KIDNEY TROURLF Suffered Tm\) Years—Relieved In Thrct Months. "I have suffered with kidney and bladder trouble for ten years past. “Last March I commenced using Peruna and continued for three months. I barn not used it since, nor have I felt sl pain. **I believe that I am well and I there fore (Ire my highest commendation to the curative qualities of Peruna.” Pe-ru na for Kidney Trouble. Mn. Geo. H. Slmser, Grant, Ontario, Can., writes: "I had not been well for about four years, f had kidney trouble, and. In tact, talt badly nearly all the time. “This summer I got so very bad I thought I would try Peruna, so I wrote «o you and began at ones to take Peruna Wad Manalln. ' "I took only two bottle* of Peruna led an* ef Manalln, and now I feel bet tar than I have for some time. “I teal that Peruna and Manalln cured ■e* and made a different woman of me altogether. I bless the day I picked up the little book and read of your Peruna.” It la the business of the kidneys to reaamra from the blood all poisonous /materials. They muat be active all the time, else the system suffers. There are times when they need a little assistance. Parana (a exactly this sort of a rem edy. It ha* saved many people from disaster by rendering the kidneys ser vics at a time when they were not able to bear their own burdens. Atchison Globs Sights. ‘Bom* people say everything la for the beat, but they don’t believe It. The man with the hair Up always wants to do the talking, Some people won't have anything new tf they can buy It second hand. Two men are nearly always braver than one, even If one of them has cold feet. tf a boy earaa 10 cents, he wants It; he dan't willing to trust the best man alive. Woman eeem to try about everything for their complexions except the rules of health. Arbitration Is a great thing, but It doesn't appeal to the party In a dispute who has a “cinch." What has beoom* of the old fashioned child whk’li was always suylng, "I'm go ing to tell mamma!" The bride Is never nervous, and the groom always thinks he has a lot of nerve -because he showed up sc all. If a man ever thinks much of his wife's kin, It Is apt to bo a younger sister, of ■.whom the wife will be Jealous. Some boys can have a pretty good time ..at anything which Interferes with the hap. plness and comfort of others. -a love them," sold an Atchison man to • day, of his grandchildren, "but they near ly set me crazy." (Chart: They live at : 'us house.) .There was a fracas at the Globe office :yesterday afternoon, ana perhaps the truth about It will be Interesting. For many years, railroad officials have had a habit of visiting towns on their lines once a year. Lod by the local agent, they • visit the newspaper offices, althought the rxatlroad officials do not care to see the • editors. We have stood this for twenty nlnc years, owing to passes, but passes having been withdrawn January 1. 1007, we rebelled yesterday; when Jim Oarslde appeared at this office with a party of Santa Fe officials, we refused to let them in. We regarded Jim tlarslde as the prin cipal offender, since he knew the officials did not care to see ub, and since we have often told him we did not care to see the officials, therefore we pushed him down the steps, which started the story that there had been a light. In the railroad party were the general manager, the pas senger truffle manager, the general pas senger agent, the second vice president, and two or three officials whose names we did not learn. We are tired of these offi cials looking over our office with a super ior air which seems to say; “These dubs should see the Tribune office In Chicago," and passes having been withdrawn, we do ant intend to stand It any longer. CHANGE IN FOOD Works Wonders In Health. It la worth knowing that a change tfc food can cure dyspepsia. "I deem It my duty to let you know how Grape-Nuts food has cured me of Indi gestion. "I had been troubled with It for yaara, until last year my doctor ree pmraended Grape-Nuts food to be used awry morning. I followed instructions and now I am entirely well. *The whole family like Grape-Nuta, ere use four packages a week. You are welcome to use this testimonial as you ■ee fit” The reason this lady was helped by •the nse of Grape-Nuts food Is that It Is predlgested by natural processes and therefore does not tax the stomach as the.- food she had been using; It also contains the elements required for Aolldlng up the nervous system. If dhat part of the humau body Is in per fect working order, there can be no dyspepsia, for nervous energy repre sents the steam that drives the engine. When the nervous system Is run down, the machinery of the body works badly. Grape-Nuts food can be used by •mail children as well as adults. It •la perfectly cooked and ready for In atant use. Read, ’The Road to Wellvll/e,” la jpkgs. “There’s a Reason.” ^ FOR THE BUSY HOUSEWIFE. ♦ Corn Pudding. Drain one can of corn and chop hn* - ly; mix with a cup and a half ot mi k, two beaten eggs, naif a cup of cra< it er crumbs, one tablespoon oS sugar, mi a salt and pepper to taste. Heat hard, pour in a buttered pudding dish, law covered for fifteen or twenty minute.-, then uncover and brown. Succotash may be used in the same >vay. 1 n13 makes an excellent luncheon or supper dish, and with a little cold meat and with good broad and butter furnishes u substantial meal. Rice With Tomato Sauce. Form plain boiled rice Into cro quettes, using a very little hour at.a white of eggs to hold the particles ,to gether. Roll in breadcrumbs, place ill a wire basket and fry In deep rat. Place where they will keep warm, and then drain a can of tomatoes, adding a little of the pulp if it is desired. Place over the stove and thicken with a little cornstarch or arrow-root. 1 our over the croquettes on the platter anu serve at once. Custard Pie. Three tablespoons of sugar, oni tablespoon flour, one teaspoon ot but ter; the yolks of two eggs, beat them to a cream; add one and a half cups of milk a little at a time and beat; add last the whites of the two eggs beaten stiff. Bake with rich crust. Mrs. C. A. Vlnlng, Fonda, la. Fried Mush. Sift a cup of commeal into a quart of boiling water, add a teaspoonful of salt, stir steadily until it begins to bo 1 and Is free from lumps, cover and cook In a double boiler for at least two hours, longer If possible, stirring often. Set aside In a broad, shallow pan until cold and stiff. Cut Into squares dip each of these into salted meal and fr> until brown on one side, then turn and brown on the other. After washing and thoroughly drying bed quilts and "comfortables" fold and roll them tight, then give them a heat ing with the rolling pin to liven up the batting. It will make them soft and new. The failure or a cam-, suumc, or similar dish, the lightness of which depends in a great measure upon the white of the eggs, may be traced to the cook’s ignorance, who, instead of folding In the stiff whites, stirs them In, thus undoing all the work of the egg-beater. Broken china may be mended by brushing the edges with white lead, such as painters use. Press the pieces together and tie them in place and leave two or three days to dry. To sprinkle eorrimeal on the matting or carpet will make it look bright and clean when It Is swept with a broom, then a carpet sweeper. Save sour milk for making various cakes and suet puddings; it makes them very light, and thus a constant source of waste is avoided. Fine granulated sugar makes a bet ter cake than the coarse grade, and confectioners’ sugar will make a smoother frosting than the powdered. A pinch of bicarbonate of soda mixed with tomatoes, which are to be cooked with milk or cream, will prevent curd ling If added before they begin to boll. Saffron added to the rinsing water will make ecru lace curtains look much better than coffee when used In the rinsing water. A drop of cinnamon extract and three or four drops of vanilla added to a pot of chocolate will greatly Improve the flavor. Mold can be kept from the top of preserves by putting a few drops of glycerine around the edges of the jar before screwing on the cover. When making starch be sure to boll It well or It will stick to the Iron, and If It is not strained It will be lumpy. Before placing a roast of beef In the oven dip tn boiling water. It prevents the juices from escaping. If new shoes blister the heel rub the shoe Inside lining with a piece of hard soap. Atchison Glebe Sights. The older a man Is, the quicker ho Is burled after he Is dead. Half a man's time Is spent In trying to square himself with the fools. Some women’s Ideas of Independence Is to have a man to depend on. Praise some people, and it acts upon them like an Intoxicating liquor. Every literary society has for Its foundation the mutual admiration I Idea. Boys have been known to complain i about everything except too much noise. The apple has very few supporters after the strawberry makes Its appear ance. The game of life Is a good deal like gambling; no one seems to win In the I long run. A woman can get along on a very small Income if it is larger than her i neighbor's. A good many people believe that to know a lot of contemptible gossip Is i to be wise. After all there are few women as tiresome as the one who considers her jself abused. This may be depended upon about the first explanation: It leads to I many others. Never believe a man's own story of how brave ho was. Brave people are ! always modest | "God gives us our kin," says a wise man. “but thank God, we can choose our own friends. Getting religion is like getting in love; you don't want a crowd around when you get It. When you think you have done your best the chances are that you have only started. The Atchison fisherman thinks he is a pretty fair liar until he meets a man from Minnesota. This would be a more comfortable world If people would listen to reasor as readily as gossip. A lot of precaution that would have been useful If applied before, is wasted after every great accident. When we find a man who enjoys being fat and bald headed, we shal believe in Christian Science. When some people speak of “gettinf back to nature." It simply means thej are figuring on loafing for awhile. What has become of the old fash ioned man who was always figuring oi a great time when his ship came in? Old people look more ashamed that young people; probably a result of lonf experience with themselves and others When real old fashioned people ge sick they are so considerate of the doe 1 tor they will not let him be callei I before morning. Every bride and groom should haw their pictures taken together; sucl pictures will afTord their grandchlldrei a lot of amusement. The Holladay Case BY BURTON E. STEVENSON, J < mmmmmmmmBBBMonm Copyright, 1903, by Henry Holt & Co. «■■■*■■■■ , -- - —*— ~ — — — - --* — mt >i ■ ■rfiii itfi i^iaiiffiTWa iirti Then, in that first moment of inac-1 tivity, the fear of Martlgny came back upon me, Had he really gone to the hotel? Had he deemed us not worth watching? Or had he watched? Was he on the train with us? Was he able to follow? The more I though of him, the more I doubted my ability to de ceive him. I looked out cautiously from the win dow, up and down the platform, but saw no sign of him, and in a moment more we rattled slowly away over the switches I sank back into my seat with a sigh of relief. Perhaps I had really blinded him! An hour's run brought us to Reuze vllle, where we were dumped out, to gether with out luggage, in a little frame station. An official informed us that we must wait there three hours for the train for Les Ifs. Beyond that? He could not say. We might possibly reach Etretat next day. "How far is Les Ifs from here?” in quired my companion. "About twelve kilometers, monsieur.” "And from there to Etretat?” "Is twenty kilometers more, mon sieur.” "Thirty-two kilometers altogether,” said Mr. Royce. "That’s about twenty miles. Why can’t we drive Lester? We ought to cover it easily in three hours— four at the most." Certainly it seemed better than wait ing on the uncertain railway, and we sat at once about the work of finding a vehicle. I could be of little use, since English was an unknown tongue at Beuzeville, and even Mr. Royce's French was sorely taxed, but we suc ceeded at last in securing a horse and light trap, together with a driver who claimed to know the road. All this had taken time, and the sun was setting when we finally drove away northward. The road was smooth and level—they manage their road making better in France—and we bowled along at a good rate past cultivated fields with little dwellings like doll houses dotted here and there. Occasionally we passed a man or woman trudging along the road but as the darkness deepened, it be came more and more deserted. In an hour and a half from Beuzevllle, we reached Les Ifs, and here we stopped for a light supper. We had cause to congratulate ourselves that we had se cured a vehicle at Beuzevllle, for we learned that no train would start for Etretat until morning. The damage wrought by the storm of two days be fore had not yet been repaired, and the wires were still down, and we were warned that the road was badly washed in places. Luckily for us, the moon soon arose, so that we got forward without much difficulty, though slowly; and an hour before midnight, we pulled up triumph antly before the Hotel Blanquet, the principal inn of Etretat. We lost no time in getting to bed; for we wished to be up betimes in the morning, and I fell asleep with the comforting be lief that we had at last eluded Mon sieur Martigny. CHAPTER XVII. ETRETAT. We were up at an hour which as tonished the little fat keeper of the inn, and Inquired the location of the office of the registrar of births. It was two steps away in the Rue Alphonse Karr, but would not be open for three ' hours at least. Would messieurs have their coffee now? No, messieurs would not have their coffee until they re turned. Where would they find the residence of the registrar of births? His residence, that was.another matter. His residence was some little distance away, near the Casino, at the right— we should ask for Maitre Fingret—any one could tell us. When should mes sieurs be expected to return? It was Impossible to say. We went ofT along the street, leaving the innkeeper staring after us—along the Rue Alphonse Karr, lined on both sides by houses, each with its little shop on the ground floor. Three min utes' walk brought us to the bay, a pretty, even picturesque place, with its perpendicular cliffs and gayly colored fishing smacks. Rut we paused for only a glance at it, and turned toward the Casino at the other end. "Maitre Fingret?” wo inquired of the first passerby, and he pointed to a little ; house half hidden in vines. A knock brought the notary himself ~.- .*» ui mail, wilii keen face, and eyes incredibly bright. My companion explained our errand in laborious French, supplemented by much gesticulation—it is wonderful how the hands can help one to talk! — and after a time the little Frenchman caught his meaning, and bustled away to get his hat and coat, scenting a fat fee. Our first step was to be an easy one, thanks to the severity and thoroughness of French administration, but I admit that I saw not what we should do further, once we had verified the date of Miss Holladay’s birth. The next step must be left to chance The notary unlocked the door, showed us Into his office, and set out chairs for us. Then lie got down his register of births for 1876. It was not a large book, for the births of Etretat are not overwhelming in number. "The name, I think you said, was Holladay?" he asked. "Hiram W. Holladay,” nodded Mr. Royce. "And the date June 10th?” "Yes—June 10th." The little man ran his finger rapidly down the page, then went back again and read the entries one by one more slowly, with a pucker of perplexity about his lips. He turned the leaf, be gan farther back and read through the list again, while we sat watching him. At last he shut the book with a little snap and looked at us. "Messieurs," he said quietly, "no such birth Is recorded here. I have examined the records for the months of May, June, and July." "But it must be there!" protested Mr. Royce. "Nevertheless it is not here, Mon sieur." Could the child have been born here and no record made of It?" "Impossible, monsieur. No physician in France would take that responsi bility." "For a large fee, perhaps," suggested my companion. "In Paris that may, sometimes, be possible. But in a small place like this, I should have heard of it, and it would have been my duty to investi gate-." "You have been here for that length of time, then?” "Oh. yes, monsieur," smiled the little man. "For a much longer time than that." I Mr. Royce leaned forward toward him. He was getting back all his i old power as a cross-examiner, i "Monsieur Fingert,” he began fm i pressively, “I am quite certain that Hiram W. Holladay and his wife were here during the months of May, June and July, 1876, and that while they were here, a daughter was born to them. Think again—have you no re collection of them or of the event?” The little notary sat for some mo ments with knitted brows. At last he shook his head. "That would be the height of the season, you see, monsieur," he said apologetically. "There are a great many people here, at that time, and I cannot know all of them. Never theless, it seemed to me for a moment that there W’as about the name a cer tain familiarity—as of an old tune, you know, forgotten i£r years. Yet it must have been my fancy merely, for I have no recollection of the event you men tion. I cannot believe that such a birth took place at Etretat." There was another chance and I gave ' Mr. Royee the clew. "Monsieur Flngert,” he asked, "are you acquainted with a man by the name of Pierre Bethune?” And again the notary shook his head. "Or Jasper Martingy?” "I never before heard either name, monsieur," he answered. We sat silent a moment, in despair. Was our trip to Etretat to be of no avail? Where was my premonition now? If we had lost the trail thus early in the chase, what hope was there that we should ever run down the quarry? And how explain the fact that no record had been made of Frances Holladay's birth? Why should her parents have wished to conceal it? Would they not naturally have been anxious to see that it was properly re corded? An hour had passed; the shops were opening cmd a bustle of life reached us through the open door. People began to pass by twos and threes. "The first train for three days Is about to arrive,” said the little notary. "You see, this Is a very small town, messieurs. The arrival of a train is an event. Again we fell silent. Mr. Royce got out his purse and paid the fee. We had come to an impasse—a closed way. we could go no farther. I could see that the notary was a-hunger for his roll and coffee. With a sigh. I arose to go The notary stepped to the door and looked up the street. ''Ah,” he said, "the train has arrived, but it seems there was not many pas sengers. Here is one, though, who has finished a long journey." He nodded to someone who approach ed slowly, it seemed. He was before the door—he passed on—it was Mar tigny! "That is the man!” I cried to Mr. Royce. "That is Martigny! Ask who he really is.” He understood on the instant, and caught the notary’s arm. "Monsieur Fingert, who is that man?” The notary glanced at him, surprises by his vehemence. "That,” he said, "is Victor Fajolle. He is just home from America and seems very ill, poor fellow.” “And he lives here?” "Oh, surely; on the cliffs just above the town—the first house—you cannot miss it—buried in a grove of trees. Ha married the daughter of Madame Alii some years ago—he was from Paris.” "And his wife is living?" “Oh, surely, she is living; she her self returned from America but three W'eeks ago, together with her mother and sister. The sister, they say, is— well-” and he finished with a signi ficant gesture toward his head. I saw my companion’s face turn white—I steadied myself with an ef fort. I knew that, at last, the veil was to be lifted. “And they are at home now?” "I believe so,” said the notary, eying him with more and more astonishment. “They have been keeping close at home since their return—they will permit no one to see the—Invalid. There has been much talk about it." • “Come, we must go!” I cried. “He must not get there before us!” Rut a sudden light gleamed in the notary’s eyes. “Wait, messieurs! he cnied. “A mo ment. But a moment. Ah, I remem ber it now—it was the link which was wanting, and you have supplied it— Holladay. a millionare of America, his wife, Madame Alix—she did not live in the villa, then, messieurs. Oh, no; she was very poor, a nurse—anything to make a little money; her husband, who was a fisherman, was drowned, and left her to take care of the child ren as best she could. Ah, I remember —one a mere baby!” He had got down another book, and was running his finger rapidly down the page—1/is finger all a-tremble with excitement. Suddenly he stopped with a little cry of triumph. “Here it is. messieurs! I knew 1 could not be mistaken! See!” Under the date of June 10. 1876, was an entry of which this is the English: “Holladay, Hiram W., and Elizabeth, his wife, of the city of New York, i United States of America; from Celeste Alix, widow of Auguste Alix, her daughter Celeste, aged 5 months. All claim surrendered in consideration of the payment of 25.000 francs.” Mr. Boyce caught up the book and glanced at the back. It was the “Rec ord of Adoptions.” (Concluded Next Week.) Hopeless Either Way. From the Youth’s Companion. When the teacher called the class for geography she noticed that Eben Wilkins, her dullest pupil, wore a particularly cheerful smile. “You look as if you knew your lesson today,” she said, encouragingly. “Yes’m, I do,” he answered briskly. “The answer to the first question Is ‘North.’ and the next Is ‘Alaska,’ and the next is ‘United States,' and the next is “But that Is not the way to learn your lesson, Eben,” and the teacher struggled for a properly severe expression. “You must skip about. That is what I shall do in asking the questions." Eben looked as if the joy of living had departed once for all. “But supposing I didn't skip about just the way you do," he said, plaintively, ‘‘then I’d be all mixed up.” Nightly Demonstrations. Gunner—“Most extraordinary looking club house over there?" Guyer—“Yes, that Is the ‘Izaak Walton’ club.” Gunner—“But why is it such a long building?” Guyer—“Well, you see the truthful mem bers need plenty of room to illustrate the j length of the big fish that 'got away'!” i This Is a Jolly world. If a man has a capable wife she rules him. People I know it and laugh. If he has an in capable wife she works him. People know it and laugh. HOT WEATHER AHEAD. How to Keep the Kitchen Cool and Comfortable in Mid-Summer. Many a housewife is wondering how she Will pass through the coming summer months with the stove she well knows will make the kitchen unbearably hot—to eay nothing of the dirt, dust and ashes that will add to the discomfort. There is a way out of it all—a way that not only lessens the work and keeps the kitchen cool, but that also reduces fue! expense. This convenience, comfort and economy is all effected by the New Per fection Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove, an oil stove so superior to other makes that it is fast replacing the coal and wood range, the old fashioned oil stove, and in many cases the gas stove. Anyone who has had to wait ten or fif teen minutes for the fire to get started will appreciate the New Perfection, which gives a strong working flame at moment of lighting. “Blue Flame” means the hot test and cleanest flame produced by any stove. The flame Is always under Imme diate control and can be raised or lowered instantly. The convenience of this will be understood when it is considered that while the flame of one burner is boiling the kettle or roasting a large joint, that of another can be reduced to simmering point —in this way enabling the housewife to cook a variety of dishes at one time. Then the comfort of it. While the flamt of the New Perfection Is intensely hot, yet the heat is not thrown off into the kitchen because it is concentrated by blue enameled chimneys. On washing and ironing days the com fort and convenience of the New Perfec tion will be greatly appreciated. It gives best results in the least time, and does away with all coal and wood carrying and the many other disagreeable jobs that have to be done with other stoves. The New Perfection is made in three sizes, with one, two, and three burners, and is warranted to give full satisfaction. Another home comfort is the Kayo Lamp, which produces a light of unusual brightness, yet soft and mellow—a light that will not hurt the eyes. The Hayo Lamp can be used in any room, whether it be library, dining-room, parlor or bed room. It is highly ornamental, being made of brass throughout and beautifully nick eled. Every lamp is warranted and makes a valuable and handsome addition to any home. The New Perfection Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove and the Hayo Lamp are two real essentials to home comfort. Their easy operation, absolute safety and hand some appearance commend them wherever stoves and lamps are used. Poor Man! From the Chicago News. Gunner—Yes, she paid $300 for her spring outfit. I tell you she was a picture on Easter Sunday. Guyer—Yes, and her husband was a picture also. Gunner—Indeed! What kind of a picture was he? Guyer—Why the picture of des pair. The hypocrite’s great business is to find some appearance of virtue to cover SICK HEADACHE ~~——-5—| Positively cured by PA DTE"S5 0 these iittlo Fills. UMl\l L r\W They also relieve Dte tres3 from Dyspepsia, In llTLE digestion ana Too nearly I \t p 1J Eating. A perfect rem I » tfi edy for Dlizlnosi Nausea, PILLS. Drowsiness, Bad Taste — In tho Mouth. Coated Tongue, Pain In tho Sldo, -.—:-1 TORPID LIVER. They regulato tho Bowols. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE CARTERS! ?en“ine,MfBear Wjttie rac-himils bignaturo p(f£ _IREFUSE substitutes. I To convince any £ woman that Piu- I tin© Antiseptic will L Improve her health I | and do all wo claim I for 11. We will r send her absolutely free a large trial rj box of Paxtine with book of Instruc- I tions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. ' fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic , I catarrh and inflammation caused by feini- . nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over tlieso troubles is extra ordinary and gives immediate relief. j Thousands of women are using and rec ommending it every day. £0 cents at d rugglsts or by mall. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOU NOTKNOTO TRY IT. THIS R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass. H Lumbering HOST PROFITABLE INDUSTRY fin American Continent. Wealthiest corporation* and imtivid „ ,u investing there. Group of practical, experienced Western men have organized a company and ar»> purchasing well estab lished lumbering business in Oregon with mill of Sil.oOO feet rapacity and large amount standing timber. Cost of production low profits very large demand enormous. Portion of capital stock for sale, constituting a safe, sensible and most profitable Investment in either large or small amounts. Write today to fcunset Lumber Co.,200 McKay Hide.,Tort lnntl,Or» Canadian Govern ment FREE' FARMS Over 2cp.oco American tarniers who have settled in » anada during the past few years testifv to the fact that Canaca is, be> ond que>tion, the greatest (arming land in the world. Oyer Ninety Million Bushels ol wheat from the harvest ol 1906. means good money to the farmers ot Western Canada when the world has to be led. Cattle raising. Dairying, Mixed Panning arealso probable callings. Coal, wood, water in abundance; churches and schools convenient; markets easy of access. Taxes low. For advice and information address the Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa. Canada, or the authorized Canadian Government 'gent. W I). Scott. Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or E. T. Holmes. 315 Jackson St.. St. Paul, Minn.; J. M. MacLachlan, Box 116 Watertown. South Dakota, and W. V'. Bennett, tot New York Life Buildn# Omaha, Neb., Authorized Government Age «o ! Flease say where you saw this advertisement. I — “ INDIANA PEOPLE IN WESTERS CANADA. “Wh»t Shall We Oof I’ve Got to Bail* Granaries.” A letter written to a Canadian gov ernment agent from Tipton, Ind., is but one of many similar that are in the hands of the Canadian government agents whose privilege it is to offer one hundred and sixty acres of land free, and low railway fares. But here is a copy of the letter: “Tipton, Ind., Nov. 28, 1900. “At your earnest solicitation a party of us from Tipton left May 15 for Western Canada. Our Interviews with you and a cureful study of your litera ture led us to expect great things of your country when we should arrive there, and we were not disappointed. We went prepared to make a careful examination of the country and its re sources, and we did so. At early dawn the second morning out of Tipton we awoke in a new world. As far as the eye could reach was an apparently lim itless expanse of new sown wheat and prairie grasses. The vivid green of the wheat just beginning to stool out, and the inky blackness of the soil con trasted in a way beautiful to see. An ^ hour or two later we steamed into Winnipeg. Here we found a number of surprises. A hundred thousand souls well housed, with every convenience that goes to make a modern, up-to-date city-—banks, hotels, newspapers, stores, electric lights, street railways, sewer age, water works, asphalt pavements, everything. With eyes and ears open, we traveled for two thousand miles thrnncrh Vfnnitnhn Snclfitphownn nnil Alberta, going out over the Canadian Pacific Railway, via Calgary to Edmon ton and returning to Winnipeg over the Canadian Northern Railway. In the meantime we made several side trips and stopped off at a number of points where we made drives into the surrounding country. On every hand were evidences of prosperity. The growing wheat, oats, rye, flax, barley, not little patches, but great fields, many of them a square mile in extent, the three, five and sometimes seven horse teams laying over an inky black ribbon of yellow stubble, generally in furrows straight as gun barrels and at right angles from the roads stretch ing into the distance, contrasted strangely with our little fields at home. The towns, both large and small, were doubly conspicuous, made so, first by their newness and second by the tow ering elevators necessary to hold the immense crops of wheat grown in the immediate neighborhood. “The newness, the thrift, the hustle, the sound of saw and hammer, the tents housing owners of buildings in various stages of completion, the piles S of household effects and agricultural implements at the railway stations waiting to be hauled out to the •Claims,’ the occasional steam plow turning its twenty or thirty acres a day, the sod house, the unpainted house of wood, the up-to-date modern resi dence with large red barn by, all these were seen everywhere we went, an ear nest of prosperity and wealth to be. We talked with men and visited their places that four years ago was unbro- J ken prairie. Their houses, barns, im plements and live stock were the equal of anything in Tipton County and why not. when they were raising five, ten and twenty, yes in one instance forty thousand bushels of wheat a year. Tlie fact that such large yields of wheat are raised so easily and so sure ly impressed us very favorably. And when we saw men who four or five years ago commenced there with two or three thousand dollars, and are now as well fixed and making money much easier and many times faster than lots of our acquaintances on Indiana farms fifty years cleared and valued at four times as much, we decided to Invest. So we bought in partnership a little over two thousand acres, some of it improved and in wiieat. "Before leaving Indiana, we agreed that if the opportunities were as great as they were represented to be, that we would buy, and own in partnership a body of land, and leave one of our number to iook arter anu operate u. This we accordingly did. “Just before time to thresh I re ceived n letter from him. ‘What shall we do,’ said he, ‘I've got to build gran aries. There’s so much wheat that the railways are just swamped. We can’t get cars and the elevators are all full. I never saw anything like it.' In re ply we wrote ‘Good for you. Go ahead and build, your story sounds better than the letters we used to get from our friends in Kansas when they be wailed the fact that the hard wheat laid been destroyed by the chinch bugs aud the corn by hot winds, and that they must sell the stock for means to live on.’ ‘Yes, build by all means.’ And he did, and our wheat put in by a renter made twenty-seven bushels per acre. “Very truly yours, “(Sd) A. G. BURKHART, “(Sd) J. TRELOAR-TRESIDDER, "(Sd) WALTER W. MOUNT.” Her Sad Face. From the New Y'ork Weekly. Mr. De Rich—What a sad. sweet face Miss Psyche has! She never smiles. She mast have met with some great loss. Miss Desmart—Yes; she was In a rail road accident some weeks ago. and she lost a front tooth. Garfield Tea. Nature’s remedy, brings relief from many ailments; it overcomes constipation, regulates the liver and kid neys, purities the blood and clears the complexion. It is made of Herbs, and il absolutely Pure. A Deceptive Age. From the Boston Transcript. "Is Maud taking a day oft to celebrate her birthday?