be, than men. are bulls on the Stock Exchange and beau at hone. we were married on Wedneeday. We have contemplated thin step for a long time, but lack of tund- has al- way: prevented, until we finally de- cided to get married and trust to Providence for the rest. The sub- scription rates ot the Record will re- main at the name price. Only the im- mediate relatives were present at the ceremony. Our View. on the money question will remain the lame, only we need more ot it. Will so to unscrewing in the Alqulth home, in Mood Itreet." The editor ot the Mascotah, Iran., Record makes the fozlowlnx personal announcement; 1'For the nrtrt time hold a dish In her hand, and had to be looked after almost like an in- mat. While Mamie was in this con- dition a neighbor who had used Dr. Williams' [in Pills with benelical results in her own inmlly advised me to try them Irt MamieV case. " had myself olten heard these pills highly spoken of, but it had not occurred to me before that they might cure my little girl. but 110“] I decided to give them to her. Before she had com- pzetei the second box I could see a marked change tor the better, and try the time she had taken five boxes all trace of both the rheumatism and St. ths' dance had vanished, and she is new as bright. active: and healthy Ml any child of her nge. Some time has elapsed since she discontinued the use of the pills, but, not the slightest trace of the trouble has since made â€sell manifest. I think. therefore, “up I am sale: in saying that I be. lieve Dr. Willinms' Pink Pills not only restored my child to health, but have worked a permanent cure." Rheumatism. Fit. 1itar' dance and all kindred diseases ot the blood and "LTVOS speedily yield to Dr. Wil- limns' Pink Pills. and the cures thus eilected are permanent, because this medicine makes rich, red blood, strengthens the nerves, and thus matches the root or the trouble. These pills are sold by nil dealers in medicine or will be sent-post paid at co cents n box or six boxres "a' $2.50 by addressing the Dr. Wllllauu Medicine Co., Bra-hills, Ont. all» was treated by a. clever doctor her health did not improve. To make hu- condltlon worse she was attack- ed with at. i'ltus' dance, and I really are up hope ot ever. seeing her eu- by good health again. Her arms and limbs Would twitch and jerk unamodwnlly, anJ she could scarcely â€new†Kira' Attacked with Rheu- -atlsm and Then with St. Vitus Ehsnee--tgt" was Unsble to Help "one" and [Ind to be Cured for Almost “to an "Nat. (From the bun, Oranzevme, Ont.) Among the much respected real- dents of Oranttevitle ls Mrs. Mar- lhall, who llves la a pretty little mums-e on First street. For some - her twelxe-year-old daughter, Mamie. has been a sulierer trom rheu- matism, combmed with that other terrible attlietioa-St. \ltus' dance. In conversation recently with a re.. porter of the Sun. Mrs. Marshall told the loilowmg story ot her daughter’s "tiller-mg and subsequent reertoration tn health: "At the age ot eight,†a}!!! Mrs. Marshall, "Mamie was at- tacked with rheumatism, from which are suffered very lunch, and although bear as it would be for a. glrl Just beginning rm. This waman has seen m much minim-tune that this cannot hurt her." Ha let her love him for a while.. Then he Went: away. also son-owed for him, bat he never Murat-d. People ml! .' t "It cannot hex so hard for her to He chm his heart, mid in those moments the (In would lay her hand in M»! and kiss him. _ t Her Mother Feared She Would Not Regain Her Health Men who could not understand thought that the man was weak, but the man knew that it was the dead girl who was making him ltrong. Late in we a woman loved a man. The affection that had been stored 1n.her Yart tor years she poured nod ihen the blesslng of her coming :11ng Nut wltA a, veil of pages. Yet she went to her grave on ac- ‘mnt of that grief over that lost In those days he had led a careleu Ills, knowing that the girl loved him, an! that there were no bond- to hold lum to a narrow path. Mat when the girl was dead she shaver came to him unless " heart " pure and his hands_ yore clegn, "o-o-r-oo-s-ooo-ro-r.' A girl, wonhlpped by a. man, died. An orphan loved a man. lilo love was stronger than death, l She suffered tterttecntiott for him. ml the girl came back to him in I She waited for him patiently, and momenta of ecstasy, and he held her at last. when he came to take her, was hand and kissed her wan face, she threw herself into his arms, and loved he:- more than ever he loved mm muting that now all the bitter her while "he was upon earth. drink was gone, and that she would In those days he had led f cart?" begin to drink from the chalice of WW uwmommmoomwwwm+ ADVICE TO A YOUNG HUSBAND . . . ooqt't qtart out by giving your wile advice bat hr h We packet at monsoon £1:wa TEA. ' he a u _irCrilfl]'i"i' A CHILD’S SUFFERING. FOUR LITTLE DRAMAS IN EVERYDAY LIFE. A Western Wedding. 7 F ,,- """'""'e""s'%rr* awni- truler.'" The patient laid a Sixpence on the table, and, with a. polite "Good motl- ing," was muklng for the door, when the doctor called altar Mm: "Stop! stop! what“: this?" “It's all rlfht, doctor," blandly rrplled the pat ant. " You said you would make It even, and everyone knot-tut at: is eWert and sue- odd." "Get you Bone, you mandrel!" mad the late medical man. "I've made four fence out of you. after all t"--tnt B u.. An Unjust lemma. Hungry Higgins - Wot do think? A woman malted no a mated learocrow this mornin'. Weary Watkins-I'm knowed since the early 'ttthr, bat I I seen no animation about you , Indianapolis Press. Odd and Even. " And now, doctor," said the patient, as he prepared to depart with Ute mixture, the lotion and the pliir, "what have I to pay t" "0h, lay Ta. 6d.." repEied the doctor. " Make it even, doctor." ' anell‘ well, we won't quarrel about A father and a daughte'r should be all but sweethearts. to men; men ow virtue to women. The woman who does not forgive and company her husband to break up his home is a conceited idiot. If 1 were a. woman, the day my husband ceased to be my lover I should be careful to secure his frlendship for the rest of mg life. In love matters only the most dell- cate and rerrned people pay atten- tion to the most trifling details. The tirttt duty of a. shaman is to teach her children how to respect and love their father. Tho man who can declare his love In beautiful and perfect language is not really in love. Happy the couple. when the wife is cooking the dinner, and the hull- band is turned out of the kitchen for kissing the cook'. I don't want to have anything to do with ungeltr--thia side of the grave; women are good enough tor When wealth come-1n at the door love and happiness often " out of tho window.--Revitred Proverb. Never try to see how bread is made. or beer, or anything that comes in contact with you inter- nally. Never go behind the curtain in a threatrn. You may run the risk of seeing Juliet fixing her teeth or of hearing Romeo use very bad language. Never go into your wife's dressing room Keep your illusions. BP, finding happiness in his unsel- fishnem. envied no mtuL--Loui.s T. Wcodork. in Chicago Journal. A Few of His Resfieetiogts About Wo- men and Home. By a. magnanlmous act of forgive- ness, 8. wife may regain the love of her 'hiLGnir, and a husband ot his wife. An act ot sublime gener- osity goes straight to the heart and fixes lt. The guilty one will then realize the enormity ot the fault committed and devote ame- time to the atonement of it. For- giveness is far-reaching, almost tii. vme. ' "Once In a while," he said to him- self, "I try to do something tor somebody else only for the Joy of the doing." The most important factor in! the happiness of a home Is a cheerful, loving and caressing daughter. A father and a daughter who are "pals" in a sight for the gods to enjoy, ' The peasant looked at them with a._l_au.gn_ln his eyga. - Yet" these men worked' oniy for their own honor and glory, andeach trrtstmI the other. Two men in a. carriage passed a peasant trudging along lathe dust. In the carriage each man envied the other. One has command of great wealth, and with it a, power that nothing exert wealth bripgs. A Thi, other was tGnome because of the golden words hepsoyld Speak: Her love that was fine enough to have redeemed almost any man now is buried with her, a. Wasted anda blackened thing. Only a week after their marriage he ordered her Into a. shamelul life. She answered his command witha revolver, and died with a. tablet in 2t,1 heart that had suffered so mac - "'let."ir; Women 8kli5'i , 2 3:3“. , N BITS BY MAX O’RELL. owe must of their defects men owe most of their d you never yet.-. you " know there ain't," replied the child; “but when I'm reading to my grandmther and I come to a. place like tub Inc Iaya‘ 'Oh, Nat any the can or Jana and the son of Smith.†“Stop." cried the teacher. “where are you reading'" “The first verse." replied the child. The teacher, much astonished, look- ed at the place and there read--. "Now, alter these things. in the reign of Attaxerxeu, King ot Persia. Ezra, them of Seraiah, the son ot Amish, they ot simian." "Why, an?" iiiGthimr there about thrryift or Jones." she said. "Oh, very well. it they compiled with the rules. I'll let them go this time." BIMPLIFYING MATTERS. New York Press-A teacher who looks after a class ot small glrls in an uptown Sunday school called upon one of her charges last Sunday te read the tirat halt ot the seventh chapter of the book ot Earn. Thin Is what she heard. "Now after these things tn the reign of Smith. King ot Persia. Ezra. the son of Jones, the son ot Smith. the son ot"-- Here is the latest story of the man who is too stingmr to take his home pnpcr- A man who is too economical to subscribe for a paper sent his little boy to borrow the copy taken by his neighbor. In his haste the boy ran over a font-dollar stand of bees. and in ten minutes looked like a warty squash. His cries reached his father. who ran to his assistance. and tailing to notice a barbed wire fence ran into that, breaking it down, cut- ting a handful of flesh from his an" atomy and ruining a lonhdollar pair of pants. The old cow took advantage of the gap in the fence and Rot into the cornfield and killed herself eating green corn. Hearing the racket the wife ran, upset a five-gallon churn ml of rich cream into a basket of chickens, drowning the whole flock. In the hurry she dropped a seven- dollar set of false teeth. The baby. left alone, crawled through the 'spilled milk and into the parlor, ruining a brand-mew twenty-dollar carpet. Dur- ing the excitement the eldest daugh- ter ran away with the hired man, the tlr, broke up eleven setting hens and ca was got out and chewed the tails off four fine shirts. Addressing Magistrate Flammer. Lawyer Alter teaid-"May it please your honor, my clients had a differ. ence ot opinion, which they settled by a fight. The trouble is all over and they have shaken hands. so I ask that they be discharged." “They should have shaken hands before they fought." said the mag- lstrate. “Your honor, they dld shake hands before the nrtrt round and after tthe fight." Alter replied. New York Sun-Lawyer Mark Al. ter last week appeared in Jefferson Market Police Court as counsel. for two men who engaged in a rough and tumble fight in the street. The prisoners were swathed in bandages, their lips were eat and swollen and thelr eyes black. but when they stop- ped ori the bridge together- the-y segxggd ty he on the best of terms. " C-cnn you m-make any d-dlfference in the price P' This was refused. " Then I will t-take the t-tender ones." "I-I w-wunt to s-see some t-tur- keys." He was (shown some. "Some are t-tqugh and some are t-tender ?" The shopman admitted the tact. "r-t s-suppose there is a d-dlffer- ence In the price t" Mn was assured there was none. " I-I k-keep a b-boys' school". would you," with a wink of the eye, "m-mind micklpg out the t-tousrh ones," - The téihgh oruu/werd Giioatart and put on one side. Sir Courtney Boyle. parmnnent new retary of the Board of Trade. London recontiy delivered " lecture of Method and Organization in Business. in which heutoid the following tttorr- . Not very idrik hi6" iiitGi' came ton large poulteror's shop a gentleman whq gtuttered, and he traid-. that tho course of true love ran Smooth. even if It did get a. bit of a. Jolt at tho ond of the rats."' "Cyrus Winterbottom,'" she sum. halt an hour later, as they were Jollrneylng' toward home In a farm. er’s wagon. " believe you did thn whole thing on purpose so you could have the chance of saying sometmng smurt."' "Nover mind, darling," exclaimed the Youth. who, with hat Cone, collar loose at one end and coat ripped up the back. was presently engaged in dining mud out of the hystorirnl maldenfs mouth. "this is one timn At the-{Jot of the incline there was a.1'harT_turrt to the left. 7 Here the automobile left the turn. pike and ran down the embankment, throwing; the young couple out and hanging- themrin a big pile of 'rand., But at this moment the automo- bile, which had reached the top of the hill. started down the other side with frightful velocity. The young man My applied the brake. It failed to work. He shut off the power. _ It was too late. The maddened machine raced down "o.0..0-ototootottt9 The [allowing story at the new King ot Italy is told in London M. A. P... May when ot an Boyd household had grown old in the ser- vice. and the King, too loft-hearted to supemnnuate them and so hurt their feelings. had recourse to a. de- vice. He and the Queen race every early in the morning. and run: every bell in their respective apartments. so that the whole palace was roused. Ladies and gentlemen in waiting. ofo ilciais. servants. all were obliged to rise. This went on for some time, " being hoped each day that Their Ma. Jesties would see the error ot their ways; but when it continued tor weeks without interruption it t2 "on tho nerves,"' especially of e elders. and requests for superannua- tion began to pour in. Then were, of course. graciously acceded to, and the household is now in process of tramrtormation. From the Boston irourna1--'Und now, darling, it only remains for you to_my when--" t sum Sims i or THE my ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 'o.... "tooo...' song, but conserve it for the Jac. try'l use. which. In due time, would taller taxation '1nneeemrarr-4ht ugh Advocate. $3,000 tor it on the can. It wan shipped to New York and was cut into veneers from one-sixth to half an Inch, and the was watched. The tree brought $60 000. This would teach no not to waste our natural wealth, Igor all to spequlatora for a new. wna nae wr Wallace Bled," The namine editor wiped the Petr- met the gaze every here and therd. EMPIRE" tron: h" heated brow. The general was much planned with "Bavesyotr gone carefully over the or- the look ot the men. " Your Nud- tlole on ‘fhrlstman‘ln Many Lands"? mg u by tar tho beat on the new, be asked. "I have," {eebly replied the Murray," be cold. " Because. ctr," am'tut, " he tled a .ee of lee Ema-ed Murray, "they are mtly to the nape of ttia neck. And the Booteh."-ANaatpfw Huald' Ilelghlng song; have the proofs been reetaed t" "Yea, 'tir." "And the ar- " tor “lung-gr. ‘nd tm I. tlclo about Yuletlde superntltlonl t" other. at“, Mr." "Then," cold the magazine ' ------ ------- editor, “send word to the foreman 'tmat ttna had no 1,yrumr look] " that the Christin“ number In ready vantages. lee, she t" to tro to was, and tell the lee man to "No. They " only been mu mm s double supply to-morrow." we 'ttmttu."-atetroit Free Pr... Tho value of some ot our forest trees is enormous. At one time the valley of the River Thames, between London and Chatham, was covered with magnificent black walnut trees, which in the early days were of no commerclnl value, but now would be a big fortune tor each owner of a. farm. These trees were cut down and burned so as to clear the land tor the pioneers crops. A man in North Carolina the other day was selling- standing timber--wainut trees. Tho' buyer offered 860 for one tine tree. The owner sent for experts, and as the result got $1,500 tor it [curled walnut). The buyer reallzed Millard! LInimem. . Friend. Inmbermn I him sew strips of matting together to tit, afterward Ironing the seams down hard. Put your matting be- tween the sheet and the mattress and you’ll know what comfort is. You will have all the original soi't- ness of your bed with' none ot its heat. The coarser the matting the better. as it will allow better wen. tilation." Tip From a Naval omccr Recently on the Aslutlc Station. "It you want to sleep in coolness and comfort during the hot weath- er sleep on straw matting," said a. naval officer who has recently re- turned from the Asiatic statlon to a New York Butt writer, "Not on the floor." ho Continued. "though, ot course, that would be cooler, but so to some carpet dealer wlth the exact pleasurements of your bed, and have SLEEP 0N STRAW MATTING had been kept corked. its contents had had time to turn acid. A note of profuse apology was at once dis- patched to the victim, whom, to make the matter worse, the host- ess had known only a short time. The net result of the entire affair has been that two charming women have now come to know each other very well, and both are acoording- ly grateful to the mistake which brought them into intimate acquain- tame. Mlnard’s Liniment I. used by Phy- sienna. mit her tad rink wine, but after the guest had some ahe tasted that clar- et and nearly tainted. It was pure vinegar and very strong vinegar at that. The bottle had been, opened '."PH. tune. before, (mp, although it ones until just at the last in desper- ation she took one big mouthful and then set the glass down, her face flushed and tears in her eyes. The physician of the hostess does hot per- was hot. She toyed with 111(6th and talked vivaciously, but the sips ltr, the ligpqr tttttt she took were tiny "I began at once to teel better, and you mar Judge of my gratitude for my escape thus promptly and salely. Having taken only three boxes I am happy to state I am abso- lutely cured, with no sign of the re- tunn ot my old trouble." She Took Her Dose, However, With- out. Squeallng. The moral of the following story is that hostesses should taste wine which they have had in the house tor some time before offering it to vis- itors. One woman who is noted for her hospitality noticed the other day that an afternoon caller seemed to have great difficulty in drinking the claret that had been offered her as refreshment because tho afternoon -_-_-_ w.-- “5"" vv wan VII-7W, mint. "About this time an anxious friend advised me to use Dodd's Kidney Pills and by the time I had finished the first box Ipussed a stone of unusual sine. which is now in the doctor's possession who named my diioaie aprienuitiir, but: In spite ot hls treatment I grew was my! began to pass blqody Engine. not required to undergo the surgeon's knife and that for a disease he never had; ia In all probabilltf nobody'e fault but his own. Poe t was not appendlcltll that Mfllcted Mr. Har- rison. It was Stone in the Bladder, and It was Dodd's Kidney Pills that restored him to the perfect health and strength he en) )yl to-day. " About a year ago," he wrltee, " began to suffer from pain in the back, accompanied by a lethargy impossible toL overcome. I employed a physician be In sum and well to-day. For amthl he was annex-lug as every- body thought with appendicitis. That'l what he was told and that's what he was being treated toe. But he grew afar-e In spite of the efforts exerted to help him. ' In amteitdiie"itiCit ll generally thought' necessary to perform an wrath); frlut Mr .Han-ison was all One was Wrong†m-ed-- Me mulled the Flct In I'tmer- Dodd’o Kidney Pm. Probably Band In. Lite. St. Mary's. N. B., July L-wr-al.) --ahamta Han-hon. ot this place, con- ghbg'l hlpoeu a. fortunate man that Thomas Hudson. of St. fury's, N.B.. Might have been Oper- ated on for Appendicitis. BBBABFUL MISTAKE BABELY Mllll'rlllll. ONE WOMAN'S NERVE. 533m Timely Dislogue. Value of Walnut. met the glue every hero and air}, The general was much planned with the look at the men. " Your up“- roll is by tar the beat on the field, Murray," he can. " new“... I“... am“ "will. "they are may Booteh."-4Naiw Herald. Shortly before the last New South Walea Bushmm'a contingent Ballad tor South Africa they Were 1narpmeted by Major-Gen. French. According to th 1r instincts and predelietl ms. they had decorated thelr quarters to re- celve the general; and the most In- terentlng ot all the exhibition. wa- that ot the E Squadron, under Capt. Murray. The aquadrun comprised ll:- tzen auto. and without exception the Scotti-h lion flow trout haltlly Im- provised t1agprtatta at the door of all the ten“. while poles hosting- bam. nemttoo with such mottom u "soot- land Yet," “Scotland for Ever,†"For Puir Add Scotland'r Sake." and even Iett Wha the WI', Wanda; Bled," Tutu laxative Bruno Qulnine stleta. AI drug‘s“ tefttttd the money it it (“In to cure. Ne. . W. Grove's mum: in on etch box. Sea of Paiestine."-arrtuGiaiiGt "7;;- the Literary Dice-t. Curious Lake Discovered by a Swed- ish Explorer in 'l‘hlbet. The Swedish explorer, Sven Hedln. has! discovered a very curious lake in Thibet, says the Review Scientifique. which he describes as follows: “It is a new large sheet ot water. hitherto unknown-a new Dead Sea --tummtt " inteeestinz as tint of Palestine. ItOis one of the strangest sheets of water that I have ever seen. It is of s"'elg"1'llhef,l'"lt' but not very deep I on t on have to walk through it on foot ,for a kilometer (over half a mile) from the edce. to reach the boat; then the boat must be dragged another kilometer so that a distance of two kilometers must he traversed from the shore before the boat with its equipment can be really floated. mit the most curious and most remark. able feature ot this inland sea is the incredible quantity of salt that it contains. The bottom is a compact mass of salt. on whose rough surface it is very disagreeable to walk, as one must do to reach the boat. The boat itself. our oars,our clothes, were all as white as chalk. and when drops of the water fell on the ground they left globules behind them as if they were sap from a candle. It is not re- markable that this sea and its neigho borhood_nre as sterile as the Dead without any surgical operation. and there is no Indication ot a return. CAPT. W. A. PITT. Clifton, N B., Gondola Ferry. Dear Birtr,--Within the past Fear I know ot three fatty tumors on the head having been removed by the ap- nn..-u__ _. q.i.-rn-w-.-.. --i--, ___ "w... nun“, “CU" reluuvcu uy line ap- plication of MINARD'S LINIMENT But perhaps the strangest case fall. ing within our present category is that vouched tor by Dr. Durrler. a physician practicing In Paris. at the end of the eighteenth century. A lady, whom he calls Mme. C., was wedded eight times. and on night oe. casions did she become a widow by reason of her husbands meeting their deaths while in a state ot somnambu- llsm. Six fell from the Parapet or windows of her house. while of the remaining two one was run over while walking in a state of trance through the street’. and the other met his death by drowning. What made the case more mysterious was that previous to marriage none of these men had ever shown any indi. cation of being a sleep walker. still more extraordinary is the matrimonial career of a Mexican lady named Senora Rey Castillo. who. within the comparatively brief per- iod of fifteen years lost no lewer than seven husbands. all of whom had met with a violent death. Her first was killed la a carriage accident ; her second one was accidentally pols- oned, her third lost his life in a mine explosion, her fourth committed sui- cide. her fifth was killed while hunt. ing, her sixth succumbed to a fall from a scaffold and her seventh was drowned. iriiiiTi, Tmiuriiturtiom a railway accident. A Not long Ilnco there died at Naplea a woman named Baldl. who at the time ot her deoeue wa- in the titttt widowhood. Although well-to-do and a very attractive woman. she had been unable to induce anyone to again make her a wife, toe her tive husband. had all come to untimely ttgtdtr--tue ttret three by drownlng. the. tourth through belng thrown. tram 't"rt1tt't't1'ftl'r'1,t, t Marriages That i t Were fatal. t To Cure I Gold In One Day A NEW DEAD SEA. Mal, Beotch." A? Mi. 1 -rirli'itjit'gi no i TCi,Tit.TL- tune I‘m I, t and t. a " tNtl,thi" V Moat m , i'ltrdur,,et,t "banana tb 11ltf,rpd1tli,i,iit Out-nu. ah. “uh" tHott, s an m .1. t"Autttt'd 'i?h'i'il'at45!gtgE 'li'iri.4 â€a.†0 â€nu. cum do and ht.“ ha» y D M... GTG'.""' or iaerqta- Trr-dr" fl--- -...._ - "d"awr-9NB arm lad " the N Pent " ,fi?.rttiJiiiti,i1yiiiiiii,i'; 'l','n'etutt itâ€. 1STPth't, of whieh h In trim. 'lrJllu't,tFib, W luminous m c tl',ltf,5'i'i'2iriuHiii,ii,'i'i Wt: Adda- . n Joan}!- (m. P. o, - In 'mu-u" __ -- -_-, --.... uvuw-wr. comma“ tit . u h. o . Add . F. on I on. p. mu 'oily""' rum pe S1'.MSei. “7.5%qu HARD 1 fr-fiiTaaiUG', a- It',' 'ikllfL','f,.l'2', "tuhedmto" or _ my» my mtq an»: itfa'ftt Central M uttt 6 minute. (mm nu- Iartt,t 1d't'f,"'gti, “W." P'PE I . no. . . Biol-l. Iguana-to. nun-o. Dunno. N. Y. ------, POR an. -----. - TCC- -r-, I bulk: tht',, gonzo-EEQIEE' ‘9- R. Jt blue book- u-e neatly ll'l’d can-ed ‘7 strains orkldnoy trouble. Brown'u Drop. wi t ttgilt can you. Bunnie bottle and donortpuve clmu " cent. for 1 menu to Itll i'te,ig,f AMI ugh“ All-imuntpo-tu “weep! of . 00- _ _ . - Thia world grown easier for the mUkmen. Their hone- nre no longer frightened by the woman who and to come out for mUk Wearing her hair In tmri-papem.-Are- 1110mm.- Cat. BROWN'S DROPS. I750 The ou Scotch Remedy loo- Ham Cttu'rh Cure In uken LLiair%fi not-directly on the Mood 5nd muooun surf-on at the Wm: 39nd for testimonials. tree. "l suppcoe." and the doctor, as In ouclully bound up the Itump of Bunny‘- ampututed arm. "that you will not shoot oft toy cannon- on the next Fourth." "Why not???" replied Sammy. "t have one am Iett Fet."-irtem Life. Sun or Omo, Cm or Team , u Luca Courâ€. . Pam J. Cunt! maker, mth that he In the cantor madam may: J. Culnv t Co., “In; Imminent In the P,.t of Toledo. County sad But. "-id, and I at and out mung-y the tum of ONE HUNDRED Dob LA for each and - we of (mum that cannot be cured by the use of mule Guam Cunt FRANK J. CHENEY. thmmtotrsgtseo mud cub-minedln m presence. would†of December. A. D., All (,'iiiri) A. W. GLEASON. ml. v Notary Public. No non-resident, tourist or summer vuitor Illa." take. catch or kill In any one day. by angling In the inland water- ot thll provlnoe. or shall carry â€my. a crater number than ten acumen or lake trout, each of whlch dull erased two pounds in weight. 1n oneday by angling. or shall carry away, a greater umber ot Ipockled or brook trout than in the aggregate one}! welgh more than fifteen puma-1, and no clutter number than fifty speckled or brook trout, though and number weigh lean than fifteen poundn, and none between Sept. 1 my] May 1. -- No pet-Ion shall take, catch or kill In any of tho watenl of this province la one day by angling. or shall carry away. a. greater number than twelve Page. twenty pickerel or toar mask- Novxieroon [hall take, catch or kill {I} Iggy .od tpe water. ot my. province INt x E 35W. 1Phthe.r-A.trr,r OP. m Fish caught try my tourist or sum- mer toarirt, not exceeding the lawful catch at two dare angling, may be taken out ot the wovtncc by such tom-ht or manner visitor when leav- lag: the province: Save an In tub-notion 2 provided, nospeckled trout, but or matekinortgrr taken or caught In provincial waters shall be exposed tor sale or l~xpurted from the province before the first day ocer, 1908, ' G,:1'gfe or private warm-n. shall be shelled with the lumen of the con- signee and conslgnor, and shall have stated thereon the contents, PAN-AMERICAN VISITORS Any box. Met. crate, package or other atom" whatsoever containing an [or gummeqt. whether caught in Fruit to ttatt in the waters of Lake {£303 and River Nepkon, which may be procured on application to the General Pan-anger Agent, C. P. It., Montreal. Hotel Columbia Sturgeon. from May 10 to March " (clove canon in Inland waters “$.11 ten-h. from Dec. 1 to Oct. 81. Ailing-cog! ape yequlrod to obtain Btteoeiat and brook trout, from my 1 to A". 81. . Salmon trout, tron Dee, 1 to Oct. 81. P. J. calmly a CO., Talia“. o “on by Drama tat. Bone lawn mum; the lemma. torayueautd A Itrorttarip: “Inâ€. from June " to April 14, except In Bloc Lake, where it In ters, Jump 2__to Apr}! It., - Picks"! (dare). - tron May 16 to A3099- -.- -- __ --- d'"-'""' tron June " to April Feer thud'l Hull-eat in the and people agree that Scott's Emul.. donofcod-livu' all is the best thing to take for "don't feel well and don't know why," especially babies --eher like it--anen and women don't mind it, but bubies actually msior it. m - w - -. "div-L‘ISW H. P. Miler; "inet, 1181.yttieitiiiiidi; self-mung up. machine; fruit av: rumor. com In“ t: 10.n.iirtuia. LS'.'!?, AMA, p .. Doctorg ISSUE NO 29 1901. (sawdust): am 1 i'iiihtGnal.rflUlfltlp' mm m Bond tor booklet. MI... I“ lip-mg. Not Yet - to Quit. Prio'u Me. 50c m: â€on. Wu. known. Pr: At.- ' P.6 -Fiiir"iiik 63‘: menu " ou I If??? â€gm-cult w and to - of the a Int - nu of an“ mud " u lave up“. and - do [IAIN It I. too In art Why, M dlp hi: can: upon to printed motion. 1. To “Instr - form; “(raved m an I thin pol-on and [Inton- In wuonl Ire SBe great C “out“. " MI can“ m and - udder: u. "Uttgtl â€a Aterrarr The purllan I. called in anneal." EV Ir con-tram â€can at thi ll and he1 no. " can Motion for Wee of malice of mat-thew “amnion . manor autumn: I attempt to I numbing a - at tl more IDSCT Meter. “some: sin we " upr boon pro-m - It in It. You co better man no. you an and; but m to help to e "mit that 1 " that and â€I round! ad. The (m you to 11101 Intoxlcnnt I nutty for u Intel-er out It. idvGo - M th Caught am Null cha â€van, wt There I: .1 of Which yo on the "1011 h. Red an much much! In _ “a? VT?! “I! boa Cluerlmon M u dizzy M heap-c Menus: up them u there - tha s'" that w “t: recon that you kn M the dl do In whlcl “I grandel "in which I who: a: My never In; to get ht It In a m down “than. al as.“ men In, cot re “a Palm I hour. It It. ot Olive - poet In I short t ion, the a "tt of the " own deo - prune IIG: "I ha in: why,, “an the “I thos h to no pa .7 thorium hive never I. I have t to the ttous, Pf' be pro “he lhockod m are not . woman. 1 he I: no tttre. You a an could m pretend M formim lit-oer “It It " know Help!“ n " the devic to entnp m without haw â€I: heart I Clue In wh! h the one i Just like an c . ter drink Inâ€! you oftl Ilm