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The Wingham Times, 1903-04-23, Page 3Wm Very Weak and Norms *Art Palpitate dee Would dot Ploy /Spells, - Shag CautidliadVourea U0101014 thiseWay.— Ar9 Toa. Ono of Them ?— If i , 'You Can Be grind; r '11LBLJRN'S { EAL,T AND NERVE E 1 'HLLS WILLIDo it r f, Eenia Eognn, Hazeltieari, Ont., Fifes: During the year liate I was troubled very much with palpitation of Use heart, foilewed by a fluttering sen- sation and great pain. X would get dizzy, and was very weak and nervous. Be- ing advised to try MILBUItheS HEART al.ND NERVE PILLS, 1 procured three boxes, and since taking them 1 have not bad a bad spell, and feel better than X have for years. ale leis o ke r The T. e. per box, Milburn for $1.25 $limited, Toronto, Out. Landon county council has introduced half penny, one ceut, fares on all the , cars running on the South London tram- *zys. Rad Nervous Prostration, Mrs. S. W. West, Drayton, Ont., states "'I got terribly run down, and finally be- came a victim of nervous prostration. I ahud no appetite, seemed`to lose interest and ambition and could seemly drag enyself about. Hearing of Dr. Chase's i`ferve Foot; I used three boxes with great benefit, gaining eleven pounds. Ir anode nie strong»and well and I had aneh an appetite that I wanted to be eating half the time." Wednesday eveniug, April 15th, at ,sight o'clock, in Trinity church, Mit- chell, one of the prettiest weddings imaginable took place. The happy cou- ple were Miss Julia Isabel Dnnsrnore, and Mr. Hugir Earry Combe of Clinton. A large and fashionable concourse of people assembled to witness the core- anony. The marriage service was con- i1uote.i by the rector, Rev Mr. Haward. B" TE ITYY SEC Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. • Munt Boar Signature of See PaaSimlla Wrapper Below. Tory smell and es oast' do take as sugar. CARTERS ITTLE EVER PI I.I.S. FOR HEADACHE., FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION tostzeW1W MU.T tIAYt: YA,u,I[. tare fs�Purai7Vegetabie. CURE SICK HEADACHE. A Bad Breath rAA bad breath means a bad stomach, a bad digestion, a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are ',liver pills. They cure con- stipation, biliousness, dys- pepsia, sick headache. 2.1e. Ail drurglete. Waat year reourtsche or beard a beettlfar brews or tab Meek? Thenthnos BUCKINGHAM'S DYEta sleets assn.s.be • vb. odn.r.t4 rOe.,LuwM,Lw. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMIES.. •••••••••••••••• • LOVE IN ••A MISR7^ msrtha Mciwgllocl*-'Witlip le • Copyright, 1 3, by the 0 8. S. McClure Compa .0410.040111l0p p.p THE Y1•NGJIAJ.1'TIMES, APRIL 23f 1903. #.r down the arbor, eyes brightening,breath il M• breatuiekeni»g, A bare half dozer, Other couples dared to follow theut, T1 Few were so straitiaeed an �Grand- , Mother Wills In the matter of daneing. g, Still there was a general feeling that • quadrilles, or at most eotilions, were mr ♦ the proper things for big public eono- ee panics. Even the Itadley glris waltzed ay ! only at home. i>w Augueta scampered across the Lure, the very anode and pattern nocent wickedness. Clothed all In ed calico and flapping sun hat, bet pink lawn lay deftly hidden 3 depths of her berry basket, wit bronze ties and clocked silk stae nestled snugly underneath. She going surreptitiously to a barn d albeit her granduiother tbougbt ing among tike deadly sins. She site would get a wigging after Still, she till not mean to let the k. edge in any way dim the apiend the clay, The Radley house lay just be the berry field, Once she reache she Was safe. Mrs. Radley had in incited her going, offering to take in the carryithl along with her girls. Mrs. Radley was so pining yielding and obstinate even Gr mother Wills could not quarrel iter, She was as motherly as she plump. Now, for two years she been persuading. her son Jobn to m Augusta, ",so as to het the poor t have a little fun and the chance to that her soul was her own." John Augusta had laughed jointly over mother's watchmaking. They were best friends in the world, but had q Either views for themselves. "Here's a hat, Gussie. I knew neves' could smuggle out that fine e Oat you have not worn twice this s fuer," Mrs. Radley said, setting a turesque rough straw turban upon runaway's head as the last Book ou pink lawn snapped into place. " but you do look pretty!" she went Then over her shoulder to Johu, " Sli outshine everybody, won't she, Jack "Except one," John answered. "It Lee '11 be there, you know. That minds me. She's to fetch pier city co in. There's a chance for you, G Rose says he has more money than well knows how to spend." "1 wonder if he has changed" G said, laughing, "or If he Is the sa little whining beast he was that su mer nine years ago." "Why, where did you ever see Trim hn demanded in open eyed wonder Again Gussie laughed. "Ills gra other and mine were cronies at t rings," she said, "Don't you ember our going to the mountain hose two old ladies thought I w rn to take care of Jody. How ould have hated him if I had n en so sorry for anything compel) suffer that name! Ile was so sic and spoiled and just plain hetet ong with it, Ugh! I'm sorry h ming. He quite scorned danci th we --said I was clumsy—but I a ys believed It was spite. I beat hi far when ft came to climbing tre even throwing rocks"- 'And you never told me a word of a s," John said a little reproacbfull ussie tweaked his ear, answerin tly: "Of course not. You have bee love with Rose since you wore tro s. I' wouldn't say things abo ur dear cousin that was to be, Jod s." ix double sets were already dan under the big bush arbor when th dleys drove up. High above th cers a string band played for dea , while the leader of it called th res In a loud, merry voice. Out un the trees other people sat, usuall ng people, fittingly paired and s t one in the other they bad eyes fo e else besides. slight young fellow, with a sing! ss dangling from his buttonbole, ned against n near tree trunk, look - discontentedly about. He darted Gussie and caught both her bands ing: "How dare you be late? Yon st have known I was pining for ther real good light." You cried 'Enough!' and promised keep the peace ever after the last e," Gussie protested. "Besides, I not fight enemies any more." 'm ahead of you," Fitts said, draw - her hand through his arm. "I not rely keep the peace with my ene- s; I love them dearly—one of them east." Your pretty speeches must be sadly eed of air," Giissle said, with a lit - sidelong look at John. It amazed to see him frown mad turn away, tying his mustache. Fitts caught look and sniffled a Little, but press- owerd the arbor, saying as they hed the edge of it: • on are going to date with me, can you longer doubt my devo- pat+. of In- fad - new n the b her Sings was anee, Mum - knew ward. Howl - or of yond d it deed her own and tend - with was had arry !ling feel and his the cite you hip ple- the the My, On. ?„ ose re- us - us! be us me 111- 'd - he '0- s? as I of ed ul e's ng m es ii y. g n n- ut y 0- e e r e y 0 a Jo m sp m bo sh be to ly a! co wi wa so or .tbi G sof in ser Zebu felt himself grow bot es he watched Augusta and young Fitts through their Madly gay rush, hNo harm in it, of cortege, but she bed never waltzed even with him. ills brows 4rew so portentously together Bose Lee Anatol significantly es she enure up behind himhimand touched bis. arm. Evi- dently she had it in mind to say some- thing—something a little Wt out of the eomUion, But a great clattering stir at the arbor's further end silenced her, A. family carriage, rusty and anelent, had drawn up there, the horses panting and flecked with foam. Ont from the door of it strode' an awful figure, Grandmother Wills, in dead biotic, the plumes of her best bonnet nodding liesusewise over her forehead. .As she caught sight of Augusta whirling halt inclosed. by a stranger's arras she gave a cry that silenced .every string and brought the, verse dancers up stand- ing. i�'or half a minute no words would. come. Then, with the hissing fall of molten iron, talktalkcried: 'Wanton; Shameless wanton; Never. never shall you darken my doors again All in a flash Fitts appeared to com- prehend. Lightness fell away from him. Hit stood upright and said clearly, "Madame, I have the honor to ask your granddaughter in marriage!" "Wire ere you? I do not know you! I—I bane no granddaughter." Mme, Wills said icily. ` Gussie bad grown white. She left Pitts and went close to the furious old wontan, saying as she bowed her bead: "Grandmother, don't, don't curse me, for my mother's sake—and your own. Let me go home with you. It was wrong to trick you"— Madame turned away as though she had not heard. Softly Fitts held out his hands. Before Gussie could reach him John had leaped to her side and was holding her close• in the face of all the world. "You're a trump, but mine Is the older claim," be said, bolding out a band to Fitts, who wrung it bard. As for Gussie, she was too happy. and too•miserable to say a word either way, Modifying a HoHow.Travelers received by the sultan of Morocco were at one tune required to make the customary obeisance of the country, but that ceremonial is now omitted. The reason, according to La- dy Grove in her "Seventy-one Days' Camping," goes back to a slight social awkwardness involved in carrying out that prescription. . A distinguished naturalist had been presented to tlie sultan, and as he bowed his heats to the ground, instead of supporting himself with his hands, be placed them behind his back; con• sequently his forehead came against the marble floor with a Ioud bang, and he had some difficulty in recovering himself.. The sultan was amazed. "Has not the gentleman had the. honor of enter- ing the presence of his own sovereign? he asked another visitor later. "Probably be bas bad that honor, your majesty," was the answer. "Theis." said the sultan, "he should have learned the art of making saluta- tions without the occurrence of suck accidents." Thereupon his majesty learned with astonislinient that this lowly form of obeisance is not observed at European courts. and he immediately decreed that none but the usual customs de- manded by European sovereigns should be required of Europeans when they entered or left bis presence. yo Fit S ing Be dan life Agri you rap IIttl gig lea ing at say mu ane , to tim do ing me ince at 1 In n tie her gna the ed t retie Now tion?" "Oh, I don't knew. You were al- ways devoted to yourself," Gussie Said, smiling wiekedly. Irltts pretended to frown. "I see you are not properly impressed with the change In me," he said. "Understand, 1 have escaped from the Jody stage. instead, behold Joe Fitts, very much at your service. 'bo you know I carne down here just to find you7" "No, and I don't think I shall ever find it out," Onssle retorted, beating time with her foot-: The quadrille wag in Its last whirls. Fitts raised his band and nodded slight- ly to the leader et the band. Instantly the fiddles broke out in the maddest, merriest twostep, Fritts naught Gussie's band and saidt "I've been waiting for this. Twosteps Were invented espeelaiiy for you. Yeti alwayn romped no matter wheat the $tep er the figure." "Can you wonder? .All my dancing fat been done under the rose," artiste said, yielding herself to his impulse. Nate tasters hater, they, Neat un Awl 4 Close Combehatton. "They can get up combinations in the west to beat the band," said a Phila. dolphin drummer who had come in off a trip and had a shortage to explain. 'Ka a town in western Iowa I had a difference of opinion with a landlord and Balled bim a liar. He was a depu- ty sheriff, and he arrested me. Fill jirother was prosecuting attorney, and he was ngainst me. The judge was his brother-in-law, and he tried the case. I said Pd take ten days in jail sooner than pay the line, but when I came to be locked up the jailer said to toe: "'You'd better pay. I'm the father- In-law of the judge, and it will be my duty to put you in a cell with a pris- oner who's gone crazy and wants to kill somebody.' "I paid and was released," Said the drummer, "but I wanted revenge. I went to the only lawyer in town with a .reputation and stated my ease and asked him to take It. " `Yes,` he replied, 'but think bow it would look. I'm son-in-law to the jailer.'" hilt' Itilndoo 'Woburn. The men atnong the Hindoos of Bom- bay are by alt odds handsomer than the women, the fashion among the fat- ter of wearing in the left nostril n huge hoop of silver ndorned with precious stoped not tending to enhance the modierrie of beauty they already pos. Sass. 1 bis ring Is often so large that the mouth and thin are covered by it, The married women also chew the lea'ces of the betel palm, and ao their teeth and lips ere stained A. vivid sand disagreeable yellow. Caste, that strong divider of chaffs, 1$ indicated oft the women by stripes of various colors on the forehead. Their arras, whlcb are mostly bare, ere rand. fully tattooed, and their toes and tinkles ore orna:tnented with slliyer ban. gles and rings. This latter ornamenta- tion k abated by both sexes. In deivn- rlght ugliness many of these Women approach elosely an American India» squaw. BRITISH TROOP OIL LINIMENT roR Sprains, Strains, Cuts, rounds, Ulcers, Open Sores, Brueses, Stiff Joints, Bites and Stings 0 Insects, Coughs, Colds, Contracted Cords, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis,' Croup, Sore Throat, Quinsey, 'Whooping Cough and all Painful Swellings. A, LARGE BOTTLE. Zda. CURIOUS FACTS Horses have now been dispensed with on the Berlin tramway system. Vermouth's boning catch this season realize 1 about $2,000,(.00 at first hand. San Francisco the per capita year- ly receipts of street railway companies is $13.83 The faculty of Columbia UniVersity has added a course in automobile um- chanies to the curriculum. The corporation ot Yarmouth, Eng- land: has ordered 10,000 posters to be treed in advertising the town. The new railway through Canada to the Pacific coaet will pass through vast regions never beretofore explored. DUMMY KE AND THE BISHOP Av. Z. E. Chitter4en Copyrieett, Itee, by the 8. 8. McClure Comeany Dummy Dee had come to van upon the bishop. The bishop and he were very par- ticular friends and therefore shook hands, as man to man, in a very cordial. "I came," said Dummy Dee, "on particular business, and I woOld been awful sorry not to find yo "I am very glad to be here, Du Dee," said the bishop, smiling a guest. There was a short pautie, Du Dee frowning thoughtfully into $ for ideas aud the bishop waitin bear the manner of his guest's "Are you ever lonesome, bish asked Dummy Dee at last, leaning ward and clasping his short a around his knees. "Yes, often," stria the bishop, note of truth vibrating through. tone. Childless and wifeless and of str and often unpopular opiaions, scholarly bishop was indeed a lo man, Jost now particularly so. A controversial point bad forced into a position where be stood ale if not quite alone. Ile tried to bell his position was a matter of prinei enmities sale it \vas obstinacy dogmatism, and even bis warm friends were silent and regretful o the matter at issue. He bad when Murray Dee came been writing ou the point, and bit fiery words were mimed on the she of paper that strewed the opeu de He glauced at them now as he spo nd from them to the beautiful pict d face of his young wife, who h led very early in their married life. Yes, be was very lonely. Dummy Dee nodded and loot thoughtfully at the glowing grate fir "Nice things happen soniethnes wh you're Ionesomest, though," he said way of giving a small crumb of co fort to his friend. "You know mother is sick and do south getting her health and fath busy at tbe settlement work, and sour times I get kind of a stomach ache my heart and a lump in my throat. "31y, it most cbokes nue" he add feelingly. "But just the other day t summer boarder sent me thembleye trousers," sticking out his short I for the bishop to see, "or I never con have stood it in the world. She kne bow I felt about kilts and aprons a always btivipg to wear something the other children's 'count of the growing so fast and me not. I sle with 'em that night in bed, and on when I woke up aud thought abo mother I just reached over and fe of these, and then felt better. 13 you ever try anything like that?" asked, looking at the bishop's tro sered legs stretched out on the oth side of the fire. "No," the bishop replied bravely; b had not thought of it. "Then there are always things to d for folks, you know, and that's on tbing I Caine to see about," continue Dummy Dee. "I've been taking sou and books and flames up for the settl ment people to a tittle girl who lives i an attic near the settlement. "She's got a kind of mother, only she an aunt and awful bad to her. Sh drinks something out of a bottle—an Dummy Dee lowered his voice to shocked whisper—"and she is awfu mean to Nora." "Wbat is the matter with Nora? asked the bishop. "A spinal back I think. they call it, said Dummy Dee, with a learned air "and I feel so sorry. I asked father i he'd adopt her, and he said he though he couldn't. I've thought i'd mare'y her if necessary, but father would hav to adopt us both then. What do yo The bishop's principal thought was a desire to laugh, but he held his peace so Dummy Dee went on: 41She's English. I've tohl her about Yeu. She calls you lord, but I steel not lord exactly, only kind of next to the Lord, you know." At this the bishop could contain him- self no longer, but put back his head and laughed a pealing laugh that star- tled the shadows in the dine quiet II- brary, and he ouly stopped when he beheld Dummy Dee gazing at him in Mild surprise. "Come," said the bishop, springing up like a boy, "let us go and see Nora." Goodbye' said Dummy Dee, getting Up, or sliding down, rather, from his chair. "That's wbat wanted. Let's walk. It isn't very far, ahd it's a flee lent before they started the bishop swept up the written sbeets of paper and threw them on the grate. They "1111" said DunitnY Dee. "See *em Wriggle as if they hurt." "I ihtended they should hurt others," Many Mirielle eyes turned to Watch the two, the dignified eccleslastie his churchly garb and the sunny, romp- irree, rosy child, who, not tiltogetber uti- antate of these glairees, took then] largely as A tribute to iris beiove.d WO. de trousers end Strutted proudly. TM) delightfill stops Were made he. fore they reached the tenettreut 'cetera little Nora lived, tad they went ,on, laden with hooks. gattle0 and dowers - tither saye she looks like it tricked very have it at t his tinny pace g to bine- npr rms the his ong the nely him lost eve and est ver int ter, ets sk. ke, Of the 1,600,000 natives of Siberia 0'1 there are 00,000 civilized negroes who d have emigrated from the United States. Basket utakiug employs 500,000 per- sons in Germany, where the wages range from $4 to $10 weekly for skilled workers. The boiler tubes of an ocean steamer, if laul in a straight line wonld reach ten miles, and the condenser tubes over twenty-five miles. Standard Oil Cornpauy dividends ag- gregatecl $20,060,000 for the quarter of the year, being $20 for each share of the $100,000,000 property. Duelling is made a safe pastime by Dr, Devillers ot Park, who has pro- vided a kind of chalk bullet than leaves only a harmless mark where it hits, The United States has 3,435 inhabit- ants who are more than 100 years old. Amoug these are two men au Indian and a negro, who are past 150. These are the mese aged. The Aeral Navigation Company re- cently organized by Americans in Mexico City under the laws of Mexico, is reported to be constructing an airship designed to Carry fifty passeregers aud considerable freight. A department of physical education has been created by °Dim:able Univer- sity. It will be beaded by Proftiesor Thomas D. Wood, who will have charge of the physical training of the entire body of students. The method of "tippiug" as it is done in England is considered by the Japanese in the light of au insult. A. person de- sirous of giving a "tip" iu that country must wrap the nioney up in paper and make the presebtation with some suit- able remark, when it will be gladly ac- cepted. TO NAIL YOUR FAITH BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. As a spring medicine it ims no egriel. It purifies and enritheS the t!lood, Acts on the Maws, Liver, Stomach and Bowes. Cleanses and invigorates the entire system from the crown of the head to the soles of the feet, Den't be siek, weak, tired, Vern and 'Weary. •TITIS SPRING TAKE kirdock Blood Bitters AND KEEP WELL e. en by in- wn er in ed he le eg Id nd of ir pt CC Ut It id he er a Oce as they climbed the steep, rickety They entered the room in response NOtat'S gad Dummy D op knoWn to the Vele ftteed child IV on the dingy bed. No. one bad ever aeon the whole Wimp in so delightful it MOW as t two children found bim that :Mem) Nora's ebeeks grew pink with hap tress and leer eyes brighter than ever She listened to stories, guessed Odd and pleyea games With the bishop, a Dummy leee. At Jost the shadows grew longer, "I've o IAA story to tell you two eh dren before we go." said the Welt° "and you must be very quiet and list hard, for there is a guessing part to I "Once Nam a time," begun the WS op, "there lived man aloue, and, eometimes happens to lonely peop be grew selfish and bitter hearted, I forgot the tenebings ot the one who he had vowed to serve, but trie4 stead to servo himself and was untie py, as all sucb. men ere. "There came to lam one day a de iittle Wend. of his who was olso ion ly, but who tried to forget Ins lonel nese by belying others and was cone forted by doing this. So the ma learned 11 lesson from IAIS little frlen and be, too, found comfort and happ ness as the boy hed. "Now, the man naturally WO no went to be lonely and unhappy an bitter again, for he found the bette part, so he tbottgbt out a plan. 11 winild take the boy down south to bi mother, wire is almost well. but no quite so welt ns she will be when th man brings to her her youngest boy." There was a queer gurgling so that was half a laugh and half a cr and altogether a mixture of tome sickness and gorning delight, and Dum my Dee shot himself bodily inth tb, bishop's arms, cuddled against hi shoulder ana lay there sniffling hap pity. Ire groped vainly for his band kerchief that eould not be found, and his fingers elosed gratefully over tbe bishop's. fine lawn that he found within his grasp. "Guessed," said the bishop, laughing with a shake in his voice, "The first part of my puzzle story guessed. with- out a mistake. Now for tile second Then he took the little sick girl to a white, bright room that he knows or in tbe children's hospital, where, sur- rounded by birds, bonito and flowers and loving care. she can get well and perhaps come to live in the lonely house of the lonely man to brighten it," Another little cry from tire bed, and Nora's slender, groping fingers sought the bishop's hand, "Me?" she said. "Me—Nora? Would my aunt"— "I think so," sold the bishop. "We will find a way. But what a fine pair of guessers these two are! Never to make a mistake!" When the kind bearted woman on that floor came in to look after Nora, her aunt being away serving time for drunkenness, they went away and left the happy child, already better, with hope and joy working miracles with "You make up your nrind the best an quickest of any one 1 ever knew. How did you think of such beautiful things?" asked Dummy Dee as they felt their way down the rickety stairs. "It's a thank offering, Dummy Dee," said the bishop, with a return of his curious smile, "for burning the pa- per to ng rly he on. 80 lee nd 11. eu t. h. fIS le, Ie ar 1- b Three Signs. Wben I was a young man said an old timer, I was employed in an Ohio town of some 1,800 inhabitants. One day the town was billed from roof to foundation in flaming letters, "They're Coming!" One couldn't go amiss of the big letters. They followed him every- where, laud half the town would awak- en in the middle of the night with those huee letters staring them in the face, while they wondered what it all meant. A week or more passed, and one morning every one of those signs was covered with another equally flaming "They Have Come; at Town Hall To- night. And you may be sure the town turned out in force. There wasn't stand- ing room, although a liberal admittance fee was charged. Inside a big curtaln excluded the stage, end to this all eyes were turned as the appointed hour drew near. There was a little delay, and it was about halt past 8 when the curtain slowly rose, disclosing to view another Of the big lettered signs, only the word- ing was different this time. The sign rend "They Have Gone!" And you can bet your last dollar it wasn't long before the townspeople had gone, Some clever fellows had worked the game successfully and got weeny with a snug little sutin leaving only a couple of townspeople to pull up the A. Lost Att. • "Grateful bowing," remarked the statuesque yonng lady at the head of the tea bible, "Is fast becoming one of the lost arts. Few are proficient in It, and, indeed, the difficulties are many. I am referring of course to men. Wo- men are still mistresses of the art, but not all of them, either. °Brit have seen wren 'with were fat, not to say tubby, and they find that a mere inelination of the head Is a bur- den, for It indrices disagreeable rushes of blood to the head, And that is bad for Men who wear twenty inch collars. And there are men Who are tall, leen and scraggy, and when they bow bee ing gensitiVe plonts, they think and .° Make the spectator think, of stringed marionettes, and they dread the smile u Of the Mao the street. "And / have Seen Men wheni the crit. octieenerit retina Unprepared, with t hands In pockets, And hare seen t them when they Were wearing tape tied elutehed vainly And instinctively at het Wilk, And blushed at their grotesque poses mid throhletary l.aried- tUrett of the line of beauty."—Now Olean Yo Lye "People should 410 0731Y Item Old age or by accident.".--Manyc,ri, 1 unbesitatingly pronounce my Cure for Liver troubles a oreeovery of the est importance. hiluggisluiess of organ brings on bitiettsneea. Sick ache, Indigestion, constipation and al ilis which folloW these Conditions. Liver remedy aCts promptilr—pUritisla blood, clears the tongue Mid Skin a Liver is one of the most important ote earls or the human bOdY. It is claniftreUle to neglect it.—Munyon. Munyon's Liver cure, ;zee a ewe purities of tne bloud. Munyon's Cold Cure twevsnts poen., 11°.5144u113n.yoPirisleiVt:inP.ile Remedies tolV.Ittilniyv'o.np!snPnVitalfzer restoreq lost power toP:r.ea'olicnaTPnikte'Pr'slee;i5clid. ressed to Prof. promptly and ',went will he given 101 trust baseness is the decreasing Mune b of oppeidunities for men to go their cwa masters. Thee aces not ay - ply to farmers ; in agriculture, there ere as many chances. as evert -fen, te man to engage in lewdness for him, self. And may the time never' mole 11 is announeed that the Minister. of Education for Ontario intends ree ferring to the sub -committee of the Edatational Council all text books, submitted for authorization, when, 'e Ot the opinion of the Ministe.r, there should be a change of the text book' zitraFtLy in use. Kansas has voted by a large. ma,. iority favor of the enkorcementi of the. prohibitory law. Le this it is from Vermont and Now, Hampshire, end has probably given a quietus to the agitation for repeal. Despaired of Doing Cured. MrS. W. E. Jeffries 44 flicks Ave,y, Kingstou, Out., states; "I suffered agora - les with itchiug piles. In fact I don't. beheye that any person who hive trot had piles eau realize what endured, The first applicatiou of Dr, ()base's Ointment brought relief and it bas since entirely cured me. h me that this testimonial will be the tueens of brieging comfort tO other sufferers by utakiug known the great power of this ointineete" The losses of the fire inSlIronoe come , panics doing business in Canada last year only amounted to 39.14 per cent, of the web received, for peerahrins, as agaiinst 70.20 per cent. in 1901, and as against the ave.rage •of 6.03 einee 1869, itraliantly satisfactory. The averege rate charged wee only slightly in ex - ems of that of the p.revioas year, ing 1.46, 0.3 against 1.42. The amount of fire insurance! in torce in the Dominion on December 31s t, 1902, was $1,083,709,935 as against eil,0e8,687,619 Deeember 31, 1901, an inerease. of about 4 pet cent. The net' eash received for premiums was 810,.. 636,653, es against $9,050,348 in; 1901, a. gain et 10 1-4 per cent. Tim increase in the amount of insurance 'written :i.:(18u2rien,5g24t,811,5ei et-ehit,ry:vtia: avulotwhi. the figu.res bsing iiiiiiii,C84,107,P*Tagitriennsnett; amount of 10,,ses paid during the year ::11:71::::58, as compared with See. 774,950 the year prey:ono a decrease Of A BAD CASE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE CURED BY DORN'S KIDNEY PILLS, Woo !Clancy t roubles, to Matter of what bind or what stage of the disease, can be quickly and permanently cured by the use of these wooderful pille. Mr. Joseph Leland, Alma, N.W.T., tecommends theta to nil kidney trouble sufferere, when he ayst—I was troubled with dull head-, Cho, luta frightful dreams, terrible pains in my lege and it frequent desire to mate, Noticing WAN'S It/DNIVE` PILLS recomitended for just such tummy. aces as mine, it oecurred to Me to give hem It trig, to I procured a box of hem, and 'Was very teach surprised at ha effectual care they made. r take n great clod of pleasure lit receitiMentling then to all kidney trouble sufferers. trice tee, per box, or S for *Mit *II eiders or rho Doan Xidney Toronto, Ont.