aArro u, entere r. left i daughter of he second hus of _ Hastâ€" seeond Marâ€" s Laudy Fiora motber) & gaged . away eory Chaplin. wodding _ she 1 Snelgrove‘s rd street, osâ€" is society has example of the than the Marâ€" of Anglesey. be daughter of rquis of Anâ€" we. as he red a great of Hastings‘ > next year‘s pped the latâ€" ;3 l0u8y t1G, is the u‘arly of id of vieâ€" surol and ind trauth, urple and and true SIX JAMAIGA ay @n istings horeo‘ of Ha of nd 81 ut Cattle bn > had an inâ€" im dolars a 50.000 worth n W MARRIAGE ora nges 0 cents to Monâ€" Miss Chetâ€" iis of Anr 0. as he SION. urity , Blacgk ed the n Engâ€" Marguis Wife, oser la is Di ADâ€" y the _ brief 1OÂ¥ e LrrA D6 ) _ LOBâ€" Sho is ofderâ€" onâ€"= nances ce ists® C the H WEEKS KX M d Marâ€" the PQG De 1# he 10 w bave Ne at +t IArâ€" How 1 the t by que 1 v bng th In it : F i onutline of the dark object I had already seea on the white ground. It was the body of a man. I had known that before; I knew no more now ; but an overpowering sickness ansl d:rztress came upon me as I This Meass Anaemia, and if Neglected Consumption May Followâ€"Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills the Only Certain Cure. When You Grow Weak and You Cheeks Lose Their Color iittuadlits s < 1 d t isA at ono side of him lay the stolon gun. and at the other, close to the bank which bordered the road n the left, was som> larger object, which in the profound darkness I could not at first define. With a sudden spring I easily scized the lunatic, and held him fast, while Jock Ufted tihe Femkaem Ieeds 2l co= ulne are sold only in boxes that Wave the full name, "Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People" on the wrapper around every box. If your dealer does not have them, send direct to Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.. and the pille will be sent post psld_ at_gqmoontl a Dr. Williams Pink Pills not only eure all cases like the above, but also cure all other troubles arisâ€" Ing from poor blood or weak nerves, such as rheumatism, partial parâ€" alysis, St. Vitus‘ dance, indigesâ€" tion, kidney â€" and liver _ troubles, scrofula and eruptions of the skin, etc. These pills are also a direct‘ eure for the ailments from which so many women suffer in silence. Giva the pills a fair trial and they will not <lisappoint you. The genâ€" SOTN fail« to dell &n MOs help the\ doctor, â€" and _ althoug ment was followed f« It «id now benefit her some other remedics, faile«dl, and she had to a more shadow c deli. At this stage 1 t ‘â€"""7?"â€â€™7 fww;@_ï¬ M#W&MW : MA â€" 22â€"0 0 CAUSE FOR ALARM gowee . ie te t o n oe UEepR iT t To ET UICCE P E ; does not have them, send | me for haviag unwittingly brought toDr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.. | yet another disaster upon her. ville, Ont.. and the pills will!‘ Ferguson met us as the door of the â€"nt post paid at 50 cents a Hall, and told me, in a volce which or six boves for $2.50. distress made only more harsh and nacth upon having, the beth h 1 i CHAPTER XXVI _ I stayed beside the body of my dead |friend while Jock, by my direction, returned to the Hall with the unâ€" happy Elimer, who had already fallen ‘into a state of maudlin apathy, and ‘ was crying, not from remorse, but | from the effects of cold, hunger and exposure on his now wasted frame. He allowed himsel{l to be led away like a clwWld, and seemed cheored and soothed by the promise of food and lflre. I wondered, as I watched him stagger along by the side of the stalâ€" wart Highlander, that the spirit of a not ignoble revenge should have kept | its vitality so long in his breast in ; spite of enfeebled _ reason, poverty | and degradation. P es " It was a terrible vigil that I was keeping. Iknew by my own feelings that the shock of this tragic return to her would be a hundred times more severe to Babiole than if her bosom had been Tpulpitntinp: with sweet expectancy for the clasp of a loving husband‘s arms. Instead of the passionate, yearning sorrow ol a woman truly widowed, she would feel the far grueller stings of remorse none the less bitter that her conduct towards him had been blameless. As for me, I remember nothing but his brilliancy, his vivacity, the twinkâ€" ling humor in his picrcing eyes as he would stride up and down the room, pouring out upon any inoffenâ€" sive person or thing that fagled in the slightest respect to mest with his approval such vials of wrath as the less excitable part of mankind would reserve for abandoned scounâ€" drels and namoless iniquities. With all his faults, thero was a charm, an exuberant warmth about Fabian that left a bare place in the hearts of his friends when he was gone. As Ileant over his dead body and gazed aif the still white face by the light of the lantern, I wished from the depths of my heart that Ellimer had shot down the man he hated, and had left this poor lad to enjoy a few yeard longer the beautiful world he loved with such passionate qrdor. 7 we have all of us known to escn:)‘é from an existence which has brought a rersation too deadly to â€" be borne. Every mad impulse of _ the _ pass‘on with which I had lately beon struggling, every vague wish, evoery feeling of jealâ€" ons resentment seemed to spring to lifa again in my heart, and turn to bitter, gnawing _ remorse. I thinrk I must have staggered as I stood1, for I felt my foot touch someâ€" thing, and at the shock my sight cams to me again, and I knelt down in the snow. "Fablan, Fabian, old fallow!" I callsd in a husky voice. Ho was lying on his face. I put my arm under him, and turned him over and wiped the snow from his lips and forshead. His eyes were wide open, but they did not see me ; they had looked their last on the world and on men. The blood was still flowing from a bullet wound Jjust under the left ribs, aad his body was not yet cold. glanced _ down, blotting out the sight irom before my eyes and fillâ€" ing me with the cowardly craving es Rusess cese (â€"% & & ‘The snowfall began to slacken as I waited beside him, and when Jock reâ€" turned from the stable with Tim and another man, tho rising moon was struggling out from behind the clouds, and giving promise for a fair night after the bitter and stormy day. We laid my dead friend on a hurdle and carried him home to the Hall, while old Taâ€"ta, who had come with the men, saiffed curiously at our heels, and, designing â€" something strange and woeful in our dark and gilent burden, followed with her sleek head bent to the glistening snow, and only offered one wistful wag of her tail to assure me that if I wera sad, well, I knew she was so too. I learnt from Jock that Mrs. Elimer had met her husband, ard that, after the raanner of women, she had led him in aud ministered to his bodily wants while taking advantage of his weak and abject state to inflict upon him such chastisement with her volable tongue as might well reconâ€" cile him to another long absence from her. But Jock thought that the poor wretch‘s wanderings were nearâ€" ly over,. us - 4 Mad Mr. Elimer, in the snow and the darkness, had mistaken Fabian for me. He had sworn he would ki‘ the man who should destroy his dauchter‘s happiness, and fate or fortune, or the providence which has strange freaks of justice, had blinded his poor crazy eyes and enâ€" abled him most tragically to keep his word. "I doot if a‘s cen will see the mornin‘ licht again," said the glllie gravely. " A speaks i‘ whispers, an‘ shivers, and cries like a bairn. A‘ must be verra bad, for a‘ dosena‘ mind the lady‘s talk." " And Mrs. Scott, does she know ?" Jock looked solemn and nodded. *‘ Meester Ferguson told her, and he says the poor leddy‘s crazed like, an‘ winna speak nor move,‘ _ d I asked no more, and I remember no further detail of that ghastly proâ€" cesslon. Isaw nothing but Babiole‘s face, her eyes locking straight into mine, full of involuntary reproach to Adgen guttural, that Mrs. Elimer had had the cottage unlocked, and had c«aused lires to vbe lighced there for the reâ€" cep.bon of her husband, the poor la y besieving that he would give iess trouble there. "How is Mrs. Scott?" I asked anxiâ€" oubsly. "erguson answered in a grating, broken whisper. ‘"She went awayâ€"by herself, sirâ€" when I told herâ€"let her guess like â€"the thing that nad happened." They were taking Fabian‘s body to the little room where it used to sleep during our yearly meelings. _ As the slow tramp, tramp up the stairs began, I opened the door of my study and entered with the subdued tread we instinctively affect in the neighâ€" borhood of those whom no sound out flame. I advanced as far â€" as the hearthâ€"rug and stopped with a great shock. On the ground at my feet, her head resting face downward on the worn seat of my old leather chair, her hands pressed tightly to her ears, and her body drawn up as if in great pain, was Babiole; even as I watched her I saw that a shudder convuised her from head to fnot, and left her as still as the dead. Every curvre of her slight frams, the rigidity ofher arms, the evident discomfort of ber cramped attitude, told me that my poor child was a prey to grief so keen that the dread of her turnâ€" ing her face to mset mine made a coward of me, and I took a hasty step backwards, intending to reâ€" treat. But the sight of her had unâ€" manned me; my eyes were dim and "Batiole, Babiols," I said hoarsely; and moved out of myself by my terâ€" rible fear, I came back to ner and stooped ,and would have raised her in my arms with the tenderness one feels for a helpless child alone in the world, to try to soothe and comâ€" fort her. But before my hands could touch her a great change had passed over her, a change so great, so marked, that there was no mistaking Its meaning ; and, breaking into a flood of passionates tears, while her face melted from its stony rigidity to infinite love and. tenderness, she clasped her bands and _ whispered f{everishly, but with the ardor of an almost delirious joyâ€" will ever disturb again. The lamp was on the table, but had not yet been turned up. The weak rays of the moon came through the south window ; for the curtains were alâ€" ways left undrawn until I chose myâ€" self to close out the night _ landâ€" scape. The fire was red and withâ€" "l1 am a great, rough brute," 1 saild, noursely. "It is very good of you to forgive me," "You are our best friecnd, now and always," shoe said, holding her hand steadily in mine. She continued with an effort: "You are uot hurt ; then it isâ€"â€"" gy w I stepped back, startled, speechâ€" less, overwhelmed by a rush of feelings that in my highlyâ€"wrought mood threw me into a kind of frenzy. Drunk with the traunsformation of my despair into fullâ€"fledged hope, and no longer master of myself, 1 stretched out a madman‘s arms to her, I heard my own voice uttering words wild, incoherent, without sense or meaning, that seemed to be forced out of my breast in spite ol myself, under pressure of _ the {frantic passion that had burst its bonds at the first unguarded _ moâ€" ment, and spoilt at one blow all my hardâ€"won record of selfâ€"control and selfâ€"restraint. _ &he had sprung to her feet and evaded my touch; but as she stood at a little distance from me, her face still shone with the same radiance, and she looked, to my excited {ancy, the very spirit of tender, impassioned, exalted huâ€" mait love, too sweet not to allure, too pure not to command respect. There was no fear in her expresâ€" slon, only a shade of grave, gentle reproach. As â€" she _ fixed her solemn eyes _ upon me, Istamâ€" mered and grew ashamed, and my arms» dropped to my sides as the reâ€" coliection of the tragedy which had breught us here came like a pall over my excited spirits. "Then she came round the table on hor way towards the door, and would have gone out without a word, I think, if the abject skums and selfâ€"disgust with which I hung my head and slunk out of her way had not moved her to pity. L was afraid she would notlike to pars me, savage beast as I had shown myself to be, so I had turnet my back to the door and moved toâ€" wards my old chair. But Babiole was too nobleâ€"hearted to need any afieeâ€" "God forgive me!" she said brokâ€" enly, while her eyes grew dark and soft with sorrow and shame; then drawing her hand from mine, _ she crept with noiseless feet out of the I lost command of my steps. I touched the screen in my _ clumsy attempt to escape, and Toâ€"to, disâ€" turbed from sleep, sprang up ratâ€" tling his chain _ and chattering loudly. tations of prudery, and to see her old friend humiliated was too painful for her to bear. She looked at me with eyes full of awe, but she was prepared for my answer. "Fabian," I whispered huskily. "He is dead ?" I scarcely heard the words as her white lips formed them. & *"‘Mr. Maude," sho called to me in a low voiee, and the very msound ol her voice brought hoaling to my wounded selfâ€"esteem. 1 turnea elowly, without lifling my eyes, and she held out her little hand for me to take. "Thank God! Thank God ! Then it was not you! They told me it was you . Tommy‘s View. f Titâ€" Bits. "How do you like school, Tomâ€" my ?" "Pretty well, mother : but it©; such a waste of my playâ€"time." p» (To ve Coptinued.) Elimer hbad had $%%008000000048 4000 RAAAAAAAROAAAA 4 ;POUL TRY PARASITES.; The following is a eynopseis of an amts. ll often also use a sawdast address by Mrs. Ida E. Tilson, of West DF. Salem, Wis., who has been conducting ie ll:d&-n :i:d;;n Pe:ch;: 1 wA & B xes by y, comâ€" a series of pouitry institute meetings ng forth to feast o% Slood af m&LL in Nova, Scotia : rap) ~O apectatna decommiiniptpato O esn Â¥6Pritip "taret Pcaris : Bs "Besides some mimor pests, there are two great classes of poultry parasites, lice and mites. The latter nave no trorax, ony a . proboscis, head@ and abdomen. They nelong to the araclnigae, or spider kind, and are nearly all blood suckers. some of the lice, notably the large, grey headâ€" lousge, are blood suckers, but most of them are filth feeders. Te blood sucking lico, when killed by oil, usuâ€" ally de slowly and roll up themâ€" se.vos and provoscis. Killed more quickiy in alcohol, the proboscis may sometimes be seen. There are about nine kinds of lice, and four kinds of mites, infesting poultry. ‘The pests vary in size, co.or and shape, but preâ€" ventive and rsmedial measures do not differ so much. "While some lice breed in filth, othâ€" ere lay cits or eggs upon the birds. If possible the mu_nure should daily be removed, and the perches scraped. This not only takes away breeding places for certain parasites, but gives fowls a better air, and gets the ferâ€" tilizer on the land or in a compose beâ€" fore its valuable ammonia has escapâ€" ¢ed, in the last particular fully realizâ€" ing what Lord Palmerston said of dirt as only matter in the wrong place. "We maiy bui.d a dry, sunny, warm hen house, feed wellâ€"b.lanced rations, and be kinu, laitniu, masters, yet deâ€" feat ourselves in poull.ry culture by aliowing everytning to pour through the fowls luto nasty â€" paramtes around and on theam. ‘% Provide Dust. If a mellow dust box is provided, or _ a frosh spot : of _ earth often spaded, fowls will clean @nd exercise thomselves rather than exers'hae their owner. Wood ashes _ will ‘ discolor plumage and legs, a matter of conâ€" scquence only to exhibitors. With a coarso sieve from the fanning mill I sift any kind of ashes, throwing charcoal or clinkors one side for the biddies toâ€" eat; but rest _ assured their bath of dust is more patronâ€" ized when free from, chanks, keep it in a sunny place, stir and renew often. A little sulpnuur of lime, not enough to cause sore eyes, I freâ€" quently add. _ If fowls are very inâ€" fested, I huva found 1 can clean 25 birds in 15 minutes, by a pulf box or little bellows of Persian insect powdor. I do not get acquainuted with cach individual parasite, but apply my powsder to top of head, unâ€" dor beak, wings and vent. This is dons in tho evening when fowls are drowsy, or wnen I set a. hen, and several times during her &necubating. Silteod coal ashos will answer well. Thoâ€" Persian insect power is volaâ€" tile, and should be kept tightly covâ€" ered when not used, and is of no usa in nestâ€"boxes, unless mixed and held with oil. Tunsy, wormwood and clder leaves, cedar springs and onâ€" ion skins are good discounragers in One of the sons, however, producâ€" ed a will made over twenty years ago, leaving the deceased‘s estate to himself, after the payment of cerâ€" tain small legacies to the brothers and sisters. On the face of the will the bequest to "my son Richard," was unmistakably clear; but a miâ€" croscopic examination raised some suspicion that the name of the leâ€" gatee had been tampered with. . A photograph of the name was taken and enlarged enormously, with the result . that beneath the name of another brother, Edward, who was his father‘s partner and favorâ€" ite son, thus proving that a daring forgory had been committed. In all cases of forgery photography is simply invaluable ; for there is no forger in the world cleyer enough to bafflc its detective skill. An inâ€" teresting proof of this was proâ€" vided, a few years ago in the case of a disputed will. A wealthy merâ€" chant in the Midlands had died, as was supposed, intestate, in â€" which case his estate woukl have been equally divided between his four sons and two daughters. â€"In another case of a suspected forâ€" gory of a will an enlarged photoâ€" graph revealed the pencilled lines over which the signature of the tesâ€" tator and witness had been written, although ro trace of them was visâ€" Probably few of the tens of thouâ€" sands of people who take a practiâ€" cal interest in photography have much of an idea of its value as a detector of crime, although this is perhaps the most interesting of all its many phases of usefulness. In fact, it is no exaggeration to say that scores of criminals are now enâ€" joying the hospitality of His Majâ€" esty‘s prisons who, but for _ the camera, would certainly be at libâ€" erty, to carry, on their itlegal pracâ€" tices. To understand paralysis and its causes it is well to remember that every movement of the body or its members is due to the contraction of muscle, which can ouly take place under the influence of nerve force. The Dreadful Results of Neglected Nervous Diseasesâ€"Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Feod Preventse and Cures Paralysis by Restoring the Wasted and Depleted Nerve Celis. As this allâ€"important nerve force is Greated in the nerve centres of the brain and spinal cord, and conducted along wirelike nerve fibres to the various parte of the body, any deâ€" ramgement of the brain, spinal cord, or herve fibres may result in paraâ€" lysis or loss of the power of moveâ€" ment. tX % > Paralysis, then, is the natural reâ€" sult of all neglected nervous disâ€" "u? eP Sms B H t i 405 S WR BE " 2 2 2 ns uP C MMOOQMMMMJ you find yoursel{ nervous and Paralysis and Locomotor Ataxia. (London Titâ€"Bits.) ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Cof But Puncture For Blood. They multiply go fagt, I havo actuall y* known two hen houses to be purned when cleaning was thought hopeless. But from two sieges with them, I know they can be conquered. Hot, thin whitewash (the lime â€" newly slacked with hot water), _ kerosene emulsion, turpentine (singly or in combination}, brine, hot tar paints and even hot water, have all, to my knowledge, â€" been successfully used. The main thing is to repeat the apâ€" plication every day for about a week, in order to catch every hatch, because the eggs are less susceptible to applications than are the adult creatures. On our farm we found it necessary to clean some oi the carâ€" riers, or cats and dogs, with phenoâ€" chloro, etc. walls and nest boxes by day, comâ€" ing forth to feast on blood at night, hence our measures for destroying them, must be directcd to the house itsell. These creatures are just visâ€" ible to the naked eye. They are more ruddy when they have had a good meal, and paler after fasting. A daytime examination frequently discloses them on sick or witting fowls, the pests seeming to realize that the latter are not going to shake them off. Mites, when very thick, will be found between nests and walls. There is an important ifference between lice and mites. I have done considerable work with the microsâ€" cope, and am convinced that henâ€" lice do not breed on horses and eattle. The latter have their own kinds independently. Henâ€"lice will run over horses and cattle, causing great annoyance, but do not lay nits on them, while mites are cosâ€" mopolitan. They will bite all alike, even unto thy manâ€"servant and thy maidâ€"sorvant, and the canary or baby within the doors. They do not bite the skin, It will bo seen ‘that a necessity to tnorough cleaning is maveable furniturs« in tae poultry house, of moveable nests and perches. . Soap or cracker boxes hung to the wall by stout nails driven part in and tippoi up like picture nails, then passing through corresponding holes in those ‘boxes, make nests easlly takon cown for cleaning, and also adjistabls to any size or height of fowls, sinco active breeds would betâ€" tor have nests out of reach of their prying mischief, and large breeds cannot, without imjury, jump down from or fly to high nosts. Perches mrst not be teeterâ€"like, but whethâ€" P#r they pull out of grooves or from undor leather straps, will answer if moveable. _ Wide perchos â€" prevent crooked breast bones and are genâ€" erally selected by modern heavy fowls given a choice. Whore a forged signature is susâ€" pected the method adopied is to take photographs of the genuine and supposed false signatures, magâ€" nifying each a hundred{oid or more, and compare the results. Under this erucial test the sglightest discrepâ€" aney becomes exaggerated out of all compmarison with the signature; and cvery sign of hesitancy (for no forger can write a counterfeit signature with perfect ease and _ fluency) stands revealed. { In a rocent case, where it was suspected that certain account books had been tampered with and false figures substituted for the actual ones, the original figures and entries woere distinctly visible, although they had been ‘removed‘ by acid; and it was further proved that the alteraâ€" tion had been made, not by the clerk, who was responsible for the books, and who was suspected, but by a fellowâ€"clerk who had imitated | his writing. As a pioncer retraces his steps by blazedl trees, so, would that I could wins> by a line of clean henâ€"houses with moveable furniture. F. W. Hadâ€" son, Live Stock Commissioner. irritabic, overâ€"sengitive to ‘ght, sound, and motion, addiected to conâ€" tinua)l movement or tapping of the fingers, twitching of the muscles, sudâ€" den startings and jerkings of the limbe d@uring slcep ; if you have nerâ€" vous headaches or dyspepsia, are unable to sleep or rest, feel downâ€" hearted and discouraged, and unfit to fight the batlles of life; if your nerves are weak and exhausted, and your blood thin and watery, you have every reason to fear paralysis of at least some part of the body, ang> consequent suffering and helpâ€" leasness. _‘ » Paralysis can always be prevented and {-mm. paralysis actually cured by the _ timely use of Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food. ‘The time to begin treatment is when any of the above This is ome of the peculiarities of the camera, that it brings to light marke which are quite invisible even through a microscope, just asâ€"it has known to reveal the signs of measles and smallpox â€" several days before they become visible to the naked eye. ible even under the microscope. ho Duly a few months azo the camera was the means of bringing a murâ€" derer to justice in Germany. A man had been found murdered in a field by the side of the railway a few miles from Bresliau, and the man suspected of the crime pleaded and secmed to prove an alibi. To one of the spectators of the trial, however, his face and figure appeared familâ€" lar, and it flaszhed on him that the prisoner figured in one of his photoâ€" graphs. On looking through them he discovered a snapâ€"shot which he had taken from the train near the scene of the murder, and with the very date of the crime marked on the back. magnified, it was found to be a copy, not of a brass, but of a skilfally formed imitation of one, a marvel of clever penmanship. * In more than one caso_the camera has unravelied a mystery which comâ€" pletely baffled the rescurces of our detectives. In the famous museum at Scotland Yard may be seen a large framed photograph of a chisel on which may clearly be seen the letters "rock." ‘This was the chisel that was proved, on the strength of this phoâ€" tograph, to have fbelonged to Orâ€" rocks, the murderer of Constaple Cole at Dailston a few years ago, and which was found by the side of the murdered man. It was only when this chisel came under the camera‘s eye that these convicting letters be« came visible and led to the arrest and execution of a dastardly murâ€" derer. In the nicture two men were walk= ing together on a ficld foo‘path which ran by the side of the railway, and one of them looked remarkably fike the euspected man. The photograph was enlarged, and it was then placed keyond doubt that the two men were the euspected prisoner and his uns happy victim. Oneâ€"third More â€" Bachelors Than Spinsters in the United S.ates. The fate of the unsophisticated man who declared in a public ad= dress that there were "100,000 suâ€" porfluous women in Massachusetts‘" has never been â€" definitely _ ascerâ€" tained. It is known, however, that this was his concluding public deâ€" claration on that subject. Without the fear of his fate, anâ€" other computer came forward reâ€" cently to declare that the proporâ€" tion of unmarried girls and women was increasging. As a matter of fact it is steadily diminishing in the United States, and, as a veteran adâ€" vocate of the extension of the legat rights of women has pointed out, there are now in the United States, 2,500,000 more #ingle men of marâ€" riageable age thian there are sin= glo women, the official figures being as fol.ows: Unmarried men, 10,448,â€" 153 ; unmarried girls and â€" women,, 7,078,819. [ Bocause I thought she was one r.mon‘r a thousand : now I think she is 2 thousand among one. I was lonely and melancholy and wanteq someone to make me lively, She makes me very live‘y.â€"Exchange. In Massachusetts the number of unmarried men exceeds the number, of unmarried women by only a few: thousand. In Utah there are 35,000 unrmarried men and 23.000 unmarried\ women of imarriageable . age. In Washington, the capital, the number ol single men is 42090 and of single women the saime. Why They Married. An editor sent out circular letters to a large number of married men and asked them why they married. Hore are some of the answers; I didn‘t intend to. £7 }g Because I didn‘t have the experi= ence I haye now. | I married to get even with her mother, but never have. That‘s what I‘vo been irying for cleven years to find out. I yearned for company. Naw we have it all the time. I thought it wou!d be cheaper than a breach of promiso sait. ; i Because Sarah told me five other men had proposed to her. ( The old man was going to give me his foot, so I took his daughter‘s hand. 1 In New York it is 249.000, in Pennâ€" sylvania 180 000, in Ohio, 120,000, in Illinois 200,000, in California, 150, 000, in Texas 150,000 and in Kansag. 75,000. I That‘s the same foo! question my friend asked m>. { I wanted a companion of the oppoâ€" site sex. N. B.â€"She is still opposite. mentioned symptoms become appa® ent. These are indications ol a degeRrâ€" eration of the nerve celis, and wher nerve force becomes exhausted pare alysis is bound to follow, The male population of the United: States, through the eaxcess of male immigration â€" and the higher male birth rate, is more than a million in excess of the female. The span of, life is, on the average, longer for & woman than for a man, and the marriageable age for women is sev= eral years younger than the aver» age for men. C ce Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food aets on the system in an entirely different way to ordinary medicines. It is neither a stimulant to whip tired nerves to rencwed activity, nor & narcotic, nor opiate, 10 deaden the nerves. On the contrary it is a food@ cure, which forms new, red corâ€" purcles in the blood, and creates new nerve celle. Every day it is bringing back health, strergth and vitalilty to gcores and hundreds who have become discouraged through tho failure of doctors and other treatments to cure them. 50 cents a box, at al! dealer®, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toront@ , As a consequence of this the nume= ber of widows is very largely in exâ€" cess of the number of widowers, the figures be‘ng 2,730,030 and 1,220000 respectively. _ There are more di« vorced womenr who have not remarâ€" ried than there are divorced men, and for all these reasons the num= ber of single men o marriageable age is larger than the number of single women. In New York it is 249.000, in Pennâ€" Bocause I agsked hoer to have me and she s2aid she would ; I think she‘s got THE UNMARRIED MILLIONS. yo ioi in ul e 41(54 ts 11 1 1# 3 IL