§ Cb & y ® §\ the &4 WY tt H Gp®KY heme SyPhy home M h, enough, 1001 soul, look back hide that tra Pn d Denizens of the H _ which the nay n port to port. strange and p« aven of His own unean, B. D. A Cook‘s Confession cen lurid â€" Jamplights glow, ought them sunshine bright ly danced to wanton strains leviling delight * Wish to Sin No More ow creatureâ€"â€"man? dish laugh to . see ikling brotherâ€"man vetor life tprint out rdin 1€ ind 1at looks hack ware il so dar Ordered Lives t on Him who died for them, e inestimable boon of knowâ€" has given His angels charge and appointed a bright anâ€" for them.â€"By a Banker. sin no m e and mon tread that ras it once la m IM t t why is n befor euiding creat re pFi been th w h v L Di no more t it dark it mun 1at pain, my WB Th Air Iri€ him fall h U tic rtaid itures t dis what itures 11 iY it th s ut it il'. d Oldâ€"Fashioned Democracy. (Philadelphia Record.) In a speech made before the Nationâ€" al Democratie Club of New York this week exâ€"Judge Herrick among other things said: We are here to read men into the party. not to read them out. . Our party is a national, not a secâ€" tional, party. We must not expect all members of our party to think alike upon every question, and we should not rule out of its membership those who differ from us in some patâ€" ticulars. I have been taught to believe that the following are some of the essenâ€" tial principles of the Democratic caused me a great deal of suffering. I tried a great many doctors, and was in the hosâ€" pital four times. I tried almost everything, but nothing did me any good. I could nct sleep at night with the scalding and burnâ€" ing pain, but from the first application of Zamâ€"Buk 1 never lost any sleop, and folt nothing more of it than if I hada‘t any sore at all. It staried healing and gave me no turther trouble. Shortly after this I was getâ€" ting on a street car, my foot slipped and I came with all my might down the edge of the step and gave my foot a terrible manglâ€" ing up. This made it far worse than ever, but I started again with Zamâ€"Buk, and it did the same wurk‘ over again as it did at tirs. and my ankle is sound and well as ever it was. 1 cannot speak too highly of Zamâ€" Zamâ€"Buk cures cuts, buras, chapped hands, chafings, cold sores, itch, chilblains, eczema, running sores, sore throat, bad chest, ringâ€" worm. piles (blind or bleeding), bad legs, inflamed patches, rheumatism, neuralgia, sciâ€" atica, abscesses and all diseased, ‘njured and irritated conditions of the skin. Obtainable of all druggists and stores, 50c or postâ€"paid upon receipt of price from Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto. 4 HOSPITALS FAILED > James Heard, of Morton Park, Ont., says: "While employed at the Speciality Works, of Newmarket, 6 or 7 years ago, I bruised miy ankle but through neglect, this bruisa turnâ€" ed to an ulcerated or burning sore which EORLY® That the principal function of govâ€" einment is to prevent citizens from inâ€" tor‘ering with the rights of citizens, and, that function being performed. that nation is governed best which is governed least. Individualism, with equality of opâ€" portunity; no paternalism, no pamâ€" pered citizens or industries, and nc special protection to persons or classâ€" es3. Governments not engaging in any business or enterprise, but produces #uin or profit that can be conducted by individual or corporate _ capital and enterprise. A simple, not a splendid, govern: ment. and that no more money should be exacted from the people than is necessary for the support of governâ€" ment economically administered. The distribution and not centraliztaâ€" tion of governmental powers. State sovereignty within constitaâ€" tional limits. * The artificial cultivation of anails is an extensive and flourishing industry in France, no less than 2,500,000 pounds of this succulent delicacyâ€"as Frenchmen consider itâ€"being consumed annnually. The city of Berlin has appropriated $12,500 toward the fund for combating tuberculosis, to be named in honor of Dr. Robert Koch. About $10,000 have been subscribed from private sources. TEVTE U , P mE iimy Eces State sovereignty within (‘Dnstit.l-: Ii you want a woman to believe tional limits. | yor absolutely and implicitly, keep Home rule, local selfâ€"government, telling her that she is the sweetest the result. and also most efficiem!thing that ever happened. That all property devoted to a pur: pose or business affected by a {m%lic use in subject to public requlation, and our transportation corporations should be so regulated l:i/ law that there shall be no favored localities, corporations or persons. _ _ $ bif_ferver__of civil liberty _In protecting the individual and in affording equality of opportunity. we recognize the fact that large agâ€" f-'.g;'ziéï¬Ã©"a} wealth place the indivâ€" dual at a disadvantage. It leads to Foremost among the minerals, etc., which Russians regard as the source of Siberia‘s future wealth, are gold, iron, coking coal, manganese, copper, platiâ€" num, emeralds, topazes, asbestos, Glauâ€" ber‘s salt, rock salt, and, in all probâ€" ability, naphtha, idual at a disadvantage. It leads to the crushing out of small dealers, deâ€" grivos them of the opportunity of uilding up and maintaining a busiâ€" ness of their own, and it often com: pels them to become employes instead of independent business men. This coal yearly. . It costs fifteen thousand dollars to paint the Eiffel tower. s o e _ The entire native population of Siberia does not exceed 700,000. Steel rails average 130 tons of metal to the mile; iron, 145 tons. The tariff of the Indian railways are lowest of any in the world. Over one million exiles have been transported to Siberia since 1840. Four and a half tons of cotton rags will make 24â€"5th tons of paper. _ Ninetyâ€"three per cent. of the theoretiâ€" eal heat of coal is wasted, and only 50 per cent. of that of oil. There were 9,914 new books published in 1907, or 1,311 more than for 1906. _ ' Every yea‘l" Denmark sends a million dollars‘ worth of poultry and eggs to England. _ o Poratbes *4 _ A rubber tree four feet in diameter yields twenty gallons of sap, making 40 pounds of dry indiarubber. _ ; _ The infant death rate of "the fashion able end of London is 11 per cent., whil« that of the east end is 38 per cent. A suit of clothes which will float the wearer in case of accident at sea has been patented by a Norwegian inventor, The sanctuary of the tomb of the proâ€" phet Mahomet, at Medina, Turkey, is to be lighted with electricity. The contract has just been given to an English conâ€" struction company. The development of the water cress growing industry in Dorset, England, is enormous. One farm alone employs 40 persons in picking, packing and preparâ€" ing the cress for market. In most large cities death rate in win ter is much greater than in summer. England spends $40,000,000 per year for eggs and poultry, for oneâ€"half of which she is dependent on foreigners. . ardiff exports twelve million tons of | should so far as a (Government can, aftord equality of opportunity, and our opposition to special privileges ‘and partial taxation, lead us to opâ€" | pose a protective tariff; whether that | protection be for the benefit of fayâ€" | ored localities or favored: individuals. ] It is a grant of special privileges, favâ€" oring some to the detriment of others; it is taxation of the many for the | benefit of the few. We recognize that large sums of muney must be raised for the support of Government; and that the simplest way of raising it is by means of a | tariff; but such tariff should be one ‘for revenue only; that if there still \remain any infant industries in this | country, or any‘ class of mechanics | or laborers that need protection, a | revenue tariff can be so adjusted as to afford them all necessary relief. Our mechanics and laborers have more to fear from the importation of cheap foreign labor to compete with |them here than from the importation | of the products of cheap foreign labor. |leads us to seek to limit and congrol these large aggregations of capital 1 | Economy. |__James J. Hill was talking in Kansas | City about railway economy. "Economy | is excellent," he said, "but even economy ?nmq[ not be carried to excess. Railways 'must not be managed as a certain New York necktie manafacturer manages his business. A drummer in this man‘s emâ€" ‘ploy showed me the other day a letter | from the firm. It ran thus: ‘We have | received your letter with expense acâ€" | count. What we want is orders. _ We ourselves have big families to make exâ€" | penses for us. We find in your expense | account 50 cents for billiards. â€" Please | don‘t buy any more billiards. Also we | see $2.25 for horse and buggy. Where ‘is the horse and what did you do with | the buggy* The rest of your expense 'uccount is nothing but bed. Why is it | you don‘t ride more in the night time*"" | â€"Chicago News. . Threeâ€"yearâ€"old Edgar was drawing on !soing.to draw a big black bear, and he‘ll l’l.iu- you!" In a moment his mood softâ€" | ened and he said, soothingly: "There, | never mind, I‘ll rub him out before he | sees vou." \There is Only One This is an _ altogether admirable statement of the position of the Demâ€" ocratic party both as to the policies it has contended for in the past and its attHude toward questions now at issue before the country. We comâ€" mend it to the perusal of all Demoâ€" crats, especially of young Democrats, volve the burden of the maintenance of the principles set forth. s ds e n on w i E 1 we insist that their franchises an1 powers should be strictly limited and defined, and that they should be exâ€" ercised under strict supervision and control, not nagged, worried, threatâ€" ened, and plundered, but simply conâ€" troiled, in the public interest. 8 Our belief that â€" the Government En P e mttd _ _I have used it, now, two and aâ€"half months, and unhesitatingly state that it is the best remedy I ever used. It has worked wonders for me. Since using Mira Ointment I have been able to work every dayâ€"withont irritation or painâ€"no stiffuess of the limbs or soreness. 1 feet a new person. n e L "In November, 1905, I had another atts and was advised to use Mira Ointment. hou:ht this would be like the other remedies Ihad tried, and of no use to m‘e‘). But, to my great delight, a few hours after the first application, I felt great relief. ______ o What this wonderfully effective Ointâ€" ment has done in this extreme chronic case, it can do in other seeming!y incurâ€" able conditions. _ If you suffer from any form of skinâ€"disease, don‘t delay, Certain relief and cure is waiting you in Mira Ointment. Get a box toâ€"day. 50c. â€"6 for $2.50. At drugâ€"storesâ€"or from The Chemists‘ To. of Canada, Ltd., Hamiltonâ€"Toronto. 15 "From a state of great irritation and someâ€" times excruciating pains to freedor from all such, being capable of doing hard work every day, is a marvelous change. Mira Ointment which shows that skin diseases hereâ€" tofore considered hopeless can be cured. Since childhood, Leo Corrigan had been tortured with the burning agony and itching of Eczema. His parents had spent a t deal of money in conâ€" sulting Bhysgi:u and buying medicines â€"but all to no purpose. I tation and pain caused by the Eczema were so severe, life was a burden. He would get so bad he could not walk. Several winters he could do no work. has effected it _ _ "I strougly recommendany person afflicted with this terrible eomphintâ€"g;emâ€"lo use Mira Ointment.‘‘ Marvelous case of Leo Corrigan As he grew older he sought other doctorsâ€"some of them specialists, He was eleven weeks in a Toronto hospitalâ€" eight weeks in bed. At times the irriâ€" That is * Laxative Bromo Quinine Always remember the full name. Look for this signature on every box. 25¢. He wrote, on February 20, 1906 Not So Terrible After Ail. TRADE MARK REGISTERCD ««Bromo Quinine" ARIO ARCHIVES TOROoNTO Floating softly up into the blue ocean of air, watching the earth sink slowly away beneath us, and fade and change quietly to an immense map spread beâ€" fore our wondering eyesâ€"such are. the first _ impressions of â€" balloon voyagers. The noisy shouts of those who come to wish us "Bon voyage!" become fainter and fainter until absolute quiet reigns about us. It is so still that the ticking of the clock in the barograph is heard noisily counting the seconds as it traces the line of our upward flight across the Sheet An elderly churcuwarden of a small church in Birmingham, England, in shavâ€" ing himself one Sunday morning recentâ€" ly before church time made a slight cut with the razor on the extreme end of his nose. He called his wife and asked her if she had any court plaster in the house. "You‘ll find some in my sewing basket," she replied. At church, while assisting with the collection, he noticed everyone smile as he passed the plate, and some of the younger people laughed outright. Much annoyed he asked _ a friend if he noticed anything _ wrong with his appearance. "Well, I should say there is," was the answer. "What is that on your nose*?" "Court plaster," "No," said the friend, "it is the label from a reel of cotton. It says, "Warâ€" Reasons Why Air Voyaging Should Become a Popular Sport. So the wonderful scenes come and go, ever changing, but ever grand and inspirâ€" ingâ€"scenes tnat come back to us real and vivid, that we may live them over again in later days. The cloud effects are at times / the most beautiful of all. After having sailed up through these into the dazzling sunlight, we see the snowy bilâ€" Jows just below oura car, the sadow of our balloon falling upon their white surâ€" face. â€" This shadow is often surrounded by a halo of rainbow colors or rare beauty. At such times one has the feelâ€" ing of having left the earth completely, and to have reached some other planet. The white masses just below seem to be quite solid, and look as though one might step out of the balloon and take a stroll over them, if one only had snow shoes. The air is wonderfully clear and pure, and gives us a feeling of exhilaration much greater than that enjoyed in mounâ€" tainâ€"climbing. Ts it, then, surprising that ballooning is rapidly becoming a popular sport?â€"From Henry B. Hersey‘s "Exâ€" periences in the Sky," in the March Century. Result of Experiments Conducted in Germany and the Netherlands. The resuit of the experiments in light visibility conducted by Germany and The Netherlands working in harmony are given as follows: A light of oneâ€"canâ€" dle power is plainly visible at one mile, and one of threeâ€"candle power at three miles, _ _A tenâ€"candle power light was seen with a binocular at four miles, one of 29 at five miles, though faintly, and one of 33â€"candle power at the same disâ€" tance without difficulty. On an excepâ€" tionally clear night a white light of 3.2â€"candle power could be distinguished at three miles, one of 5.6 at four and one of 17.2 at five miles, The experiments were made with green light, *as it has been conclusively proved that if a light of that color fills the required test a red light on the same intensity will more than do so. It was found that the candle power of green light, which remained visible at one, two, three, and four miles, was 2, 15, 51 and 106 respectively. Meanwhile the earthâ€"map down below us stretches out larger and larger, but its details are fading and becoming blurred. High hills have changed to flat surfaces. A river winds and bends its way through the duller colors like a tangled ribbon of silver. A small lake sparkles in the sunshine, giving life and fire to the sober shades about it. A railway train creeps slowly along, its trail of smoke streaming back over it; but as we look, it suddenly . disappears from sight, apparently swallowed up beâ€" fore our eyes. Then we realize that it has pluxnged into a tunnel, through a hill which to us seems only a flat surface; now it appears again, coming out on the other side. "No," said the friend, from a reel of cotton ranted 200 yards.‘." contagious Itch on human or anime@ls cured in 30 minutes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion. It pever fails Sold by druggists. A sight hole to enable a stoker to see the combustion withous opening the fire door, says Power, is a very useful adjunct to a furnace, as an inâ€" telligent stoker soon notes what color indicates that the boiler is doing its best, andâ€"learns how to regulate his operations to obtain that color. The . Sun of the Blind. I have not touched the outline of a star nor the glory of the moon, but T believe that God has set two lights in my mind, the greater to me by day and the lesser by night, and by them I know that I aim able to navigate my life bark, as certain of reaching the haven as he who steers by the north star. Perhaps my sun shines not as yours. The colors that glorify my world, the blue of the sky, the green of the fields, may not corâ€" respond exactly with those you delight in; but they are none the less color to me. The sun does not shine for my physical eyes, nor does the lightning flash, nor do the trees turn green in the spring; but they have not therefore ceased to exist any more than the landâ€" scape is annihilated when you turn your back on it.â€"Bense and Sensibility‘ in the March Century. VISIBILITY OF LIGHTS. FUN OF BALLOONING. Useful to a Stoker. ITC i4 Nasal and every form of "Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, ‘Toronto, Ont. Gentlemen :â€" § My many thanks for<Psychine :.nd Oxomulsion _I have used them with very great satisfaction both in my own case and in that of my friends. 1t af; fords me much pleasure to recpmlllelltf a remedy which is really good in cases for which it is intended. I am, yours very truly," 96 . Doctors recognize that Psychine is ofe of the very best remedies for all throat, lung and stomach troubles and all run down conditions, from whatever cause. _ It is the prescription of one of the. world‘s greatest specialists in disâ€" eases of the throat, lungs and stomach, and all wasting diseases. Ask your druggist for it. at 50c. and $1, or T. A. Slocum, Limited, Toronto. I have handled MINARDS _ LINTâ€" MENT during the past year. It is alâ€" ways the first Liniment asked for here, and unquestionably the best seller of all the different kinds of Liniment I hanâ€" dle. Onee there was a struggling young auâ€" thor who was blest with many friends, all of whom told him that he was the coming great writer of the country. So one day a bright thought struck him. HMe said: "I will publish my book, and all my friends who admire it so much will buy my book, and 1 will be rich." So he printed his book. And all of his friends waited for him to send thern autographed copies of his book. And so his books were sold as junk And ever after he didn‘t have any friends.â€"Success Magazine, The Making of Garden Walks. Even in a small garden, the laying out of the walks is a delightful task. Lt cuts the enclosure even more tellingly than the laying down of rugs within doors; it divides sweets that may be neighbors from sweets that may not; the introduction of little threads of paths will harmonize vagrant colors as can no other device. And this is a plea for walks of grass. It is true that gravel walks given a sense of neatness and trimness; it is true that the strip of cool white gravel is an institution as honorable as the stars; but if you have ever been in an oldâ€"fashioned garâ€" den and stepped along between sweetâ€" smelling wildernesses with wide walks oft hick grass between the beds, then you know that the gravel walk is useâ€" ful for nurserymen but charming for nobody. Particularly in naturalistic gardening â€"as if gardening can ever be anything elseâ€"grass wolks are indispensable. And why not let the lawn extend to the borâ€" der beds? Of course narrow gravel strips may edge the border beds when they do not mar the general effect of the lawn, but especially in small gardens these should be omitted. Do you not rememâ€" ber the old pictures of the castle garâ€" dens where princesses walk all day?â€" From "How to Make a Garden," by Zona Gale in the Outing Magazine for March. Minard‘s Liniment Refieves Neuralgia. Marion Bridge Why are you always awake so wide, Oh, little gold moon on high? I‘ve twisted my "thinker" from side to side, Yet it will never tell me why. Run out and play But you are always awake, old fellow, And so is each tiny star; And you‘re just as pretty and soft and yeliow As the little buttercups are. I guess (iod knows how little boys creep And tumble and toss about, When mother says, "Bobbie, go right to sleep!" And then blows the candle out. will say when he finds that his safet razor case has fallen on the lloor,lpmo‘ the blades out, and mixed them all up." Perhaps He thinks we‘d be afraid of things Alone in the dark old night, And so He‘s made a candle on wings, And never blows out the light! "Children," hastily exclaimed Mrs. Skimmerhorn, "your father is coming! Gently Broke the News. Captain Pritchard, of the Mauretania, was talking about sailors. "We are a bluff lot," he said. "Did ):ou ever hear about the sailor and the parrot? Well, "What do you want us to run away from :apa for?" asked the children. "I don‘t want you to hear what he an old lady was returning from abroad: with a parrot of which she was very. fond. She intrusted the bird, with many: admonitions, to a sailor for the voyage. Seasickness, or something, killed the parâ€" rot the third day out. ‘The sailor, know ing how upset the old lady would be, could not bring himself to tell her the sad tidings, but asked a companion, famâ€" ous for his skill in such matters, to break the bad news to her very, very gently. The man assented. Approachâ€" ing the old lady with a tragical face, the famous newsbreaker touched his cap and said: ‘I‘m afraid that ‘ere bird o‘ yourn ain‘t goin‘ to live long, ma‘am.‘ ‘Oh, dear!‘ exelaimed the old lady in alarm. ‘Why? ‘‘Cause he‘s dead,‘ was The world is quiet at night, I know; The hollyhocks droop their heads, And the butterfliecs nod as they go To sleep in their leafy beds. the reply‘" A Doctor‘s Statement Preparing to Face it Alone. DR. ERNEST A. ALLARD Baie St. Paul, C. C., Que March 27th, 1907 Bobby‘s Question How It Works NEIL FERGUSON B., May 30. ‘02 awhile!" "Did you ever notice," ! foraigners | always gpeak when talking with other their own country? mek own xullg * "I mean that foreigners traveling about in this country conduct their conâ€" versations at the top‘ of their yoices. The same is true of them in restaurants, where they discuss the most . private matters openly and loudly. They have abundant confiderce that no one else will know what they are saying. "I remember on one occasion â€"being on the street with a young woman who knew Italian much more than I did. We passed several Italians who were walkâ€" ing along and one of them, turning to a companion, made a remark about the young woman‘s personal _ appearance that wasn‘t exactly flattering. ECC in T4 l Prowl wV UMIEL "Yes," said the other man, "and _ if you ever have been abroad you will reâ€" member that Americans and English there are quite as free in their way of expressing loudly all sorts of opinions. It looks like a standâ€"off to me,"â€"New "From her derstood. I t she put her h me not to d at that." Foreigners Here York Sun Things (in a painting) must not have the appearance of being brought toâ€" gether by chance or for a purpose, but must have a necessary and inevitable connection. _ I desire that the creations which I depict should have the air of being dedicated to their situation, so that one could not imagine that they would dream of being anything else than what they are» A work of art ought to be all one piece, and the men and things in it should always be there for a reason. â€" lt were better that things weakly said should not be sajd at all, because in the former case they are only, as it were, defiowered and spoiled. Beauty does not consist so much of the things represented, as in the need one has had of expressing them; and this need. it is which creates the degree of force with which one acquits oneself of the work,. One may say that everyâ€" thing is beautiful provided the thing turns up in its own proper time and in its own place; and, contrariwise, that nothing can be beautiful arriving inâ€" appropriately, Let Apoilo be Apollo, and Socrates Nocrates,. Which is the more beautiful, a straight tree of a crooked tree? Whichever is most in place. This, then, is my conclusion: The beautiful is that which is in place.â€"Jean Franâ€" cois Millet. Man on Ray Material. German science announces . that everything needed to make a man weizh 150 pounds can be found in the whites and yokes of 1,200 eggs. Reduced to a fluid, the average man would yield 9 cubic meters of ilâ€" luminating gas and hydrogen, enough to fill a balloon capable of lifting 155 pounds The normal â€" human body has in it the iron needed to make seven large nails, the fat for fourteen pounds of candles, the carâ€" bon for sixtyâ€"five gross of crayons, and phosphorous enough for 820,000 matches. Out of it can be obtainea besides twenty coffee spoons of salt, fifty lumps of sugar, and fortyâ€"two litres of water. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Pflmr=- ing Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. Sde "Well, you married my mother, so 1 don‘t see why I shouldn‘t marry yours." His Granny. ;A certain little boy was very fond of his grandmother, and continually pesâ€" tered his father as to why he eouldn‘t marry her. At last the father grew anâ€" gry, and told him not to be so absurd, upon which his son ‘sa‘id in a hurt voice: Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. Food Note. He was a kindly old clergyman, and he hated to have to suspect the honesty of his tradesmen, _ Butâ€"at last it was impossible to ignore the quality of the milk, and he approached the millkman. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. "I merely wish to remark," said the good man, in his kindliest, mildest manâ€" ner, "that I require milk for dietary purâ€" poses, and not for use at christenings." Lamps cause 500 â€" fires in a year in London; gas, 219; chimneys, 179. THOSE PILES CURED iN 6 TO 14 DAYS P the big black plug chewing tobacco. A tremendous favorite everywhere, because of its richness and pleasing flavor. 3206 Get acquainted with Black Watch ParrOR Marcncs LPCEL WAVE 8 2 °C OC0 HICH alian much more than I did. We everal Italians who were walkâ€" g and one of them, turning . to mion, made a remark about the woman‘s personal _ appearance sn‘t exactly flattering. i her face 1 knew that she unâ€" . I turned about angrily, but her hand on my arm and asked to do anyvthing. So we let it go Enppyvs @ "SILENT" rs Here Do It, and So Do When We‘re Abroad. What Art Should be. eocmmmeeeestotiireetemmemes en stt i 110000000 wHO SPEAK LOUDLY. I ISSUE NO. " he asked, "how ak â€" very loudly her _ persons of Silent as $2.00 Where They Are Madeâ€"Points the . Manufacturers Observe. Samuel G. Firth, who is interested in the shoe manufactwring business, . said that the making of shoes far dancers, athlotes and stage folk was one of the interesting industries into which some hand shoemakers had drifted. "In Boston, Brockton, Lynn and Has erhill," said Mr. Firth, ~there are a number of oldâ€"time cordwainers, who are now busily engaged turning out bal let shoes, dancing . slippers, dancing clogs, athletic shoes and dress and gro te«que footwear for the stage. Ballet shoes are made in quantities in Lynn for professionals of 3- stage, amateur dancers of the stage schools and col lqaundotha‘girhvbo‘olnlorphy- sical culture. "Dancers have small and shapely feet. _ This is also true of college girls who go in for physical eulture. The typi cal stage foot is No. 4, which is an ideal size. The stage foot is apt to be broader across the toes than the or dinary foot, because dancers exercise the muscles of their feet and develop them, It is a rule of good dancers to wear shoes that will allow for space between the toes. It is a.point 0f good fit that all persons should heed."â€" Washinaton Herald. We gont Wrie The Stow, the famous antiquarian, DecaMme a licensed beggar. Camoens, Portugal‘s poet, died in an almshouse after years of beggary. Ben Johnson perished in poverty. One of his last acts was to return a paltry sum sent him from King Charles. Uljlrich von Hutton, the brilliant Gere man, was reduced to a tramp‘s life. He was found frozen in the store. C Enmp e OB C Pn id y "L Quida was not the only writer who died in poverty and neglect. Chatterton, the poet, poisoned himself, rather tham die of starvation. . _ Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, The story is told of an actor, popular with the matinee girls, who is beset by the fear of being thought older than he is. ...2}.«.);;: ‘Z‘-udv:g’_s-â€"vt;lg never succeeded till he was dead. His life was a long struggle against dilï¬ne and neglect. nr‘â€"lflel, sprains, sore and swollen throst, coughs, etc. Bave $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by dragâ€" The last time this &hycr was interâ€" viewed, says Rarper‘s Weekly, it was by a young woman reporter for one of the dailies, She wished to get his views touching the condition of the drama, a subject the actor was not particularly desirous of discussing. dear young lady," the player to interject.â€"Harper‘s &‘:ekly‘ "I‘m not sure," said the young woman laughingly, "whether I‘m really finding out what you think. You ought to be frank, for your eyes are grey, andâ€"â€"*" "Prematurely so, I assure you, my The McJones family were moving to another town. Mr. McJones had gone ahead to get the new home in order, and Mrs. McJones was to follow with the family goods and chattels. When sho was ready to start, Mrs, MceJones, reâ€" membering her mythology,. wired her husband as follows: * Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. "Lard and peanuts on board boat. Wil: arrive . toâ€"morrow _ morning."â€" Success "Lares and Penates on. board boat. Will arrive toâ€"morrow morning." But when the telegram got to the hus band it was in these terms: frequent cause of Headache, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE removes cause. E. W Magazine Grove on box, 25¢ An old Geolï¬:’ negro was sent to the hospital in Atlanta. One of the nurses Eut a thermometer in his. mouth to take is temperature. Presently, when the doctor made his rounds, he said, "Well, George, how do you feel?" "I feel right tolâ€"ble, bose." "Have you had any nourishment*" "Yassir." "What did you have** "A lady done gimme a piece of glass ter suck, boss." The date for the Unitde States giving back &;t::‘Ouhn people the p«“‘er"\ ment of their republic bas been put of! till Feb., 1809. P Poor Reward for Genius. Richard Savage died in a debtor‘s pri ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT the Sphinx! SsTAGE DANCERS‘ ShOoES W A PA T EC lesire to employ a few B Men and Womea . â€" . > L eC C002 mskd d WHAT CAUSES NEADACKHE n and WOmsem â€" + 207 per eay GVUARANTEED §A LA R Y A ND C o M M 1§ § a O N he J. L. Nichols ©o., LAimited, Toro: (Please mention this paper.) Appearances Deceitful, Something on the Way. Sanitary Food. famous antiquarian, became for Genius few Bright, lowe wWwWOMEN 11. 1908. and the & loved one‘s in b tres Lb60666 w ha et Ha the t far he we B ston ï¬ plump, T he re digestion provides 1 easily dig s ALL H t U