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THE YALE EXPOSITOR FRIDAY, MAR. 15, 1907. DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Cure ths Kidneys and tho Pain Will Never Return. Only on sure way to cure an aching back. Cure the cause, tho kidneys. Thousands tell of cures made by I loan's Kidney IiU. John C. Coleman, a proml ncnt merchant of Swiinsboro, Ga., says: "For several years my kidneys were affected, nnd my back ached day and nlsht. I was Uaguld, nervous a:id lame in the corning. D-uin' Kidney Pills helped om right aw;iy, and the great relief tint follows I ha been permanent." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. F-jiter-MilbuHi Co., Ituffalo. N. Y. Money in Motor Manufacture. About fM.0iW.000 is at present in vested in Kruland in the manufacture of motor waMiis. About 250,000 men r employed In them, or as chauf-f-- irs, etc.. and their wageB aggregate f 75.000.00;) a year. Worm Knowing About. If you r.I a first-class laxative, thre Is nothing better nor safer than '.hat old family remedy, IJrandreth's (Mis. Kach pill contains ono grain of solid extract of sarsaparilla. which, w;f.h other valuable vegetable prod ucts, make it a blood purifier of ex cellent character. If you are troubled i'h constipation, one pill at night w;il afford great relief. Mrandreth's Pills aro the same fine liiative tonic pill your grandparents u.W. They have been In use lor over century, and are for 6ale every where, either plain or sugar-coated. 8ank of England. The Bias of England employs about 1)0 people, pays $l,2:.0.000 yearly In wages and $175,000 yearly In pasionj. Especially worthy of notice i Cirfield Tm, Nature remedy for constipation, ii-k-head u-he, liver and kidnev derange ai;aU. It w made wholly of Herbs. Never Had Picture Taken. Judge CharleB T. Woodard, lately tppolntel to the Maine supreme 'irt. nver had a picture taken. IML.r. 4"i:i(KD IN 'IU 14 DAT. 4 r' DIM M KN I' is trimmntf cd to euro am i . 'M n. it!. ml. Hiffilinii or I'ruiriiUinf l'ile tit I v it tier tc iii jne.r reltinded. U)c. No man ever asks a truthful woman waat gh-4 thinks of him more than oa:e. Hf,'OpTHE m . )nor. sToroH fwUDNEYSX :: a v mLm W. A. Mitchell, dealer in general merchandise, Martin, Ga., writes: "My wife lost In weight from 120 to 63 pound.. We saw she could not live Ion?. She was a skeleton, ho we consulted an old physician. H told her to try Peruna. 'She gradually commenced Im proving and getting a little strength. She now weighs 10G pounds. She is gaining every day, and does her own housework and cooking." SIGH HEADACHE Positively cored by these Little rills. Tbe y also rt litre Dis CARTER'S tress from Dyspepsia. la- aiestlon and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem ec.y for Dizziness. Ksusea, Drowsiness, Bod. TasU la tbft Mouth. Coated Ton (ran. Pain In the fit Je, TORPID UVER. Tuey IVER PILLS, regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SKILL PRICE. Gmuins Must Bear Fac-Sinruld Signature REFUSE SUI1TITUTU. CARTERS ritTTtE I flVER FOR C v - fash By DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS, Author of "THFCQSTMcr CIIAI'TCU XXVI Continued.- Possibly," said I, with no dispo sition to combat views based on 1 knew not what painful experience. "But I don't care for that sort of lik ing from a woman, or from a dog." "Its the only kind you'll get," re torted he, trying to control his ag itation. "I'm an old man. I know human natur that's why I live alone. You'll take that kind of liking, or do without." "Then I'll do without," said I. "Give her an income, and she'll go. I see it all. You've flattered her van ity by showing your love for het that's the way with womn. They go crazy about themselves, and forget all about the man. Give her an in come and she'll go." 'I doubt it," said I. "And you would, if you knew her. Hut, even so, I shall lose her in any event. For, unless she is made independent, she'll certainly go with the last of the lit tle money she has, the remnant of a small legacy." The old man argued with me, the more vigorously, I suspect, bncause he found me resolute.' When he could think of no new way of stating his case his case against Anita he said: "You are a fool, young man that's clear. I wonder such a fool was ever able to get together as much prop erty as report credits you with. Hut you're the kind of fool I like." "Then you'll indulge my folly?' said I, smiling. He threw up his arms in a gesture of mock despair. "If you will hav tt so," he replied. "I am curious about this niece of mine. I want to see her. I want to see the woman who can resist you." "Her mind and her heart are closed against me." said I. "And it is my own fault I closed them." "Put her out of your heal," he ad vised. "No woman is worth a serious man's whhe." "I have few wants, few purposes," said 1. "Hut those few I pursue to the end. Kven though she were not worth while, even though I wholly lost hope, still I'd not give her up. I couldn't that's my nature. Hut she is worth while." And I could see her, slim and graceful, the curves in her face and figure that made my heart leap, the azure sheen upon her petal-like skin, the mystery of the soul luring from her eyes. After we had arranged the business or, rather, arranged to have it ar ranged through our lawyers he walked down to the pier with me. At the gangway he gave me another searching look from head to foot but vastly different from the Inspec tion with which our interview had begun. "You are a devilish handsome young fellow," said he. "Your pic tures don't do you justice. And I shouldn't have believed any man could overcome In one brief sitting such a prejudice as I had against you. On second thought, I don't care to see her. She must be even below the aver age." "Or far above it." I suggested. "I suppose I'll have to ask her over to visit me." he went on. "A line hypocrite I'll feel." "You can make It one of the con ditions of your gift that she is not to thank you or speak of it," said I. "I fear your face would betray us, if she ever did." "An excelleut idea!" he exclaimed. Then, as he shook hands with me in farewell: "?ou will win her yet If you care to." As I steamed up the Sound, 1 was tempted to put in at Dawn Hill's har bor. Through my glass I could see Anita and Alva and several others, men and women, having tea on the lawn under a red and white awning. I could see her dress a violet suit with a big violet hat to match. I knew that costume. Like everything she wore, it was both beautiful in it self and most becoming to her. I Could see her face, could almost make out its expression did I see, or did I imagine, a cruel contrast to what always saw when she knew I was looking? I gazed until the trees hid lawn and gay awning, and that lively company and her. In my bitterness I was full of resentment against her, full of self pity. I quite forgot, for that mo ment, her side of the story. XXVII. BLACKLOCK SEES A LIGHT I was next day, I think, that I met Mowbray l4ingdon and his brother Tom in the entrance of the Textile Building. Mowbray was back only a week from his summer abroad; but Tom I had seeip and nodded to every day, often several times in the day, as he went to and fro about his "re spectable'' dirty work for the Roebuck Langdon clique. He was one of their most frequently used stool-pigeon di rectors in banks and Insurance com panics whose funds they staked in their big gambling operations, they taking almost all the profits and the depositors and policy holders taking almost all the risk. It had never once occurred to me to have any feel LUCE ing of any kind Tom. or in any way to take him into my calculations us to Anita. He was. to my eyes, too ob viously a pale understudy of his pow erful and tasclnatlng brother. When ever I thought of him as the man Anita fancied she loved. I put it aside instantly. "The kind of man a wom an rally cares for," I would say to my self, "is the measure ot her trueelf. Put not the kind of man she imagines she card's for." Tom went on; Mowbray stopped. We shook hands, and exchanged com- inonplaces in the friendliest way 1 was harboring no resentment, against i him, and 1 wished him to realize that his assault had bothered me no more than the buzzing and battering ot a summer fiy. "I've been trying to get . in to see you," said he. "I wanted j to explain about that unfortunate Tex- j tile deal." This, when the assault on me had burst out with fresh energy the day after he landed from hurope! I could scarcely believe that his vanity, his confidence in his own skill at un derground work could so delude him. "Don t loiher." said I. "All that's an cient history." Put he had thought out some lies he regarded as particularly creditable a mm m I " 'HUT I HAVEN'T THE SLIGHTEST INTEREST IN CROOKED ENTER PRISES NOW.' " to his ingenuity; he was not to be deprived of the pleasure of telling them. So I was compelled to listen; and, being In an indulgent mood. I did not spoil his pleasure by . letting him see or suspect my unbelief. If he could have looked into my mind, as I stood there in an attitude of pa tient attention, I think even his self complacence would have been put out of countenance. With his first full stop, I said: "I understand perfectly, Langdon. Put I haven't the slightest interest in crook ed enterprises now. I'm clear out cf all you fellows' stocks. I've reinvest ed my property bo that rot even a panic would trouble nie." "That's good," he drawled. I saw he did not believe me which was nat ural, as he knew nothing of my ar rangement with Galloway and as sumed I was laboring in heavy weath er, with a bad cargo of Coal stocks and contracts. "Come to lunch witn me. I've got some interesting things to tell you about my trip." ' A few months before. I should have accepted with alacrity. Put 1 had lost Interest in him. He had not changed; if anything, he was more dazzing than ever in the ways that had onco dazzled me. It was I that had changed my ideals, my point of view, l had no desire to feed my new-sprung con tempt by watching him pump in vain for information to be used in his se cret campaign against me. "No. thanks. Another day," I replied, and left him with a curt nod. I noted that he had failed to speak of my mar riage, though he bad not seen me since. "A Bore subject with all the Langdons," thought 1. "It must be very sore, indeed, to make u man who Is all manners, neglect them." "I am strong and secure," said I to myself as I strode through the wonderful canyon of Proadway, whose walls aro those mighty palaces of finance and commerce from which business men have been ousted by cormorant "captains of industry." I must use my strength. How could I better use It than bv fluttering these vultures on their roosts, and perhaps bringing down a bird or two? I decided, however, that it was bet ter to wait until they had stopped rattling their beaks and claws on my shell in futile attack. "Meanwhile," I reasoned carefully," I can be get ting good ami ready." Their first new move, ufter my lu tle talk with Langdon, was intended as a mortal blow to my credit. Mel ville requested me to withdraw mine and Placklock and Company's ac counts from the National Industrial Hank; and the fact that this huge and powerful institution had thus branded me was slyly given to the financial j reporters of the newspapers. Far and , wide It was published; and the public 1 was expected to believe that this was one more and drastic measure in the "campaign of the honorable men of finance to clean the Augean Stables ()f Wall Street." My daily letter to investors next morning. led off with this paragraph the first notice I had taken publicly of their attacks on me: n tie cffort to discredit the only remaining uncontrolled source of financial truth, the bis bandits have ordered my accounts out of their chief gambling-house. I have transferred the accounts to the Discount and t? jK)slt National, where liC-onldas Thorn ly stands guard against the new or der that seeks to make business a synonym for crime." Thornley was of the type that was dominant in our commercial life be fore the "financiers" came just as song birds were common in our trees until the noisy, brawling, thieving sparrows drove them out. .His oldest son was about to marry Joe's daugh ter Alva. Many a Sunday I have spent at his piace near Morristown a charming combination of city com fort with larm freedom and fresh air. I remember, orie Sunday, saying to him, after he had seen his wife and daughters off to church: "Why haven't you looked out for establish ing these lwys and girls of yours? "I don't want my girls to be sought for money," said he. "I don't want my boys to rely on money. Perhaps I've seen too much of wealth, and have come to have a prejudice against it. Then, too. I've never had the chance to get rich." I showed that I thought that he was simple jesting. "I mean it." said he, looking at me with eyes as straight as a well-brought-up girls. "How could my mind be judicial if I were personally Interested in the enterprises people look to me for advice about?" And not only did he keep himself clear and his mind judicial but also he was. like ail really good people, exceedingly slow to believe others guilty of the things he would as soon have thought of doing as he would have thought of clipping into the teller's cage during the mnch hour and pocketing a package of bank notes. He gave me his motto a cu rious one: "Relieve in everybody; trust In nobody." "Only a thief wishes to be trusted," he explained, "and only a foool trusts. I let no one trust me; I trust no one. Hut 1 believe evil of no man. Kvea when ho has been convicted, I see the mitigating circumstances." How Tliornley did stand by me! And for no reason except that It was as necessary for him to be fair and just us to breathe. I shall not say ho resisted the attempts to compel him to desert me they simply mado no impression on him. I remember when Roebuck himself, a large stock holder in the bank, left cover far enough personally to urge him to throw me over, he replied stead fastly: "If Mr. Placklock is guilty or clr dilating false stories against commer cial enterprises, as his enemies allege, the penal code can be used to stop him. Put as long as I stay at the head of this bank, no man shall use it for personal vengeance. It is a chartered public institution, and all have equal rights to its facilities. I would lend money to my worst enemy if he came for it with the proper se curity. I would refuse my best friend, if he could not give security. The funds of a bank are a trust fund, and my duty is to see that they are em ployed to the best advantage. If you wish other principles to prevail here, you must get another president." Thut settled It. No one appreciated more keenly than did Roebuck that character is as indispensable in Its place as is craft where the situation demands craft and is far harder to get. I shall not relate in detail that cam paign against me. It failed not so much because I was strong as because it was weak. Perhaps, if Roebuck Land Langdon could have directed it in person, or had had the time .to advise with their agents before and after each move, it might have suc ceeded. They would not have let ex aggeration dominate it and venom show u)on its surface; they would not have neglected to follow up ad vantages, would not have persisted In lines of attack that created public sympathy for me. They would not have so crudely exploited my uncon ventional marriage and my financial relations with old Kllersly. Put they dared not go near the battle field; they had to trust to agents whom their orders and suggestions reached by the most roundabout ways; and they were busier with their enterprises that Involved immediate and great gain or loss of money. When Galloway died, they learned that the Coal stocks with which they thought I was loaded down were part of his estate. They satisfied them selves that I was in fact as impreg nable as I had warned Langdon. Ttiey reversed tactics; Roebuck tried to make it up with me. "If he wants to see me," was my invariable answer to the intimations of his emissaries, "let him come to my office, just as I would go to his, if I wished to see him." "He is a big man a dangerous big man," cautioned Joe. "Pig yes. Put strong only against his own kind." replied I. "One mouse can make a whole herd of elephants squeal for mercy." ' "It isn't prudent, it isn't prudent," persisted Joe. "It is not," replied I. "Thank God. Tin at last in the position I'v been toiling to achieve. I don't have to be prudent. I can say and do what I please, without fear of the conse quences. I can freely indulge in the luxury of being a man. That's cost ly. Joe, but it's worth all it could cost." Joe didn't understand me he rarely did. "I'm a hen. You're an eagle," said he. CHAPTER XXVIII. A HOUSEWARMING. Joe's daughter, staying on and on at Dawn JIlll. was chief lieutenant. If not principal. In my conspiracy to drift Anita day by day further and further Into the routine of the new life. Yet neither of us had shown by word or look that a thorough understanding existed between us. My part was to be unobstrusive. friendly, neither in different nor eager, and I held to it by taking care never to be left alone with Anita; Alva's part was to be her self simple and natural and sensible, full of life and laughter, mocking at those moods that betray us into the absurdity of taking ourselves too se riously. I was getting ready a new house in town as a surprise to Anita, afid I took Alva into my plot.' "I wish Anita's part of the house to be exactly to her liking." said I. "Can't you set her to dreaming aloud what kind of place she would like to live in, what she would like to open her eyes on In the morning, what surroundings she'd like to dress in and read in, and all that?" Alva had no difficulty in carrying out the suggestions. And by harass ing Westlake Incessantly, I succeeded In realizing her report of Anita's dream to the exact shade of the draperies and the silk that covered the walls. Hy pushing the work, I got the house done Just as Alva was warning me that she could not remain longer at Dawn Hill, but must go home and get ready for her wedding. When I went down to arrange with her the last details of the surprise;, who should meet me at the station but Anita her self? I took one glance at her serious face and, much disquieted, seated my self beside her In the little trap. In stead of following the.U8ual route to the house she turned tier horse Into the bayshore road. "Several days ago," she began, as the bend hid the station, "I got a let ter from some lawyers, saying that an uncle of mine had given me a large sum of money a very large sum. I have been Inquiring about It, and find It Is mine absolutely." 4To be Continued.). A MID-WINTER VERDiuT. "Bright Sunshine All Winter," Is What a Western Canada Lady Says. Maidstone, Sask., Canada, Feb. 4, 1907. C. J. Proughton, Esq., Canadian Government Agent, Chicago, 111. Dear Sir: Pelng so well pleased with Canada we wish my father and brother to come here. Will you please send them reading matter on Canada. We have been here nearly a year and are delighted with this country. We have lived in Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan and we find Canada away ahead of any of them. We have had bright sunshine all winter so far, only two nice, easy snow storms. If it was not all right you know I would not want my father and brother to come here, but we think it is grand. Yours truly. (Signed) MRS. ED. TROUPE. Energetic Claridon Women. That the women of East Clarldjv have fallen heir to the masculine a ergy which built the houses and farujt around this neighborhood is shown 'j the fact that when you meet a te' the women nearly always are driviaj. In this the women excel, and it only an occaslopal farmer's team which does not seem to be in posses sion of some' woman. Chicago TJi uue. j A DANGEROUS CASE. Permanently Cured by Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy Best Kidney and Liver f Medicine. In 188C W. J. Pllyou. of Hyde Park, N. Y., was cured permanently of rheumatism and billiousness by Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. His case was a severe and dangerous one. He said at that time: "Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy has no equal." Now, in 190G (20 years after), Mr. Pllyou says: "My health Is good. My best wishes for Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy." Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Rem edy makes permanent cures. Won derfully successful for over 31 years. FREE SAMPLE POTTLE. Simply write to Dr. David Ken nedy's Sons, Rondout, N. Y., for a free sample bottle and say that you saw this liberal offer in this paper. Largo bottles fl.00, at all druggists. MADE HIS MEANING PLAIN. Indian's Answer a Real Triumph of Quiet Sarcasm. Georfje Vaux. Jr., of Philadelphia, has been appointed a member of the board of Indian commissioners. Mr. Vaux told a reporter the other day an Indian story. "There was a certain commission er." he said, "who treated the Indians with rude scorn. One day a chief en tertained this man in his tepee, tell ing him over the tobacco many quaint legends. "Odc legend concerned a plague of grasshoppers. The chief told elo quently how grasshoppers overran the land, eating the grain, and how the medicine men averted a mine by offering a silver grasshopper to the Great Spirit, whereupon all that deluge of grasshoppers disappeared. "Put the commissioner scoffed at the tale. " 'Are you Indians such fools, he said, 'as to believe such rubbish?' . '"O, no,' said the chief, gravely, 'or we'd long ago have offered the Great Spirit a silver pale face.'" Milwaukee Sentinel. Quick Cure Effected. Saturday afternoon an Atchison young lady complained of sore and tired feet. She was so crippled that her father carried her upstairs. A few hours later she was invited to at tend a dancing party that night. She not only went, but danced until thre o'clock Sunday morning. Atchison Globe. THE WHOLE FAMILY. Mother Finds a Food for Grown-Ups and Children as Well. Food that can be eaten with relish and benefit by the children as well as the older members of . the family, makes a pleasant household commod ity. Such a food is Grape-Nuts. It not only agrees with and builds up chil dren, but older persons who, from bad habits of eating, have become dyspep tic. A Phlla. lady, after being benefited herself persuaded her husband to try Grape-Nuts for stomach trouble. She writes: "About eight years ago I .had a se vere attack of congestion of stomach and bowels. From that time on, I had to be careful about eating, as nearly every kind of food then known to me, seemed to cause pain. "Four years ago I commenced to use Grape-Nuts. I grew stronger and better, and from that time I seldom have been without It; have gained in health and strength and am now heav ier than I ever was. "My husband was also In A bad con dition his stomach became so weak that he could oat hardly anything with comfort I got him to try Grape nuts, and he soon found his stomach trouble had disappeared. "My girl and boy, 3 and 9 years old, do not want anything else for break fast but Grape-Nuts, and mote healthy children cannot be found." Name riven by Postum Co., Pat tie Creek, Mich. Read the little booklet. "The Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. Thers'i a reason," Tone Up With Good Paint It i good business to keep prop, erty 4toned up." A coat of PureWhite Lead Paint not only makes things look better and gives them a higher idling Talue, but it makes things wear better and gives them a higher value for long wear. Pure White Lead gives an opaque, durable coat that protects and pre serves from the ravages of time and wrather. Prospective buyers of Pure White Lead have heretofore been tubject to much attempted fraud in adulteration and sub stitution. You are now pro tected by the Dutch Boy trade mark which is found on the side of kegs containing only Pure White Lead, made by the Old Dutch Process. Look for the boy. SEND FOR BOOK A Tlk om Plnt" gi lui.l infoiw nation on tha Mint aulijwt. Moot l(t opua raq ueu. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in mhicffr of th iWJwi. tng ctttf i nrarrtt tun; KawTork. Morton. Hutalo. C1valaa4, Cincinnati. Chian. ht. Louia, t"atlail phialJoan T. Lrwia Broa. Co. PUUtmrga (baiionaj Lead Oil Oo Satan is willing to let men go to church on Sunday if they work for him the remainder of the week. Catarrh Cannot B Cured with LOCAL APPLICATION'. a they cannot we tha teat of tba dtneaac. Catarrh 1 a biwxl or eonMl tutlimal dlneancaod In order to cure It jron muHtaka Internal rrnied!. II all's Catarrh Curat takrn In ternally, and acta directly on tha blood and mucoae urfacei. Hall'a Catarrh Cure It nt quack medi cine. It wai preacrllted by onsof the het phrK.'aiia la ttili country fur year and It a regular preTlpUu. It It composed of tbe heat tonic known, couiblD ! with tha hem blood purifler, acting directly oa tba Riucnui nurfacei. Tbe perfect combination of tba two Ingredient 1 what produce aucb wonderful re sults lu curing catarrh. Send for testimonial, frwa. K. .1. CHKSEV A CO., Prop., Toledo, O. Sold hr T)rii(rjrlt. price 7V.. Ttka Uall's Family Pills forcontUpatloa. Matrimonial Infelicity. Divorces are, happ'ly, rare 1n so ciety circles. Separation by mutual consent, however, grows more fre quent every year. Every one has upon his or her visiting list husbands and wives who never meet If they can help it, but between whom there has never been an open breach. Incom patibility of temper is the usual cause, and the reason for that la, ona imagines, the still common custom of encouraging the younger generation to marry before they have begun to approach years of discretion. Lo don Throne. GENERAL BREAKDOWN A Condition Which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, the Great Blood Tonic, Have Been Curing for Years. There Is no moro perplexing trouble for a physician to treat than debility cases, especially in women. In which there is no acute disease but in which the patient every day sinks lower ani lower despite changes of medicine and similar experiments. That Dr. Williams' Pink Pills win restore health under these conditions Is no speculation but the fact has been proved In hundreds of cases similar to that of Mrs. Sarah Ramsey, of 100S St. John St., Litchfield, 111. She says "I never felt well after my first child was born. I had a gnawing pain in my stomach and could not hold any food down. My head ae..d a great deal and sometimes the patn went all through my body. I had dizzy spells so that I could not stand and seemei to be half blinded with pain. The spells would often last for over an hour. My blood seemed to be In a very poor condition and my hands and feet were like Ice. I seemed to b growing weaker and weaker and couM not get around to do my work ta the honse. I was extremely nervous and the least excitement would bring on a dizzy spell. "For a number of years I was under a doctor's care but seemed to get ir better. I had heard about Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills and I began to take them. I soon felt better and garnM In weight and strength. My nerve sre strong now and I am a well woman In every way." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are soM by all druggists or will be sent, post paid, on receipt of price. 50 cents per box. six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company. Schenvs tady, N. Y. A booklet of valuable In formation, entitled "Plain Talks to Women. sent free on request. Don't Push The horse can draw the load without help, if you reduce friction to almost nothing by applying iMicaAxli se to the "wheels. No other lubri cant ever made ft wears so long and saves so much horsepower. Next time ttf Mica Axlb Gtk. Standard Oil Co. laura nana 1 ' l ctinTwiHem mr wry sv snai tlM r .wla.Mev