irmrrfii BrAAWALL PARMSL A(fna?ar60MWffuurrLH(.cK cl. SYNOPSIS. Th? story op-ns with the Introduction of John :-:: pli-iis. ;nivfmiir-r. ;i -i.ii.i--lms-ttj m.t:. marifl hy authorities :it j Valinr.us-. l.ili- I Siujr IntT-st-l in milling rations in IJoiivia. h- v.as !'- ( miiin-i lv liil- us an lusiirrecti'.r.:st , iiiiti m :i nseiii'ni was lii'lin-:. At Lis liot.-J .ti att-nii"n was attiictl liv an Kuxlisliis.:!. :itil a mi:j wuinan , Kt,i'j'::, r -t-in-l the you:i-c woman lroin n IiiiiiK'-n llicr !! w.is tiiank-il liy j li.-r Ai-inril of tho IVrmi.in navv on-l frontal Si iis. toM iiitn tli.n war i:l , Iwri .J.-. J-:.-i l.'tw.'i I'hil.- ami lvrn , nnl otf. r-il him th ollico of -ap!ain. Il I cirl that that nluht tiio KiiiK rahia. a j '!iil-an vmjspI. "Fhouhl b r.tptnr-l. i Ktcpli-ns accepted tho commission St.pli-ii.s mot a niotl-y rr-w. to whi. ii ho was aesiKmcI. H f,'a- tlwm tmal Instruction- Thov bosnlnl tho vossol Tiiey .ui- .'ssfullv capture! tin- vessel supp ise.I to be the Ksiiiontlda. throwsh strategy. Oapt. Stejhen.s Rave Iireotlons for the. lo Itarturo of the craft- He entered the cab in and discovered tho Kni;l!sh woman and her maid. Stephens quickly learned the wrong vessel had been captured. Jt was I-ord Iiarlinston's private yaclit. the lout's wife and maid bvinK ahoanl. He explained the situation to her lady ship Then First Mate Tllttle laid bare the plot, say'.nc that the S.-a Queen had been taken in order to ko to the Antarc tic circle. Tuttle explained that on a former vovace lie had learned that the Donna Isabel was lo-,t in 17.V5 He had found it frozen in a liK" case of ice on an island and contained much sold, titephen-, -.insented to ix; the captain of the expedition. He told I-ady Ti:irii.ftnn. Slie was croativ alarmed lint evriIeS-Jel contidetice in him The Sea Ouo n encountered a vessel In the fos. Stephens attempted to communicate Tills auMe(l a flen-e MriiKule and he was overcome Tuttle finally squaring the sit uation. Tlien the Sea Queen headed south iiKain. 1'nder Tuttle's RUidance the ves sel made progress toward its Roal. I)e Nova, the mate, told Stephens that lie liellev.nl Tuttle. now acting as skipper. Insane because of his mieer actions. Stephen was awakened by Hashing of Klass. He saw Tuttle in the grip of a epasm of religious mania and overcame him. The s;ii!or upon regaining his senses was taken ill. Tuttle committed suicide !v shooting. ITpon vote of the crew Stephens assumed the leadership and the men deehled to continue the treasure hunt, the Islands being suppose to be onlv 2f miles d'stant Tuttle was buried In the sea. I-adv P.niliig'toii p-.-nouii'.ing t li4 set Ice Stephens awaiviiig from t-leep saw the ghot. supposisl to have formed the basis for Tuttle's religious mniibi rpoti advice of I'dy Parlington. Stephens started to piohe the ghost. He eatne upon I.'eut. Sanchez, the drunk en olP..er he had humbled in Cnile. He f..und That at Sanchez' inspiration. Kn-Klnei-r MeKnlght playi d "ghnst" to scare the men Into giving up the quest. Steph ens aiinoiitu ! that tie Sea Queen was at the spot where Tuttle's quest was sup-po-ed to be The enw was anxious to go on in further arch He Nova and Steph ens einqtietd them in a tit Slglit. I.idy Ixrllngtiiii thank. ii him. Tiio Sea Queen btarted northward. CHAPTER XIX. Continued. "They've had enough." I said. breath Ins hard. "Co hack on the bridge, De Xov:u Now. you lads, pet busy. If oi of you soldiers, or talks back to me again, he'll ro to his bunk for the rest of this voyage. Get up. Anderson, and stop that growling! You fellows may as well learn first as last that I am commanding the Sea Queen, and that we are homeward hound." Within the space of five minutes I had the whole gang at it. a profane, shuttling crew enough, yet carrying out my orders after a fashion, and sufficiently cowed to be obedient. At last 1 dispatched the starboard watch below, and. leaving De Nova in charge of the bridge, started back to the com panion. To my surprise Lady Darling ton, muffled to the eyes, still stood, half protected, in the open door of the chart-house. "What in the world are you doing hero in sill this snow and blow?" I questioned. "Waiting for you." she explained, her eyes glowing. "I could not go to the cabin until I knew you had really won. Is it true that we are home ward bound?" "Yes." I answered, not altogether happy over her evident pleasure. "The Sea Queen has attained her farthest southing. Are you glad?" "Glad!" Her gloved bands sought mine. "In all my life I was never bap pier." These impulsive words, natural as they were, nevertheless hurt me, and perhaps my face exhibited it. Hei eyes fell. "You cannot know how much I have suffered on this voyage." she said, re gretfully. "Only a woman could. My heart cries out for relief, but it is not because I wish to lose any friendship formed on board." "Yet that is what being homeward bound must inevitably mean." Her long lashes were uplifted, dis closing the depths of those gray eyes. "Not with me. Mr. Stephens; I not a woman to forget." am CHAPTER XX. In Which the Yacht Meets Disaster. I have been endeavoring to recall in sequence the occurrences of the tluve days and nights following our turning northward, but it is all chaos, vague, confused an expanse of sleep less hours, raging seas, snow, sleet, and ice. in the midst of which we bat tled for life in as desperately terrific a light ae men ever waged against na ture. I can see and feel It all clearly enough, yet the incidents are so com mingled that the separate days and nights appear one continuous event, without beginning or end. I hear the ceaseless howl of the wind, the growl of grinding ice. the smiting of tons of water, the threshing of loosened can va. the rattle of blocks aloft, the thousand noises emitted by the strug gling fabric under foot. I see the swirl of snow; the crested seas, boiling in madness; the gleam of pursuing ice fields; the towering pinnacles of giant bergs overhanging our mast-heads; the flying clouds, and the settling down about us of the ghostly frost fog. 1 feel the wild plunge down into the hollow; the sickening, staggering ef fort to climb up; the dizzy balancing upon the crest, and that awful drop again into the hell below! No man on bord will ever know how we made it; how we ever found pas3se ihrough those wind-lashed LAST VOYAGE OF ISABEL T Caught Lady Darlington More Closely to me, Helping Her Climb th Inverted Stairs. channels; how we ever kept upright under the pounding of that sea; how the Sea Queen ever shook her trem bling decks free from the tons of ice and water, and rose staggering to the crest. Once our engines broke, and for two hours wo rolled helplessly, while McKnight and the Chilean tin kered at the damaged machinery, and the great waves buried us, and smashed the chartbouse Into frag ments. Once the rudder-chains be came fouled with ice, and we swung into the trough of the sea hurled over until our lower yards trailed in the water and half the yacht shivered be neath the smother, we hanging on for our lives, drenched and buffeted by the waves. The jib-boom snapped like a pipestem. and a huge, ugly hole was ripped out of the forward bulwarks. Up to the neck In ley water we chopped away the raffle, and flung it overboard. Gustafson. shrieking wild ly for help, went with the litter, while his mates bore Symes below groaning from a broken leg. Mersiful heavens, how that Ice came down, pursuing us like the very Fiend! Once it pressed so closely against our quarter that the sea, rebounding from off its front, boarded us, sweeping aft in a vast wall. It caught Dade open ing the companion door, hurled him smothering backward and flooded the cabin a foot deep in Icy water. Yet we held to it, our eyes aching, our limbs frozen, our oilskins stiff with ice, the exposed flesh of our faces one festering frostbite, bruised by the shocks, half dead from fatigue, dizzy from the battle. Hut it was no sea manship which saved us; it was a merciful Providence, for at times the smother was so thick we ran into it blindly, not daring to broach to with all that Ice after us. driven by the wind, and not knowing what was ten yards ahead, or ten yards behind. During all that time I scarcely left the deck, although De Nova served his -watch on the bridge in the flying spray. Dade fed me as best ho could, and what brief snatches of sleep I caught were on the divan in the cabin, my icy clothes drying on my body. 1 saw nothing of the women; there was no nine, no opportunity. I doubt if eith er could havo kept upright amid the awful pitching of the yacht, for I was obliged myself to creep from one hand-grasp to another. So I saw noth ing of the ladies, but Dade succeeded in taking them food cold provender, for the galley was wave-lashed, the cook driven below although how the iid ever managed it is a mystery, and he n ported that Celeste clung to her hunk, sick and frightened, but that Lady Darlington was about and dressed whenever ho went in. Some time during the third day the wind had blown itself out. or else we had b?on driven beyond the sweep of it Anyhow, it died down Into faint puffs, but the sea remained heavy, the fog thickening as the gale ceased. This curtain, coupled with the sparse light there was, left the decks so dark that we attempted little clearing up. merely pointing the yacht's nose more directly northward at half-speed, trusting the Almigh'.y to furnish us with clear water. Indeed, there was nothing else to do with that ice-pack back of us, and the fierce seas pound ing our poop. Besides. I had come to the end of my endurance, and when De Nova came limping forward, hang ing to the life-line, to take his watch, I crept below more dead than alive, and clawed my way across the cabin. Lady Darlington stood braced in her doorway, yet for the life of me I could not speak, although I tried my head nodded on my shoulders, and 1 fell forward across my bunk, asleep before I even struck the mattress. Dade said she made him pull off my boots and loosen my muffler, stand ing over him until it was done. It was not sleep it was more like death, for I never stirred or knew anything. I lay exactly as I fell, utter ly insensible to either noise or motion. It was Dade's vigorous shaking1 that finally aroused me, nor did he desist until he had me sitting up in the bunk, my eyes wide open. "What time is it, Dade?" "Two o'clock, sir." "Morning?" "No, sir, afternoon; but the fog Is that thick outside you can't see your own nose." "Then I've been asleep for six hours. Why didn't you call me earlier?" "Mr. De Nova told me to let you He, sir; I guess the lady asked him to do It." I had pulled on my boots, and was standing up, gazing out through the door into the cabin, where Dade still remained, watching to see that I did not go back to sleep again. Suddenly there came a tremendous shock which sent me sprawling forward, and flung Dade headlong against the wall. As I struck the deck a thunderous crash and roar sounded forward; the stern of the vessel seemed to spring upward into the air. sliding us both down against the front of the cabin. In stantly there followed two muffled re ports, accompanied by a further up tilting of the stern. Everything loose came tumbling down upon us, and, as I pulled myself to my knees, I found the deck slanting upward like the steep side of a hill. "Oh. Lord, sir, what's been done?" "We've hit something hard; Ice, likely. Jump, now, and help me get out the women." The awful, sickening poise of the stricken boat, swinging stern-up to the motion of the waves, was enough to shatter the courage of any man, and I could read speechless terror in Dade's face. Yet tho lad stayed with me, and together we clambered up the incline of the deck, gripping at the table to help us. The door of the Put Happy End to Quarrel Tactful Act That Reconciled Friends Long Parted. Otd The passenger on the car looked slightly alarmed, investigation was proving that he had no smaller change than a five-dollar bill. He offered it to the conductor in vain. "Can't make the change." said the autocrat, reaching for the bell rope. The passenger started meekly for the door. A man in front ef him stood up suddenly and said: "Let me pay your fare, John." The other passengers looked re lieved, but Instead of accepting the happy offer, John scowled darkly at the speaker, to the great surprise of the observers, and evidently would have refused to accept the favor had not the other man insistently closed the deal with the conductor, in spite of John's protest, all the time keep ing up a low conversation with John. The scowl slowly melted from John's brow, and soon the two men were seated side by side, chatting con genially. After John left the car. the stranger T iuiisrmmBfiitimui GaaBr4cGwK4& tarn wmmmmmmFrrrm after-cabin was either locked or had become stuck; I did not wait to learn which, but burst it open with a swift, heavy kick. The light streamed in upon a scene of chaos overturned furniture " and broken glass. Celeste lay in one corner screaming hysteric ally; I-ady Darlington was upon her knees, holding herself partially erect by clasping the brass rail of the bed. "Quick!" I cried, before either could speak. "Gather up all the warm cloth ing you can reach. We must get on deck. Here, let me help you!" We were scarcely a minute at the task; and the four of us, laden with apparel, slid and scrambled down the slope of cabin floor to the companion- steps. Here I caugbt Lady uarungton more closely to me, helping her climb the inverted stairs. Her face was pale, her eyes fearless. "What is it? What has happened?" "I hardly know myself; only that we have hit something and are badly damaged." It was like night on deck, the en veloping fog so dense that a human form was indistinguishable five feet away. Fortunately but little wind stirred, and the sea had gone down. I could distinguish De Nova's voice as he sang out a sharp order. I hollowed my hands, and bailed. A dim smudge leaned over the rail above, and peered down. "Wras zat you, monsieur?" "Ay. with the women. What Is It, De Nova, a total smash?" "By gar, oui! Ze whole bow cave In; ze deA crush to ze main-hatch; ze after-bulkhead was ze only sing w'at hold us up. Sacrc, It not hold long." I grasped the entire situation in stantly, realizing the desperate need of haste, of cool, intelligent command. "Send a man down here to help Dade tote up provisions. Jump live ly, now: cet biscuits and canned goods, my lads, and whatever blankets you can find. Hustle for your lives! Now, De Nova, reach over, and help the women up easy; that's right." I held tightly to my lady, clinging to the rail, as I crept across. The black, shapeless figures of several men, whose faces I could not distinguish in the gloom, were clambering about the longboat. "Everything fitted?" "Ay, ay. sir." "What have you got?" "Oars, mast, canvas, and fresh wa ter." I reached forward to assure myself that the rudder had been properly shipped, and the plugs securely driven in. "All right; hero come the provi sions. Dump them in anywhere, lads. Yes, go back for another load, but for God's sake hurry! Do Nova, help me stow the women; gently, but quickly now. Stand by, all of you. Here Is the rest of the provender. Now tumble In, lads, and let fall. Ease her off, ease her off. you fools!" The black smudge dropped down ward, and leaning far over the slant ing rail T could see it strike the water and ride free. The sodden, wrecked hull beneath me rose and fell with a heavy, sickening motion which brought the heart up into my throat "Are those all the living men left, Mr. De Nova?" I called down, for the first time realizing how few they were. "Zey was all I know." Another voice spoke, gruff from ex citement. "The fellows for'ard had no chance, sir; all alive are here." I swung over the side, and shot down the line into the boat. "Cast off, then. Oars, men! the yacht Is going under." With a single sweep of the hastily plied blades we were beyond sight of the plunging hull, yet we had not taken half a dozen utrokes before we were tossed roughly by a sudden con vulsion of the sea. "My God. she's gone!" shouted a voice forward. All I could distinguish within the boat were the two women next me at the stern Celeste, with her face burled in her arms, and my lady staring into the icy fog. (TO BE CONTINUED.) betook himself to the platform with his cigar, where he explained to the conductor. "That man and I used to be good friends, but we had a quarrel and have not bee on speaking terms for years. I have tried several times in various ways to make It up with him, but never before have succeeded. Even this time he was obdurate at first, but I didn't give him any chance to get away. He has promised to take lunch eon with me to-day. and that will clinch the matter. Glad yeu didn't make the change." Disraeli Among the Lords. Disraeli was a past master of the art of flattery, but his audacity carried him out of danger. Soon after his ele vation to the house of lords he was asked by a brother peer how he felt in his new surroundings. "Oh, don't ask me," he groaned; "dead and buried." Then remembering that his question er was of the company which he was contemning, he added, "and in the realm of the blest!" NEWS FROM THE CAPITAL CITY Items of Interest Around the State House Ntbraska a Flour State. "The growing Importance of Nebras ka as a milling state Is shown by the reports to this bureau," said Deputr Labor Commissioner Maupln W'ednes day. "Between January 1 and Decem ber 1 of 1909, Nebraska flour mills shipped by rail the enormous quantity of 240.000.000 pounds of flour. This, of course, does not Include the flour consumed at the point of milling. The amount shipped represents three and one-half fifty-pound sacks for each man. woman and child In the state. What these shipments would have been if Nebraskans had been loyal to the 'home patronage Idea and insisted unon havlnz Nebraska-made flour, no one knows but the production would have been enormously increased. "When it comes to shipments or onions. Lancaster county comes up strong, having shipped C0.000 pounds of that vegetable during 1909." con tinued Mr. Maupln. "Box Butte. Da kota and Douglas follow along with 30.000 pounds each, and Hall is fifth with 22.000 pounds. "Sheridan Is the greatest potato producing county, with Box Butte sec ond and Dawes third. Sheridan fh'pped 250.000 bushels of potatoes last year. Box Butte 140.000 bushels, and Dawes 61.000. The total potato shipments, by rail, during 1909 were 1.007.000 bushels. "During 1909 Otoe county led all others in the amount of apples shipped out. with Nemaha. Washington and Cass following In the order named. The total apple shipments (freight) during the year were 567,000 bushels." State House Briefs. William A. Cole has intervened in the matter of the train service com plaint against the Burlington which is to be heard at Red Cloud, May 18, by the railway commission. He de sires a train to start from Hast ings in the morning to run to Red Cloud. The assessed or one-fifth value of railroad terminals In Omaha and other towns of Douglas county, excluding South Omaha, as returned by the coun ty assessor to the state board of equal ization this year Is $2.CSS.214. Last vear the same terminals were valued "at 12.369.419. A carload of hogs was shipped from from the Lincoln asylum last week, bringing to the Institution $1,391.06. This Is the fourth car marketed by the asylum since last fall, the price per hundred being respectively $7.S0, $S. $9.20 and 8.25 and the total re ceipts will be about $5.S00. Washington county bonds to the amount of $46,000 were registered Tuesday at the state auditor's office. The bonds are refunding bonds to take the place of 5 per cent bonds held by the state. The old bonds were due April 1. but the county of Washington did not get the bonds in shape to re fund till April 18. The state may claim interest from April 1 J. A. Robertson of Glen. Sioux coun ty, has filed with the secretary of state a petition signed by twenty-five electors asking that his namo be placed on the primary ballot as a democratic candidate for representa tive from the Fifty-third district He has filed a receipt from the county treasurer showing that he has paid a fee of $10. but has not filed an affi davit of acceptance. State Auditor Barton, unless en joined In court, will pay the claim of Secretary L. P. Ludden of the state normal board at the rate of $25 a I i- -,- j: i. k- ..SM. moniu. me aun.iu. uao uu - f , for an opinion of the attorney general. Ho has received an opinion written by Grant Martin, deputy attorney gen eral, holding that the auditor would ho justified in approving Mr. Lud den's vouchers unlses restrained by an order of court. Warden Smith appeared before the board of public lands and buildings and obtained leave from that board to buy 150 tons of coal in Omaha and smaller amounts from Lincoln deal ers. The board met to devise ways and means to get coal for the peni tentiary. It is the only state institu tion that Is short of coal on account of coal strikes. The contract made by the state some months ago is con ditioned on there being no strikes. Therefore the state has to buy Its coal in the open market. The board of rublic lands and build ings contemplates buying electric light for the Kearney Industrial school for boys from a private company at Kear ney rather than pay coal bills and hire an engineer. The private com pany has offered to sell light to the state for 5 cents a kilowatt The state Is now buying light for the girls' In dustrial school at Geneva. At the penitentiary, where the state is obliged to maintain a big power plant, it Is said the cost of production Is 3 cents a kilowatt. The penitentiary supplies light for itself, the state and house grounds, the home for the friendless and the governor's resi dence. The railway commission has granted leave to the Bell telephone company to reduce lt3 rates in South Omaha to meet competition of the Independ ent company which the Bell company sought to keep out of South Omaha. The Burt county telephone company has been given leave to reduce rates at Oakland. Tekamah and Lyons. The election of Lucius R. Hammond to the office of first lieutenant of tho Fremont signal corps has been ap proved by the governor as commander in chief of the Nebraska national guard. The American Express company, which recently obtained control of the Pacific Express company, has changed one of the rules enforced by the Pa cific company. The American Express company has notified the state railway commission that it will ship all con signments over the Union Pacific line that dips down into Colorado at Jules burg as state shipments and will en force the Sibley rate law on that line of railroad. The Pacific company re fused to do this on the ground that such shipments were interstate traffic. CANADA F01 AHEAD Thomas C. Shotwell. one of the greatest market reporters in America, writes from New York, under dato of March 20th, and says: "The Tariff tangle with Canada which President Taft has taken in hand is of importance chiefly because of the multitude of American fanners that are crossing into the Canadian northwest Most conservative esti mates of their number place It at 150.000 for 1910. Some say as many as 250.000 will cross. These are all expert farmers and their places in the United States are being filled by un trained men from Europe and from the cities. Canada is gaining rapidly In agricultural Importance and with in a few years the United States will have to call on the Dominion for wheat Production of wheat in the United States Is not keeping pace with the population. A tariff war would complicate the problem of get ling food. Even now Canadian farm ers are getting higher prices for their cattle on the hoof and Canadian house wives are paying less for meat in the butcher shops than farmers and house wives are receiving and paying in the United States. The tariff on cattle and wheat must be removed as be tween the two countries before long." HIGH IN THE AIR, TOO. First Contractor Why did yon stop that sky-scraper at 22 stories? Second Contractor Labor got too high. PERMANENTLY CURED. No Kidney Trouble in Three Years. Mrs. Catharine Kautz, 322 Center 8t, Findlay. O., says: "Four years ago I became afflicted with kidney trouble, and rapidly ran down In health. I suffered from back ache and other kid ney disorders and was languid and weak. I doctored and used different xal - remedies but became no better. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me and for three years I have been free from kidney trouble." Remember the name Doan's. For tale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Bonaparte's Resolve. Napoleon entered the clubhouse with a frown a foot deep on his fore bead, and a temper not fit for publica tion. "Mllle tonnerres!" he ejaculated. "If I ever play golf with Baron Munchau sen again may I end my days on the Island of St. Helena." "What's the matter with Munch. Bony?" asked Caesar, looking up from i aA.k. . .P 1ia Pnn oTMiea ( nno 1 ,s """ w' w "" ,. Record. "You eet nothing but bad lies all over the links," retorted the emperor. Lipplncott'8. NufT Said. "How did Jones get those two black eyes?" "Hunting accident" "Why how?" "He was hunting trouble and I hap pened to meet him." Cleveland Leader. Mr. Wlaatsw'a Soothlaar Syrvp. Porchlklrrn tlbliw.ftnslbituBis.TIueln aaBuaaUoiLAllaytpaiB.cureswlndouUc Za buttle. Some of our first Impressions were made by mother's slipper. OoastlpetloB caaara may arrtons dlaeasra. It Is tborooctily cared by Uoctor 11 tree's PleaJeat yeilcts. Oaa a UxaUra. three for caifcartta. Always keep imagination under control. 19SP M rffBH SBBBBW BBBBr sT 09 - .r v.2!:a ' 4iDB7YwrBT at ' aJaf aal ITIT 1ttat " ll'VrTsassV 'ITIwI 9M tWmA W13 iii' """ ""wWpljwi TbM 1 1 "Til 1 " A "' Delicately formed and gently reared, women will find, in all the seasons of their lives, as maidens, wives or mothers, that the one simple, wholesome remedy which acts gently and pleasantly and naturally, and which may be used with truly beneficial effects, under any conditions, when tha system needs a laxative, is Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. It is well known to be a simple combination of tha laxative and carminative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic liquids, which ara agreeable and refreshing to tha taste and acceptable to the system when its gentle cleansing is desired. Only those who buy the genuine Syrup of Fig3 and Elixir of Senna can hope to, get its beneficial effects, and as a guarantee of the excellence of the remedy, the full name of the company California Fig Syrup Co. is printed on the front of every package, and without it any preparation offered as Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is fraudulent and should be declined. To those who know the quality of this excellent laxative, the offer of any substi tute, when Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna s called for. is always resented by a transfer of patronage to some first-class drug establish ment, where they do not recommend, nor sell false brands, nor imitation remedies. The genu ine article may be bought of all reliable drug gists everywhere; one size only. Regular price 50 cents per bottle. Get a bottle today to have in the house when needed. ' DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION CoredbyLydiaEPinkIuui,s Vegetable Compound Galena, Kan. "A jear ago last March I fell, and a few days after there was soreness In my light side. In a short time a bunch came and it bothered me so much at ugnt x coma nnot sieep. i p tMA A1jV KCVWU1K MlgVl WW by fall it was as large as a hen's egg. I could not go to bed without a hot water bottle applied to that side. Xhad one of the best doc tors in Kansas and he told my husband that I would have to be operated on as it wji something like a tumor caused by a rupture. I wrote -o.i fv aAvinn and Ton told me not to get discouraged but to take Lydia E. FinkhanVs Vegetable Compound. 1 did take it and soon the lump in my side broke and passed away. Mrs. R. R. Huirr. W3 Mineral ATe., Galena, Lydia E.PInkham'8 Vegetable Com. Kund. made from loots and herbs, s proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, Irregn laxities, periodic pains, backache, bear, ingdown feeling, flatulency, diges tion, and nerrous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result has been worth millions to many offering women. If you warn t special advice writ forittoMrs.PlnkhantXyiiivMasa, It is free and always kelpf 1 The Army ol Constipation Is Cwwfast Saurisr t CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS i SMALL POL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PlKt1 GENUINE matt bar Mrtnt WESTERN CJUIABA Itl Juwwf Da a. of Pllaota. a a a aaa os iana is, duukmwu. vanaaa. no aaa aM u lamlatarrlawt -Am as Anarleaa X am delighted to aaa tha ra- markabJ oroaraaa or Wartara. Caaada. Oar i Mopla ara SocUaa arraa tha boundary 1b thoa- aaaoB. and I hara aot a ma oaa who admluaa ha had madaa. Ther ara il loln well. Thar is aearerly a. torn aonltr la tha Middla or A m.MMM,.,lm I. lffsaltAlt Baakatohawam or Albatta. ZAmwmm toft if Waaterm Canada Said erosa far 190 will anally ie!d tothofant r 17W.OOO.OOO.OO la eaah. Frwallaaaeatradaof ISOacfwa. amd wra-einptlona off ISeacraa at SaToo a Acre. Railway ad Land Companies hava laad for Mia at re anaabla prlcea. Many farm era have paid for tbrtr laad oat ef Um pmreede ef eae crow. Katendld climate, coed achoola. ezcvUeat railway FacWtla.low frcteat ratm. wood, water aad lamber anally obtained. For pamphlet 'Laat Bart WeaV aanlealare as to satiable loeatloa aad low Bsttlerafrate. apply to 0apr ok iraniimuH. v.awat w , er vaaeniaa uwi W. V. ENNETT (T7ea address Baareet yon.) (1) . Hay's Hair-Health Waver Palla to Wmatmtm GrayBaJr to Ma lateral Colee aassl Baeaty. Stops its Wliag at. and positively removes OaadraC la aad Dye. Refute all snbetitntes. ti-oaaadjot Betues by Mail ar at Onftfau. CQEB Brad toe for brtw ! Bottto raOaHay Saec. Ce Mewatk. W. t. 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