U\ docks of Lordon cover a~ greater area than those of Liverpoo! and some of them individually are, or were until recently, larger than any on the Mersey. The Victoria dock, opened in 1855, measures 3,000 x 1,, 050 feet. The Royal Albert, conâ€" necting with it and completed in 1880, is 6,500 feet long and 490 feet fride. The t«ro, with their locks, conâ€" stitute a chain almost three miles long, across one o‘ the great horseâ€" Phoe bew‘s in the lower Thames. London‘s Vast Dock System. London has a larger commerce than any other city in the world. Liverpoo: comes next an1 Hambirg probably ranks third, although Antâ€" werp closely approaches her. "The a reporter, Mrs. Doddridge said : ‘For quite a number of years I have been a terrible sulferer from dyspepsia, acâ€" companied by the sick hoidaches that rlimost invariablo come with this tbrouble. I suffered from terrible pains in the stomach, bloating and belchâ€" Ing wind. AH food seemed to disagree with me, and as a result of the trouâ€" ble I was very much run down, and at tl.uï¬;;~ I was unable to do e en light housework. T am ayna I t'u-itydY a“s}:sore of different medicines, but without success, and as I am sixty years of age, I had come to believe that it was hopeless to expect a cure. â€" A friend@ who had usei Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills with good results, nrged me to try this medicine, and my husâ€" band brouzht home â€" a couple of boxes. Before _ they were finished _ I felt _ much better; and we then got another halt dozen boxes, and these have completeâ€" ty restored my health, and I not only fee!l better than I have done for years, but actually feel younger. I very cheerfu‘ly recommend Dr. Wilâ€" Hams‘ Pink Pills to similar sufferers. If your dealer does not keep these Ills, they will be sent post paid at EO cents a box, or six boxres tom . $2.50, by addressing the Dr. Wilâ€". Hams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. _ offered the public that will act so mptly and effectively as Dr. Wilâ€" K::ns' Pink Pills. Proof of this is given in the case of Mrse. F. X. Doddridge, Bt. Sauveur, Que. In conversation with An Elderly Lady Tells of Her Cure Through the Use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills After a Score of Other Remedies Had Failed. Dyspepsia causes more genaine disâ€" tress than most diseases that affiict mankind. In this country from one cause or another its victims are numbered _ by the hundreds of thousands, and those afflicted always fee! tired, worn out and miserable, and are subject to fits and melanâ€" choly or 1!1 temper without apparent cause. It is obvious that the human body, in order to perform its funeâ€" tions, must be properly nourished, and this caunot be done when the food is Improperly digested. Those who eulâ€" fer from indigestion should exercise care as to diet, and only easily digestâ€" ed foois shou‘d be taken. But more than this is requiredâ€"the biood needs attention in order that the stomach may be strengthened, and the 'eure-‘ tion of the gastric juices properly carâ€" mied on. There is no Oother medinina Custom has ordained that the Shevrift shall be paid a big fom for his part in *the execution. Frequently his fee is $300. Dr. Schwatka was more inexponâ€" sive, as he only chargod $150. At the last session of th> Legislatur® an efâ€" fort to aholish the payment of fees to the Sherifl was made, but failed. The feos for hanging a man is one to which Erticular attention was called, as ing entirely illegal and unjust, as the Sheriff is required by law to perâ€" form this duty. etc., Smith must have be well sunpolicd .« .. .. . %ï¬l"(‘ way. _ l [lV [ye $ Condemaed man was gi ter food than the other prisc the jJail, and from the bill it is that Mrs. Doyle, wife of the of the jail, preparod his Twentyâ€"five cents per meal | charge, and ®mith probably fai well at this rato, Tho cha setting up the scaffold, paintin F‘earing it Jown is an item: t peais to many as capableo of being down congiderably. The cost of hangman‘s rope was also not insig cant. At the rats charged for cig demned man thus custody of the S) *ra cost to the « the deputy ward have watched hin Deputy Shoriffs. though, to do the expensive way. .. Two of Sheriff Schwatka‘s deputies, Messrs. Walter M. Gorsuch and Leo Arivestor, were appointed as the death watch, and cither one or the other of the men was on duty at the jJail every day from May 290th until August 3rd. Many persons failed to seoe any reason for turning tha conâ€" demned man thus entirely over to the custody of the Sheriff‘s officer at exâ€" tra cost to the city, and claim that the deputy wardens of tho jail could have watchod him just as woell as the Deputy Shoriffs. It is the custom, though, to do the thing up in tho more DYSPEPSIA AND HEADACHE Death watch ... ... .. ... Board of condemned man Sheriff‘s services ... ..; ... & moval of the scaffold ... ... Physician‘s services ...... ... ... Hangman‘s rops ... ... ... ... .. Buit of clothes, hangman‘s " Cown and C4B :+ ..0}...)s.+ /(« Tobacco, cigars, stationery, The Expense Account. Erection, painting and roâ€" cuted at the City Jail. The execution of ‘the negro, Amos Smith, on August 8rd, for instance, was not a ch>ap afâ€" falr by any means. The bills for the various exp>nses were turned over this morring to the Controller, where it was founrd that sending Smith into etarnity had cost the taxpayers of the city $785.05. The various bills were as follows: Baltimore, Md., report: It is an expensive operation, when a man, conviectsd of murder or other crime punishable by doath, is legally exeâ€" MANY ITEMS CHARGED UP. What an Execution Costs in Little Maryland. HANGING 45 A LUXURY, Wotal Shoritt Recelves a Fee Death Watch Custom ©,. _ The charge for i{fold, painting it and no other medicine aP t EOE OC RTES MCY Te up in the more | the upper "arch bridge," ab [ube: 9 ue 4 he entered the Avater hbe was given betâ€" | start in the direction of the r prisoners at | The deathâ€"defying matriner )ill it is evident ; with him in his boat the par of the warden | for taking aon 3ifEs, and as 1@ his meals.| down th> rapids he will thre meal was her| plumbâ€"bob attachod to man ibly fared very Peet of wire and do his best t ho charge for | tha depth of the ewirling ris painting it and | says he is sure he can get a Thom: «w.a T knj . (us 02 T0 OV NV AAnL q004 $785.05 pré $§119.28 _ 15 00 25.00 39900 | 50.25 ' 150.00 Apâ€" cut the LrS, tty iï¬ 0.00 proposed Panâ€"Am>rican Exposition in Buffal@. About that tima I was down at Nlagara Falls, and while 1 was down at tho rapids one day the thought struck ime that it might be possible for people to ride down those turbulent waters as easily as they rid> down th» soâ€"called chutes, I conâ€" cluded ‘that I would study the matâ€" ter more thoroughly than was pogâ€" slble Just thon. I went home. and waited until winter came. Then "I first became possessed of the idea of swhooting th> rapids as long ago as 18097. It was when there was so much talk down cast about the "When th» bob re:ich s the bottom as nearly as I can tell, I shall cut the line, aml by measuring what I have left in the boat amd substractâ€" ing that from the amount with which I started, we will have the depth of the river as the remainder. 1 shall use wire for the pumb line andt I will have bt ;olled on a number of differâ€" ent b&ioo.d, 80 mhniy feet on a spool, and this arrangement will faciiitate measurements. I may find it advisâ€" able to cut a hole in thia cockpit of my boat, through which to let the wire run, but I will determine that matter later. It would not endanâ€" ger the saufety of the boat in the least if a hole or two were made in the bottom of the pit, as the two air chambersâ€"even one of themâ€" would keep the boat aflowt if the pt ahould fill with water to the brilim. I shall begin trying to got a soundâ€" ing when miy boat enters what is known as "snow drift." ‘This is about threeâ€"{ourths of a mle above the rapâ€" ids and a little way above the Grand Trunk bridge. Since I was so sucâ€" cessful before in getting through all right I shall not have the least hesâ€" itation or fear in again shooting the rapids, and this time» I hnre to obâ€" tain facts of cons!Gerable value which no one has ever been able to secure before. _ _"I will probably receive financial backing for my new schome from a ‘source concerning which 1 can say _nothing at present," said Nissen. "I have received great encouragement from many people, including some government officials, and I will cerâ€" tainly make th> venture along about tho middle of next month. I will use the same boat which I used before, for sho demonstrated beyond a quesâ€" tion her ability to survive the terrific ordéal of a trip through the rapids and the whirlpool. Of course, as is well known, no one ever made this trip in a boat before, and, therefore, mno one has ever attempted to sound the rapids and th> pool in the only way which [ think it can be done. ‘The effort which was made to take a sounding with a 700â€"pound plumbâ€" bob was a complete Tailure because the attempt was made from a stationary point. Now, my thoory is that if the bob is thrown from a boat that is | {lying along with the current it will sink all right in a very few minutes. Of course it will be carried forward some distance by the irresistible force of the current, but the boat will also© be carried along at th> same time, and when at last the bob reaches the bottom it will have drafgzed out mot much more than enough lire to measâ€" ure . tbe depth approximately. IOP taking sout<ifigs, and as he shoots down the rapids he will throw out his plumtâ€"bob attached to many hundrec feet of wire and do his best to measure tha depth of the «wirling river. Nissen says he is sure he can get a sounding 500 feet below the Grand Trunk bridgo, but is not so sure what h> can do with tho turbulent torrent from there down. T‘ h‘s lLoat shoots into the whi 1 p:)l Trom the ur%v.r-r rapids then the Joatman will mike strenuous ‘éfforts to sound that treacherous body of water. However, if the boat fails to turn into the whirlpool, but flies on down into the lower rapids, Nissen will make a virtue of necessity and proâ€" ceed to take soundings in that part of tho river. Some years ago Government eng‘nâ€" eers emleavored to take soundings in Niagara at the poins where the Grand Trunk bridge crosses the river. As a pumbâ€"bob they used a 700 pouwdi chunk of lead, which they threw ~from tho bridge. The lead floated off down stream like a pine shingle and whoen it reached the length of the cable to which it was attached , the latter snapped _ like a tow strinzx from the forco â€" with which the lead was carried by the water. That experment ended the efforts of Government officials, and all others as well, to ascertain the depths of the rap‘ds. S> toâ€"day the depths of both the upper and lower rapids, as well as the whirlpool, reâ€" main anknown. At on‘y one point beâ€" tween the Falls and Lew‘ston, five or glx miles blow, has a soumding ever _been successfuily made. This â€" was some distance above the upper rap‘ds and just below the Falls, near the boat landing. From that point _ on down to Lewiston the distance from the surface of the rver t the botâ€" tom is unknown. Nissen proposes to go to the bottom, as it were, of this mystery. Near th> middle of September he is onca more going to hop into his nonâ€" sinkable little twentyâ€"foot boat at a point closo to th» mills and just below the upper "arch bridge," about where he entered the Avater before, and start in the direction of the whiripool. The deathâ€"defying mariver will take with him in his boat the paraphernalia {ofr taking soun4ifgs, and as he shoots down the rapids he will throw out his Peter Nissen, the Chicagoan who, under the name of Bowser, recently shot the whiripool raphis below Niaâ€" gara Falls, is going to atvtempt the same {eat agnain in the near future. This time Nissen is to make the danâ€" gerous trip in the name of science, for he wiull emieavor to ascsertain {acts in regnrd to the river which up to the present thme have remained shrouded in mystery. "BOWSER" TO TRY AGAIN. An Adventurer Has a Scheme to Plumb the River, NIGSEN TO SOUND NAGARA Expects Financial Aid. Idea an QOld One. Toal ddle of September he ng to hop into his nc twentyâ€"foot boat at th»> mills and just bel made this trip therefore, mo to sound the the only way we,. Ns _ was e upper rap‘ds ills, near the iat point â€" on distance from er t> the botâ€" n proposes to _A woman really begins to grow sold," said the Cornfed Philosopher, "when her husband sees some other woman he thinks is better looking." A Matter of Custom "I can‘t see the justice," said Tooler, ‘"In condemning the Mormons for drivâ€" ing their wives fourâ€"inâ€"hand because we prefor to hitch ours tandem."â€" The August Smart Set. 4 19 You think I look so much better ; yes, and I feel betterâ€"Miller‘s Comâ€" pound Iron Pills did it. Miss Wunderâ€"My goodness, do you call that a modest bathing suit ? _ Miss Gabbyâ€"Of course! It has such a swhrinking disposition.â€" Baltimore American, + "I had a birthday last week, and he gave me a $20 gold piece, He also askâ€" ed if I would allow, him a discount of When children are pale, peevish, and restless at night, they require g dose or two of Miller‘s Worm Powâ€" ers. & 20 per cent. if ha would give me next year‘s birthday present at the same time. I told him I would do so such thing."â€"Detroit Free Press. "I think that my husband carries his businese proclivities too far." said Mrs. McBride to Mrs, Darley. * "How so ?" The Sultan of Turkey also posâ€" sesses pipes of great value. In 1862 when the Prince of Wales was on a visit to Turkey, he was invited by the Sultan‘to smoke a narghila, an oriental pipe, in which the smoke passes through water. This pipe was studded with diamonds and _ was worth $15,000. It was given to the Prince as a memento of his visit to Constantinople. Another _ pipe, made entirely of meerschaum _ and amber, and belonging to Prince Ferâ€" dinand of Bulgaria, is reported as costing $3,000.â€"New York Press. Shahs and Sultans Indulge in Costly Smokers‘ Articles. The shahâ€"inâ€"shah, or padishah (king of kings), the present ruler 0% Persia, owns the costliest pipe. It is tha kallian, or state, pips, and is used on special occasions. It is valâ€" ued at $400,000 and is ornamented with diamonds, rubles and smaragâ€" dites. The long, snakeâ€"like stem and th'gkbowl-are of pure gold. PIPES OF ORIENTAL RULERS If you suffer from cramps, pain in the stomâ€" ach, nausea, you will find ten drops of Polson‘s Nerviline in a tea-lponntul of wa‘ er a most effiâ€" cacious remedy, 1‘ is Tu:'ker than any known romedy for the alleviation of all pain, Try it. Bold every where. Lyâ€"Cheg nuts must be put on the table in their shells. In size and shape they resemble the walnut, while theo shell is not unlike the shell of. the butternut in reâ€" spect . to â€" color and corrugaâ€" tions ; when pressed it colors like an eagg shell. Besides its weird taste, the Lyâ€"Chee nut has a subtle and very penetrating â€" gwoctness, which perâ€" fumes with an unmistakable odor everything it comes in contact with. ‘mmediately Felievyed and Permanently Cured by a few drops of Polson‘s Nerviline. But no hostess nced fear that his guests will consume too many _ Lyâ€" Chee nuts, to the exclusion of the other viands on the table, for while they taste as sandalwood sweetenâ€" ad might be supposed to taste, two are about as many as the ordiâ€" nary palate cares for. cessory to the luncheon or dinner party. It comes from China, and in appearance, taste and odor has all th> Orientalism of most such proâ€" ducts. Besides being hard to obtain, it is sufficiently dear to prevent its becoming common, while it also posâ€" sesses tho virtue of being a decided novelty. |; 4 iney tGo a Long Way at a Dinner and Have a Subtle Sweetness. The Lyâ€"Chee nut has appeared above the horizon as the latest â€"acâ€" cessory to the luncheon or dinner party. It comes from China, and in appearance, taste and odor has all th> Orientalism of most such ornâ€" Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is take acts directly on the blood and of the system. Send for testin Phey Go Sworn to before me and subsc presence this 6th day of December t osnaeima 2t S oak Mn Edhaint cti foit s i County will pay LARS 1 they mad> the latter take. "After I bhad studied the flow of tho ies for a long time I found that I had not yet nï¬ of ths information which I nesded. I learned that a few months later an old bridgeo would be replaced by a new and more modern structure and that the wooden parts of ‘the old bridge were to be thrown into the water. That made me deâ€" tormine to come back once more to the river to watch the pieces â€" of timber wheon . they _ got into the rapids and the whirlpool. I did so and I then acquired a great deal of important information which was of great valne to me in dotermining how,. T should make the plans for my boat and for the trip which I proâ€" posed to take down the stream,." â€" Chicago Chroncile, StTaTE or On Painful Cramps . the system. Send for t« . F. J. CBEND Sold b; Druggists, 75¢. Hall‘s Family Pills are t when Iâ€"thought it was about tims for the ice in the river to break up I commenced daily trips down to one of the Chicago dopots to ask the conâ€" ductor on a cdrtain train which passed Niagara each day if the ice had yet bogun coming down the stream. At last, aftor many, many trips, the conductor told ms that the ioo had broken, and that If 1 wanted to es it fNloating down the river I would bettor hurry up. I took the next train for the Falls, and arâ€" rived in good time, For a great many hours I watched the cakes â€"of lce as thoy cam> down through the rapâ€" Ids, and as they were thrown about in the whirlpool. I studied the eddies and the curronts and their effect upor the cakes of ise and the course they mad> the latter take. "After I had studied the flow of tho ies for a long time I found that I had not yot all of ths information which I nesded. I learned that a few months later an old bridge would be replaced by a new and more modern tructure and that the wooden parts f ‘the old bridge were to be thrown nto the water. That made me deâ€" . tormine to come back once more to 1 the river to watch the pieces â€" of Frax® J. Ci not be QUEER CHIXESE NT h )#10, CiTy or Toreno, } PR cas CouNTy, Te . CHENEY makes oath that he is the ner of the firm of E. J. Curxry & business in the city of Toledo, 1 Stato aforesaid, and that said firm e sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLâ€" cach and overy case of Catarrh that ured by the use of Harn‘sCaTarnuT 1t Was Shy. Cornfed foo Far. A, W. GLEA FRANK J Lt be '-.L\:-!,!.i‘s 55‘% '}‘z,“ft~5 S_Q,F, a CO internally and ucous surfaces CHENEY SON iry I in my Beware of dangerous substitutes. Putâ€" nam‘s is the only genuine painless remedy. At all drupgists. Price 25¢. It goes right to the root of the trouble and tiere acts so quickly and so painlessly that nothing is known of the operation until the corn is shelled. Putnam‘s Painless Corn and Wart Exâ€" tractor proves on what slender basis public opinion often rests. If you suffer from corns, or if you are bothered by a host of nuiï¬tly warts, get Putnam‘s and you will be satisfied. Charlatans and quacks have long plied their vocation on the suffering pedals of the Eooplo. The knife has pared to the quick. Caustic applications have torment ed the vietim of corns and warts until the conviction shaped itselfâ€"â€"there‘s no cure. comu and We Errrreron 1 | No longer any necessity to feel embarassed over unsightly warts. A new remedy has been discovered which removes warts, corns and bunions in a few days. A sure, safe and painless treatment. A man finds no sweeter roice in the world than that which chants his prailses.â€"Fontenelle. WA RTS. Use Poleon‘s Nerviline for all paim. Only one man at the big hotel, Only one ; And a hundred girls or more were there. "It‘ll come along fiercely backâ€"answer crowd, who was the pose, "It will come earns all he gats." By their action on the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, Miller‘s Worm Powders correct all such troubles as Lack of Appetite, Biliousness, Drowsiness, Sallow Complexion, etc.; nice to take. *"*When," shouted t] will come that blosge man shail get all ho smeen Victoria has at her disposa when she wishes to take a ride innum erable carriages, Of these the corona tion coach is first, This carriage is un known to the present generation, as i has never left the royal mews at Back ingham Palace since 1861. It is lovely but cumbersome, was designed fo George 111., and every portioa is rich!; decorated and gilded. Outs‘d> its pan els are pictures paintsd by noted ar tists. "No; I told him how my shirt walists and high collars worried me, and he said my condition _ was brought on by trying to look sty}â€" ish and keep clean."â€"Detroit Free Press. ‘‘Nancy, did the doctor say y had nervous prostration from ov work ?" ; Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in It blistered month there no lameness. i cured a | five bottles tion of being t earth. No hu there escap>s m is ol the porni of field latorer: tion each year, of good pay for Minard‘s NHrl fro; Dear Sirsâ€"I have MINARD‘S LINIMENT The Most Deadly Spot Minard‘s Liniment Cures Cold Victoria‘s Coronation Coach Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Oh, what funâ€" For the man. Woman’s Weakness RICHARTX n Feast and Famine. that blesged day when every _ get all ho earns ?" me along about the time," ickâ€"answered the man in the o was there for that purâ€" will come when every man he gets.*"* A woman‘s reproductive organs are in the most inâ€" tense and continuous symâ€" q\:uhy with her kidneys. he slightest disorderinthe kidneys brings about a corresponding disease in the reproductive organs. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, by reâ€" storing the kidneys to their perfect condition, prevent and cure those fearful disâ€" orders peculiar to women, Pale yourg girls, wornâ€"out mothers, suffering wives and women entering upon the Change of Life, your best friendg i9 wrete} denath. shouted the orat« Liniment Cures Di hore Some Day e the corona arriage is unâ€" eration, as it news at Buackâ€" 1. It is lovely, designed â€" for rtioa is rich!ly ts‘d> its nanâ€" 1 , the Roman the reputaâ€" idiy spot on who works 0n theria when arth The Ameer of Afghanistan is saijd to be mobilizing his infantry and artilâ€" lery preparatory to an advance on the Russian frontier Good Plain English, "‘The man whom you saw me talkâ€" ing with this evening dared to kiss me. I can assurs you I spoke my mind to him in good plain English." * What did you say to him ?" "I warned him that the next time he did I should be obliged to rebuke him."â€"New York World. My that Mille ter with r could be of tod Star. sorry with Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper t] condemn real‘ty i month 31 days. Naturally the 865th day cannot merely be dropped withâ€" out carry‘ing confusion to the Greâ€" gor‘an system, and Grosclaude wou‘!d have it inserted between December 31 and January ist, g‘.ving it no date, butecalling it the "year‘s day." In leap years another day would, of Swiss Professor‘s Plan to Improve the Gregorian Calendar. Professor Glosclaude. of the Un!« versity of the Watchmaker‘s Art, in Geneva, has suggested a novel way of relorm.mg the calendar, says a Berlin despatch to the New York Journal. The purpose of the projectâ€" ed reform is to abolish the most misâ€" chlevous point of the existing sysâ€" tem, which renders it impossible to tell the day of the week on which any given date fails The cause of this is the fact that the number of days in a week (seven) is not a prime factor of the number of days in a year (365). If the year contained only 364 days it would consist of exâ€" actly 52 weeks, and could be d‘vided ‘mto four equal quarter years of 91 days each, ‘ The I‘rst two months wanuld than ) be June 30 and July 1. This day to be called "leap day." This suggested mode of reforming e calendar mity at Tirst sight be ndemned as futilely bizarre. In al‘ty it has many excellent points + recommend Mt. For instance, the eekdays would fall upon the same tes in successive * years. Thus, if e year were to bezin on a Monday ell, Baldwin," y to hear y i Betty is bro es, sir," said t d that we cou! to eat the cr ty it has many recommend 1t. F« ‘kdays would fall es in successive * conta‘n : 31 days system, and Grose!: t inserted between 1 January ist, giâ€" utecalling it the "y« > years another day _ have to be ad »st opportune date on are deemed by A YEAR OF 364 DAYS. D d 0 months would then 0 days, the third Naturally the 865th rely be dropped withâ€" u ihe young man. ting any notice ?" was practising yesâ€" e neighbors stopped what was the matâ€" to enquire if they Ir of Interest. woulid consist of exâ€" and could be divided quarter years of 91 in 2 Ns prov h n I y y Tire Miller‘s i the _ The New Chemical Compound, wondertn! o 1e Dchue::l;:!ncl m‘musu&.’f," win n said, "I am Sore Throat. Viphberin, mm-l;"i:tg engagement â€" ache, Bruises, and Bladde: ft." Bold by all druggists at 2 cents, or trom: i man, "we M. F, LEBY, Chemist, Port Elgin, Ont n know Is did added, _ and ates for the Â¥ Grosclaude man, *‘ we igree who > if they Washingâ€" SQ) ur ldea much herâ€" it. nll‘ Winslow‘s Syrup should as. 'u;.l hm,n"‘ “'Cm. 1t soothee softens the cures wind colic “’d';'"“""‘l‘-dl’:.anm Twenty fAve cents a bottle, PERMANEXNTLY CURED BY DR FITS Kline‘s Great Nerve Restorer. Ne use on O Cooeepee after firet day‘» P:.‘m-w to IlArdunnoL For saic by 3. A. Harte: se Rous Deane siFeet Montreal, Que. One of the finest i unNhrnM In, at Wlnon.l,,gtnflugn:‘m Bn‘:f:én:g.ï¬u ways. aAcres, which mostly Will be sold in lots to suit This isa bargain, " Addrigy o Suit rurchasers. JONATHAN CARPEXT P.O. Box 49, W&so“. FRUIT FARM FOR SALE ] F YOU WANT a GOOD BUSINESS F cation for the leaâ€"t money, write B: ville Business College, Brock vilie, Ont. Agents wanted in every town and vill anada to sell made to measure Tailor lothing. For particulars Crown Ta 0., Toronto ance from _ 3°8,° wia rector, his she‘s the m with Knew the Family "She is a clergyman‘s you said, didn‘t you ?" i young man of a frtend wh troduced him. CGAN RAEUMATISM BB GUREFD? 5Q MONTHLY MADE WRITING _ a )XJ home. Bc postage for particulars, i Mil â€"â€" EBY‘8 DAISY OlL â€"â€" Box 916, Providence, R.J Str is even more easily digested than cream. It‘s surprising how chilâ€" dren thrive when given it. Don‘t keep the children living on the edge of sickness all the time. Make them strong and mg::d. plump and hearty. Scott‘s » sion of Codâ€"liver Oil and the Hypoâ€" phosphites of Lime and Soda will do this for them. ISSUE NO 34. 1900 Scoll‘s Emuision scort‘ s "Sopspm:asssd * Growing bodies must have an easily digested fat. Just think how much of it there is in milk, as cream. In speaking about Scott‘s Emulsion for children, you should not forget that it conâ€" tains Hime and soda, jus what the child must have to form strong bones and good teeth. It‘s this forming time you want to look after. Strong Bones the You can‘t tell without trying ng drink rator. * 1P WANTED. wife stoma ife‘s the lirector. n Wiers y town and vil im measure ‘huorhï¬:do e l a" on tow