& /\ #1 $3 Somehow or other the hinges never eem to get rusty on the door of adverâ€" bined, business generally gets ti;vwv;;:i »nd of the deal. Y 8¢ LOSP. o Emt EP" STuTP 10838 than twenty minutes," s eR Ae e ‘"Whew! What did you do with it"* "?l. they got it back again before I had Misard‘s Liniment Cures Buros, etc. (Philadelphia Telagraph.) Johnnyâ€"What was Maude so dreadfully fross about in the trolley last night? Adaâ€"She thought she was being admired by a gentleman sitting opposite, only _ to lind that he was crossâ€"eyed and was reading pickle poetry in the top of the car. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken 1n;’rnâ€"n;l; and actedirectly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonial®, free. F. J, CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0, Sold b‘ all druggistaâ€"75c. Take Hall‘s Family Pills for Constipation. Sworn to betore me and -nb-crlho;i‘ l; _ml presence,this 6 th day of Decem ber, A.D., 1 886. â€"*= 3 N { ..“.} A. W. GLEASON, Nee Notary Public. Srtate or Omo, Cits or Touspo, } Lvcas Cousry j *® Fraxk J. CnexEy makes oath that hels the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cuexgy & ‘o., doing business in the City of Toledo, Jounty and State aforesaid,and that said firm wulenv the sum of ONE HUNDREKD DOLâ€" LARS for each and every case of CaTAarkka that cannot be cured by the use of HaLrL‘s CaTARRE CUm®. "What is your idea of a truly good wife?" asked the youth. "A truly good wife," answered the Comminsville sage, "is one who loves her husband and her country, but does 1ot attempt to run either."â€"Philadelphia {nquirer. When business and pleasure are #« w ids "Did you ever make any money on All urinary complaints are caused by Diseased Kidneys. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills ilways cure the Kidueys, and therefore ilways cure urinary complaints. mured, and you can bet 1 ;\'asflx;rl;a;i)":\’r man. I cannot speak too highly of Dodg's hidney Pills." "For about four or five years," says Mr. Taggart, "I was a sufferer from Kidâ€" ney trouble, and the scores of medicines 1 used gave me no relief. I was forced to get up three or four times every night and my life was simply miserable. "At last I started to use Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills, and I got relief from the first. Atter using two boxes I was completely Wellâ€"known Tilbury East Farmer Telis the Tilbury News How Easily He Got KRid of His Trouble. Tilbury, Ont., Aug. 29.â€"(Special.)â€" Mr. Wm. Taggart, a wellâ€"known and highly esteemed farmer of Tilbury East, tells of his remarkable cureâ€" of longâ€" standing Kidney Discase by Dodd‘s Kidâ€" nev Pills. HB CAN SLEBP IN PBAGE NOW Wm. Taggart‘s Kidney Disease Cured by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Even the infinitesimal variation in the foree of gravity at different portions of the earth is not too insignificant to be disregarded, and must be determined and a correction applied. This delicate deterâ€" mination is made by observing the pressure of the atmosphere by the deâ€" termination of the boiling point of waâ€" ter, and comparing the same with the barometric reading, the difference, if any, being considered due to a variation in the action of the force of gravity upon the mercury Recent Applances Used in the Science of Goedesy. The science of geodesy is making rapid strides along the line of wcumc?y, ol:)d there is not much left to be perfected in the way of method. The allâ€"important problem of modern as well as ancient geodesy, of course, is the measurement or the dimensions of the earth, which enters into all practical work of surveyâ€" ing, navigation and terrestrial physics. The International Geodetie Association several years ago undertook the problem, the different nations having agreed to contribute their share toward an acâ€" curate determination. _ As has already been recorded, the determination was unâ€" dertaken in Ecuador in 1901, and exâ€" tended from the Columbian to the Peruâ€" vian frontier, and every possible refineâ€" ment to attain the maximum degree of accuracy was adopted. The greatest difâ€" ficulty is to secure an accurate base line, which is complicated by so apparently trivial a thing as the expansion of the measuring medium. _ ‘The latest refineâ€" ment in the bar method is that originatâ€" ed by the United States Coast and (Geoâ€" detic Survey, using a single bar immersâ€" ed in melting ice, the conmtaining trough being carried in a suitable car upon a temporary track. Jater still, M. Guilâ€" laume discovered an alloy of 64 per cent. steel and 36 per cent. nickel possesses an exceedingly low coefficient of exgan- sion, and, consequently, offers the best medium for accurate base line measureâ€" ments. This alloy is known as "invar," and is usually employed in the form of a wire supported by tripods and stretchâ€" ed by a definite weight. A very valuable . piece of work on the Island of Spitzâ€" | bergen was completed with the use of, this alloved wire. Got Away Again. (Chicago Recordâ€"Herald.) The Truly Good Wife Alas, Poor Maule! MEASURING THE EARTH. +s Will every reader of this enquiry $ «WHO KNOWS ANYTHING ABOUT BANNIGER" please drop a line on the subject to THE E. B. EDDY COMPANY, â€" ~ BULL, CANADA EDDY‘S IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING PAPER All buyers, sellers and users of Who Knows Anything About $175 5 every case of CaTarrg 1 by the use of Hauu‘s FRANK J. CHEXNEY, "BANNIGER * ? one day in less are interested in this question the A YEAR‘S ARVERTISING. Entirely through advertising in the leading newspapers, a real estate comâ€" Ftny of Chicago sold in one year 25,000 ots at a Michigan summer resort. The manager says: "We found that every class of buyers, including the men of largest means, can be reached through the newspaper better than by any other mummseus 3t C s e Te ve 12 L. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. "Now, boys," he said, "I will give frm each three ordinary buttons. Here ey are. You must think of the first one as representing Life, of the second one as representing Liberty, and the third one as representing the Pursuit of Happiâ€" ness. Next Sunday I will ask you each to produce the three buttons and tell me what they represent." The following gund.ay, in accodrance with his plan, the teacher interrogated his class on the subject of the butzons. says Harper‘s Weekly. uw v o. oW s P This story is told of a Washington school principal who was trying to make clear to his class the fundamental docâ€" trines of the Declaration of Independâ€" ence: gestive organs some work to do. tions need exercise as much as the human anatomy, but if the give them the aid that Dr. Von apple Tablets afford and you c thing that‘s wholesome and pal box, 35 centsâ€"8 | Ethopia is wealthy in resource beyond ’the power of any man to calculate. gold, silver, asphalt, petroleum, iron and coal exist in combination with a salubrious climate, agricultural productiveness and a people of singular docility, With watchful eyes upon the future the Emâ€" peror seeks to preserve the political inâ€" dependence of his people, which has been handed down through the centuries and in the meantime he hopes to develop the intelligence and resources of the pâ€" ulation to such a point as to enabr it to withstand any fressure from withâ€" out. The Empire holds out no attractions to the commercial advertiser with limitâ€" ed means, says United States Consulâ€" CGeneral Skinner, who negotiated the commercia! treaty with that country. This cup is fileld with a fleshy disk, the upper surface of which is everyâ€" where covered with the projections like miniature cows‘ horns. The cup when free from its contents, would hold about twelve pints of water. The flower weighs fifteen pounds. It is very thick, the petals being threeâ€"quarters of an inch in thickness. With its beauty one is led to expect sweetness, but its odor is that of tainted beef, and Dr. Arnold supposed that even the flies were deâ€" ceived by the smell and were depositing their eggs in the thick disk, taking it for a piecce of carrion. The raffesia is a strange plant. _ It grows in Sumatra and derives its name from Sir Stamford Raffles, Governor of Sumatra at one time, and his friend, Dr. Arnold, a naturalist. They were the first white men to discover the wonderful plant. It is said to be the largest and most magnificent flower in the world. It is composed of five roundish petals, each a fot across and of a brick red color, covered with numerous irregular yellowish white swellings. The petals surround a cup nearly a foot wide, the margin of which bears the stamens. Eat what you like. p. "I suspect," ruminatingly said the Old Codger, apropos of nothing in particular, "that if all men were mind readers in the full sense of the term, and each was able to realize what every other person he met actually thought about him, there would be Â¥ery little going on in this world but fights, lawsuits and underâ€" taking; and only the helplessly meek, the sublimely egotistical, the genuinely philosophical and the hopelessly idiotic would have any happiness in this life.â€" September Smart Set. 1 "_ Is your ad. in the Times? Clothes * Time Cost is Money Money The New Century Washer saves bothâ€"nothing casâ€" ier or more effectiveâ€"nothing half so quick. You sit to operate it, and a tubful of clothes may be thoroughly cleaned in five minutes." You cannot make a more profitable investmentâ€"the profits direct and incidental cannot be estimated. Loâ€" cal dealers sell it at $5.50, Ask your dealer for it. If he cannot show you the machine write us for booklet. THE DOWSWELL MANUFACTURING CO. LIMiTED HAMILTON, Canaoa Largest Flower in the World. An Interrupted Lesson. African Eldorado. His Pessimicogitation. A HIKO.â€"Give the diâ€" work to do. These func» much as any part of it if they‘re delicate, Dr. Von Stan‘s Pineâ€" d you can eat any» and palatableâ€"60 in [2? Then they use an ingenious and curious method. . They make a small bamboo raft about three feet square, and to this they attach a long rope, made of loo-e]y-gole:ted cotton. _ At the end is a huge hook, to the shank of which they tie a live chicken. Now and then, however, a crocodlie becomes so ferocious and kills so many persons that even the superstitions naâ€" tives feel it necessary to despatch him. mp o oÂ¥ $yl x) T F 2 P rice, attached to trees or saplings close to the water. These are offerings made by the natives to some crocodile that has his haunt just under the bank. a spirit of the water. Therefore ,these ugly monsters are not only extremely plentiful there, but thety are so daring that they make most of the waterways dangerous even for persons in boats. ’l'fe Englishmen who dwell in that part ‘of the country declare that hardly a week passes without the killing of a naâ€" tive by a crocodile. The brute swims slowly along behind the rude, flimsy eanoes and dugouts used there and sudâ€" denly switches his terrible tale around in such a way as to sweep the men out of the boat into the water. Here and there ai;ongwt.t;é'banks of the black rivers will be seen strips of white cloth and baskets full of fruit and Odd Superstition of the Natives About Crocodiles. Along the Malaccea Straits the Malays still believe that many beasts are sacred, and they are particularly impressed with the belief that the crocodile is ’ Chinese Silver Tea Sets.. Mme Wong, wife of Wong Kai Kah, Viceâ€"Commissioner from China to the St. Louis World‘s Fair, has taken up her residence in Indianapolis, Ind., during her husband‘s absence on official matters, This gives the American woman a chance to see what the table silver of a wealthy Chinese woman is like. Sevâ€" eral dishes new to the Americans are seen in Mme. Wong‘s coliection. All the dishes are solid silver and richly ornaâ€" mented. The tea set has solid silver cups and saucers, the size of our ordinary eups for family use. The soup spoons resemble our cgafing dish, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. They set the chicken on the raft and There used to be complaints that paâ€" tients under the treatment might take cold, but that happens so rarely if after the exercise they go home immediately and take a bath. For persons who ride or play tennis the new treatment is splendidly effective, but it is of no value to those not addicted to athletics. ‘ The treatment is not expensive. The original cost of the rubber will not exâ€" ceed $4 in any case, and it can be used time and time again. . The treatment requires nothing in the way of diet, although it will, of course, be very much more effective if fattening foods and liquids are avoided. But the rubber dam devotees do not, as a rule, follow any other course in attempting to get thin. In the same way, men who think they are getting too heavy over the hips or maybe over the abdomen wrap the rubâ€" ber only about these parts that they are anxious to attack. Women usually wrap the rubber about the body from the chest down to the knees. _ Many women are most interestâ€" ed in getting rid of their hips, as they are likely to show stoutness first there, and the big hipped woman is not at all in the style nowadays. _ Such women wrap the rubber dam several times arâ€" ound the hips, and waist and devote all their energies to that particular part of the bodv. Persons who want to take off flesh buy four or five yards of this material wrap it tightly about the body, and to keep it in place put on a tightâ€"fitting suit of silk or woollen underwear, preferably of the kind called the combination. This is only the first stage of the rubber dam reduction cure. _ The hardest part is still to come. _ Once the rubber is in place there must come many swift sets of tennis, hard horseback riding, tether ball playing or some equally exacting sport. _ The use of the rubber wrapâ€" pings assists the action of the skin, makes the perspiration much freer and has been known to take off as much as five or six pounus in one day. | This new method of melting away the too solid pounds is described as the "rubâ€" ber dam" system. _ A rubber dam is the bit of rubber fitted by dentists about a tooth on which they are working to keep away saliva and other moisture. â€" The rubber from which such dams are made comes in bolts about twoâ€"thirds of a yard wide. _ It is a hard rubber cloth, and is sold by the yard in one or two drug stores. doul " Pn c ontrntaindiates PiNidin s Smd td sat +/ oi bant It is a fact that some of the women of New York smart society who are notâ€" ed for their good looks and athletic figâ€" ures are most devoted to this method of keeping their weight down. Among men its advocates are those conspicuous for their athletic figures and their strength. The graceful woman one sees at Newâ€" port riding along Ocean avenue, playing tennis at the Casino or on the links at the iolf club may all the time be takâ€" ing this method of getting thin, although there is no trace of it in their appearâ€" ance. Mer who ride crossâ€"country or play Eolo may be simultancously followâ€" ing this method of flesh reduction, a&lâ€" though nobody would suspect it. The New Reduction Cure the Secret of Some Fine Fig:ires at Newport. ; There is a new mthod of fleshâ€"reducâ€" ing which is intended only for people adâ€" dicted to athletics. . One of its features is the fact that one may follow it withâ€" out attracting attention from, their friends. f WRAP ; ,THEMSELVES IN RUBBER. ALL DRVUGGISTS MALACCA STRAITS. NOTHING,KILLS: a L(E 4l ‘WILSONS FLY PADS in Jraq Dr. Lancetâ€"We had a long and earnest disâ€" cussion, but we finally came to an agreeâ€" ment. After we hod been closeted to't:t.her for about an dour the nurse came in tell us that there seemed to be a change in the conâ€" dition of the patient. So we went to take a look at him. It was then that we gecame united in our opinions. We agreed that Dinsâ€" bury was dand (Boston Transcflpt:) Dr. Scalpelâ€"What was the res eonference between you and Dr. Dinsbury‘s case? 66 dHow r "‘*Yer settin‘ cream." They were discussing political broils, remarks Youth, and Senator Charles Fairbanks said that the personal element in them reminded him of a church sociaâ€" ble he once attended. ; "As I sat down comfortably to enjoy the scene, a little boy opposite set up a shriek. "‘What‘s the matter, child ?" I inâ€" quired. * ‘Boo hoo ! Boo hoo !" he yelled. «"‘Who‘s worrying you ?" I asked. , "‘You,‘ he whimpered. 64 ‘Me â€l "But I couldn‘t do less than obey the specific details of the law," protested his friend; "lookâ€"here‘s what it says," and he read from his papers : "For all property bounding or abutting on the highway, $12 per front r00t." According to Law. This story is being told of a certain New York politiciary says _ Harper‘s Weekly. He had succeeded in securing for a friend of his a position as tax asâ€" sessor at the cost of considerable exâ€" ertion. _ Not long after the friend had begun work in his new position the poliâ€" tician was surprised and grieved to see that he was taxed under "personal proâ€" perty,"" $24 as the possessor of one goat. He called on his friend the assessor, for an explanation, accusing him of ingraâ€" titude and forgetfuilness of favors reâ€" ceived. In all cases of habitual headaches reâ€" curring ;})):riodical]y. a physician must, of course, consulted that he may find the cause,â€"eye strain, disease in the ears nose, stomach or other more distant orâ€" gans,and remove it if possible. But the separate attacks of headache have to be relieved, if severe; and in these cases it is better not to resort to drugs, unâ€" less the drugs are taken under the specâ€" ial guidance of a physician. In the conâ€" gestive headache, marked by throbbing, and made worse by stooping or lying down, a cold towel or an ice bag applied to the head, a hot water bag to the apine a mustard plaster to the back of the neck or to the inner side of the thighs, or a hot mustard footbathâ€"one or more . â€"will often give relief when many drugs fail.â€"Youth‘s Companion. es Although various causes have doubtâ€" less been at work to weaken the hearts of the present generation, there can be no question that one potent influence has been the indiscriminate use of headâ€" ache powders. During the Spanish war numbers of wouldâ€"be recruits were rejected because of a weak heart; and in the epidemic of pneumonia, which ravaged the counâ€" try last winter, an unusual number of deaths occurrred from failure of the heart to meet the added strain. A sufferer from repeated headaches who has found a r#ins of relief in headâ€" ache powders or other even less harmful drug may dispute this assertion, but the victims of some drug habit or the friends of one whose heart, poisoned by acetaâ€" nilid or antipyrine, has suddenly ceased to beat before its time, will look the matâ€" ter from another point of view entirely. It may be said, with little fear of conâ€" tradiction from those who know â€" the facts, that if a castâ€"iron law forbidding the use of any drug whatever could be enacted and enforeed there would be much less misery for the coming generaâ€" tion than there is for this. There is only one member of the House of Lords who within the last 200 years has suffered death as a felon, namely, the Earl of Castlehaven, described by his contemporaries â€"as "the wicked husband of the wickedest woman in the world." _ It was at the execution of Lord Ferâ€" rers at Tyburn that the drop was used for the first time, in the place of the old cart and ladder. The drop, it is reâ€" ported, did not work very well. It is on record that the earl‘s toes touched the ground, and that he "suffered a little, having tiene to raise the cap, and the exâ€" ecutioner pulled it down again, and then they pulled his jlegs, so that he . wraas soon out of pain and quite dead in four minutes." In fact, the experiences of the unfortunate earl led to the adoption of what is known as the "long drop" in lieu of the short one. Drop First Used on Uufortunate Earl of Ferrers. It was the fourth Earl of Ferrers who was hanged in May, 1760 for the murder of his steward, a man of the name of iHarold. The Earl,who killed the man in the most coldâ€"blooded fashion, was tried by his peers in the House of Lords and found guilty unanimously, the sentence of h&x being pronounced upon him by Lord High Chancellor Henley, who preâ€" sided at the trial at Lord Steward. ‘The Earl was allowed to drive to the gallows in his own state carriage, drawn by six horses, which was followed b a hearse and six, and it is on record that the rope with which he was hanged was silk instead of hemp. This concession being due to his rank. Indeced, the silk rope used on that occasion was still in existâ€" i ence towards the middle of he last cenâ€" tury, forming part of a celebrated colâ€" lection of ropes used for purposes of capital punishment. The villagers follow the course of the raft as it goes down stream, and after a day or two, when the crocodile has weuiegl_ himself thoroughly ‘by his strugâ€" gles, they paddle out and haul it in. ‘The crocodile comes ashore without much fighting, and is killed with ease. _ It is very rare for a crocodile to esâ€" cape once he has swallowed the bait, for the hook goes deep into his stomach, and the looselyâ€"pleated rope is so soft thatâ€"the brute‘s teeth have no effect on it. USE OF DRUGS FOR HEADACHE, Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere Sitting on His Plate of Cream. shove it out into the stream. The poor fowl cacklee and screams, txz:‘ng to release® itself from the line; "this at: tracts the crocodile, who darts at it and gulps it down. ‘The next moment the raft bobs below the surface. Where the Doctors AN HISTORIC HANGING. TORONTO ‘ on m RaF result _ of the her enemy‘s ly apposite. tle. Waranted the most wondormi I;len:;-;n Cure ever known. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains; cures sore and . swoolen throat, coughs, etc. Save $5C by the use of one gotâ€" sick. _ Bc . oo Ann henry sez just look how david sloo goliuth ann he wuz a iiunt too. Whenn ennybuddy walks hoam every nite Witl;_ ture best gurl wi uve just gott too ite So henry Beemus sez ur els uno Ule bee a kowurd iff u lett him go. Sonnets of School Days. (Bonnet of the affair of honor and the misleading tale.) Mee ann bil Peerson are a goin too fite behind the stabul aftur skool toonite. heez biggern mee butt ive gott a noo trick That henry Beemus sez ull maik him Many contrivances have been used for the purpose, including fly traps of many kinds, sticky gnper. and diferent makes of poison, but although all will kill some flies there always seems to be as many left as ever. There is only one really effectual way to kill them all, and that is Wilson‘s Fly Pads, being sure to follow the directions carefuily. One ten cent packet of Wilson‘s Ply Pads has been known to kill a bushel of flies, and a few pads properly used will kill all the flies in any room in a few hours. Scientists having proved that the common house fly is responsible for the spread _ of some of the most deadly diseases, it becomes the duty of every housekeeper to assist in exterminating the little pests. What are the most unsociable things in the world?â€"Milestones, for you never see them together. What is the difference between a chicken seven years old, and a mud wherry?â€"One is a ""werry‘‘ old fowl, and the other is a foul old wherry. Why are artists like washerwomen ?â€"Beâ€" _cause they are not satisfied until their work is ‘"hung on the line." If the letter D were never sad, why would it be a dead letter?â€"Because it would be Dâ€"ceased. What makes rice so chilly?â€"The ice in it. What officer of the army lives in a nut?â€" A colonel. Why would a snail make a good hatpeg?â€" Because of the nail in it. What part of a fireplace is like preserved fruit?â€"The jamb. What game of cards suggests childhood and old age?â€"Cribbage. When is a hammer like a public official?â€" Wg!n it‘s a tacks‘ gatherer. hen is an orange like a soldier?â€"When it‘s in quarters. , lWlum is meat not meat?â€" When it‘s dripâ€" ping. \ What is eatable in a figure?â€"The fig in it. What makes a broom musical?â€"The Hanâ€" del in it. What tree grows by a winter fire‘â€" The ash. One part of the day is in seven â€"what is it?â€"Eve. I was Cured of Acute Rheumatism MINARD‘S LINIMEXT, i I was Cured of Acute Bronchitis by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. I was Cured of Rheumatic Gout by MINARD‘S LINIMEXNT. o ut ANDREW KING. What fish is always in pain*â€"The hake The stone blocks composing the ruing of houses, temples, etc, in these upâ€" per strata are of remarkubl{ exact area, uare proportions and excellently dressâ€" :3. Tge more solid constructive work is, however, found in the remains of the original city. _ At this depth there was unearthed a perfectly preserved wine celâ€" lar. _ Some fifty huge jars or vases had evidently contained red wine, now turned to a ligit powdery substance. A large collection of valuable antiques in gold, marble, and ancient pottery has also been found in these newly uncovered ruins. _ These have been dispatched to the Hermitage at St. Petersburg. M. Formakovski, however, carefully examâ€" ining every antique unearthed, to estabâ€" lish its genuine character, as it was on this site that the spurious tiara of Saâ€" itapharnes, now in the Louvre was alâ€" leged to have been discovered. ©UG00MME ME PE CCC OOC | Olbia was ‘('lestroyed by the Getae about 70 to 60 B. C., but it was revived and when it was visited by Dion Chryâ€" sostum, about 100 A. D., it was again a flourishing city. The excavations that are now in progress upon the site of this city are being carried out by M. Formakovski under the auspices of the Russian Archaological society. M. Formaâ€" kovski has succeeded in unearthing °xâ€" tensive Fortions of the walls and foundaâ€" tions of the original city, which date back from the seventh century, B.C. The masonry is identical with that of ruins of ancient cities excavated in various parts of Greece. Before this depth was reached two different strata of walls and basements bearing desc:iptions of the fourth and first centuries B. C. were encountered. Markham, Ont. ' Interesting and valuable archacologicâ€" Aldheoveriuhnboenmdeonthesito of the ancient Greek city Olbia. The site is situated on the southern bank of the Boug, about midway between Otchâ€" akoff and Nicolaierr, and not far distant from the estuary of the Dneiper. This, ancient city was a colony of Miletus 655 B. C., (and was a great centre for Greek trade with the interior. It is generally maintained among archaeological authâ€" orities that a trade route extended from Olbia across counrty to teh northern gea, and when a find of ancient Greek coins was made it was contended that was substantial proof of the fact. Reâ€" cently, however, it was proved that these eoins were sepurious. L iCs t Vakl ) qi c 12004 on Sussex. Halifax. TO EXTERMINATE HOUSE FLIES. Light Thrown on Grecian "Life" by "Disâ€" coveries Made at Olbia. DIGGING IN ANCIENT RUINS. Refinement of Cruelty. Lt.â€"Col. C. CREWE READ Riddles. C. 8. BILLING. by 4.nnyhow he put beafstake on lni eyes ann sez I am a terrur fur mi sighs Butt bil wuz too bi fur me, so mi fase doant hurt so bcdt‘l‘gecu itts no disgraie to be licked henry sez if ure outclassed in sighs, i think that fitam i. "__" °4 fur met“{{_b@lieven henry sez I musta mi mussels ur els i Ennyhow he put b ann sez I am a terr Butt bil wuz tan hi The Independent Order of Foresters have just issued from the press a very neet little booklet giving a great grist of facts and figures with regard to &n- ada, its resources, mineral and agriculâ€" tural, etec. _ Historical points, territorâ€" ies and other Canadian information of great value. This little booklet should be in the hands of all It will be sent on application to Dr. Cronhyatekha, Suâ€" preme Chief Ranger, of the 1. 0. Â¥F., Temâ€" ple Building, Toronto, Canada, CANADIAN NATIONAL FACTS AND FIGURES. "Oh," said the mother, "you got it out, did you?" "Naw," was the impatient answer, ‘‘we shoved it down; it was his, wasn‘t it ?"â€"Harper‘s Weekly. hood, and in a moment of excitement it slipped down and stuck in his throat. But, said the narrator, they succeeded in relieving him. A small boy in a town not far from New York was telling his mother of a mishap which had occurred to a playâ€" mate of his.. The youngster, it apâ€" peared, had been regaling himself with one of those large, marbleâ€"like candies which are a particular delight of childâ€" Fnulty_!sig._,,y; $25.00 to Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, and many other Oregon and Washingâ€" ton points. F. B. Choate, G. A., 126 Woodward avenue, Detroit ,Mich $20.00 to Ogden, Salt Lake City, Butte, Anaconda and Helena. $22.50 to Spokane and Wenatchee. $25.00 to San Francisco, Los Angeles and many other California points. West you can do so with very little exâ€" pense as the UNION PACIFIC will sell Oneâ€"way Colonist Tickets EVERY DAY at the following rates from Missouri River terminals : (Council Bluffs to Kanâ€" sas City inclusive.) SEPTEMBER 15th to OCTOBER 15th. 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AND SKIRT SUPPORTER WONDERFUL RESOURCES oF THE WTST Steamers leave Hamilton 1 p.m,, Toronto 7.80 p.m., Bay of Quinte ports, Montreal and intermediate Y‘oru. Low rates on this line. Further information, apply to R. & O, agents, or write to H. FOSTER CHAFFEE, Western Passenger Agent, Toronto. JOF RMOCHOBUOT, I,UUVU AMIAMM ARMODIEN 98 Lawrence, Montreal, Quebec, Murray Bay, Tadousac and Saguenay River. W Steamers â€" leave Toronto 8 p.m. daily for Rochester, 1,000 Islands, Rapide, St. WEPAY A GOOD SALARY to ladies and gentlemen. Péermanent position, %fllnnamont. good ““3 and expenses, desirable â€" business. rite the J. L. Nichols Co., Limited, Toronto. (Mention this paper.) styles and cloth samples. THE SOUTHCOTT SUIT CO always be sooths the colic and is hesmil Td © Jl 8 and up to LADIES" #5 "3; $550.¢%.8 Hamilton, Toronto, Montreal Line MONE1 THROWN AWAY. ut ib tasths dth .1 2. think that fite‘ll bee belheven thatt '. Foley ifl Ne' els i wuz overtrained. IT WAS HIS. w0 WO wl 94 »â€"Have you backs Toronto and Montreal Ling ) Hucrg + n If you are looking for a home and want to visit the , London, Can, my lasst thing. _ Is cures wiag should Sunday Elisha‘s request was i f“. Saviour‘s admonition ‘eeive that our joy may \dently realized, what wa Christian schools. ‘"The yphets" evidently had the ‘ t prophet elijah. ‘:l-nchool of toâ€"day is a "truth and of our _ holy ighould be supported by prophets not say iot of fi wind." @10 INTERNATIONAL LE SEPTEMBER 1 al s jowur the 1 Taiked KElijah â€" ©ourage sels on were t ing on fire, et ecomme: l.\' a "d. henom fo( of | of the scene w iot and that va ments _ berry t Klijah Taken Up Into Hea Comemntary.â€"1I. El 110. A hard because God a: such a gift, an upon Elisha‘s thou see me to the end th ance, and heep on the departi h his.â€"Stani had been into E“jlh.b succoos ." of God‘s XÂ¥ili. 7â€"10), de; faithfuine=s. IIL Elijah‘s not the Gily the prophe: at Bethel an About nine ; To Jericho east of Bet was transl @welling a®>on; â€ed to tas and Jericho, t} ~ pre"iuus I last day whe: â€"Gam. Bib. ]1 for Elisha must parture, for ther tion between th« ble portionâ€""Th selfishness or am mean twice as n expression was « and law (Deut. : the eidest son t heritance as to : â€"Toadd. 65. Bons of young imen seminaries, i the prepara: the people. and the band Jm '}qu ; ure of El E;‘headf Th thy spiritual! :I’@W. The "Taken 1 @lso intimate moval.â€"TDers: questioning 6. Tarry of the one h« hind him. T Elisha‘s aims How would w “ with so erally, the H hush !"â€"Ter: To Jordanâ€"A|x cho is a bend is 7. Fifty men the prophetical surprising to c of men devoti life while Ana‘ the throne." > den the gratit: companyving 1} least watch hi mibk‘. Wha . 8. His 1 ment which h: phetical badge. skin. The ski: the hair on w an insignia o‘ â€"Tightly roun means, in the 1 Emote the wa enemy in his v to him at Jorw was to Moses a the ascension have taken pla liveth, ete.â€"1Tl of the most in 16, 21); an of these tw Christ on Whedon. > #ide rushin; towering uy thinks peated three : â€"He refused wi sistence. BHe wil his purpose to r II. Elisha â€"What is U Day , Jb schoo W t not 0of PRACTICAL MLS W W ta k« MA t wi0k t} Lhe SU W