it id Some enterprising Seotch _ planters commenced the planting of tea, and the first shipment made to the London marâ€" ket brought _ the most extraordinary prices, they developing a cuality in the eup far superior to anything ever known in tea previously. These Ceylon teas rapidly made a foothold in England, unâ€" til toâ€"day the exports to that country amount to one hunrdred and twentyâ€"five million pounds annually. He who hevitates isn‘t necessarily lost amless he is found out. * Many of our colonies are now beâ€" lag governed by quondam secretaries who atiternded their offices from 11 to 5 or earlier amd later, for the stiâ€" pensies of janior clerks, Lord Minto, tovernor General of Canada, was Lonl Robert‘s Private Secretary at the Cape 22 years ago; Lord Northâ€" cote, wio rules the millions of Bomâ€" bay, was a Private Secretary {jor four years at Constantinople and the treasurer ; Lord Tennygon, who has won such gokien opiniong as an Ausâ€" tralian governor, was his fathems confdential sccretary, and Lord Lqm‘n-f;on. Governor of Qucensland, succewled Mr. Curzon as unpaid secâ€" retary to Lord Salisbary. : The tea trade of the world has underâ€" gone a remarkable change in ahe past few years. Twenty years, ago, practiâ€" eally all the tea of the world was supâ€" plied by China and Japan. About that time there appeared an insect in Ceylon which attacked the coffee tree, and in a very short time the entire coffee plantsâ€" tion was destroved. The "Salada" Tea Co. commenced their introduction in Canada and the United States, packing their teas in airâ€" tight sealed lead packets, and both their black and grees teas have made wonderâ€" #ul progress;â€" American tea drinkers finding this tea superior to anything they ever tasted. in either the black or green teas of China and Japan. The utter absenea of coloring matter in their gun teas says much for their healthâ€" Iness and their deliclous fiaver speaks for itself. Among the former private secreâ€" tarios who have been heads ol deâ€" partments within recent years on aalaries expressed in four figures are Elr Thomas Sanderson, permanent undor secretary at the Foreign Ofâ€" flce on £2,000 a year; _ Sir George Murray, secretary to the Postâ€"oifice at the same salary ; Sir Fleetwood Edwards, and Sir Courtenay Boyle, permanent secretary to the Board of Tradeâ€"to mention only a {iew of these children of fortune. Mr. Wymdham, for whom the high est place in the State is more than a posgbility, «dbrove a quill for Mr. Ballour five long years for an abâ€" sundily small remuneration, and six years later he was one of the Crown‘s M nisters, and Geraid Ballour was his brother‘s Secretary nine years beiore he was made Chiel Secretary for Ireland. Mr. Glagstons was just as good a friond to his amanuenses, as Sir Alâ€" gornon West, Sic Charles Ryan (late Comptroller â€" and _ Auditorâ€"General), 8ir Artnur Godley and other officials who hold or have held the highest p.:!qu in the civil service would teosâ€" tily. « Many of these men have filled the offico of private secretary to eeveral Ministors. Mir Algornon West served Mr. Glagistons, the Duke of Somerâ€" ect and Sir E. Wood ; Sir Charles ï¬y&n was a protege of Mr. Disracl, r. Gladgstone und Sir Stafford Northcots®, and Digby Pigott, head of tho stationery office, ike Lord Esher, wears a fourfold sceretarlal crown. Sir E. J. Monson, our ambassador at Paris, has exchanged his pittance as Lord Lyons‘ sceratary 40 years ago for £9,000 a year and the highost posiltion in our diplomatic service ; and Lord Curric, our ambassador at Rome, is another of his many assistâ€" ants ‘whom Lord Salisbury has adâ€" anceod in the woyrld. C C i The third of our trinity of gloriâ€" fied amenuenses is the premier, who for two obscure years acted as hiy uncle‘s Secreiary at the Foreign Ofâ€" fico dmd drew his £25 a month as gratefuly as any gecondâ€"division clerk in His Majosty‘s service. And all three, if they had to commence their careers over again, would no doubt go through precisely the same apprenticeship; for, as the late Lord Derby said: "If a Private Secâ€" retary to a Cabinect Minister cannot make a brilllant success o his life, means cither that he has no cards to pay or that lvo doce not know how to play them." Naturally, all secretaries cannot reach such dMrzy heights; but there are many poaks on the political Parâ€" nasgus, amdl there is one for each o those who will climb to itâ€"with the assistance o a good many pushes from bebhind. A fow years earlier, in 1885, Mr. Curzon, fresh from his Oxford triâ€" umiphe and his presidency of the urion, was acting as assistant priâ€" vate secretary to Lord Salisbury without a penny of salary ; thirteen years later he was ruling a {fifth of the human race and filling tho most splendid vige throne in the world on a salary of £25,000 a year It is only fourteen years since a comparatively unknown barrister and journalist, was writing Mr. Goschen‘s letters for this modest stipend ; but even in this characâ€" ter he could not conceal the light of genias that was in him j and toâ€" day, as Lord Milner, he is one of the few dominant figures in the empire of the King, with a salary of £8,000 a year and the making of half a continent in his hands. If there is mo royal road to sucâ€" cess in life, a rery good substiâ€" tuto for it is to start the journey io the character of private wecreâ€" tary to a minister of the crown ; for of ail men who enter the race Lor high prices. no ona gets a more Mberal handicap. Indsed, in nine Cases out of tem it is his own fault K he does not capture a valuable prize. It is weighty evidence of the truth of this statement that the three men who toâ€"day are filling the mest honorable and â€" responsible posts in our empire were, not many yoars ago, occupying useful but oiâ€" scure ro.es as private secretaries on salaries not exceeding £300 a year. A Revelation in Tea. "People who do not think very deepâ€" ly about railway mattets are eager to wolcome Mr. Hill‘s echemes, because they mean more competition, and thus they look upon unlimited railway comâ€" petition as a good thing. They forget that every train load of grain carried from Canada into the United States means a substantial loss to Canada. The grain brought from the west by a Canadian route means that before the sharechoiders of the railway get a single cent dividend hundreds of thouâ€" sands of dollars go to the maintenâ€" ance of the people of Canada. Canaâ€" dian grain transported to the seaboard over United States routes _ means money diverted to the pockets of the American people." Via Lehigh Valley R. R., through the Switzerland of America. Fast express trains. Double track. Block signals. Pullman sleeping cars from Toronto, For further particulars, address R. S, Lewis, Superb Service to New York and Philadelphia. 10 King street east, Toronto, Ont. "Olving up anythirig during Lent?" im« quired the first financier. *‘No, sir,‘" replied the second financier s§iWâ€" fly. ‘"‘Why should I give up anything? I made my money honestly." â€""Aw, that don‘t go with me,"" replied little Johnnie, ‘"When sister talks business with a guy she always takes him in the comâ€" He does not accept the report that Mr. Hill intends to construct a new transâ€" continental system from the Atlanti:c to the Pacific as in the remotest degree probable, but Mr. Hill probably wants to build a railway to tap a particular source of traffic in the Northwest. In order to create opinion in his favor, he or his agents ave holding out the glamor of a new transcontinental railâ€" Sir William Van Horne, on his return from Europe, was interviewed in Montâ€" real by the Herald, and in the course of his remarks said of the Hill invasion of Western Canada: "I do not profess to be able to read the riddle of Mr. J. J. Hill‘s projects in the Northwest. I know nothing of what he proposes," said he, "beyond what he is reported to have said in the newspapers; but Mr. Hill seldom gives a clue to his intentions in the newspa pers." . 7 ff is ow o way. _ He might think he could influâ€" ence legislation in that way which he could not otherwise do. For instance, the Manitoba Government, which has railways that are leased to the Canadian Northern, would not be disposed to give Mr. Hill facilitiese for the construction of railways in that Province to eampete with their own lines. "It was just having a little business chat with your sister," said Mr. Williebouy. _ Motherâ€"Do hurry, Isabel! The duke has been waiting in the drawing room for tem minutes. & _ Daughterâ€"That‘s all right, mother. There are five photographs of himself and several large mirrors in there. Obtainable from all druggists at 50 eents a box, or postâ€"paid from the Zamâ€" Buk (Co., Colborne street, Toronto, upon receipt of price. As Mr. Rhinehart says, Zamâ€"Buk is good not only for eczema, ringworm, ulcers, abscesses, discharging sores, barâ€" ber‘s rash, serious skin diseases, genâ€" erally, but it is a household balm. When applied to cuts, bruises, burns, scalds, sore breasts, boils, etc., it heals them in wonderfully short time. It differs from ordinary ointments in being made purely from vegetable essences, and contains no trace of the rancid fats or animal oils found in many ointments and embrocaâ€" tions. It does not contain, either, any mineral coloring matter. What Sir William Van Horne Says of the American Read‘s Scheme. "I consider Zamâ€"Buk a wonderful balm, and shall always recommend it to my friends. If it can cure such serious skin diseases as mine was, it must be ;“;;ar_y; speedy cure for euts and slight injuries sustained in one‘s every day work. I shall always keep a box handy." THE HILL RAILWAY INVASION. l "Last winter I had a big sore appear on the back of my right hand. I thought it would go away, but instead of doing so, it got worse. A patch of about four inches square became inâ€" flamed, then the skin broke and the sore mattered and discharged freely. Not omly was it very unsightly, but it was very painful, too. In spite of my care it got worse, and to my great nlarm; & sccond inflamed patch apâ€" peare@ on my left hand. This was foll@red by an outbreak on my arm, and on the calf of my leg. The pain from these patches was terrible. _ At times, when they got thoroughly warm they itched until I could hardly bear it. I used ointments and salves of all kinds, but got no benefit. One day I read a report in the newspaper of how a case of eczema of long standing had been cured by Zumâ€"Buk. I had tried so many things in vain that I doubted whether Zumâ€"Buk could cure me. My wife advised me to try it, andI did so. The first few applications gave me reâ€" lief from the terrible itching, and also soothed the pain. I cleansed the wounds thoroughly once daily, and applied Zamâ€" Buk as directed. Within a few days there was a marked improvement, and gradually the wounds began to close. The discharging ceased and the skin began to grow again, Within a short time of commencing with the Zamâ€" Buk treatment all the four wounds were not only closed up, but all the patches were covered with new, healthy skin. | to the fore throughout Canalaâ€"has triumphed over skin disease. Mr. Geo. Rhinehart, of 210 Wilton avenue, Toâ€" ronto, is the grateful subject of this recent cure, and here is tiie story. He says: Once again we have to report a case in which Zamâ€"Buk, the great herbal balm which has recently come so much A TORONTO MAN TELLS HOW THIS HERBAL BALM RID HIM OF SKIN DROVE IT COMPLETELY FROM HIS SYSTEM. Johnnie Knew Better ZAMâ€"BUK AGAIN TRIUMPHANT. Enough to Keep Him Busy. Not Compelled to Disgorge. i2 _ The then Captain Keppel, arriving at Spithcad after four years service in the Far East, was looking forward to meetâ€" ing his wife again at her father‘s house, only fourteen miles distant, when he received orders to go immediately to Sheerness, _ He was dining with the Adâ€" miral in command at Portsmouth, and was to be taken on board his ship, the Dido, in the Admiral‘s tender. He found the master of the Didoâ€"a man by good luck, of the same size and buildâ€"dressâ€" ed him up in his cocked hat, epaulettes, and sword, taking the master‘s oilskin and peajacket; saw him or board the tender, duly touched his hat, and went his way, The master took the Dido to Sheerness, and nobody was a penny the wiser or the worse. It was well said of Occasionally some foreign publications asâ€" sert that there is such an unworthy thing as an ‘"American language." Our slang phrases and our dialect stories worry them no little. So far as dialect is concerned, we have no advantage over our British brethâ€" ren. ‘They have novels written in a jargon which no one not initiated into the mysterâ€" ies can understand. It is not denied that the United States have contributed many ‘‘Americanims"‘ to the language of John Bull. We are a resourceful people, much given to invention, and if we want a word that is not in the dictionary we do not hesiâ€" tate to coin one. ‘This may be a very bad taste, but we have a great country and are entitled to make occasional innovations. Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend. (Harper‘s Weekly.) In the last two years Germany‘s Southâ€" west Africa has cost the German government $150,000,000 and some thousands of lives by massacres and in course of operations to subdue the natives. It seems a good deal to pay for imperfect pacification of a territory which contains no more than 5,000 Euroâ€" pean residents and of which the combined imports and exports amount to no more than $2,500,000 a year. If the nations of the world ever become sane enough to consider modern colonization as a business propos!â€" tion there will be an intornational auction at which there will be bargains for buyers. him that "he was thé'bi"s;;es'{;mu;.:vl.lo ever lived, who ought to have been turnâ€" ed out of the service years ago," « What is it that makes people anxious to see a bull fight in Spain, where the bulls and some horses are brutally put to death, and the men fighters get all the glory with the minimum of danger; or a blood and thunder play that has neither sense, conâ€" sistency nor education; or a risque burlesâ€" que, garbed in a manner that is tolerated in a theatre, but would shame the audiense If it were seen anywhere else; or a prize fight, at an enormous price of admission, in which combatants are strugsling for the gate money under a ‘"previous understanding‘ and not for the promotion of "manly art:" or a football game in which the most imâ€" portant personage is the surgeon? Mankind is wonderfully distributed. Possibly the great majority are not for any of these spocâ€" tacles; but we do not hear of them so much. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. DC OR IOCY 200 TCES DR SOP€, He ploughed it all in one short dayâ€" In Luscomb‘s grocery store. Joe Bing, he made five dollars onct By aimply pickin‘ hops; Hadoneitalltnjestad‘ay +4 With time for sev‘ral stops. I He could as well aâ€"kept it up A «lozen days or more Where was it done? The eame ol‘ placeâ€" In Luscomb‘s grocery store I The luckless patient, perceiving that he had fallen into the hands of a lunaâ€" ’tlc, resigned himself to his fate, and had an awful time. When, however, it was all over, the dentist was as good as his word. He only asked for a very trifling sum, and, after expressing the hope that his victim would send him some customâ€" ers, and would himself return one day, ‘bade him farewell. As soon as the young man was clear of the place he proâ€" ceeded to the nearest police station with the story of his woes, and the dentist, who was known to have been in a queer state of mind for some time, has been reâ€" moved to an asylum. But this will not restore the lost grinders, and the patient has received such a shock to his system that some time must elapse before he can be himself again. Joe Bing, he ploughed four acres onct, He ploughed it gool an‘ neat; An‘ ‘fore the sun had near gone down The job was all complete. The hosses never turned a hair, _ _Wan‘t tined, ner leas‘ bit sore. fle could, I guess, before he slept, Cut jes‘ as many mordâ€" He cut it where he did the wood, In Luscomb‘s grocery store. Where It Was Done. (John D. Larkin, in Woman‘s Home Comâ€" panion.) Joe Bing, he cut ten conl 0‘ wood From rise to set 0‘ sun; He cut it and he piled it, too, Yes, sir, that‘s w‘at he done. To cut ten cord of wood, I vow, Is one tremendous choreâ€" h Joe Bing cut his behind the stove In Luscomb‘s grocery stone. Joe Bing, he cut «ight cord 0‘ hay I swan, an‘ raked it, too, An‘ in twelve hours by the clock _ _He was entirely through. "I tell you that I shall extract the lot, and instead of thanking me you object. You see that revolver. Well, if you move I saall shoot you," and the dentist laid & revolver on a table by him. "But I have only come for one," reâ€" plied the patient, a young man, who was already suffering horribly. "Do not stir. I am going to extract all the defective tecth in your mouth, and you will not have any more to pay than if one was taken out." Young Parisian Mourns the Loss of His Teeth. Here is a striking bit of Paris correâ€" spondence in the London Telegraph: Colonizing as a Business Proposition. "The American Language." A STRENUOUS DENTIST. Some of the Mysteries. ONTARIO ARC TORONTO Little Admiral. )4 (Boston Herald.) What‘s in a name * By proclamation of Nov. 4, 1901, the ruler of the British empire bears the title "Edward VIIL by the grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Treland and of the British dominions beyond the seas, king, defender of the faith, emperor of India." A comprehensive title, that, but it is an extensive empire. . According to figure» recently compiled Edward VII. has more than 300,000,000 subjects in Asia, 7,500,â€" 000 in America, 43,000,000 in Africa, more than 5,000,000 in Australia, and 52,000,â€" 000 in Europe. "Defender of the faith," the faith of how many? Surely not 10 per cent, for classified roughly by reliâ€" 2$00,000 of Mohamednne. ©©0,000000 " of Christians, 12,000,000 of Buddhists, 23,â€" 000,000 of various pagan and nomfl.t- fan ngpou, including Parsees, Sikhs, Jains, Jews and Confucians as well as of wailllions who believe in little more tham primitive forms of superstitition. ‘"‘Why, G‘blesh me!" he exclaimed. "I didn‘t know it was twins!" Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Matter More Than Manner. Norman McLeod was once preaching in a district of Ayrshire where the readâ€" ing of a sermon is regarded as the greatâ€" est fault a minister can be guilty of. When the congregation was dispersed an old woman, overflowing with enthusiâ€" asm, addressed her neighbor: "Did ye ever hear onything sat gran‘" Wasna that a sermon? But all her expressions of admiration being met by a stolid glance, she shouted, "Speak, woman! Wasna that a sermon?" Ou ay," replied her friend, sulkily, "but he read it." "Read it!" said the other with indignant emphasis; "I wadna care if he had whisâ€" tled it!" Ask for Minard‘s and take no Other, ‘"‘It‘s a boy,"‘ he heard the nurse say, and immediately hbe sailed forth to tell all his friends. When he returned later he was perâ€" mitted to gaze upon his ofspring. Old Ladyâ€"Where d‘ye come from*? ‘Tramp (who has seen better days)â€"Madam, I castigated my itinerary from. the classic Athens of America. Old Ladyâ€"Hey? Trampâ€"I say, I beat my way from Boston. KIDNEY SEARCH LIGHTS.â€" Have you backache? Do you feel drowsy? Do your‘ limbs feel heavy? Have you pains in the loins? Have you dizziness? Have you a tired dragging feeling in the region of the kidneys? Any and all of these indicate kidney troubles. South American Kidney Cure is a liquid kidney specific and works wonderful cures in most complicated cases. was, when found, placed on a sled and taken home, where grave fears were enâ€" tertained for his recovery, his hips being badly crushed and his body turned black from his ribs to his feet. We used MINâ€" ARD‘S LINIMENT on him _ freely to deaden the pain .and with the use of three bottles he was completely cured and able to return to his work. Famine Prices for Japanese Widows. A Chinese newspaper, the Chung Hua Pao, prints the following: ‘"A special correspondâ€" ent at Fengtien writes that about the beâ€" ginning of th»s month a Japanese imported some 3,000 Japanese widows, whom he offerâ€" ed for sale, either as domestic servants or as secondary wives, at 60 cents a catty (1% pounds avoirdupois). Photographs are first shown to intending buyers, who then make their selection, and the woman is weighed and her value calculated. There is no conâ€" dition attached save that she must be a)â€" lowed to return home once every three Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited, Yarmouth, N. 8. Gentlemen,â€"In January last, Frances Leclare, one of the men employed by me, working in the lumber woods, had a tree fall on him, crushing him fearfully. He King Edward VIIL is the uncle of the emâ€" peror of Germany, will soon be the uncle of the queen of Spain, is already the uncle of the crown prince of Roumania, the czarina, the crown princess of Greece and the crown princesses of Sweden and is the father of the queen of Norway. Sunlight Soap is bettor than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight 6oap and follow directions, Equally good with hard or soft water. didn‘t, neittier. He thought they wus | _ How the Error Was Made, ’ (Cleveland Leader.) brother made fzees oat yeur _yesterday u‘l:g'«u't darest ter He pretended he didn‘t notice ‘em.".. . Happy Father Saw Double. Using Language to Suit. King Edward‘s Subjects. Europe‘s Uncle. SAUVEUR DUVAL. Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto (Waskington Star.) ‘"‘When in doubt," said the weather exâ€" pert, ":l:ly’l pro::duyhbnd weather." ‘‘What for?" as! the young man learning the business. € who 4s ‘‘Because if it turns out to be correct people commend your accuracy and if it‘s wrong their minds are so relieved that they don‘t find any faunt.‘" isnnd h uh Mess s he?t" _**Mercy, noâ€"he doesn‘t even act like ona!" Spoiled Chinese. Miss Bret Harte, with the aid of a number of her father‘s English friends, has opened a typeâ€"writing office in Lonâ€" don. She is a proficient typeâ€"writer, and an American journalist calling to have some copying done complimented her on her skill. "My skill, such as it is, is due to practice," said Miss Bret Harte. ‘It was acquired very painfully, like the marksmanship of one of my father‘s western friends. My father used to tell of a man called Redwood James, a charâ€" acter of California. James in a bar one night drew a revolver and shot the ashes from the cigar of a friend on the other side of the room. The friend laughed and calmly drank off the remainder of his cocktail. My father said to Redwood James: ‘That must have required conâ€" siderable practice.‘ ‘Practice," Redwood James replied; ‘I should say so, young man. I guess I sp‘iled more‘n three dozen Chinamen aâ€"learnin‘ that there trick."" Cal Lord Day Observance. Scene, Scotch farmhouse; time, Sunday morning. Tourist (to farmer‘s wife)â€"Can you let me have a glass of milk, please? Milk is produced and consumed. Tourist (taking some coppers from his pocket)â€"A penny, I suppose? Tourist (srepocketing the coppers)â€"Oh, well, there‘s no harm done. I‘m sure I‘m much obliged. But won‘t you have the money for it? Farmer‘s Wifeâ€"Na, na; I‘ll no tak‘ less than saxpence for breaking the Sawbath!â€"Leeds Mercury. SUDDEN DEATHS ON THE INâ€" CREASE.â€"People apparently well and and happy toâ€"day, toâ€"morrow are stricken down, and in ninetyâ€"nine cases out of every hundred the hbeart is the cause. ‘The king of heart remodies, D. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart, is within reach of all. It relieves in 30 minutes, and cures most chronic cases. _ Farmer‘s Wifeâ€"Mon, dae ye no think same o‘ yersel‘ tae be buyin‘ goods the Sa.wbz.th'! Y 98 That precious remedy, is a positive cure for al : «hrouler and free cample. R. 8. McGILL, Simeoo "I‘D RATHER BE DEAD than suffer again the tortures of insomnia, palpitation of nervous twitching of my muscles induced by simple neglect of a little indigestion.*" ‘These are the forceful and warning words of & lady who proclaims that her cure by South American Nervine when everything else failed was a modern miracle A few doses gives reliof. â€"92. _ DOUGHITY‘S CEMENT BUILDING BLOCK MaCaint Action and Looks in Line, Silent and Noisy Lett (Cleveland Leader.) (New York Mail.) '."I;{e doesn‘t look at all like an actor, doas _ Reform our spelling. Cut out Farmers and Dairymen FIBRE WARE »nus Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan Qrange Blossorns You will find they give you satisâ€" - faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE How to Predict Safely, Insist on being supplied with EDDY‘S every time. . B. EDDYS any form of $5,000 be paid to any injurious erson who roves that Makes all kinds of Blocks, either solid or hollow, gâ€"â€"ï¬"u“lb all thtbo:ocuur! 2124 "S. 2C it vimple, handy and easily oper ated. Why pay famcy prices for a Block Maâ€" .I..h.' '_.?__!?_‘ can buy this -ï¬l:o and outfit mninininnn i l k m 0 TD seniar c SCs ARMS FOR SALE. IF yYOU waxy E buy & hr-‘_ul 0!=Mo.llex.1'c‘1‘ t°[_:'° & IRPRE A0 ARNIIC, BOH ï¬ of over 3,000 farms for sale. Whe Wer. ern Real Estate Exchange, Limited, London, The followin{:tory illustrates the dis. advantage of having an article in comâ€" mon use called after one‘s own name, The chief of the Clan McIntosh had & dispute with a cabman about his fare, "Do you know who I am*" indignantly euh{mql the Highlander, "I am the Me. Intosh." "I don‘t care if you are an umbrella," replied cabby; "T‘ll have my rights." RHEUMATISM â€" WHATS THE CAUSE?â€" WHERE‘S THE CURE > YÂ¥Y about 2 years of age for ; as cook and housemaid in a private The active irritating cause of this produced without the navment of royalties!" the blood. South American Rheumatic Cure neautralizes the acid poison.. Relieves in 6 hours and cures in 1 to 3 days.â€"90. Era of High Expenditure. (New Orleans Timesâ€"Democrat.) We are spending at a fearful rate and much of the expenditure has, for the nonce, no offset except paper profits. The land is full of nouveaux riches who, as the slang goes, think they have ‘"money to burn‘ and their womenfolks are bettoring the instruc» tion. The cost of building and living hbas thus been raised to a level on which it can not rest for very long. As the old adage hath it, ‘‘Put a beggar on horseback and he will ride to the devil.‘" From the present outlook the record will be broken by the jockeys who are now in the saddle. After a while the season of repose, repentance and The Manager‘s Definition, (Modern Society.) *‘*The legitimate drama‘" said the playâ€" wright as Manager Fiasco bhanded him back hs rejected inanuscript. "I hear nothing but ‘legitimate drama!‘ What is the legitimate drama, anyway * *‘The legitimate drama," said Manager Fiâ€" asco coldly, ‘"comprises all those plays !’B‘E‘,", their authors being dead, may be lumps andrb‘,bhmnh'l es ‘rl::ho horses, blood spavin, cu: splints, ri ne, sweeney, -l:i‘flu, cpn.inn,plou and swollen thmd.: coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one botâ€" tle. Warranted the most wonderful Bleâ€" good wages to reliable girls. . Aldress in writing to u“rg.io_c‘g.‘ F. Glassoo, 14 m Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should ai. ways be used for children teething. i soothes the child, soothes the gums, cure wind colic and is the best remedy for Diar. painful of diseases is poisonous uric acid in Dr. Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid cures any form of Piles. Internal, External, Bleeding, Blint Itching, Suppurating, etc., are simply nam%Â¥ of the stages through every case will pass it it continues. Piles are caused by congestion of blood in the lower bowel, and it takes an internal remedy to remove the cause. Dr. Leonbardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid is a tablet taken internally, and no case of Piles has ever been found it failed to cure. Money back if it does fail. mish Curs ever known Reform our spelling. Cut out the s!lent letters. ‘Then cut out the ones that make a noise. After that we can have some place. $1.00 at all dealers, of The Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 14 ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT economy will come W ANTED, IMMEDIATELY, Two CirM about 20 years of age for position: Souvenir Post Cards 18 for 10c; 60 for 6Oe; 100, $1; 200, 32; 5y ; all different. Largest and finest stocy The Chieftain and the Cabby, KVILLE FRUIT LANDSâ€"10 ac lots, excellent for fruit, nrdenm.fl: ; close to electric cars; big money j l‘m quick to A. 8. Foster, Oakville, FARMS FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS, Silent and Noisy Letters, *~ NO DIFFERENCE LE ROY PILL CO., ='.' ""'nz"ruu' lls have been used in Francs u&",-..."%“'m"‘“ Tsd are ces guaranâ€" teod the makers. Enclose stai sealed circular. . Price $1.00 f‘:' ::Xl‘: y mail, securely sealed, on recelpt of price FEMALE PILLS A safe, sure and reliable monthly reguls. NO. 18. 1908 DR. LeROY‘s National :1 illionzire Huw: Â¥$ Fund GREAT L THE C Attempt Being eisco Hoe Bernhardt Bet The pric is going u Complain widespread at work to within rea leases of 1 since ) Leï¬ml“‘i All vacan rople who ng their cit moving out "It is er for t the chief cifie coa filling © construc ing the 1 San Fran group of i1 that city‘s her comm« Oakland docks an los Angel Huntington, ed with :Tl:'\"inte the sional men a in the San statement n ton con follows: "Durit @1800 4 Wi the misfort fessional n ance Ol abundan his feet eonditio: quake. work _"It seemed to me {hai lawyers. doctors and ot men, who depend upon and their clientele for s1 heavily hit. I know per nofenional men who los mes, instruments and tl\clotlms they were mea are not well equipp labor, and must take a start in their profession nothing to begin with." an And the Refugees Sufferei end Squares San Fran SVNG W I] TORONTO MAN CURED 0 BILIOUSNESS & ncd Help for Professic Bflc“m for Bili ’hhi.g eature ovel so superior that w remedics Bileans are ml Toronto m ting in this c Frank O‘NMeill, of 7© reads as follows : "* To the Bilean Co. **Dear Sirs,â€"1 for what Bileans hi troubled since last J ings of fullnees, and headache and comq down and out of 0 failed to do me any . I am pleased to 8 things had failed. In gratitude for my sion to use this info * If .n_vhfld_\’ i8 '“rï¬lllli these ] me. I will be ple my experience Headache, Constipat tion, Palpitation, LO# Debility, Anemia, & purities, Eruptions, « d@efective bile flow & and Medicine Vend« the Bilean HEAVY RAIX F L1 t} n n The following i () ti () EILEANS an Co., Col 6 boxes for { Sank ib D r sup perso n lis W