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Durham Review (1897), 16 Jun 1904, p. 6

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English Taverns That Have Entertained Guests for a Thousand Years. somshow one always hears with reâ€" gret that one of England‘s famous old mossâ€"grown, ivyâ€"clad inns is about to be demolished. The Old King of Prussia bostelry is the latest to pass into the housebreaker‘s hands. This old ‘"inn is in Finchley, and from I1757, whern the Place was built, until the presont day the aicense has been in the keeping of one familyâ€"perhaps a record in the licensâ€" mg annals of England. ‘The Old King of Prussia is a nintn= A gentleman who has authority over large bodies of men, and therefore is a person of importance in native eyes, told me that not long ago he was riding with a lady through a native town when they were seriously and even dangerously mobbed ; so much so that the leaders of the crowd subsequently received severe punishment. He added that on this ocâ€" easion he was indeed thankful that the lady, his companion, could not underâ€" stand Arabic, and that even in Cairo a lack of knowleage of that tongue is oiten a blessing in disguise.â€"H. Rider Haggard, in London Mail. Others hold that even the fellaheen hate us actively, and that our typical smiling and grateful guide would be the first to cut our throats if he could see a chance of doing so with safety to himâ€" self. _ The reason is religions, for, of course, I speak of the »mahommedan popâ€" ulation and not of the Copts. You may, for instance, win the affection and even the love of a Zulu, but scarcely of a servant of the Prophetâ€"at least in Egypt. Remember that in his heart the most cringing of these peonle. freed by us from the oppressions of ten thousand years, looks upon the very best of his deliverers as inferiorsâ€"as dogs without the pale, who by right and law should be offered the choice of the Koran or the death of a dog. In our easy tolerance of quaint faiths and their followers we forget this, but the obsequious fellah does not forget it. It thrills every fibre of his being, and, therefore, at heart he loathes us. We suppose in our ignorâ€" ance that benefits bestowed involve gratâ€" itude twards the bestower. It cannot do so, for in the hearts of these recipiâ€" ents no such sentiment exists. Therefore, say these authorities, alâ€" though the people might, and probably would, stand aside if we became involved in troubles with other powers over the question of Egypt, they would not origâ€" inate such troubles, or even take any active part in them. And as for the Surâ€" anese, they at least respect us with the respect that men have for men of whatâ€" ever race. Â¥ C c THme ) Well, is it so* Nobody seems to think it. Some believe, indeed, and it seems the sanest view, that however much the Pashas and rich people who have lost their importance, and espodali thein Kower to oppress, may hate us, the fellaâ€" eenâ€"i. e., the peasants, who form the bulk of the populationâ€"at least know on which side their bread is buttered. They also may not love us, but to them our presence means water and money. Therefore, 1. means life, or at least plenty, as opposed to starvation. _ It means right as opposed to the law of the atick. Even in 1887 it was common to see peasants being thrashed by persons in authority; in 1904 I have not as yet seen a rod lifted. It means, in short, a ‘ day‘s pay for a day‘s work. The sick who seek this healthâ€"giving land te be cured of their discase must also suffer or keep away, since but a small proportion of them can meet exâ€" pense calculated upon a scale that is velcome only to the flower of Chicago or Johannesburg. Who, for instance, can compete against, or with any comfort follow in the steps of, the individual who considers fifty pounds sterling a suitable bakhsheesh for his dragoman? Such peoâ€" ple, and the example is no fable, make a land very difficult for more modest folk to sojourn in. Sometimes the Engâ€" lish giver of bakhsheesh wonders what the receiver of the sameâ€"i. e., in this way or in that the majority of the lower classes of nativeâ€"born Egyptians, with whom he is likely to come in contactâ€" thinks of him in his collective heart. For instance, does the smoothâ€"tongued guide or driver who smiles as he pockets his generally excessive fee really mean his pleasant words of farewell?* I have been at some pains to ascertain the opinions of those who, from their position and years of residence, should know â€" the truth, and this is the sum of what I have learned. In his youth that every man, perhaps, or at least his relatives, lanvored in the corvee. He worked under the whip, his pay was nothing, his bed the damp ground, his food he found himself. Now he is clad in fine robes, often he has large savings; he is a person of importâ€" ance. Want and oppression are far beâ€" hind him. Surely, then, he should love those who brought about this marvelous f change, who, taking nothing but the digâ€" | nity ana the power, touched the mass of |â€" cruel corruption with that new crook of | Osiris, Britain‘s pure wand of justice,|â€" and turned it to a mount of sweet seâ€" | curity and to a pile of shining gold. So it j should be also with his parents the peasâ€" | ants, his uncles the shopkeepers, his couâ€" | sins the hotel waitersâ€"in short, with | 1 every working class in Egypt. p Insist on being supplied mmumwmm:- In Roilsâ€"*" Standard," ""Hotel," ‘‘York." * Use GNLY the SOFT, SILKY, TOUGH TOILET PpPAPERS of the many exclusive heritages of the wealthiest classes of Europe and Amerâ€" ica, whose prodigality has in this respect made the country what it is It may seem hard, but to persons of moderate means, and to the vast majority of the workingâ€"by which I mean .oae profes clonalâ€"classes its ancient portals are in practice closed. SOME INNS VERY ANCIENT. But Sojourn There is Only fjor th Wealthy. In short, unless things change, the beauties and historical attractions ofi Egypt must henceforth be considered one Of the many exclusive heritawes af tha w en CV L4A d 1041 ® In Sheetsâ€"*" Importa‘," " Royal," * HEALTH IN EGYPT. Prussia is a [emnoses MANUFACTURED pictur mother was an entertainin and my sister a bright girl." "I‘m going to call again. I company, and intend to cul acquaintance." â€" Christian World. '" “York." "Mamm:th." “ al," **Rega!," ""Grient," &c. "It was‘t a bit funny then, although I can laugh over it now. I sat down, and she told me one or two anecdotes of my boyhood, at which we all laughed for m little. Then we four played games for a while. When I filually retired I was invited to call again. I went upâ€" stairs feeling pretty small, and doing a good deal of thinking." "And then?" asked his companion. "Then I made up my mind that my mother was an entertaining woman, "Well, we went in, and I was introâ€" duced with all due formality to my mother and sister. "The situation struck me as funny, and I started to laugh, but the laugh died away. _ None of the three even smiled. My mother and sister shook hands with me, and my mother said she remembered me as a boy, but hadn‘t seen much of me lately . Then she inâ€" vited me to be seated. "I thought it strange that he should have made the appointment for the Coâ€" lumbia under those cireumstances, but I said nothing, "The young man himself tells what happened. "*All right,‘ I said. ‘Where shall I go? "He auggested the Columbia Hotel at 7.30, and I was there. When he apâ€" peared, he said he wanted me to call with him on a lady. "One I knew quite well when 1 was a young man," he exâ€" plained. "We went out and started straight for home. "‘She is staying at our house, he said.. One afternoon his father came to him and asked him if he had any engageâ€" ment for the evening. The young man had not. "Well, I‘d like to have you go someâ€" where with me," A young fellow who had got into the habit of spending all his evenings away from home was brought to his senses in the following way: GETTING ACQUAINTED AT HOME. Handsomely printed matter, descriptâ€" ive of the different sections, is being disâ€" tributed. and the representative in charge gladly furnishes information reâ€" garding same. DY The ceiling is divided in three panels. each panel having an art glass skylight of unique design, the whole being lightâ€" ed with over one hundred ground glass incandescent bulbs. _ The general colorâ€" ing is maroon and cream, and the light green frames of the bromides and the gold of the oil paintings, make a very pleasing contrast. _ Two moving picture machines, showing scenes on the road from the St. Clair Tunnel to the Androâ€" coggin River in Maine, are run conâ€" tinuously, while the wonderful reflection picture "On Shadow River," continues to revolve every thirty seconds, and a puzâ€" zle to many is,. which is the reflection? of the handsomest pavilions on _ the grounds. _ It is of Dorie and Corinthian architecture, with Deer and Moose heads as central pieces in the cornice. Large bromide pictures depicting hunting, fishâ€" ing and summer resort scenes along the line are in panels on the three sides. The interior is decorated with large photoâ€" graphic productions, well mounted fish, consisting of brook trout, landâ€"locked salmon, â€" ouananiche, wallâ€"eyed pike, small mouth black bass and maskinonge. Two oil paintings, O9x13 feet, executed by one of the best artists in Canada, and titled, "The Royal Muskoka Hotel," and "Head of Lake Joseph," scenes in the Muskoka Lake district, handsomely framed, are on the inside front wall. These two pictures will be placed in the King Edward Hotel, Toronto, after the Fair closes. _ One of the largest moose heads in the world, is also on the wall. This head has a spread of 66 inches, the palms having a width of 14 inches, and is one of the finest specimens of taxiâ€" dermy on the grounds. Its present name is derived from an encounter which King James I. is said to have had with a tinker at the door of the inn. The tinker‘s conversation so pleased the king that he made the mendâ€" er of kettles "a knight, with £500 a year," the records of Enfield inform us. â€"London Mail. \ The Grand Trunk Railway exhibit, ocâ€" cupying a central position in the Forâ€" estry, Fish and Game Building, is on Grand Trunk Exhibit, World‘s Fair. Among the very oldest of suburban London inns are the Plough at Kinksâ€" bury Green, and the King James and Tinker inn at Enfield. The first is said to be 850 years old, and the latter was reputed to have been first built as an inn and under another name 992 years ago. | Another famous inn is the Baldâ€"Faced Stag and Egmare. _ Nobody _ knows when it was originaly buiit, and it would seem as though each successive proprie tor has endeavored to place his mark on its architectural aspect, for many parts of it have evidently at different times been rebuilt. In the stables, it is alleged, Dick Turpin had _ his horse‘s shoes turned, so as to make his pursuers imagine he had gone in an opposite direcâ€" tion. The Angel inn, Highgate hill, dates back to the time of the reformation. Orâ€" iginaly it was called the Salutation inn. it is built entirely of wood. ____ _ _ Round and about London, and its ever extending suburbs there may still be seen inns and taverns of great age and interesting associations. esque haifâ€"timbered house, and many a noted highwayman has partaken of its hospitality. The grandfather of the preâ€" sent proprietor was quite a noted characâ€" ter, having vanquished _ several noted highwaymen on Finchiey common. It is on record that he once had an encounâ€" ter with Dick Turpin. 3 l u‘\L‘ me one or two anecdotes d, at which we all laughed hen we four played games When I fiually ‘retired I 1 again. I enjoy their nd to cultivate their Christian _ Endeavor To a stranger a Chine > * most evrious spectacle. The auctioncer lecns over a slightly clevated counte: ard exhibits his wares. He says nothâ€" ing, neither does the bidder, who merely «teps forward to the auctioneer and rurs his fingers up his sleeve, making pressure or the salesman‘s arm, thus indicating how much he will pay for the article. Then another and another repeat the acâ€" tion, until the one signifying the highest price receives the article without a word being exchanged on cither side. Only the auctioneer and the successful bidder lLâ€"maw the nrica afered and ensantad Then the lady did wait until a scat was found for her.â€"New York Sun. OUne woman from out of town went to a fashionable church on Sunday _ and told the usher she wanted to sit in the pew of a lady who had invited her. He made no movement, and she repeated her request to be shown to the pew of Mrs. X., who had invited her to share it. She was somewhat insistent now, as the service was beginning. "Mrs. X. has only one seat in this chureh," answered the usher, gravely. "and she is occupying it hersolf at preâ€" sent. But if you will wait, I will try to find room for you elsewhere." ; 5P Strangers in New York are _ often heard to complain of the brusque treatment they receive in churches, either from the ushers or the owners of pews to which they may be shown. They do not, of course, realize that many of these persons pay several thousand dollars a year for their seats and naturaly expect to have them ocâ€" cupied in the way they desire. Never Got His Feet Wet. Captain Alexander McKay, F. R. G. S.. commodore of the Cunard fleet, sailed his last voyage on the Lucania before his retirement. He has been at sea 48 years, 34 of them in the service of the Cunard Company, 14 of whose vessels he has commanded. For one with so long an exâ€" perience, his record is probably unique. As he puts it himself: "I have never met with a disaster in my life, never lost n ship, never grounded, never ran anyâ€" body down, never was run down by any body, haven‘t even had my feet washed by salt water since I went to sea." Minard‘s Liniment Laumberman‘s Friend. Ain‘t it grand?â€"Newark (N. J.) Evenâ€" ing News. And your wife tells you frankly that she considers him a conceited puppy and vot half the man you are,â€" And he has talked about himself all evening, tand g t m Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the House. And you have taken him Home to meet her, And you have told your wife what a smart man he is, And you have admitted his superiority secretly and reluctantly. 38 And he has led you to look upon him a superior to you in every way, And he has succeeded a little better than you, . s $ When you‘ve known a man a good many years, Minard‘s Liniment is used by Physicians The manufacturers claim it is disinâ€" fectant and a soil binder, so that its application to a roadway greatly imâ€" proves it. Particular stress is laid on this claim in connection with macadam roads. _ The cost, which is apparently moderate, being lower in England than cither crude oil or tar, amounts to about $30 per mile of roadway, six or seven yards wide. Country roads require an application every three or four months. PUZZLES FOR CHURCH USHERS The automobile has made evident the dustâ€"laden streets and roads of this and other countries. Run a car along a road that has the appearance of being hard and free from dust, and which would actually prove so if driven over in a carriage, and the machine is folâ€" lowed by a perfect cloud of dust. Waterâ€" _ing is not very effective, as it soon _dries out, leaving the road in a condiâ€" tion as bad as before. Oil and tar as dustâ€"binding materials have been used to a large extent in roadâ€"making in California, where the heavy California: crude residuum is available at a low price, but their use has not spread, as was anticipated. In England a disinâ€" fectant dust layer is being marketed is mixed in the proportion of 5 to 95 per cent. of water, making an emulsion that can readily be applied by a waterâ€" ing cart. _ Several sections of roadway have been experimentally treated with the new compound, which is known as Westrumite, and very satisfactory reâ€" sults obtained. Preparation Recently Placed on the Market in England.. DISINFECTANT AND DUSTâ€"LAYER. "Hearing of cures by them prompted me to try Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, and after taking them for a time I passed a stone the size of a large bean. Four boxes of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills made a complete cure in my case." "I had been troubled with Ciravel and Bladder Disease for seven years. I had to go to the hospital and have water taken from me. I tried medicines of difâ€" ferent kinds, but they failed to remove the trouble. The case of William Thomas, brickâ€" layer, 158 Mill street, this city, is one of the recent proofs of the efficiency of the treatment. Mr. Thomas says: Toronto Bricklayer Relieved of those Terrible Troublesâ€"Medical Selence Makes Another Move Forward. Toronto, Ont., June 6.â€"(Special.) â€" Medical science has at length awakoned to the fact that Gravel and other bladâ€" der troubles are caused by disordered kidneys, and that the modern method of curing them is to cure the kidneys with Dodd‘s Kidney Pills This does away with those terrible operations that in past years have been all too common. NO OPERATIONS _ _ NEEDED NOW Gravel: and Bladder Disease Cured by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, YOUR WIFE‘S OPIKRION. SILENT AUCTIONS. _ are often the â€" brusque in churches, the owners of TORONTO One curious phenomenon _ noticed in this conection is that the odor of camâ€" phor ascended twice as fast as it deâ€" scended, while ammonia diffused equally rapidly in either direction. It is as. serted that it is the penetrating hydroâ€" gen sulphite odor ecarried by slowly asâ€" cending currents of air that the vulture class of birds that feed on carrion are able to locate their food. These birds are often seen sailing round and round all day long until finally, sometimes after the lanse of two or three days, they have been able to trace the smell of their food from great altitudes downâ€" ward to its location on the ground. As Prof. Moore declares, the distance from which they come, often 100 miles and sometimes from an altitude of 10,â€" 000 feet, "give some idea of the gentle slope of these soâ€"called ascending â€"curâ€" rents which are twisted and controted il}S)‘ , every imaginable shape by the Some Odd Facts Relative to Odors That Are Not Generally Known. It has been ascertained as the result of experiments conducted by Prof. Zolâ€" eny, of the University of Minnesota, that the diffusion of odors through the atmosâ€" phere is much siower than is commonly supposed. The professor has _ investiâ€" gated this phenomenon experimentally, and he finds that it takes the odor of ammonia at least an hour an a half to make its way to the opposite end of a glass tube about five feet long. With the idea of throwing some light on the character of odorsâ€"that is, whether or not, they actually‘ consist of tangible physical particles of subatomic size, the experiment was tried of allowing the odors to ascend and descend glass tubes and noting the time of their diffusion. Ask for Minard‘s and take no Other. Prof. Goldwin Smith denies that he advised Andrew Carnegie how to disâ€" pense his benefactions for the greatest good, but neither Mr. Carnegie nor any other wellâ€"disposed person can make a mistake in following any advice that may be obtained from a man who can think straight like Prof. Smith. Inquire of G, A. Hérrlg. G. As 708 Park Bldg., Pittsburg, Pa COLORACO AND RETURXN. Via Union Pacific every day from June 1st to September 30th, inclusâ€" ive, with final return limit October Slst, 1904, from St. Louis, $25.00, Chicago $30.00, with correspondingâ€" ly low rates {rom| other points. j Be sure your ticket reads over this ine. # oi This simple operation is repeated inâ€" cessantly every two minutes until the radium is exhausted, which in this inâ€" stance it is computed will oceupy 30,â€" 000 years.â€"Scientific American. A charge of electricity, in which there are no beta rays, is transmitted through the activity of the radium into the leaves, and the latter thereby expand until they touch the sides of the vessel, connected to earth by wires, which inâ€" stantly condtuct the electric charge, and the leaves fall together. The clock comprises a small tube, in which is placed a minute quantity of radium supported in an exhausted glass vessel by a quart rod. To the lower end of the tube, which is colored violet by the action of the radium, an electroâ€" scope formed of two long leaves or strips of silver is attached. A radium clock, which will keep time indefinitely, has been constructed by H:g_risor; Martindale, of England. CLOCK TO RUN ABOUT 30,000 YEARS Dear Sirsâ€"Within the past year I know of three fatty tumors on the head having been removed by the application of MINARD‘S LINIMENT without any surgical operation, and there is no indiâ€" cation of a return. ' "But on clear days, unfortunately rare, the blue sky was Mediterrancean, and at such times the bergs out at sea would flash like jewels in the full blaze of the sunshine, while blocks of dark green ice, half buried in snow under shadow of the cliffs, would appear for all the world like "cabochon" emeralds dropâ€" ped into a mass of whipped cream. But the reverse of this picture was depressâ€" ing in the extreme. For on cloudy days the snow would assume a leaden apâ€" pearance, and the sea ice become a slate gray, with dence banks of woolly, white fog encircling the dismal scene. Fair and foul weather in the Arctic reminded me of some beautiful woman, bejeweleo and radiant amid lights and laughter, and the same divinity landing disheveled, pale and seasick from the deck of a‘ channel steamer." SMELLS MOVE BUT SLOWLY. "Place a plece of coal sprinkled with salt on a white tablecloth, a few inches off it seatter some lump sugar, and it will give you in miniature a very fair prosentment of the ncenery. The coal is the bleak coast line, continually swept clear of anow by furious gales; the sugar, soa ice, and the cloth frozen beach over which we journeyed for over 160 miles. The dreary outlook never changed; occaâ€" slonally (fm cliffs vanished and our way would lie across the tundrasâ€"marshy »lainsaâ€"which in summer encircle the “ulnl‘ Nea with a belt of verdure and wild flowers, but which in winter time are merged with the frozen ocean in one boundless, _ bewildering _ wilderness â€" of white,. In hazy weather Jland and sky formed one impenetrable veil, with no horizon as dividing line, when, even at a short distance away, men and dog sleds resembled flies crawling up a white ‘ curtain. CAPT. W. A. PITT, Clifton, N. B. Gondola Ferry. Desolate Though the Frozen Sea Is, It Has Many Attractions. One of the most vivid descriptions of arc‘ic mcenery ever penned is given by Harry De Windt in '})ueis book, "Paris to New York by Land." In it he gives the following picture of the Arctic Sea: _ A Straight Thinker BEAUTIES OF THE A8RCTIC. [good sense â€"and diplomacy to answer routine letters without calling the boss of the job to their aid. Later they are found to be competent to handle deliâ€" cate matters of business, and then the boss begins to rely on them. He may be at his country place, fifty miles ont of town, and he will telephone the office. The secretary tells him what‘s doing, and then he will probably say: "Well, use your own judgment in this matter, and that." He usually finds that "her own judgment" is good. So it happens that many of the big things reported in the financial columns of the daily newspapers are really negotiated by the young woman secretary. BIG SALARIES OF WOMEN. There are 400 women in New York, some young and some not, who have salaries bigger than United States senators. Mr. Rockefeller‘s secretary‘s annual income is $14,000, and the young, or at least not old, woman, who occupies a similar position to H. H, Rogers, also a Standard Oil magnate, drags off $10,000 a year. These girls all begin as stenographers. Then they are found to possess the necessary Shiloh‘s Consumption (St. Mary‘s Argus.) In ordor that the poor editors [at the St. Louis Fair] might have something to spend on the Pike, Ryrie Bros., of ‘Toronto, presented them with leather coin purses containing two newly minted cents, and gave their wives silver pencil cases to keep account of how their husâ€" bands spent the money. Knowing that editors are peculiarly subject to nervous headaches, the Royal Distillery of Hamâ€" ilton sent several bottles and flasks of whiskeyâ€"for medical purposes; whilst the Tuckett Tobacco Company distribâ€" uted cigars, pipes and tobacco in abundâ€" ance. Had the presentations been comâ€" pleted by a gift of "comfort bags" from the W. C. T. U. nothing would have been }:ackingâ€"-at least for the cold water ediâ€" or. The concensus of opinion is that the New! York Central is the corâ€" rect line to New, Yoirk, Boston and points east. Your ticket agent will tell you all &bout it. id [ The situation in the Confederatfon that exists toâ€"day is not a very pleasant one. The various experiments in State ownership have not proved remuneratâ€" ive, as they are not managed as economâ€" ically as are private enterprises. The railroads show deficits and are a burden on the treasury. The general paternalâ€" istic programme required large sums of money which have been borrowed from England. Now Australia‘s demands for adiGonal oans are respectfully negaâ€" tived. Her credit is not very good. And most aminous sign of all, there are more people leaving that _ continent toâ€"day than are entering it. In fact, during the last decade Victoria has lost 112,000 more people by emigration than she gained by immigration. During 1902 and 1903 the emigration _ from New South Wales has also exceeded the arâ€". rivals by a large number. 4 Results from common soaps$:? eczema, coarse hands, ragged clothes, shrunken flannels, * ‘The Lun, fure ‘Tonic 6 cured them of chronic coughs, cannot all be mistaken. ‘There must be some truth in it. Try a bottle for that cough of yours. Prices: $.C. Werrs & Co. 310 25c. 50c. $1. LeRoy, N.Y., Toronto, Can. Standard Service The thousands of people who write to me, saying that wXA LXPELNSE Ask for the Octagon Bar 37 Finding Them Out. A Socialist Paradise. W and no one makes a complaint when court was adjourned. If a newspaper prints such reflections on a man‘s charâ€" acter there is a libel suit or a dead editor. And this is owing to the fact that people believe what an editor says; what a lawyer says cuts no figure. The Editor and the Lawyer. (Routt County, Colorado, Courier.) A lawyer in a court room may call a man a liar, scoundrel, villain or thief, Lever‘s Yâ€"Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder is better than other powders, as it is both soap and disinfectant. a4f Socialism in China. (Chicago Tribune.) According to a Russian traveller who recently made a tour through Manchuria, there is in a Chinese business house neither proprietors nor employees. All persons employed are partners, who share in the profits of the undertaking. During the year each member receives, at stated times, a kind of salary. which, however, is so meagre as to be barely suflicient to supply the necessaries of life. Then at the end of the year the profits are divided. In western Nebraska near the Union Pacific Railroad in section lots of 640 acres each, for almost nothing. The salâ€" ubrity of these lands is something reâ€" markable. _ Distance from railroad is three to thirty miles. There will be a grand rush of iomelten.dern. This is the last distribution of free homes the Unitâ€" ed States Government will ever make in Nebraska. Write for pamphlet telling how the lands can be acquired, when enâ€" try should be made, and other informaâ€" tion. Free on application to any Union Pacific agent. NINE MILLION ACRESs Government Lands for Homesteaders, gn»lng' the patient strength by buillding up he constitution and assisting naturein dol: its work. The proprietors haveso much fai in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Bend for list of testimonitals. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Bold b& all druggiste. 75¢c. Take Hall‘s Family Pills for constipation. The readers of this paper will be J»leuod to learn that thereisat least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh, being a conâ€" stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken inâ€" ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby desâ€" troying the foundation of the disease, and He Was Splendid. (Chicago Chronicle.) Stanley used to relate the following funny story: One day while he was conâ€" versing with a friendly tribe during his travels one of the chiefs present inâ€" quvired how many wives he possessed. Upon Stanley replying that he had none al, those present stood up like one man und unanimously exclaimed: "What a splendid liar!" They intersely admired the apparent calmness with which he lad, as they thaught, tried to pass off on them a wondrous traveller‘s tale. is almost as necessary as bread; -ochlls cln.&:bont it but the price; a rnulne an reliable ‘"friend" to an agent; big commisâ€" slon; credit given; freight pald. No ex. perience necessary, A very Pmlluble diâ€" version for apare hours. ‘The J. L. Nichols Co., Limited, Toronto. Mention this paper. Mrs. Wirsiow‘s Boothing 8B shoule always be used for Children 'lc::h‘ It sooths the child, softens the 1'-- cures wigg colie and is the best remedy for Diarrhoa. ISSUE NO. 45 1904. $100 REWARD, $100 Brusn & Go. ‘ NOROMTO, â€" ONT. B $ C NO BRASS EYELETS A POPULAR CORSET FOR 1904 OUR FAMOUS «"B" «"G." L LONG HIP J MANUFACTURED ONLY BY Pb3 How Russia Hopes to Save T Squadron. Paris eable: â€" The St. «#orrespondent of the Matin sondon _ ca spondent of 1 the Germans Port â€" Arthur means of . ju adds that for proached Port recent vxplc»iun lttemph to clea: Ten â€" thousand south from Haic -'qllnq-u' stack Rome Trom Yinl says tha thur has day, both asserted t imminent . The J2; Port Art!l Explanation to es Tokio. is rehes Yinkow Despatch sources 1| has effec Arthur # r.llct' an rge shij from 1i "The Chinese and ®t thur, si They w k wang s **The ter‘s must be : tical‘y. On comes | a ment. â€" The ent of the view with the general clares it Czar has 0 me from ders th of action, l tempt remor Several Sustained As ed Fo: London cab says that ear of the Japane mnews of the i eome at any was reason fo: received son *"The messa the position jous, and t tack long." pubiish weived h matters ered, bu delay. PORT ARTI MAY H Ao actus from the = gertain is 1 heavy firin; Gen, Oku i dav. Euw unanimmol must fall is wheth« furiouns 1 Another Rus: Struc Assa l nrder to retii llpan«w art serve was br nel into our however, to ; escaped unin An the : Russian Ffleef for V jor \ hen nese report «tubborn r, simultan y were rej The posit1o Mi SORTIE AT FULL SPEED 1t FROM LAND FIGHTINC U â€" Oku 6r His Grin ress 1 ING THE Port Artih t1 n Aj Rece

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