IABHINES THAT THINK. IRON ACCOUNTANTS, I MATHEMATICIANS. Ii schoolboy: only has teen in existence and a quarto}: past. a tag sums. Viscount St. in 1775. It is b smalx typewriter. an and subtraction qui Some Very Ingenious Incl Can Do Sam: and Sort, Money. It wiil. also do vision, but by cess. ‘ Even this Was not the ï¬rst at- tempt which man has made to save his brains. The famous French philâ€" osopher Pascal invented a rude sort 0! calculating machine as long ago as 1642. lie was then a boy 0! on- ly nineteen. The little machine, which was a series of gear-wheels with numbers on them, could add and subtract, but Was not of much practical use. ‘ o ‘ 'A,_ A l'..-7 AFTER TEN YEARS arrived, in 1822, at such success that the Government’ 3 notice “as attr: tet- evl, and the how ntor Was commission- ed to superintend the construction 0! u. trial machine. The ï¬rst difference engine, as Bub- hagc called it, was SIX fleet. high, thrve broad, and one deep. It Work ed .six columns of twenty ï¬gures, and was capable of slicwing all possible clile-enu-s of those. Not only this, but once a calculatinn Was begun by human brain the machine Wouid lin- ish it, and then automatically set up the results in type. So soon as the ï¬rst engine was finished. and favorably reported on by n treasury commission, Babbage set to work on a far more intricutu machine called the analytical engine. He worked at it {or twenty years. and to give some idea of the gigantic labor involved, it may be mentioned that at the and 0! that time no por- tion of the machine had yet been cast. Only drawings had been made. cast. Only drawings had been made. 0! these, there were over 400, be- sides more than twenty volumes of notes. rough sketches, and calcula- tions. Seventeen thousand pounds of Government money had been spent. Then the Chancellor of the Exchequer stopped supplies. The one portion of this miracle of machinery which Was actually put together stands in the Kensington Museum, a monument. to such pa- tience and ingenuity as no man ever before put. in practice. MAKING CHANG E. is the bugbcur 01 those Who, like tic-knt-sellcrs. have to hand out their goods at lightning speed. Machines for change-making have lately come intu use. and the most recent pat- cut 0! the kind is n marvellously in- genious one. In a row on the top are representations of all the coins in common use. Supposing you are the cashier in‘ rhurge of it, and a. purchaser buys something worth fourteen cents and hands you a twenty-live cent piece. All you need to do is to put. the twenty-live cents in its proper place on the top of the machine, and touch 5 key marked with the number “14†The twenty-live cent. piece ialls into its compartment, and from another little till out. tumble eleven cents in- to at tray ready to receive them. Whether the coin is a cent. or a. fifty rent piece makes no difference to the machine. which never makes ablun- der. and gives up two cents or one dollar with equal readiness. IllIIIIJu vv-v-. 'â€" .__-_ Another almost equally ingenious machine is coming into extensive use in big shops. It is designed for sort- ing small money. A peek or two 0! different-sized coins are thrown in, and a moment or two later the ma- chine gives them all up. neatly sort- ad in little stacks, into their proper “nomination. Dry for Over Ten Years, it 833‘ Now Rosumed Existence. | For over ten years the Pool of‘ Siloam has been only a name. Visit- ors to Palestine who visited this! famous spot of late years found that? its healing waters had vanished. This was a great. blow to the inhab- itants. but recently the waters of Silmun have been made to flow once again, and there has been great re- joicing in the holy land. It appears that Jerusalem has been especially short of water of late, and it. oc- curred to some 0! the inhabitants of Siloam to try to ï¬nd out whether the spring which psed to supply the â€"" pool was really dry. Tons of accu- mulated rubbish was cleared away. and after about a month's work the swing was found. The excavators discovered behind some fallen rocks an old aqueduct running away into the valley of the Kedron, and into this aqueduct. the beautiful, cool. clear water had run and been wast- ing {or years. #Aâ€"â€"- In 1796 it took 6 tons make a ton o! pig-iron; I take! two tons. Not that deceit is a be but some babies must h in the cradle. Oh, that’s Not that deceit is a born instinct, but some babies must be two-faced in the cradle. Oh, that’s not possiâ€" ble. I don’t. know. I know a child that looks like its rich aunt when isit, and is the ex- act image of its :ich unole when he oys only knew it, there existence for a. century er past a machine for do- Viscount Manon invented It is about the size of a riter, and does addition tiun quite mechanically. (in multiplication and di- by a rather lengthy pro- POOL OF SILOAH. 0 tons 0! coal to iron; now it only THY LIVE BY SMUGBLIEB The greatest smuggling centre on the {ace of the earth to-day is St. Pierre. the French colony on the south coast of Newfoundland. It is the centre of an admirably organ- ized system of illicit trading. Opium Liquors and Opium unmoa 1 and From Port With Impunity is smuggled to New York and Bos- ton, cognac is smuggled to the Maine seaboard, and whisky is smug- gled to Cape Breton and up the St. Lawrence. The Governments of the United States, Canada and New- foundland have tried for years to stamp it out, but it still thrives amazingly. An idea oi the extent of the con- traband operations conducted there is supplied by the fact that its an- nual imports aieValued at $240 per head of the population. whereas Newfoundland’ s only amounts to $40 per head. As St. Pier1e is ostensi- bly only a ï¬shing shelter pmt, and its total of inhabitants is under 6,- 000, with 110 industries save the fisheries, it is clear that all this conmierce is not legitimate, and the proof is only too abundant of what lecomes of the surplus. St. Pierre is, strange to say, a place where .s111uggling is encouraged by the au- thorities, or, at any rate, passively acquiesced in. A British consul is; not permitted them, because his pre- sauce we .ld be a deterrent to the tiadic; an Ameri ,consul some y<ars ago was so e a partici- nt in it. that lie-chad to be re- ved; a Newfoundland agent sent to St. Pierre in 1897 was mobbed and had to fly for his life from the thleats of the crowd; and last summer the French customs com- missioner there, M. Ferry, was burnt in emgy and was forced to 'embark under an escort of gen- darmes, because it was thought that he had given information to Canada , of the smugglers’ doings. 'I‘IIE REASON OI“ IT How St. Pierre comes to be so convenient a centre for smuggling is that France, regarding it merely as a fishing station, charges only tri- fling duties on imports. Then, its location in the midst of alien terri- tories, its isolated remoteness and the strange tongue of its people, all enable the traflicking to be done; with a shrewdness and a proï¬t not possible under omer circumstances. For instance, the duty on rum enter- }ing Canada is $3.40 a gallon; at {St. Pierre it is only twenty cents. l'l‘hcrefore it pays the l’ierroi-s to buy “est India rum in bond at. Halifax, bring it to St. Pierre and pay the iduty of twenty cents a gallon, and lthen transfer it to light, handy kegs, which are smuggled into every cove along the St. Lawrence foreshore. " 'lhe most, profitable smuggling, of course, is done in opium, which con- tains such great, value in such small The Rich, Red Blood Made by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Gives New Strength to Every Nerve, Fibre and Organ of the Body. From the Budget, Shelbgrne,.-l“1:_ S. Among the young ladies of Shel- burne, there is none toqlay who more fully bears the impress of perfect health than Miss Lilian Durfce. Un- fortunately this was not always the case, as a few years ago Miss Dur- i’ee became ill, and her friends {cared that. she was going into decline. A doctor was called in and prescribed, but his medicines did not have the desired effect. Her strength gradu- ally left her, her appetite failed, she. had frequent headaches, was veryl pale, and finally grew so weak that a walk of a few rods would com‘ pletely fatigue her. The young lady’s family sorrowfully observed that she was steadily failing, and} feared that consumption would claim; her as a victim. One day a friend urged that she should give Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills a trial, but the idea at first .Was not favorably on- tertained; it seemed hopeless to ex- Epect that any medicine would help iher after the doctor's treatment had Jailed. However, this good friend gstill urged, and finally prevailed. By the time the third box was used, there was an unmistakable improve- vccv- ment in Miss Durfee’s condition. Cheered by this, the pills were con- tinued, and in the course of a few weeks the former invalid, whose strength was taxed by the slightest exertion, was almost restored to health. The use of the pills was still continued and a. few weeks more found Miss Durfee again enjoying perfect health. ‘ ‘ -4. To a. reporter who interviewed her. she saidzâ€"“I believe that Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills saved my life, and I earnestly recommend them to all who fear that consumption has laid its grasp upon 7 then}. 'f . ‘â€" â€"â€"A' _A That the facts related above are? not in any way exaggerated, is born out by the following statement from Robt. G. Irwin, Esq., the well known stipendary magistrate for the municipality, who sayszâ€"“I distinct- ly remember the pale face of Miss Lilian. Durfee and the regrets of Lfriends as they expressed their con- viction that she would soon be com- pelled to say farewell to earth. Miss Durfee. however, carries the unmis- takable credentials of good health. and frequently expresses her indebt- edness to Dr. \Villiams’ Pink Pills.†Consumptive People. LN SECURE RENEWED HEALTH AND STRENGTH Pale and anaemic girls, or young! people with consumptive tendencies, will ï¬nd renewed health and bodily vigor through the use of Dr. Wil- llams’ Pink Pills. These Pills are an unfailing cure for all diseases due to a watery condition oi the blood, or shattered nerves. Sold by all dealers in medicine or sent postpald on receipt.“ 50¢ a box, or $2.50 ifor six boxeS. by addressing the Dr. Williams’ Hedicine 00., Brochille. bulk. The Gloucester (Mass) fishing vessels are the instruments of this tx'aflie. They run into St. Pierre on tho’ home trip, purchase stocks of Opium and French wines and per- fumes, and, amid the great number of vessels entering the New England ports daily, contrive to land this secret addition to their cargoes with- out urousing suspicion. The most audacious fraud of all a cargo 0I "5"- WW “‘"Wz‘t'mdw'ï¬y; was that carried out with the Con- deceptive packach. Ell-“'3 , nivance of the United States consul the unbroken seals and supposed to . . . .- ' ' ' tores and before mentioned. Uorn spirit was 0011mm only ships 5 . imported from Illinois, being convey- speedily transfer theim :0 ttllslséddeak'slfg ed down the seaboard to St. Pierre by whom the stufl 8 an '. by schooner. The liquor was always W , packed in twenty-five gallon casks, can only be come is visit St. 3- hfllldy sort of package, and the 200 United States vesse ship's clearance showed St. Pierre Pierre each season, and few of them as her destination. She never en- leave without opium, liquors and tered that port, however, but hove perfumes in greater 0“ 1039 quanti- to off the islet, where she unloaded “‘35s her cargo into the ancient schooners! â€"--"+ soso ssosoiflnnm BRI 18H comm ' 1 'carried the liquor up the St. Law- rence, where it was â€run†in one or more of the many harbors of the. â€â€" province of Quebec. The original' IT WAS FOUNDED BY AN ENG- carrier was, meanwhile, sent back] LISH JOURNALIST. to the United States with a fraudu-l .â€" lent certificate to the effect that her It Is In The Wilds of the Cots- cargo had been duly landed at St. . Pierre. After a while the American Wolds, and Only Has A Some authorities suspected something of Inhabitants. wrong and a detective was sent with a shipment of the stuff right from: the distillery. lie exposed the whole men, ‘ . ‘ plot, and all concerned in it had to wilds of the (,otswolds, in Glouces- decamp at once. 'etm-shire, England, on .the very sum- . sinit of the range of hills which here THEY’RE FOND OF RUM' sruns between (jheltenham and Stroud .I On a less elaborate scale, however, and halfâ€"aâ€"dozen miles east of the‘ the practice is now being revived city 0f (3101160514313 livmg under 00““ There is a small community of women and children on the and the Newfoundland government ditions surelyuvithout a'parallel 11) is pursuing an active crusade against, the United Kingdom. Jhe colony it. Rum is a beverage much in vogue generally counts about a score of among the Newfoundland and Nova persons, though the number fluctu‘ Scotian fisherfolk, and these coasts ates. A lady member of the colony are always easy dumping grounds writing recently to a lady friend in on which to unload cargoes. Last (;310u(109i01‘. said for some tune past year 35,000 gallons of rum were the only food they had to hve up- brought into St. Pierre from Ilali- on was a. few ears of cornâ€"some: fax. ’l‘hat meant an annual con- times roasted, at other tunes boxled. f sumption of seven gallons of it to And yet it is a fact that one of the Jewry human in St. Pierre, if it was men who has voluntarily subjected l l I l >1 I! it 3! l [all consumed there, besides which himself to these privations has ’only :thero was the champagne, wines, to signify his consent â€to lift, as4 .‘brandies, whiskies, liqueurs, and a Scotchman would say, d0,000l, other beverages to be considered. and an active share in a big London However, it is well known where the .business. stuff goes. When some smugglersl WHEN COLONY WAS FORMED. were caught red-handed a few years: ‘ . _ ago, one of them admitted having 'lhe Whiteway colony was founded brou ht 4,200 allons of rum into some two or three years ago, when D‘the cilony in agtwelvemonth withâ€" ‘Samuel V- Braicher, a young 91.01?- ‘out paying a cent of duty. It is es- tester Journalist and Quakei',.nug1at- timated that Canada loses $250,000 ed With a number of other. discon- 7' yearly by the whisky smuggling up tents†from .a. Communistie colony at the St. Lawrence, and St. Pierre is'at Burleigh, m Essex, the party es- '9 known to possess four millionaires tablishmg themselves at Whitew-ay and three almost millionaires, whose on about forty acres of arable and es have been amassed in this paSture land purchased with money :. [fesoisitt‘i‘ssband traffic. found by Braicher. There were Ol‘l- ‘ m2nA1l-u nnhxn kn"_l‘n'71‘l1 innn {I1I°ne Lar‘o Liquid and Powder . Sample for the postage. 3c. 25°C, 256. 35c. The St. Lawrence branch of the enterprise is conducted with worn- out schooners which would fetch lit- tle or nothing if seized by the Cana- dian coast guards and sold under writ of confiscation. These craft are supplied with suits of sails of differ- ent colors, which are changed at. in~ Vllv " torvals, so that the vessel may not be so easily detected. The ï¬liquor is usually hidden behind (also bulk- heads in the skin of the vessel, barâ€" rcled up in fish casks in the hold or; buried amid the salt ior’curing thé rod, of which the craft/ls ostensibl in quest. .v '1 The fogs which preuail along our c south coast assist the smugglers ( greatly in making the trip from St. 1 Pierre to their own homes, and in the countless sheltered harbors are innumerable landing places where contraband goods can be stored. Not alone liquors and the like are ‘1 brought, but tobacco, sugar and :« provisions of various kinds. Them people think it not wrong to smug-'5 gle, though they would shrink from" Iother offenses; but they have a, curiJ 10118 sort of idea that it is not wrong 9 to cheat the government. the workl of their own hands. Hence it is’ that every fishing craft passing St. i Pierre takes on heard some smuggled ' ‘ goods. and that in every lisherman’s‘i cottage are to he found liquors, to-g lbacco, tea, sugar and other articlesi 'gwhich have never paid the king any gduty. while frequently they and theiri liamilics are clothed in the. same! iiashion. A few years ago an inquiry , gin the assembly elicited the iacti that in one large southern district,- with a population of 10.000 souls, ‘the total of custom duties collected! for a year was but 8680, while 82,- 500 was expended in maintaining a| stall to keep down smuggling. It is needless to say that the outcome 0! this exposure was a "shake-up" in the said staff; and a revenue cruiser . was put on, a vigorous crusade was set ageing, and now some $15,000 is collected annually in this district, . even though there is still consider- able smuggling done. But it is im- . possible to eradicate it altogether, ' for as long as St. Pierre remains a g French possession there will always s-_A i I .cv-u .â€"â€"~V_v_. be the temptation for daring coast- ers to venture in there and ship a cask of liquor or a stock of tobacco, not to mention smaller matters. From reliable estimates it is calcu- lated that. the colony still loses 160,000 a year through this cause, but that is small beside the loss to Canada and New England. vwâ€"w" w..â€" The smuggling '01 liquor into ‘phyte. "Becau aim is done by means 01 casks and more ready to it other receptacles brought along by diction does not. AIDEI) BY TIIE‘ FOG S. HALL}. RUOKEL. Montrgil: the United States fishing schooners, with the American revenue seals still intact on them. This is done by removing a. stave or board from the package and emptying and filling it by that means. With empty packâ€" ages of this kind these Glouâ€" cester schooners visit St. Pierre fill the packages with liquor and oth- er goods, and, returning home with nunâ€: â€men Ul‘ BUUU5: uuu, nova-â€u": ___-7 - a cargo of fish, they unload these deceptive packages, guaranteed by the unbroken seals and supposed to contain only ship’s stores, and what extent this trade is carried on can only be conjectured, but about 200 United States vessels visit St. Pierre each season, and few of them leave without opium, liquors and nerfumes in greater or less quanti- wolds, and Only Has A Score of Inhabitants. There is a. small community 0! men, women and children on the wilds of the Cotswolds, in Glouces- torshirc, England, on the very sum- mit of the range of hills which here! runs between (jheltenham and Stroud and halfâ€"aâ€"dozen miles east of the city of Gloucester, living under con- ditions surely without a parallel in the United Kingdom. The colony generally counts about a. score of persons. though the number fluctu- ates. A lady member of the colony writing recently to a lady friend in Gloucester, said for some time past the only food they had to live up- on was a. few ears of cornâ€"some. times roasted, at other times boiled! And yet it is it fact that one of the men who has voluntarily subjected himself to these privations has only to signify his consent "to lift," as nun nnn‘ on about forty acres of arable and pasture land purchased with money found by BraiCher. There were ori- ginally some half-down men, three ladies, and three or four children, some of whom were housed in two or three laborers’ cottages, and the others in rude and rough makeshifts of corrugated iron and wood. For a time the colony prospered. but later the peace of the Communists and of the neighborhood Was dis- turbed by a. disposition on the part. of certain of the members to advo- cate the equaiity of the sexes, and to denounce the legal binding con-l tract in marriage. Braicher said his confidence had been betrayed, and as he wished to sever his connection with the colony he asked them to Surrender the land. This they refus- ed to do, and the original founder emigrated, and is now following ag- ricultural pursuits in Australia. {I HAVE NO MONEY THERE. l! .I 11 Nobody in the colony ever has any money, a state of things which some- I ltimes proves as awkward to the col- ;onists as it does to the ordinary imâ€" 5 {pecunious person. For example, thel‘ {colonists have thrice been summoned . ihefore the local magistrates by the I. .rural overseers for non-payment of â€ioor-rates chargeable upon the land 1. they occupy. Each time the plea lwas advanced that they had no imoney and that they objected to its {use Twice they were saved from‘ ithe ignominy of jail by friends. The Ethird time Dr. Eilvart and Sodburyi ‘ "rotheroe had several days in jail {before their friends paid the fines. in this matter the colonists are !hardly consistent. They object to ithe use of money, but they allow ltheir friends to use it in their be- "half. Long before this they would ‘have been starved out of the colony had it not been for gifts of clothing ' and food. Everything about the 001-. r any is of the most primitive char- . acter. The land is all tilled by 5 hand. At one time the whole forty -lacres was cultivated in common, ' plow each colonist has his own allot- * ment and is supposed to live upon ’ what he can get out of it. They . have no stock. of course, as all are ' vegetarians. Their houses and the ' furnishings thereof, are as primitive . as possible. They contain nothing ‘ but the barest necessaries. “Mamma, why have you got pa- pa’s hair in a. locket?" “To remind me that. he once had some, Tommy." vs; v u ---v_ weather proï¬t, “I have found that the safest course is to predict chad weather." “Why?" asked the neo- phyte. "Because people are much Emore ready to forgive you 1! the pre- “0n the whole,â€_ suit} the_ A young novelist. describing the heroine oi her story, legs: "She had large, sky-blue eyes, between which her line nose rested like a tiny white :loud, and above which her golden hair hung in bewimhing little bangs which were Nature's giit unaided by the curling tongs. ‘ She had a cherry mouth, full of pearly teeth. and dain- ty pink ears. Dainty dimples gave piquancy to an otherwise mobile face. in which there Was a constant play of emotions changing from grave to gay. And yet Sybil Ethel- wynd Hcthcrington was not beauti- fiul.†Another writer says of her hero- ine: “When she first heard that her false lover was married to another she was collapsed with grief. but her womanly nature soon asserted itself, and she 'began a desperate flirtation with another gent,†while another heroine ’was “widowed at seventeen, reâ€"mgrried at eighteen. widowed again at nineteen, the ca:- eer of Geraldine St. De Courcy had been unlike that of most girls." â€Sue declares that she is single from choice," said Miss Kittish. “But did she say whose choice ? " asked Miss Frocks. A LETTER COMES TO LIGHT WHICH SHOWS THE UN- DOUBTED PEBMANENCY 0F CURES BY DODD’S ' KIDNEY PILLS. AFTER. A LAPSE .Mrs. Edward Patterson, according to her own statement, is 10-day in Splendid health. Her rheumatism has left her, and although it. is ten years since then, it has never re- turned beyond a slight, touch in cold weather, which a Dodd's Kidney Pill or two immediately Gnu-s away. This proves what has always been cl.1ixned-â€"-that Dodd's Kidney l-‘ills cure [30111111111311in 'I‘hcir effects are lasting-in fax. t they do not merely relieveâ€"they cure. Here is M rs. 1,3l‘w terson's letter 2- Mrs. Edward Patterson, of Con-‘ boyville, the Writer.â€"Her High Opinion of Dodd’s Kidney Pillsâ€"‘ Her Advice to Others. I Conboyville, (_mt., Oct. 2].â€"â€"(Spe-I cial).â€"Mrs. Edward Patterson, of this town, is one 01 those who can testify to the lasting nature 0! cures by Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the great Canadian remedy for all all'cctions of the Kidnevs g "It is many years, perhaps ten or twelve, since I started taking Dodd's Kidnqy Pills, and than it was not for Rheumatism that 1 took them. l was feeling namerable. did not know what ailed me, and while read- ing a paper 1 saw the testimony of some one who had been cured by Dodd’s Kidney I’llls, who had been feeling“ just. as I was. ‘1 got a box: and found they helped me. 1 found also that my Rheumatism was not nearly as bad, for I had sun'ered for many years especially in cold weath- er. I have used dozens of bottles of medicines and olntments, but it always returned until I used Dodd's Kidney Pills, and now I seldom have a touch of it. I occasionally get a box, perhaps two a year. I never hear anyone complain of Rheumatism but I advise them to try Dodd's Kidney Pills." DECLINED WITH 'IQHANKS. Miss Giddygirl: "011. girls, what. do you think ‘.’ When I was out to- day I saw a strange man who look- ed just as if he was going to kiss me. I never ran so fast in my life.†Chorus: "Did you catch him ?" Don’t you miss your husband very much now that. he is away ?†“011, no ! at. breakfast I just stand a newspaper up in front of his plate, and half the time I really forget he isn't. there." Iâ€. Wlxsmw'o aoo'rnnm Srnvr bu been and by ionic! mothers {or their children whilo teething. “oath" the child. softens the cums. any. pain. cum wind colic. re into. the ttomach and liowelt. und in the but. remedy or Dita-than. Twenty-ï¬ve out: 3 hotels. and by dmuisu throughout the world. Be my. uni at to: " Ins. Wnuww‘a Soot-um 8130'.“ sup: the Cough and works 0' the (and. 14:51â€. Bromc-Qulnino Tablets cure I. cold in one day. No Lure. No Pay. Price 25cm“. When a. full grown man robs a bird's nest, he is not in the same cat.- cgory as the small boy. He is allud- ed to as an ornithologist. C. C. RICHARDS Co. Dear Sirs,â€"â€"I have great faith MINARD’S LINIMENT, as last y« l cured a horse of Ringâ€"bone, w ï¬ve bottles. ll ‘0 â€way-v... 1t. bListcred the horse, but. in a. month there was no ring-bone and no lameness. DANIEL MURCIIISON. Four Fans, N. B. U‘ â€VII 0-.- "- they used to say she was a great. talker, but since she became rich it is difl‘ercnt.†“Indeed! What do they say now?" “They say she is a brilâ€" liant conversationalist. ’ ' “When Mrs. Parvcnu was â€â€˜39:. Don't start out by cw MODERN SOCIABILITY. AN 0!“ ISSION. ADVIOI TO Don't tart out by giving your ‘ 0F MANY YEARS For Over Flay Venn Tommy (on a. visit)â€"â€""Do your specs magnify. grandma?" Granu- maâ€""ch, Tommy." Tommyâ€""Do at faith in ‘you mind taking them on' while you as last yea_r {cut my cake?" VIC! 70 A YOUNG nun-nu... has your wit. sdvlco. hue bring her homo a packet 41 ‘ - “ carton TEAâ€" with APPLES. POULTBXJ BUTTER EGGS, l b loco] appucauona. M they cannot. reach the ‘ d rlion of tho our. There “only one :31: c320 doatnons. nnd§hgt is by constitu- tional remedhw. Dwfme nu caused him: ! inflamed condl ion otghe mucounliuing'o pho §l€uutachlan Tube. “hon min who as nn-. flamed you have crumbling sound orimpcr foot. hearing. and when“ in ent rely closed deufmcu is the result. and union ohe inflam. motion can be tat: arm. and this who vemnud to 1m normal oonditi n. hearing wfllbo doâ€" otroyM forever: nine (ascq out, of ten are mused by c tan-h, which is nothing but. on In- flomed condition of the mucous cur neon n_- an--_1..-a l‘n"nllufï¬. an. Mrs. Oldunâ€""llad the influenza?" Mrs. Youngunâ€""Why of course we have, dear. We had it. when it ï¬rst came outâ€"when Mrs. Million had it and all that set. you know." linard's Liuiment Cures Colds, etc. Consumption causes oneâ€"scv all the deaths in the world. Lilyâ€"~“I passed your house yester- Eday.†Ethelâ€"“Did you? How nice 10f you." INFORT.W.â€"thn writing lute which you prefer. the. Bevin; Ind-Am alone or the Punch and Manet... â€I“ Hi: autumnal“. Dr. cumm- does :10th ma :0: 3 honest wutnmnmnuubu .3. flllflcu 0.5““ onâ€. -, _ _ Wo willflvo 0;; 'i'l'u'lihâ€"rod Donne for any case of Deafness (caused by cat rrh) that can an pa c-uredADyA Hall's Catorrh Cure. Bond The death-rate is 176 per 10,000 in England, 181 in Ireland. and 184- in Scotland. aor'civtrcdldra. 33-69 " New minnow" Ming “whine. (l' .isl: a uriiculuq Laudwinonufciir muhino vï¬ivh will luv. fat you. and do is work parfcdly, ,i m gelling Chrlfliaii'c I'm-«l Blood l’llll. Dr. (Zhflstlui'o repuuuon in uni known oqure tad lionntdoalii and im will prov. Ii. lvcry hon": pom. N‘ no!“ on! )0 boxes or Dr. hriumfu Rc-i Maul l'iila. 3 wonderful remedy ~‘ the “In uni impure mndiaicm of the lilnud. «mum. sick ht‘duhfl, J Intuition. debiliiy. i beinliaiism. pains in we lurk. 3nd corral he‘ll] annuals. armuiu rum fur male dim. will recei‘n Mo (rim-om - to Imam this beautiful Sea in; whine or the Couch and women. Diane! M. - ‘ with 3 Tea Set. whlcli he Will «lid to you ï¬re fondling llio 10 but†ofl'ilh. â€on"! SEND ANY “O'E' Wflteto Dr. Christin to-day cud Lowiiiuud you {he pi N by return mil. 0 m very on: to u‘l. Bell iinm us; «nil norhox and return him the m cy. (a. , and Dr. (“wrist inn min nuiemihnt “you comply with i he oil'er lie send: to M orynno kl adumngv of this nun imam the New Glasgow Rowing â€whine. or the Court: and the loo pim‘o Dinner Set will in uni. 0 you abwluicly Inc. Dr. (’ln-ifl. hn iI_ tiiommghiy l‘ï¬uuln. EU“ will engagin- marijuana and 1y .- represent“. no wishes to immune MI lad Hod h.-. ‘1‘.-- -4 -_ _‘_ '10111â€""1 confess 1' d prefe1 1ichcs to love. A kiss, (01 instance, may be sweet;b11t it 1511 ’t. north anythingfl' Jimâ€" ‘Wcll, it’s always wmth 119 face value." mama’s [mimem GUIBS Game! In W8. IOI' cu'ClIllra. "11:. F J CHENEY 8: 00.. Toledo. 0. Sold by Dfllgï¬iétl. 750. mm. Family Pills are the but. You will and it. a delightful chtnge. [9 Land Pacing“. 85. ‘0. To (“IBIS A COL“ IS ONE 0‘". Take Laxative Bromo Quinino Tablets. All dru ista refund the money if it. mm to euro. E. . Grave's signature is on not: box. 250. Japanese Catarrh Cure (“DOBRO IV THE IEIIGAL PROFEONOU. Dr. R. 8. Wilson. at the America†Journal Health. New YO‘k. wrlwn .-â€" Jupuueoo tart-h Care has met with tho highest. 01;. donomenl. of the Medical Profession for tho _ __-l.._ ..-.-I. A-‘A-nA-nA-Q u'u'l'VUIU III Iâ€' â€vâ€"U‘Fvv' _ 7 u -- _ _ _ on! rouon tint ever wins such enc‘orsomont. Its lather. and woven vslue. It. I. really 3 weenie {or caurrh in in various forum“ Jam-nose Osurrh Cure in cold by :11 drug- gma. 50 cents. Merchantâ€"“What’s the matter with your writing this morningâ€"new pen?" Bookâ€"keeperâ€"“No sir." "New ink?" “No, sir." "What, then?" I thommzhlv mduhlo and win gamma.» than prams onmy an rpm lnw eve ry home, 31d}! advent-3n them in tit: w". Wm: at Old! to n.--_-.- -g- “nus-Aim†an n-..“ ink?" “N0, “Neurulgia._" NOT ONLY GIVES RELIEF. BUT PERMANENT“ CHRIS OATAIRH Deafness Cannot be Cured TWO WEEK‘S TRIAIIEflT FREE. When you have used all that me. you now pan Thousands of people tell as Japanâ€: Cour-r1: CII’O does cure (‘I'Ol'rh and col in the head. so it must be true. Now we wgot every ' Mien-3r (tom count) in Amerh on to know 32:31 how good J wan?“ Court!) Gun 13. um! L. order to prove condmivcly 0;. came at this remedy out! out conï¬dence in it. we mil mod 3 trial quumity. unfl- cient for nearly two nooks tnstmnt. two. It at tho 0nd of that time you ï¬nd it. benc- new. coll at your druum'u for a. realm rao cont. bottle. or we will be plant to In“! it to you direct. Enclose b vent lump [or ounce. em. on sample sad it. will be ten 'tu you by return mail without on: charge whotovrr. Mention this uncut Adam“. The Grimm: t flucphouon (10.. United. T019010. Con. 7 GRATEFUL (DOM FOR'WNO- THE MOST summons. BREAKFASTrSUPPER- and is advent-1n them In thin way. wme at Oltf to 05!. CHRIS AN MEDICCNB 00.. 80:00). Toronto. Ont. rue canon ooummou cm, Unit“. tannin. HIGH can: sawmo Inca: at BEAUTIFUL com III loo PIECE IIIIEI Wli‘. i: 53 to assist In. ( hrhulll ht human! In; In. Rc‘d Inca! Nils. son an snafu]! mod (‘ou- h. mu: uuuv cmmod h. v.‘ .omuortaystry. Mshaudwma! dnoratu sen i pum Mu I†} 1cm manor and 1‘0. Set in I cued (u far... I, us. or 3 high “ New Ulaxgow†â€in; flu blue. U .shtpalllc .hhy Lm:_dlomonm: du 'mm swimwear: “(can No don-[Mon Dr. Christina mu. a norm {1‘ but u» truth. I! 3cm me an one» "mourn mnlh o! (6:- nc at home. "We I'm-nu yui il machine. Eu, w.ork Go 4 pay. a‘wsfihzn 8mm Hose 0... “0:“! EDUCATIOIAL CENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE. 1 ONTO Two!" Tocchcn. «no meat. ekhcy typomlting machines. . coon-on thorough work. Invim cor one. from an {mama-lad putt... A W. D. Shut. Principal. ‘ ANTED-PAR“!!! TO DO ANITTI? _ forgo a bongo. ï¬Wofut-nug 3'91“: wwv'v‘vv“ ' GlLNTSâ€"IF YOU WAN? A LIVE 0'. 7 fut-ulna; and. that give you 0'." but rant. und sell in every ham-e. 'rlh; an. 'n. F. E. Karo 00.. m flown: M GENTS WANTED FOR OUR I Books. “ bite of “'ilhtlll Mcliinlo . iart rod l’rcctdent." ahao our new '° 0' nos.†amily Rubies. Albmmm to. Ollr' are low und on: terms extra â€bani. A pmopcctua if you man business. or wrll circular: and to ma. \R illium Brig". ll oist Book and Publlshm Houso.1‘oron .1 Toronto. HE SUN SAVINGS AND IO\N PAKY _is @1110; finch and duh __-_ A _..J L‘I. l l’AKY is railin Mocks and d! (ll-swing uood rates 0 inuuat and 1 pod“ ; Nun oppormnltlu tor invo- uuequgllod: u'cli..blo "can an “’31 e to the Compwy's addms. ‘l‘c VV :8 loculor Lnuemn mu. all wholnor Nrttimo lubera tern. OI or commisu-hn, “ m ex pen." an Apply now. STONE 8c WE Mill Qunuh’ 0 Greatest. Nurseries. Tomato. ‘ â€"â€"‘ ' v ‘ ANTEDâ€"RELIABLE MEN N as loca!_or mxy‘qmn‘ agony-.2. Dept. A. to' SmpKBY'JEui. ("addition pout-cut: no; your and exponos; mm». Oral. ,_‘l-__- ..â€"-.n.--.. "Heron oxnorionoo unnocemry. 0' KE Fl). address “0 Truth 0mâ€. Tomb 'V our well known speculum "I In one of the oldest. and mac relhbm amp I. Canals. Balu- or commission. Emma!†granary. Out Hus. Pelhcm Nun»: 00.. 0mm. Ont. f 7 WA'NTl-IH..GOOD max ONLY '10 an. w our well known speculum. We a m... of Hm (11th um mo~t rellublo am. In HE ROY b VICTORIA LIFE "€3th- ANCE C . tnvimnpplicauonu (or u in districts a present. Inmate-outed ; 00v valuable urrilo ï¬e! tn availdï¬qp may}; â€"Wnu:n42 mm on wanâ€"a: “omen v‘r hï¬geg~not to calm. -'â€"- â€"--â€" ‘-‘-‘n ‘u " I'“ It. "I “I." -v'-‘~ cw v- - _‘ numb}. arrno in are «(50.3310703311in- tppuouulz oxpoflonoo not. indhpounkblo. Apply supertuteudout o! Awning O I“ afloat I out. Tomato. 'l‘oâ€"morrow does not worry me- Through all its tricks of hope I we; Vain, too, its cflort to (“sway-â€" "l‘will be just. this same old (0-day. 'l‘eachor-"In What battle Was 1: tuvus Adolphus} killed?" Pupilâ€""l .-. L8.- IA lilard's Liuilcnt 0am histolpor. notâ€"gigaâ€"SUt I think battle." Reginald»~'l‘herc is one Word in t1 English language that is 1|le spelled Wrong. chitmld’s Chm “hat. is that? Reginaldâ€"“Ton“ _‘ GALVERT’S OARBOLIO OINTME for I. Okla M kmmliumatcnl REIGII GLEAII “a “sunbeam," g'tfu'nuda tutu-Sum...“ __AI Aukâ€"Ah.“ Wuhnf Llnq loans! to um MI co â€01.9““ Unwed. “to.“ “II. b a! hating-Inn flu «M b: Mel m "on! I my. “Lo-unnu- boa a...“ “.0. 0h- .I-u! cuddly-Ithaca...“ . Mmhtg- UM“ Brass Ba EVERY TO“ m IAVI Lowest price. our uotnd. n mama-mum. mane this; In lull: or Instant t“ml-‘1: mm mm Instruments. Mano. AGENTS WANTED, HELP :,MBW°‘ Potatoes, THE OUTLOOK. | 50 tad Oc. a it was; his |1