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Show SICK FOR TEN YEARS. Constant Backache, Dropsy and vers Bladder Trouble. So-- 1 Fred W. Harris, of Chestnut St, Jef For over ten ferson, Ohio, says: years I suffered from kidney disease. The third year my feet would and hands swell and remain I puffed up for days at I seemed a time. to have a constant barkache. Finally I got so bad that I was laid up In bed with several doctors in attendance. I thought surely I would die. I changed medicine and began using Doan's Kidney Pills when I was still In bed. The relief I found was so great that kept on until 1 had taken about ten boxes. The kidney Hocre'lona became natural and after years of misery T was cured. 1 have Increased la weight, and show po symptoms of my former trouble." Sold by all dealers. CO cents a boa. , T Foster-Mllbur- N. Y. Co., Duffalo, n LEFT THE BABY BEHIND, The Nurse Had the Carriage, But the Baby" Waa Missing. Mrs. Maud Miller Hippie, whose advocacy of a course In motherhood for young matrons has already begun to bear good fruit, waa talking of the duties of young mothers. And no young mother," she said, no matter how .many her millions nor how high her station, should trust her little one entirely to a nurse's care. A nurse may be the most Intelligent, meet conscientious; but to rear ft baby properly Is a difficult task, and only one person Is sufficiently Inter ested In this task to perform It well. That person Is the baby's mother." Mrs. Hippie smiled. A young mother, she said, waa walking with her husband on the Atlantic City hoard walk. Suddenly . ahe gave a little cry of pleasure. Oh, she said, 'there la nurse nurse wheeling baby. And ahe ran lightly to the luxurious coach of leather, with Its d carriage and Its rubber-tire- d wheels, and ahe pushed back the parasol that shaded the occupant from the un. Then ahe gave a great atari. where's 'Why, nurse, she cried, awan-ahape- Mistress Rosemary Allyn E. By MILLICENT Copyrliibt, IfUi, by MANN (XX LUUAS-LINUOL- plague-stricke- n CHAPTER XX Continued. " Cease at once, 1 commanded. Would you add Insult to injury? What Is your love to me?' Have a care, Rosemary,' he cried. Do not drive a man to extremes. Quentin Waters has bewitched you with hls dark foreign face and he had grace, I will acknowledge; but am I altogether without charm T 'Leave, Oh, leave me, I begged. T am wearied with you all. I will molest you no more, if you will but promise to think of me, he pleaded. 'Oh, Rosemary, listen to my love.' He stretched out hls arms to draw me to hls breast. T will intercede with Lord Felton; yon shall not leave town If you care to stay only love me a little.' You listened,' I cried; I am finding out some of the characteristics of I hate you and my cousin U Quentin Waters Is dead, I shall be hls bride in heaven. 'So you said before he retorted. I saw that he waa holding hls temper in check. You liked me well enough before this upstart came to town you shall Ilka nay, more than like me again when time shall have healed the wound. Adieu, my cox; I hope you will find your sojourn In France to your taste. Fairly well, If do not see the face of my Cousin Raoul Dwight,' I returned. 'That you will have to put up with to some extent,' he observed, since Lord Felton has asked mtf to attend him. I had no words to say to this, and 1 motioned him from my presence. T have almost finished, at this point the lady said, and her voice broke like a harp that had but one string. Here Is the locket and the Tell Mister paper la inside of It Waters, if you find him alive, what I have told yon, alnce It Is Impossible for me to meet him. If dead, place it upon his breast and whisper to him that it has lain upon my heart all. the time.' She had ended and there were to-p'g- i swear it. Imprison me, bnt let one so sweet go. So time dragged on until at last I regained consciousness, only to repea' when asleep from sheer weakness, She Is innoent innocent. How wearying it was to him, poor Oil! those long hours In which raved, for he blamed himself greatly that he had not waited until I waa stronger before be had told me shout the locket or given It to me, and also restrained himself when speaking of Lady Felton. I forgave him that. Indeed I never referred to it, hls humility waa so sincere. I knew him well enough to know that he meant nothing, hls hark was ever worse than hls bite, -- 'tness what he did for pretty Alice Lynson and her daft mate. He sent them on to Bristol escorted by Torralne and Pat, when he He also had need of them both. paid their passage In a vesael soon to sail for the States, and heartened their trip with a well-fillepurse. The house on Bow Street Is closed, you say, Gil? I asked, and also Lady Feltons. You are sure the servants left In charge know nothing of their whereabouts? As sure as I am that my mothers bones lie In St. Swlthln's church yard," he aald grimly. "My lord, be added after a pause, do you think you will be able to travel by the end of the week, so we can go to Long HautT" There la no need to hasten now. Lord Waters has Oil, I replied. been laid been laid to rest a week agone at least. I did not see hls face, calm, I hope, In death; after bis life's restless wave of turbulency may he sleep well. Ah! me! my errand Into London as far aa my father's message Is concerned waa of little avail. Lady Dwight has left town; God knows when I shall see her again! i Since ahe' has waited so many ; years, a longer wait will not matter, I d iT j babyr TERRIBLE SCALY ECZEMA. spel at home and Met say mjm yen spot where my father lies. It took ns no longer to leave Lon--- a Eruptions Appeared on Cheat, and Face and Neck Ware All Broken than It had Long Haut. Bnt this lms instead of the quick men, one Out Cured by Cuticura. was worn with vigils, and the other 1 had hn siA, whom all chunked for fear the eruption appear on my plague had laid her clammy fingers cheat and body and extend upwards on Mm. and downwards, ao that my neck and We skirted the town, especially the face were all broken out; alao my spots In It. We heard arms and the lower limbs aa far aa the crier cry, "Bring out your dead, the knees. I at first thought It was a gruesome sound. But more But soon scales or prickly heat. was the sight of hls cart piled eruats formed where the breaking out high with corpses on the way to dump was. Instead of going to a physician I them into St. dare's church yard. purchased a complete treatment of the Let us hasten out of that city of Cuticura Remedies, in which I bad fearsome sights; grim with Its hor- great faith, and all was satisfactory. rors, putrid with its smells and hasten A year or two later the eruption apto the clean, pure atmosphere of Long peared again, only a little lower; bnt Haut before It had time to spread I proThe only thing that enlivened us cured another supply of the Cuticura on the Journey were the remarks upon Remedies, and continued their use unthe open country made by that cock-- til the cure was complete. It la now nay, Pat the linkman, who had never five years since the last attack, and been outside of London. have not seen any algna of a return. We reached Long Haut In the even- I have more faith hi Cuticura Remeing. The sun setting In brilliancy dies for akin diseases than anything where- were sunsets more brilliant I know of. Emma E. Wilson, Iowa. Oct 1, 1905. than In that south country? threw its light upon the windows of the There la nothing truer than a huts, and the village looked aflame. love for some other chap. How pleasantly the smells of the sea came to our nostrils, after the close PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color breath of the town! How good its Silk, Wool and Cotton at one boiling, earthy smell! How good the smell of fast beautiful colors. 10c per package. the hay in the fields! We reached the hall and passed into Anything but Friendly. You astonish me. Your engagement the kitchen. Before the fire, crooning over It, sat old Nance, the same as with Mias Welloph la broken, la it? Are the relations between you still ever, with perhaps a few more wrink- The nurse gasped. Goodness gri I forgot to put him clous, ma'am! to! Lord Milner, the former high com-- 1 mlaalonpr for South Africa, has through the duke of Somerset an address expressing appreciation his services In Sooth Africa signed by 170,000 persons. grue-soifi- e 1 - Lla-com- b, 1 n E, life-givi- EGG-O-SE- E this great food. Children and aged persona alike are friends of Merit and common sense are things most that advertise EGG-O-SE- EGG-O-SE- EGG-O-SE- E A la cheap. E pack- 10-ce- age contains ten liberal breakfasts. sold la everywhero, Grocers must keep it if they want to keep their good customer, for gooq customers insist on buying EGG-O-SEE EGQ-O-SE- E. friendly? 1 should say not! The relations between ua are her relations, and theyre my bitter enemies. Chicago Tribunal The fact that no preparation, no cooking, la required, makes very popular. Open the pack-age; put in aa much aa you like in a dish; pour on milk or cream and eaL It la delicious. It la wholesome. It makes you atrong. A lot of interesting facta about E have been published la back to nature. hook form entitled, This book alao baa a course of physical culture fully illustrated. Anyone wishing thla book will receive It Comp free by addressing pany, 10 First St, Quincy, I1L War on Liquor and Tobacco. Tact ale-ter- 's les added. She did not even start upon seeing ns. 1 wm but now dreaming you were here, dear lord, she said aa ahe hob-bled toward me. I took her withered shape In my arms and gave her a sounding kiss upon her brown cheeks. "Tis half killed they have you In that pesky hole," she muttered. Sit ye down while 1 see to your bed and give you something decent to eat," and she mothered 'me like I were a I laughed for Joy at being babe. home again. EGO-0-8ENothing Succeeds Like The man who preaches the beat ermon; the man who tells the fiw-nlestories; the man who keeps beat store, or tho man who mahaa the beat goods, soon finds that people come to him. Merit la the beat advertisement In the woyld. People peak well of things they know ere They paaa the good word good. along. The beat breakfast food la "EGQ-O-SEfor it contains all the properties of nature's beat food' which la Wheat la deeply In debt to the thousand of wives and mothers who uae It In their homes, for these good women tell their neighbors about EGG-O-SE- ! EGG-O-SE- EGG-O-SE- The Kansas 8ociety has adopted a new plan to fight the liquor traffic. It is mading free a recipe for the rare of the liquor habit. It can be given secretly in coffee or food. Alao one for the tobacco habit that can be given seThe only request they make ia cretly. that you do not sell the recipes, but give free copies to friends. Their address ia Room 19, Gray Bldg., Kanaaa City, Mo. Anti-Liqu- E He had crossed her and she waa in a dangerous mood. See! she hissed, pointing her finger at him, see how yoh have worked np my feelings. Why, I am purple with rage. But the young man only smiled. So becoming, he muaed, softly. "What is becoming, air? Staking Only Bara Juatlca. "Why, the purple. It Just match ea CHAPTER JXII. Creditor So you've come around at that purple waist you have. on." me owe what yon last to pay me, hsve And the next moment she waa all Cornea How Love? "Pray, you? miles and telling her girl friends that I waa up early the next morning. Debtor Not at all Just tho con- George was the cleverest chap la the Ah! aa GU aald, there was nothing trary. Yon made a statement at the world. from sea like this air fresh to put clnb last night that I owed yon 600 the new Ufe into one. At once I was marks. Aa a matter of fact tho "Cut out hot cream of tartar bin-cu-lt My Mood ran quicker strengthened. show I only owe yon 560. Ive used to he a common, every-da- y through my veins. All lassitude fell come around to collect that balance of remark among physicians when disfrom me, and I longed to do out- 40. cussing items of diet for thsir parageous things, even as a boy escaped tients. But alum baking powder bl Into words Plow. from restraint might cults are never mentioned. in this re the centennial celebration la During I left Gil snoring In hls bed, sleeppact. Why? Because it's tba cream 1876 In tbe members of Philadelphia of tartar that la objectionable and ining the sleep a man feels he la en- the Universal Peace union assembled titled to after having spent daya and to celebrate tbe tenth anniversary of jurious, y and yet there are some people continue to uae the eld who nlghta of vigil with an exacting pa- tho foundation of the order. cream of tartar baking powder, and tient, now that he has brought him A number of officers and descendsafe home. ants of officers gave their swords to wonder why they are always ailing. I did Jusdpe to the bowl of porridge bo made into a plow as a symbol of d Chargsd for Using French. ale Nance aet be- peace. The weapons were afterward and For speaking French to him, a landfore me, and in spite of her protests fashioned into a homely agricultural that I waa not atrong enough went to Implement, which, however. Instead of lord of a Dueoaeldorf hotel recently the chapel. I looked about me. How being a plow, took tbe shape of tbe charged a guest extra la hia MIL till It waa In that house of prayer 'ordinary field cultivator. Km WlnSiri SnlMni torn, and how familiar, save my father's Urtkiae, tefiauattosaa.iaiaaaa to This cultivator may now be seen In ftochtldraa anunaUaa.aUarfsafa.eafaavliMaoUa. SaiMSa, eat draped In black and that newly-carve- d the hill at Geneva, Bwltserland. Over atone resting upon all that re- it la an Inscription giving the history And no mars man knows what it li mained of him whose name I bore. of the Implement to be a woman. Candles burned upon the altar, while through the stained memorial window the light softly fell. I thought of the dead reating beneath those flaglife has so much to give to stone some, ao little to others how would it be with me? I account every man AND CONSIDER THB responsible for what hls life ia whether he make or mar it. But mostly I thought of the newly buried, and while I said a prayer for the FACT peace of hla soul, I vowed that never should' my feet rest until I had found Lady Dwight and delivered my father's message. After that waa done, I should seek the lady of my heart, and by all the laws of nature ahe should be mine, though all the world should say me nay. That in addressing Mrs. Finkhain yon I went down the bridle path and are ilia to a woman confiding your took the abort cut through the woods, a woman whoseprivate with wowhich led past Caatle Drout Castle men's diseases coversexperience twenty-fiv- e years. Drout that In the distance and the The present Mrs. Finkham la the of Lydia E. Pinkham, gray mist of the early morn looked daughter-in-laand for many years nnder her direction, like a fairy's house. and since her decease, her advice haa been (To be continued.) freely given to sick women. Many women Buffer in alienee and drift along Bright Doggie. M. M. Williams, of this place, haa from bad to worse, knowing full well that they bnt a natural a very fine thoroughbred Fields water ought to have immediate assistance, from exposing them to shrink them impels modesty la a apaciel (Imported) that truly elves to tha and probable examinations wonder in bis way, says tbe Titus- of even their questions family physician. It ia unnecessary. ville (Fla.) Star. He can do almost Without money or price yon can consult n woman anything except talk, and la able to whose knowledge from actual experience is groat. find a lost article on being sent for Mrs. Plnkhams Standing Invitation t It by hia acute sense of smell. An IlWomen Buffering from any form of female weak lustration waa given a member of the ness invited are to promptly communicate with Mrs. exhibiwho witnessed an Star staff, Mass. All letters are received, Pinkham at Lynn, In this direction tion of hls acuteness opened, road and answered by women only. A Williams took from Mr. bis recently. woman can freely talk of her private illness to a vest pocket a good sized roll of bills, woman; thus haa been established the eternal and, going away from hla dog a dis- confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and tha women tance of 150 yards, bid hla money of America which haa never been broken. Ont and returned. Upon being told to of the vast volume of experience which ahe to draw from, it ia more than possible bring It back, the spaniel went haa she haa gained tho very knowledge that and returned immediately to straight that will help your case. She asks nothhia master with the lost greenbacks and ing in return except your good-wil- l, intact, not a single bill missing. Thla her advice has relieved thousands. 8urely fine specimen of canine intelligence any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if genrecently recovered a very valuable he does not take advantage of thisPink-ham and highly prized gold hunting case erous offer of assistance. Lydia E. Medicine Co., Lynn, Maaa. watch for laaac Jenkins, a very heavy grain buyer of Jacksonville. Aa you know, I wrote yon that mydootor Following we publish two hnva aa operation or I could nog from a woman who accep- aid I mart Two Mottoes. wrote yon, telling yon my John Kendrick Bangs waa Invited ted this invitation. Vote the lira 1 thra followed I your advice and am ento dine at the New York Yacht club, result: can walk mike without aa walL I tirety First letter. and of tbe event the Sun tella this Mrs. Pinkham- story. The medallion and motto of the DaarFor iah every suffering wn I have (offend antnethlng Yale club Juat serosa tbe street at- terrible eight year rit g I Ida laatiinraiiil and rrallas Tbt Taint nf month. Tha paina are Mrs Mary and I can hardly stand than. My ing to yoa and your remedy. tracted Mr. Bangs attention. Warn-lngtoE. S0th and IHmmick, Dtaaate, aara fomala I bars a wnra Capital trouble, "That's very nice be said. "That dorter D. CL an operation if I want and I must go a gives an air to that building that at- top well. I through do not wan t to submit to it if tracts me. Lax et veritss. Why dont I can poaubly halp it. Phase tall me what When a medicina haa been aneoeaaful can mtieve me." Mrs, in you yacht clnb chaps put a motto on to da I hope you restoring to health ao many woman Mary Dimiaick, Mth aad X. Capital Streets, whoaa your own door? C. D. testimony ia ao unqnaatienaMa, Waaungtoa, yon cannot well aay, without trying it, "Possibly because we don't happen Second letter. it will help mo" If I do not believe hesitate to have one, answered the host Daar Mm. Pinkhaa to are dont a botill, yon aald Mr. Bangs. If "Nonsense, "After following carefully yonr advice, tle of Lydia B. Plnkbame gat vegetable Pinkharn'a use Lux E. can et club and Yale Lydia Vegetable the verltna, taking I am vary anxtnna to arud yon Compound at once, and write Mra Flak why cant yon fellows use Ducks et my testimonial, that others may know thsir ham, Lynn. Vase., for special ill "lit demttasae? Iff rn!' fa approprls-.- ' value and what you hnva dona lor it ia free aad always helpful. to-da- home-brewe- We oannot expect the plenum of .friendship without the duty, tho privilege without this responsibility. Hugh Black, M. A. Hasty Nervous STOP, WOflAN! Chewing of Food of Dyspepsia the Cause "Leave, oh, leave me,' I begged. ! am weary with you all."1 tears In her eyes aa ahe gave the aald be with the patience of an older locket Into my broad palm. Then ahe man. "It matters much for my peace of left me, nor would ahe let me eee her I returned. If she should home, saying that her maid awaited mind, her at the corner. I took the precau- die and she la not a young tion to follow her, however, and saw my father's message let me not think of It. I cried petulantly. that she reached her borne safely." To the dead all things are known, Gil bad flnlahed, and 1 saw that he was well satisfied with himself that they say, he said. I lingered too long over he had dons hls task so well. He my own handed me the locket I took It me- affairs, I continued. My punishment chanically. My proud lady had done la this: My lady mourns me dead penance, indeed, in confessing all this and I know not where she bldeR. "You should thank God fasting that to Gil, so that it should be repeated to me. I looked at the bare back, where she la out of this place, the mirror had been that could soon Gil Jerked out, seeing me ao down In be fixed and then Rosemary should the mouth. What do you mean? I quickly wear It among tbe frills of her gown whenever ahe chose. While idly fing- asked. The plague! he replied ering it, I pressed tbe spring, whlrh Ah! that la the reason for this The thin gold flew was uninjured. out, and instinctively my hand opened exodus from town at the height of the to catch the paper aa it fell. It season, I aald. Then I turned clutched emptiness. "Forty more they tell me, SL Olavea tba locket this way and that, up and he aald carelessly. down, while I looked for wbat was not church yprd begins to be full and they are dumping the bodies Into tbe town there. ditch. But what la more to us, the fools think you have It and I cannot CHAPTER XXI. get one of them to come nigh the We Leave London, Beoet by the place." "Is Mistress Nell Gwyn still Plague. I asked. "I must see her And you say you stitched the town? locket In your Jerkin pocket, I re- before we leave and find out what she knows regarding Lady Felton. peated In a weak voice. GU replied, as he had many times No." be replied, she has gone woman--witho- peat-ridde- If your teeth are fit, chew, chew, chew, until, the food is liquid and insists on being swallowed. If teeth are faulty, soften Grape-Nut- s with hot milk or cream, or allow to stand a minute soaking in cold cream. Theres a reason, as follows: Grape-Nut- s food is in the form of hard and brittle granules, intended to be ground up by the teeth; that work not only preserves the teeth but brings down the saliva from the gums so necessary in the primary work of digestion. Many people say (and it is true) that when they eat Grape-Nut- s they seem able to digest not only that food but other kinds which formerly made trouble when eaten without Grape-Nut- s. Chew!! There's a reason for 6rape Muts n to-da- before: Yea, and I never took off the Jerkin either night or day, until I saw you." Hia deep voice trembled in hls desire to render Its tones soft, and he spoke as a person would humoring oae who had passed through the shadow of death. We bad been going over the same thing again and again, for I made him repeat, not once, but many timea, wbat Ijidy Felton had said to him when ahe delivered the locket Into hls hands, hoping thereby to find a :lue to the missing paper. An1 each day after talking, for very weakness, I would fall asleep. In the long hours of my delirium, so Gil told me, I talked and raved of nothing but Rosemary and the lost locket Oft I started 'up after lying with wide open sightless eyes crying out: Sha It Innocent I ewear to God, the la Innocent; look at her face; could deceit dwell there? Again I was before tbe King crying ont: "She Is Innocent your MaJasty. Richmond. And ahe knows little, sent Torralne while you were yet unconscious to ask her where Lady Fel ton had gone. He found her on the eve of flitting. She told him that she had seen Ijidy Felton, and that, though tearful at her enforced partnre and fearful of your fate, she yet held herself brave and ready for She herself did not know anything. where her father's destination was, but thought it might be France perhaps a convent there, if ahe was not complaisant concerning the marriage with her Cousin Raoul Dwight God's blood!" I cried; thea France I will go." As you will," be replied patiently. But why not on the way atop Long HautT Nostalgia was upon and, I will confess it, upon me also. Long Haut, where the fall flowers would he bending their heads before the strong breexea from the sea, wtiere the Manor House covered with try would look like a picture. "Ya, I replied, I would visit the I I ALL-IMPORTA- w W . V -- il ten ts. mv axcru-ciatln- n, |