UIJIl WAYS [IF THE BEAVER Interesting lamination About This Buy Little Animd. The current number 0! Rod and Gun in Canada. has an article on the habits of the beaver in which the writer, frank 11. Risteen. tells some interesting things about that most interesting of North American uni- Illillh. ()1 the cutting power 0! the Denver’s teeth the writer says:â€" "'l‘he beaver is really a sort of portable pulp mill. grinding up most any kind o! wood that comes his HOW HE MANAGES TO STAY UNDER WATER IN WINTER. way. I once measured a. white birch tree. twenty-Um inches through, cut down by a beaver. A single beaver. generally. it nbt envoys, amputates the tree. and when it comes down the whole family {all to and have n ro- gular frolic with the bark and branches. A big beaver will bring down a fair-sized sapling. say three inches through. in about two minutes and a large tree in about an hour. “One of the queereet {acts about the beaver is the rapidity with which his long, chisel-shaped teeth will re- cover from an injury. I have known beavers to break their teeth in bit- ing a trap, and when I caught them again ten days attermird you could- n't see a sign of the break-the teeth had grOWn out to their former per- fection in that short period." _ Mr. ltisteen's experiences have not given him a very high opinion 0! the Denver’s swimming quers. I10 Writes: “As compared with the otter or mink the beaver is A VERY SLOW SWIMMER. "is iront legs hang by his sides, and he uses only his Webbed hind feet for purposes of swimming. It is easy to capture one in a canoe if you can ï¬nd him in shoal water. He is a most determined tighter, but clum- sy and easy to handle. If he could get hold of you with his teeth he would almost take a leg oflâ€"â€"So you want to catch him sharp. The place to grab him is by the tail." (u’ the ability 0! the beaver and some other wild animals and birds to remain a long time under water this writer says: "The ability 0! a beaver to remain! under Water [or a long; time is really' not so tough at prohtem as it looks. When the mac or pond is lrozen over a beaver will come up to the under surlnce o! the ire and expel his breafh so that it will form a Wide, llat bub- ble. The air coming in Contact with the m- and Water is purilied. and the beave' breathes it in again. The ot- ter nï¬nuskrat do the same thing. "When the ice is thin and clear I have often seen the muskrat attached to his bubble, and by pounding on the ice have driven him away from it. when he would drown in a very uhort time. I believe that the beaver as well as the loon. sometimes em- ploys this pneumatic suction princi- ple by breathing into the mud on the bottom, and thus remaining under water for a remarkable length of tune." That it is diflicult to hold most of tho- .shyt-r fur animals in captivity is known to those who have made the equ-rnm-nt. but the beaver evidently takes the lead in this respect in Mr. "ism-en’s estimation. as the follow- im: will Show: "It almost takes a burglar-[wool sale to hold a newly captured beaver. I UIH‘L' caught an old one and two kittens up the north branch 0! the hon-“est. put them in a barrel and brought them down to Miramichi Lake. That night she gnawed a hole through the barrel and cleared out. LEAVING IIER K IT’I‘ENS. They were so young that I had no Way of feeding them. so released them in the hope that. the mother might ï¬nd them. Soon after that I caught a big male beaver. I made a large log pen tor him 0! dry spruce. but the second night he cut a log out and disappeared. "Beavers. when alarmed generally make up stream. so I went up the brook to where a little branch came in and I thought I would go up that a little Way, and I hadn’t gone more than ten rods before I came across my lad sitting up in the bed of the brook having a lunch on a stick he had cut. He actually looked as it he knew he was playing tn nt when he caught sight of me out o the side of his eve. "I picked him up by the tail, brought him back. and put him in the pen. supplied him with plenty of Irexh poplar. and he seeined,ns tame mi possible and never gave me any “10"" trouble. I brought him out to Stanley where he lived for a. long time. 'l‘urnbull had a thoroughbred mongrel dog which was jealous o! the beaver. and one day attacked him. He only did that once for the beaver nipped the dog’s tail oil quicker‘u a cut could catch a mouse. Mrs. Hauskeepâ€"Goodness ! This meat. is absolutely raw. Thiz; new cook is wretched : she never cooks anything hall enough. ilr. ll'auskcepâ€"lkin't blame her She's unly a woman. Hrs. Ilziuskocanhat has that. to do with it. ‘P llr. Hauskccpâ€"Well ‘woman’s work is never done.’ you know. Germany has now 19 millions More people than France. and France has 3 millions more than Italy. Norvuus o'ld Invalidâ€"Well, Miss Nipper. I think it's quite time the passage walls were repapered ! humanlyâ€"Pardon me. sir. but. I am Waiting to sec ’0!!! your ’ealth goes on. (‘ofl‘ins is sich things to knock the paper oft a-comin' down. A ducwr giving advice to a pa- tient who was a furious smoker, said :â€".\'cver smoke cigars without using an amber mouthpiece. Also clean your pipes regularly after hav- ing smoked them. and avoid smok- ing the same pipe twice in civic suc- cession. Having taken them pre- cautions. avoid smoking altogether, ‘ you'll soon be all right." HELP WA ST E fFâ€"MALE TRIFLES WITH HISTORIES KNICK-KNACKS WHICH TELL OF HUMAN TRAGEDIES. Disasters of Long Ago Brought to Mind by the Finding of Relics. On January 16th. 1862. work was being pushed vigorously in the Hart- ley Colliery in Northumberland. Eng- land. Suddenly there was a grind- ing crash. and one of the immense twenty-ton iron beams of the venti- lating Shaft collapsed, and fell into the depths below. With its huge weight it smashed the brattice and carried down tons upon tons of earth and rock. burying completely every soul below. Two hundred and two were buried alive, for the pit had but one shaft. A few weeks ago the scene of this awful disaster was at. last. pumped dry, and the ï¬rst miners who had entered it {or Iorty years descended. There at the bottom lay a tub of of some mrgottcn trageay. Ilunt- ing {or seaâ€"bird’s eggs in the cliffs m':u° the harbor of Mendoza, in Smut]: America. two boys from the British ship “Eumruld†saw some- thing Shining in the cleft. far above the high-wulcr mark. Nature. or man. or both, soon wipe away. or cover up, the ugly remnants left by ï¬res. floods or ex- plosions; but now and thou a little relic comes to light, which brings pnwcrfully to 'l'hey reached it and found it was a handsome gold bracelet, set with stones. still clasped around the wrist of. a Woman’s skeleton. The bones Were Wedged tightly in a Cleft of the rock. where. no living creature could have passed. They brought the jew- el down. and inquiry proved that the relic dated from the awful earthquake of March, 1860, when a great tidal wave dashed over the land and swept seven thousand lives away in less than seventy seconds! The wav- es had caught the wearer of that bracelet from either beach or boat. and left her there, forgotten. in a niche of the rocks till the boys found her bones. nearly half a century later. coals stiil full to the brim. as it had been loaded on that. fatal day, and [erfnct in every particular. except that the Wiltt'r in which it. had stood so long had rusted its iron hoops. 'l‘ho annihilation of Corvcra's fleet by the Americans. 011' Santiago, is still fresh in the memory. But. the wrecks have been cleared away by snlvugemcn, or Waves, and the scene This Condition Causes More Gen- uine Suffering Than One Can Imagineâ€"How 9. Well Known Exeter Lady Obtained a Cure After She Had Begun to Re- gard Her Condition as Hope- less. ' From the Advocate, Exeter, Out. "A run down system!" What a. Wnl'lll of misery those few Words im- ply. and yet, there are thousands throughout this country who are suf- fering from this condition. Their blood is poor and Watery; they suf- fer almost Continuously from head- aches; are unable to obtain restful sleep and the least exertion greatly l‘ntigues them. What is needed to put the system right is a tonic, and experience has proved Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to be the only never-fail- ing tonic and health restorer. SHOWS THAT THE BLOOD AND NERVES NEED TONING UP. A Bun Down System. Mrs. Henry Parsons. a respected resident of I'ixeter. ()nt.. is one of the many who have tested and proved the value of Dr. Williams’ Pink l’ills. For many months she was a_ great sufferer from what is commonly termed "a run down sys- tem." To a reporter of the Advo- cate she gave the following story in the hope that other sufferers might beneï¬t from her experiencetâ€"“For many months my health was in a bad state. my constitution being greatly run down. I was troubled with continual headaches. my appt~ tite. was poor and the least exertion greatly fatigued'me. I consulted a. physician but his treatment did not appear to benefit me and I gradually became worse. so that I could hardly attend to my household duties. I then tried several advertised reme- dies but without result. and I began to regard my condition as hopeless. A neighbor called to see me one day and urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Having tried so many medicines without receiving beneï¬t. I was not easily persuaded. but ï¬nally I consented to give the pills a trial. To my surprise and great joy I noticed an improvement in my condi- tion before I had ï¬nished the ï¬rst box and by the time I had taken four boxes of the pills I was fully re- stored to health. I no longer suffer from those sever.- lieadaches. my ap- petite is good. I can go about my household duties without the least trouble; in fact I feel like a new WO- man. All this I owe to that best of all medicines. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. and I would strongly urge oth- er sufferers to give them a trial." llr. Williams’ Pink Pills are recog- nized the world over..asrthe best blood and nerve tonic. and it is this power of acting directly on the blood and nerves which enables these pills to cure such diseases as locomotor ataxia. paralysis. St. Vitus’ dance. sciatica. neuralgia. rheumatism. ner- vous headache. the after effects of la grippe. palpitation of the heart, that tired feeling resulting from ner- vous prostration; all diseases result- ing from vitiated huniors in the blood. such as scrolula. chronic ery- sipelas. etc. Dr. \Villianis’ Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medi- cine or can be had by mail. post paid. at 50 cents a box. or six box- 816: 32.50. by addressing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brockvillc. M l N I! THE DETAILS ()ne of the most, charming curios belongs to a nephew of Sir Richard Temple. It is a ring, which, when you touch a hidden spring. and place it near your ear, plays a tiny. tink- ling tune. it is only lately that this ring has been made play again. For years it was out of order, and when at lost its works were examin- ed. they were found to be choked with a clot of blood. of the battle, with blazing ships and drowning men IS CALM AND PEACEFUL as ever. A London jeweller possess- es a little relic which brings vividly to mind the horrors of the scene. It is a blackened lump of metal.-which close examination shows to be com- posed of silver Spanish dollars. It was found on the body of a sailor on the warship â€Maria Theresa." and is an eloquent testimony to the thoroughness with which the Ameri- can shells did their Work. (Phe ring is a reHc of a tragedy more than a century old. Made nearly two hundred years ago in Genoa. this quaint bit of jewellery czuxxe. into possession of an ancestor of its present nwner. who lived in France. at the time of the Revolu- tion. Detesting the wild work U! the mob, heart and soul into the cause of thel King and Queen. ‘ Like all the others who did so, he: paid the penalty. After long weeksi in a gloomy dungeon, he was led out, to (lie, with many others of the world's finest aristocracy. Just be-‘ fore his turn came. he held the ring to his ear. and for the last time he heard it tinkle out its cheery little: tune. Then he laid his head upone the guillotine. and his life-bloodi stained the block on which a few hours before a queen had died. I --\' --_ A curio, which at first, sight. has unthing striking about, it, lies upon 1.“; sitting-mom cl1i11111cy-piccc in 11 \anvmhamptnn house. 1L3 ownm, Mr. A!L::rtM11ttl1cws. an old sail- or. is a living example of how near u mam can out, dying. ‘ Vlin 1874 he was mate of the pearlǤ ing schooner “Fly.†when she was? wrecked on one of the Solomon Is" lands. lie and the others. seven in‘ all. got ashore in safety. only to; ï¬nd themselves in the hands of they cruellest tribe of cannibals in the3 world. They realized this when, af-i ter a week of imprisonment on good' food. they were taken out to form.‘ themselves. the principal dish in a' prolonged series of festivities. One1 by one they were knocked down withl a stone war-club! Matthews was left to the last. a‘ stunned spectator of the horrible! fate of his comrades. At last his‘ turn came. He was bound against! the sacrificial post, and a big chief. was l - fat the TEETH and BREATH m sm sozonon memo . . . 25. In Patent In 8020M“ POIIIEI . . ‘ 250 Largo LIQUID «(POWDER- - . . . 160 At the Store: or by Mail, postpaid, for the Price. ACTUALLY RAISING HIS CLUB when, with a. shriek and a. roar, a shell swept in from the sea. and burst, among the savages. A German warship-had seen the “Fly†fast on the rocks. and come up just in time. Mr. Matthews's re- lic is the fork which, but for that lucky shell, would have been used upon him as it had already done duty upon his comrades. This frightful fork is of a very hard. blu- ish-red wood, and of a. pattern only used at cannibal feasts. A tragedy so complete that not one single survivor remains to tell the tale is, fortunately, rare. One such, which Britons will always be proud of. was the ï¬ght of those gallant forty under Major Wilson against an army of a thousand savages. Ring- ed by death, they went to their end singing “God Save the Queen." ""'n“‘g‘l Mr. Rhodes. possesses among his treasures a unique memorial of this disaster. It consists of a pair of earrings. taken from the ears of the Chief Makoni leader. under Lo Ben- gula, of the great Matabele revolt. By a remarkable coincidence. this re- lic is one which surviveth a, second disaster. It is one of the very few which were saved from the burning of Mr. Rhodes's beautiful house. Groot Schuur! Probably you have seen a crowd ofT 20.000 people; you have looked about you at this sea of heads and; thought that such a number of hu- man beings represents the population of many a small town. It will sur-' prise you therefore to hear that 20,-. 000 persons are reported as missingi in London every year! Are they, found again? Only about one-fifth“? less than 4,000â€"of these missing; persons are ever accounted for, by! suicides and in other ways. The others disappear from friends for! ever. Many of them are “wanted"l The average duration of human life increased during the past hun- dred hears 3 years for men and 3; years for women. by the police, which explains why they do not reappear. Numbers of them leave London. going abroad or into the provinces. but the police state that the majority merely go from one part of the metropuéis to another.and live there under assum- ed names; their identity is changed and they are “missingâ€â€"within a few miles of those who seek them. 111C FLU NC HIMSELF MISSING LONDONERS huve come to death withâ€" of the 1 That â€all the King’s horses" have comparatively speaking, as good a time of it as "all the King's men" cannot be doubted by anyone who ‘lhas seen the royal stables at Buck- ,ingham Palace and Windsor and has lseen the conditions under which they | The side of the quadrangle oppo- site to the entrance-gate is the home of the beautiful cream and black horses familiar to the specta- gtor of Royal State processions. lHere, in spotlessly clean, perfectly ‘appointetl stables. with stately col- ‘umns and vaulted roofs. are stabled Esome of the most valuable; and beautiful horses in Europe. Some of the Most Valuable and Beautiful Horses in Europe. It is only ï¬tting that the horses of a. King should be lodged in an equine palace and should lead lives of dignity mid luxury Worthy of their high st,utio_n._ KING EDWARD’S STABLES. live The stables at Buckingham Palace, which lie baiely seieened from the. beautiful gardens, me a small palace in themselves. forming with the coach-houses stately rows of build- ings. arianged in the form of a huge quadrangle approached from Buckingham Palace Road by an im- posing gateway. Seen apart from their rich trap- pings, the cream horses. with their uncommon “complexion.†almost colorless eyes and pink nosm, look- ing like equine Albinos, lose Some- thing of their stateliness and pic- turesqueness. They are, however, magniï¬cent animals, perfect in form and breeding.’ and standing on an average nearly SIXTEEN HANDS HIGH. The creams, like the blacks. are of Continental extraction. although for many years both have been bred at Hampton Court. They live long. reaching an average age of over twenty years ; and curiously enough nearly all of them bear royal names, such as Emperor and Monarch. So- vereign and King George. names pe- culiarly appropriate to their high rank and duties. The utmost care is taken in train- ing those horses. which are Warrant- ed to maintain their cquanimity under any disturb ng conditions. {from a German band to the dis- 'chargo of an 81-ton gun. The blacks, which are of Dutch origin. are still larger and ï¬ner, many of them being between seven- teen and eighteen hands high. The Palace Road side of the quad- rangle is devoted to the carriage- horses, about thirty in number, nearly all magnificent bays averag- ing about seventeen hands, and all equal to fourteen miles in the hour in double harness. Five hundred guineas a pair may be set down as the average value of these splendid animals. In the coach-houses on the east side of the quadrangle are to be seen some of the most costly and magniï¬cent carriages in Europe, in- cluding the gorgeous State-coach which. after forty years of disuse. was seen at, the opening of Parlia- ment some months ago by King Ed- ward VII. It is interesting to note that this "glass coach†is eight yards long. 12 feet in height, and weighs no less than The carving on it cost over $7,500. the gilding nearly $5,000. and the coach-maker’s bill was $8,365. But this truly regal. it not very comfortable. coach is only one among many State carriages of more‘subdued splendour. The semi- State coach which was built by a Lord Mayor of Dublin is a beautiful vehicle in all the glory of lake, vermilion, and gold. surmounted by one large centre crown and four smaller ones. one at each corner of the roof. The hammer-cloth is a gorgeous arrangement of purple. scarlet, and gold. embossed with the royal arms. For State purposes there are also a dozen other coaches of lake and vermilion decoration, with similar regal hammer-cloths and crowned tops. Perhaps the most interesting of these royal carriages is the com- paratively plain landau which the Queen invariably used in London, and to which she remained loyal during the last quarter of a century of her life. The Windsor stables are almost. equally interesting. with their mag- niï¬cent greys and their army of carriages of all degrees of stateli- ness and simplicity. Here may be seen Queen Victoria‘s faxhrite gar- den chair. low. {our-wheeled. and canopied. which used to be drawn by'Black Sam, the Queen's favorite Exmoor pony. Here. too. are the large. high phacton. the favorite carriage of the Prince Consort. religiously preo Served in his memory ; the odd-look- ing basket-carriage in which the in- fant Piinco of Wales took his airb. FOUR TONS ings nearly sixty years ago. Rus- sian droskies, a French char-a-banc. and many other historic vehicles. which ? the King will treasure in memory of his mother. KNEW SHE WOULD COME BACK. A young man who looked as it he might be twenty-ï¬ve years old, was sitting in the waiting room of the railway station. On his knee was a year-old baby. Presently the baby began to cry. and the awkwardness and helplessness of the young man were so marked as to attract gen- eral attention. At this point a waiting passenger a {at and amiable looking man. cros- sed the room and said to‘the dis- tressed baby-tender :â€" At. this point a waiting passenger Ascent of Mount Sir Donald, in a fat and amiable looking man. cros- sad the room and said to‘the disâ€" the Selkirks, by Woman. tressed baby-tender :â€" The Matterhorn of the Selkirks. “A young woman gave you thatiMount Sir Donald. has at last been baby to hold while she went to see : ascended by a woman. Says a letter about her luggage. didn't she? from Glacier, ll.t‘. Only about a. Yes. dozen men have succeeded in getting You 8X99“ her bflCk. I SUI’DOSC? to the highest point of this pyra- Of course. mid of stone with its needle point Ha. ha ! Excuse me, but I can't. piercing the sky at an elevation of help laughing. A woman 01100 playedtoï¬oo feet. although many have the same trick on me. You're icome from all parts of the globe to caught, young man. She took you'attempt its ascent. There are high- fO!‘ a greenhorn. ler mountains. but few on this con- Oh. she’ll come back. answered thei tinent so diilicult of ascent. and yet. young man, as he looked anxiouslyza small woman. a bride. not more around. [than 5 feet 2 inches high. and weigh- She will. eh ? Ila. ha, ha ! What‘ing only 96 pounds. has succeeded makes you think so ? 'where strong and experienced moun- Why, because she's my wife, andltaineers have failed. ()hâ€"umâ€"I see I muttorod the fat, man, and he was in such haste to get. back to the other side of the room that he nearly full mwr :1 pass- ing pug dug. ..___.._+__._... WAY FREIGHT HOTEL She will, eh ? 113., ha, 1m ! What, makes you think so ? Why. because she’s my wife. and this is our ï¬rst baby. PROPRIETOR OF THE POPU- LAR MONTREAL HOSTELRY TALKS ABOUT DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. Used Them Some Years Ago for a. Bad Case of Kidney Weakness. -â€"Reeommends Them Highly to All Those Who Are Worried by any Urinary Sediment. Montreal, Aug, 26.â€"â€"Duu W. Allan, proprietor of the Way Freight lio- tel here. made a strong statement about the well-known remedy Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Allan's hotel is at 463 St. James street and en joys considerable popularity with railroad men. Some of the latter were discussing ailments peculiar to engineers, brukemen. tireinen, conductors, and train crews generally. It was ac- knowledged that the greatest diili- culty a railway man has to contend with is Kidney Trouble. The con- tinual jarring of the train weakens the ï¬lters of the system and various forms uf Kidney Trouble result “Every man that. works in an en- gine cab 01' on any part of a rail« road train ought. to use Dodd's Kidney Pills." said one man. “Ar'c poda's Kidney Pills what, they're cracked up to be. though ?†put in a second. “Yes, sir." returned the ï¬rst cm- phaticully, “Budd's Kidney Pills are what they're cracked up to be. and I'll leave it, to Mr. Allan." 3- -vwv â€"â€" v v-__ “Gentle1ne11,'said Mr. Kllan, “I ï¬rmly believe Dodd's Kidney Pills will do everything that, is claimed for them. They are a genuine medi- cine. They cured me of Kidney Trouble. I know that. My urine was full of a kind of red brick dust. for years. I knew it was my Kid- neys. but could get nothing to stop it. Two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills did the work ï¬nally. and I've been all right ever since." People Who Can't Sleep for the Quiet. Country people, when visiting Lon don. rarely sleep well for the noise. Most people know this. but has it ever occurred to you that Londoners frequently suffer in the same way while staying in the country owing to the excessive quiet? They miss the dull roar of the streets by day, and by night the rat- tle of cabs, and the hundred-und-one noises familiar to those who live in the crowded thoroughfares of the axe- tropolis. A Londoner. who had chambers in Piccadilly. was ordered to a small country place for rest and change of air. In a very short time he was the victim of the most terrible insomnia. and ï¬ts of nerves into the bargain. The local doctor whom he consulted was a clever fellow. He recommend- ed him to move from his apartments to a hotel. at the back of which was a yard frequented at night by car- ters watering their horses on the way to a neighboring market town. He slept thew ï¬rst tight to the mus- ic of heavy wheels lumbering over the cobbles. and the shouts of the men. It is a strange fact. too. that those who have lived by the seashore for any length of time ï¬nd it diflicult to obtain their usual rest. They miss the music of the shore. which in time becomes part and parcel of their slumbers. “Bruce sold his dog." “What. did he get. ‘2" “The max} offered him ï¬fty cents for the collar and Bruce threw in the dog." Such is the force of habit. A LUCKY OPPORTUNITY. FORCE OF HABIT. 'acé . at 50445253..†a C 1]... cf MALEâ€"h; We]. all 3m .4 NOTABLE CLIMB OF A BRIDE If You want butmuntuCBIPdl.m . The Dawson cé'Wï¬1m3'33Wm'Kvgmw‘ 1““- A Mr. and Mrs. Berens of Kent. England, are on a bridal tour round the world. Mrs. Berens learn- ed the other evening that no woman had ever climbed to the top of Sir Donald. She had never done any mountain climbing except she had ascended Mount Stephen. but only to the fossil beds. which is an easy ascent. Neither had she suitable clothing. She donned h(r‘ husband' 8 breeches cut as to come a little above the knees, but, woninnlike. stuck to her nink shirt waist. This shining mark enabled the interested spectators to watch through the long telescope her progress over seracs. erevnsses and the most difï¬cult kind of rock work. Accompanied by her husband and two experienced Swiss guides st :1- tionod at Glacier. B.(‘., the party left at 3.10 in the morning. and after spending a little more than an hour on the extreme summit. re- turned at 5.30 amid the cheers 0! the spectators. Mrs. llerens was apparently none the worse for the trip and appeared at dinner at usual. She was so modest concerning her achievement that she was with great difï¬culty induced to speak of it. She thinks there are at least 3.000 peaks and as many glaciers visible from the top of Sir Donald. She had any number of narrow escapes. Once the snow cornice upon which she was walking gave way and precipit- ated her. luckily, upon a huge bank of snow many feet below. She climbed perpendicular walls saturated with the waters from the melting snows and fell into a crcvicc at one time. {mm which the guides. to whom she was roped. rescued her. At, another time she slipped upon the ice and was held dangling over a prezipice, and had the guides not. heid her would have fallen several thousand feet to the rocks below. thousand feet to the rocm uomw. 1"" m.“ mun-u ,0, um" “M". "m a... She says sho had simply dctormin-. uoouloptlu chad. mucu- awn-.sluumm. cuni _ ' . . , . . . w u; It and!» .01“ ch ed to gm (.0 thg top, and she did , .3233: “Dmflhfl‘lwuwgu sun“: but she does nut, advise any other I.“ undmuim throughout mung 30.“... bride to Spend her lmuoymoou that. ï¬lo: Inm'uwowoioouummaur. way nor any other woman to make the trip. - â€â€˜ï¬‚â€" 1 250 million bri0ks are used in u. The clerk. seeing that she was beautiful, smiled at her in his bland- est way, felt that he ought to avail himself of any opportunity there might be to explain things to her. and sweetly replied. I would like. she said, walking up to the counter. to see the manager of this department. I don't, - see- him anywhere about just now. qug't 1 do '.’_ She looked him up and down a few times. permitted an expression that. he didn't quite understand to over- spread her features. and then re- pligd "kc. I don't think you will. I'm his wife. and "But the clerk had gone to hunt for him. SMART BOY. Hull ! exclaimed Mr. Rox. after reading his morning mail. "our boy's college education is making him too blamed smart. I was cured of acute Bronchitis by MINARD'b ‘LINIMIZNT. MINARD’S LINIMENT What'swihc ‘maucr “P asked Mrs Rox. . I wrote to him the other day that I thought it would be kinder inr me not to remit the check he asked for. Now he writes : "Dear Father : I shall never forget your unremitting kindness. I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism by MINARD'S LINIMENT. GEORGE TINGLEY. Potatoes were ï¬rst. cultivated on what, is now the border of Peru and Chili in the Andes Mountains. IS SELECTED F80] ‘l‘llE I’L‘IESI‘ ELIE“. Springhill. N. S Bay of Islands. AIf_w_ais cured of Facial Neuralgia by Albert. Co.. N. B. HE W0 ULI)N'T DO J. M. CAMPBELL. WM. DANIELS. If I stand on my head the blood all rushes to my head. doesn't it 1 EN0 one ventured to contradict him. zNow, he continued triumphantly. .thn 1 stand on my feet. why 'docsn't the blood at! rush into my {foot ? Because. replied Hostcttor Ic- L :iunis. your feet are not empty. For loam. mun. mm moat-n. .5- Ilflflm'S [Immem cures W08! III GOIS. HOW, ABOUT On an average. one in {our case- of typhoid in the Brit“!!! troops In South Africa has proved fatal. $100 Bowel-d. $103. The radon of am ever wlll be pleued to lure thet there In at out one deeded dleeue thet eclenoo has been able to cure ln ell lte lumen end wet lo Court-ll. llell'e Ceterrb (‘uro lo the â€IL posltlve curs now known to the medical In rnlty. (tout-flu being e com- tltutlonel dloeeee. rcqulm e communion-l treatment. Hell‘e Ceterrh Care In token “HO! - nully. eating dlrectly upon the blood so mucous out-faces of the system. thereby doe troylnc the toundetlon ot the dleeue. end glvlog the patlent strength by handle: up the ct netltutlon end uxlstlu eetere ln dole: lu work. The proprletore have eo much (eltb In [to curetlve powers. thet they offer one lluoâ€" dred Dollere for my one um lt tells to cure. Send tor llet of testimonlela. J Qll EN BY 8:. 00.. TOLEDO “S†PEERLESS Of all money transactions in Great Britain, 97 per cent are transacted by cheque ; only 3 per cent by notes or gold. Minard’s Linimcnt Cures Diphtheria nil-{ts of tea in a year. The teapot to hold this amount. would comfort- ably contain St. Paul's, dome and all. England has 807,471 paupcrs. by the latest. returns ; Scotland, 97.947 and Ireland. 97,587. w'c 8007mm Sump ha been and by $63339»;- fo: chi}: ohiidren with woman. A _--_._ -|'-â€".\ An- Annâ€"- Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, em 250 million bricks are used in a month in the United Kingdom ; that. is. each inhabitant, uses ninety in a. year. Each American averages linml's Liniment Cures llistempe: 891?! b: The revolver-carbine of the Swiss Army, imontcd by Majou Knrcklin, ï¬res 48 shots in 21 seconds, and will kill M2 .000 yards. our inâ€! to do w.. 300ko and mod an OALVERT’S CARBOLIO OINTMENT. Londoners drink 1,250 million For ail akin climb. I. o. court n o... W. Inch-I 10.00th ice. ever noted. Fin. «ulna. Mlllnatnu'ms. mule Write us (or a] thin in In“: or ï¬nial â€IIICHIOI“. 7““ .0 9L- ‘ Dominion Lino Steamgfqil†- â€Yup..- w'“" :57? W t» mum» Vilma-w" ml. .04 In: Map. Bu ‘ he clan-ad oumn. 'IM'“".‘W and Moon “aim at YUM-Cl.- woo-5"†at an pawl-n. ml! to “' nos-mum «Mom-ml. "an More the Mus. I.._ up! you v-v Iwwv â€"- v- .â€"v 200001 a: and with tho but. USE MIOA AXLE ORI'ABI. I, All!!!†nus susou's on, 3 â€on! u I! don F0! Over PC"! arm to an W nu nun mt aluminumâ€! In (Mum. ‘I_ti I. u ,A-.. ammunition; (iii. 75c. Pills are tho but W [’0 I0!" fl