E| fact the prisoa popimaizion is 20 smail (and it is getting to be relatively smalâ€" ler) that its product is hardly worth considering. Nothing should be allowed to interfere with making the lives of donâ€" viets lives of workâ€"with making them earn their kep. They should really be made to recompense those they have wronged by their crimes. And the obâ€" struction sometimes unwisely placed in the way of making them work, and work hard, to support themselves and reimâ€" burse a wronged society, results in honâ€" est labor having to make up the loss. goous there displa devi the ownership of the 60,000 sharee and several millions of the other fellow‘s money. But thosoe who are eager to get rich this way should remember that they are not all Fricks,and that they might meet the fate that befell the wellâ€"known plunger. The Philadelphia Record says that the process of getting very rich very fast is simple enough; you have only to buy shares when they are down and sell them when they are up. Mr. Frick, it says, is credited with having bought 60,000 shares of Reading when they were low, and having sold them at or above 160 to "a wellâ€"known plunger" of New York, who was convineed by their advance that they wou!d advance still further. On the eontrary, they declined to 125%4, at which point Mr. Frisk began buying them again, and he is now credited with The Philadely process of getti simple enough; shares when the when they are is credited wit w Street Stea Mi of th nsiran at An At Canada has voted the $100,000 to the San Francisco sufferers, and it is probâ€" able that the money will be sent to the Relief Committee direct. It is genâ€" erally felt that Roosevelt in discouragâ€" ing foreign grants intended to refer to those only that were made to the U. S. Government, and had no intention of reâ€" pelling help sent to the local authoriâ€" ties or relief societies. 419 Ae At dian v€ i U In spite of the large immigration this year, the ery for men grows louder. The great activity in railway building and other large works makes demand active. Soon the Northwest farmers will be needing thousands of harvest hands, and the contractors fer the G. T. P. will be bidding high to get them. ‘These are exe als for Government institzrtions. Avd t is put forward as a solution of the blem ef how to employ prison labor hout bringing it to displace free or! Isn‘t it a sort of whipping the il arourd the stump? Would not the ds thus produced take the place of ds now made by free labor? Isn‘t re a lot of nonsense talked about the »lacing of free labor? As a matter of crete three inio t crete it m havi men in b Turkey tam trios NPCOW iN o St RV | cnvanr couor. liflerent t] ar t fivrea In ip . once, costs $ a t $50 for the glass qu iall space, is perfectly «d labellied, and does . inz amd collecting for ‘y. Beer bottles are a It is the paper age. mm ie ols "inancier and Bullioni in ti y needs a lesson, and if the Sutâ€" s British patience much longer v to travel than to stay at fact it is dangerous to stay One of the U. S. accident mpanies has prepared a table following as the percentage ent kinds of accidents: { the issue it nes chicles tside) n, Mo., is going extensively ilding of large reinforeed conâ€" s. One has been built oval ith a diameter of 17 ft. 5 in. paper milk bottle is the lat ful application of woosd by a Michisan firm. lt ds la 18 ntion t s of pr OTs LN r of a coal strike is over for the miners and operators ed on continuing the old _ a very costly holiday the w dig coal, thankful that in. An 3 1t. sewer required ction 1.16 cubic yard of conâ€" ear foot, and cost, without 1arges, $6.30 per lincar foot. ted to r and Bullionist, of Lonâ€" on April 28, published a 1 edition with cight pages 1ada. ‘The first page arâ€" s Awakening," and Lord Canada‘s "Natural Deâ€" inot but attracs much atâ€" land. The entire Canaâ€" e issue is well written and gives a great mass of Mo ~age 4 dnc > costs $3 a thowand as the glass quarts, folds ‘, is perfectly sterile, is d, and does away with collecting for return to bottles are also on the ites trians wolc nt d »««..w.«o..ows, requirin rtn s and peniten Di Per cent. .. 24.14 .. 18.80 p 100.00 son 66 of 20 08 70 16 18 | Both Expensive Luxuries, _ "Now, Hentry," she said to him next day, "we‘ll just be having your pay raisâ€" ed. You can‘s keep two as easily as you can one. Mr. Fields is a rich man, and he will understand that. You go down and tell him you heed fifty dollars a month now." Away went Henry, and after much arâ€" gument and persuasion obtained access to the inner office of the great merâ€" chant, where he stated his case. Mr. Field became interested at once. "Ah, yes," said Mr. Field. So you want a raise, do you? Let me seeâ€"how much was your pension? Twentyâ€"five dollars? Well, you won‘t have to pay any board now, so suppose we make it twelve and a hali* That will keep you in spending money." (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) "Are you ging away this summer?‘ "I don‘t know. We will cither go away or else stay at home and take ice." Mre. Newlywedâ€"Before we were mrfledyouusedtod?EveryMoml send you violets Mr. Newlywedâ€"Well, this â€"morning I sent you a cauliflower, didn‘t 1+ He had gone far from Mr. Field‘s memory, but remained on the list. His pension made him quite an "eligible party" in the circle in which he lived, and at last he yielded to the blandishâ€" ments of his landlady, an elderiy, prosâ€" perous widow, and married her. "A widow, eh?" 7f|éwin("|1'xi;;l',“lmiling‘ "Did she ask youâ€"or you her?" "Well, sir," stammered Henry, "I guess she did lead up to it." "How old is she *" "About forty, sir." "Did she support herself ?*" "Did she support herself ?" "Yes, sir. _ She has a big boardingâ€" house. I boarded with her. I do yet, in fact." Among the charities of the late Marâ€" shall Field, says the Youth‘s Companâ€" ion, was a pension list of persons _ to whom a stated sum was sent regularly each month. With these he was generâ€" ous, but he disliked being imposed upon, One man, who had in some way imâ€" pressed Mr. Field with his descerts, had a cheque each thirty days for twentyâ€" five dollars. Folders descriptive of the Thousand Rapids, Montreal, Quebec, Murray R:;h';?:: douuc."th:l mr‘ famed Saguenay River, etc on application to any rail mboat Noket acont. Y road or steamboat It you desire rest and recreation, why not "The River St. Lawrence Trip?" For illustrate guide, "NIAGARA TO TH® SEA.‘" send six cents in postage stamps to H. Foster Chaffee, Western Passenger Agent, lozonto. His faithful attendant, strong in his sease of duty, cut the map off the surveyor‘s plane table and wrapped it around his body in his waistband. He afterward explained that ho was afreid to carry it in his hand for fear be might become insensible and lose it. They then wandered from the camp and finally all but Saidu lay down in the shade of a high mound to die. Saidu struggled on the whole day, but must have become delirious, for he remembered nothing till he regained consclousness for a time by stumbling into a pool of water. On coming to again he found hbimself being carried on a man‘s back to Chakansur. He had been discovered by some villagers and, as in the case of the three guldes, his life was saved with difficulty. Where Will You Go This Summer? crawled to a ravine close by and dug for water. No spring was found and their on!y relief was to throw the damp earth over their bodies. In the evening some of these mon succeeded in struggling back to camp, where ;hoy found Mohiâ€"udâ€"din dead alongside of his nrge, The rest of the party under Mohiâ€"udâ€"dig met with melancholy fate. They were too weak to march and the first to die was a camel man who had wandered into the desert and never returned. The others remained ail night with Modiâ€"udâ€"din and in the early At midnight on the 1ith they started again, still steering northward, and at daybreak they halted on a high desert plain. There was no sign of water and, the position being critical, Mohiâ€"udâ€"din reluctantly recognized the futility of further exploration. He agreed to return, but by night, after great suffering from thirst, two of the guides beâ€" came insensible. A third guide, Sultan Maiâ€" homed, tied each of them upon a riding camel and himself on a third camel. The animals were then linked together and left to go whither their instinct would lead them. Sultan Mabomed fell unconscious du:â€" ing the night and remembered nothing till he came to through water being poursd down his throat. He and his friends had been rescued by a hunter who had wandered into the desert in quest of wild asses. The party was within an ace of death, but was taken to Chakansur, an Afghan village on the Kash River, and under careful treatment recovered. They marched all night, called a halt in the early morning and continued the march durâ€" ing the day. At nightfall the water carried by the camels had given out and the guides urged that either the return journey should be begun at once or a route taken due west so as to strike the northern bend of the Helâ€" mund. Mohiâ€"duâ€"din, Lowever, was deterâ€" mined to push on and a guide was sent off on a camel to find water. He returned with a leather skin full, but it was so brackish that those who drank it fell 111 and could not eat their food. The party had then to march on and they were fortunate enough to reach anâ€" other well, where a small supply of drinking water was obtained. One conspicuous plece of devotion on the part of a native surveyor named Mohiâ€"udâ€" din deserves mention. He was a man of some distinction who had won the title of Khan Babhadur by previous notable surveys on the frontier. While in Seistan he was particularâ€" ly desirous of exploring the Dashliâ€"Margu, a very forbidding desert between the Relmund and Kash rivers, and in June, 1903, in spite of the extreme heat, he struck out from a point west of Helmund on a course nearly due north, bis party consisting of four surâ€" vey assistants, four Afghan guides and two camel men. to zero. In a great blizzard which raged for five days in March, 1908, during the progress of the mission, the wind actually rose to 120 miles an hout. For many months the heat in Seistan is overpowering, while a wind known as the 120 days‘ wind‘" blows from the northwest with the force of a hurricane, its pace varyâ€" ing up to seventy miles an hour. In the winâ€" ter there are violent snowstorms and blizâ€" zards, while the thermometer falls almost ‘The Seistan boundary commission, which has now returned to India, was one of thoso hazardous enterprises that the survey ofâ€" ficers of the government of India are every now and then called upon to undertake in remote, unfrequented and inhospitable reâ€" gions, to penetrate into which, even with such supplies and scort as are feasible, is practically to carry one‘s life in one‘s hand. Wanted a Raise (London ‘Times.) hotel, marked, "C. 0. D." Opening the package the American was dumfounded to discover that each piece of silver, had been ureln‘l‘lé engraved, in a beautiful monogram.â€""C, 0. D." The American had been making severâ€" al purchases in a jewellery establish â€" ment ,among others a silver set, and finding that he had with him insufficiâ€" ent funds to defray the entire cost, he desired the clerk to send the set to the Cabby looked at the coin wistfully. "What‘s wrong?" asked the old man. "Nothing, sir," was the reply, "but Mr. Leopold always gives me half a crown." "I don‘t wonder at it. Mr. Leopold is a spendthrift; but he can afford it; he has a rich father. I am an orphan, and can‘t." A New Yorker was once referring to the stolidity and literalâ€"mindedness of the British shopkeeper, says the Boston Record, when he was reminded of an amâ€" using experience of a friend in Louâ€" don. Prodigal as the Rothschilds were and are they nearly all have and had one trait in common, They will give thouâ€" sands without a moment‘s hesitation; they will not be fleeced of a penny after an hour‘s discussion. There is a story in connection with this trait relating to Leopold de Rothschild‘s father. The son was in the habit of taking the same cab every morning from Piccadilly to St. Swithiu‘s lane and always gave the jehu half a crown. One morning when the son was away the sire hailed the conveyâ€" ance and at the end of the journey gave the driver a florin, or 12 cents less. The grimyâ€"looking tramp espied the cottage door ajar and little Johnnie playing at marbles just inside, so _ he pounced on his prey. "Look ‘ere, young ‘un," said he, taking him by the collar and shaking him, "just you tell _ me where your father keeps all his money. And if you don‘t, I‘ll knock your head off, and then I‘ll eat you." "Oh please don‘t do that, sir," said little Johnnie. "You‘ll find all the money we‘ve _ got in an old waistcoat in the back kitchen, Sixty seconds later a human _ avalâ€" anche was hurled bodily through _ the front door. _ It alightde in the gutter where it sat a while and opened _ and shut its eyes to see if it was still alive. Partially assured on _ that important point at last, it said, "That kid‘s _ too good to live. He‘s too smart to be naturâ€" al. Never said a word about the old man being inside o‘ that thore old weskit." Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. "Well, I‘m very glad to hear that," responded the lady, with a relieved look, "although I was far from sharing the apprehension of the rest of the passenâ€" gers. After all," she adder reflectively, "why should we worry, even if there was something the matter with the screw? It is under the water and doesn‘t show." "Not at all madam," was the reply of the officer. "There was some little difficulty with one of them, but it has been repaired, se that now everything is all right." An official of a Transatlantic steamâ€" ship line tells of the excitement on board one of his company‘s vessels sevâ€" cral days out from Liverpool caused by an accident to the sterring gear, a misâ€" hap trifling enough in reality, but which rumor magnified says the Ladies‘ Home Companion. The captain was soon approached by a lady passenger. "Is it true, captain,‘ ‘asked she, anxiously. "That we have lost one of our screws." And so, wherever you may be, or in whatever station of life, you inquire, Zamâ€"Buk is praised by all. It is made from vegetable essences and contains no trace of any animal fat or any minerai coloring matter. It is healâ€" ing, soothing, and antiseptic at the same time. It is easy to apply. is always cleanly, never stains or dyes, and in all ways is an ideal healer. All druggists sell it at 50 cents a box, or you may obtain direct from the Zamâ€" Buk Co., Colborne street, Toronto, upon receipt of price. While of genmeral serâ€" vice for all skin injuries and discases, Zamâ€"Buk is especially good for cuts, burns, bruises, eczemas, pimples, running sores, spreading scabs, scalp diseases, poisoned wounds, festering sores, piles, ulcers, bad legs, abscesses, boils, ringâ€" worms, erysipelas, serofula, _ psoraisis, barber‘s rash, stiffness, rheumatism, and all injured, diseased, or inflamed condiâ€" tions of skin and tissue. "Zamâ€"Buk heals cuts and bruises as nothing else does that I have ever met with,. I had a piece of flesh badly torn on my arm, and anticipated beâ€" ing unable to use my arm for a long time. In two days Zamâ€"Buk closed the wound and in a few days it was covered with new skin. I shall always give Zamâ€"Buk a good name." The Rev. W. C. Leeper, of Mellis Recâ€" tory, Suffolk, says: "For years I sufâ€" fered from piles, but Zamâ€"Bul; cured me. I have great confidence in recomâ€" mending it." Mrs. J. F. Baker, of Aultsville, says: "I think Zamâ€"Buk just fine for skin diseases. Having once proved it, I would not be without it in the house." The exâ€"champion wrestler of Amâ€" erica, Mr. Hugh Lannon, says of it: An Indian fakir took a boy of sixâ€" teen, placed him under a wicker cover, and ran a sword through the cover. It projected some twelve or fourtcen inches on the other side of the basket. The latter was lifted and the boy had disappeared. Another fakir cut himself with a curved knife, rubbed the wound with some magic ocintment, and lo! the place was healed! That is magic with a vengeance. Now, Zamâ€"Buk, the great herbal balm, does not effect magical cures, but it effects some almost equally wonderful and scientific cures, "I never saw anything heal so quickly in my life as a deep cut on my husâ€" band‘s chin healed when we applied Zamâ€"Buk," says Mrs. H. T. Parks, of Washago, Ont,. in a letter to the Zamâ€" Buk Co. "My baby had a rash on the skin somethiny like eczema," writes Mrs. J. Reesor, of Aurora. "It was very troublesome and made the child very ill. I tried all sorts of ointments . and salves, but no good came of their ‘ use. _ Then Zamâ€"Buk was brought to me and the third supply cured the little ‘ one completely." | SOME EXTRAORDINARY SCENES SCIENCE AND MAGIC. Not of Much Consequence. Had a Rich Father. Marked C. 0. D. Too Good to Live, AVOID POOR IMITATIONS Sold by all Druggists and General Store: and by mail. TEN CENTS PERPACKET FROM ARCHDALE WILSO! HAMILTON. owT. Mr. Jefferson shook his head with : gravity that completely veiled the iwin kle in his eye. _ HLC 1. 68 w : "No, George," he replied, soberiy, "the Lord made only one man who could ever manage the sun and moon, and you reâ€" member even he let the stars alone." The friend could stand it mo longer. "Good Lord, Jefferson!" he eried, in an excited aside, "this will ruin your piay! Why don‘t you interfere? You could settle matters if you only would!" Brutal. "I am here to press my suite,"" began the young man. J ‘"‘Why, didn‘t the man you hired it of attend to that?" asked the girl. ‘This comment seemed to him brutal and so changed the trend of his thoughts that there was nothing doing. Let the Stars Alone, In staging one of his earlier plays a friend accompanied Joe Jefferson to a rehearsal, at which a lively disagreement arose between two of the actresses as to the possession of the centre of the stage during a certain scene, says the Boston Herald. While the manager poured oil on the troubled waters Mr. Jefferson sat calmly swinging his feet from the rail of an adjoiring box. f Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. "For more than three yeur; I suffered from _ weakness and female trouble brought on through my kidneys failing to act properly. 1 was bothered with a pain in the small of my back, headâ€" aches, dizzy spells, heart flutterings, deâ€" preasion, loss of eleep, poor appetite and a terrible dragging sensation as if a weight was fastened round my loins. I tried doctors and took all kinds of mediâ€" cines, but nothing seemed to do me any good. Then a neighbor told me of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and advised me to try them. I did so, and after taking six boxes I am entively cured." ‘ She Blesses the Day Sbhe First Heard of Them. Newmarket, Ont., May 7.â€"(Special.) â€"The case reported below is another of the many thousands of /instances of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills coming to the resâ€" cue of weak, suffering women. Mrs. M. Doner, of this place, says: wOMEN WEO SUFFER SHOULD READ THIG They Made a New She was Cared of Female Troubles by Dodd‘s Kidncy Pills. The sound is easily board at 50 feet in a wind, and twice as far in still weather. When a herd is moving along the countless crackâ€" les from their hoofs make a volume of low, continuous sounds. The object of this is doubtless the same as that of the whistling of a whistler‘s wing or the twittering of birds migrating . by night. | Persons who have never heard & in life have no difficulty in explainng it, "Ot !couue, the hoofs spread when they bear the weight of the animal," they say, ‘"and when lifted the hard surface springs together with a crack." But a close observation shows that the crack is made by some mechanism in the foot, and it "goes off" while the weight is on it. It is not always one sharp crack, but sometimes a crackle like several sounds close together. Many examinations showed that just as the foot is relievel of the animal‘s weight, but before any part is off of the ground, the crack takes place. The hoofs do not strike together during the stride, and the crackle is not heard until the foot is placed, and the weight is on it. Thus it usually crackles twice at the place of each track, always once as the weight is coming on, usually a second time as it is going off. I walked on hands and knees by the side of a reindeor again and again to make observations, and finally induced one to walk while at considâ€" erable personal risk I kept my hand on the knuckle joint. It was so violent that it jarâ€" red the hand laid on it. It was deepâ€"seated and on the level of the clouts or back hoofs and appeared to be made by tendons or sesaâ€" mg'i:ls supp!ng over adjoining bones. "On July 4, 1900, got into a herd of about 1,000 haliâ€"wild reindeer. ‘Their only vocal sound is a grunt. This is uttered singly or else doubledâ€"that is, two are given in rapid succession. It is sometimes the call of a cow to her calf, and sometimes is uttered by one that is left behind, evidently a note of alarm or inquiry to find out if his friends are close at hand." But the most singular of the sounds made by the caribou is the cracking of the hoof. At each step each foot gives out a loud, sharp crack. D. G. Eliot calls it, a sens of nature, but like that of the rhe on this are very full *‘‘Soon after leaving our camp on the mornâ€" ing of August 13 we saw some barrenâ€"ground varibou. A young buck on a point of land was approaching as closely as the depth of the water would permitâ€"about 200 yards. He showed little fear, trotting along the shore abreast of our boat for about a quarâ€" ter of a mile. He would frequently stop and wade some distance toward the boat, at short intervals spreading and contracting the white patch on his throat literallyinto an oval dise, so abruptly as to give the effect of flashes of light. He finally grew tired of following us and drifted behind." What was the caribou doing? Apparently signaling to what might be others of his own kind out on the water. in 1900. ‘Through the observation applies to the garrenâ€"ground species, I believe it will be found equally true of the woodland. Another signal that I have not seen noted by any one else is thus described by Mr. E. A. Preble, during his trip to the Barrens, Next in importance, says a writer in Scribâ€" ner‘s, is the white flag with which most deer do their wagwag signalling. ‘This is the tail, and its surrounding, the disc. The sudden elevation of this white tail when danger is sensed conveys at once a silent alarm to the next of its kind. A gregarious animal has usually many means of communicating with its fellows. The wellâ€"marked livery of the species serves it is his uniform does a soldierâ€"it lets friend and foe alike know who he is. How the Caribou Talked and Walked for Their Observers. The caribou‘s grunt or bark, as SIGNALS OF THE WILD. Wilson‘s unt or bark, as ?teuor it, I have never heard in but it is said to be much rheindcer, and my notes Woman of Her and TORONTO "One day I found her eating a hearty meal, and asked her how she was, She sighed and answered. "‘I feel very well, ma‘am, but I alâ€" ways feel bad when I feel well, because I know I am going to feel worse after. ward.‘" (Sabetha, Kan., Herald.) In these days of rush a man never gets his full quota of anything. He takes his food predigested in prepared foods, his literature cut down by the newspaper and magazine reviews, his music from the graphophone and even his cocktails bottled and sold alreadv The Hardâ€"Working Reformer, (Washington Star.) **Bometimes," said Uncle Eben, "it ‘ to me like a reformer was one o‘ de people dat has to talk two hours an‘ a to ‘spress one 0‘ «e ten commandments hll;vgrn'tmdhpuu ‘bout dat in de place," "This old woman was always ill, alâ€" ways ailing, Her various diseases wore to her the most interesting topic in the world, and she must have thought them most interesting to others, also, for she always talked of thenmnâ€"she talked of nothing else. Why She Felt Bad. Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay, at a meetâ€" ing of the Roslyn School Board, disaâ€" greed with a pessimistic opinion that had been expressed, says the New York Triâ€" bune "To be so unreasonably and so rasoâ€" lutely hopeless is unwise," she said. "It reminds me of an old woman I used to For they‘ve moved in their apartment, and everything looks queer, The bride sits weoping on a trunk, her hat After moving to the city in ‘‘What‘s that so black against the sun?" the husband asked his bride. ‘‘They‘re hoisting the plano through the winâ€" dow,"" she replied. *‘What makes the cracking overhead?‘* the husband asked his bride. It‘s scrapin@ un against the bricks,"" the tired wife replied. packing case They are moving For they‘ve taken an apartment, and it‘s really a disgrace, ‘The splinters from the furniture are all about the place. Upon ths sacred rosewood chair reclines a ‘‘The bed belongs in kercâ€"in bere," reâ€" marked the pretty bride. ‘‘The room is several feet too short," the moving man replied. ‘‘What makes the table look so queer?" reâ€" marked the pretty bride. "It‘s lost a leg or two, I guess," the moving man replied. They have taken out the furniture all ground, A quarter of it is in the van, the the ground, Hear the table legs mâ€"cracking. I pleasant sound. ie h. 9 Oh, they‘re moving to the city in the mornâ€" *"What makes the mover puff so hard?" the husbang asked his bride. "He has the couch upon his back," the tired wife replied. *"What makes the little man fall down?" the husband asked bis bride. ‘"He tried to carry all the chairs at once," the wife replied. For they‘ve taken an apartment, and they‘re moving in toâ€"day. ‘The chiffonier‘s becu carried down, two beds and the buffet, The bookcase and piano, they are carting them away, And‘ they‘re moving to the city in the mornâ€" B (Reynale Smith Pickering, in Marper‘s Bazaar.) "What makes the doorâ€"bell ring so hard?" the husband asked his bride. "‘The van has come to take our things," the tired wife replied. "What makes you look so wwrried, dear?" the husband asked his bride. "I‘m thinking of tue tuings cuacy‘ll break," the tired vife replied. Dear Sirs,â€"Your MINARDS LINTâ€" MENT is our remedy for sore throat, eolds and all ordinary complaints. dt never fafls to rvelieve and cure promptly. ; F â€" uns Minard‘s Liniment Co.. Limited "Well,sir," replied Willie, with the utâ€" most naivette, "part of it is." "Yes, sir," was the answer in a someâ€" what hesitating tone, Observing this, the lawyer added: "Willie, are you sure that this water is fresh ?" Part of It Was. There is in the employ of a Chicago lawyer an office boy somewhat averse to overâ€"exertion in the line of duty, says the Boston Record. Willie‘s duties comâ€" prise, among other things, the proper care of the iced water receptacle. Shortly after his arrival at the office one morning the legal man swallowed a copious draught of the water, and imâ€" mediately became conscious of a very distasteful quality of the fluid. He called the boy. "Willie," demanded he sternly, "is this water fresh *" they are very lucky they‘ll be sottled in Port Mulgrave Necessities of the Busy Life moving to the city in the morning sSAVE sSUNLIGHT SOAP COUPONS Free Gifts of Toilet Soaps legs mâ€"cracking. It is not a Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and GET CHARLES WHOOTEN, MoÂ¥ing. every day. Read circular in every package, or write s for Premium List. A gift is of little value if it consists of something you have t&tï¬_f_Of_-_ In exchange for Sunlight Soap Coupons you can get something you need The Coupons are the same as cash becat for which you have to pay out money eÂ¥ Users of SUNLIGHT and CHEERFUL the morning. rest upon it‘s lying have to pay out money every week. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, Juggling With Words. Mr. Flushâ€""Have you change for & five?" Mr. Brokeâ€""No; but I would like to have a five for a change."â€"Leslie‘s ‘That precious remedy, is a Weekly. ‘‘When do you consider a man at his prime of life?" ‘‘When he‘s old enough to quit writing poetry and not old enough to begin writing love letters to his stenographer," Ask for Minard‘s and take no Other. No sooner was he gone than the ne gress, said to her son: How to Get Chicken. A philanthropic person heard of a neâ€" gro family that was reported in destitute cireumstances and, calling at their home he found the report true. The family consisted of a mother, a son neariag manhood‘s estate, and two young chilâ€" dren,. _ The benevolent old gentleman, afâ€" ter hearing the mother‘s story, gave her oldest son $1 to get a chicken for the Thanksgiving dinner, and tok his deparâ€" ture, says the Cleveland Leader, ‘"Pa," said little Tommy, ‘"my Sunday school teacher says if I‘m good I‘ll go to Heaven." ‘""Well?" asked his pa. ‘*‘Well, you said if I was good T‘d go to the circus. Now, I want to know who‘s lyin‘ you or her." _ "Sambo, you done #ib me dat dollah and go get dat chicken in de natchral way." Via Lehigh Valley R. R., through the Switzerland of America. Fast express trains. Double track. Block signals. Pullman sleeping cars from Toronto. For further particulars, address R. 8. Lewis, 10 King street east, Toronto, Ont. Bunlight Soap is bettor than othor soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions, DOUGHTY‘S CEMENT BUILDING BLOCK, MACHINE U cnecs Thge taman‘s Superb Service to New York and Philadelphia. (London Idler.) ‘The real ruler fo England is the permanent official, an easy going person whose berth is secure and whose pension awaits him when he has put in the fewest number of days that the law allows, doing as little in that time as is compatible with keeping a@wake. The only real passion of his life is a hatred of all reformers. â€"Warwick James Price in Watâ€" son‘s Magazine. _ Who gets off a trolley car the right wayâ€"though she runs the risk of being arrested as a man in disguise. _ _ . -â€".\i:f:oâ€"gc:;v‘:ii;Zi;ai;l; _ between _ the laugh of amusement and the one meant to show off a dimple. . C is _ Who realizes that two pusbands of twentyâ€"five years each are not recesâ€" sarily as good as one of fifty. _ Who appreciates that â€" the largest room in any house is that left for selfâ€" improvement. _ i ts a se . Who can téfl the difference between her first child and a genius. Who most admires those eyes which belong to a man who understands her. Who arknowledges the _ allowance made her by her husband by making allowances for him. C f Who has learned the paradox that to have joy one mast give it. Who keeps in mind that a little creâ€" dit is a dangerous thing. & Who is able to mend both her husâ€" band‘s clothes and his ways. FIBRE WARE amarss Farmers and Dairymen same as cash because they can be exchanged for Tub, Pall, Wash Basin or Mitk Pan oramlossoms You will find they give you satisâ€" ‘ faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE Could Not Be in Two Places. + a 2ire £9" all Ciwenses. Write for @escription -na-.-nfl;""n.aueom...-:“" menndihoriondiinemin deadfheniihetdihemcecs s l Ont. SHPS A WISE WOMAN Insist on being Just the Prime of Life Barnacles in England, Too, (Catholic Standard.) . _ B. EDDY‘S SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS supplied with EDDY‘s3 every time. at THE PREMIUMS After Piles have existed for a time the suffering is intenseâ€"pain, aching, throbâ€" bing, tumors form, filled to bursting v:i black blood. itar,) Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend. (Kansas City Independent.) *"Good morning," Mr. ‘Pustinburne," said the editor, as the poet antenal the sanctum *‘Some more of your blank verse I suppose*** (We use the word ‘‘blank" that we may § not shock readers by repenting the real exâ€" Hemâ€"Roid will cure the most stubborn case in existence and a bonded guarantee to that effect goes with each package. Time to Live on the Porch, (Baitimore Sun.) ‘The parlor ought to be deserted in summer for the open air, and the dining room likeâ€" wise. With hammocks and easy chairs a deâ€" lightful existence there is practicable, and a stay there is much more healthâ€"giving than in the contaminated air of a bedroom. Many persons nowadays spend the night on the porch in summer, and a few find the air better there in winter aiso. A bare, bleak morch exposed to the sun has its drawbacks, but it can be made attractive by planting around it in the spring quickâ€"growning vines. Porch furniture is now made in many styles, including the indispensable table for books, magazines, etc. Hanging baskets with flowâ€" ers and ferns have a decorative effect. Evâ€" erything is to be added that will charm the household from the house into the open air. $1.00. All dealers, or The Wilsonâ€" Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. This is when Dr. Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€" Roid, the only absolute Pile cure, brings the results that has made its fame. It is being pointed out for the consolation of the people about Vesuvius that lava, like adversity, hbas its uses. It makes, for inâ€" stance, a very beautiful glass of extraordinâ€" ary lightness. But curiously every volcano sends out a special brand of lava with qualâ€" ities of its own, which can only be discovered by experience. The rich plains of Sicily owe much of their fertility to decomposed lava, and in South America volcanic soil is found to be the best in the world for coffee growing, though nervous planters would rather take the soil without the volcano. 12 for 10¢; 60 for b0c; 100, $1; 200, $%; 500, $5; all different. Largest an‘ finest stock in Canada; 500 mixed, $3; albums, mll prices. Mre. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should alâ€" ways be used for children teetaing. It soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarâ€" \Z ‘jots, excellent for fruit, gardening or poultry; close to electric cars; big money in fruit. Write quick to A. 8. Foster, Oakville, ISSUE NO. 20, 1906 H"cook ..“. housemald in a private family; good wages to reliable girls. Aldress in writine to Mrs. Geo. F. Glassoo, 74 Hannah WAN'!'B.’D abo\n'g Gxc k i t t i shock readers by repenting the real exâ€" sion made use of by the unfeeling eiâ€" Souvenir Post Cards AKVILLE FRUIT LANDSâ€"10 ACRE » Patentes, Waterford, Ont. Glass From Vesuvius Lava, tor. These Pills bave been used in France for over fifty years, and found invaluable for the purpose designed, and are guaranâ€" teed by the makers. Enclose stamp for sealed [circular. Price #1.00 Ptr box of ; Or oy mail, securely sealed, on recelpt of price MISCELLANEOUS. THE WORST KIND. Not the Real Word. LE ROY PILL CO., Toilet Soaps FEMALE PILLS A safe, sure and reliable monthly regulaâ€" IMMEDIATELY, TWO GIRLS and use [Â¥ every hoi ored penu and shipp tiny pass r“‘u an mamy cal The bank an 11 low in wae dr ing of standa flew f order nccasion cay, the rqing a trial dis ing the the fa city mz and perk There iring Flin-. § bhe hun !: takis tion. sian mil were at was to ¢ and cou to the 1 the bur: of th not ] sampero: strong : of muts the grea It eould :::m e in a m¥¥ray 0| tachmen armes =! large re wards of Czar and Cz Took the L NKoty permi f “‘j‘ SS W/