WHAT BECOMES 0F “a neces- ot a widely rend novel, m " "David Haram," lnvnrlably no“ people ttsuing about enormoul “in. and paragraphs (ind their way Into print recording the taet that so many thousands ot copier: have Been com. All.) We tall: about " all though It were a nine duys' wonder, totnily unmnndlul at a book which but run through countless editions, and of which nearly 2,000.0» copies were pruned in New York hut year. That book ii the Bible. ‘L or course everybody known that more cupws ot the Bible have been printed uni sold than of any other boon, but lew persons realise, or atop to than: about it If they do, just to what extent the Bible ls circulated. “What becomes of all the pins 't" in a question that has never been antle- lacturny solved. "What becomes of ell the mun-u .."' In one that in even more dnllicuIt ot solutlnn. A pin us- sumen lnflullesimul proportiony com- pared Wltll a bound book, and when one considers that the lncreased pub- "canon of Bibles ls out of all propor- tion to the natural increase in popu- lation. one cannot help wondering what [lemmas of all of them. It stands to reason that a. great! many copies find their way Into the! hands or loreign missionary societies‘ and are sent to the heathen of other lands. Possibly the proportion is one- hair. But even then the balance tor home consumption. it so purely mer- cantile a phrase may be permissible. I: very considerable. One New York publluhmg house alone, the American Bible Society. issued during the lust _ your 1.:81).H9:1 copies, of which a. trifle more than halt were sent I abroad. Ant one year is very much 1 like another in this respect. Times! may be good or times may be had,I but the printing ot the Scriptural goes on. l . . .____--- n! ‘Itnm "tto 50cc 0-. Now. what becomes ot them all? One seldom (llscurds a Bible, no mat- ter how old or worn. The ordinary book except to the bibllophile, ls re- gartle'l as an article or commerce--" something to buy and sell. somethlng to read ant enjoy. and then, If neces- Ilty dnmnn'ln. [was along that soma- one also may enjoy its beuerltir. " ACampden Lady Cured of Its: After Effects. li u GRIPPE’S RAVAGES. a month I was once mute enjoying th" best or hoaith. every trace of the troubio that hud afflicted me liming chum) 'UPL' I. It is nearly three years trineo l usued the pills and I have been well and strong ever llnce. and have the hat of reason tor nacribing my prosont good health to tho use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a. tvnic .n'l not a. purgntive modicinn. Thor onrlch the blood trom tin first dose to th" hat. and tin“ bring hnnitil and ltrnnzth t , ew-ry organ in the body. The gnnuine pills are sold only in boxeq with me full name. "Dr. Wil. liams‘ Pink Pills for Pale Peonio," minted on the wrapper. If 'SPE deal. _ _., -_--- _--n A_-_‘ " or cannot nunply you ann-l direct to the Dr. WIIll-uns' Medicine Company, Broctvllle. Ont.. and tho pills will be mulled potrt pal-1 at 'so cents a. box. or six boxes tor $2.50. -iriirait, conslsts not in possessing we“: nnausnoyoauno am In anq 'uouoq we deserve "th-Aristotle. A Mend-hound bear his friend's In- ttrrnittetr.--atrliut' Caesar. 1v. 3. " calm Neglect at . Con! or Son 's " Thmt may result In In iliglliiiilil Inmnble Throat Trail: Of IMb5 Consumption. For relief I: BROWN'S BRONCHIAI. TROCHES. Nothing excels this staph rtntefyefo_tf only In boxes. All. THE BIBLES? whim} The distribution of Bibles in tor. York i eign lands is not accomplished with- erirgun out severe hardships and often dan. " last KPr to life. The eolportettrlh as the ch " trawling aganta are caii~d. are quite sent i heroie in their devotion to tin work, much 1 espeeialir in lands where fanaticism Timiste _ holds sway. China is Just at present a bad. tho theatre of tho moat interesting 'f Not so with the mole. Yon may hunt the town over. you may delve among dust covered tome. in out ot the way book store. until your head grows dizzy. and I doubt. It you will tutti a dozen second hand Biblel in all New York. I asked the proprietor ot one ot these old book chop: it he could explain why it was. He shrug- Bed his shoulders and frankly adam- led that it had been a puzzle to him tor yours. And he was a man ot ripe experience. too. mu um Were not so than would be no second-hand book dealers - "Pu“--. us. At the ottieeg ot the American Bible Boeiety I was only bewildered by ng. nree without having any night thrown upon the real question ot what he. comes ot all the Bibietr--the Bibles th it are not sent ta the h :uthen. The figures as to production were stu- peuduus in themselves. I was told that the val-bus Bible societies alone had distributed ere than 200.000.' 000 since the year 180k, and this number did not include the output of individual publishing houses, or which there are about a dozen in New York alone, which issue Bibles. -.._. a The British and Foreign Bible Bo. clety ot London operates on even a larger scale than the Amorioan Bible Society. Last year 4.479.439 copies were printed and distributed. and since 180 l. when the society was organized, It has Issued no less than 160,009,393 Bibles. ... . . activjty. “nu..-“ It Is ostimate‘! by me most care- ful ntr'horltie.s that about 1500.000.- ooo Bibles! hare been printed In this century. Snme vstlmnhs are. an high as three hlllluns. As the population of the work] be estimated at nme l, - A small sum of under c20 was pass- l, ed by him, the sum sum in be ex- 5 pended in typewriters at a. certain 1barrucks. Ilia order In guts course i came before " War Otnoe clerk in i sums minor post, who marked It “F I '17 coma-Jars this demand most unu. l suul. inutteed he (has not know what l to any "bout It.." Ul but: ‘VUII‘I n-V _rAww_....'e'"'""' t,ro0,o00.000. If the latter estimate wpre true, there ttnro boen two Bl. bien for every inhabitant ot the world. Some years ago when the non-mm- tary side of the War Office was more powerful than It is at present, Gen. Bu'ler was appointed quartermm"er- general. ..~a.5......v.., I "Dear mp, this is mnat extraordi- nary," said the Financial Secretary. 11"You can‘t seriously menu. Sir Red- vvors. that you intend to resign be. t cause " clerk disapprove: of a. tririo E like this 7" . w w, 'i-ve-e ___ From vuculuting F' " the (locu- munt passed to F T, who in turn, ex- pressed his disapproval and forward- ttd it to l" l, the Flnanclul Secretary, wh, initialed his agreement with F 7 and I" 17. In Hm course or a. fortnight or so Um order. indorsml by th w“ cumm- tiv. churnebers, returned to the gon- vral. Without " moment's hesitation Buller marched of! to tho Fluuucml Secretary and gravely handed in his resignation. M "Indeed. I do,' answered tho gene eral. , "And why t" "Because I Imagined that I was given the Q. M. G. as an experienced man. and It every little tuppnnny-ha'- penny clerk la going to be ullowad to override me. I'm on." London paper-h young lady abrupt- ly turnedacorner and ran! agnlnst a boy who was ragged, small. and heckled. Stopplng as soon no she could, she turned to him an? rsald: "I beg your pardon; indeed I am sorry." The small. ragged, and heckled boy looked up In blank amazement tor an instant, then taking of! about three- fourths of a cap, bowed very low, smiled until his face was beaming, and anwored: _ B "You kin hev my parding, and wel- come. mks; and yet may run ng’ln mo and knock me clean down and I won't say a word." ' L 1'r'tir"%Giia,riad, passed on he turned to tt comrade and said. halt arto)oitet1ettiV.t . .4 A gentleman met a young woman who had formerly been a. servant In his house, and being "Iterated In ': her welfare. said to her. “Why, ' haven't you got married yet t" "No, BDT." t I 7 "Well, I thought you w_ould have "i"'"-'""'" a "I never mild any one ask my pard- in: an' it km! o' took me ott my met." The following story is popular at procent in the States: The other day a guide was showing an Amerlcan round St. Paul's In Lon- don. "That, Mr, mm the ma. “hln the tomb of the greatest naval 'ero Eur. ope or the world ever taww-Lord Nelson. This marble sarooughoglls weighs forty-two tons. HInslde that his stool recepticle weighing twelve tons. hinskle that his a lemlen casket 'ermetlmlly sealed. weighlng over two tons. lilnslde that hln a mahogany coma 'oldlng the ashes of the great 'ero." . "Well," said the visitor. utter thinking a. while, “I guest you've got him. It ever he gets out ot that, cable me at my expense.†been married before now P' "Oh, no. not." she laid. “There’s two waitin' " “Two l" he exclnlned. “Why you don't intend to my two, do you t" "No, nor." T "Then who are they?" he Inn-trod. “Why." she replied, unholy. “the two that's waltln' u the print an' 516 TRCHW’E TORONTO ln tor. WOMAN IN This In what 3 wrlter in one ot the English magazines predlctn will be the state ot attain when an- other century roll: around: " n - was-uni I'l- --Ne--" "Br that time women will be all six feet in height, many ot them considerably over. while the aver- age height of a man will be five feet nothing. Women will lie-trong and lusty; broad and heavy in build. and will be very proud of her large feet. thick wrists. powerful limbs and great muscular develop. ment, while men will have grown vain of their trimly-corseted waists. nice pink and white complexions and soft voices. “Love will not have been com- pletely done away with. though sen- timent will have given way to cem- mon sense. Every woman will be required to marry and support two husbands, one of whom must be a useful, domesticated creature. capa- ble ot tending the children and look- ing alter the household, while the wife is away in the city earning good money to keep the home to. gather. and the other Will be a better looking. and, theretord. more ornamental creature (not a ‘general utility' man like the 'house- keeper'), whose duties will be to act as companion or 'gentleman help' to ‘the mistress and ruler ot the man-1 ‘slon. and keep things up to the mark generally. " Women a century hence will all wear mioomers,' both literally and thruratistsV speaking; any woman ti'amsgrtstmittg by appearing In a long- , tailed skirt will be condemned to act ‘88 public street scavenger tor as Ilong a. period as the local council 'shall determine. Women will also wear a moustache. and the faces ot men will gradually become smooth. Cooks will no longer be at a premium, as tiny tabloids of food will take the place of the elaborate dishes ot the. past. We shall he able to get through a six-course dinner in about two minutes, a tabloid tor each course, I"'""fl'""" w u- ...r. "V lor. if we prefer it. we can have, muitum In parvo. a tabloid with loverything compressed and condensed llnto one harmonious whole." LOX OF THE TRAINER) NURSE. I Is Not One or “use, But ot Constant Toll t nd Vlgllunce. The exacting demands made upon the trained nurse are little appre- ciated by the majority of people. While she receives good par-who" aha is tortunute enough to uodect her bilisr-alte earns every dollar of --it, and more, too. A serious case. where great responsibility rests upon her. is a great drain upon the vital energies or the nurse. and at its ending she must often take an enforced rest of more or less dura. tion. No woman. however strong. can pursue so arduous a calling Without new and again intervals of rest. and although her wages at first eight appear high ttrom $30 to $25 a week, often is a heavy drain on her employers). yet when one considers the many weeks in the year when the nurse must rest, it brings down thL’aum to a moderate weekly aver- age. And she cannot pursue this lite, unlwa exceptionally strong. through a very long term ot years. Twenty-live years of nursing Willi leap the vitality of innit and leave them prematurely Worn. The ques- tion that should impress all nurses Ivery strongly in that of laying by a. sum of money. that. carelunly in- vested. may yield them enough to glive on when the inevitable break- l down comes. And the laying byvmuet begin. or should begin. with the first case. unless the nurse is in debt tor ituition. She cannot afford to put lot! so important a matter, Amino .ono known until she has tried how lreally easy it is to lay aside a small sum every month, a sunruover to be touched. no matter what tent tation main: one. Henry tate, the great banker. says that every man t may become wealthy by saving and ‘prudently investing than savings. And so every woman Will (ind. ' [LIN W Viva .w_-r--'- -r ,.~ - lu ttto Oculanr number of the Aruisrr can Journal or Nun.“ a correspondent. tells how shttraa had per sympathies aroused by th: case or a nurse who has been at work for nearly twenty years and finds harselt on the edge or a complete breakmwn. with but $200 hotwcvn bend! and charity. and is thanetoro oiyl'ged to struggis on when she should be rotting. n is the old story. so common Ln all lives. 01 rein.» tires who needed har holp and ot her giving everything she could lpare to them. Now they were all dead and my left with nothing and ruined health. It wag treit-atusr':freing togive, nnuul. I.» "W In... u.-v...-_-.t - - U _ but all) also had a. duty toward her- 1 self, and Ind an: wxwmntly saved " little toward th, tinte when she would noed It sorely my would not have been left in tgash cruel poverty. The correspondaat took it tor a text which hrr fellow nurses tshould take toheurt. and for ham-sell she was savlng against an proguble rainy day. There are safe luthments, United Shines bonds. savings banks. life insurance endow- ment poik‘he, etc., tint every woman can avail hmtelt ot, aad it is her duty to do it. Better hue fewer pleas- ures, plainer cloth-.19 now, with " blamed certainty ot bread and butter G' and by. One should not be mean. ibut should aha traves-Chicago Chron- 1010. Whieh means. do good as well as] get good. ’l‘llls ls how it operatetrrl Pearl Lake Mill, Que., August, 1900. , --"Ettelotied tind $6.00; send dx out- fita to "lends" us tollowa--"A short tlme net: I wrote you tor on outtlt tor Mr. leergu; he would not now part with It tor twlce it: vain-n I w- cured one In Montreal, hovlng been informed ot your remedy by my ta- ther; It hue acted wonderfully In Nasal Coturrh of long standlng. 813n- ed, Theo. Show. Mr. Simon- nye a. great deal more, but when n mun sends tor olx outfits of Catarrhosortet that means more than a bushel ot words. Such octlon stands tor convictlon that he Im- dio- oovered a remedy ot tsuperlative value. Dmgglsts all cell Catarrhogonm Ask them to show lt to you; ask them to let you try It. We wlll send " to you tor 81.00, or a. sample tor 10 cents. N. C. Poison a Co., King-ton. Ont., Hartford. Conn. Mu. Gabbtr-49o your ion is In oot- lege 7 Mrs. Malaprop~0. my. yea ', hn‘a Been there two years. HW'w In w‘mt they call the sycamore clu- Iow.‘ Catarrh Philanthropy. I00 YEARS. Jam.“ l LITTLE RAPIDS SENSATIIIN. A Very Sick In In 'tt Very Well In a Very Short Time. The One oft). "night u an Interest- In; story of How a Domain-In: Imm- Md Funny Gained Health and Strength Through the Use of Dodd'o Kidney Pills. Little Rapids Algoma. ont., Feb. 18.-epeeiti-Motrt or the inhabi- tants ot this district are constantly exposed to Inclement weather and ex- tremes ot heat and cold. with a re- suit that very many bad cases of chronic kidney disease. lame back and rheumatism are to be found among our people. Mr. D. Height is one of our must respected residents who has been a terrible martyr to the dread torture or chronic kidney the For tour years he has suffered. He has tried every prescription. patent medicine and home remedy that he! been suggested to him or advertised. but all to no purpose. Mr. Height enumerates at least a dozier: die- agreeable dosea which he has forced down his threat in the hope of get- ting some relief, but nil In vain. Some of these would help him tor n. time. but very soon the pain would return with renewed vigor to torture him; At last some one suggested that King of remedies. Dodd's Kidney Pills He had tried so many medl- cines that he had very little faith, but at the suggestion of his iriemiu' ho bought and used a box. He com-l Inenced to Improve from the first, dose, and gained steadily as thel treatment continued, till finally: oVery vestige and symptom of his old I, enemy had disappeared. and he was a. well man. This is over a. year ago‘ and Mr. Height has had no return; or sign of the old trouble. . l His has been regarded by the peo- pio here as one ot tho most remark- able cures that has ever been ef- ', iected in Algoma. Mr. Height says. “Four years am) my kidneys were in a. had state; I tried old medicines and new medicines ot all kinds. doc- tors' prescriptions and home-made cures. Some of them relieved me tor a little while. but I WM soon as bad as ever again. and a second trial of the same thing proved its worth- lucsness. At Inst I was recommend- ed to got Dodd's Kidney Pills and they cured me and I have stayed ' cured." COMEDY AT T" F, FRONT DOOR. Amusing Inquiries Overheard by the Cain.“ Wayfarer. Same or the overheard colloquies on the doorsteps of Naw York man- sions are wry "musing, says the New York Tribune. 'r, Four missus in?" a. ked " can-i g moimnn ot an Indoor footmun, wi.u iumiliar l:rcularity, while his mistress sat in unsuspecting state in her victoria. " No, she ain't." answered the other, with a grin. ., Well, Im glad, and you're glad, und missus in the carriage is glad,' ex- claimed the Mentions iontman. 6r I: Miss B--- at home?" inquired a man ot the new butler. " Are you Mr. x-- ?" queried the servant. hull opening the door. " No; my name is Mr. Smith." amid the caller. "Then she Isn't at hem-e." was the unblush- ing answer. _ .. . . , __q__, ------ “A" my, ....-..-V. An English lord, who was rather noted for MB d'hsity. wcut to call on a, woman who had entertained him at dinner on a former visit to Amerlca. “Ask Mrs. tr--- If she will see me," he said to an old family servant who came to the door. evi- dently la a 'rtts.te, ot great agitation. "Oh, sh!†exclaimed the old ser- vitor, wlth tears running down his cheeks. "my master is dying." “I didn't ask tor Mr. B---," responded the peer. testlly. "I asked tor Mme. QI- Ilngmro 33 on everynbog o.' the -ttne IBM th" (mm Ironic! In on. - To be traduccd by ignorant tongues la the tough brake that virtue must go through.-Shuirospeare. " cannot be too often repeated that It is not helps. but obstacles: not fucllltles. but difficulties, that make men.--W. Mathews. " Well," said the patient man. 't 'ati' things come to him who waits.' " " Yes," replied the other; "but the trouble is that starvation is one of the first things to come." My work, however small, ' No hands can do but mine : " is God's special cull _ To me, a. voice divine. .-Antoinette Van Hoesen. Maude-He kissed me. the insulting creature! Etrther-h kiss in not neces- sarily an insult. Maude-Oh, it wasn't. the kiss I complained or. He had the insoience to say he didn't mean to do it.--Boston Transcript. "MERGE tViiiitoRluipilte ae " wlll out you now," the attor- ney for the prosecution said to the wltnesa. "lt the defendant In this case confessed to you his motive in shooting the geomed."_ . "Hold on I" Interrupted the attor- ney tor the defence, "I object." " only want to find out whether--" "I object!" (Legal wrangle for half an hour.) "The wltness may answer." ruled the Judge. "Now, then, slr. I will ask you strain. Did or did not the prisoner confess to you hls motive in shoot- lng the deceased t" “He did." "What was It P "He wanted to kill tthttp-London Klng. Neil-Old Mr. Kuhtiburn died last night. Bette-o.' my! That’s terrlble. Awful! Nell-You seem to regret " very much. Belle-a do regret very deeply the (not that I refused him only three months ago. MM, WP3K AND o' " ERVVISE. Establlshlng u .‘l otlvc. nothing to F0" toge and prosperous reign. One of the nbiest men In the United States today. " man who occupies a high position in public life there. and one who has had many opportunities of gauging the qualities of the ruler of Great Britain and Ireland. has declared him to be one of the wheat. I It not the wisest. of the public men of Europe. if that be true, and we I believe it to he true. then we here. as his subjects. realize what the i't'1rt"d'lot'lr' means as 00mins: from such a source. and also as given by His Majesty himnnlf a few days turn. When he declared that he pr/wm'ell to follow the example of his mother as l long as breath remained in htn body. and did not hncitut- to express hie determination for the future In his .homely Anglo-Saxon wny. We then lmny. I any. feel confident that in Inoklmr forward to the future we Iii:'?), have nothing to fear in a con- trtittttietrtttl sense. nnd nil oil!!!†may Ii'; considered as pointlnv: to A wise and nrospnrmw ,aqn.--Mr. Whitney in the Legislature. - ll. "o"-- - One of the nblest m' States tan-day. " mun high position in puhlh one who has had mm of gauging the quallt CONFIDENCE " may. I say. teal can Inoklmr forward to t shall have nothing to stitutlnnal â€use. nnd qu, We otter One Hundred Dollars Rental for any case of Calm-m that cannot be cured by Hull's Csurrl' Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. o. We. the undersu ned, have known F. J. Cheney for the but 15 yore. and believe him pcrtvctly honomble in all luminuun lawn-omens tudjtttitsqitu.lstt.utler ween? out any oolceuonu qu rrel you had with your wue T" Be-Distinct/y. "What was " about l"' l "Oh, about " kins." , _ “Maw!" ' 'tyr." "But domn't she like kissing t" "Oh, ya." "Why, than. did she object t" "I wno Inning another woman." Yonkers Statesman. made by their tirm. WuaTkTRUAx. Whole-isle Dmgg‘lstn. Tobie. WALDING. KINNAN & MARVIN, Whole-do Drugglsls. Toledo, , l. Hull's Uatarrh Cure is taken internally, wt- intt diremly upon the blo d And muoom sur- face- of the Datum Tmtlmontsu ttout tree. Price 750. per t lo. Bold be a“ drum MAIN Family Pills are the but. Gradually and too surely the old thatched cottages ot England are going. Where the thatch exists slate is not substituted for It ; lt is rep had when necessary wlth straw (II-reeds. more commonly with the former. But when: a thatched cottage tumbles tme--Do WP to pieces or is burnt,, the new one that taka its place is given aslnte roof. writes an English cormsrpottd- mt. Large numbers of the old cot- tagwm. with the wooden beams amid their bricks and the thatche1 tools. are destroyed by tire. Them In lit- tle (-‘hnnoe of stopplng " fire when it has laid hold ot tho wood or the thatch. Thutched Cottages Disappearing. Nervlline h- a combination ot the most potent pain curing substances known to medical sclence. It repre- sents the latest discoveries In the healing art-oo concentrated that one drop of Nermine is equal in pain-summing paww to five dropout any other. For Neurulg'a. Rheuma- tism, Cramps. Pain in the Back, Its action ls rapid and certain Sure to cure. Your money back h' you do not ruul it on. Dragging lell it. She-I see there was a girl mar- rlel In New York recently who was only 13 years old. Don't you think It's wrong tor girls to marry before they reach the age ot discretion? He--Graeious, not. I wouldn‘t have Chem remnln single all their lives. Nervillne a King or l'nln. Quite mtrerent. " With “can"! to the Future. - "..- "r- Howu This '? " THK KING- remember the [hit d with your wile T" . "iifnid t).C:." Beauty The most beautiful thing in the world is the baby, all dimples and joy. The most pitiful thing is that same baby, thin and in pain. And the nothcr does not know that a ittle fit makes all the differ. Dimples and joy have grand, and left hollows and fear, the fat, that was comfort and color and curve-all but pity and love-is gone. The little one gets no fit from her food. There is some. thing wrong;itis either her food or food-mill. She hashad no fat for weeks; is living on what she had stored in that plump little body of hers; and thatis gone. She is starving for fat; it is death, be quick! Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the fat she can take; it will save her. ESUE NO 3. 1901. Br devoting . pm of their time hundhlg mtose rule: and OAT‘I. Agata wand in all unoccupwd tor-mm: “I mm VIII FENCE CO. Ltd . VIM-ad. on. W -.'9-'"e _-. 7,, money made. “roan-ad- nud mica Adana - iiuiu,ano sun-PL! co ".-.TiriEiRAwtsrarwiL'ti" WeP/,'rdsfW'f' IN 1:“:le TOWN In Canal. w M! mum-sump "an dam“ I00" commurhmq tud PAt" mum Crown Tuna-tn: Co.. Helix-mun "hlg, To mlo.0nt,. ----- A8liTdd HEQUEEN IN mm“ .., n... 1t,rty,,cNy,eie.P, will “Mil n ' l lf" u! lull',' Vm. We wtll haw the bu“. F r 2t “when. A Imam. mum-um nu " hook “0' 'rl'a,g'."Tf, h _ n dwmunI-h'd tun- Idhll " or. 8i',Ur',l,.'l, can “sum: null. trr.itgdftrr I005 Eytm‘hbcral tum». McDer 'aiTEYadiCtotidon, 0m ENGINEERS. "REM PIN. and electrician.» m.“ i" (“Dwain queslions m-kml Board ot When-- new trec Puhlhhor. at. ML. Mo.. U. F. do- thing-our. AUCTION SALE Fit! I I ION-N: noon. P‘nlurd t), 1 It Reboot-an reel. llmnmmh ', (“than bank b,ru. mm swan (LT. R. Mm‘lm a v. 1?"ieJ, FARM FOR SALE . thteret in t no Ninxzn'v W “mun. 10 mile! {run Ham “In I!) urns» m "lt. M of u wally pen hm. Win lo mm divided into lulu)! 15 In 2'rl A aha-on. This“ a Iloviv'md l Jonah" Conan-m, P. o. “IMAG- l n. lemlow'n Roaming I "I" be mm! for (‘hudxu r I. the ohtid, “one!“ the gunk. I Had " the but. [jammy tor lr. tii, aerial . home "' mt. pout paid for My“. Send for Hal. N. v. â€LL08“, "ietthrim. 0.5 Men Make Money. 9E.'OP--T ViMttr.r.'..EN ll The genuine. has Mm I. take no othe :. " you In." nu! tried it, and Or we sample, its am“ - will mums: you. We ttare mild" drop“: oompltetuions u “mum twenty years. 14va .Cum worst CB6Pb. " l te'/,,','gih't,'ti, and lo (continent nun BOOT-fa BOWNE. Chemisti. bTLii.moReirnr'stsom Box tt A-ada. so . d an. n' tpate' DROPSY Treated Free. scutonTrH at whom-10W“- tt nut in! PM“: money Nfuttd Gualuwodwr‘ll war Hid do he'll-T work Ihll . yolhr'rnnchh‘ an them rut. A I to “Am. ttig u (no. - - CLOTHES “SHE Go Hamilton. .. o. bosl 511w - M31." 'ttTN 8y? grrl an. Toronto. Rummy! UNI “mad“ ma“? for r); whet. Book at 10 In.“ "tot k Ll. JI. hm In. I ' , h nuclJ r. “in.“ was an I. T I out! should A ',iruuad and: h. i/Jto't.t.e w m; W won. 'ttlt. " IO 5‘ m {PHIL "' "I" n to the rum to Iron um: him." It I: my dough†M you that all th CI of Adam and RV the bunch-mm my m do the right th be nut street no N mirrfortune, I In will“): beg amneq from some E the had noon!- Are to htm lint a great he II " opulent u Be do8N hin up a “In atttre and mm -rtate for a ma In worldly clroum "on; last year; ttt mt. On the man s In. from pom-m Ind he meemed to N bat a uklllful plum “win of his 2:y) and vigomu- (want to In. former vigor. he In I." wrong Duel m1. In these ma my theme. I)“ would run- b b. cranks. Ar my 60 roman " human raw li'. tl "ve Ml Ko' tt (that man) s; In women, but the, have not always or thought the t were tny ol you Mee you an "we Blot-ta and inn mouthing. Hen Bible promise tl Wullln‘ton new: m in ttttti QAN'UU h tlt- whom. livey ttea. Text, Isaiah i the righteous that .2 Ben is, I p on right. bu: How many, l Ne do you kt It were ask.- those who He " III we hm “not“. Christ halite riche- pays-x Wh- us in Mitt Hettqqt wardrnhe r dun robe of His given us A plant in I. In ready to tl Now, as to our spxr att right. We Wet" but Christ the phya Mow. II to " all right. Th the righteous text. It In I I. Imputed r you 'te'. int curb! the L Appnclnle tl the text. an (rest Book. urn chunw d the hunt I ttod me a ll deeper and h than that of In the At the can“ when th: noon. P, the oven the Lord [Ml In a of It daze good thim overwheln and the n '0 would â€been In personally appeared 1 tom. cou', abundance canary " that 999 Ind life t out ot m ederAed fr (an Man! 3 good tt till drowr mum I; the best him MI Schl- u! u n Idlemu ploymen throw. bis-Ins um " - ol .0. Host Ci worth 82‘5" may" Tu! ee' all and HI world'n re, them up t, Inad- esret an Inst ot to the rep. - how “menu!“ you know ntturnl of before "od Betterment 0&th Puri ot taking "a the H (him I FH Illed " that .v' .tgccer'* Non an? out o', There Is W have mmil them will world. so tl ml Itthe Iou. The f â€no and dttrerenee i fl Say w tbe m w loam mint too rise more he f word to lot . another Ill tn M n mam th h