West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Jul 1902, p. 2

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54* t Extraordinary Unpl:asant Sympâ€" toms of ~idney Trouble in this Case. Tortured by all Kinds of Pains and Aches be Pries Kverything, but Fails to Find Reliet THi a Friend Advises Mim to Use QodAA‘s Midney tillsâ€" Ihey MHave Made a Well Man of Him and be is Gratetul. (State Journal.) Wifeâ€"I‘m afraid you won‘t be well enough to go with me to Mrs. Swagâ€" ger‘s progressive euclhre party toâ€" pight. iR P one . Frank Chartrand, a rallway man, whose homs is 130 Little Chaudiere sgireet, has acksowledgei that Doid‘s Kiiney Pills imve done more for bhim than anything else in the world has ever done. He says: "I sulfered with backache ami was always . drowsy and had a very heavy feeling in my The constant vibration on trains and engines is very hard on the kidâ€" nays, anmd Nk»«ld‘s Kidney Pills make these organs well and able to resist disea se There are many railway men in Canadia today who find Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills indispensable. They are the railway man‘s surest and best friend. "NDoid‘s Kidney Pills have worked a wonderful eure‘in my case, and I qannot speak too highly of this great anmi good remeiy." What Dodd‘s Kiiney Pills have done for Mt. Chartrand they bave done for thousamis of others, and they‘li d&o the same for you if you give them a chance. "I had frequent severe hbheadaches airi more times very sharp pains in wie top of my head, which gave me much annoyance in my work. â€" "My fingers would cramp and I would have an uneas.ness in my legs and occasgonal pains in the loins. _ "I was dizzy in spells and short of browth. If I ate a hbearty meal 1 would have a paia in my left side. My appotite would sometimes be vyery ge«»)4 and sometimes 1 couldn‘t eat an ything." g _ "I had a constant sorencss and tenâ€" derness over the spine and tired feelâ€" ing in the region of my Mki«tppys.‘ liog b#. "I suffered quite a little with a dragging, heavy feeling across the Lo n e t "Deo«ki‘s Kidney Pills wore recomâ€" mended to me by a fr.end of mine who luvi been curel, and I began to use "Almost from the start I began to feel â€" the womlerful improvement, which continuel as the treatment procei@del, till the unpleasant sympâ€" toms had one by one entirely disap peared. « A RAILWAY MAN. Ottawa, Ont., July 7.â€"(Special.)â€" Husbandâ€"I‘m afraid I will are U. 3. Govarnment Inspected. The wholesomeâ€" ness and geodness of every article is rn-rnd in ite preparation for your convenience. in the bandy keyâ€"ovening cans. A supp‘y on yoor pantry shalres enables you to have always at hand the sesentiale :m very best meals._ The little book, '&o' to ake Good Thing» to Eat," te!!s all about themâ€" seut free, Linby‘s Atias of the World, mailed free for 1) cants postage. LIBBYV‘S Natural Flavor Food Products LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBBY, CHICAGO. EDUGATIONAL GROWTH What Hoe Was Afraid of M~Master â€" Cniversity has from it3 inception held . a recognized place among inâ€" stitutions of learning. Ita growth in numbers has boen remarkable, as has also the suecess of its graduates in business aml professional caâ€" reors. â€" R ooot additions have booen made to its equipment. Young men @hould write to From Libby‘s hmoulmionio kitchens. where purity provails. meate used in THE M MASTE Good Things to Eat IE REGISTRAR, STER UNIYVERSITY TORONTO. 2e and women for a calendar 235 used â€" were _ employed _ {for the | removal of the whey. Now, under the best equipment, white earthenâ€"| 0 ware sinks or troughs are employâ€"| . _ed ; these are about 24 inches wide, aad of a length in proportion to | the quantity of milk used. They | may have a hoie in the bottom for ; removing the whey, a plug being : used, and if it is deemed necessary, | a pipe may be screwed on to the ; : bottom â€" to carry the liquid else-i' where. Across this tank pieces of | . wellâ€"planed hard wood are placed | _ to hold the sides of the draining | cioth into which the kurd is placed ; | the cloth having been spread across‘ ite supports, the curd, when fit, ie | . removed, slice by slice, into It, and ;. the whey at once commences _ to | leave the curd. As is found necesâ€" |. sary ‘the four corners of the cloth | are subsequently tied . loosely toâ€" ; gether to keep the still tender curd | in a compact mass and to slightly encourage continued drainage . by the gentle pressure which is thus given. Presently it may be that the corners are tightened, and l’ur-l ‘ther pressure given,. The object isl to obtain curd sufficiently firm to' ’hundle without _ real pressure, . Or | without adopting the process which | is common in the manuafacture o(] Cheddar and other hard . cheeses | lDraining- is chiefly caused by thei fractures made first by the vessels‘ | employed in removing the slices of | curd from one place to the other, and next by those which are natâ€" | urally made in . the process, the heat of the curd materially assistâ€" | ing. It cannot be too plainly reâ€"| marked that heat encourages drainâ€"| ing». whereas a â€" low temperature | seriously retards it. When, thereâ€"| fore, curd is much below 80 F., and | in an apartment of a similar temâ€"| | perature, it â€" becomes most diffiâ€" | | cult, and sometimes impossibie, to | , separate the curd from the '| | whey. Sometimes the maker draws | 'th.a plug, and allows the whey to| escape ; under other conditions he | | prefers the curd to remain still in | | the cloth ,but somking in the whey. | | The success of the cheese in its priâ€" | ‘mary stage depends upon the proper | | development of acidity and uwpon temâ€" | |peruture, so that neither too much | | nor too little ‘whey is removed.l | When the curd is firm enough to |h.‘urdlr~ it is either cut or broken into | blocks, and placed in a dry vessel to | lmr, or to ripen by coutact with the | air. Befors the hoop or mould proper | bos"ke [ is filled with the curd, and the most || | improved size is 15 in. by 8 1â€"2 in. | in diameter, the curd, ripe and sutâ€" | t ficiently firm but mellow, is broken | Iiutu small pisces, usually by the | ‘hands of the makesr. It should perâ€" | haps be pointed out that the growth | of the blue mould or fungus common | to Stilton cheese is possible only beâ€" | cause 1t is not pressed. It will be | proticed that as the curd is broken : into small pileces the complete cheese | is crowded with interstices. During | | the process of manufacture the seeds . }ol‘ the blue mould are deposited from | | the atmosphere upon the curd, and | € sTILTON CHEESE ; i By an English Authority. ; m«nmwma% In the equipment ht a dairy 10T | is your only means of killing them. making Stiiton cheese it is esgential | (urges Professor James Long). to Obâ€" | Scott‘s Emulsion of codâ€"liver oil tain milk vessels, and those of tinned | _ 14 ; o iron are now generaily used, alâ€" | will give you that health, if anyâ€" t".':ou'gh t!_w_v do not retain the heat : thing will. of the mllk 5o “.""“.“‘? wooden ves-: Srmao rom FAIC SAmPLE ANO tMY i/. sels, ol a size which is in accordanc? | georr a sownt cnuumiere, tomonte with the number of cows from which gec. and $1.00; . all druggists. the milk is Umflifl-l‘. These Ve:lflels | anmmmmmermmmnmmmanmmmmemmmemmmmnmmmmmmmmmmememmmmmemmmnemammmmnemmmnmmmmmemmmmemmus are narrower at the bottom tDAN | at the top The milk intended _ foT | A Discreet Lover. manufacture â€" having been straingd! (Detroit Free Press.) and purified as far as possible in Heâ€"I love you, darling. I sawear it this way, is poured into the vesse!8, | by those lofty elms in yonder park. and when the tenfperature, which is | ‘Stheâ€"Don‘t swear by those, Reginâ€" regarded as the essential temper@&â€" | ald. ture for renneting is reached, the _ Heâ€"Why not ? rennet is added. It is usual to dilute | Sheâ€"Because those trees are slipâ€" the rennet with pure water, and | pery elms., + i when it is being poured into the | wuudeitiastdie maulewm ic ccuienlpiecracediins milk to stir briskty that the mixture! Minard‘g Liniment is the best. may be compiete. Under most syi;;‘ cce acnt ausycataae ts crns menisrriabiennreges tems the temperature of the mWlE | s varies between 80 and 90 F., the / ,, w:"wd, to Get It. Â¥4 curd being sufficientiy . coagulated | Mamma, said Tommy, . " does to commence work im about fifty | sugar _ ever cuso adybody ‘of anyâ€" minutes. Temperature. however, is & | -‘-l"‘““g,?' n question, which the makerâ€"hbaving | ;. Why do you ’a.ak_. my boy ? 37 learned both practice and principles | I thought I‘d like to catch it, â€"will determine for himsel{f when he | saild Tommy. * § goes to work with his ow n milk. | Enpmmmmmmermemmnmememethensemmmmnd It is neediess to say that the dairy | Minard‘s Liniment cures La Grippe. must be well ventilated, sufficiently | 6 Ggeiesiecanccrans reseiecerate uces cool to prevent too high a temperâ€"| ture in l::ne middie of, the sumimer, | Beogal Tigers. imnasmuch as the higher the temperâ€" | The manâ€"eater is usually an old ature the more rapid does the whey | tiger, whose strength is failing and or serum leave the curd, with the reâ€" | whose teeth have partly lost their sult that the curd may be too dry. | gharpness. Such a beast finds it easâ€" In days goue by scmewkhat primitive‘ ier to lurk in the vicinity of settleâ€" t roughs or ah tC or drain= | ments and to pick up an occasional e oo * Condnnire alt tarmi wmare | man, woman or child than to run as it is a congenial soil upon which the fungus can â€" subsequently feed, and as, too, the intersticeés provide both space for their expansion durâ€" ing growth, and air, so is it importâ€" ant that the greatest cleanliness should te observed, otherwisa deâ€" structive germs will also find their way into the intoersticos and in the end destrovy the cheese, Turner, the maturalist, declared | that he once saw, upon the coast of | Brasil, a race of gigantic savages, | ons of whom was twelvye [eet in | beight. M. Thevet, of France, in his | deseription of America, published at Paris in 1375, asserted that he saw | and measured the skeletorn of a | South American which was 11 feet | 2 inches in length. The Chinese are said to claim that in the last cenâ€" | tury there were men in their counâ€" | try who measured 15 feet in height. Josophus mentioned the case ol a Jew who was 10 feet 2 inches inl height. Pliny tells of an Arabian glant, Gabara. 9 foet 9 inches. thel tallest man in the days of Claudiug. John Middletown. born at Hale, Lanâ€" cashire, in the time of James I., was 9 feet, 3 inches in height, his band. was 17 inches long and 8 1â€"2 inches broad, says Dr. Platt in his "History. o Staffordshire." The Irish glanot. Murphy, eontemporary with O‘Brien, was 8 ft. 10 in A skeleton in the Museum of Trinity College, Dublin, ba 8 foat 6 inchos in heixzht. and that of Charles Byrne, in the musaum of the College of Surgsons, London, is 8 feet 4 inches. The talleat living man is Changâ€"tuâ€"Sing. the Chinege giant. His hoight is 7 feet 3 inches â€"Medien! Expnminar and iPractitionar. â€"mledGil Liamingr and ‘racll{tonor. | (N. Y. San,) ~sâ€"~«ma«sominastant ' Freddieâ€"When do you call a woâ€" Plants for the destruction of sewâ€" | man a grassâ€"widow, dad ? ; age by cremation are now operated || Cowpiggerâ€"When the graas isn‘t in 97 cities of the United States. < over her husaband, # The Height of the Taliest Men. OW IT iS MADE 3 "Mamma," said Tommy, _" does | sugar ever cupgo adybody ‘of anyâ€" t thing ?" » .\ __" Why do you ask, my boy 9" \ __"I thought I‘d like to catch it3 (Detroit Free Press.) Hoâ€"I love you, darling. I swear it by those lofty elms in youder park. 3heâ€"r)on't swear by those, Reginâ€" ald. pno escaping the germs of consump tion; kill them with health. Health is your only means of killing them. The manâ€"eater is usually an old tiger, whose strength is failing and whose teeth have partly lost their sharpness. Such a beast finds it easâ€" ier to lurk in the vicinity of settleâ€" ments and to pick up an occasional man, woman or child than to run down wild cattle. The largesat, fiercest, and _ most brightly coiorefl tigers are found in the Province of Bengal, near the mouths of the Ganges River, and not far from Caleutta. A fullâ€"grown Benâ€" gal tiger sometimes measures ten feet from nose to tip of tail. Such a monster makes no more account of springing upon a man than a cat does of seilzing a mouse. He surpasses the lion in strength and ferocity, and has no rival among beasts ol prey exâ€" cept the grizzly bear and the recently discovereadl glant bear of Alaska.â€"St. Nicholasg. The answer will be a aafe gulide ment the size of the drum or the length of the wire or ribbon used therein may be materrally lessened, so that a long speech or a number of speeches or signals may be stored up>n a comparat.vely short or sma l magnetic body. WRIT IN BLACK AND WHITE. New Telephone That Writes the Mesâ€" sages Sent Over the Wires. Among the patents recently isgued in Denmark is one to Peter Oluf Pedersen, of Copenhagen, who has perfected a method of us‘ing the telegraphone in such a way as to record a number of messages on & shugle stoel strip and to reproduce each message without interference from the others. W.th this improveâ€" The telegraphone is the invention of a Danish electrical engineer, Valâ€" demar Poulson, and is, as the name implies, a combination of the teleâ€" graph, telephone and _ the graphoâ€" phone or phonograph. By the use of this device a telephone or telegraph conversation can be revorded on a steee wire or taps and reproduced at any time and as often as desired without the record deteriorating. In this apparatus a steel wire, or a steel band, is moved by any suitâ€" able means with considerable velocity between the poles of a small elecâ€" tromagnet. On speaking into a teleâ€" phone transmitter, joined on the cirâ€" cult, the undulatory currents set up in the transmitter react upon the electromagnet and cause a continuâ€" ous vibration in the direction and in the degree of magnetism at the poles of the elsctromagnet. There is These variat ons are permanently recorded on the steel wire as it rushes by, and when the message is complete the steel wire retains a definite record ol what has taken place in the shape of a continuous series of transvers> magnetized lines varying throughout in their polar. ity and in their strength. Onâ€" conâ€" nceting a telephone receiver to the electromagnet, and again starting the wire on its course, says the Teleâ€" graph Ago, this magnetized wire generates electric currents in the coils of the superimposed magnet as it passes between its poles, and theso electric currents, which are the exact counterpart of those genâ€" erated by the original voice, cause tho telephone to repeat what was sabl in an almost absolutely perâ€" fect manner. " Â¥Yes, I like you very much, George," said the fair girl with the fiuffy hair, "but 1 really coulda‘t think of marrying you." Secretary of War Root, while on his way to the commencement at Hamtliton Collegse, stopped at a hoâ€" tel in a little New York hotel where he is well known. He called on some women whom he knew as a boy and they asked him if he was comfortâ€" able at the botel. "Oh. yes," he satid, "but I would like a bath, and they haven‘t one." "Go ‘way, sir,‘ said one of the women, "you‘re putting on styie since you got in the cabiâ€" net. You go out to Cedar run and "Why â€" not, â€" darling ? George. _ pe "Becauise we could never be hapâ€" py â€" tlogether," she â€" preplied. "You know 1 always want my own way in everything." "Oh, that will be all right," reâ€" plied the crafty George. "After we are married you can keep right on wanting it, as far as I am concernâ€" ed."â€"Chicago News. take a swim, as you did boy."â€"Chirago Chronicla. Willing to Oblige. Go Take a Swim. Defined. whon a wINIAMIV AKCAIVES TORONTO queried Queen Alexandra insists that the grace and wauty of her coronation robes shall not be sacrificed to hisâ€" toric precedent or to the College of Heralis. She has no mind to walk to her throne in Westminster Abbey looking like a picture out of the Midâ€" dle Ages. Her robes will have a modâ€" ern style so far as is possible. The selection of robes for such a historic ceremony involves countless considerations of detail, which do not enter into the choosing of dress for state ceremoniale in general, |_ _ 04 $40000 00040 ¢e4%¢00040¢0¢¢¢%¢ $ MODERN SPLENDOR + WILL PREDOMINATE 04099900000 0004 #0000004000%e The (Gueen has her trials, and her boudoir at Mariborough House has had on occasions the appearance of a school of design and a modiste‘s esâ€" tablishment, combined. Shall it be silk or shall it ba veivet ? Is it to be embroidered with gold or studded with gems ? Shall the herallie devices be put here or shall they be put there? are the questions which the Queen and hbher ladies are even yet discussing. The Queen will not walk under a canopy, that ancient custom being omitted from the coming ceremony, but the precedent of having her train carried by her three daughters may be followed, and would certainly give distinection to the procession and preâ€" vent rivalry among the peeresses. Aunt Jeminaâ€"What is a miracia, Adelbert ? To The Queen will wear everything new on her coronation day, down to the most insignificant item in her apâ€" arel.â€"London Daily Mail. When washing greasy dishes cr pots and pans, Lever‘s Dry Soap (a powder) will remove the grease with the greatest ease. ;3 _ Adelbertâ€"Paw saaiid it would be a miracle if you got married.â€"Chicago Daily News. The human stomach is subject to many distressing affections, like cramps, cholera morbus and %sentry, which, if neglected,are dangerous. e best and ?ulckmt remedy is Perry Davis‘ Painkiller. _ Look out for subâ€" stitutes. 285¢. and 50c. Landlady (frigidly)â€"You seem to be examining that egg very critically, Mr. Slopay. Is there anything wropug about it ?" Mr. Slopayâ€"Not at all, Mrs. Hashus! â€" I was only looking for the wishbone, that‘s all !â€"Puck. Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold4. Lazative Bromo Quinine Tablets eure a cold in one day. No cure, No pay. Price 25 cents. Altogether Too HMHonest "By Jove ! I left my pocketbook unâ€" der my pillow." "Well, your servant girl is suroly an honest person." s -‘Thnt’sjlrwt the trouble. She will give the pocketbook to my wife." ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT removes all hard, soft or calloused Lumps and Blemâ€" ishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Ring Bone, Sweeny, Stifies, Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by all druggista. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All dmfiglsu refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove‘s signature is on each box. 25c¢. Poet Stuart Not a Centipede. (Ottawa Citizen.) Banford and his rescuers have been immortalized ia verse by a Hamilton poet in a poem 64 lines in length. These are either too many or too few. The well was only 45 feet deep and the entomibment was for a period said ‘to have been 100 hours. _ Mr. Stuart, tho sweet singer, should give this his (to quote Sizr Oliver) "seriâ€" ous consideration."‘ Pity Poor Morgan. (Toronto Star,) Owing to the cireumstance that his interest checks on July ist only amounted to $2,000.000, J. Pierpont Morgan may not be able to take his family to the seashore this sumâ€" mer. . There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doeâ€" tors pronounced it a local disease and presâ€" eribed local remedies, and by constantly failâ€" ing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore reâ€" quires a constitutional treatment. Hall‘sCaâ€" tarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & €o., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional eure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. Itacts directly on the blood and mucous surfAces of the system. _ They offer one hundred dollara for any case it fails to cure. _ Send for cireuâ€" lars and testimonials. Address _ F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. I( this thing of slaughtering people in seores every Fourth of July is to go on, it might be as well to change the flag‘s pet name to "Old Gory." â€"Hamilton ‘Times. Well, what is Glory, anyway, but Gory with a little more ‘ell in it ? New York Central and Hudson River Railroad. The above rame is a household word and the superior excellence of the road should be sufficient to atâ€" tract most people, but now that the rate is the same to New York and points east as by other lines no further recommendation should be sought. Everybody will tell you it is the best. "Here‘s a story in the paper about a woman who married a man one day and applied for a divoree the next." â€" "From perversity, I suppose," "No; from Chicago,. I believe," m;..-:m:::m Co., Toronta, Dr. Chase‘s Ointment 8 a prove that &n‘- OKMQ-M& ' es and absolute cure for each t and evory form of itehing, TO CURK A COLD IN ONK DAY Bold by Druggistsâ€"75¢. Hall‘s Family Pills are the best ET & % what they think ofi‘. You car use it and our money back if no? cured. 00c a box. at in the daily prex and ask your neighâ€" t‘heythhk ofi‘ . You car use it and Merely Looking. War‘s Hell Broth. (Woodstock Express.) A Miracie. (Toronto Globe.) General Buller has brought down on his head another storm of newsâ€" paper censure. A suggestive feature of his case is that he is still the military hero with the London deâ€" mocracy. Messre. C. C. Richards & Co. Dear Sirs,â€"While in the country last summer I was badly bitten by mosquitoesâ€"8o badly that I thought 1 would be disfigured for a couple of weeks. I was advised to try your Liniment to allay the irritation, and did so. The effect was more than I expectedâ€"a few applications comâ€" pletely curing the irritation, preâ€" venting the bites from becoming sore. MINARD‘S LINIMENT is also a good t Teo kn c Gumerditrane article to keep A person of a statistical turn of mind has been delving into somew hat romantic domain for one of his pracâ€" tical bent. He has compiled statisâ€" tics that cannot fail to prove interâ€" esting. Eightyâ€"one out of 109 men, he avers, yowed they could not live any longer without the adored ones ; 72 held the ladies" hands in a tight grip, 60 kissed them on the lips, 10 : W ‘ & 1 wul va o 14. se e s e LA IF on the right hand, two on the tip of the nose and one on the shoulder ; 18 were so excited that they could hardly speak ; 26 lost their cloquence throuch certain qualms of conscience; 12 said in deep chest tones, "Thanok God," and eight frankly admitted that they were Inexpressibly happy. By studying the conduct of 100 men whose suits were rejected the statisticlan â€" obtained . the â€" followâ€" ing equally interesting {igures: Forty of them rushed in a frenzy out of the room ; 21 of them said that life henceforth bad no more value in their eyes, and tha« they would comâ€" mit suicide ; 14 became â€" suddeniy tongueâ€"tied and irrational ; six calmly resigned themselves to the inevitable ; five avowed their inten« tion to immediately emigrate to Amâ€" erica ; three tore out some of their hair ; two bit their lips till blood came, one stuck his hands into his trousers" pockets‘ and whstled a popular song, and another looked up toward Heaven and began to say the Lord‘s Prayer. Of the ladies 87 per cent. knew beforehand that the proposals were about to be made to them. Seventy of them sank as though embarrassed into the arms of the loved ones, and only four fell gently down on a chair or sofa. Fourteen covered their blushing faces with their hands, eight threw _ their arms _ passionately around the necks of the men. Two said "Please speak to mamma," and one sneered. One lady, who was 48 years oid, protested vigorously against giving or recetving a kiss. Another who was about the same age, saild, "Yos, you may kiss me, but you must do it in a gentlemanly manner." Such, then, are some of the ways in which proâ€" posals are made and received. The study is an interesting one, and in several ways should prove â€" especiâ€" ally instructive to members of the fair sex. * "The costliest of ail the smoked meats," said a dealer in such things, "are the fine hams and bacon that come from Limerick, Ireland. The prices of these meats may vary slightly from time to time, the hams selling usually, however, at from 33 to 35 :cents a pound, and the bacon at 32 or 343 cents a pound, Common soaps destroy the clothes and render the hands liable to eczema. "These costly smoked meats are made from fine hogs that are fed and tended with scrupalous care. The curâ€" ing process is a secret. "‘The combined result is shown in meats of euch quality â€" and flayor as to commend them most highly. "OI course there are fine hams proâ€" duced here, also, notably those of YVirginta, the finest of which bring 24 cents a pound. _ Included in the price ol the Limerick hams and bacon is a duty‘ oOf 5 cents a pouud. 1 you were to add that to the price of the Virâ€" ginia hams« you would raise the cost o" them to 20 cents, and adding furâ€" ther the cost of transportation from Europe, would bring the YVirginia hams pretty close to thoso of Limâ€" erick in price; so that in their origiâ€" nal cost ‘they are about the same. Minard‘s Liniment the best Hair Restiprer. "As to which is the petter ham, that would be largely a matter of taste. The Irish ham is rich and Juicy, the Virginia is of a more deliâ€" cate Mavor." Minard‘sa Liniment for Rheamaâ€" tiam. Harbor Grace, Nfld STATISTICS g AND COURTSHIP Always insist on your dealer supâ€" plying you with PP wienre ceR PRPPPREEC The Masses True to Him. They are manufactured from the BEST of MATERIALS by the MOST SKILLED workmen. Ask for the Octagon Bar Wted Costly smoked Meats. PAILS and TUBS p off the mosquitoes. Yours truly, W. A. OKE. .. Jano. 8, 1898. WOODENWARE E.B.EDDY‘S '\, at cleaning . silverâ€" ‘ & ware and your other ‘ bright metaia, Elecâ€" of ltrh- POLISHING FIBRE takes away the drudgery and makes allver cleaning a pleas Â¥t | ure. No solled hands, nothing to use but the eâ€" beautifully prepared chemical selfâ€"polishing . cloth. Price 25¢ at druggists and notion isâ€" | dealers. By mail from ‘r. | MONARCH MFG. 00., 8t. Catharines, Ont. m . Write for trial samples. .l"';"'. &_‘;”d" for Children e°otming soothes the child, softens the gums, Cures ISSUE NO. 30, Alma Ladies‘ College, 8T. THOMAS, ONT. Preparatory and Collegiate atudies; untiver a<ty music course ; fine art ; elocution; domesâ€" tic acience; commercial. Superior buildi «trong staff, healthiest location, pl.u.nz ootic and is the best remodv home life divided irto lots of 15 to 20 acres to chasers. Thisis a decided bargain Tonathan Carpenter, P. O. box 400. Jonathan Carpenter, Berriea and other fruita on commiasion, or will buy F.0.B. point of shipment, also Butâ€" ter, Egga, Dried Apples, Poultry and all other farm pro&uoe. Correspondence solicited WESTERN FRUIT & PRODUCE CO., Cor. York and William Ste., Market BM§ % Ottawa, Ont eX CONSUMPTION Prevented and Cured. _ tlon, Weak Lungs, Catarrh, | and a rundown system. W ork No More H.B. Marshall&Co Mre. Winslow‘s Four marveious free romedies for all have in your body the seeds of the most dangerous malady that has ever devas tated the earthâ€"consumption. Humane $wine Â¥, Stock Marker and Caif Â¥ Dehorner. Stopsswine of all ages from rooting. Makes 48 differen t ear marks , all w sises, with same biade. Extracts Horus, z: * Testimonials free. Price$1.50 orsend $1 for trial ; ifi t works, send balance. Pat d “J U.8. May8, ‘02for 17 yrs ; Canada Dec.17, ® ‘0l,18yrs. FARMER BRIGHTOS, FateGeld, lowa, U. & The quality standard from Ocean to cean. °\'our money back ifnot@atisfactory . ROSE & LAFLANMER, _ _ _ Y ou are invited to test what this system will do far you, if you are sick, by writing for a FREE TRIAL TREATMENT Company, Limited, 179 Riag Street West, Torosta, .am‘po-tofimu-:‘unâ€"m-d the free .fian(&smâ€"&n)flhmfi-m. Persons in Canada secing Slocum‘s offer im ons poges Do Poie mund for kasplcs an this paper. 191 King 8t. Kast, Hamilton, Ont WANT RELIABLE AQEN I‘S_ RUIT FARM FOR SALEâ€"ONE OF THE aacts cinet Reer AMrartues 0s geemalt nona, 10 miles from on two railâ€" fi'mmh%“dvhflbhm neaches. be sold in one parcel or IMPERIAL MAPLE SYRUP. Is o&nrpetiubulf Ar:your ungs delicate?P Are you losing fesh ? Are you pale and thin ® Do you lack stamina ? These symptoms are proof that you Do you cough ? Do your lungs pain you ? Is your throat sore M’M' Do you spit up phiegm Does your hguI:an WE WANT FREE. Agentsa, Montreal, V * y .‘ voure 14, lowa, U. & Mower Troâ€"ks ar« #sumimer novellice, and dipnere . at placos this garden the lead, One may choose whatever _ Nower Jancy, though it ; lug that the love ernamented _ with Bbicome«. Eweet poae le wirably fo tine that they grow ol tints makos «suited to Tower lavenders, deep whites are ali © tints are becon yet nothing is and dainty As ol this old â€"faeh BOU.. The gow: le as quair «ign, â€" and ator shows Nower har When un used theys orate mat terms for inetance Filimy Pink showing a em pofect gown delionute potil blown lhither . loes wond. A jpisin alor reline i« «rop of pink chiff« from hem of overia tea â€" lab! hemmed ; with pal times th ALe @4 falling « folde. the whote fual and dov« appea ran se s deft @ perhaps stray pe mentatio high ing sher in. A P0 lines the more ol th fully ecatt Arim J mon ow w * deep the The gsleeves « cagrious. â€" Comin shoulders,. the :« Ove wi «d arn ol its 1. velled is one tures © Doruerd ©n atte but shea «d for The 1« acoompr o wide mase < pD licate bore both _ «ide wthere the shmple ko 1 The «k sbout 1 be usc Nowers giod follow the th eity it amuch and £ Emall women 4 ‘awhion in Amerd one takes their I «idera tkon wineh Jfrocke With the« tJeal â€"a«pira ton up phyrically a that within the they bave adde wmeh to their SU ; HEALTH & [ OR In view be well 1 now abso in «o»rder creditabl» fact, the jncreAsiLL | door qm:'\n in their D nund gymua® there, . and PAEY rival® o uncom us 16 denying£ cream to !x ing hber and golo®® FLOWER *Yhe 1x tnow®e tha! i‘r] plu mp ts 1A8sCinké Y1h¢* nik chifiod bem almo erlapping w4 n N ovelty 41 6 meng t I s €1 a ePX ABRDA yeoud hene 18 aC001 6p6 n LK + #% i1 ® 4* 11 TD prc uol It Ond re ma mA k i4 1k #58 in K @W A4 i W lovel 2 4 110 M ou T# 1 1w t ( w «>Â¥ W

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