Monkton Times, 15 Sep 1911, p. 7

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=e SCARLET FEVER. _ Searlet fever or scarlatina--the hames are synonymous, although often erroneously supposed to de- hote two distinct diseases--shares _ with diphtheria the unenviable dis- tinction of being one of the two -- most dreaded and dreadful diseases of childhood. That is not to say that certain other diseases are not _ More often fatal, but they are not So common, nor are they in general £0 likely to have serious conse- quences, Scarlet fever is an infectious dis- ease, although it is not known posi- : tively what germ causes it, nor is it always easy to trace the mode of - infection. An attack may begin in a vari- ety of ways, but in general three forms are recognized. In the usu- al, and fortunately the mildest form, the disease begins with shiy- ering or chilly feelings, sometimes # conyulsion, fever, loss of appe- tite, vomiting, and often a sore throat. In twenty-four or forty- eight hours the rash appears. It is a general raspberrv-colored erup- tion which disappears on pressure, apd returns slowly, so that if the aaeof a pen-holder is drawn firm- ly over the skin a white line is made which persists for several minutes. In another form the first symp- toms are the same, but more se- vere, and the signs of inflammation of the throat are marked. Inspec- tion of the throat shows it to be very red, the mucous membrane often ulcerates, and it is frequent- ly covered with a leathery-looking membrane like that seen in diph- theria. The inflammation travels to the nose, and often to the ears, in which case it may cause perman- ent deafness. The child appears much more il] than in the simple form, a fact due to absorption of the poisons produced by the bac- teria in the throat. In the worst form, malignant scarlet fever it is called, the at- tack is sudden, and the child is seen from the first to be very ill, the fever is high, the lips are blue, there is more or less drowsiness, and the little patient is evidently poisoned through and through. If he lives long enough for the rash to appear, it is not bright, as in the ordinary case, but dusky and not very extensive. This variety is really a form of blood-poisoning, the. bacteria themselves, and not g y their exé¢reted poisons, be- ing contained in numbers in the blood. There is little to be done in these malignant cases, but in the milder cases, especially those in which the throat is affected, much can some- times be done, in addition to giy- ing the supporting remedies, by washing out the throat and nose by a stream of salt and water flowing from a fountain syringe. This, however, should not be done except under the directions of the physi- cian, for inflammation of the ear may ensue. The object is to wash away the bacteria, or their pois- ons, and prevent their absorption into the system.--Youth's Compan- jon. VALUE OF FRUIT AS FOOD. In these days of impure drinking water, water famines, and filtered water it is well to know that one of the greatest advantages of fruit is that it offers us pure water for which we do not need a filter, to ~ the amount of nearly 50 per cent. in berries and 92 per cent. in wat- ermelons. - Oranges and lemons are not only valuable by reason of their potash salts, but especially for their citric acid. A case ofeparalysis of the e right sidé is reported where uice of oranges, adopted as a regular diet, with chicken broth, appeared to do much good. As an aid of digestion--a really material aid--the pineapple stands alone among the fruit. Its vege- table pepsin neutralizes--or, per- haps, rather, digests---albuminous substances in the stomach, Fresh pineapple--or, better still, . the fresh juice of one--placed in direct a contact with eggs or gelatin, or -- milk, will prove this fact conelu- mee "rain 42? sively by produeing a bitter tasting lish. In eases of catarrhal ail- ments of the throat and in its down- ward connection, the alimentary ~ tanal or tract, pineapple cannot be overestimated, and it acts with equal foree in malarial affections. As for the date and the banana, 'they contain sufficient nutriment to sustain life. The salts and organic acids in the apple tend to improve the quality of the blood. cM ARERR Even the most successful surgeon might be a failure in operating on the stock exchange. ious Mother+"Johnny, what e you doing out there in the - Johnny--"Getting wet." It causes. the average young girl ss inconvenience to lose her to loso her appetite. ee | } | | A GENTLE LAXATIVE FOR THE BABY Stomach and bowel troubles is the cause of niae-tenths of the ail- ments from which little ones suf- fer. Let the little stomach and bowels be kept right and baby will be happy, healthy and strong. The only sure and safe means of keep- ing baby's stomach and bowels sweet and regular is to give him an occasional dose of Baby's Own Tablets. These Tablets are a gen- tle laxative, they sweeten the stomach, regulate the bowels, ex- pel worms, break up colds and pre- vent or cure the dozens of ailments that afflict the baby. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. a] DISEASES DUE T0 ALCOHOL. They Kill Twice as Many People as Tuberculosis, Says Doctor. One of the greatest services which physicians of to-day are doing for the public is in acquainting them with the causes of some of our com- mon diseases and showing them how these diseases can be prevent- ed. Although attention has recently been repeatedly called to the great |} amount of tuberculosis, cancer, and diseases of infancy in existence, it has recently come to light that there is a common disease or group of diseases which is responsible for a far greater loss of life than any of these. This is the group known as the degenerative diseases, consisting of heart and Bright's diseases, and arterio-scierosis, usually occurring in the same person as result more or less of the same cause or causes. These diseases kill almost twice as many people annually as tuber- | culosis and have increased since 1880 at the rate of 103 per cent. In a recent article in Harper's Weekly, Dr. Norman E. Ditman calls attention to the fact that this increase bears a suggestive rela- tionship to the increase in the con- sumption of liquors--which had in- creased from ten gallons per capita in 1880 to 22 gallons in 1910 -- the total consumption of alcoholic bey- erages having reached the enorm- ous amount of over 1,917,000,000 gallons in 1909. The economic aspect of disease is constantly becoming a matter of in- creasing interest. This is brought home to us when, appreciating that an excessive meat diet is one of the causes of the degenerative diseases, jand that according to Prof. Chit- |tenden of Yale we consume about | | twice as much meat as we need, we | realize that in our annual expen- diture for meat products (1906) of $2,345,461,000 we are wasting $1,- 172,730,500 on our butchers' bills. : Tas EAR CAUSES SEA SICKNESS, University Professor Claims the Discovery. Vienna Ye who have hung over the rail, fearful one day lest ye die and fear- ful the subsequent day ye. would not, hearken unto Dr. Julius Auer- bach, When you thought your stomach had rebelled against the evil of spending money in foreign lands! and was making you feel the ills of| mal-de-mer, you did an injustice to an old friend. For your stomach does not cause sea-sickness at all. Dr. Auerbach brings the tidings of the discovery made by Prof. Alexander Dalikinik, world famous specialist of the University of Vi- enna, that sea-sickness is due to the canals of the ear. covery, but while it is accepted as the solution of the question as to cause, no progress has yet been made toward a remedy. "The semi-circular canals of the inner ear,'"' says the doctor, "have the funetion of enabling us to main- | tain our equilibrium. Irritation of the canals causes nausea, vomiting ry For s) Breakfast-- When about Scramble two nearly cooked, half a cup of Post Toasties and serve at . once--seasoning to taste. eggs. mix in ht's immense ! '"'The [Memory Lingers" Ganadian Postum Cereal Company, Limited, * Windsor, Ontarlo, Canada. J irritation of the semi-circular | All medical Eu-! rope, he says, is discussing the dis- | and loss of balance. The doctors found in their experiments that a deaf child in whose ears the canals had been destroyed cowld not be made seasick, and that animals, al- though whirled in swings and given deep sea treatment, did not get the seasickness." Then the do¢tor went on to say that the ancient and accepted idea 'that one might prepare the system for a voyage by dieting was all a foolish whim. No matter how much the stomach might be treated by a thorough plumbing, refitting, and housecleaning, and no matter how much or how little food be used, the result would not reach gea- ickness. % SECRET ROYAL LIBRARY. Buckingham Palace Has Strong Room for Private Pavers. Within the walls of Buckingham Palace, and constructed on the "strong room'"' principle, is a room known as the "Secret Library," and in this are stored documents and private letters which, were they sent forth to the world, would doubtless set the whole universe talking. ' From the very commencement of her reign Queen Victoria assidu- ously stored away in nice order all family and other important papers, her only assistant in this duty be- ing a secretary, who entered her service within fourteen years of her accession to the throne, and who retained his place until her majestie's death, though he himself had no access to nine-tenths of the papers which are docketed, the late Queen alone retaining the keys of the safes and cabinets in which her "secret library'? was contained. Just before her death her majesty added to the list of her papers a batch of letters of the most private and confidential kind, addressed by the late Prince Consort to his brother, the Duke Ernest of Co- burg, and possiblly, she acquired every scrap written by her late con- sort to his private friends. It is said by those who are qualified to surmise that the "Secret Library" not only tells of royal marriages, births and deaths, but that it is virtually the private history of Eu- rope during the last half of the nineteenth century. Se ee WISE TEACHING. There Is a Use and a Purpose for Everything. In writing of his father,, Prof. John P. Emmet, Dr. Thomas Addis |man he ever knew who seemed to | possess a more than average know- |ledge of everything, and who could laccomplish all he ever undertook }in mechanics of the arts. | From my earliest age, he seemed [seldom to have spoken to me with- | out attempting to teach me some- ithing. I can recall one of our earl- jiest talks. On being asked why a | robin in front of us on the grass | would jump along a few steps and then suddenly stop, I was about to |gire an answer when my father said : "Think before you speak; other- of no } { | wise your opinion will be value."' I thought a moment, and said, "He seems to be looking to see if any one is coming after him." for his breakfast, but not for the bell to ring, as we have to do. All | birds and animals which are not tame live on some other insect, animal or bird which they have to | catch, "The robin lives on earthworms, jand has to get a great many of [them before he has had enough. | Now the earthworm is as busy as | the robin in looking for his break- fast, and as he makes his way through the earth, the robin hears him, and knows just where to stick his bill in and pull him out."' My father then explained the work of the earthworms, which were countless in number, and | how by their tunneling they brought the earth to the surface, gave it air, and made it that vegetation could exist, and that the earth would become a desert but for this constant boring by the worms. We could get nofood' without vegeta- tion, nor could we live without good air, which we get from vegetation. He thus in' few simple words ex- plained the law of compensation existing throughout ereation, and made it plain to a young child that there is a use and a purpose for everything. ROTEL Ss) EARS es HOMESICKNESS.* In the following is expressed clearly, although in imperfect Eng- lish, what every sufferer from home- sickness feels. It is a good story for the unsympathetic mistress to keep in mind. "You ought to be contented, and not fret for your old home," said the mistress, as she looked into the dim eyes of her young Swedish maid. 'You are earning good wages, your work is light, every one is kind to you, and you have plenty of friends here." "Yas'm," said the girl, "but it is not the place where I do be that makes me vera homesick; it is the place where I don't be." so A pound of care will not pay an ounce of debt ' | Emmet says that he was the only | : essed . |eourts of justice. My father said, "He is listening | BABY'S TERRIBLE ECZEMA. Five Doctors Failed to Relieve, but Zam-Buk Worked a Cure. Mrs. Chas. Levere, of Prescott, North Channel, Ont., tells how Zam-Buk cured her baby: She says :--"My baby's head and face was one complete mass of sores. The itching and irritation were fearful, and the little one's plight Was so serious that at one time we feared her ears would be eatea off by the disease. "We had to keep her hands tied for days to prevent her rubbing and scratching the sores. Doctor after doctor treated her in yain, until we had had five doctors. "As a last resource we were ad- vised to try Zam-Buk. The first box did so much good that we felt sure we were at last working in the right direction. Weé persever- ed with the treatment until we had used thirteen boxes, and at the end of that time I am glad to say Zam-Buk worked a complete cure." For eczema, eruptions, rashes, tetter, itch, ringworm and similar skin diseases, Zam-Buk is without equal. It also cures cuts, burns, sealds, piles, abseesses, chronic sores, blood poisoning, ete. All druggists and stores at 50 cents a box, or post free for price from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. Refuse imitations. ae, grea ome ENCOURAGEMENT PAYS. The Young Docter--"They tell me you are noted for encouraging your patients."' The Successful Old Doctor--"Yes. Many of my wealthiest patients think they are sick when there is nothing the matter with them--and I always encourage them." The destruction of the house fly is a public duty. Almost every American State Board of Health is carrying on a crusade against him. His filthy origin and habits, and the fact that his body is gen- erally laden with disease-produc- ing germs, makes him one of the greatest enemies of the human race. If the housekeepers of Can- ada will use Wilson's Fly Pads persistently, this peril would be tremendously reduced. Father S---- was remarkable for his ready wit. On one occasion, while travelling on a steamboat, a well-known sharper; who wished to get into the priest's good graces, said :--"Father, I should like very much to hear one of your sermons." "Well," said the clergyman, "you could have heard me last Sunday if you had been where you should have been." "Where was that, pray 1' "In the county jail,"' an- swered the bluff priest as he walked away. It Testifies for Itself.--Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil needs no tes- timonial of its powers other than itself. Whoever tries it for coughs or colds, for cuts or contusions, for sprains or burns, for pains in the limbs or body, well know that the medicine proves itself and needs no guarantee. This shows why: this Oil is in general use. YOUNGER THAN SON. An amusing incident happened some time ago in one of the Paris A vain, haughty woman was called as a witness, when the magistrate inquired her age. 'Twenty-five last © August," promptly replied the lady. The next witness was a young man, who at once acknowledged that he was twenty-seven years of age. '"'Are you related to the last wit- ness?' queried the magistrate. "Yes; I'm her son," he replied. '<Ah!'? mused the magistrate, 'vour mother must have married very young.' No, Maude, dear; crumbs of comfort can scarcely be acquired from eating crackers in bed. None are so blind as those who are visionary. Beauty is potent, but money is omnipotent. They Keep the whole system in the pink of condition. Their singular curative pro- perties discovered by an Indian tribe--introduced tocivilization nearly a century ago--com- pounded since 1857 in the Comstock Laboratories at Brockville, Ontario. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills have a remarkable record for consistently curing constipa- tion, biliousnessandindigestion, purifying the blood, banishing headaches and. clearing the skin, 25c. a box everywhere. », fell, Well! THIS isa HOME DYE bin that ANYONE , Can us of Goods with the SAME Dye. eS ees a =e CLEAN and SIMPLE to Use. NO chance of using the WRONG Dye for the Goods one has to color. Allcolors from your Druggist or Dealer. FREE Color Card and STORY Booklet 10, The Johnson-Richardson Co.,, Limited, Montreal, THE GLOBE TROTTER. "What did you do during your three months in Europe?" "Most of the time I sat around waiting for my wife to get rid of her headaches." No person should go from home without a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kel- logg's Dysentery Cordial in their p ssession, as clérge of water, cooking, climate, ete., frequent'y brings on summer complaint, a:.J there is nothing like being ready with a sure remedy at hand, which oftentimes saves great suffering and frequently valuable lives. This Cordial has gained for itself a widespread reputation for afford- ing prompt relief from all summer complaints. THE LAWYER'S CHARGE. Defendant's Wife--"Don't wor- ry, dear. The judge's charge was certainly in your favor." Defendant (moodily)--"'I know that. It's the lawyer's charge that I'm thinking about." G Accidents, Burns, Scalds, Sprains, Bruises, Bumps, Cuts, Wounds, all are painful. Hamlias Wizard Oil draws out the inflamma- tion and gives instant relief. Don't wait for the accident. Buy it now. Mrs. Dashaway--"Yes, while we were in Egypt we visited the Pyra- mids. They were literally covered with hieroglyphics."' Mrs. New- rich--"Ugh ! Wasn't you afraid some of 'em would git on you?' Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. Sometimes a man fails to accom- plish anything worth while because he is too busy criticizing some other fellow's work. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Byelids. Marine Doesn't Smart--Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Hye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail, Murine Hye Remedy Co., Chicago. MUDDLED. "Can you tell me (hic) where B-Brown, the sh-schoolmaster, lives, mish ?" "Why, you're Mr. Brown, sir.' "Yes, but, "hang-it ail, I. don't know where I am." ? The Bowels Must Act Healthy.-- In most ailments the first care of the medical man is to-see*that the bowels are open and fully perform- ing their functions. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are so compounded that certain ingredients in them act on the-bowels solely and they are the very best medicine avail- able to produce healthy action of the bowels. Indeed, there is no other specific so serviceable in keeping the digestive organs in healthful action. Whether the eorn be of old or new growth; it must yield to Hol- loway's Corn Cure, the simplest and best cure offered to the public. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Ete. . THE OLD WOOD SAW. Essau Wood sawed wood. Wood would saw wood. All the wood Esau Wood saw Esau Wood would saw. One day Wood's wood-saw would saw no wood. Esau Wood saw a wood-saw raw wood as no other wood-saw Wood saw would. In fact, all of the wood-saws Wood ever.saw saw wood, Wood never saw a wood-saw that would saw wood as the wood-saw Wood saw saw wood would saw wood. Oh, the wood Wood's woodshed would shed, when Wood would saw wood with the wood-saw Wood saw saw wood. No man may ever know how much wood the wood-saw Wood saw would saw if the wood-saw Wood saw saw would saw all the wood Wood would saw. Esau 'After lunch sit a while, after din- " oer walk a mile. ARTIFICIAL FLOORING. ~ Made of Sawdust and a Solution of Magnesium Chloride. Artificial floorings made of saw- dust and other ingredients, are manufactured extensively in Ger-|}- many. The flooring compositioa consists of a solution of magnesium chloride to which pulverized mag- nesia is added and which of itse!f forms a white, absolutely solid, ar- tificial stone. If to this cement saw- dust be added in considerable pro- portions the combination when it becomes hard possesses many of the qualities of both wocd and stone. Some of these floorings are mixed on the spot and laid soft on the space to be eoyered, while others are moulded into plates and deliy- ered ready made. One Hamburg firm impregnates the wood meal with oil before mixing it with the magnesia paste and thereby ren- ders it non-absorbent. In Germany the cheaper grades COLLATERAL VALUE OF -- # q Bonds generally speaking are considered by ae financial men and corporationsas the most desirable collateral---or security -- for loans --.because of their salability. @ Financial men know by experi- ence that good bonds will appre- ciate in value---because of the reasonable certainty of increase in the value of the security behind them. 'I. The investor in bonds has an absolute assurance that, should it ever become a necessity he could find ready sale for them and convert them ir» cash on the shortest notice without Chtailing more than a nominal cost in the way of com- mission for selling them, : "I View it asone may, Bonds asan invest- ment undoubtedly have all points in their favor, whether from appreciation in value security for the money invested, sal- ability, or a good income. i of flooring are colored to resemble linoleum or mosai¢ pavements, and | in many instances have given en-| tire satisfaction during a consider- | able term of years. The emigrant! halls of the Hamburg-American | Line in Hamburg are paved almost | entirely with this composition. | Floors thus made are more elastic) than cement floors, are much warm- | er, and preserve a smoother sur- face. Under the fire test this floor- ing chars but does not burn and is a poor conductor of heat. OO An Easy Pill to Take.--Some per- sons have repugnance to pills be- cause of their nauseating taste. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are so prepared as to make them agree- able to the most fastidious. The most delicate can take them with- out feeling the revulsion that fol- lows the taking of ordinary pills. This is one reason for the popular- ity of these celebrated pills, but the main reason is their high toni- cal quality as a medicine for the stomach. CURED. "T have cured myself by learning to chew my food." "What have you cured yourself of ?"' "The belief that if I remained away from the office for more than ten minutes at lunch time every- thing would go to the dickens." 8t. Joseph, Levis, July 14, 1903. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,--I was badly kicked by my horse last May and after using several preparations on my leg nothing would do. My leg was black as jet. I was up in hed for a fortnight and could not walk. After usine three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT I. was perfectly cured, so that I could start on the road. JOS. DUBES, Commercial Traveler. TRULY IRISH. Mrs. Casey (sitting up in bed)-- Moike, did yez put out the cat?' Mr. Casey--Oi did. Mrs. Casey--Oi don't belave it! Mr. Casey--Well, if yez think Oi'm a liar, get up and put 'er out yerself, REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD Mrs, WINSLOW's SOOTHING SYRUP has been used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TRETHING, with PER T SUCCESS, It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS, ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHQG#A. It is ab- solutely rmiless, Be sure'and ask for " Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other Kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle, A man went into a dry goods store the other day for some lady's gloves. "Are they for your wife, or shall I show you something bet- ter?" asked the clerk, Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. MISUNDERSTOOD. A man entered a restaurant and studied the bill of fare. After he had further studied it and learned it by heart, he impatiently rapped his glass with his knife. In response, a tall, angular wait- ress waddled towards him. Her gait was between that of a crab and an inquisitive goose, and it took her fully two minutes to reach his side. "Have you frog's legs?" he de- manded sharply. "Dear me, no, sir!" she exclaim-, ed, smirking. 'I'm obliged to walk this way on account of rheuma- tism." laid | 'I Let us send you our literature on Bond" investments. Drop a card ROYAL SECURITIES CORPORATION : Limited BANK OF MONTREAL BUILDING YONGE AND QUEEN STS. TORONTO CUMULATIVE. Little grains of short weight, Little crooked twists, Fill the land with magnates And rhilanthropists. Many mothers have reason to bless Mother Graves' Worm Exter- minator, because it has relieved the little ones of suffering and made them healthy. NEEDED AT HOME. Brown--"That is the worst-be- haved kid I ever saw. Do you know his parents?' Jones--"'His father is one of those scientific management experts." Every packet, of Wilson's Fly Pads will kill more flies than ean possibly be caught on three hua- dred sheets of sticky paper. It's wit to pick a lock and steal a horse, but wisdom to let them alone. Minard's Liniment Relieves Where the will is ready the feet are light. Neuralgia. FARMS FOR SALE OR RENT. ASK DAWSON, HE KNOWS. you want to sell a farm, me, consult [* [* you consult me. HAVE some of the best Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farms in Ontario, and prices right. El W. DAWSON, « Street, Toronto. want to buy a farm, Ninety Colborne ACENTS WANTED. GENTS WANTED.--A study of other Agency propositions convinces us that none can equal ours. You will ak ways regret it if you don't apply for particulars to 'Travellers' Dept, 220 Albert St., Ottawa. | Biggest fo MEN OR WOMEN, DO you wish to make Five Dollars day for balance of year? If so, consult J. L Nichols Co,, Limited, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS, JAY and FARM' SCALES. Wilson's Secale Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto. WANTED, A LINE FOR ee every home. Write us for our choite list of agents supplies. We have the greatest agency proposition Canada to-day. No outlay necessary, Apply B. C. I. Co,, 228 Albert St, Ottawa. ; C ANCER, TUMOKS, LUMPS, ete. in. ternal and external, cured without pu.n by our home treatment. Write ua before too iate. Dr, Bellman, Colling wood, Ont, I GENTS in Wilson's * TON SCALE QUARANTEED, ¢ Toronto. ) Seale Works, 9 Esplanade, \PECIALISTS ADVICE FRER. te us inp regard to any disease. Lowest prices in Jrugs of all kinds. russes fitted by marl Send measure ment. Glasses dtted by age. Write today for anything eold in first-class drug stores to. Dr, Kellman, Collingwood. Ont. CLEANING LADIES' WALKING GR OUTING SUITS Can be dono perfeotly by our Vreneh process. Try it British Amorigan Dysing Go. Montreal, Toronto, O.tawa and Quebee Consult Canada Business College CHATHAM, ONT, fn a_ class by Itself Amon America's Schools of Business Training. 414 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1908 385 STUDENTS PLAGED IN 1909 475 STUDENTS PLACED IN 1910 We publish the lists annually, We dey. full fare up to $8.00, and bring long distance students for half fare. Good board and room, $3.00 per week, | tH. If you cannot come to Chatham, we can train you by mail. Here are somo students ed recently: -- ote Wade, Cameron & Heap, Regina, . Burk, Nicholson & Bain, Regina. H, Wood, 'Trust Co,, Cheboygan, Mich. Bight calls just received for Stenograph- ors, Teachers, and Auditors, for openings worth from $600 to $1500, will give you bome idea. of the demands. a COLLEGE REOPENS FOR 36TH YEAR SEPTEMBER 5TH. , taloguo 33 tells of work at Chatham, ot ogue a ue of work by mail - @ sod Ab ap eco Sea a MeL ACMA eG © Cota

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