msy @ [3 scb £ ® 44 4 "I must have that hat. Ul be a b!ul)de." One Thing Leads to Another. Employer â€" What! I‘ve just agreed to give you every Saturday off as a holiday and now you want an increase of salary. Emnloyeeâ€"Yes, sir, so I can enâ€" jov my holiday. il!l ; I had a good appetite and was completely cured. In the years that have elapsed since I used the Pills not a twinge of the trouble has reâ€" turned. To me Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are the greatest medicine on carth, and I never lose an opporâ€" tunity in recommending them to other sufferers, for I feel that were it not for their use I would have been in my grave long ago."‘ f What Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills did for Rev. Mr. Nowlan they have done for thousands of others and will do for you if ailing. They not only cure cases of stomach trouble, but rheumatism, partial paralysis, heart palpitation, St. Vitus dance, and all other troubles that have their origin in a bad condition of the blood and nerves. The Pills are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 30 cents a box or six boxes for 82.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine (o., Brockville, Ont. but do not rub. Wash off the Cuticura Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water and continue bathing for some minutes, This treatment is best on rising and retiring. At other times use CutbmSoap&edyfmthoWudh&h. to assist in preventing inflammation, irriâ€" tation and clogging of the pores, the comâ€" “mdmmum tious. Sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. Libersl sample of each mailed tu.-na-p.&lutqï¬..m d.nth_-l-:.. Address postâ€"card ‘‘That is a beautiful hat.‘" ‘A charming hat.‘"‘ said the salesâ€" lady. ‘"but not suitable to a brunâ€" ette. Now if you were only a blonde." F‘c~ pimples and blackheads the following is a most effective and economical treatâ€" ment: Gently smear the affected parts with Cuticura Ointment, on the end of the finger, on o SmE «ERMT CE POStâ€" *Cuticura, Dept. D, Boston, U. 8. A." "I used â€"â€"â€"â€" and â€"â€"â€"â€" Oil, also a fow other oils and they did no good. I then tried a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointâ€" ment, washed my head with the Soap and warm water, and applied the Ointment. After the first time my hair stopped falling. I got one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Ointment. I continued l;du&; for a few months and my head is now well." (Signed) Miss Myrtle Davis, June 3, 1914. 58 De Salaberry St., Quebec, Que.â€" "About six years ago dandruf#f began to form on my scalp. At first I didn‘t notice it, but my hair began falling out gradually and it kopt gettiag worse. The itching and burning were so bad that I scratched and irritated my scalp. I was kept awake at night by the irritation. 1 . became constipated and was forced to use injections daily. This went on for about two years; I grew weaker and weaker; my weight fell off from 185 to 125 pounds ; I had a hacking cough and appeared to be going into a decline. All this time I was being treated by the best doctors but without the least benefit. Night after night I could get no sleep the pain and agony was so severe. On consultaâ€" tion the doctors decided I was suftâ€" fering from cancer of the stomach, and advised an operation as a means of saving my life. This I reâ€" fused to undergo, and began to look forward to an early death. Just then a friend advised me to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. T had no faith in any medicine and at first refused, but my friend was so persistent that finally I gave in and purchased half a dozen boxes. By the time these were gone I felt much stronger and the distress was not so severe. I continued their use and each sucâ€" ceeding box wrought a marked imâ€" provement in my condition, till by" the time I had taken a dozen boxes, every pain and ache had left me; my strength increased ; my weight was back where it was before I was Itching, Burning, Irritated Scalp. Kept Awake at Night, Used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointâ€" ment. Now Head Is Well. There are two ways usually adopâ€" ted in trying to cure indigestion or stom&;h trowbleâ€"one, fl:‘d \:’hroog way, by. using purgatives r drugs which only act locally and which in the long run cause more distress by weakening the whole systemm. The other way and the right way is the Dr. Williams‘ manâ€" ner of treatmentâ€"that is to nourish and build up the stomach by supâ€" plying plenty of new, rich, red blood. CGive the stomach this muchâ€" Cured by the Use of Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People DANBRUFF AND _ FALLING HAR needed supply of new blood and distress will disappear and stay banished forever. The new blood strengthens the nerves of the stoâ€" mach and gives it the necessary power to digest food. Thousands bear witness to the value of the Dr. Williams‘ treatment through the blood. _ Among them is the Rev. P. D. Nowlan, of Summerville, N.S., who says: "I certainly have great reason to recommend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, as they were the means of saving my life. Till I reached the age of thirty I never knew what pain or sickness meant, but after that my stomach failed me and food of any kind caused untold distress. iwo Years of fornne 7 Minard‘s Liniment Cures Oandruf. Samples Free by Mail No Trouble to Change. "XCCTIEEN INUItATy attache at Conâ€" stantinople. â€" The Government at Berlin was not even consulted. It was notified of a fait accompli. Modern Bourbon. The Kaiser ranks as the most modern and progressive of monâ€" archs. His intimates have _freâ€" quently told me in ultraconfiden. ! _ But it cannot be possible that | these or any of them had a word to say that really counted. The Kaiâ€" ser has interfered always in the things of peace. Is it conceivable that he would keep his hands off in the affairs of war? 1’ Muzzle Taken Off. _ The November storm of 1908, which set his throne rocking as it never rocked before, taught the Kaiser the perils of ‘"butting in." But not for long. The muzzle which Prince Bulow placed upon him soon grew irksome, and when Prince Buâ€" low himself was compelled to retire the muzzle went with him. ‘ If the records of the German Forâ€" eign Office could be scanned they would unfold a wondrous tale of the interfering activity of William II. It is one of his penchants to go over the heads of Foreign Secreâ€" taries and play international poliâ€" mn his own. He sent General von Sanders to Turkey as headâ€"of the reorganization commisâ€" sion of the.Ottoman Army after unâ€" derground negotiations with the German military attache at Conâ€" stantinople. The Government at Burlin was not even exnaulkaA» TL The hand on the throttle of the engine of State is the steelâ€"gloved hand of the Supreme War Lord. That is another of the Allâ€"Highest Person‘s official titles, by the way. English newspaper readers someâ€" times think its employment is heavy journalistic irony. The military rank of William II. in peace and war is that of the Oberstenkriegâ€" sherr (Highest War Lord). Kaiser Willed War. Bo it is fatuous to think that anyâ€" body in the wide world could have been responsible for this mad war precipitated by Germany except William II. The military party may have wished it ; the Navy has been waiting for it. But the Kaiser willâ€" ed it, because only Heâ€"they spell him with a capital letter alwaysâ€" could do so. I believe that Herr Doktor _ vyon â€" Bethmannâ€"Hollweg, who has been called the incarnaâ€" tion of passionate doctrinairism, unâ€". doubtedly would have preferred peace. I am quite sure that the inoffensive and knightly Herr von Jagow, Secretary of State for Forâ€" eign Affairsâ€"a bridegroom of only seven weeksâ€"sighed for the joys of honeymoon and not for Armagedâ€" don. ‘"‘Tirpitz the Eternal," I believe, is the only statesman who has ever even approximately imposed his own will of iron upon that of his Imperial master. Prince Bulow used to get his own way occasionally beâ€" tween anecdotes in a promenade round the gardens of the Imperial Chancellery. But the point reâ€" mains. Germany under William II. has been a oneâ€"man country so far as its administration is concerned. Others have helped built it but none has helped to "run‘"‘ it. No one who has not lived in Gerâ€" many can possibly comprehend the overâ€"allness of the Kaiser. His official title is not the Allâ€"Highest Person without a reason. He is it. Berlin cannot erect a public founâ€" tain, an opera house, an elevated railway station, or a statue withâ€" out his allâ€"highest approval. Ifhis omnipotence extends to the unconâ€" sidered trifles of national life, visâ€" ualize his almightiness in connection with the affairs which count. A great career is impossible without his favoring smile; a frown from Jove wrecks it irreparably. Chanâ€" cellors, ministers, generals, admirâ€" als and burgomasters propose. The Kaiser disposes. KAISER CHWHEF "BUNERâ€"IN" tim of his own prophecy, never opined that William II. would be not only his own Chancellor, but his whole Government; like another Kaiser, the State itself. Poohâ€"Bah of Germany. The Emperor William, like the rest of the Germans, was an admirâ€" er of "The Mikado." You will know what I mean, therefore, when I say that he is the Pooh Bah of Modern Germany. It is the busiâ€" ness of the Quadruple Alliance to see that he does not become Lord High Everything Else. Bismarck Expressed the Same Idea More Than Thirty Years Ago. It was a witty American who, hearing once in Berlin that the Kaiâ€" ser had found time to object imperâ€" ially to a proposed tramwayâ€"line across Unter den Linden, said : ‘‘Say, William II. is sure enough the logical candidate for the presiâ€" dency of the International Society of Buttersâ€"in.‘‘ A "butterâ€"in‘"‘ (i.e., one who ‘"butts in‘‘) is one of the etymological gems with which our transatlantic cousins have enriched the King‘s English, says the Lonâ€" don Daily Mail. It is derived from the goat, who butts. It means a person who not only rushes in where angels fear to tread, but does so habitually, incessantly, joyouslyâ€" and egregiously. The facetious American phrased it differently, but the idea was exâ€" pressed more than thirty years ago by Bismarck himself, when he said of the future Kaiser: ‘"‘This young man will be his own Imperial Chanâ€" cellor.‘‘ Sagacious as he was, Bisâ€" marck, destined to be the first vicâ€" wWHAT A ~WITTY â€" AMERICAN SAID OF EMPEROR. Steelâ€"Gloved Hand. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ~ q, (4°° 0C 0 30 VHC SUTACE again, At the London General Postâ€" Office, a similar staff of cats is maintained. It is their duty to proâ€" tect the mails from rats, and when past work they are pensioned off, just like other Government emâ€" ployees. WonlitiReatidets Alistl â€"1 > 202 0) 2 der Valetta, and, like the pit once they are taken below seldom ascend to the surface Mailta also has its Government cats. They are kept in the great subterranean reserve granaries unâ€" der Valetta, and, like the pit ponies once they are taken below, they anl P um Pa is * mupdhey‘d & Mc ue se N they are given a similar shore. In Hong Kong, for instance, durâ€" ing the epidemic of ratâ€"borne Buâ€" bonic plague, some few years back, many handreds of cats were imâ€" ported, and set to work to exterâ€" minate the rodents. They proved, however, to ‘be very poor ratâ€" catchers. In France, too, cats are used by the Government authorities to proâ€" tect military stores from the depreâ€" dation of rats. and in order to train them, and to ascertain their fitâ€" ness for their work, they are sent for a sea voyage. If they are found equal to killing the rats always found in the lower holds of vessels, We meenelh m 20 c 9 Wnn ic ltepee Cats Used by Governments to Exâ€" terminate Rats. A suggestion made that the rat nuisance should be fought by means of armies of cats has already been tried elsewhere. Minard‘s Liniment Gures Burns, Ete, Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, Patent Solicitors, Montreal, report that 82 Canadian Patents were issued for the week ending Septemâ€" ber 8th, 1914, 58 of which were granted to Americans, 14 to Canaâ€" dians, 9 to residents of Great Briâ€" tain and Colonies and 1 to residents of Foreign Countries In the United States for the same week, 654 were issued, 7 of which were granted to Canadian Inventors. INFORMATION FOR INYVENTORS They Have No Windows and Furniâ€" ture Is Absent. The absence of furniture and of what we should consider the ‘bare necessities of life is the outstandâ€" ing impression of any visit to a Chinese house or palace, writes Miss Violet Markham 1a the Westâ€" minster. A Chinese palace is mereâ€" ly an exterior with magnificent painted beams and a tiled roof of many colors. The desperate disâ€" comfort of these places as living houses judged by our standards jumps to the eyes. A Chinese house has no windows, only trellis work pasted over with paper. The Chinese eat, sleep and conduct the business of life whenever the fancy takes them. They have no special rooms setâ€"apart for special purâ€" poses. They eat on their beds and sleep on the floor. For heating purâ€" poses they have evolved what is known as the stove bed, consisting of a raised platform at the end of the room, which is heated with hot air in winter time, the only warm spot in the house, for there are no fireplaces. They have no beds, only bedding, and the Emperor would sleep huddled up in a quilt on the stove in the same way as his humâ€" blest subject. _ Ellaâ€"Her face speaks for itself. :‘eLllnâ€"Yes, and it is very plain No Remedy Like Old "Nerviline" to Cure Pain or Soreness. That terrible acheâ€"how you fairly reel with itâ€"that stabbing, burning neuralgiaâ€"what misery it causes. Never mind, you don‘t have to suffer â€"use Nerviline, it‘s a sure cure. Not an experiment, because nearly forty years of wonderful success has made a name for Nerviline among the peoâ€" ple of many different nations. "There is nothing speedier to end Neuralgic headache than oldâ€"time ‘Nerviline,‘" writes Mr. G. C. Dalgleish, from Evâ€" anston. "It is so powerful and peneâ€" trating that it seems to eat up any pain in a minute. My family couldn‘t get along without Nerviline. We alâ€" ways keep the 50c¢. family size bottle handy on the shelf, and use it to end chest colds, sore throat, coughs, earâ€" ache, toothache and pain in the back. My wife swears by Nerviline. For cramps its effect is astonishing and we believe it is better and speedier than any other household family remâ€" edy." One of the most vehement assurâ€" ances dinnedâ€"in my ears was that the Kaiser‘knew nothing*of Ausâ€" tria‘s plans to humiliate® Servia. No more absurd fiction was ever perpetrated. The Kaiser‘s whole record banishes the thought to the realm of the grotesque. He probaâ€" bly did not actually write the Note from acceptance of which even the selfâ€"respect of Servia reeled ; but he was not far off when it was forâ€" mulated. _ William the Meddler could not be an innocent byâ€"stander when things are done which mean the eventual clearing of his fleets for action and the hurling of his legions at all and sundry. Nerviline Ends Neuralgia, Brings Relief Instantly medieval of kings. ; ;‘They say there is no man in Gerâ€" m’n{migrwwin&r.new idea. His i j«of art and music and litâ€" erature, are desoribed as at least three generations behind his time. studious observers among us thoughtâ€"you would be told that the Fatherland had aspired greatly and mounted high in spite of William II.â€"not because of him. 3 tial moments that he is the most When you asked such critics how it is that Germany under him grew great and powerfulâ€"not as great PUSSIES DRAW PEXNSIONs CHINESE HOMES. job on ted, on the margin of which the Czar will write his views. All this is the result of Nicholas‘ now chroâ€" nic dislike of seeing the human face. When Minister of Education Sasso went to Tsarkoe Selo, immediately after the restaurant scandal, in which he was publicly boxed by two young men, he was not received. Basso thought this was a hint to reâ€" sign. In reality, it meant that Nicholas was in one of his antiâ€" human moods. Even Premier Goreâ€" mykin was sometimes turned away. When Witte was Premier he had audiences three times a week, and Stolypin had two weeks audiences. Now the head of the Government contents himself with one weekly This is reflected in the reports of the police building department, which show that since 1905 there have been seven times as many large villas and goodâ€"class apartâ€" ment houses put up in Moscow as in St. Petersburg. High politics are seriously affected. Under Alexanâ€" der III. and his predecessors the foreign diplomats had opportunities of talking to the Czar every week : and Bismarck, when Ambassador at St. Petersburg, carried on his most important negotiations with Alexâ€" ander II. direct. Such a thing is no longer possible. Ministers also have cause of comâ€" plaint. Twice during the present reign their opportunities of talking politics with the autocrat have been curtailed. Up to 1905 every Minisâ€" ter had one weekly audience, when the Czar was at St. Petersburg or at either of his suburban palaces. He was further summoned for speâ€" cial audiences two or three times a month, and he had the right, when ‘nï¬airs were pressing, to demand special audiences . After 1905 the weekly visit was all that was left. Weekly Visits Cut Short. During the last year the weekly visits have been cut short. On the days appointed for audiences the Czar‘s aideâ€"deâ€"camp telephones to the Ministers‘ quarters, asking if there is anything pressing, as, if not, the audience may be delayed or a memorandum may be submitâ€" Diplomats, high officials, and the chiefs of the army regard the imperâ€" ial seclusion as a scandal. Angriest of all are the diplomats. Some of them have been in St. Petersburg a whole decade, and during that deâ€" cade there have been only two court entertainments. The levees, drawâ€" ingâ€"rooms, and court balls have enâ€" tirely ceased. St. Petersburg, once Europe‘s liveliest city, is now the dullest. Big nobles without official positions have taken to living in Moscow as the livelier town. Bince then Nicholas has been more of a hermit than ever. When the Romanoff tercentenary was celeâ€" brated last year only a few thouâ€" sand frightened subjects saw their autocrat‘s frightened face over the heads of menacing soldiers. Now even the motor car tours around the palace have been curtailed, and Tsarkoe Selo becomes more and more a monastery of gloomy people, who are allowed small communicaâ€" tion with the outside world and who keep their mouths discreetly shut. These operations mean that Nichâ€" olas II. is withdrawing more than ever from human life and realizing the nickname given him by his subâ€" jects after the massacre of January, 1905, "Schimnik Nikolai,‘"‘ the herâ€" mit Nicholas. For three years Nicholas ventured only twice out of his palace cell, and then to St. Peâ€" tersburg. Later he made some cenâ€" tenary journeys, showing himself to few, and fugitive tours through Italy and Germany. This qualified return to the world got a bad check by the assassination in 1911 of Stolypin. Nicholas II.‘ is having a new wall built to the north of Peterhof Park, where he dwells every summer, and he will shortly have the high gates of Tsarskoe Selo made still higher. These are signs and symbols of his latest hermitâ€"like phase. _ At the new palace at Livadia, whence he recently returned, were other herâ€" mit innovations, such as soundâ€"proof doors in the west wing where he works, and for this he brought all the way from France the architect Robert Chaudet. Nicholas 1. Hides Himself From the Outside Worldâ€"Fears a Assassination. The assaseination bx a woman, of Rasputin, the priest ‘of Mystivsn, who was reputed to be the power. behind the Russian throne, u.gi.in"‘ calls attention to the curious life led by the Czar of all the Russias, who has shut himself off from nearly everybody but the spiritualists who have the ear of the Czarina and] CZA LIVES BERMHT: UFE AUTOCRAT:OF RUSSIA LEADS A CURIOUS EXISTENCE. Angers the Diplomats. IS8UE 4#4â€"‘14. Investigations show that the brain of the famous M. Bertillon, late head of the Identification Deâ€" partment in the Prefscture of Poâ€" lice in Paris, was considerably above the average in weight. Such brilliant men as Bismarck, Cuvier, Kant and Turgenief also possessed brains far beyond the portion alâ€" lotted to ordinary mortals. Turâ€" genief possessed one of the heaviest brains _ on record. Apparently. therefore, that peculiar grey matâ€" ter known as brain plays a very important part in the success of mankind. .We are apt to dub a failâ€" ure as "lacking in brains.‘"‘ Conâ€" tradictory to this, however, is the fact that men whose genius has moved the world, and whose brains will be remembered for all time, have been the owners of brains far below the average in weight. The brains of Descartes, Bhelly, and Bchumann, for instance, weighed considerably below the normal standard. w " Eo Oemnntme! CO2s 200( gie, haven‘t you tried and failed 1 Reggieâ€"Can nothing induce you to change your mind and marry 1 . Miss Keenâ€"Evidentlvy not, Regâ€" The new Lake Shore line of the C.P.R. has been used for pasâ€" senger traffic since June 29. A freight business is also being carried on. This new line gives practically a new route between Montreal and Toronto, and greatly facilitates in handling the enormous traffic, pasâ€" senger and freight, which passes through this territory. The work was commenced about two years ago, and entailed a cost of nearly twelve millions of dollars. That it will create new business is confiâ€" dently believed ; but a consideration which is not directly associated wit«h1 profits, yet is not alien thereto, i'i that by the duplication of the tracks there is set up a closer communicaâ€" tion between the two great centres of population in the Dominion. A vessel leaving Liverpool for San Francisco, and going from the Merâ€" sey through the canal, will only have to cover 7,857 miles, against 15,250 round the Hornâ€"a saving of nearly 50 per cent., or 7,393 miles. The time of the passage through the canal is put at 8 to 10 hours, and through the series pf wonderful locks at 3 hours. The total number of men employed on the historic work has been 40,000. Other figures are equally astounding, including the estimated total cost of $375,â€" 000,000. The total length of the canal is only 50 miles, but it will mean a saving in distance for vessels going from New York to San Francisco of no fewer than 9,540 miles, for round Cape Horn the route is 14,â€" 840 miles, and through the canal 5,300 miles. From other parts of the world enormous timeâ€"saving, too, will be effected. Will Mean Enormous Timeâ€"Saving for Vessels. Now that barges are going right through the Panama Canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and now that 1915, when the official inauguâ€" ration is to take place, draws near, a few figures of wonderment will be of interest, says London Answers. The above straightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of a wellâ€" known miller in Rogersville, is proof sufficient that Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are a wonderful woman‘s medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Hamilton‘s, 25¢. per box. All dealers or The Catarrhâ€" ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. "For years I was thin and delicate. I lost color and was easily tired; a yellow pallor, pimples and blotches on my face were not only mortifying to my feelings, but because I thought my skin would never look nice again I grew despondent. Then my appetite failed. I grew very weak. Various remedies, pills, tonics and tablets I tried <without permanent benefit. A visit to my sister put into my hands a box of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. She placed reliance upon them and now that they have made me a well woman I would not be without them whatever they might cost. I found Dr. Hamilâ€" ton‘s Pills by their mild yet searching action very suitable to the delicate character of a woman‘s nature. They never once griped me, yet they estabâ€" lished regularity. My appetite grew keenâ€"my blood red and pureâ€"heavy rings under my eyes disappeared and toâ€"day my skin is as clear and unâ€" wrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills did it all." When a man was brought to a judge it was taken for granted he was guilty, and if he did not conâ€" fess he was tortured and made to do so. Witnesses, too, were openly bribed. In fact, giving evidence for or against an accused person meant a living to a portion of the comâ€" munity, and these witnesses naturâ€" ally favored those who paid best. How a Sick Woman Oneâ€"sided and Unjust. .The Corean judge dispenses jus tice in the open, and by etiquette only the judge can sit. Every one else must stand, except the prisoner and his friends, who are forced to tion audience and with Until Recently Trials Were READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY. WHAT THE CANAL COST. Genius and Brains. NEW C.P.R. LINE. Nothing Couldn‘t. €OREAN JUSTICE. Can Regain Health communieated by as 1 see you are a judge, these‘‘â€" and the grocer smiledâ€""these are handâ€"picked.‘‘ Of course," she said hastily, blushing, ‘"‘why, I might have known. Give me a bushel, please.‘"‘ Aiter the bride had inspected all the fresh vegetables in the store, punched a few, and inquired prices all round, she said to the patient clerkâ€"‘"These tomatoes are just twice as dear as those across the street. Why is it?‘ "Ah, yes, mu'hm, to ‘be sure ; but, you know, Her Dadâ€"Does that young man you‘ve been keeping company with intend to get married or to reâ€" main single? Daughterâ€"I think he‘s on the fence. papa. Dadâ€"Then throw him over. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Gente,â€"A customer of ours cured a vory bad case of dbu?er in a valuable horse by the use of MINARD‘8 LINIMENT. Yours truly, VILANDIE FRERES. ‘"‘"A militant suffragette, son, is a woman who wants to vote so badly that she forgets to powder her nose." Hard, Soft, or Blecding ? ette 1" Every bridge and tunnel was measured, then the box was reâ€" duced to eight feet, telescoping Mr. Giraffe, but he arrived safely in London none the worse for his cramped journey. A big elephant is an awkward aniâ€" mal to handle, especially to get aboard ship. Elephants, as a rule, hate ships. When Barnum bought the famous Jumbe for $10,000, it took about a week to persuade him to enter the box in which he was eventually shipped. ‘‘Bcience attacks the sandwich," is a headline. Here‘s hoping it has better luck with it than we have had with some purchased at railâ€" way lunch counters. No matter what kind or where located, any corn is promptly cured by Putnam‘s Corn Extractor; being purely vegetable it causes no pain. Guarantee with every bottle of "Putnam‘s" use no other, 25¢. at all dealers. A young giraffe, even before shipâ€" ment, is worth at least $1,000, and needs two men to look after it. One that was sent from Delagoa Bay to the London Zoo was eleven feet high, and was packed in a huge box ten feet high, with an opening in the top for the lengthy creature to put its head out. Something like #250 worth of fodder was shipped for its consumption on the voyage, and when it was landed the box was found to be too big to go through the railway tunnels. coast. For twenty years, from 1880 to 1900, only three giraffes were brought to Europe. During the present century the supply has been larger, owing to the opening up of East Africa, particularly of the Sudan. More animalsâ€"wild ones, that is â€"are shipped from Bingapore than from any other port in the world. Singapore is the collecting place for which actually specialize in this trade and cater for it. Elephants, panthers, h.ogw‘- deer and monkeys of many kinds, crocodiles, snakes, in huge varietyâ€" all theasare shippodâ€"sat Bingapore. The collectors buy snakesâ€"wholesale The most precious of all fourâ€" legged passengers is a girafie. A girafie is a most difficult creature to catch alive, and when caught too often dies before it reaches the Wild animals won‘t stand confineâ€" ment in the hold of a ship. They are all, or almost all, carried as deck cargo. This means a lot of extra risk, for a bad «torm or a sudden change of temperature may play havoc with a valuable consignâ€" ment. from the Chinese who are particuâ€" larly good about getting the creaâ€" tures they want. _ yA ~ ~egn Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. PORT OF WILD ANIMALS. Singapore Collection Place for Sayvâ€" Battle Without Powder. "Pa, what is a militant su Timeâ€"Tried Ingredientsâ€" These Honest, . Might Have Known. eodcomation. Of approved raw materials, Masier painters will materials exist. Your own s that acie is 3 kmmï¬u&uwumluhm Specify Ramsay for your next bigâ€"jobâ€"and for the odd jobs you do y Ramsay finish. Nfl!&t-thloal Ramsay 4"3-1«â€31'“?.3 Best Regards to Science. In RAMSAY PAINT A Hard Bump Coming. is a militant suffragâ€" Y & SON CO. (Established 1842) MONTREAL & you & the . most accurate materials, Master painters will t tige, o AINT ueJ ‘EST.. 18425 /A â€" _ Dr. Morse‘s ® Indian Root Pi! Regularity Bheâ€"It must be man | One drF.\.\ $ years and years, an have a new dress i Heâ€"That‘s why c lasts a man for vea Except for the great many men v be heard of. _ weeli, _ mused . $ Harry, as he was being into a clean white suit, been an exciting week, mother? Monday we w Zoo, Wednesday 1 lost Thursday â€" was Lily‘s party, Friday I was sick, I had my hair cut, and 1 am rushing off to Sunda; CANCI!. TUMORS. LUMPS g10 internal and external, cured wit. out “t..:». '&, °l‘:uh°T). lll;ectment Wrin re s T. 11 8.. LAmited (‘omnnnm«e :?:P Media oD wW. LX LN LIVE g“_'_‘s' .‘g:!&, Stationery AX York County. Stationery and Bm Business in connection. ."Pr‘t:.: §4,000, Terms liberal Wilson Publiy P 0:-1 T1 West Adelaige Stray y mail Free. Murine F Colborne St.. Toronto Minard‘s Liniment Relioves Neural8h K. W. DAWSON, Colborne St. A great smap at this price Full measure rolis 400 sq. {« in each. Use it ‘lemlfulh a this price. SAMPLE FREE Lowest prices on record A C(« Genuine Asphalt Felt Roofing Ral 100 per cent. saturation, conâ€" 106 mï¬-:ol‘lolurocm;;u lnhf.n & A rol 08 square feet with nails and cemet BaAmPLE "Free MAMILTON %%> _ "Neyygz2n2n7?â€" IDADUfACturers to sagrb, stocks in order to keep tm mills running. To the alert buyer this sents an unprecedented Opportunity 1o money. These chances come only once in; timeâ€"when they do come it pays to act gua Wall Board takes the place of both lath and rlnler. It gives a finished wall without further decorating. Anybody can put it on. Now selling at a specia BUILDING PaAPrEer "‘Well, # YOU WANT To BUY or WALL BOARD Climax of a . DAWBON, Minoty Colborne a.n." . ty Colborne Smz WEWEPAPERS roR ROOFING PIGEON, PIGEON & Pavs St. James St., + M wea Write for info l!lun“\ ATENTS$ selling at a s SAMPLE MISCELLANEOUS. SEED POTATOEs mNE P90 BVY OR s®uL2 tock, Grain or D.lrr"‘t" + D.w:?:. Brampton, or i are the bulwat of RAMSA o U A L11 oF INYEXTIOXs ut rawmeey Miis 4C as To s price Cen 0 sq. feet Ra tifully at 40 FREE, &A Giddy Whirl L tek R FREE woman 1 very part «d ging POT ATOR. t hub fall wi to y .‘ wiku‘g nA Fost x Ved n vesterdl iradg akes, 4 w her vea but vyou ® TOWN in h Chicap D y words, that eh« owledge of it if th, r. Heron‘s eare; and ith a peevish and su her face as they «t; y went up secondâ€" h, who was in the i â€" _ "We «hall g need know a tickets for th staille on pur k row. I thou , and if yo the tickete." "Oh, do let us & saered concer; atre, but it w otony ; besides, lot of trouble tc ead in the paper Ar _ ruch for them nd «poil our enj "I wish you wou da,. with a sigh Ladcs ielded. _ Mrs. Heron Eut "° 9 pate nd a ‘lo-' n‘-. to eay 3 Ing tie, enlivened the ; teing facetious remarks llm to 14a, who in .“5-. as far ae poss it of the carriage, and ) the han 0. 14. makin the hall, and ‘after Jou" ispute with the man who m into their Place, and \.) L:he tickets ‘and their n had left Heronda e one desire to «c ible, to earn h h was very sul} leabel informed } illâ€"tempered at the t know what to ma came in «oon ; n Mré. Meron ha« rmed lIda and Is=ab for a concert at evening. "It‘e a smered con« hat you need have n« \ regular s:;u affair great difficulty Fl‘h.mj' It‘s a ch: nobs of + E(‘ Miql be no en« the tickets becau into the country a while the (‘?l'.- a enjoy ourse ves; : a emered concert, | he were allowed | t« “uqurmu.;‘he add "It is very kind of y da; "but I think 1 hething BQ0T® BMe had beer > k.::‘lo'"‘i: l’.:'eal world , but t â€â€œ n take her, hlll‘(‘;’ m“' ~;~ was goi to take M.“ the ::nnoru and leh -â€"~L_!“ read and h CC Oe Poe L _ of the €arriage, an icentrate hber attentic mime. But though h it and ahe 00“#"0' ‘6 illbred jokes, i back to a « en she had sat b« eam and listened to ; m"m He ha« reat ) knew moply Creat C and looked long line of . dft b‘ way of d t. ith a moth understood w out into new eu ies, why he came } is wont, and why leâ€"faced girl who his presence. _ M 1, as she would ) he had taken a vip fas ambitiouns for fanted to see him b!ï¬tm of a reti ett in Wood Gr« nd Fometimes he ca aining to them : ng in the City, ] on one of | asions he was ket and knicke flattering con ike a country ger is conversation e mdeavored, as he pake bimeelf agre Of all the daye, lda fo: ; for on that day | a little ohllpel at . wh inistered." It was a U ite construction and p ill to one‘s very bonee ranted and ‘Hw led ; and Ida learned jous lips that only : mankind, hi« own see nd for heaven, and t he world was doomed t horrors of I"Iu('h he a . As «he eat in the uncoun often wondered whethe x believed . what . he he wae a bypocrit« wator. All thie was very hand to heavier was pro the :fl.ï¬ of her cousin ovening of her arrival enough to bestow ration of which che was ; but his admiration to pay her what pe eall "attentions," He « lier of an evening that arrival, and he sat b« ith his small evee fixed on face, to‘d ber an ffice and his fellowâ€"cle ks he impression that he poss r with a ceriain amount got her to play his a~ ectowing killing looks at he he "Maid of Athens r lane"â€"with a falee noie i: nt and promiei (u‘ph. Mrs. Here th a certain an svicion; but Ida e change®in Mr e was of the ca: home." thought yor ‘ph_remarked going, but »he i A Foolish rg. Heron eubscribed to a libr: and Jeabel read the latest «x An with avidity. «stuffing ther and if you do Jckete." ) let us go, 14 d _concert isn‘ but it will i Â¥; besides, Joe trouble to get the paper that for them. Do 1 our enjoy me you would go CHAPDER XXIX.â€"(Continued as ‘"‘delicious. . the days, lda fou TOW any for the n qpunrpos 1 thoug) of a ret Wood Gr she wae good en« promieir ir of 3 and n ‘fli;(;;\"a'. the song whic inted out som d his way _Over his wb carriages set 9n€. He; irable bar bes ‘de to Staff d widel y med to h he apy he uncor Or, the Bel he H Cou p« fr whil Mor