i/ii-iii/iii/if" tttii) nu. la- vie mull", w - yum - “mph occurritttt an" the visa d 'b. - an'hue their “In - Inc - Mn r 'va- pvuentum. who. J... at In! and y,ruruod to MI. â€Iâ€! - Jum- They can. Into tho will (not - saw my. young child (not I...) III III mor)- hump]: uni-My It unsung: Jan 'ra, um. no rau- dd I. "In! tn- Inn. V. , ml 16. his - mum - strt .n-u'. m â€an. n. m “as It: an“, ,outtt, and Sun-om novelty alias “j to“ ym- -. V mother cto-h m" u. then no yea. “I tl. i and I. m V“ gull-null. ll MMt. M. .r... "my. nd 3|- wm of Jam". Two 3mm In. - main tao much not a! I will. Wlaer. lo. ttto I... "It: WM! one M M J um,†u no III. " may and. "When- is tBq Ml. s-r. Inu- - 'tre'-. they and. "For we in. on. m- MI was all: To utx‘bhip Hun it" we ho- w M. 1m birth revs-bl to I. by III: M an." KM " "Go " to mum." and “no! an. “And ttttd m. child who“ Meth mu not. to you. And when yo “up! Him 511:; are wad leP, the you“ contact: from that city moved To seek a. Kin; did they so (on. no“; It lound In sum. Hia Kitt-ttttt pond Why - no Christ rejected by m: on: Then Herod and the ' hr chub be this m would pg: no we"! _ Who- - soldier all). Would not " Beth no Gaiaat. um their dyxng day no - (or when nuir laiuts‘ t Tat plan: tt is. that In the (mute years. When grit an and: by can“) - was um hon ant-u Izd tirisees can: nought but " sutu- an lied wtttt But mm but di.atqtoiattw than; 7 --- " For writ“ Amxmblcd on that --t- nun o ittru In catch at [can "rat" mu- Tbuy did expect - My. " born. In Imhieben ot Judah." may tonal. ror mun tho - In.) an Moll. 'rttou Bethiettetn of 1m. this a, pride, Thou shalt the ml" [in In and." hm". “audited on nets "In What could they do Ml m night "In! tho In. its bear-ma at: And HIV-I‘M God would lead ll -- man I. wheat the night bar tab! All Dunn's but In: Bu 1 in! no my Anriaiue no YO" an» the I new“. In God. tannin; Surr- plus of an. {Ore-tor In “do. than the loo u Ha) I†â€and the lung in tar-ott Namath Yum! "on. the "and, sate in absent“! If. as the, urn! In; from Bethlehem. Tho wim- _ u was with WI (you; That uno- would the lat“. chin con- artgtttg-- "From ounce no prophet doth um." (John VIL. W.) and. all than guidance they on ma Upon In In that did nut and: have; - 0am.- to“! “a an adore the In“ In“. hrul'l who" all in blindness In. warned by God of Hand's crust latent. Bo sure In Sta-nth they and. no our. Thor found my Kill m to an. did "can; The" costly att-rid, trtFtMtmhtsq' attd myrrh. That night. mu. m. m "mb"..""- "Wuh and and mother Into Egypt (be. And bo than not. an!“ 1 this an wont.“ no" the (My own " no - sum, and ao-ttr M and. any; Tho hon“ W m MCI their ttuttt. But umber my had an. no one could no". While I the Mngrs In mo did "and cut tor M fawn. The lad â€canâ€! an outlet 13!; You“! in " can... not“ his “I: ma burn. All “mulch-1 than boys In an in thy. that word. King. I. um um clear. . an“); new a. can In dun Jewish breast; g Han-l. and will MIMI-l! and “at. sewvd with an. no m'l a. I". A y Jug man once wrote the eels-brut- ed Thomas Carlyle, inking his advice about the beat wsv to get on. The [or lowing was the ua'tnt Inswz-r: "sway to do faithfully 'al'ld','d'e"r' thing in your mum situation you find. either (Klimt tr or tacitly, laid to your charge. That in your post; stand in it like a soldier. Silenuy devour the runny changing of it. a. all hull!“ situations have mat-Lana an that you aim not to quit it without doing all that it " but requires of you. A man perfects himself by work much more than by reading. The: In a grov- hg kind of no: that on wisely combine the two tMi-fell. vuinsttr. can det mtishidtotbdthnd in their}?- oat who". at! â€to “and". h- d foe but" Vida this I at h Hon . iqd.-- OA by. c Soon van in»: "no! some by deaMt any These “dings did tho use! Jo-ttx tell. "Lo. they no and who â€an: an and Guided by God to Nun.“ I. â€turned. And the" lived Joana In! " Janka can And-thunu-otopultha: He w; warned And hated by (In - a. "Punt." " then no. wnx "was. run uurTtu-e-e.tr"f.tctrf lust. truthm m thou-Ho alt our known. Ills soverdn qritt vats out In: "Marriage," remarked the intellectual you-sh woman. who had given Inch that tome mango! “he†'"ts the "frigate! of love." " [no you’re rfgkt. named the name-plum your: man. "It coon-Joya} aâ€: sort into 51-1. is.aaGartou.undeeur"1 but. tn m "lat unlined, no" hymn; rum. .e unto m- ul and m. "I re- u not." wto'. Th. who - on he King in “than. PM: At ) old Jan in M In no aka u. W. meticu- xu 14. and 1 home to Sutton. but: It. 3. w.» men had not "t a... II "r nmmdtmi)‘ an: that: vbou d Mary Hod inn my. Thu pn- , mummy 9t. mart-3'52} " 7JiriiiiTit; tr,Gilai- if no." Jew-In. hd ed iae ochah' M.reB99*.a._r."e"l"". I - " ° ' u '. 2rd,t,u's,'l,'t VIE-1|. ot um“. me of , 3 . ot Br and . - e n emu, the human so out “ tba& “m" God'ts mod 1"2t wont-:4 nod If: an. mum: tor lp. Matti with their courtly min Mod " to ttget " -t. a! the won word Jam-lea: did My.“ a.“ at an. captain.- “any done around ' the will emu and driven umn in a hard " Din a! than. handful down to the river BEST WAY TO GET ON. Dull“ eastward. to the an that no. binding who: I†ink-nod and this not“! In! KING. Kn. an: huh but born?" I can. In. Mn land: with Jaw?! at God n hitter err-. , --Hs all our Morrow, ". who - “you! ‘joy _ n: their (h 'iGtGiuratir “and. mat: Ind been " in. u banned to the north. wait for their "turn. iiia 7 50mg: " use their nous " h cumin: spread. a duty Alumna} in; “to abut. a land than "e [1013†din; [rear . Its: despair now m hope out... am. an: that): hurts there haul rm OM PG“ ar " blood purpose and ad All “h? but; Ind drivel. banne- and W at N. me In dame-m. com- pared to a. “but but at the King ot sun. It in n cud u well u a pictures- .uo custo- ud survives “chased in an In Wyfmunu. _ ___ .___, wt. It and to be maul "tair. but than I‘ve been “Hons In." In an. mlon. ny- tho ml Goon-ohm Massimo. The" no latched..- lut the you com be ttlseu - oi ttee-ttr I. this [on on. The run donut hunt in a more Ber- lau- malt. - when that majestic in... "a a. only mean: at roral branch at tho "my. Save tor trndltlon and sent!- am. tor oee.aimtal unto uplendoro and and... the {kph-n: may he no part on Buns“ court lite, and his occupstlon would be (on. were It not tor the survey earns. the road builders, omen) tantalum; la the runway provinces and the to“ forests 0nd ember yards when Amerlc-n overhead muhlnory want â€what the Intelligent strength ot the olqhant.‘ _ L ' ' the viii elephant: end driven than in a herd of two or three hundred down to the that bank and heroes to the King's tree]. The in: hunt ot thh hind we: unused for the epoch] enjoyment of the Crown Prince after his return from hie audio. st oxtord end his tour oi America. Ind before he hemmed the rohee ot l Buddhist prim sud meat the regulation three months in a monetary, in newt-deuce with aid Siamese cumin. For the hunt week the court Ill]. It the new» wince ot Bans-9min. on the river bonke. and the diplomtic end other ioteigu meets go up to Ayuthie on their houseboat which taxation-11 lodge them during the - It". When the hunter. hove urged the slow loving me out from the Jingle to the rive bank the eight is worth all Stan’s efforts to one. Named in " n nie dis- tance by hundreds or hom the tune ele- nhuits slowly urge their jungle cousins acme the new. and Into the converting Ip- omchen to the krill. Thin square enclosure has solid walls six ieet thick. with an inner stocxnde ot teak ion twelve feet hlrh. handed together with iron and not so closely together that there is barely ewe between for the slimmed Siamese to .etuee't. through. Ttto mod stand. with it: royal lodge. from which the Kin; and his guests View the acne. in built our the north wall at; tho hull; but as this position ot honor‘ and fixed Asiatic convention in I bad one; tar ohotomphen the King, who in In ell-i thltaiut over the amen. he. bad a spec“ hi pnvillion constructed at one one. where‘ he manoeuvre', his iastrumenta, large Ind "hall, with the greatest spirit. Nearly every one carries n camera to the elephant hunt. but nom- snip at royalty. except by request. In no highly civilized a country as Slum. Aa the wild elwhnnts crowd up and into the tun-ow chute lending to the uni. trum- patina. end Ihuiilln‘ nervously in their fright. the scramble and crush ls torrifV'. After the huge log: have closed the wink-rt or portculls the lame elephants go around a-l In stimulant-e Corps, assisting bruised and injured elephants to move and ride to thtir tee: and turnin; the dead can over out or the wny. At - hut: sew-n1 beasts have their rttt8 Broken no the lite crushed out ot them In thin crush It the “we. tor when two frantic elephnnts try to go through at once 'nelther one yields or draws back, and tho strange“ and hunt survlvei. . uh... A..n_:A-. .hnI-Jh “In. All which that can tlad foothold goes up ttto tony mne- by train, and III as river-Me Ind creek country 'pooplo paddle their man been and dug out mum to the arm or the Main-m on which the Kingâ€: has! lite. J k ' After this punk mihtir a the krnl in “Hod with the , who trumpet Ind sow-m ‘ manhunt dttetorit move about [when and not. the damn (hill!!! one. no but)!!! b we “Wu-tum m... ._.,.-V "__-- After this punk mlldly subside. though the krnl in mm with the wild jungle folk. who trumpet and scream unceulngly. the manhunt doctors move about on thetretrainest “when and not. the dulrable caches. The than: one. no but)“ by the toot and M In! to who». A few are chosen for the royal tabla. but the mu ao the pram- tlul. column-la! work-to tho survey camps cud the In]. forests _ A v-----.- .u., A..-» - - - -'-»u.. . There is great. cerium between the sink. fit. well ted and well groomed tame ele- phant; with their quiet dignity. their benign and on! muioouvnss. and the softy looking jungle folk-flaw. weather worn oleqthants. with visible rib» and pair-hes of tunson arowth--but n [at weeks at cure and tout. a few '.erutRtiags and ohl':ttipt transform them. .erd they son acquire the urban.- manner an! compo-Ire. ' . __,--.,----. Ann --:.:.. "aw-mu. Every Siamese in a vonnolssnur and critic of olenbanu. and judges urterriMir from "an arm herd. Pint. the welfare should have -1-. “In too- should have black nulls and his an must be absolutely Intact. lnsigulncuut In the olephuu's all u, tho want ot it ren- don the creature impolshble and ridicu- loua: and many a promising elephant h rejected at the Run! because be In: 1oat " tail In none jungle tutht. A Mendy. mu nil In mercury for the elephant to be used in tnvelllng. . v... an... ...-.. -_» "WW, . load Illa. uncured. of uniform wrlnk “In or texture. and nu light In color a. sol-IMO. , - -- _ ..__., __. ,_ .0“: ut Winn {no will eleqthtutts' have been that"; and made (not to stake: they come- thcu break loops and wreak their tron“ an the (In: animal in new. and battle on the (In: animal in new. and bank-s royal Mara-mm fiervet tuskars and otten occur. "he" the Mr rings "ll" the about: of the mole and [ha sumac an“. he has had I royal holiday lndoed. " 7 -- . . . L._ "--- -.- " "J When tho "In: obolce has been made and' the resent-(l clam-nu are turned back into the meadow. fed Ind tread. the King riseg 1nd :0- to his boat. The King ot Siam h one of tho most Husly but“); man now and": . thrott.--"tt" landmines: man in Ann." many of tho diplomats cum him-- and in " will. Inniury unllorm he new on at . no. that puts the royul umbrella tare:- u a do. trot to “up up with the unawa- ruler. At ulna M the King tn his teuropean Cloths. undtr his Asiatic umbrella. mu â€we alt-h on the" heels Ind remain in I Done ot reverent. humility unlll be him “and. Than the people. who have an- m m. holiday to the (all. the a fresh Quid. 1.ch " thalr pinup. paddle any or 1nd. the stream. and Mann. be- - again but a busy voter village net: -0 ruined lemole- In the Jungle. Mind's Liniment Cares Colds, etc. Sdiury Cause of Discord in the Merry Italic of the Plat. "Piano paying anthem! 1 don't ob- ject to," add the fiat dweller, "nor do 1 perystt and! to worry over the sing- in. there. "'itte piano may be out of tune and on the blink gcncnlly. and the playing my be worse, and the singing may be taping u to voice and ahrieking as to hum-r, but 1 dont iet any of those tbittgs disturb me at all. Nor um I put out by the dropping oi flutirom and out. I): un- unui'luua- v. -._-_._,, things like that on the floor overhead. "Than things “my make the gas fix- tures in my (in: dance and jingle and Mop the dock. but they don't any of them aifeet my llf‘l’Yua the least little bit. because. with a multitude of other sounds, way are all a part of life in a fiat, and to bc averted. We get used to them, non of keyed up to them, and I) WWI, 'Ul‘ v- nL'ch "t' “I -..-.._, V," - m should miss them it We didn't hear they It isn't the hum of the law- mill, you know. but its sudden stopping Ch: gives In the jolt. ' "But there iss one sound to be heard in “an that I confess does disturb the and that one bs stamping on the tiaor averted. That sound I have never been Ate to got used to, because stumping is sanctum that could be avoided. Ti,'1'l'lii'd't to be eure, this pound- - ugh done by the pounce? thought- - r his own Imminent; tmt oven in JARRING NOTE. TS if??? a has been made and are turned buck into trod. the King rises Th. King of Slum h In». H. H. Mack's 00m pound . Cure! 'Aetunatitmt--ttnd mu it to star cured. To prove it. Dr. Maek will give you a bottle to try, asking you to pay only the "xpre6q (abqut 250)._ -- -- u . "Writ; 754194.; Dr. H. H. Mack, 60 Yonge street, Toronto-and get a full air.» $1.00 bottle absolutely Rheumatism in the exceptional cases it may be no less disturbing to the people below. "I lived once under a man who tap. ped on the floor unconsciously. When he began thinking over something, or moybe when he got busy working, he would begin to drum a tune on the floor with his foot; a drumming with a. regu- lar pattern in it, like the drumming on a drum. - "He would keep that up for minutes nt a time; he drummed lightly, and so he' was sure to keep it up for a long time. it used to worry me.. Sometimes after I'd gone to bed and just an I was dozing of! pleasantly into sleep I'd be woke up with a shock by the sound of that patter, patter, [tutoring on the floor overhead. "Then, after a while he'd stop, and once more everything would be quiet, and tlun again the ntilness would be broken by that regular thump, thump, thumping on the floor; and, as I have said, I'm an any man. but I was glad when he moved “Way. "But it isn't that sort of stamping that makes the staple of this sort of sound. The common" and most famil- iar and most grating and disturbing form of stumping is, that which goes with piano playing. "Somebody stun upon the piano, I "'I‘hr piano, the phonograph. the "ing- ing, tlh- lmby. the plny of children. the Immim: around of furniture. the drop- ' ping of things ,the clomping around and ithe running buck mm furl" from mm : room to mmtlwr and th- oecasional dull Eli-ml min-n mun-thing hum) i, nym-t playing a lively two step or something in jig time, and then somebody starts stamping on the floor in unison with the music. Tho floor under his feet and the ceiling helm;- that form n combination ,oumiing board, and the stamping sounds like thunder to tho people underneath. "l live'now under a cheerful family that in all realm-ts save this are as nice u lot of people as I ever lived under anywlu-rv. They go clamping around lu-m‘ily at all hours of tho day and night. and they drop the uscnal unort- ment of things at about the right im tervaN and drag around beds and fur- niturc- and make the trsual orderly saw- mill uproar and rnekot 'routerail.v, day and night. but all that, 'rt' Mpoct EN a matter of voursv. and w" uhouhl miss it if no didn't hour it, But ' hurl- t-om-Prt nighta. and when they ploy the piano (hwy Sdamp on tite flonr. and that dumping jars on our us-rws fright- full}: "Wham they mtart up with the piano, old flat ulwollmw as Ge an», We are actu- ally appri-hemivo for fear they will nanny. and when they begin stumping, the sounds hit in and buffet us like. hinWi with a club wry far from stuff- ed. roar doesn't disturb us at all, but I GO thunk that awry hut dweller is in honor bound not to [mum] on the floor." When Winter Knocks. (Baltlmore Sun.) A and farewell to summer tuna. Good-by to autumn. too. l The breezes ot a balmy cllme, Good-by. good-by. to you. But though the wullng which swoop can And nipping - the air. Why need we ugh when drama is my Ho tor the rocking char! Ho for the corner by the blue, The book. the long, the glee. The sweet delight at winter night, With Goldlmks at my knee: Knock. yr._wiPtty., at my lumen. "**. "u...†-= -. ---_ Blow. bugle of the atom! Around me strum: the fireside dreams. The love Iightss keep me warm. And while the but but: loud without Till summer we (and Through all Tf' It".' that 'neuh the m. IMU'I’IFUL MOTOR! POI? - To anyone writing “I tut-ring the fol- lowing questions we will gladly and air __ - _ -. - - ___-, --- ----- - .._o 'iiiiiit'y'i?iiiijiieii2e'oht', u not. ot four of our latest Mon of beautiful 919mm post cards lithognphod in brilliant. "The earthquake that eastern seismo- graph recorded was somewhere 14,000 miles away." "Hasn't it been reported yet?†"No." "Took plum and nobody knew it, eht" "Evidently." "Well, say. that's just the sort of earthquake I Iike."-C1eveund Thin Dealer. -- _ Mad I ruling of Curiosity. (thiuton Herald.) '1':- and to and out “on you would pay an- little Account." sud the collector, pleasantly. "many," mod the lobar, "I an n- "Rally." cm the debtor, “I an un- pack-yer In am not: block who any: a madman: tho Ptet.f, â€any." ----- h- -. -" - tha "r've no mm to 1m." W.“ m. collector. “J" add a. so can. to my mt" “mount. "tor I unto-noon! on as win "an." Yew. 'iiiii'"afiU the violet» " RELIANCE " "ers. - " J .. .r n M tptt't.'t."t.'w"t' ~~.- " . w u I “Ask For the Naval. Puma." INTERNATIONAL FOOD co.. TORONTO, CANADA "a." .. P. 'vtutvtvt',-'hAr".tm mum}! BAKING POWDER nun. Food Healthful. com L... to U... - - Result.- Inolot on the “and“ Distance Lends Enchantment. otly stun! upon tho piano, lively two step or something Be, and then somebody starts on the floor in unison with the ho floor under his feet and the 'iow that form n eombination board, and the stamping sounds p Peart---Whst in your hm!“ Mr. Duhwny! Mr. Duh-r- 1st. Name your moor- znd. â€an. till. â€pct. lively a, and m the 1 a flour FREE BEBE " in unison with the ‘ldt'l' his feet and the form n eombination the stamping sounds poople underneath. Pr u cheerful family mm V.. u'u‘lof Ah: bi, gm Starving Inuit“ Endeavor to "."- mm. mm! aibensate. 1 A St. Petersburg dospatch unnnunces‘ that in several of the piovineet of Bus-, gin, the peanuts. as a result of the famine. have taken to their beds, Wm! motionless for days at a time in ordtfr to.woaken the pang-i of hunger, This 65'9â€." may be akin to the pseudo- h.ibernation habitually prvtised by Itur man peasants in the northern provinces. {notably in the Pskov district. If such " the case, the hardihil†endured by the peasants this winter mu." not he “a great as the casual reader may be led to be. lieve. . .. -t.,'M, in Hove~ . . True, the pqetutrvhitiernttie which " general in Pakov has resulted from the feet that famine is well-night chronic there, but by practice front time imme- morinl the peasants have become accus- tomed to imitate the habit of the bear and marmot in winter, until now the rustom is regarded by them as one of the. normal conditions of human exist- ence. They have a name for this winter sleep. It in called "lotska." ' f alcl'p. It IN 'moe" nun“... . - l in the brief autumn the housewives of Pskov prepare a sufficient quantity. of hard, black bread to hut until spring. When winter sets in in earnest the fam- ily lie down around the stove and go to Meets. Once in the turenty-tUttr hoyrt overyono wakes up to nibble at a were of black bread. which is wnslml down with a drink of water. Then all go .t.o slaep again. The members of the family take watch and watch about to Keep the fire going. ttt nut “lung. This pscmlo-hilwrnntion lam until spring, or upward of six months, when the peasants take up their humble tasks again, and are busy until the succeeding Winter. when silence reigns oven the frozen land once more.--New York Timer. k' 7 Mb' W, we? '1. /AT /. , ~ P * . ‘5/ , “1‘ T: .33? i; m r. " " a , "I was much amused the other day,†mid a hardware dealer. "at a. small boy who cunw around for a job. One of the I l-h'rks had drople a lot of sharp-point- l "d taelos into it drawer of the brass) M‘I't'W!. and had given up the idea ofi taking tlu-m out. When the youngster turned up we thought Wu would try him by letting: him sort the two article's. ll" wot all it tho sumo way the clerk had banana. pit-king out the tacks with the lingoâ€. and getting the point ot about vn-ry third tack in the ball of hi! thumb. Ile had (“rough in about. a min. uto, and lie stmightum-d up. We all be. gun to smile. expel-ting him to give up the jolt. luau-ml of that he went over to the show emu- and pieked out a horse- shov magnet. Then he came back to the Por. In thirty wounds he had the tacks (out and tho N'rt'Wi were still in the icompurtnu-nt, He knew that the map,- net would uttruv‘t iron and not tho brass, and in A jiffy iw had accomplished what WP had been trying to do all the morn- ing. We didn’t runly need a boy. but this little frllmr's smurtnesa appealed to us, and WP ongugod him " once. as m: warm! in any. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. In a. little town In Seotlnnd tho naive-d1;- xer has been induced to give up his habit of hard drinking and sign the pledge. At tt pub- lic meeting he give his experience. "t - thocht to: text ye.†he sold. “that for I whole month I ttavna' touched I: drssp of anything. t save enough to buy a. haw out comm wi" brags handles and brass mmo--tutd' it t'tts a teototaler for summer mouth I all“ no wantin' It!" Somebody has wanted to Commander Peary the idea of bulldlnx I railway over the ice tow-rd the pole that would in, him in touch with his base of summon at all times. The x-ommander think: the builder would need a. iivoly section 911;, been†out: ot the track would be shifted every hour. But Peary mustn't be u hasty in con- demning the suggestion. There are certain railways tht seem to be built under exactly the same condition. IT CLEANS AND IT CURES "Royal Crown†Witch-Hazel Toilet Soap It's a toilet soap and a medicated soap -- for the price of ordinary soap. - - . ,‘A_.. K' - - _ 'e - 01ny we. a cake. 3 cakes for 2 5c. -ol Back .-ot Shoulde: -.ot Stine -ot Bough -.of Whirleboue --ot Knee --of Fetlock --of Coffin Joint Shifting Try-ks Nothing New. At Mt â€rink†tttrd ttee.ers. o For Strains Be Got the Joh. Would Need It. to Inmate TORONTO m. "iiE'iiiuijir""r'"T""a" HEARIBURN? yt' Because when food return. with that com: taste, ' you have "heartburn," wind Mter food. or any of these unpleasant findings ot' fulness," it is Immune your digestive system has given way for the time. The "food tax" upon its energins has been too heavv. Bileaus jun enter the stomach. m3, dissolving there, they liberate certain herbal essences which " once correct the gutric glands. These etttreN5M 'tel pau into the blood and are carried to the delicate vessels of the intestines, All along, those herbal essences act' beneficially. so that digestive disorders we corrected. the bowah are gently' opened-not violently purged-the acid and ierntenthtg substances are rmnmwl from the body, the blood is cleared of poisons. and a feeling of lightneo and restored vigor, with Whirl] of healthy appetite and freedom from all digestive marbles is the "will. Bile-Inns tiluo pure constipation, debility, female ailments piles, headache, and all liver, kidney and stomach disorders. Of all I stores; and druggistm at 50 cents a box, - u "sr-.., “A "gut Light on I There has A. mu Le l scientific pa ttrits"? Light on a Long-Forgotten Tragedy. There has just returned to Berlin Dr. A, um Le Coq, the head of the small scientific party despatched by order of the German Emperor to Chine“; Turkes, tan in September. 1904, to carry on the work of excavntiml in and around the town of Turian. For the most, part these discoveries consist of MSS. in at least ton different hmguages. and paint- ings on hardened mud. plaster and wad I ' I, A “an...“ ruut interest of ttvmologitt.s Huron world. Apparently this 131ng variation of Syriac. Although most of these m must date hack to the eighth centuries, if not even earlier, no papyrus :mmng them, all b ten on Irarelttttettt two or th of .Chinese paper or leather. Other dueoveries made by tl tion were of n more grueson In one temple unearthed from that had long oovered it ly Coo found some hundreds of d Cm] found Home hundreds or ueuu "Hun-n of Buddhi-t monkyI. The plinth- was crowded with these to the tu'r.'" doors, and eridenee was forthcoming of these having been driven into the temple by the Mongol followers of Coniueius and than no mammal in that escape was im- possible and death from suffumltion was only a matter of time. Probably this mum-re took phlm- ten or twelve cen- turies ago. but wiren the temple was opened the lmdioi were found to he in a remarkable Mate of 1lseservstiu-1rom the London Times. " ACID RIFTINGS or PO0D? Silent End- These Symptoms. The Sum. South: "lurmbrr King" my“: " consider MINARDN LIXIMENT the BEST linitnent in use. 1 got my foot badly jammed lately. I lmtlml it well with MIXARD’S LIN!- MENT and it was as well as ever next dar." She is the girl who is not "tiso bright and too good" to be able to find joy and pleasure all over the world. She is the girl who appreciates the fact that she cannot always have the first choice of everything in the world. She is the girl who ifoot aggressive and does not find joy in inciting aggres- sive people. She is the girl who has tact. enough not to any the very thing that will vanit- the skeleton in her friends' PIOFOK to ral- tle his bones. - She ii the girl whn, 'hrthtr.r it h warm or cold. clear or stormy. finds no fault with the weather. A 7 She is the girl who when you invite her to any place compliments you by looking httr belt: A _ .. . .. She'lsthe gill who makes thin world n pleasant place became she is so plea. Mnt herself. ' Mind's Liniment Cum Diphtheria. Yvette (Wilbert, the famous French “new. is an excelentl skater. Talking about it in New York one day, Mme. Guilhert said: "It is only through perseverance that. one learn to skate well. I am nure no one ever suffered more than I did in learning to skate. "I remember one day in my girlhood, the second or third time I had ever been on the ice. J, was returning home in a crowded omnibus, uld I. kind old man got up and offered me his seat. “I shook my head, Ind the old man laughed I good deal when I said: "No, thank you. I've been skating, and I'm tired of sitting doien."--New York Times. lmmonsoly boner summon nun un- mar that“ or British squadron: In the Waqt Indies. It my be and. too, that Bri- tish mortuary and Bram: interest.- there, white “to from nonunion by us. Ire fur- M and by the bet that nonunion from may other quarter would {usually be- come I matter of an.“ concern tor the Tmited Bum. Reftyctft"t, In undue, will mar-517 Maul-h Mr. who!†mnem- ovot the Ibo-nee ot British and and: M tho All-one coat. hem-1n; Amaze of Life. (aunuh. Ola M3 A,,,turuttteurreresEtL.tte.tttt 'gtl'A'hG"k"iiV"irirFiie,ttrH.t.r'Jt Tt1'Wtu"rG7triuF.rhy.ytost.y2 oaCdiitiaittriet" W" Am“ =.T=Tt',"ua-tGiriiiiae-ttru “mm" ._ aaa a. m o a. work till will: we Momma-b. between m'ost of these manuseripU rack to the eighth and ninth not even earlier, there is among them, all being writ. Ac-. Linda The Favorite Girl. After Skating. "vol in nu vrly tl y attract Yours wry truly, T. u. MeMULLKN Need for w York 1 York Tunas.) . us has quite other and ' gnu-unu- than the ata- m squadrons In the Waqt be and. too, that Bri- td Drum: Intern-u there, nonunion by “I. .r. fur- an met an isioeat8P Je by this expedi- gruesome nature. ,d f rum the sands J it Dr. von Le ‘ds of dead bodies The phuie was a the wry than, a tongue unknnwn. T L the notice th ruughout s language ' Ships. Tunes.) being writ. three kinds that lhese old man is and the luau the “gimme: See us to- w "ovation. qlow with angina!!! Iom watch him '" ho crunchel m “I from the cob, changing the rich- Illl of the field U0 an incense od the bear, ts surely, u gently as the phat “We! the sunlight into I flower. It At O “lion In full of anticipation u a L.†to the amide or I visit to the -ntah: air. A New again that shote in his final “his! Ilen- u I table quad white In! in the cent" a putter filled to the H- with spareritm. The some changing. “0 is where the heart meanders along .. lane. o1 delight. Lift a section of ‘M “heinous hummer): to your plate II. behold tho deticioxu membrane be ". the ribs, as sweet a mono! A: a pet “honey and cream. ., -iiiGGTiiairiiuiiaiure timid" 9.3mm to these he: my†quii, wiExEs1§beat rain and sting, iriiiLuiiii'iiirG"ii, hunply makes Joy ' 'tFit all. Row one thanks the cold We: {hat Jar,, Vtguring around tlter - with their ~uennev of r,teet and lee, tt U I- only newly: at a sperm-Hp! “if conce'rn" in that the "memurtuie. in moo slight. But he remembers phat mture is aiming of her richest 'ttlt/y 5 with that satisfaction that - with . mteful heart ho nibbles and gunn- u the hat shred of muscle is gang from ht fair bone and he looks anx'l'ousiy IO. " the platter for more. Will he “ take more'. Wouhln't yourwo- i"iiaii' o.. State Journal. and Your Doctor Self-Sacrifice of the Stage [in l Stage Lisa's! No one but an actor or l anacttuascw fully apptvciate what they ', mean. The tricture a: presented to the audience i. wry pretty, but the \‘isionl which looms up [More the (we: of the poor player is aonwthing like thits.. A Nice covered with a coating of cold cream, which has been pondered ova with a thick In)†at pearl-while or brunette powder, as the use may be. Un the cheeks are daubs of rouge, which at that clure rangv in no possible mul- ner suggest, as tin-3- do to the dunlenceJ ‘the rosy cheek, of a country labia. Over the "l""' un- rude at little dark- blue powder to make them poetical. The wider lids are limnily punt-iled and a mark extends a quarter of an inch from the eye at the and. This maker than larger. Upon val-h separate lull u s bead of blank cosmetic, which ha the effect of making them bony and long. The cherry lips. which to the audience the hero is eager to prey; to his own, are to his distorted vision It such close range only a gush of mnn'tne painted into a. Cupid’s bow. The was†so“ before her a pi1'tut"' oven less attrnrtive, for n-n rimm-m to on" the hero, in nd. dition to his Tit/tti,',"').', Wear; a false mustache, and is a so "smelly" with tobacco. The glare oi the footughto tones down this ooogiomesmtio" of paint ,and at n dietauwe the hm are actually lusty, but upon close ingr- tion thoy rpwmhle nothing more t on a very bad oil-painting. out of focal. Taken from this viewpoint, some of the very impassioned kisses, featured in plays such as "Zara." "who," ote., re- quire no little self-wrifioo on the rt of the players.- Harriet. Qnimhy in a. Be's Weekly. Can cure your Cough or Cold) . no question about that, but-- why go to All the trouble and inconvenience of looking him 9?. and then of having hitsprisqetfption filled, when you can step into In} drug store In Canada ind obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE fty. quarter. " q u Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. The Ruminanu. I They nn- two.tood, hoofed mammnll. Their hollow horns grow from bony lumps. _ Most astonishing. they have fouri stomach». l The first stomach hold» their hit-t chewed food. After a rest they bring it bark to. the mouth and finish the chewing. These animals Ire " without front teeth in the upper jaw. Their long teeth â€tilts the mtttintt teeth of the lower jaw in clipping gun from the ground. q Gie7rirniunnts comprise one of the man important group. fungi-Nag much food for man. "iiiti"i'iariwo to five doum when I. g1atrwligt cent bottle pt SHILO will cure you asauickly? by not do as hundreds of thousands of Canadians have done for the put thirty-fpur years: let SHILOH beyour doe- tor whenever a Cough or Cold â€gears. . HILOH will cure you, 3nd n11 ',tthe, back up this statement with. a positivttruarantte. "iid- iiiekt" iiGe you have n Cough or Cold cure it with SHILOH (j 8Fa h $ â€WMMMMVA-mm PARLOR .UI-PHUR WAX [iErESiriir9lllEEi'i? m. -e, '"" iiiUi2ttns'5 2ttk"ibi"i5ii"aii wtrd - II I m teat Mr - mum. 11' Haw no Pormd . I I v- - M. null-h nor-wh- a! ovary (on. or costum- Itch on human or un-nl- cured “a " mutt-I by Wollord's salary was. n - falls. 3016 by M†- ,eee.e,'.'.=r-=rca-" "Anglo-Indian†writes to Sun: With reference to t the grant dry gooda prim Mr. William Whiteley. 1 sh ‘rel-te an Wat which on own observation when l u tinny yarn “a. It "as Uy's boast that you could I in his store, from g pin to a he endeavored to live up to . ,, -tA-. " - Me.-"-"'" “Anglo-India!" writes to the b. l. Hun: With reference to the death o! the grant dry goods prince in In“... Mr. \Yilliun Whiteley, 1 should. like to relute " Wu which can: - my own quotation when l wu in Innis muny para not). It "I. Mr. Whim- Uy's boast thabt you could pl -rtttito, in Itis store, from p pin to a. plough, no he endeavored to live. up to his posimm as a. "universal provides." In the 703 there was a civil officer in the Control Provinces who occupied the position ot n commissioner. or and civil otfieer ot a division, and counmpwntly he wu pro- minent socially. - . ' .- â€I'd-mi he had minent soon“). During a. furlough in England he Ind putiently looked for a wife, but has not succeeded. When he w“ about to re- turn to India he went to “'llilolryn more and made some huge purchuu, and us he was leaving the store Mr. Whiteley neeosted him Ind asked if he had found everything he wanted. The commissioner replied: “Yon, Mr. “lilo-- Icy. you have thoroughly supplied me with everything I went but one article, which it will be impouible for you to find." "Don't be so sure of that, sir'." replied the merchnnt. "Sluts Four wants, sir, and they shall he uupplipd.†“‘ ". Mr, Whitely, 1 an: In and a! . who. 1and I unruly think you an supply that article." Mr. Whiteiy “in: "utueed l noun. A young lady has just become a L salt-slady in one of our clpgmrtmvnln, and she is altogether too highly educated l and too refined for tun-h u position. She is a clergymnn'i daughter. Ind has been left an orphan. If you will allow me, I will introduce you to her, And I will take are that she doen not know shout the bargain!†u! no Focal . Wife tir u nun-n an: om in was arm -- 'a-, ‘A the N. y The commissioner went to the - ment attd was introduced to the youm lady, of whom he made huge purchases. The result was thnt he eventually uk- ed her to become his wife. The" were married in due time and went to India. During my reaidenee this lady ut- the leader of society in one of the dividom of the Canal Provinces. It in aid that after the marriage. sud before " left Emmi. the commissioner and on Mr. Whiteley Ind told him of MI luc- cou. "Oh," he reqrlied, "that in can imam-e. Simply a 1Mtor of love'." NERVOUS DEBILI‘I’Y Cr'"'"""".'.';"'""""."'.- :'rf"" . lb "a','1'lt.,,u,u . chill-d do . ',t/h,a,':yttrl.ttl.tltt, hamm-I-ar-b La.u-t-er-V h“ GE het FA: â€3-50; a“ in! a.“ fiiatGu fraud. - Manama-v6- The Thu-r Evidence. (London Advertiser.) There were rrtions of the evident at Mrs. Evelyn haw yesterday it“ no mwupuper should hue printed, TI. Adverbuer. like the Toronto, linmllton. and Detroit. evening new-pupae. deleted these pangnphn. and per-hep incurred the displeasure of readers who want every ulncioue detail at the hill. n in posnhle, however, for " “View to give the outline: of the atolls told by the fit-Neel, without filthy parties uurieation. Only the prudent-uh“ want more. and their chin: ue not to be weighed agiilut the danger of,“ wing the itnNrittatiotts of the yo“ and immature. . “intake: in lecturing Age. Age is not n question of year; hit of experience and of the died: thereof on ttp brain or but. A ma my be"ol “unmet. m. The faetof meaauriaqrngein you.“ to dismal consequences. One who comb his yous becomes the victim of n dud- ful nutceuggestion. He thinks that he should begin to decline " " jun. be. cnuu he is 70. and not fun nny inhu- out reason. so he pureed: to decline. m. vigor in upped by I cite. Perhaps it would be welt to abolish ell We of births nnd - dlow any one “know [all on use in -.--st. boui- Globe- Demoemt. i-rcH UIIVEBSAL $15.7 Gia." no» I ma. in the Central the position of civil otfieer " My he WM [PW' mm“ If], one of the ,ttrtlhot-" d that we ptt-"'we'"" tbra-hes llw Halli: r to tho We wtthortt at V“. for ttttt [tawny-h 3W1!" - the lim u The “new; ot yum ad A Mica in rte" u A the " rennin)“ all M (be. amp, ot _ Mom-r. ll. I.. It'll, r _ was injected into! _ tbe Ioe. of the e' h Blwk lrhlld N "High a collirion nun-r. Harry Iu mt. $bAug of thr -lrul - Imilhxi than hi- “one of tU iir-t. it not - the ~iul~ing any" l "u “d in "qu.s to char “MI. ten IN .war ohl mag-(ll. w]. um - at tut " “r I PP" u Sadie Gallup Rett By Captai In " q man With Baby Also Were DI the moo on. Tiw , ad ttiesb, tber M - , oth' di ht this iention n ttw of ire an ttary Wert' bt.' tbe r ‘5’. doom of gamut ut 130 Lives Now B in the , hind of V chem n. ts chum tbe tr Life ul. l MI We r the li km!†mom an“) )kllll Mi P luv WAe id th " " [NGERS . CAPIAI t the 'ate-er " to the wt on and ttw m- 'trtvr-r"'t bis “I†an N!" thr IN thr "M at Nia. Sandi m two w" on hit all m unable M“. u d y"u%' " an deuert Notttr thin" he with tite Mm ll vol