: .y ? , . IJ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " - f : r 1 . . l i - - - - - - - - . . . _ . , - . ' : LIVER , BLADDER , KID"eV + I and STOMACH TROU LES i TAKB t . i ' , . . ; GOLD MEDAL , i I . ' HAARLEM OIL . CMprhM ad Tasteless CAPSULES , { Gold Medal Hiarlem 011 Is I put up is two 1 farms : , ! b CAPSULES And BOTTLES , C p- nle 25c. . ad SQc. per box. Bottles ISc. and 35c. : . at all drocti'tz. Be sure you obtain the GoM . Mich ! TIMr brand. f E HOLLAND MBDICINB COMPANY I COte MUttATCRS SCRAttTON , PA. WESTERN CANADA Wbat . Governor Deneen , of Illinois , Says About it : jScvwnor Deneen of Illinois , ' own * a seo- _ tlon of land - in Saskatchewan. t I Canada. Ho has eold in I an interview . I " ! "As an American I am I delighted to sco the ro ' Imorkablo progress of t I Western Canada. Oar I people aro floe kin a across lino boundnry in thoa- d-511ift4 I , and I have not yet - I met one who admitted I ho had raivlo a mistake. I They aro all doing well. . I There is scarcely a com- I munIty in the Middle or Western States that has not a representative in Manitoba Saskatchewan or Alberta. " _ : : : : 125 Million Bushels of . - : , ' * Wheat In 1969 rl Western Canada . field crops for 1909 will easily yield to the farm er $170 , 000,000.00 In cn h. - . ' Free Homesteads of 160 acres , w and pre-emptions of 1GO acres Ii r . at $3.00 an aero. Hallway and - land Companies have land for sole . s : 1 at reasonable prices. Many farm- . era have paid for their land out , of the proceed * of one crop. Splendid climate good schools , t : ' . A excellent railway facilities , low : cu. . ; frelfrht rates wood water and r 7 -J'J' fi lumber easily obtained. f ! . For pamphlet "Last Best West , " I . . particulars as to suitable location and low eettJe ' rate apply to I Bap't of Immigration. Ottawa . QuJ. . . or to t 10 following Canadian Gov't Agentst ! 1' . Hcfrnos. 315 Jackson St. St. Paul , Minn. , and . : U - faeLachanBox116.WatertownSouthDakota. t Guooddrees nearest you. ) 3daee Bay where you saw this advertisement. jP'Sio1,1st For Asthma , Bronchitis and all Throat Troubles Take . pISO'S . . CUREw J\t. m tU\Q t tQ.UGlS . \ ( itDS 'The relief is as quick as it is certain. PIeq.sant to take and guaranteed II absoutely ! free from opiates. AIl Druggists 25 CCDtI. Fowl Taste GOOD while you're eating it XMAS TIME - bad - awful bad 'in ' YOUR MOUTH the day after if you fail to take a CASCARET at bed time to help nature remove the over-drinking and eating load. Don't neglect to have Cascarets with you to start the New Year right. They simply help nature- help you- S91 CASCARETS IDC a box for a week's treatment all druggists. Biggest seller in the world. Million boxes a month. Fatal Oversight. Acliilles had discovered that he was vulnerable in his right heel. "It's nothing , ' he said ; 'Til pickle that before ' 1 go into action. " But he put it off : too long , and Pari one day shot an arrow into it. . A NOTRE DAME LADY'S APPEAL. To all Imowing sufferers of rheumatism , whether muscular or of the Joints , sciatica lumbagos , backache , pains in the kidneys or nenralgia pains , to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured an of the.se tortures. She feels it her duty to send it to all sufferers FREE. You cure , yourself at home as thousands will testify no change of climate being necessary. This simple discovery banishes uric acid , from the blood , loosens the stiffened Jolnta , purl- fies the blood , and brightens the eyes , giving elasticity and tone to the whole system. It I the above Interests you , for : proof address &Cr * . M. Summers , Box 3 ; .Xotre Dame , Ind. Unfortunate Habit. , Patience-She says she never forgets A. face. Patrice - No wonder she's sub- ject to nightmare. - Tonkers Statesman. i ONT NEGLECT THAT COUGH , It certainly racks : your system and may run into jometWng serious. Allen's Lung , : Balsam will clu-i-k ; : ltquicklyand permanently. For saeata.l1drug"l"t- . Most spiders have poison fangs , but few are dangerous to human beings. The danger from slight cats or wounds : Is always blood poisoning. The immedi ate application of Hamlins Wizard Oil aakes blood poisoning impossible. Revised Upward. One evening at family prayers the , head of the house read that chapter irhich concludes with , "And the wife . ee that she reverence her husband. " After the exercises had closed and the " thildren had gone to bed , the New fork Evening Post says , he quoted It , looking meaningly at his wife. "Let us see what the Revised Ver- lion says on that subject , " said she. 1 will follow the new teaching , if you please. " I The Revised Version was produced , ind her chagrin may be imagined as / the head Impressively read , "And let the wife see that she fear her hus- fcrnd. . , e Ir I i r II I ' I I I 1 % e I I I I a 1i j ' u I , , Gu t , / : j < . ' : ! , . ' - . .i . .iI I 1 x . , . . . " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The . Redemption I ? ) ) o.vid eats on By CHARLES J _ FREDERIC GOSS . . . Copyright , 1900 by The Bovren-Merrill Company. All Right Rcaerrtd < < _ u _ . - - cx - . CHAPTER XIII. After wandering aimlessly about the city for a while the half-crazed gam- bler turned his footsteps toward home. He entered , both hoping and fearing that Pepeeta would be asleep. He had a vague presentiment that he was on the verge of some great event. The guilty secret so long hidden in the depths of his soul seemed to have fes tered its way dangerously near to the surface , and he felt that if anything more should happen to irritate him he might do something desperate. So quiet had been his movements that he stood at Pepeeta's door before she knew that he had entered the house , and when he saw her kneeling by her bedside he stamped his foot in rage. The worshiper , startled by the Interruption , although she was mo- mentarily expecting it , hastily arose. She smiled him a welcome which re- vealed her love , but did not conceal her sadness nor her suffering , and , ap proaching him , extended her hands for an embrace. He pushed her aside and flung himself heavily into a chajr. "You are tired , " she said soothingly : , and stroked his hair. He did not answer , and her caress both tranqullized and frenzied him. She placed before him the little lunch which she always prepared with her own hands and kept in readiness for his returned. "Take it away. How often have I told you never to let me find you on your knees when I come home ? " he asked , brutally. "Oh ! my beloved , " she exclaimed , "you will at least permit me to kneel' to you ! See ! I am here in an atti- tude of supplication ! Listen to me ? Answer meVhat ! Is the matter ? Do you not love me any more ? Tell me ! Will you never love me again ? " With a violent and convulsive ef- fort he pushed her away and excltim- ed fiercely , "Leave me ! Do not touch me ! I hate you I" ! "Hate me ? " she cried , "hate me ? Oh , David. You cannot mean it. You can- not mean that you hate me ? " "But I do ! " he exclaimed , bitterly. "I hate you. You have ruined me , and now you confess it. From the time that I first saw you I have never had a moment's peace. Why did you ever cross my path ? Could you. not have left me alone in my happiness and In- nocence ? Look at me now See what you have brought me to. I am ruined ! But I am not alone. You have pulled yourself down with me * What will you say when I tell you that you are Involved in a crime that must drag us both down ? " "A crime ? " she cried , clasping her hands in terror. "Yes , a crime. You need not look so innocent. You are as guilty as I , or at least you are as deeply involved. We are bound together in misery. We are doomed. " "Doomed ! Doomed ! What do you mean ? Tell me , I implore you-do not speak in riddles ! " "Tell you ? Do you wish to know ? Are you in earnest ? Then I will ! You are not my wife ! There ! It is out at last ! " Pepeeta sprang to her feet and stood staring at him in horror. "I deceived you. You were married to your beast of a husband lawfully enough ; but as you would not leave him willingly , I determined that you should leave him any way. And so I bribed the justice to deceive you. " "You-bribed-the-justice-to - me ? " "Yes , bribed him. Do you" under- stand ? You see now what your beauty , has brought you to ? " I She stood before him white and si- lent. He had risen , and they were confronting each other with their sins and sorrows between -them. "This , then , " she said , "is the clue to all this mystery. The tangled thretid has begun ! to unravel. Many times this suspicion has forced itself upon my mind ; but it was too terrible to believe ! And yet I , who could not endure the suspicion , must now sup- port the reality. " "Well , " he said , "what are you go- ing to do about it ? " "Do ? " she said , do ? Must I do something ? Yes , you are right. We cannot go on as we are. Something must be done. But what ? Is it possi- ble that I must return to my husband ? How can I do that - I who cannot think of him without loathing ! What Is the matter ? Why do you tremble so ? Is it then as terrible to you as to me ? I see from your emotion that I am right. And yet I cannot see what good it will do ! How can it undo the wrong ? It will be a certain sort of reparation , but it cannot bring him happiness , for I cannot give him back my heart. Oh ! David , why have you done this ? And yet I see my duty ! If he is my hus- band , I must go back to him. A wife's place is by : her husband's side. I do not see how I can do it , but I must. How hard it is ! I cannot realize it. The very thought of seeing him again makes me shudder ! And yet I must go ! " . . "It is Impossible gasped the trem- bling creature to whom she looked for confirmation. : "Why impossible ? " "Because , " because - he - is - dead , " be whispered , through his dry lips. "Dead ? Did you say dead ? " Pepee- ta cried. "When did he die ? How did he die ? " "I killed him , " he shouted , springing to his feet and waving his hands wild- ly. "There ! It has told itself. I knew It would. It has been eating its way out of my heart for months. I should have died if I had kept : it secret for another moment. I feel relieved al- ready. You do not know what it means to guard a secret night and day t' f \ . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for years , do you ? Oh , how sweet It is to tell it at last. I killed him ! I killed him ! I struck him with a stone. 1 crushed his skull and turned him face downward in the road and left him there so that when they found him they would think that he had fallen from his horse. It was well done , for one who had had no training in crime ! No one has suspected it. I am in no danger. And yet I could not keep the secret any longer. And now that I have told it , I feel so much happier. I am like myself again. I feel as if I should never be unkind irritable : any more. The load has fallen from my heart. Come , now , and kiss me. " Extending his hands , he approached her. As he did so , the look of horror with which she had regarded him in- tensified and she retreated before him until she reached the wall , looking like a seabird hurled against a precipice by a storm. Such dread was on her face that he dared not touch her. "What is the matter ? " he said. "Are you afraid of me ? " "Forgive me , " she said , "for seeming even for a . moment to despise and ab hor you. It was all so sudden. I do not mean to condemn you. I do not mean to act or feel as if I were any less guilty than you are in all this wrong. But when one" has to face something awful without preparation , it is very hard. No wonder that we do not know what to do. We are both guilty. David. I think that it is be- cause I have had so large a share in all the rest that has been wrong that I cannot now feel towards you as I think I ought. It is true that you have injured me terribly and irretriev ably. It is true that your hands are stained with blood , and yet I love you ! My heart yearns for you this moment as never before since we have known each other. But there is a voice with- in my soul that tells me that we must part. We could not respect and there- fore we could not truly love each oth- er. Into every moment of our lives this guilty secret would intrude. No , it is impossible. I see it clearly. Ev- ery passing moment only makes it more plain. " "We shall not part ! " he cried , springing towards her and seizing her by the wrist. "We are as firmly linked by vice as by virtue. This secret will draw us together ! We cannot keep away from each other. Let the dead past bury its dead ! Let us be hap- . py. " "No , " she answered , calmly , "it is impossible. You need not argue. You cannot change my mind. I see it all too clearly. We must part' "Oh ! pity me , " he cried , falling on his knees. "What-shall I do ? I can- not bear this burden alone. It will crush me. Have mercy , Pepeeta. Do not drive me away. I cannot pminre to go forth with this brand of Cai- up- on my forehead and realize that I shall never hear from your lips an- other word of love or comfort. Pity me. " "But , my beloved , I am not acting for myself. It is not my mind or heart that speaks. It is God speaking through me. I feel myself to be acting under an influence apart from myself. We have resisted these voices and this influence too long. Now we must obey them. " "But , Pepeeta , " he continued , "you do not really think that you have the power to suppress the love you feel for me ? " "I shall not try , " she answered. She smiled on him with unutterable tenderness , and with her eyes still fixed upon his haggard face began to move slowly toward the door. He did not stir ; he could not move , but re- mained upon his knees with his hands extended towards her in supplication. Like some exalted figure in a dream he saw her vanish from his sight ; the world became empty and dark ; his powers of endurance had been over- taxed ; he lost all consciousness , and fell forward on the floor. CHAPTER XIV. -A month of dangerous and almost fatal sickness followed. When at last , through the care of a faithful negro "mammy , " the much-enduring man crept out from the valley of the shad- ow of death , he learned , that Pepeeta had secured a little room in a tene- ment house and was supporting her- self with her needle , in the use of which she had become an expert in those glad hours when she made her baby's clothes , and those sad ones when she sat far into the night await- ing David's return. On the morning of the first day in which he was permit- ted to leave the house he made his way to Pepeeta's new quarters. "And so this is to be her home , " he said with a shudder as he looked up to the attic window. Every day this pale young man was seen , by the cu- rious neighbors , hovering about the place As for the object of his love and solicitude , she began at once to be a bread-winner. The delicate girl who never in her life until now had expeiienced a care about the necessi- ties of existence began to struggle for bread in company with the thousands of poor and needy creatures by whom she found herself surrounded. The only hunger she experienced was that of the heart. She soon became con- scious of David's presence , and de- rived from it a pleasure which only added to her pain. She avoided him as best she could , and her determina- tion and- her sanctity prevented him from approaching her. He wrote her a letter in which , after passionately pleading for her love , he asked her to give him a sign of wil- inguess to take him once more . back into her life. "If I may cherish hope of your " ultimate relenting , " he wrote , \ - - i - - - - - - - -place your candle on the window sin. I will wait until midnight and if you . extinguish it then. I > shall accept your decision as final , and you will be re- sponsible for what follows. I' am a desperate man , and life without you has become Intolerable. " Having thrust the letter under the door , David fled hastily : down the stairway and Into the street , where he began to pace back and forth like a sentry on his beat Never did a con- demned felon in a cell watoh for the coming . of a m ssen eIt of ( jardpn $ : with more wildly beating heart than his as he gazed at that window up in the wall of the gloomy : tenement house. Never did a mariner on a storm-tossed vessel keep his eye more resolutely fixed on beams from a distant ligt- house. Finally , and after what seem un- counted ages , the great cock struck the hour of midnight. One , two , three -he stood like a man rooted to the ground-four , five , six-his heart beat louder than the bell - seven , eight , nine -the blood seemed bursting through is temples-ten , eleven , twelve-the ! light went out ! The universe seemed to have been Instantaneously swallowed up In darkness. He could not see the figure that crept to the window and gazed down upon him from behind the drapery of the curtains. He did not know that Pepeeta had fallen " ' - " - her knees in an agony deeper than his own , and was gazing down at him through streaming tears. In those few succeed- ing moments the sense of his personal loss was displaced by a sudden and overpowering sense of his personal guilt The full consciousness of his sin . burst upon him. He saw the selfish- ness of his love and his wickedness In a light brighter than day. "What next ? " he said aloud , as if speaking to some one else. Receiving no answer , he turned instinctively to- ward his gambling house , and went stumbling along through the deserted streets. What is a man , after all , but a stumbling machine ? Progress is made by falling forward over obsta- ces ! The poor stumbler tottered across his own threshold into that brilliant room where he had always received an enthusiastic welcome , but which he had not visited since his sickness. If ever a man needed kindness and encourage- ment it was he ; but his sensitive spir- it instantly discovered that all was changed. His superstitious companions had not forgotten the broken glass , and had heard of his subsequent calami- ties. With them the lucky alone were the adorable ! The gods of the temples of fortunes are easily and quickly de throned and. the worshipers had al- ready prostrated themselves before other shrines. The coldness of his greeting sent a chill to his already benumbed heart and Increased his desperation. He was nervous , excited , depressed , and feel- ing the need of something to distract his thought from his troubles , he sat down and began to play ; but from the first deal he lost-lost steadily and heavily. Within a few short hours he had staked his entire fortune and lost it. It had gone as easily and as quickly as It had come. "I guess that is about all , " he said , pushing himself wearily back from the table at which he had just parted with the title to his desolated home. The sun was just rising. The first faint stir of life was perceptible in the city streets ; the green-grocers were coming in with their fresh vegetables ; the office boys were opening the doors and putting away the shutters ; there . was a bright , morning look on the I faces which peered into the haggard I countenance of the gambler as he I crept aimlessly along , but the fresh , sweet light gave him neither bright- ness nor joy. His heart was cold and dead ; he had not even formed a pur- pose. And so he drifted aimlessly until the current that was setting toward the levee caught him and bore him on with it. The sight of a vessel just putting out to sea communicated to his spirit its first definite impulse and he ascended the gang-plank without even inquiring its destination. In a few moments the boat swung loose and turned its prow down the river. The bustle of the embarkation distracted him. . He watched the hur- rying sailors , gazed at the piles of merchandise , walked up and down the deck , listened to the fresh breeze that began to play upon the great , sonor- ous harp of the shrouds and the masts , and when at last the vessel glided out into the waters of the gulf he lay down in a hammock and fell into a long and ] ' dreamless sleep. ( To be continued. ) Mandarin. Mandarin is not , as is generally sup posed , a Chinese word , but one given by the Portuguese colonists at Macao to the officials of the Flowery King- dom. It is from the verb "mandar" ( to command ) . There are nine ranks of the mandarins , distinguished by the buttons in their caps-first , ruby ; sec- ond , coral ; third , sapphire ; fourth , an opaque blue stone ; fifth , crystal ; sixth , an opaque white shell ; seventh , wrought gold ; eighth , plain gold ; ninth , silver. Bee _ . Bees were unknown to the Indians but they were brought over from Eng- - land only a - few years after the land- ing of the Pilgrim fathers. It was ' more than two centuries after the first white invasion of New England , how- ever , before modern beekeeping began. The industry of the present day dates from the invention of the movable frame hive by Langstreth in 1852. Stark of Egypt4 Were it not for the multitude 01 storks that throng Egypt ; every win ter there would be no living in some . parts of the country , for after every inundation frogs appear in devastating swarms. . Took Him at Ills IVord. Blobbs-What's the matter with Henpecke ? He seems quite depressed. Slobbs-Oh , I made the mistake of telling him to make himself feel quite at home.-Philadelphia Record. . - . . . . - ( FACTS IB SABLOID ; ] [ . I The Eeppelin weighed ten tons. In Constantinople there are mort than eight ' hundred mosques or tern ules. Fines or imprisonment are the pun Ishment lu Prussia for keeping cbjl J "drfcu" ' ajvay from ' school. Count Zeppelin made his first as- cent in 1900 and attained a speed of thirteen : feet a second. During the course of aeronautic ex periments : Santos Dumont altogether constructed fourteen airships. English was spoken by 22,000,000 I people at the beginning of the nine teenth century. Now more than 100. 000,000 people speak It. An eight-track swing bridge across the main channel of the Chicago drain age canal , near Thirty-first street , will be operated by electricity. In Massachusetts tree planting is systematically conducted along the public highways. Fifteen thousand trees have been planted in a few years. : : The Italian laborers who are con- structing the electric railway from the Engadine to the Italian lakes get only GO cents a day , and of that they man- age to save something for their fami lies. Lord Strathcona , the veteran high commissioner of Canada , has returned home from London. He is 89 years old and holds the record as a trans- atlantic passenger , having crossed and recrossed more than 150 times. John Pollen , president of the British Esperanto Association , bearing a green flag with a single star , which is the emblem of the association and signifies "Brotherhood and Justice Between Na- tions , " recently arrived from Europe and will be entertained by the Ameri can devotees to that language. Before sentencing a man at the Lon don sessions to eighteen months' im- prisonment for stealing a dog , the chairman said if he had stolen the col lar which was less valuable , he could have been sent to penal servitude. There were twenty-one previous con- victions against him , all fpr stealing dogs. Winnipeg , Manitoba , is erecting twenty warehouses , factories and addi i tions , eleven schools and educational institutions , twenty business and office structures and twenty-two apartment houses , several of the latter costing about $200,000. Since the first of the year about 1,700 fine residences have also been erected or are building in the city. Students of the Crustacea often find the cod a useful assistant colector. Thus the circular crab seems to be a favorite food of cods and rays , and It was chiefly from the stomachs of these fish that some of the oldest natural- ists obtained their specimens. An- other hunting ground of the naturalist _ Is the sailing ship which has been in . foreign parts. The oldest newspaper in Belgium is the Gazette van Gent , which received the privilege of printing the Gendtsche Post-Tydinghen on November 17 , 1666 , and which has existed almost continu- ously since the first number was print- ed on Jan. 1 , 1667. The oldest copy preserved Is No. 69 , of Sept. 8 , 3 067. The next oldest newspaper in Belgium is L'Independence Beige , in Its eight ieth year. Professor Charles Richet of Paris ; has devised a means for purifying the air In rooms. His apparatus is an air filter which mechanically sterilizes air. Very fine drops of glycerine are scat tered along the walls of a cylinder containing a suction fan. Each par Ucle of air drawn in by the fan is freighted with glycerine and hence tends to drop , thereby carrying with it the germs , dust and microbes with ! v/hk-h : 1 : may be laden. Twenty years r.go J. P. Morgan " Jr. , began working as a shipping clerk with Drexel , Morgan & Co. Later ! he became executive head of his father's London Louse. He assisted in organ izing the London Underground and the International Mercantile Marine Com pany - the so-called "ship trust. " lie . I Is a director of both the abovo com I panies , of the United States Steel Cor poration , the Northern Pacific Rail way , Acadia Coal Company and of the North British Mercantile Insui ance Company. At the conclusion of a children's performance of Old Meldrum an ele phant proceeded along a narrow road with a pall in its trunk for the pur- pose of procuring water from a pump. A little girl chanced to get in the ani mal's way , and , the road being only wide enough to accommodate his sub stantial body , the elephant laid down the pail , picked up the child with his trunk and gently : lifted her to a plac of safety , afterward resuming his jour ney to the pump for the vater.-West minster Gazette. A recent traveler in that laud ol dikes and windmills has been at pains [ to make notes of the names bestowed E by the Dutch merchants upon theii i ! country houses. Here are a few ex ! ! amples translated : "Our Content ment , " "Joy and Peace , " "Leisure and Happiness , " "My : : : Desire is Satisfied , " "Friends and Quiet , " "My Wife and S I , " "Not so Bad. " To say the "least any one of these would seem to indi , cate more of the genuine sentiment of the householder than can possibly bi expressed by the "Belle Vues" and ! "Cedars" of Suburbia. - Westminster I 1 Gazette. u . . , " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - I P J _ ' j = r'IP ' VITALIZER i . , 4f - j 1 1 1 a . RESTORES il t " r"FOWERS. A weak. - man Is like a clpck run ' down MDNYON ' 8 VITALIZES will wind Urn up and malt him go. If you are nervous. ; If you are Irritable , If you lack confidence In your . self , If you do not feel " Tour : full maniy vigor begin on this remedy at once. Tier are 75 VITALIZER tablets In one bottle every cablet : Is full of vital power. Don t spend another dollar on quack doctors or spurious remedies , or nil your system wita harmful drugs. Begin on MUNIONS VITALIZER at once , and you will , becla to feel the vitalizing effect of this remedy after the first dose. Trice. $ l , post-paid. BTuuyon , C3rd and Jefferson , Phlln , I'a. t Not HI * . "I don't see why Packham should make a poor mouth all the time. Hi . . , -t. - commands a good salary every weefe of his life. " 4 "He may command It , but his wlfi demands It every week. " - Philadelphia- Press. - A GOOD COUGH MIXTURE. - _ Simple Home-Mnde Remedy That In Free from Opiates and Harm- fnl DrnKN. i An effective remedy that will usu- ally break up a cold in twenty-four hours , Is easily made by mixing to- . gether In a large bottle two ounces of Glycerine , a half-ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure and eight ounces of pure Whisky. This mixture will cure any cough that is curable , and is not expensive , as It makes enough to last the average family an entire year. Virgin Oil of Pine com- pound pure Is prepared only in the laboratories of the Leach Chemical Co. , Cincinnati , Ohio. Heroic Remedies , "According to this magazine , " sa4 Mrs. Biffingham : , "sliced onions scatter : ed about a room will absorb the odo- of fresh paint " "I guess that's right , " rejoined Bif fingham. "Likewise a broken neck will relieve a man of catarrh-London. ! Answers. Dr. Pierce's Pellets , small sugar- coated , easy to take as candy , regulate' „ . and invigorate stomach , liver and bow- " els and cure constipation. , FASHION HINTS - , + , , i\ \ I R . - . ' . ti. r i1dij . ' r vljiijj . ' . / ; : : . ± ( { j fI 1 N , in , I r i 712 r , . , , . - 3 of ' / 6 , . . "ail ins la- " o i / - - - I r1 r 13 - Light blue chiffon broadcloth to used for this charming gown of modi * fled princess type. The bolero is em broidered In Irridescent beads , and * . touch of gold , as Is also the band e& the skirt. Mousquetaire sleeves and yoke of deep ecree chiffon cloth. The gown could be carried ont oa the same lines , much less elaborately. If desired. CAREFUL DOCTOR Prescribed Change of Food Instead : . of Dmars. It takes considerable courage for a. . doctor to deliberately prescribe only- food for a despairing patient , instead : af resorting to the usual list of medi . cines. . Vi There are some truly scientific phy sicians among the present generation who recognize and treat conditions as * ihey : are and should be treated regard less ! of the value to their pockets. Sere's an Instance : "Four years ago I was taken with. severe gastritis and nothing would. ; stay on my stomach , so that I was oa. he : verge of starvation. "I heard of a doctor who had a sum- ; r ner cottage near me-a specialist front- V. Y. , and as a last hope sent for him. "After he examined me carefully he idvised me to try a small quantity of Jrape-Nuts : at first then as my stom- . LCh became stronger to eat more. "I kept at it and gradually got so I. ould : eat and digest three teaspoonfuls. "hen [ I began to have color In my face , nemory became clear , where before- iverything seemed a blank. My limbs. got ; stronger and I could walk. So I teadily recovered. "Now after a year on Grape-Nuts I treigh 153 lbs. My people were sur- irised at the way I grew fleshy and trong on this food. " Read the little book. "The Road to- vellville , " in pkgs. "There's a Reason. " Ever read the above letter ? A. icw one appears from time to time * . . fhey are genuine , true , and full of' , laman interest. -