Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Feb 1907, p. 3

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DR. SCOTT'S WHITE" LINIMENT Is ti s best for all Jains. ' No family hould be without it. Frost bites, Sprains, Burns Swellings, &c. nd as a reneral household has no equal. Large bottles, 2 _DR. SCOTT'S White Lintment Co St. John N.B., Proprieters of Nl Dyspepsia Cure. ners For Sal ' ear ale at J. B. Meleod's Drug BARGAINS IN FURS We want to clear out all manufactured goods. Call and See the Bargains AT | | | W. F. GOURDIER EXCLUSIVE FURRIER 78-80 Brock St. Phone 700 Candelabras In Bright or French Silver, Gray and New Brushed Brass effects, with Exquisite- ly Tinted Silk shades, in loose effedts or with Pierced Metal Covers to match en- tire picce. Any special shades style or color may he ordered and are sold separately. SMITH BROS. Jewelers and Opticians 350 King Street Issuers of Marriage The sudden changes in Ww 0 eather ought to suggest the wisdom of putting in some good Coal 0 sell good Coal. It's the kind oy sends out the most_heat, and makes the home comfortable; it's the best money can buy, and there is none better mined. We deliver it to you clean a y yo nd thous slate, at the very bottom BOOTH & CO., Phone 133. Foot of West St Wonderful Values In EMBROIDERIES and INSERTIONS. Nothing in the past to equal the elegant designs and the popu- ar prices we now show. From the very narrow Edge and Inser- ion to the wide Allover Patterns, Flouncing and the range is ery complete, another point we lesire' to emphasize, it is this, nany patterns now in stock were imported direct from St. all, Switzerland 'and cannot be epeated this season. Valenciennes Laces and Inser- ions to match, in nd designs. Our New Wash Goods Are all in stock. Get your Apply while there remains such n excéllent lot to choose from. ------ many widths EWMAN & SHAW remedy ihe. 5 ¥. A Neighbor Advised Pe-ru-na. ENDS TELL FRIENDS THING LIKE PE-RU-NA." PE-RU-NA'S POPULARITY 18 IN NO SMALL MEASURE DUE TO THE GENEROUS PRAISE GIVEN IT BY GRATEFUL PEOPLE. w Tells Every One About Pe-ru-na. Mrs. R. T. Fennessey, Bound Brook, N.J., writes: «] have taken Peruna and find it a very good medicine. After I took one bottle of Peruna, I was cured of my cold. Icannot help telling every one I know about Peruna and asking them to try it. 1 would like every one to know of the good Perna does." Mr. E, W. Staley, 812 Fillmore St., Nashville, Tenn., writes: "I was down for three months with pneumonia and had gotten very weak. A friend advised me to try Peruna, which I did, and soon found it was the thing I needed. When I finished the third bottle, I found I weighed more than I ever did in my life." Recommends Pe-ru-na. Spreading the Good News. ® Ni Mr. Henry Ganther, R. R. No. 1,| Prof. J, Ivison, dealer in musical Necedah, Wis., writes: merchandise, box 813, Cumberland, "I recommend your medicine to every one who 1s in need of it. I have been using Perunaand have gained in health. I thank you for what you have done." Md., writes: "It is now five months since my wife began taking Peruna and from the first day improvement has been going on noticeably. She is now in good health, We never tire of making this fact known te our many friends." A Friend Had Used Pe-ru-na. Mr. Henry I. Goodwin, portrait artist, 88 Govestreet, EB. Boston, Mass., writes: "For three years I have been suffer- ing from a general rundown condition of the system. I tried many remedies. "A friend of mine advised me to use Peruna. as it had benefited him. "After taking two bottles I felt botter. Now'I am ia tho best of health." Mrs. John Haynes, 107 E. Main St., Columbus, Ohio, writes: «For over two years I sthiffered with headaches and severe pains in my head, and all these two years my friends would say,"Why don't you take Peruna? "Finally one of my neighbors just in- sisted on my taking it. I tried it and before I had taken one-fourth of a bot- tle my headaches were gone. I am 'never without Peruna, I advise every one to take Peruna," ~What You Get ¥ Out of Lilie Depends Upon You. The wear that you receive during the life of a pair ot shoes depends very greatly upon the dealer youn purchase them of. If You Got Them Here, They Are Bound to Be Satisfactory If they are not, you know we make good our guar- antee of service in every case. NO RISK IN DEALING AT J. H. Sutherland & Bro, THE HOUSE OF GOOD SHOEMAKING FOR SALE: ENGLISH PIG LEAD Canada Metal Co., Ltd. Toronto, Ont. THURSDAY SPECIALS 400 yards WHITE SPOT MUSLIN, VICTORIA LAWN and INDIA LINEN, worth from 15¢. to 20c. yard. THURSDAY BARGAIN 121c. yard. 5 pieces BLEACHED SHEETING, 72 inch. wide, nice round even thread. free from dressing. good va- lue at 30c. yard. THURSDAY BARGAIN 28c. yard. 10 pieces CORSET COVER EMBROIDERY, 18 to 24 inches wide, with beading on edge, 35c. va- lue for 2Bc. yard. THE JAMES JOHNSTON STORE 180 Wellington Street. POSSIBILITY OF ANOTHER BECK CASE 1s AGITATING ENGLAND. May Be Innocent--Parliament May Order a Searching Investigation-- The Evidence On Which He Was Convicted. ! England is at resent agitated over the possibility another Beck case, the victim being George Edalji, at present serving a term of imprison- ment for mutilating & horse. Our rebders will remember the case of Adolph Beck, the Norwegian, was twice unjustly condemned on charges of theft, and whose innocence was finally demonstrated in a miracu- lous manner. Beck's wrongs crea a tremendous sensation, and English public opinion regarded him as a martyr of the Dreyfus type. It is for- tuhate, indeed, as The 8 that the people of England become so much in earnest whenever they suspect that a wrong has been done a private citizen, however obscure. { is now certain that when Parlia- ment meets a thorough investigation of the Edalji case will be demanded, if not ordered, by the Government. The Anonymous Libeler. a Church of England clergyman of Parsee origin, and was born in 1876. In 1888 a number of threatening let- ters were received at the vicarage, and their author was proved to bea dismissed servant girl who was pro- secuted. Four years later the Edaljis were again the victims of anonymous libels circulated in the village. These letters continued to ba written till 1895, when they ceased, but not be- fore the local Staffordshire papers had printed a forged letter of apology, ad- mitting the authorship of the letters, signed by George Edalji and Freder- ick Brooks. In 1903 there was another outburst of scurrilous letters. It does not appear, however, that the same person wrote all the letters, and it seems clear that Edalji could not have been the author of them all, if, indeed, he wrote any of them, which he has steadfastly denied. Mutilating Cattle. . On Feb. 2, 1903, took place the first of a series of hideous outrages on cat tle, that eventually led to the young man's arrest and imprisonment. Be- fore Aug. 17 six instances of mutilat- ed horses and cattle occurred in the neighborhood, and on Aug. 18 George Edalji was arrested, apparently be- cause his name had appeared so often in the anonymous letters that were in full blast about that time. In press- ing the charge the police appear to have tried two or three lines of pro- secution before settling down to their theory. They finally tried to prove that the crime was committed by the prisoner between the hours of 1 o'clock on the night of the 17th and 6.20 the next morning. The prison- er's father swore that his son went to bed shortly after 7 o'clock, and did not leave his room until 12 hours la- ter. They slept in the same room, and Edalji, jr., always locked the door. The Evidence For the Crown. The police produced a coat belong- ing to the prisoner, which was damp, and on the cuff of which were blood- stains, proved by a medical expert to belong to some mammalian animal. The prisoner's trousers and boots were also shown to have been muddy, and the latter fitted exactly into tracks found in the field with the wounded pony. One of Edalji's razors was wet, and had evidently been re- cently used. Twenty-nine horschairs were picked off Edalji's clothing. This was the evidence for the prose- cution, with some expert testimony to show that the prisoner had written a threatening letter to the police. Edalji was convicted, and sentenced to seven years' imprisonment. He was in jail awaiting trial when another outrage occurred, with a horse as victim, and for six months thereafter horses and cattle were found wound- ed. Finally a man named Farrington was arrested and convicted. He was sentenced to thrée years' imprison- ment. Edalji served three years and was released. For the Defence. At the trial and since some facts have been brought out that point to Edalji's innocence. In the first place he was under surveillance for some time previous to his arrest, and the vicarage was watched the night of the Hony outrage. He was not seen to go out. It is obvious, however, that the watch was not very strict, for the field was also watched in the same way, but the ny was wounded nevertheless. Edalji suffers from as- tigmatic myopia, and without glasses can see only A few yards, and as it fs a considerable distance from the vicarage to the field, it would oer tainly have been extremely difficult for him to make his way there at night. As regards the damp coat, if it was worn that night, it would have been more than damp, for the rain fell heavily. But if the coat 'was damp, why were not the bloodstains also damp? As a matter of fact, they, were dry, and eould only be recogniz- ed by careful analysis. The Hairs on the Coat. The mud on boots and trousers is explained by a walk Edalji took early in the evening. But the most impor- tant contention of Edalji's friends is that the coat was examined by the police and not a hair found on it un- til 12 hours later.' Then the police had also in their possession a piece of the dead pony's skin, and the sug- gestion is that the hairs got on the coat while both were in the hands of the police. Edalji's case was taken up by Henry Labouchere, in Truth, and attarly by Sir A. C. Conan Doyle, in Telegraph. Their pre- sentation of the fects given above was so telling that the congiction grew that an innocent man had been punished, It has been suggested that' the Home Office has been 'actuated' by personal bias in the case, and since the Beck case this branch of Try a Pound of ge Sp yh rw that if any animus was shown it was at the prosecution. have imagine that a young descent, whose Pp Son of Church of England Clergyman | made it impossible far hin te 50 in : . fi rts, woul y receiv Ungrgoing~a_Term of Imprison- ig Spr 2 English districts. More- ment For Mutilating a Horse Whe | over, cent, with scurrilous letters 'would | A not improve his position. Edalji is apparently the victim of some dead- ly shemy of a type more common in fiction who | Calme! while the Bacteriological Institute of Saigon, Cochin China, first commenced hia experiments on the neutralization of Laon He had axeeptionsl opportunities in the matter y with to carry out his investigations, tor says, | inasmuch as a band of cobras had recently attacked a village in the vi- cinity of Baclie governor of the nineiy specimens of the terrible Naja tripudians, or cobra de forwarded and several were at once secrificed to secure their venom glands. Each Edalj# is the son of Rev. 8. Edaljl hor a shelled almond, contains about thirty drops of venom, and in this transparent limpid liquor is em- bodied a strength. As is well known, this cobra is the most dreaded of all ser- pents, and it is widely distributed over India, Burma, Bumatra, Java, Calmette, however, set to work to sys- tematically study the nature of this ed as to ita character. DATLY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 20. NAY BE CAUSE GELEBRE (fa IAE god A Deadly Enemy. It seems more probable, however, Bdalji- seems to been unpopular, and one can man of Parsee hysical infirmity his connection, however inno- an in real life. « ---------- wood work. Business worth $1,000 SERPENT POISON. pot annum. Last man fly from Ew i-health, Avnly to W. GO Mc The Venom of the Cobra 1s Deadly Gioness, Emerg, Ont. Atmost Beyond Belief. SPRING SUITS TO MAKE. GENTLE- It was in the sutumn of 1391 that tte, as director of t venom in the animal system. serpent venom where- din ssiibissi. SC SALESMEN agent. Cavers Bros, Galt, YOUNG MAN TO LEARN CLOTH- ing business, also a young man to learn Men's Furnishing. The H. Db. Bibby Co. IENERAL BLACKSMITH AND £3 HELP WANTED-MALE, v _ FOR AUTO-SPRAY, Best hand Sprayer made, automatic. Sample Machine [ree 10 approved horseshoor, with some experience at men, bring your own cloth and get a up-to-date suit made. Style, price and finish puaranteed. Pressing and repairing done well, Galloway, BY MAY 1st, OR SOONER, MEDIUM ENLARGING ARTHUR ELLIS ARCHITECT, OF- fice, Cor. WANTED--GENERAL. | FOR SALE, i MLLIARD fRABLE, CARON, NEW or! § cushion space. Whig office. sited house, centrally located. Apply i stating rent, to Box 06, care nig Apply through ol AMERICAN BNCYCLOPEDIR, NEW OUR SOLICITING | Sool fearon APB. through, Whitt force ; permanent positions open in special reagon, 'Apply office. tected tervitory ; practical rain ne Aven, Xequires a tention and ustie ; no snap. Work means money. | FRAM y i Aires Box 383, Hamilton, Ont. A rl. a oA stable, Large lot $950. Apply Bex "A, C. ig office, " Dt Whi ARCHITECTS. 3 IOLSTEIN RAEIFERS, TEN ABADS, two and three years old coming. in choice rrade, and some pure Appty to Fred. 8. Ferguson, v. Queen and Dagot streets. vers and by order of the istrict no fewer than capello, were in a barrel to the institute. Forty of the reptiles arrived "alive, land, resembling both in size and toxin of extraordinary Malacca and Cochin China. Until reptile's venom but little precise or reliable information It was, of course, nesessary 3h the first instance to ascertain, within as narrow a limit as possible, the exact degree of toxic power inherent in the venom and to determine if possible the precise dose lethal in respect of each variety of animal experimented upon. A correct calculation of the quantity of venom required in every case was, | I however, found to be quite impossible, for so virulent is the poison that a single d of an emulsion produced by pounding up eight glands in 300 grams of distilled water is sufficient, when introduced into the vein of a rabbit's ear, to kill it in five minutes. All the mammals to which Calmette administered this cobra venom, such as monkeys, dogs, rabbits, guinea pigs and rats, succumbed more or less ose.-- Westminster Gazette. rarely come in pairs, but are of dif- ferent heights and sizes. It was the custom in the mi ages, it seems, to make them uneven se as to faci litate the moving and raising of the huge blocks employed for firewood. He continues: In the middle ages they were also planned to hold a splint, and it was not until the late sixteenth century that they were much ornamented. According to Viol- let le Due, since the most remote ages, from Etruscan times down to the Romans, such andirons were made of iron. Vasari speaks of andirons made with "'meraviglioso magistero" for the captains of the Arte delle Se- ta, but I have not found much orna- mentation upon them as early as he says. I have a theory of my own, which is contrary to that of Viollet le Duc. In England andirons are call- ed fire dogs, and in the Bargello there is a splendid specimen made in the form of crouching hounds. 1 hold that the andirons were in the first in- stance made in the shape of animals lyirg at rest,.shaped of clay or stone, and it was much later that they were made of iron, when they often ended in animals' heads, most often in that of dogs. The Flelg Marshal's Mistake. In The Manchester Guardian G. W. FE. Russell tells, or re-tells, this good Wellington story. Mrs. Loudon was ar accom lished lady, who wrote not only on floriculture, but on arboricul- ture and landscape gardening, and il- lustrated what she wrote. In one of her works she desired to insert a sketch of the "Waterloo Beeches" at Rtrathfieldsaye--a picturesque clump planted to commemorate British deliv- erance from the Corsican tyrant. Ac- cordingly, she wrote to the Duke of Wellington requesting leave to sketch the beeches, and signed herself, in her usual form, "J. Loudon." The duke, who, in spite of extreme age and with perceptions not quite so clear as they once were, still attended to his own correspondence, ed as follows: "F. M. the Duke of Well- ington presents his ents to the Bishop of London. bishop is pite at liberty to make a sketch of the breeches which the duke wore at Waterloo, if they can be found. But the duke is not aware that they differed in any way from the breeches which he generally wears." "Put Into a Book." Thomas Mitton was Dickens' solici- tor as well as his schoolfellow and used to say that he was the only one of all of "Charlie's" friends whom the novelist had never "put into a book." Mitton's hearers smiled inwardly, be- cause. they recognized obvious pieces of Mitton in several of the novels, the most conspicuous fragments being in Wemmick ("Great Expectations") and Tapperit ("Barnaby Rudge"). Not much in common, it may be said, between these two eccentrics. Never. theless, life being more various and more inconsistent than fiction, there he was visibly. Dickens waa greatly and long attached to him, and it was in o letter to the lawyer that he des- eribed most admirably the frightful railway accident from which he es- caped physically unhurt, but gravely shaken in nerve.--London Chronicle. Piles get quick relief from Dr. 2h Magic Ointment. Remember it's made aloge for piles--and it works with ainty' and sabigigction. Iteb- ing, painful, protruding, blind piles Myers' soxs.uave Sausage: For Sunday's Lreakiasts 60 Brock St, been obtain- | A eee att t----taer A GOOD COMMON SENSE COOK FUR a hotel, Apply Box 472 Belleville: uickly, according to the size of the |out the county that 'much damage has V been done the orchards this winter. It HUSTLERS i Everyone of them, These WHIG WANTS No wonder people use them. HELP WANTED--FEMALE. |= HOUSEMAID APPLY MRS ge street FOOD GE JRAL SERVANT AT once. Apply 289 Division St. ty VETERINARY, 2 PR. 6G. W BELL, V.8,, HAS RE INTERNATIONAL ee -------------------------- DWELLINGS, ete., at McCann's. 51 Broek street. ---------------------------------------------------- moved. to his Brick block, on Clarence EDISION TRIUMEH PHONOGRAPH : \ 3 rect. .. Tha Tullos, 181 Brock stivet, HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, | RICK HOUSE, 7-ROOMS, 600D OUT AND WOMEN TO LEARN ote. Anchor Bullding, Market Square. buildings, acres ga nnd at rt. GEAR [1 Ture, M5 in Meh State of cultivation, within arn $10 to $18 Weekly, Help| "Tm 4 Hmita of sity, For particulars, apply secure Sosiions, secured 10, Jo. Inst POWER & SON, ARCHITECT, MER 0 ivtoria street, year for our graduates. Catalogue ant' ' hie Bs oi free. Moler Barber College, Queen and chants Honk Bullding, Sutuer. Brock Spadina, Toronto. | ne ington cots. one, . FOR SALE . WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT, OF ---- fice, second floor over Mahood's Drug ory store, corner Princess and Ragot yay hantisoms open _ Motor Launch streets, Entrance on Bagot street. i", t. inches beam, hull of pine all copper fastened, witn mahogany decks, seats and trim- mings, cushions and all accessories. This boat new July, 1908, Boat and engine, in perfect condition. Nise horse power ongine. 1 guarantos totter than 16 wiles an hour, N CORRESPOND. Fa deliversd to way point on the St. va awrence River {ree all oh Pu. Local § QaWIeSR Gi Terie. "Phone, 00% EDUCATIONAL. ence Schools Scranton, (Bargain). Othe, 67 Brock St. Office hours, 9 am. to 5 p.m. Saturday evening, 7 to D oelock. J. K. Caroll, Repre- Address : . ini ISAAE P. WISR ' Ontario, Canada, PIANO TUNING. P.O. Box 224, L. LOWE, PIANO TUNER, LAKE View House, Ontario St. 'Phone No. 690, all work thoroughly guaranteed. MONEY AND BUSINESS, OUR POLICIES COVER MORE ON building and contents than any other company offers. Examine them at Godwin's Insurance Fanporium, Marke et Square. TO-LET. OFFICES, STORES, LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLONE PURNITURP STORAGE, DWELLINGS, Fire Insurance Uompany, Available stores, offices, factories, eto, Mes assets $61 187.215. addition to Cann's, 51 Brock street which the policyholders have for security the unlimited labilit the stockholders. Farm and of all a ------------------------------------------------ ty pros ble largest in city. 200 selections. Terms treet, t above the Post Office. Calis Ling vonphone or telegraph m te. Postal will bring them, new business get rates promptly attended to. Thos. McGinnes, 281 Division street. & Strange, A~ents. ---------- SS ------------ FRUIT TREES KILLED. The Frost Has Likely Done Ser- ious Work. Picton, Feb. 20.-1¢ is feared through is thought that with no snow to pro small fruit trees such as plums and cherries. Apple trees, as a rule, ave of more sturdy growth. Much speculation has been advanced towards Picton's prospects for junior 0.H.A. hockey next winter. This year's teamn showed up well. Tt is understand all hut Benson, who on the line-up this winter will be oli gible for next This presents happy vrospeets for the town It is understood that Kehoe, the star player of the Brockvifle septette, con templates were 4 season's games remer ing to Picton to mv side and will be a likelihood for next winter Mr. Fielding, teller in the United Em pire bank, il the past six weeks with typhoid, is sufficiently' recovered to he able to be at his duties. E. J. IN ov, of the Standard bank staff, Bell ville, has been wending a couple of days at his home in town Evening Frock For Young Girl. A graceful little dancing frock for a young girl is shown in the drawing, the design having a suggestion of Empire lines. Pale blue China silk was used for the model, the trimming con- sisting of bands of Irish lace inser- tion, and flounces of Valenciennes. The space between the strips of in- sertion forming the yoke was embroid- ered with little forget-me-not flower sprays in natural colors, ssa Suffers Fearful Agony in Resort ing fearful agony, «dl, yesterday, in a resort BED FIRED ; NEGRO DIES. The Paragraph Pulpit REV C.W CASSON. OTTAWA All Thingy Are Sacred. If there has been one lesson taught me more plainly than all others, iv hus been that there ix in this world at Peoria, Ill M., Feb, 20. After suffer George "Isabel, col ored, died, the result of burns recciv Before los Peoria, the deconsed stated i tect the trees and the unusual severity | ing consciousmess, ' A 1 vd J dieous, iter in of the cold will combine in Killing | romeone entered his room while asleep, wathing suis, ood i sated. Al The ws Toa Poe out the cur. |them. The probability is that the | saturated" the bedelothes with kero divinity Ete ie no ---- he 1 i f: t that the old: ; frost will be particularly severe on | sone, and applied a match. } ow th ™ ny g ny ous lac at the er specimens . Minervn Williams, a sweetheart, had | than any other mo day, and no act, and no place. Whatever the time or the place, God ix there, and makes iv sacred by Hin presence. This is the larger lesson that the world must learn before it enters into-the larger °° truth. Every inch of ground is holy, every common' thing in sacred, every imperfect man is inherently divine, made threats against his life, it 1» snid, and is being held by the police. She assorts Isabel went to bed intoxi- cated and lighted a cigarette. ee mn-------------- To Colonize Vancouver. BL, Feb 20. The Vancouver, Canandinn Pacilie Iuilway, company Knowing this thow dare you despise has completed, in Montreal, a COR} uthing or anybody ? track with the British Columbia De A hm------ y o AY i ' + velopment Association, of London, of | Address Mr, Casson for free litera which J. Wilkinson and Hon J. H Turner, ex-president of British Colum members, for the ture, WHAT MAY HAPPEN. bia, are prominent colonization of a hundred and fifty thousand acres on the Esquimalt und Wave of Crime y Re-Establish Nanaimo railway land grant on Van Ma; conver Island, which now belongs to : : Guillotine. the Canadian Pacific railway, The Paris, Feb, 20.--Since the announce mont that rhe guillotine would pro- bably never be used again in Franeo, crim has ineroased notably, especial ly In Parle, and there is now a re. vival of sentiment in favor of capital punishment. There is some' prospect of a place being again found on which ' to erect the guillotine, which now re ersten maine stored in a government shed German Slain. . peneding a decidon whether head chop: Berlin, Feb. 20. The foreign office, ping shall be resumed in all ite revolu- here, has been notified hy the German | tionary plelurespiencss or the nystom Jogntion at Teheran, Persia, of the | now in force' continue of sentencing German subject, named | the criminal to death and depending Damman, snd the wounding of two [upon the president to commute the other Germans by robbers. The lega-] scnlence to life imprisonment. tion protested to the Persian govern ment and demanded the punishment of the guilty men. No political ad vantages for Germany are being pre gved on the Persian government, £500,000 yecessary for the purchase of land, expenses of clearing, ete, have been obtained. Sir Frederick Borden's name is associated with the project The land, it. is certain, will be much songht after hy small British settlers with some capital, if placed at a rea- gonahle figure, murder of a Forty Little Liver Pills for 10e. Gib- son's Red Cross Drug Store. Thomas © H. Fleming, agent Lake Sennen' Union, writen that the union gave no reports or information about New life for a quarter. Miller's | ice, as Dr. Faans stated at the board Compound Iron Pills. For gale by W. J of health meeting. Individuals may H. Medley have spoken to him, but the Satlors' Union whould not be involved as Dr, Evans suggoeste, "Mantol Soap' something new. Sold at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. When the Hair Falls Stop it! And why not? "Fall ing hair is a discase, a regular germ disease; and yers Hair Vigor Lavant Station Affairs. Lalant Station, Feb, 18.-Miss Ger- tie Blair, of McDonald's Corners, vis ited her friend Miss Clara Lee. Mrs, John Lee and her little boy, Clifford, of Edmonton, Alta. Mrs, Barr and hor sons Cecil and Lionel, and Mrs. James Rankin, vieited Mrs. Thomas lee. H. D. MeCuanig, Kingston, con ducted services here and at Wilton on Sunday. Miss Mabel Barr has returned to her home at Poland, after spend ine two weeks with her aunt, Mrs, Thomas Lee. John Lee, leit to-day, for a nine days' trip north. Miss Gar- rett of Sharbot Lake, is visiting Miss Geneva Reynolds at Folger Invita- tiond pre oat' for the marriage of Miss (Carrds Jackson to Frederick Paul. Fhe ox social whi a @iteess, consid Sing the stormy night, $51.75 was disappear like magic by its use. Try it and see ! Sold by all dealers. NEW IMPROVED FORMULA quickly and completely destroys these germs. The hair stops falling out, grows more rapidly, and dandruff disappears. An entirely new preparation. The New Kind ~~ Docs not change the color of the hair? : taken in. The highest box went for $3.05. J. €. AYER CO., Manufacturing Chemists, Lowell, Mass. < #

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