Bad blood is the one great camSo oi bad complexion and blotchy Skins. This is why you must. attack the trouble through the bleed with Dr. \Ylllizmxs' 'Pink Pills. All blotchos, boils. ulcers. pimples and palcness are tho din-ct. unmistakable result. of “‘cak blood loaded with impuri- ties. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills con- qm-r the position: they drive out all the impuritits; thoy actually ‘make new, rich red blood; tho}: strike right at the root of all complexion troubles: they are a. positive and perâ€" manent euro for all virulent skin dis- eases like eczema, scroiulu. pimples and orysignrlas. They give you. a char. clean soft skin. ï¬rm;- from all blemish and full ox‘ rosy health. Mr. Matthnw Cook. Lambcrton. N. W. 'l‘.. tells how Dr. Will‘ums’ l’ink Pills cum-d him 01' m'ysipolzvï¬ after other modicincs had failed. He says: "My skin Was inflamed; my flesh tender and sore: my hm uchvd: my tongue Was coated: 1 had chills and thought I was taking fk'Vl‘l'. I tried several medicines, but, nothing h¢,-lped mo until I began using Dr. Williams' Pink Fills and drove the trouble from my system. and I am now in the best of health. I thing these pills the host medicina- ixr. the world for blood troubles. It, is an over); day recon) of cut-09‘ like this that has _gi\'cn r. Wil- liam's Pink Pills their world-wide prominflnco. They cure when othm‘ medicims fan. but you must get. the- genuine with thc- full name: Dr. Williams’ Pink Pins for Pale Poo- pio. or. the wrapper around every box. You can gnt those pills at all drugâ€" gists. or by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes: for $2.50, by writing The Dr. William B‘rockx'illv, (Int. The Danish Plan. for Getting at the Truth. One coâ€"ope-mti'vo company in Dmâ€" mark Which attends to the marketing of thv ngg product of 33,500 {armors stipulates that eggs more than sev- en days old must be delivered under penalty of 5,. [inc of $1.34 for tho ï¬rst. offence and double that sum for later orient-vs. Thu im'mm's arc ro- puirod to take tht-il eggs dizmtl» to the local socixtg. to “hich they be- long, and the sodoty is torhialdvn to keep eggs longer than four days after colluction beforu Svnding them to one 01' the shipping nations of the com- pany. It is also r‘giuirod that oggs be gathered every day. and in hot sum- mer days “View a. day, and the nests must. be barred at, night so that fowls cannot have new s: to them. The company guarantees to pur- chas-rs that. all vggs delivered are new laid and clean. and each egg is stamped with the comp: 11;: s 11'; (10- mark for new laid eggs. Fach egg is also stamped with tho 1111111‘121-1' 01‘ the local society from which it Conn“ and with the numbvr 0f thr- 121-111101' whondolixers it. fllayconzpany (lo- clincs to accept vggs ‘thut are not ob\ iously clean. No other egg pvoducms haw: studied the egg market. so closely as the Danes. Because tlm English are the chief buyers of Danish pggs. the Eng- lish market is the hasis upon which the ’cgg producimr busists 01’ Donâ€" mark has been built. The Danes have discover-0:1 that. tho Englishman Wants an egg of a. certain size, and so eggs of this size are supplied to the British markr-t to the extent of from 30,000,000 to 40,- 000,000 dozen. anycar. the Danes receiving for them an average of 3.3 cents morc'a dozen than the av- erage price paid to an other produc- ing countries by Englishmen. It is‘liccause the Danes take so great an interest in practical. remun- erativc pouury culture that they are the largest, exporters of eggs in the world. In 1902 the exports of Dan- ish eggs reached 35,967,000 dozen. worth $6,451 .000. or travel ~contirmov.xsly if he likes, within†thd. ï¬fteen‘ day limit. In Switzerland, where the main lines of .rm'cl ham} recently conic into the he m1: .‘of the Government, a similar p..ss is_ issrcd. g1 passenger â€desir- ing me of tlz- csc tickets has to ltmc his phqtograph afï¬xed to it. to iden- Iii) him and prevent transter. A ï¬fteen-day ticket. thirdâ€"class. costs szomcthing pwr $5 5, but. it, will take you practically all over SwitZL-rlzmd. This. of course. was in addition to the larée Quantities of eggs consumed at home. The hens ot thn little kingdom 'Havc evidently been stimu- lated to the greatest. industry. Most European railmxys carry three classes of passengers, and those of Prussia and Saxony carry four. In Wnrtemberg you can buy a. ticket good for ï¬fteen days, which is a gmâ€" erai pass over the railways of that kingdom. A third-class ticket. of this kind costs about $5, which makes travelling very cheap indeed, for with it a. passenger can ride as often as he likes. stop where he like:' u...-.- _ ,â€" v “The names of the physicians who attended the baby are Dr. Eddy of this town and Dr. Geo. Gale of New- port, 0., and anyone can write to me or to them and learn what GmpeNuts food will do for children and grown-ups too." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Look in each pkg. for the famous little book, "The Road to Well- Ville." baby got hold of A bottle of curbolic i “Cid while playing 0“ the “00" and ‘ thv man who spends: his. flaps "thinkâ€" his stomach was so badly burned n ing in thousands" in tho my '2 was feared he would not live for ho; '1T.(-n\zigicz “hirr m' the )‘N‘l when could “Gt eat ordinary fooo's. Th" :1 Lhirh- -ponndor. fair or fuul hook-- mother says in telling of the case: od runs mun “ilh yards of line. “It. was all two doctors could dl):tiie sulking undI-r the hiddon stone, to save him as it burnt. his throat the uxnnim.r oi the ï¬sh Izmtchmi and stomach so bad that for two against tho n; mâ€"in ï¬ne. the play- months after he 1001‘ the POiSOH ing of at game ï¬shâ€"surely such at nothing would 18:: on his stomach ï¬ght. lusting- perhaps. an hour. is Finallv I took him into the countrv “orth any money to 1th iishcnmm and tried new milk and that. was no for flu; \cry thriii 31 giVInv. him. better {or him. His (.rundmn ï¬nal-1 Thu rush for Norway and Sweden )\ sucgt‘sted Grapeâ€"Nuts and I am f as a chuup iix‘hing ground for salmon thanklul 1 adopted â€10 food for he homm in «arm-st some ten yours ago. commenced to got better right away 'ui‘o-du} ii the cxponso of getting and would not eat. anything else. He 1 there and back and the "incidontuls" cominenced to get fleshy and his 3 are considered. Norm-gian rivers checks like red roses and now he is: ' zhaw little to offer the man of modâ€" entirely well. emu: means who disdains the trout. “I took him to Matamorns on 111;: x‘cliom trout ï¬shing is included I But. what is $2.). or (-‘II‘n £100, 10 L i. I Visit and e\'er\’ place we went to in Lille hots} hill in many Norwegian stay to out he called for Grape-Nufs apd shy. am, \i_11“g(.g but the sul- and I would have to explain how he 'mon fishing in \01\H]\ is becoming came to call for It {is It “as hlSIannuanv DION: dime-uh to obtain at main food. rcasona blc rates _ .. .l... I a... While the mother was unpacking an old trunk a. little 18 months old baby got hold of A bottle of carbolic acid while playing on the floor and his stomach was so badly burned it was feared he would not live for he could not. eat ordinary foods. Thu mother says in telling of the case: “It was all two doctors could do to save him as it burnt. his throat and stomach so bad that for two months after he took the poison nothing would In." on his stomach. FinallV' I took him into the country and tried new milk and that. was no better {or him. His (.rundma ï¬nal- )3 suggtsted Grapeâ€"Nuts and I am thankful I adopted the food for he commenced to get better right away and Would not eat anything else. He cominenced to get fleshy and his cheeks like red roses and now he is entirely well. Baby Finds a. Bottle of Catholic Acid and Drinks It. Trouble Due to Impure Blood Easily Benzcdied. REALLY FRESH EG EUROI’EAN RAILWAYS m A'N OLD TRUNK. BLOTCI-IY SKINS. Medicine (‘0. . GS. "God never did make a. more e um quiet . innocent. recreation mun anglâ€" ing," wrote Izaak Walton some three hundred years ago. If the philosopher could come to life again in this twentieth century Country of preserved waters. says the London Daily Jail he would probablv Instcn to add "expensive " to the list of adjecthcs g In the County Galway. for instance l'gnml trout. ï¬shing can be enjoyed for 'ilhroc shillings pm‘ day; and in many iparts of Scotland the hutol proprio- ;'t.ox‘s to buy up the ï¬shing rights of .ï¬ve or six lochs and add “trout. ‘ï¬shing" to the lit-st of attractions {$11,333. HUNTING ESTATES IN B TAIN ARE EXPENSIVE. The sportsman whose thoughts run to trout, stx‘cums or salmon pools and an inï¬nite Variety of “taking" flies will tell you that “angling" is still a “calm. quiet, innocent. recrea- tion†within the reach of the poor man's pursc: but, "angling†means to him the patient individual who may he been on an): of the quiet. reaches of the Thames, sitting on a kitchen chair in the middle of a. punt, with a rod, black bottle, a. dog. and a paper bag. listlessly watching a float. SPORTS OF THE ENGLISH ()r pcraps the (riot looking men who may be seen by the ï¬fties and sixties sitting on soup boxes in the summer time on the banks of the cannula nem' Iondon, watching each other's rods, apparently ownm‘loss, lying on the banks. This is the poor man‘s "ï¬shing competition,†and there are many worse ways oi spcnéing a ho‘x‘rday. “Fishing." to the same sportsman, means something inï¬nitely more. ex- citing and men) difï¬cult to ubtuin. A heat on a Seourh or Irish salmon river, or the right, to ï¬sh a small portion of u \V'vstâ€"country trout Stream in the brief dryâ€"fly seasonâ€"- that kind of ï¬shing; is fast, becoming The. "silver salmon†is a misno- nmlt. Thr- king of British Iish should be at oncu rcchristonod the “golden salmon," for the man who takes a bent on a, ScMch riVer nowadays may be well excused for muttvring â€that fish cost me exactly ï¬fty sovâ€" ereigns" when he lands a. thirtyâ€" poundul' or «won :1 grilso. A \m‘x wuul h\'1.1.glish Duke mton tells his f1 wmls u stony against him- sgll which sen es to illustrate the‘ (‘x- pauses and surprim‘s of salmon lizh- ing. He took two boats on the ’l\\ced-â€"bcuts v. hich had ï¬elded over {We hundred -almm: the pxovious season. and he paid £1,200 for the autumn ï¬shing. 'l‘hv clays ‘nssod, the river \"48 low. and not, a. ï¬sh was killed. Just, before the time was up the Duke killed a grilsc, a friend kilicd two eightvon-poundors. and a gillic landed a fourth ï¬sh. I ate the grilsc myself." said the Duke. "It cost me £31,)U, so I didn't see why I shmxldn't."" the Trout ï¬shing is still within the reach of the man of modc'atc moans. I-‘roxn many Scotch. ‘Jelsh and Irish inns very good sport can bc obtained for a trifling addixion 10 the hotel bill. SALMON FISHING “TlCKI-l’l‘S," 5, which are still issued on :1 1011: riv'czs 1 in lrvland and Scotland 11' a guinea.i per dam. 1111' v.01! onuughu for the .mm on a short, holidax; ml if he: have luck he will do “1:11 out 01' 11,: 1'01 the 11111: with these “tickets 131 that the market price of the ï¬sh kill-' ml is: deduct cd from the guinea. Thus one duy,1o mag, 1‘: y a guinea and; another day 1110 shillingsâ€"but he: must. give up the 13% when 10 has landed it. t The prices of spmting (-5 ates .1ï¬01-. ding grouse showing and salmon 138111111. hmc 10136th sums 0 1!, of all‘ propoxtion to the sport 11103, aï¬ord. f The millionaire who Wishes to “on- textain' is said to be the cause of the inflaied sums now asked by. owners of even thirdrate shootings and ï¬shings; but then the millionaire is often a much-maligned person. and still more often a. much-deceived one. In n certain Landon banker's safe m'u chcral papers yellow with age. The letters are from an old client. “119 913911: :5:- ~par 1932 stronglv objectcdvto hr sing to pay the Sim; of £300 a war for a certain sport.- ing estate in Invcrnvss-shiro .... . n The present. millionaire tenant of this same estate paws £3,000 for the autumn scasm): and not, many miles from its borders are two rivers which yield gold to four big estates. Two hundred pounds a. beat. for the. spring or autumn season is the low- est, price accepted on either of them. And the beats never go aâ€"bcgging, for the pools are famous, and the dreaded nets arc_t‘nings unknown. From all accoï¬nts the spring ï¬sh- mg in this year of grace is far ham gothod and wt there are ï¬shermen who are nibbling no doubt at a tempting Supposing; therefore, that flw en’- crngc is maintained, which is: ex- trcmcly doubtful this no.“ nummn. each ï¬sh killed will ruprusont when all extra expenses un- paid something like. .325. in '.-\hcrdcenshirc. which is going for £1,200 without a house of any sort. Last ycur,‘it. is stated. was a bad year; but 150 salmon is the average on this particular boat. ach Fish. Caught on One Beat, It is Estimated Cost on an average £220 apiece for the months of June and Jl‘bt. Fisher- The famous Nnnisen River, in Nor- way, is now divided into beats, mostiy English owned. which fetch MONOPOLY ()1“ THE RICH. “BEAT 01“ TWO MILES" $125. men who go your after your to the Namsin are accommodated at de- lightful farmhouses, where everyâ€" thin" is spotlesslv clean and the liv- ing its 1011‘, With a somewhat monot- onous dietary 0! ï¬sh and eggs, is 0x1 raordinurily cheap. Sweden has free trout ï¬shing in many quiet spots 00" the beaten track of tourists. But the poor man will say, quite rightly, "You have to get there ï¬rst." HE TELLS BF PIGMY RAGE lie speaks in the highest terms of missionary enterprise, \vht-thr con- sidurcd from a Commercial, humani- tarian or spiritual aspect. A set- ious menace, however, exists to m1- tivc races. he says, in the increasing number of non-Christian white people contiguous to the native popula- tions. Many Climes Visited and 75,090 Miles Trav rsed in His Journey. Edgar (Ioil reached London recent- ly after a journey oz“ 75,000 miles in many ciimcs. Ho. Visited a numâ€" ber of mission ï¬elds during his trav- els, which Consumed three yours. D0 NU'l‘Hl-XG BUT HUT'T. 'l‘llu pigmies, says Mr. (loll. are the groan-st, mcut enters he ever met. They do no agricultural work, but devote tlmir whole time to hunting. A trihc m“ people of ordinary size who inhabit the forests are complete- ly tel‘x‘uri.:ul by the pigmir-s, who make then do all their work. T120 pigmict: are Very clmm‘, bright. and indvpvndont. puoplo. and are de- scribod by Mr. (:eil us “the Japanese of Aft-1cm." TRA 'ELER SAYS THEY TER- RORIZE NATIVES. Mr. Coil spent a month in the great pigmy forest. of Central Africa, where in: studied and made photo- graphs of these remarkable people. He li\'od in a. loaf hut, constructed for him by the pigmics at Camp Gorilla. in the very heart of the for- mt. Though he encountered no dun- ner from the nativus, the falling of great trees which have no tap roots was a continual menace. The place. too, is alive with wild animals. and colonies of monkr-ys inhabit the up- per branches of the ï¬res. Mr. (lei! said he cune to the con- clusion that time are grunt appor- tumtics for imprmcmcm in the cou- iduct of some of the state ofï¬cers to- ward the natives. From what he Saw tin-2'0 was no doubt. that the government is strong- ly iorln‘ying the portion of the Congo bordering on the British frontier. Many of thr fur interior stations are being transformed into forts, and quick-ï¬ring guns are be- ing imported packed in chop (food) boxes, He knew sumething of the atroci- ties which took place, but, was not. prepared to discuss tho question. In the recesses of the great. forest he found a modern fortiï¬cation, partly built. of stone, and surrounded \vhh a moat. in course of construc- tion. many of the Pacific islands. New Zculand, Australia, 1110 islands of Torres Straits. New Guinea, the Philippines, Japan. the mountains of Northern Korea, Vladivostock, Hal‘- bin, Borneo and the Straits. Starting from San I'm" nciscn Mr. (lei! visited the Sa'nchxixh Islands, He then crbsscd China. commenc- ing at~ShamghuL and traveled up the Yung-tsc and uCX‘OSS into Burma. Proceeding to Nepal. along the 'I‘hi- but frontiur and through India, he steamed to Mombasa and visited East. Africa, traveling through Ug- anda into the Congo. He Came down the Congo to the coast, and reached London by way of sLenmer from Sierra Leone. In discussing his e\nm1cnco in Man- clunia. .511. Gcil said he 1111.11, with some opposition from Russian om- cials. Once on the railway his noto- hook was taken away. and he only recovered it by'physicul force, and on a second occasion, when a. paper was snatched from his hands, he. struck the oflicur who took it and threw him across the. railway car- 1'ia::c.When it, was found that Mr. Geil posseu :scd a1 tmnspon. signed b\ the Russian mnbussudcr at \\ .1911111g- 1011 the ofï¬cer he had assaulted gmc to him a special steamer to convoy him to )eyleWang Tl: c thing-111.11 impressed him most. in Munchmia was the mushroom gm“ th of the cities along (“0 mil- way. Iâ€. slound 1111 inquirv that 1-\ en the artisans and shopkeepms “are reaih soldiers. so than it is difï¬cult to say what force R115 .5111 has mail- nble in the country. He was; also struck by the presence everywhere of Japanese. not more coolios, but men of intvlligcnco. In the far west of China he fuuud tin-m, and in northern Km‘oa they were present in great, numbers. Chairs. were in use in Egypt, so long mm as 3399 13.0. The Chinese emplmml thvm from about 13W) B. (‘. 1n India thov Were used. and me monlimwd 11s dating from 1100 B.(‘. House chairs “ith b.1c.‘ s “cm in use in India A 1) 300. They arc known to l1.1\e been emplmod in Home so vul‘h as A I). 70. being nirontioned by Pliny .11 â€1:11 (into. Chairs with toot lusts \wrc usvd in Rome A.1). :\ curious wedding has taken place in thv linlt- town of Kalbcl‘gu, in Germany. The husband was: an in- mntv uf the prison of that town, and the bride an unusually pretty girl. who livvs: with hvr palm-1119. at Ber- lin. After the mn’umony the bus- huml returned to prison; he has still hvo yours to serve inlcss he is pardoned. . They married in order not to forfeit a considerable lvg‘ucy. prevent croup and destroy worms. The mother has .11 guarantee that this modicum. contains no opiate or harmful drug. Mrs. T. E. Greaws. Marimnn, Qua, says:â€"-â€" “I have used Baby's 0W1) Tablets with great suc- cess. They never fail, in my nxpori- once, to cure the little ills of chilâ€" dren." You can get. these Tablets from any medicine dealer. or they will be sent, by mail a; 25 cents a box by writing The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockvilie, Ont. Haw/.034 4. 9....an 3.5 2w2$2<2 1! IS LONG .1 ()URNEY BABY’S HOLD ON LIFE. '131'1‘} AGE OF CHAIRS. mcdi Suffered for Twenty Years Before Be Found. Relief in the Great Canadian Kidney named}?- {oscdcnq 0m... May 9.â€"(SP°cml)" Robert. C. Lumpmun, the Well known Guinsboro farmer and stock g1'°“'e"' is completely cured of a. long'Stand- ing case of LumbagO. 0““ he has made a statement for the beneï¬t 0f the public. in which he giVCS the en- tire credit for the cure to Dodd's Kidney pins. In his statement Mr- Lampman says. ‘ -,-__ "For twenty years I suffered from Lumbago with all its worst symp- toms. I had the most, distressing pains it seemed possible to bear. COFI‘lcd With an irritation of the spmc. \t times I “as entircix prostrat- cd and “as for weeks unable to do anything \xlmtmcr, and reqUil‘Cd the services of . J familv to â€-51% me in messing and moxing from a. chair to the sofa. "I tried doctors and medicines. 1)â€?! got no benefit till, on the udVicc 0‘ a neighbor, I commenced to “50 Dodd's Kidney PiIIS. ' After the ï¬rst box I noticed an improvement. and when I had taken six boxas every siingptom of my trouble had vanish- e . ’ Three Notable Discoveries for Sav- ing Life. “'0 are in dept to Japan for at least, three notable discoveries, We of which have already saved many European lives, says The London Academy. The oldeét of these is the discovery by Kitasatn, a Japanese hactcriologist, of the bacillus that causes lockjuw, or ietunus. leading to the production of an untitoxin serum which is now regularly used and is by far the most. cflicicnt re- medy we possess for this terrible disease. STATEMENT OF A Like Rheumaï¬sm. Lumbago is caused by Uric Acid in the 1310‘"!- Sound Kidneys take all the 17"“? Acid out of the blood. Dodd's Kid- ney Pills make sound Kidneys- A Japanese observer named Shiga has recently discovered the bacillus which causes a great many canes of dysentery and, though that disem- ory has not yet led to any improve- ment in prevention or treatment. and will therefore not lower, during this struggle, the death rule from that dire fee of the ï¬oldier in “a 'n‘time no one doubts that this is another deadly disease. The third discovery is really more interesting because it raises newer problems. There is in the body of each of us a pair of organs known as the adrenal glands yet unknown to the public, though life could not continue without them. It, was a Japanese chemist. 'l‘akamine, who isolated from these glands the inval- uable substance which they produce for the beneï¬t of the rest of the body. It, is known as adrenalin. and nearly every sample of it. if preâ€" pared by a. good ï¬rm, bears upon it. the name of that distinguished Ja- panQSQ. It, is the most powerful of all chemical agents for stopping hemâ€" orrhage. It. will arrest bleeding from the nose when ey‘crything else has failed: not that that much mat- ters, for the nose is accessible to mechanical means, but. adrenalin has already saved many lives that. Were oozing away in a thin red stream no surgeon could reach. Seéond Goatâ€"Indeed? The ostrich must be the billyâ€"gout of the desert. First Goatâ€"I understand that an ostrich can eat nails, scrap-ironâ€"any- thing. in fact, that a goat can out. Guestâ€""Well good-Mo, old chap; and you‘ve really got a \ory nice little place here!†Hostâ€"“Y,os but it's rather bare just. now. I hope the trees will have grown a good bit before you come again, old man." A young lnclv sent to a. news'mpor a. poem entitled “I Cannot Malac H'im Smile.‘ The editor \onturcd to ex- p'ross an opinion that she would have sucoodod had sh» shown him the po- as mercury will tardy destroy the sense of smell and completew dcmngo the whole system when entering it threuzh the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used exrept on pre- scriptions from rcputnblc physicians. as the damage {hey will do is ten (old to the good you cnn pessibly derive from them. Hull's Cutnrrh Cure. mam- ufucturcd by F. J. Cheney 00.. To- ledo. 0.. contains no mercury. and_ is when internqnyc hating dlrzeuy up'on LhO-E‘Y‘“ and mucous surgccs of the »,~.-. Beware of Ointments for Caiarrh that Contaln Mercury. N- all“ lllu‘vua "â€"ll‘Iv\-1 ... system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cur. he sure you get. the genuine. It IS tak- en lmcrnnlly and made in Toledo. Ohio. by F. J. Cheney Co. Testi- moninis (rec, 301.1 by Druggistr Price. 75¢ per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pill- for consu- pinion. “It is :\ Great. Public Beueï¬t."â€"These sizniï¬cmt. word: were used in relatjo“ to Dr. 'J‘homas' Eclecu‘ic Oil. by a. gentle. man who had thormmhly tested its merits inï¬xis own caseâ€"having been cured by 1!: of lameness of the knee "t three or {our years‘ Standing. In uc‘vcr fails to rcmpve soreness as well :w lama. Hess. and 15 up incomparable pulmoni. ury and corrccuve. “IIal‘oa, Jack, I undvrstand you'rv engag'd." "I am, and to thoâ€"â€"†“Ah, yes, I know; to the dearest, sweetest litth woman On earth. The one Woman ciflcï¬latud to make you a happy humo, the ombodimont of your idem, the dream of your youth." "'Suy, Md man, how did you (War 1111:] that out? You-you don't know her, do you?" To Burs You Now That We Have learned How. Relief In 30 Minutes. It is so Easy For years the nun)? 1 ‘r Agnew‘s Heart Cure has believed â€3.3‘ the health of the heart; 1.: almost. entirely respon- sible for lhc health of he nerves and stomach and now it, can " pmvcn. Dr. Agnew’s Heart, Curb will reheve heart disease in 30 minutes an“ cure it. It feeds the nerves througn the heart by glvmg the heart the necessary Down to pump rich blood to the nerve centres. when stomach disorders and nervousness disappear as by magic. One dose will convince. 29 Dr. Agnew: Liver Plus. 40 do". Io Gmu. Minard's Liniment Relieves Eeuxaigig 3 LUMBAGO WAS CUBED DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. J APAN’ S TRIUMPES . APPARENTLY. STUCK GRBWER â€And is the air healthy hon-7' ask- ed a visitor at a mountain resort. "Excellent, sir, excellent. One can become a centr‘nal‘ian hero in a little while." Mrs. Emrieckâ€"J'I think. Hurry, that our daughter has made a Very satisfactory lxlarriago. and that she will succeed very well in the manageâ€" ment of her husbandlj Henry l-Zn- peckâ€""Why do you think so?" Mrs. linpeck~“1 overheard hvr talking to him this morning, and she got him to agree to a proposition like this: 'If you will do as I warn. I promiso to d0 the same.’ ' Lifebuoy Soapâ€"disinfectant. -â€"â€" is strongly recommended by the medical profession as a. safeguard against in- fectious diseases. 22 " Pure soap!†You’ve heard the words. In Sunlight S o a p you have the fact. whencvcr a boy sous anybody cut- ing something he Wants .9. bite- Drop-3:: is one Positive 815:: of Kidney Disease.â€"-Havc you any of these unmistakable signs? Pufliness under-the eyes ? Swollen limbs? Smothering feeling? Change of the character of the urine? Ex- haustion after least exerticn P If ycu have there's dropsica! xendency and you shouldn't delzy an hour in putting yoursflf under 1he zrcat South American dency Cure.-â€"â€"86 Lady (at tclcp~hono)-â€""Arc 30:1 there? Arv you Mr. Frizzlc, the bar- ber? “1-11. I want my hair done for a party this evening." Mr. Frizzlc (at the other end of the wheyâ€"“(for- minly. mum. I'll send a boy round for it in ï¬ve minutes." Bil. .usuess Bunleus Lita. â€"T.:e bil lous man is never a companionnblc man be cause his ailment. renders him moms-u: :mJ gloomy. The complaint is no: so danger ous aw in is disagreeable. Yet no one me 1 snï¬er {mm it. who can procure Pau'mclcc’s \‘egetalle Pills. By regulncing the livcr «ml ob'.’ miug the effects of bile in the stomach they restore men to cheerfulucss :md full vigor of action. "At what age do you consider \vn~ men the most charming?" asked the inquisitive female of more or less un- certain ago. “At the age of the wu- mun who asks the Question," answer- ed the man, who Was a diplomat. When a man practises humility he may humiliate you if yOu don‘t lock out. If a man get 5 tired of loading a single life he should maxry and be led. A Sour Stomach and a. Sour Temper travel hand-m-hand and art: the recunors of mental and physical wreck. inc hundred and ninety-ninetimesin a thou- sand {cod ferment (indigestion) is the cause. Dr. Von Stan's Pineapplc Tablets keep the stomach swee:â€"-aid digestionâ€"keep the nerve centres well balanqedâ€"they're nature's pan- gagcmcnt ring. A man who gets into trouble ï¬nds that his friends are always liberalâ€" with advice. A girl tries to judge the quality of a "Hm†‘ ~ by the stone in the en- ';';§§.z"".‘.~:m;e;;: ’in a.:a‘+.zae‘ay."roi ï¬rms to )which flesh in heirâ€"the "er aunt. of may curltlves being sac that. were the 543er 0' 0U!" and (M!- !erqntly {1:93.117 diseases rooted in tn. ..-__. _1._. __‘___IJ a nun: or the putienlnwhat would re- levo one in in turn would asflnvsu the other. ‘11; have. howovor. n Quin. he “in, «hm obtainable In g sound nusdulutmsd state. I. remedy for mnny ad â€View il's By 11.! grldunl tad judicmps an. 3.2.. ("Along cyst-m9. m La mm convulcscence and itrength, b, 1).. influence which Quinino exert.» on nature’s o'n rcstovstivea. 1L unavo- the drooping spirit: 0! than with whom ‘ chronic blah of morbid dus- pondency nud hunk 0! interest, in “to is a diam. and. by Ltnuquiltxiu‘ tho urva, dasponox to pound sud rat-shin .hepâ€"Impuru vigor to the ution o the blood, which bun. "Janka-d. courses tin-on bout the veins. ntrcnz‘h- cm»; the hen thy nnimq luncuonp at tho system, Lhcnby mum: actinty n necesury result. , Mrcnxt can»; the Hume. and giving m. to UN: unguuvn organs. which lunar-My demand In. cremd announceâ€"result. Improved Ap- petim. _N9rutrop 4‘. Lynun o! Toron- to. IIIVO ‘lVGB to tho public that: su- puma- Quinta. “mm at the usuu "A... and. gauged by the o inion o! actu- um, this wine lppl‘ou‘: a lac-rut. per Reno. at any in tho mark“. nu drug» ‘ilu all It. C. C. RICIIAmIS C0. Dear Siré,‘â€"MINARD'S LINIMENT is my remedy for colds, etc. It is the best linimcnt I have ever used. MRS. JOSIAH HART. Durkcn the room. Now pour half a pint oz‘ methylated spirit. into .11. 111111, place :1. handful of ordinary table salt in it,1. d thvn set. lire to it. I ill flare up' in an instant and ghc 01- 1111101111 in the 100111 :1 \\"oi1d and hick». nus appearance. If vou want the flame to be green use nitrate of 11.111- um instead of salt. ()11 if 1011 prcfm 11011.11811 nitrate of strontium in place of m1]t..Anmhi1r trick is to take beforehand a little minute of stionti- 11111 dissolyc it in a little. hot, \vntm; than take pix-cos of “liite 'issuo pa- per. dip them into U121 solution. mid thun hang them up to dry. Thun. when you are. ready. touch a match to thvsz- pivcvs of 111mm- and tin-y will burn with 9. brilliant. rod flush. if \011 combine this with tho “grovn†trickâ€"i 11. perform the two tricks m. ithe same timeâ€"the effect will be [weird beyond description. For a risky and exciting and proï¬tâ€" ableâ€"ii you survivoâ€"-mo-dc of earning a livelihood, a new Australian inâ€" dustry wanid be hard to boat. It is the collection of snake venom, a substance that, like radium. is valu- ed by the “grain. 'A pound of it is said to be worth $25, 000. The rep- tilcs must be caught uninjured. and it goes without. saving that the in- dustry demands considerable know- ledge and skill in capture. Tiger snakes are the best, for they carry most venom. 1T MAKES SYOU LOOK (- RF-l N i-v pleasant ud harmléss. 3 5 centsfâ€"ss Port Mulgrnvc. June 5, 1897. â€k for the octagon Bar. “may!“ WI: soot-i RIS KY OCCUPATION. First :‘ffl..-""1'UUS your with do mm‘ything you In†hrr?" Second Mun~"\%\-IX, 5224- abused my orders East night, :m_\].uv.." “How was that?†“WWI. 1 mm htrr 10 go 10 bud, and shv said. ‘J won’t.’ Then I laid hvr 1n git up, and 5310 ()bt'ycd me " get you good nims. THE 9?: W503! COMMESE-[ON GO, Limited mm'ylhing Mun~"\Â¥vll, iast ni;1ht,:: that?†“WI-1} We are chncinx‘. uwdl-knom: jar: worth Lrying {m 4.. EACH OF THE SIX PICTURESREE’R2~ S NTS A GARDEN VEGETABLE. CAN YOU NAME TREE-13 OF THEM? It doe: not. cca: you gnu cont. to try and eat-n2 this panic, 1.2265! you up correct you may win a. Large umcau‘oe! Cash. Y. e v.) “or, =3}: my money from you, and. 3mm l:::a_th-.s i: rcryxazerwir . 1:; does not; muchr when; you 1; :9; we do nc’; we one bit. who gets the maze; ; 1: you cu: rank: cu: m; ages 0! three of these Lug-am y .gczgggcs' mail vour answer to u, with year nzme and nddms plainly written. and it you)" ans-a or is co; n11, was “-531 notin- you. We are giving :2?! 2'- .CO is: correct â€was. 2.4 3 low u'.:nutcs<.f)'cur1' - Scrd in y {guess so once, “5111313131,â€. III-1:32 and sddtna, m Inn: “A" ._A_, ___, _â€".‘ _‘--_-_,‘ _ "You sold m- that horse as {1‘00 from faults. Why, it's blind." "Mind? \‘rll. that's not a faultâ€"- that's u crud “.3 ‘z‘nrmucf' 7mm ._ _._,_.........V___._ ...._..V.__._Â¥mr 777*7- Pqtatoasflbflultry; Eggs, Butter, Amie: They WM“: 111" Tux-pm Energiesâ€"Mat, chincry 130?; px-dpmlv wpcrvised and 1:!- to run ixsrsh'. very ~u-’Ji1 shows {an}; in its working. I: is 151°. smue with the diges {ive organs I’mmgnluml from :ime 1.0 time Hwy mu} 'mh to become rorpid and throw Hw v. “(.15 aymvn out. of gear. Punndee“ Vegcuï¬ I ; L’ H; were made :0 meet such ('nww. 'J'uey rcs'fm'e to the fun flagging; 131:;le has. and bring imme Ad'a-v‘WVusn't thm‘c- some talk of Maud..- marryiny: a duh-‘2" Dolly â€" "Yes: but. 50:1 son. Lhu duh: Liidn‘t 4y anything uncut 1L." Have You a Skin Disease?â€" Tsncr. Salt Rheum, Scaid Head, Ringworm, Eczema,ltch , Barbct‘s Itch, Ulcers. Blotchcs, Chronic Erysiyehs, Liver Spots. Prurégo, Psoriasis, or other eruptions of the skinâ€" what Dr. Agnaw's Ointment has done for other: it can do {or yonâ€"cure you. One ap- plicatian gives miniâ€"55 antiâ€"$7 Sheâ€""I somoxiums \x‘ondvr whv!h~r all those things: you said to 1m- “MW truu. ’ I'eâ€""H'hat dim-I‘vnw- (inws it, make? “(2 both bclimcd tlvm. He did not cure for womankindâ€" A bachelor hold was he; Yet o‘er each girl's receptive mind He'd great authorhy. They watched his face with vigil- nncc, The sharp girl fvarvd his frown: The flat gix‘} {rounded at his glance \Vlwnc'm‘ it met her own. The roason ho could load each lass Submissive to conunand? He taught Lhmn in a music class-â€" Conductor of the hand. His ex'm'y motinn thvy obeyed. Compliant to his nod, For, if tho pretty luggm‘ds stayed, He urgml them with a rod. In. Wmuow't Boot-auto sum- bu boon mod by runes: a!“ “'21:? {of-z at; dnduadvhnt mo 00 I: .0» an r :nâ€pdn.¢ rind colic. tonal-tn the Imam: «A hard; ad I. â€round: {or Manta» TtMy-ï¬u m 3 Ink! 2:; '29 \broughcn: the «odd. 80 an In! -.|. I... "Mu W1:IL01'I5W?IXX¢ 31mm." 25-“ Miami’s Lininant far saie ï¬aryï¬ï¬eza W... _. _ ,._._ "a - ' †' uh (c.1331: Willbow'l Savanna swam; Ltimulutrd by tho laying down of a. mono-mil olocxx-ic lino betweoh Bor- lin and Hamburg. which is now in process. of Construction, the French have comnwnurd the necessary surâ€" veys 101' :1 similar hnc between Paris and Mara-UHF. But they intend to open a n~w rncm'd in the matter of spvod. ’1‘lw Uu-xmun trains are to make 120 milrs an hour; the French (mm 1180 miles an hour. A Lagtmg Cure of Itching Pikes 'l‘hl'qu}mm ".mmm Incrv are nun- drods m‘ (‘mzvs :imilm' to the one de- scribed lu-iuv; in which Dr. Chase's Uimmont hus‘ pruH-n at positive and lasting cmxv fur 1va most hL‘Vcl‘c form of itching; pin-s. Mr. Alex. McLaughlin, for 30 years a resident 0f Bowmam'illc, Ont" writes :â€" v.14; u: Jnlul Aucw -1. v.. gnu; M123§ï¬Ã©Â£3LUING ch “For twenty long: 3 from itching piles. at: who have been trouble noying disease can ir endured during ‘hat seven years ago I ask< “For “vent; long: 50am I Suflcrod from itching piles. and only persons who have been troubled with that an.â€" noying disease can imagine what I endured during that time. About, chen years ago I asked a dl‘uggist, if he had anything to cure me. He said that Dr. Chase‘s Ointment. was most. favorably spoken of, and on his recommendation I took a. box. "After three applications I felt. bot- tor, and by the time I had used one box I was on a fair way to recov- cry‘. I continued the treatment \mâ€" tiljhoroughiy cured. and I have not suflered any since. I am ï¬rmly con- A Chronic Case of Unusual Severity and Long Standing Cured by émï¬ 'MJ / é ,Wjéf/Wy/ N10,,†OOWwM‘ON. twmugmwm Mao gum. “HMO MCNNFM «mgâ€"hum ".mndn thorn m‘c hun- ; ni cam-s timilm' to the one de. .\(l ln-im'.’ m which Dr. Chase's non! hus‘ pron-n u positing and m (-mv l‘m' Uh- most hCVcl‘c form us have your consignment of any of those articles and we will get you good prices. 190 MILES AN HOUR :m. A. w. BEASE'S 0mm CURE 2E0- Dr. Chase’s Ointment. For Over sixty Yarn rARRH 008E I II égG.S Is sen: dine: to the amass] pans by the Improved mower. 1 Heal: the 01cm. clears the .3: pasugcs. stops dxoppin s in thc threat and mutant 3' cures C marl: and 3; Fever. Blower frce. Ml drden. or Dr. A. W. Chase Licdic-Zne Cu. Toromo and swam ___.__.+.â€"- A MASTER . A Cllinï¬Sn DOV who was: Study" hinglish had on “8101‘ the o’i'mr '10 writu a lottor to tho _\me; lw jwho was his Sunday-school nm‘ ;.\’m wishing in begin his 1m: :- zhu mnrwotywd way with ‘Miss. ' he 104:1; his 177:5:155‘2 ‘ury to ‘mok up an Og‘JiVu‘u‘lï¬ for the Word Thin is 131: “2}" 11m kin-x- vcas (‘oan-‘crfl "1':?-;j*"11\f§\'f' Tum: d‘ngi 5031‘ .. : ‘, . 'Y (.1311. ’ “32:62 of dollar-3‘ .o adufliu our bawincse. Sacha ' ’ the: six mum p: 'cturgg ‘45} £3: :3 " \ ‘ 3e: able. Cu: you um}: our. :..e:: :nesc‘ than of Khan? If re the “my,“ 22 mm), "c gm“: â€Ham 1: «cgmzz mum-u yawn, gamma tried to heip you. n .L 991'. West Marketrand Com: m: ;a . fronoujo, *‘ 7477* flag 834- M‘QH REID BROS“ M'f‘z 0033 135 Km: 6!. fl. Biiliard Tables An omceholdor ureds liulv 1.0:") if he has a pull. Maiden Fairâ€""Oh, it aha-‘3'? null-:0? my head swim to go on 1}» awn-r?" Sailor furn,-tiousâ€"-“‘.\'o dang-1' nf drawning, then, mom, if yuu s-lumld {all overboard." K. -r-; w 0:“ hinted that the oimnwnf perfect cure. tivc Syrup the pain cm: be . dangeravoidcd. This: synm :5 3:19:- the taste. and unsurpassr- for r-‘ Leulmgand curing uii affection- Ih‘xont and h:ug<, colds. coughs $135138, etc. cw. \\ hy willv van nlzou :1 ca your (1 mat and lungs .md ï¬ning r. consump; iv‘c ~: g : he timely use 01 3k: 1e" Minard’sl li' H7235 Miss." . ’17 For FL: mar- 3 after marriage- a ‘st hi; Wife c‘cl‘ything {had Hus; after that hr: tells her a 10'. things that happrn only in his mi Shiloh’s Consumptian Cons Cure Women in Korea (112‘ or x markuhh from their sex in othur (‘uunn'ios in one particularâ€"they are ahsu‘flnly silent! The length of L: “oman s tongue is a frequent lt’prOdCh 1“ch- w,hcrc but it (‘annot ‘nn b: ugh: against the Korcun “he. “in $.0ch speaks more Ihan is b“ fcl‘ _\ nous- sury. A bride dzuc not L-Zlul‘ a word or make even a sign. hawc‘mr much her husband 11333 'u'tlbk‘ o: tau'm. her, for in break siic‘m- \mum mean total loss of main. Among the higher classes it wax u “tn-L's m' months before a hush: ml 'm-m‘s ‘nk wife's voice for the ï¬rst limo. uh..c the wife does not speak or m (‘2‘. look at her father-inâ€"luw fur )mr-s after her marriage. "I consider Dr. Chase's (‘rmnmnt an invaluablc trcamwm fur piles. 12, my case 1 think the (-urv “as rw markable when you consider that 1 am getting up in yours. and had been so long a sufl‘orer from this diamm-ï¬â€˜ Mrs. Jane B. Scott, North Gran» Ville, Cumberland C0,. N.S. writes: “Last spring I obtained from you a. box of Dr. Clmsv's ()imuwnt and used it for inward piles. It gah' me almost instant relief from the torturing, itching zuld burning. and as the trouble has never returned I consider the cure a rox'mammv. 0110. You may use this statement for xlw beneï¬t of others.’ ’ wv..v__ ,_ v ___7 Dr. Chase's Ointment, 60 cnxns :1 box. at all dealers, or Edmanwm. Bates Company, Toronto. Tommâ€" tcCt you against imitations 1,310 yorâ€" trnit and signature of Dr. A. \T. Chase. the famous receipt book a":â€" thor are on ever;- box. Ham's Usimaat limes Sham, The Boot at tho Lowest Price Writ. for 1'qu .14n..ï¬u»o,w.ur..A.QVm u‘H 3:030“ 3... .ouunxnuuyr .U 2% .mooflm in g Do you catch col-<1 easily ? Does the cold hang on .7 Try Th L . are 7021:. "Pg cars the most stubborn kind of coughs and colds. IE it doesn't cure you, your money will be refunded. 1'406 . ron’éi’i‘o. our. § 32-31 ISSUE NO. 20â€"04. SILENT WOMEN. Pusty Rhod--sâ€"â€" Hvr hustlin' tr, .3 mm a co lg: m 11%? mgs and ru :1 rim 1-52; of wive‘s' grave “he: ‘W Bick} e s -\n'.i- (‘u xmp' new: beak? ' ‘ =, “11' ‘ surnas: g uli :zï¬cctiom of the aids to wig, b:- 1‘- ‘- I In! a man 480