Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Aug 1904, p. 6

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m - The horse is a noble tuyttytl-rexeept when you bet on him and he fails to thaw up. There m be such a thing as love at lint eight, int love after several sights h are. Someone has said that wealth does not beget oootentment--aad we are very positive about it that poverty does not. It is rather difficult for . men to climb 'ttdur of the ladder--. but it _dendeuy forum “nude down “an The yan- Tau is proving to be horrible --but what could one expect of leap Satan probably had a. good excuse not, learning to skate. At Oxford University a certain under. gndlnte was adjudged too fond of dram, and it was decided to correct this weak- lieu by droning him bodily into a fountain. The victim Was seized one night when attired in evening dress and romptly immersed. To the surprise of his “Stunts. he made no resistance, but seemed thoroughly to enjoy his hath. "rhis won't improve your clothes, old mam" laid the leader. "0h. these oren’t mine," he replied, mildly. “I heard what was on, so I slipped in and borrowed your dress things for the oeeuion." Miord's Lina-en: Cures Dist: "Some time Two a friend told me Dodd's Kidney Pills would cure me. As 3 but resort I tried them and they have cured me. "I could not imagine more severe suf- fering than one endures who has Stone in the Kidneys, em! I feel the greatest gratitude to Dodd's Kidney Pills." - If the disease is of the kidnap" or Kidne Pills are the standnrd remedy for all Kidney Complaints, it may eur- priee some people to know they cure such extreme cases as Stone in the Kid- ney; Yet that is what they have done right here in Ottawa. Mr. & A. Cauidy. the man cured. is the well-known proprietor of the Bijou Hotel, on Metal! street, and in an in- terview, he says: "My friends 'tll know that I have been a martyr to Stone in the Kidneys for years. They know that besides consult~ mg the best doctors in the city and try- " every medicine I could think of, I we.unablt to get better. ,, 777v- -.- v: ‘llv Pf"'"'" from the kidneys, Dodd's Kidney P will cure it. Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 15.--(special) - While all Canada knows that Dodd's Mr. B. A. Canny. ot Ottawa, Per- manently Cured After Years of Sum-ring by tho Great Cnnudlnn Kidney Remedy. At one place where the "guns" (that is to say, police in flain clothes) were waiting, they baggy 37 men and five women. One honest man was so fright- ened at the approach of the 500 that he ran for all he was worth till he tumbled down a well. and it was only with great difficulty that he was rescued. The fear of the police. as g Frenchman puts it, is not always the beginning of wisdom. Stone in the Kidneys Cannot Stand Before Dodd's Kidney Pills. The "Uhtu" was in charge of M. mm. md himself. The police formed com- ponies. and by the aid of repeated light- ning drove the mgabnnds in all direc- tions They were hiding in that ample dwelling We, 'THotellerie de In. Belle Emile." l " howled and shrieked and smmport-d like frightened rats driven by dogs and ferrets trom a barn. EURES THE MOST EXTREME GASES A few nights ago the entire "Brigade Mobile," aided by 50 detectives and 45 'Ugenta" from distant arrondissements, comprising a police force of 500, raided the fortification between Porte de Ber, cy and the Porte Dore, and arrested 65 hooligans. All had revolvers. The local police are powerless, be. - they would be marked mm it ther intervened too actively. Officers from other quarters are told off into “write districts, and when arrests are mafia it is the cubicle "agents" who After one in the morning in the boulevards ere hunted by the moat mur- derous looking cut-throats. They are lurking end loitering about for provoea- tion. In '1"'P".V. with a. friend who knows his Pans like a book, I watched them all the my from Montmartre to the boulevards, and I am not surprised to read the daily stories of outrage which no told in the press with a fre- quency compemble to the relation of motorcar calamities. Boer war. In frirth case tic constant record of fighting in the jourmla has bettan importapt ttntributorr eapse., Hooligunism is u rampant in Park just now as it was in London on the south aide dying .t.he firtst_raar of the In the boulevud de Clichy two men had bullet: put Ihrough them only ye.- terdny morning, and close by another quarrel ended in a man but? stretched on the pavement with " kni a stuck in Ponce Unable to Stem the Tide of hooliganism. The Paris correspondent of the London Morning Leader in authority for the tol. logving; - _ __ - - Appearance, Durablilty, and Convenience USE his. Mt, Wash Basins, dtil,tttit?h " Pans, Sputum, [.iiilll'll5 TIT tit, Pointed Paragraphs. PARIS BY NIGHT. FIBRE WARE FELLOW STUDENTS, of (Beukjdney13r For an. by Denim Everywhoro. Superior to all other. no regard. :mper. for iShiloh’s I Consumptlon : Cure Ted"'" i' I,',u,ur,urhttuus,e,vms. m I A goldfish farm has been established at Waldron, Ind. Mr, Shoup could not make ordinary farming pay, so he went in for pet stock, and stocked a pond with goldfish as a pastime. He soon found that they were multiplying so quickly as to crowd each other opt of their preserves. He put some of his bet. etr specimens on the market and soon received s. prompt request for more, un- til he decided that it would be worth while to devote additional farming space to his fish. So from s. mere ttt time sprang the largest goldfish in us- try in the world. From s rough colon. letion he bu one hundred and fifty thousand fish. Some of the flimsy garments sold in Parisian stores are made of such poor material that hand sowing is necessary. The girls who do this get only 20 to 40 cents for twelve, fourteen or more hour: of work. The following is a literal copy or a bill recently sent by a cobbler to t York. shire (England) squire: Squire Knowles to S. muon, Gob- blerL-. Four of the cannon taken from the French off Finisterre in 1747 by Admiral 1'roseawen, now fill the lowly, if useful roles of curb posts and lamp posts in front of the house, No. 2 St. James' square, London, of BoseawenU descend- ant, Lord Falmouth. is simply ungirded when he lies down to sleep. It is neither changed nor wash- ed until it goes to pieces. The man inside the robes fares no better. A duck which is the property of Mr. T. Lane, of Chesterson, Staffordshire, has just laid an extraordinary egg. It weighed 101 ounces, was 42 inches in length and " inches in circumference. The whole of the contents filled an im- perial half pint: measure. - Mr. James Rigby, about 40 years sex- toin and verger at Holy Trinity Church, liumley, England, who recently died, was said to be godfather to half the peo- ple in the parish, which has fifteen thousand inhabitants. Here and There. Thibet has its "park pests." The robe which constitutes a man's suit of clothes Total “When you draw the beer into one of these the stuff flats very nickly. As the beer hits that ring it Erops down, It doesn't spoil the beer either. When the beer is poured into glasses it will have all the original life in it, just as if fresh from the keg."9un. "What difference does that make? Why, it acts this way: Most of the growlers we send out of here In about one-third beer and the rest foam, but with one of these greased pitchers it is all the other 1yay. d "Did you notice how little foam there was on that pitcher of berr. Well, I got, worked for about twice as much as we usually sell for a dime. The trick is very simple. Before those people sent in that pitcher they drew a ring around the inside of it with butter or something of that kind. The Innkeeper stopped long enough to fill a "growler," or glass pitcher, with beer, looked st it auspicibusly, and then mre. When his good nature returned ho explained: NEW TRICK ON THE BARKEEPER. At nlldrugguts, 250.. 500. 5nd 01.00 IMO. gen h',',',"?,' euro that it' t', on“. It not on who u " mph. but it in can: ',t'lu'lll. Tu. Summer Colds To Bathe? You After Using: _,? é Wilson’s Fly Pads' Sotd Everywhere. None Left Goldfish Farm. Shoemaker's Bill. rum 5-H vitch ennui}; G 82313668?" Incl ot health. intelligent. 3nd gull be " [out 3 mu. ratsM.--N i The real traitors to race are those who would degrade and weaken it try so danish- mg the opportunities ot a swarming popula- tion that discontent and a tiereer atrulee tor existence will bring the usual qualities uppermost. To give one well-horn and cor- rectly brought-up son to the commonwealth is to nerve it better than by hardening it with a half dozen ill-conditioned boys. What the ultimate destiny of the human nee may be we do not know; but the duty which lie. next at hand for this genetation is to may and disseminate the laws ot heredity. 3.9.." lo, m her 21y2notlt1tt_oCiiiiiiu' HERL‘DITY AND SOCIAL PROBLEJIS. Love your neighbor-in moderation. , Needieis to say, sleep was impossible Walk every day. -'while the elephants ripped the jungle Avoid excessive Jealousy. finto pieces, and it was too black to at. Shun debt as the plague. {tempt hunting; so we lay anxiously, not Have the courage of your opinions. i, say fearfuily, awaiting developments, Attend to your own affairs. fgiven now and then an extra start b Cultivate a charitable attitude. "shrill trumpeting of the elephants, whirl Remember that spite work doesn't pay. shortly before daybreak suddenly moved One should never be too hurried to eat away, to leave all quiet once agani. If and bathe regularly. anything is more disconcerting than the Remember that content does more for bungling of elephants in the still of the looks than do cosmetics. , lo night, as they enclose you in a Do as you would be done by, and not 'dal',,] circle, I have yet to experience as you have been "done." |t.-Caspar Whitney in Outing. If you do all this you’ll be a comfort. to yourself and friends and a. credit to the communoty. I Be fair, Judge not. Make haste slowly. Beware of making rash promises. Be not selfish. Never borrow. Breathe deeply. Eat regularly. Dress comfortably. Give what you can afford. Love your neighbor-in moderation. Walk every day. Avoid excessive Jealousy. Shun debt as the plague. Have the courage of your opinions. Attend to your own affairs. Cultivate a charitable attitude. Remember that spite work doesn't pay. One should never be too hurried to eat and bathe regularly. The French Savant, M. Benard, is con- vinced that Nansen took the only route by which the North Pole can be possibly reached. He favors an expedition with two ships connected by wireless teleg- nphy. The time is estimated It three years, and it is hoped that the Prince of Monaco, who is greatly interested, will contribute the necessary $900,00. Mind's Linnea! :Cures Colds, ct: Now a' trriiat scientist tellé dr"iEkt%fGrU will I???” freckles. Girls,it ia worth try- A nun often boasts ot ancestors who unlu no ufquPGJ ty recognize him. A woman's idea or a mIFcle is hi6 return ot.her hysbary1 at 1:_t_l_.m., perfectly soberr. An enterprising Milwain-Eee ErBEeFVEHQQr- tity "Spring_chit_:kens all_thts yer rpund." In; tawny. Many a man rear-hes his -cGritabwtimit when ho Means“ {rm advice. -Ttu, trouble with some men In that they ttttte too much room. at ttys tqp. A Truth is certainly stranger than fiction to to some people. d",'."""' mar be either flattery or stup- Mahy a large fortune has . small toundatlon. been built on . 7 A mega man never seems to tire ot t In to lower his record. " 3 " .. ..-_, u..- ..., .... w.......,.. u.nv..,, ...., -r I was completely out of "V. depth,! plicants for membership in the Massa. when I hear , quiet 1.tsu,sth behind '99:! chusetts militia, Dr. Blood, of Boston, and, on turning, found I? my', min tn. j said: "If it exists in form serious enough structor, who held..up his right pd,‘ to interfere with walking. of course, it and the tro men disappeared, the she" I bars him from enlistment." That is not resuming its place on the veranda; _nnd, ' surprising, for if there is one accom- . to tert.'wn all, there was not thy slight- i plishment a. state’s militia ought to pos- est syp. of any . water having ty.en," seas it is that of being able to walk. brought tn. I eX9Itedly appealed to h"“iAs for the rest of us, we ought not for an explanation. .He said he Aarto care whether we are ftatfooted or been present all the. ti.m.e., haying willed; not, for there is less and less reason that he should be invisible to me, and. for our walkina auyway.-New York that I should imagine myself to see and q Evening Post. B . do what I thought had taken place. In' D order to rove it he asked me to Me into the pcompound, and directed ii) MR. DAVIS A FARMER BOY. attention to a large cavern, which I! -I-l- knew was not there before. As I am Be Has Worked His Way Up to Positions tered a number of huge elephants and. of Hi h Trust and Honor camels issued from it in a continuous} g . stream, yet I could not touch one of il When the next national election is de. them. They apparently passed over my cided Henry G. Davis will be preparing as though I did not exist. He again to celebrate his Slst birthday. raised his hand and the cavern and uni-j Born on Nov. 10, 1823, Mr. Davis male disappeared." i has risen from _ farm boy, with few ad. bungalow would be washed away, Finding that 1 could not arrest or stop his movements, he passing through me an though I did not exist, I drew my sword and lay in wait for him. Imade a slash at him and apparently cut him in twain, when, lo! there were two men bringing in the water, neither of whom could I restrain from doing so. - _ "The most exciting performance thati he gave for my amusement was theI converting of a. bamboo atick into a. native servant, who waited at table and supplied our wants. Afterward-in his tNenee---1 tried it, and to my aur- prisre the same man was before me, asking for instructions. I directed him' to fill the chatites in the veranda withl water from the well in the compound. This he proceeded to do. When he had; iilled them all to overflowing I request-i ed him to stop. m, however, took no, notice of me, and went on stolidly,I bringing in the water until, in my ext-l bringing in the water until, in my ex- gite jmaginatiopj it seemeq that the "When in India I made the acquaint- ance of a juggler who tried to instruct me in all his tricks. He said that it was imaginary on the part of the spec- tators, as he simply willed that they should see those things. Yet I, in com- mon with western nations, was too ani- malized, sensual and materialized by flesh eating and consumption of alcohol to retain or accept any deep spiritual teaching. A A Traveller's Story of Marvels Per. in eatitied to n ttthee-tit _& mg? M. Wenrttt nail ml booklet“ dung" .!,'.','tretfgt Sold by hm dmteiiere can A“. L 'r'fGl'hal?'fa'llPlt'tmGa The populatity of the"Now Century P,.obAetarfasd Washin‘ Machine “be tteatevidetteis of its Imus. The lulu-ml puke of the pulsed: about but that”: . andttom the ktrd this aid that IN, jetted ft In Ffr1),'lll'fA'le' trlt.ere ttte 89w 9.83151 Wireless Telegraph, Near Pole. “939?“, was“: we was iillllt/ aites; tAl tttttglib, iiigliigg muggym (8iSitia {Asa Fiijiile; ‘ 'is'" ffd, " TRICKS " A moo JUGGLER. regird io "tiiirjjiiiii's"iuiittt7"7t formed in His Presence. BY AN OBSERVER. - ---"_._ ALWAYS. ‘,_ '-r""'r, v: .u n" brought an action for dimlgge,on the ground that this was an illusion to him. M. Rene Dubreuil, 9. French “that, baring written a novel continuing . climber named Bishop Volaille (fowl), 1tttc.leye.e, (upon), of Nice, ha krona "- 5“:‘_ ._, ' I In the night I was startled from sleep ‘by a Tdts in the nearby in la, ’which sound a: if all the trees ungu- matra were being torn up and simul- taneously emaehed to earth. In the boundless midnight jungle the noise 'eeemed tremendous, as indeed it was, and right at our very cars. It was my first experience with elephants, and I must confess it was porve-trying to lie quiet with that crashing all around and no surety that the elephants might not take a. ancy to stalk in upon us, or what minute the fancy might possess them. Nor did it lend peace to the anxi- lety of the moment to realize that one [wheat much less a herd, is only now _ again providentially) stopped in his (tmeks by powder and all ' or at the ‘baae of the trunk and through the ear are the only instantly vulnerable places to your rifle bullet. o have an elephant break cover immediately beside you il‘ not so serious a matter on hard open ground, where you may have good foot. ing, trees ,and it is not impossible to dodge; but in a jungle where you cannot make your way except by constant use of knife, and sink your ankle: in mud: at every étep, is quite another story, and one full of trouble on occasion. Mr. Davis' wife, whom he married in 1853, was Miss Kate o. Bantz. of Freder- ick, Md. They had five children. Mr. Davis' benefactions are many, especially in the line of educational institutions. He recently meted in Elkins a handsome me- morial to his eon, Henry G., jun., who was drowned eight years ago. When the wife of his only remaining son, John T., presented him with a grandson two years ago, Mr. Davis made a. gift of $100,000 to the youngster. “LEPHANTS CHARGING IN DARK. Always a. Democrat, Mr. Davis' public service began in 1865, when he was elect.. ed to the House of Delegates of West Virginia. He sewed two terms as State Senator, and in 1871 was sent to the United States Senate. He was re-elected and might have had a third term, but he declined because of his business inter- eats. Mi. "Davis, who has been one of the leading spirits in the development of West Virginia, was born in Woodstock, Md., on a farm, as was Alton B. Parker, and his early education was what he could get in the winter in the country schools in Howard county. Since then he has built railroads, organized banks, opened coal mines and has raised his voice in the councils of those who direct the course of the governmeng. - l' Born on Nov. 16, 1823, Mr. Davis has risen from a farm boy, with few ad. vantages, to be the possessor of a fortune estimated in the millions. Besides hav- ing been a United States senator from West Virginia for two terms, he has held many' positions of honey. A A Whatca-rt,aasdm"rgtMt, he I Prevented. l Flatfootedness may or may not be increasing among the modems, tmt.it 3 has at last brought out some verge in- tereseting theories as to why it I uid ,be prevalent. Sandow got i1atfoe.ted ifrom lifting heavy weights ,aeeording to the opinion of Dr. Sargent, of Hire vard, Children are likely to be aiflieted in this way when they wear spring heels, for the bones of the instep, in ' the cases of young children, depend for l keeping their place upon adequate sup- I port of the heel. Fat children find them. selves becoming flatfooted because of the abnormal weight the feet have to sustain. Poor feeding of the child tends to make it fiatfooted, for the bones of the foot require plenty of lime to make ’them firm and strong. Poor feeding {leads to "rickets" as well as flatfooted- iness, though the physician who says it goes not stop to explain rickets. What [used to be called rheumatism of the ifeet now turns out to be flatfootedness. {Persons who go barefooted all the time ears said never to get the trouble, so 5we are led to believe that if we wear ishoes " all we are apt to become as gthe big policeman or the mythical Chi- ; cage girl. The finest {lshllne reels be off, He has the ttneat pole. And with the outfit steals he on To find the clear trout hole! He reels the finest the: of all When he no catch doth bring, And think: that In the one or " no is the "reel" thing. If one doetor'ts storv is believed only old people get flatfootedness after the bones begin to disintegrate, so to speak, and let down the high arch of beauty in the instep. Asked whether the mal- ady was at all common among the ap- plicants for membership in the Massa. chusetts militia, Dr. Blood, of Boston, said: "If it exists in form serious enough to interfere with walking. of course, it bars him from enlistment." That is not surprising, for if there is one accom- plishment a state’s militia ought to pos- sess it is that of being able to walk. As for the rest of us, we ought not to care whether we are ftatfooted or not, for there is less and less reason for our walking auyway.-New York Evening Post. The Egotistic Fisherman. (New Orleans Times-Democrat.) The scientific fisherman. Behold him standing there.' Could mygody with a. man A more contented air! TORONTO ABOUT PLATFOOTEDNESS. A Curious Libel. is Perhaps the finest collection of jew- els in the world is that in the Sultan’s treasury at Constantinople. The tur. bans of all the Sultans since Mnhomet I. are there, all glittering with rare and large gems of the purest water. There are elso the royal throne of Pei-sh, car- ried off by the Turks in 1514, covered with more than twenty thousand which emeralds and fine pearls, ind the throne of Suleiman I., from the dome of which there hang. over the head of the thliph an menld six inches long end four tht. ches deep. These two thrones no the chief objects in the collection. A committee of the Royal Statistical Society of Great Britain has recently been engaged in investigating the pro- duction and consumption of meat and dairy products in that country, and ,while they find that there has been in. ‘creased production, yet it has not been on a scale proportional with the increase in population.' According to its report, submitted " a recent meeing of the so- ciety, the average consumption per head in Great Britain was, of meat, 121.8 in; of milk, " gallons; of cheese, 10.5 lb... and of butter, 18.5 lbs.. The amount of meat included M.8 lbs. of beef and veal, 27.5 lbs. of mutton and lamb, and 36.8 lbs. of bacon and pork. In addition the British people consume extensive quan- tities of poultry, game, rabbits, ete., which are not included in the above sum- mary. The average of 15 gallons of milk does not include separated or skim milk, both of which are consumed to an a . preeiable degree. In comparison with tin: continental countries, England consumes much more meat, but considerably less than we United States and Austrilia..- Harper’s Weekly. mum's Linnea! aG Blptheria. mm Liy tiiti 'iiif Pukdnle, Ont. _ I was cured of Inflammation by MIN. ARD’S LlNlMENT. - . _ - _MR8. W. W. JOHNSON. I was cured of painful Goitro by MIN. ARD’S LINIMENT _ .. _ A BYARD M'MULLIN. _ Death of Jedliczska. l The announcement by cable in yester- terday’s papers of the death in Berlin, Germany, of Dr. Ernest Jedliczska, the celebrated pianist and teacher, after sev- eral months' illness, Will be read, with sorrow by his many Canadian friends. Dr. Jedliczska, during the past few years has had many Canadian pupils who were much attached to him, led',',','?,'!; Doug- las Bertram, the talented young oronto pianist, son of the late G. H. Bertram, M. P.; Leslie Hodgson, W. H. Hewlett, organist of Centenary Lhurch, in this city, and many others. Dr. Jedliczska, who was a Russian by birth, and an intimate friend of Rubinstein and 1'sehtpikowtrkr, was one of the most popular and successful teachers in Ger- mang'. m will be succeeded on the staff of t e Stern Conservatory of Music by Martin Krause, the famous pianist now resident " Leipzic. Mind's Linnea! Cures (large: in Cows. i The little girl could not understand the meaning of the talk. but when the steward brought forth a big pot of jam, as ordered. she gave the captain a, pret- ty little smile she marched off with it. From that time on her face was never e1ean.-N. Y. Times. - Fifi, is a very serious ease," he said, "and must be dealt with accordingly. The penalty of the ttrsst offence is im- prisonment. For the second it is spank- ing. and for the'third it is hanging or exclusion from America. But the facts in this case are such that I shall have to be more severe. I therefore sentence you to eat the best jam this ship can produce every time you feel like it. The jam wil be supplied by the steward." truiltr, poor and could not provide any sweet- meats for her. When the case had been presented Capt. Krech thought over the evidence for a. time. and as the girl was caught with the evidence all over her face and hands he pronounced her on his ship, like all other captains, is judge, jury, and Court of Appeals, listened to the charges with a stern look. Besides learning that the little girl had taken the jam, he also learned that her father and mother were very Walsh, Ont. ; SENTENCE!) To EAT JAN, Captain of Ocean Liner Find- Little Girl Guilty of Theft. Capt. Krech, of the Hamburg-Ameri- can Line's tstetumshipGmf Walden-see was called upon during the trip to pass sent- ence upon a thief caught stealing aboard the vessel. His manner of conducting the case and his judgment were com- mended by all the passengers. Several steernge passengers on the earlier days of the trip frequently misa- ed food and sweetmeats which they had taken aboard, and nothing was known of the culprit, until one day a woman, going to her bunk, found a little, fltsxert- haired girl busily engaged in emptying a pot of jam which had been concealed there. The little one had the jam plas- tered all over her face and hands, and in that condition the woman who dis. covered her led her to the chief stew- ard. He in turn took her before the captain on the bridge. , Many of the passengers, seeing the little girl being dragged crying before the captain, gathered about to learn the cause of the trouble, Capt. Krech, who " Pure soap l" You've heard the words. In Sunlight S o a p you have the act. of lag titmiGruiriaiiri'i.' Sultux'l Wealth. I” mum; m m an «can!» 1 of F3931 Nemlgis by (7jr'. a): Teaching the Police lumen. In Man the you" at I thrttmr. hnd' am to _ Wm... in “civility nnd “mt." to u to bear themselves on all when with "dig. 'sity and M” The boom in mun, " to tm gtrrn by the an that. The wealth of Russia. in furs in being npmy upped. It is reported that in . certain district of the Yeneeei Govern- ment, where fifty years ago hunters en- nually shot 28,000 ables, 0,000 been. 24,000 foxes, 14.000 blue foxes. 300,00o epuin'ell. "In wolvee, and 200,o00 hares, badly e Odie can be found tp-day. The bleme is laid to the wanton destruction at 'dlf mine!- in the oouree of t' unt emditiom. No I seem lave been ukenmpute late this. " madman; Eii"i h" tte1tierrudrpiaiueetantsm, Punk”. . booa to “I home. " an. In... -_.I -I-, - __ ,V,,_._-_ -v-unvu u: but Ill-cull. can”. We will [In On Hundred Donu- tor A” on. at ”all... (cm-ed by etbttrrtt) that cannot b0 and by law. Gnu-rt Can. and tor dream. It... P. J. CHENEY & CO., Tobdo. o lnhl i.- "--.a-, ‘- tt local npplientionn no they ennnot nun do due-nod portion ot the on. Tinni- only one wny to cure (led-eand that in " coo. attttettohat remedies. Donineee II eattqdd by nu interned condition ot the mucous uni-got the Iii-whim Tube. When thin tube in in. t5amqd you he" n rumbling uonnd or inner- Iect hurl-3. nnd when " in entirely cloned, Denineen in the result. “a unieu the tnltaaC mntion enn beteken out and this tuhemtoo ed to ita normal condition. Poth"g will be dean-o ed iorever' nine an. out " ton m "l'llrJli'r,' diuiu, which " nothi but a 1'",1't'ef,P?.eitiiii 9! the tango“ 1'liil2'..l Deafness Cannot be Cured Home Comp-Jib; Flint heart in time my an t breach of promise unit. "_utysiufetornnuiomoutotan ink bottle-oe my other my. He thinks he in nun-yin. in ideal, but lhe sometimel turns out to be his ot- deal. ' Borne woman'- love in that In full at rung: and tee! u the epiuph on o I". a 0:“- - tween . GmsG Gi Giiriririi a; womanil u little non ao.-wo-" hwyer'l to wru- uwn, luv I.“ m. ill'w- tinny ill the“ land: in omnethine to- mu'luble. Distance from nilrogd 5 three to thirti miles. Thou will In . ttttf, null of one-hula". This in no t distribution ot free hon. the Unit- ed sum Government will our unto ll Nebmks. Write for pamphlet can. how the lands cul u wqulnd, who. - try Md be made, and other inter-:- tion. Fro. on npplioulon to a, 0‘0. PneMo “on. In western Nebraaka neu- the Union Paeitie Railroad in section Iota of " tfre te5f.or "Pot' m- In.” Government “and. lor Ila It is suggested that the eat bu now experienced more revolutions than any recognized South Amerienn republic. Lava-'- Y/ When at length the engine m tstopped, the out jumped down, otrggeeed about confusedly for n few seconds, and then walked quietly to its corner, none the wane for its extmrdinnry experi- ence. A at living in the flower house, they any, wan asleep in t e rim of 3 tly. wheel when the engines were surfed. and for five, hours puny was whirled round u the tate of Iix_ty miles an hour. Bold b Dru Tub 'Clpl A Cat'a Remrluble Experience in a Flywheel. A remarkable-almost tmhelievabie- eet story, any: the London Expreu, it told by the othetiu of the corporation electricity works, telegraph: 1 Black- burn sxrrteortdett., _ .. Cum Burns. Scolds. Sores on all kinds, Cuts. Bott., Skin Dneloe. Blood Poison. no. “admonish trom moot promlnent page In Canons. by}. sample and book bt Inc» that tree. A an“ FOBTEK MFG. CO., Toronto. Ont. AND SKIRT SUPPORTER All": and]. In Hook: to tour the hands. Hulls: to he and on. _ Shannon In” Rcmllton t 9.1... Toronto 7.80 p.m., Bar of 011-00 pom. Ionmu And Inumadlnu nor“. Low raw- on th “no. Further Intonation. ”ply to R. t o. “an“. or write to E FOHTEB CHAFPEE. W's-urn Faun" Agent. Toronto. 'or mun-war. l.vvv "R....-.' lawman. Month“. Quobec. Talon“. and among giver. _,ii',i!j,!t.s't,i, rorsaua-defAt...t toms. .133}. ti- moth-thew cows-dung E51315 No. 35 1904. Lady agent-c wanted everywhere. Band for our “It of pnmlumn. Room s, " Scott Street. Toronto. Ont. 'iiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiti “NIGEL Ile Fun Growing Scarce HERO OF MANY REVOLUTIONS. "om 930nm Growl. of a Grimm! Bachelor. Aprtr to only Wk dilforem be NINE IIDUON ACRE! para. Ttbe. -- - -" --....... w an - Pul- tor Con-ulna” -- -, , i.strro-rrarrptt? n.0, duo Skim And mu. Senator “Ho. um and“. ran BOUTBGOTT SUIT 09.. p IN FoNTTuM_e J. A. DAME", max 3500!, in Siberia. Niall. Can. Ont. " Pf) Interuow wtt .urt destroy? that after thr there was on" thr Russian Lieutenant from Port ttttle sinn likol fun" the , "temulpo vindivotrtoett moved howl nun Ch" fra I H, then ha ltoly a line um lppl‘nac of her the uni ing in Curvwi While Trim: '1 mam u " (Iii-l the In the hm an hy Rum-in Lloyd r Rursiat Sen. ha wow (I Consul:- other In is bein: Mttese F herc. 1-41 the 1an tow. lny sari war n Wtt Easy-inn to pron The Jar Ours. wi and rm where Ii ll (do! mnmk the lit render the L" of the nfely ach- t, dent i unmi- den m .Japa A late The lnnm to allow Arthur. Ct amendm- Wlsion of port that mitted to operation:- humane " Office is of the MIN net. but u military ' long an L without a less Wotnt from tho ct" under of th um: reports t ber of his pl . tug of trm Minus. “In in mm oft Peer of Japa --etrtttutarr much-r of I esqtertel to-d St. Petenbu rg and M TIN Togo' Funeral Servi m" SAYS STOESSJ \rth Salvaging a R A FEARFUL Tokio ll mitt Atl oil tl r"

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