" ‘g '4 i t Tca Cuba libre has been given one trial, and it cannot be said to have made the best of it. It is now in the throes of ©0D yevolution, and life and property are being sacrificed. The United States are asked for help, and it will probably be given. Perhaps Cuba will have another irv at selfâ€"government, but we have not _great hopes of its suecess. The people * meed a strong hand to control them. ‘The present trouble may not lead to it tS being taken into the fold of the republic % as & state, but repetitions of it may â€" do so. And probably it will be the best © thing that could happen for the people ef Cuba and foreign investors in it. amg The new outbreak in Cuba may have portant consequences. The population r the island is not fitted for selfâ€"govâ€" the @nment. There are a few good men, 7 the masses need direction and conâ€" tiv . Spain found it a hard task to S4) govern the island. | It is rich in reâ€" do sources, although illâ€"suited to the northâ€" erner, and for many years a longing eye has been cast on the Pearl of the Antilles by a class of statesmen among our meighbors. Spain was envied the possesâ€" sion of Cuba, and for a quarter of a _ eentury or more aid and comfort were w | forthcoming generously for any filibusterâ€" __ers who may wish to foment revolution on the island. It was easy to run over men and arms to Cuba, and the U. S. authorities were not always argus eyed. In New York a Cuban Junta maintained headquarters, and wellâ€"known men in & return for "Cuban bonds" gave pecuniary ® aid. It was in the shape of contribuâ€" : tions to "Cuba libre" then. This conâ€" $ â€" stant disturbance was made the excuse . _ for U. S. interference, and the war with A Spain followed. That is history. At _‘ the close of that "struggle" Cuba would ! probably have become a state of the 3 union, but for President McKinley‘s highâ€" â€" _ minded and honorable declaration. After y it, to seize Cuba would have been a blot A on the national record; and our neighâ€" ;‘ bors did not seize it. There were those who said the object of‘the war was not | _ achieved. Perhaps the object of some of the war promoters was not achieved, } but the United States as a government w "lived up to McKinley‘s pledge. . They «> helped to organize, to pacify, and to purify Cuba, and left it with a governâ€" ~ment of its own, not entirely without i\hitltiom, it is true, but with practical freedom. :aï¬;‘“)hjor" MeBride went out to hunt ble in the Boer war, and he did not galÂ¥ hunt in vain. His war on "perfidious ** WaAlbion" was mostly a matter of mouth. tho tts A sit He was ready to sacrifice half his counâ€" d;trynen on the Boer altar if his own skin t99 was protected. But he fell into British ::"ï¬.ndl, and was not even given the glory wer of martyrdom. He was set at liberty the then fell a victim to the termagant i ude Gonne, who married him. What orse could his enemies have wished p 1 He stood it for a brief space, and n sought separation. And when he itg, looks back on his marital experiences he made is moulds, In Mor under one Why the rate is nc have a h are born business ? The est perty by ing reduc number o sand, and ceedingly sa, hundreds i ‘Toronto eceipts of "Institute :’bur mon: of â€" The "prof :. with vagr se« lars. Mo wy. foreign co a The sel House of gwhncco us * that there terioration to Pare entirel The comn *®Weriminal ] da ature lac In Montreal last week 111 children under one year old died; in Toronto, 43. Why the great difference® A high birth rate is not everything. What boots it to have a high birth rate if the childrer LEIVUUDâ€"ouf : werine > ~ 4 :o:bly regards war The select committee of the Bfitish House of Lords hits a hard blow at tobacco using by boys when it states that there are no signs of physical deâ€" terioration among girls, because girls are entirely free from the tobacco habit. The committee proposes to invoke the iminal law to prevent injury to imâ€" r.tme lads by the weed. | _ In Chicago a doctor has been given an !Mto jail sentence for robbing a «patient. He is not the man who presentâ€" m.ï¬o bill for a $300,000 fee. This one f & small robber. Toronto police estimate that the reâ€" ceipts of "Prof." Mann, head of the "Institute of Radiopathy," Toronto, in four months amounted to $304,084.55. ‘The "professor" is now on bail, charged with vagrancy and mailing fraud cirenuâ€" lars. Most of the money came from foreign countries. , and the property loss will be: exâ€" large, it being yet reckoned in hundreds of millions. The estimates of foss of life and proâ€" perty by the Chilian earthquake are beâ€" ing reduced, but it is feared that the number of victims will exceed a thouâ€" In New Orleans ice is furnished to householders at 25 to 30 cents a hundred pounds delivered daily,. It is all manuâ€" factured, and the water from which it is amade is filtered before going into the _ In London, England, a warm discussion is going on as to the question: "Should Christians make fortunes?" The cable man calls the question "thoroughly idiotic." Why? [ enear comnn. but to boom the undertaking e went out to hunt er war, and he did not is war on "perfidious ly a matter of mouth. as he knew it as Of my maturer years. Yet from those prayâ€" era I rose always regirded for the strife And conscious of new strength. Pray on, sad heart, That which thou pleadest for not may be given, But in the lofty altitude where souls ‘Who supplicate God‘s grace are lifted, thero Thou shalt find belp to bear thy daily lot Which is not elsewhere found. tearsâ€" l pel S e Nee ho es What would it profit us when school was done And not one lesson mastered? In famed Pandora‘s box were such vast !!!s As lie in human bearts. Should our desires, Volced one by one in prayer, scend to God And come back as events shaped to our wish, What chaos would result! In my fierce youth. I sighed out breath enough to move a fleet, Voicing wild prayers to beaven for fancied boons Which were denied; and that denial bends My knee to pnng‘gf gratitude each day Do not thing that the diarrhoea may pass off, as the baby may be so i1 in twentyâ€" four ho»rs that no treatment will be of any as much of the rubbish as possible. Rubbish breeds flies, and flies poison the food that they settle on and illness results. not. Since in his silence and refusal lies Their selfâ€"development, so God abides. Unbeeding many prayers. He is not deaf To any cries sent up from earnest hearts; He hears and strengthens when He must deny ; hituns Esctit *n‘ He sees us weeping over life‘s hard sums, But should He give the key and dry our What a world Were this if all our prayers were answered In any case of sudden dirrahoea or vomitâ€" Ing stop the milk at once, give only plain water or eggâ€"water, (the white of a fresh s@e dissolved in a glassful of cold boiled water). and take the baby to a doctor withâ€" out delay. â€"lvri hét weather do not keep bones, stale vegetables or frult and other rubbish for the dustâ€"bin in the room or house. Burn And calling, ‘"Help me, Get small tins, as after the tin is opened the milk wil soon go bad. Cover an open tin with clean muslin or butter cloth to protect it from dust and flies, and keep in a cool place. ANSWERED PRAYERGS. (By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.) Like some schoolmaster, kind in being stern, Who__pe,u the children crying o‘er their tube. The bottle should bo scalded out after use aud cleaned with a bottle brush, which should boiled tmmediately before using. After each feed the nipple should be turned Inside out and washed, and kept with the bottle in cold water. Good milk is often spolled by~dirty bottles. When fresh cow‘s milk cannot be obtained, or the milk has turned sour, use the best unsweetened condensed milk. Then place it in a covered vessel in a basin of cold water and keep it cool. The milk must be covered over to prevent the @ust and flies from reaching it. Always taste the milk, in & spoon, befors putting into the bottle to see that it has mot turned eour. Do not put the nipples into your own mouth at all. Do not keep any milk left in the bottle for the infant‘s next meal. Use it for yourâ€" self or the rest of the family. ‘The bottle should be boat shaped, with an !ngh rubber nipple, but no long rubber Buy the milk twice a dayâ€"not once onlyâ€" and get the best cow‘s milk you can, as cheap milk is always dangerous. Scald or boil it at once for one or tw» minutes. Nursing mothers should avoid overwork and fatigue, and should remember tat worâ€" rying and quarrelling may spoil their milk and give the baby diarrhoea. In summer any dirt entering the mouth produce digrrhoea. ‘Therefore do not F' babies such dirty soothers, nipples, comâ€" orters or thumbs. 11.â€"BOTTLEâ€"FED BABIES. In every hot weather diminish the amount of cow‘s milk given before the baby gets M. Make up the quantity usually taken by mdding boiled water. Summer diarrhoea in infants is chiefly @ue to bad and tainted milk amd dirty feeding bottles, and not to teething. 5 On no account give bables fruit, ice cream, fried fish, or bits from their mother‘s plate. To strengthen herself, the mother should take milk and plais food, not beer or stout or epirite. t Give the baby nothing but the breast milk which is its food. Babies are thirsty as well as adults. Reâ€" lMeve this thirst by giving cold boiled water trequently. fundt wWteds. 4 It dying of these complaints. 1.â€"BREASTâ€"FED BABIES. Diarrhoea and sickness is much more potemon in bottlefed than in breastâ€"fed babies, therefore mothers should always nurse Infants when possible for eight or nine uonths. But infants should not be weaned just before or during the hot weather. FO PREVENT DIARRHOEA IN BREASTâ€" The first crop should pay for the land and increase its value zmr-fold. Special Reduced Railway Rates, Write for illustrated folder. They are cheaper now than they will ever be. Climate the finest in Canada. Cattle graze all winter, and fatten on prairie hay. Soll the richest in the Northwest. Will grow, without irrigation, Winter Wheat, Oats, Barley, Sugar Beets, Alfalfa, and almost anything that grows in other parts of Canada, With irrigation a crop never fails. 1f the best Ontario farms could be jrrigated, they would double their Eresent average yield, and could e cropped ten years longer without running out. . EesE PCOE PEWIIRCNCCC SUMMER DIARRHOEA IN INFAXNTS. Hundreds of infants die during the sumâ€" mer from diahhoea and suckness which may, with proper care, be prevented, but cannot ?‘N'y- be cured. If mothers will read careâ€" and carry out the following instruction2, they may hope to save their infants from @esire that the general public should be inâ€" fermed. and therefore the suggestions are bherewith published:â€" _ _ _ _ ____, ___ daily. As these rules are important for not only those who receive treatment at the Ready for the gongh. Convenient to Railway and Post Office, Market and Schools. : FED BABIES. \ Nurse the bay regularly, not every timo Telfer & Osgood Selling Agents 216 CORIsTINE BuILDING MONTREAL (Calgary District]) master!‘ yet helps No difficulty is experienced in obâ€" taining good results from snap shot phoâ€" tographs taken on the street at 10, 11 and 12 o‘clock. They are, however, withâ€" out shadows and are rather lifeless for reproduction. The cheechacoâ€"the Indian word for newcomer and the popular term for tenderfootâ€"finds it difficult to go to sleep on account of the light, and for some unevxplainable reason the hotels use white curtains. This is reversed in winter and dm:f December and Januâ€" ary there arfe only three hours of dayâ€" light each d:y.â€"f'alu†‘s Weekly, There is no place in the world which has a wider range of temperature than Dawson. In winter the mercury drors to 60 and 70 degrees below zero and the ordinary thermometer goes out of busiâ€" ness and a spirit instrument is used to register the degrees of cold. In midâ€"sumâ€" mer it sometimes becomes so warm that the sluice boxes at the mines are worked at night, which is always cool, instead of during the day. This can easily be done, as throughout the summer the sun comes up before 3 o‘clock in the morning and goes out of sight after 10 o‘clock in the evening. The red glow remains all night and one may read a newspaper by a winâ€" dow at midnight. & ‘ Life in Dawson, _ The ubitquitous servant question bobs up in Dawson in the shape of unskilled labor at high prices, and _ the family which is fortunate enough to possess a cook pays well for her servicesâ€"$60 to $70 a month. This includes board and lodging. A woman who comes in to preâ€" pare dinner and set the house in order receives $35 a month, while the ordinary scrub woman commands $3 a day. Keepâ€" ing warm in winter is another expensive nocessity, Wood is used for fuel, and last winter it cost a housekeeper of my acâ€" quaintance $67 to heat her sixâ€"room cotâ€" tage for one month. Our friend Mr. Deppe of Deppe, N.C., came here a few days ago and took us out to rids. Now, we are very fond of riding and we very readily got on board and out of town we went at .the rate of about thirty miles an hour; now we don‘t want any of that kind of riding, for we came back minus a hat and umbrella and if our pants bad not been belted on I guess we would have lost them. No more automobile stusts, thanks. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere Wine germs, which make it possible to duplicate the famous wines of Bordeaux, Burgundy or the Rhine, are among the latest experiments of scientists, _ The germs are obtained from the dregs of casks which have contained genuine old wine, and those for each particular brand are placed for safe keeping in a subâ€" stance prepared from Japanese isinglass and fruit juice. In the jellylike mass the germs soon establish a colony. When needed, sufficient germs may be placed in a tube of sterilized fruit juice. After two or three days the juice will be in full fermentation, with plentiful efferâ€" vescence. This process is said to impart to the wine the exact bouquet and charâ€" acteristics of the wine from which the germs originally came. Dear Sirs,â€"I had a Bleeding Tumor on my face for a loftg time and tried & numâ€" ber of remedies without any good results and I was advised to try MINARD‘S LINIMENT, and after using several botâ€" tles it made a complete cure, and it healed all up and disappearad altogethâ€" DAVID HENDERSON. Belleisle Station, Kings Co., N. B., Sept. 17, 1904. [9 Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. ity, etc. They improve the general © culation, and are a boon to paleâ€"faced girls and weak women. Obtainabi« from all druggists at 50c a box, or from the Bilean Oo., Colborne street, Toronâ€" to, Cut out thisarticle, write across it the name and date of this paper, and post it to above address with your own name and address, and a lc stamp to pay return postage, and a free sample box mwill be mailed you. Bileans for Biliousness are also a cerâ€" tain cure for skin eruptions, biliousness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, foul breath, dizziness, fainting, feelings of uncomfortable fullness even after a light meal, wind pains, anacmia, debilâ€" An Australian Native. they will stimulate you wonderfully. Bilâ€" eans, without the slightest discomfort, prompt the liver and digestive organs to act in nature‘s normal way, leaving those organs strengthened and stimuâ€" lated to continue the performance of their dutics without further assistance. They produce a gentle action on the bowels, curing or preventing constipa tion, cleansing the stomach, and ridding the system of all impurities. f ' /, 3 ‘\\ are het Aey _ ou P 7 :,; ME live wA PA + ?;:;l é ie B E hea CA ï¬j// Py stir AA 4p7 R fe N/ +. ce U 4P //:'. Th NPA :t rh f‘\"\ out & AWea\ & . . t Wl =r* // // ( '/,!f,"" "ru ENALLE ou CAPT. COOK ‘AND ! AUSTRALIAN NATIVES. ;‘ It is a wellâ€"known fact that mo: liver and stomach medicines contain mercury, bismuth, and other minerai poisons, _ If taken for long there subâ€" stances cause such serious effects ad loosening the teeth, causing the hair to fall, etc. Now Bileans are a household medicine absolutely devoid of all such harmful ingredients, They are purely ~lâ€"â€"® Wt vegetable and 2ails 22 .B are a certain m B + bÂ¥ â€"cure for all N/ 4 /i ae liver and stomâ€" & '_’;,' / > ach troubles,inâ€" hk / dige!tlon, é\., S PÂ¥ headache, conâ€" 3/ K d WWe stipation, piles, CA 4/ PAE female ailâ€" PY CAAA ° ments, _ etc. < CAE T They cure conâ€" R //; BJ stipation withâ€" w PMA out causing &* MWMR griping. If you The natives of Australia knew the medicinal virtues of roote and herbs so well that when first discovered by Captain Cook, the great English na gator, they were practically free from disease. Bileans for Biliousness (the great Al:;:dnll'nn herbal remedy), are compou rom the finest medicinal herbs, and. are altogether superior to ;houpedieiuu in use before their introâ€" uction, New System of Making Wine. Out For a Fast Run. ht i t : Cmaio aol artacialts l-‘.'[.]lï¬l.‘ "runâ€"down" or out of sorts TORONTO feeling and it cures the cold. That‘s what is necessary. Igsoothes the throat because it reduces the irritation ; cures the cold because it drives out the inflammation ; builds up the weakened tissues because it nourishes them back to their natural strength. ‘That‘s how Scott‘s Emulsion deals with a sore throat, a cough, a cold or bronchitis. Great joy is manifested all over the city at the expected inauguration of overhead trolley service on the Madison street and Milwaukee lines on Sunday. The rest of the world had overhead trolleys years ago, got tired of them and adopted underground trolâ€" leys. Now comes along poor Chicago, alâ€" weys ten years behind in anything that deâ€" pends on the city government, and picks up the leavings of other cities and is only too glad to get them. This is the result of eight yéars of democratic rule and municipal ownâ€" ership bosh. The tissues of the throat are inflamed and irritated; you cough, and there is more irritaâ€" tionâ€"more coughing. You take a cough mixture and it eases the irritationâ€"for a while. You take EMU LSI O N It may be better to go un like a rocket than never to go up at all. SCOTTS I never pick a péeper up, $3 An‘ glance acroft th‘ dpa,ge F d But what it riles my dander up An‘ puts me in a rage. By hen, I only wisht I had Th‘ makin‘ o‘ tÂ¥ law, I‘d make it life with ball an‘ chain ‘I" speak the name o‘ Thaw. It‘s Thaw done this an‘ Thaw done that An‘ Thaw sez this an‘ t‘other An‘ whether Thaw was right or wrong In this, that an‘ the other; I git so goshâ€"allâ€"fired wild, Ez I remarked to ma, I wisht they‘d start a cold wave an‘ Freeze out the nume o‘ Thaw. The Better * Way Dr. Leonbardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid is guaranâ€" teed to cure any case of Piles. $1.00 at all dealers, or the Wilsonâ€" Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Ointments and local treatments may relieve but cannot cure. If Hemâ€"Roid doesn‘t cure you, you get your money back. _ 7 _ Hemâ€"Roid is a tablet taken internally, thus removing the cause. Nothing can cause more pain and more distress than Piles. About one hundred will attend the congreâ€" gation and the election of the General requires a majority of twoâ€"thirds. It is believed by those familiar with Jesuit affairs that there is little or no liklihood that the new General will be of Italian birth, for the reason that the interests of the order are much greater outside of Italy than in it. The last six Generals were not Italian. The late Fathor Martin was a Spaniard. It is because the interests of the order have so greatly inâ€" creased in this country in the last decade that knowing ones look for the election of an American. The headquarters of the order have been for years at Friesole, near Florence, which was the official residence of the ‘"Black Pope."‘ ‘The late General, however, residei for most of the time in Rome, and recently the immense quarters formerly held by the Augustinian order in the Ludovisi nelghborâ€" hoo¢ in Rome have been purchased by the Jesuits, and here will be the headquarters of the order in the future. The property includes the Church of St. Patrick and an unâ€" finished convent. â€"Buffalo Commercial. gat He is to Be Chosen in Septemberâ€"The ‘The two Jesuit provinces in this country _ o) gamad tha dalasates who are to TERRIBLY DISTRESSING. Uncle Ezra‘s Complaint. (Exchange). THE "BLACK POPE." Chicago‘s Trolley. Where Woman Pleads Not Guilty, (Sheridan, Ore,. Newsâ€"Sun.) Yesterday we were asked if we ever saw a baldseaded woman. We answered, "No," we mever did, nor did we ever see a woman waltzing around town in ber shirt sleeves with a cigar in ber teeth and running into every saloon she saw. We have never seen a woman go fishing with a bottle in her vpocket, sit on the damp ground all day and come bhome drunk at night. Nor have we ever seen a woman yank off her coat and say she could lick any mar in town. "The play‘s the thing," remarked Shakespeare. But had he lived in this age he would havre known that m.:-'l ink cuts rather a considerable If one is lively and up to mischief, red or pink should be worn; if angelic and gracious blue is the shade; if sad and distraite, grey or black. These symbols are interesting the youths of Weisbaden the capital of the butterfly realm. The greatest swimmers in the world are the Filipinos. They can do the alâ€" most impossible in the water and #wim for hours without becoming exhausted. Nowadays the parasol is a confection if French millinery destined to lure on to their doom susceptible creatures of the male persuasion. Women grow old through fretting more than men. The routine of home life and dutics are wearisome and wearing. _ It is said if fresh apples are eaten with salt after every meal theyswill cure indigestion, and make the skin benutiful. In a national beauty â€" contest â€" the French woman would not rank second or even third, but to the casual observer she would come out ahead. She makes a study of color combinations and lines and almost arrives at perfection. There is a sign outside a small estabâ€" lishment in Paris that reads, "Here there is Face Skinning," and it is here the French woman goes to have her complexâ€" ion renewed. Japanese youths give their _ sweetâ€" hearts little glass bells, called "memâ€" ory bells." They are hung in a window, the air causing them to tinkle, serves as & reminder of the giver. ‘There are few citiecs in the world having more newspapers and of such varied tongues than Buenos Aires. Altogether the number of dailies, weekles, montblies and irregulars published in the republic fluctuates about 180. Besides, of course, the ‘"national" lanâ€" guage, with its wide divergencies from Spanâ€" ish, there are papers published in Castilian, in Italian, French, German, as well as English, in Basque, in Norwegian, and Danâ€" ish, im Arabic, Syrian, Hebraic, Servian and in several dialects, while in the Chubut terâ€" ritory the Welsk organ has considerable sale and influence. Bold by all Druggists and General Stores NO DEAD FLIES LYING ABOUT ‘"‘The neckties are supplied free by the railroad companies for use as danger sigâ€" nals in emergency, Thus, no matter when or where an accident may happen, there is no need to search or scramble for a red flag, but the brakeman whips off his reg'necktie and waves it frantiâ€" cally aloff. "Red neckties are always worn by forâ€" eign brakemen and conductors. Ever notâ€" ice it?" said a railroader. "No. â€" Why is it?" "As a safety device," was the reply. "These red neckties that flash upon your g:n on the railroads of Italy, France, rmany and England are not a sign that the people have a gay taste, but that they are cautious and prudent. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. "You blundering idiot!" he blurted out. ""You‘ve made it too small! I can‘t get it over his head!" "Over his head!" ejaculated the sadâ€" dler, " Man,, it wasn‘t made to go over his head. â€" Back him into it." And Stingiman was quiti â€"rude lected. Mr. Stingiman‘s antiquated horse is, to put it mildly, rather thin, and a sif to make up for lack of flesh on the body, the animal has a head many sizes too large for it. Of course, people talk about that horse, and Mr. Stingiman ;doesn‘t like it. The other week, for instance, Stingiman had gone to the expense of a new collar for the brute. Ten minutes after delivery he was back at the sadâ€" dler‘s with the collar. Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufactprers, after a two months‘ thorough trial, Made by GOOLD, SHAPLEY A MUIR CO. LIMITED, * {rantford. Canada. * IMPERIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL and by mail. i * TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM ARCHDALE WILSON, HAMILTON, ONT. Town of Many Languages. Things We See and Hear. Red Neckties on Trains. His Horse. Wilson‘s Three hundred times bet. ter than sticky paper. FLY. PADS "Get off my toes, you lobster!" cried the Yale freshman to the New Haven peeler. _ Astounded Bumble took that beardless insulter in. A police magiseâ€" trate fined the young desperado $15, A scratch on the dignity of a New Haven policeman merits a penalty of much more than $15,. _ But what compensation is there for the offended dignity of a lobâ€" ster, that sacred crustacean, the king of foods, for whom palaces and lordly halls are built, a god who is killed and eaten all day and all night long? At best the policeman is a necessary evil. The lobâ€" ster is an indispensable good.â€"New York Sun. The Medical Brigand. (Toronto Star.) Considerable _ comment has _ been caused by a claim of $300,000 for mediâ€" cal service given to a lady who has inâ€" herited a fortune, * * * Discussing the same topic, the New York Medical Record says that the wealthy patient should not be regarded as a lamb to be sheared, _ ‘The conscientious physician, it holds, "should formulate for himself a fee rate, and exact this of all his paâ€" tients who are able to pay ‘market rates‘ for all they receive, whether groâ€" ceries or medical services." In these days of free dispensariecs and charity hospitals the city practitioner at least is not called on, save in emergency, to treat patients who cannot afford to pay. When he does remitany part or all of his fee, it is a voluntary act of charity, and, says the Recort, he has no moral right to compensate himself for the underâ€" charge by overcharging the next wealthy patient who seeks his advice. "It was the highwaymanr of old who robbed the rich to feed the poor, but now that we have organized medical charities the phyâ€" -i:-ia: is not called upon to fill this role. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff A question of some importance, howâ€" ever, is which census is used, and we beâ€" lieve that the publishers adopted the plan some years ago of going back to the census of 1890. This was because of the general belief that the census of 1900 did Chicago a great injustice. it were to be accepted we should have to admit frankly that the increase since 1900 that is indicated by the estimate is very improbable. It amounts to more than 35 per cent., or in exact numbers to 601,025. ‘This is just about equat tb the increase in New York as that is indicated by the recent State census. But New York had 3,437,202 people to begin with, and Chicggo only 1,698.575. All the figures, except that of the school rensus for 1904, would go to show, howâ€" ever, that th€ population now exceeded £2.000,000.â€"Chicago Herald. At druggits‘â€"or from The Chemi (nndmucd.Hn-flmâ€"TM ‘The publisher‘s estimate of the populgâ€" tion is not determined by using an arbiâ€" trary multipleâ€"that is multiplying the number of names in the direct,orx by 31â€"2, 4, 41â€"2, or some other figure; it is based on the United States census. We take as a basis the number of names in the directory in a census year, and in succeeding years increase our estimate of the population at the same ratio in which the names in the directory &nâ€" crease, and we find it makes the result elmost as accurate as the enumeration of each individual. _ How Chicago Boomers Figure UB® ** crease of People of That City. It would not be strange if the casual reader should become somewhat confused by the estimates on Chicago‘s popula« tion. We start with the censue figure for 1900, which was 1,698,575. The inâ€" crease over 1890 was 54.4 per cent. Next there is & ment estimate for 19003, which is ljnm. The increase is 175,305, or slightly more than 10 pet The following year, 1904, there is & school census that tells a story of Arâ€" rested development and decline. UCBi cago‘s population is only 1,714,144, or 150,736 less than it was in 1903. There is no increase worth speaking of in the four years since 1900, Then comes a Health Department esâ€" timate for 1905 which appears as 1,090,â€" 750. This is but 116,870 more than the census bureau‘s estimate for 1903, and look@,like a gairly, conservative figure. specialitsâ€"lay weeks and weeks in hospitalsâ€" In the same year, however, there 18 & directory estimate of 2,272,760, and the difference between the two is 282,010. Finally there is the directory estimate just out. It puuMuhtion at 2; 300,500, and the by which the calculation is made is carefully explainâ€" oi oooke Farmers and Dairymen FIBRE WARE »ncas khas wor "I thought Mira would be like other remedies 1 Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan You will find they give you satisâ€" faction every time. Apology Due the Lobster. POPULATION ESTIMATES. TRABE MARK REGISTERED THERE Is NO SUBSTITUTE hhtmbdn.wbdm EDDY‘S every time s‘â€"or from The Chemits® Co. ef flm Itching Piles, Eczema, and an, 475 Ferguson Ave.. N. Hamilton, . B. EDDYS Here is a cure of hay fever that may not come to late for the, susceptible victim of that fell malady. ‘The Hospital relates that "*a gentleman who was a sufferer from hay fever happened one summer to spend two hours in the refrigerator hold of a steamer,* This cured bim and he bad no further attack that summer. As a remedy "cold storage** has objections, but there are victims who would even be cured at the expense of a frozen foot or fingere, and at any rate the ldea is refreshing. ‘Those of us who enjoy novelty, and always the "Jlact thing," micht rush for the refrigerator the instant we begin to feel that hay sneezing coming on. be interpreted may be judged from the fact that the term "whiskey‘ ‘is to be appied to "whiskey made from pure malt only." ‘The regulations to which these special provieions are to be enforeâ€" ed are to be published in the Governâ€" ment Garette, and will not take effect until after three months of such notifiâ€" cation. _ This act does not apply to Australian made goods exported to any one or more Etates of the Commonâ€" wealth. Newspaper men in general, and the younger men in the profession in parâ€" ticular, will be interested and profited by reading an article on The Independâ€" ent Press; Its Opportunities and Duties, which appears in the North Amerwan Review for July, theâ€"writer being Bir. Samuel Bowles, editor of the STnngfldd Republican, His conception of what a true journalist should be and what a genuine and selfâ€"respecting journalist should stand for in every community are -d,mirably expressed in these words: "The journalist has one client, one paâ€" tient, one flockâ€"that is to say, the whole community; and nothing should stond in the way of his singlehanded and devoted service of that one interest. He should beware all entangling ainâ€" ancesâ€"political, eocial, commercialâ€" which md limit or embarrass such eserâ€" vice.l d;ou’l:l let the honore and ¢moluments of office go to other peopie. His own office, if proï¬':rly administered, is more important and more Ymmu than any his fellowâ€"citizens are likely to confer upon him." food or drink by men or used in the manâ€" ufacture or preparation of articles used for food or <rn'nk by man, and on mediâ€" cines or medicinal preparations for inâ€" ternal or external use; apTrel, includâ€" ing boots and shoes, and the materiales from which such appare] is manufacturâ€" ed; jewelery and seeds and plants, How strictly the terms of the regulations will Lo s‘ s en D . It in part requires a trade . devs-cr?;'»{i;-l specifying the exact nature of ingrediâ€" ents to lfe_p_lngea on all articles used for Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. The Australian Commerce act, which went into effect June 8,contains a proâ€" vision regarding the labelling of goods. It in part recuires a tuden‘ dpnrf:u.. n:(r:†are divided into several classes: “Hdbo::n,†machines depending on scrows flight; "aeroplanes," machines in which equilibrium gpendo on plane surfaces, and "orthoptera," mechanical birds and machines propelled by the flapâ€" ping of wings. The expression "aviator," very often incorrectly employed, whoult be applied only to the pilot of an "aeroâ€" nef," as "aeronaut" is applied to the pilot of a gas balloon. â€"Boston Daily Adverâ€" chase a of tea contentment, as “SALm put up in quarter, half and one pound packets and sold at poâ€" pular prices so as to be within the reach of everyone. There is a squabble as to the correct name for various flying machines, airâ€" ships and balloons, and the Acro Club of France attempts to set the matter straight. "Aeronef" describes a {!ying machine heavier than air; that 1s, an apparatus having no gas bag. "Aeroâ€" PV muey J q0L.0 Gtvmzn! alsmane. It‘s an old saying that contentment is better than wealth A very limited amount of wealth is necessary to purâ€" tiser. be and 60c; 1,00 1or®‘®) R. m‘r..pmu. PICTURE POST CARDS lllorne;lnr.o:wtor.e; all difâ€" ferent; 500 for B assorted; 1,000 envelopes Hnmdfle:l..tonglung‘ï¬..'. Mre. Winsiow® E00000 CC lt tnge T '.,.uu-lurau. wething. _ 1t mummw eroben witws cotle and is the best for Cold Storage for Hay Fever What a Journalist Should Bs,. Australia‘s Commerce Ast, Airship Nomenclature. THE BEST TEA. s Boothing tiyrup should alâ€" han air; that 1s, an no gas bag. "Aeroâ€" into several classes: chines depending on aeroplanes," machines um z;endo on plane thoptera." mechanical remedy ‘"‘cold storage‘ there are victims who at the expense of a . Oldofd any hm' the ‘hose us who enjoy he ""Jast thing," micht or the instant we begin zing coming on. stant of most uni killing @ aga she the reser brigt sug? no her he i sket vell flew all, whi ing & WoOmar "And « Mona PA in my i "But 1 awbout w and wor would p who ha showed der her eminon & mon! burgh‘s Everard your un that tin Mona n shlng w of '%u-.rq Lisle steady easy, a letel Ris, the easy tion of pleasan Supp of your induige course, time ha with y« In a beside basket care of and the hills," silence "Like to you & .-fo dog races, al tios, we Now, a 1 "No, 1 the cou season the nut} That is "Much laughing sinking . making royalty . think al "I fea very pl eyes up improve Eurpow ut J w "I has is not + style of you wo! "A mi am I }i _ *"No only if 1 am Band among he smi "Nery recovere t my P ot up "Yos, ereature wering CC appy Wi ri Or Oh, I Shall I ho reat 1t h