that Im t fi al d in t1 s1 w ol pI vi a$ le in f1 4 Of fi of th th it €ibs th wt dr fi &c zli Fuul Sp th «. f¢ ti pi One we es Free tr A certi Tick th We have noticed that Lou Smucker, who never needs a hair cut, gets one every week, while Jim Nation, who needs a ha‘r :tlumu-n.mwp-mrtw op. The â€" National Anthem â€" having been sung, with a wave of his wand the conâ€" ductor starts the first note of that grandest and sublimest musical composiâ€" tion ever written by mortal man. The Messiah. After a few recitatives and stirring airs and choruses, with a triumâ€" phant shout the great chorale "For unto us a Child is born" commences, graduâ€" ally sinking down until almost in a whisper the chorus murmurs out "And His Name shall be called;" then, after & momentary pause, with a mighty roar, accompanied by the blare of trumpets, the beating of the giant drums, the elang 0o: cymbals, the resonant blast of a multitude of cornets an bassoons, the booming of mighty organ and the serried array of stringed _ instruments, the thousands of singers rend the very air, and with one voice in unison thunder outâ€"*"Wonderful, Counsellor, the Mi hty God, the Prince of Peace." The pufsat- ing atmosphere itself trembles and viâ€" brates and a thrill of awe, or almost inâ€" deed of stupor, must course through the veins of every one amongst that vast audience as they listen to the soul stirâ€" ring paean. ; €ontrio kind. A “ mel paeans victory and ex tion an the con eal and to peri magnifi musical when that first ed, doubtless bei his newly inver in Ch bro end bli wor @i n lit pr m da AV @v wa idea the en ty ti O11 kno oth: the imn and frie com the who the has sid» her and proj kn Than On!y a midnight thought, Born in sorrow in the attic drear, May be the soul of battles yet un Of On!l Falli{ Sparklit Only a mite given in By humble hands, rugge« *\ ‘toil, Only a bite, seen from u‘.)' make a wary wate Only a schoolboy‘s dream, Wending his pathway to the village aahast 6yR Momg Ma €» The Triumph of »m the very earlie 1, in fact from t . that first harpist siime May be t Lxik sC PCE lay be a vision of wimic navies on t Perverse Kansas Nature. raised iltaton 1 grief i mly in ibination instrum ana y the sunlight, in a widow‘s home, % upon the hearth where God is praised, Â¥_ grander be than gleam of gilded dome, f ling afar, that tyrant‘s power has rayed, rincely diadem, won through blood ndâ€"crime. ti epRi OME 1e humble head toil martyr in the roadway The Evangel of Hope th Golden â€" Grains. 2e () heul sway ,wnether in nphant jubliation _ for phes of poetic rhapsody or in dirges of lamentaâ€" nd mourning. quite recent times has on a large scale of voâ€" mtal music been brought ind probably the most overyhelmingly sublime ince ever heard all down the trieunial rendering orchestra of four thouâ€" instruments of a selecâ€" el‘s great oratorios. seen from the stars above, wary watching angel smile. ph of Mclody. earliest epoch of _ the om that far off time arpist, Jubal, performâ€" re Abram himself, on ed instrument, music, and vocal has largely ie recreation of manâ€" n the ages the charms ‘eld sway .whether in rander, nobler crown arâ€" n iven in honest love, , Yugged and rough with in mercé it NO M f the great unseen, the wayside pool. M () d creeds of wild Charles Reekie. wning eve it ho Iurrowe T1 Oli wisdom d ney rid he rl shall never \nother said, | touch shall want." _ Anâ€" at my touch e beside the ippines ly for d duty ve Sch of a hemi more r nor prays neâ€" gly above â€"dreamed n am 10Ve the there ss and those y, and weiner mur a hed." who ove, the lose His m which it can be questioned is that â€"of mecidental coincidences and that arguâ€" ment would ur-t wireleas telegng; and oneâ€"half of all the convictions of the buman family. and mysterious murder ever committed here was unravelled by a woman‘s dream. So terrified was she that she made her husband get up in the midâ€" dle of the night and go with her story to the police station. _ She was ridiâ€" euled and denounced at first, but her theory proved to be absolutely correct. It is hard to see how any one can doubt the reality of telepathy. It is every whit as well proved as wireless telegraphy. The only ground _ on which rt can be tmelt{onesr(;s that â€"of The girl died and soon afterward her father was found in _ the gorge dreadfully imjured, and gave an _ acâ€" count of the way he came there which tallied exgctly with _ all that his daughter had seen in her vision. Tgings of this kind are happening all the time and those that have ocâ€" curred in Chicago alone woud fill a large book. _ The most â€" semsational At the same time a similar event was occurring in South Dakota. Miss Kendall, a 17 year old pupil of a paroâ€" chial school in Sturgis, lay dying. With great agony of spirit ~ she deâ€" scribed a vision of an accident to her father. _ She saw him ascending the bluff on which the school is located and saw him slip into a gorge, â€" where she insisted he was still lying in a helpless and suffering condition, This impression on the pastor‘s mind was so profound that while he was deâ€" scribing the vision he was convulsed with sobs and the congregation also was deeply affected. The next day one ofe:ie seven young men mentioned in comnection with it was killed in a colliery. Does It Mean That the Whole Universe is Alive? It is astonishing how many cases of telepathy are reported at tKe Kreee-nt day. _ Hardly a week passes that we are not told of some one who either in a dream or in a vision or in some other way gave a minute description of some event, almost always a calamitous one, which was occurring at that moment at some distant place, A London cablegram was printed on last Sunday giving a striking case of this kind from Wales. The Rev. Mereâ€" dith Morris, pastor of the church at Garth, who had often ridiculed visions in his sermons, recanted these opinions in the pulpit before his congregation, and then related a vision of his own. . He said he had seen a vision of seven young men, . whose names ho gave, aitting under a tree gambling and in some way which the despatch does not describe, it was made known to him that one of them would soon die. T uin ooih ies c t , L2 ho onme sugar and water for fifteen minutes, usâ€" ing three fourts of the weight of the berries in sugar and allowing one cupâ€" ful of water to each pound of sugar. Add the syrup to the fruit to overflow the jars and adjust the rubbers and covâ€" ers. Put the jars into a kettle of cold water heat the water gradually to the boilding point and keep just below the boiling point for one hour. Raspbertry Jam. (Fannie Merritt Farmer in Woman‘s Home Companion for August.) Plck over the raspberries. Mga:.h a few in the bottom of a preserving kettle, ‘1 a wooden masher, and so continue until all the fruit is used. Eeï¬. slow}y to the boili nt, and add gradually an equal qmngh":‘;i of heated sugar. Cook alowly forty minutes and put in a stone Jar or jelly tumblers. Canned Rhubarb. Pare the rhubarb and cut into oneâ€" inch pieces, using a sliver knife. Pack solidly into a jar, put under the coldâ€" water faucet and let the water run for twenty minutes; then adjust the cover. I have asked many chemists why rhubarb could be preserved in this manâ€" ner, but have never received a satisâ€" factory reply. As a matter of fact, I have known rhubarb so treated to keep from one rhubarb season to the next.â€" Quince Jelly. Wipe the quinces, remove the stem and blossom ends, cut in quarters and remove the seeds. Put in a graniteware preseryâ€" ing kettle, and add cold water to come nearly to the top of the fruit. Cover, and cook slowly until the frint is soft. Mash and drain through a coarse sieve; then allow the juice to drip through a jellybag. Boil for twenty minutes, add an equal quantity of heated sugar, boil for five minutes, skim and turn into glasses. Let stand twentyâ€"four hours in a light place, then cover. Canned Strawberries. Pick over, wash, drain and hull the strawberries, then weight. Fill sterilizâ€" ed jars with fruit, packing as solidly as possible. Make a syrup by boiling Libby‘s Food Products are ready to "“'L‘W“Se“hw.ydmcoohd as carefully and as well as you could do it in your own kitchen. enable you to make good meals out of mx 2w ut that we carnot explain this ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Mrs. Skinner (c;fï¬Ã©}i;';mdale farm)â€" You‘ll allus find the milk in that there pitcher with the chip off‘n its smout! The newest boarder (sarcastically)â€" How am I to distinguish the milk from the cream, Mrs. Skinner? Four seashore excursions via Lehigh Valley Railroad, July 20, August 3, 17, and 31. Tickets good 15 days, and only $10, round trip, from Suspension Bridg~. Tickets allow stopâ€"over at Philadelphia. For tickets, further particulars, cznï¬ on or Write Robt. 8. Lewis, Canadian Passâ€" enger Agenat, 10 King street east, Toâ€" ronto, Ont. $10â€"Atlantic City, Cape Mayâ€"$10 In Massachusettts there is a uniformed forâ€" est police, which devotes its entire time to seeking out and destroying moths, caterpilâ€" lars, pupae and eggs. It entails a great exâ€" peuditure of money, but the old bay state is not willing to see its woods denuded withâ€" out vigorous resistance. The gypsy moth, if it is not checked in the east, will certainly within a fow years overspread the entire country and each state will be conmronted with as difficult a probâ€" lem as that with which Massachusetts has been struggling for a long time. The pests reproduce themselves at an Increditable rate and if Massachusetts has not succeede din exterminating them the other states should at least be grateful to her for having reâ€" tarded the advance of the tree destroyers. St. Antoine, P. Q Gentlemen,â€"In June, ‘98, I had my hand and wrist bitten and badly mangâ€" led by a vicious horse. I suffered groatâ€" ly for several days and the tooth cuts refused to heal until your agent gave me a bottle of MINARD‘S LINIMENT, which I began using. The effect was magical; in five hours the pain had ceased and in two weeks the wounds had completely healed and my hand and arm were as well as ever. Yours truly, In underwear factories, girls start the trade by running ribbon through beadâ€" ing, ironing, running buttonhole maâ€" chines, and gradually learn to sew on inâ€" sertion, tucking, etc. They quickly work up to $6 per week. An expert in underâ€" wear makes $12 or $14 per week,.â€"Anna Steese Richardson in Woman‘s Home Companion for August. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited Operators in suit and waist factories do pieceâ€"work principally, and as a rule make $12 per week. Finishers, who sew on buttons, etc., receive no more than $7 per week. as shopper. Her first duties consist of matching thread, buttons, linings, etc., and later she is entrusted with trimâ€" mings, laces, cc. She starts at $4 per week, spends most of her time in stores and usually becomes a professional shopâ€" per. * A girl with the shopping gift can usuâ€" ally secure a position with a dressmaker Needlework‘s Wages, The apprentice in dressmaking has to work six months for nothing or perhaps a mere pittance as errand girl . Then she starts on linings at $4 per week. Next, she does overâ€"sewing and finishing at $6. Trimmers on skirts or waists receive $12 to $14 per week, and fitters from $15 to $18. A small establishment is considered better than a large one«gor learning the trade, as more personal attention is given apprentices and there is quicker advancement. _ Any woman who sews neatly by hand or does fine embroidery along popular lines can secure a position in a shop without difficulty, and the fall rush in dressmaking opens up Sept. 1. "The bridegroom‘s present to the bride was a handsome diamond brooch, toâ€" gether with many other beautiful things in cut glass." The story, which described the marâ€" riage in the usual flowery adjectives, concluded with this surprising announceâ€" ment: With reference to the humors of counâ€" try "society" reporting, Melville Stone, of the Associated Press, tells of the account of a wedding published in a Kansas paper. The mind cannot avoid speculating on this subject. What sort of world will we have when the conditions of telepathy and clairvoyance are underâ€" stood and when these strange powers become a practical merchantable comâ€" modity. This is rot all speculation, eiâ€" ther, for scientists have just discovered germ life in rock erystals and every day adds probability to the theory that the while universe is alive.â€" Chicago Chronâ€" icle. J The tendency of this class of pheâ€" nomena, it may be observed without prejudice is in the direction of psnâ€" theism. If the universe, including all animal life, is God, it follows that there is communciation of intelligence among all living beings. It may be true that this community is affected, not by distance, but by cornditions unâ€" known to us, among which may be inâ€" tensity of feeling. For almost all teleâ€" pathy is _ connected _ with dreadful events which produce paroxysms of emotion. C | Sunlight Soap is bettor than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions. is always far in advance of our exâ€" planations. Thunder and â€" lightning were familiar occurrences long before Franklin explained them. The huâ€" man family may have to wait several centuries before it _ can understand telepathy, _ but in _ the meantime it should not be stupidly incredulous in regard to the facts. henomenon is ~nothing: â€" against its ;ecli_ty. Our knowledge of <phenomena Making War on a Pest. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) Easy Identification, Most Uunakindest Cut. (Harper‘s Weekly.) A. E. â€" ROY, Carriage Maker , Delighted to meet ybu," &i;bed the i::t, rubbing his hands. â€"‘"I‘veâ€" often enâ€" joyed your beer." Nell â€" In Turkey a girl never sees her husband until she is married. Belle â€"How funny; in this country she nevâ€" er sees him afterward. ; This little story must be added to the list of anecdotes of eminent personages. Editor Bok, of the Ladies‘ Home Jourâ€" nal, who thinks he is somewhat emiâ€" nent, while automobiling, stopped at a small wayside inn, and fel into conversaâ€" tion with the proprietor, who finally asked the stranger‘s name. "My name‘s Bok,"_\u_i.d the eminent litterateur. "Oh, One of the rarest American coins is the $5 gold picce of 1822. One of these coins sold the other day for $2,165. The last owner of this particular coin had paid only $6 for it. Not until about twenty years ago did it become known that the half eagles of 1822 coinage were scarce enough to be classed among coins that command fancy prices because of their rarity. There werg 17,796 of them mintâ€" ed, but at the present time only three of them are known to exist. Besides the one just sold there is one in the coin cabinet of the Philadelphia mint and another in the private collection of Virâ€" gil M. Brand.â€"Nashville, Tenn., Banner. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, For illustrated guide, "NIAGARA TO THE SEA," send six cents in postage stamps to H. Foster Chaffee, Wostern Passenger Agent, foronto. Folders descriptive of the Thousand Islands, Rapids, Montreal, Quebec, Murray Bay, Taâ€" dousac, the far famed Saguenay River, atc., on applicaticn to any railroad or steamboat ticket agent. "The River St. Lawrence Trip?" Urging a New Secession. (Texas Medical Journal.) In Texas the negro is not elgiible unâ€" der our bylaws either to state or county medical societies and can never be afâ€" filiated with the medical profession of Texas. The southern peopleâ€"the medical men of the southâ€"cheerfully accord to him all that is coming to him .We grant him all civil, political _ and _ religions rights, but the line is drawnâ€"and will} never relaxâ€"at social and scientific afâ€" filiation with him. The time has come for the southern states to secede from the American Medical association and establish a southern medical confederâ€" acy. & Where Will You Go This Summer? Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by GOOLD, SHAPLEY @2 MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. * IMPERIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL If you desire rest and recreation, why not Ubiquity of the Human Hog. The seasons pass in opulent procession, parties and governments succeed cach other ,thrones totter, dynasties peter out, but the human ho€{ survives | all change and accident. e is as superâ€" ior to argument and denunciation as the whisky drinker is to prohibition laws or the gambler to municipal perseention. He does not limit his activities to street cars, â€" He is omnipresent, pervading, imnâ€" domitable. No pentup Utieca confines his evil powers, He ravages alike the pub lic vehicle and the private drawingâ€" room. _ He is everywhere, like high temâ€" peratures, mosquitoes and bad smells. Have you headache, back pains, or pains in the chest ? Have you that " allâ€"gone" feeling? If so, you need a stomach and liver stimulant, and the best is Bileans. Big Price for a Rare Coin. Mrs, R. Saville, otf Oakwood, Ont Of all druggists at 50c. per box. Why Bok Fainted. lousness "Do you think a man can be in _ two places at oncé? "No, but l"mfln. I saw one do it in a street car y." "Finally ,thougn, his challenging came to an end. He announced that the jury now satisfied him. "Your challenging is all over? We can now go on," said, with a smile, the attorney for the prosecution. "The jury is all right," said the prisâ€" oner, hurriedly and anxiously, "But 1 want to challenge the judge. I‘ve been convicted under him several times beâ€" fore, and it‘s more than likely he‘s prejuâ€" diced against me." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper, Plaint of "Denatured Women.* (Minneapolis ‘Tribune.) It is said that some of the clubwomen of New York complain of the way in which the parks of that city are littered up by parties of children, No doubt such complaints have been made, for there are finicky women evâ€" erywhere, but we doubt if the whole burden of the attempt to block the childish fun should be laid at the door of the clubwoâ€" men, who are often the objects of unjust criticism. We sbould rather susnect that the idea originated with those denatured women,. whether members of clubs or not, who aport dog® instead of children. Martin Doyle, acoused of murdering Vineent Wylie at Snowflake, Man., on Nov, 20 last, was committeed for trial at the Winnipeg Fall Acsizes. . ‘Evidently the prisoner knew ait about the right to challerge, and eviâ€" dently he felt that the more challengâ€" ing he and his lawyer did the better his case would go for him. __"He said that a certain man was about to be tried in the common pleas, and showed a great disposition to chaiâ€" lenge the jurymen. The One Dangerous Man. (Oswego Times.) "The late Judge I. Clark Hare," said a lawyer of Philadelphia, "was one day relating to me some of his odd exâ€" periences on the bench. â€"Eczema, Sak Rheum, Tetter, etc.â€"yieldquickly btbcbmbpwerdM’nO'nnat. Why sufter with the M-‘x-d itching ? Whhl:lhd\iugou? Don‘t be miserable 2 ira costs only 50c. a boxâ€"6 for $2.50. CGet one toâ€"day. At dntf::;;'orho- The Chemits® Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamiltooâ€" eï¬ â€" Aimk e ons id Artntediie shistnisianii Aisan Lt ns tns1 M 000. It is now in the Royal museum in Berlin. Where Amber is Found. (Technical World.) The shores of the RBaltic sea are the world‘s principal source of amber. Here a large mumber of people earn a precarâ€" ious livelihood by gathering the preciâ€" ous substance along the shore. At some points along the coast divers search the bottom of the sea for lumps of amber hidden in the seaweed or jammed beâ€" tween rocks. The largest piece ever found weighed eighteen pounds, valued at $30,â€" 8 CPCRTYE "A hours after the firstapplication," writes Leo Cor{';an ¢; 4:(““,' Ave. N..'I./câ€"'lu., “l/llfvsl rdzj. Mira has worked wonders for me." (Hehkad Ecxema for years.) _ ___ _ _ When a fine ruby is found in Burmah a procession of elephants, grandees and soldiers escorts it to the King‘s palace. The sapphire which adorns the sumâ€" mit of the English crown is the same that Edward the Confessor wore in his ring.â€"Louisville Courierâ€"Journal. The Island of Ceylon is the most reâ€" markable gem depository in the world. Every gem known to the lapidary has been found in the United States. The carat used is estimart‘ixrlvg the weight of gems is a grain of Indian wheat. The black diamond is so hard that it eannot be polished. An uneut diamond looks very much like a bit of gum arabic. The diamond, in sufficient heat, will burn like a piece of charcoal. Mr. G. L. Stephenson, of Peterborough, says: ‘"‘For over ten years I suffered conâ€" stantly with Piles, first Itching, then Bleadâ€" ing; pain almost unbearable; life a burden. Tried everything in ‘vain till I used Dr. Leonbardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid. "I had taken but a few doses when I beâ€" gan to notice an improvement. Now I am completely cured.‘" A $1,000 guarantee with every box of Hemâ€" Roid. $1. All dealers, or the Wileonâ€"Fylo Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 21 Scaly SXKin unnecessarily imposed upon the _ vast army of men once known as "baggageâ€" smashers," but now known as baggare men. _ During this season of the year this branch of the railroad business is greatly overworked. _ It is exacting, hurried and exasperating labor, and tne _only wonder is, considering the number of pieces handled during the season that more are not lost or smashed than reâ€" ports show. _ The baggage smasher of twenty years ago would stand little show of retaining his place under the present system. _ ‘The exercise of eare and the necessity of reducing damage claims to the minimum has revolutionâ€". ized, in great measure, baggage handling methods. Where trunks are ruined rnow it is either because they were of flimsy construction or partly damaged at the outstart.â€"Philadelphia Press, The other side of this 't-l‘l;l-l-in;!'lliï¬zflz'?? is the amount of extra work which is man or woman and of moderate size. The wellâ€"dressed, the refined .the modâ€" est, do not require an outfitter‘s shup as & part of their daily wardrobe. 1f it is a fluffy summer girl, whose mission to the seaside or mountain is not for health or enjoyment, but to pose as x milliner‘s mode}, or a newly rich matrou whose mantuaâ€"maker has been given carte blanche .and who is aching to ghine and outshine, that is another matâ€" ter, and the number of trunks is not perâ€" miitled to interfere in her plans. " (Hekad Ec A Taidht me postng the promiee, whh this iedcinsthâ€" The Extra Work Unnecessarily Imposed on the "Baggageâ€"Smasher." The happiest, most contented Ame¢riâ€" can is he who in his journeying is freoed from an encumbrance of trunks. Une or two should be sufficitnt for the avera®e Something About Valuable AFTER TEN YEARS Not Properly Packed, TRAOE MAARK AEGISTERED. THE TRUNK NUISANCE. Stones. ;’,‘sunuc_m !| SoAP #.%== It is well known that ordinary winâ€" dow glass allows nearly all of the heat derived from the sun to pass through, but, on the other hand, intercepts all heat coming from nonâ€"luminous sources, such as a stove or the heated ground. This is the reason why heat accumulates under the glass roof of a hothouse. If covered with Srigmondy‘s glass a hothouse would, it is claimed, become a cold house, since the heat could not get into it. Glass to Keep Out Heat. An Austrian inventor, Richard Szigâ€" mondy, is reported to have made a new kind of window glass whose chief pecu!â€" iarity is that it prevents the passage of nineâ€"tenths of the heat of the sun‘s rays, THE FAMOUS '?mumnmub" Leaves Buftalin..;.,.... ;. x4 Afliv“ Pit“hf‘ sw #* se Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. LAKE SHORE RAILWAY * (Jewel City, Kan., Republican.) Machineâ€"mede editorials are like machineâ€" made sermons and machineâ€"made music. People do not like the hollow boilerâ€"plate sound of such things. They want the buâ€" man, fleshâ€"anmâ€"blood touch of personality and sincerity that is lacking in all madeâ€" toâ€"order expressions of opinion and judgâ€" ment. A paper that has no distinctive colâ€" oring, no individuality, no way of its own, would better quit. It is as tiresome as the last speech at a fourth of July celebratiop. August 16 is the date of West Shore excarsion to New York City, good 15 days for return, giving privilege of tri'p on Hudson River steamers between Alâ€" bany and New York, in either or both directions, without extra charge. August 28, "American‘s greatest railroad," the New York Central, will run one also. Full particulars at 69)% Yonge street, Toronto. & The Short Line to Pittsburgh [ Thomas Hardy‘s First Love. That Thomas Hardy, although he abanâ€" doned his profession of architect to beâ€" come a writer, has nor forgotten his first love, is shown by an interesting paper recently written by him for the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings. The subject was the restoraâ€" tion of churches; and the author, after speaking of the many open abuses in soâ€" called "restoration," goes on to say that were he now practising as an architect he would not undertake to restore an old church under any cireumstances. in such an edifice the human interest aiâ€" ways ranks before the architectural inâ€" terest, and therein lies the whole diffiâ€" cnlt{ of restoration. The ideal method, he thinks, would be to enclose the ruined church in a crystal palace and to build a new one alongsideâ€"although it is searceâ€" ly necessary to amy that he does not ofâ€" fer this as a practical experiment, FIBRE WARE amoasrs Farmers and Dairymen Does Not Believe in "Boiler Plate." Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milkâ€"Pan You will find they give you satisgâ€" - faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE LEVLR BROTHERS LIMITED, Torente Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way (follow directions). Equally good with hard or soft water. NEW YORK EXCURSIONS Insist . DALY, Chief Aos‘t. G. P. A. . J. Lynch, . B. EDDYS on being supplied with EDDY‘s every time When you require a Smoking (Co:s jw~ T52 Parlor ie s xmx:?.-o-an. Miss Gushleighâ€"I suy aA great many narrow « l’hilippims, Colonel. _«( â€"Weli, 1 should hardly many. I was in three en all three of the girls ger off. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cown Plenty of Room Then. Authorâ€"Sorry, old man, T can‘t deadâ€" head you toâ€"night. Every seat is sold out. Friendâ€"Oh! ‘That‘s all right. 1!l wait tili after the first act. From Buffalo and _ Niagara Falls, Thursday, Aug. 16, tickets good 15 days. The West Shore takes you through the Mohawk Valley and along the Hudson River, and gives you the privilege withâ€" out charge of a trip on the Hudson River steamers between Albany and New Lork, if desired. For particulars consult ticket agents or address Harry Parry, General Agent, Buffalo, N. Y. "Oh, no he considers himself safe," reâ€" plied the living skeleton; "he‘s married to the snake charmer, you know." New York and Return $9.00â€"West Shore R. R. Safe From Serious Consequences. (Philadelphia Press.) "It‘s just scandalous _ the way the bearded lady is loadin‘ himself! _ with booze these days," remarked the wild man from Borneo, "I should think be‘€ be afraid o‘ delirium tremens." 1 for 10c; & for §De; 100 for 80c; all difâ€" ferent; 500 for $3 assorted; 1,000 envelopss ways be used for children testhing. 1t sootbe«; the child, soothes the gums, cures We=a colic and is the best rumedy for Diarâ€" PICTURE POST CARDS R. Adams, 401 Yonge street, Toronto, Ont. ISSUE NO. 32, 1996 _ Gon‘l, Pasr‘t. Agt., N. Â¥. C. Lines, Chisogs, B Mre. Winsliow‘s Soothing syrup should aiâ€" LE ROY PILL CO., MISCELLANEOUS. + f a on o ult Tarfth _ _A safe, sure and reliable monthly tor. ‘flmflh«hâ€"nu‘dhg for over ffty years, an« *~und invaluable for the purpose designed. and are guaran teed by the makers Mfl.h sealed @ircular. Price @1.00 per b of 10.00 a. m. FEMALE PILLS Wash oilcloths and linoleums with generously lst me !y say a great engagementsa, but Colonel S o o sisting town woun troop S17 The Mut though auffers saw a Sveabc Bian and enin lea v rr ha ands . seem t in 1m?t od the render Helsi firing in the â€" m m fi H Harak place, ineers borg fire. haif Sandh whole Island The hands sapper @ort man titiea muti: the u ©Uus al aide Svea tx ©0¢ miners tiny p.m P wert n A d Me atin ike ut t} H Ini w It n n