"The braves are the tendered, The loving are the daring '." . -BayAtu, TAMIL. Oh, dear." said Brnsaie,'how dreary it .11 look. " And mde the view won from the windo . of the bie,white,Wotera farm- house W35 unybhxng but cheerful Bare, rcown,treele" prairie all ground; sunl- le , wimry sky overhead, and not I linng era-nut“ in sighthc'ept s distant speck M ~Csrlec down in the 'draw'--. Buhy Wilto It play. Indoors it WM plm‘nt enough. Bea- tsie w» a. brink and tidy little house.. keeper. When, irumedistely shel- din- ner, bur bsther had brought round the cum. and he and her mother had driv l otf to town w do their regular wit-ekly shopping, or 'tradmg' as they called it, Beanie» had hustled about at I wonder- ful rave. She had washed the dishes, Ind put them in a shining row on the yello . pins- drmrer; she had polished the HwVP, and brought in water; she had swept Um room, and straightened the rocker cushius; she had set upoaee' for the bread that was to be worked it night, and hated early in the morning; tshe haul shaken the any strip of rag carpvt, and dusted the clock shelf, and rstwed the chairs by the wall with untlwumtical precision. Then she had wulmi her face and bandit in the bright. tin pm kept for that purpose on t buckle,os cha'r nnar the doorend b-nsh- eel av‘tl hrullwi her soft, brown hair. Slu- took up her apron of triue.checlred gurdGtrupuc on one of snowy naimsook, hung a clam roller towel on the rack, and put a kettle of my†on the tine Then, ulna had taken up her one dear awry 'Hmk, And su/down to read. It Wnu a tremeud1 us'y attractive book to rm girl who had been brought up in the Hummus and monotony of of prniile hfe ; it wai all about great, good and bran: women; nbout Florence Nu,,rhtivgale,susd Joan of Are Ind Grace During and " Lewis, and heroines of every time and place. A beautiful book 7 But Bessie laid itdownwith the camcmumvss that she Gd been intru- ding,tGt the company in the brilliance of whose deeds ol, Had been basking “in altogether too lofty and magnum- mom in her. So she went over to the window and leaned her bead against, the pane, and thought how hard " WM to be a hero. ine m No-hrmlm. There was no war here, nu pinuue, not emu any indians no“. And hvlhlng ever happened. And pondering over this had caused her to give a long sigh, and voice ber discontent over the drearmess of a“ creation. a mile _ Willie was too young to be compthnv for lwr. What did he one about her \4;uP, delightful dreams-- about hm l‘momesl And her parents had dr. a... 41-9 was not strong enough to go l , Pr, Hal that winter. Indeed, was she, permitted to do so the girl would tind It a recreation ; merely that. lt W15 no wonder her life WA: A wee hit lonely. The ware-n neighbors lived For she knew quite as much rather in. otlicic'nt young teacher could attempt to teach her. She was a slender, delicately formed girl of sixteen. Her hair, of a crispy mlkineqs, Wu. parted over her forehead in aid-fashioned style. Her eyes large hazel, drenmv, had a certain quiet, dir. ect way of regarding one. Her rather clumsily made gown had- frill of home made crochet at the neck and wrists. How the windmill was creaking! And how the bare snow-ball branches in the front yard were rattling! and what a brisk tattoo the skeleton sutt.flower by the back door was playing on its panels l . But Baby Willie was enjoying him self She could see him running up bad down the 'draw, lmgging his little wagon after him RAVED THE p'rc"V1. she turned tr " she sat, in the big wooden rocker, She curled herself up like a comfort 'oving kitten. And rock- ing, and thir -mg, somehow or other, she nicked sud thought the cosy kitch- en away. She dtdn't live in Nebraska, within fiere miles of the town of Netr raska, within five miles of the town of rubble. She wu not Bessie Linerd at all. She was . brave women in e frail boat out on a. stormy us. She was a helmeted heroine, leading host. to battle She q...--- Whnt a deafening noise J:: it the clung of I coming “my t. u it the beat of drums, the clamour nod club of swords, the tread of marching feet? No, not nay of these. Only the crank- ing of the inn of the windmill, which wu whirling " tut astonishing rata. Only the noise ot the sinking window- frames.- Only the cutter ot Ini‘k-pnila piled outside the door. Shin ! Bang! Bessie Iprnng from the make. Knot she stood, that], tterildrtd, "ilutt asleep. A than" had been blown violently spin“ the window. mi 3 storm begun while “M1850“! edtotheusea-t,iooudi--9r, bmvoummkwhd cup-hoodluww imr.M-ttorttrunra+ wild. “Rh Ttim. it! 'd"d"dl'll1tltddlNlh' BY KATE I CLEAR? used, quiviring on : 1 -Winlie! Baby Willie? 1 Quick u . Huh the " old shawl of her mother’s 01 and unlslched the kitchen 1 furlou- wnnd tore it from M dashed it tureely buck and Vial, she sumo to elot' her. The now use drivinl Quick to a hub the " g . heavy docttir aid, old shed of her mother’s o er her head lived. You and nnlntched the kitchen Moor. The your twhei fut-Ion. wind tore it from her hold, and from town.' duhed it tureely back mull-t the wall. ' Just then Vein], she “rose to clon'p it behind said very li her. The now we: drivink in, orirl- the thin bu ing over the floor. She hastened the tfirpute. norm-door That, tl e wink! dulled in- ‘And -..at to place just after she had hindeo ' ‘He was no plunge int6 the ttora'.. Oh, such to you. Y! . storm ! some had bved on the prai- Come here, tie since the urn a. belly, and bed seen He lifted the element. iu their many moods and She smile d caprioee. But the had newer seen nor small arms. iavutined unything like the From 'Is it--at the four quurtets of the earth the wind The doct seemed blowing. The snow had not 'Dear chi the softneer one associated with now. She looll It was n dense, enveloping, impene- 'lt was a Irnb'e cloud, tilled with pin-tides, icy, went on; " stinging. sharp on needle poinu. The West. The cold Wu Intense. Oojecu ten feet “my perished. S were absolutelv iruiukiuguitshthe. Tent and tinsel! Nay, they yore more shape-I at tive- others. Th at three, came to pu From the rear of the house a. narrow wooden sidewalk ran down past. the barn, put the paddock, towards the 'draw.' In that. direction Bed Bessie. The shawl was torn from her head. She held it in her tingers as she ran. She would need in when she found Willie. But soon she wu‘otf the walk, and flound eriog clung through hits and drift. of blmaing snow. When: was the-born? She strained her eye to nuke out the familiar struc- ture. It was blotted out. All the world was blotted out. She could feel uotlr ing, see nothing but tsnow-nothing, Where was the paddock? She was an ", uwered by running into n barrier. She flung out her hands a. this shock sent her reeling. Her palms _ wens cruelly lacerated with the barbed wire which formed the pasture fence! She knew now where she stood. Abtutt two yard. to the left began the descent of the bluff, in the ravine in whush she had been the child she nought Her shawl wound iteelf around her body in a man her which impeded her progress, as late stumbled on. She could feel that she was going down the 'dtaw ;' feel, for sight was useless in sueira storm. Soddeniy tho cried and» . fright _ The clear little lad l if the could only Gd him ! She imagined him crouching iug down, tremtsline,troblting, frighten- ed; and growing stark and helpless with cold. , She tried to occalerate' her speed-to rush down the incline. She tripped, fell ; but she was up again in a second, battling on. i, Down at last. Here,in:tha hollow be. tween the prairie slope), the blizzard raged less fiercely than Above. ‘Willie l' she cried. _ She could hardly hearher own voice. 'Willie 1' she shrieked. But the wind swept the word from her lips, and the sound was on soft as a sigh. - It she could only tree! She put up her hand and rubbed her eyes. The lashes were wet and freezing slut. Her hair wuss one stiff matted mus. Her feet uched with the sharp, biting cold. She tried to pray. 'Dear God, Bnby Willie! Oh, dear GodrBaby Willie " That was all she uttered. All at once she stumbled over some thing--somethimt mules in the snow. Eagerly she gasped it., She dragged it up to her breast. She wrapped, as beat' her cold hands could, the shnwl around it, Ihsadt Oh no, no! She could feel the shivering' pressure of the little limbs as she cuddled them to her, Ch, for strength to réach home I Or would they both freezes Ind lie down here, and be buried in the "Pr 1 A heavy burden for her tslight arms, for her freezing bends, the sturdy baby she carried ; a. burden made still hear. ier by his prolent semi-stupor. She gripped her numb fingers around him. She bent her head. Beaten, swayed, bufroted, she madeherlwny up the hill. She reached the level. She could not go much farther. Her hold of Willie was relaxing. He we: slipping from her so she fencied. The bitter, bitter cold ! her very heart was peining with it. Ber whole slender, unprotected body we: racked with its egony. Wes that the houee'l Directly be s7tiiTTaiiCiiai. HST kaiii iGha T'"" ' - "Bq"""'-W' “"fusw" "'"T,' donuts-1'3. W. Beecher: fore her something dark bud loomed up. ranch-ring loot in tendon - function - It there be on truer manure of . She tottered opium it. A hnyamk. “0' e',,,',',',',',"':',"".,',') Th“. whit WI“ ttSt-i-Jo,'":,",'."),',',',",',',', liehle then b Chl he does, it must be At its hue she rank exhuosted. One t,2u'r,"det. Worldâ€; 'l'lrli to income text y. you must be 'leu'lt he, ‘veo. nth stepfather would be simply e phyei- cente in .taanrstjtboAondhte.r. Gtlltt Imding 8M,000 e your! Jack M. y . --N . col impossibility. Tighter the wrapped to men. not ude'deddre- EVJ. N, ing-Very likely ; but whet bee that ------_----- Willie in the ohuwl end held him to 24 “M Ave. 1'omitto, “km to do with my inottmet-Nemr York A ml.†her. Then, with her book against the ----.--_--- ' Sun. in the renal: of e healthy physicel con- harstack, her head halved forward her Mn. Grar-1hsnnr that she should _ -' - dition. "Beauty in but skin deep†yet bead bowed fort-rd. her hoe hidden, on": shearer dyspeptic ballad. Her . The police 1'gft,'ttltfa12-i2t it may depends on e elm complex- she crouched there it torture, which tirat uehend, you know, wee tor your- bit this man, didyou’ beâ€: 860 ion, free from wrinkle. end hollow drifted into drew-inn -- drowsiness e martyr to indigestion. batdr---- The culprit (,ittftf,',)di oheeh. l, . ' droweineeo that '“l (loudly u deli- In. White-Yet, but then it will Your honor. heukedneifrl reel! Heath at " Iteingririth orhearstr ciouel V oomAttandrtoi-trmhtttlttoth 'tttr--' ‘You‘ere dtrtlted,'-U 'a"t,",llit'M),"l'l the-yuan cornea 'lelie!’ I _tuatuttieiaur-tltyrt leftinthe OhicegoRecord. ( ' 'littttiktouriMeriu4At-sehr. MMwumeWmnï¬n-houeâ€"MW' 'f 'Ghlih 7i"iu,,,u,,', thaw-f l '0er w to "r, . ', ---t---rc I . , p M’. 'Fu. b m 6Ҡed delirium at fever ovum g ware-3mm . . ( "0,)i'l'ilfi'itvitte'lii'tii, . tttrt)) “the. w rate we- WE'E'E' 1re1ttfttr,t,r tr_e.)eehLttiLeeeieetrit ‘ - t'dt'tJtfrAltlttl1'4'lt I, - Ptt3ti fitiltil.', , Cats, _ ML Mug... (lawman ’tho_kng.w ed deliriunot fem. one TIt Wham-ho! N month-pui- ai.lNetinthat:a [white whirl- t'gMttdt, cm- H, I and, In 1 4 '15de ...| b?“ all! "ii- i Mun " Wind hunura W'tltu't, thmy.rogn- An bee. _ . _ You will be better can now,' the doctor said; ‘though it u a wonder von lived. You Vern unconscious irhen your (the: found 'yors On his return waterloo County Chronicle, ,' I-rust then her, father came in. He aid very little, but. stroked Condo-Hy the thin hand on the gray caliep coun- til-pane. 'And --and Willie t' V ‘He was not much the worseJhmh to you. You had him well prriteeted Come here, Willie.' . He lifted the little chap on the bed. She smile d as she felt; the clasp of the small arms. 'ls it-snowing--" , I The doctor lauehed. 'Detsr child, it is hGy,' he aid. She looked bewildertd. [ 'lt was an awful blizzard/Ute dortor went on; the, worst ever known out West. The paper: were full of it, Many perished. Some people were very have and aruusltitsh and saved the lives of others. Their deeds, " [out those that came to public notice, were pruised all through the country. Yours was as grand sie.' He was a. young man, a good looking man. 'A powerful smart. doctor,' aver- red the Western people, among whom he had elected to practice. lt had tab an the exereiee of all hi, skill to save Pessie Lintsrd's life, and now he felt corrrspondinuly eluted. _ .. n ,l,,,l__ __.I ‘Ohrlll'QiIi Br 88.6 very slowly and aerioualy ; I thought. no one could be a heroine in Nebraska.' _ _ _-‘erious t.' exclaimed Dr Henderson, and he looked gravely " the wunpweel face on the pillow. 'Besides,' she went on, meeting his glance with that quiet, direct, convin- cing gaze she had,und withjust a flick. er of rose-bloom coming into her cheek, ‘heroiues do something very wonderful, and I-I only did my beat !' _ That WAS two years ago. Bessie ir eighteen new. and taller, hewlthier and prettier than ever. She and her mother are busy sewing ; for this Je"r there is to be a. wedding in the old farm-home When it is we, Basie Liuard will not ‘be Bessie Linnrd any more, but Mrs. Dr. Henderson. If they were fashion- able people Willie would be pressed in. to service as a page. But as they are not anything of the sort, he will figure in the important ceremony merely as A boy, in a. new corduroy suit and . blue silk necktie; a boy who possessee a fond pride in his sis‘er and a tremen- dous appreciation of wedding cake. There was quite «ï¬ght in front of the store today,’ said a Kockland man at the supper-table. ‘Two men got in- to a row, one utruck the other and than the crowd gathered The men who was struck ran and grabbed a cart stake and rushed back, his eyes blazing. I thought sure he'd knock the other men’s brains out and I stepped right in be- tween them.' The young heir had given over eating his turf†the narrative proceeded and his eyes leaned right out of his head. He was proud of his fatherU valor and he cried: ‘He oouldn't knock any brain out of ytircmll he, ttutr. . The old man looked long and earn. estly at the heir, but the lod’s counten. we: was frank and innocent and open. When it elem With the tart on the in- side, the father gasped nightly and rev aumed his supper. Young, old or middle sged, who tind them. selves nervous, weaken exhsusted. who no broken down from excess or overwork, re- 1t1,t,,i'di in msny of the following symptoms: Menu. depression, premsture "ol s30. loss of vitality, lo- ot memory, had drums,dim- nose of sight, pslpitetion of the hurt omis- sions, lsck of energy, pain in the Edam hesdsches, pim in on the {we end n itching or peculiar satiation shout the scro- tum, waning ot the orgsns, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitchin of the muscle, eyelids sad elsewhere, Millikan, deposits _ in thetrine, lo- of will pt?wer,tetdtrrms" of 2g,tt2t"i1, fine,“ sud â€hymns- cles,desireto eep,fsilnre to bemtedby “I“, “IS-nu w 'Iwy, mm w u- a-.%rNq ll, sleep, eons“ tion damn-I of . lo- of voice, tinge for. solitude, 'd',1tl'8',' of temper, sunken or; Inn-rounded withtaUD. Ixcncus. oily ookintrAyin, ttet.-, pro_ .11 new, foily tttt “ugly. ttt tdA', sued young Vienna, you no we when m o nervou- O . '.-... C gym: 1 The i or mu slung I know of. Wuhgngton Stu-.1 om _hving loot in Main: on? ttttt - bl. “W ttt Mm?“ _ o ttmme Oo11sseto'r--Yous. you no not lid t,2u'r,t,'Stl t2rg,t'mtt'd,tTi to me an h',",' ,0. m u. out. in .taanrt)tt1ttorlottditte..r, Gtlltt Ipendmg 825,000 I you! Jack M- to Mum udoduAddm EVA. N, imt--Yerr likely l but whut bu that 'i'iriaii," iiii"t"iiiiiariua iii.WriiiW, ar-via," likely ; Gt whnt bu am 24 “who.†Ave. Tomato. Oahu-Ind. to do with my inottanet-Nmr York -----i----- San. ‘as any. You "are a tusroine,Bea- ALL MEN Falter Wu Sure. Wig" It] tui ihie an mie- robe. (ui has: Bmid “in Kim '0 Mr Haunt-hp" microbe- ".e'"- Ute. ornio---uoy'f that novel of roar'. coming slant t sm'bbler--L, isn’t. com- ing along. I forum winclooe stamps for ita "sturn.-Bynsmtsts Pout. Wife (o bretskfaat)-a didn't hear you when you ounein has night. 'Hotrmuti--1 guess that}; the reuou I didu't bear you.--)?!" In- quirvr. q J ournsl. Mrs Watts-Nou have . moat ra- murkubly hard face, to tell you the truth. Dismal Damion-aea'm, mm. is bacause it is so drr-.-hurusruspor" berEhging 'leosoua 1' 'Well. ’paps, has taken the wudding out bt his can for the flrat time tcHiir.---1niegende Blat- BIobba---Do you think the wet-age man is u stupid before he marl-lean he nicer-wards? cron-peel'.,? h.e wouldn't get Record. Mrs. Murphy-Yes, sonny, I've had a. bait stund on this block for nigh thirty years Tim Ryan-lt you’d have advertised you might have owned the block by this time.C-Boaton_ulottts. 'You don'tieem to think this story very funny,' oomphined Smalworb. " ter be had tinished. 'Oh, you, 1 do,Un- swered Ford. IGo ahead and tell some more of it.'--Ohieago Tribune. Wiggimr---My boy, if you live be. yond your Income you are bound to come to grief. siwtidits--hly dear fellow, if I had to live within it, I would be mia. erable even now r-mt-ru Bazar. Which is my part in this duet? ash. ed theprima donna of her husbandmho was the tenor. 'Your part1 Here it u, of course. The one with the last word: in it.-Waahiruton Mar. "yboyr-1 want to make . match with Madge. turtror--Why don't you do it? Bartroy--Htsr father says it takes money to start th witch factory on his preaiitsea.-PhiudelphU Enquir- er. fyhts--Do you think I look as old " they any I dot He-lt you man the gentlemen, I any you; but. if you mean as old as your lady friends any, I say no, decidedly -Boeton Trumcript. . M r. Wixham--Did you ask that new girl to show you her recommendations? Mrs Wixham--No ; recommendations don't amount. to anything. I've given them myselh-sossmreil1e J oumnl. Bov--8hovel off your wow , udr--- No. I've got a husband who can do it. Bor-My goodnmyou look too young to be married. 1ady-Ahemt. Well, you on do it.---Harper'a Weekly. Mrs Athpen-1 found it almost im- possible this morning to get a mun to shove! snow. Mrs. "ihuttfut--.Ppor fel- lows! Impposo they’re All too busy look. ing for work.--dtoxtmry Gazette. ‘How is your liner getting on with - - u. .. ---- L__ Old "roogrv--Do you think, young man. you could support my daughter in the style to which the hu been in itsis style to Vhiots Ge harbessn accustomed t Ber tmitor---1 could. but I'm no; mean enough to do ie-Chicago Sundny school temestMsr--W1teuttMorges Waahington's father forgave him for cutting down the cherry tree what " aon did it we!†Little Johnnie-- That he bud buried the utaet.-- Judge. q sly-ye try to keep up with the timee.’ method Chet-by Neirgope the clock etrnck 11. 'Ye,' replied the feti- gned young women, you ere the latest thing I know ou-AF-tron Bur., -iiia 13..., otstatioal1y.-- LUrieaL-Phuiasiphia I've had " In. If. "an. um " “OI-"'0'†My futher ti a mo“ ind benu'ifu dog, who "pi; in tho - of Ibdel. _ ity. He dim-red hom other good d..." Only in being better then (tthers, and in monifo ting scumbag that seemed like reitim" mouthing, or o pccumxr attachment to religious pierce. peop'e and service». m tstteaded funily wot ship with a punctudht Tend rtuulerity that other nwmheri ofy the housvhold might well haveimimtod, and certainly did not euro-cu. If s stranger wer- preeepo-tutd much company vi~iced our houtyr--thrt doik attention to him woe regulated by his thtrtg the land. or not, in the religious worship tf the house hold. It the visitor, It my father's request, coaduoted the worship, the doe I " once attached himself to his person, and when he departed the dog escorted him out of the vill-ge, sometimes going home with him to o neighboring town and making him I visit ot I few days. If the vilitor did not perform any re- ligioue services in the house the dog took no notice of him while there, and offered him to depart unattended and evidently unrmrretted. Such a dog was, of course, an habitual 1 attend-int on the public services of the l church 0n the Sabbath. It required ex- l traordinary care to keep him at home. _ Shut up in a ream hedashed through a window, and was at church before the family. He was once thut no in an outhouse that had no floor. He dug out under the sill of the door and was at church b-fore the first psalm. In church he occupied the upper step of the pulpit within which his master ministered. He lay quiet during the sermon unless other dogs below misbe- haved, in which case he left his seat, and after quiuting the disturbance, re- sumed it. He was equally devoted to the weekly prayer-meeting, which was l held from house to house, the appoint- ment being announced on the Sabbath. He remembered the evening and the iAure, andâ€was always present. As it was not agreeable to have a dog at an evening meeli g in a private house he was coatined at home. The next week he went early before the family had thought to shit him up, and waited for the hour and the people. He knew the mmes with families where the meetings we held, and where they, lived, and could have gone to any of them on an ertaud as easily and cor- rectly " I th and the Only knowl- edge he had 0 the place of meeting he got as the others did, by hearing the notice on Sunday. These habits of the dog were not the fruit of education. On the contrllry, pains were taken to prevent him from indulging his religi- ous preferences. He did not manifest a fondness for other meetings, or for any individtipU out of the family circle, except those whom he recog- nized by their habit of praying, as the people in whom he was especially in. terested. A Tobacco Co’s Generosity. The George E. Tuckclt & So 3 Tobacco Co., Ltd. of 1Gmilton, nine year: ago insti- tuted the commendable idea of presenting a building lot etch Christmas to their oldest active employee. This ear it was the. good fax-tune df Mr. Thoma {Milken to succeed to the iirm'a generositv. h- having been with them for 21 years. In addition no the lot he received a tnitmtantitsl ch_ect_1ue from t e same source. The whole staff of the concern also came in for I gif , the may ho-nde receiving an extra week’s nelny an the piece heads a good lined turkey. Some time "go the Messrs. uckett turned t eir factory into e joint stock eompsny. admitting may of the ".0 e important 'g/ttgg,', into pHtnettrhip, and thug addition ' evidence of I desire to than with their men the roaperity of the home cannot help but beerfru tin increased energy and good-will emong .11 who ere fortunate enoug to 1e oonnecad wi h this enterpris- mg frrm. “‘3 nrm. --r-------- l The boy, trudging back with his dad. Aunt (who knows her neioe's tge)-- met his companions and . group of How in it, Laura, that you are going pwengeu. to mury a mun younger than your- ‘Whot s brave boy!' axoinimed may no]! t voices. , "Aunt how do you make that outt Isn't. he 27swhlle_roy f"! 36 l _ .. - 7 Nuoo-iut's sl'l right,but thee dull times everything is going " a quarter off, you know.-tetroit Free Press. ; The old scriptural lobriety v.5 etree. tad doing i acetic nobriety in trtreetual drtihsees.---B. W. Beecher. in the result. of l healthy phyaiul con- dition. "Beauty in but skin deep†yet it may depends on n clan complex- ion, ttss teen wrinkles md hollow rm: mum " one Niece-That ian't Bo. He is the same vâ€. un'Iu'I '""'""'"""%'"""r. or'. '1 left “calm Rtrtt 'fer' “10"!“ come! to,work over when I’m t‘Piereo'l 2tgtyttet him Bur. QM NPO. I “I I bitumen-06ml!!- t,lttflir,t'liE2t'il,'i'il,tci' ,‘m which Munro- 8tti1'N', 1.vg,7N, h“. w _ f2t'tamt duh-u a: le hot-mm ii,it1iitillh1i'iii' " ' pron.- ttt iElliitir1htr,,1,it,iih', 1W~ 7,,5 T 'k4'llftifttl!8dF'tt"'W., It's Easito On tho edge of I Northern New England town there was . long hill sloping down a deep ravine which was pierced by a rnilwuy track. In Win. ter ir was a. favorite coasting-ground for handy, venturenome bows. Starting from ths, cast of the bill, n sled sc- qnired grunt momentum in the decent met the icy surface, and on rewiring the bottom shot, over the railway tucks with the ve'ocity of an express train iii/e-si/it)), I',")',','; It WM exh'ilurnung . sport. but hazardous at hours when thins were nue The danger was inermaaed by a sharp Curve of the railway truck emerg- i, g from A short. tunnel, since A train cou'd only be soon ashore dustmnce Made for Home Use LWBy . oli, Wiuter'e aftermou a. dozen school boys were ramming merrily on the hill, where an icy track had been worn all the wgy down. The sport went on until the town clock struck fire, just. as the returning pro- cession had reached the summit of the slide. mmssoottoeaoae-1esotcoi-detaPey. WM & Wu Co., Manned. P.2. The boys 100de at one anotherv -.. doublfully They kne_w mat a train 1 The “cry of was due, and that they ought to wait which reached for it to plus . ‘good enough fo There',, time for one more trip !' ex- claimed the leader. ‘Who will follow me t - i 'Go" in alone, if you want to,' aid one of his companions. 'I’ll wnger you half a. dollar that you don't. dare try it' -- 'I'll take the bet!' cried the reckless leader, flinging himself on his sled sud pufing of. . ' . . Down he went, the sled bowling mer- rily over the we. Hudly had he started bsfore a. whime was heard from the mouth of the tunnel. The boys behind him screamed to him to stop, but it was too law. He was half way down, his sled running as if it had heading straight far the ruilway track. The engineer, rounding, the curve, heard the screams of the frightened boyn and saw the Bring Iled. He siz- nnlled the brakemnn, but it was impos- sible with in so short a distance hostop the train as it was for the boy to switch his sled " the ice track. As he reached the bottom the boy lay flat on the sled with his head ducked low. The train passed the coasting track, and “no to, a halt 3 short distance beyond. The boys at the top of the slide could hardly believe their eyes. On the other side of the railway there was their companion. spinning along on thealed on though nothing had happened: Themed with its rider had shot an- der one of the passengohccrs of the moving train, gotng in " one side and out at the other directly across the mil- Wty track. 'No, no, not brave, but mkleu,’ An. swered the frightened lad, thoroughly "Umed,and schema by his folly, 'you any keep the half-dolls: Joe.' Should be met! in attempting (0 can that very ding-emble- dine-u. eataertt. Aa on“ orig- tnate. In impurities of the blood. load unplu- dona on do no pennant good. The common “no method ot twine“. u to purify the Mood, and to: am purpose there " no prop":- tion superior to Hood's Bet-sperms. Fochfeuuea is not mange. - Youth's Compumon. ‘This page: aid the publisher to the most author, ‘Ieom ambiguous to me.thtdoyouIneunby it? _ 'I don't know,'replied the grant subh- or; q left it them for “In mum" to work on: when Pat &rnd.....-Waah. [GOD'S PILLS cure eon-Imam by tutoring new action to an nun-nun ml. Reckleesneu. Not Counts. 2'35 Any Color Absolutely Reliable (IO-.0- lam 2SiEhiiii, by Bunyan i The wary of a well known bishop orhicts reached me the other day seems ‘good enough for publication. The highcp g'ls one day examining a batch of dea- ‘oons for priests' order. After the the, ioretjcnl port of the examination. he ‘ssid to them."' Gentleman, you have passed . most excellent ertuniast,ioa ii. theory. I should now like to see you do something practical. I shell go into the next room and par-outs a sick man. (You will come in, one by one, eddress [mo Ls I sick parUbiouer, Ind say some {thing comforting." When bis Lordship ily, retired, the candidates were in some confusion, and nobody mind to ibegin, but at lost a me! Irishman ivolnntered to be the titat. He entered the study and opproeched the bishop, iwho was lying with e woebegonc air ion, the sofa. sud thus sddressed him i"ob, Anthony, Anthony! The drink 'agsin! Share it will be the death of " iTurn from your evil weyl before its to ilete and be u meal" This in aid to be vgthe last time that the bishop held a I i practical examination-lam JonTruth, Scott's Em'lldon r ret for an analyse r 'k is in it, Cornea 10ml)- ment of the m :dnml something. that whet you F '_':" sion you a-e m»! 55'!" mixture contaming harmful ornm. overcomes 11rasting, promote'; the makin of Soli2 Fleslv, and gives Vital gray/z. It has no equal as a cure for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis. Weak Lungs, Consumption, Mun. Amy-pin. Emiieittiyy.tnA, Wm? Anaemia. tmtclauon._anc ast ng Diseases of Children. 'oetthtFtse 80“"in MI Moms. 50c. 5 " Coogan (below)-Sar, him-{my , Murphy (tibove)--Pbwtst do ye want? Coogin-Jist Crow me Aowrs a brick till oi Sll up me hod,-schulerville Standard. Hand u the madness of the heart --Brron. Fidelity is seven tenths of businm mtecesce-Puron. "im, "' aloud fMttt'i1tl8tttll'J?f,t't _rG ‘WA'l'Enwo Granite and mm Works. Dom aTitTsriititTii tifSitTorig6etion W . to w T has... mum.“ and!" shall N yum-ad denials“ ','ttitittU'gtAe m" re - “In 0'3â€â€ Diamond Dyes 5015:6753 Emt1rll,fcit...ytt, 1100088 Pusl-g In lint-innuen- Every package fully warranted. Take no other. means that you should use dual .urxu opp-it: more. WAmLoO in Dyeing 3805. Ind derirt'l To Smok A Columbian P, This nupplun- n long manner one ' mu pl .soeest More of the h a pure Ymnmn Totmm - “new. the wiises of Goo. I mum ma son "st., Mm puamd upon tl BOUNTY M Mr. Foster, thein received a cheque 'i) Donald Smith. to) Thompson umumrxal the amount of tue fu The “ ingham Ti mun in a nughhzvnq be called Jul.“ J J9 m tin tag Tdll advertisement ol 3 , said they uould mm msn's f ture wife on The )‘(xlllg man bet and /edeived this a mail: Mrs John J I A mun mun-d Jo! the tiUt cmm~~1un Paisley, Drum- o-ur.‘ w“ txffhcteti with tt on tne jssw nr ner-k dispose of 1hr Inium sGughtertH It and parties in t"ut-siey' 1oesl board M hen guiltypurty. Thu a tine of $15 and cos the total " h. wmv Mr.lCr' Mckin Mr. F. S MCKIM wholesale merchant projector M a mN howl, to ir. 11“;er corner of “Emmaâ€: The hotel will have feet on York arms! Wellington emu, stories high It in, mid that H Colonel Alum (Him under the peculiar case,with reapect to ticGries “Uh a cart tion.net 1th mm i; 000 in SU&'CI‘>~|HIA te The lrsdies l to run Uth the date bvim Women Will i departmvm f. simply ‘not in awaited with KC It is understood quests made M (In Gilmour, n5 tln. 1le t25,000 u, the I', Ottawa. Tlu. H} Orph-nage is to re Mr. and M rs 8L: " Mount Elem frt they own a fine " erected a house at lave 100 acres bro! the crop yielded sown, and they (m or. jdry msre" I verd phsiutdf. In the uwizvs 1 f1 William Mc1'ul'ioul William Andersol Amelia-burg, for d 'ytml"'by the rug In In: than Y“ t) day Severe cold b: mung D Turpentine. n ts uiq tum; Forty MEL! var dressed lsorc,vtsirfv Chipped by Jtsmes during the three I bet 28th, 1891,to m “I giving Aqke, and hunt! I should " I“ who h uotrtained dun-him News of th Cougty Ditstl but!“ In»: A clergyman w: truduce some new church, and arr that the lather“ notice immediate] The clerk, bowove Itqrgt with referew infants, to give Itonoeto the ch “wanton de “done of the ( -tttqtaoesd that, when whom mm were to Frbm Em an I.. an -ruesu .1 Per" "lnwley of he‘ll Thr ti and cot ln tsoule SMO fr, a Ve tl rt' d Jo' Tt the}