Trviy this earth of ours is adorned and beautified with a lavish hand, and well may the heirarchs of high heaven bave sung for joy at the contemplation of its beauties. And yet He who made it all, (for by Him Jesusâ€"all things were and are created),. was content to bleed and to die for us and on our behalf; thus paying the penaities due by us to Eternal Justice, and assuring for those who believe in Him an eternity of super> nal joye.â€"By A Banker. "That looks like a comfortable pair of slippers that you have on," remarked Muggins to his friend Buggins. "Huh!" broke in little Willie Buggins, "that deâ€" pends on what part of the body they and wiandâ€"dviv air far above id rock. Above is the apreared beetling eliff rising in savage grandeur upwards towards the clouds, on its summit the white houses of Constantine, _ or the rounded dome of a mosque, built upon the very edge of the precipice; or the eharp silhouette of some stately palm trees or graceful and lofty excalyatus. neath Lower down. on the oth town, is a most notable waterf{all. Here the river very deoop, pursuing its ra most â€" curafflied, then cur lofty ‘«dge with majectic luge of waters plunges in tossed. yawning abyss fay a Gosfening roar. while a Probably the most strikingly situatâ€" ed city in the whole world is Constanâ€" tive, an imand townr of North Africa. Perched, at an elevation of more than two thousand feet, on the summit of a vast towering block of limastone rock, it is almost completely encireled by a nuiow worge or canon cut deap into the mourtains through which swirls and edâ€" dies a furious raging torrent, its perâ€" pend‘cular walls, in which a footpath has Leen hollowed out in order to enâ€" able visitors to inspect this wonder of natiuve, rising sheer from the foaming flood more than eight hndred feet. Descending this precipitous pathway, now under overhanging ledges of rock, now on the very edge of a terrible preâ€" eiprice, beneath which the boiling surge is wildly foaming in a very paroxysm of turmoil, or now round the spur of a Jutting craig, the visitor is awestruck and bewildered at the majestic grandeur and the august solemnity of the scene. Far beneath, the turbulent riverâ€"after the continuous rains and the abnormal snows of the past winter, much fuller and prander than usualâ€"swirling round a sharp corner of the ravine, leaping over a steep escarpment into a boiling caldron benreath, and then with a throbâ€" bing plunge disappearing in the «emiâ€" darkness of a natureâ€"hewn tunnel serapâ€" ed out of a projecting bastion of the solâ€" id rock. Above is the apreared beetling eliff risine in sawnam arandany inurnuiuls tiwir beauty, to the delight of ungéB and the redeemed. How «mall and evanes eent is the world of time, an island in the ocean of God! "He taketh up the isles as a very little thing." T When fohn says immediately I was in the sprrit there was directness of relaâ€" tion, a blessed nearness, a freedom from intervention of any medium; power to act without aid, telescopic vision withâ€" out a telescope, marvellous discovery without human aid or learning. How plentiful is the Holy Ghost! Not solitary star shinivg in the night, but an atmosphere filling, sustaining, the life of the eaints. Doubticss some may grieve amd quench, but this only proves the all pervusiveness and nplifting power. John in Patmos saw a throne and was held by it. It is the centre of eterâ€" tuâ€" clo I said, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." At the traisvigrration we learn the same losâ€" son. a voice out of the cloud said. "This is My Iewred Son in whom I am well pleas«i lear ye flim." There is a voice im ev=ry cloud. At the tomb there was a voire and s vison: "Fear not, He is not horc. berold He gooth before you into Galilee 1o! I have told you." ii the door opened in heaven there was: a voiee and a vision. Rev. iv. 1. The voice of trumpet tones said: "Come u hither and I will show thee things whiez shall be hereafter, and immediltdz I was in the spirit and behold a throne and one sat on the throme." Where this vision is there is authority, inspiration, discovery. cheer, all these unite to bring us to the throne; blewsed are our ears. There is not a same:e»s in these comâ€" munications, there is evor delicacy of touch and correctness _ of perception. houddt aadcgl db css th« progress. atmesphere of | {.‘nniu.itim a wl > voice a relyszed *y dn Ts sen, the g vaice and saw thâ€" clo 1 said, in whom J an traiscicuration &‘ round about the saints. Here on the eorth. U'L-" sent here to minister, all of them. Drubtless there are stages in th: growthk and poists of excellency in th« progress. Voices are heard, vision« atmesphere of the world would stifle and {cnmi-..itien are imposed. Zmcharias w.l > voice and saw a vision, and was relyssed !y dumbnmess for bis unbelief. Tha sen. the great foreranner. heard a The Spirit Reatm. 1 "Millions of epiritual creatures walk â€" the earth, I Unseen, both when we wake azsd when ; we sleep." | Aud as the guests aro ever more im ; number than the servants, how many / millions live and move and have sheir | being in this realm! The reganerate wa!‘t | at lerge in this larger life. It is not a ; wone it is a sphere. It is not in heaven. : but here. The ange!s of the Lord encampâ€" | S@&%‘? hong, ville. Ont rrosive and deadly is tian‘s blood upon a vitably sap it to the love that never fails ion." In one hour t A Cloudâ€"Capt City n sSpF the + 1 the other side of the notable and imposing he river is anparently ng its rapid course alâ€" then curling over the maiectic aweep the deâ€" H. T. M T utd Te 5oo 4e [5) * M evcalyp ore you into ‘on." heaven there ev. iv. 1. The he billowâ€" cath with d of foam igh in the ricare beâ€" vorce ont nrone; _ M mindation ; to attract ic mighty Lo am weu is a voice ere was a He is not mething drop of me: â€" it lasting t Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumpg and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, aweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warâ€" ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists. lence is mandatory and all the inmates lead the life of recluses. Pians have been completed for a free synagogue in New York city, to be open to Jews nd (entiles aliko. Rev. Dr. Stephen 8. Wise, who heads the movement, intending to have Sunday services for adults and Saturday meetâ€" ing for the young people. ipsy Smith, the evangelist of the Naâ€" tional Free Church Council of England, who has been having such remarkable success in the United States, will return home next month with Rev. Thomas the Tired of the life he has been leadâ€" ing, Joseph Dwight, son of one of the professors at the Harvard Medical School, has entered the Trappist Monâ€" astery near Lonsdale, R. I., where siâ€" threatemed to close permanently the old Westminster Presbyterian Church, in Baltimore, seems now in a fair way to be relieved, and probably the building will not be given up in June, as was feared. A brotherhood for settlement work in Rochester, N. Y., has been formed by Rev. Algernon 8. Crapsey, the Episcopal minister who was unfrocked for heresy, and the financial backing for the venâ€" ture has been found for at least a year. The financial embarrassment ‘that Such progress has been made toward the proposed $200,000 fund for the care of superannuated ministers of the New York Methodist Conference that it is now evident that the whole sum will be raised within four years. There is considerable discussion at present in the Episcopal Church as to the advisability of having a colored bishop in charge of exclusively colored parishes, but it is not believed that it will amount to more than talk. ing the Conference year, the largest amount ever reported. The Woman‘s Missionary Society conâ€" nected with the New York East Conâ€" ference of the Methodist Episcopal Church raised $15,200 for missions durâ€" A new religious movement has been started in Boston, to be known as the Parish of All Strangers, being primarily for theatrical people, but really for all travelling classes, that can have no perâ€" manent church home. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT There is almost a famine in Methodist preachers in some sections of the counâ€" try, the salaries being so small in most cases that able men have to decline pulâ€" pit offers for something that will give them living wages. The Mississippi Synod of the Presâ€" byterian Church will make a hard fight at Birmingham, Ala., on May 16 against organic union, its delegates being inâ€" structed to oppose the articles of agreeâ€" ment. The Methodist Church is vigorously pushing its plan to have at least one active missionary for each 25,000 of its membership and to raise $6,000,000 anâ€" nually to keep up the work. The Church Extension Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church has selectâ€" ed Rev. Dr. J. Wesley Johnson, of New York, as editor of its magazine, the Ainerican Republic. Over $60,000 of the required $100,000 has been secured toward the fund to establish the new St. John‘s College to be built by the Church of England at Winnipeg. B Sixtyâ€"one of the 67 counties of Alaâ€" bama have been organized in behalf of the State Sunday School Association and within another year all will have been covered. A long legal fight is certain between the two factions of the Advent Church, due to the cloging of the denomination‘s immense tabernacle at Battle Creek, There is talk among New York Methâ€" odists of erecting a morument to the memory of Barbara Heck, of Brooklyn, the first woman Methodist in America. The South Georgia Methodist Conferâ€" ence has 17 missionaries in the field and owns over $1,000,000 worth of property. THE RELIGOUS WORLD TRUTH IN TRADITION. liowing account of of false logic: When f the shoals called began to be dancerâ€" TORONTO "I fear this will #o hard with me,"*" said the egg as it foll into the boiling waler. ‘‘What is there so realistic about it?" ‘‘There are four acts and they are supâ€" posed to occur on four successive days." *‘Well?" ‘‘Well, did you not notice that they have a different servant ecach aot?" Remarkable Selfâ€"Control. i (Titâ€"Bits.) "There‘s one thing I will say," remarkâ€" ed Mr. Millions, "and that is that my daughter Arabella has a fine disposiâ€" tion." "Indeed ?" "Yes, sir. The way she can listen for hours to her own playing on the violin shows remarkable selfâ€"control." ‘‘So I did, mamma, and this is what Jacky Jones did while I was counting." Valuable Time Wasted. (Cardiff Tites.) t ‘"Tommy," said mamma (who had noticed severe bruises in his face), ‘"‘you‘ve been fighting egain." ‘"Yes, mamma." ‘"‘And didn‘t you promise me that when you wanted to hit amyone you would always stand still and count a hundred?" The Editor Refutes a Siander. (Hometown, Pa., Banner.) The editor of the Banner was _ not knocked down on the street on Thursâ€" day last by Henry Knowlton, the groâ€" cer, as has been asserted by an envious clique. We sent our «ditorial can to the grocery to be filled and Mr. KnowlIton sent back a very impudent message. We called on him and told him what we thought of a man who was afraid to trust a country editor for 14 cents and then walked off. No assault of any kind took place. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. A new type of projectile, which, says the Londor Standard, will play an imâ€" portant part in future warfare, _ and which, according to Sir Howard Vinâ€" cent, will pierce any armor yet made, has been introduced by the Hadfield Steel Foundry. _ This â€" anmouncement was made by Mr. R. A. Hadfield at the annual meeting of the company yesterâ€" day at Sheffield. He mentioned also that the firm had introduced a new steel called "Era," an entirely British prodâ€" uct, for which the Admiralty had given them facilities for testing. It had provâ€" ed of exceptional quality, and was rapâ€" idly coming into use for ship construc tion. Minard‘s Liniment used (Houston, Tex., Post.) ‘"The most realistic play 1 have ever Thanking you for your valuable space I am, yours truly, f I understanding the trade has been waiting for this axle for some time, and the different manufacturers have arrangâ€" ed to divide up this year‘s output, so that each dealer may have at least one job equipped with what they believe will be the future axle. It is said to be very simple in construction, that the rollers are conical in shape, and that the objecâ€" tional cage is eliminated. The low price is also one of the strongest features, as well as the fact that oiling is seldom necessary, and even then the wheels do not have to come off. So here‘s a word of praise for her Who tries to make a home For all the hapless ones condemned ‘Without a roof to roam. The mistress of the boardingâ€"house, A lot is said about her, But ‘f we tell the honest truth, We cannot do without her. Referring to an article published in your last issue, under the head "Will Antiâ€"Frietion Axles ever come into genâ€" eral use?" have thought it would be inâ€" teresting to your readers to know that an antiâ€"friction roller axle, claiming alll the features spoken of as being necesâ€" sary in the said article, will be on the market this year. They are being manâ€" ufactured in Hamilton, but as the comâ€" pany is also manufacturing bearings for other purposes, they will oxflg; have three or four thousand sets for livery this year. But a little knowledge of the local traâ€" dition of Tenterden confirms the testiâ€" mony of the poor ignorant sailor and turns the laugh at last u the comâ€" mission. A sum of money m been left by an enterprising citizen of the parish of Tenterden to keep the Goodwin Sands frem encroaching upon the chanâ€" nel. This money was honestly applied for some time, how long is not known, and the shoals were kept clear. But the time came when these funds were divertâ€" ed from their rightful purpose and were misapplied for the crection of a stceple on the parish church, The sands were thus loft to accumulate, and hence the very truthful as well as logical saying of the people that Tenterden _ steeple was the cause of the Goodwin Sands. Here wae have a perfect bit of logie, containing a very interesting and valuâ€" able historical incidert wrapped up in a traditional nutshell, which has been handed on from generation to generaâ€" tion by word of mouth.â€"From the Nineâ€" teenth Century. Just think of what a drearyâ€" place ‘This world of ours would be, If the homeless host of us She chanced to turn the key. We‘d have to tent beneath the stars Or in an alley dream, And predigested breakfast food For once would reign supreme. To the Editor: She‘s up before the break of day, The morning meal to spread, And midnight finds her still awake While others snoozo in bed. She has to keap a trooper‘s heart To ride her troubles down, And though she bears a martyr‘s cross, She never gets the crown. (Minna Irving in Leslie‘s Woeekly.) Remember when the tea is weak, And when you criticise The flavor of the butterine And filling of the pies, The mistress of a boardingâ€"house Has troubles of her own, And if she had her way, no doubt Would rather live alone. Oh! who would envy such a lifeâ€" Her home she has to share With fifty kinds of beats and ‘bores, And cranks from everywhere. It takes eternal vigllance To catch them at their tricks, Else they depart with board unpaid And leave a bag of bricks. Projectiles Now in The Boardingâ€"House Mistress. Realism on the Stage. Antfâ€"Friction Roller Axles. ‘ R coe. h Fig e Meni s Aute ind 20A 9 Bb ie a boardingâ€"house of her own, her way, no doubt by Physicians, the Lead. A Dealer Gave Plenty of Notice. ((Baltimore American.) "Did your cook give you any notice that she was going to leave?" y ‘"Oh, yes; she broke two windows, one of my most costly ornamenis, three dinner plates, a whole porcelain tea service and the pledze." Chance to Gain Experience. (IMlustrated Bits.) Editor (to artist)â€"I refused _ your drawing a year ago. Why do you bring it here again?t _ 4 Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend. "Salve nothing," replied the visitor. "I came merely to offer sympathy and to remark that if my home is broken up the bull pup is my personal property, and don‘t you forget it." Artistâ€"I thought you would have had more experience by this time and might know a good drawing when you see it. "And," said a covert sneer. ancial salve?" Wanted an Understanding, (Philadelphia Ledger). "You have alienated my wife‘s affecâ€" tions," said the visitor, and there was a glint in his eye. h Mange, Prairle Seratches and overy form of contagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 mipttes by Woilford‘s Sanitary Lotion. It never falls. Sold by druggists, Nonsense About Dead Oysters. The value of a watchâ€"dog is not meaâ€" sured by the frequency oï¬ his bark. Whatever may be the service which Dr. Wiley, chief chemist of the Department of Agriculture, has rendered the cause of pure food he does ,actual damage by making such unjustifiable statements as that "a dead oyster is a noâ€"good oyster," and that oysters should be shipped only in the shells, and he is properly taken to task by the Bridgeport: (Conn.) Standâ€" ard. That paper declares that for more than fifty years opened oysters have been sold in bulk with no signs of trouâ€" ble, dissatisfaction, or disease of any sort. "It was doubtful," the Standard says, "whether the statement was inâ€" tended as a piece of pleasantry, or as the few and precious words that wisdom utters, till the doctor was pushed from his perch incontinently and took a back track without ceremony. He now has no objection to the trausportation of opened oysters in bulk if the conditions are sanitary, and only wants the law enâ€" forced against the use of poison preâ€" servatives and the gencration of ptoâ€" maines in oysters,‘ as if those things were the particular and express purpose for which the oyster business is carried on.â€"Leslie‘s Weekly. injured. GET IT NOWâ€"and you have the remedy that CURES all lameness in horses. If your dealer does not handle it, send 50c. to National Drug & Chemical Co., Limited, Fellows‘ Leeming‘s Essence romitting money to us @[ [ \\ ELITE â€" DRESSMAKINS senooL The witchhazel in the soap allays all irritation â€" takes away the smarting and burningâ€"heals the cutsâ€"leaves the skin soft and â€"â€"#â€"__ _ smooth. DRESSMAKING SCHOOL thesnd, Some & himself, needs no talcum â€" no witchhazelâ€"no "cream"â€"if he uses "Royal Crown Witchâ€"Hazel Toilet Soap But don‘t wait until an animal is P. 0. BCOX 91 oumoasS, omtT. At Druggists ard Dealers. 4 A Man Who Shaves e PP PEErite LA Miss Valons, Izstructor TCM MONTREAL the man addressed, with "you propose to seek finâ€" Not a shaving soap â€" but cooling and delightful after shaving. 3 cakes for 25c, ITTE 18 , 99 The "Unwritten Law." (Chicago Chromicle.) They are a little more careful about enforcing the "unwritten law" in Georâ€" gia than in Virginia. Judge Loving in Virginia killed a man for an alleged wrong to his daughter and then discoverâ€" ed that no wrong had been done his daughter. Perhaps that was the reason that L. D. Strong, of Macon, Ga., who accused a man named Smith of wronging his sister, considerately waited until the Grand Jl:? had found a true bill against Smith, and then emptied five barrels of a revolver into him. As a reward for his selfâ€"control the coroner‘s hlz took rt five minutes to discharge Even there is to be an "unwriten law" there is no use in enforcing it too rashly. "Charley," she said to the boy nearest her, "tell me what bread is made of." The boy instantly obliged, Then, after half an hour‘s earnest tal she ventured to question theme:)tnut:llz subject. _ . s "holes and At length she sent one of the ghildren to the village baker to fetch a loaf, and on its arrival she held it up and began once more to desgribe its manufacture. What Bread is Made Of. The schoolmistress had been attemptâ€" ing in vain by means of a lengthy lecture to make her scholars grasp the names of the various ingredients that go toward the making of a loaf of bread. Caring for the Fishing Rod. All rods should have the greatest care be they of solid wood split bamboo, or steel. Wet are not all inclined to send them to the rod maker every season for examination and repair; we would rather do that ourselves, at odd times. Serape the rouph picces carefully with the sharp edge of _ a piece of broken glass, then revarnish with good coach or pilano va@arnish laid thinly on with a camelâ€"hair brush. Examine carefully, that no crack or open.inf is seen in the bamboo and that the silk is not frayed or untied. If the latter, some fine rel silk twist carefully wound will replace the frayed parts. If the thin part of the tip shows weakness, extra ties can be wound over it, and if the guides are loose, they should be retied; also the ferruleh, if only slightly loose, should be taken out, reset and regluedâ€"then true casting is made more sure. Perâ€" sonally, I think the plated _ or silver mountings are a mistake. I do not keep mine polished bright, for the reason that the flash in the act of casting seares both trout and bass, especially _ on bright, sunny days and low water. The time is near, I hope, when makers will roduce a rod with mountings of a somâ€" ger color.â€"From _"On the Care of Tackle" by Louis Rhead in The Outing Magazine for April. "Leeches are no longer used because bleeding is no longer belicved in. â€" You couldn‘t booet bleeding a bit, could you, in the paper? I might make it worth your while."â€"Philade!lphia Bulletin. "My father had a leech farm for some years. He raised the Hungarian speck!â€" ed leechâ€"that‘s the bestâ€"in a New Jerâ€" sey pond out Matawan way. He did fair. He got an annual erop of 25,000. "I used to sell to one hospital in this town 50,000 leeches a year. I had on my books 200 doctors, each cof whom I supâ€" plied regularly every morning with a dozen leeches. They carried them about in ditise /0‘ cases, as they now carry bypcedermic syringes. "Mine is an extinet trade," he sighed, "like that of the armorer or the sundial maker, and I can‘t make a living out of it any more. But in the pastâ€"why, great Scott, in the past leeches were so much used by doctors that a doctor used to be called a lecch. The Dealer Says There‘s No Longer a Demard for His Leeches. The leeches, like hairless black caterâ€" pillar, clung to slim reeds that protrudâ€" ed above the water in the aquarimu. They were torpid, as though bhypnoâ€" tized, but when the dealer put one on his finger it fell to work as busily as a Mursataria mosquito. It could be seen swelling and flushing. "That‘ll do, you little rascal," and the dealer removed the leech hurriedly, then sighed. "Please Dear Sirsâ€"Your MINARD‘S LINTâ€" MENT is our remedly for sore throat, colds and all ordinary ailments. It never fails to relieve _ and cure It neve promptly, On the Londonâ€"Teheran circuit there are ten automatic repeating stations, namely, at Lowestoft, Emden, Berlin, Warsaw, Rouno, Odessa, Kertch, Sukâ€" hum Kaleh, Tiflis and Tauris. The busâ€" iness for and from Manchester and Liverâ€" poll is also handled direct with Teheran. It will be understood that automatic repeaters virtually take the place of operators at the repeating stations. In the case of the circuit under consideraâ€" tion there are repeating instruments and batteries at each ;;...;he...;‘ stations, As the line is divi From St. Martin‘sleâ€"Grand Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited : Londor, and Teheran, Persia‘s capital. This circuit is 4,000 miles in length, and in its course it traverses the North Sea for 200 miles and passes through Belâ€" gium, Germany, Ruseia, Turkey in Alt system of transmission and reception employed on the circuit. By this eystem messages are transmitted at te rate of from 80 to 400 words a minute, acâ€" cording to the nature of the circuit, as against 25 to 35 words by manual Morse transmission, Probably the longest telegraph circuit in the world has been in operation for over a year on te lines of the Indoâ€" European Telegraph Company, between How the Line From London to ‘Teheran is Worked. ___ CHARLES WHOOTEX. Port Mulgrave. LONGEST TELEGRAPH CIRCUITI.. AN EXTINCT TRADE miss," he answered crumbs!" 1 of the ten repeating line is divided into ele IP CE cR + She eagerly, Fatherâ€"*"Ask your mother. She al ways has the last word."â€"Rire. Sonâ€"*"Does the dictionary include evâ€" ery word?" Fatherâ€""Oh no, my boy. New words are being brought into use every day." Sonâ€"*"Is that so* Well, then, what‘s the last introduced ?" Crime costs the City of New York « $35,552,134 per annum. (Boston Herald.) The secretary of the New York Assoâ€" ciation for the Blind reports that there are 65,000 blind people in the United States, and then makes the ubonhhi:g statement that "twoâ€"fifths of the bli in our country need not have been blind." This is worth verifying. If that can be done an educational campaign should be begun the country over to put an end to such needless waste and sufâ€" fering. Of course, some cases of blindness are due to accident and to other causes that could not be avoided. But every conceirable preventive which the educaâ€" tion of parents as well as of children can provide should be the subject of legislative action. ) Somemy 60(0304 <1 0+ ++ / C . YR OH MA es | O IP B : - jWP MeS quvBra L NY + Aue C o a, +8 CHIPMANâ€"HOLTON Kkwitting co a & 68. ¢ ~‘-"¢")-f.12f.:{’)": Makewy m CX ue n rakrigf lnnigonwsk â€" _ _ Eagierâ€" 2;.‘-{‘,/ This coldâ€"water starch ï¬&‘é};‘gï¬"†gets ironingâ€"day over ME n pnatnls m. awitly Lakn einnnk im sarge ( Siely 1t 6 ce 9 v'. ¢ P n ‘K dp," t ioh n M us ind lt The E. B. EDDY CO In three and sixâ€"foot rolls, is unexcelled for al building an mhï¬hnu-ofmhm.,mmae. i GET OUR PRICES . _ Local representative wanted in each county. Before deciding where to locate in the West, let us tell you about these lands. The best wheat fields â€"the richest grazing landâ€"are in this Province. Write us for ‘full information about crops, climate and special railroad rates, ete. b TELFER&OSGOCOD Eastern Selling Agents 200 CORISTINE BU!ILDING MONTREAL 1chess and Pï¬SCflIaIF&Mp“L‘“ Rock Rib ans HerCcHles Schoot Hos A lame horse It costs as much to keep a lame horse, as it does a horse in harness â€" and the cripple briugs nothing in. You can‘t afford to support idle stock. ‘That‘s why you can‘t afford to be without 3 * » # Rendall‘s Spavin Cure It takes away the;-lnmdotfln&uï¬m Sprains and Bruisesâ€"draws the soreness out of Strained Muscles and Tendonsâ€"CURES Spavins, Soft Cunches and Swellings. Used for two generations by two nations. $1.00 a bottle or 6 for $5. Sold by deaiers famous bookâ€"" Treatise On The Horse." Y HULL «@ Agencies in a!! principal citien ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Little Darling ans Little Pet Fot Infaot hmh"oolanlï¬'l'h All Wool MHoflouthï¬oWï¬mu.. Worcester Upâ€"toâ€"Date. IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING Sad Waste of Eyesight, Strong as Gibraitar _ Limait of Steength Princess Reyptian Lite For Children DR KATRINE StATrO®, OxT., Dec. 15, ‘0M "I have use Kendall‘s Spavin Cure for a Bou::{uvi- du standing, which has entirely cured the lameness x‘n.uy the swelling. Another bottle of the Spavin Cure, I am sure, complete the cure." HOWARD BROCK okâ€"" Treatise On The Horse." You will find a need for it every day. B. J. KENDALL CO., Enossunra Fl!.L.. Vermont, U.S.A. is a dead loss. «_ LIMITED, HAMILTON, oxtArio, ‘‘That‘s all right ethically, but I knew he had the proof." Did Not Fit the Case. (Philadelphia Ledger.) **Â¥You shouldn‘t have bit that ma» who called you a liar." *‘Shouldn‘t, hey?" *‘No, you should have demanded the proof, and if he could not produce it he wrould themselves discouraging this brutal sport but if the bulls do not put a stop to it the legislature of Texas ought to lose no time in punishing bull fights as seyâ€" erely as holdups or any other crime whatever, Bull Fights in Texas, (Chicago Chronicle). It is with unfeigned pleasure that The Chronicle ngoru the result of a bullâ€" fight in El Paso, Tex. Theé matador was dreadfully mangled and fatally injured and all the picadors were more or less injured. It is pleasant to see the _ bulls Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Machinery in Abyssinia. So far owing to the difficultiese of transport, but little machinery has found its way into Abyssinia . Early last year _two traction . engines were sueâ€" cessfully brought into the capital by tfl E;semr’c aï¬n. for the purgose ’ roadâ€"making and two more have reachâ€" ed Adis :th during the _ present month. ‘The head of an important Britâ€" ish firm came personally to interview the Emperor on the subject, with the result that the machines were adapted to the country and the best to be obtained. Copressod~â€"â€" Wls EseE T " CC ILGS enssalts ‘tion, boils, tumours, scrofula or other results of impure blood â€"can find epeedy relief in Mira Blood Teakc. it draws out the poison from the blood and ï¬-whdh&h!‘.‘w virtues of curative herbs which a4 in a natural vaeues Of Ceeete S 4 o d 0 manner on the syfem. . Price, $1 aâ€"bottleâ€"6 for $5. A.“mh TlhOnfl'o'CA of Canada, Limited, Hamiltoaâ€"‘Toroanto. Be sure to get the genuineâ€"ash for Wolves in a Game FTODWT® After having spent $1,400 to rid the company‘s game preserve on Grand lsâ€" land of a wolf which was playing havoc with the deer, the Cleveland Cliffs lIron wi has discovered evidence that three wolves have evaded the vigiâ€" lance of the gamekeepers and are workâ€" inghvocm&op-ol the in ‘The island is stocked with moose, cariâ€" buo, elk and other species of the deer family native to America, and with doâ€" mestic and foreign game birds, and it is efared that there will be a heavy slaughter before the wolves can be got rid of. An organized hunt for the marauders is now in progress, but a big «wamp in the middle of the island makes . wolfâ€" hunting difficult. It took thirty men thirty days last winter to round up and kill the first wolf that entered the preâ€" serve and during the time it was being / chased the wolf slaughtered a score of deer. » After this wolf finally had been killed the company stationed gameâ€"keepâ€" ers about the island in an endeavor to keep away the wolves, which cross from the mainland on the ice.â€"Marquette corâ€" jÂ¥ respondent of St. Paul Pioneer Press. Everyone Run WV Limited CANADA Ne iyt s . ‘Write for free copy of our ‘s Fine Dress ult. Jt took thirty men st winter to round up and wolf that entered the preâ€" and lining purâ€" «@d «dvisable the organizations | mi their annual meeti the same place. e alternately. d Th were approved. .A tion of the bonrd1 amethods of carrving sen that uni tain lin« view of ary worl recomme the con eign Mi ©f the ; izrations stated 1 was «d aan} ed whi Li« Dec PRESpYyT MISSION «lege nout to he, alwa unfei and _; céjve whon OA six a t with i annoud The bi 1 ©4 Asi ters 14 hisl pa Ap} th sion th pait M the tÂ¥ 44 444 OFFICER e Spar le U t» All Spai vCrora VIC M ng N