Constipation â€"â€"«â€"*~* y uuuog»s BUSINESB COLLEGE, TOâ€" 4 ronto. Canada‘s Popular Commer elal Sehool I.(mfl:sout Catalogue free ZEareaee EXEIE PE EC Constipation. They are entirely "fu&ae in composition and do not sicken, weaken or gripe. Preserve your health by taking Dr. Morso‘s " Indian Root Pills W. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Torento. We W. W. DAWSON, Colberne WAWV.b PERVANENT _ MEN Women locally, !hlsrb)lnd miesion, Make Five to Ten ‘l\:n snare time accepted. _J. l‘. Nicho! mt e 0000 is an enemy within the camp. It will undermine the strongest constitution and ruin the most vigorous healch. It leads to indigestion, biliousness, tmmure blood, bad complexion, sick smm e TL QTA!P COLLECTORSâ€"HUNDRED _ DIF & ferent Poreign Stamps. Catalogue. Album, only Seven Cents. Marke Stamp Company. Toronto. P C cnmmemenmpnpenerammpmm t CO('NTRY WEEKLY !BWBPAI?B FOR Sale in good Ontario town. reellent opening for man of energy. Write Wilson ‘I.blhhmg Company, Toronto. %l."l; is CENTS FOR k Song Success, "My W N Wilson, % Melinds 8t. se 0000000000 (VA:\(?);I, TUMORS, . LUMP®8, ETOC., ; internal and external, cured . withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. _ Write ue before too late. Dr. Beliman Medica! (o., Limited, Collingwood. Ont. K4 every town peceastty. Selle . g’u to £800 a d3 lindsa, Toronto smm 0002 (“ ALL @TONES, KIDNEY AND BLAD Â¥ der Stones. Kidney trouble, O\nfl. Lumbago and kindred allments positively sured with the new German â€" remedy. "@anal," price $!.50. Auother new remedy for Diabetesâ€"Mellisue. and â€" sure cure. is "Sano!‘s Antiâ€"Diabotes." Price $2.00 from druggists or direct. The Banol Manufac turing Company of Cunads, . Limited, Winnivew. Man. 1 ELECTRIC DYHAMO 30 K.W., 110 Y8LTS, D.G6., 675 R. P. M. At a Vory Reasonable Figure tor Immediaste Sale. 8. FRANK WILSON & SOHS, blishere, Toronto EPTWeR PERRCR C CKC Rail way trackage. in _ Toronto. mnton and other towns and cities. A new gem, given the name of "hellodor" and found in German South Africa, has taken its place among tha jeowels, says the Poular Mechanics Magazine. The German Kaiser reâ€" cently presented one of the new stones to the Kaiserin. The discovâ€" ery of the new stone was made by the governor and diractor of the Gerâ€" man Colonial Society while he was travalling in German South Africa. In the sand near the railway between Swakopmund and Windkuk he found a large crystal, rough and unpromisâ€" Ing in appearance. He carried it with him to Germany and had it cut and L MLKAE im a Mamand eutting factory. RUIT SPOCK, GEAIN AND DAIRT Farms in all sections of Ontarig. * rOLUary® ACTOBY SITE®, WITH O vu_?locr 1 2 myâ€"han > cently presented one stones to the Kaiserin ery of the new stone the governor and dirac man Colonial Society travalling in German In the sand near the r Swakopmund and Win w large erystal, rough Ing in appearance. He him to Germany and polished in a diamond The result was a Surpr aguamarine of groat t ESTIDENTIAL _ PROPERTIES _ _IS Brampton and a dozen cther town* EW GEM AMONG JIE.WELA. ‘he **Heliodor‘‘ Entitled to Rank with Ruby and Emerald. The German C ately took posse upon which the c a great number now making the the German mai that the new go with the ruby w t p 13 Adsiaido St. Wost, TOROKTO. Mr. Doug! hes, and is one of 'tbg most t causes of appendicitis. To it is slow suicide. Dr. Morse‘s Root Pills positively cure NEWSPAPER FOR SALE. q e C ©aTVE AGENTA wWANTED _ IN ry town to handls â€" houeehold ¢. Selle on sight. m‘u make #§00 a day. Apply N. {leon, 25 Well Metâ€" FagM® FOR SALZE A dainty, nourishing dish for breakfast, lunch or SsuDPâ€" cream and sugar. of choice Indian Comâ€"skilâ€" fully cooked and toasted to m.w.ï¬dn‘goldmbm perâ€" Wholesome Nourishing Easy to Serve sTAMP3 aND COINS And Post Toasties FOR SALE ACENTS WANTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. emporarily e CENTS FOR THE WALTZ uocess, "My Wondertul Girl." % Melinds 8t., Tpronw. MiSCELL ANEOU® Canadian Postum Cereal Co.. Ltd. EDUCATION. OR GZNERATOR A Good leigh : ‘‘Weil, no; not He has rheumatism in Canada M irpris) U §t., Toronts N( 4C itt Appetite R int nalist A Lom re day ols Co. lea »ved. t that e Brie, 18 direct Would Turn Things Upside Down If We Could Do It. If experiments now bei&g made on the brain of the late Dr. Madrice Howâ€" ard Richardson by his former scienâ€" tifle associates should furnish the deâ€" sired results, this old world would have to be placed on a different footâ€". Ing from any that it ever held before, whether for better or worse. The end â€" sought after is to read the thoughts which they think leave a permanent impression upon the brain in a series of definite lines. Dr. Richâ€" ardson was a fArm believer in this theory, and it was that it might be studied in his own case that he made | disposition of his brain in his will. Is he pale By analogy, at least, the idea preâ€" sents features that rob it of absurdity. The manner in which the steel needle makes its impression on the wax cylâ€" inder of the phonograph, and the later reversal of the operation for the purâ€" pose of reproducing the message, is one of the best illustrations of a posâ€" sible similar process in the phenomâ€" ena of mental impressions and their translation into speech or action. That the simi{larity appealed to Mr. Edison himself seems more than probable, as he has in this, as in other views, fully committed himself to a wholly materâ€" lalistic conception of life. y Eooo eP C CC If the theory, then, has even slight kindred evidences in its favor, the reâ€" searches now being carried on with much secrecy may disclose unexpected results. If the lines on the brain should be found related to definite thought impressions, their interpreâ€" tation is not beyond human powers. The same order of mind that wrested the key to the Egyptian hieroglyphics from the mutilated Rosetta Stone may possibly do as much from the brain of a dead professor, bringnig to light the thoughts which he kept hidden ucsw Bewn "®ig‘ own Reart while in even life. Should this come about, however, it is hardly necessary to speculate upon the portentious changes that would be wrought. No man could hide himself, nor could any nation practice the arts of diplomacy. No one could be led astray that was not willing to go. The Black Hand would betray its own secrets, and the white slaver convict himself. Congressional invesâ€" tigations would cease, and the reâ€" former discloso at ‘aâ€" glance whether he really liked grape juice or preâ€" ferred something strongar. And John | couldn‘t even think that his wife | thinks he is going to the club, for fear that she would find him out, the gay deceiver. In view of which, together with a 'thonsand and one other complications | that would ensue, it will perhaps be | beat If the Harvard sclentists fail of their purpose. Every mother is anxious for the welfare of hor little onesâ€"above all sho wants them to have good health. Thousands of mothers have learned the secret of keeping their little oncs healthy â€" they have learned that by keeping Baby‘s (Own Tablets in the house and givâ€" ing an occasional doss to the little ones that they will escape constipaâ€" tion, vomiting, colic, colds, worms, etoc. The 'l‘ai;lets nover fall to be of service in keeping the baby healthy and happy. Sold by mediâ€" cine dealers or gy mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co., Brockville, Ont. READING THE BRAIN. Once Thought One of the Impossi= | 1 ble Things. he Probably the most daring chapter in modern surgery is that which treats Ir of operations on the heart, "The road ta to the heart is ouly two or three 0 inches long, but it has taken SUIg@rY | a; nearly 2,600 years to traverse it," is n one writer‘s striking remark. How reâ€" 0 cont this work is is made plan fmm\ 1 the fact that & book published by | t Stephen Paget in 1895, contained a | & chanter on Surgery of the Heartâ€"the C words being contemptuously inclosed in quotation marks, says the World‘s Work. The scientist, as well as the layman, looked upon the heart with | ,, an almost superstitious awe. Any 88| | jury necessarily Implied death; any | ,, Intorference with such_ an injury |,, | could only hastern the end. Yet many | | shrewd observers in the course of the | ages had noted that all heart wounds | did not result in instantaneous death. : | It was not until ten or fAifteen years ; , | ago that surgeons began to act upon this knowledge. In exceptional cases i death did not result immediately from 1 ,|\ a heart wound; there were intervale | ; of a few minutes, a few days or l‘ _|few weeks. Why not utilize this inâ€"| \ terval in an attempt to sew up the |wound? Medical history now reports | many successful â€" operations of this â€" ‘klnd. An eapecially noteworthy one, \ performed upon an Alabama negro | boy in 1902, illustrates the resources of modern heart surgery. This boy had been the victim of a stab wound. The knife had penetrated the apex of tha heart and passed into the left ventricle, making a wound nearly half an inch long. When the boy was | placed on the operating table, in a little negro cabin, the signs of death had already appeared. His feet were cold, his face showad signs of the utmost distress. The surgeons viade oPERATING oX THE WEART. from his own heart MOTHER AND BABY. uimost «13110880 AMD EDMBAMOD RCLL a little windowâ€"like opening just above when n the heart. Through this they could‘ o‘ clock readily see the injured organ, the and let blood spurting from the wound at each | forgott pulsation. One surgeon put in his hand, pulled the heart upward &and | minard held it while another sewed the wound with catgut. The operationâ€"â€" performed® without an anestheticâ€" ie lasted 35 minutes; on tha sixteenth Gr day the boy was sittimg up; in a that I short time his heart was as good u‘have 1 new. Johnny‘s mother had instituted & fine of 10 cents for every spot made on the tablecloth. One day Johnâ€" ny was observed rubbing bis finger for a long time over the cloth at his plate. _ _ * t "John, what are FoOUu G0°"D° said his mother at last. "Nothing. I was just trying to rub two spots into one.‘* Mother (after Well, our dauï¬ band are off at ling you, John! l‘“a ut Sb o Fatherâ€"I don‘t quite young fellow‘s parting didn‘t say "Goodâ€"bye ; "Au revoir.‘"‘ Amalgamation. Coming Back. the wedding)â€" ter and her husâ€" st. ~What‘s troubâ€" â€"bye ;‘ he like that words. He That Terrible Fatigut Can Be Overcome doing?‘ A Simple Home Remedy Now Cures Lack of Energy, Loss of Amâ€" bition, and a Feeling of "Don‘tâ€"Care."‘ That miserable nervousness and halfâ€"sick â€" tiredâ€"allâ€"theâ€"time condition is due nine cases in ten to a cloggedâ€" up system. You grow irritable and despondent, you lack ambition, enerâ€" zy seems all gone. Surest road to health is by the frequent use of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills; they will make you feel like new all over in a short time. Writing from his home in Barce lona, Mr. Frederick G. Mayer states: "I think no one ever suffered as soâ€" verely as I did for nearly six months. Yo many serious symptoms were deâ€" veloping as a consequence of this evil condition of my system that 1 realâ€" ized I must find a remedy. The strong pills of various kinds 1 tried seemed after their first effects were over to make me far worse and I did not know which way to turn for relief. I saw Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills advertised, and the first box used satisfied me. I found a true remedy. Instead . of griping with undue activity, Dr. Hamâ€" ilton‘s Pilis acted as naturally as if physic had not been taken. I never had to increase the doee and, indeed, within ‘a month 1 reduced it, and when the system finally acted of its own accord as a result of Dr. Hamilâ€" ton‘s Pills, I took a dose twice a week only, just to make sure the old condiâ€" ‘ tion would not come back." Aub maddnpdiac h men o o 7 0 siok Wls . dE on c csd No other remedy cures constipation and billousness 80 easily or safely as Dr,. Hamilton‘s Pilis; they aro Aan ideal family remedy for all diseases of the stomach, lHver and bowels. Sold in 250. boxes, five for $1.00, all druggists and storekeepers or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. Successful in Nearly Every Case. People Hore Drop It, Which is a Pity. ' It is a pity so many people here drop the Irish O, for it is a prefix of nobility that is the oldest in Euâ€"| rope, S&y8 Tryconnell O‘Donne!l, in New York Tribune. Many of our best Dutch families in New York came here without a surnam?, but there is uot a family in ireâ€" land possessing a surname in O that has not borne that surnams®s since at least the twelfth century. That is surely a high distincetion and proof of social syanding that Ireland‘s fall from its high estate cannot obliterate. I beleve thatâ€" Vanice has families whose surnames date from the ninth century, but with that exception Irish surnames are the oldest in Europe. Under compulsion of the penal laws, many people in Leinster | adopted English names, but these people belonged mainly to the lowâ€" , | er classes, and the names they .| adoptedâ€"Smith, ‘Oarpenter, Cook, § Butcher, showed their occupations ‘| and the meaning of their Irish surâ€" _| names. â€" Such names ‘dw‘eyl I‘J‘Ol"e THE "0O‘" IN IRISH NAMES. names. 400 M omtmat eaÂ¥ ol nit 7t the Mac, and in Ireland‘s whole history you will find nowhere in its ancient nobility a family bearing & wame associated with any trade or occupation, nor any euch naime with the O prefixed. Howard or Hogward, the most aristocratic name in Britain, would have been borne only by heroditar{ swingâ€" hords in the old Irish wor d. | The belief prevails in parts of Ireland and Europe that only five Afamilies rightly bear the OQâ€"the (‘Neills, high monarchs of Treland and kings CA Ulster; the O‘Donâ€" | nells, princes of Tryconnell; the | (‘Connors, kings of Connaught ; |\ the O‘Briens, kings of Thomond ; | and the O‘Flahortys, princes of Ian | Connaught,. eAE s used according to directions is one of the most potent restoratives that can be | taken into the system. It cleanses the \ blood and makes it possible for the orâ€" lw-ans to do their work properly. | ECOZEMA and eruptions of the skin ‘ yield at once to treatment. Hundreds are more than willing to tcetify to the boneâ€" ‘ï¬cial resulte of using LIQUID sgULPHUR. RHEUMATLISM is simply the result of ‘\lmpum blood and clogged blood vessels. y LIQUID SULPHUR removes the cavee of i tha Canwurity &nd cleanses the blood the â€" impurity channels. CTeLTNIUTET For aale by all druggiste. Price 50 cents per bottle. "As a rule I‘m & peacelul Ang easyâ€"going man.‘"‘ ‘"‘That‘s your reputation.‘"‘ "I believe in being pleasant and accommeodating." ‘‘Yes, that is true."‘ "And I try to keep my temper. I don‘t believe in "I‘m glad to hear 16. "But I want to say to you that I‘m not responsible for what I say when my wife wakes me up awt one o‘clock in the morning to go down and let in the servant girl who has ‘f.or‘-gogten her key." LIQUID SULPHUR "Gracious! That skirt is so tight that I can plainly see what you have in your pocket." "But I have no pocket." "Then what is that lump 1‘ "Oh, that‘s a mosquito bite."" Minard‘s Liniment The Texas Sort. The Limit. profanity ."‘ for sale evorywhere. peaceful and PMAE THOLY_ SCATTERE) ON FAQE In Bad Condition. Pimples Large. Face Sore and Itchy. Looked Badly. â€" Cuticura Soap and Ointâ€" Pnd 1200 AcasnmtortiPillins se u08 eenabr y v dev in Mwumaveryb.deondflonwuhnm kind of pimples. Thoplmplumt.hlckly nstad scattered. The tops of them f M\ were white; matter was in them. ‘They were quite large and my face was sore and itchy and looked badly. I ‘. d had to scratch to be comfortâ€" wVAF able and sometimes lost my " sleep. ‘The sores lasted about A f two months and I tried some ointments but didn‘t like them. Thenl-ontformeCnucunSoup and Cuticura Ointment, used them for two wveklsndlwueompletdycund."(suned) e sCaLUE f . were them. and itchy ‘. a had t« [/\,, abie : ‘t sleep. 8 two n * / _ ointm them. ‘Then I sent Alex. R. Oke, April 2, 1912. two years, started with a skin disease on herfwo.-olalledlnthodoctormdh. said it was eczema. ‘The skin was quite red and all scaly. I washed the parts well with the Cuticura Boap and then I put the Cuticura Ointment on. You ought to uohnnowâ€"-uturusulyl "I suffered a great deal with piles. I had them very bad, and they itched and hurnodnloouldh&rdlybeult. When I got the Cuticura Olntment I tried it. Now it bas entirely cured me.‘" (Signed) Mre. Oyrus Ward, Jan. 1, 19012. A man who tries to swallow the whole world usually chokes himself in the process.â€"Sir J. Lyons. There is no one thing so trifliing but which (if it is to be done at all) ought to be done well.â€"Chesterfield. There is no pleasing some people. If you butter their bread on both sides they want it marmaladed round the edges.â€"Mr. John Burns. mag ‘ 10. W diciuks ntv \ ment Cured in Two Weeks. on Eo oia d J Outicura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold throughout the world. Bend to Potter D. & C. Corp., Dept. 53D, Boston, U.8.A., tortmumpleo(owhwlmsz-mobook. uo CuUgyee NOE OO opuc ce He who is false to present duty breaks a thread in the loom, and will find the fiaw when he may have forâ€" gotten the cause.â€"H. W. Beacher. In 70 or 80 years a man may have a deep gust of the world : know what o o what it can afford, and what In 70 or 80 years a man may ""*" a deep gust of the world : know what it is, what it can aefford, and what is to have been a man.â€"Sir Thomas Brown. It is unreasonable to Pplame the poâ€" lice for allowing children to play in the streots, because the children as a rule have no places but the streets to play in â€"Sir Edward Henry. Clarkson, Ontario.â€"*‘" My littlo girl, aged In the course of the late Balkan ‘ war & correspondent had the toothâ€" ache while in camp. He sent for the tooth drawer, who came with huge pincers. He was sot in & chair outside his tent, with the vilâ€" lagers gathering about. He mildly protested against the publicity, but the village blacksmith said that the villagers didu‘t mind. The booth came out. Judge â€" What is ths charge against the prisoner 1 Officerâ€"Yer honor, he‘s a public nuisance, He‘s been goin‘ around in th‘ middle 9’ the night-L waking F1 lt i 1. . oau belatrei® Aap stt i i up night watchmen and thin nin‘ away. P ED POT CROORCE CC N CCE mc After many yoars of patient suffering you can be ‘divorced from corms by 53; plying Putnam‘s Corn Extractor, whi acts in 24 hours without pain. Refuse a gubstitute because "Putnam‘s" is _ the LVO COOCRTUT _ Ua mnatnless â€" fhe at SCALY ECZEMA ON FACE remedy | thi all dealers No one ever yets found happiness | by running after it. It may look only a little way aheadâ€"in the new house you are building, in the highâ€" er position you are seeking, in the wealth which you are hoping to sCâ€" . cureâ€"but it is in none of them. | When you reach the place where you seemed to see it, liï¬e a willâ€"0‘â€" theâ€"wisp it will be dancing a little beyond you, just out of reach. The l only way to be happy is to abog: tryâ€" ing. Forget whether you are happy or not in trying to add a little to tho happiness of those about you. and some day you will find that life has grown very sweet tn PILLS F0R WOMER Mrs. T. Harris of Tyneside, Ont., knows all about GIN PILLS. "I am now taking my third box of GIN PILLS," she writes. "The pain across my back and kidneys bas almost enâ€" tirely gone. I was a great sufferer from Rheumatism but it hbas all loft me. I strongly advise all women, who suÂ¥er from Pain in The Back and Weak Kidneys, to try GIN PILLS." 50¢c, a box, 6 for $2.50. Sample free if you write National Drug and Chemâ€" ical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. casts m shower mil 2WE 200 TTC CC she thinks the Government oUS to give her & job in the weat} bureau. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. A DIVORCE GRANTED. Read What Mrs. The Trouble. "What‘s the trouble !"‘ ' "‘The doctor has changed â€" my medicine. I wouldn‘t take it unâ€" less the nurse gave me & kiss each tiwo.‘‘.: : C "Well?" "The old medicine I took every fifteen minutes. Now the doctor has given me some to take every four hours.‘L . Trouble for Pa. "Ma,‘" enquired Bobby, ‘"‘haen‘t pa a queer idea of heaven 1 ‘"Why do you ask that T/ "Cause I heard him tell Mr. Nayâ€" bor that the week you tï¬ent at the lole_znhom seemed like heaven to im.‘‘ When a Villagers Didn‘t Mind. Ontario.â€"‘*"Some time ago my Grains of Gold. Minard‘s Liniment:Gures: Burns, Ele e â€" DecRust PBR s that is eafe and painless. te at a woman accidentlly foreâ€" shower an hour in advance ks the Government ought her a job in the weather ie Nuisance. Happlness. Harris€ays About Thom. ths charge rPunDâ€" VIEVAY PAEABAGERRTaT C SE C make in bright weather. It is woll known in banks that errors in figâ€" ures are far mor efrekquent on dull days than on fine, and school teachâ€" ers have observed the same thing. A warm, bright day is the best for mental effort, but it is also the worst for crime. There are more‘ convictions for assault with vioâ€"| lence during the warm weather than during the winterâ€"& fact that is probably due to the misapplicaâ€" tion of the energy which the fine days bring to all of us. When the weather becomes very hot, 0n the other hand, the effect is depressing, and there is a marked decrease in crimes of violenc, with & falling off also in th output of sound mental workâ€"another illustration of the es law of compensation To be able to look cheerfully and bravely through clouds of poverty and distress is an accomplishment bestowed by nature upon every true and brave woman; and, no matter how poor and humble her home may be, the magic powers of smiles can brighten its dudow:s and liLg‘ht',- Oe e NORAAA C EC CR DC N C ons ad t 7 en its cares. Upon the troubled mind of a feeling husband a wife‘s smile falls like & sunbeam on & 11 nbeam ON . BNUMINC [d MB c aute d Aatvc flower. And how much more beauâ€" tiful it makes the face that wears it than a frown? When a wife and mother â€" forgetting . sorrows and hardships, smiles away her tears there is a loveliness in the act that speaks to a man‘s heart more eloâ€" quently than words. m u6 TORONTO How to Curé An E "After fifty years‘ experience in raisâ€" ing horses I can safely testify that no remedy gives such good results for an allâ€"round stable Hniment as Nerviline." Thus opens the very earnest letter of J. J. Evanston, who lives near Wellingâ€" ton. "I bad a very valuable horse that took distemper & month ago, and was afraid I was going to lose him. His throat swelled and hard lumps develâ€" oped. His nostrils ran and he had a terrible cough. . I tried different remedies, but was unable to relieve my horse of his g:ln and suffering till I starte(} to use Nerviline. I mixed & bottle of Nerviline and sweet oil and rubbed the mixture on the throat and chest three times a day, and you would soarcely believe the way that horse ploked up. Nerviline cured him. I also have used Nerviline for colle in horses and cows, and earnestly roâ€" commend it to every man that is raisâ€" ing stock." 1> Bte 50 oo is: cnalfines" anlin. _ For strains, sprA distemper, coughs Ing BLOUE, Tor strains, sprains, swellings, colic, distemper, coughs and colds, no liniâ€" ment will prove 80 efficacious in the stable As "Nerviltne"â€"it‘s good for man or beast, for internal or exterâ€" pal use, Whorever there is pain, Nerviline will cure It, Refuse subâ€" stitutes. _ Large size bottles, 50.; trial size, 250. at all dealers, or the Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Ont. Says Nervllln; ts Fine Liniment. King George and T1oydâ€"George. Although David Lioyd George, the statesman, has achieved much fame and success since ho left Criccieth, | the little town in Wales where he | first praotised law, he would hbardly | lay claim to any such triumphant carâ€" eer as a compatriot attributed to him. . Shortly after the death of King Hdâ€" ward, an Englishman travelling in Wales got into talk with an elderly Welshman. The traveller happened to be the first to tell the old man of the king‘s death. "And who might bo king now ?" asked the Welishman. "Why, Gearge is king now." "George!" exclaimed the old man, in surprise. ‘"Well, how he has got on, to be sureâ€"and I remember nim as a litle lawyer in Criecieth!" ly True and Brave Women. Try Murine §y¢ Remedy e s p in T If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes | or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn‘t Smart l â€"Soothes Eye Pain. Druhfgists Sell | Murine Eye Remedy, Liqunid, 252\, 500. l AZ w 2 i omm e slcak AuP tCt e t t a on 1 » Murine Eye Salve in Ageptic Tubes, 25¢c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonic GQood for All Eyos that Need Care Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Are You Set Fair! Experienc«i Horseman Solemnâ€" ; Declares Nothing Is 8o Satisfactory as Nerviline. Frightened. "Why has Mrs. Jones d cided to give up the European trip she was contemplating t‘ ‘‘She happened to hear amebody say that travel broadencd one, and she weighs one hundred and eighty now.‘" Baltimore, Md., NOY. 1, 1200 Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Sire,â€"I came acroca 2 bottle of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT ia the hande â€" of omne of the students at the Univereity of Maryland, and he being #o kind as to let me use it for a, very bad eprain, which I obtained in training for foou races, and to say that it helped me would be putting it very mildly, and I therefore ask if you would let me know of one of your agen ta that is closest to Baltimore eo that 1 m;( obtain eome §f it. Thanking you in â€" vance I remain, _ h Awful End. "What became of that Russian count who insulted you?" "He choked to death."‘ "How did that happen?" "I made him swallow his words|" 14 St. Paul street, are Oliver Typewriter P.S.â€"Kindly anewer a day not only depresses s, but is apt to lead you es which you would not # rowikk BBX Horse Distemper Youre truly, w. 0. MeCUEAN MA4., Nov. 11, 1903 at oncé. rog jocrecenlsit :,} . e Je Pes: PeR se onE s 0 EDo i‘ "A TRIUMPH® m tea ovauty BM |Â¥apoleon Granted the Simple S0!â€"| | dier‘s Plea. It was at &n improvised review m] @Y |ine presence of the enemy that Naâ€" | ‘yes | poleon for the first time granted penâ€"| nart 'siona to simple soldilers, and named |: Sell | them Chevaliers of the Empire, and | 500. \members of the Legion of Homor.| bes, |Later, the chiefs of division always | {fail, | conferred the distinctions, but the emâ€" | are | poror permittod the soldiers who beâ€" agoe |lieoved that they deserved the honor | to present their claims to himself in ; person. Bo it hbappened that an oldl d to grenadier, who had made the camâ€"| was ,paigus of Italy and Egypt, not having ‘ been honored by his chief, sought the | God emperor and asked for the cross. | Â¥| "But," said Napoleon, "what have. and | you done to deserve this recompense?" | "CALADA" | 2. h __ooffecoommemn io n F PURE, OLEANLY PREPARED AND ‘DELICIOUS ® EMPEROR " "It was I, sire, who, in the desert of Jaffa on a day of frightful heat, presented you with a watermelon." & * . P C‘ o io c n o 0 BLACK KNIGHE® EM U OEA WeR o eP aduelcs "I thank you again for it, but a gift of fruit is not worth the cross of the Legion of Honor." The grenadier, excited almost to the point of paroxysm, cried aloud, "FBh, and do you count imy wounds for nothing? My seven wounds reâ€" ceived on the bridge of Arcole, at Lodi, at Castiglione, at the Pyramids, \at St. Jean d‘Acre, at Austerliiz, at [Friedhmd, eleven campaigns in Italy, in Egypt, in Austria, in Prussia, in ‘Pohnd, inâ€"" . C ‘, But the emporer, interrupting him |and laughingly imitating the vivacity ‘of his language, cried, "Tal ta!l ta! \How you fiy into a passion when you ‘come to the essential points! That‘s FOR where you should have begun; that‘s | worth much more than your melonâ€"I | make you Chevalier of the Empire, with a pension of twelve hundred francs. Are you content?" "But, sire, I prefer the cross." "You have both, since I make\,\'ou. \Chevalier." ‘ "I would rather have the cross." The honest grenadier would not deâ€" R:m, and it was with great dificulty \he was made to understand that the ‘dfle of Chevalier of the Empire carâ€" rled with it that of the Lefon of Iw. He %uu-noa on this point my when t mporer had fastened e decoration on his breast, and he was infinitely more pleased by that than by the pension of twelive hundred francs. AUTOMOBILES THE Cars listed below ahanea tae nnr Intaak «4. change for our latest models with the Knight Motor. They are in good repair, fully inspected, and are ready to go on the road. The prices we are asking are just what we allowed for them in exchange. Once hin & kvlv);ilo a map "doesn‘t forget his old friends4fte uirâ€" xi wealth and famg, _ * _ The cars are in splendid sbape, and will bear examination and comparison with any others on the market. RUSSELL MOTOR CAR €0., LIMITED Long Distznee Phone, Adel "BRUSSELL‘‘* Model "RUSSELL‘ Model "R." Car in splendid shape. "RUSSELI‘‘ Model "22."" A beautifal fveâ€"passenger. 120â€"inch wheel base, 86â€"inch wheel. A fully equip« ped Touring Car with the Knight motor. This car %. & Peerci l m.i.. @1 *hR Ah at a reasongable priQ® ....>0>s>s>>>>> > ANXDB GRENXADIER. 100 RICHKMOXND STREET WEST. ‘ Model "88," fitted with Daimlerâ€"K night Beautiful Torpedo body. Fully equipped, 5 S n e e P our regular guarantee, Price, $1,500.00 A HousEwIre is JubaEpd By HER KITCHEN ; ror a Bricxt STOVE AND A BRIGHT ) REpUTATION, UsE BLACK KNiGHT. A PaASTE NoWasTE Meuraigla. > . 8276. Free Samples malled on enguirys Adsdreoss : **SALADA,""‘ Tors A fiveâ€"passenger Touring have been taken in exâ€" tht F F Dairey C. m>.|No bust Hamiirron. ONT No Rust FOR SALE Pulleys & Shafting Sultable for Milts, Manulacturing Plsnts, Printing How:es, Ete. 2 Wood Split Pulleys, 129 x 48 in. tar % 1818 in. «haft. for 8 1816 in. e2AIt. 1 Wood fplit Pulley, 12% x 48 in for 2 15/16 in,. shaft, 1 Wood Split Pulley, 12} x 28 im for 3 T16 in. ehaft. 1 Wood Split Pulley, 104 x 38 i% for 3 7/16 in. sha‘t. Pulleys of smaller sizes and Bhatfting of various lengths and pBizes to be sold at very low figures. ' Box 28, \ Wilson Publishing C€o., Toronto. FOR SALE $1,500.00 _ *Yes," #aid Decim ron turned to him, "‘am very sorry. | "We must bear it, Ll:t been telling Bob ve The Woodbines a ly, likeâ€"like poor qwn g‘ we whall be. The r in that." whe looked at her w "Andâ€"and perhaps ful," she went on in . be able to pay you :;::y you have loet how much it : Mershon .?D)'f-fd "I‘m afra your you a@ll," he said ance, I‘m afraid. Bu: when he gets into th o clever that he is e "It is evident that | all," eaid Merehon. I wima. that the case i wuess. 1 didn‘t know ) self until 1‘d had a t«) wud brother together "Yee," eaid Decima, all. Me is bearing it b by! It will be a strugs have to manage with a Decima looked . a growing mpprehensic "What do you me "Mow can it be woi "Woell," he eaid, w th shouldere, "you . and your br army. but I‘m afrai of either event com want to be paid ba« money. The faot i father has beon go meck or nothing w city, lor all or w mind, didu‘t ki strongly have advis foolâ€"hardiness â€"that wenny he possessed thing. And of cour fact, I‘m afraid he lizble for more than be is utterly ruine "With meP" Her lips uu-{ were ecaprcely o u: "Yes," with you," h cima, I‘m a straigh epeak out etraight i won‘t treat you as a « a woman, upon whom m hlwlneu. t trowble‘® mbout a must go under s ware to eave thein "Iâ€"1 save them!~" ea jerked his head " You remembe on thhe wther might s hlm'l taken it. i you ‘ves," 1 off your Lnnd-. 1 father‘s loei, % allowance J debts!" brea M l-,ughml wes, there as Roing the pace. 1 CA CCOT, NAMG a clgare -m\o‘ his cignar h« # had done, } emotion. Decima put Mershon went and his foot, then he ©= near as he dared. "Look here, Miss D beet to face these th ‘ulr'- ruined, an ave to give up all take his chance is deuced poor chance is, unless"â€"he pau and then down a: terror in her eyes e4 even him for a went on. . "Well~i: 'm; etared at ermlips quivered, 1 to be 11 wid 1 said wou haven‘t taken If you say ‘v of your hands. 1 father‘s loei, s allowance, "Mis debts!" brea M ll,u‘lwd wes, there as the pace. 11 J an eye on future and look ati< L nt on you In h eagernees two nearer. Do Jeaned _ again= was echirling m:“outmu an whrewd, «ha under a spell. j3 _° TS & woOrd. a word of three i whe could save them At that moment all Ludy Pauline mn.bnln..lk duty of «ellâ€"»a ‘ merose her mind. (I w others, to suffer for others, it wa woman‘s ideal, the woman‘s duty, « = the woman‘s pleaeure _ No thou ‘ e rose _to deter he: By . -a she oould eave those she lov L s L_O!?’_!!“nl her father, broken. $ OP° PPRPCRTT TT ME "MICT, t by hie ml-n.!\‘g'.:;«é w # oottage, depri of hiw . E his dreams ; ahe thought « boy, with his wha arving in the solonies, an wept over her. Bhe could eave them by th as . :; That moment â€"why. ehe thought here to ME 64 to m , .n turned a half«lazed, ) ‘7 whould you . llca LC CECC* Why, whe knew mh! .oz bo.rd G.:‘uul 1t “i to ip her, vise her not there; he migh! be thouss _ away. She was alone und )« nshon eyed her covertly. . He g.'l‘ .lm.fhn‘. ‘bn' he was no loophole L â€" td he had drawn round h~ hat fo you eay?" he wila .. . CHAPPER XX you I loved y lose «o mus sigbed mo Occae he said ; wife. Y wouldn ‘t for your Her G vou * _ In Watern fact that gold p« and character of the chamb Para 3 the Or, A Str d he 19. NATIONAL DR Fou Sold bs NAâ€"DR d ht of Bot whattened stop ateriy Whene rk â€"#b 1ï¬ upor phi he t