~ OSES ee poe TRAE LOVE REASONS NOT. © CHAPTERLXI. A. SACRIFICE, Lady Marion raised herself so that she ami2g look into the face of her beautiful ci civ: sone Iwill tell you,” she said: “you are going to Berlin ; you have. an engage- smeat at the Royal Opera House there, and |? amy husband wishes to go there, too. But ~weali oppose it ; his parents for social season, and ae val you frankly, because Zam jealous of you, and cannot bear that ‘&e should Falies et there. Ihave asked ‘him to give up the idea but he refuses—! ‘will not listen to me, Ihave said that if the goes there, I will never see him or speak ‘%o him again, and I must keep my word. So, One by one ‘the little birds ale ‘te you, do not let him go ; you can prevent| The most priests woman Ope, one the flowers closed their eyes, the ab Asa most gifted singer on the stage, the idol of vepiets ch a pmeggiegetbigger- Puaaee Whee ogee eionpa.ace the worldett schema ar that herbless; | mantle of night fell on the earth. So sw Pita fins hav ipa ot pi Haeathery os cea “There is no harm in our friendship,” she the only | dame, I have come to you ; I appeal | H would me er all vell her face ithe wild words : the same raptures of nly | Tove had come over her face and she look- wed like a lovely; glowing rose. “Think = Be ees Taste oorie 6 tal you which, if ever there has been any par- TE friendship between you and my hus- Sand, must end it, Ihave come to tell -you that which will show that now—now “yeu must not take my husband from| we sme. _ “Bend down lower,” continued the sweet “voice, “tbat I may whisper to you. I > I love little children so dearly. And I have always thought that] wa, -with it, my heart has burned with envy, and now, oh, madame, bend lower, lower— mow heaven has been so good to me, and they tell me that in have a darling little child, all my own. Oh, ver an ‘Lance's file chide o Saiy Gad koe Lnows the sera that came over her, the sor: row, the bit in — ey of ed 7 — neg ee ag. bss slow! ‘oami ‘i of the great boughs, the coving of the blue i more aes | white pigeons,” Why, surely, vst was whe same, and yet how different. The with the wreck of her'life he surg in a low voice the words pevgiys penpa sen tet prophecy : “In she! paren pie seats whee Aring in pledge ‘Tpave her, ape love we cae How true and how cold the prophecy had been, As he sat there she saw a light ia sun, aes in Kissed the banks. "Slowly | the falling water set dah to music, and the rythm was al- or hs the grave could hide me, For there ‘fone is peace. Shine on, setting sun. Sing on, fallin water. There is no save in deatl and in heaven. Sing on, little birds,throw your eweet shadows, dewy nights ; there is lay dowa hand Gi dehy geset tach efreshed her. The nig! afew months I shall| Pa a terrible shudder to sinighos iba old; deress oul For there alone is peace.” drove m that was her haven of rest, by th wate! from her mind, the Bre f ph her find that she ws “I would the grave would hide me, been mad,” she said to herself ; Within sight of the mill Wheel, and the trees, and the water. be well, the clond would pn brain, the w | peace. dieaer nights ‘nad tie antllan mene to ieee pees that she went uy the stars than dowa to the sti ihe lay ian ee hor dinge, | Wasit suicide, or was she mad! ey EP 53 x 5 8a ae £ ‘we must live in peace and write,one to her imagen wit ot rho m her en- his wife, when she saw him in hisdaily life, yet knowing that he was lost to her She iy mn there ‘| Without speaking by * | chair and was sleeping soundly, {the father realized t hs P knew that she an siborbel bes At Was the Means of Farnine a Bratal Man Into a Loving Husband a Father. Mr. W. J. Colville, of New York) wines name has become familiar through his work along the new lines for the treatment of physical ills known as i RATIONS IN VARIOUS ARMIES. The Allowances ef Food for Satlors Tha: se OF Soldiers, In the present contest between the Jap- anese and the Chinese troops, the question as rations figures: greatly to the benefit of the claims of hypnotism for higher purposes than those ofa mere display of mental wer, He relates in the current number ran | of the Metaphysical Magazine a remarkable tothe end of a man’s salvation. This maa, dastardly in the extreme, was engaged in wife and timid daughter, both of were in a delicate ae and subject to nervous diseases, felt impressed to call one day, by asubtle sense of need thrust up- ‘on him just ashe approached the dwell- ft ling, Immediately after the door had been closed and he was ushered intothe reception th HE HEARD A SCREAM ite sdjoining apartm: As it was soon rrified aly he went bold- nds proceeded. The sigh ig guoe dalled foc quick and decisive action. The ian of striking h fome—the old farmhouse si hedge lta San ite bay efit td was vainly eek hers Robert Noe! lived, th Pessnied artinal adie canta’ mere (Orly: w he Rare reece: Sieapald | to hor «those cca yea came ue | determining there and, then to prove the “Leone. where are you 2” an tise from the water and eall her. “There | “ficaey 0 wwerful, silent command, stood deafened her as they whirled round| si ence,” sung the nightingale; /i% the doorway, he very personification of her head. She stra ple for a time with where alone. vis ng ,the nightingale 5 stern resolve, and. co a her dazed bewild lere ; butske could | «There alone is place,” sume” 3 \ thought force upon nten. cannot strike a girl,” The effect oF ‘this Pie “whose conduct towards his family was | y, which they were | 10 French ea Italian soldiers, an ‘They are well fed, wee the Chinese, from all accounts, are Uses ae and in poor physical cond: herefore, to cope with Bale intial peeing The staple article of diet of the Japanese soldiers is his favorite pastime of bullying a sensitive | oo mare who ie 2 § E he German army it is twenty-eight; ix xeept the Russians, have a daily allow- ance of rice, The English, French, Italian, and German soldiers get four ounces of coffee per week; the Spanish three. Tea is supplied to the Russian soldiers, special allowance of sugar is made English soldiers, to Ger- of wine to f fish. ON THE VERGE OF HYSTERIA, alond, he mentally co You are perfectly | vr be) ed to her the words, * is time the girl’had sunk into an easy 8 soon as e situation he ap- ecselt vores rane Bee ee thuacl toes Ceseranl barton ine Herself £0 one of the ‘highest positions in | Titerested, and the report was that there r old love, Only Heaven knew what | bad been no further discord in the house: she endured after tha : hold, the father was a changed man, an daughter were well and oe ‘The sweet voice t 9 rips telling him fe rs “ eo tl chine e she wasill an gonearayforher health, | his wife spoke of “Lance's little child.” If ABOUT ADVERTISING. ‘ate entreaty; and tady 3 pra withdrew AiaE he ecahd een fears of her | those ‘words’ drove ‘het’ to hy fcom the clasp of her to Lord Chan-|shall wonder? She saw the stars in the ‘ vat her feet. The face she pk was bright | dos. 1: “Good-bye, | water and tl he was going to ; | Somee User a pla Business Men as _ and. peatlal as though angel’s wings [mad g— saat vo Berlin —but away from | aud,perhaps,onthe Great Day,thatthought, | 0™* When aud Where to advertive, herraes iar, ene Hele Bari ; but, bie Pra Saapene ob plead it pk tt te A good salesman, paces yy a es <f ai yee you,” she said, “I pray to|to look at and listen ies Neat ae ok bap poeta Rantion wher tees alivectaston can always sell good good: cyou. You hold my life in your hands. If|last sie Good: : pinky Lance. In heaven] that te aogier was not well. He start-|__“ reetts farm frees pe lon id ee you will know how much I have loved you, | ed at once for leigh. The morning sun more—try them and tah tell eisuabia be glad to die, |7ov wun coon, aren you wil = was high in the heavens when ho reached | is a taking ad in the New York ‘clevaicd vee that if my hus loves you best_he ae Thave' left Be end there. Going at once to the mill-stream,he | ‘rains. might” marry you, but itis for my little ad seen th ofthe. woman he loved| | People, will road the. news. abot yoor child. Do youknow that I say to ting jer long hair had tangled in | g and store just as readily as the news Gdaeiail) | ‘Cadoate litle obild the words ies lies ami ab acomes from | about anything else, if you Talore fresh; peace o crisp Bees ote mmnereniy AS they ayootont, ta | wisest thing he could havedone—he brought | J ie a golden maxim that the women are tase.’ Farmer Noel to the spot, and told him the] the buyers, ‘hen ive the men for ‘But the beautiful woman who had been ry, while she lay with her face raised to | whom they buy, ie an a the morning skies—the story of a mad love. me wife, turned deadly pale as she listened 2s Sar words. She held up her hand with a Tyee Heaven's ‘sake, hush,” she said ‘hoarsely, I cannot bear it !” Hoc one minute it was as though che had Ween turned to stone. Her heart seemed clutched Jets « cok iron hand. “The next, sic had recovered hera coal on making he oak feestliavial the aclicard fitine: “Sou mast calm yourself," she said. | “1/¢ have listened to you, now will you listen to ae We cae sed ‘atl, “whet he r fe is sorrow and as dazed him ised Lady pees to atill | "08 in the stream, and the water-] Tiliee bgriasi foam faintly as the white f CHAPTER UXII. with and rimson cloud that threw « rosy in the d GIVES PEACE,” western sky aflame, ist <riaon cond Hone d orange— light on nit 10 one recogni: There was a verdict of hinge gael aad Wise “newspape gers urge their eee cage of eo0y, be- cause froqunatly cnaaged ads pay Beaty and thus stimulate vanes pean fr ing. che tae atlas oven if they forget what its merits really “the os tide of the fert meadows, the s] corn, the Tike the old’ farmboube; the light falling on the roof qith its moss and lichen Tomes and white ji = sal be a murderess if I did,” aaid in a low voice. face was whiter than Gry face of the id set as the face of the dead ;she threw Heed: “She stood quite. silen fow lack ber voll as though sho wan ing fc i pminnites. Kncher heart, like's death-Kael, breath, and chen oa tlie seaudl oelll cod ietion: less as a mi | “Lance's little rao fbiter an w the beautifal |Pigeops colder ae: whore mute and Liu the beautiful ly she said: Kise me; Lady Marion, kiss me with |{a! eee of joey 'e e | Whose face was porn hee tod she si for some tim mm driven to a thik ey tch— ing the farmhouse, her beautiful febe white the birds were singing their vesper hymn, the cattle had all boo jes ge rest, the tei teil in the > garden our mao! Leeehe tie boa open wilt not take your eatch the eet and fragrant, until sh save until the its dead. Marioa with @ smi on Coa face, such as had not been sew bef It would all come right. | ‘Ske believed i me Vanira’s simple|the water, ‘words as in the pledge of Bow it would managed smet know—did not think ; but madame fallen int swrould keep her word, and her husband te Ties slong pool aad be bad told te cups to tie so ret pay dae ¢ bloom, hough the fields where the clover lay so e came to the reat | How- Lord Chandos grieved, u te dit faa because he undertook thet feel expenses, mad at first with angerand disappointment, then a rumour was spread that Madame had gone to America, aud had married millionaire there. The world recover its good temper and laughed ; then another grand singer sppest see ere and was torgotter recnpeeare sayy “ia” the wruth was the Countess of Lanst shock- 2d her so grestly that abe gave up all a0, ciety for a few days, and. thes, world had > heard | or very hap; She ne breed phiiadasss Paatta'a ecbapuy, cot W | nor did she ever know who lame Vanira ¢ | departing 3 ceaaheseshal a ticles: ioperigs ct the me win- harac- cogs bor idlers, ‘but Puupetlirs. palshasoes ote 00d: Ivs on casy to persuade a dealer to tock an give: them tore windows = nia To say your goods are ‘best and cheap- ers think tell th je-mark with your name ai dress and the goods you sell is not bad ur rk with Because you never have advertised your z t why you should advertise it now. The me from. you. provean attractive = of it There used ing, “One might as well be dead as out eat avisot Eareniiraa ed, Fas wrall CHU bal os Epi equally true and embodies ‘igalt of ts Dian ay of advertising, in shoppers—as long as it is s'rictly honest. As Very Plausible. Magi one (severely)—You are ons ed this young bere against her * the mill will never gr'ni azain with th: Je pasts 4 She} waters of the to (tHE END; et mistook her fo my long los oo briskly)--Discharged ! Call 5 3 eekly ak tions of Eng! 10 | master’s _undoin; ii | 20d generous that was not com| —South Bet it| tind than the hot wine 2, folly, mesna aa at heme. again i mhouse, | only She dew nearer to |termined mental act on the part of the and had dreamed a long, troubled dream, | anced train and distraught w scted visitor caused the infuriated or whether she was ing now. Her| in the clear waters she a man to change color from vermilion to brain burned—it was like guid fire sn shining: perhaps sho thou "almost white, while his nand dropped | mt ee al len-haired | ing to them. A little low cry that fell on | Bervelessly to his side and he childs "Lance's uatle sila 5 Fer thoes benitght ais: ‘ca ocysiiian convulsive i he was holding mother and child both in| doves, but fell on no mortal he mi at ue Ps is arms, ki ile she lay there | way slaves Sndlaria cual iehoreattt God, forgive me. | How could I India. The Russian soldie hetples cand despairing. “Mine was al-| "A ‘nad love,” and the. voiss chat had |btate? Seeing the instantaneous effect of allowance of vegetables—thirty six ounces 's & mad eelf—‘‘a hi tion upon the now thorou: a eater Then whe he a round ir pladdeneil the hearts of thousands was | pis Ses po! eaintck Pocnee olde ‘ —r 7 is d tarned his attention to the DaLaiee, who | are ly given have not only their ehrough the room, and woke to reason with | oo <r; S| was trembling violently and likes bu cov dislikes as well, French indly tovenl, Ea piss soldiers to pork, ee Japan eem to have @ natural. ant pathy: fees von. ee eat more meat than ately, leas vey tabs. The ly twice as great as iers.. French sailors have a wea ky allow- ance of 200 ounces of bres wine, 85 ounces of meat, vegetables. ‘The popular theory that any man wito hes idameugis tot ce gun eed the eeill aim it direct; at an enemy it enough for a soldier, ie fallacious, as the records of the recent battles between the Chi Japanese and the Chinese show clearly. The Japanese soldiers are, for the most sions which is due, ia part, to the cupidity of army contractors acting in concert wit corrupt Chinese official a PEARLS OF TRUTH. Thought is the property only of those who can entertain it. —Em isan idiom i in ith which falsehood never can imitate. te, —Napi it th i is nob planted Felth man’s fonsrue sha shake out his Well-arranged time ia the surest’ mark of «= well-arranged mind.—Rousseau, ‘The generous acs should scorn a Bene ure Tae gives others pain, —Thom; king water neither makes soak ra novin debe nor his wife ® widow.—Joha Neal ee concord and most sacred peac doth nourish virtue, and fast friendship Spenser. th is born in the deep oe of ine -sutlering hearts; not emidst It is marvelous how long a rotten post will stand, provided it be not shaken Gree mptations come to ti Gan) bet AInpiaisea mrs testa geon.— ‘ti ly has the great moral defect of giving top much diference to lite death. —Cham: There in a rete difference between speak- ing to deceive and being silent. to be i We must not let go manifest truths be- wuse we can not answer all questions about | thens:—-Jeremy Cellier. some every net contributes in soon away.—Johnéon. There never was any heart troly great also tender and Sorrow in Kind of rust of soul which ite passage to oud man is seldom gratefal man, fece ha pee ge as he thinks be deserves.—H. W. Always to chink the worst I have ever found to be the mark of « mean spirit and 4 bas, soa = Balingbroke: ter one bite at forty of Truth‘s bitter ‘that gushed from sf n say things because we can say them. well, Pathier than bscaute they are sound or reasonable, — It is best. to endure what you cannot a bad wale wi wi follows his captain complaining: —4 More helpful than wile eat or counsel is one draught of simple human pity thas will not forsake us.—George FE) Great mischiefs ippen more aiid trom ess and vanity than from the grester sins ot avarice and ambition.— the po eine Bit Se ma EE Pe THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA, NO LESS THAN 25,000 LETTERS|®% WENT DOWN alld THE ELBE. Dive Search for a tater Wilt Be Tre: ered Sea Post Phat ee for Be Pestal Clerks. ‘Twenty-five thousand letters ab the bot tom of the sea! No ene possibly, twice registered, and perhaps as man; sacks of mail matter may hardly be cal- culated. How often do life and death hang ‘upon the prompt arrival ofa written mes- sage ! The delay of as a communication for'a week ma; he failure of a firm. Drafts and sah paper representing large | 9. re in some of the missing letters. Only the other day a man wrote from Ger- many inquiring about a missive containing $1000, which he had sent by post to this country. Fortunately, it had already been returned to him, the address being defec- ive, Divers will seek for the mail of the to sea. Whey were picked up during the next six ‘months at varions points along the Atlantic const from Portland, Me.,to Cape Hatt an. Iv RECOVERED. Such mail as may be recovered from the Elbe will be forwarded immedia“ely to New York, where it will be examined with a view to its delivery to the addresses at the earliest possible moment. Much of it will be reduced to the condition of papier mache; wrappers will have disappeared,and dresses at soaked stall amngg! articles in newspape exten! revi fine handkerchiefe, and, gloves were being this fashion in enormous quantiti al a goes on to-day, for the Post Office authori- ties can do ve It 18 not possible to examine every news— paper and parcel of printed matter for contraband good ANOTHER GREAT LOSS, Another great loss of mail at sea ocourred in n the Bist day of January, Ke monial from lost their lives on earn the Bl do this kind of se: men w cocrlea teiee ne essy life. They are chosen trom the rail- ay mailservice, or sometimes from among ve hai experience at post 100 small jor comfort —a room over tes serew or opposite the steerage kitchen, Perhaps the quarters will measure 2)x10 feet, with a case of g i hip,are put in th coms{rom which they are brought | too ood Nature never hurries, never halts and etorage r by the frags hande as they are wanted. ‘THE SEA POST OFFICE. n board oly from Germany, bat aso from Norw ark, Russia and Austri id | cue me iS me Lost | i -|in Hambarg reali ba wi soere: a. | and says, “Phe only objection f| you in or no Two postal cies ee be im | your fortune to id quit giving | him a fire, and he ie mcalslating whe | years before when trou mail, some of which is mies clean. He must sort his lette tly when the Sugy Gilling aad Pitehing so that ifficolt to maintain his footing. On th is toll i hard than that tel visit ich may con’ penta at employed o “4 nthe ‘Hamburg ‘American Line, his an hotel Dag sl t e Queensland’s New Voting System. Chief Justice Grifith, of Queensland, Australia, bas written to ii would go to one of th Tiaae beoaing @ Oe wih a the voter, Tn this way two minori jority. Chief duatios Grifith thinks that the system is entirely practicable, have seen sons who are con- scious that they can not command a major- ity of the votes, but still desire to be elected.” Reetas Suet: Where No One Ever Walks. ‘The city of Buenos Ayres has the largest w ee streetcar system, in proportion iene was The Retort Social. Astle Miss Mugg—I{ just want y: Lerma at I don’t sociate with rey ‘Tikes o’y Tite Mias Backcourt—Yon needa’s be $0 uppish, just because your nose i Blessings of Ignorance. tae ek aot really so old as you ei any family Bites, Sod chavaereniegwal Aesth they. Neatly Do Done. Gus De Soh Then me rg one of ’em A Decided Success. » | belong to with lai Is nie dean euctons ? Yen, indeed. At oar last prea ll,_We just promenaded about the coi Do you call shavia busceas jo Tt Look at oe A Little Too Too Regular. St. Peter—I hardly know whetier to let Mrs, Veragood—You don’t? I never missed a church service, no matter what the Boxer —You and your husband worked ieath paying doctor's bills, Wait, and 1’ fines it he eats you, eos Se A Wonderful Gift. Fortune fea You may in time make ood income, bet you sell never Be rich. oung pet maps You are not rasteful. My ! My Vin ara ihmpintune Spe have a wonderful gift. How did you know Iwas wasteful You have just wasted adollar getting id. Cold and Calculating. Mr. DeCad has such a cold and look. He--And no wonder, His landiady bas get his trunk out of the hous without cue his board bill. Proverbs. F wenly mansions. ids big ae iDiies -ossid Wal ste aie tenement-bouses for heaven! opinion ‘To-morrow’s advertising may be « day |” lave. never iails. —<—<—$<—a—__—_ MR. S. F. se seen ct mlten's Well Kua aye Pear ge ehh a seve! ica im Five ys was completly cured. plaints loctors three taonths to Rygkinan, Hamilton, On. The Fite pic of South American Rbeo- ratio Care gives elif, and abuointely jon | ken yore Been ne | are ‘til in the prison of Lou a1 Gus De Smith—By the way, Horcetter Dora—What is that D. R.A. that you ¢ Gee The Dancing Reform Association | 2°14 gentlemen dance with gentlemen, snd ladies dance no. one |} § _ Avis easier to break silence than to mend De ‘The chureh cannot. help . you, to. trade | Pn if men as’ lesoctously as.they de ~ mee {op tbe day fe iatloateg hersentence of d ‘o-day SOME FEMALE POISONERS, IN THE MIDDLE AGES THEY OPER- ATED ON DIFFERENT SYSTEMS. The acsret of the Aneten: jot Been Tramsiiited to jas Women. Polsoi Us. * ‘Lhe trial of the woman aptly called “‘ the Antwerp Brinvilliers” culminated in thi only possible conclusion. Mme. Joniaux was sentenced to death, being found guilty on La counts, and if she escapes life and the sentence be commuted to one of perpetual imprisonment, itis only be- Ring ot the Belgians ied to ratify ignature, and is practically has abolished it. Belgium has of late years been the theatre of several sensational poisoning cases of an equally revolting nature, taking into con- 9d. ging toa noble family, poisoned his brother-in- law, and died on the scaffold, while the perpetrators of the Risk Allab murder in and the Peltzer ae in 1888 The birth and sieomgie of Mme. However, itis an ascertained fact that when v di of poison, the drug has been generally administered by women, the motive being mosily AN ILLICIT OR THWARTEDL OVE, and their chief object to carry out their artistic epicure, lightly dropped poisoned ose leaves into the wine-illed cups Spares enemies she had: doomed. jent poisons has not been trans- mia vous, It is only of the compoun: hy mctecia Borgia that we have formed tome accurate is little doubt that the eautilul NDachsey of ere re- in arsenical preparation, The famous aqua tofana w. only variation or adulteration. of the pel operat in a graceful and elegant Seilous! th in dainty perfam- ee hie reticent, admitting ae to her trade in poisons she had added the of witcheraft, and ‘pk a arb the devi vigne in her “Letters” fallatas tafttec etal aud eh: SHE WAS BURNT ALIVE on the Pl Gi uggling wit! traordinary fiercen inst the stotio- ers till the flames suffocate Bus it id Mine: Latarge, ngs Marie'Oap: elle, who’ remains the moder ty of female poisoners. She: was ghter of an officer of the Imperial Guard, ‘well married, happy at Gra of her bus! inne "She had myles warned her hus- e had become hateful to her, i7 on i y lent and died a few .aunths after her Ripe eed leaving a book of seen pe Hoare” After reading ic Al the elder wrot guilty or not judges and ing aasiai is brother-in-law, was found uot guilty self-com igi Wh whe : e murder, kc poisou S ral | poitons are only gies kia ihe! igooranc or by passione’ convinces that a cure is certai women, have pot the se its to wait for the ote: AN EMINENT MINISTER REV. W. S. BARKER OFr PETERBORO. Mr. W. 8. Barker is » young minister of Peterboro who has by his great earnestness and able exposition of the doctrines of the Bible earned for himself a place amongst the foremost’ ministers of Canada. He, with his most estimable wife, believe in looking after the temporal as well as the spiritual welfare of mankind, hence the following statement for 4 publication: “TI have much pleasure in re- commending the Great South Ameri- tan Nervine Tonic to all who are flicted as I have been with nervous prostration and indigestion. Ifound very great relief from the very first Vottle, which was strongly recom- I mie | to me by my druggi dea iad general debility. el my wife to use it, w! L must eay, was completely run down aud was suffering very much from She found great relief from South American Nervine and also cheerfully recommends it w her feliow-sufferers. “Re v. W. §. Barner.” It isnow e scientific fact that cer- tain nerve centres located near the | t! dase of the brain have entire control over the stomach, liver, heart, lungs and indeed all internal organs; that. is, they farnish these organs with the necessary ncrve force to enable them to perforn: work. When the neive centres are weakened or deranged the nerve J. Torrance. their respective y x) i D, Oi ) i Hy force is diminished, and as result tlie stomach will not digest the fooa,| the liver becomes torpid, the eee will not act properly, the heart am lungs suffer, and in fact the ehoay system becomes weakened and sinks on account of the lack of nerve foree.’ South American Nervine is based on the foregoing scientific discovery! and is so prepared that it acts irectly on the nerve centres. It uachiopels increases the nervous energy of the whole system, thereby enabling the different organs of the body to perform their work perfectly, when disease a ouce disappear ia It greatly bonefits in one day. Mr, Solomon Lond, a member of the Society of Friends, of Darlington, Ind., writes: “Ihave used six bot of South American Neryine and KE. consider that every bottle did for me: one handred dollazs worth of good,, because I have uot had a good night’s sleep for twenty years om account of irritation, pain, horrible dreams, and general nervous Pros-}; tration, which has been e: by? chronic indigestion and dy: ia. off the stomach, and by a bro down conditi of my nervous sy: stem. | ion Bat now J can lie down and sleep all night as sweetly ag a eee and ati feel like a sound man. I do think there has ever heen a made introduced into this country, which, will at all compare with thi eure for the stomach and nerv Agent. impulse rem for effects of vegetable poisons i their mad r ove the ol tacles between them a Sher cgi loves. It the Iatter dru Saipe cess, account of eitintatvians from 54 al they require more careful and f shey haves desided nd often unplesrant wine neal, and . arouse the pean sha auteocled' ale pete d a8 ns of ‘egetables and favorites and the chief factors of most violent deaths me. lately, woman to use morphi joniaux wae the first acriminal agent. ee a Se FOR THE BUSINESS MAN. AFew Mints ax to When and How to. iF Advertise, Advertive such things as the seaton sg- 8 Advertising is the champagne sparkle of business. Time is one of the most important cle} iiong the succe isin, J ach advertisement is enough ior me. Sitversteec’s . docks iebevdneesescaiee ‘that is fresh to-day is liable re Hard Times If you have a good thing, you owe it to the public to advertise it. The gst brings the customer credit. mes | and tne ne t illustrate ar sale stabs the illustration will do t im| knowing how vo ilgecaiat te know how out, advertising. not Nou tale the | paying like the man who has uot tried it suything, you offer for t credit, seeds Moe sliee SP iawira gerpla going toknow why th a trade with you Tnadettne Merl tn: bas if wanted” he ver tinkng 3 is pocsi if you don’t teil ertising when euch adver- men oer is convinced the public for sale can make cought the public think no, t00 The hire that may be goo day morrow. ‘Times orange adadh should ba sbasiied with All the business sente, ‘all the ‘common sense, all the can be sit elsbat woot Tes aebad spots in the best, ade, the | sameas there are weeds in the best garden: Roniska’ viealtivarswibar boyy eovotsns 2 What you've got to say may have been said by cuhiere a million tiznes; the way you in Oh what couvinces and counts in ad. ie People’ think they don’t wantto read advertisements. ‘That's why it takes art And litersture combined to make. people them, axes everyone is aneceeding in hie adver ing, Tn fact, advertising muccess ane aae he few yea He the necessity of wipes se best advertinla potsible to ish to be clase —_——_——— Found an gain Husband—Got a new girl, I see. Wiie—Yes, and she’s an angel, too. cau you know that!” She hasn’s i heen here haifa day yet. eae, bat she celle mn once lived ilk uae eather aia aseiee ne three: weeks Sympathy. asked Li Hung Cha ® photograph, tire, of ta American society lad; appears to hi Tons Alaiodt ge teal Sehr GeOBE T have.” A-Negative Accomplishment. ty Sie + Mis Gildingby say accomplish. out ? asked the young mi . replied riscacthtetos refuse to play the piano and stick t9 it, in >