rd al os relieripg it | I. Barron for relieving it of {dust is the abomination of the {down to your mechanically | thought." Your house will be a hu- "Principal. | of thinking, for itself by CER m, of the year 2, in of boiling. He is book A Hundred Years Expectations of an 'Opti: mist." ' . Frankly, one is glad to live in this dismal age of os if only a tithe prognostications are . He would tum into flabby automata. We ange in the momisg, lot ug suppose, in May, 2006, Our brdroom ig a circular chamber, corners being ob- solete betause they harbor dust, and 0 new . The housewife of 2006 will say that we, her urcestors, were a tor- tibly dirty crew. Ip the room stands ancapparatus which has supplied "us with oxygen--fresh ¢ air--during the night. a button and your bath ap- (servants 'being - superfhious), your speedily with ey ted water, delivered with a force that will render rubbing unnecessary and beside it will stand the drying cupboard, lined with moving brushes un your soft clothes--men and women will dress almost alike~no stays, no "tight lacing, no.stiff collars, no bowl er hats, no leather footwear. Then, after having turned on the au- tomatic vacuum cleaner to brush your clothes, you the lift, since Staircases are' no more, and sit served breakfast of lentils or beans or nuts. Coffee and tea are no longer taken; neither do you smoke, The breakfast is eaten to the ae companiment of the summary of the m 's news, whispered in your ear a machine, which also pro- duces the world's doings in faithful il- lustration. Is: this the climax of hustling ? Cer- tainly, but it is done because you are anxious to reserve as much time as "for culture and for mon rabbit warren of a hundred stories. It 'will be filled with sciea- tific appliances. There are telephones, | tolan yo kil , and all other . sorts of '"'scopes" in every apartment. The new servants will be as good as their 'masters, becaiise the EE ERE By Regulating The'Food System Nearly All the Most Common Ills of Humanity Are Prevent- ; Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills "When otr fod is 'properly digested and 'assimilated, the waste atter promptly excreted and all the organs working in harmony we are well. When any derangements of 'these func- tions occur we are sick." If we wait to consider for a moment what' a large Proportion of such de- rangemonts arise from constipation of '| the bowels, torpidity of the ver and X sluggish action of the kidneys it is not dificult to understand the far-reaching effects of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liyer Pills as a means of preventing and curing disease. One of the results of our artificial modern life, and more especially that of winter, is too mueh eating and too little exercise. "The liver and kidneys are overworked in their rt to re- move the excess of waste matter, and when they fail in this work disorders of some kind are bound to arise, It is usually with the liver that trouble begins. The bile which should be poured into the intestines to aid digestion -and insure healthful action of the bowels is left in the blood to Headache, biliousness, liver com- Paint and constipation are followed ' poisoning, kidney' di and rheumatism when the kidneys out, Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills begin by enlivening the action oi the liver and bowels, and thereby eff acting a thi cleansing of the whole filter- Shoroug Sanaing 5. By this kidueys' they purify the blood of uric ------ x rheuma the kidneys. 'In the newspapers have ap tes & Co., , which is the cause of , backache, lumbago and ball the dreadfully painful and fatal ared from time to time thousands of letters box; at all deal 3 & Cl dan Co., 58 Colborne Street, Toronto. spots, envrustations, scabs, obstinate sores, running wounds, inflammation, peeling or scalivg skin, senrf, diseased ankles, sore heads and backs, bad legs, erysipelas, piles, psoriasis, scalp diseases, barber's rash, abscesses, boils, ringworm, chapped bands, chilblaius, colds and chills, stiffness, ete. box, fifty cents (50c). or post free from the Zam-Buk Price per utterly failed to stay the progress of the disease. 1 1 meat, the pain was excruciating, and sometimes I thought it would drive me mad. | var A ue 2 relief. One night my husband brought home a box of Zam-Buk, and persuaded me to give it a trial, as he had hear splendid accounts of its healing powers for skin eruptions. The same night 1 applied it to the affected parts, and was very agreeably surprised at its goof effect. I enjoyed a féw hours reireshing sleep that night; the first for many weeks. : sed I was delighted to find that the eruption was drying up, and I began to have some use come back into my hands. My husband and iy if were delighted. Before a month had elapsed my hands were quite well again. New skin had formed all over the affected parts, ang 9 2 po would think to look at my hands now that at one tine they were such a horrible sight. Altogether 1 used five boxes of Zam Bu. I thought at first that the sores might break out again, but nearly six months have elapsed since they were cured, and 1 have not the slighest sign of an eruption." .. 3 'Women's Weakness Caused Skin Torture is not an uncommon thing for serious skin disease to break out as the result of bodily sickness. The I remains healthy only so long as it is properly nourished ; and during iliness, when the blood is weak or the system "run-down," the delicate structure sufferstoa marked degree. Ulcers, eczema and minor eruptions arising in this manner, or as a result of cold and irregular living, may be effectually overcome by the use of Zam-Buk worked gently into the tissues. Zam-Buk induces a healthy action of the skin, heals sores and dispels disease like no ordinary ointment, salve or toilet cleam can possible do. : It is prepared on the lines dictated to us by nature, being composed of juices from rare medicinal herbs, and it "feeds up" the skin. Zam-Buk is both a " skin cure " and a "skin food." "To a "Sunday Echo" reporter Mrs. McKeevan, of Reowie Rom Spark]. Sirminghiam, said: -- bis 'as treat: me for a ener; Te; own in hea an a 2 rp Spe) we fade: he sun iy" bid ee oy on'ny hand. When I showed it to the was a result of my poor state of health. He gave m: medicine and lotion for it, but it got worse and worse. over the hand, and then commenced breaking out on the other. Thinking | was not properly treated I consulted (separately) two more They told me that the disease originated from pgorness of blood, and gave me medicine, cintments and lotions, but legal doctats. r It began to spread to my arms, and I became greatly alarmed. poorness of blood, © said it The sor Spread all Apart from the disfigure- 1 tried various remedies, but none gave me the slightest thin I persevered with Zam-Buk, and before a week hey FREE SAMPLE A free sampte x of Zam k wil ba sent You if cut out this c« and mail it w one cent star pay return pos and full nam CJC) : 14 ] A) and "filled with desiccated air, fob hs ice ih : which in & moment you emerge with | state aducation "form eir the skin died and electrified, Jou put | oxaue dues Out of doors you put a penny in the slot. apd jump into a waiting motor ¢ar, which even babies in arms may apparently drive; or you step on the moving pavement, which is as clean as # whistle---vacuum cleaners at every corner--have yourself whirled to your' work, transact your business by ve. cortling and illustrating telephone, or watth the machinery do the work of your trade, and having done your state regulated hours, vou devote the rest of the day to the study of pic tures, statuary, or rire books. Horse rabing, gambling, reading frivolous books, gossiping in clubs, spending your money on expensive luncheons or dinners have all been relegated to the limbo of the forgot- ten past.! You are simply a flabby noodle, a superior hothouse plant, done up in liberty clothes, with ahout as much physical courage, as we un- derstand it in 1906, as a codfish. When a map has amassed a petency the state steps in, divorces him from his occupation; and forces him into idleness, so that he may not bécome a Pierpont Morgan and or- ganize a trdst. What a wréward for talent and ambition! Every worker 'has a share in the business in which he is éngaged; wherefore there is an end to "ca' canny' and strikes. Being temperate in drink and having discarded meat, enjoying the blessings of ozone in every bedroom and the benefits of superior, science in medicine the new world is healthy, with an al- most total absence ' of disease. Also, ince. race 'suicide is a crime, families will be enormons, Flying machines, built for one: or two; will be popular for mountain tap, nan alcoholic picnics; ships driven by wireless force will cross the At- lantic in a day, so that vou may breakfast at the Savoy, and dine at the Waldorf-Astoria; the ships will skim over the water and not plow through the waves; trains will go 200 miles an hour to the seemingly endless suburbs. The trains do not stop. No, all you do is to stop off your train at Little Paddlington station on a moving platform, which will gradually slow down and then let you down easily; goods will be forwarded on moving platforms connecting 'the great centres of commerce; bookkeepers will disap- pear because their work is" performed by comhined adding machines and typewriters; no more drains: garbage destrovers in every house; wireless electric lightings wireless cooking; Canada 'the richest and-m#ist populous cduntry in the world; coal dug from the ocean and the ocean levied upon for its water; which is to be turned into oxygen and hydrogen, and thence into power; gold and silver. and pre- com- ocean: bed; and: parliament will appear ! = The government of the country and the making of its laws will be in the hands gi' specialists. Lawyers, specia- lized lawyers will wake the laws, so that it will no longer be a joyful and immoral task for barristers to how they cen circumvent loos drawn acts of parliament; lay <4 will be non-existent, and- wonder of wonders !--successful litigants will have their costs paid by the state ! Literature will be mountains "high" and there . will be no chanee for Kip- lings ar Doyles or Pemberton, Poetry will Sourish and the swall trader dis- appear. Provincial ' newspapers will have been dead for fifty years or more and the Express will be illustrated from end to 'end with colored photo- graphs reproduced from some hocus- pocus of light cast on the paper; its advertisements will * be * written hy great literary lights, and "the circula tion will be many millions of copies, Finally, women will vote ! een ee A Thought For Tree-Planting Time H. C. Bunner, in Century. What does he plant who plants a tree 2? He plants the friend of sun and sky He plants the flac of breczes free : Phe shaft of beauty, towering hich : He plants a home to heaven anigh see " For sone nnd mother-croon of bird In hushed and Happy twilight heard-- The treble of heaven's harmony-- These things he plants who plants a tree. What does he plant whe plants a tice 2 He plants cool shade and tender rain, And seed and hud of days to he. And years that fade sand'flush again ; He blants the glory of the nlain : He plants the forest's heritace : The harvest of a coming are : The joy that unborn eves shall see-- These things. he plants who - plants a tree What does he plant "who plants a tree ? Ho plants. in sap and leaf. and wood, In love of home and loyalty And far-erst thoneht of civic. gnnd-- His hlessine on the neiehborhood Who in the hallow of his hard Holds all the erawth of our land-- A natinn's orowth from sen to sea Stirs in his heart who plants a tree. Forming New Theatrical Trust. New Vork, Mav 11540t is vumortd in welldnformed cireles that vlans are on foot for the formation of a thea- trical © combination: on an enormons seale. with a capital of move than f30.000.008. The firm of Klaw & Prlanger firures consoioponsly in the vroposed plan, and Al. Fayman, who i now on his wav home. front. Eurone, will hea. an imnortant factor in the formation. which will include ths pre sent theatrical svndicate, several laroe vaudeville interests, and western theatrical ecorvorations that are not now allied with the trust. It is said that sixtv per cent. of the cious stones to Jbe mined . from ithe cases of short-si tary. tedness are. heredi- The United States Mint in Sa building in the business part of destruction by fire, although it earthquake and scorched by the {as sowewha rn Francisco is the only large thac illfated_ city which escaped injured by the re, ' » RAISE MORE HORSES, There is Constant Demand for -~ Them, Toronto World. ; Industrial demand for horses is constantly. expanding, and farmers can make no mistakes in raising standard commercial classes from the viewpoint of profitable husbandry. 'I'he . appre hension that the inquiry for horses would diminish with the invention of the automobile has now been: eliminat- el from the industry, and farmers raise horses with the extreme con- fidence that when the foals reach ma- turity industrial demand stands ready to take the surplus at remunerative prices. It would appear that the broader the competing motor power for commercial use the greater the in- quiry for good horses. Not only in cities has demand for horses increased during the past de- cade but in agricultural development demand is steadily broadening. Vast new territory is being brought under the domain of improved agriculture and the cultivation of a greater area of land annually creates incréased de- mand for horses. Machinery is" largely supplanting hand labor in farm man: agement and horses are indispensable to operate the Rew farm implements. It is dn admitted fact that in many localities farmers are short of horses and have been the best buyers of the surplus in their community. The breeder can no more afford to keep a mare only to raise a foal than he could afford to keep a cow to raise a calf. The expense of maintenance of the mare in idleness would counter- balance the profit in raising the foal. But when the mare performs regular work in harness her foal becomes a most profitable by product. Buying horses for farm work soon totals a thousand dollars, 'and in a quarter of a century amounts to a snug fortune. If the farmer raises his own horses and always carries a small surplus for sale it will make an almost incredible difierence in his ac- cumulationg' in* twenty-five years of active husbandry. Every farmer should raise his own supply of horses and al- ways try to have a surplus to sell to dealers if he would get the greatest profits from agriculture. Often-times in the sudden illness of children if a reliable remedy is avail- able fatal consequences can be avoid- ed. For these emergencies parents are urged to have at hand ready for im- mediate use Dr. Shoop's Diptheria Cure, Dr. Shoop's Croup. Cure, Dr. Shoop's Worm Cure, and Dr. Shoop's Pain Panacea. Children's ailments de- mand promptness above all else. There is nothing harsh or that can possibly harm_in any of these excellent house hold medicines. Sold by all druggists. The steepest railway in the world was up Vesuvius, now destroved . by the eruption. : J Great military activity among the Chinese churia. is reported in Southern Man- A Problem Solved. Ozone is. ozone, _nd in buying it the Problem is to get the purest form. "Solution of Ozone é ithe coupon kind)" is the, purest form in which: Ozome is put up. In addition, each bottle contains a coupon entitling you to a package of "Celery King" free, and it is wellknown that yon should take "Celery King" along with Dzone. * We put "Celery King' coupons in our Ozone . bottles because no other firny can give "Celery . Kigg" with Ozone. By buying "Solution of Ozone (the coupon kind)" you get the purest and most concentrated form of Ozone, and, in addition vou save the ex- pense of buying the "Celery King", to se with it, : No other kind of Ozone offers this advantage. Ask your druggist for it, and if he hasn't it write the Public Drug Company, Bridgebasg, Ont. QUEEN QUALITY More fashionable shee styles originate with Queen Quality than with apy other shoes. It is the recognized leader PACKARD & ASTORIA of style. It originates, others copy. Everywhere itsetsthe. Are two names known to style. If you wear Queen well-dressed men, as being the leaders in Men's Stylish Footwear. 3oth of these popular makes have surpass- ed themselves in the natty styles in spring shoes. Come and have a look. J. H. Sutherland & Bro. The House of Good Shoe Making An Opportunity to. 300 Men! The bargain wave has once more turned our wey add we have securel from the makers joo MEN'S SUITS 2 special prices. : Quality you are with 'the leaders in fashion, This Gib- son Tie is only one of the many Queen Quality Oxfords that you ought to see. If ever grace, distinction, fashion, fit, wear and all round excellence were compressed into suits for men, they are bi these pure Fancy Worsted, Black Worsted, T weeds i fae new grey slate effects and navy blue garments. Suity hal fit, that are shaped, that have "tone." Not one seta) neglected, not this shape or that shape in pastionint by every style that's shapely. They will give satisfaction fom Ihe time you put them on until they are threadbare. Keg prices $15.00 and $18.00. All Sizes Offered at $10 GENTS' FURNISHINGS. BOOTS AND SHOES Louis Abramson, Up-Town C lothier. 336 Princess Street. 00000 6000a0060030E Ripe Bananas Ripe Tomatoes Ripe Pineapples A. J.Rees. 166 Princess St GOCGGGITIGE FEOVVIY Connection Wit hes Pacific Rail | (uN LEAVE KINGS _.slzpress, for Ott 1389 PO "St. Jobs, N.B. po 0 eronto, Chicago. De Best auit Ste. Pad fanipol a Francisco. ~Local Saething with £10 a.m. --Mized, fer Renn rmediate points. + leaving Kingsto) Pi arrive in Ottawa at me p Tor 513 pm. Powivore. © 1% 80 "wm.i Shar east ¢ for C.P.R. culars at K. & ¥ PA fice, Ontariv str al! a et Otlice, §, CONWAY. F, A, F Gen. Pass: Agent. ou SE Bay of Quinte R . Tweed, and all local poi Hall Depot at 7, Agent B.Q. Ry: New short line for Peseronto, L BRANCH TIM LocAL Effect Jan. 2nd, s will leave and arr of Johnston stre foot Depot, Foot SING WEST « 16 Local ... . GOING EAST ¥ Lve. City No. 8 Mail .. \ 1.4 « f Fast Exp " 16 Local .. » gMail .. 12.16 noon " 4 Fast Exp. 1.00 p.m « 12 Local ... ... 7.03 p.m .1,2,8. and 4 rum d = a daily except Monda u daily except Sunday. Breet rowte-- to Toronto Hamilton, Buffalo, Lond Chicago, Bay City, Saginas Ottawa, Quebec, Portland, Halifax, Boston and New Y For Pullman Actommoda! «od all other imformation. 8 J. P. HANLEY, Agent, C aad Ontario streets. Kingster ALLAN LINE Fe AL TO LIVE May 17, June June . June Virginian June 7, July MONTREAL TO GLA (moderate rate serv Mongol May 16, June Corinthian June v thereat For rates J. P Avant, G I J. SLEEVE SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN | HOMESTEAD REGUL Any even num), sectio: fon Lands in gba or west Provinces, ting 8 meerved, way omestea any person who is the sol family, or any male over "8, to the extent of one- tiop, of 160 acres more or Entry must be made pers local land otlice for the dist the land is situate. HOMESTEAD DUTIES : has been granted an entry i red _to perl ted therewith vlans : SIX months n of the land during th wm of three y @) If the futher (or n lather 18 deceased) of any make a howeste der the provisions of this Son a farwi in the vicinity slered for by such person siead, the requ ments of thi Tesidence prior to obtaining be sat sficd ch person the father @ nu hi Tesidence yp r lak bim in the vic ho a ed by residen ATION FOR PAT at the end of thr Avent, Sub ector e Commis t Ottawa, of SYNOPSIS OF CANAD] EST Minin REGI Coal.--( no lands may Le er acre for soft" coal ehracite. Not "more than Rex « indi at the rate " pounds sh ree miner's ment in an in ner annum to capital. r, having disco + locate a el The foe for recording a Bost £100) St be e Sain each, yo r Yo t order ud Lot won Bred or paid, the Omplyine A survey ma Wi¥ing with othe > se the TL other requ at §1 an vides for t "T cant on t ~ claims : entry fee nay ohtain 1 of five mij rized publ iil not