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Show 34 GAINED POUNDS Parsiatant Anaemia Cured by Or. Williams Pink Pills After Other Remedies Had Failad. When I began taking Dr. Williams Pink Pills, says Mrs. Nathaniel Field, of St. Albans, Somerset county, Maine, I was the palest, most bloodless person yon could imagine. My tongue and gums were colorless and my fingers and ears were like wax. I had two doctors and they pronounced my'trouble anmmia. I had spells of vomiting, could not eat, in fact, did not dare to, I had such distress after eating. My stomach was filled with gas which caused me awful agony. The backache I suffered was at times almost unbearable and the least exertion made my heart beat so fast that I could hardly breathe. But the worst of all was the splitting neuralgia headache which never left me for seven weeks. About this time I had had several numb spells. My limbs would be cold and without any feeling and the most deathly sensations would come over uie. Nothing had helped me until I began taking Dr. Williams Pink Pills, in fact, I had grown worse every day. After I had taken the pills a short tune I could see that they were benefiting me and one morning I awoke entirely free from pam. The distress After eating disappeared and in three weeks I could eat anything I wanted and suffer no inconvenience. I also slept soundly. I have taken several boxes of the pills and have gained in weight from 120 to 154 pounds and am perfectly well now. Dr. Williams Piiik Pills cure anaemia because they actually make new blood. For rheumatism, indigestion, nervous headaches and many forms of weakness they are recommended even if ordinary medicines have failed. They are sold by all druggists, or will be sent postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per box, six boxes for f2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. FRISCOS CROP OF GENIUS. Second Only to New York In Vigor and Freshness of Ite Literature. A Question of Understanding , By Grace G. Bostwick "It Isnt as though she had cared," Atherton said, in a tired voice, turning the letters and telegrams over listlessly. "It isn't as though she had cared," he repeated, dully, opening and closing the small drawers, one by one. He was searching for a photograph that she had kept on her desk a likeness taken In her early girlhood, long before he had met her. As he felt clumsily- about among the papers a letter fell out. He started to replace it, but caught sight of his own name in the familiar writing and paused. He opened it with trembling fingers. "I did the best I could," he said, I couldnt help slowly to himself not caring I thought I could at first I thought It would come with time. God! how hard It has been, how bitter hard'-- ' He passed his thin, nervous hand wearily across his colorless face. At least. she never knew, never suspected, nor cared, either way," he said, hltterly. She was a indifferent as as I was. "I wonder If she knows now, he breathed I wonder If she knows and understands. She never seemed to understand anything. I used to wonder how anyone could feel so little and live. I tried once to tell her how I 'felt and she laughed. Said I needed something to tone me up. Perhaps she was right. Perhaps I am a morbid chap. "If she had cared," he began again, "I would have tried to be different. I should have learned to get hold of her interest In some way. but that dead calm of hers! I used to think it would drive me crazy. She- was the right sort, too or semed to be. With her possibilities she might have developed Into a wonderful woman under the right conditions. She is wonderful she was, he corrected himself, shuddering at the correction. "1 admired her more than any other woman I ever met. Poor Helen! he sighed as he pored over the letter In the falling light He sat up, startled. Hurried to the window, reading eagerly with a look of Intense interest on his rather apathetic face a look such as Helen Atherton had never roused in all her sadly inconsequent life with him. "Dear," he read, I couldn't hope ever to make you understand how I love you. You have just left me cold, unloving, careless, as you always are and I (poor foolish, loving thing) put my starved arms about your chair and laid my lips passionately against the spot where your dear head has lain. I know it is utterly unreciprocated, that I shall never be more to you than I am now, and though it breaks my heart with its desolation, Us litter despair, yet I bow to it Dearest, no man was ever loved more deeply, more tenderly, than you are. O, the sadness, the heartbreak of it all! You thought at first you cared. If -you had been sure, then ah, If you had only known then and told me. Now It is too late. I am wrapped in a never-endinregret that will be my portion to the end of time. I can't ease the hurt of loving unloved. I want you to know if you are left and you will be that I have always cared. I used to hope for the day when I should se your eyes flood with I have gladness at my coming. learned to welcome even the weariness of spirit they express If only I may feel you near me. "Dear, I know how It Is with you. I know that the bonds have become so Irksome that they have worn Into youi very soul. I see the distaste, the dislike almost loathing that possesses you at times. 1 see It all, yet I am powerless to release you. I can only hide It all securely away under the slow smile, the smile that you call my every-daface. If you had cared, John, we should have keen very happy. I love your work, your interests, but I have not dared voice it for fear O that look! that cruelly indifferent, hard, careless look! It burns into me as I write and I writhe under the torture of it He sat with his head on his arms for hours. Once he cried out in My God, If I had knovfn! agony: If I h(fckrWwn! At IdSt he climbed The lieavy,"ffark stairway to the room above to face his dead. He turned back the- - white coverlid With hands' "Strangely steady after his long vigil. Her face was oddly girlish as It was in the little photo. He felt a vast tenderness welling up within him as he looked. A rush of feeling that flooded him with longing, longing for her smile, for her clear-eyelook, for the spirit of her, brave and Indomitable as it had ever been. At last he He could see the knew the truth. soul back of the silence back of her apathetic gentleness of demeanor that had shamed his churlish outbreaks of Oh, to tell her! to let irritability. her know how he admired her l, her wonderful soldier heart that could force her to smile calmly, though her life's blood was ' oozing away, drop by drop. Ob, to tell her that he might have cared: that she was his hearts own after all, though be had not known It he had not known her. If 1 could tell her just once and see her smile as she used to smile" He buried his face in the before. clothek at her side at die recollection. He remembered suddenly that .she ! a horror qf had been possessed - - New York is of course the great American market for literary wares, says E. S. Martin in Appleton's Magazine. There is also a measure of hospitality shown to writers and their products In Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and Indianapolis. But San Francisco for thirty years past has beaten all four of these subsidiary literary centers In the freshness and vigor of its inspirations. It has had an ocean of its own to stimulate its imagination, a new country behind and about it and an adventurous and virile population that has liked to live its own life in its own way and dream and live its own romances. It has had money, too. It has sent oat its envoys to view the world (and a good many of them have stayed away), and because it has been one of the world's great starting places and landing places it has viewed habitually from its own doorstep pretty much every kind of human creature that has been worth looking at. Altogether, Saa Francisco has been Ula no other fcity of our republic. Fear for Cologns Cathedral. Serious damage to the magnificent central portal of Cologne cathedral Is feared. Several large pieces of carved stone have fallen and numerous other portions show signs of loosenThe cathedral, begun in 1248, ing. was not completed until 1880. It is generally regarded as the finest piece of Gothic architecture in the world. g y V. L. DOUCLAS Shoes 3.50 &3.00 THI BEST IN ILDough $4 WORLD Gilt Edgs Itna miuwlbseqinlledatanjpr TaSkoe W. L, Douglas' Job-- . Mnf Hoqm Ii tb moot eomitiete In tht country Send or Catalog d I POSEY KS YBOD AT Ali. PZICUL Vi Sboas. SB to Sl.sa I to anas, wown'i Soo fi-elam ft COlidrea'a SboM, SS-S- to UOO. SHOE iho. Try w. L. Doaglat Worn"'.flt CUMnol aboes; (or ttjto, thy mm! othor mokes. f self-contro- iri could factories at take you Into my largo Brockton, Mass. .and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoe are made, you would thau understand fit better, why they hold their shape, wear loager, and are of greater value than any other make. . Wlom yoa Hva. yoo US oMakl W. PmrlM l hoc. Hto mm and pries kstasiH M na bottom, which protacti yoo afataa blb ' prlcaa ua4 fcitortor ihoofc To Aak your diolorfcv W.L. Douglaa (lima lit,. jnS ImM mom having them. turn mitt not moor Iran, Color Crrlrtr Writ tar OhMtrataS Catalog of Fall Styles. W. L. WkSILAS, Da. 12, BrecklM, Mom. .! DEFIANCE CoTdWtitrSizrch lakes laundry work a pleasure, re os. peg. res H burial a 1th life still existant started and looked again, piercingly, Into her still face, it was not mas as the faces he had seen U death. A sudden hope clutched at his heart back! come "Helen," he cried, You are mine, child; I have alwayi I didn't know. loved you always. HU O child, open your eyse to me! face went gray with the effort of bli life. He was straining, strlvlni against death, the conqueror himself. He prayed by all he held sacred. By his mother's memory. By bis belief in love, by the prayers of the long-gondead, and bolding her two cold hands in his own, be chafed and warmed them unweariedly, repeatedly. calling to her, pleading with her, begging her to come back. The passionate warmth of his appeal softened the cold stillness of her fingers. They seemed to him to be growing pliant, human. He put a terrible effort .into his . plea, shaking from head to foot with the strangest passion mortal ever experienced. He would win her back from death. He would see her eyes unclose or be would die In the effort The perspiration was pouring off his brow where the veins were cruelly knotted. His eyes burned like those of some wild animal seen in the darkness at dead of night. Helen, he called for the last time, "Helen child, it is I open your eyes to me! It was the Impassioned appeal of soul to soul. Than slowly, wearily, unwillingly, as of some child waking from a sleep of deep exhaustion, the cold, white lids lifted and the familiar eyes looked into his own, though faintly as from a long distance. The shadow of a smile parted the gray lips the lips of death. Overcome by the wonder of the miracle, he staggered baqk, but compelled himself, by a supreme effort of will, to hold consciousness a moment longer. You are going to live! he cried, You are going to live for loudly. me! He felt her cold, cold face against his own hot cheek. He heard her sigh a long sigh of rapture that was almost a sob then blackness. ble-llk- e e a a a a In the little study below the sickroom the room of resurrection a All Chemically Pure. The mistaken Idea of a few years 'go, about Alum in Baking Powders being injurious, no longer prevails. or) scarcely exists. It is a well established fact by chemical anal) sis that Cream of Tartar being less volatile than Alum, when exposed to heat. Is not entirely vaporized as Is the case with Alum, but leaves a residue In the brreid, which Is Injurious., Alum, on the contrary. Is entirely evaporated while performing Its function during process of baking, leaving no atom of injurious reslduous substance. The Woids "Chemically Pure erroneously Used to designate Cream of Tartar from Alum baking powder Is a misnomer. Baking Powder made of pure Alum Is as chemically pure as made from pure cream of tartar. These words mean nothing more nor less than pure chemicals, and In no way can they Imply that one baking pow-dIs Alum and another Cream of Tartar. Alum has been declared to be wholesome, an established fact. Ev-- r large water system in the cities long the Missouri river use Alum In Urge quantities to purify the water before pumping it Into their water mains for consumption. Creafli of Tartar iuk.ng powder Is perhaps good Alum Dough for any one. baking Powder Is better, and very much Cheaper " "That so?" Yes. They shot off a gun unexpect- dly, )elled 'hire!' and told her a dis- - tant lowder blast was an earthquake. Still she was unmoved Then they liber ated a mouse "I'll wager a hank roll against a itogie that the mouse made her nerv- I ous" Not at all She only stepped on that wouldn't rth exploded." Oh, Stepped j Such a woman as lose her nerve- - if the es One of the detectives up and whispered In her ear that her hair had been mussed up for two hours, and then she collapsed. OrrertTHE BEST PART OfllfE Help fbr Woman Passing O hangs of Life Through Providence has allotted us each at least seventy years in which to fulfill our mission in life, and it is generally our own fault if we die prematurely. 'iSHmi i0Q? Nervous exhaustion invites disease. This statement is the positive truth. When everything .becomes a burden and-yocannot walk a few blocks without excessive fatigue, and you break out into perspiration easily, and your face flushes, and you grow excited and shaky at the least provocation, and you cannot bear to be crossed in anything, you are In danger; vonr nerve have given out; jrou need building up at once ! To build up womans nervous system and during the period of change of life we know of no better medicine than Lydia E. Iinkham's Vegetable Compound. Here is an illustration. Mrs. Mary L. Koehne, 371 Garfield Avenue, Chicago, 111., writes: I have uwd I.ydia K. Ftnkham'sVegetable Compound for yean in my family and it never disappoints; so when I felt that I was til? u Crucial Test. "Yes the prisoner was a woman of tttraoi dinary nerve They tried In Wen known way to make her narv-ou- s nd laughed Gnat Jupiter! A HEALTHY OLD AGE j nearing the change of life I commenced treatment with it. 1 took in all atout six bottles and It did me a great deal of goo-1- , it stooped my dizzy spells, pains in my back and tbs headaches with which I had suffered for months befors taking the Compound. I feel that if it had not been for this great tnediclns for women that I should not have been alive Boday. It is s;lendid for women, old or young, and will surely cure all female disorders. of Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-la- For Babys Skin & Scalp Because of Its Delicate Medicinal, Emollient, Sanative, and' Antiseptic Properties combined with the purest of Cleansing Ingredients and most refreshing of Flower Odors. BaH Brew" aaaM. (hlhare Base. a.OBS. me. (la Bare at MS reaal, InCMwla E. of Pinkhem, Mass., . A atafla a at Lydia atal Ita. Lynn. pm ruia, atiaa aana auto your looking bright vites all aick and ailing women to writs ue the following mixture for all paint-ia her for advice. Her great experience Oar- e- Sala ire. fc ar-SHaa ta fnam, VaHfr. aaS WaathSa parts: Sperm oil, one-hapint; ,is at their service, free of east. Saai, Uab, aa UaaS. aflataaa aa4 CIMna. ire, Common vinegar, one-hal- t pint; oil bergamot, one dram. Mix and rub with clean cloth. When you buy For all brass work use tripoll, one and one-hal- f WET pounds; any DIR WEATHER lubricating oil, eight ounces; gasoline, CLOTH1NO Ihree quarts. This is one of the best treat leaably tbs bast ahacp dip os tbs rest want Cleaners for all polished brass. It care tbs wont core of SCAB with, you out lajurlaf tba wool. lastaatly sola Ws is vaster com plot If you contemplate buying a medium at aay temperature. Km pofeoaous aafs. If protection piced automobile and want to be cer-U- n year dealer bull it ia Bock, writs tbs And long OARBOLIO BOAR CO., BKW YORK CITY! of securing a car suitable for tour-bservice. on country roads, up bill as well as These and mom? E. EUSTOI, acmVmi"?.nd down hill, you win make no other good points mistake are combined In peel sms (trlcet: Host surer. Leak, III UoM, SO- h buying either a Buieck, Maxwell, Ztiwt or Copaar.lt. Oranlda taata. Sold.blni 5,1601 aaealosaa ana fall TOWERS Kltchell, Reo,. Knox, Franklin or oovnl sod Umpire or ailln,tnj. fio-vlll- s, FISH BSANO Colo kel arenas. CareQaaiohattosaTbaa Queen. These range In price from OILED CLOTHING )7S0 to 92,000. Toy cairt afford 60 Bus. Winter Wheat Per Acre to bqy any other sf5 To keep d lf BUCHANS SILVER FLEECE . few hours later Atherton again fumbled about his wifes desk for the little photo. Again his awkward hands tumbled the contents of the drawers in reckless confusion, but at last they closed on the treasured picture: Tears of joy, the great tears that rise out of the deepest feeling of a strong maris heart, fell thickly, unrestrained' face of the vronji. ly, on the chlid-lik- e , , - False A larno Ctovorea lMObMlojpie of Wlitfcrr WhM6, Kjr, an who had' been hii wife for Surf From the valley there came cloud Timothy. ftrea, tali, Treo.i tor fail pfaMmaf mjtlAlliSWNbtw.LLaBrei.abH c HU aw long, miserable years. if dust and a distant rumble. The V9wt CaaaBiasi ca yma (Copyright, 1906, by Dally Story Pub. Ca.) Ban of the stone age rushed up the Vafar Thoagmi aountain and perched himself on the Ml TfftEfrt1 VMttthtfllR TENDERFOOT KNEW THE ROPES. Ughest peak. ms rear i iu BALEBMKN fTAMTKD, Solid rabfrr support ofMifc exclaimed the fugitive, .j "Shucks! frMdvttlmiitMd tawtdc Mr, 4 barrr tie Is His Suspicion of Cowboy's Marksman- is be slipped down to the valley again. ind orary year Wd vast Hr, oodthovtmfrfaty erperimeetf 66fh ofMTr, c(ivwrs. aioawaa la this Inealltr wkfc iaffieidtit bomt M M. & It HOOKE, 1411 Great Areaire, bit V ER, COLO. It is only a poor dinosaur roaming Mttli fci ship Was Verified. ftr moaih supply of oar Aim buy oauljdi From the blitfttr Ca w ' AFrit re II allow WlrdGwm Ibout for bis breakfast. Ll4ta. auiivT ooddod I a arorj tur and mftka BEST POTTVABM tar 91. ila taotBoaad fullf dompivtof wtb iataraBoarvtvd. Tf Rodey, of New Mexico, Boise I thought it must be an autoTrial tinrttent only cold todtalara. Ad eh will fWd diltttMva sataa rifbited drsMsiuars U BoUViMM Pihit Ciiu taarantod tells a story illustrative of the trite mobile. ta rataatmamat If aoodt not otd ta mto&d lUdtttrdttirsdt, Ca. IwtOy. data, fartbdrptntf'niaraoriroqa. T0 StAadardAnd the man went back to his saying that circumstances alter cases. Cd-- M UlUoa VtidOf of hewing an Some of the citizens of a certain peaceful occupation DEFI1NCE STARCH Baost linens, yy. n. U Salt Cake southwestern town, which was still in ipartmrnt house out of a solid cliff. City, No.M, 1904. the class of frontier settlements, de vised a new method of Inducing "tenderfoot visitors to furnish entertainment for the crowd. When the stranger arrived In town and began the making of acquaintances by conventional methods the ringleaders would present to him one of the natives, who was described as a marvelously accurate shot. To satisfy the curiosity and Interest invariably manifested by the stranger the marksman would consent to give an exhibition of bis skill after considerable urging on the part of his friends. - Rcislng his the celebrity would address the stranDo you see that man smoking ger: a cigar about two blocks down the street there? I'll hit the cigar without making the man bat an eye." OBaarereacre and Bang! went the back came the cry up the street: i See here, Bill, you have got to '"V'A atop this thing. Thats the fourth If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the V, cigar you have spoiled for me in so merit to a the i,im i c jreraa laaaM.ma. winning placer, exceptional remedy game I dont like it. Gfet somebody else to ireaa ensures the commerdation cf the well informed, AndTs rej practice on." v ' '' vrwLVW" Sonable amount of outdoor life Slid recreation Is conducive to The astonished stranger could al' to a laxative so and does ones tend be health an such the strength, ways perfect depended on after exhibition "tolpet up the marksman improvement in cases of constipation, biliousness, headaches, and his friends. One day there ap etc. It is ail important, however, in- selecting a laxative, to r 4j-,- , ...J peared a visitor less credulous than one of known quality and excellence, like the ever choose ' . f his predecessors. After the usual exof Figs, manufactured by the California Fig pleasant Syrup hibition this stranger appeared scornSyrup Co., a laxative which sweetens and cleanses the system .'X ful of the feat. effectually, when a laxative is needed, without any unpleasant That's nothing," he declared. That after effects, as it acts naturally and gently on the internal does not prove you can shoot I'll organs, simply assisting nature when nature needs assistance, wager 1100 you cant hit a barn door n I without griping, irritating or debilitating the internal organs in at 100 yards. of or an contains The marksman took him up, and, as it objectionable injurious nothing any way, followed by the crowd, retired with nature. As the plants which are combined with the figs ifi him to the back of the store for the the manufacture of Syrup of Figs are known to physicians to ,vV i? test. A shot was beard, and shortly act most beneficially upon the system, the remedy has met afterward the alleged marksman came r with their general approval as a family laxative, a fact well back looking very glum. worth considering in making purchases. What's the matter, BUI? asked It is because cf the fact that the man whose duties behind the ' is a remedy of known quality and excellence, and approved by chunter had kept him from enjoying well so use millions of a , by many the tenderfoots discomfiture. physicians that has led to its informed people, who would hot use any remedy of uncertain Matter!" growled Bill. "Matter Every family should have a enough. That greenhorn set the door quality or inferior reputation. up edgewise! bottle of the genuine on hand at all times, to use when a g noma Wtr.S1 Ct 75 & r TheWinn ing Stroke to-da- i ' . - N ' re SYRUP OP PIGS V.V'V-lwvy,- ' Looked That Way. Pardon me, but is the milk feeling bad this morning?" asked the lady of the milkman. "No, mum. Why do you ask? "I noticed it was quite blue. Milwaukee Sentinel. laxative remedy is required. Please to remember that the genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale in bottles of one size only, by all reputable druggists, and that full name of the company California Fig Syrup Co., is plainly printed on the front of e very package. Regular price, 50c per bottle- - I Omt (ALF9RNIA FlG SYRUP iniWi' 5n Frwttireitj. M 7, re i . -- i .'L assaramiKM |