The Cure that Cures Coughs, Colas, Grippe, Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis and Incipient Consumption, la olios Tta German remedy Cameras atvi Vutwv iXstasM. i hi a AtumVs. 25650cAf BUY GOOdS IN CHICAGO Have you tried the Catalogue system of buying EVERYTHING you use at Wholesale Prices 7 We can save you la to 40 per cent, on your purchases. We are now rrectinq and will own and occupy the highest building in America, employ 2.000 clerks filling country ordnrs exclusively, and will relund purchase nr'ce it goods don't suit you. Our Genoral Catalogue 1.000 pages, 16,000 (lustrations. 60.000 quotations costs us 72 :ents to print and mail. We will send it to you upon receipt of 1 5 cents, to show your good faith. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. MICHIGAN AVE. AND MADISON ST. CHICAGO. D! LOOP POISON k A KDtTni A I TY nary,8o lary HUMID l'OISON permanent!! I faatiorLt- f. TKi.mo prion under sumo guaraa l y . 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For the fiftieth time, at K-ust, Chillnye repeated this phrnse to Mme. de Ny in be, who, skeptical and bored, replied: "To bcunn with, don't tell me so again; really, my dearChOlaye, nothing is more monotonous and less new than your perpetual cooinff." "Hut you enn't imagine how 1 love you! Ii you demanded my heart's blood, I would give it to the lost drop, gladly." "Don't tie ularmed; I won't demand it!" "Put me to the test- give a Bign, a more sign, and I'll follow you to the ends of the earth, on my knees." "Really, now, would you?" asked Mine, de Xymbe, suddenly thoughtful. "Wouldn't 1!" cried Chillaye. "In deed, I would1!" Berangere reflected nn instant, then, looking tixedly at dazzled Chillaye: "I take you up." Seeing his stupefaction, she contin ued, laughing: "I don't quite demand that of you you propose to follow me to the ends of the earth on your knees I consent to your following me to Nice on horseback. It's not so far, nor so tiring." "What! you Intend" "Yes you know I detest the railway, with its jolting, its smudges, the pro miscuity, the hurried meals eaten at greasy tubles, while waiters shout at jour ear: 'Don't hurry, ladies and gen tlemen, 15 minutes yet!' It is ull odious and prevents my traveling." "And so?" "So, as I want to go to Nice, I've de cided to go by horseback, by slow stages." "But it will take nt least a fortnight," "Say three weeks I'm In no hurry. Well, are you not delighted at the pros pect ?" "Of course certainly but, you know, on horseback it is hard to talk. Why not by post carriage? Delightful, they say." "Arc you really naif enough to think I'd start out with you like that en tete-a-tete like a wedding Journey f "I'm sure I'd ask nothing better." "Well, I do. You draw back we won't say anything more about it." "What makes you say I draw hack? I'm simply bo overjoyed, so overcome, that I can't find words" "That will do. I can guess them." "When shall we start?" "To-day is Tuesday; why not this day week?" T am entirely at your orders." "Besides, before we start we will see each other again to talk the cam paign over." Kissing Mme. de Nymbe's taper fin gers, Chillaye departed, lrke a conquer ing hero. Toasting himself at the reg ister In the hall, he saw himself already In the flowers and sunshine of Nice. The cold outside air brought him up short; turning up his collar, he grum bled: "B-r-rr! it's freezing! Whutwill it be on horseback? My hands and feet are always cold, even in July. Let's hope the weather will be decent. How will poor White Cat take the rood, I wonder? She's not fit; I feed her too high, till she's ready to burst. I'm big and heavy and like broad horses, other wise they look aa if I were breaking their backs and looks are everything In the Bois. Why do pretty women have such absurd notions?" In spite of Chillaye's timid sugges tion that two o'clock, after lunch, was a good hour to start, Mme. de Nymbe had fixed the time at sharp eight. White Cat stepped out coquettlshly, not guessing what was shead of her. The coupe, filled with luggage, was standing In the courtyard. Chillaye was penetrated by a soft emotion when he saw his valise standing among Mme. de Nymbe'B bags and his rug tightly rolled around one of her numreous wraps. "What a delicious intimacy this Jour ney will bring about!" he exclaimed to himself, looking at his watch to see If he was en time. Tie was, but she was not, A message came asking him to wait a few moments. How altered the drawing room looked. No fire, no flowers, no tumbled cushions, no opened Bcore on the piano no bonbone, nothing! How often he hod drawn up his big pouf before the bright hearth and listened to Berangere talk, half hidden and curled up in the dim brocade arms of her favorite chair! In ptte of industrious pacing up and down, he was literally frozen when Mme. de Nymbe appeared at nine. The sight of her in her riding-habit, pretty enough to eat, warmed him up a bit. Preoccupied as she was, she ran gayly down the stairs without discov ering that he was blue. The maid got Into the loaded coupe. The valet got up by the coachman, and the grooms led out the horses. Here was poor Chil laye's first discomfiture. He expected to give Mme. de Nymbe's little foot a bit of a squeeze as he assisted her to mount, but when he approached to per form the ngreeable task, she said that only her old coachman knew her move ment, and, putting her hand on the old fellow's shoulder, she was up like a bird. "What an awful fog there Is!" she excloimed. "I hate it! don't your "Still, perhaps it is better than cold." "Yes, but I wanted sunshine, at least for our first day. Whnt road shall we follow? I suppose you've traced our itinerary?" "No, I haven't traced anything. But I suppose we go out by the Barrierre d'ltalle." "Where is that?" "Oh, a long way off; near the Gobe lins." "But I haven't the faintest idea the Gobelins are!" "They're across the river." "Where in the world are wo? This fog ta thick." "I think we're near the Talais de l'ln dustrie. Be careful; you'll run into a tree I" "MonDieu! how dangerous riding it is in such weather!" "What if we should postpone start ing till the day is more favorable?" timidly ventured Chillaye. "Never! How easily you get discour aged! By the way, where shall we lunch?" "Fifteen miles from Taris. We must not think of lunching before one or half-past." "That's awfully late! Don't you know of any nice restaurant, near the Barrierre d'ltalieV" "No, I confess that quarter never at tracted me; it never occurred to me to say: 'What If 1 should go and dine near the Itarriere d'ltalie?' " "So, then, you never thought of plnnning our stages?" "But" "I guessed ns much! So I am having Huptiste.my old coachman, follow me on horseback. He'll show us the way and not make the mistakes you're guilty of, my dear Chillaye. We must not go out at all by the way of Barriere d'ltalle." "Well, but Nice is near Italy, and It seemed to me but I I'd far rather fol low Baptiste and avoid responsibilities. Anil, positively, in this fog, It's lucky you've provided yourself with a better guide than I, or we'd either get lost or have to turn back." Mme. de Nymbe called Batiste, who detached himself from the two grooms. "Batllte, we will take the road we agreed upon." Turning townrd Chillaye I "Now, since you've nothing more serious to do, amuse me a little. What's the news, les petits potlns?" "Here goes," thought Chillaye; "now TU have to sparkle the whole way." "I'm all ears. Was Clotilde at the opera house last night V "Yes." "With Du King?" "I don't know. Perhaps he came after I lcftr-I went away early, you know. I'm not used to getting up at daybreak, and if you remember you said 'eigltt o'clock sharp.' " "Ah! you're emphasizing 'sharp' to make me understand that I was late. You're compluinlng of having to wait a few moments In the drswing-room " "I wouldn't complain if" "If?" "If there had been any Are but" "Oh, 1 beg your pardon! It must have been forgotten in the hurry of my departure. Were you very cold ?" "Bather, thank you!" At this instant White Cat, startled at an omnibus she had not made out in the fog, and not pulled up promptly enough by the stiffened hands of br rider, came down on all lours, ana sprang up so wildly that Chillaye was a bit shaken. ' "Mon Dieu!" cried Mme. do Nylnbo, "you almost lost your seat!" "Not at all," said Chillaye, annoyed. "Yes, you did. I saw you. I hope you're not 111. Don't you think it's nice to go to Nice on horseback? Admit that if you'd been alone you'd have turned back already?" "Ah ca! Certainly I would never have thought of riding to Nice by slow stages alone; but with you, what wouldn't 1 do? Dieu! How pretty you are this morning fresh, rosy, rested" "Not like you tjjrn, for you look" "Ah! how do 1 look?" questioned Chillaye, nervously, fearing for his al ready contented prestige; "it's true I'm tired and " "You can rest to-night; go to bed at eight if you like." "No, I don't like I never con go to Bleep early." "Well, it's a pity, for I intend to re tire every night directly after dinner." "Allons," reflected Chillaye, more and more depressed; "this little expedition is not going to be very amuBing, de cidedly." They rode into a wood. "Where are we?" he asked. "I looked at a military map before starting, and 1 saw no wood on our road." "It's the forest of of Vllle d'Av ray " "How Is that? Are we going to Nice by wuy of Villa d'Avruy?" "Don't worry; I tell you Baptiste knows the road. Don't you breathe quite a new air?" "I can't breathe at all in this smoth ering fog." "And then this wood is wilder than the Bois de Boulogne what a different iicent it has." "It's not half so pretty aa the Bois, and the scent is that of soot, just as in all fogs." "Are you lees cold trotting?" "No, my hands and feet are icy." "Why, have you got hands and feet like a fish?" "You are unkind, madaxnW If you knew how ill at ease I am, perhaps you wouldn't chaff me." "But, really, you know, you look pre pared for cold, and brigands, too. Dien me pardonne!" She pointed at a yellow leather case fastened to the saddle. "I took that revolver along" "I'm not finding fault. An excellent Idea, on the contrary. What's that oth er thing?" "Some madeira and a cup." "Another good notion, more prac tical than the revolver. I say! You're enormous! How much clothing have you got on?" "But" "Speak up, be honest!" "I've got on a vest, a thin one and over that a warmer one; a hunting vest you know one of those English concerns, knitted angora rabbit; then a coat and an overcoat." "Only one overcoat?" "Oh! I have got on another one, but it's very thin; besides, It's bitterly cold." "And those boots, like barrels! Sid some ancestor hand them down to yovj or did you have them made for some masked ball?" "They're only fuMined ones I've re cently had made." "Recently?" "Yes a week ago." "To wear to Nice?" "Yea." Mme. de Nymbe burst into a laugh; Chillaye felt annoyed. "Positively," he said, sulkily, "as soon as one leaves Paris, the country becomes hideously monotonous; these paths we've been following for the last hour look all alike." "Well, but we don't complain of rid-, Ing daily on the same roads in the Bois?" "Yes, but the Bois is quite a different matter to this, and far prettier." Chillaye began to be In a horrible temper. Mine, de Nymbe's good humor was irritating. And he envied every thing about her her thick veil, the heavy, golden coils that protected her neck, even her position in the saddle, for lie was getting a veritable cramp. The prospect of passing whole days to gether astride broad-flanked White Cat filled him with terror. Seeing old Bap tiste forging ahead, turning to right and left without hesitation, crossing bridges, mounting slopes, Chillaye asked: "Has your coaehmiin ridden to Nice before?" "Not all the way, but he knows the beginning. Isn't the country growing pretty? Look at that little island. There's nothing near Paris as pretty." "It's an Island like another, it seems to me. The Grande Yatte is far pret tier." "Do you think so'.' The day is im proving. The fog bus not entirely cleared yet, but the sun can be felt through it." "I should say so. It's given me an awful headache; It must be a sun stroke!" "Why, sunstrokes drive people mad." "That's about it, otherwise do you think I would jog to Nice by slow stages?" "You certainly show no enthusiasm, my oor Chillaye." "You didn't stipulate for enthusiasm you must admit that when one is suf fering from n sunstroke, one's mood " "Surely, you don't suppose a pale sun like that" "All the more dangerous, because one takes no precautions; I'm not used to the low hat I've got on. A tall hot heats the head leBS, because itis farther away from It." "Yes, but it's nearer the sun, so that it amounts to the sume thing." "Now you're dialling me.' "Not at all. But you're In such bad form that I'm inclined to give you back your word and go to Nice without you. Good-by. Hurry back to Paris I" "Hurry? Why, we're three hours from Paris." "Nevertheless, here we are at the Boulevard Maillot and the Garden of Accllmatation; in a quarter of an hour you can be at home. For the last two hours we have been riding in the Bois. When you said just now that the Grande Yatte was prettier than the Is land I wanted you fo admire, we were passing the Grande Yatte." "It is this cursed fog!" "Perhaps. But admit that even in fine weather you would not have guessed where you are, for you only know a few alleesin the Bois. Good-by, Chillaye, don't propose to unyone else to go to the ends of the earth with them they might take you at your word!" "And you are you going to Nice?" "I never thought of such B thing! I'm going back to lunch. Good apjie tlte!" And off she rode at a brisk trot. The fog having cleared, the weather was radiant; swarms of riders, detained by the thick morning, were now coming to the Bois at the usual hour for leaving It. Chillaye, recovering from hisstape faction, rode slowly down the avenue, reflecting that he had been done. "Mme. de Nymbe Is mad. She has cooled me off, and I am glad of it. She's pretty, of course devilishly pretty but she's far too original. Ah ca! What are all those simpletons staring at me for? Do I look like a man who has just been made a fool of? Do they read it in my face? Positively, Xaln trailles laughed as he passed me. What's wrong about me? Ah, saprlsti! It's my ridiculous get-up; my boots, and my flask, and my hat, and the re volver especially the revolver! Hang It all! What wouldn't I give to be rid of the revolver. Good enough! Here are the Flirts and one of the litUe Blrfrays, and D'Oronge. I must get rid of it, at all cost." And sidling up to the edge of the road, in spite of the efforts cf those who wanted to keep to their right, he man aged to fling the revolver into a bed of gilly flowers. Just aa be passed the Flirts and their escort, a policeman ran after him, brandishing the revolver. "M'sieu, m'sieti! You have lost some thing!" Adapted for the Argonaut from the French of "Gyp." Slept Four Honrs a Day, Alexander von Humboldt, the great German philosopher and traveler, rarely spent more than four hours in bed, and, on the testimony of Sir James Sawyer, was frequently content with two hours; nnd Littre, who lived to be 80, thought that to spend more than five hours a day in bed was shameful self-indulgence. Although his invaria ble hour of rising was 8 o'clock, he scarcely ever left his desk until 3 in the morning, or until sunrise warned him thht a new day hod dawned. Many of England's greatest men have scorned the delights of bed while living "labori ous days." Brunei, the great engineer, who lived to be 80, rarely spent more than four hours in bed at any time of his crowded life; and Sir William Arrol, the engineer of Tay and Forth bridges, and the Brunei of our day, rises earlier than any of his employes, and will frequently crowd 20 hours' .work into one day during the progress of his great enterprises. London Mail. Questions for Women If you were offered sure aid in time of trouble would you put it aside and accept something of doubtful efficiency ' If you saw before you a strong and safe bridge leading to your goal, would you ignore it to try some insecure and tottering structure? The answer to these questions is plain. You would, of course, choose without hesitation whut all evidence showed to be the safe thing, and you would risk nothin.-j in useless experi ments. Why then do some women risk one of their most precious possessions their health in trying medicines of unknown value, which may even prove hurtful to them. Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has stood the test of years. It lias the largest sale of any remedy for female ills in the world, and nothing could have given it this sale except its own merit. Do not try any experiments, hut buy what is known to be reliable. Mrs. Pinkham's Compound can do all that is claimed for it, and all statements in regard to it can be easily verified. Write to Mrs. pinkham at Lynn, Mass.. for a little book she has just published containing letters from the mayor of Lynn, the postmaster and the Women's Christian Temperance Union. Mrs. Pinkham's advice is offered free of charge to all women who write to her for aid. This invitation is con stantly renewed. A million women have been cured of serious female il is by Mrs. Pinkham's advice and irt'dicine. Three Letters from One Woman, Showing How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound Cured Falling of the Uterus: "Dk.au Mrs, Pinkham I see your adverti . .. . nt in the papers in regard to treating woman's diseases, and would be grateful to you for your ad vice in ray case. I am suffering from falling of womb, hav(j pains in my sides and legs, In fact I ache all over. 1 am getting so weak I cannot stand on my feet much. I have the head ache sometimes, and a choking, tight feeling in my breast and throat. Have a baby seven months old. 1 hope to hear from you soon, as I am in so much distress." Mas. J. R. Comfton, Eggbornsvillc, Va., May 16, 1808. "Dkar. Mns. Pinkham I followed your advice and I am now on the sec ond bottle of your Vegetable Com pound and I think it is going to cure me. If it does I will ever praise it, for I am, and have been, a great suf ferer; but now I live in hopes of getting well." Mns. J. R. Compton, Eggbornsville, Vs., July 18, 1898. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham Again I write to you. When I first wrote to ?ou for advice in regard to my troubles thought I could never get well again. After receiving your letter I followed your advice exactly, and thanks to you, I am cured of that dreadful disease. I cannot find words to ex press the good your medicine will do. It is really more than was recom mended to me." Mrs. J. K. Comfton, Eggbornsville, Va., April 12, 1890. Two Women Cured of Irregularity. Falling of the Uterus and Ovarian Trouble. PDear Mrs. Pinkham I have female weakness. Menstruation ir regular, and I suffer hearing-down pains in left side and hip. My doctor said I had womb trouble and enlarge ment of the ovaries. I have doctored two months, but see no improvement" Miss Mary E. Rked, Swan Creek, 111. "Dear Mrs. Pinkham Your good advice has been worth more than all I ever received from a doctor. Words cannot express my gratitude to you for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. Aftertwelve years' suffering I am stout and healthy." Miss Mary K. Rked, Swan Creek, 111., April 28, 1899. " Dear Mrs. Pinkham I suffer female troubles. Mv doctor wishes i my ovaries taken out, but I shall never consent. Menstruation is irreg ular and my head has a tired feeling. Hospital treatment does me no good. I have five children and am forty-four years old. Please advise what medi cine to take." Mrs. E. 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