.-1 S ok'7 ;3ggff5g?gr ??3v o.l-.t3j.:-gl SS?TT- m - -!i AUTflLE4UX ! Be caught a little coM That was aJL, So the neighbors sadly sald.- As they gathered round bis. bed, When'they heard that he was dead. T.!$ JL. . H uv (ttfcieold : ,V "nn.:te... .11 (DnVl ilfi .. . " ,M1eBSaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaBaaa ' I " ''","'' ' '- - Jni ' AXJ- 'mmmMMmtmmwmmmmmMmmMmmmmmMmmmmwmmwmmm.t -tt'KsSjZ3 r A 4jVa' " rVrYTFFIJrFIJ r WWr WW zmr WW' bbv MM . .' immt V ;: I f Mr4kwS am muzt cWmm r Air " SYNOPSIS. " The 'story opens with the shipwreck of the steamer on which Miss Genevieve Leslie, an American heiress, Ixrd Win thrope. an Knglishman. and Tom Blake, a brusque American, were passengers. The three were tossed upon an uninhab ited island and were the only ones not drowned. Blake, shunned on the boat, because of his roughness, became a hero as preserver of the helpless pair. The Knglishman was suing for the hand of Miss Leslie. Winthrope wasted his last match on a cigarette, for which he was cored by Blake. AH three constructed hats to shield themselves from the sun. They then feasted on coeeanuts.-the only procurable food. Miss Leslie showed a liking for Blake, but detested his rough ness. Led by Blake, they established a home in some cliffs. Blake found a fresh water spring. Miss Leslie faced an un pleasant situation. Blake recovered his surveyor's magnifying glass, thus Insur ing fire. He started a jungle Are, killing it large leopard and smothering several ;ubs. In the leopard's cavern they built a small home. They gained the cliffs by burning the bottom of a tree until it fell against the heights. The trio secured ggs from the cliffs. Miss Leslie's white kirt was decided upon as a signal. Miss ycaU- made a dress from the leopard nkin. Overhearing a conversation be tween Blake and Winthrope. Miss Leslie became frightened. Winthrope became ill with fever. Blake wjis poisoned by a fish and almost died. Jackals attacked tlie camp that night, but were driven off by Genevieve. Blake constructed an ani mal trap. It killed a hyena. On a tour the trio discovered honey and oysters. Miss Leslie was attacked by a poisonous snake. Blake killed it and saved its pol Rin to kill erame. I'or the second time Winthrope was attacked by . fever. He and Blake disagreed. The latter made" a strong door for the private compartment tif Miss Leslie's cave home. CHAPTER XIX. Continued. "Mr. Mr. Blake, pray do not get excited I I mean, please excuse me. I'm" . "You're coming down sick!" he said. "No, no! I haveno fever." 'Then it's the sun. Tet you ought to keep up there where the air is freshest. I'll make you a shade." j She protested, and withdrew, some what hurriedly, to her tree. In the -morning Blake was gone ngain: but Instead of a note, beside the fire stood the smaller antelope skin converted into a great bamboo ribbed sunshade. She spent the day as usual on the headland. There was no wind, and the sun was scorching hot. But with her big sunshade to protect her from the direct rays, the heat was at least en durable. She even found energy to work nt a basket which she was attempting to weave out of long, coarse grass; yet there Vere frequent intervals when her hands sank idle in her lap, and she gazed away over the shimmering glassy expanse of the ocean. In the afternoon the heat became oppressively sultry, and a long slow swell began to roll shoreward from beyond the distant horizon, showing no trace of white along its oily crests until they broke over the coral reefs. There was not a breath of air stirring, and for a time the reefs so checked the rollers that they lacked force to drive oh in and break upon the beach. Steadily, however,' the swell grew heavier," thongh not so much as a cat's paw ruffled the dead surfaces of the watery hillocks. By sunset they were rolling high over both lines of reefs and racing shoreward to break upon the beach and the cliff foot in furious surf. The still air reverberated with the booming of the breakers. Yet the girl. Inland bred and unversed in weather lore, sat heedless and indif ferent, her eyes fixed upon the hori- con in a vacant stare. Her reverie was at last disturbed by the peculiar behavior of the seafowl. Those in the air circled around in a manner strange to her, while their mates on the ledges waddled restlessly about over and between their nests. There was a shriller note than usual In their discordant clamor. Yet even when she gave heed to the birds, the girl failed to realize their alarm or to sense the Impending dan ger. It was only that a feeling of dis quiet had broken the spell of her rev erie; it did not obtrude upon the' field of her -conscious thought She sighed and rose to return to the cleft, idly wondering ihat'the air should seem more sultry than at mid-day. The peculiar appearance of the sun and the western sky meant nothing more to her 'than -an odd effect' of "color and light She smilingly compared It with an attempt at a sunset painted by an artist friend of the impressionist school. , I Neither "Winthrope nor Blake was in 6ight when she reached the baobab, and neither appeared, though she de layed supper until dark. It was quite possible that they had eatenbeforeTier return and had gone off 'again, the Englishman to dozevand Blake on an evening hunt . 'Milast tired of waiting, she covered .the.:fire and retired into her.-treecave. The air in the cleft .was still, more stifling than on the headland. She pa, ?witn- her hand upraised to propped itopen when.she camejrat in thVmorning. After V moment's hesi tation, she went on across the hollow, leaving the door wide open.. ,.',, T'win xes.ta little. and close It later," she-sighed. vShe- was feeling weary and depressed. An hour gassed. An ominous stiU: ness lav udou the cleft Even the cicadas had hushed their shrill 'note. The only- sound was a muffled re verberating echo of the surf roaring upon-the seashore. Beneath the giant spread of the baobab, all was black ness. Something moved in a hush a little way down the cleft A crouching figure appeared, dimly outlined in the starlight The figure crept stealthily across into the denser night of. the bao bab. The darkness closed about it like a shroud. - '- A 'blinding flash of light pierced the blackness. -The" figure halted and . crouched. -lower, though-the flash bad gone again, in a- fraction .of a second. A dim - rumbling mingled with the ceaseless boom of the surf. A second flash lighted the cleft with aw, aaa - w awi r - "t- "" - .sa t. raaawn n saaam aaaaaaaaaam " av?3i aaaaaaavs .a jvv Bstm. d aHl - aft : jmlLmtntMm aaaaaaaaaaw! - Jvy ABBJ . gfcy-f Sat-V M w M X T? al anilUaaffsaaV aaaaaSBBBBBBJ J""v awBTaatsfaaW BaBaaaaV r X GsZv-' KzZrZMtKlKm flaaaaT w " s vWSClm wtzzJkjt i c "Mnttva"'- saaaSt W a st-r J W ' B iIHhIUII IUIIll"lnlllflj'3iBWTffTMl iK - W - j& I s ZJh L mill ra mi m "-""" -a rv a ra aTamra If . I I 7 I si u .r Ml "I Know Already its dazzling coruscation. This time the creeping figure did not halt. Again and again the forked light ning streaked across the sky, every stroke more vivid than the one before. The i rumble of the distant thunder deepened to a heavy rolling which dominated the dull roar' of the break ers. The storm was coming with the on-rush of a tornado. Yet the leaves hung motionless in the still air, and there was no sound other than the thunder and the booming of the surf. The lightning flared, one stroke upon the other, with a brilliancy that lit up the cave's interior brighter than at mid-day. . - In the whlteglare the girl saw Win thrope, crouched beneath, her upswung door; and his face was as the face of a beast CHAPTER XX. The Hurricane Blast OR a moment that seemed a moment of eternity she lay on her bed staring into the blank darkness. The storm burst with a crashing uproar that brought her to her feet with a shriek. Her giant tree creaked and strained under the impact of the terrific hurricane blasts that came howling through the cleft like a rout of shrieking fiends. The peals of thunder merged into one continuous roar, beneath which the solid ledges of rocks jarred and quiv ered. The sky was a pall of black clouds, meshed with a dazzling net work of forked lightning. The girl stood motionless, stunned by the uproar, appalled by the blinding, glare of the thunderbolts; yet even more fearful -of the figure "which-every flash showed her still lurking beneath the door. A gust-borne bough struck with numbing force against her up raisedjarm. But she took no heed. She was unawareof the swirl of rain and sticks and leaves that was driving in through the open entrance. Ona sudden the door shook free from its -props and whirled violently around on its balance-har. There was a shriek that pierced above the shrill ing of the cyclone a single human shriek. The girl sprang across the cave. The heayy door swished up before her and down again, its lower edge all but grazing: herface. For a moment it stopped in a vertical position and hung quivering, like a beast about to leap upon its -prey. Too excited to comprehend the danger of- the act, the. girl sprang forward and shot one of the thick bars into its socket A fierce gust leaped against the out eriaceof the door and thrust- In upon i striving to burst it bodily from its : bearings. The' top sdad, the free side of the bottom bowed in. But" the branches were 'still green and tough, the bamboo like, whalebone and the shrunken creepers held- the.frame to gether as -though the joints were lashed with wire rope. Failing to smash' in the elastic structure or "to snap, the crossbar, it were as if the blast flung itself alternately .against the top and, bottoxsjin. a fierce. attempt to againrWhirirthftame;ij&out' vThe white. glare streanjing via through. the -interstices stioirodjhe ffrl her oppor tunity. She grasped another Jwr and shot it into 'its socket asx'.the lower nart'of thcTdoor gave back with the Khiftinr of the Pressure to tlie top. .: Ithtific wasthen a. simple, matter to slide the. remaining ars" into the. deepunk holes. Within half a minute she had, made the door fast from the first bar, to the sixth. t A heavy spray was beating in upon her through the chinks of the frame work. She drew .back, and sought, . ...ri, ..- I Know All.' II shelter in a niche at the side. Nar row as, was the slit above the top of the door, it let In a torrent of water, which snouted clear across and against the far wall of the cave. It gushed down upon her bed and was already flooding the cave floor. She piled higher the cocoanuts stored in her niche, and perched her self upon the heap to keep above the water. But eevn in her sheltered cor ner the eddying wind showered her with spray. She waded across for her skin-covered sunshade, and returned to huddle beneath it in the still mis ery and terror of a hunted animal that has crept wounded into a hole. During the first hurricane there had been companions to whom she could look for help and comfort, and she had been to a degree unaware of -the greatness of the danger. But in the few short weeks since she had caught more than one glimpse of Primeval Nature she of the bloody fang, blind, remorseless, insensate, destroying, ever destroying. True, this was on solid land, while before there had been the peril of the sea. But now the girl was alone. Out side the straining walls of her refuge, the hurricane yelled and shrieked and roared a headless, formless monster, furious to burst in upon her, to over throw her stanch old tree giant, that in his fall his shattered trunk might crush and mangle her. Or at any in stant a thunder-holt might rend open the great tower of living wood, and hurl her blackened body into the pool on the cave 'floor. Once she fancied that she heard Blake shouting outside the door; but when she screamed a shrill Tesponse. the blast mocked her with echoing shrieks, and she dared hot venture to free the door. If 'it were Blake, he did not shout again. After a time she began to think that the sound had been no more than a frvn of the shifting wind. Yet the thougLt of him out" in 'the full fury of the cyclone served .to turn her thoughts i.om her own danger. She prayed aloud for his safety, beseeching God that 'le be 'pared. She sought to pray een for Vinthrope. But the vision of that jeastly face rose up before Jtxtt, and she could not then. -1 Presently she became 'aware of a change -in the "storm. Tie; terrific gusts blew with yet greater violence, the thunder crashed heavier,, the light ning filled the air with? a 'flame of dazzling white light "But the rain no longer gushed across on the spot m z. . j.1 -tnvU - --.BS & L . . -... j 9nK?" oa jt - .syjw -m -. nt re- 2t W! fTSHTjr. 'Ci - C.K1. S'JLL4Llc&yF&r&2 jCS OSr. TOjRkT . Ntffir. X3Slu jus. VWfeWr r V WP TSLy . Now ! voeet ------ - - - - - - --hnrn"fcftr-fcriiifcih rh ojm- i.. " srsj wsr v'vv KEEPING UP WITH THE TIMES Matter on Which All Success ... Ufa Is Dependent: in A physician tells nie that be goes through bis medical library every ear and throws oat a lot of books .which have become useless to him be cause .the new, up-to-date, the more progressive, are pushing out the old. We all know that some of the sclen- books published, are useless a yearfter they appear Jn print. There never was. a time m the history of the world when the new in. every line .-of endeavor crowded, out the old as it does to-day. "" if you examine your business thor oughly you will probably find old-fogy methods, obsolete ideas, and cumber: where her bed had been. It was en tering at a different angle,, and its force was broken by the bend in the thick wall of the entrance. After a time the deluge dashed aslant the en trance, gushing down the door in -a cataract of foam. Another interval, and the driving downpour no longer struck even the edge of the opening. Thej wind was veering rapidly as the cyclone center moved past on one side.- The area of the hurricane was little moresthan thrice nhat.of. a tornado, and it was advancing along its course at great speed. An hour more, and the out ermost rim of the huge whirl was passing over the cleft Quickly the hurricane gusts fell away to a gale; the gale became a breeze; the breeze lulled and died away, stifled by the torrential rain: Within the baobab all was again dark and silent. Utterly exhausted, the girl bad sunk back against tho'friend; ly wall of tlie tree, and fallen asleep. She was wakened by a hoarse call: "Miss Jenny! Miss. Jenny, answer me! Are you all right?" She started up, 'barely saving her self from a fall as the big unhusked nuts rolled beneath her feet. The morning sunlight was streaming' in over her door. She sprang down .ankle deep into the mire of the cave floor, and ran to loosenMhe bars. As the door swung up. she darted out, with ' a cry of delight: "You are safe safe! Oh. I was so afraid for you! But you're drenched! You must build a fire dry yourself at once!" "Wait." said .Blake. "I'va got-to tell you something;" ' " -..,' He caught her outstretched hands, and pushed them down with gentle1 force. His face was grave, almost sol emn. "Think you can stand bad news a shock?" "I What is It? You look so strange!" "It's about Winthrope something very bad " She turned, with a gasp, and hid her face in her hands, shuddering with horror and loathing. "Oh! oh!" she cried. "I know al ready I know all!" "All?" demanded Blake, staring, blankly. "Yes; aH! And and he made me think it was you!" She gasped, and fell silent Blake's face went white. He spoke in a clear, vibrant voice, tense as an overstrained violin string: "I am speaking about Winthrope under stand r. me?. Winthrope. He has been badly hurt." "The door swung down and struck him, when he was creeping in." "God!" roared Blake. "I picked, him up like a sick baby- the. beast!'? 'stead of grinding my heel in his face! God! I'll" "Tom! don't don't even speak of it! Tom!" "God! When a helpless girl -when a !" He choked, beside himself with "age. She sprang to him, and caught, his sleeve in a convulsive grasp. "Hush, for mercy's sake! Tom Blake, remem ber you're a man!" He calmed like a ferocious dog at the voice of its master; but it was sev eral minutes before he could bring himself to obey her insistent urging that he should return to the injured man. "I'll go," he. at last growled. "Wouldn't do it even for you, but he's good as dead lucky for him!" "Dead!" "Dying. You stay away." He went around the baobab and a few paces along the cleft to the .place where a limp form lay huddled on the ledges, out of, the mud. Slowly, as though drawn by the fascination of horror, the girl crept after .him. When she saw the broken, storm-beaten thing that had been Winthrope, she stopped, and would have turned -back. After- all, as Blake had -said, ,he.wa8 dying When she stood at the feet of the writhing figure, and looked down into the battered face, it required all her will-power to keep from fainting. Blake frowned up at her for an in' stant. but said nothing. Winthrope was speaking, feebly and brokenly, yet distinctly: "Really, I did not mean any barm at first you know. But a man does not always have control " . . "Not a beast ' like you!" growled Blake. " "Ow! Don't 'it rne! I say nowfl'm done for! My legs' are cold fteady- (TO BE. CONTINUED.), 'J A ( ' ! . some ways of doing things; a lot of red tape in your methods. - Remember that nothing, else Is ln provlng faster Chan business me'lhodav' If you are keeping books as they wewT kept a quarter of a century ago, if yo are using, the same basihess systessV you will find. that you are way be hind the times. Success Magazine. V j '- "NetVet. t When tailofs s.ee rhreecornered hats ,InPccadffly) and" fiond stireet.it wilt be time 'enough to hiybi a stock of pink dress suitings. But unless we are mistaken; this sort of thing will not trouble the present generation. The present ..rage is for quiet tones. Tailor and 'Cutter. w ;. . . f setter sod- dsmxhtM . Neglect bt a osvglwor cold often leads tosktwibte; To break up a cold Jsvttifopc .hours and cure ;aw baatsJifs-curaMe -mix two ounces' of Glycerine, 'a half-ounce of Virgin on of Pine compound pure and eight ounces of pure Whisky. Take a teasnoonfal erery four hours. You can buy these at any food drug store and easily mix thess in a large, bottle. Made Sura Pair Was There. A through train stopped a few mo ments at a small station the other day. A passenger got off to walk around a little. As the train began to move, again the passenger jumped aboard, but just" then he discovered that he had but one overshoe. Think ing that he dropped the other some where on , the platform, .and as the trainwas-going' too fast for him to jump off and recover it, he pulled off the remaining shoe and threw it on the platform, exclaiming: . "There, that makes a good pair of overshoes for somebody." Entering the car, he proceeded to his seat There, to his great astonishment was his overshoe A look of intense disgust came over bis face; but he did not hesitate. Quickly picking up the lone, arctic, he hurried to the platform, threw the shoe as far as he could back toward the other one, and shouted: "By jimminy, there is a pir of overshoes for. somebody!" Lost in Antiquity. A little fellow who bad just felt the bard side of the slipper turned to his mother for consolation. "Mother," he asked, "did grandoa .brash father wben be was a little boy?" "Yes," answered bis mother, im pressively. "And did his father thrash him when he was little?" t, "Yes." "And did his father thrash him?" Yes.", A pause. "Well, who .started this thing, any way?" Cassell's Saturday Journal. How's This? . We offer One Hundred Dollars Rawaid for tpf esse ot catarrh that cannot be cured by Haira Cattrrn Cure. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O. We, the nDderstencd. have known F. J. Cneaey far tbe last IS years, and believe him perfectly hon orable In all business transactions and financially able to carry oat any obllyationa made by bis firm. WALD1KO, KlNNAN A MARVIN. Wholesale Drunrtets. Toledo. O. Han's Catarrh Core Is taken internally, acting 4treetlv upon the blood and mucous surface ot the yatem. Testimonials sent me. Price 75 cents par kottle. Sold by all Drontots. Take Ball's Family Fills for constipation. Sing Sing to Be Removed. Sing Sing prison is to be removed across the Hudson river 15 or 20 miles northward, just eight miles south of West Point, where a large tract of' land has been purchased and a gang of several hundred convicts has been working for two years. The, present prison was also built by convicts in 1826, with material found on the grounds, but', although it has been enlarged every few years, and is now one of the largest penitentiaries in the world, it is not. large enough. Important to Mothers. .Examine carefully every bottle of CAS'TORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Sienature of " ww In Use Fbr Over 30 Years. ' The Kind "You Have Always Bought Ruled by Kindness. Lucy Burd's success with boys at the reform school in Bucks county. Pennsylvania, she thinks, is due sim ply to kindness. She has reformed more than 100 boys in her term of five years as superintendent Some of her boys are. in the navy some on farms. Few have gone back to their old ways after coming under her in fluence. Take a hint, do your own mixing. Rough on Rats,, being all poison, one 15c bor will enread ox make "50 to 100 little cakes that will kill 500 or more rats and mice.. It's' the unbeatable exterminator. Don t die in the house. Beware of imitations, 'substi tutes and catch-penny ready-for-use de vices. When a man tells a young widow thatvshe is the only woman he ever loved -she is sure he is eligible for membership- in an Ananias club. 8trong Winds and Sand .Storms eause granulation of the eyelids. PETTITS EYE SALVE soothes and quickly "relieves. All druggist80rHowardBros., Buffalo, N.Y. Happiness is increased, not by the I enlargement of tbe possessions, but of the; heart Ruskin. bONTC IOSGIJ5CT THAT COCGH . It certainly racks yonr system and may tun Into something serious. Allen's l.nns: Balsam will check Itqnlckly aad permanently. For sale at aU druggists. We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge 'tis by what we have" already done. Smokers also like Lewis' Single Binder J eijBtt.for ita. purity- ;Jt is never doped, qnlyptobacco .in its .natural state. -;; H' that does a base thing in zeal for., his friend burns- the golden thread that ties their hearts together. who look Hk rjjsesnfZSST ri-www9 to lean that tkeyara r, sad yofj reeJiss 1 at forty or fbrtyf ve oafat to isadfaireat. Way isa't it health of wosbm as se , rWP v. atkarjaasl bbbb Aaaaaal , t.aaNly awoostsd withthe local awakh ' saw eaa be so tas cassks sM row -r fcest wave there a lajBalwiilraiii - . ' WmmJm ... hmti aalalal feast la:alaaV- 1 taa(aa"o Dr. ?ii h Km aleeaol. or ambit.ibnaas! drafa k Aay skk woaaa aary cossslt Dr. sacredly coaadential. aad BM"'-iifcim aray FavotAV rirJaa. It af, f waaaW. k okar. wyss aai raiiea t&a aaieks. World'a Dispeaary Medical Asaociatioa, - fmm wnman'a ailmfmta am inTited to 'write to-tho addresses here given, for positive Vegetable uompouna aoea cure iemaie uis. TwmmSmmmn. . . 1 " . SS "&: .- CUeaajo, H1.-Xrs. Ainu Sfwliag, U Laap- OOBJBCrSBS. IJadley, IwL-Hn. May Try. Kiasley, Kim-Ma StelU OUTorel Beaaaa. Scott. N.Tj-Mrs. S. J. Barber. CoravaUrina, N.Y. Mrs. Wb. Boagkte. ClactoBJrtl.O Mrs.WJ.HoBsk,7KastTJwAT aWwsaka.Wia.-3IrB. Knout las. SS3 1st 8t GsfiaM. ClnaMsflltfc floats Bast, IaZ-Ura. Tni Cartia, 1W4 S. ifaiaUa Proof Uoafc, KmtaekyMra. LlasCo Hollan. BrookSaI4.3fo.Mn. Barak Loasigitoat, Wt LWaAaana. NJ.Mn. ws. eaascnua, HMRMIlkATIBBA . rUladMokka, Pav-Mrs. B- X. Oarntt, WB7 North (Janet Street. . Kevsakoaa, Wto-Mrs. Carl Daklke. Worcester, Mass-Mra. Dosj1t Co, UT Soatksato Street. liasapoUs. Ind.M nb A. P. t3B K. Pratt Street. BI(Baa,PavMrs.W.E. Pooler. Jitwate SUtkM, O.-Mrs. Anton Maentaapt. Ciaeiaaati, OaIo.-Mr. K. H. Haddocks, 213S Gilbert Aveaae. Mocadora, Oklo.Mrs. Lm Manges, Box 121. DewittTllle, N.T.-Mrs. A. A. Gilo. JoBnstown,N.Y.-iMrs.HoBerJJ.8eaMaa,103 E. Mala Street. BBrtoBTiav, iaMrs Peter Langeabaha. Avetil Operatloaa. Haapstead, Md.-Mrs. Jos. H. Dandy Adrlaa,Ga. LenaV.Honry,BouteKo.S. Indianapolis, lBd.Baarie V. Piper, Soatk 'Addlsoa Street IouUrllle,Ky.-Mrs. SaraLee,3SaFburUtSt. Soatk West Harbor, Maine. -Mrs. Iilliaa Bobbins, MUOesert Light Statloa. Detroit, Mick. Mrs. Frieda Boseasa. 6U Meldram ATeane, GersMa. Oraamte IMsalaeeaa 1. Moxteri Dls.-Mr. Mnry Ball. Uwier,lBd.-Mrs. EltaaWood,B.P.T.Kn.4. Melboarne, Iowa.- Mrs. Clara Waterauna, B.P.A.No.1. Bardstowa, KrMrs. Josepk Halt Lewistoa, Maine. Mrs. Henry Ckmtier, BS OxfordStreet. w Minneapolis, Mina. Mrs. Joka O. Moldaa, 2M5 Second Street, K. . . Shamrock, Mo. Josie Haa, B.F.D. o. 1; Box 32. . - Marlton, K J.-Mrm. Oeo. Jordy, Boato o., Box 40. Chester. Ark. Mr dla Wood. OcilU,Ga.-Mr.T.A.Cribb. ii. Pendleton, lad. Mrs. May Manball,R.&44 Cambridge. Neb-Mra. Nellie MosUader. ITiese 'women are only a few of thousands of living' witnesses the nower of Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoand to cure fesa diseases. Not one of these women form for the use of their names in ing that we should refer to them because of the good tner An other snfffirine women to move that Lvdia E. Pinkli Yegetable'Gompound is a reliable and honest medicine, and that statements made in our advertisements regarding its merit are truth and nothing but the truth. Difference Minutes Make From 35 degrees to 70 degrees from an unbearable 'cold to a glow ing heat that contributes the cheery comfort you want in your home is the difference that can be made in 10 minutes when you have the PERFECTION (HI Heater (Equipped with Smokeless Device)' to do your heating. It is unrivaled for quick work and effective, clean ly work. Impossible to turn the wick too high or toorfow impossiMs to make it smoke or emit disagreeable odor the self-lockioc Automatic Smokeless Device absolutely prevents smoke. Lighted in a second cleaned in a tmsrets burns Nine Houts with one filling. Rustless brass ,font Automatic smokeless device instantly removed for cleaning-. Highest efficiency in heating power -Beautifully finished is Japan or Nickel an ornament anywhere a necessity, everywhere. Variety of styles. Every Dealer Everywhere. If Xot At Yours, Write for DesctlptiTe Grcalar to the Nearest Agency of the , STANDARD OIL COMPA1CY The Wizard of Horticulture . Hon. Luther Burbank " says: "DeHckras is a. gem the finest -apple in all the vjorlA It is the beat ia quality of any apple I have so far tested," and Mr. Burbank knowi Delicious is but one of the hundreds of good things 'io,Srk"Trees tie good things you should know about before you. plant this fall or ext spring.. Let us tell you about them by writing today for our complete, illustrated pnee list'Catalogue which describes our complete line of fruit trees, ornamentals etc Wanted-A Bright, Capable in each county of this state to sell Stark Trees" on commission. No previous ex perience necessary. The work is pleasant, clean work, highly profitable, and the positions are permanent to the right men. who apply immediately. ; Many of our salesmen are earning 850 to f 80 per mrjhth and expenses; some are making more. ' You can do as well or better if yos'te abustlerand trjfn to succeed. - s--. ... - -. No investment called for: we furnish complete order-getting outfit free and the most liberal contract. ,; - t v ,.' For complete information address the Sales: Manager of ; . . ., STAKK BIO'S NUatSElIES & ORCHARDS CO.. LOUISIANA. BJO. - s2saaa-5W SW KVsaw I aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaW ""Wsa II f aftaaaaaaW II m A --' "av : VWml m - .aaaaaaawlaS"ateaOBr Y' aaaaaiaaaaVasaPaaaw'aay tlfM vsjar aal vaaawy W'aVtV1-' '- that be soP, in- ia "Faroraa Pisres by lataw. free. Every letter is atlar, traa. Every swurarl at a paaa rdope. .Adarssss Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres., Bafclo, N.Y. smrT' v- proof that Lydia E. Chicago, IIL-Mrm. Was. Tally.0BJSiast. JHuiAlaf, MteK-Mrs. Bart Lj4l.r.i. Noll: care of H. A-Saakoca, Paw Fmw, Mc,Mn. vmmrn uijbm. CofreeriUe. Miav-Mrs. 8. J. aav Ciaclniiall,Oaio.-Mr.FaraAkr, street. . . , aerelaud, 0aVMas Uzaftt ! Fleet Aveaae, tu. . WealeTTille. Pav-Mrs. Kaaaie "JLT. THrrhin-tr-Tnm Mn. ImTI J, Uayleld, Va-Mrs. Mara mala. Iferria. m. Mrs. Ckas. Pel Vk'tBRkMter. IniL Mrs. Mav DM Iryer. Ibo Mrs. Wm. Obertok. K. T.9.) Baltlaore,Md.-Mn.W. 8. Ford, BOB aa dovae Street. , Boxbe,MaaMmFraKaVerUsHsMc Street. Claxksa-Ue,MoMIaAanaWanaat. GaTTille, Ohiou-Mrs. Hb Michael. .T.nx Daytoa, Ohio. Mrs. Ida Hale, Bos a, 3a-. tlnaal MiUtarv llone. Lebanon, Pa.-Mn. Harry L. KitOe,! au Street. STkMi.Tenn. Minnio nan. Setroit1Mlck.-Mrs. Loaise Jaag; Bt- Ovarlaa) Trookfc. VincenBes, Ind. Mrs. bjl. U. Teatk Street. Gardiner, Maine. Mrs. SLA." D.H6.14;BoxS9. . rhilatlclpkla. Pa. Mrs. Chav.BeeB, SBV 3L Garnet Street. Plattt)ar,MisjMIssVernaVTIlaJa Ftt.f. Veaaale 'Weakness, Wintmsatle, Coaa Mrs, Etta. J 20O " Wondside. Idikou-Mr. Xaekel JoB Bockand, Maine. Mrs. Wilt Touae nabia, Arcane. RenttrUlo. Mich.-Mrsr.OT Dayton, Ohlo.-Mrs. F. B. Saith, 431 Bai St. Krie,Pa.-Mrs. J.P.ndlicn,B.F. D.Na.7. Beaver Falls, Pa. -Mrs. W. P. Bsj Sa Serentk Arenne. Fairckance,Pa. Mrs.T.A.lmlaia,BsiBS. Fort Honter, Pa. MraMary Jaae SkaMa. Bast Earl. Pa. Mr.AairwtttsLjoa.B.y.lkz. Vieaaa, W. VaJteXaaa Wheats. Oronoco, Mo. Mrs. Mae MeKnigbt, CaalSi,NJMra. Xlllie Waters, 4Bliker tr Street.. Joaenk. Oreson. MrK. ABee Hn Pkiladelpkla, Pa, -Mrs. Joka . Hiegei street. Christiana, Teaa.aira. Mary Wood, B.F.B-. Ko.X. Peeos. Texas. Mrs. Ada Tovnc 1 uraaitenue, vt. Jtrs. a, uarea ever received compensatiom amsiqr this advertisement but are wil That Ten CAREY ACT LANDS .. - u- 4330 rEK ACIE , '' 'a - . Ten years to pay Largest reaexiam as State. Water in caBals. New sekjers arriving daily." Write for booklet Warn to tive ';..- ': BUBTNEK Ilftl GATED LANDS CO. S23 Jams StasV. Salt lata Otr. 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