Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Oct 1908, p. 10

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PAGE TEN. ---- Kheumatism Comes From Weak Kidneys 'When the kidneys are not strong enough to filter uric acid from the biood, this poison inflames nerves and muscles, bringing the excruciating pain of Rheumatism. Abbey's Salt cures Rheumatism by strengthening the Ki and preventing the accumulation of uric acid. If you feel your old trouble coming on, get a bottle of dealers. This woman was ill, blue, and uraged. Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. R. Gentle: 1093 St. James Street, Montreal, koe writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "1 suffered from a severe female weakness, and extreme nervousness, and was blue and utterly discouraged. ** Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound was recommended, and after taking several bottles, I am not only cured, but am an entirely different woman, and on the whole a healthier woman than before taking your valu- able medicine. \ ** Every woman who suffers from any form of female ills should not fail to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia EK. Pink- ham's Vegetable ow: pound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands o! women who have been troubled with displacemerits, inflammation, ulcera- tion, fibroid tumors, irre iti riodic pains, backache, that bear- ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. i! NEW MACHINE SHOP. A call is invited for all kinds of general manufacturing and machine repairing. Special work such as machine sharpening lawn mowers (we have the only machine in the city for this purpove)--repairing sewing machines guns, phonographs, scales, razors, edged tools, dws; brazing, model and pattern mak- ing. Best of attention given all work. Re de may be tested before leaving shop. Vork guaranteed. Work outside city prompt- ly attended to. Charges moderate. J. W. HUNTER, Machinist, 30 Montreal St. (near Princess) Kingston. Orders taken at mmons Bros. and A. Vanluven's Parcel De ery. Dyeing with Soap! Maypole Soap is the Household Dye that washes and dyes with one opera. tion. Used almost exclusively in England. Yields fast, brilliant colors. Dyesto any shade. No streaks. And above all-CLEANLY, SAFE, SURK. Maypole Soap roc. for Colove--isc. for Black, Frank L. Benedict & Co., Montreal. Every Woman 1a interested and should knoe about the wonderful MARVEL Whirling Spiay The new Vaginal Syringe. Best--M ost conven- fent. It cleanses book --ger . full rticulars and directions wal to 1 ve WINFSOR SUPPLY CO., W indsor, Ont. \ General Agents for Canada. Cook's Cotton Root Compound The at Uterine Tonic, and 0 oe thly safe effectual 10 degrees stronger, $3; Special cases, per box. id all druggists, or sent ' Pai receipt of price, A Parag ot. Address: Ine Cook Meoine G0. TORONTO, ONT. (formerly Windsor MEN AND WOMEN. hi eg irritations or ulcerations Preveuts Contagion. "Painless, aod Bot Setrin: EVARSCHEMIGALDD, gent or poisencus. |, Druggists, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for $1.00, or 3 bottles 82.75. Clroulat sot 0B request, No me 3 TRANSPORT OF WHEAT SOME INCORRECT STATE. MENTS CORRECTED. As to Shipments of Canadian Wheat By U. S. Ports--Not a Single Cargo of Wheat Shipped From North-West to Chicago. The following letter appears in the Montreal Witness : Apparently, from your editorial of yesterday, you have decided that no lake combine exists among Canadian vessel owners. In, this you are quite correct, but the figures you have given of shipments of Canadian wheat © by American ports are so far from cor- rect that it is hardly worth while taking notice of same, as the trade bpays not the slightest attention to them, knowing what is correct. You say that out of a total ship- ment of sixty million bushels of wheat of last year's crop, twelve mil- lions alone were shipped by Montreal, the balance going by United States ports. Surely no man, giving the thing a thought, would write such a wild statement. The production of the - North-West last year was from gixty to sixty-five millions, generally accepted. Of this, the twelve millions you speak of no doubt you estimate as going from the port of Montreal since the first of May, which is about correct. You have overlooked five millions or more of the same crop that was shipped from Montreal from the time the crop began to move un- til the port of Montreal was. closed. You have also overlooked from eight to ten millions as the amount carried from St. John during the winter sea- son, also about five* millions carried from Bay port to Portland during the same season, all of this being done by Canadian craft. and Canadian route. This accounts for about twen- ty-seven millions. Seed would be at least ten millions--thirty-seven mil- lions. Food, 1 cannot estimate, but in the vicinity all round of fifteen mil- lions, 1 give these figures roughly, but they are about correct, out of a sixty-fivé million bushel crop, giving it the outside estimate. You further say that Chicago was a port of discharge for 5,469,081 bush- els. Now, as a matter of fact, there has not been a single eargo of wheat shipped from any North-West point to Chicago. Where your figures come from is astonishing to the trade. It is true that one, possibly two cargoes of elevator screenings were shipped to Chicago, nothing more, and 1 would like to ask your writer what the ob- ject would be in shipping Manitoba wheat to Chicago; it would be a bonded wheat, it could not be used for milling, it could not he used for mixing, What tise did they put it to? You also lay stress on this being car. ried by American hottoms. Now, it was neither carried by American nor Canadian bottoms, as, if your writer had inquired from any reliable source he could have ascertained. You next say that there is a feeling on the board of trade that American vessels should be allowed to take grain from one Canadian port to an- other Canadian port. This is a thing that is not worth discussing, for the f~Nlowing reasons : » o-day, nearly all of the wheat ship- ped from Duluth is being carried by Canadian bottoms, showing clearly that American vessels are not compet< ing at the rates of freight being paid, which are equal to Fort William freights, Further, the trade that has come fro Toledo and Chicago has been very largely carried by Canadian ves- sels. I have no hesitation in saying that from eighty to ninety per cent. of the entire shipments of grain from United States ports to Montreal have been carried by Canadian vessels and that there is no desire, and nothing to be gained in the interest of the trade or otherwise, in bringing American vessels into the Canadian carrying trade. Further, your writer speaks of the "rush season,"" before the close of navigation; would he kindly say what season this is as Montreal closes on the 15th to 20th of November. The "rush season' that he speaks of then comes on, there is no other outlet ad that time than American ports. I would further say, that during last winter the feeling by the banking interest, railway interest and other interests was doubtful as to the keep- ing qualities of Manitoba , wheat through hot weather and in order to help farmers and others to market their wheat, gave inducement in the way of slightly lower freights to have this wheat shipped out. Portland, which can be lochd upon as a Cana- dian port of export, and St. John were quite full, in fact, had more grain than they could forward. Now, where was an outlet to be found ex- cept by American ports ? t is time that these wild statements were. abandoned and that a seliable paper, such as the Witness should ex- amine, more closely into what is printed for the public than they did, vesterday, in your editorial. As I be- fore said, the trade pays no attention to it, but your outside readers may be misled by statements that are to- tally incorrect, and printed for want of knowledge, apparently, of what is fact, Good-bye ! God Bless You! By Eugene Field. I like the Anglo-Saxon speech When I was leaving mother It takes a hold and seems to reach Way down into your feelings That some folks deem it rude I know, And therefore they abuse it, , But I have never found it so. Before all else I choose it. 1 don't object that men should air The Galic they have paid for, . With "Au revoit,'"" "Adieu. ma chere," For that's what French was made for But when a crony takes your hand At parting to address vou He drops all foreign lingo and He says : "Good-bye ! God bless you?" 1 love the words perhaps because When 1 was leaving mother Standing at last in solemn pause We looked at one another, And 1-1 saw in mother's eyes The love she could not tell me--- A love eternal as the skies, Whatever fate befell me, She put her arms about my, neck And soothed the pain of leaving And though her heart was like to break, She. spoke no word of grieving. She let no tear bedim her eyes, For fear that might distress me ; But, kissing me, she said good-bye And asked our God to bless me. The stylish clerk may be a poor seller of goods. ] stock of envy, The small mind usually has a large THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1908. NEWBORO HAPPENINGS. J. N. Enolton Spoken of As a Candidate. Newboro, Oct. 6.--Robert Irwin's threshér is doing the work in the localities north of the town. Many are complaining that the dust and dirt in the barns this year is the worst in years. The dust is reported to be due to the black rust which struck the oats last summer. The recent rains have helped the pastures slightly, but wells and springs are very low yet. Potato digging has commenced and the crops are report- ed unusually poor. Messrs. H. 8S. Foster, R. P. Tett and Edward Lan- don. went to Westport on Thursday in Mr. Landon's speedy motor boat. Miss Millie Green, trained nurse, of Ottawa, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Eleanor Green, Carleton gtreet. Mr. and Mrs. Austin Preston, Harlem, spent Sunday in town, the guest of G. W. Preston at the Hotel Rideau. Mrs. George Bilton is spending a few days with relatives in Brockville. Mrs. Ann Bishop, who fell in the cellar, some time ago and fractured her hip, is reported eritically ill. Very poor hopes are entertained for her recov- ey. William Spicer, who has been so seriously ill with typhoid fever, for some weeks past, is recovering very slowly, George E. Foster, Montreal, spent a few days last week in this locality." A number from here attend- ed the auction sale of the farm stock of the late James Murphy, at Crosby on Saturday. Miss Jean Johnston, principal of the Newboro public school attended the meeting of the West Leeds Teachers' Institute at Gan- anoque on Thursday and. Friday of last week. Mrs. Robert Bolton is again on the sick list. Elmer Knapp is blasting out a well at his home on Drummond street. .J. F. Graham has completed the build- ing of a granoclithic sidewalk on Sim- coe street, from the corner of Drum- mond and Simcoe streets to the Pelow bloek. The Reform Association will send a delegation to the convention at Delta on Wednesday. It is rumored here that J. N. Knolton, of this place, will allow his name to go before the con- vention. Mr. Knolton is one of the best known men in the rear of the riding. He has always taken great in- terest in all matters of importance to the country at large. On several oec- casions he was sent to Ottawa as the representative of different bodies to appear before committees in the House of Commons. Should Mr. Knolton be the choice of the convention a hot contest may be looked forward to in Leeds, and in the event of his elec- tion the people of South Leeds may rest assured that their interests will be in safe hands. Michael Murray, of Chaffey's Looks, is moving into Mrs. Galbraith's house on Carleton street. Mrs, F. C, Lan- don and daughter, Miss Bella, return- ed on Saturday from a prolonged visit with relatives in Rockport and Alexandria Bay, N.Y. Mrs. (Judge) Sinclair and daughter, Miss Eleanor, are guests of relatives in town. The Holiness Movement congregation which have been conducting revival services under canvas on the Knolton block on Drummond street for the past few weeks, has moved into the town hall. DENBIGH REPORTS. The Crops Out There Are Light This Year. Denbigh, Oct. 3.--The bush fires which were raging here-in- all direc- tions, have been fairly well quenched by last Monday's rain, and no further damage is anticipated just now. Threshing in this vicinity is finished. It did not take long, as with very few exceptions, crops are very light. Po- tatoes are also almost a failure with many farmers, and the prospects - in general are not very encouraging. Lumbering operations will likely also be very much curtailed this fall and approaching winterg and most _of the young men in the Vicinity intend to start for New Ontario next week, to seek employment in the lumber camps there. Miss Clara Petzold, who spent a few months at home with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Petzold, has returned to Toronto to resume her former position. The Misses Jane and Martha John intend to start, in a few days, for New York state, where they intend to remain for the winter at least. The Misses Emilia and Martha Wuntke, whose parents formerly resid- ed here, but moved, some years ago, on a farm near Mount Forest, are spending a month or so here visiting their relatives and former neighbors. Miss Christina Chatson has returned from Canandaigua, N.Y., to remain for some time with her pareals, Mr. and Mrs. F. Chatson. P. Stein was for a few days, last week, the guest of his sister, Mrs. C. B. Marquardt, of Hardwood Lake, township of Rag- lan. A political public meeting was held in the conservative interest in Charles Both's. hall, . on , Wednesday evening laske--=Messrs. Uriah Wilson, M.P., and William J. Raul, M.P.P,, addressed the apdience, which was not as large as expected. Alfred Both, who was employed in Arnprior, has returned home, to spend a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Both, before starting for New Ontar- io, where he intends to try his luck during the coming winter. The Lord should not be responsible for all the dispensations that are claimed to be His. WORSE THAN ONIONS. Bad Breath From Indigestion Can- not Be Overcome With Per- fumes. Nine-tenths of the offensive breath is a result of stomach trouble. It can- not be overcome by breath perfumes or any other palliative measures. Ii you have a bad breath; if there is heartburn, flatulence and gulpings of undigested food; if the stomach burns or smarts; if there is sleepless- ness, nepvousness, headaches or any other symptoms of - indigestion, use Mi-o-na stomach tablets and get "well. A 50c. box of Mi-o-na stomach tab- lets lasts for a couple of weeks and will ward off a dozen mild attacks Jf indigestion, while its continued use will give an absolute and complete cure. G. W. Mahood has seen so many cures made by, Mi-o-na stomach tab- lets that he gives a guarantee with every box to refund the money if it TRIP T0 PIGMYLAND SAVAGE TRIBESMEN ARE RULED BY WITCHES. I---- Strange Cannibal Races Found in the Wild Fastnesses of Interior Africa. y Lieutenant-Colonel BR. G. T. Bright, C.M.G., who leit England at the end of 1906 as British commissioner in connection with the disputed frontier between Great Britain and the Con- go Free State, has returned to Eng- land on the conclusion of twenty months' travel in some of the wildest party of East Africa. . The joint commission lost five of its members, who were killed at vari- ous times in the more unseitled re- gions, and several were wounded while working in small parties escorting store or mails. During one of the journeys of Capt. E. Jack, R.E, one of the British commissioners, along the western shore of Lake Albert, one of his can- oes was upset by a hippopotamus, an animal which abounds in this lake and in the river Semliki, two privates of the King's African Rifles being drowned. There were several small encounters with the more savage tribes through whose country the commissioners pass- ed. At the south portion of the boundary a party of soldiers, while escorting some friendlies who had brought in food, were set on by hos- tile natives who dispersed the British pr who had to take refuge in a riendly camp. When the news reach- ed the main camp a rescuing force was sent out in relief, this itself be- ing attacked on the return journey, several of the members being killed before the assailants were eventually driven off. Great difficulty was experienced ow- ing to the proximity of dense grass, in which the natives remained hidden, and while some of the natives were extremely friendly; it was impossible to know how many natives might be hidden in the jungle. On another oec- casion one of the escort was attacked just outside the camp and severely wounded. Toward the northeast end of Lake Albert Edward, a porter, who had become detached from the cara- van, was attacked and cut to pieces. The commission had some interest- ing experiences in the dense forest along the banks of the Semliki, where weeks were spent by the officers in ex- amining the country. The conditions [ were most depressing, the sun was seldom seen and the forest growth was so thick that camp could only be pitched in the native villages. The continual rain and semi-dark- ness, with the presence of myriads of stinging ants, made life very uncom- fortable. In this forest a pigmy ele- phant was shot by a German party. The forest was densely inhabited by people who live in the thick under- growth. All the paths to the forest villages are strongly stockaded, and, in addition, the jungle itself was thickly studded with wooden spikes to prevent surprise, The inhabitants in this forest differ Ituri. They are cannibals, and when pressed for food exchange their chil- dren for those of other families. They refuse to eat members of their own family. They displayed great nervous- ness at the first appearance of the white man, but were quite friendly. At the southern end of the boun- dary the commissioners met some in- teresting people, who are singular in the fact that they owe allegianee to no chiefs. Each family owns its own village, and recognizes no head. .The whole community, however, is domin- ated by a clan of witch women, who are very hostile to Europeans, and claim occult powers. These people were largely respon- sible for much of the trouble with the natives. The chief witch woman visit- ed the British camp and prov- ed herself to be not only a very at- tractive but a very clever person. It transpired that on the night previous to her visit to the British camp she had summoned a meeting of the peot ple and told them that she had ar- ranged to clear the Europeans out of the country. Fortunately for her it happened that the day on which she promised to get rid of the strangers was the date on which the commission had struck camp. While on Lake Albert Edward the commissioners visited a native tribe who lived in floating villages erected on separate islands or rafts of papy- rus. It was said that these people, who live entirely on fish, had origin- ally taken to the water from fear of lions. All the commissioners suffered at various times from fever owing to the hardships endured, but the malaria did not prove to be of a malignant type. The Congo dommissioner had to be invalided home after a severe op- eration, while another member of the Longo commission died on the way home. What Happened To Jones. St. Louis Republic. One day a tdll, gaunt woman, with rope-colored hair and an expression of great fierceness, strode into the of- fice of a country clerk in West Vir- ginia, according to Senator Penrose, of Pennsylvania. "You air the person that keeps the marriage books, ain't ye ?"' she de- manded. "What books do you wish to see, madam ?"' asked the polite clerk. "Kin you find out if Jim Jones war married. Search of the record disclosed the name of James Jones, for whose mar- riage a license had been issued two years before. 'Married Elizabeth Mott, didn't he ?"' asked the woman. "The license was issued for a mar: riage with Miss Elizabeth Mott." "Well, young man, I'm Elizabeth. T thought I oughter come in an' tell ye that Jim has escaped !" P : bl Argument Illustrated. "Calling names don't make any real difference," said the conservative cam- paigner. "No," answered the scientist. "If it did, those Latin titles we have be- stowed on germs would have discour- aged them long ago," ' The use of liquor causes many men to think they are misused, and they are--by, themselves, . entirely from the pigmies of the pro KING STRANG'S EMPIRE, Foreign Tale of Michigan's Pirate Islands. London, . Spare Moments. ? About Ey ive miles from Char levoix, off the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, is a group of islandsgleven in number, inhabil ever since White men first entered America. They were practically cleared of forests and cov- ered with cultivated fields as early ae 1650, and within four years of the founding of Quebec Champlain had a trading post at Beaver Island. It was at Beaver Island "that one of the most interesting incidents in the history of America occurred--the attempt of James Jesse Strang to establish a branch of the Mormon church, and at the same time to set up a virtual kingdom, with himself as reigning monarch. Strang was the son of a farmer, and born in Cayuga county, New York. Although possessed of little education he had great natural abilities, and supported himself in early life by tem. perance lectures and dabbling in poli- tics. In 1843 he settled in Burling- ton, Wis., and some time before the death of Joseph Smith, in 1844, he isited Nauvoo and became a convert to Mormonism, being baptized, made an elder, and commissioned to 'plant a stake in Zion" at Wisconsin. After he death of the brothers Joseph and Hiram Smith Strang claimed the suc: cession, although he had been a mem- ber of the church for less then a year. Brigham Young and the other Mormon leaders denounced him as an imposter, excommunicated him and drove him from Nauvoo. Attended by a few followers he attempted to set- tle in Walworth county, Wisconsin, but was compelled to go further afield, and in 1847 he transferred his community to Beaver Island, and founded a village, which was named after himself, St. James. About July 11th, 1850, he organized his. church gan and established his "kingdom," and from then till his death he was known as "King Strang." He controlled the Mormon vote, and was elected to the legislature in 1853 and again in 1855. The mysterious disappearance of trading vessels and all their crew in the vicinity of Beaver Island led to grave suspicions, and when the schooner Robert Willis, loaded with wheat and flour for Buffalo, was seen steering for Beaver Harbor, and was never seen again, while the Mormons had plenty of flour and wheat for a long time after, decisive action was taken against them. [The man-of-war Michigan was sent to Beaver Island with the United States marshal, who arrested Strang and a large number of his followers, and took them to De- troit, where they were tried before Judge Wilkins, of the United States court. In the end he and a hundred of his followers were acquitted. In 1856 matters came to a crisis. A resi- dent of the island named Thomas Bed- ford had been publicly flogged by King Strang's orders, and he determined on revenge. On June 20th the U. 8S. 8S. Michigan was in harbor at St. James and Strang was shot in the back, after which Bedford and his accomplices were taken to Mackinac, and acquit ted. King Strang lived only a month, and after his death the taber- nacle at St. James was destroyed, the rty of the Mormons confiscated and the Mormons banished from the state. A Latch-Key Town To-Day. Arthur Chapman, in Denver Republican Old Chester Boggs went way back home to take ome look around And see the quiet, dear old friends and tread familiar ground, But trolley cars whizzed up the roads where goldenrod once bloomed, And, t® make way for a skyscraper the baseball ground was doomed ; The deacon drove a whizz-machine in place of one-hoss shav And, just to free his dizzy mind, Old Chester Boggs aloud opined a latch-key town to-day." The houses, deep in flowerv yards that looked so trim and neat, Had been replaced with modish flats, steam heated--all complete ; The orchard where the laden trees had charmed his boyish soul loop-the-loop cars roll; He caught a vagrant taxicab and home- ward went his wav. And to a man across the aisle smile ; "The cross-roads burg of yester-year a latch-key town to-day." Shine Just Where You Are. By John Hay. Don't waste your time in longing For bright, impossible things, Don't sit supinely yearning For the swiltness' of angel wings ; Don't spurn to be a rushlight, Because you are not a star; But brighten some bit of darkness By shinning just where you are. There is need of the tiniest candle As well as the rish sun ; The humblest d is ennobled When it is worthily done ; You may never be called to brighten The darkened regions afar ; So 4ll, for the day, your mission By shining just where you are. and then in years' steady sifting, Some of them turn into friends. Erieads are the sunshine of life. i ttt------------ Toronto Street Market. Toronto, Oct. 5.--Wheat, fall, bush., 90c.; wheat, goose, bush., 88c.; oats, bush., 44c. to 45c.; barley, bush., 55c. to 58¢.; rye, bush., 75¢c.; peas, bush. 90c.; hay, per ton, $13 to $15; straw, per ton, $13 to $14; dressed hogs, $9.- 50 to 810; butter, 25¢. to 28¢.; butter, creamery, 26c. to 28c.; eggs, dozen, 25¢c. to 28c.; chickens, dressed, lb. 12¢. to 13ec.; fowl, per Ib., 9c. to 10c; ducks, spring, 1b., 12¢. to 13c.; tur- keys, lb., 16e. to 18¢.; cabbage, per dozen, 25c. to 35c.; onions, bag, Yc, to $1; potatoes, bag, 65¢c. to Thc; ap- ples, bbl, $1 to $1.75; beef, hindquar- ters, $8 to $9; beef, forequarters, $4. 50 to $6; beef, medium, carcase, $5 to $6.50; beef, choice, carcase, $7.50 to $3: mutton, per ewt., $6 to $8; veal, prime, per cwt., $7.50 to $10; lamb, per cwt., $8.50 to $9.50. his little shop through the He is an inverate puzz ment the wits of his patrons. i : He has. invented puzzle pictures, representing every sort of goods he has Answer To Merry Go Round Puzzle. There must have been thirteen children on the merry-go-round. .-° » who rode ahead of Willie at the same time came behind lim, as there were twelve of them, we simply add thrée-quarters of twelve twelve, which gives thirteen, the total number including HEAD OFFICE S. ROUGHTON, City General Agent, Kingston. "The cross-roads burg of yester-year-'s 10. Here is a funny old hardware man, who has built hy a fine business in original methad of keeping" ki Je crank and sits up nights scheming to tors is customers guess. instead of labeling his stove lifters in plain English ha srefers to call attention to them as shown in picture No. 1. ' "Can you tell what articles the other signs stand for? Answer on Friday. 1. Those to onethird of Willie himself. i Pe 4 4 / y RIT Our Greatest Year In spite of induftrial Storms and financial depression, this Company has &eadily marched forward. Inctead of losing ground, -or even Qanding ill, The Mutual Life of Canada wrote MORE business last year than in any other one year in the Company's history. The total new insurance amounted to $7,081,402-- again of $1,577,855 over 1906. And all but $78,000 of this was written right here in Canada. The Mutual Life of Canada is the people's Company -- conducted in the interests of its policy-holders who get all 108 WATERLOO, Ont. Boggs found to be a Coney Isle, where Old Boggs remarked with -mirthless Make all good men your well-wishers, WE ARENOW SHOWING --OUR-- Royal Shoes for Women ----AND---- JUST WRIGHT AND ROYAL SHOES FOR MEN. REID & CHARLES Milk Chocolate Stick, Medallions, Cro- quettes, Cream Bars etc. are truly delicious. For sale by all dealers from Coast to Coast. THE COWAN CO. LIMITED, TORONTO. 78 «KING" FLY KILLER Kills without crushing and do es not soil the most delicate fabrics or injure the highest polis h. 10c. each, Druggists, Hard« ware pad Gracers.

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