THE-EXILES. I BUSSIA1T'STORY. cMonsieurLafleurl" cried Yegor. “Present!” answered the dancing-master, -hose sledge had been the first to stop. • You have had a narrow escape, Monsieur r^fleur” said Yegor; “I thought I would C«ve to’wear mourning for you 1" ••Ah! ma foil. I thought it was the end ef the world! The learned say that we shall eerlsh by cold, and I suppose the snow hur Jtejne will have its partin the closing scenes If the last hour!” They talked without seeing each other, in the midst of the obscurity. The Yakouto Tekel had, meanwhile, gath ered alder and fir branches and kindled a with them. The fugitives uttered ories of loy on again seeing light and fire. They hastened to the blaze to warm themselves—they were cov ered with snow and scarcely recognizable] Yermac made very strange grimaces. “Ladislas! Where is Ladislas!” asked Nadege, looking around her for the little Pole. Alas! he was not to be fouhdl He had been tom from the sledge by the terrible hurricane! Yegor called Wab. He fastened his dark lantern to the dog’s collar and, after pro nouncing the name of Ladislas several times, sent the animal to search for the child. After being gone an hour, Wab returned alone. The animal was shaking with cold; from the bloody marks on its paws, they saw that the creature had thoroughly searched a long distance, but without result. It had returned to the forest that it might not per ish from exhaustion. Nadcge wept, repeating the name of her adopted brother. Yegor and M. Lafieur, silent and afflicted, thought of the poor child lost on the frozen plain and struggling in the darkness against the furious and icy wind, amid the blinding snow. The chief of police was touched by the grief of the fugitives and strove to Impart to them, in regard to the lad, a hope he did not share. The two Yakoutes prepared a shelter by making a deep excavation in the snow. The traveler’s spread their coverings in it, and took refuge there to await a lull in the storm. The dogs were unharnessed and grouped themselves in a circle on the snow, in which they dug holes to obtain warmth. A second fire was kindled at the edge of the forest by Yegor’s order. He hoped that Ladislas might, perhaps, be guided by the light of this fire and rejoin them. CHAPTER SIX.—LADISLAS AND THE GOLD-ROB BERS. • When the hand of gold-robbers to which Yermac’s son belonged quitted the neigh borhood of the consumed forest of Os trovoye, leaving for dead the chief of police, Dimitri assumed the command of it. The young man told the truth when he assured his father that he had participated neither in the assassination of Major Dob son and his servant nor in that of the Rus sian Khabaroff. The band had been renew ed several times and, when it attacked the chief of police, there remained of ita former members, upon whom the stigma of the murders rested, only the chief Koskintine shot and killed by Yermac. The others—considered as associates— had upon their consciences only the rough means employed to procure the gold stolen by the miners. This gold they carried into China across the frontier of the Amoor, em ploying against the Cossacks charged with guarding the banks of the river now force and now stratagem. They hid their gold dust in loaves of bread, introduced it in small ingots into their horses' hoofs or placed it in the stomachs of fish, transform ing themselves according to circumstances into merchants or fishermen. The alarm spread by Yermac, by means of the Cossacks, caused redoubled watch fulness among the posts scattered along the left bank of the immense Asiatio stream. Besides, when the escape of an exile is the matter in hand, nothing is neglected to stop bim; if necessary, the Russian government would put an army in motion to arrest a sin gle man, in order to discourage other at tempts of the same kind. The bandits commanded by Dimitri found themselves compelled to change their plans and to give up, for a time, crossing the Amoor. They went towards the Gulf of Penjinsk, situated at the most northern point of the Sea of Okhotsk. At this spot, fiiey counted upon succeeding in crossing the Stanovoi Mountains, by ascending the Omo* ion to its source. They had procured a number of nartas drawn by reindeer purchased in the Yak euto villages, and, forcing thoir Journey, ®*d already arrived among the spurs of the graat Stanovoi chain, with their bare and •nowy peaks. They did not hesitate to ven ture among these terrible mountains, from whence it is rare that one can make his exit When he has entered their sombre and inex tricable labyrinths. Yegor, also, had for a moment entertained •to thought of taking this route. He knew, thanks to his investigations, that every •hhuner the natives and the Russian half hreeds from the shores of the Sea of Ok hotsk assemble together in a village named Tchimikan, at the mouth of the Ouda, to exchange furs, fresh meat and fish for •Pirituous liquors, calico and tobacco brought J the American whalers; but the fear of “hding Russian vessels in that interior and "together Muscovite sea had caused him to *“?don the project. The gold-robbers could manage matters •esier by mingling with the trappers (prom tention^' Bn** 3ucl1 wa®> last exPloit of the band had been the hbery of the mail which departs monthly 7°m A]an—a station in the district of Ok ™»k, founded in 184$ by a Russo-American •hr company. It may be said, in passing, “at the postal road, a common, narrow Wth cut through the forests from AJan to takoutsk, was used by the Russian gov ernment to transport arms and munitions to possessions on the Pacific, during the Trrnean war. At intervals of from twenty twenty-five miles are postal stations, here reindeer are kept for the mail and the few travelers who venture into these regions. The mail carries every month about a wt*D ^et.^ers5 it is entrusted to a courier, d °'®rthe Journey is made with reindeer har ‘"®*®din pairs to a narta; in summer, the J~®d®er are replaced by horses. This pos »*route connects Yakoutsk, the capital of J®rn Siberia, with Kamtchatka. «. , robbery of the mail could not be of itfn . ‘proflt to Siberian bandits; but mulshed them an opportunity of main "•"hR their state of revolt against the laws ^““‘hority Oae evening, the bandits halted at the "“Wnce of a narrow valley, there to estab LUh their encampment in the open air. The night was dark, but the sky clear and the temperature comparatively mild. Besides Dimitri, the band included two Tunguses a Lamoute from the Bay of Tausk, a Koriak, a Ghiliak fisherman, a Russian convict ea oaped from the colony on the bland of Sag haiien, the fierce Cossack Ivan with whom our readers are already acquainted, and, lastly, another escaped exile. It will be seen that the band had been augmented by the reception of Beveral new recruits. The Lamoute had drawn from his pocket one of those enormous agates found in the beds of rivers, which the natives use for are-stones. He began to strike it against his Under-steel, employing for Under ex orescences from the birch tree boiled. This tinder plunged in a small bone box, in which was a supply of sulphur, procured for him a flame which he utilized to light the bivouac fire. During this operation, Ivan, axe in hand, was furiously felling the young pines of the vicinity, and Koschevine was carrying the wood with which to foed the blaze. The two Tunguses had already establish ed themselves beside a dead horse, of which they were devouring the flesh scarcely pre sented by them to the flames; it was the horse of one of them, an old hunter by the name of Ephraim, a great slayer of bears in the district of Okhotsk, who had the rep utation of slaughtering or capturing at least twenty of these animals every summer. Ephraim, too tightly squeozod by the Iprav SLik of his village—a young Russian of thirty, who passed his time in getting drunk in company with the priest—hod treated him as he treated his bears and had afterwards escaped by flight. a He had met the bond of gold-robbers only a few hours before, and had immediately become a member of it. His horse, com peting in swiftness with the reindeer, had broken a leg and, for that reason, boon con demned to death. Hie old Tunguse, who had not too much feoling, had slain it after the fashion of the country. Those Tun guses, though in general mild and pacific, are very cruel towards animals. Thus, their favorite mode of killing a horse which is to bo eaten is to throw it upon the ground, tie It firmly with repos and then to open the breast and plunge in the arm to compress the heart with the hand until death ensues. They claim that the meat is much improved by this process. Old Ephraim and the other Tunguse were capable of eating the horse before the break ing up of the encampment. The latter, named Avaram, with bronzed skin, very prominent cheek bones and small eyes black and bright as those of the Tar tars, belonged to a Tunguse group of the southeast of Siberia. Entirely clothed in reindeer skin, his chief garment was a kind of large fur overcoat, open in front. To its neck was attached, to be used at need, a species of very gay hood—a malachi—made of the skins of red, black and gray foxes arranged in alternate bands, with a border of sea otter fur; tight-fitting skin breeches, with the hair inside, covered his thighs; his feet and legs were enclosed in reindeer skin boots with seal skin soles, reaching above his knees. This Tunguse had joined the band of gold robbers in the hope of gaining with it suffi cient to pay the price of his betrothed, the daughter of one of the golovas or great chief of his tribe, a rare beauty .whom he had obtained at the exorbitant figure of a hundred reindeer—a veritable fortune. Among the Tunguses of the southeast, the price of a woman varies from one reindeer to a hundred. They tell, however, of beau ties of an inferior order obtained for a pipe of tobacco. These circumstances do not prevent the marriages from being celebrated by a Russian priest. The other bandits, after having killed a passably foundered reindeer, roasted stocks cut from the animal; the Koriak and the Lamoute, on their side, prepared a soup with the contents of the reindoer’s stomach. This Koriak was a young man, the sole survivor of a family dead of hunger. When he related to his companions that each year( at the close of winter, famine decimated the Inhabitants of Toumane because, at that time, the supply of fish caught during the summer gave out: “Why don't you continue to fish!” askod one of the bandits of him. “Ah I I don’t know,” answered ho. “The Russian government furnishes us with packthread to make nets, but we give it to the Lamoutes on condition that they shall fish for us. Unfortunately, the most fam ished among us eat all at the beginning of the winter!” The Lamoute wore suspended from his neck an enormous silver medal, the gift of the Czar, received as a reward for the as sistance he hod rendered his countrymen during one of their periodical famines. These spring famines are the scourge of Siberia. This medal, strangely placed on the bosom of a brigand, won for the entire band a great deal of respect from the J :■ tives. The Ghiliak fisherman was a native of the lower Amoor country, forced to flee after having slain one of his relatives who had stolen from him the flint of his gun. He feared, not without reason, that the friends of the defunct might retaliate according to the Ghiliak code—an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. This barbarian, who was very superstitious and inclined to idolatry, had been baptized in accordance with the Greek rite, and wore about his neck several little metal crosses. His name was Mich aelofi. As to Ivan, that former Cossack had aban doned the post of the region of the Amoor, where he lived as a soldier-laborer, coloniz ing the country. These Cossacks owe a service of fifteen years, for which they re ceive an annual salary of about two dollars and a quarter, the government furnishing them, in addition, with rations of black bread and, sometimes, of tea. Their nour ishment consists of salmon which they must catch themselves, and which, with dif ferent wild-fruits and the bark and roots of several kinds of trees, forms a diet but little varied. Those who live in the vicinity of the Bay of Castries consume a great quantity of very large and fine oysters. \\ e know that the Russians visited tho Amoor, for the firs! time, only in 1843; but, about ten yoars later, they succeeded in obtaining from tho Chinese the cession of all the regions stretch ing from the left bank of the river to the previous boundary of Siberia, gaining by this “rectification” of the frontiers an immense and rich territory. Ivan, who had grown weary of the life ol a colonist, had deserted. He often men tioned to his companions this curious cin cumstance; upon the shores of the great Asiatic river, the animals of tho cold coun tries meet those of the burning regions ol the south. The reindeer there becomes the prey of the Bengal tiger, and the wild boar and the badger live, side by side, with the hare of the pole and the glutton. Koschevine, the Russian, had escaped from the mines of Nertchinsk, following ths course of the Amoor in the hope of being r* celved by the native population established on its banks. He succeeded in passing all V the Chinese posts in s smell boat, keeping along tho left shore of the stream, living upon the produce of his oarabino and en during great privations: at last he reached tho Sea of Okhotsk, where he counted upon finding an asylum on board some ship. In this, he was unsuccessful; then, all chance of safety having vanished, he retraced his steps, resolved to return to the mines, where, nevertheless, a severe punishment awaited him, rather than dlo of wretchedness and hunger. But, after having scoured the country for somo time, he had met the band of gold-robbers and had enrolled himself in its ranks. When tho bandits had satisfied their hun ger, they loaded the fire with wood, and wrapped themselves in the warmest and largest coverings they possessed to sleep in the open air. The night gave promise of being quiet, when, suddenly, cries were heard—cries of terror uttered by a child. The men around the camp fire seized their weapons, and half raised themselves; soon they hoard the snow cracking beneath ths hoofs of a reindeer harnessed to a little sledge, and saw behind this sledge a pack of wolves hurrying along, howling and men acing. As the sledge approached tho bivouac, th» intimidated wolves slackened their pace, The child, beside himself with fear, cried out incessantly. When the rcindeor stop ped, the poor littlo being fell inanimate into the arms of Dimitri and Koschevine who had gone to his aid, while old Ephraim, his Tunguse companion Avaram, the Lamoutc and tho Korlak fired numerous murderous arrows at the wolves and frightened them with discharges of fire-arms. The inanimate child, half doad with terror, hunger and cold, was Ladislas. The-Lamouto saw his state of oxhaustion. and taking from a bag a piece of frozen inaro’s milk, he broke some fragments from it with a hatchet and placed them in a cop per pan over the fire. The milk, speedily boiling and foaming, was presented to tho lad. The first drops introduced into his mouth restored him W consciousness. - CHAPTER XX.—A LITTLE HERO. How had Ladislas escaped death, lost, alone, shipwrecked, as it were, in tho midst of the immense ocean of snow I After being hurled from the sledge into tho thick of the hurricane, he aroso safo and sound and sue ceeded in crawling under a bush which served him os a refuge. , The next day, after a night of watchful ness and anguish, he courageously set out in the direction it was probablo the sledges bad taken. He knew that the fugitives were going towards the north, and had learned how to tell where he was by study ing certain undulations of the snow formed by the wind. But the plain stretched out in its terrible solitude beneath tho winding sheet of winter. A few stunted birches and willows, which arose here and there, resented white monks at prayer upon the marble of a tomb. The sun disappeared below the red horizoD —it seemed to have melted in a conflagra tion—and great pink reflections ran shiver lng over the silvered ground. The nighl came on and Ladislas had not seen a living creature. He sought a shelter in a forest After having eaten a little frozen bread which he found in the pockets of his pelisse and drunk a few drops of brandy from the small flask he bore about him, he fell asleep overcome with fatigue, at the foot of a tree, behind an old trunk about which the heaped up snow formed a sort of rampart. Very early awabtft he saw the day return after long and cruel hours of waiting, and was much surprised to perceive at a short distance a reindeer browsing on the tender portions of the branches of the birches. He ran towards the animal. To Judge from the saddle and loather bridle it wore, it was a reindeer prepared for mounting, which had strayed away. In fact, it allow ed itself to be approached and seized by a strap. The child dimDed upon it, and thought himself saved, when, trusting to the In stinct of the intelligent creature, he realized that, instead of going heedlessly forward, it was following a path leading to some inhab ited spot. In a few hours, he found himself in the midst of a Yakoute village, half covered by the debris of the recent pourga. The huts of this village were scattered about upon the snow, as if thrown there by chance. They wore, nevertheless, constructed with exceptional solidity of trunks and branched of trees. The villagers spoke a little Russian, and Ladislas received from them the most cor dial hospitality. They warded him, gave him an abundant repast, and helped him, the following day, to make with some birch limbs and straps a little sledge to which he harnessed his reindeer. He asked of them Information concerning the country and what direction it was necessary to take to reach Nijni-Kolimsk—the sole means, by leaving that station to his left, thought he, of again finding Yegor and Nadege, who were to pass to the east of that town. Two hours later, he started on his Jour ney, driving a sledge for the first time in his life. This vehicle was of the most ele mentary description. Well wrapped in his furs, the little Pole held in his hand the rod which serves to direct the reindeer and to stop them in case of too rapid descent on snow-covered slopes. He went with ex treme swiftness, hoping to reach Yegor’s qartas on the morrow. He took no rest at night, and, as the sky was clear, guided himself by the polar star. Of all these things, Ladislas told only what ho Judged proper to tell to the ill looking men by whom he was surrounded, who questioned him with curiosity, greatly astonished to meet a child and a foreigner in these frightful solitudes. “And the wolves!” demanded Dimitri of him—“the wolves that were howling behind you, ready to devour you! Were you not afraid of them!” “The wolves 1” said the child to the lat ter, whose red pantaloons, ornamented with silver and numerous and varied weapons, sufficiently indicated the chief of the band —"the wolves that were pursuing me i They were behind me for I know not how many hours!” “They numborod at least two hundred!” said Ivan. flO BE OONTWUKD.J .•* onto, uuuKKcuuer stole $301 from his employers and * lost it at the poker table, ilia tlioft was diacovereil. but instead of bavin" the culprit ar rested the lirm guve him some good ad vice and a check for $50. with in structions to ieavo town. Instead of jumping at the chance to got away from the scene of his disgrace, the un grateful man went back to the poker room anil lost tho $30 check. Thun 'd* old employers bpuglit him a ticket or Portland, put him ou the train and -aw him off. after which thev caused lie poker dens to be raided. Of the 44.000 lady teachers in France. 11.000 are Sisters. What Two OlrU Got. Mr* Moffi-M]' darter went to ell them revival meettn’a last week, and the—got a huaband; reg'lar cane of love at flrat eight They're to he mar ried nex’ month. Did your darter got one too? Mra Pugge (sadly)—Naw, she didn't get nothin’ but religion. Hopeful View*. Little Dick—The school la closed be cause so many children Is sick. Mamma—They will probably be all right again In a week or so Little Dick (hopefully)—Perhaps the rest of us'll be sick then. Vile and Unworthy Of consideration are nostrums of whloh It is asserted—and there are many such—that they cure immediately bodily ailments of long standing. There are none such that can. Chronic disorders rannot he Instantaneously removed. Continuity in the use of a genuine medicine, such aa Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will eradi cate chronic physical evils Not the least of these last in the foree of Its oppo sition to medicine Is constipation, to the removal of which, if persisted in, the Bit ters is particularly adapted. Constriction of the bowels is a complaint which should be dealt with early and systematically. So are Its usual attendants, liver complaint and dyspepsia. For these, for malaria, rheumatism, kidney trouble, and more re cently “la grippe,” this highly and pro fessionally commended medicine is an un doubted specific. Nothing can exceed it, moreover, as a means of imparting strength to the feoble and nervous. —A hundred and twenty-seven years ago England seized the first eight bales of cotton raised In the south and declared Its production should cease. Thebx Is mors Catarrh In this section of tbs' country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to bs incurable. For a groat many yoars doctors pro nounced It a looal disease, and prescribed looal remedies, and by oonslautly falling to cure with local trostment, pronounced ltlucurable. Belenco has proven catarrh to be a constitu tional disease, and theroforo requites constitu tional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manu factured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional oure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon ths blond and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any oase It falls to enre. Bend for elroulars and testimonials. Ad dress. F. J. CHENBY A CO., Toledo, O. Mr Sold by Druggists, 75c. —Fifteen per cent of the students at tending Sydney University, In Australia, are women, whose advancement there is keeping step with their progress in Amer ica. An Important Difference. To make It apparent to thousands, who think themselves 111, that they are not affected with any disease, but that the system simply needs cleansing, Is to bring comfort home to their hearts, as a eostlve condition is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. —The population in Rome has doubled in twenty years, the number of residents having increased in that time from 200,000 to tOo.OOO and the oity itself haa been re generated. What Bib? was itok, wn gave her Caetoria, When aha mi a Child, eheeried for Cantoris, When ebe became Mlee, ehe clung to Caetoria, When ehe had Children, she gave them Castorth Tb* Only Ob* Unr Prints*!—s CaTou Find the Word? There to e 8-lnch display advertisement in this paper this week which hae no two word* alike except one word. The earn* ie true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. Tbto house places a “Crescent" on every thing they make and publish. Look for ft, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, bbautiful litho GBAPHS, or SAMFLS PHU. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp’s Balsam will stop the Cough at once. Go to your Druggist today and get a FREE sample bottle. Large bottles 80 cents and |LOO. —it is said that if the "voice" of an ele phant were as loud in proportion as that of a nightingale, his trumpeting could be heard around the world. For Coughs and Throat troubles use Brown’s Bronchial Troches.—"They stop an attack of my asthma cough very promptly."—C. Falch, Miahivillb, Ohio. »I« —Artificial teeth are so much in use nowadays that it took 40,000,000 of them to supply the demand last year. Bavi Youbsblvbs, Coughs t Hals's Hoxbt or Hobbooubd ahd Tab prevent bronchitis and consumption. Piss's Tootbachs Doors cure in one minute. —It is said that the sale of tha average novel does not exceed 1,000 copies, and ?publishers regard themselves unusually ortunate when called on for a second edi tion. Bsbcham's Pills curs sick headache, disordered liver and act like magie on the vital organs. For sals by ail druggists. —A Polish chemist has discovered that liquid oxygen is not colorless. In a layer of it thirty millimeters thick he finds that It has a bright sky-blue color. IjWS$?,0#5r a RATtnUi< iv Epileptic Fits, Falling sickness, Hyster ics, St. Titos Dance, nervousness, Hypochondria, Melancholia, In ebrity, Sleeplessness, Dls ainess, Brain and Spi nal Weakness, This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers, allaying all Irritabili ties, and Increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. rDrr-&^.%feav!SK: iiill ran rjmtdr baa bmpnpml by tb* Inml pi,tor Scaly. of Fort with, Ind. staco M S3 \s bow prapaiM undor bla dincUoa by tb* KOENIG MED. OO.. Ob'engo, lit MitsPmsinirtSlsirSmia IbrSS EenaSIss SMfc SSaHleibrSfc otvwtwmfc - Hits the nail on the head —one of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel lets. They do the right thing in the right way. They oleanso ana regu late the liver, stomach and bowels —thoroughly and effectively, but mildly and gently. They persuado, rather than force. One tiny, sugar coated Pellet's a gcntlo laxative; threo to four act as a cathartic. They’re the smallest, but tho best. There’s less to take, but thcro’s more good in it, when it’s taken. They’re tho original Little Liver Pill, and they've never been equaled. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels, are prevented, relieved, and cured. They’ro the cheapest pill you can buy, because they're guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. --—-.-————■ . i ‘August ; Flower”| VI am ready to testify under oath that if it had not been for August Flower I should have died before this. Eight years ago I was taken sick, ana suffered as no one but f a dyspeptic can. I employed three f : of our best doctors and' received no benefit. They told me that I had heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me so that I had to throw it up. August Flower cured me. There is no med icine equal to it.” Lorenzo F. Sleeper, Appleton, Maine. 4) THE COST IS THE SAME. UlM H.ftJtsI fl LUfy^ — ft. 11 at.,,warn THE HARTMAN STEEL PICKET FENCE Coats no mors than an ordinary clumsy wood picket affair that obstructs the view and will rot or fall apavl in a abort time. The Hartman Fence is artistic in design, protects the grounds without concealing the and is practical/owoi Instill*. ILLUSTRA TED UATAhmUK WJTIIF.. 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Martin’s Mammoth shoe store, 819 Fourth Shoot, SIOUX CITY, IA. MADE BT THE DUTCH PROCESS m "Tmtod with Cwtouto of Soto, Hapnta, Potnli or Bhutoiiti af Soto." The nee of chemicsle eon he readily detected by the peculiar odor from newly opened package*, and also from a glass of water in which a small quantity of chemically treated cocoa has been placed and allowed to remain for several days. ■For ordara. Eiubiirli , ural Daii.v artiom. ioo __ bSar^rnsisiisi ^ t>"w Th« dot# lo nice!y arijuatrd lo aull enat, aa ont pill ms nworbotooinuch. Each vlateonulna^.carried invaat pockak. Ilk* load pencil. liualnca* tUttn’g |tm| eonreniaiiee. Taken eaaler than auger. SoldVvn* All fan ulna fooda bear “C react nLM 8«nd S-cant atamp. Ton gat 81 page book wttb atmplft ntf uf«H»a M#|. GARFIELD TEA" of bad ealliii cam Sick Hndlikt, the Cniltilui earn CnillftUn. J. H. Hankimson, Carthage, Mo., writes: Was troubled with Constipa tion and Sick-Headache a year ago, and two boxes Garfield Tea com pletely cured me. A lady in Youngstown, O., reports a cure of Diabetes by using Garfield Tea, after the doctors had given her up to die. With Qclnlne, It (Garfield Tea) Is • specific for La Grippe. © fl FKT FOLKS REOOOEB PATENTS, PENSIONS Send for Inventor’* Guide or How to Obteln a Pit ent. Send for ntgeat of Poaelon ami B*«el* Laws. PATRICK OTABBELL, Walk* l*|t*af II C. Ilowble BREECH. LOADER GUNS Mint**. »* rrn—■ m WrowilL«'» Habit Cured la U» OPIUM ft&SHhfas&siiaBB Sioux Citt Pmixtixo Co. No. 897—la Wit will be to your interest when writ Inf to adrertUers to say you saw their ad rerti.emeot in this paper. Jk T: Fteo*e Remedy te CMarm k the Beat. Kesleet to rse, end Chenpeat JATA R R H BeM by drugslau or amt by mil. Ha at ■sselUm.Weuen TS.