r? . tt ti' I} ‘I. ' 1‘. ' . - a: tdl f A _ E France will build a battleship of 29.500 tons 6'2.0 feet. long, carrying sixteen guns In four revolving tur- rate. i Post il Toasties The man who minds, his own busi- ness is usually the one the other Flow goes to when he needs ad- “If my hens get den. Why don't J out?" nee I'll "Miss Peavh is a decided blonde isn't she?" remarked Mr. Dubbe. "Ya." remarked Miss Crabbe "She decided to become one alum a month "o." It is not, by shy mum the lar, gut birds that enjoy the longest lives. For instance, the, sparrow mmetimos celebrates bis fortieth birthday. Other ages reached by birds are: Hens. 10 years; phea- pants and partridgos. 15 years; lurks and nightingales. 18 years; pigeons. 20 years; estuaries 24 years: peacocks, 30 years; and her- uns, 60 years. A hundred years is probably a conservative estimate of a parrot’a Me, and it is recorded that one of these birds also started nesting " tor thirty years of captivity. With ordinary luck, both the crow and the swsn may reasonably expect a century of life. Longest Livers. 1 "Garlic gave us our beat results, . . . . . and would seem equally efficacious, [he question of ,rhioh bud: llWino matter what part of the body is the. torurert has never been .ottled affected, whether skin, bones, salmfapt-orily. But the nvenoouneo glands, lungs or special parts. very high in the hut, and u said to Imse oar ioternally, one reach the great age of two hundred drachm of the empremed juice or â€arm . two drops of the essential oil three [angles and vultures also on.lo.y times a day; externally, poultices long lives. Indegd. dbtt gagle-owl “lot crushed bulbs, one part, with .known .to. have livtti. mnety .yetsrslthree part-a of lard, or unguentum Mt captivity.. ln this particular garlic (50 per cent. juice in vase- case. the bird began to lay eggs up.†applied daily.†after fifty years, t.snd during the Tuberculosis is uncommon in lam forty years of m life brought l Italv, where garlic is used univer- uu numerous little ohm. lump ths, landing: Italian nhvsi- The Largest mses Are Not the Longest Livers. The question of which bird: live the longmt has never been settled satisfactorily. But the nven came. very high in the hut, and u said to reach the great age of two hundred years. _ Theoe Pills are sold by all medi- cine dealers or will be sent by mail st 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr. William’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. nnd ennble the body to take full ulnntaga from the food eaten. Mrs. J. C. Chapman, Omemee. Ont., stays: "I became completely run down and my nervous system shattered from overwork and worry. I always felt tired and ex- hausted and slept badly at night. I tried several medicines but did not find the hoped-for relief. Then I decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I took them regularly for several months and they restored me to perfect health. and l have since been well and strong, I can recommend these Pills to any " Bieted with nervousness or db broken constitution as I feel sure they will effect a. cure." A Fruitful Source of Broken Down Constitutions OVERWORK MI) WORRY Teaohee--Wbere is Chili , Bertie (venturing a guess) r I think it is in the Arctic circle Post Toadies we made for your pleasure and nour- ishment. ' Every crisp Rake of this attractive food represents the best part 0 choice white Indian CorTb-- Perfectly cooked deli- cately flavoured and toast- ed to an appetizinx golden "brown." some from the sm'ert8 to your table in tightly sealed pyrkages--ready to eat when opened-with cream. good milk or fruits. Cotaetaa Ready-Cooked I'll do more than sh boot their owner.' tiONF, $lChtNT "Mt BIRDS. With "ii Whole Soul. Soldby 8mm The sane. Wan. Sounds Likely. Footl- Cancl Co.. but like. 0mm --froII1 Your Grocer. Iteeision. tttt PP sh them out ur gar- J them 3 Garlic in a. plant of the onionien he lar, ' family. It is to the onion what. the l It longest .tiger is to the cat, or the wolf tad") parmw the dog. Growing, it, looks like a tie ortieth small onion plant. Its bulbs, which 'I ed bylmay be seen dried and hanging in lull phea- i festuons in most grocery stores, are len years; I composite, thigh It, they are, {owned 3 ayl A proposal for the erection of duplex bongo- hri ttacted with the o ' t g M tor the won-amen? Winnpo‘; aha milking them (rem $16 in.†par mouth. . The Which“ of a. market: Niais cut-1e. the property oti Frank E. Hatch. of Grand Point, Man., alrout 11 miles south of Win»! him. were "ruatled," and so tarl there ia no trace of them. ', After fighting tire in Winnipeg for over forty years, William Code, assiscant chief of tNe Fire Depart- ment, has tendered his resignation. The Cadet camp at Edmonton this year is expected to be the big- gost in the Province. and it is an- ticipated that 1,348 school boys will take part. Labor troubles are being experi- enced in Edmonton. The other day several workers "knoehed-ofr" to join the I.lrw. parade. ---- _ Items From Provinces Where Mun! Ontario Boys nnd Girls An "Making Good." Tho membership of the Edmonton Property Owners’ Amen/don has very, largely increased. NEWS {If Tllf MIDDLE WESI BETWEEN ONTARIO AND BRI- TISH COLUMBIA. Mothers, if your baby suffers from constipation. if his little sto- mach or bowels are out of order, give him Baby’s Own Tablets. They never fail to give relief. and an occasional dose will banish consti- pation and keep the stomach and bowels in perfect. order. Concern,, ing the tablets, Mrs. J. H. Gagnon, St. Sinkâ€). Que., writes: "I can- not, recommend Baby's Own Tab- lets too highly as a cure for const/r pation, as I have found them the very best medicine in the world for this troublo." The tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail‘ at '2.5 cents a. box from The Dr. Wil, liams' Medicine, Co., Brockville Ont. l lthree parts of lard, or unguentum garlic (50 per cent. juice in vase- lipe) applied daily." l Tuberculosis is uncommon in Italy. where garlic is used univer- sally; the leading Italian physi- cians in New York say it is alarm- ingly prevalent among the children lOf Italians in America, children (who do not eat garlic. largely be- lcause their school fellows and other associates ridicule them for smell- ;ing of it. of many smaller bulbs or "cloves" loosely bound together with skin. Cooks who know their business use it as they mm salt, almost univer. sally. but with great discretion. A great French epicure called garlic the "soul of cookery." WHEN BABY SUFFERS FROM CONSTIPATION "GUrlic contains a. volatile oil called allyl sulphide, and its medi- cal. properties depend on this oil, strongly antiseptic, and it seems to have remarksble power of inhibit.. ing the growth of the tubercle bturil- lus; it is eliminated by the lungs, skin, kidneys, and liver, and oxi- dizcs into sulphurous acid in the system. Appliéd locally, it is free- ly absorbed by the skin and pene- trates the deeper tissue; - "In our treateneryt-study of this disease during the past two years,†wrote Dr. McDuffie, “observations have been made with hfry-six treat- ments in over one thousand and eighty-two cases, mostly in Ward Q of the Metropolitan Hospital, De- partment of Public Charity. Of these treatments but two stand out as regards anything like specific ac- tion upon the tubercle bacillus and tubercular prooesseB. They are garlic from the vegetable kingdom and mercury from the mineral. New York Hospital leea'Julce at Guile to Patients. There‘s a new treatment out for tuberculosis. It is put forth by an Irish physician, Dr. W. C. Minchin, of Dublin, late medical ofhoer to tho Kells Union Hospital, who wrote a book about it. The treatment is garlic juice. He, however, is by no means the only doctor who is of the impres- sion that he has found garlic the best remedy for the "great white plague." In New York, at the Metropolitan Hospital on Black- well'ts Island, the physicians in charge of the tuberculosis wards have been experimenting with the treatment for two years. As their experiments are still in progress, they are not yet prepared to pro- nuunce any definite opinion on its value, beyond what Dr. Marshall W. McDuflie stated in an article published in the Interstate Medical Journal for March, 1914. FIGHTING coNBUNPrIot'. ED. 4. Tho Khoja his borrowed furf" he said A great. man once gave a feast, to which, with much condeseension, he caused the Khoja- to be hidden. Accordingly, on the appointed day, the Khoja, repaired to the great man's house, and found himself in the midst of a. fashionable and richly clad company. which took no notice of the poor imam in his threadbare black gown. No one greeted him or spoke to him, and eventually he was shown by a ser- va,nt to the lowest seat. After a, little while the Khoja slipped away unobserved, and went into the hall. where some of the mighty ones had left their outer garments. vSeleot- ing a. magnificent gown richly lined withfur, he put it on, and returned to the room. Nobody recognized this resplendent personage. whose arrival excited universal atte-nbion.i The company me to salute him, and the host, who had previously ignored him, approached. bowing, and inquirrd after his honorable health. "Don't you know what that is r' said the Khoja, who also had never seen a camel, but would not betray his ignorance. “That is a, hare a. thousand years old." , Halifax, N.S., Dee. 15.-When inter. viewed at her home at 794 Argyle St.. iMrs. Haverstock was quite willing to talk ot her peculiarly unfortunate case. l“l was always 'blue' and depressed, lielt weak, languid and utterly unflt itor any work. My stomach was so ;disordered that I had no appetite. iWhat I did eat disagreed. I suffered :greatly from dizziness and sick head- 'ache and feared a nervous breakdown. IUpon my druggist’s recommendation 1 used Dr. Hamilton’s Pills. 3 "I felt better at once. Every day I iimproved. In six weeks I was a well gwoman, cured completely after differ tent physicians had failed to help me. (lt is for this, reason that I strongly :urge suaerers with stomach or diges- {tive troubles to use Dr. kIatnilton'e Pills." 1 Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the fatomach, improve digestion, strength- One day a. camel passed along tho street in which the Khoits lived, and one of the Khoja's, neighbors who had never seen a. camel before ran to ask him what this strange beast might be. How the Khoja Managed ttrGet Himself Recognized. Some hundreds of years ago there livnd in Agshelin. a. tittle town in Asia Minor, an im, or Village Parson. the Khoja Nasr-ed-Din Ef- fvndi. Concerning him Mr. H. C. Lukach tells sumo stories in his book, {The Fringe of the East." an the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood ot long-standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they eftectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, tor men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. l A committee of the Calgary Board of Trade have made a. report on monetary conditions in the West, as follows: “Statements have been made to press representatives by leading financiers recently, claiming that the money market had a good supply as. proven by the de- creasing rate of interest. However, this has not been productive in a general reduction in the rate of in- terest on loans by banks to their patrons, and we believe that it is advisable that some action should be taken by the Board to secure from the local bankers a general reduction in the rate of interest, charged for the purpose." I A Nova Scotia Case of Interest to ill Women Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help to Many People. Brandon proposes to give a. loan of 815,000 at 5 per cent. to the Young Men's Christian Association of the city. The debentures issued and sold will be payable in twenty years from July Ist. A vote on the question is necessary and will be taken June 6th. Government ogieiais" akd ldepart- ments are taking a great interest lnmthe Calgary exhibition, which will open June 29, and this year’s fair will not, only be attended by members of the Cabinet, but there will be exhibits from the Depart ment of Agriculture. pew home on the Red River is be- Inf, erected so that the members will be able to take up their quar- tgrs there in early June. It is an- ticipate-d that 1914 will be a ban- ner year for the nautorial artists. Winnipeg waiters are preparing a petition to send to the Dominion Government protesting against the Anti-Tipping Bill.' They say they cannot live on their wages, and that tips are essential to their exis- tence as matters st_and at present. dsy in Red Deer Us not yet proven a woven. The trouble is that while plenty of buyers were on hand the last day, the amount of produce oirered by farmers was small. THI F, " BTI,F', AyrlrAT'It'. Winnipeg Brirprpittr" Club's stroked the alt-eve of garment. "Answer, TORONTO ISSUE 247.14. Some gnen have an inherent abil- ity for making mistakes. _ "Tell the a; otiF.r'rTaii'iiiiii'i; demanded her mother. 'We-he just yawned.†"Mercy, my dear child I" she ex- claimed. "He struck you, then t", "No, worse than that mother!†anA..tle young wife aobind afresh. A young married woman went home to her mother and aobbingly declared she just couldn't be htppy with her husband again. " would- n't have minded it so much, m0- ther," she sobbed. "it Charlie had answered me back when I molded hire, but-pu-Giulia/if;' Her mother wil ELEMKI’M this. Some musicians put on more than they can play. land'- Nine-tenths of the things that have been said might as well have been left unmid for all the benefit they are to humanity. YOUR OWN DIUGOIS'I‘ WILL TELL Yor Try Muritte Eye Remedy for Red, Weak. Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids; No Sinai-Hugh just, Eyr- Conform Write for Book ot the Rye by null Free. Muruse Eye Remedy Co., Chicggo. It's an easy matter to acquire a. flow of language. Alonzo. All you have to do is step on a tack with your bare feet. Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, patent Solicitors. Montreal, report that 137 Canadian patents were issued for the week ending May 19th, 1914, 92 of which were granted to Americans, 24 to Canadians, 15 to residents of foreign countries and 6 to residents of Great Britain and Colonies. INFORMATION FOR1NVEN'I‘0RS Tho "colonel" passed on and pmmenaded the town for an hour, dealing out four days' arrest and speaking injurious Words to every noncommissioncd officer he met who was vain of his soldierlike appear- ance, donating unasked favors and bostowing paternal beneditions on scallawags of legiona,riea, and be- having in a, way that horrified rc- speotable people. The poor sergeant; was struck dumb. Ile, one of the dun-dies of the legion and a. man who prided himself on walking- as it he had a rifle barrel for a spine, to be ac- cused of 'ulouehintr" and wearing a dirty uniform! His chin rank. and as he dejectedly moved off, all the starch seemed to have beep taken out of him, and he did "slouch." Half an hour afterward a, ser- geant of the legion, strolling along the shaded Rue de Mascara, saw in the gloom the five-striped sleeve of the colonel's coat just in front of him, and braced himself up to qus- tify his reputation as one of the smartest non-commissioned ofhoers of the corps. His salute did not appear to please his commanding officer this time, for the tive-tral- ooned sleeve was raised in an im- perative signal to stop, and an an- gry voice ordered him to return to barracks at, once, and take four days' arrest for slouching about the town in a dirty uniform, and salut- ing his colonel in an unsoldicrlike mannvr. There was a, sergeant employed as a clerk in the regimental office at Sidi-bel-Abbes. Ono day the colo- nel happened to be confined to his bed, and was visited in his lodgings by his sergeant-clerk, who had some papers for the chief's signer- titre. The colonel happened to be asleep when the sergeant arrived, and he was shown into the dressing room to wait for the oifioer to awake. The eight of the oolonel’s uniform coat gave the sergeant the idea that it would vary the mono- tony it he took a, stroll round the town in it. _ Sergeant in the Freneh Foreign l Legion Had His Innings. The pranks played by legionaries when seized by that peculiar hy- steria that the inaction of a. mono- tonous routine brings on, range be. tween farce acid tragedy, seldom touching either extremity, but be. ing about midway between the two, says Mr. Frederic Martyn in his ac- count of life in the French Foreign Legion. The author saw five years of active service in this crack corps of the French army. Ask for W's “a an no othn. TM F', cor,o?ir,tpg l' NIH'IRSTI'DY Nerviline is mighty good for pre- venting colds and for breaking up a bad one, too. For general family use it cures all sorts of external aches and palms-you simply can't beat It. Try it for earache, toothache, neural- gia, sciatica, lame back, rheumatism; or lumhago. Wherever there is con. gestlon. inflammation or pain in the joints or muscles, Nerviline will cure mighty quick. The large 60e. family size bottle is so economical. so use- ful, it should be in every home. There is also a small 25c. size. Dealers any- where sell Nervlline. When your boy comes in after play with his feet soaking wet, his throat hoarse and Bore, his little cheat tight and congested, Just apply Nerviilne. give him a vigorous rubbing over his throat, and put lots of Nerviline on his chest and rub it right in. To make Nervillne penetrate more quickly cover his chest and throat with a. hot ttatmel bandage. This treatment WON'T fall. Your boy will be feel- ing better in half an hour, and you will have the satisfaction ot knowing you have warded " perhaps a cold, or grippe, or illness that might have laid him up. It'ts really s shame to upset a young child's stomach by internal dosing. when external treatment will so promptly break up a cold. Mothers Will Find Nothing to Specdlly and Reliable u old-time “Ner- villnc." cure children’s Golds By External Treatment Elihu!!! P"rsttemurts'. mil. Real Cruelty. when I scolded iystem. Dr. REES". tiiiiiin'ii"ioi'iliiC act directly on the bowels, regulating them-ou the kidneys, givinq than: use and strength to properly fi ter the t2,tl,asrd En the sham. It',','?,', u t e pom or use cod an we: health take 9 t Dr. MOPIQ'I " Indian: Rout-‘- Pill. Irvbanii--so 75m .1111; "i But she didn't promise to forget she’d forgiven me. 7 "she%umined to hear somebody say that travel broadened one." loop mum's um“: In tho hm‘ A Woman’s War. Bachelor Caller-hrs. dear fellow, I thought your wife had forgiven' you and promised to forget itt" Er, _LA" I h - - Bad blood - Took It Literally. “Why has your wife decided to give up the European trip she was 'tntttnrlluinst" Siatde--Don't you ever sweep un dey. the carpet? Janitor-dye/std, ; I always sweeps everything under the carpet. --- ..__ __..,..-_... ......‘...4 --,.. Camp, held at Tusket Falls in August, I found MINARD'S LINIMENT most benetteial for sun burn, an immediate relief for collc and toothache. ALFRED STOKES. An old man in the west of Ire- land told him, said Mr. Yeats, of a ghost which had infofmed him that it was miserable because it, was stark naked. The ghost suggested that the men should give a suit in the spirit's name to a. beggar in the streets. Tho man did so. and when the ghost again appeared it was wearing the selfmme clothes. The history of spiritism, said Mr. Yeats, was full of complaints from spirits of the way in which they were troubled by the doubts and the unhappiness of the living. One Countess of Sligo dismissed her stable boy because, seeing his Me master the Earl walking neu- the house, he told the ghost, to go any and haunt a lighthouse. The Coun- tees dismissed the boy for telling the spirit to haunt such an incle- mont spat, because a, ghost had to go wherever it was told. For mus the stockbroker cent money to needy houses as directed, and became known because of his benefioenoe. He then asked the spirit to take charge of his affairs, and the spirit complied. The stock- broker became a, wealthy mu. _ V~_-_m wwcu in“ cl bd-up kidney. Bud skin. The moginstcd food and other waste mat.. ter which is allowed to accumulate poison: the blood and the whglo Iystegn. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pitt. The spirit advised the stock- broker to perform acts of charity, and advised him about various speculations on the Stock Ex- change, always forxetelling the re- sult, and the gyms with accuracy. Mr, Yeats related an amusing case of an evil spirit mentioned in "Maxwell's Phenomena." In the sixties a. small statue of the Ma,- donna in a. French stock broker's house began to move from a. bracket to a. bed and back. Then weapons moved. Ultimately, through a me- dium, a spirit foretqld events which came true, and eventually revealed its identity as the founder of the Christian religion. . II the direct and ineviuble result of igtety, “SEW. txyyeis 9nd Miserable When Naked, But Cheer. ed up When It Got Clothes. "Lure, cannot be so much more numerous in this next world than in this world," remarked Mr. Wil- liam Butler Yeats, the poet, in an address to the members of the Lon. don Spiritualist Alliance the other night. _ He was referring to the innumer- able cases of false information gi- ven through mediums, all of which, he amid, could not be due to lying spirits. Cutlcun Bonn Ind Ointment Ire oold throughout the world. A “but! ample ot each. wlth 32-m0 booklet on the are grad trauma". ot the “In aud my. lent post-1m. Adam- Power Drug 1 Chan. Corp., Dept. IMC, Boston. u. 3.4. At, Pt, Ygrzpoqth ..TPfAl.A, Boys’ DIRECTIONS: Make a parting and rub gently with Cuticura Ointment. Continue until whole scalp has been gone over. The next morning sham.. poo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Shampoos alone may be used as often as agreeable, but once or twice a month is generally sum- cient for this special treatment. w \wza y CUTICURA 3031’ AND OINTMENT A (LEVER GHOST', THIS ONE. HAIR GROWTH PROMOTED 0n Principle. General Sddretary, , my: boy 'letwfxi'é MM. kGiGcc-riii""to in than days. I never could get any money out ot father. Newlywed (disturbed over pur- dusae0--Yot, had very simple tinge: betore. I myriad vou. Bad Experience. Britres--Woi.d you marry man llwyer’? Grigrr--No, sir. Even the my woman can Croe's-exmtt too well. . No death is more certain than the end that come: to every offender treat- ed by Putnam's Corn Extractor. Out comel the corn or warts. root and brunch. Insist on "Puttuun's" only. It“. the but, free from add- und painless. Price 250.. at all dealers. "Aw. that ain't hard," replied Johnny. "Yer see. when the cider got up to the first joint of my thumb, I stopped." Ma's Lituatott Ina HANGED B? THE NECK Johnny was sent to the evil†to draw a pitcher of cider. When tte not back the guest commended him "You must have good judgment. to have filled the nitcher so accurately in the dark without running it over." "Oh, I Hon't Came Fhether he make). I wanted to find out if he kisses her!†“I asked her if her husband smoked," said the woman with an inquiring mind. "and what do you think? She said she didn't know '." "I don't see what, difference it makpa to you." am PILLS and Mame quite well. Two month- uo 1 had Rheumatic Pain: with Near-alum. I resorted to (“N PILLS “sin for one week and became quite well." 60c. a Box. 6 for 82.50. Sample free It you write Nltlonnl Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. Toronto. Mr. Samuel Longmnre. of Montreal. “If: "Just a word of prIIIQ tor GIN P Ls About tttteen month. ago I could not walk across my room. suffer- 1tyttttyerAy rm; Rheumum. I t_ook Helpless From Rheumatism - “We have obtained proof," he said. “abut another man oommitted thf/sriane with which you are eurtr “Well, I guess that lets me out,' said the prisoner." Gin Pills Give Prompt Relief By Curing the Kidneys. Nor does the teacher forget that "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." Unlike the Anglo- Saxon child, the young Ruthenian does not seem to take naturally to play. On his first arrive-X at school he holds aloof, and gazes in a. kind of stupid wonder at the antics of the children. The prisoner sat disconsolam in his cell. Suddenly the warden asp- peaygd. _ _ But it in round the school-houses that the chief interest of both the Ruthenium people and the teachers centres. They are frame structures. neat, commodious, and well lighted. There is a, keen rivulry amongst the different districts as to who shall have the best school-house. and they are quite generous in regard to furnishings and equipment. Up to date more than fifty such schools have been built in the Ruthenian district. And truly this end of the task of moulding the young Ruthe- nuns into Canadians is far from fruitless, for the children show con- siderable aptitude in learning a.nd pick up, English quickly. l There. are many rungs of failure [ the ladders of success. l Thia one-momcd abode the teach- er usually divides by curtains into two apartments, and when she has decorated it with pictures and nick: nacka and books and tried her hand at constructing some rustic furni- ture, and bu scattered about it some comfy cushions, she has made for herself a nest strong with the home sense. The children linger at the door to get a peep at its splen- dors, and the parents who call on the teacher carry away a vision of home comfort such as has never been theirs before. Who can tell, what iaifuence these little homesl any have in correcting the interior of the cheerleas four walls withinI which the Ruthenium lives? a. little shack built in the school yard, for the thatched homes of the Ruthenian people have no rooms for the aoeommodation of boarders. The home provided for the teacher is never elaborate. It is usually a one-roamed shack, and is erected at a cost of from one hundred and twenty-tive to two hundred dollars. It is provided with a bed and a cook stove. To the teacher who undertakes . school in a Ruthenium oettlernent a. new life opens, and one not without ita hardships and loneliness. A: a rule he or the has to live alone in hunter-In; no. In. (7mm- Citizen. To the east and north-east of Ed- monton. Alberto, lies the largest Rutheniarn colony in Canada. Though today we call them "Aus- trians" or "Gnlieuns," the day is speedily coming when they and their descendants will be known by :9 other name than that of Cans.- was. RUTHENIANS IN THE WEST. Easily Explained. Easily Gtutgod. vtrl PardonOie. sleuthing. '. Even the ordin. cross-examine tar by Ph-sa. "on! IEDIOAL M,, canon. Mich “d tttustinat worm. trom calm. as well '0. I..." Lha§ will not . mis. than no an a a “an n this t â€on." m I link-euca- In Mile: with new bank; All Retrtrie--"She aid' The r. ring phenomena of heat and no so frequent 1nd (to funth to be matters too negligible l,, any: my intoreet, Mr. Risky ' Hen ry--' l Welt." Girish, reply 1' ' Regtrie-"So, by way of i, ing the ice, I reunited that wether wag__vg_ry cold. .. ppttnt, Bony Growth: and Ln-r,, _ from many other causes. it Law bones working. A $1 with 2:1.)- uvenhorae foryou. Getabotil -':.- next time you are in town. SUN! , _ druggists everywhere, $1 a bottlr "- for to, “so ask for a copy of our bu >1; "ATreatiseoe, the Irorse"-orwrite to . J. “HWY - I. 'kTrWd.4 ' .k' (VANCER. Tl'llUlisL LUMPS, I: y internal and external, (‘urml u out pain by our home treatment IN Ill before too late. Dr. Bellman Mm: Co., Limlted. Coltin.wood. Um. (Noun WEEKLY IN LIVE Tn“ I York County. Burtionery and Bunlneu tn connection, Price H.000. Term. “bond WitFon l'u In: Company, " West Adelaide , Toronto. NEW YORK? LATEST MODEL AGENTS! BIG Mtt.NKy-.t Our dollar book. "homruvt pron of lrelund." Bent hunk ed; write at once for Free nun Terms; freight/bald. credit Nichol: Limited,' Publishers. T' I Fruit, Stock} (him "r In} write H. w. Dawson. “ramp! Co1borne 81.. Toronto. I. V. DAWIO'. 001110“. In. T, tits J I. v. nan-ox. In», Colbcrne Bin; Toronto. JULY and AUGUST 2'. G. Y. “OWN. Regutrar, Kingston, Ont, iii-) EENgs KINGSTON. ONTARIO Alt. APPLIED DCIENCE EDUCATION vacuum MEDICINE cm'm'l'e"k'llua F YOU WANT TO BI‘Y (pl SUMMER SCHOOL Come 1 "in. Reggie In 1"!â€an pon “LE ATENTS â€80'. "020' & DAVII no It. - Bt., lustre-1 â€GILLLIEOUB. LG! "I WAX In D "to [or Interaction 101 omniisi A. I. "WIDIOI ' a... - {096 7' _ “to" nuns. road - an". Bo only. or Money form Bus land can "The new lonlble mom-tea thu, .0 lamentably lucid". in home dressmaking) my Ion your dreu In mum ed and Btted (“a ,4 “My page on. " In. m Each part 15 made In t trained expert frnr the "ry bent malt-rm} Bun and skirt cos-'. with fast black Jersr. Cioth. to which drawn: may be pinned. Sm- " to N. bunt measur- Two styles. dander 'nd an†or - hip Air, clrls from 14, Hi. 1! Tel". You 01mm)! â€our. the twining. ttrseerut tine. go ugqch sought try mph " INVENTION N UNIVERSITY The Ark Course um be when hymn-mun draw. but Mudent dam-g to gradual must "(and on session. pon WIN of hr-Mk ENGINEEiTNG HO M E STUDY u M 2 Fiom W. - I DMWQ‘.’ Why take chance: by asking for "A Dollar's Worth of Sugar ?" mm! I "dt'tt Sim "I "" " ul PACKAGE liq-d t't'Y CANADA SUGAR n 'ihort in»: 50 ti