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Durham Review (1897), 5 May 1904, p. 2

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- .l 3ra I ;n .L Whether or not lamps need clean- lng and trimming. they: should be mm: with oil every: day. They burn, better when the taunt ls full ot oil. When the inside of the hunt is found to have a sediment. the residue ot oil sc'rottld he bourcd out and thrown sunny and strained and used for oth H' household purposes, such as cl, van): moukly or damp woodwork in A will“ or in the combination cl " to It the nick needs trimming. take a match of smooth bit of wood and gently rub it over the edge ot the wick. alter turning tho wick down until the metal tube holding it is on a line with the lower edge ot the burned out, crusty rim ot the wick. The metal tube new as a guide for the hand, thus making the trimmlng (Wen. Lamps should be kept perfectly clean on the inside as well as on the outside. They should be Cttt'e- iully annual and tiled each morn- mg. and when necessary cleaned out and trimmegt.3 The burner oTa lump should especially look.. ml after, but this is the part must Aten neglected. The fine holes in t, or the "gauze," through which the Jr is admitted to tho flames should k,' kept entirely free from 911 and lust. The little machlnery which 1:: was tho wick up and down must I :-‘.be cleaned out when necessary. it Y"' lamp is a large brass lamp mm a tube tor ventilation running leur through the tonal: to the burner. so that the air ascends to the mick from beneath, be careful to examine this space. for it us like.. ly to become choked with dust and burned ott particles of the wick. Careful Housewife Keeps Her Lamp Trimmed and Ready. It Is not an uncommon “thing tor women who are fastidious in other matters to pay little or no atten.. tion to lamps except to till them when necessary and trim the wicks when they becone uneven. Ask for Minard’s and take no Other. The Crown Princess of Roumania. who is a granddaughter of Queen Victoria. and her children would be in the line of succession to the British throne had she not forfeited her rights in canine..- tion therewith by marrying , Roman (fathom. The English law does mat ub- ject to s prince or princess of all: reign- ing house wedding a men ber of the Greek church, a Jewess, a Mohametan or a member of any Christian or .m- Christian faith. But ever since the not of settlement, in 1700, which forms part and parcel of the British constitution. marriage with a. Roman Catholic car- ries with it forfeiture of all rights of succession to the English throne, toch for the contracting parties and their lesttn4Htts.--Marquise' de Fontenoy in N. Y. Tribune. Then there is the reigning Duke of Save-Coburg, a. grandson of Queen Vic- toria, his sister, Princess Alice of Al- bany, who married Prince Alexander of Ted: the other day at Windsor; Prin- cess Ernest of Ilohenlohe, another of Queen Vietoria's granddaughters, and her children; the King of Wurtemberg and his daughter, married to the Prince of Wied; also Prince Victor and Prince Louis Bonaparte, their sister, the widowed Duchess of Aosta, and her little boy, Prince Humbert of Italy, Count of Salemi, now about 15 years " age, their rights of succession coming to them through their father’s mother/ who was Princess Caroline of Wurtem- berg. Nor should I omit the Duke of Brunswick and Cumberland, with his children, among them his oldest daugh- ter, Marie Louise, married to Prince Maximilian of Baden, future Grand Dulce of. that country. In addition to these there is the Crown Prince of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, whose mother, Princess Augusta, the old grand Duchess of Mecklengurg-Strelitz, since the death of her brother, the Duke of Cambridge, and of her cousin, Queen Victoria, is now the only surviving Mfehild, of King George III. of Eng- nd. Her son’s two daughters, one of them now Crown Princess of Monte- negro, and the other married to the Frencr druggist's son, Count Jametel, are also in the line of succession, and might in certain eventualities inherit the throne of England._ l s. new dynssty into me long list of heirs to the throne of England. There is no crown in the world that hs_s such s varied assortment of Ionian Frances sud princesses that sre in t e me of succession thereto as that of Great Britain. They include the pre- sent German Emperor, his children, his brother, Prince Henry, and his sisters, one of whom is Crown Princess of Greece, whose children, one of whom will he the future King of Greece, are through her likewise tn the line of BWV cession to the throne of King Edward, Then there is the Grand Duke of Hesse and his sisters, one of whom is the Em- press of Russia, whose four little daugh- ters sre all now among the eventual heirs to the British throne. King Edward's order-in-Council, just mindsets! in 1 special issue of the Man Geute, giving his sanction es eovereign to the marriege of Princess Alexandra. of Cumberlahd, of Bruns- wick and of Great Britain, to the grand duke of FNeklentturg-sehkerin---a sanc- tion required under the terms of the English royal marriage law in order to render the union in question a valid one --mar be said to signalize the advent of ""inootteeFirrnisavevung Use ONLY the SOFT, SILKY, TOUGH TOILET PAPERS mm on being-applied with muchomm = In Rum“ unheard.” “Hotel." “York," ' tthtmmttttt," " tn Show“ 'mporitr," " Royal.” “Regal." “Orient," do. LIGHT ON THE LAMPS. Ming water and soap tor I .. tho iron sink in the kitchen. y' the best and clearest oil '. ('houp kerosene often gives i 'nsant odors and does not yhtly'. l " have a lamp turned low. It In BRITISH Tmtomt. dllii'l,a!itIi,t?(l (iCe7elf,.5 an! MANUFACTURED BY It's after a man is found out that he begins to repent. Give Misery the Cold Shoulder, (Atlanta Constitution.) _ Now. mind whether or no misery likes company. When you see him hanging his hat up and feeling around for a chair all you have to do is-tell him it's your day to go a-fishin' and you’ve only three minutes to catch a train and get the jug tilled. French Village. I know M'INARD‘S LINIM’EN'D will cure Croop. A Cape Island. I know MINARD’S LINIMJEN'P is the best remedy on earth. 7 JOSEPH! A. SNOW. I know. MTIThRD's LINIMENT, Mil cure Diphtheria, Colored Tailors in Washington. (Sartorial Art Journal.) One of the best tailors in Washington, D. C., is a colored man, who is employed by one of the largest establishments in the national capital. He is an expert in uniforms and makes big money. There are also two firms of colored merchant tailors in Washington who have a large andl growing trade, and prosper accord- Ing y. All these things he is responsible for; but that is by no means all. He must also keep a minute record of all transac- tions of this sort, and must have a watchful eye upon the passengers to note that his lieutenants among the men are giving them prompt and cheerful ser- vice. He has a record of every passen- ger travelling with him, and all the de. tails connected with his journey. If you sailed with him last year or twenty years ago, he can refer to his books and tell you the date of the voyage, its dura. tion, your room and seat at table, and just what stewards served you.---), "Stewards of an Ocean Liner," by \Vin- throp Packard, in the May Booklovers' Magazine. The comfort of the passengers de- pends, perhaps, more on the vigilance and executive ability of the chief stew- ard than anyone else. He it is who or- ders the supplies for a voyage, has a minute knowledge of what the store- rooms and refrigerators contain, and sees that the menu for each meal is tun. ple, well cooked, and daintily served. He makes arrangements in port for the en- tire trip, plans each day's meals at sea, and, with the assistance of the chief ecok, gets up the menu card. You will find him ornings in his office, just off the grand staircase, making up his books and records; but during the rest of the day he is all over the ship, now taking a look at the storerooms far below to see that groceries and provisions are rightly served out to the cooks, now inspecting the refrigerators to note the tempera- ture, and again watching the butchers with precise knowledge of how meats shall be cut, and seeing that they are delivered to the cooks on time and in the right quantities. _ __ - - l The Marine “Minister ofthe Interior' Norway. Mks Shiloh’s "e (Eonsumptionx Sharply' (warusr--Aiit yes, tired of Ttntehin. W, The Tired Razor. (Catholic Standard and Times.) thysasrartMy nmr’s in pretty poor condition. I believe it's tired. You key tineyjay {nugget that way. A "I've been astonished at the amount of extra weer I've got out of my socks by this easy method. It has saved me many a damning bill at the laundry, and if you will try it, your wife will have less darning to do." "f am worse " than you," declared the economical man’s unmarried friend, "for Pre got no wife to darn for me. "But," he went on, "1've found a. way to make my socks lost more than what you might call their normal life. It's simple enough. Don't wear the same sock on the same foot more than one by at a time. Put to-dny’s left sock on the right foot to-rnorrow, and so on. A BIT or DOMESTIC ECONOMY. “There's a mint of money waiting for the man-or the woman-who will in. vent I. sock that won't wear out," said the man with an ‘economical turn of mind. “I can’t afford to buy a new fair of socks every time my toes poke a. 1010 through a sock, and I hate to have my wife spend most of her time darning for In a country house where a large number at lam are used. it " bet. ter to keep them in a little closet by themselves than to expo” them on a shelf in the kitchen. where they, are sure to collect dusty t I ', creates gun and use. up as much on as when it burns ngb‘tlyL It It " new to have a lamp during the night in a lick room use a Mn)! night law and than: it at full force. T ' The Lung Jore Tonic It is guaranteed to cure. It it doesn'6, we’ll refund your money. Prices: B. C. W2u.s&Co. 304 Me. 50c. " LeRoy, N.Y..Toronto.Cln. Worry wont cure a cough. When you find a cough holding. on-- yhen everything else has failed-. JOHN D. BOUTILLIER. J. F. CUNNINGH'AML Russian Czar. Bow has it coma to pass that an autoerat, who is a sincere lover of peace and who has the control of at- fairs in his own hands, has brought his country; to the verge of war? In the first place, it must be remem- bered that autocrats, like ordinary statesmen in other forms of govern- ment, do not 'alway'a for-see the ulti- mate consequences of their deci- "ions, and are liable to find them- selves, unexpectedly. In a situation from which, war Iaitho only means of exit consistent with the national in- terests and the national honor. Even the pacific Mr. Gladstone let himself be drawn into! the Egyptian campaign. and afterwards drifted dangerously! near to a great war with Russia. It must: be remembered, further, that the autocrat form oy government has its drawbacks as well as advantages in matters ot foreign policy. It does not require to watch and be guided br the ever- cllanging currents of public opin- ion, and it can therefore adopt a politiquo de longue haleine; but it is not nearly: so independent of pox pular sentiment as is commonly, sup- _ posed, for its strength lies in its‘ being the representative of nation-l al conceptions and national aspir- ations, and it it fails to he true to these it weakens itself. He would he a very: bold Czar who would sac- rifice a great national interest to love of peace or any other person- al feeling. It ever a Czar was Justified in disregarding the views: of the ul- tra-patriotic section ot his sub- Jects, it was "Alexander: II., when he accepted the decisions of the Con- gress of Berlin, in order to avoid a great European struggle; but there is no doubt that that wise. courage- ous act diminished his popularity and prestige. Whether Nicholas 11 has inherited all the civic courage a his grandfather remains to' be seen. -ahyr. London Times. A F Got a constant headache? Ten chancel to one the secret of your 'mtterfagt is that “white mauU burden," catarrh. Here's a. Ientence from one man’s evidence tor Dr. Agnew'. Catarrhai Powder: “One appli- cation gave me instant relief. cleared the nasal passages and stopped the pain in my head." It's a quick, sale and lure treat- ment, and it never iuiia to cure. Dr. Agnew'e Hem-t Cure in for heart. stomach and nerves. 86 HEADACHE RELIEVED INSTANTLY An excellent work apron has a full ruffle across the bottom to stand out and protect the dress skirt and it has a pocket, not a little patch pocket. but a 'real one set in the seam. The breadths are gored Just enough to get good pieces for mak- ing the pocket. ' I . _ I always keep in the house a. small mum ot antiseptic powder and a. roll ot antiseptic gauze. I find that wrinkling a burn or blister ot any kind with this powder and applying the gauze and then a piece of oiled silk, is much better than salve. It dies and heals like magic. I hare occasionally been troubled with bread moulding in the Jar, says a writer in Good Housekeeping. My new maid placsd a large sheet ot brown paper in the bread jar. create ing it well, so that the bottom and sldes of the Ijar were well lined. The paper " replaced two or three times " wpeltWy. " trem one. It ate sorbs the extra (moisture and we have no more would; bread. Above nation tn New York I. situated on corner Fourth avenue and 42nd 'street, and the New York Central 13 the only trunk line whose train- enterit. Dad acs if I eouUGisse "£11; dust as easily as I could raise a dust he'd own a bank.-Pithsburg Dispatch. " York central Lands You Grand central Station hat about the time a fallen tries to be real good the fellers begin to call him a sissy. I ain't never been called a. sissy. I‘€.J.. L-.. .‘..-L -___ __ __' _ From what I kin gather repartee is wlyty's eallty1fhaelrGlk" in a kid. ”’d‘ _ --.Pv - -_____. navy-n WIAUM a: """'> Girls has just as much cussedness as boys, but they don't show it in the same wav. A Every day when I wash myself, maw ses I'm afraid of water, and yet she makes an awful fuss when I go in swim. ming. _ 7 Dad sea I am always on the go, but I don't feel that way at bedtime. I'd mt_her tsit, up. - "Three’ boxes ot Dodd'a Kidney cured me completely and though It is new years since“! was cured I have had no return ot any com- plaint." I Dodd‘s Kldney Pllls cure the Kid- mys. and with sound kidneys you need never tear urinary complaints. "On the advice of tN friend I started using Dodd's Kidney Pills. and by the time I had taken one box I passed a stone which is now in the doctor's possession. “Some years ago I began to suffer from pain in the back. accompanied by a. lethargy impossible to over- come. I was attended by a physic- ian. but continued to gram worse. and began to page bloody urine. All Forms and Stages of Kidney Dr. tretuge--New Brunswick Man Tells of Terrible Urinary Complaint Ban- Ished Once and toe All. st. M'mfy's nan-y, York Co., N. B, April 2a5.--(Spi.)-. Thomas Bur- rison, a wean resident or this place. adds hid testimony to that or the thousands who have proved that Dodd’s Kidney Pills cure promptly and permanently any form or stage ot Kidney Disease. Mi. Bur., rison says; That Dodd's Kidney Pills Cure Promptly and Permanently JUST ONE Bllllil Illllliltll! PROOF THE BLEATING OF THE KID. ism USEFUL HINTS. TORONTO #3 In the charming village of Chailly, France, 140 of its 523 inhabitants have attained the advance age of eighty, and all are in the enjoyment of excellent health. Chailly is situated in a delight- ful valley, open on its northeastern side, and has a sea frontage of 350 yards. It is interesting to note that Cuilly is known throughout the country as the village which consumes the largest amount of spirits in proportion to its size, and among its oetogenart%" not one is credited with being of sober habits. - Average laborer gets one-quarter as much wages as In the United States. t . Thirty-six thousand miles ot mil- road, and two-thirds of it owned by: the Government. Total exports $350,000,000. Next to the United States as a. grain-producing country. Population In 1903, 141,000,000. Rusdann, 66 per cent.; Poles, T per cent; Finns. 5 per cent.; Tum manure, 9 per cent., and Jews. 8 per cent. _ A ' . Facts Anon: Bunk. Two and a half times no large as large as the United States and (Alaska. t ' life. "Whatt." said he, "the Prince wants to smoke again.' Well, the devil can fill his pipe for him." A few years before, he trod on his master's foot and a. pear- ed most unhappy. Bismarck swuiiowed the pain he felt from his gouty limb, and turned to his servant to soothe him: "My dear Pinnow, I should have suffered no other European to tread on my earns.” Pinnow served Bismarck for twenty years, and was a veritable sphinx when any inquisitive journalist or mliticien tried to pump him. It would inter- esting to know just how large a. figure his great master upgesred to this faith- ful iservitor.--Ls1ie's Weekly. _ Thirty thousand miles or coast line, half trt it ice-bound. PAGE jijllEjk) wailing: There are many stories of Bismarck', valet, Pinnow, who has just died. When Pinnow filled his master’s last pipe for him the day before he expired, the end of July, 1898, he was astonished " what he thought wash scum} to health and NEW STORIES ABOUT BISMARCK. "They Sell Well” Hy! Drum-t O' Dell ot Truro, N. a. Want any better evidence of the real merit of Dr. Von Stan'- Pineapple Tablets as acure for all form. of stomach trouble than that they're in such great demand? Not unanimous done that makes one'. very inside rebel-out plmant, quick and ttarmies- tiny tablet to carry in your pocket. M eenta.--104 A visitor undertook to amuse the p- tients of a lunatic asylum by tsinging a. comic Bong. He was carrying every- thine before him, shaking the place with laughter, and filling the eyes of his audi. ence with tears of joyous hilarity, when a. voice from the back, breaking through the laughter, plunged the whole farce into tragedy. Said the voice: "You'd better stay here.r"---ramsa, City Inde. pendent. “I don't know," answered Senator Sor- tthum.. "Somehow we don’t get started to investigating a. graft until it is a played out proposition. And in the meantime something else has developed. We are always on the trail, but we can't catch up." Keep Minard’s Liniment in the House. Only: 90 daily papers. "Do you suppose grafting will ever be atqugd 7_” __ __ There is more Catarrh in thls section of the country than all other diseases put together. and until the lust few years was supposed to be incurable. Fora great many years doe.. tors pronounced it a. local disease and pres- cribed local remedies and by constantly fail- ing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catnrrh to be a. constitutional disease and thereiore re- quires a. constitutional treatment. Hair-Cap tarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is (he on constitutional cure on the market. It ls than internally In doses irom Io drops to o tettnpoontul. Itaeu dlrectly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. The? otter one hundred dollars for any case it mi s to cure. Bead tor circu- lars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, o. Bold by trl,rnu/g1','it,-e7c",ti; Ball's Fumi y Pills constipation. m: PAGE ma: FENCE oo. unrrco. " woman; GiGiiacG.GTi. I... *%tM.ee, I. Two minutes later the baby, tuh' , to his liking, was sound al','eicetelt', Watson Rankin, in Leslie's Monthly for May. ‘Lay baby on his stomach in the crib." Eh; was right. A hundred miles away a weary grandmother was at her wit’s end because she could think of nothing that would pacify a wailing infant who was most wetchedly sleepy yet utterly unable to go to sleep. She was pacing wearily back and forth in the nursery to the accompaniment of her grandson’s howls when the door-bell rang and her daughter-in-law’s telegram arrived. Tear. ing it open. the tired, perplexed grand- mother read: "But, George, she’ll never think of doing just the right thing,and the baby in so perfectly trained that he won't accept any substitute. I know he's crying hard _at_ this very minute," "Oh, George!” she exclaimed, clutch- ing her husband's arm, "there was one thing that I forgot to tell your mother to do for the baby, and he'll never go to sleep without it. You must go right out “(L-end hex: n tglegrnm.” "Nonsense," nid "George; “this isn't the first baby she’s taken care of." lilo Range; A young mother left her baby with her obliging mother-in-uw one night,in order to nttnd the wedding of s relo- tive who lived in a to" about u hun- dred miles distant. The young women, apparently free from ell family cares, spent an enjoyable evening; but just as the newly-wedded couple were pre- pairng to depart on the midnight train. an expression of acute anxiety fitushed across the young Pothery.eouyteyuste. new a Baby Wu “Treated" " SUCCESS AS AN ENTERTAINER. 55W}? JOLLY OCTOGENARIANS. ABSENT TREATHENT. A Stem Chase. 1ttp.tt.-ttettgtuotettsataettrtoettrrse-qt-th. - “Wt-homey. oedert9mFikittttntddfieie- Women DUearding Heavy Soled Shoes. (The Shoe Retailer.) Women who have oped the sterner sex in the matter of footwear are disearding the heavy soled shoes which were more or less popular for I. time. The natural successor to the "mannitsh" shoe is the distinctively feminine pattern in e tine turn or e fine Welted shoe. The single sole Oxford mule on . "mnnnish" last is ehout the only reminder of e. clumsy looking heavy shoe-never seriously in- tended for women. . Iron com Arm-.0 To iiGOniG' mum. " . Tletter-defy-sto-tmee-our-na. t'ttN1et'trg,hurdtt,'gypnr,t 1't,Tdt,Ttl'fdi1ll%%'d OsartqutitFmtttt-ieTGGiiiGrri um, Heer.t'eurttr ”cumin. human-uh. ttrt-ata-ttrt-tr-Fukui/Gaia-sis EACH " TEESIX PICTURESREPRE- SENTS h GARDEN VEGETABLE. CAN you NAME THREE $200.00 GIVEN AWAY or raw . |___' __V'__. Pd lltCLdLLEL.lL.gltlELgtbl '2df,Ntgt."atttttthqtttt "td-tti-de-s" mm mmywinlhm e?.!'.'.'.'.' .te,te.ttte. 1f.l.'l,lsl'lltf,'l'll/ht2'Nt; m. and goo-w; Imm- u “Aleutian n no.- - rrr~~r~v-v "P--..-.. muvummmu "I“ win-yuan“!!! “talcum. fi?yGiG'iG7irdl'e"r"tr"a"rlrG'l2 ' mlmum 'llW,T'llldtUJ. " do. “WWW Pttt lire: wedo note-non. bitwho 'l'ltltl'll money ', If yum make moyrthtnet8 clan-o! “can: Vtmbla. In.“ yawn-venous. with your nun. udyddl'l- pldn‘y “mammal uymmumm '01an 'NariAivtrti-tn.ttotoreorActut- do 'ergleetaottrtmrthrtd an“: “Mum ourtulLt-m0ddm-,to _ In". MARVEL 'llh'."drM'l' CMS.. und- 1407 renown. on. f Wasps have a great fondness for over- ripe fruit, especially pears, plums, and sweet apples. The sugar of t ese fruits has a tendency to pass into a kind of alcohol, in the ordinary process of rot- ting, and after imbibing large qunnti- ties of this liquid the wasps become out. rageuusly intoxicated. They crawl away in the grass in a semi-somnolent con- dition and remain till the effects have passed off, when they will go " it again. It is while in this condition that they do their worst stinging. A person receiving a sting from one of these in- toxicated wasps will suffer severely from nerve poisoning for days. Itver'a Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder is better than other powders, as it in both soap and disinfectant. 34 "Boo, hoot I didn't, an' that's what I was licked fur." "What's the matter, little boy'." naked old Mr. Goodart. "What are you cry- ing fort" "Boo, hoo" sobbed the boy. "Boo, hoo" "Come, come Don't mind.' Don't mind." Minard'l Llniment is used by Physicians. A sharp.. .. .... B.. ...... End of The analogy between the musical! mole and the color scale has been many I times noted. Helmholtz drawn the following uni-l in 1850, and was not covered with new tissue for 66 years. The worst attack of all was in 1787, when the tree, then 2,068 years of age, was attacked by a fire, which left a scar 18 feet wide, reduced by 1890, in 103 years, to 14 feet. Only ten isolated groves of these tree remain, and only one grove is protected by gov- ernment ownership. MUSICAL SCALE AND COLOR SCALE Minnrd's Liuimcnt Lumbermnn's Friend. mt three feet in width. After 1,190 years of placid life, in another fire in 1441 A. D., the tree, aged 1,712, received 1uto_tlttrr injury. Another scar followed A history of one of the sequoia of California, as shown when it was cut for lumber, is given by a United States Sea. stor. It was but 15 feet in diameter, while many of them are twice that size. In 246 A. D., when it was 516 yesrs of use, {forest fire burned on its trunk n OUR BRIDAL SUPERSTITIONS. Married in white, You have chosen all right. Married in gray, You will go far away. Married in black, You will wish yourself back. Married in red, You'd better be dead. Married in green, Ashamed to be Been, Married in blue, You’ll always be true, Married in pearl, You’ll live in a whirl, Married in yellow, Ashamed of the fellow. Married in brown, You’ll live out of town, Married in pink, Your spirit will sink. iGrtiii; -surfice off linens. Sunlight Soap will not burn the my offygolens GREAT Actor LIQUOR runs. Just What the Trouble Wu. INTOXICATED WASPS. “broom-u. on MW‘E , 'tbo "i'al.?ljif"i'jjiiiSi'i"j the n tyd deal of what -_ iiiedjoi.-oro. tquty in thee (In: ruturated with The Cum of War. (Woodstock Express.) Von Moltke is quoted as "ying that "war in holy and of divine institution; it is one of the sacred In" of nature: it keeps alive in men ell the greet and noble sentiment, honor, duintorestod. use, virtue; In one word, It lumps us from falling into the tttost hideous ma- torterrt," and it is to be feared that this (m. mud}; Oht if you would know the usual way The bounty maker spends the day. 'Til more or [on like, p'mps rather more, The my the van-n CNne down to L" don, 'tttttt and rushes, A struggle. and crushes, m hurried nnd marries, And Inn-bu and crashes, And wedges and dashes, He tltrhts and he hunk-n. He mull sud he bunks. He’ll do it, or die, Or at all event; try By foul - or fair, But he will get there! And he doe-nd Inter homeward will go With the charm! remark, "I've enjoyed Some are of white walnut,stained with acid to thee taste of the owner. Eng- lish fume is very popular, as are like. wise the Madagascar and cherry. Part. ridgewood and the pimienta are sought, and oak is always " demand. It would be quite impossible to say what style of handle is most favored. Each is good if not clumsy in treatment. Thom la. breds x",TT,, the cane nor service utter than to irl in the hand. For the past few years walki stick: have been more gencrely 'll'eri,',' the gentlemen of the frock Coat, They will, owever,beeeen on all occuionl during the spring and summer season. The Well. groomed mu cutie: his walking sti u busineu for service all through them, and the men who spend- but I few hour: about the busineu district of town like. wise lean: on his luck. Present Popularity of the Walking Stick. When Baby had Solid Hond- Whon "other had Salt Rheum- When Father had P,i.--or. Ag. new’n Olttment gave the quicken relief and sure-t can. Thus in gems of truth pickml from mumony which ll given every day to this greats-t ot heahrn. It ha.- never brett matched In curative qualities in Eczema. Tetter. rilea, etc. M Cettta.-108 In“ Story of American Women. King Edward recently left some cherry stone- on his plete at 5 public function. The moment he left the table . crowd of American ladies scrambled for them, with the object, it in mid, of bending them down to their descend- ants as family heirioomtv--Lrndon Daily Mail. tatt. all “out noun. receipts, new"... loan. decal. villa. groper” "tttu,', from column. landlord on tenant, am on and watercouuel. "A, one agent. oold " mm. In - days: “other cold 88 in a Wu“ French odMon now ready; ouMt 25c ; on. ottttit “a." not autumn-any mum nhndod. J. L. Nichole Co.,L1mu.4{ Toronto. Mention this paper. Tho taupe-an Duh luau I'Ire nd nun-o. Coup-I1. Toronto. Pan-an. Appllcsuon- will be waived tor 0mm. Agenda at hula! et"" at! “In“. Ad. dru- head once. Mltt “not, went. Chan. c. "nNoryrtut, P dent and bunny Director l gm. any. t%perfntondent. , {finned In 50!qu an; Thou", ttoat In iihhh ,'e'gu'Ih1it,',,'lt, the 'X'; tonnd. til gladly-e ordeal-n to n, tad who III nod to nuke coma money. 'tfGh'l.'e'o"ltLl'l _ " you {an my}. 310 an“, Tia. "ItiE 'W' icdFGGFiit0ri 'iii'; on It“; army. “In” Any Lady can an. holly -_ oo to 90.00 My W 1.111%"!me In In: ”new... my” " TeiiidaetitriiiiUTirGir" -- _. "".""S to any. kept 1',tt “We” w School, a...“ .175- Iii-it .oothut+ ”lien-duh. ISSUE N o. 19 1904. _-.--.--"---'.-----.. -' . V ---- LNTEHOUIIKMD, GOOD WAG W. _etertorttleh.ogm, tery mm. M,1 i: Mv‘o "eth" id - It.” Do n! lot MM mum riAhut-A,mseF-,eurii"Vrci BRUSH & 00., I'Bi‘gl NO BRASS EYELETS l POPULAR CORSET Foil I904 STYLE THE LABOR OF THE DAY. myself so! wat HIP) BUSINESS GUIDE MANUFACTURED ONLY " 10mm. - ONT. 253 x " tt FU "Bit Cross Charg Ilbpn li? Japan M th mik Mt tl tl Rum": Censor: Wiiu ulll di: ('II an: int t he ti, th Illll Bot Known ll shins Im- latiug tt f; ttants T -tlt tci "till Ii M "I III kt ft nu] ttt "toott " ll ll 'ok i Ill rt OFFICIA it ft::",',',,') The if “an " t mm“ My!

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