Robert Hoe. the famous builder of printing ore-m. has this tor his favorite maxim: "It la better to get tchind a thing and push I along than to at In front ot It and drag tt after you. In other worda. tt La the work. not the man. that would attract attenlon." rm. expression ot mane help. o uphill why it In that Mr. Hoe Ia m Intervievod In the newspapers. He has an alt of ele- t Mun. but works as hard as any of ttf manna. thoroughly understanding m Man of lib rut was... Although ministers of reiigion and members of public bodies have uttered vehement protests. the custom of the “wince-u†continues to flourish, and in more than one instance it has been proved to be directly responsible for the epreed of the infection. The friends of the dead house. and remain for an princes of the came of At the end of the sen In procession round the l last look. The people believe that if they are tated to catch the fever no L'fic)1e,,t'ig,',': will save them from it, and t at, on the other hand. they can come in contact with it with impunity if it is not. their late to be infected. This spirit of fatalism. says the Lon- don Express. is shown by the Welsh cus- tom of holding "wyinosau" or prayer- meetings at the house of a dead pcrsonu The friends of the dead crowd into the I house. and remain for an hour or two re- l m..“-‘., A: AL - - Welsh Custom Which Help: to Spread Disease. An epidemic of scarlet fever which is raging at Goginan. near Aber.vntwvth. Walei, owes much of its virulence to the Ipirit of {nudism which perm“: among the Wctsh. Minard's Linimeut Cures Garza! In Cows rangemonts to send one or more ex- poditions to Spain. the point selected being a place thirty miles north of Valencia. Elias Mary Proctor, daugh- ter of the noted l-Ingilsh astronomer, R. A. Proctor, is also organizing an expmltion from this country to view the eclipse in Burgos. Spain. The members of the expeditions will be mainly amateurs. who will make a. specialty of the pictiu-mque rather than the scientific details of ml eclipse. L. W. Ripley, of Glastonbury, Conn., intends to conduct a party of astron- omers and amateurs to Labrador to view the eclipse. He met with such sum-ms in a like expedition to Nor. folk. VAL. at the time of the eclipse of May 27, 1000, that he will doubt- less be as fortunate at the coming eclipse. He has studied the hydro- graphic chart of the region, and is of the opinion that there would be first-: class anchorage and plenty of goodi space for observation either on the main land or on an island havingl an elevation of some two hundred feet in the path of tho N-iip=a. The Canadian Government has ar- ranged for an eclipse expedition to bo sent to Labrador under the diteetion of W. F. King. "hiet astronomer of tho Dominion. while the British ti.:) tronomical Koch-W is now an-hm ".., A photographic telescope of eight’ inch aperture and about 70 feet focnll length will be used. mounted horizon-i tally nnd fed by a. coeloskat, the mirror, of which is fourteen inches in diameter. Five exposures will be made with this telescope. The negatives thus obtained, it is hoped will give some information regarding the structure of inner corona. Pour other cameras. varying in focal length from eight to sixty riches will be mounted on a polar axis. The equip- ment for this expedition will also in- elude a battery of four cameras of three and one-half inches aperature nndi eleven feet focal length, with which I obotogrsplm will be made covering the trp.? where the sun will be at that time! 1 mil he made in Indianapolis, in o:der'l to compare them with photographs, madeJ at the time of the eclipse. While this ex- pedition will go to Spain, the exact lo. (nation has not yet been definitely deeid. There will be no I ial expeditions from the Yerkes or Err-rd observe- tories, but it is possible however, that some or the observatory people may go as individuals at their own expense. There is n possibility of on expedition being sent from the United States Navel Observatory, Wtsshington, D. C., if Congress this winter appropriates the necessary money for carrying out the scheme. If no, one of the New]! Observatory, Bloomington, Ind., has or- ganized an expedition to Spun. The members of this expedition nre John A. Miller, Professor of Mechanics and Astronomy; W. A. Cogshnll, Assist- nnt Professor of Astronomy; A. F. Kuersteiner. Professor of Romance Languages, who is now in Spain, end J. E. Valdez, a young Spaniard, who is s student in the university. These gentlemen are all members of the In. diana University. The university has assumed responsibility for the exped- ition, but it has been aided by gen- erous contributions from The Indian- apolis News, and The Reader Maga- zine, polished in Indianapolis. , FATALISM AND FEVER, del (New York Times. The next observable total eclipse of the sun can": on August 30, 1905. It h mm], well situated, and is looked forward to with great interest. The shsdow th toxins " sunrise, In“ of LIU', Bey, enters the Adsntic Owen, s short distance north of Newfoundland, crosses northeastern Spin, northeastern Algiers, and North- l - iiiiiriiiiiiii' Hoe’i Saltse of death is now making ervico they march e coffin to take a will be make a rather of the 1t is of be first- " good on the having ar ' stttmme%.v--rd 1-!- Ite t-talk with you. Making Proper Allowances. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) 'c'tarnerlr-Wqaav. m-you g-g-got a c-c-couple ot hours to s-s-smre. T-t-thomp- wan? Thompsntr-wtty. I don't know-what do you want? '3tammerly--rd l-l-like I t-t-ten-m-m-min- an. 0-0.â€.- mnk --_. NH“. -- """"'iih'., lU Prvoa0te " l The report this Fear makes m the fact that this is the close tenth year under the present In ( ment. Looking at the figures gin the ten years We get some com of the wonderful growth being in our country. when its financir porntions can advance at the m Manufacturers Life has done. A: crease in ten years of $5,261gX assets is certainly no mean accon ment. We heartily congratulate Manufacturers Life on such a m: cent statement. d [Via the Chicago and Northwestern ltr., {every day from March lst to May 15th, I 1905. settlers one way second-class tiek.. ets at very low rates from Chicago to points in Utah. Montana, Nevada, Ida. ho, Oregon, Washington, California, also to Victoria. Vancouver, New Westmin- ster, Rossland and other points in the Kootenay district. Co.rreNiondingis mw rates from all points in Canada. Write for full particulars and folders to B. H. Bennett, General Agent, 2 East King street, Toronto, Ont. l i he withoutut j lar a bottle, f 1 Ten years ago a. French missionary . started the systematic rearing of two . kinds of spiders of their web, and the , Board of Trade Journal states that a t spider web factory is now in successful ) operation at ChalaisrMeudon, near ) Paris, where ropes are made of spider web intended for balloons for the French military aeronautic section. The spiders are arranged in groups of twelve above a, reel, upon which the threads are wound. It is by no means easy work I for the spiders, for they are not releas- ,ed until they have furnished from j!ly1ty, yards to forty-one yards of i thread each. The web is washed and l thug freed of outer reddish and sticky uneven Eight of the washed threads are, then taken together ,and of this rather! strong yarn cords are woven which areI stronger and much lighter than cords of; silk of the same thickness. I Dvar Sins that we CO' MENT a: Fairviue, -irtirt C. C. RICHAR'V‘ & (I); REMARKABLE PROGRESS I The manufacturer whose products are iditributed to consumers through thou- sands of small retailers and who depends upon them to acquaint the public with the merits of his goods is making the old mistake of sending a boy on a man’s errand. The little fellows can at best stimulate the demand each in his own particular neighborhood, while the man- ufacturer, by judicious newspaper ad. vertising. can educate a whole nation to insist upon having his specialties. Plain as the proposition is, there are too many manufacturers who do not seem to see that by helping the retailers they would be helping themselves. I SEITLERS' LOW RATES WEE meesor Mason, of Washington, de- clares that women is not built for run- mng. adding that Nhe may walk like td',' Mongolian no runs like a hen." e " reason for the outspoken Professor Mason’s remark, as contem- porary observation discloses, says the fortland. Oregonian, but one cannot Justly attribute it to any more deep- seated reason than skirts. Diana, who i would hardly "give unto the flying hart space to breathe, how short so even," was not encumbered with flapping petti-, coats. nor did Atalanta outdistance her ttarntintr-if pantles-uitors under the handicap of even a rainy-day skirt. Nor, if magazine illustrations are to be be- lieved, do the young Amazons of the girls' colleges run 100 yards in eleven seconds or thereaboutf in the garb they Wear at a dance. The "winning wave, deserving note in the tempestuous pet- ticoat." has nothing to do with winning foot races, and Professor Mason should attribute women’s (alleged) henlike gait to the fashion of clothes rather than to the fashion of her making. 1 wm A wow ms Her sum Are in Tiny and nau- namly no mean accomplish- heartily congratulate the A Boy on a Man's Eruml. )mch, are such as to recom. rongly to probable insurers. t this Fear makes much of at this is the close of the under the present manage- You ' when its financial cor- tdvance at the rate the Life has done. An in- years of $5,261,023 in Spider Culture. the figures given Er get some toneeption on she]: a magnifi-; widi ll, ir w NINAI: 30, 190:! lg inade LTON. _ --- -- - "qW.qaqrT wuwn. " has the shape and appearance of a watch, too. Then lense is in the stem, so placed as to give a. focus of about two inches. The films are in the body of the watch case. The photograph is about one inch by threeipmrtiG of an inch in size. The Smallest Camera. The smallest practical photograph camera yet made, and just put upon the market, is the size of a. man's watch. It has the shape and appearance of a. ",e.6.,a. A-, "e, ' _ _ Some Long Walks. It is certainly a great feat to walk around the world, twenty-five thousand miles. But there is many a man who {has accomplished this feat without real- . izing it, especially in the case of post- ‘men and messengers. In England there g was a postman who, when he was retired 'trom active service. had covered on his rounds tt distance of 440,000 miles. This long tramp occupied fifty-eight years. Another postman. in Scotland, who re- _ tired after thirty-four years of letter . rying, had “rivaled 110,000 miles on foot. His friends presented him with a handsome sum of money and the still more appropriate gift of an easy chair. Still another Postman, who had tramped the roads of Yorkshire for more than a quarter of a century, completed a jaunt of 125,000 miles during that time. It is astonishing what. distances can be covered by men who are by no means pedestrians in the ordinary exercise of their callings. The organist of a church in rural England who died a few years ago had walked 50,000 miles merely to play his organ every Sunday. For fifty- one years he had done his Sabbath tramp, failing only once to put in an appearance, and never once being late. l In the vineyard region of France a cannon is used to protect the vines against hail, and the vine-growers con- sider this method a pronounced success. Many thousands of these guns are now in use in France, and the confidence of vine-growers in the results obtained "yst unbounded. Annual meetings sell for the express purpose of re- .mg the reports upon the efficacy of {Ole cannons, and these remain hank "CCC?, o'"'.',".,'.',"":?')"' of OMEN)"; Ms Bvetrl, Chemists 15t-, Toronto, Ont. "it sound $r, all dtuuisu Scott & Bowne sample free. q Be sure that thin picture in the form of a label is on the wrap- per of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. and tolerate it for a long time. The: is no oil, nit excepun utter, so eas y digestedgand absorbed by the system as cod liver oil in the form of Scott's Emulsion, and that is the reason it is so helpful in consumption where its use must be continuous. . ' - . . food M £33. It,',',',?,!), 'flat: Cl',y'iQtf,Et/','d 'lit ',it'St, '/entitrghtttt fdrl, 'dh,',',,',' ISI'.' m q From time immunorial the doctors prescribed cod liver oil for consumption. Of course the patient could not take it in its old form, hence it did very little good. They can take S C 0 TT 'S EMULSION q0ereisnospeeilie for consumption. Freshair,ex- Consumption Ruling the Weather. 'eyvill send you a ONTARIO ARCHIVES _ TORONTO - V- "w..." u... union machin- nu, which went Into affect Mar my. Int, ha been expensive to that or mutton. Out of I total expenditun of $101.30 during 13“ 8156.0†was used in supporting mm Ttte strike was caused by the retina! ttf the em- ployeu to inc-one the minimum led. "n '&t,"t"iririo%si"'"lll'l'"h",a,l,2iie K,“ .._- """" u 3.51. It was no,†into an automobile that stood waiting and conveyed to the mtuehitae-rootn- of the nun-est daily paper. The paper being one“, let. the printing begun " once. and by " o'clock precisely the Journei wee on me In the streets. The entire process of human and taken exactly two hour: and twenty- the minutes. , From Tree to Newspaper. (Editor end Publisher.) A London writer says that e Germen - manufacturer " Eesenthei hee Just med. " experiment to no how repidly it ie youth]. *to transform e tree into e newepeper. Three treee in the neighborhod at " teeter-y were cut down at 7.35 in the morale; They Wm instantly barked and puiped end the first roll or paper was ready " 9.34. It we. iitbsd into an automobile that etood wetting Ind conveyed to the 'tutettinsrmsiG ot the more“ deily peper. The paper being emu; eat. the printing begen " once. end by " o’clock precisely the Journei wee on eel. in a. ItreeteLThe entire none. of mum-..“ nue - -- --- -. me Levers thy sur, . wash woolen: and iuuneu,, it. at? 3W; "Then I started to take Dodd's Kid. nay Pills, and the first night after us- ing them I slept soundly. In three days I threw away the belt I have worn for years. Dodd’s Kidney Pills cured me." “a...“ nun“! DTOKC down my constitu- tion," Mr. Rafferty says. "My back gave out entirely. Terrible sharp, cut- ting pains followed one another,' till I felt I was being sliced away piecemul. I would come in tired to death from a run. My sole desire would be to get rest and sleep, and they were the very things I could not get. Finally I had to lay oft work. For it itt made of cheese, they Bar, And green cheese. too, It that, And it the sun were made ot hm I guess we'd all set tnt. And we could all ttit down, you 1 And have a tine tree lunch, And after all the world was gone 'The moon I: left to munch. mental strain broke down? tion," Mr. Rafferty says. gave out entirely. Terrible tine trains follownd nun on This world iaVi,Tit iauGtg then A good one. too, I think. It ttil LIFE M ttt RAIL Is l HARD mm If. (Chicago Chronicle.) 3 on the world were bread 1nd cheese And see: were made to drink, his -np w-." L- _ _ - A - -- -â€"-~- . ncnen bed. In ve Fsr 10' gergtpfwing rum! will sprout so quickly Isar."tiy1. , u W Fi1iiole,trlf)'tver?'c.ii' fi"ilt't't'e't'l'. its“; 'ltl/e)1llrtettldte2t',iilityit' tliu,t.t'j.i,ie,.'ti,ii,?,j the s'i,esi.,'f/,t,r gm 'e.te1,t,,hael',.t must be planted in fertile so .a..eiiil"hveiU,'il,tt fldptai"i11t, '/2llult,"'t'ic Jl"llllc. where it will get plenty of the sunshine I -St V'lchohs of publicity. The time to sow is all the l ' . - ' . I I $33,831?,Egidljarï¬ï¬.c"}:yngemiighgii‘! Minud’s Limmcat Cures Diphtheria. ductive ground for this kind of agricul- C'"rtrtte-tr.-. ture than the.eolumns of a good home _ . Patina on .t?rNile: newspaper. . Naviention nu Hm \..n " u.» -, - I From the middle of November till the middle of A HI does indeed make rather a lengthy sieighride. The latter part of it is dismal enough, when the cahots, or hollows between the drifts, have be- come slushy pools, and the erstwhile l solid country roads, that successive snow falls have raised above the level of the fences, are turned into sloughs of de. spend, apparently bottomless. General. ly, for about a week in early April, when the air is balmy and springlike, and the crows are flying overhead in search of the first clear spot of dark, damp earth, there is neither wheeling nor sleighing in the region round Quebec. In town fil is different. The mayor gives orders that householders must have the pavements chopped out of their icy overcoats by vthe first of April. Spring freshets will {be rushing riotously down the gutters in Quebec, while there is still good sleighing in the country, and suburban- ites frequently have to change from wheels to runners, or vice versa. at We tollgate, leaving or entering the town,-... I Cor. New York Evening Post. "An English " t had out today said she was charmed wid our white would. Shure an' if she’d be drlvin' round in it so long as I have ahe’d get her fill of it." rntmr%nthtsoe'th Tt.rytstins Reap] '. R. Engineer's Experience with Dodd's Kidney Pills. The eahmnn " " season- Comel Sleigh to: W in Storm Woman. The eatnnnn of Queboe city in known m iciR cum can“ 55f the "engirCami the anion I powder) to 'e-roto Kite an " Mr. Malcolm V. Tyson, who has nuc- ceeded in finding the persons entitled to a. number of such depos1ts, is now hunt. ing for the heirs of George II. Richard- son, to whose credit about 8600 is on deposit in the Savings Bank of Balti. more. The information obtained by Mr. Tyson in to the effect that Mr. Richerd- non became engaged to marry e girl in this city end went to the gold field- in Californin to make I fortune for him- eelf and his prospective wife. When he returned to this city after on than" of [thin ttpt, not. I; found that the ir w o engaged I'm-q him had ?iiiefil'i!,,ti?l mu. Then Mr. Rte» ordeal: ween-ed and nothing I: know. of what been†of hitn.--siiliGrt m been so reduced by th I person: entitled to them cunt of such deposits in Bank of Baltimore is onl Married Another Man, Some years ago the business ing for persons entitled to forg unclaimed deposits in the Bavin of Baltimore was lucrative 1nd gregate amount of such depot very large. Now, it is said u. Mind's Lisle-limes tuneup“. overhead wai G of 1ltmrt.--Alon February Outing, 11w 'eu much, ...... r-uwv uu uu- uank. two men lenii {out and drive stakes to which to make (fast, and there you are for the night. 'A very simple and effective method, without any ostentation and requiring ver little knowledge of mathematics. It L,', also the advantage of variety. Sometimes one finds oue's self alone bis. 'ncath the wonderiul Egyptian moon lighting up the river, the distant cliffs, and the silent, empty plain. 0r phrhaps; one stops near some little native village, in which case the bank is lined with silent, curious 1igures, who crouch for hours wrapped in their white cloth cov- erings. One we tied up beside a lonely brick kiln. The sight was a wierd one. The red flare of t e furnace, fed with s r cane, cast intermittent' fleshe- of km into the night, in and out of which lliuieu Muir» .- " Boating on the Nile. Navigation on the Nile is not so com. licated a matter as upon the North At- fantic. To run full speed upon a sand bar is an occurrence of such frequency as hardly to elicit a comment from the l passengers, The crew take more inter- , est because they are obliged to push the boat off again with poles, and this en- tails a. great amount of shouting and some work. The Nile below the first cataract is a fairly broad, muddy river, flowing between deposed banks verying from six to eight to twenty or thirty feet in height.' Its surface is inter-l . rupted everywhere by sand-spits and isl- l ands upon which are to be Been thous- ands of birds. Hhe channel, if such it lean be called, winds from one side to (the other and changes completely with ( every flood. Hence even the beat pilots l run aground two or three times a dun ilt is, of course. impossible to proceed‘ l at night, and each day's voyage comes to {an end wherever darkness happens to overtake one. The boat's nose is simply; run plump on the bank, two men leap! out and drive stakes to which to mnkei fast, and there you are for tha. no.“ i We spent an exciting half hour under the pulks, with the hoofs of the reindeer rattling like hail on the frozen boards, and then the unusual commotion ceased all at once, for the reindeer had found a Siet,RA,t.dc.. 1.2 QuiWWI J,Wt eylr,y,,r (iuliiii/ 1.1yyy,t, and‘we _we_re fi,1lth'e't'l'. 1 For the first time we had occasion to see how fierce an angry reindeer can be. We heard the hoof: of Uncle Ben beat- ing on the pulk’s side as he pawed up the now in his efforts to get at us, and if we had not held to the straps and had not kept the pulk over us he would have toned it into the air with one sweep of his horns and would still have had his bout with us, in which case We should have been helpless and completely at his mercy. Every movement of our bodies Bank us deeper in the snowdriftn, and the in- furiated reindeer, finding themselves caught in the banked up snow, almost to their haunches, turned upon us and would have pawed us to death but for the forethought of Oosilik. who, seeing our danger, sprang forward, and, hoist- ing the overturned pulks in his strong arms, brought them down over our heads and shoulders and pinned us out of sight in the snow. We had travelled half the day without any serious mishap and were beginning to forget our fears at starting out, when we sped merrilrv down a mountain side, singing and ho looing at the top of our voices, and ran into a gulch and stuck there. The songs stopped in our throats, and we sprang to our feet to sink waist deep in the drifts that had entrapped us. A Mn. March", of this city. will be a little more careful in the future on to how III. takes old women’- prescription. 'lte,1,td,,' gt',', tgl/gl/tttt JfPc; ev owe an -..." ix u come 'SU/l,' and horehound and in' her a full done one hi lut week. A yer; good remedy, per ups, if old Indy Smith had not mistaken jimeon weed for horohound. As it u, Mrs. Marshall is very nick, end for hours ofter the drank the 1',lt,'hT, etc, it took the combined effort: of ree doctors to keep her alive. “She is now like on owl," said the physi- cian who gave us the facte. "She can‘ on? eee in the night." The jimeon weed l he. the effect of enlarging the pupil of the eye until she cannot see a wink in day time, but her vision is good at night. -Mountc Airy News. Dillard's Uni-lent Cures Colds. etc I f r6" Caes' E2is x (ltttitigie;an Is. tp'"""'" (â€"0117 AiaiiiiliPR , wave - .._.-v(n. “VINE was the cloudlesa, star-lit sky ,.--Alonzo Clarke Robin-on in Outinn When a Reindeer is Angry. we river, the distant cliffs nt, empty plain. or phrhaps an some little native village, we the bank is lined with us tigures, who crouch for ed in their white cloth cov- we tied up beside a lonely The sight was a wierd one. u, " ' - g.“ - posits in the & re is only about .:_'rysont Who has f such deposits WE. it is said, they have ' th finding of the l them that the gm. sits in the sung; in owl... -nu . of 194mm in Jinan N?. even the beat" pil or three times a d impossible to prom day's voyage comes a lithium "d Ci,TFA'i, m up will not in drhardettthetm smsoftcwhitet -""7 '“'-“l II'CI, sed banks, :1rying twenty or thirty surface is inter. taM-spits and isl. to be Been thous. Ines: of hunt. t forgotten or Savings Bunk , ttttd the ttg- An---“ [O his am. entitled to now hunt. L niche-d. 5600 in on '?i,t1t"; no}. wane 55‘: l _ â€"â€"â€" 'tdt',', ilhtY, see" the ma n I. ' “'0 t I‘ no of oid.faahiotod Shiloh“? -NFuA. 99m9mptiom , (nil-dolphin Record.) "land pipe will k your ruor sharp," lemma the murmur. "Get a we" piece of the manila“. â€(not lend plre your plumber In: in stock and keep it handy when you no strapping your razor we when. in to rub the men with the we Apply than». lint " you would strop tho m. to e tmttni.ned lid. ot the hath-’1 Buoy your l'uor on an aide, wind up “an I in was on the finished side at the map In Pl', will have a first-clam, edize ott an tool. never took the trouble to m I mic-title explication of the virtues ot ml pin. a a lid to winning. but it is all " tho not in that respect! "mt----"-:")"'"'," 7-. ._1.-_ - yuu woum strop user. to tie unnamed kids ot the m: Strap your ruor on that me, wind up , I for mm on the {mulled side u! strap Ind you will In" I Urn-chm Mn the tool. I never took the trouble to pr" .ehrttttte emulation of the virtues of 1 pipe " an aid to winning, but It is all the 'tood tn that respect." You can't can noon h or cold from the outside. 'iu must cut. it ulnar): oh. LI-..A Mutt their tGii. 9' If the efforta of certain parties are "l successful, the farmers of Canada will a! have to face a very unjust and bar. il densome tax. A movement. is on fact I to have fence wire. which has for a L number of years been admitted to , the country duty free, put on the duti, f able list. The grades sought to be _ affected are plunked iron or steel ' wire No. 9, " and IS. Practically mum of these are nude in Canada, and since enormous quantities are used each year in replacing the primitive rail strue. turel, and enclosing prairie farms, the injury that . duty' would impose upon the rural community could not be nud- l ily estimated. Since the admin-ion of wire duty from 1iitiie't have enjoyed the benefit, ,of cheap fencing of a very desirable (kind. This has not only mu) im. ) proved the appearance and value of hundreds of farm homer, but it has added immensely to the comforts of winter travelling over road. that were formerly very often impusnble on ad" count of - blockade; To put I check upon this sort of imprm'vmr'nl. by n tax that could work only inmy to the rural reputation without bum- fit to auv at or .1.-- " a& ' e, mun iiff1ri,r than migxhu will do this. n I"! 'tlt myth. root of the t1Httitt. t is mum to can. [WOULD nova A mama To I run mpnovmtznr. 531‘ it was there the twigâ€; minating the war of 1812 United States and England Th old city of Ghent, Belgium, in h on twenty-six islands, which are c hosted with one ttttts tie' brim. E‘Iu'cc tttt d’ I thirty public a unres are cont; ed these islands. ghent is famous b 'lt Charles V. and John of Gaunt wen- M, there. It has been the scene of mu treaties,_imurrectionl and revolts. .'l li Tba Grand Trunk has arranged u make two extensive exhibits, one at the 8 tsmen’s Show in New York city, and tar other of a travelling nature. Th. exhibits will be somewhat similar in both instances. They will consist of large photographs identical with thou. shown " the Wordl's Fair last year. rep. resenting scenes along the line of the railway, in the haunts of the summer tourist, and where the huntaman finds his paradise. There will also he moving pictures illustrative, of Canadian life, also mounted fish and game. The Sports- men's Show o us in Madison Sum Gardens, on r'ltf.'l'L, 21st, and will last for two weeks, and it is exported that 150,000 people will attend. For the pur- pose of its exhibit, the G. T. R. has se- cured 500 square feet of floor space. and 1,500 square feet of wall space, so that ‘the pictures may be seen to the best advantage. The travelling picture exhibit will leave Detroit early in March, and will open at Milwaukee on the 20th of that month. Subsequently exhibits will be made in all the principal cities of the following States: Wisconsin. Illinois. Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas. Ar. kansas, West Virginia, and Pennsyl- vnnia. This vigorous policy of mixer- tising means a great deal to Canada in attracting summer visitors to her mn- m the outside. "Sara/Ll m it “much the blood. mes " Donut aoeat"t happen to me to night I Ain’t - goin' to say 'em." - ' But he did; something happemd., (hinge Reseord.Hemld. "tr, , he answered. 2lah" you forget to say your an?" “Nope, I didn't ny 'ern last ul’ nothin' didn't happen to me. I “If-Q say 'em to-night twither tt nothll' doesn't happen to me to I ain’t pour 30M to any 'cm." M Pipe for the Razor, A. little Jim wu going lo 'gtgl'tL'"ft, the eoverlet, his tt, "M if he had not forgotten [ uw'runs. w. m pay’irig' York prion. Send (or price list 1qiettitqtrLicqnitidi." Saba-Tor. A - at out â€In; nylo- and w d “I M." to “I truita, tn cloth, gm turn: an III-mu. skin- and w m In -. lunar, Bounce" 00.. M St, Won. thtt. iiLii.riF)Siif:',FiidjiciJ." LADIES if}: was. My: ram! 10. m Chute-I Col iiiiiiiauri. [EVE N0. 8. I905. (Phllldelphil WOULD "In I our “.51 " III. “not that. . T§}on"t‘." I you. h the tun trade. IUD IANUFACIUB In Lt. Ill-In.- In LtUlPuynuetvi.ne at uce a very unjust and bus. tnx. A movement. is on {not fem wire. which has for . of yam been admitted to try duty free, put on the duti. t. This grades sought to be no plunked iron or steel it, " and IS. Pruticdly mum of a made in Canada, and since quantities are used each year ring the primitive rail struc- d enclosing prairie farms, the It a duty' would impose upon ffpmunitr could not be read- GRAND TRUNK EXHIBITS B. C. Wtrtaa a Co. 812 uRor. N.Y.. Mata. Can. was GpraGiiiit 5 upon A Northern Venice. va t g fti'fif Something Happen: Ier to the comfurts of in our roads that were often input-hie on ur- blockulu. To put 3 ii tort of imprm'o-nwnt 'rrSCELLAMEOtrs. n we scene of many on and revolts, and reptr was undo lot. ttt Pte, between the in" on Wdiait ttttttttttt at - Ot un. not! tor mulch: mega-:5. mm m- mi I IN NEED, . trial ot our use! “a Info . Ilium. w Mu".",',?."." we re Barn - -'n9"'. ps. I an 1aat_night, y our pray. :lw moth l sonn- l in ml. 'tt It Sui "itrs of the A Lilmu Cl tttak, having barbrr. and ll um, the quaint»! to I was follow"! Reinforcement lie tw The J: HI bat [Bil flat II HI " , Admire! lot i -, omoooooo tttl M Lu Grand Duh THIRD somumq s"-oo Bitter Disc BED C "fll pa Id SP! u for tlu Leave Lila: tl ERA! " mud of the CARD rreapt' the IN had II . tt M