t h prettiest in Rome; graceful 1! were entwined in mM&. n‘o quite an ornamental bower of it, appreciation of humor; and Lord Lynne‘s Jace positively beamed with happiness when he heard _ the ripple of silvery laughter that sounded through the room. In the course of the evening Count Rinaldo appeared, and was corâ€" dially welcomed by the mmuu. nobleâ€" man, who really liked a full of visitors. eycs, the devotion paid by the young baronet to Agatha. % Coffee had been handed around, the long windows that opened on the balâ€" comy wete opened. It was one of the uncomfortable _ when Lord Hortington had paid open attention to _ herâ€"who shunned the handsome, courteous Count Montaltiâ€"looked very shy and consciâ€" ous as the honest, manly young baronet lHugered near her, and seemed to forget that any one else existed. Evelyn and Lord Lynne was not deceived in his expectations; for just as they had finâ€" ished dinner, the door opened and Sir Allan Leigh and Miss Leigh were anâ€" nounced, Evelyn had quite recovered her bloom; her smile was &a bright as ever; all trace of her long illness had vanished. Sir Allan had altered wonderfully. He was now a tall, handsome man, with . a brongzed face and dark moustache. There was ome thing in which it was quite evident he had no changedâ€"that was his deep and lasting love for Agatha Lynne. Tall and strong as he was, poor Sir Allen trembled like an aspen leaf when her little hand lay for a moment in his grasp and her sweet true eyes smiled vupon him again, And Miss Agatha Lynne, who had felt Lady Florence were very happy togethâ€" nâ€"{ot.h had the uno,lon m "They will probably reach here," she replied, understanding fully all that was comprised in the question. _ _ _ "The pain must have been very bad," she said; "what can 1 do?" "Nothing now," replied Inez. When the maid dluï¬pund, Inez care fully dropped a sma rtion of the liquid into a spoon and !r.;lk it. Afiter that she slept the heary, unrefreshing sleep that results from opiates. Lord Lyune and Agatha were full of commiseration the next monllx; Steâ€" phanie had told them how her lady had suffered so much from her old com laint, ne in the face, that she hK been ob to procure opium to rub it with. * thou':t nmt&n( was wrong last evening," said Philip, "you were so quiet; but, Inez, my darling, be caretul of that opium; a small quantity _ may deaden the pain; but m?nd you do not take too much,." An uneasy expression came over the co“;;:';' 1s < nds toâ€"day t" "Do you your friends toâ€"day t" he sail, tarwag to Taws . * * * _When Stephanio brought the little vial, she looked in alarm at her lady‘s pale face. The afternoon brought Count Rinaldo to the Palazzo Giorni. Lord Lynne spoke much of the X:S?u, and of the mun they should feel in being all ther "lar better to die while ho loves you tl;‘n t.:“l.i;o without him." 0 came to ease the burning eye and the aching head. When the grey dawn of morning came, Lady Lynue went quickly to her maid‘s room, "Stephanie," she said to her, "will you rt up and find me that little bottle of udanum I had when my face ached so badiyy«: ~_~.._ ln“Cottsmlm'. y,llny Indy," replied the willâ€" g ma "I am so sorry your face is bad again. I would have been up hours ago, if 1 had known." That night Lady Lynne could not aleep; in vain were pillows of softest dows made smooth and cool; the hot, aching head tossed wearily from side to alde, seeking for the rest she was never more to find. At times there was a strong impulse upon her to seek her husâ€" band, and confess all to him. But then she would never see him againâ€"her sin, her lmc. and her triumph, would all be in "Better," said the perverted heart, "lar better to die while ho loves you "We are quite fortunate," said Lord Lynne, "in meeting so many of our friends. Some country neighbors of ours «re in Rome now, or will be here soonâ€" the Leighs. You will} like thine, count, very much; they are old friends of ours." Count Riualdo declared he should be chudet:. meet :.ny 'Mdnn- of Lord Lynne. y left the gar together, nnddho drove home with them, when Lord Lynne invited him to spead the r.mu{:' of the evening. "Lady Lynne has been very ill," he said: "it was on account of her delicate health that we left London so suddenly; she is mmnl better now, and cheerful soâ€" ciety will do her good." “-fl have been a pleasant evening, lotl%;:.,u was amimatel and happy, Lady seemed to have recovered the g&y, cheerffil manner that had once been a great charm, the count told P aneedotes of his London adâ€" ventures, and Ag:ths listened, amused and interested; but Lady Lynne had a wowm look upon her face, and ber was sad almost unto death. Onée or twice Lord Lynne gave an anxâ€" lous look at his wife. "She is not strong," he thought; "I must not let her iatigue herselft too How could he ever dream of the depth of anguish in that weary heart ! "I should not wonder," he said, "if they arrived this very day." k. She looked at him for a moment, in utter wonder that he could mistake ber meaning so entirely. He winced before the calm seorn of that beautiful face, aad then Lord Lynne, who had joined them, claimed his attention. He was unâ€" leignediy glad to see the courteous Italâ€" ian aguin; he weleomed him warmly, and gave him a pressing invitation to visit frequently at the Palazzo Giorni. Agutha received him with a marked coolâ€" ness that did not escape her sister‘s noâ€" "Nothing," he replied, with a grim, inâ€" flexible smile. "If that be the case, you will perhaps have a harder task than I expected. But you will succeed; she will never reaist your persuasions." "Count Rinaldo," said Lady Lynne, gently, "will nothing but this content you? Must my sister be sacrificed? Is there no one else in the wide world you «an seek * "I have pleaded with you for the last time," she said, haughtily. "My doom is fixed. 1 shall not ask for merey or comâ€" "That is something like common sense, Incz," he returned more cheerfully ; "now we shall do; I thought you would see wisdom at last." "No," he geplied: "it is your sister and no °~_‘d-_'._l want," * § HIS LORDSHIP‘S ROMANCE flowers _ He bent over her, and smiled into the beautiful pale face, while he whispered that he Jloved her tetter than his life. "Philip," she said, in a low, _ faint voice, "what trouble I give you, But you love me, my husband, do you not?" "Of course I do, darling," he replied; "and I ought to be more careful of you." "Tell me just once again that you love me," she said, gently. _ _ _ _ Lady Lynne would not go to her room until Agaths and Lady Florence . had g:no to theirs. Then, when she was sure r sister and her husband would _ not meet again that cvening;:ho went upâ€" stairs to her own chamber, ; handsome apartment, with some traces _of the old Roman luxury in itâ€"large mirrors, rare statues and pictures, silken hangings, and thick, soft carpets, were all there; but Lady Lynne noted nothing of the magnificence that surrounded her. Steâ€" awaited her mistress, a blue silk y t:rown o":h herâ€" arm. 5 mot keep you this evening, said Lady Lynne to her maid. "Fetch "That is my fault," said Lord Lynne, raising her tenderly. "I invite people here, and forget how necessary quiet and repose are for her." Inez had not fainted; it was rather as though some sudden blow had struck i'fv’rn.n’d-k" esk, there is something in “71 have forgotten." The maid soon returned, bearing with her the desk given by Lord Lynne to his "Are you tired?" he asked, kindly. "I am afraid all this talking and laughing has been too much for you. It is like old times to see Alan and Evelyn once more. Do you remember the charades and the tableaux, Inez?! if Bertie Boâ€" hun were here we might have them all over again." Did she remember them? A pmgg lhsrL::\d bitter as death, shot throug! her t. Was not every hour of that happy time burned in upon her memâ€" ory ? Had she dreamed then, in the hour of her beauty and triumph, of the fate that awaited her! "Oome here, little sister," said Lord Lynne to Arun. "I wonder what took place in that very romanticâ€"looking balâ€" cony. I wonder what Allan is coming to say to me toâ€"morrow." * _ "Do not tease her,‘PhiliQ,"’ said Lady But the words were arrested upon her lips. Inez had fallen back with a cry that rang through the room. _ grow crimson "I will not. tease her, my dear," reâ€" plied Lord Lflne. "I will only say one wordâ€"I think she showel good taste when she returned the white hyacinth to me.‘"* "Returned it to you!" cried Agatha, with a wondering face. "Whyâ€"â€"" your friends had arrived." ° He was introduced to Sir Alan and "eul rhouett \ should like to know â€" it in the it." Lynne went to Inez hand in his own. "Miss Lynne, are you not afraid of the night dew?" said a voice which made ig-ths start and look _ guilty. Turning round, she saw Count Rinaldo, with a strange exEuokm on his face and a lightâ€"like flame _ in his eyes. "Thore is a splendid view from this balâ€" cony," he continued, e-.nlen‘l'z turning to Sir Allan, who heartily hed him at the antipodesâ€"while Agatha made her escape and ;e-gnt«:«l t,ho room. He could hardly hear the faintly whisâ€" pered answer. It was favorable to him, he knew, by the droop of the golden head and the fluttor orthe little white It all came out thenâ€"the longâ€"treaâ€" sured secret of his love; and his story was so ‘well and so eloquently told, and bore in every word the impres of such truth and nobility, that no girl could have listened to it unmoved. "You are as far above me, Agatha, as that blue sky," said Sir Allan; "but if you will try to love me, my whole Hfe shall repay you. Do‘ not kee? me _ in "Do you know what brought me to Rome, Agatha®" he continued. "No," said she, lookh':g up into his face; but she saw something there that caused a vivid crimson to flush her own, while ber sweet eyes dropped shy:â€" ty before the ardent gaze that seemed to read her very thoughts. _ ‘The half quizzical smile she saw upon Lord Lynme‘s lips sent her, with a burnâ€" ing face to her sister‘s side, er _ "She has," replied Agatha; "but Rome suits her; she is much better and strongâ€" "How strange it seems," said Sir Alâ€" lan to Agatha, "for us all to meet here in Rome! But how altered your sister looks! She must have been very ill." ":;c;:‘t :J;x;'word," she said, raising her clear eyes unflinchingly to his face. _ "Count," said Lord Lynne, "will you give us your opinion?t Is this engraving copied from Giorgone?!" ca went to her husband "i'l.;‘m.\;t't;u_d"l:ï¬;ihlng that sounded like an execration, and _ leaving Inez, When quite sure of not being overâ€" heard, Count Rinaldo drew near Lady Lynne. _ He held a small on.nghg in his hand, and under pretence of asking her otlnlon about it, he bent over her. t progress are you making in my cause?*" he asked. "None," she replied, briefly. "Angwer me truly," _ he continued. "Have you spoken to your sister as 1 wished you?" _ _ velyn, and watched. with scrutinizing ‘ "Neither do I, Coloncl. We "At least, my iady," she said, as her to build this ome of concrete." ~_ "Â¥ou have known theseâ€"your friends â€"some time," said the Italian to Lord Lynne â€"‘"Fyer since we were children," he reâ€" plied, with a smile. \ It was with great, though . silent amusement, that Lord Lyunne saw 8ir Allan, with seeming indifference, graduâ€" lllypcuudoAi‘mwoomoutnpon the balcony to him. "There is no chance for Lord Hortingâ€" ton," he said to himself, "Allan has been the favorite all along." t _ Some one else was watching this proâ€" ceeding _ with a dark face and angry "I was passing by," said the Italian, When their visitore had departed Lord theer Was a view of unrivalled magniâ€" ficence in it, that Inez had spent hours nse, beloved, tell me, will you try saw her sister‘s _ face XXXL â€" The Tailor‘s "S. B. L." "Did you ever notice how the tailâ€" ors while measuring a man for a suit of clothes mix in a few letters ocâ€" casionally among the numbers?" askâ€" ed a downtown lawyer recently of a friend. "Whenever I have been measâ€" ured for a suit of clothes the tailor always said 8. B. L. in a subdued voice as he took the meansure for the length of my trousers. 1 oiten wonâ€" dered what this secret signal meant, and on one occasion made so bold as to ask, but was put aside in some casual way, which plainly showed me that the tailor did not wish me to know the meaning of the mysterious 8. B. L. Well, 1 never knew what these letters meant until one day this winter, when I stumbled across the solution quite by accident. I was waiting to have my measure taken while a nnp%i‘nl big fellow was on the rack. As measured the length of the trouser leg the tailor said : ‘33, 8. B. L.‘ ‘Yes,‘ came back the reply from the big fellow, ‘and Mh‘ï¬i; too.‘ All these Iem tailors had accusing me of being ‘slightly bowâ€" bï¬d.‘ and I had never caught on until I was m«uy told the answer in the acci way.â€"Philadelphia "Colonel, we want a contribution from you to help build a mission chureh." . _"Judge, you know well enough that while 1 am in sympathy with morality and ""& 1 don‘t believe in ghurches in the abstract, ancdâ€"â€"â€"" $â€"4 She went to the window, and drawâ€" ing aside the silken hangings, gazed out into the quiet, serene Italian _ night. Fhe golden stars seemed to burn‘in the depths of the dark blue aky; a soft, aweet, silvery light lay on the flower and tree and distant hill. She laid her hot, wearied head against the cool glass, and stood watching this calm and beauâ€" ty. Like great resistless waves, there surged through her mind the memories of her life. She saw herself a disconâ€" tented child in the gloomy house of Serâ€" ranto. Instead of making the best of things, she had given way to anger against every one connected with her; instead of seeking refuge either in her duties or her studies, she had given herâ€" self up to dreams. She had lived in a world of her ownâ€"had made herself unâ€" fit for real life by constantly indulging in dayâ€"dreams. _ When her mind was weakened, her morbid imagination excited, the temptation had ~come, and found her unable to resist. . She remembered the first meetin with at ruthless man who tuckeg her to her doom. Ah, if she had but been open and honest, if she had but confessed to Madame Monteleone, if sho had but told her she had seen him all would have been well. But se had met him over and _ over and over a%dn ; she had worked herâ€" selt into believing that she loved him, and then came that crowning horror of her life, that foolish secret marriage. "And I might have been happy!" she cried, passionately. "It is too late now. I am lost! My beauty, my genius, my talent, have brought me to this; and I might have beer happy and beloved." She did not weep now as she had done months ago, when she wept for the love given to anntger. The time for tears was over with Incz Lynne. A pallor like that of death settled on her beautiâ€" ful young face. "It must be fate," she cried, as with quick lte{a she paced up and down the room; "it must be fate. If one shame did not hang over me another would, and I can face neither, Oh, why have I wasted my youth, my beauty, my genius. Why have I sinned?" This was the cry of the ruined soul in her hour of remorse, "Why have I sinnar? ‘Toâ€"morrow men and women will shun me. My sister, whom I have learned to love so dearly, will pass by me. I betrayed her and took her love from her." No idle sophistries came in this hour to ease her conscience, or take away the sting of her sorrow. She no longer excused herself or saw things through a false medium. Jn the stillness and dead of night she stood face to face with her sins; she saw herself clearly, as she had never done before, with no veil of illuâ€" sion hiding the reality from her. "I am hunted down," cried the wretchâ€" ed girl, as the note fell from her nerveâ€" less grnY, "I am hunted down! Ruin lies on all sides of me. Toâ€"morrow Philip will ask Agatha what she meant by not understanding his allusion to the white hyacinth; tomorrow he will know that I lied and.schemed, and betrayed my sister, to win his love; toâ€"morrow he will know that I have deceived himâ€"he will know all the wretched story of my folly and credulity, my sip and shameâ€" will know that I am no wife for an honorable man. Oh, heaven, can I bear itt" "I shall call tomorrow at . three," wrote Count Rinaldo; "I shall ask for & ‘frivate interview with your sister, and make her an offer of marriage. §f she accepts me, which she will do if you use your influence, all is well; if she refuses me I shall ask for Lord Lynne. I shall tell him all about what took place at Serranto, and claim you and your fortune by prior right. Nothing will move me from this purpose. Inâ€" stead of wasting your: time fr(lmuselen appeals to me, spend it in persuading your sister to accept me." Then Inez remembered the note that had been pressed into her hand. It was in the ket of her dress; she rose and found Koc Her hand did not tremble as she opened it, her lips never quivered as she read it, although the few lines it contained were her death warrant. Stephane obeyed, and then went out, wondering why her mistress looked so long and so calmly in the mirror. _ _ "No one ever had such hair as my lady," she murmured to herself, brushâ€" ing it the while, and as proud of its flouy magnifi¢ence as though it were r own. . 3 Very beautiful did Inez look then, with that wealth of hair flowing like a veil over her white shoulders. Steadâ€" fastly and silently she gazed at the wonâ€" drous loveliness in the mirror, the dark lustrous eyes with their jetty lrinie, the rich red lips, the queenly brow, the exquisite cheeks. There were few such faces in the world. "All in vain," she said, "all in vain." "Did my lady speak!" asked Steâ€" phanie. C _ "N6," replied Lady Lynne, wearily. "PBring me the little vialâ€"so that if I am in pain I need not call any one." _ mistress waved ber hand in token of diniaul,“lot-or-cv;‘gm ornaâ€" ments and unfasten your hair." * : One by one the skilful handmaiden reâ€" PA A ASIC» F5 A 6 moved the Jewels from the thice treases | * coRn‘ EnA Y3E® of ravem hair; then she unfas it, and let it fall in all its rich luxuriance | ttt====mmmemmmmmmmmanemememmmmememnamm over her mistress‘ shoulders. * TBes LGeuno & WAWH ~â€"~â€" toilet table, gazing steadfastly at thr uce reflecled in the Siirror. Listlessly and stiently Lady Lynne Ssat j dmh@{amy_eh&dr_a_wq_upto@_hg "Neither do I, Colonol. We‘re going One by one the skilful handmaiden reâ€" Listlessly and silently Lady Lynne sat Objection Overruled. (To be continued.) Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia said Mrs. Lapsling. "Pearley Winterâ€" Ereen is trying to get a divorce from her usband. She says she has found out that they made a mistake when they married; he isn‘t her real infinitive." Got to Have ‘Em to Pull. "Don‘t you suppose, senator, that eventually all kinds of machinery will be run by a wirelesss system?" "No, my boy; we never could run a political machin« without wires.‘ ‘ "Oh, I don‘t know," replied Mss Youngbudd. "How much are you willâ€" ing to spend on my education?"â€"Chiâ€" cago News, Repeat it:â€"‘" Shiloh‘s Cure will alâ€" ways cure my coughs and colds." Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Pertinent Query. "Do you think you could learn to love met" asked old Gotrox. o wiks 2 Mrs. E. Smith, Windsor, N. S., says: "A few years ago my health began to fail. I suï¬erego greatly from s:wud troubles, and in about a year‘s time my whole system was almost a wreck. My blood had turned to water, and my heart had become so badly affected that 1 could scarcely go about. In fact life had almost become a burden, and these seemâ€" ed little hope for me. One day a friend asked me if I had tried Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and told me that she had been in almost the same condition I was and that the Pills had restored her to her present splendid health. I took courâ€" age from what my friend told me, and began to take the Pills I took them regularly for several months, constantly growing stronger, and the internal trouâ€" bles from which Iâ€" had been afflicted were disappearing, and my whole system seemed to have gained new strength. I wanted to make certain that there would be no return of the trouble and I conâ€" tinued to take the Pills for a time after I had really fully recovered. Since T have proved for myself that Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills can do, I have recomâ€" mended them to a number of suffering people, and those who have given them a fair trial hbave proved with me that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are just what they are recommended to be." At all ages Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are especially valuable to the female sex, for they alone possess the power of making in abudance the rich, red blood of health. They fill the starved veins with new blood, so that enfeebled bodies are strengthened, weak nerves are forâ€" tified, and robust health is restored. __ Anaemia is written on the features of ninety women out of a hundred. Unâ€" mistakable are the signs of "too little blood." The weaker sex is assailed at all s by the evilse resulting fron. bloo;f;lnen, from the girl who is weak and languid, with dull eyes, pale lips, fitful appetite and palpitating heart, to the woman who feels "never well," with pains in the back and across the shoulâ€" ders, fainting fits and aching limbs. And later at life‘s turning point, nervous disâ€" orders and heart troubles make great calls on a woman‘s strength. had said she would have placed above her remains a tomb that no person could read.â€"From the Scotsman. A tree, which has been divided into two or three main stemg, grows straight out of the tomb of a noble dame who deâ€" parted this life over two centuriecs ago, and has rent her gloomy home _ into pieces. Strangest sight of all, it has wrapped itself round the iron railing which usel to guard the grave, and which is thus now almost entirely conâ€" cealed inside the tree. People come from far and near to see the wonderful sight ; and to them is told a story that the quiet inhabitant of this disrupted sepulchre was in her day a lady of very frée thinking opinions, and Responsible for Nearly all of the Misery Women Endure. TOO LITTLE BLOOD. A,Striking Instance of the Great Power of Vegetation. A correspondence calls attention to a curious instance of the mechanical powâ€" er of vegetation in the out of the way churchyard of Tewin, in Hertfordshire. CORN S, cuRED "I never was so shocked in my life," . _.®Silent as the Sphinx!" _ 4 JXÂ¥ THZ MOST PERFECT MATCHES YOU EVER STRUCK Alwaya, everywhore in Ganada, ask for Eddy‘s Matches â€"~EDDY‘S . "SILENT" MATCHES 4 2Â¥ MONTEITH, STROTHER FUR CO., PHE FAaAvORITES RAW ‘ FURSâ€"~HIDES Write for Weekly Price Lists, Shipments Solicited. JOHN HALLAM « TOROoNnTo, ontT. 7 RAW FURS ‘©8:900 NE8"Foxas 56:8088 SRONK WaNTED IMMEDIATELY. wE ALSO BUY OTHER Fums. Ship to us at once and satisty yourself that WE are the VERY BLST buyers of Raw Furs in Canada. TREE RENDS A TOMB. TORONTO Sad Case. 2 im2« noyns Wifeyâ€"Well, don‘t be cross. I bought it with my own money. Hubbyâ€"Your own?t Where did you get it.fromt _ _ _ "Tt‘s all right," he said. "You‘ll never make a mistake if you keep that in the rightâ€"hand corner. It is just put there for that purpose.‘"â€"Youth‘s Companion. the cheaper grades of cigars from doâ€" mestic tobacco. 1t is a peculiar fact that despite the wonderful progress of meckanical contrivances in all Eirnu of manufacture, the better grades of cigars are made toâ€"day exactly as they were & hundred years ago.â€"Carl Werner, in the Bohemian Magazine for February, Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. "I wanted to make something as unâ€" like the sheath gown as possible," she explained. o [A _ Wifeyâ€"I sold your fur coat.â€"Phila delphia Inguirer, This also explains why it never became popular among our society leaders, Repeat it:â€"*"Shiloh‘s Cure wil} always cure my coughs and colds." smm ie mm Thrifty. Hubbyâ€"What! _ Another new dress? Amelia Bloomer had invented the cos tume that bears her name, _4 wonue‘~â€"nave I got it right msideup?" The painter regarded the canvas &N&t- fully, then pointed to a â€" remarkable signature in the corner. "A chromatic in sad colors, with goklen accidents," replied the young painter. "Lymn, night lights from the sea." One of the explanations of this strange condition of affairs is the disâ€" crimination practised throughout the German Empire against Catholics. Prussia is still the great centro of the spirit of the Reformation, and the strict Lutherans there cannot comé)ro- mise with a Catholic. All the Govâ€" ernment positions are held by Proâ€" testants,. The army, the universities, the railroad administrationâ€"all are closed to Roman Catholics.â€"From the Rosary Magazine. » A Key to the Mystery, The visitor took up a small canvas smeared over with invisible grey, sprinâ€" kled here and there with yellow "blobs." "Whit have we here?" he said to the artist. "Oh, quite so!" murmured the visitor. "I wonderâ€"have I got it right sideupt" $10.00 round irip from Suspension Bridge via Lehigh Valley R. R., Thursday, March lith, Tickets good 10 days. Particulars 6 King street east, Toronto. In the four years from 1901 to 1905 there were 1,557 Catholic marriages, as opposed to 4,874 mixed marriages in Berlin and Brandenburg alone. The proportion for the whoga empire for 1906 was 350 mixed to 100 gatholie unions. . The question has become very grave and is giving much worry to the Catholic Jeaders. In Germany it is almost certain that the greater part of the children of mixed marriages are lost. to the Church. In Prussia about 60 per cent. of these children are Protestants. The number of these marriages greatly axâ€" ceeds the number of Catholic marâ€" riages. _ _ & The Cause of Large Losses to the Catholic Church in Germany. A short time ago Father Bonavenâ€" ture, the great Dominican preacher, stated that within fifty yards in the city of Berlin alone a quarter of a million souls have been lost to the Catholic Church, principally through mixed marriages. _ _ = Eome one has well divided the inhabâ€" itants of Madrid into two classes: thos» }wllo.otohddman.n.ndthon who get up before four. â€" It is true that the streets are u::.:uiet. The ston»â€" eutters, who were ing the sidewalk, began chipping at daybreak. Next we h>ard the electric cars, with their loud gongs, and the muleâ€"carts, clattering over the noisy cobblestones, By breakâ€" fast time the sound of the hunly-a:rdy echoed in our ears. Street fakirs shoutâ€" ed their wares, and singing boggars, with their weird yodel, roamed up and down all day. Just before dinner the women who ¢ry %tery tickets and evening paâ€" fers took their stand at the corner, and heir stentorian voices never stopped until after midnight. Madrid carries no latchkey. The concierge holds it by day, the street watchman iy- night. Conseâ€" quently the bours of sleep were conâ€" stantly broken by the sound of handâ€" clapping, followed by the quick, heavy step of the watchman in response to this mediaeval summons. Altogether, I unâ€" hesitatingly pronounce against Madrid as a rest cure. lt is by far the noisieat place I was ever in.â€"From "A Secondâ€" Class Trip Into Spain," in the Outing Magazine for February. , Repeat it: â€""‘Shiloh‘s Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." Side Lights on History. New York Excursion. MIXED MARRIAGES 11 &st 3 CHURCH ST. ns * i ol es <e w§ * /. Minard‘s Liniment Gures betcietetty diiih shract hi 30 o0 Apnmmuo.fr::. uw:::?cmor When the patient called on his docter naturally . he found t.hrgoodmin.mot gâ€"u-u-::l,mm‘:f ‘?P‘ve.otdlml of the disâ€" hlwmht&*.ddmof ouoyuh;n." Mun. "I‘m | the ':.ï¬â€u““dln(:: mok wos; 41 44Bneo on @une | blood there can Rhoumatiom. ~ J“}YhJu‘gegwoo,ouMIh:t‘YJuk- scquently to anra Rhesmatiam â€" auns ed the patient, ‘"‘Why, man," replied the doctor, "I don‘t think I can cure it."â€"Harpeor‘s Weekly. Q‘ n HMe Had Rheumatism for Ten Years @ and the Old Reliable Kidney Remâ€" Johnnie Knew. . .‘y Cured Him Oomplmly. Stranger (pointing to the schoolâ€"| _ _ NORTH RANGKE, DIGBY Uo., N. 8., house)â€"What buill?inc is that? March 1.â€"(Special)â€""L aim so well fillâ€" Johnnie (rubbing his back)â€"The | ed with gratitude to Dodd‘s Kiduey Pills tannery. that I eannot praise them too highiy." meyeâ€"â€"«irtrfitâ€"amnen These are the words of Mr. Charles BHeil, Cause of Baldness. well known here, and they are echoed by After considerable jocularity the pair | many another who has been freed from turned to the pearlyâ€"pated stranger and | the tortures of rheumatism by Dodd‘s one said; Kidney Pills. “)(K friend and I have been discuss | "I suffered terribly from rheumatism ing the cause of baldness, but we can‘t | for ten years," Mr. Bell continues, " 1 seem to agree. Would you mind telling | was so bad I could scarcely get in and us what you regard as the real cause | out of bed. Aiter trying verious modiâ€" * e strmaget whecied about his | advised gï¬n'o‘un“xupy’ ay Piis. stranger w a , € me to ‘s Pills. qu-mt.:ws ï¬;“m:‘lhou‘lhll?‘rd:‘ Bix boxes cleaned the Rheumatism right w ma 194__ war mutks c ilk Lqe l e After considerable jocularity the pair turned to the pearlyâ€"pated stranger and one said; “Mg friend and I have been discuss ing t owueofwb:‘l:ilnm, but we can‘t seem to agree. d you mind us what you regard as the !ul‘:z of baldness t" Iicclsd aboat e The stranger w a eyed questioners fiercely, and mor"nlu "Brains!‘"â€"Pittsburg Gazette, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, "I don‘t like marble statues," said the fluffty young thing. "They always look as if they had a cataract or something of that kind the matter with their eyes," I have handled MINARDS JAJANLâ€" MENT during the past year, It is alâ€" ways the first Iiniment asked for bere, and unquestionably the best sellier of all the different kinds of liniment i handle. All Iou need do is to write for a free box of the remedy which has been placed in my hands to be given .“i' Perhaps this one box will cure youâ€"it has done so for others. If so, I Jmll be happy and you will be cured_for 2c (the cost of a gostun nnmr). Your letters held confâ€" enlmw‘ Write toâ€"day for my free treatâ€" ment, MRS, F. B CURRAH, Windsor, Ont. Bellaâ€"Have a wife and an auto that are both good climbers, been dlacourl‘od. too; but learned how to cure n%aelt. want to relieve your bï¬x"- dons. hnlnot end the pain uul stop the doctor‘s bill? I can do this for you and will if you will assist me. _ _ 4 Stellaâ€"How can a mu-get into so cletyt | > s Are you discouraged? Is your" doctor‘s bill a heavy nnmxclu‘n‘lr&ou.d? Is your pain a heavy physical b n? I know what these mcan to delicate womenâ€"I have "If you need only a nickel why do you want to borrow a dollar?" "You ought to know well enough, If a fellow has a little money about him the stickâ€"up men don‘t beat him up quite so bad after they‘ve gone through him." pion‘‘ will do, and I want you to be fully sctisfied with it before you pay for it. ‘The price is low. Full particulars free. Wm. Gillcspiec, Dept. "M* 98 Front St. East, Teronto Caution. * "Old chap, I forgot my money when ecame away from home this morning, ar 1 haven‘t even enough to pay my fare on the car,. Lend me a dollar, will you! I‘ll hand it back toâ€"morrow morningâ€"or one just like it." Roast "possum" and alligator steaks are never served in the hotels and resâ€" taurants of this city. ‘The _ opossum, which is au unclean avimal and is far from choice in the quality of his food, reverthcless, when kept up and fattenâ€" ed on cleal food, makes a rich and someâ€" what gross viand, like roast pig, but exâ€" cept in special cases it is chiefly prized by the neyroes as the crown of their feasts. As to the alligator, it is said to have a place in the bill of fare of the Indians of the Flerida Everglades, but is never eaten by civilized people, unâ€" less under the compulsion of starvation. â€"New Orleans Picayune. THE "CHAMPION" Is the only Gasoline Engine that you can tr7 before you buy. I know what the ‘"Chamâ€" pion‘" will do, and I waent you to be fully A,Woman‘s Sympathy Marion Bridge, C. B., May 30, ‘02. No trouble with Sunlight Soap, Just follow the directions on the wrapper and Sunlight does the rest. â€" Costs littleâ€"goes farâ€" never iojures hands or clothes. Disposes of a Canard Mountaineering. Art Criticism. NEIL FERGUSON. It must give satisâ€" {action or you don‘t pay for it. SOLD ON TRIAL GAS and GASOLINE ENGINES out of me," So Says Charles Bell of Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis. "I‘ve asked you twice to raise the blinds so that I can get more light, James," she exclaimed. "Oan‘t you unâ€" derstand plain Englisht"â€"Toledo Blade. More Light. By the extraordinary contortions of her neck he concluded that she was tryâ€" ing to get a glimpse of the back of her new blouse; by the tense lines and scinâ€" "Umphâ€"goof â€"â€" sulf â€" wufflâ€"shâ€" fispog?" she asked. "Quite so, my dear," he agreed. "It looks very nice." "Ouffâ€"wun â€" soâ€"gsâ€"phâ€"m{â€"ugh t?" was her next remark. it would look better if you did that," he nodded; "but it fits very nicely as it is." Lfl:p_qedmdenpï¬ed the pins into I CAN‘T PRAISE THEM TOO MUCH. Gold Laid Watch tillating flash mabout her lips he con cluded that her mouth was 1::11 of pins or terminal bud, of the trees, where it produces a rot. The great height of the trees, and the fact that the termina! buds are sheathed with the petioles of older leaves, make it very difficult to treat the disease with loc¢al remedics, It is suspected that the bacteria are ;Prend through the agency of insects he Deparement of Agriculture is in vuï¬ptn the subject. The cocoanut groves of Cubs have re cently been attacked by & serious dis ease, which is said to be widely epread in tror.lc:l America,. Porto Rica, I)‘m\-' ever, thus far escaped it. 1t is a bacterial malady confined to the srown. Back or Bowels, Kidney and Bladder troubles where caused by weskness pecullar to our sex. You can continue treatment at home at a cost of only 12 cents a week. My book, *‘Woman‘s Own Medical Adviser," miso sent Conaro was hunting a coyote when the accident occurred. _ Mis life was saved by his dogs, who lay close to thei: master and prevented him freezing to death. The dogs never left him until they heard the cries of the searchers, and then they led members of the party to the unfortunate man.â€"From the To All Women: I will send free with fu!l instructions, my hbome treatment which postively cures Leucorrhoea, . Uloeration, Dieplacements, Falling of the Womb, Painâ€" ful or Irregular periods, Uterine and Ovarâ€" ian Tumore or Growths, miso Hot Flushes, Nervousness, Melancholy, Pains in the Head, Hunter‘s Life Saved by His Dogs. Four days and nights alone in the des ert without food or water, his leg shatâ€" tered by the accidental discharge of his shotgun, was the terrible experience of Conaro Undace, a Spanish sheep herder, near Hagerman. He was found yesterâ€" day by m searching party, lying face downward and unconscious, ldaho Statesman A WINDSOR LADY‘S APPEAL but disposal is more difficult. Write for cirâ€" culars explaining our new sysetem of selling to the best advantage. THE â€" PATENT BALIESMAN CO., Rochester, For circuiar ad G@ress, J. B. Rittenhouse, 70 Pearl . street, ‘Toronto. m WILL BUY ONXB OFP THE BEST bakery, confectionery and . ico cream businesses in live town in Ontario; large premises; manufaoture both ice cream and candy, wholesale and retail; established 2+ years; doing $17,000 business yearly; a snap for good live man with a little capital. Adâ€" dress Box 376, lindsay, Ont. +J days; $2.00, one half regular price. Ourâ€" tis Asthms Remedy Co., room 2, Vancouver Hotel. Hamilton, Ont. PATENTS ARE EASILY PROCURED Tm SHOP FOR SALEâ€"RETIRING ON mocount of age; best place in all Ca»â€" da for good 8.:-'†and tinner., Vivian viance, Essex, t. f Sviu’ CUPE For THB xEXT THirTty days: $2.00. one half regular orice Ourâ€" rya s'rock FARM FOR RENTâ€"A FINE 8TOCK farm of 12% mcres, fiveâ€"miles north of London. on Proof Line road; grand opportunâ€" ity for right party. Enquire Wm. Sifton, Arva P. O., Ont. FARMS TO RENT. Cocoanut Diseas« ASTHWMA PATENTS NO. 9, 1909 Kidney Pills 40 i3 a gem® _ £ _ & mm > J.\ms YOTT is innoc L From Wm. Riley, of Ne ying He Stole the Ho M'IIIII «despa tch K jor r in witth Azod ' h ) as the lulf Â¥ 1 n Bocialists, Sm wlm to be in noalit ®Ryyd@&vas deljyered L1 4* the lium a* n h . M thes theory Sm h04 C al e Did Not Further Plots of the ho Sn . rfun . se z moe w5 , Adcottcn â€" ol >â€"I * ProvnctM®"pothatt S NMiler Iqapn mig| spprminls C péurr Ilu llla(fll%l “l,lr‘~‘|"_)“'1*!,.; ‘A‘Jl Sag UE MOW!‘5 wa=e.. tBo tlr 8 i:&%uc.flm' ho h:dm < C ahived the tow th, apmshed | m on the uur&fhn o«qï¬l:‘ ‘ \\“}u Pi yeairs #bld, wh ago, nd wor! i-i'lrurwl-: an ish u x onb 9f that this "ca â€" There . it m w0« als to l 'ï¬:n ched 'On\nmoil.uitwtu, a D 4* shif that in _ The compar ther Burbank Rest aurant Keeg.: Electr Front of His Business TAlK: OF;AN ' (l.m,d--' dot ut eds* pPimteny the eon viction â€"and im pasod yestord a v police s Tepm boli || Bars th #l« ic uk prechurriediyâ€"â€"agmyonsit .1 H1j ARERV< kplhig was, E4IEran a th b 4 W M ront Of ly i‘l«rldu rï¬&: Anemen <of * ___ There is no limit to the rig ‘the men have secured, exce 'hio smaill contracts, whigh P Wulfilling. Working alone,.. m@h‘ld time to give the fl «of his exporimeits to. the pr mbe: systematic effort wil *%o Gistributs both is past ‘: preducts to the would, O0€ "of the first Tthins * n _ O0€ ‘of the first thing *aken by the mew compa Fuller development of th tus;>#which .promises . to 1 M‘*wcm intg grazing tle, Tn this w&i it that Busbank has dove) «apaAlile | 0f producing s ter ashuch v"l yicld "o& «cohol . Burbank formation the follow Woer _A Thefl wight 19 . plant disco 1Ir.|in;‘.an- ther, (Repin llmleonsirm Man â€" EFra that his d work may ) iness worric Laither Bur| pr 1y webe engzagod mak in rheor_\' t nection !:'.:A-d on h’, and _ a hk l i o INSTANT DEA JOn m o« inve Di ‘cAsu‘t Likely "That Counsel Will Go Furi n WIZARD BUR SUSPECT FOUL PLAÂ¥ C£O8I T meed banar %â€ï¬""‘u“";' "('L'.m # %- l».‘\“.. N:‘llu“ «ut Ned on mfvw »Anaad , a oWA R 'Uw:eln.m ® iesd s choaee AkZCt an inrorms capit en 4 * â€" teayrys t noeg Db Oe it wcon nt M M r H #ir8e) . MJ Iille D a ypiment 9 TDA ecured, exce it« whigh! ig alone,.,. give ‘the t-;_‘o&b e (fl‘on wall h ~pamit, / ould . t things *# y company t of the spi sos . to %Gan razing lan “& it is s dl‘\'\d.w. icing . sacchai CQGs 61 «u0h »8 N stbeliew it 83 0i 18 W h up al P