West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 17 Nov 1904, p. 2

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once: "For a long time we paid more attention to produceion than to selling, and the result was an accumulation of products to excess. An advertising cam~ pnign was animating and we carried it on "ttth such vigor that our shelves lure nearly emptied, and we considered it expedient to put on more force in manufacturing.” A writer on commercial topiee says that recent legal proceedings showed that the out-put of a great soda-cracker concern had increased I300 per cent. in three years, owing almost entirely to advertising. The business of a big shoe house has grown 1000 per cent. in four year since it began to use printers’ ink. His First Step in Crime (Chicago Nun). "What van your 'tmt on, In ertgnq that 21:» to ma Carla; tor-Irv?" uni the on papers the Cl thow tablia to Vlinrd's Liniment Cites Colds, etc Inn's Pineapple Tablets are not big. naus- cons doses that contu- Injurlous drug: or "reotletr--ttt" are the pure unable min ~01. medicinal extract tron this luscious fruit. and the tablets are wanted in " palatable form as the fruit Itself. They are indigestion. Co In 3 box, 35 cents.--" ' Mr. J. ('ollier is authority for the stats-mm! that there are no less than tive lluulsnnd distinct languages spoken by mankind. The number of separate dialects is enonnous. There are more than sixty distinct vocabularies in Bra- xii, and in Mexico the Nahua language han haw-n broken up into seven hundred Ui,ilect.s. There are hundreds in Bor. nw. The complexities are, beyond clans. ificvtion in Australia. and generally the mum» of dialects deem-uses with the 'tnt/tual "ulture of the population. ll tin-re is an average of fifty dialects' to every language we still have the enor- mous total of 250,000. this for the ti der that he d he did not at bl») who drpri bopard had h fitrre " Jew d I girl and a I Amamu Paor, When this had gone on for a few min. utes the manager came riding up, and observing the state of athirs at once Shipped into the game. He and the boy between thrun saws-inlet! in rescuing the body of the sheep. but the leopard got the head. He contented himself with this for the time being, tad it is it won- der that ho dm not take more and that he diu nut attack the manager and the bu) M in: deprived him of his meal. The human! had hi, revenge for his discom- The hospitality of the manager of the Uopalpore tea estate» is proverbial, and he has I "Mutton Club." The leopard Boon got to find out this, and he there. fore strolled into the precincts of the club and made himself an honorary member ntraightaway, quite unconven- tinnnlly and without any of the usual formalities. For "tiffil" he selected and Mind the fattest sheep. But the boy who was in charge of the sheep would not allow thin, so he caught the sheep by the hind legs and hung on to them while the Icnrard wan tugging away at the other end, the boy yelling “blue murder" all the time. Little But Searching. "‘r " few clays after, when he maul girl and a member of the Hindus Hanan P.azttar Patrika. iahment which mak advertising would main! if it should A huge learn] visited the Gopalpore tea ontute a ew days ago, and, arriving about 11 o'eloek in the morning took a good look around. After roaming about and apparently satisfying tunnel! that everything was going on all right, ha felt the pangs of hunger coming over cartel an hour tree from pan.’ 1 could not lie’down to take rest, but had to nit night and day in a chair. “1 VI! treated for Rheumatism by severe! doctors, end elm tried several medicines without receiving any benefit. Almost. in despair. k feared I never again would tre free om pain. Then I tend of none "writable cures by Dodd'e Kidney Pills. I procured n box and soon found they were doing me good, and before I had finished the sec- ond box I was entirely tree from pain and a new man." Dodd', Kidney Pills always euro Rhea- mutiim by putting the kidneys in shape tat take the cause -Urie Aeid--out of tho bland. manufacturer Five Thousand Distinct Languages "ror toor year's [sinned excruciat- ing torture," up Mr. Doeg. “I was scam-fly an hour t.re.e from. prim , could man! - to an Night and In, to. a Chair. mid”. Ont., Nov. 7.--ieial.)-- Mr. William Doeg. of this phce, now a hub, but” “I, tah at his altno.U "grae/tu, cure of Rheumatism by us- ing Doddu Kidney Pills. SUFFERED TORTURE M FOUR YEARS Ho I'M so Bad run He Could nothae than Ttrprng old three-deeker m- the pride of g broken up at Boy's Tussle With a Leopard ree Making and Selling. rtettr. of "tiG"oGr'TriiU" nod In went to It Does Pay. Cause of Failure. 1ifirant fact that. Famous Ship h M’s Kidney Pills Curod I. Doeg's Rheumatism. arid. thong . But she fire 300 sh up to her? was of wo the Produc rest oak. hundred ' mtnmu, any of the usual 'ot' "tifrin" he selected and test sheep. But the boy huge of the sheep would ' BO he caught the sheep at: and hung on to them urd Wu tugging away at , the boy yelling "blue ainst th lag the "teq of jun"! nailed on m' nnuurmls In "or. ities an! beyond class- dial. and generally the is drew-uses with the 1- of the pnpuintiom "up of fifty dialects we still have the enor- hits tells his experi- ime We paid more rion than to selling, an accumulation of An advertising calm Ye, and we carried mi of wood produce " Duke of Welling. the British navy, Portsmouth. She and headed the Baltic when war Russia in 1854. tlu. biggest mun- ongh her tonnage she carried 131 , shot.. a minute, 'ter?" said a Lon. wood, of course, Him-o of seventY- worn-1 titi ttt for M! discom reekone Fears oh per cent. of husim rofit with, mtly more the news. cent accord i m: TIN ned at old, to Dr. Von mauled If 5091921 i date of her marriage. a Not long since a Paris jeweler made a most elaborate thimble to the order of a millionaire. It was somewhat larger than the ordinary thimble. and the agreed price was $25,000. The gold tet. ting was scarcely visible. so completely was it covered with diamonds, rubies and pearls in artistic designs. the rubies showing the initials of the recipient. Five or six years ago a jeweler in the west end was paid a sum of nearly $15.- 000 for a thimble which the pampered wife of a South African croesua insisted on having made for her. This was one mass of precious gems-diamonds And rubies.--Modem Sooiety. ' 3:93” Tho costliest thimhlo in the world is undoubtedly one possessed by the Queen of Siam. It was presented to her by her husband. the King. who had it made at a cost of rather more than $75,000. This thimble is an exquisite work of art. It is made of pure gold in the fashion or shape of a half-dpened lotus flower. the floral emblem of the royal house of Siam. It is thickly studded with diamonds and other precious stones, which are so arranged as to form the name of the Queen. together with the date of her marriarro Exquisitely Jeweled and Shaped, it i, Rare Work of Art. Nor horse nor ass be at his side. Under water man shall walk, . Shall ride, shall sleep. shall talk. In the air shall men be seen, In white. in black, in green. Iron in the water shall float An easy as a wooden boat. Gold shall be found and shown In a land that's now not known. Fire and water shall wonders do. England shall at last admit a Jew, The world to anend Giii"ioiii' In eighteen hundred eighty-one, Much of it Has Been Accomplished, But the End is Not Yet. The Penn Monthly says the famous prophecy of Mother Shipton, in Eng- land, has at last been accomplished in many respects. Steamboats, telegraphs, ironclads. tunnels, the gold discoveries, the admission of the Jews into Eng- land, lure been accomplibhed in the nineteenth century, as the fire of Lon. don, the execution of Charles I., the death of Cardinal Wolsey and the reigns of Elizabeth and James, prophesied long before, came to pass each in their own time. Her doggerel verses, which are a. powerful influence in parts of Yorkshire to this day. are as follows: Carriages without horses shall go. And accidents fill the world with woe; Around the world thoughts shall fly In tho tuinkling of an eye. Water shall yet more wonders do, Now strange. but yet they shall be true. The world upside down shall be, And gold be found at the root of a. tree. Through the hills man shall ride, The entire undertaking coneieta of two dis- tinct parallel single truck tunnels " feet spurt. but connected every hundred yards by transverse galleries. so that one tunnel will ventilate the other. And despite the neat temperature in which the men work, the ventilation is excellent. The " is sup- plied to the men right " the end of the galleries in great volume. over 68.000 cubic feet of air per minute being supplied. Spe- cial arrangements are slso made by the em- ployment of sprey and of ice for coollng the air. The total quantity of water fhyelt i from the tunnel. Inclusive of both north an south entrances. is rather under 6,000 :81- Ions per minute. and is curried in efficient side drains cut in the rock. The greatest care is taken for the welfare ot the men; they change shifts every slant hours. and are brou ht out in train loads. They are not allowe: to encounter the cold Alpine air when emerging from the tunnel in their wet clothes, but ere landed in a covered building or station. in which there are cubicles for changing their clothes, fitted with hot and cold.dnuche baths. They take off their mining coithes. which are " once hung un in heated rooms to dry, ready tor their next day's work. Adjacent is a res- taurant at which they can get all their meals. of ext-client quality and at a very tow price. Breakfast. dinner and suppe r e provided at a theme of 1d. per day. 's'ii'isvrl,,.F,, are pro- vided in rooms with three at. r. furnished with electric light, for a further charge of 2d por. night. Everything is kept in an ex- ponent state of order and cleanliness. and the organization throughout is quite with- out precedent. “The smithy." says the Engineer, "is a very important part of the workshop, with forges in the centre and anvil. at the sides. ( and baths for the tempering placed conven- iently. The principal work is the making ot new and fettling-up of worn tubular drills or cutters tor the Brandt borer. It should be mentioned here that these hollow cutters have a diameter ot from 23-4 inches to 21-3 inches across their set-out points. The cen- tral hole is 13-8 inches in diameter. this leaves a thickness of about 3-4 inch at the cutting points. After these points Jt soft,‘ become blurred over, or else are brohem away when hard .and are then sent bark to the nmithy to be let down and forged into shape again. The V-hoiiow between each (an; is Bored out afresh by_meana of the chisel. QUEEN OF SIAM'S THIMBLE MOTHER SHIPTON’S PROPHECY "right up -to ttirGittiirf Jig, ti; iGUrGii ture of the steel is-hept cool and the debris is 1195th out of the hole. The rock through which the tunnel in be- ing driven u exceedingiy hard. consisting of granite and gnelu, with veins of white quartz, but in consequence or the adoption of the Brandt drill the galleries on the Swiss side were advanced daily no less than 16 teet 3 inches. an unprecedented result. and certainly four or live than more than that attained in England through similar mater- ial. The Brandt drill la 3 inches in diametet and rotates slowly. but it is kept up to its work by hydraulic presume of 1,500 pounds to the inch. or ot ten tone on the cutting points of the drill. An all the wane watera is discharged _aiong the axis of the tool] I" Mae]. “nylon ... at. Gothud Mttatrtt Cents Arlberg ... nbove on love] tAn.arttr,t?rir"iaGr-aTtGi; tunnels, as the which“ 'di' will show: ".. ". AMY. Tunnel. “all. u; level. limplon .e. ... ... ... mama: 3.310 teet 31. Goth-rd ... ... ... “Inne- 3.18! we! Mtrttrtt Cents ... ... ... ' mile. 4.29! (can Arlberg ... ... ... ... “an” 4.300Jeel. .354'9'1. 'rttherrtt- xqtqggmqgqqd tn The latest difficulty in connection with the great enxluecflnl [at or tunnel)“ throng“ the Alps near Mount :5an Bas one: mun. brought into promtlent We the norm Ink that um Hes below mammal: In.- are burrow“). in the m ot an earth. The “nylon tunnel w.) t. the “agent in the world. and the magi: tt you new in that ita course in It a 10"" altattrge, shove In love! than tun}! nth-r Maln- 'hrMannerinWhiehthis mm WorkhaaBeertCarriegoa. w floral emblem of" the royal Siam. It is thickly studded onds and other precious stones, I so arranged as to form the the Queen, together with the THE SUPLON TUNNEL. exquisite work of pure gold in the l half-opened lotus ble of the royal is thickly studded it made [ 875.00tt work of tsa - - -'_-- -. a... UV” NIAGARA FALLS, ONT & N.Y. IP w F F% -~ Bi , "9 Fr ' n " I» I A I' If ‘18:. L' SB, Tea' . r, _- . u; s ii -I' '; " " " lmillt Eat, 37’ 3 Gavernot Dockery’s Dog Story. (Kansas City Journal.) Governor Dockery, in " speech, tells of I man who was attacked by a ferocious dog. In self-deiense he killed it with a pitchfork. The owner, much aggrieved. re- monstrated. "Why didn't you come " him with the blunt end of it?" "Beuuso." re- plied the man, "the dog didn't come at me with his blunt end." Remove: nil bud. not: ttr ullouud lump. 1nd blemishes from horns. blood lpl'ln, curbs. Ipllnta, anbonc, uweeney, um... sprung; cur" tore and “woolen throat. coughs, etc. Saw 850 by the use at one got- Ho. Wanted the most wonderful Blunt-h Cure "or known. Effect of Advertising. A banker who has adopted modern business methods to increase deposits, says: "It was not until we began to ad~ vertise systematically in the newspapers that we found it expedient to keep the place open three evenings in the week." Lifebuoy tioap-it'anfeetant--U strongly recommended by the medical profusion u e Menard against infection: dine-nu. '" The academy of crime of which Dick. en's inimitable Pagan was head profes- sor has lost its prestige since details of a similar institution in Italy have come to light. This organization, called the "Mthvita," was situated at Foggia, and aimed at committing all sorts of crime, from highway robbery to kidnapping. There were two schools, one to teach the use of the knife and the other for pick- pockets. A few frances ivere charged for admission, and the pupils graduated ac- cording to the proficiency t ey attained. If any of the members were arrested the other members volunteered to give per-, jured testimony in his behalf, while a few l more took charge of the witnesses for the prosecution, whom they scared by threats into refusing to testify. ENGLISH SPAVIN LlNlMENT , [3 W Iii E . iiil 7 il? V R?" il RB. U li Gllti k) [in ' a Bi; Il6fl J: l Fii't ..l ' tRa, A 5. ' 'emi in , © A)!" I “f .liE"d 'Its L ii'iil V 7?] A London jeweler has made a. collec- tion of ancient forks used in England, which show some little known facts about the table manners of a few cen- turies ago. The forks, which are of solid silver, date from the sixteenth century. In many cases the desi ns in all this time have scarcely varieg in any detail and the forks look like those which might be bought to-day. The old forks were a great luxury in their time and were only used by the aristocracy. Four cows, that have their feed seasoned with MYERS SPICE. give as much milk as She without it. Actual tests I It not only increases the qunntitv of milk, but improves g " well. There's more cream and butter-fat to be gotten) milk-and butter and cheese is always smooth and rich. MYERS' ROYAL SPICE does this by toning up the s insuring perfect digestion -end enabling cows to get all the went possible out of their food. It keeps the whole herd sleek and fat- -pays for itsell times over, just in the feed it saves. Write for our free literature. MYERS ROYAL SPICE CO., NIAcAnA BALL-a, - Criminal Education Society. ' Will - man of this onqulry - “WHO KNOWS ANYTHING ABOUT BANNIGBR” please drop I "I. on the subject to THE f, D. EDDY COMPANY. - HULL, DANADA Myers’ Royal Cattle Spice iilllllN M'liVltll) gllyrrllllit PAPER All bayou. taller: and nun of Who Knows Anythlng About " u BANNIGER " Old Forks. worth Two Cows in Six ONTARW m mutated In this question 'e cream and butter-fat to be gotten out of we cheese is always smooth and rich. SPICE does this by toning up the stomach-- ion -nnd enabling cows to get all the nourish.. TORONTO Worm’s Defence. The annelid, Podynee cirrata, is a (mean-looking worm, about an inch and La. half in length, of flaattened shape, blunt at both ends, apparently covered ‘by a smooth skin of a dull brown color. On being touched it throws itself into elegant serpentine curves, and then what appears to be the upper skin is seen to be composed of a great number of round flat membranous plates or shields, ur- Iranged in tfo rows, overlapping each other. These, though of larger size, are attached to the body only by a small point in the centre of their sides, so that when the animal moves the edges of the shields are lifted and reveal their live structure, sliding upon each other in singular manner. Queen iitiisist "iGi,HorGiiiirbai', PATENT TROU- Ber and . Skirt Hanger, holds, 4 Fttrments,, steel, . 1118“in “Melina; i m plate , w l as a lifetime. Bend - 60c and secure one. Endorsed by all leading tailors. Novelty Mtg. Co., :19 nun-n cum... .....5 m-__». n = I No very recent estimates, of the loss , arising from the ravages of insects have been made, save a general statement of the boll weevil's work, but some of the older estimates are here given. Twenty-five years ago B. D. Walsh, the ‘entomologist of Illinois, estimated the loss from this source at from $200,000,- 000 to $300,000,000 per annum. Fitch,) the entomologist from New York, eatim. ated the damage to the wheat crop in this State in the year 1854 by the wheat midge at $15,000,000. The loss to wheat and corn on account of the cinchbug in the State of Illinois alone in 1867 was estimated at $73,000,000, The loss occa- sioned in 1874 to corn, vegetables and other crops by the Rocky Mountain locust in the States of Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri was estimated by Riley from carefully collected data at 3100,- 000,000. The ravages; in the principal cotton States of the cotton worm have amounted to a loss of about $30,000,000 in "have: A: -L..__L..H in years of abundance, As trade now stands there is not enough gold out of the earth, if it were all coined, to transact the business of I day. w-et"--- stomach Jie the centre from which, from the standpoint of heslth, tittwtg "was! or woe." A healthy stomach means perfect dit-tlon-perfect digestion means strong and steady nerve eentres-trtrontr nerve centres mean good circulation, rich blood and good health. South American Nervlne nukes and keeps the stomach rigttt.-62 An experienced business mu: tells d a contractor who undertook . job from which he did not expect any profit. "I do it as an advertisement," he aid. The man of experience calls this a mistake. "Make a profit out of every job and go to _the newspaper and pay for your ati-, vertisement.Hrhe best id'vertfsihg is in the newspaper, followed by good work at a profit." The Stomach's "Went or Mind's Uni-eat Cures Garret ll Cows Stow of that”: who Haiti], m a Second Time. Said a clergyman, who likes dearly to tell an anecdote: "I hope the Epil- copniians in Boston will seaw- vorce question for all tt e, - 't thin! they will. The“: the ad. marriage nation, too. iiet,hi'dl',"i?,,, story of {L Methodist ' ’Wha {as taken. to task by hi oo@tion or marrm a o r month after his i%4 'ISI. "ex- cused himself in this way: ‘My dear sisters and brethren, my grief was great- er than I could bear. I turned every ,Way for peace and comfort, but none came. I searched the tit,t,rr from Genesis to Revelations. and ound plenty of promises to the widow, but none to the widower. I took it that the Lord was not inclined to waste sympathy on a widower when it was in the lath poet to comfort himself; so, having a first-rate chance to marry in the Lord, L did so, and would do so again. ' sides, sisters and brethren, I considered that poor Olivia was just as dead as she would ever be.'" l. Actual tests prove this. , but improves QUALITY Insect’s Gigantic Meal, “nnnnc m In LORD." UDNUU,UU0. The loss to wheat 'n account of the cinchbug in of Illinois alone in 1867 was at $73,000,000, The loss occa- 1874 to corn, vegetables and - L_ n - n . -- The Best Advertising. self, a dozen , ROYAL PT? is in work t6n desk. Too much man 'trusty. tttr of Charity. They h selves not to leave heroicallv. Tho dim: ctn'erar from wounds. dihnhlod men become residents. ' His administrative work fi: Stoessel prowls around the makes his bed in some tren part. Next day. with Mm, a little figure clad in black. around the hospital ward: words of sympathy to the in insists that the officers she their duties strictly. and the been closed. He takes a prom in the firing line, and when charge of detached expodittV, return he leads their men In cessfully. “is rule is, "Wh, can be done." The soldiers love him, but t ‘resent the'iaet that owing cent promotion he is vested right of the award of deem-nth a recent, assault the divisional erg presented their recomn their nides-de-camp heading General Stoessel crossed out uying: "Aides cannot be ai, the firing line, too. They are , perhaps, but it is not an oppox diyaplaying valor. I cannot these rewards." Friction resu this decision. Of the 200 women who remit Arthur neurly all are. banded leadership of Mme. Stcessnl ' It Gen. Stoessel is now getting slight. ly gray. His tall, bulky form, clad in a brilliant general's uniform, is seen daily in the streets, but when he is proceed. ing to the forts he is dressed in simple gray and is frequently taken for a pri- vate soldier. He is described as the “Russian Lord Kitchener,” a man of few words, but a strenuous worker. l’emple aw that Gen. Stoessel never sleeps. for when all the city is in darkness in light burns in! his headquarters. - TTh, ... w.mt-.t.i._e - - Shep: in Trenches and in Loved by His Soldiers. An influential merchant named Kratz, from Port Arthur, says a Chefoo de. epatch to the London Daily Telegraph of bept. 22 gives an excellent description of life in the town. He declares that all hearts beat-at the biddim of Gen. Stoesael, and all realize that the is the one strong man who alone can save the situation. Socially, however, he is not liked. ion. Tod Shiloh’s In the good tim ccoming there will not be any single-track railroads nor any trains going in opposite directions on the same track; grade crossings will have been abolished, the road beds, hacks and rolling stock of all roads will be as sound and safe as science, skill and money can make them, end no effort to insure safety will be spared. Very few of our enormous aggregate of deaths and injuries by rail would have occurred had all of these conditions been present. It is the absence of most of them that piles up the appalling list. So long as that absence exists the slaughtering will go on. It will decrease in proportion to the extent to which the obvious causes are removed-Washing. ton Post. Miami’s Linpment Cures Diphtheria. It is then that the" country-bred boy wishes with ttil his heart that be had returned long ago to the farm of his youth and taken up again the yoke which then seemed so heavy, but which he now knows was 1ight.-ltuuats City Journal. Mistake of the Cottntry-Bmd Boy. You men from the country atand a t,et'dr"Sfdl','l, of success‘ in a city than do the young women, but they exchange a lift of hen th and freedom among the fields for a hard and exacting employ- ment in the city. Once inoculated with the virus of metropolitan experience, they are driven on by. habit and neces- sity until fin.tulr., as the years accumu~ late, the majorit sink to the level of mediocrity, and anally into dull apathy. STOESSEL A WONDERFUL MAR the ad that the ”at drops. There Is In spring and it cannot get out of order. Made ot unusable tron with n piano stool tiuistt top. Largely uud tn deprathsentyl. atom and my place than - is In object. Price per seat, $1.25. It I Inger number is re- ttrg write for special terms. Novelty MU. " 219 Queen urea east, Toronto, Ont. 110‘ put Tommy Bad Upset the by. (Ptholphll pulsar.) ”In. land no r on iiiaTr"tttuitptt, unfunn‘ Jititru'"r'd"Wlt'"dl'r"a"a I rial! "imusr--r vat to write to the o the mpor. to at him whu'll tabs II out ot the paler moot. Prices: s. c. mai, a Co. no 2Se. 50c. 61. [5301. N Ar., Toronto. Can. . The Lai, "are Tong, " cured them of chronic coughs, cannot ttll be mistaken. T ere must be some truth in it. "tt"t'"etuteotmsotr-. onsgnmption The thousands of people who write to me, saymg that own}. it in said. is 'tttt ttWe of (Iowan. ' Prevention of Railroad Wrecks. up dough sometimes makes or shut up with vumen who remain in all are banded under Mme. Stcessel as " "w. Mcessel as Shh-rs cy have pledged thom, leave and are working climatv fnvnrn rapid rm Inds. The Perntanortttv come the guests of the some trench of I with Mme. Stm _itt, black. he nmr icers, shall perform and the clubs have Is a prominent place ad when officers in expeditions fail to r men himself suc- is, "What I order the .iniurtri.""'ii'l h lfllt the officers ( finished. Gen. the forts and ations 3711536 the par- do you “I! with a to the editor ot It'll tabs Inksulnl i' of Swiw oxtractinn h the rol Fold!“ Beat. Thin soul " the 'only one of ita Had on the ma- bk, and should to noon and and to be tpprociawl. The gaunt“? 'oul tenturojl tn NEW PATENT to his re, with My hitoe, sel, prom-eds r peaking or ra m F a pri- as the simple After Un- “I ' rt ple for Illt . - - . a "d Tr n. '- bF> Rit, _ "?3 le t VII-g 's0 (d? f no at V bG t " 't . . Tq c iili' afur . \ t Bl L' , I lim V 9 fi u - , Li V " td t: , 1 y Na ' cy, N‘ l' Il, q sl . e F. a' l ' i, [.' ‘ . yArQ _ o , tRI " h. u w. Want Ta! .5. t" r The New Suntan fun-hol- tmkn for itse but you will spear, In t it too if you me it once. When' buying a tt “fascist you certainly should have tLe ' , at. i. "R2iffd, are talking of the advan- l use: had from the New Century Bail- - ' Baring Machine. For sale. bty dcnlm. " your local decl- ' . er cannot s. 10w you the New Crcttrry u , s' , shalt be glad to send on I tooth-t tits. ' ' cabin; it. Dealers 'M it at “so. ' '; Tr. auras-m tml ca no, mazes, cm i " '2'F"mmtmiiiiiir%'ii'ii'G'e': L' ' iiifii.iif - . illl Polly-Th0 w” um nun looked at we was positively mum“. Dottr-Did he sure u rout 2'lta"t; He ave on. - um the! look " sanctum; else. It is I. move in the right direction when t','t,t,'ti,e,', stiff. of their own se. cord to org: Ming clubs. At Wart. losley such a union has been formed, with the appropriate name of Crosg Country Club. It in the firtst of the kind them ind the object proclaimed is that a habit of taking long walk, may be formed. Health is the first desideratum and it shows that the young women mean business when each member of the club is required to walk out of doors at least three hours a week-moo) Eagle. Mind's Llllllelt Cures Distemper. mm. TIE in“ m- mm" Was, at: 373st tio. 47 1904, -You can use my me as freely as you like, u I consider it the best remedy I have ever used. Dear Bira,-A few days T I we: taken with . severe pain en contrac- tion of the cords of my leg, and had to be taken home in a rig. I could not sleep for pain, and was unable to put my foot to the floor. A friend told me of your MINARD’S LINIMENT, and one hour from the first application I was able to walk, and the pain entirely dis- epgeued. _ _ ',(,tiai.e: 31.00 In: Won't Feet ample copy, Faring"; P'" C. C. RICHARDS CO.: "" ulHONn‘ from other. " I consider your paper the best ngr I- cultural Paper in Cant-1h. being nrlgl- mi. and in every depuruzunl Juli of valuable information. DWCAI Caetqttnrr., Elam to ' Ont. m-_u --- - "He had on. once.“ replied her hosts“, "but the doctor um it wu brought on " bein' out too long In the hot BUD. My.' I don't know In» I d do with I person around me that trad than unduly." (New York Honld.) "Does your 'ttt.ettugt.st have my perquis- ltu?" - Mr. Oldqgstle." " . . . We ' 0n. Hundred Doiiam' Row." tor any can at an"! that canto: be cund by aura Chunk Cure. P. J. CHENEY & Co.. Toledo, o. " the Indomnol, have known F. J. Cheney tor an [an " you! And believe u. pulsed: honorable tn all buolnou a... “do" and “new: Able to carry out any obligation. undo by this Inn. WALDKNQ, T Kunuu a Intuit. Whom Drastic“. Toledo, o. Hall'l Cum): Can is taken 1nterttttlly,ae' In; direetly upon tho blood and mucous an» been 01th. ”can. Testimonial: Bent hm PHeo--7 tur bottH. Sold by all drum“ Tau a '0 Fawn!“ tor communion Globe. EEK? GaiFUrtaln oonditiomd the-hut man brain refute: to work." And w. seem to hue the tsondiliong.- Bum The compentive rate of dentin. and widen“ on British and {\fnerlcan rail. lel u “tails. On British railway; only use plunger in something less than m0,060,000 is killed, while on Am. erican nilwnys the fatal casualty is one in leu than 2,000,000.. 9110 in I," than 100,000 passenger: l injured on American nilwnys to one In mort' than 1,000,011) on British. An eminent rail. road resident explnins this by saying “-4 “ml..- ”rum conditions the bu. CHRISTOPHER GERRY Iitgrrsoll, Ont. Farming World pQ'e'BiIm - ___ " Thaw what ou troductory offer farmers and steel brings the a. other w “(Wu 1- - can um- I " NI, If". tho wfiMJSLTEQ Ga mama. amnion.“ 933:"! Two Years Reading for $1 AL - attd tttrid/fit An. Parana?) position val ttutah".' meaning 'alll nus. WI canal-lam gilded the m. ond M' ffgrn'lr2Al tim “m trtaar, "’33:... 1t'.'l'ht', to "G/AG, fn theAttrur- W'l'gi'lf) m-----'"""---" -11.. of some ammo. WAN K0ii the Inuunnce “no to only.” tr? ragweed din- ttie mun Imacmmys " i. iiiiitn- 'm be pm every “use? oummmmrsswmm College Gum Walking Club. 7-37-17? m" you let us send you r. free my. no that you can are The world foe yourself? or lead two y-n' Hillary-want. Positively Unbearable 'GIG' a ih7aririii" Saint eveiy [KI “unmet. I ”tall-r" imam Only One He Ever Bad. HOW’S THIS ? u" v- M.-P'-. - - names. . llrly may. and no" tdrii'itili, into. lull at Goo. Killian, , Wet “non oust, Em on the Rails. A MN}! '??1TA?f1re_r.9? otter means to Itockmeu. $1.00 our special in- iii-ii- up In the Insur- " "at-ttttttet-e If $3.5: “It. In an). VI. , "mutt m. prop! inhuman ing the tumoria. of Pride,' which is I t. Of this 'lower." men of E crummy-M indulging to El dulm ttt t plw vi. "l. and l the world tor Ill. mm o 'l. But theme "Jerusalem a: inebn'nues an momentum. '1 not In near tit tom, there an doelme." “N drink portray wandering int . A spirit of judgmen oqtion of God's truth. A rg',trd is Well In glo tmt the battle to the ' 6.0 the “Ring enemy m an! of their own city " 1 spiritual warm“! Vi. 12). and We Ire pled IV. Pryor!“ lipnn l' It, 10. Whom shall he leg-Id these verses m them twoffers as thet , t. "They treat God mg with them and wu ttttlt with comm ht, any they, doth b infants just weaned? like little children, over the same any I We must conceive Vern mimicty with u mocki bad, And in u chit tone. -Ewnld. ll. Kay (R. I'.)- begins with this , them with great turning their own mockery. back upu It aha" be In you r. by I 'rtrtutge tong Ind. Whitlu-r you aptivily. Then l learn like children.' m . Glu'll'lll (n of incipient." an that trust in Him. hm- that (Bud brim lap that God hri: he of His people M. The crown ot glory UM the residue The turn- from the ten tribe tribe. of Judah nnd Ben] not of God'a people, who that I kingdom for war dud pears after hurl w whiny. Judah was to “cued. Under Henkiah be c revival ot religion. F mh will be " crown ot linden; of beauty" to th Bil word and obey Him. bullinen' i one who thing to d It is the body, min with it be their f tion. had to ("at l rible l God's put-1st His of C. Al the first ripe fil the first ripe fruit 'I‘ by the fruit gather" and co Samaria would be a d fer the Assyrians. " in "ankle and sorrow like an Que upon aad destroy thr have been luppy and pro: om drink. li. The crown of glory fhretur.v.---i. T " (VI. 1-4). l. W duty. u buy all. the Ta' of pride t pro tet 1 mutiful ltr/a, 1 “I BRAIN on the 1 ad surrounded by . “in“: of 5th “mg tribe of the I Md in rice. The hands, and new was upon them. A very forcible figure. M would fade as 1 Id have the riches m we. The fut vall around Baum won “Mimi. 1hereome m men to fall l tempt-lion. Alcohol t aver. The drunlord Ind generally t'tti, the vilest sins. 2. The Lord hath tt ---This is a refetvno, ‘ Myriam, which wu- them like a dovar,tutu atruction would luv m rffic htil storm m a in almost immsnihlv f, devastation that “u "lf-savage horde, 3“ try, ranging villaw women and children 'ith the Auyriun ho One and carried tho p to return. It is In nu this day where the ter ther they continue to n Latina. All of thi and especially the ME muxu‘loum. my sown-um 27. Sunday Ch, 'htrtl'a Tears-nee u in rm tmme ‘ll "f in II nnd children Trodden under the Assyrian and carried th, mind mt " an atom or a It Impossible for “on that Wow I30 hordes “we; waging villages and children. oddeu under fa n Alumina has pawn " "If It m lied by . ri of Ephraim e of the nu . vice. They Christ. f swung Uri ll “t ad "It!" I." Thee Iluu a and valley. muse We Th: Inn) mp! In” tttt refer d in ll " H " fad The flot M u tt " " "

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