WOMAN’S NERVES MADE STRONG By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetv V'3 Compound. Winona, I. . “I suffered for more than a year from nervousness, and was bo bad I could not rest at night— would lie awake and get so nervous I would have to get up and walk around end in the morning would be all tired out I read about 1 Lydia E. Pinkham’s j Vegetable Com- j pound and thought 1 I would try it My nervousness soon left me. I sleep well and feel fine in the morning ana able to do my work. I gladly recom mend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to make weak nerves strong.”—Mrs. Albert Sultze, 603 Olmatead St, Winona, Minn. How often do we hear the expression amongwomen, ”1 am so nervous, I can not sleep,” or “it seems as though I should fly.” Such women should profit by Mrs. Sultze's experience and give this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound, a trial. For forty years it has been overcom ing such serious conditions a3 displace ments, inflammation, ulceration, irreg ularities, periodic pains, backache, diz ziness, and nervous prostration of women, and is now considered the stan dard remedy for such ailments. Kill All Flies! ™ mSEAsf40 j FIs*cxd anywhere, Daisy Fly Killer attracts and kills ell fllaa. Neat,c!eau,ornamental,convenient and cheap. lasts nil season. Made of metal, can't spill or f tip otnr; will not soil or W injure anything. <.u*»ian r te*ul effective. Ask for 'Daisy Fly Killer / Sold by dealers, or 6 sent by express, prepaid, $1.00. HAROLD SOMERS, ISO DE HALO AVI., BROOKLYN, N. Y. BOOKKEEPING HV MAIL IN « MONTHS Thorough courso In book keening, penmanship and coturuerolal law; instruction by oiports; reabonablo term*. Positions scoured. Writ© for circular. MBTKOPOL1TAN COHUB8FONDMNCH SCHOOL, TO Metropolitan Bank Building, Minneapolis, Minn. SUUntU HhAVILY UN SLAUKtn Probably Dude Will Think Twice Be fore He Again Attempts to Have Fun With a Kiltie. The following was overheard on u street ear one very cold day in winter In a Canadian city. At u corner the car was boarded by n hu*ky soldier In the picturesque Highland uniform— the kilts of which leave the knees bare. On the car was a young dude still in mufti, sealed with bis best girl. The girl cast admiring glances at tlio at tractively uniformed “Kiltie” much to the displeasure of her slacker escort. No bo endeavored to make fun of the uniform by remarking: “1 think that outfit Is most rlduculous. That follow's knees look as If they were frozen.” The Kiltie overhearing the comment gluncpd contemptuously at the dude's civilian clot lies, then scornfully re plied : "Well, young fellow, it is n sure thing my knees aren’t ns cold as your feet.” The slacker got off at the next stop. - <'nnudlsn. % . - ~ Business Mind. A prominent Indianapolis banker, thinking to practice a little conserva tion, took five Liberty loan colored post ers home to Ids four-year-old son to use as playthings, telling him they were Liberty bonds. The boy, evidently lu herlticg some of ids father's own busi ness ability, started out in the neigh borhood to sell the “bonds” for n nickel each. He succeeded promptly in stdliug all five, and brought the quar ter to his father to buy a Thrift stamp, - Indianapolis News. Eating War Bread. “My son has some grit in him, 1 can tell you." “Been eating war bread, I suppose.”—Ideas. 1 ECONOMY TALK is all ri$ht ECONOMY PRACTICE is better.^ instant I POSTUM is an economy drink—absolutely no waste. Besides, it is convenient, saves fuel and sugar, and leaves nothing to be desired in tHe way of flavor . TRY A CUP! _ ! - . THE TEETH OF THE TIGER ^ V by J MAURICE LEBLANC TRANSLATED BY ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATT03 CHAPTER SEVEN. (Continued.) For, after all, she was free, en tirely free in her actions and movements. The windows opening on tho Place du Palais-Bourbon gave her every facility for leav ing the house under cover of the darkness and coming in again un known to anybody. It was therefore quite possible that, on the night of the double crime, she was among the mur derers of Hippolyte Fauville and his son. It was quite possible that she had taken part in the mur ders, and even that the poison had been injected into the victims by her hand, by that little, white, slender hand which he saw rest ing against the golden hair. A shudder passed through him. He had softly put back the paper in the book, restored the book in its place, and moved nearer to the girl. All of a sudden, he caught him self studying the lower part of her face, the shape of her jaw! Yes, that was what he was making ev ery effort to guess, under the curve of the cheeks and behind the veil of the lips. Almost against his will with personal anguish mingled with torturing curiosity, he stared and stared, ready to force open those closed lips and to seek the reply to the terrifying problem that suggested itself to him. Those teeth, those teeth which he did not see, were net they the teeth that had left the incriminat ing marks in the fruit? Which were the teeth of the tiger, the teeth of the wild beast: these, or the other woman's? It was an absurd supposition, because tho marks had been recog nized as made by Marie Fauville. But was the absurdity of a suppo sition a sufficient reason for dis carding it? Himself astonished at the feel ings that agitated him, fearing lest he should betray himself, lie preferred to cut short the inter view, and, going up to the girl, he said to her, in an imperious and aggressive tone: “i wish all the servants in the house to be discharged. You will give them their wages, pay them such compensation as they ask for, and see that they leave today; defi nitely. Another staff of servants will arrive this evening. You will be here to receive them.” She made no reply. He went away, taking with him the uncom fortable impression that had late ly marked his relations with Flor ence. The atmosphere between them always remained heavy and oppressive. Their words never seemed to express tho private thoughts of either of them; and their actions did not correspond with the words spoken. l)iil not the circumstances logically de mand the immediate dismissal of Florence Levasseur as well? Yet Don Luis did not so much as think of it . Returning to his study, he at once rang up Mazeroux and, low ering his voice so us not to let it reach the next room, be said: “Is that von, Mazeroux?” “Yes.” “Has the prefect placed you at mv disposal?” “Yes.” “Well, tell him that I have ! Hacked all my servants and that I have given you their names and instructed you to have an active watch kept on them. We must look among them for Sauvorand's accomplice. Another thing: ask the prefect to give you and me permission to spend the night at Hippolyte Fauville’s house.” “Nonsense! At the house on the i Boulevard Suehet?” l* Yes. 1 have every reason to be j lieve that something's going to ! happen there.” “What sort of thing?” “I don’t know. But something is bound to take place. And 1 in sist on being at it. Is it arranged?” “Right, chief. Unless you hear to the contrary, I'll meet you at !) o’clock this evening on the Boule vard Suehet. Pcrennn did not see Mile. Levas eeul again that day. lie went out in the course of the afternoon, and called at the registry office, where he chose some servants: a chauf feur, a coachman, a footman, a cook, and so on. Then he went to 18 a photographer, who made a new copy of Mile. Levasseur's photo graph. Don Luis had this touched up and faked it himself, so that the prefect of police should not per ceive the substitution of one set of features for another. He dined at a restaurant and, at 0 o’clock, joined Mazeroux on the Boulevard Suchet. Since the Danville murders the house had been left in the charge of the porter. All the rooms and all the locks had been sealed up, except the inner door of the work room, of which the police kept the koys for the purposes of the in quiry. The big study looked as it did before, though the papers had been removed and put away and there were no books and pamphlets left on the writing table. A layer of dust, clearly visible by the elec tric light, covered its black leather and the surrounding nlahogany. “Well, Alexandre, old man,” cried Don Luis, when they had made themselves comfortable, “what do you say to this? It’s rather impressive, being here again, what? But, this time, no barricading of doors, no bolts, eh? If anything's going to happen, on this night of the 15th of April, we will put nothing in our friend's way. They shall have full and en tire liberty. It’s up to them, this time.” Though joking, Don Luis was nevertheless singularly impressed, as he himself said, by the terrible recollection of the two crimes which he had been unable to pre vent and by the haunting vision of the two dead bodies. And he also remembered with real emotion the implacable duel which lie had fought with Mme. Danville, the woman's despair and her arrest. “Tell me about her,” he said to Mazeroux. “So she tried to kill herself?” “\es, said Mazeroux, “a thor oughgoing attempt, though she had to make it in a manner which she must have hated. She hanged herself in strips of linen torn from her sheets and underclothing and twisted together. She had to be restored by artificial respiration.. She is out of danger now. 1 believe, hut she is never left alone, for she swore she would do it again.” “She has made no confession?” “No. She persists in proclaim ing her innocence.” “And what do they think at the public prosecutor's? At the pre fect’s? “Why should they change their opinion, chief? The inquiries con firm every one of the charges brought against her; and, in par ticular, it. has been proved beyond the possibility of dispute that she alone can have touched the apple and that she can have touched it only between 11 o’clock at night and 7 o’clock in the morning. Now the apple bears the undeniable marks of her teeth. Would you admit that there are two sets of paws in the world that leave the same identical imprint?” “No, no,” said Don Luis, who was thinking of Florence Levas seur. “No, the>argument allows of no discussion. We have here a fact that-is clear as daylight; and the imprint is almost tantamount to a discovery in tho act. Hut then how, in the midst of all this, are we to explain the presence of-’’ “Whom, chief?” “Nobody. 1 had an idea worry ing me. Besides, you see, in all this there are so many unnatural tilings, such queer coincidences and inconsistencies, that 1 dare not count on a certainty which the reality of tomorrow may destroy.” They went on talking for some time, in a low voice, studying the question in all its bearings. At midnight they switched off the electric light in the chandelier and arranged that each should go to sleep in turn. And the hours went by as they had done when the two sat up be fore, with the same sound of be lated carriages and motor cars; the same railway whistles; the same silence. The night passed without alarm or incident of any kind. At day break the life out of doors was re sumed; and Don Luis, during his waking hours, bad not heard a sound in the room exeept tha monotonous snoring of his com panion. “Gan I have been mistaken?” lie wondered. “Did the clue in that volume of Shakespeare mean some thing else? Or did it refer to events of last year, events that took place on the dates set down?” In spite of everything, he felt overcome by a strange uneasiness as the dawn began to glimmer ihrouglkthe half closed shutters. A fortnight before, nothing had hap pened either to warn him; and yet lliere were two victims lying near Dim when lie woke. At 7 o’clock he called out: “Alexandre!” “Eh? What is it, chief?” “You’re not dead?” “What’s that? Dead? No, chief; why should I be?” “Quite sure?” ■'1 ■ ” “Well, that's a good ’an! not you?” BljjU “Oh, it'll he my turn soon|R|£i| sid'Titig t lie inhdlig.'liee ol'MI&f scoijiid 1'i‘ls. there's no reasoiBlJ*? :hey should go on missing iuKp|p They waited an hour lBS||| 'I lien IVrcnna opened a and I lirew had; the shutterH|§SfJ| "I say, Alexandre, pci-]iu|Hj££ft are not dead, hut you are ecrHSB very green.” Mazerouy gave a wry laugHy^ Upon my word, chief, I coB§|| that L had a had time of it I was keeping wateh whilcHB were asleep.” app Were you afraid 1 ’' “To the roots of my hair. iftplji on thinking that something going to happen. But you,Hi chief, don’t look as if yqu ... en jo\ mg yourself. \\'