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Durham Review (1897), 25 May 1905, p. 2

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cases, it was for their real advantage who had not yet learnt that, in some pestilence were such as could not fail to be intemsely unpopular in a country where one of _ the few characteristics which are common to almost all the varied races and creeds in extreme abâ€" horrence of anything threatening doâ€" mestic privacy or â€" religious _ eustom. Amongst the regulations which excited most resentment and suspicion _ were houseâ€"toâ€"house searches . for cases of plague, the emplovment of informers in the quest, inspection of corpses where plague was suspected, compulsory _ reâ€" moval to hospital, segregation, and the evacuation of infected localities. To the natural repugnance of the people toâ€"such measures was added, in many places, the preaching or writing of agitators, who seized upon the opportunity _ to further their o‘"}‘: ends. To lucl: ill;‘i;lu- ences were due the plague riots a mâ€" bay, Calcutta, and Cawnpore, and the assassinations at Poona. It is impossiâ€" ble not to sympathize with much of the opposition to such interference by people mach Province ; the head ofthe eame to the f: every likelihoo being first. Many of the feverish anxiet r-stilence were c intemsely un last few weels that â€" the disease has reached Burma, where a few cases are reported from Rangon. _ The weekly death rate in the Central Provinces still scarcely exceeds _ that of Bombay city alone, and there are other areas comparatively slightly affected. In the RBombay Presidency there were 353,504 deaths from plague recorded _ in 1903, which represents a death rate of about 10 per mille on the total population of the province. ‘The 351,.6%8 plague deaths in the Punjab in 1904 meant the death of about 17 persons out of every 1,000. Each Province seems to take its turn at the head ofthe list; in 1904 the Punjab eame to the front; in 1905 there seems every likelihood of the United Provinces ITS RAVAGES IN INDIA AND MEASâ€" URES TO STAMP IT OUT. From September, 1896, to the end of 1902, the deaths from plague alone, in the whole of India, were reported as about 134 millton, In the single year 1903 there were 853,473; in 1904 there were 1,021,048; whilst in the present year there is every prospect of a still greater rise in the deatr rate. These, however, are only the deaths admitted or provedi to be due to plague in one of its forms, bubouic or pneumonic. Many authorities consider that, after making allowance tor concealment, for wrong diagnosis, and for defective registration, especially in native States, at least 30 per cent. should be added in order to arrive at the true mortality attributable to the disâ€" ease. Assuming that the deaths in 1904 were 114 million, that only represents a rate of about five per mille on the whole population of India. But it must be reâ€" membered that great greas and vast . numbers of villages and towns are still almost or quite free from the scourge, ard its horrors can best be appreciated | by viewingâ€"it locally. It is only in the last few weelks that the disease hasl reached Burma, where a few cases are reported from Rangon. _ The weekly | death rate in the Central Provinces still scarcely exceeds _ that of Bombay city alone, and there are other areas comparatively slightly affected. In the Bombay Presidency there were 353,504 deaths from plague recorded _ in 1903, eeeletate unc lual‘s & ve . 5 t ~C‘s °53 milnon, that rate of about five per n population of India. B membered that great numbers of villages an almost or quite free i and its horrors can be: by viewingâ€" it locally. last few weels that reached Burma, where reported from Rangon. death rate in the C( still scarcely exceeds THE BUBONIC PLAGUE. "Where you so excited you couldn‘t give me any information, but simply had to rave about getting married? "A prompt reply will help me to give the madam some muchâ€"desired informaâ€" tion. Next time you tell me you are goâ€" ing to be married, don‘t think that is the really important feature about it. Yours hastily, "Fred Hazzit,"â€"Life. "Will you throw away those actresses‘ pictures in your office? "Are you fickle? "Do you think the engagement will be broken before the date set for the wedâ€" ding? "Do you thing her father will give you a cash present ? "How often have you gone to see het? "Is it that big tall girl you took to the theatre one nizat last winter? **Who in the world can it be? "Why didn‘t I ask you all this when vyou told me? "What is the date of the wedding anyâ€" way? . "For goodness sake is she going to let you keep on combing your hair as you do? "Are you going to invite us to the wedding ? "Will we have to give a present? "Is it to be a church wedding? "Where are you going to spend your honeymoon trip? "Are you going on a honeymoon trip? "Does she write to you every day? "Are you very much in love with her? "Why did you stop going with Hattie Kaslimeir? "Haven‘t you proposed to other girls? "Did you look funny when you proâ€" posed ? ] _ _"Did you ask your proposal? "Where did you get the money to buy the ring? % "Have you got a pretty good position? "How did you and I come to be such friends ? "What kind of a ring did you give her? you? "Is she a blonde or brunette? "Would it be funny if she were redâ€" headed ? "How old is she? "Where are you going to live? "Will you keep house or board "Does she know anything about houseâ€" keeping. "Please answer the following quesâ€" tions by return mail, special delivery. They cover some points I neglected to get from you: "What is the name of the girl you are to marry? "Where does she live*" "Where did you meet her?" "Has her father got any money ?" "Did her father object * "What did her mother say ?" "Was it love at first sight? "What kind of a girl would you take a fancy to, anyway * "What in the world did she see in Fifteen minutes later, after his wife had finished asking questions, Mr. Hazâ€" fit wrote as follows to his friend Lester: "Dear Tom:â€" * WW #40veortves s "I met Tom Lester down town toâ€"day, said Mr. Hazzit to his wife, "and he toa me he expected to be married in a month or so." O 400000004 40 0 44 0 4 0 s 4 s 44 ++ '. ts WHKT H#E :: § OVERLOOKED | of the measures adopted in the anxiety to stamp out the dread you ask her personally, or write Wiggâ€"They say the leader of the orâ€" chestra is stone deaf, ard yet he looks happy. Waggâ€"Why shouldn‘t he?t He dosen‘t have to listen to his own music. Haroldâ€"Aw, I didn‘t. dance none, but at supper I bad two. plates of ice cream anrd got most of Jim Brown‘s when be wasn‘t lookin‘. An‘ he hit me an‘ I licked th‘ stuffâ€" in‘ out of him. Lead a Regular Life. (Minneapolis Tribune.) Very fow persons understand the value of regularity of habits. Meals and slceping hours should be fixed ones, for only harm can result from retiring one night at 10 and another at 12 o‘clock unless the rising hour varies too. Eight hours of sleep one night and six the next is not the way in which to woo and keep bealth, and if a similar habit of taking nourishment is encouraged there is little hope of reaching the old age in a creditable condition. If ever you are tempted to prove or disprove these stateâ€" ments try going to bed at 9 o‘clock every night for three months, rising at 5 and eatâ€" ing at 6, 12 and at 6 again, with never & break in the routine. The result will surpriss Following the lead of other sparsely settled Territories and States that have officially recognized the value of pubâ€" licity, Indian Territory has just launchâ€" ed a modern advertising campaign. A special train loaded with industrial, comâ€" mercial and school exhibits portraying the advantages of the Territory has been sent out on a tour of the chief cities of Ohio, Inriana, Tlinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas. _ These exhibits are being exploited through the medium of an ilâ€" lustrated daily newspaper printed on the train and distributed wherever the muâ€" seum on wheels makes a temporary halt. The meseum is thus wisely used only as an adjunct to a more powerful forceeâ€" newspaper advertising. | Quite an Enjoyable Affair. (Cleveland Leader.) ffammaâ€"Did you have a good time at Dorothy‘s party, Harold? Haroldâ€"L should say I didâ€"great. Mammaâ€"â€"What liitle girls did you dance Lever‘s Yâ€"Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder is better than other powders, as it is both soap and disinfectant. _ 34 "Let the reader try these test words" says Prof. Bowen, "and see whether he pronounces this short list according to any received authority in use at the preâ€" sent day." "I do not remember," said Ellis, "ever meeting with a person of general educaâ€" tion, or even literary habits, who could read off without hesitation the whole of such a list of words as bourgeois, demy, actinism, velleity, batban, beaufin, breâ€" vier, rowlock, fusil, fugleman, vase, tasâ€" sel, buoy, oboe, archimandrite, ete., and give them in each case the same proâ€" nunciation as is assigned in any given pronouncing dictionary now in use." Writing on authority in English, proâ€" nunciation in the Popular Science Monthâ€" ly, Prof. E. W. Bowen recalls the late Mr. Ellis‘ suggestive test, which he beâ€" lieves has never been successfully chalâ€" lenged : torture and torment of the victim of nervous prostration and nervous debility no one can rightly estimate who has not been under the ruthless lash of these relentless human foes. M. Williams, of Fordwich, Ont., was for four years a nervous wreck. Six bottles of South American Nervine worked a miracle, and his doctor confirmed it.â€"28. ’ ‘"‘When a typewriter has been operated for several hours at a strotch it becames a cenâ€" tre of electrical phenomena," remarked . a stenographer. ‘"‘Touch it with something meâ€" tallic and you will get a distinct shock. At the same time there will be a crackling sound and a spark will appear at the point of contact. If another person than the one who has been operating it should begin to pound the keyboard after the machine has been in continuous use for a couple of hours he will experience a real electrical sensation, the pinsâ€"andâ€"needles feeling of a *foot asleep. Drawing the sheet of paper off the roller rapidly will charge the paper, and it will crackle when laid on the other paper. 1t will also adhere to the other sheets or to any suriace with which it comes in contact and quite a little tug is necessary io loosen it. A longâ€"worked typewriter seems to beâ€" come an electrical plant on a small scale and will furnish all sorts of surprises." of plague in the province. .‘The rules were promulgated without any consultaâ€" tion of executive officers or of leading Indians. It was hardly surprising that some of them were found to be unsuitâ€" able, but it was astonishing and discredâ€" itable, that,even in regulations drafted as they were, there should appear one which provided burial in lime for the body of a Mahommedan who had died of plague. To the Mohammedan that would mean burning, and burning implies to him the forfeiture of happiness in the next world. Such rules, at a time when the echoes of fanatical preaching on the Northwest frontier were reverberating in the great Mohammedan cities of Inâ€" dia, did immense harm. Was, certa‘niypwant of j ,in isstle of so &l,the‘f’llhe ov% uts ‘»‘-3& ou tn:%pm‘ ofla dil a, If a delayed the issue of )ies lx::d the stealing of a march by :z'e, y; i they finrried out the orders without eonsulting tbr" own executive‘ officefs or the social leaders of tre people, they were in danger of making serious blunâ€" ders. _A notable instance accurred in the United Provinces where _ stringent rules were issued before the appearance profitable investmentâ€"the profits « and incidental cannot be. ug:luted. were carried out wit*:'ll the consideraâ€" tion possible in the circumstances, there Ciothes * Time Cost isz Money Money The New Century Washer saves bothâ€"nothing casâ€" ier or more effectiveâ€"nothing half so quick, You sit to operate it, and a tubful :‘_-hu:. ’i‘:u camnot nniz a gahe. it may be doubted whether it would not have encountered a still more bitter opâ€" position in most European _ countries, Though _ on the whole, the regulations UNDER THE NERVE LASH.â€" The TR DOWSWILL MANUFACTUAISQ CQ. LIMED NABULTON, Cammpa . / Can You Pronounce Them? ilers sell it at $A5o. Ask your for it. If he cannot show you the e write us for bookiet. Overworking a Typewriter, A Travelling Museum. (Cincinnati Inquirer.) Let not the plodding citizen who goes to his trade or profession every day and to church once on Sunday and takes a walk into the green fields on Sunday afternoon, getting enough money to keep himself and family fairly well fed, housed and clothed, and able to keep the children well enough dressed to go to school, go into the "blues" every time he reads about a big operator making $1,000,000 or so at a single turn of the market. Beloved brother, not all of these stories are true. Perhaps a large majority of them are fictions. Operating in Wall street causes much loss of sleep and denies a great many men the serenity and contentâ€" meat of wholesome old age. And then the time is so short. â€" Parmingtonâ€"Why, were you never in the country during the season of husking bees? Dumleyâ€"No. How in husk a bee? Information Wanted. (Philadelphia Press.) Farmingtonâ€"Ab, there‘s that old _ poem about husking bees. I always did like that. _ Dumley â€" Husking bees? What do you mean ? Not an Agreeable Substitute. (Louisvilie Courierâ€"Journal.) ‘"‘My friend,‘" said the solemn citizen to ‘Tired Tiffins, who was about to enter a barrel house, ‘don‘t you know that for the price of one drink of liquor you might purâ€" gbase a whele gallon *Yes," nri.d the latter, pleamantly; ‘but . wot‘s use? I onct tried driekin‘ kerosene, but it ain‘t in it wid booze." (Montreal Witmess.) Lady Aberdeen has again been a very sucâ€" cessful competitor at the dog and cat show held in the Kinnard Hall, Dundee, recently. For dogs her ladyship has secured three first, two second and one third; for cats, three first, four special and two second prizes. Her ladyship‘s exhibits were very much admired at the show. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills not only relieve all Kidney diseases, from Backache to Bright‘s Disease, but they absolutely cure them. But sometimes where one or two boxes relieve it takes more to make a complete cure. "I have recommended Dodd‘s Kidney Pills to a number of persons who had Kidney Trouble. All who have used them have been benefited or cured." "I was troubled with lame back for 25 years or more, sometimes so severe that I could not turn myself in bed. One box of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cured me, and I have had no return of the trouble since. Cured His Backache of Twentyâ€"five Years Standing and Sausfiea Evâ€" eryone he Recommended them to. Economy Point, N. S., May 16.â€"(Speâ€" cial.)â€"Geo. 8. McLaugh!in, of this place, give two splendid reasons for his belief that Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are the one remedy for Kidney ailments. Here are the two reasons in his own words: on account of the winds. In the marsh country, where there are no towers, each man possesses a net instead. By day it serves him to catch fish, while at night he spreads it over his bed in which he is to rest, and, creeping in, goes to sleep underneath. _ The gnats, which if _ he rolls himself up in his dress or in a piece of muslin, are sure to bite through the covering, do not so mnch as attempt to pass the net.â€"(Rawlinson‘s Herodotus, Vol. II., page 154. For Believing Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Cure all Kidney Ailments. CIVES TWO REAL | GOOD REASONS The discovery of Sir H. Arthur Blaks that the transmission of malaria by mosquitoes is recognized in Sanskrit litâ€" erature recalls the following pasage in Herodotus : "The contrivances which they use against gnats, wherewith the country swarms, are the following: In the parts of Egypt above the marshes the inhabitants pass the night upon lofty towers, which are of great service, as the gnats are unable to fly to any height KiLL THEM ALL AVOIA POOR_imitationg FLY PADS We‘l!l send you a sample free. SCOIT & BOWKNE, *LEX‘$, we place this label on every package of Scott‘s Emulsion. The man witha fish on his back is our tradeâ€"mark, and it is a guarantee that Scott‘s Emulâ€" slon will do all that is claimed for It. Nothing better for lung, throat or bronchial troubles is infant or adult. Scott‘s Emulâ€" slon is one of the greatest fieshâ€" bullders known to the medical world. PROTECT YOUR FOOD For Your Protection Not Good Cause for Envy. Lady Aberdeen‘s Pets, WILSON‘S Herodotus on Mosquitoes. of kerosene?" ONTARIO ARC TORONTO the world do you CHEMITSTS, Toront Ont. goes to and to a walk And has he left his birds and flowers, And must I call in vain? And through the long, long summer hours Will he not come again*? And by the brook and in the glode, Are all our wanderings o‘er? Oh, while my brother with me played, Would I bhad loved him more. Every mother and lady should use it. Used anan d ie oo i l ie y uaniiy J Persons Who "Never Have Time." (Louisville Courierâ€"Journal.) Here and there and everywhere are to be found the man and the woman who ‘"never have time." ‘They would read good books if they bad the time. They would visit the sick and the needy, but somehow they have not the time. They would call on their friends, cultivate good fellowship and add to the comforts of living, out they have so many other things to do that they cannot {ind time for this. They deceive themselves and think they are deceiving others. They are not. ‘"‘Never have the time"" simply beâ€" cause they do not take the time. Doers always have the time to do. Busy men alâ€" ways find time to complete their tasks. Lewis, of Shamokin, Pa., writes: "I am 80 years of age. I have been troubled with Caâ€" tarrh for 50 years, and in my time have used a great many catarrh cures, but never had any relief until I used Dr. Agnew‘s Caâ€" tarrhal Powder. One box cured me completeâ€" ly." 50 cents.â€"25. _ _ He wouid uot hear thy voice, fairchild, He may not come to thee, The face that once like springtime smiled, On earth no more thou‘it see; A rose‘s brief, bright life of joy, aue Such unto him was givenâ€" â€" So thou must play alone, my boy, a . % Thy brother is in Heaven. * boil on her nose." "Please Willie for being late; he fell lnsm-th way to school. By doing the same you will Oh, call my brother back to me, I cannot play alone; The summer comes with flower and bee, Where is my brother gone? The butterfly is gleaming bright, Across the sunbeam‘s track, I care not now to chase its flightâ€" Ob, call my brother back. FREE! a ocuple, which nécofiifi-g' â€"t'; tl;; "l‘n.:; ';ll-el‘: were recently presented to a teacher who is employed not many hundreds of miles from Troy: ‘"‘Please excuse Saliis from boil on her nose.‘"‘ ‘"Please excuse W Statistics recently compiled in France show that that country is a land of what what political economists call ‘"small men." This term refers, of course, to the holdings of the individual, which are more evenly diffused in France than in any other civilâ€" ized country. In support of this statement it is shown by statistics that France has fewer than 20,000 persons who have property valâ€" ved at 1,000,000 francs ($193,%00) or more. Abaut 14,000 of these have fortunes of from $193,000 to $380,000; of the remaining 6,000 only about 100 have from $2,000,000 to $19,â€" 000,000 each, while in all France there are not more than ten persons whose property is valued at $19,000,000 or over. These figures are reliable. since they are based on curâ€" rent tax returns, and in France taxation is thorough and searching. Excuses of School Children, (Philadelphia Record.) The excuses which children bring to school furnish no end of entertainment. Here are Pense of relatives; John Quinecy Adams eft about $55,000 at his death; Jackson about. $80,.000; Van Buren, $400,000; Polk, $150,000; Taylor, $150,000; Tyler married a woman of wealth; Fillmore left $200,000; Pierce, $50.000; Buchanan, $200,000; Lincoln, $75,000; Johnson, $50,â€" 00; Grant lost his wealth in the Grant & Ward failure; Hayos, Garfield and Harrison were all moderately well. off, and Cleveland‘s fortune is probably large. McKinley‘s fortune was not over $60,000. Washington left an estate valued at $800,000; John Adams left about $75,â€" 000; _ Jefferson died so poor that he would have been a pauper had not Conâ€" gress purchased his library for $20,000; Madison left about $150.000;~ Monroe died poor, and was buried at the exâ€" Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, ete. Save $50 by use of one botâ€" tle. Warranted the most® wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. The present is marked by a crusade against tuberculosis which amounts alâ€" most to a mania,â€"even the pendulum of public opinion, so slow in swinging, swings too far. The public is just now awakening to its need, yet they have been invited to assist in arresting the spread of this disease ever since the days of Louis, who wanted the various countries of Europe to form a crusade against it. ENCLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Doesn‘t Expect Men in Heaven, (Philadelphia Record.) ‘‘The Bible says there will be no marryiag in Heaven," said small Harry. ‘"I wonder if that is true?" "Of course it is," replied his little sister. ‘"How could the women marry when there are mo men in the place?" "Few reach maturity," uis Osler, "and none reach old age without hayâ€" ing had a focus of this disease some time. The germ is ubiquitous, and none escapes it. â€" But the resisting Eower of the human body is very great, ence all are not finally vanquished by this germ." _ Suppose our power of reâ€" sistance happens to be below par at the time the germ may have found a restâ€" ing place in his favorite haunt,â€"the apex of the right lung, then,â€"pouf! we write finis, and begin our exit. _ It is the most prevalent disease in the world, and the most terrible, since hope of recovery is so rarely confirmed that it is held to be incurable. Were it as contagious as it is ~deadly, the world would soon be depopulated; as it is, ecluding death by accident, tuberâ€" culosis kills a quarter of us all. Think of that perilous chanceâ€"one out of evâ€" ery four to be sacrificed to this dread disease, and yet, it can be made "to disappear from the world! A VETERAN‘S STORY. â€" George peands of ladies. 25¢. stze for aale iz all %‘ Dz. T. A. SLOCUM, LIMITED, TORONTO, PENNYROYAL TEA. Consumption Kills One Person in Fou! in America. Tuberculosis y ::d does, invade evâ€" ery iportion of , body, says a: writer l'n',fne’- Mon ‘y'fvryune, but 'i“gu a Belective mffinity for the lungs; thro fore, pulmoiary tuberculosis, or, in ©omâ€" mon p&rlance, cfisumptpn. most approâ€" priately termed the Great.: White Few Millionaires in France (Portland Oregonian.) The Child‘s First Grief, Estates of Presidents. THE WHITE PLAGUE. the glode, o‘er? _ me played more. “I“. ;Sa_l flâ€"ll'l-V and you will receive & "If your husband were to die, would you #y pray %r him * A "Of ‘course, but at the same time I‘d pray 109% for another." Lipp erilcan Rheumatic Cure strikes the root of the ailment and strikes it quick. R.. W. Wright, 10 Daniel street, Brockville, Ont., for twelve years a great sufferer from rheuâ€" matism, couldn‘t wash himself, feed himself or dress himself. After using six bottles was able to go to work and says: "I think pain has left me forever."â€"%. Violence of Tropical Storms, ‘The violence of tropical rainstorms is proverbial, yet never before has one been scientifically registered _ in _ which so much water fell in so short a time as at Santiago de Cuba recently. An English engineer who gauged the rainfall found that it was at the rate of over four inches an hour, and that between 7 and 10 o‘clock in the evening more than a foot of water reached the ground. The storm covered nearly 300 square miles, and in places was heavier than at Sanâ€" tiago. Epilepsy, Fits, St. Vitus‘ Dance, or have children or relatives that do so, or know a friend that is affiicted, THEN SrND FOR A Fa®s TRiak BOTTLE and try it. It will be sent by mail PiB® ‘eveiptaing oiss ins When writing montion this paper, and give full The Licbig Co., 179 King St. W., Toronto On Their Nerves. It is now said, and I believe with truth, that appendicitis has got upon the nerves of smart society women .and many declare themselves to be attacked with the disease, and are not satisfied until an operation has been performed. The skilled surgeons can do nothing, as the patient will not hear reason and the only resource left is to place the sufferer from nerves in a home and go through a form of operation, administering an anâ€" aethetic and keeping the patient in bed for some time, until a cure is pronounced. The fee is the same as if a real operation had taken place, and no doubt the surâ€" geon deserves it. Sir Frederick Treves declares he has operated upon a thouâ€" sand cases of appendicitis successfully without a single death. In the olden days, before the recognition of apendiâ€" citis, sufferers were told they had colic or some of the many maladie ending in "itis."â€"Weston Mercury. FITS _themames of three of thes»cities wri a ib ye i oromaal mer bearige oo FEach of the four lines af figures in the centre of this advertisement speils the name c( a 4ATF in Canada. This is a bran new purzle and can be solved with a little study, as follows® > twentyâ€"six letters in the d:hlbot and we have used figures instead of the letters in spelling. L* is No. 1, B No. 2, © No. 3 and so on throughout the entire alphabet, _ Can you think out t of three of these cities? If so the money is surely worth trying for It does not cost you one cent to try and soive t! _ »uzzle, and if e correct you smay win A EW amouat of cash. """“W-Ozfi‘- w. Wcm.-y““.:m gf?dcllzntou}"tfl" It dpes not matter where yemu live. _ We do not c..:e one bit who gets the money. !{ yomuoru:" M.:dhud“fi-m&-miy,nd-l mnower to us with your name & ‘ gm.‘gmm.“wum promptly, _ We are @6 anowers and alfew minutes of your time. Deon‘t aom Send in your answe Results from common,Ss0apPS® eczema, coarse hznds.flxfied, clothes» shrunkan . flannels. HELPLESS AS A BABY.â€"South Amâ€" EACH ONE OF THESE or FICURES SPELLS THME NAME OF A LARGE CITY IN CANADA. can you NAwWE THREE IVZN AWAY IN CASH, FREE For %ot‘*’rect ,Answerscu? this Puzzle Praying for Two Husbhanids MICA frRQOFING â€"$£100.00â€" wAK"LQR â€" LEXPENSHL Ask for the Octagon Bar 9 Lisbig‘s Fit cure for Epil i mifufaantions is ts only ait recommended to the afflicted. If you suffer from * remedy, and is now used by the m‘a‘n and hospitals in Bu! America. 1t is confident 13 L CAN YOU SOLVE IT FOR GOLD eure for Epllopsy and THIS IS THE GREAT PuzZZLE 20 1§ 21 20 14 know that they _ are getting ther money‘s worth. Likewise, when the aq. \‘ertisi? eolimns of a newspaper ,am crowded with the â€"business â€" annome ments ‘of hardâ€"headed â€" merchants it ' tent that the advertisers are gathor i lr’; highly satisfactory returns from their investments in publicity. 20 Pat vanished, and after a stay of some duration returned. "Well, Pat," said the foreman, "did you measure . it?" "I did," answered Pat. "How long was It?" was the question ""Altogether," answered Pat, * ‘twas as long as me rule, me arm, an‘ two bricks."~ Lippincott‘s Magazine. _ "‘Pat, go back to the end of the building :nd measure the length of the foundatio or me." f 5 i. o C Pat was day when gaid : HER HEART LIKE A POLLUTE SPRING.â€"Mrs. James Srigley, Pde Istland, Ont., says: "I was for five yean afflicted with dyspepsia, constipation, heart disease and nervous prostration, 1 cured the heart trouble with Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart, and the other ailments vanisbed like mist. Had relief in balf an hour after the first dose."â€"27. ‘The Proof of the Pudding. When a store is crowded with pyr. chasers day after day it is pretty goog evidence that the people who deal ther know that they _ are getting ther ISSUE NO. 21, 1993 _ For information apply to R. R. write H. Foster Chaffee, Wostern Agent, Toronto. 1§ Steamers Belleville, H Leave Hunllto.; 1; noo.nm"nt:; -?330"“; p.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and St'::xord :q::“w :.( Quinte, Montreal and intery TORONTOâ€"MONTREAL umg If you will send me your name and address I will send you someâ€" thing you should know all about. _ Send no money. R. S. MGILL, Simcoe, Ontario. DEAR SISTER: 14 23 18 The Rule Was Too Short busily engaged laying brick on the foreman came to him and _ d c li old les war us AP met t, _ Can you think out the n;"» Three correct ansWor® 20 1§ Hamilton: Montr Line eg; a large 4WY Letter A or;:u 7‘. 1 u;ga'l A&@Nts op To Sunday Comment ary at the tomb . was Mary Mac she was espec appears to ho ie honorable OUhrist and Hi *v_p__ol' Magda nad casl se than a mor Galiled Galilee. The was ever a l distinguished & sinner" (| Mary, the sis outâ€"The ot) had left the as she suppo stay is the w others are go ingâ€"Christ she had grea but natural : time. Ntoop might not s secnis out o anot h wome His 1 to ob tomb ence s They v t«hom- and ne what 1 awble." gel, M Luke s whi Lwo, an differer emplen & WA V sure that that you 11. Jes out of th saithâ€"Thi He afterw to the oth sepulclhre INTERNATION A 1 JUNE 4TH salen ther thes 14 FO i #( m 111 eri he eonvil U mll perie mained. aays hgn doubt The Resurre 1Mit Wha SUII 11 thia 1 Y1 Ma M L4 h

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