"That guess is only partially correct," Professor Starr answered, "for 1 am goâ€" ing to study other things, too." He smiled and went on: "You remind me of a man who called at a house which the stork had just visited. "‘Is it a boy or a girl" said the man. ""Guess,‘ said the father. "‘A boy, the visitor hazarded. â€" "‘You‘re only half right, the father arswered with a smile. ins, siiie, un ABKL S wut "You are going over there to study the pygmies, aren‘t you?"" said a New York reporter. Frederick Starr, professor of anthroâ€" pology of the University of Chicago, was about to set off on his two years‘ visit to Africa. Nirs. Lawsonâ€"Are they good neighbors? Mrs. Dowsconâ€"No: they always look sour snmommmtouumclruh- An old English sport that still surâ€" vives from the days when the bow and arrow were in use is that of arrow throwing, and in parts of Yorkshire it is still made one of the features of athâ€" letic meets. ‘The arrows are straight shafts three feet long, without either barb or feather, and are thrown by the aid of a bit of string wrapped about the thrower‘s hand and about the butt of the arrow. A skilful man can send the arrow one hundred and fifty yards, though it requires some experience to eause the arrow to leave the string without tangling. Once the knack is mequired the sport is said to be more fasâ€" cinating than putting the shot or throwâ€" ing the hammer. There is a movement on foot to have the sport made one of the features of the college games, since both skill and strength are required. (Houston, Tex.. Post.) *How do you know that that couple are farried *** **They ride on my car every day." *‘Ob, then, you are acquainted with them*‘ *‘No; but she always nays the car fare." Beyer‘s investigation of the influence of bicycling on the heart has convinced him that the bicycle has a specially inâ€" jurious action on that organ. The heart in the young is particularly subject to this deleterious influence on account of the unfavorable conditions of the blood pressure in youth. Hypertrophy of the beart and nervous heart disturbances are the typical bicyclers‘ affections. It has been found in CGermany that the mumber of case of acute articular rheuâ€" matism among the recruits has materialâ€" ly diminished of late years, while the i number of heart affections has tripled. j In one army corps, out of 233 recrujts' with varoius heart affections, 41 had Aween bicyclers, as also 9 of the 18 paâ€" stients with hypertrophy of the heart. amd 8 out of the 37 patients with nerâ€" *Â¥ous irregularity of the heart action. JIn another corps the proportion was 375 per cent. in 203 case of heart affecâ€" tions, with 23 out of the 52 cases of hyâ€" ' pertrophy and 9 out of the 22 of nervous arregularity. He found furthor that among these recruits those who had preâ€" viously led a sedentary lite formed the largest contingent of heart affections f among bicyclers. On Sundays and holiâ€" | days they took long bicycle trips, with overâ€"exertion of the heart. Next in numâ€" |â€" ber were the workmen who rode the |â€" bicycle to and from work. The recruitâ€" | ing officers attribute the increase in |â€" heart discase among the young men to | the lesser hardiness of the youth in our | day and to the epidemic of influenza. || ate bicycle riding is a third and no less |â€" important factor.â€"Journal American Asâ€" | 1 Beyer suggests that unwise or immoderâ€" [ sociation. 1 Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should always be used for Children Teething. _ It soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures :lnd colic and is the best remedy for Diarâ€" ABSOLUTELY THE BEST; PITMAN OR Eclectic shorthand students write letâ€" ters after six weeks‘ private instruction. New term, Jan. 2nd. Complete course in ehorthand, bookkeeping, typewriting, penâ€" manship, $20. Write Toronto Business Colâ€" lege, Yonge and Bloor, Toronto, Ont. 12 for 10¢; 60 for 50c; 100, $1; 200, $2; 500, $5; all different. Largest an/ finest stock in Canada; 5Q0 mixed, $3; albums, all prices. W. R. Adams, Toronto, Ont. WANTED. YOUNG wOMEN OF,GOOD education to enter Training Schoo! for Nurses. Three (3) years‘ course. Seconi term commencing Jan. 1st. Apply to Miss Kent, Superintendent Toledo Hospital, Toâ€" ledo, Ohio, U. S. A. w ETTE TT EWICIUTAY & NA _ Gerrard east, Toronto; under Princiâ€" palship of T. J. Johnston; eighteen years‘ @rperience: gives thorough training for railâ€" way operating; catalogue free; write for particulars. Judging by a Sure Sign. JurroveD rarus FOR SALE IN THE Edmonton district. Candy & Co., Ed4â€" monton, Alta. BARGAXN LIST OF FARMS MAILED free. Alf. Brown, Department L, Picâ€" tom, Ont. Mighc ts ontmrnge w WANTED, MEN TO DISTRIBUTE SAMâ€" ples, tack signs, $ daily. No canvasâ€" eing. 'gonun‘eml Distributing Service, Chiâ€" * B.:"!'BAI_; TELEGRAPH â€" SCHOOL Souvenir Post Card;s Guessed Half the Truth TIVERY AND FEED BARN FOR SALE Apply A. L. Wilson, Simeoe, Ont. The Bicycle and the Heart ANTED. $# TO $10 PER WEEK CAX be earned working for us at your ; send name and address for full parâ€" rs. The Dominion Knitting Co., Orilâ€" AGENTS WANTED,. MISCELLANEOUS. Arrow Throwing. Neighbors. FOR SALE, the opera. _ Belle â€" No; :be“h::i-"; frightful cold and couldn‘t speak above a whisper. ’ Prince vyon Beulow, next to the Kaiser, is the most striking figure and the most CC | dominant personality in the German °@ | empire, but the best story concerning the ‘"~ | Prince is not of the Prince at all. _ It is * |a story that most nearly concerns the t9 ! Princess and the Kaiser,. The Princess 9f | had made her home a very paradise of ï¬d l beauty and art, and when the Kaiser inâ€" ©itimated to the Count that he was to f: | be the new chancellor his face clouded. i over. He wondered what the Countess ‘* | would say, above all how she would like ‘;' ’leaving her house. When the Emperor _ | noticed his indecision and asked the reaâ€" 'ffson, he was told that "Her Excellency is , would be so sorry to give up her comâ€" l fortable home for a palace which would 3 ' require so much cleaning to make it habâ€" * l itable." (New Yorker.) Stock Broker (to future sonâ€"inâ€"law)â€"I‘ve been making inquiries about you. Gayboyâ€"And I about you. Stock Brokerâ€"Oh, have you? Then we‘ll talk about something else. Once by profession a doctor and a speâ€" cialist in skin diseases, M. Clemenceau, as a statesman, has been accused of deâ€" molishing rather than crvating. He has certainly helped to demolish German inâ€" trigue in Paris. And one could perhaps scarcely count the number of opponents he has endeavored to demolish on the field of honor. On one such occasion, M. Clemenceau, then on the wise side of 50, crossed swords with another public man who was both young and active. Sword in hand, it is related that he purâ€" sued his opponent to the end of the field, a distance of about half a mile, but then, tired of running after his nimble foe any more, Clemenceau shouldered his sword like a walking stick and stepped back to the point of departure to await the adversary‘s returnâ€""an unpreceâ€" dented performance," remarks the chronâ€" I Three times women have played a conâ€" spicuous part in his affairs. His first wife was an English Quakeress, and he was devotedly attached to her. He made his mark in the Ggrman world as adâ€" viser on German etiquette to the British princess who became Kaiserin Frederick. [It has been recorded that nothing could make the Kaiserin realize that "vons" resented being invited to meet "nonâ€" vons" at royal functions. It was the duty of Prince von Radolin to soothe these ruffled Germans. His skill evokâ€" ed admitration, it is said. But a woâ€" man compassed his departure from the St. Petersburg Embassy. It was a court ball, and a very Grand Duke ofâ€" fered a distinguished arm to a charming lady, who replied tht she had already promised to go to the buffet with Prince von Radolin. "Truly these Gerâ€" mans are tyrannical gentlemen," said the Grand Duke. Somebody reported it to the Prince, and changed the adâ€" jective to "disagreeable," and he felt aggrieved. A personal complaint to the wife of the Grand Duke seems to have annoyed every one concerned, particularâ€" ly the (irand Dughess, who declared that she was insulteg. and what was in the first instance merely a joking remark resulted in there being a vacancy in the German Embassy on the Neva. Paris. The popular impression seems to be that he is a kind of automaton worked by wires. In Poland, however, they laugh if you suggest that the Prince is anything less that the wireâ€" puller. They have dubbed his a reneâ€" gade, for he renounced his Polish name for Radolinsky. The ambassador writes to the Kaiser every night of his life, and telegraphs to him twelve times a day. This is what has been said of Prince von Radolin in _ And much to the Countess‘ astonishâ€" ment, a few days afterward, a heavy parcel arrived addressed to her at her residence, and on breaking the royal seal she sawâ€"a hundreweight of soap! And with it came instructions that the house cleaning was to be a thorough one. Some political point attached to this joke. "Tell your wife I will be responsible for the cleaning," was the Imperial reâ€" piy.‘. _: _/‘ A strong, quiet man with admirable good sense and balanceâ€"that is M. Rouvier, said one who has met him often. His strength was made apparent during his former ministry, when his courage overthrew Gen. Boulanger. His father was a provincial grocer; he himâ€" self began as a commercial traveler, beâ€" coming then a clerk with a Greek firm at Marseilles. He had a wonderful caâ€" pacity for mental arithmetic. His comâ€" _mercial training has made him apt to deal only with present aspects in pubâ€"| lic affairs. He does not look far beâ€" yond the next "deal," it is said. He is nearâ€"sighted, but his watchfulness beâ€" speaks a man not likely to be easily deluded even by the very Watchful, emissaries of Berlin. But it is always the more human side of prominent men that appeals to us all, and below the writer has colâ€" lected a few anecdotes of some of the men who have been standing in the fierce light of these recent revelations. Reams have been written of M. Delâ€" basse, but who knows M. Delcasse? "Praise no man until he is dead," says the proverb, and you cannotâ€" rightly praise him, for you cannot know him until bone and flesh have long since sunk to dust, and his work, the work in which he has expressed himself, lies clear and unclouded by the tumult of the moment. Of Lord Lansdowne it was scoffingly said that he was made Forâ€" eign Minister because he spoke French fluently. They thought they knew Lord Lansdowne, but this is the man who since has paved the way of peace and friendship in Qccident and Orient. Men Who Are Behind the Scenes in Euâ€" ‘ ropean Politics.‘ \ \ (London Daily Mail.) Secret history has been much in eviâ€" dence of late, and many figures have flitted across the stage at the bidding of those who would make plain the tortuâ€" ous and mysterious diplomacy which so nearly dragged France, Germany â€" and England into war. M. Delcasse, Prince yon Beulow, M. Rouvier, Prince von Radolin, Lord Lansdowne, M. Clemenâ€" ceauâ€"names familiar in the ear as household words, but only apparently intimate in the personal sense. Glad to Drop the Subject. STORIES OF DIPLOMATS hn P enjoy Cash or Cure ‘‘And I tell you I won‘t buy it for you," snapped Mr. Nagget. ‘‘No, dear, you won‘t be here to pay for it. It‘s a widow‘s bonnet." The Millinery She Longed For. " * (Philadelphia Press.) ~ ‘‘Well, after all," said Mrs. Nagget, finâ€" ally, ‘"there is just one little bit of milâ€" linery that I desire mostâ€"â€"‘* # FAULTY KEIDNEYS.â€"Have you backâ€" ache? Do you feel drowsy? Do your limbs feel heavy? Have you frequent headaches? Have you failing vision? Have you dizzy feeling? Are you depressed? Is your skin dry? Have you a tired feeling? Any of these signs prove kidney disease. Experience has proved that South American Kidney Cure never failssâ€"6 The wellâ€"known English clergyman, Rev. E. Griffithâ€"Jones, said the â€" other day: "Progress, expansion, development, evolutionâ€"call it what you willâ€"is the master word in the world of spirit as in the world of life . . . What the philosâ€" opher tries to do for pure thought, what the scientist tries to do with the comâ€" plexity of nature, that _ the religious thinker, organizer, preacher is aiming at in the spiritual lifeâ€"to reduce chaos inâ€" to order, to resolve conflicting impulsee and passions into one harmonious masterâ€" motive." Dodd‘s Kidney Pills always cure sick Kidneys. With _ well Kidneys you can‘t have Bright‘s Discase, Diabetes, Dropsy, Rheumatism or any of those other fearful and fatal diseases that spring from sick Kidueys. "Yes, I can tell you Dodd‘s Kidney Pills made a cure of me," he says. "I had Kidney Disease for three years. At times I got it so bad I could hardly attend to my work. I took just five boxeg of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and my pains and aches are all gone and I can work as well as anybody. To anybod who has trouble with their Kidneys aï¬ I can say is ‘use Dodd‘s Kidney Pills!" Giroux, Man., Dec. 18.â€"(Special), â€" Mr. Philias Normandeau, a wellâ€"known resident of this place, is one of thouâ€" sands of Manitobans who have found reâ€" lief from the pains and aches of Kidney Disease in Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Mr. Norâ€" mandeau is always ready to say a good word for the remedy that brought back his health. He Echoes a Siatement Made by Thousands of the People of the Prairies. Manitoba Man Cured by Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis. HKE CAN ATTEND T0 HIS WORK NOW mOdLL PCO SW (OCO200Z. C200 $0 UH AUC B0 POPUL, ‘"‘And, thinking it over, I couldn‘t help concluding that ‘news,‘ as understood and disseminated by the press of toâ€"day, is largely a conglomeration of breeze, bray, piffle and nonâ€"esential flapâ€"doodle, and that the heads of the kind of people who appreâ€" clate that kind of stuff must surely be more or less flattened at the poles.‘"â€"Tom P. Morgan in January Smart Set. ‘"‘Last night I read in my paper that the King of What d‘yeâ€"callâ€"itâ€"some Httle Eâ€"flat dab of land over there somewhereâ€"is comeâ€" plaining bitterly of poverty b‘cuz he has only a paltry $887,500 a year and a herd of little kings to support, and that two beauâ€" tiful young ladies who were waiting table in a restaurant in Kansas City fought a duel with ketchup bottles for love‘s sweet sake. I also learned of a burglar who remained concealed behind a cabinet organ while a village maiden played hymn tunes on it for three solid hours; that a certain sideâ€" whiskered octopus owns the oldest pair of _andirons in existence; and that a brght young man in Izard County, Ark., only 20 years of age, has just succeeded in bein‘ acâ€" cidentally shot for the ‘leventh time by misâ€" take for something or other; I noted that a fool woman had grabbed an inocent United States Senator by the th‘nat and kissed him despite his squirms; I learned, too, how to pronounce jiu jitsu, and the reason why a lady in New Harmony, Ind., sued her husâ€" band for divorceâ€"she alleged that he kicked her, on the sly with his wooden leg. I also gained a vast amount of information about sanitary mattresses and breakfast fodders, the freaks and follies of the rich, and their envious imitators, how to buy whiskey and grow tall by mail; and so on and so forth. | ‘‘Many able men have from time to time answered it, with perfect satisfaction to themselves, and still the question won‘t stay settled. S$HIL O H 25c. per bottle. If it wasn‘t a sure cure, this offer would not be made. Can anything be fairer > “’:WB:&Lâ€Â«A’:“P:;;-, ‘‘Every now and again there is a discusâ€" sion of the question of what is the proper definition of the word news,‘" acridiâ€"pessiâ€" mistically said the Old Codger, during a recent session of the Linen Pants Club» Cold or Cough, you get back all you ,;p:%_fa:i. You m’:u.:l a Cm’: If Shiloh‘s SAVE SUNLIGHT SOAP COUPONS Spiritual Aims, Free Gifts of Toilet Soaps ion Cure fails to cure S’mg‘h&dlm HIS DECISION. ONTARIO ARCHI TORONTO Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and GET THE PREMIUMS every day. In exchange for Sunlight Soap Coupons you Read circular in every package, or write us for Premium List A gift is of little value if it consists of something you have no use for Users of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET for nothing. > The Coupons are the same as cash because they can be exchanged for Toilet Soaps for which you have to pay out money every week. * 313 Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, Canada wear the suit and sally abroad. We will have to investigate this report. 7 (Enid, Ok., Events.) The boys are remarking over zh:lrct that H. G. McKeever and D. M .W er, law partners, wear the same kind of a suit, some saying that only one of the partners appear upon the street at a time, the other remainâ€" ing in seclusion until it comes his time to cited. It was to be a handâ€"toâ€"hand batâ€" tle, and we feared the native would get the worst of%: As the bear approachâ€" ed the native it reared on its hind legs. We had our guns ready for instant acâ€" tion. _ But the guns were not needed. Quick as a flash the native sprang up and had his knife plunged into the aniâ€" mal‘s heart and was away several steps before the bear knew what had happenâ€" ed. _ It was a death blow, and we packâ€" ed the pelt back to Karluk in triunmph." â€"From the San Francisco Chronicle. "We came upon the bear in a ravine. The native crouched on the ground as the bear came up. We became quite exâ€" cited. It was to be a handâ€"toâ€"hand batâ€" tle. and wa fenred tha matiwna wanuld _4 at the bear and to shoot only if he fail ed to kill the beast. woman of the tribe, amd without her consent he wouldn‘t have stirred an inch. She gave her consent, so the native huntâ€" er, armed only with a knife, started out Three more of us, with rifls, acconmpanâ€" ied him. _ We agreed among us to alâ€" low _the native to have the first chance _ "I witnessed a bear hunt on Kadiac Island a few months ago. _ A big brown bear, one of the species familiarly known on Kadiac Island and the other Aleutian Islands ,was pestering the settlement, and a native who bore a wide reputaâ€" tion for prowess among his people deâ€" cided to go after the animal. Before starting on the expedition, however, h« went to his mother and obtained her permission. His mother was the oldest woman of the tribe. amd without ho» ‘__ _ How Alaska Natives Hunt Bears, "Bear hunting as pursued by the Al aska native is an interesting game," rc marked J. P. Gardiner, a Nome miner. as her teeth are exquisite. There is more movement of her shapely fingers and of supple wrists; the silk is dropped ‘and another piece is held up with mute questioning. You renew the offer of half the price named for the peace first shown. She again becomes radiant with laughtg" and hides her mouth behind tns elge of the outstretched stuff, With infinite shyness she suggests a less ex â€" treme mutilation of her original price. She half whispers the sum as if it were a possible answer to some absurd conâ€" undrum. You finally take the silk for halfâ€"for exactly oneâ€"half of the sum originally discussed. _ She is perfectly delighted and appears to regard the long bargaining as the best of fun. It is all excellent fooling, this playing at "keeping shop" by a picturescue woman instead of by a child, but the womanâ€"â€"â€" like the childâ€"is never a loser at the simple game. + THE SURGEON‘S STORY, Sir Frederick Treves, the great surâ€" geon, gives a picturesque description of he Burmese woman as he observed her during his Eastern tour. It is she who does the buying and selling, owing to the unconquerable indolence of the men. She sits on a low, yellow mat in her stail and holds up to you a piece of silk. Her hands are pretty and there are many gold bangles on her wrists. A sleck head and smiling eyes are visible above the rim of the silk. She holds it up as a child would hold up its last new toy for admiration. You ask the price of this trifle of amber and rose and she slyly suggests a quite fantastic sum, as if she were playing at "keeping shop." You propose to give her half the amount she has ventured upon. This amuses her beyond words. She is filled with laughâ€" ter, for he jest is evidently much to her liking. Smiling, however, becomes her,‘ The most notable feature of the latest census bulletin relating to illiteracy among our population is the statement that there are fewer illiterates among the children of foreignâ€"bern parents than among those of the natives. This is variously accounted for but the chief reason appears to be based on the fact that the greater portion of the forâ€" eignâ€"born children live in cities, where the educational opportunities are better than in the country. In the country the illiteracy among children is eightyâ€"nine per thousand; in cities of over 25,000 inhabitants is is only ten pz thousand. ‘This is a rather remarkâ€" able showing. SBunlight ‘Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions, digestive organs some work to do. These functions need exercise os much as any part of the human anatomy, but if they‘re deliâ€" cate, give them the aid that Dr. Von Stan‘s Pineapple Tablets afford and you can eat anything that‘s wholesome and valatableâ€" 60 in a box, 35 centsâ€"8 a third of a century ago that James Anthony Froude, the English economist, wrote optimâ€" istically, ‘"Somebow this world was built upon moral foundations, and in the long run it is well with the righteous and ill with the wicked man.‘" * pe f Only One Suit in the Firm, (Kansas City Journal.) ‘Those who are prone to alarm in the reâ€" cent disclosures of fraud and corruption in high places should take heart of their faith. Our nation is robust and strong, young and virile. We shall not die of the national measles. ‘The disclosures are a warning that we have the measles, that is all. As we have caught the measles comparatively early: in its development and have good ph{alcjan!, we will get well. It was nearly EAT WHAT YOU LIKE.â€"Give the Illiterate Nativeâ€"Born Americans, Take the Hopeful View, something you need and use That precious remedy, is Apvosm" eure for all circular and free sample. &. S. MeGILL. Sime The fans can‘t prevent our ball playâ€" ers from being hot stuff. a» Live brook trout, for instance, were shipped by rail, the journey consumnig seven hours, at a temperature of 25 deâ€" grees, in vessels filled with water to which these algae had been added. The trout were all fresh upon arrival, while of others, shipped at the same time in pure water not containing these algae, not a single trout arrived alive. The explanation of this phenomenon is probâ€" u-bg. that thees algae, like other green g]lanh, decompose the carbonic acid exâ€" led by the fish, and so reoxidize the water. The two scientists are also of the opinion that the algae also render the poison, which may have been secretâ€" ed by the fish, harmless. FIBRE WARE articirs Tub, Pall, Wash Basin or Milk Pan _ The two scientists have succeeded in keeping brook trout alive in a largeâ€" sized vessel for six weeks, so thit their taste at the end of this period did not appear to be impaired in the least. This is all the more remarkable as it is well knonw that otherwise brook trout can only be kept alive in running water. Leeches have been xept alive by the same process one and oneâ€"half years without change of the water. Experiâ€" ments have already been made to make practical use of the discovery for the transportation of live fish. FARMERS anp DAIRYMEN posesses also the advantage of multiplyâ€" ing rapidly and thrives in almost all kinds of fresh water. To the naked eye the presence of these aigae is noticceable through the brilliantly green color of the water provided it contains a large numâ€" ber of them. * The reported discovery concerns a tiny alga, by itself not visible to the naked eye, which posseses the remarkable gro- perty of preserving the water in which it exists in a state of great purity for an almost unlimited perrod. The little plant Frech Scientists Discover Microscopic Algae That Are of Great Value. Consulâ€"General Guenther, of Frankâ€" fort, Germany, writes of a report that the French naturalists, Billard and Bruyant, have made a discovery with reference to keepingy fish alive which may be of practical importance. o Orange Blossoms INSIST ON BEING SUPPLIED WITH THERE IS NO SUBsTITUTE WAY TO KEEP FISH ALIVE. f YOU WILL FIND They . B. EDDY‘S ask your grocer for r® whon you require a ve cure for all female McGILIL, Simeoe, Ont. THEY GIvE voy SATISFACTION EYERY TIMmE Interdependence of Nations. (Savannah, Ga., News.) This is only a little old world, after all, and what seriously affects the people of one section of it is pretty apt to affect others on the other side of the globe. For inâ€" stance, ferroâ€"manganese is necessary to the manufacture of steel; the bulk of the supply of ferroâ€"manganese used in the steel mills of the United States is mined in the dominâ€" ions of the Czar of Russia; the strikes and riots in Russia have shut off the source of American supply, in consequence of which the Pennsylvania steel mills have bad to reduce their output, and as a result of the reduced output steel construction in Savanâ€" nah and elsewbere is likely to be delayed indefinitely. coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one botâ€" tle. Warranted the most wonderful Bleâ€" mish Cure ever known. Removes all Ward, soft or callduged lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT In the Revue Scientifique Professor Mentre discusses the names given disâ€" .goveries, He says: , "The bestowal of a name ...... deâ€" pends not on the justice and truth, but on success and noise. Discoverers who know their secrets or who do not know how, to make them public are inevitably sacfificed. 1t was the exploiter, the vulgarizer, the skilful writer, who genâ€" erally (before the existence of the press) ’ profited by the glory belonging to the discoverer. The latter has been rehabiliâ€" tated in time by the larned; but popuâ€" lar tradition takes no heed." anything worthy of recommendation, I conâ€" sider it my duty to tell it,"" says Rev. Jas. Murdock, of Hamburg, Pa. "Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder has cured me of Catarriy of five years‘ standing. It is certainly mag» jcal in its effect. ‘The first application beneâ€" fited me in five minutes. 50 cents."â€" 9 A ufl:-ï¬on to amend the rules of bridge been the subject of conversaâ€" tion among all bridge players during the last few days. The reformers wish to do away with the enormous advantage which, under the present "dummy" sysâ€" tem, is held by the dealer when playing with the "no trump" hand. The suggesâ€" tion is that when the declaration is "no trumps" there should be no dummy, and that each player should play his own hand a sin whist. The frequent deciarâ€" ation of "no trumps" is also exercising the minds of all bridge playersâ€"and who is not a bridge player nowadays+â€" and the suggested improvements are aim. ed at minimising the advaintage at proâ€" sent possessed by the dealer and his partner, _ It seems doubtful whether the reformers will carry their point, and I hear that at Almack‘sâ€"the bridge club par excellenceâ€"the general feeling is against tampering with the existing rules.â€"London Daily Mail. No Trumps, There Should Be No ISSUE NO, 52. 1905. A PLEASANT DUTY.â€""When I know EDDY‘s EevErRY Ttmge 25 cts. bottle. * BRIDGE RULES. Credit for Discoveries. Write for $ ® P iL ï¬ho highest Jn the } dowiy wf the by cor Aureâ€" Prince arim y Urro\ Peace woul made newâ€" o @&CTre with BHoly bfied pon 4 Greek : brew w prophet & [DAY â€"The sage 1 reaches the wh Matt. â€" Beth John i his ear fac aff inciosi which and pr IL. about jected Frepr« someli1 pearan case, b‘ field. | ed in : above t winte: Jerus: ber. 5 «en ger them.â€" extrer dw CaAT m« #euch a «of the Tt is c Foom, with hi gers, a1 ©omd ON . «eloth ; the Want. In : [tbe text t d@nn, hence Rieve, with metually t« wof some c( ma lborn of e all things Old Test: angels ad« those tha mnd the f1 Bnstrume Hulfil the with res Messiah.â€" Rh‘iutioi KQuiriniu ppresence â€"â€"Farrar was betr ame 1. Her and glori is unceri robliga tor: yous that, wMatt. i. Hin the n: Galilee t of Bethl ‘David wi unan cus mlace of imeems 1« JWilleock «difficult; inius wa Uthis has iRohar) 'e-nsl;n Â¥. 37. ,f",'&l“‘ (R&wo enr Greek f there. Q ‘probabl (Wivs ‘the Ro rever b (ve. 1 birth there m rC of 1y of th