Exeter Advocate, 1907-04-25, Page 71
•
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Cr_
A Pointer in Paint
No mattter what you are going to
punt—the house, porch, blinds, fence,
interior woodwork, barn—you will find
the right paint to do the painting fright,
in RAMSAY'S PAINTS.
Ask your dealer for Ramsay's Paints—or
write us for Post Card Series "C," showing
how some houses are painted.
A. RAMS,AY & Ste cL, twat Makers, 11111MILAt,
IZstabushed 1112. 4O
THE
RIGHT
PAINT TO PAiNT RIGHT. MIS
•1
ESTIMATES and RESULTS.
Wile" the Oreat.lTeet Life commenced business in 1192, participating rates
were issued calling for dividends in 15 and 20 years. and also with the -Quin•
quennial•' or 5 year dividend period.
Life Policies issued in 1692 on the five year dividend plan rgceived their
first dividend of the full estimated bonus of 050-00 per 01,000.00 ; their second
dividend in 1902 of 50 per cent. over the estimated dividend ; and this year,
1907, are receiving their third dividend of just double the first dividend and
eettmate.
Every Polfcyholdrr has expressed his gratification with these dividends,
which are paid at the option of the Policyholder as fully paid bonus addl•
tions, the equivalent in cash, or in reduction of future premiums.
The distribution is on the English basis of an equal percentage of the
sum adt,ured, and not on the American so-called "contribution- system. and
the eminent English Actuaries. B. P. IIardy, I•'.L A.. and George King, F.I.A.,
P.F.A., reported rc;ently to the New Zealand Government "that as a work-
ing system it has marked advantages over tho contribution plan. because it
gives more uniform rceulte."
Our 15 year Deterred Dividend Policies issued in 1692 mature this year,
and our Actuary has reported that they have earned, and are entitled to be
paid, the full amount of the profits estimated at the time.
Our Non -Participating rates are. and always have been. very low, but
the results of our fifteen years' experience prove that the cost of Participat-
ing Insurance hat been very much less than these low nonparticipating
rates, because of our high interest earnings.
The applications for the first quarter of 1907 are over a million dollars in
excess of the same period of 1906, every Province ..f the Dominion having con-
tributed its quota to these magnificent figures in appreciation of the unpre-
cedented results necompiished by this representative Canadian Company.
No attempt of faddy foreign actuaries, disgruntled newspapers that fail
to get the advertising they expect• or legislative committees, well described
by D. P. Fackler. the well-known ex -President of the Actuarial Society of
America. an -absolutely innocent of any life insurance knowledge." must be
allowed to "knock" the (Canadian business of Life Insurance.
For fuller particulars• send for a copy of the Great -West Lite Report
for 1906.
The Great -West Life Assurance Company
HEAD OFFICE--WINNIPEC.
BRANCH OFFICES Vancouver. ('algary, ilontreal, Toronto. Halifax,
St. John, N.B.
1906 shows largo gains over 1005. Now business
amounts to $5,503,547 in 3,026 policies, of this $46,000
was written in Newfoundland and tho balance entirely
within tho Dominion. Tho following aro sorno interest -
facts from tho Company's 37th Annual Statement.
Pr.slatrs, lr.. re■w■r.
twee.. .. .. .. ..t I,004.8111.T4
Interest and real. 44,044.03
rivet trim .al..1 Real
Eat..... ,... .. .. 3,004,41
t 1.0; •3.433.10
ASSET..
Mortgagee.. .. .. ..•
Debeatnroa and woad.
Loan. on Po11eIt.
Premiums Ob11g.11on.
Real Estate .
M N eco m„n y'.
Head Oltlee . .
Casb be Bask. . ...
Coal at Hest Mlles
D.. sad Deterred
Premiums Ise') •
interest a.d rests due
and Steroid • • ... 4
1)rs111•R.EMENT3,
Death Clairol ..0 I127,975.40
0latuscd Endowment. I0',&Me.0o
Purrba.ed Policies ... S,007.47
Surplus ...... .... 83.047.05
Aa.ultie.' .. .. 10,443.38
Expenses, Tate., etc... 8::4,717.40
Balane. „ . ........ 1.054,443.53
,:.011.47.41
3.4211,421.40
1.110,517.23
25,7641.H1
900,34
3O,t17 5.79
001,533.00
3.340,33
30.941.81
207.712.63
"no lais.saismi
wilseests
u1T073 42a., a
1.T.'nl E,
Reserve, 4 31,51 •nd 3
Rapture on lapsed pol-
lee. liable to re-
vlre or surrender
Death clans. nand.
boated .
•
Matured Endowments
unadja.ted
Present Value of
Deal\ Clair.s pay-
able f■ Ia.talr.e./. .
Premiums paid Is ad-
raaee
Amount due for medi-
cal fees ... ....
Accrued rent.
Credit ledger be/sires
Sundry current •e -
remote . .
Surplus e. Company'.
Valuation Standard.
9,053,331.18
3,,31.95
43,ati3.oO
0,004.00
45,333,09
13,781.50
4,432.00
500.0•
10.997.30
0,370.111
1.208.1711.18
Tho Company has a surplus on Government standard
of valuation of $1,552,364.26. Tho following aro some
striking gains mado in 1906. In Income, $115,9011.22 ;
In Assets, $I1,Oy9,447.69 ; In Surpla9 (Company's Stand-
ard) $251,377.46 ; In Insurance in Force, $2,712,453.00.
Send to Head Office, Waterloo, Canada. for bookiet giv-
ing Annual Report and proceedings of Annual - Meeting.
Robert Melvin, President A. Hoskin, K.C. " Vice.
Geo. Wegena-it, Manager Hon. Justice Lritton j Pres.
W. H. Riddell, Secretary
4.0.4.^.A04-010.404(>♦o•jn.4.7+0+C♦oar-04. 04- 0
DARE HE
OR, A SAD LIFE STORY
♦
+0+0+04 o4.0+0+o-lo+o+0+00+0♦0
CI IAPTL l i NX \ l I.—(Continued).
As he receives no answer, he repeats
the exhortation more imperatively,
"Come."
"Why should 1 come' \\'here should
I conte to?" says the young man, lifting
his head, "where can 1 lied such plain
traces of her as here? 1 will stay." •
Ile says this with an air of resolution,
and once more lays down his face upon
tat) footstool, which, being entirely
worked in bends, has impressed the
cheek thrust against it with a deign in
small hollows, a tact of vnich the suf-
terer is quite unaware.
"You cannot slay !" cries Burgoyne,
the more impatiently that his own share
:,: anxiety is fretting his temper almost
past endurance; "you cannot slay, it is
1111 of the question; they want to come
No the rooms, to prepare them for ne:v
)ccupants."
"Neto occupants!" repea's Byng, lurn-
ng over almost on his face, and tlalten-
'i'g his nose and lips against the beaded
turfnce of .his stool, "other occupants
than her. Never! never !"
It is to be placed to the credit side of
,Ir. Burgoyne's account that he does not,
upon this declaration, withdraw the
resting -place from his young fr'iend's
countenance and break it over his head.
It is certainly not the temptation to do
s, that is lacking. Instead, he sits down
al some distance off, and says quietly.
"I see, you will force 1110111 to call in
the police. You will make a discreditable
e :sc•landre. How good for her ; how con-
ducive to her good name. I congratu-
late you!" •
The other has lifted his head in a
unumenl.
"\\'tort do your mean?"
"Do you think," asks Jim, indignant-
ly, "That it is ever very advantageous to
a woman to have her name mixed up.ih
a vulgar row? And do you suppose that
hers will bo kept out of it? Coale"—
seeing a look of shocked consternation
breaking over the young man's ince. and
determining lo strike while the iron is
hot—"I will call a liticre, and We will go
home lo the hotel. Put back her things
into her basket. What right have you
to meddle with them? You have no
business to take advantage of her ab-
sence to do w hat you would not do if
She were here."
Ilyng obeys with a scared docility; his
eyes are so dint, and his lingers tremble
a., hush, That J1111 has to help hint in re-
placing Iaizubettc's small properties. Itis
own heart is pricked with a cruel smart
that has no reference to Antelitt's illness,
as ho handles the departed girls spools
and skeins, rind awkwardly folds her
scrap of broidery. Byng offers no fur-
ther resistance, and, equally indifferent
1 , his own bunged -up ey0., bead -narked
cheeks, end disheveled lacks, follows his
companion dully, down Oho stone stairs,
cornpasslonalely watched from the top
by Annunzinta, whose heart is an incon-
veniently lender one to be Matched with
s.) lough n face. They get Into the nacre,
end drive in dead silence to the Jlinc►•va.
Arrived then:, Jim persuades his friend,
who now seems prepared 10 acquiesce
sleekly in whatever he is told 10 do, to
lei down nn his bed, .since the few words
That he utters convey the fact of Ills be -
ung; suffering from a burning headache.
a phenomenon not very surprising, con-
sidering his late briny exercises, since.
even et the superb nee of hventy-hvn, it
is diflic•ult to spend six hours in bang-
ing your forehead agents! a parquet
floor. in moaning. bellowing. and weep-
ing. without leaving some traces of (hese
gymnastics on your physique.
Burgoyne stands or sols pnlicnlly be-
side him, bathing his fiery temples with
eau de Cologne, not teasing hie with
any questions, having, indeed. on his
own part, the least possible desire for
conversation ; and so the heavy heeurs
ge by. '1 he clay bas declined to evening
before ihurgoy'ne quits his protege's side
to dine, shortly and solitarily. previous
to making a third visit to the Anglo-
Anlericatn, to learn the latest news of
his betrothtsl.
Ile had lett Lyng still stretched upon
his bed, upparenlly +islet•). and is there-
fore the more surprised. on returning to
take a final look al him before selling
it on his own errand, !o ilnd him up,
v. lith hal and stick in hand, evidently
strewed for a walk.
"You are going out ?"
"Where rre: you going?"
The other hesitates.
"f nun going back there."
"Imp ssible !"
"I'ut 1 am:" replies Ilyng doggedly;
"it will not do her any Injury, for i shall
not attempt to go in. 1 shall only tisk al
Ute door whether any telegram has yet
Owen receiver) from—from them: Ihet
must telegraph to direct where their
things are to be sent to, and it is most
probable that they have done so al-
r•osly."
"11 is most impr.rbnble."
"Well. nt tilt eveols it is possible. it 1s
w..rlh trying,'. and I mens lo try 11."
There is sucli a fixed resolution in his
v.eiel', whish is no lunger quavering
with .sobs, and in his ashy fate, that Jim
offers rio hatter r'stsl:ut e•. 1 he only
cs.Ieccssi•,n he can ol.l;un f•0111 hiin is
that of permitting bum to accompany
11am.
"You will not mind coming with toe to
the ..ngk►•.\meriealn first. will you ?"
inquires Jun. as they set tiff milking
across MO Piazza.
"11 w ill 'bent- us quite half an hour,"
mem ere Ilse ether restlessly. •'bit slay"
t hate 'oak e.1 remlilliscene•' downing
over hi+ pr.rnsclanieel haggard face), "did
veil tell it, that .Me"lire was ill-- or did 1
dee alts it '"
"\o. )nu AA not dream it." repl`e• the
oche r. sadly. "she is is ••
Perhaps the weds hidiioa that pierces
through his friend's quiet tones recalls
the young dreamer to ths fact that the
world holds other miseries Than his own.
There is at all events something of his
old quick sympathy to his next words,
and in the way in which they are ut-
tered.
"Oh. poor Amelia, f am sorry ! By all
means let us go at once and ask after
her. Is there nothing that we can get ?
—nothing (hal wo can do for her?"
It is the question that Jirn, in baffled
anxiety, puts when ho is admitted inside
the dull salon,, where no tore -glorified,
homely face to -night lights up the tender
candles of its glad eyes, front over its
stitching, at his entry.
Sybilla is lying less comfortably than
usual on her sofa, her cushions not
plumped up, and her bottle of smelling -
salts rolled out of her reach. air. \\'iI-
son is walking uneasily up and clown
the roars. instead of sitting placidly in
his chair, with the soothing voice—which
te- had always thought as much to be
counted on, and as little to be particu-
larly thankful for, as the air that fills
hie lungs—lullingly reading him to
sleep.
"Cecilia is with her just now," he says,
in a voice of forlorn irritation. "I wish
she would conte down again; 1 have no
great opinion of Cecilia as a siea-nurse,
and she roust know how anxious we
are." A moment Inter, still pursuing his
fidgelty ramble fmm wall to wall. and
exclaiming peevishly, as he stumbles
over a footstool, "If it would only de-
clare itself ! '1 Here seems to be nothing
In lay hold of, we are so completely in
Iho. dark—if it would only declare itself T'
A not very subdued sob from the sofa
is lite only answer he gels, an answer
which evidently irri'ates still further his
fretted nerves.
"I cannot think what Cecilia is doing 1"
Its cries, hastening to the door, opening
it noisily, and then listening.
"Let ole run up and see." says Jim,
his heart going out to the fractious old
roan in a sympathy of suffering. "lies,
1 know where her room is—au t•uisieme,
is it not ?" (a flesh of recollection lighting
u) the fact that Anmelia's is distinctly the
worst room of the suite occupied by the
Wilson family ; the room will trosl
stairs to climb to, and least accommoda-
tion when you reach it). "1 will knock
quite gently. Ito not be afraid, i will
not disturb her, and 1 will conte -down
immediately In tell you,"
Without waiting for permission, he
springs up the stairs, and, standing on
the landing, laps cautiously on the
closed door, whose number (by one of
those quirks of memory that furnish all
our minds with Insignificant facts) toe
has recollected. itis first knock is so
.rperfluously soft that it Ls evidently in-
audible within, since no result follows
upon it. His second, a shade louder,
though still muffled by the fear of break-
ing into some little fitful yet salubrry
sleep, brings Cecilin out. Ilis lirst
glance at her face shows him that she
has no good newts, either to waren his
own heart, or for Win to carry down us
a solace to the poor old man below.
"Oh. II is you, is it ?" says she. shut -
ling the door behind her with a clumsy
carefulness Mot 'nukes it creak. "No, 1
do not think she is any better; but it Is
so dillicult to tell, 1 nn► no judge. She
does not complain of anything particle
las; but she looks so odd,"
"1f she is asleep, might not 1 just look
In at het•?" the asks, "I do not know•
what you mean when you say site lee=ks
odd."
"She is not asleep," replies Cecilin, in
a noisy whisper, much mom likely to
pierce sick ears than n voice pitched in
ifs normal key; "at least I think net.
But 1 nm sure you ought mil to see her;
Dr. Coldstream sold she was to be kept
very quiet, and nothing would upset her
so much as seeing you."
She need not see ate; 1 would only
bake just one look at her from behind the
de.or," persists .aim, whit feels a desire,
whose gnawing intensity surprises him-
self. to le assured by the evidence of his
own eyes Milt his poor hive's face has
not undergone some strange and grue-
some cluuige. such as is suegestcd by
Cecilia's disquieting epithet?"
"Do you think she would tint kuoov you
were there?" asks she scornfully. "Why,
.she hears your step three streets off !"
CII:\irTER XXV'''.
So That night Jim does nal see :\itleltn
After all, ns Cecilia sots. it to 11011.1' Is
ire on the safe side, amt! to-mera,w sl
will be brighter. and he can sit by lie
side. end tell her lovingly --set vc
lovingly' ! - what a fright she has give)
thins. lee, tomorrow she %rill l e bright
Cr. The adjective is Ce'eilia's : but, tip)nrentl•, lie cannot improve ulnen it
fon Its tint only keeps repenting 11 to him
sell 84 he run, dolt ustairs. Lal employ
1! for the reassurance of Mee:\\idrosis
anxious relatives.
"She wilt be brighter to -m ern,w; sick
people are always worse at night. are
not they !"—rather voguel,-. with again
Mut oppressive sense.of his own tent
l•e•rience to 'Meese. "Not that she.
worst'" --this 1> hastily sujboo inosl, ns he
sees her father'+ !are fall --"Cecilia t►etcr
said she was wor.oe�--ol1, no. net worse,
only mal distinctly halter; and. after all.
1! would have teen irrational to expect
that. She will Is' brighter Io -morrow
oh. yes. of cour:sc she will be brighter to -
mot t� 010 ."
Ile leaves the hotel wills the phrase,
which sounds est and dried and unreal,
still upon his Up,. after Lidding it kinder
ger4A.nigitl Matt listed t„ \h•. \\ iLeon,
after having offered bo supply.\melbas
)'are by rending ak.ud to him. a feint he
has not te'rfermert `ince the evening( 4,1
has eliseetro tis experience of the Trevi•
dent \\omen Of Oxford; and Iailty, hav-
ing even—as a ueesrd to -yt�tlla, who
buts been understood to titu►'nhnr some-
thing tearful shout letting her maid look
in upon Aurelia at lntersats through the
night—tuckt,J in her Auslruhan blanket•
and picked up her smelling -bottle. lie
hal expected to rejoin Ilyng outside, as
he had promised to watt for him with
such patience as a cigar could lend, and
en nes condition that his absence should
not exceed a stipulated period. But
either the promise Itis been broken, or
the period exceeded, for Byng is gone.
'I he fact does no: greatly surprise Bur-
goyne, though it causes him u slight un-
easiness,whieh is. perhaps, rather
blessing for him, distracting his mind in
some slight measure from the heaviness
of his own !rouble.
He walks fast to the Piazza d'.\reglio;
but he neither overtakes him of whom he
is in pursuit, nor finds hint at 12 Ills.
Ili bus been there, leas inquired with
agitation for the telegrnms, which have
naluruhy not been received• and has
then gone away again immediately.
\\'hither? The t'adrona, who has an-
swered the door' -hell herself, and, with
Italian suavity, is doing her best to con-
ceal that she is beginning to think she
Inas heard nearly enough of tho subject,
does not know. For a fete moments Jim
stands irresolute, then he turns his steps
towards lite Arno. It is not yet too fate'
for the charming riverside promenade,
the gay Lung Arno, to be still alive with
ilaneurs ; the stars have lit their lamps
above, and the hotels below. The pale
planets, and the yellow lights front the
opposite bank of the river, lie together,
sweet and peaceful upon Iter breast. in
bola cases the counterfeits are as clear
and bright es the real luminaries; and
it seems a.¢ if ono had only to plunge in
an arm to pick up stars and candles out
of the stream's depths.
Leaning over the parapet near the
Poste Vecchio, Burgoyne soon discovers
a tinnier figure, a figure which starts
when he touches its attn.
"I thought I would wait about here for
an hour or so," says Byng, with a ra-
ther guilty air of apology, "until 1 could
g-' back end inquire again. The tele-
gram has not arrived yet -1 suppose it is
loo early. Of course they would not tele-
graph until they get in to -night. You do
lint think"—with u look•of almost terror
—that they are going through to Eng-
land. and that they will nut telegraph
till they get Otero?"
"llow can I tell?"
"There Is nothing Li the world less
Likely," cries Byng feverishly, irritated
at not having drawn forth the reassur-
ance ho had hoped for. "1 do not for a
moment believe Iltat they have gone
home; 1 feel convinced that. !ley are still
in Italy 1 Why should they leave it when
they—when site is so fond of itT'
Jinn looks down sadly at the calm,
strong stream.
"I do not know, 1 cannot give an opin-
ic.n—I have no clue."
"I will ask again In about an hour,"
snys Byng, lifting his arms frorn lite par-
apet. "in an hour it is pretty certain to
have arrived ; and steauwhile, 1 thought
1 would just stroll about the town, but
there is no reason—none at all—why' 1
should keep you! You—you must be
wanting to go brick to Amelia."
Ile glances ell his friend in a nervous,
sidelong wily, as be slakes this sugges-
tion.
"1 nit not going back again to -night,"
replies Jim qukd t -, without giving any
evidence of an intention to acquiesce in
his dismissal. "Then' is nothing 1 can
dc for her—there is nothing to be (Sine."
Big Ione, in making this statement,
must be yet more dreary than he is
aware. ns 11 amuses even Ilyng's self-
alnorbrd ettention.
"Nothing to be done for her?" he
castes, with shocked look. "My dear
old chap, you do not mean to say—to im-
ply --"
"I mean to imply nothing," relurns Jimsharply, in a superstitious panic of hear-
ing; seine unfavorable augury as to his
belr•otbicol put into weeds. "1 mean just
what I. say—neither more nor less;
there is nothing to be done for her to-
night. nothing but to Id her sleep—a
geed sleep w111 set her up : of course a
good 510') w ill quite se't her up."
Ile speaks alit '1 angrily• ns if ex -
peeling void el,:iietiging contradiction.
But Byng s sped has ubcady 'town back
to his own w,.... Ifs may make what
sanguine statements lie pleases about
Amto-morrow', without fearing nay
demurrer from his companion. What
attention the hiller Ilns to spare is evi-
dently only directed to the solving of the
problem, how hest. with amicable entl-
ity. to be rid of hire. Before he can hit
upon any expedient for Whittling this
desired end. Burgoyne speak., agnii.
iris eye resting with a compassionaf.e ex-
pression upon hie junkies face, wine'sns-sl
wild pallor is heighteby the disorder
of his hair, and Ike hat crushed down
over his brows.
"You hove not lin 1 anything to eat all
day—lind not you Peter come back to
hole)!h• ale) and gel something to cal
"Eel !" cries the other, with almost a
screens. "you must have very little coin -
prehension of—" Then. checking him-
self. lural mire n strong and palpable ef-
1.0r1 for cnnlja,sure--"11 would sol 1,e'
VX, 1111 %Vile. 1 sts,utd not have time. in
e :n, h•.in less than nm hoar 11,11W. for 1
r noel have been here quite len minutes
ver a: the Was,- i have to return to the
r Iii;rzzn d'.\zcglio."
"Then go to f)t,net'.: wily n"1 get
. something to cat al I►oney s :' II tt 111
8
•
_,...air eft
what o,t i please with Inc- -we will malt)
s tight eI tt tt filo all n:y !wart, t, w'e will -
"'Drink, drink.
Till the pale stars glint.: "' ,
matt
Jinn? looks blankly at him. Ishe going
"If you think that you % ill get nu' to
g . back to the hotel tonight. you are very
much mistaken," continues Byng reek.
kssly ; "no roof less high than this" --
jerking back his head, to throw too
fevered look up to the 000l stats-- "shalt
shelter any head ; and, besides, where
would be the use of going to bed wheef,j
1 should have to be up again iso earlyt'
I shall be off by one of the morning ex.
presses ; until 1 have learnt—as, of
course, I shall do to -night --,where site
has gone, 1 cannot tell which ; but nei-
ther of them starts much later than
seven."
(To he, continued),
BY INTENTION.
When a Scotchman has no argument
at his tongue's end to defend his own
line of conduct which another may have
criticized, it may surely be inferred that
Ins ancestry has a strain from some
other nation.
A mart wbto has an estate in Scotland
took his new plowman to task for the
wavering furrows which were the result
of his work.
"Your drills are not nearly so straight
as talose Angus made," he sold, severely.
"tie would not have left such a glebe as
this."
Angus didna ken his work," said
Tamruas, calmly, contemplating his ear
ployer with an indulgent gaze. "Ye see,
when the drills is erookit the sun g.'ts
in on all sides, an' 'lis then ye get early
'folies."
POOR roMi1(Y.
\\'hen Tommy tattooed baby's skin
To christen hire a sailor,
His pa began to rant and rave
Aleut the briny ocean wove,
And getting out a barrel stove
He quickly turned a whaler,
NASTY 'THING.
Mrs. Peace—"My husband and 1 never
dispute before the children. \\'e always
send them out when a quarrel seems
inmmihent."
Miss Sharp—'Ali, i've often Svontlemel
why they're so much in the street."
THE WHOLE TIIING.
"Doesn't Mrs. Gabber retail a lot et
gossip?"
"Yes, and a1 a wholesale rale:
"Yes," said the bri:le of a week, "Jack
tells foe everything he knows, and t
tell him everything 1 know." "Indeed I"
rejoined her ex -rival who had been left
u! the post. '"The silence when you are
together oust bo oppressive,"
Mrs. Jones : "My husband is the light
of my life." Mrs. Smith : "So is mine.
(Inc of the kind that smokes and goes
out at night."
Little Girl—"My mamma is home
washing the lisle.+." Little Ilny—"\\'o
don't have to wash no dishes. My
mamma keeps a dog."
Drennler—"Do you think environment
has much of an effect on a person?"
Blnnt—"Thunderalien! Were you ever
surrounded by a swarm of bees?"
Rind Lady—"Poor ethyl! Wouldn't
you like a nice chop?" The Man (suspl-
cinusl'}--"\What kind of n chop, lady—
lamb or wood?"
1'• stilly the tnlleet man who ever
lived was the Jew mentioned by Jose-
ptuls as having been 10 feel 2 inches
In height,
The "cat" used in prison tans 18 inch
lashes. 1l Is never used except as n very
lust resource and in Pie case of utterly
brutalized criminals.
Yakulzk in Siberia the average
temperature In January is 10 deg. Fahr.,
in February it IA 1 deg. and in March
I deg.
'The foundat nn of the strong•roon cf
the Bonk of England is t3(t feet lose"
he bevel of the aired.
The chamber in % titch Mu House • 1
.•=refs sits is ;5 feet high. the 01 no' of
:ommons is a fool lower.
Queen Anne. wife of !Pelmet 111.. is
sniff to hove introduced the side'-s^ddle
for Inde' s into Englund.
---
Fully four million gailons ..1 gars are
re.'eled for lite postage -stamps made in
(:rent ftrilnin in n year.
The highest pass in the New \W,r1.1
in rnritwit Hie 14 Ilunlnhunea in 'ht
.\n'e4. Its SO11111111 is 00160 feet.
Of Ian violent (Tent—he o. RR nes caused
I t
accident. 2 by murder, and 10 by
subside.
The women of liiynnzi, on the Cong-.,
weer wedding rings of bens: w.'lded
mind their necks.
r
cx,l lake you live minutia to reach the
\ in 'I'urmab11nni,"
"\\ list 5hembl ( 'Its when 1 got Iter.' T' t
ask., Il)ng hn)alirnUy "11 1 tried !o (G
swallow- fotol. it would slick 111 my
!Groat ; nu (4:440 5011111 Inas Illy tips lilt
1 learn where site is : :alter thuL'--briak-
tug 4111 into a ir,isy I:wgh--"you may, do
The Iorg,sl refinery band is tho, e.t
he Belginn Guides. There are 1(01 per.
reser.+• .
.\ pair of er.gine•dritin(r wheels are
re ckmned
travel.
to last al tail f,;.00 111i4•4'
44.4000.00.400-0-4400.41
The effect of malaria lusts a long time.
You catch cold easily or become run-
down because of the after effects of malaria.
Strengthen yourself with Scoff's.
LEm u lr to n.
It builds new blood and to:las up your nervous
system.
ALL DRUGGISTS: GOe. AND Lt.00. (44,