Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Feb 1906, p. 3

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years. Every fifty the of detail ig |p 3 rel Grand Union-Hote] Rooms Fron $1,00 Per Day Up. Opposite Grand a Station BAGGAGE}: FRE FINE FURS MADE-TO-ORDER LOWEST PRICES Fit and workmanship of the best W. F. GOURDIER 78-80 Brock Street Kingston's Only Exclusive Fur Store. Sensible Gloves for Cold Weather AT A BIG BARGAIN FOR Nednesday Shoppers \ Bargain Lot of Ladies' Black Cash- Amere Gloves, Black Ringwood Gloves and also White Ringwood . ar ea Gloves. 20 dozen in the lot, all sizes. * The best line of 25c. and - v 0c. Gloves ever shown in King ton. Wednesday, 'while they last you may have them at 15c¢. a Pair White Goods e are sell'ng piles of White Goods every day. The reason being that there is a much better variety now than can be hoped for later on. You will be acting wisely if You sce our assortment at once EWMAN & SHAW COP 0000000 CUT THIS out $ GOUPDN 10 The 18 Letters Must Accom- pany Answer. & : é A STANDS FOR ADS. "WHICH TALK SWIFT'S COAL THE BEST JAMES SWIFT & C0. § Pero bererett } a Trium ae cannot Mooney's perfection "Cream Sodas The vers' h * cream -- the Sg the very best baker in Jp 2? A biscuit superior to ther you have ever, tasted. Say "Money's" to your grocer. "TORONTO NEWS What Do You Know | of Ontario Where are you trying to do business? Do you know all about Ontario ? Ontario has over one-third {he total population of Canada--- pays over 50% of the money paid in the Dominion to wage @amers and over 51% of the laries. Has over 51% of the working capital of the Dominion invested in Manufacturing. Don't you think it's worth advertising to your neighbors. The "News" covers the whole Province--goes into 2,475 Post Offices daily. The rate is Flat 56 cents per inch. This advertisement would cost $2.30 per day in The News Siva ui : USE ONLY THE BEST pads WA de Sad be [ste STANDARD articie READY FOR USE IN ANY QUANTITY. For making soap, softening water, removing old paint, disinfecting sinks, closets, drains and for many other purpeses. A can equals 20 pounds SAL SODA. SOLD, EVERYWHERE. IE W.GILLETT Sohrms TORONTO, ONT. "2 COAL Ed yeu should burs i you wast | -& Satisfaction fire; We ure filling orders mew for winter supplies. Have you prdered Yours yet ? 'Phone. No, 188, BOOTH &CO. Honest BOORCOTOTCOWOTOOTITDOR THE FRONTENAC LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. (ESTABLISAED|1863), ent--Sir Richard Cartwright Money loaned on City and Farm Pro and County Deben- Deposits erties. Municipal tures, Mortgages purch Teceived and interest allowed, 8. C. McGill, Managing Director. _ Office. 97 Clarence Street. Kinfrston. NEW YORK CHINESE 83 Open from 10.20 Aum. to 3.00 am. =The best place to got *all round bréchton ap the Foom and: clear away muse in the city, Meals. of nan on | disease, nF sora Spe 4 A test notice. English Aine dishes a specialty, . J. FRER, Esti "ot Mason", ven for ull Cement Work of all Division St. "Phone 402 * I b 4 i i THAT 1S NEEDED IN CITY OF [than to the "spirit which giveth life." N---------------------- 1 yet intéldeds: intended 46 reveal Lit; becomes a substitute for the spirit "in -& procgss of. Bibliolatry--intense de: § ds 5 '¥otion to. 'letfer which killeth" rather TEN ih . ~The remarkable success of = a long TON, l'career 'of 'the evangelical revival imrits spt | Methodist outcome, was due to the re Notes of a Sernion on Sunday 'Christ wus namp,'"' 'taking Him for what He offer | ed Haumself 10 be. 'that was one trans- action. 'that gave the "right" (or further description | Jesus. "Ye must be born again--from | | &° spiritual lite, a divine | | producing a spiritual experience. "| Toronto rexival, Restaurant Street Morning 'by Rev. Dr. Eby, Pastor of Brock Street Metho- dist. Church. the 'receiving of Jesus | Notice! that he "believing on His | { ver" 'asin tne old version; to enter | a second 'transaction, viz., "to { human 'migdium, "but of God." in %third chaptér St. John gives us a ahove--af the Spirit." "Chat which is | porn of the Spirit is spirit, i.c., the] new' bipth gives to the man a new life, hfe.' St. less than a "'néw creature," or "a new creation," evidented by having "received the spirit oi adoption where- by Wwe cry, Abba Father. Himsell eth witness with our spirit | that we are children of God." As St. | | John ingsts that jt is a direct person- | al tanspetion; independent of atl ques- tipns of human connection or merits, 50, St. Paul. insibts that it is not the result of 'the law™=of all the Old | Testament=not .any divine advantage | externally: given, all of which should | lead men to the' Saviour; but the | transaction itseli* could be none other | than a personal matter between the Spirit "of God and. the spirit of man To-day we musg insist on the same analysis between the preparatory steps | and the actual trapsactiOn. 1 am | urged to draw attention to this, be cause .of .a sheet I hold in my hand, giving instruction: to seekers in the The diections are headed, in large type, 'As Many as Re ceived Him. (Jesus Christ) to them Gave He Power to Become the Sons of God, even to them that Believe on His: Name." There are then directions how to receive (Christ, concluding with "Having thus received Jesus Christ,'1 know on the authority of God's sure word of promise, that I am a child of God (Jobn i, 12), averlasting life (John iii, 0). But from. beginning to end there is no word of a spiritual transaction. And therein Dr. Torrey differs from John, Jesus, Paul, and that world-moving revival of .the eighteenth century, out of which. Methodism was born, and all the, churches 'were renewed. : There is no question that any who have, by this process of preparation, come to the portals of the spiritual life; have gome further, and entered nto the real life of children of God, ith the witness within, snd the evi- | Wnce without, But. long . history A shows that it is very haze dows to preach a salvation by syllogism, leav- ing' the essential element to come as if by accident. The revival we want nor the one that wil pile up the great- est number of names, but the one that will come' the nearest to the original idea: and that showed its stupendous power through the Wesleys and adjutors more tremendously as a sav- .ng, renewing, uplifting force, than at any period of the world's history since th> days of the. Apostle Paul--and greater than in his day in the greater arcna of the modern world. Why have the revivals, in all ages, ancient, mediaeval, modern, been shortlived ¥ 'Taither says that no re vical lasts over forty years. Stead. in his powerful pamphlet, "The 1905 Revival," points out that in land, in etch century, there has been the uplift of a' revival, followed : by decav ahd utter cortaption. Then cor ruption becomes precursor of another revival... And so, century after cen- tury. In the seventeenth century, the revival spirit seems to have loft the continent of Europe and to have spec ial work in the English race. In that ono. century there came the Puritan re- vival; a relapse, and then the Quaker revival. Then an utter degradation once more; followed by the evange- lical revival . of eighteenth contury. That lasted through more than fifty vears of Wesley's ite: through the fol lowing fifty, until arrested by a diver genee from the original spirit. tremendous force with which the re- vival swept into the ninteenth cen- try kept it going with ebb and flow through a 'good part of the century, but with ever slowing momentum. The cause of decay and loss of pow- er .in every revival is a something whieh "paralyzes 'the spiritual opera- tions of the Spirit of God, on' the spirit of man, e.g. : co- 80 the new religious life; it becomes an a form out of which life has gone. R.A theology is needed: to explain it; becomes an end and a musty skele- bédy worth Keeping. and bécomes a ghostly, empty cere NG-ROOM. fun,' of. pourse, i OB fet faded, don't 'let them stay so. sig and w ing don't 'dim down. o matter what they're made' of color all perfectly. Quickly done. Hardly any trouble. Mrs, z Antigonish, ) N.S.;' says : casior than other dyes.' One 10c. package dyes o-hall to three of material. duction of every one of these external thi driving 'of mien { sence of God for a personal transae tion of spiritual business, which was well 'as the indirect witness of the new power to live a better life, and | leading into the experience of a clean heart, and perfect love. | human methods are secondary, } : i) ! lished by Being "bor" pot through | shguld be worthy and commensurate-- from the lips of | \ | Paul insists on the same divine, spin- | | tual lite, and iy satisiied with nothing | | { The Spirit | § { sylvania and that I have | is not the one that is most casily got; Eng- | The 1--An institution is needed to house end, and remains a mausoleum, over ton dangles where once life made 'a 3A' ritual js needed to nourish it, { mony. : 4--A bobk in. which the secret is a DON'T HAVE A SUN-WORN to 'But when the portieres and drapes \ the sam¥ pickage of DY-O-LA will | here. E | Feen those who don't believe in race stork RUE. Mcliildiveay, Glen. Road, | sometimes makes a perfect goose of "DY-0-LA | Jimself. rked beautifully. 1 believe it to be host, dye I ever used, apd much | from one-and- | od LEC : 2% he droggist has PY:0-Lav to the very simplest, and the into the direct pre- A ; A p x ; many as réceived Him (Jesus | to result in' a definite experience, to _all this time n haye .an.idea Cn re of Lite) 10. thei | be translated into deeds of love for of how mahy o medicines io' HEht to become chisdren ol | oy "and toil for the kingdom of | tried. But T found so. relict whatever, dan vehi , mot of. blood, | God. Every one was to have, 1 felt there must be soinething that | ¢ nor of the Arlt ot the Sesh. nok of ihe - 1-The witness of the spirit to his Jeould curé sné without having to un. * "*** | regeneration into the spiritual life, as J dergo' dh operation which might kill 2A distined work of the Spirit, the but These are the divine elements, we return to the subject this évening. Charlottenburg bo has the dis tinction of being the Cident oiler in the German army, recently velebratéd his one huddredth Birthday. Ge we: ited the College of Cadets and entere fantry regiment in -Pdson in 18286. at an In Aged Seventy-Seven Whips Man Thirty-Two. The remarkable prowess of "old Penn- German * women, once their fighting blood is aroused, is a matter | of certain knowledge among those who | have undergone the personal test. | Samuel Biever, a husky farmer; of Oley, who is 'thirty-two years old, is | the latest to give testimony as to { this. He told his story in court, where id © His suit for five thousand dollars dam- ages" against Mrs, Mary Reider is on | trial. He had a quarrel with the wowan, who is seventy-seven years old, and apparently fragile as a reed. They couldn't agree as to the right of wav in a lane, Words failing, Mrs. Reider, actording to Biever, took the law in- {to her wrinkled old hands. Biever was mere play for her. He emerged from a hot bout of ten min- utes so.hadly banged and bnffeted that for seven weeks, he avers, he was un- able to do any work harder than eat- ing. Case undecided. Sympathies of jury with Mvs. Reider. The Menace Of Big Fortunes. Springfield Republican. Marshall Fild's disposition of his great estate, largely in bulk for his descendants, does not escape criticism | altogether. The Chicago Chronicle, known as John R. Walsh's paper, de- claves that the evil of keeping a great fortune intact is just as great when it is voluntary as when involuntary through laws of entail. It refars to Lord Bacon's likening of money to a compost heap which grows more and more ofeneive until distributed, and seems to agree with those who faver not only inheritance taxes, but laws prohibiting the inheritance of more than a certuin portion of an estate. It says that no less a man that the late Lyman Trumbull was of this way of thinking. { { | | | | | | Are You Run Down ? i | | | | { | Stop--do something. Wade's Iron | Tonic Pills are a tobe, & blood puri | fier, a blood: maker, and a general sys- { tem builder. They are what you need. { In boxes 25c. at Wade's Drug Store. | Money back if not satisfactory. | ------ { Ten Days Curling. {| Winnipeg, Feb. 6. The curling bon- | gpiel opens this--morning, and it will | be ten days before the finals are | reached. Some 147 rinks are entered. | There are . several entries from Onm- tario, and others from as far west as { Dawson City. American rinks are also well represented, coming fom Duluth, St. Paul, and other points. Are Without Licemses. | result of the Jocal option campaign. | carried local option and in these there fiawere 234 licenses, Besides, four munici- | palities are still under the Dunkin { Aet. In addition to the places which have voted out the barroom, there arc. 139 other municipalities now with- [out licenses. Five more municipalities are to vote | this month: Morrison, Muskoka, Feb. | 5th, I license; Artempesia, Grey, Febru- | ary 6th, 7 liconses; Sombra, Lambton, | Richmond | February 12th, 6 licenses; {| Hill, York. February 19th, 2 licenses; Beamsville, Lincoln, February 9th, 3 licenses. When the end. {| "Don't go out on a real cold day," | 'phone 230, Gibson's Red Cross Drug - | Store for drug wants; prompt delivery 1 sui ide must admit that the makes his by marrying it. Free Package in Piiin Wrapper fihat-is quick, --dasy to apply The Toronto Pioneer summagfes the | There are 9% municipalities, which have a thing goes up, that is the ast of it unless it is an airship, and Dyé ther warm, Bright colors; with with that it may be the beginning of ~the new dy, which | The man who makes his money in trade is sneered at by the man who Docemther doesn't waste his time fall" Mailed to Everyone Who Writes. "1 have Been "a 'terrible sufferer - of iles fo fourteen (14) years and dur- 4 of your *"Pyram 8," "T am free, free to tell all sufferers' of this dreadful disease to: try' this - meditine--the Pyramid Pile Cure. 1t will care when ol es fail. Sincerely yours, G. Braneigh, Schellbtirg, Pa." Anyone "sitfferiig Tom the terrible torture, burning und itching of piles, will get instant relief froin the treat ment we Send out free, at our own expense, in plain' sealed package, to everyone sending name and address. Surgical operation for piles is nerve ragking, croel, and rarely a permanent sudcess, Heré you ean get a treatment a ¥ to apply and in expensive, and free from the publicity and humiliation you suffer by doctors' examination. : Pyramid Pile Cure is made in the form of "'easy to, mse' suppositories. The coming of a cure is felt the. mo- ment you begin to use it, and you sul- fering ends. Send your name and address at once to Pyramid Drug Co. 18,887 Pyramid Building, Marshall, Mich, and get, by return mail, the treat. ment we will send you free, in plain, sealed wrapper. After seeing for yoursell what it can do, 'yon can get a regular, full size puckage of Pyramid, Pile Cure from ahy druggist at S0e. each or, on re ceipt of price, we will wail you same ourselves if he should not have. it. ----_---- 0 Dapartmentrof RMIWAYS 'did Canals RIDEAU CANAL. SEALED FENPEKS, ENDORSED "Tender for Timber" will be received by the ung sigaed, Mp to. moon on Sat- urduy. February WM, hon. for the Bu oly, ax very | < th pa Hin Mr; Difven Robben required for wie Ridedu Canad. * Specifications and Bill of Timber can be obtained at the office of the superin- tending . Engineer of 'the Rideau Canal, Ottawa, on and after February 1st, 1906. « The Department does not bind itself to accept the lowest of any tender. By Onder, "+ L. K. JONES, Secretary Department of Railways and Canals, Ottawa, 1st February, 1906. Newspapers Jnssriing this advertise ment without authority from the Depart. ment, will net be paid for it. 4 Gut Class Specials K choice and prillian€ FRUIT, beauty .... A YINEGAR ceptional value .... .«.. $2.50 KNIFE RESTS in odd and varied designs, per pair . $1.26 There are other equally attractive and moderately priced pieces in our "Crystal Cases" worth youf considera tion. * SMITH BROS. Jewelers, Opticians, 'Phoue 665. SSUERS OF MARRIAGE LICENSES EE MARRIED, KOUBER---McMULLEN.=At Napanee, 31st January. 1908, Miss Heatrice Koutwer and Joseph McMullen, Duluth, Minn BENN--BENN.--On January 81st, al Conway, Odve I'. Benn, to lra Elgin Benn, both of South Fredemekshurgh. eee ete tt eet DIED. JOY. ~At Napanee, January 81st, Wild- er Joy, aged scventy-five years BAKER.--In Camd January 28th. Jacob Miller Baker, 'wed eighty-one years. STEVENSON .--At North Bay, January 20th, Mrs. Joscph Stevenson, daught or of Jumes Heapey, Pegeronto, aged thirty-one yoars, MARTIN. --At Toronto, em January ah, Sarah, wife of John Martin, Tordnto, and daughter of Henry Marden, formerly of 'Bgseronto EE-------- SE -- IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT. Wews of The Distriet om Both Sides of The Line. Anchor ice has blpcked the Moira, and Belleville collars "fare threatened with a flood. W. A. Derbyshire, Forfar, is dead, fron pneymonia, aged thirty-five, leav- ing a widow and Tamily. He was a member of the A.0.UW, and 1.0.0.F. of Newhoro. a Clarissa, daughter of Jonathan Gaf- field, Colborne, and wife'ol Rev. 8. W. Tabu, ig dead in Coral. Michigan, aged seventy-seven vears. She and her husband did pioneer mission work in the Bay 'of Quinte Methodist confer ence. * 3 A valuable livery horse, known as the Ponton mare, the property of Ro- bert McCoy, Belleville, died suddenly, Saturday, from an affection of the heart, The heart was found to be un- natural in 'size and weighed twelve pounds, 4 Mrs. Nahey Stewart, Pembroke, wi- dow of the late Daniel Fraser, is dead, aged 108. She was born in county An- trint. on New Year's dav. and was the mother of eleven children, asven of Has Disastrous Effects 'on Victims made to stamp out the habit of earth eating, which is prevalent among na- of oarth is a gray or'drab-coloved shale. This is excavated Meth, in Pikamir, and is exported to the Punjaub at the rate of F000 camel loads a year. ties of clay are catem, special kind of mud, 'as the habit in creases the depraved appetite soon be comes satis and ants themselves is a great deli- cacy. the habit are classified lowing heads : 1, A peculiar fascina- ting odor and taste in the clay, ren dering it a : tural craving due to disease. 3. To Ai 4 ' satisfy hunger. 4. F Now; after ATVRG but one treatment | 3 a friend that the bland earthy odor Ftrous, i TAL GOURMET. , --Causes of a Strange Habit in Some Northern Iadian Tribes. Calcutta, Feb, 6.~Efforts are being ives over almost all India. In Northern India the favorite form mostly at In different districts «different varies but if the na- ives have at one time a taste for a with bricks and broken pots. White:ant soil: with the neats The reasons given for induleing in under the fol- delicacy. 2. An unna- Foree of example 5. Suppose] medicinal virtues. : A umtersity graduate confessed to was a great temptation to him, and the, thought of it made his mouth water, He always enjoyed the odor, hé said, when April showers fell upon previously parched earth. The effects of the habit are disas- Those women addicted to it very soon complain, first of pain and weakness in the limbs, palpitation and difficulty of walking a little dis: tanck up hill. After some time all the other symptoms of anaemia aré fully established; callow and pale com- plexion, . tongue and gums bloodless, fand general debility. Very often | | dropsy supervenes, amidase FARMING OF THE FUTURE. | What a United States Agricul- 'tural Paper Says. It is assumed by those who have given the subject close attention, that the world's supply of wheat, will, in & few years, be below the demand. Al though more land will be brought in to cultivation for wheat, yot there will arrive a time when the yield of wheat must he increased or the sup- ply will be inadequate. The average yield of wheat per acre in this coun- try is thirteen bushels, while in Europe the average is thirty bushels, In some sections of the United States forty bushels of wheat per acre is not unusual for a large farm, but use of the same land for wheat year after year will result in diminishing yield in the future unless some change oceurs in its cultivation, The fact that .the average yield of Burope is two ond a ball times that of this country demonstrates that onr farm- ord can at least double their aver. ages, which insures twice the present yield of wheat, Having plenty. of and gun 'farmers look more te the area than to the substence from which crops are grown. Millions 'of gallons of liquid manure are wasted every year because no adequate pro- vision is made on the farms to pre: vent this loss and farms became poorer because a portion of their pro- duets flows away with every rain that falls. upom the manure heaps. § waste materials such as weeds and rublsish are allowed to do damage in various ways and even the solids of the manure lose much of their value because of neglect. This condition is found mostly on farms that have too much land in proportion to the equip: ment. The labor thet should be ap- plied where it would prove most valuable is bestowed on too much land. The effort to raise thirteen bushels of wheat on an acre is twice as costly as to double the yield, as a profit may be possible in one case and impossible in the other. Every- thing not sold off the farm has a value and is worth as much to the farmer as to the buyer of his pro- duce, whether in the form of stock, erops or manire, 'as 'it is to send such to market to be sold for cash. Farm- ing of the future in this country will be carried on according to the pre sant European methods of intensive culture. There the farme are small avd highly cultivated, while in this country land is cheap. and many sec- tions thinly populated; but the dys- tems of Kurope are worthy of con- sideration and practice here wherever conditions render it at all possible, The farmer of the foture will be a seientist and will raise more on one aére of ground than the farmer of to- day gets from five acres and with much less labor, He Came Near Enough. It is of a western girl that the story i4 told that she refused to marry a most devoted lover, a very free spend- er, until he had amassed $10,000. Af ter some expostulation he accepted his fate and set to work to save the money. About thrée months after this the avaricious young - lady, meeting her lover; asked : "Well, Charley, how are you getting along ?"' "Oh, very 'well, indeed," Charley replied quite cheerfully, "I've saved 317." The youfig lady blushed and looked down at the toes of her boots, and stabbed the inofiensive earth with the point of her parasol, "1 think," she said faint- dy--"'1 think, Charley, that's about near enough." Baby Swallowed A Cycle. A wondetfal operation has been per. formed at the London hospital on a child who swallowed a toy bicyele, says the Tatler. An Xoay photo: graph was taken to show the position of the obstruction, then a small inci sion was made in the throat, through which an instrument was passed, and the bicycle was cut in half and the parts removed separately. The child has been discharged perfectly cured. V Queen Margherita of Ttaly, widow of the murdered Ring Humbert, is pos- s.s4ed of a kaowledge of dramatic art that would make hor the best. dra- whom survive. She leaves thirty-four Fing in love with May if | busted, December is grandehildren, and 104 great grand children, «gaged mati: eritic in the kingdom if. shé BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTI "THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS ~ Bottled only at the Apollinaris Spring, Neuenahr, Germany, and Only with its Own Natural Gas. Read and 'What is Coming As we stated in our adveritsement "last week we have purchased the stock of Messrs, Green & Co., of Gananoque, representing several thousand dollars, and consisting of Dry Goods, . Made.Clothing, Men's Furnishings, Fur 3, Men's Coon Coats, Hats, Caps, Corsets, Ladies' Underwear, Hosiery, Trimmings, Silk and Cotton Thread, etc : ER Th TAKE NOTE | That we bought this stock ata great sacrifice, + . r OIC "C 7 nrices, therefore we would advise you to come and secure Useful and Seascuable Goods at the rate of 28c,; 80c. and 78¢&, on the Dollar. -- This is a Chance of to the public on aes alive I cig Feb. At g o'clock sharp. Be sure to come early and get your share of the good things. . ] Montreal Bankrupt Stock Co. a Litetime An R198 "3 mT Also take note thet this stock wil be offered NEWBORO NEWS. DOCTORS ENDORSE HERPICIDE Because Its Formula is Submitted A Disastrous Fire--Owner Taken With Pneumonia. Newhoro, Feb. 5.-On Wednesday evening the large cheese factory and house owned by Wing Derbyshire, at Crosby, was bumed to, the ground. The family were attending rovival ser- vices and the fire had made so much headway when discovered that it was impossible to save any of the contents of the house, but 'all the contents of the factory, including the boiler, vats and thirty-two cheese, were saved. Tho loge was covered by $500 insurance, Since the fire, Mr. Derby- shite has contracted pneumonias snd is pow in a Very evitical condition at the home of his father at Forfar, Mr.Code, formerly manager of the Union bank here, and now inspector of the Ontario branches, was in town last week oh business and renewed old uaintances, Samuel McCann, Sr., one of the best known and most highly respected eiti- zens of this locality, passed away on Saturday afternoon after a very long and painfol illness with cancer of the throat and stomach. He married Miss Steadman, who at present survives snd is suffering with cancer of the face. Miss Honor Tett left on Saturday for Peru where she will attend school. A moving picture entertainment, illus- trating the Russian-Japanese war, in aid of St. Mary's English church, wae held in Victoria hall here this evering, J. A. Flood, who made cheese in the to Them. & Alexander McMillan, M.D., & fis nent physician of 8 Mi y writes : "One three cases 1 have tested Herpicide fof dandrufi and the "Herpicide is made upon an en now principle, that is, that and falling hair are caused from a mierole that infests the hair bulb, by 'destroying the microbe one's hair to, and really does, destroy thedan- drufl 3 Sold by leading druggists, Send 10s. in stamps for sample to The « Co., Detroit, Mich, G. W special agent, | Saowy Brad Light Pastry Delicious Cake come to every home [A that uses Boaves Flour. It's the greatest help any home cook can have ~--becanse it is always the same--alwaysthe best for all baking. Model factory here last senwon "has heen eng to make near Fieim 1906. Dav! MeClement will' mil cheese in the Westport factory next season, Mrs. Galbraith is seriously ill - with | poeumonia at the home of her bro- ther, Capt. Scott, Mrs. Sams, who broké her hip some timevago, still continues very low, Visitors : Mrs, Dobbs, Ogdensburg, at Mra. William Spicer'ss Miss McAn- drews, at Miss McCaflery's: Misses S. Ralph V, lvy 'and James Ralph, at Miss Moriarty's; Mrs. Barber, Winni- peg, at Mra. Vickery's. wore by chance forced to adopt a pro- fession, pbb ? Ne has been all that could 'be rl : bound "to grow luxuriantly, Roepicle 4 is the only bair remedy, that. §

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