'that isn’t fair; you know it 1 \I‘ A ‘Lh‘. , ,f. INEXT - DUDE NEIGHBORS A STORY OF THE CZAR. The St. Petersburg correspondent HINTS ON- HOW To TREAT of The Tage’olatt relates an interest- THEM PROPERLY, Render All the Assistance You Can in the Hour of Their Affliction. It is the fashion in these days to Fegard very lightly your duty to- fwards your neighbor. You are sup- 1posed to display the most courteous consideration when you. let him ï¬nite severely alone. At least that 's the rule in the big, bustling, busy bities, where nobody is expected to llmve the time for neighborly duties. Now this may be called a species pf independence, but it certainly is not neigh‘borliness, and I shall a1- ;Ways maintain that it is very requi- tisite and very admirable to know how .‘to be an agreeable, a valuable, a. leasant, and dependable neighbor. One way to win esteem in this World ,is to devote considerable thought and. care to your relations with the men, women, and children Who live in your vicinity, and t0 evince towards them the true spirit of neig‘hborliness. Demonstrated in the right way, there remains no Xioubt or question but that this spirâ€" (ithis none other- than an important {phase of the philosophy of real cour- rtesy, and that the man or woman :W'llo displays it generously is sure to charm in the other social relations .of life. HELP ONE ANOTHER. Your duty toward your neighbor demands that you consider him of importance 'L'ecause he .lives near you, and realize that in friendly enâ€" thusiasm only can a. community he lheld together. It does not make lany difference whether the Jones family next door are rich, beautiful, linteresting, or sympathetic, you still owe them a certain amount of con- ‘sideration and kindlincss simply be- “3211.150 they are you,r neighbors. The way to help a neighbor is to look about yourself, see what it is _ {you can do in the hour of affliction, land fulfil the office without advice from anybody. If the neighbor is a total stranger to you the obligation to render assistance is as great as though the unknown persons were your best friends. Not all your friends need be your neighbors, but all your neighbors should be your friends. This does not imply that all or even any of Jthem are your intimate friends, and :the surest method by which you can 'keep your neighbors on a footing of the most substantial friendship is never to presume upon their priâ€" vacy. Do not, therefore, grow so faâ€" miliar with even the best of neighâ€" bors that you are unaware instantly mg episode, which he also says is the only foundation for the sensaâ€" tional statement made in a. London newspaper that tWO infernal mac- chines were fou,ud in the private apartments of the czar’s palace. A few days ago the czar was walking with his daughters in the grounds surrounding the palace, when sued-den- ly a man employed in the gardens approached his majesty, and, kneelâ€" ing down a short distance off, held out a petition. With his usual corâ€" diality, the Czar went up to the man, asked his name and what he wanted, and was considerably surprised to hear, “I am an escaped convict from Siberia who implorcs your majestty’s gracious pardon.†Inquiries proved the truth of the gardener’s extraor- dinary statement. After escaping from Siberia he had wandered to St. Petersburg, where relying on a false passport he had sought work. Strangely enough he was taken on as a. casual laborer in the park at Tsarskoe Solo. His industry and sobriety were noticed, and he was given regular Work and fixed wages in the imperial greenâ€"houses. A deâ€" sire to feel perfectly secure among his fellowmen had impelled him to take the desperate step of applying direct to the czar for pardon. His majesty was interested in the man, and gave orders that he should not be punished. If a, woman admits that she Shores you can safely believe anything she says. For Over Sixty Years Mm. WINELOW'S Soo'rmuo Svmtr has been use! by millions of mothers for their children while teething. hanothea the child. softens the gums. nllayapniu. cures wiudcolic. regulates thofltomacll and bowels, andis the bestrcmedy for Diarrhoea. Twenty-live cents n. bottle Sold Ladruuists throughout the world. Be sure and Ikï¬forâ€MRS.\VIN5LOW'BSOOIHINGSYRUP." Lizâ€"40 One of the oldest tunes in the world is said to be sung to the words, “We Won’t Go Home Till Morning.†It is known to date back to the time of the Crusaders. MInard’s Llnimanl Relieves lleuralgla When a, fellow boasts that he can’t be bought it’s a sign that he haisn't been offered enough. Whon R‘numaï¬om deuhles a man up physician and sufferer alike lose heart and often despair of a cure, but here's the exception. Wm. Pegg, of Norwood, Ont., says: “I wasnearly doubled up with rheumatism. I got three bottles of South American Rheu- matic Cure and they cured me. It’s the quickest acting medicine I ever saw.’ 'â€"18 “I told her I would love her as of the moment when the welcome acâ€" long as I live.†"What did she say‘?’ corded you lacks a trifle in spontane- ____+;___._ BIG COAL DEPOT. 'An enormous floating coal depot, said to be the largest in the world, arrived at Portsmouth, England, the other day from the Tyne. The deâ€" ‘ ity. pot will hold 12,000 tons, and is to th-l. ‘be moored in Portsmouth Harbor. It will be fitted with machinery that will enable the biggest warships to ï¬ll their bunkers alongside it. Be- ing over 4-00 feet long, the depot will accommodate the largest cruisâ€" fers afloat. 5â€"...â€" SET’I‘LEIlS LOW RATES WEST Via the Chicago and North ‘Western Railway, every day from Sept. 15th to Oct. 15th, settlers one way second class tickets at very low rates from ,Chicago to points in Utah, Montana, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, .California, also to Victoria, Van- couver, New Westminster, Rossland and other points in the Kootenay District. Correspondineg low rates from all points in Canada. Full low the "She asked me if I would die for her.†C. C. RICHARDS & C0. Dear Sirs,â€"Your M-INARD'S LIN- ],‘MENT is our remedy for sore oat, colds and all ordinary ai1~ ments. It never fails to relieve and cure promptly. ' CHARLES WHOOTEN, Port Mulgrave. CAT IIATCHES CHICKENS. fit Bus-Chen, near Dusseldorf, a. blood of c'hickens has been hatched b/ a cat. She flew at the hen each time it ventured to approach her, and†continued sitting on the eggs until the chickens were hatched in the ordinary course. They now fol- cat about Wherever she particulars from nearest ticket agent $005- or B. H. Bennett, General Agent, 2 East King Street, Toronto, Ont. Fatherâ€"“That is the sunset my daughter painted. She studied paintâ€" .ing abroad, you know.†Friendâ€" ""Ah-! that explains‘it. I never saw .a. sunset like that in this eduntry.†Kidney Dutyâ€" It is the particular function of the kidneys to ï¬lter out pmsons which pass through them into the blood. When the kidneys are dis- eased they cannot do their whole duty, and should have the help and strength that South American Kidney Cure will afford in any and all forms of kidney Edward Buck, of disorder. It relieves in G hoursâ€"14 In scores of instances the Bible is father in the only Those Worrying: Pilesâ€"One application of Dr. Agnew’s Ointment will give you comfort. Applied every night for three to six nights and a. cure is effected in the most stubborn cases of Blind, Bleeding, or Itching Piles. Dr. Agnew’s Ointment cures Ecâ€" zema and all itching and burning skin diseases. It acts like magic. 35 centsâ€"15 â€"-â€"â€"- ATTAIN THEIR“ h‘IAJORITY. A unique event has recently been celebrated in Manchester, in the comâ€" ing of age of the triplet sons of Mr. .Burford l-l'ouse, Range. The three young all associated with their business in Manchester. Wlhalley men are literature or a language“ They were born on June 27, 1883. ‘thcn 1‘ 111118“ch “.3 ï¬rst reduced to The coming of age ‘was celebrated at htermy form m order to pl‘Oduce “ a gathering of relatives and friends Bible. lllnard’s Linimenl for sale BlelllllElu CLASSIFYING HIM. “I’d have you know, sir," said the pompous city chap on a vacation in the country, “that I work with my head instead of with my hands.†“Haw!†exclaimed the honest farmer, “I ’lowed at first that you mm a jay, but accordin’ tew yore statement yew must be a woodpeckâ€" cr, b‘gosh!" M-“ Mrs. Pottsâ€"-~“Just to think of you talking to me in such a style. You, who used to swear I was an angel." Mr. Pottsâ€"“Look here, my dear, isn’t. M‘hat is the use of twitting a man .about the lies he told fifteen years .ago?" from Manchester and Carlisle, held at W-indemere. There were eighty guests at 'dinner, and the assembled aunts and uncles of the three young men presented them each with a gold dhronometer. . .â€".V . .... . . “an..- ,.-... Worry wont cure a cough. When " you ï¬nd a cough holding ouâ€" : when everything else has failedâ€" _‘ fly Shiloh’s g . :Consumptiom Cure ital-""5 'It is guaranteed to cure. If it l doesn’t, we’ll refund your money. 1 . Prices: S. C. WELLS & Co. 304 ' 25:. 50c. $1. LeRoy, N.Y.,Toronto, Can. 5 THE PDSTMASTER IS THANEFUL DODD’S KIDNEY, PILLS EN- ABLED HIM T0 SLEEP IN PEACE. ' _...â€". Grand Work they Are Doing for Thousands of Canadians Every Year. Tabucintac, Cumberland Co., N.B., Oct. 2.â€"(Special).â€"Mr. H. J. Lee, postmaster here, is one of the great“ army of Canadians who, rescued from pain and weakness by Dodd's Kidney _ Pills, are shouting the praises of the great Kidney Remedy. “Yes.†the postmaster says: "I want to express my thankfulness for the great benefit I have received from the use of 'Dodd's Kidney Pills. “My trouble was having to urinate too freely. I had to rise eight or ten times each night so that my rest was broken. My feet and legs also swellch Then I got Dodd’s Kidney Pills and I took six boxes all told. Now I am all right. “It will be a, comfort to me if by making my case public I can lead some other sufferer to ï¬nd relief in Dodd’s Kidney Pills." Dodd’s Kidney Pills always cure Bright's Diseas‘c. They also annually bring relief to hundreds of thousands of Canadians who are bothered with earlier Kidney Troubles. . â€"â€"â€"â€"-+â€"â€"â€"â€" THEIR FAMILY VOCATION. A singular illustration. of the perâ€" sistence with which the Japanese adâ€" here to their family vocations is seen in an announcement. in a Japan- ese newspaper that a celebrated dancing-master was to hold a serâ€" vice in honor of the 1,000th anniâ€" versary of the death of his ancestor, who was the first of the family to take up the profession. fill. A. u. EHASE’S ‘ unseen can 250» is sent direct to the diseased ‘ Medicine Co.J Toronto and Buffalo Leather trunks for transporting clothes were made and sold in Rome as early as Caesar. the time of Julius MOOSE H U N'I‘ING. The ï¬nest region in Canada: for the hunter who wishes to secure Moose is the Temagami region in New Onâ€" tario, and now easy of access by the Grand Trunk Railway System and North Bay. All information regardâ€" ing guides, routes, rates etc., can be had on application to agents or by addressing G. T. Beel, G P. & T. A., Montreal. ‘ The Doctorâ€"“You have a bad cold, Mr. Jiggs. I’ll give you some ‘pills for it." Jlggsâ€"“Oh, never mind, doctor. You can have it for noth- ing." ‘ » lilnanl's‘ linlmenl {lures Dandruff. Barbed who isn’t appreciated by a candidate who is on the fence. Eyes and Nose Ran Water:â€" 0. U. Archer, of Brewer, Maine, says: "I have had Catarrh for several years. Water \vould run from my eyes and nose for days at a time. About four months ago I was induced to try Dr. Agnow's Catarrhni Powder, and since using the wonderful remedy I have not had an attack. it relieves in ten min- utes." 50 centsâ€"17 Tapieighâ€"“Have you realised any- thing from that mining investment you were telling me about?" Stock- leighâ€"“Yes I've realised the truth of the saying: ‘A fool and his money are soon parted.’ †“urn-"1 nâ€"u r , .;‘..-. n5 . ~ =- '28-:1 : '; Fla? has" Sold Everywhere. 10 cents nonunion Line Steamships h’lflNTREAL TD LWERPOOL. mModera-se Rate Servicencsa Socoud rn‘oin passengers berhhcd in boat accommo- dctlcn on the ntuumer at the low rate of $10 to Liverpool. or 342.50 to London. Third class to leerpool,London, Glasgow or Queenst lwn’SliW. For all particulars apply to local agents, or DOMINION LINE OFFICES. art: by the Improved Blower. Heal: the ulcers. clears the all A'.’ passages,stDPs droppln s in the ‘ ‘v 1-' ‘ ' , throat and ermanen“ y cures ' Calarrh and a Fever. Blower ~-â€"â€"â€"â€"--â€"-â€"- . free. All dealers. or r.A. W. Chasn‘ The wise sayings of “ISLAND CITY†HOUSE Ami FLOOR PAENTS Will Dry ln 8 Hours. (in Sale at all Hardware Dollar: ï¬Otatoes, Poultry, Eggs, Butler, Apples any of these article: and we will get you good prices. THE DAWSON COMMISSION 00, Limited 60!. West Market and eolborno eta. TORONTO. CAN BE HAD m but us have your consignment of W Falls, Wash Basins, Milk F as, do Any Flat-Clans Grocer can Supply You. L INSIST ON GETTING EDDY’S. a rich man may scund very much like the fool remarks of a. poor man. filnard's “aimed-Clues Bums. ell. Prisoners in France are permitted to pay one visit to dying parents. That Cutting Acid that arises from the stomach ambalmost strangles, is caused by fermentation of the food. in the stomach. It is a foretaste of Indi- gestion and dyspepsia. Take one -of Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets im- mediately after eating. and it will pre- vent this distress and aid digestion. 60 in a, box, 35 ccnts.â€"16 +_.____ VESSELS_ WITH BAD NAMES â€"â€" Experience Indicates That They Will Have Bad Luck. If one should be so bold as to char- acterize the superstitious sailor as silly he would at once declare that there is sufï¬cient reason for his be- lief and would proceed to prove that war vessels named after stinging and venomous things have been unlucky, and that the country should not be so indifferent to the 'men who folâ€" low “a life on the ocean wave" as to organize a mOSquito fleet. That Snake is regarded as an un- fortunate name for a vessel is shown by the fact that tw0 of that name have been lost, one in 1781 and the other in 1811-7; but no vessel bearing that name is known to exist now. Serpent, whidh ill only a substitute name for Snake, is an unlucky one also, for the one wrecked in 1892 was the fourth British war vessel of that name to meet the same fate. Viper has been an unlucky name in ‘d‘ne British Navy. The first one was wrecked in 1780, but the Admiralty would not swerve, and so kept the name on the list, each vesSel meeting. its doom, and the fourth was lost only recently. The French Navy has also been unlucky with vessels so named. The Viper, used in the Brit- ish service after she became a prize from the French. was lost in 1793. The second was lost a year later, the third in 1797 and the fourth was recently lost in a collission off G uernscy. Tho lobra, another British war vessel, was lost recently at' the same time as the Viper. Among other vessels similarily named and which met fates other than in battle are the Rattlesnake, in 1781; the Alliga- ltor, in 1782; the Crocodile, in 1784; the Adder, in 1846; three Lizards, tWo Dragons and one Basilisk. All of these were of the British navy. The list could be made larger by citâ€" ing the records of other navies. The Norseman, who were so fond of naming their vessels against the laws of superstition and using hideâ€" ous heads of dragons and reptiles on their 'high prows, were less unfortu- nate. and these did not meet 'with' if equent disasters. They did have a. 41 King St. 15., Toronto. 17 St. Sacrament Sl’n. MOutrcal be] icfl however, that “'35; unlucky -.â€"-â€"..__.______._.__.____,__._._â€"_â€"_. FEATHER DYEINC-‘a Cleunlng and Curling and Kid Gloves cleaned Thu: ’ can be sent by post, lo 58! on. the best place ll BBEHSH AMERIBAH D‘féllllï¬ 69. MOHTBKAL \, ISSUE NO. 40â€"04. and a sacrilege to select such a name .as did Lord Dunraven for his first lyacht to challenge for the America's .cup, the Valkyrie. .And this belief lwas strengthened when she was sunk ;by the Satanita. The second chal- llcngcr, with the same name, gavu trouble. and she Was broken up after only a short existence. ‘flrf-irl‘z‘il‘» ,=. - . ,, o ‘ c 5 .r. r": ‘Adam went up wagainst the matri- monial game with his eyes shutâ€"just as other men are doing toâ€"day. ; 'ï¬sfré'nr-vn ..-..1~..-.- yz-itz‘b ,_‘~ - ;â€" er:;.-':‘.esez-~-w‘ .w-V :.- My "“W‘ln 4’IE‘J&|'§'-IO..K".I‘>4‘-.~JIU A: . . r lxvrmp "c7" 3"“:3' fl i ©:a 11,- dunk-i w‘mfl'. -.- - “>1 .2‘ boa .\.. snafu-arc '.~‘-+‘rw:- ».s ., gu‘Aru 1.- Used in H.B.K. Mitts, Gloves - and Moccasinsâ€"tough as whale- bonc, flexible, soft,pliable, scorch- proof, wind -proof, boil-proof, - crack-proof, tear-proof, rip-proof, cold~proof, almost wear-proofâ€" certainly, the greatest leather ever used in mitts and gloves. Like buckskin it is tanned without oil, unlike buckskin it is not porous, it is windproofâ€"will â€"â€" outwear three buckskins. ‘l‘ -"' n'l'Jâ€"IV \- . .v .' "an"... <_']r . ."x' "1'. .4“ '.‘m‘l‘."li1“-m.‘ww . “ Pinto †Mitts and Gloves never crack or harden, never get sodden, are always warm, pliable, soft and comfortable. Sold at all dealers but never with- out this brand 2â€"- .» I.:"<.'..-_Ar= 27...,- v . m I"!vq'l“fl ._-,, ,,.. liUDSON BA KNl’l‘TlNG cc. Montreal Winnipeg Dawson 2 -v'â€".- J4"?.~ t" .n'l . l : .r., .;,_.,,;1. .g. -_»â€" ‘rn;.'n\r.' -:'7;'»:. .v ’.t'ufl". .. .., . I ,~ a» g...»- rung, , M2!!! 4. v- -> r' mu . “an. :-: . ~,-«.a.\,,\.‘»\n'.t'-:. .1 apt...“ a... .4 u njzmhn, .g; ,. '1~,«.-.'_r,-»-u:.;._..,. '." ‘.\ "WW I 2». «cue u‘-J-...-_ - .2 an“ -'r ~ 1L“: 5'7. ‘ Iron“‘...;\:ax.n~..yâ€"3'if:'v ‘v‘rnmv u .BN'JWJL hm»? éflwvvwm :M'nb'em‘dwaud ubflllrdn-ï¬w“. ver 12 .Lr ' . .- .7.-