m ha in $teMdersee. Javk--Do you girls really other..' Dolh'e--of course. m ittst. told me she was m Ion Me confided to me. bonus. wouidu't terii.--Cttieago ny " talph Waldo Old Ago." "I B " Whoever Lovu I: .iak. But the inference from the g ot intellect. having knowledge, skill-nt the and of Me just Indy born-affirm., the imspiration of I and of the moral sentiment.- when n can“; for .. our "out. r ' l S' c/iii-tiii,?':") iiiifiitil; what it can welt 'tttth, organic in II works that be 'outm inti, Thou [glancino Lord. in we believe, “on. “goof“! to: .. Thy kingdo- can uh Illuy un In mind ur ’0qu. 0 lord, In but pray In: My“ to., .. .. 01" BI this dar, , ___ -"' 7,___,,_ . The Lord . Prayer. I The right on In with, lap: than 33.31:: tretrutu'ul compo-mm. was_ the left. . . Cha, "uuou, .iou'tt â€mum, during There no may â€MM widows In H. trs' printed on vet-y no“: Ill“). [ India. nu a literary cur_!ty:1 _ - ‘ " AN-, .___- “A A, n__ n_ ____ -- m pow the. Ami mum w be " an. ad pie-m and .. .. Thy rm to don. who impa- nu: wand: if fo who"- uent. and W antir But do] will] “In. do thou roll: my. my .. .. .. And (ovum In. 't the - God. Who In in "at tnt Al uh Prayer Nuggets 'OW, mine. we do. Ethel an In love 'rith you. bot-nun she knew I print. I Th ‘o The. Ottr tuba. Id 111 from all' min that M. Ar, amid. us It. ftt, " "our Old. broad nll tor wrom "ut'." more and “(mining love, wtlling ineytrtt. may grow coir gr " God and "ternal. Amen. 1rseore your: his â€I!" ms. leaves in purified and whom than ha v gain". A' es our wit t from the P from the knowledge. trust each do. Ethel 360 with thou dust my on out' - "can " onor should be ud ali bur haw tit ll he world's I bl and tl ut iq " " tt TU It don Spoils Politieitur-. I'm .not ing to try to get around it. But unc- I’ve lost my grip altogether-and t don't think I hangâ€! find on. “I to climb m'r.’ it. r But as soon as eves are evolved, and in proportion to the perfection and height of their development, ani- mals begin to divide their lives markedly into two main portions, a walking and a sleeping one; s more an! a less active. While lfp is supplied them, they perform sl mo- the functions; the moment night comes on they retire to nests or lake and become torpid and motion- Mu Heneiunan--rhiik you my: aronn-d tt1Iriymtlasve more, - the}! sari Tit" “0:131! "3;" iiirr travels. In any opher words. they have no distinct periodicity of their own. and night functions with the high~l est animals; they eat and digest in; the light, and grow or repair them-l selves through the hours of darkness) But the lowest of animals have no] such marked division ot noctural and ', diurnal habits: with ceaseless ma" dustry they roll through the waters by day and night alike, seeking by! touch Alone whom or what they may l devour in their native element. It', thev rest occasionally for digestion; and repair it is at irregular periods-- , sometimes for a few minutes, some-6 times for hours or even days together. ! It dried up, they remain mummied: for a year; it you moisten them once, Plants," it is true, being de r, for their growth upon the cm! action of rays of sunlight that upon their surface, have an 'tql wide distinction of day funct and night functions with the l est animals; they eat and discs the light, and grow or repair ti selves through the hours of dark "V __--.- vvle wuulutv. Observe. boo, that this most mental distinction due to dis; nlght is wholly relative to the of sight. and can affect only types of life which are not lontly high to have evolved for selves eyefr. - an... .0... " ulUWH’ owl, blinking and nodding in the light ot daytime is a familiar object. But then. all such animals are themselves descendants of creatures, which were mice for many ages diurnal. The habit itsell viewed alrstraetly, is one which could never have arisen ex- cept from the regular alternation ot light and darkness. There is no particular reason whf Wtt or any other animals should rest on an average about sight or nine hours out of every twtnty-iour, save for the fact that eight hours is about th- average time during which there is an absence of light in which the minml might get about with comfort. It there are any animals in Mars, we would naturally expect them to sleep and wake alternately for a period which would be entirely deter., mined by the duration of day and night in their own climate. Observe. too, that this most funda- m-,..,. :_a:_ 74- r It the sun always shone, we should new: go to bed: sleep would not have been developed. It is true. uocturaf animals sleep and wake jun? as much 1:4 diurnal ones; and a drowsy owl. blinking and nodding in the light ot dravti"os" " .. l-__:\s, .. _ - Madrid. involves a P20. ing nix days' time. A Swiss engineer has fire escape. It cumin! folding iron ladders an: dow frames. Each lad: one window to the ne: By turning a crank on frame: beneath are unfu . minute, and form a I' of descending to the gr The worldU sheep shearing record is 2394 animals in nine hours. It was made in Australia. The foreign trade of Japan in 1368 amounted to $130,600,000, and in 1906 to 6C2lrcmo.ooo. ' It is stated that th" nourishment in three baked bananas is equal to about 26 pounds of bread. A completefour through all the room, or npgrtmenta of the Rom Palm-n "om.. thtvetopment Mair“. The first post office scheme private enterptiae and was ina about 1464. all and urban wet it does not dry Gieid ly. The Ingest clock in the world is at St. Rombold’s Cathedral, Meehlin, Bel. gium, if the size of the dial is the criter. IF THE SUN ALWAYS SHONW The cat’s Idislikefbr (Fa/Tri;;'- ed by the not that its fur h devoid of oil and when wet it does not drv nuinlr. v ' "U -- ‘1'" power in than some person. One penon in a thouund ranches the age of one hundred yous. Spain is spending $40,000,000 on new battleship- and dockyard construction. In a (notable wind, a for can scent u nun st 3 distance of one-quarter of a mih. According to the observations of a New York barber, 66 per cent of the adult mule population wear beards. Four and . half is of tbe‘Eq'gligh family. Australia in twen'ty-six time. Inger then the British Isles. the Bank of East-ad the level of the street. A chninftwo 3nd 3 In" mil. long and wai hing M tons, was . recently made in imam! toy Pe. in a tolyerr. _ At one thousand fathom, below the aurlm of the ocean there is a uniform temperarmre just shove freezing point. LTh: foundâ€? yf ghg Igrong-rogn of The [used toothpick factory is in Pain. It In. originally started as a nu‘nuf-acf'ory of qui _ pee. -- -- The ria psper upon which the Chin. me do such churning drawing in n thin my of the pith of, I_t_req. _ In United State. 20 per cent of the man no do“ than. The bone {tuna of the avenge whale weighs shout " tom. The “and irrotiU of Monte Culo among; to 06,000,000. In the has out of five, the eyes m oul of Blietment., --- -_- ___ - France Flow noun. 8Mt,000,000 (mm hewaawo trop. -- - -- _ _ _ is no particular reason my other animals should average about sight or ut of every _tw9nty-lour. amen! of Sleep App Have Been Artificial Still Has Hopes. nth are unfoldgdliln It consists of : eerie ladders attached to the Each udder reaches to the next one helm Ema, being dependent eyes are rarely of equal the 'tdial iuav, near a P20-tuiie trip, cover. due to day Gk Hive to the sense affect only those L wiltinuous mean ground. ave an oqually day functions “n." floor all perteeted a m-w is 66 (get below trio chenliéal the avenge size Appears to pot suffic- I series of inaugurated l the win. hes from below it. tr ull the less than them. whf rest nine save fall What About Death Rate? i (Ottawa Journal.) Montreal boasts a birthraie to exceed I all those of other cities oi runown. For ltho- lust ten years the rate has been ‘3792 per thousand, last year it was “4.22 per thousand. This beats Breslttu iby. 5.6; Prague'by 13.18; Munich by 5.5; (Vienna by tt.6; Milan by 10.0; Rome by L12.3; St. Petersburg by 6.5; London by [5.7; Paris by 26.14; New York by 10.0; Philadvlphia by 13.. Montreal w... 31. trays able to go some, and those of us Iwhu happened to be born there remain 3proud uf it. A There were 51,097 marriages in New York the Inst 12 month. "L'Origirw des Espeese." Sir George, who is l’lumian Professor of Astronomy at Cmnbridue, was President of the Brit. ish Association two years ago, The French Academy of Sciences has elected as corresponding member of the Geographical Section Sir George Dar. win, of Cambridge. As the Echo de Paris point" out, Sir Georg" is tho sec. ond 90†of the grmu English naturalist, Charles Darwin, whose great work is Minard's Liniment Cure: Guget in Cows. The story goes that a friend once met him in Ireland gamed in a. pair of con- tirurntions which wer" not on R making 'Aslan., with his hunts. and 1'.a'itee/, him tiitvil.v about the "lucid interval" that octmrred between them. But "Tom. my," as Lord Longford is known to his intimatos. in no wise disconeerted, bland- ly explained that it was really a matter of high politics. "You sec, my dear fellow, the broeches Wdto made by a tailor who is a rampant orav.gemttn, while the boots are the adm-wment of a Fenian eobbler, so how an you expect 'em to meej'--London Titian). One of the’wittiest of our peer: is Lon! Longford, and he has also earned the reputation of being one of the worst dressed, in'spite of the {an that for twenty yum he has been in the Second Lite Guards. Father (s?verely)--My son, this is a disgraceful condition of affairs. This report says you are the last boy in a toss of twenty-two. Henry-It might have been worse, father; there might have been mam class of twenty-two. V Henry-lt might have been worse, father; there might have been more boys in the class. Miuard’s Liniment Cures Distemper, Wm; in; Gifivu'iGiGi. you. why it 'e" teast to not right. JMM The PEDLAR People Rain can't a chm-"h n in 25 yum van-need 1: writing or that lon wood or a century. "atlrh-uire eait hedge: such a roof-propf again“ all the .leosento.-th. thanâ€: Goot goof than; in. Mango. Prairie Sentenc- And - for. a contagious Itch on human or laund- cured u a minus by Wolford'. Sunny lam. tt mu talk. Sold by drtutRutrs. The Damages: wind that ever blew can't vi, â€my I roof â€and with ldf-lockin' tore, that the subject of railway signal- ing has been brought Into prominence. With regard to the etWitetstttittt's require- ments and duties, he must, in the first place. be able to know the condition of the line in darkness, fog, and snow. and if it can be brought to his notice in spite of a temporary lapse of attention on his part. so much the better. Now the or. dinary semaphore doei not do this. In many of the varieties of weather met with in Great Britain, its indications are invisible. and in any one they presup- pose the driver is on the alert. In bad l weether semaphore.- are admittedly prac- tically unless. and they have to be sup- plemented by fog-nignnls. These latter appeal to the only rN'i'nAe that is open to appeal from without the cab, and do it e fectively; but their use involves two more links in the chain of responsibility, and at best they are a costly and unsat. I isfnt-tnry makeshift. 'l'lwrc ic. little doubt that sooner or later same method of eats-signalling will be considered DI!" sentinl to safe railway working. That it will be more than mere signalling--- the entrance to a danger zone automati- cally stopping the train -i< elmost as certain. The actual method, however, of picking up the signals cannot yet be oreeasted. they could not, but whether the fault was human or tneehauieal, the result was the 51mm. It is not surprising. there, fore, that the subjfct of railway signal- " OSHAWA " GALVANIZED STEEL SHINGLES France Honors English Scholar, Coughs and Colds QUICKLY Shi1oh's2u,htt,2 fit?, mayâ€: cough Cure --try it on. aguar- Witty Lord Longford, Signalling on Railways LDLAR People am A man “mama lauda- “mum TOO TRUE. 'ejt" ITOH thelhu'peet cough -try it on august- en tee of your money back if it doesn't actually CURE Quicker than anything you ever tried. Safe to take,--notiting in it to hurt even a baby. 34 years of success commend Shiloh's Cure-- .50c.. " an West Lambton Liberals have nomin- Ited Mr. Ibvid Milne for the legisla- ture, but he will require I little time to consider his 'teeepttuiee. In one of the New York hospitals mov. ing pictures have been made of epilep- tie patients, as well as of persons affect. ed with locomotor ataxia. This is fol- lowing the example set in Vienna, where moving pictures ave béen made of cele- brated surgeons performing eritieal op- «ration» The purpose in both cases is, of course, to enable students and pne- titioners to study the peculiarities of diseases and the methods of distinguish. ed operators. "Well, after all, as near as I can ate, there isn't much difference between “a and you, except that we 'reckon' ond you 'quess.' " Moving Pictures for Meaical Students, V "Trim," Inswered the Yankee; "Lat you mustn’t forget that we "guess' a blamed sight better thin you 'reckon.' " John Allen, of Iupelo, Miss., tell, a gorlone at the expense of his townsmen, When a Yankee happened along and while they were discussing the differ. ences between the north and the south, the Mississippian observed.. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Remove: all hard, loft and ttalloumd Iampe Ind blemishes from horses, blood trpavin, eurirs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, Ipuina, sore and swollen throat, cough, ate. Save $60 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by dr M. gins. Pennsylvania Teacher’s Record John M. Wolf, who began teaching in the public schools of Adams and York oountieo at the age of 15 and is now 75, has been absent from school on ac- count of sicknmm but four and a half days in his service of sixty years. He says thath:sidev, teaching fifty-six com' mon school term he has taught twenty seven local normal school terms of twelve weeks each, making in I.“ eighty three terms. He also claims that he has during his school work prepared more young ladies and men for teach. ers than any man in southern Penn. itr,y'lanuaitu---hYont the PleilsuielphU Re- cord. Artesian wells Wert' known in Thebes 2,000 B. C. . Prus-ziu's zinc mines produce half the zinc of the world. Twenty-tive million squirrels are kill. ed annually in Russia for their skins. The printing trade in Canada finds work for some 10.000 people. On an avenge L490 liven are lost by tire in England and Wales every year. ---.---, mills A gallon of water weighs ten pounds. The first cannon was invented in 1330. The Forth Bridge contains 48,000 tons of steel. The Sulphur mines of Sicily employ 18,. 000 men. The Thames Embankment cast fl,- 7l0,000 to build. Australian mines yield L'l6,000,000 worth of gold annually. Holland has more than 10.000 wind- Get twice the eggs " bk the coat with [even at 10e a bushel. u used Ind on- dorsed by but breeders. Unequllled for layers and growing chicks. No man too poor to feed it and no mu: rich enough to buy better. No time to lose. "Do It now" and win out. Send sump to-dar tor partieuittr. to Brant Poultry Yards. ENGLISH SPA VIN LlNlMENT u to be barely vlslble to the naked an. The oil In nhoorbed by this dough. had the chips suck to it, and there Is no other known â€bounce which con be used no I wiper with- out leaving home of ita particles llllcnod to the thin: wiped. This occounn tor the con- tinued use of bread dough In the watchmk- ime Industry. Tho $iugirt Notions] Watch Company use: something over forty-two pound have: nor any. or “out 24,000 mud: n your. "There la 110'er reg:::divx.; t.n. u-a of brad in this factory. and t am 'wllnnx to an ali I can concerning it.. From the earl. Ion tinn- In an history of watchman); it has been the custom ot watchmnkers to reduce fresh bread to the form of dough. Thus In done Br naming 1nd kneading. They then use this dough for removing oil tutr chm tttat naturally when, in the '?fPPept manufacture. to pieces " In." Witchmakors Consume Many Loaves In Their Daily Work. Hrtsattn the moat novel nu " whtch brad it mu. II" Tho American Food Journal. any be "en In the great factories of the Elihu Nuionnl.\vnch company, n Emu. lil.. where more than fory loan-s n! fresh bruit! are requirad each udr. 'ect:"'l'i2 ml- f-‘Yl! (A crap 5. Hunter. of in: tr'.:C.t td' rm". “fueled as saying: There ig no new rt'gycu'.i, I.†an» ot 1r,eti.p! this tummy, and I am ‘wllnnx lo Keep Hens DON T Have you u copy of our new Cook Book? Sent free if you write Nikon-l Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Montreal, "One can to try, will always make you buy St. George's." ii best for Biscuits-best fo. Cakes-best for Pier-best for everything you bake that requires Baking Powder." . Make Them Keep Yon I QUEER USE FOR BREAD. St. George’s Baking Powder (Dept A.) Brantford, Canada The Diference Facts and Figures. "Ta.,-." ttian 10,000 wind , hr?, " "Doiet you know if it be wet the pig. can digest it in one-kl! the time!" “Now, look here." professor," In add, “just tell me how much you think I pig'l time is worth!" A Learned Profeuor. "What ere you giving to than Itt my mant" the learned professor u ed. "Corn, proleuor,†the grizzled old far. mer, who knew him by sight, replied. 'ere Jou giving it Wet or dry?" "Oh, that’n nothing," said Tom. "I know a. word that has over three miles between its beginning trnd ending." "Whu's that?" asked Rob faintly. . "SG, 'it'i smiles, beuuoe thereh a whole mile between the first and hat letters." "Good!" said Bob. "Which is the Imttp etst_Eryrlislt, woIdl" -- -- _ "Vaaudinarianum," said Tom, mam; .. . . _ 7 "itu stumbled," saideom. “Mime you are sure to get a tumble between the first sud hut letters," . "Rob," said Tom, by way of the Busy Bee, "which is the moat dangerous word to pronounce. inthe Pyrli.eh language t" A small boy, who was dressing by the fire, called to his mother in another room: "Which foot shall I put this stock- ing ont" Without stopping her work, she told him to put it on the right foot. In a few minutes he interrupted her again. "What do you want now?†she asked. "I want IO know which foot the other stacking goes up."4(‘hicago News. liurd’s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. "I would any that I do not know of a medicine that has Mood the test 9f time like MINARD’S LINIMENT. It has been an unfailing remedy in our household ever since I can remember, an! has outlived dozens of would-be competitors and imitators." Gentlemen P-- The publisher of the best Farmer's paper in the Maritime Provinces in writing trains mites: _ _ A Sever. Indictment. Friday is the \wukly fraud; wary thing goes wrupperjuved; and the sail- ormsn who sails finds himself food for whales, and the man who killed a friend on a Friday meets his end; on a Friday tradr is Shirk. all the trains run off the truck; William Doe, to his amaze, draws $10 and ten days; brickbats fall from buildings high, break your neck and make you cry; fevers, fires, and frosts abound, earthquakes come and snort around. Old Subseriber, in a pet, comes to swear at the Gazette; ever one is feeling blue. t,'ie,'gt,e,'U? hind): end to: yet some comfort we " leek --Friday comes but once a week.--Em- porin Gazette. "Beleaguered," said Tom, What Newspapers do For the Mall. Many people have bean led to believe that the cent-ti-pound mail rate accorded under the law to publishers mailing their pspers and magazines in bulk was the cause of actual loss to the government. In a recent discussion of the subject, a writer maintaining this thesis ssuerted that the publications enjoying these Io- ealled second-class privileges paid only four per cent. of the posts] revenues. Whether this estimate is correct or not it is of little importance; the fact which is important. and which biased and thoughtless critics ignore, is that thel granting of the second-close privilege Ma brought millions of dollars of profitable fir-bolus business to the postal ser- vice. It is on record in the archives of the postal commission, which sat in New York in October. 1906, that a single ad- vertitretttent in a publication enjoying treeomi-class rates was the cause of the! wrting of more than 3,000 letters. Thin case might be multiplied by thousan‘il, and it would be shown that. far from being itself the cause of a deficit in the postal revenues, the second-class privi- lege. by the profitable business it creates, goes far to make up for the losses occu- sioned by rural free delivery, the ridicu- lous abuses of the trunking privilege, and the failure to credit the Postoffice l Department with the mail carried for all other government deImrtrnents.--usrte'. I Weekly. I "l was a martyr to entarrh of the head. throat and staunch. I N" 50 bad the doctors toned consumption. I tried runny physicians and mediums. A friend suggested Ptsyehine.. I tried it and it was the only thing ever did me any wood. I am now perfectly well. It is the-greatest remedy the world has ever known. I do not need it hr my health now but I use it as a strengthen" for my walking match- es, I owe much of my physical en- duranCe to Payehine." JAMES REYNOLDS. Port Hope, Ont. Psychine is the greatest cure for tmtarrh of the head, throat or stomach in the world. It is a. wonderful Louie and strengthener of run down system. acting direetly on all the vital organs. giving youthful vigor and strength to the sysu-m. At all druggiatg toe and $1. or Dr. T. A Slocum, Limited. To romo. The Famous Pedestrian Black Watch Tobacco Dictionary Fun. Foolish Boy. A real pleasure. The big b I a c k p I u g . A n e w sensation. "If you please, Mrs. H., I think I'll take thy mnnmui hen," wu Bertiel' po- form of a hen and ten chickens, Each child was allowed to select his chicken as it was served. Finally the mine to the ton of . pom- inent palitieian. “Which ducky will you hue, Bertie?†she asked. lite reply A 'f,',',','.',','."', i'g',ti'h',pg,'n: gum . rt tonine riemuotttereo no Sega. To add to the p'l'i'dll"l't an; occasion she had the ices'froaen in the form of a hen and ten chickens, Each child was allowed to select his chicken as it was served. by killing two quarts of hydrochloric Mid with all the zinc it will take up. Then to the acid a quart of Vlter in added. or it may have to be ttdded before the zine will fully dissolve. A quart ot glycerine, which his previously been mix. ed with a. quart of alcohol, u then added to the solution. This fluid is used for all kinds of soldering, and has been found especially degirable with granny or dirty connections, so well as for soldering iron. It. is claimed that the glycerin. prevents all rust, which plays havms when many soldering fluids containing hydrochloric acid are used. Minn“ Liniment Cum A soldering fluid, whirl: hm. proved very useful in certain railway shops, u magnify: the Street Railway Journal, Engineering Hint Foam the Beaver, Human science owes many a debt, especially on the practical side, to the instinct of the lower animals. One of these obligations is cited by an eminent authority. Engineers frequently build dun: straight across streams, the object being, in some cues, to save expense by sparing material. But the hunt orche- his dam against the current. and experi- ence has shown that this form of dam is best to resist floods and the impact of floating ice. Acting upon the knowl- edge which is instinctive with the beav. er, Ind which human calculation ap- proves, the Great Bear "lle.v dam, in Celifornia. and wine other dams in that Mate, have been eonstrueted and so made that their stnhility depends upon the resistance which their arched form presents. Contains the iamous healing principles of Mira Ointment, combined with the purest vegetable oils. It is {any a medicinal soup and a toilet soap in one. Innllnble tct all skin troubles. Ideal for the bath on account of its elegant 'se-tte-id-tsort-stem reeeiptae we. The Cheagiatm' Co. of Canada. Limited, KAI-â€ton. " "6ovetT trom using Zuni-Bali. For some months I was a constant suf- ferer from bleeding piles. I had used a great many ointment, but got no relief until I had tried Zam-Buk. It cured me and I have had no return of the trouble. Since my cure, I have advised others sufferin with a similar complaint to use Zuni-$11k, and in each instnnr‘e have heard satis factory reports." Zam-Buk also cures cuts, burns, scalds, ulcers, ringworm. itch, bar- ber s rash. blood poison, bad leg. salt rheum. abrasions, abscesses and all skin injuries and diseases. Of all stores and druggists 50 cents box or from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, post- paid for price. 3 burn-3 on .. M mm. L. noxnll, of " Scott Street. St Thomas, Ont.,' writes: "I consider it my duty to write of the benefits derived from using manhunt. Pn- This distressing cessfully dealt wit treatment. The a; excruciating us tl weakening, and ev lose no time in thorough trial. Z8. pain, alleys the enables rest and ( the. worn-out suite Ank the pliant own people who “a". next to Edison. any: the New York Bun, ind may will all you that nobody in witMtt boiling distance of we wlurd. A good many men can count their patents by the more. and. u home of them are mini yo“!!- Le Edi-on, they may but him out in Up to the present. however. he deserves the title or the Grout Ame-inn Paloma. TUt noun a good deal, {or it In undoubt- edly I not that on American will an out I um: on ion provocation than my other nun or woman in the world. A. I consequence the Patent Office in pit- ill up . "voila: fortune which Innke- it . bloated bondholder “you: the government 1utmrtmeota." it hu achieved 1 nut-plan of “000.000 and k (roving higher every dâ€. 2ykttp.rtiejtlity in norms the Pmnt or tee ,V- .u‘vuu- ll!“ the hundred thousand Edison Holds the RmM Wlth Ono Thousand to His Grodit The Nest mute. A“ comm-I404 that mob-bl: notâ€; [mt-t. In the world-U Thom- A. hon. Ho bu rolled no the enormous total ot “mail 1.000 P" tents Ind new: no iuelimrtiott to quit. NO RETURN OF TROUBLE 2MlratjiCdijItEs FILES. EDDYS “SHEEN?†PARLOIR MATCHES .- a... - “a“. um rm... "y,t.?..LrrtryrGt piling up modd- Useful Soldrring Fluid An Inherited Tendency GREATEST OF PATENTEES. ( ISSUE NO. 7. 1908. 3"! ?uoc Manx/unusunzu SKIN SOAP price. , bong}; , blood poison. bad leg, salt )rasions, abscesses and all ries and diseases. Of all ', druggints 50 cents box or 1-Buk (‘9. Toronto, Dost- Messing complain in Inc- lealt, with by the Zun-Buk The agony of Piles is 3.8 g as the disease itself is and every sufferer should me in giving an-Buk a rial. Zam-Buk subdue: tho vs the inflammation and at and comfort to come to In sufferer.. Boxall, of " Scott Shoat, m int me the Beaver. ee owes many a. debt, be practical side, to the lower animals. One of "eo Dy In eminent lg frequently build streams, the object to save expense by t the beaver umbe- mania. Silent as $1.25 br Dr. J. B. Cleland, in a paper In! before the Linnea“ Society of New South Wales, undertakes to attack the queation of the antiquity of the aneu- tora of the vanishing aboriginea of A.- tfalia in a new way. If it can bepmad, be lays, that the vegelation of Aus. tralia bu been modified in the course of a†no an to have become more tot. erant of bush fires, and u a Inuit of the frequency of such fires, and if lac-h fires are due mainly to the agency of man, then there would be mud. for attributing comiderable antiquity to fire. producing man on the Australian coa- tinent. w"'"""-' w-.. ..-,..... [In-"Um!“ nan-snow. STAR MFG. CO. ' PROVIDENCE. R. I. U. B. A. ------, Wham-mud mau- - tor " pho- of Jrdtrvlr, to â€11.11000!“- mach. When Cold uni In tho $I.20 and vanilla-Id you than TWO IUIJDOOLD lidrd KINGS. We tun-t you with [he Johan-m1 walla-m1 I I ll Ichnrm paid. Iona “I your Minoan] "d.--- Interesting trials Ire tts made in Glasgow with I new type o turn", trolle head, I New ZeelInd invention. the oiject of which in to prevent the trolley jumping the wire It cm. The secret of the new trolley-heed, we the Glasgow News, is that instead of the wheel being mounted on the rigid spindle in the ordinary fork " the upper end of the le, it in on I spindle earried on two blur; These Ire free to move It end down in two slots allgtntly inclined own< Nude toward the rear, with buffer springs behind, which tend to keep the wheel in I straight line with this“ It Ill '1rreqpturitim, inatoad o it to swivel in the wheel, which in 2.'tt the diet Queen of the trolley lerlI' the wire. The new head in the invention of I firm in Wellington, New Zeauad, For Iome " weeks back the trunwa department he been testing it, during which time I distance of Moo miles he. been covered by the can on which the new trolley-heads Ire being tried. The present system, " in obvious from the frequency with which the pole have. the wire Ind mum change, i. still Hr than perfect, Ind accordingly the mun. 9‘38 present trinla will be learned with in teat. tepartktttg do. not can children of bad- rotting. The" tn n constitution! - tor tM. with. In. M. Sumner-u. Box W. I. Windsor, OIL. will and be. to my moth. her sumo-32m home trrntmmtt, with full Inmate-l. Send no money but W In My " your child"- u-oublo m In on. way. you amo‘uu owl. the att-teq so u our! hob It. Tab Wt al- curu adult.- nad and â€out. maul am am. “mm th†at ntabt. the Sphinx! BETTER THAN fPk!N110(i. The Source of Life. In Paleozoic times. then, writes Pro- fessor Lowell, m the Century, it was the earth itself, not the sun. to which plant md animal primarily stood be- holden for existence. This gives us I most instructive glimpse into one plane» toloaic process. To the planet‘s own in. ternal heat ia due the chief tutoring of the beginnings of life upon its surface. Thus a. planet is capable of at least be- ginning to develop organisms without more than a modicum of help from the central sun. We talk of the sun as the source of life; and so it in to-day in the sense of being its sustainer. but the real source was the earth itself, which nllo rained it through its babyhood. Mm. Brown-Well, here are four two- grain quinine pills, Hamilton. like than u soon as you get home. V MA. Bromt--Don't you out take something when you are soaked through. Hummer†Hamilton 1tratrerl.v)---Ye-es, m'un (Rubs the back of hits hand aghast his mouth.) Mrs. Brown (with tsympathy)--AVh.v, Hamilton, you must be wet. “Indium "hiverintrr-- Yvon, â€has. Mm. Brown--' you ntmid you'll take cold, Hamilton? 1umilton--tFes. mn'un. Rheumatiz pretty Ind, miam. Hammon Took Ming. Mrs. Brown, living in the country. hid five trunks carried up from the station, I, some three miles away, by an old nun. I The day was very rainy and the old fel. low was soaked through u he drove up to the door. In) ten: nau- Iown or Minnow“; ftrct (‘th land; all arable; an cultivated; rm “modulo“ candy for nod; " pawn: (cocci: [out Malina; roll; '" per acre. our terms. AIM W. N. lead. Sum: Block. Brandon. Xuzhou. w AtNEo-<aADu" To DO PLAIN AND nun “In. at homo, whole or up!" tlme; qttod any: work Htsttt any distare charges pull; and hump far ml: mm r,,' m, Nation“ “m1" Co., Montreal FOR SALE Botany and Anthropology. I!†qrAINBrF-rEMaLE, A New Invention. PARIS FOR SALE. RULERS, PRESIDI SLAIN " Lriuaie, mama Wt l W CID have: Ind