) I Inbernational Press Ags'n “(»o away.'" cried Jacob Dealtry through tlic partition. “Let mo never sec your face again. A spy!” “Oh, grandpapa!'' “A—a thief! lie off with yon, once for all." j! . “Where am I to go?” implored Dolores. ■' She was stupefied and incredulous of the brusque expulsion. “Ueturn to the convent, if you will. You shall not enter my door again. A spy! A traitor!" The voice of tho old man, piercing and sharp, rose# to a sort of howl of menace witli these words Dolores turned away, with Florio under hor arm. Tho morning was clear, and the sun shine dazzling, yet the sky seemed about to fall on her head. Was it true that her grandfather had ban ished her from tho Wutch Tower for v* ever? A.crushing Wow shatters the {*■&•» of a crystal. The almtafa of brutal, un foreseen- pjee-teon front her home-, fay her nearest relat-fene, sfiatte-r-ed (Mr ideas, in a. si-milar mmamir. l'lo.r first thought wa'ss -of jfcrtfettrtwzofe Witetso ' was he? ltew. e»uM star iM Uu fas her huinilintwstr -$n& d-tst-M.yfs? faitam lacked tho nerve requisite to haunt the quay in qusm of him far did bomb fas stiuct of modest pride withhold he* from displaying her shame to the world? ■ Oddly enaugfa, tfao first and rudimentary eerngwefaMeriaa of dread of public opinion fa fat mind foo-k tine I: form of- a nahw# sfarfafateg from tire • .eye of alomhcr awl- grave- Mr. Busa*#, and Ills yeil-l-aw, little mother. The rocollect-lo.il1. ,of the fadfae of •thse .^a®, and of the gefifaHai wsh-o -Ira# bee® kind -to her qn t?hat. i-nomei-vto.es ogca* ;* slon, \dMj- not. trouble H’Cri The-r® A. ■ remained for her ©jb% the- safe refuge* of! the- emmveak Tire sad and monotoj-nous routine of ettetfe astic rule- was to- he the e-ad l of all’ joy dud bnp($m$st A P in'her throat! - She.- .. walked steivjsy tyjhsjiiMl- the - town: lifts- one ■ .ndifetec# hep utod s’h® passed other qsoUea&taifefl*twd. been phantoms r Near tlie fbrt$fi,«!<(ti;8Ksa>!Sli® ipj(«*s.e#’t^ gaze down on I'Tie tavrbt'r with- a ■f.e'r taln wistf illness. Stace-teccMIiMicwmI the ships coming ami g®j-n0bni.d; vtotfty# inspired an- 1 nl:e■ longing, and restlessuess in her breast. No,w Ar ■ thur Curzon was on board of one-of 'J the craft He would • be- sorry If he r could see her. Perhaps they might ' "‘never meet again. Ah-, how she loved , him at this moment! She loved him, with all her heart a-nd .soul. She realized the joy and tho bitterness of § the emotion. The corvette Lndislas "was steaming away in the distance,- bearing the g- young prince to the Nile. The Italian' - Jiacket, the Klettrieo, was to sail at a - later hour for Sicily. Dolores pursued Her way until the walls of the convent became visible. She halted again, aud shuddered, as if ahe had received the shock of a blow full in her heart She trembled and shrank back. If she entered' that portal, she might never be able to again escape. . On one side were the “TOU JADK. you DKVII. S IMP”’ .blue sky, the glancing waves of the see, the warm sunshine toward which , her whole nature yearned; on the other, in the cold shadow of the cloister, was the silent and repressed lot of the nun. The fugitive recoiled, oppressed wit 1st ;; doubt and dread. She hid her face in C her hands, weeping, and striving to i S’; conquer her own indecision, 'lhen a ! ewjft panic of terror seized her im • pulsive temperament. She fled back Swiftly to the Watch Tower. Fear lent wings to her agile feet The familiar boundary gaiued, she leaned against the wall, panting, and closed her eyea Her senses reeled, !> and a white cloud seemed to envelop . and stifle her. The little dog leaped to the ground, and regarded her with anxiety, his tail drooping. She knocked timidly. ^ “Grandpapa!” her voice was weak and hoarsfe There was no response. The out casts listened intently, the girl ‘ with parted " lips and dilating eyes, the dog with a sagacious little head cocked on one bide, and and cars pricked up. The ripple of the fountain alone was audible within the enclosure. “(irnndpapa? Open the pate for me. Yon will be sorry if you refuse!" .Still there was no reply vouchsafed by the obstinate old man. The ap peal of Dolores, more piercing and as sured tliis time, only served to arouse tiio echoes. .Incob Dealtry pave no sipnoflife. Did he hear the appeal? llud lie shut himself up in the tower? Fear again smote on the heart' of Dolores, a chilling, indollnabie dread of the coming night and darkness She must seek the convent as a shelter, or become a beggar, a fugitive. What other refuge could Malta offer her? J , Terrible alternatives of poverty, and ! frieudlessness. . ' She wandered away from the pate, j and crept into the ruined temple, ■ 1 where Lieut. Curzon had first found j 1 her grandfather lying inseusiblo on j ’ the pavement. Her instinct was to! hide herself from the light of day and | ^ the scrutiny of her fellow creatures. (’nu whs omy conscious oi a cowardly * impulse to put oil' the fatal hour of re turn to the convent until evening and j when no other course should be j , possible to her. j J She crouched in the most obscure i earner of the rain, holding Flo**® in J j her arms. The little dog wkmed trma j time to time a«4 licked bar cheek, i ( Flock* evidently ns-alr-sced the #*11 pe*U j . t*f the mlsera-lilc siUiutror*- | ^ Her glance strayed ar-emud th;e rnde i interior of tiro twple with iwm#h» j and iml iiiercHec. She knew the place Weil. Siho had often -visited it: with ! h»r gwndfatteesF asnd I>r. K«sai:t*. tks rose tefento her asset togtaartset s-ettitpfciwed tetoffiks fey SeestfeBed! about ! oil the ground. If tire past appealed to her at all, it ' wa-s when a sunbeam slanted to * golden shaft athwart the en trance, caa eulling to her the night when sire hod personated the I’ldoniv-hui maiden to the tableaux. ! ■bo hwM her #m» in b»bia#»M4 1 wept. Naagtt Hd tfotost ussaited he*, a®d the®- heir fae-u-1 ties became grad ually dull', eoldSly hpusHnritoA ftochap» - -she slept-. A light and Jaunty footstep .Wnww# bn » ntassaulitoa. voice feutonmi a wtoivto- ®j£ tslto «m*Q, *Shr Potto Mteow* Klakl. ” Ca.ptato Blake loosed tut®- ffog tons pile. Wop held h®» twHscb, am# shrank -bade further in to’ the slfa-l'o w. Fieri®, town atob to- sysiapa-thy. girl tot . ©■verwIielimejS -with d*9W. She-dkl »ot wish to foe sags* to her disgrace;, jwst then. Wfou-t as. sdst'ance could this. s traiigi,-r g i vi- her * She hated hii-U:, w ith suddc-ii cuprki'jL' of WMatomMe Ktototosiity. If lie ttto «»»ewsd her retKeat, foe to*tg% and JpHt at. tfo© «Mb Mhom Bd ores could not endure laughter mk! jesting to he* present plight. i "What,a beastly footo!" rro-Harhod i Ea-pt. Blake. aiaaxi, as foe lighted » i fresh cigar. The® he strolled on. The minutes passed slowly and i iiionotonij.usly. ftoloros- wi.slwd siie , had dc-ttt-WMKd, claimed the tattoo® syin* path} of the gallant soldier once -he 1 had departed. Me had been kind on a former occasion. Why should she i shrink from him new? Hope, expec tation, thrilling anxiety of- waiting, were all awaked in her breast by the < incident of Capt lllake's taking a country walk. If he thus i rambled forth from the town, why not another? Ah,, she watched, not- for him, but for another! Surely Arthur Curzon would come be- . fore nightfull. If he loved her, he j must be aware, by some unerring in tuition, of her need of him. Of course, he loved her. llad lie not repeatedly sworn that he loved her? She doubted this much needed tenderness no more than she feared the sunshine would be withdrawn by some cruel whim of nature from her island home At length her quick ear heard' an other footstep approaching, She rose to her feet with a bound, and I'lorio ’ rushed out of the ruin with a joyful bark of welcome. Oh, swift divina tion of feminine coquetry! Arthur Curzon had sought the Watch Tower, with a new fan in his pocket, to atone for his misdemeanor of the previous ! night ■•Good morning, Dolores,’' blithely. ‘Good morning,” falteringly. “Were you watching for me here, little girl? Bless you! Why, this rum old temple would serve as a good try sting place.” ■■Yes,” said Dolores, with a sigh. She grew pale, and her eyes sought the ground. “What is amiss, Dolores?” quickly. She flew to the young man's side, and clasped both of her hands on his arm. “I should have soon died if you had not come!” she moaned. “Grandpapa has driven me away. He is in one of his tits of bad temper. He has them occasionally. I did nothing to offend him, except to hide the broken fan.” Arthur Curzon's features darkened, while a gleam of anger shone in his eyes. “Did he dare to strike or beat yon, Dolores? He shall answer for it to me, if he did!" Dolores sighed. "Oh, no! Grandpapa has never beaten me, I think. He has struck me with words often enough, though.” She held up her sweet face to him, bathed in tears, for consolation and advice, i The young1 officer heard all, even to the project of retiring to the convent. “Tell me what I am to do,” sobbed the girl, hiding her face on his broad breast "Ah! I have no one in tho world besides you!” c Touching assurance of helpless in nocence and faith in his power of pro tection! Arthur C'nrzon was moved by it, as niaiiy another man would have boon in his place. “Why did you think of a convent?" he inquired at length. “You should have come to me, my pet ” Dolores smiled faintly. “How could I board vour ship? I im not a pirate, or—a—a laundress, ji rand papa is always urging my return ;o tlie convent.” “Curious! lie is a protestant,” mas “Riy. “it must be to get rid of me,” Do lores affirmed, ruefully. I' iually, he took her by the hand, ind led her back to tho Watch Tower. 11 is eyes liad acquired a steely glitter, while the lines of resolution deepened ibout his mou tli. “Door child! Your grandfather nust not he allowed to turn 3-ou out >f doors as if you had been gnilty of iome crime. 1 will make him listen o reason. Later, I shall take you Livay," he said, with resolution. Dolores looked jit him, lips and chin icquiring their sauciest curves. Al eady the terrible cloud of trouble vas passing away from her spirit, lad she not cast tho burthen of her rouble on another? oil will take me nivj,v if T will ;o,” she supplemented. “05 course.” The cloud of misgiving, and perhaps .pprehension, was gathering sqw .bout the path of Arthur C'urzon. 'Image in all relations with the sweet n4 bewitching creature at his side ta*l came with a* alinastt appalling wiflttcss, jarring and ps-rplesinig to he almost depw. If the Wtttch "wb, with 11k; tangled garden., had a h idden paradise to the supine (atl've, lip. £msvm4 because of the 'Vantifill girl wh@. dwelt there, how more so- was it to himself with iis fiery natupe of the sailor? Me fed ut availed himself of a proposed leave f absence, he cause he preferred to iuger at -Mai la and hold stolen inter oarse with U©lores. He would not acute a held m favor of Cupt. Klaku, ur some other airy trifle-r. The ataaev phe-ro of reverie was roseate, even 'i tBfi possessed mo due value spun t in of test tlaiduii.ru, varied by feiiiininG sajertess, fteree, little A*’-®*,.. . . vE'i>'Tfi w ** t» wm us nn wenuk wnn row. ” ippestsed to a se4«rtire ensiling tatoj fwility. lielwdd! lle«» was the fairy jriweess tbrassst forth iro-ui her garden o beg her bread o.a the highway! Arthur Cwrz®®> knocked ©a this gat®, a tiara, with an imperious insist anew. Nteeb Headtry vausehsufed a® response. The two yoita-g- people looked at each rtter in mutual disssuay. “You see it is »o good to knock, ’ said the girl, with blane-hrag lips, I lev evaneReent gaiety had left her vVth trembling limbs, and her great syes fixed beseeehingly on her oom sanion, who held her destiny in his ceeping. (TO BE C OXTIXI EB,) A lie in nr ku Me Feat* An account is given of a remarkable oat accomplished for the llonseconrs Spinning works at Nancy, namely, in sreasing the height of a chimney about sne hundred feet high by some thirty :eet additional, without stopping the vorks a single day. Owing to the power being augmented, the existing L'liimney did not give sufiicient draft lor the greater number of boilers, and me or two alterations were involved —either to build a new chimney along side the old one or to raise the latter still higher. An expert by the name >f Hurtling offered to increase the leight of the standing chimney with mt any interference with the work of she mills, and, aided by another man squal to the occasion, the contractor proceeded to fix a series of light steel adders to the chimney by means of ron hooks driven in between the :ourses of tho bricks—erected a pulley it the top of the chimney and a flight >f scaffolding all around, and then, laving lowered the cornice surmount ng tlie chimney, successfully built on to tlie top at the rate of about four to live feet per day. A 1'latu Duke When Queen Victoria was on her svay to Florence, divers dignitaries assembled at the station to greet her. While waiting they observed a man of nosiest appearance, who strolled up md down beside them, and whom they took for a journalist and sniffed it as having no right to be so near. A station official curtly ordered him back, and the stranger obeyed with a mild and courteous acquiescence, n.e station official and the civic digni taries were ready to weep when the train rolled up and the queen, alight ing, held out her hand to the stranger with a delighted exclamation. He tvas the duke of Saxe-Meiningen. The difference between genius and talent is that the former is a perpet ual, never-failing spring; the latter ia merely a cistern that has to be filled up from time to t.me. DAISY AXD POULTRY, INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. flow Successful Farmers Operate The Department of the Farm—A Few Hints ns to the Care of Five Stock and Foul try. BRING the past few years now and again, references have been made to a variety of duck called the Indian Runner, and when traveling in Cum berland and North Lancashire I have been surprised to see the large num bers of this vari ety ol waterfowl Kept. me same true to a more limited extent^ in some parts of Southern Ireland. When in conversation with farmers and farmers’ wives, more especially in Cum berland, I learnt that they pin their faith strongly to the Indian Runner, declaring this to be the most profitable duck known. This is due to the fact that the production of eggs is their chief object, table qualities' being a second ary consideration. A few particulars with regard to this variety will be of interest. Up to the present time information with regard to the origin of the India# Runner has been very scant, and even now we cannot point to any definite particulars respecting them, nor wheth er they are bred in any foreign country. In a small brochure issued by Mr. J. Donald ef Wigton, Cumberland, it is stated that about fifty years ago a drake and three ducks were brought from In dia to Whitehaven by a. sea captain, b«t as the term India, even today, and to a greater extent fifty years stg®, may n*eaa any place east of the Cape ei Good Hope, this dees not help ns ns to the definite port of ship-meet or pur chase-. I an* wet w ithou t hope that this article may lead some readers to Asia to make Inquiries o« the subject. Mr. Donald states that the snnw captain brought over a further eenstg-nmemi a few years later, bat that “they were not known to their tatcodweer by any ape* el-al or dfcttoe-ttve name, having simply attracted his attention when ashore by their active habits and peculiar pen gut® carriage.” The first sp«cime®ts brought over, and, we believe, the second also, wens presented to some friends to West Cum berland, to whose hands they remained absolutely for many years. But, with that des-ire for sharing to a good thing Which ts characteristic of the Cum brians, a- large fcnal rapidly sprung up- for stack, and- thus they have dis seminated themselves through that and the adjoining eownty. The name give® •to them is, -first, because they are sup posed to have some from India, and, second, that they have a "running" gait; beaee we have reached the eam bifiatlion “Indian Runners” A broods* of this variety says that fee considers Indian Runners the best pay ing variety of duck to keep, except when, reared absolutely and entirety far tte table. For that purpose they are undoubtedly sma-li, 8 to 4 fb». each when, fully grow®. Whilst they do- not reafitly fatten, they are very nice eat ing, and the -flesh more resembles the Savor of wild duck, hut is mush softer and mot's easily extern At ten or twelve weeks «H the Indian gunner fe as fen der as a young chicken. The flesh is partl-eelored, the neck and shoulders ©reamy white, and the rest ef the body MKh darker, the dividtog line being very clear and distinct. As already mentioned, H Is as a lay ing Suck that the Indian Runner excels, and is said to average 12& to 130 eggs per annum, without any special feeding, but simply When given hard w» morn ing and usight. When warms are easily found they require very little food oth er than this. The eggs are ef fair sine, white in shell, of good flavor, and not nearly s© strong as is usually the ease with duck eggs. Mr. Gitlctt informs me that he has ten- Runner ducks which have laid 746 eggs from January 1st to May 30th of the present year, which, considering the severe frosts which pre vailed during the first three months, is a remarkable result.| The highest average was sixty-one eggs from ten ducks in one week. As a rule, if prop erly grown, these ducks commence lay ing when about five months old-,and if they are hatched in May and June wiil begin to lay before the severe weather arrives, and continue egg production right throughout the winter. Early hatched ducks are liable to moult in the autumn, and this means fewer eggs in the colder months. Ducks hatched the first week in March have been known to commence the first week in August, and it is more desirable to bring them out so that they will begin in November. Five ducks can be run with one drake, and the eggs are remarkably fertile. Indian Runners hre non-sitters, but, as in most other breeds in which the ma xernai msiiiia is susiwuuea, exceptions are found to this rule, but cannot be re lied on for sitting purposes. In appearance the Runner is lengthy and slightly built, with close, compact plumage. The fore part of body is ele .vated, and the head carried high. This type is found to be the best layers. The following is a description of the characteristics of the Indian Runner: Beak: Bright orange in color, with a triangular tip of jet black, but as age advances the orange color becomes spotted with olive green, and finally assumes a dark olive green color, espe cially in ducks, the drake retaining the orange much longer. Head: Of the drake, above the eye, a very dark brown, with a slight patch below the eye on each side, these mark ings being neatly rounded oft behind. Neck: Pure white down to near the shoulders, which, with the breast, is of a beautiful grayish-brown. Under parts black, and wings pure white. Tail: Brown, with curled feathers white, and for about two inches above the tail the feathers are a very rich dark brown. Legs: Orange color. The duck has similar markings to the drake, except that the colored parts are a sober brown, like a very light Rouen duck. In summer the drake, as is the case with Rouens, assumes a color like that of the duck an back, shoulders and chest, but is not quite so light in color. The bead also becomes of a more dowdy | color, without that brilliant luster which characterizes the winter plum age. He also loses the curled- feathers in his tall, which are not replaced until after, the autumn moult.—Edward Brown, In London Live Stock Journal. flow Batter Becomes Rancid. Butter stored In a warm room or ex posed to' sunlight may become rancid from noxious bacteria without becom ing sour from either bacteria or from direct chemical change, according to V. Klecki, of Leipsic, Germany. The acidity of butter increases regularly with its age, and by the action of sun light and heat this goes on more slowly than under the usual conditions. Heat diminishes the activity of the acid miv crobes, and they may be killed by di rect sunlight, hence the degree of ran cidity of butter cannot be estimated di rectly from its acidity. Oxidation plays an inferior part in rendering butter acid, the sourness being principally duo to the action of bacteria, which art* chiefly anaerobic, getting their, oxygen by chemically decomposing the butter and hence they can live without air on light. Temperatures of freezing and of body heat retard the production of acid. The addition of four per cent of, poisonous flouride of potassium to test tubes of butter entirely prevents the action of acid-forming bacteria, and the butter retains its aroma taste and consistency, but the flourides cannot be used as preservatives because of their poisonous properties. The bacteria die after they have produced a certain quantity of acids in the butter. Hence, tlie acid number eventually reaches a maximum beyond which it does not in crease. This maximum corresponds to a rancidity of about 18 degrees. No acid is produced in butter by light with the exclusion of air, nor by pure air with the exclusion of light, but bacteria may produce acid in this butter, hence the great importance of antiseptics in keeping butter, as has long been known in practice and followed through the use of common salt, which hinders the action of the bacteria.' A freezing tem perature and partial darkness have about the same effect ia dimtaisitiEg: the preduet ion of acid as has salt on butter exposed to. light. The proportion of casein in the butter Mas little effect op the acidity, as® tedireet ou-n'Wg-bt does fewt little harm, trader ordinary ; conditions the-acidity of butter is-chief* ty due to bacteria an® not to direct exb datto® of butter fat. NeverthelesSy but ter should he k®pt away from direct sunlight as® warm -temperature®, though these factors- may retard the acidity of the butter, but because they also indue® putrefactive changes Which taring about rancidity. SRHS M In producing a pound erf butter ttsgjsa are sixty-six times more room tor skill than to toe pttoMttoi «f mm pound of potatoes. Dairying offers » man tbe test efetcgee fc» putting We skill tote money. The ©bject of the to»tter>4D(to er is to get the fat out of the milk with as little of the otter constituents in the milk ae pesetote. In every MO pounds of butter there should be about 13 pounds oit water, 82 pounds of butter fat, 3 pounds of salt and 2 pounds of the i ether constituents in toe milk. A cow is not a machine, but a living organism,■ i a®d*h®reforo will not give a different protect because she takes different food. The feed dacg net affgnt tog blogd ! of a cow, frail which talk is largely formed. Feed will affect the quality of the milk sometimes by changing the composition of the fat itself. If the quantity of fat is wot affected the vela ttle fate from the feed will become part «i Mi® fat in milk, and give its peculiar Savor to the milk. These volatile Sa vors can be expelled by heating milk ae cream t® 15® degrees. The ease with which cream may be separated from the milk sometimes depends upon the kind of fond a eov takes. Cows for making butter should be handled under such conditions as will give them perfect re pose. Cleanliness should be strictly ob served. Impure air of the stable will affect the milk, and ensilage will not injure the milk when fed to cows. When eows have been milking a long period or have been over-heated, or without salt, the milk will become sticky, and prevent a complete separation of the cream. By having some fresh-calved cows’ milk to mix with the toilk of cows that have been milking a long time, a better quality of butter can be made. Keep the cream sweet and cold, and use a suitable fermentation starter, and you will get a quality of butter In Jan uary as good as the quality of June but ter. If cream is properly tempered, a temperature of from 54 to 58 will be suitable for churning and 45 minutes will be long enough to get butter.—Pro fessor Robertson, Ontario. Whence the Quality? Quality of milk is unquestionably bred into a cow, and not fed in. My own convictions in regard to these points which you raise are as follows: 1. The percentage of fat In a cow’s milk is not materially influenced by the selection of foods, provided she is fed a generous and well-balanced ration. 2. In a large amount of feeding of milch cows which this station has done during the last five years, we have ob served that changes in food have pro duced changes in the amount of milk rather than in its character. Generally speaking, an increase of the total, amount of fat produced has been ac companied by a corresponding increase in the other solids, as well as in the volume of milk. A milking cow be longing to certain breeds that produce thin milk cannot have Jersey quality fed into her milk any more than one can feed brains into a Digger Indian. That quality must come into an animal of those breeds—if it comes at all through a process of selection and per sistent good feeding, and will be at tained only after several generations, perhaps not then.—Maine Expt. Sta. A Crimson Clover Question.—Mr. P. W. Sargent, of Amesbury. tells the Farmer and Homes of success with crimson clover where others have failed. His success also was purely ac cidental. He sowed a side hill last fall with crimson clover and berdsgrass. The following rains washed it badly, and to all appearances this spring the crimson clover was a failure, but later it began to germinate and come up in good shape at the lower part of the field where it had been more deeply covered by the wash from the hill above, and since then has done very nicely. This experience raises a ques tion in Mr. Sargent's mind, whether or not if crimson clover could be sowed so late in the fall that it would not sprout, It would start early in the spring and become a valuable crop. Ike 9tMt j«n»ittT, T, 1 I» » human nerve. Thl.il 1 •»« Let It become overs, * end the sensitive™!? K-r s Momach B existence, since U tT, them at the same ,i^'or*>*7uJ superlative e!lica“y ft l! »liS tlon. malarial and at ism and neuralgia. ^ C0QiPUitt *he Art of b„, '•till,,. It is perhaps one of'tCl that the art of breathin'! v - more and more a subiect* ?is Oculists as well as ?! "k deeply into the study !lo!" to be touched upon here JJ1 have cured aggravated cm.,1?, nia by long-drawn re!?!, fever-stricken patients wIL ed. stubborn forms of indigefc to disappear. A tendency?,!1 tion may be overcome mJ,1 jty has within the Iasi fe“™? « ly demonstrated, by exercii?,!' mm. Seasickness, too ? * mounted, and the viaim j u influence taught to within, him6 °f an eaergy dlrecki ■ IXhc,re Is a ^mous physician , ish who has written an extern upon the subject of breathing besides, formulated a system}* asthmatic patients are made to without losing breath, while «,* f rom weaknesses of the heart are; At Meran, in the Austrian patients (almost every roval l! inurope is represented) are put tin a certain system of breathin walking. The mountain paths > marked off with stakes of difl color, each indicating the mini minutes in Which the patient walk the given distance, the brea and walking being in time to* As the cure progresses the ascent made steeper, and steeper. The wisest men have never in, been the best men. Every mm is f*a of pbflssopliT»i| is WHubie to apply te his ewuamjg The angler may fer-gel Us:8aSs,tji( amn t-cur poet, never. ts t-Mo c.ofnjjlairft at man; at this seat Tbs neasati la fsiitawt In the iffit.-tha a nerves are w«als awl lire body-to-i ft* tsh and w&eufthy eandifcten. ftrat tsray be restated lty M-aeifJs Sirajs^ wWclh feeds them up®n jwkj liiuoil, 4 tfeis medtetee will also escape anappe^ and tana up t%e system end tte» ebt ml rad refreshing Bleep and vig»»ui tab Hood*s Sarsaparillt Is- the only true blood pnflter pnpiid In the public eye today, ft ; siti-faS act '•ftaMroniojtJi.il 5 ttsfld'sSarSjif-i* ★ HIGHEST AWARD* WORLO’S FAIR * # The BEST* prepare© m SOLD EVERYWHERE, ■Pc imm CARWS & flOSg.aawV«b t i the best medicine tor all diseases in aTer?f,,L mtive of diphtheria; wuets and , ivigorateetlie stomach and; jldlty pvtUeure griping, la j >lic. .not -fa^ue yourself a*lc. eeptess*i;,dits wlnea Uiswrthta 50»rW“ 1 ire your cfiild and save your on a sttenfcui. , Dr. Jaque’s German WormW* sstroy worms ft remove tlicnilromtn . , ’repared by Emmert Proprietary CM*"* SOLD BY ALL DBUCS4STS. PROFITABLE DAIRY WORK l only be accomplished with the very ot tools an(i ■\Vlth a Davis rator on the sure of more • butter, while milk Is a val Farmers will take to got a Illustrated mailed free reams*!* irm you» ad lett« ie skimnaS ib!e (***• iakcnoE> avis. 5* atalo"al ..jtsrf*1 ■DAVIS & BANKIN “ *r Cor. Randolph & Dearborn Sts., cniJij__ EDUCATIONAL. ACADEMY OF THE SACRED, IgJ The rourse of instruc tion in eJ„bnj* J by the Keliirious of the Sac.r vbole ranire or subjects neces a > i (ui'l refined education. l'r<;I*1 _«■ myr#f*t.v flre‘ tonal i.eitnesB ami the pri****^*1 e .jroiinti' ■ ieet-* of un• "_.7b' iuBtem*1^ an 1 in sickness they are atn n * j.-, r nirfl'^j* Fell te m onena Tuesday, pa-HlO** Fall te-.m opens Tuesday, fceij- J, ^>i>UtlO{« - tleulai', address J * J»**V*** Acr.demy fcnrred Heart, - Iowa College ill* , C'OO* Offers special advantages to wishing to become 1' "' lK}y„*s Moines. write l’rof. i*. S. M* MU'- *'LS^_ m taxi — ttijxit pjpcnaianti-^Jbia CSTALOOOt M£t __|p |1 ilENSSOS^'Wall'^iS* PshccMsfjMvWec^lo0.^ n~ . # Successful iyProsf^>rnJ°»“^ Late Principal E udi. at*agcliU^31 **‘ * 3yrs ulast war, l-»»Hluauai^ Bo* 214G, Ko*:Un»ter, I». *_. - -——-rr.«5. Bo*214o» --_ , .*••••*?