West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Nov 1904, p. 2

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Cl The Myers Royal Spice Company have recently published a veterinary stock book, treating of the various diseases of all live stock and the cures. This book h sent free to any one writing them at Niagara Falls, Ont., or N. Y. G"tid i; animals and 'early conceived the idea of preparing a tonic that would act on live stock as the various formu- las of the physicians act on the human system, He opened a shop in the Pave- ment, York, soon moved to Ingmar- ters and as the business grew, le the "Old Linen Mills" on Navigation Road, York. Later, another mill was erected in Hull. A business of considerable mag- nitude developed, and Mr. Myers, for a flattering consideration, disposed of his interests. It was then he came to Can- ada and located in Niagara Falls. Some years after, Mr. Myers was forced to ”0% the manufacture of the Royal Spice in ngland because the company which had purchased the rights did not keep their agreement. Recently Mr. Myers visited London and was approached by 'itttet who induced him to re-estab~ lie the business. Thus it is that Can-1 “it will lend a helping hand to the up? building of Industrial England. _ Gem of the Workman Have to Skunk Hard for Living. There was an exhibition in Berlin re- cently that,thout.th of wide and general interest, attrarted little attention out- side of a limited number in the German capital. It might fairly have been styled an "exhibition of misery." It was opened on the occasion of a meeting of homeworkers, and the exhibition of pho- tographs was intended to show the pub lie the dreadful sweating system by orhieh hundreds of thousands are ex- ploited to the benefit of the rich em- plgyers. . _ Canada Contributes Her an." To- warus Increasing English Induction. Important factors in the development of Canadian industries have been pro- .cesses brought from England. Now, it seems that Canada is about to recipro- cate, for Niagara Falls is sending an industry of considerable magnitude to the Mother Country. This is the result of the eighth trip of Mr. Thomas My- ers, of the Myers' Boys] Spice Food Company. Mr. Myers was born in 0t- tley, England. As s boy he was in.ter-, The photographs showed the utterly' inadequate dwellings of the workmen, and the article they have to make under most ditlicult conditions of life. Each of these articles beam the figure of the wnges paid. Wreaths of artitieial flowers were to be seen intended to adorn many a young girl, for making which the work- men receive half d penny or a penny an hour. Playthings there were which re- joice our children on Christmas eve, and which have been made by children who work to or twelve hours a day for nine- pence halfpenny or a shilling. Elegant articles of dress worth 30, 40 and JO shillings, for which a few shillings wages had been paid, leave the workwomnl I rrotit of scarcely a. shilling a day. Earn Beuerly Wages. For the pressing of 1.000 hairpins 6 Meanings It cent) he paid, and 7.000 to 8.000 pins are the greatest output in a day. The lretsawmukers receive 30 to 40 pfennigs (9 to 10 cents) th gross. They are able to make 30 gross in a week. The wire twisters in the Eifel mountains earn a quarter of a. dollar in m the omni- hand-g, the muted-g". An the result of but month’l ndvaasees of 5 per cent, diamonds no - deem by 20 per cent. than " my time since the consolidntion of the De Been mines in South Atria. The United States last yen imported diamond- to the nine of $8,403,222, . day of fourteen io fifteen hours. This branch of industry is dying out, but it in: very lo_ng. yediops Aeatt2.st.rusgtte. . BUILDING u INDUSTRIAL 1ili(iul0h The watchmnkers in the Black Forest are in It most hopeless condition. as m nbo the ironwork": in Schmnlkll- den. The wages in the Rubia pipe in- dustry are incredibly low. In the toy industry in Furth and Nuremberg 500 women one occupied in painting 1rtt tin. Fourteen to 16 ptennige (3 cent.) is paid for 100 finely painted Arures. By working twelve hours a day therwomen earn $1.25 a week, with a deduction of 16 cents for oil, varnish and brushes. 2g. thus earn 7 plennigs " cent) an ur. The output of the De Been companies, ,rhieh eontrol " per cent. of the world’s lupply, was for the year ending in November. 1903, ”MM, on which ' The United sum 1m become the chief importer of diamonds, with Russia next, and Frence and England in the order named. No doubt their increased popularity with us in in part due to the recognition of their desirability u an investment not liable to great flnnn. cial 1|th in mutae.-uNew York World. '88 realized n profit of 8i1,lm,000. It in estimated thnt the South Afriean mines have added $400900,000 worth of dismal: to the world’s stock. Sur- prise will be excited by the statement that not 5 per cent. of the diamonds in the world hare been lost in a hundred years. _ . -_- . . - . - Amsterdam is still the centre of the diamond industry. There 8,956 person! ere engaged in splitting, polishing and cutting these precious atone. in Iixty- four "factories." Considering the ex- pertise" demanded for this work their weekly rage: of from 010.06 to42o.10 nppeer disproportionate to the skill re- quired. -- . - - . . . - In the toy industry in the Erzgebirge a family of tire earns $3.50 a week, reckoning 81 for expenses. For the making of little toy animals IS pfen~ nigs " cents) are paid for three more. Six thousand have to be. made in a week. The expenses amount to $2.30, so that only 81.25 profit. remains. A family earns 81.50. a week by making 1,800 jumping jacks at 7 cents for three more. 'lHE QUESTION OF CHU‘CHGOIIIG. The trouble id that. those who are most agitated about this question do not re- alize that they are dealing with an evil peculiar to urban life rather than to the rural regions oethe south that men at. tend church a: .mud: at,they candid and probably more. and the an. ism d the viii-Wanna {Emu Fretrukihrtueroriiiuilut by. the summer revivals and protracted meetings have begun Ind thousands of CHEAP LABOR IN GERMANY. buxom or m WORLD. The pay of the ship's doctor varies from $30 to $50 a month. This is Mr the duties to officers and crew. As re- gards passengers in relation to the sur- geon, the following groups will include all: First, the passenger who takes the initiative by remunerating the surgeon, perhaps, handsomely, for any services rendered; second, the passenger who asks for his bill and pays it if reason- able; third, the passenger who, travel- ling for the first time, does not know whether to ask for his bill or wait for it to be delivered, but is pleased to be enlightened on the matter; fourth, the passenger who clings to the old-time notion that the surgeon is there solely fifth, the 'pusenger whi, ne.v?rtqs to pay the surge6rv-Nediiy.tl. Record. Overcrowded Java. The Dutch and the leading natives in Java, are of the opinion that the popula- tion is increasing too rapidly for the good of the island. The census, taken ev- ery five years, has long shown an in- crease of over 2,000,000 for each cen- sus period, and the rate of growth has constantly accelerated. The increase of population from the census of 1895 to that of 1900 was over 3,000,000. {61' "tih/jji/neit" of Ge pissew and, fifth, the 'pusenger who_ncv“ ttai; Minard’s Linn-en: Cures Garget in Cows The writer of a letter to the Lancet uys that the ease of the ship’s surgeon is stated with ‘accuracy in the above sentences, and adds that ship's surgeons ore of two kindtr--flrst, those who, after they have qualified, take such a position either for health or for pleasure, and, second, those who elect to make sea. life a permanency. Java is only a little larger tan New York State, and the central regions are too mountainous for a very dense paink- tion. The fact that the last census 5 ow- ed a total population of 28,745,698, in. dicates a frightful congestion of hum- anity over all the coastal and interior plains and valleys. The density of po- pulation is 563 persons for every square mile of surface, which is greater than 'ltDependslnchUpontheSicheuand the Service. ' A correspondent of a recent edition of Lloyd's Weekly has expressed the views of a ship doctor in the following words: “Many travellers are in doubt as to the position of the ship's doctor iin regard to his remuneration from passengers for services rendered. The merchant ship- ping act enacts that every foreign going vessel having 100 persons on board or _ upward shall carry on board as part of her complement a duly qtmiiiled medical i;ieiiiiliiir". Furthermore, an emigrant _tship--i. e., a foreign going vessel which carries flfty or more steerage passengers --muat have a medical man, irrespective of the number of crew or of other pas- "ngers---mutst have a medical man, ir- respective of the number of crew or of other passengers carried. The salary of the doctor on board is commensurate with these duties to his ship. To. any passengers who are suffering from or dinary forms of seasickuess and its con- comitant evils, or who receive injuries which are in any way due to the ship, the doctor's services are free. For any sickness contracted before sailing or during n voyage which is not connected with. the tgrove named conditions, he is entitled to a :emuneration " the same rate as he mould receive on shore. 0b- viuusly it Wt ttht be as unfair to expect that his "tvices to passengers should be ranch-w! gratis ltll it would be for anv visitor. in a lute: or traveller on a railway tn expect to have medical at- tendance iree in any invess for which the hotel or railway mthoritics could not be held resoonsible." in any province of China excepting in bhahtung. If France had the same den- sity of population its inhabitants would number 120,000,000; the United States, at the same rate, would have 1,688,000,- 000 inhabitants, which is about 100,000,- 000 more than the estimated population of the world. Such packing of humanity as this at least illustrates the fact that when ev- ery acre of tillable land is stimulated to its highest productivity, it will give sustenance to several times number of persons who are now supplied with food from an acre of land in most countries. The Japanese are still able to raise all their raw food and to export the pro- duets of their plantations and forests to the amount of millions of dollars a year. But they are already talking about a time to come when they will no long- er be able to produce on their island all the food they require. "every by,” " well ”My, when their material "Hm would, no doubt, be enhanced by devoting their workday tulle to their crops. - _ _ There an be no doubt that men in the larger cities we not to faithful to their religious oblgntions. If he is I prob. lean present by that Was it is another city problem, forte we sure it does not apply to the gut I . ltnnl 'd/h'." of the cotmtry.--Wrt $orth Re.. cor . - Suddenly we saw, from where we were, on a curve of the Naushan crest. facing the Kinchau Bay, a sight which made our Blood bound in our veins-it was the battle-tutr of Nippon flapping awafi. over where the Rai- Iian trenches were. hat was the signal tor a general rush forward to storm the heights. There were only a few ot us in our company who could answer the general order to rush forward-and everyone ot us wu wounded somewhere, A minute ago all. about “a were suppressed grams of men who were deeper-- ately wounded. These aeemed to come from beneath the heaps ot the dead bodies of our comrades. Instantly. as we saw our Ila: planted on the crest ot the Nansbai; the shout of the "Banzai" rolled over the Neill. coming from the throats and the livid lips that would be still and voicelesa within a few moments. As I reached the crest at the hill I came upon is follow waving a "I: which was about two feet square. It was all bloody. He was standing over the proatrate body of a Russian who was not yet dead. "This flag. air." he explained humbly to me. “wu given me by villagers of mine. I promised them I would plant it in the en- emy's trenches some time. You see. sir. it is bloody. This Russian," pointing to the stalwart fellow at his feet, “was the last fellow who resiste me. I killed him with my sworg; or. at least. I have pretty nearly finished in. I have wiped my M on em. nag. l on gains to take this no; book if I an: alioewd. to the men at my Vin-33. as a memento of the first fight I have been in."-B! t Jeanne” officer. in Leslie's lowly Magelneilogxmnber. Mind’s Lit-en! Cum ”than. Even a neighorhood store can ndver. tis ‘in a leiTst',ri'er, with - raitt. ‘A small 0mm in w ich a. ;'inirlil article is exploited at it time,mnd with name white laugh: in order to make the. letters conspicuou. does not cost much. -A until grocer in New York says he bu“ found such advertising profitable . AS To PAYING SHIPS DOCTOR. SHALL STORE ADVERTISING. A CHARGE AT NANSHAN. --'"--rqi--qdt- "In all my jaunts in eastern lauds I have found no country as interesting as the Malay States, that long strip of peninsula which is encompassed on the east by the China Sea and on the west by the Strait of Malaeea," said Mr. Mar- cus Luning, of San Francisco. "I lived over there for more than a year, and got prett well acquainted with the people and their institutions. "The Malays are in many ways a fine race. With them personal cleanliness is held in high esteem, and the common custom is to take two baths a day. They are likewise the politest folk I 'ever met. I Thu! a whole retinue of servants, and yet, t could never get used to thinki g of them or treating them as servant‘s because of their superlative courtesy.' So polite were they that it seemed as though Ayes, were doing me a favor when they, asked for an advance on their wages, and they were continually in my debt, because of the impossibility of denying requests made in such an orn- ately deferential wtty."-iathington The "Realty Trust" of New York, which advertises extensively, has author- ized this statement: "The advertising mediums used by Realty Trust are the daily newspapers. Other mediums have been; tried -n1;d abandoned, and now all of the eornpttny'ts advertisements go to the dailies." Bl DID THEIR DUTY Ill EVERY BASE Posf. Cured Manna. Murphy and Everyone Else She Etecouunend" Them To. River Gngnon, Que., Oct. 3L-(Speeial) -No complaint is so common among wo- men as PEin.iwthe-Baek. It is a safe PtV timate that fully half the women in Can ada. are afflicted with it. For that rea- ttow Dodd's Kidney Pills Banish Pain In the Back. son every evidence that there is a sure and complete cure in existence is thank- fully received. And there is abundant evidence that Dodd's Kidney Pills is just Inch a cure. This district could furnish a. dozen cures, but one is enough for an example. The one is that ot Mrs. June! liyrplt She says: " sutterisd for thirty-eight months with a pain in my back. I took just one box of Dodd's Kidney Pills and l have never been troubled with the pain since. I also recommended Dodd's Kidney Pills to other people, who complained as 1 did pad in every use the Pills did their duty aid brought relief." The wish is sometimes father to the thought, and sometimes ith even fat. The Kewspapen Exclusively. The Politeness of the Malays, Who Knows Anything About All bayou. when and nun of fiillllf't 1lll1lilllflililt gllillBllit PAPER 4' Will - render of “all enquiry “WHO KNOWS ANYTHING ABOUT BANNIOBR" - drop a lino on tho subject to THE t, ll, EDDY DDIPAIY. - HULL, MMM " To Win. (New York Sun.) More action, Less aald; More 'courage, t Lou dread. More cheerful, Less and; More goodness, Less bad. More liking, Less hate; More labor. Less wait. " BANNIGER " m Interested In this question .--Joe Cone. TORONTO vice. but slab tirdAiiée Tri7iriroi""iirim7ia man no women who are Interested In Bit a m In in... we“ BE CARRIED ML“. During a meeting of the Louisville Presbytery last week, Delegate Haw- thorne, of Princeton, told ,this story of pioneer days, and vouched for its accuracy: One of the circuit riders in my part of the State was extremely fond of pepper sauce, and as he could seldom find any strong enough at places where he stopped, he always carried a bottle with him. He happened to be at a hotel one night, though he usual] stopped at the home of a friend. I man sat across the table from him, and, seeing the sauce, asked if the min. ister would share it with him. The request was granted, and the stranger poured out a liberal allowance of the sauce, into his soup. At the first swal- low he made a wry face and blurted out: "Minister, do you preach hellt" "Yes, brother," was the reply. "Why do you ask?" "Beeause you are the first preacher I ever saw who carried samples,” was the answer-New York Tribune. NEW PATENT "#1154“ L' Folding Mat. "leht 7% T This seat is the a " 'onlv one ot its - " R E kind on the mar- " . ket, and should ‘ _. be seen and used v. to be appreciated. t' The advantage- _ 'ous feature in in the fact that the seat drops. There is no spring and it cannot get out of orders Made ot malleable iron with a piano stool finish top. Largely used in depratmental stores and any place where space is an object. Price per seat, $1.25. It a larger number in re- guired write for special terms. Novelty Mtg. 0., 219 Queen street east, Toronto, Ont. we "we.--“ v- -" - ,. goodpictures of it, too. His invention re- presents a material movement on the irphtu1meeopt invented by Helmholtz in 1850. The latter, however, only ad- mitted of viewing the background of the eye. The fact that all attempts to photo- graph the interior or the background of the eye had remained fruitless so far was due to the peculiar construction of the eye. It is difficult to light up the interior to such an extent as to enable one to take a photograph of it, and even in the use of strong sources of light the exposure would require so much time that the eye wiuld have to be fixed, which would mean great in. convenience to the patient. Now Dr. Thomer has constructed an apparatus with which he first succeeded in phy tographing the eyes of animals, especi- ally cats. . Dogs have been found of great ts- sistance to the police force of Brussels. They are particularly useful in the sub- urbs. A young minister was called a few years ago to a church in a thriving eastern city. His predecessor had been a well known preacher whose sermons had attracted large congregations, but whose expressed belief was that the elertryman's single duty was the spiritusl welfare ot his people. The church had failed to meet current expenses for sev- eral years. and its considerable debt was in- creasing with mechanical regularity. The newcomer was not a wonderful orator, but he had a firm mouth and jaw. Within two years he was " the head ot a smooth] run- ning business organization whose dyepart- ments were handled by men who understood their work and did it, which discounted its bills and reduced its old ipdebtednesura. The church had become a tryrkittehureh. "Your predecessor was right, however." Ipoke up one of his leading members, with a. smile; "he always said the Lord would ',e,if.ti,.tlt Lord did provide ,ou."-horn '-_Il-v_ “AI-I_ |'__4_I,, - -- _ Invention Has Been Perfected for Pho- tomphiu the Cavity. The dummies optieians have experi- enced in arriving at an accurate diag- nosis of the complaints from whid that patients are sullen-in; have led to ex- paiments in photogiphing the eye. For this purpose an instrument has re- cently been invented, affecting optical science in general, and the further de- velopment of the eye specialist's pro- fession in treating eye diseases and faculty vision in particuhr. According to a German exehinge'tlte assistant of the university clinic of the Royal char- ity hospital, Dr. Walter Thorner, has succeeded in solving a problem which had received much attention from many others before him, but with little or no success. He has managed to photograph the _btekgrouml “of .the eye. and .obtain At Los Angeles, Cal., the experiment has been tried of using the heat of the sun to create power and to heat water for domestic purposes. At an ostrich farm near the city a solor motor is in agention every sunny day, or about t ree hundred in a. year, and pumps 1,- 400 gallons in a minute. Sol“ heaters are placed on the roofs of houses and connected with water pipes. One heater will supply water for domestic purposes for an ordinary family. Miami’s Liniment Cures Distemper. "The church.” he said one day, “is a tma- porai organization doing an entirely practi- cal work. Business integrity is as neceuary to its continuance and definite achievement is as necessary to its advance as in any otlyAr tempora 1ortputization." _. Leanne's" Monthly iuiGirWiirNGi;int,Tr? It in obvious that the Sunday school, with its definite moral purpose and its grip upon practically the entirer,tuventie population, in a mighty tactor in the building ot the no- tlonel chowder. and no worthy ot the eer- ioue attention ot all thoughtful pen-eons. Within its wells on fixed ideele which [our are wrought out in the event: of commerce. polities. science end the fine one. Therefore the development of the Sundey school i e nutter which concerns not merely the thon- sends tho Penguin]; "rea" in_tts eer- THE BUSINESS CLERGYMAN, vane of the Sunday School. DOGS AS POLICEMEN. Utilizing the Sun’s Rare. ran-mi)“: 3m _ i?? What shrunk your wooiiiiirt' Why diAlyrleyty. so Mon ? You" I rushed by a. fellow who wss down; his left leg was shot away. He wss bleeding cop- iously. Through the din ot rifle tire and machine guns which gave us s msntle at smoke and dust, I shouted to him: "To the rear. to the Field Hopsitsl, end be quick about it." The fellow looked up st me, sad upon his fsce was s merited sign of surprise. His lips quivered in a hell-smile. The ex- pression of " face wu st once an ientrroga- tion point sud s mild rebuke. Then he be- gan to wiggle himself forwsrd through the bodies ot his falen comrades. I repented my order, whichl. seeing the: he could not welt very well with one leg, was a rather foolish tttMt-l was eomewhst ezaaperated st the evi- dent indifference on his part to the order ot his superior officer. He reised his toes in my direction with the some old hell-smile and said to me'. "Lieutenant, I hsve list one ot my legs, but don't you see I hsve two hands? They ought to be enough to strike " the Rutmitm."-From the Account ot a Jspsnese Officer, in Leslie’s Monthly Megs- sine tor November, of the Battle ot Kinchsu. "Few concerns have any real super- iority over others in their lines," says ‘an advertising expert, "yet one or two houses forge ahead while others stand still. The fault of the Utter is not in the goods, but in the matter of ndver. tising. The buyer no longer hunts up the seller, but the seller must invite the buyer through the medium which he reads-the newspaper,” PATENT TROU- . not and Skin I T_4 Hunger, holds 4 _. " a turnouts" use], . .155: MlliBIM blag! n'fefiei ia p I ' W at . M - a “mum. Bend - - Toe and secure one. Endorlod by I" leading anon. Novelty Mfg. Co., 219 Queen street out, Toronto, Ont. Dear sirs,---I was for seven are I sufferer from bronchial i'2'ld', and would be so hoarse at times that I could scarcely speak above a. whisper. I got no relief from anything till I tried your Minard's Honey Bale-m. Two bottles gave belief and six bottles made a. com- plete cure. I would heartily recommend it. to any one suffering from throat or lung troyt.rle. J. F. VANBUSKIRK. A Cause of Success. It is a. strong testimonial to the ef- ficinncy of newspnper advertising that the manager of I. food concern credits to his campaign of tiewsrsaper publicity his success in introducing into every Bee. tion of the country three or four entire- ly new forms of food, for which e de- mndhndtobemeted.“ltcoetslotot money,” he aye, “But the result- have war-natal the expenditure of every dot. Smoke mews waste. The science of smoke prevention and the science of per- feet combustion are equivalent terms. Once make u factory owner mum this chu all-w .. -"'"'"o -rw_--_ e and he is won over to the cause, for if he In: intelligence enough to mange a business he must know t " perfect oom- bustion of fuel man: no wane. Consider the analogy of a. coal oil lamp. Earn up One can almost always find a good story about animals, in the London Spec- tator. The following is reproduced from a book called Wild Sports of the High- lands. The author writes that the most curious example of a dog's understanding of conversation ‘was shown him by a shepherd. Like the dogs of modern Greece, which keep watch along the little banks that enclose their master’s bar- ley fields, the sheep dogs watch their master’s small crop of oats with great fidelity and keenness, keeping off all in- truders in the shape of cattle, sheep and horses. A shepherd once, to prove the value of his dog, which was lying before the fire in the house, said in the middle of a sentence concerning something else, Mn thinking, sir, the cow is in the pota- tom.' The dog, which appeared to be asleep, immediately jumped up, and leaping through the open window, scrambled up the turf-roof of the house, where he could see the potato field. He then, not seeing the cow, ran and looked into the stall where she was standing, and finding that all was right came back to the house. The shepherd said the same thing again, when the dog once more made its patrol. But on the doubt being uttered a third time, it got u ' looked at its master, and when he hugged, growl- ed and curled up again by the fire. I”: “II-Iva: v. - ---- v, I - the wick sad the lamp smokes. You are using too much oil, and getting 1eses light. The same is recisely true of a furnace. A smoking Jimmy-stack moons too much fuel-and less heat. Once get the factory owner to understand this--- to know that those belching clouds of block smoke means wasted money gone up the chimney and less power for his ,Gchinerr--tutd you have converted him. Lever's Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder dusted in the bath, soften; the water and disinfect; . ___ w 18 (Town Topics.) The Artist-What no you at now, old man? The Author-A football story. The. Artist-And tho hero wins the some with o ninety-yard run. ot course? ' Th3 Author-Not this hero; he simply cor- ners the ticket market um! lives our over Afterward. The steady soun~house mfron u. It": that one good tween dun-v. n- Mlurd's Linden: Cum Colds, etc. l, 91¢??? cf Fiederieton, Business Method' in a Story. Smoke Ea" Wasted Fuel. U” was: “new” Ill- " Why Some Snead. A Good Dog story. A JAP HERO. L'l,T, riit5,i8,r9,riiet,i'pli common soap. [18st 110431904. In the Fortnightly Review, Mn. John Lane writes: At evening parties a man's thym- is mitigated by music. In my own - Kerienee when some “my mu: cad I nve stood together speechleu, no ”one: did the piano break into our appalling silence than ideas seemed to iambic no. The dumb man spoke as if by We. and I, who had hitherto nothing to any, eouldn't talk fast enough. Judge Grosscup, of the United States Circuit, has just issued an order res- training nintben Chicago ticket scalpers from dealing in any railroad tickets or the unused portions thereof which are not transferable. If this order is made permanent it will practically put the ticket dealers out of business. The City Council of Nashville, Tenn., has also re- cently adopted an ordinance defining the business known as that of ticket broker or dealer. In that city Mose. Henlin, who conducted a ticket brokerage office, was indicted a short time ago by the Grand Jury of Davidson County for uttering forged or altered ticket. or passes. m pleaded guilty and was sentenced to nr teen days in the workhouse, and y a the of 8500.---Brooktyn Standard anon. A writer in the World’s Work relate.» the following ineidtetltr, . " _ An American winhed to move from the Hotel Europe, the principal hotel in tit. Petersburg, to a amulet hotel around the corner. He came down with his mi packed and ready to go. "Sorry," aid t e tntutager,"but you tsanot lave this hotel or register at another hotel until we get-your passport from tw- lice, and that will take . day 1 night. You mult go through exactly the same procedure as if you were leaving the country." - She Barr. “I suffered untald misery him rttemttittrtrt-aoetoee mule!” " no no ttood-two bottles ot South American m- matte Cure cured me-genef two hour: “It the tint do.q."-4io We olor Ono Hundred Dollm’ new“ tor on: can ot Comb an: moot be and by Ball'- Catarrh Cure. P. J. CHINE! & CO., Toledo. o. We. the 'trg1t',t'te's"p, In" known P. J. Cheney tor the [not 5 you! mad but." his 90ch honor-bk In all basin-u unno- uuona and ttruutehutr nbh to any on any obligation- made by thin am. “hum“, ktttNAN n lava. Whom Drum-u. Toledo. o. nur- Catarrtt Cut: In taken Intern-111,0? In; directly upon an blood wt! mucous on" been of the "tttem. Taamonluo can: {an Pha'sitnr bottle. Bold by .1! drama Toke B 'l FamilyPllh tor tso-tton Shiloh’s I Cooasumptiom, ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Renown att hum. not: or allowed lulu Ind hummu- from hornet. blood “via. curbs. splint. Hutton. "may. ml... mm; cum lore uni "who w coughs. otet.t_0trrtho-oteraaeeot- no. War-mud the loot manual in.» Cu. ... than. 'Whltby. was for month. a rhounmuc Tte- tim. bgtjouth Alperlcqq_ m"y!.nttu an}. A Chinese Viceroy“! W Against New The Pekingl and Tim-Tail: Timea con- tains the fo owing proclamation iuued by Yuan Shi-Kai, the powerful Viceroy of Pechili: 1. Anyone creating wild ruinon calcu- lated to alarm or Produce doubt in the peoplc'a minds, wil be beheaded. 2. Anyone teaching or learning nay-tic tgt/r: like Boxer measures and red- ntern doctrines, will be beheaded. 3. All persons gathering to gether for purposes of plunder or forcible disorder will be beheaded. 4. Anyone in the Government service military or civil, found connecting him- self in any way with people spreading strange doctrines or connected with die- orders will be beheaded. 5. For the harboring of those who spread wild doctrines and mischievous belief: the heads of the (email will be imprisoned for tire years no; ell the property continued. “Regular '.raottoetqer---$" R-att."-- Annie c, Chestnut, ot ii aiFii . Peer', "W" situation, - a woitt In“. Call - -- “a. an. In!“ 'NlllUl'lt east, In an advertising rel-iodial in rep ed the erperienee o two men a 1 sonnllyA known to_ the writer of the worm mm. 'itriirtt.iir3Fit "riot ”no“. Wrm 'Off, port. 'One went into the fancy poultry business, but did not advertise. Evan- mlly he grew disesouraged from luck of buverl and gave up the, Maine“ A hundred miles may mother mun went into the tttttit.,' but ndvertined in I mun o lending W. Be in still at it on a large sale, new a. vetting and in a rid: mane A nut in Parapet. “‘ toe.) Bro to Bin-gmt who new a. no tflk1'lrbAlti1l',' but It...“ - an "iirifi'r,tS,t 1ItmnALyy1Ere.LufGi'U" - 1i'l'ktef1h'rllhtiii'iii"iiiiittl I“ . WK” ittiiee.' -iiFiiiririiimqtigt cg with} 01-1le Pgt-rwe, prank _ "rar-rr';'..' La. trrfppe, pneumonia. and inthe enza. often leave at nasty cough when they're zone. It is a. clan us thing to neglect. Cure it wiry MUSIC AN AID TO IDEAS. AN AMERICAN IN RUSSIA. War on the Ticket Scalpen. ch Btitt-yd ' . a an jllhht'lliL'htd4ut gnu-:- of mu Nr rg,grl'llrri - ftt do.- not 31.“. Alla-III was. 21 mu and out. mm. "s-sr, wrrn ms nun- In 'a'WO EXPERIENCES. MW'S THIS ? tra " Japanese dud is a The Japanese Strq Will tl General 0y l dewn Tim WEN THE " brief rennin campaign. ( aria" reverie [IV prob-bl uian wt front from Bent not of Sinvhinr Sh: River. whe south after crm " tit' The River Form " tre, \h where mined Imam the It; this " nppn At ou Russians the imll where tl uh he: m 11mm ll Ft nnm In fir Thus ion erm' lbw ch taker}. port/Inc The " ll Mukden “lb editions of tl e, winch nov - the plum med the In” " la l WITHIN " now on: nrehensi H'l I‘ll ' "nut In his ttt " 50,000 REIH the pi tth aid at many hifl ll Eamon. I “suns, so in of a: Port 1H n 't Ill the ition “.1 night t dment of batteries. v “mm mtlm1 y er emu com-Lil! . Ill-kill] in Tt " the was W mfr (D rt k M " It]: tthe bir " irid " um It rm ill th ll TI Ll ‘nl "

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