BaANTEn , " [but lino lathe Dominion. Good Commission. Full information A witty as well as a soft answer will sometimes turn away wrath. A candi- ate. in the midst of a. stirring address, was struck by a. rotten egg full in the face. Pausing to wipe away the con- tents of the missile, he calmly continued : "l have always contended that my 0p- pcncnt's argunmnts were very unsound l" The crowd roared. and he was no longer molmted. Recently in England the mind 0! tne public has been much exercised as 8 the correct pronunciation of the word “BOVRII.†the name of the w-cil known preparation of beef. A consensus of opinion has been obtained by the pro- priebors of the preparation. As many as 90,640 voted for “BOV-RIL" and that seems to have been the favorite pronun- ciation. A Mrs. Brain of Shirehamp- tcn. near Bristol. secured a pmie of £100 by g ing the exact number of the majorlt. of persons noting flor “BOVRILJ Whether pronounced “BO- VRIL" or “HOV-Ru." the preparation 1»: very acceptable at this time of year. tyv the crews 011% other ‘boats. and aflerx ards carefully examined by Dr. N. Harvey LL. D. v ho esttmerCd its weight at. over than tons. George "$13 you asked old Brown for In daughier' 5 hand. What did he say. 7 ' "He said: â€lake her( and let. me be hap- P! - .r " '7’“ In 190% again. the schooner Mbnughan was “racked by a. S\\Ord- ï¬sh of! Block biand the long-toothed spear ripping open her planking for a space of several feet. so that she foundered almoSt im- mediately; while at St. John's. New- Icundland. there is praserved a portionâ€" nineteen feet longâ€"of one of the arms of gigantic 00% which, in the year 1873 allaiked sunk .one of. the ï¬sh- ing fleet there. Tye mon'slcr was killer; In this instance, according to the story told by the captain of the Anna. there could be no question of accident. The whale, 8. huge 01d bull, circled. pound and round the ship as if challemgin attack, and then suddeeg charged it 1‘ l tilt. in Danish schooner Anna was rammed by u hundred-£00! monster in mldooean wlnfe on a voyage from Iceland to New Brunswick not long since, and had her bmw stove in. the crew being rescued in the :xivk of time by the Liverpool liner Quernmore. The local papers. in reporting the oc- currence, speak of it as unique; but this is not. quite so, since no longer ago than July. 1905. the smack Jean Boy was wrecked in a precisely similar fashion while trawling 1n the North Sea. T hen. of oSurse, there are numerous wollauthenticamd instzmcas of ships be- ing charged and sunk by whales. Thus: An extraordinary affair happened the other day in the estuary of the Shannon, Ireland. the yacht Water Hen being cap- sized by a school of giant porpoises, who were blindly pursuing some salmon. Vessels Wrecked By Porpoises. Whales and Sword-Fish. SEA MONSTERS THAT SINK SHIPS. Crown Taiiorlng no.9 - Toronto CANADA‘S BEST TAILOBS. Dyeing I cleaning! ruuomhuuummuom “m “IBIS" "II“ ‘0.†mica-Ohm“ "and“ flootulfl'oronw. Ottawu, M I" 'Made-toâ€"Measure Clothing Pl LES" etc. Of d1 dzuggisu and stores, soc. box or from the lam-Bu}: Cm. Toronto, post- ptid. 3 boxes $1.25. I: especidly recommended for all kinds of sin: diseuq, eczelga, bad legs, piles, ulcers, boils, cfnpped lands, buben’ tub. fetterihg tom, pois; oned wounds, cuts, bmiscg. Ming-pryiu used. I! this statement can be used {or the beneï¬t of other sufferers from this trouble, you ute n liberty to publish it." Mr. George Lee. F35 Steiner St, Toronto.“ up: “ or8 yam leufl'exed torture from blind, Within; piles. During the: time I believe slums: everything in the line of oint- ment: md nlvu was used, but in vein. The very ï¬rst pron o! A 8 Years Torture Ended by Zam-Buk ZAM-BUK Zam-Buk FREE Ans-plot»: '33 b. Inflod Y“ m. if you out out this coupon and and it with iii an, 1 gig)» AGENTS to tab ordon for LXI The London papers a few weeks ago chronicled the unique success of the son, of a bargemnn on one of lhe cu- nals in the West Riding of Yorkshire. This lad's father sent hlm at an early age to an elementary school. where he won a local scholarship to the Gram- mar School. (ï¬tted with brains. he then began an extraordinary career of edu- cational and practical success. Ho car. ried all before him. went to Cambridge on scholarships. had a most distingu- ished carver lherp. and WM nearly at the head at the exams for the Indian Civil Service. iHc gained the Carpenters Foundation {and the Conquest Gold Medal. A few years later he obtained the proud posi- tion of captain at the City of London School on the. Embankment. Going to Cambridge on scholarships. he was a Foundation Scholar at Trinity and later was made a teilow of that re- nowned college. At the end of his 'Varsity course he resolved to go in for the Civil Service. and passed the necr- sary examination so well that he was drafted at once into the Board of Trade lattices. There his great ability soon made him prominent. and he has been Promoted with almost unexampled ra~ pidity, until today he stands :practt- catty at the head of the permanent oili- czais in that important department of the Government. In 1890 a boy in a. London clem'enfm‘y school, named Wild. who had won many valuable scholarships as a lad. went in Bailiol College. Oxford. entirely on tho proceeds of exhibitions and scholarships. He did very well there. and subsequently went in for the ln- dian Civil Service. Taking a high posi- tion on the claw lisi. he went out to cm- Eastem powessions. and he has r‘men since until {0-day he is at tho top of the laddor in his own depart- ment. and not only has an excellent position. but A MAGNIFICENT SALARY. VERY REMARKABLE GIFTS 'and carried everything before him in the way of prizes, exhibitions. and atholarships. Under ordinary circum- stances his father would have been able k. give him only a meagre education, but from the age of ten he never had to spend a penny upon him, and tin- ally he went, with flying colors, to Cambridge. There he did brilliantly and was Senior Wrangler. He remained at. the University and specmiized in medi- cme. For twenty years he has been one o! the most famous men at Cam- bridge, and he is to-day the Principal of one of the greatest Universities in Scotland, 21 position that, in the wildest dreams of hls youth, he could scarcely have hoped to attain. and one, certain- ly which would have been absolutely impossible of attainment had it 'not been that the right of way for brains is indeed open. In the early eighties a Scottish lad, whose parents had migrated to Liver- pool. wok a scholarship at one of the Ordinary schools which gave him the advantage of secondary education. Sub- sequently he developed Subsequently a fellowship of his col- lege was conferred upon him. and for some years he acted as a tutor at. the University. To-day he is one of the most famous mission pneachers or our time, and Best of all, his widowed mother is still living at a good old age. Needless to say she rejoioa in the succws of her boy, and no one will wonder that sï¬e should be proud of h1m._ An ounce of fact is worth. a pound of theory. and a few instances will go far to prove that the right of way for brains has been‘secured. and- that the race for the highest positions in the educational. social and political world Is much nearer being a race where all start from scratch than it used to be. when the boy with means had a. titty yards' start in a. hundred. Less than a. score of years ago the son of a poor widow at Wakeï¬eld won a scholarship which took him to the Grammar School of that town. He worked hard and won prizes galore. ï¬nally going to Cambridge with some three or {our extremely valuable schol- arships to support him there. His ca- reer at the 'Varsity was a brilliant suc- cess. for he worked like a Trojan and emerged triumphantly with the blue ribbon of the educational world. the Senior Wranglerslilp. We will take now an instance from London. There was a boy who in 1872. won a soolarshlp from an ordinary Board school to a secondary school. He went to India with a good salary In this country the educational lad- der has literally its {got resting in the gutter and its top reaching to the Cab- inet or the British Empire. says Lon- don Tit-Bits. So many scholarships and other aids are there, indeed. for the poor bOy that it has been said of late that it is the rich student who is handicapped in the race, and. that the advantage is decidedly on the side 01 the poor ladh _ _ _ . WORKING LADS’ SUCCESS III-â€ST POSITIONS IN EDUCATIONAL, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL WORLD. Many Poor Engflsh Boys [lave Had Brilliant Gamers Through [lard Work and Pluck. A MAN OF GREAT MARK. Sighting as low as I could see on that 'halmrc of yellow I pulled the trigger, and Cecily’s rifle crupked simultaneously. “The head of the 110mm pressed lower. _and nothing showed above the ridge pf grass and ihorn. The lioness must. be Head. And yet could one kill so green u'*_foe so quickly? The jungle cover parted. and with lithe, stretched shOulders a lioness shook herself half free or the "density, then crouched low again. Down, down,- until only the flat of her skull showed, and her. small twitching ears. In one mo- ment more she would be on us. In one tense second I realized that. I had seen two monstrous moving beasts, yellowish and majestic; They were very clcse, and moved at a slow pace {mm the bush ahead mm a patch of still thicker cover to the left. I remember that though the great moment for which “'0 had plnmwd and longed and ‘sh'lvcn was wally at. hand, all my excilcment left me, and there was nothlng but a cold, tingling sensation running about my veins. Miss Agnes Herbert’s Narrow Escape in Somaliland. The roar of a lion, hunting, Is a never-to-bcnforgotten sound. declares Miss Agnes Herbert in “Two Dlanas in Somaliland." She describes hearing the lions. following them up through the jungle, and the nearly fatal results to herself in their capture. SLEEPLESS BABIES ARE SICKLY BABIES. Well babies sleep soundly and wake up brightly. When little ones are rest- less, sleepless and cross it is the surest sign that they are not well. Probably the stomach or bowels is out of order, or it may be teething troubles. Give Baby's Own Tablets and see how quick- ly the child grows well and happy and sleeps soundly and naturally. Not the drugged sleep or “soothing" medicines. but the natural sleep of health. You have the guarantee oi a. government. analyst that this medicine contains no poisonous opiate or narcotic, and you can give the Tablets just as safely to a new born babe as to the well grown child. Sold by all medicine dealers .or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine 00.. Brockville, Ont. power or production boundless. It. is always the simple-minded and the uni- formed who constituie on such occasions the chief portion of tho throng, just as the people who go to extremes are the halt-educated ones. The cmwd were easily persuadedâ€"me proof that. all was right was burning thï¬ir fingers. At another bank the chief cashier him- self examined every note with the most searching scrutiny, holding it up to the light. testing the signature. and pretend- ing that, on account of alarm as to for- gery. there was need of the most scru- pulous care. When he had oomplcted :is pretended examination he handed the note to one of his subordinates very de- liberately, saying. in slow and mea- sured terms, “You may pay it." Other plans were to pay the money very lun- guidly, counting it twice over. so as to he sure the sum was right. and to give a sovereign short, so that the customer should complain and the counting have to be done over again. At. one of the banks peck measures inverted were placed in the windows facing the street‘ a pile of gold upon the top. after the manner of the fruit exposed to sale at street corners in the summer. At an- other the coin was heated in shovels over the ï¬re in the parlor behind. and handed Out as “new" at a temperature of 300 de- grees Fahr. The clerk in charge. accom- modating his phrusoology to the occa- sion, cried out loudly every half-hour, “Now. Jim, do be gettin’ on with these sovereigns; foks are waiting for their money." “Coming, sir. coming." was the ready reply; and the “folk" thought the One bank procured a number of poo- p'c as confederates, 10 whom they paid gold, and who then slipped round again to a back door and refunded it, thus. pro- ducing the effect of astago army. A story is told of Cunliffe Bmok's Bank. When there was an impetuous and unreasoning rush for gold. Mr. Brook obtain-ed a. number 01' sacks of meal, oponcd them at, the top, put a good thick layer of coin upon the cements. and the-n placed them untied where the glittering coins would be manifest to ullobsewers. Instanées' such as these might be mul- tiplied ad inï¬nitum. In these times of kren competition between nation and nation. the Briiish people cannot afford 10 let anv good material run to waste, and least of ailâ€"brains! Ingenious Schemes Adopted to Allay Excitement. It is said that when there was a run upon the Bank of England in 1765. the device was Inserted to of paying the country people in shillings and six- pcncw. One cute Manchester ,flnn painted all their premises pmfusely. and many dapper gentlemen Were deterred from approaching the counter. A gardener at a Vicarage in Hereford had a clever, plodding boy. who at- tended the village school. He did his work so well that he attracted the par- ticular notice 0! the vicar of the parish. By his advice the gardener allowed the toy to compete {or the County Coun- cil Scholarships in the Hereford Au- thority. and the lad WI; successful. me this point of vantage he won prize after prize, until at length it cul- minated in a scholarship at Balliol. While there he gained the highest honâ€" ors. and now holds a most important and responsible post. such as his fa- ther would never have dreamt of twen- ty years_ ago. 7 ,,,1 A boy whose falher worked in a forge in the North of England was sent to a Wesleyan school in the town in which he lived. A wealthy cotton-spinner in the town. whose son is now a. well- known newspaper proprietor. had es- tablished a number of scholarships .‘n connection with the elementary schgals of the place. and one of those the youth captured when he was TWELVE YEARS OF AGE. This scholarship took him to Manches- ter Grammar School, where he did well and obtained n 8811101 Scholarship. He took a double ï¬rst at the University. and is now the secretary or one or the greatest and most. beneï¬cent associa- tions in the world. ‘and soon did so well that he was ra- pidly promoted to high honors. Recent- 1» he came home to visit his fatherâ€"7 now. thanls to the brilliant and loyal 5011, no longer a bargemanâ€"und that same boy, still considerably under forty years of age. has returned to India to take up the high position of Chief Jus- tice of a well-known Indian province. at a salary of not less than £1.80) a‘ year! , , _ DEALING “1TH BANK PANICS. "ER FIRST LION. mi insanely stupid thing. It , lion hunt, and m! ignon A simple and effective test to determine whether water is present in milk may be made with an culinary knitting needle if the needle is bright and well polished. Dip the needle into the milk “Dd Quickly withdraw it,in an upright position. It the milk contains only" a small quantity of water this will prevent even a dmp of milk adhering to the needle. Jack: “Grace is_ quite an art enthusi- ast. Her mind runs to painting." Lola: “Yes. It shows on her face." ‘ A Cure for Fever and Ague.â€"-Parme- lee's Vegetable Pills are compounded for use in any climate. and they Will be found to preserve their powers in any latitude; ln fever ~and ague they act upon the secretions and neutralize the poison which has found its way into the blood. They correct the im- purities which ï¬nd' entrance into the system through drinking water or food and if used as a preventive fevers are avoided. "I once looked through a telescmpo.‘ I don‘t know as it. was the largest in the world. I hope, it wasn‘t. But it brought. the moon so nearlhat we couldscc a man in it gesticulating wildly, and cry: in; out. ‘Don‘tshoot! don’t shoot 1' The old fool thought it was a big cannon that we wene pointing at him." The quiet Elan subsided, and so did all the rest of xcm. “He seems to take life 5.014011st for so young :1 man." “Yes; you see. he's in love, and he has to run the gauntlet of her littlerbroiher. her father and the bull- aog every time he calls !" Just. the Thing Tlml's Wantedâ€"A pill that acts upon the. stomach and yet is so compounded that certafn in- gredients of it preserve their power to act upon the intestinal canals. so as to clear them of excreta. the retention of which cannot but be hurtful. was long looked for by the medical profes- sion. It was found in Parmclee's \‘c- gamble Pills, which are the result of much expert study. and are scientiï¬- cally prepared as a laxative and an alternative in one. ' “Aren‘t you ashamed lo beg ?†-“S0me- times. mum. When I ï¬nd how stingy people are, I fairly blushes {or them." a 15511: “i know it but it huii narrowed down to a choice bet“ «on him and his father, and she had to decide quick.‘ Yes. Indeed. “blood will tell," when blotch“ 1nd incmtations muk the skin. Weaver's Comte m4 \Yguer'sï¬jrup make short work 0! 3.11 blood Nan: “I was astonish‘mi to learn that [-xi Billiwink had gone and married that Spriggins boy. Why. she‘s a good ten years, older than he is," , ,1 Ind skin troubles. Mount. Clemens is famcus throughout America. as an all-the-yeu-round health re- sort, and thousands of people hear testi- mony to the beneï¬ts derived from its min- eral waters in cases or rheumatism and kindred diseases. For bilious and liver troubles. digestive troubles, nervous dia- crders, general debility. etc., the efï¬cacy of its wat‘ors is'wonderful. Seventy-ï¬ve per cent of rheumavt‘ica are cured and ninety per cent. beneï¬txed. Write J. D. McDonald. Dis- trict Passenger Agent. Grand Trunk Rail- way System, Toronto. for handsome de- scriptive booklet th'w: you all about It. u--~ uu-‘Al LUlllulHCO another enelny. t A snarling roar, and almost. before I could do anything but bring up my rifle and fire without the sights, a lion broke from the side of the brake. My nerves seemed to reiax, and I tried to hurl my- self to one side. There was no power of hurling left in me, and I simply fell side- ways. and that saved me. For the great cat had not bargained for a. victim slight- ‘ly to the right or left. [its weight fell on my legs merely, and the claws stuck in. Before he had time to turn and rend me, almost instantaneously my oousin fired. The top of the lion's head was blown to smithemcns. and the heavy body sank. The whole world seemed to me to be bounded north, south, east and west by lion. The men pulled the heavy carcase away. I sat up, feeling indescribably shaky. I don't remember anything else until I found myself in my tent, with my cousin rendering “ï¬nst aid.†.u V“: A u I ran fomardwibwinvestiga rifle at the trail. I had f< um bush fonlained another pie is the only advertised medicine in the world that has had the public en- dorsation ot a doctor of, world-wide re- putation. Such an cndorsation stamps this medicine as being worthy of the conï¬dence of every person who is sick or ailing. A great doctor would not risk his reputation unless he was ob- solutely oonï¬dcnt, ‘through a. personal knowledge. that ‘Dr. Williams'PinK Pills willvdo what is claimed [or them. Dr. Guiseppe Lapponi, one or the great- est physicians of modern times.‘ for years the trusted medical adviser of the Pope. writes the following ‘strong letter in favor 01' Dr. Williams' Pink “1 certify that I have tried-Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills in four cases of the simple anaemia or development. After a. few weeks of treatment, the result came fully up to my expectations; For that reason i shall not fail in the tu- turo to extend the use of this laudable preparation. not. only in the treatment of other morbid forms of the categorv Br. A GreatDOCtor Speaks †- 91‘ a Great Remedy Qhewing Tohggco Riéh and satisfying. The big black plug. , man Dr. Wâ€"illiams' Pink Black ' Watch '. William's Pink Pill; :Strangty‘ Endorsed by One of the World’s ' Greatest Bantamâ€"4110119 for tha Sick. ' MOUNT CLEMENS, MICHIGAN. NECESSI'I‘Y FOR ACTION. FEMININE VIE\\"POINT. WATERED MILK. rppe Lappom‘, one of the great- icians of modern times“ for . trusted medical adviser of ‘. writes the following Strong burn" a! I‘- enthusiasm carried will tell, " when blotch†am carried me away. investigate. with my I had forgotten that Pills for Pale Poo- category "‘Why are they called pyramide. grand? pa-‘Z" queried little Emerson, who was looking at a picture of those Egyptian wcndcrls. “They are called pyramids. my boy." replied the old man. shame- lCSSly, “because they appear-amid the general desolation of the desert " Whereupon the hall clock tried lo hide its face with its hands. There can be a difference of opinion on most subjects, but. there is only one opinion â€as to the reliability of Mother Grax'ï¬â€˜iiWorm Exterminator. It is safe. sure and effectual. There isno medicine on the market that can compare with Bicklc's Anti- (J-Unsumptive Syrup in expelling from the system the irritating germs that cellis engender in the air passages. ll ‘35 suicide L3 neglev 1, your cold. Try the cheap exmri-meni of ridding yourself of; it by using Bickle‘s Syrup, which is a simple remedy, easily "taken. and once used it will alwaysrbe prized as a sovereign medicinep ’ She: “Some people prom by the mis- takes of others." He: “Ya. like the min- islcr who got ï¬ve dollars for marrying H You It: Nervous and irritable. talc. " Forrovim." the greatnorvo and blood tonic; you wil! be 3 new person by the time you have und 3. bottle. $1.00 bottles. All dealers. . Guest: “\Vaiï¬nr. bring me some rice- pudding‘." Waiter: “Erâ€"‘fraid I Can't jest recommend the rice-puddin' today, .sir." Guest: “What’s the matter with it?" \V‘aitcr: “Nothing, sir; 'ccPI, there ain’t. none!" “You were always a innit-ï¬nder 1" growled the wife. “1'05, dear," respond: eel 1119 husband, weekly; “I found you !" 11.5 . H †0h. slip on any old thing." said the mid. night caller. So the doctor slipped on the to flop, but he did not [use any time, as he slippos on “The Q at." Menthol Plaster and all was right in a. 1x5}. She: “The mere thought 01' the furs which you have pmmised me makes me {ml wax-m.†He: “And the mere thought 0? their cost. makes cold shivers run down my back :" ITCH, Mange, Prairie Scratches and every form of contagious Itch in human or animals cured in 30 minutes by Wol- fm'd's Sanitary Lotion. H. never fails. Sold by an druggisls. Do Not Delay.â€"Do not let a cold or cough fasten upon you as it will if engi lccteil. Dr. Thomas’ Ecleclz'ic Oil will break up a cold and cure a cough. and should be resorted to at once when lhc. ï¬rst. symptoms appear. It can be, dis- guised so that any unpleasant taste it â€my have will be imperceptible to the delicate. Try it and be convinced . Molhcx‘: “If you marry Robert. I swear that I'll never set foot in your house!" Daughter: “Please put. that, down in writ,- ing. I‘d like to give that promise to [:cber; for a wedding present I" She's «a wise woman w ho pretends that hm husband has all the brains con- cox-nod With‘ the matrimonial combine. cases or neurasthcnia and the like." ‘ {Slgnem DR. GwSEPPELAPPONI. Via dei Gracchi 332. Home. The “simple anaemia of development" referred to by Dr. Lapp-oni is; of course, that tired. languid; condition of y< ung girls whose development 102M3- manhood istardy. and whose health, at the period of that development, is a, often imperillod. His opinion of â€the value of Dr. Williams: Pink Pills at that time is of the highest scienti- ï¬c authority, and it oonflrms the many published cases in which anaemia. and other diseases of the blood. as well gs nervous diseases, have been cured by lhwe pills. which. it need-hardly be mentioned. owe their efï¬cacy to their power of makingnew hlood,jand thus acting directly upon the digestive and nervous system. In all cases‘ot-tmneo mia, decline, indigestion. and all trou- bles due to bad blood. and all affec- tions of the nerves, as St. V'itus' dance;- paralysis and locomotor ataxia. they are commended to the public with all the greater conï¬dence because they have the strong endorsation of this great physician. or anaemia or c'hlonos'is. but/also in Why don't the girls propose, papa? Why don't the girls pvopose? Three years I‘ve waited wistfully Among the belles and beaux. But. nOW‘a kindly Fate might put An end to all my woes, If only some sweet maid would pop! Why don‘t the girls propose? Why don‘t, the girls propose, papa? I almost want tho cry 1 Just think if Leap Year should elapse And they should pess‘me by! My heart goes pitty-pat, papa! This fateful your will close In only eleven months from nowâ€" Why don’t the girls propose? Why don't the girls propose. papa? Why don't the gi'ls pnomse? The glad Leap Year at last is here, I'm ready, goodness know-s! My little shy. consenting ways My \villingneSS disclose, And yet they do not seem to mindâ€" Why don't the girls propose? ISSUE N0. 5-â€; LEAP YEAR SONG. ishcd?‘ “‘He had $21 man: Evfl‘ . A ï¬rmnimni pastor foils thslstory: “I visited a certain school one day where Bible instruction was part of the daily course. and in order to tut the chfldren’s knowledge, asked some ques- tions. One class or little girls looked particularly bright, and »I asked the tullefst one: ‘What sin 'dld Adam oom- mit ' . , “‘He ate forboddé'n fruit) 'fffBight'. Who tempted Adam 7‘ ."'fNot "really Eve, but the Serpent. And how was Adam~purgished ’2' “The girl hesitated and look woonfused Behind her sat a little elght-year-old .gjrl who raised her hand .and said: ‘Please, pastor, I knéw." “ ‘Well {all 'us. Hov» was Adam pun- The man who owns enough of this wands goods to keep him from dizt. debt and hungcr has a thousand chances of avoiding mil against the one of the man whom the demon of discouragement drags through deptm from which it is almost. impossible to escape \xwilhaul se- vere dcmoralizati-on of bodv. mind and Spirit. Are you a sufferer wiih earns? 11 you are, get. a bottle of Holloway} Corn Cure. It has never teen known to Inâ€. There are time: when it i: advisable to keep the door clqsed that leads to ycur dome of thought, “Face !" exclaimed the horticultnrist in dxsgust. “Let me tell you that when you pick out a gardener, you want to go by his breechm. l! they've patched on the knees. you want him. If the patch is on the seat of his trousers. you don't." An "enthusiastic Cultivator of {Inn-ms and shmis recently had occasi-m tn un- gagc an odd-man gurdcmr. One morn- ing two applicants appearedâ€"one a de- cidedly decent-looking man. and me other of much less premsassmg up- pearancc and manner. “Then why did you choose the shorter man? The other had a much better face." A Liltle Loss of flash. :1. little obstinate cough And auctlo pain in the chest are signs that must notbe neglected. Allen‘s Lung Baham loosens the cough andflcï¬ects a. cum without a grain of After very little hesitation the man of he house chose the latter applicant A friend who was present evinced surprLge a’. the selection, asking: “No," replied the other; “in fact. I never saw either of them until tn-day." “Has that man worked Ioi‘ you be- fore?" This mixture is said t8 be very effective in the treatment of coughs, whooping-cough, colds, and bron- chitis. * HOME-MADE COUGH MIXTURE Procuré from your druggist the following ingredients and mix at home: â€"- One-half ounce fluid extract licor- ice, one-half ounce fluid extract cas- cara, one ounce elixir tolene, six ounces best we whiskey. Dose: Ono dossertspoonful every two or thre; hours. Children. in proportion. Every room cammnda an ocean riow, bath stashed with :u and fresh wusr. Chou}- glass in every chunk". 'l‘oznpemtuto regulated by Thermoada'it, the laws: dovelupmant in $13. heating. Telephone in every roam. GoL‘ privileges. Capacity 000. Wrize lorii.as:ratcd 00 t. . A magniï¬cent ton-story ï¬ne-proof avidition is just being comeetod, making this famous hostolry the newest and most ugh-«ht. of Atlantic Cay Hotels. A new {esturo is the unusual sizo of the bed rooms, nun-aging 19 fee: squsre. CHARLES 0. MARQUETTE, TRAYMORE HOTEL COHPANY. Relief is certain after a few do'ses. HO\\’ ADAM WAS I’UNISBED. CHARACTER IN TROUSERS. HIS CHANG-ZS. Manager. SHILOH’S Lung Ger-mine 60.. $9 Rae 3m. Jackson. Mich. Quick ease for the worst coughâ€"quick .rolief to the heaviest coldâ€"and SAFE to take, cvén {or a child. C at' is".Shiloh's Cure. mes 1:! under a. guarantee €01!th co cure golds and coughs C id quicker than any other 0 S «(icing-or your money back. 3433a“! E} success command Shï¬oh’s Cur). 259.; :Yï¬ï¬ï¬ iï¬ï¬ï¬g Flamigan: “Faith an' Eliot do be an oidee of me own Wan av mm L: 1' 1m how hot it is an' 111’ other is 1‘ 1111 how cold it is." Finnigan: “Phoy do yez 1101’ two av thim thermomyters hangm' lemmst 111' back av yer po1ch. Flanuigan. "" It is not only a. cure for Consumption but 2-. ‘prevontacivc. If your lump are merely weak and the disease has not yet. manifested itself. you can prevent its devel- opment. you can build up your lungs and system to their normal strength and caper city. ' LungoGerminc has cured advanced Con. sumption. in many cases over four years ago. and the patients remain strong and in splendid. health to-day. Here to evldence from one case ' Under date of March 11. 1907. William Schmidt. 1904 Coleman street, St. Lou-Cs Hm. “Timerâ€"“It is now nearly {our years since my core of Consumption was made complete by your Luna-Ger- mino. and, I am hoppy to say that. I remain as well and stronz' m-dny as the day I was cured. I on healthy and able to work every day." We,wlll gladly send you further oroct of many other remarkable cures. also a FREE TRIAL o! Lunc-Germlna. together with our new book on the treatment and care of Consumption and Lung Trouble. Luns' Carmine 60.. 5 Rae BIL. Jackson. “AA" You should take immediate steps to check ,the progress of ’chese symptoms. The long- er you allow them to advance. and develop. the more deep»seawd and serious your con- dition becomes. abs ‘lute'b’. that Lungâ€"Genuine. the German Treatment. has cured completely and nor- manentiy case aim: case of advanced (“on- sumpticnrtTubercuiosis). Chronic Bronchi- tis; Catarrh of the Lungs. Catarrb of tho Bronchial Tube‘s and other Lung Trguibles. Many suifercrs who have lost all how- and who had been given up by physicians have been permanently cured by Lang- Gomine. Midas? THESE ARE RECARDED SYMPTOMS OF LUNG TROUBLE AND Do you spit yellow and black matter? Are you continually coughing and hawk- us? Do you have night sweats? Do your lungs ever bleed? Have you palns in chest and sides? Do you have palns under your shoulder ARE THEY WEAK OR PAINFUL? Consumption :., $1. You Pay No DutY- We Stand to Prove to You BOTH IN USE. D. S. WHITE, President.