An Anchor to Windward. A great merchant who began in a omnll way say» of his advertising: "1 10mm early that it was not merely a question of immediate results. The establishment. which believes in its own lutnro must 'rant an anchor to wind- wnul.‘ The future am well as the present must be taken into account." bronze medals and diplomas in Europe and Amvriea. all of which are first prizes And during the lifetime of the Myers Spic'o'. which is nearly half I century. thev have never taken a loss prize than 1: first. Burn! Family Bible to he Sold. Bums’ family Bible is to be offered tor Isle at Sothehy's London, on Dec. 10. She. Bible was willed by Jean (Armour) Burns to her eldest son. Robert Burns, from whooe possession it passed into that of William Nicol Burns, the poet’s mom! surviving son. He in his turn " it to hi4 niece (who lived with him), the present owner, Mrs. Sarah E. M. T. Burns Hutchinsn. But the pedigree is only a minor detail in connection with the book. for it contains. on the reverse of the title of the New Testament and in tho handwriting of the poet. several an- tries. giving the dates of his own birth und that of his wife and children. There 31041150 several entries in the handwrit- Ing of William Nicol Burns. but those in the poet'n own handwriting are more than maffieient to attract a world-wide inn-rest. The only prize medal for Condiments! Spices or Stock Foods for Horses. Cat- tlc and Poultry has been awarded to Myers Royal Spice Co.. Ninpru Falls, N. Y. and ont., at the World's Fair, St. Louis. Mo., Oct. 24th, PAM. Additional to the above the Myers Royal spiee Co. hold gold. silver and bronze medals and diplomas in Europe AN ACHIEVLMENT OF GREAT SUCCESS AT NIAGARA FALLS. The Pate of [any l"Y"" in the and: of Hm Krupp. Ulmuedly the "meet girl In the world Se mu Krupp. who on the death ot her tether bee-me chief proprietor ot the world-tuned Krupp work: It Ibsen. Ger- nuy. This girl, oboervee Leelle'e Weekly. holds the fate of unrest all nations ex.. cept her own In' her hand. tor it the Krupp work: refused to supply my country with [has that country would be In 3 bad wuy " a sunny power. A great an! of the artillery of Runslu. Japan. ance, Ger- many end Italy was manufactured " the Krupp work». and during the South Afri- ca war Englend hull to apply to the Krupp works to supply urgently needed weapon. ml STORY (lr l 8llillllilfrlN MAN “or hand an Lost Health In Dodd's Kid.†Pills. L 'Gmt an“... In», New). Welhnd, Ont., Dee. 5.-is'peeial.)-- There is no better known or more highly respected man in Welland that Mr. J. J. Eaton. Born and brought try in the â€boring; _ toanhlp_ " Ctowhytd, by "For o yea or more I bod Kidney *rouble in all its worst symptoms," says Mr. Yokom. "My head was bad, I had _Io appetite and I lost weight fast. At times I we: entirely ineopaeitated. I doctored with a. physician of vast expeo tience but got no good results. s.'ll became des ndent of ever being well spin, when T; good luck I chsneed to try Doddh Kidney Pills sud from the first they seemed to suit my case. Five boxes cured me completely." “'0'- Eda-try Aid sterling honesty be bu grown to be one of Welinnd's “in; merchants. Consequently when It. Yoko-I comes out with 1 statement that he was cured of n serious illness by Dodd’s Kidney Pills, everybody hm it must be no. RICHEST GIRL IN THE WORLD. nookld will be mailed giving itil def: union on app'.ieatiott. indicate the appreciation: of the many thong-ads who have test- ed it acl know its merit. Sold by dealers everywhere Fill 03103le WWW!“ M. tt ' V†New Century Ball Bearing Washing Machines “the. Maot of Welland III. W With the Popularity Based on k.) Ttue Merit I _ The constumlv of the increasing gale, " " .70" . - First Photograph in England. Lord Avebury, was the first person to have his photograph taken in England. M. Daguerre, the eo-inventor with M. Niepee in the art of photography, came to London to patent the invention which bears his name, and paid an early visit to the present Lord Avebury's father. The enthusiastic Frenchman was soon explaining the details of his new dis- covery. Young John Lubbock, as he was then, was playing in the garden. and M. Daguerre, pointing to him, asked to be allowed to give a practical illustration of the art. The request was, of course, granted, and a successful result followed. There is a disposition to discourage prac- tical joker sat Grandview. Three cheerful idiots placed a dummy on the track of the interurhan. The moturmun was frightened out of his wits. his attempt to stop the our resulted in bruises for the passengers. who were thrown over the seats by the sudden stop. And the jokers tound it WM no joke when they were asked to put up 8600 appear- ance bonds. And the complny. tinaing that their car had been damaged, ts disposed to push the prosecution. It in probable that at least these three will be pretty thorough- ly cures of the prttetmal joke idiocy berortt they got through with the case in tttutd.-Bur- Huston Hawkeye. - ' The proprietor of tt small city More wns asked whether his trade watrranted the expense of newspaper advertising. and he replied that he was building tor the future. "Throo-qunrters of my trade iw from regular Hummers and the nth-91' quarter is from advertising: but the merehant must advertise for his regular customers the same as for transients, many of whom became regulars. Other. wise he would not keep his business and would never grow." He Went Over to Whitney. (EventsJ Mr. Lactic Wilson hung around Ottawa last winter looking tor a job that he an picked out for himself. He discovered no one else sharing " opinion of his lune“. and now we find him up " the Toronto comer- "nee Fonmmoin: [no Ltttqmis. Ot Inch " Mr. Whitney's tailoring. Mrr.'tgroti--ot edifrlttir"di; Gii Fiitod deal: but than. you know. I bunch of matches but: so much Iona. Wash greasy dunes, pots or pans with Lover’s Dry Soup f?, powder. It will re- move the grease with the greatest ease. M Minard's Lmimm 's nus 0 urge! in Cows Saving at the Spigot. (Boston 'rramrrrtptn Mrs. Grim-Yea. the electric lights are 'ttP1t..fit: ttht they my}! copt you no“. - We. - The two presses are connected by a pipe twelve inches in diameter, and this con- nection enables the two chambers to work practically ttutomtrticallg-- that is, when the valve connecting the two presses is opened Utte upper chamber. which has been loaded down with eight inches ot extra water. giving it an increased weight of about one hundred tons, will descend and for the other chamber up to the higher level. This operation may or course be carried on without regard to whether there are boats in the chambers or otherwise; since it is a. well-known scientific tact that any body floating in water always displace; , its own weight. A chamber. therefore. containing one or half a dozen boats, may be raised by the weight ot ehe other chamber with the extra eight inches of water. Leakage is taken care of by an accumulator in one of the towers. this accumulatOr also being used to operate the hydraulic engines with which the gates are opened and closed, as well as tor operating the cap- stan by which the vessels are towed in and out of the chambers. The spaces be- tween the movable lock chambers and the upper and lower reaches of the canal are provided with collapsible tubes. which when inflated with " supplied by a. hy- draulic air compressor effectively prevent leakage. The total length of time required to make a lockage is about twelve minutes from the time that the gates are lowered as the bot- tom to allow the boat to enter until it leaves the chamber above. In making the actual ascent about three minutes is re- ouired. Canada realizes that it it is to retain its share of export grain traffic from the great wheat growing territory of the Northwest, or increase it, better facilities must be pro- vided in order to meet the competition of the enlarged Erie ctusa1.--New York Herald. Peterboro's lift lock is a Cyclopesn struc- ture of concrete and steel. It is the largest of its kind in the world. There are two steel basins or chambers working up and down between guiding towers 125 feet high from the bottom of the pit, which is 27 feet below the level of the water in the lower reaches. Over the central tower is the lockrnnster's cabin. from which the operation is controlled. The basins measure 140 by 33 lost. and weigh About 400 tons each. When filled with water to a depth of 8 feet they weigh 1,700 tons. They are supported by heavy steel trusses ot the double canti- lever style upon rams nearly s feet in "smeter and weighing 120 tons each. These runs have I 65 feet stroke end work in two steel watertight presses, one under each chamber. The foundations for the presses are on solid rock in wells 70 feet deep. A . - . Al ELEVEN. THAT _ m an An elevator that nixe- nd lowers m- boats an hue. 4. 's9qetdot1 noun, In tpief.et"r, And _the (If. an. of the 'tnuff A glence " my amp ot the United State and Canada will demonmte the utility of the Trent Wetervey. which is the rum given to that mtutniticettt series ot Wit?! etretchee connecting Georgian Bay (In um of Lake Huron) with Lake Ontario. Travelled by Chen-mien. lulled by Indian warriors, later considered an a military route by British soldiers, the“ waters are now once more the centre ot interettt--a greater interest than that or war. tor henceforth this grand s stem of lekes Inn rivers will be dedicated’ to commerce end industry. - - - be bu. on use Anetta! akiiii' ttet cently ben cbmpleted and ' in Mb " Peterboro'. Att. " i 'ti1Akl'r,' 'J,',','l'bl,f n hydnullc Ittt lock. Ind norm! ill one movement the lunatic†919:1†mils?! locks. which would be toxin In on I!" My be.- completed an pm In mice " um point. A: q work of engineering tpttia- tive and skill it ls unsurpassed by Brtrtttaie tfomoliyhtd in recent you-n, and flana- dians' meat The PMnboro' lift lock h the out- standing feature ot the Trent Waterwar. now in course of construction by the e.“ ndian Government. Ind little is blown in the United States regarding this scheme tor connecting Luke Huron with In.“ Ontario by n unis-bio Intel-w†that will uiord n short cut for (run from the North- west to â€dew-tar. a U Few in New York m “no ot thte dangerous rlvnl to the an. Cum that la now almost {ml-bod Ind will be in full operation long before the enlarged Erle Cum will be In position to meet a. new and un- loqkocl-lor competition. _ 7_ --- -. - "... _ Curing the Practical Joker. Small Store Advertising. feel l Hun. brite" Ev'their um."- [envy The process continues indefinitely. Neeil- less to say it is not a solution of per- petual motion any more than radium is a contradiction of previous heat theor- ies. In both cases the chemical energy is simply exhausted It a very slow rate of tTded.-Lomlott Globe. Nuisance of Hundshaking. (Portland Oregonian.) Handshaklng of a president is a nuisance. a. bore. a hardship, and. a danger, and it seems to have been properly emitted tor the ceremony of the reception ot President Roose- velt of St. Louis. It the President inaugur- ates during this present term a needed reform by declining to shake hands at any public reception be will be sustained by sentiment. The popularity ot the handshaker is not neo cessarliy lasting, anyway. m. A novel exhibit at a. lectuf'e given by Sir William Ramsay, F. R. S., last night st Ealing, was a radium clock, an idea of Dr. Hampsou. By means of an exceed- ingly small quantity of radium salt a feather is electrified. It bends away from the metal until it touches the side of the vessel and loses its electrical charge, then springs back and is again electrified,the process being repeated any number of times, practically like the swinging of a pendulum. A clock of this kind would be conceivably possible, and as it would persist so long as the radium retained its power, we might have a timepiece going for, say 2,000 years and never require to be wound UPC-pall Mall Gazette. From an idea of the Hon. R. Strutt, son of Lord Rayleigh. a radium clock has been constructed which is considered by Sir William Ramsay as likely to go for 2,000 years without "winding." It is made on tho principle of the electro- scope. and depends on th well known power possessed by the emanation from radium of conducting electricity. A small piece of gold leaf is the pendulum; it is charged with electricity by a radium salt and swinging against the side of the ves- sel containing it t1iseltapqy.lettiifi't Minard’s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. The White Man's Party in Louisville. (Louisville Post.) The old claim that the Democratic party in the South is a white man's party no longer holds good in Loulsville. In titty precincts in Louisville last Tuesday, the most active workers tor the bond issue and tor the Dem- ocrat ticket were uegroes. and these were not the self-respecting. intelligent negroes. but the crap-shooters. the cit-convicts Ind the rowdy class generally, and these men worked side by side in perfect harmony wan Democrat policemen and Democratic' ward workers. How full of suggestinn to see two hnrsvs. one struggling pitifullv with a load twice too heavy; the other a ca- pricious blanketed beauty, being exer. cised bran attendant. Q“W 090.0%... o------.'. To take a ease: A young American eommereial traveller. alone in his room at a hotel, suddenly saw his dead sis; ter standing beside him. He rose to embrace her, but she fled like the shade of the mother of Odysseus in Homer. He went to his distant home, and told his parents, adding that on the cheek of his sister there was a scratch which he had not seen in her lifetime. The mother explained that, in arranging, when alone, flowers around the dead body of the sister, in the coffin, she had accidentally scratched the face, but had concealed the mark with powder. Now, if telepathy exists, the mother, brooding over the memory of her daughter, might transmit the whole vis- ion of the dead, scratch and all, to the mind of her distant som-Andrew Lang, in Harper's Magazine. . A Curious Instance, Possibly Explained by Telepathy. Bow are we to explain apparition of the dead? Evidence for these was much less copious, and, necessarily, mach less satisfactory. Coincident crisis in the af- fairs of the dead could. of course, be de. tected, as in the case of the living. Again, even if we grant that telepathy between the living is a fact in nature, a ghost of the dead can hardly hope to prove' his identity. o -.-H-+-t+++-t-t-.--,---.---t-- APPARITIONS AFTER DEATH. Radium Clocks. t3'3jt5.litBittx1i'; make ot this warp. the that EDDY the bottom of would! Ind tub. There is nothing in the market Bpproaehi.ne the quality of E D DY’ S INDURATED FIBRE WARE 'ARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Bishop MacKay-Smith, of Philadelphia, tale a good story of a well-known divine who was once deveived by a man whom he supposed to be an unusually devout member ot the Church. The minister was rector of a large city parish and had under his care three or tour mis- sion churches scattered about the city. On one stormy Sunday he wan due 'at a mission which was in the extreme out. skirts of the city. It was a horrible day. But he was determined not to disap- point the congregation. So he hired a cab, and after a long, cold drive reach- ed the church. There was no one there cxce t the sexton. but he decided to have a age". morning service for the sexton and himself. While he was reading the opening sentences, a man. well wrapped up, came in and took a seat near the rear at the church. When the short service was ended, the clergyman made the announcement that owing to the small attendance. he did not think it worth while to preach a sermon. The man " the rear, who had taken part in the service and showed his familiarity with it, rose and asked it the clergyman would not read the litany and the full ante -communion service. He said that he seldom got a chance to go to church and would enjoy the full service. The clergyman gladly compiled. and then, thinking such a devout churchman de- served special consideration. went on and preached a sermon which took at least half an hour in the delivery. At the clone of his sermon he put on his coat and hat and started or the door, where he found the devout nariehioner waiting tor him. It was his cabman, who had taken that means to work another hour's hire of the can out of him. Shiloh’s Consumption .Cure it from confiscation in the event of exile. A mine has been round on the estate of Leo, which makes him the richest member of the family. None ot me brothers resembles the old Count. In Paris they follow the lead a: Grand Dukes. One of them served as an ot- ficer in the war. They all like to belong to the heavy-swell class. Tolstoi and His Son. (London Truth.) Tolstoy the Great divided his real estate between his five sons before he set out on " reforming mlgslon: Trl all; may he ptoteepd The following examples were then render- ed: As restful music. yet sufficiently sum- ulatlng to keep the: mlnd alert, the Fifth Nocturne. Levtsach, piano. As soothlng, quletlng muslc. an Irish lullaby. Needham. contralto. As physically 'rtimultttittir muslc. "The Invitation to the Danee," Von Weber, piano. As mentally stimulating musle, “One Sprlng Morning" (Goethe). Nevin, comm-alto. As reminiscent, memory refreshing music. “inhale from "ll Trovutore," Sydney Smith. It no. Music as a Remedy in Medicine. (New York Medical Record.) Following the reading of a paper on "Music as a Therapeutic Agent," by Dr. Francis 8. Kennedy, before the Medical Society ot the County of Kings, two methods ot admin- istration were demonstrated, one by the piano and the other by the voice, and an endeavor made by each method to illustrate the different impressions which could Be conveyed to the listener. Just as a drug should he put up in a clean package, and as free from adulteratlon as possible, so music as a medicine should be as tree from error ot technique as possible. For this reason. tn demonstrating the piano music. a mechani- cal piano player was used, so that no false tone should mar the harmony and effect. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. by MLNARD'S' LINIMENI. Burin, Nfld. LEWIS S. BUTLER. than: m snoomlc am can Bused on my 'Gisriesuee, thereto". I should Place the elephnnt ttrat and the rhino third the: the eel-dang. which any: sewn- eble n the Capt Buffalo. In I: meet led the Neon all over mm. m ot we“ unl- mlh " dangerous ou' different. ml individ- 'd,1l"g'l'l1i', the claimant. aging: lt'L “If! "to en an ot the o ere tr " " in; because of tyd'2ull'G'l, 'iiiiihEd which “one u no obstacle. end no extreme dit- ticuity ot reaching . vim.npot. aspect-Hy tf. with trunk tightly emu. he ll comm! Npr_vay. - _ 'v-- -"... I know of no genetic: - nwsolm than standing ankle deep ht mum mud in den-o cover, with the jungle 0mm“ Iround you " though the entire forest wee toppling. u the elephant you have wounded comes smashing his way in your dtreetimt. The solution: is dangeroul. partty been“. tt the thick jungle he seeks when wounded, but more especially because ot " tremen- dous vitality end " usunl. than!!! ttot in- variable, habit ot awaiting the hunter on " tracks, and whinging suddenly. I'm" and viciously. It requires close and hard shooting to bring down one of these six toot specimens ot Oriental cattle. The danger of the tiger and of the lion in in their lightning activity» nnq {Hodges The danger of the tiger 1nd of the lion in in their lightning activity tad ferocious Strength. but you have the shoulder. in ad- dition to the head an“. it broadside: or it coming on, the chess, all sure to stop it well placed. The reason the rhino is so formidable 13 because the. vulnerable spots are so herd to reach. It: brain in as small in proportion as that of the eiepnnnt. and may be reached through the eye, it head on, or about three inches below and just in trout of or in“ tre- hind the base ot the ear, according to your position tor a tsttot.--Frorn Outing. ARDS LINIMENT, Yarmouth. _ Hunter’s jam. My no; mg.- a; . Bath’s Mree , " - ot' The distur%ng “an.“ in untlngtnmn‘ or â€dug-or rhino in: jinn Yul a. to me n least,.the 'tet " â€certainty 1- to whether or lab! iout atom the 111-! It I wounded tt and n chm me, In It did on In Iver-age ot once in three times. - _ I was cured of a bad case of Grip by MINARD’S LINIMENT. Sydney, C. B. C. I. LAGUE. ".7?i5'c?,83Rgpft I was cured of Sciatica Rheumatism I was cured of loss of voice by MIN ' The uf, Jore Tonic 8 is guaranteed to cure. tt it doesn't benefit you, the drugglst will give you your money back. Prices: s. C. Wanna & Co. " 25c. 50c. " LeRoy. N. Y., Toronto. Can. The harder you cough, the worse the cough gets. The Catrman and the Bishop. CHAS. PLUMMER. 'S'am la on id ii' hum-e. Two View} of It. 1; (New York has» IA â€It-mum mu bu an Idea that tt no “a {cue to calm. he vould is" been much more of n mucosa. and a college lulu that " tte2e.'St he might “when mm a“ In all these months of war and blood. shed the patient endurance of the sis- ters of the Red Cross has beep the one redeeming.r feature in the mnsn of cor- ruption and degenerate manhood which now describes the Manchurian army. In this reference I do not allude to women of social position. who prove as trouble. some to the Russian authorities, as did a similar plague to Lord Milner in South Africa. The hard working. earnest, practical little women. ignorant, but in. dmtrious. who devote their time to the welfare. of the Russian soldiers, make a beautiful picture. They are fearless. They endure the same fatigues as the soldiers. and. as recent events have proved, they sacrifice very willingly their lives to save their charges. I do not think that any war has produced more touching examples of fidelity to duty than those offered by these badly .lressed. plain faced. sweet natured tun-sea. as they trudge through the rains, through the heat and the dust and the mews of Mnnchuria. These. women quite delight in their calling. and in spite of the reverses. they muster in large. num- bers to the roll call when their services are demanded. I have made inquirlel‘ tbout the conditions regulating their ser- vice. with the troops, and. certainly on the more of remuneration or “new 'reatment, there In nothing attractive in the wor.-Port nightly: Bering. est time?" It stands to reason that a liquid .specitic of the unquestionable merit of South American Kidney Cure will so more directly ttttd quickly to the seat ot the trouble than the "pill form" treatment. and when it etrlkes the spot there‘s healing in In inqttyttt.--78 otrettI."-'rhie, was one man's way ot putting it when he had been pronounced incurable from chronic dyspepsia. "it w“ a living death to me until I tried Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets. Thinks to them to-day I am well, and I tell my friends I bought my life tor 35 cents.†60 in a box. style, _ _ I'm proud of my boy who has won his way In the world to the place where he stands to-day. Your mother and I, we didn't bezreich Boostin' you high as your Irma could stretch. Poor mother'. It only your mum was here! Christmas ain't Christmalsy now, my dear; For it's hurt! to relish the fun, Bor John, With your mother lone. The Old Man': Chnltmu. (Holman F. Day. in "Country Life in Am- erica.") So you trailed me, sonny I had some doubt, That you‘d see me lenvln’ when I slipped out; One gnarled old fellow more or less, Ain't much in a Christmas party's preu. And I'll stay, if I may. my good Boy John, Here in your kitchen until they're gone. I haven't got used to your city folk, I’d rather stay here tor I. quiet smoke, Rockln' and thinkin' and dreamin', lad, For I'ttt c:.|y a sort ot a kitchen dad. It's a handsome sight. your house, to-night. But I haven't been mlssln’ it, bub. a mite By sittin' here alone for a while. For I reckon your neighbors ain‘t Just my The lavender harvest is one of the most abundane or recent years. says the Westminster Gazette. In the three chief levender growing eounties-Surrey, Ként and Hertfordshire-extending areas are devoted to the crop. It is usually raised in sheltered fields by farmers. One of the most productive plantations is to be found in a place where it would hard- ly be looked for-on the east coast of Kent. Though the plants there are swept by the east winds all through the spring, they bear profusely, and at the present time are making a grand dis- play of bloom. The lavender supply of Hertfordshire and Surrey is sufficient to yield 50,000 gallons of lavender water each season, There are about 1000 acre' devoted to lavender in the four king- dorms, and the total output cannot be less than 5.000.000 bunches. In Kent and in Surrey the lavender plantations are looking excellent. The frequent rains in the late spring and early summer chiefly contribute to the heavy yield pf flowers. In July the blooms are ga- hered for the street hawkers, and in August the crop is harvested with the sickle for distillation. How shall I insure beet results in the short- Count Zeppelin, who sunk " fortune Mme. time ago in the effort to build a successful airship, has in' the last two years recovered himself and is now en- The Satisfaction of having the washing .4000..me in the day, and well done, belongs to every user of Sunlight Soap. 103 Substantial Encouragement to Continue His Work. . iraged in the construction of u new airship which will be on the same gen- eral lines as the old one, but will be lighter and will be equipped with more powerful engines. - - .. a ' - ---- L- I.-- m- rm“--- “5..†During the rust two years he has re- eeived $25,000 by public subscription from a number of persons principally sportsmen who have interested them- selves in the subject of man-flight. Sev- eral German manufactures have offered him the use. of material free or at cost and at the express wish of the Kaiser one of the leading balloon experts of the German army has been placed at the disposal of the Count. His new balloon is well under way and it will not be long before it is ready for its first flight. The money at his disposal is not sufficient for the con- struction of the new airship, but it is said that their was no possibility of the work being hampered by the lack of funds. Mlurd's Liniment Cures Distemper. “My Kidneys P re all Wrong! “Bogght my Life for 85 Russian Red Cross Women. znpmurs “w Antsmp. England’s Lavender Harvest. Cost of Commission. The cost of n commission in the Brio tish army is illustrated in the ease of Lieutenant and Riding Master Emery, of the Royal Irish Janeen, who has just gone into bankruptcy, with lilbilltiéo nmountn'u to 83,070. Twenty4ive you. ago he enlisted in the regiment u . private. He gained an honorary commis- sion in 1894, with an allowance of $750 to cover his expenses. He was cal“ on to spend for new clothes $4.70, for two horses $250, for transit of “rally to u. dia, $75, for furnishing quarters m, and for saddlery $100, a total of .1,- 495, of 8745 more than the government allowed .him. To help out he had to go to a money lender for a considerable put of the balance. so that he was rally il- solvent from the day he got his mil- sioa. and its connections via Washington or How York. to Florida, Virginia, Guano“, Coor- gln. Nosuu. HIV-Ill. Cuba, and on VII“! resorts In Florian Ind the South. Conical†lines. Atlantic Cong Line .Seohonrd Air Line. Southern Ranwar. For rule: ot (no, moi. time ables. Haunted literature, on. out on or nddrou ROBT. S. LEWIS, Candi-n 2p.t,gygitt."'t' 10 King Strget East. TOR0T'N0, 0 . benefit of this humane law. Nothing can exceed the beauty of the sleek and well-groomed horses used in the enr- riages of Moscow. “:7on excursion tickets now on a]. by Lehigh Valley Railroaq no Bornewhipu in Iowan There is a notable law in tome in most of the large Russian town! eoneeraine horses. Among the curious things that arrest the attention on arriving in Mon- cow is the entire absence of whips among drivers of cabs, carriages and all sorts of vehicles. There is a law pro- hibiting their use and there is not a sin- gle whip in use in Moscow. The excel- lent condition of the horses attest the Mllilll MII THE SUNNY SOUTH The readers ot this paper will be plea-ed to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis- ease that science has been able to cure in all ita stages. and that la Cntanh. Hall's Catarrh Cure in the only,poeitive cure now known to the medical “may. Catarrh being a constitutional diseaae, require: con- stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure ia taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous ant-twee of the ayatem. thereby destroytnz qhat foundation of the dis- ease. and swing the patient atrenxth by building up the constitution and antenna nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much laith in la curative powers that they otte One Hundred Dollars tor any can that " (am to cure. Send .or list ot testimonials. Adam P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. o. Sold by all Uruguieta. mt. , Take Hall's Family Pill: tor conduction. The rulee end custom of polite tt,'."%tit varying. arbitrary and tutaceountatrle. 'hat ll allowed this year may he “booed next. To-day. audiences, irrespective of ego, eex andJ rank, regele their uneee at â€and and six t by performances in theetres which would create offense it referred to plainly in general conversation. Polite eoeiety tol- erates, in one form or another. as many out- rages against decency and modaty " do the uncouth denizens ot the woods. plains and mountains. All clan-en ot mankind err to an inexplicable degree in these particu- lars. It is to be regretted that they do not display more consistency and practical com- mon â€one in their cuatoma and prejudices. - Kansae City Journal. 'i7iiii"iiiGi"G iii not w... Um. w-.." _-__. - - “on um paper. - Bron If"'; ennui. wm _--___ Ind silent moot cum; " nukes at sales repaired. C. Wilson & Son, Limited. Toronto. Canada. F on gall: OR TO RENT. lbs Aunna, '" Bo Dot-cheetah " miles from Bel- mont, C. P. R. Station; the no“ la of but clay loom; we dnlnod: good large house and outbuildings and never-flung water. Apply to & T. Penn. Aylmer West. Ont. Everything In Fun " loves! prion. Sand for ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. RAW FURS. Wt will my highâ€: New York prices tor link. Skunk. Coon, Fox, and all other Fun. Send tor price list. I ATEiry IMPROVED BRING“! MACHINB d and outfit for shingle mill, en bloc or "ttettir., tor sale cheap. Also 400 feet " eirrierrlc91t Incl le. (our. D. Zimmer- TiiCviiri"i"iociuuou. F oe, D. u. ammo & fo. W Van. no: MI â€I nursery stock: cholco concludes; liberal “II: am my! (at: g. 1etPp 180-!- ------- “--- n _ Management of the -oodlot-- cutting trees to insure tepto- f1setiois--yrutttintr tree. to regu~ late supply of '"_t,tr--p1a?ti1ttr to bind the orp--ridge phuung. etc. This in only one of the my good thing: in . Every issue contains dou- of articles by "men who know," on every feature of farm work It's the cheapest and best pups for the trmur, his wife dad children. in Cumin. Two Yo." to: $1.09 madman te. I rtid 1; Sen do. you: Mart wick mgr.“ luau. Farmer's ttudmiat I Jiytriiiing World _ " King St. East. IORONIO. MANUFACTURERS tlf was '2U.eyMgtI_tmrrrtaer. tlilo REWARD, $l00 Lax Rules as to Deceany. SALE. SCALES. DOUGH MIXER " 4.--. .....o outfnl'f nu nuke- of ram-m} Farm Forestry FROM THE TO any. 19 Agggsh 1;; p, m OBI WY co speculum tee' It†Heavy Ca Ihe Polta Japanese ll ‘l'l ml: AKAS BY , " th M-tim, this papa. retr [Ill Q9 EW76r a. are??? -il'iS- on M {ESL An “I W " "