me Hil gE* 5s makes a manufacturer label hia the label is. the last which some men consult. "You E§ 5 i 5 F i g and dye you like The situation has caused the Penn- sylvania School Journal to comment ii Al g E1iel i 0 is independent and wdvocates of such ex- penses a$ incurred in presi: dential elections. He ke campaign for the first office the gift of the people, with his means, unless a very rich man - a heart for any sacri fice. No man of moderate means, how- ever worthy and - distinguished, how ever fitted for the duties of the hour, could presume to conduét an election i i £ F i shells, sawdust and clay; jellies and preserves are aniline dyes, and theby-| In additon Mr products of vitrolf honey never saw the busy bee--the chemist makds it. Red wine is salioylic acid, white wine is sulphuric acid, and, worst of all, | whiskey is 1 gely wood alcohol "The marvel of it all is that any human life remains," Fig lumbip: Conciliation Act, by which it -| is hoped a great many of the disputes bet weer capital and labour will 'be amicably settled; the Canned Foods Inspection Act, which should secure safety to the people who consume can: ned goods; the, Electric Expert Act, 4 and other measures, of less signifi- cance. Through the departure of the pre mier and two of his ministers to Eng- land, there to attend the colonial con- ference, some legislation was laid over, and the discussion of the insur ance report, or rather the act recom- dive | mended by the commissioners, was de- farred until "next year. Meanwhile some of the affected members may the, | 01 down, or undergo an experience that will be corrective in its quality. insprance report will stand as a reasonable criticism of things as they were found, despite the abuse of Fos- ter, Fowler & Co. Parliament will be pleasanter and more attractive when the members en- in the consideration wholly of what 'is for the public good rather than of what is for the evil or injury of its members. Too much time is i 3 13 44 now np THE REVIVAL IN BUSINESS. The industries' committee is to be congratulated upon the success of its work, in closing up two of the agree mente by which the industries of the city will receive important additions. These will expand in business con- ections, it is believed, and will bring in their train other enterprises. So that the outlook in a business sense is quite encouraging. The smelter site has been held a long by the city, but mot in vain. Had it passed into private hands, apd beon used for other than manufactur ing purposes, it would not be avail- able now for the lead smelting which requires the isolation it can here se- cure. Lead has been found in large quantities in this vicinity, (contrary to the assumption of very kmowing persons), and with some railway con- nections, not expensive or diffienlt of The federal iament was in ses. |enOugh, bonsidering the figures that time, That some of it was wasted | State The p xp 3 goes without saying. Goldwin Smith, | however, aro not all of them, though hes laid it down as a fact that pub- | they may reprepent all that the presi- are not delibergtive. in their, | dent wants to see covered by a public and he must have had | appropriation. There is no marked his mind, when he | expression of approval for the scheme, especially those members | Which may not be an evidence that it sition. They do ol fs dai Ong thing is certain--that the gov for effect. They were always on the | ernment of the day and its candidates aler, gentrally, not so mmch to | will receive Tio quitrier from the great defend the public interest, as to twist | corporations, Mr. Roosevelt has wag- some passing circumstance into a pub- | ed an uncompromising war upon them lic scandal. Hence there was a de | and there will be no financial aid from luge of small talk, to very little pur | them towards his . Nor does pose. ho desire it, He does not seek anoth- There. was some usehil legislation, | er term, and may not accept nomina- however, including the revision of the | tion for it under any circumstances tariff (after a eareful study of the | What he does is not for his benefit, question by the finance minister, min- | but in the interest of honest elections ister of inland revenue, and minister | --if they can be had. EDITORIAL NOTES. The breakwater at King street west is all right for ice shoves and storms, but as a lover's retreat it has lost its attraction. An Eaglish authority declares that no material makes 80 good a road as the slag from the foundry furnace. A good article, but very scarce. At the conservative pow-wow in Peterboro which Me. Bergeron was ex- pected to 'address, one motto read : "Laurier Has Betrayed Us in Eng nd? How? Will some one please explain ? 'No need of sidewalk sweeping or dinarily in Kingston. The women do the sweeping with their dresses, which is the more remarkable, secing that ordinarily they 'opposes dust and dirt. Ontario is the only province so far where the local government has taken the necessary steps to enforce the Lord's Day Act. In all the other pro- vinces it is without effect, after all the labour and expense which it en- One of the big three insurance com- panies in New York has published its statement of business for 1906. It did lest new business, but at half the ex- peases of a similar amount formerly. The exhibit has challenged popular at- tention. Toronto now looks to the legisla: ture for such power or legislation as will enable it to regulate the. street railway. There is a man in the Queen City, however, whom Mr. Whitney cannot scare, and he happens to be the manager of the street railway. In Rochester the old asphalt or con- crete is removed from the pavements and rolled inte the surface of the macadamized streots. It improves the surface of these "streets. Will the works' department try tar on the sur- face of the hew macadamized streets here ? -- Mr. Hanne, at Peterboro, told of the things the government of Mr. Whitney Syracuse Post-Standard. ' | necessity of sending their product to v- ling that common courtesy would: seem Worthy Of His Office. rd. In view of the fact that most of the tlergy are insufficiently paid, Bishop Vinton, of Western Massachusetts, has asked his diocesan convention to re- duce his salary from $5,000 to $4,000 a year. A Very Serious Question, Rochester Post-Exprees. A Cincinnati minister says a Sun- day breakfast given by Nicholas Longw was as mach a violation of the Susing laws as the open sa- loons down n. Can it be that the breakfast food had a stick in it? Hamilton Spectator. The Canadian Press Association should give Mr. Cooper some solid re- coguition of his services in relieving Canadi Spefier lishers of the subscribers in the United States. Too Much Money. New York Paper. John W. Gates has rented apart- ments in a New York hotel for $16, 000 a year. It is understood that he is 'much annoyed because the price was not $1,000,000. Mr. Gates does hate to be bothered with small change. Military Discourtesy. Brockville Recorder. Possibly the Ontario government was a bit bumptious in the matter, but has no hesitation in say- to indicate that the militia depart- ment should have notified the prov- ince of its intention before proceeding to take jon of the land under the BINA. act. We Should Say Not. Ottawa Jourmal. Mr. Stead has informed the 'secre tary of the Canadian Club at Toron- to that he cannot find time tw ad- dress the club as he had originally in- tended. Some candid friend has pro- bably shown him a handful of clip- pings from the Toronto Telegram of recent date. With all Mr. Stead's Decalinrition he is not altogether a No Feather Duster Affair. Watertown, N.Y., Times. The investigation of various state departments by Gov. Hughes during the coming summer will be no feather duster affair. It promises to be a real housecleaning, officials will likely spend their mill. summer vacations at the 'capitol the while their long closed books are pried open by a conscientious execu: tive or one of his representatives. An egg contains as much nourish ment as 1} pounds of grapes, or 1} pounds of cherries. TIREDNESS COMES IN THE SPRING. What Are You Doige to Overcome It The cold of winter exhausts vitality and ex everyone to disease Spring is sure to bring tiredness and languor that will not Spring sickness doesn't cure itself-- the cause is in the blood, and that cause must be remedied. It is easily done with Ferrozone, a marvelous re- medy that purifies the blood and ex- pels those humors and poisons that depress and weaken. Just think of it--Ferrozone upliits the entire nervous system, renews the blood, makes it rich and red--gives the sort of aid that's needed in throwing off weakness and spring languor. Tens of thousands enjoy the advan- tages of renewed health through Fer- rozone; -- if you'll only use it, you'll surely grow strong too; it's beveficial action is noticed oven in a week, -- you gee it goes right to work, re moves the cause of the trouble and then quickly makes' a cure, For those wht sleep poorly and have nervous apprehensions, Ferros-] one is a boon; it is a specialist in such cases. : Where there is paleness, poor appe. tite and languor, Ferrozone makes the patient feel like new in: a few days, In tiredness, nerve exhaustion, of Ferrozone ® known from coast to coast and universally used with grand results. . Let Ferrozong build you up, let it win you k to robust health, it will do so quickly if you give it the chance. Sold by all dealers. 50e. ver did. To did not. talk of, the things it Lox or six boves for $2.50. Remember and some state |, spring fever and debility, the power! To 3 bigs and in mind, an earnest seeker after know! and above all, possessed ofa y sympathetic nature, In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by happiness. They had children, three sons and a daughter. In those old fashioned days it was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbe, nature's own remedies--calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and experience many of them gained a wonderful knowledge of the curative properties of the various roots and herba. Mra. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their char- SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. PICEA "And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compoung * Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of '73" Causeg (it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores, In 1877, by combined efforts the family had saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enter. rise were assured, until dodiny Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable pound have become household words 'every. where, and many tons of roots and her! are used annually in ite manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till ghe had means for continu. ing her work ag effectively as she could have done it herself. During her long and eventful experi. ence she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to pre- serve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice-- and there were thousands--received careful study and the details, including symptoms, treatment and results were acteristics and power over di She maintained that just as nature so bounti- fully provides in the hatvest-fields and ore! vegetable foods of all kinds; 30, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field there are remedies expressly designed to cure body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple~and effec- tive medicines for her own family and friends. : Chief of these was a rare combination of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses peculiar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pinkham's friends and bors that her compound and cured and it became quite popular among them. All this so far was done freely, without money, and without price as a labor of love. But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the real estate interests the Pinkham family, as this class of business Sulfsred most from fearful de- 80 when Centennial year Wem it found their property swept away. Some other source of income had to be found. At this nt Lydia E. Pinkham's Vi le Compound was 'mide' kriown to the world. the various ills and weaknesses of the | hard led for future ref and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and repre. sent a vast collaboration of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can ly be equaled in any library in the world. With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-lay, the present Mrs. Pink- ham. E£he was carefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, and for she assisted her in her vast corres- To her hands naturally fell the irec- tion of the work when its originator away. For nearly twenty-five years she has continued it, and ing in the work shows when first Lydia E. Pinkham Srop ber pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, now the mother of a large family, took it w With woman ts, some as capable as her- self, the present Mrs. Pinkham continues this great work, and probably from the office of no other person have so many women been advised how to regain health. women, this advice is "Yours for Health freely given if you only write to ask for it. Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound : made from simple roots and herbs; the one t icine for women's ailments, oH the i Rain fitting shoulders. fitting monument to the woman The three sons and the daughter, with | whose name it bears. pa -- - POPP 0900009040000000 0009000 Coat Weather The man, who owns one of our useful Raincoats, has no leat ga to what the weather may be, for if it raims he is pro- tec If it Shines he has a modishly modeled garment Plays the role of a Swagger Light Weight Overcoat. Rain or Shine He's Well Attired Our Raincoats are correctly tailored in the best rain prooi- ed Fabrics, plain or fancy, snug fitting collars and perfect that Raincoats, $10, $12.50, $15 and $18 See Our Semi-Ready Special $15 Raincoat the name Ferrozone, » The H. D. Bibby Co. Sd 1s 'SO POPULAR. AN LEAD PACKETS ONLY bE LARL Proprietary Owing to the phenom the first limited amor per share will be exh will then he materia ---- The advance will take just as soon as the s very limited amount most. of which is sold I am not urging anyc The stock is fast sell; placed in Canada and 1 am anxious, howeve they want at the first ment to give you not not" last must _longer. My following ha# con vice, Bousands will 1 have never advised ally advancing in mas My method after plac it is listed on the Ex been a legitimate mar -------------- That is my record. Larder Lake Propricte and placed on the Ne I predict that very so o share, 1 furthermor alive: results, and it they will be of a sens will 'then surely geo 8 some say, but those v the {rip to Larder on New York, Boston an sorvative enough when and my engineers hav months past. The facts about the L ---------- arnt tary. Company in par Full particulars, howe personally, or by mai Again I say, I am not is sclling itself even fa from Canada and the But'T dm anxious tha far tho best thing 1 he price. 41.45 ADELAIDE ¢ TORONTO. LONG DISTANCE Moin 7565 " 7568 BRANCH