Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Jan 1909, p. 8

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ROYAL MOVEMENTS THE STATE VISIT TO THE london GERMAN KAISER. Movements of Other Members of Royal Family and Vice-Royal- ty--Opening of Parliament. London, Jan. 30. As regards state visit of the king and queen Berlin, i majesties are to le lin on Monday, February Sth, they will return to Buckingham Pal ace from Germany on Saturday, 13th. The ceremonial of the royal visit the Prussian = ¢ourt, aud the gramme of the proposed ments and London from Berlin for the king's ap- proval. Their majesties are to be at- tended by a large suite, Lord Howe, throp, Sir Charles Hardinge, Granville, and Major Ponsonby. Duchess of from attending the queen to Be pro- Lord During the residence of the court at | Windsor Castle, their majesties ente tained a succession of guests, ineluc ing several of the ambassadors and other chefs de mission, and some (of the ministers and other personages "of lighteaad leading." There will be three. or four days' shooting in Great Park, where game is very abundant, before their majesties make their parture, The king has announced ~ his inten- tion of opening parliament in person, with a full state ceremonial, on Tues day, February 16th, and his majesty will be accompanied from Buckingham Palace to Westminster by the queen, and will be met in the House of Lords by the Prince and Princess of Wales. The king and queen' 'will hold a diplomatic and official court in the ballroom of Buckingham Palace, shortly after the meeting of parlia ment, probably on Friday, February 26th. It is expected that the second court of the session will be held hy their majesties on Friday, March 5ih, just before the king leaves for the south of Europe. The Prince - and Princess of Wales are on a short stay at Windsor before they come to town, but their younger children remain for present at York Cottage. The prince and princess are return to Sandringham at Easter for ten days or a fortnight, after which they will be absent from Nor folk until about the middle of Octo ber, Englan to Lord and Lady Aberdeen are taking a short holiday out of Iroland before beginning the work of the when the vice-regal court enters into residence at Dublin Castle. The castle has been going through a course alteration and re-decoration which a considerable sum is being expended "season ol on To Have A Revolution. Port Au Prince, Hayti, Jan 30 A new revolution is looked upon here likely to break out in the north about March or April. M. Antenon Firmin, whose name was suggested for appointment as Hay tian diplomatic representative, first at Washington and Jater at Sante Domingo, which government £Euggested that he would not be persona grata, has becn appointed to be minister to Cuba. M. Fouchard has ap pointed minister at Berlin These, are new posts which will dlevated to the ranks of legntions diplomatic circles it is asserted the acceptance of the was forced on the men wag a question of "se te demettre, ns heen bye Ir that appointment to whom 1 soumettre ou An American Suffragette Prof. Spire Potter, whose paper read before the Bufialo conven Jon for equal sufirage attracted much "attention, is the mother of dour' chil dren. Besides her work as professor of English at the University of Minne sota she finds time to do considerable writing. She her second novel, a successful ply, and is frequently called upon to lecture on economic Frances has just completed has written subjects Grey Hair Restored The proper way to restore gray hair ir not to dye it, but store healthy activity to the séalp and hair bulbs: natural color then returns. This will result from the use of Dr. Dawson's Hair Restorer. In botiles, 50c., Wade's drug store. to re al WRECK OF the | the company to which is to take place during the first fortnight of nest month, it in mow practically settled that their ve London for Ber- and to entertain. | functions, will be sent to including | Lady Antrim, Lord Al The | Buccleuch will be excused | THE WHITE LAST OF DRUCE BUBBLE. Money Returned to Those Chipped In. Jan. 30.--The winding-up | order against the New Druce Portland | company, was made in January, 190% | and H, Brougham, as senior officia] receiver © and liquidator, proposes | shorily "fo apply to the board trade for his pelense, was registred on No- | vember 5th, 1907, with a nominal | capital of £25,000 in 5s. shares, and that its objects were to enter into an | agreement © with the Pruce-Portland | company, (a previously registered | company) and also to co-operate wit), | others in the prosecution of theclaims of George Hollamby Pruce, ov others, i in_respect: of the Druec-Portlend es tates. The prospectus offered 'a ungque opportunity of participating in | the Portland millions in the event of G. H. Druee profiug successful in his dlaims to the Portland estates," | tated that, "assuming these estetos | to. be worth only £16.000,000 every | Hs. share should realize £16 or Mixty- | Who | of He reports that and | Bs. four times the amount subscribed.' 1: would appear, Mr drougham, that 6G. H. Druce was a descendant of a junior branch of the | Druce family, and that the benefit of any claim which the family could | have establivhed to the Poriand eo fiates would probably have gone to C. E. Druce of a senior branch. Notwithstanding this the prospectus contained a pedigree in which G. H. Druee was shawn to be a | descendant of "the senior branch, al- | | though the fnets could, hy exercise of | " : {ordinary intelligence aad diligence, have been discovered by the promoters of tha company. The sum of £3960, Ys. Bd.. had been refurned to feontributors in respect to 17,315 s at 4s. 5€ 12d. per 5s. full paid shar | MORE SECRET RAKE-OFFS, i -- continues | a descendant in Melbourne. 30. --Advices that great Broken Hill, "Tom" Mann, about thirty other arrested. Mr. Maun the police cordon the 3 everal policeme volleys of stones. A sharp struggle between the police and the mob in batons were cial deal with a rake off The unionists have cabled for some on I'his time it was in the to g _ Britain, France and the site for the normyl | many soliciting a ce ichool, and the sum money which "Tom" Mann has to bo arounted for is $2200. In known } England as a prominent the evidence Submittel to the court it cialist agitator, first in ; has been shown that that. amount was | With the famous doc kers' strike, in paid by this firm out of the profits on | 1380, and then with the formation of the dea the L.L.F. In the former mov: Hot given. which began the so-called io sm, he, together with the chief and as regards | thanks to his great Jan. state at London, Hour ne prevailed day, when leader, and were from Mel excitement the the labor per on | Further Reason For Change { | Criminal Law. | Winnipeg, Jan. 30.--The legal action Jollowing a dissolution of the partier | ship 'which | years Ons deavored to pass with picket reliefs, L000 unionists, and We i in presence of existed for a number ot re injured by between well-know lawyers has uncovered another provin here two ensued, which freely used. Gre government Ger purchase of : of was al ohe time n a to somo one whose name was The Roblin governmen' | had heen repeatedly offered this site at |? £6,500, hut had retused to buy it until jas suddenly it passed into other hands. Burns, when it was as suddenly bought { the government for £10,000] The deal | ties, he was created a lot of talk at the time, but |e soon, hevetofore there has been nothing other gible to work Some ton of actu mont new union "Ben" Til asgocia 11% orga I its however, fell leaders of the party, political vicissitudes, for New Zealand, in Australia, sooia list socialist paper The present arrest wecond which he Australin. The first j rested in a case riot of speech. Mann expelled from Holland, whither. he had gone to agitate in f nizing found tl and left thi afterward by one o real 5 out on to make graft an ava country settling where lished weekly ne estal a organization ond London's New Reservoir. 30.--~In a few months the largest world will! | The work 189% and the un- I onde n, Jen. | time what are probably covered reservoirs in the Io opened at Honot Oak. were commenced an aertaking has cost £220,000, i clusive of the land. The reservoir | twhich, covers twenty-one acres, has al | storage capacity of S00 000 | lons and is divided into four | partments! two which will hold | The | ahout 16,000,000 gallons It will | detite its supply principally by means | of a forty-cne meh main from the | Fr an rks of the Metropolitan water will be fw iter but {obtained from a deep well the | operation the con Mann andergone of the ha in time he was mm i x the wns mvoivin { was al onde 1m strike favor of a WITHIN FOUR WEEKS. gal com Mother and Four Children Succumbed. Stellarton, N.§.| Henry Morrell, and fo have died of diphtheria mas day. when the | away. The other members ily { that eldest | Irom illness, of 20 he children, Christ Jan wif | of 1 rel, also m | halk The first in | struction of the works was the mak ing of IN.000,000 bricks on the ite, all of which "have been used. The Freservoir wil fitted with every modern appliance for regulating recording, antomatically, the land ogress of the of the fam atia Sunday recovered from their ks © some tl ed awa dread dis but on son, 'thirteen years heart failure as a re t While funeral conducted, or Vu the two doctors pas he of | and the water ill immoned, 1 noon, mother was ta Boycott On The Isthmus. ama, | Texas, wert and her children their she passed On two died anxiety care y . Ww Ine \ Panama, via Galveston |1Mg ith 30.--As a'result' of th petition of. the Panama merchants to | Presid R | President toosevelt, abuses have arisen t department, started | ory Jan: and av the Fhursday another wl] baby placed ay years, died, and Fhe allegiiy in the movements of the and commissa have be the American | canal n among anizations boycott Panama to spend any places 'than can be avoided some of I hun ten Wormwit Fou thousand the campany zone to and 1 im Colon 101 years i in with the h 10f want thi Vote for "the by money. in Kingston. \ dyspeptic is 'a profound hatréd for are, enjoying themsely more money those money spent and -- ' law the printing' and Compare our British Whig of- Everything bookbinding pric with | fice. in line. others. man wi the peopl s STAR LINE i THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, S He Has Caused Much Excitement other | t well connection | tinterrapted Cheing atl jinfection set | followed, 1 { Northampton « { Crimean first child passed | - E. J. CHAMBERLAIN, The newly appointed general manager of the Grand Trunk. Pacific ' railway as he appears in his latest photograph. wa 1 ~ "TOM" MANN ARRESTED. HEROISM IN HOSPITAL. Medical Student Loses An Eye to Save Patient. Partie, Jan. 30.--Président Fallieres, on his ow initiative and with his own, hand, has conferred on M. on medical student, the Legion of Honor, for a splendid act of Hix namo appeared in the list gazetied on Wednesday. M who the of a well- known Frinch surgeon, was assisting in a Paric hospital in an operation on a patient, suffering from purulent . plearisy. A drop of pus I entered the young sur- He knew that the matter virulent poison, and that danger- infeetion must inovitably eusue unless instant treatment were applied. But heknew also that if the opera- tions he was assisting worn for a- moment the tient would risk his life, no other Ceon band to take He, aid nothing; and continued until the operation v performed. then did he have his eve treat: it waz too late, and violent in, ute inflammation astine six months and At length the eye President Fal- incident, imme- voung of. Bazy without consult- The president said that he show "that the wound a doctor attending the poor was no less glorious than the ed by the soldier on the Louis Bazy, cross of the soli-sherifice, 4 : Bazy, is on his chief splashed anc eon's eye wi in. which his place ther was using great pdm. to be removed hearing the cided: that be decorated ministers, ided received by of ing his hex to jury fisld of Letter From King Missing. 30--A the Richard nothing less than he loss letter from the king I'he letter from his majesty acknow edged reecipt of a photograph of fom Northampton Crimean veterans, sont Jurge as the Whin Burge died wr odels storeqa king's létter, Crimean next eldest prized. the thought curious inei- death at Burge, Jan. followed Londen, dent veteban, } of a and to old of he gnartette found dis the his away, which Veteran the niece hut 8 1 to tha Burge that it 1s it. Dunkiley, I h on to letter he much hidden may have A Winter Comfort. nn, cold feexr, or bottle js winter up Fountain in sickness, a invaluable, es The the needed. in Sle right two- bulb Ul rubber sick room stp- for Syringe her art size kind 1 ges and at Wad s drug store. nonchalantly pays 8 of drawing to a often wets unduly ex some one off man who the of it priv detices ited ced nickel bn him Why let cighty-three Isewhewe? What works a plog- n emplovees have we we hole 0 1 S. S. REPUBLIC. J ATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1909. ling or protruding pilfis . m---- . . ---- TAKING OFF THE GLOVES. ELECTRIC MERGER! am oss 3 "3 moners. COMBINATION TO FIGHT! londox, Jan. 30.--A fair idea of how some of the newspapers are tak- COMMISSION. " ing up the eudgels against the House 1 # | -- of Lords may be gleaned from the re- The Cataract People in It--Sacri- marks of Revnolds' Newspaper on the fices Will Be Made to Prevent specches recently delivered by Winston ° tition in Power Churehill and lloyd George : 0 ompe * "One of the preliminary tasks which Toronto, Jan. 30.--Recent develop- | remained to be achieved before the ments have lent almost unchallenged people could enter seriously in their credence to the persistent' sssevera- | struggle against tho House of Lords tions emanating from more or" less'is already accomplished. The growing authoritative sources that the Hext jnsolonce and arrogance of Lord Lans- two mouths will see the formation of | downe and his follow aristocrats, in a gigantic electric merger, having as | recent. years, may be traced to. the its object the preservation of all pres- | Limidity displayed on this question by ent independent electrical counevrns | responsible leaders; of the liberal party which are threatened" with great loss {3 the past. Even during Mr. Glad: of revenue by the initiation of the stone's leadership no cabinel minister government's power scheme, é ok fof the present rank of Lloyd George or With an immense capitalization it is | Winston Churchill dare speak of the claimed that this merger will take in | retentions of the House of Lords in all the private electric interests in the {ha language employed by the former territory bounded by Quebec, 2 iagara | ¢ Liverpool the other week, and: "hy and Port Arthur. Such companies as |g Jotfor ut Birmingham on Wednes- the Toronto Electric Light company duy.. The first thing to be done, and the Toronto street railway, which | therefore, inthe struggle between re- two are controlled by the Electrical { prosontative goverament and - aristo- Development company; the Cataract {erntic Tale was to set out the real is. Power company, of Hamilton; the Gen- {suc of the conflict in language which the average clector could understand. eral Electric company, of Peterboro: the London Electric company, will be The notable address of the president of the board of trade in the Chamberlain the controlling forces in Ontario, While in Quebec the Montreal Light, citadel has completed the work begun by Lloyd George at Liverpool It iy Heat and Power company will be the a sive pO aN . ; 5 most active pody. In the east the St. the policy of plain talk to the peers. Lawrence river and Niagara will gen- So dong ae the critics of the peers Tate the aon aul Py She: west the were contont with bali-bearted harvan Star ill o er Arthurand [oon the absurdity of the heredity Wi iy Ram 1. fae a . ror | VOLO, they failed to evoke any sori of ere , the organizers oi the meng from the mass of natural minded voters in the country who did county jail here on a ing a worthless seized country. . variably refer to Nord in terms of endearment, generally i of al One writer pleaded with the man to sell his office furniture in > N.Y., and come to her and marry her Nord claims to have lived in Chi and says he met most of his' correspondents there, He declared, io day, that he was innocent of wrong. WOULD-BE ASSAILANT. we-- Half-Crazed Man Creates Some Excitenishit. Annie Ker, in January Wide World. 4 Another source of excitement ab Wamira was a kind of madness which attacked a man now and again, a state of exaltation somewhat resem-' bling the Malay "amok." At first the victim only sat in the house, suffer ¥ . : i respon se hope; to rival the Hydro-Electric com- not _attach much importance to' ab- mission. will be in the embracing of stract principles. Indeed, the pers the radical traction lines of the east- rn provinces, which will be included : id i i oe, goo the be Sucluded wore indircotly encouraged in this arp a : i EL y x uri the delusion th their mission lines which supply the private a ot hs hue on on Ph ' »' state . 8 py , users of power will be tapped also to Pf : Were su 'L upply the radial line which latter stage in the battle which is marked by § » rs ¢ v : . . . 2 . hes delivered extremely profitable business will thus Hirminohan' m i, Te ; : Ss chi be denied ther Hydro-Electric commis | 8M $a ay sion. This, it is claimed, will put the : ; : an AL 18 a : I as taking the gloves off. It high government at Wdisadvantage in sell- | \ ing power fume that the real character of the The big trust will. it { people's enemies in the upper chamber make great sacrifice if necessary on whe is claimed, ! were exposed the electors. I'he outset to drive the municipalities and language used Hydro-Electric commission out of | Pailus Q a business when it will have relegated |Olors: So to itsell the entire power markets, speeches in 0 hy true second character in its far from being: a WIFE MURDER CASE. {titled county families who are as Antecedents of Accused and His Dead Wife. London, Jan. 30.--The news of the arrest of Walter Blythe, near Agin- court, Ont., on a charge of murdering his wife has caused a great deal of excitement - in the village of Hutton Cranswick, near Driffield, of which Blythe ana his wife are natives. Their childhood days were spent there and their surviving parents, and most of their kin, reside in and near Hutton Cranswick, to-day. Their marriage was an alliance between two: neighbor- ing families that had followed agri cultural pursuits for many genera- tions. The victim of the alleged tra- gedy, hi wife, is better known in the riding by her maiden: name s Amelia Consitt. She was ga daughter of the late Thomas Consitt, farmer, of Cranswick Grange. The father (Mr. Consitt), died some nine years ago, leaving a widow and eight children," who all survive him until the untimely end of Miss Amelia t Mrs. Blythe). The accused man is likewise of eight surviving chil- dren, and his father has been dead a few years. Walter Blythe is the late Joseph Sheepman-lane, fas thay are be ) { They are a vesort to all kinds of hypoeritical de- | vices for the purpose of helping elec- tioneering agents of the tory party. E---- one too, the third son of Blythe, Ivy House, Hutton Cranswick, the house--lose to the station--where his mother. still resides with her eldest son, a cripple. The man under arrest, at one time, assisted his late father with farms. Subsequently the cused man farming on own account at Spaldington, which i four miles from Howden. This, | | ; dl | his started how ever, did not appear to have beer a very successful venture, and he turned to Hutton Cranswick It is believed to be about nine years that Walter Blythe married the woman he is now alleged to heve murdered, and the wedding took plac: the parish church. Not long after his marriage he went to Canada, but soon returned home again, apparently after a very He remained] his moth er's for a while and once more set off for the west. This would be eve five years ago. Finding employment on the railroad at A rincourt, he sent for his wife and she went out to him, taking with her their first born, then a baby, but now five years old. After receiving the sad intelligence, through the relatives of Walter Blythe, the family of the dead woman essayed to get in communication with the Cana dian police for confirmation or furth er particulars of the tragedy. Mrs Consitt has received a reply eable from Police Commissioner Hobbs, but again details were meg The cable was as follows: "Blythe murder, Sun- day; burial, to-da Blythe in jail ; children cared for." Mrs. Consitt desires the children brought home to her quickly. This sad duty will be entrusted to Arthur Consitt, who arranged to leave for Toronto and Agincourt via New. York. Walter Blythe is said to be about forty years of age, his dead wife was thirty-eight. a Fea oy SOTA RC ePVRTRRT (To SY TIE IRE ~ > DAILY HINT avo FROM PARIS. Faupe Color Cloth Gown, with Tucked Chiffon Waist at Rosetti's Breakfast. London successful mm Cranswick vent * enture My OATP Gearge Meredit up the endgel made the unkindly char one occasion left Rosetti's house be cause the appear of the fiam and on the breakfast table was much for him. "What I must have said," he writes, that Rosetti's habits omin ous for his health ; and I mentioned the plates of thick ham and fried taken at once on the from the bedroom. 1 ventured to speak to him of the walk, of at least a mile before this trying meal, but dix- liked physical exercise, and witful.: The main point that he came down with head full of his work and pot to be disturbed during the day, he chose a dish that would him throagh The system could not continge for Ik I had a at " Ih has at last taken agninst who that he on those rent ogres too Ts were egus he he is a sustain of which sorrowful prognostic. nature killed him. On no other subject { have I spoken of this dear fellow but | with the { playfully, with regard to his peculiar { habits, 1 dare say, never in the gos- | ip's manner." : st Probably Right. A good many years ago, when John Leimbert, a union depot ticket official in Denver Col., saw a big," blue-eved Swede step up. to the window, Mr. Leimbert went to wait on him. "Ay tank Ay tak ticket son replied the Swede man inside Jooked at minute, scratched his head, 'ovér to the got a ticket, stamp- ed it an said : "Eight ninety-five. Ihe Swede paid the money and de parted Mr. Leimbert had it figured | that he wanted to go to Gupni Whether or not he guessed right knew, they never saw the again. What Healer Have You ? Every home should contain some re medy that will heal euts, burns lother injuries as well as all sorts' of | skin aficetions. The one that can al- {ways be relied upon i Wade's, Oint- (ment. Cures eczema (salt. rheum), old | =, bed sores, piles, catarrh, dand | ! | or of a gun," The him a reached case, rufil and 1 sealy and skit In 'bir boxes, out Hardness Of Tantalum. Tantalum is diamond attempt through drill a minute, seventy son. rival of the hardne In an recently to bore a hol a tantalum plate a diamond revolving 5.000 times After continous drilling for t was four that a small dent, almut one-hundredth of an inch déep, hind wen {doubtiul which the a ner ious nobody as as made regards Swede Piles Cured In 6 To 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cue any case of itching, blind, bleed- in 6 to M4 days or money refunded. B50c,-; : si ei was used, Hours § made substane: had When a conirary greater damage, with man { wrong { | are agrees vou it's safe bet you Every time some people say smart things they make others smart. faith is to | he Ielieves it. \ woman's iden lieve ot a thing bocans Winston Churchill | | chamber, the House of Lords is merely | | a committep room of the Carlton Club. | {It coneists in the main of a clique of | {devoid of the true spirit of citizenship | { of ability and character. | collection of idle, self-in-! dulgent, irresponsible first-horns, who | descent | was | Devo- | tion to his work in contempt of our aficction I fell--sometimes | itching erup- | It was! ej outlying property ing from "heat in the heart." Then, {after muttering unintelligibly, he would seize a handful of spears, rush out of the house and career wildly {through the villages, flinging the | spears to right and left as he ran." hausted after an attack, came up the path and. demanded water, I gaves him some particularly nauseous medi" cine, which he drank greedily, after | ward asking for more. On another oe? casion one of them, who had already" aimed a spear at a villager, came on to the school, where the pupil- teacher and I had our flock of fifty or sixty. children, Seeing him approaching, however, we hastily closed and barri-' caded the doors, standing the siege until the old chief influenced our would-be assailant to withdraw. A Miracle Of Science. Syracuse Post-Standard, . After- all, the ill-thted White Star { liner Republic, did not need the in-. {stant services of the limited express [trains of the seca and all the other" | eraft, big and little that responded Lo, | her call aiter the Florida had stumbled | | against her in the fog. The 1 fot the passengers to the Florida effected without any panic and [ Republic afloat: for | hours. | But whatif | captain of Republio at first sup- | posed, that his ship was due in the Hocker of "Davy" * Jones in the space. of {two hours ? { |. Tho ery for holp which was heard at | the Siasconsett wireless telegraph sta- | tion would have heen, as it was, an- | swore immediately, and if the Repuby- "lie had been in the danger that (feared, the rescue of her fand crew might well have been due the modern marvel of wireless graphy, by means of which can casily be sent to miles: away. Even if, in extremity, i people aboard a wrecked vessel are compelled to take to the boats, their rescue should, wmder ordinary circum- stances be delayed no more than a fow [ hours, The agony, suspense and de- | spair of bout loads of half-crazed péte' { plo afloat. upon the oecan withont™ food or drink is, humanity may fairly | hope, among the horrors of the past, | 14 remains for the siudents of this 4 sdicnee {o put in practice also a plag ° by which warning will always be given [to a vessel of the approach of another | when fog or other conditions make the ordinary precautions. | against collision. 2 ransfer was the . stayed twolyvg Lin eles messagng vessels 1,700 useless | Bad Business. | Baltimore Heralds | That the methods of public school instruction. as applied in one city at | least, do not always meet the appros. bation of the parents of the pupils, | was evidenced when a German may, whose bristly blonde hair was ing perfectly erect with anger, strode into a Baltimore school one day, and, | approaching. the principal, demanded : i "Voi it, a lobster 7' { The principal explained in Sie | vest tone that a lobster wis a sper of shellfish. { "How many i ter 7' | "The number of legs was | stated "Look here stand his legr has it---der lohs- promptly exclaimed the irritate ed Teuton, "I vork for me in a big hurry, und if your teacher he cannot | find petter dings to ask my boy Her- man how many legs has it, a lobster, | mit questions, 'What is it, a lobster 7 it is pad business {" | Yankee Girls, You're Lucky ! { Dr, Charles F. Aked, of the Fiith | Avenue Baptist church, of New York | city, said recently : The American wok {man is, up to the present, God's best | piece of work." And : the other day, | elaborating this truth, Dr. Aked com- | pared thé merited reverence in~which | woman is held in America to | scorn that is too often mefed out ther abroad. I "Consider," he said, "the position i of woman in a country where such a joke as this is possible : : 'Bill,' says a young wile, weeping, | 'wot's the matter ? Don't you love me no more ?' ' 'Of course 1 do, durn ye Bill, returning to his and pot of ale, { "* "Then, Bill," the young wife 'why don't you knock me about ¥'"' the to ee penny" w rowls eckly ®ol . Unfit To Live--Must Die. | The verdict rendered a thousand timé« when corns get sore. Do them | to death by Putnam's ©orn Extract: or; it cures paintessly in twenty-four hoyrs, © Use "Putnam's," ihe vegetalile remedy known. 'a I ------------ Homes of working men extend the j city limits and increase the value of Vote for the bons only. to Wormwith. i 5 » Liverpool | Once one of these half-crazed men, ox- likened to the | I process described in pugilistic language | DR it had been true, as the... rK Ah SUR at wir wis Glow passengers. # EG ALS ool

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