ae Nerves... Dr. A. W. d and red by Wo ry rp Wast Shat or Overw Revit alized by Chas $e "S Nerve Food rk are oo w word Z olw w c oN dvsne . ta? y by day, by t Pa ' the gy an 1 ' symy S kK! n to the xha i »TVE These are s [ Vv ne W oe Ry and 1 t this 3 it D> a. W { i - stor the wasted ne ells, ts new \ ty into the system and ~ w : i ills which are due to exha Dy A. W. ' Nerve Food « by the t g ; wl 1 m the body round and | , and restores the gi ow of heal’: to the | sallow cheek & a box at ali Geaters, or Edman son, Bates & C>., Toronto GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere | for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive P:operties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-?b. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Hommopathic Chemists, Lendon, England. BREAKFAST EPPSS Gf SUPPER COA é ; / i= WEAR the celebrated | m Go CORSETS from” al] goods etores, beught leading dry To he TITIIILILIIAIITEIEISIIAIT TIT IIIT ETIIIII III pe | ol furl ttatin tattle iirtati itt st TIIIITIIIW IIIS IIIIITITIIIITITSIEI IIIT cer THE 9s ARE THE BICYCLES Par’ Excellence. FOUR STRENGTH BEAUTY DURABILITY It takes less energy to propel the IMPERIAL than any Bicycle made. Its construe: tion renders it almost inde- structable. (iS THE BEST TOO GOOD ho FOR YOU? ‘ all and fee our whee ls and get prives——They will interest you. FRED P. NEWSON, AGENT SUNNYSIDE” DENTISTRY seat ae ‘fice in New Prowse Block, first door to the right up Blairs, OR. AYERS THE Ain) KIPLING AND HIS SsiORIES (Continued from 2. p ) sent to school and was acvordtnrly placed asa boarder in the well known naval school at New Cross, near Black heath, a few miles from London. He proved an able scholar and kept his place in his classes throughout his ca reer there. Strange to say, he never seemed to study seriously and continu- ously as other students, but was always ready for a lark or some prac tical joke which kept him frequently in disgrace and a prisoner in the school During his frequent terms of confinement te his quarters be conceived the idea of edit ing awd publishing a weekly school newspaper This aroused the admira- tion of the professors. and then anj ‘he made his first reputation asa ter He finally ran away from the i school. and later the editor of The Pioneer at Lahore, India, where his parents then lived, offered him a hand- some salary to start for India via Amer- ica, Honolulu, Japan, China, and so to Lahore, writing letters for publication. The offer was acce pted. When he returned to Lahore, he en- tered the office of The Pioneer and took a subordinate position in order to learn everything in the publishing line. The work was not congenial to him, and he Was anxious to turn his attention to something It happened that the Duke of Connanght, then military com- mander of the northwestern district of India, would occasionally pay a visit to the Kiplings and spend an evening at their house. When he met Rudyard, he became greatly interested in him and, in the course of conversation, remarked, “What are you going to do, Mr. Kip- ling, now that you are in India again?’ ‘Well. sir, 1 have an ambition be- yond the drudgery of working in the office of The Pioneer.’ ‘“‘What would you like to do, then, Mr. Kipling?’ ‘**l would like. sir, to live with the army for a time and go to the frontier to write up Tommy Atkins.’’ The duke considered the matter and finally gave him carte blanche to do whatever he liked, go to any military station in his command and, if he wished, go to the frontier and live with officers or men, and if at any time he required an escort he could have ene. Rudyard availed himself of the duke’s offer and went off to make acquaintance with Tommy Atkins. At the same time he became a great student of mature and the life and character of the people Thus began a career in literature which has given Mr. Kipling wide and enduring fame Mr. Kipling was married Jan. 19, 1892, in London, to Miss Balestier, of the young American novelist, Wolcott Balestier. who died in Dresden in 1891, and with whom Kipling collaborated in the story caved **The Naulahka.’ € lse. sister It was through this brother that she be- came acquainted with Mr Kipling Her father. Joseph Navarro Balestier was a very successful real estate man and lawyer of New York city. He bought very extensively property in and around Brattlebaro, Vt., and today the Balestier includes many hundreds of It was thus estate there acTes that Mr Kipling settled in Brattleboro :s i ft Mis war riage. He and Mrs. Kipling lived: in the town until their new | > wus fin ished just outside the B1 ro tine It is fashioned after the plan of an In dian bungalow. in which one long cor ridor from end to end of the divides all the arz XY we Se worl a a@f of the staiwart yout 4s. farmer and his ros LON cheeked wit building artments, as in » h There i is no more 1 spiring sight if? rt “eb n 4 7 ‘ id “Phere sno reas 43 why all suc . cou Awe Duet ak oh \ J long, hart py, h val ] \ ¢ lives Much depet ¥ upon the wife Nes To some extent, sue mil : hs be a jack of all trade : H ier has sb ind mist oh ; little of a blacksmith at a little of a hart er atid a little of a veterinary surgeon well as a farmer. It is the wife. It is a long ways te town, and sh must have a handy hand at many things same with th It is possibly many miles to the ‘first physi cian, and the farmer’s wife should be able to see that every member of the family i: kept in good health. Ifthe young farmer’s wife is wise, wher her busband shows that he is out of sorts when he is suffering from mh Isness Oi torpidity of the liver o1 alatecs tion, she will net permit him to neglect these disor ders, but will have at hand Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. This wonder- ful medicine is not a cure all, but as most diseases have their ince ption in a horpid liver or a disordered digestion, it is a cure for a great many of them. It makes the appetite keen, the dige stion and assimila- ti rf the liver active, the blood pure and the nerves steady. It cures all malar- al troub!l and rheumatism. Medicine dealers se 1 ‘t and keep nothing else ‘’just as good.’’ The farmer’s wife may frequently save the life of her husband or that of one of her children by owning a copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. It tells how to treat all the ordinary ills of life and how to care for serious accident cases while awaiting the arrival of a physician. It con- tains 1008 pages. It used to cost $1.50 a copy; now it is free. For a paper-covered copy send 31 one-cent stamps fo cover cusioms and mathing only, to the World’s Dispensary Medical Associ ation, Buffalo, N. Y. Cloth binding, so stamps. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure consti- ation and biliousness. They regulate and invigorate, stomach, liver and _ bowels. Honest druggists do not recommend some- thing else as ‘just as good.’’ ; would say: - ship he is as genial, as kindly. ELAAMIN EK tel vod is" built on the side of a hill. It> is «u tong, curious looking structure, without an entrance on the side that faces the roadway and with but one door in the house, that on the hillside he property slopes down from the hillside to the roadway, and at the base of the hill, although there are I ostrnuctions, “ure = s¢ no fences ‘attered signs ‘on These Premises reading, **Trespassin: is forbidden Here Mr. and Mrs. Kipling lived for some time the year round, and many stories are told in Brattleboro of his li. there Strangers who saw him for the first time thought a cowboy had cone to town, and his boots. his greatcoat and his sombrero, when I the weather permitted him to go with out a thick cap, were familiar to all the town folk There are few personalities more in- teresting than that of Rudyard Kip ling, and there is no man of letters about whom there has been so much in- quiry, yet he is very little known. He has what is sometimes called the British insular prejudice against inquiry into his private life and habits. A good many hundreds of people who have come in contact with him have calleG him all the names that one may use in polite society The explanation thereof is simple enough. Mr. Kipling did not care to know them and resented their attempts to know him. To these Kipling is inclined to be exceedingly short, not to say rude. He believes that he gives the best he has to the public in his writings and that it has no right to bother about his private life To those to whom he gives his friend hearted, as any one could ask He is the most delightful of companions Personally Kipling is as complex and remarkable as his writings His affec tion for his wife and children amounts } to worship Everything in connection with fis life in Shis country shows how desirous is the young man to avoid people who bother ‘him. He absolutely refuses to be lionized. and the thought of seeing in print what he ate for dinner draws from him language as picturesque and as vivid as his poems, bat not so print able While Kipling has steadfastly refnsed to tell the reporters much about win self. his personality is qnite fauliy te vealed in his works) He may hate tad Seudery’s idea. "| know betiv.r than any other writer how to tell anecadvies about myself As a DeWspaper ¢nat Kipling is described by himself bu bis remarkable story of ‘“‘The Man Why Would Be King’ he has given us s sketch of Hbiniself sitting at bis desk onc Saturday night waiting to prt the pa per to “A king or courtier Was dying at the cther end of the worid. ‘‘and the paper was to be bel last possible moment press Oe says anti! the “it was a plicby. black. hot night und raining—now and again a spot o almost boiling water would fall on t! dust # * The tl Wht rit w was keeping as back It we i mot er off * * * | drowsed off and woider whether the telegranh was a I and whether this Gying man was aw2 of the inconvenience and delay he wa cansing * * * The clock hands crept ap to 3 o clock, and the machines | their flywheels two or three mes | see that all was in order | re | say the word that w ld set them of eould have shriekead aloud Then th rear and rattle of the wheels shiver the quiet into little bits. It was in this trying environmen! that Kipling nevertheless some of his best things. Ina couple cf pages on ‘‘My First Book,’’ which bi contributed to McClure’s four or five years ago, he told something about the way in which his verses were written. saying ‘Bad as they were, I burned twice as many as were published, and of the survivors at least two-thirds were cut down at the last moment. Nothing can be wholly beautiful that is not useful. and therefore my verses were made to ease off the perpetual strife between the manager extending his advertise- ments and my chief fighting for his reading matter. They were born to be sacrificed. Rukn-Din, the foreman of our side, approved of them immensely, for he was a Muslim of culture. He ‘Your poetry very good. sir. Just coming proper length today You giving more soon. One-third col- umn just proper Always can take er third page.’ ‘‘Mahmoud, who set them up, haa an unpleasant way of referring to @ new lyric as Ek aur chiz—one more thing—which I never liked. The job side, too, were unsympathetic, because I used to raid into their type for private proofs with Old English and Gothic headlines. Even a Hindoo does not like to find the serifs of his f’s cut away to make Jong s’s. ‘‘And in this manner, week by week Cc nanos my verses came to be printed in the paper.” Of course these verses immediately attracted the attention of the English exiles in India, and scores of people eoon began to demand the publication of the rhymes in book form. This was a little more than Kipling had bar- gained for when he dashed off his lines as the exigencies of the paper or the inspiration of the moment suggested. Here again we may quote his own words: “A real book was out of the ques- on, but I knew that Rukn-Din and ' the office plant were at my disposal at as Warm | ‘a price, CHARLUL'PETOWN, \: ? COLAO if | did not use the oLice Ume also | had handled in the previous year a couple of small books, of which | was part owner and had lost nothing Se there was built a sort of a book, a lean oblong docket. wire stitched. to imitate a D. O. government envelope. printed on one side only, bound in brown paper and secured with 'red tape. It was ad- dressed to all heads of departments and all government officials, and among a pile of papers would have deceived a clerk of 20 years’ service. Of these ‘books’ we made some hundreds, and as there was no necessity for advertis- ing, my public being to my hand, I took reply postcards, printed the news of the birth of the book on one side, order form on the other and posted thein up and down the empire from Aden to Singapore and from Quetta to Colombo There was no trade discount, no reck- oning twelves as thirteens, sion and no credit of any kind what- ever. The money came back in poor but honest rupees and was transferred from the publisher, the left hand pocket, di rect to the anthor, the right hand pocket. Every copy sold in a few weeks. and the ratio of expenses to profits, as I remember it, bas since prevented my injuring my health by sympathizing with publishers who talk of their risks and advertisements. ”’ The price received by Kipling for his work he regards as nobody’s business but his own; nevertheless everybody will fee! a keen interest in The British Weekly’s paragraph on this subject “Perhaps no one receives such large prices for his work as Mr. Rudyard Kip- ling. He has contracted to write eight stories for one of the magazines next year, for each of which he will receive about £240. This issimply for the Eng- lish serial rights of the stories. In ad- dition Mr. Kipling receives payment from America, India and the colonies no commis- | This will probably bring ap the price of the stories to about £500 each, making £4,000 forthe year. In addition to this, Mr. Kipling receives the royuities {or book publication in England and Amer- ica. This will not amount to less than about £4,000, so that for each story the author ultimately receives not less than £1,000. Whether these high prices will be kept up is very doubtful If the cheap magazinism succeeds in injuring the older periodicals they cannot be maintained. It remains to be seen whether the public cares much for names, and it must be remembered that the papers with the largest circulation in this country do net depend upon namesatall Lremember some years ago Mr Kipling contributed one of his best work. better work by a great deal than be has been doing lately. to a monthly review The editor inform :d me that not one extra copy of the pe riodical was sold Among the first of the stories of Kip ling to attract attention was *‘The Man Who Would Be King. and later came from tis prolific and versatile pen such pieces of fuscinating stories as ‘**The Phantom Rickshaw ‘The Taking of Lungtun:z pen ‘The Strange Ride of Morrow tie one “The Matter of a Private. > Binal cf the White Hussars’ and Th » Story of the Gadsbys, ‘a numer of which are included in “The Plain Tales From the Hills.” which give vivid and interesting pictures of native and life in India. Kipling’s fame as a poet is not less well merited than his reputation asa writer of fction ‘The Truce of the Bear.” in which he attacked the aggression of Russia, is one of his strongest poems, while **Be- trothed’’ may be regarded as one of the most delightful of the products of © his poetic genius. Other poems which. bave attracted wide and favorable attention are ‘‘The Seven Seas,” **McAndrew's Hymn,” **The Mary Gloster,” ‘**Tom- my Atkins’ and **Files on Parade.’ His latest poems, which all the English speaking world knew almost by heart. ‘*The Recessional’’ and ‘‘The White Man's Burden,”’ hav~ given him endui- ing fame as a poet. sp A.W. CHASE A Triumphs over the Worst Forms of KIDNEY... DISEASE fZarrisoy The wonderful success of Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills adds to the fame of the great doctor wi e name is familiar in almost every home as the author of the ants famous Recipe Book. Scores and thousands of grate eful men and women have been rescued from the miseries and dangers of kid: ey disease by this greatest of all kidney cures. Mr. D. C. Simmons, Mabee, Ont,, writes: **My kidnevs and back were so bad I was unable to work or sleep. My urine had sedi ment like brick dust, I was compelled to get up four or five times during the night. I saw Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills advertised and concluded to give them atrial. I have only used one box and am completely cured. I was a great sufferer for 18 years, but my kidneys do not bother me now. I enjoy good rest and slee p and consider Dr. (¢ shase’s f Ki dney- Liver Pills a boon to suffering humanity Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, one pili a dose, 2c. a box, at ali dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, MADE OF BEST STEEL. KEEP EQGE. LEADING DEALERS SELL THEM the blank A TT Se ee A Ce, Se St apa Se Sl asl ae Sp Sapp ie 8 o's. ROM INDIA & CEYLON = ‘eo X9QC® a Se eB F at, ee ‘its a Treat: ° x e ae > 7 a Ms ai Ms Ne . 2 ; = AS Eee ses ye 22 he Bx Seu ed oe oe ao a J ais ‘FROM ANCIENT INDIA Ae ite AND SWEEv CKYLON AS yn Fie et Se 3% oe “a0 od iB o-.d 14 | ad paexets only’ He Alt ° ” + BS $1. perl, Md wt. AN we at. * At P « Always Sest of Tea Values 1S ae at Oe ORS iS By OS Ss DSS Deis is SR se Cftice for Maritime Provinces 7 & 9 Bedford Row, Halifax, N IN Time with the paint brush is like that “‘stitch in time” that i my ‘‘saves nine.’’ Paint isa labor-saver in the home. A fe glossy, painted surface discourages dust. But the labor f of painting is lost if you use the wrong paint. a Different surfaces call for different coverings. House- wives don’t put rag carpet on the parlor floor nor velvet carpet in the kitchen. They wouldn't suit. Paint making has progressed more than carpet snaking. There’s a special paint for every kind of painting. Looks best, wears best. % Tue SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS ow For painting base boards, window blinds, enpbeards, shelves, by . flower stands and other little things about the house, get The Sherwin-Williams Family Paint. For furnitare, pottery, wicker- ow ig work and decorative work use The Sherwin-Williams En- , ay oad . ame! Paint. Fer bath tubs, iron bedsteads and meta) work get The Sherwin-Williams Bath Ename). Be sure you're tight. “Paint Points,” sent free, will help yon. THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO., Paint ano COLOR Makers, Canadian Dept., 1 St. Antoine Street, Montrea? ait “ a, Sp by S WW. Crabhe. SEEDS “THE BES; i TAAT GROW. The abeve line is « strong one, but WH STICK BY GOR GORTY The Best hat Graw—OUR Sse 'S —The B Our Specialties ‘Mower and Gard: n Vevetunble Seeds See oar 1899 Catalogue for new varieties SWE PBA EEDSs. HASZARD & MOORE, SEEDSMEN, BOOKSELLERS, AND PRINTERS, SUNNYSIDE. ee en — “ ntold. - This would not be the store i+ is, nor the stock itis; i could do either juscice in our s.ore new wec Salient points here and there may be picked out from time to time, and mentioned in this pape, but far more mus% remain untold than told. You must come in, and s2e for vi Urse ‘The Heintzman Piano must be seen and heavd to be apprecia‘e], We wonld like t } show you its special polnts over and above all other makes ic lie Our prices are right too- when you con-ider and are com vineced of the quality. In fact, tuey are iow:r than moss dealers ask fur ordinary comins reial p anos. We have 1 number of second h nd pienos on hand, that ware offering at auction prices to ciear. MILLER BROTHERS. The P. FE. island Muri House Connolly Building Queeu Siz, co ™ 1 apy