4ercag ds ABtcrerval â€"~*How « ugte tha . We have g» "’ 9 > m ~As death, Yar l of P Why didâ€"you come, Amory 0_ : "&,‘_ «could I -um:-m I knew that you were in their hands? ‘‘\ We have gone through so much toâ€" er that we cannot part now. What ~As death ::‘.w; Why should we be it 0 T + O# S _ _"f am not afraid of it." % U‘ Wand I am nét afraid of it ‘Things SR 2 Jt sns se ty i. "Do not decei¢e ie oX LGAT shiM cha. \\ .*Tell me, monsienr," said Onegs, "is t my lord still living?" * Yes, he Is alive and well." ,w’,:;,“ : m.f He is a great chief, and . "t bay never heen sorty, not even now, y :g_m'_' m“w.dfld with one who was â€". not ‘of my own people. But, sah, my \mor . Who shall give my son back to ‘ me? Ere that sun shines again we . shall all b dead, and my hbeartâ€"is glad, fog I.shall see my boy once more." . PMWAHE Iroquois had not.treated De _ §&_ Catinat harshly . ~when ~ they \ (MR _ aragged big from the ~water _ *" * into Their eahoe, Bo incompre: Bensible was it to them why any man s voluntarily ‘leave. a place of Sifety in order to putâ€"himself in their A mtmnywlnmbmitdovn ‘ to maduess, a malady which inspires " @we and respect among the Indians. esuauie passed their hands over %6 be sure that be was unarmed, d he was then thrust down between two women, while the canoe dartâ€" in toward the bank to tell the othâ€" that the garrison of Fort St. Lou!s \ upon their own side of the river and _ gprtang out of her, dragging the prisonâ€" iFs after them.‘ ‘Then, after a short _ gogncil, they started through the forest, Wwralking in single file, with their three prisoners in the middle,. ‘There were * Afteen %ï¬n ait, eight in ~front . {and gevyen 1 , all armed with mus Â¥Kets and as swift footed as deer, so * {gelpo was out of the question. *Â¥bey could but follow on and walit in lefice forâ€" whatever might befall ie Indian woman shook her head. _ AIt day they pursued their dreary ®Barch. Onega had the endurance of the Indians themselyes, but Adele, in ite of herâ€"form: journeys, was footâ€" sore and wear \before evening. It was ‘ m relief to Dé Catinat, therefore, when L ime red glow of a great fire beat sudâ€" aly through the tree trunks and they ame 1 ‘ï¬-. Indian camp in which ) was dssembled the greater part of the w#Re party which had been driven from ‘Bte. Mapie: : Here, too, were a number ‘the squaws who bhad come from the o k and ‘Cayuga villages in order ) be nearer to the warriors. Wigwams een erected all round in a circle, ï¬ofthem were the ketâ€" stung a tripod of sticks, in hich the evening meal was being . In the center of all was a very ‘Mike," which bad been made of iwbed placed in a circle so.as to @ elear space of tweive feet in the 3 He. A pole stood up .in the center a élearing, and something all motâ€" With red and black was tied up nst it.. De Catinat stepped swiftly of: Adele thit she might not have begun: already, then," ; ' A,f,,w osedly.© "Well, it will \thrn next, and we shali.show on that we know how to die," ‘ have not i!1 used us yet." said ¢ atinat.. "Perbaps they will keep ‘*AB, poor souls! " Well, if you are strong enough to jobn u8. : and you friends, we shall follow <after then 4 .fs-‘ loss. of an Anstant... "Ff @ my men will remain to guard mouse and you can have their canoe," ; coming up the stream. Adele was dAly pale, and her band, as ber busâ€" laid his upon it, was as cold as what He wills must in the end be the e Iroquois paddlers had bent to r work untilâ€"a good ten miles lay veen them and Ste. Marie. Then + ran the canoe into & little creek "ff:’;"'_“fl yourself by any such sal 'E, %m as hav etansine "' ! Jou ow _t jou are. reserved COorPYRIGHT, 1509%.. 8Â¥ «AUKFPZER CHAPTER XXV, « . â€" Troquois had not.treated De FFUGE By A. CONAN DOYLE... Author of =The Beturn: of Sherlock Holmes" r ‘And you had a <new delight in every one you éat. Yon get perfection when you get Mooney‘s Perfection did you come? «â€" all o. * jost opening the the _Each biscuit as light as if made by : fairy _ Buked to a So fresh, for the torture, â€" Y\ ife wiltâ€" married to one of #&a:::: and [ mmat #2." dreadtul. words & Soth theis Srarte which bo Thovent of death could have done. De Catinat‘s head dropped forwardâ€"/upon his chest, and he staggered and would have fallâ€" en had Adele not caught him by the um:mmmm‘iw village the squaws and warriors had rushed toward them, and they walked through a double line of hideous faces, which jeered and gibed and howled at them as they passed, Their éscort led them through this rabble <and : conducted them to & hut which stood apart, "Do not fear, dear ;"‘ ahe whisâ€" pered. "Other things may happen, but not that, for 1 swear to you that J shall not survivé you.* h > * S who had led the gttack upon the bonu.mnedommmflm doorway, looking in at the prigoners. The Bastard was smoking a stone pipe; and yet it was he who talked the most, arguing . apparently with‘ one. of the younger savages, who seemed to come round at Jast to his opinion.â€" Finally the old chief said a few short sterp An Instant later an old war chief, acâ€" companied by two younger braves and by the bearded half Dutch© Iroquois words, and the matter appeared to be tard in French to the froquois woman, "you. will have @. lesson this night which will teach:you to side against your own people!"â€" £3.5 You half bred mongrel,".replied the fearless old woman, "you should take that hat from your headwhen you #peak to one in whose veins runs the best blood of the Onondagas. You a warriorâ€"you who, with a thousand at your back, could not make your way into a little house ~with a few poor husbandmen within it! It is no wonâ€" der that your father‘s people have cast you out." 2 ‘The evil face of the Bastard grew livid as he listened to the scornful words which were hissed at him by the captive. He strode actoss to ber, and, taking her hand, he thrust the forg finger into the burning bow! of his pipe. She made no effort to remove it, but. sat with a perfectly. set face for a minute or more,> looking «out through the open door at the evening sunlightâ€"and the little groups of chatâ€" tering Indiasns. He watched her keen ly in theâ€"hope of hearing a cry or see: ing #ome spasm ofâ€" agony~ upon ~bef face, but at last, with a . curse, he dashed downâ€"her hand and strode from the hut. She thrust ber charred finger into her bosom and laughed. \"He is & good for naught!" she cried. ‘"He does.not even know how to torâ€" ture. ~Now, Lâ€"could have got a cry out of him. _I am sure of it. . But you, monsieur, you are very white!" "It was theâ€"sight of such a hellish deed. ~Ah, if we were but set face to face, 1 with my sword, he with that weapon he chose, he should pay for it with his heart‘s blood"‘ The Indian woman seemed surprised. "It is strange to me," she said, "that you should think of what befalls me when you are yourself under the same shadow. ~But our fate will be as I said. You are to die at the stake. She is to be given to the dog who has left us." "Adele! Adele! ‘What shall 1 do?" He tore ‘his hair in his helplessness and distraction. "No, no, fear not, Amory, for my beart will not fail me. . What is the pang of death if it binds us together?" "The younger chief pleaded for you, saying that the Mitche Manitou had stricken you with madness, as could be seen by your swimming to their canoe, and that a blight would fall upon the nation if you were led to the stake. But the Bastard said that love came often like madness among the palefaces and that it was that alone which had driven you. Then it was agreed that ‘you should die and that she should go to his wigwam, since he had led the war party. As for me, their hearts were bitter against me, and I also am to dié by the pine splinâ€" "Now ; at once. They have goue to make all ready. â€" But you have time yet, for I am to go first." _ °_ ___._ "Amory, Amory, could we not die to gether now?" eried Adele, throwing her arms roupd hber husband. "If it be sin, it is surely a sin which will be for given us, Let us go, dear. Let us leaye these dreadful people and this cruel world and turn where we shall find peace." . # The Indian woman‘s‘ eyes fasbed with satisfaction. _ "You have spoken well, White Lily," said she. *‘Why should you walt until it is their pleas "When is it to be?"‘ asked De Catt nat, ure to pluck you? . See! Already the glare of their fire beats upon the tree trunks, ind you can hear the howlings of ‘those who thirst for your ‘blood. You have said rightly, White Lily. There lies the only path for you." f "But how to take it? Onega glanced keenly at the ‘two warriors who stood as sentinels at the dGoor of the but. : They. bad turned away, absorbed in the borrible prepaâ€" tations which were going on Then she rummaged deeply within the folds of her loose gown and pulled out â€"a «tall pistol with two brass barrels and : double triggers in the form â€" of winged dragons. 1t was only a toy to look at, all carved and ‘scrolled and graven with the cholcest work of the Paris gunsmith. . For its beauty the ‘seignour had bought it at his last visit to Quebec, and yet it might be useful, »&lmumuunmm § »‘mh-.g;.m-dl:‘-: ho s t 1e e n e oinded to "And you, you beidam," said the Basâ€" & s1I0THEfR®3 that I can A Hush of joy aver Dé a# his fingers closed round th KWere waes indeed a key to un gates of peace. Adele bad cheek against his shoulder and with pleasure. ..g“'!d a few W“':::m e l a ®You will forgive me, dear?" he \®Forgive you! I biess you and love you with my whole heart and sou!l." . "They are waiting for me," said ahe. "Â¥ou shall see, White Wflr also, monsicur, bhow well I know w at is due to my position.. Farewell, and remember Onega!‘ Fgs . Now, Amory,".. woisi@rea . Aggie, élosing her eyes and nestling still closâ€" er to bim, Â¥ es &# It was a beech tree, exceedingly old and.. gnaried, with its bark hanging Gown in strips and ‘its whole trunk spotted with moss and. mold. Some ten feet above the ground the main trunk divided tnto two, and in the fork thus,formed a hand had~suddenly Apâ€" Heo raised the pistol, and then, with a qflekluddcnhhkluolflnb!-ï¬. he dropped it and knelt with glaring eyes, looking up at a tree which faced the open door of the but. (sâ€" . < . _ _ peared, ‘a large reddish hand,. which shook fruntically from side to se t2 passionate‘ dissuasion. ~ The next "inâ€" stant as the two captives still stared in amazement the band disappeared beâ€" hind mmkmm.mm» pearéd in its place, which shook from side to side as resolutely as its forerunner, . It was Captain Ephraim Savage of Boston. <â€" > And ‘even as they stared and wonâ€" dered a sudden shrill whistle burst out from the depths of the forest, and in a moment every ‘bush and thicket and patch . of ~brushwood was sprouting fire and smoke, while the snari of the musketry ran round the whole glade, and the storm of bullets whitzed and pelted among the yelling savages. The froquois uentinels had beenâ€" dravra in He fired both barrels, > by their bloodthirsty> craving to seo the prisonets ‘di¢, and now the Canaâ€" dians were upon them, and they . were hemmed in by a ring of fire.â€"First one way and then another theyâ€"rushed, to be met always by the same blast of death, until, findinÂ¥% at last some gip in the attack, they streamed off like sheep through a broken fence and rushâ€" ed madly away into the forest. 3 But tWere" WeÂ¥ vue s2Y0ge .FiV uas t.und work to do before he fied. The Flemish Bastard bad preferred his vengeance to his safety. Rushing at Onega; he buried his tomahawk in her brain, and then, yelling his warâ€"cry, be waved the blood stained weapon tbove his head and rusked into the hut. where the prisoners still knelt. <De Catinat saw him coming, ind a mad joy glisâ€" tened in his eyes. He rose to meet him, and as be rughed in he fired both bar tels of his pistol into the Bastard‘s face. An Instant later a swarm of Canadians had rushed over the writhing body, the captives felt . warm . friendly bands which grasped their. own, and, Jooking tipon the smiling well known faces of Amos ‘Green, Savage and Du Lbut, they knew that peace had come to them atilast. C And so the refugees came to the end of the toils of their jJourney, for that winter was spent by them in peace at Ste. Marie, and in the sprifg, the Iroâ€" quols having carried . the war. to the upper 8t. Lawrence, the travelers were able to descend into the English provâ€" Inces and so to make theif way down the Hudson to New York, where a warm welcome awaited them from the family of Amos Green.: ‘The friendshlip between the two men. was now so ce metited together by common memories and common â€"dangers that they soon mp.‘;.mhmmdhc.n:: name of Frenchman came to be as familiarâ€"in the movuntains of Maine and on the slopét of the Allegtiaâ€" wies as it had once bean in the salons and corridors of Versailles. + ~ As to Captain Ephraim Savage, be utmod-ldg‘tohh beloved Boston, where he fuld his ambition by buildâ€" ing himself a fhir brick house upon the rising ground in the northera part of the city, whence he could Jook down zmmm-mnmmm M’- a £ ~The manor bouse of Ia Ste. Marile was scon reatored to its former prosâ€" perity. but its seigueur was from the A SALLOW SKIN l It"isâ€"not veryâ€"clear from any â€" acâ€" count that has yet becn published how far this objection may still apply, if it «docs apply, to the. â€"proposal _ to . create a new sccretariat. . which his , been agrecd to hy Sir Wilrid. : The "presumption is that the essential ob jection is removed by having the new scoretariate aunder the »direct control of the British Coloniat_Office, whichâ€" "hall be responsible for its operatiotis and which may be supposed to hez a~ jeatdul eye out pï¬inst any such danâ€" gors as Sit Wilfrid foresces . might ‘arise> if the men of .one idea, the men without any direct. responsibility to any electoral body, were to: be allowâ€"_ id a free hand. i i~ Sir Wilfrid Jong in advance, in the speech be made in the House of Comâ€" ; mons before going away expressed the fullest confidence in . the ~Willingness and ability of the Colonial Secretary to (meet all. suggestions made . to ‘Great Britain by Canada.. "At presâ€" ~ent,"" he said, ‘‘Downing street is not an object of terrorâ€"to : them and the term has passcd from the language of politital : discussion. . Whether < the Colonial dflo& is presided _ over, by Mr. Chamberfhin, Mr. Lyttelton, . or Lord Elg:.'l beat testimony, â€"â€" afnd cheerfu) testimony, that the efforts of the Colonial Office have always been in the direction of meetingâ€"as far as ~ possible the wishes â€"of th» W bovernments, .* * In regard to 4dea of an Impetial Coun‘il it is not cleat to me that it wouldâ€"â€"improve ‘our relations with th+ Empire to deal ~with such a Council rather .. than Yhrough the Colonial Office." .. _ ~ . (Montreal Herald:) P3 . Accord‘nz to the not vety cleat ac« counts . of . what h.wï¬q;d in London last woek, Sir Wilfrid Laurier seems to have had his way with the Conferâ€" (n>e, not a very surprising Fesult perâ€" hips, considering his expericnce . as well as ~his nitural aptitude . for statesmanhip, put worthy of remark considerinz that the aggressive cleâ€" mont <in . the <~Cenferen e wore ~~ all againstâ€" him. â€" ‘Sir. Wilfrid‘s objection to the :proposals fathered . byâ€"â€" Mr. Deakin was twoâ€"foid, and upon: both positicns he has becn Sustaincd. ~ His first objection was to the â€" proâ€" pes«:I, borrowed â€"by Mr.* Deakin from the circularâ€"issued by Mr. Lyttelton, th> former. ColoniaF Secretary, lookâ€" ing to the crection Of <an > Imperial Council,.efâ€" which «. Prime | © Mimsters should: be members, and which shoald be . represented between .meetings < by some sort of" pefmanent beard â€" To this â€"Sir Wilfrid expresscd at Oltawa the obtection that, "if it were comâ€" porcd of oficials, 1 #hould" fear thit all the Taddists, â€"all #be men of .one id:a, all (ho m n whose business it is to solte problems behird a desk and in the quict_of their offices, â€" â€"might reach conclusions which would come to the interestcd Governments in ~ a form : w hich ~might prove: embarrtassâ€" ing. We have problems â€" epough _ /n evety. colony.I communications ~are to be made,~ it new.. ideas are to be acted upcn, th> â€" initiative© should come: from the respective Governâ€" ments . which compose the â€"British Empire. ‘For:â€"these reasons . weâ€" do not view with favor at â€" pregcnt the ércation of the. Council."‘ day that ae had lost his wife anil son n changed man.~ He grew leaner, fieteer, less. human, . forever â€" beading parties whichâ€" made their. way into.the Iroquois woods and : which outrivaled the sayâ€" WMM“N&WMM of their deeds. A. came at last when he sailied out upon one of these expeditions from which neither he nor any of his men everâ€"returned. TE ED. ent 0J this or in Wiltrld Lagriér SIR WILFRID‘Sâ€"VICTORY action of the bowe t Constipation} dâ€"often‘the ;i.dnya are weak. grnoed mf of is this waste_â€"taken â€"â€"â€" ugby the blood and carried to the skinâ€"that ruins the coniplexion. | "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ cure all skin troubles because they cure the kidueys and bowels. _ skinâ€"incan ‘*Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" canse the eliminating organs to do their he | ; evonderful =â€"| u. | cure for Pimples | nd| â€" and Blotches the |~ ~on the skin. |â€" A ~ The Hamilton ‘confesses : to &A Mlls#hï¬m in glancing through his reFport andâ€" finding ~ that in ~alt but.one â€" of two cascs thest public _Nï¬‚ï¬‚ï¬ have becn â€" ereoted through â€" theâ€"bounty. ob.::"yh- Audrew â€" Carnegies Jt $ Jittle for tha pwblicspirit of the citizcns of so many. OQntario. towns < that ~they neglected. to establith free public Ti brariés untilâ€"/they could use the mon. ey. ol a sttgnzer for that purpose. ‘The report forâ€"the year 1906 ‘of the provincial inspector of public 1iâ€" braries contains photographic views ol sgme two dozen Tibrary â€" buildings, almost â€"alt of them recently etected, and all handsomeâ€"~and .. substantiai structures. ie o se +9 NEARLY A MILLION | _â€"â€"= â€"__â€" f OF CARNEGIE‘S MONEY St. Cathirines Peglin /..........: Cat :;â€":". «hatham «s Brockville *....... Stratford ....... Collinzwood :. Lindsay ...".%.. Smith‘s Falls Waterloo.:....... Cornwall ... In: additicn to these twonty cities and" towns, numerous ;otherâ€"smallet placés . have received library aid from Mr. Carnegie. _ Howâ€"many, the teâ€" port: does not say, but it ~mentions the following places as having _ beneâ€" fited by‘ his bountyâ€" last year: .. Dresâ€" den, $8,000; .Milton, ~$5;,000;Perth, $10,000;,â€" Picton, ©$12,000; Brace bridge, ~$10,000; â€" Gravenhurst, ~$7,â€" 000;" Oshawa, $12,000;â€" Wallacdburg, £11,500; Kincardine, $5,000; > Kemptâ€" ville, * $3,000, _ Hanover, â€"‘$10,000; Orangevilie (additional)y, $2,500; > in all, $88,000 for the year 1906 alone.. Ot â€" all â€" the mdenblo towns . in this province~ Iton and â€"‘London alcnt appear to have neglected to extend a begging palm to: the‘ disâ€" penser_ of Hbraries." London isâ€" â€"eviâ€" dntly provd of being out of the list of Carnegic beneficiaties, â€"for a â€" preâ€" &nant sentence in. the report. from the London library is ‘"Have had ~no gift from~Mr. Carkegie."* : St. Thomas, ‘Ont., April 26.â€"At the Spring Assizes betore Mr.. Justice Anglin . and . jury the case of Charles Patterson of Toronto Junction, C.‘P; K. fAtém>n Who was ko terribly scal= «d and injurcd in the wreck on â€" Wa* bath diaticnd,; cast of this city, â€" has océupted the. two past days.â€"A great army of expert niedical evidence was given by Toromto and London pgll- clans as to permapent extent of :: terson‘s‘ injurtes, who asked $20, damages from : the Wabasb. ‘The jurt had becn out for hours when . the plaintifl, . whose solicitot was . out on «nother case avrd without his advice, &d to settle with the Wabash soâ€" hHeitort Tor .$3400 and pay his > own I“V‘?hl’! blll, the Wabath to : pay alt other costs. Nee in It was learned afterwards Abat th , jury had about decided to give plainâ€" tif a" verdict of between $7000 . and $8000 for injuries roceived. liam Mulock got the postal atr | ments revolutioniacd, and Mr: m feux has just carried the revolution to :gflm' stage; Sir Frederick “g along â€" very well, indeed with the 1mperiat Defense‘ Commuttee,. ~What have we wanted that we could ~not get? Total will LLTTLE TOO HASTY What d lâ€"of a~ Britich ~Gover in recognizing Oreat B MB i 99A that $707,500 24,506 Hme 23,000 20,00( 19,00¢ 17,006 15,006 14,50¢ 13,500 11,000 10,000 10,000 Detroit, u,'“ 5 that ‘‘Prof." is .. , a hait= dresser ‘at > . 409 arcade, hadâ€"changed her hair from _ a â€" brown to a deep red, Miss C HMoweit, 18 years old, of §4% street, sged the "‘professor‘* tor $5 damages in Justice ‘Teagan‘s â€" court Wednesday afternoun. ~Miss HMoweit worked tor the pro t t o ty protngs . d t ib id .%h:*' M + which he~ was streaked and lookâ€" ou uk io e Nh Mb e saÂ¥s. and that customers would . mire her halr and have faith in him. On: March 29 the hairâ€"dyeing oporâ€" ation took . place, u# Miss Howéit says thatâ€"to her horfor she â€" found that she had been conÂ¥etted ‘into a strawberty ‘blonde. The professor on the stand dwelt on th* beauty of Miss â€"Howeit‘s _ carâ€" ming. bair and: gave an ckample â€" of hairâ€"dyeing for the benefit ‘of the "J1y it ow Justice Teagan," sugâ€" gested one of the attorneys. The judge figuratively dueked . and loudly protested, but the professor: solemnly anpounced. thatâ€"the judge was not: a It subject.= â€" rokt‘‘s Men .are so ‘habituated to the cry against smoking that there tew who=doâ€"not ignore it, says per‘s Weekly .: ' i m’lh.m announcedthat it was plpl‘h“' & . problem â€" to solve oflâ€"hand; and it ~he ~ would =think ‘«Smokers who have some regard for the anxieties "of their friends say that they. smoke tobacco from which : nicoâ€" tine has becn climinated. Tobacto §o prepared can be founa néar at hand, but few smoke it, because the process which climinates nic¢otine,> it it does not destroy, materially modifics the savor _of the smoke, 'Â¥ha outery â€" is always the sameâ€"Nicotine! But many other of the principles of < tobacco are as pernicious as . . nicoting, â€" «and when it comes to that it ~ would be &qually pernicious to smoke rye straw it orany other â€"simply, (for one of sevâ€" Jral reasons) there is a . continuous Jroduction of oxide ofâ€"carbon> : wherâ€" ever thereâ€"is imperfect ~ combustion. The â€"smoker carries~in his mouth â€"a little furnace, whose fires are fod with oxide . ofâ€"carbon; : the â€" fire â€" © smoulders inder ashes, and the smoker fans it by means of the stem of his pipe 01 the rent of his cigar orâ€" cigarette. Year after year, the furnace is in ;late,. burning oxide ofâ€"carbon, â€" and Jhe â€"smoker: is working the= bellows with a part.of the force‘of his respiâ€" tatory. organs.â€" The composition > â€"of tobacco seems=as complex. Analysis gives:â€" Nicotine, pyridi¢ gases, formic aldehyde, ammonia, methylamin,> pyrâ€" <ol, sulphoretted ‘hydrogen, _ prussic 1cid,. baryric acid, (butyric acid), carâ€" "bni¢ acid, oxide of carbon, the steam of water, an eUherized <empyreumatic 0il,. and tarry or resinous _‘ products, imong which we detect small â€" quanâ€" 'Liï¬u of phenal. Ofâ€"all the â€"products of tobaceo the â€"most venomous â€"are nicotine,~ <pyridic ~and~ methylamin gases, prussic acid, sulphuretted : hyâ€" drogen, ovide of ‘carton and empyreuâ€" matic oil; ard ‘all thatâ€"we draw into :;.rm lungs with more or less satisfacâ€" . Cologne, April _ 20.â€"The â€" Cologne Gazette publishes an ‘editorial, â€" eviâ€" dently "inspired, "in which ths presen tation ef a copy cf Alfred > Austin‘s mn- to the President of France by King â€" of England: is referred to as; an : unfriepdly act. ~It is pointed qutâ€"that _ if England hopes through such <meansâ€"to accomplish the isola~ t‘onâ€"of Germany,â€" serious complitaâ€" tions are likely to arise in the near Tature.. _ > s .. 6t w‘ 74 * Berlin, <Aptril 20.â€"The foreign office de¢linesâ€"to take any official notice . of the presentation of & cojy of Alfred Austin‘s poems by the King of Engâ€" land :to tihe Président of Franzse. A High: oficial is authority : â€" for â€" the stgtemecnt, however, that as an offset to King Edward‘s extraordinary 'ro ceeding the Germanâ€"Emperor will â€"at cace forward to the Queen of â€" Spain a pair of baby bootees of the fincst T &m 20.=â€"At a meeting _of tha and HMaitan kinds yester day, the British monarch handed © to Victor Emmanuel a : 50â€"cent cigat, *# as he did soâ€"â€" thit he would be. if the ruler of Italy would ‘ band for his little boy, who is making a collection. Pings Paris, April 20.â€"The President _ of France yesterday r:ceived a volumé of Alfred ~Austin‘s paem$§, ~containing a‘royal autograph. 5 s (Sam E. Kiser,~ in Chicago Recordâ€" Herald). £ unud‘ idon, April 20.â€"It Hag jast. been tearned QnuAle::mén. heâ€" fore starting > Tor the cont‘n at ~reâ€" antly, forwarded to: Madcid a: bean _ norsing .â€"bottle, . wi‘hâ€"theroyal | tlown in ‘the glass. . for WHAT HAPPENS WRHEN *YOU pver â€" and ‘give© ‘his decision later THE PEACE OF EUROPE m ®= w# outâ€" C ‘anony Y Mone taire Cor trb Bu Eim spoo, d recrens ofomaile hdhunuï¬a:nu -“53-."2 «ttention giveh to the use of the as is â€" "ax 2p3 Blootrle O rronte . . DB, J. R For ~mutual ? convenience‘ * from a distance 6 ‘w bussted to Mmu. E. Office: Over Bank nl Bqnu...h F G. HUGHES. i*"% Deiitist. Ocifellow‘s Block or and Stuebings W. B.Wilkingon, L.D.$., D.D.8 DENTIST, 4 f °_ Office Open: Daily, _ _ $inie atufesale creu 1 _ _ Painter and:Puper Hanging, W# dertake contracts for printing and parcr han ng in Town sand Conntry Firstâ€"clase wor wuarantésd. Charges résctreble, App! corner of Queen and Prinotse3 Cnm WOLE®, im Paintar and "Panar V J . <_ (~>_ Tesmer of Mairiage IMconsen Offlseâ€"Post Office, Bt. Jaoobs, Ont. > Spring Torm Opens This school which is the Targ * ouf Â¥>) Fatfood enjoys the beat «w Oansda. ‘OHN L WIDEM aX Specialty,:Nose, Thrcat and Ear. CLEMENT, K C. _K. W. c femooere onl M. RHADE B. A. te ‘the Alarander Hot 220 i . D 4 ' 1â€"‘) s meot ' ‘q Ihtn.e-hlm Jadd MI8OELLANEOUS on Albert Stroot, Incar ‘Public Library _ * uesday, April,2nd. of Dental_Surgeons MEDIOAL oz'.r-nmm 14 Queen) 16. , PHYSICIAN . AND SURGEON, 1st. and 3rd Â¥B . 5.. Groduate a o Aacgatt, § 81 in all Je ard & QAflv ar