TORONTO, ONT. "Capital (Paid Up) - - AD OFFICE. - $8,000,000 2,000,000 ESTABLISHED 1867. BUSINESS WITH FARMERS In addition to handling Commercial Paper, this Bank makes a s ial. business 'of Loans to Farmers, und the discount- 'ing of Farmers' Sales Notes at reasouable 'rates of interest. Careful and prompt attention is also «given to the collecting of Notes, ete. * SAVINGS BANK > DEPARTMENT, Special Attention is Directed to (he Following Advantages red by our Saviigs Bank: of One Dollar and upwards and interest allowed at current Loa 3 Intorest 'i¥ added to the deposit TWICE in each year, at the end of May and November. "The Depositor is subject to no delay whatever in the withdrawal of the whole or any portion of the deposit. . No Charge is made on withdrawing or depositing money. Port Perry Branch : &. M. GIBBS, Manager. R. D. ARCHER, M.D.C.M. Victoria : v D University ; M.B. Toronto University, * Member or the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Onb.; Licentiate of the Royal "College of Surgeons, Bilinburg ; Likentiate! "of the Royal College of Physicians, Edin- "burg ; Member of they Faculty of Physicians argeons . Glasgow; Late Resident 5 Jin 0% and 81 he > r be west of Davis' Furniture Emporiom, Queen Street, Office hours--9 to la. nd 2 to 5 p.m, and evenings. I have taken as partner, my brother, Dr 1. Archer, M. D., C. M., Member 'of Col- ege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ont. Port Perry, June 9, 1897. i DR. E. L PROOTER (SUCCESSOR TO DR, CLEMENS } M.D CM. of TrinityiCollege University, Toronto, with Honor Certificate. Fellow of Trinity Medical College, Toronto. Mem. of Col, of Physicians and Surgeons, Ont., Licentiate of University of State of New York. Office and residence on Dr. Clemens' old site. Opposite Town all. . 'PORT PERRY. NOTICH. R. J. H. SANGSTER, Physician, Su geon and 'Accouchenr, and Dr. W. A. ~~ Sangster, Dentist, may on and after vo-day, £ be found iu their new Surgical and Dental Offices over the Post Office, where they will "ho found as heretofore, prepared t attend 'to their respective professions in all their "branches. Port Perry, Dec. 8, 1897. DR. 8. J. MELLOW, Prysicras, SURGEON, &o. 'Office and Residence, Queen St., Port Pesry ~ Office honrs--8 to 10 a.m.; 1to8 p.m, "and Evenings, : Telephone in office and house, open ight] 1d day over the lines south, connected with the residends of (+. L. Robson, V.8. Port Perry, Nov, 15, 1894. TERS olor. Deposits receivad at tho Hightst rent rien ders Talib and av each depositor semi-annually. H. G. HUTCHESON, MANAGER. Port Perry, June 26, 1897. £10000 STERLING (British Capital) To lend at 4, 4% -and 6 per cent on good Mortgage security. Apply to DAVID J. ADAMS Banker and Broker, Port Perry, Ont. MONEY TO LOAN. mee Subscriber is prepared to LEND ANY AMOUNT on Farm Security : AT 5 PER OENT. #@ Also on Village Property. 44" MORTGAGES BOUGHT. HUBERT L. EBBELS, Bariister. Office next to Ontario Bank, J. A. MURRAY, DENTIST, {Rooms over Allison's Drug Store] ROKT PERRE so All branches of Dentistry, including Crown and Bridge Work successfully . . practiced. Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminum or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement, Painless extraction when required: #ar Prices to suit the times® W. A SANGSTER, DENTAL SURGEON. Office over the Post Office. : Office Hours--9 to 12 a.m,, 2 to 6 p,m. Also open Saturday evenings, #ar Gold Fillings, Bridge and Crown Work a Specialty, Vitalised "Air. Dr F. D. McGrattan (DENTIST) L.D.S. of Royal College of Dental 8 also DDS. of Toronto Catron or Office over McCaw's Jewelry Store. Office hours--8 a.m. t08.30 p.m; Port Perry, June 20, 1898. JOS. BAIRD ICENSED AUCTIONEER for County of Ontario. Sale Register at the OpservEr Office. Patronage solicited. Manchester, Jan. 19, 1899, the AUCTIONEER. HE undersigned takes this opportuaity of ing thanks for the very liberal patrcnage he has received as Auctioneer in the past. The increased experience and extensive practice which I have had will be turned to advantage of patrons, and parties favoring me with their sales may rely on their interests being fully protected. No effort will be sj to make it profitable ds. for partics placing their sales in my han My Sudo will be found a ness on at the Licensed Auctioneer, Valuator &c. Sa: Thor aa trusting their Sales to me may given to rely on the utmsot attention being 5 i #3 1 your b d coughin will not disappoint you. There's a record of sixty years to fall back on. Three sizes: 26c., Jnough for tn ordinary 001d y 53. Jusy Tight for bronyhi'ls, hnarufe ness, Bach & £1, mast ed for chronic J. e him," 'mearcely more than a girl, Whe beside Berthels. "He isn't int good hu mor today." # "Should say he wasn't," replied B thels. "ill tempered, bad mannered beast! Wouldn't wonder if he was go- ing bad." "Nonsense! My lons don't go bad. Finding fis Bride. In one part of the canton of Ticino, in Switzerland, a very quaint marriage | ceremony . prevails. The bridegroom | dresses in his "Sunday best" and, ac. companied by as many friends and rel atives as he can muster for the fete, goes to claim his bride. Finding thé door locked, he demands admittance, the Inmates ask him his business, and In reply he solicits the band of his chosen maiden. If his answer be deemed satisfactory, he is successively introduced to a num: ber of matrons and maids, some per: haps deformed and others old and ugly. Then he is presented to some large dolls, all of which he rejects with scorn, amid general merriment. The beyildered bridegroom, whose impeta- osity and temper are now sorely tried, | is then informed that his ladylove is absent and invited in to see for him- self. He rushes into the house and gearch- es from room to room until he finds her in her bridal dress, ready to go to church, 'Then are his troubles over and his state as a Benedict assured. Getting In Soelety, n, ides, he's only a two-year-old. Look at old Archon. He's ten if he's a day, | and you don't see him going bad, do { you?" "There's something wrong with Brin. dle, anyway," insisted the man. | | "Of course there is. He's had a rough | morning of it. He was clumsy and | stepped on Archon's toes at rehearsal, | and Archon boxed his ears. The hyena | in the next cage laughed, and that hurt | | Brindle's feelings. You know how sen- { sitive he is. He sulked so that I bad fo { beat him to make him perform at all, | He's awlully cut up about it, for you know 1 really believe he Is fond of me." | "Wish you'd believe that about some- | body else, Sue," said the man wistful | ly, looking down into the clear, brown | eyes that were fixed on the lion. "Perhaps 1 don't want to," said the | girl saucily. "Besides, Brindle is my | sworn slave. You can hear him swear- ing now," she #dded, laughing, as the handsome beast muttered Honwise deep down in his great chest. "Mlle, Zelka, the feline empress," was right in her half jocular estimate of Brindle. feelings. Some lions are savage, oth- ers are sullen, more are treacherous, Brindle was a lon with | sleep until he saw ber. After Rl 2 seven duys he stopped to rest under a | rather unfortunate that the story stops | here | e it would be interesting { I Up, Cmsor! Come, Senator, over! Hola! {Around thelconfines of the cage, now running, now\leaping over the set ob- | structions, glided the tawny, sinuous | bodies of the llion troupe, while their mistress, in the center, waved them on with her wand, But all the time she was watching, not Brindle, but Ar- chom, and Brindle was watching too. Soon it wap the big lion's turn. In' answer to the command he came for- | ward, Dut, there was strange in his motion. His eyes were get, and hé moved jerkily, and the | great tufted tail that had been curv- ing 'around! his flanks grew straight and rigid ag an iron club. "Tome, Afchon," sald the girl. "Up! | Get up, sir] Archon!" Then, without | raising hey voice, for the discipline of | the eirens thinks first of its audience-- | the andierce that must not be unpleas- | antly distarbed--she said rapidly: "Set the poledfand keep hint back. I can't | get to the door. He's going bad." Slowly the great lion moved on-- stiffly, Hke a cat stalking a sparrow. The others crouched at the sides, silent and trembling. Only Brindle growled slightly, | Then there was a rattle and | clank of) the iron door, and a man, | bearing heavy club in his hand, leaped into the cage. "Phill" 'cried the girl, with a thrill | in lier voice that told him more than he had ever known before. "Go back! | They don't know you! You'll be kill- | ed! "FE ean handle"-- Several young men in our smartest |and all are absolutely cold blooded. | "pa "jie was drowned in the get were asked by an Inquisitive genius | how they managed to get in high socle- ty. "I danced my way in,' said one, who frequently leads a cotillon. Anoth- er said: "I was too ungraceful for that. But I had a serious way with me, and t into the sacred circle by means of | it at all because be was the hb "1 taught a je elephant herd, and etephn class, made acquaintance of the best are very wise and believe nothing young men, met their niothers, fathers and finally thelr sisters." A third: "I got in by being a stranger in New York. While on a hunting expedition in the west I was able, through a hap- py circumstance, to be of assistance to a very prominent leader of New York society. In gratitude, I suppose, he ex- acted a promise that I would visit him if 1 ever came east. I came, I called, 1 conquered. He dined me at his club, then at his home, where I met his fam. ily. His daughter is now my wife. erp Sduth American Kidney Cure is the only kidne, treatment that has proven equal to correct all the evils that are likely to befall these physical regulators. Hun- dreds of testimonials to prove the curative merits of this liquid kidney specific in cases of Bright's disease, diabetes, irritation of the bladder, inflammation, tendency. Don't delay, --22 Sold by A: J. Davis. Conktantinople Beggars' Feast Day. One day in the year Constantinople is free from the beggar nuisance--on Nov, 25. This is the festival of St. John the Almsgiver, the patron saint of the mendicant profession. No beg- gar of the Greek faith is on his or het beat that day. In the forenoon all, or dropsical 'nearly all, Orthodox mendicants at- tend a kpeclal service in the church of 'St. Constantine, at which an archbish- op officiates. It is arranged by thelr corporation, for they are organized into a guild like any other trade. The church, spacious as it is, is none too large for the numerous congregation of cadgers, many of whom in their holiday garb look like respectable eiti- zens. The rest of the day Is spert in festivities, which are apt to extend so far into the might that many of 'the revelers are unable to attend to busi the morrow. i Jy o ssn. renovators, blood | and every gland and in the whole anatomy is benefited and stimulated in the use of them. 40 doses in a vial, x0 cents.--21 : "Sold by A. J. Davis. There are a very few exceptions to | this rule, however, and Brindle was | one of those very rare exceptions, | with a capacity for affection and loy- | alty, Mlle. Zelka bad only a faint in- kling of this. Berthels didn't belie in | but {the worst about animals. That is th | 'only reason why all of them don't di young. Berthels was anxious about | Mile. Zelks, who was plain Sue Ran- | some to him. That she wasn't Suef | Berthels was not his fault. If she | 'ever did become so, he intended that { Der lion training career should end, | and she suspected this. partly coquetry that made her leave him now, walk over to the cage and, putting her piquant face close up to the lion's, begin to talk to him. But Brindle's sensibilities had been lacerated, To be beaten by his queen was a humiliation of spirit beyond all others. Not yet had the smart of it passed away. Therefore he now arose haughtily, stalked over to the farther corner of his cage and affected a mas jestic disdain of his charmer"s conver: sation. "Well, you aren't very polite this ed away. "Hope you'll feel better when it comes time for the show." "And I hope you'll cut that beast out gaid Berthels as he went to his ele phants. had fosulted Brindle that morning chose to make some jeering remarks, Arose Brindle then in wrath and spoke in substance as follows through the network of bars fit which be claw= ple's leavings, if I could break into that cage for about two seconds and grin through the top of the tent." "He, he, lie, hel Hapith-h-h-hrr-ha-hal" taunted the hyena. "Ha-ha"-- The hateful voice died away as a ris: ing growl from Archon's cage gave news that the king of the circus had wakened--wakened with a strange fire in his eye, before which the other ani- of T this §: Lhe 'which ao. had gone bad. At one glance B knew it; knew, too, that the demon in possession of the great lion might lie _craftily in wait for long, but that soon- er or later it would glut Itself in slaughter, ne . 2 egw te - . + Of the attendants surrounding the cage where the feline empress ruled been with the elephants. but anxie had brought him into the ring when lka's act Was called. With a So it was § afternoon," she remarked as she turn- | of the programme tonight, Sue, dear," | After they had goné the hyena which | "You snickering etter of better peos get one swipe at you I'd knock that ig 'her beasts that night one wore a grave | | and drawn face. Berthels should have | shriek of thousands of voices as the ilion hurled himself straight at oat, smiting at her with those paws, At the sanie time a sec- ny body darted through the d the two met, Like a flash | had slipped away from the onslaught, but a glancing pact had sent her to the floor. Half ped as she was, she caught at the to raise herself, for once a train- 'is down authority is gone, and any is likely to attack. A strong arm ed ber and drew her toward the or, but the way was blocked. Lock- 'in a furious embrace, the mad lion the two-year-old were tearing clawing each other, while the rest k, terrified, at the sides. Even in r peril the girl thought of the faith. "ful beast. y rchon will kill him!" she cried, clutching tbe elephant man's arm. , he is working In at his throat! can't they get firebrands?" hat Berthels did then was partly m gratitude and partly from the aral fighting courage of the man o trains wild beasts. He swung his yy club up aud as Brindle in a final t for life tore half loose from his brought the weapon down with a hing blow across the mad lion's av. A lion's nose is his sensitive t. Half stunned, the giant relaxed grip, and Brindle tore away. Arch- athered himself to leap. Again the fell, but this time too late. The n was down. At him, Brindle! cried the girl, fehing at Archon with her slender nds, and the faithful lion responded h another attack. ut now the fighting madness was at eight in Archon's brain. One paw e Berthels' arm, tle foaming jaws at his throat, when there came crackle of pistols, and the fierce rose, bespattered with blood, turn- hither sand thither and closed its They dragged Berthels out of the then and there, but not so the Over her Brindle, torn and man- mounted guard until she came to im her faint and drew herself to her Jeet with ber hands buried in his hels insisted that he and the 'ought to be married on bey buried Archon, but his | wouldn't allow it. Flowev- d a professional wedding in cage, and Brindle, standing y on his hind legs, with crossed o flags in his mouth, was best pre Bt. Rule's Tower. tower, In the town of St is an evidence of the link St. Andrew, whose feast | Bipes keep, to the coufi- yhom he Is the patron saint. runs that a monk called Rule, brought the bones of "from Constantinople to wh of St. Andrews after 'Whether the story Is frue th ed, e something | ade tree, e there, being no longer J 'the temptation, he fell nto a sound sleep. When he awaken. "he was 80 sorry that he cut off his yell 'and threw them on the ground. 'Krom them grew the tea plant. It is thought of a 'eyelids and wheth- 3 for them to § es WOO and a | gang of Chinese, all squabbling and | making noises like dogs growling over | bones, fought with one another to get | on a platform where a Doller was | | chained. There was @ scuffle. One | | Chinese was pushed backward and { fell. His head hit the metal and | cracked like a nut. He gave a wriggle | and died. The Russians who saw the | accident were affected. The Chinese | | laughed. He lay for an hour in the | sun until I undid his sleeping rug and | spread it over his fade. He was soon | forgotten. A Chinese threw some hot | water over a growling dog and made | it howl. At this there were shriek} of | mirth. | "The engine puffed and groaned and | jerked the wagons into progress. The | last I saw of this spot was two China- | men pitching mud at the same dog to keep it from sniffing at the body of the | dead." There is a deal of sound sense in the | proverbs of a nation. Earl Russell de- | | fined a proverb as being the wit of one man and the wisdom of many, and the aptness of this is well shown in the following from the Spanish, "Since we cannot get what we like, let us like what We get." The thought is as old as the race of mankind, but ages pass- | ed befdre one man hit upon the happy | expression of it. This saying from the { Chinesé is a whole homily on pride in | one sentence, "When a tree is blown | down, it shows that the branches are | longer than the roots." For a concise expression of the lofty | aspirations of youth and the sobel' achievements of riper years take this | sentence from Henry D. Thoreau, The | youth gets together his materials to build a bridge to the moon, or per- chance & palace or temple on the earth, and at length the middle aged man con- cludes to build a woodshed with them." Sense In Proverbs. Did Not Know What Was Going On. There is & fact about the French rev- olution more wonderful in its way than any which can be discovered in old newspapers, It is the fact, gathered from private letters of the period, that in those stirring times, when all the world was ringing with the events in Paris, there were actually people in that city living in absolute ignorance of the horrors around them. There was no reign of terror for them. They lived veritable recluses in their quiet suburban houses, hearing nothing, reading nothing of the turmoil which staltled and terrified the nations. One wonders much what manner of people these oysterlike folks might be. Noth- Ing sounds more incredible today. Yet there are many things In history not half so well authenticated, though his- tory Is curiously silent on so strange a circumstance. : Temperament and Exerclie. Careful tests and observations made at the Yale psychological laboratory have demonstrated the Importance of studying Individual temperament be- fore prescribing a system of physical exercise, A nervous temperament, for example, requires a different treatment from that required by a phlegmatic temperament, without regard to the physical condition of the subject. The mental factors are more neces sary than the muscular In the develop- ment of strength. A nervous person should never be required to take heavy exercise. A phlegmatic person, on the contrary, requires it. The phlegmatic temperament indicates reserve energy in both muscles and verve cells, while the nervous temperament has less re- serve pawér, but greater ability to use the energy at hand. Mirrors of the Israelites. The earliest mirrors of which men- tion is made In history were lu use among the Israelites in the tiuie of Moses. That gentleman, as recorded in 'the Bible, commanded In a tertal 0 the BS be transformed Into wash basins for the priests. They were made of brass. Doubtless similar utensils of this and other materials were in use long before that. At that same period black glass was employed for the purpose, as well as transparent glass with black foil on the back. It is related that the Span. jards found mirrors of polished black stone, both convex and concave; among the natives of South Amerie. ° What the Truffle Is. The ancient Romans, at whose sump- tous banquets truffles played an fm- portant role, supposed that thelr ex- istence was one of the material results of thunder. More modern botanists have classed it as a species of mush- room, but it can scarcely be termed such. To be exact, the truffie is a tu- Dberculous fungus, a sort of morbid ex- travasation of vegetable sugars anal- ogous to oak balls or nutgalls and doubtless originating. as these latter, from the sting of an insect. Accidental Discharge of a Pun. A capital pun may arise by pure ac- cident, as recorded in Bucke's "Book of Table Talk" ' "A Mr. Alesander Gun was dismiss Kk 8 | Ing the third hd ba od from a post In the customs of Edin 'burgh for clfculating some false ri re tebe + ") ade, the muscles, . eto and Intestines during the fifth, the | heart and lungs In the eighth decade. | Increase o> decrease in the size or welght of the body co sequently is 'not due to simultaneous increase or de- crease in all its parts. | The Shark Is a Slow Swimmer. One ill service nature has done the ghark--namely, that of placing a trian- gular fin on his back which acts as a danger signal and gives warning of his approach. Happily the shark has not been gifted with sufficient sagacity to be aware of this peculiarity, for had he been so he would unquestichably aban- | don his habit of swimming close to the surface of the water and would in that case be enabled to approach his victim unobserved. The shark is a slow swim- mer for his size and strength. Byron observes, "As darts the dol- phin from the shark." But Byron was | a poet and does not appear to have been a close observer of the habits of inhabitants of the water, or he would | have known that a shark would bave | no more chanée of catching a dolphin than a sheep would of overhauling a hare. A shatk will keep up with a sail- ing ship, but it is as much as it can do | to follow in the wake of a fast steam- er, and a torpedo boat would be able to give it points. THE Springbok. A peculiarity of that most beautiful | of South African antelopes the spring- | bok is that it always leaps over hu- man tracks. It is at once exceedingly shy and marvelously active, and the reason for this strange antic is its in- tense suspicion of any possible ene- | | mies, among whom it has come to rec- ognize man as the most dangerous. It 18 not only with human tracks that the springbok goes through this performance, for it does the same with the tracks of lions or even when it gets wind of 4 lion. The leap is ex- ceedingly geaceful, and the animal cov- ers from twelve to fifteen feet at each bound. It drops on all four feet at | once and immediately rises again, mak- ing a clear spring without any run. Its usual gait when not pursued is a light springy trot. The springbok usual- ly travels with its nose to the ground, as if constantly on the lookout for tlie scent of eneinies. Pueblok and the Compass. Among the Pueblo Indians points of the ¢ompass are recognized, and | each has its color. North is yellow, | west is blue, south is red, east is white, the upper regions are many col- | ored and the lower regions are black. All the prey gods are represented by | their images in these six divisions: | For example, there is the yéilow | mountain lion of the north, thé blue mountain lion of the west, the red mountain of the south, and so on. | Likewise it is with the other beasts, | and thus a very considerable number | of deities is formed. All of them must | receive worshipful attention lest they get angry and revenge themselves for the 'neglect. Where Amber Is Found. The largest quantity of amber Is found on the southern shore of the Baltic between Memel and Konigs- | berg, Where it i8 cast up by the actiod | of the ground swell after the norther- ly galéd. It is also found on the coast of Siéily, on the shores of the Adriatic, on the English beach of Norfolk and Suffdlk and at Cape Sable in Mary- land. Mining for amber in beds of brown lignite or wood coal is carmed on in Prussia. and it is found in ex- cavations all over Europe. The Aromatic Clové Tree. A peculiarity of the clove tree is that every part of it is aromatle, though the greatest strength is in the bud. Be- sides the buds, the stems are gathered and form an articlé of commerce com- of strength, To this is due the fact that ground cloves can be purchased in the home matket at a lower price than whole cloves. Se rpms Trying Situation. Miss Amatenr--Can't you give me a part with more speaking in it? Theatrical Manager--For what red- son? Miss Amatent--Well, before going on the stage I belonged to a woman's de- Dating club, and pot having a chance to say much goes very ill with me. Hal Been There. "There 1s ub doubt," said the student | of law, "that many people have been imprisoned, Hltbough innocent of any crime." X "1 know that by sad experience." "You don't say sol Lets have the story. "There's no story to ft. 1 merely had the bad luck to be drawn on several Juries that were locked up over night" Lik i the new scientific remedy fob backache, lage or weak back, gra Bright's disease, diabetes, dropsy, and kidney, bladder snd urinary troubles oung or old. If your back or kidneys ther you, just try Dz. Prrener's BACs Acer Kioney Tasiers. They'll convinea you theyre good by curing" you. Price Be. a box, at all drurgicts or sent by mail, Tae Dr Zixa Prooies Coy Toronto, Ont ett en A She Soon Altered It. 5 Many young ladies have found it necessary to improve, or rather to alter; the spelling of the names with Ww! they were originally blessed. Mabel becomes Mabelle, Jesslé becomes Jes- sica, Mary becomes Marie, and so forth. A brother lately received a I ter from his young sister at a fashi able boarding school. It was Jessica. He answered: Dear Sister Jessica--Your welcord® let ter received. Papalca and mammaica are well. Aunt Maryea and Uncle Georglea started for Glasgowlica yesterday. 1 have. bought a new horse. You ought to sea Its name is Maudica. BAMICA. ft. It 18 a beauty. Your affectionate brother, The sister's next letter was signed "Jessie." Some Famous Echoes: There is a famous echo on the Rhing between Coblentz and Bingen whiecl. repeats a word seventeen times, while in the sepulcher of Metella, the wife, of Sulla, In the Romar Campagna, there is an echo which repeats five times in different keys and will also give back. with distinctness a bhexameteér ling which requires two and a half seconds to utter. Breivster mentions an écho on the nobth side of Shipley ebureh, in Sussex, England, which repeats twens ty-one syllables. 1 ------------ Death or lunacy seemed the only | alternative for a well-known and highly respected. lady of Wingham Ont., who had travelled over two continents in a vain search for a cure for nervous debility and dyspepsia. A friend recoms | mended South American Nervine, One bottld | helped, six bottles cured, and her own written testimony closes with theses words: "It had saved my life." ~~20 Sold by A. J. Davis. Often the Case. "Willlam 1 wist yor would go and weed out the Sowers hed." . William went and tnspected tt. Ther he returned. "]1t would be a simpler job, Marle, to flcwer oot the weed Led." Car Yon Say This? Try It How much pleasatter ii is te sit In a ent and think how much pleasanter it cab thao it is tc be walks an it is to be walking and think how much pleasanter it is to sit in d cab than it is to be walking. When Rh2umatism doubles a i and sufferer alike, ic of a cure, but n. m. Pegg, of Nora : "I was nearly doubled, I got three bottles of manic Cure and they: cured me, It's the quickest acting medicine 1 ever saw." --18 Sold by A J A Singing Well, » A singing well is one of the naturaf curiosities of Texas. In fine weather & sound like tliat of an wolian harp id given out by the well. At times the sourid is clear; then it recedes, as if tar away, and then it reaches the ear very faintly. These changes take place gvery few minutes and with great rege glarity. With an east wind blowing the water In the well gets very low, and the mysterious musical sound is taint. A strong west wind causes the Jose heart and of here's the exce wood, Ont, Davis, = pein an je tod Love Marriages. "Was it a love marriage, do you think?" 8 "Certainly. All marriages are love marriages." "Isn't that rather a sweeping state ment?" "Not at all. There are love of advens: ture, you know, love of luxury. love advertising and various other kinds of. Jove. There is no need of going into riage." Golden Kitchen Pots. In the royal kitchen at St. Peter not only are the walls and ceilings. Slack marble covered with va