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Durham Review (1897), 23 Nov 1905, p. 2

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84 Enormous Trade in Chicago. (Harper‘s Woeekly.) One of the most striking points in comnecâ€" tion with Chicago‘s growth and present emâ€" Inence in th> commercial world is a stateâ€" ment of the enormous volume of business transacted yearly in the westerm metropolis. To repressni the extent of this business, fizâ€" ures extending inco the thousands of millions must be employed. According to a recent estimate the value of the wholesale trade in Chicago in 12994 reached a total of $1,781,â€" ©00,000â€"a sum which exceeds by more thar $200,000,000 the total value of the exports of the entire United Ststes ‘The value of the city‘s masufactures during the same year amounted to $1,$314.000,000. These figures teâ€" present a trifle less than oneâ€"tenth of the @alue of all the merchandise manufactured in the countryâ€"and more than the total vaiue =.lbo manufactures of the eniire usmion a century ago. Removes alil hard, soft or eailloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, aweeney, stifles, sprams, sore and swollen throat, coughs, ete. iave $50 by use of one betâ€" tle. Warrznted the most wonderfu) Blemish Cure ever known. The annual dritk bill of the United States has averaged $1,354.2148,386 durâ€" ing the last six years. The amount exâ€" pended for tobacco is nearly as large, The ability to spend as much money for drinking and smoking as these amounts simply shows that Americans are a prosâ€" perous and likewise a wasteful people. ENCLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT The quality as well as the quantity of wine and spirits consumed by the hardened revellers of tnas day is appalling to a more Wrnmperate age. For the humbler toper there was "twopenny â€"ale" in mutchkins as stromg as the home brew immortalized , by Nyren, and drams of gin as potent as turpentine. For richer customers there was genuine mountain dewâ€"Glenlivet ani usquebaugh; huse _ jorums of steaming punch prepared after some immemorial recipe like that of Bailie Nicol Jarvie "tapâ€" pithens,"" mantiing with claret fresh drawn from the cask, and, at a later date port, strong and fiery as the Newcastle "blackâ€" strap," of which Lord Endon used to drink . his three bottles with impunity. It is no wonder that nights passed in the consumr â€" tion of such potent beverages should have played havoe with the strongest constitvâ€" tions, or that sobriety at tabie should have been regarded as the exception rather thasr the rule, â€" The Spend{hrift Club was said to have derived its name from the extravagance of its members, who paid no less than fourâ€" teen pence balfpenny for a repast. But in the matter of potations the case was diiâ€" ferent, and the members of the Crochallin or Antemanum could assuredly not hav> availed themselves of _ Mr. Shorthouse‘s excuse for Wordsworth, who had got so lamentably druak at St. John‘s ‘‘that the poet‘s standard of intoxrication was probâ€" ably miserably low.‘" Even men of the highest social position preâ€" ferred the ease and freedom from restraint at the ‘"how1" to the decorous duiness of their own firesides, and just as the Baron of Bradwardine‘s guests left the castle to finish the evening in the genial license of Luckie MacAlroy‘s tavernm, so Lord Cockburn in his youth saw some dozen of the aristocracy of Midlothian, including the Duke of Bucleugh and the Lord Advocate, cdowded in the lowâ€" roof room ol a village alehouse, drinking buge potations of claret and whiskey punch and making the rafters echo with songs and toasts and uproarious festivity. \ Anotber reason for the popularity of the «tavern was the cramped space and limited mecommodation in the tall flats and lands, where a large family was often erowded into a couple of small rooms. There could be no «omfort or social esjoyment in such narrow «quarters, and so the tavern became the muâ€" @ual rendezvous for business and pleasure, and it was here that doctors would see their patients, lawyers interview their clients ant tradesmen meet their customers. Indecd, the time bad not long passed since the Lord Provost of the day would invite his guests to supper at Cleribugh‘s or Fortune‘s. ‘"*Seme excuse may be found for the uniâ€" ‘versal devotion to tavern life which forâ€" imserly prevailed in Edinburgh in the harshâ€" mmess of the northern winter, says a writer tin the London Globe. "It is one of the vilest ‘climates under heaven," wrote Stevenson, uas if he shivered at the remembrance of it; "you are liable to beaten upon by all the "winds that blow, to be drenched with raiz, *to e buried in cold sea fogs out of the cas‘, â€"or to be powdered with the snow as it com>s iflying southward from the Highland hills.‘ It is small wonder that a Scotsman‘s Hdeal of enjoyment should have been a warii wwory corner by the fireside in one of the inâ€" wamerable "how(s" or ‘"laighs" (taverns aud oyster cellars) which studded the closes on etther side of the High street, or that every poot. from Allan Ramsay to Fergusson and \Burns, should have sung of the delights of "the joyous evenings at John Dowile‘s or the Crochallan Club, with high jinks, the upâ€" woarious mirth, the hilarious songs, when <be air was thick with the steam from the ‘They Were Our $1.00 Fountain Pen is a popularly favored specialty at Diamond Hall‘s enlarged Stationery Deâ€" partment. Samples of note paper, embossing and engraving are gladly sent on request. Ryrie " Steady Flow" Fountain Pen TAVERNS OF OLD EDINEURCGH, RYRIE BROS. The point is of finely finished solid 14k gold with iridium tip. _ The name * Steady Flow" is accurately descriptive, and the pen is guaranteed for a year. Larger sizes $2.00 and $2.50. ~ * LIMITED â€"â€"â€"â€"= 134â€"138 YONGE ST. TORONTO . OoNT. Big Annual Drink Bill Classes of Men. With Al Spending More Time Outdoors. (Cleveland Leader.) Every year the tendency to prolong the season ol country life for those fortunate enough to have abiding places outside of the crowded cities. grows more marked. The number of families that linger on far into late autumn before they surronder to the call fo the town is larger than ever before and appreciation of the charm of rural surâ€" roundings in the time of ‘"‘falling leaft ana fading trees" gains in depth and sincerity. It is a change that makes for bealih ard the general wellâ€"being of those who are favored with freedom to choose their place of resiâ€" dence from mouth to month and season to season . A woman shovld insist upon being mistress of her own kitchen, but unâ€" less she possesses selfâ€"control, patience and tact she is really just as unfit to manage her servants as a clild. â€" It is a very true saying that a man or woman who has not learned to control self is not fit to control others. â€" If a woman cannot go irto her kitchon without losing her patience, or losing her temper she would do better to stay out of it. Fault must be found, but with the servants, as with children, it should be in a quict, dignified way, and a proper time should be chosen for it. A woman who does not know uny betâ€" ter than to take a time when a servant is particularly busy or has some speâ€" cial piece of work she is trying to get through, such as washing, ironing or getting dinner, will never be likely to bave good service. If she scolds or nags she at once lowers herself to the level of her servant, and loses the reâ€" spect which every mistress of a house should strive to deserve from those about her.â€"Woman‘s Life, St. Paul is noted for beautiful scenâ€" ery, but here is something perhaps worth printing on account of its oddity. The Old Man of the Caveâ€"who may he be? Perhaps some old pirate captain, guarding untold treasures. It is only by getting in just the right position that he is visible, and many have passed the cave without being aware of its immutable guardian. But jrom the proper point of view the appearance of the Old Man of the Cave is even more striking than in the picture, on account of the coloring in the sandstone. For nature not only carved his face in the rock, but she painted his cap and tinted his hbair and beard in her own perfect and perpetual manner. There are many of these caves in the famous bluffs of the Mississippi River at St. Paul, but I know of none other with such a patient sentinel. _ This one is located near Fort Snellin@. Gray s SyruporRed SpruceGum Bright‘s Discase is Kidney Disease in its worst form. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills aiâ€" ways cure #. They also easily cure mildâ€" er forms of Kidney Complaint. "My attending physician,"* Mr. Bond states, "said I was in the last stages of Bright‘s Disease and that there was no hope for me. 1 then commenced to use Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and no other remâ€" edy. I used in all about twenty boxes when my doctor pronounced me quite well. _ 1 have had no return of the trouâ€" ble since." Doctors said there was no hope tor him but he is a Well Man Now. Mount Brydges, Ont., Nov, 20.â€"(Speâ€" cial)â€"That Dodd‘s Kidney Pills eure Bright‘s Discase completely and permanâ€" ently has been clearly shown in the case of Mr. Robert Bond, a wellâ€"known resiâ€" dent of this place. _ Mr. Bond does not hesitate to say he owes his life to Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. He was Cured of Bright‘s Disease by Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis. NO DOUBT ABOUT ROBT. BOND‘8 CASE "A sailor would never wear precious stones, like diamonds or pearls, in his ears. â€" The only stone he would wear was agate."â€"St. Louis Globeâ€"Demoecrat. Mistress Whom a Servant Respects. "But there used to be. Every salt had his ears pierced, and was as proud of his earrings as a lady. For some variâ€" eties T got as high as $50 a pair. Agate in Sailor‘s Earrings. "Sailors don‘t wear earrings, as they used to," said a ship chandler. "In the past I had a jewelry case and sold earâ€" rings of all kinds. Lately I did away with it, for there is now mno money in sailors‘ earrings at all. In spite of disarrangements Mr. Mage procured lamps and held his mecting. Crowds gathered outside, but the preâ€" sence of a comsiderable police force kept them in fair order. During the meeting a malcontent arose and called upon all good Catholics to leave the place. _ Two or three followed his exâ€" ample, walking out noisily. of Another Attack. Montreal, Nov, 13.â€"Following after the two.demonstrations which have been made against Mr. Mage, the French Presbyterian cvangelist, who is endeaâ€" voring to ‘hold sesions in the east end of the city, another attack was made last evening. On opening the hail, at the corner of St. Catharine and Maisâ€" onneuvre streets, for the service, it vaas found that the Bibles amd hymnbooks had been taken, and the electric light bulbs smashed. â€" Not satisfied with this a bottle of strong ammonia had been introduced. _ This ammonia was in a highly volatile state, and when opened by unsuspecting people several were temporarily blinded. ROWDIES BREiXK UP MEETING. French Presbyterian Evangelist Object The Old Man of the Cave. Gray‘s Syrup to keep the children safe from CROUCP. It disclves the thick sputum â€"clears the throat â€" breaks up a cold â€"and CURES COUGHS. &e _ always in the house. A brwr \\ Mflamt}ommvbmu \NW.,m seall iprmt fad Pasg mecsies ,../ Mi MOTHERS RELY $ ~Phâ€"k» A young man was on trial in Independence, Kan., for stealing watermelons. When the jury had retired the foreman asked all those who had never stolen melons to stand and be counted. Not a juror moved and a verâ€" dict of not suilty was returned. Hersic and Affectionate. (Titâ€"Bits.) He (on his krees)â€"Darling, 1 love with all my heart, with all my soul, with all the strength of my being. Sheâ€"â€"Are you in earnest, Clarence? He (reproachfully)â€"In earnest? Do think I am bagging my trousers in this for fun? nothing known in medical treatment toâ€"day so effective and certain of a cure and so magical im its building up power as South American Nervine, because it strikes at the root of all nervous ailments, the digestive orgars, makes rich, red blood, drives away emaciation, puts on flesh and makes over physical wrecks generally.â€"148 In the world‘s history Chere is nothing like the advance of Japan in the last generation. We see some of the results of the adoption of the civilization of the west by 30,000,000 of the yellow race. Will anyone who really knows him venture to say that the Chinaman iâ€" less well equipped mentally and physiâ€" cally than the Japanese. What, then, wil. be the result when the 500,000.000 _ ; Chinga follow the example of their kinâ€" dred of Japan. On the northern borders of China the white and yellow races have been face to face for some time. and the advantage appeared to be with the white. But the tide soon turned and toâ€"day the aggressive armies of the white Czar, under his ablest generals, have had to retire hopelessly beaten before the yeiâ€" low race.â€"London Spectator. ] It took the nations of Europe 2,000 years to advance from barbarism _ to their present position. It took the Japâ€" anese a branch of the yellow race, & _generation to adopt and apply all the best results of this long struggle. We are told that when the present emperor of Japan, was a boy the sort of training that was supposed to fit him for the part he was to be allowed to take in the govâ€" ernment of his country was ‘making arâ€" tificial flowers. He is only now just over middle age, yet he rules as a constituâ€". tional monarch over as. empire _ with, which the most advanced and most powâ€" | erful empire of the west was glad to. form an alliance as with an equal. His| navy has driven the Russian flag from the China seas. On land the tactics and i strategy ,the endurance, selfâ€"sacrifice,| and bravery, the care for the wounded in the field and the splendid Rospital arâ€" rangements of the Japanese army arc the admiration of the civilized world. | More Vigorous Than Caucasian, It Flourâ€" iskes in All Climates, Before the foundations of Rome were laid there was a homogenous people dwelling in China with: a form of governâ€" ment and no meanâ€"degree of civilization. ome flourished for eleven centuries and became the empire of the western world, then decayed and passed away and her civilization became the heritage of others. But China remains as a united empire to this day. In this marvelous continuity in the past lies the promise of the fuâ€" ture. _ : FOR "RUNâ€"DOWN" FEOPLE there‘s The Jurors Pleaded Guilty. VITALITY OF YELLOW RACE. LEAVE 30 Tto60 MINUTES® L | | | Looz RUB ON SUNLIGHT SOAP THE SUNLIGHT m â€"& l1 WAY _ * RINSE ° WELL EARN : Warom ONTARIO ARCHIVES f TOoRronto Elegant pictures, beautiful! rolored, 1,nll like mldfln{ ‘S'o:.altll nn}olssnd :ldrm and ma se paid. Sell them at 10c. a u':f?..w x in _ulm). rm;;n’ mney. :hrgd we‘l prompt ou this baenddome Wateh frea." THB COLONIAL ART Co., DEPT.~ $s * TOROXTG ‘nwo doue it and they say t‘s Just a dandyâ€"handsoro! ; poliâ€"hed silver nicke case, strong and well made, witu g:mmz:l l;:lmluln dial, cay wel er ll.l.lw mln-‘o and ncgnd hands of nk:e bine n;;ll:;il’gnod wor iven a ut tree lo:u.[i.{-.gour Picture Post Cards The easiest thi i2 the woride . Hundredp |60 . boys you way you ; anl} Never jump from the frving pan urtil you are sure the fire is out, _: ‘© _ E pamnl 4 _ o 0 C000 2006 eWd in the Stl’al:;l.I Bd lnp, "Faith an id, Your Worshi J It‘s better to be a coward for five Ifln& thin to be dead all your life."â€"London PMALa Tells Why He Ducked. A fine specimen of the Taurus Hiberâ€" nicus made its appearance in the Bow EStreet Police Court yesterday. "You ducked your head," said the Maâ€" shtnte to Patrick Lane, who charged ‘:ui‘phq;xsn‘mgh with shooting at him #ha ‘@E2L0 . The Roman game was "follis." and was less rough. There was a centre runner in harpaston around whoin the game was fought out. One side was given the ball; the other chose a centre. The gide with the ball stood some distance back from a line on which the centre runner was posted, and at a signal the ball was thrown past the middle man. Players could be held back from securing the ball in any way, though the Greek youths had no rush formations, never feem.ing to h‘a‘ve“ learned the valus of seeming to have lea team work.â€"Outing. If it is not the oldest game in the world football is not far from it. But it has never been a game in which puny nations played. The Greek game was originally called "pheninda," or ‘feintâ€" ing," later it was called "episkyrus," "epikoinos," and lastly "harpaston," unâ€" der which name it came to resemble footâ€" to make out what the newspapers conâ€" tain, and it is a pleasure to find modern instance parading in clothes of an anâ€" cient tongue. Modern Greck seems casy to learn. A young Irishman became emâ€" ployed in a Massachusetts avenue Grosek fruit store, and in the course of a year spoke the language of his employer with astonishing proficiency.â€"Boston Record. Studying Greek in Boston, _ | Opportunity to learn modern Greek | has never been as good as at present in Boston. Fruit stands run by Greeks are | in spots more numerous than cigar i stands. Their owners are glad to give' all the information possible about their | native tongue, and they subscribe to and ! exhibit a number of newspapers printed in Greek. To those who havre studiedl the Greek of Xenophon it is not difficdl; Cash or Cure Greatest of All Wars. The annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, coming at the end of the bloodiest struggle of thedast forty years, is a reminder to the Amerâ€" icans that the civil war is still unparalâ€" leled. . By many tests it remzins the greatest of conflicts. Nothing since Apâ€" pomattox has dimmed the lustre of the Grand Army‘s war. No Titame strugales between Mongol and Slavic hosts in eastâ€" ern Asia lessens the groatness of the war the soldiers of the union fought and won or render less splendid the record of southern valor.â€"Cleveland Leader. SHILOH the Heart is effective in apoplectic sympâ€" toms. If you have unpleasant dizziness, lightness or sudden rush of blood to the head, take precautions against a recurrence, This great remedy will remove the cause The pregs of the land has daily a flist of sudden. deaths which would not be chronicle1 If Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart were used.â€"147 It is estimated that in what is ealled the central area of London 2,430,000 passenger journeys are made every day on the local railways, tramways and omâ€" nibusses. The yearly passenger traffic is made up as follows: Railways, local lines, 301,000,000 journeys; tramways, 405,000,000 journeys; and omnibusses, 458,000,000 journeys. _ Assuming â€"the population of "Greater London" at 6,â€" 85,00, the number of local passenger journeys by such conveyances per head per annum of the population is thus 170. The per capita journeys by correspondâ€" ing means of conveyance in Paris are 200, in Berlin 270, and ni New York 300. APOPLEXY.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for LEVER BROTHERS L(MITED, TORONTO 33 25¢. per bottle. _ All dealers guarantee it, Equally good with hard or soft water. The reason for this is because Sunilight Soap is absolutely pure, contains no injurious chemicals â€"indeed, nothing but the active, cleansing, dir!â€"removinmroperâ€" ties of soap that is nothing but If Shiloh‘s Consumption Cure f2i!s to cure your Cold or Cough, you get back all you paid for it. You are sure of a Cure or the Cash, If it wasn‘t a swe curc, this off:t would not be made. Can anything be fairer > If you have a Cold, Cough, or any cisease of the Throat, Lungs or Air Passages, ty | even the daintiest fabric or the hands, and the clothes will be perfectly white, woolens soft and fluffy. Hard rubbing and boiling are things of the&st in homes where Sunlight Soap is used as The Antiquity of Football, Sunfight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way (follow directions). YOUR MONCY REFUNDED by the dealer from whom flu buy Sunlifht, Soap if you find any cause for complaint. Loendon‘s Passenger Traffic. Sunlight Soap will not injure k 155 ery. The highest price paid per bottl¢ Ne genve VOL 40 ME Doier:{3d, was $1.65, and the others slightly lowoer. | Up in Maine they have arrested . hunts The proceeds have been turned Oover to | for ‘"negligent shooting of a hum. being,‘ the school fund.â€"Swainsboro correspon. Served him right. In the shootis : of hu dence Atlanta Constitution. ORANGE BLOSSOMS here was quite a question as to whe ther or not the Sheriff had a right to sell this whiskey at public or private sale, Emanuel being a dry county. Ths officer, however, assumed the responsiâ€" bility and made the sale at public outâ€" # Ce 0 C e ol Heat uoor to you still go; h:@f:::’m’m; :“P& her parlor melodeon?" 18 en way. ear C » Bey ht Boap and follow divecii ay ;h;\ol.o s:::r:'nhanged it for a cornet, I‘m .-~â€"â€".°'0'-â€"-â€"â€"- ) h“:}_u(. 'gracfoi:s:t i‘!t’g'he plays the comnet, G”mm Sheriff Sells Wh"k.y' 't 'a'.\'f)t“:trs:.ll. uh's ;)nly half as bad. ¢h» A novel new sight was witnessed in |can‘t sing while sho‘s playing the cornet,‘* front of the court houss hore one day *esurormeniinestnacameig this week, whoen County Sheriff J. \\'.I GOT aA CONSTANT HEAD&C®1 > Fields sold at auction weveral bottles | Toa chances to one the secret of you > sur. of fine whiskey which had been captured | rering is that "white man‘s burd« Caâ€" by the officers in a raid on the blind | tarrh. HMere‘s a sentence from ons man‘s tizor of. John 1Â¥iteh, colored. broust adnnk ae) iynci ym l m PCs precious remedy, is a positive cure for all female discases Write ::e.:hr and free sample. R. S. McGILL, Simcoe, Ont. ter O GowP t $ hn #. 46 00 intsivnt" Mb P toedih e it achcs d If they must be cut the day before they are nceeded, put them in a cold place in water and wrap a damp eloth around the branches, in order to prevent the flowers from withering and to keep the seeds from hbeing expelled too soon. â€"Courtry Life in America. | Via Lehigh Valley Railroad, Friday, Dec. 15th. Tickets good 10 days, and only $0 from Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falis, to New York City and return. Tickets good on all regular express trains except Black Diamond Express. For further particulars, call on or address Robort 8. Lewis, Canadian Passenger Agernt, 10 King street east, Toronto. The pods burst at the most unexpectâ€" ed times, waking you in the night, and peppering you with their hard, shiny, black seeds. Branches that are to be used for a party must be sclected with care, to be sure of haxing perfecily fresh flowers and seed pods that have not opâ€" ened. If it is possible to do so, cut them the same day as they are needed. A French writer in a scientific magaâ€" zine tells of the great ocean depths of 20,000 to 30,000 feet, the temperature tending towards zero, the perpetual darkâ€" nees ranging below depths of about 1,280 feet. At that level plants, deprived of light, can not exist, The animal life must be carnivorous, The organs _ of sight ,not being used, have become atroâ€" phied and disappeared. Yet there is light even in the sightless world. A German | exploring ship founrd a fish with enorâ€" mous eyes: at a depth of 6,400 feet. you want a brand new sensation, bring home some branches of witch hazel havyâ€" ing both flowers and unopened seed pods on them and put them in vase of water. TOILET PAPERS How Witch Hazel Shoots Its Seeds. Do you know that the witch hazel shoots its seeds ten or fifteen fect? If $9â€"NEW â€" YORK â€"FEXCURSIONâ€"$9 "‘Yes,‘ said Mrs. Hadstonc, cently; ‘he will be down in a He is upstairs brushing his hair + ‘Thus, she was staying once at a counâ€" try ‘house, and on a eertain evening, having finished dressing before her husâ€" band, she descended to the drawing room alons. In the drawing room three or four gentlemen were discussing the misfortunes of Ireland. One of them, as she entered, said: _ "T ean‘t imagine what will be the fate of poor old Erin, but there‘s One above who knows.‘ Other weliâ€"known brands as follows: lo Rotisâ€"*«Standard," «Hote!l," *‘York," "Mammotb, In Sheooetsâ€"@Imperial," "Royal," "‘Regel"" "Orient," . BC SURC TO ASK For 9 #m tm t 2e Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gilman, says the New York Tribune, was criticising wife worshipâ€"the old fashioned, unreaâ€" eoning, blind admiration that â€" woman id to her husband in the past, regardâ€" gg him as the handsomest, bravest, wisâ€" est and most learned of men. "Mrs. Gladstone," she said, "worshipâ€" ped her husband in tais way; but, then, she had some reason. Even in her case, though, the good lady‘s exaggerated wife worship would sometimes make her apâ€" pear ridiculous. Ny? [Â¥ 7000022 A% A ammm. Thoey ere CLEAN, SOFT, TOUGH and SANITARY in every re Mre. Gladstone which contains 12,000 sheets in four Great Depths of Ocean. WIFE WORSHIP. A Favorite Brand is the "COTTACGE" E.. B. EDBDdDdDY‘ Fi of It. VJJ EDOOU in iour roi‘sâ€" the average family Fore One Dolliar compla minute man beings negligence is inexcu .ble and Maine is to be commended for pusssbing it. â€""One application gave me insts cleared the nasal passages and st. pain in my bead." It‘s quick, safe treatment, and it pever fails to Ton chances to one the secret ot y fering is that ‘‘white man‘s burd« tarrh,. Here‘s a sentence from o: evidence for Dr. Agnew‘s Catarr» â€""One application gave me insts: One Degree Less Discord. (Philadelphia Press.) "Hes that girl next door to you her parlor melodeon?" ‘‘No, she exchanged it for a ane. ents.â€"14 for rheumatic suffering. For five was a great invalid, words cannot the faintest idea of my intense s and constant pain I endured. 6 be South Americap Rheumatic Cure per ly cured me."â€"146 business," says Wingham, Ont., fields under the for rheumatic & bow such a delightful and charactont;â€" cally Latin man came to be the sovereign of an Angloâ€"Saxon nation that is by nature stiff and morose" Coveting the British King. The French are evidently very much in love with the British King. Listen to what La Vie Parisienne says: "Edward VH. would suit us as a sovercign down to the ground. 1f the French people only knew him he would be elected king by fniversal suffrage. 1 cannot imacine Address the _ BELLEVILLE | BUSiXNRESs COLLEGE, LIMITED, Belleville, Ont: cyâ€" ery department gives special training and satisfaction. [ISSUE NO. 47. 1905. 12 for 10¢; 60 for 50c; 100, $1; 200, $2; s00, $5; all different Largest and finest stork in Canada; 500 mixed, $3; albums, all prices. Fon PINE, HEMLOCK AND HArDpwoon lumbet or timber, telegraph poles, ties, posts, dressed jumber, interior finish, eniâ€" matched and bored bhardwood flooring, etc., try John Harrison & Sons Co., Limited: head office, saw and planing mills, Owen Eound, Ont. C ENTRAL TELEGRAPH â€" SCHOOL, ; Gerrard east, Toronto; under Prin«iâ€" palship of ‘T. J. Johnston; eighteen years‘ experience; gives thorough training for raiâ€" way operating; catalogue free; write. AGEN‘rs WANTEDâ€"HUSTLERs | cax make two bundred dollars per mon: gelling our household necessities; no f:) Write for samples and information to in« 157, Smith‘s Falis, Ont. 6 AGENTB WRITE J. H. ROWE, puxx ville, Ont., for a great money make; Basily sold. An article needed in ever AGIH‘!‘I WANTED, â€" MALE AND r}: male, active, with ability to sell. Our goods . are wanted in every home,. Ago»:: make money selling, and their custono» save money buying. Take mdvantag> of the holiday season. Write for agents‘ circulsr: The Rodgers Peeriess Silverware Co.,Bri¢ge burg, Ont. TWO TO SIX DOLLARS PER DAY, According to ability; either sex; introduciny our "‘New Idea." Free training: rapia i« always be used for Children Teething. soothes the child, soothes the gums, cur wind colic and is the best remedy for 1)i. m‘» ) L pl en af’ e ye ne THE ICEMAN‘S TROUBLESâ€"»\~ Negligence Not to be Tole Souvenir Post Cards THE J. i. NICHOLS CO., LIMiTED., R. Adams, Toronto, Ont. WE PAY SALARY says John Gray, ice AGENTS WANTED. MISCELLANEOUS., , ""is one Of the most fertile e sun for sowing the seeds of my intense suffer pae #o five years ] 6 bottles of permanentâ€" Byrup sbou dealer, of still con vey "he et."* he got h Preter 11 The B3 THF

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