I fi- ' tv - 'v - - -i' J? r"-- '''Jf'yt;'! Hs x' "SV?? rivvs'?i'"r "v r 1 ! A LITTLE COLD. 3 ATjUST. -; TRIED REMEDY FOR THE GRIP. He caught a little, cold That was all. So the neighbors sadly said, As they gathered round his bed, .When they heard that he was dead. i. He caught a little cold' That was all. (Puck.) Fiii -(M' ---. VSSilSSiBafS Jj Str C BBBBBBr if ssssssa i jjrft'pffj jQ&iin " L"FrF bwbbbbbbbI I bwbbbbbbI awFBsssssm. SuvCGKu fHRrSw r w 3 " 3 3 ' ' .' V synopsis. - i ' The story opens with the Introduction of John Stephens, adventurer, a Massa chusetts man marooned by authorities at Valparaiso. Chile. Being Interested In Mining operations In Bolivia, he was de Bounced by Chile as an Insurrectionist and as a consequence was hiding;. At his liotel his attention was attracted by an englishman and a young woman. Stephens rescued the young woman from a drunken officer. He was thnn'ced by her. CHAPTER III. In Which Opportunity Conies. A period of decided depression fol lowed, the earlier vision of youth fa ding swiftly as I realized what the message of this card plainly meant, and contemplated the social gulf yawning between myself and this woman of the English aristocracy. A cat may look at a king, and a South American adventurer might venture to gaze admiringly upon this beautiful gentlewoman, yet vaulting ambition should have a care lest it o'erleap Itself. Oh, well, it was not much I had to overcome merely an impression, a fugitive admiration which would early perish, for it was hardly probable we should ever meet again, in spite of his lordship's stiff invitation, and her ex ceeding warm glance secretly sec onding it. I smiled grimly at thought of so in sane a dream of love at such a time CCd place. Here was I, alone, unable SO change my environment, every Movement bringing new danger, al most certain of early detection, the result Imprisonment or death; yet " turning aside to quarrel with one only too glad to denounce me should he dis cover the truth, and totally forgetting every caution in sudden admiration for a girl never seen before, probably never to be seen again. But a smile can leave a deeper wound than a " sword, and my mind would recur, in spite of other interevening thoughts, to the pleasant mystery behind her ' gracious words and action. I was thus lingering over the nuts and wine, dreaming a fools dream, and idly won dering at the cause of that endless racket In the streets below, with the chorus of vivas arising from the crowded plaza, when the open win dow facing my table became suddenly darkened by a burly figure. Before I could push back my chair, the unwel come intruder on my privacy was po litely bowing before me, one hand pressed upon his heart. '"Pardon, senor, my so abrupt ap pearance" and I gazed curiously into a round, bronzed face, guarded by closely clipped side-whiskers, and il lumined by steady black eyes "but the waiter said I should certainly find you alone here, and my need was most urgent. I address the Senor West?" It was the name I had assumed, and. with closely pressed lips, I bowed in silent acknowledgment of my identity, feeling little doubt about the man's mission. The round, rather compla cent face broke into a genial smile of relif?. "Must fortunate I am thus to dis cover you with such facility," he con tinued fluently, using both hands in gesticulation. "Senor, it Is now a grert favor I would ask. Could you yield me the honor of a private inter view in my own room?" pointing up war" impressively. "It is upon the floor above." "If your mission Is in regard to the Sanchez affair, senor," I returned somewhat coldly, "privacy is hardly necessary. The preliminary details can all be arranged here." He gazed at me in surprise, rub bing his hands together swiftly. "The Sanchez affiair! I know not as to that, senor. The matter on which I come is most delicate, most secret; it is not for other ears. 'Tis because of what I would communicate that I seek 'private audience." I remained motionless, looking straight at him, my teeth clenched on my cigar, my mind busy with expedi ents. If his call had nothing whatever to do with, my quarrel with Sanchez, it muBt be an arrest. , Yet why was the fellow o mysterious? What did he require of me in private audience? Ah! a bribe, probably he desired to learn first what amount I would give for an opportunity to escape. I arose to my feet, the whole affair settled with in my own mind, and cool enough to take advantage of every opening thus presented. "Very well, senor; lead the and I will follow." way "Bueno!" He laid one hand upon my shoulder, his eyes darkening with delight. "You have the courage, senor, the audacity of the brave soul. 'Tis in the face, the eye. and gives me hope of my mission already. We wi!l go by the outside stairway, so as to be unobserved by those within." I followed him silently, up the steep Iron steps and along the narrow, dim ly lighted hall. He paused finally, un locking a door, and stood politely aside while I entered. A moment he lingered outside, peering suspiciously up and down the deserted hallway. and. stepping within, closed and bolted the door, even carefully lowering the 1 ransom before turning up the gas lights. He hastily crossed the room, shut down the single window, and drew closer the heavy shade. I watched these evidences of excessive caution with considerable amusement un doubtedly bribery of the Valparaiso secret police was considered a most serious affair. A table occupied the center of the room, and with a wave of his rather fat hand my mysterious companion invited me to occupy a chair beside it The perplexity exhlb- --s' V -T"asa g"gg fJ' . jJs I sL "" M f llkWCsv r m IwiL l T " fll la. W W m s iJbb&s "Sangre de Cristol But We Will ited by his troubled face caused me to smile acain. "So, senor, to you it was all fun," he said, gravely, gesticulating with vigor. "But I appreciate the danger, the peril of discovery. Everywhere lurk the spies, and what I have to say is not for other ears. Senor, I have ad dressed you as the Senor West, for so I was bidden; but the man I really seek is not in truth of any such name." his voice sinking to the merest whis per, as he leaned impressively toward me across the table. "It is Senor Estevan." t I crossed my legs in apparently care less indifference, my fingers resting on the butt of the revolver in my pocket, undecided yet whether this was to be war or peace, but prepared for a bold play in either case. "I am Jack Stephens; so you may proceed, senor." "Ah! 'Tis as I was told!" his face brightening instantly, his hands del ving within an inside pocket of his coat. "This card see; it is written in the English it will tell you if I be trusted, if I be all right You know the handwriting, senor, the man who wrote It?" I accepted the bit of pasteboard curiously. It was the business card of a well-known sugar firm, and I ran my eyes hastily over the few lines dimly traced on the back: "Bearer is all he represents himself to be; you may do business with him safely. G. P. L." I glanced upward at the anx ious face of the man opposite; he was evidently tingling with excitement "You know him, senor? You know the handwriting? You believe him? What is it he says? I read not the English." "Yes; we are acquainted. He is George Loring, a friend of mine. He says you are what you represent your self to be, and that I may transact business with you in perfect safety. Now, then, what are you an agent of the police?" He shrugged his broad shoulders, spreading Mfe hands deprecatingly. "Xo, no; Cielo, no! Does he not tell you my name?" C I shook my head negatively, my In terest already deeply increased. "No! He was most cautious. It was best so; but now I tell you, and you believe." Again he leaned forward, his voice sinking to a mere whisper, "I am Don Emilio de Castillo." My face must have expressed no familiarity with the name, for he sprang briskly to his feet, shaking a fat, official-looking envelope before my eyes. "What! you recognize it not? Car amba! then I shall show you, senor. You read Spanish, si? This will tell why I speak with the authority of my nation. See I am admiral of the Peruvian navy. I have the power, the right, the authority, to say what I now speak to you. You believe that, senor?" "Yes," I replied, soberly, by now fully awakened to the fact that this was to be no ordinary meeting.' "1 believe all you say; more, now I re member your name, Don Emilio; but what are you doing here? What is it you desire of me?" "You know not! You know not what all this means?" he questioned, pointing with trembling finger toward the window. Before I could answer he burst forth vehemently: "It is war, senor; war, disgracefully declared this "cry day between Chile and my coun- y the pigs! the cowards! the bul- es!" He sprang to his feet as If razed with sudden excitement and vjgan pacing the room, waving his Show Them What War Means!" hands with wild gesticulations. "They think to fright us, senor, but they will learn a lession. We will fight, senor; fight to the knife. It will not be vivas they will shout these Chilean dogs when the Peruvians come to their country. Then they will be beg ging on their knees for mercy. Sangre de Cristo! but we will show them what war means!" I watched him earnestly, already be ginning dimly to perceive in all this a possible opening for my own escape. 'War?" I repeated. "And declared to-day? It has come suddenly, al though I am aware there have been months of controversy. Did Peru ex pect such a result? Is she prepared?" He paused in his nervous walk, his hands outspread on the table, his dark eyes glowing into mine. "Both yes and no, senor. We knew well that nothing save war could ever wipe out the Chilean insults to our country. Yet we hoped for more time in which to prepare. Cielo! it is not lack of men no! no! the army is strong, valiant, senor; it will fight to the death. But the navy! Dios de Dios! we have not the ships, senor. They come not yet, those we have bought in Europe. 'Tis that which has brought me here in disguise to Val paraiso; 'tis that which brings me now to you." I watched him closely without ven turing response, and he sank into a chair, his elbows on the table. "Si. uow I explain it all to you." his voice failing so low I could scarcely follow. "We know for two weeks past war was to come. We have only a few warships, one, two, three; not enough to fight Chile, or oven tnutrrl nur nirn pnact Wt Iithtq tVta. man suf- ficlent. but not the ships, senor. What could I do? I, the admiral? There was but one hope the audacity of sur prise. They must be taken from the enemy; we must strike the first blow, and at the very heart of the Chilean navy. I come here incognito; I come before war has been declared; I study and observe. To a brave man chances for action come, senor. and so I found what I sought. You know about the Esmeralda, senor?" I sat up suddenly in my chair, grip ping my cigar between my teeth. An Interesting Runaway. "I read a piece .fn your paper-about an automobile that run away with a man's mother-in-law," a correspondent writes the Adams (Ga.) Enterprise, "and I'm interested in that automo bile, and would like to know the name and price of it, or if the owner would part with it for an extra considera tion? The only objection to the story is that it doesn't go far enough; it says 'the automobile ran away with her,' but doesn't say what happened whether the runaway was fatal, or the automobile changed its mind and turned 'round and came back to where it started from. Can you throw any more light on the subject, and, by so doing, oblige a constant reader and old subscriber?" On the Levee. "Lmme tell yer some'n. When Ah calls er nigger's bluff his chest caves in!" "Huh! When er rousterbout tries ter call man bluff Ah'm stone def ! - Ah can't heah a word yer say!" BIrmiaj. bam Age-Herald. "The Esmeralda! Ton mean that steam yacht the Chilean government purchased from Brazil ? "81," his eyes glowing eagerly; "jrou are a aailor. and so would know of her. She is beautiful, strong, swift, a most dangerous vessel if well handled. Have you ever seen her, senor?" "Only through field-glasses from the balcony of the hotel. She rode at anchor well off the government mole in the roadstead the last I remember." He clasped his fingers on my arm, leaning eagerly forward until his face was pressed close to mine. "She lies there yet, senor, but only for to-night Dios de Dios! only for to-night! To-morrow-they warp her in beside the quay, her crew comes aboard, her armament, her provisions, and she Is -made ready for sea. Holy mother, such a chance, and only for to-night! Think of it, senor, and won der no longer if I seemed crazed. She lies out there now in the darkness. swinging to a single anchor chain, her steam up, the nearest battery a quar ter of a mile away, and not a half dozen men aboard her. It is as a gift of heaven. Yet, sangre de Cristo! he who should lead the venture lies de- Tirious from fever. Was there ever such cursed luck before!" He gripped his head between his two hands, but I was already upon my feet, my mind instantly grasping the situation. "Don Emilio," I exclaimed, eagerly, gripping his shoulder, and compelling him to look up, "let me understand this clearly. You had perfected plans to capture and run off this Esmer alda the moment war was formally de clared? You have organized a crew for the work, and they are waiting the word here now in Valparaiso? Their leader is suddenly stricken ill, and you have no one capable of taking his place is that why you have come to me?" "SI, si, senor." "How did you learn about me?" "From Senor Loring. He has lived in Peru. I have known him long." "But you must have other officers In your party; what of them?" He spread his hands in a gesture of utter helplessness. "Senor, I brought with me only the one. It was not safe to bring more. Besides, what need? This Valparaiso is a great seaport; here we may al ways find the scum of the seven seas; here ever are plenty of men glad enough to fight and plunder 'tis their trade. Cielo! we could enroll 100 devils in an hour along the water front, hell-hounds of the ocean, carins nothing for the flag above them if the pay be good." "True; and you have them ready at hand. Where are they?" "At the wine shop of Rodrlgues be yond the plaza. You know the place?" I nodded, ray memory instantly re calling the foul den. "How many?" "Twenty It is enough for a sur prise, and they are sea-rats, senor." "But they are under officers?" "Of their own kind. yes. but not of our navy. The first officer Is a Yan kee whaleman; the second I know not what, only he is a deep-water sailor." "I see." I acknowledged, taking a long breath, yet continuing to stare at him. "What you need Is some one able to command such an outfit one who can operate a steamship." Like a flash the official envelope came forth again. "Si, si, and you can do that senor. I know; I have been told. You hate this Chile; you fight her already In the hills; you hide here now for your life. I come to give you a chance to get away free. But I not stop even with that; no, no, my country not stop with that See! here I possess the "SS' 2 sl ld my government, of a captain in the Peruvian navy- Only is the name left blank for me to write in. I write in your name; that makes you an officer of the Peruvian navy. See you what it means? Chile dare not touch you ex cept as prisoner of war. Is that not right, senor? But I not stop even with that no, no! When the Esmeralda comes safely to Peru, the government pays you five thousand American dol lars in gold. I pledge you that. ' Emilio de Castillo, admiral." (TO BE CONTINUED.) 000m0m000 World'a Coldest City. Yakutsk, in eastern Siberia, is said to be the coldest city in the world. It is the great commercial emporium of eastern Siberia and the capital of tne province of Yakutsky, which in most of its area of 1,517,063 square miles is a bare desert, the soil of which is frozen to a great depth. Yakutsky consists of about four hundred houses of European structure, standing apart. The Intervening spaces are occupied by winter yoorts, or huts of- the northern nomads, with earthen roofs. The doors are covered with hairy hides and the windows are of Ice. Took Precautions. "You ran into this man at -30 mile an hour and knocked him 40 feet," said the court "That, or a little better, I suppose." answered the chauffeur. "Why didn't you slow downr "Mere precaution, yonr honor. Once I shut off speed ant hit' a man ao gnat, ly that he was able to climb into the machine and give me a licking." Neglect of' a cough or cold often leads to serious trouble. Tobreak up a cold In. twenty-four hours and cure any cough that Is curable mix two ounces of Glycerine, a half-ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure and eight ounces of pure' Whisky. Take a teaspooaful every four hours. You can boy these at any good drug store and easily mix them In a large bottle. Tuberculosis Death Rates. The death rate from tuberculosis among men employed in occupations, exposed to municipal and general or ganic or street dust is higher than among other employed males, accord ing to a recent bulletin of the bureau of labor of the department of com merce and labor. The percentage of deaths from consumption among males exposed to organic dust is 23, while the percentage for all males In the registration area is 14.8. The percentage of deaths from tuberculo sis among workers exposed to metal lic dust 1b very much higher. Where Is Bessie Hartman? Hosanna and Bessie Hartman lived with their mother at Chapman, Nebr., in 1901, the year that their father was killed by a falling tree at Anada, Mo. Their mother, an invalid, being unable to care for them, the girls were sent to Omaha to school, being housed and mothered by a Mrs. Smith. Finally, in 1903, Bessie, the younger ot the two, was taken in charge by the Nebraska Children's Home society, who refused to tell her married sister, Rosanna, where she is. Bessie be came of age last February. If she will send her address to P. O. Box S98, Omaha, Nebr., it will be for warded to her sister Rosanna, who la now Mrs. Geo. Duerr. Temperamental Toilet Table. A very aged Englishman many years ago gave this advice to his daughter in a letter as to what a lady's dressing table should contain: The best beautifier a young lady can use is good humor. The best renovator truth; the best rouge is modesty; the best eyewater is the tears of sym pathy; the best gargle for the voice is cheerfulness; the best wash for smoothing wrinkles is contentment; the best cure for deafness is atten tion; the best mirror is reflection, and the whitest powder is innocence. Importantto Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Rpjir"! the Signature otj&XT&AjbM In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Provided for Newsboys. Mrs. William Waldorf Astor provid ed in her will that the newsboys of New York should have a Thanksgiv ing dinner, as they have had at the expense of the Astor family for half a ccnturj'. This year at least 2,000 newsboys were on hand, the afternoon papers having suspended work, thus giving the little fellows a holiday. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any or cat&rra trut cannot De cured by Halls Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHEXEY & CO., Toledo. O. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe htm perfectly hon orable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldi.nc. Ki.nnan & Marvin. Wholesale Drucf-ists. Toledo. O. IXnll's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents pel bottle. Sold by all Drutn-lsts. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Restrained by Politeness. "Prisoner, have you any reasons to present, why the sentence of the court should not be pronounced upon you?" "No, your honor. I feel as if I should like to say a few words about the defense my lawyer put up for me. but there are ladies present; you can go ahead with the sentence, your honor." - This Will Interest Mothers. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, cure Feverishness, Headache, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, Regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. They break up colds in 24 hours. Pleasant to take, and harmless as milk. They never fail. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. v Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Exactly in the degree in which you can find creatures greater than your self to lock up to, in that degree are you ennobling yourself and in that de gree happy. Ruskin. There is no use going into a politi cal campaign with any reputation, be cause you won't have any when you come out. Quick as Wink. If your eyes ache with a smarting, burn ing sensation use PETTIT'S EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, X. Y. Seneca: Vices are contagious and there is no trusting the well and sick together. PIUS CURED TX 6 TO 14 DAYS. FAZO OINTMENT I srnaranteed to mrr anv raw of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Kit, in 6toltdvsor money refunded, ate. Don't be common. It's the uncom mon man who causes the world to sit up and take notice. BARKING, HACKING. RASPING COUGH can be broken up quickly by Allen's Lung Balsam. This old, reliable remedr has been sold for over 40 years. Ask your druggist about It. Remember that a sound argument doesn't mean loud talk. PUTNAM "!?'" wsim csisw tasB any swat wmsitfira. smaiii Mme. X., the fencing master's wife, finds some pins long enough for her hat A Pessimistic View. Among the patients in a certaisbos pital of Harrlsburg there was recently one disposed to take a dark view of his chances for recovery. "Cheer up, old man!" admonished the youthful medico attached to the ward wherein the patient lay. "Your symptoms are identical with those of my own case four years ago. I was just as sick as you are. Look at mje now!" The patient ran his eyes over the physician's stalwart frame. "What doctor did you have?" he finally asked, feebly. Illustrated Sunday Magazine. Where Are Harry and Isabella Allen? Harry is now aged 20 years, and his sister, Isabella, aged 18 years. The children were taken in charge by the Nebraska Children's Home society in 1fiQ7 frAm Crnil To1il fMTnnniv Iia death of the father, Silas Allen. The ' mother Is now in Oklahoma, and is distracted because she cannot locate her children, whom she has not seen since they were taken by superintend ent of the society twelve years ago, I who now refuses to tell their mother ( where they are. If the children will' address P. O. Box 898, Omaha, Nebr., giving their own address, it will be sent to their mother. Her Mistake. A lady overtook a little girl of her acquaintance on her way to school. "Do you like decimals, my dear?" she asked. Now the little girl had not gone very far in her arithmetic and she was unfamiliar with the word deci mals. She shrank from acknowledg ing her ignorance, so, after a minute, she stammered: "Yes'm, I like them pretty well, but not as well " as peaches." One idea of Economy. "What do you mean when you tell the people they ought to economize?" "I mean," said Mr. Dustin Stax, "that they ought to go slow in patron izing most business enterprises In or der that they may have more money to spend with mine." Washington Star. HEAD, BACK AND LEGS ACHET Aeho nil over? Throat sore, with chills? Th.it Is La Grippe. Perry Davis Painkiller will break it up if taken promptly. All dealers. 25c. Cc and 0c bottles. During the iirst six months of his married life a man pities old bachel lors. After that he envies them. OXI.Y ONE "BBOMO QIIIXIXE." t That is LAXATIVE mtO-VO QUlXIXK. I-ook for , the sisnature or K. W. (iltOVK. L'scd tho World l over to Cure a Cold in One Jay. 2ic. The people who have the greatest opinions of themselves are frequently the poorest judges of human nature. Smolcers also like Lewis' Single "Bimle; i cipar for its purity. It 11 never aoped, only tobacco in its natural state. There's a difference between dignity and pomposity, but some people don't seem to be able to realize it. Mr. Wlnslow's Soothlnn Syrup. For children teethlnjr, softens tho rnitns, reduces fcj flammatlon. allays pain, cures wind coiiu 25c a bottle. A man can't help feeling1 restless when even his bills are unsettled. Welcome Words to Women Women who, softer with'disorders peculiar to their sex should write to Dr. Pierce and receive free the advice of physicwa of over 40 years' experience skilled and successful specialist in the diseases of wooes. Every letter of this sort has the most careful consideration and is regarded as sacredly confidential. Many sensitively modest women write fully to Dr. Pierce what they would shrink from telling to their local physician. The local physician is pretty sure to say that he cannot do anything without "an examination." Dr. Pierce holds that these distasteful examinations are tfenerallv need. lest, and that no woman, except in rare cases, should submit to them. Dr. Pierce's treatment will care yoa right ia the privacy of , yonr owa borne. .His Favorite Prescription" has cared baadreds of thousands, some of them the worst of cases. It m the only medicine cf its kind that is the product of a regularly graduated physician. The only one good enough that its makers dare to print its every ingredient oa its outside wrapper. There's ao secrecy. It will bear examina tion. No alcohol and no habit-forming drags are found in it. Some unscrup ulous medicine dealers may offer.you a substitute. Don't take it. Don't trite with your health. Write to World's Dispensary Medical Associstioa, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y., take the advice received and be well. Look at the Clutch of any cream separatoryon think of burin1. See bow it Is thrown into rear. 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