-rrt WW 31mm Nature Needs Aid in Making New Jiealth-Giving Blood 'li the Tht the - m a tank. To 2htu'.", - hue new blood, just " we. - be" new up to "new their MN hy. Nature Meade it, end nritb) out thin new Mood u ,rill het week and languid. I,',l - but twinge. ot than.“ oe the My mum»; was " punk“. on" " us We maple. or eruption: on â€an In other cm; thero iq merely . loading of (indium and a osriabU We. An: at these we aitt'ttt that tho blood " out of Grdor- that tho in- door We a! motor han banned your vttahty. What you need in wring is a tonic medicine to put, you rig-n. and in all the world of meukine there is no tonic on) equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pill; Them. pills Muddy make new rich, red blood-your ttreateet need in sprint This new blood drives out the seeds of disease and nukes euily tired men. women and chil- dren bright. octive and strong. Miss Edith Brown. Severn, B. c, saysw"! we: aa pele u . tthost. suffered from headaches, se- vere palpitation of the heart at the slightest exertion. I had little or no appetite and seemed to be drift- ing into a decline. I was attend- intt High School in Vancouver at the time. and the doctor advised pp Thosuop. ldidoosndwolml treatment for will: time, but it did not help me in tho least. Upon the advice of a friend l Ire-t tak- ing In. Williams' Pigk PMS, and in, Those Pills are sold by all medi- eine dealers or can be had by mail at w cents a box or six boxes for 32.50 [mm The Dr. Williams' Modi- eine Co., Brockvilk, Ont. I very mun time they give me back complete health, and enabled me to resume my studies. I hive enioyed the best of health since, sud owe it all to Dr. Williams' Pink Por." _ __ .. Minn-III Whirl Slightly Ilene-blot! Writer's (‘n-p. Many women since the war In†taken to knitting with a vigor that knuvm no bounds. Untoriuotstely their zeal has produced a defutito malady which may be compared with tennis elbow or writer's cramp. In one single country village "When any untrained not of mu:- tries is suddenly called upon to re- pvat indefinitely a. complex and un- ouutetsated sequence of move- menu." a London physician oaid recently. " spasmodic panlys'u u Tery likely to develop. In knit†m-uritis the trouble begins with the wurkrr feeling that the usual wrist \and finger movements clu- not be followed out with their car tummy ease. Later the muscle! got stiff, and finally, in the later stngv. develop a ppumodicncnmp In one single country village where the knitting fever ran very high three women no "uttering in various degrees from what is known as "knitting neuritic." It Illa-ts the upper um and shoulder rather than the hngers, and seems to affect only those who knit with difficulty, having not practiced the art in their youth. It is "aid that. the English method of knitting. which ia equally popu- lar in England as the German method. has a greater tendency to produce this affection. a man as the knitting needles m taken into the fingers. A peculiar characteristic of the ailment is that while the fingers are thus dated when any attempt is made to knit, there is no interference with other varieties of ftnger motement.. "The only treatment is to give up knitting indefinitely. Bometimeo after a couple of months complete rm: one can begin again. In other can" a year or more of abstention is lwcessary. otherwise the trouble recurs immediately." Tea Drinker Feared Paralysis. Steady use of either tea or oofieer often produces alarming symptoms, In the poison (caffeine) contained in these beverages acts with mop' Postum comes in two locum: Postu- Cereal-the edging! fem |-(Illl0t be weâ€. boiled. 13tt and 35° Whats. t "atant ttttttat can“. pox b. db . bot - Ami"!!! aft.. potency in son); persons than in others. -r was never a canoe drinker," “ me: a lady. "but a tea drinker. l mu very nervous, had frequent tur,1", (if sick headache and heart Cl:-1ll)!“. and was subject at mine. In sebert' attacks of bilious colic. "Nu end oi sleeplm nightee would have spells at night when my right side woulld get numb and tim. trle like a thousand needle. were prirkhus my fimh. Attimeo I could hardly put my tongue out of my mum}: and my right eye and car were affected. 7 â€The doctors told me to quit thing lea. but I thought I could not lite. without it-that it wauuxyonly an) I had been . to. drinker lot twetur the years; .m under the (1-00)“: care for fifteen. ".Umu: six months ago. I Bna1ly n tit t"t and commenced to drink q l', lam . i havss never had one spell of IL; F'rruhn'ne'= since and only one light avtack of bilious colic. Mis quit haying those numb lla " night, sleep well and In an in treqine “was†all 'fl/lu,', - Nam} given; by Candida ttortmst Co., Windsor, Ont. W â€Th Tutr' .to WohiBy". in pip. KN ITT, NG y III‘RITIS. IN , SHADOW Ill THE SPRING the an), . I!†LI medium Postum M wit fin ',tgl "Tho you at! . a 6 "tity,),.)':'),'?:,:,,,,,,, 'EU',',' o . ml tt ed. 150 and 850 a?" you _ Inhabla new. “U Buuilg 500 Pallets at I cost of $5- Writing in the American Poultry Journal. Mr. F. B. bnith of M' ton. Ohio. says: This mny seem in- possible but it cnn he done And even at less cost. it all concerned he" Winch. The writer bu bred single Comb Bull Leghorn. tor the put sixteen yen" and hltdhed than: each yen by the thousands and never raised n chick himself, but has done it by the hm" nest him on the halves. It hats been my plan lor the lat ten years to hatch out thousands of chicks in Doom- ber, January and Februnry, end by doing this tor yous. I hsve de- veloped a wonderful winter lnying strain, or in other words, I hive birds that produce eggs the yen around. If you raise chicks by the thousands in the three coldest months, you have got to get winter eggs and Iota of them, and "like be. gets like." If the pullet'a mother, her grandmother. and her grant grandmother, and so on, have all been good winter layers, you can readily see that this pallet has the blood back of her to produce eggs in cold weather. The same thing applies to show) birds. I never breed from birds unless they are good color, type. etc. I simply mention the blood lines of my birds end their egg qunlties as an illustration how to produce 500 pullets for 825. You can do this with most any breed of birds, bat remember you must give the farmers good stock and prove to them that they will get some- thing that will be a profit to them or t y will not go in with you, for mos all of them have a bunch of mo rels of their own. The first thing to do, is to pur- chase an incubator or incubators, that will hold 1,000 eggs. Thie should not be charged against your 500 pullets, for you have it to use in years to come. Any good breed- er will sell you 3,000 eggs for $225. This is $75 for 1,000. Say. for in- stance. that you have had bad luck and only hatched 2,200 chicks, los- ing 800 eggs. Now you give the chicks as they are hatched, to good farmers to raise on the halves, you take your half the hrst of October. Remember you gave them 2,200 chicks. Supposing the farmers have some bad luck and lose 400 of the chicks, fully developed, ready to lay when you bring them home. Out of the 1,800 you get 900 young birds. If 400 of them are oookerels, they can be sold at market price, fifty cents each, which will bring you $200. At least fbfty of the cooker- els should bring $2 each as breed- ers, but I only figure fifty cents each for them all. By paying $225 for the 3,000 egg? and selling your surplus cockere s for 8200, there are 500 fine pallets left and the 500 pullets only stand you $25. Now you are ready for the poultry business right and will make money from the start. I think I hear you say that the farm- er will get the worst of this deal, but there you are wrong. How many farmers will try to hatch tad raise 500 chicks? They usually hatch chicks all summer long, hav- ing them different ages, and the large ones kill and run over the omnll ones. Give him 500, all ot one age, good, full blooded stock, show birds and birds that are bred to lay the year around. Say the farmer hatches 500 chieks of his on, what will it cost him? m will have to set at least seventy hens and each hen will set one week be- fore he places eggs under her and it will take her three weeks to hatch the chicks and sixty days to raise the chicks. So she has lost ninety dnys of her most valuable time in the spring, when any old hen will lay Iota of eggs and during ninety days he should " least get 60 eggs frirm the old hey and fifteen eggs that he placed under her when she was set, would make a. total of " eggs. The eggs at two cents would bring Mr. Farmer $1.50 and by using seventy hens, he would lose $105. and I am sure he would not pay out near that amount. for feed for your 500 chicks. Therefore the farmer makes by raisin-g your fine birds and he has a fine Book left for himself. I have used this method for years with the farmers and I have them on my staff that, are well-to-do, that have ruined them for me on the halves for years, and they make money by it, or they would not keep it up. So many people so into the poultry business and pay out money tll year and do not get anything in return. Follow this plan and you can not lose. le ia not exaggerated end can be done on n much larger £830. A farmer hr the name of Nos, than Brrartt,9eiltort,,0yio, {an Ji, over-500 Single Comb Buff Leg- horns for me last year and Bll his feed cost him for the entire - flook was $69. Think this over and get in the business. Bold your job in the city and batch your chicks out in March, April and Mary and next ttStl you will have 500 pullets. The first of next January purchase more incubators and brooders and the following summer you can have a flodk of 5,000Mmds, and it you nut with the heatbnd to lay stock you 5%)qu clear at lust $2.00 on ry on that you has. member the mom: Iff2a It'.' and) you In.†the rt, on and. in by this method you gunnot 1oqd in the poultry. iMWh Weston In Tells Why Dodd" Kidney an. no So Pop-1n " the Patties. Ramadan, Alberta. my and (hreoiayl).--Juast m D,odd't Kf,1- nay Pills on no popular on the prairies in shown by the statement. of Mr. B. A. Clark, a well-known reaiiont of this place. .. -- M , “Since loam: West,†Mr. Clark states, “I was often troubled with my stomach and back. F11y.t1ls I decided to try DoddU Kidney Pills and before I had “ken more than half a box I wu so much benefitted that I recommended decided to try DoddU Kidney Pills and before I had taken more than half . box I was so much bmsef1ttod that I recommended them to a friend. He also found them tclronelit. I am still taking DoddU Kidney Pills. I would not be without them." In new countries bad water is one of the diftiewlties settlers have to fight and bad water makes its first attack on the kidneys. To resist this attack the Kidneys must be stimulated and strengthened. In other words the Kidneys need Dodd’s Kidney Pills. By giving the Kidneys the help they need people get new health, sod Dodd’e Kidney Pills add to their, popularity. AnoExpert Opinion on the Use of Newspapers. Whenever business has called me to a. city or town where I could get Mt touch with local automobile con- ditions in the laymen; or. po I have been struck by the interest of the prospective buyer in the me- chanism M the car he is inspecting, any: a representative of a. large automobile concern. This, eott- trary to the p.rottt genera.) belie} that an are bought on size and look: only. It in this eager desire for exact knowledge which had the largest influenoe in causing us to prepare a. series of advertisements dealing with the mechanical fea- tures of our on". We decided to ia,' ling-sew irdvi/Aiisementa in news- papers because we regard them as the medium that is immediately re- sponswe. Thetimsyuagoneh?ywheyt.tu automobile is purchased merely be cisupe it is good lopking. Quota ox a time the man about to buy an automobile looked only at the lines of the hood, to-day he is vitally and intelligently interested in what lines under the hood. - _ . . Since the work of the advertising department is to tell the public what it want-a to know and what it should know about aytom1rlriles in order to purchase intelligently, naturally we are keen to get our story as quickly as possible to the public. Having dccided to give what one might call on education in the mechanical (natures of our amplify any of these talks almost in a. day if we find there are reasons for doing so because of loca1.oon- ditionn in any wut of the country. Gr, we are using the newspapers because we can keep our hands on the pulse of tltpub1ie.irtterrat yy1 The nowspipir advertisements we are running are merely what the dezuerfrtsyo, to_cust.oqen yhen they come in singly to the showroom. By putting the dealer's answers in the form of newspaper announce- ments we seek to reach thousands in the same time that the dealer can talk to one or two or three. The education) edvergisimg _we have already used has shown that themanwbointendstobuyaoor not only reads it and studies over it, but he lays it aside and comes back to it. A Magic "litrTiliat" Ends Stilt Neck, anbago In these mechanical advertise- ments we have a comprehensive guide to the machine. With their rawings they give the owner an understanding of the details of construction and operation. You don't have to wait all day to get the kink out of a still neck it you rub on Nervilino. And you don't need to go around complaining about lum- bago any more. You can rub such things awny very quickly with Nerd iine. It's the grandest liniment. the quickest to penetrate, the speediest to one museum pain of any kind. Any Curable Muscular or Joint Pain In Instantly Relieved by Nervmno. One twentri1ets cent trial bottle of Nervillne will cure any attack ot lum- bago or lame back. This has been proved a thousand timem just A it was in the case of Mrs. E. J.. Grayden, of Caledonia. who write:- “I wouldn’t think of going to bed with- out lmowing we had Nervillne in the house. I have used it for twenty odd years and appreciate its value " a family remedy more and more every day. It any of the children get: a ma neck, Nerviline, cures quickly. It it is enrache, toothache. cold on the chest, sore throat. Nervillne is always my standby. My husband once cured himself ot a frightful attack of mm- baao by Nerviline. and for a hundred ailments that turn up in a large tam- lly Nerviline in by far the beat thing to hare about you." In England lawn! well-known novelists have apparently abandon- tl the writing of Romances, at trmportsrihr, no: the topical tttttt at w articles, "YW the _, Mid. B. G. Wells, LT " WHY M. A. OLA REcolIENDB‘ DODD’S GET TRIAL BOTTLE TO-DAY GUIDE TO PURCHASERS. KIDNEY PILLS. War and literature. and His Friend A Ola-Io Inventor of Even-gain he. an. to Ion-unpo- BirmmmtEaximd-NOim- "1fa-heonioinvesakor. Rm beaddedtutuauth-tprtso- tied}?! humor-o, . 'e? who e.? .use.his hand. a well us his brain. He began 31011-3. Before Emmy-goat ,tnOIPGTH-n My. he made tb mph in- atnmpnt which Gatadhirnuode- tecmme latitude. At fourjqen you! and sums months, working eight. hours in the morning sad sn- other eight in the attorooon, he was turning out wheo1-barromr--the best lot his employer had seen. M- other job at this period was making axle-trees of seasoned rook maple plank as hard as horn. Then came the first inwemtim: proper, an en- gine of destructkm t no mus a formidable as the . quick- firert. IN be frank, it was a. mouse- trnsp, and mightily ingenious. The trouble with the ordinary trap was that, when it had caught Que mouse, it could not catch tutother until the first had been taken out. Young hUximU device would wind up h"keaselou,aodmt_iuelt.ts great number of times. Five mice formed the first catch. Thes trap wan expensive, however, so it yield: ed place to something cheaper and even more curious. " made one," Sir Hiram balls in his osutobiogras- phy, "that required JP. coiled spring, the mouse It'll-elf doing all the work. BU mouseehip walked in, and touching the bait, abut him]! in; thutrightrmted him; he would attempt to coupe, and did escape mm a. mall CHN, but in doing so he not theta“) for the next customer, and so on." A little while, and he made the first sili- cated blackboard, preoenhing a. bill for twenty-four shillings and re- ceiving five t. From wood Bir Him turned to metal. He began by cleaning brass castings; than he was promoted to a lathe on rough out-iron work. And so to brtustrcrmsking valves and blow-off each for boilers. Next he was put to dismantling an automa- tie gas-Mine and turning out working drawing: of it. At the some time he was a ooppernrmith, when necessary. Also. he painted stripes on luthes, which was a good deal easier, if less exciting, than painting landscapes on the dash- boards of sleigh-ne of his earli- est Links. There followed such machine, a steam tap, a. loccm tive headlight for gas instead of oil, are lamps, drtaao-tsleeteioA1 ma- chines, and, very nearly and by ac- cident, diamonds! Thus his pro- gress until, in August, 1881, he went to London. Very soon after he made his first drawing of an automatic gun, that weapon which was to develop into the world-famous Maxim. Many were sceptical. To begin with, he found he could firm rather more than ten cartridges 6 second, min a belt feed, the gun loading and firing itself by energy derived from the recoil. Still there were unbe- lievers. They were speedily si- lenced, for the weapon was proved to fire 666 shots eminutol The gun which was its successor was much smaller, cheaper, and lighter, and became the standard for the world. Every experiment added to its vul- ue. Demonstrations were given in various, countries. There were other guns, too, including the Pom-Pom of South African war memory. In Switzerland his machine gun, in action again“ a. dummy buttery at a; range of twelve hundred metres, “technically killed three-quarters of the men and horses†in slightly less than one minute! Later. the German Emperor said of the Mu- im, which had put it: every shot in the bull’s ems of a target: "That is the trun-thers in no othtrr," Te Pom-pom, by the way. interested vastly Li-Hung-Ohsng, who made a. remark which is of considerable in- terest today, when Win is costing so many millions. "This gun," ho said, referring to the expenditure on cartridges. "firea altogether too fast for China" (650 per minute). Experiments with Powder. Meantime, Sir Hiram had turned his knowledge and his common sense to powders, and invented, for example, tb rumbles powder, to say nothing of re-disoovering in En land that new and powerful cqflouiw first d'nooyered in France and called Waite. Next, he pa.- touted I. {brigade to be propelled though the In, inventing a gun to “19w the demrsdo so that it would strike the water only e few het from its target. f,egP,p,2ttt included a ooAees ro ' a vignett- M the world owes " ' living, why not pull Mt our out; and proceed to collect itt - Man eoert-hyt, d the “no, the world " tull of Melon. tusd-Arthur, and, of couro'e, a flying an mu MAXIM. Various Inrentiorsa. Mr Hiram Maxim. FX automatic gas TORONTO -,/iti'iG' A»... the 'Mo . ni- Mb Hagan. W“ " French its“. to tho pr.dord, Bo wtiety for 'iiiritiiiiyiiii1itioeh',','l' Not at... Nikola-15"“ ly {and n - in mum to wv caution. mu (dry also be bold to 2rhildeerst" . [is Emu in . Mob of the hi.- tor,'%7irlrtiiG,rt,itee',: eludes all tales of magic nod w- pernatuml being., said they vote prohabl intinitoV older than the use ot u or the inventbn of the pottor's wheel. Incidentally all: suggested that the "trlaas slipper of Cinderella, " once up puzzhng and captivntins‘ s 4etail. d the story, to E11311" child‘EeuEu 1tt h; Ill] cmvovu- - -_e--" story to Bangui. children, irs duo to a. mutrtsmriation of the French of Penmult. Pursuit. wrote not 'Uouleir de verve!†but “oouliorde wit,†“nit†being a kind of fur. We my be lune, said Miss Hugon, that; Cinderella won little my shoes with In: round the top and had never heard _ot glass slippen. " t Sick Woman ' Can Regain Health READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY. I "For years I was thin and delta“- t lost color and was easily tired: a yellow pallor, pimples and blotchel on my toes were not only martin“): to. my feelings, but became I tttought my l akin would never look nloe again 11 new deepondent. Then my appetite tailed. I grew very weak. Variou- remediee. pills, tonice and tablets I tried without permanent tseueft. A visit to my sister put into my hands a box ot Dr. Hamilton's Plus. 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. Hnmil- ton's Pills by their mild yet â€urchins nctlon very suitable to the delicate character of a woman's nature. They never once griped me, yet they estab- lished regularity. My appetite grew "reen-mr blood red and pure-hee rings under my eyes disappeared and to-day my skin is no clear and un- wrinkled as when I was n girl. Dr. Hamilton's Pills did it all." The above straightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of e well- known miller in Rogersville, is proof tsuftieitrnt that Dr Hamilton's Pills are a wonderful woman's medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Hamilton's. Me. per box. All dealers or The Churn-h- CGGRio.n%bston, Ontario. Story of Victor Hugo’s Father and, a Wounded Moor. Just a century ago, in 1815, as a French writer reminds us, says the Youth’s Companion, Gen. Count Joseph Hugo, father of Victor Hugo, the famous poet, rendered his country the last service of an adventurous military career by de- fending for the second time the fortified town of Thionville. The first siege, although the gerrison was weak and the military supplies were wretchedly inadequate, lasted for eighty-eight days-one day more than the femous aiege of Lucknow. The place was abandoned only on the news of Na,poleon's down- fall, and woe reoccupied and held for him once more during the Burr. dred Days of " return. Thion- ville, which was renamed Diedea-- hofen by the Germans after the Franco-Prussian war, may some time find itself again in the var zone, since it is only a. few miles from the great fortress of Metz, and that is only ., few miles from the border of Itreneh_Lorrtyiue. The fame of Gen. Hugo in asso- ciated, however, chiefly with wu- fare of a more picturesque and dashing nature than siege open- tions usually permit. m Arved brilliantly in both Italy and Spnin, and especially distinguished himself in putting down bandits and guer~ rillss. That he was a men as meg- nanimous as he was brave is attest- ed by a, little incident of his career that his son narrated. Gen. Hugo, accompanied by a single trusted hussar orderly, had occasion, at the close of a. day of fighting, to ride across a portion of the battle field as dusk wee beginning to fell "He heard a feeble sound in the shadows,†wrote Victor Hugo. "It was a soldier of the Spanish army, who dragged himself along the roadway pale, bleeding, glsping, and who cried, 'A drink! A drink, in the nuns of pity.' “My father, touched, handed his canteen to his faithful hussar, and said, Were, give a drink to that poor, wounded fellow.' Suddenly, as the hue-sat, Hooping, leaned over him, the mu, 2. Moor of we sort, snatched the pistol he oarried and fired at my father's head, cry- ing, ‘Carmba y The bullet [mused so clope that the hat fell, and the charger rented wildly backward. m-um um. tutu-um M "'0ive him the drink all the ame,’ said my hetherr." ' hfaryUtt.otbstutrmeamsthe only name that has been borne by men and women alike, writes a cor- respondent of the London Chron- icle who has dipped into our old wish and other registers. Sir Patience Ward was Lord Mayor of London in 1680, Eve 8litthton ia mentioned in a. will of the six- teenth century and Grace Baldwin was an old landowner in America. 1tto_maunametsuarurpedbrthe ladies,, imrtamoeo occur of feminine Philips and Georges, and in one one a dough-her was duly baptized Noah. A tiaidautiheer a $9.15!}; of Wellington wan med Arthur in h): hortors and in Musing Church film is is mmyrrent'VrHiiGii4 J,' ,rite of Riohnd “who. Crtorford--% that book of the War. {ribbon lt aaytreu'riueaat 6rasuw-io., by. . srU corres- pondent. ED. t. CINDEIILLL'S mm "IN THE NAME OPPI'I‘Y." Names Canned by Wo-en. B1tteeent. te,tzshotttPh.i- cm "at! iTai.iishely 2'U'2'i unwed†baby!» "artheynrte* Mm older than the hum- at.vyst.so,n, of the by mailn unkind-11V she Dr. Willis ISSUE Ib-ng .e.ee-"hT-r--==--""rC CROSS, SICKLY BABIES NEI'erL" lets are 0014 " "rm." by mail at 35 oeota , Dr. WWW, Medial Ground to be Saturated With “it. -- . - A Dug-‘7 “Seven mom/he after tho begin- ning of the retreat of the Ger- man,†says Dr. Doizy, deputy for tho department of the Ardennee, “unburied dead ere being distsover- ed on the tiotgeiield of the Marne. In the centre of a village on the banks of the Mane, where the 'a_, â€Md-"mt we: cloning LII - mr'.-""- - banks of the Marne, where F" sanitary depamnem was clunng “my the debris, they brought to light a, body that was beyond identi- ficstion either u German or French. 7 - .. A *LMI-nndl, of Home! are um on... "w, stantly under brush in ditoheo and abhndoned trenches. They ere found not only in ditches, branches, and emntione made, by shells, but in wells, wring. and all the little stream of the region. In many places where it was pueblo for al _--- A- L"... ohnh- (lAld they were stream M the region. In may place: when it wu Poqaible for them to bury their dead they were insuttieieMir covered with earth, mm! were frequently buried in bro close proximity to sources of water anypl‘y. m... ___ -'.." A...» . â€WP-7' These conditions eint over I none MO miles long, end from 10 to 40 miles wide, with . total of from 5.000 to 6,000 square miles of ground, ' ooistderahie port of which required thorough dieinlec- tion to prevent the outbreak of epi- demics. Besides the bodies of men there were in this zone thousands of bodies of animals, part of them killed try shell tire and many ot them dead from starvation, having been abandoned by the fleeing population. Corns A: Cured ti Quick 3’5; MUST DISINFECT WAR ZONE. {may mum’vumww v, i-tturtastttmd.oodstmy= datum tsottsoe'tatmmutoi. 1hoas who know the Prince of Wales intimately ny thet he is u fond of a joke now " he we: when he was . little boy, and in hit nur- sery den hie quaint saying. we proverbial in the revel family. The late King Edward, “ye Peueon'e Weekly, need to tell with great gue- to the following etory. he King naked little Prince Eddie whet pert of history he l"? studying. "Oh," wavered the prinoe, "he pretended he was the can of t king, but he waan't. m wu the son of respectable parents." ";riuTiriiGa oi' inquired His Majestv anxioul to test his trraod- son'a knowledge. A - . -.. "“1171, -iioiit Perkin WM," re- pug 1yits.Rorst Eiqhnen- . . -. "Little Briggs certainly does have awful ludk.†"What his har- pened to him now l" "Why, he eloped in a. taxicab with the Yan Spender heiress, who had forgotten to take any money with her. Bo the taxi man. brought 'mn both back to her hther'l." Bodie- are those Canoes, Skiffs, Motor Boats rim rzrznnonouau LINE. Hub] " lay an. on an you mm It In a â€TIRIOIOUGH." Alw- had our ,0. up. at union. nodal. mm and tia- lull. Over am we and _ Writ. Mama. The than canoe In tho Pouches-om eranhta coma. at tor mm folder. Skins tor the m w Km. PM launch... an m an! pow- on. Oct folder-5.13m“ m M than. u “I w Fee'-" Over Bettie" Atteoted. Bespeotable Patel“. "I! tantalum“ mtoe can". mmâ€. - "runaway-I; our. " meow-nu --- - Arlt. , box tmen m l “In!†Co., Brook- also being Mid 'rp; l, White, W‘Wmd' .“I hue and Bahru for both all. terie. am. aim-inc not Iron mm! 3;- Fl/tnares ll- tructor In " trem. Amie! In of an "TIMI. -------"-e'-_e5rire E Alla! an! can“: -r.sqtqttr oea.ertqd Ill Inâ€! [or and. Only linm his. 0-- Dollar per bushel t m. up Consent-l"- Pride In". m “but new pom Fro. biiifitr,.tet.1: h so: .I, I" all“. POTATO}; E I M and lil,'drT,'d'l flf2ttth'h,1tt, Only tignited quunuty. at... tMuff; par bun-he! t.o.b. Bram». At- Con-chuf- Pride and New 3"... m “but no. pangs. Prices, m .003“. - ml. thrertil prcu tinatt . Cub mun mum ttNt m. ti. w. Damsou, Bump teudo rim-tin Inc: Jane tiale Louise" ttUdo Noe; I will (awn-A the -ikhietiesotillihooe'us Zeus no Rev. W Lrooel T- M was mm with acraze fur Ions m0. and blink“! his eldest nun Iarhh Ydusuo Odin Nod-w w Lyonal Toodmag Huh 15"" bum Sm la. Orme Cram“ c',] Nevil Dyna-t Plaotagtsoet. Minard'. Llnlment Co. Limited. Dear tttrs,---) hummus LIN. [MINT " our remedy tor lore mum colds and all ordinary ulmenu. " MVOI‘ un- to renew and was " never (all to renew unu promptly. CHAS. WHOUTEN. Port lulu-Na. [DUI "I “It“. you mind-cl" orâ€. qu,W.ter, AruAraaAt3ieue.. ' Mo th-ttag-s “is. a...“ to: look of um I)". _ mink-cucummugo u â€Ina-Mes. “not"! tbs family t" . fund par ext was tied. "Well, my chum are at . dif Souk, ago now." "Dittiaultt Why, they've all posed the monies and lemming "t have they oott" " " Mo. But you don't know . tather'. troublel. My children no at the use when, if I use slang, my wife up I'm outing a bad ox 151191030“ . I monk correctly the Eli! think I'll l M m1mher. Winch would you do t" Urge Vegetables. An Eaqterner who Ind bought A (an in Maui. had heard of hm neitMror'. Went for ailing lama Jroutom, " '03 his (Maud mm to get a hundred gonads. l “You go homo," answered the talented (inner to the messenger. “and tell your hon that l wm't out I pot“ toe myone Y' A train of thought is often Wrt' w; ed in . brain Mm. “A noun, min.†“You; an mt gender?" “Can’t uy till it's hitched." W or hum "Willie, Mutt part of apeech ms nu A Ila-o to: Every Letter. We}! “no ms an JOB mi , In good Ontario hmâ€- atlu grate, "t m nu Int“! on on mumm- an wishing Convam'. ll I“ “I. " who: In 00 have» any iotiietod L l, Ate t"ttl" have I mt y imprq M they ire young. Quiet to injure a you- oude- feeding than - one. Thought I musty at sll mm animals. but e-UI) Seeding young animis. Whole milk is mu the young all. but u In col: object it will Iced it. The next Aim milk, but thin with cure. The Ain d all should not ex pounds daily until a. weeks “My. and only would an amount be four pounds be given. _ m dertrryml by bond akin: milk. Where al on skimmed milk due to the abuse of lam I Guppl'y of . and irregular feed. and your. unclean I the "bMret' of nine troubles. Kinda-nu Md Carr a The dairy all "heal be kept growi- to be with ita, or two days. to have the ttr " my rate, _ for clearing tl ing the disc so quickly thing that Ther-tfab" Inknowuu Md dr " that " is tized r FEEDIN " " n sun with IduAl ly i to nth , a prob-t being I " [If comm tity has If other him and in rk '" nug'h without t kneaded b,, hing " of the n ll' Inkr Huang: M )m nil! Canada (I at! lids " "It- I mu 51°PI|DIIO| HEAL fs ll" ll Tri? N - yell UK In to " pal t my. It Ion Lu tinnin KLâ€) M te u it??? m ll' If