OCR Text |
Show 1 I THIN On NERVES BLOOD-W- EAK tho Other, but Dr. Follow To - Wil- taken. My future happiness depended os my regaining Mettas confidence, Viy liams Pink Pill Quickly Cur Beth. Tho steady ns of particular art of muscles tends to chronic fatigue, which produces faulty or difficult motion, paralysis trembling, cramps and Writers, telegraphers, tailors and seaui classes the must are stresses among threatened in this way with the luee their power to earn a living. The fol lowing iustauoe shows that nerve power may be recovered after it seeuis entirely lost, if the right means are taken. Mis, Bow- O. S. Btacksteu, of No. 684 North man street, Mansfield, Ohio, says : For years my hands would become so numb at times that 1 would drop lift, lain anything I attempted tocould not sew the became so bad that I scarcely auy longer, and at last I could do anything at all with my hands. At would night the pricking seusatioua some on worse than ever, and my liands and arms would pain so that I dreuded to go to bed. My family doctor gave me some nerve tablets. They helped me a little, but only fur a short time after 1 had taken them and if I happened to be without them for a day or two 1 would lie aa bad as ever or even worse. Finally I gut a box of Dr. Williams' Fink Pills and began to inks them. The result was surprising. By the time 1 hud taken the last pill in my first box I could see a gain. Thanks to Dr. Williams Fink Fills, lam now all right. I ran sleep undist urlied by lsiiu, and fut two years I have been as well as ever." Dr. Williams Fink Fills feed ilia uervea by making new, rich blood and in this way liave eured nervous diseases of every description from simple restd lessness to paralysis. They have the tortures of lieumlgiH, the weakness of nervous prostration, the disability and awful fsiiu of locomotor ataxia. They are sold by all druggists or direct by the Dr. Williams Medicine Oum pun y, ticluuiuciudy, K. Y. Iwu-islie- Truth Always Victorious. All truths are at lirst badly received by men, but they soon take root, and often the very ones that shrugged their shoulders and refused to listen are the ones who became the most nr. Johnson. fervent convsr return your moMjr If you dont Ilk Hmd. Handkerchiefs wrought and edged with gold were at one time worn In the hats of English gentlemen as favors from young women. Plao's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of aa a cough euro. J. W. O'liaisa, ts Third Ave. Minneapolis, Mian., Juu. 6. UNO. Academy originally meant a garden ir grove in a suburb of Athens where con- schools of philosophy met and versed. - ( Copyright, ISOS, by Dally Btory For a long time I held the dainty, envelope unopened In What train of memories my hand. this pink envelope and that subtle fragrancy of violet brought to my blase heart! How It recalled the hot years of my youth during which 1 had sown a rather profuse crop of wild oats. m At that time those scented notes, some pink, some blue, some lavender, had formed the bulk of my correspondence and had carried with them the delightful touch of intrigue which a wild youth would naturally crave. But why should I receive one I, a married man? I turned the letter over three or four times, then tore it open and read the following words written In a crumpted handwriting I had never seen before: Dear Old Tony Though It may be folly to make auch invitation to a married man, I risk It any way. I will be this evening at 10:30 In room No. 16 of the Bon Ton Cafe and will wait Tor you. One who loves you. violet-scente- d to-da- TEA What could this mean? Who was this mysterious Z who could be so bold as to make such rendezvous at the Bon Ton, one of the gayest restaurants of the city! In my younger days 1 wouldn't have faealtaied a second but now I had a wife, a weak, babyish, clinging creature, whose childish ways were somewhat tiresome, that's true, but whom I deeply loved. I crushed the note with an impatient gesture, then lit a match and watched it burn, a righteous frown upon my brow. Such follies were not for me. I would not go. By six o'clock I bad changed my mind and had persuaded myself that my very life depended upon my going to that rendezvous. For the first time since my marriage I was embarrassed before my wife during the dinner, which I barely tasted. I could only reply In monosyllables to her gay, childish prattle. When dinner was over, and aa the maid removed the dishes, she came and sat onT the arm of my chair and with her fingers tried to erase the Trown which my conflicting thoughts had caused to gather on my brow. Is my darling worried about something?" she asked, as her blonde head nestled on my shoulder. Yes. sweetheart, I replied, thankful that her eyes were lower and she could not see my face. I am mure than worried, for I am deeply disappointed. I ha'd planned to spend the evening with you, as usual, but a business appointment with man from out of town will call me back to the office this evening, and It may be midnight maybe later before I can get home. With her eyes still averted from mine, but with a little quiver of the body, like a child about to sob, she said In disappointed tones: You surely are not going out again Cant that horrid business A married man wait until should stay home with his wife. That last sentence sounded as a reproach to my already alarmed conscience, but I again forced it to silence by assuring myself that my sole - Is it tea that makes the Jap? What makes a Russian? Christs thorn, snposed to be the plant from which the crown of thorns was made, was brought into England about lfi'JG, where it has since grown Analysis of Medicines Open to All. There Is no public demand and there Is not the slightest public necessity for a law compelling the publication of the formula of proprietary medicines. says the Committee on Legislation of the Proprietary Every Health Cummissionei and every Pure Food Commissioner in the country, as well as every private physician or chemist, If he pleases, has the right to make an analysis of any proprietary medicine and to publish the result and to tell the public what he thinks, and there Is nothing in the world to prevent such action. But that Is not what the agitators for such legislation want. Their object Is to destroy the sale of such remedies entirely." Asso-ciaUo- After a wedding it was a Teutonic custom to drink diluted honey fen thirty days which was a moons age hence the familiar term honeymoon.' MACHINERY. The Machine which skims the oream from milk docs not lose a drop while the old skimming process wai crude and wasteful. Washing ma chines, which will relieve woman of the drudgery of cleaning clothes have not proved an encouraging success up to date, but when It comes to manufacturing exclusively by machinery without the touch of human hands, there is nothing more Interesting than the history of PlUabury'a Vitos the best breakfast food in the market today. The white heart of the wheat kernel ia cut out by ateel rolls, conveyed to i ter II leers, and then packed in air-tigpackages (this Is the whole story), all by polished steel appliances, no handling, no cooking, no coloring, no adulteration, just the white heart of the wheat berry aterll-lzed- , nothing added, nothing taken away. PUlabury's Vitos is therefore a healthful, substantial breakfast dish, actually the Meat of the Wheat." two-poun- Price 20c. A package will supply breakfast for live persons. See the economy. Ask your grocer to-da- a weeks Why should I receive one?" reason for going was to protect this lender, clinging girl from come brutal revelation of my past wayward life. "Yes. yes. I know," I hurried to St. Anthony is claimed to have reply, "but it Is for your sake, little lived to the ripe old age of 105 year? one, that 1 must go. on a daily diet cf twelve ounces ot "For my sake?" she questioned bread and water. with pouting lips, but still without 'ooklng np. IMItf'T FOKIIKT Yes, fur your sake, dearpst. is it l Ita.l H'.iin. only A large Bor. purkiuhS ora In. The lli'nd, lul not for you I work, to give you all these fine clothes in which your soul thou- delights, this home which Is the envy Two hundred and fifty-tw- o sand six hundred miles represents of other women, this tho greatest distance lo the muon She threw her arms around my from the earth's center - tii-'- Ir-w- rub. STRIKING Co-- neck, and sealing my lips with a kiss, g cried In a nervous, voice: Oh, I know that all women of our set envy me, I have everything I want but, oh Tony what I care for the most, what would kill me to lose or share with another. Is your love 1 could not live If I thought that you could even think of another. That old nuisance of a conscience again raised a reproaching voice and 1 was about to say that business could wait and that I would not return to the office, when a vision of note passed that pink, before my mind's eye and my good balf-sobbln- violet-scente- half-laughin- d I was astounded. Which do your family ? think most of, tea or ttefalUlor (PORK OTTO Z." TEA Your ifnKt UMU pulled back the hood, and then started backwlth a cry. resolution came to naught I must know the author of that letter. I bowed to my wife passionate protestations of love, I soothed her emotion, then getting into my overcoat, 1 made my escape. Instead of taking the car, I decided to walk down town. It was yet two hours to the appointed time and I wanted to collect my thoughts. 1 did not feel at my ease, I krew I was doing wrong, yet I felt powerless to resist. and I walked and bit discontentedly at my cigar. When I reached the business part of the city it was still too early so 1 amused myself by walking past the lighted stores and watching the crowd which passed and repassed in never ceasing flow. So keen was my preoccupation that I forgot myself In the maze of my thoughts and only returned to reality when my eyes encountered the white dial of a street clock, and I saw that this indicated twenty-eigh- t minutes past ten. I reached the Bon Ton cafe Just aa the clock struck the half nmir. As the flunkey showed me up to room 16 he winked In a knowing way and said: Deuced pretty woman, but so nervous and timid. Hasnt been a rounder long. More anxious than ever I followed my guide. Before No. 16 he paused, saying: She's in there, walling for you. Has supper been ordered?" I asked. No, sir. Shall we send up something. sauternc' and oysters, to- - In" stance, followed by "Yes. perhaps," I Interrupted, hastBut wait until I order. I will ily. ring if we want anything. He bowtd and left me. All this was so familiar and yet so strange, that my head was In a whirl. "Time to retreat." kept shying the still, small voice of duty, but I had gone too far, I must know all. I knocked. 1 A sweet voire called to enter. opened the door and stepped In. At the farther end of the room, a woman sat, huddled In a chair, a dainty white and pink opera wrap covered her shoulders, the hood of which concealed both her hair and face. I hesitated, my heart thumped disorderly against my bosom. At last, oppressed by the mysterious silerce, I walked resolutely toward the woman who had not stirred since I had entered. Well, I'm here." I said In tones 1 tried to make stem. "Will you kindly tell me the meaning of your note. Who Hre you. anyway?" With a quick movement I pulled back the hood, then started back with a cry, the mysterious woman was my wife! A peal of liygterieal laughter greeted my discomfiture, then Metta's voice said: "So this Is the business, this is the way you love your wife, this oh. my heart is broken ! And before 1 had time to recover from my astonish p ent, she had dropped hack on her chair, her bosom convulsed with wild, passionate sobbing. In an Instant m resolution was I half of her love depended on the blind truat she had placed in me. I was on my knees before her In a minute end was seylng In tones I tried to make end commanding: Item ! See here, Mette, don't be a fool. Do you think I would have come if I lad not recognized your handwriting. Foot little girl, yon did try to disguise K, but such things don't work with yes sharpened by love. I knew that fou had written the note but the Idea (truck me ee novel, this mysterious reeling In n down town cafe with my wife. So I let you come." fwn if sometime! Mettas childish, trusting mediocrity of Intellect has fatigued me, I blessed It that night (I nee thanks to It, she credited my words and saved me from n very kwkward position. Only I can aesure you that I have (worn off answering pink notes or violet scented ones. One of FACTS ABOUT SLEEP. the Most Mysterious of the Ways of Nature. : Shakespeare,'' said a sclent iat. "called sleep the ape of death. That la a striking name for a striking thing. us ex Bleep ia a wonderland. plot IL Is a mysterious force that we can exercise on ourselves In sleep alone. We are all We all, on certain nights, tell ourselves firmly that wc must not oversleep, that the next morning at 4. at C or G precisely we must wake up. Our sleeping selves respond to the hypnotic suggestion made the night before by our waking selves. That is mysterious and striking. Isnt it? Still more mysterious and striking, though. Is the fact of our keeping track of the time somehow in our slumber. IIow on earth do we do that? It Is impossible to do without sleep. Men have slept standing, even running. They have slept in battle, under fire, with guns roaring on all Ides. They have slept In unendurable and deqdly pain. There la no torture equal to that which the deprivation of sleep emails. The Chinese are the rraelesl folks on earth, and the most ingenious of torturers. Well, tho Chinese place the deprivation of sleep at the head or their torture list. a state of rest. The heart, Sleep rcita In sleep. The heart ia a rhythmic rawcle, not one that never reposes, bm one that works at short shifts, like a puddler. a moment on, a moment off. Well, when we sleep, the beart'a shifts of rest are redoubled. It worka then, one on, two off, getting, indeed, pretty nearly as much repuse as we da The brain in sleep becomes pale anK alnka below the level of the skull. ye are awake the brain la high end full and ruddy. ,No: only the brain and heart, hut even the ear glands rest in sleep. That Is why when we awake we always rub our eyes. The rubbing la an jnsllnrtive action that stimulates the stagnant, tear glands and muses them to moisten properly our eyes all dried from their inaction. Pt Wanted to Be in Time. to look at some household goods, said the tall brunette aa she entered the lilg furniture store. to be married You see, I expert 1 would llko soon. smiled the polite "Ah, Indeed. clerk, Just step this way. We have special Inducements for young couples just starting In housekeeping. When Is the glad event to come off?" "Well cr the day hasn't been set as yet." Oh, I see; the lucky young man " has just proposed and be hasnt proposed yet, No, but Ah, he Is going la propose. long has he been calling? How Well, he hasn't started calling yet, " "What la the young man's name?" "Really, 1 don't know at present, but mamma Rays she thinks some nice young mnn will start calling soon, so I wanted to be in time." but Mutlnga at Night. late, so lute We le.irn the way to live; Lite, so Lite We find w lint life mnv give; We spend our years with lavish hand . Their wnitli wc do not Till, late. Int, ao late. late, late, Wa tarn ao Into wimt living means; tats, late, - an late We prim- tlir g srunes; Wa fling away the coin of youth And do not barn to prise the truth. so late. Till, late, late, dew-hun- late, late, so late We learn how aweet ia love; late, late, so late We find 't is from above; We loiter in forbidden ways And do not I. urn tn hoard our days. TUI, late, late, so late. ao late, late, late We learn the gold from dross; late. late, so lute We learn to kiss the Wa prise our youlh when It takes flight, W do not rnad life's Ixuik alight. Till, lute, lute, so Into. - ( UiroiiMe. ("hii-ug- Plenty of Bait Dear me." iMiiiicd I lie young wife, who was wedded a disciple of Izaak Walton. don't see why a man cant 1 fishing without rarrjing a horrid hottle. "My hiiriliiind never carries a but I'e," confided the matron next door. "How nice of him." Hut "No. he curries a demijohn. . ri:y grandfather was a great fisher-trancarried cither a botH' r tle or a demijohn. "Noble man. Hr must have been splendid." carried a keg." Yc. be ;i go VANITY WENT WITH GREATNESS. Peculiarities I i i 7 FIRST PRIZES of Famous Men In Self Adornment War awarded ad lh Utah Stat Fair to Hewlett Bros. Co. for th superior quality tn telling of the various means of adopted by certain critic says that Alexander authors, Dumas, the elder, delighted to appear In the uniform of the national guard of France, with medals pinned to hie breast, though It ia doubtful whether hie motive was anything deeper then vain, childish delight In gauds. He was the sort of man," one of his enemies once remarked, "who was capable of riding behind hie own carriage in order to prove that he kept a negro In hie service." A certain literary person once appeared in the atalla of Iamdun theater wearing a Jeweled brooch In hie long hair; but ho was anticipated In this respect by Tbeophlle Gautier, whose waietcoat was always tho moat conspicuous object In any theater which he entered, and even by Disraeli, with his rings outside hie gloves, and hie green trousers. It is said that M. Paul Ilourgel also wore green trousers when he was a denizen of the laitln quarter; but that was In the days of poverty and early struggles, and perhapse be had no others. many-colore- and ascallenca ol W THREE CROWN BAKING POWDER d EXTRACTS AND SPICES Your Grocer la authorized to ral und th money If you dont Ilk Th bast of th good ones." W y Y W Nice and Nasty. Clarence, aged 4, had Just taken a bite of a very large but unusually sour he exclaimed. apple. "Gracious!" "What an awful ulce bad apple that la." An Honeet Opinion. Mineral, Idaho, Oct. 16th. (Special.) That a sure cure has been discovered for those gristle pains that make ao many lives miserable la the Farmers and Merchants firm opinion of Mr. D. 8. Colson, e resident of this place, and will be Interested lu announcement of be does not hesitate to say that euro "Acetylene Jones In this paper la Dodd's Kidney rills. The reason Black and white beans were used Mr. Colson la so Ann In hia opinion in tba la that he had thoso terrible pains and aa ballots by. our ancestors Is cured. Speaklug of tho matter bo election of magistrates by tba people. well-know- n Bays: Ask Your Dealer for Adens Foot-- its A powder. treats the feet. Cures Swollen, Bure, Hot, Callous, Aching. (Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Kails. At ail Drnggiala and Bluie stores, 35 cents. Accept no substitute. Bainple mailed FI IKK. Address. Allan U. Oluiatod, Lultoy, N. Y. E am only too harpy say Dodd's Kidney rills have done me lota of good. I had awful pains In my hip eo I could hardly walk. Dodd'a Kidney Pills stopped It entirely. 1 think they are a grand medicine. All Sciatic and Rheumatic pains are caused by Uric Acid in the blond. Dodd's Kidney Pills make healthy kidneys and healthy kidneys strain all the Uric Arid out of tho blood. With the cause removed there can be no Rheumatism or Sristira. I A group of (he Madonna bolding the dead Christ iixm her knees, in 8L Peter's church at Rome, la said to be the only piece of sculpture which bears Michael Angelos signature. W. L. Douglas In Scotland the subject of a practithe 1st of April Is called a gowk, while In France he la W. L. Douglas termed "polsson dAvril, or April cannot b 3i?&3?SHOESEr. f 4.00 Cllt Edge Lin cal joke on equalled at any prlc. flab. "Acetylene Jones. hie advertisement in this paper for free bouklet and write him Be to-da- y SHOCK FOR GREAT CHURCHMAN. Bichop Unaccustomed to Such Famll. lar Mode of Address. The county of Lunenburg, la Nova Beotia, waa settled by Germane, and the children of these sstllera are still Germaq, says an eastern writer. At one of the little hotels in the town of the same name a party of drummers were waiting for the hoot. They were well primed, and ready for any lark, when In strolled a well known character, Neil Hyson, also a little sprung." In the parlor stood a solitary Individual dressed In tho garb of a minister. Nell spied this man, and asked the leader of the Jokers If he thought tho stranger would drink with him. "Sure, said the leader, but he is the bishop of Nova Scotia, and yon must call him 'my lord.' Hyson marched up to the stranger, and giving him a familiar slap on the hack, shouted: "Mine Gott, bishop, you drinks mitt me! What the fiery bishop said (he was none other than Bishop Courtney, former preacher at SL Paul's, Boston) I did not learn. iMaHWmd JelyLUm. W. L. DOUGLAS MAKES A D MFILA ' MORE MEM'S $3.50 SHOES 1HAB AMY OIHER MAMUfAOTURER. cm nnn reward t mr1 $IUUUU diiprere thli daiaoMt W. L. Dnugla $.1.50 shoes have b y tholr a erllrnl alyleT rosy filling, and eurcrlar wearing achieved Ithe largeat rale of any SJ.M qualitln, has In tho world. Thry arc luet os good oo IIimo that coot you SS.00 to $7.00 loo only dillrrcfice to the pries. It I could toko you Into my factory ot Brockton, Mm., tho largeat la tho world under ana roof making men'o fine ehaeo, and allow you tho cart with which every pair of Douglas thors I made, you would realize why W. L Itourlae SJ.B0 chore ore tho beet ahoeo produced In the world. II I could ohow you the dlfierence between the Ohoee made In my factory and Uioon of other makes, you would undrretond why Douglas $.1.50 eh ore coil more to moke, why they bold their ehepe. lit better, wear laager, and ore ol greater Intrlnelc value thou any other $J.S0 ohao on tho market today. W. L. Pnergdno Wroiii Mode far Mmm. $Y.$0, $2.00. Bmjm Sahmml $ Drmmm Shmmm.S2.BO, $2, $1.1$, $t. MB CAUTION- - Inelet upnn keying W.L.Doug-laelioM. Take no nibetltute. None genuine without hit name nod price etnmped on bottom. WANTKIX A ehoe dealer In army town where W. L. Ikiuglno fUioee are not told. Pull lino al templet eelit free far Inepectkm upon roqueeL fait Color E gwete vied; tMg mill etc near Inuif Write for Illnetreted raining of Pell Stylet. XV. L DOl'tll.AM. Ilnirkton, Mate. tin Mon Brothers High Sense of Duty. Alfred Towns, of 8llverton, Ore, returned the other day from a trip into the hills and told his brother Robert that he had shot two deer. Robert Is a game warden and at once ar rested Alfred for shooting without a license, and Alfred served five days In -- COFFEE NEURALGIA. PommelSlicker Leaves When You Quit and Use A lady who unconsciously cold, e wind cc- when windy, n rein coat when k reined, and far n cover at night if we gat to bed, and I will toy that I have gotten morn comfort out of your elickrr than aqyotheg COO article that I ever owned." 11 M mm in4 44mm ( th writar ot (Ml UMHrM laiur Mfljr ba htd om ppilrUjoa.) Wet Weather Cennente far Riding, Walking, Working or B porting. HIGHEST AWARD WORLD'S FAIR, 1904. Poe-tu- drifted jito nervous prostration brought on by cofiee, says: I have been a coffee drinker all my life, and used It regularly, I fallowed tho Trait trail horn Texeo kvtlh s Fish Brand mbJTbkand On the Jail. three times a day. "A year or two ago I became subject to nervous neuralgia, attacks of nervous headache and grnernl nervous prostration which not only Incapacitated me for doing my housework, but frequently made It necessary for me to remain In a dark room for two or three days at a time. "I employed several good doctors, one after the other, but none of them was able to give me permanent relief. Eight months ago a friend suggested that perhaps coffee was the ensue of my troubles and that I try Iostum Food Coffee and give up the old kind. I am glad I took her advice, for my health has been entirely re-- 1 stored. I have no more neuralgia, nor have I had one solitary headache in all these eight months. No more of my days are wasted In solitary confinement In s dark room. I do all my own work wilh ease. The flesh that I lost during the years of my nervous her, come hack to me prostration during these months, and I am once more a happy, healthy woman, i enclose a list of names of friends who can vouch for the truth of the statement." Name given by lostum Cu, Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Ten days' triat leaving off coffee and using Post urn Is sufficient All grocers. A. J. TOWER CO. boros, v.s.A. 2!jrai TOWER CANADIAN C&i Unhid FOR WOMEN : troubled with Ills peculiar to their ecx, sitd ee a douche ia survclout eeeetul. Tkoroagklycleiatti, killzdiKAMgermi. stop diechargei, Mala lnllamntation sad local .w lonuiio It In Putina water, end it powder farm to be diuolned in pore heal.ng, germicidal lir more denning, ad economical than liquid entimilKi for ell TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES Par die it drugiztt, Ml ccnti bus. Trial Bos and Book ol Inotructloao Frwa, fag n. Paxton Company Booton, Man. PATENTS1PR0FIT MUST FULLY PROTECT AN INVENTION. MASON, FENWICK A LAWRENCE, Patent Lawyers, Washington, D. C Entabllshod 1861. nur Ctrd Anntrerwjr frea Booklet, itnr Scad Ink lllaatmtliMie of Moremmt,. Itofnr nrem HrwUirrat and thouund of ml-ln- d rllcalA CouiuiunicoiluBe confldonlleL Write ue today. lr When Answering Advertisement Kindly Mention This Paper. |