West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Apr 1904, p. 6

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P"% | + M [d Â¥ 0 00¢04Â¥4Â¥44¢¢444 _ If this serew revolves 1250 times a minute the the blades of the provne!! In a boat of high power the peller will be twentyâ€"three inches diameter. This means that its ; phery is a little over six feet. Two Miles a Minute. It requires some study to ascertain the precise speed required in an engine that drives the fast autoboats that plough through the water at the rate of twenty or twentyâ€"five miles an hour, and having ascertained the figures one is almost inclined to disbelieve them, although it is said they cannot lie. To attain the speed named the propeller wheel revolves from 500 to 1.230 times in a minute. When the number of reâ€" volutions is stated une rarely compreâ€" hends what it means. °_ VMS Screw revolves at the rate of Tt“:lll up a child in the way he 250 times a minute the outer edge of should go and when he is old ho he blades of the propeller are cutting will not depart from it. mmommflmm ic _ "_"lass. 2M PA 3 en s CY â€"~"** i 5. _.!',, â€" ;: ) .'.. s a" 4 i K > * * 4 td Je 15e t o = y NesA PS in ie ks e P i §¥’ “ “‘ «mss ‘ : ’riv « _”: ’ d ues JPs L < n | /3 mR J â€"Luncheons EED CTIUUIT CC nE OTUIITD Pleasant car and a Georgetown car. But that‘s not all. Wo were wa tching him again one day. Nig was waiting for a car A yellow one came along and he didn‘t even look at it. He didn‘t even wag his tail. Then a green one came along. Nisg pissed that up, tod. I Jell you I felt bad, I thought he‘d lost the trick of reading the colors. Then I saw over the rear ekylight ;E and G streets Yes, sitâ€" ree, tat dog knows ths difference, all right. He tells ‘em by the white tag on the front dashboard. i . Ng won‘t go around by the gas tank. He always takes a car straight through to Georgetown. "He keows all the conductors on the line now, and they never ask for his fare any more. Hoe goes up to Georgetown every time Bill‘s off duty. And he rides, too. That dog won‘t walk any place except to a fire. And then he runs." While Driving the Boats GREAT SPEED OF MOTOR ENGINES "It ain‘t overy"izrbi;;: that knOWN‘ tho difference &otween a Mount | BIEIAACEME mEW HUIL io ASmrovdemiecllll "But that‘s nothing," said the fireâ€" man. "Nig‘s the smartest dog in Washington, and no mistake. We caught him one day standing at Twelfth strect and the avenue waitâ€" ing for m car to visit his pal up in Georgetown. A‘wo â€" Fourteenth street cars, yellow oses, prissed the corner in succossion. Niz passed ‘em up He rever moved. Then a groen car came along, and Niz jamped on the platiorm. We ran un as far as Thirteonth street to see what would happen. Well, the conductor tried to put Nig off. The old fellow showed h‘s teeth, and the conductor retivred. Me watched the car out of elzht, and the last we saw as it turned by the Treasury was Nig sitting it . down proper. We bought him a leaâ€" | ther collar for that. ; One day one of tho firemen standâ€" ing at Twelfth and D streets saw the black mascot board an avenue car. The do; was alonc, but ho know his business. Hoe had lsarned to save himselif a iong tramp by riding on the cars. t Nig‘s particuilar friend in the comâ€" pany lives in Georgetown, and when the fireman s oil duty the dog trots up to S4th street to visit him. Then Nig hit upon ia better scheme. At the fire Nig was one of the first to enter thoe burning building. He bounded up the five flights of stairs and was present with his company on the scene of the fire on the top floor. That night at the fire comâ€" pany house, on D street, he was reâ€" galed with a pound ol lish and caltâ€" ed "great dog." As the engine crossed the car tracks a big dog bounded from the sidewalk, directly in the path of the engise. He faced the plunging horses and barked his disapproval of the clanging bell. It looked as though the horses must run over the dog and probably cause them to stumble and go down, with serious conseâ€" querce to Loth animanls and fire apâ€" paratus. The driver knew this, and took a itighter hold on the reins. Nig also reâ€"med to real zo the situa. tion. Bounding at the othor dog, ho soized it by the neck and swung to one side, so that it rolled into the gutter, clear of the wheels of the engine. The bystanders on â€"the sicewalk applauded the act with cheers, as ithough a heroic feat had been performed. But Nig did not seem to know that he had dons anything but his duty. (Washington Post.) Nig, the best known fire dog in Washington, and the pet and masâ€" cot of Chemical Company No. 1, disâ€" tinguisted himscl! and probably preâ€" vented an accidient to th» apparaius last Sunday afternoon. On the way to the fire at the Mâ€"zerott building Nig preceeded the engine. The heary fire fighting machine, on its way up Twelith street at a galiop, was handicapped by cabs, carriages and othor vehicles which lined the curbs, and loft only a tunâ€" nel through which there was a free passage. N‘g was ahoad of the apparâ€" atus, almost under the horses‘ feet, when the E. street crossing was reached. They Exceed periâ€" proâ€" in E h s atiats d i C200 MCOLC sick. If ye cast pearls before swine they will turn again and rend you. It is tettor to dwoll in a corner of the housso top, than with a brawling woman in a wide house. Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spivrit before a fall, The race is not to the swift nor the battle to the strong. The wicked flee when no man purâ€" sucth. fiex. io rnalis Bepairy 2s on t i .Hope defertred maketh fess Lnerewith than a house full of sacrifices with strife. Better a dinner of herbs where love is than a stalled ox and hatred therewith. Fear God and keep His command. ments, for this is the wholo duty of man, Go to the ant, thou sluggard, conâ€" sider her ways and bo wise, He that is of a merry heart hath a continual feast. Hell and destination are never full; £o Ehc eyes ol man are never satis-‘ #in As a jewel of gold in a awine*y snout so is a fair woman who is without discretion. Before honour is humility. Better is a dry morsel and quiet, ness therewith than a house full oft sacrifices with strife. A good name is rathor to be chosen than great riches. A soft answer turneth away wrath; Lbut grievous words stir up anger, A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver. In beginning an examination into the proverbs of different peoples and different ages, one can hardly start with better material than the bits of crystalized wisdom to be found in the pages of the Old Testament. Among those wise sayings in common use whoseo origin is to be found here are the Toliowing ; power mowor will use a gallon of gasoâ€" lline an hour, and will cost about 16 | or 17 cents an hour to run. A twentyâ€" { four horseâ€"power motor will take three 4 gallons an hour, which will make the 1 cost about 50 cents an hour. Shiloh‘s Consumption CUP@E There is a motor boat being â€" built that is to have a 500 horseâ€"power motor. This motor will consume about sixty gallons of gasoline an hour, and if run for ten hours a day will cost more than £90 a day. T n in y n t e en valve is opened to let the gas out, If there are four cylinders at work on the same shaft, and many of the fast boats have four cylinders, then each operation is repeated four times. Some motors have eight cylinders and one is now being built that will have twelve cylinders. It is figured tnat a motor uses a pint of gasoline for each horseâ€"power an hour. â€" An eight horseâ€" power motor will use a gallon of gasoâ€" Iine an bour. and ®ill anct ‘ahnnt 18 The Minneapolis and the ocean liners are driven by steam, but in the fast autoboats gasoline is the motive power. It can be understood to what a nicety the mechanism in a gasoline engine is adjusted when it is stated that to make 1,000 revolutions a minute means that in a four cycle engine, there are 500 sprays of gasoline forced into the cylinder, 50 times the electric battery makes a spark and 500 timse the escape The propellers which drive the fast Atlantic liners are. about fortyâ€"eight feet in cireumference. The tip of the blade will cover about a mile ard a fifth each minute when revolving at full speed. The cruiser Minneapolis, which is one of the fastest in the navy, has proâ€" pellers fortyâ€"eight feet in cireumference. They make 132 revorutions a minute, so that the tip of the blade when driven at full speed is travelling at the rate of 6,336 feet each minute, and the helicoid path, or the distance covered by the spiral twist of the blade, is 8,870 feet a minute, or more than a mile and a half. Prices: 8. C. Wrsurs & Co. 303 25¢.50c.$1 LeRoy,N.Y., Toronto, Can. e The Lung lure ‘Tonic 2. It cures the most stubborn kind of coughs and colds. If it doesn‘t cure you, your money will be refunded. This remarkable speed is produced by a motor that is only twentyâ€"eight inches wide, forty inches long and fortyâ€"one inches high,. It develops a horseâ€"power of m?bout sixtyâ€"five, $ an inch. To give them a grip on the water each blade is twisted slightly, like a spiral, and that twist increases the stretch of the blades beyond its cireumâ€" ference by about 1.4, so that what marâ€" ine engineers call the helicoid path of the propeller would be very nearly two miles in a minute. through the water at the rate of just one and a third miles a minute. These propellers are not flat. If they were they would have no purchase on the water and the boat would not move Do you catch cold easily ? Does the cold hang on ? Try PROVERBS. 500 timse the escape the heart Probably no small part of Poe‘s conâ€" temporary fame grew out of that queer notion. While he lived, and for long afâ€" ter most of what was said of him was in a deprecating, apologetic vein. The world was asked to pardon the habits of drun}â€" enness because of the genius, and was assured that without the former the latter could not have existed. Fifty or sixty years ago, when Poe was living, there was a curious impresâ€" sion widely prevalent that an abnormal thirst for brandy, a mania for getting more or less drunk, was an indubitable sign of genius. The curious delusion has not wholly disappeared even yet, but it was a common article of faith then and is only exceptional now. It would have done little harm, perhaps, if it had not carried with it a notion that many who possessed genius could manifest it only while intoxicated. Fame a (Chicag There is grave « ther Poe ever di him to lasting fan lurid, one may . extravagance of i morbid and fanta agination at all 0 liitine type. One bottle of MINARD‘S LINIMEXTD warmed on flazrnels and appl.ed on my breast cured mss completely. C. H. COSSERBOONM, Rossway, Digby Co., N. S. Dear Sirs,â€"This fall I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest very bad so that I could not work, and it hurt me to breathe. I tried all kinds of liniments and they did me no good. I Rossway, Jan. 28, 1901. C. C. RICHARDS & CO.: The United States statistician says twoâ€"thirds of a school year would be saved to American girls and boys by putting the metric system in place of the other twelve or thirteen systems. Carry the enormous saving of time into the countingâ€"houses of the country, into al kinds of calculations from the farm to the factory, and a fairly good idea is obtained of what the metric system would save. A TIME SAVED BY METRIC SYSTEM. "I was under treatment with some of the best physiclans in London (England) for what the{ diagnosed as incurable heart trouble. suffered agzonies through pains about my heart, fainting apelis, palpitation and exhaustion. As a drow ning mangrasps at a atraw, I tried Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for v.ge Heart. The first bottle relieved me greatly, and when I had used two bottles all the symptoms of my heart trouble had left me," â€"A, Lavers, Collingwood, Ont. 85 Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment Cures Eczema, 35¢ In Half an hour after Mr. Lavers took the first dose of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart ho was on the road to Permanent recovery. A girl is willing to marry a man she doesn‘t love because she thinks it will somehow come around the way it doe.g‘ in the story books.â€" New, York Press. A woman gets her enjoyment out of talking about scandals she isn‘t in, a man out of being in scandals that aren‘t talked about. It‘s funny how much more extraâ€" vagant it seems to take your own sister to a 25â€"cent lecture than an old schiool chum to a champagne dinner. ( A woman worries a goodl deal all her life over the possibility of not getting as many flowers at her {funâ€" eral as she deserves. A man‘ can forget to love a woâ€" man quicker than she can learn not to want him to. Proved Priceles:.â€"luby coats and 'clnnumon.fluvor. Ur. Agnrew‘s Liver Pills are household favorites. Impurities leave the system. ‘The nerves are toned. The blood is purified. The complexion is bright and ruddy. Headaches vanish and perfect health follows their use. 40 doses 10 cents. =â€"101 + Grand opera is a good training to go somewhere clse to get some fun. . Turned the Tide (Chicago News.) Tailorâ€"Do you wear padded shoulâ€" ders, my little man? Wilieâ€"Naw; pad de pants! Dat‘s where I need it most. The cure is to tone up the kidâ€" neys with Dodc‘s Kidncy Pills. Podd s Kidney _ Pills make healthy _ kidâ€" neys. Healthy _ kidneys quickly cleanse the blood of all impurities and the "spring feeling" is replaced with a vigor of body and buoyancy of spririt that makes work a pleaâ€" sure. ; ‘This means ex"ra work for the kidneys, and if they are at all tired or worn out they fTail in their work. The result is clogged circulation and that tired spring fecling. The cure is to tone up the kidâ€" neys with Dodc‘s Kidncy Pills. Podd s Kidney â€" Pills mako healthy â€" kid. Ihc Vkidilejs., hfx(fl'c_\v'flel'ig(i -};(;1;' t‘llx‘(’a In the fvinter you "yet used" to the cold, you think. As a nitter of fact, it is the body that gets prepared. It puts on a fortilicaâ€" tion iof extra tissue that keops the cold out. In the spring time this tissue is thrown off by the body and ‘if the system is all in good working order, the blood carries away ‘the castâ€"off tissue, which is in turn fl!terod out of the blood by The spring is here. You can {feel it"in every part of your body. Your clothes aro too heavyy and though you are not too sick, you are too tired to walk, too tired to work, yes, even too tired to eat. It‘s that "spring feeling." Do you know the cause of it ? No, all you want to know is how to get rid of it. Well, the explanation and the cure are alike simple. a, y type Cause and Cure of the Tired Feeling That is Epidemic at This Season of the Year. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Will Do It Naturaily and Well. Fame andâ€"Brandy! (Chicago Chronicle.) is grave question by many wheâ€" e ever did anything to ‘entitle lasting fame. He had a curiosity ne may almost say grotesque, zance of imagination in certain and fantastic ways and no imâ€" n at all of the broad, noble, upâ€" SHAKE OFF THAT SPRING FEELING Reflections of a Bachelor. and TORONTO A Utilitarian. up _ Mrs. Blankâ€"Y have one. Assistance. Mrs. Blackâ€"Did your husband help you decide on an Easter hat? Then He Kept Busy. (Cincinnati Enquirer.) He stole a kiss, but strange to sa She did not bid him stop ; She merely said in a Fracious way, "Sir, this is no retail shop." Via the Chicago, Union Pacific & Northâ€" Western Line, from Chicago, April 23 to May 1. Choice of routes going and reâ€" turning. Correspondingly low rates from all points. Two trains a day from Chiâ€" ecago through without change. Daily and personally conducted tourist car excurâ€" sions. Write for itinerary and full parâ€" ticulars regarding special train leaving Chicago April 26.â€"B. H. Bennett, 2 East King street, Toronto, Ont. Some of the rooms in the new apartâ€" ment houses are so small that the tenâ€" ants have to use condensed milk in their coffee.â€"Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. A sailor brave, no other grave mz Would he have sought, nor ask it His requiem the ocean wave, His battleship his casket. Many a man has found the key to sucâ€" cess, but saw too many keyholes to put it in. Almiral Makaroff. (Toronto star.) > Brave Makaroff is surely dead, No more the Japs shall flout him; At rest he lies in ocean‘s bed, His gallant crew around him. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia, "Can I see the editor?" inquired a stranger, as he stepped into the editor‘s offiice of a Carbon county ncws{mper, and turned to the inkâ€"daubed devil, who was roosted on a high stool. "He‘s sick." "What‘s the matter with him? "Dono,‘ said the boy. "One of our subscribers gave him a bag of flour and a bushel of pertaters the other day, and reckon he‘s foundered." $50.00 to California and Return American Magnateâ€"Well, say half of what I‘ve got. The Dukeâ€"But what are you going to do with the other half? ‘You have no more daughters. His Grace Was Grasping. (Modern Society.) The Dukeâ€"How much of a settlement will you make? PENNSYLVANIA BRAIN THROBS. What Zion City Should Secure. (Cleveland Piain Dealer.) Zion City has a printing establishâ€" ment and the superintendent is looking for a printer who does not chew, drink, smoke or swear. Of course, there are printers of this deseription, but they are not looking for jobs in Zion City. What the superinterndent should do is to compromise on an automatic attachâ€" ment to a linotype machine that can be worked with a crank. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. The Mighty Microbe, "Here," sgid Marmorek, picking up a phial thoe size of a finger, "ig erough microbic poison to kill off all Paris." D»> you wonler that, Cur» ing the strife betweon Spain and Cuba, a bold, bad Cuban sougcht adâ€" miss‘on to him and asked to purchase a& germ which could ne let loose in the Spanish camp? Marmorek was so ftickled by the man‘s native noâ€" tilon of his functions that he burst . out laughing in the fellow‘s face ; whereup>n the Cubin, < utragod, cry., ing, "I see, you, are not a serious scienlist," turned an incisnant back upon the institute.â€"Isracol Zangâ€" will, in the Reader. Use Lever‘s Dry Soap (a powder) to wash woolens and flannels,â€"you‘ll like it. 32 Minadr‘s Liniment Cures liums, etc. 7 PERITET TV EECTITY ‘AIAIU GOTC or, such as clo} blue, hyacinth blue, orchidee mauye, vert salade, caressâ€" ingâ€"how I love that word !â€"a black picture ,shape, theo feather monopi}â€" zing. indeed, the whoie decorative sitâ€" uation, _ consumates a millinery triumph of the highest order of clcâ€" gance. My horoscope predicts a danâ€" gerous run, one verging to ubiquity, which a crowning triumph is found in one of thegss black chapeaux with its accompanying feathor of Gelicate ‘ genre. +777 Ostrich feather of our best afâ€" factions is the Noeil Gwynne variety, which by a deft manipulation is disposed upside down or curled over on its Ibuck. This is some pale colâ€" o c aud 097. Te MienaneP alec .2 t ‘ exceeding extravaga The ostrich feather factions is the Neil C which by a deft 0 Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere It is in Some Pale Color and Sets o f the Black Chapeau. A fact with regard to millinery that I am afraid must be chron» icled, although I do so with a bad heart, writes Mrs. Jack May â€" in London Queen, is the cost thereof. There are cheap models, of course, but frankly no one wants thenm ; they mean well, but they do not look well. The untrimmed shapes _are marvels at the price, and in a weak moment we succumb beâ€" fore their economical possibilities, But, lacking the subtlest millinery faculty, the possibilities end at the purchase of the shape, after which we flounder about with veils â€"and flowers, a*d cacheâ€"peignes, _ and mostly produce failures. Nothing either in millinery or modes is so disastrously misleading as â€" simplicâ€" ity, which every touch tells. _ Su. preme efforts aro always inspired, and the only millinery efforts _ a Tastidious taste can induce us to accept this year are essen tially lnspirations, creations of dangerous simplicity, the result only of an e.fpcieeding _ extravagance. Too Much of a Feast. ad THE TINTED FEATHER, ; he said I couldn‘t say, COFFEEâ€"DRINKING IN BRAZIL, Brazilians are great coffee drinkers, Numerous cups are drunk each day by the average man and woman. The beverâ€" age is made very strong and very sweet, It producs an exhilaration of a more in tense and lasting kind than beer. Those addicted to the habit become very restâ€" less _ and scarcely able to sit still or stand still even for a moment. "1 believe it to be the most offactâ€" Ivo remsosdy for the Stom=ch and Nerves in the market." is what Annie Patterson, of Sackville, N. B., says of South American Nervine, for, she says, La Grippe and the complications which follo wed 1t left her next to dead with Indigesticn, Dyspepsin and General Nervous Bhattering. It cured her.â€"100 AT ALL EVENTS, SHE WON. A Kreacher, who went to a Kéntucky paris where _ the parishioners bred horses, was asked to invite the prayers of the congregation for Lucy Grey. He did so, They prayed three Sundays for Lucy Grey, On the fourth he was told not to do it any more. "Why," said the preacher, "is she dead?" "No," answered the man, "she won the Derby." We will give One HMundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. bK local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by conâ€" stitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. _ When this tube is inâ€" flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperâ€" fect hearing, and when itis entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and uniess the inflamâ€" mation can be taken out and this tuberestorâ€" ed to its normal eondition, hbhearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Cumrrfi, which is nothing but an inflamed condition 6f the mucous surfaces. Colonist Rates DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED A Spanish naturalist, Dr. Ribera, has proved that fish can hear and distinâ€" guish sounds and words. Concealing himâ€" self behind a bush, he taught the carp in a pond to come to the surface for food every time he spoke a certain senâ€" tence. To other words not associated with feeling they paid no attention. Insist on being supplied with one of the following brands : In Rolisâ€"*** tandard," **Hotel," *"*York," In Sheetsâ€"* Imperia‘," *‘ Royal!," *‘*Regal SOUTHERN PACIFIC A little Sunlight Soap will clean cut glass and other articles until they shine and sparkle, Sunlight Soap will wash other things than clothes. 4B Bold bfi Druiglst-. T5e. Take Hall‘s Family Pills for Constipation. Climate Goes with the Land Use ONLY the SOFT, SILKY, TOUGH TOILET PAPERS FISH UNDERSTAND LANGUAGE. TELL THE WHOLE STORY * The San Joaquin Valley," «California for the Settler," "©The Land of Opportunity,"" and other descriptive matter free to agents. Write to H. F. CARTER, 75 Yonge Street, â€" â€" . _ Winter has much sunshine and warmth and GROWTH ISs CONTINUOUS all the vear. F. J, CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0 IN CALIFORNIA Kz ty Tec " ol lxÂ¥) iW &7 i BOOKS PUBLISHED BY THE armers‘ Crops THEIR LEVEL BEST beca use MANUFACTURED The woman who has mastered the art of holding her tongue, even when in the right, has little fear from her enemics. Above station in New York is «sltuated corner Fourth avenue and 42nd street, ; the New York Central is the only trunk | whose trains enter it. New York Central Lands You in Grand Central Station " "York," *"*Mammoth," &c. 1," *"*Regal," "Orient," &c. o rtes) ;u;"l:.\,'. LoX A.D. 1851 $33.00 from Chicago tella dld::,out ‘nl&te.. recelpts, m leases, #, W property exe seizure, landlord and tenant, gf watercourses, etc., one agent aold in three days ; another sold ®% |, Freach edition now ready ; outh+ 2 outht to-d%‘y: If not satisfactor refunded. he J. I.. Nichols Co.; Toronto. Mention this paper. The Independent Cash Mutral mnf]I surance Company, Toronto, Canada, Applications will be received tor Ontari A'e:ele- at leading towns anda vlllu;zv.«.l Ardo drera head office, 24 King street went. Chas, C, VanNorman, President and Managing Director ; Wm. Gray, Superinten lent. ESW 12,00 to $20.00 weekly by representin f-hla.‘tah her spare time ‘The pou® tion is muut lnddprofiluhle the year round. I gladly send particulars to any lady who may need to make some money, ud’wfll eolmee you that this is no decep. tion. Mre, Davidson, drawer GG, Brantforg Ont â€" Mention this paper, “' AMan Oc o 1"e o ARNBERAL â€" SERYAXNT. home. fldru. o’ apply &-"l‘i:- c‘(‘mfur‘&& Haniiton, Ont. â€" ¥¥» Hoilton, se e nmmmerm es on mm mt s mm s s o wws.. ANTEDâ€"HOUSEMAID, Goop w ,~~ ‘W oo-loru.“blfi home, four ml»:iguAL':;',?' p-,o.(BoI‘llllon, ighfield School," Hamil dx Mrs. Winslow‘s Odotilu Byrup «h always be em lor' J;',‘“.?,"’" 'l’eetgln.g.o.}d‘ s00 the o s the gums, cures eou:h and is the best remedy for Ularrh@:m" WHHHHNNNNINNSIINSSNTINNIENIierecitritmemmmmmesane ... WwWAyterA GENERAL highest _ wages naid BrausH & o. NO BRASS EYELETS [cEXq) A POPULAR CORSET FOR 1904 STYLE C LONG HIP J Any Lady Can Make E;;.; Toronto, Ont. BUSINESS Guipr MANUFACTURED ONLY ry TORONTO, â€" oxnp 253 NO. 18 1904, + mortfzc,.' exempt from «litches and i week m o lmg(on street fire. Less t were shoot in the roof of | partment had \fight in its 1 led his mon â€" house of A. . its upper s on the dlams« »nderneath, a «dlown a hose f Chief Thomp he experienc that his servi A comparativ him out of tancously wit &he splendid â€" sulated, is aster. _ Wi Coronto s g9 pared to wh Electn at the gale fi the de «detach tory, odds a buildin meant other | the O that h And 1 house : the fir rich w as any ween 0 skill a depart: Canadi mceross by an i fire chi of batti and ove standing embers . through mant wal nade side : tered to 1 walls. A seers wad of the Es and telegar and men a while the of tangled southeas=t streets th the Mcela: witr _ the acingly, w deep with street is a arises the and throug skeleton 0 shroud of departed p Gra sew month Buch is the great fire. "I ness commu is recognize eity‘s progi eaped the rivals oppo selves at 0 be mantain so willingl»y onto to.tigh in other wa; the fire. o "A_‘ gtreet thro old busines morth half stretches @ and twisto «vring the 0 Tt is i ed «listric on the s eorner ol eustom | the â€" dess Yestordas house nos Bay str« With fow the commen hand of the ,eitl‘rdll.\'- puined _ wal Toflmw's 1 Mer tir Acres . Factor Emplo: Total | Insura wrmie 1 street 14

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