s t 2+ m #*% +4 ar al Ar: l Th th Alter hearing evidence in an as@sault case between man and wife, in which the wife had a deal of provocation. the magistrate, turning to the husâ€" band,. remarked, "My good man, I really cannot do anything in this ease." *"*But she has cut a piece of my ear of{, sir." » "Well," said the magistrate, "I will bMnmi her orer to keep the peace." *"*You can‘t," s#houted the husband ; "ahe‘s thrown it away."â€"Titâ€"Bite, An ace in the hand is worth two. S Hhume Mests times to the ,"â€"‘;r.rk--;‘-l-u- during the @pring and e mou} Vimese what it costs to apply, and will do much toward preventing the attacks of borers ani other inâ€" sects,. _ A eneâ€"pound can of concenâ€" trated lye dissolved in two or three gallons of water makes a very good tree wash. â€" Another good wash can be made of oneâ€"half pint pine tar, oneâ€"half pint carbolic acid, and two gallone soft soap. These washes can easily be applied with an old whiteâ€" wagsh brush or a swab made of old rags timl on the end of a stick. The wash should be applied two or three Timmes kee kc s C SS k se n l 0 ueC CUr ow er OF CHG tree, but a tree that is sound and free from blemish is very seldom if ever attacked by this rot. The best thing to do is to keep the tree free from borers an| other injuries. â€" The lamdi should be kept free from grass and weeds and well cultivated. Good clean cultivation is worth more than all the washes an! dressings that ecan be applied to prevent borers. A gool wash, howerer, is often worth many times what it costs to apply, and will do much toward preventing the attacks af Inweues aasg Coqi o rrok An ace in t the deek. o us 0 NC COoms CHe Chek h on the trunk ist dead and black in irâ€" regular epots anl lines. Just beâ€" neath the dead bark is the borer‘s burrow filled with worny dust. _ If a large epot of bark is killed, the bark anl wood begin to rot, and are soon filled with a mushroom growth which develope the fruiting portion on the outside of the trunk and resembles that which is seen on rotten logs. The rot may haseten the death of tho Minard‘s Valnable Suggestions Condensed from an Experiment Station Bulletin. Many orchards suffered a _ heavy amd unnecessary logs during the last aummer from the attacks of borers. Most farmers do not notice that there is anything wrong with the treeo until the leaves turn yellow amd begin to ‘fall in midesummer. Afâ€" ter this etage has been reached there t# little hope for the tree, and it dies before frost. _ A glance at the tree will be eufficicnt to see that the hart C Cay i Cl omm ceeee cE «4 faint. I called in a doctor, but his medicine did not help her and she was growing weaker than evor. Anâ€" other physician was then consulted, who pronounced her case one of genâ€" eral debility, and gave me very little hope for hor recovery. Some months ago whil> reading one ofâ€" the daily papers I came across the case of a young woman cured by the use of Dr. Williams‘® Pink Pills, so I deterâ€" mined to give them a trial. _ After she had used about three boxes the color began to come back to her cheeks and sho began to grow strongâ€" er. Greatly encouraged by this, she continued to use the pills for several months, and now she is as well as any girl of her ago. Hor appetite is good . and she has gained thirtyâ€"five pounds in weight. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have built up her system and have made her healthy and active after doctors failed to benefit her. I beâ€" leve that Dr. Williams Pink Pills are the greatest known medicine for growing girls, and I would advise their use in all cases similar to that of my daughter‘s." Miss Cloutier‘s story should bring hope to many thousands of _ other young girls who suffer as she did. "Those who are pale, lack appetite, «uffer from headaches and palpitation of the heart, dizziness, or a feeling of constant weariness, will find reâ€" newed healtir and strength in the use of a few boxos of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Sold by all denrters or sent by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box, or #itr bores for $2.30 by addressing the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine _ CGo., Brockville, Ont. of a few Mx‘eé"o-fâ€]').r‘ Pills. Sold by all dea mail, post nald a+ ~r of the Telegraph gave aim following account of his davgchter‘s illivess and recovery : "Almost from infancy my daughter hai nos enjoyed _ good hkealth, her constitution being of a frail character. We did not pay mmuich attention to her weakness as we thought that she would outgrow It. Unfortunately this was not the case, and as she groew older sho beâ€" came so weak that I got alarmed at her condition. For days at a time she was unable to take out of doors exercise; she became listless, her apâ€" petite failed her, and as time went f on she could not stand without supâ€" porting herselt agninst something and at times she would fall in a faint. I called in a doctor, but his smskhct c ses ragPvP I As She Grew Older Her Troubles Beâ€" came More Pronouncedâ€"Doctors Said Her Case was One of General Debtiity, and Held Out Small Mope of Recoveryâ€"She is Now Well and Strongâ€"A Lesson for Parents. e (From the Telegraph, Quebec.) No discovery in medicine in modâ€" erv times has done so much to bring back the ricn glow of health and the natural activity of healthy young womanhood to weak and alling girle as has Dr. Williams‘ Pinik Pills. Girls delicate from childhood have used these pills with renmrkably‘ beneficial effects, and the cherished daughter of many a household has been transftormed from a pale mxd’ sickly girl into a happy anmd robust conmdition by their use. Among the many who bave regainâ€" ed health and streongth through the use B Dr. Williams Pink Pills is Miss Ernestine Cloutier, the fifteen year old daughter of Mr. G. A. Clouâ€" tier, residiag at No. 8 Lallemand street, Quebee city. Mr. Cloutier in an interview with a representative of the Telmmeuniy nuvie sn e meipoo pe c FRUIT TREE BORERS The Unfortunate Condition of Miss Ernestine Cloutier. Threew it Away WEAK FROM INFANCGY Liniment Lumberman‘s id large limbs early summer. ers or sent by cents a box, or by addressing Medicine _ Go, inds of other er as she did. lack appetite, and palpitation death of the the following The ETASE Good than n when it was discovered by the botâ€" ,anistn that the sugar cane was losing its power to produce fruitâ€" Â¥ | ful seeds, it was realized that such t | a loss meant inbreeding, as it . | would be called in the cases of anâ€" t | imals, and that unless some artifiâ€" ¢ | cial means of restoration could be Y | employed the species would eventuâ€" â€" | ally run .out. The highest animals ° | are so classified, because they are " | the best equipped for the perpetuaâ€" ° | tion of their species and the intelâ€" K | lect of man places him above other ~ | animals because it equips him _ to " | maintain the life of the race under ‘ | all sorts of unfavorable circumâ€" â€" | stances. As the breed of man is | maintained and improved _ by the | cpnstant crossing of individuals, a /+i | ing intellectual strength to gentleâ€" _ | ness, so in plant life a _ similar ' crossing is essential to the mainâ€" tenance of a species. Plants are classified as high or low as they possess to a greater or less deâ€" gree the canacity for perpetuating their kind. The beauty of the flowâ€" er, its bright color and sweet perâ€" fums, and often its pecu‘iar arrangeâ€" ment, are all for the purpose of atâ€" tracting insects so that the frucâ€" tifying po!ien may be carried from plant to plant, crossing individual with individual and one variety |â€" with another. £ History of Two Little Seeas. There is a little fable, popular 4 among botanists, which ilustrates | the point very neatly. Two seeds of 4 the eame plant were separated in D their youth, on» being dropped on a 1 mountain «fde from the beak of a bird q and the other being carried into the P heart of a awamp by the current of C a atream. Both brought forth similar ] Plants but in the course of many generatione the mountain plant beâ€" came etrong and hardy, while the ewamp plant became soft and watâ€" | 1 ery. The time came when the awamy was dried up and changed to meadowâ€" land. The ewamp plant was not fitted for this sudden change of condition, | p _and would epeedily have become exâ€" | j tinct had not a bee brought polien | c from the mountain side and crossed | t the weak plant with the strong. Thus | 4 the meadow plant was the child of Be the mountain and the @wamp, but | ,, was different from them bothâ€"a new | y variety. . Interesting as the botanical theory 5 i#@, it did not appeal at first to the i eugar planters who were raising bE crops from budding just as they had | 9 been raised for many centuries. Ameng the planters, however, there 1 was one notable exception, E. F. Atâ€"| cc KiA of Boston +m 26 _ 1 â€" To TK i: &Ablsf Af 1 00 00 LCC CCpPOTAy o E. dL* kins, of Boston, thd owner of one of the most important plantations â€" in Curbs, who was interested gufficlentâ€" Eo eE mt 2° 20 & SUPC of strong caneâ€"stemmed grass, ten _Oor twelve feet high, with a large feathery plume of flowers. It is at present grown in â€" aill warm ‘counâ€" tries and the plants for fifty of 100 plant generations have been startâ€" ed from the buds which spring from the joints of the cane. A section of the stalk containing one of these generative joints is planted and a new stalk or group of stalks springs up, the plantation being thus mainâ€" tained by a portion of its products. Meanwhile, as the plants mature, they put forth blossoms, w hich though as beautiful as they ever were, perhaps, are meaningless and unfruitful. its When it was £ER C UTTURTUU U EEECDIE® kind. The giant ferns and other forms of plant life which are ncw found in the form of coal had served their purpose, and in the action of natural laws it was fitting that they should become extinct. But the ,de’:adonce of the sugar cane and the potato is not natural, but rather reâ€" ’ eu‘ts from the circumstances of their cultivation. The danger lies in the fact that both have been propagated for so many generations from buds â€"the sugar cane from the joints of stalks, and the potato from the eyes of the tuberâ€"that they have aimost lost the power of producing fruitful seeds. For a century or more, durâ€" ing which reproduction from _ buds can be euccessfully continued, the lact that the seeds themselves beâ€" come sterile or dwindlie away and disappear does DOL seam nartinnla»Iw The records of rocks unearthed by the geologists show that in former ages there were many plants, just as there were many animals, which have since become extinect. Plants which flourished and died in _ the carbeniferous period, for instance, have been preserved for thousands ol years as potential agencies for somrurt. and convenience of manâ€" tw 3 wrel > L ! . j _ â€" ""valy extinct has for some time been recognized in botanical laboraâ€" tories all over the world. In this country the botanical department of Harvard University has gone into the matter with a good deal of thorâ€" oughress and exp>riments have been undertaken to perpetuate these valuable species, l If there should be no more sugar _cane in the world beets might be culâ€" tivated to take its place entirely, but if there were o longer any poâ€" tatces the domestic economy _ of thousands of humble homes would be seriously deranged, and the depriâ€" vation would be considerable even on the most luxurious table. That the sugar cane and the potato are in danger of becoming degenerate and finally extinet has for some tima U °_ UINCUF AmnU Ssweel perâ€" often its peculiar arrangeâ€" all for the purpose of atâ€" nsects so that the frucâ€" len may be carried from plant, crossing individual ~u ce piig We 0 A Nee a‘t the meeting of the . corps held Tuesday, a re« the Chinese claims, as pr rejected, ; . ; PV Many farmers in Ontario appear to be under the impression that recent regulations adopted by the Ontario Government in regard to the destrucâ€" tion of the Codling Moth on apple trees are compulsory upon all perâ€" sons. These regulations bhave been made in accordance with the proâ€" visions of the Noxious Insects‘ Act passed in 1900. This is a local opâ€" tion Act and comes into force only in those municipalities that adopt it by byâ€"law. @hown, by contrast with the hybride, to be less valuable, the warning of the botaniets is being heeded, and, as has been seen, science is being cal‘le;l upon to point out the meanse of relie % F House. Ing, am1l when it became known that the pe tito was deteriorating and beâ€" com ng "halfâ€"witted," a@ Mr. Danâ€" ceno, of the Harvyard botanical deâ€" partment hae aptly expressed it, he went to great paing to secure seeds to use in the restoration of the speâ€" cles@ As a rule the small amount of seed which now survives the degenerâ€" ation of the plant is likely to rot away immediately, #o that the greatâ€" eat care and skill are required to seâ€" cure the growth of geed plants. Howâ€" ever, as in the case of the sugar cane, ag the common varieties are showan, by contrast with the hybride, o be 1866 vainahle +ha ... 6 UT ME From time to time new varieties of the potato have been developed by the cromsing of the seed, but this reâ€" quires a somewhat costly experiment, which is quite as likely to prove a failure as a suceess. The first year‘s _ crop of tubera from a planting of seed i9 gengerally too small for commerâ€" clal use, so that the seeding process ham of late years been almogat â€" enâ€" tirely discontinued. The â€" budding method of propagation hag been carâ€" ried on to #uchi an extent that it is the rele for the blo@soms to wither without fructification, and even _ in the exceptional cages where frait apâ€" pears it is generally â€" seedless and barren. It ie largely due to an enthusâ€" lastic norticulturist, Luther Burbank, ol Santa Rog@i, Cal., that the seed of the potato is to«day being perpetâ€" uated. Mr. Burbank has produced _ many new and valuable varieties of plums, peaches and strawberrics by crossâ€" io e oo en i e e ts e en _ | to have, and was rooted up _ and ~ | thrownr away. But the fecundity of I | this seed is already demonstrated, * | and it only remains to be seen what 4 | sort of a plant will bs developed. Mr. A | Atking is very desirous that Harâ€" L | yard should establish in the West © | Indies a laboratory of economic botâ€" ©| any, to undertake a course of invesâ€" ‘" | tigations parallel to that of â€" the T | laboratory which Prol. Charles S. ¢ | Sargent, of the Arnold artortenumâ€" d another botanical department of the 8 universityâ€"hopss to establish in 1| Arizona for the study of the differâ€" 5 |\ ent variety of cactus. The project t | for such a West Indian botanical laâ€" 1| boratory has already secured â€" the ~ | promise of some financial assistance | and is at present receiving serious ‘ | consideration in the hope that the | whole amount nocessary to estabâ€" | lish it will shortly be forth coming. < Potato is of Nightshade Family. « Practically all that has been said in relation to the degeneration of | the sugar cane may also be said of the potato. _ This useful vegetable, it is interesting to note, belongs to the nightshade family, as its botanicâ€" al name, "solanum tubsrosum," inâ€" dicatos, the common poisonous nightâ€" shade being the "solanum nigrum." The potato has been found wild in Mexico and South America, and was | i taken to England by Sir Walter Ralâ€" | eigh toward the close of the sixâ€" | teenth century. It is unnecessary to | 1 refer to the enormous quantities of | potatoes annually eaten in Europe | | and America. _ It is sufficient to say | ! that when the potato disease appearâ€" : ed in 1845 it produced a famine in many localities, particularly in Ireâ€" : land, where for years potatoes had y beon the chief article of food among C the lower classes. t t The potato is Among the cheapest t of all the cultivated foods, and while e it is generally known that it is reâ€" | g produced by budding, .pieces of the J: tuber containing "eyes" being plantâ€" | a ed in the ground, most Teaders will be | a surprised to learn that potato seed | h is an almost unheard of curiosity. | n In the museum of economic botany at | c HMarvard there are models of potato | T plants, including the pink and white | n« blossoms and the grapelike fruit, but | £ this seedâ€"containing fruit has beâ€" | D come so nearly extinct that few peoâ€" | C€ ple, even from the agricultuaral disâ€" | i« tricts of the country, have ever seen | 4 it. In the models, however, it is | â€" mFed xc s FF 1 Minard‘s Liniment in the The Codling Moth ation ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ENE Ti l ar was definitely a reduction of ngement of seeds the original fruit the potato is : tomato, and diplomatic condi Vogue. It is better to take les than to give one.â€" HEVE Y WeQpmmnt ie in Mc n Plt i. 20B 7( > posite side of the table from Ila‘de Neptune wince.â€"Marina SOZODONT ior the TEETH 255 mm "th + sly dn i Cc atsin ts iss t B diacovered that she was u; hi@ undershirt. Her discom{fi #o painful that chloroform v have ulleviated her @ulferin pint of powder hidden her when the gentleman turned enquiring look to see, what 1 ling his neck. € h SHE WAS TOO KINDâ€"HEARTED the life of a v'aluulv)le’l;)â€"ra‘;l ;1 Vet. had given up, with a fe tlee of MINARDS LINIMENT Alfred A. Taylor, of Margaree, eays: ‘"One bottle of MINARDS LINIMENT cured a ewelling of the gamble jJoint and savred a horse worth $140.)" Thos. W. Payne, of Bathurst, saved the life of a valuable horse that the Vet. had given up, with a few bot. §L. 00 P MEWRH 4 eeme ced d T T it talth 2Â¥ intatiih oc is â€" 2223 gnaw at the vitals of millions. With no meanse of procuring their bare neâ€" cegsitles of life, what can these milâ€" lions do °â€"C. Fred. Ackermaa in Lesâ€" Ma‘e Virksmdl lie‘s Weekly. Millions in China Now Said to be Facing Starvaiilon. Can you picture millions of people flocking to their ruined \ lllagee along the Peiâ€"ho, absorbed with the idea of reconstructing their homes and culâ€" tivating once more @ections o‘ ground that had been their msans of supâ€" port ? Everything is barren ; everyâ€" thing is waste. The once thrifty valâ€" ley is only a continuation of ruins ’ and devastation. The military operaâ€". tiona are the only signs of actual acâ€" _tivity. The population etands with mouth agape ani waiting. What do they wait for ? They do not know. While the troops of the world wanâ€" der over the face of their province there can be no perce. And the weeke fly by, the ground hungers for the #eed from the hand of the sower and» goes wanting. â€" The crude plough is Jammed into the soft mud of the rivâ€" er‘s bank, and grows rusty with age and disuse. The roofs over the mud houses are not replaced. No moveâ€" ment is noticeab‘e towards the reâ€" construction pof villages and â€" cities. The chaotic conlition of things@ does not change. The pangs of hunger | "I recommendt Dodd‘s Kidney Pills to anyone who has backache or any other Kidney Complaint." "I have been subject to lame back for eight yeara The different remâ€" edie# I tried wera nds good. I got so that I was crippled up entirely and couldn‘t do a tap of work. Another thing waesl a frequent desire to urinâ€" ate, altogether unnatural. ‘*About a year ago I commenced to use Dodd‘s Kidnsy Pills. I had run down in weight to about 140 poundea. During the tim> I was using Dodd‘s Kidney Pill@ I gained 23 pounds. My | back got better anl better as I conâ€" tinued taking the pillw, until toâ€"day I am ag@ free from backache as ever I was in my life. This after eight years of it meana an awful lot to me. I realâ€" ize the dangek! I was in and know w‘hgt I owe to Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Backache is the commonest sympâ€" tom of Kidney Digesase, Kidney Disâ€" eame is the common>st of human ailâ€" ments, and Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are the one infallible cure for all Kidney diagasce. Read what Mr. Morgan eays about them himself. John 8. Morgan for eight yeare was hampered in his work by backache. Etooping continually at work is the cauge ol a great deal of backache, though bet in the way most peop‘le imagine. Mr. Morgan‘s letter explains the truth of the matter when he anys Dodd‘@ Kidney Pills cured his backâ€" ache. It wase really Kicney ache that Dodd‘s Kidney Pils cured. It was really Kidney ache that troubled Mr. Morgan. ¢ ( Nova Scotia Member of the Guild Wants Mis Case Publishedâ€"An Kight Year Sufterer from Buckache Cured Recently by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Bridgewater, N. S., June 15.â€"(Speâ€" cial.)â€"The case of John 8. Morgan, plumber and tinemith, of this town, ghould be put prominently â€" before every> union and nonâ€"union man in Canada. In a matter like this there mhould be no distinction, the benefit belongs to all. John S, Morgan‘s Letter Open for Their Perusal, THE PLUMBERS OF CANADA INVITE» it "le_ was unraveling . Her discomfiture was Eo wHHic O mt o T HARD OUTLOOK. &A se mady injup. «â€"Franklin, _ _ ave from him, «â€"Marine Joupâ€" @ulferings would not with an was tickâ€" blughes rch of f Wallpriaae s c . | CCA K DJOCKE, such as hedgerows, flowers, birds, inâ€" sects, etc. It looks as if mothers and nurses ought to be constrained to take their charges where the vision would become strengthened by pr acâ€" tice over long distances, so that the girls might grow up with keen eyes for the delicate duties which fal to them, and the boys be better ableâ€" among other thingsâ€"to sh00t.â€"Legâ€" lie‘s Weekliyv. City Children are Neur-SIghted. Acoording to Dr. Brudenell Carte an English physician, the vision â€" children who lve in towns is restric ed in range and power by the fac that they are seldom able to â€" se long distances. The other side of th street is about as far as they has the opportunity of using their siph, while country children have an en panse of landscape before them, an AFO AlSO ADIG t muwanei i. 0) 30( W 00n. AUK EF" COOV! VC PVEREHRU trip, with choice of routes returning. Send stamp for ilustrated itinerary and map of San Francisco, to B. H. Bennett, General Agent, 2 King street east, Toronto, Ont. en nhailway, to leave Chicago. Tuesâ€" day, July Oth, 11.59 p. mn. Stops will be made at Denver, Coloraao Springs, Glen wood Springs and Sait Lake, passing en route the finest scenery in the Rocky and Sierra _ Nevada Mountains. Through _ Pullman palâ€" ac3a and tourist sleeping cars. Order berths early, as party will be limitâ€" ed in number. Fare only $50 round tl‘lp. with SRHOICO IOF BAE A6 NMoboceoll n The _ Mayor they put in was a Wooden Man who had been sitting in a Rocking Chair ever since the War, listening to the Clock tick. His clecâ€" tion twras considered a great Victory for the PTaxpayers because it was known that he would not recommend any Expen@‘ve improvem>nts or anyâ€" thing else, Moralâ€"Wait Gntil you are Electâ€" ed before you Trim the Property _ Holders. We enb areryointion ons heas es Special Train to Sav Francisoc For Canadian delegates and all othâ€" ers going to Epworth League Conâ€" vention, via Chicago and Northwestâ€" era Railway, to leave Chicago. Tues-‘ day, July PtH,; 11859 n in (Shang «uin $100 REWARD, s100 Man, and all the Things they did to him it would take too loag to tell. Every one that ever had to part with un Assessment was glad of the Chance to jump up and down on the Bogie Man and try to Gouge him in a vital 8pot. They did him up and Buried thim deep and refused to Mark the Epot. Thereupon all of the white whisâ€" kered Grouches and the weeping Tax Dodgers and the variegated Fossils who had been hanging as a dead Weight on the Community for seyâ€" bral Decades saw a Chance to Catch even. They got out their Medgeâ€" Hammers and Cleavers and made a grand Rush for the Pubjic Spirited After he had strained his back for many Years trying to pull the Town out of the Yellow Mud and give it a Standing, a feow ol his admirers got together and nominated him as an Independent Candidate for Mayor, saying that the Citizens would be glad to smhow their Appreciation of all that he had done for the Town. In this Town there was one Pubâ€" lic Spirited Man. He was in favor of a Baseball Nine, Asphalt Streets and a Halfâ€"Mile Track. He was all the time scheming to blead the Fogies and Grannies for Funds to improve and beautify the Municipality. He hammered at the Conservative Eleâ€" ment until he got a Water Works and a Fire Department. ‘This Man engineered the ordinance for hayâ€" ing the weeds cut down, and it was he who sat on the Neck of _ the City Council until it promised to sprinkle the Streets. is a 9 o‘clock Curfew Law for Marâ€" ried men and at 9.30 all the Sideâ€" walks are taken in and the Electric Lights go out. for Minard‘s In an Excuse for a Town known as Pokeville, there were not many Live Ones, The typical! Resident had been there so long that he had taken Root and had Lichens and Moss growing on him. If he had a Dollar he was hanging on to it like Grim Death, now and then letting out a Low Wail about Taxes. If aroused from his Trance and compelled, to Ante for a Fourth of July Celebraâ€" tion or something of that Characâ€" ter he would separate himself from about 75 cents in Coppers, Postage Stamps and Milk Tickets, and then he woulid sit down and cry like a Child. There was a great deal of Wealth in Pokeville, but most of it was salted away in Woolen Socks, Coffee Mills and Chimney Corners. . The ones who had it pleaded Poverty. They cut their own Hair and borâ€" rowed somebody eise‘s paper to read. The Town was so far behind the Times that it had lost the Route and was Doubling on itself. The People in Pokeville didn‘t begin to sing "The Blue and the Gray" until late this Spring, and the more chipper ones are beginning to ask ] who has read "David Harum." There | cltiiing in glrtlilth i.4 a 1224 o able to practice their s immense diversity of ob je hedgerows, flowers, birds kos c Â¥a » 2040 7 Brudenell Carter .s sy Gro. Ape. (N »P@p@@PPRPPRPPE e vision â€" of s is restrictâ€" by the fact they have their sight, take no ve an exâ€" them, and ir sight objects, the 11 t § au2 . en ie ines... 11 its R RUPTURE_â€"THE ‘.t-hm ‘Iu“)n:u ‘I‘r::. :....o in Others; can T G nstiâ€" ; reliabl ‘ reat: | forpent thaln blo repageen 3 | e t the m lï¬ Pé"klï¬. O_PJIolnu: eor ; fts 4 es the ad far insl ©. > °0P 6 mhmehMmÂ¥%_1 the child, softens the gums, cures w and is the best remody for D five conts a bottle _‘ larrhosa. q. 12000 420930 a daeci Jonathan Carpenter, P * *finge," ; °M FOR BALEâ€"ONE or r=zs Prmeaoth ce Rrow k ranprae rag 'm acres on two most] N"‘%l{."‘m"‘fl&“huh“h-: Â¥ M divided into lots of 15 to 20 acres to ul G‘.m,, This is a decided hareain AM& vo uo di__ °, 0.9X, AND WANT 1%. to better mv Write, in your own hand to Marshall & Co., tea importers, Lonâ€" don, Ont. Outft furnished. ts o ie T. ns oi it mminat oi mm tm io ie mc o ow CO&;TROUSAND ACRKS FO!}‘ BALIâ€"‘ dollars â€" acre, _ near ‘onneau Harbor. !lohu C. Graham, Butler, Pa. beuremmmiey ue C Mre. Winslow‘s Soot ‘ ays be used for Cp ioi 6. ® K Ave in crops â€" yaua " 2R,8ALEK, FORTYâ€" e i good buildings; possessi $ Iu-f- mz to W. 8. Wn'l'gn. Scarbore A one dollar bottle guaranteed to cure woret case of lame back, caused by strain or kidney troubles. If not kept by your druggist order from WM. BROWN, Proprietor, Prices 25¢, 50c and $1.00. Sutton, P. Q mY. fAve in orams . °224 VA 9 NRUIT FARX Fo To earn a handsome stemâ€"wind and set silyer watrh. guaranteed timoke»per. for selling on‘y 12 boxes of Monarch Silver Polish, someâ€" thing every housckeeper will buy, Cleans gold silver, plated ware, German silver, brass Copper, tin, steel, etc. Send us your addreas, we will send you the polish, you zell it. return us the money, we will then send you the watch adsolu:ely free by roturn mail. "Address the Monarch Supply Co., St. Catharines, Ont. Boys and Girls Wanted cZonsumptive Conviects Isolated. Texarg isolatcs its consumptive conâ€" vietse and provides troat ent for thein of the most approved f‘nL such as highly nutritiouns foods, proper etimulants and an enforceed lifo in the open air, requiring them to aleep in open etockades. No one is allowed to work beyond his strength. ns at " agoag oo n BROWN‘S$ DROPS. Bobcaygeon Indepondent: The Toâ€" ronto Medical College should have three subjects for the pickle vat within a week. Three of the leadâ€" ing criminals of the continent have killed a constable with the object of making escape. _ The court is sitâ€" ting ; they should be given a trial limited to one hour and a half, includâ€" ing addresses ; twentyâ€"four hours to arrange any business affairs they may have and contemplate the> fuâ€" ture ; and instract Radelif{e to turn over the bodies to the Medical Colâ€" lege. _ Such a procedure would be ex»mplary, which is the object in view, it would be in the interests of society, the advancement of science and nothing more than common horse sense. Why not do it ? Minard‘s Linimént' is 7u;u;d sicians. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Al dmg?t.- refund the money if it fails to cure, 25c. E. W. Grove‘s signature is on each box. W _ of adulteration. Its own properties, bhowever, are such as to make a cop. tain amount of dilution nece@sary. Ip its original purity the perfum» is altogether too overpowering for use A single.drop of the essence is suffi_ clent to imprognate a whole pint of hair oil with the well known odor. For this reason it not infrequently happeus that a purchaser of soâ€"called pure attar of roses really gets noth. ing but a measure of olive oil with a few drops of the powerful seent added. Consumptive Conviec Attar of roses, in fact, is literally worth a good deal mor» than ijts weight in gold. Solid gold is priceg at about £4 per ounce, but the same quantity of attar would cost the pur. chaser £20 to £30. Like all other commodities of the expensive order, attar of roses is liable to the abuse ed is the popular impression ï¬;;{ attar of rosas is ons of the most costly commodities in existence Millions of Flowers Used to Produce the Attar. ‘The scent industry is a very large one, and there are some inu:rvsl'u)‘ particulars in the Girls‘® Own Papep concerning attar oill. ‘The quan!ity of roses used is almost incredible 1 the best districts it is computed that the petals of 300000 roses are pp. quired to produce one ounce of the essence, while in France and some other countries in which the climatic conditions are not so congenial the number would increase to 400 99) It is not generally known that atiar of roses can only be extracted from the red variety of the flower, ‘The yeollow and white species apparently lack the essential oil. Considerations like these will show how well ground. n "tEâ€"THE WM. PAYNE IMâ€" :‘v:dr‘l‘ru. has no equal; fl:fl‘" from piipnaom stnine mï¬ ared 5 e ves w ; phiet. The Wm. Pnyn:‘ Co., Lendon, * THE SCENT OF THE ROSEs» Scno rom ecort a sown t It is food, and more than food : it helps you digest what. ever food you can bear. Getting a Nandsome stemâ€"wind and set silver Rguaranteed timoke»per, for solling mxet'a of l{ommh Silver Polish, someâ€" paver hy use es 2 C TE T To Cure a Cold in One Day ISSUE NO 25 1901, Rept by your druggist order L BRoOWwX, Proprietor, and $1.00. Sutton, P. Q soc. and g1.00; Treated Free. We havo made dropsy and its complications a special ty for twenty years, Quick relief. Cures worst cases, Book of TE8TIMONIALS® and 10 Pays treatment rras FDR' H. H.GREEN‘HSONU, Box 0 ATLAFTA, GA, Smift‘s Plan. DROPSY . 0. bor m, WMs "MIDGET"BICYCLE by Phyâ€" Toronte, Uness and a £ them thinking dering who you eause of the v depicted betwee ead and the r ,,ou are the rig mt kind of & happened to you soul with coura glorious sunrise given, that mal the pasl, & to your sou! with the fu Again, is Y or humor? 1 the world‘s â€" of gatire has "Hclture & aut »atart been neve righ they your look in G In one of state an in of mine: * man does, t Higion that n as he seem rough visag God so mad have so def ef ours; if @yes, no on features wer physiognomy for that. T ject or retre be Shakespe $n that man KFects and p him a #uj «heerful lool 4t for the ® wwill be a h will meet will have no empts amount YFext, Matthew xx & certain sin wpon a cheerfu #sult of a cheer Buence of suc would be felt : ut throughou mess is catching #e exceptional ‘WWashington ropo «@iscourse by . lwr. : given to deprecia wwho have an idoa #o â€" bright cheek, nostr men who a Expel first frow Ntalents the word *o have beon tr ‘Usury is finding Is it a cheerfu Jook wherever y from a cheerful inane smile whic which is an irr words. it must b what it is, w Of it? The m ing that they do as the ma awble, they nid people who J it out for us half past m t0 write at th 1950 the earth outskirts of l« What is your â€" us too high, our To find out what ally and mentall sible. We ~are « selves by those a 4s not fair, as th Mant, or very very bad. indeed scales that can | and mental weig #standand ty whi hardest thing to our real stature 0 be no â€" evigence 0 place and compelli enreasonable sim 1/ @st" is a rightsous use of mone; Wh this parable went gave to his #stewar money, wishiag to awbly invertes h it as something Meanwhie we + censider what ; their one talent ten people of or important as on ents. In the on« ©r opportunity eingle personalit 4t is divided a: Now, what we sermon is to wi ene talent to ; @uty. Only a i talents or ten t have one. My s Â¥anic shock. 1 as to the ww remember t} taients, to n ene. . What a last, you thin be expected + one talent" |] ene talent a; ene," it implies : the least have mu We bother ours awbhout thoss who bave large financi ed official positio e©pportunity. _ Wy their wenslith the vanic shock. ‘1 The most di world is to ma mate of ourselys When one 0: ity to useful it, we enlars wil, be emj One of the t retort if Exe ha 1 It May O we sA y T n things how in W CAp bus & J xh'fl ic non