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Durham Review (1897), 5 Mar 1903, p. 2

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In it "â€"Harpor‘s Magazine. CALIFORNIA The success of orange culture in Contral and Nortaern california for ten years past suggests the climatic unity of the State. Some of the most successful orange groves are 600 miles north of Los Angeles. The long summer, the warm and dry atâ€" mosphere, the abundance of water, and the low price of land, make these fields in the San Joaquin and sacramento valleys very desirable for oranges and all kinds of farmâ€" ing and fruit growing. Just now the rates are specially low. From Feb. 1ith to April 30th the rate from Chicago will be $33 to California points. If you are interested in Caliâ€" fornla, such publications as " The Land of Opportunity" and "Califorâ€" nia for the Settler" will be helpful. They are free, and may be had of F. B. Choate, General Agent, Southâ€" ern Pacific, No. 126 Woodward ave., Detroit, Mich. At the Foot of the Pyramids. Burgerund Bauern Kalender. Guideâ€"It took over two hundred years to build that pyramid. Americanâ€"You don‘t say so ? Must have been a government $95, I guess. At leegth bedtims came, and, kneelâ€" Inxg before her, he implored a blessing to# each member of the family indiâ€" vBually, she alore being conspicuâ€" ons by her absence. _ Then, rising {raum his devout posture, the little suppliant fixed a keenly trinmphant loA upon her face,. saying. as he turned to climb into bed : *I s<‘pose you noticed you wasn‘t Little Jim‘s Triumph. ; Ab James, four years old, has teen | 86 nanghty to the point of evoking a | Ne whipping from _ his longâ€"suffering mather, and all day long a desire for | M revenge rankled in his little bosom. ; Slia & At leegth bedtims came, and, kneelâ€" I Three days after this strange ocâ€" eurrence, on June 26th, 1902, Heaâ€" ry Joues: wase killed by faliing out of the bottom of the skip a distance of severail hundred foet down â€" the sume shalt from which the mysierâ€" jous @ignals to hoise the man had boen given. Theose three occurrences made a groat impression upon many of the mer and particularly the more supâ€" erstitione of them.â€"Denver Times. thortly after this three distinct signale to hoise the men given from the station were heard in the ‘boiâ€" tom of a shaft where Henry S. Jones and somes others were workâ€" ing. At the tim> the signalse were giver no one was nearer the place thar fifteen feet and the search maude to discover the person ‘who gave the cignals have been unayvailâ€" ing. the man was. He approached to whore the figure had beer, and ns be neared the spot the man disapâ€" pared. No trace of the man could be found. McQues swears that he saw the man, but the moment that he appronched to where the figure had been it vanished as if by magic. Not even the slightest trace of a mar could be found, asd none of the men working around the mine at the timo saw anything of a stranâ€" ger, nor were any of them near the pMace where McQueg had seen the ligure at about the time that the engineer saw the vision. They Scare the Workers and Give some Mysterious Signals. Weird stories of ghostlike figures seen at the entrance oi the miue «hafts ami taules of groans and moauâ€" log soumis being heard from the botâ€" tom o the chafts are related by wising men who have jJast retarned lrom the property of the Big Kanaâ€" wha Mining Company â€" at â€" Creede. These tlales, which rival these of "Labstte, of whom Frask â€" Danioels sang, are @ald to have becorme so imâ€" prewserdd upon miny of the meon emâ€" moyei in the big Kanawhas Company‘s munes, that thoey have quit work and sought places in other mines where the unnatural sights _ and _ sounds are unknown. ; The fir=t man to relate a ghostâ€" like tale of his experiences while: working at the mine was Neil Moâ€" Queg, an engineer. It was uhoui;' live months ago that, whilestandâ€" ing at the end of the tram, he saw a min not more than twonty feet | away. Thinking it was one of the' miners employed at the place he «poke to him. He received no reply’ amdl again be addressed him. Again | he received no reply and this time! MeQueg determined to find out who the man was. He approached to| whore the figure had beer, and ns be neared the spot the man disapâ€"| mared. No trace of the man eould / II U10Ul UV! 0 In a few minutes it will be as :')l:?)’x:lyn‘:t to enjoy each meal to | Y*AT®m as the patient can bear. 'I"he Je € Podlrap ® , | paper keeps the pipe from _ being the "'-"'l""‘;z"t'f:;l':,;‘*?gore;mm;u{o‘;} moistened by the wet flannel, and stomach * t frould t ' at the same Time prevents the flanâ€" the food you eat you shou ry nel from being soiled by contact 9 g+ ; with the pipe. Fomentations thorâ€" Dl'. Cal'SOH 5 TOI’I IC | oughly'n.pplled will relieve most of e | the local pains for which liniments, 5‘“"?“".""" Constipation Bn:f:s | lotions and poultices are generally It will give zsest to your appetite. | applied, and are greatly to be preâ€" (rur pamphlet on th.t- une' of this superior ferred to these remedies, since they y ‘I."',,‘;:,f,.':‘,',‘f‘;n‘,:{ fere.""""> [are cleaner and ‘ald nature ‘more 80¢. per bottle at all druggists or sent preâ€" | effectually in restoring the parts to paid on recelpt of pric. | a sound condition, Sam ple sent on receipt of 6e. (stamp) to ieeieincn e rasioas cover postage. The Perfumed City, TNE CARSON MEDICGINE GOâ€"rorox to Chicago Tribunme. | " How far are we from Chicago ?" . N t asked the pessenger with the skull ('"0“’5 "A"N;r Thls M NE cap, wiping the moisture from th.e They Scare the Workers and Give ;i;":coi:; (g‘t the sleeping car add some Mysterious Signals. ', The passenger with the cropped Weird stories of ghostlike figures beard raised his head and sniffed the seen at the entrance oi the miue | air. Stomach Disordsrs I you want to enjoy each meal to tho utmost extent and feel that your stomach is taking the good out of the food you eat you should try Analysie of a pound of chimney soot has showed that it contained iron, calcizm, nickel, manganese, copper and silver Great Britain has 1,600 steamers of orer 3,000 tons:; Germany. 127 ; the United States, 120, and France anly 60. The worid‘s rreord sugar plantaâ€" tion contains 13,000 acres, has 30 miles of railway, and employs 1,500 poople. In 1840 95 pounds out of every 100 | ol sugar were made from cane Toâ€" | day only 34 pounds are so mad* | Out of cvery one hundred pounds of ! piaper manulactured in the world | only six pounds is made into books. _ | Chaperon originally meant the hood [ of cloth which priests wore in the fifteenth century. ) _\ ODD FACTS { _ AND FIGURES. %’ T I P L e AIALIILILLIILAL L L Aangaroo have been known to jump . height of 11 feet. A deer‘s best reâ€" ord is 9 feet 6 inches. ecrrerper »>2p 4 isn‘t "Sir, I came through this office four hours ago and found you reading the prper; I return, and you are stiil wasting your time in the same manner." "Indeed! Well, 1 am very glad to Lear it. I am, sir, simply one of the pubiic, who has been kept waitâ€" Ing here for four hours for an answer to a «imple question, and I shall be much obliged if you will use your in‘luence to get me atâ€" tended to." The story stops herec, but Jr0â€" bably he was attended to.â€"London "YVery true; you have stated the case to a nicety." Hereupor the head of the departâ€" ment naturally fires up. "What is your name, sir?" he says. "Well, I don‘t know that my name is any affair of yours. What is your name ?" "Sir, I would have you t that I am General Blank|~ Recestly a war office official kapâ€" pened to be passing through one o bis depariments. There he eaw a man standing before a fire readâ€" ing a newspaper. Hours after, reâ€" turning the siame way, he was shockâ€" «l to find the same man, legs exâ€" tengded before the same fire, still buried in the columns of a newspaâ€" head of the department you doing ?" > "Can‘t you see what I was the answer. Express The Virtues of Women. A Paris paper has been inquiring what virtues are most essential in women. The question submitted to its readers brought many thousand angwers. Faithfulness had 8.278 rotes; economy, 7,8600 and orderliâ€" ness, modesty, devotion, charity and gentleness follow in the order named. Cleaniiness had _ 3,594 advocates ; patience, maternal affection and inâ€" dustry had tetween 2,000 and 3,000 each, while courage, discretion, simâ€" plicity, wisdom, honesty and amiaâ€" bility were between 1,000 and 2,000. Abnegation came last in the list with 868 votes. Shades of R. Wa.g'ner!â€"‘ New York Commercial Advertiser. \ Messrs. C. C. Richards & Co., Yarâ€" mouth, N. S.: Gentiemen,â€"In January last Franâ€" ecis Loeclair, one ol the men â€" emâ€" ployed by me, working in the lumâ€" ler woods, had a tree fall on him, erushing him fearfully. He was, when found, placed on a sled and taken home, where grave fears were entertained _ for his recovery, his hips being badly bruised and _ his body turned black from his ribs to hia feet. We used MINARDS LINIâ€" MEN‘T on him freely to deaden the pain, and with the use of three botâ€" tles he was completely cured and able to return to his work. sSAUVEUR DUVAL. Elgin Road, I/Is‘et Co., Que., May 26th, 1893. ‘ In Ithaca. Cornell Widow. A Miss is as good as a mileâ€"for really it‘s only a diffezence in the number of laps, anyway, Settlers‘ Low Rates West, Via Chicago and Northwostern Ry., every day from February 15th to April 30th. _ Colonist one way secâ€" ondâ€"class tickots at extremely low ratos {rom stations in Ontario and Quebec, to points in Colorado, Utah, Montana, Nevagqa, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and California; also to Victoria, Vancouver, New Woestminâ€" ster, Nelson, Rossland, lete. Full particuiars, rates and folders can bo obtained from . H. Bennett, General Agoent, 2 East King street, Toronto, Ont. "IH * About forty miles said. |_ A little time is required for the heat of the fomentation to penetrate the dry flannel, and thus the skin | is allowed an opportuniiy to acquire | tolerance of the heat, and a greater | degree of temperature can be borne | than if the moist cloth is brought i directly in contact with the surface. | The outer fold of dry filannel will ‘alno serve to keep the cloth warm by preventing evaporation. _A fomentation is sometimes needed _when no hot water is at hand. Soak the Tagne!l in cold water, ringing )as dry as desired, fold in a newsâ€" paper and lay upon the stove or wrap it about the stovepipe. ; ly to the skin. Never{fieiess, it is better after wringing out the cloth as dry as desired to fold it in a dry Tflannel cloth of one or two thicknesses before applying it to the patient. na : In Hot Cloths are an Excellent Antidote for Pains. Hot fomentations prove an acceptâ€" able "cure for aches and pains" durâ€" ing the cold winter days, when the very mention of . warmth seems soothing to sensitive nerves, and it is surprising to what an extent this antidote for pain is now prescribed. When a fomentation is cal.ed for ‘by a physician, or when it shalil seem to be the proper thing in the emergâ€" ency of extreme internal pains, a flanne! cloth may be folded, wrung out of hot water, and applied directâ€" loa, «<ir?‘ cried t of the department i‘s Liniment R Lunnon‘s" War Office A HANDY PANACEA. cried the indiznant yrou to know , I judge," he eves Neuralâ€" am doing:" "what are <10 ARCHIVES TORONTO Chicago Post. "Im tired of these lectures on ‘How to treat your servants." "Have you anything in the line of a substitute to suggest ? "Well, rather." "What ? "Why, I think it wouldn‘t bea bad Idea to have a few lectures for gerâ€" vants on ‘How to treat your misâ€" trosses.‘" "I don‘t think «o. Just before Christâ€" mas wo did a large box trade, but for tho remainder of the year our box trade runs rather even. I should say men smoke more when they can be comfortable out of doors than they do indoors."â€"Washington Star. "How about the home tradoâ€"don‘t men smoke indoors at the fireside to batance the outdoor smoking of sumâ€" mer ? Men Indulge the Habit Most in Warm Than in Cold Weather. "It may appear strange, but it is none the less true, men smoke less during the winter months than they do‘ in the ‘good old summer time,‘" remarked a local cigar dealer to a Star man the other night. "Did you ever stop to consider why this should be ?" asked the cigar man. "Take toâ€"night, for instance. There are plenty of people on the street, yot business has been very dull with us. But the wind is blowing and it is disagreeably cold. Men do not like to smoke while it is windy and cold. When the spring opens our sales will jump. and by May they will be at highâ€"water mark. They are much biggor all summer than they are at this season, but May appears to be the ideal smoking month. Your true smoker likes the aroma of his Havana with the fragrance of the May flowâ€" erg. All the outdoor season our Satâ€" urday alternoon sales are the largest of the week." | For all weak and pale and thin children Scott‘s Emulsion is the most satisfactory treatâ€" ment. Children take to it naturally because they like the taste and the remedy takes just as naturally to the children beâ€" cause it is so perfectly adapted to their wants. Scott‘s Emulsion is simply a milk of pure cod liver oil with some hypophosphites especially prepared for delicate stomachs. It is like the penny in the milk because it works and because there is something astonishing about it. When mothers are worried because the children do not gain strength and flesh we say give them Scott‘s Emulâ€" sion. SMOKE MOST IN SUMMER. Just a little tickling cough may not suggest any trouble but it is often the foreâ€"runner of very serious lung disease. Gray‘s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum soothes and heals the irriâ€" tated membrane and the cough passes away. Gray‘s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum is a carefully compounded preparation and is a specific remedy for all throatandlung affections. 25 cents a bottle. Gray‘s Syrup One bottle will demonâ€" strate its virtue. "When the butter won‘t come put a penny in the churn," is an old time dairy proverb. It often seems to work though no one has ever told why. Red Spruce Gum Don‘t Monkey with a Cough. j ProVverDs$s @9# A Change Suggested. N nkK uie * 20c 1J passages, stops droppir:fl in the throat and fiemman cures Catarrh and Hay Feve:*lom free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co.. Toronto and Buffale is sent direct to the diseased arts dy the Improved Blowe. glegla ‘e ulcers. clears the ait goc. and $1.00 ; all druggists. of Chemists, Toronto, â€" Ontario. SCOTT & BOWNE, Be sure that this picture in the form of a label is on the mpY:r of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. We will send you the penny, 1. e., a sample free. Kelics of Preâ€"Roman Days Unearthed at Reading, England. What the absentâ€"minded old lady called a creamery has just been disâ€" covered near Reading, says the Westâ€" minster Gazette. Twenty urns, conâ€" taining calcined human bones, have been _ uncarthed at _ Sunningdale, near Camerley. _ A mound was being removed in the construction of golf lisks, when three urns were disovâ€" ered. . Under the direction of Mr. A. C. Shrubsole, F. G. 8., curator of the Geolocical and Anthropologisal Department of the Reading Museum, a further search was made, and seyvâ€" enteen more were brought to light. It is believed by competent authoriâ€" ties that the mound was the site of ar ancient crematoriumâ€"probably a Enttlegfo‘qudâ€"u! pre-Ronu!n _ dayse. Some ol the urns are one foot four inches in diameter. They are of anâ€" clent British make, and may safely be ascribed to the time before Briâ€" tain came under the Roman influâ€" ence. It is estimated that the burials must have taken place â€" beâ€" tween 2,000 and 6000 years ago. Some of the urns have peen sent to the British Museum, the Reading Museum, to Oxford and to the Louvre, Paris. " AN ANCIENT CREMATORIUM. New York and Boston Via New York Central. The numerous trains, the excellent service, the uniformity of its trains, Ite four tracks, and the location of its depots in Boston and New York, make the New York Central the (ayâ€" orite line to those polints. _ Jimmy (on the back seat)â€"Please, m, why don‘t th‘ devil make his wife darn his socks ? Ary ticket agent will confirm the above. Entomological Research. Detroit Free Press. Teacherâ€"Now, children this queer insect is called "the devil‘s darning needlie." + W. ErnEst Lewis, of West Flamboro Quebec, states :â€" "I have been troubled wit Catarrh for several years. It impaired the hear ing of my right ear. I used Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder and in a week found : marked improvement. I took three bottles anc could hear as well as ever," You just drop the tube into th« Powder, blow it into the nostrils, and begin to get well at ONCE. Dr. Agnew‘s Heart Cure Feeds the nerves and the blood. _ It is LIFE 1 medicinal form. It transforms the weak an« sickly into the well and healthy. It tones all th vital organs. It‘s the cure for you. 1 This is not a cheap remedy, buw: an inexpensive cure. â€" Remedies arc but remedies. If a CURE is wha: you desire, it is waiting for you. At once the new vitality that comes from proper breathing is felt. The cure is begun. Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrnal Powder you feel the improvement. When driven from Virginia the adâ€" venturers established trade with the West Indies, where sugar succeeded tobacco as the staple of trade. ‘Then came cotton and next coal, which was soon followed by iron. _ Mcanâ€" time there had been a continuous development of trade with India, with China, with South America, with the United States and ultimately with Australia and New Zealand. ‘Nill then the Clyde had been little better than a stagnant ditch, but Glasgow by degrees formed a deep, broad, _ navigable waterway, and then came commerce and shipbuildâ€" ing.â€"Scottish American. Very soon the city became the cenâ€" tre of the tobacco traffic. For a long time thereafter the "tobacco lords" of Glasgowâ€"in their scarlet robes and on their own privileged beatâ€"were almost as strongly markâ€" ed figures in history as woere the merchants of Venice. When the Amâ€" erican colonies revolted and the U.S. republic was _ reâ€"established Glasâ€" gow lost its flourishing tobarcco trade, but some of the "tobacco lords," who held heavy stocks, made enormons fortunes by the rise in prices. These fortunes formed the foundation of larger enterprises elseâ€" where, and the begetting of the nuâ€" merous "merchant princes" that soon characterized Glasgow. | FIVE MINUTES AFTER APPLYING Scottish Metropolis Was Founded 1,800 Years Ago. We hear a great Geal in these days in praise of Glasgow as a truly model city and of its municipalizing in the interest of the citizens nearly every public franchise. That is all true and Glasgow highly merits all praise bestowed upon it. At present, however, we would briefly remind our readers of Glasgow in the olden timeâ€"hundreds of years before it obâ€" tained its present state of perfeecâ€" tionâ€"and of which we now rarely hear a word. It is about 1800 years since Glasâ€" gow was founded by Kentigern or St. Mungo, but the city did not amâ€" ount to much until after the act of union between Scotland and England about 200 years ago. It was that act which enabled the merchant adâ€" venturers of Glasgow to send out their ships to Virginia and Maryâ€" land here for cargoes of tobacco leaf, . Thus tobacco manufacture was the first important foreign trade and home industry established by Glasâ€" gow enterprise. GLASGOW KOARY WiITH AGE No Waste. Detroit Free Press, "It seems to me," remarked the customer, as she watched the man at the market trim the slice of ham she had bought, "you are wastâ€" ing a good deal of thiat meat." "Not at all, madam," he said, genlally, "I weighed it first." a bill to tax bachelors; a Pennsylâ€" vania legislator, one to ‘tax spinâ€" sters over 35; a Missouri legislator, one making it a :misdemeanor for a man to flirt with the teachers or pupils of a boarding school ; a Louâ€" isliana _ legislator, one _ compelling women to wear a skirt which does not touch the ground; a Montana legislator, one to appropriate $%3,â€" 000 for triplets born in Brtte "as a recognition of such patriotie and praisoworthy results." In reâ€" freshing contrast is a bill presentâ€" ed by the woman member of the Utah â€" Legislature providing that "no candidate shall buy for voters, beer, whisky, or any intoxicating drinks, cigars or tobacco in any form, lend them money or promise them jobs."" Its object is to prevent bribery at elections. Nevertheless, women are too emoâ€" tional and impractical to hold ofâ€" fice or engage in politics.â€"N. Y. Sun, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burps, etec. Freak Bills. Within the past week or two a New York legislator has introduced There is also a small, but steady demand for recommendations frbom .pretty women, known to the wrade as beauties, who will furnish strikâ€" ing pictures to go with the adverâ€" tisement. Pictures 6f beauties must be in evening clothes and without hats. A short time ago a medicine comâ€" pany decided on a campaign to a western state. The testimonials of the governor ant . some congressâ€" men were desisred. Many efforts were made to secure them, but all failed. At last the head of the adâ€" vertising bureau, a bright young woman, took the task nersonailly in hand. The governor and the congressmen all happened | to â€" be in Washington at the time. she went on to the capital and planâ€" ned a campaign ‘that lasted _ a fortnight. 4t was most _ successâ€" ful. The officials could not rcesist ber feminine tact. She got testiâ€" monials from all of them.â€"Chicago. Chronicle. ] Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff Women Who Make Money by Giving Testimoniais to Quacks. One would be led to believe {from a perusal of the patent medicine advertisements _ strewn . broadcast over the land that half the women in the land had been at one time hopeless invalids, but had heen snatched from the brink of the grave by the use of this or that nostrum that is guaranteed to cure all the ills flesh is heir to. The fact is that not a few women deâ€" rive a good income by permilting the use of their namesâ€"frequently accompanied by their portraits â€" among the testimonials of the effiâ€" cacy of the drugs. A letter of comâ€" mendatipn from a governor or a member of congress is worth from $15 to $50. Members sol state logâ€" islatures are quoted at from ®10 to $15, Mayors and councilmen are steady at about $5. the whole LPAPE NREOCA uPA CPaAXE | RCYREH l YBRAP Can you arrange the sbove sets of jumbled letters into the names of e snare in 1ifo hoere oo demt THE ABOVE PRIZE .3 severence you can probably make out 5 or 6 0f them. To the person wh wive the sum af Ama as _ 3 2LCRC CCC 5 02907 $200.00 IN COLD CIVEN AWAY FREE If you want soap, buy Sunlight Soapâ€"Octagon Barâ€"and you have paid for nothing but pure soap. If you want something else than soap, buy it independently of the soap, and you know what it has cost you. " You may fool some people all the time ; You may fool all the people some of the time. You cannot fool all the people all the time ;" You cannot long fool a woman. $§15 When you buy Sunlight Soap you are presented with pure quality in the soap itself. â€" You do not pay for loading refuse at the price of soap, You don‘t wear out your clothes in half the time, and ruin your bhands with Sunlight Soap, as with common And no more than you can thus get the present of a horse or a dress can you get a *" present"â€"freeâ€" gratisâ€"for nothingâ€"of diamonds, gold, jewellery, and cutlery, with the purchase of a bar of common soap. Freeâ€"Gratisâ€"For Nothing You Caxxor Loxa Foom a Worax. When the white man wants the black man‘s land he approaches the innocent black with * presents " of beads, colored cloths, ribbons, and other useless trinkets that catch the eye of the poor blackâ€"but that are no earthly use to him. These are all " giftsâ€"freeâ€"gratisâ€"for nothâ€" ing! ! !" We all know who soon owns the black man‘s land. Yet this system of conciliating the innocert is not practiced alone on the negro. <How many women read that they can get aA certain " present" with a certain purchase and forthwith they make the purâ€" chase to get the " present "â€"freeâ€" gratisâ€"for nothing!!! The presâ€" ent may or may not be usefulâ€"but in this twentieth century are there those who believe they have not in the purchase paid for and often dearly paid for the " present"? _ When you buy a dress you do not buy the buttons, and have the dress thrown in. 3 When you want & horse you canâ€" not buy his tecth at ten cents a tooth, and get the horse thrown into the bargain. ADCIT 2 "TC £000€ Sets of Tiee lotters into the names of cight well khown fruits. If so, YOU CAN RE IN Tflii DISTRIBUTIOA OF THE ABOVE PRIZE. It ‘E no €a8y Sask, But by patience and perâ€" reuce You can probably make out 5 or 6 of them. To the person who can make fout the largest number we witl “lllllofOlaHn-d"uDouus. To the person making out the second 1 number the sum of Fifty rs, To the person making the third large: t numnuy "R on Nee hccond 14 varcensdirendiizmat / dsA > CURED BY NOSTRUMS. ONCE. Add UPML mmamnemrare ussm YBRAPRSRE j;l“:} A. W. GLEASON, P Sm Notary Public. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and actsdirectly on the blood and mucous aurfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F.J.CHENEY & €O., Toledo, 0. Sicighing and Slaying. Chicago News. The . Druggist â€" Have ‘you done much sleighing this winter, doctor? The Doctor (absently) â€"No. I have lost only one patient so far. Rratk or Omo, Crty or Touspo, }- Luvcas Counry t Fraxk« J. C@rxcy makes onth that he is the eenior partner of the firm of F. J. Carxsr a Co., doing business in the City of Tol‘ra County and State aforesaid, and that raid 6 will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLâ€" LARS for each and every case of CaTaRm® that cannot be cured by ‘the use of Haum‘s CatarR® Cur:. PRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and lub-crlba;i presence, this 6th day of December, A. D Maru Maru, Tokyo. "My friend says that her Rair when unrolled will reach to the floor," Minard‘s Liniment for salo Sold by all drufgifiuâ€"flk'. tÂ¥ Hall‘s Family Pills are the best In Modern Parlance. N. Y Sun ‘Why did she sue for divorce? *"‘She .tound a perfumed note in hi nunteas 99 "Ah,. I see ; "Yes, if it is cut off," THE CAMPBELL MFC. CO. of HAMILTON, ONTARIO. For sale by all leading dealers. JOHN J. FEE 1,000 MILE AXLE GREASE Consignments of Butter, Poultry and new laid l:fr solicited. Prices firm for choice qualâ€" ities, Choice yonn&Chlrkenn,dry ‘flcted,(-fe“, selling 60 to 80c per pair. l 1pay 80e B;r Ib. for BEESWAX, delivered Toronto. rreapondence anlicited. Butter, New Laid Eggs and Poultry Wanted $10 ePIV ling lnvent,lon;fmamt acientific dis covery; develops heat, :iht. and power from the sun day or night without fire, fuel or exâ€" pense; in actual operation; hundreds of refer ences. Solar Furnace Co , Denver, Colorade YY â€":dlfifiengfl:mi. correapond immed lately with SOCTHOCOMBE, VIEL & RAMs DEXN, TORONTO, CANADA. WANTEDâ€"Enerxetk' men, nursery stock saleemen preferred, correapond immed. WAN‘I‘EDâ€"IIAN OR wWoOoMAN TO RE®p. resent us selling lamp that makes its own gas for onecent ldbr glber.-t oler&omt&uny. Brass lamp free. Ad. dreas Poerfect Light Co., 140 Nassau street, New York. always be used for Children Teething. |; mt.ll.mohfld.mmofumw cures win cotic and is the best remedy for Diarrhosa. ISSUE NO. IO0, 1903, f It Mas No Equal Manufactured only by Write for our free bookJet *How to Make Good Things to Eat." Keep in the house for emergenciesâ€"for suppers, for sandwichesâ€"for any time when you want something good and want it quick. You simply turn a key and the can is open, An appetizing lumch is ready in an instant. Libby, McNeill & Libby Chicago, H1., U. S. A. LIBBY LUNCEEONS made reacy in & few moments. ‘The Wafer Slced Smoked Beef, Pork and Beans, Veal Loaf, Potted Chicken, and lots of good things to eat. will wonderfally increase her yield of milk. It saves feed too, because a smaller amount of well digested food satisfies the demands of the system and every particle of nourâ€" sishment sticks. 50 cents a package. Leeming, Miles & Co., Agents, MONTREAL A Common Bred Cow Are U. $. Government inspected BLOOD PURIFIER Just the Same "What Luck!" INVESTED CLEARS $250,. STaRT AGENTS WANTED DICK‘S ATSWRYREER * ERPA MENT . 1( you can make ply. Do NOT Dirlay, trustâ€"buster." 62 Front Street * Kast, Toronte 27 everyâ€" shon‘ld What it Coms« 10 Ploat a B Plug Tobaced The _ American Toba brouglt out a brand 0 "Baitieâ€"Ar." The ver the name wah probab readers the time _ wht «tared ar one from®ev and fence. of Delicious (Black, Mixe sent to any pe sending it to postage. Mosey was poured « mii even with the eno veloped by advertising heavy deficit, but this ble Mr. Duke. _ HMe we only for trade but fo: macy, amd he knew would be solttied dat "A Free the toh ity for «aid to theâ€"A 1 *Ba t Tobaecco He‘s Mon wA a bishs ARE WE PAmM The Detroit Journa sued a special export ained an article wri ©. Morris, the United in Windsor, Ontario. things, he eaid ; "It is commorly kn Carace in wlider pati erowill buy ly upâ€"toâ€"la e@ry season machines 1 the next s inmes may ] bert awill c« B froxxl o0 and these ; are shippo« reduced in duty, and t to the Can hine." United Sta competitor than a the «=» tbmy Un really t gatherc plement Cann«in at that «hipped i give sat iamplemet pect this to rathor extra« y Mr. Morr wlin gigt )t tion «in e clu tim« wl a 1 OONEâ€"W Ar Te many points in V fornia, Oregon and EVERY The Union Pacilic ® Colopist ‘Tickete a mtes from Missouri $25.00 10 Kar gelee and mai points. . ‘Ticket June 15, 1903. uo sermts t RBpok anme £25.00 $22.50 W ns‘ . attlie. gene. Alba kand. Tekels « i 1903. man pronin tobaceo us for the stat kKrews _ H. 1* Janes Building F. B. CHOATE W a Detroit, Mi TALK IN MILL ger fire th quelce thin aatll des \ y 25. 00 w W i [ 1 [ _ rraae‘. Address . 0.00 0.00 i€ (X) 0143,003 t4 x Upmmond is the stt for £0 Ni W )6 &A Brave Mt W Tekels OL L t Address nNOWI 1 Ogder Butte t3 On TH e F. 1:000.0 Pop DOwe Nat idia t OT I M 11% JMI n« Tw

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