i/ air 3’3: P o' [W32 a a Is ui m Ir L953} IJIPIIESE (lllllill “MM. Organization of the New Judiciary of Japan. FIRST TRIAL UNDER NEW LAW. Thisis the acte d'uccusation pre- pared. " is usually a very .eiaoor. ate document, setting lorth the whole details of the charge in very line and grandiloquent language. The prot'uratmr describes the scene as it he had witnessed it, and deals with the gory museums in a style that the author of a shilling shocker might well envy. This work of art is launched at the prisoner at the ofx-ning of his trial and the presi- dent of the court takes it as the basin of his examination. ORGANIZATION OF THE COURT. And now as to the court and the bench. The Yokohama chino sai- bunsho (district court) is a big mow ern buildimr, of brick, one of the beat or its kind in the empire, and, ot course, immeasurably superior to mt courts in the provinces. It is arranged in European style. In the criminal m-vtion is the counterpart ot the dock, the barristers' table and the judges beach, all as they might be in an English court. But, at the same tune, there is the usual Japanese air ot lorlorn untidiness about everything. 1ncomparably neat und tasteful in their native architecture. their native dress and their native gardens. the Japanese are hopeless when they do things a “Can prune. In this tin a large huhmng. for example, floors are filthy. walls are scriboled over with foolish and dirty nonsense. gendarmr-s and police smoke cigarettes in the cor- ridors and throw lag-ends every- where. and one even sees the bar- risters' tables garnished with a row ot teapots! . , gin-Ls and a young American who nan uuppianw-i him in the affection}, of one of the women. He was at onco arrested by the Japanese authorities and from that moment WI the day ot the trial nothing further could be Learned concerning him. ALL 1aRELIsuNAItiEts SECRET. Neither the inquest nor the pre- liminary examinations were public, tor Japanese Justice is based large- ly on the French plan, and proceed? about its task with a mystery and swrecy that. make an Anglo-Saxon nncomlortuble. The wise an seem at the French law is adopted; the prisonwr is visited try the public prosecutor, who (â€mos alone intohis cell, asks innumerable questions and does his ttettt to anti-up him into mah. ing admissions. Indmed, it is still an opal] wustion whether physical ter- ror in not cwi.aaionali.y employed to - . __. .._‘...‘.. ma â€If In nu. __V%-'W.qqiF'-""'"""- __ - - extort cunlcssi-uns of crime. one very ugly case of the kind came to light a few mouths tuto, and it may not hc a wholly singular experience. The court consists of three judges, and tho procurntur and the clerk of the court occupy seats Imam? them. Their lordships are all comparatively young men, and uppurvntly as able and intelligent as can be cxpovtel of orneials who fulfil grave judivlul func- tions at salaries of front £150 to £200 per nnnnm. They Wear gowns much like tttotw of Engilsh barristers. but Instead of a horse-hair wig the head is crowned with tt Mark cowl. some- thing like that o/ " Catho!ie priest. PRESIDENT CONTROLS IT. Almost the Whole of the examination is in the hands at the President. The bar has a very subordinate part. Bar- risters limit themselves to suggesting rluestinns and making applications; they do not thvmmlves examine wit- nessnu: all questions are put through tho prouialing Judge The propriety of any query the latter may think fit to put in apparently never questioned. the Japanese barrister appearing to be wry mueh I02" puguacious and much more overawed by the court than his British confrerp. Less time In probably waated than in an Eng- luh court. hut there is no question as to which system is the more fair to the "isomer, _ _ . lvrul. nun-h nu...- -"""-er -"-- --_- gory strum.†Prisoner had suf- Iem] a disagogtoinhmmt of some set. {his expectations and he is describ- ed as "brim: plunged from the airy nights of liq» into the dismal depths ot grim despalr." What Cambexweu Lastly, the Judgment. use]! is a curiosity. If this case be any criter- ion, the Pmskbnt ot tho court Is at least an anxious as the proeamtor to exhibit his literary powers. Tho mummy on this American crtigen-- he was (-omkumu-d to be hanged-- occupied two reams of Am- man characters and as translal uon would run into six columns of a Wampum Tho ndVim of the Ent lish W who midto a younger cor. kag'm. "Give your conclusions. my dear lellow. but. never Four reasons." is totally disregarded by the Jap anmo omeial, whose judgment. in praeu Mettily one long argument. wlththq arm that {or thirty years had wrestled with the angry wave." The new or tho murder was hit on In thh wotlgrritutr:. "Bay-s splintorfrd. irakdt nut, tlr1ng 3'me brains mattered around, red blood walling forth. ’long hm _dr_ifting _ a} thy mm of proving th? correctness ot hLva decision. It is marked with very ttno writing. Ttgy m-eusai In this case was a sailor and the wenponheused is described gs belly; "wielded by at} in: law. methods have lately very practical interest 22!. In the days of treaties a glimpse ot appear; cont; was merely tern in foe programme of rotten to be taken after a brutal murder an American ei- day on which the me inter operation 'e prisoneg has ab. meat but not meibtd the attention it deserves. The iudgu.remarked that of the three murders the moat serum was that ot the young Autumn; that there were extenuating circum- stances tn the case of the two Jap. anese skis, and that it they only had been in question Justice woid have been aasiafied with a sentence of renal servitude. This is peculiarly Japantese.:. . - ms l w A So Engihh Judge would have 'tound any redeeming feature in the doing tky death ot these unfortunate women. Bat one of them happened to be Liv- ing with the murderer as his mistress and had afterwnrd deserted him, and in Japanese eyes 18 some juacitrcation tor bloodshed. ' It is a remnant of the teeyrng of o".d Japan. Forty years ago a man was not exposed to any great censure if he killed a woman who had been false, and the old sentilayerf ls still strong enough to sway the mrarits of three judges of eniightened views well versed in the legal systems of the west. It is a point which ilvlustrates the truth of what has been so fre- quentiy contended-that, however cdmpbete a code of laws Japan may have, and however good a theoretical knowledge at those laws her Judges may possess, Japanese justice will never be the 981116 as European Jus- time. The bias of tradition, race, pat- riotism and temperament has to be reckoned w'rth.--Chicago Chronicie. " jicili/i -ot" Lack velvet. with a skirt of bright Scotch plaid, is con- sidered very smart for a girl's Suit. just For the very diminutive specimens of femininity slips of white cashmere, richly embroidered. to be worn with a detached guimp ot any preferred dowriptbn. are much in vogue. ' -irtGrliir, fronts and scalloped edges are even among the short Jackets ot the most exclusive tailor suits. Long cloaks and ulsters of douhlen faced Scotch clonklngs. trimmed with velvet or fringe. are very [aahlonable for misses and gin-[s this winter. = I For hoys single ind double-breasted top coats of lrieze, Oxford mixtures or Kersey, 1n brown, blue and black, are en regle. Bedford cord. cashmere and cider- down, trimmed with satin ribbon and fancy silk braid, are most used in the creation of infunts’ winter coats. _ HOW. Girls from 12 to 16 now follow the lead of their elders, and wear side- closing skirts that tit faultlesslylabout the lxips._ _ - . " " styles:for Little Ones, Lads as Well as Lassles. “5118113: tatl,riFii/ bontinue in popular- ity for Jsoss'riptetr wear. . ,rr.Hnrvevvriee,ormsmto,sumrreil for Yours Before Finding a Cttre- Dr. Wiilrams' Pink Pills Restored Him. Those who suffer from stomach troubles are truly to be pitied. Lite seems a burden to them; food is dia. tasteful. and even that of the plain- est kind is frequently followed by nausea. distressing pains and some- times vomiting. Such a sufferer was Mr. Harvey Price, a well-known tar. mer and stock grower living at Bis- mark. Ont. To a reporter who re- cently interviewed him. Mr. Price said: "I hare found Dr. Williams' Pink Pills of such inealrutlable value in relieving mo of a long siege of suffering that I am not only willing but anxious to any a good word in behalf of this medicine. and thus point the road to health to some other sufferer. For five years I had been afflicted with stomach trouble and a torpid liver. I doctoral and also denied myself of many kinds of food pleasant to the taste, .but neither the medical treatment nor the diet seemed to help me to any degree. In January, 1899. the ctr. max of my trouble appeared to be reached. At that time I was taken down with la grippe. and that, add-l ml to my other troubles. placed me in such a precarious position that none of my neighbors looked for my recovery. My appetite was almost completely gone. and I experienced great wmkness. dizziness. vomiting' spells and violent headaches. I was also troubled with a cough which seemed to rack my whole system. I shall never forget the agony ex- perienced during that long and tedi- ous sickness. Medical treatment and medicines of various kinds had no (apparent effect in relieving me. Ar. tcr existing in this state for acme ‘months. my mother induced me to ltry Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. In May last I purchased three boxes and before these were gone un- doubted relief was experienced. Thus lenumraged, I continued the use of the pills, and with the use of less than a dozen boxes, I was again en. joying the best of health. I can now attend to my farm work with the [ greatest case. My appetite is better than it has been for years. and the stomach trouble that had no lag made my life miserable has vanish. ed. I have gained in Weight. and can safely say that I am enjoying bet- ter health than I have done tor years before. I feel quite sure that those who may be sick or ailing. will finda cure in a fair trial of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Dr. Williams' Pink Pilll make pure, rich blood. thus Hatching the root of disease and driving it out 'of the system. curing when other medicines fall. Mat of the ills afflicting man- kind are due to an impoverished con- dition of’the blood, or weak orshat- tered nervur'and for all these Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a specific which speedily restores the sufferer to health. ‘These pills - never sold in any form ntcept. in the.oom- pany's boxes. the wrapper round which bears the full name "Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills tor Pale People." All others are 1sotuttertelta and whoan always be refused. Get the ugenuine. and be made well. One Fraquent Source of the Most Intansa Misery. (mlllilhllfI TROUBLE. CHILDREN’S MODES. , DMSION. with' this ‘found Ills Career Has Been s Brilliant and Promising One. Mai-Gen. Sir Archibald Hunter. who is second in command to Gen. Sir George Stewart White in Lady- smith, and who has been mentioned as a possible successor to Gen. White, made his record and reputation in Egypt. He is still a young man, being only 40 years old, and is one of the most promising lights in the British army. He has been described as Gen. Kitchener’s strong righthand in the ‘years of difficult work in building up the Egyptian army and in the re- conquest of the Soudan. When very young in the service Hunter attract- ed attention through his travery in fights “in. some of the Dervish chiefs and " one time he caught an eiTeo- ially ugly fellow with his own hands and dragged him over the sands to a gunboat lying in the Nile. While a captain in the Royal Lancashire Regi- ment, but a tfrdaaier-general in the field, he led the Egyptian army, which he was working in shape, against Ne- jumi and had a hand in the actions of Ginniss, Arguin and Toski. Later he was governor of the Red Sea littoral and of the Nile frontier at Wady Hal- fa. He had a prominent part in the battles that have made Kitchener famous and displayed such gallantry that he was promoted to major-gen- eral. He will probably have an op- portunity to add to this reputation in the conflict in South Africa, dur- ing which it was originally intended he should act as ehiat of staff to Gen. Sir Redvers Bullet. fmllIhlflilll,'8 MW, Tweed Shoemaker Who States He Was Cured of Backache by Dodd's Kidney Pills. No Reason to Doubt It-le isBut One of a Ttrousand-Doda's Kidney Plus Always Cure Burkuche. Tweed, Nov. 27.--There is n, shoe- maker in this town who is one mm_mp; the thousands who have been cured of Buckuche by IJodd’u Kidney l’ills. The Shoemaker'" work, sitting bent over the bench or last all day, is naturally a strain on the buck, but that of it- self is never the cause of the real I'xwkache. L'ackacho of the genuinely painful and distressing kind is caused by disorder of the kidneys. in fact the. :u-he or pain is situated directly in the kidneys, as the sufferer will find if he tries to rub the pain away with lini- ments, as he would were it a mere stillness of the muscles. Mr. W. S. Busby, of Tweed, thought his vase was of the latter kind. He born with it for years, thinking itin- s;epura0t from his work. Finally, how- ever, he found his mistake. He writes: The Pall Mall Gazette says tardy justice is at length to be done to un- other of the many nmrtyrs of science in the person of Prism d'Avennos, the dist-owrer of the famous muxhnn of Ptah Hotep. which has been clulmml us the oldest book in the world. Prism d'Avennes was a munifieent donor in his time to tho numeums of Paris, and most patrioticnlly refused all offers from other nations to work ior them as an archaeologist when the trade of exploring was; morr- highly pail and less‘crowdod than it is to-day, He died in poverty at tho age of 72, and his grateful country has; now named " strmt in Paris nitvr him, and proposes to piano his bust in the Egyptian Museum of the Louvre. "I have long been troubled with se- ven- pains in my back, and I always thouqht that the cause was from my (-onntunt work on the bench. I found out my kidneys worn affected, and (met! I {was certain of that I resorted to Dodd's Kidney Pills. I am happy to any three boxes left me clear of Bucknche. I can hi1:th recommend them to any person afflicted with that form of Kidney Disease.†Inflammation in The Order to “Right About'." And nmv. after slinging mud for two or three weeks at; the Eminen- Canadians and their Liberal load-em. the Montreal Star and Toronto Mail and Empire have suddenly veen-d round and are giving thou, peep}, tally. Tho Frtmclt-Carradianrt are all right, tlwy sa.v--osrtr?ptiug, of course, thom "roacNouary" Cocta?rvacivo,, (le-crlbod. by the Halifax Herald's Montreal correspordent. These Tory pnpén new pretord to say that it was onlv Tarte they were after. Att-. otlurr mid'mre td the failure of tho pmti-FrertcJ, campaign in Ontario.-- Halitax Chronicle. Seeking Sunken Treasure. Soundings and divings are taking plat-e near the Island of Teracholling. in tho north of Holland, at the spot. where a Frrrwh warship sunk just 100 years ago, She was loaded with silver and gold to the amount of 40,000,000 trams, or $8,000,000. The captain's log mentions the amount, and as early as 1800 French sailors succeeded in bringing to the surface a box con- taining: 1.500.000 tranea' worth of gold and silver ingots. In 1856 and 1860 a private undertaking succeed- ed in raising another 1,250,000 francs value. The warship sunk in 230 met ot water and divers hare great diffi- culty in working at such a depth. Dynamite is now being used to break up the iron cases. Soldiers and Quinine. There is one essential of tho “slnewa ot war,"that Le not usually taken ac- count o'. Tho Manna! News says that more than 1'.?.G,000,000 grains of quinine have been taken by United States goldrprg during the past year. It is said that some of the military patients in tho army hospitals In Cuba and Puerto Rico took us much as 300 grains a week during several weeks. Hardly any of those who were In service in the What Indies failed to take some quinine during their stay. The Confederacy la or. ten sum to have failed largely tor want ot quinine. The St. Lawrence Channel between Montreal and Quebec is being dredged to a depth of 29 feet in low water. HUNTER AND HIS RECORD. The Manitoba Legislative elections take piace on Dec. 7th; nominations a week earlier. Miller's Grip Powders euro. DALLEY’S FAMILY SALVE. A Martyr to Science. tion in its worst form can be removed by La Gripper, or Epidemic Innuensa, is a disease caused by an air germ. " appears from time to'time as an epidemic, and attacks numbers of per- sons " one time. Commencing with a chill it is followed hr intiamanatlom' of the mucous membranes of nose. throat, and in some cases severe bronchitis. _ A __, Aka. a p.v..v-----. " ts easy to understand that a remedy having the power to destroy germ lite, and to heal up the inflamed parts, entirely without injurious ef- fect, will cure the disease. Now comes the question: is there such a remedy? Thousands of persons who have tested the merits of Catarr- hozone, and numbers of physicians yd' use it in their practice, answer, 'es l Cntarrhozone, the new medicated air treatment, is a guaranteed cure for diseases of the nasal and respira- tory passages caused or maintained by microbic life. . .. --- L_-n“;n and pan- macros“; sun. It cures while you breathe and can- not fail to reach the seat of the dis- ease; it goes wherever air can she, and no matter how deep seated t e disease may be in the lungs or bron- chial tubes, it always succumbs to the use of Catarrhozone. The success of Catarrhozone as a. treatment of Catarrh. Asthma, Bron- chitis, Influenza. and all other dis- eases oaused by microbie life has been unique. It never tails to cure, and the method of treatment, that of inhal- ation of medicated air, is a very plea- sant and effective one. You simply breath the medicated aim and it does the rest, a pleasanter and more rational mode of Ereatment "" ' ----- _.. “Adah anu unite luuuuun a“..- -- "H than using muffs and washes which are quite ineffectual as well as dis- gusting. (Price 81 at all druggists or direct by mail. Send 10 cents in stamps for simple outfit to N. C. Polson & Co., Mfg. Chemists, Box 514. Kingston, LlElTT.-(EI‘IN. He is the Youngest otneer of This Rank in British Army. The youngest Lteutenant-Generrd in the army is Lieutenant-General Lord Methuen, who is to command the first division of the Army Corps in South Africa. He joined the Scots Guards in 1864, and had held a long series of regimental nnd staff appointments. He was in the Ashantee campaign of 1873, at Tel-ei-Ke'bir in 1882, and commanded the lat Cape Mounted Rifles in 1884, during the Bechuana- land expedition under Sir Charles Warren. In 1897-8 Lord Methuen was on the northwest frontier of India. He commanded the home district from 1892 to 1897, and devoted himself to developing the efficiency of the Vol- unteers of the Metropolitan Corps. He has served for three years as attaches at Berym, and is a personal friend Oni. Pale checks rapidly become may when Miller's Compound Iron Pills are taken. 50 doses 2.G cents. 3E ar Euimror wry/Lim. Mint creams are thought to aid digestion, and are frequently served at dinners when the Crnger bowls are brought Ln. They may easily be made at home. Miller's Worm Powders are the host laxative mrediolne for children; asnice as sugar. . Put in a granite saucepan or the chafing dish two cuphxls of granu- lated sugar and a halt cup of water. Stir until the sugar is dissolved. but no longer. Remove the spoon. and after the syrup begins to boil, boil Just eight, minutes. Remove from the fire, add eight drops of pepper- mint, stir hard. then drop from the tip of the spoon on waxed paper or a marble slab. Although the difference between a good and a bad sponge is Very marked. but few pecple seem able to appre- ciate it. Tho first rmuisito of a good sponge is that it should be dark in Color. The beautlful yellow sponges commonly Peon in druggists windows are a delusion and a smart". The nat- ural color is a light to medium brown. and the yellow sponges hm‘e been bleached by a vitriol bath. which de- stroys their elaatsicity and makes them wear out mu'ch sooner. From time to time expvrts have no- ticed certain unexplainable peculiar" ties In magnetic Instruments in va- rious banding-s. Electricians now do. Clare.'as the result of experiments and investigations, that the vagrant les are due to tho presence ot mag-netti- ban in bricks. They are made of earth- ly matter containing a great or less proportion of magnetic iron ore. Take Laxative Bromo Qulnine Tah. lets. All druggl-n refund the money ll it Inâ€: to cure. Mc. E. W.Gr0ve'a signature In or. each box. Britain always keeps on hand a large supply of army stores at the Woolwicli and Deptford stock yards. When the fitting oat of the South African expedition begun there was on hand at these two depots 2,00o,0iJ0 pounds of ships' bread or biscuits, 1,000,000 pounds of clioeolate-.the use of which it did not require Bernard Shaw's German soldier to tell us-loo,- 000 pounds of tea, 7,000,000 pounds or sugar. 100,000 bottles of lime juice and tins of condensed milk, a quarter ot a million barrels of beet and pork, and millions of tins of meat. For leples and Blotches take Bailey's Family and Liver Pills. They clarify the skin and give a clear complexion. Only 10 cents a box. In Switzerland a miikmaid gets bet- ter wages if gifted with a good voice, because it has been discovered that a cow wilt yield ore-fifth more milk if soothed during miAing by melody. Thomas Conder, aged CG, one of the 1‘or9nto coal gas poisoning victims, is LA GRIPPE, T0 CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY DALLEY’S FAMILY SALVE Supplies for British Soldiers. For cute, burns, wounds, scalds. old sores. etc. Bow to Tell a Good Sponge. Magnetism in Bricks. Musical M llkmalds. Stood the Test for 100 years- ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO M int Creams. il.% 'i'pith?s1?', r! ti'Eiiii ls, a Is .om) METHL‘EX LT (mu-or of This C is there of persons of Catarr- physician! TAKE 8 Mattit of "While I was In Washington I..- month." at! . Chlumn the other night, “I out something which tair- ly gag me cold shivers. We were tsittin In the attest on and In the tteat fut hackle no out one at the handsome“ women in all Washington. a will. well developed. well groomed creature of perhaps 80, with dark rimmed eyes ind tiroetseutlnted hair. I know her tor the widow of a man who was nomethlng or other in the State department under the Cleveland il%iiniatratioy, I believe. I know she ill-ma in a dainty apartment In the newer part of the northwest quar- ter. There was a. man with her on the car, a. meme boy of a, follow. and he gazed at her thh admiring eyes. There was a hint of chihllness In the air and the Woman shrugged her handsome shoulders. " ‘Myl' said she, 'Pm afraid I'm taking coid.' “Can’t I get you somethmg be- ‘-- we start t' asked the boy any» 376a£¥1 get you fore we tstart t' asked ouior. -. __, -5- III-w " 'It's an isn't, it t' a} the way the mind the ta me just, then, and she blushed. It wm deed, to take. not phtne." taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condition. Mating will be destroyed forever: nine case: out ot ten are caused by catarrl1,whitrh ls nothing bat an intlamed condi- tion of the mucous aux-moss. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend tor circulars, tree. I". J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, o. Sold try Druggisrta, TGe. HalN Famlly Pllls are the beat. by local applications. as they can- not reach the diseased portion or the ear. There In only one way to cure deafness. and that In by con- stitutioual remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed canditlon of tho mucous lining ot the Eastaehlatt Tube. When this tube gets inflam- ed you have a rumbling sound or im. perfect. hearing. and when it Is on- tirely closed. deafness ls the result, and unless the Inflammation canbe A strange experience recently he- tell George Dietz, formerly a resident of Chester. Pa., but at the present time m the Jewelry business in Hon- olulu. Mr. Diet: has recovered a watch which he lost over thirty years ago at Gettysburg. He was fighting for the North on that bloody battlefield when he dropped it. The watch was recently brought into the jeweler's shop by Harry Ellis. ot the Kansas volunteers. The soldier. who was bound to Manila, wanted to sell it. On being asked where he got it he said his father. who had round it on the field of Gettysburg. had given it to him. The Jeweller opened it and saw " name scratched on it. He. last no time in making a trade with the Putnam’s Painless Corn and Wart Extractor is guaranteed by' the makers to remove corms. warts, bum ions, ete., without pain, in twenty- tour hours. Putnam‘s has been the standard for thirty years, and in the only sate and sure remedy of its kind on the, market. Insist on hav- inq only Putnam's. and beware of acid flesh-rating substitutions. Price 250 per bottle Cat all dealers, or by mail. N. C. Poison & Cay., Box 514 Kingston, Ont., proprietors. soldier. h dose of Miller's Worm Powders occasionally wlll keep the children healthy. The weak, fluttering heart becomes strong and regular when Miller's Com- pound Iron Plus are used. It has been shown by Koch and oth. era that soup is a mierobicide, or germ killer. and, according to Profes- sor Serafini. soda. or potash soup is quite a good disinfectant, not only because of the nilmlis. but the combi. nation itself. Heating the water fa- vors the effect. Resinous soaps are not the best disinfectants. h solution of 3 or I per cent. kills the most re. sisting microbes. Mix two parts of powdered whiting with one of powdered Dining and one- half pint of sonpauds, and heat it to the boiling point l while still hot apply with n soft cloth to the discolored marble and allow it to remain there until quite dry. Then wash oft with hot water in which a little salts of lemon has been dissolved. Dry with a piece or soft flannel. The County Crown Attorney has ad- vised an inquest on the body of Peter Peterson, killed in the London, Ont, Packing Company's ostrtattrtashanent. Admiral Dewey has settled his new residence in Washington on his wife. Deafness Cannot SEQ Strange Story of " Watch. Best Way to Clean Marble. Soap as a Germ Killer. t is Wan-Eto- Belle Accl- dontally Discovered. HOBPBINE " PUBLIC. taéte Corns and Warts “W’s: In waahingtoet Innt be Cured as: a." m“ - ISSUE No " 1839 A Fleshy Cohsumptive Had Her Doubts. " don't believe protease“ know so very much," said Mamie. “Why! How can you. talk l0 t" re- Joined Maud. "WeU, I don't see why Mr. Ful- pate should have seemed so surprised and puzzled when I asked him how to say 'rubber-neck' in Greek." If your child is pale, peevish and doel not thrive, a dos? of Miller‘s Worm Powders occasionally will ('urv. Cugtlng otr "is Retreat. "My income in small." can n rather dilatory lover. "and perhaps it Is cruel ot me to take you from your futjnerja roo_f_." .. The secret of success is comdaraV of purpai-Disraeli. wad the prompt replr-Rarlem Life Train Service It is a well -known met that Roma troubled with Heaven. it played on Prairie pasture. arc soon cured of the have; " cents I Expre- leu-ing Hamilton Tatt pan. dailr hm Pullman wide vcnibule. Tickets sud berths cu: be new from CHAS. E. MORGAN. u Jamel m north, Hamilton. or Btmut ntrcct Smion. Is composed of tho Puma Weed .. which has. been found no "bettml in raring Heat Pp." combined with other \mlunble rum ial a -m _, and will prove an exfocuul remedy for {San w and Coughs in Home: and l 'attle. NOTE-Train leaving Montma1 at 10.25 pan. daily. except Sunday. has Pullman vestibule Sleoptnc Car to Hamilton. oe, Sunday- this on will leave Montreal " 8 gun. “‘hen cost of tuition. board, ttte., nupcriori! y of training. mpid program in studies. and “LP “hood affecting a. mutation an†milmuon are cons! cred. our college In the beat placv in Canada for you. Our ‘nuloauc given full particulars. Write, tor one. .lil-ll. no. Kach pickup mum-:- we OWN worth cf tine Ink. Send your 0004me name and address and we. will forward you the Ink Powder and our lawm- Catalogues prepahl. When sold spud Us .mr money and we will send you the Premium you select. Write for the mull! lo-dny. Mum-m this paper. IMPERIAL INK Co..T'omsuto,orn. PARMANENTLY CURE!) " Dr. Khan Great Nerve Rao- w. No nu or ncrx‘ounnm after first day's um. Send " “A Arch Errol, l'himdclphh Ps, for treatise and (me , trial with. For " by J. A, Harte, 11w iotme Dutue are" Montml. Que. PRAIRIE WEED Heave Powder 5 cents or package u I" Dwain“. or m ed by I: F. EBY, ttomist, Port Elmo, Om SLEEPING CAR from Hamilton to Mont M.c. DICKSON. District. Mm:- Agent. Very handy for many thing-s is DALLEY'S FAMILY SALVE Hamilton to Ioronto Montreal and East. NOTICE TO HORSE OWNERS. Fast and Elegant Only 10 rents a box ) STRATFORD. ON . For Travellers W J: ELLIOTT, Principal. uni court! h AN' ly H TH Ii II)! Tam ht he is Lon: from t of o stop t hence the an pow "Now words rvttr, It Th ri