'lirtrraneur-hrres2-g.t-t. B-tttatrou areatthotooteethiotae.. "o-Why. pl. 1 mam from your tau- in] at: it was proper not to know My- “I a all. ' no that he has a clear view of It for i Chum-e. turn straight. in. He should adopt the same tactics in paging these arrow. treed roads; swinging to the Mt until he but parsed, then run back to the right. In approaching from the 1ch he has only to step on that side, rand when opposite the narrow my turn F-he Outing Magazine for January. "Yin," answered Gear ' “I had to (ltd: I train." to . rorced to Drag Himself Away, (Smart Bet.) '%eorgr," said his mother-in-law, "I a)»: coming out of a human yea- It is impossible for a. driver to see down tho street until he has negotiat- od the turn, which generally is too late to avoid a collision with horse, ear or pedestrian travelling the hidden road. A little common some will enable the motorist to avoid this contingency. First of all he should reduee his speed to a minimum. Then, it approaching from the loft instead of continuing to the narrow gnted on his own-the right-side of the and. mad. he should run over to the loft, and when abreast the tread way M a... " L... - -I_-_ __. - -- - , _ w -Vv.-- e "r""""" v- v- """""'F IVE "no now To TAKE CORNERS WITH AN marost shelter miles amty.---Nilwaukee AUTOMOBILE. ( Liantinel. Taking corners af a high ft ed is dan. I We not only to o'u'lJa"nt'?l1','s' the oar! SAID '." GREAT MEN. but to any one else who happens to be No conflict :5 so. severe as his who not the turn. To this particular form labors to subdue himstlf.--yv.v. of "road hog" three out of every four Education ice possesszon of which man out-of~town accidents are accountable. cannot be rot*ed.---Memrnder. This is especially true of New Jersey, To be content with what one has is when there are so many narrow, thickly the greatest Ind. truest ruter.--Cieero. wooded roads leading from the widemain He who think! his We; below him MgMare. will certainly be below he pl-ass. "YA, Dodd's hank} jiiiU%ai"iii; Lamb-(o and Kidney Disease, and tho but of it is I have stayed cured!’ Fortune Harbor, Nild.. Jan. 1lk--(Spe eia0.--tkores of people in this neigh- borhood are living proofs that Dood's Kidney Pills cum all Kidney ailments from Baku-lie to BrigU's Dim. Anon the most remarkable cures is that ot Mr. Richard Quirk, and he gives tho story of it to the public as follows: “I Baffered for over twenty yam from Lmnugo end Kidney Disease, and st menu. was totally unable to work. After ten or twelve years of doctors' tmtment. I had made up my mind that my 00:1:th was incurable. Reading of was y Dodd's Kidney Pills tempted. no to try them. I did so with little faith, but to my great surprise I had not taio u more than halt a box before I felt relief, and after tho use of seven or eight has, I was fully cured and B new man. Inch"! Quirk Doctoral 'trr A Dozen Xian Ind Thought In: Case Incur. 'ttue-Dodd'. Kidney Pin- Cnnd But Dodd's Kidney Pills Made Him a New Man. wan we harmony-us through the Mr that In below the freezing point the moisture utths upon It in tho form of A clear lone ot ice. while. on the other had. when Ibo Mr u moistened ttttd its Datum I: above the freezing point the no. " ke 19 opaque. glil'll ONLY Mg _ OUT OF sums sun which Iran Ind f nucleus. When the " that Is manure an: a clear lone hard. when an†In": wlll serve on In excellent be- moan: for a. further ensue. It In eully underatood that the force of annual†has been constantly pulling an Atom ot dust and lte congenled moll- tttre toward the ground. In it mm: on In journey back to the earth it wlll plan Grouch that; of " which differ krontly h Del-turn and temperature. Some of the air will be above the freezing point. and other layers wilt be below It. whlle ft will be no uncommon thing for the when». to duh through a cloud eome not-Ind- of feet thlv-k. The hnllstone it- nelf. with lts heart ot lee, u nlwnya be- low the freezing polnt. no that my molsw are mulch settles upon lt ls promptly Iran and forms a girdle ot ice than: the nucleus. . In such s piece it in not long before the moi-lure on the Atom ot mm freezes. The form which the {man moisture takes de- pends upon t'irertmstaatess., but there no muy possibilities before it. It ml! "nailing Is a tiny pellet ot new, or may at. an “up. ot an ice crystal or Iimply no form at a frozen raindrop. Any of not than will serve as In excellent by my." for a further change. nnd q6tggte 'ny of being canted up to these height... So the Journey I: made by get- ttatt Into the VI! of one of the about neonatal] current.- wluett opting upward from "most every part at tho enrth's sur- The holistm to attain great size must piano to tho on“ from o are“. height. Tho cloud: which non " the groom: dir- unco from the ouch no then knowu " no cimo. and no often may miles show no to“ oi tho highest. mountain. It the bottoming of I hollow!“ con only dive to tho oath from its height. it will. in its loading flight, on: through strata of air diluting very much u “and: temper:- tm and moisture. and then no circum- “as moot tovoroblo to its development. IPt before it can toxin its descent lt must to loo-d in them. It is coming to be be- linod that without these “one of dust upon which tho moisture ot the ll? can settle. than would so no "when. no lot. no snow, cow. clouds or hm. With- out the†hint. plui'orus. " they no rolled. upon which the moistun con- can. u it Ilightl. ruin would be con- tinuuly pouring down upon the earth. These notes loop the lune-pliers buoyed up till such time as clrcunltncu oom- oet them to yield up the supplies they I." collected. " c little vapor should haven to condone. on a particle ot dust Hating nimlcuiy shout in the air. there is the beginning or what. under favorablo czculmtances. will become a lullsized hail- I I no. Artat-otduattsth.mtet-oteaetg wine“. These atoms ot dust new“. - out o: the “manure, an A:- and not my In the lower um. of the air. In): the with curry them to the tops of the highest. mountains. So that, no - whether an!“ ot " tre ob- and by uncoun- o: mum climb- gn._mln}|te pgrtlclos_ of dust no may: to It In. would know how a hasten. it _ to must first “an: it. no will ftnd um it is composed or I gummy of - calm: “and m concentric than or when. and and: son. in tun will have a. widow. to an concerning tho an!" of I hall-lone on m I†to the earth. Chipmthemm the humane Thai! is an old saying that you can’t make bricks without straw, but that doesn't teem to influenee the anti. of chicken uhd without chicken. Coal Output of Pemylnnia. (Boston Herald.) In the last calendar year more coal was mined in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania than in any other twelve months in the history of the business. The output of the mines in estimated at close to 70,000,000 tons, of which more than 61,000,000 tons can be classed as the marketable 'Atl',) This marketable output is larger t n the gross output in any vent Friar to 1008 and the III- ount which ug salable has more than doubled since 1884. The 40,000,000 mark was firrt"ttmehert for total Ittgrt h 1888, the 50.0mm mark in l 5, the 60,00,00 mark in tMt. ' 'Whne Gi, mind is still tender it is easy to mould it; vice: which have grown up with us are with difficulty er- addicted.--6eneea. Iguoiance combined with discretion is more serviceable than skill accompanied trst,.tyt..raegaztot.-rDuerydes, There is no great achievement that isi not the result of patient working and! wtiting.-J. G. JIollytd. I Not only he who wrongs you, but he who wishes to wrong you is your enemy. --Demoeribus. Hii who thinks his place ttefGr%isn mill certainly be below his Itltum-ats. ville. Education is a possession of which man cannot be robbed.---Nemrnder. To be content with what one has is the grates: and trggat rfoher.--Cieero. Tho lighthouse can only be up. prouehed on one side, and then whon the water is smooth, for there is an abrupt wall at the top of hte platform, some thirty feet high. and the boat and all the supplies are hauled up by a derrick. There have been many occasions when the returning keepers found a heavy sea. running at the lighthouse, so that they could not approach and have had to take chances of laying by for hours in their little eraft--not the safest thing to do on Lake Superior-or of making for the nearest shelter miles amty.---Nilwaukee Sentinel. In the early days of the light house‘ the keep re had only one or two assist- ants, and there were periods of months that he never got away from his post. The Government, however, soon realized the undesirobility of such lonesome service and the difficulty of getting! men who would stay on the rock for so long a. stretch. In later years! there have been four men, including the keeper, to care for the light and i,iiiil fog whistle, and by an arrangement be. tween them two are on duty all the! time. l The rock itself rises from two and a half to three feet above the level of the lake ,and is but fifteen or ewtnty feet in diameter. This pinnacle marks the site of a dangerous shoal extend- ing north by west and south by east for 290 feet, with a width of 1,500 feet. Close around it, however. is some of the deepst water in Lake Superior, soundings Inning been taken for MC feet. During the season of navigation the keeper and his assistants while at the rock look out on nothing hut sky and water except when they sight a pas- sing ship in the distance or hte light- house tender visits them with sup-- plies. perior and visible only to lake craft which make Marquette' and ohter ports along the south shore out of Keweenaw Point or those which Ply from one end of the lake to the other, is a eonieal graystone tower rising 102 feet above the level of the water and from which er. ery night during the season of naviga- tion there flashes a white light every thirty seconds, warning navigators of the danger zone. This is Stannard Rock 1lighthouue-ute lonesome" spot on the ibig island "a-of which Captain Cham- bers of Mackinac Island, is keeper. So isolated is the light house that the nearest port-- Marquette -- is more than fifty miles distant, while the nearest land of any description isl, Manitou Island. In clear weather the light is viable for a distance of over eighteen miles, and in thick weather there is a ten inch steam whistle to give warning to passing craft. Lighthouse in Lake Superior That is so Miles From Nearest Port. Out of sight of land, perched on a pinmcle of r.ot.kt, tttout in Lake Su- than Mrs. Win-law‘s Soothing Syrup would always be used tor Children Teething. It rooting ta. child, tootha- the tuna. cum wind colic and in tho but. remedy for our rho». -""___ w “(â€13 D tor 85 cents. Sample blocks and tor 4 cents. Address, BROWN MPG. CO.. HAMrtgrr A Pain-TV Ian... -v----_ -vv- vmyuc, DAVULAISH U“ l" Scotch, 6 tor " cents. Dominion Sup- ply Home. King strut, Hamilton, Ont. PICTURE POST CARDS, ENGLISH Scotch. ' for " ppm. r_..t.,.. " for 10e; 60 (or 808:100. tp, 1 85; nu ditterent. Latent and I ht Can“: MO mixed. 8: album W. R. Adam. Tomato. Ont. ‘V err town. W. m honest and ener- getic men in Darin! business for them- selvu. Write to-du- Portrait Supply Co., Dept. P. 1'arkdale, Toronto. Ae',',',,',',': an ARE mm Fii,Eie", comma n: ot any , " " beats! business: we magnum the high- on and. ot f1nvttrinq povdm in America: Tt TUW"', trom the to It tle, d . py to us for Trarttettlaes, want. MdaufhertUriise Co., Hanna», Ont. ---.----, EPRESENT ' . - v R ere .m Amaremwe m- WANTED. among IN EVERY county. with a rug-to (about. and all our goods. Permanent employing: to an" m1. No like. Adam. Pox 9.5.2, Mont, in fioqvepir Post Cari; AGENTS WANTED; MISCELLANEOUS. A LONESOME SPOT, HAMILTO N, ONT, block and GTiGr. yous tor making ext and Neheat idea In Ink patch- work. All the co!- ors of tho uln- bow nicely blend- mt. We gem! t!lkt, sample The “PURITAN MAID" in the ut.. Particulali is sofor 33 1/diiii To procure a patent in Mexico the party making application, unless present in person, mast furnish Ibis representa- tive with a letter of puthority---carta de poder in b'panish-sigmrd by himself or herself in the presence of two wit. l nesses. Ordinarily legalization by a Mex. ican Consul is not required. It must be borne in mind that one carta de poder i will not answer for several applications. Ias each application for either patch; or trade mark must, be accompanied by a separate earta de poder. This must be accompanied by a full and complete de- 'ann'ption, and claims of and for the in- vention. If they are sent in Spanish ready for filing they must be in tripli- ! cate, on clear white paper 330 by 215mm, ' approximately 13 by 18% English inches, l written with typewriter on one side only . of the paper, leaving on each trheet a ' left hand margin of one-fourth the width i of the paper. Of course, if they are not i sent in Spanish the local representative ',' “tends to all the details, which in by I far the better way, Be should he fur- 'nished with full names, profession, citi- I airship and residence of epplionnt. l "Some day," said the struggling liter- ary genius, writing his mum with . flourish, "that autograph will be worth 3 thousand dollars." "perhaps kw,†"/le',t,t,' T tho undid In“, pie on" t 0' 1rit-siy note, "tmt you needn't 't'tgol',',',l ing to woit until that time comes glare I India on it, young man."-Ahieago Tri- Bow a Woman lesion. (Council Grove, Kan, Gland.) A vomu nevu- losu In“ In the In: she might have Med. tr he mean. she prides heroelt on tho not that all. could have had him. lt sh. (All: no is - proud at the tact that the Ind tor-13M qntrttqh to turn him down. mum‘s Llaincnt Cures luau-met. A strange fact to which sea water owes its peculiar power is that it con- tains practically every known chemical element from gold to potassium. The animal organism is a sort of sea. water aquarium in motion, and disorder or feebleness in the organs may mean sim- ply that the aquarium liquid is be- neath the proper strength or improperly proportioned. Children are especially nus- teiptible, and at the Maternity Hospital the premature and weakly are soon brought to sturdy health by treatment with sea water, administered either as a draught or “y subcutaneous injection. The young French bacteriologist, Ilene Quinton, has confirmed by his researches the popular belief in the curative and constructive efficacy of sea. water. HF. has discowrcd that in all forms of sup- erior We, man included, the liquid in which all the internal organs) are per- petually bathed is chemically identical with the son water slightly diluted. He deduccs that animal life was first form- ed in the sea. liven animals habituated to fresh water contain as a necessity of life sea water from which they are first nourished and vitalized. 1 Sunlight Soup in “(for than other mp0, but in but when and in tho Sunlight VI,- Bay Sunlight Bow ad follow direction Has Cured Shiloh Every large city Is the rendezvous ot I. certain portion ot the criminal classes. For the pollce to plead Ignorance on this count would be absurd. They are laminar with this class and know their haunts. It in- uead of tolerating them under any condi- tions the town was made so uncomfortable they would wither be compelled to mend their ways and move on the spasmodic cru- sades so frequently in evidence would be {1111196085 In the war against Japan they were I. in- mentahie failure. an no amnion did they live up to their reputation of posse-lug the single Ihtue-couriure. During the present crisis the Cossacks have only proved them- selves to be bullies and cowards of the low- est kind. They respect neither age nor sex. but destroy their unfortunate victims as re- leutiesaiy as a hungry tiger kills an unte- lope. They appelr to obey the orders of their officers and observe some discipline in behavior it not in appearance, but when once set upon their deadly task they do not appear to be checked until they have tit1ishod 'it.-itilade'ohity Record. Their repuataion u fighters was earned chiefly during the Napoleonic invasion. when the French cavalry repeatedly charged them without effect. Under the conditions of mod- ern warfare, they have proved useless and since then have been Minded with the re- gular revolt-y they have lost their ehlet source of "risturiictGGirriaiarGii"tGi"ii fighting: . - W ,_.--_ _,-.. -.... m“.-. ._~- can horses, arms and equipment. Nothing about them resembles the smart cavalry ot other European countries, for both they and their ponies are small and Irtsitmiticiutt and :62}th ls properly groomed. . In Virtues Shown by Race in Japanese War or Present Crisis. . Originally the Count: were hand“: and they s.eemed to is" retained all the worst. qualities of am disreputable class and to have lost all trace of the rough kindnen‘ think sometimes characterized hrlzands in reality as well u in romance. They new by no means always supported the czar-s. but often tough: against them, tad it was not until 1814 that they gave up their brlundage and New J' kind of 51"“ regular horsemen who, in return'tor a mntl at land and freedom trom taxation. came out to Pr,ttrtets called upon and brouglrt inch-l Getting a Mexican Patient Shiloh's Consumptim Cure the L I II '. . . . ' u am IR well off, ' ", _ , a“. brakezh 'trid" £51k, “In: l the. contiition of his n? Lei'-,'),'),,!,,.),",',,',"; libel); w . I a , , . . ' . . _l'l"v'e2Cl!C'irltd,t year by ytau it,",): 1,'i',t,p,'l"i'i't, , 11:0 “heel horse of the first beamed of the merit of ' -,., ' nu a ell ot pCyliar tone attach- . "r.1 to his harness. 'l here was not a. iloh '"'ir'e (f,',','; with the train. . 1e our wagons had been tmotives-ted u . in?“ t/igtt,fioet and " 'Into large one-romn hulls-1's. and were fr:: g. . at W- fit-10d up comfortably, one of them can- be mhgztiz have used Shiloh wouldâ€: ', taming an organ. on whieh one of the med itshoizld know 'iutuat,tt"i', â€Minn girls Cl,“ playing Roek of Ages, told with a .. e . . an singing 1e hymn to the musical 1c- doesn't cure 'p,tftetrgtr2lr'; if I e.YRanim.e,nt. This was the living room what youpaidforit. Shiloh “f†the girls, while their father and mother and two of the younger children s Cured oeeupied another wagon. Tho remaining . zsons occupied the third. and the furth tttttacl/ate, 1titte, cues of was used as a kitchen and dining room. cure GL' g ton . Let tt Alli of the rooms were equipped with s ores "Last . . . '/i"etgJstj,fg'l for '.hgL'yteatf, IFamp for your: lived near Battle mm??? mmba'mcoh'mmuï¬idiwwpd Creek, Mich. and was; engaged in the 1'1'tld',Qf,'v','.' (hfht.'gg,uindie. 'l'l'l lumber business until a short time ago. “my," not aUe â€WSW n s'l'llfa',','l'l'l He said he had seen the pine forests con- :zrdmd 'th 'gi.r'a'l.'M'l Shikhmade ' yerted into building material until noth- ad "a, on; of Le,,i"ta"dtegrgglte..tt l mg was left hut farms. Being a woods. MS!- HrseintheeQui." . 60; i man, he looked around for tl new location land. found it near Columbus. Tenn. He 0 fill 'deculed to go there. and build houses on 25e ith 'ius nagnns in which to make the trip.--- . w guarantee " all M... Louisville-Courier Journal. tom d Giikiiii,Tii nothing did me tyer,', will used Shiloh- Comumplion Cure. our hula cured me. Thin winter I had nvcryhnd comma not able to 'ee.sk., my lungs were new on I tt gnd bluish; at; bugle. of 'ttt that: m we um. " sun " to m and every one a? then have been 'd,ut.'l.'l'f. Joseph. St. Hyacinth, Que." tux Sea Water as a Cure-All. u a can for Coughs. Colds. and all disease: of the lungs and " pangs. Thom who have used Shiloh would no: be without it. Those who have never gd would know that every tlt, is u .. e m I . it doesn't cure 'y'C,'."h't'l'd', will refund what you paid for it. Shiloh Strictly minim-T COSSACK ONLY A COWARD. Criminals in Large Cities, waste, " TORONTO ‘1 DR. VON STAN’S PINEAPPLE t IABLEI&--Mediea1 science by accident 4 discovered the potency ot the pineapple as a pun-cc: tor stomach troubles. The itntnottree percentage ot vegetable pepsin contained in the fruit makes It an almost indispensable remedy in cases of dyspepsia and indigen- tlon. One tablet utter each meal wlll cure .moet chronlc cues. 60,111 . box, 35 cents. *de up] "' GlGiidiiiU. dim Tn 'tMtv,' hy'. hand. It don’t ulna tam out that guy!" “Say mister, when you go back to the city hunt up some of those miter fella: and tell 'em to quit makin' up them fish. '2ttteelre,i he! ‘the_ country Aid's After a. couple of hours of fishing the two anglers, with their eontruting equip- ments, met again. "What, luck, mister!" asked the coun- “Twelve fat trout, four black has and some piekere1," said the dude fish- "PP: 1rWhttuvegolt landed t" "Didn't catch 1 single thing," answer- ed the mum. Struck with a. sudden thought, the tgr,".." youth continued, somewhat bit- r t . He passed a. country youth, who with a rough pole and line, was trying to lure trout from the stream with worm bait. The lad directed a. look of scorn at the outfit the city_ man carried. tryjoqth. Belied the Stories. The city sportsman, armed with Hub of every shape and color, a five and n m†ounce rod and a latent reel, and 3 treatise on fly casting under his arm. vandal his way toward the country strum. 'a did, I dld," the pale youth med; "But you'd be sick perforce If you had learned your seamnship By eorrespondeaco course." "Great Hornrpoont Did you Chldwick met You vowed that you could rail This barkentine across the sea And weather every gale.†The captain spoke unto the lad. "What M15 you. man?" quoth he "I never saw a. salt before With ludsman's malady. And though he were a. sailor‘s garb, No cabin boy was he. Athwart the rail he Hmply hung, Asad-tred into the sea. , _ Casa Bianca. t , [Up to Date.) (Puck.) The boy stood on the rolling deck Whonce all but him had fled, His we was of a. tombstone hue, His but! was on his head. Miami s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Since the announcement ot his coming marriage to Mire Roosevelt. Congressman: Lottgsvort11's mail has increased fourfold. Nearly half of his letters contains recipes for promoting the growth ot hair and he is ottered any quantity ot infallible tonic- it he will use them and send testimonials in return. lie gets statistics to prove that no bald-headed man has even been known to go insane; that lack ot hair is a preservn~ tlve against nil manner of pulmonary dis. eases; thlt criminals of all dunes are not ed tor their growth of shaggy hair, usu- ally straight and black, and that bald- hended men in all times and ages have Mood for benevolence. intellectual ripeness 1nd law-abiding qualities. A caravan, consisting of four house wagons and two bupgier, in which ten persons. W. C. lump, his wife, their five sons and three daughters were making their way south, passed through Jeffers sonville yesterday. .m,matititeearttt. W if"iGrtrl/'ilTat,l.= RUB t1.tLhiittutitrt ytihi, THE sUNLIGHT- Strange Moving Caravan. After Longworth. We must cut hard end deep as the wine surgeon would and try to extirputo the crhns ot wife-beating even at some ost to our teelititps. Lay the lash to the bark or the brute whose brain is so dull that he under- .tands no reasoning but that. Better I .wrlthlng, sanguine back than . trail, wan woman waiting at the Ituirs' head with ter- lror in her eyes Is she hear: " drunken step stumbling up the stairs, " heavy breathing and his curses, Ind knows what . he“ ot pain she must pus through be.. tore the (In... ' t .141.“ --_r----.-. I When an offiee-tseeker who has once been defeated is renominated he is gen- torally redeieated. - "__' - vveVI (‘3 23m“ 'PIN,',;,?.. '23:?“ .ikflfra,'Ttt,'Wat M Matte " hut- h$ï¬-~w , FARMERS AND DAIRYMEN - , “an“. A . m. I.tlLllll1tlLltItittrgiitrt, - _ a i')' E B. EDDY'S OUR-“ESE. FIBRE WARE «new: _ l, ,$lMr%rgqa,---___., " . 1 Creative Genius of Women. (Washington Star.) It is not true that woman lacks creative genius. tn fact. the Inventive teient is marked in woman. There is usually nonze- thin; original in her makeup. The rude unl- cuilne observer who nukes the charge that woman is defective in creativenesu is wrong. He has noted that when one women be- gins to wear a. certain or unrenaiu shape ot hit every other women must have the some shape. be it nhepeiy or enemies. lie bu observed that when one woman switch- on tho fullness ot the sleeve from the elbow to the shoulder or back again than: one shoulder to the elbow every other woman must do the name. Ho has observed that when one woman designs to bake a cake she insists on borrowing the neighbor's recipe, though this argue. more for womw'g your- once for precedent. than for her lack of or- isinaiity. Tho observer he: the noted that the first woman got ott the rim street cm- backward. and that ever since every other woman has done the same thing. T Mlnard’s Lilimenl Cures (large! in Cows DEAFNESS OF " YEARS' STAND- 1NG.-Protraotmt Catarrh produces deaf- ness in many mac-s. Capt. Ben. Connor, of Toronto. Canada, was deaf for r.'. years from Catarrh. All treatments failed to relieve. Dr. Agnew's Catarrhtu Powder gave bun relief in one day, and In a very short while the deafness left him entirely. It will do u much for you. 50 rettta.--N This is I common vomnlaint, unfortunate- ly, which appears periodivuly in Gunman newspapers. There is a lamentable prev..- lence upon the Dublin streets ot hrotanity. It in not. profanity which is provoked by anger or any unwwnnd- circumstance; it is deliberate and cold-blooded blasphemy, ut- ters din perfect dimard of those who my be passing by. in manila the ears of vo- men an dlittlo children. It is entirely ob.. Jectionable and Indecent. It the offender- ot their own accord have not the decency to consider the tooling: of others. they should be compelled to by the law ot the land, If rubbed between the haml- nnd in- haled fmquontly, it will never fail to cure cold in the head in twanty-four hours. It is also the best fur hnlison. sprains, etc. Yours truly, Dartmouth. Sink-I have used your MINARD'S ItNLMENT for the past M yams and whilst I have oeHtionally used other linimenia, I can mfoly say that I have never used any equal to yours. Minard‘s Linimont The Kaiser receive: $3,925.†I. year as king ot Prunin. but nothitw " Emperor of Germany. Reside] this he has an enor- mous private income, derived from mines, fisheries and estates, of which he owns more than my other man in Prusain. The King of Bavaria receives 81.350900 a year; the King or Saxony, $8'iG.000; the Grand Duke ot Baden. $400,000. The Czar ot Russia it paid “2.750.000 tor his private use. while each grand duke receives 51.000300 a year. in addition to these enormous salaries each ot these has . large income from mythic; Ind perquisites or many kinds, of which few outsiders know anything. Orange lliiNettaeiG-ii'riri'=i"i'" L'r"el"pe"h1',attrttrzte,t, m- mvlo. R. tt. mom. I“ a“ Mattr h m THERE It? NO §UBSTITUTE 1'lf1t1r1t!1tttma m m up. nu... -- lEVER BROTHERS llMlTED. TORONTO Eqixally good with hard or soft water. YOUR MONEY “FUNDED The reason foe this is beexuse Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure. contains no injurious chemicals --indeed, nothing but the active. cleansing, dirt-removing proper- ties of soap that is nothing but The Lash for the Brute. was; rand the clothes will be perfectly white, woolen: soft and fluffy. ' Hard rubbing and boiling we things of the C,', in homes where Sunlight p is used as directed. Sunlight Soap will not injure even the daintiest fabric or the Sunlight Soap is better chm other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way (follow directions). try the dealer from whom Sou but Sunlight Soap " you ad my cause for complaint. . - "u qreu. “W "I? an. no ans-xenon mu itiii _ Swearing. Good Pay. G. LESLIE Limitmi. '55 "To-marrow I'll go to bed, At six o'clock and get thing Before tho setting of tho " Lives there a nun who Inn At " I. m. "an coon u Does teal." and not“ all n Then wondered hour In dent Oliver-n1 Habit. (Won-11': Homo Comma Lives there u’mn who bu not ..1\n_mn»n-. In --- - _ - Mind's Uni-en! (In; La, It '18 I rainy morning and the cm In crowded. Tho conductor, a young “New. had urged over and over 1331:: â€may. roughly, entrancingâ€. Glove up the", Plano move into the centre ot the our. Plenty ot room up trout." Tho our stopped again, nnd n roam sought to [at on. Tho conductor gazed It the mug in the ear. “Gentlemen." he sold "renritr. “won't you pies" movo up ma nuke room for on. more ot Gat'. lot, best gut ta m-n9" cured it." " eentB.---8t "For Mac yours I wu autGiiiria ter on my hands. Dr. Anne-'1 mm .-'rhm. distreuin; skin «also: by one npplzcatlon. Dr. Anni? ' is tr potent cure tor all eruption" skin. June. (Install. WHko‘u-re. Accudento Resulting From Fatigue. (Philadelphin Telemph.) It was shown by on about". inquiry of the subject in France that the number of accident.- increuen proactively hour by hour during the tire hit on; that one: the mst " midday the number of accident- is notably less than in the in! hour ot tho iorenoon; that in the course of the second half day accidents again become from hour to haur progressively more nummuo no (in: ,the maximum number of 3collab to- ward' the end of the second hut do, to not- ably higher than the corn-pending Inui- mum in the morning. Tho iniiuonco C the workingmen's fatigue on the production of accidents stmdl out cloudy "on than observations, and it is euy to name how this comes about when it is "new that with fatigue the nttontion mail, dl- minishea and ditrttppeartt. Removis sll bird, soft or eall.ottaed lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, "my, atifles, sprains, son and swollen than, coughs, we. Ssve $50 by use of one bot. tle. Warranted the most wonderful Ble- mish Cure ever known. ENGLISH SPAVIN LlNlMENT i J. W. Matt, clerk and a-omoio unnum- of Mus-cl Pork township, in in WHIP the other day and mum us to any that he wu only medium drunk. When dun drunk he is a nuisance; when "Nat Mum drunk" he in . cross have-I II I. And a. monkey; whan cow he in a chant [allow and in nobody's tool. Tho moral in: He ought to m â€but. Ho "If: lobar en- ough to know wine became of " me)" “though molding no hi- nts-prawn of his condition be In: jun. “Indium drunk." He an. burner, ho who hump: made a donation to noun mu. claim and he and us to tell then! thet, tmp. Bret we havett't head from the children up to the time ot going to pm If this write-up doesn't suit him, we will lat him coupon his own "obituary" the next Um. no nt- eiiher dead drunk or "Nat indium drunk." just that incipient tom of kidney (lune which. it neglected. will - tnto Dub- born and distressing am tut will take long. tedious "tumult to can. Don't nex- leet the “buckncho ' of the moot In- sidious of disc-net. Booth All“ Kid- ney Cure new the ache in six hour- and curee.-30 SALT 'tmanCiEFFiiii, new)“. “Lamps give a great deal of trouble. We easy to forget WI of chimneys and hard to draw pictures of them m the air so tint the drawing will suggest to the clerk's mind just what kind of chimney is desired. These air pictures are a great lid for them. It's wonderful ---a women’l air picture of the Utrst, patent in potato waters or ice cream freezerg."--New York Sun. “Still another wanted some very fine wire to go through the things at the sides of a picture she wanted to hung up. She kept up such a lot of theeed- the-needle gestures to show me how tiny eyed the things were that I got pretty dizzy. w". “She held one hand like a drooping flower over the other. She got pretty nngry, I can tell you, when we brought her ceiling protectors. She waned an incandescent mantle. 'A woman in here â€may vented . ‘thing to nuke e hole.,' “net'- the nearest she could get to . gimlet. An- other wanted 'a thing to hang over the "And they get provoked if you dart understand at once vhf. they man. They use . great may gestures to help themselves out. in the bright lexicon of wornna," said the alumna in the have" chop. ‘Wonun could - buy Mun-e. Al. most everything here is just e thing to the Indies. mt me" It! MBAR. When uud by . Wm: in a ndvare ISSUE THE moment sue: my be "If there were no and: word " thing' Room for Just One Metre, J " of Medium - - -- - mm. In at the mug. in the car. said Jenny. “won't you Ind mum room (or on. ' 5..-; -:-A A best “it EYE-5?" thinks done I. sun." Companion. ) name, a"; mun-ea was Tet- “new: Ointment «noun "ttseed Ann'- oiatanent "with; at tho i. kc. like a“ she! the "It". 321 out the I "Every WI he! and mu: on dock we! time to mm "Ti, boat: ti tt tt " Ni it)