to“ The press does more. It not only tr.lls us what men are doing, what wrongs are going on and what issues are before us. It tells us what men should do, exposes the wrongs that are being done, warn. us of irrpendintt dan. pr to ourselves, our o'ty or our country. and is lavish With its advice on all questions of public moment. It enlighten and educates, and as a rule rommends what is good and denounces what in evil. There are few people who do not read the newspapers. It is a daily welcome visitor to the family circle. to interest, entertain and instruct, and some would rather lose their supper than their paper. We are afraid the reading of the paper is not even second to the Bible. It the reading of the daily paper in the public schools would teach the youth of the land to take an interest in something else than the sporting page, its reading would not be in vain. Not long ago it was announced that the daily newspaper was being made a text book in a Chicago university, now the Rev. Hugh Padloy, pastor of Emman- uel Congregation] Church, Montreal, tells a Christian Endeavor meeting that “we should have classes in our public schools to receive instruction how to in- teili,eently read the newspapers." He further added: "The reading of a newspaper should be wcond only to the reading of the CURRENT COMMENT "The reading of a newspaper should " second only to the tending of the 'ible. The press tells us what men an mm. what wrongs are going on, what nun-s are before us, whnt work we hue , do to raise the nhndud of our citi- oship. n is because we are no ignonnt non of what is going on that we no J useles in opposing corruption nnd "morality." " “35m n- are glad to learn, on the nuthority Mr. Archibald, the Dominion paroh NW. that crime in Cinnda in not on increase. Notwithstanding the his .- of immigration, he up that fig- . Prove that crime here is stationary. he various penal settlements in Can- there nre between 1,300 and 1,400 I. and in the various prisons and jails I This shows, he says, that Cam L hwabiding: nation. Between four- 1 and filter" men had been released parole. and eight hundred of there nt unv time or another obtained fight between the Lords and Com, m on in Great Britain. It my be struggle between the than. and DIS 2t " the D it with all "It Well done. Roos streets. Me " of Sun F neet the His w tnâ€: that the oblig; fr Inn to the removal ot 'rom Scotland. Mr. Ila!- h-cretary, stated to a n that waited on him the there was no intention the Stat 1uv-atriuin, (e the but ection of l The Presi1 tl mt. never appeared at Edinburgh, were tld not be made suit- ry barracks, and he 1 way at present to liture of £200,000 on nbust n an in his message l V Loin m y np, Roosevelt obligations of ttu mnon law and un 's to the utter dis State authorities Railway hat they nines wht that Hing people, and butt of hoodlum- of the law is de. M vent WT“ Tl ident says Ja 3 says that "if rancisco is not situation and barracks else me, it is do PH the Govern: me measures hriaml's ten Japanese in have a manly is refraining. tions of the residents in In n wr'um Company must not ‘n power at osewhat “and ot in uni- ‘. under are the l n d "ttl sihm " but the " he nt m to To the Editor of Public Opinion: Sir, ---A little late perhaps, I should like to any a. word on "A Scut’s" letter in your issue for Oct, 12. I altogether deny his conclusions. A man I know was, I think. much nearer the truth when he remark- ed, "They who are kind to animals are all nice people." There is a. woeful ten. deney to degenerate human nature to trample on the weak and helpless, oi which the strong white man's treatment of the weak dark races is awfully re- corded on bloodstained pagm of history: and those who dare not so treat human beings can. and often do. vent their mir erable tempers on dumb animals who cannot tell their wrongs. They may do an every day without going to such atro- cious lengths as the unearthing of n fox by thrusting something of the cork- screw kind into its living body. And the men who permitted this were reckoned gentlemen! I maintain that the most liberal-minded and the largest-hearted people, the most tender and considerate of the feelings of all sentient life are thoee who care most about animals, who recognize that being a weaker race they need special kindness. That noble phil- anthropist. Lord Shaftesbury, cared for the emsterrr.onger's donkey as well as for the costermonger. Frances Power ("nbbe, one of the most fearlm and efficient defenders of the claims of dumb animals, was from girlhood a worker for the sick, the poor. the helpless of human kind. John Bright and William Edward For. "er were certainly never accrued of be- ine weak-minded men. and 'tir, were pe- culiarly kind and aentle to an mails. Nor was John Stuart Mill ever charged with want of strength of character; and he wrnti- thus: "The rennin! for legal In. Mention in favor of children apply not Another of the hunter executives was Prsident Arthur and he was also a skilled angler, usually a highline man among the sportsmen who went to the salmon rivers of the Qudmc and New Brunswick provinces for their sport. Be. fore perpetual close time was put on th game in Yellowstone park President Arthur spent many happy hunting days there with his friend, General Phil Sheri. dan. All kinds of outdoor 1nd indoor sports caught: the fancy of President Garfield. Hunting was his favorite diversion, but if business or a close season on game precluded ll quest in the big game jung- es or the. bob-white covers he could find B full measure of pleasure in the grand- stand at, a. baseball game. contemplating the rural NMtne.q from the. back of a horse or playing billiards with a. part- ner who would not let him win just be. cause he was president. Jefferson. Mun. me and Jackson were superb horsemen and riding was their chief outdoor en- joyment. . Mind's Liniment Cures Distemper. No more enthusiastic angler and duck hunter muld be imagined than President Cleveland. m in a keen. per- sistent. break-o'day wild Howler and not even that grand but departed old angler of pleasant memory. Joseph Jefferaon. could impart more delicacy to a long mat for tho wary trout. lie is quick with the gun and a sure wing shot and hunted every foot of the Chesapeake hay eountry. Of quail shooting he was particularly fond. hat as he ndvaneed in years and took less rendly to follow. ing the utters and pointers the sea. salt air and the whirr of duck wings entieed him almost wholly from the up- lands and so enamored did he become of wild fowlinp that he even gurnkl duck in a “sneak bor." From what has come down through the years, in written and spoken spew-h. it seems that John Quincy Adams WM the swimmer president. having learned the art in some favorite swimming hole in Tomt River bar, or somewhere near the place on the Fore, River where bat. tleohips are now being constructed. In his day there was but one man in Wash- ington who could outdo him as a nata- tor. and that was Benjamin Franklin. President Adams had a favorite pool in the Potomac river near Georgetown. where he used to swim and being fond of walking he would arise befor dawn, walk to Georgetown and enjoy a swim. returning to the white house in. time for an early breakfast. Neither horsehaek riding nor ahtleties appealed to President Harrison. and as fond as he was of the water he cared nothing for swimming. In this respect he was not unlike President Cl4weland, Later Washington’s active life we largely out of doors; tro, too, were his pleasures. m loved tho fresh open air nigh-nee of the woods and fields and there, he found his one great amuse- ment. He shot and fished. but did not care much for these pursuits. for his hobby was hunting, which gratified " once his passion for harm-r and dogs, and his love for the strong excitement of the chase when dashed with just enough danger to make it reallv fast- rinatinit. Upon his horse he would fol- low hia hound: over the roughest coun- try. often ending the hunt alone. the timid riders having! withdrawn from the dangerous chase. lie omi many vi. “able horses, inrluding the highilmbl hunters Chinkling, Valiant, Ajax end Blueskin. Duck hunting and upland bird shoot- ing appealed to Washington before he became a general of the revolutionary army and the same waters which pro- vided such excellent wild blowing for him have since been shot over success- fully by Presidents Harrison and Cleve- land. When a boy. Washington and Lord Fairfax. who had settled in Virginia, became fast friends and his skillful rid. ing and love of sports greatly interest- ed the old nobleman. They hunted the fox together. . . " Those interested in the brush shoot- ing and big guns hunting trips of the president, his ganops across country sud other sthietic exercises need only to examine the records of former oc- cupants of the white house to learn that he is not the first chief executive to turn to the open fields for sport and recreation, says a writer in the Boston Globe. Before making final prevention for his deeeent on Pennant President Moose. velt quested long Ind diligently for n ebot st one of Virginia's wild turkeys, and not until utter a. hunt of four days in the vicinity of Pine Knot did not suc- ceed in getting a. fair view of one over his gun sights. It had been n match of hunting skill against turkey cunning nnd at the end of the hunt the president PM or rmn'rs. Washington WaaAnsd " Shooting and THE ANIMAL AND THE HUMAN. Nowadays doctors forbid gouty pa- tionts to out, any kind of sweet food, but “commend them to eat at least n dozen walnuts a day. There is no doulrt that walnuts are most useful in gouty subjects. or in cases of chronic rheuma. tism. Swelling goes down and pain de. crt'aseir.--Philadeiphitt Inquirer. fir-erything- fresh ana clean, with the purest of soap and plenty of warm water. To assuage thirst and cure feverish- nees apple tea is a notable drink. It is made by slicing up raw apples into a jug, filling up the jug with boiling wa. ter, as in tea making, then sweetening to taste. When cold this apple tea will be found pleasingly tart and refreshing. Have the bed a foot or two from the “1111. . Plenty of ventilattion, but no air di- rectly blowing on the patient. Tobacco should never be used in the sick room. Use kindness, but (humus, toward tho patient. Pansies. that were her trouble. run riot heâ€. Roses, that were her dreams, their perfume shed. Tall irisetr. she attended. arch o'ersend. And tawny liilies that she smiled on. roar Their stalks in scarlet pride; while, sweet and clear. The (finishes all thn trees with music thread-- Not wistfuliy. In those who mourn their The old idea of "nothing new under the sun" in completely put to tllght by the Puc- itie Coast Secumlee Com-pony, ot Portland, Oregon, in handllna the stock of the Set Island Copper Company. This company. when oiiicere are business men of meny your ex- parlance. have perfected n plan whereby the investor’s money is under " own control and he does not We the stock until earning and accrued dividends are satisfactory. A new booklet. "Something to Set You Think.. ing." has jut been issued tor trms dietribu- tion, and it is valuable to anyone contem- plating investment iAnrc_orporate emu-prion. sight." . Never leave medicine, drink or food uncovered in the sick room. mayhem the whale when Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc. And who shall doubt but that she does return To Breathe the fragrance of her blossomed powers. And whisper ancient vows amld the torn. Where he white hurt Ilnce opened like the flowers; or that. each yew. when earth I: warm with smug. Somewhere she lurks terertP1r18tri.r,tl. P,lobhr--Those girls are twins. They an- rather tiresome. s'lobbs--Yos; there does seem to be a good bit of sameness about them. - Each individual disease requires 3 ptlyliar diet of its own. diction. -No one negd have theseGo . I nod: an calla! blood and nerve remedy to; Mira Blood Tome and Mm: Out-mu and» art/Inf for Mood and “in Int-611:. TRY than. At fpgtf/,'ag2.t"r' The Ocular Co. q/Cauada. Lind . Heonittor--Torxmto. less strongly to the one of those “for touts slaves and victims of the most brutal part of maatkimb--the lower Ini- Intls." I do not know very much of novelists, but I do know au the prince of novolists " deeply attached to his dogs; and does not George Eliot speak of poor Hetty’s shallowness of feeling be- ing illustrated by her indifference to the baby and to the young animals about her? The vagaries of unbalanced minds-which Lord Rosebery says are the majority-when unchecked by con- science are endless, and why should we wonder if some of them mnke fools of their animals as well as of themselves? One thing is clear, that your correspond- ent has never known the passionate, loy- al love of a. faithful dog. I have known it, and I say that if the recipient of such love is not benefited by it, and a. better man for it, he is a poor thing. Bacon tells us that Man is the God of the Dog; and if man were often as leal to his Croator as tho dog is to himself it would be a. Very different world from what it is. J. Budge. A SALLOW SKIN means weak blood. WI] debility, implitd Tablets gr; lo gnu. frur mm)». Yet weiVaiFiii4rsikrau--d has. t230. Boni Scouted at Home. (Pituhur: Duo-ten.) When Count Bani Do Castelinne ascended the speaker's tribune in the chamber ot deputies hat? the members nbruptly left the place The incident is iilutttlmttiee. lt re- minds the world that behind the nyety and glitter ot Paris there is a sober. moral and industrious bulk of the nation as sensitive upon honor and decenr'y as any other. It also shows that European heiress hunter: are considered in much the some light at home as they are In this country and that public opinion abroad vlewtt the nbominnblo conduct ot Cnstoiiane with as new. Abnor- with'red corgugcla' "rl,rettitre, We as we do V 7 read. But glad. u It Plan of the Padfic Coast Securities Company Absolutely Safe _ Hints for the Sick Room. Keep bottles as far as possible out of Der bisy .h, Plymouth. England. Gray't, Syrup Red Spruce Gum UEiiiidtG iiiaisinn the CostnopotitV SOMETHING ENTIRE†NEW. he married for money, Twas not very nice. But how could she heirp it Considering the price? For he was a widower (Surely "Twas fate) or sixty. marked down " ghoul tttrrtttrttt For Coughs and Colds. 0n the Bargain Counter. TEARS MARK RIGIOTiilD. purify th whole . - mild uni: and maggot! make [[0 Her Many Brothers. her presence hovered near Dr. James W. Robertson, Manager, Macdonald Agricultural College, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Que.; Hon. Sydney A. Fisher, Minister of Agriculture, Ot- tawa; Hon. W. R. Motherwell, Minister of Agriculture, Regima, "Wheat Grow. ing in the Canadian West;" Prof. R Harcourt, o. A. C., Guelph, "The Re. lations between Soil Conditions and Crop Improvement;" Dr. Charla E. Saunders, Experimental Farm, Ottawa, "Quality in Wheat;" Prof. F. T. Shutt, Chemist. Experimental Farm, (1) "Soft Wheat Problems," (2) "The Action of Certain Smut Preventives on the Vitality of Wheat;" Mr. John Buchanan, O. A. C., Guelph, "Some Effects in Varieties of Cereal erpa Arising frtnn Different Conditions of Growth†W. T. Maooun, C. E. F., Experimental Farm, Ottawa, "The Improvement of the Potato;" Mr. Geo. Robertson, St. Catharine, Ont., "some Results in Horticulture from the Selection of Seedsz†Mr. L. S. Klinck, Macdonald Agricultural College. Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Que.; "Methods of Storing Seed Corn.†Mr. W. L. Smith, Toronto. "How Best to Encourage the Dissemination of Highclass Seeds." The Seed ontroi'Aet, 190s,%ontain, ing a reprint of the not. with general explamfions and instructions. Circular on Seed Testing, giving an outline of the objects of testing needs for purity and vitality and some general notes applicable to the condition of the trade in agricultural seeds. Geo. H. Clark, Seed Commissioner. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Reid is a. tab. let taken internally that removes the cause of Piles, hence the cure is perman- ent. Every package sold carries a, guar- antee with it. Thousands of people know that the or- dinary remedies for piles--ointments, suppositories and appliances-will not cure. It is perfeetly harmless, $1. All deal- ers, or The Wilson-Fyle Co., Limited, Ni. agara Falls, Ont. The best of them only bring planing relief. Ball Player'.' Finish. The ending of a. ball player's career has in it much the same tragedy that accompanies the loss of voice by the singer. At, one fell swoop the player and his family drop from comparative lux- ury, case and ability to have all the ordinary pleasures of life and fall to something like actual poverty. Often- times poverty is encountered before the end of the struggle is reached. The still young couple, after several years of good living, travelling. seeing the world, enjoying all the fun in sight, suddenly come with a. splash to the icy water of poor living, poor e1othes,inability topay for theatre ticketa and trips about, and inability perhaps to much more than pay the rent of a small flat-for the ball player who has never done anything but play ball and who has not saved his money is against a hard proposition before he can learn a trade or find something to carry him safely along. Only the magieiott'ss wife doesn't one if her husband is tricky. " APPLICATION To In 8BRD COWSXONER, OTTAWA. This is a. valuable report of 96 pages, containing interesting reading for far- mers. The report oontaims u summary of the business transacted, a. reprint of the constitution, by-luw- and regulations of the Association, the methods of keeping records of registered seed. the names and addresses of seed growers who are producers of registered seed, and instrue. tions as to the methods of growing and selecting seed grain and other seeds of various kinds. 501181 Part III.‘of the report contains P" pers and addresses by the following per- Teething Babies. Fairer than the fairy crew. 0r lu, queen, who laps Portions of the morning dew Prom her golden cups. Clearer than the anal till " thy voice benign, Purer than “I water! um. Ev'ry nought of thine. Lino Betty; Winsome mm; Betty, only nine; Little maid ot Joy and bliss; Little trturrttnt leafy trowers, Like a. fairy small, There I see thee with thy flowers, Queen among them all. Brighter than the tlowereu, tar, is thy glowing lace; Lighter than the zephyrs no In thy form of grace; Sweeter than the tinkliug rill ls thy magic voice, Bidding. with its treble trill, Ev'ry heart rejoice. Brow to match the llly lair, Eyes of violet blue; Lips exceeding. I deck", Roses' crimson hue; Tresses o'er they wuon brow, Ltke B film of gold; Fairer than the nowereta, thou Fairer, manilold. Pretty, pretty, emu deer; Lime queen ot flowers, Reign without a thought of tear, In thy Iylvan boners. Grow in beauty ev'ry dny, In thr fairy dell, Where the sunbeam; dmce tad play. And the "overt-u dwell. N nrses’ma bthers' Treasure Quickly relieves-regulates the bowels' - prevents convulsions. Used 50 years. Absolutely ate. At drug-stores, 25e. 8 bottles, 't.g& National Drug& Chemical Co., Limited, Sole PropHetors, Montreal. qt are saved imfferintr-and mothers given rest--qrhen one use: nttr T0 fARMlERS. THEY KNOW IT. Betty. TORONTO -F'rank Leon Beebr Tedious Funeral Sermons. How long should a funeral sermon bet We asked this question of half a dozen different people this was]; because of a conversation we overheard in the post- office in reference to the outrageous length of a sermon preached at a recent funeral. The general opinion seemed to be that few funeral sermons ought to be over fifteen minutes in length. At 1 time of that kind the less said the better. Few are concerned other than the immediate familyand they are hav. ing trouble enough without being com. pelled to sit and listen to any lengthy serviee no matter how interesting it muy be to the rest of the audience. Fifteen minutes is as long as any man ought to preach and his voice should never get above a smooth conversation. al tone.--Wnshington Register. If rubbed IfetuGen the'hands and In. hnlod frequently it will never fail to cure eold in the head in twenty-four hours. Bilenns are a cure for all digestive and liver diaordent, constipuion. piles. dummy. metal“ blood impurities. colds and chills, rheumatism. wind spams. (amine Ailments and irreguNritims, allow complexion (due to bile in the blood), dizziness, etc. All druxxiau and stores sell " Mhe a box, or tree trom the Bilenn Co., Toronto, tor prior. ' boxes for 82.60. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited Sim. I have used your MINARD'S LINIMEXT for the past 25 years and whilst I have occasionally used other linimentn. I can safely any that I have never used any equal to yours. It is also the best for bruises, sprains, etc. Yours truly, Dartmouth. J. G. LESLIE. You Hunt Agree in Thir.--. Afterward he rose to high rank in the army and retired. Ten years ago mis. fortune overtook him, and as a last re- source he raised a few pounds by leaving his beloved ems“ in a pawn broker's drawer. Then he departed and nothing more was heard cf him, A Victoria (mm is never sold until at. ter the death of the man to whom it has been awarded. Mrs. G. R. Block, of " Blevins Place. TU- ronto. so": "I unlined acutely from hood- oche. The attach were most violent and mode we so ill I could hardly do Anything. The hendnche wan necomponied by disc-live trouble. heartburn, Ind eonattpetton, and it seemed u it I won going from bad to wane- Until I tried Bilennn l w“ unable to get anything which give no relief. Bile-n1. however. noted like magic. They not only cured the headache, but also relieved Inc ot indigestion. heartburn Ind Milan. No family should be without a box ot Biielnl on the shelf." (hp-n Gazette) The Japanese smy has decided to discon- tinue the German system in the march step and adopt a new system in connection with a revision of the Infantry drill book. Ae- cording to the old system. infantry on the march ought m raise the feet high and step heavily "tying the hands tore and stt. The step under the new system is very light and the msrch mayo be permanently contin- ued. In the teen no not required to be nixed so high and the hsnda Ire to be freely ox- arched. Each infantry regiment is to send u representative to the Military Model Colt letter to study the new step system. Minard's Liniment Cares Guget in Cows. The. auctioneers searched the Snmer set house registers for days, but the gal hint offieer's name was not to be found At last three days ago. his death wm presumed and the cross was advertiqec; for sale. It was to have been sold new week, but yesterday afternoon. quite by ancidont. the auctioneers heard that tin officer was still alive, although serious 1y ill. - A new light romantic opera, "The Vicar of Wakefield," has been founded on Goldsmith',, novel and arranged with songs and lvrics in “mm ~'-. Ml Austen’s "Pride and Prejudice" ha. been done into n play. Thove still re- mlin Younis "Night Thnuuim" or," "Pilgrim's Fromm.†which no doubt TIl be turned into Christmas pum- Hem Who Won It Pound Dying Befon It is Sold. After a brief spell of fame it seems to be the predestined fate of the Victoria cross hero to sink into a. position so re- duced that it is impossible to find his whereabouts. Many are the romances, which fate has woven around men who, after a daring feat of arms, have been rewarded by a grateful sovereign with the proudest possession of a soldier. But none of them is more pathetic than that of a distinguished officer whose Victoria cross was to have been sold next week in a London auction room. Fifty years ago he performed Inch feats of heroism in the Crimean that he received a nation's praise and a grateiul queen pinned on his breast the bronze cross that is worth so little and yet is worth so much. ABOUT YOUR That heedeche does not ocean-I'll! mean there ie uythin; wrong with your heed! Thnt he!" Bo, you must look to eome other emu tor the trouble In the who in the fort-had. end doee it we " you ere-I it? That is neunlric Maudie. It in on one Iide ot the he“ only? That in what the doc- tors cell "megrim." Both the†form: arise from leek ot tone in the system. In your headache general and aeeompanied by nick- neel or foul breath or corustipatioett That kind of heedeche in due to liver end atom-ch disorder. Nine headaches in ten "tao from these ceuue. There ere two method! ot treatment. One is to teke heedeche powders. It 1e like trying to some pain try axial ehlorotorm. The other is to correct the or- nne which by their damage-eat an cull- in: the trouble. That is tho Biieen weyi Eileen cure headache by their beneficiu operation on the digestive lyetetn, the liver and the tgood. -And so the cross will not be q sibly a friend mil rocmnponse tl broker to the extent of its vn send it along to the officer in or he may see it again before he (lit don Mirror. VICTORIA CROSS IN FAWN. New Military Step for Japan. Dramatization Yet to Come HEADACHE ! rs heard iut although sari sold the 1 with nrdm pawn. P and r that wan net! MIX! hy the ms» "Soon he aid: Tm the Sheri" of this county. I've got a couple o' any women, takin' 'mn to the 'sylmn. You wouldn't ever know they “as crazy, wither. That woman over there with the blue dress is one of "em.' "Well, I have known 9mm keen bu- miliatiom, in my life, but that was a trifle the keeuest."-lieatro News. "Ahoot this time I tall, lanky person walked into the at. spoke a word to the woman accompanying the one ot the friendly proelivities and then sat down treside me. We drifted into conversa- tion, with th lreemnwnry of involun- tary seamtnu. "I thought ails-t I have found some on: who detects a good thing ct first sight without the necemity of any ot the Whammy stages of acquaintance. The mt time I looked. her w-hid' wasn’t. 1omr--there was . {haunt} twinkle in my own eyes, In we to which a. suggestion of a smile visited the com of the woman’s well-dumped mouth. Dear Mother What Socialism Fails to See. Jhieago Chronicle.) If the right of private property in the means by which the multitude of tuseful and convenient. things were produood were taken away the motive to maintain their earellenee and to produce them " the least cast would dinppm. _ - _ _ " at up, fixed my cont com“ so it set just right, adjuemed try four-itvtuutd and tried to look unconcerned. Within five minutes that Mange pawn and l were smiling at each other like old “qualm- Deterioration and privation and high cost would take the place of excellence and abundanw and chmpness, to the vast injury oi the muse- of the people whom the socialztlic are-meta promimt to benefit. . There would, therefore. be In. - ply, inferior quality. higher prices, no effort to meet new wants and general economic retrogrossion in we of the Utopia promised by the cochlistic vio- ionaries. “We! 1 Ian'- Ftigtatt" " the Tull. " - m much given to nirtation," .iriiiNiaiiiurGuo,"ttyt1?tht. narrow agape lat cum from {unis from grace. " wu twig from Hammad, Mo., to tSpeiugfiehd, Ill., an a. WM will. I ii'lii22'iiG'tiiGassowontheNrhtsidr of the car, no one during my neat. Am the Lisle from me at two worm, The one next to the window wan 3 good- looking person, with a blue ailk gowu and a pleasant facial expreorionu. Once as she looked at no I detecit-, tdnetly friendly twinkle in her eyes. I WM autonismd. But not (sully. A Inn’s qpstisen will never let him tool wholly surprised when a woman moms “3116 pt bting pleased with him. Private producers must sell on a. nir- row margin and economize on cost of production in order to bring their pro- duets within the much of the greatest possible number. No such force would he in operation to secure the most thun- dant supply to the greatest number un- der public ownership of the menu of production. .. Mind's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. "No, sir," remarked the weary ny- farer, "I wan not Alwayo as you an me now. I was once cheated out of s for- tune." “How was that t" asked the sympathetic listener. "The man who hind "st refused to allow me to marry his daughter." replied the weary wnyfnrer. g. m an“ HARRIS m HOTELS, qrAiotrsz.'::,rrtyertrargt, mm m .i90quelltitq BULPHUR‘ WAX Withsdoulctnomy) Ithaca 1oheth-lrreluhktaHrf1trall diale- of the air page: in was. ,'2 tt1i"d,r,ltg Ld to e. m tomorywm haunted. Tupeieeu25s,ierbottie, andnli&Ueeai.rit.dicine" " ThicresdrAitLtr_iveethihald, SHILOH Your Edema": a can“ a. h, Fall tad Winn: MIC. “ELM" tycheoid.. Derma.knorr+y.t . ilutu. Couuuu’ cu;e,tutumTmtic,and ,eir,'f'e'Le,1tltr,,e,",'5 like“ run " won at. MATCHES x'l nirtatun in Kelly Who Have Bouleire Axe [point of Their Dee. The French people, in naming the wite's private sitting room her "bou- doir" pnetieelly recognized her need for being alone. A place in which to eulk was provided for her, end there are times in which even the best tempered of men and women feel that their mood is unfit for social intercourse. To recogniu this is one of the first duties lst we newlyrterried pu_tne_r_._‘ The (lurk mood will pus, end In the sooner, if the sufferer is lett unques- tioned. Queries are quite meleu. To be naked what is the matter only ss- sists in the cunning process elreedy be. gun. These are times when 'ttrt sum: dwells spurt in isolation. To disturb its solitude is to cell down on ones de. voted heed the wrath of the household gods. - Mnny married lives are wrecked from this inability to understood moods. A husband often uympathy. A ymmc wife feels convinced her duty ll to win hor loved one tron his attttude of me!an- choly. All either of them requires is a little time Ilene. THE FARIIRI‘ MANUAL annual a aor- laa of special lawn- In tam manning. with full Iaatructlona. unant- rnuncl lad printed heading-- for min account. poultry account. cattle acecunt, tum account. labor account. dairy account. canâ€. account; department tor each kind of grain. can received account and cut: nud out account. The Hanna] alao contain a common - department. . veterinary handbook. a per- feet "ll-In of ttor-ttting according to the matnodu and by Prof, o. W, Glcaaoa. bonds- the (armou' legal departmont‘ " ln. Wlnulov'a Soothing Imp noun ul- wayl be and tor children teething. " soothe- the chm. toothe- the (ulna. can. wind eotte and In the but remedy tor dllf- rhoen‘ ' I Reta-e. all builds up tbe _ nervous â€nun, gives nu. an! vigor.puri6enthe blood, cures constipation.kidney troubles, sore hock. And neurolgil, Sold only by mail. Send portal note or coin. Price 60c. And one than! sump. The Morrison Spe- ciolty Co., Box 224, Windsor, Ont. The J. L. NICHOLS CO., “and. â€In“. Mention this paper.) ion-w. an “on" "and. FARMER’S SONS The Dmhrd'u Contribution (Country ut. In Amulet} The eighteen}: country In Inland VII notoriously III In at Ill drink.- and who Huber. 1nd your lull-h can“ we top-n Bil. Hence u up proportion of the Inn-lb tincture of the emu-cum century “I m the (pm ot drinking 3h... mugs and acumen. Prawn u v. In†upon tho mo- (urea ot midnight "In" 1nd Mien-row convlvumy. with have (out and homing bumpers. _rnuitte _ the NHL-mus holiday? one mud. sweet "boo-e," are on not deny that we or. thou morn M1F("-"C much tor the an lie (but. the graceful acumen but] the “coder win. (ham vhlch they hue bequeathed to u. ISSUE NO. 1, 1907. (lllli.,l,,i.?(l, Auh. In. an nus-k monthly nub lot MHIH have tse-ilu"--. tur or: In, not um 9m I'll-AMI tor the purpose dawn-:4. and an (nun- hrd by [In :nlk'l Melc- lwny toe an]!!! drunk! Prtre 01m " ot a ' and). normal] and. on pt o.' n..- A PLACE TO SOLE. I†FORM “ROYHILOOu tgtscttLLAmNnm. FEMALE PILLS "DAcOVAL" DI. LEROY. a all. or " the Pretty Soon Variety A duh ARREST ( In numb Charged Five Negro Fifteen L BLAO . IMF Mb" N W