was it in comparisomn with the grim prospect that stared his hated cousin so closely in the face! When ho thought of this it was as the one sweet drop in the bitter cup which Fate had Ke:?dl_with such unrelenting fingers is 1i ghilo E?t h'uoc:ing o‘\’rerllh;o and other maiters, just as dayli was deepening into dusk, a n:sen unâ€" locked the door of his cell. "You‘re wanted in the waitingâ€"room," said the man. "Your uncle, Colonel Crofton, George Crojton sat alone in his cell devormmg his heart in a bitterness too deep for words. _ All was over; all the bright prospects of his youth and early manboe«xi bhad ended in this:; his home for years to come would be a felon‘s cell, his only companions the lowest of the low, the vilest of the vile. "Facilis est descensus Avernc," he muttered with a sneer. "Yes, in my case the descent has been swift and easy emough in all conscience." _ One gleam of lurid joy, and one only, illumâ€" med the tblack cavernous depths in which his thoughts, like fallen spirits, winged their way aimlessly to and fro, fpding no spot whereon to rest. Gerâ€" ald Brooke, the mam he hated with an intensity of hatred bred only in natures such as his, wus a prisoner even as he was and it was his, Crofton‘s, hand that had brought hin» there! He had but spoken the truth when be said that the hour of his revenge would come at last. It was here now, although it :d come after a fashion altogether different from what he had expected. Thanks to his folly, his own outlook was a dreary one enough; but what neduseiit dï¬ B stt s > Ts see only a stranger, one whom I had never seen Lefore. _ But ever in that case I should bhave done as I did toâ€" day, and have confessed that it was by my hand and mine alone that Von Rosenberg met his deatn. Conceive, then, my astonishment when in the acâ€" gused 1 recognised M. Brouke, whom 1 had known in London under the name of "M. Stewart!" I knew that when in London be was in troubleâ€"in hidâ€" imgâ€"but mnever did I dream of the crume that was laid to his charge. Had I but known it, you and bhe would long ago bhave been made happy by the conâ€" fession of him who now signs his name for the last time, C _Jules Picot. Even before I had spoken a word, 1 knew why my footsteps had been diâ€" rected to this place, and that my wanâ€" derings were at an end. This afterâ€" noon, after all was over, I lay down on my pallet and fell asleep, and while I alumbered, Henri came to me ; but this time his face was no longer averted ; his eyes gazed into mine, and be smiled as he used to smile as me out of his mother‘s arms. _ Ab, how shining and beautiful he looked ! _ Then a soft cool hind was laid on my brow, that bad burned and burned for months, and all the pain went, and 1 knew nothing more tiull 1 awoke. A word more and I have done. Maâ€" dame, pm' believe me when I say that never could a man be more surprised and astonished than I, Jules Picot, was toâ€"day when I found that it was ‘your good husband who was accused of the death of the Baron von Rosenberg. When I made my way into the court after hearing that some one had been arrested for the murder, I thought to With what a host of conflicting emoâ€" tioms this document was read by her to whom it was raddressed may be more readily imagined than described. After he was gone and I was alone in the world, I, too, began to have dreams such as I had never had before. Every night Henri came and stood by my bed, but it was always with an averted face ; never would he turn and look at me. I used to try to ery out, to seize his hand ; but I was dumb and motionless as a corpse. _ Then, after 1 minute or two, he would slowly vanâ€" wh, with bowed bead and bhands pressed to his face, as though he were weeping silently. Night after night it was ever the same. _ Then a great restlessness took possession of me. 1 seemed to be urged onward from place to place hy' some invisible power and without any . will of my own. When I rose in the morning I knew not where I should wleep at night ; onward, ever onward, 1 was compelled to go. Last night I reached this place, and this morning I rose thinking to resume my wanderâ€" ings ; but a conversation I chanced to overhear led ime to seek the court of justice. _ You, madame, know what took place there. | but little pain ; life faded out of ‘him like a lamp that slowly expires for want of oil. _ As I said before, he often talked about his belle madame. _ He could not remember his mother, and it was your face that shone on him in his dreaims, as it were the face of an angel. in his thoughts when be was dying. I also address you for another reason, which I will explain presently. It was in the first week of the new year that Henri met with the accident which proved fatal to him. He lingered for two weeks, and then died. Hle'had enough to hold the phial. Picot had evidently prepared himself beforehand tor a contingency the like of that which had at length befallen him. The letâ€" ter written a few hours before his death was in French, and _ was adâ€" dressed to "Madame Brouke." The following is a translation of it : is tired of me ; this night we part comâ€" pany for ever. I take the liberty of addressing you because of your kindâ€" ness to my little Henri, whom le bon Dien has seenm fit to take from me for my sins, and because you were so much Madameâ€"When these lines reach you, the hand that writes them, will be cold im death. I am tired of life, and life ceal about him even so insignilicant an article as the tiny phial of poison so as to evade detection. _ One of the wardens, however, of a more inquiring ‘urn of mind than his fellows succeedâ€" «l a day or two later, in solving the nystery. â€" The mountebank wore very highâ€"besled shoes, as many of his counâ€" trymen make a practice of doing. The heel of one of his shoes had been so made that it could be unscrewed at will, while inside it was a cavity just large Jules Picot had been carefully searchâ€" ed before being locked up in his cell, and it was an wtter puzzle to the jail officials how he had contrived to con= A DEAD RECKONING. ho in o e o hlren eguii _inank you very much; I shall be ~lad to do so," said Etephanie quietly. ‘he had given no name at the inn, and the landlady h>4 not the slightest susâ€" q 00 C222 AATE â€" HOEutest to it and asked to be accommodated with supper and a bed. She had asâ€" certained from a constable in the street that the earliest hour at which visitors were admitted to the jail was ten o‘clock. Next morning, which was that of Saturday, Stephanie rose betimes. While sge was eating her breakfast the landlady bustled in, carrying an open newspaper. ‘"Here‘s the weekly K; per, ma‘am," she said. "The boy just brought it; and as it contains a ‘ong account of the doings at the jusâ€" ticeâ€"room yuterd&i', about which you may have heard, thought that perâ€" ~aps gon would like to read it over . vour breakfast " _ _The warder, who had conducted Crofâ€" ton from the cell, was present at the interview, ostensibly for the purpose of seeing that none of the Jall reguâ€" lations were infringed either by the prisoner or his visitor; but a sovereign having been pressed into â€" his unreâ€" luctant palm at the moment he usherâ€" ed the latter into the waiting room, he now discreetly turned his back on the pair and stared persistently out of the window. |_ A little further conversation passed between uncle and nephew, the chief art of it falling to the lot of the former, then the colonel _ looked at ‘his watch and rose to take his leave. t The warder turned at the same inâ€" slant. i "As I remarked before, my â€" dear George," said the uncle, as he clasned At as early an hour as possible on the morning following his capture, Crofton had obtained permission to send a telegram to his wife, and beâ€" fore noon, Stephanie was _ speeding northward by the express in response to his summons. When she reached Cyummerbays, it was too late for her to visit ber husband that night; so, carâ€" rying ber little handbag, she walked from the station to the inn nearest to it and asked to be accommodated with supper and a bed. She had asâ€" certained from a constable in _ the street that the earliest hour at which visitors] w:are admitted to the jail was tan n‘clas Om en U APSOUU AECC | say that my purse is at your service; | for, shocked as 1 am to find youw in fthia place, 1 cannot forget that you &re my brother‘s son. I leave for Lonâ€" | don by the first train, and immediately | on my arrival I will take the advice | of my own lawyers in the matter, lwhich will, 1 think, be the best thing ; that can be done under the painful cirâ€" | cumstances of the case." | _ _"A suppose that‘s about the only ‘thing that can be done," answered Crofton, who was still utterly at a loss to divine the motive of the other‘s viSit. Crofton, unheard by any one, had contrived to file through the middle bar of his cell window â€" and then to squeeze himself through the aperture thus, made, after which there _ was nething but a high wall between himâ€" seif~ and liberty. Beyond this _ wall were some market gardens, the jail being situated in the outskirts of the town, and then the open fields. Outâ€" side the wall, a coil of rope with a strong steel hook at each end _ was found; and the footsteps of itwo if not of three men were plainly traceable for some disiance in the soft mould of the garden. As to how Crofton had _ beâ€" come possessed of the file, and by whose connivance and help he had been able to climb the wall and descend safely on the other side, there was no eviâ€" dence forthcoming. The only fact the jail officials could affirm with certainâ€" ty was that their prisoner was noâ€" where to be found. w T aiheiOibtplalss, Aficatscica t ds 2 1 c k 1 1 ‘cal ton‘s breath away. + "The first question, my dear boy," resumed the sham colonel, so as to give the other time to recover himself, "of course is whether anything can be done for you, and if so, what. L need not George Crofton had undergone many surprises in his time, but never one that left him more dumbfounded than this, for in his soiâ€"disint uncle hbhis quick eye recognized at a glance no less a personage than Lardy Bill. 1i at the moment his eyes feil on bim behadbeemimtheleastdmbtosfthe fact, that would have been dispelled by the expressive wink with which hbis friend favored him an instant later. The nlmn'shauducifty fairly took Crofâ€" J nafe Fescuse d s lc t ut vivtsnalsnm P Subrinct dlccss s acad + ‘"My dear nephewâ€"my dear George ! he exclaimed with much effusion as be advanced a step or two and held out his hand. ‘"‘This is indeed a dreadful g‘rulwament in which fto find you. ‘hat, oh, what can you have been about that I should have to seek you in a place like this! â€" Your poor aunt will be heartâ€"broken when she hears of it, I must break the terrible news as gently as possible ; but really, really, in her delicate state of health 1 dread the effect such a disclosure may have upon her." His voice trembied with emotion, he brusmhed away a tear, or seemed to do so. ered into a sparsely furn:sped whileâ€" washed room, where a middleâ€"aged, wellâ€"built man of military carmage, who had been perusing through his eyeâ€" flau the printed rules and regulations ramed over the manieiâ€"piece, turned to greet him. He haucloseâ€"cut grizzled hair and a thick drooping grizzle4 moustache. _ He wore a lightly butâ€" toned frockcoat, gray trousers . and straps, and millitary boots ‘highly polished. _ He carried his bhat and & tasselled malacca in his hand, and one corner of a bandana handkerchiel proâ€" truded from his pocket behind. Crofton followeda the man without & word; and after being conuucied through a couple of corrizors, was ushâ€" Crofton stared at tha man in stupeâ€" faction. _ To the best of his belief he had no such relative in the world as the one just named. _‘"Ah, you didn‘t ¢xâ€" pect to see him, I daresay," continued the warder. "A nice afiable gent as ever I see; but I wouldn‘t keep bhim waiting if I was you." Lk / t has called to see you. It‘s past the hour for visitors ; but as he‘s brought a magistrate‘s order, and as he says he‘s obliged to go back to London toâ€" night, the governor has agreed to reâ€" lax the rules for once." , In the Middle Ages the basement door was not besieged at all hours of the day by importunate beggars, for it seems to have been a pleasure _ inâ€" stead of a panalty of the rich to feed the hungry, says a recent writer. Pilâ€" grims,and travellers were always sure of a good meal wherever they might find themselves, and in the case of the two Maids of Biddeanden, Eliza and Mary Chulkhurst, even death did not stay the tide of hospitality and charâ€" ity. The sisters, who were twins, livâ€" ed in the early part of the twelfth cenâ€" tury in that quaintly quiet French village. One of them died twentyâ€"four hours after the other, and they left a piece of land to provide funds for doles of bread and cheese at Easter. The vicar and church wardens underâ€" take the duty, and a.nnuall{ distribute gmgwerbread cakes to visitors, _ and read and cheese to residents. Every dole is stamped with a rude likeâ€" ness of the two maids, their names and the dates of their birth and death, _ | ‘"John Myles bas brought wordâ€"and he ought to know, if anybody doesâ€" that one of the prisonersâ€"Crifton or Crofton by nameâ€"managed to break out of his cell in the night, and has got clear away. But that‘s not all thy any means. _ The foreignerâ€"himâ€" as accused himself in open court of the murderâ€"was found dead this morning, poisoned by his own hand. _Ths news will be all over England before nightâ€" fall.â€"Gracious me, ma‘am, whatever is the matter! â€" Mary, Elizaâ€"quick, quick 1‘ >. _ _ a" 505. ¢ At this junmcture in burst the landâ€" lady with an air of much importance. "As you have read the paper, I thought thre maybe you would like to hear the news that one of the warders just off duty has brought us from the .jail. Surh times as we live in, to be sure!" |_ For & little while all thought of ‘ her busband had vanished from _ her mind. ‘This second blow had smitten her so much more sharply than the {irst that the pain caused by the forâ€" mer seemed deadened thereby. _ But now that her waking trance was brokâ€" en, the double nature of her calamity forced itself upon her mind. " My father and my busband shut up in one prison!" she said to herself; and it was all she could do to refrain from bursting into laughter. For _ are ! there not some kinds of laughter the | sources of which lie deeper than the deepest fountain of tears?t _ surh times as we live in, to be sure !" _ ‘‘Newsâ€"what news?" asked Stephanie faseliy. . (HA_*â€" C : | _ Ssuddenly she started to her feet and | pressed both hands to her _ forehead. "But whyâ€"why should my father have gone to Von Rosenberg to demand from him tidings of me, when I wrote to him from London telling him all that had happened to me and where I was? Can it be possible that my letâ€" ter never reached him? Had he reâ€" ceived it there would have been _ no need for him to seek Von Rosenberg. Even after so long a time L could alâ€" most repeat my letter word for word. In it 1 told my father how I had left home with Von losenberg, but only after be hbhad given me _ his solemn promise to make me his wife the moâ€" ment we set foot in England. 1 told bow, within an hour after our arrival in London, L had claimed the fulfilâ€" ment of his promise, and how he had laughed me to scorn, thinking that he had now got me completely in his power. 1 told how 1 flung all _ Von: Rosenberg‘s presents at his feet and. left him there and then, and going out into the rainy streets of the great city, fled as for my life. L told how I hid for weeks in a garret, living on little more than bread and milk; and / how at last, when my money was all gone, L found my way to the nearâ€" est cirque, and there obtained _ an engagement. All this L told _ my father in my letter, and then 1 prayâ€" ed him to forgive me, and told him | how L longed to get back to him and ; my mother. _ Weeks and months 1 waited with an aching heart for the ; answer which never came. _ Then 1 said to myself: ‘"My father will not.l forgive me. I shall never see him or | my mother again." _ But the letter | never reached him. Had it done so he would not be where he is toâ€"day." | %‘earless sobs shook her from head ta j oot. | ‘The moment she was left alone Steâ€" phanie opened the paper with eager lingers. Her quick eyes were not long in iinding tne particular news of which they were in search. She read _ the story of the attempted robbery, as deltailed in the evidence, with everâ€" growing wonderâ€"a wonder that was intensitied twentyâ€"fold when she read hbow Gerald Brooke had been arrested at the same time as her bhusband, and by what strange chance the two couâ€" sins had once more been brought face to face. But wihen, a few lines lowâ€" er down, ner eyes caught sight of anâ€" other weliâ€"known name, ali the colâ€" or ebbed from her face, leaving it as white as the face of a dead woman. She read to the end, to the last word of ricot‘s strange confess.on before the magistrates, and then the paper dropâ€" ped from her hands. t How long she sat thus she _ never knew,; but she was roused by the enâ€" trance of the landlady, who had come to reclaim the newspaper, there beâ€" ing three or four people in the tapâ€" room who were anxious to obtain a glimpse of it. Fortunately, the good woman was somewhat _ shortâ€"sighted, and perceived nothing out of the orâ€" dinary in ber guest‘s demeanor. But ber entrance broke the spell and servâ€" ed to recall Stephanie to the realities of her position. _ _ Mess * "My father the murderer of Von Rosenberg, and iâ€"LI the cause of it!" she murmured in bhorror stricken acâ€" cents. For a little while she sat like a woman stunned, stupefied, her eyes staring into vacancy, ber mind _ a whirling chaos, in which thoughts and fancies the most bizarre and inconâ€" gruous came and went, mixing _ and mingling with each other in a sort of mad Brocken dance, all the eleâ€" menis of which were lurid, vague, and elusive. | fioion that her guest had any reason for being more interested than any stranger might ‘be supposed to be in the news contained in the paper. Nor, in fact, had Stephanie any knowledge of what had happened. Her _ husâ€" band‘s telegram hbhad been of the briefâ€" est,; it hbad merely said: "IL am in trouble. Come at once. Bring money. Inquire for me at the d’ail." sBut from what she knew already, she guessed, and rightly, that the enterprise on which Croiton was bent when he left home had failed, and that by some mipcthnnce he himself had come to grief. MAIDS OF THE MIDDLE AGES _ "C â€"â€"wa we fancy we sould be i When we come to act, we canâ€" r a provoking word.â€"Hannab To Bs Continued. yer ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO If a dairyman wants to treat himâ€" self to a genuine surprise, let him keep his herd of milkâ€"giving cows in the stable and give them water in such a way that the weéight drunk by each cow can be ascertained, and be on hand sothat each cow may have all sh> will desire, and when she wants _ _A small quantity of Douglass mixâ€" ture, which can be (tnade by dissolving eight ounces of copperas in a gallon of water and adding oneâ€"half ounce bf sulphuric acid, put in the drinking waâ€" ter, will prevent dysentery and destroy cholera and other disease germs which are liable to attack poultry at this time. One tablespoonful of this mixâ€" ture to the half gallon of water is about the proper proportionâ€"a little more or less according to the condiâ€" tion of the flock won‘t hurt. It should be used about once a week .and dysenâ€" tery, diarrhea and cholera will be successfully banished. Next in point of importance is that the fowls have plenty of fresh, rlean water.© During the season, drinking vessels no _ matter of what deâ€" scription they may be should be cleaned at least once a day, and fresh water, given morning, noon and night. ing the heut of the (lay, as the habâ€" it increases the supply of vermin, both on the fowls and ‘n the houses, and consequently makes this pest fharder to cope with. T6 e First of all may be mentioned the fact that poultry requires plenty of shade, and the shade very low, jeafly trees, or bushes, is the best. Chickens are very sensitive to wind, yyhether it be hot or cold and prefer the shade of bushes because they shelter them from both the sun and che wind. lIn the abâ€" sence of trees or bushes, @ shade must be provided for the flock by other means, and an open shed or leanâ€"to on the northâ€"side of the henâ€"house or barn is the next best thing. Chickens ought to be prevented from congreâ€" gating in the henâ€"house or stable durâ€" A few simple rules for the care of poultry during the summer : months can be given, and if intelligently folâ€" lowed, will produce satisfactory results, not only in maintaining Yhe health of the flock, but in their productive abilâ€" ity. s * This is the season of the year when poultry requires the closest attention. Especially is this the case with the young broods. At no other time of the year, with possibly the exception of the severest winter weather, does the flock need such constant care. Enâ€" ervated by extreme summer lheat, it is more easily attached by the various diseases to which both the young and the old are subject. Coupled with this is the fact that it is at this particular season the prey for all the vermin that afflict, and in many instances destroy poultry kind. + soil. We have cloud water, flood waâ€" ter, ground water, soil water, hygroâ€" scopic water, ooze water and spring water. The cloud water is the preciâ€" pitation from. the clouds or rain waAâ€" ter and when it first strikes the ground it is surface water. When it begins to flow it becomes flood waâ€" ter and itmay be the rapid little current which gullies the hillside or the torrent which plows a deep gulch in the steepgraded slough orsweeps over the flood plain of the ‘river. Ground water is the water that stands beuneath the surface. It is the water |0f saturation.. Its surface in . the | water table and its height or depth in the soil is denoted by the line at which the water stands in a well or post hole. Soil water is suspended water, oOr Ww&â€" ter of absorptiog or capillarity. It is that quantity ofawa.ter which the soil bolds without dripping and which it will not yield except through evaporaâ€" tion. Hygroscopic water is the water of constitution or that quantity which cremains in airâ€"dried soil. Sloughs may be deep or shallow, wide or narâ€" row, steep or flat. Their surface may be depressed at different points into‘ little basins called ponds. _ The drainâ€" age engineer, must, therefore proceed with the drainage of a slough acâ€" cording to its own characteristics and without regard to the way Thomas Smith or Ole Oleson drained â€" his. There is the one general law that the ditch must strike at the origin of the water if it be looze water or spring water or at the bottom of it be ground water. There is another law very well established for the light, porous soil of the prairies which is that a fourâ€"foot ditch will drain the land for a distance of forty feet on either side of it; so that iditches may run eighty feet apart whether they be subâ€"mains or laterals. DRAINING A SLOUGH. Farmers stand opposed in reference to the method of draining a slough, and many of them make serious blunâ€" ders, blundering on both sides of the issue. One class says to lay the drains ‘u p the center, another class says to lay theim along the sides. Either may be right; both may be wrong. W hile there are imany general ruies that apply in farm draimmage, says Wisconâ€" son Farmer, still tuere are many exâ€" ceptions that govern in special cases. The methou of drainage uepends laigeâ€" ly upon the topography of the gurâ€" face and geoiogy of the subsurface. A slough is a depression in the, surface lay them along the sides. Either may or ground water flows during heavy rains or periods of wet weauher. Heuce‘ the soil of a siough may be wet irom‘ surface water alone or it may be wet. by reason of several other states of: the water as it exists in the soil and‘ no man can drain successfully unlessi he thoroughly understands the seyâ€" eral states of water. Of course, wA ter is water wherever it is found, but it varies in the chemical properties very materially, and it has received several different terms in the parâ€" lance of drainage, accordingly as it finds lodgment on the surface or in the SsUMMER CARE OF POULTRY THE COW AND HER DRINK. PRACTICAL FARMING. ri it, writes John Gould in Country Genâ€" i | tleman. We have been through a litâ€" s | tle experience of this kind, and the quantity drunk by each cow _ was | found out. It is an experiment one i | wili not care to follow up more than |a week, before the faucet at the big .‘tunk will be turned, and the cows â€drink out of the basins again. The / trial was made with six cows, @nd it 'wa.s found that the average quantity |" consumed daily varied with individual | cows from 70 to 140 pounds. One cew drank this last quantity daily right _along and some the smailer quantity, ‘with an average of Y pounds each. | Amother thing we found was that some ! of the cows would drink very ften, |i.e., their buckets wouid be frequentâ€" ‘ly founa eimpty, and others drank ‘longer at intervals; and one cow wantâ€" ‘ed about an _ ber tweniyâ€"iour bours‘ | supply at one iime, an dwoulid only drink a little towards night As these cows were being leq fifty poonds each of ensilage a uay, it is seen it «nce | that succulent food did not play any | |imporuuxt part in the economy _ of of drinking water. 1t was a sofound , that the desire of a cow for water was | about an bour aiter eating, but the | evening thirst was never so great as \ in the morning. With some of the cows there was some variation in the quantity of water consumed daily, but ]wti.h others it was as steady hn quanâ€" tity as standard mcasure. . in this !there might be some variation in peâ€" sults from some other herd not so | cared for; tnese cows being continuâ€" ously stabled at the u*: of the exâ€" periment while a hberd Fhat ran outâ€" ; | doors more or less might show differâ€"| ent results. In another thing Iwas ‘convinced that a cow did better that | drank several times a day and sol convinced was I of this, that a waâ€"| tering system for the cow stables was 'pu‘t in several years ago; and my opinion of itsvalue has never changâ€" ed, except in a more thorough belief, in‘ its promoting the milk fHow; und | ter at say 52 degress day after day â€"as the water in my big stable tank indicatesâ€"is not -ul;j:cted to the exâ€" treme temperature ranges of outâ€"door drinking water, and air &ncluded, and she must do the bett=r for this auniâ€" formity with the shocks fo the cow‘s system eliminated. Pss en e n se noe pOlle ACCCCE ATUWM, THBE if our cows were to be turned out eyâ€" ery day for exercise, I should not conâ€" nect outâ€"door drinking with it, but hold to the manger water basin. In this connection there is another point 1 think of importance, and that is in stable watering there is uniformity of the temperature of the water, and the cow being habituated to jirinking waâ€" Lumber, Shingles and Lath always XIn Stoci. N_ G &J. McKECHNIE Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" Sash and Door Factory. ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stook of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. ment, FREE. “ D “ ' Are youavietim? Have you lost hops? Are you contemplating m.gtm? ; _ Has your blood been diseased? Have you any weal. ness? Our New Mothod Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others it will do for you. Consultation Free. No matter who has troated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge., Charges reasonable. Books Free â€""The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on Diseases of Men. 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Underits infiuâ€" ence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotcbes and ulcers disappear ; the nerves become strong as steol, so that nervousâ€" ness, bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and sexual systems are invigorated; ail drains ceaseâ€"no more vital waste from the system. The vyarious organs become natural and manly. You fee! yourself a man and know marriago cannot be & failure. Weinvite all the aflicted to consult us confidentially and free of charge. Don‘tletquacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. We will cure you er mo pay, SYPHILIS is the most provalent and most serious yep C BLOOD dGiscase. 1t saps the very life blood of the ‘a .\h) victim and unjless entirely eradicated from the aysâ€" tem will affect the offspring. Beware of Mercury, LEREDITARY BLOOD DISEASEZ, It only suppresses the szmmorna ~our NEW METHOD positively cures it for ever. VAINA ND asÂ¥rhine d aimeae es uy C CC A3. UE S HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED! A NERYOUS WREOK, FOR CURING THESE DISEASES Thousands of ‘oung and middle aged men aro annually ungat to a Rruuturi grave through EARLY INDISCRETIONS, EXCESSES, AND BLOOD DISESASES. ‘ you have any ¢f the following symptoms consult us before it is too late. Are you norâ€" yous and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks befors the eyes with dsrf circles vzndnr them, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashfu , dreamg and losses, sediment in urine, plm{:les on the face, eyes sunken, kollow cheeks, careworn ©xpression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired morpâ€" ings. restless nights, changeable moods, weak manhood. stunted organs and premaâ€" ture decay, bone paing, hair loose, sore throat etc. & YOU HAVE SEMINAL WEAKNESS1 /‘ R@"CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY! WEAK, NERVOUS, DISEASED MEN Greatest Discovery of the Age â€" FOR CURING THESE DIS8EASES The New Method Treatment is the SELFâ€"ABUSE, EMISSIONS, YARICOâ€" CELE, CONCEALED DRAINS, STRICTâ€" URE GLEET, SYPHILIS, STUNTED PARTS, LOST MANHOOD, IMPOTENâ€" CY, NERVOUS DEBILITY, UNNATâ€" URAL DISCHARGES, ETC. ; $1000 IN GOLB For a case we IN&@ULTED. Tenspotâ€"Why are you so angry at the dostort Mrs. Talklotâ€"When I told him I had a terrible tired feeling, he tol4 me to show him my tongue. at 1 Sheâ€"How can I ever repay ; your kindness? Heâ€"With kisses, ‘S.he-Bow much do you value Strict devotion to the truth is come mendable, but it sometimes leads to curious situations. A young man who was paying court to a young lady was thus addressed by ber mother, who was perbaps not the most agreeable person in the world : And so you want me for a motherâ€" inâ€"law ? Abhâ€"ab, it‘s nâ€"nâ€"ot exactly _ that, stammered the young man, but 1 don‘t see_ how I can marry your dauphter lwi't'l'wnt your being â€" my motherâ€"in= a i w stt CHHm 112 B6 occasion he shot from the right shoulâ€" der, and on the second, owing to t/he faili sisiht of the right eye, he shot trommiu's eft shoulder. TEETOTALLER TWICE A ViCcTor. Heâ€"I‘li take them at their 1 * lod a gay life, or indulged in the follies broken down your system,. You feol the lcally and sexually you are not the man s reap rich harvests. Will you heed the NO DISCOUXNT oX tgr ANOTHER MATTER PRIVATE. No medicine sent € N p al. Question list and cost :‘ + No. 148 SHELB., u3. DETROIYT, MICH. Xneh CANNOT CURE OF TREM . repay you tor face valâ€" them ye The Right Pu“‘. DD, E ield, is de vears of age c&d BSeotlan able aumspic« good bags. born in 1807 eshorough : ial gold tation t pI Ir The body fries, near appeared f busband‘s found on 8 low grave i house. She d¢ 1 They thr toms offi lis th LOry tend this d"n' gineer 0 and Can sla t4 geons much speciion o is progre pests the © year U wl J usopli iD awaiting t the charge unsuccess! y per cenl. < per cent. 1 the baif y payable Oc a blind han oner‘s jury ceased cam Mails for yet, de('u(xM ress N imA Viot«:::i tho*. wili & ed Police, Mr. Sha the Can that Am on the Cro says all th tained in C The Can pany has â€" THE VER The Cust new u d llton" brik found that ing brougt M Man. Interesting OGrent | All Par The byâ€" $110,000 4 ments w al Hamilt The Ca mak ing the vast g to receive Iven & ; sulih.x. 'l‘h:dlhu rang w Company school tex A numbe ness men | of the con country 1(1 Over 50( nd Thorng the Albe NWT., of 10 per The C Pai part . Ross M« crosse pla Bistant to Crow‘s Ne The ‘Opn: be conside revent . | f-»m in C poried the ere ral par Arrang starting : don. Lood . been di A nother in Montr« being the The sch been seize at Moneto It is rej Briiish + Chathar awhattoir. Bt. Tho: tric stree The fll't Manitoba Montreal There â€" revenue « last vyear In Mr.Co 14 n e are . eding ed Stat Dingley duty troubl su m me off uol 28 d« DK »ALn ol lort line w ned sSpal XQ 1@ J" y€ 1 D #41D n of t i C 6 1. Sir