August 22, 1895 THE WEALTII MAKERS. ? Copyright isss.-' " (CONTINCED HOM L4ST WHK.) CHAPTER V. A FRIEND IS SEED. "Milly, dear, leave the coffee on the store and be oft to bed. The pro lessor and I are going to hold a pow wow, and squaws are not wanted In the wigwam." The scene was the interior of the prospector's cottage; the dramatic per sona, Jack Wilders.his wife and Frank Grey; time, twenty-four hours after the events recorded in the last chapter. "Squaw, indeed, Mr. Impudence," chirped the young wife, saucily. ''I've a great mind to assert my woman's rights and sit up till midnight." "Do, dear," said Wilders, "that's just what I was driving at. I knew that the best way to keep you with us was to ask you to go." I "Then, to sustain my character for obstinacy, good night, Mr. Grey," was the gay reply; but as the little woman's glance fell on the haggard face of her guest, her heart melted, and she added with much feeling: "I know all Jack's secrets. Bear your trouble bravely. We are your friends and what Jack wants you to do, is for the best. Trust him as you would a brother." "Easy, easy, old lady, you're too fast; youll spoil it all. Women in busi ness and hens in a garden always the same trouble." "You savage man, I leave you; but remember, if you fail to bring Mr. Grey to our way of thinking, I shall believe that all vour boasted tact is only strong enough to impose upon an unprotected female, who hasn't the courage to re bel." "Ah!" the prospector mused, casting ft proud, loving glance at the retreating figure of his wife. "Did you ever see. such a woman? Nature made her, and broke the mold." "Have you seen Wixon, Edgerly and the others?" Grey asked, too anxious to bandv compliments. "Seen them! I've been running about all day, like a candidate, who wants to save his country by taking office. "Well?" "Well, the whole concern boiled down to facts means that Wixon holds two bowers and the joker, an' you are euchred." "But his charge is so utterly, wildly absurd. Surely the child's age might have protected her" "Hold hard, Grey. You forget she's a bouncing slip of a girl sixteen years old." "What!" the schoolmaster's eyes flashed fire. "Ilave you a shadow of "TBUST HIM AS YOU WOULD A BH0THEB. in. doubt in your mind concerning my nocence?" "That you are sitting in this room; that you have just taken my Millie's hand in yours answers that question," said the prospector with dignity. "I believe you. Now tell the worst." "Well, Frank, my boy, you are just in this fix. If you stay here you may clear yourself , but you will never be able to relieve that young girl's character of the stigma cast upon it. Ill-natured people will say that where there is fire there must be smoke. A lie that's half a lie is always the worst to fight, as that poet that Milly's so sweet on, says." "I see all this," Grey groaned "WeU, the alternative is to fling up the sponge. Just quit and leave the game in Wixon's hands." "What! That would be to confess our indiscretion. If the very children are gossiping about us " "Gammon! There isn't a man, wom an or child in the city has said one word about her, except those as Wixon had at the meeting last night. There isnt a living soul in the city as guesses the purpose of the meeting. The captain played his cards uncom monly smart. He didn t want no in vestigation. He just wanted to get rid of you; and, if he had not left this chance for vou, he would have had no price to pay you off with." "And he offers?" "He don't shoot straight at the mark. He insinuates that il you will resign and leave these parts, he wiU keep everything as secret as the grave. ,"But how can he? Who could curb the tongue of that woman Clarkson, for instance?" "He can. That I know. He's got a hold on her that 'ull shut her mouth as tight as a squirrel trap." "And Susan Green?" "Her father's Wixon's private prop erty. He never uses no tools he cant dull or sharpen as he wants to. That sham parson is his, body and soul, and the'lubber Holbrook is already shipped otoffilcago." "And Mr. Edgerly?" "Ah, he's a horse of another color; honest as the clay, but nis neau never ache from the weight 01 nis brain. Wixon 'ull fix him, never fear- You agree to go, an' Edgerly s all right." . . , And my friends of the nigni scnooi, what will they say?" That vou were bought on boiu them got your pile and skipped." "Then I mutt leave benina me mo reputation of a villain?" As I said before, you musi eimer sink yourself, or sacrifice the girl." For a time there was silence. The young man sat watching the clouds of smoke that rose irom m cuiupmuu pipe, as though in them he would read his fate. In imagination he saw the the sweet, innocent, childish face with the brown hair clustering round it, the .and look of those pensive eyes, the trembling movement of that beautiful .... . . . J ll'.'l lip and he held hie nana oui w uu ers and said: "Jack. I will oof "Spoken like a white man," cried the nrosrwptnr. "Now we can go aneaa with full steam on an- no uauer tiK- nnln out " Ixmir and earnestly they talked till the first shrill scream of a steam whistle roused the miners from their sleep and called them to another day's duties when thev were but half rested from vpsterdav's. 'j " . . u ..... 1 tf "Ktinr a minute. YVliaers Bum, iub miMt. rnRB to leave. "Millie wants me r. to give you this." He handed the young man a Duiy sealed envelope, which he took from a table-drawer. "Just a woman's whim nothing worth mentioning but she said you were to keep it in your pocket, an' not open it till you were a day's journey from Oretown. Grev's face was shadowed as he stood fintrerinff the little parcel. "fiiiftss it's some of those furze-flow ers." the prospector added unblush Wlv. "Females is awful tender hearted, an' chock fuU o' nonsense Hurl n' foro-et-me-nrts I euess but take of them for the little woman's Bake." "I will." Grey replied in tearful tones "and may God reward you both for all vou have done for me. "Goin' to Chicago for a visit, be thee?" asked honest Mrs. Whitford at break fast. "Hast thee volks down i' those parts?" "No. Mrs. Whitford," Grey replied, "I have no business: my father and mother died when I was a lad, and have never known other relatives." "P'raps." interrupted the corporal jocularly, "we shall see you tripping back with a trim little wife hanging on to vour arm." "No, Mr. Whitford; I never yet spoke one word, of love to living woman, Grey declared in slow, impressive tones, "Lord, but I pity your bad taste, grinned the corporal. "Why, when was a lad in the royal marines, I" "Howd thy tongue, mon," Mrs. Whit ford interjected. "Dunna thee see how thy foolish claver reddens Elsie's cheeks." Then turning to the girl, she added: "Gan thee hast finished thy meal, my dear, get thee to thy room an' fettle it oop a bit. Oi 'ull be wi' ye presently." Grey seized on Elsie s absence as a good opportunity to finish packing, for he was haunted with a painful dread of arousing her suspicions of his per manent departure, feeling sure that a long farewell would be so hard for the dear child aye, and for him, too; whereas if his plans did not fail he would slip away under the pretense of going to Chicago on a vacation, and be off without any painful betrayal of emotion. But this was not to be. The last book was packed, the last belonging put away, the last long, lingering look out of the window at the lake, now a big plain of snow, tringed by the pine-clad hills, the last Ah, what was that? The door opened and Elsie Whitford confronted him. A child! Good heavens, it seemed as if in a night she had grown into glori ous womanhood. As she stood there in the strength of her young beauty the scales fell from the eyes of the unhappy man, and he knew he loved. Oh, how he longed to take her in his arms and tell her all he felt; but, between her and him. was a chasm he dared not cross not vet but who knew what the future might bring forth? She seemed very quiet and self-pos sessednot a bit the emotion-tossed Elsie he had pictured to himself. Look. ing round the room at his corded boxes, she said very quietly: You are going to leave us for good, Mr. Grey, you are not coming back to Oretown?" "Yes, Elsie, I am going away; you have guessed rightly." The words and tone were cheerlul, but she read in his eyes the pain the parting cost him. "On account of the trouble you hinted at?" she asked. "Yes." "I guessed as much. And you thought to spare me the misery of a long fare well! Ah, that was kind of you kind to the very last." "Shall you miss me so much, Elsie?" Manlike he was disappointed at her equanimity, though he had so much dreaded any ebullition of feeling. "Good-by, Elsia!" "Good-by, Mr. Grey!" And that was aU their parting, for at that moment the prospector drove to the door in his buggy to take rramc rey to the depot. The prospector's horse was just 6uch an animal as he might be expected to own a quick, rough Indian pony, with legs as clean as a deer's, which was by no means inclined to ie the grass grow under ms leei, iut Wilders was afterwards wont to de clare that it was the longest mile ne ever drove, for his companion was more inconsolable than a widow at the loss of her first husband. As the steamer Idlewild pulled out of the bay Grey sat gazing on the re treating land, wondering whetner ever again he would see those inhospitable shores. His heart was full of oitterness. Why had things gone so wrong? W ell, ves. he had after all been indiscreet it his treatment to fcisie nmuum, uuu who would have expected such a child as she was to have grown into a woman in one single night? Then he took from his pocket tne package that Wilders had given him. There was a spell of sentiment over him now, and the dried gorse flowers would be a consolation, conveying many pleasant memories; but, when the envelope was torn open no yellow buds were there, only ten twenty-dollar bills wrapped in tissue paper -and letter in Mrs. Wilders' neat hand writing. "Use this trifle without compunction. Ittis a free gift from your loving friends, Jack and Millie." Then was added in the big, rough, scrawl of the prospector: "Don't return this little pile, no man goes back on my Millie's wishes and calls me friend J. V." "Now, God bless their noble hearts!" murmured Grey, as tears of deep emo tion coursed down his cheeks. (TO BE CONTINUED ) WHEN THE TIME SHALL COME TO FIGHT. Afaction of the democrat may resolute and say, They favor sliver coinage free, and for silver they will stay! But the Bold-bugs will dislodge them and put them all to flight, Not a democrat will be on deck, when the time shall come to fight! Republicans may now declare, with voices pitched in O, To bolt their party platform If it don't say silver free; But fles'u is weak, morals low, and principles out of sight. When the money gang confronts them and the time shall come to fight! Laboring men are organized, that fact is plain to all, Unanimous they rally at their leaders' beck and call: But when the ballot contest comes to give each man his right, Labor will be disorganized when the time shall come to fight! The pops will all be ready when the contest is begun, They first will shoot their ballots, and then will get a gun: They represent the masses, their interests and their might, Yes, the pops will surely be there when the time shall come to fight! Southern Mercury. THE PEOPLE ARE LEARNING. Socialistic The watrons of eight different ice companies lumbering up and down the street every hour of the day; mint wag ons belonging to six different dairies rattling over the pavement of thesamo route; numberless pie wagons, cake and bread wagons all In the same man ner illustrate what competition is. on the same street six times a day the government mail carrier calls to deliver your mail. One carrier quietly nan dies the business of the street and does it well. This is co-operation, now would you like to have the mail service turned over to private corporations and "competition?" It wouldn't oe socialistic" then, you know. Chicago Express. . Money Contraction. Instead of increasing the amount of 1 141. 4.1. money so as to Keep pace wim iuo growth of population and commerce in this country, we find by examining the treasury reports that it was decreased 82,047.588 during June and $60,000,000 for tne year ended June 1. ihe coun try suffers from this decrease alone, but it has also been drained and its money is held and controlled in the great money centers of the world. And there are men who will sell cot ton at 5 cents a pound who contend there is plenty of money and say we have the best financial system the world ever saw. Bonham (Tex.) Farm ers' Review. That Specie Basis. People are told that the national bank currency is redeemable in green backs, and the greenbacks in specie; but the fact is carefully concealed that there is not specie enough behind the paper currency to redeem one-half of it; and should a crisis arise which gave any advantage to the holders of coin, Shylock would be first at the sub- treasury, while the masses would be compelled to lose any advantage there might be m resumption. Will some "hard money" philosopher rise and ex plain wherein the people have been benefited by resumption? Hut it does not require a philosopher to snow wherein their burdens have been in creased through this infamous scheme. Cleveland (O.) People's Forum. Rank Anarchy. Says the Clay Center, Kan. , Dispatch: "From an old and almost obsolete doc ument we reproduce the following choice bit of fancy's creation. What a dreamer the writer must have been: We hold these truths to be self-evi dent, that all men are created equal; they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights governments are instituted among men. Whenever any form of government becomes destruc- tive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it' " Kansas Fopullsts In Missouri. Mexico, Ma, Aug. 13. It is an nounced that Jerry Simpson of Kan sas will be here to-morrow to make a folitical speech. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth ase writes that she will be in Au drain county in the near future. Vacations for Fork Inspectors. Washington, Aug. 13. The light business now carried on by the pork packing establishments in various cities has resulted in luriougning about 150 assistant microscopists of the ag" ricultural department. Waller Bator 4 Go. Llmliefl, Tha Lufut Manufaetuiws of PURE, HIGH CRADE Cocoas and Chocolates On thia Continent, Sara nmlrtd HIGHEST AWARDS from tha fraat Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS IN EUROPE AND AMERICA. ar VI 3& nm Caution: In Titw ef hs many imitations of tha labrta sad wrappara m m 8 nodi, tMMmm hould malt two tat onr Plata of manufacture, namaW, Dorcaester, laprintMC I on each packag. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.) WALTER BAKER ft CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, 'HAM. Slowly But Surely They Are Realizing That Metalllsm Is a Delusion ana a Fraud. Says C. W. Stewart, in the Chicago Express: "The funny part of the Harvey-IIorr debate, aside from the general flaying that Horr is getting, is their quibbling about the unit. The only benefit that can possibly come from it will be a lit tle education on the question of money. "The whole trouble is that both dis putants are trying to avoid the logical conclusion that all units are ideal. The reason they do this is because if they did admit it they would both have to give way to the absolute fiat money idea. There is but one abstract unit, and it is an invisible idea. When Coin made his chalk mark 1 on the black board he made a chalk representative of the one eternal unit Harvey is Quibbling in favor of silver, and Horr is auibbliner in favor of srold. That is "1 t-i all there is to it. "The supreme court in 1871 settled that question. It said: "It is hardly correct to speak of a standard of value. The constitution does not speak of it It contemplates a standard for gravity and extension, but value is an ideal thing. The coinage acts fix its unit as a dollar; but the gold or silver thing we call a dollar is in no sense a stand' ard; it is only a representative of it." "Why in the name of reason cannot people see that point? Why cannot they see that the name of a horse, and the horse, are not the same?" In the same issue of the Express, Kev. D. Ogrlesby comments as follows: "This Horr-Harvey debate is exceed' incrlv interesting reading to us reform ers. These old Bulls of Bashane, gold and silver, these idols of Shylock, are eroring each other to death; and the amusing thing about it is, they don't know it When Mr. Horr said, "to measure length vou must have length to find weight you must have weight, and to measure value you must have value." why didn't Mr. Harvey reply, that is barter, that is the money of barbarism. Mr. Harvey could not make that rerfv for the reason that silver is the money of barbarism too. "The argument that it takes value to measure value is very captivating to the isrnorant, but it is pure sophis- try. Money, the money of civilization, is not designed to measure values, but to express price. Values can't be measured by money. Values are al ways changing. A loaf of bread is as valuable to a starving man as his life, but when a man has plenty of bread, it is valued at 5 and 10 cents only. ' "The values are generally fixed in the mind. An heirloom, or keepsake decends through generations from father to son, and the present owner values it a thousand times higher than its cost, and would demand a thousand times more for it if he parted with it, than it is intrinsically worth. The first dollar coined by the United States gov ernment would bring thousands of dol lars now, its value or price depending on the whims of curiosity seekers. "Commerce is exchanging the prod ucts of labor. Money is intended to pvnrpss the relative value in labor of articles to be exchanged. Money is the scales of commerce. When men weigh anything they don't presume to have weights as heavy as the article to be weisrhed. A pound weight will weio-h a ton of hay. The merchant don't use yardsticks as long as the bolts of cloth to be measured. But the coin money advocates contend that the money used must be worth, in every case, as much as the property ex chanced. This is barter. Swopping one thing of intrinsic value for another thing of equal intrinsic value. 'Let the fight go on. The people are learning slowly what money is. The reformers contend that as long as cold is used, silver should be used on nn eaualitv with it The only advan tage that would accrue to the world bv free coinage would be to enlarge Vi irnlnmA of monev a little. But it ?b nr would be. no remedy for the troubles which vex and agitate society. It. nrmi .AhA nnlv nalliative. What the is to demonetize both gold and silver, and substitute the money of civilization. "The creat mistake that the founders nt tho rmiblic in 1776 made was to adopt the money of monarchy. After throwing off the yoke of Great Britain they adopted her system of monoy, and it has enslaved us. Had they cut loose Tr-iTT. mnn arr-hv entirelv. and issued ab solute money similar to the greenback wjithnnt the exceptions, and no promise to pay but to receive for all dues, this i -a . a Jl I -.1. Vv it 11 n. country wouia oe io-uay ncuer uy un told millions. There would be no bonded debt, no strikes, no tramps, no too- v.fnrtn ramtal and labor, ana Id be the ruline coun t, on earth. Metal money, the hot is the curse of the world. There can never be any settled state of society anywhere until it is wiped U"Gold and silver are only commodi Them in no sense at all in allow ing them such pre-eminence over all other commodities, and labor too. rinnrn with them forever. Let them be equal to other commodities." THE LAW MAKES MONEY. England's First Lord of tha Treasury Well Understand th Power of a nation's Flat. The accession ta power of Salisbury and the leadership of the house of com mons confided to Balfour as first lord of the treasury makes his position on silver a matter of fresh interest In a recent discussion of the matter he pro nounced the stuff we are treated to daily by the "sound money" people in this country as "idiotic," and adds the following: "No economist of repute will lend his name to the idiotic objections if I may use the expression without offense to bimetallism wnicn you will see in some of, the daily newspapers; objec tions which appear to be founded on the view that to hold that a stable ratio can be maintained between silver and gold is something like holding that value is not determined by the laws of upply and demand or the cost of pro duction, but that it can be settled by the mere flat of a government. Those who hold that view show an ignorance of the very elements of the question which makes it hardly worth while arguing with them. They do not ap pear to have realized that as it rests and must rest with the government, with every government, to say what shall be legal tender within the limits of the state, so it must rest with the government to determine what shall be the greatest cause of demand for that which it says is legal tender; and, therefore, to suppose that you can dis miss this doctrine by saying that it is inconsistent with the law of supply and demand is to ignore the main ele ment in this problem." Even gold cranks will have some re spect for the position and statement of a British official of such high grade. The man who contends that silver ad mitted to coinage with full legal ten der power would be still at its com modity value in the arts is, as Balfour mil.... iwtai- il .nBai.A. Says, miOHO. TYIOU vue uvrmruw of Rosebery, son-in-law of the Cleve land syndicate, the attitude of En gland toward a bimetallic conference may be changed. Kansas CUy Journal. SILVER THE UNIT OF VALUE. Ex-Got. Prince, of New Mexico, Shows That There Is No Doubt on This Question. Hon. L. V. Bradford Prince, for years governor and chief justice of New Mex ico, in a recent interview in .New ioru, said: "A couple of months ago there was a great discussion in Chicago as to what was the unit of value under the original coinage act of 1792, which em bodied the views of Washington, Ham ilton and Jefferson. They made large bets on the subject, some contending that the unit was in silver, and some in eold, and finally the matter was re ferred to Judge Vincent, who rendered a decision which was no sooner made than it was controverted. The joke is this: That the people of Chicago never thought of looking at the coin itself to see whether it said anything on the subject "Now here," said the governor, tak ing out of his pocket two finely pre served specimens of early coins, are two silver dollars, one of 1795 and one of 1802. On the obverse of each is the word 'Liberty,' and the date on the re verse and 'United States of America.' Now look at the edge, where the mill ing is placed on more modern coins. What do you see? 'One dollar, or unit, hundred cents.' "If the Chicago brethren had only thousrht of going to the coin itself as a witness they would have seen in a mo ment that the silver dollar was tne unit by this direct statement imprint ed in its very substance. "You know the silver dollar never raried in weicht in the United States from the foundation of the govern ment to the demonetization in 1873, when it was worth 81.03 in srold dol lars. When the change in ratio was made in 1834 it was the gold coin that was altered, not the silver dollar. The lat ter was always the immutable stand ard of value till struck down by the monometallist, who desired a dishon- st constantly increasing silver stand ard in 1873. When the 'unit' question comes up again, just remember to look at the coin itself." The Sioux City and St. Paul lioute Is the Northwestern, the only one-line route. o transfers. Io delays. Morn ing and afternoon trains to Sioux City. Reduced round trip rates to St. Paul, Duluth and other places. City otoce 11 So. 10th Street O at A R National Encampment Louisville. Ky The Burlington will on September 8th to 10th sell round trip tickets, via St. Louis, at $18.35; via Peoria, $19.35; via Chicago, $20.40, good to return un til September 25th. For full information apply at B. & M. depot or city office, corner 10th and 0 streets. G. W. Bonn ell, C. P. & T. A. Dr. Miles' Nebvb Plasters cure RHEUM A. T1SM, WEAK BACKS. At druKKiste, only 25c. BrY "Direct From Factory" Best MIXED Paints. At WHOLESALE P RIOT'S, Delivered Free. For Houses, Barns, Roofs, all colors, and SAVE Middlemen's profits. In use 61 years. Endorsed by Granite and Farmers' Alliance. Low prlc-ee Will soTDrlss yon. Writs for samples. O. W. INGEKSOLL, 263 Plymouth St., Brooklyn, N. T. YOU ARE OUR AGENT. For a Club of Five yearly sub scribers we will give a Year's Subscription to the person send ing it. Send for Sample Copies and work among your neigh bors. Address, THE WEALTH MAKERS, J. S. HYATT, Bus. Mgr., Lincoln, Neb. A Question of Loyalty. I will state the proposition so that the children can comprehend its mean ing;. The only constitutional leffal tender money consists of gold and sil ver coins, authorized by act of con gress pursuant to grant of authority in the constitution, which coins have an equal value upon an established le gal ratio. To maintain these coins at the same value they inust receive the same protection at the money mints. This right is now rteniea suver, wun the result that its equal value is de stroyed. The silver men demand as of right that silver be restored to its rightful place in our money system. The bankers and gold men ask that the constitution be disobeyed that gold, and only gold, be made the legal tender in payment of debts. Will the American people who freely gave their loved ones to die in defense of the con stitution until the dead numbered 364,- 112 and exnended thousands of mil lions of money to save it, now obey it themselves, or will tney permn ms greed for gold to annul one of its plainest provisions? Shall we be oatriots or traitors? J. B. Cheadle, in Iowa Farmer's Tribune. Government Banks. Over 8175.000,000 have been lost by derjositors and investors in the banks of t.h United States within the last tn Trpn.r. Over S25.O00.OOO were lost bv deoositors and investors last year. These losses will continue, unless the people take the matter in hand and it where the constitution of the pmintrv savs it belongs in the hands of the government The fight is not for monometallism or bimetallism thR are merelv incidents, side issues. skirmish lines. The main fitfht is for a governmental system, dealing direct with the DeoDle. Government banks against private banks. Solidity against duplicity. uuDiin ueij impress. rinlrl la not monev. silver is not monev. paper is not money until made an bv the government then one mate rial is just as good money as the other, Pittsburg Eansan. Scott's ... Carbo-Digestive Compound. Positively the One Remedy for the treat ment of Nervous Exhaustion, Simple and Aggravated forms of Dyspepsia, and Palpitation of the Heart. Does your food sour after eating? Ar. you easily confused and excited? Do you get up in the morning tired and un refreshed, and with a bad taste in the mouth? Is there a dull cloudy sensation, at tended by disagreeable feelings in tat bead and eyes? ; Are you irritable and restiessr Does vour heart thump and cause you to gasp for breath after climbing a flight of stairsf Does it distress you to lie on tne leit ide? Have you impaired memory, dimness of vision, depression of mind and gloomy forebodings? -7 i Thase symptoms mean mat you are y Buffering from Dyspepsia and Nervous v Exhaustion. There is no other remedy extant tnat has done so much for this ciass oi troubles as Scott's Carbo-Digestive Compound. If your case has resisted the usual methods of treatment we are particu larly anxious to have you give this com pound a trial. We guarantee reuei in every case ana will cheerfully refund your money should our remedy fail to produce the most gratifying results. i' lease remember tnac tne appellation "Patent Medicine" does not apply to Scott's Carbo-Digestive Compound. It is a preparation put up by aleading physician who has made stomach and nervous troubles a specialty for years. We court investigation and earnestly urge all physicians to write us for the formula of SCOTT S CARBO-DIGES TIVE COMPOUND, which we will mail on application, that they may satisfy themselves of its harmless character and excellent virtues. Scott's Carbo-Digestive Compound is the most remarkable remedy that science has produced. It has succeeded where all other medicines have failed. Sold by druggist everywhere at $1.00 per bottle. Sent to any address in America on receipt of price. Don't forget that we cheerfully refund your money if results are not satisfac tory. Order direct if your druggist does not have it. Address all orders to CONCORD CHEMICAL MFG. CO., Topeka, Kas.