to prctect themselvesâ€"by frequent washing and baths. Children of can sumptives should be taught tb: \:.(- tue of ckaniiness at the ear}: ~: pas- Bible moment. The parents ' ii of- ‘ Ber premiums to the clean" and girl. “The home of the it ever so poor. s-hc -w a cwsumpnve I0 neglec: bod- ily cleanlmess is nothing short of crime. Daily baths or washings from head to foot must never be dispensed with under any Circumstantmo “For 31 consumpn ily cleanlmess is crime. DEâ€? baths other way. "Furthermore, each atflxcted person should have his 0 r her (mu bed, towels, knives, and forks, etc. "The body and other linen of the consumptive ShOUld not be run in .1... -kuupuses wno marry, or who become infected after lessen thei lives and health cleanliness. r reaponsibihty .I‘oi‘ the of others by absolute wife wuï¬jd be livelihood, "Permission to ma: withheld for two years 83mpi0ms have ceased. _ â€This prohibition is rative when the con: gs living by hard lubc wife Would be forced 1 livelihood. an early age. "50 Consum PiiVe shuuh ‘ Me 1313 spin "Remember that duty to Prevent by 'umpli‘v’e son or dau ‘n early age. .l\' ,v v “5". a sufferer. and Vic quently the childre and sometimes the ers bring in the fa "The danger to and companions is more squalid the more limited the ro« ex their nourinhmn or men nourishment. PROTECTION EOR TL "Remember that everything ed to tax a person’s ph) strength beyond the average hz tendency to deveIOp the seeds of . , each act of overstrai tends to increase the danger.†"Remember that personal i1 consumptives healthy people does more the disease than any orhpr "In my will I have set aside a sum that will pay for the publication of these rules in more permanent form, enamel, or iron shields, but we can’t wait for that. Delay may mean loss of life to many." “In my cabinet you will ï¬nd a draft for 10,000 roubles on the administrat- or of apanages in St. Petersburg. This. .I am informed will suffice for the priming. Eorne ten days before his death, he called Naval Lieutenant G. A. Boiss- mann, his Adjutant, to his bedside in the fairy castle of Abbes Tuman, Cau- casus, where he had been established (or the last years: “George Alex- nndrovitch," he said, “send this paper to the Imperial Publication office at once and order 1,000,000 cepxes to be printed and distributed among all the governments of Russia. One shall be hung up in each town-house, city hall church, chapel, railway station, and in every Other place of public re- sort and the elders, Councilmen and hatmen must be asked to read the’ paper once a week to those unable to read themselves. Almost the last act performed by the late Czarevitch George, who died recently, of consummion after long tad terrible sufferings, was to approâ€" priate 10,000 roubles for the publica- tion of a set of rules and regulations for the benefit of consumptives. TO PROTECT THE SICK AND HEALTHY. Who I‘d-ll A Vlcfl- To The Dread Handy -spclt ll: Wall-g life In Study of The DIM-aw and loptd to Prevent 1:» Spread. RULES LEFT BY CZAREVITCH GEORGE 0F RUSSIA WARD OFF CONSUMPTION. consumptive to uusvdnd will make his wife . and xice versa: very fle- xe children are also affected, lmes the servants and oth- in the famih. nger to children, servants “"0 years :25 act. 3 ner system. If the dis- tested itself before mar- relations will increase that it is __--\..Lu, at'l'VaDTS is the greater the .= surroundings; the room Space, the poor- Mnm O- c"misnmlptive, be ShuAuId marry .dt everything cal- a person’s physical the average has a TH E HEALTHY. z'ry should Practically im- marrying at Y9 ma keg parent's ’.V dur- "ants COD- Wife COD- câ€"vvv u a I mate m the money 103‘ Lhroughout the world during year. The amount is placed at 000,000, of which 830,000 000 is 1. English race. courses, and, strax say, about $100,000,000 on A‘ust' courses. The remainder is chiel tributed betweep France, the 1 States and Brimqh m1--.“ r, Emperor Alexa: and his sister-iu-law, the Czarina had literary aSpiratio ' to publish a work on threatened to ' he: preached has al ' Ever since the regulations he asked 1118 subjects to} adtpt for their own good W hen he lay ,! on his deathbed To set an example to his people ' s'vera'nda, terraces, ghouses of Castle 11' I l bbas Tuman. and: . whenever a cou ' f j that his sputum he whisked aw- ' I istantly and without the possibility of g‘ : danger to Others. I‘hose provisions of ' ; .I the rules that apply to married peo-! 'ple indicate perhaps that th imore in th ' »‘ ' beautiful girl, attached to the Tiflis Postoï¬ice, Perhaps he. was, after all, ried to his sweetheart and thus had v Opportunity to test ‘the instructions t given for healthy wives’ and children’s i I protection. . 1 really mar- s emu, uuw uex-ng adepts of the sign â€â€˜ § angulage. George was very fond of: 5 the revolutionary poets, Berangere be- 3n Ebieng his favorite, and Boissmann} 'in the same way before the eyes ofé fthe Imperia‘l patient, who held very 3 E liBeral views ° cannot be enforced by la police, scientists time and again, '0 Grand Duke, brot w or by the have pointed 0m: ut when a Russian her and heir of th to appeal to man’s that is quite another thing. The late Czarevitch knew and that. the pUbIIC had [0 be educated nn The two-hour rule, however, applied to the Adjutant as well as to other attendants. Though his Imperial Highness was most unhappy without 'ihim, the Lieutenant was allowed to ’ 'see him only one hour in the morning land another at night: 01' late, when l Sometimes the young men carried on 5 an animated conversation through the ,‘ iglass, both being adepts of the Sign, llangulage. George was very fond of. That sanitary measures 1 cannot be enforced by law police, scientists have pc time and again, but when London The late Prince employed no court officers, no Marshals, grand and petty charges. His only Adjutant, Lieuten- ant Boiss'mann, was a dear personal friend. who refused to leave him, though George offered him liberty to When you consider the fact that you go and a large pension time and u-â€"v -VV‘ the time they ha‘d to devote to bodily exercise, bathing and walking in the Open. “If some minute tuberculosis bacilli crept into their system while waiting upon me or amusing me,†be likened to say, “it must be eXpelled by the quickest possible methéd.†The above rules were worked out in substance by the late Czarevitch’s fav- orite physician, but, for purposes of the publication just ordered, they ‘were extended and amplified to suit the great masses. Grand Duke George himself followed the principles involv- ed in every particular. He was a humane man, and the fear of dragging others with him to the grave was al- ways uppermost in his mind. It be- came almost a mania with him, and his attendants and body servants were never allowed to be on duty morel than _two hours per day. The rest of I F "If these measures are carried out in all particulars the consumptive husband or wife will~be largely bene- fited in body and mind, and several years will be added to their lives: w bile their children,servants and com- pamons will be safeguarded against :nfection as far as that is pos- Cible'.†LARGEST DAIRY. 10D magazzne gives the money lost. on IURE L " \E (I) her, Emperor Alexander, ' _, the Czarina, he aSpirauons and intended runu uuke practiced what has already been nou’ced. he true character of his diagnosed, he submitted .so Lt, of course, reasons or. permit that. The could ill afford tto hat age of its mem- s 0“â€. , most onerous of the :ked his subjects to rn good when he lay To set an example F\ RESULTS. ‘9 the â€"â€" v - . [him I said, politely :â€" th . . . £81133)?! "Will you kindly direct me to the ngere be- 3nearest camping ground?†015511131313 i "Tell me now, are you Edward the great f rigs and S Wood 3’ 'he asked. Thls sudden quesâ€" ira," “Le ltion, couched intones redolent of the Lise†and {“Ould counthrie,†took my by surprise, 8 f fbut I answered, promptly; 'es 0 . n ’ . eld Very I lies, that Is my name.» '5. The 3 “Faith. then, we have been on the n for his 3 lookout .Me own name is Patrick Cogan, and? H" ;I belong to the same department as; the SOTti . by the , yourselfâ€"sorryl can’t accompany you§ led 0m homeâ€"too busy. But I’ll write a amen: Be scribbled a few of the , them to a men, under whose guidance .3 igh un- 51 duly reached the bungalow, introâ€" .‘5 and of .‘duced myself to the lady of the house, 5 . classes! ' " " “ “ eszi- pre- Without the f1y~and9 as is stances, insu charge of She: ies to the aln Skin of the an have DCDMrorI b1 . it, ot Which they are mowtaily afraid, and which rejoices in the outlandish name of ‘tenduah,’ has taken possession of their ï¬elds, and they want me to either kill it or drive At the time I had not been very long in India, and was temporarily posted as assistant engineer to the Etawah branch of the Granges Canal. As the 1 line of rail from Cawnpore to Etawah ' was on the point of completion, our 1 jE‘tawaih, then unknown ground to me. ' fOn entering the station 1 espied a ' European hard at work with theodolite ! ‘and chain, surveying; stepping up to: l'hi1n I said politelv ‘ m. we animal Peppued the insmmly wk he continues, “Of course, the young hunter was horribly mauled in the en- counter, but by his splendid defeat he lsaved his own and a fellow creature’s life.†It is the story of this deed. heard from the lips of the hero of the advemure, that is narrated by Cap- tain Cecil Dyce, and as far as possible in his .Own words. The hero, sayS Captain Dyce, is my friend, Captain Edward \Vood, formerly Conservator, of Woods and Forests in the northwest provinces of India, but noiv retired: hid Dashed "s Brains Out Against 8 Treeâ€"Graphic Mflpflon of a land- to “and Con-m for ure Between Man and Beast. An Anglo-hdian aut'hor‘ of repute, who writes underth-e‘ noun de plume of ‘Mauri, in a'book entitled “Sport and Work in the Ne-paul Frontier,†men-j tions incidentally that a powerful young Scotchman belonging to the Forest Department, in a struggle “1th a leopard,‘ ‘by pure physical strength dashed the ammal’ s brains out against the jagged edges of the stump of a sal tree.†A line or two lower down I HUNTER SEIZED THE PIERCE MAL BY THE TAIL EIGHT WITH A LEOPARD. la 3 E1110 1 W‘ and Inch as get tiï¬g a. uiifle Iged to fancy that; a general dm and hubbub. our bled a few lines lxâ€"na-Ez‘lildbeï¬â€™ gogn, gnder whose guiï¬ance? . ', inuoâ€"f {31: w phe lady of the house,i Igua'aung tub, and pro-gently; ‘ Y‘l 1i hf): 1.1+ 9..-! ad‘ded 30E; __..- “J “cwrlp‘ with considerable dif- r the circumsltances must of necesmty’be sed- It seemed to me T _ - _ 1 Was clutching he?!) his farms i :ft with ball. Presently 9 Wheat fields, in which neariy four feet, high, LS well irrigated. Here “AA l.‘__ Leep his £31188? fro; Windpipe, and h: "u-.-_, we have been on the I 1 for some time past is Patrick Cogan, and 3 , same department as [ can’t accompany you 7fly at his onISEI no Time to collect me like a thunder- flred my remain- a missed, and “73.8 A; .L! arc-um- hand WT?! intem .He Pretends to he 333 been £1021 Jvasbg and this IS convened from one Drlsoner to another ' putting as across his e got, say, three "ear;’ Some one is i: years, and this Prisoner to an Putting as acroe impunity, the lips and lower jaws never even being mnvnd n a“. -.A_. They (‘zm Ta} 3 :5 For many weeks I ay seriouslj' ill. ’ 5wit’h fever, delirium, blood poisoning -{and their concomitants. 'Dhe sur- lg’geom's at: one time wished to amputate Umy arm, but were afraid I might sin'k 'fu'nder the Operation, so fortunately :t‘hey left it alone. At length a good g'consti'tution and the devoted (wreful fnursing I received at the hands of 1ed, and I became convalescent; but it 3was Quite six months before I was,‘ icince more fit for work. My arm, as; 3 you see, 18 badly scarred and indented, r ;so also is my chest, and I have par-. I tially lost the use of two fingers. Oth- i Ierwise, I am thankful to say, I am; inone the worse for the terrible tussle;g ‘I had with that leopard, whose glossy,§ speckled coat I 'hav ' . as a trophy. Of course, it was my; friend Cog-an who, during my illnessu‘ had the skin beautifully cured, and; when I became convalescent present-f ed it to me with a kindly, little speech! The native gun bearer, I am glad to l7 say, recovered very quickly from his}? wounds, which were not of a serious}: nature. - l 5 Of course, the question naturally arises, Where was Cogan all this time, . and 'hOIW was it he was not at: hand to1 Ih'elip me in my difficulty? It must be5 iremembered, however, that neither of !us expected to find a‘leopard in the? §fields, hence Cog-an was at the ex-f Etremirty of the drive, some 100 yvards’ ; distant, and at. the moment I fired his; attentinn .had been diverted by a drove ; an: ---:]_‘I __--, . ‘~â€" ‘vvu VJ u “JUVC of wild pig, which broke. cover quite! close to him. He, however, arrived in time to Witness the final of the fight‘,§ which, though so full of incident. to: myself, could not from first to last9 'have occupied many minutes. ï¬vvvvwâ€" so broke its week; but after the shock I remembered no more, as I must have dropped down in a dead faint, due doubtless to loss 01 blood and exhaus- tion after the terrible excitement of the struggle. COGAN SAW THE FINISH. JAILBIRDS’ SIGN LANGUAGE. my strength into the effort, had swung the leopard clear of the man, and was whi-r'iing the brute round, with my own body answering to the motion. Quite three parts of a circle had been completed when I felt a great shock, and the leopard’s skull seem- ed to crack. It had comic into violent contract with the ugly spiked stump of a sa] tree. Probablyï¬h’e impact al- Then for me. there came a blissful pause in the breathless fight for life I had been waging; yet, strange to say, half a dozen seconds were enough to put new vigor into my relaxed mus- cles. There was the leopard barely two yards off, its superb frame dilat- ing with rage as it stood triumphant over at least one conquered foe. lts hind quarters were nearest me, and ills splendid yellow tail swayed to and fro before my eyes. My shattered, useless gun slipped from my ï¬ngers, focr, to tell the truth, that oscilating tail fascinated and drew me, and be- fore I knew What I was about I had seized it at theroot, and, putting all being. At another time I was sprawling on the ground, the result doubtless of a frenzied effort to throw off the leopard and be free of him, even though it were only for a moment. 0n the latter occasion my zingers came in contaCt with the steel barrels of my weapon; and this proved a godsend, for in the ‘round’ that en-. sued I so battered my spotted foe that, I must have rendered him dizzy. In the meantime, seeing how fully the leopard was occupied. with my luckiess self, some of the natives, recovering from their pani‘ returned, and I re- membe1 quite distinctly that Cogan’s gun-bearer actually succeeded in plac- ing the muzzle of the loaded rifle he carried against the leopard’s body ‘ making the while frantic attempts to pull the trigger, but the gun refused to go off, as it was on half-cock. Nor, in the mad excitement of the moment, could I muster sufficient Hindustani to tell the caperinug idiot of his mis- take. The native, however, paid some.- vs hat dearly for his stupidity, for the leopard suddenly turned from me, and, springing on the poor fellow bore him to the earth. ‘ be reading the V intently. :laws from disemboweling me; While with my right fist I instinctivaly rainâ€" ed down a shower of blows on his head and neck, precisely as though I were in deadly grip with a human Tam to One Anoiher “’llhout Anyunc Knowing It. A BLISSFUL PAUSE. newspaper he many pre- TISSUE PAPER. Tissue Paper get its name from 39.? fact that, when in was first made 1: was gsed to lay between golfi “18:11.. ver 'tlssue c1011: .to keep the {me C 0 from turning Mack. sway has already been referred to. 1' Was a woman, Mme. Maintenon, ‘th Induced the autocratic Louis XIV. {C revoke the edict of Nantes, Bona' Parte paid a very high tribute to MD}? De btael’s ability and power when he declared that France was not iargE enough to hold her and him at the same time, and drove her out- The same shrewd observer declared that the Duchess Hf Angouleme, daughter of Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette, {V35 £118 only man in the Bourbon family“ lhese instances, and the case of “9' toria of England and ChrisLian of spam- [among present potentates, ought 1° Show the Russian Emperor that W013?“ are capable of making a mark in 901" thS- The intimation, of course, of the cable correspondents that the birth 0f daughters to the Czar leaves his throne Wlthout a direct heir in case of ms death is incorrect. It is within the power of the Czar to declare any one Of his three daughters eligible to the throne. This privilege is one of 111“ Prerogatives of absolutism. .Taine remarked that the 3018 pm. Clple which could be clearly discern- ed 111 the absolutism‘ of the old Bour- bon monarchs of France was that “’9 rnen were excluded from the throne. II Brance, however, women have exertec more Influence than in any other coun- try of Europe. Mme. pompadoul’} scause the child borne to Nicholas II, 1y i the other day is a girl instead of a .e, boy will suggest to readers of history :2 g the query as to whether Nicholas ever of ' heard of the person called Catherine i'eEH- Catherine was not only greater l- : than her husband and predecessor on i: g the throne, Peter III., or than her son 'e ; and successor, Paul, but in intellectual. 1ZEuropean history back a century or Eftwo they will discover that women as a , crown wearers have not been outclass- I 5 ed by men. The witty Frenchman who E gave the name of " the war of the !;three petticoats†to the conflict oi ,f1736-63, which is called in European hiatory the seven years’ war, and w 'sknown in American annals as the 'fFrench and Indian war, paid a very 5 high compliment to women. 'l'he "three .‘petticoats †were Maria Theresa, Em IPI‘eSS of Austria; Elizabeth, ltussra's fEmpress, and Mme. Pompauour, W1“ fwas the real directing head of h‘ranct 3 during a large part of the reign of LOU" IXV. These women, and Catherine IL: ‘ who went to the Russian throne shortr» fly after Elizabeth’s death, were POW‘ Jerful forces in European politics, a1. é though they had as contemporaries oi ithe other sex Frederick the Great of ‘Prussia, George 111., of Englanduand Charles 111., the ablest of Spain'slxï¬ngS except Charles I. and his son, Philly 1L Everybody, of course, knows of 191128- beth of England and lsahella of 393199 the last named of whom stood, alone among the patentates of her day 113, grasping the importance of Columbtlï¬ theory, and who gave him the 85519 tance which enabled him to discover a new world. It was her devotion and her money. that made a great career not only possible but easy for her ambitious husband. On one occasion, when was dining at the l‘eCLOI‘I ing in high praise of his Kingsley said, "Please do to me. 1 am only the pointing to his wife, is an sit at the window all ' ing of nothing but home. . fore felt the loneliness of ' out the beloved being whose (New look and word and moLion a notes of my life.†he voted WOMEN AS POTENTATES. , when a friend latest had, in " I»! vs 5:4an or 5 Va; a population Bavaria. in Den .000 a year r. y 0‘ ms party walls on Mr. one- i‘g‘dttfor third term attracts fur-regs- a e . ntion here. and his nomination. “spiteoits exceptional character. is unpossibility. Reciprocal '1‘ :de relations with Canada and the admiv I501! Into the United States free of duty 0‘ that celebrated Canadian produrt. Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. on “out Of its painless aczion and CPI“! tointy, W [(1 " 5 {Eat- form. U80“ beg a plank m h: ) sure I 6 Putnams Corn Emma-Jr. sate! painless! a???» MALT hens. E. ERA-L AGENT â€â€™0 Tom e . Building, Montreal, Mo 318(35an and Farrell, Bar- tinters of Kingston, at once communa- “W with The Identification and Frown" Company of Canada. and their Manager. Mr. G. I. Goddard. for- mded them the necessary certiï¬cate to eï¬tablish the identity and enable ‘hem to °°mPlete the chain of proofs for the COllection of the Insurance. 2n the P609163 Life, of Toronto. in fan. or or the deceased sisters who hadbenn “able 90 recover the amount untzl the “entity 0f the corpse was estabiishud “mad a doubt. A MIRROR ATTAvCIï¬MENT. M93 Will appreciate a new mirror: cttcchmmt which will enable them to' m the back of their hats and gowns}; ‘ “am being attached to one side of} ‘ “"180 glass to carry a series utlinka1 “Emma a flexible arm which can bei "bu-3t“ to bring a smail mirror into Nï¬on to show the figure in the Euge Upon the band of the shirt 00113: were found the initials H. T. 8.. km ï¬lese letters were not absolute prooi “t t!†Identity of the body, but upo! “â€1138 attached to his wetch than “Pi-011,601: number 5559 at The Idea. Mention and Protective Company 01 M. limited, whose head office I} L. ‘- 1393- He had gone on a hunting am fishing expedition to Salmon Lake am lboat Partly filled with supplies \x‘al washed ashore on the following day. A search was made at once and thc lake was drugged for ten days With out malt further than the findi_ni “ a portion of the supplies which :n: floated where the boat was capsizec Ed â€10 PTObablo drowning of its 00 It was supposed to be the body 0 Mr. Henry Thomas Shibley a wel known barrister of Kingswn, Ont., wh‘ was drowned on the 29th of October On the 15th of July last, a body we. found in Salmon Lake, Frontenac Cg Ont., by some farmers residing in thl vicinity, in a state of decompositioi which made it absolutely impossible t4 establish its identity. The parts expos ed in contact with the water. the {ac and the hands, were completely den-ad: ran CORPSE or A KINGSTON BAR RISTER DROWNED LAST AUTUMN. Thqanoient supposition that a vein bud direct tram the fourth finger u the heart, and the tact that {his sin. W WV, wâ€"-â€" [or is used less than any other, 3h. ring being thereby less liable to re gem injury, were doubtless the mo w the Old custom Of placing :he weli. ding ring upon the fourth ï¬nger 0' be left hand. flEflRlY NINE MONIHS M â€if W ï¬" O r W111 walk Luv WmLua 111:; 53mg Great Fair and Indus . xpos‘tion' Which “fill be held i ‘ t twenty-one years smce T to JElfhibition was established as a maul institution under the preset} um During that time 1 _--.1 0:..- (all! in. pvnrv dire nanuacuw tion. and t have assume “w sed five fold'in every direc 0-day can fairly lay claim t: d a. national characte: ____-...I.~ A: mm“ mnn‘ln 9f may lecovered and Identiï¬ed. [d1 ‘V' V- V' 1-5qu yu': «Jul 1113 any recard, in settlement of The $7980 Mdamnity. It was for :1.- pounds, '16 shillings 9.3.1.19 â€mm a Boston cab driver W, ated a fortune of 8100.000 kinetim‘ by the investment FAMES'FEHECK. SPENT. o§ BEER. WEDDING RINGS. will mark ktlge 00192118 the: 'laggest check in the GREATEST FAIR. POM 0! Grab. QuO‘ which the bank