'Mo’Wnnulhgeon, my tr that con no). hurting. then om trroettftttrutterfrwtthV Truly! You dmuhtunl-uly bottled We" minimum-um: tor-v-em,--, meonummm-um» Mariam-amount!!!“ w: Right on Without Pain Dmit Weâ€)! ruin my. Mei-1 in It 'tge.' 1min on'“Diah6ik my duo-tin. h M The Chinese have a Bower which is white at night or in the shade, Old ltd in the sunlight. midst of a Jungle far from human habitation In the Gold Coast Colony, West Africa. According to native te. "no it was placed over the grave of the vttiettain who had occupied it “on alive. The Ocean Terminal trunsit sheds under vuy " Hnlilax are the hunt d their kind in Canada. The IIIUVPJ believe, according to a dr-apmch to The London Grupmc. that the clanetzain still an: upon " old throne In spirit " certain times, and for this reason they hue never Mod to move the PM" which. they declare. bu low rooted mm in the “with , massive chair made of copper,' which natives believe was given try the late Queen Victoria to an Album ehrntain and used by him " " "none, has been discovered in the midst of a Jungle tar from human habitation in the Gold Coast Coionvi PALEANDWEAK TrmishliNn'rglli2l) A Gold Coast surveyor Brttt numb ted Icross this curiosity; A much â€31, returned to the not and found the jungle no demo that the “the. had to hack a path with callus†through the undergrowth. Can Itegain Health and Strength The best time to begin taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills In the moment you (an! the Ian: bit out of aorta. The leaner ytu do so the sooner you will regain your old time energy. You can (a these pm: through my medicine denier or try mall at 60 cents a box or an boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil- brurm Medicine Co., Brockvme, Ont. Canada's tro-eil Barren Lands, Inching to the Arctic. an estimated to have 30 million caribou. "a, y... u. m- WW. ...- "'"..'"" lineages, digestion becomes more, rttrthermore.in order to provide nn- pater-t and energy and ambition ro- derwrtters with information concern.- tnrn. The cue ot Mrs. Wm. New“, in: the doing of Ihtpo, Lloyd's pub- Aobut Street. Hrochvillo. prove. the 11-h our! dag a “twin: newspaper. mine of Dr. Wilzlamq‘ Pink Pills tn . the “Shipping and Hematite Bhutto." - " this kind. Mm McNirh says: I This is printed in the huement of the "I was quzte young when l married,iRortu Exchange. and Intonation is and in raidng my family I becnme all) collected and cabled by thousands ot run down and a nervous wreck. I be. t agents throughout the world. came so weak that i could hardlyE The Immune. of â€.3,me wait: arms! the ttour without sitting The "Gazette." which with the ox- down Pt" my breath. lslept poorly ception of 'iir'"u"/aJn Gazette." In and at “me" my “9"" would twitch the oldest existing London newnpnper, .0 that I could m" he†"ill, and I was started towards the end ot the was in constant misery. i tried mun: leventmth century by a certain Ed- wardirinr-s but they did not help me; l ward Lloyd, at who†cola-house in bdeed my comm†was ttrowintt j Lombard Street merchants and other: worse. nntil one day a friend told me used to meet to arrange martno lnlnr- tttat she had been in a minewhnt simi- i nncee These covered all sorts ot con- hr rundilion and had been helped by ifiGiicG but gradually the Insur- Dr Wllliams' Pink Pills, so I decided an“ of shipping Mame the chm to W. "f" medicine. After the nu bra-these ot the freq-enter. ot Lloyd's. ot " vouple of boxes I felt they were Lloyd was an energetic man In or- IrlpSnz me My appetite Watt better der to develop the operation». ot his and I 'dept ttcrtter. By the time I bad customer! he produced in 096 not half a dozen boxes I felt like a: daily newspaper culled It 'at "w Wotnult, my health had tally I""Nevnn-x" which comma informazlo 'tUI and i could do my toysteioia/rsii the movements of ship: It mt: (use, in New of what Dr, Wll-I t ' Mums' Pink Pills have done for me ru,'"uo','le'lho", rtgaht'T",t cannot recommend them too 1ntrtureii,','.'s,,,2, tn "m 1'udd'l,'e,', a: PM]: Many women who had . good eotor h - girlhood new we no color- ha when they hocone when and “on. Who: tho Mm color in the chub ud lips in accompanied by . but of Michal.†in tho on: and II increasing heaviness in the Itâ€. the cam will he loud in tho late of no Mood. In, - contribute to the con- “ ol the blood known a â€all; Overvorl in the bone. o be! of out- door - non-dent rent and the). llproper diet-ttbe" ere o in C then. The import.“ thing is to m the blood to normal. to build I " no that the color will return to - no line. brightness to the ere. .0 tuhttse" to. the step. Dr. wo. h-e' Pink Pill: are the great blood new" and nerve strengthen". They begin with the very first dose, and lbrough 3. “Hr use make new blood that carries strength and health to every part of tho body. The appetite banana, digestion becomes more putt-rt and energy and ambition re- turn. The case of Mrs. Wm. 5teNUtt, Abba: 14treet. "rm-hump, prove.'. the will" of Dr, wil'.utnu' Pink P111! in Slit “DIAMOND DYES" A Curious Throne. "0tWi8" 'fi, LI did ( Lloyd was an energetic man. in or- der to develop the operations of his iGhiiGi, he produced. in ttl'; n ieilr newapaper called ' loyd's INews," which contained information 5 cementing the movements ot ships. _ For a while the paper was suspend- !e|i, through Lloyd publishing a re- Herence to the proceedings of Pariin- f merit, which he refused to withdraw, it l being illegal at that time to make any lsuch reference. it resumed publica- ftlon in 1726, when Lloyd, or at any trate the then proprietor ot Lloyd's 'lcottee-houme, started " again under the name of "Lloyd's List." After a i time Lloyd'ts moved to the Royal Ex- It'hange, where it still carries (an the lunderwritlng part of its business. dt.eortrtF no - but. an}. at am trouble In to It." It mud-hylmumudoh In the Ukraine the maiden In no one that Joe "ll the courting. Whoa mum-m: “tanning“! to hit home u.., him the ante of Mr toothâ€. and u no 1'06th . round -- In duly mod. If be b “will!†I]. m that, hoplnxuuumnhbamuhl. A. the mr. m val to an to - a. halt at m .0 - The story is certainly of very ancient origin. In its most commonly Icccpud form, it is that Jesus, weary of carrying the cross, sought to rest for a moment on the doorstep of . lhoemnker named Ahuuerus, who told Him to “get on, and be quick about it." Lloyd's underwriters, by the way, not only lawn the ships that all on every Bea, but all sorts of other things an well, They will insure you sum-t twins. they will Insure you against an, and even against a change ot Govern- ment The Wandering Jew in not mention- ed in the Bible. He is merely the principal ehameter in a story, like Rip Van Winkle. Ever since then Ahatmerus has been doomed to wander ever the earth; Ind, strange to lay, he seems to have tum- ed up now and again, at long intervals of time. To which the Saviour replied: “I shall soon be at rest, but you will wander until I come ngain.†The last occasion on which he we: seen we: in England, nearly two cen- turies ago. Many people talked with him, and he gave an account of tho Crucifixion. waking as an eye- witness. m told anecdotes of tho Apostles, some of whom he professed to have personally known. He not. many languages. with all of which he neemed equally fuming. Then, Ind- duly, he untiua, and mraainlik “I heard of him. Dr. Paul von Eitzen, Bishop of Schleswig, met and talked with him in the year 1547. Be told his story to the bishop, who described his as very tall, barefoot, with an astonishingly long beard, and hair hanging over his shoulders. He was "en in 1575 in Madrid and again in Paris in 1604. In 1640 he turned up in Brmssehr--an aged and tattered man, who accepted food, but refused to sit down and eat---and in Leipsic two years later. The description of his uncut-nee h invariably the name. He to“: his story to somebody, pauc- on and dis- appears. TIE ROMAN“? (hi Iumn COMPANY A COFFEE-HOUSE KEEP- ER'S IDEA. It you tell a Frenchman, s Spaniard, n Galina, or an Eskimo that . ship is "AI u Lloyd’s," he knows that he an treat " as such. because "Lloyd’s Re- nder" is never wrong. m ships bum. in all parts ot the world we examined sud ehursiited try Lloyd's surveyors, and all particular- uo entered in the Register. Thus underwriters, when they are culled up- on to insure a vessel, ma'r obtain pn- ciu information as to its state and re cord. "AI " Lloyd's." This is a. common _ yet many people do not realm its red 'ftptitieanee and application, an s London magazine. h- au; -riyr an?» Density and ac- cuncy in the think; world. Every SeGnd Many Other Court-Mp in the Uhralne, Deathleu Journeys. Burn: and Maclver listened to Cunard’a scheme. and promptly named to back him for a." they were worth. Within a tow weeks $1,350,000 was raised, and a tender put In for the mail contract. . The Government accepted the Can. ard tender. a seven yeare’ contract we: signed, and it no tstipulated that four steamers should be built and that the payment should be 8406.000 3 you. The steamers were ready within two years. A Government Contract. Mr. Napier received the Canadian visitor cordially, and introduced him to Mr. John Burns, ot Glasgow, who was already running coast seamen. Bums was interested at once, Ind in his turn introduced Cunard to " part. ner, David Mtciver. 3 Liverpool mm. The Britannia was a wooden paddle steamer of twelve hundred tons bur. den. Today we should call her a mid. get. Eighty years ago she and her three stout little listen, the Acadia. Columbia, and Caledonia, were the Bnest steam venue]: tyttotyt. in the "Urerpool Mercury" ot July 3rd, 1840, uncured the following “ad- vertisement: "The B.B. Britannia will sail tor Boston on the 4th July next. Passage, including provisions and wine, thirty-eight guinea. Stewart“ tee one guinea." The Britannia/s Brat trip to Boston was made in fourteen and a halt darts. The service worked he regularly to clock-work, end thin u a time when other linen were lacing ship: and an!- fering all kind! of dinners. However, Samuel Cunard, in spite ot his titty-one years, was not the sort to be daunted. He found himself in pos- session of a letter of introduction from the secretary of the East India Com- pany to Mr. Robert Napier, then the foremost steamship builder on the Clyde. The early steamers were ell driven by paddles, and it wee not until more than twenty yeere later, in IMS, that the lee! of the Cnnerd’e peddle steam- ere. the Scotin, wee hunched. She wee of nearly four thoneend tone, end built of iron. She could “um thir. teen knots unmet the Britannia'. eight and e hell, end out the create; to ion then nine den. The Boone wee followed by the China, the ttmt of the ectow-propelled ennui!“ She. ot com, land can one mew. It wee not until the yeer IMO that the twin ecrew wee “Induced in the Del-hie end Bennie, ttno - eech of tougs teen thoneend (one. The In! atuteqt ship wee the Benin. e ten-thousand- ton ehip built in no. which wee cep- ehle ot deeming Mn note. As early as 1830, Mr. Cunard had begun to agitate for a. tramr-Atlaatie Iteam service, and in 1833 had “tuni- ly become director ot a company torm- ed for this purpose. This company purchased the Royal William, a steam- er built by James Goudie. at Quebec. and meant for the Quebec and Halifax Steam Navigation Company. She was a vessel ot 830 tons. with auxin“ of 10 horse-power, and was the first shlp to cross the Atlantic from west to east under steam. Leaving Quebec on August 4th, 1383, she arrived quite safely at. Gravesend on September 11th. now.- 1840 and 1875 the Cnnu'd 00w bum no tower than one hun- dred Ind twenty “no", but the viola lot out mutter mum hardly - either in tonnnge or coat the thmm hunt huntin- which have boon con-trusted by the comp-n7. A Doubtful Honor. The venture, however, m not . success from a commercial point of View, and the Royal William was eventually sold to the Spanish Govern. ment, who used her as a warship. A: such, she had the doubtful honor of being the tirtrt new: vessel to tire a gun in war. To return to Mr. Cunard, after read- ing the otter ot the British Govern. ment, he went all round Halifax en- deavorlng to mine money to start the new line. But steamers tn those tiny- were looked upon very much " dirigihies are DOW. It was granted that they could steam, but it was con- sidered impossible that they could pay. No one would put up a penny, to Mr. Cunard left Halifax and sailed tor London. For days he visited various firms and finaneierss, but without the slightest success; THE ROMANCE OF h GREAT BUSINESS HUMBLE BEGINNING ty STEAMSHIP COMPANY. Builder of Lusitania Won Sue. cess by His Undnunted Perseverance. Up to the year 1838 the Royal malls were carried across the Atlantic from England to America in gelling ships, old naval vessels which were so slow. so shockingly unseaworthy, that they became commonly known " "com twigs,†says a London magallne. Trade with America was rapidly in- creasing, and the popular outcry against these wretched old ships " came so strong that the Brititrtt Gow ernment was forced to take some steps towzrdo lmproment. In October. 1888, tenders were invited to convey the American malls by steam veg-ell. Circulars were distributed broad- cut, and by chance one found ita wny into the hands of Samuel Cunard, n merchant ot Halifax, Non Scotla. Quun of thq In; _ The origin] Brianna us two tum. MONEY ORDERS. Buy your out-of-town luppues with Dominion Express Money Onion. Five Dollars coats three cents. People who buy their food in mull when and expect the grocer to deliver it sum-r from the coat of high living. ibe plant. It doesn't speak very well for a man when I“ the animals on the place get out of his way when they see him coming. . Remember that plants root shallow and that the roots run deep. Deep plowing end shallow cultivating lulu ' _ To Mop tubing Mir u once And rid the - ot every punch of Mndrtttt, get a and! bottle ot delightful "Dan- W‘ at any drug or toilet mum to: a for mu, pour n ma. In your hand and rub it Into the two. After - application: the hair wally my: coming out and you cum and nay Mgtdrttff. Your hair will grow strong. thick and long Ind tow Bott, glossy Ind Morn bountiful and “ending. Try It! The well child is always a happy ehild--it is a baby's nature to be hap- " and contented. Mothers, it your little ones are cross and peevish and cry a great deal they are not well-- they are in need of medielne--aomo. thing that will set their bowels and stomach in order, for nimrtenths of all childhood ailments arise from a disordered state of the bowels and stomach. Such a medicine is Baby's Own Tablets. - They are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach, and thus drive out constipation, colic, indlxes- tion; break up colds and simple fever: and make the baby healthy and happy. Concerning them, Mrs. Albert Hamel, Piorreville, Que., 'rrttete:-"Bab" Own Tablets are the best medicine I know of tor little ones. They relieved my little girl from constipation when nothing else would and I can strongly recommend them to other mothers." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockvil-le, Ont. Auk hr Mlnnrd’. and (oh no others HEALTHY CHILDREN ARE HAPPY CHILDREN and and an: feet m'mtn, thirty- ionr feet wide, and twenty-two and a half feet deep. The Win and Mtutmntania were each seven hundred and ninety teat ions, eighty-eight foot wide, and sixty feet deep. Their ton- nage was thirty-three thousand, and their speed tmrentriiot knots. The Mauretania, the mrvivor of the III- tere, is today the world‘s taste-t mer- chant ship. “Yesterday is gone; to-morrow Never comes within our grasp; Just this minute's joy or sorrow, That in all our hand: mar clasp, Just this minute.' Let us are it As a pearl ot precious price, And with high endeavor make it Fit to shine in Paradise." But the Mauremnia, not as the II. is dwarfed by the enormous Aquitanin. Nine hundred tad one foot in length, with a breadth ot ttinet-Ten feet, you could pack the Britannia inside her And lose her. Put the Aquitanla in Cheapslde, Lott. don, end she would blot out the street completely. Her vast-double bottom la wider than the whole thoroughfare, and her sides would tower above the tallest houses. Moat people know the Thames at Tower Bridge. If the Aquitanla were placed across the river alongside the bridge, her stern would be on one bank and her bow on the other. 'at we’ve thoughtful Just this minute, In what'er we say and do ; It we put a purpose in it That is honest through and through We shall sudden life, Ind. give it Grace to make it all sublime; For, though life is long, we live it Just this minute at a time. FALLING? HERE’S WHERE IT SHOWS Don't worry! Let "Danderine" save your hair and double its beauty Just This Minute. MIDI No. 27--'20. TORONTO The Bible il itrtmed, in whole or in put, in ovt100 language. ttnd dial- The cowstable "tea wagon" makes its bow. It comes in answer to the need ot the "ierttitie dairyman who feeds each cow diaerently from the rest. in conformity to its dietic re- quirements. The teed out, to name it more exactly, is mounted on two small wagon wheels, and is divided by muons into tive or six compart- ments containing bran, ground corn, etc. A scale and measuring pail ore suspended by a frame above the mid- die compartment (5) Don’t let your own W upon the foreground. (8) Below pressing the bulb tor a snap, say something to make the clan smile. (9) Don't try a snap after (our o‘clock. Take a "short time." (4) Under trees, faces are often mottled by leat shadows. Look out tor this. (6) Aévnnce the and: ot a group so that all are equidistant from the cam- (7) Water makes a. good foreground but a. bad background. (1) Don't wait till utter upper for your picture. Get the clan together at early " possiblo, while the light In good. (2) Group them facing the sun, but if ramble make your exposure while the sun is thinly veiled in cloud, tro as to have a strong {unused light and no hard shadows. V "(3') '11 in direct sunlight. hat! which throw a heavy shadow on the taco should be removed. No picnic h complete without I group photograph; no a few hints tor the dmateur photographer may be uto- MInard'l Llnlmont for “I. overywhon Photographing the Picnicers. ASTHMA Feed Cart in Cow Stable Facilitates Dieting. mums... William“ "t land new had I trtmgN and can m he: became “and. Later on tho puzzles _m hams ltd .99 - _ y t "5 mmrteett.rttuUGGG . tttt ha I though was iiSiv,'i',ttif?3,i?i?!ir, MOW.“ "at',et Munch-1mm†I ) -ttttturxrmeeWioidiirms, lo..Dec.l¢,lm 1heCgeiarrBttnr,0trtemaetond 'b1mrrn5trr.tttotttfrntrro-. FABE 'Will/ill) NEURITIS Bet Pt/dd, have Kaunas. "ffhCtf,ttili2'rts.lftlllf, in mumm- RAZ-IA " 0-p- Iulel Are [nu-unwed to "up†LET H MA. Don't Inlet sn- other dli. W4 Templeton. new at. " Toronto. 101' - s. rubble drum“ all than u 1.04 . box. 1mm also Bet mm no quichy 3nd 1'h%'ll1'. not ulo u rat-bio drug- [tstl tpr .1.“ I box. Templeton’s iGGiik' 2kr""ifGiiinutNr ii; onâ€: aâ€. It fou no I for he. at lotoqq. 14:2 L" It""'"""""'"""'"',""' WHO _rs We [24¢ % _lllllr8dtalMt,' Cw" J2s42asi' 'i , '/ J, Puhee THE mm, g " _ c. H. cosswoou Roseway, Disby Co., NB. But of all the joy: which the world may bout. Alike to the great or can)! A contented mind and a heart that's a“: in the home. "Why, Willie," she cried. ugh-it. “want do you mean try bro-km: all those out?" "Well," said Willie, “I heard m "ring wok 1m monoy tn can than dam, and I’m trying to and it." mama's Llnlment Co., mum. Dear Birtr,---Thits Ml I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest very bad, no I could not work, and it hurt me to breathe. I tried on kind- at Llnlmonu Ind they did me no good. One bottle ot MINARD’S LIN!- MENT, warmed on tttxnmtits sud " plied on my breast, relieved me com- pletely. There’s lots of joy In this quoor old world, - Though It’s sometimes but! to and; Andtttoroad-lot-0ttsr. There's Iota ot tot in the sunny like, In the - neldu. fresh and hit; In the work we" done in the battle won, And the courage to do or dare. A good coat of paint on the build- ing: will make them sell better-will make them look so good that you won't want to sell 'em.' Little Willie was discovered by " ulster industriously smashing ttll the “lid. The Bride-Nhat" my poetry, Dick. 3nd you said nothing about It. You‘re always cracking up Elizabeth's." q-.- :A_n_- kn. ant-ya may-.. _,. _--- Her Bpmme---"t'm sorry. darling, but your: wouldn't crack." ttciidener did, too." creditable Ml. Mtutd--"ru give Jack cud“ tor geb ting me a nice engagement ring." Mgrrie--N undenund an“ Whit who, Beulah, Ear-dye, and for 1thrmrnatism, 1mm. Bettina, Nou- Htu, “In Aqtirhs lurked with the nine "Bayer" or you no not taking Aspirin at All. With your home left ttrr behind, In the greatest toy of all lune “Buyer" or you no not taking teen ymia." Now made in (and: "ttt at All. Bondy tin boxes cotttaininr,r 1). trh. wept only “Bum Touch of let- ooet bet u terr cent... nmgyhu Aspirin" h an “Molten "Bare" also all Inger "Bayer" paeka." 't in only one Aa.ui-"-'-To. not my "Bayer" with: I. the trade mark (rem-tend tn Cum.) of my" llhufnchm- . 1 lot ‘. unknown-tor of “Italianâ€. White tt II well known that Aspirin mu.“ Liavor uni-tuna. to 'ttf the while “than lulu-"0M the Tnbleu of my. i' Cc nanny will be “any“ It It their men! ma. null. [In "Born an..." mom-glen.“ For 991613, pnin,‘_xemplgu. Tooth- now am 5m 95.5.95 teil) ltHa/dr ttsAariar The Greatest Joy. Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" Ii T . 'iirfr.t'cie other chewing tobacco. That igwh; ANCHORPlHGisw Search for Wealth. ONLY TABLETS MARKED TMR' ARE ASPIRIN I. on: Clout tht., be. 118 Won am mun 7 Now York. Irte.a, DOG rffgtMEs teauod Pres to any Adv (use by tha Author. 'Pe.httte.eeryyr, ofANCHOR PLUGis “K apprtnehed by any puck-ca which contain- eompietr di- tactic-.111“ yo? tstgtltimr rad A. Mat-ther gimme Alpinn‘ High“ by 'tge,' for over teen you". ow made in (E Accept "cal.itcruia" Syrup " Figs 'ratir--letoy tor the name Calilornh on the package. then you Bre sure you child In having she best and mod hnmlesn phylic Mr the “we stony uch, liver and bowels. â€warm; Ian " fruity mute. Fun directions on each bottle. You must my ‘64:"- forum." To remove n ring tram a nun: "alien by its tightness, dip the My. ik Grid arrsua, fGaiior. an: you "AN. [wow "u... (MM Illâ€. Adan": Superintendent. -----eee'-_2" Sun nut warm I "I. an my, - - Iron In: Do not all - "I' con-tutu.“ wt ya. I..." in; W 0'.- - _--------"-'-- Mrt,'E',"ta'rt5'74' WITH NED - _ can. tvtm'.le're tn Ontario I. - - _ A_ u..- -.._nnO.M Aggy!“ I WILL 3.01er KIWIPAPII gal so. ulna- in! " h! mm Iran-00 " in " " on an I 9n... mm In... - was "at 'ttibtdW/ 'f [LO " an P.Mte, on! If: " c. "California Syrup of Figs' Child's Best Laxative w T.agglrgsrq' 'ee ton Ill-III- -.-.-----'-__" MISTER†TRAINING SCHOOL riot Nurse-z " Elisabeth Ila-pun. Inn-0L nan-A III-IL â€math. NO! 'ao o'l'48r"f-, COUC H 3 MOTHER! r; "/u fii:iiiiii, hiulu.m' " will ‘ thet, the" W by droppi rbr "eytad wth of the mm bet, thd 'jiEri',','i,'ij'iit tre.. m w ttres be plant" W. I" bum are Tety at Ne in. "rpoeiaity if the but before we Btatks tterottt, ‘d bard .36 rhile the MFA .. tLt-toat ya! tetl no whether l N hall ls In annual or porn-nah! a? "I! g! " ,eetl in light ad" " an It by plant h “to um 1:1 . each. There mu he a d mm thi. your Much will d M Would it be I and plan " the Ind. all it It mil, B l: - - . goed (in) t,"ttom? R. B...--" ull " can, in letting a a ground in the type m sewing to cr' gmenlly. any um tends to be mu" rem-d by drains 's' of lime It the l, in re. However. I 1 carefully and row rate of so tu. acre. The and ' ttfr quantity v “Ammo bulk. to include about ('ili'i'ji"j,-i,/, m- 'ir-iii, "-tiras Bef Golden ‘ tor or com!“- the various their MGM†hm to 1mm chapter 19: I difiirulty. h In v. 5 Dav were exam" table at the db}. explan; â€women†o of Slul him It9t 20.24). W) repo, duo ncwucn MW he! -uuui In all u Well a "ther's mm- afraid. M M that I (Ms decid can. win“ I moo. fer“- Dnvid Mtvil Jonah-s my. rttd “native by ' MI " tun.“ I“ l and II moon th unholy tut-ad Mther 1-11 ' '4 tte-te " ly.s “a. m. life. He r, h tieree unset “ “I'M Not for tt w kingdom. but m “hm. been 6agte him dame in -irittr ".ietat a mun Jul min-m ho 0-24 , ' ther - to I) David up tt 'air,' became his ml n dame in chitin! h " at“ kim to.etri “I " lor ricr at ioe " h h Ht SC "HUI "TN mm In“ MW a " M per h tho P I“ fr