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Durham Review (1897), 14 Nov 1901, p. 6

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191 quired to produce the t Jrom below. _ Use the MAMQObnriy to hoid the tone -m?:{6 ,;g #4J 8°$( ggmoulh is always nearly perâ€" ec great singers, and that upâ€" «P poerfection the beauty of the vocal sounds greatly depends. mflll(dll[holter to practice fifteen 4. CoemnOihta Adith cdth cae? Albcs tds imamhe toneâ€"any note you # udlâ€"soft, sweet and ‘3"§’ Practice on the Â¥yo **"*o" as it DIOW. Remember you must ~Aweath in the middle o You must learn to breathing so that yor bo supplied with suffiici earry you to the ter musical or poetic plr Practice your seales ly, never forcing the â€" T <ewo.l .et o+ Thero is no reason, in my opinion, why Amorican girls should go abroad for the cultivation of the singing volce, If 1 were an American mothor 1 chould have my daughter‘s voice placed and trained in this splenâ€" dbd country. 1 have heard pupils ol New York professors who sbowed in their singing the master‘s perfect method and absolute knowledge of our art. _ The Iintimate friends of this robust man have known that for the past ten years he has been a sufferer from a disease that bafflied medical gkill, and that ho has lingered "beâ€" iween life and death on many occaâ€" glon@ since he was first attacked. At the initial stage of the disease ho was taken with violent cramps In the left side of his stomach, and the best skilled physicians could afford him very little reliet. _ The afford him very little reliet. _ The attacks were of about two weeks I should feel choked if I were to dress in the strangling bodices worna by fashionable women. A singer must make fashion subservient to ber art. Tight shoes, tight corsets, tight goilars, or even fight sleeves w.ll Impaie c.reulation and ruin your voâ€" gal cords,. _ _Btand erect when you practice or wing for your friendis, with the welght of your be«iy on the bails of your MA AOAFE A Little Advice by the Singer to Her Sisters. stu«ly. Learn to breathe properly. Take your â€" breath _ deliberately. The moment you begia to hurry the tones are insufficient and you will acquire the habit of aundible gasping for breath, which is painful to your auâ€" élence and dostructive to your voice. Novor practice with a high collar or a tight stock about the throat. Many porcons have remarked the tenâ€" deney of slugers to wear at all times gowns cut so that the throat is Many porco denecy of s gowns cut {ree. Practice every day regularly and systematically if you wislh to make progress, Remember that careless, slipshod eoâ€"called study is worso than _ na Hing ihe words just as you would speak themâ€"near the front of the + Amd that reminds me that W( eth are indispensable to enâ€" «meiation and the production of the [y, therefore, if you have any MGeficlvncies they should be reâ€" at once. _ It has been proved that the cavity When old residents of Ottawa are in a remiviscent mood and talk of the goo«d old sporting days, they always associate the name of Sam Cassldy, who took an active part in sport 20 years ago. He was a fast runner and jJamper of local renown, amd took an active part in all lines of sport. Toâ€"day he is forty years old, and tips the scales at 250 pounds. % o 4 9 P PP P PP P P P P P P P o i i 9 4 2@# g i d efi io d o o t ced c ie c ie 4o ho hy tb y ob pe i BEAUTY TALKS FOR WOMEN: tige oo ol uTe uh ol on on on ul s ie ol on sGe alee ie â€"Lo on ofa oo ahe ofe on ofee ABo aipe of e uie se oT o offe ohe ahe on oo ofe o ofe oo ohe B ape aTe 4e ofe ofe ofe Lo ofe ofe ofp ofecfn He is known by almost everybody and is liked as generally as he is known. His hostelry is between the main entrance to the Parliament buildings and the principal thoroughâ€" fare of the city, and it is not to be wondered at that he has more than a rodding acquaintance with the gentlemen who hold the destiny of this country in their hands. ANQTHER STARTLING OTTAWA CASE, A LETTER FROM MB. S. A. GASSDY Following the Report of G. H. Kent‘s Cure of Bright‘s Disease By Dodd‘s Kidney Pills,an Ottawa Paper Calls Attention to Another Remarkable Cure. A‘ representative of the Citizen reâ€" cectly learned of a remarkable cure m a wellâ€"known resicent of Ottawa, who has suffered for years with a terrible affliction. . The wellâ€"known reskient is Mr. 8. A. Cassidy, and the affliction was stone in the kidneys. The Cl:izen representative called on Mr. Cassidy to verify the reports of his recovery and found them to be trus. He is the proprietor of the Blionu Hotel. Metcalfse street. 4 T member WHAT CALVE SAYS. T the strength reâ€" ic tone must come the other muscles (From the Ottawa Citizen.) A Professional Gives a Few Hints on Preserving Your Appearance. $ epenite tntr ie eone. 2A Aâ€" e\ fer.> ysd dn | finda them conveniently, â€" send 25 | cents direct to us, and we will forâ€" | ward a box by mail propaid. The Dr. | Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, | Ont. [ _ Every mother should have our valâ€" | uable little book on the care of inâ€" | fants and young children. Sout free i for the asking. 1 | Ottawa, Aug. 8, 1901. | _ Dear Sir,â€"1 want you to publish | for the benefit of others who are | suffering as I have suffered for years | about how I was cured of Stope in the Kidneys. My friends all know that I have been a martyr to this disease for years. They know that ’beeldee consulting the best physiâ€" clans in the city and trying every kind of remedy I could think of, I ‘ was unable to get better. Some time ago a friend of mine told me that Dodd‘s Kidney Pills would cure me. As a last resort I tried them and they have cured me. This is the first year in a great many that I have not been confined to my bed _with the disease. I could not imâ€" i agine more severe suffering than one _ endures who is afflicted with Stone in the Kidney, and Ifeel the greatost gratitude to Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, for they have cured me. Anyone who has suffered need suffer no more. Give mo a girl with volce and temâ€" perament and good realth and the capacity for real workâ€"ah, then there are no heights she may not reach ! temperament and the voice is insufâ€" ficlont. But more can be accomplished by the girl with the temperament and less voice than by the young woman with tones of tremendous volumso and sweetness who is devoid of temperament. Therefore, the girls with small voices must not be disâ€" couraged, for proper training will work wonders in increasing the voice. I have done cuite enough preachâ€" ing, have Inot, and for the first lesson too.? The Italians have a proâ€" verb: " Pazienza, pazien:a! Roma non era fatto nel glorno‘ ("Patience, patience! Rome was not built in a day"). Remember, my little Ameriâ€" cans with the beautiful voices, no singer has learned her art in a day, and every one of them has had to begin as Ihave suggested to you in this little lesson. The girl who is to have a carcer must have something more than a good larynx to make a great singer. Sho must have the genius for work which is only given to those whom the gods have destined for great heights. Also she must have a good ear and the artistic tomperament. Froquently a girl has a voice and no temperament. Again, she has the How to Keep the Baby Healthy and Happyâ€"Avoid the Soâ€"called Soothing Medicines. Every mother is naturally soliciâ€" tous as to the health of her childâ€" ren, but not everyone treats their little troubles in the right way. The soâ€"called soothing _ remedies are still used altogether too much, alâ€" though physicians have preached against them for many years. The the trill, which is beautiful and beâ€" longs to our art. Don‘t be deluded by the notion that anything can take the place of the scales and exercises. Suecess is hard work. . There is no easy road to the laurels of the singer. fact that they put children to sleep is no sign that they are helpful. On the contrary, soothing drugs aro dangerous and distinctly harmâ€" ful. At the slightest sign of ill health or disorders, give the little ones Baby‘s Own Tablets. This mediâ€" cine is purely vegetable, and is guaranteed to contain no opiate or poisonous soothing stuff. For indiâ€" gestion, sour stomach, colic, constiâ€" pation, simple fevers, diarrhoea, the lrritation accompanying the cutting of teeth, there can be no betâ€" ter, no safer remedy than this. Baby‘s Own Tablets are a sweet, pleasant little tablet, which any child can take readily, and" dissolyâ€" ed in water, may be given with abâ€" solute safety to the youngest inâ€" fant. Mothers who have used these tablets cheerfully testify to the benefit their little ones haye deâ€" rived from them. Mrs. R. L. Mcâ€" Farlane, Bristol, Que., says: _ "In my estimation, Baby‘s Own Tablets duration, and when he left his bed he was reduced in flesh and ‘was almost a nbysical wreck. Some years ago an eminent vhysician diagnosed his disease as "Stone in the Kidney," but even after the diagnosis the physicians were unable to effect a permanent cure. ‘Toâ€"iay he is a well man. He has found a remedy that has banished the diseaseâ€"a remedy that has cured where medical aid was ineffectual. The remedy is Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, and Mr. Cassidy feels so elated over his releaso from the excruclating suifegring that he bas given the followirg statement over his own signature to a wellâ€" known Ottawa newspaper man: my estimation, Baby‘s Own Tablets have no equal as a medicine for litâ€" tle ones. _In cases of children teething I would not be without them on any account, as they keep my baby healthy ard happy." Drugâ€" gists sell them, but if you cannot $i.a wes > I ‘ ADVICE TO. MOTHERS. 8. A. Cassidy, Ottawa, Canada. â€"Emma Calve The Vernacular as Spoken on the Other Side of the World. Dear Sirs,â€"A few days ago I was taken with a severe pain and conâ€" traction of the cords of my leg, and had to be taken home in a rig. I could not sleep for the pain, and was unable to put my foot to the floor. A friend told me of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT, and one hour from the {irst application, I was able to walk, and tie pain entirely disappeared. C. C. RICHARDS & Co. You can use my name as freely as you like, as L consider it the best remâ€" edy I have ever used. "Oh; Lord!" im United States. Among‘ other slang phrases are the words "screw," for salary, or income, "narked," for angry, "cush" for comâ€" fortable, and "putting on side" for putting on airs. If a man is assaulted by highwaymen and robbed, he is "stuck up," and if he has no money whatever, it is common to say he ‘"has not a bean." "Good iron" is an expression of incredulity at â€" a preposterous story. People ask you to "hang up your horse" instead of hitching it. "To have" a man is to do him‘ or take him in. If a person fails "he is gone bung," and if he is well off, "he is pretty well on." We use the expression ‘"on the jump" or ‘"on the go " ; the Australian says he is "on the wallaby." When a man acts foolish, we sometimes say "he is off his base" ; with the Australâ€" ian "he is off his pannikin." An Ausâ€" tralian girl doos not prim ; she ‘"tittivates," and when she keeps her beau waiting she apologizes for her delaying in ‘"tittivating." An Ausâ€" tralian dude is a "tofi," a tramp is a "swapman" or a "sundowner." Lugâ€" gage is always called "swag," and the common word for food is "tucker." & ‘"Inasgmuch as I have noticed the prevalence of this defect only since sghort skirts have geen â€" generally worn, I cannot guess whether it has always existed, or whethor it is a regult of modern conditions ; but it is mighty certain that women‘s photographs showing the feet won‘t be popular so long as so many of the sex are pigeonâ€"toed." j CHRISTOPHER GERRY. Ingersgoll, Ont. The Judge Was Compassionate. A certain judge who once presided over m criminal court was famous as one of the most compassionate men who ever sat upon the bench. His softness of heart, however, did not prevent him from _ doing his duty as a judgo. A man who had been convicted of stealing a small amount was brought into court for sertence. He looked very sad and hopeless, and the court was much moved by his contrite appearance. "Have you ever been sentenced to imprisonment ?" the judge asked. ‘"Never! Never!" exclaimed the priâ€" soner, bursting into tears. " Don‘t cry, don‘t cry," said the judge, conâ€" solingly, "you‘re going to be now !" The Australians have more slang phrases than the Americans, says the Ballimore Sun. Their most comâ€" mon ejaculation is "My word!" It takes the place of "Mon Dieu!" in French, "Ach Gott!" in German and "If as you walk along the street you will observe the feet of the women which may be seen under the short skirts you will be amazed by the statistics of women who are pigeonâ€"toced. From my own observaâ€" tions I am inclined to believe that two out of three women have their feet turned in, or at any rate set at an angle widely different from that prescribed by tho rules of beauty. The feet may be s#mall and wellâ€"ghaped, tho ankles round ang pretty, but the woman in most cases will be without one element of femâ€" inine beauty that is greatly admired ; either one foot, or more generally both, will be seen to be set on at an impossible angle. io uty Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. ) "If you will look at these pictures you will see that while many customâ€" ers want to display their forms, alâ€" most without exception they draw the line at or Just below the knee unâ€" lees a long skirt is worn. In soma cases, ag in this picture of the girl sitting on the arm of a chair, one foot is seen dangling coquettishly in the air, but in a majority of inâ€" stances the feet are in eclipse. I think the prevalent fashion of the short rainy day walking skirts reâ€" veals the reason. » "A few years ago, as you see, their ideas were running on their faces, Now their ideas run to curves, and the body has to be slighted in order to bring out pretty curves and graceâ€" {ul outlines. In favor of the new fashâ€" ion it may be said that it sometimes gets into the picture more character and better effects than when merely the face and part f the bust were ghown. \ 1 hope "picthres," "Bald "the photoâ€" grapher, turning over a pile of porâ€" traits of women, were taken â€" ten years ago. That was the gooâ€"gooâ€" eye period. Lhese," polnting to some displayed in a frante, "were «taken this. year. ‘Ahis is the human form divine period. Then my customers made the most of their faces, Now "It is simply a change of fashion which they sgettle for, themselves. ‘The beauty arena has been enlargâ€" ing. It is now extenged so that it takes in pretty much ‘the whole figâ€" ure. But I will venture to make this prediction, that it . will be some years before fullâ€"length portraits of women standing up will be popuâ€" lar unless there is a change in the style of skirts. "It may be different with photoâ€" graphers who have studios and can therefore charge high prices. They can afford to throw in with the picture some advice about posing. I have only a gallery, and at gallery Frices customers do their own posâ€" ng. They pick out what they think are their most effective points and study how to bring them out best and then come here and show them off while I photograph them. they are more inclined ‘to travel on A Photographer‘s Little Talk on Feâ€" male Defects. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemâ€" ARE YOU PIGEONâ€"TOED ? AUSTRALIAN SLANG. Theso rules shall be placed in conspicuous place in the shops. ‘The use of powder pulls is proâ€" hibited. Instead use clean towels or absorbent cotton. ‘The use of sponges is prohibited. Every barber‘s shop shall be proâ€" vided with running hot and cold water. No person ghall be allowed to use any barber‘s shop as a dormitory. . Every barber shalt cleanse his hands thoroughiy immediately after serving each customer. > _ o The use of finger bowls is prohibâ€" ited. Needles, tweezers, forceps and other instruments must be disinfected in boiling water or 3 or 5 per cent. formalin sclution immediately after using and thoroughly dried by passing quickly through a gas. or aicohol flame. Scissors and clippers to be treated likewise. Barbers are warned from attemptâ€" Ing to treat skin diseases, barbers‘ itch, etc., and should advise their customers to consult a physiclan. Barbers shail not blow away with their breath any hairs after cutting, but must use a towel, or bulb, or fine hair brush, which must be sterilized, as the hair brushes are. Barbers shall keep their finger nails short and clean. Alum or other maâ€" terial used to stop the flow of blood shall be so used only in powder form and applied on a towel. _ _ A separate clean towel shall be used for each person. \ All wash basins must be connected with sewer and properly trapped. Razors shall be wiped with 95 per cent. alcohol before and after beâ€" ing used on any person. _ _ Hair brushes, known as "sanitary brushes," must be used. These must be sterilizel by iminersion in boiiâ€" ing water or by dipping in five per cent. formalin solution. Combs must be kept clean and treated like brushes. Razor strops must be kept clean and never wiped off with hand or blown upon with breath before usâ€" ing. $0ZODONT for th TEETH 26¢ If malaria is conveyed by mosâ€" quitoes it is probable that other Ingects may play a like part. A French physician records that a certain family had a member who for years was subject to frequent malarial attacks, and that three children in the family were seized with the disease directly after some oleanders were brought into the house. The malaria germ was found in lice on the plants. If There Was Any Hope of Enforcing T hem. The San Francisco Board ol Health at a meeting the other day, adoptâ€" ed the suggewted sanitary â€"regulaâ€" tion of barbers‘ shops as usbmitâ€" ted by Dr. Baum, Chairman of the committee having the matter in charge. The restrictions are very severe, and will apply to every barâ€" ber‘s shop in the city. Health Board Inspectors will visit the shops regularly and report to their suâ€" periors any violation of the rules, which are as follows : The place of business, together with all furniture, shall be kept at all times in a cleanly condition. Floors or woodwork should not be ewept or brushed dry, but must be mopped up with an antiseptic soluâ€" tion, preferably with a solution of corrosive sublimate, 1.5000. Cuspidors must be made with wide openings, without any beveled or rough sides, and should contain water, and when cleaned must be disinfected with any of the herein recommended antiseptic solutions. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other discases put together, and until the last few yeare was sunposed to be incurable. For a Preat many years aoctors proâ€" nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies,and by constanily failmf to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constituâ€" tional disease and therefore requires constituâ€" tional treatment. _ Hall‘s Catarrh Cure, manuâ€" factured by F. J. (‘hene{ & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the onlf constitutional cure on the market. It i« taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Bend for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, 75c. _ _ Mugs and shaving brushes shall be stcrilized by immersion in boil.ng water three or five per cent. forâ€" malin solution, after every separâ€" ate use thereof. At least oneâ€"half of the millionâ€" alres of the world are Americans. In a list of noted rich men wha are reâ€" puted to be worth $25,000,000 or more there are included fortyâ€"four Americans, twenty citizens of Great Britain, nine Australians, four Gerâ€" mans, four Frenchmen, three Rusâ€" slans, three South Africans, three Spanishâ€"Americans, one Italian, one Spaniard, one Belgian and one Chinaâ€" man. The Spaniards named it " The Flower of the Holy Ghost," and reâ€" garded it with superstitious awe, but the native Indians, more _ superstiâ€" tious still, worshipped it like an jdol, and would not let the ground on which it grew to be touched. The flower is pure white, and is shaped . something like our jackâ€"inâ€" theâ€"pulpit. Inside the flower, right in the heart of it, is a perfect image of a dove, with drooping wings, enowy breast, gold tinted head and crimson beak. No effort of the imâ€" agination is necessary to see the resemblance. It is a perfect image, exquisitely beautiful in tints, and givâ€" ing off â€"an odor that no perfumer could imitate. One of the rarest and most wonderâ€" ful orchids known is a native of the Isthmus of Panama. The early Spanâ€" ish fiettlerl there named if Flor del Espiritu Santo (Flower of the Holy Ghost), anid those who have seen it readily undu-stanf d why. It gfll;ws in marshy places from a decayed log, or son’:et&:es from the crevice in a rock. ‘The jeaf stalk reaches several feet in beight, and the flower stalk, which grows from the bulib, bears twelve or fifteen buds. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphâ€" theria. Hall‘s Family Pills are the best, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc Malaria From Plant Lice. Millionaires of the World. A QUEER ORCHID, GOOD RULES, ‘The preliminary estimate of the yleld per acre of barley is 24.7 bushâ€" els, as compared with 20.4 bushels on Oct. 1st, 1900, 27 bushels at the corresponding date in 1899, and 23.4 bushels the mean Of the October estimates of the last ten years. The average for quality is 89.2, against 82.1 last year, and 88.4 in 1899. ‘The preliminary estimate of the yleld per acre of rye is 15.1 bushels, as compared with 15.1 bushels on Oct. 1st, 1900, 14.4 bushels at the corresponding date in 1899, and 14.3 bushels the mean of the October estimate of the last ten years. The average for quality is 89.4, against 92 last year, and 90 in 1899. We buy Butter, Eggs, Poultry and all kinds of Farm Produce. Write us when you have any to sell. Check sent as soon as we receive the goods. Samusl L. Lewis & 60. ‘The preliminary esiimate of the yield per acre of oats is 25.1 bushels, as compared with 29.6 bushels on Oct. 1st, 1900, 30.7 bushels at the corresponding date in 1899, and 27.2 bushels the mean of the October estimates for the last ten years. The average for quality is 83.7 against 89.2 last year, and 89.5 in 1899. 45 United States Corn and Coarse Grains Thb October report of the statis tician of the United States Departâ€" ment of Agriculture shows the avâ€" erage condition of corn on Octoâ€" ber 1st to have been 52.1, as comâ€" pared with 51.7 last month, 78.2 on The potato crop of the United States this year is estimated by the Agriculturist at 167,171,000 â€" bushâ€" elsâ€"a decrease of nearly 88,000,000 bushels as compared with last year. The average yield per acre this year is placed at fiftyâ€"nine bushels, twenâ€" tyâ€"eight bushels less than for 1900. The crop is lower than for any year since 1892. ‘‘The Agriculturist estimates the potato crop of Canada at 49,314,000 bushelsâ€"a decline of over 8,000,000 bushels as compared with last year. No wonder potatoes are high in America. Just how high prices are across the line is indicated by the fact that the quoted prices run all the way from 70 cenias paer bushel in Boston to $1.50 in New Orleans. The highest price last year wAas 65 cents. L lE oo oys iT October 1st, 1900, 82.7 at the corâ€" responding date in 1899, and 81.8 the mean of the October averages for the last ten years. The preliminary estimate of the hld eP catntas < 1 5.. iih d infi dr conndionnanacinintih en rent, was 380,000, as compared with 350,000 for the week before. From March 1st, however, the total packâ€" ing this year amounts to 13,480,000, an increase of $630,000, as compared with the same period last year. Eirick Brotherse, writing from Bufâ€" falo on Thursday, say that while there had been a elump in hog prices, it looked as if the market would beâ€" come stronger rather than weaker. This statement was based on the fact that the kind of hogs that were then coming into Buffalo afford sure evidence that there are not many good ones in the United States. This, say EKirick Brothers, is an indication of stronger and higher prices later in the season. The total number of hogs packed in the United States last week, acâ€" cording toAtlgo‘ggnclnnatl Pric‘o C?‘r; CURSE OF : DRINK & ts and many other equally important marks and signs, « 1 They tell you many interesting and useful things. 4‘ Properly read they are aids to success in every walk in life, If you wish tolearn something about yourself, write for FREE BOOKLET ‘ full information on this interesting subject. Address â€" giving NORTH AMERICAN SCHOOL OF PALMISTRYy P. 0. Box 225. (Canadian Branch.) The Line of Fate, a M\ </|\\® O\ t ) & ‘J 3 -',g <C 4&& O I‘:‘“y_.:‘r i 6{»'?"«.‘5’- ; LVE â€"\Thar/)~ ta V C -‘4",‘1' / t Y h o.~ +A Ab B WANIFD CGommission Merchants LONDOCN American Potato Crop. Every line in your hand has a regular The Line of Head, Inf CANADIAN RUBBER & m ~=mmnnccneâ€"_â€"_ ic Nee ic i M hn no 4 2ib 0n [ T : 7 % “r 3y feg "’.} > â€" it Oe i o on > & 2) A \z 1P i \a CZ </ B V 12 3 2 WX / i & m A wÂ¥ l"‘_ m D aveuTt PALMISTRY IF ANZ7 MEMBER OF Yorr FAMT ¢ the taste for liquor can be removed MI:Z-PEI.\KH' e for liquor can be removed ./. "RNINK®, the taste for liquor can be removed permanent] by giving Tasteless Samaria Prescription lmcrel{v in food or drink. Failure impossible. Free sam ple, Ic:timonials, price sent sealed, Write SA MARLA REMEDY CO., 18 Jordan street, Toronto, Ont, A" lington, all cultivated; 70 acres fruit railway, postoflice, blacksmith shop, basket factory and school, half mile ; will seli in whole or in part on easy terms. Geo. K. Fisher Freeman, Ont. A" finest in the Niagara Peninsula, at Winona, 10 miles from Hamilton on two rail« ways, 130 acres in all, 35 of which is in fruit, mostly peaches. Will be sold in one parcel or divided into lots of 16 to 20 acres to suit pur chasers. This is a decided bavgain Address Jonathan Carpenter, P. O. box 408, Winona YY effective system for collecting debts in Canud;b United Stares and Europe, without using offensive methods to your debtors ; reâ€" mittance on day of collection guaranteed ; reasonable charges ; call, write or phone Main 2927, and Oone of our representatives will call on you. The International Mercantile Agency, %‘umeatguildinz. corner Yonge and King sts., ‘oronto. Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing ®yrup should alâ€" ways be used for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhce a. Twentyâ€" five cents a bottle. The camel can go two weeks withâ€" out taking a drink, but it would make some men hump themselves to abstain for two days. WE HAVE THE MOST PERFECT AND effective system for collecting debts in FOR SALEâ€"200 ACRES, NEAR BURâ€" lington, all cultivated; 70 acres fruit positior, ISSUE NO. 46, U I‘. 0 p 00 x ) . zf 1 f Naturgé PRUIT FARM FOR SALEâ€"ONE OF THE ©colls 1 | Babies and children need proper food, rarely ever mediâ€" COD LIVER OIL WITF NYPOPHOSPHITES or LIME & SODA cine. If they do not thrive If you will put from oneâ€" fourth to half a teaspoonful in baby‘s bottle three or four times a day you will soon see a marked improvement. For larger children, from half to a tprflfUlo according to age, dissolved in their milk, if you so desire, will very soon show its great nourishâ€" ing power. If the mother‘s milk does not nourish the baby, she needs the emulâ€" W& . They need a little help to get their digestive machinery working properly. sion. 1t will show an effect at once both upon mother and child. The . FARMS $3 PER ACRE AND UP. all drugrists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Toronto, Canada. COLLECTING AGENCIES®. with a name and meaning The Line of Heart HAMILTON, can Line of Life, fT! m'fi;_lz_&_!?“ M ORS, ently hy CURED ‘Cretly in sam ple, Y 19 2% on css CO. SECRETLY «9 19891. A# 31 Washington, Oct. 21.â€"I course . Dr, Talmage 4 that we are affected by we seldom recognise a upon human accountabilit 4s Job xxxviil, 31: "Cans the sweet influences of P What is the meaning of tion which Coga put to . we all our lives been read are most of us ignorant 0 and power and practica} mess? 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