W vK p ft m r ra IV y - - V if B V V i I 1 f TTJ xtftfrtdSK Back aches ail the time Spoils your appetite wearies the body worries the mind Kidneys cause it all and Doans Kidney Pills re lieve and cure It H B McCarver of 201 Cherry St Portland Oregon inspector of freight for the Trans- Continen tal Co says l used Doans Kid noy Pills for backache and T CONSTANT ACHINQ JSSBM J other symptoms of kidney trouble which had annsyed me for mouths I think a cold was responsible for the whole trouble It seamed to settle in my kidneys Doans Kidney Pills rooted it out It Is several months since I used them and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble Doans Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers Price 50 cents per box Co Buffalo N Y Charm strikes the sight but merit wins the heart A womans idea of a secret is some thing worth telling POK RENT OR SA1E On Crop Payment SEVERAL CHOICE FAHHB Send for list J UMLHALL Slooi City Iowa The only way to have a friend is to be one The best thing to put by for a rainy day is good health Catarrh Cannot Be Cured trtfiiSOCAL APPLICATIONS they cannot reach the Boat of the diheime Catarrh Is a blood or constl tutkraul disease and In order to cure It you must take Internal remedies Halls Catarrh Cure Is taken In ternally and acta directly on the blood and mucous surfaces Halls Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medi cine It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescription It In composed of the best tonics known combined with the best blood purifiers nctlnfc directly on the mucous surface The perfect combination of the two Ingredients li what produces such wonderful re sults In curing catarrh Send for testimonials free F 1 CHENEY CO Props Toledo O Sold by Druggists price 7Tc Take Halls Family Piilv for constipation First impressions are everything with the collector of engravings Ambition never to be satisfied with ones achievements Clean white clothes are a sign that the housekeeper ues Red Cross Ball Blue Large 2 oz package 5 cents Success To m perfectly satisfied with ones achievements To support a delusion is to court de feat Burned out but was insured in the STATE FARMERS MUTUAL INSUR ANCE CO of South Omaha Nebr which means that he got his money Has some agent tried to cancel your Mutual Policy Telling you all sorts of things almost crying for you Why Because he needs the money he would make out of you wanted pay fo the talk he gave Dont be fooled Keep your Mutual Insurance and get more if you need it Write to B R Stouffer Secretary South Omaha Nebr It takes two to fill a family jar Brief Superscriptions Senator Hanna has an envelope ad dressed to him that he thinks equals the famous one Secretary Elihu Root received Secretary Roots reads The Hon Li Hu Root Senator Han nas was inscribed Sen Hannah Wash The Lebaudy Airship The Lebaudy airship in its recent trial between Paris and Moisson a distance of about fifty miles showed a docile dirigibility giving it the palm among balloons and its screw pro peller working up to a maximum of a thousand revolutions a minute ena bled it to make headway against mod erate winds and choose its own course and return The ship after two hours of successful sailing and maneuvering came duly back to its own shed and dropped down before its door like c dove returning to its cote It has since suffered damage and been near ly destroyed in other experiments but the success of the one referred to is a step forward in aeronautics and of such significance in that delicate and difficult practice Best in the Worlcf Estherville la Feb 1st Mr George J Barber of this place says Dodds Kidney Pills are the best medicine in the world There is noth ing as good I had been sick for over 15 years with Kidney Disease which finally turned into Brights Disease I was treated by Doctors In Chicago but they didnt do me any good The best Doctor in Estherville treated me for five years with no better success I heard of Dodds Kidney Pills and made up my mind to give them a trial I am very thankful to be able to say that they cured me completely and I think they are the best medicine in the world The honest earnest straightfor ward experiences of real living men and women are the only material used in advertising Dodds Kidney Pills One such testimony is worth more than a thousand unsupported claims The people who have used Dodds Kidney Pills are those whose evi dence is worth consideration and surely nothing can be more convinc ing than a statement like Mr Bar bers There are thousands of others just as strong Jealousy The homage paid by fail ure to success Wise man One who is and doesnt show it a o 1 the same secret hiding place as before and laid it out before him without a word There was silence for some moments which was only broken by the sound of the doctors voice as he repeated the words to himself as he succeeded in deciphering them At the end of five minutes he gave it up Its of no use puzzling my brains rocsnagmE THE FATAL REQUEST OR FOUND OUT By A L Harris Author of Mine Own Familiar Friond etc vopyrigit 189 l by O ass ell Publish in a O omnanv p y r i g h t l o o S by Street cfi Smith CHAPTER XVIII Continued Wait a bit was the impetuous answer there is more to come still He told him about the visit to the detective and the detectives opinion of the matter Then with a little hesi tation in his manner he related his strange experience on the night of his return the voice which hq heard tell ing him where to look andthe discov ery of the photograph in the very place indicated Having reached this point in his narrative he paused to judge of the effect it had produced upon his hearer Dr Cartwright said nothing and Ted went on to tell how the imperfect copy of the letter which he had made himself from the remains of the original had been completed and filled up in another hand The doctor withdrew himself into ambush as it were behind his spec tacles Then he opened his mouth A remarkable co No hang it all was the interrup tion dont let us have any more coincidences Im sick of the very sound of the word Call it anything you like but that Dr Cartwright shook his head But what else could it be My profession al opinion in quite another tone of voice is that the sooner you hand this room over to the housemaid the better Meanwhile suppose you show me the original document that was burnt The young man produced it from EgsaByrea time there is an explanation pos sible And that is That in your sleep this arrange ment suggested itself to your mind so forcibly that you were able to retain the impression on waking and what you thought you read with your out- ward eyes was in actual fact only visible to those of your imagination The young man gave an impatient sigh Have it your- own way Of course I cant expect you to accept my statement as the truth My dear fellow said the doctor Let us both agree to maintain our own without seeking to disturb the others opinion But for all that I should like if you have no objection to sub mit the origin of this discussion to two tests and if you have a micro scope anywhere about the premises and can also procure a lamp as there is no fire in the grate we can pro ceed with the investigation at once Both articles were forthcoming with very little delay The doctor examined the blank spaces on the paper carefully through the microscope then shook his head There is no sign of any writing but your own I suppose you will stick to your original opinion in spite of this I do was the answer given most emphatically I thought you would answered his frifmd I suppose that now you have told me all there is to be told He rose from his chair Keep your seat said the young man I have not done with you yet First give me your pledge of secrecy The doctor somewhat puzzled gave his promise Now said Ted where is the morning paper I left it in the other room Do No sign of any writing but your own and injuring my eyesight over this any longer Let me see your copy of the letter that mysterious copy which the ghostly hand filled in for you I suppose you have kept it under lock and key ever since I have done better than that was the answer I have carried it about my person ever since I suppose you have some specimens of your late fathers handwriting that I may compare it with His friend put his hand to his breast pocket and produced an envelope This is it he said As to com paring it with any other writing it happens that without noticing it I made the copy upon the back of a sheet of paper upon which my father had written the first words of a letter a letter which for some reason or another was never finished The doctor took the envelope which was fastened down opened it and drew out the inclosure As he held it the other man could see on the outer page the date April 23d and the words My dear He watched the doctors face He saw its expression change from interest to bewilderment and felt that he was triumphing over the scepticism which had possessed his friend at the outset You notice the difference in the two handwritings in which the copy is made he asked You observe that part of a sentence is written in one and the rest in an other Well I cant quite say that I do was the unexpected reply What do you mean Why its plain enough Look here The doctor held the sheet of paper out toward him He saw the broken incoherent sen tences which he had himself written He saw and recognized his own hand writing The other had disappeared CHAPTER XIX Dr Jeremiah Is Astonished For a moment there was a dead silence Then the young man still holding the sheet of paper in his hand dropped into the nearest chair and the same words fell from his lips which he had uttered before under somewhat similar circumstances Am I going mad Not at all was the cheerful re sponse Dont you see he went on clapping him on the back You dreamt it that was all The other raised a haggard face toward him But how about the writ ing which I saw and of which even though it has now mysteriously disap peared I can recall every word It certainly is very strange said Dr Cartwright But at the same you want it Yes Ill get it he replied and quitted the room Read that advertisement doctor he said when he returned and he handed the paper to the physician Dr Cartwright read blindly through a small announcement among the Situations Vacant and then looked wonderingly up at the young man Im going to apply said Ted What gasped the doctor You mean to say that youre going to trick yourself out as a servant on the off chance of locating your fathers mur derer Why youre mad sir mad Here let me read the thing again Man servant wanted at once Apply personally J Ferrers Belmont House Hampstead Ferrers broke in Ted impulsive ly That name of all names There can be no mistake I tell you Im going to apply for that situation and so get a chance to study the man Very well said Dr Cartwright after a pause Go ahead with your plan and Ill help you all I can Ill explain that business has made it nec essary for you to leave home for a time With Ted to think was to act and he wasted no time in shaving off his mustache and repairing to Belmont House He created such a favorable impression that he was at once in 1 stalled in his new position under the assumed name of Edwards He was not able to discover anything for many days Mr Ferrers kept his room for the most part and was care ful to lock the door when he left for even the shortest time With great difficulty Ted or Edwards as we must now call him got an impression of the lock and had a key made but could yet find no opportunity to use it But one tremendous discovery Ed wards the man servant made and one which he had not anticipated When his eyes fell on Agnes Ferrers the pretty daughter of the man he was tracking down his heart was no longer in his keeping He had first seen pretty Agnes Ferrers in the Royal Academy and the smile she had then given him for returning a drop ped program had set his pulses throb bing and stamped her image on his soyl Now by a strange caprice of fate he was brought into touch with her again but they were not on equal footing now She was mistress he was a servant nay more a spy Eesides had he not sworn to avenge his fathers murder The situation was torture It cannot be he groaned I may not I must not love her I have my mission But try as he would he could not altogether hide his affection Ills eyes followed Agnes about and if she did not notice it there was one other who did This was Perkins tho house keeper who had ever been suspicious of the young man Not for a mo ment did she allow him to escape her pert scrutiny and he was often handi capped in his task by her prying eyes He dared not make any prolonged search for Perkins would have had him denounced as a thief and he should probably have been dismissed Then came a break in his attempt to unravel the mystery His mother was taken seriously ill and he hastened home only in time to hear her dying message When the funeral had con cluded he returned to his task leav ing his sister in Dr Cartwrights care CHAPTER XX Extracts from a Young Mans Diary I find my self imposed task harder and more torturing to my feeling3 than ever Heaven knows how I am to muster strength and determination to carry it through As it is I am torn by conflicting feelings my reso lution varies a hundred times a day I only returned to my situation two days ago I had fully determined in my own mind before doing so that the only way in which to remain mas ter of myself was to put myself as far as possible beyond the reach of temptation by allowing myself to see as little of and by holding no sort of communication whatever with the en chantress who has made havoc of my sternest and most justifiable resolu tions and taken my heart and brain captive I returned to this house full of the resolution of keeping my plan and pur pose constantly before me of remem bering whose son I was and whose daughter she is And how long did I keep faith with myself How long did I preserve this precious resolve inviolate Only until she encountered me quite unavoidably on my part and animated by some celestial sym- pathy and divine impulse spoke to me of my mother pitied my sad bereavement wished she could have done something and even went so far as to say that she could sympathize with me because she was half orphaned herself Poor fellow I heard her murmur to herself as she turned away Poor fellow What title would she bestow upon me if she knew the truth the truth which must out sooner or later Villain Spy Be trayer But I must not allow myself to think of this for if I do I am lost Let me employ my pen on some other and less distracting subject I have made a discovery since my iieturn or rather it has been made for me One of the first items of in formation worthy of notice which I received from cook who was appar ently bursting with that and a sense of her own added importance in hav ing played such a prominent part in the affair was Lor now whatever do you think young man Masters been and made is will which I was the chief witness This was a piece of news worth having Why has he suddenly taken thisstep What does he anticipate Does he begin to fear mans vengeance or Gods Is he menaced by sone mortal illness the chances of which I have before contemplated or does he mean to commit suicide and thus elude the just punishment which might await the discovery of his crime To be continued Wonderful Human Hand The human hand is so beautifully formed it has so fine a sensibility that sensibility governs its motion so correctly every effort of the will is answered so instantly as if the hand itself were the seat of that will its actions are so free so powerful and yet so delicate that it seems to pos sess a quality instinct in itself and we use it as Ave draw our breath each moment unconsciously and have lost all recollection of the feeble and ill directed efforts of its first exercise by which it has been perfected In the hand are twenty nine bones from the mechanism of which result strength mobility and elasticity On the length strength motion and mo bility of the thumb depends the power of the hand Without the fleshy ball of the thumb the power of the fingers would avail nothing and accordingly the large ball formed by the muscles of the thumb is the dis tinguishing character of the human hand Italys King as a Sportsman The King of Italy is devoted to all outdoor sports more especially ten- nis shooting yachting motoring and fishing There is a story that once on returning from a very bad days fishing the King met a poor manwho had been very much more successful The King stopped the man and asked for a light The man noticed that the fish the King was carrying were few in number and small and not recog nizing the King chaffed him on his bad luck You might be the King said the man with that little lot Why asked the King slightly em barrassed Well said the man everyone knows that hes all right as a King but hes no sportsman Spain Is Waking Up A recent report from Bilbao state that there is a very strong possibility of the import trade in nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia for agricul ture purposes being considerably in creased owing to the efforts to nrnvp tho merhnrlR nf milrivnrinTi In PANAMA 13 THE CUDJECT A Talk by Simmonri of Ncrih Caro lina WASHINGTON The senate pro ceedings Wednesday included a speech by Mr Simmons of North Carolina In support of the Panama canal treaty and the passage of a number of bills and resolutions Mr Simmons was the nrst democratic senator to favor the measure on tho floor of the senate He announced his disapproval of the intervention of tho United Satos in the Panrnm re volt but said tnat as the revolution was an accomplished fact and was such before the treaty was made ho could not accept the theory that the treaty itseir was invalid Mr Simmons said he believed tho president and the secretary of state should be relieved of all charges of complicity in the Panama revolt He added that he did not believe the pos session of information concerning an approaclyng revolution should be ac cepted as discrediting the president and addeu In reference to the views of others on this side of the chamber who may differ with me I think the state ment of the president in this respect should be accepted Undoubtedly the president knew of the forthcoming re volution in Panama It was his dlty in vfew of imminent insurrection to have on the ground sufficient forco to protect the lives and property of Am erican citizens This he did and if he had done no more than tihis he would have done no more than his duty under the law Mr Simmons announced his belief that the change of recommendation b the Isthmian Canal commission from Nicaraguan to the Panama route had been the result of honest convic tion He also accepted the Spooner act as a deliberate pronouncement by congress in favor of Panama and a direction to the president to construct tne canal by that route if possible to acquire title in a reasonable time He continued It is vehemently asserted by some of the opponents of this treaty that a vote for its ratification under the cir cumstnees is tanamount to condon ing the action of the administration as to the resolution and the recogni tion I thought that as favorably as I considered this treaty as impor tant to us as is the immediate con struction of the canal I dont think I can vote for it I join my colleagues in condemning whatever is wrong the president and administration may have done in bringing about the Re public of Panama but in my vote on the treaty I propose to recognize and act on the fact that Panama is an independent state possessed of equal rights and powers to make this treaty as we ourselves possess rwt only with our consent but the prac tically unanimous consent of all the civilized nations of the world Considerable discussion followed of a bill providing means for citizens of Porto Rico and the Philippines to become citizens of the United States The fact was developed that citizens of these and other countries similarly situated to the United States have no means of becoming naturalized as citizens Mr rettus during the de bate suggested that the island of Porto Rico should be made a territory and Mr Foraker said he had not as much objection to that end as some of his colleagues The bill passed but Mr Spooner entered a motion to reconsider which went over DONT HAVE TO RAISE BRIDGES Decision Affecting Pittsburg and qheny City WASHINGTON Secretary Roct after many months consideration ha decided a question involving several million dollars growing out of the ap rlication to oblige the elevation of the six bridges over the Allegheny river connecting Pittsburg and Alle gheny City The secretary denied these applica tions In his decision the secretary points out that to grant the applica tions which were opposed by thn Tit les of Pittsburg and Allegheny would involve the practical rebuilding of some of the bridges an extensive change ol street grades and serious injury to improved real estate n ar The river and that the whole would ccst several million dollars The bridges he says for only a few dayo in the year at times high water oiler obstruction to the vast and important traffic now carried on Experimcnt8 With Radium VIENNA Prof Gussenbauer one of the leading surgeons of Austria has conducted successful experiments with radium for enlargement of the gullet in cases o cancerous contrac tion of the osophagus thereby obviat ing the necessity of recourse to arti ficial nourishment Cruzen Wants Millards Job SAN JUAN P R Alonzo Cruzen formerly collector of customs of Porto Rico and his family sailed Wednes day for the United States He says he will return direct to Nebraska where his conversation indicated he will open a campaign with the object of succeeding Joseph H Milliard in the United States senate Kansas City Gets Reduction KANSAS CITY The Chicago Great Western has made a drastic cut in the wheat freight rate from Kansas City to Minneapolis The present discrim inating rate of 14 cents will be re duced to 9 cents effective January 30 The 9 cent rate from Omaha against the Kansas City rate almost complete ly shuts the Kansas City market out of the Nebraska wheat business The ChlfaS Great Western will also cut 2 Spain About 4000 tons of nitrate eas the frra Kansas rate Cit are used every year at Bilbao in the from fc ChlcaS to the production of acids and cl emical Mississippi river manure Tin Ore In tho Transvaal 1l It is reported from Johannesburg that a new and unexpected source of wealth has been discovered In the ter ritory of the late Boor republic Near the eastern border of the Transvaal op the ledge of the lcty South African plMeau three valuable lodo3 of tin ore have been found and tho deposita apparently so extensive that pre dictions are heard that the new colony may prove to bo ns rich in tin and cop per as it Is already known to bo in geld No chromos or cheap premiums but a better quality and one third more of Defiance Starch for the samo price of other starches American Apples in Germany Last year witnessed a groat in crease in the imports of American ap ples into Germany For the first eight months of 1903 the imports were 3G9G metric tons of 2201 pounds each against 211 tons and 5 13 tons during the crmo months in 1902 and 1901 Of American dried fruit baked and simply preserved the German im ports for the same period were 252 L tons against 11981 and 12060 tons respectively in 1902 and 1901 PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color Silk Wool and Cotton at one boiling Fatal British Climate and Cooking The climate of England kills half the oppulation according to London Truth the cooking kills the rest Throughout the world wherever thero is the sun or a spring there are Eng lish men and women endeavoring to repair their constitutions The medi cine bill of the English people to gether with its accompanying ex penses is sufficiently large to support a second rate power and does mainly support many large and small towns on the Continent and elsewhere Tho Wonderful Crcim Separator Does its work in thirty minutes and leaves less than 1 per cent butter fat The price is ridiculously low accord ing to size 275 to 600 each and when you have one you would not part therewith for fifty times Its cost JUST SEND THIS NOTICE with 5c stamps for postage to the John A Salzer Seed Co La Crosse Wis and get their big catalog fully describing this remarkable Cream Separator and hundreds of other tools and farm seed3 used by the farmer W N U The easiest way to outwit a liar i3 to tell the truth Story cf a Missionary A capital story has been told by an American missionary who has just arrived in London from Korea The difficulty in learning the language of that country is increased enormously owing to the large number of words which with a slight inflection of the voice are used over and over again with an entirely different meaning The missionary in question was preaching to some natives and assur ing them that unless they repented they would go to a place of punish ment Amazement rather than terror was written on the faces of his ori ental listeners Why on earth if they rejected his advice and refused to repent should they be dispatched to the local postoffice On another occasion a lecture was delivered in the course of which a beautiful moral was being drawn from the gay ca reer of the tiny butterfly which was suddenly cut short in the clutches of the spider The smile however fell somewhat short of its intended mean ing an it was not until the laughter had subsided that the lecturer be came aware that the victim which had been floundering amid the dainty silken threads of the web was a donkey which in the Korean language it appears is synonymous with butter fly Even the silk covered umbrella has its ups and downs DIDNT BELIEVE That Coffee Was the Real Trouble Some people flounder around and take everything thats recommended to them but Anally find out that cof fee is the real cause of their troubles An Oregon man says For 25 years I was troubled with my stomach I was a steady coffee drinker but didnt suspect that as the cause I doctored with gool doc tors and got no help then I took almost anything which someone else had been cured with but to no good I was very bad last summer and could not work at times On December 2 1902 I was tcken so bad the Doctor said I could not livo over twenty four hours at the most and I made all preparations to die I could hardly eat anything everything distressed me and I was weak and sick all over When in that condition cof fee was abandoned and I was put on Postum the change in my feeling3 came quickly after the drink that was poisoning me was removed The pain and sickness fell away from me and I began to get well day by day so I stuck to it until now I am well and strong again can eat heartily with no headache heart trouble or the awful sickness of the old coffee days I drink all I wish of Postum without any harm and enjoy it immensely This seems lke a wonderfully strong story but I would refer you to the First National Bank The Trust Banking Co or any merchant of Grants Pass Ore in regard to my standing and I will serd a sworn state ment of this if you wish You can also use my name Name given by Postum Co Battle Creek Mich Still there are many who persistent ly fool themselves by saying Coffee dont hurt me a vm days trial of Postum in its plae will tell the truth and many times sao life Theres a reason Look for the little Icok The Roai to Wellville in each package