Ontario Community Newspapers

Listowel Standard, 7 Feb 1902, p. 3

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¢ - MARCONTS .. . ACHIEVEMENT. How Messages Are Sent Without Wires. ag e 'ere eee ee ee eS ee ee ee ee eS eee a When oeee. Marconi went to4tinued rapidly, until a Soran ae Newfoundland las cember' to test his newly roctested system of wire- less telegraphy, the only representa- tive of a newspaper or magazine to join. him was . Ray Stannard Baker. Mr after and acc to Nova Scotia, obtaining from him an authoritative story in regard to his se herbed te This is given to the public in the February number of McClure's Magazine, and in addition Mr. Baker gives a comprehensive and of one of the feats of modern " -wanderf ul In its bare outlines, explains Baker, "Marconi's system of tcleg- raphy consists of gating in motion, means of his transmitter, certain ectric waves which, passing throug the ether, are a distant wire suspended from a kite or "mast, and registered in his receiving p-4 paratus. The cther is a mysterious, unseen, colorless, odorless, incon- ceivably rarefied something which is It has be e to vibrate-in various ways. Etheric. vibrations of certain kinds give light; other kinds give heat other t 7o shown that if the ether vibrates et the in- conceivable swiftness of 400 billions of waves a second we see the olor red, if twice as fast we see violet, if mory slowly teriape : aan millions to the second, and we hove the Hertz waves used by Marconi in his wireless Ether waves should. not be "confound- ed with air waves. Sound is a re- sult of the vibration of the air; i we had ether and no air, we should still see light, feel heat, and have electrical phenomena, but no sounds would eyer come to our ears. Air is ether, and sound ether brings the flash of the "lightning before the *nir, brings the no thunder, as every one know ETHER eaves "Electricity is, indeed, only. other name for certain vibrations in ether. We say that clectricity. ' in a wire, but nothing = really except an etheric wave, for composing the wire, as air and the earth, and travel to the other. Throw a store into a quiet pond. Instantly waves are mu which spread o in every direction ; the water does not move, except up and down, yet the wave passes onward indefinitely. Electric waves cannot be seen, but electricians have learned how to in- cite them, to a certain extent how to control Pasco and have devised cun- register n ning. fast An gee mts. which Baoctrleal waves: have long been __harriessed_ by the use of wires for "sending communications ; in other words, we have had wire tclegraphy. But the:cther exists outside of the wire as well us within ; therefore, having the ether everywhere, it iust be possible to produce waves in it which will pass anywhere, as well through mountains as over sens, and if these n be controlled, they will serge convey as easily as the ether within wir dificulty lay ment which would produce a peculiar kind of wave, and in receiving and registering this wave i second apparatus located at a distance [rom the first A CRUDE BEGINNING. "Jt was, therefore, a practical me thanical problem which Marconi had tin of his ra lg estate in Italy, plly vised an apparatus which a current generated by a bat- tery and passing in brilliant sparks betwoen two brass balls was radiat-|; ad from a wire suspended on a tall But shutting off and turning pn this peculiar current by means of g device similar to the Ganiiey tele- grapher's key, the waves could be so divided as to represent dashes and dots spell out letters in Morse alphabet. This was the trans- mitte It was, indeed, simple en- ugh 'to start these waves travelling | hrough lly 80 to speak ; ore difficult to devise an apparatus receive and register them. For oved by a French- M. Hranley, called the coherer, the very crux of the system, without which there could be no wireless tele- graphy. This coherer, which he eatly improved, is mercly a little abe of glass as big aronnd as a oe pencil, and perhaps two inches ng. -It is plugged at each end with tween them is filled with finely-pow- dered fragments of nickel and silver, |yoyage. For every-morni each which po the strange property |ship, though JS will get of being alternately very good and /its bulletin of aews, the'ship's print- conductors of electrical ves. THE RECEIVING WIRE. The waves. which come from the transmitter, perhaps 2,000 miles way, are received on a suspended te-wire, exactly similar to the wire used in the transmitter, but they are so weak that they could not of themselves perate an Sigg pid = instrument. They ever ossess strength rough to draw the little particles of silver and nickel in the coherer together . a electricity, and a current from a bat- }2,000 near at hand rushes through, opeese the Morse instrument, and uses it to print a dot or a dash ; tice a little tapper, actuated by the the are po apart or decohered, becoming tl a poor conductor, and stopping the strong current the home battery. Another suspen there drawing the particles again to- gether, and another dot or dash is printed, All these processes are, con- ey -. Baker arrived upon the]tiono Mr. u 7 indecd, ¢/ 800,000 vibvitions. the | cy to iar the etheric |), but it was far | jp, Tjearth, as »| Why he should not send signals is. ticked out on the tape. * * * less telegraphy possible, the inven- hich he~has taken out 182 patents in every civilized country of e world. : CONTROLLING THE MESSAGES And now we come to the most portant part of Mr. Marconi's work, the part least known even to science, and the field of almost illimitable fu- ture development. This is the m of tuning, as the inventor calls it, the construction of a certain ro- ceiver so that it will Saree o the transmitter. hen coverics were first anieeee in 1896 there existed no method of tuning, ceouge the inventor had its necessity arly in mind Accordingly the Sabae inquired, '"'How sre you go- i p your messages secret -? Supposing a warship wishes to com- colori with another of the fleet, ut is to prevent the enemy from readiffg your message ? How are private business dispatches to be secured against publicity 4°' Here wus a problem. Without se- crecy no system of wireless tele- graphy could ever reach great com- mercial importance, or compete with cable communication. tells how this difficulty was overcome: " "The reflector system being, of im- pe °e is- truthful story told réporter of the : of oI a rdi| who have hysterical tendencies. A MOTHER'S WARNING. SPEAKS vet A - TROUBLE THAT AFFLICT: oan YOUNG Headaches, Dizziness, Heart Pal- Eallor nm, Fickle "Appetite and allor the Early Symptoms of a pad 'gee Orangeville, Ont. Hard study at school, coupled with e@ lack of attention which every young girl merging into womanhood shotld have, is responsible not only for the many palo faces and attenuat- cd forms .met with such lamentable soanency, but is responsible also for Many valuable young First there is an occasional headache, and a sallowness of com- plexion, from which stages, if these early ms are neglected, the condition gradually grows worse and worse until decline op consumption ®& | sets in and death oe another vic- tim 'of enti neglec Upon noth- ers especially ponte a t re- sponsibility as their daughters ap- proach womanhood. The following Sun O. Herm of Thi Avenue, Otangeriiie, seri a lesson to our mothers, Mrs. Herman said: 4 Mes" fifteen months ago my daugh- er, Kate, while attending the public jc studied hard. We noticcd that she began to complain of headaches. This was followed by a listlessness und an utter indifference to the things that usually interest young girls. We consulted a doctor, and she took bot- tle after bottle 6f medicine, but with no benefit. Often she would rise in the morning after an almost sileep- less night, her limbs all a --_ and her head recling. She wo at- tacked with spells of 2 hae and on the least exertion her a would Palpitate violently, we wero really afraid she would not recover. course, impracticable for long-dis- tance work, Mr, Marconi experiment- | ed with tuning. He so constructed a receiver that it responds only to a certain transmitter. That is, if the transmitter is radiating only 800,- 000 vibrations a second the corres-| ponding receiver' will take same way « familiar will respond to another tuning fork havingg ¢xactly the same number att vibrations per second. And Marconi has now succeeded in eines ing this tuning system to some de- gree of perfection, though very much | © work yet remains to be done instance, in one of his English east periments, at Poole, in England, he| had two-receivers connected with | the same wire, and tuned to different | 2 transmitters located at St. Cather-! inie's Point. Two messages were gen nt | one _ in English and one in French, | without the least interference. And) so when critics suggested that 'the! inventor may have been deceived at} a} St. John's by messages transmitted | © from ocean liners, he was able aot respond promptly : 'Impossible. instrument was tuned to receive 'only | from my station in Cornwall.' " ja POSSIBILITIES OF THE SYSTEM. ! Wireless telegraphy has infinite pos- | sibilities B Says : "The | importance of the new system of tun- ing can hardly be overestimated. By | it all the ships of a fleet can be pro- vided with instruments tuned alike, so that they may communicate freely with pond another, and have no fear | great chango for the better. ene wan-| Fey ae and efpannget be us At this stage my husband suggested that we should try Dr, Williams' Pink Piils, and ha brought home sev- eral boxes. Kate had only taken tho Pills a few weeks when there was a color, and from hao wees it was not long until she was ain. enjoying the best of health Bee able to resume her studies at s ' might also tell you [that chek pills 'cured my daughter = Mma of an attack Of rheumatism, 5 that you sec we-have much ronson 'to Praise them,' and I earnestly re- commend them to all mothers whose a may be suffering as mine dr, Williams' | diseases that hav na po | blood or shattered nerves. It is be- cause they make rich red blood and strengthen the nerves with ae dose that they cure such troubles aemia, in its "naxty stages, , St. Vitus* nee, rheumatism, partial paralysis, (Fouble, indigestion, ete. Pink Pills cure all suc ii inedicines are discontinued tho trouble retyrns often in an aggravat- ed form. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills on the contrary go direct to the root of the full name, "'Dr. W Jiams' Pink Pills for Pale People,"' is found on the wrapper of every box vi enemy" ailed, sages. "The spy of the future must! post paid, at 50 cerits no adh or six be an electrical expert who can slip! hoxes for .50, by addressing the in somehow and steal tho secret __of Dr, Williams' @fedicine Co,, Brock- the enemy's tunes. Great telegraph] vilie, Ont. " companies will cach have its own r 7 tuned instruments, to receive only its own messages, and there may be HEALTH VALUE OF SCENTS. special tunes for each of the = im portant governments operated very cheaply), the time wil come when the great and business houses, or even families and friends, will each have its own wire less system, with its own seeret tune. Having variations of millions of different vibrations there will be no Inck of tunes. For instance, the British navy may be tuned to" re ceive only brations navy 1,500,000, the United States Government 1,900,000, and so on in definitely.' 'COMPARATIVELY INEXPENSIVE. Murconi informed Mr. Baker that be would be able to build and equip slutions on both sides of the Atlan- tic for less than $150,000, the sub- sequent charge for maintenance be- suiatll. A cable across the A costs between §3,000,000 and $4, gp: sol and it is a constant source of e nditure for repairs. It is estimated that about $400,000,000 is invested in cable systems in var- ious pesca of the world. If Marconi hopes to succeed, the vast network of wires at ¢ bottom of the world's oceans, represented by this investment, will se its usefulness. It is now the mrentor's purpose to push the work of installation between the contin- ents as rapidly as possible, and no one nee¢ surprised if the year 102 sees his system in practical commercial operation. Along with this trans-Atlantic work he intends to extend his system of transmission between ships at sea and on fand, with a view to enabling the shore stations tosmaintain constant communication with vessels ali Way across the Atlantic. ceeds in doing this, there will one of the aiwantsane of an ocean friends gwaiting the ,delayed voyag- er.' Mr. Marconi's faith in his inven- tion is boundless. He told his = in- terviewer that one of the projects which he hoped soon to attempt was to communicate betwee England and New Zealand. If the electric waves follow the curvature of the the Newfoundland experi-|@ ments indicate, he sees no reason 000 or 10,000 miles as easily --_-- >? , RAISING A SEA, The Czar has just sanctioned a re markable .enginecrin; project--the raising of the surface of the water of the Sea f 14 feet 8 inches, by building a dam near Kertch nine miles long. In the wall immense sea- gates are made for passage of ships. There will also be outlets for the The cost superfine will be about $25,000 e| thickly smeared with 6,-| Bris. as water. ,000, the inter- | way Ideas of the eo" to Which Science is Again Turning. Science at present shows a tcenden- ey to turn ck to some of the be- liefs of the ancients regarding scents Scen rous herbs, otably vervain, | warded off the evil eye. The Mosaic' ritual is full of hyssop, nard---and+ frankincense. Greece set cinnamon . to its elysium, and surrounded t a scented river a hundre cubits broad, souls sWain through and thereby purged - them- selves of earthly grossn Pliny records eighty-five remedies derived from the odorous rue, forty- one whose basc was mint, thirty-two balms from roses, twenty-one from lilies, bulb and bloom, and seven- teen medicaments strong in the vir- tue of violets. Thus it appears that the violet pre for cancer is among the very 'new things that surface science scorned because they were 50 very old say various experts, one must choose and use perfumes with | an eye, or rather, a nose to health. So it is worth while to set down the | properties attributed to various per- mes. Pure violet essence is said to be; especially suitable to nervous people. | But it must be obtained from the | flowers themselves, not the chemical imitations. Chemically derived per- fumes are irritant, poisonous even, to persons of especially sensitive con- stitution. TRUE FLOWER SCENTS. are' obtained in three ways: First by | spreading fresh blossoms upon glass grease, letting them stand in the sun, and as th wilt, replacing them until the grease is as fragrant as the flowers; second, by repeatedly infusing fresh petals in oil; and third, by infusing them in cther, which is then distilled to a dry solid. As this solid sells for $250-an ounce, it is easy to understand why But the scented grease and the essen- ces made by stecping it in pure spir- it are never cheap. scent possible has abstracted the grease it is still fragrant enough = make the very finest per- fumed s All the a --s rare re- stimulat- ing, if properly prepared. To make a lasting perfume some animal base is essential--musk, civet or ambar scents, ) If the base is too strong it makes the flower scent curiously irritant. People who feel themselves faint in crowded room, are often the er, no matter how strong, while, deadens the olfactory nerves, whereas a combination keeps them active Hay fever, eo it 1s believed by some, arises m the irritant pro- pertics of fine Saeoue pallee on weed fields, is in est on which will be paid by 'hips trading to the porta affected, particles in gen enough of acrid cnough to set ar is After all the | & Ceylon Tea Is the finest Tea the world produces, and Is sold only in4ead packets. Black, Mixed and Green. 'apan tea drinkers try "Salada" Green tea, lent ills. None the less, they have their effect. Witness the refreshment of lavender Bybee! When one is faint from heat o eraments stimulating. Jasmine. should. always be used pure. Alone it tones and braces the whole system, but in almost all of ts compounds is singularly depres- sing. Neroli is the exception. Jus- mine and Neroli together in faint es- sence make the scent of scents for all --_--+ SPREADING..CONSUMPTION, How Does the Inhalatidn of the Bagilli Take Place ? A consumptive individual, even at a period = he is pot confined to his bed, ate enormous 'Now if this ex- come pulverized, the least draught or motion in the air may cause it mingle with the dust, and the in- dividual breathing this dust-Inden atmosphere js certainly exposed the danger df becoming tuberculous, if his system -offers a fa g' "favorable soil for the growth the bacilli'? must be understood any tem: condition in i ae the body is a porarily or nily enfeebled. Such a comeltion thay ted from paremte, or aequired ' meen ikebuet.: privé< tion or diseas Besides carclessly deposited rt cg or spit- tle, the inhalation of the ticles of saliva which m ~ be = ex- pelled by the consumptive during his so-called dry cough, or when speaking. quickly or loudly, or when sneezing, mu igo be considered as those who come jalmost invisible drops of saliva may jcontain tubercle bacilli. Recent ex- periments n this direction -have a gen the possibility of infection by this sas THIB CARE OF LITTLE ONES. Some Sound Advice as to Best ened of ------s digesti lothing is more common to child mood than indigestion. Nothing is --" }-|ammore dangerous to proper growth, more weakening to the constitution, or al ie to Pk. the hu Me to tome by 'which Waigestion in in infante ng readily petite, nau- sea, a coated tongue, bud breath, ccoug Bull disturbed sleep. Indigestion may be ensily cured, and M ¥F. K. Begbie, Lind- pay, Ont., oulnts out how this may best roll one. She says : "When my baby was three months old she had indigestion very badly. She would voit her foo what I gave her. After feeding she semned to suffer ter- ribly and would scream with pain. he seemed always hungry, but her If ood did her no good and she kept {thin and delicate. She was very sicepicas and suilered also from con- Fer gaat We i } these troubles and got a box. After giving them _ her she began to improve in two days, and in a weck's time H considered her well. She could sloep well, the vomiting ceused, her bowels n to & fat, healthy baby, and I think the credit is due to Baby's Own Tablets and I would not now be without them in the house.' Baby's Own Tabkts is the medicine sold under an absolute panto that it contains neither nor other harmful drugs. These t tablets are a certain cure for jall the minor ailments = childhood, such as sour stomach, indigestion, see merge simple fever, diarrhoea, [They break up colds, jand allay the irritation accompany- j | 'cents a box at all druggists, o ville, Ont a YOUR HANDWRITING. It ts ai faet that ped hand- writing of and _ very much alike, although the father has not taught the son. Han ir gy to Darwin, and uch as dinpesivion and 'other Gubenastiites, The theory is tpat rtain ligaments are inherited, and father La quite different. rou- ote almost exactly like his ham grandfather, who died before Broug- ham am's birth; and Lord Palmerston's *'fist"* strongly resembied his fa- ther's. We have seen a collection of handwritings and signatures in sup- port of this contention, and the re- semblances are very striking. The characteristic is more marked in wo- Daddy," asked Mttle Jack, 'where does a --_ Lau n when he wants to wag his tai Two ounces of impure sap. Ask for the and a trial sample of Se > Bar. --- I the danger arising from mall par-|T | compel led i nly ling as TRY IT YOURSELF. - A vtry curious fact ge the impessi- bility of moving ~your amining the reflection ore that orgin i mirror. It is really ™mov- able part of the face;. yet, if you ofaninch. Of course, if you look at the reflection of the nose, or at an other strange thing is that the moment you endeavor to perceive the motion the eye is fixed. This is one of the imse! iferent from what it is when secn " * THE TURPEN THE PITIFUL EXPERIMENTS OF A YOUNG MAN TO CURE HIMSELF OF ZERUMAT: Liniments, Oils, and pb beri) Failed to Relieve His Suffe --He Used Dodd's Kidney Pi And They Cured Him. Boissevain, Man., Jan. 27.--(Spe- cial)--Five years ago, Mr. C. S. Hol- den, of this place, then quite a young man and a farmer's son, became cripple with Rheumatism. His own'account of his experience is very interesting. He says : "For about a year anda half I had a dull pain' in my riglit shoul- der. in cold d have to take my left hand and hold my right shoulder to turn over. The ain was nearly unbearable. Words cannot express it. I often said if I had to endure such pain all my life I would rather have no arm. "I was almost a cripple and could help complaining very bitterly. i tell me every other liniment and oil I could hear of or get, 'but all to no pur- me I_was growing very downhearted as it looked us if to = anything to cure my ecooen Pp ned that. oe ha some of Dodd's 'Kidney Pile tn the hotse--we always m--ind having tried overything father suggested that I comm ree dose woine better, and I i on int In a fow duys the pain was all go "This iv five yoor:s ago, and T have not had the slightoxt pain or ache gince,"' + HIS SECOND COMMISSION. had been by adverse circumstances w up the commission he held o crack aa and to enlist as a private soldie " We found it dimeult, however to forget his former pe c apd ee nage in u ng ee, nece duty wi ory 'opade, "to which he strongly chien he sei /monstrated. "But, sergoant," he drawled, "er-- you--er forest I've held His "Majesty" s commission d--"' a sergeant cut him short. now, young 'un, you've got to hold His Majesty's shovel."* - --j----_ CALIFORNIA - sions. EXOUR- Every d Unton Duss. & "Normale "Thre runs through first-class Pa: tourist slecping cars to aote i Oal- ifornia and Oregon daily. Personally conducted-excursions from to San Francisco, Los Angeles and Portland, leaving Chicago on Tues- days and Thursdays. Shortest time on the road. scenery. Inquire of your nearest ticket agent, or write B. ets, 2 King strect east, Toronto, Ont. _--_-- ro AN EMBARRASSING HONOR. The obsequiousness of those who hope to advance themselves by bein a polite to th superiors n office sometimes assumes an amus- aspec fe A certain head of a government department was invited, says a daily r, to dine with others at a table with a cabinet minister. Dur- ing the dinner the former, who hap- pened to be pluced between a door and a window, and had said nothing at all, began to sneeze. you taking cold, Resa Brown?' cv pleasu ~ vary Fam respectfully. Vin' Llniment Cures LaGrippe n London 900,000 persons are living more than two in a room, an 26,000 six or more in a room. 7 wari athe Jasnse Bite Secu: cure, me Pay- ore ate fin the Great The material - used a Wall of China would build 160 such 1 | structures asthe » year of Cheops. ipard's Lictment the Best 1 Holt Restoret WHY HE NEVER TIRED, d taken pains, when he ap- plied tor work, to assure the farmer that he never got tired. en his new employer went to the*field where he had p the man at work, he ~~ A og 'otling on his 'back under this mean ?°' asked the "I thought you were a man who never got tired ?'" * Wha td jarmer 'One ounce of:Sunlight Soap'is worth more'than xnciraD, rerenta, mat "ondag he his yp don't, said the hired man, is doesn't tire me." REDUCES EXPENSE eae address, t you mead = cost. 4 TINE WOULDN'T WORK, rs Uoes bet rae ipale hve yt te sane, ot ONSO0 that certetely will please thas fs #, axe : N ates r The Frost. >. P. AGENTS Wé Ee To Sell Frost Wire Gente. cross wires aré im place by the FROST Loan. it _aever weakens or . re Fence Loek>r? THE ;FRost Wins FRNCE C0.. Lsarre * T, , Weite for Catalog. WELLAND, O1 thy ae | saa Lemons, Fresh Fish 'ish of All Kindg . THE DAWSON Y_ COMMISSION co. "Limited, TORONTA Shipments of Butter, Egge, Pouttry, Honey, Beane, Appice, Potatoes, Selicited 'PREPARIN G CARRIAGES. nplaneis Vehicles to Figure in ronation Pageant. The sonoaatiin Pageant in London will bring out such a display of gold in the way of state generation. t carriages are now being pre- pared for the King at the carriage works in Chandos street, and a large ainount of gilding, royal and noble arms and mottoes, rows of bullion, searlet; cloth and rich blue and fabrics of varied and beautiful shades are being applied. superb carving on the King's state landau, which has just been re- novated, is thoroughly English. Two semi-state landaus are being prepar- ed for King Edward and two. dress carriages for the Prince of Wales. The pancls of the Prince of Wales' and the pendant of jewel, as w as the prince's own motto,*'Ich Dien." bay of the 'Prince of Wales' feath s," and on the right the addition commanded by his majesty in coun- cil, namely, the badge of Wales -------- ee Monkey Brand Soap will clean a house from ccllar to raof, but won't wash --_--_4+>--_--_ . London's gest traflic numbers a year. If Londoners 9 as much as Paris fans, the steamboat traffic would be 44 ? * For Over Sixty Years = has ee tom "Mus Wiasraneoenine knee furs ad The vine will not grow a at a a great- er height than 2,300 feet above the sea, nor the oak above 3,350 feet. The fir, however, Gourishes up to nearly 7,000 feet. TO CURE A COLP IN ON Take Laxative Pane Quinine mbt: Au 4 refund the money if it tocare. | E,W. Grove's signatare is on Om each In England hare is one clergyman to every 610 peopke, in the United States one to 630. Spain holds the record With ono to every 400 inkab- itants. Mnard's Llotment for Rheumatism Of English people 450 in cach mi lion are convicted nd balgery in . ph deeb n Ireland, howev ie falls to 216. In Ttaly it is 1 '010. ---- } EMPIRE STATE .PXPRESS--FAM- ous 'S FAST TRAIN. This magnificent train, one of the fastest trains in the world, runs daily except Sunday from New York to Buffalo, a distance of 440 miles in the fast time of eight houss and fifteen minutes. The time occupied from Buffalo to and as it the ad be admitted. The New yore Central has a dozen fine express 8 tween Bufialo and New York daily. 1t is the High class pig-iron contains 934 pounds of iron o the 100Ib., the rest being carbon, silicon, phosphor- a sulphur, and manganese Mlnard's Linlment Is the Best The island of Jamaica has. three districts. The northernmost is Corn- wall. Next comes Middlesex, and then Surrey. ; Deafness Cannot oe Cured th ot reach the nym eprntos eer aes intog of the mucous elining 0 pe freo. FJ. aera g00. tastes pores: Halls y one the best, a ey "You speak,'t said. the fond moth- er, 'about people having strength of anybody 1 ever knew,"" EPPS'S|i=: CO A BREAKFAST--SUPPER. ~ On the left panel is the familiar de- |]. if once presented to almost immediately began to whim- er, and whose cyes were go full ef tears that the matter. her broke were so tall and so handsome ONE ON KIPLING. Rudyard Kipling says that he w a young lady w he felt compelled to ash ill or if anything w Looking at him "a bs the disappointed mai out : "Oh, I ee , vow she were Messrs. ©. 0. RICharas & Co. tl cat benefit from the use of ARD'S NIME in evere tack of LaGrippe, and I have fre quently proved it to be very effective in cases of -- W. A. WUTCHINGON, hi from school with "De Johnny returns 8 exercise book all blotted. dear, you naughty boy !"' exclai his your new book,"' th "You've quite 58 Johnny (equal mamma. me i and it bled on my copy-book.* wero inn4 |tente * Sults Cle Cleaned Lowest pri erelitastratsons, ws wail WHALEY BO BOYOE ; & 00, Limite, seiataton -- "Guearsatips ae oer oe Ce peak fae ds Brass Band EVERY "TOWN "AW HAVE At A joes over ee Write ustorang Besten to Liver. OOPS PHOTOLENGPAVING LT VONESEAGLC ho HNN Sbaetbo POMONA GYSTEMATIC. \AVING Gare Saving = a Te eats es eb ee ee eT *) ; TH CAMADA PERMANENT ; and WESTERN CANADA ; MORTCACE CORPORATION Toronto Street, TORONTO. 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