ý Ai rstagplsbod s,ýfe Utt.r.dby the. 04are reeallç-d 'Wa C«pta in Glamor'a fi1ery, wholu 18i97 d r t ii ' 'tCost ot à , e&4a survr for the ïiew riyilwy, says \R-BOY S." ne, and found himseif Kwai people in the. th'o- cf Songo Town, ich ýi abqut Virty miles up- country. At thst time the Kwaia *ère #howing, sigris of robe-lion, sud long,-befor. }Ioweil reaehedý their .-etr ritqry lie had been warli- ed uot te enter. But, accomps.uied by a fe>v native boys and ouly oee ft.eJà - he fearleusly proceeded with hi, iuürvey. Night aftor night hoe waë âttacéked by âmali baud. of natives, or "var-boys," but he stilI continued with i work, being anx- ioua telfnish it if possible wthout havng *ýtoe- apj>ly for Military assist- ance.. Ou*.da 4y, however, a native sohoolmanter rushedwmdy into H a'.camp andI urged hiuim te --1Y four hie lhfé..It appeared that niicnmissionirxes b.d been - uurder_0 at s village onlY t8n miles 4 a#d the.ba.nd -ofreb- w :o nuitted the out- ragM e e théln haatçnýug towarda U ,elscamp. APERILOUS POSITION. HRastily 'cencealing underground hie theodohites and other vekluable t.»truluents, the captain and bis to)"rt nà iâ tleir W&y arrosthe éRive UbIi ami in due course yreached »Vterloo, the second larg- jVjn1utii0 Cohony, after warn- i ng t'he peeiple in Songo Town sud F'reetoawnof the, outbreak. At Wat- e.rloo Captain HoweIl uaised a body ~feighty volunteers, and by means ~tforced' marches they quickly *.sched laongo Town; but no accu- L!r had tlaey aurived there th&D au- ~'hentic information Was received toWthe effect that MrIs. Iane, wife et on. of tbe sisionaries, hiad not lieen maauaeîed wth the rest cf the. viçtiunee aa sahe vas at fiait sup- ýýpoW- to have been, but had es- 7»ý4ed f rom ber assailauts and B.ed înto the bush. To reucue the un- fortunato 3ady f rom her perilone position at 41l couts was the deter- mination of the voluntecrs. To'waîds thesensd cf a long snd tiring, march they sighted the ffi- teniu srfsce of the River Bibbl, tn p.eqI1y came alonguide it'at a poi~ wer.its breadth exceed8 110 Varda and its dèpth 300 feet. nasrajy . d thcy arrived there ,When & a.tttle of rifles between 200- _Ydg. anid 30M ydm. beyoud the.ap- i>otbank, followed aîmot im- ,Iaaditely by a w n tiuga hever ai buflets v,,egtlwir boude, waîe.<4 t1ham L&lb-:uei ad oPeu< ~an d almost M tis ae uuom' ont 1ih4 diîooeêred that al bostl suez- rd..rats upon their sidia 01it te. stres abd been destroye< ~YA cROCODILE. réWu #ox1y oea ay in vhich tle baud could be auded up- >' oppo site ba.nk in ouder that ~Itiresie sud disperse, the ,su ltimatelll reacue the. uate < lady mssuonary. Soin. nt *vis»tise treaciierous riv il ot vbirîpoolsansd couves).. Ds, and, verse tisa» &1l, fuir- ermng ,viti crocadilea--and back kt least oeeof the boats bold aseau mooued siong *~oste aboe. Quickly div- Cvwe Il a! aIl ÃŽnt te waCs begs, te swtun eut into tfi ;Wifewa howeverg, e'N'evywhte taa uin hiâ OWn 'a ., j Bbgo Townl, in Watt oohia 44'm4tt likbIy, also in FPre$-: s I -1 s I r s natives discovered the. tac- ad begsu to fire st tise swim- jo &ttIliatOY t ewra b.d elow1&etad afeadily -êeleawun nspite etf sUbits visici kept duoppiug a of thsediatauce vLan bit loe viso e vereatpbisi# o1uh,ýbeir glsuses,- -e' f'ly-grvu crocodile tuavel- If' &10114ss thée surfaceo! r ,oareIy ve yards, b.hid or. But ReeIl h"i sa MIsd &sà théiçecdl Grtfoer Seat Mk. ot Petu. and Ope»ed tle Eje e! ibe Fily A lady writas tram Blooklue, Mass. : " A package o! Postuin vas sent me one day by 5istake. 111 notifled the grocer, but fln4-" ing that tIsera vas ne cefie for breakfast uext userning, I prepared seomaetftise ostusi. !ollowiuig.#4e directionsveyaefl. It vas asimdaas i»cea l My fainily. sud te htday We: have used it, constautly, paronîs sud chiIducu,ý toc-for m~ lse uosy yousugstors are alio'wed to drink it fueeiy at breakfast wd unbo.They ticik itdeliciosa, ,andI I vould bave afi uitin>' on nsy bitus dxuIsldý I omoit tihI>eior-o vary dlicate tétesb whiJu v ére USIDg coffee, l4ut ýtéout' sairýiulbis etosacb hiesro*a stress atýd'en- tireI.>'w.41 aisee, w, quit «Oe>o u ha» been o ,»Potm. _ "Xoing- t~good eeff . jin,& fawliy 1 ivxste te uayi aiter, vs. vat* acoffeoper1~, and after..muh 5a1s ave 6e4ýtise *Cîal docu , ts ei4ér publihd lis j4st beeniemued by the Bïria P4ison Oorfizissioeiers. if desi. Siona1, - 4 m';s, j-but, vho, afAî. re. yietdc~~tons,> and yeakape*t in1o, htafie .erdheerror oet hair wes and'hire turne4d' over s; anW, Many :oEthese ;éex-eonviots ýhave b&ttled se o-aisccest'fnlly against the disadvautages imposed upon them by their criminal antecedents, that not ouly have they sneceeded in lifting themselves ont of the depths, but they lha'e even raised them- sielves to high salaried posts and' positions of trust and responsibil- ity.. One old thief, for instance, is now the trusted employee of a big firm of jewe lier. Ho ha. aceeSs to thou- sands cf pounds' worth of valuable and easily negotiable property. Yet he has neyer betrayed the cenfid- ence of hU. employer8, who have ev- ery confidence in him, although they are, cf course, weil aware of what his past record has been. A FORGER NHO TEACHES. ed w". iepîlg TUIE CIE8E GIRL Revoit et the New Woman AgaLlat Compîîlory Marriage. One of the. mo&t cinîious incidents cf what R. von, Ruhstrat, in the Greuzbottn 0,eipziq, Geriùaxà y),ý calta the 'nuodernizinz of China,"' i. the. revolt agaînst enforced mnai- niage, organized by an association which styleé itffelf -the Society oef Sigteris. The Young girls, its mem- bers, bind theinselves to refuse euh- mission to 1 "the hrah laws of ('hin- ese mariage." This law makes the. girl the slave of her fatther before maxrniage, the slave of lier husband after ruarriage, and,.if left a wid- ow, tiie slave cf lher soân. She lives at the. house of ber husband*s par- ents. They can force hlm te div- orce her, even though he loves her, or to retain hie.r 8 their bdding, even if she bas incurred hi, bat- ued. If rsh. has no chldren lier hu.sbard i. permitted to take an- other woman Io hi. bouse, whose offsprin the wife is expeet- ed te treat as he rou-n. - The. result ha.a heen -i marruage tstrike," says Louis Laloy in the "'Grande Revue" (si) a move- ment toward feminine emancipation1 spreading far and vide f rom Cau- to.n througuout the who]e province; of Kwang-tung. Tise coursie the "Sisters" take, when their intend- ed bais been na.med, this writer thus recounts: "To refuse the. husband their parents choose would be te uise in rebellion against paterual author- ity, a crime which ia puniahable witb the Beverest penalty in the Chines, code. The future bride, therefore, pretenda ta snbmit her-ý- self, but in three days after the. ,weddiug returus to the parental home' to take the çnatomary final adieu. Frein that home it islier resolve neveu &gain te dopait. It à a a sacred asylum froin wlich it il flot permitted ev'en te the hnsband blimacif te drag ber away." Furtiier particulars are furnisb- ed by a Chines. writer wbosys, ini the. "Sin Cheu Ki" (<"The New Age," Canton>, an organ of the Re- formistsa "Duînng the three daya eh. spenda under hier husband's roof the 'Sister' neitber eas nor drinks, andI refuses te coeneruhin. If, sh. breaks this rule the. other 'Si.-i tera' exp.1 ber frein their associa~- tien sud neyer again pronounce heu naine. Some escapefîroxu theïu dis- grace by suicide." A These youuig women aue msiY et: them wJll educated' in the neéw- achoohs of China or are, at aiy, rat». sii!ul eaough te eara their owvui living "They vouS lu .115, and *an msu cftbem. caru More tIsa» i.l sufficiept fer their vante. Tis e n- alas tbh= to live spart f ram thoir * ulibands. Sosuetijes ,thuey av4e l end hlm à a holp4M* baud sé that h. 'may set up another houmd>soId. Tht i à th very pity et contcxupt.t Lili. erty i. what they cravie-Ilberty tram the tyranny ofet ti. n-v are told. and their action is one, of hthe mnost hopeful signa et reformin i ,- China. But these sue» vere Bot protes., sioual erînsnals. They madIe one~ slip, sud one ouly - Tha cases deal viti lu tise report mautioned abovea on ýtbe ether bsand, ail relat.e te mIa wisb have delib.rsteiy ,mbsrked upon s regulajr-career o! trime, sn)4, afttr following itoure or lam su40ssfuîly fou sons.'ime, bave tu rned trous it and lived honesi lîvos for a. -ternu of Yeai's -long enougisto staxnp thonsa. 4beis» peu, susnteutly reforSc»ed ebafaters. Ou. sUn, for intsuce, served thirtesn long ternis, of'! impusso msent before ttmiag over 'a fo for boua.breaking a.fteufOve Pro- vî~s ciliCtOti fr "meeane f- teoe, ztedis< o-artwavayaara. Hae is novr à traireller for s-welail frnor' a l» Londesi Thesiummr xi)ut4 -arq thçWmoot "aga,oga f thq.,year;fot the little one. iThei. oonplaintu eotibiissas- Bon eoease oquicI4y tb0>4on4.& preciouos11#10lp ifé ilbe1ou0tAi& her, the, mother- rea.ie.baby i. ill. Oolic, darrhoea sud ý'hoAer4, infantum à re aIl rife ai, th4 timef" The mother muf t gua dbr baby . health every mùià utd. 1Sire muet b. careful of his food and cà raul that hi. stomach is kept sweet anid -is bowels floôvé regularly 'and --fibely. To do this nothing cà n equal . Baby's Own- Tablets-they lare mothers best ftiend at al 1imes cf the year, but more especi- alMy in the ummer, when, if given occasionaily«, they act as a pr.- ventive of those. dresded summor troubles, or if they do corne on suddenly the Tablets will jîtat as quickly remove the cause and baby. will soon b. well aga.in. The Tab- lets are solcl by rnedicine dealers or by mail at 25i crnts a box f rom The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockviile, Ont. À CZÂRINA'S ICE PALIACE. I;Èyýü tà tke, CEnw- _'Inos.a8tieeii chancu, aritii otna ~ioms aong illonvine yen tthe 'Masny men, figur-e Just how fart they d*re te b. bad. Whnwe a.ut the sanie i.n Our house, whether there'.. company .preseut or not, vo have a prttty good stand in with our fsmily. The man with, on., idea is âOmie- times a bore-sometimes an inspir- ation. It dependa on the man and the idea.- Thaire is nothing that will choke off lies and cause them to wither and die like suprerne' indifference. Time i. a great leveller, and if we have pluck enough to act the truth and to maîntain silence &bout lies, the lies will die and be forgotten. Thou foolish, gold-biinded man&f. Thon spendest thy health getting we.alth, thon thou wakest- up and bath a pain, and the doctor looks vise, and thenceforth thon spend- est *ealth gettiug health. What about the future you dreamed -of and workedý for v hile you forgot to-day 1 Thse Building ansd AI] the Furni8h _____ luags Were of Ife.t The use cf ice for architectural The PilI That Leads Thom Ail.-- purposes is an art that ha. boen Pilla are the moat portable anti carried te a bigh state cf perfec- coýmpact of ahi une-cicines, and whe -i tion in nortiieru countries, and easy to t.ake are the most accep- mome aImost incredible feats have table of preparationa. But thoy been accomplished in this curions.must attent their pawer te be po- branch of industry.1 pular. As Parrnelee's Vegeta-buu( Probably the most reviarkable F illsaraie due mneet popular pf ail building constructed wholl.y of icejpills thiey muet fully ineot ail re- was the palace built on the. Novalquiremen ta. Accu rately carupouri- by the Czarina Aune of Russia, in 'dL.d and c,'mpor-ed of ingreodientii 1730. The. frat attempt t-o construet'proven te be effective in rezula.ting this building vas unsuccesaful, '8 the digestive argans, thero is ne the. sîabs ,ofice vere tee thin, and surer medicine te be bad an- tbie building coilapsed in the. fret wvh re. Y thaw. Subsequeutly large blocks cf ice- vere rut aud squared vith great 'Wife-"&Wuetch! Show me tisat care, and laid on one another by lutter." Huisband-What letterV" skîlîful masons, who cemeuted the Wife-' 'That one in yeur hand. It's joints with water, vhich immediate- f rom a 'weman, I can* see by the iy fre. TIse building, viien cern- pleted, vas 58 feet long, 17 1-2 writung, andI yeu turne'd pale vhen broad sud 21 high. It vas but eue yen sav it-" Husband-"Yes. Etory. Hon. it is. It's you dessmaken's The facade coutained a door sur- bl. mounted by an ornamental pedi- - ment aud six windows, the trames RESI AMD HEALTII TO MOTOiE AND WILD.* and panes of whieh voie ahI cf ice. Mas. WsLov's SOO'rauCO v&ilpli& bes An elabenate balustrade, adorned m>d4xie lo iÛîr ii~.IN w ai vith statut.., rau along the top of Tim ,wthPZFC UCP81ýi the facade sud another balustrade ALYaIA:CURX$ WINI).CotIC. lsd 8jurounded the building et tIse'lev- uoî*ylis atmulee. ne dure andS se),1r -Idt& el of the graund. The side eutranc- Wn w sooaih e Syru, ansd t*e no ethee es te the enclosure vere fianked cetabote with pillais supportiug urns, the- latter eontaining orange .., trees, Towley-"Bîôevu le týrrib1y a-- whose $rances eaves sud floWers e à enmimided, . o tervi4s 've .ail ofiÂce. est up til a e êcn~>r~Ã"k ËYtIyni R ollov pyramidsof ice onoach te remeinher what it *as -ho wanted- aide of thse building -contauued te dl. Cowleèy-"+ .rmm lighte by night. Tiiground ee Oierrt oIy"es i îev flurfber adopued vith a life.vs bréà that he wauted' tb go to bed jf4ure ot an cepliaîit, vith i a- rî" - hà urt ou hbisbaok -A stress» et va- tan' vas tlu-ewn. f rom thee1aeint& trunk by day sud a fum».e ïi4h- Hous fluas-avr hatoised in man ure Itaby »nibt. sd reve l nfilîtis. - 8oitrtists hagre A ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~d tetc a otie o ahiio red that tIsey are, largele ini whicIs persans ehiaùlly,>baiâed. 'respontible frth. spr'ed of ,Tui., There vëe.alise noeverai oý,èr>nouns bérçulôti2,,-, Typheid ,ý i- ht1ièdsý snd mortais 'oft ice, W1hch vére 1>ytOnttwy; Inftantile- ýtifeae ' ot k léded with bullets of ibe sud iroe»'h oe~ t-.Zapé, c sud iecssrpd- il.eei'z-Fly Pà st wil1'ill -More Tho. intersor of thebrsilding vas iastissu 300> gheets ofet.tioky pap r. emiplêtely furnuihed vitistbls chais, tatesIeoiugglases ~ iperý-Wh5t do yen Inean by doc, eos~t ts AsérVicei . ete,, f f. air-tedto ln- ~itam e- 111 e 511'Ãýfù oid ss fisleraisins-' T A 'fape tathIe roal objeCts.. A1 iad au The P-o4tUýý' l; Ther. ero k0es Odudie hlrnLiDg ook sahmppg siuït *.tisathécoui naphta ;and-mu onetl fh sqeeeu >au l.fx pl"ceeuaiugbr-- t n e oglbok t ceo s eil 4gtolà iemch', 4OlearMi'nï out oe eider thé hoà eytc Mus.Goostt-"YU-- e M'- l flag,'tbe Mmnd 4 rOpà aa- týrkbe- # bhave sosie 'educatin. Penma1. osq i-poaie.q*yeAri g yen ve* once a, proeesîi>iI.he 4. erspr etlla Mail" 'tion -of t4k#0! 4s'4ýýM4 beebt 'oà dahi-Lady, Fnl'as - £ pr'atio» for., %jss M psçe.la IdUMismsatist by professiion." Pa~1eaVg4b~ ille, e- MMsQ"(lddrt-4A nuuiiatlitl' * 10t'fY e*bai .outni e Hosvrd ssIer-<Y.s lay i 164 r i". 'A -tu).*à Scollecterof rare èiis.' Any ulüd *vlW'*ttatlt v*eM - coin a ,re t e u.» J.... ifle -.Taaksranwls~ 'î'desad the, United k tatm s es e- gardathe rit! nduitry, and the , auUiest rieed of s Protectie tarifi ,çprt Canadian fruit. gravera have. -been clearly U>IQwn ii a series cIý articles b.1 Dr. Georte..Chazles Buchanaii of hesmsvil1e, Ont., Pre- s oen f the Ontario and Western Co-operative Society. Dealing 'Wîth the Niagara peninoula Dr. Bluchanansays: ,i There are in tihe Niagara Penir- suis about 350, square miles of l.and on which. fruit can be well grown, not counting such district. as An- caster and Luadas. Betwoen To- ronto and Hlamilton there is an- other 100 square mil-es; in all at leatit 288,000 acres. Not aillof this is peach Land, not even proibably 20 per cent. of it. But very littie of it im of n,) uie for any fruit. Mucli can b. made fine peach land by drainage, or good ipple, plumn or grape land; some is only goo.d for berries, but ail of it is in a goci fruit climate. The unpianted lanid i. waiting to double W ~ ~ 'fn I 1.U LEiA, U~UIJ J'vÈ dme tth~ é t Prut t bk, orDalryPFarme la éNtarlo, &Md puce. rlght. W. D re 01Trt EESSÂSKATOONq ynIr Yois are a bard-worktng PFanner In any branch. Couid you NOnIy ose Ouragricultural prosperity. no- L int would thereaiter keep yau where Fou are. What money have you aavedl the past seven years? lnu Is time, with tees work, f armer. win fortunes ber. Ualte the beof ife. God ineant you to. Write LOMMISRIONER BOARD OF TRADE. -Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Westr eru Canada., AGETS78WANTED. TAST TEA ROUTE TO-DAY. Send Spostai for circulaire or 10o for sain. pIeu and terme. Âlfrf.d Tyler. London. AGENTS WANTEDb.-Àa tudy af other Ag&enoy proposition@ convinea ni tbat non@seau eq1ual oure. Yon will al, wraye regret it i l _on don'%Dpi o psrtiouiarm ta Travellers' .. 2SU à 1bert St.. OttuwA. MISCELLANEOUS. IAY and-PARU SCALES. Willsa' [iSeule Works. 9 Esplanade, Taranto. UTOUR GLASS AT HOME.-Our ne* CRTed Devil" Glass Cutter pute wlred ctg.us plate glane. suioked and windOW g lags. By mail 250. W. E. Patter & C.. 46mit Saal t.. Montrea.. OlIWMILT M&CIRINERY, _Portable-.-pi on quadruple in value, whenever kiS bevY, Lathe >Mille sbingle MilI.. tii.~~~~~~ mrt'emdemrfrt. nglues and Ballers. Miii Sup t~es.Tb It rnay ho assumed that the. strAet. IrlaOntaio. value cf thia land for gentral ANCER, TUMOBS. LUXPS, etO. In. farming is not oven $100 per acre, c tnsi land casernai. aured wtthout and tht for ruit prpose ::.by our home trettment. Writee and h-a fo frit urpoea t i tooretoclate. Dr. licilma -Coiing worth Sf500 per acre; althougb wood. Ont. miucii of the peach lanud is wortb g6 TON SOALE oUÂR oANTeD. Wlo' *1,000 per acre; and that where i t SaeWrk,9LpaadTrne bas o b draned drani~g vil WRITE us to-ds.y fou oui choice liâ has o b r1rine, driniig i vl or Agentu, Suppîli. No outia7 average about $20 per acre. neceppary. 'Tbey are11mOne musers. 4p- It cau further b. stated that OtawaOnt . L S peacb laund at $1,000 per acre is ',,PBcxÂuss v Consul known to pay a gt>ad returu on the . :jus in regard toa au diseýq*!Low iTvostznent in the bands of practi- nèees lu . 9uau me" cal growers. If we take the veTyr , anythung î bà n al150o5 1ew estimate cf 10,000 acres plant- usas.s ta Dr. Dilsean. Caiigw=&d. -00 etI at $500 per acre we have s value of $50 oO0 for the. orchard and O R E Y I berry Isud s.Ckimsl& Thl. te es poeliij'Mi!G berry )&nds.Sritieh à Amerlotbn Dyebing 000 Now as cur home market grows0, O a. Ip.seJaby pu ad we m m te ade0. austI ini ouihome unanket we bave SUreauton 168. *.atr.sL ne competiton, eveîy acre of fhis 288,000 ha. poteritially the. sanie Young Wîfe (in passion)-' I shaîl value, and fully half ia unplanted. go stisigbt home tao my mother!" There are in Canada about 8,S00,- Husband (calmly,)-"Very . wel. 000- pe-ople, the. United Btat'e' Here'â the ffoney feu yonr railway cla-M 93,000,000. Hovev,,r that fare." Wife (after counting it>- may ho, oui proeept soit fruit acre- 'But that isu't enough for a re- age is fnlly equal to supplying turu ticket.", Canada. It is sgafe te say thon. is net aven 12,000 acres of peaches in As a vejinicide thuere is no ^pue- Estern Canada. If this suppliée pa:ration that equais Mother 8,000,000 people it vonîd talc. Graves' Worm Extoerîninate*r. i- r150,00acres to supply 93M? Is as. eaved tIse,-live& of eçutIemSe people, but tIsýe. are-80,M0 acres oldo. --- of paeaos îýGeo rg e' --. n - -."-Magistiate.-"Yoiu n.y- ti%. san Mizt. e's (to servant, abnut î â 61 , ýprefeeci& r,--the scr LmaTra'iil-ý' 'd -wh-ere d1d -YaO tn ht ô >Ut~ te4ix rteet ~rYoung man, )Isaryll , nthm 1 rscWr~'Wf; Mar-~'hat unçle's fumerain, am eurIpeert&ôt -mus». H a~eht aud U IS i tpsan0t1ye - -- Ail' 1ïy rthe be to~khearae i 'Y-on- havre tw-o vr bright pui- Every housekeeper-,honld use tiier. e-pile,1 [iss Wiaosme," remarked Ahl Druggists; Guocers,_ andI Ge»- ~ oral St&Ores. soIt ythons. Sw-à re y il -Wby, teein your <fX4ow,- Mis& Agely21' said Youngz s$ ei'o, ,o . 0 r."Mr., Ricis. "Il should like te 'pro- - - pse--"- -'h, tuis lase ud II .'DitIayuect hei Y il, srvant-, Yas, aan I~4tise> leavo .tisoir - ~ervant-'2 ia~'-am. 1- Lsdy-<'Whstdo y 1 _- - Wb"u cf lies.lla e 7- i s-.- - 1'- I 1. -1~ ý 1 Another reunarkable case is that of an ex-forger who ha.s erved several enins cf penal servitude aggregating altogether twenty- eight years, and who now teacher in a coîlege, where he ha. been for sorne tine. Soin' cf the atonies of s1ucCeesful êtruggîes against alinost over- whleming odds by mien who have paased thse hast yeans aof their lives in conv-uct prisons £we Furpriaiing, as well as patbetic. In noV a few instances reformation ha. folioved upon unarniage te a respectable vo- One.mn u vo vas thns saveil frein bimacif bas served no lever than four penal servitude senten- ces for iiorse-stealhng. Rie bas nov isen, quite appropriately, te be a foremnan borsekeeper. Another aId convict whe ha. similariy reformed thrugh thse influence of a good voman, becaine a porter ini a f ar- eus London shop, andI bas preved 8trictly honest tbrough ii long teîmn of years- A mnu vIseas-senved, amongi other sentences, eight yeais for connmd phsmn e4 traight," and h. did s0, although ho vas cîten ont cf vork, h. had to e b.contecRt vith the woust. jpaid forme cf casual labor, Then, sat hast, lie geV a permanent job, and stuck te it. H. saved money, set up as au electnical engineer on, hie owu aceounit witb a workshop ini tIse resu cf bis houge, -a4 ila uov; a dealer in elertrical appliauces ln a largo vay ef business. O!fcurse, other cniminahs have reformed themeelves ere tais, and have even riben tea igh poitions. Thero is, for instance, the -we-l1- Ignovn case o ettii to buctiesau W tkefield, bath ex-coxevicts, vise me"e vauld-vide reputations . for thpçmselves, tise one asa geucual eI -fi<*r lu a foreign aemy, and the oth- er as s suoeessful Autstralin Stfas-, massandI legishator. Andt ier, us.- etI-to linluenoneunet long -sancé a bankmnauger vIse i.ad served a teini 4fpNmal servitude for -u.- glauy in hieyougeu dsys. 13 TDÉES A ORIMINÂL. 'Y