â€"â€" NA.DRUâ€"CO C the old ® age was.. m w to bave the solcine soughing o6 the trexs, . dunemers af the vgf rad match ed the :rï¬u- of night, . You would have thought that woods -ul prairie were alike nntenanted, had you not l’:b:\'!'x ï¬zlfl those Ulo‘; move in then by n staiking or | stalked, sceking the llh.z another or shudderingly trying to save their own. As the stick cracked, there was a rugâ€" tling in every bush, a stit in every tree, unscen â€"feet pattered, â€" unseen; wings fluttered for a moment, and then again â€"all was still,â€"listening. As the five paused with all their senses on the alert, a tiny bright red s showed for a moment in â€"the pom shead of, and above them. _ "Gosh! ~1 didn‘t know that we were ughu." muttered Al. "If that hadn‘t have touched his fire I‘d huve blundered â€"right into them. Lie low, boys." Mess Geie °o ~For a quarter of an hour. the five men lay motioniess, and so still was everything that before the fifteen minutes had passed, the Boss felt conâ€" winced that the light which they had p--thnohnnbonofmir imagination. . It could not be that there was any live thing in such a silence as that. But Al did not share "It‘s a mercy none Of Tthe Cayuscs whinnied," he whispered, "but it won‘t do to trust them any longer. Let me wm&n‘. Now foller me Go easy, and for the love of life, don‘t break any more tress, Pan," and so saying he led them back by the way they had come. . ~â€" _ At last heâ€"stopped. â€" Thereâ€" had crept into the sky the faintest suspiâ€" clon of light. Black darkness it would have appeared to most men still, but to these whose eyes had become acâ€" customed to the utter dark it sufficed to show a hollow land. ; ts A&kis faaline â€"*We‘ll tie the horses here, and wait z bit. ‘When we can pretty nigh see pur sights, we‘ll begin our sneak. ‘They‘re a blanked sight nearer than I thought they was." . _ * ‘ ‘The black belt of gloom which surâ€" rounded the hollow in which they lay, was . suddenly starred in a dozen {‘I:eel by quick red jets of flame, and silence shattered by the ringing gponl of as many rifles, after which the darkness came back again and the silence, but for the screaming of s wounded horse. _ "Guers they beat us on the sneak," muttered old Al coolly. â€""Get. into gover, boys, quick." ied 194 unds ~:Probably no white man but Al could have led the ranch posse through those woods at night as silently as he had done, They had stirred no heavy beast to precede them and carry. a warning to their foes. There had been mo fluttering of disturbed wings in front of their advance, except that once; but a warning need not be prln:ed in large type for an Indian to see it. . _Az he spoke his words were just!â€" Hled. wh â€"Ever since Dan "broke that tree" the staikers had been staiked without suspecting it. _ es e g on When the volley was fired Dick Rolt had had his eye on the exact spot in which one of the red starsa_of light had burst. He had beard the bullét sing past him, and for & fraction of & ï¬on‘ hadâ€"seen the prone figure of man who fired the shot. But he had not replied to it. . ws were. e could not hear them mee the outline even of the neares} _It was still pitch dark on the The brilliance of the momentary flash. had accentuated the darknegs £° and taken away from him all of locality, so that to have reâ€" would only have been to vzlu_ shot and betray his own hidingâ€" "‘He was lying now behind the degd m waiting to snap at the next sta; h should appear or to meet fl;z which might have followed had attacking party consisted of white . "We‘ve got to wriggle out of this. m Mft your head, but â€" just sicw h on your belly and snake it aftor ©he, There‘s no burry. 1‘il go slow." _ **But. the horses?" asked Rolt. *Yours is dead, ain‘t it? If they want to shoot the others we can‘t stop ‘em, blank them, Come," and Rolt who by this time had his head n:iar pid ‘Al‘s heels, saw these draw quietly away from him. f s sway from hlll‘ll.l a ' Imitating is . ‘companjon, Rol squirmed on his belly through tl: bush which closed over him, so that It was only with the utmost difficaulty and half by instinct that he managed to follow Al, of whose tortuous .proâ€" gress he could see but little, even t'ln he was within arm‘s length of him. 4 He knew that he was going down hill, and that the ground under him was growinz eofter and softer, until last he might almost #as well hay swimming, but he could see nnd' RWe‘re all right now," Al stq whisper, just when Roit was to wond:r. whother he z' be shot than go on any Me .. a c s 5 ['m‘lnhthn erik bouom_."" ie ave gugessed thgt, â€" AP & m':ï¬-w.†C y b!ankcd cold, ch! Wel, that.. We‘ve got t move a; twoy:ar.olds, â€" Are you c " and bo rose to a crouching posltion Wr head Jow till we‘re in . Now come. and we‘!) brat â€.' had no notion how close his fe} Supplied Exrclusively A tollet delight, with the exquisite of tresh rowss, Makes hands emooth and sott and so. Preserves the most ie e I7 1â€" i‘l) certainly appréclate it, : A TENDEREOOTS WOOING 280. opal jare, at your druggist UIVE PHILLIPS WOLLEY Autbor of "Gold in Catribeo," Ete â€"Onmadin British & Oolonial Préss :«fl«.urnr BY tnem . mDC\. as be i forar mt wihe naporge a shelter of its banks, into the heary plue timber, ‘There they threw themâ€" teives on the ground, soaked to the bone and panting heavily. at now*? .Are we going to fight mmf'*llfltnht.rufl- Ing up to let some of the water drain out of him. . "Fight Injuns in timber? Not much. m another &n"‘mnuul before yA miss u t‘s. coming. 'l::'z:'n .eta:u inpmnt. Hear that? "If it‘s not too far." Rolt‘s rumn‘ns days were over, and he. was a heavy rmean. used to riding. [ +s "Hain‘t missed us yet, anyways m,"m good for another burst "No, it ain‘t far," and the old man began to run again as if be had boen five and twenty, Toma and the other Indian> loping along as casily as wolves, whilst Dan the bigâ€"footed, sob bed â€"wearily far behind. At Jast on the extreme cdge of the pine belt, Al paused. . Beyond the timâ€" ber the open country rolled down ty wards the Fraser and the dawn had «ome. It leoked about as bad a place to hold agains‘ an ensmy as you cos‘d imagine, lying as it did in a kolow and containing n> timber big exo gh to serve as a shie‘d against rifl> b 1 lets; but there was nothing hetter#- sight, and it had just one thing in its tavor. For seven or cigi:t bundred yards a least on one side,â€" and for sev.n 0: eight miles on every cthor s‘d>, the was no cover ol ary kind larger ta the thin bushes of 7 zo brish and th patches of bunch grass. A coyo might bave crawled throrgh that u: seen. It seemed impossible that any thing else should. y Realizing ‘that at any moment th i enemles might reach the cége of th timber, Rolt and ~his. companic® raced over the space inter eving b tween the pines and‘the cherry bis at headiong specd. When Rolt cras‘e into the edge of the cherry patch h had not another yard of runn ng pow er left in him. With a feeling (ha. h had not known since he had w.n th quarter at Rugby, he dropped wher he was and lay still _ _ _ _ "That" was another yolley. poured nto the hollow. ‘Don‘t stir, boys, and don‘t shoo back," commanded Al. When the} think they‘ve kiled every insect i this bloomin‘ bresh patch, they‘l maybe try some other racket. The: we‘ll get our work 4n." "It‘s our only chance and a 5"’! me. Jt‘s zot to be thet cherry pat h. \ said, pointing . out to the op:n. ‘There 2in‘t anothcr p‘ace in sight a vould give.1s a show," ard he sct o‘f unning apain at tep spced for a 1 te ‘ourâ€"cornâ€"red patch of ~wild â€" charry ush, abort a thousaend yards . from he timber. The cherry patch looked like a fie‘d after a Manitoban bail storm, and there could have been little doubt in the Chilcoten‘s minds that anythirg that had sheltered in it was as d a~ as Julits Caosar. But being Indians {he clected to run no risks. Wher he firing ceased a sound ofâ€" ch>p ping began, and Rolt who should hay« known better, imagined that the câ€"ld blooded brutes were going to { e1 b â€" dore picking up their birds, but h> Mizjudgsed them. An Indian is su‘fiâ€" clently coldâ€"blooded, but not on the hunting trail or the war path. The: he thinks a great Ceal less of his bely than does a white man under similar clroumstances, f Before long a great tree crashed down, and before the sound of its fa‘l fad died away, they saw the top cf another lean slowly over, hang for a moment, &and then disappear in a spray of shattered boughsâ€"and pine peedles. Three fell in all, and still the chop gng went on. ‘Then for the first time olt noticed what looked like a giea‘ saw log just outside the line of th: rlne trees, lying parallel with that ine, and as he noticed it two more game to join it. There was no doubt that they came; he saw them emerge slowly, like some feotless monsters, moving sideways down the hill. The Indians were very thorough in their work of destruction, and thanks o the looting of Rolt‘s storeâ€"house they had plenty of ammunition tc spfn‘:e, but at last even they were sat ‘sfled. 4 "Ah, here they come! flu'w tin‘ down to business at last. "# more like Cree fightin‘! I wouldn‘t have thought that they knowed so much," muttered Al. But at first Rolt, who had not Al‘s experience, did not understand, and the sight of those three great pine logs creeping down abreast, apparentâ€" ly by their own volition, was vory horrible. _"We‘ve got to get them other tâ€"n qver this side," said Al. "We orn‘t them," pointing to the logs, "and h&my get here there‘ll be a blaokâ€" ed bot time in the cherry patch." . _SNot likely, and it they do wp"@ got to risk it, 1 guess they‘}l wipe us eut this time," with which cheering mï¬ he crept away, returning with "I‘ve left the other galloot where he was," he explained. : "He ain‘t any mtulflthllfl-.,‘ntu'on plum seared that he‘ll & ‘Vrmy amart looking man, Hullobh! What‘s got that log *" _ Cmy ~them?} Wonut th Inition‘s meak roond Inio tohinge â€"* The centre log had reached the spot where Al‘s bat lay, and as it pas ed ta mt dete iprmeinier prope reac or the derelict "Stetson" which had been the old man‘s pride. <At the same tind the slope of the prairle incremsed sud denly, and this particular log had been trimmed too fine. By nature it bai rown al u}ymnv.; and . he ;gtf_.ï¬ whe, meo . Who, R#d Touk to the trank. _ _ =â€"=â€"â€" =_â€"â€"=~!‘ From time to time a rifle spat redly ?- the timber, but for the most part he slow progress of the logs down he sloping: prairie was made in at m Bilence. ‘The sun creep‘ng the heavens seemed to move aster than they did CHAPTER XXI was. that thoigh Jt Ja4 up to this nâ€"int, as soon as it | ioi on en «it %M atll it was #, $ Alregdy 4 ~as twouty feet ahoud of Its compe~icns, and theo for a mo ment & brown hand showed above It. XC And then the expected happensd. Four -e: however Mw hold a green pine tree from when it begins to roll, and re this, one of the Indians let go boited back "towards the timber. fell . with <Rolt‘s bullet b-tm&g shoulders and Al‘s through his before he hadâ€"gone a dozon paces. The others beld on for one â€" more breathing space, and then the < log broke clean away from them, rolling merrily down the hill, whilst thres miserable devils writhed in the sage brush in the vain hope of hiding from the whiteâ€" men‘s withering volley. One wretch ran perbaps for‘ fifty r'll'dl with an arm swinging: helpessâ€" from his shoulder as he ran, a d they saw him winceâ€"and stumble as a second bullet touched him. F Faster M%u‘nah&fl again a band : and: arm and sboulde 3. M?fl Wï¬ butâ€"the arm, broken at ths wrist, had Sallen bhind the log, b> tore his bul‘et el,lmh of 1. ‘Bully for you, 1 It .al back about thom sitter«" t Ro‘t did not even â€"emile. Hig â€"lips were thin now and set, and his eyes ‘were glued to that log, whilst he held his rifle as m«<n kold their gunsâ€" at the "Outer to me, Boss," shouted ‘Al, pnn!ll‘ up another cartridge, "bull to wou," be added, regrctfully, before he could fire ara:p os bisifellowâ€"creature collapsed inâ€"a b.ap and lay still. pigeon traps at Hurlingham _ It the cove l:li in the timber had been -h!?:: it a haystack at seven hundred yards, the fate of. Ai and Rolt would have been l!*dw in the excitement of the moment both men stood up, every thought intent upon their pray, utterly regardless of the leaden becs which bummed barm lessly past them. Men fighting for their lives have no sentiment, ard periaps Al never had much atâ€"any tim... The sight of blood had roused al his fighting instine‘s, and for the mom.nt he was £s reckless as he was pitiiess. se t But the other trars were not pulled, Whilst thec ntre log was b traying its masters, the two outside logs bad come to a stamist‘l}, and so, in spite of Al‘s gibes and th2 bullets with which he made chips of them<fly, they r > mained, grat black bars on the prairle, three hupdred yards from th cherry patch, wHilst the Novemb.r sun crawled down towards the hort zon. Suddenly it dipped into a ow lying bar of cloud and the light fai «d so suddenly that Al noticed it. "Oh shoot. &nd be blanked!" h> cried, as haift a dozten bullets humâ€" med past him. "Ii‘s our turn now. Pull them othcr trans, cain‘t you." â€" "We‘ve got to hurry, Boss," be sa‘d sinking into his place by Rolt‘s side, and shaking a spray of blood off his hand where a bullet had skinned it. "We cain‘t let them fellows stay there after dark." ‘"That‘s so; but if we stay here we‘ll be roasted as soon as it‘s too dark to shoot. They‘ll fire the bush on us, sure." "Well, what is your plan?" asked Rolt, wearlly. He was a brave man, but the fight against such odds, as he now realized that they had against them, seemed to him hopeless. Only the boyish spirits of such a dareâ€"devil as the old frontiersman qoul& remain unbroken under such a strain. "I min‘t got no plan," he drawled, "at least no plan to speak of, bit & Bcripture saying seems to me to come in mighty bandy: ‘Do unto others the ru as they‘d do unto you,‘ only do t quicker _.Now those Johnnics ars calculating to rush us as soon as it gets good and dark,. We‘ve got to rush them first." "All right." ‘Hold on. ‘Tain‘t time for the last act yet. We‘ve got to playâ€" this game gccording to Hoyle, with all the fr.l} as belongs to it. Fust there‘s o?ov; "What are we going to do to pr vent It? We have lost our horses." _ Rolt did see, and he never saw a halfâ€"hour in his long life so trying 24 that during which he and the o"q three men crouched, like sprint© waiting for the start, whilst the flg‘;i )og lay motionless in front of gbolq! and one by one the outlines of the prairie grew indistinct, the gepars tree tops merged into each otrer. ux night came. me ELCY Julsda AAD Last $a 4wA _ "They m:‘;jh( try‘ foMn't. b:cx to the r," spered Al, * nm?aub:h:r gcr :In-. lyl";?:;†%:. our that Wny opr tone in ruat them â€" B "m&; ’blz one rl!h" & Bcatch fir beâ€" youd r camp?" * "All by its l%lu on a bluff. Yef‘ That‘s It. We‘ve ?t to make for that. "But we should beve to go through the whole lot of them to get to it." *That‘s so, but Ii‘s the on‘y way as they won‘t expect us, and it‘s the short cut to supper, Are you sared to try It? Maybeâ€"the folk at the ranca want us as bad as I want my tucker." ~ ‘Roit knew that in vhe darkRéss th s was only too probable, but there wers other lives to be considered, _{n prg: clous to him than his own. * ""Twon‘t do to bunch up, that‘s the trouble.. We‘li have to> split like a band of prairie chicken, and I‘m scared as yon‘ll loss your wey‘~ > * _ _"All right; I guess you ailp‘t, it if o to that; but keep your halp on i amnpnenge m es ho m then tfell as &'.’y walited, whilst the :rt came quickly, as it does in northern lands. First the bar of brown cloud turmed to fls y muoo th:w“‘hra fhee t: pines iauu‘ou hard ..:“o'&‘.:‘ out a pale green + then tha Taat Inded sid on o4f hoplod. ® ink I kid or & {chee inhiho, Atl" ho saith angaaiy. * **"** "rm‘ e from the orchestre, then the '&g; &:Wl kinder dlnr.!um Ineebf- Ain, the ghost appears.â€" Seg?" in ‘his "You choose your time and I‘ll fol That‘s t ire," and be sto t a better. chan e signal. spered â€" Al his volee gnal. They‘re going d Al . "Are _ you vnmnmh ted at last. i1d reply the old man €500 RECIT RV ARVIYY Years alter hs was known ss BC}y Brokeniaw. . Ho was more Jucky then the big Chilcsoten just ahead of him. The hand which struck the senses out of Blly, gripped and clawed at the naps of the next man‘s meck. For a dozen 8 it seemed doubtfu!l wheâ€" ther wEu. rage or red terror would win in thet rece for lie, but the claw. ing fingers bont at last, and the In: dians shock of black hair, be‘ng ng‘i;o t.n‘d e‘:trc&g €3 & hom:uml& @ grip ose fingers o 9 two men rolled over together, like gï¬ and hound in the final worry. _ it sufcks But Ro‘t‘s muscles bad been kept hard by &1 outâ€"door life, and he stlll five ycars on the right d‘.': forty, so that hiz feet seemedâ€"to de vour the distznce, «1nd in spite of their efforts the shadowy figures of the Indians grew plaingr, until one turned $or." ho had herdiy thike 10 200. the Cor. s to fleroe white faso. ‘The uflï¬ml: seemed to ries up and strike him, an he krew Bo more, the releage cams. heâ€"boundcd forwa‘d s he had acve when ho was the first string for bie alma mater, and passed Alas a motorâ€"car passes a bus. "To ‘em, b>ys," sâ€"reamed Al. Sock ic to ‘em! Giye ‘em hell!" and, yelâ€" Ing like a fiead or an‘old Cree brave, he dashed aiier his leader. To their crudit, in spite of his pac», Toma and A; were notâ€"much farther behind Rolt when be sprang at the log, than the second and third strings are behind tro winuer<in the quarter. As Rolt reached. the Iog a group of figures rose: from the sage _brush. They had miready.wormed their way through it for some fifty yards un seen, but concealment being no lorger possible, they rose now and ran. Fleet as an Indian," men say who do not know Indians. â€" Those who know them wou!d back Oxford or Ha*~ vard, Cambridgg or Yale, to b>at any Indien who ever drew the breath of the prairics into his lungs. ‘The trow ble is.that mest of the men who take back these stories of Indian prowess don‘t know anything about first<lâ€"ss athletes; don‘t know what it means to come to Lond:n the wonder Of your sountry.â€" and find yourself a vei moderste secondâ€"class in town; -1 moreover, the raconteurs, l‘tlg for the most part lutborlt:%'a‘l whiskey, have no personal sta to jndge by. They. themselves â€" think them selves t:wl:'t The boys would ::2 them obsolete machines past forty {it only for wasting good fuel, Little Liver Pills. ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Te 1J8.| porsiy violent headache were so disâ€" Eons heCEatmtied ta se sn mt _~*Rruitâ€"aâ€"tives" is the g gure for headathty in the: world ‘and is the only medicine made of fruit juices. â€"_ or trial size, 25¢. Atall dealers or from Frpitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottaws. "FRUITâ€"Aâ€" TWVES?" CURED MIM I was i to try "Rroitâ€"aâ€" tives" and â€" g, 1 was better, and in a I was quite well more I threw my s away. â€" 7 "Fruitâ€"sâ€"tives" not cured mnd-dlï¬. but ï¬-fl?emlu‘& ,.m.'.u-- w. J. Mecons, * * will always cure Headâ€" m%ma "and all Stomach and soc.‘s box. 6 for $2.50. Traaton %tf Despa Yory emalil and 4s caay to take as sigar, t , O# l--t:'m ear J e i un Carter‘s OURE BICK HEADACHE Must Bear Signature of See Pucâ€"Simile Wrappor Betow. FOR B MYEA, POR THE COMPLEZION rlfl 88 YEARS EXPERIENCE Nh APCG As they ran a horse whinnied, Al, checking for a minute, lma mï¬% l‘ok’o! h ted, Rolt I "â€"he pan a% overhsuled ‘him. â€""That‘s their horse m Let‘s chanceit, Boss. It‘s h the risk," and he stole swiftly along throuch the bushes until they opened out into & narrow swamp, not an acre in extent all told. "Cut the ropes or pull the * gasped Al, and his own g& mko snicked and slashed about the horses, reckless of their heels or of any who might be on the trail. "Now â€"jump on and git," he added, "Til finish ‘em. . Jump, blank it, flm" he screamed, as the . Boss itated, and a crashing of brush in the direction of the fires vnrnï¬lfl th;: :35' minutes of grace had ox . Luckily his horse was not hit, but brnmmtmoumnmm all but toppled from his seat, though he rode bareâ€"backed, he got his grip again, and in spite of the deadly sickness which took him and the warm trickle from the numbed shoulder, he managed to stick on, whilst the loose horses, frightened by the shooting, thundered past, ‘ him as they went, into the d in which Rolt had vanighed. _ Sorely against his will he had to let his rifle go. If his enemies caught him the rifle would be useless new, and he bad all that he could do for the one good arm left him. You :;e pMyulm d @ .l:-?m neve ':‘ ol a In wonia . whe As they yast what looked in the Muh:‘:ahkn to, a man leapt out m path, m‘:l who ':‘ now repeated ery._ t fhoigh Ai ty mast Rie thy ty an was dian tried boldly ‘to &.‘l-olnvm To Roit he wasâ€"the full Dback of tis pace he pretended o swerre, aud pace prete swerve, i then, as the man closed on him. turn ge aue ran TIgOt at Aim, tixed tae Indian‘s chin up with the butt of his open hand so that his head was shovâ€" ed almostâ€" off his shoulders, and . so passed amongst the great dim pines which stood for goal posts, through s line of smouldering fires, seeing only the tall thin figure of the tireless rupâ€" ner in front. In it twenty or thirty horses had been picketted, and as luck would bave it not a man was in sight. Rolt obeyed him as the last m was severed, and Al, losing his at last, cried in his triumph, "Now, catch us, you swine!" as he lVfl himself on to the back of the horse and galloped into the bush. As if in answer to his taunt, a dosen Indians dasbed into the opening, and four or five rifles were fired point blank at the retreating figure. Â¥or a mile,‘perhaps, he let s gallop, almost lying on tum avoid overhanging boughs, mailntain ing a precarious position by holding on to the horse‘s mane with his unisâ€" jured hand. Toronto, Feb. 23.â€"At the meoting of the Assocjated Heards of â€" Trade which opened in the City Hall yes tercay, Mr. H. L. Janzen, Psesident of ‘the Berlin Board of Trade, presenâ€" ted â€" a novel idea of dispensing with local option. He advocated that when a man was arrested for gonâ€"gupport he be given a ferm oaf aix months on the prisog farm, amd given work to Jao â€"whigh woul‘ wean money for the provigce. _ ‘This money should be sent to his family, lessâ€"the cost to th» government of the prisoner‘s support. Shoul1 the offender take <to liquor ht For u::ty yardsâ€" the two. tors impending brush or blunâ€" surare mt C in # main trail which led to Khmb camp. If they had had time to think, the smooth firmnéss of it would have suggested (o them theâ€"numbers of an enemy..who could wear such a trail in so short & time. When at inft be came out upon the prairle be rcduced :Ilil m: a lope nd sat up, muttering ay £h horse with I‘s. knees M'w bold up his wounded arm with his jeft band. Winged, blenk them, but w d yet, nor goin‘ to be by any g:ncotea," bct though his words were prave his sleeve was v sodden with a warm sticky ficid :‘lxch still conâ€" tinued to coze In‘o it., and he was wing go dim of sight and dizzy thai nowcuu bave ridden right into Rolt, bhad mot his horse shied. f Then for the first time since he had grown to man‘s estate, the old cut a volun{ary. but even then ha w on to the halter rope, and manâ€" aed to mermur: (To be Continued) tjos soven ronto, proud and be wo marvéellous! wit which celved the should tbe : given. a terni twice as long and so on until he reéformed. long ani so on until he reformed. Mr. ‘ Janzen moved a resolution that a prison farm be established in the north country with a view â€" to demâ€" onstratimg the richness of the s6il. CANINE WITH NOVEL IDEA OF DISPENSING WITH LOCAL OPTION 4Â¥ aeo mdividua) eth is th Om s Th ) Mew .bohi) the proud 0 Al Gid uwot stay to look at z.“hlhg:lwt%.ol l.l:gwth as ll-x ered mgp&nm true accent ready id for ‘the moment deâ€" with â€" a 1 rare enoug milar deco GoLD TEETH VW when Chamberâ€" was used, Why in remedy â€" may 4 $ ick of his fmesl timea tas utt of his was shovâ€" tha d Mr, Henry Sachs, Hespeler made atrangemente a few days ago > over the long distance telephone for the purchaseâ€"of Sailor Boy, the 12â€"yearâ€" old pacer from David Brash, w.Plattsâ€" vilie. The horse has a mark of 4.16. . Sachs, who pwas Banner will now have a tcam of â€"pacers hard to beat. _ Ice races are expected â€" to be Held â€"at Hespelet this winter and no doubt botl: horses will be entered. Sailor Boy is well known here, as he has ‘taced in several of the matinees. "The Dream and the Busineso.‘"" | The truth is only convincing when‘ it is told by an experienced lHar. â€" "A Bundle of Life." s To see men as they. are not, and never.carm be, is the peculiar privilege Oof the feminine nature.â€"‘‘The Sinner‘s Comedy." To die for cns‘s great ideas â€" is gloriousâ€"and â€"easy. . The hortor is to outlive them. â€" That is our _ worst capabilityâ€"*"The Ambassador." Rospectiability is something in the constitution. .You ..can‘t acq‘re it, and, mercifully, it â€"you haven‘t got it, you don‘t feel the nees of it. â€" â€" Men have no real confidence in woâ€" men.â€"‘‘The Dream and the Busiress." She is mot, properiy speaking, â€" a tretty woman at all. She is a Manâ€" ner.â€"‘"The Sinner‘s Comedy." The Brantiord Collegiate Institute Board: is asking the City Council for an appropriation of $28,000 this year, beingâ€" an increase of $12,000 over the amount â€" for ordinaty requiremerts. The extra money is .required to covâ€" er & deficit on the now building and equipment, and will probably be covâ€" ered by debentures. ‘If, however, the ‘netpase is taken out of this year‘s taxes, it is more than litely the rate of 23% milip will be boosted: ‘tne fraest modesty is three <parts pride.â€"‘"The School for Saints." You are so clever that in any Case you will certainly come to grief. For it takes # born fool to drive a good bargain â€"with li‘e.â€"‘‘The Herb Moon." I make it a rule never to regret a thing: regiw. :s a bore. I merely call my mistakes experience.â€"‘"Some Emoâ€" tions© and a Moral." She was not a woman one â€"could woo dozing.â€"‘"The Sinnetr‘s Comedy." CE 20 MRCCD AECOPRCIY PECECUUEY 9 § rretty woman at all. She is a Manâ€" , CAQN,)Y, ez Denile: Weteitos per.â€"‘‘The Sinner‘s Comedy. I Houts 0 to 5. Fridays 9 to 12. e sls After April Ist will visit Elmira the When her child is in a danger ‘llaurml â€" woman will risk her life to protect it. ‘ month, 1.::‘, ;.o;.rtb Â¥riday ~ No great act of heroism or risk of cthay : life is necessary to protect a . child | ______. . en fromâ€" croup. Gite _ Chamberlain‘s * on Cough Remedy and all danger is ' DR. J. E. HE®DT,8 : avoided.© For sale by all dealers. * Specialty=â€" soi MAY BOOST TAXES, From ‘‘The John Oliver.. Hobbes Birthday Book" we take ‘the followâ€" ing epigrams: SAILOR BOY SOLD How to cure & cold is a in which many are sow.~ Phamberiain‘s nmmmtnmni mense sale by its remarkable cure of cold. _ It can <always be dependéd upon. For sale by all dealers. t OPERATIONS AVOIDED on sonnenle futlet t E. Pinkigan‘s Vegetable Compoutd 4 ® would not be alive, . For five months I rrom= Mmufdlnd in« esd {er periods and s | ;:{ inflammation of 3 [( Afereddices marige 3 ~| and thought often jA',II-_‘: Nes | :fd denth. 1 conâ€" C \~+<»] sulted two doetors M ~ Liud w he. could d? $"te "lW io HAâ€"a f wen & f ) and the best doeâ€" C ubmit to an operâ€" ation, because ! M.m-..l"'! Tooln " nitedueness and backache Te 1c 1ns in B{'I..ydh E.. Pinkham‘s egetable Compound m SAYINGS OF JOHN OLIVER HOBBES 1 Dogm to culeres rom the office. D. 8. D, D. 8, §. mm&mm Royal College of Dental Burgeons of Torrute Dental Office in Fischer‘s Blook, Waterioo V&nhflhmln-dfll‘m- the month, Dentistry practiwed in alt is Mast ‘..':u," ï¬ij! EXPERIENCED VETERIN. ARY SURGEON . J'E%mamm Veterinary Office "‘& denee, Queen St. Phone 203. All â€â€œ!Nflcgtmm Janzen‘s Blook R «& _â€"__ _ Issuer of Marriage Liconso« O Bos ~PostlOfMec, 8t Jacobe, Out ts Megs, 8 Barrister, Ouavm,.. € COha. Ml:‘lone Bih F G. HUGHES. Dentist U« Licoensoed Auotionser For the vounties of WATERLOO and OXFORD. Satisfaction an teed. Address muumfl:' to Freegort orbusiness left Iwn- ot the %° Daily ph :: Bofl.lugz h im te ceive prommuon Our classes are now larger than ever before but we have daï¬ our quarters and we have room a few more students. You may enâ€" ter any time.â€" We have a staff of nine experienced instructors and our courses are the best, â€" Our graduâ€" ates succeed. <‘This week three reâ€" coent graduates informed : that have positions 1875 mm per mth’wxm three our free catalogue now. Pnone No, 734, _ ring 4,.Freeport, Ont Robt. Brickne!l Clement & . na Rriprege souiort OBM L, WIDEMAN Contral Business: Colloge B, MoBRIO® or. and F T eimir oo d tC mow 1 io. Dr. Lederman, D. D. 8. ‘~ PRIYVATE FC D_l!_d_fln_ Ear, St. STRATFORD, ONT ‘X FUNDS T« E, MEDCALrE @r, . Bohcitor, Lng h4 ®" Dentist LD.8. Royal Restorer for Men BITZER, B, A D. A. MeLoiibi®o, i ce Lt 0 En 6‘ next ":flm Berlin Ba rristo TV TUISL® Clement OBA NoT a Bta., Wateries "rincipal, Notary, â€" Pubit to Unt Waterloo N. Webel spokea 5Â¥ 557 Public