West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 1 Jun 1905, p. 6

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:1; in“ game. which he at one proceeded handbo- thtdq mrdbridae - “was feet at the mm Mow Bridge Began. The advent of the game of Bridge to London, was on this wise. One ar. trrnoon the customary rubber of whist was being played at the Fenland Club, which has long been recognized as the headquarters of scientific card games . Among the players was Lord Brougham, who had recently re tnrnd from the south of Europe. “he. it came his tam to deal he omitted to turn up the last trump curd, placing it he. 'tntree1ltromt.rtiskeeahkirsi. Porters" chimed a miideat, in lubri- hnce with “habitat: gl the (£9.qu nrokgised to nor, ll g, an: very 1',7f,,lt/rr%'l,'t' Wilma“ ’3,” bridge.” “Bridge,” you tho "h. an, "irhrtt mirage?” To a» u "rtkdtut_ttwe_ttrbyther9estgarrt - ever invented. After the rubber no om none on suggested that lard Ito-h- tho-Id show the. an wou- The St. Bernardllogs are also effec- tive in the recovery .f rost “hi'c’ren. A little training has taught tietn Hr a crying child in the midst of a you: of people is probably lost and they are several times brought to the station house some little boy or girl who has strayed away from home or frieada. The dog police 'auxiliary has not et been officially recognized in AIU'?. phie. but it is nevertheless a very effi- cient branch of the service. The demon. stration of the ability of the dogs and the interests of public safety may lead in the future to tho use of the St. Ber. With their marvelously keen scent. these dogs are quirk to detect the smell of fire, and therefore it has been easy to teach them to give warning to the police whenever they ferret out the pre- sence of an incipient eortflagration. One dog, named Rex. has discovered no .rrs than five fires before a sign of Imwke had revealed the danger to the watc.h, man. Discovered thus early, white still in a smoldering condition, the fire on s easily quenched end thousands of dol. lars worth of property thereby rived. nards in other eitids and "tova-L-iii. junets to the police foree.-The World of Today. Returning to his master the dog speed- ily gives the policeman to understand that he is needed, by dragging at his mat until he follows him to the place where the unfortunate man is lying. And not until the latter has been transferred to the ambulance or the patrol wagon will the dog give his attention? to other things. Important Auxiliary of the Department , in Philadelphia. The Philadelphia police are using dogs as helpers in their work. They have found that the famous St. Bernard dogs can be easily trained to discover uncon- scious men in alleyways or doorways or under wagons, who, because of drink, are succumbing to the cold and if left utwared for would soon be beyond recov- erv. corps of gnrdcncrs. farm hands. and es- tate office clerks. with bailiffs, head gardeners, ar.d cstate agents over them, and a firm of solicitors in command. The man wants a secretary. his wife wants another; they may not want, but they both have a yacht. motors and hotel bills. on the Riviera, and at Claridge's while the family house in London is shut up. And once every two or three years comes a bill for structural repairs to one of the country palaces, the total of which would buy a moderately t'omfort, shin country house in any chug part, of England. What is to be done? Early] it is impossible that a. great and re- spo-clahle institution can be thrust out of sight. and can live on. alive but buried. for another century or two, while public attention devotee itself exclu- sively to trmnways and penny steamers for the million. and improving the morals of S'horediteh." Mr. Cooper favors the idea of taking tt leaf out of the book o." demoerntie France or America, where the lordly people who are not lords are treated with all oottsideratiom It is not. a wry hopeful solution, but the hint isl worth noting. . England, Scotland and Ireland: and fam- ily house in London, must each have a. regiment of servants, with a house. kevper to look after them. and an army In Mr. Cooper's opinion, "the family man with £5,000 a year, and his fin- ancial affinity, the bachelor, with £500 a par-are certainly the poorest people in London; but there is another class who, without being as poor, live through- out their lives in what is known " 'em. barrassed circumstances.’ This is a duke or similar personage with £50,000 tV year. Is there a man in London more habitually or hopelessly unable to put his: hand on a ten-pound note without defrauding: somebody? Ilia palaces in that is, if he were married and had {in children. It u " this precise point of the finaneitl sale that things are "ex. Tic,".,','," of a household. You my not ire in Butane, with a tr,1,ge,tif, and a pony trap, and go to t e upper boxes of theatres, and give your dinner gueetl cheap claret on such an income. You must have a house in Mayfair which is just . little beyond Tour means, with a butler and a. footman to match, Ind more luncheon and dinner parties than you can afford, in order to give these persons something to do. Luncheon guests mean expenaive white wine, or whiskey, which is even more expensive, because, in the words of a. {mans pho- tpgraphie company, the guest takes one an: and the butler drinks the rest. inner means champagne and entertain- ing in general means flowers, liken, glans, and table linen, all costing more than you can afford to begin with, and all wanting constant renewal." Mr. mm Cooper than a. pretty .'titietere_iitytemiirikiiG, The Poverty of the Rich. Some of our 'iei.titeopuummorsts pooruhe make. out; everything depends on what a man Itnsto do with his income; what mement- his forebears my have nude for Uriah expenditure. It was but I short time ago that, being in the company of two finnncinl experts, we fell to considering what kind of person was the. poorest in London, end came to, the unanimous conclusion that r. nun with £5,000 3 yen was about the poor- eet person in London under the ordinary eireumsttutees of modern family life-L I The Poor Rich: DOGS ON THE POLICE FORCE. Wax KW Same as I Teetouler. (Milwaukee Seminal.) "The drunhrd's path," my: Dr. Park. burst. "leads to the hear-e "a the grave." In tact It meets ths. known-'3 mu: at that great common tannin-l. . 7 " In the Good Old Summer has. It is only a step from spring to sum- mer. By the time people have accom- modated themselves to the change trom the rigors of winter to the balmy weeks that follow they begin to think of the country, the mountains and the seashore. Most folks plan their summer vacations n long while in advance, and n large pro- portion of the vacation appropriation " spent in the getting ready. It’s none too early for shopkeepers who can con- tribute toward the comfort of the sum- mer outing to advertise thnt Het. It is good busines to get ready for not weath- er trnde when hot weather is pretty nest due. iid; Jaaiarirairu. The: JG, E? ai, G Iii baiiii iiiiiir,GGi! m. T. A. swam. Lam-w. 13mm. can». Eva-y mm In! My Ihould “In it. that! may; Mum;- of teiryu.Fhx tttttstrruts_trrptrD_rttgttti1r d e "No," he said to an inquirer, 'they don't thoe oxen everywhere. It’s only in mountainous countries, where the rocky beds of streams are a. gomrdeal used for roads, that an ox's feet have to be protected with these metal plates." Does Not Worry About Debts. (File-sends Blactter.) "Well, my friend. I never pay my on debts. I forget them." "And your new ones." "Oh, I lot them get old." "He will walk like that for a. day or two," said the smith. "I wonder why it is that shoeing an ox always makes him sick? I never saw one yet that could go straight back to work after being shod.” Hd gathered up his tools and mounted his backboard. But, when it got on its feet, the ox staggered. As it walked away its gait resembled that of a drunken mun. [jiifiTjifiiI] Finally the ox was shod. The ropes were then taken from its legs and the yaks was lifted from its head. It was allowed to rise. . "I" was kicked once." he explained, "Here." He touched the place that had been kicked. The smith cautiously set to work. On each clown hoof he fixed a. plate or shoe. It took him a long time to finish with the eight plates, for at the lent movement of the ox he dropped every- thing and moved far back. There, them, {he ox lay motionless, two men holding his head down and four others holding with their ropes his feet which pointed towarq the sky. _ When the big, fat, docile ox was led before them they took ropes and awk. wardly lassoed his fore legs. Then they drew the ropes taut and the ox fell, with a mournful bellow, on his side. They slipped a kind of yoke over IN neck, and on either end of the yoke a. heavy farmer sat to hold him down. . "Taut, now, boys; dead taut'." shouted the smith. The other farmers pulled their ropes tighter and the smith coaxed and pushed the ox till he got him over on his back. A handful of North Carolina Farmers atood in a field. They had convened to shoe an ox. Jun that incipient form d kidney disease which. it neglected, will develop into stub- born end distressing disordet that will take long tedious treatment to cure. Don't nex‘ loot the “backache stage" ot the most insidious ot distance. South American Kidney Cure stop. the echo in six hours and tturea.-at The wid6w’s chanceswatr ail-y age are therefore 76 to 82 times better than that of a. spiruster.--Answers. It should, however, be added that the table of averages does not apply to widows. Accurate statisticians, who would not be caught in a mistake for the world, affirm that a widow of any age has as least 76 spinster drawing power, and 50m? place _her figure up to 82. From 35 to " the chances of an un- mmied woman sink to 3% per cent.; from 40 to 45, 3 still furthur diminu- tion is seen. her chance being but 2%. Worn 45 to 50, the old maid’s chance of cutting a husband is but three-eights of l per cent., while from 50 to 55 she is supposed, to have but one-quarter of 1 per cent. of a chance. PENNYROYAL TEA. A woman's chance to marry at from 18 to 20 years of nge in said to be 14% per cent. From 20 to 25 the chance is increased to 52 per cent. ; from 25 to M, it diminishes to 18 per cent.; from 80 to M, it diminishes to 15% per cent. [with n still greater weleofe than at the Portland; after this it spread to other tombs, and wherever it was once intro- dueed it was welcomed with open on!!! as s delightNu1 change from the stereo- typed methods nnd precise formulae ot lseieastifie whist. It was some years he. fore bridge became popular in country houses and before ladies discovered that it was a game eminently suited to their capabilities, but when once the discov- ery was made it spread like wildfire, un- til at the present day it is played in all societies and by ttll disses. and it is quite the exception nowadays to find any one who is not a bridge player of, some sort.-Saturdny Review, London. l THE BACKACHE STAGE may be Club. Fro- the' oPrthnd it very I001! teyeiled ttt the Turf Club, - " Pyt use tii-..., WILSONS FLY PADS men’s Chances to Marry. ShuEING AN OX. w": iii-ABE and you willpcatygg iiiitl,iii'P"i"" co POUND The deepest wells in Europe ere " Pansy, France, depth 2,000 feet; " In. Mlle, Paris, depth 2,960 feet ; " Gmelle, Pain, «Eh 1,798 feet; " at? 1hta",T,, mmdiggh $378 i . . . y ' feet; nt Spemberg, nee: Berlin, m 4,190 feet, which in said to be the deep- est i nthe world, “I: et M'id'p'gg2,' there rte” 'at In: at St. lath. 2,088 feet; " Colombus, Gib, depth 2,86 feet; at Columbus, Ohio, depth 2,7N% feet, and at Chi-lam, B. C., depth 1,250 feet. New Rule u to Half Fete. (Harper's Weekly.) A novel and somewhat ecientitic method has recently been devised for the reilweyl of Switzerland, owned by the Government to determine the hen-{ere limit for chil- dren. lneteed ot en eee limit. which he: been the custom hitherto. e standard ot height is to be employed, end e page end sceie will he pieced " eech ticket tttttees no that the eunt cen tell " e - whe- ther the child requim e tun tare. it is u- snmed that this is en equitable method at doing ewey with conelderehie imposition on the reilroede. while It the came time chil- dren ot smell site who ere ehove the legal age would be correspondingly benefited. A withhone won't k a m hi!“ hi luck with na' boa. mG.--Protraeted Catarrh produces deaf. neu in many cases. Capt. Ben. Connor, ot Toronto. Canada, was deaf tor 12 years from Catarrh. All treatments failed to relieve. Dr. Agnew's Catnrrhnl Powder gave him relief in one any. um in n vary short while the denttttqgtg let: him entirely. It will do a: much tor you. so ttenta.-33 "I could not imagine more severe suf- fering than one endures who has Stone in the Kidneys, and I feel the greatest gratitude to Dodd's Kidney Pills." A famous hysician upon being asked recently Wills is the chief cause of ill health, replied: "Thinking and talking about it all the time. This ceaseless in. Uospection in which so many of the ris- ing generation of the nervous folk im. dulge is certainly wearing them out. When they are not worrying as to who- ther they sleep too much or too little, they are fidgeting over the amount of food they take or the quantity of exer- cise necessary for health. In short, they never give themselves a. moment's peace." - If the disease is of thi, kidneys or from the kidneys, Dodd's Kidariy Pills will cure it. "8ome time ago a friend, told me that Dodd’l Kidney Pills would cure_me. As a last resort I tried them, and they have mind me. Mr. & A, Cassndy, the man. cured, is the well known roprietor of the Bijou Hotel on Metcalf street. and in an nv terview he says: "My friends all know that I have been a. martyr to Stone in the Kidneys for years. They know that besides consulting the best doctors in the city and trying cvori medicine I could think of, l was una le to get bet. ter. Mr. S. A. Cassidy, of Ottawa, Permanent. ly Cured After Years of Suffering by the Great Canadian Kidney Remedy. Ottawa, Ont., May 22.--iSpecia0.-- While all Canada knows that Dodd's Kidney Pills are the standard remedy for all Kidney Complaints, it may Bur. prise some people to know meg cure such extreme cases as stone in t e kid. neys. Yet that is what they have done right here in Ottawa. Stone In the Kidneys Cannot Stand Before Dodd's Kid- _ my Pilis. "Plenty of cider this year, Pere Mar. let, for you have surely enough apples," you say convincingly, as the old peasant looks up from his work to bid you bon. Jour. - "They are so small," he groans; "it takes more time to pick them up than they are worth." CURE THE MOST _ EXTREME GASES I' These ruddy old Norman farmers un- derstand economy to a finesse, be says. It is the secret of their wealth. And thus, when one morning I came across Pere Trebard munching a withered pear while he sunned himself beside the snug barn and asked the old man why he did not chose a. good one from his fine crop, he exclaimed: “Ah! but Monsieur, we might sell it!” The character of the shrewd Norman is interesting. Never will he give you a direct answer; a definite "yes" or "no" seems to have been expressly left out of his vocabulary. m is a fine morning," I ventured to a grizzled old dealer in oxen. "It might be worse," he answered. "That'is splendid cider of yours, Legro- jean." "Some say it is," he retorted guard- ;edl . gather does the true Norman ever seem pleased or satisfied. "Beautiful apples this year, Pere .Mhllet." "Baht they are so few." he replies,‘ gloomily, with a shrug of his shoulders. The next year the trees are bent under the weight of a rich crop, and you hail this rich old agriculturist as you pass his! gateway: A wishbone voi’t DEAFNESS OP 12 YEARS' STAND- Writing of "A Corner in Normandy,” in the June Delineptor, F. Berkeley Smith gives an interesting side-light up- on the real character of the Norman pegant. -- -- ___ Comparative Depth of Weill. COMO“. should continua tho treatment In hot weather: amulet- doc. and a llttlo ti',1'ttl "Ill',', will IQ o away w a cot on whl h I: ntt-chodtoh Dm- sl'dl'A'L damn: tho hated ‘Thou who realm . out: wnzmm E, 'r'd'llll'a'NPa'. WiTEiicrlm Toronto, Fusing About Health. Scothtimulsion "magnum-aqua le" & BOWNR, any; bk.mxdrtatosaitar-i'C Norman Shreme ONTARIO ARC _ TORONTO According to an English specialist who has made a careful study of the subject the reason why women are better look. ing than men is because they are more indolent. and are not called upon to use their brains as much as men are, Hard intellectual work and assiduous attention to business. he says. are harmful so far " physical beautz is concerned. ' As proof that is theory is correct he ints to the Zeros, whose home is in gitieh India. Among them women hold the place which in other countries is oc- cupied by men. The Zero woman man- ages the affairs of Mate, goes into busi. use on her own account ,and does not wait for a proposal of marriage, but pro- poses herself; whereas the lam man has nothing to do but cool: the meals and look a ter his children. The natural re- sult, say- the scientist, is that the men of this singular tribe are very pretty and the women are unusually plain. - It Wu Granted. the following letter asking for In in- cmne of salary was received by n tum in Shanghai from two Chinese clerk. in its employment: and}. an. BO long while. More: 'rertttrrturarrsotto_e1te4trmtrnr sigma {or new 'lealitt of Cl! .1. ”in I w. an 15h funny. Recently It Shanghai tr: have tent and provisions, eta, no doubb dun between since for few yea-I which con. pel u to ask you for the {swam you will kindly enough Ltg2t, In this ieettrg 94!”). - A in II a! "Denr Mrs-Being respectfully to uk you the pardon for In" as to must yan the favor however we Mutual thyyou m a ".tu'titretst..eytatrytt. Removes all hard,' soft or allowed lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sorsms. sore and swollen throat, coughs, eta. Save trro by use of one bot. tle. Warranted the most. wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Ont bright girl, who is doing this work in a. Catskill hotel, gets "20 a week for it. The work is pleasant and she has just as much fun as the persons who are paying dearly for it. She has the same food as they, and has a pleasant room besides. She is making money by being ttgreeable.--New York Sun. Such a young woman greatly increases the popularity of a. summer hotel. and has her own vacation for nothing. When the season ends, she comes back to town, and may possibly have a little bank ac- count to show for her summer occupa- tion. ENGLISH SPAVIN llNIMENT ‘ Her first duty is to introduce them to the other boarders. That is her chief duty. Every one who Cl' to a summer Jsotel knows' that the rut few days " ter arrival are not very pleasant unless you know someoqe there. A man man- thiee the ice is broken things Co along smoothly. When there ere no newcomers to make comfortable. the girl introducer can find plenty to do. She can suggest games to pass away the time. on the piazza, and she can get up trips to in- tereeting points. She aeU as . sort of guide to the hotel. If she can play the piano or sing she makes herself more valuable. Lies to worry along, but 1 woman is li ely to be lonesome until someone for- mally irevoéuoqs For: -- r but is Vivien a clever, bright woman makes herself generally useful. If she is an agreeable pertson--and the must be if she wants to be aueassful---there are in“ possibilities in her place. She wate as for new arrivals and tries to make them comfortable. Many a bright young woman is spend- ing the summer at seaside and mountain resorts and making moxie there. She is the summer hotel .','ltrt'Ll,'.l It is no new occupation, but more women than ever are holding such place. this season simply because there are more places open to them. New hotels are being built all the time, and the men who put their money in them don't leave any- thing undone to make their places as powder _as Rossible. - ‘7 - - this iriirerr,Ga"VFCiiiii - Mote/ester.' ”Imam - - _. . _ --ev_ -"'-"V orha" children or "IICIVPI that“ to. or know a trust that u unwed. Tum 8r.ND run A m; Tun. Born; and try It. nteiit be sent by mlil wink}. It by.“ lsued . no "out my: I“ ttuied. .. .Whon writing normal: The "shoot" wss divided Into three par- tiertr, with the mnjor in the ‘second. end it entered the jungle to n depth of “out ten miles. The meiot- and his two friends. Mr. du Boulsy end Captain FoUnmbe. selected s tree esch reusing along s nulish. end the two lster fired st s tine lion. wounding him high in the right shoulder. The msJor elso hit s lioness. The nstives siso tired their oid~tsshioned guns. and it 'rtur.thought sets to descend the trees for s consultation and search tor the wounded qusrry. The lioness sppesred end ran tor sehlkari. but the malor fired sod dropped her dead. Then there wss s pause tor drinks and the party commenced to follow the tion's trail down the nullsh tor s mite or so. Now nu! then the men ascended trees to keep I lookout, and " inst the party came into a clearance, with waist-high grass instead; of trees. _ Suddenly there was s roar end the lion [dashed out, making straight for the major, ‘who fired one snot. just grazing the beast, Simultaneously there was A struggling cloud o tdust, in whtnh the natives say they saw the lion beat the major down with a blow of his new. Captain Folinmbe fired. Mr. du Boulny ran up and fired point blank at the lion's heart. a. native fired into its hind quarters. while others clubbed it with a rifle butt and swords. He must have died instantaneously. The dead body was carried on a eharpoy by torehlitrht and conveyed hack to Remote by special train, and the shock caused by the news throughout the Junnsndah district was intensely felt. It is added that the lion measured eleven feet from tip to tail. The others shot were two lions rather lea. and a lioness (the major's) of nine teet.--Pau Mall Gazette. FITS off, "mor Carney Killed " a Blow “It: ( ' Paw. The Indian mail to hand bring: III vivid Ind pathetic details of the death ot Motor "Gang! during the 'toat-shooting exploit in the Glr forest district. The major. ct course. we: the political officer of the Viceroy, and the expedition had been arranged by Lord Manhattan on the site of the lion hunt pre- Pared for Lord Cunon tive yea_ra ago, but never fulfilled. It is believed there pre sixty or seventy lions in the air. and the major. having spent the past couple of years in the vicinity. knew the Junngadh better than1 any one. On march a trucker arrived who had been attacked by a lion while riomg Into camp, and while he dropped his wea- pona and escaped. it was only by abandon- P2r his pony and seeing the animal cal-tied Ett1tyerv,ttth).ii0nte' ture, ACTS AS HOTEL INTR0DUCER 'rtuDiiirktCn"fsrk%tr St. W., Toronto. Why Women Are Pretty. se-av Ya womnn LION. no o In can for Evil-pay Udl2rfdh,it u "mania ammo-:3 "My, Ind It now med y the but philan- and humm- tn gap, and Months. " in sounds: y mnmm-ndod to tha "tiote& If you lulu from For steep or flat roofs, Inter Proof,tim proof, easily laid, cheaper than 0th. roofing. Send stamp for sample Ind mention thi- paper. HAMILION MICA ROOFING C0. l0l Rebecca St. HAMILTON. C‘NADA FF ' , I all p, _ H ‘ ', Cir..' ‘ 1,. r 42 FM,".', 451k}: “45" "a" [t C. 'iiifiitrl) a' Tf/e k T a _. T That meiotic remedy. in n positive cure tor MI fem-lo discuss. Write tor description clrcululud free sample. R. S McGILL. Simon, Out. em “Mimi tor In food it would poulblo to keep the army up to Its standard ot formidabmty. Pea-Int: the Best Soldiers. (Philadelphin laquirern The best recruits in Germany, as else- whmo. are dawn from the rnnks of the MFR“. Wham-living peasantry. and the Ruser knows very well that it the nut! regions were to become depopulnied; it Gummy were to be turned into such a workshop is Great Britain and were to he- como u dependent. Is Great Britain on tor- ORANGE BLOSSOMS ' Go look beneath my royal bed And use what you can see, For mullet: I fear and dread, With me they don't agree. They seem to mt to take my head And no. away from me. Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lover’s Dry Soap a powder. It will re- mothegreue with (hastened; ease. 36 Go search to all the palace room, And In the cellar, too. And in the whiskers of the groom, Go there the search pursue. The form at anger darkly looms, And nukes me shake I few. And search the royal tloor, Go look Around the piles with car. And under all the carpet stir. And look the bedroom o‘er. Bedtime for the Cut. . (Chicago Chronicle.) Go look beltind, the up”) chen- End!oftbcfoqtlilunffixuminthccmmdthhdwfimtspexluhnmd-urn-c“, um Tbs-ughmmpunhndanbenolndvhh-flnkudy,“follow: 'Ihereuc :Ie-Cyaixlcneninthcalphabctlndnhwundxrtujnmuldlhemhopcmng. lone" "i""trP"..f?e.?..'e.-h.rouabtyat ,sttim.etabet_. Qummink out Inc-11mm o-dont-cities, trsoeh-o.ri.saurwueutrriktor. "eoeei-tsoversoi. DR. FAR STARS PmEAPPLE IABMtTS.--Medieal science by accident discovered the potoncy ot the pineapple Is a nuance: for stomach troubles. The immense percentage ot unable pepsin contained in the fruit nukes it an almost indispensable remedy in can; or dyspepsin and Indigestion. Ono “hm utter each meal will cure most chronic castles. 60 in n box, 35 eeuttr.-,'i"2 in." can YI-et-tyor-d-this-g-dit "tPNet . I“... Lvai’Wcrbu-g-y-nzfiâ€"m "6'.7Gurdl1L'd'lh%'a'tfgg,t.ea. lzumw-hyuht We 1ttet-ttor.t_ueraiGF." "yum-muons! hudhdtbmvfintfi-HJ-I-fl'rwmuflhywmud 1ttrae1',tS'p'd'.,','e'.utWggd,',tr?getqtr 1':'?itat.'"'s'.'tdti, Wen-giving w -- in. h - . in!” my“. a... 'a'a'lT%h""ahTfalN'rlllNat"atW?.11t ”.41. on. A liuion and a Half to Promote Busi- he“ The mnttufttetttrerm of a well-known disinfectant are reported to have »ppro- printod nearly one and a half million dollar. for the advertising of their pro- duet all over the world. Such an outlay for the booming of business means not that those who no about to spend the money are courageous enough to take an enmuom risk; bat that their past experience has justified them in the be lief that the more they put into adver- tising the more they will get out of it. Publicity is not, a. speculation.‘but an investment. 'nrrsiiiir,lfic'iat of having the washing done early in the day, and well done, belongs to every user of Sunlight Soap. Ion For MICA ROOFING -. - A Jl,r'h'$uulltui,."Jef tos 'u, K, not be present. The mom Interesting Method. (Washington Star.) "Do you than tell tho out: truth shout I “dun; trip?" "I and to," uld the mm with In elastic con-canoe. "but I've quit bot-lug my friends. I have concluded that It . better to be en- tertatntnq than "ruckus.” Intellectual Equi- Are Scarce. (Bevan. Ge" New” A New York club women an e few I". m: “the worst fete that could bet-ll e my men. tt eeeme to me, would be to marry I mm of Interior Intellect." Does the club women desire to shut up all the female col- leges? When. tor menace. would one be ebk to find I man of other than Inferior intellect u compared with am. of a gradu- ate ot Vmar. Wenosley. Bryn Mun- or Lucy Cobb? The deer llrl (“dunes mil have to so right along marrying men at In- teriw intellect or do without husbands. .-ytt- “drama: skin disuse: relieved by on. apptieatitttt. Dr. Ann'- Ointment In t potent can tor w eruptions ot the skin. Jun- Gaston. With-burn, Myst “For nine ”an I um durum-ed with Tet- tor on I, hands. Dr. “how's Ointment cured it." 83 eqggtn..-0t (New Odell“ noeyunci The politics] corruption ot cities ill the United States is the most strlkmg mum» e! the Auction system ot Goverutisent, The ”test nowhere ot voters in our cities “a respectable citieees. highly esteemed and, believed te be upright sud honest in own-1y m, end yet teo often the men who are elect“ b emee ere tricksurs. Jobbers and wholly corrupt; nevertheless, they are elem- ed by these sum worthy citizens, eItbnr " votes cut outright by them or by mum; to you. end thereby silently consenting to such election. For tsitortnntiotx apply to R. R. " who H. Foam Chance. Western Pa Agent. Tomb. STEAIBRS TORONTO AND KING Commencing Juno l, artr'attters Ita ronto " ' p. a. duly except Sunday, July , duly. Rochester. Thourun-I Ream; IL Lawrence. Montreal, Que' We." River. Sienna! Belleville, Hamilton and P " beavo Hamilton le noon and anw-x p.111. on Tuesdays. Thurman and Fr' 2:. tor Ber of ante. Montreal and um-x. dine pom. T0it0filrtNMohmtEAL UNE 1:01! 6ALR--UhDEtt MORTI‘.‘ elm terms. volume oil pr 'l. mm. thirty acres. rmtrnlly . ... $1.000 dawn or seam-d. huh-aw cent. London Loan Comp-Ry. Inn Mm. Wimlnw'a Rant} ft p aha-v- 0n- uu-ui my Jld rim u “"43" "to "tttof, Ion-l .. Hu- ‘y eoite “1 in ‘2;- l-n-I rum-9v "' ISSUE N.) 2u' SALT RHEUM,‘ TETTER, ECZEMA, (ii" in“ "finale Corruption in American Cities, PCB SALE , Hamfsion- Montreal Nine ---, SET Ihmeri 1mm tl ti ml: In tl dl . denial i relieve his our tensmx Admn: - w? - Tl Russi Wadi News ll10 um: in: l Togo

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