, air/ a»: The win silver, is , S w W i ll In" t be 'll no luduoiu " '0 give D The a: Only t fold: the light. of the sun in not. there. nor moon. nor stars. nor trlimmer. of lampntaml. "The kingdom of God is within you": all others are excluded. and you on itwompetent. Your ink-horn is not in your girdle: you how no girdle; you aro noted before the Lord; your naked rm ntand on the living rock. To try to look in upon you is indelivato and impenetrWe. This sacred region is in- violate. and mm! sacral open in thought. is he? What combination of qualities Hush-1' round him to give him full equip. Im-nt. mrlivate and profound, for such o tank? Was there ever touch a crowd of functions com-mtrstml in one person'. llo- la culprit. judge, jury and verdict. Me tries to describe matters faithfully, but like the woman " the well. we my In‘ in tho spirit she said it in. “Thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well in doc-p." What is the duty of the sn- nlyn 1' " " to sopsrate. examine, elus- ity. weigh, nwasure snd teat. combine, strike an average and give result. There are millions of payers su- swam] awry moment, but thst they on capable of publication I grsvoly doubt. Can you penetrate the inmost dumber of private Worship. where the lonely than is with the only God? Tell how the fur- nitun- in arranged in that most holy Plttee. No other eye can trace. for you on slum. "There shall be no mats in the holy thee"-- Lev. xvi. 17. Your on eye cnnnot trace. for van up in the dark. The folds of the tent sre dark. fold on thth to the lockup: of a nun. t Unity! that “that. when it moves, wing darkest bits of all!!!“ gmund . give aradiant “at" to‘tbe an. -Ettehrr' Wow stood by the comma There is no urn! mystery of prayer. avenues of thought; on there in III in " so, our ideas of I and unworthy, and the final point. At pen to write about t'an he delineate, m gram or chart. Ind fit for publication? in het What comb} cluster muntl him to ment, delicate and l task? Was there on lum-tions cum-entrat It as ie. y mlitudx- ir. as ' to stand and o'. what joy it think the tho lame-z Earth ban no l ll I turn repentant to! “Pith 1htettsOrorse and mle of H); RES! glue. to“ and valued at two million. sterting. " tr Tt " " Thou the only holy lilo, Ordained the light of men to be, I turn from a" my mental strife, And pray Thee to enlighten me. Thr My The L“. of WI“. thy Frederic B. Duval, D. D.) "The life was the light of men," John i. ' try H ve- a t br i'iiiiiisiii,itii", who; -'"_" --'. moowlike upon th. an“. pine stump fawn. Envy ANSWERS TO PRAYER man an the been in their ro- m: no higher Mina. '.ntH. lnve'n reward. nptlm- will it be wfurv th" throne to lie w arrl can on Thor. n father pine": his childun pitieth them that felt “in.†Father pitirth his child. Often wlp him. but behind MI purpose. plan. provision. We an pain. "or seen it too, Ut l the pleasure and Pt pl!- I" , m it fills the harshest all the avenues of earth hw, wandrred in its quest g good, but finds a death, kly turns to Thee for rest. ul he le apt i! thottitht h downy mwstonn like In ‘e that poor shifting lr iol from us. We know lt' in an hour, but mm l4 hid. "in hand u not Morehouse empty; it "uh-s thee, with _ thee: "in! love i. Mr. : is enlarging. Ind ntl It to ,4tetn the host“. (Tans. carry the pak my. o glory undn .‘ u in the night. What, «I prayers gathered on I " lung storms of life! j H. T. Miller. 9 Id another windin Mn until the smoke that trom its ch, the!) think of my to life divine, "unis to walk therein my to love like Thine, It heart from sin. m iiiiiiiiii; ret' an world 'hend lain lung to men feel, could not traee, :0 their well with veiled tnee- it death breathe the most holy we. for you no man in Your own rncimu Lord would an; adored, to me. n]! thereupon pursued the herd on hone. an"! the colts beams so “hunted that they could travel no further, and then it I'll any to capture them. Prom time tt/ttGeiier" 001;“ see from If" that young colts had been added to the herd within , tur frr two. They It is practically lmpoaslble to rapture adult animnls on their native plains. The Russian. followed the comparatively simple Mongolian method of getting poo- ses_sion of some of the horn. Mill some facts are known which indi- rnte that there is hope that those harm "my eventually be tamed. The explorer Kosiov shout forty year Mo saw a colt of six months belonging to a chief in the Gobi that had been so far tamed as to walk peaceably in u bridle. It would permit itself to be led up a stairway to the floor shove, and even allowed the "ren-year-old son of the chief to sit on its back. mvered with deeply trodden tracks. Time To ttnd From Sometime; Varies. They neigh rleuly. ttttd the sound cor- Howard Carroll, of Denver, whose~busi. responds exaotly with the neigh of the nous-like presentation of the invitation domestie horse. There 1. some resem. to the Democratic Natonnl Convention to blsnee between the snorting of a badly gamete Pen"? was largely instrumental frightened wild horse trnd that of domes- m the vietory of that eity over Chicago tie nnimnls when scared. and uuiAvi.0e, told I good story in the The Mongolian: hove made many nt- CNMtrBe of " 'speech. tempts to tame the wild horses, but in "An old miner boarded I train " "in. De.n.ver, one day to no to Pueblo," he All efforts to tame the animals thnt t traid. "When the conductor came around have been brought to Europe have also I the man inquired how far it was from funny. Denver to his destination. He was told Thus far the horse will not submit to 'eu.!. 130 miles. man: in afraid of him. and cannot be "Well. how’far ttr it from Pueblo'to rendered serviceable. Though now u- Dtyy.r: then? ' "e the next qttestion. onetomed to the sight of human beings. "If it. " 130 miles from Denver to the captives are very badly frightened Pueblo ,,it. mus: be 180 from Pueblo to " n pertton approaches tteater than with. Denver, replied the conductor, somewhat in two or three rods of them. teMily. The )Iongoliuns have made many st- tempts to tame the wild horses, but in "In. They neigh oleuly. and the sound cor- responds exactly with the neigh of the domestic horse. There ls some rosem- hllnce between the shorting of a badly frightened wild horse and that of domes- th, animals when land. When there are nursing colts in the herd the animus always rest in the same place, but this does not amen to be the can when the foals become In". Thev usually wnlk one behind the other, no that the region when they live is rovered with deeply trodden tracks. The brothers Gruttt-Grymtuno, who have had the best opportunity to observe the horse in its wild state, any that it lino In the level districts und goes at night to the pasture land. und drinking plms. At break of day it returns to the desert, when it rash until' sunset. Restart For lack of data Dr. Salenaky has not been able to determine what relation. ship may exist between this wild horse of Mongolia and domestic, homo. The animal is an inhsbituit of the Dxungarfa and Kobdo districts of the Gobi Desert. Its habitat. which in not large. lies be. tween the Grant Altai and the Tian Sham Mountains to the north of Chinese Thte. Many naturalist: now hold the opinion that tho domestic home of to-duy was mainly derived from thee wild species, which have been named the steppe. for. eat and phteau varieties. The Prjevnlsky horse is a representative of the steppe variety. The animals wan more colts when they arrived in Europe. Ind were not prepor Inning, for they did not take kindly to the novel conditions, were out of Port. anion and had ragged coat- tnd awk- nrd units. They have now reached maturity, have been well cured for and "tytrrodnookintt nnimnln. The brothers Gruttt-Grymtuhr, The results M the investigation were prepared for publication by Dr. W. Solen- eky, director of the Zoological Museum of the Imperial Academy of Sciences, M. Petersburg. The book has just been "undated into English and published in London under the title "Prievtrlsky "one." It contains u number of picture. of the cnptives. The hontllpleee shows u three. yeu-old mum and n â€0-year-old mare which on the property of the Czar. l The Russians. however, hove settled the question. They have proved by the methods of commuting trnatomy and in other way: that the Prjcnleky horse hu no relationshi with Mongol ponies or the king, but t, a valid and distinct epociee of the genus horse, without rele- tion-hip to the use, though it has acme features which remind one of the Asiatic use; but even in these features, as the toil, for example, the resemblanc in cheer to the home than to the as. I There we. little prospect thirty yen" jumolthdbeovu'y ofthe genuinevild _ hone. There HO, to be lure, the ro-eulled ', wild hone. of the American, but they ,amtttod-dnataofhomestttuthe I B-iards brought to the western world some centuries Mo. While "lance ex- iled that wild harm were probebly " was“ in prehistoric times in the 1 south of Europe he zebra ere to-dny in British Rut Atria, moot naturalist. be. lieved that true wild horses with an j unbroken line of wild ancestry were ex- tinet. of the English naturalilts believed that they were true wild horses, but looked upon them either as a kfang, hybrid, the kianq being I species of the an, or as the offspring of mped Mongol ponies. The English nstunlists did not make a scientific study of the snimnls in that country become the Russians have had a most thorough investigation in pro- gress, with the Idvsntsgo that nesrly all the captive horses and B number of) skeletons are in their hands. Very few I The Itttainn. were greatly interested and it wu decided to cepture u number of the enimls end bring them to Eu- rope. These efforts were successful, and five yar- Igo a herd of about thirty of the Prjeveleky horses, titer no end of trouble, were landed in Europe. Most of them no still in Russia, but a few were taken to England, where they are {kept on the estate of the Duke of Bed. 0rd. Then, in 1819, the Russian explorer Prjovnlaky reported that he had die covered . new and quite distinct home in the Gobi Desert to the west of Mon- own. From the Gobi Donn A BOOK ABOUT THE BEAhtt PRJEVALSKY DitkNnfEREtt. ONLY GENUINE WILD HORSES. Ania Studied OaMuily by tho Hus- I .tart.--pr-d to be a Distinct Aree0s-Tttey haw Boon Unum nbio Thus Far. In: ,_, Ttnies. "That Mrs. Power,†slid Min Grouch, "is the moat Haven y housekeeper I ever saw." "But," protested Min Goodley, "ihe has a big family of growing Boys-"' "All the more shame to her, for ohe should know that 'e1eotlirtess in next to godlineu,’ tUtd-.-" "She Icy: it's next to 'irnpossfb1e.'"-Cuhotie Standnrd ind "Allow me to introduce the man who has written more absolute nonsense than anyone else in Paris." "Monsieur is a journalist?†. "No, madame; sumo? her to 'the Ch‘nmber of Deputies! 'Jfee,uod,h', "Not necessarily Io,†said the miner. "It is one week from Christmas to New Year's, but it is A long time from New Year’s to Chrutmacc-Chieaao News. The value of 825,000,000 placed on the annual output of honey puto this farm crop t',.2 slightly behind raw mm eug- ar, whie had a valuation at the refin. eries of $'28.0oo.ooo. Comparuons with the output of the sixty-{our beet-one" factories. which have a capacity ot w,- 600 tons of beets daily, mayeeem odi- ous. Yet the e,'t',t of this coddled and fostered in 'ueI.v---$45,000gyar-, was less than double that of the busy hive communitiee. The bee in effect pays the interest on the public debt--82Vioage. Shall not the insect which Napoleon made an im- perial emblem have Dome State recogni- tion such as Mansaehusetts gives to the codiish in ita legblative halls. As amat- ter of tact. the products of the New, England fisheries,' which have. been the subject of treaties and international eun- ventions and Womlly raised the spectre of war, moat. in value to onl half the bee's produet.---The New Yori World. Time To limrd’l Liniment 9e" Coldl, etc. V V - ~-v-u v. -.vuv.uw i ltlil- average yield per acre Th lpmmds, In Lower Egyyt 40 pm lithe cultivated area o 1260.01 ii: under cultivation and all of tion than h havin enennial i I Ab-. J}, J ll In! ulluer cultivation and all of this sec- tion through having perennial irrigation s eouorvbtjer. So, by means of the Assumm dam. the engineers have m:- sured the permanency of this source of Egypt’s wealth, since cotton can be grown on the some lands two years out ot five. We may conclude that in cotton Egypt had I permiutenr world market. and for that reason this staple will he cultivated irrpreference to other (rays. The change from the time of Joseph and his tive brethren to. the e och of Lord “(inner and the British {no consuls is one from corn to cotton. From "The West in the orient-mi. gation: An Old Force Newlv Among» b Charla M. Pisi;ii/i, dribner. _ _~-~v-- anvil! '1qu [Egypt is no more exam? than other we to.nyrrorirqr regions, we been bal. Ianced by bringing increased are†under lcultivatinn. so that an actual increue of 20,000,000 pounds in the crop of 1907, was obtained. the production for those yours, a decade apart, being 654,313,000 ipounds and 675,000,000 pounds respec- . tively. The area under cotton in 1907 w“ ‘aiightly in “can; of 1.500.000 acres and the average yield per acre was 445 pounds. In Lower Bart 40 per cent. of tho cultivated area o 1200.000 acres " “A“ m“, .. - A In _ What Irrigation Has Done for the ' Cotton Crops of Egypt. ' Economists who study the increased , productivity of the earth which is se- cured through irrigation, when they come to Egypt will ponder on the cotton yield. In to fullest' some that is what future Egyptian irrigation means. The showing of the cotton yield of the Nile regions in values presents a. remarkable series, of ascending figures. In 1906 the increase in the value of the crop over the previous year was $30,000,0ai. Over cropping, boll weevil, and unfavorable conditions of the season from whini- Removeo all hard, soft tutd allowed lumpl and blemishes from horses, blood twin, curbs, splints, ringbone, lwoeney, stints, siirains, lore and Iwollen thmt, coughs, etc. Save $60 by use of one bottle. Warranted the moat wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Bold by drug- "ut. "'I have now taken steps to upfpoht I Ministry, and if it la the will o God I will complete it. I inform you that I have appointed the following persona: Alta. N Nuibu, Fitaunrl HIM... 8i'l'r)pil,Tr'i'v, Seal Sabra Selassi, Beji- mud Mulligan, Likamaquu Kntanu, Sandra Hails Giorgia, Ksntiba Wald: s'adik."---irn th? London Standnrd. Abyuhian Ministry. The decree 'ot the Emperor Menelik announcing the eonatmetion of a Cabinet on European lines is as follows: "The lion of Judah has prevailed. "Salutation be to you. "It is some time since we thought of introducing a European system to out country. You have always indicated (this), and said it would be good if we, too, would adopt some fo the European systems. ENGLISH SPAVIN LlNlMENT On the Boulevard. flavor. The Big Hui plug chewing tobacco. The Busy an e West in the orient-tri. Old Force itwtt, AJpplied," M. Pepper, in t e snug" t weevil, and unfavorable , the season from which Porf.exempt then other pleasing ue January 2267 It's . tor-H, which elm of Topic . woman diulikeo molt. those w o talk about her or those who ignore her. If it were to be blown up the fimut. cial Iona would be almost hir-a point of some importance inasmuch as its diurnal teyant is obliged to me 00de- emble quantities of explosives in the business which tang-goo his attention, for I roman audio " I. tort of mmzine or "pectin , with I. paper t for I burn! as flll't, tf fire for pmjectileo. The quarters occupied by this ermite artisan are a tiny house. which might al- most be bailed a hut. with a floor space not more than six feet square. Standing by itself, at least sixty yards from any other “mature, the little building is ol‘fngod, of the oim_p_lest architecture. The wages he gets are high, but not by reason of the loneliness to which he u condemned; he is paid tor the risks he is obliged to tak?., _ He occupies an isolated cell, any: the Technical Wo'rld. and nobody comes near him while he is enguged in, his patient toil, A Good Deal Like Solitary Confinement --one May to a Hut. The most solitary person in themrrld during working hours is the maker of roman candles. . Minud’l Liniment Cures Game: in Cows. I "And how did you feel when ybu found ( yourself the victor?" a young girl asked. "Fvel?" said Mr. Beachey, 1trughing. "Why, I felt excited, flustrated. I felt just like my old Toledo friend, John Humphreya, at the time his first baby came. "To Jack Humphrey's, cowering in his library, the doctor entered. “Congratulations, w. Humphreys,' the doctor said. 'A fine 1bpowad baby, lizl' " 'Glorious." shouted Jack, hysterically. 'And am r a father or a mother, doet'" The Flusterod Father. Lincoln Beachey. the Toledo avmnaut, was being congratulated on the $2,000 prize that he won with his dirigible bal- loon at St. Louis. "General, I never knew before just who my employer was," Clancy said, bowing. "Don't you ever stop?†the Senator asked. "No," General Butler said. "Satan finds some ntitehief still for idle hands to do." Benjamin P. Butler, of Musuhueetts, was a tireless worker when he started on 3 anything. He and his lecreury, Clancy, says the Baltimore Sun, oftentimes not in the library until almost daylight, when the general wanted to finish up anything. During the night sessions of the Sen- ate, toward a close of Congress, I Sena- tor ealled on General Butler one mornin at 3 o'elork. The same Senator calletf again when the Senate adjourned the following morning at daybreak, and found the general and Clancy still " work. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ' Nuke: a cut or tscratch and it may turn to blood poisoning. Mr. Joseph Lalibenie. ttt 84 Ariillorie "mi, Quebec, might hove lost his hand and arm but for the timely use ot Zam-Buk. He says: "I cut one ot my “nun on a rusty pieco ot tin and bad no idea it would become so serious. but in two days blood poison had so: in and my linger: became terribly discolored. and my hand and arm owollen. I was alarmed and began ‘11:an one ointment after another but none relieved me. I Wu about to consult a doc- tor when a friend advised me to in Zam- Buk. This I did. Zuni-link began " duv- ina out the iantbtntnatiou and in one week the wound in nicely healed. Since then I have had no healing balm in tho home but Zom-Buk. I feel no [raisin] for my speedy cure that I 1tnttmritatinelr live my telli- monlal to the mum of Zam-Buk.“ Zam-Buk curoa Gnu, Burrur, Chapped 1 Hands, Chiliâ€. Cold 80m, Itch, Chiltslains, Eczema, Running Born. Bore Throat, Bud Chest. Rhinos-m. Pile. (blind or bleeding). Bad Len, [nil-mod Pnichel. Rheumatism, Neuralgin, Sciatica. Alt-cone. and all dio- emd. injurod tad irritated condition- at tho nkin. _ of all drama and stoma, son, or no". paid noon receipt ot price, from Inm- Buk Co., Toronto. Me I box. ' box" $2.50. A; , Soaking of critics reminds me of one old friend. long deed. who. considered himself A trend judge of mini-ten end their perform- encu. One day I use om of my own put- Mt. end I friend conduct.“I the service- for me. He was . Homer’s in style. and tair. ty took the wnfmuon by norm. Meet!“ Dunn. during t e week. I we. not nut-prised to hear hie highly inudltory opinion ot my iriend'e preaching 31m. "t an delighted you liked him, Donut," I aid. "but on You tell me whet puticulnr future in hie Branching enacted you most." "Weel, tit," Mid Deuvit impressively. "I noticit when he we: heir-w†dune he begun to mm A lltle at the moo'." Such wu David'l idea of TtreFott in pulpit eloquence. HAND AND ARM MAKING ROMAN CANDLES. "t do not believe, however, the top but will become as deep " met again. The bell shape has come to stay, and if you increase the depth the ehape must either become neuly eel-eight or display I con. Ipleuoue and inelegant wtu'et.-Lrndott Dolly Mail. lam-Bu]: Arrests Blood Poison. . _ 7w.-. ..---..- -. WWW“-.. Ill rho ing a fashion, and only a very olittht zguItion can be nude at s time. For two or three yarn, however, there haa been no decided chlnge in the shape of the top hat, Ind it seem about time there we. Ionic alteration. The limit of shallowneu Icem- ttUre been reached. They Ire now being made six inches deep' in mull nine: and about six and A quarter in the largest, to that they can only grow taller again. A Iixteenth or even a quarter of an inch does not sound very much. but it really makes a, greet deel of difference in the nppeannce of u hat. The very tall but of fifteen years 'lg, wu only six and five-eighth. inches eep. "tu Englishman." said a. west and _hatt:r, Its never violent y cqnupicuoul man... In Style That the London Hutton Are Outlaw-lag. Tho questio- whotb: the an hat dull hecqxne tatler is now being .11.:- iomly debated by the half dozen went end Utters who rule the fuhion, and several of them have almost decided to take a step in that direction by an in. crease of one-sixteenth of an inch in height. TALLER 3an HATS Foil MIN. Ono on the General. What He Liked Best. ENDANGERED. An electrical instrument recently in- vented for avoiding the pain incident to the extraction of teeth has attract. ed considerable attention. Briefly ia consists of adjustable prongs, car- ing buttons and connected with an electric battery. The buttons are placed on the face over the nerves ending from the teeth to the brain, and a circuit is established the mo- ment the extracting instrument touches the tooth. no PEDLAR AGL- u'll? can Ito-mu on": Tomato In. 1- M4 1 Spanking do“ not euro mum: of bed- wetting. Then lo I motltutlonul can. tor tht. troublo In. M. Summon. Box W. 8. Wind-or. on. will and {no to my not“ her ween-ml homo Moot. with full Instructions. Send no moan but wrlto her to-doy If your chlldron trouble you In this wâ€. Don't Mono the child. the chom- u-o It our! tolp it. Thu moanâ€: Ibo cum 14qu Ind and pooplo croublod with um. aitnett1ltiittCeg or â€night. the change, BETTER THAN SPANKING. ___ - m- .__- - mum. .. '"""M" Twenty minutes later he handed this "persotml" over the "wana" counter fo therqding mprping daily: He flung the note on Grhiiri.' Then he nhrilly whistled. There was no ro- sponae. He whistled again. He saw it all now. She had gone and taken the dog with her! He picked up the note and reud it aloud. "I have gone any with William," she wrote. "r felt that I needed 1 change," a“ "I: .EG'""v%'r67ii'"tG"a .2: can“... name: Add... t PEDLAR gamma '.tttt'afgttrtpte,Pggtteec tll.' ',".c'ptl,'ttd. ',tgh.'itnat,'ttt. Gi-aa-ra-ua' T The Phiiosopher. He came home at night to find the house deserted, guys the Cleveland Plain Dealer. There Watt a crumpled note on the centre table. He read it. His wife had ttry, wlith a Ut'einttittebiiutieker. rlurnore tor President in 1856. The Civil War, and the necessity of getting u m soldiers u tibia from all ele- mm of the â€union. killed nutin and, except in o. few feeble and sporadic outbreaks, it bu not reappeared qinee.-- nom Leslie’s Weekly. mum'- Liniment cine. Diphtheria, lees attention than did an lame}: of a quarter of those dimensions half a cen- tury ago When the potato famine in Ireland in 1846 sent the immigration into the United States in 1847 above the 200,000 mark for the first time in the country's history, and when the abor- tive insurrection in Austria, Hungary, Prussia, Bavaria, and other European countries in 1848-49 re-enforoed the Irish inpour and sent the immigration Iabove the 300.000 line in IMO, and above 400,000 in l854, many persons feared that the alien deluge would overwhelm i, America and subvert its institutions. <hen started that wave of nativiam ‘which resulted in the establishment of the secret, oath-bound Know-Kathi party, which swept Mumbmeta :33 neural other Stated in 1864 and 1866, and whi under the name of the Am. erican y, polled 875,000 votes for Fillmore for President in 1866. The Civil War, and the news-ital of getting " soldiers aura-i e from all ele- menz of the Port, tion, killed activism 'ttg ' ta.fttt: 'rui,tt'atit. rtri& The Ebb “Id Plow of'hnmigration. That immigration flood of 1,285,000 people in the fiscal yum 1907, Wlli'lh ended on June 30th and which left all the records far behind, uttnated far viou-,'luirriiti11 61.2803 and keep _,. __-_. â€my..." nAUlly, mal- im sick people well (we;I Weak people thong. Psychine (pronounced ai-keen) for in]: at all drugstores at 50c and $1.00 per bottle. wma. uroncmus, la.grippe. chills, light sweats, wasting diseases, and ccnsumption. It strengthens the stomach. creates a ravenous appetite, destroys all diseases germs, and tyet P? the trem Quickly, mak- . mummy no new these facts for the htnetit of other sufferers from this terrible disease. Yours very truly, Leander McKenzie, J.P.. Green Harbor N.8. Psychine itively curds coughs. colds. Momma. la.grippe. chills, 1hisy "__ -___..,wu, val: ulna-ya W 'relied on to bring help and relief to the suffering, and restore health and ' r. Dr. , A. Slocum. Limited: .trentlernen,-"r feel it my duty to advise you of the remarkable cures effected by your Psychine and thro. mulsion which have come under my personal observation. Three men, well known to me. Albert Townsend, Hanan Hipson and John McKay, all It, §he1burne County, were pronounc» Extraction Without Pnln The Ebb ve ,---_- _'____ my "?"'"""N5 from these troubles, will bring en- management and help. It is a source of comfort to know that there is one remedy which, after all others have failed, and the physician's skill has Pe tthttu,rted/ cgn ulw_ays _tre. Then on In people who, either thcmulvol or some of their triends, are not suffering from some form of throat, cheat, or lung or stomach trouble. To such the following vol- untary letter, written from a sense tt., pt, to those who are suffering in 0 A..- o--._LIA_ _.., I . £me sauna by a Justice of the Pm Show Mow Consump- tion in Being Cured " Paychlne. mutt. MN m - mt SAME mount: irvira' an. V --- .wmu - Jill! I ful; Ind I'm sure papa made an lo: an him more than hit a bl ' and his tooth held it ts] but didn't uni" n dront" "Icyr "PTrmv-"Not any la than we English people have. Wm.†Maud--' 'Oh. no, they have; for who papa asked the new Scotch ("donor tacky it he would take just 3 tooth. ful; Ind I'm sure papa made the but lor the him "mm- ac.., . .- Mapd--"What N a; 1., Scotchmen have, mummy they?" Wtmna-.-hGi my 1 in English ---., . Titian of the pictures on his walls he gunned with an art dealer to In" Ml rooms hung with pictures on hire, ro- tuming them and receiving others in ex- change as often " he liked. He took out 129 patents in Englnnd. and the invention to which he attache: moat a. pomnce was his artificial Indin rubber, of which few people inn ever heard, because his dynamite monk. Io loudly" for tueit.--uitdoii Chronicle. - - ___ vs vII,lJKlI. Only twiee.did Nobel ever visit tho great high explosive factory which u established in Scotland. In Paris he In to be seen duly huddled up in his rug- in his carriage driving to his lsbontary outside the city. He had an “tr-ordin- ary knowledge of languages. a diatr,mt of Itor.verrr--he made his own ,rtir---d when heart disease mme upon hill he wore s spvnmogrsph to true the irregu- hritiu of his pulse. Traced the Irregularities of His PuUe Now Pictures for His Wally Alfred Nobel, whose memory reed". its mun] revival in the award of " munificent prizes, hu little Pemrtgtal knowledge of England. He disliked our elimate Ind 'ookine-in I." London he found only one hotel and one resume, where dinner was n posibility. and he qualified even thin phrue by detailing their cuisine u "the least diam-c.1313†in England. A disappointment that he never ttot over wu thnt he wan not elected g member of the Royal Society. while hll lifelong Weakness and nervmm di'pogi. tion And winter bronchitis made first Paris and then San Remo his chow. abode on. his utniiinwnt of wealth. From LfiiirGufiii'ririi meg mm to the merits of MINARD' [.1le BENT, the beat of Household Rom- as. MINARD‘S LINIMENT CO., LIM. ITED. We publish simple, straight unti- monials, not press agenu' interviews, tee weuckn6wn people. """ep--'- m... And of Iowa’s nectar sips. Tis not the jolly girl, I claim, The one with any wink, It's just the over-proper dame That drives the men to drink. --From the November Bohemian. All lrumba: to her with laughing A d-ruby tinted “In, Who: at our elbow ingtrs nigh 'Tis not the gar!“ of the guy At party, bait or show, Who make life seem a fun'nl day For all 'ttttttkind-A), not. 'Tis not the maid well groomed and fair, The maid with merry eye, Who fills the world with woeful care For men like you and I. and Colds QUICKLY Coughs EOCENTRIC ALFRED GGL' ytirollt'tiie: Cure --tr - - -- -tNr - - the tan. ratute ra . from two hum dred andwfifty 'ar,'r"Jl'Pa', two hundred and eighty degrees Fahrenheit. This ingenious Italian bu already sue- ooeded in bar-nerd the energy for the operation of a 'llllS “In ine, to whid: n dynamo wu connect? and h txntdident of far greater achievement. He is now making endavon to drive I turbine with the steam inning from three large “Honi. "Trmenting In Ig- gregnte of some four thouund hono- power. If these first reporu are to be accepted as accurate, it would stem that in the near future . new unit of en- ergy will be creatod---etamelr, vale-nip power. l . _7. ___ - way u: nut-I altered, not has the amount of Imam varied much in quail,“ The steam Ir thirty and woudonolly ninety feet, f " .m...,.-.....__ - _ . - - I. close obsorvatioan of the temperature of u stun: issuing from the “foul, and has found that during the put ten yen: or no the tmnpenrture bu My qw, nor lb" the amount of “can native at TUse this, feat on I. But volcanoes, tho I: [datum no, no not no dining u ',Qfh'll'it might be utilized to almost my extent for practical purpose. without fear of l pit-lie protest. An Italian engineer, 'n So much ha been said MCI-Mill the (lingers of dutmyilg the pietur esque beauty of the greet falls el the Xingu: River by using the enormous mu. df were: u epower producer, that in engineer who turns hi. attention to the inner {use of the and. my . be regarded as . sort of nrientifie uncut of moiety. Pietom. have been pumialm!1 showing the condition to whidl Km will be reduced in e dusk We ot In“. and the nth-int and the “men- taliat have . ined head. in sttado 't on the new: oommermUltim whieh del- tmyu what mama intended to be indee- trustible. Italian Etgineee Plan the“ PM the GkheU Hail. VOLCANIC POWER. Hold It All TAKE NOTICE. Who 00;. It? .-_.. - I“ euglurtl, a “any, puree, to, anempt 'mnmmu'. uaiiri at ---- c - yith laughing eye Use Shiloh's Cum “or the worst cold, thesharpest cough --try it on usur- a n t e e of y o u . money tuck if it doesn't actually CU R E uicker than 'd/She"-;',,'-,' ever tried. Safe to tak-ttsing in it to hurt even a baby. 84 years of success commend Shiloh's Cure- Mc., Oe., " an idle. He has mule of: the ttmpettury Wealth. 'r visit the y which u Paris he u. it 111.73: me an irin " Cleveland Plain Doctor. " a..." Fir-t intense-norton th thing "one with the Ihip. The surgeon commutator; nature of the stuck? “fit intorare-at lppun t cilion on the outer 111W 1ooAout all. it . leak. The "rgeon comm-m what the lookout calls i Itemized cotton Ind m If the NPproms do not ll tle “(hurt you gun. in Why, may any“ of you. "J. PU at. nor n is like daughhrrumm ti.“ both f, "Why in J. HE; Ph/Yeoh" daughter) ranted e co-edt rated {Eon mi 53.3?“ EL eo-eds have evolved n new jest, or, rather, I new union of In old on, which say.- -off, like thin: all“. “I“ Mt.eutt. “in“ "" 'tther they te "ttfruiiumre-,Ld.-,, u .y it at. ltghter tiii/7jeqehertpe,gtta Out at the University of atieago the women’s commode- have develop“ fountain heads of humor, tron which -" --s_, V i -- ..-...u., qun WI" wit uprings u spouuneou-ly u on it. John D. RoeekfisiUr's wells in Indian. Most of the numerous "ge" st thn founders expense are Iulpecbed to kn 'l"'iiii'rdi'iii;iiii "tmtishing “r; Baking Powder Nt'. “'1" t2tet2ti?:iiiiii 'Cid taustatidd' Tan... . front. end with on lmpneelve we†1 the otter ma, In I "Moe loud “out: to he been! over but the ehuresh--"Cmne out eve tint now!" The ladle- eurprI-d and greatly confused. obeyed with all lame, but no noon- or we; the In: one out tn the title then the men waved In. hand mclmly. “New In rid yes teh'.'. he remarked. louder than boron. "All nah youmlvee at home. Ot only__vlntad "I to know who owned the . I " - Salt rgr'ttt,ttt, 'ithTtt1tltat. lav-1M) Minn“) Van's wrong. 1..., There was . “new colebrtuon ot noun MM In an clutch when a mu: m- an owned n pow. The building - omi- "andtuat-ttto-teestt-athurrr- mater made in way down the “do In the door ot " m which wu only two “a from the trout. In It were two or an. India. mum to him. Than VII Ill wand-no. of room an: the he“ of no meat, but he now“ at the door, bid no hard upon the but of the pew “It In from. And with u: Impressive wave 1 he J. PU - at. 1133.1: is like Plurloli'l 1ifi'l'th'dt ey both found I lit- prophet in the Tusltes on the hub." Hand'- Liniment Cum Distemper. Bmtwuou outlaw to to tower“ up- on that not! (mo-u of Scotti-h trurgttr- Dullonnltno. The luau hen-halal: can. tram Mr, Pour Donald. Now York, who ho- nnmuncod " "button of Metne BUM to - o bed In the DtMtNrgnllttq "a Won ot Ptte Hospital. A mm ot the city, who has. “In other. belonging to Dunhrmllno -qMttssttir. ot cont-q. Mr. C-te-made a fortune In Amer-la, Mr. Don-Id I. o W of the firm of Inglis 1 Co., Dumfermllne. who have two large aunt-k works. Htth- (no he in been In the hob! of ("in . treat to the poor of Dunfennllm on New Year'. my. o custom calm-bod by an brother Robert while he wu prov“ at (to our. "-"_' - " . 5.3;" “1:71:- 'i;lti"1"s'lL.'pcfsit,?trt) Bed. Itching Shin M & Chemical a. “mind. .‘lnnlrr-I Rheumatism†" Could “tandem Hutu ever" tdGii." foould' mm ly iGiiiG with Rheumatism. Now I an Alright:- I "arm." 8 oqnce bottle; sent on recexpt of gnu, $2.00. AquilCo., 0mm, Ont. A Dunhrml in. Benefactor. A Co-Ed Conondrmn. AJAX Pat and Hi: Property Now he in free of pain and ttget,",,,', 'ttttthet-- u meat in 311mm)? tlt n hit trill. “1.15.990!!! of 091M119. “I“ Mr. Woth' an I: "AJAX _OiL ,',f,Ygl",UT,i' ISSUE NO. 8, 1908. a It WW" to in a. h. outer integulnut, air. in. h. - I n ITOH 'Pender-Never mind M " n ... _ - Pierpont -" Morgan ere wweea to I... it, IMnor, tru?2t neon-1y u o ft. well: in Minn. “5 “Ml†" tho WWW to kn source. may Ed n new jest, or, n of " old on, "It: at Morgan like antral Chrnt it "tti" on'u plaster. te ppm to -Whut'u ' how per- " il, PASSEIGERS " THE IOU! NAMED tirAItVAr, Women lar " tl "II-III " " FOUGHT FOR I h, " MANHOOD BY Pl Sauna Sam at Ere. Th am 1 Before About on t Until They? its Wont on