ge Meat tion. vel in the huge 3 ovens f the crisp delicious. ir matchless baking med, steam cooked kes are conveyed by akes back and fort len brown--the . onverting a grain of own to science al for thin peo ie. ose whose ph ially for children-- hing else can satisfy, range Meay/is ars old, her tary d, as it seems such id recommend to ackages. Fveryy5e. for premiums," Bc. 4 times the quantity eat, Kingston," for oes Your 0 To? e of furnace- eutilization of mits. shine" furnace the heat .and p the chimney. put your hand himney when s are in use, wich heat goes ey your hand ned. That is time wasted, akes so much up when a tf your heat is nits from the waste heat like SONS St. Jonn. HamiLton rigerators ry, a large assortment of re ¢, ranging in price from 8 )., ' . cial Features re all made of the best ma ined with galvanized iron, + chamber, cleanable flues, vool filled, perfect circulation ry air, which renders it per orless and free from musty Phone 35. minister m disease that might have bees avoided had the old, and it may be, poisonous wall-covering been removed, or, better still, never been put on, and the walls decorated with Church's Alabastine y Wall Coating . Does not joapregnate the ee coloring, nor flour paste to thrive in. ht and mew at small expense. : roduced. An 3 at dealers seil Alabastioe. just' the jaformation you want = PARIS, ONT. ==------7|CANADK'S NEW RIFLE LIGHT |e ev 7 J THE SUN cr - IT WILL SOON BE READY FOR , GENERAL DISTRIBUTION. Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps. but is bast when used in the Sunlight way (follow _ directions). k Hard rubbiny and boiling are things of the past in- homes The: Militacy Expert of the Vancouver News: Advertiser Talks of the Points | of the Ross Rifle, the New National | Weapon -- A Striking Comparison | With the Lee-Enfield--It Is One and a Quarter Pounds Lighter, ALL beeen rp A RUB ON SUNLIGHT SOAP The new arm for the Canadian militia is now being turned out at the faotory in Quebec; and will soon be Issued to | the permanent corps. In all probability | the city corps will receive the first con- { where Sunlight Soap is used as | directed. c Sunlight Scap will not 'injure even the daintiest fabric or the hands, and the clothes will be |" RINSE WELL signment, and then follows the rural "regiments. This weapon is known as the Mark II, and differs slightly from Mark I. in the bolt action. The same | sights will be used for both patterns. Lieut. James Sclater received a Ross rifle, Mark IL, repently, says The Van- | conver News-Advertiser, and it has | been very closely inspected by a num- | ber. of rifle shots,' who all admire its many improvements, and invariably add «if it only shoots as well as it 100ks it will be a great rifle." | perfecily 'white, weolens. soft and fluffy. The reascn for thisis because Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure, contains no injurious chem cals -- indeed, nothing but the active, zleansing. ditt-removing proper- ties of soap that is nothing but soap. No official description has yet ap- | Buy itend follow 5c. directicns C. peared, and it is difficult to desaribe iR MON on paper all the various parts of the X e 'Mey RUFUNDED rifle . without = using technical terms buy Sunlight Soap it you find which are not thoroughly understood by those who are not rifle shots. Per- haps a comparison with the Lee-En- field will give a better idea of the Ross than a description with "metes and any cause for complaint. 16s LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO FORGING AHEAD Remarkable Growth of the 37 y ns MH | /V" OF CANADA. Here are some of the gains in 1905 of Canada's fastest growing and most pop- ular Life Insurance Company. Gain in INCOME - - $231,210.01 Gain In ASSETS - - $1,075,560.70 Gain In SURPLUS - - $170,928.25 Gain In INSURANCE - $3,720,984.00 Amount of Insurance Written «= + - $6,014,576.00 Figures aro facts, and so are gains. These figures and these gains 'prove the great fact that tho Canadian people have absolute confidence in the Mutual Life of Canada. Because the policy-holders OWN EVERYTHING CONTROL EVERYTHING GET EVERYTHING + blacksmith shop is too handy for me bounds." { Lighter Than the Lee-Enfield. In the first place the new rifle weighs only eight pounds, one and one-quarter pounds lighter, This is obtained by hollowing out the woodwork in the stock and less metal in the barrel to- wards the muzzle. It is two inches shorter, but this is a questionable im- provement, and results will be awaited with some anxiety. The sights are about the same distance apart, there- fore the back sight is a little nearer the eye. The rifling differs from any | other rifle in the number of grooves, but little, the shoe and nails to put | having only four, but they are wider it on costs him but five cents end for | than the lands and have a right hoist his work he fifteen to twenty | instead of 'left as in the Lee-Enfield, cents for a few moments work. Other i the rate of twist being the same, viz., 1 work is practically the same. With a yin 10. farm shop, the hired man can do most-{-; The lead 1s a Severe one, the lands or of the work, on rainy days, under | ridges being continued to the place your supervision. My hlacksmith bill, where the bullet rests in the breech. to say nothing of 'the carpenter work, In the Lee-Enfield the ridges are sloped has been as high as twenty dollars a dowy for about half an inch, and the vear and this was only rt of what bullet gets a short start before it meeis ° A pa a 1 was out. My time was worth some- with the friction a the Tigges. Woks thing. I have sent to a shop nearly a adoption of this change is pro 3 THE FARM WORKSHOP Will Be Found a Profitable In- vestment. By A. L. Morris, Elwood. Ind. { 'l here are but few farms on w hich a workshop is not needed, for there are several reasons why they axe profitable investments. Some one will say, "the to- put up one of my own." But even if the shop is just across the road from your, house, the shop will be the same. Material 'costs the blacksmith gets HEAD OFFICE: WATERLOO, - CANADA S.ROUGHTON District Agent, Kingston JUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. 90 Aloo, Ansesia, Lime, Phasobates, or any lojuriont. EW.GILLETT ooMrany LIMITED TORONTO. ONT. Thisis the Shect Metal Age. Cheaper than wooden les because they can- 'p, crack, burn or bl w off. Madeof best gal- Vanized steel. Will not rust. past at least a lifetime. .T ART METAL ca.Lu. i the result of experiments In the old mile away and found that others were | country, with' a view of obtaining a i before me so that my work could not | pigher velocity, which proved that there | be done that dav--another trip next : I is a loss of muzzle velocity with an | day and my machines must stand idle. | easy lead. | No matter how simple the break or The Bolt a Great Improvement. jlo CRsy. no mn, 'we must. go to the One of the worst faults of the Lee- | , shop. if we have an outfit at home we | mnfeld rifle was the system of lock- 1 can fix it or have it fixed to suit our- | yn ang in this respect the Ross cer- selves which is not alwavs the case, i when we are obliged to send to the shop, for the smith does not under- | stand the nature of the trouble, as we 'do and so does not know how to fix it. Another point, this is good train- ing for: the! boys and hired men. "| hey cany learn to put up buildings. fences, gatbs, make and repair harrows, rol- tainly is unsurpassed. The Enfield bolt required two motions, throwlig upward and pulling back. The Ross needs to be pulled straight back only and a push forward will compress the firing pin spring and lock the breech. The old rifle bolt resisted the shock of discharge on a shoulder about three inches in rear in a worn breech action allowed con- lers, ploughs, rdpair machines, shoe p horses, and many other things, the siderable movement at a critical time. "know: how" of which will be a great | The new rifle is fitted with two strong help in after life. Every farm should | locking lugs which engage in slots im- be equipped with some kind of an out- mediately in the rear of the base of the la A small hinged flap could have | rel is made of a high-grade steel that LITTLE DORRIT'S ORIGINAL Lovers of Dickens' May Be Interested to Know That "Little Dorrit" Is Still In Land of Living. The crypt of the Church of St. George the Martyr, Southwark, so closely asso- ciated with Dickens, is "to let" for storage parposes, and passers-by who | read 'the notice are reminded at ence of "Little Dorrit." The original of the chamcter is still alive in the person of Mrs. Cooper, who, as Mary Ann Mitton, was a playmate of Dickens and the sister of his closest school companion, has lived at South- gate for more than half a century. Al- tho more than 90 years of age, she is sUin full possession of all her fac- ulties, and takes an outdoor walk every fine day. ; In a conversation Mirs. Cooper showed how keen a pleasure it affords her to talk of the far-away times when as a girl she attended St. Pancras Church with "Charles," and of the visits after- wards paid by him to Manor Farm, Sunbury, where the Mittons lived. later. Of the boy Dickens she retains the fondest recollections. One' ra quaintest anecdotes tells how as a Kir! she teased him about his future wife. He declarnd that she must possess an intellectuality which would qualify her to take a keen interpst gn his work, and when the girl remawked, "Then. 1 wouldn't do for that, Charles," he agre- ed. "No, Dorrit, you wouldn't do for that." How keen an interest both she and her brother took in: the 'young writer's work is shown from the tales she tells | of how "Charles" used to bring his manuscript and read. it aloud to them. have In addition an'apérture or peep been mounted, with an aperture in the centre which would lay back out of the way when not in use. In the States this form of sight is very popular, and it has been found that recruits who have had very little experience soon become fafr shots, Having no back sight to complicate matters he i= able to foncen- trate his attention to the foresight and the bull's-eye only. With the open sight a man has to focus the back sight, fore- sight and bull's-eye at three different distances with such rapidity that they actually seem to be seen at one and the same time; that is by men with very good eyesight and which is known as good "accommodation," but there are very many men who have not this fa- cility, and who are heavily handicapped, and the aperture sight would be a great boon to them and to men with a tendency to short sight. Ahead of the British. Probably other suggestions will be made and some men will say, why not wait a little and get the very latest ideas, but if such men had their way very little would be dane in the world. The Rass rifle is the latest up-to-date rifie, and in many respects is away ahead of. the British- army short rifle, which has raised such commotion that manufacture has ceased. The United States army rifle, 1903, seems doomed also, in its present sawed-off form. It is to be sincerely hoped that actual tests with the Ross rifle will bear out the good opinion formed from its ap e and handiness, that the bar- will last long and maintain accurate shooting, and finally that the shorter "A Friend in Need-- HAT thin, little, 10-cent Box of Indigestion ~ He Cascarets. . a, Di When carried constantly in Torpid Liver. Flatulence your Vest Pocket, Appendicitis Hi Lady's" Purse it will ward off ninety pet Rheumatism Jaundice cent of Life's ordinary Jlls. Carr = Nausea ? Eat one of the six candy tablets con tained in that "Vest Pocket Box" whenever you suspect you need one. Worms Blofches It can't hurt you, and is sure Insurance Piles Bioghe against serious sickness. Ulcers Dysentery Want of Exercise, indoor Employment, worth fifty dollars worth of Treatment weaken the: Bowel Muscles! just as they weaken Arm and Leg Muscles : «. discomfort, loss of Business Energy, and The Muscles lose tone, tension, strength, 103s of Social Sunshine it saves. to force the food onward. . a 8 . And the longer they stay in that state the weaker they become, because the less A coming Headache can be warded off exercise they get through the slow pass- in short-order, by a single Cascaret, and age of food. the cause removed. : Cascarets contain the only combination Heartburn, Gas-belching, Acid-risingsin of drugs that acts on the Muscles of the ~ the throat, 'and Colicky feeling are sure | Bowels and Intestines, just as Cold Water, Signs of bowel trouble from food poisons, or Exercise, act on a Lazy man. and should be dealt with promptly. They act like Exercise. One Cascaret will stop the coming trou- --_-- : ble, and move on the Bowel load, if taken at the first signs, Ju Don't fail to carry the Vest Pocket Box of Cascarets with you constantly. When you have Heartburn, Colic,Coated Tongue, Suspected Breath, Acid-rising-in- throat, Gas-belching, or an incipient Cold, take a Cascaret. Remember, all these are not merely A thousand dollars a year spent in amuse~ ing of the barrel, even only two inches, will not impair its shooting qualities at long ranges, - What Hurts Our Pride When Criticism Hits Us. LITERARY CANADA. "If we thought anything. was not quite | as it oaght to be, 'we would tell him straight: 'Ne, no, Charles, that won't do at all," Mrs. Cooper would say. | Of Dickens, the man, the old lady | says: "There never Was such a man. He was so gentle and kindly to every one, and clever, for he newer really had much education; but he had a natural Discomforts, but indications of a serious Cause. . Nip them in the bud--eat a Candy Cascaret. Cascarets don't purge, nor punish the stomach like * Bile-driving" "Physics."' They act like Exercise on the Bowel ments could not buy for you Half so much hearty Happiness, solid rt, cheerful Temper and Health Insurance as that little Ten Cent Box of Cascarets. All Druggists sell them--over ten million boxes a year. Be very careful to get the genuine, made of breech and on one side only, which | Those who resent the criticism of Mme. Bernhardt and Sir Gilbert Par- ker, are right in asserting that Can- ada has her writers, her musicians, her artists, her men of science, says The Montreal Standard. The slightest re- flection, the slightest knowledge of facts, shows that in every nation there is a remnant, a saving few who devote themselves to the things of the intel- lect and the imagination. These the na- tion is proud to count as its represen- tative men. Go to Finland, Bosnia, or Argentina, and you will find this true. Ah, but our Canadians do not take first rank; they are not known 'to the world, and that hurts our pride. The nativist literary movement in Canada in the last twenty years pre- sents distinct features and outlines to the observer who has noted the facts. Verse came first, and then prose fiction, Lampman and Parker leading the two divisions. The output, in bulk and var- | lety, is worthy of attention:.and greater | things are yet to come. The books in | question could have been written only gift for noticing things and describing them." The old lady has still In her posses. slon many relics of those old days, not- ably part of the bed upom which Dick« ens slept when he used ts visit her bro- ther during holidays at Sunbury. She is proud also of having received many letters from the great novelist in his younger days. | She dearly loves to tell of the trou-' ble she used to get into in the early days of young Dickens' sojourn in Cam- den Town (Mrs. Cooper was born In Hatton Garden), when, instead of fe- turning straight home after the service at St. Pancras Church, she used to lis ten to Charles' persuasions, and go to see the "beadle in his gorgeous dress." or some such other wonder of childhood. Speaking of the life at Sunbury, she sald: "You could always find Charles lying out among the hay, absorbed in some book." Mrs. Cooper often pays & visit te" London, and she told her visitor that next week she intended, weather pers mitting, to do a little shopping In the city. How few of the passers-by in the busy streets will recognize the little by Canadians. Generally, outside recog- | nition gave our writers their place, and extra-Canadian markets gave them a living. Roberts, Parker, Carman, Barr, Mrs, Cotes could not have lived by thelr | white-haired old lady as the original writing in their own land. Their royal- | "Little Dorrit." ties would not have bought them shoe- -------------------------- strings. Our own people were apathe- | tic; until London and New York began NEW ZEALAND PENSIONS; to praise and to buy. One reason for our apathy, which now is passing away, was the quality { of our criticism. In the past Canadian | books have been either over-praised or else 'unduly disparaged. Both methods have made the public suspicious, and doubtful if any good thing could come -- Ninety Dollars a Year Is the Maximum For Old Age. New ; Zealand looks after its old folks. Every person of 65 years and upward | whe has'lived for twenty-five years in the celeny, has enjoyed a tolerably good character during that period, and cartridge. The Springfield and new United States army rifte, 1903, have locking lugs on the under side of the bolt head which are well up to the out of--Canada. At the present time, | criticism has a useful function to per- form. It can overlook, commend, praise, | and interpret the literary mowement. In fit if it. is only a wood working one costing a couple of dollars. A com- plete outfit of wood and metal work need not be expensive, sav cost from a hamber, but they each have 1 i ten to twenty dollars. 1 bave spent eariridge chamber, y | rare instances, it may call attention ta | i "3 A a diect vpront 12 single lug in the place of two. faults. Because there Is only one stand- | 3 ih rn a : = FL ire i ay Magazine In the Stock. | ard by which Canadian literature should | } Losides qui a OL Of Hire hs : The Ross magazine is another good | be measured--the highest. But its chief The house in which to house them, should he roomy but not expensive, in most of the cases they are made of second hand lumber. and covered with boards, plank or felt -------------- The Sacrificing Profession. Here are American tors, grunting our collar buttons of on the lever that moves th: world, aim should be to interpret. "The school | of Jeffrey, Lockhart, and Macaulay | were zealous for order, for putting peo- ple in their places, for awarding judi- cial praise and blame; they loved the literary tomahawk and scalping-knife. But Sainte-Beuve showed us a more excellent way. He taught us that the chief aim of the critic should be to! understand his author and help others to understand him. point,'as it is contafhed inside the stock { and does not project as in the Lee- Enfield. When the rifle is held in the left hand the fingers can press the mag- azine platform and the right hand hav- ing taken a few loose cartridges from the pouch, can pour them in and close the bolt. This does away entirely with clips and the tedious process of charg- ing the Lee-Enfield magazine, which requires both hands, one to put a single we edi- with the old handle flying up every few days, knoeking out our tecth, tak» | cartridge in and the other to lay it in Se------------------------ ine fifty per cent. of the legal rate | place and keep it down while another A Memory For Faces. for printing while the statesmen gge | Was placed on top. A cut-off permits In the course of the Saturday recep- the rifle to be used as a single loader, tion at Ottawa Prince Arth and pressure on a thumb-piece on the ur gave an taking 150 per cent. of their pay; here instance of the remarkable memory for wo are galloping up and down the : 4 Tip! earth Cer thet people's burdens, left 3ljows the bo! y = nye om faces which is a gift of the Royal Fam- bearing other prople's sorrow, anc the rifle. To describe what occurs When The officers on duty were present- i. the bolt is closed or opened, would 0c- | .3 to His Royal Highness at the sta- taking our pay in due bills on St. Peter--and all for what ? For the fun of getting the smell of pews ink in cupy too much space, but it is not too much to eay that the mechanism of the for the} f doi Ross rifle is extremely good, and em- ur nos; fot"the joy of rippin« open pi y 0 eo] Y, a 103 A ne ; o he bodies many of the latest suggestions plied Col. Hodgins, "you have" A few the familiar old exchanges; for 1 made by experts during the past two | pleasure of making a three days' | years | moments later the Prince inspected the | Kpecch every ninety days at the note | © 01d rifie shots will be most interest guard of honor, and 'Col Hodgins ac. : fed him. At they went down the counter of the bank; for the delecta- | ed in the sights. The foresight is still companied tion of getting complimentary tickets line Prince Arthur turned and said: of the ancient barleycorn pattern, per-| «py a uw Tw e to church socials, and for the sweet | manently protected by a steel hood bye Place y° i ® years ago you| y ' were attached to Y Battery, R. H, A, at satisfaction of beine too 'unnopular | about one-half inch in diameter, which | 4 q6rehot." even to be asked as pallbearers at | is secured to the block of the sight by The Prince was right. two screws on either side, doing away 3 tion. When Lieut.-Col. Hodgins, D.0.C, passed him, the Prince said at once, "I've met you before" "Yes, sir," re- Two years ago mention, however, was that of "back- ing" in supplies from Newmarket on foot, and wading--and 'in some in- stances swimming--the Holland River with their purchases held above the | water level, says The Bradford Witness, But the greiter the trials the greater | There ate 7,000 farms in the Orance River Colony, all of which are includ- ed in an atea of 7,000 square miles. The pure in heart never stop' to think about it. . pressing both sides, which releases the grips from the notches in the sight bed. Any correction for elevation is made by rotating the fine adjustment ring which entirely encircles the bar- rel, and is marked every ten degrees. He Wr ude me amar. ' Io ude me once : Blo Kblon Tea et By rotating it one way the bridge is pulled slightly towards the musile, ele= | their apparent determination to over- vating the sight leaf, and depression €°™® them, and the co e which {| prompted their departure m the is obtained by a movement in the other ef | the comforts of civilization their direction. No table accompanies the | cifle, giving the scale and its applica- | assumption of the obligations which a tion in inches on the target at the dif- | residence in the forest entailed, buoyed ferent ranges. Allowance for wind Is' them up with the vicissitudes which made by a small milled head on the followed in the wake of their location right of the sight cap. Each division | Mons the wilds, and secured to them gives five inches for each -100-yards, | eventually the success and comforts which is easy to remember. The back | which they so eminently merited. sight itself is a V, but this could be M---------------------------------- Many a man who can't trust himself ' filed down and used as a bar. It is to | be regretted that this new sight does $xpects the butcher and baker to trust New Laundry Have you pains in the Back, inflam. First-class hand work guaranteed. Give mition of any kind, rheumatism, me a trial. Géods called for and | fainting spells, indigestion or consti- parcels delivered. | pation, Hollister's Rocky Mountpin JIM LE 188 Division St., | Ten makes vou well, keeps. you well! ! Cor, Garrett ' 35 cents, Mahood's Drug Store. t Col Hodgins was in England undergo- | Place, funerals. It is a great business--this newspaper. business. And rforming the with the necessity of a sight protector. yo nig training for tactical fitness for world is a mighty happy diversion, A small set screw in the front of the 203 In the course of this he !and if Andrew Carnegie forgets us block secures the barleycorn in place. oo. attached to Y Battery, RH.A., and with his hero medals, there is some If the rifle does mot shoot straight the pyc Arthur was attached at the same comfort in knowing that as we turn barleycorn can be adjustéd, the set ,.... the two being on parade together, | to the right when we finally go up, screw tightened and the hood replaced. | 1,4 not speaking to each other. Sub- we have our harp check paid for by For Long-Distance Wark. { sequently, at the manoeuvres, Col. Hod- the best line of free advertising that The back sight differs from any other , gins was introduced to him a couple has ever been nrinted in the world, sight in the market, in the leaf being of times. . curved, and in the method of fine ad-| Ra R - i - . 3 > Have poops) wr a prowph and | a aopories ut 8 | rials of thw Biohuara, | positive cure for sick headache, bil- | moveable bridge on the sight-bed, which Among the incidents of the first few { fpusness, constipation, pain in the { js stamped with the ranges from 100 to days in Gwilimbury, which from its side. and all" liver. drgpbles. Carter's | 2 200-yards. The bridge is moved by peculiar séVerity seems entitled to Jed a sober respectable life for at least five years past, is entitled to an old-age pension of the state funds. It is provided, however, that ne pension can be awarded where the income from other sources exceeds $260 a year, or where the applicant has more than $1,360 worth of property. Asiatics and other aliens are ineligible. Wives draw a pension as well as their hus- bands, provided the total income of the household does not exceed $390 a year. The full State pension is $30 a year, but $5 is deducted from every $5 of income over $170 derived frem other sources. Thus a pensiener with $200 a year In- come would draw $60 as his old age pension. The system has been in opera~ tion seven years, and the number of pensions in force is close on 12.000, in- volving an annual payment of over $1,000,000. Last year the pensioners in- cluded four centenarians, two of whom were 103 years old. The pension is paid on the first day of every montll, through the postal department, ' Peer Is a Farmer. | Muscles that propel Food, and that squeeze the natural, Digestive Juices of the body only by the Sterling Remedy Company and never sold in bulk, Every tablet into Food. stamped "oecT . Cascarets ward off, or cure, the follow- = A sample and the famous bookley Ing diseases: "Curse of Constipation," Free for the Constipation Bad Breath asking. Address Sterling Remedy Com= Biliousness Diabetes pany, Chicago or New York. [0] [ RLINGS "i ALE,PORTER ald 1X0] 3 » A a2 E NOTED EX X PURITY BRILLIANCY « UNIFORM CI ENDO FOR Infants, Invalids, Nearly 80 Years' Established Reputation. DR. BARNARDO and T have no hesitation 'in saying it has proved SAYS I aistac tory." July 27th, 1901. Manufacturers: JOSIAH R. NEAVE & CO., FORDINGBRIDGE, ENGLAND, Wholesale Agents: ~THE LYMAN BROS. &Co., Ltd., Toronto& Montreal. "We bave already used Ni Food our Homes (Habies' Castle ang the Rin tv That a scientist who is sso a pert | wm -- can at the same time be a good busi ness man is proved in the case of Lord Rayleigh. Lord Rayleigh is one of the " greatest scientists of the day. He was senior wrangler and professor of ex- perimental physics at Cambridge; i= a professor of natural philosophy and has innumerable decorations and scholar ships. In addition he is a good business man. He owns a large estate, Teriing near Witham, Essex, England, and this he has converted into a huge dairy farm, from which he supplies the ' three stores he runs in London under under the name of "*Lord Rayleigh's Dairies." ! His profits from this source are very | large. Lord Rayleigh is a brother-in-| law of the Hon. A. J. Balfour, and is staying with him at Carlton Gardens in the house which Ambassador Choate once occupled. Lord Rayleigh married Miss Evelyn Balfour, a sister of the! former Premier. Thought He Lost His Head. A gentleman while taking a ride with his groom had the misfortune to have | himself and companion thrown violent. ly to the ground by his horse taking | fright and running away. The gentle- | man was not seriously injured, hia principal loss being that of his wig, which had been shaken off, but he | found Pat in a much worse condition, with the blood tricking from his head and holding his masters wiz, which | he was surveying with the utmost | alarm and horror. "Well, Pat," said his neaster, "are you much hurt? "Hurt Is 11? Oh, master, do you see the top of my head In my hand?" Pat ii his terror and confusion had mistaken his master's wig for his own ! natural scalp and evidently thought ! that his last hour had arrived.--Lon- don Telegraph. A The proportion of blind pecple the world is 800 to every 1p one in 1,260. In South Africa £1 has only a pur- THE 20th CENTURY TRERTINENT, The source of all Power, , erst The Fountain of Youth, jit.22 Jules Kohs. The result of 50 years of scientific research, . manhood brought back after years of weakness despair. Nature's Secret by com! of the rarest chemical reagents in the world. is po experiment. itis by its use in the Rospltdy: of Europe. Tens of of weak and {casas cured by 30 days treatment. This is ~~ Prove it yourself by a test. A S days treatment full particulars sent free: All packages carefully sealed in a plain wrapper with no mark. full 30 snys treatment (180 doses) with cure or. refund of money, for 00. Send for sworn Canadian testimonials received within the Jast re ea m De. KOWR MEDICINE CO.. P.O. Drawor i. 2341. MONTREALS. i i EL a Ta FY @u account of its terribls effects, blood disease Is called t diseases. It may bo either hereditary or contracted; 80 te it a ihe to the disease, itin a crime to permit it to remain in the system. It ma it itself in tho form of Scrofula, Bczema, rheumatic L as, or blotctes, nicers i fae mouth the ioe /, Te ch a or on "old 9% Tags, "Fou : is guaraateed to cars this disease, never I Fama s iors Ta pra ivy av, Fico hn 7 rte GR WY y gon from Ny Rr a ara JN y a Chins SUAR 32 'NOUFAY. "36 Tears in yp Cousultation Free. Question Blank for Home Treatment and Books Free, ? Drs KENNEDY & KERGAN Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby 8¢., Detroit, Mich. i chasing power equal to about 10s, in Britain, .