Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 17 May 1900, p. 4

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Publle interest is so centered upon the program: of events in South Africa that little thought is given to other parts of the great continent, though the reorganization of. the Soudan un. der Sir Reginald Wingate, in succes- sion to Lord Kitchener, is well worthy ol attention. The Opening of this vast regien, closed to the outside world for more than sixteen years, took place in November last, when the Khalifa was killed and his army annihilated in an advance toward Omdurman, by the last of the three Anglo-Egyptian expeditions sent againt it. the government set up to succeed the hideous t3 ranny of the Mahdi and the Khalifa is necessarily military, the natives “owning no arguâ€" ment but force,” an army of 11,000 men being permanently concentrated at Omdurman and Khartoum, and its command carrying with it the gover-‘ nor-generalship of the Soudan. As the 1 old rule was also that of force, the ‘ new rule differs from it less in the‘ means employed than in the object ! aimed at, which is, broadly speaking, to develop the nation which in a rude and degraded form came into being as a result of the Mahdist revolt, and to prepare it for inclusion among: civilized peoples. In this process first ; place is given to the establishment of 1 ,law and order, and the first step has i ‘been to prevent the possibility of an-i other insurrection by the deportation and confinement at Rosetta of all the relations of the Mahdi and the Khalifa likely to toment one. Of the remain- ing Dervishes, the blacks have, follow. lug the British custom, been freely enlisted in the Sundanese battalions. while the Arabs have been scattered' over the country to till the land, or are engaged on canal works and in rebuilding Khartoum. DOLiES’I‘ICS IN CHINA. The question of domestic service in China is by far an easier proposition than in meet other countries. In China a rich man gets as many ser- vants as he wants. and yet he pays them no wag-es. while the common people have to pay them well. Even then they are hard to get, for the reason that the employe of the rich than can make moré than m5]; If); ordinary #0303 it perquisites. Next, for administrative purposes, the Soudan has been divided into five provinces and three small districts, each of the former being in charge of a British officer, with two British officers under him as travelling inspectors, and under them the magis- trates and police officers. For mar- tial law has been substituted a Soudan Penal Code framed after the Indian Code used in British East Africa and Zanzibar, and a Code of Criminal Pro- cedure, based on English military law, and so familiar to the officers called upon to administer it. As for slavery, rwhile it has been found im- practicable to at once abolish‘it, the institution being firmly rooted in the Soudan, the traffic in and ill-itreat- ment of slaves is prohibited by heavy penalties, and no greater right is recognized on the part of the master as against. his slaves than against other servants. Almost as important as the establishment of order is pro. vision for adequate revenue, a pro- blem which with a people so poor is one of great delicacy, any heavy taxa- tion threatening to prevent the re- vival of prosperity essential to the payment of taxes at all. The plan of levying new taxes monthly as trade increases has, however, been adopted, and thus far found to work fairly well. though the danger of overdoing it is evident, and could revenue be otherwise provided, a more rapid in- creases of prosperity would follow were no taxes to be imposed for the next three years. Of the other objects which must precede} the larger deveIOpment of the pos- sibilities of the country, the redistri- bution of the pOpulation, establish- ment of communications, rebuilding of cities, etc., come in natural order, and the energy with which they dire being pushed must go far to convince ' the natives that the purpose of Eng- land in the Soudan is not destructive but constructive. aidering. Wet a sponge in soft, hot water. Put on it a little good soap end a few drops of glycerine. Lather the face thoroughly with the rinse, end rub the skin with almond meal till it is quite dry. Wash the meal off with fresh hot water, then spray or sponge the face with cold water till the flesh feels nice and firm. This closes the pores. Dry gently With a soft towel and powder lightly with pure Fuller's earth. Perhaps every one is not aware of the quite magical effect of a face shampoo when tired out. Its refresh- lng powers are so great that the lit- tle trouble involved is not worth con- sidering. Wet a sponge in soft, hot OF INTEREST T0 BRIDES. Bridal bouquets are made very light and loose, daintily tied with ribbons, and veiled with tulle or enveloped in valuable lace. The prayer book isin :ooled white morocco, with gold mon- ogrun. Very few jewels are worn, be- yond a pearl engagement ring, afew diamonds from the tronsseau or pre- sent: from relatives. E DI TORI/1 L NOTES. A FACE SHAMPOO. Milk with dry hands. vigorously and exhaustively. Nothing will prrolong the milking period more than by get- ting the last drop. and reinember the first pint has but one per cent. but- ter-tat, while the lam pint has ten per cent. CONDITION IN CATTLE AND HORSES. “Condition” in a horse has a very different meaning to the same ex- pression as applied to cattle. In the case of the latter, the more heavily- tleshed the animal is the better is its “condition” reputed to be, whereas in the case at horses it is not great wealth at flesh, but great muscular develdpment, so essential to the per- formance of the work expected of it, that constitutes the highest condition. order. Before starting to milk. the flanks and udder otthe cow should be wiped with a damp cloth to remove loose hairs and dirt, which otherwise might fay iptq the_ milk pail. It is found a good practice to out off the cow’s switch and clip the hair from the hind quarters when putting her in for winter. Endeavor as far as possible to have the cows milked by the same persons, at the same hour, ' Bacteriologists tell us the small agnqunt- of _miAlk _which has collect- ed in the teat abounds with injuri. one forms of bacteria, while the re- maining portion of the milk is prac- tically germ free, and they recommend not allowing‘ the first stream to go into. the mitk pail. I have often heard a person say, “1 can get more milk from that cow than anyone else.” or “This animal will not let another person near her." Why is it? In such cases there is be- tween the cow and her milker asym- pathy and confidence. He has in some mysterious way crept into her affections, and it in her pleasure and delight to show her regard in the brimming pail. Does this sound sen- timental? There is far more truth than poetry in it. Get a cow to love and trust you by feeding and caring for her kindly, and she will repay you by bringing you in additional dollars I noticed in England the farmers had milking sheds in or near the pris- ture fields, and that the men had long linen ulsters which they slipped on when going to milk. I thought this a good idea, as it tended to cleanliness in milking and also to a saving or the clothes. To insure pure milk the atmosphere : in which the cows are milked must be . pure. Putting down hay or cleaningf out the stable just before milking is; a bad practice. The milk in passing; tromthe teat to the pail through an; atmosphere laden with stable odors and dust may become sufficiently con- ‘ taminated to materially affect thef flavor of the butter. For similari reasons we hear milking in the barn-§ yard condemned, especially in dry, 3 dusty weather. 1 If the nerves have no part in the milk secretion, then the hornfly would not cause a shrinkage in the flow of milk, nor would the snapping and barking at the dog as he drives the herd from the meadow have a like ef- fect. The manipulating at the teats ex- cites the nerves in the udder, thus stimulating the milk secretion. Any harsh treatment, fright or unusual excitement prevents the nerve action in the udder. We say “The cow is holding back her milk"-â€"in reality she has ceased to make it. One hasty blow not only material- ly lessens the quantity of milk, but also greatly affects its quality, and experiments along this line have shown that it takes several milkings to bring a very sensitive cow back to her normal record. - The transudation theory is that the milk is simply filtered from the blood as it passes through the udder. If this be true, then we would ex- pect to find in the blood the same properties, to a large extent, as are in milk. Such is not so, for the blood contains but a small per cent. of the constituents found in milk. A com- bination of the two theories is e rea- sonable solution of the process of milk production, the (at, casein and sugar to a large extent being formed in the udder, while the other proper- ties are filtered from the blood. When is the milk manufaéiured? Just while you are milking the cow -all but perhaps a quart. That is the fact I want to impress the most degply. There are two general theories ad- vancedâ€"the metamorphic and the transudation. The advocates of the first claim that the cellular tissue of the udder is built up and then broken down, and so changed into milk. This theory cannot be accepted as the only source of milk production, for it would be hardly possible for a cow giving from sixty to eighty pounds of milk a day to build up and break down her udder four or five times in the course of twenty-four hours. We know that milk is made from the food the cow eats, and that the food is first converted into blood; af- ter that the process it undergoes is, as yet, largely a mystery. First we will briefly consider what milk is, and how produced. The aver- age composition of milk is: fat, 3.6 per cent; casein, 2.5 per cent.; albumen, .7 per cent.; sugar, 6.0 per cent.; mineral magter, .7 per cent; water, 87.5 per cent. this particular time, writes Laura Rose, of. the Ontario Agricultural Col- lege Dairy School. during the milking hour. Let us reason out why we should not irri- tate or in any way excite the cow at If there be one time above M all oth- ers when peace and quietness should reign supreme in the stable, it is place, and in the samé _ .___ v--.’ ease through hot applications. My 'stomach also gave me much trouble, land did not appear to perform its {customary functions. I was treated fby a skilful doctor, but although lunder his care for several months, I Tgrew gradually weaker and weaker, ?until finally I was not able to leave ;my bed. Then I called in another idoctor, whose treatment. although fcontinued for some eight months, . was equally fruitless. I was scarcely fable to hold my head up, and wasso gnervous that I was crying half the Etime. My condition can best be de- scribed as pitiable. At this time a ,friend brought me a newspaper in :which was. the story of a cure of a wornan whose case was in many re- :spects similar to mine, through the use of. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. I :then decided that 1 would give the f pills a fair trial. When I began the male of the pills I was in such a con- dition that the doctor told me 1 would always be an invalid. I used four boxes of the pills before I no-; ticed any benefit, and then I could see they were helping me. I used‘ twelve boxes in all, covering a treat- ment of nearly six months, when I was as well as ever I had been in my life, and I have ever since enjoy- ed the best of health. I believe there would be fewer suffering women throughout the world if they would do as I didâ€"give Dr. \Villiams’ Pink Pills a fair trial. lA, medicine that is not right is worse than no medicine at allâ€"much worse. Substitutes are not right; more than that, they are generally dangerous. When you buy Dr. Wil- liamv’s' Pink Pills for Pale People he sure that the full name is on the wrapper around every box. If your dealer does not keep them they will be sent post paid at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for 82.50. by addressing the Dr. Williams’ Medicine 00., Brook- ville, Ont. i Among those who freely acknow- sledge the benefit derived from this great medicine is Mr’s. Jas. Hughes, of Dromore, 2.3L, alady who pos- isesses the respect and esteem of all :who know her. Mrs. Hughes speaks 9of her illness and cure as follows: :“Until about four years ago 1 had falways enjoyed good health, and was elooked upon as one who possesseda Irobust constitution. Then lbegan to grow weak, was troubled with se- zvere headaches, and frequently with violent pains in the region of my heart, from which I would only find Anten OL_.‘-_._.L L A. I Foiled. “Anger,” he Iald thoughtfully. “short- ens life." She looked at him sharply. “It also." he went on. “spoils beauty. It has an exceptionally lnjurloua effect on a pretty face.” Then he knew that all his precau- tions were useless and that he might as well have told her in the first place that she would have to wait a month for thnt new bonnet-Chicago Post. “John Henry.” she exclaimed. "what in It you want to say to me? What provoking suggestion have you to make now? For what offensive ruling in do- mestic economy are you paving the way?" inorflcfloun. An urchin in a country pariah In Scotland, having been told by his PU” ents to read I. newspaper dam! to them, began to do so in the usual drawling manner of the parish school He had not proceeded far when his mother stopped him short. exclalmlng: “You rascal! Boo dare ye read t newspaper wl’ the Bible twang?”â€" London Telegraph. They Are the l-‘rnltml s'ource or Headaches. Nervous Disorders, I’alus In the Back and Lotus and the Feeling of Constant “'earluess That Alected So Many Wo- men. Almost every woman meets daily with innumerable little worries in her household affairs. Perhaps they are too small to notice an hour after... ward, but these constant little worries have their effect upon the nervous system. Indeed, it is these little worries that make so many women look prematurely old. Their effect may also be noticeable in other ways, such as sick or nervous head.- ache, fickle appetite, pains in the back or loins, palpitation of the heart, andafeeling of constant wear- iness. If you are experiencing any of these symptoms it is a sign that the blood and nerves need attention, and for this purpose Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Bale people are wo- man’s best friend. They are particu. larly adapted as a regulator of the ailments that afflict women, and through the blood and nerves act upon the whole system, bringing brightness to the eye and agiow of health to the cheeks. Thousands of grateful women have testified to the benefit derived from the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pius. MAKE SO MANY WOMEN LOOK PRE- MATURELY OLD. PRUN E LOW’. Don't let thog fruit trees run away up out of your reach; there are lots of disadvantages in tall trees, and not one single advantage. It is more work to prune the trees; more work to thin the fruit, of course you do thin the fruit; more work to spray, and to pick the fruit. If any of the fruit falls to the ground it is bruis- ed and badly injured, and if you fall while picking fruit from these tall trees you would perhaps get a broken arrn or leg and perhaps a broken neck. A considerable wealth of flesh is of course necessary for animals which are used for draft purposes, because in such cases "weight” tells, but in the case of animals required for fast work it is sheer hard muscle rather than preponderance of flabby flesh that is especially required. Good condition can only be obtained by the use of proper foods, and for this purpose there is nothing better than a ration having for its basis good oats and sweet, well saved hay. Oats should form the “foundation” of all rations for horses. Household Worries “the Widow Watson.” She had “exclu- Iive charge" of the Journal. After a couple of years Mrs. Watson married a leading citizen of Hartford, and after that date she no doubt iet him advise and assist in the conduct of the paper. But she holds the record for the first woman editor in the country. Dealers tn charcoal ln Havana are uld never to have yellow fever, while in lay circles It is advised always to have It about during its prevalence, because of its absorbing propertlea, It I. presumed. This. it properly carried out. brings the head of the patient almost upon his right shoulder. The body is then to be inclined to the left and the head allowed to roll in that direction. still uncontrolled by the muscles. As soon as the head has reached the left shoul- der muscular control is to be resumed and the head raised slowly until it is in the same position as at the beginning of the exercise. Then the whole meth- od is to be repeated as long as needi'ul. Our Fin-it Won-ass Editor. According to the Hartford Courant, that paper in 1777 was owned and ed- ited and managed by a woman, whose name comes down to modern days as Every one who has ever watched a sleepy man in a train has probably been amused by the neck distorting nods which herald the approach of sleep. It the observer has given any thought to the subject at all. he has probably decided that the contortions are due to the sleeper’s unconscious et- {orts to preserve his balance. Dr. Par- dini says that the balance has nothing to do with it. He declares that nod- ding is pathologic; that it is nature’s own method of inducing sleep. Rod and Drop All“). Dr. Pardini of Turin claims that he has discovered that the best method of treating obstinate insomnia is to make his patients imitate the drowsy nod- dings of a tired man while sitting in a chair. roars and lets you know in clarion tones that it has come. The moth steals upon you in the dead of night and chews up your best trousers. gorges himself upon your wife’s furs. tickles his palate with your swellest flannel golf shirt, munches away upon your h ndsomest rug, punches holes in your best sofa cushions with his tusks and then silently folds his tent and steals away without so much as a thank you for his meal. For unmiti- gated meanness commend me to the moth! Alongside of the moth and his nefarious work even a book agent pales into insignificance and an unpaid xrocer’s bill becomes an absolute pleas- The Arch Destroyer. “He ls a mean. sneaking, underhandâ€" ed element, the moth ls," protests John Kendrick Bangs in The Woman's Home Companion. “Fire has e. decent sense of the proprletles. Moths have none at all. When fire attacks you. It smokes and crackles and hisses and Spanish Proverbs. Proverbs uncomplimentary to the fair sex are common in Spain. “A we- man. like a pavement, should be well trampled on to be kept in order." “A woman is like a candle. Twist her neck it you wish her to be good;” “Be- ware of a bad woman, and do not trust a good. one;" “Crying in a woman and limping in a dog is all a sham;” “A cock crows on his own dunghill. but hens cackle everywhere” (this in refer- ence to the supposed garrulousness and inquisitive disposition of the sex); “Show me a magpie without a spot and I will show you a woman without a faylt." in English counterparts are not wanting. for example: A woman. a do: and a walnut tree- The more you beat them the better they be. Mothers-in-law and stepmothers come in for a good deal of sarcasm. Some of the proverbs in regard to them will not stand translation. or a man who is accounted lucky they say, “If he tell from the root of shame, he would fall on the top of his mother-in- law.”â€"Chambers’ Journal. Ego always carried a pistol and was always trying to shoot through some- body'a hat without hitting him. 'Ono day, at the Independence creek terry, he shot at a man, but aimed a little low and creased him. But Ege waa always a gentleman; he took the man into his home and tenderly cared for him until he recovered.â€"Atchison Globe. man. with a kind heart. One day while returning home from this city he came across a man.whose wagon was stuck in the mud in Inde- pendence creek bottom. Colonel Ego at once started in to help the man pry out his wagon with a fence rail. While both were working away Ege becamé angry and yelled to the man, “Lift, you son at a gun; you are not lifting a pound." The man picked up the end gate of the wagon and split it over Ege's head. laying him up for three'weeks. Ege had his hat 03 when he was struck and was so bald before coming to Kansas that he was known as the Bald Eagle of Maryland. Anecdoten of Colonel 83.. Colonel Ege was a famous character in the early days. Although living in. Donlphan county, he was often in Atch- lson. followed by a pack of bounds. He was a high toned southern gentle- JAPAN TEA DRINKERS ! CEYLON GREEN TEA Cheaper to use than Japan tea. What is the defense whom Miss Fortyodd breach of promise? Insanity. Everyone is surprised at the rap1- dity and efficacy with which Ne1vi- lineâ€"nerveâ€"pain cureâ€"relieves neu- ralgia and rheumatism. Nerviline 1s a specific for all nerve pains and Should. be kept on hand by every family. â€"No; but I have Seen plenty 0! them who could make a bluff. You never saw. a man who could make a mountain, did you! - Hilaine Derosier,‘ of St. Edwidge, a village near the Grand Trunk line in Compton County; is among the latest reported. He was tortured with kidney disease. He- was naturally de- licate, never having been very strong. He was treated by numerous and vari- ous doctors, but they availed nothing He was then living out west, but came home east to be treated. Here he heard of Dodd's Kidney Pills. One box sufficed to show him that he could be cured if. he kept on. This spring he is returning with his family to his home in Western Canada. Dodd’s Kidney Pills- having made astrong man out! of him. Similar cases are coming to light from all over the Province. It is claimed that wherever Dodd's Kidney Pills are honestly used they never fail to drive kidney disease out of the human system. This has been found absolutely true by thousands of pegglethrgugho‘ut Quebec._ From all over the Province new cases are reported every day. First we hear of a case of Chronic Rheu- matism down in Drummond, cured by Dodd’s Kidney Pills; then a man in Sherbrooke is cured of Bright’s Dis- ease. Then another cured of this formerly incurable disease in Riche- lieu. Then away down the river, a woman in the County of Rimouski, is cured_gf Dropsy. Diabetes. Bladder and Urinary Trou- bless, Women's Weakness, Blood Die-- ordersâ€"all the kidney diseases. in- cluding Bright’s Disease, have been permanently eradicated in scores of cases. In Montreal 'the cases of euros of various forms of Kidney Disease by ngflis Kidgqy _P_ills are__le._gion. atlatne "owners. or at. Edwidge, the latest Reported~lornerly a Dell- cato Manâ€"One Box of Budd’s Kidney I’Ills Izzstltnted a ' Chang». St. Edwidge, Que., May 7.â€"Nothing has ever taken place in Quebec that has caused such a universal sensation among all classes of people as the miraculous cures performed by the world-famous remedy, Dodd’s Kid- ney Pills. Stirred up over the Cures Dodd’a Kidney Pills are Making- May Be lad. Useful. Mchgzerâ€"Krusty Is auflerlng from, dyspepsia now. Thinr'umbobâ€"Ah. that’s : blessing in disguise! Mchggerâ€"A blessing? Thingumbobâ€"Sure. He can blame tint hereafter for his horrible idispolio “omâ€"Philadelphia Press. “I presume that is what you would term it." he replied. "This fellow stop- ped me Just now and ordered me to hold up my hands. I complied, and he began to search my pockets. ‘1 will put a bullet through you.’ he said, ‘it you take them down all during the time I am’â€" And then I knocked him down. ‘All during’ in an abominable perversion of correct English that no man can utter in my presence unre- baked." Thc unlucky tootpad had tackled I professor of rhetoric. â€" Chicago Trib- A pale. scholarly looking man in Spec- tacles was standing over a burly ruf- flan and shaking his slender flat at the prostrate form “Wait till we get across the street.” answered the conductor. She waited. and instead of stopping there he let the car go on. past the transfer station and across Broadway to Sixth avenue. There he pulled the bell and looked at her. “Thank you,” she said gratefully. He had carried her within a block of where she wanted to go and had taken no tareâ€"New York Telegram. More Than Be Could Stand. “What’s this?” demanded the police. hurrying to the scene. “A hold up?” The car then had reached Madison avenue. “I’ve a long ways to go on Sixth avenue,” she said. “and I’d better walk to there and then ride.” It. Didn't Pay. Not all car conductors are merely hardened ringers In of fares. A poor woman got on a Twenty-third street croutown car at Fourth avenue, and as it was well under way and she was about to hand her fare to the conductor she asked him it he transferred to Sixth avenue. On being told no. she drew back her 5 cents and asked to be let 0!. FBENUH CANADA ”JWow/Wfi Topics of the Day. NOT UNUSUAL PLAUSIBLE. I .l . ' -(ld’té Wilflii.” of that man is suing for Mrs. Brooksâ€"Very. My nearest neighbors. Mrs. flanks and Mrs. Wa- ters, are on the outs, and both come to me with stories about thé other. Mrs. Riversâ€"Do you; find your new nejghborlaooq plggsant? The renders of this ever will be pleased to learn that there is et out one dreeded disuse thet science hes been eble to cure in ell its ztezes end thet is Ceterrh. Hell's Ceterrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medloel treternlty. Qeterrh being e eons- titntionel diseese, requires n constitutionel treetment. Hell’s Ceterrh Cure is taken inter- nelly. noting directly upon the blood end mucous eurteoes of the system, thereby dee- troylng the toundetlon of the diseese. end ginnf the petient strength by building up the const tutlon end esnls'tlng neture in doin its work. The proprietors have so much felt in Its onseotive powers. thet they od’er one Hun- red 11ers for en{ eese thet it tells to cure. nd t list of test moniela. Ad rest. 1‘. J. CHENEYRCQ. Toledo. 0. Bold bi‘dmgw 75c. Hell‘s ~e yPn are the beat Mchggerâ€"Borrows is crafty. He paid back to Hoodew one dollar of the fourteen he owes him. It is not necessary to buy corn cures. Men and women should remember that Putnam’s Painless Corn Extrac- tor fs 'the only safe, sure and painless corn remover extant. It does its work qm‘ckly and with certainty. See that the signature N. C. Poison 8:00. appears on each bottle. Beware of polsonovus imitations. Maigéer;mrie; hiltiâ€"HVOâ€"ddew is so superstitious Barrows knows he’ll never ask for the balance. Thingnmbobâ€"It’s unusual for Bor- rows to. pay 311th back. Suicide is getting tearfully common ' Mink mtnvin no» man box Mme. lakes remarked Mrs. Northside. Pm‘h £50 wdoxorfl forts“ 3 one. your money refunded I! not a Do "0. I don’ t know, remarked Mr 33..“ am emu. o. a. Yovm Northside. The one who once mkes M I‘m” a success of it never does it again. i nonmnMIM-nm m-x-Ih.o.._ m...â€" Sometimes: anjsfi:e;;d: Miss Cayenne. It depends, of course, on who the lady in the. case happens to be. THEIR GOLDEN WEDDING, Colonel and Mrs. Girard, of Neu- chatel, Switzerland, had a curious experience a few days ago. On one and the same day they celebrated their eightieth birthday, their golden wed. ding, the silver wedding of their daughter and the marriage of their granddaughter. Yes, said: the self-satisfied young woman, I have had several proposals. Don’t you think a man seems absurd WEBB ho is proposing! '1‘th Lanuve Bromo Quinino Tablets. All drugginta refund the money if in tail- to cure. 25c. 11:. W. Grave's signature is on each box House cleaning now! exclaimed Snaggs, when he went home and found everything topsy-tmy. Yea}, dear, replied Mrs. Snaggs. Yaw ought. E0 have? done itwfn Lent. That is the proper season for pen- an“. CEYLON TEA LUDELLA [uvizornm :nd Btre (them. LLOYD WOOD. Toronto. G ’ERAL AGENT 1‘0 CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY EXTREMELY PLEASANT. FOR THE BABIES, ONE ROUNDING TEASPOONFUL 0F $100 Reward, $100. PREFERS QUIETUDE SHE WAS LATE. HER OPINION. UN LUCKY. NEVER. www.chtddicioum lt‘smost eoonomiod. 88!!) FOR WIWIVB CAT .LOOI Tommi-hot. down“ 3.. Lunil Relelences {32m ”5‘23“?” Esplanade, “I. I. «am. Manager. The Canadian Helne Safety BOILER non-non Stock Fun. 175 mm. 8 3003.901: 3.1.11.â€" anlm fin n... o... “a- L- ___ ~ â€"' -_ UIIIA" CWUI‘I'. Religion Picture; Sutum. 5nd Church Ornaments. ldunuom Works. Mail order. moi" prompt “an. “on. D. ‘ J. .MLIIR 00.. “Ohm --â€"â€" wvvvâ€" â€" â€" Q " -U|“q “(Wâ€"sierloo. 00.. oJi’. ! r l Queon'kfiompsllt. oq M; - n. -â€"â€"-A._- -_- A POULTRY, BUTTER, EGGS, APPLES. ;Â¥.oth:r‘?RODUg_E. to 09mg. bmfuuluppnsign 9 iâ€"H;V-" - uvuuvlb. W CW. out run!" 003'!“ Damon Commiasion 00., L imito cor. Vat-amt Balboa-no It» va 5'. 9%" 2'30 Prayer __â€""â€"- “V'- u' .u' " BBITIBII Auiiflcm nmuc co." but for went. in your town. or and and. Montreal, T oronto. Ottawa, Quebec. con man 0000 Fllfllllc MIDIâ€"ARENAO 10-00 Onmuw god Crawford Counties. 1‘1ch leot. On kickigsn Gown. Dotson t [gonna Loon m. Rdhouh, a price: mating from ”$9 r m. Thou d. we 01m to lumpfldu he. owns. Churches. 001:. «0.. 3:4 71115000140- on We tom. Apply to 8. H. PIERCE. A t. We“ 3.] City. m. 9: J.W. CURB; Whitman. Moll. Dyeing 1 Cleaning! v loom-eats. Dru-o. vUn'llor-s. Etc. Every Town can have a Band Lowe-c prion our notod. Fl :0 analogue 500mm “than usilod tr... rite In for banking in luolo or lusloal lush-amounts. “Inlay RO’O‘ co” Tomb. Out. 3.4 fiilen Marker on: disc”... Ask, 'y'oi'rw'w 50:13: WEEK. 3 supply. Lieu muilod free on sputum Cal-bout: chlnfoctanto. 00:3», Ola. moat, Tooth POWCOFC, etc" have be“ uwardod 100 medals and diploma for superior oxcollenoo. They-3033131- guys-event intentl- fl-- 3‘ AAAAAA N0 QUESTION. Our youngest child talks contino cally. Boy or girl! Aren’t you able to draw an unten- ence, my dear sir! W P C 1023 Brass Mid I Wscerloo. 00.. Out... for uh” ‘1‘. pm sppl: to D Ian's Hotel. Out. on ma. . 23. m For ' Wt weer better than leather. It is ways looks pretty and makes you feel comfortable, with just elit- tle pride in the beauty of the thing. Ask your dealer to show you. 50 shades ready for use. The first stroke shows you how it covers, how easily it goes on. how nice it looks and what 31in. close it has. Ramsay’s Paints, 5 WW“ Wm“ Makers. Michigan Lamâ€"17;!- Sale. r. c. cuvmr a; '00.. .ANOHEOTIR - - ENGLAND. For tho very best lend your work to the LEAD PAOKAGE‘. 25. 30, ‘0, I. and ~ CALVERT’S ' Importer and exporter o! ‘ Raw Fur: and Skins. Con- ' signmcnu solicited. High- est prices paid for ginning. H. J OHNSON , 494 St. Paul street, Montml‘ will J. “All. Int. m "an. FURS. FURS. mum mu, {outfit-wrinku “:1“! vvt Madagtkggkfitzt ”Illa. "Ill. 8 fl." WWW-yams! looks, loom“, Om- _ aging, gunman. lothe‘

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