Jt M It, 7 a... nu That “to II- shll n or. Ho an. “I Must, by - Me my! - sun“ la on! Gold or stubble an 7°“ Predom- “a. " ‘" Will your ,rortg W -t-- ' a "enou- yup-w. -"- Will your mu can" an an ot III. “an“ uh! an Are you on the m mum.- Jo-u- Chm. tho W no... Mighty Ito" of all the - That led up to un- dun? When the than and not) have H30 “in. new: w an M Woe to than when. when. ata-tts Ott sytt24 It. ', an t u I. or or an...“ “we. Imaging?" “A. ‘*~ n v Wlseut um IInuI a..- ._ “in “do.†w al Woo to un- who“ when. Ott amt-Mo. anus-g trand oi'1tr"iiiiid_tttee,L Hum but. lull- cm Numb; have that “did t In the time at din and. . It on Christ you and. " Is maul-d you by an no Bat it PM you m but!!! You will um I and â€In oCtuus-iees and! the M 'As In man-um). an _ " -‘AIA an. m" "is: tho ow - - " Glow. w, i-er-tMa, Lite atom-l tMir mad And “You " Wnltstol for cum. the Scum sumo“ whim to In: Make deaf souls to but Gina's my. Make Hand sunk their Slum “to; Members ut the Club! W. rvet to 103m In Jud noâ€. Had: to but; a rd tough»: to touch than had mama you stun they In"? And except they hear. how "all they tht the Lord ot Me W0? Ought u not to an an only Ar ot Chm we did receive? " not gathering lot tho Saviour you are “mum-I w; Yet the work mu " mad. For nil-mortul In God. Not by mum. not by CI any. Can this “do" it won. But by mm of â€I. Who but “not! it an! it do“; Clam the you!“ at tho PM. to: In: an oi ttro no Inc: Not and! than on you do! an: Not (or God a we". " q“ u. --" __ .- m In - 01 - sun coulme " q augment-W ttttntl " ham“ ttMt “I t Perish shall all a†t In tho tin of m d! “tribunal: I.“ u b - ,,4 _-tos I". Unto DO“- - u.. --- W, Who an "in. am In night. You no and. you no can“, To be no!» then I ttabt. "Everyone I" ' tm eternal m. t 1". and“ " M In Christ V. A. tho ma. tho Workin;'lth or Against 9‘" tn Christ" ll All in you? HIVUJI .l-"- .7. - Or no!!! In your “and III-£ To tout to can. “l? mu you in anon. the “not W tio “kc Due. we“ .54 won When actual “on 13km!- kw By Inc than “A. IN up! s, w why would rout " not. M")!!! ls exceeding plain and Broad,-- "Lm’u ye image. practice many. AM till humbly with my God." 'lt is and that "I. (“when “on. ot Solomon's (come In" nunr boa disturbed. God's covenant and» unchanged. twrittrn in tSM.; ta' “nu-u- w w... Dd In Cttrut 1n. annual " the 1m. tho mail. .. my. nu are called to hob no Mm And most bland one" on. o be beacon- In tho has. Where the “an In. - than; no soul: that have not MI Ill Who m â€in. an“ In nun. -- " -A-. -..- "mm-add In the day ot coupon-Hon. Resurristimt ot the Just. There and] be to Inch mum] For the work H. M ulnar. wan you mad We Mum gladly Having hinted tor “in - 0r ymd up your “and “In; To - to an... “I? vi. 8; Int. "r. a; t. not. w. - , 2; Mah. m. I; Ma. will. 11:] I. Cor. 17.. tr. an.» IL. 10; I T; Matt.. “It. M; he“. L, w. I Luke n. a; la. "it: - lni.. rr. Beets. Iv.. F. Lulu. xt.. ML. 8; John nt.. 3-8; [All gtet.; . an ing unmitions. " " III was of the name nature 1 New Testament til“ we WI that it might not nil and a half yet" it did hs, prayed for ruin. te.., {or my. I 'real a - [I “V†was: influence doth wietd, no III- “. In!" . and: - â€I: '. “I w -- by " “who. no; t nut-b not in tateqt ia out" unw- -. [ unbblc are you will!“ .... an“. or wood, I" Bar.' Scanning in the In. "Hallo.' In. yank".- put 31 a week ,,c7iiiuriGtutsk-ho-o' "'ul30 "Yes. a friend od mine in the muddpl qdtiee and no the] use gain to any! item“ the duct [to-Inga Panic: Kamikaze“ mm Prayer Encouragement (By C - Ill“ be tho ot-at. just. mu to m m all an.“ " -. of mu: diva-z huh Io 10""- " who - their be". r. macaw"; Him faGi 761:".on in; Emmy. iiiind ghoul. pe4do not! one: u. datum so; I. Cor. m. 10-12; Mra. mryyt, Al; ee ll below. WA herhe.) Four. “n†if." firbe. au builders .."' -. fun It. xl.. u,' at: weal i'wldlllon jr--iiao _ n Weko dew Government Expert Records Tone: Heard in the Wildwood. Henry Oldys, assistant biologist in the department of agriculture, has 1,000 sam- tlr, of bird music written in popular am so that his pospilgle loathe hu- nan voice exactly to imitate the song- sters of the field and the forest. He has recorded the actual tones, setting them in the proper musical key, and their re- production is easy for anybody who can rend musics! symbols. 3 Mr. Oldys hss been gathering bird lon. - for thirteen years, and during most of that time has been devoting Ms expert knowledge of the subject to official reports which find their say in the government tsrehires. He liss ex. tended the work of other eminent natur- alists and to-day is foremost among those who have made as study of this '"ttt branch of science. l e forests of the south and the fast-l l nesses of the west have been the hand. I book of this student. He ‘hss collected es far as possible all the bird notes curable of reproduction for human ex- reunion. Asked last night if he would gamma†these in popular form 'tttld ,rsrrsracrrmrmrrr""'t. that it probably would not be possible, II his samples are short and often dis. jointed. He thought the composer, how- ever, might supplement the work of the scientist. .. . - There is in this collection. then. the possible groundwork for a magnificent; bird opera. ii the blending of notes can successfully be accomplished the theatre poor at the ttext dtwctvto may be treated l with a Mundm'ful entertainment and,' may hear in the course of one evening the songs of the feathered musicians of the world executed by human vocal chords. Mr. Oldys Pxplains that many of the bird tones are almost identical with those of the human. Taking this as a basis he has recorded the symbols where- by the human an read and the human voice express these harmonious sounds. . Among the more prevalent birds whose l tom" are like tho» of the human and an be reproduced and written as music are the wood thumb. the chewlnk. the song sparrow. the field sparrow. 'the Baltimore Oriole, the wood pewte and the Carolina i.ron.---wisutingtott mroH. WRITES THE BIRDS' MUSIC vu- "W, Our mar " b L, And when mm wottM m central rim tho ttett And ml. WNW! she hea Uni-I Ibo " alone. (bib out w Bll the - - .,, n--.l .h. 'nh When "o-ttttru,',' “P Anon on. he": tho gentle W" WWII tho wooden box-- ..o. an“; M's stocking: or little mother's 'toct-- an that tttgh' It" aside: " Mtre m and went! bono'- n... qetthtq - for dinner." A“. rggnenrr. st the who“ m 1.9 hat â€unseat: the universal ung- no at at!" It VI“! and weep. min". tho wall- ot Jerusalem, and it tum up In tho ooittudetr of the duel"; flu the tone- llm mountain posts are not at: trom It: mantle unpucny. can I In a silk .0. WI! round mm on. â€chat (at NI. milking . co. In t bond“ gut. Tho mt nutty and a not: nah and every Kathy and and and tstdtgnantir., “can“ cowboy ta an W m fittiatted "ssT"ii'i'rFiiitete.,.tt' dummy ot m. to. an! a. lllll pl! be mm Trineidlr out d - sun. - can’t EDI. “at. In the w at "new 1m. why my,“ I an: to: be pan!“ to milk c on? The at Can't gm. no u†MM v.2 Another Drums mama“ to un- w ".qb'. n}. 3 Mn. Jena." Of Una-“Mm “w Nhro new {I tho m “an out be - Mog "Nt. no: it" for fhe.e! "tMS, nu. --- ___ -"_-" “a. Innu- " an The“ In.†when mm. hem -- A-I‘A . rank -- when mumm- hoar- tho our. an one or twice I week. no “and! It tho Winn. Mud and but do. not neck. And win: we at. "mum dolls; now?" In " handout tone. ‘60 on and may all never mm," - -= ' 5.0-an -r-ftrf. an luau-tut. -r--yel my will and - a " d W lot {in - and comm-In It tu1t"'U'lu'%""iniu""""""" The lama “Abe Phone, (you York Sun.) Universal Language of Clothes. nuns: In‘thgipog 'tend 'l'ri'iiiiGii-." 'towhcr (got; t tre"rhorser t UdiA in nu who. to “I Your Doctor lore Successful Than Her Male Com- l petite: in the Sense Line. 1 "For persistent persuasive bill collect- I ing give me a Woman every time," said 1 a. dunniug creditor recently. " think , the future will see women the only bill collectors. There is something in the sight of a woman bill collector that few men can resist. It seems strange, too, that some of the most retined women take to it. There are a. handful of wo- men money collectors in Philadelphia 1 and you can learn from their employers !, that they make a greet success of their ivocatioy They would not take to it except for pure love of the thing. "One woman in my employ, conceded , to be one of the most tastefully dressed and best looking women in the business here, is as graceful as s queen in her daily collecting rounds. The most in- teresting andounique thing shout her1 work is that she never leaves any venom l in the hearts of the people whom she duns. I send her especially to the big mercantile establishments and wholesale houses where salesmen are inclined to -_nverlook the matter of long-standing 'bills. Her entrance always causes a commotion and she nearly always makes ' good. , "She walks gracefully up to where the l large groups of salesmen are standing . and inquires of the first one handy: "ls " Mr. K. in today?†I be 'No,' the salesmsn_sddressed will re. no question' about that but- why so to all the mile and inconvenience of looking him up, wager: of having hilpragrltgtion “on on custapm any drug store % Canada ind obtain a bottle of SHILOB’S CURE for_a. matter: A a a n IVI I I‘d- av-- Why pay two to fhre dollars when a it4'tt'lfir-,',2t, cent bottle of SHILO will cure you "gttklg , y not do a hupdredu of thousands of Canadians have done for th1crtet.mthirtf,ou_r .‘ll. Ix. In uv """d . be 'No,' the salesman addressed will re. ply. Ho recognizes the woman and he thinkq to save a fellow worker. '-Well.' the unduunted collector will reply, 'Will you tell him that I will drop in here every morning at 10 until I see him?' And sure enough she does. Per- haps for a week the woman will enter that building and exactly at 10 o'clock, taking pity on her and beginning to re- sent the evasivenesa of the dunned, will smoke him out by the usual stock of salnsmen’s jokes, and lo the woman I walks out one fine day with at least half the bill paid on aeeaunt.---PhiltutelphU Ledger. WOMAN AS BILL COLLECTOR. tiii,itt5if, einiaiiiu 't'ij5iit,tt,'t' e or e pas - our years: let SHILOH beyonr doc- tor whenever a Cough or Cold '%"f/f? ""'giriihH will cure you, and all tgy',',',,' Wk up this statement witl a positivtttruHefeh, SHiLOH " "iii'" IG/i" {it}? you haw a. Cough or Cold cure tt with Bournville, Where the Workers Live in a Wooded Park. During the past eleven years Bourn- ville village has arisen and to-day it shel- ters a community of about 3,000. It cov- ta on an area of more than 500 acres, near- ly the whole of which was a free gift by ti Mr. George Cadbury. The village, which p: stands amid gardens. and park lands, com- d prises dwellings which are not beyond the resources of the artisan, and also a a fair proportion of houses of the villa a type. No two houses are alike. The aver- I age garden space allowed to each house t is 600 square yards ; and that most of 1 the occupiers take a pride in their gar- dens is abundantly evident. The roads c are 42 feet wide and are planted with i trees. The houses are set back at least 20 feet from the roads. About 1,200 out I . of the 4.000 employees in Messrs. Cad- lbury’s factory reside in Bournvillc. Of . Ithe remaining residents, about 40 per 5cent. work in Birmingham. Mr. George l E Cadbury explained that out of their 4,- . 1 000 work people only seven had died for the last four years, a death rate of less than two per 1,000. Six hundred or 700 girls had learned to swim in a large bath provided for them at the works. Prac- tically all the boys and men could swim. No cottage is allowed to occupy more than one-fourth or one-fifth of the area of land on which it stands. Mr. Carbury urged that if we were to maintain our position as an imperial race the prob- lem of overcrowding in unsanitary sur- roundings in our great cities must be faced. At Bournville village the death rate was 7.5, whereas in the working class quarters of Birmingham the rate was three times as high. One of the prin- ciples which had been put into practice} at Bournville was that every child should be within five minutes walk of a play ground. He hoped England would soon Adopt the German scheme of not allowing any district to be developed for building without the whole of t e Inns being first submitted to a J,'h2 authority. --From the London Times. . The ttartrerdmstter sighed. tor his welt) full of lovely holiday women. was ttttik opaque with from "I'd give a lot," be uld, "tor tom noth- od to keop my wlndow trom from“ on: In cold weather." "1'11 let you have the method you what for nothing," and the gun-on. "Coat the Inside ot your window wlth dye-run. Ind " will - " clan In wham- a In aun- not. I'm a Dunner, And tn my "do n nlvnys no glycerin on our da- upm- meats when It’s- cold." 'U'll lot you ha, for nothing," trttid Inside ot your Witt It wig-km u ete More Hope for Porto moo. Ab the end of this calendar your the United States will have taken from Porto Rico rvameth'tntr 111:1 'tp00,000 worth of tobacco, ei to m'garrtte . This, fact suggest. 'le trrsittilitr if not the probobility that who» my yd take yaw of coffee u tho "ttt any " o Porto New tra",',; cultivation of We; 0 ch colan- f'I,..oU'itt “10:“! load and, ekhonto at My until-I7 lo Tlull".! .__ New York Sun. To Keep Windows From Frown; (N. Y. Her-Ad.) ci' rs In! eignret . 'le, priNiitr if ttl at. tobacco my 1* coffee u tho magi-J W0, Il ths cildn-‘ min- only land and. lot Always ma. u cum to We. _ It in the conviction of many Americtn tourists in London that there is fog in that metropolis M6 days in every year with the exception of lap yen, when there is fog on 300 days. This examined notion of London fogs is quite refuted by an official pub- lication of the E huh government. which gives a. cowgi‘tion of the wet.- ther conditions taken twice a (by and which shows the following mult for last year Overcast (part fog) Fog (dense) .. .. Clear sky ...... .. Snow..... ... .. Thunderstorm Gale . . . . . . . Variable . . . . London had last year 1,460hours of sunshine out of 5,470 hours between the rising and the setting of the sun. In other words, about three-quarters of the time taken by observations was over- east and the bahnce was clear. London owes its fogs to a triple com- bination of eireumstiineesr--westerly or southwesterly winds 325 out of 365 day! of the year. salt marshes through much of the territory over which the wester- ly or southwesterly winds blow and an almost universal use of soft coal. Last â€IIIIUBV _.....'.-'". _._rrNrt ~â€" --"e" year there were more days of. sunlight in London than there had been on All oval-age for twenty years before. LORIâ€! HAS BrtrtWX DA“ IIAUTIFUL new“ FOOT - To tnyoua writing us answering tho fol- lowing quonlions we win gladly send Ib- oolutoly fr... pout-.30 would. A not of four of our latest ilion of Mutual piqturn post cards littioirtsphed in brilliant Total Bibi. :4 Lndylikc Geometry. I. A straight line is the shortest dis- hnce between two millinory openings. II. A straight line determined by two bargain table, is considered as prolonged both ways until the store closes. .. . III. A broken line is e series of successive straight lines described by a woman alighting from a street car. IV. A mixed line is a. line composing the reception committee of I. elub's presidential candidate. V. A plain figure is one lilpointe of which have been neglected by the When Father Cleans the Sidewalk. ' (Chicuo Record-Hernia.) When tether cleans the “(law-1k He puffs and pants and blows He roars " us tor hinting N no and It wows; miraiiidui t1t.t. 1“ - In "any a disgrace: When “the: claim the Maw-1k There's trouble round the plum Re plays golf In the In“ To In the exercise, And on the nlny Sandâ€: He often nearly dial. . You'd think that he vault! {hum The bail " every - But when he has to Ihovol It nearly breaks his back. He acolda about. tho claim: And an be while- we . ----_ -.-- "and of which have been neglected by we dressmaker. VI. Figures of the same shnpe don't Ilwnys have the -slme style. VII. Figures of the same size never consider themselves equivalent. " RELIAN CE " "Al Cor tho Purple mush-." VIII. Women equal to the same thing are not always equal to etch other.-iNellie Parker Jones in Chicugo Tteeordmerald.) Ana I!!! u: nun“- w- Could live when mow Wu “will; Thu we mum - no. He trlu to break the shove! And tserooehes up " two; When {Amer clean. the “dunk There‘a trouble round the once. mum's uGnent%ires Guget in Cows. INTERNATIONAL FOOD co.. TOIONTO. CANADA tmqtnswuvvvivuRvaett1.se.ttt' wet!“ - Food Mouthful. cm L... i. U..- OIvco nomr Raoulâ€- Inslct on the contain.- no. lam. your - 2nd. Nam. cm. '"MMtr. BAKING POWDER FREE y 7,7iFiiFG7GF0iGiiivow" You know how good Witch. iLluuusenueut-uePuih." --eoothes chtrtintr and thin irritation? “Royal mmm" Witch-Hazel Toilet Soap h jut Witch-Hue! and - mum: an. an n and up “a -atmtea giie?",'l',y,1tf 'lh'tu'stl.'lllt -aaiaa.%rrrrte". . TORONTO _ ine is 0. series of lines described by My: to the sung Duo. . . . M5 WHEN (i REMEDIES HAD 'fAIlED Strange why people should not try the i very thing thst would do them good until I lost! Mi. Geo. P Portwin, of 86 Bt. ', Paul street, Toronto, tried six different _ remedies for dyspepsis, hesdseho, end heartburn before he tried Bilesns. The did him no good. The Bilenns hove cured ‘him! Be says: “I had heartburn, dys- pepsia sud wind sfter food. The nour- ishment I took seemed to do me no good, and the pain I suffered wee very acute. I tried six diffirent remedies before Bilesns, but they did me no good, With Bilesns it was quite different. I found they relieved the flatulence and the pun within a. few hours, and s short course resulted in 1 complete cure." . In every country where they have been introduced, Bilenns have quickly taken first place because of their rapid sud lusting cures of indigestion, liver end kidney complaints, anemia, headache, de- I bility, constipation, piles, female ailments , and irregularities. rheumatism, liver chill, . etc. Purely herbal and containing no I alcohol, they, are an ideal family medi- ' cine. All stores and druggists sell st 50c. t a. bor, or from the Eileen Co., Toronto, l for price; 6 boxes sent for $2.50. In every country l introduced, Bileans first place because lusting cures of in kidney complaints, ; bility, constipation, and irregularities. rl At the Coronation My seat in the Abbey was an excellent one for seeing and hearing everything. I was in the Ambassadors' tribune, directly behind Mr. Stevenson and before all the secretaries and attaches of em- bassies and legations. The Queen we: directly in front of and below me, where I could see much of her expression. Whilst engaged in prayer she raised her countenance directly towards our box, and a sweeter face no Queen need have. 2,r,IJ,t she first entered she was consid- erably flurried. but became calmer " l ter half an hour's pertormtutee, as I call it. The whole ceremony occupied about! four hours and a half, during which time she retired from public gaze only twice, and each time only for a minute. She, got through the affair admirably and without much apparent fatigue. She seems to have excellent sense. and keeps constantly inquiring. like a sensible wo- man. what she is to do next, rather than push on and bungle-- - -. - I “A“- _.-_ a.st.,e. has". P When old Lord Rnlle mu dointt hom- age, being very infirm he fell after he ascended the throne, and rolled down three steps to the bottom of the Abbey floor. Everybody but the Queen mule 1n exclamation of concern: she started from the throne as if to catch him. and "collecting her dignity. resented herself instantly. which natural and graceful movement in 11 young girl. though Queen, drew down thunders of ap- {plume from the 'rtseettttors. _ ..- . W W w'.---- '- qt..-,.....' n New E. H“ Drsreri" No More. W...“ .."e... Meee V, --From "John Van Buren in England." in the Deeemher tChrUttmtst) gorilmm'. Fairville, Sept. 30, 1902, Minud's Liniment Co., Limited: Dear Sira,---We wish to inform you that we consider your MINARD'S LLVI- MENT a. Very superiqr article., and we um it as I. sure relief for sore throat and chest. When I tell you I would not be without it if the price was one dollar a bottle, I mean it. French Savant Discredits Ides of Their loudness for Melody. It has been asserted that, spiders pos- sess a sensitiveness to musical sounds. Some species seem to respond to the notes of the piano, the harp. the inte sad so on, in a manner suggestive of their ability to recognize these sounds, or the harmonic vibrations on which they are based. But Monsieur A. Le- caillon, of the College of France, who has made a. special study of the instincts and the supposed "psyehitsm" of spiders†thinks that the apparent sensitiveness of these animals to music has been misum dcrstood. It is his poinion that when musical instruments sre phyed new their nests the spiders simply feel the vibrations through their webs, or other- wise, without recognizing the mnsieel notes or sounds. The effect upon them is similar to that of the buzzing of en entrapped fly. He does not nscribe much "intel fgenee" 'to spiders. Minud’s Linimont Cures Colds, etc. Mysterious Electricity. l oNattittr,ton Haratd.) From III 'rteetrie looomotlvo Growing hun- dred- ot to†or mum to o fountain playing on u dlnlunbh Alli-I'm. And yet the some mutations um I- Immune top both. It u I curm- not. an! with MI ot In Incubation Halo or nothing to known of the source or man of daemony. new“ of qqqteS char-cm hon bun advanced. but none of then " column when the pro- blun. W0 know how to not». 'sietttetettr no no! to control It, but in orUttt " u eluulvo on tho mum! at "to. In this Mad as, Mover. the he! at an “out“. do. not _---- In- an nun- nomad " nun mum none or man: - “um..." --..-_ .__ ,,, Hun. Wo know how to make electricity and how to control it. but in origin in u eiusivo u tin mm ot life. in this Mod “a, â€not. the he! of an. “0'11ch (you not me my com. We are more (Bowed u a column] nation in increasing the mints; of ma to which electricity an in “sounds funny to but of tobacco mm; mu In Canada. donn’t. It?" and W. J. Gunny. of Toronto. “Not to much net-hug): to Wham-In people. who know that It " grown in this am. whale an maroon-y tn- cmtly no. cm ot night. but the "can Andean think! at an waving pull- ot the t'rlara7iaTittettretP.eee; thud. nk3mt. iuGiaur,tttatthred 'd'T",tri;oGGiTtiijitieiee2te.,t."2 'f,trlarrriioiiiia0iAt.reee,.e! tho Dominion. So can We ban to ro- - -7 A ALLA --- hm m MTU" Amman nun- v. -- ___ _ _ _ We: uncon- momma“ h men-| “and. It k I Met, mover. that the wood in now grown with can men- In Dunno Iridium!†in 'ttr"G"rGGirG'iGil tho Dominion. 60 you It" bun In ro- man. In“. tiairuirrear-to1ttr, up†all a. plum“ ttttr-ttt In their rain: to Avoid m."- , (Catholic w.) -r-1 an“ my wit-'0 mm with u My up! but tt â€but. New 'hiiiiifi8vtt'"'Ju'us tt my â€all h but. I. "gTiiVeey in: .0 - " . - with l bit It h an. - SPIDERS AND MUSIC. Tobacco Grown in Canada, (lawman. Sentinel.) n. funny to but ot sauce Yours truly. CHAS. P. TILTON. of Queen Victor“. ox, , me. tSIN sid- . I " call ' 7 put mac 1 dee, - She - and r She urn. I. Hunter. eeps wo- weary feeling W ..- . . , _.__A Winter, - sad morsels“ a winter is in those region- only, Ind fallen on saw. with a sort of hungry vap- unoe, and lengthened the long journey -. "um-A "" in n convict mBTer II III I.“ -~. ensiberiewlthe Moth-01.nov- not, and lengthened the [out PM inteminebly. Cmped up in n convict est, which was divided into some twenty null. bully-ventilated cells. it scene I mimic that we did not perish miserably on the "J. One or two ems/outed wretchee, tten deeply by expoeure end ooemumptiott, did succumb. while the re- minder of my companions dwindled gredunlly in numbers es we cuwled tor- [ tuguely from station to station-priser' to prien---f"'e.r the barren leagues be- tween Russia in Europe and the oontinee of the empire. Aketui, n decrepit vii- lage et best, we: more then half buried in now when we-myself, two other prie- onere, and truararz.arriave1 after sledg- ing the inst fifty-mile stage of the jour- ney. Rising over the town " one end Wes the grey prison, surrounded by high and massive Wliil, built, it is said, of mnmrinl taken from the great wait of on the "J- wretehes, tten mumption, did minder of my gudmlly in nur iutus.ir from at to prien---f"".'r tween Rush in wan new 5..., ___V,,, and mm Tau, built, it is um. ot material taken from the great wall of Chins. mu frown, nearly furnished, and wholly discouraged by the first glimpse of what was to be my residence for near- ly two you", I - lodged in B roomy cell in company with two other prison- :ers of hope. - . . . ___ __...A..I.‘.4l "ninth. en OI nope. l 'd"',",',, the eighteen wretched months that followed, every spare moment we had was spent in planning an empe. but so heavy we: the gusrd maintained over the town so well as the prison, and so vigilant were the soldiery, that two yours pused before my dress. of escape came true-two years of 2'tG'ltr,' unre- mitting labor in the silver mine. of the region; two years of rigor and hardships â€which only the strongest constitutions ‘ my possibly survive. Death, in (not, is . release which on a down occasions I have heard welcomed in our exile com- munity thTrre.--Gregori Uerahani, Ruse sian Social-Revolutionary leader, in Les- 'iaiir"i'ii"riiitoiMrri0h lic’i Weekly MRS. titltiTrlt's STORY Bar. Beiulu are “Truly Momlloun." Mrs. 1. Hunter, of 111 dlllts Raglan Road, Kingston, Ding-up: .. . " “We, -.-- _-' Ab ble and chronic consti- pstion for some the. I was subject to dini- neu, bihoul headache, . nervousness, drowsi Mrs. I. Bantu. he“, pains in the m and side, and . tired, wesry feeling needy til the time. “I tried slmoet every medicine, wu treated by doctors and druggista, with little or no benefit. " tried Dr. Leonhsrdt's Anti-Pill, and the results have been truly wonderful. I sm so much better. Anti-Pill is s uncut wonderful remedy." All dealers, or the Wilson-Fyie 00.. Limited, Nisgsn Fslls. Ont. cos =---_--" The Ghost of Trinchinopoly. The ghost may be seen on most nights between the hem of 11 and 12 on..the Tonmir rout. She is a most beautiful creature who walks out of the river with her clothes all wet, water dripping from her long silken tresses, and the fltt rice in her right hand-no, not a p’ of soap not In antiquated toothttruett--- merely a brew lamb. If any perm It- tempte to approach her she merely poietU ‘the forefinger of her left hand at him and he dies. The ghost was originally one of the temple dancing girls famous all over the town for her ‘otriklng beauty. The temple authorities raised objection to her bathing there and or- dered her to creep out quietly at 11 every night and bathe in the river ct Tennur where no one would see her. This all: did for some time, but another temple girl gnu any the oeeret, with the result thtt the next night when bath. Ing she head the tramp of may toot and on rushing out to see whit was the matter was mummy " chad mb, the river and drowned by the crowd of m rushing to the river aide to no tter.--. Madms Mail. . II imh' . ti ii2'i"ciii,iiiiarCaAGeuevret' 'iri'iii5ii'eiraiiTGGuruui"" MM _ ih7i,7i'uei-aetrt-quedau t-"iiiiGJea0iei.yaeryrlyeet u,tiiCrii'iiiAriiak.riiaoayeey nun-they... Faun-Mk! "ts7"%7ayfiF:rhri't,ef?eri" EGTrGase IV"? Per " Ata-ee-retry. Tttn The immediate and ell-important quee- ' tion in not why the frequent track: ii)) so destructive. but why they “a In allowed to occur in the first place. Shell cars, of course. we better than woodetl ones, but there would be no complnint of dunger from the letter if the number of wrecks could be reduced in thin our try to whet experience thread than to be the unavoidable minimum. The more ‘proapect of collision-proof an in the dim future will hurdly divert public n. taxation from the tllk in hand, which i. to prevent the connequenoee of collide... by abolishing eouisiori.---ctereUnd Phin- Denier Be Amati “GEM/W qua: mum “can“: l!lii7 ' " “Elm! h Ill)) l * illuiiirlllllll,5 ?ll'lllllllr,,j Danger -BMrM"8M-88tteqrAMtgtlBM-- PARI-OR .U I-FHU " WAX "di'Ga" tsuffered with kidney_ln_d liyer trou- In. Built.“ Wrecks. [ierEaNjir9lllrIiiiiEcji? , @3333 “in W II“ - -eq'e"--r" 7 - - In. “an". teh was _-- .11: ti2rt “Orgy?†tnt kr)'. M " .mn all. 2t'lt W - M . -....------" I‘I'OH m. mm. -. nod qTeer - of anomalous In on human or amul- an! In so mum by Volta-4|“- sumu'r W- " una- mm. .014 by druet'. It“ IEUE N o. 6, linrd’n Linnea: Cum Distemper. no" I". In“! m 01‘ Ber. mumutdbrinthem“ my mother some from whose name no Tancook. Mmunrettyw sort of s em. out! It w commonly believed that he m in I? ,rith in devil, uni he in, tob. W by andâ€. the devil 00M he'd In“ Tot-'0 oom- pnnyéon below. 80 hound onTom only on: naming and (and Tom bd just got In) and VII droning. “Tom; nil he, 'you've End in t†town long enough. I want you to gone down to the pit and say with an. Bo make Me. I've got to loop the (In goin' dow often, you know! irihAtudeviifookTomMUPHm to hurry him and mum sure of on Tom didn’st like the loch at the m, and the deviN linger: we awful bot. Tom tried to pull along, and a d- woe time he com, 'Wait, “it, can you, until I get my gums:- on?’ "The devil ioobod bin .14 am all then ho grinned and be add: 'Ye, “I wait bill you get your gun..- on." "He no sooner aid that than Tom threw the place. into the (in. Tho devil now he'd loot " no out went on in great ongcr. and Tom never won gu- lusu -in."--New Maul Woo. The (infinity often optioned of safely investing mull "NIM, an he ob- viated by securing come than in c first clu- Lou Gown], paying down plen- ium of Ten Dollar. per share, and then *obtaining 6 per cent. on all nub-quad PM“ i Write (aluminum to John Wright: Broker, Lo on, Out. Rafa-em, New“ Bank of Can-d5. Save Your Earnings . nmnuuvmz. Natl-y all the toy-Ida at kw. mu, if - to it,†“with. in“. The QumotRoun-IIIAJXI-elqt Ta, ',.keea.iti.stasimrttettsftV bookn Ont may “CHM“ equal. 'Nnttu-tituruahiettpirtee- doubtedl'y 1savesutstseuerdilt Mops“. The Queen of Iulyis a M'lt a! - u'ud (Alan. Gus-cling Maul may in Mght Inattrt-s, howl M-ury tianeietatroodio1siV qthoM. a V'Ir‘heKingotEnghndi-moftbhd judge. Mahmud cigars in the writ. Asoueorub-soexPert.oreot his intheee luwieo,ho would no. Invasion“. qhtsQueersotPttrt-lh-dim1 de,-1oouh1eaai1.vernmh- andâ€. TheGerm- W,“ cm kmoqm,eouMarAe tqoodl'whg-‘ poet,a ,todeioenrtutiuibuht. cry-yaw, tatoutfneturer,ntseti- tttoetor,ttrookbamirr,Frr-, "tath?r,tyertor,aururr,alGrk. or IMO Uni-at Cunt Dim A minister of a run! garish in Soot- land oueered one of his noeh "hooting a hare on the Sabbath. When 'eterinitq by an. round, he questioned his It follows: Uohn, do you know what a work of 'seemtsity " “I do," said John. “Well,doyouthhkshoouu¢ that... My c work of annuity?" "rt In tut," aaid John. "How do you mun ch. out?" “Wool, canâ€. mean-bet, it m [be awnâ€?- dar'." no the any nun I it my mu. 0).- - a--.“ ht reply. A Vat of locality. v 831 --- - â€an?“ - 1-- te 1907. 10 GIRLS l WALK DUI. gnawing-um“ mum we tiiag ‘M‘Wi trsetttermtidte. 1 in Inmate Was tot c Tue. [0mm agar“ hone Cum." Bl hours W " v (our hundred I d be Impouum- w. TBr turoin of cut with C " the buy tits it the - we med by the any“). 05pr that the on“ e today, bit the no: d. tue “Mu chimed. I “A 'Lcmln-uucv an: Use W†to " + eight hum or . 1m... etxeinely " psrity of the irs "(he Wilt“ out i ' -eatt Mr. " . ttuty aim-w of l mun-um. tiecreW autumn. N dbl-r Bttgmtu ilk Mr. ket wt of ll ' averting tl M, Lntl I the girl M tll in t'uo L unruly vud ikt “hump-arr mun-e ' tmetro""'" nu- Urr nth-um to wstlt 1 ity. Lilli night I “ “Dual 'e hi ("a Mouth-m ' flux-w. to an trod I atami" Xena-thy an.- i-uuuutwu in l a mum-ling. but action bayou! l of aim to rettre new; ot Uw ull'lk r ot the ('0 ting the tr but WM girl striker Tle. Labor , emiorred IIIIS I Kenneth Flu! trat " d girl " of Ill "tics when we“ "I increaw Batu-r th minimum d" '" l" " t lu-m h a w i‘ " bad Mu NM of" n