MEDIGALJXAMIHER 01 tlie U. S. Treasury Recommends Peruna. Ur Mcwcilyn Jordan. Dr. Llewellyn Jordan , iledic.il Examiner of U. S. Treasury Department , graduate of Columbia Coll-ege , and who served three years at West i'oint , has the following to cay of Peruna : " Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from your wonderful remedy. One short month has brought forth a vast change mid 1 now consider rnvscif a well man after months of suffering. Fellow sufferers , Peruna will cure you. " Oalarrh is a systemic disease curaHp only by systematic Ircalnient. A ifinedy that cures catarrh must aim directly at the depressed rirrve center * . This is what Peruna does. Peruna immediately invigor ates the nerve-cent ITS which give vitality to the mucous membranes. Then catarrh "dis appears. Then catai rli is permanently cuied. Peruna cures , catanh wherever located. Peruna is not a giie . < nor an experiment it is an absolute scientific certainty. 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LOVE IS "BEST fc TO Bj/ Florence CHAPTER III. Poverty presses harder on a man's pride generally than on a woman's , perhaps because most women care more for persona than for things ; and while those near and dear to them are well and happy , the pin pricks of having to go without many things their neighbors have are not so keenly felt , while to a man each is a morti fication. Harold Dynevor was a good son , and a brave man ; but poverty tried him sorely , and there was a constant chafing at the injustice of circum stances which made his life harder than it might iave been , but which those who knew his story thought only natural. Harold was a gentleman farmer. He worked quite as hard as many farm ers who did not own the prefix ; but he was the last male representative of a good old county family , who had been known in Sussex for many gen erations. He was popular wherever he went , his mother was devoted to him , his pretty sister , Kitty , looked up to him with fervent admiration ; but Harold Dyuevor could not be called a happy man. He had inherited a grievance , and the recollection of it marred his content. "You're tired out , Harold , " said Kitty gently. "I'm sure you work as hard as any of your own men. Sit down in your armchair , and I'll go and hurry tea. " "All right , dear , " he said gratefully. "It may do me good , for I've a split ting headache. " Mrs. Dynevor waited till her daugh ter was out of hearing , then she asked anxiously : "Is there anything wrong , Harold ? You were going in to Martoii ; did you see Mr. Proctor ? " "I saw him , mother , and got a re ceipt in full. There's bad news. I meant to keep it from you , but I can see I've betrayed there's something wrong , so I'd better tell you the truth , for fear you think it worse than it is. " "You don't mean that the mortgagee wants to foreclose , Harold ? " Poor lady ! that was the bugbear of her life. Uplands , the land which her son farmed , was her very own. It had been her wedding portion , and the home of her married life. When bad seasons came , and expenses multi plied , with her full consent her hus band raised a mortgage on the farm. They had thought lightly of it then a few good harvests would soon en able them to pay off the debt ; but it had never been paid off in all those years. It hung like an incubus about them , and Mrs. Dynevor's one dread was that some day the mortgagee would foreclose , and , if they could not find the 5,000 due to him , they would have to leave their beloved home. "No , mother , " said Harold quietly , "it's not so bad as that ; but you will like the news as little as I do. It seems Mr. King has been settling his affairs , and he has transferred the mortgage on the Uplands to some one else. Proctor told me the interest was still to be paid to him , so we shall have no personal dealings with our new creditor. " "Then I don't see that it matters , " said Mrs. Dynevor. "Your dear father always said Mr. King was a very hon est man. Do you mean that you have heard a bad account of the new mort gagee ? " "He is a man we both have cause to fear and dislike , mother Eustace Linden - don ! " Mrs. Dynevor had grown white even to her lips nothing could have ter rified her more ; but she was a brave woman , and she knew , besides , where help and strength were to be found. One silent prayer to heaven , and she answered calmly : "There is only one thing for it , Har old we must raise the 5.000 and pay off the mortgage. To be at that man's mercy is more than I can hear ! " "I don't see how we're to do it , " said Harold , gloomily. "There's no money in the bank , and we must spend a , good sum on the farm this year , for everything wants renewing. The blow couldn't have come at a worse time. " "I wonder what his object is ? " said Mrs. Dynevor quickly. "He has never once 'been near this place since he left it with your poor Aunt Nina just after their wedding. Not a year after her ieath he let the Manor to General Cra ven for fourteen years , and , except pocketing the money from the estate , he has taken not the least interest in the property since. " "Proctor says he has married again , and thinks he means to settle at the Manor. The general's lease expires year , and he has refused to renew it. " "If he means to live here , of course he would want to get rid of us first , " said Mrs. Dynevor quietly , "for men never like the near presence < 3f those they have wronged. " Now , according to the strict letter of the law , Eustace Linden could not have been said to have wronged the Dynevors , yet every one for miles arou" ' Dynevor Manor regarded him as t ) .r despoiler. It was a sad little story , so well known that every villager could have repeated it. When Mrs. Dynevor mar ried and settled at the Uplands , her husband had an elder brother , Frank , who was 'squire of Dene , and the largest land owner for miles round. Frank Dynevor was devoted to the voung couple at the Uplands. A good deal older than his -brother , Charles , ind a very studious , reserved man , he had reached the age of 40 without marrying. People were beginning to look on him as a confirmed bachelor , and to regard the little boy at thu farm as the heir of the Manor , when , be fore Harold was 5 years old , his uncle suddenly returned from a summer hol iday with a wife of 18. There was not the least mystery about his young wife's antecedents. She was an ofllcor's daughter , and had been brought up in an orphan asylum , which found her a situation as soon as she was old enough. She had been in it just six months when Mr. Dyne vor came on a visit to her employer , and converted their little nursery gov erness into the mistress of the Manor. If the family at the Uplands were disappointed , they made no sign , and welcomed the bride warmly. Frank Dynevor told his 'brother he meant to settle a small fortune on little Harold , "in case farming failed ; " but he was not a businesslike man , and , being in sound health , no doubt he thought there was no hurry , and he might well wait till his nephew was out of the nursery. The baby who arrived at the Manor within a year of the wedding was a girl. She was 2 years old when her father took it into his head to go out to Australia to hunt up some informa tion for a book he was writing. Nina dreaded the sea , so he left her and her little girl at home. From that voyage he never returned. He died at sea. And Mr. Eustace Linden , a fellow pas senger , who had been with him a great deal at the last , brought the news to the poor little widow at Easthill. CHAPTER IV. There was consternation at the Man or and the Uplands ; but when Frank Dynevor's will was read , his brother was amazed to find there was no men tion whatever of his promise to secure Harold's future. It had 'been made im mediately after the birth of little Lil lian , and it left everything in trust to his wife for her daughter , and if the child died before reaching the age of 21 her mother inherited everything , with power to bequeath it to whom she pleased. No wonder the Charles Dynevors were aggrieved. They would not have grudged the estate to Lillian ; but that it should revert to her mother , that a girl who had never seen the old house three years before should have power , if her child died , to leave it away from the family who had owned it for centuries it was terrible ! Perhaps their sense of injustice made : he Charles Dynevors keep aloof from the young widow , and so they did not realize how -quickly her acquaintance with Eustace Linden ripened into in timacy ; and it came on them like a thunderbolt when , a year and a day after her husband's death , Nina mar ried the specious adventurer and went abroad with him. Very little news of her reached Easthill. That she had a second child another daughter and that her lealth failed so rapidly she was obliged to live always in the south of France , was all the Dynevors heard in the first few years. Then there came a formal etter from Eustace Linden , acquaint ing them with his stepdaughter's leath ; and , barely six months later , mother to announce that his wife had passed away. "She will have left him all the ready money ; but she can't be so base as to bequeath him the Manor , " Charles Dynevor said to his wife. "I don't know. She was perfectly nfatuated with him , and I suppose she would think of her child , " replied Mrs. Dynovor. But there was no mention of her shild in the will. Mr. Dynevor paid lalf a guinea for a copy of it. It had jeen made immediately after the death 3f her firstborn , and it simply be- lueathed "all property of which I may lie possessed , real or personal , of jvery description whatever , to my dear lusband , Eustace Lindon. " It had been drawn up by an English awyer , and witnessed by the doctor md nurse who attended little Lillian n her last illness. Everything was perfectly in form. Mr. Proctor , the eading solicitor of Marten , who had jeen at school with Harold Dynevor , md remained his close friend , said ; hat to upset it would be quite im possible. So Eustace Linden enjoyed his thou sands and the Dynevors grew poorer jvery year. The father lived till his mly son was old enough to talie up : he burden he had borne so bravely. 3is dying words charged Harold to 36 good to his mother and Kitty , and lever , if he could help it , accept any aver at the hands of Eustace Lindon. "I can't explain it to you , my boy , " said the dying man , solemnly , "but I lave thought a great deal about ths jast since my illness began. I would lot say a word to your mother , lest she should brood over it ; tout I can't lelp feeling Linden did not play itraight. Your Aunt Nina was little nofe than a child when he married ler ; but shs was singularly frank md true. Knowing as she did that Dynevor Manor had been in our fam- ly for centuries , I can't believe she rould have left it away from the old lame willingly. " "Do you mean you think the will was L forgery ? " asked Harold. "No ; I believe it was obtained from ler by undue influence. When she vaa very ill he must have worked on ler fears in sonic way or other. I can't explain what I think. Harold ; but I seem to know Nina Linden never did us such a wrong willingly. " "I could understand It better If she had left anything to her child , " said Harold. "The injustice to ua would have heen the same , but it would have been more natural. " Mr. Dynevor shook his head. "It's a mystery we shan't fathom here , my boy. Only , with the instinct God sends sometimes to the dying , I seem to feel that Linden is to blame. If he comes to live at the Manor , avoid him by every means in your power. " And that was the story of the past. It was not strange that , remembering his father's last words , it was torture to Harold Dynevor to think that the mortgage on his mother's home was held by Eustace Lindon. Kitty and the tea tray came in to gether. There was a capable woman servant at the Uplands , but she had her hands pretty full ; and -both Mrs. Dynevor and her daughter were thor oughly domesticated , sweet , tome- keeping women both of them , not learned in 'ologies and science , per haps , but well guteii to make those about them happy. Harold felt quite refreshed after his tea , and asked his sister cheerfully if any one had been there that afternoon. "Only Helen Craven. She wants us to go to dinner there next week. I said Tuesday would suit you best. " When the Cravens settled at Dyne vor Manor they made it perfectly clear to the family at the Uplands that they regarded them as friends and equals. The young Dynevors had spent some of their happiest days at the Manor , and Helen Craven was Kitty's closest friend. "Tuesday will do nicely , " said Har old. "I shall be glad of a little talk with the general. He may 'be able to tell me something about his landlord. " "Helen was quite radiant , " went on Kitty. "It seems Alick is coming home next week on leave , and is going to bring his friend Captain Tempest with him. " She spoke with studied carelessness , and yet the speech had cost her an : ffort. Kitty and her mother were both Jreadfully afraid Harold cared for Helen Craven. Loving him as they lid , they were of course persuaded he 2ould have won the general's daughter lad he only made up his mind to woo. Both believed only his poverty and 3ride had kept him silent , and it had : ome on them as a blow when they liscovered the great interest Helen .ook in the visits of her brother's ; hum , and they were forced to see that Uaptain Tempest was already more to ler than Harold had over been. itty made this remark tentatively , as i sort of breaking the news to Harold ; hat if he entered the lists he would ; e too late. Dynevor never guessed Kitty's sus picions. He smiled quite cheerfully as le said : "Sets the wind in that direction ? Veil , you will miss Helen dreadfully , itty , if she marries ; but she is 22 , ; o I suppose it's time she began to hink of such a thing , and Jack Tem- ) le is a right down good fellow. I took L great fancy to him when he was lere at Christmas. I only hope you'll lave as good fortune , Miss Kitty , when rour time comes. " Kitty and her mother exchanged rongratulatory glances , which seemed o say : "He does not mind ! he could lot have cared for her really after all. " ( To be continued. ) NOBLE RED MAN. MfHcuIt for the Indian to liocomo Solf- Supportlnc. How to make the Indian self-sup- lorting is a problem which William L. Jrown tackles in the Southern Work- nan. He would solve the problem by naking the red men a race of goat terders. He says : "The question of elf-support for Indians is a difficult me. The limitations imposed upon hem by the nature of the country in vhich they live and the lack of an 5n- lerited habit of work , together with he pauperizing tendency of the ration ystem , make it difficult for them to irogress very rapidly toward self-sup- lort And since a training having this ml in view should be one of the facers - ors in their education the question is ine in which the schools should be larticularly interested. It has been uggested that goat culture might of- er a solution of the difficulty in some ocalities. The Indians' familiarity ath and love for animals makes herd- Qg a natural calling for them , and hey can therefore be easily trained in he care of stock. Then , too , goats can ustain life where cattle cannot. That ; oat culture may be made profitable here is little doubt , since there ap- iears to be a ready market for the arious products. Statistics show that he importation of the skins , from r'hich the chief value is derived , in- reased 28 per cent in the fiscal year of 898 as compared with 1897. Most of he goat skins used in this country are mported. It has been estimated that he market value of the importation f these skins amounts to twenty mil- ion dollars. " Parents Inability for Child's Farp. A parent entering a railroad train rtth a child non sui juris , but old nough to be required to pay fare , is icld , in Braun vs. Northern Pacific lailroad company ( Minn. ) , 49 L. R. L. < 319 , to be under an implied contract o pay the child's fare and , on refusal o do so , liable to be expelled fnCT he train with the child , even though he parent offers to pay his own fare r on refunding it to him if he has aid it. Time waits for no man unless he ; carrying the ticket for his watch. Snliinarlnn Trip tn Europe. Holland , the aubimirlno boat man , proposes to cross the Atlantic in a new craft which will live under water or travel like an ordinary , respecta ble steamer , Just as the owner desires. Ho has planned the itinerary and de clares there la no more to be feared ii. . making this experiment than when he Hrst took a dive In the original Iloland boat. His new invention will go first to the Bermudas , thence to the Azores , Lisbon and Cadiz. Spain. Much of the trip will be made under waiter , he says. t'ii Up-to-Oiito Service. A new telephone service has been established at Budapest , the object of the scheme being to supply subscrib ers with reports of all the important occurrences which are ordinarily chronicled in the daily papers. The service has a. main line IC8 miles in length , rand it is connected with pri vate houses and various public re sorts. Between 7:30 a. in. and 9:30 p. in. twenty-eight editions of newn are spoken into the transmitter by ten leather-lunged individuals , who work in shifts cf two. Virtue eventually manages to get the laugh on those who throw mud at her. In 1890 the mineral production of the United States amounted to $ G19- 000,000 and in 1899 to ? 97G,000,000. " 1 , 0 Genuine flFffik CTAETza XBJv P ffiust Bear Signature of Sec Fac-SImlte Wrapper Below. Vcr ? email snd as easy to tnlie as sngar. FOR HEADACHE. FOR D1ZZIHES3. FOR 3ILIOUSHESS. F03 TORPID LIVER. FG3 CQ3STIPA7IQH. FOB SALLOW SX1M. FOBTHECQEPLEXIGH , i 5 p Casts I Surely Vey CURE SICK HEADACHE. WINTER. TOURIST RATES. SPECIAL Tou.-a to Florida , Key \7est. Cuba , Bermuda. Old Mexico and the Mediterranean and Orient. HALS' Rates for the round trip to many points south on nle flrst and third Tuesday each month. RATES To Hot Springs. Ark. , tne fa mous water resort of America , on sain every day in the year Tickets now on sale to all thf winter esorts of the south , seed returning until fune 1st , ISMl. For rates , descriptive mater - : er , pamphlets and all othT informntion. all at C. & St L. R. R. Citv Ticket Dfflce , 1413 Farnam st. ( Paxton Hotel Bids ) orwrite HARRY E. HOORES , C. P. & T. A. , Omaha , Neb. V. N. U OMAHA. No. 2 1901 UUHtS WKLRE ALL ELbE FAILS. Best Coush Syrup. Tcstea Good. Csc to time. Sold by drusruists.