Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Feb 1915, p. 2

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m F ..A tt ttSi It annually have: tha mm Dobllitatad and an Buy mm to lithol- Ilium: HEALTH WRBCKED THROUGH IA GRIPPE One of it. 1m medicine writers aye: “It is ukm'nhin the number ol people who hue L',".',' crippled in health foryesrs atternn attack of " grippe or irsfhtemaa." The reel danger from this dieeeee, which sweeps over Canada every winter, is during mnwaleseenee, when the chemterietic symptoms. the fever. the climb, the head- ache and the depression of spirits pass away. Grip leaves behind it weakened vital powers, thin blood, impaired d'geetion and over-sen- sitive nerves --a m-ndition that makes the system an easy prey to pneumonia, bronchitis, rheumatism. ran-nus prustration and even con- ewrttption. It is a condition him zuliq most emphatically for a tonic fur the blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pl.s are a tmic especially adapted in, 211"»: this need as they purify f. :1 Easteirn woman who is . fond m_t'ner wares an amazing arm]. about her experience feeding her boys. Among other things she says: ' Three chubby. rosy-cheeked boys, Bob. Jack and Dick. respectively, sra‘threv of our reasons for using an v rec rmmending the food, Grape- b ts. for these youngsters have barn fed on Grape-Nun since in- fancy. and often between meals when other children would have been given candy. "I gave a package of Gros -Nuts to a neighbor whose sweet-0% child we: a weazened little thing, ill half the time. The little tot ate the Grape-Nuts and cream greedily and the mother continued the good work. and it was not long before a truly wonderful change manifested Mari in the child's {we and body. The results were remarkable, even for Grospe-Nyta. , . - IN cant ' Ruth husband and I use Grape- Nuts every day and keep strong and well and have three of the bteat, healthiest boys you can find in a. day's much.” Many mothers intend of destroy- ing the children’s stoned! with candy and coke give the youngster: . Inqdlul_d ane-Nutglmhep they uunpuon. can: most for the Me Pills are a to meet tl and enrich the nerves grid healt system. M Indian Isl: several wit attacked b: weak and t use I used with the Last wince 12min prev; no begging for something in the way of new. The result. ioooon shown in greatly hon-neg! health, strength and mom-l musty. ' ' Nest? given Y. 0mm Patna: with Dr. Williams' Pi escaped the trouble. w my neighbors were dew fact I enjoyed the best spring and feel sure t will so fortify the syste k wink" "7:6“, v--. for the famous buyback. "She M " Well- ci. Wham '2"i.,eur.emPits an... h'h","i,ilUiriPie'"tit-"%dh' rel enrich the blood. They tone up . nerves and give vigor, strength id health to the debilitated stem. Mrs. Howard D. Chatrey, ‘dian Island. N.B., says: "For veral wirttors in sumon I was h m scrapers ma: gnod homo-um ade of wood on of steel. An ie the work of soo taking kt ? Ling " the bl similar to a Cl Mu humv-made scraper my hie of wood and faced with a of steel An ice plough facili- the work of sseorimrinto blocks making off. A slice bar for ine off the blocks Can be similar to a crowbar. with a blade frum six to eight inches An ice aw may be impro- by renwving one handle of a at saw. A number of pike ice tongs and a chain, with pair of ice tongs attached. ete the tools required. A rm. one end of which any be mm into the water. and the end raised level with the of the sleigh. permits the use nurse in taking the ice out of 'tter and loading on the sleigh, ice should be packed gs solid. pussible in the-ice house and aken tn have strfficient insulat- ateriai' ariund the outside andl T. If n‘wc ice is required than. '? accommodated in the ice . it may be piled outside. t/r1't'l , mania an the ground. tel .21.; them with a layer of saw- t, “in. Two a Pub are sold by all med- ealers or may be had by mil Nuts a box or six boxes for mm The Dr. Willisms' Med- 0.. ankville. Ont. If? THREE REASONS. ti Finger» um: I'M-men n the Work. int add: 901' Legs and Ten ered and pro- , prevent the ho insulating i, way the ice the summer. " F. C 1lol nn ule many ' en the srto' mo styk anada. at Me T he may " "l A MOTHER’S ANXIETY In Most mothers are anxious when their little ones are teething, for at this time the baby's stomach gets disordered and there is a grave dangerof convulsions. This anxiety can be lessened, however. if the mother keeps a supply of Baby's Own Tablets in the house and gives an occasional dose to her teething baby. The Tablets are the very best medicine in the world during the teething time. They regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach, promote healthful sleep and make teething painless. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Bmckville, Ont. V Withthe an 1rotPotnahhorn the German mire: shut " by - conditions, Canada should now give attention to the large quantity of this fertilizing agent which is nllow- ed to go to waste through want of care and conservation of the nnnual prgduction of wood ashes. - A grasses Wood ashes, by hastening the de. cay of organic matter in soils, ren- der "1an readily available the nitro, gen contained therein. In sandy soil, wood ashes supply the phos- MAS]! AND W00!) ASHES. Sane Yul-able Products for Land Improvement. Throughout a. large part of Can- ada the chief fuel at all seasons, but more especially in winter, is wood. In the eastern provinces, hardwoods are chiefly used. These woods, etb- pecinlly beech and mane, are rich in potash, varying from 5 to 13 per cent... aecor.ding to conditions of dryness of the wood and care 9f the possible; in any event away from an} danger of fire, and should be kept dry to avoid leaching. In the spring they should be spread upon the land. They are especially valu- able as a fertilizer and to enmurage the growth of clover and the better der lllnr? readily available the nitro- gen contained therein. In sandy soil, wood ashes supply the phos- phoric acid and lime in which these mils are deficient, while, on clay lands, the lime content of the ashes tends to render available the pot- ash salts already present in abun- dance. Putash as supplied to the land through the medium of wood ashes has a distinct advantage over the {width salts imported from Ger- many, in that it is in a very solu- ble form, and hence is at once For Military Purpose the Airedale Beats All Others The finest military dogis the Aire- dale. in the opinion of Major E. H. Richardson. a breeder of war dogs, who was in charge of a, pack of bloodhounds. with the Belgian army until they were Inst in the disaster at Mons, He says the Airedale cam stand any clmate, is second to none in faithfulness and intelligence. has powers of hearing and scent re- markably acute, and is the right size, whether used on sentry duty, scouting, searching for the wounded or as a messenger or ammunition carrier. "He can hear 300 yards farther than a man and knows friend from foe by their smell," says Major Richardson. "A man's smell de, pends on what he eats, so a dog can tell the difference between English, French and Germans even when dressed in the some kind of clothes." ashes. Other valuable ingredients of mood ashes are a small ropor- tion of phosphoric acid an? about hity per cent. of carbonate of lime. In the clearing of wood lots and in the burning of debris after tak- ing out the fuel supply, large amounts of ashes tire produced. These. as a rule, are left where the burning is done, and are conse- qupntfy wasted. . TN "Don was blown twenty yards by a bursting shell. He was not hit, only scared. He declined to face the music any more, until after a lot of coaxing. when he went back on night duty, watching and listen- ing in the trenches with the intent- nees of the most seasoned sentry, aided further by a. sense of sight tund smell that was almost un- canny.” "'iiirif 'isri/ershould be carefully stored in hre-proof receptacles if An officer wrote to the major in reggrd to ont pt his dogs: - - Because of that the entire Ger- man people enter upon the new year full of comm and oonfident of ultimate victory. From Kaiser to working men, all Germans know the struggle on last u long time yet, but likeviu they all know the Ger- m people ultimntelv will win. Do- mestic controversies have diap- peered end ell German etend to- mb: a one Inl- s..." _ "We know in Germany that not only can we last out a long war, but also that we can last out a long war better than our enemies-political- ly. militarily and economically. We know the longer the war lasts, so much better will be our world standing. - A - - - _ GERMANY BEST IN LONG WAR. Count Rove-allow Thinks Teutons Can Beat Allies in Time. The London Daily Chronicle prints an article by Count Revent- low, in which he says: .\IREI).\LE Till-I BEST DOG. ' It has been my good fortune, says ‘the medical correspondent of the London Times,. to enjoy many op- lportunities of talking with soldiers who have been wounded in action. I have visited Belgian, French and British hospitals at various peri- ods, and as a medical man have i/i'cir'.t afforded special facilities for “study. These opportunities have lcunvinced me that no two men feel quite the same sensations whilst un- der fire for the first time, and also that a man is capable of experien- cing quite different emotions at dif- ferent periods of the same day, though his circumstances have not changed. Ila Wants Ml T he "For many years I suffered from kidney disease," Mr. Tapp Eiays, "It started from a cold, and gradu- ally grew worse. My skin had a harsh, dry feeling, my appetite was fitful and I perspired freely with the slightest exertion. I had Gshes of light before my eyes and I was al- ways tired and nervous. - No Two Men Feel Quite the Same Sensations, Says a Doctor. The man who has not been under fire always desires eagerly to know what were the feelings of the man who has been during this ordeal. It isprobahle that he does not ire- quently find the information given by veterans either satisfying or en- lightening. For example, from the statement of a. man who experienced shell fire for the first time in his life in the neighborhood of Arms, I gathered that his first feeling had been one of great interest and curiosity. A "Black Maria" fell some hundreds of yards away and sent up a great column of smoke, and at the same time shrapnel was bursting at no long distance. But suddenly there came home to him the realization that these shells were intended to work havoc, and that, in fact, the position occupied was full of dan- ger. "Then I felt exactly as any- body would feel the moment after he discovered that he was in a held with an angry bull. 'Every instinct of mind and body prompted flight." "Finally rheumatism wu added to my troubles, while attacks of sciatica and neuralgia followed. The doctor who attended me and the medicines I tried, failed to help me till I decided to use Dodd's Kidney Pills. I took four boxes in all, and to-day I am a. robust man in excel- lent health." All Mr. Tapp's troubles came All Mr. Tapp's troubles came from sick kidneys. That's why Dodd's Kidney Pills cured them. A second man told me that from the moment he came under fire-in a tr"ench---he experienced the most lively terror. "But the feeling pass- ed 9.an after a while, leaving me rather tired and only a. little anx- ious." A third declared that he had been so nervous before going into action that the event put the antieipations of it to shame. He had regarded himself as a dead mum, and woke up, under fire, to the real- ization that his chances of coming through safely were very good. The achievement of "second cour- age" is, of course. a well-recognized stage in the seasoning process of war. I heard a little story from the lips of a British officer which seems to me to illustrate the genesis of it very cont0sively--and the story is worth telling for its own sake. At a certain period of the present war some new troops were sent to hold a particular trench. They suffered a really terrible bombardment, with shells and shrapnel. and at last about a hundred of them evacuated the position and retired. Present. ly they met a senior, who stopped them and inquired what had hap- pened. A _ _ On being informed the officer looked grave and told the men that he would be very sorry to hive to use any coercive measures with men whom he knew to be brave fel- lows. He spoke to them for a. short time and steadied them. Then he pointed out that the way of duty lay backwards towards the position they had left. “I'll walk back a. part of the way with you." He did so. The men returned to their poetpnd gave a good account of themselves. In the words of my informant they "were all right after tut." Quebec Mart Who "ttered from Kidney Disease for Yetsrrritragain a Robust, Healthy nan. L'Anse-a-Yalleaa, Gaape Co., Que., Jan. 25th apecia0--'ll am happy to tell you Dodd's Kidney Pills made me well." s, says Jean Baptiste Tapp, a. well known and highly respected resident of this place. Ahd s'o thankful is Mr. Tapp for the benefits he has received from Dodd's Kidney Pills that he wants the whole world to know it. He wants others. who suffer as he did to know the cure. DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS CURED JEAN BAPTIST!) TAPP. ED. 5. SEN SATION S l' NOER FIRE. World to Know ft 183m: Hus. TORONTO 311 CL"! Plums-WOOLEY. Honored , ainttthtued fee m. ' . um. b Thy knighthood bgstowed upon Captain live Phillip-Woolen .ot Victoria, B.C., is a. reward of arm;- ulate and active Imperialism. Slrl Clive was born in England in 1864. I lFor some years he was British con- I 'eul at Ke etch. w Aikemrdo he proc- tioed Jaw in London, moving to lVictorja when he retired from pptbc- "ice. He belongs to a. very old Shropshire family, the Wooleys of Woodhull, whose same and arms lu, amsumed on tsucceeding to th i.; estates thirty years ago, his own Iname being Phillips. He was at lone time a captain in the 4th bat, y' .lion S. W. B., and he married in 11879 a. daughter of R,ear-Admiral, l Fenwick. l Was Restored to Her Anxious Family When Hope Had Gone. St. John, N.B., Dec. 15.-At one time it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, of 3 White St.. would succumb to the deadly ravages of advanced kidney trouble. "My first attacks ot back- ache and kidney trouble began years ago. For six years that dull gnawing pain has been present. When I ex- erted myself it was terribly intensi- fled. If I caught cold the pain was un- endurable. Insed moat everything, but nothing gave that certain grateful relief that came from Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. In. Mead of being bowed down with pain, today I em strong, enjoy splendid appetite, sleep soundly. Lost proper- ties have been instilled into my. blood --aheeia are rosy with color, and I thank that day that I heard of so grand. a medicine as Dr. Hamilton's Pills.’ Every woman should use these pills regularly because good health pays, and it's good, vigorous health that comes to all who use Dr. Hamilton's Mandrake and Butternut Pills. Youthful 1irtseliuhnesg. He was a, good little boy and very thoughtful. It was during a, long spell of dry welther, and he had heard of the great scarcity of wa- ter throughout the country. m came to his mother, and sliped his hand into hers. "Mamma," he said, "is it. true that in some places the little boys and girls have not enough water to drink l" Sir Clive PNllips-Wooley has also been very active in the affairs of the Canadian Navy Leagues. He was recently appointed by the Dominion Government a censor and special Government officer on the Pacific coast. His son was naval comma. Id.. er of the. Rogue, one of the British cruisers torpedord in the North Sm last September by a German sub- marine. has written a great deal of stirring patriotic poetry, and his ballad of England's sea power, "The Sea Queen," is often referred to as a fine expression in verse of Imperial- istic sentiment. In his three nov- els, "Snap," "Gold, Gold in Cari- boo," and "The Remittance Man," he has given us excellent pictures of the making of the far Canadian West. He has been a very strong advocate of Canadian support for the British navy, and his addresses on "The Canadian Naval Question" were published in book form in 1911 at his own expense. His arguments were summed up as follows in one of these addresses: "The suprem- acy of the seas is vital to Britain; the continued existence of Britain is vital to her daughter nations; therefore Britain's supremacy at sea. is vital to Canada.” Death more tr: ', 33%;“: else no m.'IK" British C,clvvh':n hymn as a bit game pamdise, and he has been very active in public affairs in the coast Province. For example, h" was appointed in 1896 to enforce tlar, Health Act in the mining distrivt of British C'olumbia, and succeedw' conspicuously in this arduous undertaking. . "TUt is what the papers say, my dear." . "Maamms," he presenhly said, "Pd like to give somethin for those poo‘r little boys aod shad" _ "Yes, dear. What would you like to give l" “Momma.” he said in an anneal: wav “as long as the water is so very. very source. I think I ought to give up bein' washed!” ' "Lorna Boone,” thought his book “Sport in, the Crimea and Caucus- us," the only Living picture of life in those rovintic Yands. Iris "Biur Game,” in minton L the spr' _ Sir on“? Phillips-Wooley new high among Canadian authors. He llafuro moving to Canada Sir! Clive did a groat deal of big-game hunting all ovér the world, and th late R. D. Blackmore, author o' Mr Clive Pltillips-Wooley. 'gtmmmln Nearly Nahum! New Brunswick Lady vohvmes, in tlk Br, , . 9.190 borm [cine o J:l' else sto mnkn l known as a him To and he has been an” Clive basrdonr of . Nerviline will save you from lying fy' awake to-night, coughing, choking and 1x suffering from congestion in the cheat m and acute paln in the throat. st' Nervliine will break up that dull Il m uralgic tustuiaehe--will kill the cold in and chill at its very tmrinnirig---will 31 ‘save you from perhaps a serious ill. _ l ness. . liq-mt“. Unison Co., binned Bim.--t hue and Four MINARD't, LIN!- MENT for Wong-at 25 yeah and whim l have occasion , “led other iinimenu I an you any that 1 have new: mud any Mun On I'M- eqxual to you". t rubbed between an baled frrmenur, it will FFre c_old_in the head in “It’s this Gr" explained the groom, gently. "Now and then I gave tothink ofthe furnace, my ear." doc 1581mm "1'5; "Do you think only of me t" mur- mured the bride. "Tell me that within]; _only of me," Maid (knocking in the morning) 'Madame, I've forgotten whether you wanted to be walled at seven or eight. N Ln rd’s Day Alliance Active "Bridget, has Johnnie come home from school you” "Yis, sorr." "Have you seen him?" "No, sorr." "Then how do you know he is homer' "'Ctsuse the cat's hidin' under the stove, sort.” YOU. OWN DIUGOIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes Ind Granulllrd Eyelldl; No Gunning“ tum Eye Canton Write for Book of the ye y mull Fr... [mm In Remedy 00.. Chicago Very busy with tho good work. but no more eirieviottt than the old reliable Put. nm'a Corn Extractor. which when 00nt and warts in one day. Fifty yeans u" provm the merit at Putnam}; Use no other, war. at all deyon. The thyroid gland, which is situ- ated about the lower part of the throat. is still a medical mystery. Practically nothing is known as to its uses, and very little mhout the mums of diseace in it, Goitre is a. nonmalignant enlargement of the thyroid gland. The swelling may be no more than a mere thickening, or it may grow into a mans weighing several pounds. It is common in mountainous districts and where there is magnesian limestone in the soil and drinking water. Operation may be necessary. but goitre will usually yield to treatment. and is rarely fatal. Malignant disease of the thyroid gland is often associat- ed with oversstrain or sudden shock. Here operation is generally neces- any. and is a verv serious matter indeed. In some mysterious way re- moval of the thyroid gland affects the mental powers. and the unfor- tunate person who has his thyroid removed is in great danger of los- ing his wits, more particularly his memory. {was hms affected men of all ages. Ancient Bwbyluniuns displayed their superiority by refusing to wear beards; the Assyrians let theirs run wild. The Jewish law forbade its children to cut their beards. The Tartan, a. beardless WAC" waged war with Persians be- ("111w the latter refused to part wi:h their hirsute adornment. I' ards were fashionable among the Greeks until their great general, Alexander the Great, ordered the Macedonians to shave, lest their beards should form an assnilnble weapon for their enemies. With the advent of William the Conqueror, beards disappeared from England, and the mode did not return until the thirteenth century, and was discontinued at the Restoration. The vear 1851, however, saw tut- other revival, and the feet that King George alwnvs adopted the style has done much to bring the beard into favor. To-morrow rhymes with borrow and sorrow. ~‘V"e. For forty years it has been the I most largely used family remedy In the Dominion. Time has proved dr/ merit, so can you by keeping handy on I tre shelf,the large '50c. family size bottle; small trial size Me., sold by any dealer anywhere. I Home-made charity brands. Don't wait till night. cet after your cold nr.w,--this very minute, before it grows dangerous you e' 21d apply old-time "Nerviline." hub your chest and throat. rub them thoreughly with Nervillne. Relief will be immediate. _ . To take away hearseness, to break up a grippy cold, to cure a sore throat or bad cold In the chest, you can use nothing so speedy and e'teetive as Ner. TU-dav is the day of the clean s‘uLven man, and the 'banbers f1tyyr [Dangerous Throat Troubles Prevented by Korviline ish aecordinky. To-mormw side.. whiskers and beards may again be the rage, for the fashion of the Dartmouth ulnard‘: Llnimenl Guns nlstempu. "What time is it now?” I'Eight." LOW FARE. " w" GMIOAOO EXPONYIONI. VII can? i mm VIM Iv. htteos,'.e.tiyr. ugly-tranche!” “W "BE! 191.1 IT ENDS MIBERY OF COLDS QUICKLY. The Mysterious Thyroid. Barring th" Beard Conscience. Ber Rival. ween “as hand. tad in. r. it will never (Lil to ' held in " hour! It in r bruins. apt-nun. ow. Youm 'Pt. J. . LESLIE. bears other kia "What do volt sunpose makes that bob: on so awfulh' loud t" “WM. hoth.its parents are hard of homing, vou know." "tohn-hrxss" that pften destroy whole towns and villages. No cook- ing is permitted while the fohn in blowing, and not even a pipe or . cigarette may be lisrhted. Many persons suffer with "fohn-aric1metes" whenever this wind prevails. The chinook of the West is similar in character and origin to the folm. Over the waters of the Pav of Clmlour. in Canada, a mysterious phenomenon known in the "fire ship" is sometimes sown by night. It is a, roughly hemisnhvricnl mass of luminositv. with its flut side to the water: but. sunlutimw it rises in slander tmrvingrolvmns that rF'Bem- “10 the flaminur rigging of a ship. "Andes lightning" is the name iriven lo a very striking luminous dimharge of electricity seen over tho crest of the Andes, in Chile. in a region where ordinary thuoder. storms arc almost unknown. The mountains appear to act as gigan- tie lightning rods. between which and the clouds silent dis-charms take place on a, vast scale. A con- tinuous glow is seen about the num- mits. with occasional outburatn like the beams of a great mhlig-ht. These displays have been seen by vessels three hundred mike from the coast. Peruvian coast is known ml the gamma. It occurs in a mint! where rain is unknown, and evpp‘iec turfh- dent moisture to support vegeta- tion. er fogs frequently occur " the northwest covst of Africa, be. tween the Canaries: and the Cape Verde Islands. Thev are sometimes so dense as to make mrvitr,ation diffi- cult. The color is owing to dust that the trade wind brings from the Sahara desert. Certain valleys in the Alps are of- ten visited by a. very warm and drv wind known as the tou. 'Ne " fects of this wind are Wulnrly striking in winter. The snow melts and evaporates u if by magic; woodwork becomes as drv as tim. der; and great precautions are ne cemry to prevent the occurrence of the disastrous fires known as Among the mow-clad Alps a. curi- ous and beautiful phenomenon u sometimes observed " the close of the day. The row illumination of the mountein summits passes away. from below u word. as the sun sinks below the opposite horizon, and for a, few minutes the peaks, with their rocks and more. have a livid appearance; then gradually thev are lighted up with a second run ttlow, and this may last for as much at an hour after sunset. This is called the "recoloration of the Mm." or in the case of the giant of thr, trump. the "resurrection of "M” WWW.” The whole series of rs,'" "_-menn is called the "Alpeu- . Incl OWN. "rutade-tieoat.er.uaietegt, when a curreht of moist air math the slope of the mountain, for the air ooolsu it rises and the Mun in it condenses. 0n the Bat tor ot Tab'e Mmmtain, near Carnwwn, I sprang southeast tiuit"d," 3 horizontal sheet of elo known " the "tablecloth." This cloud Uten appnnlrs to pour over the 5069 Ice- wsud side of the trvcatain ‘ike a. mir/iv cataract. The "spreading of the tablecloth" is a sien of bad weather. At a little dirl'moe from the mountain a second cloud often forms. A similar pair of clouds of- ten seen near Cross Pell. in Eng- land, are known as tho "helm and bar." The helm. or helmet. forms over the mountain when a violent wind, known as the "helmwrul." in b-‘uwimz: the bar appears a mile or two to Vccward. At Callau, on the a a,rf of Peru, sailors often moount/cr a foururrnell- init fog that deposits a brown slimy cotttirur, on white V fit and metal, and hence is called the "painters." Anothvr remarkable fog on the glow . ' ' Phenom Me thI It is s Minard's Linimcnt Cure. Carnt In that M'mttmrEBE 00310811138" HEY-git} ELEV-g. all}? i%iirih mu um m ded tttest, (and am. pm.- will but» bu airTdii,' (- an the]. trgti'attgtge,t Manual”. O crmd I on A tl WYNT , bi'ii't or Pdf/ll 1i'.W, W "g.'.ttp1T “ma-rm. I'ue'ee "Grgt',T 3%:2‘3 SHARE IN “ma histamine)? 0F nil; Tiw, '" _ I. " no but. In - M w ardent-you mamas-bl Rtalttr?tttgarE6etftb-. T:&*£.uh%~*"u gG.',t""t',h'g',',ig s'l't'al'lY,tfll'Js! T'Ltutrg,Ltt'ApNh' ittl.ittt all an» Hun Tatum-m. “nth l-it-t_-ae all"... mun-Irma“! t'i"r'it"rulrllh.rrh';7t'f'dflM.'Au'lt"r1 , ”summon-guy _ - -tpe-rrt.tt" have Cu mu th any. of but Slug?“ “a 'h/Strat/hte/ri, 7, 'C,--.--" 2'ki,i,,idiitYc'eutLh.tettttgtt.,tt RODGERS. GRAY & STEWART, PERFUMERS out. mu. a nut 07.. mun $200.00 IN now GIVEN AWAY FREE ‘vle'nphonv Youngstor. cn'ui LPAPI It sometimes it rises in 'tir columns that ream- ine timing of a ship. al to tvrctell a Mom. my explanation of this has fever been given. $500 FOR A NAME ”vi-whoa; 5.34:. -- it“ asaGiictil_t he hem (an Bt'd,"datlfrl=ttp1Ttt .CBJM “dd-4.1“. L"e1'rrAr."d'MeheoretT'gCs teu.re.f.id. $eesh -. .. an h he on Mon than ‘11:ch WE NOT noun “a You 77!: m. u a. an. m-alauum-dldun-I” 'il'."."'."."'))"'.'?')". IOVIII “to“ Dbl-“manhunt. nth-ulna”. IQYOI’CAN or Talmvl I I no Int. "mu-pdw 5169!... To TltAuv2dta.UlrmnlGh't'f2idGlf,7i und on. bt our Iron] Bounmr Bottle. o P.eetgm.--rqtul" yt,, alum I'm 00mm mg and . his All lot 10 can. b M to In. to Content an to m. [nu his}. You!!! homun- - II “I“ PIIIII "ur/g 1 Pa. but . a 50.” tor the beat =h.uo,, d the perfume. £5.00 tor an ”out urn-mo. mm tor m second de.tsrtrtlorr. I.“ toe tho OHM but “Hinton. and um am who hr who not: but doom on. Ihoxringterro8thoooqtq.t unnamed» . tatieptid.'e,t'Ta'? Pet. and“ non math-u- i.iqetwillttqtbttN. “moor my" qtqqtq.t+ 'set. than at I... the - will be on it . ad on aadltioticl who to the who it.” 'glil bo than one) ouc- o-ld column. c, to on. or u not of thu nm .wr cam tho Donut KI ooh- (on 31099- _Qg_g_i_ldn§ht. - "It. "u.. 'iidtifNtr--h,r'",',t.u',t,,'.' "fr6ffWi" {ETHE- *5 habit Om intuit“): to try the gov paths. to!!! pumpinlu_ my; Tttin 1. tho M - tteeturrte, mule ‘L Canal; and.“ and In! -luauverir by " will. Dom. tho I“ Gunman Prima " I. me n who“. I... tor It, ind In yr (V Mr. Dooler-42ive me a soap. please. Shopkeeper wmt it scented or unseen: Dooley-Mr, niver moimi just ate it with me. In. 1hagt41ab---Bridget. “in ' yougdthu dreadful eye. Buzz Me brother gave it no me. 2. and wut'll the neighbors has with en eye like tut and m ", hand. Que time: good ttrar, “ - f"ahh8t . Md an than“. NA EAL MANN 00.. Montreal. P5"'rrdiiiiiirtui'e? -F arm- t Ron. Port Bur-wall. Ont LIA“ Bum TRADE Al cm "tatloeoett " rod max; wash mull-ed to We“ 6'syrily (or full “Mm MMIUIM use - (Jon-cc. 219 0w Nome. Machinery For 33m Pet Mug, belting, O') etc. rum large futon f . Wheoiock engine. 18 by M? C .2: with cylinder frame, fly uhe, ings, MA. all In good r-L-v Shafting from one inch 1. inches, pulleg: thirty 'li, fifty, indigo. lying six c', have inches Wirt "ell e Mt part " REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. B. Fruit Wilson & S. “a " Adelaide Street West. T, r CVt '2iulf,t)'tE ttthy or trs.rs 17 . T . rmpluu -.r b,, who It. T'W777, f "s 1GriGFi "Find-Sou W ANTED-LADIES TO Do P Wu -lor_.fu., hum Cumin. 'UWMU' LUMP: .1 . Inn-u "I nut-nu. rum: l A on ul- " on hon. (re-(mam. “. . I men no lato Dr. Belltnsu M. Otr., “all“. Com-ood, Ont u w. ”when. many comm 51:. forum. K. W. o‘m. coIhorm M, Tammi; FFeTArrtrgpasgai, .Vnwmuuu llama ”mm! can. ttttttttnero Grhanr [You guy! go, an 9n n.1,; I EGISTERED BHou'rH, Hal-tell: cum: t J .err, For severe wounds, cuts. skin diseases, eczenu and all skin troubies-for adults or for children, there is nothing to equal the great herbnl healer "In: "ELP WANTED in: new WANTED IUIIERV STOCK IIIOELLANSOUS PO. ILLS I "'0'“va I '.g.M (we re "ue ND Fl ND " ts " I. VAL Or,

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