Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 12 Nov 1903, p. 6

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IN THE `DOMINION WILL-It Club Clubbing Rates We have a. large assortment of Fire Arms to offer this sexson at prices away dovn below all former prices. Do not fail to see our stock if you are looking for Good Goods at low prices. ' (`nu afnnlr Ac T2...'l.J.....J U-_J____,_ ,_ Guns, Ries Ammunition 's Di.-Eases begmwim fever--a varicotde 4 v . Women @6305 oon ' _ inam- 1 contagious dtscn 8es-all ' ed blood. 7*` &.a?i1I1Dure otlfonson act! as a vital- dehmty qz1:xcg: can do. . I` awn! hing what no M `fwl |rea's-Jc.11noau lijcllina-at If you need Liquozone, and h tried it, please send us this couggs nez: will then mail you an order on you; local druggist for a fu_11-size bottle, and we win pay your dqsggtst ourselves for it. 11,- 19 our free gtft, made to convince you. t show you what: Liguozone is, and whgt can do. In Justxce to yourself please :2 0 ;t';:`:zg:..'::.P`a~ ~r2__--_..._- --.4_'_- 1 - -:_-_J L1qnozone-our trademark namc-ncrw appca on every bottle of genuine liquicd ozong, ___ ____w \I\.a I 't1`1iI-oc1-nty not 1 ' ire blanks and 1 I` .. (`an GILXYI ..l";l.J;1`- If you will apply take it. uyaxaauu 1 .-g mgnnga 1.1.3 YS_..-_ OICCCCCIOIOCO once to-....... `.9 WIJGCVCI 0 iquozone coats" 50c. and S1. cur our `nus COUPQ for Old: (DP -2: uni gun..- -_.x._ ..... 50!}. Bottle Free. coococoooOoO00'OOOO0oIooto0ooIoouo 0000000O$OOQIO0OOooo0oIIOIQ|IQ.. Give tun oddnea--write nmnlv IANDI gooooocotOoooooivovooooooootoq plainly. j BARRIEZ 4; L Aasm-.% gain" . M ..,l.....inl|.. In. `lug. `ml-n-I u e.I.-arm-I ,1l|I"`I9"3'. it !:xrl2*'`:s s s %.-.\ * or-=1--:w`%:-air` Gun-A. O 4.,` 3 s_~,.`,`," . ,\' -`, W33`, 5 - ;It' you want to win` your battles . .1 {so and work your..b1oomi13s 1 ';_:_1`-f igqays Rudyard yK'Ipling,:. use-*.= 0 y `al forcetul*directness.. In"nava1.war-, stare its is the guns that matter, and ;` 1 -in land war they--may be of tar g`.rea.t-., i or mqme_nt.- than foot and horse,,ge.s e. saw over r andfover again in the Boer war. The Germans took Sedan ' 1 with artillery almost ; alone, ` the. . Boers held Ladysmith by superior` ' . guns, and would have taken it if the"_ , sailors had not come up, in time with better guns than the `British l Army possesses. _ In the making of : ` I guns the British Navy and;-the Army Ipend millions,.~i'or ,a big gun may, cost $50,000, and `be capable of only a. few score shots before it becomes useless from wear. Army guns are `_ comparitively small, consisting most- ly of weapons which fire a, shell weighing twelve or fteen pounds. -In South Africa the army borrowed from the navy guns with a, bore of 4.7. inches, -. which re a, shell weig'h- 1 ing 45 lbs. six times a minute. These 1 QFD no-nu.`-1-. ....'.._1.:._ .. __ - __ 1 Home Great aims. The largest gun now made at Woolwich is a twelve-inch weapon which weighs forty-six tons. This is the . gun used for the turrets of bat- , tleships. So easily `can it be handl- led with hydraulic gear and served by . .electric appliances that it can be tired once-every minute. The opening and closing of the breech is all done ` by hand, and with a single motion, "in the turning of a wheel. This in [itself is one of the most important inventions in securing rapid fire." The `second largest gun has a bore of ten inches, and weighs twenty-nine tons. Then there are the 9.2 inch guns for cruisers chasers. .`These are some-' times called quick-rers, `though they are not what. we generally mean by that term. The Elswick rm make a an eight-inch quick-rer which `can throw four shells in sixty-tour sec- onds. The British naval 6-inch gun which is the second weapon on bat-. tleships, is a `trie smarter, for it can be fired once every fifteen sec- onds, throwing a projectile of 1-00 pounds. This is commonly regarded as the largest of the quick-ring guns. An important element in se- curing rapid discharge is that the powder is enclosed in a brass case, which avoids the danger `of portions of the silk bag remaining in the gun and causing an explosion `when the ,next charge is inserted, as has fre- quently happened with the old muz- zle-loaders. By having a brass case; there is no need of sponging to clear - away the burn ing particles. and time is saved. The smaller quick-ring guns employed on a- battleship are chiey intended to repel attacks by ' torpedo craft. They are mounted V -along the side and in the `ghting-_ `tops on the masts. They do not dil- tor in essentials from army guns; and the description must be allowed` to 7 . y'apply to both. The twelve-pounder` weighs six cwts.. and can send as V shrapnel shell carrying 160 small_btu_la-4 ats for a distance of 8,000 yards, '1 though` it-is not often usadj-at`.,tliat_" extreme range. For this `gun, as for: , the 0 sign-pounder -and the th reeepeu_nd-1 _ er. the explosive charge land, thelypro-g .. loctile are made.`.'up._t0E6ther. aw` rass case.fwhi,ch saves `.:1m1;p;ito4 cunt` ot._ time in loading;p~. iAnotli e r}` l,int.le at1nK; . Wesson; .`?'Wh1h.E`;~h3l_!ih`:.% "i1E`.W4Y"1>IW5!! tired `in 'S9uth= 'Ar1'Lo:E",i.!5*3h'e"# - r"Bqers; had. `lis ldi9..;[?retorivit;?ids} ' W1tabr`:?:~: whiiah. iniiire; {Ii lateri19m1eol%.W9rk5?Mali?!0 ti ;: 1 ` .&1$~_1*R9W=..5h:1l -` ` E - 2" 5: - `. ` In the perfection `invention o!` ` cannon as much science has- been applied in the last thirty years as in. any other branch of industry. Some of the most important improvements in gun-making have originated at the Armstrong Works at Elswick-on-they Tyne. A Sheield has `improved. the- manufacture of `steel expressly for the purpose ofturning _out better guns, and Woolwich Arsenal has kept" . twelvethousandmen busy forming the guns. and the projectiles they use. A To make a gun for the turret of a battleship requires two years, so you see it .would_ never do to wait until the emergency arose before com- - pleting the full equipmlent of deadly weapons, seeing, that victory rests not with him who. hath his. quar- rel ijust, but rather with the one who "getshis blow in rst. Some years ago artilleristse favored `great size in guns, but it has been- found that bulk and weight involve . disad- vantages which are not compensated for by the addition of striking force, and so the British experts of to-day draw the line at agun weighing 46 tons and _ having a `muzzle twelve inches wide. The tremendous wea- pons of 111. tons whichare to be seen on the warships Benbow,. or Sans- pareil, are out of date. They have a -muzzle of 16} inches, and fire a shell "weighing 1,800 pounds. ..T.hen there was the eighty-ton gun, which red a shell nearly as large. `Thee have.- .gons out of fashion, as have the 13.5 `inch guns, which weighed sixty-seven tons. and were made in. large num- bers for warships. To give some `idea of the cost` of guns it may be `said that the hundred-ton gun called the Woolwich Infant. of which we `used to hear so much, meant an ex- penditure of $100,000 for the cannon ~itssl!, nearly $20,000 for the ttings, . and a single shot cost $175. 1 .mp3 vmeura THAT HAVE aaftu `MAD: m THAE|Rg34xANUFAOTU.RE.v f CV?"-VVOIOI IJIJV ll}! J,n%$?; `ground. . -...".......- 1' `mi nnewitii 6:13 fna?z"VA3$hese4A%i:unn J5`FT"`?`i" W.` P`f!`i* 4 ..,.a __ -...-u puun vac-VD G `Ll-lIll.uI.aUo J.IlVU are, properly sp'ea.k-iniz-.. naval guns, though for the future they will be in- cluded in the armoury of the army as well. - - a`."`,'|I6~ t"b"'..' 0* A Giant lolgnoo. - ` -vvv-V out Winn,` vuvg. cusp,-urn I -.1?.-- than was won. The young man then told a. story ;.il1ustra_ti_va of Scottish coolness 1121-, v der trying circumstances. A num- _ her of S_c`ots,"he. said, "were work-`` ; ing on a. fteen-storey building. One, up near the `roof; lost his loothol-d ` and Well; ~' But even inihis switt `de- scent thfough the _;a.ir hotronxsined quits tcoolglnd csltq, [In fact. as `he -not 'mste_`=1triend%-` Ton'., ;th..;:W"Fh' i.::stb! 93I ho:I.IIns.s9ut.`:_!_m~ t I The London Chronicle seys: Sir i Francis Howard, the new Inspector-' General of Recruiting, is a relative i of the Duke of Norfolk, and has had quite an interesting` and exciting } fighting career, , He began in the J owakai affair, and then went through` the heavy Afghan campaign, ; bringing himself into notice on many occasions. In the war in Upper } Burma, fteen years ago, he was sev- 7 oral. times mentioned, and jgivcn 1 the distinguished service reward`. and I for his work in Crete later on he got V the -c.M.G. Colonel Howard was `locked. up in Ledymith with Sir j George White. and did well in com- " mend of the 8th. Brig-ode, getting the : R C`. TI nffnn {Rh innit 4...! I.......'.._ \.-vas..|.IaI5u,I.|\7, 50091115 \\.IlU 3 E`.-`(.3.wI!".m a.fter the war, and having [many clasps to-his medal. In his new post Sir `Francis .moves on to the rank of Major-General. Hais an -A,D.C'. to thg King. _ ms qvuu vIwiI.vv- at: Univ -Janus `VI yuu UGlUlo '1`he gun, now almost" complete, is placed on a cradle, which travels for- ward and backward, on which is a long iron rod. with a cutting instru- ment at the end and a beam at the side to guide the motion of the gun. The cutting instrument goes in and out, cutting as it comes out, while a. spout of water `pours irom its I head to prevent heating by friction. The model bar at the side moves the gun _in such a way _ that shallow ; grooves are cut in the metal in `the ` spiral form, which you can see if you look down the muzzle of a rie. These grooves are intended to give, the shell a revolving motion as it issues from the gun, and this is achived by put- ting a band of copper. on the end :0! the shell, which -is easily cut by the ' steel grooves, with the result that . the projectile is whirling as it rushes l forth. The spiral ight gives truer di- rection, and takes much better mark- , manship. Other and larger. hooped ; are shrunk on the breach, part for 3 strength in the region where the ex-` ` plosion occurs; then. the mechanism of the breech is` xed, and the gun, is complete. A formidable yet grace- ful `weapon is the modern big gun. Orientals lavish "decoration on their artillery; we are content if they are `strong and true. i . . H. L'." Doherty,. the English tennis ohampion, was _ complimented one day `upon his coolness in play. "You, _I manage to keep cool," said Mr. Doherty, bui;. I fancy, I should do better it I had Scotch blood in my voir1s."_ ' o A ` ' ' . - __-.__.__. _,,__ nu ,_, 1 cc Vv-vwvw GTO cut.-1 _L-n-.. ._LI_ End lxomng rightly; `Inner. lymph at lctoh coolnuvn; ww-uk-dr. _ :'?='~'3'@!*xzi'y-u "nun vs-It -:~ ~ $111 4 .. .;ao uuv.a-u,vvv,vvv,vvvs LIIV VUIIIJ llilp` tion that rivals the empire is the United States, `with an income 0! . 3,000,000,000. Theleading gures ` as to the expenditure in `the United ',Kingdom are as` i`o1lows:-Food and drink, 468,000,000. or 34 per cent, of the total; dress, 182,000,000, or 13 per cent.; house, 223,000,000, or 16 per cent;;` national sex-vices (ex- clusive? of education), `188,00'0;00O, or-13 `per cent.; miscellaneous (in- cludin '30,000,000 for education. L 2550 O_`OO0.for_ church, :_30;0O0.000 tor locomotion,` etc.), $180,000,000; ' oi` 9`, `per, cc'en't.'~. and} "'os't`of distribu- H't1fm,. `200,0Q0,000, or-*1_5 per cent. u . Statistics of the income and ex- penditures of the British people were presented recently `by Sir Robert Gif- fen before the members '0! the Brit- ish Agssociation. The total income of the British 9Empixje reaches the enormous sum of '3,130,000,000, from a capital of '22,2_50,000,000. . For the United Kingdom the income .is 1,750,000,000, from a. capital of '15,000,`000,000. The only na- f`t\I| vfhn vI`1vn`n I-Inn A-uu9.un 4-: I-I-A uuu uavu 'V`IIlII IIU WU! BU Iluca At Guernsey, in the Channel Isl- ands, two" men of a certain. regi- ment, who were conned to barracks as defaulters, determined to have at least one day's liberty in the town. Watching. their` opportunity, they managed to get out of the barracks at Fort George, and making their way down to the beach and com- mandeer.ing a !lsherman's boat, they rowed out to sea. They had no denite object in do-ingthis, being . ` inspired merely with a desire to put as much spaceas possible between themselves and the barracks for that day. previous acquaintance -with the sea, and when they got some distance out into the swell they were `attacked by. seasickness, lost their oars, and the boat drifted about, hither and `thith- er, for three, days, until they were picked up by a Frenchshing smack and landed in Dunkirk, `almost dead from exposure". istarvation and l ill-' ness. The British Consul sent them back to the regiment, and they `spent two months in thelmilitary prison, ruminating over the amenities of life. When they came out and related their experiences; their story V proved so inspiriting that another party of six men repeated the performance a few days afterwards. But they were never heard of again. - A, severe storm sprang up the same night, the boat was found floating bottom up- wards the next day a few miles out at sea, whilea week afterwards `one of their forage caps was . washed `ashore on the adjacent island of Jer-k eey. Neither of them had any ` IVJIIVOQ I \I`Il |IVl\l VV One night two soldiers made up their minds to break out of bar-' racks, after tattoo. Being aware that they `could not pass the sen- tries, ' they determined to try the cli, and after almost superhuman- exertions they had managed to get about half-way down the face of it, when one of! them, failing to. secure a footing, lost his hold, and was dashed to pieces "in the street below. The `other, scared by the fate of his companion, remained where he was, r poised between heaven and earth. not daring to move either up or down, until at last the shouts of the people below attracted the notice of the guard, -and a- rescue party with ropes,-dragged him to the sum- mit of the cliff again. He spent that .night a prisoner in the guard-room. only too thaukml to think that he had met with no worse fate. A4 r'1u.._..-5.--. .I_ LL- t~n___.,,-s 9-- "Po u m1i.'V'V si1e"a:i'd',' . atgoping iover` thevitim who hagdf just begn dragged` out from `mnderrf -her. automo- %Vbu,.;?`ha.va"you1u`wi1e;?'. '.`No.'. . he, _.`,."t.hiIt, Fit _ .W0l`lt 3.4:.` 51".; ` .-....;.. "'I...__.`_`.A o 52- `.`_'. "'__ i'nJ-gnu usouvvvvwwn J 0 A , feeling,ibut*~itis` a certain fact. that `ies""iife' he leads `that engenders Tim the inner consciousness of .ev`9ry . soldier` jthere" lurks i a`da re-devil`, rhis- Chief-.l0Vin8`r-8Pi1'.it: =<.w.hicli every now. i and then} coriwlses him and impel!` him to .:commit -js`ome`j`,ra.sh`act, to * : burst out gin; soine"forII_1 jot, excite meat, which furnish "him with some means of riskimr. either his life V or his liberty._ Especia.lly_ is this the case where he wriggles under any - restraint of hishacti-_ons. Up" to quite recently, every soldier in the British army had. to be in barracks at tat- too, unles he was on pass. It was a very common "occurrence for men, aiterjanswering. their names at tattoo, to break out of barracks" again in quest of further excitement and pleasure. A glance through the delaulters book of a company will show you entry after entry of crimes for this breaking out of barracks." In "opens camps, such as Aldershot, Colchester, . and Shornclie, the breaking out" is practically a mis- nomer, for it, consists in nothing. more thanwalkiqg out of the` bar- racks, the soldier merely risking his liberty if apprehended -in town by. the -police. But in barracks, sur- rounded by high -walls, an_d also in fortied places, the soldier risks not only his liberty, but also his life in attempting to "break out." Some years ago a fatal instance occurred `in the Grand Shaft Barracks, Dover. `The only means of exit from this barracks is by gates guarded - by` sentries. On the northeast and west side's the barracks are protected by strong fortications and deep en- trenchmentsr so that escape that way. is practically impossible. On the south side there are no walls, but the barracks are bounded by a cli which is almost perpendicular, and perfectly inaccessible from the street which runs below. ' t`\_._ --:__I_a 4; Ian - Brmnh Income and Expgngilturo. ` It I135; lava loo: ' Wane. VI `4T$I Y `J. L \I IE3! PB` 9\.PI} Y IIIVDJO E The boat is to be fitted out witli fog signals, whale boats, windlasses, cables, mushroom anchor, etc., the I fog singals being suiciently power- ;' ful to be heard for 25 miles. The crait is tted with electric lights to: lighthouse service and with a large -;.1,000- lb- bell. '1`ha;Lurcher and its companion, craft, _ which. is built on; = the same specications for use in the, Gulf of at. Lawrence, at the endoi the - Island of Anticosti, are worth in the neighborhood of `$200,000. is `~ is the tint time lightships havebeen Ibuilt in this country, and- they are KL ? IIU IJ\l I-ICIJLIO ! The measurements of the hull . are: " Length between perpendiculars, 112 1 feet; breadth, mou1ded,- 28 feet, 6 1 inches; depth of hold from top _to keel to top of maindeck beam amid- : ships, 14 feet 101} inches. The ves- i sel has three decks, the main and {spat decks being continuous and the lower deck extending from the stem to coal bunker bulkhead, and from the sternpost to the engine bulkhead. The machinery includes the engine, surface condensing, single cylinder, l 23x22 inches, and the propeller is o! the solid type. 7 -feet 3 inches diam- . eter. Each boat has two navy type boilers, 9 feet diameter, 16 feet, 7}` inches long. designed for be. working pressure 01 100 lbs. per square inch- fl... Kan` `Q `Q kg Cami anII.\ZI The MASTER MECHANIC`S PURE TAR SOAP -heals and softens the skin, while promptly olee._nsin'g it of grease. oil. rust.-~eto. ` Invaluable tor mechan- farmers; aspottsmen. J__FRE_E can ir`eo'eipi;* 018121 pqstagea _ `- Albert 1 lI"\;.u..|. :nv.}..v_. II- I` In-.3 '|l.._..;._.__`-:4 . IlIUUC $\JI U3 ZIIJIJIID Inlliill-In ` Bishop Loitus, `who has labored (or years among the Cree Indians and Eskimos. of Hudson's Bay, said that he had seen Indian men and women i walk 10, 15. 20. or 25 miles through snow to attend a church service, be- ginning at 8 a.m. on Sunday. and he had known them to travel 200 to ' 400 miles to kneel at the Lord's F table. In 95 percent. or the Indian tents on the shores of the Hudson : Bay family prayer was conducted night and morning. and he had seen the Indian last all Sunday rather than kill game on the Lord's Day, % which was a marked contrast to l many professing Christians, -who. j when relieved oi the constraints ol j V the city, had not scrupled to go hunt- T ; lng on the Sabbath for sport.` The ` . Diocese oi Keewatin was an immense one. embracing a portion of Ontario ' on the south, running north 1,600 5 milles, and covering 50,000 square mi es. , ' t On the 17th October Miss Belle Jeffrey christened the new Govern- ment lightship "The Lurcher`, which is to all intents and purposes a oating lighthouse, and it was then I sent into the waters of Toronto Bay . 3 The, Lurchern is intended for . light- _ehip duty on the Lurcher "Shoal, near \ the end of Nova Scotia. _It is very, etify built, and stands high above the water. She will have a. crew oi about 30 men. A A .I,- `.,_II _..__. - vvv-Ia- _ l.:,'l_ot1atf. Soap 05.: i7.Igf.'i.;".E.a1,`? Govvu-uncut Lightship Tho Lu-shot." `-.u u o _ 2,11, Interesting Information Given by Bishop A of Ioswstln, _ During his recent visit to Toronto. Bishop ~ Loftus, __oi Keewatin, gave some remarkable instsnces ' of the piety snd devotion which he said was universal among the Cree Indians` of "the Hanson : Bey District. in those regions not invaded by civilization. which was killing o the `Indians and vii-t.u'elly' destroying the value of re- ligious eorte among them. lming-n Y;nCOssn anion Inna Inhnrntl inf LU 12316 HUI: LUK IIUHUKU UK 'VVlIlIuIIg' EU. `said, If `your love should prove a lie. . I'd gjae not for pleasure or h.ea1th,r he s ; V . . . I d dhley desire to die. Pdhcaremnot for home or for 1-lendn,'_' s e ea ; . I111'e s joys would seem a jest. Whenmyour passion wavers or ends. sh! ea "1 shim seek _ror eternal rest. Yet to-day he digs deeply `In Dawson, they. saw. ' ' say. . * ' i . And In politics out there he wins.` She rules In a Toronto home. they, lay. Andltocka a cradle of twjns. llI)Vd" luau an-on-v-. -.-_ V. ..._V,' ,. paid Sxoogooo for the right _t,q'mnke Liquozone. That. is the `price ever paid for the rights in one country on any sdeixtic discovery. Itlwis paid by us,,after years of experiment with it, be- cause Liquozone alone can kill inside am-mg withnut killing the tissues. `too. C8383 U LA}: Luvuuw germs without killing the tissues, Nothing else can destroy the cause of any aerm dmenlse. . - A Przfhis .m,P_n3", `d,;;,1.g:e`c}'l"ni'1:sI" vsah.-1 Irnnxxnn far ue fkht tn-make Liquozone is simply liquid oxygen"--no drugs, no alcohol. in it. e Itis the dis- coveroof Pauli, the great German chem- ist, w spent 20 years on it. His object wasto get such an excess of oxygen in st: le form into the blood that no germ con d live in anymembrane or tissue. Liquoznne does that. We spend 14 days in making. each bottle of it, but the result is: germicide so certain tint we ublish on every bottle an oe: of l,000 or a disease germ that it cannot k L Any drug tlnt kills germs in a poison to you and it cannot be taken interxully. Medicine never destroys inside germs. Liquozone kills them with oxygnn--a tonic to you-the very source of vitality. It killethem because germs are vegetables, {re hot :5: honor: or wealth," hi. ,, T . Kill: All Germs. PIETY oacne INDIANS. Liquid Oxygen. 3EI=O'a`E AND AFTER. Rive will .1 A xcv.-Is of VU7m*i an animal.--is away in vesetabie mt- V coon iaemploedinthq tmnnmhndu 2: motor. or all kinds in stock ox-_made ;Qrape_a,nd -all Funeral RequisitesfurI1l9hd' :0g;I;13>;gV?rdgiaph1 or otherwise plfdmptly attended to- . H, ` .. . ' ';`.,`.vzan---r;.A.-- _- HKPITK, Acanauuw-a w -.v ..-._- physiciam,`t`1:e gzorld over. It is essen- tial in any germ for the cause must be destroyed", and nothing elpe can do it. Liqnozone then act: as a tonic to bring back a_ oonition of perfect health ; for oxygen is Nature : greatest tome; Its effects are exhilarating, purifying, vitn1iz- ing. It does something that all me. skill in the world cannot do without it. ' These are the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troubles `take Nt eroomethgenno 1 ... .3 3.: ;...u...'i...1 mi 'uCwI.C7II,IlIlLIZllnIllGIvsu- `eviuble. By deitxoying the canon of the trouble. it mvuinbly ends the disease, sud forever. certaan. uquolme mm W` 8"""'! whetue:theynre,andthereIu.ltouein- -__:.._|.:- 1:- nlgabuuina fl-In nnnnn ti the -KEG POIIUI .-Night : Dianne nave! `trouble: -Coughs-Cold! Consumption colic--croup R T A K E R 3 .':P.*:_-E," % mu t+ONN+NV % ' A V N4` % ++++++++++; __._____ gwwkwounowouuwowuwwooooto:-+:;::+++no .yv-.-a -v- V.-- \r-\.rvIAIJ uuv zuvv xxuca. thOulr stock.(:lf :3uilders Hardware is V -~ . e atest an st that money can E pu'c_hase. We invite all parties re- =e Fe svmm Bum : vs: 8;:v:;;:::: A 5500853 dlkilhl z ceived our secozid import order of > "7 "kd ` "4 3"; Glass.` We can save you money by 'iudumm `kn. V. 3 letting us gure on Your wants in all ; 4 E ` T THE SHARPLES House Furnishings in our line. f V--. GREATER THAN EVER" _WALTER sco'r'r, S cott s B ookstore Germ Diseases. T'%for its `Subscribers at o All Books and Supplies necessary for Collegiate Institute or Pnblic Schools M; the lowest prices. Mail orders receive prompt attention. `With Any Paper AND STROUD. THE ADVANCE THE STOCK or SCHOOL suppuns AT. . . . ..

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