If you are bilious. blame the liver. If your digestion is impaired and you suï¬er from headache and dizzy spells. blame the liver. If your bowels are irregular, constipation and looseness alternating. blame the liver. If you have pain under the shoulder blades. feelings of fullness after mealsl aching limbs, a yellow, muddv complexion. blame the liver. 'l‘orpid, sluggish action of the liver is responsible for all these symptoms and while you have a right to blame. the. liver, it may be well for you in set. about to help the liver out of difï¬culty. Though bile. which the healthy liver filters from the blood, is 1111. ture's cathartic and is necessary to bealihful and regular action of the bowels, it is poison when left in the blood and gives rise to many disâ€" tressing symptoms. The use of Dr. Chase's Iiidney~Liver Pills promptly cures torpid liver and biliousness nnd because of their combined ac- ii011 on liver, kidneys and bowels ensure a. thorough cleansing of the "I see. It -is the girl he has the knife into.†“01',†said Adolphe grimly, "in whome he means to stick it. She sleeps alone in her tent. Pass that box of cartridges; I may as well fill each chamber." He did so, and q'uietly left the caravan, It was a cloud]; night, as he had said, occasionally lit up bril- liantly by the light of the Inoon. He knew the direction of Miriam’s tent, and walked that way, walked in the shadow of the hedge, lest the Chase's Iiidney~Live1‘ Pills pronxptlyiscription of Dr. A. W, Chase. '0ne cures torpid liver and biliousx1oss,ipill a dose. 25 cents a box, at all nnd because of their combined ac- dealers or Edmanson, Bates & 00., {ion on liver, kidneys and bowelsi'l‘oronto. To protect you against ensure a. thorough cleansing of tho‘imitations the portrait and signaâ€" system. ture of Dr. A. .W. Chase. the famous There is probably no one orgth rc- receipt book author, are on every monsiblu {ur so many ills as the‘box. “Yes.†“,We were talking of him.†“Ah !" "Miriam told me of a murder of which he was guilty." "Murder !†"Yes. He and two others of the tribe. Two are dead, and Miriam is the sole living witness.†"And she told you this?†“Yes.†"And he heard her! That ac- counts for it. It is not your death he means to compass, but the girl’s for betraying him. So far, you are safe. He did not see me watching him; he would imagine your voice mine.†Scores of the Common Ills of Life Due to Disorders of the Liver are Curable by There was a World of meaning in the Way he spoke these words. As his brother passed the weapon, he said : “Good boy! but be careful.†"Trust me. Tell me, what were you talking about in here ?" “Why ?†“Because I am puzzled. The man who was listening means killing some one. I watched him sharpen- ing a weapon. I saw murder writâ€" ten in his face, Yet he cannot know you; why should he want to kill you '2 I can understand giving you up for the sake of a reward, butâ€"â€"†“Do you know the man ?†' ‘Yes,_ Reuben-Reuben Lee. " “The man with the sore eyes ?†"Enough to make me. Your presâ€" ence here is known." “Adolphe !" "Fact. I'lcft you to yourselves, and was sitting quietly concealed be- hind the hedge, smoking. I was out, of sight: because if the murmur of voices came from the van, there should he no suspicion aroused. Be- sides, I wanted to be alone, to think. A month has gone by, and you are no safer now than you were. The hue-and-cry is stillâ€"â€"" "Yes. What has that to do with your scared-â€"" "Hear me out. It is a cloudy, heavy night; the moon comes out ï¬ti‘ully. A few minutes ago, when the moon happened to be beaming, I chanced to cast my eyes campâ€" waJ'ds, and to my horror I saw a man crouched beneath this van, with his ear to it, listening l" Alfred sprang to his feet, and gripped his brother's wrist, as he issed in his car: "And is the man alive. now ‘2" "Yes. Pass me the revolver from Are Yam iEicus ‘? the Liver. behind that bracket leading up to the caravan, an'd Adolphe entered. His face was deéthly pale, and his lips trembled; it was evident that excitement had got. him tightly in hand. "Miriam has been with you all the eveningâ€"has just left '2" "Yes," replied Alfred, surprised at. Cm: question; "is there anything un- usual about it ‘2" And then notic- ing his brother's evident perturbaâ€" tion, he continued, "What‘s the matâ€" ier? you look scared." b0WMWWWWflDM‘ CHAPTER XIV. [moon should snddvnl)‘ appear DR. CHASE’S KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS. quick stop ‘WOWOGGWWWSOOWWS 0* W Md Greed - on the short ladder Or, The Sign of the Arrow healthy .'er. Eliver. ()vereating, excessive drinkâ€" anddng or irrgulnr meals are very likely zzylto upset the action of the liver. ourioverload the system with bile and ion'hring on biliousness or sick head- the ache. Keep the liver in health by the using Dr. Chase's Kidbey-Liver Pills [CSS and you will avoid many of the comâ€" ow, mon ills of life. There will then be (or. no constipation, no stomach trou- ver bles, no danger of kidney and urin- nns ary derangements. to The position which Dr. Chase’s for Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills hold today as \‘01‘ the leading family medicine is un- doubtedly due to their wonderfully tliylprompt action on the liver and their na- combined effort on the kidneys and to lbowels. There is no medicine obâ€" tlzeltainable which is mm‘e useful in the {cases of emergency when the digesâ€" iisâ€"Etive, lu‘inary or excretory systems Dr. iare deranged than_this great pre- oner’s court it would have tiï¬able homicide.†With crs in tents it took the "serve him 1Vight,â€-but in same thing. The camp gradually settled down to quietness again. Three of the elders and Adokphe discussed the situation. It was a superstitious By the side of the tent the man was huddled up. The groans had ceased. They examined him. He was quite dead. The girl had 'de- scribed the noise she had heard as a crack, and crack indeed it was, just over the temple; it was an ab- solute deathâ€"blow. The tent was examined, the rip in the canvas seen, and the knifeâ€"Reuâ€" ben Lee’s knifeâ€"drawn from the couchâ€"bed into which it hakl been plunged. It was palpable that murder had been intended. The Ver~ dict was given in, by what c0nsti~ tuted the jury, at once. In a cor- He explained what he had seen, how he had come to ï¬re the shot, and with one accord the camp turn- ed to Miriam for further explanation. “I had made up a couch on this side of the tent,†sfhe said, "amid had just lain down, when I saw on the outside a shadow of a man with a knife in his hand. In a moment I had sprung to my feet and seized this mallet we knock the stakes in with. The next moment there was a ripping sound, and a hand with a knife in it came through the canvas and the knife was buried in that part of the couch where a moment before I had been lying. That same moment I brought the mallet down with all the force I could on the man. I hear- a crack and a groan -â€"and that‘s all.†moon should suddenly appear and betray him. He. had got Within a few ym‘ds' distance 01‘ it when the moon did npjmai‘, and the next inâ€" stant he had raised his revolver. But his arm wavered. He saw a. man, \ï¬ti knife raised, rapidly ap- proach the tent, pause a moment when he saw his shape silhouetted on the canvass wall, then suddenly plunge his knife into the canvas, stagger forward, then backwards, with his hands to his head, and fall a moaning heap on the ground. And the wavering arm with the re- VIoIver he had been afraid to ï¬reâ€"â€" for the man was in a. direct line beâ€" tween himself and the tent, and missing him might mean wounding the occupant of the tentâ€"the arm was gradually lowered, for Adolphe was paralysed by what had occurred, he could not understand it. There was a sudden thoughtless contracâ€" tion of the muscles of his hand, and the ï¬nger on the trigger pulled, with the result that the report of a. pis- tol rang out over the slumbering camp, the bullet being buried in the ground at the shooter's feet. In a moment the camp was arous- ed,_ and tumbling out half-dressed. A gipsy wears partly the same clothes night and day, so that a minute after the ï¬ring of the shot they were all gathered roun'd adolphe. DR. A. W. BHASE’S CATARRH SURE 250a CIi‘A PTER K V is sent dircc: to the diseased arts by the Improved Blower flea): the ulcers, clears “m a]: passages, stops droppin I In the throat and ermanam y cures Caturh and ay Fevar. Blower free. All dealers. or Dr. A. W. Chase Medlclno C0,. Toronto. nnd Bufl'alo. appear and got within a it when the been "jus- tlle dwell- form of meant the Two half-dressed men, presumably attracted by her cries, rushed out. and ran in the direction to which she was pointing. Near the body they paused, and Adolphe almost fancied he could see their lips framing the word "Reward." But he had seen enough. He mounted his machine, and rode away, back to his brotherâ€"his brother who was free at last. And then they resolved on the doâ€" ing of a daring thing. It would make assurance doubly sure, it was true, but! to the or'dinary mind, was a terribly risky thing to venture on. Three (lays after the incident just Three days after the incident justiz;l detailed, Alfredâ€"of course a differ- ent Alfred from the convict; the dress, the shaving, the hair-trim- ming, the pointed moutache, he felt sure had made so great a. change that he would never be recognisedâ€" ISI put up at the nearest inn to the] fc pcrison, and from there wrote to the governor of the goal. As a’lneasua'c of disguise he worded his letter in bad English, and determined to speak it even worse at the interâ€" view. His letter ran: “Sinâ€"I to England came this weeks, to hope ï¬nd permission to interview my brother Alfred, who is imprisoned with you. I hear in- formed that permit is given on ap- It was a gruesome task they had laid out for themselves, but for A1- fred's safetyâ€"and that was the main cm)sidel‘£1ti011â€"-â€"tl]e discovery of the missing convicts body was essential; and it had to be found in a certain way tooâ€"too disgustinar to detail here. When a body has been in the water a week the clothes it wears helps largely in the identiï¬cation; the features are swollen and dis- torted beyon’d ordinary recognition, -â€"that was the foundation of their scheme. And that is the way it was plan- ned that the com'ict’s body was to he foundâ€"after being a. week in the water. That is why the punt was necessary. Moored in the stream, it would excite no surprise; punts are kept that way for months to- with the other. She went straight down to the river, and there she dropped the pail and ran back to the cottage: she had seen that thing. It, seemed an endless time before any life stirred in the cottages; but. at last he saw a slipâ€"shod woman come out of the door of one of them, doing up her hair with one hand and carrying an empty pail was driving there, and from away up the river Adolphe was rowing thereâ€"rowing, towing behind him a heavy, cumbersome ï¬shingâ€"punt. Both vessels he had purchased. Then, in his boat, he towed the punt away, rowing as he had never rowed before, he was so anxious to leave that awful thing behind. He fastened up the punt, shoved the boat into the reeds, and left them for good and all. He ran back to where he had left his machine, and cycled to an elevation a mile away, which commanded a view of the river’s bank. There he rested, and, with a telescope, watched. A :WCCk after_, Adolphe had cycled back and was fishing. A ï¬sherman's being on the water all night would have excited no suspicion, even had he been seen, and the work he had tq do he preferred doing by night. With muffled oars he towed the punt awayâ€"away to near the habiâ€" tations of men; and then he poled the punt in as far as he could, and loosened the straps which held the buxiien beneath. Pushing oï¬ gentâ€" ly from the shore, he was horriï¬ed at what he saw by the light of the breaking dayâ€"saw come up beneath the boat: but with his pole he gave the awful thing a push, and saw it ground on the sloping bank, as he had intended it to. The details of the Work are better skrippod. Sufï¬ce it that during the night it was done. The puntâ€"with its human keelâ€"was securely chainâ€" ed down, the boat run into some reeds and fastened there, and at day- break the caravan was travelling away nomhwzu‘ds. A and the two men breakâ€" ;cther, and during the meal mlightcned as to the dis- thc body, and at once he- willng helper. Adolphe his cycle and rode away, "Rolfe Bolderwood," the writer of Australian bushranging‘ romance, has just completed his seventy-third year [and is living quietly in Melbourne, :3. spot with which he was familiar be- for a. house was built upon it. Mr. Tom Browne, to give the famous Colonial author his real name, began life as a pioneer squatter in the bush, but various droughts crippled his resources, and he eventually ac- cepted a post as stipendary magis- trate under the Government 01' New South Wales. Many a man who, on convietion before "Rolfe Bolder- Wood," could not pay his ï¬ne has had it quietly paid for him by this largehearted magistrate Who in this way did good by stealth and “pitch- ed in" to the local reporters “men they recorded it in the newspapers. “Adolphe Dubois." And he went at noon the next day, this daring manâ€"went, and was overwhelmed with grief at the tidings of his brother's death. He wept 'to think that he had arrived too late; for an inquest had been held and the body buried. His lumentntions for his brouherâ€"his dear, dead brotherâ€"- ï¬lled the air. The stolid English temperament ol‘ the ofï¬cials could not understand the emotion shown by this foreigner. Sir John Gorst, instead of being a politician of note, might to-day nave been a. bishop. As a young man. fresh from his \Vranglership at Cambridge, he actually took ship as a missionary to the islands of the Pacific. .As fate would have it, there was a charming young lady on board who was the inno‘cent means of caus- ing the young enthusiast to weigh the claims of the altar against those of the heathen, and the altar turned the scale. Thus it happened that Mr. .Gorst broke his journey at New Zealand, and under the stimulus of his young wife started the career which is familiar to all who take an interest in politics. Lady Dudley, who was a Miss Rachel Gurney, of Norfolk, England, is a very accomplished woman, with a ï¬ne and beautifullyâ€"trained voice, which has often been heard on conâ€" cert platforms in the poorest parts of London Mr‘. Charles Gurney, her ladyship's father, was a. Wellâ€"knOWn Quaker banker who fell on evil days and gave up everything to his creâ€" ditors. His daughters for a time served in a milliner's shop in Lon- don. The Misses Gurney Were soon removed to more congenial sur- roundings, and it was as the adopt- ed (laughter of the Duke and Duchâ€" ess of Bedford that Lady Dudley met the young peer Who became her hus- hand. The man with the most gigantic correspondence is the Czar of Russia, who, if he read all the communicaâ€" tions that are addressed to him. would have no leisure from one week’s end to the other. Five hunâ€" dred letters, exclusive of something like a hundred petitions from people with grievances, reach His Majesty daily. The contents of all these efâ€" fusions are carefully note†by the secretaries, who have strict injunc- tions to inform His Majesty of every complaint lodged by a Russian subâ€" ject, be he a. man of peace or n Niâ€" hilist. ist, Vladimir de Pachmann. She chose, .and married, the latter; but. the union proving an unhappy one, a divorce was obtained, and, subse- quontly meeting her old lawyer-lover in Paris,‘she made an alliance with him which she has never regretted. I \viil come you toâ€"morrow at moons hoping to receive permit. “Receive, sir! the assurance of my obedient services, ’ gicution to you only. I have to nglaml leave this weeks. May I ask you permit to see my brother? Notes of Interest About Some Prominent People. And at last the sad interview was over, and he loft the precincts of the prison armed with what he. had gone forâ€"a certiï¬cate of the death of Alfred Duhois. All was abso- luter safe now; he could move with- out four. The hue-addâ€"cry was at an end; and even as the body was buried as Alfred Dubois, so he then and there buried the name. He changed the handiwork of his godâ€" fathers and godmothers by rcâ€"chrisâ€" tening himself. Henceforth he would be known as Count Oscar de Verement. PERSOAAL POINTERS . (To be Continued.) Mrs, '1‘. Brisson, Gold Rock, out. writeszâ€"“Baby‘s ()wn Tablets saved my little boy's life when there seem- ed no hope, and he is now a. bright, rosy healthy child. He sun‘ercd more than tongue can tell from ob- stinate constipation and medicine gave him no relief until I gave him Baby’s Own Tablets. I would not be without the Tablets in the house. and I think they should be kept in every home where there are young or delicate children." All the minor ills of childhood, such as indigestion, colic, stomacl troubles, diarrhor‘a, worms, consti- pation. simple fevers. and colds an promptly relieved and speedin curet through the use of these Tablets They are guaranteed to contain m opiate and may be given with abso lute safety to the youngest and mom (’r-lieate child. Sold hv all medicinu dealers or sent post paid at 25 cent: a hm: by writing The Dr. William Medieiie Co., Brockville, Ont. More men would be rich if mane}: “em as hard to spend as it is to earn. A man spends oneâ€"third of his life in bed, but it's the other two-thirds that usually cause all the trouble. ‘ Never kick a. 'dog to which ym haven‘t been properly introduced. you pro tor. I dor in I don't “What would 3 ofl'er you Wonk ? right, mister," z Mikef “I kin ta' anybody." FROM ONE WHOSE DAUGHTEB‘ WAS RESTORED TO HEALTH. Nearly all the ills of life are due to bad blood. and they are cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills simply be- cause these pills make new, rich blood thus bringing strength to ev- ery part of the body. That is th! whole secret, and is the reason Why these pills have cured after other medicines have failed. All medicone dealers sell these pills, but thorn are some who on'er substitutes; see that the full name "Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People†is printed on the wrapper around every box. Ti in doubt send direct to the Dr. Wil- liams Medicine (70., Brockvillo, Ont., and the pills will be sent by mail m 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50. Papa : “Dear mo, Mary ! whatcvcl are you going to 'do with all thesu trunks? Two, four, sixâ€"twelve 0: them. You can't (111 more that one.†Mamma: "I know if, my deal‘: but we must make a. dccnm ammarance on zu‘niviug at the hotel. mother as follows: "A few years ago my daughter Bertha began to decline in health. Among the early symptoms Were loss of appetite, loss of strength ,and an aversion to exer- tion. These were followed by severe headaches, and sometimes fainting ï¬ts; her color left her and she was greatly reduced in flesh. In fact her condition was such that I feared she would go into consumption. We tried a number of medicines but they did not help her; then a doctor Was called in, but there was no improve- ment, and things looked very hope- less. At this stage acting on the advice of a lady friend (who, by the way, was studying medicine and is now practising in Chicago) I started giving her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. In the course of a few weeks there was a decided improvement in her condition‘ and by the time she had taken nine boxes she was again en- joying perfect health. During her illness her Weight was reduced to ninety-ï¬ve pounds and While. taking the pills it increased to one. hundred and ten pounds. My advice to other mothers who have weak or ailing girls is to lose no time in giving them Dix Williams’ Pink Pills.†“an0 you any defects S'il‘, I am shortâ€"sighted.†Had Suffered From Headaches, Dizziness and Painting Spellsâ€" Feared at one Time that Conr sumption Would Follow. All the freshness of youth, the rosy cheeks and bright eyes of girl- hood, the charms of budding woman- hood. are due to pure, rich blood and houlthy nerves. When the face is pale and the eyes lack lustre, when there are headaches and backâ€" aches, shortness of breath and palâ€"‘ potion of the heart the blood is serâ€" iously out of condition, and decline and consumption may well be feared; In emergencies of this kind there is no medicine so certain in its beneï¬ci- al results as Dr. \Villiums' Pink Pills. Every pill makes new, rich bloo-d,‘ strengthenes the nerves and puts the sufTerer on the road to health. Proof of this is found in the case of Miss Bertha. Milloy, Port Dnlhousie, Ont": The story of this young lady’s res~‘ toration to health is told by her. mother as follows: “A few years Bobby (at the Zoo): “1 wonde] why the tiger doesn’t lie down an'c go to sloop once in a while ?†Nurse “I am sure I don't know, Bobby.’ Bobby: "Do you rmppose he's afrai? he will turn into a rug if he does ?" 1 prove it ?†Easily enough Do you see that nail up ‘ in the wall?†“Yes.†MOTHERLY ADVISE. SAVED BABY’S LIFE 'I you 'do if I were to ?" “It ’ud be all answered Meandering take a joke as “‘(‘H as .1. "Yes, “How can \V c l l, doc yon