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Durham Review (1897), 29 Jun 1905, p. 6

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Roughly rifle with inches T " -5- me: for the' shorter made shorter t the ship ic, within a certain distance of the ms! or west eoast of Africa, and that it should be regtttarly taken by those engaged in boatonliung Mung the manta or on the rivers or creeks. We may any with as much ttttth Low as did Lambert in 1820: "The treasure; which Peru yields and which the Span- iards sought and dug out. of the bowels. of the earth are not to be compared. tor utility with the bark of the quinquim zine. which they for a long mm.- ignor- " led rifle and a shorter bayonet reach. The new springfield rifle is six inches abort" in the barrel than the Krag- Jorgcnsen. The otfieal tests were thought to prove that the short barrel was as accurate as the old one. but the odd thing attached to the bayonet work at the time was that the new bayonet was not only pot lengthengd to comm a! reg should the sh The native Indians did not even know of its curative property till enlightened by the Spaniards about. 250 years ago. 2her called the chinehorta tree Lina, from which comes the word quinine. What do you call ib---kwine, kin-nine, keemmeen or kin-men? What a lot of men the drug has had'. China bark, cincona. countess powder, Jesuit’s bark, Cardinal de Lugo's powder, Peruvian hark, ete. cost a use it of exp fuly c it As from is sun with: opmion part in l led rifle American Infantry Arm Was 3t“ Shortest Reach in the World. The United States have rather laid aside the saber in favor of gunnery, but now comes the lesson of the far east. The Americans are sharpening their sn- bern and searching for old ones that have. remained in store since the civil war. This is the result of an order from the war secretary. And an agitation against the new rod bayonet may pos- sihly produce yet another order. The agitators would like to see it replaced by the old knife bayonet. or at least lengthened if it be retained. It was chosen for its lightness and it was not only thin but also short. As the new 8 ringfield rifle is also short the length or the arm for bayonet work is tho shortest in the world. That would not matter if battles are really to be de, cided by rifle fire and gun fire alone. but if once it is believed in an army that men will often have to defend their 'ives with their hayonets the moral question is at once introduced. No army could afford that leakage of confidence which would be the result of using a mistrust. ed weapon. This is to say no more than will meet with general agreement. It is not by guy means necosmry to assume that the "lessons" which the Americanr are act. ing upon are true. Before we can be convinced that the bayonet. will really lay again a Napoleonic part we must L properly informed as to the 'ptatity of the Russian gun and rifle fire, which, in the first place. was directed to stop the Japanese rushes. Whatever be the truth about that. it is extremely interesting to see that I Its safe transportation from one side of the world to the other and the suc- oes attained in converting a. wild into a. cultivated plant and naturalizing it reads like a romance. One of the strange things about quinine is that it is not used as a medicine in the practice of the native physicians of Peru, Ecuador or Colombiw. The whole world is indebted to the cinchonn tree, from which quinine is made. Who could have foretold that this tree, a native of the mountainous forests of South America, would be of much importance to the advance of civil- nation and Christianity'. The great interocennie canal now in process of construction norm the leth- mus of Panama requires the labor of thousands of men largely unaccustomed to the climate, and so much more “19 ceptible to ita ill effect. Before the route was decided upon may surveys were made, and the men, luvs] officers and other: engaged in this work, were ex- posed to al conditions of weather. But through the universal and proper use of the medicine daily as a precautionary manure the mortality was no gutter than among men in like employ in other localities. Out of a little over 6,000 white men employed in the construction of the Panama Railroad there were only 293 deuths, and some of these were the result of other than climatic causes. The aohdiers in the American civil war depended greatly upon quinine. The pio- neers in this country when it was first sealed and civilized had no hard work fighting fever and ague in the then swampy, malarial districts as in fighting Indians, and quinine was even more ne- cessary than firearms. . Quinine is one of the most valuable of “Indie drugs known to media! Icience. .No _one would venture to travel in lo- dia without. it. Before its discovery 2.- MM people died annually in India of "auriel tent, the mortality from this WW. looked upon the people is their fate and expected. no relief-trt, lured by the ugeney of quinine. England could not keepherEurope-neokiieninlndinwith- out it. Livingston end other tunic: in Com tral Afriets could hue never mule their discoveries without its aid. It is aid of the great Genus) explorer Schwin- lurth that when he lost his entire pro- perty by fire, valuable .eimstitie intru- mm. among the rent, he felt the loss of hie quinine to be the greatest of all, and of“ thought with fear of the journey that lay before him, which, however, he persevered in. Great fortunes have been made out of . At the time when Louis XIV. pur- msed the secret a pound of the bark at about $.30. As it came into general to it became a. most important article , export from Peru. Now it is success- ily cultivated in Cerlott and Java. A3 a. man of guarding the system om intermittent fever the English nav- regulatioit4 require that every man mum take a portion of the drug when CHARGE WITH THE BAYONET. ablé part of in America i poor mph-9° per.tyteher. As it came . most impo Peru. Now in Ceylon al of guarding nt fever the require that tortion of Ur hm a certain nit comb of Ptt "p but was ietualb' Mn the German is the Amerie now ttttr-tc rter barrel onet reach ed military Jour over Removes all hard, soft or callouaed lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, aweeney, stiflos, sprains. sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bet- tle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. bu, mu Utah-ll" syn run... guy” If not yourself, who would you rather be '.--The Wandering Jew, with a. nice annuity. "tvi/it 1i'.i."ofri/te"noirt---iwhu is my which t) Consumptives in the Arctic. (Boston Transcript.) It la interesting to note the rate at which new theories of medical science are revemlng thmo that prevailed a few years ago. Once when the consumptive was told to seek a change of climate he checked his trunk tor Florida or some other sub-troplcal section. But advanced views upon the nature and treatment ot the disease have \maten'ally changed that. Dryness is a much more lttt- portant condition than warmth. .ne patient can be protected against cold, but against moisture in the climate there is no defame except to run away trom it. The full force of extreme expression ot the reaction is He lustrated by the fact that a Washington phy- slcian proposes to take about thirty consump- tive patients on a ttsrlttt-seeking expedition to Greenland this summer. Mrs. Jack Astor's Back. Two women en evidence everywhere are Mrs. George Keppel and Mrs. John Jacob Astor. who was Miss Eva Willing, of Philadelphia. The vogue of the former is supposed to be based upon the King's admiration, while the latter shines as a rich. all-around American beauty. Her back is quite famous. She evidently realizes this advantage, and has her dresses cut so low at the bark that they threaten to lose their bal- ance. This lack of balance is only ob. 'servable from a side view, when it con- trasts quoerly with the higher front. What is your idea of happiness t--Frnd- in: the buttons all on. Tour idea of misery? --Breaking an egg in your popkvt. . - .' No Wonder this back of hers, which really is fine. is famous. Her tactics at her presentation at court were conspicu- ous enough to have gained notoriety for any member. Lest her veil. which hung from her bejeweled head, cover up the snowy expanse of back, she had it pinned around to the side in order that her heauteous back be not hidden under this ganzy bushel. Mrs. Astor’s dress was of white brocade. with a great train of geraninm red velvet. Where would you like to live t---Tn the moon. because there is no water there. Favorite arnusementt---Httntingr the "t'uwr" or some kindred game. Favorite oeeupationt--Like dew on the gownn--lyirut. What trait of character do you most admire in man'.-Che noblest form of eannibaliam-love for his fellow-man. In woman t-Love for her fellow-man. What trait do you most detest in each ?--That "trait" which you put "or" to, to describe its pnssossor._ . ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT -wiu Epoch \vould you choose to hate lived in t---Before the present Erie-it was safer. - What book (not religious) would you part with last t---The one I might happen to be reading on a railroad during the disaster season. Poet t-Robert Browning, when he has a lucid interval. . Poetess .'---Timothy Titcomb. Prose Author ?--Nonh Webster, LL. D. Characters in romance t---The Baron Family. In History t-.faek the Giant Killer. Book to take up for an hour?--Van- derbilt's poeketbook.. is trump. Style of beauty b-The subscriber’s. Names, Male and Female t-M'airnex (Malmie), for the female, and Tacus and Marius, for males. 1'ynter,t'.--s.Wt painters. Piece of "ulpturet-The Greek Slave, with his bod. Your favorite eolort-Anything but dun. The Things Be Like: Most ta TN! Vuieuted World. Someone asked Mark Twain to kodak his own charaeteristtes for B Mental Photograph Album. The questions in the album were answered by Mark as fol- lows: Gold Mine 3,900 Feet Deep. The deepest gold mine in the world is said to be at Bendigo, Australia. It is called the New Chum mine, and its main shit is sunk to a depth of three quar- ters of a mile. The most difficult pro- blem is how to keep the tunnels and general workings cool enough for the miners to work. The temperature is us- unlly about 10tr degrees, and this is, of course, greatly enernting. To make it possible for the men to work at all a easy of cold water is let down from I. ve and kept continually playing on their bodies. They no naked from the waist up. Tree .'---Any that bears forbidden fruit. Object in nature t--A dumb belle. Hour in the day t---The leisure hour. Season of the year'.-The lecture sea. Perfumet--Cent per cent. . Gem '-The Jack of Diamonds when it LET “mas/m SLEEP' wufsbN’s FLY _' PADS, MARE TWAIN’S FAVORITES. USE t Ms, Explaining His Position. (Wuhlnnon Star.) "Are you looking tor work?" "No," answered the poor, but undid than 'trn looking for money. but I'm wining tt n23. “gun J an". sat u~omcvhu'f_;_ Starling at 57 Broadway one looks down a. steep and narrow street that was the joy of the small boys of a cen. tury and a half ago, for then this spot was known as Flat and Itarraek Hill, and down the slope in winter time the lads and 1asscs coasted. spooding on in. to Garden street. as the rude road WM known other it crossed Broad street Now, under the more significant name of Exchange Place. this street wiggles be. tween great sky amppers and from Broadway one can see the edge of the Ingest office building in the world, the Broad Exchange on the southeast corner Tuck News for April. Connemara is the place to see fuchsia: in perfection, for they grow, or rather luxuriate, there in grand, freely-flower- ing, gorgeous masses of bloom. They rush up into bushes as large as fairly- sized elder trees. They form hedges miles long. as in the Pass of Kylemore, where to drive between two converging lines of startling bright red is a novel nxpcrionce alone worth a. visit to the West of Ireland. Odd Corners. Travellers like to visit the oddly nam- ed little streets of old London town that they may tall: of them to their inti- mates, but few who pry into the corners of foreign cities know of the quaint sur- vivals of other days in the very heart of the New World metropolis. of Flat and Barrack Hill. Tin Pot Alley, Edgar Street and Petticoat Lane in the midst of theftnaneial district ot New York. Joy the good things ot lite and leave no bad ethyctts-earry them with you in your vest pocket-60 in a box, 35 'ymts.--48 Connemara has other attractions be- side its wild rocks and him. J. Harris Stone has an article, "Among the Fuch- sias," in the Health Resort, from which, we take the following extract: Sample's Instalment Company, Washington. Pa,, writes: "For years I was afflicted with Chronic Catarrh. Remedies and treatment by specialists only gave me temporary relief until I was induced to use Dr. Agnew’a Ca- tarrhal Pawder. It gave almost instant n- 1iet. ar Cents.-49 stimulate the digestive organs. Let one en THE PRESIDENT A SLAVE IO CAIARRH.--D. T. Sample, president of “Doctors and medicines failing to give me any benefit, I bucino. despondent, when by good luck I chanced to try Dodd's Kidrwy Pins, and from the first they seemed to suit my case. After tak- ing five boxes the old trouble ham grud- ually disappeared, and I was feeling bet- ter than 1 ‘had in many years." Dodd's Kidney Pithf suit the case of every man, woman or child who has any form of kidney disease. They always cure and cure permanently. than with one that's got a constant "hurt “For more than a year I have been ail- ing with Kidney Trouble in all its worst symptoms. I had a distressed feeling in my head, little or no appetite, and a feel- ing oi great languor. I became greatly reduced in weight. to it, Doctors and Medicine Trailed-- Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Succeeded-Other Cases They Just Seem to Suit. Welland, Ont., June 19.--(Speeial0-- J. J. Yokom, a prominent merchant of this city, is telling his friends of his re- markable cure of " terrible, Kidney Dis, ease by Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Yok- om's statement is as follows: Spasmodic Effort; Spasmodic advertising is seldom very helpful. Henry James, for instance, un- less he shall speedily devise new ways of drawing newspaper attention to him. self, will profit little from the publicity attendant upon his recent "stunt" at Bryn Mawr. Busy people soon forget unless they are frequently reminded. No merchant would dream of putting out his sign one day a, month, or one day a week and keeping it in the cellar the rest of the time. Newspaper "ads" are infinitely more valuable in attracting trade than signs, and it is infinitely more important that they should be used constantly. JUST SEEMED (Ill SUIT HIS BASE Welland Merchant Restored to Health by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. This spring the man has been so beset by two fish hawks, thought to be the father and mother whose young he threw out of their nest last year, that he has not been able to do any sustained labor on the place. The hawks flew about him colse to his head, and sometimes when he was not prepared for it they struck him with their bills. Finally the owner of the estate had to discharge the man. His successor has been undisturbed by the birds, which seem to be well satisfied with their revenge. There is an interesting bird story cur- rent in Bristol, R. 1., according to the Providence Journal. Last spring a man employed on a large estate in that town disturbed a nest of fish hawks. The re- an]:l was that at least one of the young die . BETTER WITHOUT A STOMACH The Fuchsias of Connemara. Dr. Van, Stan's Pineapple Tablets Revenge of the Hawks. A Modern Grandmother. uh4inoator.) I want to see a grandmother like those there used to be, In a cozy little farmhouse where I could go to tea; A grandmother with spectacles and a funny, frilly cap, Who would make me sugar cookies and take me on her lap; And tell me lots of stories of the days when she was small, When everything was perfeet---not like to-day at all. My grandmother is "grandma" and she lives in a hotel, And when they ask "What is her age'." she smiles and will not tell. Says she doesn't care to realize that she is growing old, Then whespors--"But you’re far too big a boy for me to hold." Her dresses shine and rustle and her hair is wavy brown, And she has an automobile that she ‘ steers herself downtown, I My grandmother is pretty-Mo I love her," Rather-yrs; l Our Norah calls her stylish, and on the whole I guess l She's better than the other kind, for once when I was ill I She helped my mother nurse me and read to me until l I fell asleep: and stared with me, Ind wasn’t tired, and then She played nine holes of golf with me when I got out attain. Yes, because Pve never seen one, just once I want to see A real old-fashioned grandmother, like those there used to he. , The Pastor matter with t such tame I Haven't been Crirtutfst-rN "iilmow cheeks-induced by nervous. mess. "MY HEART WAS THUMPING MY LIFE 0UT,"is (he way Mrs. It. IT. Wright, of Brorkville, Ont.. describes her suf- ferings from mothering. fluttering and pal- pitation. After trying many remedies without benefit, six bottles ot Dr. Agnaw’s Cure for the Heart restored her to perfect health. The tirst dose gave almost instant relief, and in a day suffering eease1 iulosett"r.-4r1 Round "."shouiders-indtteed by wrong sitting and wrong reclining and failure to take exercise. eyes It is to set, up such pier at Harvard that Dr. Klotz has come. and he has been promised the hearty co-operation of Prof. E. C. Pickering and his staff on carrying out his project. This stop con- neets the Canadian transcontinental longitude series at one end and with American series, and ultimately there will he a similar connection established between Ynneouver and Seattle, thus completing the loop. -J W. Greases between the eyebrows-Indus ed by bad ta"mper. . Pimple-induced by tight lacing and overeating. This completed the circuit of the world for the first time in work of this char- acter, an event that culminated actually on the night of Sept. 27, 1903. The work involves the setting up of a firm pier of cement or brick at each of the sta- tions, on the top of which is a point, the longitude of which is determined with the utmost possible. accuracy. The observers" clocks at two stations are tele- graphically connected during observa- tions and the error determined with ex- treme refinement. poet . Dull eyes, with hanging Iids-induceu byipatltaryl inditterenee. Cultivated Uglineu. Here are some of the deformities which careless women cultivate: A heavy lower lip-indicated by a Use Lerer's Dry Soap (a powder) to wash wooiens and funne1s,--you'11 like it. " Scientists Complete Longitudinal Obser- vations of Great Importance. Dr. Otto Klotz, government astrono- mer of the. Dominion of Canada, has been in Cambridge recently arranging with the Harvard observatory for a. station to perfect his series of longitude obser- vations made in the interest of the Do. minion Government. This work was in- stztutcd upon the completion of the Brit. ish trans-Pacific cable a few years ago. Dr. Klotz and his party made longitude connections, beginning at Ottawa, at Van- couver, Fanning island, the Fiji Islands, Norfolk island, Queensland, Australia and Sydney, N. ti. W., where his series met a like series from Greenwich east- ward to Sydney. Bury mm and My Ihould use it. ttmd and!!!“ Ibo-{Mum vtuvtlts_f2_ftt. gtgrtggmpyrulpim qrd Some have claimed that Mrs. Dodge' meant to say merely that six babies are T as many as one nurse can care for, but] that doesn't affect her declaration at all” says LeslieU Weekly. If a wamon can’t. care for more than six babies, or eight, at the most ,that settles it. That she happens to be the mother of six or eight‘ has nothing to do with the question. It seems to be up to Mr. Roosevelt to an- swer Mrs. Dodge. ehiidrikaUuiGiriGii'd iirrGi'miGriiii:' A little Sunlight Soap will clean was reaching a sort of fixity and final-' ti cles until ity on the vexed subject. Dod cut glass and other a, Now comes Mrs. Arthur M. ge, pre- . unli ht sident of the New York 2e,r,t,tig, f, they shine and sparkle. S tg Day Nurses, with a new dictum w ie . wash other thin han upsets everything. She declares "the Soap will gs " absolute limit of a woman's capacity for clothes. . taking care of babies is eight, and she t-c.ezexeserxeeeee---er-rr--e-"-e-"-"r-e-"-"= ought never to have more than six.” I - 1%-“- m... The Roosevelt Controveny Renewed by I Woman. President Roosevelt has indicated the motes and bounds of the family by num- erous letters of congratulation to fathers and mothers of twelve, sixteen, twenty children and upward, and the public mind was reaching a sort of fixity and final- itt, on the veyp1 subject. __ _ _ [iiiilji1jirji0 Goggles-indueed by straining tho 'zmiiElliiii'i,iii'iffiferit PENNYROYAL TEA. CIRCLING THE WHOLE EARTH. (Cleveland Plain ly Pastor-What In the , . with the choir to-day? tame tad ablolute l 't been nghtintt agaln. at)st-rNo: just now they ARE SIX BABIES ENOUGH , TORONTO E a Rousing. Plain Dealer.] in the world "o-dar.', k as m the wer heard ', “using. they! 1 ORANGE BLOSSOM§ That precious remedy, " . positive cure for m tennis diseases. wn circula- and free sample. R. s. McGILL, Simcoe, Ottt. to tor Too Much Thought for Food. (London Illustrated News.) It Is a renectiou. on our itttelligetteet that we spend so much time on our food had so much more time in talking about it. It In the perversity of the human mind to occupy use]: with the incidental. w. must eat nt course, but what a needless, pother there is about the dishes and the cookery, End the Em: ish mills prago, at 69% Yonge street, To. ronto, will gladly furnish particulars on application. or have (hudrvr; or Mann-u that (In In, or know u frund th" " Miivtrd. mm bthD run. A max Tam. Bur-rm And try it, It will be but by mlil prepaid, It My cured Mum ovuythmg que Lag (MM. Whnn writing mention Bow They Look. (Chicago Chronicle.) Speaking of the summer invasion of Amer- leans, a London newspaper says that the streets will soon be full ot "euNouslr quiet- looking men in weird costs, with padded shoulders, long boots, biobby at the toes and straw hats with no root, and women with brown faces and eyes with very white whites, green veils tlotttintt in the breeze Ind accents that sets one‘s teeth on edge." " we really do look like this to our English friends, their professed fondness tor us In voiced by Lord Lensdowne and Mr. Balfour is something to wonder at. Perhaps it in a use of "handsome is as handsome does"-- the deeds to render the Anglo-American alli- ance worth while for the Anglo and ot it. The popular time for a trip to New York wall be about the time of the Wetst Shore or New York Central excursion on August 14th and August 24th, respect- ive i y When with; Inc-mum - this paper. Bod gto: mu mtg-at to! syty bz-MW Single fare plus $3.35 for round trip, which includes membershir fee, return limit July 10th, with privi ege of exten- sion on payment of Mk extra. The West Shore and New York Cen- tral are the best routes. Get further information from Louis Dingo, Canadian Passenger Agent, 69% Yonge street, To- ronto. FITS N. E. A. CONVENTION AT ASBURY PARK JULY 3 TO 7. Whet'e the good 0' summer time? What's the good o' mything In thb world of ours? What's the good o' Howe"? What's the good o' wintar time? war: the good o' spring? In there anything to gnin Heerin' robin; sing? What's the good o' whistlin' tunes? Whot's the good o' Jokes? Don't yer hoto to git mund Where ther's singin' folks? What's the good o' shekin' hand. Ev’ry tune yer meet? Ain't their lots o' bitter things? What’s the god o' sweet? Whot'e the good o' happiness, Kin yer tell me? Bar- Don't yer think it's vesting time Watchin' children play? What's the good o' workin’ herd? Put it ter the test'. What's the good o' gittin' tired? t Whnt'e the good o' rest'. What's tho good o'duvin' brains! What'tt the good o' heelth? What's the good o' bein' roar! Whot'l the good o' was tut ' What’s tie good o' anything Yer bee ' er do, or see? Where's the good in any mun That thinks nn' talk- like met ARRANGE YOUR VACATION AcC0it0iN0LY, Test for All of TU. (New York Times.) I look into my tteighttor'tr eyes And twist a smile thn‘l plainly grim; I'm thinking. Would he feel surprise To know just what I think at hunt I gaze into my dear friend's Nee And with this thought my soul is stirred: What revolution would take place Were I to tell her what I've heard? I stare into my mirror there With ere" that hunger to " true And say aloud: Would it be {sir To mention an I know ot rout Epilepsy. 59- Istltu.s' Dee, : - r atit, and m Ttse L'ftili'd 50.. 'm' XII: St. W.. Toronto. Pemtic Vim. um . Int run for Elihu-y III v',,tl'lfau',h,f,1', " umonly .11er rumour. an! " note mad by m- but physicist" “a hulp‘l‘all in Rum. and Amen-la. It In oosndeat y rn-ommundd to tho mew. " you “is: from -Btmtott Transeript. The retailer who complains that busi- ness is dull in summer time usually has only himself to blame-unless, indeed, he is a coal dealer or a specialist in our muffs or some other commodity that Nature rebels against when the mercury climbs upward in the tube. Summer dull- mess is generally attributable to the absence of a part of the population from the city during the hot months. The antidote is ready to hand. By forceful advertising the stay-at-homes may be induced to increase their purchues. New customers may be secured to take the places of the old who are temporarily absent. As the temperature rues the publicity appropriation should sympa- thetically follow it. _ "See here," remarkelt the jailer to tho trest prisotter, "you dont want to get too frée w:th inc: Beet" "REGULAR PRACTiTmNER-- NO RE8ULI."-uMrs. Annie C. Chestnut, of Whitby. was tor months I rheumuic victim. but South American Rheumatic Cure chanc- ed the long trom "despair" to "lor." Sh. says: “I suffered untold misery (tom rheu- matisttt-doctors' medicine did In. no good--. two bottles ot South American Rheum-tic Care cured tno-relief two hours after at first (totte."-60 mu will annoy a turkey cock as much as a. bull, but a sparrow will not let it disturb its mind. But if one shakes a. blue rag in front of a caged sparrow’s eyes he will go frantic with disgust. Spurows and linnets, too, will refuse food offered them on a. piece of blue paper, and they dislike the appearance of my one wearing a. blue dress. Medium light blue affects them most. but blue serge they scarcely mind at all. Thrushee and blackbirds object to yellow, hat will use red or blue dried grasses left about their haunts to build the outer layers of their nests. Yellow grasses they will not use. During June. July, August and September the Chicago end North Western Relive, will Bell trom Chicago round trip excursion tick- ets to Sen Francisco, Lo: Angela, Portland, Ore., (Lewis and Clarke Expoeition), Seet- tle. Victoria. and Vancouver, at very low rem. correspondingly cheep are. from all palate in Claude. Choice or routes. best ot min service, (Womble stopovers, and liberal return limits. Rates, folder: and tull in!or~ nation can be obtained trom B. H. Bennett. tit"" Agent. 2 King street east, Toronto, n n SPEAKERS TORONTO AND KINGSTOS. have Toronto " 3 g m. duly. except Sun- dare. Mm July 1 Ally. Rochester. Thou- sand binds Midi. St. hwreuce. Montreal, ft/ttff and Murray Bay. Tudouwc. Suuenny vet. Agent. Toronto, Joke on the Inquisitor. During the South African war the cen- sorship of soldiers' letters home was very strict. One soldier, who alwa I sent on account of the doings of the regiment, which account w“ slwayl blotted out by the censor, laid I. plan for revenge. At the foot of his next letter he wrote, "Look under the stamp.” The censor did so, after spending con- siderable time in steaming the stamp from the envelope. And he found these words: “Was it hard to get off?" PACIFIC COAST EXCURSION ii. "FEE-Information apply to R. R. menu or "m H. Foster Chat“. Western Passenger Emmet-I Bethune, Hamilton Ind Plato. be". Hunmon " noon Ind Toronto 710 p.111. on Tuesdays. Thundny- ma Sauna-yo for Bay of Oman. teogttil tad mum.- am. ports. LOW RATES ABOVE LINE. Iron fence. as foot long. shout , feet but. with eight ornament-J foul and game, 3 teat high. Apply Box 65, Milton, Ont. TWO ELEM“! IOTORS. mud current. 1% and I horn-power. Ad- dreu Box IO, In Indira I qul he .1! for not!» thy child, - SEEM} is. ISSUE NO, 26. 1905. IORON IO-MON TREAL LINE The Antidote for Summer Mum 'PW, E4 Colors That Buds Like FOR SALE FOR SALE TIMES OFFICE, Huntlmn. FOR SALE. Hamilton- Montreal Line duaiptlm 'iiviwtni - te. " Ha M C t I / orcgco.1 Couat nyr‘ it I Capini. 1 Emperor cf Austria Procession Ip: arrival Frcm it eonii It IN the 1 the l ti",,'?,',. In msdorf that his t phyr-ivian ordm'vd I bedroom tion. luv“ pending agents t timo th .nd Tol, tion of Aged Empem (hr Over Pro: Invasion spec-oh M gution re 'tro" of otlwr 1 chu riu porta m joyful ' 'rceivod tion of great fut plodgod tion. Thr, ot rep"', dates fn The 3 renewed throne I el-es I heart b shaking The t d " ret M i0 the wrml l, es and “an gthout the r of “If be has tinned land u of haw a mum-1m the bun kitted t1 the poo Nun wh the poo] tl "I " B apan A M. p, on th [N mp Lara In it nit ml: " m " tex to lir. p CORPUS (I iii run Pat B3311

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