- . in ~.~ _ The cramped up png, N011 in which a tailor w_orks_ comes hard on his _kldnew and hard on his back. Very few ?5°°P° _backache. pain in the side and urinary troubles of one kind and another. Oftentimes the nrst warnings of kidney /disease are neglected_ think it will be all righ\ in a day or two-but wc»n't get well without help. AN’S NEY PILLS best friend of kidneys needing Read the proof from a tailor tried them. » John Robertson. merchant tailor, Ont., gives his experience gg been ailing with my kidneys for f I ~» I r _ ET I f Qualify ol' material and workman- _ Q _ _ __ _ _'rms eUAitn_i.\N,cHAai. ' ` ‘_ ~ I 4 SHURES And the Islc of Man I Described. _ . CIINAN DOYl.E’S WORDS Recalled - Vivid Description ofthe Manx Peo le-An castles, old cities, and the living customs J E ` ` Of the people. as the shi dela onl DS Y .Y a few hours within sight of Moville, we must forego these coveted excursions and P0 W , proceed. to our destination. The anchor is weighed and the good ship, now under madefmm me VERY FINEST. ~control of the pilot whom the tender I Y of calves'-foot gelatine that can buy. brings off to us at Moville, continues on I the brief remainder of the voyage. Next diuerent dishes can be made ,morning as we»come on deck. we are It is both tasty and nuzritious. sklpplng down the Yorth Ch 1 . to is th whipped cream. I RE __ 1 Q f _ 5% 3-" ‘-'5' _ or C ' A, Y 3 " Aim; *H* _ .§_ ":.'~.~ » -g`;:__-V_»_» 1" rjj_"_" :», \:" ¢ __ T _- I' '~ . , _ 1 _ ~`_ 2,! i_ .r i fill-_ u - \ { ship cannot be ¢XC¢l1¢¢L Sfylish Cut I andlishioriableshapes. The“.E.T." row.-is are a delight to the wearer I ind ' omolc good 1163.111). They my be had in all lengths and e Shapes and all colors and shades. They are pratically unbreakable. I ALUE IST e ` THE MAGNET of the mercantile world. I 1 'I cost is next tp nothing. ‘ _ _ ‘ anne m _ _ , the Irish sea. On the port or rig-ht side, ho it served wi* ' . , 1 -` , . . _ the shore of Ireland is still In view. On f°‘°'*°%*°°' ofthe western isles oggcotland iirmely Cantire and Arran. The mainland of Scotland itself shows in hazy blueness of outline, becomes more distinct, and then recedes again into distance when we en- ter deeper into the expanding waters of the Irish Sea. Directly under our baw and s little to larboard, a speck of land looms up. Some of the passengers here grow animated, for this is their home. It is the Isle of Ma:i.A separate islet of rock at its southern point is called the Calf oi Man,probahly supposed to be the calf of the said man`s leg. This interpretation is entirely our own; for the name Man is not the same word by deriv-:ttion as “rna.ri" signifying mankind. The ship passes south of the Calf of 3-lan within a stone’s throw. Pleasure yachts are flitting about, the sea birds flap their wings and scream, and the dark blue waters swirl about the rock. The shores of Man curve away to the north west. and the tovi n of Douglas lies in sigh t, less than ten miles away. Much as we strain our eyes to the shores of England, thislittle spot of land may well claim a few moments’ consideration. A few years ago people thought little and _ knew less of the history of this little Is- land; but a magician arose, a wizard of the pen, who threw about it a halo of charm and romance. We mean of course Hall Caine, the novelist, a. native of the _ Isle of Man and her most patriotic son. His celebrated semi-historical novels, the Bondsman, the Deemster, and the _Manx- inan are today in every bookstore, we would like to say in every home, and doubtless the chief reasons why 12£l,(ll0 ior :D GOODS have the the larboard are seen the most southerly V. "` ' - " I. ' `,_s_>“.` ~ [more tourists visit the Isle of Man__every year. The island is 33 miles long and 12 I broad. The south west coast is very pre-I cipitous, rising at one point to the height af 1449 feet. The south eastern shore is low I ind sandy, indented with several fine- bays. The climate is very mild, the air It dl'¢V5 ‘he ¢'°"d' i ‘being unusually line and clear as in the.. Our prices never foil to _~ attract lthe prudent; "1 looking ahead purchaser. Our styles aid the su- perior quslityiof our wa.re always clinch the sale. _ Look at our handsome , display of. . . . I SETTS 9.50 These are elegant de- signs and excelient ware. See us on shopping dey, 3 I Illarkfmokary [lo Lewis’ 01|! Stand. !&%%%§ Bred registered Lester Ram. fm" \ w grade Cotswold Ram, three year LEWIS W BEER. ` 2° ead&wtf. Charlotte towi if licial t atisfzetion in evei y respect J- P. IIIIRBA tdseof neiiud, mains blessed with s treedom'froin venomous reptiles, and toads. » _ A few particulars of the people, Selected j from a little book of Hall Caii:ie’s, entitled ‘The Little Manx Nation,” may prove SETTS $11.00 - on the best English and Amelie!! interesting. There are two ideas associ- ated with the Isle of Man. One is that .llianxmen have three legs, the other that Manx cats have no tails. It is a fact that the domestic cat of Man either has no tail ir elsea very small one. The reason f0r this we may leave to the followers of qgrwiu. “The sea.” writes Mr. Caine, “iS uwayg present with Mauxriien. Everything they do, everything fheysay, gets the color and shimmer of the sea. The sea goes nto their bones,it comes out at their skin Fheir talk is full of it. They buy by it. thev sell by it, they quarrel by it, they 131;; by it, they swear by lt, they pray by t. Of course they are not conscious of this.” With them it is always the island, the island, the isIand,or else the boats and going gut to the herrings. The sea is ».lways` present. » Manxmen are all sea _ 'olk. Two short passages from that book . I n-ss-_\'¥ _ Y a¢l`\__lh1olse¢Y‘\! nee, ,_ ___ 16 d&w _ th bo standon theirheafls Whether e ys s no dilier o cases are merely strong cuthartics. Such things are not needed. If the organs are in a clogged condition, they need only a little help and they will right themselves. Cathartlcs irritate the sensitive linings of the stomach and bowels and often do more harm than good. Purging is not what is needed. The thing to do is to put the food in condition to be readily digested and assimilated. Stuarts Dyspepsia Tablets do this per- fectly. They partly digest- what is eaten and give the stomach what it needs. They stiinulate the secretion and excretion of the digestive fluids andrelieve the con gested condition of the glands and mem- branes. They put the whole diges Liv system in condition to do its work. When that is done you need take no more tab- lets, unless you eat what does not agree with you. Then take one or two tablets give them needed help and you will have no trouble. Its a cxnmon sense medicine and ii common sense treatment and it will cure every time. \Iot only cure the disease 'aut care the cause. Goes about it in _ a_ perfectly sensible and scientific way . We have testimonials enough to fill a book, but we dont publish many of them. However- Mrs. E. M. Faith of Byrd's Creek, Wis. says: I have taken all the Tablets I have got of you and they have done their work well in my case, for I feel like a different person altogether. I don’t doubt if `I had not got them I should have been at rest by this time. H. E. Wilare, Onslow, Ia., Says: Mr. White of Canton, was telling me of Lvour Dyspepsia Tablets curing him of Dyspep- sia from which he had suffered for eight years. As I am a sufferer myself, I wish you to send me a package by return mail Phil Brooks, Detroit, Mfch.,says:,“Your dyspepsia cure has worked wonders in my case I suffered for years from dyspep sia but am now entirely cured and enjoy life as Inever have before. I gladly re- commend them. -It will cost 50c. to and out just how much Stuartfs Dyspepsia Tablet-s will help you. Try them-that’s the best way to decipe. ‘ ' A -"~ ?@ f BOYS' CILOTHING. ` - - ,,- 0;; their 1feet__make ' ` en .e ,if I _V _ _’ _ f I I _ _ _ heir clothes were bought at Paton s mr Ugg; on reefers, overcoats, suits, cr __ _ ,15¢¢|;|'ouglxt to bring you to our store at lthat t'ie harbonmaster had I ’ _~'|ll show you something of the char. ctir Bible.. He had strange notions, some oef -fhshis race of Island fishermen. them bad shots for the truth, some of _ ion will thin_k,’ writes Mr. Caine them startlingly true. _ _ _ The fishing , _*that Manxmeu stick close to their island. town nearest to his farm was they do more than that. Iwill tell youa Peel, the great fishing centre of the story. Five years ago I went up into the west coast. It was only five miles away, mountains to seek an old Manx bard, last Iasked him how long it was since he had if a race of whom I shall have something been there? Fifteen years, he answered. '50 tell you in their turn. All his The next nearest town was the old capi- dfe he had been a poet. I did not tal, on the east coast, Castletown. It was rather that he had read any poetry except just six miles away. How long was lt his owii. Up to 70 he had been a bachelor. Since he had been there? Twenty years. l‘hen this good Boaz founl his Ruth, and The new capital, Douglas, the island's ufarried und had many children. I found D°iDl> U'-I much Wm* the W°I`1‘1'» WIPS vine ‘iim in a lonely glen, peoplecl only iii story 1111108 &W8Y- HUW 10118 Silwe he 1185 been md then by fairies. A bare hillside, not in Douglas? “Sixty years,” said the old ic bush in sight, a dead stretch of sea in 13ard,'God bless him, the sweet. dear, old front, rarely brightened by a. sail, I had S°\11!\1nt»aught, narrow, selboentred, bred some through ablinding 1mi1.s¢,m-m, The on his byra like his bullocks, but keeping . :id man was sitting in a chimney nook, a his soul active for all _that-; caring not .a _.nos red siinwi mud his head and knot- he'i>°rrh for the things of the world. he ‘ted under his chin. . . I-Ie was no her- W-as a true Mimxman and ‘Tm proud .-uit tntitfsi-m¢.~ emi had lived on that him-” New fer the other ewriv “On the- land, man and bby, nearly 9.1 years, He west coast of the Isle of Man stands the had never been of the Island and had townof Peel. It is a little fishing port strange notions of the rest of the world, looking out on the Irish sea. To the north ruiked of England, London, themes, of it there is e bread shore. palaces, King, engertainments, evening £0 tg? S°\1\'f1l 1i€S'f=1\6 119»1‘b0l‘ With 8- P001!! _ rparties. He saw em all through the ea and called Contrary .Head. In the §n§.‘rP`:1l;f_n D mists of rumor and by the light of his water between and around Contrary. con- dlgrufl lf_f;_r_;.~, and am sincerely glad Bard. l ;’”_`_Y_;“"`°“t5 nilgi “lid Wh¢ll 3116 W1Bd iS' so. e wron action o me . _3 ey racean rance there like an made me sick all Ever and cefmised unbrokeh horse. It; a. nd sccpg but inconvenience and in._ hal ° l ____ -"'* it ' Km ` _ thing of the past, Issues . Good Doctors are Quick to See and “inp(I;`ti.i>ri»\;;x;1tni;.2iJor: l:1i§:we0ix;;;fi?;n:isa 11:. mired mg I hu., hm no Mant-led in darkness and gemmed with St Gem, in ’ “arf 1 ti; t ’ ° inconvenience with my kidney; [the lights of dwellings along the coast. Appreciate Real iierit in New drfm Re' E I mp” ` was hilsloe I took-these remarkable pills; ‘ the bold shores of Ireland lie before us I nz on tn- ontnr) Head' She ni ,my 5, mr, um, I ghd), ma* me had _of peat _md ww” ____ _ _i M(_diciMs_ laboring hard in the heavy sea, rearing, . P0 e an ‘ham to “hu ‘nxuut ` I that haunts the exiled sons Witli dreams ol 1 T 1¥:::gi:llgl:;re:kl3l§in€Ilo1;:lng xililiddl wind: ` _ 4 S yearning recollection, the land of the Si'°&1°f»°SD.YSP€DSi8 THb1€l2S are 8 <1iS~ threshin sg k t 5, ,Shan I shannon, Liifey. Boyne and Foyle, of the '5°"9l'Y Of Krfllb Willie 50 the lD€d1¢81 PPO' steep hoinsritf 3; °rl;c: ugéel 35:: lovely lakes of Killarney, of Belfast, tession and the public. They are an unfail- _ '_ 5 'e Dublin, Cork and Limerick; above all ini! specific in all cases of dyspepsia and ggvxaaggfgbixg nwimhmg har’ Féaxs | the green native land ofa people warm diS°"d°"°d ‘“3°S"‘°“ waves breaking oviinilidouheichn wer; hearted, hotheaded, impulsive, generous Alumst ¢"’¢l'.Yb0d.Y°S dl8eS15\- ‘S dis' wooping up th. shingle and mug,” ,tl gl ` ' _ . ,_ Y . HE _.li ~ - - - ~_ _ - » E Hem is much .tg be ,mqugred into with thing they do for it is to take some of the g s . _ eet' i 5" _ _plgggnrg gud pl-ogg’ Qld battlefields’ old S0~callPd blood purifiers, which in many and qulckmgud ordered more or less, and the commonest ,hrou h the mr like 8, 8 was got Peel has a lifeboat and out-. There were so many of selection, the boat got oi1`, the was called Charley Cain. It was a o_us adventure. ' The Norwegian had 'her masts, and her spurs were Boating avound her in tliefsnow-like surf. She was dangerous to approach, but the lifeboat reached her, Charley cried out to the The answer came back, “Twenty-twol” Charley counted them as they hung on a the ship‘s side,and said: “Iseeonlytwenty _one-.; not a man shall leave the ship until 4-you bring the Oli one on deck." The odd one, a disabled man, had been left below _ to his fate. Now he was brought up, and ‘all were taken aboard the lifeboat. On landing at Peel there was great excite/ ment, men cheering an' women crying. “ It was a. brilliant rescue.” _ ` For further enthusiastic descriptions of the interesting island and its inhabit- the little book which we have consulted in the foregoing notes. H. V. R. 1 » iiri?s7.‘éi»"é“" 25°. _ E I a I 1 ` ls mit direct to the diseaged ' gm by the Improved Blower. eals the ulcers, clears the ail rr °'°M““.f=l° “=° oa an rmanan cure; 4 Catarrhand Ea Fever. Tlowet &ee. All dealers. or lY)r. A. W. Chasl _ _ Uedidne Co.. Totonti and B i SALT SUPPLY FROM A LAKE E il The inhabitants of Palmyra ret all their salt by dipping buckets into the neighboring salt lake' and allowing “the It will pay to keep a bottle .of Grifliths’ Menthol Liniment quick to cure any pain or days as we have to give up the store ,“- - ,‘~1_Ye1;> Norwegian captain, “How many of you?" ants the reader will turn for himself to ` L' "_."v`1 _ ,Arc (L2 j.`\" `\;-}l .I ~ é i_‘ L-1. ,I , '\ .‘ /'_`;j~`\_: iv -`\' , , _ ___,____. ('17 '_“`\I/I irl’/'iff ' ss. _»-\¢J -> { i'.__*gj_‘\` mf/ __,-_,`__/ , » '\‘1:_'l ,_ .-.I lf7~’T.*';f. ..;,' -;:_.» iff. ','~_`~' *X i-'T ll' cpe ';>\\ ~ f* ra . I il ._1~ water to evaporate. "7 M lllflffll D _ * To show drst what ,-. -`__ \ B" B 'I ICOSCS 888881 O UCC' 'Ill ll “V ` , 3 it E ` * 1 1 _ 1 #fn eu-vcd DH. A-H11 _ .._§i I I .. 'T5 sm; ‘_~’T'1_`ET0‘_‘ N- _,PRINCE .EPWARI 151-r_;\s`i1) _0Q1`9.1}E.B__1;9n_l9QQ-__ - ......__- _»s-._»~--silsssuu-s zu ' 7”' at I; .id _-.- » 1 " 'lf . srvusué Minnie. s,»,,.» i~ W. >~ » ost desirable in the .way ol Ladies’ Hale is our ambition every changing season. ffl ,lf "7_f The present one ,some variations in Millineqye presen&~' in the large and varildfsssortment Luiiss' good. einen "e_hi¢ii we just put in stock. ;f _*E* ' Our Millinery more please you, for it is possible for else by reason' of our for ` only, also sending our liiyer all_ dvds, the world, gathering the _choioest lots _ to be had. ` `~ ’ ` “ Our range of values _in Felt~0uting 1 f"‘Eate,""car'ries you- to vgry__pan»qq____ price possibilities, if you so deiire, with no evidence of parsimony in either material or makeup. V » - » ~ '»`~ 1.- _' fri, "l Wefsellm goofclass -of»ii_ii}l,i||e”q ' all tiinél. be it high or lop _,, es; ,dns-_,#__,`. , ~ _ » , -.. ..= ff eff . _, Q wx I and ber assistants _will :hd onto help you to create onefyourseif.: They will do so very cheaply too. _ 1 , _ Leave your orders early in the week and we’.l send them in time. Pruwse Bins. The Ladies’ Stylish Outdtters. m ¢\» \\.. .I I 1 F always in your home. It is _ . geodin any emeigenc_v,_ ard _ = I ' . i ` ` _ C” A ui! GR.EA8Emv1 lteostslusns ache' ' ' _-7.'PU‘¥\lg£‘f§cg1l;@IIitglr:f2Z?I>n_x§ioaxle. When'_r5ii ~ -- ff f-' ._ An emggists sen mem. A neue book ;I1§_CL»},_§:§\gm(gh1§3le}&_s§§ei§iY13;.§f£_=5vf§l:;»uwm§3°;’°www! on stomach diseases will bemailedfreely ' i d__ .lk d ,_ Y r - ' ~ s s-._ _I . _-:__ m add=wi»g F- A- emo 0°-» Marshall. 1..`”l`§$.°..?.?’€l.‘2‘Zi_5,°i.”i¥;‘”;'.'%°...‘;°‘....5 »2 M' h. "the Factory, alter St. Call, send or* j _ ~ “? » ,e,e,,,,,,,,,_,___ _M . Petroleum. .~ ~ .22 ° ‘c ”\ H. In 'QU ao @ I '\T 1‘f:1.,] r ' .. V1 _IA < ?l\-`_.> I "J . ii éifv 1133111 ` 1 U 1 -1 QI _%@ %ii¥%i% iii §%E#l g - .v , LAST CHANCE.. I _ ‘E . Big Clearance Sale of W. H. SsTEWART 6: C0’s stock of 'in a TW ' ° sr , Q 5 Wthing must » . is oo: s 6 lor ‘ “ I , I for old and voungniust A lot of Boots in the window§at;»-mf HIUQ °` yS°;T;pl;}:re Ram oucwyiuwl I " will be sold at discbunis of POI' ¢0ll‘|'» 40 P33" A 9 *T0* 3; T’ ‘ ' 'Ml 1( g`»§,.,ni *l.<';“'~' rr :»,»,~g¢ . ».¢‘ _#F w'lla§a.i‘!éIl1¢r%°Brom0~Q&l|i° M amy box e‘nt¢1:m$s':: ° . Sale cond\1‘?t_ed_17’Y _ he I ' E5 . _ .~ . 32?” * vi . to obtain better valnejian _any si o he allowed to create a hatggijnr -,yoim is -as M It We oooh ¢» I cypra f