h â€"G, ie ~. s imefign When a fellow is about to propose and the girl is nervous, it is gonerally becanse she is afraid some _ one will interrupt them before he gets 1t out. . % It is better to have a light purse than a heayy heart, but more comâ€" fortable to: have neither. A man has to make a name for himâ€" self. All a woman has to do is to get sumawat.a married Remember that a dwarf and still boe . tleman Arler simving for the almighty dolâ€" lar many a man strives to get rid of it. It requires a lot of nerve to tell emue men the things they ought to know. some men‘s idea of progress is to stan‘ and watch others go backâ€" waird. Plles. Cuts, Sore Feot, m'::.".; Sold by Druggists, 25¢. Try | why is it that grey hairs are more often respectel than baid hoads ? Supplied to British soldiers in South Africa. :’:v all ‘Ihro‘o‘!‘o!iflau__‘_ Troubles, Lum " KELPION" Endorsed by best Engliish nodlulL:;:a'l;. An undertaker ne to do the same job The man who is a failure is apt to think that success is accidental. A bachelor‘s advice is wasted on a married man. The milk of human kindness isn‘t put up in botties. A joung Kentucky girl of amazing beauty who had been forced into marrlage with an aged «peculator whom she beartily dialiked, _ yowed that after marriage she would nevyâ€" er look upon ber face in a mirror, freing that it was her facial charms whie} hbad brought about the loathâ€" ed un on. For sit years she faithâ€" fully observed the yow until the death of hber husband canceled the extraordinary oath. A mudleâ€"aged resi apolis made an exe lent yow on the eve to a charming San He dseclared that a sary of the wedding he would distribute Rers to the deserving This resolve was rmigzidly adher and the poveryâ€"stricken denize the place benefited accordingly reaclhicu hus car. Loss tragic was the yow made by a young Polish mechanic residing at Warsaw, though the oath in quesâ€" tion was cerlaialy touched with muchk folly. He swore that on sach anviversary of the wedding day he wouli drink himscl{ into a state of complete intoxication, andl it may be aided that he kept his word to the letter. Unfortunately, however, he did ol reserve the cissipation named for the anniversary alone, ant in consequence oi his cissolute habits ns wile claimed and obtained a sepâ€" aration. After striving for the al Btrange Obligations Men and Woâ€" men liave Made at Marriage. Ivonceiasts insist that love is but & epsles ol lunacy and if one takes gotle ol the foolish yows some people make upon the eve of their eniry into the marital state he is half conâ€" vincest that the jJuigment is a corâ€" riet one, As one instance may be mentioned, the vow registered by a I‘russian brlidegroom to the â€" efiect that if his brite perished within the first five years alter their union he wouli desiroy his own life. This terâ€" rilile outh was faithfuly observed, for the unfortunate lady happening to suc.umb after the birth o( her soconi chid the husband blew _ out | ho boskis clir gily the sad â€" news Why is it Mr. and Mrcs. Kent are naturally very gratetul, and as a mark of their gratitude have ca‘led a sweet Mttle girl horn to them some two years alter Mrc. Kent‘s remarkable recovery hy the name of _ " Edna Do+!®" Kent. Mr. Kent has made a sworn stateâ€" ment rceting the details of his case and his cure. VOWs MADE AT THE ALTAR trary in at work A messenger was despatched for a box of Do li‘s Kilney Pills, which wetre immediately brought to the dying man. At lnst hbe got so low that his body became terc.by‘ bloated and is skin like tanne! leather. He had convulsions, which increased in freâ€" queney â€"and the intervals between these spasms sound so weak that be was bareiy conscious. One noght after a particularly buu! spell the physicians told his e that he coud not 1 ve till mornâ€" Physelans were in constant atâ€" tendance upon hbim, but instead . of improving ne gradua.ly grew worse aml worse. Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 22.â€"(Sprcial). â€"At 309 (GMimore street, this city, there reg‘deg a man who has been nearer the bour and article of death than anyone who has beeâ€"n privileged to Ave to tell the story. Ho ‘s Mr. Gco. H. Kent, a printer in the mp‘oy of the Bank Note Co., of "We‘llington street. Some seven or eight years ago Mr. "fent was sezd with Bright‘s Disâ€" ease which gradually grew _ worse tW1 be bad to quit work and was confined to his bed where he reâ€" maine! for some months. An Ottawa Man‘s VWondertuIXy Narrow Escane. Me was in Couvulsions and the Docâ€" tors Fold His Wife he Could not Live till Morning, but be KRecovâ€" cred. XROM DEATH‘S DOOR Supposed to Have Point. Kent c(A1 not die. On the eonâ€" in about two months he was ork again in the shop and has ince been off work for a single Ecroma ged resident of _ M:inneâ€" an exceedingly benevoâ€" the eve of his marriage ng San Francisco girl. that as each anniverâ€" never has occasion )b more than once. UVlcors, Felons, Skin mples, Stif Joints, man may be a every inch a genâ€" d d iL V y came round thousand dinâ€" or of the city. Iy adhered to T STaiNLESS qontamany.) ns of ‘"Not a da have one of for dinner." (Town Topics.) "What did you get out of garden this year * points east as bg other lines no further reâ€" commendation should be sought. _ Everyâ€" body will tell you it is the best. New â€" York _ Central and River Railroad. The above name is a household the superior excellence of the road sufficient to attract most people that the rate is the same to New points east as bÂ¥y othar linas na A friend of mine returning alter a day‘s shooting, caume in sight of a big she 1 two cubs following in single ceeding along a ridgo, the the three being sharply s egainst the sky. It was a shot, but ho determincd + Tearing down signals does not dpla{ storms. Ulnium-hulen ""medicines‘‘ may check coughing, but the cold stays. Do not trifle; when you begin to cough take Allen‘s Lung Balsamâ€"free from opium, full of healing power. Bear Mother‘s U MHad Forgotten His Excuse. (Philadelphia Record.) Mrs. Gu:zler (as Guzler comes in unsteadily at 3 a. m.)â€"You have no excuse for coming home at this hour and in this ocndition. Guzzrlerâ€"I had one, my dear, and it was a Sandy, but I can‘t think wAsce se oo it was a 8: what it was "Dod, noo when I ste her in the daylicht T‘d like langer time to conâ€" sider ‘t" When the two met for the marâ€" rlage ceremony to be performed it was observed that the bridegroom‘s face wore a look suggestive of exâ€" treme _ disappointment; and when the minister put to him the question, "Do you take this woman to be your lawful wedded wife!"‘ he cast a& critical glance at the bride and responded : A coachman to a country gentleâ€" man fell in love with one of the maids at a mansion house to which he occasionally drove his master. He ultimately proposed marriage and was accepted, though it so happenâ€" ed he had never ssen his charmer except in the evening. Whereupon the minister pawkily observed in a soothing tone of voice: "John, John, ye needna greet, it‘s nearly a‘ owre! A rather unique incident took place at a wedding some time ago, and thereby hangs a tale. ud dnb ctanind diits tatsctads t in : 20B ic3 lt 3404 0 iA cA $ is id of his fingers and began rubbing his right eye. Thinking his eye was dirty the bridegroom began to do likewise. Then looking round again he saw his friend rubbing his other eye, and not knowing whether he had wiged the right one or not, he wet his (iIngers and rubbed both of them. During the ceremony on another occasion the bridegroom happened to turn around and glance at a friend of his in the congregation. This Iriend, who was of a waggish disâ€" position, observing the look, wet one The minister looked up very much perplexed and paused. He repeated the sentence, and again the same grull voice answered : "I will." Again the minister looked up surâ€" prised, not knowing what to make of it, wihen one of the groomsmen at the end of the row safd : "she‘s deaf, and I‘m answering for her." He was certainly more polite the brideâ€"groom who moekly responded: "Yes, If you please, sir." Amusing incidents are of frequent occurrence. At a marrlage service performed a few days ago in a little country church, when the minister sald in a solemn tone: "Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husâ€" band?" etc., instead of the woman answering for herself, a gruff man‘s vo‘lce answored, "Yes, I will." "Ay, I‘m takin‘ her; but it was her slister that I wanted." Another rustic on a similar occaâ€" s‘on answered the question thus : "Oh," returned the bridegroom, reassuringly, "ye dinna need to put yersel‘ the least aboot, sir, for ye see ye‘re no a bit waur than my sel‘. It‘s my first marriage, too, an‘ I‘m nae a bit frightened !" It was a matter of fact kind of inâ€" dividual of this kind, who, on being asekd the fateful question beginning "Do you take this woman?" replied "What ither am I gaun to do; isna that what brocht me here ? ‘"Well, Mr. â€"â€"â€", you know it will be my first marriage." . some, however, are not so nerâ€" vyous, but go through the necessary ceremonies in a matter of facst way. An elderly bachelor who at last contemplated entering the married state set out one evening accompanied by a friend to see the minister. _ The reverend gentleman had _ recently been ordained, and when his services were requested he took it seriously to heart . and said : I Ererybody knows how unresisting most bridegrooms are, how â€" they are generally content to do as they are bidden in a dazed kind of way. Such a bridegroom took an inconspicuous part in a recent marâ€" rlage ceremony. Sameone or someâ€" thing, he did not quite know which, had led him to the altar and now. he turned, and something else was steering his course down the aisle. His ears buzzed, and there was a mist before his eyes. Something clung to hi#‘ arm which he tried to shake off. When he reached the vestry he discovered that it was wife. Then he found his voice. "Oh, it‘s you, Mary,‘ he exclaimed. "George !" cried she, reprovingly ‘"Well," he added, "to tell the truth, 1 had nae idea wha it was." + GLINTS OF HUMOR _ ¢ AT BRIDAL ALTAR \44449944949444 4494944444442 x OB ud ue i% # J PME A Profitable Garden 1 J went by that I didn‘t my neighbor‘s chickens ract most people, but now Ehe same to New York and iine returning to camp s _ shooting, suddeniy ol a big she bear with is a nousehold word and 1 € nJust Chastisement. & in single file, proâ€" rfldgo, the forms of ~ im d * . ;‘@;:3’ { should be Hudson t T3 t Take Lazative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drvglsu refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove‘s signature is on each bor. 25e Going Through the Deck. This religious note is from the church departmert of the Loveland, Col., Reporter: ‘¥nly a few weeks ago Rev. F. L. Rozellie preached on ‘The Discarded Queen.‘ Next Sunâ€" day night his topic will be ‘The Two Kings.‘ It will then be seen that after having discarded a queen he held up two kings (and possibly an ace), hoping to pull two more kings in the draw. The parson is bound to have a good hand if it takes all summer. We await with feverish eagerness his lecture on ‘The Grasping Animal ; or, Who Feeds the Kitty 7 " 1 Nee that the druggist gives you the riï¬ht articleâ€"the soothing, h»l,)ful Painkiller that was used in your familly before you _ were born. There is but one Painkiller, Perry Davis‘ No upright dealer offers substitutes. bing. Aftor the doctor h: the one who had howle in the name of heaven to endure ail that screaming ?" "Easy onough," was fool~! the dortor; I sound leg to rub." KFooled the Dector. Two Polish rustics who were badâ€" 1y aiflicted with rheumatism were rocently taken to a hospital in Frankfort. Each folt great pain in one leg and the physician tried to alloviate it by rubbing the leg. One of the rustics howled terribly whia this was boing done, whereas the> other uttered not a word ; inâ€" deed, frony the smile on his [ace, one woruld have said he enjoyed the rubâ€" TO CURKE A COLD IN oNE DAY LaxattveBromo Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cure, No pay. Price 25 cents. â€"Dorothy Moore, in -"tchefl:lul;"é: tury. Nothing ®rorries a _ woman so much as not to belong to things. 00 WRsecs comereicl ce c n .0 ie s ce hi i Temperament covers a multitude of sins. e It is queer ‘how much tyranny glipshod people discover. Life happens to some folks only in novelsg. * If mere ideas are not truth, they are at least the cloth of which it is made. To observe the habits of an echiâ€" nodermâ€"that is science. To do thie same thing for a manâ€"that is only fiction. _Before giving â€" one‘s cause it is well to be the gift is of some value I never knew a man to object to any sphere for a woman that ha_d him for the bub. There is nbore joy ovier one sinner who makes up a quoroum than bver the sinety and nine who come reâ€" gularly. t The most uninï¬tex:ésti‘h'é-r;;e;;;(.)n in the world is he who is interested in everything equally. Comets are probably male; their eccentricities can be computed. lady. W1 I sat in the dark, in an agony of apprehension, there came again the patter, patter of little feet, and a whiteâ€"clad figure stole down the stairs, through the hall, into the dining room, up to the table. Smaill fingers replaced the â€" stolen peach jJust where it had been, and a stubâ€" born Mttle voice muttered, "Done z;lgain. old devil!‘"â€"Harper‘s Magaâ€" n@. It is rather harder to he petty outdoors; there is so much breadth all around. § Yes, for my i)oy oo ols It won‘t do to be only partly a The child was put to bed every night at 6. We dined at 7. I was gitting in the drawing room one evening before dinner. *The room was dark, the doors open, and my seat commanded a view of both the stairway and the dining room. The table was set and in the center was a dish of tempting peaches. Presentâ€" ly there came to my ears the patter of little bare feet, and a childish figure, clad in a night gown, stole down the stairs, through the hall, into the dining room, up to the taâ€" ble. Small fingers seized the topmost peach from the dish, and the litâ€" tle fellow turned and trotted a.wa.y‘ upstairs again. The whiJlow of an English army ofâ€" ticer was visiting me with her son, a charming little fellow about five years old. The mother told me with pride how honorable he was, how highâ€"minded, and that she had never for an instant seen in him indications Ol any traits that were low or base. To ‘children Scott‘s Emulâ€" sion gives food and strength for growth of flesh and bone and blood. _ For pale girls, for thin and sickly boys Scott‘s Emulsion is a great help. . Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto, Ontario. 60c. and $1.00; all druggists. For women Scott‘s Emulâ€" sion does this and more. It is a most sustaining food and tonic for the special trials that women have to bear. To the men Scott‘s Emulâ€" sion %ives the flesh and strength so necessary for the cure of consumption and the repairing of body losses from any wasting disease. Scott‘s Emulsion ‘is the means> of life and of the enâ€" joyment of life of thousands of men, women and chéldren. SCOTT‘ $ FMULSION Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold «*lrone Again, Old Devil!" " petmaptet smidlls Pss â€"s "ï¬ x 201 believe in â€" chapsronage ? doctor had gone away, had howled asked : "How of heaven were you abls all that pain without Microcosms. ing one‘s lifs to a well to be sure that the reply. "I gave him my U AKC TORONTO venâ€" "Good morrow, Father Jacob," aried the last. "I am neither Abraham, Isaao nor Jacob," replied the old gentleman, "but Saul, the son ol Kish, who went os#t to seek his father‘s asses, and, l0 ! hege I have found them." Three conceited young men wits, as they thought themselves, passing along the road near Oxford, met a grave old gentleman, with whom they had, a ‘mind to be rudely merry. "Good morrow, Father Abarham," said one. ‘"Good morrow, Father Isaac," saild the next. w 3 Left in the Dark,. A little girl about 3 years old was out playing when suddenly it â€" be.â€" came very clowly. She ran into the kouso and startled her mamma by paying : "I‘m not going to stay outdoors any more," ; ; c . "Why ?" asked ber mother. "Because God blowed the sun out." by local applications as they cannot reach t{e diseased portion of the ear. Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by conâ€" stitutional remedies. . Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. _ When this tube is inâ€" flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperâ€" fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafneas is the result, and unless the inflamâ€" mation can be takem out and this tube restorâ€" ed to its normal condition, hearin will be destroyed forever; nine cases out (5 ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deatness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. " Remarkable! But what are you doing now ?" "Waiting for an carthquake to come along:â€"and shake the potatoes out of tha ground." DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED "Pretty tolerable, stranger," reâ€" sponded the old man, who was sitâ€" ting on a stump. "I had some trees to cut Cown, but the cycione levelâ€" od them and saved m» the trouble. "That was good." " Yes, anli then the lightning set fire to the brush pile and saved me the trouble of burning it." Minard‘s Liniment cures Burns, etc I induced him to procure a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, which he applied with the most astonishing and marâ€" vellous effects. Before he had finâ€" ished using the contents of the first bottle he could walk readlly without the aid of a stick, and alter a few applicitions from the second bottle he was free from pain, and has been ever since; and although 50 years and a farmer, he can walk and work without exâ€" periencing any pain or difficulty whatever." F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo Sold by Druggists, T5¢. Hall‘s Family Pills are the best. Sergeant Jeremiah Maher, of Ardâ€" cath, Royal Irish Constabulary, says : "My â€" friend, Mr. Thomas Hand, has been a great sufferer from rheumatism in the back and joints for the last four years, durâ€" ing which time he has applied many different methods of treatâ€" ment, but obtained no reliet whatâ€" ever, and for the last two years has been unable to walk without a stick, and sometimes two sticks, and was in great pain constantly. Place of Real Rest. (Life.) Briggsâ€"What‘s your idea of Heaâ€" vyen ? Griggsâ€"Well, it‘s the way a man feels the first three days after he is home from a summer vacation. LOST HIS RHEUMATISM By the Use of a Bottle of St. Jacobs Oil. It was in the far south "How‘s times?" asked â€" Gentlemen,â€"My daï¬ghtéx;; 13 years old, was thrown from a sleigh and inâ€" jured her elbow so badly it remained stlif and very pain{ful for three years. Four bottles of MINARD‘S LINIMEXNT completely cured her. and she has not been troubled for two years. Yours truly, se ______J. B. LEVESQUE, Handicapped. (Smart Set.) Madgeâ€"How 4s it you are not going out yachting with Charlie again ? Messre. C. C. Richards & 0.; In _ Cuba cZbbages _ frequently woigh as much as twenty pounds. All vegetables do well. â€" Radisnes may ba eaten from fourteen to eightcen days after sowing, while corn produces three crops per year. Swoeet potatoes are perpetual. The natives dig up the tubers, cut them off and plant tho old vines, wanich produce a new crop in three months. All sorts of fruit, horticultural and greenâ€"house _ plants, and Dulbous stock are also grown‘ with the most gratifying success, M _Dollyâ€"It took both his hands to manage the boat. Iwentyâ€"Pound Cab b;go- Before she is married the average woman thinks that when she has a home of her own she will raise vegeâ€" tables and chickens; afterward she thinks children will do.â€"N. Â¥X. Press. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everyâ€" where. * St. Joseph, P. Q., Aug. 18, 1900. The way to convince a woman you love is to sit in abstraction for. a long time and then say with a start that you were thinking of the first day you ever saw her. A married man‘s troubles begins when he is engaged. . It isn‘t on what income one can got married, but on what income one can live after getting married. No woman can ever account for her husband‘s lack of interest in her diploma and the photograph of her first suitor. » _Minard’s Liniment relleves Neuralâ€" Nature His Hired Man Sought and Found Reveries of a Eachelor. the tourâ€" 11 Cuba,. Dr. Chaso‘s Qintment In all I think, or speak, or do, Whatevrer way my steps are bent, Gord shape and keep me strong and true ; Courageous, choerful, and content. God help me! help me to suppress All longing for what ecannot be, Ami grant me moans wherewith to blegs Whoever may have need of me. ~â€"W. D. Russel! in the Independent. 1 a woman could only get a husâ€" band who would com>s hom» regularly every evening and be able to mateh silk for her she woulin‘t feel there was so much necll for her to worry about what Heaven was like.â€"NXexw York Press. + The avorags man thinks he is getâ€" | ting Into public life when he marches ; in a political torchlight parade .;.n-], is allowed to contribute toward buyâ€" | ing the uniforms. 1 AzCFO is som» hope for the idiot who thinks he knows all about garâ€" dening, but none at all for him when he thinks the sime ray â€" about women. ried. Mighty few giris can ever talk about a new engagement without wetting their lips nervously, C o eoeson s A woman sort ol exp.cts burglars to coms around in tho same regular way as the m‘kman. 'phr-:P is som» hope for the idiot some men wouldn‘t be any worse than they are, even if they were marâ€" A BOON TO HORSEMENâ€"One bottle of English Spavin Liniment completely removed a eurb from my horse. I take pleasure in recommending the remedy, as it ncts with mysterious prom‘)tnen in the removal from horses of hard, soft or calloused Ium{u, blood spavin, splints, curbs, eaweeny, stifies and sprains. GEORGE ROBB, Farmer, Markbam, Ont. Sold by all druggists. The bed ought to be slightly inclinâ€" ed from head to foot, but the proper elevation of the head varies accordâ€" ing to temperament. Anaemic people need to have the head quite low, tut fullâ€"blooded people rest easier it the head is higher. it\ cinf t vadcsiiintivcinnire Wttsd lc tc h Ti + Ac k 3 2104 11000 +4 { false positions and perfoct freeâ€" dom ; all compression intc rlering with respiration or circulation must â€" be avoided. The feet ought to tbe warm and lower than the head. _ The tbody should be extended and not cuddled up into a ball. When thq bed is in an aleove or surrounded by heavy curâ€" tains nightmare is sure to lurk withâ€" in, for they prevent the free circulaâ€" tion of air, and the brain is stupefied, as it were, by laughing gas produced by the sleeper, the air vitiated by him being breathed over and over again. Ee Py VETmeWw relishes and stimulating drisks. The chamber should be spacious and woell ventilated, the bed not too soft and without too much bed clothing. Perâ€" foct muscular relaxation, avoidance be taken to remove the supposeq cause, to prevent recurrences of the nightmare. In the case of children intense moral impressions, _ weird stories and grewsome tales should be avoided, especially before bedtime. The child shouid be put to bed early to avoid the exciting environment of the social circi», of animat>d converâ€" sation and convivial jo.lity. The evening meal should be a light one, both as to quantity aad quality of food and drink, avoiding highly spiced s team ccSicats P C . 5 U there is perturbation of mind, givâ€" ing some mildly sedative pot.on, such as warim watler swoeetaned with sy: up of lettuce. Following this care shouli red, anger, etc. In fact, the most intenso nightmare is due to exhalâ€" ations of passion, due to the loss o[f dearly loved relatives or friends, sudden and extreme reverse of forâ€" tune, disappointed ambition, the {ear of disease, or even a shock to one‘s self love and esteem, wnich, as has been aptly said, slays more victims than love. The treatment of nightmare conâ€" sists in awa.k?nlr_ngntne subjoct and, In nervous persons, emotional in character, nightmare may be caused by grewsome tales of woelul specâ€" tacles, griel, discouragement, natâ€" Those who sulfer from nightmare and the number is legionâ€"may be inâ€" terested in knowing that the disorâ€" der is a nervous one, traceable in many â€" instances © to preventable causes. Somotimes these are due to projonged wake{fulness, a _ radical change in diet, or faulty position of the body, such as lying upon the back or face. Sometimes it is due to some â€" mechanical â€" interference, such qs an aneurism or even swolâ€" len tonsils. West has reported a case in which, in spite of â€" all hygienic treatment, nightmare continued evâ€" ery night for a long period, due it was discovered after careful conâ€" sideration, to a prolonged uvula, which during sleep in prone position, hindered free respiration. Cutting off the point of this michievous uvula caused the permanent discontinuâ€" ance of the visits of the nightmare. | The retention of heat in lava is almost incredible. Lava is so bad a conductor that it is possible to walk on the surface of a lava flow when it has cooled and yet see red heat in the figsures below. Reflections of trying to do with common soap what she could so easily do with Sunlight Soapâ€"Octagon Bar. 216 would be kept in perpetual motion Whenâ€" George Stephenson was asked, " Do you believe in perpetual motion‘?" he replied, " Yes, if you lift yourself by the waistâ€"band of the trousers, and carry yourself three times round the ‘room." â€" . Just so, and a womanâ€"would just as soon believe that she has not to pay dearly â€" for common premiym soaps, in the low quality of soap, in ruined hands and clothes. . She Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandrulf ‘Perpetual Motion. The Heat of Lava. Prayer a Bachelor. uï¬ll. zlnslow‘zi? ks used for !°°u"°: the child. sof tle aull is 1eÂ¥ s the colic and is the best remedy V oo rrovhk OF THE I-‘INW \ sugar beet land in Bay County, b wild and cleared, in ï¬uod hrmlnï¬ communâ€" ity, Apply to 1. Bent y, Glover, Mich. Â¥ FOR SALEâ€"SOorr BUgAF beet In»4 uid 2 7AVs war Lamp and Mig. éo?lrhmnmn â€"___i_" 10 21lg. COo., Ha t P e ET Â¥YY _ who can earn at least weekly ; several of our repres over flyve dollars in a day ; nc collecting. _ The Century Chri Toronto, Ont W CIF TOWE hooalh..dth.. t A POoULTRY CHEESF comn aAND ExTRacrEp nox®Ey Good facilities for handling. Consignmen ts solicited. Correspondence invited and prompt. ly attended to. Will buy honey outright. 62 Front Street Enst, JORN J. FEE * *:ousrss NO HUMBUG s :>z3,:; STRUNENTS in 1 Humane $wine Â¥, Stock Marker an d Cal# ® Dehorner, Stopeswine of all ages from rooting Makes48differentear marks , all #ize5, with same blade. Extracts Horas, ‘ Testimonia)s free, Prige #1.50 or sen d #1 fortrin!l :iï¬ t works, send balance. Pat‘d U.8. May6, ‘02for 17 yrs ; Canada Dec.17, # Ans se C Guose BUTTER AND FGGS IMPERIAL MAPLE Canadian School of Mustration TORONTO, CAN. Yonge and Gerrarnd Es P Individual instruction and hel#fnl criticiam from expert instructors. You can carn while you study. Write for booklet giving full information. ANTED LEARN rrm'm-n] PEX drawing at HOME during spare hours. Best course by mail ever devised . Easicy LEarx®E» Srupexts Deurowre» Larg®s Sararme Postrioxs Wairtine Nothing like Dick‘s powder for a run down horse. 50 cents a package. Leeming, Miles & Co., Agents, mMOoNTREAL. Write for Book on Cattle and Horses free. DRAWING is a necessity where the best results from feeding would be obtained. It tones up the system, rids the stomachk of bots, worms and other parasites that suck the life blood away. 000 0 Transvaal Not Open to Ail. No one can land in South Africa without a permit, and no one but relfugees, government employees and persons engaged in a service of » public nature will be permitteq Lo move up into the Transvaal. When an animal is all run down, has a rough coat and a tight hide, anyone knows that his blood is ont of order. To keep an animal econoâ€" mically he must ge in good health., Monkey Brand Soap makes copper like gold, tin like silver, erockery like marble, and windows like crystal. tf F An lutricate Language, The intricacies of the English jan. guago are well illustrated in the deâ€" finition given of a sleeper : A al \s one who sleeps. _ 4 sleeper I: that in which the #leepep Hloeps. _A sleeper is that on whigh the sleeper runs while the sleeper sleeps. There{fore, while the sleeper sleeps in the sleeper, the sleeper carâ€" ries the sleeper over the sleeper under the sleeper, until the sleeper which carrles the sleeper jumps the Sleeperp and wakes the sleeper in the Sleeper by str‘king the sleeper on the gSleeper, and there is no longer any sleeper sleeplag In the sleeper on the sleeper, 51# | ISSUE NO. 41, Blood allty standard from Ocean our money back I1notnï¬dnctorr ROSE & LAFLAME, Agents, Montroal, BLOOD PURIFIER Ryrie Bros.,‘«» Yonge and Adciaide Sts., Toronto. "Dâ€"SEVERAL BRIGHT PROPLE 1 PRD ues we an C CBC! 7 Transvaal Not Open to IThe centre setting is a perfect diamond. We guarantee the safe delivery of this to any address for $8.50. o hib The Pansy Stick Pin shown above has the natural color effects hard 1 enamelled on 14k. gold. OUR NEW illustrated cnulorue, which we send free of charge to any address, offers an assortâ€" ment of gift articles almost unlimited. DICKCS FOR MONEY Floral Pins. 1 10 C RIZ PEOE LE n at least fifteen dollare our representatives make a day; no delivering nor ntury Christian Co., Ltd., ar <#Hf alf V om all s u%, ho #i :74.0 sows rowng rield, lowa, U. 8, address for , Ont. SYRUP. 14 The point point whic Â¥ill be Â¥e le somctim For aft sleeve is x laid in co der and t served at whoulder a course, a Iits own. The ma is not qu the mak the previt work is collars t #leeres. AJJ All ads se their comditior with a band. P pronouns wleos Th to bag and c new s tinetl: Th« at 1} conti theyv mikngs . for thol Pose i4 beautil guoise. gimps â€" «1nd th be obt sloeves decorit And | ama k ing bille, that monhos The n aAted w There « line for are vog their m gimps a passcms The call ore bro lo and bues x miLgs, ventio: Clded|s 1t t! W th left : hung beloy All +# at leas four . The 1 bea vie« Duch es color w feta. 1 y 1 U C ons ba n fast L4 Prine who is girds, n dress, 1 lively. . Â¥kirt d cian C brea dth But th« in a w Lictl fuln ther o the co ane nOL ; stuff, and terials in ale ((_)r t going look like creation. The hin in the su would be shoulder Shoulders much tri are put c has been dresses. extend « there is them. Little la lace are «ar a net gown be thing cls= But isn Ing it © ter than a new ©( need mol ftomr it ca Your 0 out and new one how i l n Ti TJ Lt sle i a