1 44 worrer $18,00 _ for t appr® | \ will °V shach the C ©1 to t hund Th have eit y of 1 for opea tensl_ worl take by Ne el pal ! ecity 'i'\ he lent"®" in n’ fort eral. up + fo dy te» Ag int "T9 of You call me an angel of love and light, A being of goodness and heavenly fire, Sent out from God‘s kingdom to guide you In paths where your spirit may mount and Aspire, You may say that I glow like a star in its course, Like a ray from the altar, a spark from the Now list to my answer, let all the world hear it; I speak unafraid what I know to be truc; A pure, faithful love is the creative spirit That makes women angels. I live but in you. We nlr.e bound soul to soul by life‘s holiest w#, And if 1 am an ange!l. why, you are the The world makes grave errors in judging these things, Great good and great evil are born in For ‘This fire from God‘s altar, this holy love flame That burns like eweet incense forever for you, Might now be a wild conflagration of shame, Had you tortured my heart or been base or untrue; For angels and devils are cast in one mould, ‘Till love guides them upward or downward, Love horms us and ‘hoofs us, or gives us 1 hold. I tell you the women who make ferveat wives And sweet tender mothers, had fate been less fair, Are the women that might have abandoned their lives To the madness that springs from and ez2ds in despair, As the fire on the hearth, which sheds brightness around, Neglected may level the walls to the ground. Had you wantonly misused the treasures you You As my ship skims the sea I look up from 1 laid down the wealth of my soul at your (lo?" woman does this for some man every ). No desperate creature that walks in the street Has a wickeder heart than I might have, Fair, firm at the wheel shines love‘s beautiful torm; Apd shall 1 scorn the barque that last night went to wreck, By the pilot abandoned to darkness and storm My craft was no stancher; she, too, had Elizabeth Whiting in the November Century O child my mouth has never kissed, My body never known, By all the joys that I have missed, I claim you as my own. _ _A verdiet of suicide luring temporary insanity was returned. At an inquest at Colchester on Colorâ€" Sergeant Harrison, of the Scottish Rorderers, who shot himself through the head after returring from furlough, a military surgeon stated that, although deceased‘s brain was protruding from the wound, he was perfectly sane for 36 hours. and read a book with evident apâ€" Two days afterwards, however, delirâ€" ium tremens set in, probably as the afâ€" ter effects of drinking while on furâ€" lough. It was stated that Harrison had a comfortable banking account, having eaved money while on foreign service. He belonged to Leeds. |______ _ _ preciation He wooed and won a pretty girl . . With bair of shining gold; She loved him with a loyalty Quite touching to behold. But other people‘s wives he used Approvingly to scan, And growl and grumble at his ownâ€" ‘The discontemted man. His business prospered every day, Another store he leased; He bought a house and motorâ€"car, His bank account increased. But still he wore a gloomy faceâ€" "While Jones is in the van My trade is going back," exclaimed The discontented man,. our wings, And the best could be worst and the worst could be best. ou may thank your own worth for what "t» bitter road that I have trod Has brought this thing to be: I need not give you back to God Who gave you not to me. tils children in and out of school Were wellâ€"behaved and bright; ‘They reached the hbead of every class And studied day az_:d_‘nllht. "It didn‘t take me balf so long To learn what 1 beganâ€" I wasn‘t such a dunce," complained The discontented man. He went abroad, and viewed unmoved ‘The Rhine‘s majestic flow, ‘The snowy splendor of the Alps, ‘The matchiess lakes below. "I want to got a steamer home As quickly as I can; There‘s nothing here worth sceling," cried ‘The discontented man. At last he left his earthly cares To mount the starry skies And knock upon the pearly gates That lead to Paradise; And though to fling the portals wide St. Peter nimbly ran, *You‘re long enough about it," said The discontented man. % watched the tides creep out and in, ‘The darkness wax and wane, The years lag by, and could not win To any rest from pain. Love called you to me from the dark, â€" But as your spirit heard, Death laid his fingers cold and stark Upon my heart that stirred. I yearned for you with every breath, O never had, yet lost, While on my heart with touch of death Struck deeper down like frost. But as toâ€"night I sit alone, With only shadows near, O child incredibly my own, I know that you are here. Within my breast and croon A song my mother used to make For me about the moon. I hold you tight against the ache Come soon or late the day when earth Shall grant its gift of rest, The child to whom I gave not birth Shall lie upon my breast. O little child forever mine, Yet safe from life that barms, Not all of buman and divine Can take you from my arms! LIVED WITH BRAIN EXPOSED. so many men with heart riches have done. 4 I grew to be, the demon lurked under the angel in the v';;lnan deserted or slept at his WITH POETS The Discontented Man. The Child That Came. As He Makes Her. â€"ELLA WHEELER WILCOX *# A harder case is that of the tradesman who deals on credit with a lady enjoyâ€" ing a substaatial income but discovers when he seeks to enforce payment that her income is subject to restraint on anâ€" ticipation. The original idea of this reâ€" striction seems to have been to protect ,| a married woman from the consequences tiof her extravagance and the danger of her denuding herself of her property unâ€" â€"Ger the influence of her husband, Take the fougwing case for the sake of illusâ€" tration : s A 4i#4y with a settled incotme of, say, a thousand a year, subject to restraint on anticipation, buys goods on credit for which she afterward declines to pay. The tradesman sues her, and as she has no defence he gets his judgment. But to his dismay he finds the judgment so framed. as to put beyond his grasp the very meansâ€"viz., the lady‘s incomeâ€"to which he had looked for the discharge of her debt. The lady may have a large credit balance at the bank at the very time when judgment is got against her, but the court will not permit the creditor to touch a penny of it; much less will he be allowed to lay hands upon subsequentâ€" ‘ ly aceruing income. He is in the tantaâ€" lizing position of seeing his lady debtor in session of ample means to »ay whlr:‘ he is utterly helpless to compel her to pay a farthing. On the other hand, if it be shown to be clearly to the lady‘s advantage that she should be alâ€" lowed to anticipate her income, in spite of this restriction, she can apply to the court and get the restriction removed. But the court does not take the view that the payment of her just debts is sufficiently to her advantage to justify this procedure.â€"London Spectator. As the result of a series of acts of Parliament passed during the last sevâ€" ‘enty years married women have graduâ€" ‘ally emerged from this position of legal disability. â€" Now a married woman may possess separate property of her own and deal with it quite independently of her husband. She may make contracts. Bhe may sue and be sued in her own name. _ In fact, she now enjoys all the rights of an unmarried woman. wq‘l‘xired during her marriage passed inâ€" to his control and he had the sole right .of dealing with it. She could not make ‘a valid contract. _ She could not sue or be sued alone. â€" She was, in fact, a legal! nonentity, a mere shadow of her husâ€" band‘s personality. 1 10 & it en $ _i is l a€ The history of the favored position which married women occupy in our leâ€" gal system is not without interest. Unâ€" til comparatively recent times a married woman was considered in the eye of the law as no more capable of owning or dealing with property than an infant or a Inuatic. All she {oneued when she married became hber husband‘s. All she But for some unaccountable reason the Legislature in conferring upon her inâ€" creased powers and grivilegos has not enâ€" larged her responsibility in proportion. In a recent case a married woman was sued by a large West End firm of milâ€" liners and dressmakers for the price of goods supplied. The manager before opening the accovnt had made the usual inquiries as to the lady‘s means, and reâ€" ceiving satisfactory information allowed her to have the goods on credit. On that footing she dealt with the firm and became a regular customer. The artiâ€" cles which she ordered were charged to her account. â€" The bills were sent in to her, and for a while she paid regular‘y by her own cheques. Shortly afterward the lady‘s husband, who had been livâ€" ing with a vast show of wealth, was found to be utterly insolvent. He abâ€" sconded and the firm sued the lady for the unpaid balance of her account. She refused to pay on the pretext that she had bought the dresses as her husband‘s ageht and that she had his authority to do so. But the firm knrew nothing of this. The Only indication they had reâ€" ceived of her having a husband was the fact that she gave her married nameâ€"a fact which, as was pointed out by one of the Judges, was entirely consistent with her being a widow. The case went to the House of Lords and eventua‘ly :t ;'las held that the lady was not legally iable. aee O en it o e o n l s t t Regarded from the standpoint of legal liability, her position still remains in many respects quite exceptional and anoâ€" malous. _ For example, the wife is enâ€" tirely exempt from liability to pay for articles which fall within the category of "necessaries"; and in the case of ladâ€" ies in society "necessaries" is a very elastic term and may include expensive articles of dress or jewelry. Dr. Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid cures any form of Piles. Internal, External, Bleeding, Blind. Itching, Suppurating, etc., are simply names of the stages through every case will pass if it continues. Piles are caused by congestion of blood in the lower bowel, and it takes an internal remedy to remove the cause. . Dr. Leonhardt‘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. k + There is no more agreeable or refreshâ€" Ing addition to a cold meat collation, especiaily in the fine warm days of sumâ€" mer, than a wellâ€"made salad. It is the experience of a good many persons that the appetite becomes lessened by the sight of food, and more particularly of animal food. on a hot day, and that this is not so much the case when it is acâ€" eompanied by a fresh green salad, which not oul’v renders the outlook of a meal attractive, so far as regards the palate, but encouraging also to the digestive organs. When there is no inclination to eat, or when, as it is commonly said, a person does not "fancy" his food‘ there is, as a rule, torpidity of digestive funeâ€" tion. ~With the sight of tempting food the work of the digestive organs is beâ€" gun. "The mouth waters and even the gestric ljulee flows im response to a pleasant impression. ‘The salad, thereâ€" ferme, may fill fill a special and importâ€" ant gap in the dietary, and when it is prepared with oil, as every good salad should be, it becomes an excellent and agreeable vehicle for conveying fat into _ $1.00 at all dealers, of ‘The ‘Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co.. Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 14 the It is a singular fact until quite recent NO DIFFERENCE SALAD DAYS. years the salad wus an almost ignored dish in England, and its preparation was so badly understood and its attraetive qualities were thereby so impaired that few were tempted to include the salad in the daily dietary. The demand for salad has since happily grown, thanks perhaps to the experience of an increasâ€" ing clientele who have visited the counâ€" tries of the salad connoisseur on the conâ€" tinent. But even now few English peoâ€" ple realize that there is no country so favored as is England with materials for making saladsâ€"â€"materials which glow wild abundantly and which may be posâ€" sessed for the mere plucking. As a rule a salad conveys to the averâ€" age English mind merely a dish of culâ€" tivated plants, such as lettuce, endive, cucumber, =:zstard, cress, onion or radish. Such excellent wild vegetables as sorrel, dandelion, wild chicory, shepherd‘s purse, lady‘s smock, or even stomne crop, all dignified by the name of weeds, are well known to our French neighvbors as admirable ingredients as a salad; but such plants, though growing abundantly in every grassy meadow, are almost unâ€" known as materials for a salad in this country. DPressed by the discreet addiâ€" tion of sourd olive oil and pure wine vinegar, no more excellent adjunct to the cold dish can be suggested.â€" The oil modifies and "smocths" the . peculiar flavors of the juices of the plant, while the vinegar softens the tissues, renders them more digestible, and gives an agreeâ€" able piquancey to the whole. The use of salads prepared from tender plants by those who possess normal digestive powers is undoubtedly salutary, and the constituents of raw green vegetables contain salts which have a favorable efâ€" fect upon the condition of the blood.â€" The Lancet BETTER THAN SPANKING London Schools. The official report of the education comrmittee of the London County Counâ€" cil for the year ended March, 1905, points out that the cost of: public education during the period was £5,000,000 gross, or £3,000,000 net, that is, after deductâ€" }:r'lg the grants from the Board of Educaâ€" 100. Among the articles supplied to the public elementary day schools in the course of a year were 11,520 gallons of ink (fluid). 14,400 gallons of ink (powdered). 5,000,000 copy books. 1,250,000 drawing books. 20,000 reams foolscap. 15,000 gross pencil work books. 11,300 reams pencil work paper. 2,200 reams blotting paper. 65,000 gross pens. es md 3,000â€"gross penholders. truc (Eastern World.) Oh Soka, Palaka, protector of the world in weneral and of Japan in particular, mayest thou forever be seated on a lotus flower like Padmavati, the daughter of Bibbu and the bride of Sakti. Verily, the Linga Purana, in which Siva explained the objects of life, conâ€" tain no wisdom like thine. Surely thou art even as Mahavira, the twentyâ€"fourth Tirthaaâ€" kara of the Jains, who was born many times and finally attained the Kevala, that is, the only knowledge, under a ‘Tal tree on the north bank of the Rijupalika. (Detroit News.) Mrs. Krick, wife of a farmer near Belding, is worth having. Recently between the hours of 1 and 5 o‘clock p. m. of an October day Mrs. Krick picked up fortyâ€"six bushels of potatoes, besides having to stop and bother with the baby, which it was necessary to have in the field with ber. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. Papaâ€"Is the teacher watisfied with you? Tobyâ€"O, quite. Papaâ€"Did he tell you so? Tobyâ€"Yes after a close examination he said to me the other day, "If all my scholâ€" ars were like you, I would shut up my school this very day." That shows that I know enoust Wisdom of Oh Soka Palaka. CGray‘s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum Valuable Helpmeet. He Knew Enough. GRAV‘S SYRUP does that one thing, and does it well, It‘s no ‘"cureâ€"all,‘"‘ but a CURKE for all throat and lung troubles. GRAY‘S SYRUP OF RED SPRUCE GUM stops the irritating tickle â€" takes away the sorenessâ€"sooths and heals the throat â€"aud CURES COUGHS to stay cured. None the less effective because it is pleasant to take. TORONTO TZAMâ€"BUK WINS WORKERS‘ PRAISE. Zamâ€"Buk has been called "the workâ€" er‘s friend" because it brings such reâ€" lief and healing to workers who suffer from cuts, burns, bruises or any skin injury or disease. Mr. Alf. J. Clark, of _ Cavendish street, London, Ont., tells how Zamâ€"Buk cured him of severe burns. _ He says: "I got my hands very severely burned with lime. | The burns were so deep that as I Elied my shovel the blood actually ran down the handle. ‘The agony I suffered you may well imagine. _ I tried several different kinds of salve, but the burns were too severe for these preparations to heal. Consul Golding writes from Newcastle that the Australian cultivation of sisal hemp, which is geneerally making its way in Queensland, has now been brought within the range of the manufacturers‘ and traders‘ outlook. The government experimental plantation at St. Helena has been producing first rate fibre, and this has now been manufacturcd at the Kangaroo Point Rope Works with exâ€" cellent results. Coils of one inch rope for shipping and other purposes, clotheslines, binding twine and Yashing have all been made and placed on view in the Brisbane stores. The appearance of the articles is equal to those imported. The binding twine on a recent test bore a strain of ‘jmore than 137 pounds and the lashings resisted up to 255 pounds. acatching another cold. After his illness I the professor was seized with a senseless | dread of taking cold and insisted upon | keeping his bedroom windows _ closed down tight, and from that time until his death spent prnctiull{ all of his ; time in bed, where he did all his regular | work and ate his three meals a day. . "I obtained a supply of Zamâ€"Buk, and the very first application gave me ease. This pleased me, you may guess, but as I applied the balim each day I was more and more pleased with the effect. The pain was relieved comâ€" pletely. toe hal it . "I had often heard of Zamâ€"Buk, but thought before I tried it that it was similar to the ordinary salves you see advertised. In a very short time Zamâ€" Buk healed my burns completely, and my head actually felt better â€"â€" teh muscles more firm and the skin in betâ€" ter condition than before I was burned." Not only for burns, but for cuts, bruises, sprains, etc., Zamâ€"Buk is the best and surest cure. It also cures eczema, ulcers, abscesses, _ ringworln, boils, _ eruptions, _ poisoned wounds, chapped or cracked hands, cold sores, chilblains, bad leg, piles, ete. _ All druggists sell at 50c. a box, or post free from the Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto, on receipt of price. 6 boxes for $2,50. Blood Tonic is a pure, safe, pleasant cure fos nevvens exhantion. painitation of the nervous ex!uymou. pllp&lm:nd o ho heart, reubls sopee soie eoneen ag ob dccden nj!;‘.n-‘ retabredt Te .‘ meas": dAnoi in pmr _ Don‘t neglec yourself. Clear the poison out of your body ‘by wing Mira Blood Toake. â€" . â€" ~Every ditail of its manufacure is personally supervised by experienced chemits. hi::l- from the pureit and best ingredients on the most effective formula effered by modern science. $1 aâ€"bottle, At drugâ€"#toresâ€"or from The Chemists‘ Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamiltonâ€"Toronto. _ Witk Mira Tablets and Ointmentâ€"a trio for health. Eccentricities of a Professor, > It is seldom that we hear of a more eccentric man than was Professor (Cedâ€" mann, a Swedish theologian, who died a short time ago in Stockholm. One time during a prolonged illness he was comâ€" pelled to remain in ded for many weeks, and during this time conceived a liking for lying snugly ensconced in warm blanâ€" kets, free from the caprices of the weaâ€" ther and protected from the perils of Cures Coughs So very odd was he that in examining written exercises by the students he reâ€" fused to touch the paper upon which they were written until it had first been warmed over the stove. It is claimed that the professor‘s death was actually causâ€" ed by a visit from an old gentleman on a stormy day who desired an interview with him. This latter incidentally entered the chamber of the professor with his clothes covered with snow, a sight which aggraveted the professor and he ordered his visitor to leave the room at once. Unfortunately the visitor was quite deaf and misunderstood him, _ approaching nearer to the bedside of the angry proâ€" fessor. Herr Oedmann became greatly alâ€" armed and in his _ frantic: excitement broke a blood vessel and expired. MARVELLOUS CURE OF BURNS. I was cured of 'painful Goitre by MINâ€" ARD‘S LINIMENT. Chatham, Ont. _ BYARD MeMULLIN. I was cured of Inflammation by MINâ€" ARD‘S LINTIMENT. Walsh, Ont. MRS. W. H. JOHNSON. I was cured of Facial Neuralgia . by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. Parkdale, Ont. J. H. BAILEY. Fear of the Electric Cradle. (Albany, N. Y., Argus.) The man who invented an electric cradle, the neowest in baby tenders, must have been inexperienced in the ways of fond mothers or he would have known the futility of patentâ€" ing the contraption to which no woman with the average amount of maternal nerves would utbaidineg vout on an vat o c B on w Pod P Simgh e edgdis for a minute trust her offspring lest it might be electrocuted at the first rock. For some time to come the baby rocking of the universe is likely to be donm____. Manufactures From Sisal Hemp. MLLLL NLLV Aeanievrben TRADE MARK RLGISTEREO. 25 cts. bottle. . | Reasons Why Doctors Use Dead Tongue in Prescriptions, Why does the doctor write his preâ€" scription in Latin instead of English? In the first place, Latin is a more exâ€" act and concise language than English and, being a dead language, does not change, as all living tongues do., Secondly, since a very large pro{;orua of all drugs in use are botanical, they have in the pharmacopoecia the same names as. they have in botanyâ€" the scientific names. â€" Twoâ€"thirds of such drugs are without an Tnglish equivaâ€" lent for their Latin names. The{ canâ€" not, therefore, be indicated in English. _ The third reason is a very r‘hctical one. Suppose a physician should write a prescription in English. The patient, it is to be supposed, reads the prescripâ€" patent ,a careless or uneducated man tion, thinks he remembers it, and so tries to get it filled from memory the second time. It may, for instance, have called for iodide of potassium, which the perhaps, confuses with cyanide of potasâ€" sium. Of the first drug he can safely take ten grains, but one grain of the second would kill him. Perhaps the above is an extreme asâ€" sumption, but it will serve as an illusâ€" tration. In this respect Latin is a posiâ€" tive protection and a safeguard to the patient not being able to read Latin, cannot therefore have recourse to his memory. _ e i aratrxInB i SV ol * E The final reason is this: _ Latin is a language used by scientific men the world over. No other language is so honired. A Latin prescription may be filled in any country on the face of the earth where there is a drug store. Dear Mother St. Luke‘s day is also called Whip Dog day in the almanacs, which refers us to the quaint offices of dog whipper and sluggard waker, that used to be held generally by one person attached to every church. As late as 1857 there is a record if one of these officials at Dunchurch, who, armed with a wand that had a fork at the of it, used to go round the church during sermon time and wake the sleopers by crooking it around their necks. Sometimes the fand had a fox‘s brush at the other end, with which to arouse lady sleepers more courteously. In some places the whip for driving dogs out of church is still preserved; and till quite reâ€" cently the schoolboys had a custom of whipâ€" ping the dogs out of the streets on St. Luke‘s day in a similar way. A curious entry in the Wakefield church accounts runs thus: "1703: For batts, shoes and hoses, for sexton and dog whipper, 18s 64." "* IMPERIAL‘® PUMPING WINDMILL THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF GOOLD, SHAPLEY @ MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. The Price of Proficiency. Herkimer James, the wollâ€"known seiâ€" entist, was talking in New York about the bill of $25,000 that Dr. Frank Billâ€" ings presented to the Marshall Field esâ€" "It seems a big fee," said Prof. James, "But whenever physicians‘ fees scem exâ€" tortionate I think of a certain famous eye specialist. _ _ o ut CE es is ME "A patient of this epecialists, coming to pay his bill, growled: ""Moctor, it seems to me that £500 is a big charge for that operation of mine, It didn‘t take you over half a minute.‘ "‘My dear sir, the other answered, in learning to perform that operation in half a minute 1 have spoiled over eleven pecks of such eyes as yours.‘" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. ADVANTAGES OF LATIN. While Archbisbop Trench was dean of Westminster he delegated Canon Cureâ€" . ton to preach at the wbbey on a certain saint‘s day. On such days the boys of Westminster school attended service and afterward had the rest of the day as a holiday.. While Mr. Curcton, on the morning of the day he was to officiate, i was looking over his sermon at the | breakfast table, his son asked, in a tone | vibrating with anxiety: * ‘Father, is | yours a long sermon toâ€"day?" : "No, Jimmy; not very." j "But how long? Please tell me." "Well, about twenty minutes, I should say. But why are you so anxious to | know?" _ L f "Because, father, theâ€" boys say they will thrash me awfully if you are more than half an hour." "Decency ard nolitics," says Dr. Parkâ€" hurst, ‘"have been divorced.‘" By the way, haven‘t they been liviag apart for some time in New York? Your little ones are a constant care i Fall and Wintee weather. They wi Fall and Wintee weather. w eatch cold. Do you know about Shiloh‘s Son Cure, the Lung Tonic, and Miï¬doncbtwmy? It is said zo be the only reliable remedy for all discases of the air passages in children. It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to is returned. . The price is 25¢. per bottle, T eud uh deslors i Inoibemne woll / _ .. 314 $HILOH take. Itisguaranteed to cure or your money "This remedy should be in every household. Not on Speaking Terms Lately. Brevity Appreciated. Whip Dog Day. He was a solemn dCOMAMIIAAO TCO Olael) ;%lully solemn and downtrodden wife. e fact that they were receiving &D excellent price for their "second pair front‘ from an American lodger did not blind them to her failings. "Dear me, Mr. Macleo4," said the lodger one Sunday afternoon, when an errand took her to the parlor, where the family sat, "I should think you and 1 We ue t nnntcctnts" M oradat d T .ccise t c v d your whe would be stifled sitting inâ€" doors this hot day with the windows shut. If you‘d just open one and get soem fresh air I‘m sure it would do Mrs. Macleod good; she looks pale." Mr. Macleod looked at her with his usual stern and unbending gaze. "We can hae fresh air ony day,‘ he said, calmly, "We‘ve no need to hae it ;usll:ing aboot the house on the Sawâ€" ath." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows,. Wednesday. November 28th, Tickets only $9.00 round trif from Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls. _ Tickets good D 4 . oo ds Aimas en n n tm W on regular express trains leaviMg Susâ€" pension Bridge 3.50 and 7.15 a. m., 1.15 and 843 p. m. Tickets good 15 days. For tickets and further particulars, call or write Robt. S. Lewis, Canadian Pasâ€" senger Agent, 10 King street east, Toâ€" ronto. T ns d sn eee d ds ie i ainnidiith tocrats, Ailocinactrniniisctainad We have reformed the great !\owm-lu buildings, but fine :u'n t aine ber game, _am.] 1(»({!\)f\ll pla};er! can I'IFh'l' 8. Th“-o:‘thm\.ï¬.':(“' , in ue.“’.oq break their bones kumanely, says e eeoc‘l. t “"“w.lfl Hanpon Travel Magazine, but we have not lllc-‘ 00 pirer in ‘orimen M ownkbip. 101 5, susâ€" i forming the November gales. ‘ cession 7, formerly n as the Hanigan cceded in re ng | s o o olel lno'..‘ & n The autumn wind is an unregenerate -:'l: “m o7 Gfl.’ “l...m: abou $ around the Flatiron Building toâ€"day as it | ;n ai1 the M.'â€:.’ Cc ‘""Mk"mw was around the family clothesline 'in Qliâ€" ; possession; small payment down and low inâ€" ver Wendell Holwes‘ boyhood. Nobody l‘ch‘.:crt.l-:l’hm.l;r:. balance. For has hung a shorn lamb on that gusty corner. _ But we in New York don‘t T. 'o Jo F‘“R .ll'l’klfl'. BC. care, Out in the country, ?\p\'emher $ James street south, Nhon, DL f bring a certain sadumess with it; the 4 n oi e mnnee en nnermmenmmmen o Hamilton, Ontario dead leaves swirl, sometimes out of the } MISCELLANEOUS, gray sky comes a spit of snow, t:e WW weight of coming winter rests on t el TOLD THIE spirit. _ But here in town there is a reâ€" | 1ove flm:.mv-. -m-n or business, compense. ‘For every fallen flower, blosâ€" ! comes true. Send N-"'Mu.";“ Prof. soms an electric light bulb in an amuseâ€" | Lavas, box 16, Delormier P. O., Montreal, ment sign. We have returned from na. | Quebee. ture and the pleasures of solitude to the | gge T F o m ho naae pleasures of society. The last rose of ml‘:â€:'-. u..°~. summer may be fallen in the garden, DUt | aorjeg of weemhl p w‘-u contains . a it is just being sung of by Sembrich, | ing with full instructions, 'm"-mn‘m (Modern Society.) A clergyman was rating against diâ€" vorce. "We ought to have the divoree law that was enforeed in ansent Greece," he said. "If that old Greex clause was tacked to every separation I am persundod that divorees would fail off 60 to 70 per cent. This law wae thta when a man got a divorce he cou‘d not under any Circumstances marry a woman younger than his exâ€"wifo. An innocent Jaw, a brief law, not much to look at, but how many divoree enits would be nipped in the bud :if all husâ€" bands krew that after the separation they could not marry younger women than the wives they had cast off?" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper, ‘There is no city in the world where so much bread is consumed as in P‘aMS. i1 is tauâ€" mated that every iubabitant eats one pound a day on an average. Even P‘iwt centus~ les the Frenchâ€"especially nsâ€"â€"had a horror of stale breed. And, as in those days people manufactured their own bread, they had a curious way of making jt palatable. Strange as it may seem, the bread they ! preparedâ€"huge round or equare slabsâ€"was : used as a dish on which the meat was carved, and bore the name of ""tranchoirs," or "‘tailâ€" loirs.‘" The juice of the meat having peneâ€" trated into the bread imparted a pleasant taste and prevented it from becoming dry. £& °7 / EDDY‘S SAFETY MATCHES @ lflmï¬ * _". pARL OR One Way of Checki 1z Divorce. â€"Day New York Excursion Via Lehigh Valley Railroad. Tsie Joys of November. solemn Scotchman, with an mn and downtrodden wife. at they were receiving an ice for their "second pair an American lodger did not Parisians‘ Bread. (The Bystander.,) MATCHES BULELP M L M I some small fruit and timber. 7. 36 acres Township of Binbrook, 14 miles from Hamilton on new county stone road; no buildings, but fine soil. 8. ‘The south % of lot »0, in the second concession of Glanford, near Hannon P.O., 1 88 mcres, good buildings. e ic o ladies and gontiemen; perna tion:; rapid advancement; ealary penses; genteel, desirable busine jlence unnecessary; full instruct Write THE J. L. NICHOLS CO., | 8. ‘The south % of lot »0, in the second concession of Glanford, near Hannon P.O., ; 88 mcres, good buildings. . 100 acres in Grimsby ‘Township, lot 7, conâ€" cession 7, formerly {.ovl as the Hanigan farm; good buildings and orchard; about 4 miles south of Grimsby viliage; pï¬et $3,200. , In all the above we can give immediate ; possession; small payment down and low inâ€" ; terest and easy terms for the balance. For A Good Salary TORONTO Choice Farm Properties For Sale or To Rent 1. The Lassert farm, 140 mores, @O)oinink the east side of the Town of Preston ; one of the best farms in Waterioo County ; brick bouse and large bank barn. 2. The Robert 8. Smith farm, Township of Glanford, 7 miles from Ham{ilton, ®@ acres, Mulmwmm.flmuw beech, maple and pine timber, 12 acres fall wheat in zonnd; fall plowing done. 3. The nmtnrn.lotn.eonoc-h-d. West Flamboro, 7 miles from Hamilton «on good gravel rogd; stone house, large bank barn; magnificent stock and dairy farm; 100 acres. 4. 90 acres. 1% miles from the Village of Smithville, on tpe T., H. & B. Ry., with fair byildings, known as the old Morse farm. 5. % acres in the Township of Willoughby, northwest part of lot 8, in the first cross concession, 12 miles east of Welland, known as the Sauer property, with fair buildings and some fruit, 3 miles from railway station. 6. 60 acres in the Township of Nelson, 17 mijles from Hamilton, known as the Harris y our, PORTUNE _ TOLD FROM THE cradle to the grave; matters of business, love and marriage made clear; what 1 tell THE FARMERS‘ MANUAL contains a series of special lessons in Farm Bookkeepâ€" ing with full instructions, separate ruling and printed headings for @grain account, poultry account, cattle account, hog account, labor account, dairy mccount, expense acâ€" count, department for each kind of grain, cash received account, and cash paid account. THE MANUAL also contains a complete inâ€" sect department, a veterinary handâ€"book. a perfect system of horseâ€"training according to the methods used by Prof. O. W. Gleason, besides the Farmer‘s {au Department. 400 pages. 1. The Lassert farm, 140 mores, adjoining e east side of the Town of Preston ; ne of the best farms in Waterioo County ; rick house and large bank barn. 2. The Robert 8. Smith farm, Township f Glanford, 7 miles from Hamiiton, ®@ acres, mmmwuamm.nmotw eech, maple and pine timber, 12 acres fall heat in =oln4; fall plowing done. 3. The arpe farm, lot 13. concession 4, /est Flamboro, 7 miles from Hamilton «on ood gravel rogd; stone house, large bank arn> maenificent stock and dairy farm; Mrs. Winslow‘s Syrup Mu;;. ways be used (l:'..:m- teething. It soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures :.ln‘ colic and is the best remedy for diarâ€" Hascoyneâ€"Do you mean to tell me that you really could live on $5,000 a year? 4 y i d live on less than thatâ€" it ‘‘Hello, Leo,*" uâ€"lfl the u&â€"'g“r'. been chasing a nice, cender antelope for an hour of more. nuu:..,m,.. ° No Feplied the lion, licking his chops contentedly, "it didr‘t pass here." The J. L. NICHOLS CO., Limited, Publishers, ‘Toronto, Canada. Agents wanted. (Mention this par + Ur by muail, securely senied: on recelpe of parsg Ls® RoY PiL 00. AGENTS WANTED. FARMS FOR SALE. Willing to Experiment. ‘WAREHOUSES, ROSPITALS, Stopped for Dinner. eX NE EL ids mamar 3 (Mention this paper.) 9 .1 _E“»z N A 434 Van Cha the day the Wwh discy ality Tran aill â€" Chi n qua 1 T\ vÂ¥ee bee; 18 the M rl D