you find that she is company of stram«â€" + "I£ schoo‘ boy who used to buy creamcakes,. I can see your fin your cousin Rebecca knows : or two, my love. She is the ¢ wise woman of the Eastâ€"Bath Why Ask Foolish Question ‘"Yom ask wherein the widou perior to all others. Well, supp consider her as a commanian * Ing schoo‘! ib creamcakses your coustyn C 7 bithiotsncintndiifto ind ce t a ol P ob c 5 1 34 00 what she was and what you were. It was a case of ‘calt love‘ mereiy. But I don‘t mind teiling you. my boy, forKFK am not at all jealousâ€"there are many more like youâ€"that it would be well worth your whHe to run up to Rockefeliertown and makeâ€"mind, I do not say renewâ€"acquaintance with the charming widow. If you do, forget the past. bhlot it out. If she weore to recognize in you the boardâ€" Ing school boy who used to buy papa‘s EAWSHE Prates Resucs oÂ¥e d is AE0 se C uC "Think fate had ripe hbit . 2 g , _ , 3._ ~CCHkK FOUr InCky stars it was not yonâ€"wno is now resting beâ€" neath the daisies, went into the ernâ€" cible with her and helped to make her so. s I C m n Aneles U fail at her feet in silent a Ah. yes, worth your while, But just hecaus> some suffe â€"you may thank your Incky was not yorâ€"wno is now e a blooming \ est woman Manbattan. her to=Jay â€" her as your hes bu 4o a cesc en elcy ~OF ~SEXE andâ€"thirty in half mourning, with a look of resignation to give characâ€" ter to the smile, and with all the graces whch nothing but experience and schooling can give to a woman. "What coes ‘sweet sixteen‘ know about life, about men, about hoprâ€" self? What is she but a lot of va> cuous chatter and silly laughter ? A bright eye. a bit of pretiy color in the cheeks, a (gure not yet l‘nrm(‘ul} to the perfection of _ womanhoodâ€" bah !â€"a lot of IHtG, TOOLILEEN _ HEMMEESHtz c TTE CETTT UV excuse? It is all Yery wel about ‘sweet sixteen‘ and long list of like phrases wh so pretty and mean so litt Sweet Flddlestlcks, Ma Be!tf-r sweet sixâ€"andâ€"twent andâ€"thirty in half mourning look of resiomutinm a« 106 AS& you young t) suasion w years ol | i# cither point, opr for which W g s e o oui ue 94. Aols > t e en > LCb tily. You certainly are of the sex which nee is our pity and instruction, and as much of our affections as we choose to give, But this subjsct of the widows versus all otivrr forms of womanhood seems to me so patent that it needs no ilumina tion." "Is thore anything more stupid, I ask you fair and square, than _ a young cthing of tho fomninina .ls yuestion ? Pooj {ounwl! a stud foun pretend t of the worlkt." An â€" Humble humbly lind widows married kin have Rever bers the earth. And ye that they cannot help _i Are they not all doing to correct the blemish of 1 and advance at least to of existence which makes gible for widowhoodâ€"I m rlage? _ Eut even when woman is not sure of re high goal. It is the old again. _ Many are called, are chosen. _ But perhaps as well. Diamonds would n preciated if every chunk « the cellar were. a Kohinoo s with widows, The scarei first water kind adds to t clousness. Their rarity an contrast to less fortunat make the world appreciate their true value. 8So, perh ture is kinder than 1 have Credit for." pict Ma *Oh, well, that depends. There is much to be said in favyor of the grass widow, and I know many who are far on the asphalt road which leads to the happy city of Perfection. But I was thinking when I spoke of the readyâ€"made articre, and not the custom kind fashioned to order, «i to speak, in our courts. It is the woman who, at a proper â€" and Interesting period of existence, has been accorded the high honors of iss y CCs oL am vyery ignorant biy. "Am I not a m; ‘ru.:-. Forgive me if | "Grass or hay, Rebecga?" I inâ€" quired, with rather more interest than I am accustomed to feel in the chatter of the woman philosopher. "I often think," . said _ Rebecca thoughtfully, "that a widow is the noblest work of heaven." k 3 [ of the dread{uilness of You ie se u.c 10 cce S weulr â€" LHGseCrE * HHk ‘ks, a figure not yet formed perfection of womanhoodâ€" lot of idle, foolish, sentimenâ€" les which have got to be out of her by the heary tripâ€" of life. â€" When you were ‘ghteen and not mutch more ~ ppon to know that girl is vidow. She is the: prettiâ€" bet ween Ossining _ and ind if you were to meet ou would not recognize early flame, but would Aask,. Rebor ws so much kind, or eve or married possible th; Poor boy. i student o th t gr + than she, s somethin superhnma n pp r _ _UUL pernaps It is jugt amonds would not be apâ€" if every chunk of coal in were. a Kohincor. So it lows. The scarcity of the t _kind adds to their preâ€" Their rarity and their to less fortunate sisters : see your finish. Oh, vca knows a thing our whileé, indeed. some suffering man AW n( rllov 18 ti *A 18 ‘ Questions > ’ dropped â€" the widow is syuâ€" | ger this Well, suppose we | anywher mpanion. Do not| Yor Bh vorihy of the across it 2°n * She kno‘n kets. > . * is the original istâ€"Bath Beacan. @ appreciate them at ue. So, perhaps, naâ€" than 1 have given her th Acknowledgment ty _ square, than a tho feminine perâ€" net arrived at the n. and whose mind & big interrogation a mass of conceit ‘er has no possible Yery well to rave een‘ and all the wrases which sound in so little. ‘ ticks, Say 11 1000â€"1L mean, marâ€" ven when married a sure of reaching the is the old story told are called, but few et sixteen‘ kno men, about ho but a Ilot of v; silly laughter ? [ pretty color i P NOG Â¥AL frreme ent adoration WiSt be surfeited with which now encumâ€" And yet we know help themselves. doing their best th n Ca man ?" if 1 spok a, wherein you superior to the _to those who FOu Aj uman nature. â€"you, a man eavy tripâ€" you were ruch more u used to very â€"deâ€" i sort of you think main yourâ€" o[ their birth, to that stage U them eliâ€" need to u _ call naracâ€" l the rience oman. oman. | NEcret o know | t Sstcret hop. | nothing i va. | never pr PP ? A "A wid or in Sho has rmed | There is oodgâ€"| ing her, XUL has Mrs. Yonr BMumerâ€"Dear. dear, I dropped my diamond ring off my finâ€" ger this morning, and can‘t {ind it anywhere." * Yonr Blumerâ€"It‘s all richt T Aamie _we must be going,." said the jolly horseman‘s daughter, gathering her wraps about her alabaster shoulders. "This sea fog makes the air quite chill. I thiask it about time to reâ€" tire." M wiA c az.___._ _ sffHTyY,. my DOF, matry a widowâ€"a widow every time !" "My â€" dearest Rebecea," said I, "there is wisdom it what you say. It appeals to me, every word with a foree which is quite compelling. And now. may Iâ€"" 11 _ you must marry a widowâ€"a widow . _ PDUL, SNUrey, it is not necessary for me to go into particulars about this. 1 merety point to the fact that a woman‘s second marriageâ€"I refer, of course, to women of good sense and keen discernmentâ€"is alâ€" most invariably a happy one. And it, perchanee, through â€" natural courses, she enjoys a third and fourth, they run as smoothly as an electric _ automobile on a perfect road. ‘ m wile who Wiltl Make BHin She has been broken ness. she knows wha and if she is willing i it is because sho has 1 art of making marr And a successful marr good thing to tie to. "But, surAy. it is n Mrs. Yon " The | bouncing, widow io m wife w! PUIFT AMemthe s en s Peres mage? Yes, every timeâ€"if you can get one! I say it bo!dly. and I do not fear contradietion from any one worthy to speak. Nothing more riâ€" dienlous was ever written than old man Welor‘s advice to Samuel. ‘Beâ€" ware of the viddors> " The man: who Pats .n Birisuc ing her, while ho who ought to be alas! often alone. terion after all. It about it. That Eo would do so if tha me out. A widow f And so say the m "AmP sa T «ayw a selfâ€"esteem been rubbi way by some maladroit he has met ? How gent him the right way an« Ibruck . ul sunth es InSaccrecis ols € most approved brand. Hath hankering for tenderness and little cooing ways? The wido cooâ€"coo beyond all commare H CTRTE C 12200 â€" RHUOW 5 the widow how to creep in to the nermost cockles of the heart? D he wish passion episodes, she them ready to command and of : most approved brand. Hath he Kprsueto Ofens! /s dn L # D+% suppose we consider the widow in the light of a lover. Ah. you bend a listening ear. You are interested. Now, let mr ask you as a man who has had some varied experienceâ€"nay, do not smile. in that selfâ€"conscious wayâ€"it is common to all your sexâ€" have you not found the ‘reli¢,‘ as some jolly joker called her, far and away the best article of affection turned out by the alchemy of life ? "Who knows so well the needs of the creature man? Who knows as‘ the widow how to creep in to the inâ€" nasil d Louys L P "A > NTLer I hear women crying Jout against the widows and accusâ€" _ | ing them of being monopolists. They say mean and spiteful things about the poor, defenseless creatures. But the widows try to bear up, being comforted by the thought that they hold the trump cardsâ€"the men. . Another Point of Vantage ! "Another thing which makes the widow superior is the fact that she has learned the truth about the men and has learned the proper way to manage them. You are very â€" nice creatures up to a certain point," said Rebâ€"cea, placing her warm hand on mine, "but you have to be proâ€" perly managed and driven with a firm hand. In the first place, you must not be adored too much. It spoils you. The widow never adores. She tempers her love to the shorn man. She knows when to be cold and when to be hot. Sha never sickâ€" ens him with sentiment. She is just right, and ha finda her so. And she is so wise that she always has more than one string to her bow. It is the great secret of success. A man thinks far mpre of the woman who laughs at his jealous fits and refuses to be his slave than at ons who sickâ€" ens him with adoration. "But suppose we consider the widow in the light of a lover. Ah. you bend x Astening car." You aro infaxneks. C ngetshrandanliinetistndbtsindPulaid â€"bâ€"An s _men and women. Who has the men of moment hovering around her ? The widow every time. Go to the big seaâ€" shore or mountain hotel, where there i# a hue and ory concerning the dearth of men. Do you find it coming from the widows » I think not. They have all the men they want. It is the wives and the maidens fair who are suffering from the drought. j "Why, often I hear women crying out against the widows and accusâ€" ing them of being monopolists. They SIY MCAD And Shitafnl thimms almawk D .0 CEC0®N CCOR tHUM I & good story be told. It is just, possible ’ that she can teil a good one herself, though women differ in this respect just as much as you men do. In short, she meets you on the level, so to speak. She has learned how to be genâ€" uinely entertaining. She does not talk everlastingly about herself, as the poor. silly fool whom the papers call ‘""the belle" continually does, and who attracts men only if she have money or beauty, two things which the widow of talent can do without and win hands down., if she cares to enter into a contest with the maiden perâ€" son. in one of An Early Call. _ Wike hor nice little sister ght to be a magnet walks, iten alone. That is the criâ€" ifter all. It is not what I say t. That goes for naught, or o so if the facts did no?enr A widow for a lover, y L. say the men, (God bless ‘em. so I say a widow for marâ€" Yes, every timeâ€"if you can Â¥ v t 1 20 F ww an who gets <a aye! or an â€" airy marry him, is going i0 Into any w never wants for lovers _ selection to choose from iUways a procession followâ€" y s F 1 ing ways? â€" The widow is a exond all compare. Has his im been rubbed the wrong ome maladroit person whom et 1 How gently she strokes right way anad brings it alt _sets him purring with conâ€" a hugo tom cat? Does he 8 all right. 1 came { my trousers pocâ€" ‘oken to double harâ€" what is before her, ling to try it again, has learned the rare marriage successful. marriage is a pretty Him HMappy be hot. Sha never si't;f(: _ sentiment. She is d ha finds her so. And rough _ natural a third _ and smoothly as an on a perfect mixed assemblage of irt ? Does buxom fairy to gret 9 is soft \ He Wouldn‘t Mina. Thus a writer in an American paper views the life of King Edward VIL: When I think of Albert Edward, With his throne, To comment upon his worries I am prone ; Ant I cite the restless bed, f An uneasy royal head ; But‘ IT‘d like 10 1086 some chiniha. has the ‘"Says he‘s got to havre more room in his flat. Says it‘ll help him some if you‘ll let him scrape the paper off the walls"â€"Catholic Standard and Times, - ‘‘*What‘s he want now the proprietor of the Higl ment house. "Here‘s another letter from 1 new tenant." said the secretary eW +D 200 I close 50 cents for two n of the Tablets, and will without them in the hous have children." Baby‘s Own Tablets are druggists or will be sent post paid, at 50 cants a addressing the Dr. Willia cine Co., Dept. T Reartke: On a throne, It Would Help a Little F ~2 64. AAwetls are â€"sold. by or will be sent by mail, , at 50 cants a box, by & the Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" Dept. T. Brockville, Ont. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO WHAT IRISH ELECTIONS COST WHY BABIES CRY BC s es ons sseese Snor Feh) srines *( $E 15 : six beds in one room bE td ie 1 four in another, at ; C494 _ ;/ > guineas every bed 4 #RHE | not more than four CC 14 , ny bed at a time,â€" C338 q 6 3 ap _ enough, God w#s,â€" Is to me ... ... 223 15 C horses and 5 mules CC 1i ut my yard all night E CR3 ;. 4 13s, every one of C4+ i », and for a man, | 3 Cp ch was lost on head tCA watching them all _ ; | | t, is to me ... ... *.; t 0O reakfast on tay in the _ c ow fllnl‘. TW ANrraWaY 6i i _ a p. and â€" good natured. ross children will easâ€" uch a change. I enâ€" for two more boxes _ and will never be in the house while I some slumber, Bryan now /~ inquired Highuppe apartâ€" hundred by Bryan I prays for your P‘rim and no more in place of Jemmy *9 mark his sarraty., that At all Stores, or by Mail for the price SQOZODONT 1 me Teath * Breath 25° At the age of the average man the age of 30 she stomach, ommb uic »ho / â€"2s) large ones. And his wife said t; him : " Where aro the large fisn 7 and he isald : "Thore are none." Aan she said :""And where is the lie abou the _ twelreâ€"pound trout?" And he said : " I have not one." Then his wife said : "I do not believe you have been fishing at all, but have been to the races and lost a lot of money and are afraid to tell me. I think it is cru>l, and I shall go home to mother," And she webt for a long time, and was only persuaded by a diamon ring that he was telling the truth, Moralâ€"A lishy lis is cheaper than the unexpected truth.â€"Londan t There was once a fisherman. And of course he went aâ€"lishing, for no one expects a fisherman to go out shooting rabbits. And he caught two little fish, and they were so small that he threw them back again. And he went home without any, and did not stop at the fistmine"f" ", U U1d 7 iiedontietrus Thissi..... * 1OSOpNer, "Is that cross streets are quiet." "No,. Maude, dear, there is nothing remarkable in the fact that when a man has been sitting perfectly stlll you‘ve seen his sidewalk."â€"Phil adelphia Record. \Ammamts | _ CV _ ~C, t68 C&BHE, but that doesn‘t make him a noble. man. "This air is very familiar," remarkâ€" ed the musician, as the wind took off his hat. The toper objects to having body in the wine, and the prohibitionist objects to having wine in the body. "The difference between a street and a woman,‘ s2ys the Manayunk Philosopher, "is that Cross streets are quiet." Quaker Chips. It‘s a wise child that doesn‘t ask questions. The cream of a book is not obp. tained by skimming. In cooking as in singing, a great deal depends on the range. A fool can make money, but it takes a wise man to spend it. Be sure you are right and thenâ€" bo certain that you‘re sure.. You can take a lazy man to task but you can‘t make him work, What‘s done can‘t be undone, espec. lally if it‘s a hara boiled egg. A man‘s house may be hig castle, DiUnt Kha®) Astencirk 0 uncoi s Minard‘s Liniment Cures Come, from nowhere elge ECEC it hy eifihadiahMis tds h i dsc ds c . 13 bel of the right sort must come true happiness, all from within Happy is the man in these times, exclaims a writer in the Boston Trangeript, who can see from his dinâ€" ing room window the very patch in which grew the ear of corn that is at fhat instant tickling his palate ! For no vegetable known to modern | cooks takes on travol staim and gors stale so quickiy as does sweet corn. It looks as well at the end of four hours from picking time as it did at the first instant. but even in that short time the sweetness that is inâ€" herent has vanished, no one can sa y where. Cooke who know this and aim to make the loss good by adding augar to the water in which they boil the corn have their labor for their paing They don‘t fool anyone besides themsgelves. ThG SWOCLINA§E Af mews q 2 ‘ @ "am, 1 _0 t _ ~u® ~sIvÂ¥en ( Rev. J. 8. Elisworth, of the Cliftor (N. J.) Reformed Church, recently says the Newark News. It consisted of a chicken house, as well as the chickens to put in it. The oddest feaâ€" ture of all was that the good clergyâ€" man was unaware of his friends‘® inâ€" tentions until the chicken house was found in his back yard. The presentation was made by the members of the Young Men‘s Hociâ€" ety, who carricd the chicken house to the minister‘s home and placed it safe ‘on the ground. Then each one secured a chicken and decorated it with ribbons. When a ring at the door«» bell announced visitors, Mr. Ellsworth was greatly surprised to find that several dozen good healthy chickens, gay in their varied decoraâ€" tions, awaited him. Minister P A QUEER DONATION PARTY . ; o . o Darter, of Cape La Hune, had troublq with his heart for years. and could find nothing to help him. But his own words will better tell the story. "For over six years," writes Mr. Barter, "I suffered intensely with palpitation of the heart and had to give up work: I could not do anyâ€" thing at all until I saw} in Dodd‘s Alâ€" manac that Dodd‘s Kidney Pills would cure me.‘ I then sent ior six boxes. I used five of them and am completeâ€" 1y cured, I can do my work again now as well ag ever I could. I am not much of a writer,but if you think this letter would help any other person by being printed in any of your publiâ€" catlons you are at liberty to print it, for, I am thoroughly grateful for TrwlLI‘e triac lc c clll Ne One of the oldest ado to a minister ez l ow ~ 7 PAGOu d in them. The trouble was t act at the root of the i Kidneyse, Do@d‘s Kidney P tirely different to any o ment for Heart Trouble ; t the Kidneys Tirst, and for reason are so succoessful. Mr. Thomas Barter, of Hune, had tronhlin with: Li ’ Dodd‘s Almanac the Means of Helpâ€" ing Mr. Thomas Barton DownThere â€"KRKead that Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Would Cure Heart Troubleâ€"Tried Them and Proved it True. Cape La, Hune, Nild., Aug. 26.â€"The most popular remedy down here this last few years is undoubtedly Dodd‘s Kidney Pille, It is only one of the host advertised which universally shows that it may be relied upon, Medicines for Heart Trouble have been advertised before in l\'ewtound-J land, but nobody placed any reliance | in Kh.ame onne _ 022 c ) P ge _ of 16 a girl i e _man is all soul, 30 she knows he is Tale With a Moral. News of the Good Work in the Old Gaulf of St. Lawrence Colony. IN NEWFOUNDLAND The ‘8 Kidney Pills." C is c mCU was telling the truth, hy lis is cheaper than d truth.â€"London King. MeeaPrbricdk peteces y * CHHSVer ‘was given to S. Elisworth, of the Clifton teformed Church, recently, Newark News. It consisted ken house, as well as the to put in it. The oddest feaâ€" l1 was that the good clergyâ€" unaware of his friends‘ inâ€" mwadd 4420 ND Th Fresented With a house and Fowls. 1 0e es TuF EXHTRCC .â€{he trouble was they did not Sweetness of Corn helr labor for their t fool anyone besides sweetness of corn to oldest presents ever biucs 4 s q7 P ®) wife said to _large fish ?" re _ none." And _ the lie about ut?" And he Then his wife you have been girl imagines &)u‘l, but at . must come, like from within and been to the ( money ang I think it is H 1o_m0th3l'." t of the matterâ€"the Kidney Pills are enâ€" to any other treatâ€" Trouble ; they act on in these times, in the Boston see from his dinâ€" ¢ yery patch in no one can say w this and aim ood by adding which they boil mostly Garget in Chickenâ€" that very Cultivated land is won d o 1,000 times as much foo area of hunting land, A correspondent, says the Pall Map Gazette writes to Rommoun‘y Asteney; "In Stockholm we havo fiva AUtOo» maten, or antomatie Pes o ura 1t e 1t is a very good Unng fop l'lutllulmwng you need only drop your rmnu,y In the glot, and without spoak n# tho lapy. guage you get n waunid w ho , Admon t of any kind you like, op boop, milk, colfee, ten, ote," Automatic Restanrantsa in Steciholm And the bride wiped O w a y â€"Philadelphia Telegraph, *" Yes," the bride resp is so sad! If it hadn‘i Henry by his favorite propose having it taken thing else put in the framo is lovely ! But blue every time Ilook ; There that poor youn; . ,, 3. _ 9_IH® Iivorite uncle J should propose having it taken out and some. thing else put in the frame. _ Tho framo is lovely ! But it makes me blue every time Ilook Aat the pletupre, There that poor yuung couple haye Jjust buried â€" their little baby theip firstâ€"born, likely tâ€"ohn, 1 can‘t boap to see it !" The bride was showing her w presents with great deligh when her visitor paused before etching of " The Angelus" ho {ell. tlon Minard‘s Liniment Curon C oo ons l Walsh, Ont. I was cured of Facial Neuralgin MINARD‘S LINIMENT. ol s J. . BAlLEY P‘atisinintssntliiiih s sc esc ck c 224 6\ P Chatham, Ont. I was cured of Inflammation by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. MRS. W. W,. JOHxXaNmx i was cured of painful Goitre MINARDS LINIMENT. A young matron of New York tells the following joke of her bridal atâ€" tempts at housekeeping. She had employed a greenhorn as a servant, and spent many weary hours teachâ€" ing her the way things should be done to be in the correct style. Her latest lesson related to the correct way to receive a visitor and the maid was instructed in the mysteries of cards, cardâ€"trays and the acâ€" cepted formula to be gone through when opening the door for a caller, One afternoon the door bell _ rang, and Mrs. Gregory heard the maid tearing up the stairs two steps at a time. » "Shure, m‘m, there‘s one of them machines outside, with two men aâ€" sittin‘ on the top of it, and a lady on the inside, nn'.“â€"looklng at the card in her hand, and with a dash down the stairs againâ€""P‘yp forgotâ€" ten me pan !"â€"Ledgrer Manti) . Parksdale, Ont How beautifu) :~ was Hals Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur face of the systemi. Testimonials sent free Priceâ€"75¢ per bottle Sold by all druggists, Hall‘s Family Pills are the best. PF PP \diffnsatitsiss Mik 4 & : ledo, 0. Waupinc, Kimmxax & Druggists, Toledc, 0, Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is lng directly upon the b F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toleao, 0 We, the undersigned, have known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions aand financially able to carry out any obliga tions made by their firm. “;::31’ (s)c TRUAX, Wholerale Druggists, Toâ€" 0, 0. WaLupinc, Kimmxax & Maryr®, Wholesale Nimmondaea n c A We offer One Hundred Dollars‘® Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. "Goin~ t‘ th‘ singin‘ skule Satur day night?" queried Jim. ‘"Nobuddy axt me," she said. "I axes you," said Jim bravely. "T‘ll go," she said. Twentyâ€"five minutes elapsed. "Ole Boss hed a kaff," said Jim, brightening. "Law me," she said. Twenty minutes passed. Then Jim unlocked his hands, put on his hat and stood up. "Goin‘?" she asked. "Goin‘," he said, and walked out on the porch. She followed him to. the door, and they both stood thus in silence for ten minutes. ‘"‘Must be after 9," he said. "Must be," she said. "Good night, Mandy," he said, and lhug the door as he walked out of the yard. _And yet this is tury. HALL & RUCKEL, Montreal rer," he said. ‘"Dew tell. Must hey airly crops," from her. * Then the clock had the floor for another 17 minutes. "Hoss is sick," sho said. "Waal, I‘ll be durn. Which un ?" exâ€" claimed Jim. apt t y# "Bay mare." T. +. fat , ‘ "Ep‘zooticks ?* ; ;|; [ :: : :; "Ep‘zooticks." . After this outburst nothing â€" was said for thirty minutes. Another long and ominous silence, perhaps 20 minutes. "Goin t begin harvestin‘ t‘morâ€" â€" _"Be it you, Jim?" 2# © Jim admitted being "it," by a curt "yes," and followed her into the parâ€" lor. He sat down on a chair without leaning back, placed his hat in his lap and clasped his hands over his knees. She sat on the far side of the room, with her hands lying idly one in the other. After a lapse of fourâ€" :fen minutes he opened the conversaâ€" on : "Fokes well ?" q "All ‘cept pap. He‘s down with roomytiz." 440000800040 ¢00004000409%¢v He came in the early twilight. When he knocked, she opened tne door and pretended to be surprised at seeing $ a coUuNnTRY _ ; P _ coURrTsHIP] It Madeo HMer Biue Forgot the ltx;((!c- responded HOW‘S THIS ? BYARD Mo 4, and with a dé.-s-l-l againâ€"" T‘ yp forgotâ€" edgep Monthiv. wald t1 Card Tray. b the twentieth cen the exclama Jded ; "byq 1t en given to u’l(’l, (* JOHNSOx produnp &n ngunp} MULLIN Sh1 ; but re a line her Ince & Lear wedding ol them men aâ€" ) a lady at the to by b s io s , § TX® if £000; if not food you are pornloxo‘.":od' your general health i4 wrong. Nend 500 by expre«ss or P. )( order for two :‘.W“ presorptions lmm yfl:r hen!tl; 00 your complexion not as :l::‘}or mï¬!."ï¬. blotches or washe."" 4°* POmm in one of youp 0) perplexed, and y N.“d m lly Q'" matohless praspp Your TWP COC Cenek to do KNITTING for us at arn and machine, Kas: {hnd knitters also w anted particulars to STANDARD HOsSEB ow PARTIES WANTED h .ds d 3.A Canadian houses for Canadians at Canadian prices and managed by a Canadian. The Hotet Bm-klnglnnn. The Marlborough and; Phe 1ilian, All up to date buildi Roofsuden on the Buckingham, |m.°f.'i_w per day, Apply E. B, ROBINSE, Hote Buckingham sokdd $ ngh P0R sanp Buffald Hotels HEAD oFFICE, TOoRroxTo, Authorized Capital â€" $1,500,0( The policies of this company brace every good fTeature of Life surance contracts, and guarantee highest benefits In regard to log cash surrenders, and extended ing ance. Goodagents wanted in this distr Hon. Jno. Dryden, Geo. B. Woo President. Genarn! WÂ¥ . _ _ The Continentai Life Insurance Company There _ are times when tolls nothing and sllence There ain‘t no credit in game when ye‘ve got all t ‘less you dealt the cards D ons 1COs TUd threse months," he said, "Oh, that‘s al1 right," , clork, promptly. "You j to grow ; it you had, th work all right. What m« expect ?"â€"Chicago Post ‘"You said," asserted the i tomer, "that this tonic wo hair grow." "I did," admitted the clep The customer removed his showed a head as smooth . liard ball. Minard‘s Liniment ria, "Wantedâ€"A sad heart, a t life, a #@inful soul to save with word and my heart‘s sympath y bath morning and evening. Firs gregational Chupch. Arthur C. | PER®ONAL. ‘"Wanted â€" A heart to ch tempted life to strengthen f test ; a soul to save; Sabbath . ing and evening ; God‘s word of First Congregational Churech, A C. Dill." YALE MEDICaA) A Very Unique Way of Using th» Advertising Columns,. The populazity of the "want" ad. is growing. For years newspaperse have been portraying the advant=gos offered by these short, terse, adver. tisements, untii now, throughont th _world, people search the "want ad." columns as they do the news c« lumns. They realize they are just as essonâ€" tial in the makeâ€"up of a newspaper as is the latest item of new»® Eack city has its peculiar offers prosented to the reading public through the means of the "wants," and a Niagara Falls minister is among the v« ry latâ€" est to avail himsel{f of this opportunâ€" ity to do good. Alert to thae yalur of advertising, here is the way ho uses the aÂ¥lvertising columns : n WAXTED. Ni as in winter, and if you are thriving upon it don‘t stop because the weather is warm. ol 4 OxH if good ' your gene by express "ay A certain amount ;)f fiesh is for health; if you have mit you can get it by hmnw the ounce produce; the M;.xl!‘*mym to start the oing g. so that the patfent isp.:;t to digest and absorh his ordinary food, which he could not do be. fore, and that is the way the gain n e pouin a stay by uhi a a =‘ï¬n ounce of SCO'I';S EMUL. SION. It is strange, but it often colf‘s Fimaisign How To _ Gain Flesh, You will find it just as useful in summer in winter, and if you are thriving unan ECOTT & Bow a, e7Z~ ‘carure of Life In. ntracts, and guarantee the mefits in regard to loane, nders, and extended insupâ€" Complexion JSSUE NO 36 1901, A DOMINIE‘S WANS. ' ning 8 h in Eoage se Medy for dlarrhce a, Twonty. Asks Too Much _ j ,, "NMwain â€"Addros: & P, O, w‘é“ml using that us at home "You have no hair had, the tonic would Creail in winnin‘ got all the trumps e cards yourself, ed in this district, Geo. B. Woods, General Manager, O es or washes, Ad Yale, Mich., » Toronto, On Wwa. township of stman‘s Springs, id peat land, or T eparate x u; or Chemeford, Ont. NA 6 Cures answered the We furnish Good pay, slamp for re ( clerk loquacity teils much. toni irate cus uld | mal r the morn=â€" ‘. Sal t Conâ€" n L by heâ€" Ur Bacon â€" wroie, phised, and A1l and Jonathan Judgment to c there have be« tion who wou!l to stand the t« ’flnolple was J wife‘s volce U do right and presiden by the 1 the habi presiden w 4 y o 1 m Cld pecome under t epact, « childrer But I â€" la selves keep h to hu: thougt desira down their homes or keep of capa I know tery can is prepar mercial & &nfluence boards « want w heart â€" al barrier t righteous. might as : how high fy or ho alunge as beight or guty. . The wettle finall whole eaubje prepared to and nelither @n v to e are vou ought is th My ke 4# the h gtill left ven and eternal J throne in man the man phr spheres by which his realn woman‘s item o where x love tha Robert and â€" Jo dist, an: and avith LAr e on im thund l We Bras" about â€" the at} C©aT regnan domina dline be betwee, not m this di In ot] make ; woman move in m Ar enco Gene ated en #f the iua Reso @uperior MJ O kor “‘ al n This d# U 0 2CT 18 id h