2 P § 0 *# Â¥ 1 1 4t 1 g/4 4 #% «t But whet George reached his lot_lsh ings, he found on the table, side by side wigth Mr. Blodwell‘s final letter about the Brighton trip, Laura Pocklington‘s mate. Hwuct â€" ARIEL s t _ No. _ But we do." Neaera laughed again, and George took his leave, better pleased with the world than when he arrived. A call on a pretty woman often has this efâ€" fect; sometimes, let us add, to complete our commonplace, iust the opposite. _"Wh{ shouldn‘t 1?" he argued _ to himself. _ "I don‘t know wl)Â¥I I should got all . the blame for nothing. _ If ,ho[ think it of me I mas a6 wl _ ""No. "At any rate, you‘dâ€"you and your friendsâ€"be _ somebody ‘to speak _ to, wouldn‘t you?" said Neqera, resting her chin on her hand and gazing at George. ‘"Oh, yes, you must come. We shall be very jolly." s o ‘"Poor us!" But perhaps it will conâ€" sole us to mingle our tears." "Will you come?" asked George. "I shan‘t tell you," she said with a laugh. "It must be purely accidental." -'i fortuitous _ concurrence? Very well. We go toâ€"morrow." â€" } don‘t want to know when â€" you are going to have a run to Brighton. I shall go, just to get out of this." "ls Brighton nice now?" Nicer than London, any how." "Yes. Mr. Nestonâ€"â€"t" "Yes, Mrs, Witt? Why don‘t you come too." ‘"Well, well," she said with a sigh, "and now what are you going to do?t" _"Oh. nothing. I ‘think some of us _ Neaera implored him not to say that, running over the names of such as might be sugposed to remain faithful. George shook his head at each name; when the Pocklingtons were mentionâ€" ed, his shake was big with sombre meaning. | _ This speech was indiscreet. George recognized it, when Neaera‘s answerâ€" ‘ng glance reached him. Tgat will make them talk worse than ever," she said, smiling. \~"* C O ought never to speak to me again, Mr. Neston.‘"‘ ‘"Oh, we are damned beyond redempâ€" tion, so we may as well enjoy _ ourâ€" selves.t "No, you mustn‘t shock your friends still more.‘" ‘ "I have no friends left to shock," reâ€" pl'gd George, bitterlys j is Neqaera sgreud ber hands out with a gesture of despair. "What am I _ to dof I amâ€"desolate." "So am I. We must console one anâ€" other." ‘"You mustn‘t rate what you call my generosity too high," said George. "But what are you going to do, Mrs. Witt?" Gerald was, of course, the subject of these strictures, and George was conâ€" tent not to contradict them. "He evidently," continued Neaera, "simply cannot understand your genâ€" erogity. _ It‘s beyond him!" F In fact, he was thoughtful. What would Mrs. Witt do next? And what would George Neston do? Vane knew of cases where the accusation suggests the crime; it geemed not unlikely that if George had to bear the contumely attaching to a connection with Mrs. Witt, he might think it as well to reap the benefit. He might not have sought to win her favor yet, but it was very possible he might do so now. If he didn‘tâ€"well, some one would. And Mr. Vane considered that he might find it worth his while to be the man. His great relatives would cry aloud _ in horror; society would be shocked. But a man will endure something forâ€" a grotty woman and five thousand a year. nly, what did George Neston mean to dot It will be seen that Sidmouth Vane did not share Laura Pocklington‘s conâ€" viction that George cared nothing for Mrs. Witt. Of course he had _ not Laura‘s reasons, and perhaps some difâ€" ference between the masculine _ and feminine ways of looking at such things must be allowed for, _ As it happened, however, Vane was riiblâ€"!or a moâ€" ment. _ After George had been for a second time repulsed from Mrs. Pockâ€" lington‘s doors, finding the support of his friends unsatisfying and yearning for the more impassioned approval that women give, he went the next day to Néaera‘s, and intruded on the sorrowâ€" laden retirement to which that wrongâ€" ad lady had betaken herself. And Neaera‘s grief and gratitude, her sorâ€" | row and sympathy, her friendshi;; and | «ury, were all alike and equally delightâ€" {ul to him. ‘"The meanness of it!" she cried with || ‘lashing eyes. "Oh, I would rather die | : than have a petty soul like that!" C Vane wanted to be let alone, and Tommy worried him. He turned on the little gentleman with some feroâ€" alty. " My dear Tommy," he said, "you backed her through thick and thin, and blackguarded George for attackâ€" ing her." ** Yes, butâ€"â€"" ** Well, whoever was right, you weren‘t, so hadn‘t you better say no more about it?" And Mr. Vane rose and walked away. *"* My dear fellow, we wanted her to have fair play. I suppose there‘s no guestion of the marriage now ?" *"*I suppose not." *"* What‘s the fair Mrs. Witt going to do ?" "1 had a pretty shrewd idea of how the land lay. So had Bella." «* mxl"p' " Why, my wife." "Oh, a thousand pardons. I thought you rather backed Mrs. Witt." Tommy sat down by him. "I say," be remarked, " this Neston business is rather neat. We read about it in Switâ€" zerland." * Been away t" "Of course I haveâ€"after my wedâ€" ding, you know." " Ah! Seen Punch ?" And Vane handâ€" ed it to him. l _How are you?" said Vane, raisâ€" ing his eyes for a moment from Punch. mouth Vane. elandre, To: peararse ‘in Themic, have ousted mwriage an be came bac One evening, about a week after what Mr. Esplon called the final esâ€" elandre, Tommy Myles made his apâ€" pearatse in the smokingâ€"room of the Themis, Mort important matters have ousted the record of Tommy‘s marriage and blissful honeymoon, and he came back to find that a negligent world had hardly noticed his absence. "How are you?" said he to Sid-‘ tbenâ€"away went CHAPTER XVIII FATE‘S INSTRUMENTS may as well you ‘"Oh, they‘re all on your side." "Are the*l I needn‘t see more of them than I like, need It" The Marquis was not young, no, nor inexperienced; but, all the same, he was not proof against this flattery. "Perâ€" haps they won‘t stay long," he said. ‘ And you?" she asked, He smiled at her, and, after a moâ€" ment oé _m::ooent seriousness, her lips wavered into an answering smile, f (To Be Continues.) Srter eearcivg ie Dix o C pevRoos, C Coms d As ed it gallantly. "If that is all," said he, smiling, "perh%)s we may manage." ‘"‘Thanks," said Neaera, putting her handkerchief into her pocket. & ‘"‘That‘s right! Blodwell and Vane are here too, andâ€"â€""* L__':I don‘t much care about them: butâ€"â€"* "Iâ€"I only want some friends, andâ€" and some one to speak to," said Neaera, with a forlorn little sigh. The Marquis took her hand and kissâ€" od it gallantIivâ€". "If thakt ts am» t""*4 _1 came to make my confession, not to hear yours. How shall I atone for all I have brought on you? _ What shall I do now?" Then she turned to him suddenly, and said, "I was very young, you know, andâ€"rather hungry," "I am a sinner myself," he answerâ€" ed, smiling. "Andâ€"and what I did afterwards, I â€"_ll i ‘ \ "‘I‘ came to make my confession, not fhix ymes ue so sibe in Â¥ee u3 t oant ‘"So you see," he ended, "you have to put all your woes down to my chatâ€" ter." « "How strange!" she said, dreamily, lovking out to sea. The Marquis nodded, his eyes scanâ€" ning her face. Then he settled himself by her side, and told her how his reminiscence had been the firsse thing to set George on the track of discovery, whence all the trouble had resulted> causeâ€"â€"* "As I said at the beginning," interâ€" rupigd 'the Marquis, "I‘m the cause." "Â¥ou!" § ‘"‘The fact is, you see," the Marquis resumed, "his aifairs are rather trouâ€" blesome. _ He‘s out of favor with _the auth?rities, you; knowâ€"Mrs. Pocklingâ€" toun.‘ A "%)oes he mind about Mrs. Pocklingâ€" ton?" + _ "He minds about Miss Pocklington, and I suspectâ€"â€"*" ""Yest" t ‘"‘That she minds about him. I met Pocklington at the club yesterday, and he told me his people had gone abroad. I said it was rather sudden, but Pockâ€" lington turned very gruff, and said, . ‘Not at all.‘ Of course that wasn‘t true."‘ ‘‘Oh, I hope she will be good to him,‘" said Ne:ufra. "‘Fancy, if I were the ‘"Yes," said the Marquis. "Now, o know all about it, and it‘s a burning shaime. And, what‘s more, it‘s all my fault.‘ Â¥ ‘"Your fault?" she said, in surprise. "However, 1 warned George Neston to let it alone, But he‘s a hotâ€"headâ€" ed fellow," > "1 never thought him that." o ‘"He is, though. Well, look at this. He asks Blodwell, and Vane, and meâ€" at least, he didn‘t ask me, but Blodwell didâ€"to make a party here. We agree. The next momentâ€"hey, prestol he‘s off at a tangent!" Neaera could not make up her mind whether Lord Mapledurham was givâ€" ing this explanation merely to account for his own presence or also for her information. I ‘"Why, it‘s Mrs. Witt!" he said. "We are acquaintances, or we ought to be." And he held out his hand, adding, with a smile, "I am Lord Mapledurham." "Oh!" said Neaera. Neaera looked up with a start. The upright figure, bravely resisting a growing weight of years, the ironâ€"grey bair, â€" the bhooked nose, and pleasant keen eyes seemed familiarto her. Sureâ€" ly she had seen him in town! But one who came from behind _ es caped her vigilance. He saw the gleam of golden hair, and the slim figure, and the little shapely head bowing forward to meet the gfï¬ved hands; and he came down the beach, and, standing behind her for a moment, heard a _ little gurgle of distress. I help?t" ol man was a grief rortune had hithâ€" erio spared her. She forsook the crowded parade, and strolled down by the water‘s edge. Preâ€" sently she sat down under the shade of a boat, and surveyed the waters and the future. She felt very â€" lonely. George had seemed inclined to _ be pleasant, but now he had deserted her. she had no one to speak to. _ What was the use of being pretty and rich? Everything was very hard, and she had done no real harm, and was a _ very, very miserable girl, andâ€"â€" Under the shade of the boat, Neaera cried a litâ€" tle, choosing the moment when there were no passersâ€"by., _ * "TRS child‘s a trump," he said, "a * regular trump! _ And she shan‘t . be â€" worried hy _ hearing of me _ hanging about in Mrs. Witt‘s neighborhood. |__ The happy reflections which ensued were appropriate, but hackneyed, being in fact those of a man much in love. | It is, however, worth no't?oe that Lauâ€" | ra‘s refusal to think evil had its reward; for if she had suspected George, she |would never have shown him â€" her beart in those letters; and, but for those letters, he might have gone to Brighton, andâ€"â€"; whereas what did happen was something quite different. CHAPTER. â€" XIX. Being a puilic character, although an object of ampition to many, has its disâ€" advantages _ Fame is very pleasant, but we do not want everybody in the hotel to point at us when we come down to dinner, | When Neaera went to Brightonâ€"for it is surely unnecesâ€" sary to say that she intended t~,8° and did go thiitherâ€"she felt +444 the fame which had been thâ€"=st upon her devarred her from *â€"t@ls, and she took lodgings of « severely respectable type, iaciag the gea. ‘There she waitâ€" ed two days, spending her time walkâ€" ing and _ driving where all the world walks and drives There were no signs of George, and Neaera felt â€" agâ€" | grieved. She sent him a line, and waited two days more. Then she felt | she was being treated as badly as posâ€" | sibleâ€"unkindiy, negligently, faithiessâ€" | iy, disrespectfully. _ He had asked her to come;, the invitation was as plain as could be; without a word, she was | ; thrown over! in great indignation she |] told her maid to pack up, and, â€" meanâ€" | ; while, sallied out to see if the waves | would perform their traditional duty of | ( soothing a wounded spirit. The task | i was a hard one;, for, whatever Neaera | ; Witt had suffered, neglect at the hands | ( less person, quite undeserving to . Teâ€"~ ceivepesuch aq]etter from suc% a latd}fc; And when the second letter meh'un- next morning, he swore again, at i D self for his meditated desertion, anrthy all his gods, that he would be worthy of such favor. ton, and Neaera Witt, and the reckless defiance of public opinion, and all the rest of it! And George swore at himâ€" self for a heartless, distrustful, worthâ€", your pardon," said he. "Can about them; Most men who are "made" by their wives are made worse. It is easier to spend all you make than to make all you spend. When a woman can find nothing to worry about she worries about 5mt. All man are Th use asg on .09 More men die too late than too soon. A coward can sometimes deal a terâ€" rible blow. The truest sympathy is never expressâ€" ed in words. Faith with some people means simply trusting to luck. Yo amount of kind words ever atones for an unkind deed. nadbags, 51202900 e un c C0lreniese UOE EN acted ostensibly onlfv as its guardians. They formed the first standing army of which we have any record; but they were appointed not as the defendâ€" ers of the national interests, but simâ€" ply. as the executors of the personal designs of the Sultan. The name bfl which they were best known and whic] inspired most awe was Yenitzer, signiâ€" fying in Turkish the new army, beâ€" cause it superseded, as a dperpetual and consolidatege force, the ol troops which were raised only in emergencies and scattered when war was over. 1 P ppNCâ€"DOimititeniaditatcictondit ces winse inss d ~ 74 & * S eigns, but they never aspired to the high positions of state, and were conâ€" tent to fill their original posts. Not one of their number ever occupied the thro‘:m of Tl_xlrlkey. zlmd the whole corps it PnT ol mnane ce ced ht s 500 Pn n n ooladh d 7 how in association with the D/ia;melukes of Egypt, but though there were some points in common between them, they differed widely in their character and aim. The Mamelukes, though originâ€" ally a race of slaves, founded a sovereign dynasty in Egypt, but the Janizaries, even at the height of their é)ower, never ceased to be soldiers, an they maintained throughout all their history the proofs and symbols of their lowly. origin. f They made and unmade soverâ€"| he Sultan‘s Strange Army and Its His« tori¢ Place. The Janizaries are unique in the his~ tory of the world. Nothing like them has ever been known in the constitution of any state. _ We think of them someâ€". Muzaffarâ€"edâ€"din‘s first step on asâ€" cending the throne was to abolish the taxes on bread, meat, and other necesâ€" saries of life, a measure which, howâ€" ever popular, made a big gap in the revenues of the Government. _ It reâ€" mains to be seen whether learning and philosophy on the threne will suffice to keep in order a country whose only law hitherto has been the despotic will of the sovereign and brute force. P ie Cimimines SV "venl. Arotciaatity D\ AulllP cce Brass 1 and made her influence felt in the administration â€" of _ the grovinoe of Azerbijan over which her husband was Governor. i unB Gnentiints se tst drel hsn es ~A The Persian monarch has also studied the philosophy of the West. _ He reads Aristotle and Plato and is acquainted with the ideas of Leibnitz and Kant. He knows French well, and does not limit his reading to scientific works, but tries to follow all the phases of life in Paris. He is fond of astronomy, and recently had sent to him from London a large telescope and other scientific instruments. _ Besides this he is a firstâ€"class rifle shot and a bold hunter. _ His tastes and the turn of his mind are said to be European rathâ€" er_ than Oriental. One way in which this is shown is the strong influence which he has allowed his wife to obâ€" tain over him. Disregarding the perâ€" mission of the Prophet and the tempâ€" tation of his position, he has refused to become a polygamist. His wife is one of his cousins, a Princess of the royal blood of the Kadjars, and she was ulll powerful within the palace of Tauris, ing the Babists, whose religious and political opposition forms the greatest danger to the absolute power of the Kadjar dynasty. The new Shah is a thoroughly good Mussulman in practice as well as in theory. _ He observes with the utmost scrupulousness the rules laid down by the Koran. Five times a day he goes through his ablutions and recites the prayers obligatory on all faithful Isâ€" lamites. % has never drunk wine or spirits, which is the more remarkâ€" able as the Persians do not always folâ€" low the precepts of the Prophets in this respect. . The poets have sun% the delights of wine as well as the perfume o[m{()sga; and the bulbul‘s song. _ _ and before his accession to the throne had become an authority in matters of religious doctrine.. This study of theâ€" ology he engaged in because his father considered it the best means of resistâ€" uold his own in any theological dispute. Muzaffarâ€"edâ€"din‘s _ education _ began when he was twelve, and before he was twenty, besides sp.-akini the national langqage of Persia, he knew Kurdish, Turkish, and Arabic. There is probaâ€" bly no one in the Orient to-dafy who has a more thorough knowledge of the classâ€" ical «literatures of the East. He then devoted several years to the studfv of the endless problems arising out of the interpretation of the Koran. â€" He reads t?e works of the chief commentators 0 The Kadjars are of Turkish origin, and _on that account suspected by the Il'&fl.lmm who form the most iniluenti}ll port}on of the people of Persia. . *T‘ edâ€"din himself used to tylh 7 i‘urkish dialect within the pre * of his palâ€" ace. He was Aâ€" .Hr{n'med that the heir to his tpâ€"~4> Sshould be an educated . Pereâ€":â€" of the old school and able to‘ pered him. in the East and an Authority in The ology. According to Persian accounts, Muzâ€" affarâ€"edâ€"din, the new Shahâ€"inâ€"Shah, beâ€" sides having the largest private forâ€" tune of any monarch on earth, is the most learned of all the crowned heads. Nasrsedâ€"din left behind him the most dazzling collection of jewels in â€" the world, and about $20,000,000 in coin. He had picked out his second son as his sucâ€" cessor, because this son was the issue of a legal marriage with a royal Prinâ€" cess, while the oldest son‘s mother was one of the women of the harem, and he determined, in part for political reaâ€" sons, that his son should not suffer from the lack of education which had hamâ€" The New Shah the Most Learned Monarch MODERN PROVERBS MUZAFFARâ€"EDâ€"DIN OF PERSIA. THE CHIITE SECT, JANIZARIES. says only what he acquire a reputation tlive his usefulness ; as some sort of horâ€" and equal, _ _get marâ€" Mr. Dexterâ€"Yes, I am. I went to a fortune teller toâ€"day to find out my fate and was told that the girl I loved wiulgrez(l)ltl ewight Tish h red y caug 1 as gills. Those of a fish not reoentltr‘ caught are Eler in color, or of a rk Eu.rple. icky dealers to make stale fish seem fresh, put beef blood on their gills. Miss Kissamâ€"â€"Y o night, Mr. Dexter. use by citizens, the given to all who w away. Fishermen a; since the canning in such a run been se The receipts of salmon a Oregon river canneries C usually heavy, and are f of the capacity of the e lishments. Tons of frqu ing thrown overboard on the lack of means to pr until they could be canne as possible have been salte ’ Leman Bishop, an old coloured man, while out in the woods near his house, beyond Crawfordsville, Georgia, heard a partridge whistle and thought â€" he would kiï¬ it ; but while looking for his bird he found the whistler to be a black snake in a brush pile with his head above the brush, whistling in perfect imitation of a rooster partridge. What is believed to be the celicbrated Swift silver mine has been discovered on Round Stone Creek, thirtyâ€"five miles ?‘oul:h+ of lr%“ishmonql. Ky., in f‘iock Castle 1 Aub lc on 00e 06 mt e td upu yet on this he is making a good livâ€" ing. He raises no cotton, but has an abundgance of corn, meat and the usual farm sgupplies. He is independent and out of debt. LCE SB] UZ 22 2E eEs l TE cracked while being tolled July 8, 1835, to announce the death of John Marshall, chief justice of the Supreme Court of the UJnited States. The bell was cast in London in 1752, broken up and reâ€" cast in April and in June, 1753, so it was 82 years old when it broke, and had some hard usage. The crack proâ€" bably came naturally. . A, B. Jones, of Newnau County, Ga., is 72 years old, has a wife to support, and only has one arm with which to work. He owns a little home _ of twentyâ€"seven acres, all unlands _ and Newton F. Hurse, 24 years old, is a grocer‘s clerk in Buffalo, and gets $5 a week wages. Some time ago he inâ€" vented a carâ€"coupler, and last week he received a letter from a manufacturing firm offering him $30,000 in cash an a royalty olval_lâ€"zogï¬lvé;; sold for his invention. There has arrived at Yakima, Wash., a combination bharvester and thresher of immense size, to be used in harvestâ€" ing a big crop of wheat. The machine will cut a 20â€"foot swath, threshing and sacking the grain as it goes, and will require thirty horses to pull it. t , A coloured teachers‘ institute in Georgia has asked the State authorities to provide them experts of their own race to instruct them instéad of white teachers. They also object to Bill Arp‘s "School History ot Georgia" ‘as abounding in untrue statements about the negro race. . _The statue of Edgar Allen Poe, which is to be set up in Bronx Park, New York, by the Sï¬akespeare Society shows the poet seated in a armchair in meâ€" ditation, with a raven at his feet. The statue is of heroic size, and will rest on a granite pedestal. The sun, if hollow, would hold 800,000 earth globes, and an eye capable , of hourly viewing 10,000 ‘square miles, would require 55,000 years to see all its surface. a There is a scarcity of "subjects" in the Atlanta Medical College, and under an old law the facalty has demanded that the bodies of paupers be given to the students for dissection. The daily shipment of celery from Kalamazoo is 80 tons, an un&'ecedented amount for this time of t year. _ The members of a hose _copx::émny in Saginaw, Mich., have equipped ther selves with helmets of @allnyiR2n colâ€" The sale of oleomargarputter, is now oured to imitate najtiws of thirtyâ€"two grohibited by ++ 499 _une rates in Chillicothe, Mo., T8 heen reduced to $18 and $24 a Fear respectively, for residences and business houses. ; The coloured people of Baltimore have started a movement for the erecâ€" tion of a monument to Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe‘s memory. Neighborly Interest in His Doingsâ€"Matters of Moment and Mirth Gathered from His Daily Record. Mrs. Annie L. Webb in the only wo man is Idaho who is in the life insurâ€" ance business. ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT THE BUSY YANKEE,. MA DNCHF $A B AI CcOULDN‘T BR HER. You seem depressed toâ€" "~f5 on account of is to preserve them be canned. As many een salted for winter he fish being freely would carr{ them assert tha never industry began has seen. mon at the various ries continue unâ€" are far in excess the Eacking estabâ€" f’x:es fish are be.â€" , all uplands, and years. c Columbia â€" River t it is dangerous c Thornberg was 5 feet of ~water port and had rip in a rowâ€" good _ fishing ng in yellow en â€" suddenly Philadelphia O to the drug store. 80 ‘"That‘s the worst part of it. It‘s one of these mysterious things. I can‘t say just what‘s the matter with me, and yet I know that T feel terribly bad. It‘s the gloomy uncertainty â€" of it that makes it dreac&ul." And he gave a suppressed groan. _ _ "It doesn‘t agree with health‘s bad." "It wasn‘t bad this morn said you never were better." No Wonder the Poor Man Was in a Bad State of Health, He threw himself on the lounge and exclaimed mournfully: "I guess we‘d better sell out and move." "I don‘t think so," was his wife‘s emphatic reply. "We have made our home here, and our friends are here, and I‘m sure there isn‘t a prettier city anywhere," "I don‘t like the climate." "Everybody else seems to think it‘sl as good a climate, take it the year round, as is to be found in the whole country." ‘ EMISSICKNT L},, | Wiod seven medical firims and speut @00b wip onl oo d EM'SS'ONS AND anvo p l{a_dle;m!: nm.n; op Iny, syst n w q IMP OTENCY Blo. é:"flm&.&wvid me 4s & last resort, to corco . k r8. nedy & Korgan. Icommenced their New Mctho CURED‘ Treatment and in a few weeks was a new man, with no mmz rrmmmmmmmmmeâ€"â€"| 1if€ 8100 qmbltlon.h'rhlc wnla four yeflndnï¬, um. r{n{)] specialists to all my afilicted fellowmen.» Diz e Abcommeid Shess 1«ile CURES CGUARANTEED OR NO PAY.â€" CONFIDENTAL. Lumber, Shingles and Lath alway In Stocki. DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN, "s opes. Every ment, FR!E’. é:‘;’:“"! C ! EPy‘ ;s : f ns PB ow he4 onl 5s + Te Je 1+ §are® io u: :.;f ..l ..r.o.‘i KD" We treat and cure Varicocele Emissions, Nervon Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Smlu'}i:, Unnatural Disc Kidney and Bladder Diseases. 17 YEARS IN DETROE 200,000 CURED *The vices of early boylimd laid the foundation of my ruin. Lator on a "goy life" and exposure to hlood di« Reases completed the wreck. I bad all the symptoms of Nervous Dobilityâ€"sunken eyes emiesions, drain in urine, pervousness, weak back, etc. Eyphilis caused my hair to fall out, bone pains, ulcers in mouth ard on tongue, blotches on body, etec. 1 think God 1 tried Dre. Krznody & Kergan. ‘They restored me to health, vigor and hap; ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheetmg. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so thit a)] Ordgy can be filled. â€"siil> O omm M Having Completed our New Factory â€" _~** "*" Prepant so FILL ALt opnrâ€"" Prompry We keep in St~~ 4 !arge quantity of §qq Doors »«vUldings, Flooring and the hi VARICOCELE, bash and Door PactoE Norvous and despondent; weak or bitionâ€"lifelees; memo r; eas eyda B, reu andrï¬g:‘d; p losses; restless; hfggntd 00 ; wenk back; bone p waricoce!¢; deposit in uri‘e a dmimg stoo!; dif energy and strength â€"â€" W OFAN CURE YOU 1 STARTLING FACTS FOR DiSEASED victims. _ H@°°CURES GUARflNTEED OR NO PaAYy1 Ee e PR PE CE L 0 eR ld W Ni Bm Tonekss. Suualhs) BEFORE TREATMEKT, AFTER TREATMENT, . BBFORE TREATAENT, | AFT0RB TREAZmeNT NO NANES OR TESTIMONIALSs USED WITHOUT wWaRaitten consent. BLAMED THE CLIMATE. JOHN A. NANLIN, RESTORED TO MANHOOD By prS Noarvous and despondent; weak or dobilitated; tired mornings; n bitionâ€"lifelees; memo ; easily fatigned; excitable and )+. eydn reu lndvrgl: pimples on ï¬wo: dreams and i d looking; wealk back; bone puin*: hair loore; tlcers; e .. / t in urine and draing nt ataal» Aioteneimil 215 0% CICCPR] 8 this morning. You . JOHN A. MAXLIN. â€" CHAg. POWERS, CHAS. rowrus, wb aricoceie, Emissions, Nervwous Debllig;, Seminal , Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, If Abuse, John A. Manlin says:â€"*"I was on tims of early ighorance commenec â€" G. & J. _McKEQHNm The time occupied in the operaU® " often of long duration, wm«"li“!“‘ C tendl.w over as much as 30 minut® but, course, this varies according 9 the itmvï¬â€™h of the tooth. l’ursunl’ this coun who make a practice taking an anaesthetic when lm"lnis a tooth extracted would prowably {iné i dn M boatiaoso is w a _ little troublesome, t the least of it, lhar?uned ivory,' steel, or w calmly proceeds to hack awa Eun until the offending tooth He then extracts it with Ting thumb, the patient having su( turally unspeakable agonies. The patient is placed on ‘nd twr men are Q‘Hlfllll‘\c'l‘. m' two taking lllli.'d arn .__ Then the ope: dmeglide him, and takin s- _No..n..-. 2 TeR CVNO % ames on boxâ€"s or : us n boxes o stion list and cost o; ’;: Mow Molars Are Extractod in This secti08 of Africa. The methods of extr: among the Kaflirs are the extreme, and remind tortures of the dark age THE COOK COMPANY, Room 3â€"No. 258 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. happiness." CHAS,. POWERS. NTCCLO 21027 20066, UIC@Te] gore t/ 4 ’tw; want of contidence; hl.:w KAFFIR DENTISTRY o. (48 SHELEBEY 5T. DETROIT, MICH. Syphilis, Emissions Varicocele, Cursd. . NO RISK. Cook‘s Cotton Root Compound ATUTE of the countless vig. ut 15 years of eco, P n J ID " %wr v; ered o# \;atim is imas €X* PR ©at round 4 bim | two ;peel$ oce U YUL8 ; the 10088 all, the oth le i Ottawa, ArDl Railway Comp Respecting ! Canal and Pos Mr. Maclean. To change t ectric Compan: er Railway Con wâ€"â€"ul‘. De To incorpori branh and * Respectin@ gompanyâ€"Mr To incorport and Power Cc To amalgam: and Parry 8 and the Parry way CM | To amend t Eastern Trust (Halifax). PROMOTION Mr. Davin i ing the Mount @oing so, he e was to improy ficers and n Mounted Polic promotions she ranks, and it ; with the exce with the assist be appointed e served in the . of the Royal | also designed which the offi sent suffered, culating the & of an officer i on the basis C received his c time he had : °C Jn Ho v ‘m -d BILLA The followin! ut read & fir go revise and ing the Stâ€" Cl Mp‘nyâ€"â€"ul'. To i,nc()rPOf‘J pacific Railwa The House d of Mr. Foster, Governorâ€"Gene was deleated | veas. 69;: nays. affairs | justi Cystem of er THE Mr, Chog "“l'lment Bubstan t {a | The bill w GOVERNOR GEN. CAM Sir Charles ister of Militi addition to th &s&uerdayneql ege, & cop to the comma coigne, and w eron‘s igna Mr. llieo.rtn was a private sulting with net thought â€" down. cape school tion, althoa sontemplate and Edmont, railways not selection and th’ have ea the Mr. Oliver aware that Bir Richard Mr. Gillies, s intention of t duce any le4 #olvency â€" this Mr. Henry . tions as to ' tions regard ovemenils a :"hich the M that the mai eration . NORTHâ€"W Mr. Davin i the Dominion certain disali settlers in cert clause ï¬rmlt in the Mount year in the g duties. The bill w had been $36, were mrï¬ sented the a through the is rated to gmv is to what it bring down n been considere RAT Lo CatUieâ€"rais which on ace lations as to Mr. Fieldin ter, said that of the consoli year 1F95â€"1896 "z to then * Governme :h_‘- to co: .ll “ cam n istruction . Wwrence at Mr. Ialu;ic pepitle Hed to the * the Goy H‘in. how tre of the lie impr r' . Dobel1 . oS INSOLYE *the had hbeer * the i €omn wWare i Pacific resery. l‘fl“ Â¥ ht 4 CONsO yments Olive BRAN justifi Arnp com the mman y W red OI