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Durham Review (1897), 27 Dec 1900, p. 2

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s /% Liw GOLD HOMROED !N IND. About fifty milliards of france is miLl to bo th»> tosal amount of ,the gold product of tha two worlds since tho dissovery ol America. And, strango to say, of this outpouring of STORED !T FOR CENTURIES. Immense Amount of the Metal Among Hindoos. goid which during four centurios has been scattered all over the world, an immense portion remains idle in India, whare it has been embodded. In India the gold returnse to the earth and remains thare more completely hiddon thin it was in its original state. Tho lul“llnt of gold brought into IEndia during the past sixty yearsâ€" thit is to say, from 1837 to 1898â€" ts greater by three milliards nine hunâ€" dred and â€" fortyâ€"three millions of france thin the amount exported. The soil of India absorbs tha floods of gold just as th»> sands of the qesort swalâ€" 3+ 24 C low th> overflow of the great rivers. When it is rememberai that the work of absorption has been going on with little interrup.ian for ten centuries and still contluu>s under our eyes it ts easy to form am idea of the immenss treasures that are h‘dden in that cuntry. All ihis goli remaine sterile, and, consequ>ntly, is lost. It is absurd to say thit it is brought into mone tary circulation or that it passes through tho hands of ths native goldâ€" sm.ils. It is Gisseminated in innu merable b‘ding places, from which i never emerges. Why Hoarding Was Begun : In ancient times and up to the period of the conquest and occupaâ€" tion by the English individual proâ€" perty was not protected. The counâ€" try, from one end to the other, was the prey of rival {factions, who rayâ€" aged it ceaselessly and without merâ€" cy. Princes and potentates, as well as the smalil fry, were squeezed and shorn constantly. To escape from the general robbery the natives, great and small, carefully concealed their money and their valuables _ under ground. ‘This inveterate habit beâ€" eame hereditary among them, so that toâ€"day the natives do just whuat their anosestors did in past ages. It be estiâ€" mated that milliards upon milliards of france in gold lie buried in the hiding ma of India, and it is known that eolossal treasure la in coln that dates back several centuries. To ‘the suffering and wretcheduness that poverty ordinarily creates the natives of India add the tortures, equally painful, of aza incurable avarâ€" lce. That is the thing which puzzles the observer and throws him of(f the right track. In that country all the poor and indigent have little hiding mm. where they put away their litâ€". treagures and guard them, watchâ€" Ing their growth and never drawâ€" Ing from them, evean in the face of famine or dishonor, danger or death. All around them and above them are the proud and the rich, who do just as their ancestors did, and remains exractly the same as they wereâ€"that is to say, insatiable hoarders, susâ€" plcious and cruel misers. They hide their gold in the vaults of oid forts and in citadels, and add to it from generation â€" to _ generation, from century to century. Like that of Rarâ€" pagnon, their beloved treasures posâ€" sess for them charms far more fascinâ€" ating than those of their immortal bhourts and of their enchanting peris. Treasure in a Corner Stone The persistence olf the Maharajah of Sindnl in petitioning the British Government to give back to him the fortress of Gwalior is perhaps reâ€" memberedâ€"a persistence that seemâ€" ed strange, indeed, not to say suspiâ€" clous, because Gwalior was not oune of the holy places, like so mary others in India. After numerous peâ€" titions and intrignes the Maharaâ€" jnh at last won his case. The Tortâ€" rees of Gwalior was given back to him. _ And now quite recently the wecret of his persistent effort has become clear to _ everybody . who reads. He had concealed in the fortress of _ Gwalior ast immeuse treasure in coined gold, and this gold had been put away with such care near the corner stone of the fort, to which a subterranean pasâ€" sage led, and closed up with such skill and cunning that nobody in igâ€" norance of the secret could possiâ€" bly disover the treasure. In the Presidency or Province of Bombay it is estimated that there are 200,000,000 france in gold sovâ€" ereigne, which are preserved with extreme care, not only on account of their intrinsic value, but on acâ€" count of the fact, without countâ€" ing the image of St. George, there is stamped upon them the effigy of a dragon. In India, as in China, the dragon is a holy creature of celes tial origin, an inducement to the faithful to become enrolled among the beatfed, so that they can live ylth dragons in peace and prosperâ€" ity. But unfortunately the gods themâ€" selves, and especially the gods of Inâ€" dia, are very fort of goid. They whistle for it through the lips of their priests. Obedient to the diâ€" vine call, it comes, rippling from all points until it reaches the sacred parvis. It accumulates in the sub terranean passages of the temples, to which the priests alone have access, Thence it overfiows and takes its place, where it shares with the gods the incense and the homâ€" . "Just getting my prayers Sald for while I‘m going to be out grandpa‘s. _ There‘s nothing to -*o _of the men whom it has beâ€" witched.â€"Courier des Etasâ€"Unis. My emall nephew was ready to start on a longâ€"promised week‘s visit to his grandfather‘s in the country. There was an exasperating delay in the appearance of the carâ€" rlago to take us to the station. ‘The young man worked off his impaâ€" tlence in various annoying ways for half an bour, then suddenly he was seen to kneel beside a chair in the corner and bury his face in his hands. After a few minutes his mother said, "Well, Kemmeth, what are you doâ€" Bore, and I ‘spect to be Fpu'tty busy while I‘m there."â€"E. F. R. ‘The Prawer, in Harper‘s Magazine for o t ds Improving the Opportunity. up at #© and my husband brought home a couple of boxes, Before they were finished, Ifelt much better, and we then got another half dozen boxes, und these bhave completely restored my health, and Inot only feel better thar I have done for years, but acâ€" tvally feel younget,. I very cheerfually recommend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to similar sufferers, * If your dealer aoes not keep these pills, they will be sent postpaid at 50 cents a boxr, or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Modern Term for a Fop is of German Origin. The word "dude," as applied to a fop or exquisite, came suddenly into use ahout.\ 1882â€"3, and alil that we learn from tbe dictionaries is that its actual origin is not recorded, writes Walter W. Skeat in the Athenaeum. The Century Dictionary says that it "perhaps originated in London, Engâ€" land," while the New English Dictionâ€" ary expresses the more general beâ€" lief that it came into vogue in New York about the beginning of 1883. DYSPEPSIA AND HEADACHE. Considering the number of German immigrants into the United States, we should naturally suspect it to have been suggested by some German dialect. The problem of its origin does not seem to be difficult. It can hardly be other than an abbreviated form of dudenâ€"dop, a blockhead, a common term ol depreciation in many parts. The Bremen Worterbuch gives us "Dudelâ€"dop, â€" Dudenâ€"dop, Dudenâ€"kop, ein Hannrey, cin ein{altiger Measch, eine Schlafmutze, der alles mit sich anfungen lasst." Lubben . gives it under the form dudendop only. Schamâ€" bach has the adjective dudding, "dumm, stumpfsinnig, schlafrig," and the allied substantive duddigheid ; also the verb dudden, with its frequentaâ€" tive duddern, which he says is East Friesie: and accordingly Koolman gives the East Friesic dudden, freâ€" quentative duddern, "betaubt sein, traumen, dusein," whence the subâ€" stantives duddeâ€"kop, dudâ€"kop, duddoâ€" lap, etc. Calisch‘s Dutch Dictionary has dodderig, drowsy. It thus appears that dude may almost equally well have been suggested by the adjective duffig, drowsy, or by the verb dudâ€" den : but the abbreviation of . the readyâ€"made substantive dudenâ€"dop or dudâ€"kop perhaps gives the simplest so lution. In any case we can go back to tho old Friesic dud, occurring in the compound subgtantive dudâ€"slek, which means a stuuning blow, such as dazes the receiver of it. Ladies and Gentlemenâ€" The hollow square, a purely Britâ€" ish military tactic, wias never broken but once. Why ? Because Tommy Atâ€" kins from Canada and Tommy At: kins from all other British possesâ€" slons stand solidly together. The lesâ€" son is, that in a commercial way aleo, the colories should stand firmâ€" ly together; and the ladies of Ca:l (J h dn â€"Actisiaghd oG 2i <autend Cmvcin t s s adaâ€"the purchasing powerâ€"can do much toward accomplishing that end. Ceylon and India produce the finest teas. By using the toas grown in sister colonies, ladies act patriotically. These teas appeal to you from sentiment, from purity, from economyâ€"in every way they are superior to Japan or Chinas. Drinkers of Green tea should try Monsoon, Balada or Blue Ribbon packets. An amusipg etory is going the rounds that at the siege of the Legaâ€" tions, when the Japanese Miuister called for volunteers to assist in the gglofio of h:‘uhg:t}w. no less than Ticers t apanese army, who had been scattered about p.?\'n in various disguises, responded to the call. One had been the foreigner‘s barâ€" ber, another lhiad been the leading photographer, etc.. which perhaps accounts for the excellent informaâ€" tion about things in Chima that Jaâ€" The English Catholic Charch of St. Joseph in Parls hau been seized for arrears of taxes. ‘The fathors will appeal for hslp to their coâ€"religionists in Britain and America. : “!;hh has very high food value; in fact, it is very nearly as nutritious an chicken or turkey. 1 THE HOLLOW SQUARKE. THE WORD DUDE." Japanese Sples in Pekin s ME TXE PROLIFIG â€"WEBBS. Kentucky Family With 12,000 Relatives. NO NEED OF IMMIGRANTS THERE. The most remarkable family in point of age in the United ABtates lives, moves and rums things in the Cumberland mountains of Kentucky â€"In Letcher county, to be exact. Webb is the name of these old perâ€" sons, whose number is six, and to whom every individual of the 12,000 population of the country is directâ€" ly or indirectly related. Three old men there are, and three old woâ€" men. Their father was the first cousin of Daniel Boone, and was, in addition, the earliest settler in the rugged mountain region in which his descendants are now all powerful. They are all called by their glven vames, with the prefix ‘"‘Uncle" or "Aunt," as the case may be. There is Aunt Letty. Bhe comes first by reason of her age, which is 89 years. ho is growing rather appreciative of the burdens which come with adâ€" vanced years, and she is not so spry as she has been up to a few years ago. Then, too, the murder of her son, Wiley W. Cra{t, a dozen years ago, has had much to do with aging her. To Archibald Craft, her husband, she presented 11 pledges. Her grand children number 90, her great grandâ€" children 60 pnpd her greatâ€"greatâ€" grandchildren 40. Her husband was pretty well along in years himself when he died, 80 being his age. After Aunt Letty comes Aunt Polly, who is 80 years old in ber own right, and who is growing old gracefully at the home of her son. She married a man named Adams, and ten ch‘ldren were born. It was to vialt her eldest daughter that Aunt Po.ly last year rode 100 miles on horeeback over the roughost of mountain _ roads, . She didn‘t mind this experience, so unusual for an octogenmarian, and _ romarked that the Webbs came of hardy stock. She has 110 grandchlldren, 70 greatâ€" grandchildren and about 40 _ greatâ€" greatâ€"grandchlldren. _ _ s Jason is next in point of years, being 80, and th» most prolific of the family, He doesn‘t know the meanlnf of iillâ€" ness from any personil knowledge of it, and ho saays he feels as fine as a yearling. Nineteen childron is tho reâ€" cord which makes him the proudest man in Lechter county. ‘These nine teen have oveyed tho scriptural inâ€" junction, and have multiplied to such an extent that the old gentleman has 175 grandchildren, 150 | greatâ€"grandâ€" children and more than 100 greatâ€" greatâ€"grandch‘ldren. ‘He is one of the two members of the aged alx who have ever looked upon the landscaps from a car window. It was two years ago that hoe first ventured on the "kyars," and that was when he went on a visit to friends in Tonnessee,. Then there is Uncle Miles, who conâ€" siders himsel{ in the prime of life. Although he is 78 years old, he rides his horse all over the rough neighborâ€" hood and is apparently as unreâ€" stricted in his movements as a youngâ€" ster. With him, too, the storks have been generous, amd the children of his children number 165, his greatâ€" grandchildren count up to 150, and the last generation 90, Aunt Sally, with 75 milestones to her credit, runs around her home with as much agility as any of her grandâ€" children. She is a widow and does her own work, even to shouldering a eack of corn and carrying it to the mill. She has 13 childron, 80 grandâ€" children, 65 greatâ€"grandchildren and more thays (50 greatâ€"greatâ€"grandâ€" children. ‘The baby of the family is Uncle Wiley, who is only 73. His 11 children perpetuated the race to the extent of 75 grandchildren, and he has 50 greatâ€"grandchildren and 30 greatâ€" greatâ€"grandchildren. . He _ apologizes for his comparatively small number of descendants by stating that his soms married late in life. I was cured of Acute Rronchitis by MINARD‘3 LINIMENT. n w9 Bay of Islands. I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. WM. DANIELS. Bpringhill, N. 8. I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. GEORGE TINGLEY. Albert Co., N. B. cure your trueâ€"born poacher of it. He begine to poach as soun as he is old enough to steal eggs, and he . conâ€" tinues to do so until so long as he can drag one leg after the _ other, In all other matters he may be a most estimable character. As it is, the love of adventure, the cunning of the hunterâ€"whether of men . or of gameâ€"the exhilarating reliance on self are perverted to a wholly desplicâ€" able object. There is scarcely a village in the sporting neighborhoods of England but can poliut to some such character, well known to all, a loafer by preference, who poaches as much for the sheer love of the thing as for As a fact, éaoa.chers are a race by themselves ; the poaching instinct is bred in the blood and nothing | will KHere is "mother‘s doughnut recipe," which she has used for over twonty years successfullyâ€"Take one egg, twoâ€"thirds of a cup sugar, cup sour milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter or lard, one teaspoon soda, nutmeg, flour to stiffen. These are much better to stand an hour before frying. This recipe makes two dozen or more. "Adeline and I haven‘t spoken last winter." "What‘s the matter?" _ _ Why, she got a coat for $10 just "Why, she a coat s in ay e e mt t haie 25 in Minard‘s Liniment cures diphtheria. Many Musclies in the Trunk. Thé trunk of the elephant has no fewer than 4,000 musclesâ€"at least, so said Cuvier, the famous comparaâ€" so saio VuVO, wIP IAIURE CGRDERT T C tive anatomist. ‘The whole of the Â¥5 Tne British Poacher. Mother‘s Doughnuts. Reasons for Coolness. LWE W J. M. CAMPRBELL. Newralgna A Story for Foolish Girls to Read and Heed. The end of an elopement, sensation and romance has just come to light in Albany. Bome years ago Emma Adriance was adopted by a wealthy sunt, who resides in Baltimore, Md. She was educated in Raltimore select schools, and when ahe became of age moved in the best circles, and had gentlemen admirers by the score. But she refused flattering offera, and her aunt thought Emm« so much attachâ€" ed to her that she desired to remain her companion. This beliet was audâ€" denly dispelled, when one morning Emma and the coachman were missâ€" ing. In Emma‘s case the old story is retold. The disappointed and irate aunt disowned her and â€" discharged the conchman, whose name was Chas. Adrlance. â€" SBoon the coachman deâ€" serted his wife, who sought work in private families as a servant. Then her health fatied, and there was no one to respond to her calls for help. Bhe was finally adjudged insane by Judge Gregory at Albany, and was trken â€" to Poughkeepsie Hospital. And hoarseness with their attenfant dangers may be speedily averted and remedied by the use of Nerviline. Excellent to f-.rglc withâ€"ten times better than a mustard plaster and more convenient for the outside, and specdily allays inflammation. Nerviline cures because it is five times at.tonrer than other remediesâ€"penetrates the tissues instantly, soothes the pain and cures simply becaare that‘s what it is made for. Druggists sell it. There is a warning in this story. But will any foolish girl heed it ?â€"Buffalo In Spain a waitress may be had for $1.50 or $2 a month, and often mereâ€" ly for her board and clothes,. . Good cooke command $3, but if allowed to do the marketing, they will accept $2. Marketing is a pecullar process in that country. Everybody buys simâ€" ply for the day, and it pays him to do 60. Eggs come cheaper by the dozen than by buying in a large quanâ€" tity. The same thing holds good of candy and many other supplies This signature is on cveryAbo_x Qt the genuine Laxative Bromoâ€"Quinine Tabiets the remedy that enres n cold in one day "But why do you call the hero of your musical comedy ‘_A.r.o( Yore P * "Well, you know that in every perâ€" fect musical comedy there must be at least one joke. You can have all the music you want, but you need :)tn'l.y one joke. The audience looks for is Rhoumatism of the face. . Vric Acid left in the blood by disordered kidneys lodges along the nerve which branches from the eye over the forchead, and across the cheek to the side of the nose. The cause is the same as in all Rheumatismâ€" disordered Kidneys. The cure is likeâ€" wise the sameâ€" "Well ¢" "Well, when the heroine asks ‘Do you love me as of yore ? they get the joke. Seet Azof Yore. Clever, isn‘t it t"â€"Cleveland Plain Dealer. The tip of the tongue is chielly sengible to pungent and acid tastes, the middle portion to asweels or bitâ€" ters, while the back is confined enâ€" tirely to the finvors or roast meats and fatty substances. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper The building occupied by the Conâ€" struction Department at the Norfolk, Va., Navy Yard was completely deâ€" stroyed by fire. A lot of models and plans were burned. A PERFECT OURE Had Catarch, Throat Trouble and Bronchitis from Childhood. . Was Perfectiy Cured by Catarrhozone. Mr. Aler. Smith. of Cardinal, Ont., had this exporience, of which he tolls in the following "It is with great pleasure that I give you a statement of my ca e. _ I had NwS’Ca.u.n-h. Throat ‘lrouble and Bronchitis from childâ€" hood. _ When fir«t I used Catarrhozone I was so choked up, and there was so much mucous Mth?m and in the air cells of m lungs, that I could scarcely breathe at all. Bu{ the worst of it was that my strongth was failâ€" ing to an extent that alarmed me and m en e e pycd on clalists, but they, together with various o& treatmonts, faiied to co me more than temporâ€" ;K‘ood. Change of climate for a time did heln a little, but not until I used Catarrhozone Dodd‘s Kidney Pills hdli. ligle, Dut not UnUi ) GBEN U@WiLRORATEE did L know what real relief meant. Under that wonderful Catarrhozone treatment I improved THE END OF A ROMANCE Sensibilitles of the Tongue. Makfag a Musicat Comedy. C 272 Sore Throat In Spain. g.;‘a‘ AiGk Over the Shoulders of His Helpiess Offspring. The genuinely tact{ul married woâ€" man of the present day doesn‘t porâ€" tray her husband‘s shortcomings to him in a direct manner. She tells it all to the baby, when he is sitting in the same room. ‘The way this scheme works was lllustrated the other evening. The man and his wife had had a few words. He was sitâ€" ting by the front window reading the paper, and she was googooâ€"Ing to the baby in her lap. "Yer," she crooned to the baby, "its father is a nasty illâ€"tempered fellow, isn‘t he, tumâ€"tums, and he‘s always snarling and growling around the house, isn‘t he, mamma‘s itty copâ€" syâ€"woopsy ?" _ s e o s y us BP\ Puii 6. ons A n Then she glanced at the husband and father out of the corner of her eye, in order to ascertain if she had succeeded in getting a rise out of him. He only crackled the _ paper nervously, however, and went on rending. "And he‘se getting to be as stingy as a miser, tom isn‘t he, mamma‘s obysyâ€"boybey ?" she went on, dandâ€" ling the baby up and down. "And he makes a big row over every penuny I spend for the house, doesn‘t he, mamâ€" ma‘s pet, and he knows that I‘ve made over the dresses 1 had when I marâ€" ried him over and over again until their nothing but rags, doesn‘t he, mamma‘s itty tipsyâ€"wipey ?" Again she ginnced over at him to see if she had him going. but he went right on reading the same line of the same political speech for the 74th time, when she resumedâ€" l "And he dresses himself like a naboh. doesn‘t he, mamma‘s â€" oohsyâ€"woohsy, and he spends more money on drink and cigars than hbe lets me have for a week‘s grocery bills. and goodness gracious only knows what keeps him out until about two o‘clock in the morning three nights in the week, and he treats baby‘s itty g‘anmother very badly, and he never has a civil word for anybody, and he is beginning to drink like a fish, and to neglect and hate his fnmilyr, isn‘t he, mamma‘s tonsyâ€"wopney 2" "Ray," broke in the husband and father at this point, throwing down his paper, "that‘s a prettyr way for you to talk to me. isn‘t it ?" _ She looked at him with an expresâ€" slon of Intense surprise. . C "IT haven‘t said a word to you," she sald, In a wrongfully accused tone. "I was only talking to bahy. I suppose you will permit me to talk to my owr baby, won‘t you ?" Why, of course, a wom~n has a right to talk to her own bohby. haen‘t she ? This system of hammering him on his weak spots, involving, as it does, much less danger of fierce nnd nolsy retallation than if he is addreesâ€" ed in direct fashion. is worthy of the highest â€"recommendation. â€" Sceottish American. y Side by side stood Canada‘s noble sons with the boest ‘brawn of Ceylon and India in th> resent unpleasant. ness. Th» slogan was "Help one anâ€" othor," and no one forgot the watchâ€" word. You, ladies of Canada, have the power to wage a relentliess warlare on the impure teas that come into your homes from China and Japan, and at ths> same time assist your brother colonists who produce tho pure Ceylon and India teas. If you drink Japan tea, try Silada, Monsoon or Blue Ribbon packets of Ceylon and India green teas.â€"Colonist. Ladics of Canada â€" A good etory is told of a Seottish soldMer at Blocmfontein, who was just recovering from an attack of enteric. One day he suggested to the doctor who called to see him that he would be grateful for a wee drapple. "No, no,‘ said the doctor. "Do you know that your stomach is in such an ulâ€" cerated condition that a spoonful of whiskey would kill you ?" "Aweel, sir," replied the patient, "I must just do without it, but, doctor, just come up close to me.‘" The doctor obliged. "Ah, doctor,‘ said the soldier, sighing conâ€" tentedly, "yer breath‘s verra refreshâ€" There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put !fimher. and until the last few years was su:g)o- to be incurable. For a fmt. many years doctors proâ€" nounced it a local disease, and 1rroacribod local remedies,and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constituâ€" tional disease and therefore requires ronstituâ€" tional treatment. Hall‘s Catarrh _ Cure, manuâ€" factured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the xystem. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold b{rdmmm‘ 750 Hall‘s Family Pills are the best. Even an attempt at cleanliness will sometimes result in an epidemic of disease, as was the case recently in Lambeth, London. _ A neighborhood of 24 houses has a common mangle. The housewives would wash _ their clothes and then take them to be mangled at one place. In this way the mangle became infected avith typhoid germs, and it in turn infectâ€" ed the clothes and through them the people. The natural rosult was an epidemic of typhoid. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Bome people consider it "pow‘ful resky" to tell the truth. Typhoid Spread by a Lanundry y« aas sn oN THE FIRING LINE. rHUMPING HUBBY A Good Substitute of His Helpless PiKY anco Beauty "Merciful heavens!" I gasped. Of course my blood curdled in my veing. ‘ For I now saw plainly that I was about to have the whey knocked out \ of me.â€"Detroit Journal. ‘The most beautiful thing in the world is the baby, all dimples and joy. The most pitiful thing is that same baby, thin and in pain. And the mother does not know that a little fat makes all the differâ€" ence. ISSUE NO 52. 1900, Dimples and joy have gone, and left hollows and fear; the fat, that was comfort and color and curveâ€"all but pity and loveâ€"is gone. The little one gets no fat from her food. There is someâ€" thing wrong;itis either her food or foodâ€"mill. She hashad no fat for weeks; is living on what she had stored in that plump little body of hers; and that is gone. She is starving for fat; it is death, be quick! Scott‘s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the fat she can take; it will save her. h That to remove corns, warts, bunions in a few d:‘- all that is required is to apply the old A wel â€"tested _ corn cureâ€"Putnam‘s Painâ€" less Corn Extractor. Sure, safe, painless. At druggists. Strength of Human Bones. The bones of a human beilng will bear three times as great ®. pressure as oak and nearly as muc*. as wrought iron without being crushed. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etec WE WILL START YOU INX THE MATL or~er business in your own homes. We can furnish you fi“l that Lou can make from wit.o 150% on. any people make from $2,000 to $5 000 a year with no office rent to pay and «asb coming in every day. Send $1..0 money order for a book that tells you how to encceed 'i= a very small capital to Star Novelty Co., Box 12, Clifton, Texas About 17 hands high; weight from 1,100 to 1,200 must be sound; age not to exceed 8 years. Address ALEX. McGARR, Windsor Hotel, Montreal, Que. FRUIT FARM FOR SALL Oueoft«hellnutlnmNhrnPonluth.u Winona, 10 miles from Hamilton, on two railâ€" ways. 170 acres, 45 of which is in frait, mostly E.abu. l&fimdh‘l&w‘vn‘fi t this sea«on. . Will be sold in lots to p&.\. This is a bargain. Address JONATHAN CARPENTER, P.O. Box 409, Winona, Ont. Mre, Winslow‘s mwpmu- ways be used for Children ‘Foothing. 1t soothes ~OR ONE DOLLAR WE SEND, SECURE the chiid, softens the guins, cures qnlhthhgltun.-.dymnh- The aspect of mine enemy terrificd fi vecents a WANTED TO PURCHASE... Curds and Whey. COACH HORSES The genuine has this picture on it, take no other. If you have not tried it, send for Tree sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOEI & BOWNE, < emists. C Don‘t Forget We have made drop«y and fte complications a specialty for twenty years Quick relief, Cures worst cases. Book of TESTINONLIALS and 10 paré treatment rar®. »DB. H. H.GREKEN‘S SONB, Box O Atuastia,Ga. 60c. and $1.00 all druggiets. DROPSY Treated Free. Toronto. d1 text is 1 moticed Talmage comforti went ov king‘s } That # tigue . David him ar brated passed. the ba Kn it . and is : oratic 0 zlilai by try sen David | how sh ferryt and see th has thar old ish are bee unt &1 David him ar 18 thea his dent he b see I he to that shore appé There W as!t aged vice. the : peop 1f EV I wb to th dan his ing the fron temp They some make and | that is thi shore the .3 osop can them brok: Tynd: Bpino and be ab this J and 1 souls cross const! they | morti Leux

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