ORILLIA.-The Local Improvement Committee of the Board not '1`ra,de will meet . nbk-t .W00k. "V `W complete arrangements ,tor. laying. out a model `block. in .oonJu.potxon. with the Town Council. Residents who may desire the block on which they live to the one improved are invited to decide what they erev ready to do` on their `part. Pro- vided itis oentra.l,a.n-d. otherwise suitable, the work will ,be,done. on the `block where the residents". ~ `pro- Ilgxlsi tthe heartiest `eo-operal';1on- -T 110 8 . . _ ' The dmtes -tor the fair at Orillia. this year have been fixed tor_Mon- udy. Tuesday/an-d W9dJn93&_a{o 339`?-f 18th.. 19th and 20th. owms 0 9013' Dlaints as to the disadvantages!!! having the last day on Satuzgday H10 first three d s otethe week haw neon olnosen 1 stand. Arrangemlellt are `being made. to `rent J.a_r,ge t'0_nt8 160 take the place of the meal fb.I1l1d_ gag. and the fair will` hem; er and oetter than ever.-News-Let etc. a" COLDWATER.-On .'1`ues;.1a_y.: st. Goldwater, before Magi`otrates..rMam- Ailing. Brown `and `Kitchen. W-ill!-`a_m'.`j 1- ` . - - Lover-:~ `ES1!:a.rgte(1!;avi'"ll1`;?1%Ik,`8i`1!C..\`9"@AAI'4 3 -IIIYIHS 0.W!.y` tH!`69'- mi ". .i F".+`. Z; 2-.I.; ;?.?3e `.?59E'a1a{ :::.~a;'e: uw prupurty or Luuuu uzfvuaeg, `"19 0X. the pro arty ,0! . ,1! `"`c`t '"`a V &`:" W `$1 fa o . o ., 0,, rougcu -. Mr. R. D.Tgwnh?rI1{`. 0110!`; iii ;. g Foaased-on the *1 .j ` Kw -`neg lara2"-Q9. ` =...P.`- :'T-G1J:_igi GMJNTY SUMM ABY. ls Royal Household Really theest Flour? of women who do own l_n_o_\: it is be. by _e_:_sl_g--they don't about the re,aT8o.ns'-but` those who have not tried it may to|:nowv_v`_l'_:!itistheBe:t. or "Sm any maker of our-;-with the sain expe,rience--the same facilities for the beitwheat ~ --the same tremendous plant equipriuqnt for and the same process for El ' ricati our couldimalse; as out as ROYAL HUSE-. JBut* ho other an; maker in Canada ha : all these and facilities. thetefore {to flour equal ROYAL HOq_SHO_Ll_3_ is made in country. _ HOLID-=%_3f`he had :he for pur ROYAL HOUSE!-lOLDs ch; besTTn3u: and my it is the cheapest out for you to use. ' at I119 01!! Stall. .|lLl.'o l.lLI.lu yLupuu- es `rushing the erection otthe .- ro-p posed new sheds. so as `to have =1; em ready for the gall business. The vtemnorary build-rags. are about one: hundred mad twenty feet long and fifty test in widthq-Bulletin. ` .A splendid portrait. in water col- -ors. o_the late W. 3. Hamilton. was hung M in the Council Chamber last ` week. about completing the group of `ex-Maysors of the town. The portrait- was a gift to the. town. from a son.- Mr. W. A. Hamilton. postmaster. The late W. B. Hamilton was `the -Iirst "linmvnood. having been elected to the latter position on February 2nd. Reeve and the first Mayor of Ool-A 1858. He was born in ohariestownj in '1812: came to Canada in Em .. 182%. settled in 0ollinwood 1854`.4a.n-d 28thu V ' died October . -' Alexander Mulholland had .a nar- row escape from death at the Oh-arl-g ton vsawmill on Saturday m-ormng- l 't 5 be` ht `b 'r?vIolv!"'iz1g ieglft.alulhoand was a swiftly`: putt-irnlg `the cap on `the: oil-lbenar-ing` at `the shat, which was `revolving six hundred revolutions to the-mm- ',,ute. ~whent a.-zvpvojectin set screw .An|cIlI`\" IA alansrn in '"'?VVV7VVVVVVVVYYVY Y Y V v v v - BEE'l`0N.-Work is proceeding briskly in ciomnecition with the non- struction of the new. C.P.R. .line at and -near Tot-tenham. The Johnston firm has the contract for building ten miles of the road. five iniles north and tivegniles south of Tat- tenharn; The railway station. it has been decided, will be situated on Mr. John Lyons` farm. just east of the. village. and three -large switches. as well as the main line. will use put in at once. Large droves of horses and i mules, with w ons and m-em._ias well as several caroads of mac-hinepy. have arrived. and the work is now in i full swing. Two steam shovels are in i oiieration. one a short distance` east r 0 8oa.nlan`s Corners. on the titthi line. and the other. at the.` Black: Hors_e.-World. A A ' j has tempioraryvsheds erected on its; wharf and is again doing business: at the old stands. Mr. Tiffin` propos-{ .. ......i.:.m I-hn= n-mntinin n!` the voro-: all l.IIJ'llI-IIVBVI Lvrvavnunvu-- '7 nte. when set screw. caught `the sleeve of in mock. `His f-oreamn} was simpl ground out from the wrnst to the e w. but `orally one. home was broken. He was `bmxse_d on `the chest and shoulders. The -qmokly I revolving machinery then threw him } .. n...+ i-ha shaft name into contact: ed 'D1`ll.l80(1., W `[115 uluu guru olyothing gave way and he wag` strip- ped` :f_mm~ the waist and' throw~n a!`o`on`t titteen feet. - Vulhol`la1_xd_ A --is -now doin%_well `git the-`hos i_to.-lAa!Iid. althpugh _`_V _:s_ WOII.!I`t_1;8'_&'i'_0' 'ribua.;'he has; wuthi -a31d~.st.r6.n. n idn. h.i3.:i0.? ' *~ I 1'0-9 revolving maaonmery wen T.ul.'uw uuu. =30 that the shaft came into ooutao withhis bank w.hi`o`h was badly `burn- e9...e::d. s.>:`.*.i.=.*..`,:.=., :d*L?~$:a*:t,?3 Fortunes "T Won on ~ Derby ` Each year Vthere are more for- tunes won and lost on the Derby. than on any other race in the world: and the motney that annually changes hands over that great class- i~o `event has '.)ee:n.estimated at up- wards of three million pounds. a _ For enormous individual wins the truly sensational Derfoy of 1_867. un- doubted-ly holds the record. on this Henry Chaplin was reported to have` won as much asone hundred and titty th.|0\IS3.`!1d pounds by the ex- traordinary victory of his much-jeer' 'ed-at_oo1't, Hermit: and of theftew. other persons who backed this tank. outsider. there were five who were said Inc `have made~. as much as twenty-five thous-andundsa each. Nor can these `huge winnings `be at all wondered at when it is1'remem- bered =thia.t_ the lions odds of 66 to 1 against this =horse- were `freely given. and. indeed. in most cases of- ` tered in vain. r Bur; in addition to -the instances a.`l- i ready quoted there were some very;-; highly sensaitiional wins. It is on re- cord that a,"sporti:ng purveyor of meat in one `'0! Ilt-he northern su- burbs of -London, made "more out of A h.ors_e;le-sh `that day` than me. did. in all his lite out-. of heel. J:He must ahaze `backed Hermit with all `_t-h_e_`mo- may` he who w1o[r'h` tn` could `raise; gor he netted, the ecnormom-3, sum qt one hundred 'th`ouso.nid` pounds by the animal's victory. ., ' - "`UlUl'l'UWUu .|.I.In.u. `nu: VJAfQxlgvJ ...- .. -....__ box a. round sum of one hundred `pounds to speculate on the races. In this way he made `her himself `little [Shl01"t of `seven tho.ulsandjpou.nds. and ' was alble -to replace the borrowed" money foe-fare its abstraction could be detected. Like an others a ma put their money on Hermit. fortmme [ favored him as it does only uncle ` in a lifetime. c Pretty much the same itlhing `hap- pened in the 1898 Dewy. when was the money won .wchit into `the poo- kets of a mere handful of people. It was what may. Foe called a bookmak- e_rs - race. for Jeddah was beyond `question theprankesti outsider that- ever vwonjhe Daliby. According to_u_ London-_ sporting _ journal. one Ibook- ', _m aker cleared a.e_ort'nne. of upwards- -_o:. tigt_y~th'ousa.{:`;d _po\tn`ds. by; this, .qui,t`e 7},-.!19!pec:t9`di`.~;result. e ` i 1. . ........-. - .-~..a;e. . .uyilI1'. i-nnu|lrnl'n'n1'_" uLVuc vv Al vv 1-: voovrv w- \ guyumsorupulous solic-itoz- s olerkuwho ..n _,,., -__--.III .I_\A._. 1.-.:n ovv|r\`l\!1nI h` 8..Il.AulnB01"upu1vuo auuv-u.u.. .; ...--....-.....-~ borrowed trbm `his employer's oaph -... - L .. -ula-nob` AW:|u_ Iggg.1ns',.. qypwggg. whow w induced. qfllljt 2/" unoxpeu-Luu ruuuu. ` As "some readers will remember, 3 thegodds wvetrojno less than one hun- one. . theA tartunatg Anggher nqtable was then: on! ,-__I... -I4_I_ -Ln THE; NORTHERN J%AnvA`NcE _ di-e{1 pou1d"'t:c$te7?';_i:i; fJeddah found __fcio. hZs'astdi1ishine'nt at` the conclus- `A `9ai`6`~the*'-race t.hat'whe .had~~mIag1e :1 a cool ten tQgsagq__g9gn_ds_ by_ __hj.s_ I .u.4.}..;.\...'.:""- I The -' ;,`j?_Lag_vre,'easI _aurp_z-lag. .,`awa_ited'~a'~-Ia`ondon;:, publicnawhq. 9.1- , 'w._aya endeavo1;s..t'o~have `fifty pomidl ;o'n the.DerbyL But this ;o: oa.sioIu 3 by backing. the Iquttsider, he (was {able to more than make good all ghis previiotus ldsiels fa;v0trLL'te..fo1", `he won the sufost-a.ntia1 sum qf fivn `thousand pounds. `- x . Fnom Muooume. Australia. it was} reported that 3; nvork.-i:ngsm'a.rn bian- won a. not inconsiderablg tfor-tru."m_,d. a. over the same memorable Derby. ;Ha bald taken ashare in DE the many sweep-s that are pndimdted 2-.4-I....L _._.1 .._.A....,-Ll_-.. A--..L_..I!-_. In.-er gui;ne!a- sweep. organized amongst the miemlbiets at a :wel.l.- lmnwn London club. the vtdt-a:l_ sub- hcr-ipti:om.s amounted to bone Ithous-A and i..w.o hutndreod -pounds. of wv hiu_h the `wluoky drawer of Jeddah took as his share the suibataxntial prize .,of- hundred ' . . It \wqa;s some .th`irte(e'n: wqams: ago that Sir Hugo managed to snatch -the blue 1'ib`b|0ln `at the turf from L6. Fleche by `the distance of aheade c. mere matter of inches. .Yet `those. `few inches meant [1290 '.a despermtef backer. the sporting sun of a-MEa.n~ cheater manu!~acrt'urer, the difference b-elt_wee.n `the loss qf `two hundred and - -.-uqU ---J - rr'i`I')"t-11.`:--drdin.ary re`.aderit' may.` {be sne.w.s that John Gully. perhaps thqk most famous prize-Jfighter this coun- try ever produced. made at least `hailf-ua-dozen fortunes out of the great Epsom event. Moreover, b` _-.. ._A .3 LL- _____ LL--- __--,I_-;.._ inthat and everyother Australian town. with the result ;'that Jeddah fell to him with the premier prize `of four thousand pounds. ' Eor it will |be'rem!el_mbered that Sir I-Iug1o s `chances of getting first past the winning post were consider- ed` so small that -the odds were 40' to`1 against. at which figure `our? I4amoa=shire friend was persuaded to; back this outsider. Fortunately for? him. though somewhat to his aston- ? ish-ment. Sir Hugo did contrive to win, thus replenishing his s.p.dly_ de- w plated exohequer. and enabling him to put away three or_ four thousand pounds as a sure provision for the pndvefoial rainy day. fl\_ LL- _-_x-_-.___ _,.-.1___ -L',,,- ,n,_ was nine of the ordy three racehorsq owners who have _ver succeeded in winning the Derby three times over ssinice the ~imat1i.'t.u'tibln of the race. < -----.---._-.'m-- '_ --- _--v- It is generally. believed that he made more money out" of it than'a'ny other sportsman of his own or any other day. On the -ocoasiovn `of his third win with Arndover. in the your 1854. he was said to have .won. in wagers nearly three hundred thou- sand pounds. `but of that sum he was able to obtain `payment of only " afaorwt ninety thousand pounds. - ,..,.... -vy-- w--- -v-... v(- v..- _.._-_._v-- ..P-.-_ the winning .af_ esgihxt athousapd .. -.___. J- 0n_.the Der.o_v `mp-net Ibis total-wi:n- him-gs cannon`. have been much less1 than five hundredTth;ousan-d pound` and` he died worth upwards of two; million pounds, `pr.a-ctialiy all ofi which he made out of horses and: horse racing. unv- When Gladiator, some forty years ago, drove the French backers of this a.nimal'fra.ntic with delight by winning the blue ribbon of the Eng- lish turf. some of them won very sulbstantial fortunes, and could. therefore. afford to crow, particul-at-` ly as this was -the first occasion on which a French horse ever succeeded in-. winning the Derfoy; The only consolation this country gained from it was that the animal was ridden -by an English -jockey I '1... -,-..__.-_ L1_-. I`_,, ,.L 3, T V __ __ __ --~-., v'-._v.,. - Itsiownzr. the` Count de Lagrange, was said too have netted closeu-pun one hundred thousand pounds Toy. his horse's victory `and one or rtwo other Fran-chmexiw'ho `backed their oou.n;try s oaa1di_dat_o made upwards of ten thousand pounds apiece. '39 might `be expected. Gladiator carniod very little British money. acouple of `throusand pounds being probably the largest sum won by-any English boaeckerdot `it. s ax - 4- II Anny In the first Derfoyj of .theg20th century. which was` a triumph to: our American _ cousins. no 'phenomeh- ally large winnings were- reported. a.!:thaou;gh the winner. Volodyovski. was said .'to` have been heavily back- ed by Ameridans. who were doubt- less 'S'$iBfi6d tq see! their oandijdbrti w+.in.4-Tit-Biits. ' V London Globe. The tragic element underlying every great .surrender. `in history is not wanting at Port Arthur. Since the beginning of the `bombardment last February the trend of affairs has been almost unbroken to the advantage lot` the Japanese, and it only remains to conjecture the spirit in which the gallant defenders .of the .forf_tr_es.a` conveyed to the condent ' urea V `notch and decor: fox-securing 6'11. 11mm 0 um.-iII,tho -LV: . \ quick] ' - our opinion -tree w :'1"an mm 'M `.m` bmkonPumm; reqe11\: . AQKAAII vim...` C! Q, -Uuu vu - wvv-yy .mn`nao ; c::-. ..... Famous Sun-enders % u***!=-3'--nun I! .-ism _n; :..._, !'., ;. 3.`$`o1`ipr'; :11 ri.j."73u RWY. ` triumphant` enemy their inability to continue an uneven struggle. The` nal act of the drama ha.s~.__Foeehl Iplhwedi ,o.'ut again and- again in the world`: records of oapitulation, the curtain has been rung down repeat- edly upon a heartebroken command-y der. :1 suffering and dejected; g'arri- ` son. a generous but inflexible con- -qruendr; the story i.otf.one siege dif- y fers from the", story of another most essentially in the matter of detail, and yet in a spirit of the surrender Ilies a. world of significance. . ' Take the `two disasters int the Franco-German war. of: Sedan and Metz._ and compare; thqgenuine cry of: despair from Napoleon` 'III.. who `betrayed by fortune, had lost all`. and had placed in the -hatnds 'of}his fconiqueror the sole thingleft him ,...his liiberty. - ,v with Baza`ine`s pom- pous address to his soldiers: :"Van- quished by famine, we are compeillie to submit to the law of war in con- stituting ~ ourselves prisoners. At -different epochs of our military his- tory.` brave -troops. commanded by Massena. Kleber and Gouvion St. Cyr have experienced the same lot. which detraccts not from military honor. whe`n.`like you. they have so glori- ously performed their. duty to the extreme of human endurance. This, when surrendering a fortress. and garrison of the first order to abesieging army only slightly su- perior in numbers. while guns and ammunition `were pentiful; and food supplies were at least sufficient for, another week's consumption! Na- poleon, on the other hand. made no attempt to conceal the finality of his disaster as he lingered in the garden of the Belgian weaver s cot- tage, where negotiations had been held. a broken, despondent figure, dressed` in a jaunty red cap with a gold border, a black paletot lined with red. red trousers and white kid gloves. The note of inevitability was struc kperuxps as fully as Gezaegmzl Lee in the American Civil war. al- though he had been saved the mor- titication of proposing a surrender by General Gra-nt`s letter: "The re- sult of the late week." he _wrote, to Lee" on April 7,1865. must con- vince you of the hopelessness of fur- ther resistance. on the part of the army of Northern Virginia in this struggle. Two days later ameeting was effected at Appomattox. and this surrender, of which the victory of Five Forks was the prelude,_prac- tically ended the war. the remaining armies ot the Confederates laying down their arms one after `another. Lee kneiw.when the and had voorne. Not so Napoleon I.. whoseuletter to `the `Prince Regent censeiquent on Waterloo can be regarded only as a diplomatic attempt to gain time for a tresh rally of forces. `Exposed to the factions which distract my country? he wrote. `fand to the enmity ofthe 1 greatest powers of Europe, I have` closed my political career. and I come like -fhemistocles. to throw myself upon the hospitality of it-.h9_ Britishpeople. I put myself under the protection of their laws which I claim` from your royal highness, as the most powerful. as the most constant and the most generous of my enemies." I An unsatisfactory capture was that `oi Sefoastopol. /since the enemy_ had fled, leaving behind a smoking mass of ruins. Zutphen fell through a '1-.1,1se. soldiers being introduced into the town apparelled as Flemish coun- try-woomen. their baskets filled with -sw.ords and loaded pistols. One of -the ` _most `bloodless capitulations. consi- dering the imhporitzmce of the fortr-` es 3s"surre'ndered. was that of Gi":)r:al- \ta_r.,A'wrest`ed from the `Spaniards in 1704. our .total- loss in gaining this ~impprtant `acquisition tothe crown ;.i_x`t.._..m8p' killed and two hun- feixt__;in w_o=u:nde_d_. On the th`er-hand- I-was W.,Wa8 811 SW19 at the ca itu-latio'n of Edinburgh cas- tle in 1 89 to the Earl of Devon. Gentlemen and -soldiers." he said. I know not wherein`! have been mn- kind to any of you. but if I have ever wronged any man in your rramks let him '-speak etc we part tonesver. Denotl brawl with the -newcom'e`r.s, for you are too few` to conquqr and `too many to sacrifice." .Gen.'Gor- don s message of defiance was: "When you, Mahdi. order the Nile to dry up and walk across with your troops. and come into Khar-_ mum to me and take me. then! I `will surrender the town to you. -and not before. Little` as wa know of `the details accompanying the fall , of Khartoum. it may be safely assumed ; that when the relief gxpedition ar- rived at that city to find it had fall- en into the hands of the Mahdi `two dayspreviously. Gordon had surreend-. ered: nothing save his life. ; A manly oonfession. of de.featA was that made by the Duke of Gordon _L LL- __,.'A.._I_L'_',. _ 1'.Ij`,l`_ yswore that for every hair other head_ one Sepoy should -die. At {the surrender` of the Bastile' infthe iFrench`Revolution` there `was "no 'tighting. the Governor. dc Daumfay. after making a hesitating defence. capitulating on a promise of safety, for all the garrison. A piotumsquu surrender was that of Cetewayo, who was captured on Aug. 29. 1879. by Major Ma :-ter during the Zulu war. Troops had been pursuing the chief sinceAugust'.13.- land. he was 'tin.all.y_ tracked "t`o A deserted kmal in `the 3Ngoma. Forest. Major Matter him- ` self roderito the entrance of the but and called upon Ceteiwayo to :yield. Enter."~-was the_reply: "I am `your prisoner. From motives 0: prodence Marter refused. again summoninct the Zulu $hief. Thereupon the .un- iortu-nate Cetewayo. weak. weary. footsore and very sick at. heart. came_ forth from the kraal, and re- pulsing. with a remmant of dignity. the dravgoon guardsman who ventur- ed to lay a hand on him. said`: - "White soldier, touch me not-I sur- render to your chief. ` TBA nnnifnln-rrnn nf (`.1-nninnntl Os}-.- . TOTTENHAM.-Mr. Francis Holl- mgshead of New Liskeard. son of Mr. Joseph Hollingshead. '1`otte_;n- ham. was shot by the accidental dis- charge of a shot mm in the hands of his hired man_ on Friday. the shot entering his side. His mother has gone up to wait on him and `reports him doiu has well as could be eag- pected. W lie the wound is of a seri- -ousnature. it blood poison does not set in. his recovery is looked for.- Sentinel. - KEEISTON.--An Essa man had a` close call on Sunday eveningdurlng the heavy storm that passed over this section. While the storm was at its height Mr. Joseph Fits-Wand his hired man. a recent arrival from the Old Country, were in the stable under the .ormcr`s barn. when the h [oarn was struck by lightning and Iavoth were knocked down. The hired man seems ho have got more than his share of the electricity. .101` 110 rexnuined mntoonscious I-or afoout gan- hour. and for a day or two was quite 11}. _ Beyond smashing some oil the tlmmwrs the barn was umnjured.--. Herald. Q < ; Lcuuoj. UU your UULUL. The capitulatmn of Cronje -and his 1 four thousand men on the annivers- ary of Majuba Day. 1900. will be re- membered as long as any incident of the Boer war. An onslaught made: by the Canadians, who -had entrench- ed themselves eighty yards from the Boer position in the river bed at Paardeberg. was greeted. not by, a storm of musketry. as had lbee.n2ex~ pected; but by the appearance of three white flags. hastily thrust above the parapet of the Boer tren- ches. Then a horseman appeared. carrying another white flag. and in-. tent on arranging a meeting` Foe- tween the generals. Forth from `the la-ager came presently two men. one mounted on a white POTIY. in his hand a sjambok, wearing a brown felt hat and a huge overapat. moth- ing of his face visible but a thicket of hair and two glowing sparks for eyes. This was Cnonje. who had kept the British army at bay for ten days with no better shelter than could be afforded him by a -deep riv- er bed. I am glad to meet so brave a man, said Lord Roberts, but he refused to accept anything short of unconditional surrender. Cronje's reply to the terms of the capitula- tion was. abort but effective: `Jo. he blurted out. ` 1.- T"j"' Theubody of an unknown man has been bound in the Niagara river be- lnmr the _t.a;lls. 2p..__l... _-;___-9AIL-_ _,.'II NU VV L Ll`; I.'tL.ll.D A special Senate committee will investigate what measures cam be devised to stop the; spread of rtu :)er- cul-osis. ` ff... ............ c..- ....-u_-_- ..._u_..__ ._ |IlLl`UDlo The season for sockeye salmon on the Fraser -opened on; July 1st.. and great activity is manifested among the caxmeries. 4Four Facts For Sick Women A To Consider I4ydiE'.PinHIam's Vcgdcblefiampouni `Hosea I1nqoaUadR{aodofGuus- _ I, IV__l_J___ !`lZl{o"`.l.u.I usuluwv vtvu] vlrvnuvuuuuu th`6sido`.lgurn.ingsenntloninthuton- SIooxn.-The medicine that holb thoroooi-d for the ` ntupher 41 abeolhtoeureaofte e bnydh E. Pinkhan V lo It . diseases of the female, as For thirty years it Ins bepn helping woneuto be strong, an backache. nervousness. kidney troub es. sllutus inc. and ovu-inn inpmmationg `weak- ness and displacements, reg-nlstinig ...-_-L...-63;. ma-Cgnl-up and n'nnnnan_ nuns ulna uaafautiuulvuuq, aw.Iaauuu' menstruation perfectly and Vernon- ing its ins. It has also proved itgelf , invalua le in preparing for childbtrth and the change of life. _'1`1nnn.--'The great volume ot.unao- I4J6.s4-I and maInnfn1 fAa.;vI'n\I|;1`nlIII `IQ .lI'.lI.lSD.`*LuU great vuuuuu UL. unaw- licited and teful testimonials on lie at the Pink am Laboratory at Lynn, Mn ss.. many of whichnre fromtime to time. published by permission. we ah- aolute evidence of the value Lydia E. _Pinkhun s `Vegetable Compound Mrs. Pinkha.m s advice. ` ` Faun-_rx.--Every ailing womfsn . in Canada is asked to accept the ; following invitation. It is A bring` you health and may sue your 1&0`. ++++no+++++on: ` 111.3. Mrs. PlnkluIn I Standing Invitation :0 Wln g-Women ante;-:3 cm 0 emale weakness ~ Bromptly oomfmmicatc with Mrs. Punk- -a.. .4. T.unn Mun All lgttarl Am lllluuubvu vvuun nuns A. an-5" Eun. gt Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened. read and answered bywomcn only. From symptoms given, your `trouble may be located and the quickest and` surest way of nmwuq advised. Ontoftho not yolumo-of ox- %;}:s..u,..' 7' lid, ha, and obey: Hdpfnl 9 . . . - .. . ' . 9 E Acursory VIEW of Incidents as clipped from 4 , ' : V g ...,.llur Exchanges.%.... f` 3 I++$+++`: nll`.li`.'l`n1\I,_.\Nnrk is -m"oceedimr