W Mr. A"erroramC-1'"es/ you can: I'll help you. Pm an teTm,piiehe.d dishwasher~ .y dear. Pre washed dishes sixteen hours a day, month in and month out. Mrs. N.~G-odncss me! Wheret Mr. N,-a once went West to leak my bylaw Gi% J"dly..lvt0.-otu " an, Felt atimel " hired iriA has gains: in tb buff up! tett a great pile of dishes for At to wash. I can't possibly get through in time to go outwith. you. Mr. ry.tw,rrh-Set; rye!!! leaf: J'U help ‘r [n m. - __- an. "Hung on a welt- bking envelop! is Ngun far enough to the left to be well balanced. The lull word tet not squeezed and crammed. The address. with mum, of state and my, 18 written in mm. The atampu no evenly plavt in the upper right- hand corner, tvath astight margin left between the top of the envelope and the edges of the stamp. The flair, too. ot the well-bred enveloge is mucr. bged down in a cleanly, or erly mans r. It is often rendered modish with Wad w", and the sender'- mono-l "21m - ' - _ ’ What u high-bred. well-groomed look there is about an euwiope that I properly prepared for the mails. A little thing, of course! But one of tho little things which tells. The hand- writing! No, the handwriting doesn't “5nd for much, because each indivi- dual has its own special t.ei.siroirraphr, and it is more ttaractorsuti,, 9b.... -L-‘ on the theory that political rights ought to be reserved as closely as pos- Iiblo to the so-oalled nobles. Naturally the bureaucrats have taken their one from the Court. At the same time it must be admitted that the present Em- peror its not exclusively responsible for _ the "kindling of dislike for Prussia in South Germany, seeing that the re- , union against Literilurm began while! Bismarck was still Chanmlor. Of course, diasaffection is unlikely to im- pol South Germans to sum-mica so long as Prussia has at its disposal thei colossal standing army. and so longl u Austria. their natural ally. is bound: by treaty tn the house, of Bohenzollern. ' But now that a union of hearts has‘ and to exist in Germany. it is it'll-l “all“ to look upon the present poli-| tical system as indestructible. ANENT YOUR CORRESPONDENCE The disappearance of the enthusiasm which attended the creation of the new unpire is, no doubt, attributable to the change in the ideals and principles od the Imperial] Government. The Na.. tional Literals and the Progressists. who cont-eived the idea at n resurrec- tion of the German Empire, thorough- ly understood that a lasting unification of the German nation could only be brought about by giving ample liber- ty, social, economic. and political, to nil classes. This was pnmxised and so long as the National Liberals and Pre. [Insists retained a majority in the Reichsmg the promise was in some Inca-sure kept. The few concessions, however. which were made to Liberal) ideas during the first years of the em- ( pine are now undergoing restriction. and Kaiser William H. is governing For n little while after the union of Germany, accomplished in 1871. all named to go well. but the hunter moon did not in! long. Owing to the overbearing attitude which the Prus lien: untamed, the minds of eel-ions men in South Germany were soon occu- pied with the quantum, whether it would not he better to be free than united. At pwt. according to Prof. Reinhold. the whole of the German peo- ple south of the win new echo the words of the Suabinn member u Per- linment. Hauamunn, "Thank God, we In no Prussian." In the Hessian and Bavarian Pal-Linen even worse signs ed the time were observed, for here, on all sides. in beard the declaration: â€We mould mther be French." Common, ia) it, also. for South Germana to any that it was stupid to kick Austria out of the German Bund; Austria, who was liked by overybody, and whose absolutistl system was, at least, patriarchal and good natured. whereas the modern Prussian feudalism is unbeatable. and its representatives are personally in.I wlent. in a word, the excitement in; South Germany is asserted by Prof.) Reinhold to be A) great as to bring; about a coalition of mulcontents which I threatens to paralyze the whole me-l chauieun of the State. He predicts that V the next general election in Genmany will exhibit the almost unanimous ow ‘ [tuition at an angry people against the authority of the Government. thq war which ended at Sadowa. The but}; of the 8mm German with re- IIM to this Pruning " that time was 03pm in an word- ot a Btw.. Orian addict, who raid to the Crown Prince Frederick William. " " you had how our commander in 1866 we would have whipped than. boast/1, confound. Io doe not hesitate to any that the hmtatkyn of Prussia in South Ger- may mall: the state " things which “bud Mal: More and alter Acoordiu to an true]. dgned. "Ger- anium." in the Contemporary Rum. tho Mind at tho Pr-iana. which used to animate South Gnu-mam. has reviv- al and is â€cumin: torn‘nhble propor- tions in Banal. Wnrtunberg. and “a. The facts it asâ€. “a attent- d by sane mat], published letters a! Mr. Reinhold. Protege: of Political Mom, It the University of Berlin, win as tn tppointae of the Prus- sian Government, must he donned a. mluctartt witness. We are not surpris- od that the realm! of tha Profesor's “nations would have produced al, -ation throughout the empire, fori LEARNED A TRADE ttg own Trial. t.ei.siroirraphy, more characteristic, that she But tho. writing _on a well.. NO TES AND COAIMEN TS mum, of state and run. The stamp. in the upper right- h a slight margin op of the envelope 'f, stamp. T.he flair, "It's as ninth as when; in wo " said Davidson. an? buyout! mum "But it's Mn Mania. le try It," Nell went back to r husband. Davidson buttoned up ttia coat with; out giving himaeilf time ttl k, and hurried off to the dd! ghouce "It'd Edi make a. ' 1ioyrist, Yam tdl'4 fl) Gatherwirk is whey N mytli' r his 't ut or; own . tefChim," pleaded Rm iwmter will be over. if we can only Him) out" E If----. Betore that month was over, I the prodigaPs brief “that was ended. ( Utter/v unfitted for th battle, either by nature or (mining. it ended as any Mme might have 33%in foretold from “be first, One morning he was not equal to going down to the office; he would rest and co fresh to-morrow; but tour:orrossr he. did not want to heave his bed, and a ahetp doctor had to be humilvy sent for. The doctor spoke of a touch of poem-by, and scon- stitution hefnw par, and promiood to send in a bottle of medicine and coma; again to-morrow. I Ned put on her bonnet after and and raced round to Davidson? lodqlgg. “Be '.oolm so ill." how out. ' x. do go and telt his father; he want: better food and no many things we (21111.net get.." -. "It isa new overcoat you are needing Maurice," she said, stirring the tiny" fire to a. maze. "Cougdn't we man- age one? It is surh a iong way to that office, and you mmt keep well." "Nell. do you know how much cash I possess at this present moment? Just three-aud-ru'nmience. If you per- suade any tutor to furnish one for that, you. 'tre heartily welcome to try. Atterivardr, you might. look up a shoe- maker on the Milne terms; I am need-, ing boots worse. still; look at those." Neil shook her head. "Well. well," said Maurice, with an attempt at looking resigned, "an- other month, and the worst of the winter wilt be ovor, if we can only lurid out '. i Davidson‘s strongest point was not vaLour; he went down disconsolately. At the end of the street he encount- ered M'Calium; not that that gentle- man was Waiting there for the purpose, only treeimt--ats he mentally phrased it --that there was a screw loose some- where, it was but rousiderate to try to put it right, the first step of course _ being to thut out which screw it was. 7 But that was this difficulty. David- json flatly declined to give him any [information about the matter, and, thereby laid the foundation of a cool-] new that for weeks after completely] Etook the gm off those constitutional ' half-hours before closutg-timas. l " think we must be growing old, Nell." he remarked one night as he came in wich blue fingers and tshatter.. ing teeth. "I used to enjoy frost and snow thoroughly. instead of shivering uiong after this fashion. They say you do fee: the cold more when you my getting an in iife.†Winter set in ear.’y that year, early and very Weakly. Week after week the bitter east winds went driving down the streets which Maurice Gath- erwirk trudged daily back and for- wards, mummy clothed, and often scantily fed; little wonder that he felt it Aeeapir, "That its enough," interrupted his master. “Pay attention to what I have said.-'I"hat is 3:5; you may go now." “He had no thought. of air stick: thing." began the culprit earnestly; "and he's working so hard, he that"---. "lt is not to happen again," said. Maurice's father decidediy.t " will have no pketweens in this office. Mr. Maurice ought to have known better than to employ you in such a capacity." "Now, then," began Mr. Gatherwick sternly, when six had arrived and, vety unwillingly, M'Canam had retired downstairs-iw {long nave you been in communication with my son, may I uh!" "Since lust January," came the un- willing answer. "Indeed. knowing it to be against my orders." "I didn't know it, sir," said David- son. liming at his own audacity. "You never said we were not to trpeah to him, and Mr. Maarioe was very kind to me wheat he was here." With a solemn shake of the head, Mr. M'Cailuln turned round to his deck tstrain. There won sounds of some one moving shout the inner office, and Mr. Gatherwick might reappear at any mo- ment; and in much uneasiness of spirit Ihsvidson Mao went on with his in- voicing. 'ou often enough inguinst trying that prodigal laminae.†"There ought to no a Lurnmg Diet" said Davidson gl'oomily ; "it's hard lines if one sup is to be reckoned up against one “Mays" Mr. M'Ca‘llun whistled. "Bo you have been 'iilipping. I thought " much. and You. cannot say I have not warned "Wea, ’md Mr. M'Callum curi- only. "than i! -hiog, and you know that quite wen. Better make, . data has» it it at once. Don't wait till it’s 3 case of disappearing, lus--weil--tiu Some one who shall be named“, Tho downward track is easy. but there’s no turning back, "None that I know of," was the ana- war; "xutra-u--. There he stopped. with u sudden fear that he did know, and that there would he a bad half hour before him. now it could have come to his master‘s at: puzzied him; he had never mentioned Mr. Maurice's am can to wanna. Mr. M’Cailum twirled round on his stool to inspect the delinquent. 'What pranks have you. boon up to now, David- "Dam stay behind to-night; leah to speak to you." said Mr. Gathctwich in a perpemptory voice one day when that dusty summer was merging into autumn. Ba was opening his private door as he spoke, and; he pmed in and shut it to with an ominous click. MI. (lhntt't htt '5. R '-.Cp4, "LC-tc." _. makés" Up $5 Ry! youriéfig nou- mury'mg him!" " all. he ed me go to spicnic o co and I refund . nth um 53:. iiii'irli',)li,il, 'Ira n , l I n - lilo . l 'it my: been for et ' on 'dt ..1_':1.mgl _ lean tn taa Ego, and m1 Joni Bug k __ - (m . "wt-‘5'“ nun to, {a to chose ihi'si1G2 times In one evening when we was playin’ kiasin' games at , play party forty-nine yearn “guard 've allua tel} that I had a . "Well, not to say engaged! meble, Ibut then it WM next door to it. He lbeaued me home from speUirt' Brehool twice fifty years ago att' land only knows what'd happened if he'd Cone home with me a. third time, And what if I had married old Henry Todd forty- ‘live years ago!" "Did he ask you to marry him?" "Well, it was next thing to an out an' out proposal. He c.arpfs over to our house three Sunday mghta hand run- ning! If that wan't mighty nigh a. roposal I dunno what could be. And fspose that if I'd married Joel Baxter I'd tr' been the mother of all them Bax- ter children and not one of 'em has turnod out well and how terribly I'd felt. I'm thankful enough that I as- caped Joel Baxter." "21d 1?tpTorrttse.t? you, too?" "Why, were you him?" "What if I had of married old Hi Skaggs!" she. said with a great. sigh of relief one day. "He's tormented three wives to death and what if I'd been one of 'eanl" own views escapes. other Persons: Than the Narrator lluve (Yunna- for Gratitude. Miss Elvira Tobey had reached the age of To without Incoming the victim to mattimony, but according to her own views she but! some hairhreadtb "H ' ias"n% I t, féoglchoae fill siren-bed out 1arttler country just before day- break. Nell laid her face down on the pillow beside him with a burst ot patssionato tears. "We were poor, and hungry. and cold often; but he never said an unkind word to either mother or me Isince the first day we saw him; and ru [love him-ril love the very sound of his name all the days of my life." _ And some of ter-not prodigals by several degrees-need not complain if we get no better epitaph. There in something to be said on both sides. Was ever yet a flawless Imus- sailabie vase recorded? Cheap vie- tomes are worth little. Mr. Gather-, wick vindicated his principles thor-l pughiy, carried them out, to the end; but there are times, when he sits alone at nights listening to that olook tick- ing out the hours, and feels that he would give all his Wealth for one sight of the young face that lapsed out of the march long before its time, for lack of a helping word he might have ytttit-jx hand that. he might have u.rn’.-hn n~-t This patient. was fast giving it a fair trial; he smiled aintly up In M'- Oullum's perplexed face-tinked a lit- ta, discouheciedly about Nell, and his father, and tylpo.cpranks long "o-. gnd'finally drifted] away lo a much Davidson went away to M'Callum in the sudden revth. and told him the tale, of Maurice's wrongs. M'Cailum listened in much perplexity. Elie the- ories about prodigal: were well known ; had he not reiterated them over and over again in Dan idson’s unwilling ears? And yet he, too, had liked Mr. Maurice; prodigais often are rather likeable peo- ple-he would go and see him at any- rate, and there would be no harm done if they took some JeLlly or wine with them. "I believe it was black warrant jelly they used to give me when I was lid," he remarked on the way. "We had better bug’ a pot it's said to be Strenmhemng stuff, if you give it a; fair trial." The fatted calf might have Played Illuminated in its native fields, or all Mr. GatherwiNr construed after his merk'e departure. IN had believed .rn and Mood by certain rules and pun- cmllee all his life; his son had gone “mater to both. If he were to bung him back tomorrow and put him In the old places, how long would it lama Could he rink that sore disgrace a Beth" ond time? Possibly at no distant date. Thu. exile meant more to him than It. could tar Maurice. He had lost the most by it; a solitary old age stretched be- fore hun; letter that, than to build up fresh plums with a. broken faith for foundation. Maurice was young. and would find out new interests-nay, had found them ahead . Nothing ever troubled him long thought the father bitttTiy; and he eat still and made no sigh, while the slow hours ticked themsedwes past. "And I have never been there smfe. said Davidson; "tNC-ty: .thts firs} time daring to assert himse.1f I_n oiy,1fl11r lion to the great Mr. Gatherwiclr-- [we not forgotten him, and I'm 80108 @54th to him now." - . "It's Mr. Maurice. air; he's very Ju, and his wife's frightened about him. She's too poor to get him what he ought to have." At that same tab'co--DaAdto.n could have tambed the spot with bi.s hand --htut once Mood Mama's otusir...Per,- haps Mr. Gatherwiuk thaught of it al- so for one fleeting instant before be rHepe.rtd.hin Irrjnctpfy.. . at- .. "The did ati-rr,'"' he said impatientll We have hard in all before. I tehought I told you some time ago that I would have no emrununieatjon be- tst.etm yam" . .. "Rat, what has brought you out here t" Manda! Mr. Gama-wick with- It', laying down his fork.-"You leave !hxy roHm" with a glance at the man i'n..tyytiyyr. -- _ brought up. ' "See Mr. Getter-M} Why.‘hee Mt ut dinner." said the wand-deed mall .to whom he made his request. . . "Duet or not, you must taid him ith Important." The man detached for a moment; ha was new to the situation, and perhaps “any realised the risk. He opened a door' clam by. and Davidson could hear the menace delivered. ."The.ro the (Jun man from theat- ficay, sir. t'du,1'lll 1y name, Wishing to 500 you. and won't take no demaL I "va3 Show him in." . .. With has first llama down the bril- iiantly lighted able, there flashed 315mm the visitor some odd fancy about the Gust calf; it was there in qbumj- yEh; but this father was eating it sane. when 1Guriem had been SOME N ARROW ESCAPES. if"??? m of araiVii; AT (The End.) UN I AHIU“‘A‘RCH|vr;s TORONTO i u t walked him sll_ti)r't/.ti,1.tg in one ever engaged to and L I Good form of writing notes or letters has been changed considerably. You ‘must no longer have a margin " either side of your page nor divide what you have to say into paragraphs. bat write it continuously. You musn t write on each aide of the sheet, one after the other just as they come. Use the front page first, then turn it over end fill up the back; if you still have something left to any attack the bther aides of the front page. writing cross- wise tram top to bottom, and no on down, fillieyr both the inside mean , Now, of all the. members of the reigat- ' ing Houses of Austria, there is no one except Empress Elizabeth herself who i more cordially detest: Kaiser William I than Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria, the heir to the Austrian crown. He has been educated to the old-fashioned Hamburg idea that the Bohelnzoilerns are mere vulgar up- starts who must he kept down, and all his sympathies are with .Russia rather than with Prussia. Indeed, he is a warm friend and admirer of the young Czar, and, like, his father be- fore him, is more at home at St. Pet- ershurg than any foreign prince of the blood. There. is an effort to con~ real his antipathy to Emperor William and while he make, a point of appear- ing at the railroad station to welcome all the members of the reignin House , of Russia. who happen to visit gustriu. and takes part in the festivities given, in their honor. he point/eddy keeps away whenever the Kaiser appears. upon the. scene. l This has been commented upon [el Berlin court. circles. It has aroused. a great' deal of ill-will and annoyance! on the. part of the Kaiser. and there is every reason to believe. therefore“ that the, ri)ulous stories about the' Archduke's meeralliaawe all the more preposterous. as he is known to have) a romantic attachment of quite an-' other kind. They have their origin in l Borne of those shady press agencies and I ftrurUr-rate newspapers' whose methods and whose connections with the Ber.. lin court- were so thoroughly laid hare and exposed at the time of the trial for forgery, conspirary and perjury of Emperor William's own private police oommisrary, Von 'I‘auseh. way are you cry! ' llttle boy! ut' $131.11: by . 'l/bl/JI/fd bee, si FASHION IN CORRESPONDENCE WHY _v--_°....° .v yum \Luu,uuu nun- }oul the latter's knm1edga to King ‘Geurge of Greece, her brother, in order 1to assist him in his sorry plight. The story added that on the discov- ery of this the Count had been dis- missed and the widowed Czarina,, han- ished by her son. Of house. there is not a word! of truth in the whole " fair; just. as little as there was in an- other story of the same kind and of the same origin. which insinuatod that the widowed Czarrna was plotting to have her son, the Czar, pronounced in- sane and herself proclaimed as regent pemding his mental incapacity ram reigmng. same type commence to circulate the moat modalovus stories about them. Thus when the widowed Czarina of Russia left St. 2it.trt'iers the other day, two days before the uiser's ar- .riva) for the express purpose ot avoid- mg him these same Berlin gutter sheets at once came out with extra- ordinary stories that she had induced Count Worontzoff. the, Minister of the lmpgrial household to take advantage of hits position to send large sums of Perms.y,beloyKusg. tq the. Czar, and with- umns at a newspaper known as the "Lokal Anaeiger," which is noted for its lack of veracityfand, 'secondly, if the marriage had taken place as alleged in London, the news thereof would have come from thence instead of from Berlin. For the registrations of mar- riage are very carefully watched by The fact of the matter is that when- ever any illustrious personage mani- fests a dislike, either tar Prussia or for its ruler, at once the "Lokul An- zeiger" and other Berlin papers of the the newspaper men in Iundon. where by the way, the Archduke is well known and which is about the last place to which he would resort were he aruxious to contract a secret marriage. BO much indignation five years ago, namely toheve his imperial flag flying from the flagstaff of the saultimg point in lieu of that of the Kingdom of Ba- varia. This time he did not even raise the question, and none but Bavarian flags were seen upon the field, while it was beneath the fold of the standard of the crazy King that he took up " posi- tion to parse tho army in revieW. CIRCULATING SCANDAL. There are Womble grounds for discrediting the reported marriage of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Aus- tria. to a lady of obscure birth, who is asserted to have formerly ocoupied either an equivocal or menial position in tho household of Herr Krupp, the German canon king. For in the first place the story comes from Berlin and received publicity originally in the col- 50-0 may Dem About an Noun†In" a um qrea--The “a" and In "euaates-An Earn Caner. Emperor William is evidently im- pressed, and perhaps a. little alarmed. by the manifestations of hostility against him in Southern Germany. For when be reviewed the Bavarian army. the other day he did not venture to put forward the demand which caused WHERE THE EMPEROR WILLIAI IS CORDIALLY DETESTED. SUANDALS IN IP?lilll LIFE. didn‘t? yéur {of In}? “no ‘twu one o' th' hm-bumblo. sir. HE HATES THE KAISER. u-u-oumnle pee, air. :et 0112 of its way! “_ .4 A n I . - -» A “a†000mm then l by the use ough ttood twisty. have, WET. You will .gide 51* your in the "eau, 4 -'us-r"C..- W; - 1" [GOO] kind" iii"ii thtstmmmv-Ih, you gnu-um thus porousp1hartmm tobecoodforuwoak bank t Drug ist-Ye-ir., tho an oodfor a ,'di1ril'lhTMu for 3 gm?» com Utar you put them on. then, he tsaid,V"t"tGir"i" ESE“: ough," "Yes," I replied, "I think you luvs]; 'eye thgreupon left the in- -illn A- A..¢_._|A ,1 '. "_" __- 'e-i-i.. Actb I sideHar the outside artho iso? GOOD WORK FOR A WBDLE YEAR. _ . t†v. TTr'""'"'"'""." was promised hi mtho following week which offer he eagerly reamed. Said the old man: 'Abs smoked hin pipe as he dig evtrrWyqr. . glut} thoroughly "Centah" writes "It has never been stated yet how and when Mr. Bpur- soon learned to smoke. It was while he wes an usher in e boys' school ht Cambridge. and became the pastor of the little Baptist chapel " Wnterbes'rh. He used toItay with one of the dev oons from Saturday to Monday. Ad- miring the zest with which hm host enjoyed his 2153: gigs, E'tlturt.shssumien' One cap to design star in center. Three feathers for ditto. I Six yards silk lining. i It is a circumstance worthy of note i that a cap. star in center. with three! feathers is an indication of royalty, in Africa, when the crown, gilt, nine-l inch. is alnent, and also that his 1111-, jesty is the proud â€scissor of one shirt i' and one pair of trousers. I V,,-V._. “a... an. One pair of trousem, black sup. cloth. embossed in rich. heavy silk. One shirt. black superfine cloth, em- bossed with gut, straight lines of gilt braid. One mantel to design, lined black silk embossed all around edge in gilt oak leaf, with fixtures tar epaulettm One gilt nine-inch crown. One pair epaulettes with gilt torm are] gilt fringe. _ In» frown. 'tate Mun. One Pair of Itâ€.- lelleu and Three Icahn. I An order which has keen received in England from a dusky monarch in a British colony. for his regal roles and crown, indHatea that eivilization is making Very lapid program in West Africa. The kings who were content to be clothed solely in a, top hat and a pair of anklets if they have not ace tually all gone are fast disappearing. The enumeration of the articles ask- ed for will no doubt. he of interest as showing the clothing of a king-- in 11j,stt At.rica, .They are: Lumber, Shingles and Lath alway- In Stock. -0.- Having Completed our New Factory we no new prep"!!! » to FILL ALL ORDERS PROHPTLY. We keep in Stock 9. large quantity of Bull. Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the Mor- ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside shooting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Luge so that all orders ' I T YEAR. IN DETROIT. 200.000 CURID. N READER! Anion a victim? Have you loan hope? Are " marriage? Han your blood beendiuuod? have " Our New Method Treatment witi cure you. What it bu done foe (“In a 7011.. Ph',,hWlfd Ph, No mum aha irltgrrtth.e.'ii,ei Ion moo Abuse. ran-out e. .--' a It 'lll'k1tr'h'lli1'fJe/i1'Jt. “who!†Wain-mm. 9-H Sash and Door Factory. a - "Thin terrible blood disease was tn my "not: for Mt ' “PMâ€; tlllltil, yours. End taken mercury for "rope. but tho also“. rammed. yea rod, pins In: and blowpea on the skin. when In the mouth and . tongue. bone pains. fallfn. out of hair wmknmmw. I) humonwbo land to. cum! of Gleot and Stricmre by Dru. Ruined and Km "comm“ it They our-d me in I few weeks, and t thank 601 l cons-lad diam. No m of - tLtsetuse n: It: "aiu-W. P. it. Juli-on. SPU urn. Kennedy and Km cued no in n In ,r-ttr.-1. L. viruses. look. J. P. EMERSON â€In!†bin science. " lint on gllll,,,t,,!ilm?,l,ti CUREâ€. than. At whooll [quadru- only t. which wen on me physically. anal! and mentallr. Family 'ltttst,tt add if (in. Into 'decline' (porummptionO 'tcw', The Go don Ionltor. tf/ttt ow & Ker-gun. {all into In? bands. I learnodthe TRUTH and the Belt had 'ly/r), my vita ity. I took tho New Method Treatment and 'u . My friend“ link I menred of conaum 'tion. I have sent. than: on til of “â€330qu cured. The.“ New Ahmad Treatment “ppm. tr and m . NERVOUS and dupondot' m _uMtftated.. dnd no lo tll? M I tunb1tionrrliftsl-,' manor; s1'lltrylil'v",1 'iiiriir'ai ouihbllrlz L 'ite.fittue, “x"? 1h i',',',.",'.',','."?'),,',':.",,",,',',":",,'.",.',','," n2't, , ,'l'.r,','r,2edd,tigttA'r,it - I mm oo ,. on ' e ooo.', t eels; 'li'ttit'ih'f, ad: Bttd drum " 'ft'h',tWlt,',2k'flt, t 01 We“ ot energy and 'rt-tlt-We CAN CURE YOU OR “K N. PA Y. CURES GUARANTEED on no PAv--totnorIDEimAL d In middle and In. all old I. I Ilil!lllili,!! tt L'ior'flf,l%rd"dl' or curl) mnphood u I at: o ignorance of only oath. or Inter a: . mil-pug! Me a. “m d the w my?!“ form: rii'tfll'ii'iCi'i'i'f,)'ti'irii " . “a: " .. 'ii'R WT " I c V. m .9 . m ge, It.' vain. bllh'Mt mum murmu- viu Mun; can um VABICOCELE, EMISSIONS, NERVOUS DEBILITY. SYI’HILIS, STRICTUBE, BLEET, SEMINAL WEAK- NE88, PIMPLES. LOOT MANHOOD, UNNATUIML DISCHARGES, KIDNEY AND BLADDER DMD“. GUILTY on "(IT GUILTY DISEASED MEN (HIRED I c fl D "Vtrimcele made life mint-bin. I m I , nervous. eyes sunken bashful in ggttg le! tn3?eihot',_optsd my gun“ bririGiriia7 - 8.. G. &J. MOKECHNIE can be filled. Bat the local saucer forced them to apologize, and he following summer Emu Ind the lady We grub friends. Sher w" troot Aim for weak Brea, and out by in : "Qhuy1t "ple you warm hurt ms ,V_ w". w anâ€. ""b o Hana. Int Ignaz“ " " don't wow, . aid he. "Th dovl entered my ' an". I was Salon. to you alwnyl with the filf,mtt tn not noticing as. Out nine. I u to know you J could kill nylon tor t.’ ' He he! on: women <1er him howli away. Lady Burton mounted her 'lily. and rode Q'rty.'"U up our... of tho attacking It . "We will) {allow you." any walla "with sticks and stone. and guns; an " night We will come in a party and burn your housel And whenever w. meet an Euclid: non of n pig we will kill him!" so. . - W'-_ -v- --_.' w w nusl’. "For Allah's lake. bar it patiently?' they implored. "We are not strong en- ough to fight for you." By this time a crowd had 001in and she was the centre of all eyes. "What it the meaning of this t" ah. asked Hutu). "It means," said he, "that I will pull yr?“ off your; horse Ind duck you in t a “.9,†, .__.- _-... "What tellovw: you swam no to up lute this Christian woman! 1 will show you the way to treat her." She reined in her horse. The mun. dropped on their knees. kissed her heh,, ain't: grayed her not to be angry. .. ‘nr A " I- _-I.- L--_u tr . -- as usual. every one roe. up an; tttit her, and where she was Joined by sew a1 native Christians. Suddenly Hausan, a youth of twenty-two, thrusé hm bt!itr,t her .ltorses and all“: When Sir Richard Burton wu con- sul at Dam-nous, his wife Ihnred the Perplexitiea of that complicated Enta- ern life. She was braver than may men, and situation- which would have seemed impossible to some women did not trouble her in the least. One day she was riding through a village where, No, BOW IT WAS MANGKED. speaks broken English. doe-n't bitten. 3. Mn (rightful- water, twaste" In?!“ A “an“. If! Pty. “'31-. t'At 1?! ieariG5 ITS-7d 'uke. bur (piiiiiiirtTyy "We are not strong en- a in bitched (ran Navy‘s Mg 3 of drivers. qhaivine tr in: man filled the air. "It 'ragt alum ll n'. (when ordered an an. mom, (In; farm lam. did the Fmach troops often wen they fox-rod but the firing hes-rm mad Charge had liven iii Ney. 'thro the le but“: in In in; horror. try under henspt, a cavalry. logotnsr “a brVh.t-unitorat.w.d nu muons on chm-r a qt tits. Slmdow of " Baptism ui hem ha tes than: at Rapid: Them wa of 1110 1' on the l of Waterloo. rim day, thet relmamd in t had vommuuiv he. “om-.1 m1 Bras and am- from of Mon tlu bu (I) the hero of {Au ulna brought f, krone. ers'attly and attending land's hall 11 very {hing Wall maimed until a it; on the night “stay. Baron l, will; very rim ‘ in the Itddié tee Bran. "Bun my youn live long enough t marvel of . mum. [nu the world on ttoo of the Em Bras. Marsh; but the Bag: of this comm [:be says about asqusu'ly IOU know, to ending in 1 Murklbhem wrbgNs tron Po.e, bu It 1.80 “lips Um. I got my friends Drowning t c piuled between the Enngxh Duh George Berr bar of Ila-ins treat oven: DEM and who, Un the ormasworth, Ohio “L A few ‘u-k terriemsd this n i an tint mt coal “013ny a. last (A tho.eon'o final defq darn ago. 863 m1 Greene. and hes Anal new: or T'RE I NAPOLEON'; In... I. GHQ-0‘s l." Curr-Io»! ton-Ia .l Ite-er an um Ada-um at sap-l Fa-ttmar"",. " T. but“. M WV: oightr-uvo "I. g . neighbors Tau NDER AN 0 ate nt' ll TRf under hits n BATTLE Ill? u " n Ft are mug mmantie rho, u d "I WM v into Mani or m " Ea H. m In her n ll We no! of B he ll \I Mono till h no I w ttrr no m