Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 18 Feb 1915, p. 2

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below. Every lull hour he sent a glass negative alidin down the bal- loon rope, so that 'IL complete op- ontions of the forces below could he strung together. Nadar gained undying fame at this period by ascending in his bal- loon, Neptune, at Malamute, and by means of primitive form of cm- pus took_phototrr?pltes of the troops Gam'oetta was carried across the From-l: battlefields in a balloon. Al, though at this time balloons were continually collapsing in mid-air end killing their unfortunate voy- ggt-iu. trips with cargoes of letters were continually made from one w ut to another of the seat of war in ham-e. A balloon named the Wae,hirtgton on one occasion look " " sai‘nr and a post-omee dole. 'tate. with a huge collection of ISO,- 001 letters. and 30 carrier pigeons. The sailor was an inexperienced air pilot. who fell out of the balloon whilst attempting to out n gt 'pling hook. At the mercy of tlt wind the vessel drifted uncontronDd over the German frontier, and the [outlining passenger with his let- ters end pigeons come nee: to being shot no I spy. - - _ _ Thirteen Prizes to be Awarded in a Letter Writing Competition More than one cure may be des- eribed in the letter, but every platen-ant must be literally and ab- solutely true. Earn letter must be signed by 1hr In” name and correct address of the person sending it. " it des- cribes the cure of some person other than the writer of the letter, it mm: also be signed by the person “hm" cure is described us a guar- MIN- uf the truth of the statements Some years ago the Dr. Williams' Medicine 00.. of Brockville, Ont., offered a series of prizes to resi- dents of the Province of Ontario for the best letters describing cures wrought by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peoile. Burr dreds of letters were su mitted in this competition and yet there must have been thousands of other users of the pills who did not avail them- selves of the opportunity to win n prize. To all these another letter- writing competition is otrerod. Thousands of cures through the no of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills htwe never been reported, These will furnish the materiel for the letters to be written in this contest. There is no demand upon the imagination ; every letter must deal with facts and facts only. The Prizes. The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., of Brockville, Ont., will award e prize of 825.00 for the best letter received on or before the lat day of Much, 1915. from residents of On- tario, on the subject, "Why I Re- commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." A prize of $10.00 will be guarded for the second best letter received; a prize of 85.00 for the third best letter, and ten prizes of $2.00 each lot the next best ten letters. The Conditions. The cure or benefit from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills des. cribed in .he letter may be in the writer's own case. or one that has ('(IHK' under his or her personal ab- “nation. More than one cur" may be des, CAN YOU WRITE ONE? $25.00 FOR h LETTER M u a! TM Dr. “illimm' Medicine Co.. Brut-Milk. ont. t r l" um-s: Irvpartment. M um [HIT IN hh "tr.uth'. the Mr whu writer of each letter must le, name and date of the pa- which he or she saw this an- I) the ll try the l'rcm-h During ~in-gu- of Paris in H70. nt Ih ur [ll n BI 5: will not win the prize no a good case to des- strength of the recom- wt not the style of the the basis of the award. rutnud that The Dr. 'dicine Co. shall have he divine Co. shall have publish any letter en- contest if they desire ihe-r it wins a prize or he ' above W tters as tollows the n as delay ill New on March the prizes will be I as possible there- lc-lay. It you know pour letter NOW. ve conditions care- ter may be thrown l not the I There was an interval of twenty minutes before the next one, so I (bought a magazine. I had to remove {my left glove in order to get at my (money, and pulling it " I noticed a {shred of cotton come away with it. (That meant an inside seam gone lsomewhere; and they were new .gloves, too. I threw a coin to the lpapermoy, and two small round ob. Heels like boot buttons rolled upon the i platform. I At the oftitre, I was so busy all day (that it was not until I was seated in i the train, going home in the evening, tthat I vaguely remembered that I had iforgotten something. I grew uneasy, ‘aud to distract my thoughts. I picked l up an evening paper from the opposite seat. The first paragraph that I read reminded me of Joan's forgotten or. ders; but it relieved me, too, for it ran, "The funeral of the late Mr. Jeremiah Moggridge, founder and managing director ot the mammouth stores that bear his name, took place this afternoon. As a mark of respect the premises were closed tor business lan day." Bo it would haVe been futile to ring them up in any case. I was saved! The first thing Joan said to me was: "Did you order those things from Moggrldge’s." ( This mother is right. Grape- ;Nuts focal is a certain and remark- "able rebuilder of body, nerves and brain. _ 1 “There's a Reason." _ Iva and tho that. 'g"t,il. A an "'li't ttlas, tn». m an 'lrserd mun“. A woman writes: “I had suffered with indigestion for about four years. ever since an attack of ty- phoid fever, and at times could eat nothing but the very lightest food, and then suffer so with my stomach I would wish I never had to eat anything. “I was urged to try Grape-Nuts, and since using it I do not have to starve myself any more, but I can eat it at any time and feel nour- ished and satisfied, dyspepsia is a thing of the past, and I am now strep! 9nd wel). - _ _ As I hurried toward the stutlon a keen wind was blowing. I withdrew the handkerchief from my hat and wiped my streaming eyes. The opera.- tion over, I placed the handkerchief in my sleeve. I heard the whistle of a train, and instinctively took out my what. It was right-about (Ice in my pocket, and I lost tt good second In turning it over. I had just one min- ute in which to do the quarter mile, and I missed the train handsomely. "Yes, I thought you'd mess it all up in spite of your ichneumonics, or win:- ever you call them; and so after lunch I went to the call oftiee and ordered the things myself. Next time don't try to establish an alibi with yester- day's paper." _ bur-phvate telephone will be in stalled my next week. "My husband also had an experi- ence with Grospe-Nuts. He was put under the doctor's care. but medi- cine did not seem to do him any good until he began to leave off ordinary foods and use Grape- Nuts. It was surprising to see the change in him. m raw better right off, and 'htu,'GN' has none but you!» ot pain for Grape-Ruta. "Our boy thinks he cannot est a meal without Grape-Nuts, and he learns so hot at school that his teacher comments on it. I m satis- fied that it is because at the great nourishing elements in Grape- Nuts." I didn't say anything. I merely handed her the evening paper and in- dieated the saving paragraph. Joan read it through. Then she said: It is a. serious question some- times to know just what to eat when a person's stomach is out of order and most foods cause trouble. Grape-Nuts food can be taken at any time with the certainty that it will digest. Actual experience of people is valuable to anyone inter- ested. "Those," I said. “have nothing to do with clocks. Everything I have done is suggestive of what I have to remember," and I turned my watch round in my pocket so that it faced outward. "Pérhaps they expected It to run down." I suggested. - Joan merely said. "Well-do some- thing. Put the sardines in your pocketbook or the marmalade in your gloves." "Hold on a. minute." I cried. “Just tie a piece ot cotton round my third tInger." She did so. Then she went on: “The drawing-room clock Ihould have been sent home, cleaned, last Friday. It wasn't." (ll,-,,,-, "Well. foutteen pounds make one stone, don't they? Before I remember the hard thing Is a piece ot sugar. I shall think it's a stone.” Joan sniffed contemptuously. “There's my ring," she continued, "the diamond and sapphire that I left for resetting. And---" - For reasons ot economy. 35” a com tribute: to London Punch, we get all our uupplles from Maul-Ian's stores. We have no telephone " home, so I ring up Mourldxe's when l urlve " my omee, and order that we want; that is, whenever I remember. Un- fortunately I usually forget. Con- sequently, it generally ends in Joan's writing a note whw I return home in the evening, - "Why put it in your Joan. "Beettuse," I answered, “I may not have orcnslon to draw my handerker- chief from its usual place, whereas I always have to take my hat off.” ity One morning after breakfast Jun asked me to repeat her orders. I did BO. “That’s not what I laid!” cried Joan. "1 did not mention smoked salmon. Now listen-or, better um. write it down on a piece of papgr.” .. "vihiiGG/%sre-tite' papal“! said. "But so on with the list; I've I very good idea." -- _ - "i'"irilsed up two cones betas from the tray and put tpenn i_n gny_pocket. -2rGirteTa" GGiis" of loitvlugar." she went on. _ _ “i dig; ai my handkerchief, tied a lump of sugar in a corner of it, and then put " in my hat. _ ‘___ . '"HGTounds ot Mocha eottee," she began. -- _ - L' >_;.7,) -.-rs "iioivUin you remeinber the quant- { iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiri") SENSE ABOUT FOOD. Faets Worth Knowing. hat Y' asked ED. 5. Mr. Taylor's troubles came from his kidneys. The diseased kidneys failed to strain the uric acid out of the blood and the results were as he has stated. Dodd's Kidney Pills put the kidneys in working order, the uric acid was strained out of the .blood, and the troubles went with It. . It, is to guard for the future against such procedures as these that the national council appeals to the "undivided spirit” of Poland ond looks forward to a "radiant marrow of reunion for our nation." The Poles need elbow room in two directions Should their aspira- tions be realized it will be possible for the patriots to erect. their long projected monument to 1foscius.Ao Gs,' I think I duty safely say that you are the favorite author of the teetile-minded ."' It ill Started But the German tyrant has also been at work. In 1986 40,009 Poles were expelled from Posen because they had not become Prussian citi- subjects, as a preliminary to means» urea for colonizing Polish districts with German settlers. In 1873 the Polish language was excluded trom the elementary, and later from the secondary schools of Prussia. In 1905 a decree forbade religious in- struction in Polish, and the Poles were compelled to pay for having their children taught the catechism in German; hence the famous in Warsaw and forever impossible for their children to be brutally flogqed for refusing to use German in Posen, Kate Douglas Wiggin's closest possession, she says, is a letter which she once received from the superintendent of a home for the feeble-minded. He spoke in glow- ing terms of the pleasure with whith the "immrtes" has read her little book, "Marm Lisa," and end- ed thus superbly: “Ip_fact, mad- People Hope tor More Liberal Treatment as Result of War. The movement for a. larger Pe. land takes new strength from the formation of a, national council at Warsaw, and from the stirring manifesto just issued in its name by the Polish lenders, Count Pyg- munt Wielpolski at their head. The Poles are now in the full tide of war, and with the exception of wane of their brethren in Galicia, have unreservedly thrown in their lot with the Allies. As a race they be- long to conflicting jurisdictions. There are 4,000,000 in Prussia alone. west and east; Austria also has her share. Geographically complex, the pro- blem of "unifying" Poland is also politically difficult, for at this mo- ment its solution waits on the out- come of the war and the goodwill of Russia. That its people are already unified by [suffering in common is plainly the conviction of the na- tional council. In hm territories they have felt the heavy hand of the oppressor. Of course, it is the Rus- sian tyrant of whom we have heard most. His ruthless suppression of insurrection are still served up in our historical text books, and the story of his attempts to extinguish the language and national "irit of Poland form a part of every liberal eduestion. Jones -- Sergeant, I think my daughter intends to elope to-night with young Bmith. Police sergeanb--Well1 Jones-Wet), just lock me up till morning, so t can’t possibly inter- fere with them. "My trouble started with a. cold," Mr. Taylor states, "and though I was treated by a. doctor I got no permanent relief. I had cramps in my muscles and stiffness in my joints, my sleep was broken and unrefreshing and I perspired freely with the least exertion. I had at- tacks of rheumatism and sciatica, and though I tried many medicines I found no relief till I tried Dodd's Kidney Pills. I must say they were a tarettbepefit to me.” "childypn'ss strike” in the diocese of Posen the following year. And by a law passed in 1908 the use of Po- huh was interdicted at all meetings in districts where the Poles formed less than sixty per cent of the popu- lation. WATFORD MAN FOUND RELIEF IN [man’s KIDNEY PILLS. Mr. Robt. Taylor. Sn, After Butter. ing for Two Years. Tells of the Benetitt, Ile Got From Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Watford, Ont., Feb. 8th (Special). --Mr. Robert Taylor, St, a very estimable man living here, is telling his friends that the pain in his back, from which he suffered for some time. has disappeared, and that he gives all the credit to Dodd's Kidngy Pills. NATIONAL SPIRIT IN POLAND. Ilnard's LII-Imam cum com. Eu From a Bad Cold Wine Pop. ISSUE 7-'15. Many Professors and Students Have Enlisted tor the War. Though tho military organize- tions of the Canadian Colleges were in a. much more rudimentary condi- tion than those of the British Uni- versities, a large contribution has already been made to the Army for the present war from their gradu- attr' and yndtrgrayluates. _ (llhe following is an account of what has been done by the Univer- sity of Toronto: According to our most recent in- formation there are, besides the members of the staff, 134 graduates and 86 undergraduates, and of these 137 are officers and 83 privates. The chief electrician and several of the laboratory assistants are alto on service, and their places are being kept for them. Professor de Champ and Messrs. Balbaud and Bibet of the Department of French in Uni- versity College have been serving with the French army since the be- ginning of the war. . _ . . On Fridav. January 22nd, 1,500 students with their officery were reviewed by His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught. He addressed them in part as follows: 'U wish to express to you my very great satis- faction with the splendid turn out you have given me this evening. When I looked at you and saw how you stood to attention and the ad- mirable way in which you marched past, I saw that your work since you were formed, a very few months ago, has been performed with a will, and I can honestly says that I have never seen better results than you have shown me to-day. What pleases me still more is the splendid example you young gentlemen are showing to the whole of Canada. You have come forward at a mo- meat when every man that is able to do anything to help the Empire in a time of stress is needed, and you have done so readily and in a most otheient manner. As an old soldier and as Governor-General of Canada, I wish to say that no par- ade that I have trseh-and I have seen many latei1r--hms given me more satisfaction than your parade this evening." _ _ Increase in, cost of other necesai- ties and luxuries, 22,000,000. Loss of shipping, £1,000,000. Decline in national income from invetstmruts, £2,000,000. Total loss per week, £16,000,000. We thus reach the conclusion, adds Mr. Hurd, that during the past four months of war the navy has been paying dividends to the nation at the rate of £16,000,000 per week, without taking into account the fact that it has spared us moral and in- tellectual damages which are in- calculable. Battle or no battle in the North Sea, the people of the United Kingdom, not to mention the peoples of the far-flung Domin- ions, have reason for satisfaction that during the years which pre- ceded war they turned a deaf ear to those who urged tlhat the expen- diture on the fleet should be re- duced. At present our information is quite incomplete, but we have the names of 53 graduates and 63 under- graduates who have been accepted tor the second contingent. _ Halifax, N.S., Dee. Ili-When inter- viewed at her home at 194 Argyle Bt., Mrs. Haverstock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case. "I was always ‘blue' and depressed. felt weak, languid and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick head- ache and feared a nervous breakdown. Upon my druggist's recommendation I used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. At the same time the women eta- dents of the University have din-awn their determination to be of service by occupying the hours from tour to six in the afternoon, when there is no instruction given in the Uni- versity, with naming and other work for the Red was Society. Increase in the cost of food by 50 per cent., raising the outlay per head of the population from 85. to 223. 'r_weelt, 29,000,ppp. - - A Nova Seotia Case 0f Interest to ill Women Saving Nation " Enormous Amount “of Home}. In the course of an trticle on "No Naval Battle-Whyt't which ap- pears in the Fortnightly Review, Mr. Arehibnld Hurd says that the German _fleet, which, during the past fifteen years cost 2300,000,000 to maintain,' has completely failed to fulfill any single one of the hopes on which it was based. Declaring that the British people would do well to be duly grateful for the blessings’which have been theirs owing to naval predominance during the past three months, Mr. Hurd says that in the absence of complete command of the sea the British people would have had to face the following weekltbilr, "I felt better at once. Every day I improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differ- ent physicians had failed to help me. It is fcr this reason that I strongly urge sufferers with stomach or digest. tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's Pill." Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the stomach, improve digestion, strength- en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood ot long-standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away wearlness, depression and disease. Good tor young or old, for men, for women, tor children. All dealers Bell Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. Decline G, wages'biu, about 22,- 000,000. Halifax Send. Out a Menage of Help to Many People. Ilnard'. Llnltnom Cum Dunlap". UNIT ERSl'l‘l' OF TORONTO. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO THE BRITISH NATE. W "_'-' l.v 5.»... '.. LsstLu.ru2ittuyaiIiiaih'iui' Such Troubles Now Quickly Rubbed Away by Powerful Remedy. If you have any muscles that are strained and weak, that are frequently subject to rheumatic pains; it you have any painful swellings that re- fuse to go away-get busy with Nets viline. This is the very sort of trou. ble that Nerviline is noted tor curing quickly. "t have proved Nerviline simply a wonder in reducing a. hard, painful swelling. It followed an in. Jury I received in my left leg and caused me great pain and discomfort. The muscles were strained and sore, and no other remedy gave the ease and comfort I got from rubbing on Nervgiine. There ls a soothing, pain- relieving power about Nerviiine that touched the root of my trouble. Ner- villne reduced the swelling, it destroy- ed the pain, it brought my limb back to perfect condition." The experience of Mr. Bowen, whose home is in Mid. dlesex. is not unusual. Thousands are proving every day that muscular pains ot every kind, chronic rheumatism. lumbsgo, neuralgia and sciatica will yield to Nerviline when nothing else can possibly cure. Net-viline is an old-time family pain remedy, used nearly forty years with great success. The large family size bottle costs 60e., trial sine Me. It all dealers. The Bedouin Live As In Old Testa- ment Times. The report that the Turks have induced the Bedouins to assist them in their invasion of Egypt calls If.- tention to these strange nomadic tribes in Eastern Palestine and Arabia, observes the London Globe. They are undoubtedly among the most picturesque races in the East, and although born fighters and cap- able of giving a good account of themselves, would be useless against a modern army with artil- lery. Their principal value to the Turks would be as an adjunct to their cavalry, or for making guer- rilla raids or attacking lines of oom- munications. Just as it is allowable with them to steal camels, so the young men help one another to steal wives from other tribes. The youth anxious to obtain a bride forms a. company of his companions, all mounted and well armed, while he also mounts on camels and horses ten women of his camp. They go secretly to the camp where the girl is, and while the young man and his companions wait with their rifles loaded and ready outside the tent, the wetter: go into the apartment of the haf m and bring the girl out by force. She is then taken to the tent of the young man, who makes a, feast and with this the marriage ceremony is complete. _ Their mode of life has not greatly changed since Biblical times, and to-day they steal cattle and camels, and their young men steal wives, as was their wont in Old Testament days. Indeed, the purloining of cattle and camels is considered law- ful among them, and the more a tribe or an individua,l can enrich in this manner the more their prowess comes to be recognized. A. These people, however, who live by thieving and move by stealth, are invamiably hospitality itself to the stranger within their gates. Yeus of experience in travelling through the more unsettled puts of Palestine, Syria, and the outskirts of Arabia, have made it very clear to me that the Bedouin can be trusted and the word of their shieks relied upgn. There are always three thinge up- permost in a BedouinU mind-his gun, his horse and his wives. The moat modern arms of precision have replaced the primitive spear, which, until a. few years ago. was the usual weapon. The Bedouin is quick to realize the efficieney of modern weapons tnd soon becomes an ex- pert marksman. So much has the spear fallen out of favor that the bearer of one. would be ridiculed in his own camp. A Painful Swelliugs Reduced Muscular Strains Ended Boby’s'Own Tablets m o ttood medicine for little ones. They ore guunnteed by I Government ans- lyst to be absolutely free train the opiates and narcotics found in so- cnlled "soothing" mixtures. They cannot possibly do harm-they al- ways do good. Onge a mother has given them to her little ones she will use no other medicine. Con- earning them Mrs. los. Desrosiers, St. Alphonse, Que., says: "Balry's Own Tablets saved my little one's life when he was suffering from Worms. and I would not be without them." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers " by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. h GUARANTEED MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES "Where is Tommy.?" asked Mr. Jones on his return from business one evening. "Gone to bed," was the wife'a reply. “I hope he's not ill l" "No, I sent him to bed as a punishment for swearing." “Swear- ins?” repeated Mr. Jones. "I'll teach him to swear.” Without wait- ing for a, light the angry father rushed upstairs to interview the culprit, only to fell over ' loose stair-rod and bump his chin. At once he became exceedingly fluent, and when the air had cleared he heard his wife call gently: "Better come down, dear; I'm sure Tommy has heard enough for his hmst lee- son. The only time some fellows look tor an opening h, when they carry a. corkrsoresw with them. mm. ”Mm! Gun. mar-mun A woman should never spank her dhildren with a dipper unless she puts her solo into it. A WARLIKE RACE. Beard Enough. Yes. tor the man that we." tight boots, but his coma are renewed quickly by Putnam'a Corn Extractor. No pain and certain cure. That's Putnam's. Use no other. 25c. at all dealers. m-Listen. My love for you is I consuming fever. The blood runs through my veins like molten lava from a. seething vdlctrno. Arc Hard Times Coming? ' She-Well yiist hold this thermo- meter in your mouth till I get your temperature. to prove it. - lea I“ a with W e! the III. sundae}- The British q Media" Journal thinks that the present standard of height in the British Army ll too high, and estimates that in the hat few week; more than thirty thous- and excellent soldiers have been lost to the nation because of it. In war time, short men are in many respects more desirable than their bigger brothers. They occupy less room in transport. they find cover more easily, and they offer a small- er mark to bullet) and shrapnel. They are better sheltered in trenches and do not have to dig them so deep to protect themselves. As the Journal says. “It takes less khaki’to clothe them and less leath- er to hoot them. The army blanket covers them more amplv. and they need less food than tall, thin men to keep up their body heat and main- tain their marching energy. Those 'who stand the rigors of cold clim- ates best are not always big men. and the sailor, like the mind-swept tree on the coast, may be short. 'Warmth and easy conditions of life rather tend to the development of . -a -- “How is it you were so long over your work to-dly t" she uked. "Sure, main," replied the ser- vant. "you were watching me most of the time." _ "You can always trust a piano marndacturer." "Why so r" “Because his products are both square 1nd upright." The hardships of msr--armored cruisers. "I consider MINARD'S LINIMENT the best LINIMENT in use. I Bot my foot badly jammed Imely. I bathed it well with MINARD'S LIN!- MENT and it was as well as ever next I Bot my I bathed it NEST and day. YOUR OWN DIUOGIS‘I‘ WILL TELL YOU Try [urine Eye Remedy for Bed, Weak, Weary Eyes and Granulated Eyelldu; No Sun-rung- ly',', Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the In y mlli‘ru. Murme Eye Remedy Co., Chicnzo. m, Didn't Forget M. "John, did you mail that letter I gave you two weeks ago!" "Yes, my dear. yesterday." The Nova Scotia "Lumber Klu‘ says: ----__-- powerful, but u to those who Bur- row in the trenches, how cu: it matter whether they are {our feet and nine inches or five feet and six inches? We are not out for a show and a parade, but to win a war of sieges and attrition." rnultl lCuu w ...- --" _ all men. The mull-yuan and u- tilleryman need to be his and powerful, but an to those who bur- -___re_ = “-- 6....m1n: how CM) it Din-urn Llnlmem euros Cunt In Com. Such thorough, scientific handling of Boiler Water pro- positions. results in the preven- tion of scale, corrosion. pitting and foaming. and consequently a great saving of money. Scientific “Treatment BOILER FEED WATERS Engineers Comprises knowledge of the water conditions, tusplieation of the correct reagents. careful supervision as to quantity Ind regulation of treatment. l Individual analysis ot water from your own boilers, by our chemist will be made tree ot churge if you are interested in ridding your boilers of scale. DEARIORN CHEMICAL co. OF CANADA, LIMiTED. amoral "has and Wain: 1220-1230 DUNDAS STREET, Toronto, Canada. snon‘r SOLDIERS- The Modern Way. Done Properly. Your: very truly. T. G. MCMULLEN, Their Kind. 3500 FOR A NAME THE 'tart. WA. were so long over Chemlm. "ta-ire ii - v-iuwy 'ul a (IRWIN h" u comm on i veruunk In“ t8Pgt,,Utitidii, Ciilli "a.“ 1el,rhtilii,'i'/i, Mro a r a I w an. name ,. who ML", can? Aut'. Bard u: addition" mm . Nu. rm will be liven nub rh- em J.e"tewtsto ‘oluplonc or member 'tl at 1. the hawk! new tum. - Can-4n. cum and I!“ Jl'ifll1"ei, by bln Pull!“ non-Us. tho tumou- Cnnumu Pr-H" Donut. At “It . unabl- “no tor it. mm on " To. an I. GAIN 'IIlEI at'grsa an . a . I... “I [or the but union ot the Hr?!"- fl:llirAe no... Hie 3 u . " Bor OI. " tor a turd - keTdr.'8llll. al..'" an "in lot-tho use but deter; 2eghtttt 3.322239 y.ritt bt MN be ' bp, $3.5“. I” IL! IMO' CT. BUSINESS IN THHH’\ Grocory for ...e with tcttrtr dwelling. wen ambushed. Rood 1... t' Doing food buulness whiott tun hr l, ly .Incxeqed.n 88.990‘ym hmum , "t1riCieaitVcC"" Yonge tit., T II._W. DAN“ - Column Sm...“ P2ttr In: to no! on BELL _ Pratt. “out. an“: or Dun hum. urn. . V_. Damn. Its-awn. a: 90 Cor LEA“ [LIBEI TRADE -- MM il ., can 0199103.»: " load wag”. 'rss wool- muln‘ to com‘pleu tour“ I." , [or M! unfold”! In abaloguv . 'ttr IohrABubor College. " Queen 3 ' %ieonto, a. W. DAWM. alum IL. Toronlu, At the (bedside of a patient, Watt a noted humorist fire (L _ were in consultation as to :‘w means to produce perspirar _ sick mun overheard the dimh and. after listening for a {w tt Men, he turned his head (mum trroup and whispered with " chuckle: “Just send in yum r gentleman; that will bring :1 once." wuwnnuu. BABPBI-Jmum Po , up“; 0105301119 tree. MW“. " Ta ENGINE New Wheeled " It " 'ttatom) Valve Complete operating condition. ttrwhee1, fume. belt, cylivtbvrs and nll puts. Can be sliotvn running at present lime, Will all at “a than half cost price. . FRANK WILSON a SONS " Adollld. " Wat. Toronto What Is Your Mirror's Story V...“ Cold Cream own} no animal or vegetable fats. h sterilized in the making and clt cater perfumed. “Vaccine” preparations are f, " a. It all Chemists and General Sto , AVOID SUESTITUTES. b, You can't have a beautitu complexion for the asking; COLD CREAM CHESEBROUGH MF'G co med regularly will remove Me 'l "utter, and make the skin smouv , den and loud. on "Vaseline" in original I...» we: bearing the name. CHrsv BROUGH MANUFAC'l'l' R ING CO., Consolidated. _ (W1 mo cumm- AVE., MONTREAL VaSeline [Maul beateefhe on request FOR SALE in: new wanna PARIS FOR SALE IONTIiAL NUIOEIV STOCK IIIOKLLIMIOU.‘ ', peRFUmiis, Mad. in C nude 1'1:ch mt zany KT'C., tt any! tone lug 6t ' bend For Free Book VA Costs. Proto Buildings F r Reduce You ill it: .. East Metallic l " an mun cm The CAM| “and 'IWUI “I“ TH! IUA " IT, u K

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