friend, hould #1 nove art 13 t of the aheer iD ns fa mCorHaAy Lr th o ont Mss UnE 5C H MADE _ _â€"â€"â€" IN CANADA. it it Cheerful " MISTEMPER ing away took Mr. sPOHN MEDIC nted it g away the 25,000 a day. her charitie al ey with Mrs. Nage‘s away shows that the vay $2 in the same Te Saoe to accumt Al ver You certainiy stove pq_lish, in THE C. F. DALLEY CO. LIMITED, Hamilton, Ont Makers of the famous *‘2 in 1*‘ Shoe Polish. X @ M AGIG‘ BAKING POWDER BLACK KNIGHT sTtoVvE PoL jue es at the me in five financier‘s TRIBUTORSâ€"ALL WHOLESALE DNRUGAND** AL CO., Chemisis and Bacteriologists, GOSHEN, (ND., U.5.A, Send us 100. for a large Mrs nate EW.GILLETT CO, LTD. > TORONTO, ONT. (@ THE KIND THAT PLEASES _ tHE PEOPLE]! prevent where 1 was DoInj U that bellowed forth to : morn; the picnic that when winter breezes the sidewalk of the sn I had to do. I remen ber, the oldâ€"time days lickings that I always ing some darned rule; nights I used to go . bob sleigh and hug pretty girls among the § remembor,_!_rgg?eml ly do get in the bi A NI n t handle "Black Knight IN THE OLD SCHOOL DaYS8 in to And Window Displays nerâ€"How do you ma Unique icht Mo M me (Troy, Kan., Chief.) nember, I remember the house 1 was born; the voice of dad llowed forth to rouse me every the picnic that 1 always had winter breezes blew, to clear lewalk of the snow; the chores to do. 1 remember, 1 rememâ€" ca ald.tima days in school, the We nter rcha it that I always got for breakâ€" > darned rule; the moonlight used to go out in the old igh and hug and kiss the rls among the robes and hay. ber, I remember, oh, no, I‘ll et; I‘d like to wander back those old days, you bet! can postpa AR V e. worth 1oc. cans it vorthy of a little reâ€" t absolutely expose ie fuse is very short be coolly considered. t means the destrueâ€" d comrades, and when t the bomb must be hematical exactitude. e man must leave his ge â€" an overwhelming t throw till he is close Happiness Pink Eye, Epizootic, Shipping Fever & Catarrhal Fover horses at any age 2r0 acts on the Blood and esa NVietemnper in Dogs night‘‘ Stove Apd paste, that is liant, lasting ALIFICATION 10 of the best of "Black ns is of fine water) or what 11 ter attra inage . to ison with m183 Appy physician he saw A py are ildren, with 21 ith (The Farm.) At the Canadian National Exhibition it was very easily discovered that breedâ€" ers of draft horses, both _ commercial and pureâ€"bred stock, . are demanding more size in the stallions they buy. _ It was noticeable also that the importers have done all they could to bring big horses with them this year. There are Olydesdale stallions in _ Scotland with plenty of size and _ some of them _ no doubt could be bought. The trouble is plenty of size and . some of them _ no doubt could be bought. The trouble is that size with quality and individual exâ€" cellence is worth a lot of money, and there is certainly no inducement for any importer to put more money into his lot than he knows he will be able to ot out of it again. If the breeders are Se- termined to have size, they must also make up their ininds to pay for it, On. the same line of reasoning that a good big one will always beat a good little oune, a good big one always costs more money. Hence, those who buy on this side of the wa‘*~» must meet the importâ€" er half way. & .chmen do not want to increase the « ~.age size of the Clydes @ale breed. They say it suits them very well as it is. Our people want more size and must have it. It looks as though our breeders will have to pay longer prices if they are over to add the bulk which they now need. THINKING AND KIC Dominion Department of branch of the Dairy and age Commissioner. I 7 imary sn 1 on e lt CBY EZUETTTCICCC b:\ .ecent issue of the ‘"Creamery Journal" states that the farmers of Towa are taking a special interest in cow testing. To quote a vigorous ediâ€" torial, "An intellectual bomb has exâ€" ploded, farmers are thinking. Hunâ€" dreds are kicking themselves for havâ€" ing so long fooled away their time and effort and money chasing the dualâ€"purpose _ nonsenge phantom. Breeé)ers of dairy cattle are simply ‘swamped with business. Dealers in dairy utensils re%ort whirlwind sales of scales and Babcock testers." Farmers of Canada, are you going to let farmers of adjoining _ states beat you in advanced dairy thought %ivan to cow testing, and in resultant usinesslike action? One main obâ€" ject of testing individual cows is to ascertain what difference there is between the ({)roduct or profit of a good cow and a poor one. Ift our poorest cows were known they would quickly be discarded because there can be no object in retaining them. lThe trouble is that they are not |known. Often the poor ones are Ee- 3 2 stt .. e x6 t RARU NTE L oPNpRE S TITCTE [ lieved to be good. They will be de-i tected only when records are kept. A more careful study of feeding, and some associated ‘plau of breedâ€" ing from good pure red sires will work wonders in improved cows on Canadian farms. Cow testing assoctâ€" ations should exist by the iundred every county needs several; they were never more needed than at present. Who owns the best cow in your county ? 4 w\ yar cow TESTING AssOCTATIONS. Most farmers can estimate closely the number of bushels of grain raised, and tell fairlg accurately the number of tons of hay grown, but when it comes to the really most important income of the farm, the product of each cow, it‘s all a blank, and they say, "Oh, I don‘t know. I get my cheque each month ; that‘s all I care about." sSIZE IN DRAFT HORSES While a knowledge of the total weight of milk delivered at the factory is neâ€" cessary, it never conveys to the farmer the information he stands in need of as to the profit made by each cow in the stable. That information is absolutely necessary to him if he desires to considâ€" er himself a credit to his profession, a first class, businessâ€"like dairyman. Othâ€" erwise these satisfying totals or deluâ€" sive averages will continug to allow the one or two poor cows in every herd to consume good feed for which no profitâ€" able return is ever given. ‘ In many herds where no attempt at checking up individual performances has been made, there is frequently to be found a difference of $30 or $40 in the carning power of the best and poorest cow. Farmers need to consider that statement carefully. In the Dominion are te e found herds, let us say of 12 or 14 cows, with a fairly gooad average KING Agriculture Cold Storâ€" total weight vield of perbaps as high as 5,500 pounds of milk, where the highest yield is close on to 8,000 pounds of milk and 330 pounds of fat; but, where the lowest yield is only about 3,700 pounds of milk and 150 pounds of fat. Such compariâ€" sons are only made possible by noting the actual performance of each indiviâ€" dual cow for her full milking period. Weigh and sample regularly, and make sure that cach cow brings in good profit. â€"â€"C,. ~F. W Eight demonstration flocks of grade sheep, bred and kept for commercia!l pur poses, are being established at repre sentatitve points in the Province of On Lssn Mlocte nedinttns 1 W ball were." _"No, John isn‘t isn‘t the name for baseball crazy." DISFIGURING, TORTURâ€" ING SKIN TROUBLE IMPROVE SHEEP BREEDING Cannot be Cured by Salves and Ointmentsâ€"The Blood Must be Purified. A blemished â€" skin, irritating sores, pimples, cczema, salt rheum and other skin disorders are all signals of disâ€" tress, telling that your blood is impure or weak. You cannot cure eczema and other skin troubles with ointments and outward â€" applications. _ These things may give temporary relief, but cannot cure, because the trouble is rooted in the blood and can only be removed by purifying and enriching the blood. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills speedily cure skin troubles because they enrich, purify and build up the impoverished blood that caused the trouble. As they feed and cleanse the blood the skin grows fair, the bloom of health ~returns and new strength is found. No other mediâ€" cine has ever had such wonderful reâ€" sults in curing all diseases, due to bad blood. Miss Elizabeth Gillis, Kensingâ€" ton, P. E. I., says: "Words can hardly express how grateful I feel for what Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have done for me. For seven years before I began their use I was troubled with _ salt rheum. My hands and arms were nearly always a _ mass of torturing cracks and sores. 1 tried several doeâ€" tors and spent a great deal of money without getting any benefit, â€" Indeed, my hands seemed to be getting worse . all the time. Finally, my brother perâ€" | suaded me to give Dr, Williams‘ Pink | Pills a trial, and I am happy to say they have completely cured me. 1 used . | in all seven boxes, and I would not be ; | without them in a case of this kind if | they cost five dollars a box instead of â€" | fifty cents. I hope my experience will â€"| be ‘of benefit to some other sufferer â€" | from skin trouble." â€" These Pills are sold by all medicine a | dealers or will be sent by mail at 50 e | cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by â€" ) The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockâ€" “NO." "How strange. 1 thought all the A REGULAR FAN. (Chicago Recordâ€" Herald .) Is your husband interested ville, Ont To eS of the heavens. Yet history make it the ! cometsâ€"its â€" long 8 ances at intervais of years, which have be 240 B. C., and the c which it became . @ of the planets, and hencs HMMMOJ """ cided that they were really reappearâ€" ances of one comet. Before his death, in 1742, he reflected that although he could not hope to se# the comet‘s return, if it did appear, "about the year 1758," posterity would remember that it was an Englishman who first predicted it. The comet returned in 1759, as Haiâ€" ley predicted, the slight delay being also forescen as due to planetary atâ€" traction, It has appeared. once since then, and we are now watching for its third â€" calculated appvnruncc.â€"-bondun N Mail Kind Old Lady {talking to a tramp)â€"â€" "Have you ever made an effort to g@% work? Trampâ€"Yes, ma‘am. Last month 1 got work for two members of my family but neither of them would take it. Unmerited honors never French. f , of Byron,. These two and have been, selecting h which to demonstrate, good ewes are chosen in sith them one ram of each HIS TROUBLE. (Human Life.) interested. That his trouble. â€" He is turned in 1759, as Haiâ€" the slight delay being as due to planetary atâ€" has appeared once since re now watching for its ed amwaruncc.-â€"bumlun sted in base of gmdc men wear wellâ€" Was It First Played in New Orleans? â€"The Persian Game. John B. Barber, O0f New Orleans, speaking about the game of poker, said that while most men will testify to the fact that few know very much about the great American game of poker, even the experts will admit they are ignorant of the origin of the game. "All the evidence about poker which has come to light, however, points to Its origin in New Orieans," continued â€" Mr. . Barber. ‘"The question is where did New Orieans gel it from or is it an improvement on s0Mme gamo known to the population of that eity, who, it must be remembered were French aud used French terms in any games that they played? ! m ul us Santiread With most men know . yery game of P they are i and may Prove Fatal. Mr. G. L. Garrow of 116 Millicent St., ‘Toronto, writes under date of September 13, 1908, "Oneyeuu,-,olhinpringl conâ€" tracted a severe cold in the chest, which developed into Bronchitis. 1 took three kinds of medicine and found no improveâ€" ment. . Afriend of mine advised me to try PSYCHINE and in three days I fe‘t like a new man again, 1 desiretolet othersknow what a valuable cure you have in PSYâ€" CHINEfor itcured me where all other medâ€" icines hadfailed. I am morethan thankful to be wellagain, and for the sake of others who may be ill,you may publish thistestimonial." _ Stop that colg or the results will be serious. You can do this by toning upthe system with PSYCHINE. For Sale by cll Druggists, 50c. & $1 per bottle BRONCHITIS ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ‘‘There is no only tweuty ca New Orleans it French games | If Neglected, it soon reo:lfl‘th Lungs they played. ‘There is no French game played with only tweuty cards, as poker was played At New Orleans in 1832, but there are several French games in which all the poker hands are to be found except four of & kind. Amâ€" bigu, Brelan and many pthers will ai Once usggest themselves, But all these French games are played with three cards only In the hand of each player, Where could the with five cards in each hand and the pack iuventor of poker bave found a game played cousisting of twenty cards only? ‘ "The standard pack of cards in Europs from the earliest days has been what is nOW calied the piquet pack, which is the same as our American euchre pack, . thirtyâ€"two cards. There is ouly one country in the world where poker has always been played with five cards in the hand of each player and that is Persia. "But the game is not called poker. It is called nas. If they brought it to New Orâ€" leans from Persia or if some resident . 0f that city was familiar with the Persian game and thought it an improvement on the French game of nmbisu and brelan, the introducer was probably French and more familiar with French games and French terms than with Persianâ€"Washington Herald. s T Eaajhet 1 of c ons + ie 9h: & he | #+ "'{ ; 8 af of | Mc . . w# A en l en ; %.,5 s be ut | Pss ce 14 b ull | Rponas‘ % p Ts e 24â€" leâ€" | <sty $ 80 1 ar l MFr ,' a # lt» es > > > M (Montreal Witness). In order to deal more effectively with the evils to which women and girls are exposed, the cities of Portland and Seatâ€" tle, on the Pacific Coast] have appointâ€" ed Policcwumcn, with the same status as policemen, and who also act as. detecâ€" tives. So valuable have their services proved that it has been proposed _ to. employ more of them. They perform their duties in ordinary costume, and have done a great deal to correct social wroug in individual cases, besides strikâ€" ing terror into a certain class of young men who never know who may . be watching them until they are summoned to appear in the Police Court to answer for their conduct. _ These are put on the same footing as street walkers of the other sex, and liable to like punishâ€" ment. purppomsrADed and we will sond yoU, t M e 'ourcholcoo(onu.ltgou‘ allalll )t igsin imndmmculngs.phinon-‘ graved or set with precious stones. Kend your name and awddress immediately and we will send you, p-nt-pg!d,tl:o Pills and fancy Eius which are to give away to purchasers of he pills, We do not ask any money before the pills are sold and we take back what you ‘c&nnut soll. Address The Dr. Maturin Medioine Co. 7 ET * a_aata. fint. e 0C 14 Karats Solid PFree 1 ‘ Sold Shell Rings DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s VegetableCompound Canifton, Ont.â€""1 sufferer for five yea told me it was ulcer and another told me told me it was uicers O° MDV "A° 023 | 1 F and another told me it was & fibroid | ‘"£; . ‘" ngugve tumor. No one i{md in the meant id knows what L suf. | !!*"°: procuce i ; is 9993 MÂ¥ fered. 1 w ould ‘:“n«l‘ furnish a g Py always be worse | tirely outranks 1 2e at certain periods, | â€" The #02% i% to I m and â€" never_ was | !o the task of ea * +5 ° â€" Smaith s regular, and the \m lowa, broom es ue be aringâ€"d ow n | ginia, cocklebur ’;- a Yainswrrcterrible. \ sunflowers in 1 °_ es was very ill in | Nevada, lantana e o s bed, and the doctor ‘;\“\1 an _ unlimit nc Saseil told me I woOuld | where % have to have @AnD | 1; is the Ang C & M operation, and | ,; q1 the cbe" that 1 might die | %, V vaw * i d@uring the operation. I wrote to my ,| Phis because of sister about it and she advised me to | herds mamibaint take Lydia E. Pinkbham‘s Ve ctable | the new duties iQompuun«l. 'l’hrou{:h persouaf expe. | becanse there «* rience I have found it the best mediâ€" | products in thes | cine in the world for female troubles, These great | | for it has cured me, and I did not have | particularly in | to have the operation after all. The becoming . migra | Compound also helped me while Rass- their new usefu ing through Change of Life.""â€" MIB. | seeking what th | Letrria Buam, Canifton, Ontario. _ | continue to give ‘ Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" { such dress @oot ‘Kound_ made from roots and hberbs, | !"‘ rcially valua | has proved to be the most suceessful | that covers i ‘ semedy for curing the worst forms of | trains and such | female ills, including displacements, | * the wigs wi Jnfl;tpnn:\liqn. fibroid tumors, irreguâ€" \ the theatrical J larities, periodic pains, backache, bearâ€" | make sport. l[|g410\\~x\ feeling, flatulency, indigesâ€" | y« | tion, and nervous s)rostration. It costs A man may | but a trifle to try it, and the result has | that doesn‘t n ind aadHii nc tn aniferinpwomen. â€" world. ORIGIN OF FOKER. been worth millions to suffering women. MALZE STREET WALKERS . The Dr. Maturin Medioine Co. Ring Dost ;,,. Toronto, Ont. Ont.â€""I had been a great ; five years. One doctor was ulcers of the uterus, 50c. & $1 per bottle r. T. A. SLOCUM LIMITED, i TORONTO We will give you your choice of oneof those beauâ€" tiful rings Azuaunued 14 karats solid gold shell, plain, engraved, or sot with elegant simulated Jewels, for the sale of 4 boxes only. at 25¢. a box, of Dr. Maturin‘s Famous Vegetable Pills. They are the groatest remedy for indigestion, constip&â€" tion, rhcumn(m. weak or impure blood catarch disoases of the liver and kidneys. When you have sold these 4 boxes of pills, send us the money $1 and the size of the ring desired and we will sond you, not called poker. It is brought it to New Orâ€" or it some resident of rp with the Persian game provement on the French 4 brelan, the introducer i and more familiar with French terms than with | 4 So Many Received That No Place Can be Found for Them. The occupant of the see of St. Peter is frequently the recipient of strange gifts. w *4 2+°€ . TT C omdencewe wf Hans HRRE mume tHime ago a present 01 M arrived. These are fortunate animals, | CORN EXTRACTOR Mific Pope at considerable expense | mmmmmmmnâ€"mm=maeee hagiPhad them secured in large dens, | Whi i t * hy ch Was th i shich they can ramble a@t w ww e Head of the Mouse? B they can desire is free run of the | a Illnh'- grandmother had come to vieit yeni. girdens. Another remarkable gift, according to a Paris contemporary, was a colosâ€" sal group in iron of 8t. X. driving back Attila from the city of Z. The names are purposely omitted becaure our contemporar; does not wish to identify the diocese which in an inâ€" op, ortune moment of generosity forced upon his Holiness this damnose haereâ€" ldnn;, which now reposes, covered with rust, in the Vatican cz}rdc:ï¬. i P 8 Dus sumen s Such gifts innumeta! stantly arriving om 2 world, and no place ca them among the marble and the paintings of M Raphael and Pinturioc} ace of Bramante. Poss car will find a place be less saint who _ turn« scourge of God" from city.â€"From the Londo III Health, Its Cause, Sluggishness of Liver and Bowels. It took me a long time to learn, and big doctors‘ bills in the bargain, writes Mr. Ogilby, of Winnipeg, that the disâ€" turbance of my system was due simply to liver and bowel inactivity. A sleepiâ€" ness and languor extinguished my old time ambition. _ 1 fear irritability of temper added little to the comfort of my family, yet the headaches, general misery _ and melancholy _ forebodings that weighed me down ought to be conâ€" sidered. _ Tonics, electric treatment and mineral waters in turn failing to cure me, the advertising of Dr. l{umi‘hun'a Pills and the testmonials suppo"!""e the claim of great medicinal virtue in duced me to try them. The result of even the first box made clear that my own body was making its own poison that by driving it from the system and removing the. cause which undoubted]; resided in the liver and bowels, by Dr Hamilton‘s Pills, my health would 1 as foo«l as ever. It seems certain to me that more than half the sickness we see about us i* caused by carelessness in keeping the howels open and the liver active. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pils I found do both,. and do it better than other remedies. _ 25¢ per box, at all dealeas, or The COatawrrh ozone Co., Kingston, Canada. Ability to Him Dear The . goat favorite. _ In sented â€" with community and assisted 10 A!! *T D trail, More recently the cans have been its titbits and the joke colummnm its hall of fame. At â€" last, however, it is being taken seriously. On the western national forâ€" ests the goat has been set to eating wide swaths through trackless thickets, which munched off paths are to act Ns roads and fire breaks. Farther east the capacâ€" ity of the goat to eat is being utilized ‘ for the clearing of brush land. In each case, says the World Toâ€"day, the deâ€" \ spised creature is doing better work in +s Vine than can man With all his case, says the iorid . nds CS spised creature is doing better work in | its line than can man with all his ingenuity. A goat will eat with the sole idea of consuming quantity and with an indifâ€" ference that is absolute as to what manâ€" ner of thing it devours,. From clover to sagebrush and from parsnips to tree tops it is all one with the goat. ‘Armed with this capacity to eat A flock of 3,000 goats may be huddled toâ€" gether and â€" led through a chaparral thicket such as skirts the forests. The men in charge hold back the flock as it advances that it may have time to make its task complete. Its errant appetite wanders from dry leaves on the ground to the rank weeds growing in moist places and the dense branches of the chaparral. . & 5.0. 10" suhanstad the ballroom floor. The usefulness of | laborer with man by here. There are millio in many of the State with brush. The ten revert to that condit clearing is once mads IFTS TO THE POPE. THE GLUTTONOUS GOAT laborer with iman by no means stops here. There are millions of acres of land in many of the Steates that are overrun with brush. The tendency is always to revert to that condition even after the clearing is once made. | Rank weeds, sunflowers, ('Ockleblll’l,‘ and such have spoiled for cultivation millions of acres elsewhere, The chaparâ€" ral is smothering out all other vegetaâ€" tion in such sections as west Texas, | q where orginally prairies un wound themâ€" | « selves for hundreds of miles and were kept clear by oftâ€"recurring prairie fires. For all such the goat is found to be the savior. These lands would require | . from $12 to $20 to clear were mon to do the work. The goat will do it for nothâ€" ing. In fact it will perform the task and in the meantime yield up abundant fleece, procuce palatable goat "venison" and furnish a grade of milk that enâ€" tirely outranks that of the cow. The goat is toâ€"day actually harnessed to the task of eating up oak brush fields in lowa, broom sedge wastes in _ Virâ€" ginia, cocklebur patches in Louisiana, sunflowers in Kansas, sagebrush _ in Nevada, lantana â€" in Hawaii, chaparral and an â€" unlimited â€" miscellany . everyâ€" L id aid®: ons taih AP in particularly in New Mexico. They are becoming . migratory under the call of their new usefuiness. As they go about seeking what they may devour they will continue to give up the fleece that makes such dress goods as mohair, such com mercially valuable material as the plush that covers the seats in all rai) way trains and such quainty amu«mg articles as the wigs with which the members of the theatrical profession are wont to make sport. that cov trains at od no place can be found for r the marbles, the antiques intings of Michael Angelo, d Pinturiochie in the palâ€" mnante. Possibly the motor 4 a nlace beside the nameâ€" usefulness of the goat as & l .i;;m‘(-,;lrï¬bnck "the from the unuamed London Globe. may I»cv;»;n?f-~.l with pride, but sn‘t cause him to rise in the rable are conâ€" all narts of the can be found for ngora goat, the aristOUE® e. that is doing the work. of the existence of great ned for their wool before es were laid down, and are more profitable byâ€" ese than in other varieties. t herds are in the west, with the sole iden of y and with an indifâ€" lute as to what manâ€" rours. From clover to im narsnips to tree ought to be conâ€" | " ""*~* ic treatment and | throw 0 n failing to cure | the vici of Dr. flflmi‘hl)ll'a iÂ¥ nials _ supporting | * e o dicinal virtue in: of hunt [ "The sesult of | PMok 19 de clear that my Elkin®, . .__" lof Phip ight to be con: treatment and failing to eure Dr. ï¬umi-ltnu'e Pemlg RFEC 1+ of lions by it was preâ€" ted sins of the o hit the long cans have been column its ball the aristocrat PUTNAM‘S PAINLESS | CORN EXTRACTORâ€" CORNS Ae §# ZR & I w..n ““ox,' You can painlessly remove w( eorn, eltier hard, soft or bleeding, 1y applying Puwam‘* Corn‘ Extractor, | 1t never burns, leaves no sear, contains no acids ; is harmless because composed mly of healing gums and baims. . Fifty years in use. Oure guaranteed. Rold py all druggists use, _ Oure guaranteed. Bold py we. bottles. Refuse substitutes. Gold Laid Watch W "No, dear, I‘m your grandmotne? 08 your father‘s side." "Well," sail Willie, decidediy (he was an observing little fellow), "all 1 got to sav is vou‘re on the wrong wide,"â€" Necessary in COTOT®®" Because Bruin is | The annual roundup Routt county. Albert Eikins and several 0 of note have undertake s;‘\'â€i\- -_\‘V»'\Fn; on the wrong . side Everybody‘s Magazine. Necessary in Colorado, Cattiemen Say, Because Bruin is Kiuing Stock. The annual roundup of bears is on in Routt county. Albert Whitney, . bteve Elkins and several other bear bunters of note have undertaken to rid the cattie ranges of Routt county of the bemts which are killing the colts and calves in large numbers. Kight bears have been tuken so fur during the hunt. The headquarters of the hunters is at Phippsburg and from that point they throw out a circle, beating the timber in the vicinity of the places where dead calves and colts are found. The party of hunters has about fiflty bear dogs, the pack being mostly from the kennels of Elkins, of Mancos, Col., and of Whitney, of Phippsburg. \ The stockmen say that they are losing at least $1,000 a week by allowing the ' 101 io o Anfuas wi ds EPE T Pss i> bears to live off their colts and calves, which are «o small at this time of the year that bears easily pull them down., Two skins sent in from the â€" bhunters‘ camp are the finest furs that have been seen in Denver for many yeark. One is off a brown bear and the other off u black. _ Each is a glossy pelt, full furred and in perfect condition. At this season a bear‘s #kin is in prime condi tion, as he does not sheq until July.â€" Denver Post HOW MRS. CLARKE FOUND RELIEF After Years of Sufttering Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cured her. Pleasant Point Matron Tells Her Sutâ€" fering Sisters How to be Free From the Terrible Pains That Make Lite a Burden. Pleasant . Point, Ont., Nov, 10.â€"(8pe wial.)â€"That most of the ills that the suffering women of Canada have to bear are due to disordered Kidneys, and that the natural cure for them is Dodd‘s Kid ney Pills, is once more shown in _ the case of Mrs, Merril C. Clarke, a well lnown resident of this place and a prom EC PEmmy Py ETTE CC case of Mrs. Merril C. Clarke, a well lnown resident of this place and a prom ineut member of the gulvnion Aarmy. Mra. Clarke is always ready to give her experience for the benefit of her suffer ing sisters. "My sickness commenced twenty years ago with the change of life," says Mrs. Clarke. _ "My health was in a bad state. Water would run from m“ head which would make me faint. ‘hen 1 came out of the fainting spells I took fits. I was bloated till 1 was clumsy The pain 1 suffered was awful. It would go to my feet and then to my head Many doctors attended me, and I tried wany medicines, but nothing gave me reâ€" lief till T used Dodd‘s Kidney Pill«. The first box stopped the fits and seven boxâ€" es cured me completely." Â¥Every suffering . woman should use Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. They make strong, healthy Kidueys, and the woman who has good Kidneys is uh{\urdnd against those terrible pain« that make miserable the lives of so many women ROUNDUP To rob a robber is French. An airship somred in the upper #ky, An engle watched it with careful eye. "A wonderful bird," he cried, ‘we‘ll see If it is going to fight like me." A dove eat watching it skim the blue, As over the farms and w it flow "A beautiful bird," she , * wrlll be If it is a eymbo! of pescs like me." An ow! perceived it at fall of night, As over the trees it took its Night "Quite sctentific,‘ he cried, "we‘ll try It it is as wise & bird as 1." A hen looked up with & jealous glance To see it rise in the cloar ï¬rln "Although it can fly," she #£10, s bq To state the critter can‘t lay an €H€ * iWaashineton P Our handsomely illustrated 144 page cala> <asnt d P ng, <+WTe v RYRIE BROS., Limited ;;c:;';l Dismonds, Jewelry, Suiverwane, Lesther, Arts Goode and Novelties, free upon request SPECIAL $1.00 FOUNTAIN PEN 134â€"138 Yonge Street TORONTO For cither a man or woman no more sensible Xmas gift could be found then this Ryrie Fountain Pen. It is fitted with a 1tk Iridium pointed pen nib, and safety clip. Complete in case with filler and instructions. Delivered â€" postâ€"peid, for $1.00, to any address in Canadaâ€"except the Yukonâ€" Order by the numberâ€"698. The Rilvals OF BEARS. SEND FOR CATALOGUE a -inlg woman . should use Pills. They make strong, s, and the woman who Adneys is safeguarded errible pains that make ives of so many women, CUREPDP not â€" robbing.â€" G ty 2