For many years the passenger traffic from the Broomieclaw to the popular water places has been in a languishing condition. _ A great change, howeve'r, has taken place, an< there are, indications that the sail down the river is fast regainâ€" w@ng its lost popularity. An illness caused by lack of| scending with closed wings from a blcod will be benefited and cured| bhigher level of flight, though a few #*® by a course of treatment with Dr.| give the preference to the second bar« Williams‘ Pink Pills. These Pills| re! shot at teal scared by the discharge increase the red matter in the| Of A Otst barre! and darting upward Tiea <nd enable. & to carly to| and ll: ::lny direction but that which is every organ and tissue an increasâ€"] exze(lr);;d which we bave never seen ed supply of oxygen, the great supâ€" Portef-) ofy all orgfnié ife. "This has! l!ï¬et;)tio}ned ";“d which yet might take a peen moved oy ues m thousands | gh place in the category is the sand f - $ & grouse, It is not to be rated as an of cases not only in Canada but in | 2. . i 4 * glish bird of sport, but is familiar all parts of the world. More peoâ€"| fe shoolers id h § is an ple toâ€"day owe health and happiâ€"| s io nas lt hfelvis tor aitane Bak Pink! as it comes fighting to water holes to t,h~ 4 e e medace. Oe L2 drink. Its flight is something like that an to any ovher & 'f Cal *j; of a pigeon, with very swift curves these is Mr. James St:'â€â€˜" 8. “2; 5~|\and undulations, and in its case again, kag, Alta., who says: _ ‘‘A f°w as in thit of the Virginian mosquito years ago I became ill and very nawk, it is said that those who have weak. Some days I would have nequired the knack can kill it with a wA hot dry fgver and on others would : comparative certainty which is the deâ€" be bathed in a cold sweat. I grew spair of the novice. weaker _and weaker until I could‘ After all perhaps our pheasant aeroâ€" do no kind of work and was finalâ€"| planing downward must still be given ly confined to my bed. I tried s(?V-‘f the highest marks for difficulty, for eral doctors, who cost me considâ€"; we hear of no one who presumes to erable money, but did me no good, | say he has discovered any infallible €"Fâ€"was still getting weaker and knack by which this most perplexing Aweaker. _ I asked the last doctor and yet apparently simple shot can who attended me to tell me frankâ€" be brought off with any great assurâ€" Iv if he could cure me, and he told, ance.â€"Country Life. Mr. A. Bell, who died at Peebles recently, in his 74th year, was #fprominent amongst Scottish gas managers for many years.â€" As manâ€" ager at Dalkeith he did much to poâ€" pularize the use of oil in gasâ€"makâ€" ing. Wevive the Jaded Condition. â€" MWhen energy flags and the cares of business become irksome; when the whole system is out of sorts and there is general depression, try Parmelee‘s Vegetable Pills. They witl regulate the action of a deâ€" rarged stomach and a disordered liver, and make you feel like a new man. No one need suffer a day from debilitated digestion when so simple and effective a pill can be gow at any darug store. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. Dundee‘s income next year is estimated at £53,851. !here is nothing equal to Mother raves‘ Worm Exterminator for deâ€" stroying worms. No article of its kina has given such satisfaction. James Drummond, keeper of Tilâ€" licoultry Town Hall and town‘s beliâ€"ringer, was found dead by his son suspended by the rope of the be!ll in the tower of the clock. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. That was long before either Arthur E. McFarlane or Arthur Stringer beâ€" came a topâ€"liner in the United States periodicals. A census of the really big stories and articles in the leading United States magazines would show a large percentage due to the Canadian colony in New York of whom MeFarâ€" lane is one of the brightest. He was born near Stratford, Ont.; has travelâ€" ed a good bit; written a great variety of good things; is an omnivorous worker; lives most of his time at Birch Cliff, near Toronto. Just at present he is on a shoepack jaunt to the Peace iver, incidentally picking up some d things and at bunkâ€"times when e rest of the gang is asleep pegging away at a novel he must deliver in the early fall.â€"Canadian Courier. Don‘t experiment with unsatisfacâ€" tory substitutes. Wilson‘s Fly Pads are the best fly killers made and will kill many times more flies than any other article. _ *What are you going to have?" said each to each. Impossible to decide. ‘"Ohâ€"guess we‘ll take fried eggs," said one of the Arthurs. Arthur E. McFarlane. Arthur E. MceFarlane is a Canadian; just as much as that other Arthur, crony of his yclept Stringer, with whom he fried pancakes in New York many a month; yes, with Canadian Harvey O‘Higgins, too. They were a jolly, brainy but impecunious three; said of them that once in those batchâ€" ing years one of them at last sold a story. The three adjourned to a gildâ€" ed restaurant, took a table at the rear end and looked critically over the bill of fare, as if any one of them could have bought out the entire menu. .These Pills are sold by all mediâ€" ine dealers or may be had by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Meâ€" dicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Fs"iv%&,sfull getting weaker and Aveaker. _ I asked the last doctor who attended me to tell me frankâ€" ly if he could cure me, and he told me my case was so complicated,that be did not think he could help me. I told him I had heard a great deal abcout Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and asked if he thought they would help me. His reply was: ‘Well, they wen‘t do you any harm and they may help you.‘ I sent for a half dozen boxes at once and began takâ€" ing them. After taking three boxes there was no doubt they were helpâ€" ing me, and I continued using them for some time longer. _ With the result that I am now as strong and hearty and can do as good a day‘s work as any man in my neighborâ€" hood." 2 The Cause of Most Hinegsâ€"Th3 Cure, Enrich the Blocod Supply. LAGK OF PURE BLOO0D "Not always," replied the real wiseâ€" acre. "She may be a mother who has a baby she thinks is prettier."â€"Cathâ€" olic Standard and Times. "Wound up my advertisement by saying I was on a diet," said the lucky one. "That ‘on a diet‘ notice goes right to the heart of stingy souls who are trying to cut down expenses. They hate to figure on a washerwoman‘s meals and jump at the chance of getâ€" ting one who doesn‘t eat.â€"New York Sun. Often the Case. "You can pretty safely bet," began the man who thought he knew, "that amy woman who doesn‘t gush over a pretty baby is a confirmed old maid." ‘"How did you bappen to get four times as many letters as Tâ€"did?"‘ said one washerwoman who had advertised for work by the day to another who had advertised for the same thing. Truthful. Angry Father (to son)â€"Yon never saw me getting into a serape like that when I was a boy. Flippant Sonâ€"No, dad, I never did.â€"Exchange. } One of the most important matters _ is the preparation of the patent, a long strip of parchment, to the end of | which is affixed the wax seal, the color _of which varies, according to the rank _ of the new member. Apnother item is “ the robe, made of scarlet cloth with | three doublings of ermine, the number | of bars varying according to rank. \Thus a duke bhas four bars in front ! and the same number behind, a marâ€" | quis one less, and so on. The Antiquity of the Ballet. Strictly defined, the ballet is properâ€" ly a theatrical exhibition of the art of dancing in its highest perfection, comâ€" plying generally with the rules of the drama as to its composition and form. It was in existence in Italy as far back as A. D. 1500, the court of Turin in that day making especial use of it and the royal family and nobles taking part in it. The ballet was first introâ€" duced in France in the reign of Louis XIII., and both that monarch and Louis XIV. occasionally took part in its dances. About the year 1700 womâ€" en made their first appearance in the ballet, which up to that time had been performed exclusively by men, as was the case also with plays and operas, but no woman ballet dancer of any note appeared until 1790. A Left Handed Man. "I never realized how unpopular a left handed man can be until I joined a fishing club," said the man who canâ€" not do much with his right hand. *"Soâ€" cially I was all right, but when we beâ€" gan to fish the rest of the fellows couldn‘t get far enough away from me. ‘There was another left handed man in the party, and we were shunted upstream, away beyond the best fishâ€" ing holes. I am a good fisherman. When alone I can manage rod and line as skillfully as the next man, but when I go fishing with a lot of right handed fishermen our lines tangle and we get into a regular muss. 1 have tried to learn to manage my pole with my right bhand, but I haven‘t made much headway at it; also I have noâ€" ticed that right handed persons who tried to become ambidextrous could learn to do everything with their left hand better than to fish."â€"New York Times. Altogether the financial disburseâ€" ments amount in the case of a new earl to between £600 and £700, some of which finds its way to the chancelâ€" lor of the exchequer and somesto the crown as represented by the college of arms. A considerable portion of this expenditure is, of course, incurred in the purchase of the coronet.â€"Lonâ€" don News. 7 Then there are preparations in reâ€" gard to making or changing coats of arms, in connection with which fees to the extent of about 50 guineas are paid by the recipient of a summons to the house of lords. Preparing a New Peer For His Seat In House of Lords. Numerous formalities have to be gone through before any new peer is entitled to take bis seat in the house of lords. higher level of flight, though a few give the preference to the second bar« rel shot at teal scared by the discharge of a first barre!l and darting upward and in any direction but that which is expected. Birds That Test the Skill of the Best Marksmen. We often hbear the question as to which is the most difficult bird in the world to shoot. The answer is usually, glven in favor of the pheasant deâ€" scending with closed wings from a LORDLY FORMALITIES. DIFFICULT TO SHOOT. How She Caught Them. Natural Gas Near Cooksvitle. While drilling for water on the farm of Harrison Hisy, two miles north of Cooksville, recently, natural gas was struck at a depth of 248 feet. That night the well was lighted and burnâ€" ed from 8 to 10 feet above the pipe. The light was visible for miles around. It is the intention to drill further, with the intention of supplyâ€" ing the whole countryside with fuel. 5 19c en oimsaotions i nelen o a draught. It will do you good. In this age, when women are clamoriag for something to do, surely it would not be amiss for them to take up an educational _ crusade against â€" the scourge of consumption." Another physician, commenting on this opinâ€" ion, said: "By rebreathing the air of a stuffy room the germs of a cold are likely to be taken into the system, especially if there is another person in the room who has a cold. But introduce a draught in the room and sit in the draught, and, no matter how many persons with colds are in the room, if you breathe the pure air in the draught you will not inhale the cold germ, and you will be all tight. I, for my part, know of no discease that is due to a draught." Another Notion Swatted. Sir Frederick Treves, one of the eminent physicians in England, has attacked what he valls the old wives‘ theory‘" that persons catch colds in draughts. He recommends draughts as excellent things for the health and as preventive of colds. ‘"‘The idea is absurd," said he. "No cold ever had such an origin. Colds are the result not of draughts but of stuffy rooms. Don‘t mind sitting in In the matter of the extended franâ€" chise, therefore, it was not theory but practical experience that won the day. It was rot because women wore human beings as much as men; it was not even because they were inâ€" telligent human being to whom men were ready to entrust the case of their homes and families; it was because they believed on the evidence of exâ€" perience that women if they could vote would take an intelligent interest in public questions and would by their votes forward the best interests of the country and its people. The women of New Zealand vote at elections as a matter of course just as they partake of their meals or do any other ordinary duty of everyday life. The principal change produced by the new order of things, as far as the family life of the people is conâ€" cerned, would seem to be that what may be called political questions have become matters of general interest inâ€" stead of being as formerly matters which were tacitly presumed to be g)lut-side the sphere of oneâ€"half the famâ€" ily. The fears expressed at the time the franchise was given them that the reâ€" sult would be either that the women would vote just as their husbands and fathers told them to vote or that the new privilege would mean dissension in families and the practical degradaâ€" tion of the women have not been jusâ€" tifled by the experiences. The proportion of women who votâ€" ed at each election compared with those whose names were on the rolls have been almost exactly the same as that of the male voters. There are not at present in New Zealand as many women as men, and the actual votâ€" ing power of the women is nearly 10 per cent. less than that of the men. Practically, however, all who can do so vote at each election. In New Zealand Women Are More Than Welcome to the Franchise. The statute extending the franchise to New Zealand women was passed in 1893. Since then there have been six Parliaments elected by the joint votes of the men and women of New Zeaâ€" land. In all of these elections, says the North American Review, the woâ€" men of the country have taken their full share. S$10 Fiaï¬ THEIR VOTES ARE PRIZED. ISSUE NQ. 35â€"10. Belt Cut His Throat. A peculiar fatality occurred at Warrenheip, Victoria, lately, a farmer named. Patterson being the victim. He was feeding a maize cutting mill when he was caught in the machinery and drawn against the sharp edge of the driving belt, which cut his throat, severing the windpipe and causing instant death. _ England‘s Army of Unemployed. Despite the $80,000,000 annually spent by Great Britain to relieve disâ€" tress, there are toâ€"day 7,000,000 people in that country in actual want from lack of work. It is this vast army of unemployed that constitute Engâ€" land‘s emigrants, and in the last four years the Salvation Army alone has started over 50,000 of them on their way to Canada. The general worthiness of this class is testified to by the fact that of all those emigratâ€" ing under the auspices of the Salvaâ€" tion Army, less .than one per cent. failed to make good. |__TRADING on a good name and deceiving | the public is what the imitators of the | wellâ€"known ‘"The D. & L." Menthol Plaster eré doing. Don‘t be fooled, insist on the ‘genuiue, "The D. & L. z By and bye the G.P.A. got cross with some other official and fired in a resignation to that gentleman. It took considerable diplomacy on Mr. Mcâ€" Nicholl‘s part to get the matter into his hands for adjustment, but he finâ€" ally succeeded. Then he wrote the G.E.A. and asked him in future to send his resignations direct to the viceâ€"president where they would be roperly dealt with. It is said that Eroke the G.P.A. of the resignation habit. Anyway he is still in the comâ€" pany‘s service. Cured of Resigning. D. MecNicholl, viceâ€"president of the C.P.R., once had an irrascible, though very capable G.P.A. at an important point on the system. Whenever the G.P.A. ran a tilt with the viceâ€"presiâ€" dent, which was not infrequent, he would write his resignation to the viceâ€"president. Mr. MceNicholl, with true Scotch imperturbability, stowed the resignation away in his desk ani in course of time had quite a collecâ€" tion of them. Holloway‘s Corn Cure is the meâ€" dicine to remove all kinds of corns anâ€"l warts, and only costs the small sum of twentyâ€"five cents. Dalmellington Iron Co. are erectâ€" ing 40 workmen‘s houses near the Old Hospital. A Time. for ‘Everything.â€"â€"=The time for Dr. Thomas‘ Eclectric Oil is when croupy symptoms appear in th» children; when rheumatic pains beset the old ; when lumbago, asthâ€" ma, coughs, colds, catarrh or earâ€" ache attack either young or old ; when burns, scalds, abrasions, conâ€" tusions or sprains come to any member of the family. In any of these ailments it will give relief and work a cure. Edinburgh is thinking of going in for a perfect netâ€"work of new tram routes on the overhead wire system. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Carget In Cows. Last year 92 boys left the Mars training ship at Dundee for serâ€" vice. The members of the Stirling Tyâ€" pographical Association are petiâ€" tioning for an increase in wages and a reduction in working hours. Bowling is growing in popularâ€" ity among ladies in Glasgow. The other day ten of them took part in games on the Corporation greens at Alexandra Park. The destruction of the house fly is a public duty. Almost all Boards of Health are nmnow carrying on a erusade against it. A bulletin reâ€" cently issued by the Dominion Govâ€" ernment states that no house fly is free from disease germs. Use Wilâ€" son‘s Fly Pads freely and persistâ€" ently, and do your share towards cxterminating this menace to the public health. Your Druggist Will Tell You Murine Eye Remedy Relieves Sore Eyes, Strengthens Weak Eyes. Doesn‘t Smart, Soothes Eye Pain, and Sells for 50c. Try Murine in Your Eyes and in Baby‘s Eyes for Scaly Eyelids and Granulation. Hope for the Chronic Dyspeptic. â€"Through lack of consideration of the body‘s needs many persons alâ€" low disorders of the digestive apâ€" paratus to endure until they beâ€" come chronic, filling days and nights with suffering. To these a course of Parmelee‘s â€"Vegetable Pills is recommended as a sure and speedy way to regain health. These pills are specially compounded to combat dyspepsia and the many ill; that follow in its train, and they are successful always. A whale, 25 feet long, was capâ€" tured in the Tay, near Newport. There is a proposal on foot to inâ€" stitute a festivity. week at Edinâ€" burgh University to commemorate the founding of the institution. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. The rate of wages and the workâ€" ing agreement in the building trade in Paisley will be the same next year as in past 12 months. A Glasgow naturalist has an Auâ€" stralian loveâ€"bird, which, in addiâ€" tion to whistling, can spealk disâ€" tinctly over fifty words. By the death of Mr. Robert Harâ€" die, 63 years of age, clothier, Selâ€" kirk has lost one of its most reâ€" spected and most prominent inhaâ€" bitants. The War Office has supplied the history of each of the cannon in the various parks of Glasgow. The kistory will be printed and affixed to each gun. barning, painful skin. Zamâ€"Buk from the very commencement seemed to go right to the spot, and the pimples and sores and the irritation grew less and less. Within a few weeks my baby‘s skin was healed completely. â€"He has now not a trace of jrash, or eruption, or eczema, or burning §sore. Not only so, but cured of the torâ€" i menting skin trouble, he has improved in ; general health." 1 _ Zamâ€"Buk is sold at all stores and medicine venâ€" 1dors, 50c. a box, or post free from Zamâ€"Buk Co., ; Foronto, for Yrice' 6 boxes for $2.50. â€" A certain cure far all skin dise=<e3, cuts, burus, etc., and forpiles, At Broughty Ferry the price of gas has been reduced a penny. This is to certify that I have used MINâ€" ARD‘S Linment in my family for years, and consider it the best liniment on the market. _I have found it excellent for horse flesh. If every houseckeeper would use Wilson‘s Fly Pads freely during the summer months, the house fly peril woeuld soon be greatly diminished. Montrose Suspension Bridge is said to be in an unsafe condition. SUCCESS FOR SIXTY YEARS. This is the record of Perry Davis‘ Painkiller. A sure cure for diarrhoea, dysentery, and all bowel complaints. Avoid substitutes, there is but one " Painkiller "â€"Perry Davis‘â€"25c. and 50¢. Leith Dock Commissioners are proposing to build a breakwater beâ€" tween Newhaven and Leith West Pier. The change of dictary that comes with spring and summer has the efâ€" fect in weak stomachs of setting up inflammation, resulting "in dysenâ€" tery and cholera morbus. The abâ€" normal condition will continue if ncot attended to and will cquse an exbaustive drain on the system. The best available medicine is Dr. J. D. Kellogg‘s Dysentery Cordial. It clears the stomach and bowels of irritants, counteacts the inflammaâ€" tion and restores the organs to healthy action. The largest salmon of the season, which weighed 32 pounds, was takâ€" en from the Tweed at Berwick, reâ€" cently. Infirmary for Sick Animals at the College COLLEGE REâ€"OPENS SEPT. 30th, 1910 N.B.â€"Calendar on application. E. A. A. GRANGE, V.8., M.S., Dept. H. Principal. Ontario Veferinary College Affiliated with the University of Toronto and under the Contrél of the Department of "Agriculture of Ontario. CARPET DYEING ___ and Cleaning. This is aspecialty with the "** British American Dyeing (Co° Send particulars by post and we are sure to antisty. Address Box 158, Montreal. ‘"A ho#d . ie ns rash cams out all over my baby‘s /ace and spread until it had totally covered his scalp. It was irritating and painful, and caused the little one hours of suffering. We tried soaps and powders and saives, but he got no better. He refused his food, got quite thin and worn, and was reduced to a very serious condition. I was advised to try Zamâ€"Buk, and did so. It was wonderfal how it seemed to cool and ease the child‘s _ _ Ww. 8. PINEO ‘"Woodlands," Middleson, N.S. The “OTTO HIG EL» e Soul of a Planois the Action. Insist on the Piq.no Action get a box to help introduce. Agents Wanted. Michlgan Bait Co., Dept. 20, Port Huron, Mich. Keaps you busy pulâ€" Hnlg them out. V}Prl_ta toâ€"day and FISHWILL BITE (Signed) like hungry wolves at all seasons if you use FISH LURE. A New Head In 30 Minutes NAâ€"BRUâ€"CO Headache Wafer 25¢. a box at your druggists‘ or by mail from National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Exchange that aching, throbbing, suffering, muddled head for a clear, cool, comfortable one by taking a ï¬iJ The Renfrew Machinery 5/ Go., Ltd., â€" Renfrew., Ont If yo’u can‘? come, write for Free Catalogue to |FLY KNQOCKER| TORONTO, LONDC :N OTTAWA Fairs Look for This Name The HEARâ€"Oâ€"PHONE will give you the ‘caeï¬u of good hearing. Send for free ocklet, giving particulars and names of satisfied users. Also @pecial Offer for a Month‘s Home Trial. THE SRAND ELECTRO OIONE LIMITED, 134 Spadina Avenue, Toronte. will keep cows free from flles at a cost of less than one cent a day. $1.75 CALLON "sTANDARD" Flies on Y our Stock â€" wWM. COOPER & NEPAEWS ToRroNntTo. "S 1 ANDARD" C ANCER, Tumors, Lumps, oto. InterBak and erternal, cured without pain byr our home treatment. Write us ineigm tog late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited, Collingwood. Ont. A2%%%e%2%%80%%e 00800 Is Your Hearing Good ? 8%48%8%%8%%%8888208%0 WORLD‘S GREATEST SEPARAT OR The NATIONAL LIFE Assurance Company Head Office of Canada, Toronto An Old Saw Saysâ€" AUTUMN TERM | COOPER‘S | DBECREASE THE MILK YIELD. Ask your Hardware Dealer, or ‘Procrastination is the thief of time." _ In the case of fife insurance it is the thief of family protection. _ How about YÂ¥OUR family ? If you have not yet proâ€" vided for them after you have gone DO IT NOW, Get particulars of the NATIONAL LIFE plans. EVERYBODY IKViTED Opers August :?‘th in all Departments of the Central Business College, Toronta. We invite requests for our new catalogue. Write W. H. Shaw, Principal, Yonge and Gerrard Sts., Toronto. To Our Exhibit WELCOME Perhaps you.could sell Insurance. If you think you could, write us. We want good men at all unrepresented points. Montreal, 50c. QUART