West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Nov 1909, p. 3

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rought . t, t and the es of hith. M , lll"m; Its W n 100 it of a mspital s not Philipg NERE ae meets. . wine his wil« imnitiative nroads of t1 directin ka M il 1d thie t w een uilors" en to ebild~ w hile on and the the uie it Inc 1J» The Celestial Visiter of 1835 Apâ€" proaching Us Again. Outside the circle of astronomers, Halâ€" ley‘s name is known because it is atâ€" tached to a comet whose orbit he calcuâ€" lated and whose return he predicted. This was in 1682, when Halley computed its parabolic orbit, and comparing this: with the imperfect observations of comâ€" ets which have appeared in 1456, 1531 and 1607, concluded that each was the same body returning from the outer reâ€" Â¥ion of the solar system beyond the urthest known planet. _ He _ wrote: **Wherefore, if it should return accordâ€" ing to our predictions about the year 1708, impartial posterity will not refuse to acknowledge that this was first disâ€" covered by an Englishman." This was not only a great advance in astronomy and important in its relation to the theâ€" ory of gravitation, but was a forward movement in the conception of the orâ€" derliness of the universe. Comets had been portents of war, pestilence and faâ€" mine. It was indeed Halley‘s _ comet which appeared in 1066 at the time of the invasion of William the Conqueorr and again in 1456 when Constantinople was besieged by the Turks and the creâ€" sentâ€"shaped tail was a mighty omen. Halley‘s comet duly appeared in 1759, somewhat retarded by the attraction of Jupiter and Saturn, its perturbations kaving been accurately calculated by the French astronomer, Clairaut. It appeared again 1835 and is now once more rapidly approaching the earth and the sun, having passed the orbit of Jupiâ€" ter in April last.â€"The Popular Science HALLEY‘Ss CQOMELI |CORNS TONIC TREATMENT FOR IND:GESTION Remedies That Digest the Food Will Not Cure the Troubleâ€" The Stomach Must be Fitted to do Nature‘s Work. U 1 GuieT$s _ CREAM TARTARA for November 1) Canadian Government tests show we have the purest, and highest strength goods. Gillett‘s is used by the best Bakers and Caterera everywhere. Costs no more than the inferior ‘ adulterated kinds. E. W.GILLETT Co,LTD. 7 Toronto, Cot $\ MADE IN CANADA if ust mention Turkey one treatment for indigestion, tarrh of the stomach and aving remarkable success in ate cases, and deserves atâ€" : every sufferer. al is that remedies for hat digest the food for the CHEMICALLY PURE velling withoul & ~ial examines and e particulars of all â€" if anyone is found c is removed from but it is only on ting Turkey one gets an impression of the strictness rt regulations, but in realâ€" nothing more than another ng revemue. L0 €ApMFTC ntlon that before trave!â€" one must get a license ting about five shillings which has to be vised at ‘en route. and for each > D Ont licin« and DaCKâ€" | other forms re the irregâ€" womanhood, ine dealers box or six > Williams they cure rheunmi h ‘-" W &R & 4 UCIN24HOYRS You can painlessly remove any com, either hard, soft or bleeding, b‘ |pplyÂ¥n( Putnam‘s Com Extractor. )t never burns, leaves no scar, contains no acids ; is harmless because composed only of healing gums and baims. Fifty years in only of healing gums and baims. Fifty years in use. Cure n‘amm Sold by all Xrugtlu e. bottles. Refuse substitutes. PUTNAM‘S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR "Quotations 50c. lower than a weeX ago," remarked a packer, "are due, not to lower prices in the United States, for they are not lower there. They are not to any extent due to lower prices for bacon on the old country market, for we are sending little if any bacon out of the country at present when long clear is such a scarcity at home. But it is due to a large extent to the fact that‘ darmers are marketing such a large percentage of unfinishel, immaâ€" ture hogs, which are poor killers, and do not handle to good advantage in any “v.y.ifl r'""'"""""""'fi 3 ll THE FARMJ "Quotations 50c. lower than ago," remarked a packer, "are to lower prices in the United S they are not lower there. The; to any extent due to lower pi bacon on the old country ma hi ds _ Whatever other reasons there may be, it is quite probable that packers anticiâ€" pate a shortening of consumptive deâ€" mand at the present high range of prices and are endeavoring to gqt into lhage to meet it in time. The fall of the year, when the plentitude of vegetable foods of all kinds makes economy . OB the meat bill a possibilityâ€"the beginâ€" ning of the game â€" season in England, always a slack time in the old country bacon trade, is historically associated with a drop in the price of live hogs, & drop which was always such an irkâ€" some one to the farmer, who has estiâ€" mated his hogs at prices current all sumâ€" mer abd fall, until the time when he was ready to cash them. At the present juncture, the arrival of larger receipts of light unfinished hogs is probably nccelerated by the anticipation of the customary drop. This week the range of current quotations At the present of larger receipts hogs is probably anticipation of the week the range is as follows: Live hogs, 1. 0. points.. ..... autusctind hP d C Live hogs, fed and watered at Toronto. . .e« ie.2l0ce. ark 06c Iive hogs, weighed off cars, Toâ€" routo.. ... > > Thin. unfinished Without the lumber trade market would be a very quiet present time. City demand though the present season w increased demand for all cla horses, especially . good de heavy lorry horses. With (Fr Saddle ho to choice Serviceably horses. . Our present law, which has been in foree for some time, recognizes as the standard a certain total amount of solâ€" ids in a cow‘s milk and a certain perâ€" centage of fats. For the purpose of an argument it is not necessary to go into those figures very fully, but the stanâ€" dard calls for something like 4 per cent. of fat, and in the summer months it may run between 31â€"2 and 4 per cent. In other words, there must be a certain precentage of fats in milk or, according to law, it is not salable. T The total amount of solids must run up to something like 13 per cent., alâ€" though that amount also varies someâ€" what, I belsove. If those standards are i not met, the law will not pormit a far T n Tix 6n "aal! bhe milk. and ths rom the Canadian Farm.) THE LIVE HOG TRADE. low that standard percentages were from the milk « cows. In the m fat percentage is er cows give mil which is up to standard and is less adulterated Now. under t ner or dealer to aw takes it for PUR rE, NOURISHING MILK TS RF QUIRED. THE HOR orses, good e lumber trade the horse be a very quiet one at the City demand is quiet, alâ€" resent season should see an mand for all classes of city ally good delivery and horses. â€" With the coming n and winter season, with ads and increased local deâ€" EPA uy B to there are other cows whose ile good and nourishing, neverâ€" ails to reach the standard of solids as established by the law efore cannot be sold. The Holâ€" eeq of cow« comes under this heir milk is good and nourish s C e Foge tm samiee: t o PRathvvie s CHHHeRR it for granted that milk beâ€" andard is adulterated. Those were taken, I understand, milk obtained from cortain the milk of Jersey cows the age is somewhat higher; othâ€" o milk the fat percentage of p to the requirements of the nd is allowed to be sold unâ€" b sound sE TRADE 1 business than anyâ€" ; as if holders must a hefore heavy tradâ€" ilk of Jersey cows the | Pinkham‘s V egetabic somewhat higher; oth. |. es it ; the fat percentage of ‘t-,i- t El he require ments of the x‘? \‘ s 4 allowed to be sold unâ€" o ;%g»‘:?,’.f". * Â¥ee] o o es fa ie present law here is | *3 :’:.z' FÂ¥2A at Apart from the breeds | $ w s 2k â€" tnts > are other cows \\hlh" %‘ y tg “‘.' ,» €0 | and nourishing, never: : yha> < . S § D reach the standard of | i" 3ile . td uj s established by the law &::\ wA § t: mnot be sold. The Hol f f ? t ct cow< comes under this } y Nes ol de T Lo t aent coumsontelte 1 »_ nnatize e C it CUREDP 100 00 150 00 edly to a range w the ideas of â€" a fact which eountry 15 00 ff 00 On )lids must ru per cent., al ) varies some be in evi #7 60 T 85 8 10 185 00 200 00 150 00 200 00 300 00 60 00 infants and children from obtaining this / pure but weaker quality of milk, which: is as necessary to them as the stronger milk is to others. As a physician dealing with infants, I have many instances coming to my NO* tice of cases where the weaker milk of the Holstein eow is the only quality the stomach of the infant will retain.â€" The milk is pure and nourishing, and many infapts thrive upon it, which could not digest any stronger quality given by other breeds. Yet the law will not perâ€" mit the Holstein milk to be sold.â€"Dr. Thomas Morgan Rotch, Harvard Medical | College. The artificial incubation of duck egg3 is a thriving industry in some parts of China, more particularly _ in Canton, where a large and ready market encourâ€" ages the business. ‘The first thing to he done is to secure suitable eggs, and this is done by men who devote themselves entirely to the task during the summer months. The examiner squats on the {mund, and, holding the egg up to the . ight. turns it round and judges its suitâ€" ‘ ability by the state of the shell and the clearness of its contents. The least appearance of cloudiness enâ€" tails its rejection, so particular is the examiner, but nevertheless only from 8 per cent. to 10 per cent. of the eggs are rejected none over seven days old are accepted. The skilful examiner can deal with 6,000 eggs in a day. The selected eggs are placed in shallow saucer shaped baskets with a lid similarly shaped, and each basket is set upon a wickerwork ‘ cylinder over a stove in a darkened room heated by charcoal brazlers.â€"From the ECZEMA AND PILES CURED. Feathered Life Magistrate and School Commissionâ€" er Healed by Zamâ€"Buk. LyvdiaF. at Ly 28 LTox, N.J.â€"I fecl txl;le’“"d lie. « NEARLTOX, X.J. o nfen io new ten Mrc‘y RLTON, egetabl o Mefed For MA V M ed us tain \ Pinkham‘s € El B“fie'-th sefioin the | cols . Cc ition * ars Wloubles' r: *\ s Temale e wicet "me| P . s o Ion, a§nd‘g°"§‘3<i unâ€" : : tÂ¥ atéll‘voumests' sleep. Ex .t $3 D 1d _ _no ve_ me i | | es s ie rer c ie sds my e is | 3e k~%. 3 s R Docas they sa were eeds . \ae 17. e up, ble s s in hos As $s _ _i trou I wa ot 1 o | / Mipipcat i foopair and did. n d $\ Pas * R air, & I]lve‘ d of| l e M desp hether E. law | E8 C o i apout Lydmol Hol A ‘ f read ab()u oufld; sand this | d when Itable Cov?el;l a;galnhfr" . thdiniot Picatle 6 ne c MB milk | 1)inkl‘:‘to takelll 'my s‘;gehlarltbolrel'coma t i+ a W epeta m Ciond ol N0 haim lk is Gl':ol:fia E. from nrcoticso record ilsion \ Lyd made is no naholds thefllcures other | gou“ ’contan to_dage £ actu“f and ‘"" | fherbs, and mber 0 ow O1, are pe uk drugs, est nu we kn nonials t na bl | ful the large ases testin tory a he for le dise tary bora 'ave n “‘v»‘»\v 1‘ of fel;l:: dsof vol“"i‘:kha,mml:“ Wt}%rl:n of y the | t“°‘é§fe in the from “St evprytion' CC | on 1 )Iafis"om 3lm;)1}flamm.‘:1tum0"5' im« | Lyn cared fr] ints, s,fibroi kache, o) gate Aoenspiet napr? | fomal , dis lodicpa r erâ€" They , cera“,‘{:‘lfities'finne""ol‘gwgs ‘?st%-‘e]ge- i¢ usA "Eej?ésti‘)“r?n 1x E. Pinkham {'-‘ft“ | i[~1vel‘Y sufte Lysia It:i'ifll‘ ial adviee being | 1‘“ to give und a e speci nfiden‘ ilk \u table C"mpouldm‘ ite a co am, a : state "2¢ it your case wr Avice is Ireo, ; S~h"~‘ l *A voflrw Mf“advm i oA ie io goe nee 1?\,’ I T.ynn. M Zamâ€"Buk by its hbealing POW®! ".". carned the praise of men and women in the highest stations of life, One of the latest prominent gentlemen to sgeak highly in Zamâ€"Buk‘s favor is Mr. C. E. Sanford, of Weston, King‘s Co., N. 8. Mr, Weston is a Justice of the Peace for the county, and a member of the Board of School Commissioners. He is also deacon of the‘ Baptist Church in Berwick. Indeed, throughout the counâ€" ty it would be difficult to find a man more widely known and more highly respected. 19 u. calg 400 .4 . mnnaerensInt respectedu. Some time back he had occasion. to test Zamâ€"Buk, and here is his oPinion of this great balim. He says: ©I had a patch of eczema on my ankle, which had been there for over twenty years! Sometimes also the disease would break out on my shoulders. I had taken soluâ€" tion of arsenic, had applied varkous ointâ€" ments, and tried all sorts of things to. obtain a cure, but in vain. â€" Zamâ€"Buk, unlike all else I tried, proved highly satâ€" isfactory, and cured the ailment. "I have also used Zamâ€"Buk for itchâ€" ing piles, and it has cured them comâ€" pletely also. I take comfort in helping my brother man, and if the publication of my experience of Zamâ€"Buk will lead other sufferers to try it, I should be glad. For the cure of piles or skin disâ€" cases, T know of nothing to equal Zamâ€" glad. eases Buk. Zamâ€"Buk also eu blood poisoning, 1 chapped hands, cC injuries and dise to the chest in c the tightness and and stores sell at from Zamâ€"Buk C % boxes for $1.25. School â€" Children _ Given Practical Pointers by Principals. ‘The principals in practically all the public schools m the city yesterday deâ€" livered short lectures to the pupils cauâ€" tioning them as to the proper way to board and leave trolley cars, the danâ€" gers of stealing rides and playing on the trolley tracks. These lectures were delivered in response to a clreular letter | addressed to the principals by President Charles 0. Kruger, of the Rapid Tranâ€" sit Company, which was cordially â€" inâ€" dorsed by Superintendent Brumbaugh, and they were but one step in the genâ€" eral plan ""i"}" followed out by the comâ€" pany in an effort to cut down the aceciâ€" dent claim account by educating the public to look out for itself where trol ley cars are concerned. his damage account has heretofore constituted one of the heavy drains on the oom;)a.ny’s gross earnings, and an ea‘mfst efdort fis 1 . T C on i ol la4 ts neolar T es S PEA e i en being made to minimize it in order to achieve the longedâ€"for point of placing the company on & sound financial basis. â€"Philadelphia Record. AFTER SUFFERKNG TOLD HOW TO LEAVE CARS Cured by Lydia E. Pinkâ€" fran‘s Vegetable Compound Chinese Egg Examiner. TEN YEARS Lynn, Mass. Her % and always helpfui. also cures burns, cuts, ulcers, ming, ringworm, scalp sores, nds, cold sores, and all akin d diseases. Rubbed well on st in cases of cold it relieves ss and aching. All druggists sell at 50c box, or post free Buk Co., Toronto, for price, its healing power has : of men and women in ‘=Frools Like A Rew Women YEARS "Like many. another woman,." writes | %rs. J. H. Hilliard, of Ashland, N. y er "continued weakness caused . by. poor stomach: and constipation led me to hbeâ€" lieve I would always be sick. It was Mrs. Ryan, my neighbor, who advised me to use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills and it was the means of teaching me ‘It is never too late to mend. 1 am rather a ‘ small woman, always pale, except when | my skin became a muddy yellow. 1 never | had much of an appetite because my diâ€" gestion was never very good and vt\ill‘ worse my system was seldom regular. | Mrs. Ryan had become healthy and well ‘ with Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills and kept tellâ€" ing me that they would fix my system | o it would work well, too. Certainly Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills must have made right all that was wrong, bocause 1 weigh ten pounds more than ever hefore and feel fine. If you could see my rosy color, and watch how quickly 1 do my housework, I am sure you would think just as much of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pilis as T‘do. They are a real fine mediâ€" ciae for woman and like as not would do a man just as much good, too. There is no remedy for general use in the home to make you well when sick. to keep you from getting sickâ€"no medicine with half the merit of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pillsâ€"see you get nothing else, sold in 25e yellow boxes, all deal ers or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont. Those who were in Peking during the Boxer rising, and who visit the foreign settlement toâ€"day. see many â€" changes, The Legation â€" walls show no soigns . of warfare save one corner of the British compound, near the gate opposite the Forbidden City. Here the bullet holes remain, and the broken bricks lie just as they were when the allied forces reâ€" lieved the garrison. To preserve the memory of those trying days and nights, Sir Claude Macdonald, then in command of the British post, had the words, "Lest We Forget," painted at the spot where the attacks were fiercest. This is the only real mark toâ€"day in Peking of the great trouble of 1900. The words are farâ€"reaching, and they bring back _ to mind the scenes of â€" treachery and strife which were enacted near by, and the many anxious hours spent by those who had friends and relations within the walls of the British Legation during the siege.â€"From the November Wide World Magazine. Men whose business takes them into the wilds have to be very careful about their supplies. It is of vital necessity that they should be able to obtain proâ€" visions when required, and that these should not be too far away. ‘The Canaâ€" atel. fAavarnment survevors. who were dian Government surveyors, who WeTC running the fourteenth base line, located a "cache" on the McLeod River, a tribu« tary of the Athabasca. The â€" supplies were taken in during the winter, when the swamps were frozen, and placed on a platform solidly built of logs, about ten feet from the ground, so as to be out of the reach of bears and other animals. The depredations of hungry animals who have destroyed "caches" _ which their unfortunate makers thought secure have l‘eS\l]t;:l"â€"i-lr more than one terrible traâ€" gedy by starvation in these trackless wilds.â€"November Wide World Magaâ€" zing Marienbad is a place of special interâ€" est to English people, for King Edward has now deserted Homburg, where for so many years he did his summer cutre, and every Augsut sees him installed in | the Church &Ymre at Marienbad and prepared to follow out the somewhat seâ€" vere regime of the place, Twenty years ago this famous wateringâ€"place _ was scarcely known to foreign people, alâ€" though it is nearly a century since it was visited by as great a man as Goethe. The spvrinfs are owned by the Abbey of Tepl, a large monustery some miles away, and tie good brothers evidently did not understand the art of advertiseâ€" ment, for the place remained Pmct-icnny C mamintenc graved or set with, precious stones, DOTT your name and addr8ss immediately and we will send gO\I. golt-psld, the Pills and fancy rinl which are to give away to purchasers of he pills. We do not ask any money before the pills are sold and we take back what you cannot sell. Address The Dr. Maturin Medicine ot ‘ Ring Dept 499. Toronte, On 14 Karats Solid Free 1 * old Shell Rings unknown outside Germanâ€"speaking counâ€" tries until recent times. But %octms began to find out how useful its waters were to the man who loved his dinner, and to the lady whose figure had losf its lines, and nowadays it has bedome the Mecea of the fat. ‘ Of course, Marienbad |s not given over entirely to the obese. Tt is high up in the Bohemian mountains, two thousand feet above sea level, so that the climate is peculiarly healthy, Many come for the air cure and for the benefit of the children, who love roaming about the pine forests and exploring the everâ€"fasâ€" cinating hills and valleys.â€"Mrs. Herbert Vivian in the November Wide World Magazine. OF 1LLHEALTH CURED Importance of the Cache "Y.oung man," said the stern parent, who thoughtfit was up to_him to ring in a bluff, "can you support my daughter in the style to watich she has been accusâ€" tomed *" "Oh, I suppose I could." answered tne sonâ€"imlaw cardidate, "but, hanestly, old man, Td bo ashamed to do it." . Increased Size "Lest We Forget A Mecca for the Fat. 38 Going Him One Better. We will give you your cholce of oneof those beauâ€" tiful rings S\nrnnuod 14 karate soli gold shell, plain, engraved, or sot with elegant simulated Jewels, for the sale of 4 boxes only. at 25¢. a box, of Dr. Maturin‘s Famous Vegetable Pills. They are the greatest remedy for indigestion, constip& tion, rhoumndlm, weak or impure blood. catarmh diseases of the liver and kidneys. When you hare sold these 4 boxes of pills send us the money $1 snd the size of the ring desired and we will send guu, yourchoice of one of those Lnduomo Rings, plain enâ€" th, precious stones. §ond T EACLLA <ea in Ocean Liners of ocean liners is ""‘ feet ol sony ‘oy | that thegr diâ€" | ciimati cenyvi lill‘ trde, altitu« ar. | P* that pr _ .f] | Ire cigar w ap|® est (Georg em | !XP" .m-;\rly nby Carolina, bu ie quality of 1 the manufac ore ulated s-n!u} uy The delici \" | of Virginia ‘;! FARMERS NEED TO LEARN black loam soil in sheitered mountain coves, between 1,000 and 2000 feet eleâ€" vation. â€" In the lower eclvations of the Xorth Carolina fruit belt the eoves on the northâ€"side of mountain slopes . are best suited to fruit, while the . coves with Southern exposure require a highâ€" er altitu g to give the required climatic envifronmeat. : Peaches doâ€" well on the Eastern Shore and in the mountains of Western Maryland, but are generally unsuccess fol on the intervening ~Piedmont Pla teau, where frosts are apt to kill the earlyâ€"fruit buds. i To Distinguish Gentlemen From Waitâ€" ers on Dress Occasions. A new dressâ€"coat model on view at the Tailor and Cutler exhibition of tailorâ€" made garments seems likely to remove the complaint that a man‘s evening dress is identical with taat of a waiter. The latest dressâ€"coat is no more than an Eton jacket with tails attached, that portion of the skirt technically known as the "strap," which used to come round to the front edge of the coat, being now abolished. Another new type of garment is the "Jodhpore breeches," which are a curious hybrid of riding breeches and trousers As far as the kneo thoy are cut like or dinary riding breeches. Below there i an extension like a narrow trousorâ€"le fitting closely to the calf, with a "twrn up?" at the end. 1t is claimed that thi â€" OR V s io e ie in m Ervichaitl COUGHS & COCLDS LEAD TO CONSUMPTION Colds are the most dangerous of all forms of diseas». A neglected cold leads to Bronchitis, C omumrtion. Pneumonia. #* Coughs * are the result of itritated bronâ€" chial tubes. "*PSYCHINE" cures coughs by removing the irritating particles and healing the infamed membrane. It is a germicide and destroys the tubercle germ. It is a tonic that strengthens the lungs, the liver, and tones up the system. It makes forbetter health in all conditions of humanâ€" ity. Getstrong and the cough will disappear, "PSYCHl%E" makes weak people strong. _ It cures coughs of the most ubj’u- rate kind and breaks up a cold in a few houss» "hak t oA tare ap" at She Ond :. £C 15. 000 BE n Eardntihe type of breeches is the most comfortable for hot climates, since it obviates the necessity of enclosing the lower part of the leg in a tight puttee or a stiff legâ€" UE 28 CA sel s oo C n Contatiae" and: Cuk. _ ""The King ter, "is this breasted Che EAPRRPVIM CC coating having a rather rough . service. "It fastens across the front with a moderate overian, and has three buttons up each side. The lapels are rather narâ€" row. The length extends to the knees, and the edges ar stitched wide down the front, and round to about three inchos from the edge. The collar is covered with velvot. There are horizontal flap mets on the hips. and a neat welt st pocket on the left side. The sleeves are finished with a turnâ€"back cuff two inches deep." . I ilg CE e ues Bay "It fastens Act moderate overlan, up each side,. Th row. The length and the edges ar front, and round from the edge. with velvet. Th For Sale by all Drugzists and Dealers 50c. & $1 per bottle. f Dr. T. A. SLOCUM \ LIMITED, y . C TORONTO Crrey "18 .. 10 00 _ ) men‘s clothesâ€"not i was popular during «tee) grey The smokestacks on ocean vessels of recent years have been made to slope backward more particularly to give the steamer a rakish air, the masts also beâ€" ing given the same slope. As to the efâ€" fect on the draft, there is a slight one soe CTL steamer a rakish air, the masts AlS® I~ | ing given the same slope. As to the efâ€" | fect on the draft, there is a slight one as the wind pressure on the frout of the stack sloping up and over the top of the stack is more apt to draw lhel smoke out than to cut it off, but from ‘ all we are aware of, this seems to have been held of a secondary consideration . The shape of the smokestacks _ also is changing from round to oval so as to present . less surface at the front. If you compare the steamers with the slopâ€" ing and straight smokestacks, in . one case the former, while motionless, still appears to have life while the rigidity of the other gives it an appearance of stiffness even while under considerable ?eed.â€"l"rom "Nature and Science," in ovember St. Nicholas. NEW DRESS COAT. TORONTO Write for Free Sample. Matter of Smokestacks. with taat of a waiter. : dressâ€"coat is no more than ket with tails attached, that the skirt technically known p," which used to come round ‘edge of the coat, being now " says the Tailor and Cut season wearing a double «terfield of dark grey over be th of Â¥um@nt is the which are a curious eches and trousers. hoy are cut like orâ€" es. â€" Below there is narrow . trouserâ€"leg > calf, with a "twmâ€" is claimed that this a silyer grey. such as + the summer, but a at thik f lati exa m Suma The facts are as follows: A long, tical spike erected on the top of house, as we often see on the conti unless it has a proper _ coutinu down to an earthâ€"plate suuk at depth in the ground, is worse than less; it invites the lightning to s there M tor along the roofâ€"ridge. B separate vertical conductor mnamerlx â€" ‘‘earthed" to separate vertical conductor should 3 in â€"raprery~ s properly "earthed‘" to an "earthâ€" ou. m mm! plate"" in moist soil or to a waterâ€"main. | i A Any telephone wire (or other such | 1f you have ceased to be in love, they wire) entering the house ought to be | eall you imconstamt. protected at the point o fentrance by | If you don‘t «now whom you 10Â¥e¢, of a "lightning arrester‘ (costing only a | wlu\t{mr you love at all, they eall you few swhillings), which is itself connected ' fickle. e to "earth" or to some part of the conâ€" | _ 1f you don‘t choose to love at all, they m 2.... indiffanant ductor NEWFCUNDLAND PAYS TRIBUTE To the Grand Work Dpodd‘s Kidney Pills are Doing. V Among many others Mr. Frank Banâ€" ficld, after years of suffering, has found reliet in Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, and here is what he is telling his friends: "I find Dodd‘s Kidney Pills the best medicine | for Backache 1 have ever used. _ I only used two boxes and they eured me of Backache 1 had had for five years. It started through a strain. My father‘s back also bothered him, and he got some relief from one pill 1 gave him. They were too preciouns . to give him more. All persons suffering Tram RBackache should use Dodd‘s Kid be Usefu! They Must be Well Grounded. cured me of B five years. It st My â€" father‘s s and he got som gave him. They give him more. from Backache nev Pills." ishermen Regard Why do Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cure RBackache? Simply because Backache is Kidney ache, and Dodd‘s Kidney Pills positively cure all Kidney aches . and i1s. This has been proved in thousands of cases in Canada. If you haven‘t used them vourself, ask your neighbors. FRENCH WRITERS EARN LESS | Translations of Foreign Novels HIV.'\; Spoiled the Market. While the serial story is if anything more popular than ever as a newspaper feature in France, â€" Robert Sherard writes in "My Friends the French" that the remuneration of the writers of this \ kind of fiction is not as good as it uwdt to be. * d arge 1 ENE ET DE aeal 2. Formeriy these fees were very large. According to the Bookman, Jules Mary used to receive 30,000 francs for first serial use of one of his thrillers. That | would represent about half of what the | manuscript would produce, for after the | tale had appeared in the paper the pubâ€" | lishers who issue tales in ten centime parts would pay him another _ 25,300 france for this use. \ _ D‘Ennery, the author of ‘"‘The Two l()rphnnfi.”' received a franc and a half a line. One of his novels, "An Angel‘s ‘Remorne," brought him 70,000 francs. | But free trade in fiction, says Mr. Sherâ€" I ard, has injured the home manufactusâ€" | ers. The French publishers can get good | translations for low, sums. Hachet‘te whenever a large price is asked for an English novel produces a veccipt sigaed by Charles Dickens. It is for a eum of twenty pounds and ne‘fen to a novel cailâ€" That is because the editors find they can get very good fiction from foreign publishers. The payment for the trans lation rights of a good English, Russiaa, Italian or German nove! would not imâ€" ount to the twentieth part of the foe which would be demanded by one of the popular masters of the feuilleton. E . SeRLLC tne . es es Roatume LIGHTNING RODS ed "David Copperfield The man who ol â€" any . more 4 Them as ‘a Boon Mr. Frank Banfield ws: A long, verâ€" the top of a on the continent, ap continuation dyes his hair doesn‘t people than the man his conscience. _ "@POHNG thor of ‘‘The Two a franc and a half novels, "An Ange!‘s him 70,000 francs. strike some Dogs and Sheep. TMS eUNP"""" °* "lom af the purest ingredients und not an xtom of poisonous or injur lous nature enters into its composition. Many persons are noW taking SPOHN‘S for La Grippe, Colds. Coughs, Kidâ€" ney Trouble, ctc., and it is stways safe. It expels the Discase Germe from the body ; uots directly on the Blood and . GMands. SPOHN‘S is now sold by nearly every drug» gist and harness dealer im the land, and any can get it for you. Fifty cents and $1.00 a bottle. and $6.09 and $11.09 the dozen. PRn en me C COd CC C n t 8th Year £¥% +4 .4 . 9 . ) sPBMONS * #th Year ...........+â€"172485 * 10th Yoar (atbserove NX |:3; i. j C lith Year iÂ¥ s axx‘s s s +4 s$HNMED * 12th Year L vadas s« +s+»~900,/00E t 13th Year .............$08,120 * 14th Year ORA ANEbEOK | :.;. j #* 15th Year [ Â¥11%%4 464up% sBDIEbL # Send for our Booklet of twelve :ood r for family and stock medicines, ‘REE Spohn Medical Co. CREMISTS AND BACTERIOLOGISTS GOSHEN, INDIXANA, U. S. tion of t dâ€" Petersburg “‘1 trade is i ol commenr "" . tions for M , are “.[..”'4 * / in turn re * / tor, who « 88 | the board "(‘" sion. € ‘â€" his very remarkable preparation is now 1. is the greatest Constitutional Remedy known for Brood Mares, Colts, Stallions all other horses ; aiso Distemper among and Sheep. This compound is made of purest ingredients und not an «tom of mous or injurious nature enters into its osition. â€" Many persons are_now taking HN‘S for La Grippe. Colds, Coughs, Kidâ€" Fanuhla oto_ and it is #lways safe. It Gold Laid Watch Record of Annual Sales. All Wholesale Druggists If you don‘t choose to love at all, they call you indifferent, If you love anyone else but the on» lhry want you to love, they eall you false, and only when you give yourse!f to him whom they think y‘:m ought to love are you called loyal. Yours is a hard lot indeed, oh, woâ€" Yours is a hard maAn. 1t is not nooeau\.nx' nowadays for bru'n{ woman to advertise her cleve ness by wearing her belit badly. Foreign Medicines in Russia | but if a girl thr \fellow and misses | One of the charms of music is the musically uneducated person not have to “updorltuul" it. Wl%h EOV EHepe WE PIRCC CE is tative" music, however, the case in Jnito different, and every ruuce has either an obvious or a thinly concealed meanâ€" ing. Occasionally it is hard to decipher certain unusual noises, as the following story from Fliegende Blatter indicates : d U _a"rack eduiad Infe Aust ues Rhratucadiastie.. L ATLCLC The composer had just rhyed his last piece to his friend, the critle. "Very fine indeed," said the eritic. "But what is that pnus which makes the cold chills run down the back *" "Oh," returned the m'f.“" "tha t is where the wanderer has the hotel bill brought to him." hits another. "; SOLID GOLD LOCKET $5.00 Girls never \‘THAT nicer Xmas gift could be found than this locket. It is made in heavy 10k solid gold and has spece thr two photoâ€" graphs. _ Delivered post peid to address in Caneda â€"except Y ukonâ€"for $5,00. ‘This may be had in either yellow or bright finish. Same locket in 14k + + $700 Same locket in finest gold filled 1.75 §END FOR CATALOGUE R Our handsomely iWNestrated 144 M remare, logue of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware, Lesather, Arts Geâ€" is and Novelties, tree RYRIE BROS., Limited y A Chilling Passage. 134â€"138 Yonge Stree: TORONTO girl throws herselt at one " misses him she generally 4,864 8,256 19,150 40,284 12,880 100,532 could throw straight, of music is that cated person does nd" it. With "Aniâ€" r, the case is ’ulto has either \ly concealed meanâ€" is hard to decipher s, as the following : Blatter indicates : BRottles 8old recipes § y hp Â¥al A# 40 3 J Mi2% hota lk & &

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