‘The other night a Florida farmer dreamed that half a mile east of his house there was & little hill on the crest of which stood *# tree and that at the root of the tree tners was buried a pot of gold. Next morning bright and carly he started out to investiâ€" gate. Anr hbis dream came true in part He found the hill and also the tree. If in war Providence is on the side of the hoaviest battalions, the same power may be said to be, as a rule, on the political side that has the heayâ€" iest money barrel. When it is remembered that the legitimate expenses of the U. S. clections are nearly all borne by the public exchequers, the conciusion. is inevitable that the vast sums already 18883 C . m, Presidential clections cost money. Mr. Sulzer, of New York, in the House of Representatives gave some figures reâ€" cently which are rather startling. Prior to 1860, he said, the campaign fund at the command of any national committee never exceeded $25,000, In 1860 ind the subsequent years the national camâ€" paign funds of the two parties were as 1880 1864 1868 1872 which will cost its owner less than a lar a year for the first four years at the end of that time sell at the m for 850 to $160 for meat. If it be t: ed to the sled it will be worth twice much. Tkey are prolific, and after t are two years old will add a fawn to herd every year for tem years. On count of their timid and gregarious I its the reindeer are easily herded, one man can easily manage one thous head. The cow gives a teacupful of v rich milk, about the thickness of ere which makes delicious choese, and, mi with water, forms a refreshing drink w rrn nds 4 flw mm mm T . 5. Presidential clections cost mor Mr. Sulzer, of New York, in the Ho of Representatives cave some ficures ormous and which will e« receiving deer care tonzites. cen ® MUBhas S Anrens s is 6 Sss rentioned constitute a sort of corrupâ€" ion fund. present ra twentyâ€"fiv head of t thirt y five 10,000,000. 884 2() "Miss Randolph is.a peach; most of her beauty is natural, and she looks good to us; she is one of our schoolâ€" mates and we know can throw a brick with remarkable aceuracy. _A sample of her rare nerve is shown by her yowing to ‘love. honor, ete.‘ "The other interested party is a joke; he came to Leona in the fall of ‘83 without clothes or morey, and is now free from all financial debt. There are others just as bad and they are not in the penitentiary either." in Alaska y 04 3 <drtip e agrairkp ces 2i dee told. And he pondered for a moâ€" Ine ooo siths o Farkie farmer drtaised [ (Bewe uie Sit on the srase St which stood » "I‘ve got some property in Seotland," e .bndl .l.lint. at :hQOIMtI :f ?cnsrz.::s he said, at last. s ur . Ne Ll i â€œï¬ :;ht and w13° he lta‘r':od out to hvnti, ‘Ah, th::d'ihl: breo:e]eld:d“htdt) mh?he te. Anr hbis dream came true in part W’ P k. found the hill and also the tree. ore he left, however, the sergeant (Kansas City Journal.) what part of Scotland your property is Speak every day to some one who you ‘ ‘eituated?" he asked. w is your superior," said Edward Everett "Oh, yes," said the recruit, . "I‘ve got a s. An casy duty. If your wife is not football jersey in the Porth dye works!" bass ack sometkin= ic the s=aÂ¥> "There were man, . becouse be could find "The groom (that means ‘we) wore the customary black handâ€"meâ€"down, and was about scared to death. The dull sameness of most wedding writeâ€"ups must have often struck the observaut reader. The brides all "look lovely," the presents are always "numâ€" erous and custly," and the performancs is usually "pretty." Here is the report of the wedding of the editor of the Leona, Kansas, Hustler, written doubtless by himself before he had recovered from the effects of the experience; "The bride wore a bezutiful dress of French lawn, at least that‘s what they said it was. 18 usita the we Kansas himself effects RLawin J ourselve gloriiied sure of ] is o our lose ure needs acter the p« genius Now that a statue of Joe Jefferson is proposed with some prospect of success, there is a plea put in for one to Edwin Booth. An admirer, after setting forth his claims to hbistrionic immoraltity, at in the lo¢ danger. mJ standard « Part of His Dream True. | cntar conman. | G00 in ete rat in Booth‘s private character was of dard equal to his dramatic genius le, generous, modest, pure and hearted, this great American actor no monument other than his charâ€" to live forever in the hearts of cople whom he inspired with the of his noble art. hese days of dramatic degeneracy it is well that the fame and name win Booth should be cherished. It n said of us by our critics that in ad rush for things material we ght of higher things. In the failâ€" us far to honor the memory of Booth we do alike injustice to es and to the art which he so e"mutklog iG ht $23%. t 18 $@id M 8 $UC ol reinu@@r raising are enâ€" be work is simple. _ A doe it its owner less than a dotâ€" r the first four years wiil that time sell at the mines 0 for meat. If it be trainâ€" 1 it will be worth twice as are prolific, and after they old will add a fawn to the car for ten years. On acâ€" timid and gregarious hanâ€" er are easily herded, and rasily manage one thousaud w gives a teacupfel of very uit the thickness of cream. aTs 1 the in the groom did not think ; a better man than himâ€" | C ic iwo parties were as ra the other day a charge "s1ddenly" exploded, the 1 us, killing two men. | of dynamite that explodes with ample notice to those ; there must be much less Republican, Democrat. 100,000 $ 50,600 15,000 50,000 150,000 75,000 200,000 50,000 no bridesmaid or best 1,000,000 500,000 1,100,000 1,400,000 1,350,000 1,250,000 1,350,000 1,350,000 16,000,000 975,000 9,500,000 400,000 4,500,000 1,250,000 na s arc vast sums already mven ‘ul of very of cream, ind, mixed 4 < Mrs, T. Hunter, of 111 e } (CBYS®y, â€" Ragian Road, Kingston, ! o f \ wl Ont., says: E C ' > ip . @I have suftered with | 0 & kidney and liver trouâ€" } ; ble and chronie constiâ€" | it To# pation for some time. I h? er was subject to dizziâ€" / e | uP m noss, bilious headache, | £3] nervousness, drowsi ' | Mrs I Hunter. NCss, pains in the back | d | and side, and a tired, . t : weary feeling nearly all the time. t d ! "I tried almost every medicine, was 1 | treated by doctors and druggists, with | ; little or no benefit. n : "I tried Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill, and | â€"! the results have been truly wonderful. | ¢ ; I am so much better. Antiâ€"Pill is af â€" ! most wonderful remedy." 1 1+ All dealars or the Wileam.Ruls f% Montagu Brown was full of military ardor, and he was endeavoring to enlist in the London Scottish Volunteers. Of eourse, he was asked if he were a Scotchâ€" man, according to Answers. "No; not much," he replied. "Parents Scotch?" asked the staff serâ€" "He automatically obeyed. I slipped on his coat and hat and to all appearâ€" ances was a soldier of the Czar,. I walked past the guarded gate of the yard, out into the street. Before me were thousands of soldiers. 1 saw my friends being brought down from the hall and put into the black vans about which stood guards of Cossacks. I marched through my friends (all of that group are in prison toâ€"day, save ut cce B NP Bd TD P The 4 oi becaithdbe onl{ myself and the friend that escaped with me) with the air of a soldier on & very important message, and pressed on thro:zll the mass of other soldiers that filled the street." "I jerked a card from my pocketâ€"to this day I do not know what it wasâ€"â€" and handed it to one of the soldiers. ‘Here is my eard,‘ I said rapidly. ‘I am a memver of the Secret Police. One of these Revolutionists is trying to escape. I am after him. Quick! Give me your coat and hat!‘ Nowhere outsice of the pages of ficâ€" tion would we expect such an incident as the following from the personal story of the Russian revolutionist, Narodny, in the May American Magazine. _ Narâ€" odny has just jumped from a window to escape the police. _ "When .I serambled to my feet 1 discovered myself in the {ud and among half a dozen soldiers. was without overcoat and hatâ€"a very snsYieioul figure ;ard having neither, I could not escape even could I get by the soldiers who surrounded me. "I tried Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill, and the results have been truly wonderful. I am so much better. Antiâ€"Pill is a most wonderful remedy." All dealers, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. C603 Says Results are :o'r"“, At the casinos, with thetr restaurants and gaming houses, their theatres, terraces and bands, he can spend many spend many a pleasant hour without risking a louis at the seductive baccarat tables, where enormous eums are won and lost every day. _ Highor up in the town, away from the casinos and loungers, he will find abundant opportunities for recreationâ€"and money spending. The ce Are scores of shops which vie with erch other in their tempting wares; there are sa~â€" loons outsids where he can sit and listen to the melody of song and guitars, and there Are confectioners‘ shops where he can sip his tea and cat his cakes in the company of a crowd of the most beautiful and best gowned women in Europe. Add to thasa faintlyâ€"sketched attractions glorious sunshine which even in March makes a solar tonee a grateful headâ€"covering, and an indescribabls atmosphere of infoctious gaiety, and one gets some conrantion, however, Inadsanate, of the fasctnations of King Edward‘s holldav Fanane MRS. HUNTERS stoRrY "No; Bethnal Green," said Montagu. "Well, unless you have some connecâ€" on with Scotland you can‘t join," he When he seeks less athletic recreation, he can stroll along the Plage by the fringe of the sea and watch the moving panorama of life and color. Aimost every nation of Eurâ€" ope, from Russian to Spaniard, is representâ€" ed by his fellowâ€"saunterers:; mandolists make music for him; seductive flowergirls, whiteâ€" clad vendors of sweets and brilliantlyâ€"attired negroes tempt him with their respective whres. Fair bathers, in dainty costumes, trip across the promenads from the casino and disport themselves in the creamy waves; while at scores of tables sits a merry crowd, smoking their cigars and sipping their manyâ€" colored liguids. most picturesque golf links in Europe, where, unless he is an expert he is as likely as not to send his ball over the edge of a eliff or chasm into the sea which thunders and foams a few hundred feet below. If he wearies of golf, he can find capital sport close at hand in hunting, shooting or trout fishing. Not even on the Mediterrancan could his Majesty have found more ideally beautiful headquarters. From the windows of his gorâ€" geously decorated suite of rooms he looks down on one of the finest panoramas . the whole world can show. At his feet the bluo waters of the Gulf of Gascony breaks against the barriers of quaintly shaped red rocks and pour in their sheets of snowâ€"white foam; away to the south and southwest are the purple and snows of the Pyrenees and the faint, hazy line of the Spanish coast; while immediately beneath him Biarritz ""spreads In memory of this romance he built for his bride a regal pleasureâ€"house on a headâ€" land looking down on Biarritz and there, in her company he spent many of the hapâ€" plest days of his life. The magnificent hotel which has replaced this palace of royal roâ€" mance bas been chosen by King Edward as his place of residence during his wellâ€"earned ho_l_ldu in the south of France. Napoleon, it is true, has sentimental reaâ€" sons for his love of Biarritz, for it was there, so runs the story, that he lost his heart to his future Empress. Riding one day, he saw the radiantly beautiful face of Eugenie de Montâ€" 1jo looking down at him from an upper winâ€" dow, and he knew no peace until he had made her acquaintance andn won her conâ€" sent to share his splendid if illâ€"fated throns. **You may search Europe through," said the third Napoleon, "and you nowhere will find a place better dosizgned by nature and art for the ‘joy of living‘ than Biarritz," and there are probably thousands of pleasure seekers who wil endorse this high eulogium, says the London Titâ€"Bits. Q'W“oomzl | Romvélvl'tvi;!iialï¬t; | uld The Riso of a Revolutionist. Where His Projerty Was. nervousness, drowsi _ ness, pains in the back and side, and a tired, "I have suffered with kidney and liver trouâ€" ble and chronie constiâ€" pation for some time. I was subject to dizziâ€" 0 "Truly Marvelionsa." Mrs, 1. Hunter, of 111 Raglan Road, Kingston, Ont., says: in the creamy waves; os sits a merry crowd, ad sipping their many~â€" their restaurants and theatres, terraces and bilious he_nd&ié, Edward‘s holiday TOO MANY PEOPLE DALLY WITH CATARRH.â€"It strikes one like a thunâ€" derâ€"clap, develops with a rapidity that no other disease does. Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder is the radical, quick, safe and pleasâ€" ant cure that the disease demands. Use the means, prevent its deepâ€"seating and years of distress. Don‘t delay with catarrh. Agnew‘s gives relief in ten minutes. 50 cents.‘"â€"97; town The Easter Bride. t (Philadelphia Bulletin.) Here‘s the old superstition which the Easter bride, who fortunately is always married in white, may take for what it is worth : Married in gray, you will go far away. Married in black, you will wish yourseif back. ue Married in dead. Married in Married in Married in Married in Married in Married in 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. 8. Lewis, 10 King street east, Toronto, Ont. Superb Service to New York and Philade!lphia. We have been ‘"building up a navy‘‘ on the idea that ships alone are necessary. But wo have neglected to provide additional sailors, gunners, engineers and, most of all, officers. so that we have not a fully manned ship at sea and a large number of our vessels are laid up for want of crews. Every time a new vessol is launched some one of thoso in commission must be retured in order to furnish a crew. Furthermore, the facilities at the command of our navy for docking large vessels are so poor as to greatly hamâ€" per the operations of our fleet on occasions when quick repairs may be needed. kuz granpa ud died. wunder whut our yard 11 du n hollyhocks n garden tu?tâ€" who‘ll care fur imâ€"I wonder whotâ€" now grandpa‘s Gled! n grandpa Aled. _ . _ _ _ when they cum back twus almos nite n they kep us insid out ov site n we didunt play kus it wusn‘t riteâ€" â€" Land in the arid portions of Mexiro is still very cheap and can be bought in tracts of 1,000 to 1,000,000 acres. The price is rising but not at the rate it will probably reach in the near future. Withâ€" out any effort at improvement, investâ€" ments made with reasonable carefulness will bring good returns by the enhanceâ€" ment that improved methods of communâ€" ication, agriculture, etc., aro bringing about. There is a good chance to enâ€" large considerably the area of irrigable land in these tracts, aside from the gain in value due to improved methods, betâ€" ter stock and other improvements _ a progressive rancher can make. The land investment offers a surer, perhaps even a larger, prospect for profit than investâ€" ments in mining enterprises. Comparaâ€" tively few Americans engage in the forâ€" mor, while nearly all who go to Mexico engage to some extent in the latter. The American is prone to play for the highâ€" est stakes, regardless _ of the greater risk. when granpa died. may telled up boys jist ho wtu ack n tuck us us tu missus mack ¢u waite till pay and shee cum back, whan grandpa ded. wee seen um go frum where we wuzâ€" theyâ€"wuz sojers marchin tu, becuz when soldiers die they alus ruz, (John D. Wells, in Buffalo News.) maw she crid n paw crid tu, 1 persackly like us childurn do sumtimz n so wud yu + { yur grau‘pa died. all our windo blindz wuz down n most folks cum frum all aroun‘ barkers mills n marshaitownâ€" Mr. Thos. Molyneaux, of _ Amherst, says: "I was croubled with my stomâ€" ach for about three years. Every two I or three days bilious attacks would come on. I experimented with T don‘t know how many different medicines, but the biliousness went on just the same. _ I saw a report about Bileans and tried them. I hardly expected them to cure me, but I am glad to say that although it is about a month ago since I took any Bileans, I have not had an attack since." Thousands of similar cases could be quotâ€" ed. Married l Bileans are purely vegetable. _ The proprietors firmly believe that vegeâ€" table roots and herbs, or, what is the same thing, their essences, were from the dawn of creation intended for the medicine of â€" mankind. All kistory tends to teach this lesson, and mod<rr science engorses it. In Bileans, thereâ€" fore, you have a purely natural remedy, free from alcohol, free from mineral poiâ€" sons, free from the danger of s«tting up the pillâ€"taking habit, and a medicine which has row been tried and proved superior by all classes of people in pracâ€" tically every civilized country in the world. For liver complaint, headache, biliousness, indigestion, _ constipation, piles, wind, female disorders, spring deâ€" bility, anaemia, and for all ailments arisâ€" ‘ ing out of defective bile flow, assimilaâ€" tion and digestion, Bileans are unequalâ€" led. They are obtainable from atl ¢rugâ€" gists at fifty cents a box, or direct from the Bilean Co., Colborne streat, Toronto, upon receipt of price. e a medicine improper and harmful for family use. _ ‘This, no doubt, in great measure accounts for the worldâ€"wide success of this great vegetable remedy. ) More than oxe newspaper in Canada . has recently been pointing out to readâ€" ; ers the danger of taking medicines which contain an%ig percentage of alcohol. lThere is one medicine in great demand ;which, however, contains no trace of alâ€" cohol. This is the Australian herbal ] household remedy, Bileans. While much attention has been directed to the danâ€" ,gers of aleohol, no paper that we know has yet called the attention of readers Bileans for Biliousness contain none of these poisons. They are thus free from the two great evils which render to a still worse dangerâ€"that of taking medicines which contain such mineral poisons as mercury, bismuth, calomel!, etec. These substances were common in the liver and stomach remedies so wideâ€" ly used before Bileans were obtainable in this country, and which are still used in some quarters toâ€"day. IMPORTANT FACTS FOR CANADIAN PEOPLE. "ome Needs of the Navy. Alcohol in Medicine. When Gran‘pa Died. Profit in Mexican Land. pearl, you may live in a whirl. green, ashamed to be seen. yellow, ashamed of your fellow. blue, be will always be true. pink, your spirits will sink. white, you have chosen aright. brown, you will live out of red, you will wish yourself SEA.‘" send six cents in poscage stamps i0 H. Fester Chaffee, Western Passenger Agent, Folders descriptive of the Thousand Islands, Rapids, Montreal, Quebec, Murray Bay, Taâ€" dousac, the far famed â€"Saguenay River, etc., on application to any railroad or steariboat "The River St. Lawrence Trip?" Where Will You Go This Summer? Where Partiality is Shown. (Philadelphia North America.) ‘Tobacco is a necessity and ice cream isn‘t, rules a Pittsburg justice in passing on the Sunday laws. And yet the opponents of equal suffrage insist that women are adeâ€" quately represented in the government. Removes all lard, soft or calloused lumps andblzkmilhul M trdmbohom, Llood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, -g.iflu, lpra.il;s,plore ,nnd swollen thto;t: coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one botâ€" tle. Warranted the most wonderful Ble Pastorâ€"Beware, young . man, remember, *"The wicked shall not live out half their days." Rounderâ€"Does the bible say that? Pastorâ€"Yes. Rounderâ€"Well, I‘m all right. I‘ve lived all my life so far mish Curs ever known. Sending Messages in Paris, (Harper‘s Weekly.) ‘The telcphone system of Paris leaves conâ€" siderable to be desired and meets with conâ€" stant complaint with the subscribers, One of the datter endeavored to test the speed of the various means of communication of the city, sending mesages in different ways from his rooms in the Rue Richelieu, in the centre of the city, to a friend on the Avenue de la Grand Armee, near the Bois de Boulogne. He found that a bicycle mesâ€" senger made the trip in eleven minutes and fifteen seconds, as compared with twentyâ€" three minutes for a cab. A message sent via the Metropolitan railway required thirtyâ€" five minutes, a _ message | by the pmeumatic tube three hours, while the mesâ€" sage sent by telephone did not arrive at all. ENGLISH SPAVINLINIMENT HOW DR, VON STAN‘S PINEAPPLE TABLETS GIVE INSTANT RELIEF.â€" They‘re handy to carryâ€"take one after eatâ€" ingâ€"or whenever you feel stomach distress coming onâ€"sufferers have proved it the only remedy known that will give instant relief and permanent cureâ€"no long tedious treatâ€" ments with questionable resultsâ€"best for all sorts of stomach troubles. 35 cents.â€"96 For illustrate guide, "NIAGARA TO THB If you desire rest and recreation, why not Now, these will be the virtues of the cerâ€" eals, they are cheap, easily swallowed and of moderate nutritive value. There is an element in the average human mind, balf puritanic. baif stingy, which is inclined to count as a virtue in ingestion of any food which is not especially attractive but beâ€" lieved to be nutritious. In fact, to eat that which is cheap and filling is one of the petty vices, MINARD‘S LINIMENT. I cured a horse, badly torn by a pitch fork, with MINARD‘S LINIMENT. St. Peter‘s, C. B. EDW, LINLIEF. All, or practically all, these policies are British. After allowing for overâ€" lapping, more than half the working classes in Great Britain, most women and children, are insured with the indusâ€" trial life offices. I cured a horse of the Mange with MINARD‘S LINIMENT. CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERS. "Industrial" insurance is very popular in Great Britain. The number of poliâ€" cies outstanding is immense, namely, 24,608,532, insuring $1,210,000,000, at an annual premium expense of $55,000,000. Expenses fell from 44.5 to 43.5 per cent. of premiums. _ British life insurance as a whole did not increase much last year. In 1900, excluding inductrials, the policies numâ€" bered 958,824, insuring $2,350,000,000. In the six years since the number has inâ€" creased only about five per cent., to 1,â€" 005,304, while the total amount insured only increased to $2,435,000,000, or less than 4 per cent. For instance, the percentage of all exâ€" penses, including agents‘ commissions, to premiums is now only 13.50 per cent. In 1900 it was 14.01 per cent., and it has fluctuated between that and the present ratio in the intervening years. According to the British Board of Trade‘s Annual Blue Book on Life Inâ€" surance Companies, the business is far more cheaply run in Great Britain than as the recent revelations have told us, it is in this country. Use the currycomb on the cow. _ She meeds it as much as the horse does. If it is not used, loose hair will be conâ€" stantly dropping into the milk pail.â€" KEben E. Rexford in "Making the Country Home," in The Outing Magazine for Febâ€" Bathurst, N. B. THOS. W. PAYNKE. I cured a horse of a bad swelling with Be thoroughly scrullbed. Every stall ;‘i:;:)ld be provideddwith some means for sing of liquid excrement promptâ€" ly. Letgthe tidiness for which g[olhnd is famous prevail here, and we may proâ€" duce butter which will rival the producâ€" tion of the Dutch dairies We have all necessary facilities for making as fine butter as is made anywhere in the world, but we have not yet been educated up to the proper stangard of caring for the dairy. * Dalhousie. 4°% °NC BLaDie, It should be thorouil;ldy cleaned every morning. Ai soiled â€" ding should give place to that which is clean and fresh. Twice a week it should us Class s s â€" oi true. Too much attention cannot be given to feeding at stated intervals and milking with cfockwork regularity. The utmost neatness ought always to prevail in the stable. It j}ould be thoroughly The cow is largely a creature of habit. A &rominent dairyman recently said, at & dairy convention, "When you break in on a cow‘s habits, you disturb her whole ‘lilk-mnking machinery." This is quite THE COW, & Creature of Habit, so Milk Her Reguâ€" None of Them Lost so Far. â€" Life Insurance in Great Britain, Cheap and Filling Food. TORONTO In alecture on objectionable publidtyi Bostonian said the other night: "So far as billboard advertising is concerned, the advertiser must realize that the abuse has aroused such feeling that it no longer adds to his reputation, but is simply of: fensive notoriety." This is putting it a little too strong. Repugnant as the billâ€" oard is to the aesthetic sense, like every other medium ithh:eit. value. It cannot be compared with the daily newspaper as a means of influencing &xrchube;- Noâ€" body was ever persua to buy anyâ€" thing because he saw the maker‘s name on a poster. Billboards are useful merely as auxiliaries to newspaper arguments. They are simply reminders «erving to recall attention to what the advertiser has said in the daily press. During December, 1905, the receipts of the Mazatian telegraph office ( the telegraph lines being owned and operatâ€" ed by the federal government) were as follows: Messages sent and received, 6,â€" 244, the fees for which were nearly $10,â€" 000, American currency. The goverrâ€" :lne;lt messages amounted to $634 in adâ€" ition. p "I? I‘m neve; thglty."" ddy 1 + s a "But » 4 1 a * Wireless Telegraphy in Mexico. ' "Y:l.yi‘ll! ‘;e f;r n C l:l‘xt a ie “zn onlgm Wireless telegraphy was put in pubâ€" | thirsty." lie service on January 1, 1906, at Maz‘i ommmmeemnmmmemmenenencoomsimnmes eoommemermmesmene atlan and messages are now being sent and received from Guayamas and Santn.‘ °r. nge Rosalia, Lower California, the latter | precious remedy, place having been without telegraphic : ‘.-‘- and free ...'.:.‘E 8. l' communication, ‘The tariff rate for M | T omm mm message is $1 American currency for ; . <Pinattre®irtireaPricbiÂ¥eaPrpanye each ten words and ten cents, American for each additional word. It is too early F to give an op}i’nign as to the success of mers &Ild l the system, which consists of two plants called the “Shll:y-Arco" and "Telefunâ€" When you requin ken," both of which were imported from C erkiany. .. _â€" Tuh Pall Wach Racin Ask for Minard‘s and take no Other Diplomatically, this may be _ true. Socially and individually, it is not. The English possess too many agreeâ€" able traits to permit them to be as much disliked as they think and hope they are.â€"Agnes Repplier, in May Smart Set. per with which England regards the other States of Europe and the tamper with which those States regard her is albsolutely different." And then, with illâ€"concealed elation, the writer adds: "The English are the most universally disliked race on the face of the earth." So much has been said and written about England‘s "splendid isolation," the phrnse has grown _ so familiar to English eyes and ears, that the political attitude it represents is a source of pride to thousands of Englishmen who are intelligent enough to know what isolation costs. "It is of the utmost importance," says the Spectator, â€" "that we should understand that the tomâ€" | The Follies of the Rich. ‘ (Leslic‘s Weekly.) â€" To the fact that all the fools are not dead yet, especially the rich fools, the newspapers of the day furnish abundant evidence. It was one of this class living in Philadelphia who spent $20,000 the other evening on the "‘coming out‘" of his eldest daughter â€" a sum of money expended in mere vain disâ€" play larger that the total income for a year of many hardâ€"working and worthy men. More of a fool by several degrees was the wealthy woman in a New Hampshire town who had a pet dog buried the other day in a costly casket trimmed with white satin and adorned with cut flowers. Upon such pabulum as this does anarchism feed and grow. The worst and most dangerous eleâ€" ments of society toâ€"day are not to be found in the slums nor in the haunts of vice, but in the mansions of men ard women who make no better use of the opportunities which large wealth has afforded them than to feed their own follies and vanities. Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€"wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. 8. M. #umâ€" mers, Box 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money, but write her toâ€"day if your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child; the chances are it can‘t help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by night or day. Sunlight Soap is bottor than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions. sterers BETTER THAN SPANKING What the Dress Needed. (Titâ€"Bits.) Miss Anglesâ€"This new gown of mine doesn‘t give me the graceful figure the tailor claimed it would. I must have it altered. Miss Plumbleighâ€"Why don‘t you take it to Paddem & Co.? Miss Anglesâ€"Are they your tailors? _Miss Plumpleighâ€"Oh, no; they are upholâ€" ~SUNLIGHT: A Y = ~â€"(~ §SOAP _ "SPLENDID ISOLATION." Newspaper Auxiliaries, bauer mes _0 ommmmemmamen S y o e o tmï¬ memmmememmmmmmmmmmmmmemmmmmen Orange Blossorms mm'm"&pwat-:‘â€". Write ter Qemeription Something for a Starter, (Philadelphia Ledger.) ‘"So you will make a dash for the morth pole by airship. Have you the ship wet?" *‘*Noâ€"o, not exactly." ‘"How far along are your preparations?" We have the air." *‘What was his sentence?" ‘‘The judge gave him five hours in a room with his five wives." Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend. Fatherâ€"Can you support her in the manner to which she is accustomed? Suitorâ€"Yes, sir; if you will raise an equal amount. poses. ‘The reason why these cattle are deâ€" sired by cattlemen is that they are immune from pleuroâ€"pneumonia, which has caused such heavy losses through infection by cattle ticks. The ticks, it is asserted, can not work on the sacred cattle. Experiments have been carried on for years to demonstrate this fact. ‘The introduction of oneâ€"eight of sacred blood in the ordinary American cattle is said to be enough to obtain immunity. Secretary Wilson agreed to afford facilities for the imâ€" portation fo Indian cattle, but on condition that government veterinarian should examine every beast before it was bought and give his approval to the purchase. ‘The expenses of the veterinarians are paid by the cattleâ€" men. DOUGHTY‘S CEMENT BUILDING (Boston Transcript.) ‘The government has undertaken to superâ€" intend the introduction into this country of the sacred cattle of India for breeding purâ€" ITCHING PILES.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Ointâ€" ment is proof against the torments of Itchâ€" ing Piles. ‘Thousands of testimonials of cures effected by its use No case too agâ€" gravated or too long standing for it to soothe, comfort and cure. It cures in from 3 ot 6 nights. 35 cents.â€"95 _ § "Well, that I would not; I‘ve got two goats!" "Another example: If you had two goats and I had none, then you‘d give me one." "That I would, Dennis, and it‘s a fine doctrine, too." ‘‘You must have an awful thirst, Hissot "I‘ll tell you what socialism is," said one. ‘If you and me were socialists and you had a thousand dollars and I had none, Fou‘d give me five hundred." "It‘s fine," said the other. "Go on." "Again, if you had ten cows, and I had none, you‘d give me five." "Sure I would. Go on; what next?" "Or, if you had two horses and I had none, you‘d give me oneâ€"that would be socialism." FIBRE WARE uns Capital Punishment. i‘!{g pleaded guilty to the charge of bigâ€" Teaching Political Economy. Two Irishmen were discussing pure socialism. Farmers and Dairymen Tub, Pall, Wash Basin or Milk Pan You wl:l.gun:n m.:;.y s\: my:u satieâ€" - THERE Is NO SUBSTITUTE Keeping Down His Thirst, Makes Carnegie a Proposal. Insist on being supplied with EDDYy‘s3 every time. 6e Importing Sacred Cattle, . B. EDDY‘S will be paid ; 0 C ECV â€"wymm‘mm. chine when you can h’ fit at a moderate cost? a&:‘h’“.ufln “tl | wee uryeving .Mm Bt Chanailan tPD ue 2s aug mone® i MimPle: handy and essily eled. _ WBV pey fancy prices for a Block Meâ€" **And so you have three new little brotipe m?"uhmnd‘hborot.lltu.nflphr- lnngn the front yard. "Isn‘t that pice*" "*Yes‘m.** ."'I“ ’I'Elllt congratulate your papa. ‘Where _"ln tho_huu writing a letter to Mr. "‘I stopped speaking to him," ed. *‘because he naid aush a ed, "‘because he paid such a poor compliâ€" ment to my taste and judgzment " Probably the most important step that has been taken in this country during the last decade has been in the direction of reclaimâ€" ing arid and semiarid lands by means of irrigation. Vastas tracks in the west and middle west are now richly productive that once was considered worthless for raising crops. Deserts formerly given over to moeagâ€" er bush and cactus are now wonderfully fruitful fields and gardens. In this developâ€" ment the department of agriculture has beon a most potent factor. It has realized the dreams of ploneers that were considered vieâ€" ianary and impractical. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. cold and exposure many a brave soldier who left his native hearth as "fit‘" as could be to fight for country‘s homor, has been "inâ€" valided home‘" because of the vulture of the battle groundâ€"Rheumatism. South Ameriâ€" can Rheumatic Cure will absolutely cure evâ€" ery case of Rheumatism in existence. Relief in six hours.â€"98 At Manitou, Col., at the base of the Pike‘s Peak range, there is an electric power station, which is operated by a "head" of 2,100 feet. The pressure is greater than that at almost any other station in the world. It is calculated to be 913 pounds to the square inch where the water is utilized to drive turbine wheels, and at the nozzle of the long pipe employed the stream gushes out at the velocity of 250 miles an hour. The Nestor of Orientalists, Julius Opâ€" pert, whose 80th birthday was celebrated last month in Paris, is a German by birth, but since 1854 he has been a natâ€" uralized citizen of France. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. (Denver Post.) First Doctorâ€"You‘re treating Jenks for in= somnia, aren‘t you? Second Doctor.â€"Yes. First Doctorâ€"Have you rendered bim your bill vet? Second Doctorâ€"No, of course not. I want the man to be able to sleep. * ‘‘What did he do?" asked her **He wanted me to marry him.‘" ways be used for children testhing. it soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarâ€" 12 for 10¢; 60 for 5Oc; 100, $1; 200, $2; 600, §5; all different. Largest anf finest stook \Z jots, excellent for fruit, gardening OFf poultry; close to electric cars; big money in fruit. Write quick to A. S. Foster, Oakvilie, WARRIOR WOES.â€" BELL & SON, St. IsSsUE NO. 19. Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should alâ€" Blacksmith for agricutural machinery conâ€" irn; good position for sober industrious Souvenir Post Cards Made Productive by Irrigation, FARMS FOR SALE A safe, sure and reliable monthly regulaâ€" tor. ‘These Pills bave Leen used in France for over fifty years, ana found invaluable for the purpose designed, and are guaranâ€" teed by the makers. linclose stamp for sealed "circular. . Irice Ҡbox of 4. @9 mail, securely sealod, on ipt of price LE ROY PILL C€CO., MISCELLANEOUS. Insomnia Treatment. WA NTED Thing in Order, Box 42, Hamilton, Canada. DR. LeROY‘S IF yoU WANT To Th o M m ia «4 ain." saud prison tral station pris when the tromgleu something like eight n th cells the morni In our department ereatures charged 1 «rimes, many of who Iy lost. They cried mercy whon the she «d pitifuily for relea the #ul + Wits ayer whe unk the 1 to tower t women app Their praye after it bec tendants co CLFAN a@rate goners «drunk theso amaile mone dia gh blood The eart warped the eould be oy ©an |ï¬l ¢ wer ’la ( aniners malte: #ons, i aliy wintire The City G weosd l ing « as th @1 mnl Ni fats iC Curious an W 400 1 I0 Ma My be ver want t said prison ti ad