ï¬t. 1“ Rama mi- HERE“. I Value uld Se“ County at of Sussex HM the kind of music 1 have {men lia- zening to Lusty. Time .s a. Manse: ~Lhe high soprano; Martialâ€"the con- Lralto; \‘ickers-Nordenfeld; â€"'.enor; H» is gran. on runs) Krupp and How- itzgr-‘msm 1 did not. enjoy the same. of concerts muun, but 1 'Wuï¬ Very much pleased to new the banana on one ocwsion, when the tem: “13:00 prominent. Anomal- class '48 (he nun-n music, the swish, swish. of tho miantry‘s feet through the mnlh’d'pxsa and. round at “Web of voicesgot “33103212, W. 1 noise 0! picks, v axes, hm“. ï¬ns, one" when we pitch I think these will iivra on my . forevex. But what do :01 Mm the sweetest music {heard lime I left home? It was tha Chorus of Chum]: 3,0113, morning. ,There was church . on Sunday m I seldom -.A1 53 E? f pm by this mil. Smarts and music being mutton-ed remmu' me of ladohmilm. _ 0m" readers will peruse with m- mt the following letter, recently limited from. Sergt. John. MoCrae, at {In first Canadian Contingent, by his sister in Umemee: qumumein, April 20th. 1909. My Dear Armyâ€"I received. letters of Jan. 2911:, and Feb. 4th and 5th, and m pupers. 1 am sending some pa- no Writer Mada Acting Pioneer Cor- panl with a. Good cmoootrnrthor Promotionâ€"Tho Kind of Haste with Winch the Canadians 83v. Boon NEWSY ACCOUNT OF LIFE BLOEMFONTEIN. teller Hum 38ml. Mama. 1'3 great Prescriptions ol‘ LIEDSAY, FRIDAY, MAY 11th. JOB PRINTING. oanbWt i. one 0! the but equipnod 0M1! Wt, Ind k pnpond to emu 53:. at "man: in arm uyb u hone-t fl‘ sojobtoo bitâ€"mom .31). mm commie-tie" to ho adduced to WILSON a: WILSON WWI _ 7 â€W â€for â€I†W for bushes :6"an and. .m on Won 1.: the oï¬ee. ‘ADVBBTISING RATES. W, 10 colt: per lino (12 lino to imrtioa; 5 ant- euh nub-qua“ 1" notion- in loan! calm. 10 cent lino m 5 cum Md! mhoquun 1%. 13M shaman, such 0 Wed “ M rated, hm lo: do, etc. 0!.†for W Iâ€. 'F-IA...‘ M for business advertising and. 3;)â€, mun Eben yau to mu. m Inch "Al‘s-h in shiny- but man your upper expire- h on!!! to NW" ~ â€warrant! some. _ an,“ or Ann.†â€"Alnyl gm both you old ‘Wfl' M01500 than youuxulto chug. ï¬w;¢om¢dmewnmdmmbu Wynn" in would shay. follow your own “ï¬ningmthil om Wemo‘rfldflv ononrboou unlo- Ihb I; don...- dike. % ,5 The Weekly Post. - ;AYLIIâ€" 1: Anna. yum-co with on! Maï¬a ‘1'â€. be and. it .... Mr. and mm Iona: see why: we should till over. ‘When there was 5 about the Sunnyaide 0n the Head. " m its worst form. She tried almoot every treatment known in the world of medicine without receivint any lasting bandit. Hunnsot :1- most minculons are: mad: by Dr. Ami 0-.me Powder. the pn- cured it, w im£wfor “After you-i of sutï¬r be m" â€(11.32: Wt}: Will in ’Inounndl o' out. In" to Fight max-1h Union Dr. M' Gnu-rm PowdoruUudton-omt the 20111.33 0! the load. The wife of a prominent physician at Toronto was a. victim of 0'8th Sir Charles he run de English end. An' he make do big hurrah About sane soldat he went for sand Aldongh 1 don't like dat myâ€!!! For ï¬ght in Atrika. . Far make good politiqne, Igaon'l‘montoan'mahebigspeech For M deold Torte sick. I'm do great omtenr of de Bleu Mose every. one she know, I use. to live on my politiqne But now, I got no show, Kevendenleuget in. somemore I'll try make fodder my nest, I want be fair, I'll take my. slate, Sir Charles can tnk'e the rest. -De Montreal Star she miss big howl And print some Bytm coon But for to mains good pohthue Sh; shoot: her gun. too roan. Mons. Grahams he spend his agent. He's generate- in de ï¬ght; . Because he knows if Tnppor wm He's goin.‘ to be big “knight." For me I don’t care 'bout such ting, I’m very modest man. ‘ To help Sir Charles win dis fight I'll do the best I can. :Why some peeplike somuchgoldlace For me I cannot see. ‘ So long Sir Charles‘ make me judge That’s big enough tom me. . Now when do 'lection she come again, I tint: we have ï¬ne show: _ (312er Wallsfe he work do Orange man _,I_.- 1.:- OM.'A-p V. An' Tapper he make big “blow," floater he work do temperame cry. While I stir up «b “Bleu.†‘Wid Hugh John's nose an’ racid' c1 Perhaps we will pull trou.’ Xn' got do L‘aréent, too, It's putty hard. for get dc vote Downy I mfortodo. I play do school question plenty time, But now' she is and bare, I try an' hunt me something new For give do Rouge big “we.†- We hold- grpat cacns of do Blew An' every one aha tool We want something for mtg “excite" Desameaslouisï¬ml- I m d» {at man from Beauhu'noia And plenty timbkAI ““1“ his m’ Forlkmw mpmtr‘c‘ ' '- But now' deR-pugol‘msgot (kph - .. 1-- name is historic in tom-y deals. and when he collected money for. the gov- ernment twine sold he gave the money to the Connollysâ€"and genre the gov- ernment promissory notesi And the tory government accepted. that ’kind. of thing! No wonder the country, was robbed on every hand. vi'hile govern- ment acquiesced in that method at doing business. “ ’Iho examimtion at John Connor's, tory agent for an sale of govern- ment binder twine under the tory gov- ernment in 1895, lots in light on the way the critics of. the present gov- ernment's binder twine policy dealt. with Lhnt commodity. In the. light at the revelations made the toriee ap- pear to Live used. the mnuhctnre of binder twine as the maple sugar maker uses a ‘mile"â€"u:a means to bleed me government. The agent stood in with the Connoliy’s, whose THE FAT BOY FROM BEAUHAR‘ MIS- Sir Adolphe Caron renal-had in the house lhursday night : "The policy of the conservative party upon this vital issue had never varied. Loyalty must be altogether voluntary." ,We had al- ways understood that the conservative policy on this question weathat there was only one genuine brand. of loyalty. the conservative brand. and that peo- ple had. to ban this hall-mark or be content to be classed. as traitors and rebels. According to Sir Charles Inp- per. conservative loyalty will depend upon Britain extending (hnada. a quid pro quo to balance the prder- enoe extended by the banner govern- ment. ridding its streets of unsightly and dangerous poles and wires, and with- in six months it is expected that thirty miles of telqmah, telephom and electric light uni power wires will be placed in conduits at a cost of about 11.11! a. million dollars. flzhe result will probably encourage to fartJnr expenditures in that direction. EDITORIAL NOTE; Canadians who thought we were sending our Lads to South mice. on a holiday excursion am now. revising their estimates of the situation. Al; ready about 30 of an contingent's members have been ï¬lled. in battle. 39 haVe died of wounds and Hines, __A nun and had the v! gtggt. Ein Pony. British 00¢th 3E I caption when we mturn‘.‘ (mi in to be imputed W Coking. and thus Nana Erin inspection. lean for their, . erful. Note the m on. 1 LA GRI PPE VICTIMS '0. mid» }1 about the work of or malty" undu- i? E’d‘ “0m Vrij Myttotty violet â€Dir. Bhithg POW- I) on let- Wheh tree Dr. Ward’s Blood and N ewe Pills IN ORDER INORDER happy, and contented, growing stronger and sturdier day by day. ‘ IN ORDER To have strength for pleasure ,after the dutis of the day are accomplished. IN ORDER Not to have the body so tired that the mind cannot be culti- IKWULU' "wan vv~-v _â€"‘_.‘, -_- ., ducts of certain he had been a jouxmlilft himsel and knew. all about it.†But that such mm should openly and shamelessly carry on their: evil propaganda. is regret- table and. the mischief they do i: enri- dently far-maching. It is fortune that. Mr. Turbo has. had an opportun- ity. of vindicating the French-Canaâ€" dian _ name and French-Canadian loyalty in Iondon.‘ . - IN ORDER As Sir Richard Cartwright recent- ly said. the mu who attack: the loyal- ty: of t1» mm-Ganndians. whether it be in parliament or elsewhere. is a worse foe to the RritiahiE-mpim than it move: inthemroQMr. Paul Kruger to be. {His people of Great Britain seem to thoroughly appreciate this flat and Mr, moo has emu-ed. than that “too much attention should not bopaid tothgrpportaol'mid ‘ h_ were matLy ï¬x? pro- thair English fellow-citizens. .VVhen you go_ to Eng-land you any that you we going home. When we go to Framowadonoteaythntwem goinghomqbut many that were ga'ng to nmbe (kinda. is ï¬rm all}. you may sure we 1 tint Grant Britain is our Motherland. I wouldbemï¬nmadot myseltitlware not proud otmor Neal. and I wontd not exchange the British titutio'na under wï¬ohlhave 1L, sum Ibo Bench-Canadians are 2,000,000 people. in this country, or perhaps a. little moms; the English population is a little above 3,500,000. You cannot get elm with us. You don’t want to, and. even if you did want. to, you nover could. No country in the world, populated as this country is. could get along without good will and. harmony. Intro millon pcopls could make gov- ernment impossible in the conntty. You oouldnmhsitimpossi blaforua- We ham got to get along together, and those who are branding nearly hilt tlis population as disloyal are committing Mung a test cxime uglinst the Canadian people, and they are committing it knqwing that they am speaking falsely. The Franck-Cana- dians have no other. interest thanl "We are Rand). our mothers and, fathers warm th, but we areBnt- ish tothecore. Wowntather was a mbel whan our Queen came to‘ the throne, yet bo-dpy the French-Can- adian has learnt to love. British in- stitutions and Englidw and French subjects of her Majesty in Canada are together wm‘h‘ng to build up 0. new, British. Empire.†And another gives in extenso. with scam very pointed comments. his newts made on an- other occasion. which my be repro- duced as conveying a. pointed moral‘ to the Emmophobe prbss of Toronto, Hamilton and elsewhere: l an. TART! IN LONDON AND PARIS The latest British papers tohand In- dicate thht Mir. Tarte'a speeches in Lohdon and Paris have had an ad- mirable duct and made a. marked im- pmssion in public circles. Om journ- al quotes, in warm ofhEgheat oom- mendntion, this following passage from his speech bottom the Society of Arts; Dr. Hall’s Rhcntpqtic Care is put up in so ctnt bottles. contaxnm‘tcn days' treatment. For .33}: b an d: at: and dealers. at mean-me. :- Dr. Ha 1 Medicine Co..Kxng stun. (mt. to try Dr. Hell’s Rheumatic Cure. After taking the contents of the ï¬rst bottle he was able to move mum! the house. The second bottle cured him cuxupletely, and he wns able to return tn his work. Mr. Hunter says he would strong] recommend Dr. Hell’s Rheu- mauc ure to 111 who snfl'er with rheu- matism. 1 5mm View 'n‘ejbicEs. t h i n g by any m ea n s f o r a s u tfe r- s. .. er from ; Sciatic Rheumatism to become completely helpless from the disease, in hot more helpless than a child. And what havoc such pain creates in the entire system! The efl‘ects; of a long siege of rheu- matism is aptto be very severe on the constitution, so that the pati- ent should be prompt in obtaining relief the moment the opportunity T presents itself. The reetorstion to eelth of a rheumtio sufferer is like un- to the freedom from a prison cell of on innocent man. In either case the bond- age is unnatural and uncalled for. Mr. John Hunter, 821 Brock Street, King- ston, Ont, was laid up for six weeks with rheunntism. He was so help- less he could not leave his room or dress higself_._ 5 friend advised him Send to: it. Systematically, and you will be delighted with the result. Why? Because they will en- able you to sleep mndly.at hardly, and digest what ya: doe-t. thenby m mind the wits sharp, perceptions clan, and the ability to main: nï¬aitsrunsmoothly,†To have the sensibilities keen, That the children may not come from school heavy-eyed. languid, and. listlgss. WY: m. MQMAflo. ï¬ctitutibns nadirâ€"mi be cheerful. IT is not an uncom- Plum." "A me o! whiskey realized £108 at 3 mile. and a. pound of flour was sold at auction {or two when." I"... Gnu-c m London. llny 8.â€"'l‘he Lorna: lur- quacorrapondontol'l‘hcm has: ,3" j I thymhm m luv-.1: to W corn". to htd'flpt. Colonol that: wan- 1‘ ||‘ Igor-1m “ â€"v m- râ€"vâ€"r‘v- '- -â€"-_-. â€'“I‘lher satiation is unchanged. Tho garrison in depressed at there being no sign of relief. but in a determined as over to deprive the'Boa'I of a. crowning triumph 'on the western border. an honor to those son: from over the sea, who have innrched shoulder to shoulder with regiments of long and great tradition. M: from )lnfohI-g. London. May 8.-â€"-Lo.dy Sarah wu. son wire- from Mulching, nude. dnto of April 22. a follow: shouldered. clean-limbed and blue- eyed. They swing past with an easy stride and a tree gait, conscious o! the strength and pride brought than from the lakes and mountains of (anode. Their 'boots' were out at the toes. stockings unearned. oreecn- cs torn, then mexided and torn again, but every utter and ever): stain “"8 London, May 8. â€" The Morning Standard correspondent. deco-thing the capture of Bloemfontein, raters to the entry of the Canadians: They are ï¬ne, strapping“ fellows, broad- MIIP‘IOI o! the Can-dim: Imp. on tho 000.01.- 0! that In": In:- the Fm St-lo Capital. Boon Lost Forty XIII“. Smaldeel, May 7.â€"-The British st- rived hare without opposition. The Boen’ last train left late Saturday night. The Boer losses yesfa'dsy on the west flank were 40 killed. Their rear guard remains behind kopjes. 10 miles distant. Their is much railwny forage and corn here. It is stated that the Boers are retreating towards Kroonstadt. The land River bridge is reported to have been destroyed. The same despatch, describing the ; crossing of the \‘ct River by the Bri- tish; sass: “The Boer forces en- trenched on the opposite bank pre pared to contest the crossing. Our guns were brought into play and a terriï¬c shell tire was directed on the Boer lines. At the same time the Queenslanders. under a heavy fire. dashed across the river. and. advent» ing in the open. completely turned the Boer right. It was dusk. but nothing could stop the gallant Aus- tralians. They pushed on again. seiz- ed a commanding kopje and by bril- liant movcmcnts and continuous ï¬re drore of! the enemy in the_de.rlmess. The ï¬rst gleam of down this morning found the enemy in full 61th and our men after them, and by 9 o’clock this "morning We entered this important strategic point." Recon-Alamo. Irv-I Hostel. A despotch from Boshof. dated Fri- day. May 4. says Gen. Hethuai made a reconnaissance from there the day previous to the neighborhood or Sju-t- koppies Fontein Aand located the Boers' hanger. Mter an unimportant. exchange 01 tire the Boers removed their lager. A fairly strong lore. of Boers Was seen moving northâ€" wards. Gen. Methuen then returned to Boahoi. London. May 8.â€"A special dee- patch from Smaldeel, dated 9.45 p. m., Sunday. May 6, gives details of the occupation of Winburg by the British. It says: "News has just come here that Gen. Hamilton is giv- ing the Boers no rest, and that they are {ailing back hurriedly. He en- tered Winburg to-day after a brisk ï¬ght, in which the Boers fell back so quickly that one 0! ï¬nd: guns. in ad- dition to a Maxim. was abandoned." ' \"t'l'l'l tonVGupe Colony. May 8.-- Th- Doers have been driven out. at {om-tee: Streams, and the British are now encampcd on the north "Ln; of the Veal River. Hn' Win-bur: “'u- Cap and ï¬nd I" Colonial» Banned I 3. 70¢. "The enemy have retired from the front of Thubanchu. and the exceed- ingly strong position they held is now occupied by Rundle's division." anr¢oon 91".qu l suntan-a. "General Hunter, after defeating the enemy May 4. joined hands with Puget. near \Varrenton. The enemy left. 13 killed and wounded on the ground. and we captured several pris- Qners. Our losses were slight. â€Hunter speaks in high terms 0! the gallantry of the Yeomanry under Colonel Max rick. London. May 8.â€"'n:e War . omce has received the 'fullowing despatch from Lord Roberts. dated Smaldeel. May 7. 10.55 a,m.: Goal. fln-ur and Fugue Jolt-ed lind- Xonr “um-ton. â€We captured 3 Maxim and 25 prio- oncrs. Our casualties are way (cw. only 15 wounded. 1 killed and 8 missing." “Captain Anley of theEsoex meat, commanding the Third Infant- ry Battalion. behaved in u. very gt)- kmt. manner. “The naval guns and the Milky made excellent practice, particularly two 5-inch guns used for the ï¬rst time with this force. "The turning movement was made by the Mounted Infantry just before dark yatcrduy. It Was a. very dash- ing aflnlr. 'me Canadians. New South Wales, New Zealond Rims and Queensland Mounted Infantry vied with each'other in the determination to close with the enemy. "We crossed the Vet River this morning. and are now encamped at Smaldeel Junction. The egg-y n in full retreat towards Zand River and Kroonstadt. London, May 8. -â€" Lord new reports to ihe War Qtnco in a do- spatch dated Smaldeel, May a, M noon. as follows: Lord Robert- III-30lo- the Work .10.; Ill-unfl- Bflndoâ€"Hovhlg .- to lighting-Gout. Hung: and Pm: John“ lind- Sou Warn-g.- â€"uo' Win-jolt: Wu Cup- ' Inna. PRAISE FOR THE COLONIALS. SMALDEEU OCCUPIED. Ehemy fulï¬l“? Retreat 80M the British Advance; ELOQUENT ADMIBATION. KOVIXG ON To MAFEKINO. $0313 FURTHER DETAILS. lunchoslor Opâ€"u- :- I an Londo'n, May S.â€"T‘.;e Lou o! Hunchmter has cpened a : the relief 0! the suflgrers by cent 11:. at Ofmwn. Ottawa. May 8. â€" The City Coun- cil met last night. and read a. by-lew embodying the views of the Fire and Light Committee. a. ï¬rst time. The bylaw provides that. no more then 500,000 feet of lumber shall be piled in any one quarter oi the city; that houses nhell not have ehingled reels. and widun the ï¬re area. con-idenb- ly. The bylaw was not dimmed end the Council adjourned to meet egnin this week, alter the important. are meeting of the Board at Trade {o-nicht. "Cape Town. My 7. 1900.-â€"Fund 'Ior reliel of sufl'erers Otuwa. ï¬re opened in Cape Town. and newly $2,- 000 subscribed in three days. This {a not a. rich town, and citizens hove enormous demands on their purses at the present time. Response due to strong {eeling of gratitude for Con- ndisn help in war. and appreciation of gallantry of Canadian â€111181.â€" (Signed) Milncr.†"Soddon, Premier, Wellington. New haland: Accept for your-sell, Govern- ment and people 0! New Zenland grateful thanks of Quads for gener- ous assistance to Mm by hte conflagnuon.â€"(Slgued) I‘m-la." Idle! Iced 3700.0... . The relic! fund is steadily growing. and last night over $626,000 was in sight, with nearly enough money sub- scribed. but not paid in. to make it. $700.(X)0. The fund yesterday was estimated as follows: Belle! (and In Bank of www.mooa 21 Dominion Govemmen: ......... 100.000 00 City of Ottawa ........... . ..... â€,1!†oo Onnrlo Government ...... .. . . 25,000 00 City of Mata ........... 25.00000 City of Noam] ............... 15,000 (D Journal fund ln bank ...... . 15,673 on The Clutch fund ........ . ..... m 03 New mm ..... 25.00000 Pro-lot It: wnmu Ian“: (:3qu tho Pro-m at tho “our Colony to That wot-no In“ low. Ottawa, May 8. â€" The following message has been sent to the Pre- mier 01 New Zealand in acknOWIedg- ment 0! the hondsome donation re- ceived from the sister colony on be- half of the Otha-Hull are outletb try that wins admiration from every soldier for matching. endurance and ï¬ghting. It can challenge compar- ison with any battalion in Lord Roberts’ army. and that is saying 5 ccod «‘u‘l.†- Dodd’s "To Canadh we take of! our htts. She has sent us, besides other worthy representatives, 3 rqimcnt o! infan- Six thousand four hundred and m- ty-eight troops are now at sea on their way to South Africa. No other: are under orders to go except an recruits to ï¬ll up the Iona of re- w“ 315.93 Ogosnot'cundn. London, May 8. â€" he Bloemfon- tein correspondent o! The Daily News describing Greater Britain at the front, says: Queen Victoria: in! send u tuned photograph to Col. Kekewich. the hero of Kimberley. Lord Roberts sad Lord Kitchener personally directed the artillery 1n thg Vet River engagement. According to advices from Maseru. Beautolend, several thousand Free Staten sre north of Leda/band. where they hsve collected greet herds. The district is rich in food for men and bores, and the Boers seem resolved not to move north- wu-d, but to be preparing to resist where they are. 1! they are let alone they will menace the line of commun- ications after the min British army has passed into the 'I‘rmvssl. Fifteen 'thomend British are now opentlng on the western frontier o! the Free Sate. As the deadlock et Wanton has been broken. end the Boer: are retreating there le nothing lormidnhle except distance between Wernnton and Matching. The most hopetul advices from lacking on April 22 were tht the gen-lean would be berely eble to hold out {or a. month. At thnt time the fever was Ipreeding. Gen. French's 10.000 canary hove not been mentioned in the ouch! or munch] decpntchee {or tour doyo. It is by no means likely that he is Idle, end the conjecture in thnt he is either detouring toward Kroonctcdt nr_;:oldinz# the ladvbrond district. Lord Rom is expected to do u:- othor forty or any miles, sud then to wait for time, in order to bring up supplies and to repair the runway. Thenmoneor two hints in th. despctchc- trom the front. tint. be my rest. (or s few days a, Smddool. Dundee,†8. -- (4.2) em.) -â€" The Boa-e ere everywhere retiring be- fore the British. except on the mm {tonna- end at Wag, to the in- na circle of their delenee. 'Ihey ep- peer determined not. to ï¬ght until the Kroonetedt. hille are reached. not I... Dour-l-od 8.: so "no it. lull-i Jul. Us“! Imam. lino orders peculiar to women. Pale young girls. wan-out mothers. safes-ii}; wiv- gm“. ~23: ’°“' A woman’s reproductive 0'3“.“ are in the most in- tense and continuous fly with her kidfxcyt- cormopon . the reproductwe Dodd’s Kidnc Pint. y Iv noting the ki neyflo their perfect condition. prom! sod cm those fen-M dis- CANADA GRATEF UL. Otlnwn'u [In Ann. EOERS ARE IRE] IRING. Ari Ion-bod. info: (1‘ to: the Kipling 1 hold val mâ€" the Ada on town am No ogvuu. a wxrséu cum all We. mm W had. [an ad Inna-u A“... mutant... pct-g cranky-II umacmwmeï¬Ã©s m7 "7de Wished. Bath plus and people went Kipling med. Newm- had they reed each node; Never before had they been mitten. mhe four volumes issued by his American publisher. un- protected by copyright. were raided, enditmconeidenedepooriaue' m 1890 yhen the greeteegorihe smell- out of Amarian milieu had not Kipling stoyy. Bu nuns m a house- hold word in the United States. from the Atlantic to am Pacific, in†city, town and hamlet. P ' pm. and W a (few Englishmen in India; but tha mid of lotto", and tb [rut linhworld mt got 2‘33. {3'5“}: 0 I. u t English pith-hen bound. him out. He then called on tin agent of on Am- erica: pflalillur in Ion-(ion, whohad faith omit in him; to publish his Indian mm and Meaty enough to whim n royalty, although it was MW y c copyright. Just as his tint bookaxnetrom theAmerican pms. the New York Sun reprinted his story of “The Man Who “as,†“the mtest our written." It was copied In the Sun intoovm' three thousand daily, Sundu and_wuk[ydnews_pn_p_qa‘ in Elia coun' . Flinn followed "Tho Imnction Kï¬lhna. â€annoy,†which failmt fem paper m_ the lupd 35.79.. The “new viii." return to theirnorul ooodi â€limit!†renal madam neat. *homlbomfluhul mam-d «locale-um mikggflthQQggi Yon-I ill-Yon in Ink. {cabin and hand: mom. irribblo and u- du blight “renaissance. WE CURE WCOCELE W W271?†Amman have been completed. hymn WI, Whimwillm has with his Wt at hut on my 11th. â€:31. MM“ tb M M at £14an (mu 0‘15"†t° an. town. a dictum. d 156 nib I .Whito bun;- his. modulation cupid», with 28 people in the out. travel!- in; in Unix- own prime mailman: and win; our than tom 0: m m- Armament! "umm J: â€m; 3:?“ at 1 out! We on arrivalot â€In White White and mayâ€"not 0mm cl tin scenery d the Mano will; mm 111" Vi“ undoubtedb' both mt 0‘ ‘1' “'1‘ 250,9 90 CURE? W. cumnn mm a 60 Km. Iona-nu. Mr. K. Don Mum. write. I have and Victor-i=0 and ï¬nd it very non-(M s gun av- il‘ 1* Inâ€. Sakumghudvnh4bfl- â€01010:.th The luiy gets hu- clothes vi‘hont their being torn on the wuhbourd, nor rotted with thong chemicals as VICTOR- mE cannot injure either clothes or lunchâ€"'9 guaran- too it, Ind men cf Victorinc back us up. The laundreu, instead of rubbing any at the wash- bonnd, puts her clothes in the boiler, then rinses them, tad ï¬nds them wavy whim hue both anon to thunk Victotine. THE LABY AND THE LAUNBBESS TheRbeofRndyud Kipling. mscmm EOUS. 1m ad Incl-unzip†' Vatâ€"GE ain’w mm 8 W . .-~ m-QY’. PETER Bgowf, w---“ I.“ 0.0- WWMM‘J.‘ “'0‘- mun-r kmooonoa AUO'rIom-mn. W WW Luna 1. STEWART a O'donon, Barristers, Notaries 1mm: maven at 4.; to 5 p. c. OORE «a. M JACKSON, Imma- B. G. 8. BYIRSON. DR. F. A. WALTERS on: 90 LOAN. Dnmnsman, DIITIS'I'. u ugh-i; ““91! 03038. ma .- may. JOHN s8'on‘r “ml-pan. 80:42. Lad-1.4.. 41mm. mxwobp p. o. I“ was “and“ “4-1". ILHFRBW. I, D» 9L 0. P- W'WHKJ mom no 10155 231801515351 . E. A. Torn-2N; durum tin-y. o-s