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Durham Review (1897), 3 Nov 1904, p. 7

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ted to be n Dollars. nan Loses His ars for Crews. rt ysteries about adâ€" ceessfn] merchn, YÂ¥ simple rule for opy which insures t is to have a disâ€" announcement, clearest terms." ation Believed to n Incendiary. RTISEMENTS ids Whole Night in vat. BROOKLYN. ta H and th instant. HER‘S BODY TY Hawanan Citta Di 28 YR Mr C 0) MJ Mr vaused Name it and inâ€" Ir. . Gowan young c~ilâ€" rent t off ving in nren | had ntion rused Tmmne U M r in imp own Police M \t th H 1¢ m LN€ im € n it it line amâ€" VET ard ne In D it n | . COLE PPE TARY MADE THIY * _|" "ame imeip mack! > Mr. Dick Souvey and Wife Both Had Kidney Troubles and the Canadian Ridney m, Them. ¢ .i "~ Port Arthur, Ont., Oct. 24.â€" w’ â€"That Dodd‘s Kid’ney Pills (qm t.), Kidney ills of men and women alike has been proved time and in in this neighborhood, but it is occasion ally they get a chance to do ble vork- in the same house. This has ha in the case of Mr. and Mrs. Dick slz:v‘:d a farmer and his wife, living about my, miles from here. In an interview l:: Souvey said: % My wife and myself have used Dodd‘ Kidney Pills and have found them a bi; benefit to our health. We had La Grippe two winters and were exposed to much frost and cold. Our sl was broken on account of urinary tr;:%lu and pain in the kidneys. We each took six boxes of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and now enjoy good health." It is said that 45,000 picture postâ€"cards were sold at a fashionable wawrlnf- place last year, llfl London Country Life. Why people should regard the taste for sending these cards as a "craze" it is difâ€" ficult to see. It is very natural â€" that those who are enjoying a holiday should wish to let their friends, especally chllâ€" dren and young rople, know what the places are like that they visit, and to give them some idea of theiz beauty and attractions. Very few people are good at writing descriptive prose in letters, and if they are, it takes too much time. Letter writing, during holidays is rathâ€" er an unfair tax, as a rule, so they buy picture postâ€"cards, and for a shilling, can tell half their family and imitatefriends more about the objects of interest and scenery than they could on reams of letterâ€"paper. Children rejoice in receivâ€" ing picture postâ€"cards, as they carry out all the details which is so dear to them, and even the windows of the rooms where their friends sleep can be duly identiâ€" fied. Shiloh‘s . Consumption The urban district council of Handsâ€" worth, near Birmingham, has decided that in future houses must be identified by numbers and not merely designated by highâ€"sounding names. 4 ‘This practice in London gives much needless trouble to the postal authoriâ€" ties. "The whole thing would become inâ€" tolerable if it were not so humorous," said a post office official to a Londor Express representative. _ 0 . $ Muc us "A humble individual like the First Lord of the Treasury has for years been quite content to have for his ad: dress No. 10 Downing street; Lord Rosebervy is modest enough to pass his town life at 28 Berkeley square, and even Mr. George Bernard Shaw manâ€" ages to exist at a residence known as nothing more pretentious than 10 Adelâ€" phi terrace. 2 2A n pFy? _ "But Mrs. FitzSmith rents a £36 house. Really it is 304, but under the r[Pi,tm of the Fitzâ€"Smiths it becomes The aurels. "Here are some progressive instances of house names: pinte Mont Blane .. Court Douglas Feverel .. .. The Deodars.. Windermere . Loch Katrine. "I could go on fore®or. By the 1 the wonder is that some of them do the wonder is that some of them do not go in for a little Latin. How full of tone would be such addresses as New. Con.,‘ ‘Ad Valorem, ‘Sub Judice, ‘Verb. Sap.‘ "There are needless possibilities in Latin, but the stern fact remains that the work of the poor postman is imâ€" measurably increased by this silly cusâ€" tom. Why cannot people be satisfied with a plain, straightforward number?" Gladys (sighing)â€"Ob, dear, he hasn‘t proâ€" posed yet. Etheiâ€"Well, what can you expect of a chap ;hn never runs his auto over ten miles an our jd‘s Kidney Pilis “‘ b ;q“': a Work Around Port Arthur. Those whom neglected coughs have killed were once as healthy and robust as you. Dcn‘t follow in their paths of neglect. Take * ‘The Lu ure 1%.;°"° right now. It is guaranteed to cure. It has cured many thousâ€" ands. Prices: 8. C. Werrs & Co. #¢. S0c. $1 LeRoy,. N. Y., Toronto.Can. Use of Picture Postâ€"Cards. Nothing Fast About Snobbery and Real Estate. goore Rent. !â€"| Without a Rival in the Favor of the ; 38 Multitude. he| We are told that the great doctrine he| of the solidarity of mankind is being enforced as never before by the discovâ€" es | eries of modern _ science. Medicines, economics, â€" biology, physics, in their it. | latest, developments, teach us _ with 30 hitherto unapproached force that all ‘32 men and all things are so bound toâ€" 40 gether that what affects one affects all. 50‘ It is an impressive truth. Consider the 50’ case of man# the cotton crop and the1 64 peanut. ‘ Within the last few years the: lconsumption of the peanut has vastly iy, | increased. The interesting legume has ot | fought its way over prejudice and conâ€" me| tempt to a place of unchallenged preâ€" n.‘! eminence in popular estcem. Sneers \p-" have not prevailed against it. Conâ€" in | tumely in the presence, of the unparalâ€" at | leled novularity of the peanut hides at mâ€" | last its diminished front. Last year we usâ€" | broke the wrinkled shells of 5.000.000 ied | bushels of pindars. and ate some billions "" | of archian "nuts." If essentially the choice of a plebian taste. if the rich and fastidiotfis prefer a daintier delicacy, the 'w_lpoannt is without rival in the favor of the multitude. s o K 0. The district in which the proportion of ne‘qrou is greatest lies in the Missisâ€" sipi alluvial region, along both banks of the lower Mississippi were fiveâ€"eights of the population is negro, the maximum being in Issaquena County, Missisvswi&pi, with more than 15 negroes to each white person. Negroes form oneâ€"third of the population in the south, both in cities and in country districts, while in the north they are about oneâ€"fortieth of city and oneâ€"nineteenth of the populaâ€" of sountry districts. In the country disâ€" tricts of the south, excluding the populaâ€" tion of the 242 cities which had at least 2,500 inhabitants both in 1890 and in 1900 the negro population increased from 1890 to 1900 over 16 per cent.; in the 242 southern cities as a whole they increased 21.7 per cent. â€" 118 The largest number of negroes living in compact masses are found in certain urban counties, several of which lie outâ€" side the great cottonâ€"growing States. The four each having over 75,000 neâ€" groes are: District of Columbia, coâ€"ex« tensive with Washington; Shelby Co., Tenn., containing Memphis; Baltimore City, Md., and Orleans Parish, La., coâ€" extensive with New Orleans. Half the negroes in the United States are below 19 years of age. This medium age being four years below the whites. ‘Their illiteracy is much more common in country than in city districts, and the females, as with the whites, are the more illiterate sex. Negro bread winners zonstitute 62.2 per cent. of all negroes at least 10 years of age. For whites the corresponding per cent. is 48.6 and for Southern whites 46.9. The relatively high per cent. for megroes is closely connected with the marked prevalance of female labor in that race. There are 27 occupations in which at lcast 10,000 negroes were reâ€" ported as engaged in 1900. These ocuuâ€" pations gave employment to 3,087,008 negroes, or over 95 per cent. of the agâ€" gregzte of negro breadâ€"winners. C m NEE oi k iy B The total number of negroes reported by the twelfth census was 8,840,789. To this number may be added the 363,742 persons of pure or mixed negro blood in Porto Rico. vtne INUIUIEINIC RBut now observe. The plant Arachis hypogrea demands an early spring, & hot and moist summer ard a sandy, friâ€" able Joam. But these are conditions reâ€" quired by another plant of great usefulâ€" rees and valueâ€"namely cotton. With this stavle at a rormal valve. Virginia, NCorth Carolina. Georgia and Tennessee have found it advantageous to devote a part of their acreace to the edible, at the exponse of the sartorial crop. But lately cotton has been going up. and the south is naturallyv planting it to the negâ€" lect of other crors: umhappily, _ almost to the exelhision of the peanut. Thus we L uieA cecte n wb s e seo that such At the value per ba foeets human han ticular. â€"Philade Charies M. Russell, a Montana cowâ€" bov artist, who visited New Jersey reâ€" ceatly, has returned to â€" his Montana home, ard in an interview says: "Id rather live in a piace where I know somebody and where cverybody is someâ€" body. The style in some of those New Yoik saloons is something to remember. The bartender won‘t drink _ with you even. Now, I like to have the bartevder to drink with me occasionally, out of the same bottle, just to be sure T ain‘t getting poison. They won‘t even take yoiur morey over the bar.. Instead. they wive you a check, with the price of your drink on it. and you walk yourseif sober trying to find the cashier to nay for it." i pIDN d it advantageous to devote a heir acreace to the edible, at se of the sartorial crop. But ton has been going up, and the aturally planting it to the negâ€" ther crors: unhappily, almost clusion of the peanut. Thus we svch an unimportant fact as + per bale of catton vitalUly afâ€" in hanniness in a remote parâ€" â€"Philadelphia Ledger. THE PEANUT. "p LIKE NKEW YORK. y qoigs The reports of the bestowing of the Order of the Golden Kite on Japanese officers for conspicuous gallantry read rather quaintly, sandwiched, as they genera.llfi are, between items of news which show how very much abreast of the times and Western idéas is the Land of the Rising@Sun. Still they serve to recall what a very large role kiteâ€"f{lying plays in the life of the East. According to ancient Chinese recâ€" ords, the first kite was invented about 200 B. C., and since that date the naâ€" tional pastime has advanced to a very fine art, indeed. Â¥ M n o d s (Philadelphia Inquirer.) Tt is not true that the human race has undergone & physical degeneration since the dawn of the history or during the thousands of unrecorded years which have elapsed since its appearance on this earth. The idea that in their physical character our forefathers were superior to ourselves, is due to the inveterate tendency of the human mind to idealize the past and to assume that everythin; was better than it is now in the goos old days, and it is more justified in this garticular respect than it is in any other. here were giants in those days just as there are giants now, a few of them, individuals, whose abnormal â€" developâ€" ment is the result of a disease which morbid e(!mthology has recognized â€" and classified, but that there cver was . & race of giants there is no reason whatâ€" ever to suppose. C. C. RICHARDS & CO. I was very thought I wo! once. 22 THE CITY OF ISLANDS. Ane city [of Venice] proper huddles its population of 163,000 within a circumferâ€" ence of seven acres. It is so built and bridged with artificial streets that one may walk where he will, and that is sure to be first to the Place of St. Mark. He takes the street route from his hotel, a passageway so narrow that his extendâ€" ed arms may touch the buildings on either side, winding reviously into the shopping distrit leading to the square, where booths of shell, bead ornament and every conceivable trinket to ensnare the beautyâ€"lover are attractively disâ€" played. % Happy is he who sees the Place of St. Mark in its evening dress, ablaze. with electricity and thronged with promenadâ€" ers in superb costumes. ‘The shops are invitingly open. Beautiful St. Mark, with its four big bronze horses which Napoleon took over the Alps to Paris in 1797 and which were returned by Emâ€" peror Francis I. of Austria in 1815 to guard the principal entrance to St. Mark, where they are poised toâ€"day, seemingly ready to spring over the red and grey monolith pillars and bear the church beâ€" yond the reach of failinz campaniles and toppling greatness.â€"From "Venice >s she Is and Is Not," byEmily Frances Smith, in Fourâ€"Track News for September. 2? Happy is Mark in it electricity : ers in supe A MASTERPIECE OF COMPRESSION. Acrording to the New York World, a prize was once offered for the shortest history of the causes and results of the Mexican war. The winner produced the following treatise: Nauwigewauk, Â¥2, M nE 4 27 CWC" 1 ; I would strangle. I used MINâ€" LINIMENT and it cured me at am never without it now. Yours gratefully, Wl;o Knows Anything About All buyors, sellers and users of F Chapter I. Cause of the Mexican War. Texas. tesults cf the Mexican War. Texas. e EDDY‘S IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING PAPER The Cult of the Kite. THE E. B. EDDY COMPANY, 4 Wlllâ€" every reader of this engquiry «WHO KNOWS ANYTHING ABOUT BANNIGER®* please drop a line on the subjoct to c m Enny COMPANY, + _ HVLL, CANADA "BANNIGOER "? sick with Quinzy _ and RS. C. D. PRINCE. Oct. 21st. ;'oâ€"ll'lie-riuteil in this quootloe The Operation Robs it of the Beneficent Now comes a Paris physician who siys that it is all wrong to boil dnnlh( vt-'1 ter, as the municipal doctors direct when: there is a danger of typhoid fever epiâ€" demic. Professor Charrin, of the Colâ€" l:ge of France, is the learned authority o is quoted as depouncing the popular theory that the fever n;rml buzn:; stroyed by cooking them well, the of sickness is avoided. Professor Charâ€" rin‘e doctrine is that in boiled water not only is the deadly microbe destroyed but also the microbes which even more than the dog or horse deserves to be called the friend of maun. The beneficent miâ€" crobe is that which assists at the digesâ€" tion of such substances as cellulose lll albumen. If he is boiled out, these TAâ€" tracable substances set up irritations which end in enteritis and other malâ€" adies. Another eminent French authority M. Pages agrees with M. Charrin in sayâ€" ing that boiled water seriously impeds digestion and attacks the assimilative orâ€" gans. "It may," he says, "save you from typhoid fever, but the risk of typhoid is in any case very small, while, if it does save you, it exposes you to a host of other ailments no less mischievous." "If you do boil water," says M. Pages, "exâ€" pose it before you drink it for some hours to the open air, and agitate it." ‘This is probably to let the. microbes all in again. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. Minard‘s Linment Cures Diphtheria. i _ Exrtemuating Circumstances. (Kansas City Star.) A Topeka jury awavded $6 for damages due to a negro who filled the role of "wild man" in a circus one week. The jury took into account that he ate about $100 worth of rew meat dgrln& the packing _house strike, Giants in ‘These Days Too. PEOPLE MUST BE TOLD. A writer on advertising says it is the aim of nearly every business concern to have a special and original feature. "But when such a specialty shall be found it must be advertised. No article can sell itself without the aid of advertising." ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, eurbs, splints, ringbor«, sweeney, stifles, sprains; cures sore and â€" swoolen . throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by the use of one gotâ€" tle. Waranted the most wonderful Blemish Real Estate by the Gallon. (Philadelphia Press.) "What did your property in Swa cost you" "Four dollars a foot." "What‘ll you sell for?" "Obh, I‘ll let it go for $2 a gallon." Cure ever known. Will Study Human Nature. A new scientific society which, says the London Express, has for its object "the study of human nature" in its broadest sense, has been formed under the name of the Ethological Society. The study of human nature will not be carried on through any one departâ€" ment of science, but all will be considâ€" ered, with the object of arriving at a knowledge of the intellect and character of man, and the laws which govern their manifestation. The society will not limit its efforts to any one method of research, but will collect all the material that is available and apply it to the preservation of the mentag health of the individual, It is intended to inviteâ€"all the most famous scientists of the day to s‘p‘u.k‘ P a msC s P ZEROuU® MuSSURIEC ol tL a® at its meetings, and give ‘the result of their researches. Not only will those scientists whose theories are generaly accepted find a helnng‘; every scientist who has a theâ€" ory of his own, which so far has not met with recognition, will be invited to state his opinions before the society, whose members will then discuss them and isâ€" ;;w their conclusions for general readâ€" gl‘o aid humanity is the Alpha and Omega of the society, and to this end subjects will be discussed which to nonâ€" scientific minds border on the ridiculous, but as a member of the committee said yesterday, "The ridiculous in science ofâ€" ten becomes the reality." Such objects of criminology will be discussed, and the various scientists will be asked to give their opinion as to the best methods to be employed to comâ€" bat the growth of crime in England. One of the members of the society, & most distinguished physician, proposes to bring forward the case of a boy whose criminal instincts he declares he has | eured. _ t t i D. 120 cCLlus nf t curedu. The boy in question, by means of an electric current placed on a certain part of his head in the region of the brain, was, according to the doctor, immediateâ€" Iy transformed from being a born thief into becoming a most respectable memâ€" her of society. "What have you accomplished with your prolonged tests?" asked an inquisiâ€" tive rerson. "Well," answered the Government chemist, "we have found out that uocisonâ€" ous articles, taken into the â€" stomach every day for a period of several months, have a deleterious effect upon the human system."â€"Chicago Tribune. * When you notice a vague accusation you give it a reality and turn a shadow into a substaunce. DONT BOIL THE/WAÂ¥ES.| 2 IMPORTANT RESULTS. in Swamphurst ONTARIO ARCHI f TORONTO |2? $ : ‘Shirt waists and dainty linen are made delightfully clean and fresh with Sunâ€" light Soap. sB _____~~.(Gunton‘s Magazine.) In ::ferringnd to t::.a labor vote it h‘ ver ten unders to an organâ€" Iu({ movement. This is an error. We find in the labor political movement, and supposedly representing it, the workingâ€" men‘s clubs and socialists. These two forms of ug.nintion represent about all there is to organized labor movement in politics. The remainder is without such affiliation and is governed by what ever directly affects each person. The laâ€" bor organization political club, or what stands for it, does not amount to much. It is generally a shadowy affair, out for office for a few of the promoters and a share of the "coin" for the remainder. The Socialist movement represents the serious vote and is has effected a tangâ€" ible combination. lessNnOBS8. â€"The hopeless heart sickness that uttLu on a man or woman whose nerves are shattéred by disease can best be pictured in contrast with a patient who_has been in the ‘‘depths‘"‘ and has been &sgged from them by South American Nervine. George Webster, of Forest, Ont., says: "I owe my life to it. Everything else failed to cure."â€"i4 The majority of men, when they meet you on the street, or talk with you at office or shop, act and speak with the most lrecoming courtesy,. Even if you are slightly deaf and have to be bawled at, they will do the bawling with good humor and gentlemanly patience. A man may be greatly rushed in his place of business, but if you step in he is not likelyâ€"unless a veritable bearâ€"to show his teeth and growl. Courtesy is the rule, and. rudeness is the exception. a Eky Hemeanne n 2 C e e e d ul But there is a difference when you confer with a man over the telephone â€"or some men. You are sometimes so hsocked by~ a savage â€" voice rushing along the wire that the receiver nearly falls from your hand. The most conâ€" stant user of the ‘phone is the central. Calls come into her ears almost withâ€" out interruption. _ But "Central" is always accommodating, never impatient. You never hear her voice keyed up to the musical point; but always it comes â€"at any hour of the day or nightâ€" sweet and clear, gentle and tolerant, without a hint even of weariness. There is not often any need of shoutâ€" ing over the ‘phone. When there . is, there is no need of using a voice bristâ€" ling with all sorts of fireâ€"tipped inâ€" flections. Distance does not make the voice grow fonder over the telephone.. A grow!l is a growl still to a sensitive Twitcshy Muscies and Sleep: :ar?.;md ‘there is such a thing as courâ€" tesy even at a distance.â€"Spartanourg Herald. Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever‘s Dry Soap a powder. It will reâ€" move the grease with the greatest ease. 36 CAN CREATE A DEMAND. The statement that "manufacturers must make what the people want" is qualified by an experienced advertiser with this: "Or they must cause the people to want what they make." _ He says: _ "Enormous revenues are now derived from the sale of articles of which the public knew nothing until they had been widely advertised in the newspapers." A Modern Darby and Joan. (London Telegraph.) At yesterday‘s meeting of the Gloucesâ€" ter Board of Guardians, Mr. G. Bennett, workhouse master, stated that when Minard‘s Linimeat Cures Distemper. the resolution of the board that aged couples on entering the institution could have a sepatate room to themselves was in force they asked every married couâ€" ple over sixty if they would like to live together, and while some said "Yes," the majority replied "No." § y ty c esb t ) ts aeem oo AC PUCT lie inquired from one old man who had been married fifty years if he wished to stay with his wife, and he replied in the affirmative, but the wife, who had a wooden leg, when asked, said "No, the old lam!;!brought me to the workhouse, and I will not live with him here." The "Labor Vote." lgm‘!loalynquln.few nh*oofgouttimmhyb-n $320 a rnr. Â¥ou can earn it with a Chatham Incubator. _ A No. * Chatham Incubator will hold from soo to 120 eggsâ€"according to size dfi" Eighty chickens is a lowavorr batchâ€"users of Chatham Incubators will tell you so. ickens are always in demand a the supply is always short, so fifty cents is the lver?o price secured. If you only take off eight hatches in a year, that * s cens1 FEs of $220.00. Woulda‘t that extra amount be useful to you ? ‘ Best of ';‘!â€"Ml!‘- â€"according to size of .. Eaghty chcken®!® 8 * "" P ova sunnly is a Incubators will tell you so. E:uh” are always in demand -3 the supply is alwa so fifty cents is the aver price secured. If you only take off eight hatches in a y gw-youn-inemo(‘.‘;a.n Wouldn‘t that extra amount be uscful to you ? * all, you can buy a Chatham Incubator without one cent of cash until October, 1905 The machine offer than this, your first paymer Telephone Manners. was Do you want to add $320 to your income ? nq‘iuwningmuyfimsmrbe&cethauime. this, e ship a Chatham Incubator to yOu at once, ayment is not due until October, 1905. _ Write us toâ€"d: ncubators and Brooders have every new improvement € ISSUE No. Pppinon ie Pmanetr on enpe zies Agents wanted for iaities. Comâ€" pisks dutrle use _mnt macont $200." All good ote outfit d exceed $2.00. All A cigarette company a year or so ago tried the experiment ‘of a fourâ€"page adâ€" vertisement in a leading newspaper in New York. Recently a member of the company said the effect was more than surprising; that for weeks they were wholly unable to met the city demand, the increase of which was enormous. We offer One Hundred Dollars‘ Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. 4. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him periectly honorable in all business transâ€" actions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by this tirm. Waromo, Kinxan a Mazvix, Wholesale Druggiste, Toledo, 0. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,ac* ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur: faces of the system. . ‘Destimonials sent frea Priceâ€"75¢ .K" bottle. _ Sold by all druggiste. Take Hall‘s FamilyPills for constipation Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. An English tourist was being driven on & jaunting car through the Donzal Hi%hhndl, and after a time the results of his observation came to _ the surface in the following query: "Driver! I noâ€" tice that when you speak to your friends whom you meet on the road you invariâ€" ably do so in Irish, but when you adâ€" dress your horse you do so in Enblish. How is this?" To which came the retort: "Musha: now thin. lIsn‘t English good enough for him?" NOVELTY â€" MANUFACTURING CO. The candidates are lining up, ‘The party‘s ranks are closing. ‘Their records they are showing up, The voters still are dozing; We know that a campiagn is on, Because we‘ve read about it; Some day the battle will be won, There is no use to doubt it. And yet, while all this may be true, We‘d really be delighted If we could meet some voters who. â€""I had valvular disease of the heart, writes Mrs. J. 8. Goode, of Truro, N. 8. "I suffered terribly and was often speechles» and partially paralyzed. One dose of Dr Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart gave me relief and before I finished one bottle I was abl to go Both Talking at Once. (New York Telegraph.) Mrs. Jawkinsâ€"I‘ve been trying to talk to Mary over the telephone, but I co ldn‘ * G@erstand half she said. man‘t m Mr. Jawkinsâ€"You‘ll find it easier it you were to talk one at a time, my dear. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows ish undertook to carry the great kan gon bell, the third largest in the world. to Calcutta as a trophy, but dropped it overboard in the Rangoon River, where it defied all efforts of the engineers to raise it. Recently the Burmese lifter the mass of metal from its muddy bed and triumphantly restored it to its old It may se in the swim overboard. Would seem dental a Wash pay. y 4R s You don‘t feel tired if you use a New Century Ballâ€"Bearâ€" ing Washing Machine. Speechiess and Paralyzed. and five minutes will wash a tubful of clothes beyond criticism. Send for illustrated bookict describing it and order through your dealer, He will sell it to you for $8.50, After conquering Burma English as Spoken in Ireland4. THE DOWSWELL MAKUFACTURMKC CO. LTD. about. **Toâ€"day I am a well woman.‘ HOW‘S THIS ? The Apathetic Voter, hat time. _ There couldn‘tbe a fajrer M dn it freaia in ahe us ot e vement zoflh while in an incubator or brooder. The incubators are made with two walls, at least excited m odd, but a fellow isn‘t when society throws him 45 use it effeciivelyâ€" , You can 4 q

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