; um» We had called at, Capetown. after a fairly quick run from the Lizard. to land :1 l'ew passengers and take in a little t'argo; and. in place of keepingr away to the southward. the t'aptuin Monti along the Lilith parallel. in (in- mg titi~4 he ran a risk of meeting \sith light and unfavorable uinds. But that! ' was purely his business. \Ve were just now in that sort of No Man's “aler between the Indian and South Atlttntit' ()rean shunned by sailors. and used only by at few steamers. ()ur [N'Ieition at noon ilitd been 45 deg. 15 min. east longitude. 36 deg. 13 min. south latitude. or about. 1300 miles ilnlll Capetown. The night was dark and equally “hen [wine on deck to keep the middle \"ELIt'h. and as] stump- ed the poop. listening to the wind, that seemed every now and then to shrill with a deeper note in the. roar of it aloft amongst the canvas, there came a cry of “Light on the lee bow. stood onthe break of the forecastle. heed. an ordinary seamen. But, peer no I might. I could see no light. So, descending the poop-ladder, I walked flung the main-deckend jumped on to the nil just before the fore-rig- ging. lend. leaned out-board in order to get a better v'ié-ï¬r. ï¬nal on tho break of Um no“. inning cleared the “a; a ï¬nite 1 “iii heme :Ihvaul “iih In) yarn. by reading \IhiIh ynu “ill see that. ewn in the present prosaic :Ige, ruri~ mu liIinIs man happen to those \IhII rm ilu\illPSs in great \Iaters; and may also realize that “other (heat) has ith nothing (If her 0111- limo p0\\91‘, “th she «houses to exert it. of staging rmnamic 8(91’188. and incidents grotes- que- and tragic and mysterious. I am not going to say anything more a‘mut tho- AnIMOpe just now. because this story duvsn't ('(mvern her very murh. :Indafter i left herso sudden- ny. Captain (‘migie and three of her mm were. the unty recognisable men- hers [PVPI’ again saw of the ship's cumpany. my life. and esyeeially when any one happens in remark in mine or my \sii'e's hearing that there is no romance In the sen nowadays. Five-an'l-twenty shillings per week, after eight years’ servitude given to the mastering of an arduous and fatiguing profession. and one in whit-h the disparity between renumeration and responsibility was so vast. appear- ed. even to my mind. to leave some- thing to be desired. As for romance, that had all been pretty well knot'ked out of me. and I had teased to look for or extet't anything of the kind. The mean. clearly, had altered, and been modernizel to suit. the timesâ€"brought. so to Speak. sternly "up to date,†and had. save for a few rare outbreaks, taught itself to recognize that. fat-t. and behtve as an every-day. L'Omlthll- plat-e piece of water should. This, at; least. is whit. I thought whilst I paced the Ante'ope’s (it’Vk as she went roar- Ems; down the (‘hannel with a fair; wind behind her. her Plimsoll mark just “wish. and three lower topgallztntâ€" - sails standing out against the rlear ek\ like (‘Unt'llVeï¬i of sculptured marble. About the ship and my shipmates there was nothing more particularly notit-e- able than there had been in half-aâ€"doz- on similar ships and ships’ com )anies I hid sallPd with. 01' rourse. in ( etilil, they varied; but. take them full and by. skitper. offivers, crew, routine. rig. and pro. isions, there was the usual family likene-s. Mervhant-t-aptains rommanding vessels like the Antelope are as often as not. in these modern times. gentlemen. Captain (‘raigie was one; and the thief mate. Mr. 'l‘hotuas. was another. Both were srientilie and skilful natigators. and both officers in the Royal Naval Reserve. The ship herself “as a flying Clipper. steel-hunt; crew mixed; provisions fairly good; every prospet-t ofthe usual dull and etentless voyage to "Down ITntler†and bark again. It was my last. at, any rate. and it. has given me quite enough to talk about for the rest of “l""' .-.- "no-Ha Although “a missed master," I had not yet been lucky enough to get a. better billet than a second mate’s. Ships, t'ompztrutively. were few, and of- {irers as pientiful as blackberries in a good season: and I was considered for- tunate when a berth as second mate. at £5 per month. wasoffered me on board the A'nteEOpe. a Limo-ton ship bound from London to Fremztntle in “'estern Australia. I hardly took the same view of things. and had quite made up my mind. as it was rather late in the may for choosing another path in life. '0 do as so many others were doing. and “t'hunge into steam." "'“' r"“‘â€" ‘ _ I Inved the sea itself beyond anything, and was never tired studying its my- riad moods. and attempting to interâ€" prm the language of the many tongues with Whit'h it, spoke to the wanderers upon its mighty breast. Ant LA) years the most exciting matter that happened “as the carrying away of an upper fore-topsail-yard. Still. if Imus not altogether satisfied with the re- gular routine of the hard and monoton- om profession I had so wilfully t-husen, -_-A 1.2.... I had been at. sea eight years. As a boy. innate loxe of romance and Marry- at's novels had sent me there. Other- ui-ie. there was no particular necessity for such a step. My father held the li\ing of Compton-ona'l'or in South Devon. and was rich enough to have given me a ('hOiCO of professions. Nor u all lh'lSC eight. years did I once en- ‘ounter the romance I had fondly itn- Lginetl was the inevitable lot of the malarerwlhe romant-e of inrident. In- deed, a more humdrum. matter-of-fart. life would scarcely be t'onCPived. with its inevit'ihle recurrence of headwinds and fair. gales and calms, long passages and short. Artually. so far as my memory serves me. throughout. those Author of “ Steve Brown's Bunylp.†" In .the Gust Deep," etc. ; A , . 4 . a dark figure rising and falling with (HAPlbï¬ I“ {the vessel’s head against the patchy l bud been at 38“ mght â€are" A5 a ? sky. “Where away. my lad 8" I ask- .V innate low of Immune and Marry- " ed. “There, sir," answered he, point- 3- nmplg had sent mg them. 0th?!“ ing. . ‘-4‘Ahn-O‘v THE LAST VOYAGE OF MARTIN VALLLANCE : :l‘ V18\V. l'ne seaman break of the Ioreeastle, A SEA STORY on: 10.0â€. By JOHN ARTHUR BARRY, ors lived. Now what annoyed us aft annoyed Jack forward just as much. and there were consequently growls, deep and long, from the watch below. And I saw what had happened as elarly as if [had been there. In the rush and hurry consequent upon my tumble things had 'ï¬een thrown over- board at random; and a sailor, seeing his chance. aiashed through the lash- ings of Nan's pen. waited for a weather roll, and with a push, gave it a tree w- - \lu! u‘l"115 as 4:. horse. and almost. big enough I 1' Human to live in. This structure, its summris â€razeed" by our carpenter, and at. firstplaced aft. was presently, because of Nunny's \x'aiiings when, every night. her kid was taken from her. shifted forward and lashed on the pig-pens close to the door of the top- gallant forecastle, in which the sail- â€"\'-- I now kIIPM' the ship should be. But there was no sign. A man's Vision m a. tumble of a sea has not time to set- tle itself to reaeh very far. Still. I thought i might. have seen a light. had they Shown one. As I turned. 'witl. a Short. prayer on my lips, de- termined to swim till lshuuld sink ,from pure exhaustion. I heard some.- thing rome down on the wind like the ery of a. child â€"- “Ma-ma-ma-a-a!" changing into a long querumus hleat: that seemed very familiar. Staring intently in the direction, after a while I made out. some. dark objeet, now looming as big as a boat. on the crest of a wave, now hidden altogether in a water-valley. A few minutes more and I was alongside it, clutching the wet and slippery sides. whilst from its interior proceeded a. volley of plain- tive railings. l revognized the thing now; and as [taught hold of one of its stumpy legs and dragged myself on top, and lay at. full length. pant- int: and nearly spent. 1 l'rlessed the. sailor-man who had made suvh good use of his opportunity. Whilst in Capetown the eaptainh who was ailing. had been prescribed a diet of goat's milk and rum. or, at least. frequent doses of the. mixture. The rum we had plenty of aboard; and the skipper soon got a fine. goat. new- ly 'kidded. from one of the farms round about. He. also bought from an Indian trader. then in harbor, a four~legged mavsive animal-pen. il‘on-l'arred. strong 0‘3. 'n ‘\nl~nA n... .\l_._ ___L. I . u see nothing excpm the white iops of the short waves as they came snarl- ing and Musing around me; these, and Overhead. 1h? W131 concavity 01' rag- ged darkness lit. here and there by a. few stars. I stared in the direction All this worked in my mind as, turn«- intg: my haek to mind and sea, I swam slowly and met-.hanivally along, think- ing whether it might not he as well to throw up my hands at onee. and go down instead of lingering. But I was young.r and strong; and, heavens! how passionately the love. of life runs in such a body “hen there seems to“ he a. chance. of losing it! And surely, i thought, there must; he a lmoy or two somewhere. So lkept on. Fortu- nately I had only light shoes in plate of sea-hoots but my pea-jaeket felt. as if it were. made of sheet-lead. The first sudden shook and surprise over. my thoughts turned to, and worked eolleetedly enough. even to the extent. of arguing. pro and eon. whether or not it was worth while- to go to the trouble of taking my coat off, as I could have done. for [was at. home in the “ater. Presently, standing up, i I strained my eyes in another long look around. But [could hear no- thing exeept the. moaning of; the wind. ’ As. gasping and choking, I came to ' the surface again. the first thought that. flashed across my brain was that ‘ the ship was still reeling off her thir- ' teen knots, and that; 1, Martin Val- lant-e, was no better than a dead man. Swimming with one hand, I squeezed the brine out of my eyes with the other, but so dazed and stunned was I by the amazing suddenness of the affair that l l'(_)U.l(i see nothing, look- ing, possibly, in quite the wrong di- rection. ’l'here was a nasty, short. 'cho‘ppy sea on, too, and [found it took me all my time. to keep afloat. Then I raised my head and shouted. but. with poor heart. I knew so well the almost. utter uselessness of it. ‘\\'hat merehant seaman under like conditions ever gets pieked up? And I. mentally followed the course of ?events on board. The lookoutâ€"a lad [on his first voyageâ€"miter a minute's lgaping astonishment, roars, â€Man; ï¬overhoard!†The watch on deck,«' 'skulking in snug corners. rush sleepy- .eyed to the rail and stare. In my :t-ase, as officer of the watch, it. was iworse than any one else's. Most likely 3 the mate would have to be called before lany measures were taken. Certainly ithe fellow at the wheel might put it, :rhard over, but. that. would do no good. iAnd by this time the ship would be a full. three miles away. Probably. after some. twenty minutes' hard work with rovers and gripes. a boat. would be lowered. pull about aimlessly for an hour. and then get aboard again. In the morning the. log-book would; show my erilaph: “0n such-and-sueh a date. longitude and latitude so-and- so, a gloom was east over the shipâ€; etc. I ‘1 l was holding on, carelessly enough to some of the running gearâ€"jih-hal yards probably, and not to the stand ing rigging. as I should have done. I stared. and leaned over farther still. "A star. you mutton-head !"’ I exclaim» ed. as my eye caught what. he was afterâ€"Aha yellow glint, of Antares, just. on the extreme rim of the horizon. The words were scarce out. of my mouth when I felt something "give†aloft. and in a second [was in the boiling. foaming lmrkwash of surge. alongside. : CHAPTER II. And now the, weather took a thor- oughly settled sort of lookâ€"blue srva. blue sky. and the sun just hot. enough to La. grateful. A light but steady Lreeze blew from the south-west; and L.“ as time passes!" And lat-cured the others in the same fashion. and stowed them carefully away in my pocket. It was a real comfort to have some- thing to 'talk to, although it could; on‘ ly answer me with impatient (-oughings and cryings as it scuttled to and fro. standing up now and again to nibble an-J pull at my clothes through the liars. Even that. took away the dis- mal sense of loneliness and desolati'on induced by the look of an‘ empty ocean all around running to an empty sky. the goat, but she only smelled at it and stamped her foot, snorting indig- nantly. “ All right, my lady," I said; "per- haps your stomach won't be so proud as time' Basses?" And luamn-ml Hm Nan jumping out. At last, aftermauy min effnrt's to finger them, taking the kernhief off my npck. [tore in into strips. joined them. and bending my knife to the end, managed t0 harpoon one. It was soft. and sudden with sea- water, and full of dead weevils; but it tasted delicious. I offered a hit to LL- - ""J ‘--..-b. 4Lll‘l at, times, the men, perhaps by way of t'ontrast, \x'nuld throw her :1 had his- "uit, out of their own barge. At, the present moment there “'l'l'e three. of these under Nan'a feet. I stretched :1 n 'trm down, but vuuld not reach them try a full six int-hes. Nor could I open the door. farming as it. did bath, of the front of the pen, without. the risk of l 01' Nan, previously. I had naver tak- lvn much notii-e. Now, as [ looked down, ll saw that she “ax a great strapping 'lump of an animal. in fine mndition. with a woll-hred. good-tempered head, hearing a short, sharp pair of horns: and a queer squali of a tail that she z-arrietl in a jaunty sort uf curve uvvr her backbone. She was mostly black in colour. with a big white patch hero and there, anl she kept her legs strad- (“Pd 10 the heave of the sea like an nld sailor, and stared up at me with a pair of Mg, Mark, bewildered ayes as who should say: “ Where's my child ‘? And what's become of the stmvant? And what's this row all about ?" And, sad and sore as l was, I (-uulcln't {or the life of me help grinning as l luukt'd- at my ahipmate. All at uni-e, underneath her, li'aught sight. of three virvular irrrm'n nhjeots; anrl suddenly I felt hungry. All day long the skimwrusml to stuff Nan with \yhito cabin bread, lumps of sugar, fancy biscuits, an'l such-like, for she'd eat anything. And: _-â€"-- ‘y‘r I could see nothing. Nanny and I were alone on the wide and sandy mean, and evidently travelling in the set. of some t'urrvnt. And it was owing to this, probably, that Iwas not sight- nd in the morning: for the ship had actually shortened sail and stood by the» whole night, through, tacking at. intervals, so as to keep as near the spot as possible. So they told me af- terwards. It was more than many a captain would have done. goat or no goat. And I was the. better pleased on a certain very momentous occasion. of which you will hear in due t‘OUI‘SB, to he able to make my arknowlvdg- ments to my old captain and thank him for his humanity: also to help him a little, in his own time of need, in a different. fashion. However, this last is an affair that mnt-elrns not‘ the story. As the night slowly passed, the jump of a sea that. had been shaking the soul out, of we went down pre- ceptibly; the “ind, too, blew warmer and more lightly. ()f seeing the Ante- lope any more. I haul n0 hopes. By the stars I could toll l was drifting to the northwards, and quite away from her course. Still the captain, might; stand by through the night, and with a look- out, at, the royal mast-head. they might possibly sight me. A forlorn ('hnnve! And, indeed, when at, last the sun rose gorgeous out of a great l'ank of opal and purple, and balancing myself like a ('irtus-mzmn I stood up and took in the horizon, and the son that ran to it, {out I); {out wiyh my smdrling mes, Luckily for Nan and myself. too, the gen hadï¬fallen on its back. and rode are to the sky. so high and dry, ex- cept for' a swish of spray now and again. that I had no need to loose the canvas curtains which were made to fasten over the hare in had weather. Putting my hand down. I felt her Skin. warm through the wet hair, and you wouldn't believe how grateful that touch was to my chilled and sodden body; ay. and how comforting, also. l0 my heart, just now so utterly deâ€" void of hope. waw the. sense of that dumb companionship. And though I knew that, barring something very like a miracle. my hours were num- bered; still, compared with my condi- _ tion 80 lately, here was, at least, a re- lltrieve. [ have already said that. the Antelope, in place of stretching away to the southward for a. westerly wind, as most. vessels would have done, had kept Well up toward the Indian Ocean, making. in fact, a nearly straight. line for her port. This was in one. way a gain for me. in another a dis- tinct lossâ€"the former by assuring me! of warm and most likely fairly finel weather; the latter llytaking me quite out of the track of outward or home- ward bound shipping. Had [gone overboard anumget the huge, ice-cold combers of the South Atlantic in forty- five degrees or therealiout, [should have been food for the fishes long ere now. All these matters I turned over In. my mind as I lay at, full length, Wlth room to spare. and gave Nanny a hand to suck. and longed heartily for daylight. was, its own weight, almost. would have taken it over. Thus in one act did the ship'lose an officer from alt and a. nuisance from forwï¬rd. And even whilst lying across the bars that form- ed the from; of the cage or pen. drip- ping like a wet, swab on to Nan, who, silent now, was trying to nibble my toes, I could well picture the skipper's rage when he missed his goal. Of course he would be sorry for me too. We. had always been good friends. But, then I could be replaced at once, there “ere in the An‘telope at least three males before the must, the goat not It all. ' Wonk! ‘ "Another matter vthich I will bring: i to your attention is the manner “hit'h ‘exists for staking every stream and i-..,rult-h in the country whether there iii any prospect or not. Lieu think ‘nothing of pei'juring themselves h5- '.aking the oath that they have found gold on the claim which they have. staked “11011 the thermometer was 50 deg. below zero. Streams are staked {or several miles in the space of I few hours. The definition of a mining division which allows a claim on every separate stream which flows into the Yukon, like every other re- gulation which allows any latitude. has been abused by the people staking on the different small streams more claims by far than they could possibly represent. Of course many of. these creeks will never be worked; it would cost more to make a survey of these Snell streams than all the revenue which may be expected from them.‘i Hundreds of these worthless claims‘ will be advertised [or sale on the mark- I ets in the outside world at; prices far in excess of their value. Capitalists will not be {ikely to purchase without. investigating the properties they may wish to acquire through their agents. but the 8:11qu investors will suffer. as the. money mid by them will he as good as throï¬'n sway. no“ Inlcmlm [Inn-non “'lll Ito Swim" HI I‘uloss "It" luvrulgatr. The Gold Commissioner in the Can- adian Yukon, writing from Dawson (.‘ity to the Minister of the Interior, Pails attention to the indiscriminate staking of gold claims in the Klondike region, wiwther the vouditions war- rant such staking or not. He says: ..H' was glad, for IknPw the fall would quiet that; venomnusly hissing $921, that seethed and raced so close to my Suak~ 9d and hattorml body. As tho first weight passed I opened a cornpr of the tarpa-ulin and peered at Nan. She was (Touching in one corner, and there mm far more water mashing about than [A fancied the look of, t-nnsidm'ing that I had nothing I vould use as a hailvr. Also, the pen had sunk approvinhly un~ der the added wvight of fresh water and: salt. pen awn-l fix them snugly over the Mrs. But for these thingsâ€"made to protect ,Nun from the spray on the. Antelope Â¥ in heavy weatherâ€"we should have been done, for I was certain that enough wa- ter was: going to {all in the next few minutes to sink the cage. As it was. I felt nervous about the result. I hzul thought: there, was no “ml in the storm. But. i was wrong. for present- ly a low, white mound showed itself advancing from the edge of the hor- izon. quite discernible with the. play of the lightning upon it, and travel- ling swiftly towards me, roaring with a mighty noise. of winl and water it nine. Thunder peeled and crushed as if the foundations of the ot-ezin were lieuâ€"king up, whilst the heavens glowed with such continuous t'lzunes of 018(°~ trinity as made the eye wither tot look Upon. I had never in all my exper- ience seen anything like this. And I pretty Well gave myself up for lost FAKE KLONDIKE GOLD CLAIMS '1 be \\ 1nd had died entirvl) mun, and the (down “as so thi 8k 1 muld hurdh see to cast adrift the curtains of the Since meeting with Nanny I had felt quite hapel'ul, almost cheerful, indeed. Twenty-(our. strong as a young horse, sound as a nsw hell, with eye of a gull and digestion of an ostrich. doesn't step in the dumps very long under any circumstances; and lsat in the sun, and stared round the horizon, and talked to Nan, whilst our ungainly craft tubbed about, yawing. anti slueo ing, and lolloping over the regular seas. Still. the salt biscuit, had made me thirsty, and my throat was like an overboiled potato, when, towards mid- day, clouds began to rise in the west, slowly at first, then with such. rapid- ity that all the sky in that quarter soon became as black as an ink~pot. I had just taken a dip overlmard, and was munching a fingers-breadth of llllSClllt- to still the inward grinding. when, as l glared thirstily at the. huge darkness that was creeping gradually over all, thick and dense, as if it meant to Mot out sea and sky for evermore. my eye caught a glimpse, on the edge of the storm-curtain. of something showing white against the gloomy" background. Standing up, I saw it more. ,‘ plainly. It. looked like'a ship’s royal or a boat's sail. That it was no, flicker l of sea-hird‘s wing or breaking crest of a wave, l was certain: although, even as I. told myself so, it was gone, â€"engulfed in that. profound blackness, beginning now to unfold me and spread I to the farther horizon. whilst streaks" of vivid lightning and low mutteringsl of thunder heralded the. approat'liingi storm. the previous night. was a long. oily, unbroken swell, over which we rode fairly dry. and showing two feet of a side. with, clear of the surface, a couple of stumpy outriggers, where the carpenter had cut. down the tall legs at {he pen when it came on board the Antelope. The two lower unes were of course. under water. (To be ('«mtinuedJ sioner in the Can- ing from Dawson 31' of the Interior, the indiscriminate A pound of phosphorus 000 matches. 1 hope Lo Jim 10 M9 â€W ‘ "l hungh mm.) 11, \eL be In \\ hen all my lu ks shall m i All silver) fzizil YORKSHUKHS UAR VEST BM 1t Uriffield. in the East Rii'l Yorkshire, the “rust bvli a» 4‘“ at 5 o’clock in the warning; I“ 1 the laborers from their slumlma h‘a 7 in the evening the “eltomt‘ “ 0‘ the hell intimaws the lime {Hf ing work for the day. In round numlm's Ihrxv juurnals in Paris. ()ne hun- seventy of 'Lesv rue [mum-u pver 100 each of fashion In] Illustrated journals. smnv _lI 03' papers. over 20" finnuvm and about 60 doaiing‘ “â€11 and other himnnhes â€I am)“. ' ‘li~ 8‘ ad. But. raven Illa-0k becmuq-s my h“ l (l l'fllhfll‘ far the“ lhuu “(‘11 led. 5"(;my hairs are hhn'l'uhlfl' ! ! My first grey hm. “I‘ll not just 391,â€"]m. [1H1 “fluid I permit â€me !u hm lvlmn my smlp--l'm "HI 1112“ Begum: ingrey him‘ - V >00 1 hope the years m cutm um é Emndybild sitting nu nun kuet‘. Gray halts will Ihen Irrulmng he. And dark «anus rare: My fi'l‘stvgroy hair? CUBIC ihou as friend â€1' wume A“ Sign of wisdom. or of “08‘ “'hi-(‘h M" thzwe {our ['41 like to Thou lone grey hair! ing [“9 I)X.\‘\I;HIH1{HS Klinh '“o' (I. Brookville. Um. 'w MY FIRST GREY HAIR. JOHN Hum-z. rum N m. MN- lfuund :I Slwnk uf ~H\v: {Jr Amnng my lnvks of r‘u'n 'IJHF ‘ '1'th marge [fly 83"‘8 \‘jqq' :42â€) wk?“ “just as good.†50M i sent by mail. pusqmui hux. or 6 boxes for 8‘. ing the Dr. \\'illium: Brockville. Out. o I g y Ppnk Pills {or l’ale [$01,115. “. ' 3- years of age and lute lived 1‘ l.. for the. past but 3wâ€, Pm“ thus. I. wnth In) husband . “WI 6 mason ' ‘ who“ D . were remdents rt About tour . ’ C l, swelltng on the nght side 0f ' v. ‘ l ,1. large as a “(Klfl egg liltingr Ll ph) melon and he ldut‘ed ll 16:: f£10m!) diagnosed In} Case n ' _ ment. of the glands, and same†E get w?“ after a MS lamest y operatton gene the â€mlwan' ’ I bill. It was on“ u Alton lime “gm“ -. ' 'n ' a months I was \t'orbe than "all; r Ineanume 1 had lbw-u panlll‘dt ; dlffen’nt llhySl(°lilns and lake" lgf‘ve me 1110f? l].tn [vm r , lief. About. three 5» pom «'tI‘S a ‘ ' arton for (‘heslvj‘ thinness]? a. change would improve my htaltl ' consulted a phyhit'mn the}. Md. said the ll‘Olllllt' “as inputsâ€. might end {3‘41“32 Ulï¬l"lluragedl turned to my home in \Vlarlon worse than I was \\ but I left, and lieving Iliad (‘01th home 10 dle . fore I left for ('lwsley ] 11811an tacked ovctlsiunmly \sith lull spells; on my 1911â€â€œ tllvsa own. more frequently and of longer .... Lion. With the. lrast excltemw would faint dead mm}. I had} ‘ very weak and mold St'afceh' norms the floor and lvlt myself; ing worse. every clay. l again (‘0 , ed the local physirinn :lntlthls iim said it was spasms of the heart that. I \muld um live more than couple of days. \\ llllt‘ hing in lrc lady of the ttmn \isiml me am vised me strongly to 11‘} llr.\\'lll' ll’ink Pills. I thought it uselvss M: was ready to grasp :1: any mran~l pmmised relief. and SH mmuwnrtdl use them. Beforv tlw swund bum completed I felt. tnysvll gettimm ter and before I had lintxlwd my“ enth box I “as nlIlP lo go anon?! mwn work. 1 t'ontiuuwl Ilwm um.. had used {ourtwu Lou‘s \tlleu lit 'vumpletely cured. The .sxwllin: lmld my [160k and l mu How ax \tmlam man as I ever mm in m} lite llllhl the above stutenwnl \u.Uil‘.;ll‘l;}'I lieving it my dun- In that “hill: saved my life and will ll tlw‘rm‘ make an allidmit lu the alme l4" at; any time. A deprawd t'ulltllflull ut‘ the Moo 3 shatterml nvnt. .:~ \ulo‘m 15‘ In†ret of most ills Hm :tl‘t‘lint mans: an dby restoring; llu‘ lmml untl re! 1.: ing the nerves. llxx “HEMP" P; Pills Strike at tho- l'm: u: tlnwllm driving it from llw S“~\’t‘lll Julâ€"'1‘“! ing the pativnt tn luml'l‘ .-m «on; ll) 03898 of [lttt‘allsls 5;» Inf 2 v‘ll lmzomotor ataxia. “mum. 'zmn tism. erysipelas. st'rul'ulmh mu» etc“ these pills :ll't‘ Summit“! 1“ .-.."u" treatment. 'I'uvy. :nv :tlw ‘I *l'“ for the troubles “owl: nm‘w 'lw ‘ of so uumy \uuuvn .l lard?“ * speedily restore llu lull gnu qflw to sallow ('llf’t’liï¬. {mmrv ~'-' 1" lions and sulmtitute-s nib-1M ‘“ l- â€"v wwâ€"‘ PHOSPHORUS FOR NEWSPAPERS or PARIS "W“Vulu OI years ago the“ the right side of: as the um. w»... 3U m, mums ° 3 is SH“ "3. ll .‘0 l he ")9 )1' [‘5' dull E? en ml .their own in mi: 0Ҡi‘ [with little {at and and Dene pmwrl mu oi. 1.0 sw'urv Ih “ we bl‘tmvivn ‘ them up. and get i . . -- -vu Ollllllng. H" ['u [in e a tad ergoked nulk win lo" a ‘m 0 _ . " ‘ ' r. . Vlt.8§lty, jar mH-P'°h‘n€ry (a nun: IP3 no signs can he use- ponl my. as two (mus 1; wall in milk produciim mint in form. just .11 their own individuality, 1 their own individuality, mm tgeneral dPScI , we get {at ixh‘H‘éU‘ †(him of spew! in the “1d cause “"00! in ‘11! in the. hog. ad a 291mm“ in the one at lhv hvn ng of Bi“ ii. win!» ‘ n .ly «annulled by brain. a, bright, “(ellimaut And I‘M. eye to indium». {of-rt toaw uf mu: 4 intelligent». rarely is .1 I. or In. producing 1mm Llly (it. milk six mnn'hl (U tb m of NW 5911‘ that on?! at his «Mn-m I. We!“ “flck'hunt‘. Ella. well developed tominini‘y' ï¬nd “10 good ‘ Hui Inner slightly neg] rula. the V e. n wit mt I‘ll