* ‘A niltie while later, ma pauyre Marie died. ohe bhaa been ili a long time , but what suied bher was Lie i0ss t Stephanie. Ab yes! Aiter that, Henri anu . set out, wandering Lrom place to piace, not caring much whence we went, but always looking and askâ€" amg for Von Rosenbverg, because 1 waBnl to demand of him what bas he done with my child. Ail at ouce 1 éiscover bim. lt was at the bhouse oï¬ this gentleman, Monsicur »rooke. Next uay Lhey teli me Lhat de has gone away pack to uis own counlry, and they know not when bhe will relurn. But 1 wait and wait while one week . go @away a&aller &NoLBGT, &ABJ &L lengio ue womes vack. i hide myseli in the wood. 1 climo imio a thick branch oi a tree, and stay there bour aiter bour till he aball be alone. Ai length i see him a»ming down the path that leads from the Rouse to the chalet near the ‘wood ke whistles as hbe comes, and be is wlone. I wait a little while, then J some down {rom the tree and walk up to the chalet. The Baron is standing up, examining a pistolâ€"a pistol with imlay of ivory and gold and with strange figures marked on it. On the table close by is a heavy ridingâ€"whip. He has mot beard my footsteps. 1 enter, and be starts and stares. I make him a goloud bow, and | say: "Bonjour, onsieur le Baron. My name is Jules Picot, and I come to demand from you what you bhave done with my daughter S&a&banio." He still stares, and seems to thinking to himself how he shall snswer me. _ At last be says; "I know nothing â€" whatever of _ your daughter ; anu i@ i aid i suvcuia deciine to tell you." "She left Paris in your company," I reply. "Possibly so," he apswers with an evil suser. _ "Monâ€" sieur. I repeat that I am hber father. 1 seek for ho{ every where, but 1 cannot find her. ou, monsieur, if you choos: ean give me some clue by which I may be able to trace ber. Her mother i gead, and I have no other daughter Think,. monsicurâ€"thick." He laugbs a ‘mighl yeals ago, mopsieur,"" he beâ€" gun in a low, clieas Youce, *4 &d & wile, u_ daugDL@er, &nda & soP. Now i w alone. i WwAas IiViBy iD Lars. No man wla bave Ueen more uy py LA &A was,. . ougpdanie, luy udlgimiuc£, L&du &D engagement al Lhe «iryque de 1 Hivei. Ble was veaullils, sls vwa&s goou. . in an evil Rour ade Aili&uicd Lie allenâ€" tion of Lie barum YOu irGsenuerg. e iol.oweu Jer everywaese, he . gave ber rich presenis, ne even went so 1ar us lo proumse 10 wake hoer is wileâ€" sceleral Lhal ne was! Un ail Uhis 1 kpew DOLDBy U ailerwaras. URe uay blepdaunie uoes nol come nowe. 1 make iquiry 10f Der. moe duas Lied. V on cuartreE® xXvÂ¥il Kwe the fivst toew momonts after Piâ€" wat‘r stariling conlession bhad tallen hke a ihumierteolt aamomg (UDose assom> biwt in the justiweâ€"ywm» aof Cummerâ€" harya the silonce was wa intense that. to wse a comimen phrase, a mA might bhare beon beard to drop. Evory eye was focussel on the mountebank, who stowdl on the spot where he had risen, erect and very pale. his oyes glowing in their deep orbits like live coals, and pressing his soft felt bat with botb hands to his breast. Suddenly there was a slight commotion close to where the magistrates . were sitting ; the strained silence was broken, and all eyes turned as with one accord. â€" The lady in black, she who was said to be the wife of the accused man, bad tainted. But Margery‘s strong ATMS had caught her ere she fell. Another woman in the body of the court burâ€" lt was so eVluei somelDily NOe | vroke Lie silence ‘Ma ioo, mopsieur," answered Picot, with a slight shrug, "that is whal i am here forâ€"to pake whal you cali slateâ€" ments, to teli the Lruth, to prove that this gentleman is inBocent, and that 1, Jules Picot, and 1 aione, killea Otto von Rosenverg." He pausea, ana in lhe bush iluat Llollowed the rapid scratching oi theclerk‘s pen as . it ruce« over the paper was ciealiy audiâ€" vle. The pencils of uie two reporters who sal 10 & illlie DOX below the clerk moved at a more deliberate pace. One wl them even lounga Lime io muke _ a iurtive sketeo of bicot on a blank page of is nOleâ€"v0uk. ]u;tnutl", loo, Bas disapp.ared. 1lhey bave ilea logetuer. krom that . aay } pever saw olephname imore. " Again he paused, ana a.cbhough iluere wa&s no LFate Cl EmQLiON in Dis Volce, it may be that the niauen uepthis of is being were proiviuzmediy moved, woman in the body of the COUTE M7*/ rled to ber help, and between them the upconscious young wife was carried out. "Place that man in the do.ck." said the redâ€"faced magistrate, "and allow the other prisoner to be seated." Picot stepped quietly forward of his own accord, the people near making way for bhim with wonderful alacrity, and placed himseli{ on the spot . the magistrate bad indicated, & couple of copstables stationing themselves . beâ€" bind him as be did so. Then the clerk put certain questions to bim, _ which Picot answered without a moment‘s hecitaftion Whan these came to &n put certain questions to bim, _ wWAICB Picot answered without a moment‘s besitation. When these came to an end the entry on the chargeâ€"sheet stood as follows: "Jules Picot. Age, fortyâ€" three. Native of France. Profession, acrobat. No fixed place of residence. Then the magistrate, clasping the fingers of one hand in those of the othâ€" er, and resting them on the table in front of him, as be leaned forward & little, said: "Jules Picot, you have conâ€" fessed openly and in public to the comâ€" mission of a most beinous and terrible crime. Such being the case, we have no option, but to detain you in custody while inquiries are being made as to the truth or falsehood of the extraorâ€" dinary slatement just volunteered by you. Any further statement you may choose to make, we will _ listen to, but at the same time we must caution you that apything you wmay s8&) will be taken down and used as evidence against you elsewbere. is it _ your wish to make any further slatement, or is it not ?" A DEAD RECKONING eÂ¥iuaent the prisoner . bad nore lo say Lual no one 1 , "Ah," remarked the doctor, who was s quickly on the spot. as he held up to 1 \the light a tiny phial only about balf p |the size of a man‘s little finger and & |smelt its contents. "five drops of this b would kill the strongest man in three e | seconds." |_ About eight o‘clock after the gas had been lighted, he asked for pen, ink and paper, and a small table to write on. These baving been supplied him, be sat and wrote, slowly and laboriâ€" ously for nearly & couple of hours, fiâ€" nally puttinf what he bad written inâ€" side an enveï¬ and sealing and diâ€" recting _ it. en, after having taken off his shoes and coat, he wrapped himâ€" self in the blanket which bad been supâ€" plied him, and lay down to sleep. The gas was lowered, and silence reigned ‘throughout the prison. Once every bour during the night a warder went \the round of the cells and peered into each of them that was occuned through ‘a grating in the deor. Al| through the ‘night Picot apparently slept an â€" unâ€" broken sleep. When the warder visâ€" ited him at one o‘clock he found that be hbhad turned over and was now lyâ€" ing with bis faee to the wall, after which be seemed never to have stirred \between one visit and another. At sevem o‘clock another warder, who had just come on duty, went into his cell to rouse bim. To his dismay, he could not succeed in doing so. He turned the unconscious man over on his back and ithen the drawn, ghastly face told ‘its own tale. | As soon as Picot reached the cell ‘allotted to him, be asked to be §upâ€" {piied with a cup of coffee, after which |kw lay down on his pallet with the lair of a man thoroughly wearied out, and in a few minutes was fast asleep. He slept soundly till aroused some three bours later when be was conâ€" ducted to a room where he found one of the magistrates, thé clerk, the governor of the jail, and two other officials. _ Here a paper, which had been drawn up from notes taken in the justiceâ€"Boom, was read over to him. After baving caused it to be corrected in one or two minor particulars, he afâ€" fixed his name to it; and his signature ‘baving been duly witnessed, be was ‘reconducted to bis cell. i _.ore it could be accepted and acted upon. Meanwbile, be regretted to say ‘Mr. Brooke would bave to remain in custody. ut on the morrow, or next |day at the latest, both prisoners would \be transferred to King‘s Harold, when ‘the amplest investigation would doukâ€" \the ampiest investigation would doubtâ€" |less at once take place. With : that \the prisoner was removed. °* ‘‘Then you are a coward and aVilâ€" llain," 1 continue; ‘"and _ I spit !D your face, as 1 will do again and ag4D whenever 1 meet you. 1 have found you now, and 1 wili follow you whereâ€" you now, and I will follow you wherâ€" ever you go.‘" He replies only by selZ~ ing the whip, bissing it _ quick!ly through the air, and bringing it dowD with all his strength round my bead and sboulders. Strange lights dance before my eyes;,; there is a noise !D my ears as of falling waters The pistol is close to my band ; 1 grasp :t 1 fire. Von Rosenberg falls without a ery or a word. I fling the pistol away and walk quietly nack through the woods. As 1 reach the village where my boy is waiting me the hanging out of its mouth. chureh clock strikes seven. _ The evenâ€" ing is that of the 28th of June." In a sudden burst of sunshine a lady standing on Leith Hill in Surrey Engâ€" land, saw the flash of swords and helâ€" metls at the Military Review at Alderâ€" shot, about 23 miles off. laugh that makes me long to spMDE at his throat and strangle him. "I &)â€" together refuse to g.ve you any inforâ€" mation whatever avout your daughâ€" ter," he says. "How, monsieur, YO9 refuse!" I say as I draw a step or two enarer,. He bas laid the pistol on the table by this time, and his fingers now sbut on the bandle of the ridingâ€"wDPâ€" Before going back to his cell, Gerald was allowed to see his wile for a few minutes. The meeting was almost a silent one, words would come after a time; just now their hearts overâ€" flowed with a solemn thankfulness, the roots of which struck deeper than speech could fathom. Their is a quaint plant which grows in pea bogs. It has large flowers, with an odd umbrellaâ€"like shield in the cenâ€" ter. The leaves are generally about balf full of rain water, in which many insects are drowned. Some naturalists say that the flower lives on the drownâ€" He ceased speaking as quietly and impassively as be had begun ; he might have been reading something from & newspaper â€" referring to some _ oUlher man, so little apparent emotion did he display ; yet his bearers felt in stinctively tnat he was speaking the truth. He turned to obey, and as he passed Gerald the eyes of the two men met. Geraid‘s band went out and gripped that of the mouuntebank. "Oh Picot!" was all his lips could utter. The mounâ€" tebank stroked the bac kof Gerald‘s hand caressingly for a moment while a strangely soit smile flitted across bhis baggara features. "Ab, monsieur, you and la beile madame will be bappy again," was all he said. Next moment he bhad passed out of sight. Gerald was now repiaced in the dock; and one oi the magistrates, addressâ€" ing bium, said that aithough, on the face of it tuere seemed little reason to doubt the singular narrative . to which they had just listened, it would bave to be contirmed by ample inquiry "What you bave just told us," said the magistrate, "will be taken down in writing; it will afterwards be read over to you, in order that you may make any additions or corrections that you may deem necessary ; and you will then be asked to affix your name to the document. You will have no obâ€" jection to do so, I presume?" To write my name on the paper, is that what monsieur means?t" "That is what 1 mean." "Certainement, _ monsieur, 1 _ will write my name. Why not?" ‘"‘Then for the present you are Te manded." Picot looked round with a puzzled air; but one of the constables touched him on the shoulder and _ whispered, "Come this way." LIVEs ON INSECTS. (To be continued.) A LONG FLASH _ _On my faftm was also a lot covering several acres which had once _ been cleared up, but had been allowed to heaps, which, too, were burned when thorougbly dry. Some stumps still remain on the piece, but most of them may be easily removed with a team. Now that field affords an abundance of rich pasturage. _ e l â€"no small task I_ assure lyou; but cutti.ng it at this season of the year seemed to practically put an end to it. The next year I had far less work to do with the bush sc.glhe. When the brush comes fairly dry, I set fire to the bheaps. What a change a few }Joulxrs made in the appearance of that ot Following this up I cut the logs into convenient lengths for drawing with the team, and skidded them _ into ed. And the mowing of she stubble prevents the weeds from going to seed and stocking the ground for the fuâ€" ture. Our land would grow a solid crop of ragweed, etc., if left alone. Now, some years you would hardly find any ragweeds in the wheat stubble when we mow. Again, weeds cannot grow withâ€" out feeding on plant food in the soil. After your land has produced a wheat crop, there is usually little enough left for the clover or Timothy. If the weeds get hbalf, or more, the clover is robbed of food it mneeds. _ Will you let it be robbed when you can stop the loss for 20 cents an acre, counting your time at $3 a day?t 1 can easily mow fifteen acres in a day. ‘This food which the weeds eat, that the clover should have, would be worth many dollars to you ultimately. _ What business manageâ€" ment not to invest 20 cents an acre to get back several dollars ! _ But this is not the half of what you may gain. .Some years it is dry after harâ€" vest, and gradually the clover burns out although a good stand when the wheat was cut. What is the matter? Want of watler. But you let the weeds grow How much water do they use? Well, a crop that would make a ton of weed hay to the acre would take from the soil between 300 and 400 tons of water. This is evaporated from the leaves while they are growing. Just think, 300 tons of water, £00,000 pounds per acre! Might not the clover have done better _ if it could bave bhad this? Is it businessâ€" like to let the weeds steal it and the clover die or suffer seriously when you could mow the stubbles for 20 cents an acre, and really for almost nothing by doing it some wet day? Oh, don‘t leave them to grow and do all this mischief and then rake them and draw them off the next spring. 34 a are rank growers, and if they get startâ€" ed they will just mwbout smother the clover out. Half the failures, says a writer, in seeding, comes from . negâ€" lecting the clover after it is well startâ€" MOWING WHEAT STUBBLES. Why should we mow the wheat stubblest We can keep the weeds down and give the clover a good chancte to grow. Why let weeds rob and strangle and emother a clover crop any more than a corn or potate crop? You can cut them off with a sixâ€"foot mower for 20 cents an acre, counting time of man and team. Is it not practical, if weeds can be kept down at that price? Weeds per acre? LC HURV PPCOUD! Those weeds drawn off are a loss of fertility to the field. If mmowed as soon as they start well above the clover, the plant food is left right there, seattered on the land, and it has a double value. Every wheat stubble that you cut off, and every clipping of weed or clover that falls on the surfaceacts as a mulch. This belps the young clover, enriches the soil by shading it, and checks evaâ€" poration. This ve?etable matter scatâ€" tered over the surface, all around beâ€" tween the plantsâ€"this is where it will get as they push their way up through it,â€"will help wonderfully about carryâ€" ing the young clover through & dry time. And all this comes in to pay that 20 cents over and over again. But 1 am not done yet. The clipping of top of clover has a tendency to thicken it, and it Prevent,a its seeding, which injures it for next year. iIt increases root and top growth. And then you have clean hay the next year. There is no growth of weeds that must be raked up and drawn off in the spring, or else be put up in the bay. Your field@ is all clean in the spring. ‘The clippings decay so they wi‘ll not rake up, if the mowing is done on time, while the weeds are g'oung and tender. _ Now, friends, I beâ€" leve all this to be true in theoriv; and from many years of practice. We began the practice because it seemed to promâ€" ise good results, and we bave not been disappointed. Think over these things. Is there not a good deal to be gained from 20 cents worth of work 'fï¬;vv?o brush until some of the ings were good sized trees. For My first work was to cut the brush eIf, THE FARM. LATE SUMMER WORK ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Agentâ€"William! _ Never mind the oi:ag. Kick the gentleman out. paist two seasons it has been my‘ late summer work to cut these small trees. The trunks and larger limbs make Real Estate Agent, out west.â€"Goodâ€" morning, sir! â€" What can I do for you? William! Bring the gentleâ€" man a cigar. Do you want to buy A new Japanese mail and passenger steamerâ€"the Taiâ€"Hokuâ€"built at Midâ€" dlesborough, England, bas just passed successfuily her official trial. She has a length of 843 feet, beam 43 feet, depth molded, 28 feet ; her upper decks are teak, ber main deck steel, with water ballast in a cellular double bottom. She has a speed of 15 knots, and the owners will receive a subsidy from the Japanese Government. into fine clover and other sweet (There are few farms upon _ which there are not some such fields as I have been desoribing. A few weeks‘ work will put them into condition to yield very good results. Some say the assessor takes no account of land grown up to unprofitable brush. On his roll an acre is «n acre, and I never knew the taxâ€"gatherer to show any mercy when the time of year comes round for collecting dues to the town, county and state. We must defend ourselves by puiting to the best posâ€" sible use every foot of our land. ‘The margin between success and failure just now is very dimly defined at best, and we cannot afford to run any chances by poor farming. Make every acre count. The hog may be kept growing _ and thrifty through August as well as May, provided the May conditions are furâ€" nished, and this is possible on most farms. One of the most important of these is pasture. It is possible to grow hogs successfully by soiling, 8says & writer in National Stockman, but it reâ€" quires more attention and work than most farmers are willing to bestow. A grass run affords the growing pig that exercise so necessary for his proper deâ€" velopment, and the succulent grasses are rich in the muscle and boneâ€"{forming ‘mater'm.l. wrass and clover are loosâ€" ening to the system, and are just suitâ€" ed to his wants in dry, hot weather. It matters not how well cared for in other respects, the pig will never be thrifty in summer unless be has plenty of pure fresh water. This important point is, perhaps, more often neglected than any other. Slop will not answer the purpose of drinking water entirely, though it is, of course, a partial substitute. The man who has never had the job of carrying water in a pail to a bunch of hogs has no idea of the amount they will drink on a dry, hot day. ‘The man who will pen up bhogs, or any other animal, in a lot or field quiet destitute of shade ought to receive the attention of the humane society. Such protection from the sun as wire fence affords is hardly sufficient Shade trees here and there will do fairâ€" ly well, but nothing is equal to a wood lot. If the ground is low and damp, and is covered by a dense undergrowth through which the sun never penetrates so much the better, but shade of some kind hogs must bave in order to thrive and grow. Some good hog growers beâ€" lieve that hog baths are unnecessary. Others are just as sure that a wallow of mud is better than none. I know from long experience that the bhog will do tolerably well without any bath except rain, provided he has damp earth and dense shade. He will do still better if he can bhave a bath of clean water at will. â€" But rather than allow â€" him access to a foul wallow of thick mud * No, doctor, those are so Mirandy‘ll have an easy time getting ber teeth," was the response. ‘" Those are rattleâ€" snake bones. The critter was plowed up last spring when the men folks broke up a new piece of land. 1 jest took and biled him a couple 0‘ days and strung his bones on a string to hbitch on to Mirandy‘s uneck when it was time ; she wa‘n‘t but six weeks oid then. 1 misâ€" trust they might be good for rheumaâ€" tics, too, but ‘taint best to run no resks. 1 s‘pose you know the best thing for rheumatics?" f "1 reckoned everybody knew," said the woman, with momentary animation. " Why you jest take four pieces of eelâ€" skin, about three fingers wide, and bind ‘em on your ankiles and wrists. It drives the worst kind 0‘ rheumatics off, they ‘‘Doctor," _ said this _ believer in charms, with a dubious glance at the tumbler of medicine prepared for her husband,. " be you sure that aint any ways pisonous! ‘Cause I aint tried binding raw tomatoes on hiin yet, and there‘d be some by the first 0‘ next week |" On his second visit the doctor noticâ€" ed that one of the children had around ber neck a string from which dangled some small bones. '*"â€"Fe.rhaï¬.s 1 don‘t know your remeâ€" dy said the shrewd doctor. § $ ‘" What are those intended to cure, rheumatism?" he asked the mother, with a smile. A young doctor was called to attend the father of a large family, a stalwart backwoodsman, who was in the grip of a malarial fever, on which his wife, with all her supposed skill, had been unable to make any impression. Charms Are Still in Use in some Beakâ€" wood‘s settlements. Doctors in the "backwoods" districts often find that their patients will reâ€" fuse all medicine, as long as they fancy that there is any possibility of effectâ€" ing a cure without its aid. Their beâ€" lief in "charms" is difficult to unsetâ€" tle or combat. L would prefer that he never see water except to drink. In these times we must look carefuuly to these little details if we grow hogs at a reasonâ€" able profit. « ood wood. The smaller branches J iled and burned clean. It is wonderâ€" ul bow quickly such land will come NEW JAPANESE STEAMERS BUYING AND SELLING. â€"No, HOGS IN SUMMER HER REMEDIES. The village authorities take particuâ€" lar delight in passing sentences of flogâ€" ging on the heretics. 1 shall never forâ€" get the most distressing sight which presented itself to me in the person of a moujik of _ the Village Komissaâ€" rovka in the L&)Ker Dmieper district, by name Potap i â€" He looked emaciâ€" ated to the extreme, tortured indeed almost to death. His legs were wrapped up in rags, but the wounds on them could be easily seen 'putrifyinf with matter. This man has been flogged numerous times, whether by formal sentences of the Orthodox Commune or simply by consent of some of the vilâ€" lagers. Hg'n tormentors themselves wonder how he can survive all the conâ€" Lumber, Shingles and Lath always tinued torture. On one occasion Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared The Stundists are the Russian evanâ€" gelican nonconformists, and they were persecuted during the last as well as the present reign by the Government And this notwithstanding the official documents which have passed between the central Government and the auâ€" thorities of southern Russian districts show that even the Government agents have paid a high tribute to the moral character of the Strndists and preâ€" sented their movements in a most (aâ€" vourable light. Situndism first made its appearance in the period between 1860 and 1870 and, says the Angloâ€"Russian, met with a bhearty welcome from eduâ€" cated society and the progressive press. Later developments, hbowever, reveal the inhuman cruelties which have been perpetrated upon these unfortunate Protestants by their fanatical Orthoâ€" dox brethren with the conmvance of the authorities. _ The Novoe Zlovo reâ€" cently printed a letter from a Russian lady who thws describes a scen= she witnessed : Sash and Door Factory. _ so FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stook of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. Russian Nonâ€"conformists Flogged and Torâ€" tured for the Good of Their Souls, The Abgloâ€"Russian, printed in Lonâ€" don becaume it could not be printed don because it could not be printed in Ruissia, is publishing a series of arâ€" ticles, based upon official documents, which clearly enough explain why the Etumdists, or Russian Protestant disâ€" senters from the Greek church, prefer death and selfâ€"immolation to life under existing circumstances. They also illusâ€" trate the invincible opposition of the Russian Government and church to religiouk liberty in any form. PERSECUTION OF THE STUNDIST. 8 GCUILTY OR NOT GUILTY i In Stock. MX G. &J. McKECHNIRE, CHNHÂ¥UIACOC towns 28 have over 100,000 inhabi:urut:. 48 more over 59.000, and 556 more over 10,000. The hxï¬ut are Pombay, 821,â€" 764 ; Gllclltl%' 1,144; Madras, 452,518: Hyder&btd. 15,089 ; Lucknow, 272 0°8; Benares, 219,467 ; Delhi, 1892,579. Manâ€" dalay, 188,815 ; Cawnpore, if8,712 ; Punâ€" end of which they put into his nosâ€" trils, igniting the other end. This reamâ€" edy proved eifective. The blazing fiame wugl{lt the moustache and nostrils o the virtim, and he began to move and f-ro.m to the great amusement of the rbarians around him. " PRETTY FAST. It was in a negligence case recent» ly, and a good humored Irishman was a wiltness. The judge, lawyers, and everybody else were trying their best to erxtract from the lrishman something about the speed of a train. Was it going fast? asked the Judge. Aw, yis, it were, answered ibe witâ€" India has 2085 towns with an apfrteâ€" gate population of 27,251,176, about one tenth of the total population, Of theme watched his returnfor a secret meetâ€" ing of his brethren, and decided to ar= range a little entertainment. 1t wam an awful frost, and first of all they tr~ ; off his boots and led him iure L. d over the irozen mole hills, fore= it im to count how many such holes t. : were over the vast field. Thia po.)yekha _ enjoyment, lasted whoilly, two hours. The legs of the victim fin= ally got quite numbed, and be feli tw the ground unable to move any furâ€" ther. The villagers then dragged bim a long distance and threw hium in & hole, watching whether ke would move and get out by himself, but he did not move, and lay in an unconscious copâ€" dition. _ The miserable creature was then taken out from the hollow, and bleeding from several wounds he was dragged into a coltage, there the fa~ vourite "cigarette" was applied io him. This consisted of a big sheet of paper rolled up like a cigarette, one Ob, purty fasht, Yer Honor. Weil, bhow fast¢ . Aw, purty fasht. Was it as fast as a man «can run* Aw, yis said the trishman, glad that the basis for an analogy was supplied. As fasht as two men Kin ruun. How lore, 186,366; Rangoon, 183.374 re, 176,854 ; Alhhna%od, 175,246. 186,366 : Ra; CTTIESs e OF INDIA w5 Interesting was drow 'f‘.“ n# vB qâ€d L Montreal. Bteanus real and within a It is ex* from tixe Kiondyka{ ter. The D authorlz watuuaan goilit in. Lhere 100 W elland Larm hl’ ther arr BVA sartme; Â¥ man wda is . show a had BUOP es . Manit« c:loo of rrel, 1 few wee the ornoy are look: time las Mentr Laurier a Laur be foll the Boa Mr. K Premi Bou t bhws Beven eyclione sLOPG m Orman : Reguls eames 1+« su bie e T p rlace veopmé Mr. J« Que e Thiey »Putagg 11 mto the States C ed with vioe _ a cane, l Riley It wa Neb.. o jubile« who des Kingdor wea tor In the day eve of eight: by a vot to twelv Right ment ol ag EaÂ¥y tur yacuns Montre. .n skpe Mrs cried Refer: Sheppa r be tween Mexico « i gu thr «4 the inge g* d line« ly i MZ! Rev. A 14 Â¥ @ n# By a m <Vise x ? to a M Odith M I h« Do e wWar # 1N dn g den TA wl Om # 1. OA