We have a supply of cut hard wood and kindling. J. Sowards Coal Co. HHH HH I Sawed in Stove Lengths : BOOTH & CO., Phone 133 Foot West Street AH on | QUICK'S CHOICE Western Meat Mar- Oholes line of bacon st lowest prices. Call and see onr goods. 112 CLERGY STREET § FORD CARS FOR SALE 'CARS FOR SALE || | | *{ | It 1] lca | i your family or friends, going HAT kisi Ty _ COULD NOT SLEEP When the system receives a shock Of any kind, the heart becomes weak- s the nerves unstrung, the appe- tite poor, faint and weak feelings tome over you, you can't sleep at Jleht, and you wonder if life is worth re all those wlio suffer from mner- ous shock we would recommend Mibares. Heart ana Nerve Pills ag the best remedy to tone up the en- r gan 3 Bunyan, Pilot Butte, x Writes: --"I have used Mil- and Nerve Pills after having suffered from a terrible shock 10 my whole system. I was so ut- terly weak, and nervous I could not sleep at night, and my appetite was yery poor, 1 could not walk across the floor without trembling all over. I bad hot flushes and. fainting spells. When I was on the second box of your Heart and Nerve Pills, 1 began to feel that %they were doing} me. good, so I kept on until I had used six boxes, when I felt like a dif- ferent person. 1 am never without them In the and highly recommend them to all who Buffer with their heart." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50c¢ a box at all dealers, or mall- od direct on receipt of price by The Milburn Ce,. Limited, Toroato, Ont. CRAND TRUNK AGENCY FOR ALL STEAMSHIP LINES Special attention will be given to or returning from the Old Country. LEAS AN SYSTEM For information and rates apply to J. P. Hanley, C.P.&T.A., G.T. Ry. Kingston, Ont. TELLS DYSPEPTICS WHAT. TO EAT|iz.c Avoid. Indigestion, Sour Act Stome ach, Bearthum, fir on Stomach, Indigestion snd . practically all forms of stomach trouble, say medi cal authorities, are due nine times} out of ten to an excess of hyd Shiotte acid in the stomach. Ch stomach" is exceedingly dan gerous and suffevers should do either ope of two things. Either they can go on a limited and often Sisagteenble Sey avoiding foods that disagree with them, tha irritate the sto iach 22 : £] i 1 : i Ed "sf ~s tire stem. a and strengthen the weak-| 4 | tes i wFhces yr Sa nN Posts of Wood: Tro Iron or Cement Can Be Used. Important Factors to Be Considered Are Cost, Durability and Service ~=How 10 Lengthen Life of Fence With Undone Costs. Contripiy ted rtmen gy yiSntaria.§ spartmant of LESSED is the farmer who, conscious in the security of his fences, can leave home on A day's business, or retire to rest at night, without anxiety as to Possible depredation committed by straying cattle, or his own stock, 10 carn, roots, or grain, during his ab- sence or. rest. Brush, stump, aad stone fentes--relics of bygone days =rcan still be séen here and there, but are rapldly disappearing, and are being replaced with modern up-to. date woven wire fences that are built, Wot with the fdea of the smalls est 'possible initial cost, but with forethought for the future, remem- bering that quality and material as well as the design and construction of post fences are elements that de- termine its life and service. @ prime factors in a fence are fair cost. durability and service. The annual up-keep of fences is consider- able, and fo the farmer a material that will do away with the expense of repairing, replacing, painting, or other forol of ° iafntenance; should strongly appeal to him as represent- ing true Economy, almost regardless of first cost. 'The apportanity for econoniy I$ found, first, fn using the kind of whieh, taking {nto ac- count both cost and durability dre cheapest in the long run: In 4 poat which will have comparative- ly 'short life, he loses not ont thraggh ish having to buy flew: posts; b because of the additional labor invoreed i removing the old nd set set ting new one. There is, hows over, great difference in the OO 'of Silterent 'Woods, average Mo of a fencé constr: of 'wood posts cannot be safely ¥ ured 'as greater than 8 or 9 For length: of service codar white oak ottlast all 'other w By treating: the posts with ereesote; coal tar or tharing them, the cost a up-keep might - be arially That the end or corder PostS Die all the strain, and are the founda tign of the 'ence, is common: knowl- to 'every experi 'builder. . They must, be well' anchor ed, 'rigid and strong, and so structed that they can be d upen to give proper service at all times, and. I ah 1). into # eared [ water 2 ih d EE between. the past the Roh its of the he a. every v locslity. sty an ma! for ee - L 'cement are ! pn farm timber or the prices and condition of local market for the other mn med 08 of the met 15 NOW COMPLETED Maggificent New "Labora "58,000 Boi Sopacity of What fs wid to | to be one of the largest pharmaceutical laboratories in the United States hes been com- pleted at Dayton, Ohio, for the manu- facture of Tanlac, the well-known medicine, which according to recent reports is now having the largest sale of any medicine of its kind ii the worlde™ ? The erection of the new plant was made pecessary by the rapid growth of the business, as the older plant a found to be wholly inadequate to supply the ever-increasing demand which at the recent rate of sale will amount to more than five million bot- tles for the present year alome, By the erection of this plant the manufacturers of Tanlac are giving to, the World just one more evidence of the remarkable growth and ex. pansion of their business, and of their absolute confidence in its fus ture. This announcement will be read with interest not only by thé many thousands of Tanlac agents scattered throughout every state of the Union and throughout Canada, but to the millions who have used it benefically as well, The new building occupies 60,000 square feet of floor space. It is six storeys in height, practically fire- proof throughout, and is of striking architectural design. It also has pri- vaté railway facilities. This beautiful new structure now stands in striking contrast beside the older building where Tanlac was first made. Visitors to the laboratories are strongly impressed with the extreme. ly modern character of the equip- ment, Everything is provided and splendidly a ged to promote sys- tematic and Tapid production. The very latest ry and' devices known to invention and pharmaceuti- eal science are here used, The interior throughout is finished in a spotless white] and all of the Jarge force of employees wear white "uniforms; which they are required to change daily, "The main offices on the first floor are all finished in Carara marble and mahogany. ='The entire process of manufacture . is. conducted under absolutely sani- tary ponditions. Even the hotties made expressly to gontain Tanlac are washed and sterilized electrically by the ultra violet ray process. They are then filled by automatic ma-~ chinery and the finished product is, therefore, never touched hy human enced femce lhands. When Tanlac was introduced into Oanada history repeated itself, and 'Jthe 'demand which had been created in. the United States was quickly: du- plicated in the Dominion provinces. AS a result, it was recently found necessary 1a: latoratory at Windsor, Canada, which is ¢n a somewhat smaller scale ficas modernly equipped. These méw facilities give a dafly we of 36,000 bottles, but as introd only 8 'G.estion of a few years before van on. Theititien will become ne- the Tanlae cuality of the medicine shall never "is 'guaranteed by inspeetions by ex- from the time the Uniform quali} a series of carefu pert chemists, Aroots, herbs, and barks are received in their rough state from all parts of the globe until thelr medicinal pro- perties have been extractel by the most approved processes. e finish: ed medicine is then Nottied, labelled. land shipped Sut io ths tnd of ows of dr a demand never before equalled for this or'any other medicine. The exec cated in A Buflding of that city. Hin (Chown, in Plevna in Battersea by C. S. Olark, in Fern. leigh hh B Martin, in Ardoch by W. ¥ --Advt, to establish 'another Taa- perchan Da recnal 'that the} 80d e sales offices are lo- , Ga, and occupy al-}! "floor of the Fourth}! on AP} in Sharbot Lake byl 180 DISGRACE T0 FEEL FEAR 'One Restlt of 'War Has Been Saner /ldea of What Constitutes Real Bravery. An English observer eli' attention to the fact that our world wa? has destroyed the fear of 'being afraid, Heretofore, even to most distant an- tiquity, the one qQuulity Ansisted on in the soldier was that he should he fearless and the more caflously so the better. The faintest tremor of timid ity was-a black mark against the most respondent knight as well as thie low: lieSt bowman or halbardier, and the schooling for war was an otter defl- ance of the personal risk This theory held, as wag wil rd member, even till the peridd of the Boer war, When the British suffered 80 severely in' officers because it was held cowardly "for "4 'commander' to The Emergency Brake in Busifiess Practi SIR bt B Veni Se Tra Ny © WA JOELD, Mme Safety Deposit Boxes 10 Reut at Kingston Branch, seek cover. Men, thes as now, felt fear, for that Is one of flesh's attri- butes and, iudeed; is 'one of the most valuable of human 'possessions, since fear is our protection: from dangers and harms inpumerable. We fear wild beasts to avoid them, snakes and spiders to Increase our attention; storms and tempests that we may pre pare means of escape from them, So it was. only in battle that chive silty insisted that man should be with- out fear, or pretend to be. With the coming of new warfare, however, all lands at once came to a more sane understanding and 'the dld physical bravery has given place to moral resolution. The mah who now entors the hell of shell fire, of hurled flames and deadly gases, no longer attempts to fool himself into the be- Hef that he is not afraid. He knows full. well and only' a stupid nature could avoid the knowfedge that the human is at the mercy of forces a million times beyond his own ability | to counter. The old knight might really believe he was able to nnhorse Cool and Dainty tor the Warmer Months Now that summer is really with us, the all the enemies that rode against him and therefore might conceivably be without fear, but how can a soldier fe¢l that 'way when facing modern weapons of destruction? Therefore, it 1s no longer a dis Erace to feel fear or to admit it; the only disgrace is to allow fear to pre- vent one doing his duty. How much finer fiber is needed for this new de- fiance! Need for More Consuls. The chairman of the shipping board has called the atténtion of congress and the people to the need of enlarg: ing our conshlar service abroad, In view of the fact that our great mer chant marine will be released for use in foreign trade. well dressed woman seeks a covatonable. and snug-fitting pump. We have just re- | ceived a new lot of pumps and Oxfords in | w~canvas, buck and poplin, from $3 to $8.00. All sizes and widths. LH. Suth rland &Bro Mr. Hurley tells ua, observes the In dependent (New York), that the Uni- ee nas dicarogt by tn erfence duties tha 1 iuAided and by Abfiquated th Even now the burden of work, espe- | cialiy in the way of mquiries to be an- For speed, safety and thoroughly satisfactory service, be sure to ride on "Dominion" Tires. The extra mileage makes them the best to SOLD BY THE LEADING DEALERS