Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Feb 1906, p. 11

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for it. Your neighbor ] S As are in the ps If 2 . he more likely to have jt ad enough and dangeroys ds every year. But nity ven more dangerous, The Pneumonia, Catarrh apg ten the forerunner of that ~Consumption. es In Psychine, er, Headache and Dread- ills the germ. Psychine es it healthy all over; 'Stop cur stomach. They simp] ¢ the way for its return in hine. Use the one remed it kills La Grippe. Thou- 0 the words of Mr. John n of Toronto, rst dose. I was taken sick pained] me. I (had a most able to attend to business. I wit is the most effectual isn't it > Tells you just juick relief and permanent for yourself and you will of Canadians who say we "> HINE 1 SilKeen) ine cures Consump- ork is the prevention the builder .up of a .. Psychine is at once ventive against Con= 51 per bottle. SALE ed by Thomas Mills. y Feawick Hendry & Co. » occupied by, G. 8S. Briden. , occupied by! W. Bowen. occupied by Mrs: W. Benn. rincess, occupied hy C. E. de Car- rincess, occupied by Mrs. T'. Cotter, ncess, occupied by P. H. Ferris Union, now oceupid hv Dr. Hor 1905, and may be inspected between . A full lot deep, soil and first. property," north of Prin rainage. reet, néar Union. chases. and balance may remain or less, 3 subject to present tenancy. DC. for rental for a term of years, 1" NNINGHAM RS 'E STREET 0-0-0000 00000000000080 INSURANCE > Lhe f You Want a Home Or Insurance, have a talk with REAL ESTATE sorge Zeigler, **} INSURANCE 57 Brock Street. FOR SALE First-class mil} property pi% ile. from a thriving ville jngston District, io consisting acres, , large Arh and saw, shingle and grist lls, with about $4,000 worth of achinery : good water power. wner going west. Pro cost out $6,000. Will sell for 3: quick buyers T. J. LOCK» Estate Agent, Kine BWP 00000 COCO 0O COO 0O | D WOMEN that will give you greater returns for that inves in procuri odern 8 EDUCATION-I: makes on Business College AND CLERGY STS. Commercial suhjpsts. A 'aff of com- achers.' Ne second to note Il graduates secure good situations. VENING CLASSES z * catslogue and foll information. T.N. STUCKDALE, Principal. VA A favor. Does not create Lamont, Corliss & Co., 27 CANADIAN HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS ™ ---- ' even mumbered section of Domins STHOPSIS OF ds in Manitoba or' the . North. Provinces, excepting 8 may be homesteaded upon by any 'whois the sole head of - any male over 18 years of age, to the sxtent of ohe-qua wegtion, more or . td be. made personally at the Entry yb he istrict. Jn Which the land to be taken i» mvusted, or if the omesteader P po i Hl 7] awa, the ( 1 fasily Digested Food, and an "irresistibly de. licious" confection with 'the true. chocolate NORTH-WEST | CHOCOLATE A Natit, wholesome, thirst, Common Sireot, Montreal. Free to You, "ou 0 My Sister | | Free tb Vu da Every Sister Woman Stuttering _ from Woman's Ailments Liga - aathracite. Not more thas 330 ipeg, or the local agent for Ly nich the land is situate, ve authority for 'some one to make recel satry for him. SSTEAD DUTIES A settler who HONESTE ted gn entry for A home ired to perform the con- tions connected therwwith umder ope months residence wpom nd saltivation, oo the Jang 1 each year ng the term of three « Bur ie the father (or mother. if the 18 deceased) of any person Who is sligible to make a homestead eatry un- fer provisions of this Act, resides spon a farm in the vicinity of the land for by such person as a home stead, the Tsuirements obthis At aa to dence prior to ol ma; yp tiation a pataon residing . wi desires, he may. on applica ata the Minister. of ths Interior, d be "PPLICATION FOR PATENT should be made at the end ef three years, be- N the Local Agent, Sub-Ageat or the to Co! minion Lands at Ottawa, of his intention ta do su 4 SYNOPSIS -OF CANADIAN NORTH. WEST MINING REGULATIULS, o~Coal lapis nay be purchased at 0 per acre for sof. coal amd $30 for acres can Rap, boos, neta) or Soe 4 y Mt 0 Tal cen' « on of 9,000 pounds shall be collected T will mail, free of any charge, my hohe treatment with hi! instructions to any sufferer from woman's ailments. I want to tell all wotuen about this cyre--~you, my reader, for yourself, your daughter, your mother; or your sister!" I fant totell you how to cure your- selves at home without the help of 'a doctor. Men canngl undersgind woman's sufferings, Whatweitomen kilow from experience we know beétter than any doctor. I kmow that my home treatment is a safe and sure cure for rthoed br Whitisl Discharges, Ulceration, Displacement or Falling of the Womb, Pro- fuse, Scanty or Painful Periods, Uterine or Ovarian Tumors oriGrowths, also pains in the head, batk and bowels, bearing down feelings, Rertausntes crkselon feeling up the spine, melancholy, hot , weariness, kidney and: bladder troubles where caused by weak- nesses peculiar to our sex. T {167 send Wd 'a complete ten days treatment entirely: free to prove to you that you can' éuré yofirself at home, easily, quickly and surely. Remember that"it will cost you nothing to give the treatment a complete trial and if you should wish to continue, it will of ut 13 cents a week, or less aE ALERANDRK'S VICTORY HOW SHE MANAGED TO KEEP THE DUCHESS OF BUCCLEUCH. Does Not Change With the Change In Government--The Bed-Chamber Question In Queen Victoria's Third Reigning Year--Gave Rise Then to a Ministerial Crisis, But Not New. Queen Alexandra is possessed of .a determination with which few people, save those who know her intimately, are disposéd to credit her. And she usually manages to get her way. Thus she has just won a quiet though signal vigtory over the new Liberal adminis tration, says the Marquise de Fonte- noy. When the new Ministers came into office a few weeks ago they took it for granted that the Duchess of Buccleuch, whose husband is a great Tory magnate would, in adcordance with the custom that prevailed during the three score years or more of Queen Victoria's reign, resign her office of mistress of the robes to the Queen, which is the highest feminini ty at court and carries with it the trol of all of the Queen's ladies in w , and indeed 'of the entire feminine porton of the This Mistress of the Robes to a Queen J royal household. In fact, they were discussing among they would nominate as successor to the Duchess, when Queen Alexandra suddenly but quietly under no circumstances would she ang that she intended to retain her in office as mistress of the robes, no matter what administration happens to be in power. There were some who, on receiving this news, imagined that the so-called chamber question; rise to a ministerial crisis in the third year of Queen Victoria's reign, was about to recur. When Sir Robert Peel in 1830 was summoned to form a Cabi- net he demanded that Victoria should dismiss her mistress of the robes and her ladies in waiting, who were all of them the wives or sisters of hil most bitter political foes. To this the Queen Peel and his Cabinet thereupon tender- ed their resignations. Finally the matter was compromised by the Duke of Wellington, who in- duced her to give way by pointing out to her that the spirit, if not the letter, of the constitution required ft; that in previous reigns the lords in waiting and the chief dignitaries of the king's household had changed with each out- going Cabinet, their successors being nominated by the new ministers; and that as queen regnant she was much in the same position as her uncles and the circumstances her principal ladies in waiting were amenable to the same rules as the male .dignitaries of her predecessors on the throne. It is difficult to convey any idea of the bitterness excited by the contro- yversy at the 'time. There were parties ter, the majority of the public, how- ever, being disposed to condemn this | attempt to "Peel the queen's belles." When Queen Alexandra, however, was approached- the other day about the appointment of a new mistress of work or occu address, tell: me hétr vou s=il'¢riif you Ta and I bo i nd Fou ihe trentment, for r case, Are] , in in wra T, by Feturn ih i Ro send he aor cost, ft book. ** 'S OWN MEDICAL AD- eu thereof. expended or paid, the locator may, baving & survey made, and upon fomplying with other requirements, pur- ghase the land at §1 an acre. The patent provides for the payment of Bh royalty of } r cent on the sales. PLACER mining claims generally are 100 Jeot square ; entry « Tenewable rly. pon A frees miner may obtain two leases to fredge for gold of five miles each for a orm of twenty years, renewable at the tion of the Minister of the Interior. The lessee shall have a dredge im oper tion within one season from the date of lease for each five miles. Rental, $10 ber annum for each mile of river tess :d loyalty at the rate of 2% per cent eollect- ! AA the output after it exceeds $10,000. W. W. CORY, Reputy of the Minister of the Imterior. N.B~Unauthorized publication of this Mvertisement will not be paid fors B00G000000000CO00OLOO8 "nonce GOAL! That Is the kind we sell--The 0 kind yéu should burs if yom waat ® satisfaction fire, We ure filling prders mew for winter supplies. Have you ordered yours yet ? 'Phone Nog 188, BOOTH &CO. BOOTOOCO0 OOP OTOODTTTOR Honest OO0O00000C "THERE IS A TIME FOR ALL THINGS." Now, while prices are low, is the time to fill | your coal bin with best quality SCRANTON COAL from P: Walsh's Yard BARRACK STREET. frame seaman sme A Light Subject The: best gas lights on the market for $1 and $1.25, giving a light of marvellous brilliancy, can be regulated hy a child to sult any gas pressure, also pee wee lights burn on foot of Las per, and give 60 ecandle- power light, for 700. : DAVID 59 Brock Bret. Phone 335, GARDINER "S HALL SER," with explanatory illustrations show- ing why women suffer, and how they can easily cure themselves at home, Every woman should hi i erself. Then when the doctor says-- "You must have an operation," you can-decide for yourself, themselves with my home remedy. rs, T will explain a simple home treatment w! effectually cures Leucorrhee Green Sickness ladies, Plumpness and health always result frome its use. Wherevet yout live, T can refer you to ladies of your own locality, who know and will gladly tell any sufferer that this Home Treats ment really cures all women's diseases, and makes women well, strong, plump an bw. Just send me g ten days treatment is dress, and the fre yours, also the book. Write today, as you may not see this offer again. Address MRS. M, SUMMERS Box. 11 Windsor, Ont. ave it, and learn to think for | Fhonsands of women have cured | It cures h speedily ana | and painful or irregular menstruatisn in young | r ade | the robes in the place of the Duchess of Buccleuch she expressed herself in much the same fashion as her mother- in-law, Queen Victoria, nearly seventy years ago, declaring that she would not part with the duchess; and on be- ing asked for her grounds for taking such a stand in the matter she pro- ceeded to point out a fact which had until then been forgotten--namely; that she was not a queen regnant, like | her {illustrious mother-in-law, but a | queen consort, and that therefore the rules which had been invoked by Sir | Robert Peel in 1839 did not in any way | apply to her case. | . Further consideration of the case led to the discovery that the Queen was entirely right in the question, and accordinly the Ministers withdrew their pretensions and left, with the best grace possible, the victory to Queen Alexandra. For, although Lord Grey, in the reign of King William IV, insisted upon Queen Adelaide's MERE SRE JUANY BEEING POWERS Nl A ™mE - dur THERE IS ONLY ONE MAGIC. BAKING POWDER and Economical 77 SOLD.IN ALL SIZES. E.W.GILLETT eer ht LIMITED YORONTO.ONT. . i Cook's Cotton Root The only safe effectual monthly medicine on wi women can ier 3 Re of rengt o. 1, y box; No. de: A Tre sen er for } drupgite Ask for Cook's Cob ton ; take DO substitute. the Cook Medicine Cn., Windsor, Ontario Guarantee Wo ghistabtde OUR milk to be AB- SOLUTELY pure; put up in sterilized bottles. It is the best. Try i. Kingston Milk Depot Cor, Brock and Bagot Sts. "Phone G67. : dismissal of Lord' Howe, who was her chamberlain, on the ground of his pub- lic demonstration of hostility to the reform bill, then before Parliament, yet the Premier was generally con- considered to have exceeded his au- thority, and it is recognized that the Cabinet has no say in the appointment of the members of the household of a queen consort, the only rule binding upon the matter being that her ladies should be of English birth, which, of course, debars any American born peeress from ever being appointed to any position in connection with the lwqueen's court. The Duchess of Buccleuch is a great Tady, one of the most influential figures in English society, is a sister of the of Lady George Hamilton, and of the Duke of Marlborough's mother, Lady Blandford, and was mistress of the robes to Queen Victoria before being appointed to the same office by Queen Alexandra, who is fond of her. The duke, who is not only Duke of Buccleuch but also Puke of Queens- berry, holds among other dignities that of captain general of the royal company of archers of the sovereign's by reason of his left handed descent from King Charles IL, to bear the royal arms of England, France, Scotland and ireland, debruised by the bar sinister. On the distaff side he is descended frem Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch, whose abortive attempt to rescue King James V. from the prison like control of the Earl of Angus forms the theme of Sir Walter Scott's "Lay of the Last Minstrel." It was his descendant, Ann, Coun- "tess of Buccleuch in her own right, the greatest heiress of her time, who mar- ried King Charles Il.'s son by Lucy 'Walters. This son at the tire bore the title of Duke of Monmouth. But on his marriage he assumed his wife's pa- tronymic of Scott and 'was created Duke of Buccleuch. The duchess survived her busband's death on the scalffold--he was con demned for high treason in heading an abortive insurrection against bis uncle, Try Myers' "Home- Made" Head Cheese. themselves as to which Liberal peeress | intimated that . part with the Duchess of Buccleuch, | --Swhich gave refused to consent, and Sir Robert ; grandfather had been, and that under | for and against the queen in the mat- | Duke of Abercorn, of Lady Lansdowne, bodyguard in Scotland, and is entitled, lawfully married and that the ill fated Duke of Buccleuch and of Mon- was therefore his legitimate in existence it 'would not have affected in any way the rights of Queen Victor | ia or of King Edward to the throne of Great Britain. Their respective suc- cession thereto and possession thereof are based on the so-called act of settle- i by Parliament 205 years ago, which by a narrow majority of one vote, cast by Bir Hugh Owen, vest- ed the throne of Great Britain and Ireland in the Hanoverian descendants of King Ji I, barring therefrom the less remote descendants of his son, King Charles 1, now represented by Princess Louise of Bavaria and by her son, Prinee Ru Still, at the same , it was a loyil thing of the late Duke of Buccleuch to do to sacrifice this document testify- "ing under the hand and seal of King Charles II. that he, the duke, was de- scended in a straight line from a le- gitimate instead of from a natural son of a British monarch, and that the bar sinister. has unjustly been placed on thé armorial bearings of his house. ONE OF "SIX HUNDRED." Death of Another Survivor of the Im." mortal Brigade, The death took place recently of Sergeant-Major J. I. Nunnerley, of the 17th Lancers ("Deat! ory Boys"), at his residences Greetby Hi who was éne "the "six hundred," was in his 76th has been in fail ing health $i He was born at Wil Soha was the seventh son A rd "Nunnerley, who died in o vanced age of 80 years. SW." ida In 1864 he ordeted with his regi ment to the i where 'he took part in the battles, in- cluding' Bi 3 ¢Kenzie's Farm, the Balaclava fort and harbor, thes 0 Inker- man, Tekh we, the whole of the siege 'taking of Sebasto- 1 ! hy In his description of the charge of the Light Brigade, the late sergeant- major said he was in the first line of the right squadron of his regiment. He saw Captain Nolan ride up to Lord Cardigan, and giving his lordship the order, proceed to Captain Morris, then commanding the 17th Lancers, to whom he said, "Now, Morris, for a bit of fun." Scarcely had he uttered the words when he was shot. They had not proceeded far before the men in the left division of thé sergeant-major"s squadron were .nearly all cut down, and Mr. Nunnerley was not without his hair-breadth escapes, for he was with. in a few yards of the 'Russian guns when his horse was shot under him and fell on its head. He performed many daring feats whilst on foot, and ultimately caught a horse belonging to the 8th Hussars, which he mounted and then joined his regiment. Like "Hamlet" Without Yorick. The House of. Commons without Mr. Labouchere, says The London Star, will be like "Hamlet" without Yorick. Therefore we lament his retirement from the stage on which he has crack. ed quips through six Parliaments. A fellow of infinite jest, a cynic with Radical principles, a hater of Peers and plutocrats, a foé to nepotism and jobbery, "Labby" has long been one of the most fascinating personalities in politics. We shall all miss him, and Parliament will be duller and drabber without his irreverent wit and irres- pressibe mockery. We. do not agree with those who regard Mr. Labouchere as a heartless cynic. In reality he is a profound sentimentalist. It was his | sentimentalism that barbed his bitter- ; est gibes. He never attacked the poor, the weak or the oppressed. His mor- dant satire was reserved for the pom- pous humbug, the charlatan, and the quack, whether inside the House or out of it, She Had Mim There. John Philpot Curran, the famous Irish lawyer, ranks 'amongst the wit. tiest men the Emerald Isle has ever produced. His wit, however, was some- timeg turned against himself by the intended victim, the following story, taken from the volume of biographical reminiscences entitled "Mrs. Brook- field and Her Circle," furnishing. an amusing example of how Curran' was once outdone. A. brisk young widow, fn some part of Treland, used to preside at the table of a coffee house patromized by Cur- ran. Her name was Honor, and one day there was some disputed charge. Curran slyly winked at the friend who happened to be dining with him, and proposed "Honor and Honesty." "By all means," added the widow, briskly, holding her glass to be filled, "Jet us drink to Mr. Curran's absent friends." . . Not to. Be Undone Some More. A London broker, a German Jew, had his hat tipped over hig face by another of the same race. A few hours later the same friend met the broker and attempted to repeat his .clever jest, The latter drew away, and, raising his hand, sald, austerely: "Look here, mine friendt, to play 1 do not mind sometime, but always, never," Don't forget that vour actions are measured as critically all through life as is the borrowed butter you return to a neighbor. Many a man who neither drinks nor uses tobacco doesn't own a row of brown gtone fronts. 4 'GREAT. BRITAIN'S TRIBUTE - TO THE DOMINION Imperial Government Sends Home the Remains of the Late Hon. Raymond Prefontaine, Minister of Marine, In One of the Greatest of His Majes- ty's Battlesh the Dominion-- Some. Facts About the Ship. The remains of the late Hen. Ray- mond Prefontaine, Minister of Marine, have been conveyed across the ocean in one of the greatest of His Majesty's battieships--the Dominion, The cir: cumstance that the Imperial Govern- ment places this huge vessel §g com- mission and sends her to Canada to carry. home the body of a Canadian Minister 1s a great honor to tiga coun- try, More than this; it shows the King's sympathies are not restricted to any race or to any Every sub- ject of the King is on an equal basis with his neighbor, irrespective of ori gin, language, or religion. About the Dominion. The Dominion, it is interesting to note, is one of the latest of the newer additions to the navy. She belongs to the heaviest type of battleship afloat. Although launched in 1903, there is al- ready planned a fighting machine that will outclass her. The Admiralty has just begun the construction of a more powerful vessel, of which the Dread- naught will be the first sample. This battleship will be 18,000 tons displace- ment, and will mount ten 12-inch guns, instead of four, as is the case with other vessels. But she is not completed yet. The Dominion-is smaller than the Dreadnaught, her tonnage being 16,3560. She shares with four sister ships the | oo that nutritious parts of the honor of being the most formidable ; 2 is simply Weakness, or Laziness of the Want of Exercige, Indoor Employment, weakens these Bowel-Muscles, just as it Castor Oil, or Glycerine, will grease the passages for ore load of Food at a time, but these lubricants can't help the 'Cause of Delay. "Physic like Salts, Calomel, Jalap, Phosphate of Soda, Mifieral Waters, sim- ply flush-out the Bowels for the one occa- sion only, They do not remove the Cause of Con= - stipation. Moreover, they waste so much of the © ASS 4 precious Digesive Fluids, inthe Bushing A AR I. process, that it takes dose every a rn aan Bee succeeding time hep 8 Bowel load. ADEE AEN © map GHEE Bil Jt ty difforent with Cascargts, CR Ea _ Cascarets ct on the Muscles of the EE ETA Bowels and Intestines, They act justas SENET TA BT Cold Water, or Exercisg-act on & Lazy : man; Na ¢ Hi U have thirty feet of Intestines! They act rm dha What makes food travel A Cascaret EE he same sort of Natural result that a Six Mile walkin the through them? A setof Muscles that line country would produce. 5 . * the walls of these Intestines or Bowels. When a piece of Food rubs the walls 'The Vest Pocket Box fs sold by all' Druggists, at Ten Cents, . of 'the Intestines these Muscles tighten behind it, and thus it starts a Muscle-wave : which drives it through the whole length It should be carried constantly, bey ° cause a Cascaret should be eaten. when you first suspect you need one.' Be very carefulto get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Co., and of the Bowels, -. . It should take about 12 hours to do this food may have time to be digested and man-of-war floating the Upglon Jack. 'The other four are the King Bdward VIL, launched in July. 1903; the Com- monwealth, named after Australia; the Hindostan, which represents Indla, and the New 'Healandi which bears the name of another important member of the Imperial family. It seems that it is now the practice to name vessels after portions of the Hmpire. This Is a happy idea. Our neighbors, it will be remembered, name their vessels after the various States, A Powerful Machine. The Dominion represents the highest type of battleship ever bullt, and until the Dreadnaught appears is the largest vessel in, the navy. Her guns are the most powerful yet They are capable of firing in one minute one projectile of $50 pounds, sixteen of 380 pounds, and twenty of 100 pounds. In pursuit of an enemy the Dominion can fire ahead of herself four projectiles of $50 pounds, eight of 380 pounds, and sixteen of 100 pounds. Anything she can approach within twelve miles she can throw a shell abroad of, Her speed is 181-2 knots an hour, and her officers and crew number $00 men. Her total cost was over $5,500,000. The weight of metal discharged by the Dominion In a single round is 5,920 pounds. This is greater than that of any other British warship. Experts declare that the Dominion and the four other ships of her class exemplify the new tendency of battleship designers to afford better protection to the secondary battery and to increase the calibre of the guns. The change in these regards was first tried in the Japanese battleship Mi- kasa, and in that case it must have been highly successful. improved Improvements. At all events the improvement means that instead of having a large number of casements for firing purposes, there is a central battery, and that instead of having two large guns, there are eight or ten of bigger calibre than any as yet afloat. With all the mechanism apper- taining to her, the Dominion is a wén- derful vessel, and is one of the bul- warks of the Empire. That she should have been named after Canada was no small honor to the Dominion. The cir- cumgtances was duly emphasized at the laun ng on Aug. 24, 1908, when Her Roval Highness the Princess Louise perfdrmed the naming ceremony for us, end Pelee Island champagne was used instead of the European article. The Dominion has not as yet seen service. Coming of the Blenheim. In the early days of 1805 HL M, 8. Blenheim sailed into Halifax harbor. That vessel, the fastest protected cruis- er afloat, bore the remains of Sir John Thompson, Premier of Canada, who had dled at Windsor Castle while receiving there the rank of Privy Councillor. It was in December, 1894, that Sir John, after transacting public business, had gone down to the palace of the Queen to be sworn in. He was in apparent good health when he left London, and everything went well until, at lunch, the great Canadian fainted, and shortly afterwards died. The event, so tragic and so sad, challenged the attention of the world. Her Majesty Queen Vie- toria was especially affected by it, and was exceedingly kind to all concerned. The funeral took place from the Castle, and the body was placed upon the Blenheim at Portsmouth, and conveyed to Canada, where, at the capital city of Nova Scotia, the last ceremonies took place. The offering of a cruiser to carry home the remains was feit to be a signal expression of good-will to- wards Canada, and was universally ap- preciated. 4 Another Great Honor. The mark of Ipperial favor shown to the late Mr. Prefontaine is equally well received by all classes in Canada. It bespeaks a kindly feeling, and, as al- ready pointed out, indicates that there are no distinctions in the British Em- pire. All are equal before the Sove- reign. While this is the situation as re- gards the Minister whose memory Is thus honored, the coming of the battle ship Dominion on such a mission is especially appropriate, The vessel was named after Canada, and that she should have her first commission In Canadian service, or rather in Imperial service of a Canadian nature, is a mat- ter of high interest. In all probability the coming of the Dominion--the finest of His Majesty's ships--will promote a Canadian sentiment favorable to the navy Certainly it teaches that that arm of the national defence ls some- thing to be proud of. The astonishing total of 219,920 prisoners were received into the local prisons of England and Wales in the year ended March 31st, 1905. y There are 15602 public bodies en- gaged in administering the poor law in England and Wales. absorbed. - But,~if it takes twice or three times | that period the food spoils in passing, and becomes as polsoniots as if it had decayed before bing eaten. Now, the cause of delay (Consfipation) i never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped "cee. A sampleand the famous booklet ' 'Curses ' of Constipation" Free for the asking. Ad~ dress Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago of New York, | 04 Specials FOR ---- o-night . We have about 140 pairs of Children's, Girls' and Women's Warm House Slippers which we have decided to clear out at once and offer them To=night at 25c. pair. ~ We have all sizes, DEPENDABLE 2 'SHOES ~ Mr. and Mrs. William F, Littell, now living on eonw : Avenue, East Orange, N.J., celeb rated the fiftieth anniversary of « their 'wedding the other day and among those who attended id celebration were thirty old men and women, who had been at the Littell wecding fifty years ago. ~~

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