West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 14 Jun 1900, p. 7

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Blifkins’ wife is such’ a worrying Woman. “That’s she got to worry about? Blifkim’ is such a good husband .. t she‘s afraid it wee’t last Well. said Farmer Corntossel, them summer boarders littered the place up terrible with them trashy novels last year. Me an‘ ma done the best we could to burn ’em all In the cook , ; 3" '1 3‘ m up. " :2, '~ ~- '-- The Japanese undoubtedly believe that they can beat the Russians, if they can fight this summer, and if, with England's help, they can compel France to remain neutral. Should their expectation be fulfilled, Russia’s southward expansion would probably be deferred for many years, for the Japanese would not be content with} the acquisition of Korea, but would? reassen their title to the Liao-Tung§ Peninsula, which they won from? China, but of which Russia deprived: th‘ffll. ‘ RELlfht 0i“ HUMMER BOA Yes, said the young worn: books in the running brooks. The moment. the war in South Africa Is over it will be for Japan’s interest to enter forthwith upon the contest with Russia which, in no event, can be long postponed. Just now, Japan’s naval power in the Far East is some- what superior to Russia’s, but the dis. proportion will not long continue, for Russia’s fleet is growing faster than Japan’s, and large reenforcements are being hurried to the Pacific. lf Japan could fight this year, she would have a great advantage in respect to dock- ing facilities and of coal, for the new ; docks, now in course of construction at Port Arthur, can hardly be finished for a twelvemonth, and for coal Russia must depend exclusively on the supplies forwarded to her naval stations from EurOpe. Japan, on thei other hand, has half a dozen dock yards and coal mines which yield a combustible, inferior in quality, it is true, to the Welsh product, but un- limited in quantity. It is also to be borne in mind that the instant the . war breaks out, Russia will be unable to reenforce her squadrons in the Paci- tic, because she will no longer be per- mitted to use the British coaling 3 stations on the routes thither. Her’ battleships would have to turn back I as did those of Spain which were on 3 their way to the Philippines. i at any other time since the close of the Peninsula \Var. She may then count upon securing deference to her announcement that she could not view with indifference the attempt of any European Power to assist Russia against Japan in any way. There is, in fact, no doubt that the Japanese regard a war between themselves and the Russians as inevit- able; that, in their opinion, they have much to lose by delay; and that they will enter upon a trial of their strength, as soon as England’s hands are left free by the subjugation of the Transvaal. \Vhy must Japan wait . for the close of the contest in South Africa? Because, while she may not‘ need England’s cooperation in order' to hold her own against Russia in, the Far East, it is indispensable 'that l England should enforce neutralityI “POD France and Germany. It was} because Russia was backed by both. France and Germany that Japan felt constrained to surrender the terriâ€" tory acquired on the Chinese main- land by. the Treaty of Shimonoseki, and she knows that it would be im- possible for her to face a renewal of that combination, or even to cop-e with the conjoined navies' of Russia and France. Now, it is almost oer- tain that, unless England forbade it,~ . France would place her feet at the ‘1 Czar’s disposal. England will issue no I] such injunction, so long as she is 00- , c‘upied in subduing the Boer repub- l lics. \Vhe-n. however, the subjugation ’ of the Transvaal is completed, Eng-lI land’s strength will be generally re- it cognized as greater than it has been 1C t on the China station having been in- vited to be present. It is understood, however, that the purpose of the naval manoeuvres in the Straits of Korea was the blockade and capture of a squadron,_ supposed to represent the Russian fleet. BORROWING TROUBLE“: It cannot have escaped observation that during the war in South Africa the Japanese, alone among great p80- plee, have expressed a,wish for the speedy success of the British arms. The Mikado was, we believe. the only Sovereign who telegraphed to Queen Victoria congratulations upon the re- lief of Ladysmith, the victory of Paar- deberg, and the occupation of Bloem- fontein. It must also have been no- h'ced that since the beginning of April when the early triumphs of the Eng- lish began to seem assured, almost the whole of Japan’s Navy has been mobilized, together with a consider- able part of her Army. As to the do- ings of the Japanese fleet, great sec- recy has been observed, no one ex-§ oept the British Commander-in-Chief: nits help, they can compel main neutral. Should their be fulfilled, Russia’s rxpansion would probably for many years, for the EDITORIAL NOTE; 51f MAYER BOARDERS. young woman. I find the milk fer the two periods of three weeks next after the test was made, that the increased quantity of fat in the milk we. maintained. I say ex- traordinary, because it is a part of the contention of thue who believe a; .I. UL VUULO Usual ration, three weeks...... 5.28 Same, next three weeks ........ . 5.80 Palm-nut meal ration, three weeks ..... . ................. 5.80 Same, next three weeks 5.80 Usual ration. three weeks 5.80 Same, next three \Yeeks 5.80 .7â€"â€" -y - ' ' . " ' ’ P'nk Pills. is a matter of rather considerable in- me to try Dr “llhams ‘ . .7 I . . , My husband then got me half adozen difference to them what solenttfic - chemists m to the contrar f th . boxes and I began taking them. Af- lbelieh U j y 0 8" ter I had used two boxes I began to '. ' ale and th various But it may be well to point out the enjoy, my me e . . svmptoms of my trouble began to fact that a bulletin has been issued i . , , . . . . . ,~ . t ,. disappear. I continued the pills until i b} the he“ Xork Experiment btation ; . . ., . . . , I had used the half dozen boxes. on this subJect, giving agreat variu- d I .. . . f l f 'tl ' v ll M 'tion in the beliefs of some of those an . baguin 'e thp'elruec 3 ‘ e . .3; :‘scientific students who are invesunut- stomat “as ”‘3 ea. y as ever 1 - -. . . _ . ‘5 had been. 1 could sleep well and my my; this matter, some of them agree,- ' l d f f h ing with the contention of the pruc- hf“? was 0 ear in rfiet rom lt e ticail business dairymen. while others [I dizzmess kand ac.esnl:1d. Its?‘ ong‘i [diffen But one point I think will I helped me. eme. “fuel”: e. dlbt‘I-Effl‘ei‘ , have great weight with ”1088 Who are ’ then a. I} 80.1 juice]. hsiloppe Lit mg? Ion the fence, and this is that while :18, P11: M1 ' edit usoo: fume”; the New York Station decidedly afâ€" ‘ \ftfel} bantitszlgsdotrhhedi: 8.31.81 | firms the belief that the kind of food , J" “5" fa Ion ea {81 t “IDS :33 a :: as to the fat in it has no relationl“?)5 till“ fgrattiu .0 rib 1 rims ' to the proportion of fats in the milk, i Pink. (i t: or? e miser‘y they I ave! nevertheless it gives, as the result of] 1.818.459; I .er ”of: and .1? e a ways, a test the clearest evidence and fig- . adnses riends w o are 211 mg to usel ures to support it, that the feeding them. I . .. . . . l of palm-nut meal does increase the, Dr. \Villiams’ Pink Pills cur by; proportion of fats in the milk. Here 2201112 to the rnnf nf nm A: nnnnn ‘ are the figures ; an abundance of proofs to support this that it is the practice among in- telligent but'ter-mafiers to choose such foods as contribute the best flavor and consistenCe to the butter, and it is a matter of rather considerable in- difference to them what scientific chemists say to the contrary of their belief. ....-.~ The scientific physiologists and the imedical profession are a unit in the~ {belief that the fats of the food do go ldirectly into the blood, and are thus gassimiiated into the system directly, (without change. it was not always so however. I remember during my training as a physician, that thiswas a moot question. then under the most skilful study and experiment, and af- J ter a series of tests most carefully- conducted. under the control of the British medical members of the Royal Association, the conclusionâ€"-quite un- avoidableâ€"was unanimously arrived . at that the fats of the food were as- similated without digestion into the blood directly. and then distributed through the body. Of course, if this is true, the fats of the food go into the milk. Dairy- men in practice know. beyond ques- tion, that the quality of the butter is varied as the fats of the food vary. The oily beechnut makes soft butter, as it makes soft, oily pork. The but- ter made from cotton seed meal is soft, while it has precisely the same reaction with nitric acid as the cotton seed oil has. Indeed, there are such has been one of the most important parts of their business, they have come to the reasonable conclusion that they are acting in strict conformity with a natural law, that the fats in the food do increase the proportion of butter in the milk as well as affect its quality. i l) 1i1ymen generally believe this, and feed their cows in acco1dancé with that belief. As it is a common prac- tice among the most intelligent of butter-makers to choose these foods quite as much for the quality of the butter made as for the-quantity, and it has been a result of long prac- tice L0 find that the choice of foods has been one Of the most imxmrtnnf THE RELATION OF FOOD TO MILK l- FAT. _ j as one ofthe most interesting pro- _gblems of the industry of feeding :cows for the dairy, for fully a score lof years and more, but it was many “years before it was regarded as one _}of the problems to be studied and : : settleca by the medical profession and 1 Ephysiologists generally, writes Dr. , 3 Henry Stewart. It might seem to be really a subject better fitted for the attention of such experts rather than for persons who do not make their ex- 1 periments in a truly scientific man- : DPI‘. "The question to be put accurat- 15‘ is, does the cow extract the fats gfrnm her food by ordinary process ’of assimilation convey, we cannot say i sconvert, the fats thus consumed into that part of the milk which we call the butter fat? In other words, is it ’possible to increase the quantity of ‘butter a cow will yield by feeding ’foods rich in fat? The questiOn is! not whether we can make a cow eat Ianimal fats or oils and thus increase' the proportion of fats in her milk, I but this simple propositionâ€"can the ‘ dairy man, by feeding foods naturally ( rich in fat, and such foods as the cow t naturally is able to digest and assimi- :3 a late, increase the proportion of fats in the milk, or increase her yield of butter in any way? HINTS FOR THE PARMER. s extraordinary, and , as an objection to the palm-nut meal ntric acid as the cotton Indeed, there are such of proofs to support the practice among in- -makers to choose such 3 the; Dr. \Villiums’ Pink Pills cure by Here :going to the root of the disease. [They renew and build up the blood, Fat. £and strengthen the nerves, thus dr'w. ing disease from the system. Avoid iimitations by insisting that every box you purchase is enclosed in a ’Wrapper bearing the full trade mark. Dr. \V'iiliams’ Pink Pills for Pele ’People. If your dealer does not keep and, lthem they will be sent postpaid at toyso cents a box or six boxes for neal ’82.50, by addressing the Dr. Wil- p131! {isms’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 3 D UVVU In Germany and Holland girls are chosen in preference to young men in ail employments in which they can be advantageously employed. I could do my household work, and at all times I felt weak, depressed and nervous. While I was at my worst, one of my friends, seeing that the doctor was not helping me, urged A practical illustration of the symptoms and torture of dyspepsia is furnished by the case of Mrs. A. La- Ibonte, who lives in the village of PStadacona, Que \Vhen interviewed 'by a reporter of the Quebec Tele- graph, Mn. Labonte looked the picâ€" ture of vigorous health, showing no traces of the malady that had made her life for the time miserable. Speaking of her illness, Mrs. Labonte said: ” For about two years I suffered dreadfully. My digestive organs were impaired, and the food [ate did not zussimilate and left me withafeeling of flatulency, pain and acidity of the stomach, and frequently heartburn. This condition of affairs soon told on my system in other ways, with the result that I had frequent headaches, dizziness, and at times adimness of vision with spots apparently dancing before my eyes. I became so much run down that it was with difficulty The primary cause of indigestion or dyspepsia is lack of vitality; the ab- sence of nerve force; the loss of the life-sustaining elements in the blood. No Organ can prOperly perform its functions when the source of nutri- ment fails. ‘Vhen the stomach is nature nssimila‘. ion ceases, unnatural gases are generated and the entire system responds to the discord. From the Telegraph, Quebec. _’ It should be borne in mind that ' cows may be, educated to consume a 5 greatly increased quantity of food and turn it to profit; also that cows dif- , fer in their natural ability to make l Profitable use of food, and while some will respond favorably to a test of t.this kind, others will not; and that some dairymen are obliged to discard some cows on this account, while they tkeep others year after year, and find {them often to be steadily improving; 'by the culture they are subject to in this way of feeding. Some of my cows have continued to improve with high feeding until they were old-aged, and their calves improved in respect. to habit of profitable feeding year’ after year. It THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE AND HOW TO OVERCOME IT. in my own practice when feeding palm-nut meal having 12 per cent. of fat in it, comparison with corn meal having half as much fat in it, for six months steady, the yield of butter from one cow increased nearly 50 per cent., or half as much as the differ- ence between the corn meal fed and the palm-nut meal fed afterwards. Dyspepsia’s Vietims. Frequently Produces lle: dache, Ilean- burn. Dizzlnms and Other Distrcsdug Symptoms-A "lcllm Tclh of Her lic- lo 1w It might be urged that the feeding of the foods rich in fat, for short in- tervalbof three weeks, is not so sat- isfactory a. test as the feeding through some months, during which, in the milk, but at the same time ao- cumulate a surplus which inures to the increased quantity of fat in the milk for a considerable time after the feeding of the meal has been suspendo this effect of the fats in the room; that the cows not only yield more fat ‘ GIRLS PREFERRED It is not generally known that Mr. A. J. Balfour was formerly a death- haunted man. Until he blossomed forth as Chief Secretary for Ireland he was a confirmed hypoohondriac and valetudinarian. He was not strong, but he made matters worse by his imagination, and by physicking himself. The story gOes that his mantelpiece was. covered with medicine-bottles The life of charming and brave Rob- ert Louis Stevenson was one long de- fiance of death. Pitifully weak in body, his great brain and brave spirit carried him to forty-four. when he died at his ocean-home, Apia, leaving behind that which will not let him be easily forgot. declared the doctor grudgingly. Thus Britain and the Army brave soldier, and-journalism and the world gained a brilliant writer and the prince of war correspondents. ' declared the I But he has outlived all those who counted upon his early decease. He has been Pope twenty-two years, and at least once every year he has been dying or dead, according to trust- worthy reports. llwar correSpondent, who died the ‘other day, owed his chances in life to a doctor’s sentence of death. He was a trooper in the Royal Dragoonsl in 1861. He had risen to acting quar- termaster, and promotion would have soon followed, had not his health broken down. After eighteen months I in the military hospital he was dis-l charged as incurable. He placedg' himself under a London doctor cured in six weeks, and then , was i l WENT DOWN TO ALDERSHUT. to show the Army surgeon how he was. “W'ell you ought to be dead!” His Holiness the Pope is a standing defiance of death. He has always been of the frailest and most delicate health. It is a fact that he was elected to the Chair of St. Peter twen- ty-two years ago because the cardi- nals anticipated his early death, and the consequent early recurrence of the vacancy. i No one is more typically the British l dog? ltarâ€"bbld. breezY. strongâ€"than Lord‘ I don’t know, ansxvered Miss 0115" 'Charles Beresford. But as a lad he? enne. If I felt positively ObliS‘Od [C f‘vas puny and delicate. AS he Step- l make a. éhOice, I believe there CUUId l _ ' . . fped on board H.M.S. “Marlborough"l be found a man who was less stupid I an old tar scrutinised the puny middy,} and annoying than '4 PW; dog. i and remarked; “’Nother candidate for ' isea-berryin’ come aboard, Bill.” l UNLOCATED- Sir Andrew Clark, the celebrated! Mrs. Stubbâ€"gohn, the kangaroo has 'physician, who died at a ripe old age, ! pockets in Wine]? hf?" young conceal was attacked by consumption When a g themselves at the first scent of dam. young man. A Specialist confirmedl 8813 . . ‘ young Clark’s own diagnosis of hisl MF- StUbbâ€"Well, Maria, if they are case. “Twelve months,” said thel as difficult to locate as those of the great man ‘ majority of her sex I can’t see hbw ' ‘h ' i' dth . SHORTLY AND SIGNIFICANTLY. ‘ 8 ”mg on“ ”1 em *« ‘ o. 2“ How he lived fifty times that peri iod is well known. He cured himself by fresh airâ€"for the modern out- door treatment of consumption was originated by Sir Andrew Clark from his own experience. are the only medicine that will cure Dia- L‘s..- I '1 Lord \Volseley, the Commander-in- Chief of the British Army, was medi- cal'iy pronounced dead in the Crimea. He was so defiant of discipline and science as to live. His existence to- day is a standing instance of insub- ordination. hatred. But for him the Boers would reign supreme, for it was his action in fore- stalling them by annexing Rhodesia that put the first spoke in their wheel, and earned for himself their undying f But in many notable cases the grim tyrant Death is cheated of his victim for many years. The condemned man émost heretically refuses to die, and :proves his vitality to the whole world. of a doctor who used to practise at Bishop’s Stortford you would find a hopeless entry anent the health of a certain Cecil John Rhodes. He was his life for more than eighteen months. He made this entry against his patient’s name. How young Rhodes cheated death and defied the faculty is shown by the ’ Cecil Rhodes “'31; Given Eighteen Months In “'hich to lec--Slr Andrew Gun; “’33 Attacked by Consumption When a Young Manâ€"Mr. Archibald “'a‘ his- clnargcd From the "capital as Incur. able. When a man is sentenced to death _by doctor or by judgeâ€"his career is regarded as closed. Metaphorically speaking, his grave is dug and his coffin made, says London Answers. NUMBER OF FAMOUS MEN WHO HAVE CHEATED DEATH. MANY HUPELESS GASES. MAP OF SOUTH AFRICA. tea grown. is superior to that of the finest Japan THE INFUSION OF CEYLON GREEN TEA “'33 5 Uncle ‘3 lot 0’ ; fense. ‘ I A souvenir birthday spoon has the gname of the month in the bowl, the . handle is embellished with the flower fof the month and with the Sign of 5 the Zodiac appropriate to it. Landhxs they a mor'gidge on his farm? i "No; but; that's ‘whnt he's guardm 5 agmst. He’s gain i’fill th’ house up; with boarders. sothey won’t be no? room f’r ’hu's cily cousins t stay w1th? ’1m {‘1‘ nothing” th’ hull summer long: Mr. Stubbâ€"VVell Maria if they are 'ing, be answered. as difficult to Ice he as those of the! â€"- majority of her sex I can ’t; see how} The He: the young ones find them. {Nam What are you going to have for din- [nerl’ asked the new arrival ’ try hotel. Well, anSWered the landlord, who had been helping his wife, it didn’t ' look like we was goin’ to have much i of anything at first, but from the ' present looks 0’ things we’re goin’ to have two drummers, three bicycle riders an’ a book agent. at a coun~ I don’t know, answered Miss Cay- enne. If I felt positively obliged to make a éhoice, I believe there could be found a man who was less stupid and annoying than a pug dog. MIGHT POSSIBLY BE FOUND. \Vhy is it, said Willie \Vishington, that a woman who has no ties of af- fection will devote herself to a pug dog? _ ___- Pitt the younger was another who defrauded. death. He lived to forty- Very different was.,.the escape of another member of the House from death. In 1867 Mr. J. F. X. O’Brien, now M. P. for Cork, was tried for high treason in connection with the Fen- ian movement. He was convicted, and sentenced to be hanged, DRAWN, AND QUARTERED. However, this was commuted to penal servitude for life, and subse- quently he was released. No other man can boast such an experience. 1 Many famous men have cheated1 death for' years, and so altered the .world’s history. Isaac Newton was l so puny and delicate a babe that his survival was accounted miraculous. In 1753â€"thirty-eight years before his deathâ€"John Wesley was so convinced of his approaching death by consump- tion that he wrote his epitaph. He wrote himself as having “died of a consumption in the fifty-first year of his age, not leaving, after his debts are paid, ten pounds behind him.” Both doctors and himself were falsi- fied, and in three months he was travelling and preaching again. when the offer of the Irish Secretary- 5hip arrived. He confided his fears to a doctor, who told him the office would save his life. He took it, and with it health. Dodd's‘1<i2133§vi3m§ fiftv cents a box at druggists. is Do‘dfi’s _Kidney' Pills. C‘yrus’ fo-lks IS goxn t' take summer boarders m self-de- IN THE COUNTRY. FROM HIS STANDPOINT. u“ u are the only medicine that will cure Dia- betes. Like B ri ght’s Dis- ease this dis- ease was in- c urable until DOdCl's Kidney Pills cured it. Doctors themselves confess that without Dodd's Kidney Pills they are powerless against Dia- betes. Dddd's Kidney Pills are the first medicine that ever cured Diabetes. I imitations-box, name and pill, are advertised to do so, but the medicine that does BIRTHDAY GIFT. '- The fire department of Chicago has nced . ninety-eight steam fire engines. bild.! Cigarettes are smoked almost ex- wasgclusively in Germany, Austria. Rus- hese i. sia and Greece, and generally through Inp\n - 'I" Enduxed the severe marchmg of the ,North-uest campaign 1.111115 adm1r- Fable fouftude. The Government ’should have supphwi 11191111 with a fquantity of the celebrate! Putnam's lPamless Corn 'Exn :140 01.11 never fails to1 remove (orns pumfessly, and the volunteers and exervbody else should h1ve1t. B wazo of substitutes. ’Ge1Putnams Extructm and take no 1 other. The largest hosital in Europe is at Moscow and has 7,000 beds. Its staff consists of 96 physicians and 900 nurses, and about 15.000 pakients, are cared for every year. MODER N BU SI .\' ESS METHODS. How is business ? asked the reporter. Dull, said the marriage license clerk. I‘m thinking about advertising that I‘ll give an oil stove and a pound of candy with each license. Railway. First-class Cozumel provcmvflcaâ€"Rates moderate. _ST._JAMES’ uafiifii: ‘ \mew The “ Balmoral,” Free Bus Am ‘15 TOO NUMEROUS TO BE IMPORT- ANT. Jimmy Jones brought his little bro- thaer to school with him, and I asked him who the child was. \Vhtat did he say? He said: “ Oh, this is just one of the Jones children." Now enters upon pursuits formerly molnopohzed by man. But the {eman- ine nerves are still hers and she suf- fers from toothache. To her we .re« commend Nervilineâ€"nerve-paln cure --cures toothache mnmomem Nervi- Inne. the most. marvellous pain remedy known to science. Nervilme may be used efficaciously for all nerve pain. \Vould you let a woman stand while you cocupy a seat? she asked. Madam, he replied. do not blame me. [The fault primarily lies with your own sex. How so? she damanded. I did not receive proper home train- She looked at him scornfully, even indignantly. Boston'has an ordinance restrict- ing the height, of. buildings, which has recently been put to the test and sustained by the courts. The city of Rochester, with an es- timated population of 180,000, pays $1,575 per month for the. collection and disposal of its garbage. Supt. Quigley, of the Indianapolis police force, has given orders to en- force the anti-spitting ordinance by arresting all offenders. The Panama Canal Company of France has secured a six years‘ exten- sion of its grant from the Colombian government. The city of Cleveland is the first to create a department whose sole ob- ject is the abatement of the smoke nuisance. sia and Greece Europe. OUR BRAVE VOLUNTEERS bwwws/v“ BRIEFLY MENTIONED. CEYLON. Thinking of painting! Weigh carefully the matter of “cheap” paninvt before buying it. Don't buy stuff in the paint line, because it’- cheapâ€"it‘a never cheap. “AIHHA‘YOH LARGEST IN EUROPE. M ES’ "375 {norm 1" . two blocks from C. P. nut-class Commercial House. Modern im- .- Y’-A_ ‘ MONTREAL flOTEL DIRECTORY. PLACING THE BLAME. The Ne w Woman 'WHEN YOU WANT TEA, THINK OF The nuno Luciana. Mcmll~ College Au Family Howlg rues 8 58 per day. Am. Pun. 7,1.50 up. when m with to“, forms a combination that is irresistible. LEAD PAOKMIIO. 25.30.40. 50mm. =3“ “- REM?“ ‘t‘ Puml Makers} Q avwmwm THE \VOMAN OF IT. Claraâ€"If you don’t love him, why ahppld_yo_t_1_ accept his attentions? LgO has RAMSAY’S 2 PAINTS I-A--â€"â€"_ The Oldest and mag; cadadian sort. gage Corporaiion. Paid-9p (lapital, - - $2,600.06n- Bayada Permanent , - _--vvâ€"- v'vu I... u u v v " ' " "' R-‘MFING SLATE in Bitch. Red or Green. SLA'I‘.‘£::1.ACKBOARD ( e I 8. ply Pumio and High Schmhfl‘or nto) Rooting Felt, 1135“,. Coal Tar, etc. Rbamm T! E (8%: New City Build- ings. Toronto. done by our (inn). Metal Ceali . Cor- nioesxtc. Estimates fut-aimed {or work c on: 223 materialssh x‘gwd to any part of the country. bone 1961 B. ourmsa 0N8. 121191211698: wzdmarStc..Torouto. K, R o 0 F I N G and Shoot Motallom. R-‘NM’ING 814'”: :.\n|..-|_ _ _ _â€"-, â€"_â€"” “I I -‘v' 3nd other PRGDUCE. to ensure best. results consign :- The Dawson Cor. West-Hark Commission 00., Limited, at 8; colhom St, Toronto, Paid-up Reser’vc _--â€"' uâ€" ‘7‘. V\"' u. VI WU' Modâ€"t‘r'éé'lv, Toror; to, Ottawa: pounm, BUTTER, gags, puts. Ind othpr Pnnn'r'nv o- ,..._.._- _ N For further particulars apply to J. HERBERT MASON. Managing Diteaor. 'fcranto. JLAW ”veifig__!_--,--._91I9;ani_ngI Music or Musical Instr'ume‘htvs. ' Whafey Royce 00., “mngqhggggfai. Lowest prives our quoged. Fine catalogue 500mm tntion: maificd fro-.2 Wrgtc us for anything in Every Town can have a Band TORONTO CUTTING swoon. 08ers speck! tam» tagcs L0 911 dcsxruqs of acquiring a Qhorough know. led e of Cumug and 17mm; Gentlemen's Garments. rise for particulars. "3 Vans. 8t, tog-gnu, "ATURAL HEN XNCL'BA’I‘UR. 100 EGG HATCH. ER, costs only $2. plan of constmction 31. A. 'v'lCKBBQ‘. Cakgl. iAlbcm carbonic Disinfectants. 00;”. Ding» meat, Tooth Powders. etc., have be. ewamea 100 edele and diplomas for “new excellence. heir retulet nee prevent inf one dlseaeee. Ask your deeler to obteln e eupply. Lists mailed free on eppllcetlon. mgs Band According to the Soir it will cost 8150 to see all the sight: at the Paris exposition. W P C 1027 Hall’s Chtarrh Cure is taken internslly, and acts directly on the blood and mucous suxtaoos of the system. fogshfor testimon free. 7 F. ENEY 00.. oledo, 0. Sold by Druggians, 7:30. Hall's Family l’iih are the best. Sun: or 0310, Crrr L FT OLEDO. } 88. LUCAS COUNTY. FRANK J. CHENEY nukes ouch that he is senior partner or the firm of F. J. Calms! : 00., doin business in the City of To. County an State Moreaaid, and Uni. mid r3 will pay the sum of 0.\E HUNDRED DO LABS for etch and every case of CATARn'n that. cannot he cured by the use of HALL- CATARRH CURE. FRANK J._ 9113mm l‘ A C A -â€"--â€" v- vâ€""nv Bworn to before me anu subscribed in presence, this 6th day of Docem r. A.D. l : """" : A. W. G EASUN 2 SEAL. 2 Notary Pal De man dat nebber kicks an’ do man dat kicks all de time, said Uncle Eben, is both mighty li’ble to git no ’tention paid to ’em. used by mother: for their children teething. It 500‘ the child. soften the 3mm. alloys pnin. cures colic. 3nd in!” boot remedy for diarrhea. 250.: both Sold by .11 druuisu throughout. the world. Be an sad at {or “ In. Winazow's Soothing Syrup." lOAN AND SAVINGS COMPANY. I!” 8.40 .. amps" Ausmcdiiiéific co." FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS MRLS, “NBLQW'S SOOTHING SYRUP hu b0. Mauiâ€"Well, y_ou know, some oth- er girl might. Look for :3an in your “11"“ or send djrect. Instruments. Drums. Uniforms. Etc. are not cheap paints, but when you pay for them you pay for the beat that’s made, and when you weigh the matter, weigh the “ can" and see that you are get- ting more paint to the gallon than you ever got before from any other.’ - For thficqhect semi your work to the .--â€"_ - -â€" r. c. CALVERT '00., HANOHESTEB - - ENGLAND. thnd Ixoonroxurren 1855. CALVERTS .axv-vv yov-Ilyv DU I o. I: £3501“ij a 00., Montreal NOT N OTICED. FOR SALE. to Wesley 8‘? mom! 8:. W cream. iB:$r_r_iibgrs.§_£5::.â€"l‘éli $2,600,000, ., QUEâ€"bee.

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