Richmond Palladium (Daily), 11 May 1904 — Page 6

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM. WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1904.

MUMYONS

PAW PAW Cures a Foreman In the Pennsylvania Iron Works of DYSPEPSIA. Iluntor hlcom Caves Strong Testimony. Sa$s Ho was Curod. I have had considerable trouble recently, duo to indict ion, and was fearful that it would become chronic dyspepsia. I was urged to try Mtrayon's Paw raw and I am giad to bo able to say that lees than two bottles put mo right again, and I now feel as well as ever. My experience with thl ne'T digestive tonic leads me to believes that there is no case of dysJiepsia or indigestion which Munyon's 'aw Paw will not cure. (Signed) HUNTER MOORE' 5505 Lansdowne ave. I'hila. If you have Catarrh, Trv it. If you have Dyspepsia, Try it. If you are nervous, Try it. If you are despondent. Try it. If you are weak and run down, Try it. Cast away all tonics, all medicines and all stimulants and let Munyon's Paw Paw make you well. It will lift you into the high altitudes of hope and hold you there It will give exMlaration without intoxication. It makes old people feel young and weak people strong. At all druggists. Large bottles, $1. Taw Paw Laxative Tills, 25 cents a bottle. MONEY LOANED from 5 to 6 per cent. Thompson's Loan and Re&i hnt.x v(?wnv. Main RtiQ vnt.b tfrt-fi for strictly first-class tickets on sale If from Chicago April 23rd to Aay 1st. Choice of routes going and returning. The most luxurious train in the world, the famous electric lighted Overland Limited Leaves Chicago daily 8:00 p. m. Solid through train, less than three days en route, over the only doubletrack railway between Chicago and the Missouri River. Two fast trains per day, through to California from Chicago via the Chicago, Union Pacific and North-Western Line. 6 he 'BEST of E VERYTHING All agents sell tickets via this line. SenJ 2c stamp for itinerary of special train for Los Angeles which leaves Chicago April 26th. A. H.Wagganer T. . C. L N. W. Ry. Isn't it true that a homely woman knows only half of life's pleasures. Ladies why not take Ilollister's Rocky Mountain Tea and add the other half. 'Twill do the business. 33 cents, tea or tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. In a class to themselves, Ideal and Mother's lead, others follow. Doesn't Respeot Old Age. It's shameful wh-r: youth fails to show proper respoet for oi-i tyso, but just the contrary i.i tho ease of Pr. Liner'" New Life Pilh. They cut oft rr.o'adies no mn'.'.ov how severe ;rid irrespective of old are Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Fever, Constipation ail yield to this perfect. Pill. 25c at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug stoiv. If you are pale, no enercry, no ambition, irritable, cross, uprly, take Ilollister's Rocky Mountain Tea,' and see it revitalize your whole system. It will do the business thoroughly. 35 cents., tea or tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. DR. laFRANCO'S 3 COMPOUND. Bafe. rNS1y regulator; 2r rrnts. IiriigRists or mail. A WEEK Oil Burner. Heata stove or f ursace : burtia ernda oil;o intFUEK. Writ.VatlonIMljr. Co.. mttor J&, Mew York, . f .

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DONALDSON. '.JR

On'jrluht. iros, by Charles V Hooke Continued.) "Do you fancy that I shan't?" retorted Dorothy, almost in tears from shame and rage. "Mow dare you hint that I wouUl share a secret with you and exelude my husband? I wouldn't do it if it were about a pint of peanuts, and you should have found that out by this time." I had a glimpse of Carl at this moment, and his face was so white that it seemed to shine. "You will tell him," said he slowly. "It is honorable. But upon the other hand I was equally bound in honor to tell you." "You were bound in honor not to have any such thing to tell," replied Dorothy with spirit. "We will not quarrel," said he sadly. "I have only one word more to say. The time must soon come when I shall offer you the deepest sympathy of my heart. I cannot offer it to you in the name of friendship. I won't lie to you. That is why I tell you now that I love you." "It seems to me that if you foresee trouble coming to me you have now put it out of your power to help me. But what do you mean? Do you expect harm to come to my husband?" "Will yon keep the secret?" "Not from him," she answered firmly. "If tl-.vie is good reason, I will keep it from everybody else." "I cannot speak on such terms," said Carl. "Indeed. I would better not speak on any un.is. I have lost your esteem. I cannot count upon your help. You would distrust me. But, Dorothy, remember this: There is some one very near and dear to you much dearer than he has any right to be whom 1 have honestly tried to save, but I have failed." Dorothy was more bewildered than alarmed. "I know that my husband has lost money," she said. "Mr. Bunn has led him into a very foolish investment. lie may suffer heavily, but it will be no such catastrophe as you imagine." This, by the way, was the first hint I had received that Donaldson had gone with Bunn into a certain wild dream of finance which I will here describe simply as the Ilarbrook Land com-' pany. I had earnestly advised Donaldson against it, and I supposed that he had heeded my warning. As for Bunn, I understood that he had drawn out Willi a m.-irvelor.sly small loss. My conscience I:.:d been dragging me away from that window; now it dragged me back again. "That is but a small part of the trouble," said Carl. And then suddenly: "Dorothy, don't disclose this. You will regret it. I have spoken to you from really good motives, even though they may seem to lo mistaken, and in the strictest confidence." "There can be no confidence of this kind with a wife," said Dorothy, "if she really is one. But, Carl, I begin to see some sort of sincerity in you, and this is what I will do to reward it: I will tell my husband that you have spoken in a way to offend me, but that I have forgiven you, and I will beg him not tc ask me any questions. I will not say, unless directly asked, that you have spoken to me of his business dilliculties, which I believe that you greatly exaggerate. But I can take this course only if you promise me to change from the heart outward to be to me in all your thoughts that which you may honorably be, and no more. Will you do this?" "How can I look at you" he began, but she interrupted him crying: "Carl, this is monstrous: I am an old woman. I am the mother of a! grown man. I have lived my life, and. it has been a wondrous and beautiful; life to live. I have had such lovesuch perfect love." "You trifle with me," he said in a sudden rage. "Your husband is as cold as the dead. He neglected you openly. He has no eye for your beauty, for this living miracle of your unfading youth which has been bestowed upon you, in my belief, that you might wait for a real love." "I have not had to wait," said Dorothy in a voice indescribably sweet. "And now," she added, "this is the end, absolutely the end. I asked you for a promise. Give it to me and think upon whatever is most sacred to you while you speak." "I will think upon that which is most sacred to me." he said, looking straight into her face, "anrt for the sake of It I will either conquer my heart or surrender it with all my mortal part to the dust of the earth to the unconscious dust that cannot suffer." This pledge struck me as somewhat theatric, and yet it was spoken with heartbreaking sincerity and seemed to have a considerable effect upon Dorothy. "The way to cease to desire something," said she, "is tc desire something els?. Find a right love, Carl. I hope you may. There is a woman somewhere who is really young, who needs no miracle, who will not fade in a year or two. Find her." She turned away and walked toward the front of the house. lie remained standing stock still for fully a minute and then sank slowly forward upon, his

Being a True Record and Explanation of the Seveo Mysteries Now Associated With His Name to the PubHc MM. and of an Eighth. Which Is the Key of the Seven

By HOWARD FIELDING knees and still Tower. lie seemed to be kneeling upon the body of an enemy. I could hear him mutter curses, and he beat the turf beside the graveled path with his fists. It was the most extraordinary spectacle of the abandonment of self control that ever I saw and was made even more remarkable by the suddenness with which it ceased. The man arose and wiped his soiled hands with his handkerchief; then he felt nervously in his pockets. He found a cigar and crushed it In his fingers without realizing what he was doing. But a second was successfully lighted, and Carl strolled out into the moonlight beyond the shadow of the house with his accustomed careless and graceful stride. CHAPTER XIV. THE RETUltM OF "A 15AI1 rF.XXY." SfIIEKK M as a great weight upon me as I left the libiv.ry. My heart echoed Doroi'.iy's words precisely. .My prnust. like hers, was against any change in the ways of our lives, which had seemed so perfectly well ordered; not that I fancied they con id ever be the same again. Upon the contrary, I perceived ciearly enough that Archer must be sent away ;'; v his own sake and the peace of or' us. I blamed hi in bitterly. There was nevei- less e ver.se for any man's folly. In the sixty years that I have been in the world I have never seen a woman whose heart could be read more easily than Dorothy's nor a man whose guilty thought had been hidden behind a mask so impenetrable sis that which Carl had worn. If he had been mistaken in her, he must be mad, but it seemed to me that not even the mysterious power which she had once possessed could have warned her against him. His manner toward her, as 1 would have sworn from constant observation, had always been perfect. Yet it is true, of course, that those who stand nearest to such tragedies of the home are often most blind to their beginnings. Mrs. Kelvin's hint about Donald recurred to me, and I wondered with a shudder whether he had looked into Archer's Ik art. If that were true, it could have been only to hate the man. never to fear him. When I ea me out upon the veranda. Dorothy was sitting in a big chair with her son upon the arm of it. I saw them against the brightest of The moonlight, and this made Donald loom dark, like a great statue of bronze. "Where is vor.r father, Don?" she was asking him .-is I stepped out. "In his room, writing," lie answered. "Shall I call him?" She answeied "No;" that she would go up. "I'll carry you." said he, and in an instant he had lilted her with his right arm alone by a peculiar knack which I had never seen the like of before. It was very easy and graceful, and Dorothy was perched upon his arm like a bird on a bough. "Oh, Donald," she cried, steadying herself with i hand upon his bare head, "I'm too heavy! I'M topple you over." "I have a pond lily in my buttonhole on the other side," said he. "I'm balanced perfect ly." And he strcde away with her into the house. I waited t lit re a long time for Carl, but he did not appear, and at last I made up my mind not to speak to him of my plan for sending him away until I had had more time to mature it. No Immediate action was necessary, for upon the following day Carl went to visit a friend of his who lived in a fine country house about half way between Tunbridge and the Junction. He had made such visits before, and if I had not had the wretched fortune to play eavesdropper I should not have felt the need of any explanation of his departure. A day or two later Donaldson laid the whole case before me in a manner most delicate and most affecting. He spoke as if I had been his father. Archer had come to him, he said, In such an attitude of mind as to alter his own feeling materially, lie was inclined to believe that tho man had been greatly overwrought by the exigencies of our common business affairs. "He believes," said Donaldson, "that Kelvin will win in this tight and that it will bo the beginning of the end, so far as this business is concerned. He has brooded over it and gone sleepless, as he tells me, and I know what strange things, contrary to his own real nature, a man may do when subject to such a strain. It is a weak justification, but one can't look at him and feel that there is nothing in it. He has been beside himself for weeks. I think his attitude toward Don has been the result of pure nervousness. At any rate, acting under Dorothy's advice, I am unwilling to do anything that may cut Carl off from the benefit of your influence. I know how strong an affection you have for him" "That's the central fact, isn't it?" I Interrupted. "You want to please me. Well, then, let's wait. Let's trust a bit to him. We will not hastily condemn

a man who seems to be struggling to redeem himself." Now that my attention was thus directly called to It I perceived that Carl had not been himself of late, and I was weakly anxious to make the best possible plea for him. He was my dead sister's son and had been dear to me. I thought it might be well to have a long talk with him, and one day when I came into my office after luncheon and found him there alone I was upon the point of burdening him with much useless advice, but he turned my mind Into another channel. "Who do you think has been here?" said he. "The last man you'd expect to

see, upon my word." : "Not Kelvin?" I queried, for a call from him at that juncture would indeed have been unexpected. "Severn," answered Carl, "the first one the pretender." I was amazed at the impudence of this visit. "He wouldn't tell me what be wanted," said Carl. "He inquired for you and promised to come back.". "His reception will be more lively than cordial," I responded. It was about half an hour later when the man appeared. His looks bad greatly changed, but whether he was in disguise then or had been so before I could not have decided. He had an official and solemn air as he entered the office, and he laid a card upon the leaf of my desk without having spoken a word in the meantime. The card conveyed to ray taind the information that JSIr. Frank Gillespie was a special operator 4for the Dorn Detective agency of New York. "You lost some money awhile ago," said Mr. Gillespie. "Well, sir, our agency keeps its eyes on little matters of that kind, and when they're particularly interesting we sometimes investigate on our own account without offering our services in the regular way." "Was that why you came here before?" I demanded. Mr. Gillespie gravely inclined his head. I asked him Avhy he hadn't said so like an honest man, and I received in return the information that the detective business sometimes involved an element of deception. "Now, Mr. Harrington," said he, "what is there in it if I find that money?" I was strongly indisposed to deal with this man, yet I would have been glad of the money, and I could not suppose that he had come to see me a second time without having some very promising clew. So I asked him what he would think right. , "Ten per cent of what I find." said he promptly and added, "I'm suspicion!? that the amount may be a trifle short." I was more than suspicious that it might be so, supposing that Mr. Gillespie should find it when no one was "How do you do, Mr. Gillcspict" watching him. However. I agreed to his terms, with the proviso that more than half the money shouhl be recovered and the crime fully exposed. "Well, sir," said he, "1 think I'm prepared to do it, but I warn you that it will be considerable of a shock to jtou." "It will be a good deal more of a shock to the thief," said I. "I guess that I can stand it if he can." (To be Continued.) Just before retiring, if your Mver is slupgisli, out of tune and you feel dull, bilious, constipated, tow? a dose ol 5 em And you'll be all right in the morning. Reduced Fares to Carthage, Mo., via Pennsylvania Lines. Low fares will be in effect to Carthage and Joplin, Mo., via Pennsylvania Lines, May 17th to 23d, inclusive, account Annual Conference German Baptist Brethren. Ten days' stopover at St. Louis "World's Fair allowed. Get further, information from local Ticket Agents of the Pennsylvania Lines. One way second class colonist tickets to California, the North Pacific Coast, Montana and Idaho will ba sold via Pennsylvania lines from March 1st to April 30th, inclusive. For particulars apply to nearest Ticket Agent of those lines. Have your carpets taken up, cleaned and laid by tlie monarch Laundry.

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TIME TABLE Dayton & Western Traction Co. . (In Effect May 1, 1904.) Leave Richmond for Eaton, West Alexandria, Dayton, Troy, Pique, Sidney, Lima, Xenia, Springfield, Columbus-. Hamilton and Cincinnati every hour, 7 a. m., to 9 p. m. and 11 p. m. Two Honrs to Dayton Leave Richmond for New Paris every hour, 6 a. m., to 6 p. m. Last through car east of West Alexandria, i p. m. Through rates and through tickets to all points. All entirely new cars, clean, comfortable and swift. For further information call Home 'Phone 269. Cured His Mother of Kueivraatism. "My mother has been a sufferer for many years with rheumatism,"' ,ays W. II. Howard, of Husband, Pa. "At times she was unable to move at all, while at all times walkLi' Was painful. I presented her with a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm ncd after a few applications she decided it was the most wronderful pain reliever she had ever tried, in fact, she is never without it now and is at all times able to walk. An occasional application of Pain Balm keeps away the pain that she was formerly troubled with." For sale by A. G. Luken & Co., and W. II. Sudhoff, fifth and Main street. One way Colonist Rates to the flTest and Northwest via The C, C. L. Washington, Oregon, Montana, fcc. For further information call on A. Blair, C. T. A. Home 'Phone 44 E. R. Grosvenor M.D., Specialist OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 a. m. 7 to 8 p. m. 2 to 4 p. m.; SUNDAY 9 to 12 ' colonial Building, 7th and Main Sts.

It TDFRTO CI IPf COCCI II I f all forms of Chronic Diseases that am cnraWa, Hb InLHIO oUbuLoorULLT diseases of toe throat, lungs, kii SEYS, LIVER and BLADDER, RHEUMATISM, DYSPEPSIA, and all DISEASES OF THE BLOOD, Spilepsy (or falling fits), Cancer, Scrofula, Private and Nervous Diseases, Female Diseases, Night bosses, Loss of Vitality from indiscretions in youth or maturer years, Piles, Fistula, Fiseure and Jlceration of the Rectum, without detention from business. RUPTUKE POSITIVELY (TRKD AXD GUAKAfTTEED. It will be to vour interest to consult the Doctor if you are suffering from disease. And if he cannot cure you he will tell yon so at once. Remember the time and place. Will return every four weeks. Office and Laboratory. No. 21 SOUTH TENTH STREET, RICHMOND, IND.

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