Och, Aye. "Wee!, Donald, ye‘ll soon hae rest frae a yer work, as the Doctor says ve are gey far through." Donaldâ€" "I‘m no sae share o‘ much leisure for the like 0‘ me. It was aye, Donald, dae this and dae that, sae it‘ll be: Dorald, licht up the sun; here, Donald. hing up the mune; hae, man. gie the stars a bit dicht, and a‘ the like o° that. Och. ave." doe ty hovr= of agony bear fruit in years 0 insâ€"llish toil and lifetimes of unfettere ivaipathy. Fain is the rod that smtie water« of healing out of granite heart: Pain is the chariot of fire by whic men often rise to other worlds. Al um welcome is it« touch,. vet rot unblest 04 the inl who the nes BC ible kone Li AJ tal rey 1 bow my torchead to the dust, 1 veil mine eyes from shame, And urge, in trembling seliâ€"distrust, A praver without a elaim. T N@Nï¬' wit n rreat drag swes 1 € wazes upon the work of pain to read the reason, we ask, ‘Is n. no gain in this?" "Is pain io man?t" Aud to these quesâ€" can answer truly, "There is a ian, even in this work of pain." ‘ens hearts and widens eymâ€" ‘ain draws the mother nearer ild. Pain wars on selfishness, es men think. Pain smites de and teaches him humility. isemanes are not curses, but They smite us sorely, until we e bloody sweat of pain; but darkened garden we go forth r, aweeter, nobler life; and the agony bear fruit in years of toil and lifetimes of unfettered ._ Fain is the rod that smties healing out of granite hearts. the chariot of fire by which 1 rise to other worlds. All unâ€" 3 faded ni oi willul ny; then we n but when it unrelaxing, gr ess and the t igs strike dee «i of helpless Xidl@ss dnd WIsCoMm. It I% & hat tor all time has perplexed m oi men. If it were simply whip to sting men into rightâ€" it it were simply but the fiery i oï¬ wilful _ and _ shameless i¢; then we might understand livt whoen its awful coils, in imrelaxing, grip lay hold upon s and the true, and its poiâ€" 3s strike deep into the soft @# o helpless child and lilyâ€" waaemn, we gaze upon its work r and dismay. ours to solve the riddle; but His is touch, yet not unblest; vialom, even paina is yoked : chariot of huranity andt it forward. This, of courss, op the full cirele of its orbii, rely one section of that cirâ€" that we can see. he Value of Pain antasles oi t The Eternal Goodness on its suriace transfixic; e and wouder. ‘Then, hurt abyss of space, midst rush s careering each with thei amuagless biot u lity fromm which t one which per ier suggests dow 0ss and . wisdom lor all time has i men. If it we ip to sting men were simply bu tt rong that r : guilt with right omm H} Lh »# the F4 18 t] ind wh have 1 peruaps more doubts as to th Night ig course 0 ternal dark verin@ elor upon UJ ith convui transfixing then, hurt Ol ind s he If ; fin 11L and Colâ€" God, but ne lies clings se sIns things ib u s by YA LN MA ries vl the t it F O O D. V A L U E. Boiled potatoes contain not nearâ€" ly the nutriment that is in pure beer ; milk will not feed most folks so well, nor digest so thorâ€" at the end, when the writer asked for "Land of My Fathers," the response was hearty, and what was more, it was beauâ€" ti{ul. Nothing can be more inspiring Ontario beers are pure, above all olssâ€"far more pure than most of the milk sold in cities, because made under conâ€" ditions of absoâ€" lute hygiene. ® m s rogenme m ons regiin td D didatt "Oh, they have had their chapels, of course," was the reply, and the writer smiled. . . . Comment was unnecesâ€" sary. The meeting was tranquil, and 2 URITY thaa "Squirarchy eand Heirarchy," which Mr. Lloyd George uses as his pet target for assault, was a potent factor in putting the present Government in power. Ruâ€" mov insists that "Little Wales" cannot claim this brilliant speaker as a son, that ho was "made in Manchester," but his magnetism, verve and picturesque deâ€" livery proclaim that he is more Celt than Saxon. A squire of dames is Mr. Lloyd George, you may find him almost any afternoon during the summer sesâ€" sion dispensing hospitality to a group of ladies on the Terrace, a flower in the lapei of his coat, and a waistcoat of somewhat pretentious design, attracts attention to his wearing apparel; but association with men in the front ranks of his party are modifying his ideas of switable clothing for a minister of the Crown, just as his style of nttï¬k in the Housc is lesa virulent than of yore, less sugpestive of the pettifogging solicitor with a helpless witness in his power. It was amusing to listen to the wrathy critieism of Welsh ladies, who are nothâ€" , ing if not patriotlc, when Mrs. Lloyd George appeared at one of the court | "Who is the man with the beautiful The New Russoâ€"Japanese Commercial head and face, and insignificant body?" Treaty. was the query of the writer, “f she sat The Sun Trade Journal for October enjoying the most delicious of strawâ€" 3 bovries and cream one radiant afternoon ’;{' that what purports to be a semi at Westminster. "Beautiful head!" fair. | Official statement of the differences beâ€" ly snmorted her host in wrath. "I fail to | tween the new and old Russoâ€"Japanese on the terrace of the House of Commons | treaties has been published in Japan, in find anything cither in the appearance | i f or mind of Lloyd George that ‘is beauâ€" 'l.Xb.m“ as follows: The, new trefty tiful!" But womanâ€"like the writer stuck | 8‘¥e® each country the right of burying to her opinion, Mr. Lloyd George has a | or cremating its dead in places duly asâ€" heal and face which might belong to the | signed for the purpose; the subjects of most transcendental idealist rather than “:3 power are placed on the most fayâ€" the President of the Board of Trade. A | ored nation footing with regard to broad, massive brow above eyes of exâ€" rlgricultura and the owneuhip"(‘)f proâ€" cellent form and color, delicately formed | perty; freedom of manufacture is given. features of a sensitive ‘mould, and above | to the subjects of each in the country of | all a tremendously vibrant slertness, I thcls other, whereas the old treaty covered are the characteristics which strike one | only freedom of commerce; each wer instantly. The head and shoulders give' pledges itsel?f to conclude a conv:r?tion the impression of belonging to a man | for the mutual recognition of laws relat: of great stature, but adverse cireumâ€"| ing to shipping; most favored nation stances in youth may bave stunted the | treatment is ext‘ended to the consuls of growth of trunk and limbs, or it may | each state and their functions in the lt:;vi-, b“nb‘th; p;‘o«liglous ac(;.ivnyhol .th; | terxg:):;;-(ieu o{’]t};le dother; alanewspapers rain â€" whic as _ sappe physical | or s published in the Russian lanâ€" strength. But the face is beautiful, the l'guage by Russian subjects within Jatmn' fine luminous texture of the skin, testiâ€" | are to be subject to Russian jurisdiction, | fying to the vitality of the man. One | the Japanese having similar jurisdiction would lopk for :,hc. propagation of' the | within Russia‘s dominions; trade marks, highest ideals of life from the finely | designs and patents of each to be proâ€" modelled lipg, regarding life in general, | tected in the other country. These proâ€" but alas! They are too prone to utter | visions are all additions to the old ; scathing invective rather than lofty senâ€" | treaty. ; timents. As a coiner of phrases, the _â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"@4Gâ€"â€"â€"â€"_â€".. President of the Board of Trade stands 1 anrivalled among his fellows, and one BETTER TflAN SPANK[NG. ean say with truth, that the results of Spinking does "not s Sias i bea many elections have hung upon the apt Are sbiliren ‘o * turning of a phrase Awhic‘i "gticks." ’I‘ï¬e | wetting. There is a coostitutional cause for es ns s e t C best in the world) mak. hans, and purs -h.h'&mhpr.dn.rm.ndm- in the practise of Ontato Lrewers, {impii=s 'â€"-unflz' : under most w conditions. frmm Onterde narley MNDICOOC Spplenic o SERBUILDS RODIES the magnificent part singiingi!‘)ryitihoe Beer® is a foodâ€" drink that makes the stomach do its work better, because it increaâ€" ses the flow of the digestive juices and gives the stomach musâ€" cles morestrength to do their work. Beer®* is better for run â€" down people than medicine; andforthinâ€"bioodâ€" ed people nothing else will enrich the blood so surely and quickly. Ask your ow n doctor if you hadn‘t better drink beer with LAZY stomachs mean poor digestions â€" they don‘t work hard enough to exâ€" tract the good of one‘s food. "Oh, there ain‘t none here," replied the old woman, flashing an earâ€"trumpet. "I asked y‘ up ‘cause I couldn‘t hear a word you said ‘way down there!"â€"From the November Behemian. Accordingly, the captain, with his men lugging their heavy hose behind them, laboriously ascended the eight flights and burst into the room where _ the old woman was. ‘Where‘s the fire?" demaanded the capâ€" tain, when no fire nor smoke bacame visible. Debts can be collected up to forty years after they are incurred, under a Ecottish statute of 1474. This statute has been cited by a Glasgow man who claimed £19 188. from a former fellowâ€" eountryman in the Wandsworth County Court. As long ago as 1877 he obtained Judgment in Lanarkshire for £7 6s., money lent, but did not put in force, beâ€" ing in better cireumstances than now. Beottish law allowed five per cent. interâ€" est on judgments, which accounted for the larger sum now asked for. Jud ment was given for the amount cldmog: with costs. When the first fire company, in resâ€" porse to an alarm, reached the long row of tenementsa, the fireâ€"captain _ at once jumped from his engine and enâ€" Throe tired citizensâ€"a lawyer, a doeâ€" tor, and a newspaper manâ€"sat in a back room recently in the cold gray light of the early dawn. On the table were many empty bottles and a couple of packs of cards. As they sat in silâ€" ence a rat sceurried across the hearth into the darkness beyond. The three men shifted their feet and looked at each other uneasily. _ After a long pause the lawyer spoke. un the _Any fire up ther he had reached the this building. In un.s)e{ the o for him to come up _ "I know what you fellows are thinkâ€" ing," he said, "you think I saw a rat, but I didn‘t." Mniard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. | _ Queens are invariably exempt from the ’mystery that veils the ago of women, and they can never abate a day from the cold calculation of the calendar. Wilâ€" helmina, Queen of the Low Countries, was twentyâ€"seven the other day, and has reigned for nearly seventeen years, the first eight of which was under the guidâ€" ance of her mother, a Princess of Walâ€" deck Pyrmont, and sister of the Duchess of Albany. For six and a half years the Queen of Hollanrd has been wife to Henry, Duke of Mecklenburg, "Prince des Pays Bas," as he was formally styled on the occasion of his marriage. Queen "Wilâ€" helmeintje," as she is known to her subâ€" jects, has many hobbies; her dairy at Het Loo is one of them. Her Majesty is a practical dairymaid, who can milk a cow, churn the butter and make it into | the deftest pats. The dairy began by ‘ being a hobby, but so successful did it! become that it is not run as a paying . business. _ The Queen is very fond o!! music, and has organized a series of| "slum concerts" to brighten the lives of her poorer subjects. During the winter in The Hague, these concerts, which are given in large halls vy excellent singers | and instrumentalists, engaged at the | royal expense, are open to the inhabitâ€" auts of the poorer quarters only. Queen Wilhelmina is also an expert needlewoâ€" man and is interested in the Industrial School of Amsterdam, where some wonâ€" derful needlework is done, which is eagerly bought by the best people as being exceptionally well made. â€"Dundeo‘ Advertiser. Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€" wetting. There is a constitutional cause for thi trouble. Mrs. M. Surmmers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send zo money but write her toâ€"day If your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child, the chances are it can‘t help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night. l may well be proud of the people he repâ€" resents, and Walos has reason to conâ€" | gratulate itself on the reputation which | is being earned by the President of the Board of Trade.â€"Lally Bernard. roughest of Welsh audiences of this, their national song. Mr. Lioyd George street. fire up there?" he yelled, when reached the pavement â€" bereath Eight Flights Up r, the old woman motioned Scottish Law. A Queen‘s Hobbies, A man respiresâ€"that is, draws _ in breathâ€"sixteen to twenty times a minâ€" ute, or twenty thousand times a day. Rabbits, says a naturalist, have white tails, so that the young may be able to distinguish their mother in case of purâ€" suit. The color of a rabbit is so glke that of the ground that this would othâ€" erwise be difficult, if not impossible. _ _ An orange tree in full bearing has been known to produce 15,000 oranges. Natural History Jots. Lions and tigers are too weak in jung power to run more than half a mile. "It doesn‘t take a clever barber thief long to make a good haul. In a day in Saratoga one of these men lifted out of millionaires‘ and sports‘ neckties diaâ€" monds and pearls to the value of $8.000." â€"â€"Minneapolis Journal. on vwithout references. "These rascals have learned somehow or other to shave and haircut fairly well. They go everywhere in the rush scasonâ€"California or Florida in the winâ€" ter, Atlantic City in the summer, and so onâ€"and there the overworked boss barber, with hands scarce, is only too glad to take them on, and to take them 1 was cured of sensitive lungs by MIN ARD‘S LINIMENT, MRS. S. MASTER3. Thieving Barber‘s Trick. ‘"‘There a queer and nasty ind of criminal that we call the barber thief," sail the detective. "He is a ï¬)umeyman barber who lifts your scarfpin while shaving you. 1 was cured of a bad case of earache by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. MRS. 8. KAULBACK, 1 was cured of terrible lumbago by MINARD‘S LINIMENT, REV. WM. BROWN. For all skin diseases Zamâ€"Buk is without equal. It cures ulcers, festerâ€" ing â€" sores, ri worm, cuts, bruises, chapped hlndn,n%oils, eczema, etc., etc. All stores and druggists sell Aamâ€"Buk at 50 cents a box, or post paid from the Zamâ€"Buk Co,. Toronto, 3 boxes, $1.25. good for yourfly and old Mothers, take heart. Don‘t be disâ€" couraged because evegthing has failed to heal your child until you have tried Zamâ€"Buk. Zamâ€"Buk is nature‘s healing balm, and ?:ickly overcomes and reâ€" moves all skin diseases. It is equally WAAN : haw enasters cce ov s Our handsomely llustrated Catalogue is yours for the asking [ AMtctonnximmotm_hwflb ten by Mrs. F. W. Kettle, of Kirkdale, P. Q., who says: "My little 4â€"yearâ€"old boy suffered since he was 13 months old from a bad leg. 1 tried many salves and had doctors attend him, but none did him any good. The doctors told me it was in tL blood, and he was in conâ€" sumption. I only wish now I had had more faith in Zamâ€"Buk, for it immediate ly healed the boy‘s leg. He is now nearâ€" ly 4 years old, and looks far from being consumptive. _ He is now a strong, healthy boy, thanks to Zamâ€"Buk. I hope this letter will help a good many anxâ€" ijous mothers." FOR the man who shaves no gift would bring quite as much pleasure as this Triple Shaving Mirror, as it is very much superior in every way to the ordinary style, lT has attachments so that it can be either secured to the wall or stood up on a table. FOR travelling it is very convenient as it can be folded up to occupy only a small place. But like some other little chap, Whose name I never heard, Who likes to sit on someone‘s lap And never says a word. â€"John Kendrick Bangs, in St. Nichâ€" Instead of stamping on the stair, As though I thought that I Were nothing but a lively pair Of hippopotami. From all of which I greatly fear In days beyond recall My dear old daddy, it is clear, Was not like me at all. He says he cannot comprehend The reason why I can‘t, When up the stairs I mount, pretend That I‘m a human ant. Rxrr Bros., He says he can‘t imagine why I stand upon my herd, Instead of on my dignity, Like boys who‘re better bred. He says he cannot understand Why I so dote on noise, 4 And like to play that I‘m a band, Deserting quiet toys,. My daddy says that once he was A little chap like me, So why he says the things he does I really cannot see. Shaving Mirror, 86.50 Limited 134â€"138 Yonge St. TORONTO Doctors Thought Baby Was Consumptive The Price is $6.50 TORONTO Strange Mistake. The week end custom of entertaining has brought about a new departure in the toilet preparations that hostesses are expected to furnish for their men and women guests. Mrs. or Miss arrives and finds everything provided in the chamber and bath allotted to her. Not only combs and brushes, but pins of all shades and sizes up to an equal variety. Perfumes, powders for face, mamecure preparations, brilliantine, bath and hand soaps of several kinds, perfumed barth bags and waters, dentifrice in powder and liquid form, listerine, camphor spirâ€" its. For men are added shaving creams, cigarettes and slippers.â€"From Vogue. A writer in & monthly mapazine, himself a bumorist, extra sec, of wide reputation, thinks that he sees signs of an improvement in this state of affairs. ‘‘Women‘s sense of humor,‘"" he says, "has imncreased in recent years. ‘They see jokes more readily than they used to. This is due to the fact ther thay look their best when they are etailing. ** There is hbope in these words. Tuee is no reason whatever why humorists should nxt be welcome in every drawingâ€"room. Men capable of teiling a good story, or workâ€" ing up to a pleasant epigram, will be the centre of attraction. ‘The military, the musâ€" lc:n: and the Gibsonâ€"men will be among the also rans. The problem whether women hbave any sense of humor has vered mankind for genâ€" erations, says a wellâ€"known racontour. It is upfortunsiely true that they seldom laugh readily at our jokes, and are inclined to tell us not to ‘"‘be silly" when we play airlly with a subject. 4 But this may be due to a too keen sense of humor. We may not be up to their form. Our jokes (forsooth!) may not be good enough for them. (Ha! ha! Not good enough! But no matter!) We revenge ourselves for this by telling women that they do not know a good thing when they see . ome, and that, though, when pain and auguish rack the brow they may be minietering angels, they are not the audience we should choose for our finest flights of whimsicality. A voung foreigner one day visited a physician and described a common malâ€" ady that had betailen him. "The thing for you to &@," the physician said, "ia to drink hot water an hour before breakâ€" fast every morning." "Write it down, doctor, so I won‘t forget it," said the patient. Accordingly the physician wrote the directions down, namely, that the yuuni man was to drink hot water beâ€" fore break{ast every morning. The patâ€" ient took his leave and in a week he reâ€" turned. "Well, how are you feeling ?" the physician asked. "Worse, _ doctor, worse, if anything," _ was _ the reply,. "Ahem! Did you follow my advice and drink hot water an hour before breakâ€" fast?" "I did my best, _ sir." said the young man, "but I couldn‘t keep it up more than ten minutes at a stretch. How He Does Love to Play With a Joke. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, "The two falcons are my two eyes, which I must diligently guard lest someâ€" thing should please them which may be hurtful to my salvation; the two hares are my feet, which I must hold back lest they should run after evil objects, and walk in the ways oi sin; the two hawks are my two hands, which I must train and keep at work in order that I may be able to provide for myself and for my brethren who are in need; the serpent is my tongue, which I must always keep in with a bridle, lest it should speak anything unseemly; the lion is my heart, with which I have to maintain a conâ€" tinual fight in order that vanity and pride: may not fill it, but that the grace of Giod may dwell and work there; the sick man is my whole body, which is al.ays needing my watchfuilness and care. All this daily wears out my strength." "Why, you must be joking," said his friend, "surely no man can have all these things to do at olfce." "Indeed, I am not joking," said the old man, "but what I have told you is the sad and sober truth. Did His Very Lively Little Monâ€" agorie. It is said that a friend onee asked an aged Englishnan what caused him so often to complain of pain and weariness in the evening. "Alas!" said he. "I have every day so much to do, for I have two falcons to tame, two hares to keep from running away, two hawks to manage, a‘serpent to confine, a lion to chain, and a sick man to tend and wait upon." "Why, you must be joE?ng," said his friend, "surely no man can have all these "Did The export of Chinese crackers from Canton was 45,197 hundredâ€"weight last year, as com{nred with 45,104 hundredâ€" weight in 1905, and 22,063 hundredâ€" weight, the average for the previous five years. Returns of the British Reilway Clearâ€" ing House show that 1,000 parcels a day are lost on the railways of the United Kingdom, Two locomotive engines could pass each other in any one of the four funâ€" nels of the Maurstania. A publication recently issued by the Central Esperantist Office in Paris shows that there are 639 Eeperanto societies throughout the world, and 38 journals are published specially devoted to the propagation of the language. In Belgium breeders are obliged to keep a record of all cattle raised by them, and each animal has a registered trade number, which is engraved on the ring fastened to its ear. The mackine which cuts up wood to make matches turns out 40,000 "splints," as they are called, in a single minute. Taximeters are a success in London, Paris, Hamburg and every city where they have been adopted. They have proved that honestyâ€"even enforced honâ€" estyâ€"is the best policy. Interesting Facts Set Forth Without Waste of Words. The lurgest wagon in the world has been shipped to Nome, Alaska, for the Pioneer Mining Company. It is over 26 feet long and 7 feet high from the axle. The wheels are 10 feet in diamater, and are fitted with iron tires 1}, feet in width. Weok End Sozp and Things THE IMPORTANT POoINT CNE THING AND ANOTHER. CATâ€"LIKE MAN. KEPT HIM BUSY. He Tried It. It was in the winter of 1846 that Nelson‘s signalmanâ€"the. man who hoisted the famous *"England â€" exâ€" pects," etec.â€"â€"was discovered by one who had served as surgeon on board the Tonnant at Trafalgar. The sigâ€" nalman, John Roome, was selling watercress and red herrings in Blackâ€" friars. _ He had deserted from the navy after the battle, and this had disqualified him for a pension, but representations were made to Ccvpt. Pasco, si_flnl Lieutenant on the ioâ€" tory at Trafalgar, who used his inâ€" fluence on the old man‘s behalf. Ca Pasco was at first unsuccessful ; ï¬ was informed by the authorities that there were many more Aasa«.i~= "A* mcre were many more deié;;v'i-r;; ;; didates for Greenwich. Bhortly afterâ€" Here are some of the fl?refl that inâ€" dicate the importance of the new State in the most concrete and convincing form: Area in square miles, 70,230; popâ€" ulation, 1,500,800; taxable property, $800,000,000; estimated annual value of mineral products, $200,000,000; annual crop of wheat, 40,000,000 bushels ; corn, 72,000,000 bushels; cotton, 600,000 bales ; value of domestic animals, $98,000,000 ; bank deposits, $40,000,000; railroad mileâ€" age age, who used laboriously to con a list of ten or twelve as a part of their geoâ€" graphy lessons. The admission of the new State of Oklahoma (comprising the former Indian Territory and Oklahoma Terrtitory), on November 16th, reduces the number of Territories to threeâ€"Alas. ka, Arizona and New Mexicoâ€"and b;inil the roll of States up to fortyâ€"six. Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drugâ€" gists. Oklahoma: Fortyâ€"Sixth State Uncle Sam‘s list of Territories has been seriously depleted within the memâ€" ory of people now approaching middle "These Indiaps cling to their primitive customs and do most ofâ€"their hunting with bows and arrows. ‘The way they use the bow is rather unique. They sight their game, calculate the distance, and then shoot their arrows into the air, whereupon the weapon falls upon the mark, whether _ bird of beast, seven times out of ten, with fatal effect, The country they inhabit is quite cold, and often in the morning 1 have seen a thin coat of ice over the jar of water placed on my table. Again, when shivering unâ€" der two or three blankets, I have looked with envy at my meszo (servant) who, stripped to the skin, and wrapped only in a thin cotton sheet, slept as comfortâ€" ably as though in a steam heated apartâ€" ment.â€"Baltimore American. rites and ceremonies. _ They are excelâ€" lent friends, but terrible enemies, and if defeated in battle are apt to visit their wrath on their unfortunate officers. an and Gracias districts. They are the best fighting stock in all Latin Amerioa. Three or four hundred of them will often defeat an arimy of thrice _ their size. They are ever eager for battle, and reck nothing of heavy adverse odds. They are supposed to be ghmtuu, but from what I saw and learned from others I came to the belief that they practise _ heathen ! To enable all to learn we teach on | cash or instalment plan. We also teach a ‘tenoml class at school once a month. | Class commencing last Tuesday of each month. â€" These lessons teaches how to cut, | fit and put together any garment from the | plainest »hirt waist suit, to the most elaborâ€" | ate dress. The whole family can learn from | onecourse. We have taught over seven ; thousand dressâ€"making, and guarantee to | give five hundred dollars to any one that cannot learn between the age of 14 and 40. You cannot learn dressâ€"making as thorough as this course teaches if you work in shops for years. Beware of imitaâ€" tions as we employ no one outside the school. This is the only experienced Dress Cutting School in Canada and excelled by none in nn{ other country, Write at once tor particulars, as we have cut our rate oneâ€" third for a short time. Address:â€" BANDERS‘ DRESSâ€"CUTTING SCHOOL, 81 Erie St., Stratford, Ont., Canada, WANTED AT ONCEâ€"We have decided to instruct and employ a number of smart youns ladies to teach our counse in dressâ€" msking. having one teacher for the ®lx nearest towns where they liveâ€"age 20 to 35. Those who have worked at dressmaking, of like drawing preferred. Please do not apply unles« you can devote your wlg& ï¬.xx:.,hï¬e- "These aborigines are mostly of warâ€" like mould and as brave fighters as auy of the human race. 1 was especially imâ€" pressed with the inhabitants of the Copâ€" Tribe of Fighting Indians. "I sojourned for more than a year in Central America, mostly in Honduras, where I went to make a study of the native Indian tribes," said Charles C. Lesscuer, of New Orleans, dressâ€"â€" e, 5.000,â€"Leslie‘s Weekly itdintnnlizisonsizstirs #4 Dr. B. J. KENBALL CO., Enosbarg Falls, Vermont, U.8.A. won because F4 \ this remedy l canâ€"and does P R â€"cure Bog and o 4* Bone Spavin, . wl Curb, Splint, Ringbone, hy,Gtv'll., S'elhngl and Lameness. MraroaDp, Ont., May 22 ‘06, "I used Kendali‘s Spavin Cure on a Bog Spavin, which cured it completely . A. G. Masow, Price $1â€"6 for g5. Accept no substitube, The great bookâ€"‘"Treatise on the Horse® â€"free from deaters or ais Take a Pmfl-'_â€" â€"*COIIIâ€" se at Schoo LEARN DRESSâ€"MAKING oY MAIL in your spare time at home, Of _ _ ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT a few Nelson‘s Signalman Bargain. THE SOHOOL A London firm of electroâ€"plate makers has in its service eighteen workers who have been with it for over fifty years. In Vienna Museum there is & collection of coins numbering 125,000. It is eaid to be the finest in the world. Of all the boyâ€"workers in London. memtertlcearew 2. . WB ® Of all the t newsboys are boys the most â€" the openâ€"air life 1. _ "UmMo, workmen wear upon thei: jackets the name of their trade and the name of their employer, St. Peter‘s, Rome, has a floor area of 227,000 square feet, the groatest of any eut.he_dnl_ in the world. the Tokio has 8,000 public baths. “! Budapest and St. Louis have the est water wells in the world. London consumes over 9,000,000 tons of Pc.or:.l. every year. Ub . dens and ‘the largest hoopieal. ~" *~ _In Bilboa there is a law nrohibitine ble. "Here Rirzsio fell," remarked the guide,"I dinna winder at it," she replied, "I nearly fell mysel‘." ward, however, room was found at Greenwich Hospital for old John. Had he lived in our time he would prob:bly have uooi‘;od a princely snil- ary for repeating the si nightly at music ï¬m.â€"r‘mm ‘&“ London Chronicle. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. Nae Winder. An old woman from the country orud her first visit to ldinlm;ï¬ the other day, and was taken over sights, inâ€" eluding Holyrood. On uuhm‘{ the #pot where Queen Mary‘s faithful servitor was gut to dgath, ahe gave & bad stumâ€" ble *"Hare Rissia faln Mewnuit 4 sie Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Anu sliu, are steamboat men automobilists the only people that to put up a big front? Don‘t we al * us, big and little, like to make uï¬m†whistle so big that when a.hc:zm'n blew it he had to tie up to the !q an hour or two to get up steam enough to go on. He had only a little boat, but be wanted to make as much noise as anybody on the river. But You Can‘t Always Tell by the Sound Just What There is Back of it. "Lincolr," said Mr. MacGilkamby, "told a story about a little steamboat running on the Wabash River with a MAKING A NO!ISE IN THE WORLD ho I ED (Re‘‘d hl Montrea L‘u‘ ’eop‘. 1081). Ottewa Teronto Londen Winnipeg NVUbiippnperrmmmmmone...........___ Coughs and Colds QUICKLY Shiloh‘s Cure PEDLAR 4hG §1t°; "Being gencrally in a horizontal posiâ€" tion during the night and running with less power, the horizontal position, in which the balance runs more freely, will operate to make the length of the swing of the balance wheel during the night as nearly as possible the same as in the davtime, If, however, the watch is wound up in the morning, baving partly run down through the night, there is room enough left in the barrel to contract. _ Another reason why it should be wound up in the morning is that the lprinf will then have more power and thus will be in a better condition to resist the disturbing moveâ€" ments of the bearer during the daytime. Reasons Why It is Better Done in the Morning Rather Than at Night. "You wouldn‘t think," said a watch maker, "that it would make any differâ€" ence whether a watch is wound up in the morning or at night, but it does make considerable difference. "When a watch is wound up at night, coming out of a warm pocket, and laid down or hung up in a cool place, the mainspring will contract by the cooling off of the metals. Being wound up tight ly all ehenu ol ?ont.mfting has been shut â€" off and the spring is bound to n Tokio, workmen ringing of church bells "ev:-n-o-;â€"'svl-; ISSUE: NO. 49 1997 we can in the worldt" THE WORLD‘S CITIES. WINDING A WATCH Oyâ€"workers in London, the healthiest, barbers S aurey _ "_DOg _ PAnoUw e unheaithyâ€"a tribute to Siml,, Le ms mad_ you the t Use Shiloh‘s Cure for the worst cold, thesharpest cough â€"try it on a guarâ€" antee of your money back if it doesn‘t actually CURE guicker than anything you ever tried. Safe to take,â€"nothing in it to hurt even a baby. 384 years of Shiloh‘s Cureâ€" 25c.. b0c., $1. uns » A¢ %.% xA ol _ serent). ‘kw-« awnu were _ one b.d identific M she we her father s beard in Bis | one time int said, but her OQn one occas pi,\ be wore wl it was 1 AGED WOM GREA SAW Two Days lel: Taken P d Duke Had Fal Was Nece Mrs. Marj That Drul to Die. t1 PLIGHTED T AT “P coron« eoronets f threw thon Cous t plied Mrs. father Puke 0 be T. 4 informe eral. 1: and the London, chaffing "I th pifl‘t‘s and Wwoars i8 sard aiso | shown her with coror which he s London, D« OnI® M GIRL B hotel wher + to explain unont of the I thimnk she spite of th »misze â€" ths You 4 eremeon > ~ on Sun i waiting wiel n John Ha ha M 1€ Mr 1)