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Durham Review (1897), 2 Feb 1899, p. 7

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a: No. , Normal. ttre-No. 1 M 1-23.. ~th - No. 3 " I-ge, bid. 'tro- " Clover good - & now. $1.50. ou has n ”all!“ or: DOW. ORPHAN s (on, years 01 I weeks an“ hi- ttt of the leading '0 says. that up , Emir Ahmed I. have surrend- ved at Crmdur. ' a large nun- pd cull. no " ob her! tit a “on” n In VIII! EOF io 51 1-20; mph. at ro DISTRICTS I. .rl'il'\ ”(I NDERING. lot! BN h n h ban has Mt u be Willa thrw " at u U hinlnhuullo- n MILLIONS w His. 8tT and huhng In... News show no r. Sagan“. .iuura..4 to m Non. quiet hr, m barrels. ard, in pails. ml compound lb; hams, no e to He pet ricen nominal u “no Ida. nut-Gen- MEAT m Ind a man " vents all] ha n . Mm FPS " ted in al grain ricea no i steady. c, to 84: ll] lave to In tho welsh! ain and n u bea [SW Tisdalc In an [what n ':-Aa ' tho meat bride) Id Iota ajob- as " r bag. Intuit) If; to and tnd "It! ur- the the I!" "" "ttt , " an tsag ur " " a " ha of n A DRY SHAMPOO. Many women who have luxurious tre,ses and who take cold easily on chilled to forage washing them as often as they would like, because of th- difficulty of getting them dried quickly. For such, a dry shampoo in thr nut best thing, and it carefully an! lhoroughly done it removal the no- cumulated dust and dandruff Ilmost as well as washing. The hair should be shaken loosely out over ths shoul- ders, and the head manipulated with The festoons of this beautiful vino I'lnllnt he equalled by any other style of decoration, and being- natvnl and growing rapidly adds greatly to its churn). ' in fact, there is nothing so beauti-' fut as a white lace curtain of which} such a feather, mass of green is the' Inns! important part. Of course, oith-l "r :be curtain must remain up until! it falls to pieces or the fern must be K'lt'rificed. Use, acurtain which need nut be of such value as to make it no-t'essnry to destroy the fern. over the suture hook, down 'on the “the-r side, or along the moulding, or No one has any idea how artistic a window can be made until she has tried the following plan. Curtain the win- de with rather a coarse mesh of net ---the fish net is just the thing. Then invest in an asparagus fern and al- low it to travel upward on the curtain, weaving itself in and out and all over, .1! its uwn sweet will. It will cross over to the over curtain, reach a tendril over Ir a picture cord or wire, climb both w:it until a thing is actually out he- fore ordering it. Then. on our morn- ing visit to the kitchen, the leaf can be torn on, and given you. and you have the written list all ready to give your orders to " butcher and baker and ":intilestitrk-matrer." murmnnwa the memoranda are really :uIHn-d out by accident. and very often tlint excuse is made when something is forgotten. To avoid this, have namall tablet: a pad of writing paper six by thrve inches. Bore a hole in the center of the upper edge and put a string through to hang it up by. Attach a short lead pencil, well sharpened, and suspend the pad over the kitchen table, just where it will he in plain night while the cook is at her work. On this let her write her memoranda, impress- irw, it upon her that she is not to One beautiful pillow seen at an ex- hibit ion recently was of different shades of blue on a white background, which Was most completely hid, finished by a ruffle of three shades of blue ribbon; another of brown, ranging from the dark brown, to a delicate cream, and finished in the same style, and still another of dark violet, shading to helio- trope, The newest cushion today is the one whose cover ia made of the famous cane was work in cross stitch. The beauty of this cross stitch work In in Its Poo- uihiiities of infinite gradations of col- or; with an intricate design one can use ten or fifteen shades of the worst- cds. Tho pillow is finished with a rut- fie combining two or three rows of inch wide ribbon ot the shades employ- ed in the canvas work, stitched to- gether or embroidered with herring- Lone or huttonhole. MAKING ICE IN THE HOME. A new ice-making machine has been devised which will he of practical value to the housekeeper. It is claimed that it will furnish in fifteen minutes s small cake of ice. The device consists of a double sheet and metal cylinder, covered on the outside with asbestos. The receptacle is filled with distilled water. For generating the cold tem- perature ammonium salt and water are used. The machines are used in Lon- don, and have proved tstttintatstorv. The sofa cushion has become ”much e part of the home wardrobe es the shirt waist is of the per-one! outfit, and every season new styles of cush- ions are exhibited, putting the seal of disapproval on those we have and tempting us to replace the worn out ones with .thoae on which fashion smiles. "Well, I aa% good honest butch- or_._3nd then stand by him." "You mean that iod 1". him all your trade I” "How do you nlwnys mama to have such delicious mutf'uked one hones- keeppr of another. - "No; I mean that I stand by him while he is cutting the meat." BER METHOD. There is but on way of ensuing Mood work, the old-tubionod one of being on the spot. TO NOVELTY IN SOFA CUSHIONS HOUSEHOLD. REA UTI FY YOU R WINDOW. ___-.---------- n “Macaw" " _ l The Japanese mutilated With Ilse Theatre l! -aarrcr salaries Received. " Danjuro, the Japanese Irving, is the iidol of Tokio theatre-goers. He gets _ prices that even European actors might 'envy, and which, in acountry of low lwages like Japan,. are absolutely en- I nrmous. Thus, for a run of 40 days in ,()saka, he stipulated for 50,000 yen, "rr,000, or rather more. Just lately {he asked 12,000 yen, over £1,200, for one act of a play-a Japanese play takes all dar-put on the stage of a Tokio theatre. It is interesting to note ,that the salaries of the Cabinet Min- isters are less than £1,000, that judges occupying a position equivalent to that of county clerk judges at home {get 100 to 150 yen a month, that the highest officials in the Japan Rail- '; way Company receive E800 per annum, that the average Government schom ' teacher's salary is 10 yen, gn, a month, and that some of the latter earn as llittle " a yen, th., a month. PLENTY OF RUBBER TREES. According to information received at the British foreign office, the tears re- cently expressed that the supply of rubber from the Amazonian forest. mar be exhausted in the near future, are not very well founded. Para rub- ber is produced over an area amount- ing to at least one million square miles, and while overproduction ex- hausts the supply, in particular locali- "tfiii,%atTuce'" -iiiiir" 3'0de m'rnvy wasted as she did not get any better. As Mrs. Goodfellow has three children and her husband to care for it was a deep trouble to the family for her to be so afflicted. For eight months these dizzy spells and the purvlysis continued. Then Some fri, nd asked her to try a box of Dr. Wil- lium:s' Pink Pills. To pleasethe friend she consented to purchase a few boxes. When these. had been taken she felt decidedly better. The faint- ing spells came less frequent, her “trengih returned to her side and arm and She was delighted with the result. After taking about six: boxes, and feeling quite well again, she discon- tinued the use of the pills for a time, but later felt some of the old symptoms returning. She again procured a supply and recom- mended their use, and was overjoyed to find that these valuable little pel- lets again gave relief. She continued taking them until she felt that she must certainly be over the effects of the trouble when she again ceased to take the pills. That is over a year and a half ago. and only once or twice since has she had any slight symptoms of the old trouble. and then a few doses ofthe pills would give full relief. Mrs. Goodfellow is decidedly of the opinion that she owes her present health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and is most enthusiastic in her recommendation of them to her friends and acquain- tances. t I Partial Paralysis Accompanied by Paint- l In; rm Pot-tr-abort:"', "" " Bring 'tetter-Br. Winn-15' Pink Pllh In. ”on lnlll. ( Brookholm,asuburb of Owen Sound, ismirly vibrating with interest inthe wouderfut cures effected in that place by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. A newspaper man of Toronto, spend- ing some time in the vicinity, was direeted toahouse on ahill overlook- ins Owen Silund’s beautiful buy, and was told that there he would learn something about a cure effected by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The hill was elimbul ..n'l it is to Mr. J. F. G0odfel- low, tho genial owner and occupantof that pleasant Vane, that heisindeht.. ed furthe following taetsc-"My wife was her good measure of health to- lily to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills," said uv. Guodfellow. "On the 12th of July, 895, Mrs. Gumltullow went on an ex- ‘ursiun to Collingwood by boat and cum- home with a severe cold, which d "uttoped into a partial or slight at- tuck of paralysis in the left side and limb. In addition, at times she would h. seized with a dizziness which then resulted in sudden and several falls. The paralysis made herl unable to lift any weight with] li-r left hand. She called in medical [ill and for some months followed tho advice and took the medi- vines prescribed. But it was only) Some kind soul had suggested to the Empress' chamberlain that it would be a great kindness ii the imperial car- riage would be allowed to drive slowly when passing the invalid's window. The request came to the Empress' ears, and in her kindness of heart she left her carriage. paid a long visit to the sick room and left the lonely sufferer in a state of happiness greater than words can tell. The German Empress loses no op- portunity ot "doing little kindnesaes" wherever she goes. A very pretty story is told of her recent visit to Westphalia during the recent army manoeuvres In a village close to the imperial headquarters the widow of e Captain in the merchant service oe- cnpies a small room. She is invalid- ed, bedridden and very old; but her one great wish was to see the Empress drive past the carpenter's cottage, where she lies on her little bed. A SEVERE COLD BRINGS A WIFE AND MOTHER LOW. the fingers till all foreign matter is well loosened and scattered through the hair, which should then be part- ed in different places all over the head, and the parts cleansed with a ttiff,, little brush, after which the en- tire head and hair should be very thor- oughly brushed in sections till the dandruff ls brushed out as much as possible, when some good scalp tonic or scalp cleanser may be rubbed on. and the enarls engendered by the whole process gently combed out, and the ends clipped. This should always be done once a month to promote the growth and fine glossy oonditurn of ihe hair. PARADISE FOR ACTORS. A KIND-HEARTED EMPRESS Partial Paralysis. In place of the, crisp, brown chicken. what do you suppose there was! One lone, little smoked herring - "Digby chicken" being only another name for it, that's alll" - When the waiter set Willie's plate before him, the little fellow looked dub. appointed enough. Papa didn't say anything, but hm eyeq twinkled merrily while Willie gage his order. "I think I'll h'lve some Digby chick- en," replied Willie, his eye catching at the word "chicken." However, the second day out Willie went to the table with papa, feeling quity_like himself again. - "What will you Have this morning, my boy r" asked papa, as he handed Willie the menu card. Not long ago papa took him on a. short ocean trip. Somehow the food didn't taste as it did at home, for al- though Willie didn't wish to admit it, he was a bit seasick. On the third jay after this, to the tuna-roman of btukes and others, the patient was still breathing. On the morning of the fourth day he was alive and conscious, and on entering the ward, Stokes saw him holding in his hand the certificate which required sig- nature. As the doctor drew near, the dying man gasped: "Sign, sign l" The doctor quickly complied, and the man sank back exhausted, and within a few minutes crossed his hands over his breast and said, "The Lord have mercy on my soul," and quietly breath- ed his last. Willie was exceedingly fond of chick- en! "I could eat a whole one any time!" he often declared. "lkcause," was the reply, "my pen- sion will be due mm, and I want the money for my wife and children. Don'c give me anything to make me sleep, for if I sleep I shall dies." An old pensioner was a patient of Stokes in the Month Hospital. His life was despaired of, and in fact his death was hourly expected. One morning having many patients to care for, and believing that the pensioner was un- conscious and past help, Doctor Stokes passed his bed without stopping. The patient was greatly distressed, and cried out: "Don't pass me by, docther; must keegyps alive for bur days." "We will keep you as ionk G"%, can; my poor fellow." answered Stokes, "but why for tour guys particularly t" BE MUST LIVE. It would be vain to attempt to de- scribe the sympathy for the poor and suffering which William Stokes could throw into his voice, says his biograph- er. One of (h: stories he used to tell is of peculiar interest, nut only for its revelation of human kindness, but as a proof of the power of the will in pro- longing life. is the only country which uses oil al- most entirdy for purposes of IrMeorno- tion, and which has enormous storms of that. commodity within its borders. Countries with large populations would becom: uninhabitahlu, and the world would drift back into a pastoral con- dition. The vast majority of stocks and shares would be converted into so much waste pnpu'. It would prnlmbly take at least a century to repair the devastation that would ensue. In mighty Power (Jo-Iron Our laurel Chills-"on, i We could not do without coal. Thia' commodity has become an absolute 116-, cessity of modern lite. A failure in: the coal supply would deprive us at, one blow of the means of locomotion," light, warmth and cooked food. It i would more than treble the cost of all t commodities which are at present), manufactured by steam power. In our great citi.s it would at once cause| an unprecedented famine, as it would; be impossible to meet the requirements; of the markets. It would convert our navy into a collection of useless hulks! and would probably establish Norway or Sweden asthe greatest naval power) in the world. It would make Russia: .thogreatrst commercial power, as; this' Is Camac- Create-t Medici-Z. Bod by all genera in medicine. Price 81. That medicine is Hood's Barupnrills. It his stood the test of time and trial and proved its power to cure all dis- eases caused or promoted by unpuro blood. Its superior merit is due to its peculiar combination, proportion and process. Its ingredients are selected with the very greatest care and the medicine is prepared under the per- sonal supervisi n of “nested phars macists who originated it. You m‘ly take Hood's Sartsaparil1a with perfect confidence that it will do you good. Remember Hood’s Pills HM? 'ttttttttttWillis To Get the Best Madlclno That Money Can Buy. ' y, . m if 7” Be Sure 1ii'ridiiyr, rxaiyeitd? A FUNNY MISTAKE COAL IS KING. no promp'. "leitsttt and easy in effect. 26 cents. ii/jjj/ft/tite!?', you tdr 'siriniUii-,. m: f 7 We iiliGriFii aéerhundred Donna for Any one of Deafness (canned by catarrh) that can- yon pa opted Pr Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend by level applications as they cannot reach tho diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafneu. and that is by constitu- tional remedies. Deafness ie canned by on in. flamed crrndition of the muooua lining ot the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Intl trued you hove n rumbling sound or lmdperfect hou- ng, and when it is entirely close . Deafneae in the result. and unleee the inthunrmstion on be taken out end thin tube restored to in normal condition. hearing will be 2tlgrt,', forever; nine me- out of can no cause by Comm-hf which is nothing but en intUmed condition o th_9_mueoue pun-feces. She didn’t do any such thing; she cried tor joy. - Kitty guys she cried for help when he kissed her. Violins and larger stringed instru- ments are now made of aluminum by some of the French artisans. They are mid to possess a rich and charm- ing tone. The bridge will extend from the points near the village of Lewiston, N. Y., and the quaint old town of Queenston, Ont., where is 1850-61 an- Iother suspension bridge was built to connect the Lewiston Mountain with iQueenston Heights. That old bridge was many years ahead of the profit- able demands of the times, and when it was destroyed it was not rebuilt. The wrecking of the old bridge forms one of the important events in the history of the Niagara region. Early in 1864 a mighty mass of ice came down the lNiagara River from Lake Erie. The owners of the bridge were fearful for ithe safety of the structure. for the ‘guys were anchored just above high 'water mark. Orders were issued to zloosen the guys and lift them up out i? the way of the icy mass. This was done, the ice Jam went out, and no {damage was caused. The guys were not reanchored, however, Suddenly, strut from the southwest there came a ;fierce gale, which swept down the Ni- ;agara chasm. It caught the bridge full on the side, and soon the struc- Eture was swinging back and forth. The 'men in charge could do nothing to (protect it from the wind. About 11 l o'elock on the morning of Monday, Feb. ir, 1864, it gave a great surge and then ithe greater part ot it fell into the iriver below. It was acomplete wreck. iBack and forth the old cables swung until last fall they were cut away, i From tower to tower, the span of (the new bridge will be alittle more than 1,000 feet, while the span of the :suspended portion will be about 800 feet. The outside width of the bridge will be 28 feet, and the roadway will have a width of 25 feet. This width of floor wilt afford room for a single trolley car track laid through the com tre, with space on either side for teams. , The towers are four in number, two be- iing on each side of the river. Owing (to a difference in the height of the lriver banks, those on the New York ‘side are about eight feet higher than ithose on the Canadian side, their re- ,spective heights being 26 and 18 feet. i The number of cables will be four and i they will be made out of the wire ropes 1 that formed the cables of the old upper "suspension bridge which stood trlose to Lthe Falls. The height of the bridge: isbove the water will be about 70 feet., l The bridge will be completed and open-; jed for next Bttrnrrter'a travel to the) 1 Falls. l A GREAT MINE. The Rand has at last reached and surpassed the marvelous output of 400,000 ounces of gold as the produc- tion for a single months of 28 work- ing days. Every 24 hours, then, wit- ness the recovery of 14,250 ounces of gold, worth rather over £50,009, 8248,- 325. The Rand total comprises only the output of mines along a stretch of some 30 miles of country. With this statement for the month of October the gold winnings of the whole repub- lie for the 10 months of 1898 amount to 3,700,908 ounces. The value of the October 423,000 ounces is 1,500,000, .7,- 299,750, which may be compared with E11,653,7il5, 56,102,743; the value for all in 1897, um! 2l12,208,i11, 859,412dl32, the value of the gold production of the United States in tho same year. Sold by DrmifiktarfG,' -- - - -._ Hur- Family Pm- m the but. Structure Destroyed I- II“. A new suspension bridge is to be built across the Niagara gel-go. Dur- ing tho past two years both of the famous suspension bridge: at the Falls It Will Opal the Gorge on the Site “the have given way to steel arches, and the new suspension bridge will there- fore be the only structure of the kind to connect New York State with Can- sda. Deafness Cannot be Cured h" " In?!" “In. " on an. cl..hbl31 MINI pom.~ J. Mali-ll. Sic-w” NIAGARA’S NEW BRIDGE. 1 {@1139me & CG. Toledo, o. THUS E GIRLS. ti. com: & 00-. .e..e.e. mu 599-999!!!»- Bt1 rior i'"ieN't'g','rithi,ot tor Hm (thin Sec- onrOIhln god. beer-nae gunmen. Bum of o-Fint fitPt,f .00; Ateoud Csbln. a; luch-w I Im,tie. According to It " In m. For llnformauon tttl.'. itFi Aunt} or Dun) Togtgtamm t o., (In aaotstd.tt I.8usnment Bt.. Montreal. St. John. I.B.. Bud Hum“, to Liverpool. on!“ a {abandon}. Lane nnd In! vvln new! slamming "Lsggaarritrt." " Wa.rty.ovvrrt.'L. 1'Af.x_rph'"c,rr_" Domlnlon lino TORONTO CUTTING SCHOOL no“. IT""'" d: in port- do unu-daymuu FVl4Alglptgtf, 'lll1itl.fril1htll', .l1il4'll1'1'iil'llll'ii;'t Write for agecisl tenn- during‘ January and Iretrruarr. . CORRWAN, 113 Contre an. IF T, 31;: i.'2fl"c,"""' no! or "an" The Damoni commission tk., limited, mm", itftg In nines. hue them aloe], mung. bum Bill Wl'l' Statements. [and do“. In”. lttYt'hti.t "och and to on: tgd -. .A. ... 'ee, raelrNyrftPtye'r"1t.ee.e Dr, Arum. 14mm. 199 will 031"!“qu trr1ir! cure y Stammerers Yuur crumble In am merersnbeen no'ved at m. I hue-pom 40 you! of illcenaa nt toil, the fruit of it cu: be yuan. Cull or write W. IL. BATE. Sm eitslUt. we College Bt., Toronto 8mm- ttMtNttg-.Ne,. impnrutlona than [will] 1Ultxstt,"ipitis yaue.iHr-ttyoy m- a “mom: Diolnfectanu. 80-90. 'Not. mont. Tooth Pandora, Qua. hum been awn-dad 100 medal. and diplomas for uuperlor excellence. Thr Ir regular use prevent iu'acu- nus diseases. Ail: sour den!" to obtain I lupply. Lists mule free on 'utplieamott. limo. cit: CUTTING SCHOOL n Liiir"CL' The Balmoral," free But M David Pupplewell in gd The Chamber of Agriculture," tsays:--I read your pa- per this week with much ph-asure. " Re- sidual Value of Phosphates" is most interesting. In my opinion both Bup- erphusphate and Thomas-Phosphate are valuable mttnttretr-- Thomas-Phosphate much the more valuable as producing food of a much superior quality, and being a first-rate turnip manure, when properly used, producing: a sound, heal- thy turnip. On the contrary. super- phosphate is the great encourager ot finger and toe, and should never go into the turnip field ; consequently tur- nips being a prinvipal farm crop, Thom- as-Phosphate is the much superior farm manure, and, where judiciously used, decidedly the most economical and pro- fitable of all nurtures at present in the market. As 11 pasture improving manure it has no equal. On some soil potash may be required. It Dr. w. Somerville eradieates cha rlock without injury to the grain crop, he will de- serve the thanks of the country. An electric contrivance, for turn- ing the sheets of music on a piano rack, is a recent invention.. It is operated by the pertormer'a foot. LAW THINKS THOMAS-PHOSPHATE BEST Have you catarrh? Have you often- aive breath! Have you brvnvhiliu? Have you slight symptums of consump- tiont Then send for a free sample of Catarrhozona. What is catarrhozone' Not a snuff. wash, nor ointment, but an odorous true, which is carried by air dir- ectly to the deceased parts. It pene- trates wherever air can go, and never fails to cure. We do not ask you to believe this until you have. tested it for yourself. S’nd for a trial bottle gratis to N. C. Polson & Co., Kingston, Professor, what do you consider the most powerful force in nature! Well, all things taken into account, I should say gravity, although I have not seen Nikola Tesla's latest pros- pectus. Feminine piplomai-mttie--wouid you call Nell a beauty? Ella - Well, that depends, Hattie-Depends on whatt Ella-Whether I was con- versing with her or some one else. Baker's Adjustable Bedside Table STANDARD OF PURITY "130‘ his no equal- Heuthful. loo-culled: (L,UDEifLL,A UNDERSTANDING HRREAFTER -dBb_iaote- F. o. CALVERT a 00., HANOHIOTEI, . . :uouun. CALV ER'I"S a Annie-n Ho Gui -relitl PARK. mohair- oo.. Some Plain Quuuons. iron-onto. ~1-IUIB urllu lllf¢ D. -scf10SL co., Momma mos-rant. "lilo. am. A Halo. Barristortort;r,., removod to Wed” Blg‘nq Rich and " W.. cream. no w. I. “an“; oo..' " --'_-'V Genoa] Agent- for Canada. You.“ Out. loam may tor In. _ Guam . . in lemma Inuit-rh- II ”I. “than than Mun tMO. Unheml Indorud u d hi l maiden ho 'll'.t'dt1&t1oat,,1 Iii-mine! um. I. eon-nu:- oi of steel Tibia. Inf-bed out" In Black or Whit. unmet Nickel at Antigua. 00m Pluto I“! I. at 9.1.qu Pet may yell-l ri. . .. bo erd our bod. iounaciiCir," TG." 'riraua" TaT. ' merit sud MM". Dela-ind" drain nod um he. upon Bpplkrattois 00mm ONTARIO ARCH TORONTO “than W. P. C. 956 J'tsi1ors ami Drmw [alike-1, yend tor my ROYAL “All. IT‘AIMIIP‘ Eurasia”, those who have [shed to be cured aloe when. write to Am. Pun “Jot up m We. om tu., " “and. 'trir.,HihiktE C, N T ' t' women who auTHl I '3. Sums bunt: cu : t' ' I ' _ out], mu [mm '3 a ' I . I. ' .9 "all, in Gaming ' f 3.1,; - “my!" or IO Tun Is.:" If.“ "r" "frxrr, Dunn: WI" a , in' " _ a} .. put I (ml: hm] 07 mo . t, 1 i," , In a “0ch in ma ,, minute; I mend- I ' calm-clams. an“ 's, I g underway Ind a . f“ i,,- - - . human with an Pt ”1?? j " - . . mm 'y and word. “I . . _ . T “3;; V urlnld can upnuu- Il " . . .-:,', //F.c5h,b' ' LE, , Ir) M LI In" "t T , t',dtiii,e(ii fawn Tn: me , f" :1 "he ., Junta, on“, Mon. Ff”. 'CT" L k N OI. Mlllrllari with full .. \ V t"' y V 1rt5mtmt1rNWmr" T \ "s V in“. nu: rr um. (u nu . . .ldrc-u on "can f) Price. I can” K-unple dnvuiu.v CM, Ttimr. 18MtNtN Swiss Darner. . . DARN A HOLE In Three IInuteo. HEALTH RESTOBED most dilur-iwrd tetomach, Luau. Nerves. Lirur, Mood. Bladder. Kidneys. Bun. glad Breath My m, n. rm’n haunt. which an. [unlim- Ind Phlldun. cud nluo lam III. one-lull! Infant; who» “unenc- but! 0mm, but 7. "ted ' I "than lustmrnu. " digest. when Ill oth- Food is Medal. um 50 (in. in not: in admin I luv-rhino Snows. 100.000 ears Annual Cures of Puma-pm 1mm. Fltstulerrcr, “pump-m. ludinuiou. 13ooaatptiun, Diameter. Brouehrtm, tuttw Onza. Crughn Asthma, (Mann. Phlum. "hump; Newman Dvbility. t5uqplea.urma, buyundency. London. w ' .1... In Rm. " a... de Miguniief‘aa y '1' Gttortt, c:htrreu. up! mum Meg'heren y My nu Barry’s bciU,Af,%' {57633}? 712"? HERE; (riiT"Arioifi Burrs Baden“ Biscuits. in mu. 3. M And a Du Barry & 60 M'e,1, . "" " IC'JI, London, W ' ulna in Paris, " Rue de (fungi-um- u The Hon. Jan. Chmnberltin'n ro'em appeal to the British public to inn-aux“: the homu- od dcvelopm at. of intevLiom (Mouse in th r'olonioa, trail d to the mutating of ma nun-am PREMIIHIOI. the now only two.- nized germ de<Lroyer and preventative tttht Fever-s and Agile. Pamphletm And In loin. mailed from the Canadian Money. Hundreds ttfthe-ttttV In In. Mo tt mutton. tri . " Forth-Ida; than would no to. with- out than for twioo that out. They on to and In Cotlar,Atties or B out Room. or onyplooowhoro that“. o lino " ouuoo . mo goth-on! only coco in two unto. Pol-drool“ and who areitq IIE moms: (lllillllfl)llf WISH N " and HAY FEVER Porn-ally Carol " Medicated Vin-m lnhmlnion- unimle of um " Day. Trial Fr... New] tH. for apt-non out!“ ..., ..Il.. --- _ - - - - - 7- --.'. _ -v-. n. "" um. nurulpm. on out!“ Br. Ray's Oman um “um an - Dt. RI!" Atttia'ouati,-i,o,' pm- Am--- _----- CATARRH EPPS'S TM BOLD PMAIIIAOAI. 00.. Tomato. GRAYErUL-co-ma. " CAN IAN” I "I DONE WIT" TIN! TH tt MOST NU TRITIOUS. ttRttAKrrAST-sUPPER. v-aid new '0.“ - ”-7... --. “uncut-III. "I. fl Atttta 'ypstnatiori PM. Mun our. in} Melbourne. Ann. Tannin. are. g OCOA Cugnu s Forhfy "midi" " STE M. sent. Io my uddms on ram-Int. of a? a mp . Minna “taxman: In. 1tiqtortmr Mulch. ile Illllgllil V000! fut 30. Niagara Vapor 81th FREE BOOKLET. GUIDE TO "mum. mu Waoud for Ben Cali! Bath In Anna-1m. " Pumpth and Hump!“ ot Mnterinl of om 'ttrel Franc " Yong. In. brute. Attart . little pm.- we we as, India- OI. . ram and.” who have huurd to ho come tsutticieuttir .. ttment um. Kt swxu D-tttaa In our narnu and " inaruct. other! I n "Mk loamy We "who gum of 394* grittto" .011qu or unno- to an I.

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