1 w O land ]c?{i)romiae, permanent and strong, Inspire my heart with new and deathless I know my Bank can never fail, Its funds, always the same, The Firm, "Three persons in one God," "Jehovah" is his name. I have a never failing Bank, A more than eartbhly store, No earthly Bank is half so rich; How then can I be poor? And, if you have but one small note Fear not to bring it in; Come boldly to the throne of grace, The Banker is within. But see the wretched dying thief Hung by the Banker‘s side! He cried, "Dear Lord, remember me He got his cash and died. The above beautiful poom was writ ten over sixty years ago by an old minis ter in the Highlands of Scotland. *Tis when my stock is spent and gone, And I without a groat, I‘m glad to bhasten to my Bank To get a little note. Sometimes 1 felt a little proud, 1 managed things so clever ; But ah! before the day wase gone I felt as poor as ever. Should all the Banks in Britain break, The Bank of England smash, Bring me your note on Zion‘s Bank, You‘ll surely get your eash; Bometimes my Banker smiling, says Why don‘t you oftener come? And when you draw a little note Why not a larger sum? I‘ve been a thousand times before And never was rejected; Sometimes my Banker gives me more Than asked for, or expected. All forged notes will be refused, Man‘s merite be rejected; There‘s not a single note wiHl pass That God has not accepted. ‘The leper had a little note, "Lord, if you will you can;" The Banker cashed this HKittle note And bealed the sickly man. We read of one young man indeed, Whose riches did abound: But in the Banker‘s book of grace His name was never found. Since then, my Banker is so rich, I have no cause to borrow; I‘ll live upon my cash toâ€"day And draw on him toâ€"morrow. There‘s none but those beloved Redeemed by precious blood, That ever had a note to bring; These are the gifts of God. This Bank is full of precious notes All signed and sealed and free; Though many a ransomed soul may say "There is not one for me." man, A rair beneficent, one constant flow! A lesson long o# prostrate meekness taught. They thirsted not through all the weary way. The shelvying beach delayed ‘the trampâ€" ling horse, The timbrel song rose high in glad acâ€" claim. No foot was left behind, no foot purâ€" sued ! How long the mystic angel‘s food susâ€" Yes! twenty thousand, ten times told Is but a trifling sum To what your Father has laid up; Secure in God and his Son. To Be Like Him. I will mot and I cannot enter into polemical discussions about Him; I will not anmd I cannot enter into metaphysical analysisa of Him. I have no capacity to defime with fine phrases His relation to the Infinite and Etrmal God. and I have Why live so niggardly and poor? Your Bank contains aâ€"plenty, Why come and take a one pound note When you might have a twonty? Though thousands often Bu{ They have no notes at all; Because they feel the plague of sin So ruined by the fall. tained, _ +A How eonstant pilot cloud and pilot fire, How sweet the mighty song of coming Base unbelief will lead the most To say what is not true. I tell all souls who feel they‘re lost These notes belong to you. no wish to do so. I rejoice in the mysâ€" teries of His being which I cannot solve. But to be like Jesus Christ is my deepâ€" est and sincerest desire; to have some } ahare in the work He is doing is my | asupremest ambition; in His teaching I | find the sum of all spiritual truth; in | His Spirit the secret of all life; and in Himself an object of love and reverence such that all I have is too little to give Him. If I try to put this experience into a form of words, I can find no betâ€" ter phrase than to say that I believe that the Eternal Presence, whom no one | ean see or comprehend, manifested Himâ€" | self in this one&mn life that all might | see and comprehend Him, and that | through Him all might come to be sharâ€" i era of H‘s life and be conformed to His image.â€"Lyman Abbot. | Weicome, unleavened cake and parched | corn, | Ari pascal feast, and faithful memory | stirred s | With gentle rain of bread, not made by | SyWEX home y NomE At Last! The manna ceased on the morrow.â€" fanor Marconi says that he is giving siderable thought to the employment Hertzian waves for transmission of ver as well as a means of communicaâ€" The Christian‘s Bank. â€"H. T. Miller of God, 499 alrl;’ mgxnm, who is Ij.n‘g E;i ward‘s most distinguished friend in offiâ€" elal or subâ€"official life in Paris; Victorâ€" flen Sardou, the playwright; usd Leo labor in their own homes. & With the &o“fli‘d the toy industry the substitution of machinery for manâ€" ual labor and the creation of large facâ€" tories, these independent workers found themselves in a very bad way. Parisâ€"The American who visits the exposition of toys now being held in the Tutleriecs gardens will find it hard not to believe that be has stumbled by mistake It was to give a helping hand to this class that Lepine, one of the most popuâ€" lar men in all France, organized the Soâ€" ciety of Independent Workers in 1901. The visitor feels that there is a praiseâ€" worthy attempt at ingenuity on the part of the workmen, but they are heavily handicapped ‘by cheap materials . and elumsy tools. The wares would make a poor showing on some big department store counter alongside the perfected factory article. Wing of Fossil Insect. The museum of the department of comparative anntong at Brown has reâ€" ceived from Rev. Edgar F. Clark, of Claretie, tors have the privilege of securing a cerâ€" tificate which guarantees that any inâ€" vention shown will be protected until three months after the exposition, and this without any cost. epace in the l:;ge Jou de Paume Buildâ€" ing is taken, many applicents have annually to be turned away. The society has grown so in importance that it will send a delegation to the coming exposiâ€" tion of toys in London. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. North Providence, a very curious fossil, an insect‘s wing. The fossil is of special interest in that it is a type specimen, the first, and so far as can be learned, the only one that has ever been found. It was named by Professor Samuel H. Serdder, of Cambridge, "Mylacris Packâ€" ardii," after Professor Packard, formerâ€" Iv of the Brown faculty. French Plan to Protect Mome Workâ€" er: From Factory Competition. on some New England church bazaar. If he buys his ticket expecting to delight his eye with all that the Parisiar marâ€" ket has to offer in the way of costly toys it only shows that he has not the tiop‘s real aim. This toy show is practically e municiâ€" pal charity, For patrons it has such men as exâ€"President Loubet, Edouard Deâ€" taille, the painter, who is King Edâ€" This society provides its membere with show rooms for the permanent exhibiâ€" tion of their wares, and once a year holds an expositionâ€"this year in the Tuileries gardens. ‘Then ;S the exhibiâ€" Yet with all the advantages offered by the society the independent workmen still have much to do before they can compete seriously with their factory rivâ€" als. This is easily gathered from a curâ€" sory glance at the year‘s display, . The materials are inferior and the workmanâ€" ship crude, Then there are painted silhouecttes of leading actors and actresses, Sarah Bernâ€" hardt. Coquelin cadet, and Mounetâ€"Sully in a declamatory attitude. One exhibit is of miniature hunting landscapes showâ€" ing the various sovereigns as r:ey aim at their prey. The Czar levels his gun at a polar bear in a setting of ice and snow and Emperor William has just brought low a monster boar. i Within those three months the pracâ€" tical value of the invention will be deâ€" termined and then, if it is worth it, the tent can be secured. If the inventor ï¬' too poor he will receive assistance from a general relief fund. The first year the exposition was held in one small room. _ Now all available There are very few novelties which seem to warrant patenting. There are balloons and airships with gayly dresaed aeronauts, endless displays of diabolo, eup and bi&ll games, hydroplanes and aeroplanes. Caran d‘Ache varies his familiar woodâ€" en dogs by exhibiting _ elephants and horses. Another caricaturist shows the heads of different nations in characterâ€" istic poses, Fallieres quaffing a glass of his Loupillon wine, King Alfonso tossing his heir aloft, ete. w BEER is a term which covers lager, alss, tor and stout ; and, in the of Ontarle Wwawers. impites beverages made unde¢ most fyglendo confitions from: Ontario bariey (ihe bost in BEER' BENEFITS THE WHOLE BODY the world) mait, hops. and pure water. _ " _ retie, the leading Fremnch authority toys and fancy articles known the l4 over as Parisian novelties, who OT six people in a thousand (and those six N have either diabetes or gouty tendencies) can get anything but real good from the use of good beer with their meals Because that kind of beer (and no other kind is brewed in Ontario) benefits the whole body of the normal adult,â€"enriches the blood, vitalizes the stomach, makes kidneys and liver active, builds flesh and betters nerves. Good beer, drank with meals and at bedtime, is not merely a tonicâ€"for a tonic simply gets one part of the system to work better for a while, by stimulating its activity, while beer, rightly used, does the whole system permanent good. That is why good beer is such a notable fleshâ€"builder, and why it is so effective in changing the tooâ€"white blood of aenemic people into the red, strong, healthy blood of the vigorous. It has qualities that are very valuable to women, especially. 1t is distinctly NOT an intoxicant, nor a hurtful stimulant. Ask your doctor if beer wouldn‘t be good for you as an item of daily diet. (NO OTHER FOOD.â€"BEVERAGE DOES THAT MUCH) TOY SHOW IN PARIS. understanding of the exposi Beer Builds Up Thin Folks Beer Is Not A Mere Tonic The Government of Australia proposes to replace conciliation boaris by wages boards on the State railways. The Australian Premiers‘ Conference disapproved the proposed transfer of the Nongern Territory of South Australia to the Commonwealth. The British Indian Government has inâ€" creased the pensions of nativ> soldiers. The Australian Premiers‘ Conference resolved that equal iraae _ conditions should prevail for all _ nationalities throughout the Pacific, and that British and foreign regulations disabling Ausâ€" tralian traders should be annulled. Manufacturing is increasing in New South Wales. Figures for 1206 show inâ€" creases of 128 factories and 5.533 workâ€" ers. The increase is most marked in the building trades, in metal works and in establishments using raw materiais. Corea, says Professor Ladd, of Yale University, after a recent two months‘ stay +~=re, is now free from intrigues and ccâ€" :otions, and is reaping the beneâ€" fit of the agricultural and other reforms introduced in the last ten years. Black opals of great beauty are found in Queensland, Australia, besides fiftyâ€" six other kinds of precious stones. (+ Invention Which Enables Students to See its Pulsation. The human heart is fast losing its mystery. You can actually see it nowaâ€" daysâ€"or, rather, you can obserse its movements in a shadow picture by means of the Roentgen rays. The fact is not new, but the facilities for applyinf the idea to medical science have developed wonderfully, and the authorities of one of the great English hospitals are proud of the latest addition to their electrical department, which will be opened probâ€" ably in the near future. It is called an "orthodiagraph," because it gives a tracâ€" ing of the object disclosed in exact relaâ€" tive dimensions. The Muho and Kuanying Shan gold mines in Heilungkiang, China, which have been restored to China by Russia on the repayment of the expenses incurâ€" red by the latter during the last several years, are said to be still very rich, and may be again made prosperous if sufficiâ€" ent funds are put into the working of them. It takes money to get money out of a mine. Australia is rapidly increasing her imâ€" ports of iron and steel manufactures, steam and other engines, . locomotives, electrical machinery and agricultural imâ€" flomente, but most of the orders are goâ€" ng to Great Britain. Great value is attached to the use of the orthodiagraph, which will enable acâ€" curate and reliable records of the state of patients‘ hearts to be obtained. At present, however, only the outlines and the movements can be observed. It is not possible as yet to see the structure of tge heart. The orthodiagraph wan mad« at Nauheim, Germany. The London Statist says that the total value of the exports of Australia in the period from 1906 to 1910, inclusive, apart from any.further expansion after the end of 1907, will amount to about $1,875,000,000, or, if no drought, probably more than $2,000,000,000, in contrast to only $85,000,000,000 in the five years from 1886 to 1890, a growth in only 20 years of from 150 to 180 per cent. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, The apparatus has four arms, one of which holds a small circular greenishâ€" yellow screen, one a wide black ring, one a wooden case and the other the litâ€" tle reservoir that acts as a pencil for the tracing. Against a tall canvas screen in the dark stands the person who wants his internal organs to be seen at work. The arms of the machine are lowered until the greenishâ€"yellow screen appears in front. _ There is heard the faint crackle of electricity, a circle of lighs appears, and the motions of the heart, reflected on the screen, may be followed. Attached to the front of the machine is a bulb. This is in association with the "pencil‘" behind, and as it is pressed a drawing of the heart is tracedP in little blue dots upon another white screen at the back. The novelty of the machine is the perâ€" fection to which it has been brought. It may be worked by a finger. | "Yes, poor Fido was caught by the butcher." "Now 1 wuret." STUDYING THE HEART. The Other Side of the World, suppose we may expect the DOG DAYS "Tll make a new man of you," exâ€" elaimed the doctor, hopefully. "Not on your life," replied the patient; "my wife prides herself upon being a new womaB, and that‘s enough in one family." During the past few months in Switâ€" zerland and France there‘ have been brought to light several caverns in which pertification of water has wrought marâ€" velous effects oi crystalline decoration. The last of these to be announced is a magmificent grotto laid bare by a fall of rock at the Pointe du Taland, Canton of Belle Isleâ€"enâ€"Mer. The grotto is acâ€" cessible at low tide. or 2mm. higher than is usual for field guns. It is, of course, a breechâ€"loading quickâ€"firer, equipped with a hydroâ€"pneuâ€" matic brake. The German name for the gun is "Ruchlaufeeschuzte." A story is told respecting a Scotch minisâ€" ter, who, in the old days of Patronage was foreed upon a congregation at Altness. He was coldly received; but calling one day upon an old elder he took a chair in spite of his gruff reception. In order to meet an awkâ€" ward pause he took out his snuff box. "Oh, said the elder, ‘‘ye take snuff, dae ye?" ‘"‘Oh, yes," was the reply. ‘‘Weel,‘" said the elder, ‘‘that‘s the first sign ©‘ grace I‘ve seen in ye." ‘"‘How‘s that?‘ ‘"Dae ye no read o Solomon‘s temple,‘" replied the elder, "‘that a‘ the snuffers were of pure gold?" Great pains are taken by the German military authorities to exclude all forâ€" eigners from obtaining any acquaintance with their new field artillery, but it has become known that its calibre is 77mm., ""I could not see what bearing the quesâ€" tion had on the evidence,‘ continued the law, yer, ‘but ten minutes later in filed the jury, and what do you think the verdict wast‘ ‘What?‘ asked his friend. ‘‘Why, not guillty, on the ground of insamâ€" ity.‘â€"Memphis Commercial Appeal. "If I were asked to name the cardinal features in the management of typhoid fever, I would say (1) proper feeding, (2) the prevention of excessive waste inâ€" cident to high temperature, by the use of water externally and internally, (8) elimination, through the skin, kidneys and intestinal tract, by eupplying the paâ€" tient with an abundance of water and keepirg the body elean and comfortable. "I make it an invariable rule to insist that the patient drink fre«.}uently and freely of water, thereby aiding eliminaâ€" tion through the intervention of the skin and kidneys, keepimg the general tone of the patient at the highest standard, and the temperature is held more readily in cheok. In fact, I regard the internal use of an abundance of water of «o much imâ€" portance that I always instruct the nurse to record the quantity of water given, just as asiduously as she does the mwodicine and food." * ‘Only one thing, my lord,"" replied the foreman. ‘‘Was the prisoner‘s counsel reâ€" tained by him or appointed by the Court?" * ‘No, gentlemen, the prisoner is a man of meane,‘"‘ said the Judge, ‘‘and engaged his own counsel." ‘"A marrow escape! How?" ‘‘Ab, the tightest squeezo you ever saw. You know 1 examined the witnesees and made the argument myself, the plea being selfâ€"defence. The jury was out two whole daye. Finally the Judge called them before him and asked what the trouble was. Drink All the Water He Wants, People who used to suffer torments of thirst in typhoid fever will wish they had postponed the attack until the present day, when such theories of treatment as the following from the Medical Brief preâ€" vail:; A young lawyer, not noted for intelligence, succeeded in having a client acquitted of murâ€" der. Meeting a friend a few days afterward, the lawyer was greeted with warm congratuâ€" lations. _ ‘Yes,‘ said the lawyer, mopping his brow, "I got him off, but it was a narrow . e#â€" pOCTORS TRY ANOTHER PLAXN. TO MEN ATIE PIN always forms a pleasing and witable gift to a man, and especially it© it be from Ryrie‘s. No. 30025â€"Fine 14k rope turban tie pin with whole pearl centre, $2.75. No. 30026â€"14k tie pin set with selected pearls, oriental whole pearl in centre, exceptionaly good value at $1.80. No. 30027â€"Tie Pin, twist rope knot, solid 1 4k gold, with two fine whole pearlsâ€"the season‘s newest style, aschitectural motive. Allow us Above 2,000 madern designs in every style of No Subject for Congratulation. The PEDLAR People i\ Oshawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto London Winnipeg |PELDLAR 417485 Rxrr Bros. INEXPENSIVE GIFTS 82.75 681.80 $3.50 Limited 1834â€"138 Y onge St. TORONTO $3.50. Send for our Catalogue Germany‘s Field Gun. First Sign of Grace. TORONTO Nature‘s Decoration. â€"walls to match in harmony with sâ€"adapted to any colorâ€"scheme er chest and soreness in the . bronchial tubes. To clear away Catarrh of the nose nothing could be better. Catarrâ€" hozone is Nature‘s own remedy,â€" it heals and soothesâ€"cures every form of throat, lung or bronchial _ trouble. Prescribed by many specialists and used bf' thousands every day. 25¢ and $1 at all dealers. Wedding Present in the Bay of Arosa to be the Site of Royal Summer Home. When your throat rattles, your l and chest are sore, your throat is atflf- ed with coldâ€"don‘t fear consumptionâ€" use Catarrhozone and get well. It clears the throat, cures hacking, relieves tight Capt. Porter, of the steam whaler Beluga, which arrived from the Arctic Wednesday, with 16,00 pounds of bone, seventyâ€"two fox ekins and one ebar skin, confirms the reâ€" port from Unalaska that the other ships of the fleet are safe and are coming home with big catches. Capt. Porter. who has been going to the Arctic for many years, says that never beâ€" fore were whales so plentiful at this season. Nine whales fell before the harpoons of the Beluga‘s whalemen. Capt. Porter added that he never saw the whales so wild. ‘There were thourands of them, but they were very hard to catch. The Beluga lost four whales which had been harpooned. In each case the woundâ€" ed mamma] took refuge under the ice, which mneceesitated cutting the line that held him prisoner.â€"From the San Francisco Chronicle. Gold Laid Watoch when we right to give us the satisâ€" faetion ans,tha reward to visit with enâ€" couragement and to show still lu& openings in the same direction: is with His own when they sleep, to be ready in due time to stir in them their waking, working powers, Nothing can happen to man so bad, come to him when he wakes or when he sleeps, in a way to leave him otherwise than on the bosom of the Father.â€"W. M. Bicknell. thut some wealthy Spanish noblemen . DS~ stowed on him and Queen Victoria He is having a palace built on the island of Corteâ€" gada in the Bay of Arosa, opposite the pri of Oarril and the summer resort of Villaâ€" gercia, famous for its sulphur baths. ‘The villa at San Sebastian, at which he has hereâ€" tofore spent a good deal of time each sumâ€" mer, is the property of his mother, and the new summer home is designed to give the youthful couple a place where they can @Dâ€" tertain guests indepencdently. ‘The island is about three miles and a balf Gi.:l is with me in my troubles, g: be an infinitely greater joy. He is with me in my losses, to be m gain beyond all calculation. He is with me in my longâ€" ings for good and for Yewe, for large measures of truth and love, to answer them; for he has inspired me with these longings. He is with us _ when we go wrong to show us the error of our ways, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Sold under a guarantee CO“dhl to cure colds and coughs & C l d quicker than any other o1ds medicineâ€"or your money back. 34 years of success commend Shiloh‘s Cure. 25c., 50c., $1. 316 QOUICK LY! The charm of home is its individuality, The more it is like other homes, and otg- er places that are not homes, the less truly homelike it is. "Be not conformed to the world" is above all others the text and motto for the family hearthâ€" stone, and the more the family minds it and lives up to it the dearer will be the memory of that same hearthstone, and the bitterer the homesickness of those who cannot return to it. This has a ve?' practical bearing on all our plans and arrangements for everyâ€"day living. "The way we do at home," the way moâ€" ther used to do," are phrases that alâ€" ways fall on the ear with a reminiscent tenderness. The little customs of the birthday feast, the getting ready _ for Thanksgiving or Christmas, even _ the menu for the Sunday breakfast, or the cosy grouping of the chairs for a family "Powâ€"wow" when great events, such as the boy‘s settingâ€"out for coll'e&e. or the vacation outâ€"going, were on the carpet â€"are not these the very warp and woof of which we weave our "Old Home" memories? Why, then, should we not have our own little "ways" in the householdâ€"ways that shall differentiate it from all other houssholds? They should be ways that belong to us and to our circumstances, suiting our conveniâ€" ence, accommodating . our _ comfort. Fashions may come and go, but let us keep to oldâ€"time custom.â€"Selected. Mange. Prairie Scratches and every form ef ecntagious Itch on buman or animals cured in 30 minutes by Woilford‘s Sanitary Lotion. It ngver fails. Sold by druggists. in ciroumference. It is diversified in sur face and beautifully wooded, while in all diâ€" rections it receives cooling breezes and cOMâ€" mands splendid viows, varying from . the broad Atlantic to the picturesque shores of uuu{. Previously to its purchase for the King it had a population of seventy fisher folk, who inhabited eighteen dwom They sold out their "ï¬â€˜:‘ to the in donâ€" ors, sharing the ire of the latter, as they put it, to please their sovereign, upon the one condition that the Chapel of Incarnaâ€" tion, a far famed shrine to which pilgrims from all the fishing villages of the coast resorted, should remain untouched, and should be always accessible to pilgrims. _ should be always accessible to “fu(rlm. ‘The King has placed the building of his palace and the beautifying of the island in the hands of the Marquis do Viana and a Madrid architect, _ Senor _ Ripolies. . ‘The building is to be of semiâ€"Arab design, folâ€" lowing the general lizes of some of the most famous parts of the Albambra. The harbor ie also to be developed so that the King can induige in aquatic sports. Quick ease for the worst coughâ€"quick relief to the heaviest coldâ€"and SAFE to take, even for a child. ‘That is Shiloh‘s Cure. Cures SHILOHS King Alfonso of Spain is preparing to ®2â€" ALYONSO‘8 ISLAND PALACK. Whales Plentiful but Wild. Going Into Consumption? ONE‘S OWN HOME. In Joy or Sorrow. ITCGPH and the ive the | golden be can ©2~ | the roses 1 a halt l:;dhd & a surâ€" ty sen flu“:‘gj uttered b m the |and swee "In love‘s garden lilies shake . "*"*"" golden bells when Cupid passes by, but hmso!bnmmw_d wedlock grow on the same bush." This lofty sentiment, with ite sad refrain, uttered by one of the world‘o.bur’l.rï¬â€œ and sweeltest charactors, WAs ingly illustrated recently in the case of one of the brightest wives of Toronto, who after the bix of her first born '1::‘ pronwnadm a hopd'::u tuberculosisa subject. The case was y 1-" ted by chronic stomach trouble. neg~ lected summer cold was tbo_oflï¬lfl‘; Anibal Cruz, Minister from Chile to the United States, said last night that reports that the immense beds of saltâ€" tre found in that country will be exâ€" g:usted in a few years are erroneous. "Those beds will not last merely a hunâ€" dred years or two hundred, but will be helping to make Chile wealthy a thouâ€" sand years from now. Chile is the only country in the world in which such deâ€" The Experience of Thousands llusâ€" street wrst, Toronto its of saltpetre are found, They are ?:: the most part owned by Germans and Englishmen. The Germans are the most heavily interested, with the Engâ€" lish next, Most of the saltpetre is exâ€" ported to Hamburg, while some of it goes to Liverpool. The Chilean Governâ€" ment derives a large amount of revenue from this export trade, as a duty of about two shillings a ton is exacted on all that is sent out. The revenue amâ€" ounts to eighty or ninety million shil. ROSES OF LOVE AND THORNS OF WEDLOCK ing cause. The distracted husbard #*** newly constituted fathes sgought some word of consolation from the doctors. Nome came. A friend advised Pseychine. In the absence of other hope he tried It. No doctors now. Instead of his wearâ€" 'ï¬ the badge of loneliness, that beautiâ€" ful wife and proud mother, with her sweet baby, fu’ly accompanies "Papa" down one of the fashionable streete of Toronto. Ask them how it ell came about, and they answer, simply, "Payâ€" chine!" "Mre. Samuel Barker, Simcoe, Ont. Peychine is a wonderful throat, lung and stomach tonic and regulator. Cures stubborn colds and all runâ€"down condiâ€" tions. At all Aruggzista, 50c and $1 or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, 179 King Q.â€"What game is the stove fond of? A.â€"Poker. Q.â€"Why does the window need a doeâ€" tor t A.â€"Because it always has a pane. "I consider it a duty to other mothers and other sufferers to tell of my exâ€" perience with Psychine, One year has already passed since I _ discontinued taking these remedies, and there has been no return of my former trouble. Before taking Psychine my eystem beâ€" Q.â€"When is a book like a cultured gentleman t Aâ€"When it is well read. Q.â€"Which one of the dishes on the table understands the game of baseball! A.â€"The pitcher. _ Herald. came run down with lung and other troubles. I lost flesh and ltrenï¬ï¬‚l rapâ€" idly. It was as much as my life was worth to eat ordinary food. I owe my present sylendid health to Psychine. . Q.â€"Why is a book inclined to be quarâ€" relsome ? up.n Q.â€"Why will a book keep a promise! A.â€"Because it always considers _ its binding. Q.â€"If a shoe went to school, . why would he never get 100 for his lessons? A.â€"Because he is generally to be found at the foot. MINARD‘S LINIMEXT of proved it to be of Inflammation. A.â€"When it has "dogâ€"ears." Q:â€"How do you know shoes gossip! A.â€"Because they have such _ long tongues. It results from the careful measureâ€" ments of level recently made by Lieutenâ€" antâ€"Colonel Pariisky along the line of the Transcaspian Railway that the level of the Caspian Sea is 83 feet below the level of the oceans. If the Caspian Sink were filled with water up to ocean level the town of Krasnovodsk, which stands on its shore, would be submerged, for the mean elevation of that town is between 63 and 64 feet below ocean level. favorite animal? hy mETT 20 We and an unfortunate newspaper m unscquainted with the language of Bdes. terviewed one of the reverend tlom. sudience at the conclusion of c add *‘What did Mr. Mackinnon say?" he as *‘Bay?" repMed the interrogatedâ€""Say? w ha dist tailre a .3 /3 . "EFTOEAtOâ€""Bay? West. he jist tell‘t a story aboot an auld eel, aince -I‘d“t‘: l"::,dn' -u:: 'Gol'“": n' †» 'l . ® vour stuolt heig / > & Nord o‘ 1 "â€Q‘Jfl Mniard‘s Liniment Cures Cbhambers on the 30th ult. the Rev, Hen. Mackinnon, Shettleston, spoke in Heo 35 an unfortunate nOWspaner man 2..:“‘3 Atthommmhom Chambers on the 30th ult the pBe" OY Cmeee iD your stupit held.‘‘ ‘ The Wyictived Bot take the story as having "aon" 0 did A.â€"Because it generally has its "back Q.â€"Why are shoes superior to other Q.â€"When does a book Gentlemen,â€"Last winter eat benefit from the us w eighty or ninety million shilâ€" :uh year.â€"From tL Washington Immense Saitpetre Beds trated in a Single in Language of Eden The Caspian Sink. CONUNDRUMS. of ten thounsand. . A. HUTCHINSON, ind 1 have frequenti; very effective in cases "A web bf THP PEAPNE * 0 Setinndae it Nmtwmh'f{-‘:â€â€œnm. "What of it! ere else would they have it ?" He conquers twice who restrains himâ€" self in victory.â€"8yrus. First Commuterâ€"Do you treat your cook like one of the u..d';r Becond Comâ€" muterâ€"We wouldn‘t dare to take such a liberty.â€"St. Louis Globeâ€"Democrat. A Lop of fortune is worth a cask of wisdom.â€"Latin. } # "She vowed she couldn‘t marry for x-. He swore he would wait all time." ellr “l‘bemomitod, and made it a week."â€" City Journal, He that does not honor his wife disâ€" honors himself.â€"Spanish. "The young man that‘s calling on you now, Dore, is an agrecable w from the others." "Howt" "He * turn In the Autro-Hnltrhn army budget for 1908 there will included mearly QMMfothhmholrd of the officers, 84 per cent. of which be appropriated for the benefit of Heuâ€" _ There are, it is estimated, something mCU E,C00 WORnen OB T EUP OE , elected bodies in England and Wales at :«l;‘rnut time, and of this number 1,200 are members of Boards of Guardians. Talk at the Episcopal convention is estimated to have cost $15 a minute. That there is no end to the healing powers of Zamâ€"Buk is being demonâ€" strated every day, Mr. Julins Glacier, of Denbigh, Ont., was tortured day and night with blind bleeding piles, so bad that he says: "I could find mno comfort standing, sitting or lying down, and was unable to do any work. One day my eyes rested upon a little sample box of Zamâ€"Buk. 1 picked it ug and read the word CURES PILES. mnmexmnth.mrsunnh_‘: a very interesting prehistoric find in remains of a mammoth in excellent state of preservation. So far, says a Lemâ€" Oisaster in Archaeology. French archaeology has suffered a serâ€" ious loss in a quarter where the tourists of the world will feel it most. In the Commune of Bt. Sever, in the Pau reâ€" ion, stood the ancient chateau of gumu. rich in historical association, and an admirable type of a style of arciiteoâ€" ture now almost forgotten. This most interesting building has been totally deâ€" stroyed by fire, started using Zamâ€"2uk that night, and before I ooï¬d purchase a large box I was already cured, and _ HAVE NOT BEEN TROUBLED SINCE _ You may publish this, if you wish, for the benefit healed piles when all else failed. Why do you go on euffering when such a splendid remedy is near at hand! skin eruptions, ulcers, ringworm, itch, salt rheum, abrasions, abscesses, cuts, burns, scalds ard all skin injuries and discascs. ot.nmmm 50 cents, or from Zamâ€"Buk Co., for price. 3 boxes for $1.25. berg correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette, the portions dug out include two teeth, some six feet in length, but in five or six pieces, jaw bones, parts of the vertebrae column, and three or four yards of hide, upon which the hair is still fresh, joints, and other bones, and one foot of the animal. The reâ€" markable state of preservation in which the skeleton was found is attributed to the fact that the soil in the district is permeated with mineral oils, earth wax and natural gases. TORTIURED DAY & NIGHT of other sufferers." This is of the many cases where Zamâ€" Blemish Cure ever kuï¬â€"vï¬ld“;;. dr.--- ISSUE NO. 50. 1907 ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT L. Gitiith M ntritineliineticcsascns T ever saw,*‘ â€30"080- NOWâ€"so with be sure to have ST. GBOROGE‘S for your next baking." Write for fre capy of our mew Cookâ€"Rook. ~â€"â€"the powder i ""mâ€"&-u:': Biscuits ;-m-;m.c'h and Pastryâ€" Baking Powder metiSent Prag & chatsicat Co. of Zamâ€"Buk Cures Piles A Mammoth‘s Teeth. St. George‘s women on varous "THIS IS 1Tâ€" 6 19 & A D Saloons *T wo «GO1S local in fourt at midni tally "d only a # cipally soull Th tion 1 ©ul ed quesd felt muin addi un derl Of s wC Mar 10. ol 1 10. T clide 1 vester Nha i hoep bu sn Peter CBL i+ hi we Wwil travelle worth much o and th waist } too, of wiping tion U sw au body. _ mane a taught . ed by atrenst CA Ns wh diai 101 eNildz «)pal i com thea ll N and th far it. Indi somd UI maed) deas gramse 4J they bave in UET 1+ a loag firiea t J1s lif Chi M18 rta AY + ARY M l AIM M n