TEER PAGE SIX. ; Ny Hays} Health Never Fails fo Restore Gray Hair to fis Natural Color and uty. No matter how long it has been gray | or faded. Promotes a luxuriant growth | of healthy hair, Stops its falling out, and positively removes Dan- druff. Keeps hair soft and glossy. Re- | fuse all substitutes. 24 times as much n $1.00 as 50c. size. Us Not a Dye. J1 and 50c. bottles, at ists Send % for free book * 'T'he Care of the Hair." > Phile Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J. Hay's Harfina Soap cures Pimples, ted, rough and chapped hands, and ail skin dis- eases eeps skin fine and soft. 25¢, drugwista, Send 2c for free book "The Care of the Skin. * Jas. bB. MclLieod If Sick 't risk even one single penny! . And I will tell you why I say this. because . Shoop medic cute rely Froe OF it Sailt 'No one need risk even one single penny. Just think what this means to the suffering ' , nothing whatever un. | ful Restorative or $e' umatic «1 WE why take any chance whatever? | y purchase any medicine whose maker dare not back it just as this remarkable offer' 4nd bes! y "No #hoop's Resto! in the land. Th no chance wha®y io For twenty years become thoroughly s! And I bav ible druggists ir aid, 'We take ve." Dr. Na respons village every. yours: : These edicines with the sick--and e alone But write me first for an order. | 1 have an agent in almost every commun. ity --but ull druggists are not authorized to grant the 30 day test So drop me a line, pleasg--and thus save all disappointments and delays. | Besides, you are free to consult me by letter as you would your home [iysigian Do so free! And fully~if you desire. My advice and the boo! below are yours--and without cost. Perhaps » word or two from me will clear up some serious | ailment, I have helped thousands upon thousands | by my private prescription or personal advice an. | » Resides, the books will open up new and They tell of my 30 years ex+ n homes and in Hosp. | and relief are told of "inside nerve" gives to the helpful ideas to you. no larger th silldfn Heart its impitise. How the Stomachand Kidney each have their inside or power nerve, Hod these organs surely falter when these cortroling OF Taster nerve In to fail, Tow Dr. 8hoop's Kastorative g ¥ 1 esc falling nerves, snd rebuilds, restores the lost tone and powe help you--if it i within the powe My best effort is surely worth you now, while it is fresh never comes. Dr. Shoop. Box 12, Racine, Wis. Which Book Shall I Send You? No. 1 On Dyspepsia No.4 For Women No. 2 On the Heart No. 5 Foi Men - No. 3 On the Kidneys No. 6 On Rhéamstiam Bik TTasaarhonnd-relieventi-the troubles inci dent to a billous state of the system, such as Irizziness, Nattwes; Dintrons eating, Pain in the Side, ! remarkable success has been shown jn curibg ke. While theirynost are Teadache, yet Cader's Little Liver Pills fs t pre- equally valuable in Constipation, enring au ng this annoying comy ot all disorders of thpstom aud regulate the buwels. vén Ache they would be almost pr suffer from this distressing plaints but tértu nately their goodness docs notend hex ,and those who once try them will find theso little pills valu- able in so many ways that they will not be. wil. Jing to do without thew, But afterall sick head ACHE ¥8 the bane of so many lives that here ds where we nake our great boast. Our pillscure it while others do not . \ 0 vs Little Liver Pills are very small and take, Oue or two pills make a dose ictly vegetable and do not gripe oe ut by their gentle action please all who tae then ow. } GARTER MEDITINE 00., NEW TORE. "eadsin Small BL Small Dose. Small Price Dyeing . ¢ with Soap! Maypole Soap is the Household Diye that washes and dyes with ove opera. tion , Used almost exclusively in Enyiand. Yields fast, brilliant colers. Drvesto ary shade. No streaks And above al-CLEANLY, SAFE, SURK. Maypole Soap soc. for Colora--isc. for Black, Frank deiadit @ Cory Montreal, £000000000000000000000 HONG LEE LAUNDRY : * * First-class work guaranteed. ; @ < e hand. by Goods called for and delivered. Send postal eard with nage and address and we will call prompt- ly A trial order solfgited: Ching Shu, Prop., pear Barrie St. 0090000000000 0060 000000000000000000 f41E FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863. pPrecident--Sir Richard Cartwright, Money fened on City and Farm Pro~ perties. Municipal "and Oounty Debeh- trres Mortgages purchased. Deposits received and iuterest allowed! aire SIPERSTIT J doy | Shoop's medicines have | dardized all over America. | | a THAT RIDICULOUSLY SURVIVE TO STHIS DAY IN GREAT BRITAIN. The llajority Are Connicted With a Belief, in the Power of Words--Natives Think if They Told Their Names They Could be Called From Any Part of the World. Occ Revit contributes an interest- ticle on the "Survivals of Old Magical Jritain." The majority of ases mentioned are connected with a be 1¢ of words, It is said that in Iretand and Arran many natives ab- y refuse to tell ineir names because wwledge would enable the inquirer to them, no matter how far he was irom and whenever he cared to do so. More they believe that any spell worked on the written name would have the same ef- as if worked on the owner: Dishke to of their names not con- uman Certain h and ishermen hetieve that the salmon and : objection ws being named, Hed t! ult im Great power North strinte them is > munciation } beings 1e red 1 power of werds the, chief weap®i of A poet would recite ht crops, dry cows on the face of its generally used used far epilepsy t sanre lig hg h would t listers were {orp lisease; I conjpre thee by the sun and by the and hy the holy gospel of the day, de- God unto His servants Hubert, and Join, that you arige and s had to he whispered into just after an attack Catholic i is preserved in a by Ashton-in white silk nd curses church held in veneration, ¢ rought by it. The that of Father Ed "who was executed at Lan- his been w ave been Arrowsmit 1628 ter his execution une of hand, which was preserved Hall in Lancashire to Ashton n Bryn removed idea unded « thc related to one another re- te mel spiritual connection, alt worgh t separated, and whatever happens yart affect This I wishing act objects once hey to ex- « 1 1G other 1s an of on 1 endeavors part or something actually connected with beard, a magician to. obtain sone Nay i Hody from the head or of "blood. In forsaken by her lover his hair and will have no xX man request- of a had spell hairs a drop some england a g obtain a lock of he 70 an lisse for him a i it simmers Iwo years d barber to procure piece ertain customer's hair, as he wished the to work a tomer ¢ him and - and teeth are for luck," but allow id h nail excuse being air, parings "it the a survival of custom ol » parts ol obliterating the be referred to In some districts it believed of a person s footprints acquired virtue through the. contact with body. In Germany the widely ad spread that if earth on which a man s trodden is ¢ut out and dried in an oven, the earth parches, Il either the man or his foot be withered and parch- dil np WE ir He will be fmned or killed by prestmg his footprint 1 broken meen Fe fer ablye afin nner oat. ¢ in this class ilize I'he custom of after ¢xpectoration may me tear even the imprint idea is t i SO Ww whl witht 1 § Or Clot have a prominent place from intimate on; must on any jes tcheraft wit Lig their association Lpparel of =n nt be placed "the ow ner-od griicle will t ish as it moulders in the grave. To hang tripes from a dead man's clothes on a vine n. The ancient Saxen's ash, and pers nc article Tremp person L corpse, would render it barre still exists London, an medicine times in the wi 1e there ten niles from used in must be carried and at sun ris tree hmongd Hall, now even children nine the tr time that around ee the ny Wi Great Britain was Clr 8 es annexed the sanctity 3 ees named af- en nar find we ts and thus we cutic value holiness in sat he therap to latter, whereas the in Most cases an » efhicacy was 0 eadless in thee mg exists even to the present day well the in aid of of his clothing, or even a the | the to power of person ovel mere to re eresting legends North 'Ireland y the natives, the well hin tree sufficient have a wellm according t M: onnected.- < ny I 1 ¢ s water «of which, not boils however much it ix heated; but not allow anyone to statement, and it' is attdmpt. Many stones, and ge fish, dian spirit this make 11s are lined with white the s quite common to hnd therem ratly chub. This is the gua f the we and the est it on May eve (May Day being the gfea eolithic festival) has-luck for a year. According to a local legend a man not po of fear of the spirit, caught the lish in of these wells and put him on the gridiron for supper The fish. immediately jumped off the fire and hurried back te 'its home, where it 1s shown with the gridiron scars on its side, her type of magic is ch an image 18 constructed resembling 1 is 10 be'worked The last or clay in the person who ssessed a one case of this person on whom the ev processes represde nted this is the custom image is and magical example of S corp-cr rpse, which ure A clay whose hurt is desired, and, thorns bein 1 ail common of C¢ is made person g stuck stream, ranmmg st runing by the ahd in the way tarer spel broken patient In Argyllshire a long "¢antation was repeated as the pins and thorns deserted. "When it was' desired that the 1ld die a lingering death, the owed to'touch the region of the " over it, it is placed in a the image is wasted aw the victim and tho suffers y-creagh ay tl more tire discover and the in- wastes, e also are stuck more Should a the ! 1s recovers were patient shot were not all heart gy / A curi rom attaches to the .gesin known as drago It is pins nus mostly used & >. C. McGill, Managing Dirsctor, * 87 Clareuce street, 2 girls wha, forsakdn by their lovers, try to b by 8 r . CLSTONS thebody-to remain for-otheps- thete a ES back their affections Jf the resin is wrappéd in paper and thrown on the fire, while the following couplet is re pe ated: . May hie no pleasure or profit see ! Till he comes back again to me Another 'method much used by wamen to at-| tract man of their choice is to mix to-1 gether dragon's blood, sulphur, quicksilver, | saltpetre and then throw the mixture on the fire with incantation. -In the north of England it is openly sold in considerable quantities for Lae magical purposes. Many of these processes may be worked by | the lay people themselves, but the profession- | enchanter is by no means extinct. There | are still plenty of old "wise women" in rural parts, who fbr'a few pence are prepared to cure warts, remove spells and prepare more or jess-mnocent Jove potions. Only a few years ago in Ireland a woman was burned by het neighbors to make her confess that she cast the evil eve on their cattle. REPRESSION IN RUSSIA. Two Hundred Eminent Englishmen Make a Significant Protest~ v Edward Grey, secretary of state for foteign affairs, recently received a letter sign- ed by the Bishops of Hereford and Birming- ham and eighteen [&%ia clergymen ¢f" vari- ous denominations; dhreée peers, including Lord Courtney; 71 members of parliament; 22 authors, among--them Sir Canon Doyle IFrederic Harrison, William Watson and israel Zangwill; editors of leading *publica- tions, and 32 other prominent men. It refers to conditions in Russia in these terms: 'It is spirit ungen: rous remonstrance that observe that four years a system of repression has relaxed its severity though the evidences of organized revolution- ary movement have disappeared. There. his recently been §ome relaxation in particular the greater portion of the em pire in time .of peace, under some form of martial la The number of capital sentences on civilians between Oetober, 1905 and December, 1908, has reached 4002, and the number of exéeutions was ofcially stated to be 2118. These were 'passed, moreover, by 3 process, but by exceptional military courts. The number of in exile in Siberia: ahd northern Russia, mostly punished without trial by under a system of exile physical suffering. and reckoned in October Sir seven no of we for not districts, but remams, Ww sentences not ordinary civil persons ministrative which involves privation, was last at 74.000. "The number 'of persons exiled without trial cannot be realized without a protest, but evidence the press. from trustworthy witnesses, and above all irom fhe debates it the Duma, has persuaded us that the suffer ings of those who remain in prison justify, nay, require, a stronger Over 180,000 persons--a total has more than doubled since 1905 --criminals and political of wed together in prisons built process, much officially serious remonstrance which fenders, are cr to hold 107,000. In demic diseases, and especiall) the sick and the fetters in most of these prisons epi typhus, pre lie together are are valent; wil their removed cases of fever not In some prisons the warders sys tematically beat and maltreat the sick and the whole alike. There is also egddence of 'mort delibetate tortures, employed® to punish the defiant or to éxtract confession froni thé sus pect. Such would move our indig nation were. all the victims ordinary criminals We desire to base our protest on the ground of simple humanity; but it is none the les important to remember that many of 'the if guilty at all, suffering for words which any constitutiona coniry would "be lawigl -- or. even praise worthy eho --- . The writezg have no _egpeelalinn oie lizets intervention, but hope that a friendly govern ment may exert-an influence to ameliorate the suffering under the evils describ 4 even ed' excesses prisoners, are acts or mo lot of those ed Arts Discovered by "Accident. M:iny of the utilitarian inventions dow. gen erally in use were discovered Porcelain was discovered by chance by a cer tain alchemist jn his efforts to procure a mix ture of that make durable crucibles wife English pape nmanufacturer a long ago accidentally bag fall into one of her hus When the paper cam Her astonished hus worthless anc would of time earth I'he an let blue cloth ¢ band's vats of pulp out finished it was blue hind considered the paper placed it age. Several years later he put it on the market for whatever it would It sold in a jiffy and more was order But didn't know how it was made wife finally remembered hac she Sean ITE Bine Coen Dig. 1 FTE DY accident--and- the a fortune witl it. | Hence pur blue-tinted paper A hen once walked through a clay puddle and into a sugar house with her wet feet leav ing, tra short while late on the sugar. A itt was found that wherever had stepped the sugar hadybecome white. he matter was investigated and the result was The discovery of a process of whiteping sugar in stor bring 1 he man made he she * Jewels of Old Times. Engraved gems are among the most anter- ing of art inherited from the an cients. ' Though many cameos and intaglios were engraved on precious stones over 2,000 years ago, they are still clear and fine a: 1 cut yesterday The indicate 'that the old Greeks and Romans regarded them a: charms against accident or misfortune, This superstit generally took the form of 2 fondness for representation of animals. * Sail affected the dolphin be- lieved to be the Women preferred the representation prolific aringa of the Adrfatic, symbol fruitiulness bécause of the number The ant was worn as an emblem By the frog was indicated the resurrection, that interesting objects designs m bec it was 1d of the was a great mariners which of of its eggs of 3 rdea of batrachian 1e because renews its atl A small auantity | accidentally™ rn "WITHIN THE CHURCH CIRCLE. Some Interesting Notes Concerning Clergy. : men and Other People. A local preacher was invited to a luncheon cése, for the most part eloquent, learned, and | successful men., The local preacher felt very humble among them. The bishop noticed, at the foot 6i the long table, a subdued commo-| tion. Then a strange odor floated to him, | "Dear me," he exclaimed, wrinkling up his nose, "there's a very odd smell in the room. "It's only my egg, bishop' The bishop turned to one of his servints: "Take the gentleran's egg awa¥, for it's a bad one." a "Oh, no, bishop," said the local preacher, continuing to eat on. "Do not tfpuble, sir. It is quite. good endugh for me" The late Duchess oi Teck found herself one day sitting between Canon Teignmouth Shere and another - dignitary of the same rank. "Your Royal: Highness," said the former, "must find: ypurseli in a rather alarming po- sition-- * 'Canon to right of you, Canon to left of you, ., Volleys and ' thunders.'" J BWRILY was the reply, "this is the very first time I have been connected with the Light Brigade." A resident of a Highland parish in Scot- land was entertaining two relatives, Of course, on the first Sunday she took them 'to chiirch. The Young ladies were dressed in snowy white. During: his sermgn, the, minis- ter, speaking of angels asked: Xnd who are those in white array The answer came twa nieces, sir, frae Canada." ongressman from New England, a self made man, noted in Washington for two things=>-his qu wit and pride in his Celtic origin. He was walking down Pennsylvania Avenue one fine evening, with a fellow mem- ber from Kansas, when the Westerner, look- ing at the sky, remarked, "How bright Ori is to-night." "A-r-rh!" replied the New lander. "So * that is _ORyan 153 thank the Bord, there's @ne Irishman in heay en, anyhow!" 9 - -- y An aged Scot told his minister that he was to make a pilgrimage to the Holy [Land whiles I'm there," added 'the pilgrim, acently, "I'll read the Ten Command aloud irae top ¢ Mount Sinai." said the minister, "take my them." A¢ going 'And compl ments "Saunders," Bide at hame and Keep ad vice, A Colorado=editor wanted to announce, tifat church attendants on the following Sunday would be permitted «to inspect the "most beautiful stained glass windows in the West." The printer made it read "the most beautiful stunning grass widows," and béfore the ng of tHe first hymn the next Sunday the sexton found it necessary to hand ont the "standingroom only" sign : SHI Positive Good, Not Negation. Henry Cape?' ' One of the worst types of character is that which fortifies itself with 'the boast that it never did any harm. The test of life will not be by the mischief we have left undone, but hy the positive we have done.' The man too lazy to get into trouble or to do yarm wins no merit by his innocence. When- ver a life is given over to negation, to the im of being frée from wrong, it finds that as ped desi if -GRe. Jarm. the adozen new ways "posite nly way to overcome evil i§ to put the whole ife into the. pursuit of the good. The strange hing is that those people who try to be fio hing are most willing to give themselves way on any altar or in any cause. The really good peaple never stop to take stock of them they are doing their Vork and fighting their battles without look- ng in the Mirror to whether their hel nets are.on straight or to count their pulses 0 see whether they are healthy. Real re- igion either make the world better, or knowledge that it is nothing but a dream or The sickly saints are always over their their spiritual liv- rder they per them. They complain co irant imagine religion to be good SOOM AS BET Ives; see must uv delusion. WOrryin souls; z out of « because are yetually exammning nuch th * good of the for man is in the world meast He omly effic t. far e he gives the 1s fit AGAR TS aL feaven the world fivine plans of will any price realizing them ally ser- hore 1 3 and women to whom tht ie are so glorious that they in men pay to become proficient Great Naval Loss Recalled. After lying at the bottom of the.sea un- fisturbed for a century and a half, one oi the quus of H.M.S. Ramillies, which was wrecked near. Boat Tail, on the south coast of Devon, has been recovered during salvage operations for a lost French trawler. The diver found scores of guns and hundreds of round ghot partly inbedded in sand and incrusted with rock apd rust. The gum brought to the sur- ¢ of tron, nine feet long, with a feur- One side of the weapon h%s been with the action of pebbles and shingle washed over by the tide. The Ramillies, a seventy-four. gun boat, while making for Plymouth during a severe February, 1760, mistook Boat Tail for Head. face 1% nch bore worn away gale it Ram's Getting too close inshore she Gradually she v driven ashore to pieces. Of 734 <ouls on board, five men: and a midshipman were saved. and pounded ly twenty- Tras dition has it thatone of the crew warned the captain that the ship was in Bigbury bay, bat was put in irons for what was regarded as an youth each spring by shedding its old skin. . Eskimo Graves of Stones. To the Eskimo mind' everything ammate o a soul. Thus | ic invariably placed every posse that r spirits might serve the departed spirit in the same capac-| ities in the life to come. There is little room | for burial beneath the scanty earth in- Labra- | even if the frost would permit. So the grave consists of upright stones, with long | flat ores laid These not only serve to keep the wolves from the body, but wide gd r inanimate possesses n thes graves we cherished sion, lor dor, across. chinks alsa afford the spit and out passage act of insubordin | sent to inquire. into the matter tion. Waiting For a Full Srop. Harper's, A new post-office was established in a small village 'away out West, native of th soil was appointed postmaster. After whi complaints were made that na mail 'was sent 'out. from the new office, and an inspector was He called cause | sent and a upon the postmaster, and, stat ofwhis visit, asked why no mail | out. The postmaster painted to a and nearly empty mail bag, hanging up in a cor "Nell, T ain't sent it out, 'cause eres nigh full yet" | n big ner, and said the bag aint nowt : & a a ------ from the pew oecupied by. the girls: "It's my | el BEES hie greatest Yee OT] became embayed and was obliged to anchor. | . | handed him he ware THE RELICS OF A FORMULA, « That For Making Thin Tough Paper For Bibles is Valued at $1,000000. The Oxford Prées Syndicate values jts. | given by his bishop to the clergy of the dio- | formula for making the yery thin, tough pape used in bibles at more than $1,000000. To perfect the process required. twenty-five years of hard work and the expenditure of $1,000, 000 in cash. A secret of even greater value is the formula for making the paper employed for Bank of England notes. This is a family '| possession of the Portals, of Laverstoke, to A profound and: awkward silence' ensued. |W Then, the preacher said calmly and modestly: | br | The brilliant red cloth bf the cardinals' robes hom. already in two generations it has ought an enormons fortune. worn at "the Vatican has been manufactured {for many generations by the same firm of | merchants at Burtschied, near Aix-la-Chapelle, | The secret process for distilling the dye is {given by father to son, with every precaution [to prevent any outsider from game SE: sion of the receipt. Oddly this family of cloth merchants is 'of: Huguenot. déscent, and is Protestant to-day. An English firm of bacén 'curers paid $50,- | 000 for the formula "of the Brandenburg | method of curing hams. A nfethod of mixing | chutney: sauce, which in the first ifistance, in | India, was sold for a few rupeés, whs recent- {ly disposed of for nearly $40,000, The bhiler lof an English county family sold for a trifling ! sum the recipe for making §'sauce which had {been enjoyed by the family fof hundreds of | years. The purchaser was at that time the { head of the firm of Lea & Perrins of Worces- {té. The revenues to the firm from this | formula have been enormous. A poor soldier [gave the recipe for a blacking to a barber in {the town of Doncaster who bad given him {money to buy a railroad ticket. Day & [Martin's blacking afterwards became famous throughout the world. } -------------------------------- The Source of Trouble. { Winnipeg Tribune. | It is extremely doubtful if more than a hand | ful 'of Canadians care a rap whether the coun- try to run b= patriots or buccaneers A very recent incident at Ottawa illustrates a species of carelessness of public interest, A well-known local charaeter, whosé record is not enviable, pleaded with two professional Ir ye goverament job. They jocularly {told him of a vacancy on one of the big gov- | ernment commissions and suggested that he | see a certain Conservative lawyer. The law | ver was bound that the joke should not be {at his expense and kept it up. He typewrote la petition, asking for the man's appointment, | specifying plainly the job that wigs wanted J is one of the best in the gift of the govern- ment. The would-be appointee hawked | around the petition and succeeded in getting | the signatures a 'member of parliament, two former candidates, an ex-mayor and many { prominent business men. Not one of them evidently had read"the petition. [It fell into the hands of one of the originators of the | joke, who promptly confiscated the document | It again proven that some people would Sign a penttion to hang a man without gong {to the bother of enquiring what they are put (ting "their names to | Mathematically Marvellous Idiot. Many have been the marvellous accomplish- ments along peculiar lines hy mdividuals who in all other ways were idiotic. Recent (ob- servations by the famous scientist, Dr. Her mann Witzmant, of Vienna, of a man locked 'up as a congenital idiot show a remarkable mathematical freak in brain. He able to tell what day of the week it has been or will be on any selected day {ror the year 1000 nti] the year 2000. The answer to any such e a thorough mathe 18 costal terme Cledeinsneafagh Tnoover a thousand questions he has never Beem eauglit by Dr. Witzmann in the slightest error. Thus he was asked: "What was the day of the week on October 3, 1907?" The reply was "Thurs- day" He can give the date of any Easter in the given period of a thousand years, and can give the number of days in any holiday period in the Roman Church. He can read amd write only fairly, and is unable to do any simple problem in arithmetic. The only ex planation offered by Dr. Witzmann is that this idiot had access in youth to a calendar table giving special line of information and must have some unknown table imprinted on his unbalanced ming. In the engineering shops of an English firm the workmen originated what they called "The Lazy Club." It was their own idea, and has heen an excellent means of reduding the num ber of late-conters, When ever a workman is MOFE THR TIVE TIRE sccebmehe [rds tig gate locked and is not allowed to enter until the half hour is up. This half hour is deduct- ed from his wages, but in addition he has to pay to-the Eazy €lub a fine for coming late Li he is late more than once during the week everybody is aware of the fact, and the second or third time he makes his appearance after starting time he is greeted with a terrific com- bination of noises produced on any available material by his fellow workmen. «At periods the accumulated funds of the Lazy Club are divided among the entire staff equally. Thus the late workman is made to pay the early conters for his laziness. The last distribution ($1.75 per head) was just prior to a "bean feast." : The Modest College Man. When he wis in his freshman year he "de cided to be, premier, starting on the lowly rung as local member, and then slowly work- ifig himself to the top of the ladder. In his: sopfomare year he decided to go { forth, find a gold mine and get rich, consider- ing that more profitable than being the public { idol. ( one In. his junior year he consented to offer as chief clerk in some well-established house, | taking his salary home to his wife and babies | Three months after his degree had'. been wking far a job at $10 a tweek. ------------------------ Verdict of Calm Mind. Goldwin Smith, It is clear that the rapid extension of this 'saloon drinking is threatening the very life of this community; that it producing, a physical and moral pestilence more' deadly, in the deepest sénse, thaw any other plague which infested cities of the 'east; that it is bringing great masses of our working classes into a self-imposed bondage, more complete and more degrading than slavery itself; that 18 .it is not only filling the present with unspeak able misery and vice, bat plighting the pro spect of labor for the future. SHY Crea Pontiac, Mick. --louis Barton liesina = critical condition as the resuli of & mos! " unusual accident. While driving cows across the North western Railroad tracks, oue of the cows wus struck by a train aud thrown three rods. During its through the air, the cow struck r. Barton, 'whe is now suffering from concussion of the brain, ; Jt is the une: ed that Lappens. Mrs. R. C. Small of Ottaws, Unt, says: +1 suffered from Rheumatism for years did not ta be free from puin, t I tried *'Fruitadives' sand they me". Hundreds of others write similar "stories, After suffering for years, paying heavy doctor's bills, and trying ail sorts of remedies without benefit, they are cured by "Fruit-a-tives". . . For Stomach, Liver and Dowel Trou. bles, Headaches and Backaches, Neu- Hralgiaand Rheamatism *Pruit-a tives" be depended upon to effect a speedy " for § 1 * ab or $2.50, or trial size, A dealers or sent tpaid on |, receipt price by Fruit-s-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont. / INK RAILWAY UII STEM Sept. 16ih, 17th and 18th, at the fol- flowing fares from Kingstea to Hay City .. $12.90 Detroit 1 UCheago 17.80 Saginaw Cleveland ,.. 10,15 St. Paul All tickets good to return CANADIAN. NATIONAL EXHIBITION TORONTO, Avg. 28(h to Sept. 13th, 1909 be fssuwd at Round Trip Tickets will $4.90 Good going Sept. 7,8, 9, 10, 11 All tickets good to. returifon or Sept. 14th. ichets not good on 1,2,3 and 4. Central Canada Exh.bition, Otta~ wa, Oat, Sept. 10 h to 18th Round trip tickets will be issued at $3.70, good going Se 10, 11, '12, 18, 15 and 18, and: at 5. Good going Tuesday," Sept. 14th end Thursda and Friday, Sept. 10 and 17... AlL tickets good to return on or heéfore Sept. 201 For full particulars wly to J, HANLEY, Agent, Cc Johnson and Ontario streets. | SY 2.00 4 MO until Oet, before trains ROKE IN CONNSOTION WITH Canadian Pacitic Railway FARM LABORERS' EXCURSION Sept. 8rd and 10th, at 7.45 $10.00, going; $18.00 additional "LABOR DAY tickets at single fare all stations, good going Sept. god for return until' Wednesday, th, 2909, . Central Canadian Exhibition Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 10th 18th. ~Reound. trip tickets will | 3 10, 11, 13, 15, 18, $870 yo, 1%, All tiekets go Lup on or before Sept. & Canadian National Exhibition Toronto, Aug. 28th to Sept. 1909. Round Trip Tickets will be is at $4 good going AUGUST Sept. 2. 8,4, 7, 9,10, 11 and at $3 Sept. 6th, rethorn Sept. 14th, 1900 particulars at K & and © Ticket. Office, Ontario' street WAY, Gen, Pass. Agent Phone a.m. re- : het ween 3, 4, 6 Sept Return to Pv en » ito BAY-OF.Q WAY From. Train lesvea unig statics, -Ostario street, 4 p.m. drily (Sunday excepted) fur Tweed, Sydenham, Napuaeoy -Degdes ap onto, Bavnockbure and all points north. To secure quitk despatch to Banoock- burn, Maynoulh, sod points on Central Ontario, route your shivgentis via Bay of Quinte Ruilwaw For Frther particu= ly R. Ws DICKSON, Agent, Thousand Island and St. Lawrence, River Stcamboat Companies Fin connection with the New York Central and Hudson River BR. R. Co. Leave Kingston dally, except Bunday, S00 aw. and 2.00 p.m. leave Kingston, Sunday, 7.50 a.m. and 2.00 pan. a aking direct connections at Oape Vincent to and frém-ail points In New York State. Through sleeper Cupe. Vine cent to New York, : Week end round trip rate, Kingstos to Watertown, good po Saturday on Sunday, returning Monday, $1.65. For excursions to Brockville snd ensburg and the Thousand Islands, local advertisements. . Lake Otario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co., Limited. Ss STEAMER CASPIAN 1000 Islands-- Kingston -- Rochester. 4 > fog, 1,600 Islands, Alexandria Bay. -and ,- TGhinanoque 10.80 a.m. Sundays. Returning, steamer leaves ut 5 pa. Tor Bay of Quinte Ports and Port of Rochester, STR. ALETHA--Leaves daily Sunday's. Returning, steamer tay mediate Bay of Quinte por ee am, Sobre Leaves except Full information. from FE. F. HORSEY, J. P. HANLEY General Manager, C. 8. KIRKPATRICK Kingston, Ont., JAS. SWIFT & Ca Agents, Kingsion ' + > . STR. -ECELWAT Will start regular trips to Kingston Mitls, June 12th. leave Crawford's Whar!, fool of Princess street, 10 sm, return 12 s.m. leave 2 pon, return at six, Returns fare, . Children bail fare. i . + CAPT. "Phous, 571: L. WHALEN, . Captain, M. P. KEYS Antiseptic 'Barber Shop Hair, Disssing and Shaving Parlor, alr, uick Hy Bervice. Your pay" Three C ropage scli 336 King Sirz:t Nast door to Wade's Dros Bore [1 \ 2 ?