H 'Lee": Ft"' me old age. corresponding with the quarter lunch. extending thus to exemplify the tour are. Instead ot the tune-honored seven ages 0 man's life. Death. In the third "In. of the um lec- uon. nomads the full hour. As soon u the hour In struck. the twelve noodles - tn n on] mm. just above the clock-(nee. one mung: the whom†U,,",', iii ":3 e n _ "'rgl,W, o M -h-. 1',t't,ir',feh',lr,'t .e_. 'Fidfrl,ihlt,irp,'rtFu' .u a . "uiNF'ri A - “FY"; _ . In the Portsmouth lofts, which are in the Royal Clarence Victualing Yard an Guport. it an office where the official log books are kept with the utmost do.‘ tail and precision. There are stud reps. tors and report books in which the: doings of every pigeon is etirtrll'Ntp, one volume is devoted to a Mead 'ill, times of liberation, another to p i . . goons homing at the loft and in another vol. 1 was the various messages minim! by' the birds are pasted. Among these it is interesting to notice many that hail been sent to the lofts by members of our royal family when crossing the channel. The moment a bird enters the loft. it is automatically shut into a box by the dropping of a noiseless slide, and an electric bell summons an attend- ant to take the message it has brought. The speed and endurance of these birds are amazing. Not long ago a. 21- year-old bird flew 1,700 miles in Ameri- ca. through several storms of hail. rain and wind while distances of 500 miles and over are thought comparatively little of. Every year 2.000 or 3,000 pigeons compete in a. fogmile flight, So impressed were army men gener- ally with the usefulness of the pigeon as demonstrated in the Franco-German war that it was not long before practi- cally every nation in Europe had its trained military pigeoss, and to-day there are more than sixty military pigeon stations in Europe. We are among the last to adopt this simple and efficient method of carrying messages in time of war, but now we have excellent lofts at. Portsmouth, Dartmouth and eloswhere, where birds are kept and trained in a most scientific manner. eerry a dozen without interfering with ita comfort or speed pod, as we have peer; on bird alone conveyed 40,000 messages. But a pigeon has carried In much an three-quarters of an ounce for a. short distance. The weight would represent something like 800,000 messages, or 16,000,000 words; so that, under these conditions, it would be quite possible! for a. pigeon to carry a small library of 120 volumes on its tail. How was it donet Part of the mys- tery uni-hes when we say that the weifht of all these despatches was - tualy less than a grain, about one- twenty-eighth of In ounce, and that they were oontained within a pose quill one and throequarter inches long, which was attached by a silk thread to one of the bird's tail feathers. The puzzle, however, remains how it was possible to get over three quarters of a million words within this tiny corn- pass, says a writer in London Tit-Bits. The secret of this seemingly impos- sible feat was microscopic photography. The messages were first printed in or- dinary type and then reduced by pho- tography several hundred times. The photographs were taken on thin gtg or pellieles of collodion, each of whi though it was less than two inches square, could thus contain 50,000 words. Of these pellieles a pigeon could easily G' i/isis/let for the winter and the remaining pair when it ever he found Franklin. - A _ - -.- . The first pair of pigeons he liberated in Melville Bay, on Oct. 7th, and six days later one of the birds reached its cote in Ayrshire, though unfortunately its messnge. had been lost during the journey. The distance between Melville Islend and Ayrshire in a direct line is 2,400 mites, end that is the astonishing journey the pigeon had made in half a dozen days. The day of tho month In shown on the am In the mend use. of the third section. The - rnmmtted tho loam years ttn n he my The days of the cock no wind by foot again in Paris. It in granting, even Guis%geotanir.aeus,t.othi"tlef, dangle one of that: pigeon panned curried no lever than 40,000 message- etch consuming an new twenty words. This mean: . grand total of 800,- 000 words, or the equivalent of half n dozen fairly long novels as the burden of n single bird. Queer Automatic Figures Appear at Stated Intervals on the Dial. Ono of the most curious clocks known is than dencrnged: _ _ A -. 'm., The (no, or from ot this clock h divided Mica!!! into seven sections. mad out: ot that law [in smaller sections or (runes. (â€laying in " thirty-five tunes, in eacu ot which_ is snipe poyable thing. The clock In: made by on. Christian Martin. who lived In the Black Forest, Ger- man. ind is contained in u cabinet 3.W, m: wide. t.72 new: high. and 0.3: meter niepotP: m,“ antenna Imm---363i Hm}: foami- indulge M0000 Upon this multiple face one may read the mode. the minutes, the hours, the days, the weeks. the months. the tour season; no the common nod lap years. Harmonious nook: ucomponiee the movement ot out: - Situated in the centre of the front I- the ttme-dial or clock-lace proper. An moi " the bottom ttt the centre] section In! frame ot the third section on two tig- trat home ot the third section are two ii;- nm of which one strikes the quarters while the other. with the finger of her right hand. points to the cuaster Just struck, providing in chin wu . visible on well u an nudible W- __ A A..__ -1 - _._A - At- It is n eurious link, with long-go. entwi- that the belesgured people in Port Arthur have been using currierpig- can to keep in touch with the outside world, just as good folk of Modems did not much less then Mtht yen: ego. But the most interesting use of tit,- eons in war In undoubt y when t ey did such excellent service during the siege of Paris, s. genention Mo. The pigeons, it may be remembered, were eent out of the doomed city by bal- ttton---"' of them; of these 302 were liberated, but only seventy-three set foot mil in Paris. It is gurgling, even -rir mm tum ot the “the "cum: du- Mars “massively the - ot an intuit. _ rotstty . M59233:- 311 see ttt CLOCK or BLACK FOREST. I No honest newspaper publisher claims ithnt the pubiici y Which he offers for 1 sale 13511}; only 'ind worth buying, or 5 that, money' 5pm fur magazine, poster, '1ireular and stree car advertising is ab- ' solutely wasted, he truth is-and ev- ery business ma qught to knoyr it-. [thut all forms: . mug re e. suits, but the “he Other I medial-I’m; “meta solutely wasted, 'te, truth is-find ev- ery business ma qught to know it-. that tll formy: ' . wing re sults, but theme Other mediums. “Spam 3 me 'iiigltlllt _,1.%,dve,itstW,, cam- paign conducte WWI; newspaper as- sistance is like a. turkey dinner with- out turkey. Advice for Billiard Players. Men of - skill often ask what they can do to improve their game, so I shall make a few suggestions for their benefit. In the first place 1 cannot urge them emphatically enough to play more carefully for position. Nine out of ten players shoot much too hard. 1n the long run, force without forecast is bad policy. Success by design is the rule. You can’t depend on luck. Play over the common show with special reterence to getting a good position of the next play, and remember the chief hugbesr of common players is a failure to play the easy shots right. Master the easy draw. Many players do not strike the cue-ball down low enough in drawing. This is necessary in playing Without much force . Then the stroke-must be quick and sharp, and when the balls are near together, very delicately applied in order to guard against making a "poke." To draw well, use an elastic tip of me- dium size. The very small tips and old hardened ones of any size, so often seen, are poor implements for effective execu- tion. Dpn't use the English unless you have a reason for so doing, for, with its use, aiming is more difficult. An hour's intelligent practice is better than a year's desultory time-wasting. Play with the best players; use a straight cue, and make a short, stable "bridge" or hand- rest for your cue. Use the same cue continuously, as a good deal depends up- on getting used to its weight, balance, and the size and texture of the tip. Use plenty of chalk! Practice much. Practice nursing in the corner and along the rail, trying over the shots on which you fail.-John Henry Freese, in February Outing. Minard's Linimesicttres Garza] hi Cows Lover’- Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soup Powder is a. boon to any home. It disin- (ocu and eleann at the same time. SE ra-, wi" Bee, we've gd [our rounds ot tr1tttNi',t',,1Ut we? And lidarkley's called tor n Scotch 1ighrsu Pan!) time. -- .. "i.GeiGihr-ks"aft"the imit time. He call- ed tor a. “notch skyball" then. Nell-They say that Count Bogus is a. marked man. Ilelle--Well, I dare say he's marked down, tt 2115' rate. An old beggar In the tune out on the right mink the beholder of his derail-I by kneeling. and with lowed heads "appu- catlng the deity. At the not stroke ot the hell he rhe- end the scene ot action is true- ferred ecroee the board to an on“ grinder, who grinds eny, accompanied by I clown 1nd bell tn the adjacent (rune. The upper- most from“ In eectlom l, 2. 0 end , ehow the fourteen scenes In the Poe-Ion. whlle the second from“ of section- 1 and T show the seven den od the emotion. Tnuettaiirfar'briiiki"ttaruiraitad hon-ringer. vibe duty tt in to mad the ttortrrro_t6..rru,tsi.nt. nnd6P.art..tt" hoyrs qt_rrer, - - A -- WOMEN’S NEGLECT 80FFERlM0EtulREPENALT1f Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. How many women do you know whc are perfectly well and strong? We hear every day the same story over and over again. " I do not feel well; I an: so tired all the time l " More than likely you speak the same words yourself, and no doubt you feel far from well. The cause may be easily traced to some derangement of the fe- male organs which manifests itself in depression of spirits. reluctance to go anywhere or do anything. backache. bearing-down pains, i1atulemt nerv- ousness, sleeplessness. lagoon-hwy These symptoms are but warnings that there is danger ahead, and unless heeded a life of trutrering or a. serious operation is the inevitable result: . - "The never-failing remedy for all these symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkhm's Veg- "rlt1ss Cgmpougd. - _ - _ _' Miss cua Beanbien, of Beauport, Quebec, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham t " For aevernl yea-s1 have altered with L?,. angle /g't'itrit',',hth,, proved t,t'l'i'il (tlg, non m v1 an. m (ii?,i,iil,iiiifr,,i:'s',ii' irAi'iir,' ,iii'l't'ilt',r,il, “211'; a worn-on nn Manama tMit?,',', or m I 'til?, “an; n and! l Lydia E. Rt4lllilh""v'li,i1ft'h' 'i'jls!stil, In s,'.rrgri,ttt,Wg,ft'th 'at Inn; no more bGii'ir"Gt"iiii" dimhnrga, no 'rpttetr_pain. Bofttavii-y Trt22Mt “Vague-No Compound, and I tt temtyeuttt,ttti_il1eerekl' "f yuan tft, do“ ’ t. bottle of Lydia R. blo Compound " once. and to to In. Pinkhun. Lynn. In... for-pods! “vice-it is free and than helpful. A Turkey Dinner Without Turkey. E .141 His Tongue Becoming Thick, , pubiici T Whit J, only 'iud , may app" tor I 1nd stroo car ti wasted. 'u, t mas ma qua} iorntr6t . N: the 'ne WEI _ l W 'i'J:'rr;ti't'si5N? lay, Climatic Difficulties Overcome in Arti- ficial Curing Process. Brief mentions has already been made of the attempted introduction of tobacco as a commercial crop in Ireland and of the EEO-acre tract that was being grown on the estate of Colonel Nugent Everard. The crop was successfully matured, but the climate proved so cold and damp that the crop had to be artificially cured. Mr. J. N. Harper, of Kentucky, who was invited,by the Irish Department of Agriculture to visit Ireland and take tliitrigrrt6titetralny of this experimental crop, has just returned and reports through official agricultural channels that the work was entirely successful, although accomplished by novel means. A large barn was built on the estate, divided into a number of compartments, each thoroughly insulated and provided with ventilators at the top and bottom, the arrangements being such that the temperature of each room was under control within one degree, and the hu. midity as closely regulated. The curing experiments having been successful and the tobacco being pronounced of good ex- port quality, much enthusiasm has been aroused over the work, as it gives prom- ise of a new field or activity for the Irish agriculturist. The London papers give full particu- lars of the recent sale at an auction room in London of the jewels and cos- tumes of Draga. the murdered Queen of Sonia. The prices paid were not high, considering the circumstances. Thus the brilliant tiara worn by the Queen at her wedding brought only 80,000. For a cabochon emerald-and-brilliant bracelet, a gift from the Czar of Russia, $240 was paid. For the small sum of $575 there was sold an article which had never been known to be offered for sale before-the Persian Order of the Sun, a. star and badge set in diamonds. This was presented to Queen Drags by the Shah of Persia. on the occasion of his visit to Belgrade in 1900. The order is of the greatest rarity, being only rep- resented by sovereign ladies. The only others known to be in existence are those held by the German Empress, the Czarina and Queen Margherita of Italy. The Turkish Order of Mercy brought $750. The total sum realized by the sale was $11,675.---Lrslie's Weekly. A pleasant story is going the rounds about Mr. Andrew Carnegie. At Skibo Castle during the past summer he had a, beautiful rose garden. Thnre were thousands of red and white and yellow roses always blooming there, and the villagers, were free to saunter in the gar- den paths to their hearts' content. One day the head gardener waited upon Mr. Carnegie. "Sir," he said, "I wish to lodge a complaint.? "Wellt" said the master. "Well. sir," the gardener began, Ily. “is; His this: ":.-.~.,.;.:.-:_ Tic, m... am when that an t ated. new ammo-nun “an†WW'W . T mu Humane: In? TOBACCO FROM IRELAND. Mr. Carnegie and His Roses. should be taken imme- diately. There is noth- ing that will repair wasted tissue more quickly or replace lost Beah more abundantly than Scott's Emulsion. It nourishes and builds up the body when ordi- nary foods absolutely We besttime to reme- dy wasting conditions in the human body is be- fore the evil is too deep rooted. At the first evi- dence of loss of flesh Scott's Emulsion grainsrequirethr4iNr- sane crops need diNr- enthandiingthnnotheru. He knows that a great deal depends upon right planting at the right time, and that the soil must he kept enriched. No use of complaining in summer about amis- take made in the spring. Decide before the seed is planted. Gem†hntg1eamedthatttomtt Selling a Queen’s Jewels. We'tMttsettdyoaa sarmttefree. r." 2U SCOTTQ, BOWNE CHEMISTS Toronto, Ont. Be sure that this picture in tho form of a label is on the wrafper of every bott e of Emulator: you buy. 50c. Ind 81: all druggiau UNTKKIU e P_YqEu'lr'trYWEiia" TORONTO I continued the passes, and after the lapse of another five minutes he wns ebb to speak feebly and indicate the seat of pain. Each page gradually worked the position downward, and the man’s speech grew stronger by degrees, and in half an hour's time from the beginning of the algemtion the man was able to sit up. aving worked the poison down below the knees, I tied a ligature below the knee and sent him to a. hospital, where he eventually recovered. He was bitten in the right foot. I should very much have liked to have carried the ex- periment on to the end and have bled him, but not being a medical man. and as there was a hospital only a few miles distant, I had to submit to circum- tstatutes-Madras Times. Case errawindtror 'tan Who MM Two Years Before he Discoveredi the night. Remedy. Windsor, 0nt., Feb. tk-isp/I) -....l How quickly Rheumatism and 1kopsyl can be cured when the right medicine is used is shown in the case of Mr. Jno, McDonald, a retired farmer living at 130 Lunglois avenue here. Mr. McDon-g ald says. I Memerism Cure for Snakebite. When I was stationed at Nowehen news was brought to me one morning that one of m coolies had been bitten by a snake Jlil11' dying. I hurried to his hut and found the man unconscious and bleeding from his mouth and nose. A few passes from the head downward stopped the bleeding. I continued the passes, and in ten minutes he was able to open his eyes, but unable to speak or move his hands or limbs. Dodd's Kidney Pills Soon Drove Away Rheumatism and Dropsy. "For two years I was troubled with Rheumatism and Dropsy. My legs were terribly swollen, and though I tried many medicines nothing gave me any relief till I tried Dodd's Kidney Pills. Two boxes of them cured me so may plctely that I have had no return of the diseases in years.†Rheumatism and Dropsy are caused by the poisons disordered Kidneys fail to strain out of the blood. Cure the kid- neys with Dodd's Kidney Pills, and the cured Kidneys will remove the cause of the Rheumatism or Dropsy. Without cause there can be no disease. rush- for main» was. T '.' _ J India’s“ .:" l . Neit his the Hell-hon 3mm essayist, '.Eo"l','rlTr'," rented " be- lief that N passion for detail in the dis- anguish-g wk of nearly our! fe- mnVrsomlipts aastCthnt .t.hiy te/fret tt detail in “(gum use: Mon, to all the beat work Ll by female writ- em." m cited Min Austen, in whose books he found " turning point in lit- erary history, and the great example! of this qualitz.’ . pinase. SURE WAS QUICK AND PERMANENT A London Times critic now comes buck " Mr. Courtney, deeinAng that tome other dillereutia must be found " . power of minute obserntions is " least no obvious in men's work as in women’s. Be writes: '"Who had more of it than Fielding? Or than Tolstoy? Both Thackeray and Dickens exceled in it when they chose. Heaven knows there is enough of it in Zola. External detail is not Mr. Mere- dithh strong point, but Mr. Hardy dwells on it lovingly and with trem- endous effectiveness. Fusing to lesser names of contemporaries, we might any that jn M. Huysmans in Franoelnm‘l in Mr. George Mam in England the love of detail amounts to a. passion indeed." The same WINE! goes on to suggest that “an obvious achievement of women writers which no man can equal with such certainty is the exposition of fe male passion,†and he mentions Char- lotte Bronte and Mademoiselle de Lel- A Cleveland Comm The Ad. Club of Cleveland, cently listened to a lecture on There Anything Tangible in Miami's Linimem Cures Disteml They tried to The Czar! by: "Upon the Japanese. The times were bad, Tbs MSW? Ham, The Czar. (Chicago Chronicle.) The Russian Czar He made} war The Czar. but he Declined the interview; The Cossacks shot Their guns a lot And murdered quite a few. And now the Czar Is hiding in Away where he un't in With cotton in each car. And grits and shakes, And squirm: tutd quake" TrheV telt the takes squeeze. W OW io, re- led Is vertis- f that If the PM: Were Shut Off. By my of emphuixing the value of advertising en msthusiaat aye: "Did you, eve stop to think what would burn if every tom of advertisnig in the aimed States should be prohibited for ninety hp?†Inside of half that time the null: - . . _____ta -e..- (A. .0. The past spring a pack of robins killed a ruckoo near me that they found rob, bimr a. nest. I did not witness the kill- ing. but I have crass-questioned a num- ber ot people who did see it, and I Am oominced of the fact. They set upon him when he was on the robinh nest, and left him so bruised and helpless be- nenth it that he soon died. It was the first intimation I ever had that the cuckoo devoured the eggs of other birds. --John Burroughs in February Outing. â€M30394" tou'wrhettrd memm In .Sunufht Sp'ab’you have the act. (Hy-K All-luv v- a... -w. "..__ - and mufictories would stop for luck of orders; the limost empty stores would close their doors; millions of pie and minim“ of enniul would be tr,'.',',','.',',' out millions of capital would be thrown out of employment, end this country would be overwhelmed by the greatest finen- dal and industrial panic it has ever known. It is the tremendoul power of 'g,1t,it1U.itf tum the wheels of pro- gre".-- hiiadelphia Record. Tailor-made Servant Girls. A great change was noticeable in that ttnrt? worn by the servants solicnting him at Carlisle hiring fair. A few years ego the women and girls came (hunting Into the city on a hiring an in tawdry inery of I. frequently ridicuious tyfpe, but on Saturday there was none o this. In fact, in their smart tailor-made costumes it was difficult to distinguish them " times from the ordinary city girt.--Urn- don Daily Dispatch, How pugnncious the robin is! With what spuk and spirit he defends himself against his enemies! livery spring I see the robin: mooning the hue-jays that go sneaking through the trees looking for eggs. The erow-blackbirdt, nest in my evergreens, and there is perpetual war Between them and the robins. The blackbirds devour the robins' eggs, and the robins never cease to utter their urotest, often hacking it up with blows. i saw two robins attack a young black- hird in the air, and they tweaked out Itis {talkers at a lively rate. I recently observed a robin boring for grubs in a country door-yard. It is a common enough sight, to witness one seize an angle worm and drag it from its barrow in the turf, but I am not sure that 1 ever before saw one drill for grubs and bring the big white morsel to the surface. The robin I am sreaking of had a nest of young in a map e near by, and she worked the neighborhood very industriously for food. She would run long over the short grass after the man- ner of robins, stopping every few -feet, her form stiff and erect. Now and then she would suddenly bend her head to. wnrd the ground and bring eye or our ‘oun moment to bear intently 'dr,"', it. Then she would spring to boring t e turf turf vigorously with her bill, changing her attitude at each stroke, alert and watchful, throwing up the grass roots and little jets of soil, stabbing deeper and deeper, growing very moment more and more excited, till finally a fat grub is seized and brought forth. Time after time, for several days, I saw her mine for grubs in this way and drag them forth. How did she know where to drill? The insect was in every case an inch below the surface. Did she hear it gnawing the roots of the grasses, or did she see a movement in the turf be. neath which the grub was at work I know not. I only know that she struck her game unerringly each time. Only twice did I see her make a few thrusts and then desist, as if she had been for the moment deceived. l mum's Linn-em Cures Diphtheria. I Most peoPlo think too lightly ofa l eggsh. t is a. seriogs matter and n s prompt attention. Take _ I ' . Shiloh 9 1 . Consumption, Mlnard’s Linimem Cures Colds, etc 1 . U. Q " - ' ' The Lung Dare Tonic when the first Sign of a cough or cold appears. It will cum you easily and quickly then-later it will be harder to cure. Bow Does the Robin Know? Woes. 28e.. we" and shoe. an “I must â€broom " n3! Some very Ittnctivc women cannot In! flowers " all. No matter how fresh the bloom may be, in a very short time they droop, and roses espwin‘h’ wilt fairly an over themselves, Boon fading any. If this peculiu effect aries fro come Mural cane, what is it? Ono young girl. who is devoted to flow-m- and never more hwy than when sur rounded by them, aid rather sad! to me tho other dar.. "What an it be Agent “My! have“! to look at a. flower to In" it Ma. i it the evil eye!" I in It “bk 1htt be tut. for her a}. It. color and ex random. but in Oh h tr In noun the ogly "vie. ttm," I. ~ In, all it, tome ream “I! I“ h “I “is mtmniam. Can It.," m or qtgituntt--troston Hers That the prices of fencing material would be raised to practically the ex- tent of the duty there can be no doubt. This would mean that a duty of 25 or 30 per cent. would impose an extra tax of 8150 to 8175 on the fencing required for an average farm. Nor would the rural community suffer only to the ex- tent of an increased expense to those who have to fence, but a great deal of farm improvement would be delayed tor many years, which would operate stronz- ly in keeping down the vlluc of lax... Rather than impose a tariff on Nos. 9, 12 and 13, amooth galvanizcd wire, as has been propoaed, it would be a much aaner policy to remove the present duty 'dett, cent. on Noe. 7 and ll. if this yerek one, "he evenue would not suffer, A. e m -- -- --- A . _ Why no Sane Women Blight Flowers? ---eeete'e'ef.T,rT7..GGrG - - -- -_, all w “#00, â€an! 3’30. your on . ' for from door! all on wt: hud- oono numb“: from halo movable hetero. "t to pilot with pocket -rdrtver; will at “More“: madman "In; In only some; you - Ind n prop- union “to we can: It's o money getter. Write for roll mum. Gummy Pluto Worn, m Yam street. Toronto. "mo. hm. hm. van-nun. can can "tarttttegtt ot has. cadaver; with full in- dex to content. " m bound In cloth: 'ate"is"i'Gi'Cia'r'TeriFTuf_1tAttA1e thebooklanot worth a. momma Itâ€. and your money arttt be Mun-nod: all I. I mod awe-Hue for cum. WIIIlun Brim. Methodist Book Room. men. on. gust of construction. Were the kinds of wire most in use for fence construction manufactured in Cum, there might be some excuse for imposing an import tax, but time there nre practically " factories for making it in operation in the Dominion, whom could such 3 lax benefit t , According to n well-founded rumor, the Dominion Government will during the present session be urged to impose a customs duty on grades of fence Wir" which are now on the free list. That such a tax would prove on unjust nur- den to the farmers of Canada there is no doubt. In the older parts of the Dominion the old wooden fences are being year by yer replaced by ware structures, Ind in the great Wrst, which in rapidly being settled, practi- cally all the fencing in being done with wire in one .or other of in runny forms I WOULD LIKE EVERY WOMAN To write tor our spring um.- we may). of our “.60 to $12 sum. ht cloth. silk and lulu-e: Mu ruinous. m M uni-u. Write Inc $94!". - Meter. Bouthcon Sun isirneri. ii, than. Ont. 7 4mm m nun. 3mm LADIES ter In. mu of our nonr- b.'lintr remedy: who! quick and an. Dept. m. Puri- Chemlal Co.. luv-Ink... Win. - " King “not hot. - Toronto " you: In the fun We. Barn ICANUFACaUB Bi $40,000 worth ot Fine Pun. clearing " lone-t price- In Cam and for analogue. RAW FURS. W. are paying Men New York prices. Send for price not. 7 The discovery of s menu of metamor- t*totyAr ndidnes into rt,ttr has been node In so solemn s p we so the Acad- emy of Sciences, Paris. M. Molliud taken . very strong radish, “PM" it in . certain way, and it grows up into s fine potato. More scientifically, the young radish in cultivated in I. glass re- tort, after a process invented by Pate teur, in a concentrated solution of glu- cose. Burch then develop. plentifulll’y in the cells of the radish. which owe I out, loses its pepperiness, and acquires practimlly the consistency, flavor and especially the nutritive properties of the potato.--St. James’ Guette. tpp', YOU can m mule-I Boob“; U As there is no real pan-J ills, so there is no cure-all foe sick bei"' lie-sea. A business may go into a. gm†because it is negligently or dish 'ry1r managed, or because there is no ‘5! to justify its continued exi3tcrtrc. or tor a thousand and one other reasons; . ut if it be merely languid and run dow? I. wuuout being subject. to any constitu- tional ailment, it can be cued. Advcr» tising is a tonic that strengthens weak enterprioeo and encourage. the growth of the strong, and that cannot be taken in overdoses. It is the bun-inu- world’s elixir of life. Some time Mo I had . Ind attack of Quinzy which laid me up for two weeks and cost me u lot of money. Finding the lump will forming in my throat. I bathed freely with MIN- ARD'S 1=r'MENT, 1nd saturating a. MESSRS. C. C. RICHARDS & (I). cloth night of LEAVE WELL ENOUGH ALONE. eeka and cost me u no: ox money. ', S: l ,. Finding the lump again forming in 4 g H: . , y throat. I bathed freely with MIX- 3 H RD’S LTJTMENT, and saturating a. ", f, oth with the liniment left it on all I ght. V _ Next morning the swelling was pom- _ ' - ui I attribute the warding off of _ _ I attack of Quinzy to the he" -r- ' , _ MINARD’S LINIMENT. , . _ ar., G. F. WOItDFT, " St. John. f. ------------- F-_------------------ )1 V F " _T1"u1i-x9,.N1tine:, .h , ,7, t',r rt '_- As there is no real panama teenttsed ') : 4 , il , 2 l . s, so then- " no cure-all for sick trasi. b " ', . :sses. .18 hu‘imm‘ may go into ugepine kt It ' I "s,' 1- ' h GENT'tb-ofm L]N!_l§_‘_£pgf , 1."P.2 . H. iahtrrErto a co. ext morning I attribute attack of Q con .at mum: Transmuting Vegetables. -iaTiiiiiqiimb.' iiTsiWaAmams. " "oo - tor CM " val-kiln. “4 - cadaver: with N" trt- not. WIN “1 eh8t1i not exterusively ind WHAT! -LBR'i? e I. stronger could be uh- ' out. At, Mlit. Pclzi cannon. vb†til“ it moo "my tln ti in: the u on on SI The ha PREPARING F THE " m. ttle Mul 'tlt t n and the US t"e' and ll D Ru ste