C. SMITH SONS DURHAM FOUNDRY tour mu ntha.$01dbyml new saeuen mm 00. 3mm New 19!! UM. “Wigwam-man. inbound 'Wustntod weekly. [m on o‘nhuog ot Jy‘gcieg‘cmgno‘rgg.‘ Toms. fl . _ -_._JA-I-- " II“ vumv‘ “RV.." -v- vvvâ€"_--_'. Mu taken much Inna (av-"r3667“ â€Henna. without. charge. In the _AA- Anyone sending s sketch and to. my :3: mm -.~rtain our opinion free I ha :3 n '8 probably patonublo. Commnnm “Moth conï¬dential. HMDOOIOII PM 003‘ tree. um“: agencyjoLoocuflna panama. ____ L n.. _---l_.. [turret allowed on Savings Bank de- â€it: of 3! and upwards. Promnv “nation and every facility aflorded 9.0mm.†living M. a distance. For ,\ A° gueral Banking business trans- and. Drafts iiumed and collectiom Dado on all points. Deposits re- shod and interest allowed at cur rent. rates. lit-do- in all principal points in 011 um Quebec. Hammba, United States and England. 'Skicntitic Hmcrican. Standam‘ Bank of Eanada. Bopdring promptly “tended to Outings of :11 kinds undo to order. 30's gummod “Id ï¬tted. '3. P REID Slum and Gas Piping uni Fit tings. Bissau Disc Huron: and Lmd Rollers. Domestic Sowing Muchinoa. Dealers in and Manufacturers of Harvesting Machinery and farm inc implements of all kinds. McCormick Binders. Mowers and Russ. ‘. P. SA UNDERS “.0? iï¬y 689766816 11151. Tonal. C3 ' Lion: lnolnho. 01. 80 d by dLPewodM 0.5m.) Authorize-i. 12.000000 Pdd Up ............ 1.000.000 Boar ve Fund ........ 1.000.000 DURHAM AGENCY. HEAD BFFICE. TORONTO. Machine Oil, Harness Oil Axle Grease and Hum Ointment. 9:0 to THE SAVINGS BARK. The Harunssmakwr MANAGE“ “Oh. it you would be so 3‘ the girl. flushing mininsly. i Just two weeks after this announce- ‘ ment Shorty Mahan. with his trainers, his sparring partner, his rubbers and his bull terrier, took up his abode in a little cottage on the shore of Freshwa- ter lake, prepared for the monotonous three months of training which was to ï¬t him for the ï¬ght of his life. Freshwater lake was a charming bit of water but half a mile from Thorn- ton village and a scant ten miles from the club where the tight would take place. Shorty Mahan upon his arrival looked the place over. grinned his de- light and entered upon his training with a vengeance. The trouble began one May evening just at sunset as Mahan and Jim De- laney, his sparring partner, were re- turning trom a ten mile run along the country roads. They had reached the village and were jogging easily along the elm lined streets when Mahan no- ticed a young woman standing beneath a cherry tree and calling in tones of coaxing anxiety to an Angora kitten which sulked' among the branches at the top or the tree. He stopped short and turned into the yard. “If you’ll permit me,†he said, doflng his cap, “I’ll get the kitten tor y_on.†A _ “Ir tou'u. PERMIT xx,†unusup, "I'LL on THE KITTEN. lar attraction in the lightweight class, was ï¬nally forced upon his unwilling Ifamily and their suspicious fear he- 'came bitter truth his father swore ‘rouudly, and his mother looked long at the ancestral portraits, especially the Copley, and wept. For three years Shorty Mahan en- Joyed a series of brilliant ring victories, which made his name a household word in the sporting world and added very materially to the foundation of his tor- tune. Then it was announced that the ï¬ght between Mahan and Billy Devine of the Paciï¬c coast for the lightweight championship of the world had ï¬nally been arranged to be pulled oil in a well known sporting club in the east; that the purse had been put up, the articles of agreement signed by both men and the forfeits posted. “If I could hit like that,†said Ryan, “I wouldn't be here. Man, I could make a wonder of you in a year’s time.†The exact moment when he decided what that career should be was that October afternoon when Michael Ryan, athletic trainer and ex-middleweight, rose groggily from the floor of the gym- nasium and rubbed the point of his jaw in a dazed fashion. Before him, unlacing the boxing gloves which in- cased his hands, stood a short, thick set young man with sandy red hair and an impasslve face. Ryan pulled off his own gloves and extended his hand, which the other shook gravely. When Jefferson Douglass had grown into a short, thick set youth, with sandy red hair and a mobile face. which eflectually concealed his thoughts and emotions, the family council set about to choose a career for him which would do credit to the silver, the por- traits and the family pride. His fa- ther’s mind was divided between medi- cine and the law. His mother made her gentle arguments for the ministry. Jefferson Douglass went to college with his mobile face as inscrutable as ever, but with ï¬rm determination to choose his own career. It is very obvious, of course, that his ï¬rst name was not Shorty; but, what is not so obvious, his last name was not Mahan. The name the rector pronounc- ed when he stood before the font with the wriggling infant in his arms was Jefferson Douglass Jerrold. They were a fine old family, the Jerrolds, with an abundance of heirloom silver, faded ancestral portraits, one of them a Cop- ley, and enough family pride to sink a ship. The more-a man gets the more he wants and the less is be satisï¬ed wit: vhmbgiaaL-zCMCuo Record-Herald. i Embarrassment of Seats. | I live in one of the suburbs. and the train on whizh I ride to the city is gen- :erally crowded. The other day, how- ever, an extra car was put on, and when I got aboard there were many vacant seats. I noticed when I sat down that every man who got aboard looked around as if he didn’t know just where to sit. One old fellow in par- ticular attracted my attention. He ï¬rst took a seat near the door. Then he got up and started toward the middle of the car, but ï¬nally, after a good deal of hesitating, he went back and seated himself near the place he had decided upon ï¬rst. Still he wasn’t satisï¬ed. He looked at the vacant seats around him and several times seemed to be in- clined to change over to one of them. Now I have seen this man hundreds of times scramble upon the cars when they were well ï¬lled and rush for the ï¬rst seat he could get, but never before had I seen him exhibit so much uneasi- ness and dissatisfaction. When the car is crowded he is glad to ï¬nd room to sit down anywhere. At such times he doesn’t stop to see whether the vacant seat is at the end or in the center or on the right or left side. He just takes it and is tickled at his luck. ()hedient Mrs. Angelo brought the paper. which turned out to be a poll tux notice. “Looka disa.†said Angelo, passing the notice to his landlord. “Dey mnka me pay de (1011’ for de pole. De pole he no good to meâ€"me hava no horse. Me no paya de (1011’. Me diga de pole up and t’row him away.†“Angelo,†said the landlord. “how (tame that post to be torn up?†“Me teara him up.†Angelo answered. “Me no wanta de pole. He costa too mucha mon." And, turning to his w'fe. Angelo commanded. “Bringa de little pape." The cottages had pretty front yards that faced on a street as nicely kept as a parkway. Before each gate was an ornamental hitching post. One evening when on a rent collecting tour the philanthropic landlord found one of the posts torn 11p and thrown into the street. Angelo lived in the house to which the post belonged. need to his adopted country. But he does not always grasp the entire polit- ical scheme. Angelo, a newly naturaliz- ed -Italian citizen. lived. says the Brook- lyn Eagle, in one of a row of neat little cottages built by a man of philanthrop- lc nature In a factory town. A Slight Int-conception. Under the subtle influence of the new world the foreigner becomes a good citizen, willing to do his duty by town and state and to extend it in time of And that is why Shorty Mahan faded from the eyes of an admiring public and also why Jefl’erson Douglass Jer- rold is custodian of the family pride, the silver and the ancestral portraits. one of which is a Copley. Dear Jimâ€"It's all 01!. You know I have often said that it I was ever defeated I‘d never ï¬ght again. Well. I lost thln light before it began. Clean knockoutâ€"by a woman too. We were married last night beneath the tree where I caught the kit- ten. I'm out 0! ll: for good, Jlm. was paid a liberal sum to forfeit the ï¬ght to Devlne. The real reason. set forth in a letter by Shorty himself. is in the possession of J lm Delaney. It came the morning of the ï¬ght: There have been many vague theories advanced and many absurd stories cirâ€" culated as to why the Mahan-Devine ï¬ght never took place. Some will tell you Shorty Mahan was terror stricken at the last moment. Others afï¬rm he “Now, about this prayer meeting business, Shorty,†Dawson began. Shorty’s eyes flashed ï¬re. him for a moment, then turned on his heel and went to bed. “'Member the kitten I told you about?" Delaney whispered. “Well, I’ve found out that the girl was the parson’s daughter." “Humph!†Dawson grunted, and they started back. When Shorty returned to quarters Delaney was waiting for him. The weeks went past, and the time of the ï¬ght approached. Instead of in creasing interest in his training Shorty’s zeal showed unmistakable signs of flagging. Delaney begged and the trainer threatened, hut Shorty Ma- han could be neither wheedled nor driven. The ï¬ght was to take place on a Wednesday evening. The Sunday evening preceding it Delaney and Daw- son quietly shadow ed Shorty when he set out from the cottage. They followed him to the little church and stood be- fore the uncurtained windows of the vestry. Shorty entered and took a seat well down in front, and even as they watched a hymn was started, in which they could recognize Shorty’s home- made bass. Dawson, who was the head trainer, gasped. Delaney remembered afterward that it was directly after the kitten affair that Mahan began to behave rather strangely. He insisted on taking his daily run quite alone. He found or in- vented numerous errands which took him to the village. and he went there alone also. Every Sunday night we cisely at 7 he slipped on for a quiet walk by himself, so he said. “Gee!" said Delaney when Shorty Joined him outside the fence. “Pretty nifty, wasn’t she?" Shorty wheeled on him suddenly. “Jim," he said shortly, “that was a lady. Remember it, it you please.†And then he cut out a pace for the training quarters which landed Delaney there perspiring and well nigh blown. In another moment Shorty Hahan’i' red head was among the topmost branches, and then, with the kitten in his arms, he slid deftly to the ground. f Wicksâ€"Yes. I understand the way the thieves ransacked the place simply f beggared description. 7 Hicksâ€"Not only that, but it very near. 5 ly beggared me. Frontâ€"That’s true. I bet him 3100 this morning that he couldn’t stop. «and. 1.12m: meow ' â€â€œâ€˜ * ~ --- ---.-. --.... Stopped Gambling. Bluntâ€"I hear Blones has stopped gambling. Winksâ€"ls he really? Jinks-Oh, a regular wasp. Winksâ€"I see. He always carries his point. A: WIIDI Do. ' J inksâ€"I’ll never get into an argument with him again. He’s entirely too bit- ter. More to the Point. Hicksâ€"I suppose you board that our house was robbed? "You have the wrong preposition." answered Mr. Meekton’s wife. with the cold tones of the superior woman. “I think for him." Something Wan. Rivers was smoking a cheap cigar. “Seems to me,†said Brooks. “I smell something like cloth burning.†But Rivers was game. He touched the lighted end of his cigar to his shirt sleeve. A Strict Grammarian. “You think a great deal of your hus- band. don’t you?†said the visiting relative. “No wonder,†he said, exhibiting the burned spot. The Lion Didn’t Roar. It is related that Pinnow, the faith- ful servant and personal valet of Prince Bismarck. once trod on his master’s gouty foot. Instead of swearing at him or even declaring he was a clumsy fool. Bismarck, noticing that Pinnow himself was frightened, said: “Consid- or yourself honored. No other person, my dear Pinnow. not even the kaiser himself, would have been suflered to tread on my corns.†are, according to his wife, not ï¬t for polite society, either because they have no manners or because they wear the wrong sort of collars. Ten per cent she may genuinely dislike, or possibly they may not take to her. Some of the rest are on the borderland or toleration, but most of them have a knack of dropping ofl' by slow degrees. Possibly this is the inward and spiritual mean- ing of the farewell bachelors’ dinner most intending bridegrooms give, though they never realize it at the time. squeezed as dry as possible. Should the glair téoth up on the leather, as it is very likely to do if there is much tool work on the book, dab it until it subsides with the palm o! the hand or with the sponge Her Husband’s nu. Friends. One of the most complicatai duties of a wife is the shaming oi! of her huso band's male friends, says the Ladies’ Field. Fifty per cent can go at once. tor halt a man’s bachelor associates To Restore Leather Bindlnzl. To restore the leather bindings of books wash them ï¬rst very lightly and carefully with clean warm water in which a tiny piece of soda has been dissolved, in order to free the leather from grease; then wash with clear wa- ter to remove the soda. and dry. Dis- solve a bit of gum arable the size of a small bean in a teaspoontul of water and beat it up with a teaspoontul of the white of an egg. With a bit at sponge go lightly over the leather with this glair and let it dry. tree. There was no nest in the vicinity. and, so far as could be ascertained, the cat had not attacked the jays. But what a pandemonium of fly jargon over one meek looking, quiet cat! The jays outdld themselves and called out nearly all the occupants of the many houses on that street. ; Inquisitive Birds. i Of the birds undoubtedly the blue jays have the most inquisitiveness. And they are the most noisy in express- ing it, although crows will hold a close second place, if not fully the equal. How the jays screeched and Whistled and calledâ€"a confusion of all the sounds of jaydomâ€"near my home! More than a dozen darted into a small evergreen tree on the lawn. People came from several houses in the vicin- ity, all curious to know what was the matter with the birds. It seemed to be a “want to know†on both sides. The jays had discovered a cat walking meekly along by the fence in the low shrubbery near and under the spruce Run-I’- line. It is well known that under the ac- tion of gravity the water composing such a thin shell as a soap bubble tends to run down on all sides. so that the walls of the bubble grow thin at the Stop and thicken toward the bottom. :Atter a time the bubble becomes so ithin at the top that further flow of win ter from this point can hardly take iplace, and ï¬nally the bubble bursts. lBut before this last stage is reached a degree of thinness in the walls of the :bubble is attained which causes it to glow with brilliant iridescent colors. iNewton noticed that on top of the thin bubble illuminated by white sky light a black spot is formed. With increase got thickness downward from this point on all sides, a red band next appears; then a blue one; then again red and blue, red and blue, and so on, the col- ors showing more ext1e1nes of 1ed and :purple in the higher orders. This blue band which ï¬rst expands outwaid from the black spot at the top and descends slowly with the subsidence of the \\ a- ter Vewton called the‘ blue of the ï¬rst :order,†and, although somewhat dingy, 'he judged it to be of the same tint as the blue of the sky.â€"'l‘. J. J. See in At- lanUe dear. Insubordinatlon has ruined many . man’s chances in lira-Schoolmutu. Worth Striving For. Sheâ€"And you don’t think there is a chance in the world or our living through our lives without a quarrel? Heâ€"There it always a ï¬ghting chance, j--â€" A Parallel. An old farmer said to his sons: “Boys. don’t you wait for somethin’ to turn up. You might jest as well go and sit down on a stone in the middle of a meadow with a pail 'twixt your legs and wait for a cow to back up to you to be milked.†:the-Wild Was. These people propitiate {with human skulls the demons whom. ithey~worship. Outside every village-in. :their country there are many posts; all: -in one- line, decked with human skulls. i A niche is cut in the back of each post. jwith a ledge on which the'skull can frest and grin through a hole in front of it. Every village has a dozen and isome as many as a hundred of these , head posts. Fresh skulls are in special {request at harvest time and are pur- [chased for large sums. those of distin. guished visitors being particularly de- 4-8....A Novelty Excited Cut-loony. Owtlalght~l had an awful time thinking up an excuse to give my wife when I got home from the club last night. Lushmanâ€"Did the demand one? Owtlaightâ€"Of course. I got home so early that it piqued her curiosity.-â€"Ex~ She Shut. A story is told of Count Schom'aloï¬â€™. a former Russian mnbassador to Eng- land. IIe greatly admired Englishwo. men and was heartily annoyed when he offended any one of them. Whiio he was in London he learned English. and. having heard one famous Englim beauty say “Shut up!†to another. he imagined it to be a phrase of polite agreement. such as “Say no more.†In this sense he himself addrcssvd it to an illustrious lady the next night at dinner, to the lady’s consternation. am! his own when later he discovered his mistake. Played an Organ. The little daughter of a w New York musician was I] grined the other day by the remark of a “new friend." little girl proudly: “My father is an organist†“And does he have a won! the prompt rejoinder. A Cool Place to Avoid. In- the northern Shan states. on the border of Burma. there is a tribe called Dee’s Magic Mirror. There are several accounts of the manner in which the famous gunpow- der plot of 1605 was discovered. but among the students of occult science the belief is that its timely discovery the Common Prayer Book. published in the eighteenth century, is to be found an engraving inserted before the serv- ice for Nov. 5 depicting a circular mir- ror on a stand in which is the reflec- tion of the houses of parliament by night and a person carrying a dark lantern. On- theilett side are two men in the costume of the reign of King James looking into the mirror. On the right side at the top the eye of Provi- dence throws a ray on to the mirror. Beneath are legs and boots. as it evil: spirits were making their exit. The most popular of the American peanuts is the “Virginia running vari- ety.†The pod and nut of the Virginia variety are twice as large as those of the North Carolina or African peanut. The Spanish nuts, usually sold only after being shelled and salted, are still smaller, but of excellent flavor. Ten- nessee has two \narieties called the white and the red, the kernels of the latter having a dark red skin. The Peanut. The home of the peanut. or ground pea (also often called pindar and goo- her), is believed to be Brazil, although it very soon spread to Africa, China, Japan and India and was recognized as a valuable agricultural product in these countries long before it was cul- tivated on a large scale in its native soil, which was not until the year 1870. In the old world, however, it has al- ways been planted and harvested for the sake of the oil that it yields. This is said to rival olive oil in quality and to be used for the same purposes. The nuts raised in the east are far richer in oil than the American varieties. Egus should be eaten with the ï¬ngers. EThat is why the Con k does not throw sauce over the root ends. Green corn should be eaten wi h the ï¬ngers and not scraped from tln cob with a knife. Spaghetti should be eaten with a fork and a crust of bread. In Italian res- taurants a man who cuts his spaghetti into small pieces with a knife, as he would salad, is looked upon as a rank outsider. was I. not Wm- the man. A man who has forgotten to get mar- ried and is consequently obliged to dine about town in various restaurants says that he can readily pick out persons not accustomed to dining away from home from their inexperience in using their ï¬ngers. At table d’hote places especially things are served as courses which are expected to be eaten with the ï¬ngers. No idea as to what is right can be obtained from the waiters, for it is the custom to put cutlery enough for the entire meal on the table with the soup. Olives should be eaten with the ï¬n- gers, though many of the uninitiated try to split them with a fork. igspara- cuse ue Himself addressed it to ustrious lady the next night at ‘, to the lady’s consternation. am-l a monkey?†was a well known 18 much (31:3. the ingomwm Id." Said the V--- ‘1“: (11119an "I?“ it precise betWeen 1’ the (“menace b0- een ImpflD‘ a DOIition m ‘9 let that good The candle nut is a native of the P.- ciï¬â€˜c islandshand the name is derived from the faet that the kernels are so full of oil that ‘when dried they are stuck on reeds and used as candles. The people of Hawaii. after having shells. reduce the kernels to a paste. whit-ll is flavored with pepper and salt and is said t9 be a most appetizing dish. The husk of the nut and the gum mm the tree have me- dicinal values. while the burned shell of the lcukui is [19m] to make an- indelible ink with which tattooing: is done. mom-e conform to nature’s teaching- are 240 bones in the body and 240 pence in the pound; there are 120 bones in the head and trunk and 120 in the limbs and 120 pence in half a sover- eign; each limb contains 30 bones. and Fence and Bones. A. writer in a London newspaper says: “The other day I heard an Eng- lishman defending our system of coin- age on the ground that we are the only nation on earth who can say that the system is bone of our bone. For there Ira!- Work and Longevity. In a lecture on longevity delivered before the Royal College of Physicians Sir Hermann Weber, himself an octo- genarian, gave ofï¬cial support to the doctrine that brain work does not kill. but rather the reverse. A few of his instances were Sophocles, Plato, Galen, Cicero, Moltke, Bismarck, Mommsen and Gladstone, to whom we might add Hobbes, Carlyle, Spencer and Kelvin. The facts are that brain work increases the supply of blood to the nerve cells and promotes their nutrition and health. Mosso, an Italian, laid a man on a deiicateiy balanced table and showed that the head end sank when- ever the subject did a mental sum or any other brain work. The increased weight of his head was due to the life giving blood. The truth is that brain work, as such, never killed anybody.â€" London Chronicle. loses. One of the most brilliant essays on nasology is the one which classes noses not by origin. but by mentality. The aquiline nose. for example, is the sign of goodness, amiabllity and weakness. By that nose Louis XVI. was led to the direst catastrophies. Let us have commiseration tor the nose that is very slightly prominent. It is the muzzle or a sheep and belongs to people who are easily deceived. Distrust the nose .with the medium part elongated. That elongation marks the extent of desires and the insatiability of appetites. Look out also for the ferret nose, with its sharp point, always on the scent for secrets. It is the nose of the inquisitor. The devil-may~care nose is slightly turned up at the end. It denotes a character without ï¬rmness. But when you see a nose that rises from the depths of the orbits and stands out in bold relief take ofl your hat. You are in the presence or the nose of a think- er. tulâ€"prohahly a glasstulâ€"wlthout sut- tering the lust injury. The same is true of most of the poisons savages in- Ject into their arrows, and you can suck the dangerous wound with im- punity. Arsenic eaters become so accustomed to the use of this drug that one of them could eat as much or it in a week as would kill a troop of cavalry. horses and all. It a man took a dose of lunar caustic and his wife a dose of hydro- chloric acid they would he subjects for a coroner’s inquest in a very short time. But if either the man or the woman took both doses together the resultwould hardly be diderent from that of taking so much strawberries and cream. If two men each took a small quantity of hemlock one might drop dead, it he had a fatty heart, and the other {eel only a slight inconvenience, it his heart was all right. The Candle Nut D the glfl example 1 Poisons. Sir." said the ï¬fty“ “that young men before 10:30 each :911 me kinmy.†wm never din.» "’89 and“: our “eve“ once not L; upstairs with- ?" inquired tho .Iv' groceries." You a nything each an" museum I gum mime House, k. DURHAM, OI I I o oycardu‘x.‘ l,‘- â€NJ NM“ 001'?) ,... l ‘ ‘ wwâ€"U" ' m.“ h aid is'«;' audio-hind. V u influx .â€" "I'd ‘W at ‘Etc «vi “,.. per annum. :‘u M; 'fll be pm! h l “pg? 'lrnn um: “For le.“ctc.-50 N“ bgeq .\,_ WTISING ’ ԠABRISTER, SOLICI Mclntyre‘a Him-k Luw. hull. Cullm'tiuu and Agni “tended to. Searvhos mad" trv Oflice. wdmue'mcnu um A“ .dVCHENC MP ‘0. ““04“ be bun ‘;!. †Uflioe over Gorduu's I Store. Lower Town, Durhum of money to loan at I: per property- Oflicesu '- Sundar THE JOB : : , DEPARTMEN’I‘ bong} Uflit 6 To“ 11 11 Lax. oer for flw attended t er to loan U the Durham lerm Block. Residence-Lumbm thoStation. V1.0. Pickering. 0.!) DONOR(';1{AI»I'.\'!‘I: 4 kinds 0n. lamieson I nFP‘lCE AND HITS] College of Dental : Boomsâ€"Cglder Bluck Auctiu 61166 Drum raideuce «a Orders may U short distam-e Past mbtflll Street, 'Au“? 0606 lmurs {rum ‘2 In L’ FFICE AND RESIDE (iarnfraxu and (5mm foot of hill. '(Hlime Muir‘sâ€"4 n.m.- 7-9 n-m Tellanhmwl l 600 ougr McLachhn a hour- 8t010n.m.. 2m4p ..In Special attention aim women sud children. I posite Presbyterian Church. Hr} 0 «mod Auctioneer fur tl Ggoy. Laud Valuntur, Bailii Dlmion. Court Salesnnd all m attended to. Hwhi ' if required. a dancer for the County u: pro-pay attended to. Urdel fl Ilil Implement Warerum: all shad. or at the Cbruuicll Arthur Gun, I HYSICIAN AN 1) SL’ 1‘ [ice 0\ «r McLachlan's The Bank rained ha Vim; hm‘n rd by simple means. utter huflrnngi Vith a severe lung aflm huh. I M Com-paw. 1n auxmus I. “I {allow uuflcn-rs thr "mm M Who desire it. lw will chm“ 0! charge. a copy of the museum will ï¬nd a saw (un- tut oocmuul 80v. 9. '03' AXES CARSON DI OBN CLARK. LICEI‘ ARRIS’I‘ERS. SOI ARRISTER, SOLICI I. G. Hutton. II. OBEBT BRIG H OTARX‘ FI’ICEâ€" FIRST D( )0 Dr. T. G. Holt. Vf T0 CONSUMPT EDITOR Axn G. Lefroy Mc Medial Dim MacKay D Dental Dim A. H. Jackso Legal Din’m nivarsin' M Iï¬nc for t hug each “V. IR“'I I. P. Telfo tly lflBm wrue to be left st t {gopm‘ Misde opts)". M ACK It PUBLISHED Telephone M Grad t Surgeon .. over I ROI'I All