44 If you want to be a popular boy, be too manly and generous and vnselfish to eeek to be popuf:r; be the soul of honor: love others better than yoeurself, anl people will give you tkeir hearts, and try to make you happy. ‘Lhat is what makes a boy popular.â€"â€"Apples of Goid. Fanny Footlightsâ€"Poor old Hamphat is insine. Pouy Pinktightsâ€"Gracious! is going around telling evrybody his inmnwity taken? Fanny Footlightsâ€"He is going around telling everybody his real salary. who wiill pledge h hurt, and change n fidence of his fello never hurt the fee one day find himse pathy. % it One the thou amazing The cha the pooj «da y dev their clear voice The struggie against gr comes more . and _ more Everything is done thas to keep the body from d when these efforts fail â€" th t] We ra We plow We 1C€ We voyage past rock and reef By tide winds blown afar, Beneath the ancient <«un, Beneath the steadfast star. Peace, heart of wanderâ€" Lose not thy At sunset, when the ro= y light was ing, Far down the pathway oi tae west I saw a lonely dove in silcuce flying To be at rest. Td fly aw But when the Deer «06 Set my bark afloat Upon Life‘s morning And gave for captain H To eail my bark for l [] gt. ere in wiliing i cne w weelness D [ youth, an ughts of tw r transform der; t Come home and r n of a row weaving, c came the dove t . n the forest where . grievingâ€" There was true rest Loftiest wandering . win blest, at by phantom shorce, rise the Isle of Dreams; w through wide wastes lit makes a boy popzlar*t Surely nliness. During ihe war how ool sand colleges followed poâ€" 1 with la LT mMSCOHY years. dist bish 1est way from d find m n Makes a Boy Popular. 1igriins a secret become Keeping Young Wings of a Dove,. * lenry Van Dyke. D.D thy life in fruitless quest no happy islands over yon bark afloat My Bark liv and Lowliest Gifts stre that lives thi mine! no longer sigh to lif n YU t it aton Seollard se «e Lord shail is the Lord i with many uth is renewâ€" y that serve truth, "shali d age." "Hie » seek her nest, » ner mate was leaders were rts could be ts his mothâ€" o hboy who is and what L V elected. sh m Dt freed WOUS. done OW i conâ€" wilt will »i OTT yO V ATid was Colleges and echools of all sorts solicit advertising for the publications they are inâ€" terested in. The boys who do the solicitâ€" ing are generally willing to take anything offered, and as advertising rates in school publications fluctuate widely, the diploneyâ€" olence man manages to get off lightly. Proâ€" grammes for little social affairs, contests and meetings are @lso candidates or adverâ€" tising and the appeal for help is usually based on the not strictly business ground of "aw, now, come on, help a feller out." These young folks will take goods instead of the coveted cheque, and they gencrally do so rhen the donation department can arâ€" range it. Church affairs, bazaars, sociables, sewing circles, raffles, charity festivals, benevoâ€" lent orders, hospitals, homes, secret sicietâ€" tes, churches, sanitariums, whist clubs, dancâ€" ing societies and other organizations form part of the long list upon the diplonevolence dopartment card index system. Sometimes their request is for cash. Sometimes it is for old or shelfworn goods. Atway» the same strict routine is followed to determine whethâ€" er the applicant has been helped out within the year. One person well known to the various dipâ€" Tonevolence departments is a minister who has made a speciaity of building up defunct or unsuccessful churches. He .has changed churches six times within two years and when he writes for air to beln a streng@ling narish @» qresperity, it is generally from a differ» ent address and upon the stationary of a difforent church. The department have folâ€" lowed his career with mild curiosity, but ease and the absen~e of indiscriminate givâ€" tex will partly explain their lack of success But there are other demands made which @re not so worthy and which must be reâ€" celved with diplomacy. Customers frequentâ€" ly ask aid for cbarm‘m in which they are interested. There is Sitle to be done exâ€" cept to grant such requests, however abâ€" surd, for the most gracious refusal to do so would in all probability offend the cusâ€" tomer, ‘There are also sharpers and persons lookâ€" ing for easy money who try their skill upon business concerns with continued failure. The system of finding out the merit of the ful interest in bis behal. Organized charities stand highest in the estimation of the men whose duty it is to bhandlo the business of gifts. They are usualâ€" ly worthy and merchants and manufacturers wive freely. Department stores receive daily dozens of requests, simply because they are dapartâ€" ment stores and because of a legend that they are always willing to give. If the request is found worthy the matter is brought back to the diplonevolence man and be writes that his company will gladly grant it. Sometimes a cheque is sent to the applicant, but never if it can be avoided. In the case of manufacturers and merchants money is rarely contributed to any cause unless the applicant insists upon it and reâ€" fuses to take goods. The canal is constructed of riveted steel and is nearly semiâ€"cireular in form, measuring 19 feet 8 1â€"4 inches in diameter, total length 517 feet. 1t is built of seven plates around the cirâ€" cumference, the plates being connected by 12 inch snapped head rivets of hwich a total of 650,000 was used. To allow for expansion and contraction the eanal is subdivided into seventeen seeâ€" tions. These were connected together by masonry basins and packed expanâ€" sion joints . At the end of each section of canal as it entered the masonry basin a stiffening band was rivetted on, the external rivet heads being countersunk flush. This band is made to slide in and out of the basin on short sections of rail let into the masonry. The joint is kept tight by means of tarred or tallowâ€" ed rope packing enciosed between two light semiâ€"cireular angles placed back to back with bolts passing through them. The weight of the water flowing through keeps the canal floating on the packing, and each section can therefore expand or contract, according to temperature. Seven hundred men, including eight Engiishmen, the remainder being chiefly Arabs, with a few Greeks and Italians, were employed. The work was completâ€" ed in five months, working day and night. The loose, shifting sand foundaâ€" tion caused much trouble and tools were constantly being lost and buried. The natives did not like night work and it was difficult to make the Arab "holdersâ€" up work at night underneath the canal on account of the scorpions in the sand. The Arabs were also fond of drinking the machine oil and anointing their bodies with it. One of the chief troubles was the natural inclination of the differâ€" ent tribes to engage in petty warfare, and they would frequently fight with sticks, knives or stones.â€"Ideal Power. There is no wiostiug house to determine the aggregate emouci given away anually by Mmanbattan firus and tae total sum is mere guess work. Eui the soparate accounts record the last dollar expwided for charity and to extract a donation trom a mi¢tropoliâ€" tan business house requires a meritorious ease with all its good qualities on the surâ€" in the first place, neither money nor goods are given wway by firms until an investiâ€" gatiou has been made. The applicauni for a donation, after talking with the firm‘s diploâ€" nevolence man, is dismissed with the promise that Lis case will be looked int> speedily. When toe asker for aid had denarted a When toe asker f clork from the diplo put at work. Ho se orate card index sys the concern has eve OperetiOon& Of lue Gopactinent A Department of Business That Labors With Those Who Cry "Give, Give!" rule This department operates so as to mainâ€" tain an exact recora oi the firm‘s "diploâ€" nevolence‘‘ affairs and that amaigamated | word has been coined because it tits the deâ€" ! partmeat precihely. Dipwwacy and ucnevu-‘ Ielho0 &rE LG# iau GQuauces iudt guUide Lo | Some of the larger busingss concerns in New york nuvo evolved a depasunent of which littie io ever mear., uut whica is deâ€" signated to save thousunds of dollars anâ€" nually and evidently aocs so. Iwo important contracts have reâ€" cently been carried out for a comprchenâ€" sive irrigating scheme in upper Egypt, by which 125,000 acres will be eventually irrigated and put under cultivation. The plan is one of the largest irrigation schemes ever premoted in that country. A portion of the Nile water supply stored up by the Assuan Barrage is now being utilized. The irrigation estate is bounded on the east by the Nile and on the cast by the great desert. ‘The soil is dry and parched and is supposed to have received no water for the last 3,000 or 4,000 years. The east bank of the Nile at Komâ€"Ombo is too high to allow of the land being irrigated at flood time in the usual manner, and in order to obâ€" tain a sufficient supply of water for the continual irrigation of the entire tract, it was necessary to install pumps. These pumps discharged the water into riveted steel rising mains, which in turn delivâ€" ered biito a service reservoir . This reserâ€" voir is connected with the great steol canal, which delivers the water into disâ€" tributing earth canals or culverts, from which it flows onto the land. UÂ¥4 0b 9+ 4 4444444444444 ¢4Â¥4¢4+ Many a worthy case comes up in the course + of business. Not lorg ago a woman wanted < ; help for a young friend. He was a divinity A SIEEL CANAL | student who had struggled bard at his work # ! and had succecded in writing a treatise i which was to be read before an assemblage ACROSS TnE SAflARA, | of students and instructors. He was worried { over his prospective appeararnce because his Ot¥¥t+++Â¥4¢t++++¢+¢+¢+++++++++r ! clothes had been worn threadâ€"bare and he #4+ A e | was without means of buying others. Cn and upon what date. ‘The general e is never to imake a donation to the ne cause twice within twelve months. An and u. Cuse will be looked into speedily. the asker for aid had departed, a m the diplonevolence department is ork. He searches through an elabâ€" d index system to discover whethor in has ever contributed to the apâ€" efore, and if so, what amount was id upon what date. The sgencral DIPLONEVOLENCE. ARIO ARCHIVE TORONTO A Leesville physician, who called reâ€" cently to attend a wealthy stockman who had a pain in his side, diagnosed the case as appendicitis, secured the paâ€" tient‘s permission to operate next week, and then went home and wrote to Denâ€" ver for an automobile price list.â€"Denver Post. __"Yours, ma‘am," replied the nurse "I‘m the new nurse that kem yistherd‘y.‘ â€"New York Press. "What a bright little thing!" exclaimâ€" el the societg woman, patronizingly cooing at a baby out for an airing in the park. "Whose little one is this ?" unless be can say nothing and make it sound interesting. On the following Sunday he used the term hyperbole, and added: "As agreed on, I beg to explain the word. Were I to say that at this moment the whole of my congregation are sound asleep it would be hyperbole, but if I say that oneâ€"half are asleep that is no hyperbole, but the truth." The next day the deputation _ again called to say that the minister need not explain technicai terms. The people would learn their meaning from a dicâ€" tionary.â€"Rockester Herald. Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend. A Rochester clergyman was accustomâ€" ed to use scientific terms which the people did not understand. A deputation waited on him with the request that in the future, whenever " he used such terms, he would exvlain them. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. "Another instance, this of a man whose chief object seems to have been a foolbardy display of fearlessness. â€" He was holding one of the monsters in his hand by the back of its neck, so it could not bite him. He dropped his hand to the side of his leg. The gila monster shut his teeth down on the heavy duck overalls, taking a double piece out, where the cloth folded, as quickly as a pair of scissors could have cut the fabric, and as cleanly."â€"Los Angeles Times. saw some men teasing a gila monster brought to Tueson. A string was tied around his neck. The gila monster was crawling around on the ground trying to get away, but was pulled back by the string. This was carried on till the creaâ€" ture became furious. The crowd around the gils monster knew nothing of his powoer to spring. Sudderly he sprang up and bit a man among the crowd on the hand, leaping fully two feet from the ground. "When frightened or angry he can move quite rapidly. ‘That short, thick, stubby tail is used in jumping, just as a kangaroo uses his tail. The gila monâ€" ster bites like a bulldog and has the tenacity ot a snapping turtle. I onee Why It is Poisonousâ€"The Creature‘s Tenacity and Quickness. Of some of the strange ways the gila monster, that little known creature of the southwestern deserts, a correspondâ€" ent writes: "I have had some experiâ€" ence with gila monsters and can state that no matter what scientists may claim the gila monster is a good thing to shun. Indians and Mexicans have a horror of them and fear them more than a rattlesnake. I believe that the bite of the gila monster is dangerous beâ€" cause of the creature‘s habit of eating lizards, bugs and rodents and then lying on sand so hot that it blisters the hands and feet of men. The teeth are often covered with a fermented, putrefied froth from the food. A bite has the same effect as the cut of a dissecting knife used on a cadaver; in other words, the inoculation of a deadly poison. "When frighterned or angry he can A destitute family in Harlem is being supâ€" plied with food by a firm, and a numpber of children in Brooklyn receive shoes free whenâ€" ever the old omes are worn out. A few weeks ago a crutch manufacturer heard of en old chap whose limbs had passed into disuse, aad forthwith he sent to the home of the disabled one six pairs of crutches, enough to last him the remainer of his life. Several weeks ago a canmned goods conâ€" cern received a letter fro ma man at Portâ€" land, Ore., saying that his femily was withâ€" out means of subsistence and requesting the comnany to send him several cases of its goods. ‘This was one of the requests which was refused, bocause while New York is ;flmng to take care of its own, it draws the line at Oregon And why a horse can‘t learn to moo? And why a cow can‘t neigh? And do the fatries live on dew? And what makes hair grow gray? And then my pa got up, an gee! The offul words he said! I hadn‘t done a thing, but he Jes‘ sent me off to bed. Ne man can hope to shine in socisty My pa he didn‘t go downtown Last evening after tea, But got a book an‘ settled down As comf‘y as could be. I‘ll tell ou I was offul glad fTo have my pa about! To answer all tho things I had Been tryin‘ to find out. And as I asked him why the world Was round, instead of equare? And why the piggies‘ tails are curled? And why don‘t fish breathe air? And why the moon don‘t hit a star? And why the dark is black? And just how many birds there are? And will the wind come back? And why does water stay in wells? And why do June bigs hum? And what‘s the roar 1 ‘hear in shells? And when will Christmas come? And why the grass is always green, Insteard of semctimes blue? And why a bean will grow a bean, And not an apple, too? sulted in refusal. (The case was went to a downtown diplonevolence department and the girl was torged out in a sult that must have cheered her young heart. Another case was that of a young girl who had come to New York from up the State and had found difficulty in obtaining employment as a stenographer. She wanderâ€" ed about until her clothes had lost their freshress and prospective employers .looked upon ber with a disfayor that always reâ€" The business concern appealed to answerâ€" the request by sending the student a suit in twentyâ€"four houre, and it is to be preâ€" sumed he read his treatise in honor and good looks. No Further Explanation Required Knew Neither Nurse Nor Baby. HARD BITING CILA MONSTER Saw His Way Clear. o fod e MY PA AND L Toâ€"day we can hardly credit the fact that between the years 1539 and 1720 300,000 people were murdered out of reâ€" venge, and that during thirtyâ€"one years of last centuryâ€"from 1821 to 1852â€"the number of murders was estimated at 4,300.â€"Wide World Magazina. Fortunately the dark days when Cor sica resembled a huge battlefield surviv: only as a terrible memory of the past He explained that his predecessor had mistakenly registered the birth of the bride as that of a boy, and under the registration Mile. Deschamps would beâ€" come liable to serve as a soldier this year. The bride and bridegroom hurried off to the Mayor and Magistrate and imâ€" plored them to authorize the marriage, urging that the mistake in the register was selfâ€"evident. f The authoritiecs turned a deaf ear tc their pleading, for French red tape is not to be treated lightly, and it will take time to repair the mistake.â€"London Standard. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Bride Registered as a Boy. M. Lenoir and Mile Deschamps were about to set out to be married at La Haye Malherbe, Normandy, when the village schoolmaster, who is also the vilâ€" lage clerk and registrar of births, came to them, exclaiming: "The marriage is impossible." â€"â€"_ \i . .~ Mn d Mrs. J. Webd, 175 Dovecourt Slry, Toronto, writes: "Ii is a wonderful cure." ]. Tremiett, Hamilton, says : "I highly recommend your Miro Qintment {or Zczema.‘ Mirs 7 abicts and Blood Tonic help to a more thorough cure. _ At &m from The Chemi@s‘® Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamiltonâ€" Eczema, Sait Rheum, Pugules, <tc.â€"no remedy heals more quickty tham Mira Ointment. Mira relieves inflammation, soothes pain, causes mew tisue to cover raw surfaces, and restores the skin to hâ€"cithy smoothness. Mr. Smith then explained that onel,qhnw- may } day in 1867, in W. A. Bodine‘s store at â€" Morristown, ke saw Mr. Morrison drop | a $10 bill from a roll which he had TGâ€" | .,.__, prar; ceived from the merchant. Smith picked | ,h,,{,;?:,i.m- Itc up the money and on this occasion ho! In 3 min=tes came here to return _ it.â€"Indianapolis | It never falls News. 1 v Obid Smith, a farmer near Indianapoâ€" lis, called at the office of C. W. Morriâ€" son, this city, and asked him if he still trusted in the Lord. Morrison replied in the afiirmative, whereupon Smith said: "It was the Lord that sent me here to return O of your money. I have kept it for forty years." FOE. ALL HUMOURS "The tiny corpses are sold to the French bird desalers at 5 or 6 cents a pint, and are resold for food to the ownâ€" ers of pet birds, finches, thrushes, canâ€" aries, nightingales and the like."â€"New Orleans Timesâ€"Democrat. French Pessants Odd Business. "In France, at this season," said a bird dealer, "the banks of the streams are yellow with bonfires every night. About the fires loaf peasants, men and women, smoking, chattering, spooning. "They keep the blaze going all night, and at dawn, behold, the ground is. an inch or two deep with May fliss, fireâ€" flies ,.mothsâ€"little creatures that, exâ€" pecting some unknown and divine sensaâ€" tion, flew out of the darkness into those clear and gemlike flames, fluttered forth again in agony, fell and died. oronto, Insist on gting # 7 C comnl “ ~â€"â€"__oz_z _0 ____ Mâ€" â€"we‘ll it to COILED ~not erimped. | This vanizingâ€"rust proof. w\‘flllu proct it. Leads snles oi i ie m envien. It Piays face" fames walel over heavy 2oo *tiyonizine Get flinstrated booklet and 199, y:1e., Mal l in enler THE PAGE WIRE FLNCE COMPANY, LIMITE&D. (2] warm,,..,;, 2°~ _ 2°% Hlustrated booklet and 1007 prices For the month of June a fine course in Dress Cutting and Makâ€" ing will be taught for Ten Dollars, including a Perfect Fitting Sysâ€" tem. You can â€"~ay for lessons as you take them. Phe Chart will be taught for $3.00 and each of the lessons for $1.00. This offer is oniy good for a short tim». All those wishing to learn, write toâ€"day. * ELITE _ DRESSMAKING SCHOOL Local representative wanted in each county. A Special Offer â€"the richest grazing landâ€"are in this Province. Write us ror full about crops, climate railroad rates, etc. Before deciding where to locate in the West, let us tell you about these lands. The best wheat ficlds TELFER&OSGCOOD Kept Ten Dollar Bill Forty Years, Murders for Revenge in Corsica. Eastern Selling Agents 200 CORISTINE BUILDING MONTREAL P. 0. BOX 91 DUNDAS, oONnT. TRADE MARK R&GISTEAED:* Miss Valens, Instructor ror full information X and special A Praying Church. (Christian Guardian.) The minister may he a man of God, but he cannot do the praying for his congregation, The aggressive power Of a church will depend very much upon the individual prayers of its members; and every prayeriess or semâ€"praycrio«s memâ€" ber will be a source of weakness, But thenâ€"we fear many, who complain that the church is not a praying church, themâ€" selves spend more time in groumbling than in praying. It is so easy for a sinner to grumble and so sard for a sinâ€" ner to pray; and, by the way, it should be true, that it is hard for & saint to grumble and easy for a â€"aint to pray. Let us quit our complaining, and get down upon our knees. We are persuaded that the great cure for the ills of the church is to be found in ccnstant and full communion with our Lord, _ Trae, there are prayers that s:mply tell the Lord what He ought to do, but such prayens are vain. True prayer brings men into direct contact with the infinâ€" ite purity of God, and humbles man into the dust; but out of the dust he rises, a purer man, mme who has power with God and men,. This communion is not a matter of privilege alone, but a real necessity to true spiritnal life. The man who talks with God will walk with God. The man who walks with God wiil not stoop to meanness or cishonor; he will not, he cannot, be = bare and fruitâ€" lees tree. but God w‘ work through him to make the kingdom come. Woodrow Wilson, President of Princeâ€" ton, was deploring the promiscuous givâ€" ing of honorary degrees. "Our universities have learned of late," he seid, ‘to distribute honorary degrees judiciously, But in the pastâ€"" Hoe smiled. "Well, in the past I met an uncouth person at a dinner, and, being told by an acquaintance that he had three deâ€" yrees, I asked why it was. " ‘Well, said my friend, ‘the third was ziven him because he had two, the secâ€" ond because he had one, ard the first because he had none.‘"â€"Providence Journal. Hoaxâ€"Bright chiidren don‘t all deâ€" velop into smart men. Joaxâ€"I know it Some of them become women. Almost all the duly organized associaâ€" tions are now _ at work, the members sending in their bottles of composite samples promptly. In another two weeks much fuller and better records than the above may be expected. Mange. Prairio Serstches and every form of pontaptous Itch on buman or antnale eured Woodburn, Ont.. with 79 cows, has an average yield of 671 lbs. milk and 222 Yhe. fat. At Hatley, Que.. the average test is the same as at Spring Creek. Ont., nameâ€" ly 3.4 for the same neriod. but the average vield is only 543 lbs. milk and 19.0 lbs. fat. The hichest nroduction of any one cow is 840 lb«. milk, testing 3.1. St. Armard. Que.. from 181 cows averâ€" ages 48 lbs. milk and 188 Ibs. fat. In the Asocistion at Culloden, Ont., the average of 200 cows is 759 lbs. milk and 25.7 lbs. fat for the period ending 7th May. There are several individual ields here of over 1,000 Ibs. milk. The {igheet being 1.385 lbs., testing 3.2. The 109 cows in the Spring Creck Asâ€" sociation average 702 lhbs. milk and 26.4 Ihe. fat. Several individual cows here ge over the 1,100 !b .mark, one good yield being 1,470 lbs., testing 3.0 for the 30 days ending Ist May. of 119 cows for 30 days, ending 27th April, is 567 lbs. milk and 22.8 lbs. fat. The highest individual yield is 1,360 lbs. milk. testing 4.8.. The Shearer, Ont., Association has an average yield for the same period of 624 lbs. milk and 18.9 lbs, fat. The best inâ€" dividual yield here is 880 lbs. milk, testâ€" ing 2.7 only. Dominion Department of Agriculture, Branch of the Dairy and Cold Storâ€" age Commissioner. I was cured of a severe attack of Rheumatism by MINARD‘S LIXTMENT. Mahone Bay. JOHX MADER. I was cured of a severely sprained leg by MINARD‘S LINTMENT. w > JOSHUA A. WYNACHT. Beyond Gharian the expeiition proâ€" eceded over rising ground to the hills, where fig and olive groves lay among Roman ruins and «inderground villages. Nearing Murukz, Mr. Vischer came upon stretches of petrified forest. I wase cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. 2 MRS. A. LIVINXGSTONE. In the mountains of . Gharian Mr. Vischer found people living in subterraâ€" nean dwellings. Through entrancts ten yards long and one yard broad he came upon a square courtyard, which was in reality a great hole open to the sky. Upon this all the rooms and stables converged. The rooms were very dark and there were no windows, but the most absolute cleanliness prevailed. Interesting details have reached Lonâ€" don concerning the remarkable transâ€" Saharan journey undertaken by Mr. H. Vischer, one of the protectorate residents in Bornu, from Tripoli and through the "Forbidden Hinterland" of Tripoli to Lake .Chad. The successiul compiction of the journey was announced in the Overâ€"Seas Daily Mail in December. Underground Villages in the Heart of the Desert. Bridgewater Lot 5, P. At Cowansville, Que SAHARA‘S SZCRETS UPVEILED. Cow Testing Asseciations. Why He Got Dogrees, by °C3 Nâ€"5 v Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion Sold by druggists. the average yield Proper Care of the Young. Care for its young is a distinguished mark of any progressive society. ‘The helplessness of infancy and its prolongaâ€" | tion as a phase of nigh culture are inculâ€" }catel by biology and recognized by comâ€" | passion. Science and sentiment alike force the fact upon the intellect and the 4emotions and if parents cannot or do imt fulfill their part men will provide these philanthropic and state agencies to | take their place.â€"Macmillan‘s Magazine. "It‘s shameful," be exclaimed, ‘"the way these ‘ere colleges waste money on furniture! Here‘s an account of somebody giving Harâ€" vard $200,000 for a new chatr." Ask for Minard‘s and take no other, (Judge.) Pa Smith threw down his newspaper in disoust. gfoceed; but the daring will was taken or the daring deed. Kennedy met his death in Edinburgh while endeavoring to stop a runaway horse. Private Kennedy, V. C., of the Highâ€" land Light Infantry, who has just met with a fatal accident in Edinburgh, showed conspicuous bravery . in the South Arfican war. _ At Dewetsdorp in Noevember, 1900, he carrid a comrade, who had been dangerously wounded and was bleeding to death, from Gibraltar Hill to the hospital, a distance of threeâ€" quarters of a mile, and all the way under a hot fire. On the following day, when a volunteer was called for to cross AR exposed space, with a message that _ it was almost certain death to deliver, Priâ€" vate Kennedy at once stepped forward. Before he had proceeded twenty yards he was severely wounded and unable to CHIPMANâ€"HOLTON KWITTING Co., LIMITED, IIAI!LTUN.- ONTARIO. The i= In three and sixâ€"foot rolls, is unexcelled for all building and lining purâ€" poses, inside walls of summer houses, refrigerator plants, etc. GET OURPRICES ;. .. . Fine muslins, dainty linâ€" Shameful Waste of Money. schess ans PriSCill2 Fine Hostery For Ladtes Rock Rib ans HerCcles Schoot Hew Strong as Gibraitar _ Linait of Strength Pri1nC23S Fzypiiin Lisie For Children‘s Fine Dress Little Darling ans Little PeC For Infaats HULL =â€" Agencies in all principal cities Hero Dicd Hero‘s Death. ASXK YOUR DEALER FOR Lambs‘ Wool and Siik Tips _ AH Wool Fine Hosicry Manulactured tor the Wholesale Trado by the IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING * . B. EDDY CO neingut cce tiths ... Cek â€"as in mesl n"mm‘“zmlg_hï¬mhd- â€"oronte, Montreal, St. Iohn, Winninest i Catching the Sunday Worm. Minister (meeting small boy on Sunâ€" day afternoon carrying a string of fish) â€"Johnny, Johnny, do these belong to ou? ,Johnny-â€"Y-e-l, sir. You see, that‘s what they got for chasing worms on a Sunday.â€"Philadelphia Inquirer. Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, cowh, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warâ€" ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists, tailorâ€" made woman the POXES NOT WANTEDâ€"LESS COLOR AND LESS SALT. J. B. Jackson, Canadian commercial agent at Leeds, England, writing home, says that Canadian butter sflm to the north of England markets ® be sent in casks. Practically every dealer makes this suggestion: revolutionaries. Eunderland, April 3 .. ++ + Newcastie, April 9.. .« â€"» +« gewoufle. Ap:'il 10. ¢)...% * hnï¬w, April 12.. . .. ++ Edinburgh, April 15.. .« +« â€" Edinburgh, April 19. . .. +« +« Total number of cartridges . As already recorded in the Daily Mail the cartridges are from the continent and m‘fl{ by trawlers to the coast . 0 where they are delivered to * roucnnmcflmn- 216,000 Seized This Month in North of Another seizure of has been made at Ed visited a blu'kgmitlg'n CHAS Doenr ERRMHE MR CCC visited a blacksmith‘s store in the Prersâ€" hill district and took possession of 20,000 Mauser cartridges. The complete list of seizures made in different parts of the country is as folâ€" ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT D. 8. J. KENDALL CO., Enssbarg Falls, Formest, .5 A PortaGk. RIvER, . Camres: N.B., March 5 ‘06. _ CEnewim Hendall‘s Spavin Cure ISSUE NO. 23, BUTTERIN CASKS. wV, Limited CANADA ai Edinburgh. ¥¢} the hor F‘"â€â€œ that of in givir mo tery Dous!a k t 8i 4 he > been tiee "li(‘t W s 0 e to any {r jrc 4d L upoi ol AC W m dac mims ent . The ha y cinc uind the Jac on Jeet day fron App. v’.(';\ deno seat pres anad pesur LC the Dou A DOrL lb salisf ©hame uatior the i« Orangevi} on suspend. lum\drymun “F‘I\\'ul Doulitim. .0 Coroner Doclar N M is ie« w in Aft Mt Counsel f h o Again ANG 1) it