1 i 1 i mAiev-NuitbiittU ITT"? V v 3 WTS VS ' .VIY"!""! Manyoa'a Pmtt Paw pills conx the ttrer Into activity by gen'1 methods. I"hey do not scour, grlpa or weaken. They ere a tonic to the stomach, liver ana serves ; Invigorate Instead of weaken. They enrich I ho blood and enable the stomach to pet all the nourishment from food that la put Into It. These pills con tain no ealotnrl ; they are soothing, heal big and stimulating. For ea'. by all drug (lata In lOo and 25o sires. If you need anedlcal advice, write Munyon'a Doctors, jrhay wtlt ad'vlae to the beat of their abil ity absolutely free of Charge. MUN YON'B, S4 aid Jefferson !., I'hll adrlahla. P. MunyoD S CVld Remedy eurea a cold In ana day. Price 260. Munyon'a Rheuma tism Remedy relieve In a few hours and tare la a few days. Price 2Sa FASHION HINTS 7oag fine nd extreme simplicity snake this charming gown of chiffon Tel vet. A heavy tilk meah Iniartioo four 'lochs wide, it the only trimming Died. Ic tares Then. The) American hat the taring grace f humor. Seldom In the real pinch -does It tail to come to the uppermost and he gets a good laugh out ot what men born tinder other ikies would construe at nothing elae than a fight The "bead gent" of a t t t. ahow playing at Holton recently handed out a warm one to the audience. There waa to much going oa In Holton that night that the theatrical business suf fered, but the aforesaid "gent" seem ed to think that the people did not ap predate the high-class histrionic art erred, vp by the company. He frank ly, stated In a curtain speech that In tils opinion the playa pretented were too refined for Holton. "But," he add ed, "w will try to get down to your terel by presenting 'The Whole Dam family. which does not contain a sen lble Una. I think thlt play will ap peal to you." "Tha audience," taya Frank Jarrell, la telling- the matter, "Instead of get ting mad and lynching the actor, taw -the funny aide of the case and laugh ed long and loud at him. He didn't aay any more." Kansas City Journal. Hr Oaly Course). lady Anne Lindsay, the author ot tho old poem, "Auld Robin Gray," wat ot only a delightful conversationalist, but ana waa a great story teller. This gift made her not only a wel -com guest abroad, but a valuable member of the home circle, for It la elated in "A Group of Scottish Wo men" that at a dinner party which the waa giving to tome friends an old nan servant caused some amusement by saying in a perfectly audible under tone: ;My lady, you must tell another atorr. Tho second course won't be ready for Ore minutes." Waistcoats for Dogs. Faaey cold weather waistcoats for pet doga, madt by experienced tailors. U taa announcement that meets the ye la a London west-end shop. These walttcoata are made In all the latest colon and of the finest materials They are braided and beautifully fin iaaed. and must take bourt to manu fax tar. Cftartna In tha shape of mir rors, tlay amahe with the dog's mon grun eat the back, and tUrer beads ara ether novelties advertised for dog wear. fig The Quest of Betty Lancey Tiy WACDA F. WEST CopyrUbt, 1909, by W. 0. Chapman. Copyright In Great Britain 15 CHAPTF.U VIII. The warrant was served on the Har- eourts that morning at six o clock. ut of consideration for Mrs. Har oiirt, whom her husband claimed was dcllcnte, and who really looked as fragile as a piece of porcelain, the llarcourts were not removed to the Jail tit a cordon of sleuths was appointed to patrol their apartments. The hotel management was sorely wroth, and tried to insist upon the departure 'of the llarcourts, but Harcourt came down handsomely with an enormous amount of cash, and the mollified man agement became less censorious. Ear ly that afternoon, Mrs. Harcourt fell very 111 with a seemingly malignant fe ver an outgrowth of their long resi dence In India, so her husband said. There was a brief preliminary hearing at 2:30 In the Harcourt apartments. "My name is Harold Harcourt, and I live In the Hill district. In India," at tested the witness, when called. I am 35 years of age and have been mar ried to my wife for the past six years. She Is 24, and we have been traveling for her hearth during the post two years, following the accidental drown ing of our baby son. My wife's mind has never been perfectly clear since the harrowing moment when she pulled our dead son out of the clutches of a treacherous pool, not fifty feet from her bedroom window. At the advice of physicians, we have gone from country to country, seeking novelty and change, hoping to restore her to her normal state. My occupation? Why, 1 havo none. 1 receive a large Income from Inherited properties, so does my wife and Jointly we own several rich dia mond mines. We never saw the young woman. Miss I.nncey, I believe her name is, at all. I am positive my wife never did until last evening. Why we should be held lilto this Is Incompre hensible to mo. On this card you will find the names of a number of London, and Calcutta firms, who will give you any references of me you may desire. "The night of tho murder of Cerlsse Wayne we were In Milwaukee us our hotel bills and receipts will show. The following afternoon late we arrived and went to the Directory Hotel. That evening I was trying to explain to my wife some changes I was contemplat ing In my Indian estate and was sketching the plans with the idea of keeping her amused, as she had been particularly fretful and nervous all day. The room was close, and Insuf ferable with the smell of steam pipes, so we had raised the window wide and flung high tho Bhade. I drew out my wallet to get a memorandum and In doing so pulled out by accident a little photograph of my wife that I always carry with me, and some important passports. The wind sent the curtain flying and whisked these papers out of my hand. I hurried to the window and saw them light on an opposite fire escape and tried to recover them. As the hotel clerk has probably told you the papers were not recovered." "Now, I trust, gentlemen, that my wife and I will be allowed to proceed without any further reference or en tanglement in this most undesirable affair." Wasn't there a letter dropped out of your wallet?" asked Larry Morris, stepping forward. "If you please, I'd like to submit two exhibits In evl- cence." He produced the picture and the letter that had been fished from the fire escape and proceeded to relate how they had been acquired. llarcourt's face flushed with pleas ure at sight of the photograph. When the letter was handed to him ho paled whether with fright or with anger, was Indistinguishable. "Thlt It an insult," he hissed. "What's your wife's name, Mr. Har court 7" asked the court 'My wife? Her name? Mm. Har court, of course." "Her first name?1 "Narclese." "Did you ever see this letter be fore? The hotel register was brought Into the room, and as expert testimony went to the effect that the signature on the register tallied with the conforma tion of the writing not only on the let ter that had been picked up in the court-room, but with those found in the Wayne death chamber, Mr. liar- court was requested to make conies nt the documents and hand them to the murt He did this with great trnM.. Hon. but the results were verv nniii. the originals. A movement was begun to prove that Mr. Harcourt had painfully disguised hl wrltlna- and the matter to the experts again, The man's garter Johnny Johnson had picked up In the closet of Mrs. Wayne's room, and a second one, only too plainly Its mate, in the same gold emerald and amethyst design, marked with the Initial "II," that he had found liisLie mo tnresnoia or inn f landers house at 94 Hrtarsweet place, were shown to Harcourt. lie disowned these emphatically nnd declared he had never seen either of them before. I-arry Morris, sworn next, told of the the reasons for Hetty's visiting the Harcourt apartments displaying sev eral photographs and sketches that hud been made of the late Mrs. Wayne, remarking on the great similarity be tween the appearances of the two women, and begging the court to see for itself. With Harcourt indignantly fuming, a comparison 'between the living worn an and the photograph was made, Mrs. Harcourt was in a comatose state and as she lay prostrate on the wide bed, death pale and with her hair half un bound, the Inquest of the preceding day rose like a mirage! The quick and the dead seemed one. Harcourt was bound over till the full term of court. No count was found against his wife. CHAPTKIt IX. When, two days later; Mr. Henry D. Franx, of Fran, Poubleday & Co., Bankers, Ban Kranclsco. California, ar rived, the Wayne murder mystery and the unaccountuble disaDDearanca. of Betty I-anaey were still In a cUiiotlo and unsolveable state. Likewise . the Vlan-Aperilla. His going waa like his I diamond mines of great value, appar eomlna unseen bv man. unknown and I ently. One typewritten letter was In o all unlriire:ille. Hamley Hnrkleye, too. the strange lessee of 94 l'rinrsweet place, whs not lo be found. Thn nillk ninn, who tin lined he had been pnlil for a month's warts In Advance, continued lo 1 ave n daily allowance of milk and cream on Hie hack stoop, and the accu mulation of bottled on tlio Flanders doorstep was wnxlng large. Cablej) from London brought word tbnt Hack- leye was a younger son of tho late Sir Walter Ilackleye; that for four years past he had been conducting tropical explorations, and that he was possess ed of an Immense private fortune. The Immediate family, an aged mother and widowed sister, and two brothers, both unmarried, lived In England for years, and had heard nothing of Hamley that boro upon his llfo with any degree of leflnlteness. He was a bookish sort of fellow; Imaginative and fond of origi nal research, quiet, and of no bad hab its so far as they knew, agreed all re ports. No photographs of him since he was a plump little codger of six were to be had. A copy of one of these so ran the message, was being made In London, and would be forwarded Im mediately upon completion. Johnny Johnson felt that he had drawn a blank in bis sleuthing expedi tion through tho house at 94 Briar- sweet riace, where tho death chamber visitor had vanished. The rooms smell- ed musty and the house bore the stamp of the unoccupied save for several suits of clothes, wearing the imprint of a I'lcadllly tailor, banging in the closet of one of tho bedrooms. These must have fitted a man of medium height and build. There were no per sonal memoranda around, and "to all intents the house was tho same as when Attorney Flanders had let it nearly a week previous. The garter Johnny had found on tho threshold was a woeful aggravation. "If tho owner had only lost one of them," soliloquized Johnny, "I might have traced him by matching the pair. As It is now, there's no chance at all!" Mr. Franz, who was a plump little German, a shade too well-tailored, a whit too urbane, had fetched with him a picture of Cerlsse Wayne that tallied exactly with the portrait that had blown from llarcourt's window. That the same negatlte had permitted both prints was manifest. Then they led him into the presence of Mrs. Harcourt. She was sitting in the shadow of the window wrapped In a wadded gow.i o' , ;. y - I . -). was very listless and had not c.jokun a word for hours. Harcourt declared that this had been her wont at Intervals since the death of the baby. They sent Frana into the room a lit tle ahead of his escort. "Mrs. Wayne," ejaculated the banker, letting fall his little black valiso. "Why, they told . JIM me you were aeuu: Ho advanced a few steps, and reach ed forth' his hand, but the moment he glimpsed Mrs. Harcourfs eyes he drop ped his outstretched arm and stepped back. It is it is not the Same," he murmured, studying closely the face and figure before him. Mrs. Harcourt dropped her eyes in a terrilled fash ion and raised them again to find llv soft, calm gaze of Philip Hartley fixed gteadlly upon her. For a full moment she looked sharply, composedly at Hartley, then from him to her hus- band, and then again to Frans. Spring. Ing from her chair, with the terror of a child, she flung aside her wrappings, and throwing herself upon Hartley, clung to him, screaming: 'Oh, can't you tave me from them; save me, take me away; they kill me with those awful drugs! Fram paled and turned his horri fied gaze out of the window. "The delirium again!" cried Har. court "Poor girl, poor girl." Harcourt strove to take his wife away, but she would not looso her grasp upon the arm of the reporter, and there waa no gainsaying the clasp of those cold and tautly Interlocked fingers. Hartley, the tender, coaxed the frightened woman Into the bedroom, and despite llarcourt's expostulations sent for a doctor. Harcourt swore they would kill her and declared himself a better man of medicine than half the practitioners In the town. Every time he approached his wife, however, she broke into rrignuui screams, ana Kepi nor eye" constantly avenea iron nor husband's gaie. l ne signt or trans appeareu 10 imvo un.ntm num. cuo, have forged some link in her mind thllt bor directly upon this mystery- u'lfoldln mystery. While they anticipated the doctor the examination of Henry Frans went on. It was disappointing In Us In In definlteness of result. Hut the body of Cerlsse Wayne had been taken from the vault where It lay pending Identification by Mr. Frans, so from airs, narcouris rooms iney led him to the body. Then the comn lid was loosened and the shrouded fig ure of tho deud woman wus revealed. Shu was more the Image of Mrs. Har court thun Mrs. Harcourt herself. For Mrs. Harcourt, when they left her, was sunk in a deadly coma, and the llvor of death Bcemcd reflected on her coun tenance. Cerlsse Wayne lay there. calm, quiet and all ut ease, like sleep ing marble. 'Wonderful, wonderful! The like ness,' commented Mr. Franz. lie scrutinized the face and hands of the corpse closely and said slowly: "I am positive that this is the worn an that our firm knew as :r t tha tax Wayne. Who tho womun a rectory Hotel may be, the woi so closely resembles ser, I cannot say. All I know of Mrs. Wayne is that her deposits with us have been coming, as I wrote you, for some time. When we bud notlco of her death we delay ed opening her safety deposit box till we hud a court order. Within wo found the most gorgeous collections of Jewels Imaginable here are photographs of them necklaces, stomachers, all of them trinkets for the adorning of woman. Also copies concerning trans fers of various property interests In Central Africa, particularly in the re I glons mapped as unexplored. Several I of these make mention. Indefinitely, of the box, addressed to Mrs. Wayne and signed, 'Your Fond Father.' Here is a copy of it." My Dear Daughter It Is with great despair that I urge upon you again, the necessity for finding your brother Francis, and securing from him the route to the Tiougaley Mines. He is the only living soul who has this knowledge. Ills refusal to divulge the Information to me is but another proof of his unnatural and unflllul at titude. I must Insist that you find Francis and make him tell you the lo cation of the lost fields. Cease seeking your will o' the wisp Ideal your fool ish love. Find Francis Instead and having found him return home to Ilackleye as soon as possible. Ho Is growing uncontrollably Jealous of you, and not only threatening your life, but mine, and that of the children, too. They are both well, but Taula has had much trouble with her throat since the rains began. I'm afraid she will never be well in this climate. Do not mis understand me. Ilackleye Is where you cannot trifle with him any longer, and the demands on our moneys have been so great that unless we get hold of the new fields, we will be poverty stricken nt the end of the year. I wish you would quit your gaming. I do not mean less wealthy, mind you, but prac tically poor. Iteflf-ct what this means. Cerlsse, seek out Francis, find him if possible, and by all means make him draw you a chart or map of those fa mous and almost forgotten fields. Take care of yourself, my daughter. With much love, "Your Fond Old Father." "That straightens it all out for us nicely now," chattered Hank Smith's voice on the air. "Hamley Ilackleye is Cerlsse Wayne's husband, and Wayne must huve been her maiden name. Evidently she didn't love Ilack leye, and she ran away to love some body else and to find her brother Fran cis, and 'to learn about those diamond mines. Now If the whole bunch of them lived In Africa, I'd believe that ths Man-Aperilla Is a trained ape, a sort ot body servant that followed along aftei the husband. He traced her here to the Desterle house, leased the Flandera home, and then called h her surrepti tiously. I don't believe Hubby evei went to murder his little wife, but the cot Into a family row because Wine didn't want to go home with Hubby, and In the fracas that followed wlfW got :he worst of it, and, by the way" here Hank's voice sank to a whisper "I wonder if she really was dead or only drugged? And have any of you noticed the similarity between the names 'Hamley Ilackley and 'Harold Harcourt?'" ' "You reason like a woman. Hank," growled Larry Morris. "You're con tradictory from the start." "Perhaps." (To be continued.) !' STUDIES AMERICAN WAYS. Syrian Girl Learns to Wear Corsets and Hot After Severe Trial Betrothed seven years ago In hei Syrian home to Wllllaai Bofysll, now of this city, 18-year-old Mary Abraham has arrived here from over seas tc marry him, the Owosso (Mich.) corre spondent of the Detroit News says. But marriage Is a serious business in Syria. "Whom God hath Joined to gether let no man put asunder," la In terpreted literally there. So William and Mary nre sensibly preparing them selves for matrimony so that no mis take shall be made and their live; ruined. It Is really a trial betrothal. Will lam is fond of America; he will never go back to the "old country" to live; so it Is necessary that his wife be come acquainted with American ways, aid also be given time to decide whether K.he will be satisfied here. With forethought Bofysll has arrang ed that the girl be given a practical course in domestic science. His plan la proving successful, and the wedding will undoubtedly take place within a few weeks. Mary arrived about three weeks ago. She waa still clad in the picturesque garments of the fatherland. She wore bright-colored bodice and skirt, and wooden sandals. Her crinkly, abund ant black hair waa bare. She had never worn a hat. Bofysll haa relatives here In the dry goods business, and the wife of one of these relatives undertook the task of getting the newcomer Into American clothing. Mary had never seen a cor set, much less worn one, and she screamed with pain and fright when the lady and a girl clerk began lacing up the stays: "O-oh! It Is hurting my heart!" In a few days she became reconciled to It, aa she has to a be coming hat which was purchased for her. At first she said with a wilful pout: "I have never worn a hat, and I won't wear one now! I hate any thing on my head!" Miss Abraham Is studying the Amer ican way of keeping house in the home of an American family in this city. She speaks no English, and they do not, of course, understand her lan guage, but by means of signs and a few phrases which each has added to the common vocabulary, they get along famously. The girl calls the man of the house "papa," as she has heard his daughter do, and calls his wife "mamma." The groom-elect oom.es each evening and Is delighted at the progress which she proudly recounts to him. Tho colloquial name for the aristoc racy In Mary's home town which la Andara, Lebanon is "Turkey." So her state of mind can be dimly Im agined when Mr. Bofys''. chanced to remark the other day tbfct they would have "turkey" for Christmas dinner. Earnest and repeated explanation, in which everybody In the house took part, waa necessary before Mary grasp ed the fact that Americans are not ad dicted to cannibalism. In fact, only ia of tne blri1 wnlcn was t0 Brace wa V.ard on the feast day coma anay the last lingering suspicion. Klsalna Privileges Barred. George Shute of New Jersey, has Just been bound over under a heary penalty for kissing his wife against her will. Justice Ware warned tho man not to kiss his wife again with' out first obtalulug her consent. National Iiarere. "Chinamen are very different from us in one thing, ain't they, pop?" ia a great many, but what's your oat?" "Why, if a Chinaman don't get a yellow-jacket on him, he's stung." WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY PTJZZL2. ' FIND LITTLE GEORGE, THE HATCHET AND THE CHOPPED-DOWN CHERRY TREE. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. All honor to that day which long ago Gave birth to him who Freedom's cause espoused; Who, by his ardor in the sacred fight. The fire and strength of patriots aroused; Who knew no master, save that One divine Whose strength was his, who knew no fear, save one The fear of doing wrong! All hall the day That gave to Freedom's cause George Washington! Years come and go, and generations fall Into the dust. The world Its heroes gives. They step upon the stage, tlien pass away And are no more, but Freedom ever lives. And while it lives, and while Its ban ner bright Is upward flung into the golden sun. Within the, heart of every freeman's child Will live that honored name, George Washington. Then honor to the day that gave him birth. For It is also Freedom's natal day. Let all who worship Freedom's cause stand forth And to his memory their homage pay. And let each loyal son the work take . up For, know ye, Freedom's work is never done And greater, grander, build the edifice Begun so long ago by Washington. Arthur J. Burdlck. When George Became a Mason. One of the Interesting evidences that George Washington la not a myth is the record of hla becoming a Mason. Fredericksburg lodge. No. 4, has been In existence since 1752, and In the vaults are the original documents showing that George was Initiated as a Mason on the 4th of November, 1752; he passed to the Fellow Craft degree March 3, 1753, and was raised to Mas ter Mason Aug. 4, 1753. The entry on the Journal reads as follows: 4th August, 5753, which day, the lodge being present, transactions of the evening are: George Washington, raised Mason, Thomas James entered an apprentice. Another Interesting bit of corrobora tion as to the existence of such a per son as George Washington is the will made by his mother. This Interesting document is still part of the records to be seen at the Fredericksburg city hall. Few people see any of these historical treasures, however, as only men of strong physique are able to endure the bed and board of Freder icksburg's one hotel. The will, after the solemn introduction, refers as fol lows to the Father of His Country: "Imprimis: 1 give to my son, Gen. George Washington, all land In Acco keek run, in the county of Stafford, and also my negro boy George, to him and his heirs forever. Also my best bed, bedstead and Virginia cloth cur tains (the same that stands In my best bedroom), my quilted blue and white quilt, and my best dressing glass." Washington and Lincoln. Happy Is the nation whose mightiest events are grouped about great person alltles, know-able, humanly complete, heart-satisfying. In them is embodied the spirit of the historical movements they commanded. Through them the best Ideals of their contemporaries are clear to us. Their biographies are na tional eplts. Without Washington America, by weight of growing nationality, would have parted sooner or later from the mother country. Fifty years ago the forces that tended to national unity were stronger than those that made for disunion, and In the end unity must have prevailed, even without Lincoln. But in Washington and Lin coln are concentrated the meaning of tho nation's great triumphs. The young nation scrambling to its feet after the struggle for independence, uncertain, untried, became Instantly personified In the grave wisdom of Washington. The spirit of union, so sorely crippled by the Civil War, and long suspected by many Americana to be but the spirit of tyranny in disguise, took before all men's eyes the rhape of Lincoln, so that Whitman il ri:c,ht of unionism as "a new ' virtu", unknown to other lands," to l:e rdr'e.l to Lincoln's hon esty, goodneu. shrewdness, conscience. That the n:it ion bred, ,each for hla time, the man who led and typified his fellow men justifies democracy In its hope for the future. Washington was the product of transplanted English civilization, adopting when the time came Ideals hostile to the traditional order, but preserving the essence of that order in his conservatism and gra cious dignity. Lincoln was the perfect fruit of a half-century of national In dependence, realizing a democracy that was not In Washington's blood, but which he believed in and hoped for. The new nation had made a new man. We can easily forget or fall to learn the principles of events long past. But the men who were the nation's soul, them we can understand; we hear their voices; we see their faces; we love their living presence. And so patriotism cannot grow cold. The heart of American history is In these vivid personalities, and its spirit looks out From behind this bending, rough-cut mask, These lights and shades, this drama of the whole. Youth's Companion. FACTS ABOUT WASHINGTON. As commander in chief of the army he drew $500 a month. Of 69 electoral votes cast for tho first President he got 69. He was 57 years old when he en tered upon the office of President His army, when he first took charge, was 14,000 men, 9,000 of them from Massachusetts. , He always had his hair powdered at public receptions, and never shook hands with any one at such times. His father had a fanm of 1,000 acres, so that chopped cherry tree wasn't such a heavy loss after all. He was very successful as a raiser of wheat and tobacco, and In addition carried on brickyards and fisheries In terests. At his Inauguration he wore a full Bult of fine cloth made by his own servants, and the dresses of his wife were alsg woven on the plantation. He was just 21 years old when Got. Dinwiddle sent him on a perilous jour ney to Ohio to find out the strength of the French, which he accomplished handily. The Indians said he hore a charmed life after he got four bullets through his coat and had two horses shot under him In a movement led by Gen. Brad- dock against Fort Duquesne. At 13 he was the strength marvel of the neighborhood, being abundantly able to outwrestle, outrun, outleap, out- p I ten quoits and outtoss Iron bars any boy of his age In Virginia, to say noth ing of his hatchet accomplishments. He wrote Gov. Clinton, at the close of the war: "The scene is at last closed, and I feel myself eased of a load of public care. I hope to spend the remainder of my days In cultivat ing the affection of good men and In the practice of the domestic virtues." Noaro luminal. Tourist So you knew George Wash Ington? Is it true that he never told a lie? I'ncle Ephralm Well, If he did, sun. be done and gone and tole It In slcn a way dat It sounded precackly talk d trufel '"IP i UUOIIIVJJ a I upwoiliwii If you have Dyspepsia, In'dig-estion or Constipation you can pet relief and cure by usinij FIX TABLETS Thrr ""'I preent that aistrrMed and uncom fortable tflin after eating, bad breath and belching. Fix Tablfts make fat Int a pleasure ln.ite.id of a trrrnr. To prore our ctaima let oa arnd you a FREE sample and a raluabla book let on Stomach and Uowel Trouble. Address Johnson Chemical Co. 2438 N. Clark St. CHICAGO, ILL. 131,000 estab. harness business for sals or trndo for clear bind. N. W. Harness & Saddlery Co., 314 Pearl, Sioux City. Ia. n afflicted wife Sore Eyes, ssa TBOfAPSON'S EYE WATER A Matter of Diction. In all Its phases of development, lan guage has Its niceties, and the fine shadings in the meaning of words cur rent in different communities, between which at first glance there might seem to be little choice, are sometimes well worth consideration. No one gifted with even a modicum of sympathetic imagination could fall to be touched by this plaint from a hard working, motherly woman, born and bred on a farm In one part of Mis souri, and now summoned by destiny to prepare the meals of a household ot miners In another section of the same state. "Here I stand the whole day through," she said, sadly, "boiling and sweating over the hot stove, trying to fix up something tasty to fill up the stomachs of a lot o' men-folks, and then they up and call my good grub chuck!" PILE! CURED lif e TO 14 DATS. PAZO OINTMENT Is rnaranteed to curs any caw ot Itching, Blind. Bleeding- or Protruding fuca in 6 to 14 dara or nuner refunded. 50c ins falling airancn. In the grounds of Dalhousle castle, Scotland, Is said to be a famous ex ample of the sympathy of the vegeta ble world with human death. It waa anciently believed In the neighborhood that a branch always fell from this oak when a member of the family died. Apparently the fall of the original tree early In the eighteenth century did not break the sympathy, for a new one sprang from the old root, and It Is upon record that as lately as 1374 an old forester, seeing a branch fall from this on a still day, cried, 'The laird's deed noo!" News of the eleventh Earl of Dalhousle's death soon followed. WHEN YOI'R JOINTS ARE STIFF and muscle sore from cold, rheumatism or neural- fta; when yon illp. strain or brulso yourself aw urry DaTii' i'alnkJller. The borne remedy 7(1 year. Dothircll and Queen Slary. Dunrobln castle, In Scotland, was the scene of a discovery a few years ago of a document relating to Mary Queen of Scots, which, had it seen the light when poor Mary Stuart was about to commit the crowning act ot folly In marrying Bothwell, would have changed the whole aftercourse of her life. The document was the original dispensation granted by the Vatican to Lady Jane Gorden to en able her to marry her cousin, the earl of Bothwell. When the latter wanted to espouse his sovereign he declared his union with Lady Jane Gordon null find void on the ground of their rela tionship and obtained a divorce. The assumption Is that Lady Bothwell was only too glad to get rid of the aris tocratic blackguard she called hus band, for she must have had the dis pensation, the production of which would have made her marriage valid and prevented Mary's taking place. That she had it is proved by Its being found in the charter room at Dun robln, where it had Iain for three centuries, and whither she doubtless brought It on her second marriage In 1573 to Alexander, earl of Suther land, ancestor of tho dukes of Suther land. A Fussy Set. "What's all this talk about boycot ting Dick Bannerman?" "Haven't you heard? He was seen kissing the cook!" "The cook! Why, good gracious, man, Dick's wife does her own cook ing." "Does she? I didn't know that But that doesn't let him out." "Why not?" "In our set It it considered very bad form for gentlemen to kiss their wives." Cleveland Plain Dealer. GET POWEH. The Supply Comes from Food. If we get power from food, why not strive to get all the power we can? That Is only possible by use of skil fully selected food that exactly fits the requirements of the body. Poor fuel makes a poor fire and a poor fire Is not a good steam producer. "From not knowing how to select the right food to fit my needs, I suf fered grievously for a long time from stomach troubles," writes a lady from a little town In Missouri. "It seemed as If I would never be able to find out the sort of food that was best for me. Hardly anything that I could eat would stay on my stomach. Every attempt gave me heartburn and Blled my stomach with gas. I got thin ner and thinner until I literally be came a living skeleton and in time was compelled to keep to my bed. "A few months ago I was persuaded to try Grape-Nuts food, and it had such ood effect from the very beginning that I have kept up its nee ever since. I was surprised at the ease with which I digested it. It proved to be just what I needed. "All my unpleasant symptoms, the heartburn, the Inflated feeling which gr.ve me so much pain disappeared. My weight gradually Increased from 98 to 116 pounds, my figure rounded out, my strength came back, and I am now able to do my housework and en Joy It Grape-Nuts did It." A ten days' trial will show anyone some facts about food. Look In pkga. for the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle." "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A sew one appears from time to time. They are genuine true, and full of human Interest.