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Times & Guide (1909), 8 Sep 1911, p. 6

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, | i .Sir Claude Robert Campbell, fourth _ baronet, of Guilfordâ€"Street, W.C., who â€" gerved before the mast on the sailing _ ship Sutherlandshire from 1898 to 1900, _ and who succeeded to the baronetcy jon the death of his father, the third baronet, in 1896, and died at sea on July 25 or 26, 1900, in an attempt to wiswim, ashore ~for jassistance, for; the ‘<rest of the crew when the ship was _ (wrecked, left estate row. . valued..for ) probate at ; £253.| A similgr case of a titled gentleman serving before the mastoMyas ‘recently‘ mentioned...in the _ Probate Court, when the Earl of Egâ€" mont‘s estate was valued at £11,750; f His lordship, after a longâ€"seryice at1 _ sea, became a London fireman, and~ _was for some time keeper of the Ves try Hall at Chelsea. I wigent on q secret mission to the yienug Court, ‘and at the conclurion of the y{)eace‘imeeung jat Schonbrum, on the 18th of Oétober of the same year, he ‘frecelvediorders to return home. He iistarted on the journey, and travelled jfifrom; Berlin under,the name of Koch, yim merchant. On November 25 ho arâ€" Virlved in Perleberg. Here he entered fi}:snn hotel beside the posting station. ¢In ‘xthe evening, when the journey should '%.\%ave been resumed, Lord Bathurst was ~missing~â€"Hisovercoat, was foundâ€"later w_on a heap of woodâ€"inâ€"the cellarâ€"of the. posting station, and his leggings in a wood near the village of Quitzow. j g}tzg ‘There was a secret military inquiry, WWinto Lord Bathurst‘s disappearance, and a rumor was circulated that he «Badibeen murdered ‘by the order of ‘Napoleon.. This rumor was credited in some quarters, as,â€"at theâ€"time, the enmity against France in England had reached its highest stage. _ _ v@ Pepys shows thatiin the seventeenth lcentury ‘both men andvwomen wore «their hats to worship. _ The question of women wearing ‘hats in church recalls the fact that men also formerly woreâ€"theirs at wor ship. bis . _ Later he notes that he saw a minisâ€" ter "preach with his hat off . . . which 1 never saw before." & «_ The hat was then an integral. part of both maleâ€"and female costume, and Pepys catches "a strange cold in my head by flinging off my hat at dinner." _ To.church,", he writes, "and heard a simple fellow open the praise of church musique, and exclaiming against men wearing their hats on in the church." ¢ Napppngamnertomgerensromtene omm emamen 1 pose #0; e;oh "C ?fiékeleton Believed to be That 61';Mur- 7’?;‘ dered"Envoy Brought to Light= (:f; in German..Wood :j:;' i dn f & gm g is‘ A skeleton found in & wood near the j;ff,vlllage of Quitzow, Germany, may ‘‘turn out to be that of Lord Bathurst, the English Ambassador at Vienna, i{who disappeared on the 25th ‘of Novemmâ€" ?“‘ber, 1809, as he was returning: to Engâ€" Z@land. As every mother knows the death rate of little ones in Canada durâ€" ing tho hot summer months far exâ€" iceeds that of any other season of {bhe year. The reason for this is ‘that the excessive heat brings on ?thflose dreaded troubles, cholera inâ€" Ifantum, diarrhoea, dysentery and lother stomach and bowel â€"comâ€" \«plai"fi_;s. These come on so quickly "and with such little warning that 5I:'%ben;§ baby is beyond help before ‘the mother realizes he is ill. Durâ€" wingâ€"theâ€"hotâ€"summerâ€"monthsâ€"thoâ€"moâ€" (thor must. be constantly . on her rdard To eb Te Baby d hogels _{‘fére working regularly and his litâ€" [$le stomach is Kept sweet and pure. {Baby‘s Own Tablets should always The kflepj‘} in the home as they, are‘ the rmother‘s greatest friend. A dose Inow and then will prevent thess é:groubles_, or.if they.do come on sudâ€" ‘ @denly they will} be quickly banish= *iéed by the Tablets. The , Tablets ‘@re sold by medicine dealérs or by mail at 25 cents a box from ‘The ;@r-fl"qfivi»ll,’i&mgt’ Medicine ‘Go:; Brockâ€" HWillef "Og¢.,~" â€"" i+ â€"mâ€"L,5 wA iZACH | The Ambassador‘s mysterious disâ€" ippearance caused great excitement. hroughout â€"Europe., Early in the. pring of 1809, Lord Bathurst had been | ent on a secret missfon to the Vienna A TERNBLE RECORD 0F CHILDREN‘S DEATHS have proved for over half a century, in every quarter of the world, absolutely safe and most effective. For regulating the bowels, invigorating the kidneys and stirring up the lazy liver MEN‘S°HATS LN CHURCH Dr. Morse‘s AIndian Root Pilis THE SEAMAN BARONET FOUND HIS BONFSâ€" 25¢c. a box everywhere. i The king among the more than 2,000 ‘birdg on view â€"at the nLondon Cago Bird Association‘s annual show at the fRoyal Horticultural Hall; Westminsâ€" ter, Is a handsome specimen of the igreater bird_of Paradise in full plumâ€" age. It belongs to, Mr. R. Pauwels, a famous, Belgian amateur collector, and is worth $7,500. jooMr.~Pauwels has~brought the bird to England in company with other val; mable rarsties especially for. the pre isentâ€".show. â€" His. exhiblits, include a blackâ€"capped «lory, â€"a. Cuban ; wood! ipecker, a pair of white mynahs, and a ‘pair of skyâ€"blue budgerigars, most oi‘. (which are new birds to the English, show bench. ‘The greater bird of Para‘ diseâ€"dontinates them all, however, and it is probableâ€"that no other specimen‘ of its breed. will be seen_forâ€":many years at an exhibition in this country, owing to the decree which came intoj force on July 1 last prohibiting the export of birds of Paradisa from Dutch§ Guinea, the. hame of the specieg,, exâ€" cept for scientific purposes, °_ _ s ‘ship. fINE BIRDS IN OLD LONDON ; "Our idea,", said, Mr. Gustay, Spiller, the organizer, "is to show that the prominent! om great menâ€"of all coun: tries have heads that are very, similar in essential features. A man of one icountry who has forced himself into prominence in any sphere of life, is bound to resemble men of other counâ€" itrles who are in simillar postions. This ‘should cbeâ€" shown,.clearly â€"by . the, porâ€" traits,and they, should also show that politics. produces. one universal typs, sclence another, music another, and so on. Recognition of this should tend ;tf’ _universal understanding and friendâ€" Beautiful Feathered. Creatures From ; All Over the World on Show En ons Canedin 0 dn ricls B s e intity mssnb Nn ieantncea t ;mures ofâ€"the ~coming Universalâ€" Races Congress in â€"~London willâ€"be â€"&vcolleoâ€" tonâ€"ot portraits of the Righest types: of amankind «produced ~by. varlous counâ€" trles, Thege will include Cabinet Mint: sters, heads of universities, @clentific celebrities, and probably, great writ krs and musicians.~ _ Naturally, these fingerâ€"print impresâ€" s ons are jJealously guarded.. As a consequence, the police offiicals whenever summoned to investigato a case of crime, search first for fingerâ€" prints, and these can usually be found. . Whenan rrrest is made, fingerâ€"prints jare taken from the prisoner‘s hand, and|if, they; tally ;with :those_taken on the scene.of theâ€"crime,one of the strongest pieces of evidence it is posâ€" gible !to o obtain‘i§ there against him. â€" «/ Thei finger‘print ‘collection of Scotâ€" {lan?d Yard is now avhuge. one; and a search amongst these records ‘will freâ€" ‘ quently enable:them toâ€"discover; who Lee: culpritiof aâ€"misdeed, happens to be,. so that fingerâ€"prints are not, only, & formi, of «identification,but a valuable help.in tracing criminals. . Prominent _ Men _ Have Heada Shaped j Acqordlng to the Profession They Purause ©‘~The ‘bulbs of the‘ fingers of human beings are marked with a number of »yeryâ€"fine~ridges, running in .certain ‘directions, and frranged in patterns. These are classed under four primary (typesâ€"arches, loops, whorls, and comâ€" posites, and it has been‘ proved that these patterns persist in all their deâ€" tails throughout the "whole period of humanâ€"life.0>;.â€" ®i.4 . < ’» The science of fingerâ€"prints is comâ€" _ paratively young." Though Scotland F"Ya-rgs possesses some tens of f:;thousitnds of records, it was only in 1901 that the Lz.[syistém ‘of! identification _by fingerâ€" print was officially adopted. > CRANIUMSâ€"OF THFEâ€"GREAT \ But in that short time the author{â€" tles have proved that their system is almogt.infallible,.;. It has enabled them to make no less than fortyâ€"four thouâ€" sand identifications, and that without error, so far asâ€"is known: â€"; =â€"THOSE FINGER PRINTS ‘_‘Other sources of danger dealt with are ~ungqualified .dentists : posing.. as "Institutes"and. the like, who "sgeriâ€" fice . on an enormous gcale healthy fiteefh,'fi supply illfitting teeth, ‘gnd pofson with angesthetics of which they have, no knowledge; unqualified optiâ€" cirns who write all sorts of leftters after their n@ames, and injire eyesight .with worthless elasses;â€"and qugcks who sell nostrums at shops or street corners.to cure cancer, consumption, ‘mnd other grave .diseases, which lead ~toâ€"the spread ‘of ‘disease and death. fi'ell-Tale 'Ei)lc."?nce in ldént(?ylng‘hnd ; Tracing Criminals ““‘Iâ€":Iei'bé.l_ists‘ are said to be chicfly â€"popular {n the"*MidIafida andNorth, where some vaunt spurious degrees and give certificates whickh are, actualâ€" ly rccepted by registrars of death. They "seriously diminish the chances of : cure,; lead toâ€"a great amount. of unnecessary pain and suffering ‘and prémature death," and have caused the spread.â€"of smallwpox and other‘inâ€" fectlous diSeases. by. ignorant diagnoâ€" sis and mistaken treatment. C The:North is also the chosen ground of the bonesetter ,and in parts‘ of Wales belief in these men is..said to be 1mplicit. iff? C f p Witchcraft has arrived at the digâ€" nity of mention in a Government Blueâ€" book. In a Local Government Board report issued recently in London it is â€"statedthat in a.few, of the. more outlying rural districts (of England and Wales) belief in witchcraft is still held by a few people. _ One of (the most entertaining feaâ€" QUACKS STHL ABOUND Even Bellef in V!I_'é;â€"hcrafi*Pre"yanqv in Some Portiona of "England | > ~,. ang Walee â€" !â€" ; © Lolss species,, exâ€" ;x Dignity is what some people stend t __ _ _._â€" i®en when they are short. id Don‘t get into the habit of givâ€" ing ‘advice ‘because you: want to get rid of it. Fresh Supplies in Demand. â€" Wherever Dr. Thomas‘ Eclectric QOil has been introduced increased supplies have been ordered, showâ€" ing that wherever it goes thisSexâ€" cellent!Oil impresses its, power,on the people.. No â€"matter.in, what laâ€" titude it.may, be faund its potency. is never impaired. It is put up in most portable shape in bottles and can be carried without fear of breakage. 9c 1 Some~women spend half «their lives before the glass and some men spendâ€"half theirs behind it,. If every man loved his neighbor as he loves himself his Satanic Ma® jesty woruld soon have to hunt. ans otherâ€" job. Beware of the man whose ‘dog crawls under the" house when its master enters the gate. Minard‘s Lirsment‘ Cures:Colds, ‘Ete.. Ma®s. Winstow‘s SOOTHING SyRUP has been used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS, for; their, CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING, with ‘PEREECT SUCCESS. It sOOTHES the CHILD, SOETENS the GUMS ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and isithe best remedy for DIARRHCEA:; . It is abâ€" solutely harimmless. Be sure and ask for " Mrs. Winslow‘s ‘Soothing Syrup,!" ‘and take no other kind. Twentvâ€"five cents a bottle. ‘~ There are many stickyâ€"devices on tlteâ€"market that ‘kill some flies, but housekeepers mwho have tested, them know that,. Wilson‘s Fly. Pads kill many times more,, and do not damâ€" age carpets and furniture like all sticky, fly . catchers. i : iDugald wasnill, and his friend Donald took. a bottle of whisky. to him. Donald gave the invalid one glass, and _ said â€" _ ‘"Ye‘ll get anither yin in the mornin‘."‘"About five minutes elapsed, and then Du® gald "suddenly "exclaimed :â€"s"YÂ¥e‘d better let me â€"haeothe ithem noo, Donal‘, ye hear‘o‘ sae mony sudden deaths nooadays."",; e tarti s _ Small _ but Potent‘ Parmeleé‘s Vegetable Pills are small, ‘but they are effective in action.1Their‘fine qualities‘ as avcorrector of,stomach troubles! are| known »to,~thousands andâ€"they jare, in,. constant, demand. everywhere, by ; those. who know what a safe> and simple _ remedy‘ they are. They need no introdtucâ€". tion to those acquainted with them but"‘to: theose~‘who may mot â€"know| themwthey are presented as the best: preparation on, the market for disâ€" orders.of: the stomach.,, . _ ,"Oh, you come, and live with me," said his companton." "I‘m néver trou bled;" I amâ€"always ‘comfortable, ~and; never disturbed from oneâ€"year‘s;end to.the other." : j ‘"Indeed!" sald the other spider. "And where do you live?" t3 Â¥ "Oh, I‘live in the poorâ€"box," was.the‘ teply. ... .. â€" ‘‘Oh, moderately," was theâ€"reply. ."I don‘t feel very, comfortable on Sunâ€" days. I live in the pulpit, under the. cushion, and of that day ‘the parson, comes and bangsâ€"the{book, andosends hisfists on the, side, and I have to keep very close, or else some day I think he‘ll hit me. He bangs with such force that I: know> he‘ll: squash, moâ€"to a jelly." ie ns i Enthusiasm dn a cause ‘one: has at lheart overcomes, many, obstacles which, would.. be otherwise insurmountable} For Instance, Mr. John Abbey, the{ ‘wellâ€"known‘tempérancé veteran, spent/ rover forty years in England, where he tendered yeoman service in the Eastâ€" brn Counties, and then proceeded to, ‘South Affrica ~to ‘help ‘on tha cause ‘over there. ~Mr.â€"Abbey has journey no fewer than 5,000 miles during the last thirteen months. In addition, he has deltvered 200 addresses and taken 15,â€" 000 pledges in the colleges and schools, from both teachers and scholars. Two splders who dwelt in‘ differéent parts of a ‘church ‘chancedâ€"to meetâ€"toâ€" gether in,the aisle one, day,when out for}a constitutional, f y f _ "How are you getting oh"" Satd ‘spt der No: 1‘to‘@pider No. 2:.0n°~m <, § Temperancs Voteran Journeyed 5,000| Miles: in Thirtsenâ€"Months hal By making this loaf, Mr. Newberg: breaks his own record for the largest) l6af of bread in the world; which was! one welghing a hundred popnds, sent to the Louisana Exhibition in 1904. | _ The loaf was sent to a barbecue at Moulton, where it was cut and distriâ€" buted to ‘a large crowd. " Mr.‘Newberg accompanied:the rbread.: to. its destinaâ€" tion to.see that it was safely carried. REST AND HEALTH.TOMOTHER AND CHILD, , "After the Ingredtents were "mixed; the. baking. process consumed_ more than an hour, a <special oven being used for the purpose. Lb it â€" B ~<gr As __ The largest loaf of bread in the world: was baked=the "other day by Andrew Newberg, of Austin, Texas. This gigantic mass of the Staff of Life weighed 140‘ pounds, and, was two feat high, three feet wide, and twelve feet long. __ t %%fgkfi?g{flecently In ,,fl:-"‘f’é‘?gafisâ€"Welghed _3 â€". 140, Poundsâ€"12 "Eeet Long 1 ENTHUSIASMâ€"WON THE LARGEST LOAF A PARABLE 6 ~IH DTEA _6 W ED. 1 ‘‘¥es, I think it is, all things conâ€" sidered. Still, if you prefer to let them ‘Sceald themselves to death ‘in your coffee I have no ‘fault! to fard. They â€"deserve even. that.‘"". Tke tail of a mouse is one of the conclusions a woman will jump at. ~~AU Stamped »+Medicine.â€"Parme~â€" lee‘s «Vegetableâ€"Pills;, compo’zund;ed! rof entirely,â€"..yegetable _substances known, to have,. a revivifying, and salutary effect upon the digestive organs, have through years of use attained so eminent a position that. they rank as a standard" medicine. The ailing"should sremember this.. Sitmplesin vtheir ‘composition, ‘they canbe assimilated by the weakest stomach, and, are,certain,to. have. a healthful and agreeable effect on the sluggish digestive organs. _ "You keep those horrid sheets of sticky,flypaper in your house? Do you think it‘s humane to put even flies to such a lingering, torturing death ?" : "‘What ‘are ‘you crying " about, Freddy ?"~«*‘I ‘goÂ¥t licked twice‘"toâ€" day:" ="«How wassthat !~‘ ,!‘Téachâ€" erâ€"canedo meysan‘>I told, dad;.:an‘ dad iwentâ€"up ito, thrash the teacher, an} the teacher licked dad, an‘. dad came home an‘ walloped me." There dte many ° imitations "of Wilson‘s" Fly "Pads." Do not"be‘ teâ€" ceived by unsatisfactory imitations. Get Wilson‘s. Miss_ _ Rocksey â€" "But, papa, George is a hardâ€"working young man.""‘ Old Rockseyâ€""That‘s ; it exactly:â€"Theâ€"manâ€"I« wish =you sto marry must be able to make money without working.""*"" * ‘Jack=met m friend of his; ,amfi, noticing the glum dook on.his face, said, What‘s the matter, Harry ?" @‘A.â€"burglar visited our. house, last night and stole our $15 ‘élock," ‘But â€"~didn‘t" your ‘‘!dogâ€"â€"prevent him ?‘ asked Jack.: ~‘fThat‘s the point,"‘; growled Harrya SHe stole that...too [‘ .. % ; It is befter to avert a.war than to fight and win; better to prevent sickness than;to cure, it. |Keep a bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil in the house and see how ‘much suffering Resatsad a‘nan 20 anl4l1 Mrs. Knickerâ€"‘"If isn‘t what you pay for clothes thatâ€"makes you well dressed." lb.. uo 6 Mrs. Bockerâ€"‘"No indeed; it‘s phabtygulof$" o3 hss mssy C | Advice to those who live‘ in towas Where gossip never ceases : $ Be éxreful how to pick your friends, And Con‘t pick them to pieces. _ ‘ Ona of! the commonest €omplaints ofâ€"infants is worms, and_the. most effective mapplication for them is Mother Graves‘! Wotm (Exterminaâ€" tep 2 4* e e $°~s p Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. MISGUIDED SYMPATHY ds C EtwTres: ©30C0L }~ | BANK OF MONTREAL BUILDING YONGE AND QUEEN STS. T ORONT O ADVICE TO TOWN FOLK. [ A desirable investment has in it these essentialsâ€" the safety of the principal â€"â€"the certainty of income â€"a fair and fixed rate of incomeâ€"probable appre= clation im .valueâ€"and saleability. [ Bonds, carefully selectâ€" ed, ensure to theâ€"investor all these; desirable eleâ€"s ments.and are invariably secured â€" principal. and . interestâ€"by the total asâ€" sets of the company that issues them. C Write us to day for our literaâ€" ture:on Bond‘Investments and a. list of those we recommend,. SECURITIES CORPORATION SARTORTIAT FINANCE. . BOND | INVESTMENTS â€" FIVE POINTS IN ROYAL TSSTUE 35 °1 imennonpannti It isn‘t difficult" io mdurc? tha other fellow to compromise whon ho realizesâ€"that you _ haveâ€"the â€"bes of it L know it," repled her last owner, with an easy air. "You didn‘t say anything to‘ me about 3t,"" saidâ€"the purchaser, his face finshed‘withianger. ;‘ J F , ‘‘Well, you see," replied the other, "the nan who,sold her to me didn‘t te!l mesabout>it; aad 1 thought, perhaps, he didn‘t want it known." A man who had purchased a fineâ€" looking mare discovered, after drivâ€" ing the animal for a week, that she was blind.=â€"Shortly, afterwazds he succeeded ‘in=disposing_of her, as the dleféct did not lessen her speed or detract from her general appearance. The â€" next ~day the ownerâ€"=â€"of â€"the~â€"mare~appearedâ€"â€"â€"â€" "Isay, you know that mare you sold me?"" hewegan. ‘"‘She‘sâ€"stone Hind? t %% / a Faes . Elizabethâ€"My mamma. says she can remember when your mamma kept "I â€" gToter i "fIroptâ€"===2â€" omm \â€"â€"Gwendolineâ€"Indeed... .My. mam; ma says she can remember how much your mamma owed her for Egroceriga_ i @" _ t ) fa. 1 h2 j TRY MURINEâ€" EYE REMEDY . for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery. Hyes and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn‘t Smartâ€"Soothes Eye Pain.. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25¢, 50¢c, $1.00: ~Murines ~Exe:â€"Salve=At0 Aseptic Tubes, 25C. $1.00. Eye Books and Eye,. Advice. Kree .by.. Mail: Mrs. Wildmanâ€"‘‘I can tell you this, Mr.. Wildman, if you continue in your present life of extrayaâ€" gance you‘ll surely pay for it some cday." â€"Mr.â€"Wildman=â€""I wish, my dear, that my .creditors, had the same faith in my gocdâ€"intentions.‘" It is a fact beyond dispute ‘thafi“j one packet of Wilson‘s Fly Pads has killed a bushel of house fiies.‘ This is more than .could possibly .be caught on three hundred sheets of: sticky paper. All Druggists, Groâ€" cers and General Stores sell Wilâ€" son‘s Ely Pads. Be sure.you.get the genuine â€"Wilson‘i. n ‘""~~4 i9‘ Orrrey &A e ied 4n t3 St. Isidore, P. Q,, Aug. 18, 19048 Minard‘s Liniment, Co., Limited. Gentlemen,â€"I _ have frequently used MINARDS /LINIMENT andalso. prescribe: it for my patients always with the most‘ gratifying ‘results,â€"and I consider it the best allâ€"round Liniment extant. Yours truly, Chk DR. JOS. AUG.. SIROTS. 5 "I have had a great deal of pleaâ€" sure from anticipating the trip.‘s> 4& ‘‘More pleasure, probably, than YoTIF get "from the«trip=itself." â€"».» =="*That‘s â€"whatâ€"Iâ€"think:â€"â€"Soâ€"Eve decided to stay at home and save the money 3a i 4‘il 2i O ~â€"~Dr. â€""J.~D.~â€"RKellogyp‘sâ€"Dysentery. Cordialâ€"»is .prepared. from_ drugs known to the profession as thor oughly reliable for the cure of chol« era, dysentery, diatrhoea, griping pains and summen complaints, It has been used successfully by meâ€" dicalâ€"practitioners for a number of years jwith gratifying.results. _ If suffefing ‘from any summet com; plaintâ€"itâ€"isâ€"just.the. medicine that will eure you. . Try a. bottle.. It, stll« for 93 cenfs. °(~ ++ l But, avoiding all theory, "toâ€"day," ‘"toâ€"night," and "toâ€"morrow".are daily hyphenated four times each on 234,192 typewriters, and *bree times daily on‘ 184,212 linotype m@chines.==Rememâ€" «bering_that a pressure ‘of 1 ounce‘ds required to strike a typewrlter key, and 2%4 ounces to depress a linotype, we see that in writing these‘hyphens! a total of 352,974 footâ€"pounds of energy isâ€".expended, ~or , enough to .draw & passenger â€"train ~halfaâ€"dozen |times from London to Edinburgh and back/ Minard‘s Liniment SurtasQpsziempar â€" Tovayoidnappearing. too critical, _no;] mention has been made of the\waste of, ink and papet, ‘but this would approx{â€"| mate in value the daily bread supply of London, Manchester, and . Glasgow. Murine EKye Remedy Co., Chicago There are 178,236,509 Englishâ€"speakâ€" ing people. The words "toâ€"day," "toâ€" night," and ‘"toâ€"morrow" are together used fortyâ€"eight times daily by every personâ€"five of these being writtenm out in long hand. Thus the daily outâ€" put of hyphens in these, words totals 891,182,960. _ Taking the average of a. written hyphen to be one quarter of an. Inch, you have a straight line $,864 miles long. ~At the usual rate of writ ing it wouldâ€"takeâ€"oneâ€"manâ€"seventyâ€"six years to insert the hyphens in these words, and his salary would_amount to, about £20,000. 2 Cay en enc ce oo d e AERL o C do away with unnesessiary. marks of punctuation,. the fiyphéflz:_ts (still reâ€" tained in "toâ€"day," "toâ€"night," and "toâ€" morrow." That the retaining of the hyphen in these words is not only useâ€" less but absolutely criminal is easily demonstrated by a bit of simple matheâ€" fustics.__â€" Someons with Love.formFigurea®Proves It Is Criminal Waste THAT USELESS HYPHEN Although the gengral tendency is to )\ nwirese \altic SPc WB KE _ uk s HIS VACATION SCHEME.~~ TOO READY MEMORY P KEPIT QUIE® Here are some students g(la«ced recently . I\fate Wade, Cameron & Heap, Reginz. E. Burk, Nicholson & ~Bain, éfiggsgm : H.s Veood, | Trust Co., ;:LG!;,jabp;igm, Mick. Eight calls just received for Stenogfaph ars, Toachers, and Auditorg, for opening@ worth from $500.to.. $1500, wili give you sonie idea of. the domards. . COLLECE REOPENs FOR ITH YEARA SEPTEMEER $1H. CHATHAM, ONT. in a class by itself Amons. [Amérisa‘t Sehools of Business ~Training. 414 STUDENTS PLACED TN 1968 385 STUBDENTS PLAGED :4 +309 475 STUDENTS PLACED iN 1910 We publish the lists annually. We pay full fare up to $8.00, and bring long distance students for halfl fare. . Good: board and room, ?15.‘.00 péer week. If! you cannot Come to Chath=m, we carl train you by mail. & s > Canada Business Coltcoa LQ;)_PEolg}..LISTs ADVICE FREE. Consult cy3) ts in regard to any disease. Lowest |prices in â€" drugs of all kinds. Erusses fitted by mail. Send measure ment. Glasses tfifted by age. Writo tg-lday for »anything . «old in firstâ€"class Airog "stores to Dr. Lellman, »Collingwood. (Ont }";(1 aNVASSERS WANTBD _ Woekly: salary ~4_," paid â€"aAlfred "Iyler>London, Ontario. Tanat en o Cmoep n een en â€" m A The greatest agents‘" Seller _ ever produced; every user of_pen ‘and ink buys it on sight; 200 to 500 per cent profit; ong agent‘s sales amounted to $620 in six days; another~$32 in two hours. Monroa Mifg. Cé. X., 468, Laâ€"Crogso, Wis. [ C ANCHR, (TUMORS, LUMPS, etc. § Ine ternal‘ and external, cqx'edmvflplogg § ternal‘ and external, cured wlf}xout pain by our bome treatment. Wrife us before :too {late,.sâ€"Dr.â€"Bellinan, Colling wood, :Ont. . 2 & e ‘ CARPET ~DYEING * and Cleaning.~This im mepecialtyâ€"withâ€"the..." * British Amerlcan Dysing Co° Send particulars by post and we are surgito ‘matisfy. Addre«s Box 158, Montreal. A GENTS WANTED. _A LINE ‘FOR every home. Write us for our choice listâ€"of agents supplies. _ We have) the greatest agency propos‘xfi‘dfi in Capada toâ€"day» No outlay necessary. App}? B. C. T. Co., 228 Albert St., Ottawa. $ Catalsgitn 23 teils of.work at Chatham Chaelba 1823442113 af;' work by) mail turop â€"â€"~1‘re0.} se ”T"'Hfifi"'some of the best Eruit, Stock, Grain Jor Dairy Farms in Outario, ‘and prices right. = \ 4 A GENTS [ WANTED EVERYWHERE.â€" 4 High class businés!‘withgbest{;})eople. Calyert &Dwyer €o,, Limited,. Toronto. A_ _Agency propositions convinces . us that none can equal ours. Â¥You will al waysregret it if you don‘y apply for particulare \ to i Travellers â€" Dept. 220 AlberteSt., Ottawa. = _ If a â€"maâ€"owes @â€"10t to chis w%}d it‘sbecause jshe is a poor collécâ€" DD Ironlences is hn Sm o te 9 _ "Did you have much of a vacaâ€" tion this year?‘ 4 _ CThirtyâ€"fve dollars worth>» 3 Minard s "Linlthent ‘Cures Carget"In Cows. Corns are caused by the pressure. of tight boots, but no one need be troubledâ€"withâ€"themâ€"longâ€"whenâ€"sa $1s TO $30 A DAY simple. a remedy. as Holloways Corn Cure is available. ___â€" &}%} Mrs..Jonesâ€"Mrs..Brown and her, next‘ door ‘neighbor, ~Mrs. Green‘ don‘t speak any more. Mrs...Smithâ€"â€"ThatԤâ€"!good<. the rest of the neighbors will now be able tto rtake; a map in the afterâ€" ngdn. cb { 4d 8k .9 E handlingâ€"this~proposition. | Oursagents elsewhere are doing it. You can. Auâ€" thentic referoncesâ€"required. This is sound and legitimate. ‘Address, P. 0. Box 1145, Vancouver, B. C. 4 TON SCALE @UARANTELED. Wilson‘a@ Scale" Works, 9 Esplenade,â€" Toronto. E W.= <BDAWSON;,, Ninety, ..Colborne } â€"Btreet; Toranto.~ & i { #â€"4 > 4 GENTS ON SALARY OR COMMISSION, GENTS WANTED.â€"A study of other AYC and FARM _ SCALES. Wilson‘s ©Stale" W orks;~ 9~ Esplanade, Torento. YOU, CANâ€"MAKE FRCOM If your dealer does not ‘carry ‘‘Blackâ€"Knight‘‘ Stove â€"Polish in stock, send us his name and 10G," and we will send a full size tin by return mail. THE F. F, DALLEY CO., LIMITED, . BHAVIZTON;â€"ONT. ~ sn .= 33 Afakers of the fumous "% iR I" Shos Polish, ASK â€"DAWSON, HE you want to sell a ensures no hard work and no dirty work. _ No messing or mixing. A handy paste: in a generous can,; _A few rubs, and you have‘a" splendid ~finfsh ~thatâ€"lasts=â€" and.stands the heat.. ‘The , best preparation for polishâ€", ing stoves, pines, grates. and ironwork. x\ M en ied ses o Prd â€" frmgr men : 0 on es ic o FARMS FORâ€"SALE ORâ€"RENT. _ * Stove Polish ACENTS WANTED. HIS yACATION. ~ MISCELLANEOUS. REST AT BAST. Sewefraiity OUt KNOWS. farm,._consult farm, _ consifilt Catleca (3

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