Minister: [mine he SES rung all! Lobe“. of ugh Inst '. David- th. win. mred en- an Manu- today, and In. place g his . wing hill oegte YMAN, airliners mt. H. for his] on were when became n other [no-d. use. of can" SIXTY " highest acidic: nation- oritier. 3 been tty all'. annery sixty 89. a. 00 000 North» entered Bumble 12-6 1009 " 006 no nat ‘ch- I» O“ on DIX. on M "ay. 110 les it by; to but Mr. " 00 me; this M But 00 2-0 at U. " 4. " o. " an it and o "All ht," repeats Hal, tti her “COW“ ly on the back. e,'elf talk it over w an on come Uetr--before then, fae Vin Ll asked me to go down 1.0th Fumble; and, I 'oth',',',':.',". w to yon’te goi to open) your oney- ggto-ot slum-d]:8 And, want, why don’t you get these fol-Isl. on her, and some decent top on! Vane will he wanting to sun dimly, and she curt go look- ing like I. fitptre off I Twelfth Day cake, re. Kew.." . ' The boy’s breezy voice and sound com. ’- Ieue row than all from their atapor. Ptsahing him, with a tho, out ot the room, Jeanne slip- off her veil, and her bewildered attendants road to attire her in her traveling nine. CHAPTER XVIII. When Jenna came down, the carriage, whieh was to bear her away from New- ton Regis was at the door, and Vane was waiting for her, dressed in a loose tra- veling suit, and surrounded bf Uncle John and Mr. Lambton and Be 1, while Hal was rapidly and apparently super- intending the placing of ih.tPrgi.rty,rCre lee the reverential nins with wEich Mr. Lumbton watched Trane-the marqtu%--- how he listened to every word he said with the moat profound eagerness, we: manning.o And when Jeanne came for- ward, win and smiling very much like his own UT,. - But Jeanne had no eyes just then for uyone but her own people, and it m not until Vane glanced at his watch, and Hal deelared stoutly that they couldn’t ttttlg catch the train, that she could ear herself from the embrace of the only mother she had known. _ "Are you sure your lordship hasn't any commands for mo t"reiterated Mr. Lamb. ton for the hundredth time. "If there is anything I can do, any of us can do, please remember that we tt? be only to humbly delighted to be o service. James"---) the eoaehmtur--Nte very very careful. be extremely careful, sir, how you drive. My lord, heh u very steady man. and you can rely upon him l Good-by. your ladyshjP" . n , "Hoo’d-hy. Jeanne Z†exclaimed Hal, poking his head through the window, " the risk of being tun over. "Good-by, Jeni Good-by '." and the blue eyes suddenly dimmed by tears. as Jeanne re- luctantly Ioononod his chubby hand. "'aarod-tss, Hal '." cried Vine, leaning forward. "ith not for long. remember. I’ll take care of her. Good-by I', _ -- T‘Céod-by. Vernon," shouted Ila], who not once had ended him "my lord.", _ Fragrant as Jamie kept her hand out of the win- dow until thevrxeited group was lost to sight. then Vane put his arm around her and drew her toward him. “We", darling," he said, “and now burg Foy quite festive rye, or not t" “Forgive; you t" said Jeanne, softly; "for what t" and she rocked up shyly.†"For my deception," he laid, with n questioning. smile. . - "UiGGe Emma her face upon his breast. - _ “I have to tell you that t" he answer- ed, and Jeanne, trick to note the slight. est inflection of in voice, remarked the sudden, half-pained gravity. "Do not tell me,' a e says, quickly. "Yes," he says, "I must. From this moment there must be no concealment not the shadow of a shadow between us, Iy darling; and I must tell you. But weren’t you surprised, Jennie t" A This quction made Juno’s heart "Why did you do it t" she asked, in . low voice. 7 - 230w is the time for her coniession; now is the time to tell him of the break. down on the Newton road. Ind Lsdy Lucelle’s visit; now is the time to whis- per weekly. "onfidingty of her doubts, and furs which led her to keep from him the discovery of the secret. Why does she not speak , Why doesn't she say, “I knew it, Vernon, lsst night; I knew it vs the Marquis 91 Ferndnle whom I married this morning P' But Jeanne 'n silent. Jeanne, the roudly candid. and fearlessly frank, grads the confession. So precious is the touch of his hand, so sweet are his loving words and voice, that she dares not risk losing them. So Jeanne. alas. is silent. - _ . let “Au-noun. In... mund- "MB-a who. and: an “about...“ with:ch MW†"e l-LBAD “moss. ' "V" "O course you were; how could you be otherwise? It was my halt; I ought to have taken Belt into my confidence when I gave him the lieentt, tet I clung Ir.. to my secret as long '" I emt1d--1 prec fened being Vernon Vane till the last moment; and no wonder. Wat, it not Vernon Vane you loved, and not the Marquis of Ferndale?" Jeanne opened her lips to me}: upon her confession; but he goon on, and his next words decide her forever. "Yes. Jeanne, it was cruel, it w un- Mud to keep you in the dark, and let them spring a mine upon you " the hut moment, rand before the]: ali. ' But, June, listen, and confess tnat 1 nave tome excuse.†no - a moment, and trqtty our - - - . "L, I4- LI- a; firm "y, Tjéuno.†be up. "it is too true. mp tite""-" an the Mania a! Wm- Ti:uort-trt" mum-n Jeane. Be m prsd PP“!!! ftvetty stfrn '"Tiraaiue1 " u " _ rereM. J I ',",ai5'iitttt'l1'iutiil' 1'.hilt= hurt to be born peanut an JTr. 'a'iiriihr0ureioeet.e. vat of water than to war a proud and , -" robes. Your peasant get: the LOVE AND l TITLE He . iiriia, - Ella-c "it; his his wnnder out her graeeful form long- hit-s: L Aoment, the- hush. soft ONLY ONE - TEA. n08 Ill-30h! TEA. 'iiiGiiF"rGa P tfe "I" Greorae" that I have Fresh Violetm Ell 'igiiiiii'i'ilii truth sometimes, and wins true friend: and true love-hut your lord, in hi. crimson end his ermine, seldom or never. Some live and thrive by“ “mayhem owing ndulation and flattering Alle- h ' ut, thank Heaven, there we! enough honesty and truth in me to mute the life I led unbearable. Jeanne, but for you I should have been I minn- thrope, a. hater of my kind, a. dishe- liever in the honesty of men and the purity of women-but for you, my sweet reyying, Htgtl---Py wife!’ C a rescuing natget--m wife!†- His wife'. For the first time the words! fall on Jeanne’s ears, and make her. heart beat with a thrill, half of pleasure, . half of pain. Like an innocent ehiid-- for no child could be more ignorant of the full significance of the word than Jeanne-Jeanne, who had been brought up like a nun in a convent, spotless? and unconscious of all the deep mystesier of life, she, nestled closer as if for pro~ tection from her own love. "Listen," he says, as he presses her closer to him. "I was younger than an! were when I first saw you, when t ' came and told me that the grim old nun, 1 my father, was dead, and that I wag the Marquis of Ferndale. Up to the hour I had only a vague idea of the mening and significance of my rank and. lpower. Suddenly I realized that I was the possessor of one of the oldest and highest titles in the land, that I was the lord lof thousands of acres, which I had never seen or heard of, of castles; castles and houses into which I hadi never set foot, of wealth which Went he.. l yond the dreams of avarice. Pleasure, they told me. was henceforth to be my handmaid; the world was at my feet. So I found it. I tried pleasure:, I launch- ed myself upon the charm of life, and went madly upon my voyage, and it led me-where? To Newton Regis, Jeanne, disgusted with pleasure which I had found bitter as Dead Sea fruit, weary of the world which had proved false, and distrustful of every soul that ap- praiehed me. I loathed my title; 'my locd sounded in my ears as a term of reptoaeh-to the preliminary to some talsehood. Friendship I had tried in the Lalanee and found wanting, save in one instance. It was not the man they cared Ifor. but the marquis. But all this I could have borne with an easy contempt {for myself and my kind-L-but-but, Jeanne, ah. Jeanne.' how can I tell you, you who have had no lover but me, save [iiiii,.' Iyell---poor Belly' Jeanne blushes and clings closer. "How can I tell you," he goes on; 'jolt who have brought me a heart so fresh and unstained, of this dark, mean passage in my history'. Jeanne, I tried to love---" Jeanne starts, and her face pales. F ' My lord marquis, if you were a. wise man you would have stopped short ere that word was said. With all your knowledge of the human heart you have failed to learn that where Athe passion of love is, there also lurks, dormant and asleep, the dread demon jealousy. Jeanne scarcely knows herself the meaning of the thrill of wounded pride and sharp pain which runs through her. scarcely knows why she shrank a little way from the broad breast which she had found so comfortable an abiding place. But Vane. much as he loves, had not yet gauged the hidden depths of the nature of the child-woman he had made his wife. Knows nothing or little of the in- tense pride, the intense independence, for exacting honesty which beats in the Lbreast of the girl whose friat maiden love , he had won. He hesitated a moment. "Jeanne," he says, "there shall be e shadow between us, that I swear! I will tell all. I tried love. Among the women who-shame be to them-- hung about me-the marquis, mind, not the man-WN' one whom the world had looked upon, and still deems its purest. She watr-yes, she was beautiful. Not with your sweet. fresh young beauty, my darling, but with a loveliness that had dazzled courts and made the world of fashion agape. She was of my own rank and above the petty mercenary motives of most of her sex. I will give her that credit. It was not my rink that she eoveted--no." He pauses and absently draws out his cigar case. "I beg your pardon, darling," he says, arousing. , But Jeanne stops his hand ere it can lrcplace the case, and she takes out a cigarette and holds it out to him. He 'takes it, kissing the little, soft hand as he does ,and puffs quietly for a minute or "Jeanne, it did not Inst long. I brought my whole heart and ther-tell, Bh.e my m; heart to throw into the bargain. It} was all outside---" lovely hollow ahell.‘ Some men would have been satisfied, hollow as it mm. but not I, Jeanne. We parted with a few quiet words on both sides. I asked what she could not give, and she thought me unreasonable, a and sentimentalist, and so on. Then, tired, disgusted, I determined to throw aside the rank which had brought no nothi but .,dit'y3teg,',"t, and Multan, 'dlli come ttr--? "ton Begin. I hid my art --that was enough for me, out! I swore that for that alone I would tive the rest oi the life which fate-ou" the guise of good 'ortystrrlPf pee so Iers. wife's-m}; do? you remember the winter night you stood tretitrd a: old Ttple ?iiciog,.,,tllttA'ee, md the can be†in; #:60on ti clear blue sky? I had ta on hue of the iiteaii2,u"ttrt,'g't',',,tttg',2ef. TPd 't't,h't one i,',gt,d,,',t't,',2- rd . n on m . my but, I': ot â€Etude 'lh'PUG',' may at. _ '1 Nf = Tsi, 37"!" I little . k not. now 1 oh It. "s ".--wl ter', ' It, dike: (we, a childi . _ £5: l It: red, 2 qt me, hit g d out you . "eanpet l _,' m u so ae mum! T , "Tour I My!" _ 'tfti'd?tt1f2t, C's-u" hui, Itt.tam,,th' qtLr'9,1. m m l ‘9. biif gilt“. tttily , 'eV., 4lu','tutlr,r. t'pra'fletgthtig: h 1 Giiiiarltt'bi'i, ,7. . 'h 'E' Auiie,Guimgtm,"ieith" iiiitWtrtt 'iii'tuiiiUt,e,'i'l,iisi.l ‘me. dime-eellvethlxilnmpxwruth - l '.'iii"imTGirii'F-t'iiViit5tiiitheisr. 'iltljlliig"ldt'2htit'srtii'r't'irariiiir'l' s.' " Ui murmurs, that mum}. ,r i'tterud. . a ' t"Lyq Tl,,' YPJ†" W“. “Now, my Jen-9,? any! Vbâ€. M N The but rem he! has. ' â€venue the left-es thaw-the tMt -] ttttttta";'; mont t Wellnl k I wonder bow but! it is an. , has t little use home with me gaunt my Ind thesehe out? w. “swim . . It haunted be†I ereet "kid ulekly. There’s the m; â€can.“ M . Brown to whom it belonged, end I ' a, That’s the river rttntsittg under mg to be bolted tor it the next mommg like Bi, hedge. sud tttere'.--" of col hungry men for . moral of bread. And, Jeanne breaks in with I adder: or afraid Jeanne, I fell in love with thnt little, donation, mu from her by the “a. ' I proud, defiant face that night. Then T den vision of a pnlstlsl esstle, its Gothic - l "me the dnys that followed close Ith';, tnrrents and trittiemented wslls glesm- M it; how I (ought against the spell t t I lug brightly in the setting Bun, and look- or the little childdaee hnd cast uponms. l lug down from a greatly-clothed hill. M Bow I swore that love had pnsoed from l It is a sight that many sn "tist has i the A me; but 'uow I looked and longed for I exclaimed at, nnd yet it is only one Oilmmic you. How I hated those gold tttti ' the many nobiemen't nuts with which ' shank "he Umbtoms,and that vu1gnrp Ptt the little islnnd is studded. What we. now so much of you. Why, Jeanne, he it the shah said to the prince, when he work. ssys, with . little laugh. "I Wail, m wns being shown over . eertain noble- were I jealous of F1triet-y.nr Lord Inn... trttut'g vast astute? . I who was more than he" m love with you i "Your higlmess should behead this sgnul I himself, but pu didn't know It" did duke, he’s too powerful." mind on t" . “a In . I "ll'o,'J,a-e., There are to be no con- url, what w“ the Iron ughing Illia I eeahnents, no shadow, speak out. “Your majesty, there are too many .Y your 1 " envied H3149†old Btu, the powerful as he to make it worth while in lea [ meat, bravest boy I had exer max} . to behead one." A. . mm c,' L?j'ut,i,ifiNiir ' al _ -- 1 “I envied ml--uear old Bil, the , truest, bravest boy I had ever seen. I wenvied him the caress of those little hands, end the kisses of those soft lips‘ --oh, but I my kiss them now as often} u I plesse, little wife," and he kissesw (her passionately. "Well, Jeanne, whtt, I s long story it u. But I like telling it.i " loved you more pssionstely each day.‘ Then came the que-ttion-Mall I tell her my real name and position? No, I thought, Here is a chance of winning love, if it is to be won by me, for itse t alone. Here's Clarence Fitzjames - the Honorable. and there's the Reverend ‘Peter Bell. These are my rivals; now, I if 1, plain Vernon Vane, supposed to be In. poor, 1rg'ig,).i"tf, artist, can win her ' from these, w y, then, I shall have found I true love at last. And so I went on, still fighting against my desires, until l Fitzjsmes goaded me one nighe--it was at the park-into revealing my love. I Do you remember t" 301 ever forget t Vane pauses and draws her other hand into his. "Then I ought to have told you, but I could not. The greatest happinen I bud ever known came to me no Vernon Vane, and Vernon Vane I wished to re- main. Jeanne, your love is twice on sweet to me, giving it, as you do, to the poor artist; though you had loved me ten times more than you say you do, I should have been tormented with the demons of suspicion and doubt if I had wooed you as the marquis; some time or other, in one, of my yyek..ti,tt-rr',', ' "What at lute? but In“? par littlmcuhm. “it I. link not. I number, n I felt the . Id snow falling down my back, tht I tantra-my . Ara-Indium“! , "o--whatt Only ' litues dim girl. ith mm hair blown ant-mud was! bee, and l'ptil- oi "tt eyes, Mighti “I: childish ML I rumba: the i try dress ,osrwor1tttyyt, 'sift, mum-l ""I'"""" -_-- ' u "I say, in one of my black fits, the ugly doubt would have crept into my mind. 0h, she loves me for my cor- onet, and not for myself; she is like the rest. But now," and he takes her face in his hands, and kisses her, "bat now, no doubt is possible, for it was Vane you loved, and you had no suspicion, that he was anything more than a disagreeable, struggling and out- at-the elbows artist. No suspicion!†he laughs, not the faintest. Jeanne, it was cruel; but I enjoyed, I reveled in-----" l But confidences are cut short for thol present. The carriage pulls up at the' station, the park 'lootuan---who has learned the importance of the individuals he is atumdinir--hurriets to and fro with unwonted excitement; wraps, books and paraphernalia are arranged in a carriage, and the second stage of the journey is just commencing when a groom rides la panting and sweating horse into the istation yard, swings himself from the w saddle and dashes on to hie platform, _ I Looking up and down the platform, he l sees Vane standing by the carriage tulip ing to the guard, and hurrying up, he, lwith a toue1i_of, the hat, held, out} Y: ten Vane took it, and glanced it it, and his face darkened. With 3 curt nod he dropped the letter into the huge poc- ket of his travelling jacket, and u if with an effort,_clenred_his brow. "Are you ready, my lord," Inks the gxmrd--it is wonderful how soon . men’a title is known-Vane jumps in, and the train starts. I; iiuiv, Jeanne has torgotte-ii1 CHAPTEH GLY. I "Oh, Vernon, look, what a pretty eteo l tion.'" exclaims Jeanne, leaning for-; ward to open the window, through which i the innumerable perfumes of a summer-i evening are waited as the train pulls: into a rural station/ha if it were dropped ' from the clouds, amid the Surrey hills} They had been trave11ing all day, and] it in nearly eight o'eloek when Jeennel gives tongue to her admiration. A long journey is a wearisome thing generally, but there are exceptions, and this in one of them. Jeanne is dusty and slight- Ir-only siight)r--fydf., but she in den liciouely and tfewilderittg1y happy, and} IT',', to a slight reluctance to striving: at their destination. They have halted midwep end pert-k- en of luncheon-whose uxuries had been prepered for them " the railwey hotel-end where, though unknown to Jeanne, some of the cutie servants had come down expressly to wait upon them. With each mile, my lord merguie had grown more thoughtfully attentive, end elicionnly loving and tender; new being revelled upon to . hte fragrant 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiij ttttlei n ee I It C her ' heed him for e pillow. Ya, _ the heat, and the dust, end the when, Jeanne it tr'ryqtpisyte.tt It 31th . Str: , are; 7'". that t, remem- the 'fhl'l'lh'll'l,' 'dt2S) eitrte of um 63 an bur-Ya in S'ldtl','! i. m mums. "ia £30., and our man" ' "Oumt" up Jeanne. "uok, Verbal! isn't ting; . mgnitieent carriage! I - der before lb. can finish, two lootmn, h 1lerssiier)teidterrterttif.ory bra Ya, ,"t,','d"'t'tniltt, the heats idol edunhsndthea tumult): is happy. tad n it with a cer- rnseth mg cut the mgr-Ya may: from ti,ru,itrWe1ir'thui'srrs mlwt rut-tin." ' Mind n" up ,rre'tuyrrrt"rt-lttt tstararsieieeuttsnrrugeiS-intn.e 2R) c h? "llil'atb'j:'ri'l., we? ,1: te “:Q4E2»?s$w _ - ' . 1 J i Janna breaks in with I sudden ex- ‘chmtion, wrung from her by the bud- 'i den vision pf a pslntial castle, its Gothic ,turrents and ttittiemented 1n!!! gleam- ging byitrhtlt in the "ttey, was?! ttlt eNow, my g-,'.' aye Venn, "tttd. out to the left-gmt that’s the tte: I wonder how long it is since the a had these hiya outt We In going'prctty qtuiekly. There's the viii-go; pretty, isn’t i t The“ the river running under tut bake. we} thre't--r'.', u "[563? Ga, of satisfaction let- up- on Vnne’a face as he looks " the up- turous admiration on Jetuutt'y, . "Oh, Vernon,†she says. "What I. Vin. ion. Is it Windsor Castle!†_ "No," he says, "it is the palace of in- other queen, however." (To be continued.) The very best medicine in the world for summer complaints such as chol- era infantum, diarrhoea and dysen- try is Baby's Own Tablets. During the hot weather months no wuei mother should be without a box of Tablets in the house. These troubles come suddenly, and unless Titel', checked, too often prove fatal. 2/ Own Tablets act almost like magic‘ in these cases, and speedily remove; all cause of danger. Mrs. Alex. Pou-l lin, Csraquet, N. B., says: " I think Baby’s Own Tablets the best medi- cine in the world for children. I have used them for cholera infuntum, teeth- ing and other troubles, and it is aston- ishing -how quickly they relieve and cure these ailments.†An occasional dose of Baby's Own Tablets will keep the stomach and bowels right and prevent l summer complaints. No mother need be f afraid of this medieine--it is guaranteed to contain no opiate or harmful drug. It always does good-it cannot pos- sibly do harm. Be sure that every box bears the full mme Baby’s Own Tablets and picture of four-leaf clov- er on the wrapper around the box. Anything else is I dangerous nub- stitute. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail at 25 cents a box by writ- ing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brodzville, Ont. Experta Say Pears That It May Give Way Are Without Foundation. The great succesa that hae attended the op- mtion ot the Annual: dun in extending the area ot cultivable land in Egypt recently led to the consideration at the question at raising the height ot the darn by about eighteen ieet -" addition which would neatly increase the capacity ot the reservoir . At the request of the government Mr Ben- Jamin Baker. who is responsible tor the do. sign ot the Aswan etructure. waa requeaied‘ to make an investigation, in the couree ot which the tact developed that the rush of water panning under great head and high ‘veloclty through the sluice gate: had worn _ out n series ot cavities in the bed ot the rie- ger below the dam. The structure is built in Iplaces upon a rock ot a aomewhat friable l character. and in order to secure a perfectly broad table or hench ot concrete wan laid in the river bottom. upon which the mason- ry ot the dam was built up. At the time of its con-truction it was real- , lead that the scour due to the rush at waner through the sluice gatea muet he provided agalnst. and the concrete platform waa ex- tended tor a certain diatanoe forward ot the down stream race ot the dam. Acting upon " Benjamin Baher’e recommendation, the concrete platlorni will now be carried a lar- ther dietance down stream no an to make sure. that the eti'eets ot scour can never work I back toward the dun and endanger its debil- “It. “I: Simuluneouly with the Investigation ot the den. there â€peered In Engine In macaw dune-ion. by two college mus- iOl’I ot the question, ot the eublmy ot am- tn [enemy Tttr, avenged , PS". Ste?",?, " [nun-e. nu", -r.-_-ee'e" ._ he, -_ theory an to the probable line ot failure of] dams. which was quite at variance with ac- cepud and well proved engineering theory on thin subject. l The proposal to increase the height ot the dam, the elite! engineer's investigation of the structure. and the curious theorie- ot dun failure above reterred to altered an attrac- tive coincidence tor the reporterial sensation monger, who needle to Be getting wonderfully well airetitrtttttsed in the field ot London Journalism. and the Britiah public has been treated to whole columns ot matter tending to prove that thin coetly engineering im- provement ia doomed to ebort lite, it indeed it la not liable to be swept down the Nile valley without a moment'a warning. A: a matter of tact, the Annouan dam, to tar from being in any danger ot failure, has a margin ot atability ao great an to render it poeeihle to add the eighteen (net ot height auggeate.d and Mitt leave the atructure proof again-t overturning or rupture tor all time to come. BIG ASSOUAX DAM 18 STABLE. Universe by Bids - Intake†Ihan Gun. Man’l grate". “mix in the pinning of the human race at t 9 hand of crea- tion. Prof. Oliver J. Lodge point. out that the universe in large enough to hide vastly unfctior intelligence, and that our impede. Caearrr---or our Ameri- cnn biitioniire-a Iru.t [cl-genius duet can billionaire-is but a. ere mg dust “our upon ‘one of the d'rJ"tlll,'d at. tending one of the and!“ of the five hundud million grant was. In n recent iltustmtion, T. B. Heath represent“ the distant tnvolod by light II a your Mountain. thrtaiauauthemmf' . dot 1-107 of n M in din-lent, the meth-Ao whichhum nativity is con- rnseeb-a .pnitsietyR..h:tPytitlt 12t?t "er-mr. - -"""""""W" W-V--"'" tmat it, and 1 We 51mm “we†forthe nthonohrmtcmtbew and m but: and} A " I“. â€my. Even on thir sale a circle thirty nil- utou would embrace may twenty-men of the amt can. the millions bung MAN'S INORDINATI FAmTY. SUMMER COMPLAINTS. "out-id. BN? iy,ifskat; Monk.) Coumnitiaa banished the bull! or.“ and crank piano men from ithe pity sheets, on the pics, that "the Me' -tAmthimanrrrrts" W‘ mmmmw- Muff" _ ' "ii,iiii"i)iii,i,i,i, babel: of tine when did NW ahotgidtteatthto enjoy]. tohertq'uparlaeefortutmumettt of conninptivel. In King Mill afraid tilt his pain beam my and: tonic gem? V mic val too diverting to people who .5an lave been going on via: their work." The immanenul petal-mace: were not held to come nude: the try-kw ntra'utst “macaw sad disturbing Illinois' new divorce law prohibit; di- vorced Pdies from marrying estin with- inleuthlneyeerdterthe divorce,end prohibits the party divorced for with} ity from marrying within lees than two years after the divorce, except that e divorced couple can rerun-y at nay time. This will prevent people worrying before theinkiedryontheirdivomepqnn, so in: often the cue. A eortiutronuy all: attention to the enormous number of men lined up in the RMâ€. butts. In no hunk of the past, ' not until the outbreak ot the present war, hove more than 500,000 men been lined up in opposing armies. The following were the totals engaged in some of the great hiatorie battles, from which the colon! web at the pree- ent was an be understood: Plum, September, 1877, 130,000. Seden, September, 1870, 244.000. Gravelotte, August, 1870, 300,000. Sedan, July, 1866, 435,000. Gettysburg, July, 1803, 220,000. Bolfatritto, June, 1859, 284,000. I Waterloo, June, 1815, 217900. L Leipzig, October, 1813, 472,000. I Borodmo, September, 1812, 251,000. James B. Dill, at the Oberlin College commencement, gave a definition of "grut" in these words: "Graft is the advanced stage of the crue for unearned money. It is not only the desire to get something for nothing, but it is an attempt to get something for the gutter in consideration of his parting with sour thing that does not belong to him." Fur- ithermore, Mr. Dill snid,thstslsrge part of the prosperity of the United Stslcs “consists of an overproduction of fraud snd sum." Many branches of financial business had been in one way or snoth- " "taken possession of by the unscru- pulous for the purpose of deceiving the unwary." "My pocket" is the creed of runny men of the day. TORONTO The London kneet quotes Dr. George's l Petit as saying that there is great dntr. j ger of tuberculosis being spread by bak- eries. He says English bakers' laborers Ire affected with tutterettiosis to the proportion of some 70 per cent., it is my to see what facilities there ore for the entrance of the tubercle bncillun into the dough in the process of hand kneading. Moreover, when the bread in baked, it does not attain n ternpera- ture of over 100 degrees eentigrode in the middle of the loaf, and the slight portion of time which elapse: between ( the belting of the bread and that of the iconsumption is hwonbie to the dissem- Iinntion of the bacillus of tubermlosis. Experiments by Gnltier, Mare end him- self hove shown thnt his furs ore well grounded. The matter is one of greet III- portnnee to the general public. A Since 1896 the product of the world's' gold mines has amounted to â€526,000,; 000. Of this about $860,000,000 hue gone into the nulte of the principal hunk. of Europe, while about WWW have gone into the reserves of the n:- tiond banks of the United States, mak- ing a. total at 8i,t60900900, which in re- presented by the increuel holding! of the principal banks of Europe end the United Show; It my be “mated that 8767,- 000,000 was need in the at: end We, ‘thilbeinghueduponenelknuneeof at per cent. of the you production, itttoauhrer-sreresertt.1ed,tta clue; aitienUd “is have. about 0000,- 000,000 unwound for. A part of this has gone into the an". of barks other than national in the United States, nnd other than the chief Government hula in Europe. But these holdings maid, " ur " represent only . part of the .000,- 000,000. Where the temninder is is a mystery. , Ionian is . GGiam, . work! in itself, and a. very stanza one, too. It in I place of put figures, out activitie- "Atrr'entreor1tr.mma-eroi" mmutrookotstuauti-dtrrttte ommtranmditsteirt Gmururaentttnstgt1rmiuererrab. tseth-a-ttse-ure""". prim bodi- M an open than " tuiro,-etnrm.rtunuu'eot mumbuiduMIWcuhud iiiii'iiiiiauuess-tttsirt I... goo nilu o! uh'm The -rorotuttuttteeie.uitott'tr, ieuaaostumuduottetr""" r::'r'iii,',',i' ' _ w. A“! .3. _ii?sig, -d8W"TriiJr _ 'TI-Jfï¬ mummmM-p the wing. at!" 88 pal-thu- ammnmhmu ‘qu-eolu'n-mmhxm ,ma2tg.gam1tud-thmulrtuueta Manually,†Ilium at Tait million M‘h h- {HQ-tin. than» forty-tine mic hill. ard . plneu of aartaetat-" It qhngttie. Wham-rubbi- tauesoetetag,msri-trotdt-o'e ouch-pam- ad 1†-bea- tielu. About 140,!!!) and" Up from themtes; mmdnnmhdmm- There were six and ole-Ill! umbi- ot-ttttsera-ou-r- houses but ya. In“ “0. and! mmmmmuw 1r,anu-torttoottartht-"hr, "lov-ii-ttet-th-id- “mums-mum'- sttoutaizmilti-. In these times when we hm so nah about nitrous, and wh. s we! m spitting is haw "rtivatr wind. it is comes-ht “I"! to and tilt - is-thi-rt-tor-tie-r. sndeven dust,ugernicidse.Dr.Cssv sidy, of the Provindsl Board at was. writing in the Senitsry Joan-1, eo-hsts the slsrmist views that hue prevailed in some quarters. He do. not any the possibility of the opted o! tab-toats by germ-Men dust inhalation, but he thinks the Wight of evidence goes to show thst the germs ere demons only inproportion to ttteexuetttorrltitththar here been shielded from " end sunlight. :He oonetnds that the street dust hen I rally n strong disinfectent power on the guts ot scarlet fever, diphtheria, mens- lea, whooping cough, influenu. ete., do. stroying instead of enhsncing its viru- lence. Gems in I closed room will ro- tain their virulence for s oonaidembU time, while they are soon destroyed by fresh air and sunlight. This View “I support from no less an authority tho the New York Medial Mord. Th snti-epitting campeign is good es s nt- ter of cleanliness; it is vile to spit on the sidewalks and floors; but es s matter of animal: it is no less tsad-it may even he worse-to spit in the gnu. Cost into the sunlight of the psved streets than is resson to think the life of the germ of tuberculosis is likely to be short. Sun- light is s greet purifier; if we lived more in the sunlight end inhaled more pure sir we should have less consumption. Mh la n mum tun-1mm: o! the old Ind populu- Norwegian no: that tttat new in hand Ill over Nomiâ€. “a breath. the Iplrit ot courts. and Independence that m conspicuous in the prom: nun“! cri- Norseman. nvnkon the m tron In an! Nil} "le, pr old Emu. the Ind of t m. High and lactate. in coil-m sunburn. -- - - ,7, LA... .---_" can nun Inc nary-c. u- '_-'-'-- ----'- _ land ot our (am, '0 â€It. It for the. Old MM“. Wm -'. m- 'uet,ttm'GrTi'ia11rtFtyeertate1?: _ -. t___-m.- ' AA... gin-In- MidhN8MtW.Wo'qF"P"'Pf'""r_2'"t"'rc2"L= e Hart will; noun. at club Min; proudly. Wow Southmdmonnnh. Spirit. iook back on Mr Wing (my, 'di2'i',rtiTuiGarriutt-au'" Chi-(nin- ind viking: incl-u! in am Coulee the who“: tut bum; on the g taco. Chum†and vikinp lunch! in - PM to in. but» [in mid- to the WW. Blood “on - than. Billet. clash 0’s a... Over the coo-n they can " cumplon- -matt. though. no country, To battle ma blood tor her tr “do! tho Hm. ch ml. of u.- on. sand-1m a rock that a. my will hang-u névl "and it, but mu. h'll an. - I"!!! an (IV.- -.- .._--_. - _ _ Yet he own. with u mu; t.eetie., but: or " making Ind Kin. ot M. - uatggrtttt"tf11"1t1"l'll" a - with an qrm1ttt ot (I. an“ an. an (loot. _ -- . .;_ --_- -1 on; .-_- "I". Pride ot day chum-on. the first In the birds. On may 4 noione noticed the atigbtast elation among the "tties, at tho Boo. Eagles are â€ling. Though found throughout the we ' no two pain - occupy the m neighhothood. The golden angle in an only at tho Persian MI long him It with Md try the has. no Panha- than. Fredric til-II. and â€My to - Birds In their and". - 01 m can. your an Heat J!" "tter? 129.1. “cum tneuetmrehrrd-tLsadst. b “(or 'eA"'tt'r, 0...“! -tGatk6mre..druer m .-' “whwnodarï¬m “'10†twin. 1‘..- mlhelluu-thtblhll " Moth-“any ' “I II". -'i,"ta"a'ttrtff1frrt "U',ihf" who or thy Mn with our own my 'oqatf_Pttt, Be autos for life. He makes extraordinary flights Bo ha strength, the and grant. Be has uny- been ormaidemd king of "I. For uwiftneu, his night {I not up. nice-g] bTatoiiCGtE 1331:? an t o'irii'""iFArir,itttttctrtye.r..e, u the W and M on!“ Sons of Norway. Mathew “amt: 33375-18 lu slun- world.' ' 'i'klidll