thi lib tle averrc ton the of NPA The Now York municipal authorities ‘ have chosen a site 47 miles from that eity on the Erie Railroad for the proâ€" posed tuberculosis hospital. It consists of 1,300 acres, and has an altitude of , from 1,30C0 to 1,400 foet, and the physiâ€" eal conditions are said to be favorable to the proper treatment of about two hundred patients. At the beginning $225,â€" 600 will be spent for buildings, and this amount has already been appropriated. The construction and equipment _ of . shacks for patients will cost $80,000, and the dining room and kitchens will eost $20,000. A stable for forty cows will cost :-l:,ooo. The power plant is to be built f &‘Nl;m Thien n‘:amder n:f t‘:\: appropriation w 8 dormitories, _ employees Mpe and generalâ€" improvements. The u“-gmun will be used principally for incipient h- and as a resort for convalescert Twentyâ€"seven million stamps a dayâ€" one stamp for every third person in the United Statesâ€"is the output called for by the contract awarded last week in New York to the American Bank Note Company. Of recent years the work has been done by the U. S. CGovernment itâ€" self. The Company had built up an exâ€" tensive plant, employing thousands of workmen when the stamp contract was taken away from it in 1894. This plant is now engaged in turning out hundreds of millions of stamps and bank notes for Italy, Greece and many other Eurâ€" opean and South American countries. Chicago is not likely to have municiâ€" pal street railways just yet, but the eity will assert its right to control and will be in a position to take over the roads if desired, that is, if the proposal made by the traction companies is acâ€" eepted. This offer stipulates that the companies are to be given a twentyâ€"year license to construct and operate street ear lines, terminable on Jan. 1 of any year by the purchase of the lines, and the companies are pledged to reconstruct and equip the whole traction system, inâ€" eluding subways, at an expense of $40,â€" 000,000." The proposition is said to be generally viewed with favor. ihe Foronto Humane Society wants a byâ€"law passed prohibiting boys under 16 years of age from driving horses. It was argued that boys are uncont rollably reckless, fond of speed, addicted to vioâ€" lent jerking of the reins and negligent in the matter of caring for horses. Unâ€" fortunately this is all too true in genâ€" eral. The poor horses have much to put up with. If they could only speak they would a tale unfold that would melt a heart of stone. of clergymen throughout this Province at least. A village with three or four ehurches is an anomaly in the present state of affairs. The Presbyterian laments that _ so many ministers are leaving this part of the country to engage in church work in the great west, it fears a famine of ministers in the east. We think there is room for weeding out quite a number for wine, an aggragate for aleoholic drinks of $1,342,000,000. The total for tea, coffes and eocoan was $220,000,000. As a great many people do not drink intoxicants at all, and many drink very sparingly, some must swill a good deal of liquor, The Statistical Correspondence Magâ€" azine states that in Prussia in 1905 the people ate 1.568 dogs and 81,312 horses, an increase over the previous year of 33 per cent. of dogs and 19 per cent. of horses. This is strange sort of news for Canadians to read. But these people who had to eat those dogs and horses to keep them alive were highly protected by a Government tariff. Free Trade Britain has not come to that yet. It is computed that the United States sapent, in 1905, $771,000,000 for beer, $567,000,000 for.svhisikey and $92,000.000 For the erection of workingmen‘s houses the Toronto News favors the formation of a company for the purâ€" pose, the bords of the company to be guaranteed by the city. Cortain condiâ€" tions would attach to this guarantee, as, for instance, the rate of re;ul, the purâ€" chase option to the tenant, and the in terest return on the investment. Dreyfus‘ defender, Gen. Picquart, is now Minister of War. Whatever he may do as a Cabinet Minister, robody will deny that he bore himself like a great man and true in the struggle for justice for Dreyfus. ® They are selling bailding site lots ton at $300 a foot. This is pret g':;.fot a eoulntry where there is much vacant land. That sort of a boo may have a short life. Now McGill sophomores and freshmen have been indulging in hoodlumisn and must choose between apology and susâ€" pension for a year. Must students realâ€" ly behave like gentlemen now ? Th honor of finding the North Pole is still 203 miles beyond the explorer‘s reach. Eut they‘ll reach it yet. =| amear comor. re there is so sort of a boom at ‘Birds are like human beings, differing eatly in character, likes and dislikes, %e;.' are, moreover, extremely whimsical, To train them successfully one must etudy their dispositions. One feathered pet of my acquaintance refused to sleep at night unless it had a cracker in its "When there are two birds to be trainâ€" ed they can be taught to balance together on a ladder or to balance on a ball. With three birds one can be trained to draw a tiny cart in which the other two ride. I myself once owned a bird which would jump through a hoop like a cireus clown, with apparently great enjopyment to the feat, and another tlat turned over on the swing like an acrobat in the cireus. The favorite stunt of another little felâ€" low was sliding down a rope or wire as if esoaping from some burning building. *A popular trick in trained bird exhibiâ€" tions is that of climbing a ladder. This pretty feat, given patience, and a bird who loves you, can be managed by any amateur. Begin by having the bird hop from one finger to another, lifting one above the other so as to give the suggesâ€" tions of ascent. Now try it with a toy ladder, resting it on a chair or anything suitable Put the bird on the lowest round and coax it to mount from one step to another higher up until the top is reached. Here there might be a tiny bell fastened with a ribbon, which the bird will learn to ring This trick is of eourse not the work of a single lesson or of one day _ The pet must be led to it little by little, taking him only in his most favorable moods "Another time, pin a leaf of lettuce to the sleeve of your coat or %own, and by this means tempt it by placing someâ€" thing between the lips. In time the bird will learn to take the morsel from your mouth and to kiss you. I "By placing a piece of lettuce on the palm of the hand and holding it just outâ€" side of the cage door, which has been opened, the bird can be taught to hop on to your hand. 3 seeds were placed in the seed cup, after which the master would say, ‘Tiddleâ€" winks, your master wants his breakâ€" fast." The bird would immediately take up one of the seeds and come to the cage door with it. The owner would then open the cage, hold out a finger, on which the pet would perch. The bird invariably shelled the seed, by the way, before rlnclng the kernel on the gentleman‘s ips, afterward flying back to the cage for another tidbit. "Every morning accustom the bird to some little handling. First remove the top perch, put one hand inside the cage and follow the bird with the other hand outside. Hold carefully, but very gently. Feathered pets will not stand squeezing or pressure of any kind. Let it rest with its feet comfortably arranged on ons of your fingers. Talk to it quietly and coaxingly. On returning it to the cage give it a treat in the way of lettuce, apple, etc. 6 # _ "A clever canary of my acquaintance was taught not to eat until after its master had been fed. Two or three hemp "To gain a bird‘s confidence speak to it always in a quiet, reassuring voice. They are nervous beings and â€"highly sensitive to the atmosphere of their surâ€" roundings. If you have occasion to handle them, let it be with a gentle, reassuring touch. These seem trifles, but they are of great importance in bird training. Teach a bird first not to be afraid of you,. In approaching his cage call to him gently to let him know you are coming ard that his breakfast is in sight. Many masters and mistresses fail in this simple precaution. They approach the cage sudâ€" denly, jerk the seed cup from its position, replace it in the same way, almost frightening the bird to death, and withâ€" out a word to reassure him. often by some extremely simple means a pretty trick is evolved. : "When the casual observer with little ; 4f any knowledge of birds first sees the ! little pets going through the many stunts that a bright bird can easily be ; taught to perform, the first thought is ; usually hypnotism," said Miss Virginia | Pope, a bird specialist, when asked for At druggits‘â€"or from The Chemifi C-l?mrflln;mâ€"'fm. o- * ll] 5 l’ Wl -7 Hi_'E d Loo*C-oern. 475 F. Ave., N. Hamilton, ve., N. had Eesemawince d:E:'d He. consulted specialittsâ€"lay weeks weeks in hospitalsâ€" and despaired of ever getting better. "I thought Mira wou!ld be like other remediecs I had tried," he writes, "but, to detight, a few hours after the first n%h‘am'on'y/w great n£4 1t has worked wou. s for me." Don‘t put it ofâ€"g«i. ~~x «i dlira Ointmem at once and be relieved. Price 50c.â€"6 for $2.50. "Enjoying this freedom, too, a bird will often develop pretty little traits and tricks of his own devising, which are less often noticed in the always caged pet. These individual traits can be utilized as a basis of his future training. What the little creatures like to do they will perform readily, and by adding to this "About the worst way in the world to begin is to be harsh to the bird, starving or abusing it, although some little reâ€" ward. such as a nut, a leaf of lettuce or a scrap of apple (according to the varâ€" iety of the bird) may be given when the pet has proved specially apt and willing. First of all, gain the confidence of your bird, which of itself is a process requirâ€" ing time and understanding of bird nature. When at all possible, the little creatures should be aceustomed to leave the cage now and then, to fly around the room, becoming in this way members of the family cirele. This means splendid exercise, which your pet does not obtain in his cage, besides helping him to outâ€" grow any feeling of fear he map happen: to have in the presence of humans. ‘\ "Only a bird lover can train a bird successfully. The process is a slow one, involving infinite patience. Like human education, it is a gradual process, with a humble A B C beginning, to which we add little by little. ness. This is the only witchcraft used and it is all sufficient. the secret of training them. _ "In realâ€" ity," she continued, "the bird lover‘s hypnotiec influence is affectionâ€"kindâ€" TRAODE MARK REGiSTERED, â€"or from The Chemifts® Co. ef San Domi hostilities. The revolutionuri leaders yesterday reâ€" fused to stand by the articles of agreeâ€" ment for surrender, and the President of Sultan Imports Birds. The Sultan of Turkey has taken to imâ€" {)orting birds from England by the carâ€" oad,. Among them are song birds as well as others that are simply useful as enemies of destructive insects. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Turned Tables in a Hurry. (Somerville, Mass., Journal.) Jackâ€"You say you feal perfectly sure that she is only flirting with me? Tomâ€"Perfectly. Jackâ€"Hang the luck! Why, when I began I was only flirting with her. Supplying the Idol Trade. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) Several years ago a work of fiction by a prominent English author introduced as one of its leading English characters a hyproâ€" critical person who had enriched himself by making idols for the heathen trade. Recently England was a good deal shocked by the story that a factory in Birmingham was turning out the the same kind of goods and supplying the same heathenish demand. The matter was at once investigated and after m careful canvas of the manufacturing interests of the big town a leading clergyâ€" man issued a circular denying the charge emphatically, but qualifying his denial by the statement that such a factory had exâ€" isted at one time, but it lost its trade through American competition and was finally forced to close its doors. It is reported that the British public, which has a way of taking these things with a heavy sort of seriousâ€" ness, isn‘t quite satisfied with this explanâ€" ation. British made idols to which the Asâ€" latic or African heathen bow the knee are shameful enough, but to lose the trade in them to the hustling yankee doesn‘t improve the disgraceful situation. All dealers, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. "I was induced to try Antiâ€"Fill by reading the testimony of someone who had been cured of constipation by it. I had suffered for eighteen years and had taken tons of stuff recommended as cures, but which made me worse rather than better. Doctors told me there was no cure for me. Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€" Pill cured me." CHAS. H. POWELL A steam whistle at Muskogee, which blows for fires, sounds the curfew note, advisos children when to go to school, announces the arrival of the milkman, the closing and opening of the stores, the rising of the curâ€" tain at the opera house, the quitting hour for government employees, the arrival of trains and other things too numerous to menâ€" tion is driving the Queen City mad. The thing that bothers the intelligent citizens when the whistle blows is, ‘"What in thunder is it blowing for now?" MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED. Kingston Man Tells How He Suffered and How He was Cured. s 2 00 n uoc c daana . eE mE oo 1 2CA "Wee Frees" are recognized as the Free Church and a small amount of the proâ€" perty is assigned to them. _ The great bulk of the property is assigned to the United Free Church in which are merged all the Free Churchmen except the twentyâ€"four ministers, mostly in the Highlands, and their congregations,. Property. In England they find ways of doing justice by law if they cannot get it by judicial process. _ Six years ago â€" the United and Free Churches joined each other. But twentyâ€"four ministers of the latter Church refused to recognize the merger, and claimed to be the Free Church, all its other members having joined the United Church. In the Scotch Courts they were defeated, but they won in the House of Lords. The deâ€" cision was a montrous injustice. lt gave the twentyâ€"four ministers, nickâ€" named the "Wee Frees," fifty or sixty million dollars of property and on the ground of the sacredness of endowed property actually diverted most of this money from the purposes for which it was given. The property was created after the Free Church was organized and the wishes of almost all the donors would have been promoted by the union. As soon as the decision was rendered Parliament created a commission to divide the property. _ The twentyâ€"four . wores ye _ 1 J & Gray‘s Syrup or Ren Servce Cum necessary to buy another dish of the Japâ€" | 0T gAping wound; and to ancint each enese pattern that had so attracted his | iDjury carefully with their favorite b&lm eye. was an indispensable part of the day‘s "To any one wishing to train a bird," | Programme. If we go Ed‘ in historyâ€" concluded the specialist," I would emâ€" | ¢¥en to Bible timesâ€"we find that this phasize above all the necessity of gentleâ€"{ @Xxternal "rubbing" has prevailed all ness, kindness and infinite patience, To , @l0n¢g the line, and the only explanaâ€" try to force it or to illtreat your pet | tion of its ‘survival, amidst so many when beginning his education is to lay changes in science, seems to lie in the the foundation of a complete failure." ~ }fact that the external use of salves mm# e ze and balms is dictated to us by Nature THE WEE FREES. herself. Our own instincts tell us to o s rt;b gd palrt ‘;l:sut hurts, and in Zamâ€"Buk the ideal substance to apply to an inâ€" Get Only a Small Amount of the Church j jured or diseased ,u,facep ,ï¬â€™â€œ,-vemuy Property. | believed to have been found at last. In England they find ways of doing.| Most of the ointments, embroeations justice by law if they cannot get it by | 204 salves that have had to suffice in judicial process. _ Six years ago _ the | th¢ Past are of a coarse consistency, and United and Free Churches joined each | CONt@in quantitics of mineral poisons,. other. But twentyâ€"four ministers of the |T@PCd animal fats, and turpentine. latter Church refused to recognize the | What healing properties they may posâ€" merger, and claimed to be the Free | §°§8 Are generally counterbalanced by Church, all its other members having é the grave danger of inflaming and eonâ€" joined the United Church. In the Scotch | t2Mnating the flesh, "To any one wishing to traim a bird," concluded the specialist," I would emâ€" phasize above all the necessity of gentleâ€" ness, kindness and infinite patience, To try to force it or to illtreat your pet when beginning his education is to lay the foundation of a complete failure." "An accident occurred later on, and the pretty Japanese dish was broken. The bird refused once more to bathe, and perâ€" sisted so steadily in its whim that it was necessary to buy another dish of the Japâ€" enese pattern that had so attracted his eye. cage. This dainty was not to eat, from his lordship‘s point of view, but to perch upon. The whim of another was never to bathe in the conventional white dish proâ€" vided for ‘this purpose. However, as he seemed to heartily enjoy shaking the drops from a wet lettuce leaf, thus makâ€" ing an impromptu shower bath for himâ€" self, it was not hard to see that the dish was at the root of the objection, not the water itself. ‘One day, instead of the ordinary bath, a Japanese dish was placâ€" ed in the cage. Immediately the tiny esthete plunged into it and took a splenâ€" did bath. Domingo has directed a renewal of 25 ¢ It cures those heavy, deepâ€"seated coughsâ€"takes awray the sorenessâ€"heals the throatâ€"strengthens the Iungs. None the less effective because it is pleasant to take. Just try one boitle and see how quick!y you get rid A of thet cough. At your druggists. 25¢. bottle. Dlowing Confusion _for years a marâ€" tyr," is how Chas.. H. Powell, of 105 Ragian street, Kingston, beâ€" gins his story. _ "A martyr to _ chronic constipation, but now I am free from it and all through the use of Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€" _ which ordinary remedies have not reached, will quickly yield to 5 "For That Cough Teacherâ€"Johnnie, en which side is your beart? Johnnieâ€"On the right side, teacher. Teacherâ€"No, Johnnie; it‘s on your left side. Johnnieâ€"Yes, ma‘am; that‘s what I said. Teaherâ€"What you said? Johnnieâ€"Yes, teacher; the left side is the right side for the heart. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Copper as a Precious Metal. (Providence, R. I., Journal.) Natural conditions and a marvelously inâ€" creased demand due to recent industrial deâ€" velopment have pushed copper to the price to which the famous Secretan "corner‘" manâ€" aged to lift it, only to go down in a crash. It is small wonder that the metal is finding its places in the jeweler‘s show cases alongâ€" side gold and silver. MINARDS LINIMENT. I was cured of Acute Bronchitis by MINXARD‘S LINIMEXNT. I was cured of Rheumatic Gout by MINARDS LINIMENT. in the hunting field would be practically to recapitulate every wellâ€"known name in the army list. Lord Roberts is a great rider to hounds even today, and the same remark applies to Gen. Sir Neville Lyttleton, It is rather surprising that more soldiers do not go in for golf, and I can, at the moment, only recall one wellâ€" known name among our generals who is more than an average player,. This, of course, is Lord Methuen, who, a few years ago, could show the best of them round the links, _ Sir Edward Ward preâ€" fers rowing to any other form of exerâ€" eise, unless it be riding, while genial and popular "Ste." otherwise Badenâ€"Powejl, thinks there is no sport under the zun to come up to pigâ€"sticking. This is only right and what might nave been expectâ€" ed from a former holder of the Kadit Cup. Tennis, both indoor and of the lawn variety, claims many military voâ€" taries, including Sir George Wolseley, whose retirement from the army was anâ€" nounced the other day.â€"M. A. P. | Zamâ€"Buk is absolutely {free from {any such danger. It is a preparation 'compounded purely from herbal juices, essences and extractsâ€"a *"skinâ€"food," 'which regenerates old and diseased lti&sues just as food rebuilds and reâ€" constructs the body. â€" Zamâ€"Buk also ,givea naturally just that assistance | which Nature is asking for when pain, ; swellings, eruptions or inflammation ; occur, _ Zamâ€"Buk allays all forms of | irritation, expels disease, stops â€" supâ€" | puration, stops festering and virtually }"feeds†the skin, toning it up _ in , Nature‘s own way. Zamâ€"Buk should ibe in every home. It has a wide range of usefulness, but is especially recommended for cuts, bruises, burns, scalds, «prains, stiffâ€" ness, swollen joints, bad leg, blind and bleeding piles, runmning sores, eczema, ulcers, pimples, boils, rash, raw chapâ€" ped hands, sealp irritation, sore heads, barber‘s rash, raw chin after shaving, sore throat and chest, sore and aching feet, chilblains, cold sores, festering sores, poisoned wounds, and other dis _eased, injured, and inflamed or irriâ€" tated conditions of the skin. Rubbed well into the parts affected, Zamâ€"Buk gives great â€"relieft from neuralgia, toothache, seiatica, lumbago, rheuâ€". matism, and chest and back pains. All drug,gists sell at 50 â€"cents a lbox,J or most free from tha Zaw Rul a1 Without doubt, the form of recreation that finds most favor with our leading generals is cyeling. Lord Roberts, Sir Evelyn Wood, Lord Wolseley, Gen. Baâ€" denâ€"Powell, and Lord Grenfell, to name only a few, are all enthusiastic devotees of the wheel. As is only to be expeetâ€" ed, hunting is not far behind, and to give a list of our military leaders who excel or ipost free from the Zamâ€"Buk Co Toronto, on receipt of price. Markham, Ont. I was cured of Acute Rheumatism by Snssex. _ LT.â€"COL. CREWE READ. Halifax VJYRKUNTO Ancient Greece will always be rememâ€" bered for the fine types of manhood supâ€" plied by the heroes of her battlefields and by the athletes of her arenas. Still more will these heroes and athletes themselves be remembered for the cusâ€" tom they bequeathed to later ages of healing sore and injured places on their bodies by the external application of some secret balm or sailve. The Greek charioteers did not emerge from their mad races without some severe bruise "GOOD FAIRY OF TNE HOME. aNCIENT HEROES AND A MODERN DISCOVERY. Right Side for the Heait. Generals at Play, ANDREW KING. 25 ¢ C. 8. BILLING Johnâ€"Cautious! Why, he wouldn‘t pay a eempliment without setiing a receipt for it. Jacksâ€"Townley is an man, don‘t you think? _ **Well, my dear," said Mr. Parker, "since you ask it. I will. But you‘ll have to send the children out of the room first." "I can‘t understand this street railway sitâ€" uation,‘" said Mrs. Wade Parker. "I wish you‘d tell me just what you think of it.‘" It is doubtful if many women will go in for the big ospreys and paradise plumes. Besides India‘s $98,000,000 a year, othâ€" er colonics of Great Britain exjend $16,â€" 000,000 a year for local purposes, ‘The German total does not include $25,000,â€" 000 a year for colonial military exâ€" penses, and the French total also exâ€" cludes $18,000,000 a year for the army serving abroad. The British empire leads with its home ank colonial total Another of rosebuds is supplemented by a maidenhair fern spray. aoincg of $271,000,000. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. _Jetted bows of velvet, tulle and other materials are seen. According to a British Parliamentary paper, the world‘s normal annual miliâ€" tary expenditures are as follows: Russia ... ... ... ... ...$185,000,000 Germany ... ... ... ... . 157,000,000 Great Britain ... ... ... 153,000,000 France â€"«.....=.... .: .~183,000,000 United States ... ... ... 112,000,000 Iudia‘>«.; ‘+%\ . .. «+s :/<«‘08;000;000 Austria ... ... ... ... ... 84,000,000 Italy csussiulsy 4ok yil 31n4l 50000000 Japan ... ... ... ... ... ©21,000,000 Besides India‘s sos,oop,ooo a year, othâ€" net _One is compoed of rows of roses and an aigrette. . C Yes, some resemble the oldâ€"fashioned opera bonnet. _ 3 drowning.â€"J. G @htlv Review " Your Doctor uwous feature of the great festival of the dead, which is held every few years. The dancers dance not only in the clubâ€" house, but also at the graves, and on the ice if the deceased met their death The remainder of the food is afterâ€" ward distributed among the people presâ€" eunt, who eat of it heartily. Then with songs and dances the feast comes to an end, and the ghosts are dismissed to their own place. Dances form a conspicâ€" When a person has been much disliked his ghost is sometimes purposely ignored, and that is deemed the severest punishâ€" ment that could be inflicted upon him. After the songs of invitation to the dead have been sung the givers of the feast take a emall portion of food from every dish and cast it down as an offering to the shades; then each pours a little water on the floor so that it runs through the cracks,. In this way they believe that the spiritual essence of all the food and water is conveyed to the souls. to suffer great destitution. Hence the Esquimaux fear to die without leaving behind them someone who will sacrifice to their spirits, and childless people genâ€" erally adopt children lest their shades be forgotten at the festivals. When all is ready the ghosts gather in the fire pit under the clubâ€"house, and asâ€" sending through the floor at the proper moment, take possession of the bodies of their namesakes, to whom the offerings of food, drink and clothing are made for the benefit of the dead. Thus each shade obtains the supplies he nceds in the other world. The dead who have none to make offerings to them are believed They are designed for the opera. There‘s quite unusual elaboration. Sizes vary from a blossom to a bosâ€" | lower Yukon River hold a festival of the dead every year at the beginning of Noâ€" vember or the beginning of December, as well as a greater festival at intervals of several years. At these seasons food, drink and clothes are provided for the returning ghosts in the kashim, or clubâ€" house, of the village, which is illuminâ€" ated with oil lamps. Every man or woman who wishes to honor a dead friend sets up a lamp on a stand in front of the place which the deceased used to occupy in the clubâ€"house. These lamps, tilled with seal oil, are kept burning day and night till the festival is over. ‘They are believed to light the shades on their return to their old home and back again to the land of the dead. If anyone fails to put up a lamp in the clubhouse and to keep it burning the shade whom he or she desires to honor could not find its way to the place, and so would miss the feast, On the eve of the festival the nearest male relative goes to the grave and summons the ghost by planting there a small model of a seal spear or of a wooden dish, according as the deceased was a man or a woman. The totems of . the dead are marked on these impleâ€" 1 ments. ihtlv Review." Sulphurous Language Necessary. ESQUIMAU FEAST OF THE DEAD. ‘The Esquimaux of St. Michael and the SHILOH as ‘%uickly i hy not do as hundreds of 3housafnda ut:f Cuudtl;na hflvo one for e past â€"four years: let SHILOH be m doeâ€" tor whenever a Cough or Cold apgears. HILOH will cure you, and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time ?oixï¬l’fnve a Cough or Cold cure it with Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, butâ€" why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and then of having hisprescription filled, when you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH‘S CURE for a quarter. Why paÂ¥ two to five dollars when a wentï¬-five cent bottlg of SHILOH will cure you World‘s Military Expenditures. Cautious to the Limit. Hair Ornaments. Frazer in the "Fort exceedingly cautious The Mexican government fights in a ‘ practical and direct sort of way. the Minard meat trust advanced the price of meat to A practical prohibitive figure, so far. as the | poor were concerned, the government went |‘ 1 into the business and undersold the trust, at the same time giving better meats, ‘The competition had its effect and the trust quick â€" He (a ly reduced prices. ‘The government has made | women arrangements whereby it can go into the Sheâ€"V meat business on a very large scale at auy be none time the trust becomes too greedy, Heâ€"O November 2nd and November 20th are dates of New York excursions via West Shore Railroad, $9.00 round t from Suspension Bridge or Buffalo, H}l*gn good going only on above dates in ail regular trains. Good ten days for reâ€" turn. ticulars. While the monogram â€" on shirts is sometimes condemned, it continues to survive, and, undoubtedly, will be preâ€" served as long as men like to accentuate personality in dress. _ To swerve from the conventional a monogram is often embroidered within a small circle, and each grouping of letters is given a disâ€" tinct character, _ Of course the monsâ€" gram is always in colors to match the ghirt itself. The fourâ€"inâ€"hand remains the favored style in neckties, and, though it seems rather futile to give measurements, two to twoâ€"andâ€"threeâ€"quarter inches may serve as a guide to the width, Green and red are the most suitable colors to accompany brown and green lounge suits .and a multiplicity of these gshades may be seen at the leading shops. The wide bow of the batwing type, with square endsâ€"it should be a good, long bow, not a little thing â€" is also approvâ€" ed. For those who can wear such colors becomingly â€" and not evÂ¥ery man can â€" green and brown lounge suits in selfâ€" mixtures and other colors are new, or, to be precise, not yet common, according to "Vogue." But grays and blues are shown in many different. effects and are quite as fashionable. Narrow vertical gtripes are perhaps a little less common this season than plaids, and they show up very prettily in white or gray on blue or black grounds. 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, Erantford. Canada. "* IMPERIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL November Excursion to New York Via West Shore Railroad. CSR 20T EDDY‘S SAFETY MATCHES ror RorELs PARL Drago, Canadian Passenger “‘â€"t, Yonge street, Toronto, for parâ€" Mexico‘s Handling of Trusts. THE WELLâ€"DRESSED MAN. MATCHES EL Li iD i LJ o VR nUOIELS, 'mmml ASYLUXS, E1Tc. ronto. Minard‘s Liniment Cures E‘-†t ucss dR w2 bhihirediedim« 4 Bridge, Niagara Falls. _ Tickets on regular express trains leaving pension Bridge 3.50 and 7.15 a. m and 843 . m | Tisluts mask An or write Robt, & Wednesday, November 28th, only $9,00 round trip from & Fifteenâ€"Day New York Excursion Via Lehigh Valley Railroad. 37 James street thas tha ahira _ _"li009C_ Verning. M-hm.-...om. n':w-uumhumnx 3. The Sharpe farm, lot 13. concession 4, West Flamboro, 7 miles from Hamilton on wood gravel rogd; stone house, large bank barn; magnificent stock and dairy farm; 100 mcres. 4. 90 mcres, 1% miles from the Village of Smithville, on the ‘T., H. & B. Ry., with fair buildings, known as the old Morse farm. 5. 2 acres in the Township of Willoughby, northwest part of lot &, in the first cross concession, 12 miles east of Welland, known as the Sauer property, with fair buildings and some fruit, 3 miles from railway station. 6. 50 mcres in the Township of Nelson, 17 miles from Hamilton, known as the Harris farm; good bank barn and good house; some small fruit and timber. 7. 36 mcres Townsbhip of Binbrook, 14 miles from Hamilton on new county stone road; no buildings, but fine soil. 8. The south % of lot 10, in the second concession of Glanford, near Hannon P.Q., l_m. :ood_bnlld_lng. 2. The Robert 8. Smith farm, Townshbhip of Glanford, 7 miles from Hamilton, 69 acres, good buildings and orchard, 20 acres of large beech, maple and pine timber, 12 acres fall vgui.ln ground; fall plowing done. 1. The Lassert farm, 140 mcres, adjoining the east side of the Town of Preston; one of the best farms in Waterloo County; brick house and large bank barn. x o ladies and gentlemen; pernament pos!â€" tion; rapid advancement; ealary and exâ€" penses; genteel, desirable business; experâ€" jence unnecessary; full instructions given. Write THE J. L. NICHOLS CO., LIMITED, TORONTO. (Mention this paper.) Choice Farm Properties For Sale or To Rent He (after a spat)â€"I sometimes think omen court domestic anawâ€".~ you Heâ€"Oh, exactlivâ€"if BSheâ€"We do not. If A Good Salary . D. J. FARMER, B"arrister, Etc. Mre. Winsiow‘s Soothing Syrup 7‘,.' ays be used for chfidren " u. 000A 4: ISSUE NO. 46, "u,_th. !.I’ Own Way. (Boston AGENTS WAKTED. FARMS FOR SALE. 7‘ ) _ "6) Vanadian Pagâ€" 10 King street cast, Toâ€" south, Hamilton, Ontario. we had our way there‘d WA 3C Bs Six Ne