" Obh, dear, no. He wasn‘t Wealthy enougch for that. He has merely gone "1 understand he has met with financial reverses." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distempeor. r.ld at 50 cents a box, or llxbo;;; or $2.50, by addressing the Dr. Wilâ€" Hams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. gslight return of the trouble MWilliams‘ Fink Pills soon dr out, and my health since i the very best. I have gain in weight, cat and sleep well sider myself as bealthy a p there is in the country ; a credit for this I feel is enti to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilia » I was afflicted with kidney trouble, and although I spent much money in various remedies I did not find a cure until I was persuaded to try Dr Williams‘ Pink Pilis. fn the autumn of 1898 the trouble began to assume an aggravated form. I suffered from most severe pains in the back, and a feeling of drowsiâ€" ness, and yot so severe was the pain, that many a night I scarcely closed my eyes. My appetite was poor, I suffered from headaches, lost flesh, was miserable and wholly unfit for work. It was while in this condiâ€" tion that I was advised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and procured three boxes. Before I had finished the third box I felt much better, and I then procured a half dozen boxes more. > I used all these, but before they were all gone I felt that my health was fully restored. In the inâ€" terval sinceo then I have had just one UMuslsk 225 ... w ow . Good health is the chief requisite to happiness, low spirits, moroseness and irritability can in most cases be traced to illâ€"health, and in not a few Instances are direct symptoms â€" of kidney trouble. ‘These, added to the severe pains in the back which acâ€" company the disease, make the life of the sufferer one of abject misery. One such sufferer was Mr. Darius Dean, of Jordan, Ont. Mr. Dean in an interview with a reporter reâ€" cently gave his experience as folâ€" lows: "I am a saw and grist mill operator, and naturally a strong man; but the life of a miller is a hard one, with long hours of labor and frequent exposure. Some years ego. as the result of this exposure, A Mill Operator Who Suffered From Kidney Trouble Spent Many Doilars i2 Useless Experiments to Restore His Healthâ€"Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Acted Promptly and Effectâ€" Showing How Suffering Can be Overcome. They are Kindred Institutions and Against Justice. In spite of all the boasting about clvil rights, habeas corpus, and trial by jury, the country seems to be drifting back toward the day when the rack, the thumbscrew and the ordeal by fire or personal combat were part of the system of justice. Out in Colorado, a negro boy is susâ€" pected of a horrible crime and lockâ€" ed up. The law prescribes the course of procedure in case of suspicion, but this wretched, and, to some extent, irresponsible creature, was submitâ€" ted to the ordeal of sweat box for three days continuously, until he broke down and confessed the crime of which he was suspected. That point gained the police force of a large city gives out the information broadcast, and when the people of the neighborhood where the crime was commited are thoroughly arousâ€" ed, the miserable boy, with bloodâ€" ‘ gulilt upon his soul and horror in his 1 brain, is sent away by train to meet a gang of infuriated lynchers. Perhaps the boy merits death, if death, the punishment of barbarian days, is a fit expiation of any crime, but it would seem that the majesty of the law has been outraged as much by the men who were engaged in enâ€" forcing it, as by the young murderer. It is time to abandon the sweat box method of extorting _ confessions from suspected criminals, as the thumbscrew and other tortures were abandoned long ago. A government with power over the lives and liberâ€" ties of its subjects cannot afford to be a coward.â€"Detroit Tribune. Ively. The above suggestion, from a fair Canadian correspondent, "with apoloâ€" gies to Burns," has been gratelfuaily received and immediately adopted by â€"Colonist. way, An‘ drink Ceylon for a‘ that! For a‘ that, an‘ a‘ thatâ€" Awa‘ Japan, an‘ a‘ thatâ€" The bonnie teas they lo‘e the best Are Empire Grown, an‘ a‘ that! *"*Wo‘ll Take a Cup of Kindness." Though Women‘s minds, like Winter winds, â€" May enilt and turn an‘ a‘ that, To love of Scandal, Tea and friendsâ€" They‘re Constant still, for a‘ that! An‘ so awa‘ wi‘ Foreign Teas, Doon wi‘ Japan an‘ a‘ that! Ceylon (Green Tes they lo‘e the best, And wha‘ a crime daur ca‘ that ? For it‘s the tea, aboon the lave, They dearly lo‘e, an‘ a‘ thatâ€" Blue Ribbon, and Salada, too, And braw Monsoon, an‘ a‘ thatâ€" Because, you see, ‘twixt you an‘ me, Japan, the Line they draw at, For syne the first are Rritigh Teas, They lo‘s them weel, an‘ a‘ that ! Thongh some may prate 0‘ ither teas, An‘ flaunt Japan, an‘ a‘ thatâ€" A STORY FROM LIFE. SWEAT BOX AND STAKE. Choosing a Term. h say they‘ll hba‘e their Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Titian, and Ruben, passed from the chisel to the pen or brush. Pavc Milton composed his "Paradige Lost" on & large armâ€"chair, with his head thrown ‘back. Voltaire had in his room sometimes five desks, at which he pursued difâ€" ferent tasks. Buffon wrote in lace ruffies; Alexâ€" ander Dumas in his shirt sleeves. Turgot never worked whenr he had dined heartily. Bossuet wrote in a cold room with his head warmly enveloped. Sarti, the musician, composed only in darkness. Schiller, before composing, put his feet in cold water. W. F. Denning, the wellâ€"known meâ€" teor observer, states in London Knowledge for September that in the stropg twilight of July 17 a Apuendld fire ball appeared over the morth of England, which left a streak visible for more than throeâ€"quarters of an bour. He had necsived about {iâ€" teen accounts of the meteor from different observers, from â€" which he was able to calculato that its height when first seen was 58 miles, and when last seen, over the North Soa, about 15 miles. Its length of obseryâ€" ud path was 175 miles. Its astromoâ€" mical "radinnt" was a few degrees northeast of Antares, in the Scorpion. He adds that the meteorio system to which this bri:liant object belongâ€" d is a remarkable one, for it furâ€" nishes many large fhre balls during the summer months. It is reported that twe‘ve fragments of a moteorâ€" ite Tfell, August 24th, in Spain, on the boundary of Jaen, Cocmlova and Grenâ€" ada. Whe fall was precaded by a serâ€" ies bf lowl detonations. One fragâ€" ment, weighing a pound,/is describâ€" e4 as of a hexagounml Bhapa..frgy on the murface anmdl gneenwh inside. There was nothing she enjoyed 8o much as the pleasant afternoon tea. And why ? Because she sipped the pure product (GREEN OR BLACK) of Ceylon and India. She can buy both in Canada now. The delicious Salada, Blue Ribbort or Monsoon packots await her pleasure.â€"Colonist. Love of country is the strongest characteristic of the average Britâ€" isher. Nor is it developed leas in the fair Colonist. See her bosom expand with pride, as she speaks of the old country. Hear her dilate on the pleasâ€" ant time she had when last there. But what of woman‘s mission to be lovely ? Does this no longer enter into reckonings of the utilities of the sex ? A shortâ€"akirted woman on the street, except in a deluge of rain, is a blow to one‘s ideals. The older the woman the greater the blow. "Verâ€" ily," says Carlyle, "clothes do tailorâ€" ize and demoralize us." True, indeed, concerning the abbreviated, ankleâ€" displaying skirt of the hoydeniah ‘"new" girl; traer still of the manâ€" nish middleâ€"aged and old ladies who, caring not for the size, shape, style of their feet, caring not for the subtle charm of mystery which beâ€" longed originally to woman, reduce dress to a convenierce of rapid tranâ€" géit, a grim assurance of the public health, and an artliess announcement of indifference to appearance.â€"Harâ€" per‘s Bazar. & Ladies ol Canada An Argument for Reauty No Matter About Health. While radical dress reform â€"leads womankiad nearer and nearer to the possessioa of the clothes of our faâ€" thers, let one faint voice in the land be heard in favor of the skirts of our mothers. According to modern Sclence, the dress of women should be a grim demonstration of hygiene. A congress of doctors of all nations asâ€" sembled in Rome has figured to a dot the number of deadly bacilli possible to be gathered to the square inch of a woman‘s train. In Boston, the Board of Health has formally preâ€" scribed short akirts for women school teachers. _ The warnings of science thus are unmistakable, and they are not lightly to be taken. 000 O ERCCCCC AeRITRe IRPC TeRdwoOrls €t0 I well know, was seized with intolerâ€" able retching for many days. _ In conclusion let me say that if such labors as these do not merit the Victoria Cross, then there is no reason in recognizing heroism at all ; and certainly there is no officer who is more worthy to bear upon _ his breast that decoration which is awarded ‘For Yalor.‘" "All through Thursday the Padre was busily engaged preparing his ldentity reports for the War Office and on Friday he resumed his sadâ€" der task on the opon veldt. The harâ€" vest of death was not even yet fully gathered in. First he laid to their rest those 35 he had identified on Wednesday and then 15 more who were only found that day. ‘This was the fifth day since they were stricken down, and it needs no further words to indicate in what condition those bodies were. Only by keeping his bearers well plied with spirits was the Padre able to keep them at their gruesome task. He himsell, as no rest for Padre Robertwin. That day he identified and buried 31 bodies besides identifying 35 more. Most of this heartâ€"rying work was accomâ€" plished close to the Boer trenches, and such of it as had to be carried out _ within 600 yards of â€" those trenches was performed by our bearâ€" ers blindfolded, as the Boers would allow _ no ome within their lines with uncovered eyes save Padre Robâ€" ertson. This meant that 35 bodies which lay within the 600 yards‘ limit had to be handled by him singleâ€"handâ€" ed. And those poor bodies had been exposed to an African sun for three days ! Rev. James Robertson, the popular Chaplain of the Highland _ Brigade, which made such a splendid record in South Africa, was the subject of noâ€" tice in a recent isare of the "Sunday Strand." The writer is H. C. Sheliey, the war correspondent, and it is his purpose to indicate the unsel{ish and heroic labors of "Padre" Robertson alter the disaster of Magersfontein. Here is an extract from whe article â€""With the new day there still came HIS WORK AT MAGERSFONTEIN. The Rev. Jamses Robertson, of _ the Highland Brigade. CHAPLAIN WAS A HERO, How They Worked. PLEA FOR LONG SKIRTS LOVE OF COUNITRY Meteorites As to Food. Men and women eat mmucll. «days th> New York Pross. of youth, the sallow skin, the decaying teeth, y M ERl exterlor signs o n. Bweets, pie, coffes, z»d waterâ€"with th‘s as their portion since the day of swaddling cloths, is it any wonder that many American women are neryâ€" "I thought your pa always uses“ slipper to spank you with ?" . "So he does ; but these he just got are the soft kind that‘s all made out of wool.‘"â€"Philadelphia Press. "The ladies in our congregation are pretty: fond of mo," said the minisâ€" ter‘s inischievous little boy. "Nearl all of them gave pa some suppeu‘ his birthday." & Old Maidâ€"See here, man ; is this the smoking car? Brakemanâ€"No, mum, there isn‘t any smoking car on this train. You‘ll have to wait for the 10.13.â€"Somerville, Mass., Journal. A country paper has this personal item : "‘Those who know old Mr. Wil son of this place personally will reâ€" gret to hear that he was assaulted in a brutal manner last week but was not killed."â€"Titâ€"Bits. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Is at hand, for with aching corns a prompt, safe and painless remedy is required. Putnam‘s Painless i orn Extractor exactly flls the bill Sure, safe and painless. ‘"‘There‘s nothing in my name, no matter what Shakespeare says," comâ€" mented the new boarder. "How‘s that?" asked the landlady. "My name is Naughton," answered the new boarder. By diligently exâ€" plaining the meaning of "naught" he managed to draw _ nonâ€"committal smiles from a few of those present.â€" Baltimore American. I was cured of loss of volce by Minard‘s Liniment. i Charles Plummer. Yarmput I was cured of Sclaticn Rhsumatism by Minard‘s Liniment. Bydney, C. B. I was cured of Minard‘s Liniment. I was cured of a bad caso of Grip by Minard‘s Liniment. In days to come the world will crowd to see Mme. Patti‘s autograph fan. Though comparatively plain it is one of those few objects that gathâ€" er value as time rolls an. Even now many ol the signatures written across this dainty piece of chicken skin could not again be repeated. The late Emâ€" press of Austria, Alexander II, of Russia, the old German _ Emperor, William, to these three signatures now attach a pathetic interest, the more so when it is remembered that the first two died y the hands of assassins. Mmo. Pstti was even fortunate enough to obtain not only the signature, but a long senâ€" tence in Queen Victoria‘s handâ€" writing: "If King Lear spoke the truth when he said that a sweet voice was the most preciouns gift a woman can possess, you, my dear Adelina, must be the richest woman in the world." "Didn‘t T figure it out myself *" he said at length; and then there was only silence as he continued on his way to the apparatus and safely turned the tremendous voltage into himgelf, y P The °t oc lithantran ies P dnb enc ces Bs 1.3 his carefully prepared figures on a matter of such moment was really painful. For a few moments he lookâ€" od a%t them in stence, Burin, Nfid. With a current of far mare than ordinary voltage he was going to give them a practical illustra tion of the fact on himself right there before them. . The stndents could hardly beâ€" lieve their ears, but as he stepped toward the electrical transformer a y of dissent and horror went up. "Try it on a dog! Try it on an animal!" came from all parts of the lecture room. © Lord Kelvin turned in stiff dignity and cast a look of reproach over the class. Thesa were his own puplis who were doubting himâ€"it was in his beloved University of Glasgow. To doubt on some iminor point would not have hurt him, but to think that. fhery coulid question the reliability of . Miw c cl 4s 1 t HFamous Scientist with Implicit Faith in His Own Calevintions. Lord _ Kelvin, otherwise Professor William Thomson, is a worldâ€"{amous scientist, with fellowships and memâ€" berships galore in the learned socieâ€" “:,3‘ the civilized nations (i; the Ww â€" says the Saturday vening Post. BHe is but a little less tbhan 80 years of age, but still retains the position that he has held for over twoâ€"score years of professor ol natâ€" ural philosophy in the Uniyersity of Glaegow, the lnstitution _ where he himsel{l was educated. As a professor he has some peculiarities, and one of them is a habit of saying, when a. doubting question is put to him as to the “::oolute certainty of some “Bldn't I figure that out my self?" < The question is not put irritably or egotistically as a rule ; it is mereâ€" ly the natural remark of a man who has been an acknowledged leader of worldâ€"wide fame for so many years. One day when lecturing on electricâ€" ity he told his class that while a voltâ€" age of, say some 300,000, would be pu_r{ectly harmless; Mme. Patti‘s Priceless Fan A Joke in Name Only. Something Ambiguous. Friendly Suggestions. They Couldn‘t Hurt. LORD KELVIN‘S FiIGUREs The Hour of Need Tt Lowls S$. Buatler emembered that Oy the hands Petti was even to obtain not hobx "Then a friend who had been crred of some throat irritation by CATARRHOZONFE and who knew of others whom it had benefitted. induoed me to xet an outfi‘. _ So I commenced to systematically treat myself with Cat\rrhâ€" ozon». . As I have said, my case was chronic, and I didn‘t expect prompt resultâ€". but I conâ€" sclentiously used the inhaler several times a day for six weeks, and in that time I was alâ€" oonimnls epmaaige d 0 ut a comp) & cure resulted before the second bouï¬usus use it can be _ cured ailso, for my case was as b:l.uoulevornowot." y es us Mr. rles S. Stuart, of Allanford, gives his experience with "C ATARRHOZONK" in the followingy words: "For twenty long {ears I was & sufferor from acute catarrh of the nose and throat, more espc«ially in the cold weathor. continually hawked and spat, and had most able d_rorvingu in the thâ€"oat, which ted me in the mornhaa. About all the iee advertised I u« with but little «. On the advice of my doctor I changed my location; did GVO?fll‘n‘ that lay in my power tiilo, but was nally forced to believe that no hing would ever permanently help me. Doctors Gave Up the Case and Said Nothing Could Help,. Another Reâ€" markable Cure Effected by Catarrhâ€" ozone. There is a plant in Jamaica called the life plant, because it seems almost impossible to kill it. When a leaf is cut off and hung up by a string it senmds out wlyte, threadâ€"like roots, gathers moisture from the air and begins to grow new ‘*eaves. In South Amprica is a flower which can only be seen when the wind is blowing. ‘The plant belongs to th» cactus fam‘ly, and whon the ‘wind blows a number of beautiful flowers protrude from little lumps on the stalk, Sea llonsg, seals, walrases and peliâ€" canrs are fed on fish when in cap ivity ; monkeys, young l‘ons and hippopotami driok m‘}kâ€"a fullâ€"grown hippopotamuts will abworb fifteen quarts of milk in a day. Polar bears live on bread ; monâ€" keys like fruit. This has beea the experionce of all who have Makes lifemiserable for many. Can it be cured? Yos, in a night. Nervilinegives a complete knockout to pain in t‘he back, goi;?‘ll“pi:i“ stronger, more peretrating, more aly nâ€" slhdullg than any other remedy ex»ant. One drop of Nerviline has more power over r.ln than five dropâ€" of any other remedy, and it is true strength you want when you‘ve got & pain. Your money back if it is not so, Druggists sell Nerviline. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. "CATARRHOZONE cured m "Some of the eonmp.‘"â€"Indianapolis Pregs. ber that on the bloody fields of South Africa your brave soldier boys were on the firing line, flanked by loyal British subjects from Ceylon and Inâ€" dia. In the midst of danger, lastâ€" Ing friendships were formed, and you, ladie@ of Canada, have it im your power to cement those bonds. The Green teas of Ceylon and India apâ€" peal to you from sentiment. By using them you not only aid your brother colonists, but you get absolutely the best temn. Those of you who drink Green Japan teas have a revelation in store if you make the change. Blue Ribbon, Salada and Monsoon packets may be had from your grocer.â€" Colâ€" onist, a of the chicken." ‘"What was that ?" said the star boarder, jealously. "Although I was late," said the new boarder, "I found the landlady had saved for me the tenderest part new acquaintance be forgot. Remem "Should old dm}unlntanoe be forâ€" got?" The answer comes mechaniâ€" cally from every RBritisher. Nor should CAT ARRH FOR AULD LANG sYXE Ladies of Canada ; A Yankee Plan to Peel Onions in Comfort. A Yankeo authority gives this remâ€" edy for the discomfort which acâ€" companies the act of peeling onions : The pungent ©dor of the onion is due to a sulphurous oil, which volatilizes rapidly when the tissues of the regeâ€" table are broken in any manner, and especially affects the delicate membranes surrounding the eyoes. This effect, however, can be easily avoided by sticking a small pared potat>o on the end of the knife with which the cutting is done. A chemicâ€" al affinity, which cannot be readily explained, but which is mone the less satisfactory in its workings, attracts the fumes, and their presence is not manifested to the operator till the potato has reached a certain deâ€" gree of saturation, when it can be readily replaced by another. Freaks in the Plant World. Favorite Fond for Animals TARRKRHUAUN E cured my cata and ;ouqh for it that any -ux\nr % will Dopp‘s KIDNEY PILLS â€" DROPSY FOR TWENTY YEARSs. The Only Tender Part Pain in the Back WILL IT WORK * should be expelled in the form of urine, flows back and lodges in the cells of the flesh and puffs out the skin. _ Remove the filth which plugs up the drain. Restore the Q(idneys to healtb. There is only one Kidmey Medicine for which Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are the only certain cure. In Dropsy the Kidâ€" neys are actually dammed up, and the water, which One of the most dangerâ€" ous and repulsive forms of Kidney Disease is ) cover postagie and boxâ€" & (\h.m-. Ont.; ev _ lTick:ts and all information from agents Grand Trunk Railway System. On presentation of Commercial Travellers Railway Certificates for 1900, I‘®rrrror®yâ€"Be ween all stations in Canada. FARE, GOING DaTES AND LIMIT.â€"At lowest onewn‘y firstâ€"class fare (not Commercial trayâ€" ellers‘ fare) from December 21st to 25th, inclusâ€" ive. Tickets Sood returniag from destination not later than January 7th, 1901. _ TICKETHâ€"All tickets good for continuous pasrage only in each direction. pap :. PNOVD hn Pro eA ccrp mss s 2e tsA A s ulc ns sc d GoING DATE8 AND LIMIT.â€"At lowest oae way firstâ€"clase fare and oneâ€"third, from Decemâ€" ber 8th to 3ist, inclusive. Tickets good returnâ€" ing tigxl: destination not later than January To teachers and pupils of schools ;n:l'collow‘ on surrender of mnfl?ud form of school vaca tion railway certificate signed by principal. GOING DaTES AND LIMITSâ€"At lowest oneâ€"way firstâ€"class fare. December 22nd. 2rd, 2ith and 2oth. Tickets md returning from destination not later than ember 2th, 1900, and also on December 29th, 30th and 3ist, and January 1st Tickets good returning from qaostination not later than Jan, 2nd 1901. At lowest one way firstâ€"class fare and oneâ€" third, December 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 2ith and 25th, fg returning from des‘ination not later than mber2?th, 1900, and also on December 28th, 29th, 30th and 31st and January ist, md reâ€" turning from destination not later t Janâ€" uary 3rd, 1901. BETWEEN ALL STATIONS iN CaNADaA. From all stations in Canada to Detrolt and Port Huron, Mich., Port ()ovlnï¬ton. Bombay Jet., Helena, Massena sgrinz.fl. ouse‘s Point, N. Y., and Island Pond, Â¥t. All stations in Canada to, RUT NOT FROM Elllmo, ‘l}lflck Jlo‘t;k. Suspension Bridge and Niagara Falls, N. Y Christmas & New Year Holidays 1900â€"1901 Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. A dnwghu refund the monâ€"y if it fails to cure 25¢. K. W. Grove‘s signature is on each box. Burglarâ€"Well, I got in a bouse that had been locked up by some wimmen ; an‘ when I opened a bed: room door a wardrobe an‘ a wash stan‘ fell on me.â€"Detroit Free Pross Why He Reformed Citizenâ€"What influenced begin leading a better life "Well, what is it ?" ask oner. ‘"We find," said the foreman, "that the deceased was worried to death by dogs." Again they retired, and for hours they discussed the matter. Finally they returned to the court room again, when the foreman announced that they had agreed upon a verdiet and intended to stick to it. The coroner was wroth set terms he told the jury could not accept such a v told them to reconsider t} and return a verdict in a with the evidence. The jury retired and in a few minâ€" utes returned. "Gentlemen, have you agreed upon a verd‘ct?" asked the coroner. "We have," said the foreman. "We find that the deceased met his death by_mmng over a precipice." {t was in the Hudson‘s Bay days, when the word of the factaor was practically the supreme law. At a certain post, not so many miles from where this city now stands, one of the employees, a white man, . wAs bothered by having potatoes stolen from his little patch of garden. BHe complained to the factor, who _ adâ€" vised him to lie in wait for the thief with a shot gun full of rock salt and give him a good lesson, The mam did so and in the middle of the night there appeared a Siwash, who cauâ€" tiously ecaled the fence and approachâ€" ed within a few feet of where the white man lay. There was a report and the Siwash fell over dead, forn at the close range the charge of salt had been driven clean into him. Of course there was consternation and the factor upon whose advice the man had acted was not in the easiest state of mind over the result. He had power to act as coroner and he straightway held an inquest. The jury, of course, was composed of white men, fellow employees of the man who had done the shooting. The evidence was perfectly clear, for the man told his story in the straightest possible manner. M. C, DICKSON, District Passenger A noted jurist once remarked that the way of the average jury remindâ€" ed him of the peace oi Gai, inasmuch as it "passeth all understanding," and recent events in â€" British Columbia would seem to indicate that he was not far astray. Apropos of the curiâ€" ous verdict returned recently by a coroner‘s jury in Victoria, the Old» timers tell a story of the carly days in British Columbia which probably discounts anything yet presented in the line of remarkable Tindings. And so it was recorded How They Got the Coroner Out of a Hole. To Cure a Cold in (One Day COMMERCIAL TRAVELLERS SCHOOL VacaTtions. CENERAL PUBLIC THE JURY‘S WISDOM h. In gond ry that he verdict. He the matter accordance y Ou the cor Agent to lll'-‘ Winslow‘ m"‘.f Syrup should .; u'::'e'hhd mé&fldm m“'.ln:. "ltnnoth-d solie » e and is the hest remedy f:-'BLm T wenty five cents a bottle. Oue of the finest in the Niz Winona, 10 miles eâ€"0f 33R Oin Reninsula, as TA anmas ar 2s c accQ 02 CC, 90 UWO TAUâ€" 170 45 of which is in fra inagant m on l uo n aprereng season. n plï¬hueu. This is a bargain. Address JONATHAN CARPENXTER, P.O. Box 408, Winona, Ont. FRUIT FARM FOR SALE About 17 hands must be sound; Address MUTVAL SsuPPLY co. Dept. 4, Snowdon Chambers, Toronto, Ont d fesie enc am d T 9 FnEE the 6 following magnificent premiums : ‘e'l -l.anlllu Bolid tGoid lhel: Stone rihday Ring, warranted ; Chair Bracelet with Leck, warrant d ; 4 Ists Lucky Stone in Antique Egyptian Stick Pin Betting; 3 Preces terlin Slâ€" ver Plated Ware; Buiter Kanife, Sugar Bhell and Pickle Fork., Remember, wegive all six of the above Premiums for selling 16 Perfume Packages for us. Write wâ€"-;z No money required. Goods returnable if soid. t 222000 C ETT URTE wil mail you 15 ten cent pack 2 White l:-c Perl‘g... sell them ns the money, and we will promptly se Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds ‘‘*Mischlief, thou art a foot * claimed the man with the gout. When the Sun Goes Down in Turkey® In Turkey the disappearance of the sun at night is accounted for by the periodical retirement of that plous luminary for prayers and religlious reflection. l;gou have not 3 6 tri it, send for .) YJh free sample, its aâ€" By TY 7 greeable taste will Y surprise you. SsSCOTT & BOWNE *z | Chemists, e NC Toronto. .. <4 A 50c. and $1.00; all druggists. The genuine has this picture on It, take no other. It is Scort‘s Emursion of Cod Liver Oil that starts the body going againâ€"give it time. Body and mind are weak; digestion is weak ; and hunger is ravenous. Scort‘s Emursion of Cod Liver Oil is the food to begin and go on with. It furnisFes strength to digest a little easy other food ; and a little grows to eno:fh. But the gain is nearly all fat. END your address on a Postal Card and we The ounce gives strength to get the pound; there is no miracle in it. fever, or other almost mortal sickness, a man or woman sometimes will gain a pound a day from taking an ounce a day of Scott‘s Emursion and the gain be healthy. WANTED TO PURCHASE... ISSUE NO 51. 1900 T After Typhoid || :} / COACH HORSES 4LEX. MCGARR, Windsor Hotel, Montreal, Que, high; weight from 1,100 to age Mtdw‘exood BLym 1w We have made dropsy and its !oonpllccuona & lpoenny for twenty years. Quick relief Oures worst cases,. _ Book of TESTIMOXNIALS and 10 »ars treatment rrE®. DR. H. B.GBKEN‘SBON& Box O Arcaxta,Ga. DROPSY y 2