West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 May 1913, p. 2

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SpE} ho "m ENT B ty #4 #t n M TI me n m tha and « labor r} Onny busing There simple fir 8 Hunter St., Davisville, Toronto, Ontaâ€"« mio.â€""My little girl was troubled with eracked arms and face from the time she was boru,. ‘They were certainly very much disfigured. ‘The skin was sensitivo and eracked and bled, causing much pain by smarting. When healing a little it took the form of itching. ‘The trouble made her very cross, When she cried the tears would make it smart and cause more pain. I trled eold erea, â€"â€"â€", â€"â€"â€"â€" and â€"â€"â€"â€" and 1t got better only to break out again when exposed to the air. She suffered for over three years and I was getting discouraged whon I read of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for samples. Cuticura Ointment seomed to soothe it right away, where other vintments made it burn, so I bought some more, I used them for four weeks and sho has not been bothered since. Her face and arms have never bad a mark since, in fact her complexion is wondeffully ° clear." (Signed) Mrs. Underhill,.Dec. 11, 1911. Cuticura Soap is bost for skin ahd halr because of its extreme purity, delicate yet effective emollient properties, and refroshing fragrance. 1t costs but littlo more than ordinary soaps, wears to a wafer and gives comfort and satisfaction every moment of its use, for toilet, bath and nursery. Outtâ€" cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold every where. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32â€"p. Skin Book. Address post eard Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. th Do Not Use Harsh Purgatives â€" A Tonic is Al1 You Need. Do not dose yourself with purgaâ€" tives, as so many people do, in the hope that you can put your blood right. _ Purgatives gallop through the system and weaken instead of giving strength. _ Any doctor will tell you this is true. What you need in spring is a tonic that will make new blood and build up the nerves. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills is the only medicine that can do this speedily, safely and surely. Every does oi this medicine makes new blood which clears the skin, strengthens the appetite and makes tired, depressed men, women and children bright, active and strong. Mrs. Maude Bagz, Lemberg, Sask., ‘says: "I can unhesitatingly recomâ€" mend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills as a blood builder and tonic. I was very much run down when I began using the Pills, and a few boxes fully restored my health." Bold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.530 from The Dr. Williams‘ for $2.50 from The Dr. Willi Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont ne PRAtGON CLUB‘s s1MPLE LIFE. Skin Cracked and Bled, Causing Much Pain. Was Getting Disâ€" couraged. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Soothed Right Away. Used Them Four Weeks. Has Not Been Bothered Since. ARMMS AND FAGE YERY NUCH DISFEURED A GOOD MEDICINE FOR THE SPRING Not exactly sickâ€"but not feeling quite well. That is the way most people feel in the spring. Easily tired, appetite fickle, sometimes headaches, and a feeling of depresâ€" sion. Pimples or eruptions may apâ€" pear on the skin, or there may be twinges of rheumatism or neuralgia. Any of these indicate that the blood is out of orderâ€"that the indoor life of winter has left its mark upon you and may easily develop into more se T I n BABY‘S BATTLES,. eat off bare tables,"‘ writes under of the Dragon Club, he food is dished in French of bow!s with lids to them, ; the double purpose, when iry, of saucepan and plate. oons are of horn and bone, e labor in polishing silver, r mugs are Doulton, to save and we wait on ourselves, save labor. The meal is subâ€" 1, and the hungry person â€"~l0o0k here, waiter! The of chicken you served to me . oneâ€"third the size of the you just gave to that fat r there. I‘m going to make aint. Where‘s the manaâ€" trouble it up wticatin ndÂ¥â€"Th Ob. Well! oining the club and his sixpences _ for ; fat party in it‘s him, sir. The _ The remains of a good deal of cornmn were also found, as well as ‘ quantities of bones of horses and | cattle. A large number of Fragâ€" ments of New Forest, Samiun, and ‘other ware, including a perfect jug, pots, and Purbeck marble vessels, woere ‘discovered, as well as knife blades, spindle whorls, and coins | from Gallienus to Constantine, durâ€" \ing the excavations. Inside the ditch is a burial mound belonging %to the bronze age, and here was fourd an arrow hbead and a cinerâ€" ‘.ry urn in its cyst. "villa‘‘ inside a low earthern enâ€" slosure. The farm was 96 acres in extent, and the buildings were enâ€" elosed with a ditch, which surâ€" rounded a quadrangle 150 feet by 80 feoet. The buildings found include the dwelling house, bakehouse, and a granary with hypocaust (a system of hot air flues under the floor). _ Excavations _ Disclose â€" Dwellings, Coins and Bones of Animals. A Roman farm has been unâ€" earthed at Rockbourne Down, Dorâ€" set, Enmgland. The excavations, which were made by permission of Lord Shaftesbury, disclose the reâ€" mains of a «mall Roman farm or To give you an idea of everyday ocourrences. Last week a boy of eight was brought up to me for stabbing a playmate through the heart because the latter tried to take away a bit of string! Next day a woman, with her forehead cut through to the bone from the hair line to the top of the nose, came to complain that her brother had done it because they could not agree as to the ownership of a few feet of yam patch,. Another day a white man told us that in bicycling along a track which leads through one of the sacred crocodile swamps he fell over the rotting body of a woman, the skull cleft through and laid out as if in sacrifice with dozâ€" ens of broken jars set around her. _ "Toâ€"day we have just learned that another man and woman are guilty of destroying the twins which were born to them. I just mention these cases to show you the sort of ‘incident‘ that is always happening out here."‘ "‘The trouble with life out here,‘"‘ remarks Talbot, sententiously, ‘"is that it contains a superabundance of thrills. how close a shave he and his comâ€" panions had from death. It seems that corruption is pracâ€" tised pretty extensively by the upâ€" toâ€"date native officials of Talbot‘s district. Soon after his return, in fact, the commissioner discovered that the dusky clerks of the region had been indulging in it wholesale, and he promptly imprisoned four of them. ‘"The rest,"‘ he writes, ‘"fearing revelations, started a ruâ€" mor among the villagers that the expedition just starting out was to burn and slay and that their sole chance was to anticipate events by murdering the white men.‘"‘ A Narrow Escape. It was only owing to the accidenâ€" tal failure of a signal that the comâ€" missioner _ escaped. Afterward, however, Talbot received a charmâ€" ing apology from the chicfs, exâ€" pressing their satisfaction that they had not been led into the error of killing him before they found that the reports as to his intentions were untrue. "On the safeguarding of this Lake of Life, according to local beâ€" liefs,"" he writes, ‘"the welfare of over a quarter of a million Ibibios depends.‘"" Then he goes on to tell Talbot, of course, is the discovâ€" erer of the eerie ‘"Lake of the Dead‘"" in Southern Nigeria whereâ€" of the guardian is & giant python ; likewiso of the Ekoi tribe, the men of which are little better than slaves to the women, and his advenâ€" tures among the latter and among men with ‘"buffalo souls‘‘ are set forth in great detail in his recont book "In the Shadow of the Bush."‘ The Lake of Life. Soon after Talbot and his equally intrepid wife got back to Africa again, after their holiday in Engâ€" land, the commissioner started out on a new expedition, which reâ€" sulted in the discovery of a sacred "Lake of Life," the existence of which had been kept as a jealous secret from the knowledge of Euroâ€" peans. Something about this latest discovery of the commissioner was published in the London newsâ€" paper, but Talbot gives fuller deâ€" tails in the course of & letter, dated Eket, near Calabar. _ §# That enterprising representative of King George, P. Amaury Talbot, district commissioner of Southern Nigeria, has been making more queer discoveries and making more adventures. _ Incidentally, he reâ€" cently escaped being butchered by natives, who were laboring under a misapprehension regarding his inâ€" tentions towards themselves, only by the skin of his teeth, but he must be getting used to that by now. For, besides being the only survivor of the illâ€"fated expedition that was captained by the late Lieut. â€" Boydâ€"Alexander. _ Talbot, since he bhas been in Africa, has had one close shave after another, sometimes in fights with the blacks, sometimes in encounters with wild beasts, and once or twice at the hands of the accomplished native poisoners of his district, where it is impolite to go out to dinner without taking an antidote or two in one‘s pocket. & â€" THE LIFE IS FULL OF TRRILLS Failure of a Signal Prevented the Natives From Murdering Comâ€" missioner. sOME ADVENTURES IN SoOUTHâ€" ERN NIGERIA. LIFE OF ROMAXN FARMER. +433 Wl S Pat and an Englishman were boasting of the various times that they had been attacked by absentâ€" mindness. ‘"Oh,""‘ says the Englishâ€" man, "I remember once when goâ€" ing to business I thought I had left my watch at home, and actuâ€" ally took it out of my pocket to see if I had time to go back home for it." ‘‘Well, that‘s nothing,""‘ rejoined Pat. ‘"One night I woke up feelâ€" ing uncomfortable, and it wasn‘t until thin I found out I had put me trousers to bed and had hung meself over the back of a chair.‘" ‘‘When I began to use Grapeâ€"Nuts I was way under mw usual weight, now I weigh 30 pounds more than I ever weighed in my life, and I am glad to speak of the food that has worked the change.‘"‘ Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read the little booklet, ‘"‘The Road to _ Wellville,"‘ in pkgs. "‘There‘s a Reason.‘" ‘Yes,‘‘ said the old man, "I find my strength is failing somewhat. I used to walk around the block every morning, but lately I feel so tired when I get half way round I have to turn and come back.‘" "‘Since I began to eat Grapeâ€"Nuts I have been free from the old trouâ€" bles. I usually eat Grapeâ€"Nuts one or more times a day, taking it at the beginning of the meal. Now I can eat almost anything I want without trouble. Ever read the above letter? A _ new on» appears from time to tima. They ars genuine, true, and full of human interest "After eating I would suddenly be seized with an attack of colic and vomiting. This would be folâ€" lowed by heawdache and misery that would sometimes last a week or more, leaving me so weak I could hardly sit up or walk. ‘"I am glad of the opportunity to tell of the good Grapeâ€"Nuts has done for me,"‘ writes an Eastern man. ‘"For many years I was unâ€" able to eat even a light breakfast without great suffering. Proper Food Put the Troubles Away. Our own troubles always seem more severe than any others. But when a man is unable to eat even a light breakfast, for years, without severe distress, he has trouble enough. _ p : It is small wonder he likes to tell of food which cleared away the troubles. The three men have confessed to eating their companion, and are to be tried for his murder. Machevel broke down and his three companions killed and ate him. By means of stealing a boat the survivors got to Mana, where they were able to steal <a larger boat. They were wrecked at the mouth of the Marconi, and taken back to prison at St. Laurent. (On January 6 they left with a sword apiece, some loaves of bread and some preserved vegetables in tins. Fossey acted as guide, saying that he knew the way to the River Manan, where gold was plentiful. After a six days‘ march Fossey adâ€" mitted that he had lost his way. The four men wandered about aimâ€" lessly for eight days more, living on roots. â€" Starvation overtook them. Four convicts, named Mouillard, Bachereau, Fossey, and Machevel, arranged to escape from Devil‘s Isâ€" land, the penal colony in French Guinea. They left one night, and Bachereau promised to lead them to a place where they would be able to dig for gold and make enough to live on till they could esâ€" cape from the colony altogether. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cured Mrs. Pace because her troubles came from diseased kidneys. Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills always cure discased kidâ€" neys, and as ninety per cent. of woâ€" men‘s troubles comes from kidney trouble, Dodd‘s Kidney Pills have come to be known as suffering woâ€" man‘s best friend. Terrible Story of Escaped Convicts From Devil‘s Island. A story of cannibalism, in which wrecked sgailors were indicted for killing and cating a ship‘s boy, was related in the French Pross recentâ€" ly. ‘"I read of a number of cures of cases like mine by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, and sent for three boxes. Toâ€" day I am a well woman, and can do as much work as ever I could." Ecum Secum Bridge, Halifax Co., N. 8., May 12 (Special). â€"From Vancouver to Halifax come daily reports of the splendid work Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are doing for the sufâ€" fering women of Canada, and this little place can show a splendid cure of its . own. Mrs. Orastus Pace, the mother of a large family, was a sufferer from those aches and pains only women know. _ Toâ€"day she is a strong, healthy woman. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills did it. "I had a pain in my left side and down through my hips," Mrs. Pace states. "I had headache all the time. My heart was weak, and at times a pain around it added to my fears. Some days I was hardly able to walk. From Halifax wWOMEN ARE PRAISING DODD‘S KIDNEY PILLS. Nova Scotia Mother Telis How They Cured Her Aches and Pains, and Made Her a Well Woman Again. WwWHITE CANNIBALISM. Very Absentâ€"minded. CLEARED AWAY. Weakening. to Vancouver Hinard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. In accord with the eternal fitness of things, a man who stole a watch wound up in jail. Drawing a Distinction. ‘"‘What! You‘ve been acquainted with Blobbs for twentyâ€"five years * ‘*Yes." "Why, you told me once you didn‘t know him!‘"‘ "I don‘t." Continually on their feet, the "Peelers" are invariably troubled with corns and bunionsâ€"but not for long, because they krow of a quick cure, Putnam‘s Corn Exâ€" tractor; it cures painlessly in 24 hours; try "Putnam‘s," 2%c. at all dealers. lage." ‘"‘The excavators are not content simply with digging on the site. They make excursions into the surâ€" rounding villages in search of treaâ€" sures appropriated by the Bedouins to common use. In one village they found a large granite wator jar covered with beautiful Hittite inâ€" scriptions. The only way to secure it was to present the owner with a similar jar, but without inscripâ€" tions, and this was handed over with solemn ceremonial in the preâ€" sence of all the elders of the vilâ€" ‘"‘They also took a childish pleaâ€" sure in rolling stones of some size on the metals or loosening the fish plates. They would wait to see how the engine got over these bunkers, Or Was Worsted by Them. ‘"‘From Dscherablus an iron bridge, 650 yards, will take the line across the Euphrates into Mesopoâ€" tamia. An inspection of the excaâ€" vations now being made on this site of the old Hittite capital conveys an interesting idea of the culture and civilization of that once great monarchy, One of the most interâ€" esting finds is a basâ€"relief of a camel with its rider, the first reâ€" presentation hitherto discovered of this indispensable animal. _ The Egyptians, who carved on their walls figures of overy possible reâ€" presentative of the animal creaâ€" tion, omitted the camel. ‘"When the first parts of the track were laid down, and the trains of ballast wagons began to run, alâ€" most every morning headless and footless corpses were found on the line in the morning, after the trains had been passing to and fro in the darkness,‘‘ says the Cologne Gaâ€" zette. ‘"As suicide is far from the thoughts of these children of naâ€" ture, it can only be surmised that they chose the line for their couch as being the handiest place for their work. K It is astonishing what rapid proâ€" gress they make in spite of the eleâ€" mentary instruments used. In adâ€" dition to these local workers stoneâ€" masons were hired from the southâ€" west who, with characteristic Turkâ€" ish phlegm, but in a solid, carcful manner, â€" built railroad _ stations with wonderful facades, reproducâ€" ing that beloved feature of their mosques, the smooth wall surface, without any plans and for the humâ€" blest of wages. Finely Developed Bedouins, who previously had only had a rifle and in many cases only a spear in their hands, were soon at work with pickaxes, while the women carried the ballast in small baskets, and the children threw stones one by one onto the track. However, the offer of good wages â€"26 cents a day for the men, 18 cents for the women, and 6 cents for the childrenâ€"has had its effect, and the strong, The Bagdad railway is the first step in the recreation of this once lovely region. At present strugâ€" gles between neighboring tribes and attacks upon caravans are not inâ€" frequent owing to the total lack of police organization, and in such a lawless country it was no easy matâ€" ter to secure workers for the railâ€" way. Dscherablus is on the site of Carâ€" chemish, the ancient capital of the Hittite kings,who came from Asia Minor 2000 B.C. Fierce battles enâ€" sued between them and the Babyâ€" lonians for the possession of this enchanting paradise, where nature was so prodigal of her gifts that it carried a population of 160 to the square mile. With the inroad of the nomad tribes culture and irrigaâ€" tion fell into abeyance, and the paradise became a waste place scarcely supporting sixteen persons to tho square mile. Making Laborers of Bedouin Famâ€" iliesâ€"Stations Built By Turkish Masons. The Bagdad Railway has been built as far as Dscherablus, on the Upper Etphrates and trains are now running to that point. _ AN ENCHANTING PARADISE THE BAGDAD RAILWAY WILL RUXN THROUGKH IT. A Friend of the Policeman. TORONTO ISSUE 20â€"‘13. An Irishman was once asked by a friend to go to a concert with him. Pat consented. They had not proceeded far on the way before Pat asked how much the seats were. His friend said the front seats were one shilling each and the back seats were sixpence each and the proâ€" grammes one penny each. â€" "All right,â€"said Pat, on the programmes.‘"‘ Maddenâ€"‘"How much does Baiâ€" ley pay for his clothes?" Idleness travels leisurely,;, and poverty soon overtakes her. Youngweddâ€"‘"It‘s to make the bread lighter, I suppose." Many animals in desert regions never have any water except the dew on vegetation. That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Look for the signature of E. W. GROYVE, Cures a Cold in Oue Day. Cures Grip is 4wo Days. 2. _ Mrs. Youngwedd (shopping) â€" ‘"Look at the new stove with the glass in the oven. Wonder what it‘s made of glass for!" Minard‘s Liniment Cures CGarget in Cown Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. Mr. James )#uComb. of ‘Thornton, Ont., writes: " For ecight"tmonths I suf fered from eczema and could get nothâ€" ing to give mio rélief. I heard of serâ€" eral cases where good resuits had folâ€" lowed the use of Zamâ€"Buk and decided to give this remedy a trial. Within three days I felt much better, and within two weeks the sores were enâ€" tirely cured." A lawyer and connoisseur was describing some of his experiences in search of curios. "I once enterâ€" ed a shop,"‘ he said, "and the salesâ€" man pointed out to me a dilapiâ€" dated chair. _ ‘That there chair, sir,‘ he said, impressively, ‘belongâ€" ed to Louis Crosseye, King of France.‘ ‘Louis Crosseye!‘"‘ said I. ‘Why, there‘s no such person.‘ ‘Oh, yes, there is, sir,‘ said the salesâ€" man, and he showed me a ticket marked ‘Louis XL‘" For all skin diseases, eruptions, boils, scalp sores, ete., Zamâ€"Buk is without equal. It is just as good for cuts, burns, bruises, bloodâ€"poison, piles, varicose ulcers, bad leg, inflamed sores, etc. All druggists and stores at 500. box, or post free from Zamâ€"Buk Co, Toronto, upon receipt of price. Refuse harmful substitutes and jmitations. Have you tried Zamâ€"Buk Soap? 250. tablot. It is said that it was built in the ‘70s by an old lady named Jupp for her maid to live in, and it was then endowed with a separate existence as a house and a number placed on the street door. as the passage and about twenty feet long. It has none of the fixâ€" tures of a modern house, but is lighted by a window which gives a most charming view of Hyde Park. The smallest house is really a tiny retreat built over a long passage about six feet wide between Nos. 9 and 11. The passage is a cul de sac, but half way along it there is an iron ladder which can be climbed (:iL with dificulty. _ This ladder 1 to the single room which is London‘s smallest house. It is wide "Dwelling‘‘ Near Hyde Park Is 9 Feet Wide and 20 Long. The smallest house in London has just been put up at auction. It is just been put up at auction. It is No. 10 Hyde Pari Place, in a row of houses on the Bayswater side overâ€" looking the patk. It has a street door guarded by an iron gate, but thore is only one room to the house. it, when the system finally acted of its own accord as a result of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, I took a dose twice a week only, just to make sure the old condition would not come back." No other remedy cures constipation and biliousness so ensily or safely as Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills; they are an ideal famâ€" ily remedy for all diseases of the stoâ€" mach, liver and bowels. Sold in 2%¢ boxes, five for $1.00, all druggists and etorekeepers or The Catarrhozrone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Canada. tem that I realized I must find a remedy. The strong pills of various kinds I tried seemed after their first effects were over to make me far worse and I did not know which way to turn for relief. I saw Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills advertised, and the first box used eatisfied me. I found a true remedy. Instead of griping with undue activity, Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills acted as naturally as if physic had not been taken. I never had to increase the dose and, indeed, within a month I reduced That miserable nervousness and halfâ€" ’liok tiredâ€"allâ€"theâ€"time condition is due nine cases in ten to a cloggedâ€"up system. You ‘grow irritable and despondent, you lack ambition, energy seems all gone. Burest road to health is by the frequent use of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills; they will make you feel like new all over in a short time. Writing from his home in Barcelona, Mr. Frederick G. Mayer states: "I think no one ever suffered as severely as I did for nearly six months. Bo many serious symptoms were developing as a conseâ€" quence of this evil condition of my eysâ€" Wilkinsâ€"‘"About one instalment, SLink. 35 A Simple Home Remedy Now Cures Lack of Energy, Loss of Ambiâ€" tion, and a Feeling of "Don‘tâ€"Care." That Terrible Fatigue Can Be Overcome LONDON‘S SMALLEST HOUSKE ZAMâ€"BUK CURED KS ~ ECZ2EMA Only One "BROMO QUININE® Successful in Nearly Every Case. Good Enough For Him. Had His Number. His System. A Hint. 6+ 9 "T‘ll sit Anybody could see that Tommy had been carefully brought up. One day he sat upon his father‘s knee in a crowded car. _A lady entered. ‘‘Madame,‘"‘ said Tommy, as he got off his father‘s knee, "will you acâ€" cept my seat?" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Eta Your druggist will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itch ing, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in t to 14 daye. 500. "Jack proposed to me while turnâ€" ing the music for me at the piano."‘ "Ah, I see! You played right into his hands." What many need is not wealth, but a kind thought or deed. Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smartingâ€"Feels Fineâ€"Acts Quickly. Tr{ it for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Illus trated Book in each Package. . Murine is ecompounded by our Oonlis‘sâ€"not a "Patent Med= jcine"â€"but used in successful Physiclans‘ Prag» }lco for many ‘)mrl. Now dedicated to the Pub» le and sold bga r\n;‘lm at 25¢ and B)c&f-.r Bottle, Murine Hye lve in Aseptic Tubes, and 50G. When Your Eyes Heed GCare Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smartingâ€"Feels ‘‘My boy doesn‘t seem to have got along here very well," said the ofâ€" fice boy‘s father. ‘"Well, to be perâ€" fectly frank with you,‘"‘ replied the employer, ‘"I must say he does not." ‘"Ah! What‘s the troublet" ‘"He hasn‘t any trouble; it‘s the rest of us who have had that!" Murine Eye Romedy Co., Chicago I cured a horse, badly torn by a pitch fork, with MINARD‘B LINIMENT. St. Peter‘s, C. B. EDW. LINLIEF, I cured a horse of a bad swelling by MINARD‘S LINIMEN‘T, e 2 THOS. W. PAYNE. I eured a horse of the Mange with MINARD‘S LINTMENT. Dalhousie Western Officialâ€"‘"Do you take this woman whose hand you‘re squeezin‘ to be your lawful wife, in flush times an‘ skimp?‘ "I reckon that‘s about the size of it, squire." ‘"Do you take this man you‘ve jined fists with to be your pard through thick an‘ thin?" ‘"‘Well, you‘re about right for once, old man." "All right, then. Kiss in court an‘ I reckon you‘re married about as tight as the law can jine you. I guess four bits‘ll do, Bill, if I don‘t avo to kiss the bride. If I do it‘s six bits extra.‘" Bathurst, N. B \# PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 nays lars, â€" To the person making the third )urgest number the sum of Thirty Doliars, "I o the person making the audfl.h luvn number the sum asTnnly Dml'«lu. Should two persons und’wwâ€" .qullr correct, the “n: two zl‘:-'h be divided between them, (each recetving $75:00) Eo\dd three send in equaily comrect answers, the three priges will have to be divided, (each wfl\‘w $40.003, Should four persons send equally correct answerk, the whole sum of $200.00 wiil be equa!ly divided (each recciving $5o.00), and so on in like mâ€".rldd “W‘-wfl;vlfinshghgmdflug it which we will vrite as answers ore recels wE Do NOT wanT T Cext or Soul on Y WhEN You an: weR Tds AbvikriSENENT . af make out a.?nhh' gkocin:xlm Ist. walte us at once erclosing c.cent stamp for our reply, DO uEi-' Sh.u. wRITE AT ON jress: GAYADIAN NEDPCINE CO., Dept g;, MONTREAL QUK I _ CPaANE Can the above sets of Jumbled letters into se ie e d o e ks rence you can prebably m the w’n of Omlm‘:: ars, To the person maki LPAPE Cleaner than coal or wood. Cheaper than gas. For best results use ROYALITE Oil Stock carried at all chief points. CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERA Information on this subject with printed instructions for amaâ€" teur bands and a prinied form of Constitution and Byâ€"Laws for bands, together with our big catalogue, will be mailed FREE on BOOST YOUR TOWN BY ORGANIZING A THE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY LÂ¥ WILLILAMS Balkes Bread to Perfection New Perfection / Qil Cookâ€"stove KREOCA BRASS BAND graph and a moving picture maâ€" chine, and enlarged the kitchen so that the cook can entertain her ‘"Do you hare any trouble in keeping a cook t‘ asked a neighbor. ‘‘No," replied Mrs. Crosslots, "not limml we‘ve bought a new phonoâ€" STRAYED golLERs A T_ ONCEâ€"MEN WANTED; LEARN Barber Trade; great demand; gond wages: twenty to thirty advertised for daily in Toronto papers alone. Can teach you in «ix to eight weeks. Send for Cataâ€" logue. Moler College, 921 Queen East, To ronto. (‘ ALiL 8STONES, hjDMiÂ¥ ANL Huai» K der BStones, Kidney trouble, Gravel. Lumbago and kindred milments positively tured with the new German Remedv, "Eanol," price $1.50. Another new remedr for Diabetesâ€"Mellitus, and eure cure, is "Eanol‘s Antiâ€"Diabetes." Price $200 from €ruggists or direct. The Ranvol Mannfam toring (‘omvnlnr of Canada, Limite4 N innjnee an q“ ACRESâ€"7 MILES FROM LONXDON «"+*» market; soil sand and clay loam; brick house; number of outbuildinge; an excellent fruit and vegetable farm. The (V)Veaurn Real Estate Exchange, London, nt. q TAMP COLLECPOR®â€"HUNDKED oir. & ferent Foreign Bt@amps, Catalogos Album, only Reven Cents Marks Btamp Comnanv. Toronto C ANCER, TUMOR®, LUMP®, . EPC, internal and external, cured with cnt rain br our homa treatment. Write n« before too late. Dr. Rellman Medicai fa.. Limited. Collinewand Ont K. Railway _ trackage, in _ Toronto, Brampton and other towns and cities. H. W. DAWSON, Colborne $t., Toronte H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. Flwr'r. BTOCK, GRAIN AND DAIRY Farme in all sections ot Ontario. Bome &naps. and power purposes. TANKS AND SMOKE STACKS, | agen‘s for Stuite. vant Ventilating and Heating Systems. POLSON *®°%*°**" TORONTO from the X Ranch Corral a wall syed Pinto Broncho with a Roman noss and lightning heels. We have issued a humorous descriptive circular of this remarkable bronce with ilusâ€" trations of his antics. Sent free on application to any reader of this paper. This is the most famous circular ever printed in the English language. More than half a million copies have already been distributed to advertise our famous Pinto Shell gloves made from tough Bronce hides. For a frieeâ€" copy send postalâ€"to HUDSON BAY KNITTING CO,> Canada‘s Expert Glove and Mitt Makers, _ ACTORY SITES, WITH OR WITHOUT The Hoeart of a Piano is the Action. Incsist on the "OTTO HIGEL" ESTDENTIAL FROPERTIES8 IN Brampton and a dozen other towns. ® uimirzo _ sVM Engines and Shipbuiléers MALE HELP WANTED STAMPS aND corns FARMS FOR SALE Piano Action & SONS CO., I TORONTO LIMIT ED ONTARIO St. John MISCELLANE NT New and Second hand, for heating , for heating TANKS AND / mechan i was | pus #aid : Me €lbo ma ce teawou; ment | "Are y wish. 1 n THE PERFEC FOR SUMMER _ LEET and a ASK YOUR DEALER CHAPTEI Her Or, A

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