entirely dlfferenttrom ordinary preparations. ..They accomplish the'tr._purpose without disturbing the rest of the system, and are therefore the Ideal laxative for the nursing mother, as they do not affect the child. f`,.\-.-.4...-.l-.'l `I.-- A1`. I!` RIHII I13 ?_ co x:{;oi.}a1'.-.}1,"'x'11e unsatisfactory we l1 gla 25. a box. . will mail them- -., can now uv uvn uncut [MG uuuu. all NA .-DRU-CO preparations. by expert chemists. If? dly return your money; grey our druggtst has not yet stocked them, send 25c. and we will mail them; |5r. K. &.K. TAKE ALL RISRE JMchigan%Ave. and Griswold St.. Detroit. Mich. was rree- I nu uulucn xvxonllol" UHUSLRI-UB0) on accrct uxseases 0! M QUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT SENT ON REQUEST _ u-VVI-, v \-V\rvvJ 7 -av-v lJI~lO4hl, nnwan lvvuv` YOa"::;XlmlL.'L BE A WREC -.I l`..--|....-..; nun Ain `van! nu,-1 ru-un1vn n u\\nr\ A6 `tn 1010101010-01010 :- ",oo-o-o-ono-o-o-o n-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o :0 *0 `o 9': _P`.-;E.;E.V:.9_"'_ .__p;E;fB_l.! , l_-IIAIY. xgzv \`V |`Cur`e.d by {lie N'w Method Treatment The raucous, half-drunken accents substantiated Akhab Khan s storv. -The unseen speaker was evidently hilnself a boatman. Hewas rejoicing in the upheaval that permitted debts `to be paid with a bludgeon and money 1 to be made without toil. 5 Mayne caught Frank by the arm. 3 ` We are drifting towards the ; bridge of boats `that carries the road ;to Lucknow across the river, . he ; said, in the ihurried` tone of a man who [sees a new and paralyzing danger. , There is a. drawbridge for river : traic, but how shall we nd it, and, 9 in any event, we must be seen. ! It A... J-`I...-.-A .~..-..... 1.. ...... A._ .LL. __ r Rarely, came the voice. I have already requited two bunniahs to . whom I owed money. Gold is to be : had for the taking. Leave thy budge- ;`row at./dhe bridge, friend, and join 3 us. IIQ1 . u an. - AVLGILLUIIII. Not~many. They are mostly `mud hovels. What is in your mind? I run a 1-. o yvvnvv l.r(.|.A.|1.\ I an. nanav vvvuv, vvu unuuv US. QLLAI A1:e there many houses on the; op- posite bank? asked Malcolm. (l\T.-.4- rvsnmcv 7151...... .. .~.An.LI-- ` them Il`I\ I `ILA. v|A.l.Ala\JAA 111 UIIKI '\4I-U. I The huge sail thrust its yard high {above the fog bank, and watch-ere on ithe river side saw it. Some one hail- sed in the vernacular, and Chumru re- Iplied that they came from Bithoor iwith hay. Prompted by Malcolm he wenton: I How goes` the good work, bro- "5"-`NV ``.7 H-uvvvi-N. ] A.khab Khan raised `his right hand gin a` military salute; Suddenly, his ! e1-ect form became indistin_ct, and fad- Ied out of'sigh_t." The boat was travel- gling down stream once more. /Around iher the river lapped lazily, and the isolemn` quietude of t.he mist-covered iwaters was accentuated by the far- io turmoil in the city. , I I-Lsunnn nn:1 1-.-...-.L 31... --.-._II L2...'L Tuunsmv, 25; I .`v`uW;(;u1d yQ1i~ have me draw sword against the men of my own faitlx? was the - despairing answer. T4 1171-n-.13 ~nn`J- Ln 3... LL- !....L vv>u.o-s: vl-Aw \l\.I'9'tIlllLlI6 (&l-l-DVVUl-- It would no`t_be- for the first time, said Malcolm coldly. But I` could` never trust thee again. Yet: hast thou chosen wrongly," Akhab !When thy day of reckoning comes, may it be remembered in thy favor that thou didst turn most unwillingly I against thy masters! A`l.'I...-.1. TIL-.. ....:....J. .1_:.. __:._1.1_ L-..) feet betokened V a soldier. It was the rebel .who had, becom their sc_out.. llQ_\LS`I_ 9! __3fI 1., ll`: "?77a~i{ii$,""s;.`{a `iIe`;'??u a;"`v`en as I` told you. Cawnpore is lost to you. `A` And you, Akhab Khan, do you go lor stay? ' go There was another moment of tense; I silence. o ` v.V-V*VVC--T CC-V$$VVV-V' A handsomely lllusrated weekly. Largest cir- cnlanon or any scnentlc journal. Term: tor Canagia. 33.75 a year, postage prepaid. Sold by n W all sdealern. MIJNN & Bu.36'B~g~;-;;y`py_grk Branch 0mce.'625 F St.` TRADE Mnmm Dzsuans COPYRIGHTS &c. Anyone sending a sketch and descrigtion may quick! ascertain our opinion free w ether an invent on is probably atentnble. Communica- ' tions strictly condent al. HANDBOOK on Patents sent. free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken t rou h Munn 8; Co. receive special notice. without c urge. In the . 4,AAA`mA_ A`A4A-,4.A.- $111- 311% T j 3 quickly stops coughs. cures colds, heals the throat and lungs. - - - 25 cents. Ice. wlmour. cnarge. In we ntitic Hmericzm. I Iunuulnnunnluu (`Inst-nbntl u-5.451 !-o Tana-A-L -2- (To be continud). Barrie Branch,` Five Points; BANK or NOVA SCOTIA RED YEAR A Correct Nar- ative of the In- dian Mutiny : : J IS REFLECTED% BY ITS 0010 CAPITAL IS $3,084,000.00 000 RESERVE mun 7,475,000.00 YEARS ........u..;.. 0:20 lxeuvily-laden boat was dragged! `intu the .~:tream, and a few oicersl and men clambered on board; The vo_\':zg_re they made would supply ma- terial for an epic. They were follow-I ed along the banks and pursued by! armed craft on the river. Theyfouglxtl 11 day a11d throughout the night, and, when the ungoverned boat ran` ashore during a wild squall of wind and rain at du_vh1'eal<, the surviving soldiers, at sergezmt and e1evenme~n,- headed` by Mowhray-Tl10111s0n of` the 56th, and Authof of "Wings 0! the Morning." Etc. LOUIS` TRACY Incoxfporavted I832. I The Furies must have,chosen- that! |datte. Th-e Nana, the mantwho thought; himself t to be. 9; king, decided that !IIa\_re1ock- would turn back `if `there `were no more English left in iCa`wn-- A pore! So ,as a prelimiary to.the' greater tragedy, .ve men whohad es- hcaped death thus 'ar--no one` knows E-whence two of them came--were brought forth and" slaughtered. at the feet of the renowned Peishwa.-..Then `a squad` of seploys we,r_e'told to _.shIoot all the Women, and children in the *Bibi'garh- through the `windows _of~the. :`house.' -` ` " ` i : - 1 Van! Returning to Bithoor the Nana was uproclaimed Peishwa amid the booming [of cannon and the plaudits of his re- tainers. He passed a week in- d -runk- en revels and debauchery; and when, in ignoronce of its fate, a small com- ,pany of "European fugitives from ;Fategarh sought refuge at Cawrfpore, he amused himself by having all the men -but three- killed' in his pres- ence. These three and the wo- men and' children who accompanied -them, were sent to at small house- known as the Bibigarh, in which the whole of the captives, now numbering two hundred and eleven, were, im-V .prisoned. ' ` V I 11...... .:I:..;| ......:| u. . " m . .. 1;........:.....4. . , ........ .. _ } Many died,.and they Were happiest. iThe survivors were subjected to',every `indignity, given the coarest food, and forced to grind corn for their con- queror, who, early in July, took up his abode in a large building` at Cawne pore overlooking the house inwhich the unhappy people were . penned ` .TJn4- 6-`Ln '-ruu.'n.'.I '.. A-L42- ...._J-1.1-. uuu VV vav tlvuuv -But the `period. of their earthly sufferings was drawing to `a close. An avenging army was moving swiftly up the (}rand- Trunk Road-'from Alla- habad. The,Nana s nephew and two `of his lieutenants, leading` a large `force against the British, were badly I defeated. One the 15th of` July came `the alarming tidings that the Faring- ahis were pnly a day s march from the gcity. t. V - V Ia`, nouvdvvo i Those four wereall who`came alive out of the Inferno of Cawnpore. The boat, after clearing the shoal, was ,captured by the mutineers. Major jVibart of the 2d Cavalry, who was so lseverely wounded that he `could not ljoin in the earlier ghting, and some [eighty helpless souls , under his com- hnand, were brought back to't`he- city lof death. There, byiorders of the! !Nana, the men were slai-n forthwith] land the women and- children were tak- {en to a building in which they found_ `,one `hundred and -twenty-vne others , [who had been spared, for the Brah- Imin_ s own terrible purposes from the` Igutchery -at Massacre Ghat on` Vthel . 791-. . -rut.` .11` `VI ' ( 1 Yet, not even then wa;s~t1reM'sacrice complete. Some _-who _' Werwe .9_w,ounded but. not. killed, .a >`._few_ ch,ildren:_ who crept Aunder W6 garments TAthi!%4 ` d . a'_dj 'Ii10th'8i'8`;5 '11iti1-"'.`th`i`.1fo1!nin~: " `anti? 0111 " .,..uu 4; v 5 54554. Awakened to the unspeakable trezzchery of their foe, oicers and men rushed into the water and strove- with might and main to shove the' boats into deep water, They failed, for the unwieldy `craft /had been haul- ed purposely too highf I Here Ashe and Moore, and Bo`lton,, hero of that lonely rid-e/through the enemy s country, fell. Here, too,- men `shot their own wives and children rather than permit them to `fall into the hands of the ends who .. had pl:mne.l the massacre. Savage troop- ers urged their horses into the water" and slashed cowering women with [their sabers. Infants were torn from` ;their mothers arms, and tossed by'| i .K`D'lI(|\'\` +'l`t'\Y`I1 hnxrnnnf +n kntaaznnl VH1... D ' Por wretc11es-they were afraid to `refuse, yet the ir gorge rose` at the. deed, ;and . ohey -red `at the-* ceiling! { , gun`-1' -nvnnlrnnne 1'-Ivn nnnn1y:via '4-A II-Ian I . -puissant Brahmin. He selected two uu, uuu. VLJVJ aasvu. vbir I-IA-I5! Uvssauab Such` weakness was annoying to the Mohammedan butchvers, an Efgha.=n, an`Vd btwo out-c aste Hindus, to do his bid- : d'ing' . . 1 .ve ends entered .tl;e.`.,sl1:a_xiib1'es:.w.gA1as,5- -how can. the .-scene 'rt1}_iat:. -911" Armed wit-h long` knives t'hese descri-b.ed.- _ 1 `_ _ __ 'V Mowbray-Thomson, Delafosse, land! Privates Murphy and Sullivan, swam [six miles with the stream, and were nally rescued and helped by a friend- lly native.` ` I Vknnn `nuns: 1-uvnun A11 o--Ln. "n:.umA A13-..` uuu I./AAA\.rvv' yuan UL IIUVVLIUI U11 0116 LILUE Fixing bayonets and leaving the lsergeant dead in the doorway they charged again into the mass of the enemy. Six fall. The remainder reached _the river, threw aside their guns, and plunged boldly in. Two were shot while swimming and one .man', unable to_' swim any distance, coolly made his way ashore again and faced his murders until he._sank be- lneeth jzheir mhlows. . ' ' u_ u a ' - _, A V-Delafosse of the 53d, sprang out and charged some hundreds of sepoyeand gh.os.tile villagers; who-`had gathered on [the bank. T _ V . I The craven-hearted gang yielded be- fore the Englishmen s erce onslaught. The tiny band turned to ght their wayhack, and found" that the boat !had drifted 01? again! Then they "seized a Hindu temple on the bank and-`held it until the sepoys piled lburning timber against the rear walls- and`threw` bags of powder onthe re! Wivinn Hoxrnnnl-u avail 1t\l\11:-run $1..` L. J; SALTER,Manager `A Thrilling Story of Romance : _: Love a.n{d Ad- venture : :A ": : Cured by Lydia E. Pink- l1am sVegetableCompolmd - V ' ' " V :"r- T _ Meanwhile - the `boat lurched ori- ward. ._Sooi1` a red glow]. in the sky proclaimed that they were. 'n`ea_1fing Vcawnpore. 'Thoug!h_ well awn:-.ev that "izhg ..European ~- hmgs_es L Wexg ->o.'_h.-_ .;e_, ULAV \.A&u:lL LI. lllulll .llI\IbI\A I .......,., .. Mayne hesitated. He knew" that Winifred was listening. V "` It is hard to `account for. the .-va- garies of a. woman s mind, or, shall I say, of the mind of such a woman, he answered lightly. You will remember that when you came to.-our assistance ' outside Meerut she was determined to take us-, willy-nilly, to Delhi. . V -up-1 an ..' .. -.` `We1l, _ he said, with: a cheerless laugh, .I, at" any rate, must endea.vor to reach Wheeler. I am supposed to beibearing despatches,.but they were taken from me when I` was knocked o. myhorse Vinjthe village-- " ! 'rvn11 n`-`nnlpnmla , na1-a..: `T7132 Wheeler has nogreat force at his disposal, said he to Malcolm. It lis evident that the. native-regiments lhave just broken out here,abut, by} Ithis time, our `people in the canton-I ment must have heard of events else where, and they have surely seized the Magazine, which is well fortied `and stands. on the river-. If I can [believe a word that the Nana said, the sepoys will rush on to Del_`hi to-} night, just, as they did at Meerut,n Aligarh, and Etawah. I am convinced that our best plan. is toehug the right bank and disembark near -the Maga- zine. - an All u -n up. u lb Isb it far? asked` Malcolm. About eight. miles. A I wonder why` the Begum was. so insistent thvat .w_e should go back |along the Grand Trunk Road? `Inc.-`A 1-.nnL.;J-AJ `CI - `I-........-' L`L..J. .a./ 5': can: . Malcolm, who had heard Roshin- ara s impassioned speech: and looked into her blazing eyes, thought that her motives were stronger than mere caprice. `He never dreamed; of the `true reason, but he feared that she knew Cawnpore had fallen and_ her curiously friendly regard for himself might have inspired her advice. Here, again, Winifred s presence tied his tongue." A I - COLA-I L V S U JVVU II\J&\IJ\J LU V` VI} '- On the night of Junemzth, whens I roomy bud-gerow icarrying `~.,_Winifred; Mayne and her esport drifted away from the walls of the Nana s- palace at Bithoor, there was not a breath of wind on the river. The mat sail was -useless, but a. four-mile-an-'hour cur- rent carried the unwieldy craft slowly down stream, and there was not the slightest doubt in the minds of either of the Englishmen onr~ board as to their course of action. .`-u lu.. u-J uuLDU :1; ant: v111asU"` `Were you attacked? asked Wini- fred-, and the quiet solicitqde 'in her "voice .was_ `sweetest V-music in her_. lov- .er\ s ears; ` His brief recital of the night s- ad- 'ventu1'es was followed by the story of the others, journey and "detention yat Bithoor.. It may be thought that Mr. `Mayne, with `his long experience of India, should have read more clearly `the sinister lesson to be.derived from the trera.tment meted outpthai night to a .Britie'h. Oicer by t-he- -detachment of .sowars-, amplied, as it was, .by their open references to the Nan-a as 4;` Ma- harajah. But-`hfe was not yet disillu- sioned. -And,,tLbi_s judgment were at .-fault, 'he'_ej1_'re_d in good; _company,._ for Sir" Henr.y.`LaWrence, Chief Comnfxis-_ sidner at Lucknow, was even then. re-_ i5?t.i11`8i-_th. ;aPP,ea19}L `i-t1"1e*- almost:- iinsub-.; 'T,Or,d:i.,3t9 ~.urs'ine,j R of lthmhadsitxone Mt'tinl::GubhT ,8`3183?the?;:3pQ}Y'f:inl;,_-lg5_ e `ajiital `Should dls | "ilfr. 'i&;'7ne"`w`;"s""cqua:ntea wim! Cawnpore and Sir Hugh -Wheeler was lan old friend of his. - 1 1 1'11! ,- I n AFTER SUFFERING OlIAP_TBB.. VII. .g _ 1'0 Lucknow". . I The tragedy of_Massacrej Gvhat, in- .o ten.s_ied- by the crowni-ngA'infam.y:~of the Well, brought a new e-1.emen't intol the struggle. Hitherto not one Europe ean in a. `hiindned-in Indiaregarded "the. Mutiny` as other, than "a local though serious, attempt to revive a fallen` dynasty. The excesses at Meerut, Delhi, and other towns were looked upon as the Work of unbrid- led mobs-. Sepoys who .revo-lted, and shot heir oicers came under a" dif- ferent category to the slayers of ten-I der women and children. But the planned ` -and ordered __'treachery of Gawnpore changed an that. Thence- country not only realized that the government had been forced. into a Titanic contest, but 'he was also sway- ed by a personal and absorbing lust for vengeance. _Oicers and ;men, the eld with the xed intent of exacting an expiatory life for each hair on the head of those unhappy `victims. And they kept the vowthey '` made.` `To this ,,day, though half a century has passed, the fertile plain of and Doabl-that great tract be` tween the Ganges and the Jumna--is regulars and volunteers alike, took`! I dotted with the ruins of gutted towns * and depopulated` villages. . But that o forth e-very British-born man in the was not yet. India was fated to be I ) . almost lost before it was won again. . (Wm J-I...` -.3n.LL l\ T.-..... ALL ...1....... L1... vuv a..|.Uub)\7 V_L UM It.was thus that Nana, Sahib strove to cloak .his crime. Yet never did foul murderer aunt deed more_ glar- `ingl_y in the face of Heaven. vFity years h_av e-passed, myriads of human beings have` lived and died ince the well swallowed the `Nanas victims, but the memory , of those gracious women," of those go-lden--haired child- ren, of those dear little infants born while the guns thundered around the entrcenchment, ,sha1=1 endure forever. The Nana sought oblivion and for- gvetfulness` for hisusin. He earned the anger of the gods and the maled~ic- tion of the world, then and: for all time, _ vv uunaua 411::ai`7' :Vl`ef'1:'.L1*Aecorti`)a:j Ao:f sights and ;.soni)d| ztoo ',hor`1-ibbleg to tganalate from Vtheir. -Eatern tongue. 1:1. +11... ........1.1.. -9 .::..a'..;..4. ...-.._ um ny,-_ng\__oo.5- "J.'_anI:!y9ll_J~ `,7_I(I-7,!-I5\_lU$ -` . "BIV1t'*_V t"h_8.'-l4.'l`l!llV'l8' of distant guns told` ' the _.destrbye'frth`at -his s'hort-1iv:edr_-..ho_ur of V -ltriximph l`wz1s: `nearly sped; In " at paroxysm -`of-5 rage" and, fear, he' gave the inal order, and {the Well of I Cawnpore therebyattained its ghastly immortality. ,`By his command all that piteous company of women and children, the living and the dead to-_ gether, were thrown into a deep well that stood in the garden of Bibigarh --the House of the Woman. TL _.._ _ `LI. , II ,.fL'r`1n-: iNW()R T:HTERN iADv{z\Nc1~: ..vuvu *5 He was facingrthe three men, and his order was a. quite natural one un- meant to help. St.retc=hin'g their arms for a. long and strong `stroke, they laid on with la. wil1. Instantly, live pressed,the oa.r downward-s, thus forc- ing t-he blade out of the Water, and threw" all his strength into its. unse'x'- pected yielding, Before he-y could so much as utter a yell, Akha.b Khan -and another man lay on his back on ;the deck with. Frank top of him. The simplicity of the maneuver insur- ed its success`. Neither Mayne nor Winifred understood what .had_ hap- pened iuntil Malcolm had disarmed the .trooper,__ taken his cartridge pouch, _and thrown I him ,ove:rboard.. to sink or swim aslgfateu might .d_irect..f He ere: `gretted the,loss'*~of". Akh:ab Khan, -but . he -' recalled ~ the_ que e%exp1fession'c ; on - f_the_.1;na`n7 s, face when , je read der, the circumstances. Obviously, beg h s;: ?9*19911$il titles-l. , .,,`_. Chuniru; fof V coure, after ` the gasp 9f (surprise, appreciate -f..&`).`}~u'- ' , Luckily he` had the gi\?t_of prompt decision that is- nine-tenths of general- ship. Saying not- a word -to alarm Mayne, who was still tweak from the wound received an `hour earlier, he _crossedt'11e d.eck, halting onthe way to rub Nejd=i s black muzz`I'e.e ' "llniu .-............ _.____.- ___A ,1 ' - D ' CHAPTER VI.--(Oonti nu_e,d). ' Then some one noticed~that that thatch on one of the boats Was! smoking, and it was found that glow-I ing cl1arcoa1'had been thrust into the straw. About the same time _it was, V discovered that the boats had neither i oars, nor rudders, nor supplies of food. [Before the dread signicance of these? rang out. At once, both,banks of the river became alive with armed sepoys, and a murderous rie-re was Opened on the crowded boats. Guns, hidden among the trees, belchedr red`- hot shot and grape at "them, and the smoldering straw of the thatched r 1 ithings became clear, 8.` bugle-ca-It roofs burst into ames. "*\:/ 4 Light of the wrla, -Regnnqied King M Kings, Lord of al1.w:I`ndia, ,Fx'Lzz1-*;1a'hi, `Panah'-.i-din!. ; - `That appeal to the, faith ` was too powenrful to be withstood. Yet, Mal- colm wasgla"c1 the `man had, been chivalrous in his "fall, for ,_he `had' tak- en*=a_1i.kir..1g -to % 4.nuuuL 4.I.u\.1 nan 1UUUlL|g 111111. The broad-beamed budgerow pre- sented a strangely accurate microcosm of India at that moment. The Eng- lish people on her deck were numeri- ically inferior to the natives, and de- , prived by accident of the arms that might have "equalized matterrs. _Their littl-e army wasbrealthing mutiny, but was itself divided, if C'hrum1'n* were not mistaken,` seeing that all were for revolt, but one held out that the Fer- inghis livesshould: be spared. And, even here, the cruel dilemma. that of- fered itself to the ruler of every European community in the country was not _to- be avoided, for, if Mal-' colm tried to obtain his weapons his action.might be the signal for a mur- !derous attack, while, if` he made no, move, he` left it entirely at the troop- ers discretion Whetherior n,ot he and Mayne should be shot down without the power -to strike a..`_loW.in self- defense. ' ' ' .. ....., ...u, uu u u1cv\. /LL u:.uaaLx'c.- _ > The-_ sovars were watching him. Wi-th hsready thrust of the port sweep they were heading the budgerow toward the ghat. . r. T_Tn vvvncn` ............. _'_.:I. ,_,, ,1 1'11 -` .`O"`O"J I current. ` Assuredly, Frank Ma1colm s human clay was-being tested in the furnace that night. ` He had to decide in- stantly what line to follow. In a minute or less the boat would bump against the lowermost steps,.and, if Akhab Khan and his companions were, ,indeed, traitors, the others on board` were completely at their mercy. Mayne was unarmed, Chum-ru_ s ght- ing equipnlenti lay wholly in `his as- peet, whil-e Malcolm's revolvers were in the holsters, and his sword was tied`-to Nejdi s saddle, its scabbard iand belt having been thrown aside while Abdul Huq was robbing him. l h`|'nn.r'Ll'\n-s:,m D!` But` n-nmuntrr Iv--A I .._..r 8-Avvvc 1 He _We-nthearer and` _caug11t' th;e' end of the 'heavy- oar. . 1- ll'D..`l1 `I...-nil ........ )9 1.- ..._':I -._'.V ` V- vuu uuuvi van: 1 l M Pull hard, now, he sid `enea _aging1y, and We will be o-utof : nxvnununl , , nhms-val-Ill/IaU`\.l |.~uc.1UUl\ UU.l'l'B(5Ely. _ Akhab Khan Apreventedv those Shia dogs` from shooting you and Mayne-Sahib, went on the low mm`- mur. They said, huzoor, that the Nana Wanted the ymis-s4sahib, and that] they were fools to help you in taking her away, but Akhab Khan swore . he /would ght on your honor s side if they unslung their guns. They do not `know I heard -them` a s I was sitting ]behind the mast; and I took care to creep off when their heads were turn- led toward the shore. ('t1"r-._- AH - i ."`He-re we are, cried Mayne, w'ho; ht-tvle guessed What Chumru s' mumb- iling portended. There is the ghat i I`... ..vn....-.. mu: ouuuc. (In this instance, steps leading down to the river, also, a mountain range). If it were not for the mist we could see the Magazine just below, on -the left. - - . I ~- __ K Fox Creek. N.B.-I have alwa 311 ;had pains in the loins` and a wea - H ness there, - and - often after my - meals my -food T would distress me | and cause sore-~ ness. Lydia. "E. ?; Pinkham s'V'e eta.-;. ble Compoun has` 1 done me mu'c_h ,1 good. Iam strpng-` .' er, digestionis blet-`A {" ter, and I can.`Walk 1 with ambitio*n..;._ 1- A have encouragedw , _ many mothers at: am_1l1es to take it, as it is the best rem,-A if ,dy 1n the world. You can publish thisjl n the papers. -.Mrs`. ~ WILLIAM;-.. EOURQUE, Fox Creek, N.B., Capaggrlag '. The above is only one of-__vthe,~ ands of grateful lettex_'s~ whih:%'a:e-yr onstantly being; received jth inkham 1\/| nr`lininn`l`!hrh`hn'.nvf.ri-P lm1'\"I;r]eo-lm dirl nct at_tcmpt%"quesr tion him. He glanced at the sowars, and Saw that their carbines We're slung a.cross their shoulders. KChumru interpreterd the flook correctly. ` ` Akhnh `Kl-mu .-.-n~.nm..4...;| nu.-- av`-*" . - Yet this gnome-like -"creature `was! true to his salt at a time when he must have felt that this sa*hib, to-VI ge-ther _VVith every `other tsahib in India, was doomed; his eyes now shot 1 ery, if oblique, shafts of indigna- Ition as_ he muttered- this; thrilling` I news. . _ \ cIEK11a,"lea,1}ZnFgJ{75 '"; ."~` ":7" 'Frank.,_?s heart pthriobbednnder the-is dra_rna;ti`c'- de ve1`opmen_t.- _t He, had 1 no _ reasonj-to doubt his .servant s state- ment.. The `faithful `fellow. had nurs- ed him through 3- feger with the de- votion of ahrother, and Malcolm had reciprocated this delity. by refusing. to` part with him when -he,` in turn,` was stricken A down by sma1lpo x.f In? fact, Frank `,`was_the only European in! Meerut who would employ the man,u whose extraordinary appearance went! against him. Cross-eyed, wide-mouth ed, and broken-nosed, with a strag-l gling `black beard that ill concealed the tokens on his face of,the dread disease from which he had suffered, Choumru looked a Vicut-throat of the worst type, a hungry, lean-fac d villain, a mere anatomy. Aware of his own ill repute, he made the most f it. He_ tied `his turban with an aggressive twist, and was wont to` scowl so vindicntively at the mess Ikhamsamah that his master, quite_ un- . `consciously, always secured the wing of a chicken or the best cut of the, joint. V VAL 'J.`l-3.. -_-.-_, , 1-: ~ - ` '--* "*"r".'e . V. `. . {`;`Ta1k on, sahlb, but hsten! \Your men intend to jump ashore and leave you. They have been bitteh by the wolf. T Don t try. ti) stop them. Nam of` Allah, let them go! ~ - `EV......l.!... 1.-....` n.....1..1....:.| -_'..:|__ 4:- W im.e3=~i:ia 7iaEisn`ea A "tinge . ma-~ der; As:-it .ch`a_nced the three sewers. took one ear and Chumrn helped the hsahibs with` the ether, and `the two sets -of rowers were partly` `screened from `each other by the ho`:-_ses. Mal- colm was saying something `to Wini- lfred when the native bent near hixp and whispered: ' ` ~urn..n- ..... ....1.:1. T-1.--`. 1:4-._a`_ v_,__ F`Wab,_ vkgo, .done` your `encour- ..of the gst 5 =9 on u\, vavuuo Even while they were listening to .the tful bellowing of a distant mob! ibent on mad revel `a. crackle of mus~| ketry rang out, but died "away as quickly. The budgerow grounded lightly while her` prow ran against the stonework of the ghat. Again did Malcolm make up his mind on the. `spur of the moment. A ` I:,will spare your life on one con-! dition, Akhab Khan, he said. Go! ashore and learn what has taken placel within ye minutes. Mar-k you, I say `alone. `If I see more tharr one who comes I shall shoot. Huzoor, I shall not betray you. Go, then. ' He drew the man through the water until his feet touched the s~teps.g Climbing up unsteadily, Ak-hab Khan` disappeared in the gloom. Then ~t|hey Waited in silence. The heavy breath: of the bazaar was pungent in their} nostrils, and, for a few seconds, they listened to the .trooper s footsteps. -Frank leaped ashore and pushed the boat o, while Mayne held her_ by jamming the leeward oar into the" at the Magazine. Return here, alone, mud, It was best to make sure. : They did not speak. The-ir ears were strained as their tumultuous thoughts. At last, some one came, a- man, and his rm tread of boot-shod! C 10.11511. ` Is - this Va true thin that thou ! 3 . ;,sa.yest? \ nun.-- T ..:...1- L..-1-`3..L_ LL- -42; so ` usausv Ave -140! ` I I ruiry I sink back `into the (pit -if` [it be not the tale we heard at lBithoor!" - ` 5 - .54: ULIVUL ' T_ By tliis time Mayne was at Frank s| `slde. | n . . _ - na<\n ] ` I fear we have dropped into a ` hornets nest, said be.` There is `~ certainly an ususual turmoil in the 5 zabaar, and- houses'are.on fi/re in all! directions. ' 01 .s -- I uuv J. 'AJ.\JyLI\.III I Nay, your oaths are not needed. ` You, at least, did not wish: to commit ` murder. Cling to that oar. " The ghat_ 1 is close at hand. . -, H . Then; sahib, I can still show my} gratitude. If you would sa.ve'the = miss-Vsahi-b, do not land here. The `' Magazine has been taken`. The cavalry .2 .have looted the Txfeasury. All the 5 {Sahib-log have -fallen. ,1 g lT...&1..:... .. 4...--- 1.1_:__.._ L`L_A. L1_-,_ A"Uf.:>.<.s, sahib. One cannot ght against one s brothers, -but I swear by [the P'hop`het--. ` T ' I .\Tl\`? Qvnuusn run`-Inn non mnl ....\n.'JnJ -.rsu11l.p;-\,I.~v u I Mer-c;r,.sahib! I saved you when; you were in my power. ' Show pity to`! ma 3 ;"`_It is true, then, that you meant: to desert, Akhab Khan? said: Frank] sternly. u van ..,..`l..:`I. (1.... ..........L n...1_1. _ u ..-.,,... . , The_ -shimmering surface of the __river near the boat` was broken up in- to ripples` surrounding a black object. Mvalcc-1m heard the quick panting of; one in whoseiungs water had mixed; `With "air; and hated to think of even; a. 1_'ebe-1- drowning before his eyes.; Moved by. pity, he,sWung the big oar: lon its wooden rest until the blade touched. the exhausted man, whose; hands shot out in the hope of succor. [After some spluttering a. broken voicel supplicated-: - {l\fn..n... .~.-.L`L.I 1' ........J ...._- _.L.._ . "H:.V;f-;;;m;i;sTi;;t1dingb our native forces-that is all, said Frank. Press the tiller more to the. left, please; Yes, that is right. -Now, keep it there until we touch the! lsteps. A 4 rm... ..1.:... ......_:.....' ..-_..2--_ -2 AL. I ;nu3uwuU.I.`y ucu - uzutn-vuu uye uuu _- 1 J 1nkham_Medicine Company` of -Lynn; ,3 _as_s.,wh1cl} prove beyond a doubt tha. __ 1 Ydla E. Pmkham s Vegetable C.om- it Ound. made from roots and -he:bB;'_T:i ctually does cure these obstinate ases of_women after all other_rn_1oa awjeafaxled, and that every such` ermg woman owes it to herself, 81:3 giye Lydia av 1 " lhdnorgiv) May. I never" see the `WhiteV {Pond of the -Phophet if that was not well planned. urn. ...L..a. :. :15. --... _ ~nu,,u-,,1- I ...,-.... l,......uuu. V I `i`Oh,Vwha,.t is it? came Winifred s| 'start;1ed exclamation. ..It was so dark, land `'-the_ horses,_ :10 less than the sail, ; `so obscured. her view of the fore parti of the boat, that she could only dim- ly make out Malc'oIm_ s gure, though 'the`~.s0unds of the scuie and splashing I were\ unmistakable. - ,,`.`y . o -.o .. ` l'~l'\l VVll4_l.a DD ti VVl\L`4\ol\ . Out.New Megthod Treatment can cure you and make a 1mm of you. Under its influ- ence the brain becomes active, the blood purified. so that all pimpfes, Liotches and ulcers "disa pear. the.norves_ become strong as steel, so that nervousness. bzlshfulxxess and des- - 311 enc vanish. thee 6 becomes bright-. theface full and clear, energy returns to the dy an the moral, p gsical and sexual systems are irrviqomtecl: all drains cense-no -,rnor_e vital wa,ste.fromt esystem; Don'L.let quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard 'B8l`lI9dwd0n8l?8o `WQ will cure you or no pay. - "I-our:-Inns-u-nucnc4- o.-any-.-u--n --u- 4--.-.__-.__.-- .-._ _:- ,,v- V- -v .v--,- .. ; - -. 4 . "E-ivanxfnunc PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL ; ' No`matte ;' who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Chargg. 3:` 3 ` I-'re'e--"The Golden Monitor (Illustrated) Secret Diseases of Men. nltrsnu I 1:1 Irnn unuzr "l'DI:'A'l'|ll:'\l"I` emu-r nu lalrnlrrsc-Iv s..KENNEDY5tJKENNE ` H All letters from Canada must be addressed . ~ . p to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- -. ment in Windsor, Ont.` If you desire to . 1'18 A _ nany call atjour. Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat ` ; in ,`oices which are for Correspondence _az_1d i_:w_`m d;oor. Put. 2 _* only. V "Address all letters as_ffo_l}1o(ws: Utj-cw hjj-Ij-- ` - . I V T ` Thou:-ands of young and middle-aged men are annually swept: to a. premature grave V through Early. lndiscretions, Excuses and Blood Diseases. If you have any of the fol- klowxlng 8 pwma onsult us before it is to: late. Are you nervous and weak, des:pon- tl_e`nt an gl_uomy, specks before the eyes. with dark circles under them, weak b'.LlC, kndne s lrrxmble, palpitation of the heart, bashful. dreams and losses,_ sediment in urine. _.Pimp_ es .o_n the face} eyes sunken, hollow cheeks can-ex}-om expl'cssx;.:_r, poor 1:1en:oz`_`.'., xfeless, d1st1'ustul,Lacl: energyand strength, tu'e' mormngrs. rcsncss x.-rzhts, (tlxzmgezlble rf-_moods, weal; manhood, -premature decay, bone pains, hair loose, sore throat, ctc. -. ' . ` A '-7 1rr\ll--/tutti`! I-LI-O 11!:-nr-run} V;W&;P;Y fW;l;E; 353$ - `R0 Niiuizsion Puz/o/sT}Sn wEHoU1'$vRm`N comswr .../:3 X0101OCOCOICVXOIOXOIOXOIOIO -O-O-3:3-0101010` IOIOXOIOZOXOZOXOIOIOIOX