stove.... Wife wore Pump froz House sme Wite made k It. . «. JIn going to above points take direct route, Lehigh Valley Railroad. Five fast express trains daily, from Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls. Trains of G. T. R. make direct connection at Suspension Bridge. The Lehigh Valley has three rtations in New York uptown, near all first class hotels and business houses; downtown, near all European steamer docks, saving passengers for Europe a long and expensive transfer. Secure your tickets to New York or Philadelphia via Lehigh Valley Railroad. ther It is thei: out. This one was regally arrayed in cloth of silver, with its perfectly plain, shimâ€" mery surface. The bodiee was covered with lace, and the veil nearly covered the train. A MATRIMONIAL RECORD. One Madgett, of Augusta, Ga., has peâ€" titioned for divoree. His spouse and he have, avers Madgett, quarrelled 6110 times in fourteen years. More than one quarre!l a day, therefore, varied the humâ€" drum of this couple‘s married life. Madâ€" g'tt kept strict register of every row. gives the causes of quarrels as folâ€" lows: Tant( HOEKRE . «.. «««« «.ce eie«<ed MUnWM Wife asked money .... .... .... 2241 Husband tracked mud on kitchen Husband would: Wife threw hust those on the skirt intermingling in proâ€" fusion to above the knees, and other fairâ€" ty crowding the bodice proper from noâ€" tice. Irish crochet lace formed the eiâ€" bow and Duck neck finish,. And the brideâ€"she was there, too! She was not forgotten, bless you! Raâ€" ther was her dress deemed important. It is a fact. though, that all brides have theizr own ideas and mean to carry them Husbard Husband Husband seams No dum Wife‘s c Wife so Wile Ian _ Shaded plumes were in her pale blue tuile hat. One pretty girl was fetching in a sheer organdie in a pale ping and white check. It was a mass of serpentined insertions, those on the skirt intermingling in proâ€" fusion to above the knees, and other fairâ€" A clever costume was that of a pretâ€" ty blonde. With her full skirt of cream mousseâ€" Hine, with plenty of little frills at the foot, she had a coatee of shot taffeta in the hydrangea colors. This was scalâ€" loped and bordered with three ruffles of velvet baby ribbon in hydrangea blue, pink and mauve. kx Li0Or . . Husband With a dress of willow green silk, an exquisitely dainty shade, was worn a creamâ€"white horsehair straw. There were shaded blush and yellow roses, folâ€" iage in accord with the dress, and a knot of black velvet. With a pale, undecided blue taffeta in a checked figure one woman wore a dainty blue straw hat. There were velâ€" vet bows, nothing else. It was very smart. _ Another dress of cream white mousâ€" seline, with quantitiese of narrow lace rumes, was fitted with a large hat of pale blue taffeta. This was trimmed with pink roses and a blue plume. plumes. _ With a costume of white chiffon broadâ€" eloth was seen a big black lact picture bat, trimmed with shaded pink ostrich _ Despite the oneâ€"color vogue there were many charming contrasts. _ _ _ (Ome attractive costume in heliotrope taffeta, richly embroidered, was topped by a bonnet hat of creamy lace, with exâ€" quisitelyâ€"shaded orchids. A handsome matron in lilac crepe de chine wore a hat composed of narrowest frills of green tulle This was trimmed with pink roses and lilacs, and a beauty it wasâ€"clear and crisp, yet rich and NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA There‘s an idea prevalent that materâ€" nal dignity requires mauve, and, inâ€" deed. the mother of the bride did don a dress of mauve chiffon velour, a stunâ€" ning princess affair. Her toque was of mauve tulle, with pansies along the side. The underblouse, or at least what showâ€" ed of it, was of this dainty tulle. It made the crispest of elbow sleeve rufâ€" Each carried a sheaf of La France roses and was crowned with an open wneven wreath of the same. That is, the wreath was bent into becomingness. The dresses of many of the guests were gï¬: as notable, and those chosen for iption will be perfectly suitable for September or October weddings. A handsome elderly woman was loveâ€" 1y in gray chiffon taffeta, with silvery welvet appliques. A shaded gray ostrich feather was in her gray tulle toque and. she had with her a pearl gray ostrich boa. As one looked at her one was fain to recall the line: "There is beauty in extreme old age." (Omly had Mr. Gilbert seen this distinâ€" gurished dame hbe would have been in dead earnest, and wouldn‘t have dared hint about the "fascination frantic in a ruin that‘s romantic." them. That of the maid of honor was almost white, so delicate was the shade. The two little flower girls were gownâ€" ed in a shade almost as delicate. The others were in deepening shades until the two last ones, who were stunning brunettes and were in a splendidly vivid The costumes worn at a recent «mart wedding zre not only of greatest interâ€" est because of their beauty, but for the valuable hints with which they are reâ€" dolectâ€"it is but a short time now until autumn weddings will be in order. A recent rose wedding might be carried out any time. The.indelmsï¬ll all wore woseâ€"colored chiffon. There were six of Noted at a Wedding. of omons ffee without band‘s razor to rip t go to ind‘s ph Dons urch nto stew the 145 163 34 The Guest and the Waiter. (Kansas City Journal.) A dainty stranger wafted into the diningâ€" room of a botel in Smith Contre, Kan., thke other day, and as the chair was beld back for him pulled out his bandkerchiet asd dusted the seat carefully. Pulling up his f‘,',".‘.‘s".",.h’ seated himself, wiped the Growth of Things Out West. According to Checotah (Ind. _ Ter.) Times: "One of our readers, whose verâ€" acity is above question, tells the followâ€" ing: ‘The terrible news comes from the western part of the Cherokee Nation that a boy climbed a cormstalk to see how the corn was getting along, and now the stalk is growing up faster than the boy can climb down. The boy is clear out of sight. Three men have undertaken to eut the stalk down with axes, and save the boy from starvation, but it grows so fast that they can‘t hack twice in the same place. The boy is living on nothing but raw corn and already has thrown down over four bushels of cobs.‘" And a bachelor doomed to die. _ _ 8 So, bgyf, be advised to marry when you My next wa. a lady who loved romance, And wrote very splendid things, She said, with a smile, when I asked her to dance. ‘‘Sir, I ride upon a horse with wings." There was ink upon her thumb as I kissed her hand, And she whispered, ‘"If you should die I‘d write you an enitaph gloomy and grand." *‘There‘ll be time enough for that," said I. I was now fiftyâ€"one, yet I still did adopt All the airs of a juvenile beau, But somehow or other when the question I I looked in the glass and I thought I could traae A sign of a wrinkle or two, So I made up my mind that I‘d "make up‘ my face And come out as good as new. To my hair I imparted a little more jet, Yet I could searce suppress a sigh; But I cannot be quite an old bachelor yet; *‘There‘ll be time enough for that," said I popped paifayy :( * The girls, with a laugh, said "No." I am sixty toâ€"day, but a very young man, Doth out of the window fly. The truth of the proverb I had no wish to prove; ‘"There‘ll be time enough for that,"" said L My next was a penchant for one whose face Was her fortune; she was fair. > She spoke with an air of enchanting grace, But a man cannot live upon air, And lv::nen Poverty enters the door young ve My next was a lady of rank, a dame With blood in her veins, you see! With the leaves of the Peerage she fannel the flame, That then was consuming me. But tho‘ of her great dessent she spoke, I found she was still very high, And go)t‘hought looking up to a wife quite a €. I was just nineteen when I first fell in love And I scribbled a deal of rhyme, I talked to myself in a shady grove, And I thought I was quite sublime. I vub x:om from my loveâ€"‘twas a dread‘ul fls And the lady, she wiped her eye; But I didn‘t die of grief,, O dear me, no! *‘"There‘ll be time enough for that," said I. When I was a schoolboy aged ten, Mighty little Greek I knew, I wore striped trousers, and now and then A stripe upon my jacket, too. When I saw other boys to the playground run, I threw my old Gradus by, And I left the task I had scarce begun, ’ "T‘here‘ll be time enough for that," said #. "Once in a while hold the lungs full of breath as long as you can without expulsion. In doing this you are simâ€" ply cleaning the machine. You are cleaning the blood. At the same time you are giving that little fillip to the action of the heart and the nervous sys term1 which you thought you were giving when you took the cocktail. In the latâ€" ter case you didn‘t clean the machine. You simply ran it a little faster and gummed it up a little more. You can get the same results, the same feeliny of exhilaration and of accomplishment, without taking the cocktail, and at the same time the machine will steadily imâ€" prove in its running quality. Breathe the best air you can get, and plenty of it. It is as necessary as food. ‘The heart and lungs act involuntary. In a hurried business life they become too involuntary. In that case don‘t take & cocktail; just breathe."â€"Philadelphia Telegraph. nife, fork and spoon with a napkin, worâ€" ied a few crumbs off the table and heaved _ sigh of relief. Without hesitation the irl who stepped forward to take his order eftly wiped the stranger‘s mouth, which ad been drawn into the pucker of dissatisâ€" action at this imaginary untidiness aboundâ€" ig, asd plart@l a kiss thereupon that was lainly heard in all parts of the room. The "Now, if you are working with a piece of machinery, say a typewriter, what do {ou do to make it run more smoothly? ou don‘t put a lot more oil on it, and gum and clog it all up. You clean it first. You can best clean the blood by breathing. The blood passes through the lungs, and it needs and expects to find plenty of fresh air with oxygen in it. If it can‘t find perfectly fresh air, it needs more air which is not perfectly fresh. It needs to beâ€"cleancd by contact with the air. *"Thore‘ll be time enough for that," said I T‘here‘s ro time to be lost," say I. "When you are ‘let down,‘" continued this physician, "don‘t take a cocktail. Just breathe. Put your finger on your pulse and get its rhythm. During eight beats draw in the breath, breathing deep and low and forcing the diaphragm down first, then filling the upper lungs. Then exhale this breath during four beats of the pulse. Don‘t take a stimulant. Just breathe. This is the advice of a doctor who 10es not believe in the old medical policy of mystery, such and such a remedy should be beneficial. Lorraine; because a dog howled; beâ€" cause God made Eve out of one of Adam‘s ribs; because alligators lay eggs because Solomon had 1,000 wives and no end of concubines; because the Morâ€" mons are not Indians; because pineâ€" apples do not grow in Canada; because he fell in the creek; because he shot the pig; because she sat down on his hbat, and because they had no childrenâ€"Atâ€" lanta Constitution. tist; because the house smelled of cabâ€" bage; because the horse ran away; beâ€" cause Germany wouldn‘t give up Alsace When I Was a Schoolboy. JUST BREATHE. time, _ was be c dead. and ne. each day the was improving. e called be was sad. _ Seeing the and said: *"Vell, â€"improvements?" inquired how told that she was ered ordered quickly. #e told she ill 3Â¥ w 7. 4 2k ol sing?" "Yaâ€"as." "Well, Miss Joh *A To JX .D I‘ve got a most important quest PVA h & Td | | ask you" "Yaâ€"as" "Will you Gerâ€" s % me?" "Yaâ€"as. Who is it, please?*" w« Canadian Hair Restorer â€"â€"e+# _ Will restore hair to its natural i how | color. on SP8, (%m’{;‘ air, ï¬â€œâ€™!‘:‘ Sign of a Domestic Boss. F’o' , cures » tchh;‘g and all scalp diseases. &mï¬u box.\.?'nh:r::'t.y .‘?.f’:n«?m"m'z:'.“. * 1 uoo thk gï¬x-‘?‘&?’w{fl‘?}“‘“" B‘i'“,' with his shoes and stockings off. A ime | gioesy ang rorqranc """ become likes everything around her house ig. Price, mailed, 75 cents and three 2 | D°2t 224 a mans bare feet are bt was | Cent stamps, or_two for $1 and six 2 such a plan that if they are scrubbe the ; Cent stamps. _ Have no agencies. Must | *200U0. rinsed in rose water, powdere yell ! be ordered direct from the manufacturerg, | T!ce flower and a baby blue ribbo is?" THE MERWINCO., Windser, Ontario, Camade _ in ty porin. . " 0C 0 "°UC" }* Ob, ‘twas sad to see, but how often seen, The redâ€"nosed lord and the sweet sixteen, But the funeral service went on apace, While the bishop smiled with paternal face, And asked the episcopal question terse: ‘"Do you take this man for better or worse?" Thenr the maid made answer in accents slow, ‘Neath her quivering veil: ‘"Well, I don‘t quite know." Sweet bridesmaids, chiffoned, with â€" envy sighed, As t?;’e,:d me*. and preceeded the schoolroom ride, Who hung on the arm of her pompous sire, Resembling a tub in its new attire, The whole affzir was rehearsed and planned, As the lord, with his brandyâ€"andâ€"soda hand, Approached he exhaled an alcohol whiff, And the mother gave vent to a social sniff. DROPSY IS ONE POSITIVE SIGN OF KIDNEY DISEASE.â€"Have you any of these unmistakable signs? Puffness unâ€" der the eyes* Swollen limbs? Smothering feeling? Change of the character of the urâ€" ine? Exhaustiion from least exertion? If you have there‘s dropsical tendency and you shouldn‘t delay an hour in putting yousself under the great _ South American Kidney Cure.â€"86 The church was crowded, the aisles were decked With ribbons and blossoms, a sweet effect, The organist softly did begin That same old chestnut from ‘‘Lohengrin.‘ By the altar rail was a noble lord, With an air of distinction, distinctly bored, His mothrâ€"inâ€"law in prospectu stood, Enwreathed in smiles and a velvet hood. What Men Dceem Hoenor. i What men deem _ honorable is illus-’ trated daily in the news, especially of crime. A man recently shot and killed | another. ‘Iwo children of the slain| man‘s wife, born soon after, died im-i mediately, and the mother was not exâ€" ; pected to survive. The exploit was in-l instigated vy the shooter‘s relation to' the victim was one uncomplimentary | to him. Fery ilikely he was wrong; about his facts. but if he was right we | still have the illum:inating spectacle of a woman making a certain choice of con-i duct and her husband thereupon deâ€"| ciding that it becomes his business to | murder the third person. If the wife had been attacked, another question alâ€" / together would have been created. We‘ now contemplate a free choice on our part, leading her busband to act as if we were living in those good old times : when the wife was the husband‘s chatâ€" | tel, like his house, or spade, or goa.t:.â€"l Collier‘s for August 19, 1905. | All urinary complaints are caused by Diseased Kidneys. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills always cure the Kidneys, and therefore always cure urinary complaints. "At last I started to use Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills and I got relief from the first. After using two boxes I was completely cured, and you can bet I was a happy man. I cannot speak too highly of Dodd‘sâ€"«Kidney Pil}s." "For about four or five years," says Mr. Taggart, "I was a sufferer from Kidney ‘Lrouble, and the scores of mediâ€" cines I used gave me no relief. I was forced to get up three or four times every night and my life was simply inisâ€" erable. Tilbury, Ont., Aug. 14.â€"(Special.)â€" Mr. Wimn. Taggart, a wellâ€"known and highly esteemed farmer of Tilbury East, tells of his remarkable cure of long standing Kidney Disease by Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills. Canadian Weliâ€"known Tilbury East Farmer Tells How Easily be Got Hid of his Troubles. plete. Wm. Taggart‘s (Kidnuey Disease Cured by Dodd‘s Kiduey Piills. at Darmstadt. ‘The features are singuâ€" larly attractive, but Mr. Lee does not reâ€" gard the chain of evidence which would identify them with Shakespeare as comâ€" HE CAN SLEEP IN PEACGE NOW According to Mr. Sidney Lee, the Kesâ€" selstadt death mask of Shakespeare was discovred by Dr. Ludwig Becker, the !iâ€" brarian at the ducal palace at Darmâ€" stadt, in a rag shop at Mayence in 1849. The features resemble those of an alleged portrait of Shakespeare (dated 1637), which Dr. Becker purchased in 1847. This picture has long ï¬een in the possession of the family of Count Francis von Kesâ€" selstadt, of Mayence, who died in 1843. Dr. Becker brought the mask and the picture to England in 1849, and Richard Owen supported the theory that the mask was taken from Shakespeare‘s face after death, and was the foundation of the bust in Stratford church. The mask was for a long time in Dr. Becker‘s priâ€" vate apartments at the ducal palace, Darmstadt; it is now the property of Frau Oberst Becker, the discoverer‘s daughterâ€"inâ€"law, and is in her residence Now in the Possession of Frau Becker, of Darmstadt. SHAKESPEARE‘S$ DEATH MASK. and a little cool milk with it will Which i2 attached to facly gros ducts during . the â€" heatsd endegemath $y remulnt theat. Scott‘s Emulion CONTINUE DUBIOUS RESPONSE, uld continue the treatment . . . Send for free sample, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chembts, goc. and $1.00; all druggists. weather; smaller Hair Restorer , Ontario, Canaéa TORONTO This is said to be Maud Adams‘ faâ€" vorite story, says the Boston Herald: A colored "gemman," name unknown, but called "Culpepper Pete," who being enamored of some dusky maiden, and not having the courage to "pop" face te face, called up the house where she worked and asked her over the teleâ€" phone. When he got the Ii\roper party on the line he asked: "Is dat Miss Johnâ€" sing?" "Yaâ€"as." "Well, Miss Johnsing, I‘ve got a most important question to ask you." "Yaâ€"as." "Will you marry me?" "Yaâ€"as. Who is it, please?*" i ence in American waters Of IB® siom . clodulme.s Le~al sarcc n C L. l...f ott to San *eancisen, rr'\’;ilsirm;zsu:dron commanded _ by Prince "The credulity of a mother, a wife, & | Qre., (Lewis and Cl Louis of Battenberg is in fulfilment of the wsetheartâ€"is there anything on earth | tie, Victoria, and V naval reorganization plans adopted by the r y * o a4 rates, correspond Admiralty last December. These plans conâ€" to equal that MaLe "‘nd. wonde;rful f‘“‘}h?†points in Canada. Ci centrated the beavy fighting strength of the _ "But to illustrate womans‘ credulity: | train service, favorab navy where it was most likely to ue needed. "A young man entered the dmwing- ret\tl‘rn llmltz;,.g Rl-;tt::l‘:l ® e Ar a â€" mation can o w fosed i9 ghare the cosst that is neavem Lo foom of the girl â€"whom he was soon to | PAAD, CL0 Bt tPteie France, was given a base on the North Sea, marry. j § lOnL where the former Home Fleet (now abolishâ€" "The girl came down to meet him with *msucuilit ed), used to rtznde’zvous. hIt complx'}ses. l]we- a severe frown on her pretty face. Just an H ;:.:]f.‘ii_Qli;?ma]:d“?:f g(;f,ho,},,;r s‘{fï¬::{,’ ?:'CSK? "‘John,‘ she said, ‘father saw you this (Philadelp perior to cither of the fleets which ware enâ€" nrorning going into a pawnbroker‘s with| Many jests will be gaged in the row famous battle of the Sea q large bundle.‘ 'Kek:-%n::r:e%({:erri:eia%"s a r y a s | P ies\ hss b‘e\ezu:-eYn:xsm({g":‘be:â€Atll;l:{ighf'a‘?e?tf ‘John flushed. Then he said in & low | on which his claim f« with a base at Gibraltar. It has eight batâ€" VOice: ; i | has disappeared. Yet tle ships. Then there is the Mediterranean . "‘Yes, that is true. I was taking the | DlG, Of soldierly, patr mest w Homs Pnow are thanca" baticaee Bawnbroker some of my. old clothes. | $ Qreent ww Pb s 1)1;‘(-011‘1111.1551&;‘11- in European waters, and with YOu sce, he and his wife are frightâ€" | it is only the compar; fifteen more in reserve at Portsmouth, Plyâ€" fully hard up.‘ ‘of consc.lentlousneu \ mouth and Chatham, trmey comprise the heavy | "*(Oh, John,. {forgive me!‘ exclaimed the | *Ddeserved money A fighting force of thhe n:‘;,-, In c%nnï¬c.t‘.’lon voune sirl. ‘How truly noble you are"â€â€˜:,l:’;:e:‘“e' it a fit with the Channel, the Atlantic an Itâ€" + 6 K‘ : * @ x â€" erranean fleets, there are cruker squairons, ®_=~~~~_"""â€"ooooocormamerecnenenremcame each of six ships, commanded by a rear adâ€" miral, as well as a special cruiser squadron < to be created, with a base at Devonport, These cruiser squadrons, chiéfly of armorâ€" ; \ ed vessels of high power, besides coâ€"operatâ€" | ing with the fleets to which they belong, | That precious remedy, is a positive oure for all female diseases, are detached from time to time for special rircular and free sample. R. S. McGILL, Simese, Ont. exercises or cruises, among | other | things, | @â€"mmemmunemmmmememmrmmemrommmmonmoonnmnooscmmmnmmmennttmme "to show the flag in imposing force wherâ€" : e C ememememmmants ever it may bedqnmed to :, politically or W strategetically advisable." s there are no political or strategical reasons for any of OUR LAT:'T them being in American waters just now, the visit of that which Frince Louis comâ€" mands, which is part of the Atlantit fleet, E.B.EDDYQ p is to be regarded only as what may be lookâ€" ed for from year to year in the ordinary ‘ = course of naval duty. It is an evidence ‘ ’, that the abandonment of Halifax as a base is not an abandonment in any way of Britâ€" 1;1: interests in North America. It is, raâ€" * ther, a test of the new arrangement cf the fleet as respects its capacity to send a powâ€" NOISELESS. HKEADS WON‘T FLY OFF. erful force wherever it may be requirei on either side of the Atlantic.â€"Montreal Gazâ€" If dropped on the floor and stepped on, it will not ette i wi 9e | ] times happens with the common parlor match. Will strik 1 En e Tok in He ( T wa t | 4 the best yet. es, Chronic Erysipelas, Liver Spots, Prurigo, Psoriasis and other eruptions of the skinâ€" what Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment has done for others it can do for youâ€"cure you. One apâ€" plication gives relief. â€"35 cents.â€"87. I was only six feet from this gun when the first shot was fired, and was looking intently in the top of the camâ€" era at the great machine, and the men so beautifully reflected on the mirror. I have a dim recollection of hearing the word ‘Fire!" and then a great many things happened. It seemed as if the whole ship shook, and the very pin in my hat loosened. A strange light apâ€" peared in the camera. _ I released the shutter, pushed in ths slide, and the photograph was saved. Another plate was quickly inserted, but by this time pieces of the ground glass were flying in my face. At the next shot the Insâ€" board fel from its fastenings, and photographing was ended for the day. â€"Mrs. C. R. Miller in Lesle‘s Weekly. Eczema, Itch, Barber‘s Itch, Ulcers, Blot:hâ€" so bad after all, when the order to try the fourâ€"inch gun was given. The cartâ€" ridges used here weigh fifty xounds. The pointer and trainer, two diferent men, each uses a telescopic sight. The trainer must keep a vertical wire in his sight on the middle of the target by training the gun liberalli, while . the pointer is responsible for the range and must decide when to fire. The target could be hit at every shot if it were not for the concussion which continually knocks the sight out of place. The man who keeps the score uses powerful marâ€" ine glasses, and through these he can see the shell hit the target. "Fire the sixâ€"poundér first," came the order from the bridge, and like a flash every man was at his post. Again and again the gun was firedâ€"shot after shot in rapid succession. As the powâ€" der is smokeless, there was only a flash and all was clear. These guns are used in battle against torpedoâ€"boats and the unarmored parts of ships at close range. I was congratulating myself it was not If you wish for no refreshments and for no information, he respects your feelâ€" ings and acknowledges your right to taciturnity, and keeps on his steady jogâ€" trot, making five miles an hour for hours at a time, coming to the end of his journey as ready for another pull as if he had four legs instead of two. Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever‘s Dry Soap a powder. It will reâ€" move the grease with the greatest ease. 36 What a wonderful institution the inâ€" telligent manâ€"horse of Japan has become, exclaims Rev. Francis E. Clark in Everyâ€" bod{": Magazine. He has all the virtues of his equine brother and none of his vices. You beckon to your horse to come across the street and he at once obeys you. He never shies at a piece of white paper and cares naught for a steam rolâ€" ler. Without bit or bridle or checkâ€"rein he goes just where you tell him. Moreâ€" over he may be wiser than you yourself are in many matters, and will tell you the direction, and all the turnings that lie between you and your destination, descanting, if you desire him on your route, and the viewâ€"points from which you can get the best glimpses of the surrounding country. If the robe that keeps you warm in winter gets untucked, the manâ€"horse stops and adjusts it, and if you wish to buy a newspaper to while away the time, or a basket of oranges and. persimmons wherewith to refresh yourself, he lets down the shafts and trots off to the nearest store to make the purchase. 1 HAVE YOU A SKIN DISEASEâ€" THE MANâ€"HORSE OF JAPAN. A Tribute to the Competence of the Rickâ€" THE CRUISER SQUADRON. Miss Johnsing Was Willin‘. Photographing a Firing Gun. s and stockings ing around her mans bare feet that if they are d in rose water, her house t _ feet are bui ‘ are scrubbed ater, powdered ; blue ribbon wouldn‘t look in is the evening i woman e to be built on ‘John flushed. Then he said in a low voice: "‘Yes, that is true, I was taking the awnbroker some of my old clothes. §'0u see, he and his wife are frightâ€" fully hard up.! _ s e "The girl came down to meet him with a severe frown on her ?retty face. "‘John,‘ she said, ‘father saw you this nrorning going into a pawnbroker‘s with a large bundle.‘ "Like many another great man, he has a simple and childlike mind. _ A baby eould take him in. He has the credulity of a woman." Mr. Shonts smiled, "The credulity of a woman," said he. "The credulity of a mother, a wife, a sweetheartâ€"is there anything on earth to equal that rare and wonderful faith?" "But to illustrate womans‘ credulity: "A young man entered the drawingâ€" room of the girl whom he was soon to marry. Charitabre, Chairman Shorts, of the Isthmian Canal Commision, said of a famous enâ€" gineer the other day: Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, spraims, sore and swollenm throat, coughs, etc. Save 50 by use of one botâ€" tle. Warrarted the most wonderfe) Biewish Cure ever known. The London Chronicle comments on the extreme and growing awkwardness of the refusal of Parliament to recognize marriage with the deceased wife‘s sister, for, being legal in Australia, it leads to many unpleasant affairs, one of the worst of which olcurred during Victoria‘s reign, when, arrangements having been made to present an Australian Cabinet Minister and his wife at court, it was found that the wife was a deceased wife‘s sister, and the proposed presentation was immediately dropped, to the discomfiture and resentment of all involved in the afâ€" fair. It is known that Edward VIIL, when Prince of Wales, voted in the House of Lords in favor of such marriage, so that another awkward episode will probably not occur. EXCLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT ORANGE BLOSSOMS EIGHTY YEARS OLDâ€"CATARRH FIFTY YEARS. Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder cures him. Wart any stronger eviâ€" dence of the power of this wonderful remedy over this universal disease* Want the truth of the case confirmed? Write George Lewis, Shamokin, Pa. He says: "I look upon my cure as a miracle.‘"‘ It relieves in ten minâ€" utes.â€"89 h The satisfact washing done and well done, user of Suntiâ€"ht P A Question of Marriage. inliâ€"ht Soap. the daV- to every 10B Just an Honest Citizen. (Philadelphia 1ress.) Many jests will be made about the manm who surrendered his pension because he has become a Christian Scientist, and the illness on which his claim for a pension was based has disappeared. Yet the man is an examâ€" ple of soldierly patmotism and hbonor. He dealt as squarely with the government as a decent man deals with another individual 1t is only the comparative rarity of this sort of conscientiousness which refuses to accept endeserved money from the government wmc_h makes it a fit subject for the paraâ€" The Name Noahk. Not many persons are sufficiently acâ€" ’quainted with the Bible to know that Noah was the name of a woman as wel !as of the patriarch. _ _ During June, July, August and September the Chicago and North Western Railway will sell from Chicago round trip excursion tickâ€" ets to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Ore., (Lewis and Clarke Exposition), Seatâ€" tie, Victoria, and Vancouver, at very low rates, corr-pondln‘lg cheap fares from all points in Canada. Choice of routes, best of train service, favorable stopovers, and liberal return limits, Rates, folders and full inforâ€" mation can be obtained from B. H. Bennett, (ozeneul Agent, 2 King street east, Tororto, nt. Is an Openâ€"Air Life Healthy? Compared to other forms, health inâ€" surance is in its infancy, and yet during its eight years of existence it has come to the conclusion and held on to it with dogged determination, that an "outâ€"ofâ€" doors" life is not the most healthy,. The health risk, according to its underwritâ€" ers, varies with the accident risk. The man who leads an active, openâ€"air life suffers more from illness than the man who stays quietly at home and takes care of himself. The fireman is as bad a health risk as he is an accident risk. The farmer, an excellent life risk, is a poor health risk. In the winter he loafs, in the summer he overworks, in the fall he breaks down and the insurance comâ€" pany sends its cheque.â€"Leslie‘s Monthly Magazine for August. PACIFIC COAST EXCURSION3, Reference was duly made, and in the eleventh verse of the tiirty-lixth ebï¬' the coroner found mention made of " = lah, Tirzah and Hoglah and Milcah and Noah, the daughters of Zelophehad." A SOUR STOMACH AND A SOUR TEMPER travel handâ€"inâ€"hand, and are precursors of mental and physical wreck. Nine bundred and ninetyâ€"nine times in a thousand food ferment (indigestion) is the cause. Dr. Von Stan‘s Pineapple Tablets will keep the stomach sweetâ€"aid digestionâ€" keep the nerve centres well balanced â€" they‘re nature‘s panaceaâ€"pleasant and harmless. 35 cents.â€"88 At an in:;ï¬ut in England a female witâ€" ness gave her Christian name as "Noah." The coroner remarked that he had never before known a woman to bear the name. Whereupon the witness, who was well posted in the origin or her singular preâ€" nomen, said: _ 7 c ue _ "It is a Bible name, sir; you‘ll find it in the last chapter of the Book of Numâ€" DowiRIOX SGA00L, OF TELEGRIPHY TELEGRAPHY TWO ELECTRIC MOTORS. Direct current, 1% and 8 horseâ€"power. dress Box 10, Aotm"s' WANTED, TO SELL A SPROIâ€" alty; good demand for article in rural section; write i~" »necial offer. Will adverâ€" TDE C Z0 0C C mL2 44 parsth iint * SS sha »bfld, aoftor soothe the ehild softens the Nes nmmuï¬&nuuvï¬m ISSUE NO. 34, 190. a;'.‘y- be ueed for Adldn scoothe the child, softens the . t Ne oc ns rtoiney Rog) A telegrapher earns from $540.00 to $1,800.00 a year. Do you? If not, let us qualâ€" ify you to do so. Our free telegraph book ex})hinf' everything. Write for it toâ€"day. AGENTS WANTED. FOR SALE TIMES OFFICE, B. W. SOMERS, Write for description , Ont. DISAGREEMENT _ AMONG ENVO "The Indemanity Question Prov be a Stumblins Bisct, "TheCession of Territory and Pos ion of Interned Ships A Portsmouth, N. H row the peace confe until Mondsy m the Japan« mity of commu a:‘ments. Judge velopments and an â€" #toâ€"morrow, Monday‘s mjatters to a head, a W] soon know to be peace or a co awar in the Far East current negotiation wmm exist alsc of Japan‘s demand erated by Russia war there is a has § h that lies ti» failure, and from ances the prospects are not tht besi. an the I‘)i)b‘\. the ba ridors of the We â€ce plcl.lip'»'\‘l'llll;u refused to comp: of ingemnity, th hlock to a success termineg 1 They are 4 game merd conditions. over. 1 is sian commis a â€" considerable seems to hang enough of fac inteliigent ide« President of insisted upor come at all. Abandonin for speculat in these criti Toâ€"day‘s develop beginning of the c tions. The main the remunmeration Each side clung to tion, and it became was no rhyme oi «liscussion at thi the question of Ja MIOfl of the tered at America: but there was > views that the en aside temporarily, that they were un was some discussi ence upon the 1i naval armament i waters, but this ) d I'hell tht‘ cont« for the day. Only the bare been â€" accomplished penetrate beyond : the star chambe t mations i: mwï¬ is known, some sidelights or tion, and to give the momentous p: the plenipotentiari M’l‘bere are some hope in the 1: demand for the f: halien Island, wh xit of conquest justed. _ Accord standing â€" obtaine sians have virtua me.e limited ; but under _ shall not be fortif of naval operatior uppnrmtly no abs arranged, and th which :s article 5 ditions, will be the envoys come solidated and .« points upon which was received. The importance « standing as to th territorial â€" conques eannot be overest ent . conditions. Russians have m would never surrer ritory to their e subject of Sagha the exchangos the believed, and ho the good ship of p have come, bpt good semse of t agreeing to leav« ture discussion. both sides found both sides found gether, and whil mally entered i1 this particular as if the very territorial â€" cessi mised. Amother thing, 1 envoys have been oi conciliation i points â€" upon . wh meither would give demand for the po ern Chmese Raiw enterprise of Russ to do, perhaps, tha bringing about t war, was also reg! worst stumbling bi of successful nc the evoys, to the on the outside, ma agreement that the way running fro: point ten miles fr ander Russian c0" B Mhould ie n gbourt; be *rol, subject to a of details It D« that this future © related to the T ever surren to their e of Ragha hanges the: , and â€" hor 4 ship of p« It was here me "8¢ Atledâ€"Envoys Will Co Their Governments. D Conciliation AC m n n sur ns 9+ nan W H rl n