Handfmade _ Waggon, In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Brick Dwelllng, and many eligible building lots. will be sold in one or more, bu. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, w. G. R., torn-hip of Bentinck, 100 acres adjou- lng Town plot Durham. Mortgage taken for 'art pm Horse Shoeing Shop In the Town of Durham, County of Grey, including valuable Water Power FOB sun The‘ EDGE PROPERTY. ALLAN MCFARLANE LICENSED AUCTIONEER. for th County of (key. In!" "tended to "on; III " nae-Able {not S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thonm I Lu†in, Registrar. John A. Mum thmutrrteiriltoi. omce boat: from ll t. II. to 4 p. In. JAMES LOCKIE, has†nannies! without delay. Colloctlonl prompt. y nude, lunar-boo otrseted. - I To LOAN “Iowan "uncluttered I 1m- on. door north at . Boon more Durham 'tera " . re BLIC‘, (to-m.-1oun,ece.. J. P. TELFORD, human summon Ill mm com Has opened out a tirst-elarm BUSINESS DIRECTORY. lacuna] Bunny: bin-lam hangout! Dunn Iliad-.116 eolioctionn mud. on all Points. Dope. ta necked 5nd inure“ silo-ed n cumin _l- 5:323:19 can», winner." Untied In... DURHAM AGENCY. . "on": for CouutiG of Bruce ma oGJ. 'teaidessuse--Eing tu., Known. THE GREY Wlllllll " Paid up RESERVE POND W. Ir. Comm, tho. P. Boil. President Manage' "BIS: I w you. ll â€Vile! CHAS “no: EditoraProprutem StandardBank of Canada OAPITAL. Authorized $2,000.00. 1V01'uRPt yank“ Lien-u. Ano- qulgiqg of all kinds promptly MON BY TO LOAN. ALLAN no“ 11mm, Fire Insurance secured. _ ovzn 1t.tteitorr, Lawn Tm Thursday Morning. In and Insuranqe Agent, Con- veyancer, Commissioner dco. HUGH McKAY. 1!tlrra'Cir_prlttrivt.l. Jrtittty " WOODWORK Head Office. Toronto MISCELLANEOUS. . L. MCKENZIE, t allowed on mvinn hunt down.“ 'rt01ar >Iudl. Fromm utonuon “d "can“! Mod ounomon itriug " a dutaa-. SAVINGS BANK. in connection. A flrtrt-elasn, lot of Apply to JAMES EDGE. Edge Hill, 0m. for sale cheap. DURHAM: orraCB, GA! Br.. iDURHAI. LEGAL J' KELLY. “on. m LL. 1 900.000 600,000 It is a likely place to find in, but a nasty one to get away tram, as is well known to the members of the Hillshire Hunt. The fences in Hillshire are un- deniably trappy. and to-day are rend- ered still more so from the fact that the frost is hardly out of the ground yet, and lies like an enemy in ambush an the northern side: of the banh. CHAPTER XXX. For the next few minutes there is an intense and breathless silence by the roppice side. "We are off now. Keep close to me, and follow me as well as you can," said Geoffrey to her; and then the whole field filed through an open gate- way into a ploughed field, in the direc- tion of a small copse beyond it, which the hounds were about to draw. For the present, at (rears-trepair, Lessiter faded out of Mrs. Geoffrey Dana's memory. Then cams a sudden movement, and her husband hurried back again to her side. Somehow Angel had neverfelt so glad lo see him before. I jhere was something to her so ut- ;teily incomprehensible in this‘ reply, and in the agitation of his manner and the ardour of the glances which he flung at her, that she could find no words in which to answer him. No suspicion of his meaning had as yt-t dawned upon her. Hid he not told her eight months ago that he loved Dulciet What else, then, save his love for Dulcie. could he be alluding tot And yet, surely his manner of speak- ing was strange in the extreme! He had even called her by he? christian name-but that must have been a slip of the tongue. In the old days he had sometimes done so by accident. That could be nohing. Bat what was th" meaning of these burning, melting looks he cast upon hert ( And Angel trembled, turning hot) and. cold with a vague disquietadis. l “You have not yea seen her? and yet you came back six weeks ago!" she exclaimed in surprise. "Why did you Come back than?" “1 could not keep away longer!" he cried. wirh emotion, "0h, Angel-Mrs. lJane--how can you ask why I am back again?" "No, l have not seen your sister," and he loomed down and sighed deeply, playing abstractedly with his horse's mane. , He nodded assent, although he was quite in tlt" dark as to the letter she meant, and then he threw at; her a luck of concentrated misery and re- proach which bewildered her. - "Have you seen Duleiet" she asked mtg-3r gopfusedly. "You are surprised to see me here, Mrs. Dane?" "You got Dulcie's letter about my m:trriaget" she queried back, speak- ing, too, in a lower tone. Geoffrey having ridden away a few paces to exchange greetings with a neighbour, Lcssiter drew his animal close to hers, and lowered his voice: explanation ot his return to England and his position at Lilminster, Angel had recovered her composure, and was able to talk to him in her usual quiet and gentle manner. lr, Show: hands with them both, and by the 'im- he, had axchunged a few wor.ds with Geoffrey and givtsn_a grief The sight of her gave him a great and intense pleasure. He rode up to her quickly, lifting his hat as he came, and his pleasure was in no way dimin- ished by the swift changes that flashed across her faee at the unexpected sight of him. For first she turned deadly pale, and then she coloured up furious- 1y, a flood of crimson sweeping sud- denly and tumultuously from her brow Io her chin. At a glance he could see that from a pretty girl she had become a lowly woman, that subtle change had pass- ed over her which perfects, one knows not how or why, the maiden into the matron, so that she' becomes all at once a fulfill ‘d and completed being. But on the thirteenth day of Febru- arr, when, as he reached the corner of a stony little lane along which the hounds were trotting up, he no longer repentedhim of being in Hillshirv, for there., not ten yards from him, by the wayside, under the shelter of the rentys, stood a buy mare pawing im- Pal.lently at the ground, and upon her, a hulls flushed with the wind and the eyeruse, sat Mrs. Geoffrey Dane by the side of her husband. Often during these weelr.s, he surged the shilling that had sent him to Hill- shire instead of to the Shires, often he said to himself that if things went on much longer in this fashion, he. would cut it and be off Co Melton nod ‘lay aside for ever the momentary Inclina- tion which had induced him to come down to such an uncongenial corner of the world. As to society. in the neighbourhood of Lilminster there was, as Florence Dane had said, very little of it, and to Captain Lessiter that little was un- congenial. Two or three country gentlemen made his acquaintance, and invited him to dinner parties, solemn and dreary functions whereat he stifled his yawns and spent the evening in furtively looking at his watch and counting the lagging fotsteps of time. The gentlemen of Hillshire were most- ly middle-aged and pompous, great " County Sessions 'and local politics, their spouse were fat and placid, their daughters plain and dowdy. Even the younger married women, for of course there Were a few of them to be met with, were no better than their elders,' pain; for the most part domesticated in dispositions, and very much the.re- verse ot smart. in appearance. Lessner was forced into the unflattering con- clusion that his advent amongstthem had created no excitement whatever, and that not one of them ever made the faintest effort to attract his at- tention. The hunting in Billshire was of a kind which is dear only to lhe_moat thorough-going and persevering of sportsmen. The distances were great, the country difficult, in places even, almost impracticable, and the fields were small. There was no coffee- housing, and nobody ever thought of bringing out a second horse. - CHAPTER. xxIx.--continued. Be found ample time to regret his decision between the first of January and the thirteenth of February. 9:33! Which did not in the least mean :hat Geoffrey was Jealous, or angry, or hurt in any way; but only that a vague an- nnyauce. he could not tell exactly wherefore, crept into his mind. How can a man be jealous abou; a woman "Confound the fellow! why eouldn't he_rpipd his own business!" And so it was that in their first run with the Hillshni- hounds thoy were divided from each min-r, for a place IS soon los: in the hunting field, and a posiiiun once abandoned, is rarely re- covered during the remainder of the day For a few fields Geoffrey looked back in vain for his wife-then a vague anxiety crept over him lest she might have come to grief, and then again he espied her far away to the right, he- hind him, going well, and with Leash- er three or four lengths before her, at which he was no longer anxious con- cerning her safety, and told himself thar it was all right. In spite of which he found himself presently exclaiming aloud: Perhaps Angel was still a little shaken by the narrow escape she had had. over her last jump, or perhaps she acknowledged the truth of his argu- ment-that he knew the fences better than her husband did. Fur Geoffrey, although tt was his native county, had seldom had a mount given him in mu- shire. and had never had the means or the time in know it intimately from the sporusnrtn's point of view brfore. Anyway, her oiunpanion's words had their effect. Captain Lessiter shot forward in front of her, and Angel ful- luwed him, and scrambling up a bank through a gap in the hedge, was forced to acknowledge that the place was a better selected one than the one whzch her husband had pointed out for her. "Pray do not go for that place, Mrs. Dune, it is really not practicable. I know this country a little you know, and Dane has not hunted here before. There is a gap lower down. You had mach better follow me." There was nothing to take offence at in the remark, and Angel only answer- ed by a laugh. But when, as they neared the next fence, Geoffrey half turnen back and made her a Sign. beckoning her on to follow where he went, then Captain Lesaiter said very seriously: tsho answered somewhat breathleaaly. "Ah, but Dune is such a bold rider. I don't suppose he has ever given a :houghl to the piloting of a lady be- ore." "That was a nasty place." said a voico at her side, "hardly fit for a lady to take. You might have had a bad fall." Horace Lessiter was at her aide. "Geoffrey told me to follow him," Hero her firm seat and ready hands stand her in good stead, and she pivks her up quickly, without parting com- pany, and is soon in the wake of her husband again. The next moment he is flying over surm- new rails that fill up the gap in a blackthorn hedge. They are stiff ond forbidding, but the chestnut clears them easily. and proclaims at the out- set how well deserved is the charac- ter he has earned. Angel follows him ,at perhaps a trifle too fast a pace, and the little mare breaks the top bar, and lands on her nose and knees in the field beyond. "Come on!" he cries back to her. "Go for the timber in the corner, fol- low me, and sit tight." With the fiFSVt-irush Geoffrers big chesnut flies to the foremost place. and Angel's mare sails easily after him. and through their fences, and adapt themselves to the country they are re- quired to go in, in a thoroughly busi- ness-like manner. For the most part they are farmers, whe are, after all. the very bone and sinew of an Iangush hunting field, there are also half-a-dozen country squires, and a stray stranger or two, a country doctor, and lust, but not least, a hunting parsmn, one of the last 01 that now-more the pity of it-- fast dying-out race of men, who were not ashamed to prove, by the force of example, that it is possible to be a God-fearing Christian and yet to ride to hounds as struightly and as keen- ly as any one of his parishioners. As to the horses, they are good stout beasts, not specially remarkable for breeding or beauty, but admirably well suited to their work. They un- derstand how to fretp up their banks "Tally-ho! Forrard, away, ay. aye!" as out flies a fine old fox, witha white tag to his brush. In a second he is well across, the field to the far side, and the whole pack comes pouring opt of the wood straight upon the line In hot pursuit. And now every man and horse is off too, with an eager rush to the first fence. They are a rough lot in Hillshlre, but they know what they come out for," and they dothe work before them in a manner that many a smarter field might envy. They come out, not to ride jealous of each other, to hustle one another at the gates, or to over- ride the hounds for the sake of getting a place; they come out to hunt and to live with the hounds through the run in the best Way they can. Hu-h! a faint, eager whimper is heard at last. Rapidly it deepens intoa vague murmuring chorus, as the rest of the pack take up the signal which old "Forester" has given. The cry in- creases every second, for the hounds are driving through the covert close upon the fox, and there isa rare scent. Backwards and forwards, now near, now far, come those confused cries and trounds-ever louder and wilder as they press upon him closer. Then, all at once, silence. Then a wild human shout tends the still air. Geoffrey whispers this to his wife and Angel only nods. Her heart is heat- ing almost audibly, but it has nothing to do with the love od her girlhoodi who is in the crowd behind her. Ange has for the moment forgotten him, and is only filled with that intense ex- citement - that tension of every nerve --in lhe pause before action that thrills through all true lovers of the sport of kings as they stand thus immovable at the covert side which the hounds are drawing. - Compared to that passion of expecta- tion all oiher pleasures fade into no- thiugness, and love itself becomes a thing of naught. A _ TORONTO _ -_ - -- vvvmhu’ In Steward treahneas and light. It would be a time-saving arrangement, of cum-so, if men and women had to take 'tto more thought about a spring ward- rude than the clod takes about its new coat of grass; but, leaving aside 'the probable objections of tailors and {dressmakers to such a state " affairs, (tttere atâ€? owmp n ations for the rest lot humanity. 'ihe Counters in the 'atros rm: all ngl'w with exquisite At LI!!! tin-l fabrics, and if one can bring 'unC'J-t so]: to a cerlain paint of vinw, it burnt tr. hp ml much of a deiiurht to 'lmk nt and handle all this lovelineu 'as it will be. n little later, to walk on llhz' guns and own: the colon ot the flavor. The duty of a woman to be always as well dressed as she can fairly be is one which has been often preached. Sometimes in vain, but not often so in the spring. Then every instinct of the universe, from the very elude of dirt to the hearts of men and of women, is .m.......i f-r,-. .... M. I I- . -- But even such a woman is not in- sensible to the fascination of spring clothes. The annual January "white sales" do not warm her interest. It is only those phenomenal Women who live titscordmg to a schedule of the most l'uiehandeil description who in Jan- uiry set about the preparation of their spring wardrobes. But when March draws to a close and April comes on, then truly theres are few women-and there should be none-with souls so dead that they are not touched with the wish to be in harmony with the beauty of the. spring. . Spring, and a young man's fancy. and love. Nobody denies theconjunc- [that of that trio. But there is an- [other one, which comm a little earlier, Ianrl which the poets have not yet cele- brated in song. In the late winter a iwuman's fancy eagerly turns to Uoughts of dress. There are wo- men who buy winter clothes in aper- tunctory way. One must keep warm. To this end one must have oertain, garments. Having tshivered through1 the greater part of November. the in-J different- Wumau goes drearily about the task of buying this necessary lei-l meat. Her expression is one which sags, "Well, if I must, I must!" it. The chestnut made a gallant effort, rose well, and would have clear- "d it; had it not been for the ditch; but the double width was bnyond his stride: his hind legs dropped into the stream, and in a moment both man and horse were rolling over and over in the soft clayey ooze. Bu'. Geoffrey Dane was not one of those who were present at the finish. At the very first fence he took after the cheek, he became aware of the fact that the chestnut was pumped. He scarcely lifted, and only managed to scramble through the great straggiing hedgerow with considerable difficulty. Cramming in his spurs. Geoffrey pulled him together determinvdly. and set him at the further fence with despera- tion. It was a stiff. thickset thorn hedge, not very high but of an im- pregnahle solidity, and on ugly yawn- ing ditch, wherein trickled a muddy streamlet. lay on the further side of In all the annals of Hillshire there never had been such a day as that. It was lhe run of the season. and the men who followed up that grey old fox to his death were never tired of retailing their wondrous experiences anduulventures ere the closing scene was reached. holding fast on to his brush. In a moment, however, Reynard has shaken himself free from his torment- or's grip and flies on again across the meadows, and in a very few minutes the hounds are on the line again and te chase is once more fast and furious. in the, arms of the man who carries him. A varmint wire-haired animal, who is as keen upon the business be- fore him as though he were endowed with human, instead of canine intel- ligence. Arrived upon the scene of action. he gives one wild cry that is Diamond cut Diamond. almost a scream, and dashes down in- to the drain. Soon a smothered rush is heard and inarticulale yappings from the pursuer and the pursued, and our bolts the fox with the little terrier holding fast on to his brush. Meanwhile the secret ot the check is divulged, the fox has gone to ground in a drain, and the hounds are blown off, whilst a terrier is sent for with all haste from a neighbouring farm. In due time the little beast arrives ye/ring and struggl ng with excitement All at once, after they had been running well for nearly three-qunrtere of an hour, I. slight check occurred. There is s alight confusion on the brow of a small green hill on ahead. a boil! from the huntsman. who waves his cap frantically. The master, old Squire /,'/.1,t,te,r,.f..t,e,, who has kept the bounds in Hillshire from youth to old age, and lie hale and hearty and rubicund now, at his sixty and odd years. hurries for- ward with a grave and anxious face. The hounds are seen no longer run- ning straight and compact. but fly- ing hither and thither, some one war, some another, with their noses to the ground, and their waving sterns slant- ing in every direction. They have lost the scent. One by one the riders came galloping up, the effects of the pace beginning to tell upon most of their horses as they stand with heav- ing sides, not sorry for the brief re- spite. Geoffrey, loo, comes with the) rest; he takes off his hat, and has a pull at his flask, and then he looks about for his wife, bats she is nowhere to be seen; neither is Lessiter. Either they have been thrown out, or else she is tired and has gone home. A man Cannot for ever be looking after a lady 'in the lu1nting-field. If she cam she must follow; but if she be not able to follow. she must remain behind. and he had better leave off troupling himself about her. "'irsiii' GiiTiGie ',"itiiiu'," aim would have been all right," thinks Geoffrey, and he is a. little bit out of temper with hor he does not love! and yet he thought he would have liked her to follow him on this first day, in preference to a stunt er, under whose guidance she had con- trived to lose the excellent place she had been lucky enough to be in at the heginning of the _run. _ All this tUtshed through his mind quicker than it has taken to write it, and in a vague and clouded manner. and then the passing thought was gone and forgotten. for there were other things to be attended to. A BOUT SPRING DRESS, (To be Cont inued.) The. was of an w-wrld are literally tsxed on South American Newly e. They are not viewing it as . rirte-dsy.' mm- der. but critical and exprrienccd men have been studying this medhlne tor wean, with the rm. result-they have found that its t"errn of warren: cun- (Ive quantlr: "var-t be stinnid. The great CI!COV?TOY of this medicine was petsecred of the knowledge that the sea or ay. disease ta the nerve control, shuFted at the up; of the brain. In this brllr' 'cr-r he the best menu": and mer'irel man of the world occupying exnetly the “no pre- mises. Indeed. the ordinary my- “mu "can wed tht. when“ long nun. Everyone how. am let rv.rss.ur or 21*»)er Eff“! III. M“ 'ho human ryrtmn and anâ€: 1"“. certain. [Mute the luau m. “to. In the medium o" than not" no.- tree. and pmlysi is sun to rollâ€. Here h a. In! whom). Thu Inn. In tha matter or nod hearth tempor- izin mtavure', while possibly success- ful for the moment, can now-r be last- Tnz. Those in poor health soon 1rntpw whether the reody they are using is simply . passing melded! in their Mt- Perienee, bracing them up for the day, or something that ll getting at the seat of the drum:- and ta surely And permanently "gun-int. Lumber, Shingles and Lath always In Stovk. -rrrlilltl.0aigriri- Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a, large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differ.. ant Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. i. Any ponon who “in n pupa: trom the post "um, whether directed to his who or “other. or whether he bu tsub, scribed or not in "upon-ibis for the ply. th "subscriber orders hte pupa: to it atoppod at a cart-in time, and the {Published continues to uend,tho subscriber u bound v ply for it if he takes it out of the post ofiiee. This proceeds upon he grounc~ but u man must my for what ho uses. Sash and Door Factory. 1. “any pouch onion bl. pop" discos lino-d. in mm! pay all mmâ€. or the publisher any conunno to land it until psy- momu nude. and tsolleetthe whole IILOUDI whether it be taken from the ottims or am. There on be no logs] (ll-continua“ until psvmontiunudo. '0 all tho apoch' “tension " Pu auto 3 and whooribou to the following as nap-in oftho newtpapulnvn l A Discovery. Based on Scientific Priz‘3ipl00. that Renders Failure Impossible. WHEN EVERY OTHER HELPER HAS FAILED IT CUBE Am Fixed Upon South Amerr, can Nervine. . ', Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. THE EYES [IFTHE fr,,:.:, r . I'-- v :',',ti.ttk NERVINE x: ' M Fr _,efiiiijliit' l //’ : F.(,",t 7 F. , EIN. - l "r ,x L, I 7:“ W5Sai,qAl /{1 vi,""-" -L:?{?;/:- ' iaf, V iiRiiil!! _,,i,srjs'h, '-'-5; ' y " iii. / M?‘ h 'ttii-ci, - ir( I § , AME “K ml mun - r,' M' A: == 'i7:0YS I a I†s, oy' â€I F.b, a Er8 r.' '17.“. 'kt, IMS) , mt? l . ff;/: Newspaper Lawn. saw Tkt For an br no Fungi; N- G. &J. McKECHNIE ta" AV \‘r-I a south Aswan Nervuae. Pta. pie marvel. it in true. at it. Worr-tttd "new! "gums. but may know " yond ali (motion tint It (on over!- thing that u chimed Ne n It stub .1011. n tho on gun can.“ on 2-0qu " the Mud-mu! 'ten-tttrr. thank! tll."?; tutor alumna and nut w u. t I. M tn a that undo! . omen- ot the body r2: Are their sum}. of nerve ttum. 'tht nwrvc centre. heeled, and or nrrrlniiy the oral WMch has shown tn: s.' .m-ard end-no. only of denngenmzt is heeled. Indi- cation. nervousness, '.rnpov+ binod. liver complaint " a!" (hill 'trtgtr. to a fertrngeir.erit of gu- no". contra. Thouumds bur testimony that they have been (used t the" troublta. own when shay bdbooom. so desperate to to lame the all" " the melt ammo-t rhyz'cinm. beau-O South American torvme ha: (on. I. hendquutm ad on“ than. Tho or" o! the world have not been (unmanned In the inquiry into the sub con at South Auction: Nerv.'ar. Pn- a]- --- _. _ on. with medical Wanna! III. lily. nnd with nearly all medicines. in that they aim simply to trout the or“. that my be dlryeaaist. Pant. marl“! Nervlne Plus: by the organs. and in. mediateiy applies its our-“iv. power. to the nerve renun- hon which the organs of the body receive their supp}. of nerve ttuld. 'tht narve 'tentree huled. 1nd of awn“... -.., -----. ' 0111):}:an Promptly and“! .0. "" “I“. First-Glass Hearse. Of the Best tgh Cheapo: THAN EVE . d ' Furniture Ly be alleged. Pout. Amer!“ ' Page: by the 0mm. and In. slr applies " "'.,'rttitre power. nerve venues. from which the A! uh- LA: o n l"rtrttgeir.tttt of Oe no". Thouumds bur (outlmon' by have been (used t the" I. even when shay beooom. emu " to lame the all" cl " -t.,-s -1 . - "ill tobe {and in his Old Btu] opp-it. the Durham Bauer, I. but may know by a (In It (on every. med for n It nah I cm! can.“ an atom“! 'ten-tttrr. we: alumna and may a an L',:':'!, 'iii):' . a.“ ' a, KRESS [I] _ it is Mus. These pm its. other modlclnu fail. diva-o due lo eir,her of thvt illEli and this me 'tts thut they . are in a lawn [n-rt'vmage t mums “hick: afflict m nkind. “Hummus dealers imp an or public imitmiuns of um glen! cine. The [gnome Dt. Wil Lms Pills we never sold in bulk or I hundred or ounce, ur in any mm in the rumpanyk hum wrapprr uruund which I _ tlt title mark. "Dr. Will -n.~ i'inl h Pale Panda." No m-Iter um - at the pH nttered In a: body. nommpamvd by m and: my life aburdvn l " called in but he did nut help another and another uunl I diNereat medical mm to up. of then the mm mum [my Winonaâ€. Yet my v.5 _ {do every one of livuu. an - gave me lunm- 11mm :l temporary relief. Otte m ttte trouble was IanIIIIImI'MI he. Another said it “as .., minim and aunt. 'ru,. lr In I l “by onus-r mines. hm “huh loneot them haw-.1 me. It} thad col be low and “wk '! tBotiift Mndor foot If It " m life, and no tun" 'uhl't""rt - M better. In furl {hr (1 u I annlt no). iowcr I I'I'UJI Agtd yet here I an: I--‘:,\ ll ever I was in my 1 fe m Ill the Iowan " "III4,"C" he [no and uskvd “In ' f Dr. Witliams' Pink NIB 1 m gully remedies illi': Ind lily (Inliars in "ruin-ur- Itil tr thought it wmth thv 1 heat any more. H mover. I “I“ to try them ..nd " I fen boxes there " 'h sum» I’ll. By the (inn I had us on boxes I had In“: my bed "tr to move a mun I. and " more boxes I was again parfe aatd lble to do all tue work to (ha lot of " fu'mvrp w thin I owe to Dr. “mi tttis' I lldl think that aber “In! t done (or m' I Im justiftod i needing them to ulhmsff Dr. Williams' Pink “to and richness lo l Hid nil-Here! none “disease due lo eir, "Indeed I have not, KcKinllon. "I think I uncured owe inc th: bring: them back to In In! nguod word for :1 annually hadnn inst, In: point. lt mnu- UH In the big toe, acrnmlm 'tairs. Gradually the m 94 to my 13mins and 1h In PECULIAR CASE or A SCOWAN LADY. he Tumble noun " a human II; for WEI-l Rpm-MI " All " the My Uw-Ior- to.“ H -ttmese leading up lo - the Beene.s U-“(n'l‘ uh u†now at hand. Kit-clung is a mum t MAI! inhabitanls l A: -tttweat of Fuchnu. am coached by {owipno-zs I gain boats p'ymg the 1m British Mission House, a: .riaeipat honors own aittgated outside the Pl') .81. across the river, ati. - the tmsstonoris “In tor boys and gizl- h Illa hone. ‘WCAN Mi,csciON 1 Th. American Mission “1“!" to the first Twpâ€! “M death, was also out.slc, and situated mar th grounds. Tho head of ll, M W1. Rev. R. w. SP“ I I. hits charge the turd a “I Ping-naug. “Inch I:- m and unseen by an mun:- Obel‘ Board. To asnv m with sphere of labor weâ€. Ill-iconic; besides hm “i a an“, of tive timall chm! affiliated with him in tht [07. H. B. Philips. anal clergyman. who lived In a t The Dostoz‘s w; “MES TU BARB d. This W as practically ', h ter was wid rIII for Ito fro-Mo. and WWII .I‘ “ft ho hand. From the New Glammw Fmterl an uncle FATE or A BRA! _ . TLE CHRISTIAN BAND â€m For“ In Spread IM- 0.1 ---BMre - Mario-red. I w '0.“ III [Ir lip-Inn - â€a. the details of one of the mu _ lunacy-es comuti',ted m td blood and pillage have Just l “It. In the early day, ol J “5. the loading Journals of tis; *" newnof an Ina-mu; .1. m- l ot Ku-cheng. China. I: vun TI that sumo dozen m .m- tum â€crican missionarirs ha .u'dered; 1114 ln'uzn .011.th in fllvir rump l h the course of the. (1.1. ponies to tht thousands of m mun-d " " swelling d tttratio u I by pain rden. A do I not help I er until I I " UM I'll] the in W In n lu K me ha m IN