West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Jun 1913, p. 6

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at Love at first sight is apt to fade on its initial trip to the wash. A colored woman went to the pasâ€" tor of her church the other day to complain of the conduct of her husâ€" band, who, she said, was a low down, worthless trifling fellow. After listening to a long recital of the delinquencies of her neglectâ€" ful spouse and the efforts to corâ€" rect them, the minister said : ‘‘You can‘t sit up with my daughâ€" ter after 11 o‘clock."" _ ‘"Would you mind telling her, that, sir? I have been tryin~ to get home early for six months." Vinard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria "Have you ever tried heaping coals of fire upon his head?" ‘‘No," was the reply, ‘"but I done tried hot water." Try Murine Eye Remedy. No s-anl:s-I'eel. Fineâ€"Acts Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, Watéry Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Ilus trated Book in each Package, Murise is compoaunded by our Oculisisâ€"not a "Patent Medâ€" leine"~ bat used in suecessful Physicians‘ Prac« tice for many years. Now dedicated to the Pub= lie and sold by Druggists at %e and 5e per Bottle. Murine Eye Salve ia Aseptic Tubes, &elndlfls a box or six boxes for $2.50° by writing The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. t When Your Eyes Need Gare Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smartingâ€"Feels Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicage To guard against a complete breakdown in health the blood must be kept pure and rich. No other medicine can do this so well as Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, for they act both on the blood and nerves, reâ€" store the appetite and keep every organ toned up. All women canâ€" not rest whenever they should, but this strengthening medicine is withâ€" in every woman‘s reach, and will keep them in the enjoyment of good health. And it is especially imporâ€" tant that in every stage of woman‘s life the blood supply be kept pure and rich. The value of Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills is well illustrated by the case of Mrs. David Chamâ€" bers, Bensfort, Ont., who says: ‘"‘Some years ago I suffered greatly from impoverished blood. I was very pale and thin, and had no strength. I took a lot of doctor‘s medicine without getting any beneâ€" fit, and at last decided to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which I had heard highly recommended. It was not long before I began to feel betâ€" ter, ard after taking the Pills for perhaps a couple of months my health was fully restored, and alâ€" though some years have passed I have continued strong and healthy, and I think I owe it entirely to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. ‘‘Sometime later my daughter, then about twelve years of age, had been working very hard at school and her health gave way. She was weak and listless and her hands and face were badly swollen and we feared dropsy was setting in. However, we started to give her Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and she was soon quite well again. I alâ€" ways recommend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to any suffering as we did, knowing the benefit our family recoived from them.‘" Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or will be sent by mail, post paid, at 50 cents For red, rough, chapped and bleeding hands, itching, burning palms, shapeless nails and painful fingerâ€"ends, a oneâ€"night Cuticurs treatment works wonders. Soak hands, on retiring, in hot water and Cuticura Boap. Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment, and wear old, loose gloves during the night. Cuticurs Soap and Cuticura Olntment are sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mziled free, with 32â€"p. Skin Book. Address post card Potter Drug & Chem, Corp., Dept. 42D, Borton, U. 8. A. ~~ ROSY CHEEKS ND Stould be the Birthright of Every Woman and Growing Girl. Many women and growing girls who should have bright eyes, rosy cheeks, strong nerves and elastic step, and a good appetite, are seen to decline in health. Their spirits grow sluggish, the cheeks become pale temper fitful, and the nerves overâ€"sensitive. They must have inâ€" herited a tendency to illâ€"health, or they may have overâ€"worked, overâ€" studied or worried _ until _ the strength of the body was not equal to the demands made upon it. . N/\ C nights. 1 was troubled with 1 for about two years. "After having tried several remedics without ssweess T used Cuticura Soap and Ointment and from the first application I felt a great relief, Tcontinued the treatments taking warm baths with Cuticura Soap folâ€" lowed by the application of Cuticura Oint» ment, and at the end of a few weeks the trouble hed disappeared completely and I was cured." (Signed) N. C. Boulet, May 27. 1912. "" (© s ie ;A C 4s ,Z \kl < t for about two * After havi without ssweess Lachine Locks, Quobec.â€"â€""I had itcbing commencing with my legs and increasing gradually until it reached all parts of my To body. ‘There were small s pimples on my legs and arms ‘, hh and the skin was red and inâ€" __4€ , flamed all over the body and C s‘ | Htched and burned so badly s * that I scratched and mado /w# sores. It caused mo so / much pain that it kept me /f \}, from slceping during entire y /\ C nights. I was troubled with Pimples on Legs and Arms. Scratched and Made Sores. Kept from Sleepâ€" ing. First Application of Cuticura Soap and Ointment Gave Great Relief. Cured in a Few Weeks. SKN MCHED v re am glad to see ids my sermons We Correcting a Husband. glad to see your husband my sermons regularly, my man." ‘"Yes, sir. He says the best thing he‘s tried is insomnia.‘"‘ STRONG NERVES AND BURNED | _ The spikes, which numbered about 150, were quite sharp, and | the man wore only a loin e):ti. He must have been suffering acute pain from the fact that his body was bruised and lacerated all over ;a.saresultollyingonthohrp | nails. Neither the police nor any passerâ€"by made any attempt to stop lthe selfâ€"imposed torture, But the most huriful thing is the introduction of a corner of a towel!, screwed up and twisted around. This proceeding irritates the pasâ€" sage and presses down the wax and flakes or skin upon the membrane of the tympanum, producing pain, inflammation and deaftness: _ The washing should only extend to the outer surface, as far as the fingers can reach. An old doctor used to say : "You will be on the safe side if you don‘t put anything smaller than yvour thumb in your ear." Police Make No Attempt to Stop Fanatic Doing Penance. An extraordinary scene was witâ€" nessed in Calceutta recently, when a small trolley, studded with rows of iron spikes on which a Hindu was lying at full length, was being pullâ€" ed through the strects. A large crowd was following. _ Inquiries elicited tha information that the man was doing penance, and was on his way to the temple of the godâ€" dess Kali, at Kalighat. The Hindu had been several days on the jourâ€" ney, ard was in a terrible condiâ€" Doctor Explains How â€" They Are Kept Clean From Inside. The upper passage of the ear does not need regular clearing by its owner. Nature understands the task and in a healthy ear does it perfectly. Nature‘s means for clearing the car is the wax, which drics up into thin scales and peels off and falls away imperceptibly. In health the passage of the ear is never dirty, but an attempt to clean it will inâ€" fallibly make it so. Washing the ear with soap and water is bad ; it keeps the wax moist when it ought to become dry and makes it wbsorbh dust. Mrs. John Kenny, St. Norbert, Man., says: "I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets and am well satisfied with them.‘"‘ Thousands of other mothers say the same thing simply becauso there is no medicine for little ones to equal the Tablets. They act as a gentle laxative, reguâ€" late the bowels and stomach, break up colds, expel worms and make tecthing easy. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. WELL SATISFIED WITH BABY‘S OWN TABLETS Morally also woman seemed in command of the situation, for the single standard was in force. _ _ Again, in education there was no discrimination. When small, boys and girls were educated together and later the girls of prosperous parents were provided with tutors. From all that can be learned the enthusiasm of the Roman women for learning was great, though there are proofs to show that the Roman man did not entirely like the educated woman. > A certain judge said to a husband as he issued a decree against the wife: "Provided always it is esâ€" tablished that by your life you gave her an example of fidelity. It is unjust for a husband to exact from his wife a fidelity that he himself does not keep." In this way large sums of money accumulated in the hands of the women, and as a result they often lent money to their husbands at high rates of interest. Then, too, the husbands often became business men who did nothing but look after their wives‘ estates. ‘‘Women possessed unexampled property rights. Also their right to education was never questioned, and a single standard of morality existed for men and women.‘"‘ _ It seems that when a woman in the days of the empire married she still retained absolute legal indeâ€" pendence. Her dowry went to her husband, but apart" from that all her property was held in her own right independently of her husband. ‘‘No mum; I heard pa say the map of the world was changing every day an‘ I thought I‘d wait a few years till things got settled." "Johnny, I don‘t believe you‘ve studied your geography t‘ & "In the law courts woman after woman won fame and fortune. They cared for the sick and in religion they were most highly honored. They drove chariots in the ~races and they fought in the arenas."‘ Apparently their freedom extendâ€" ed in all ranks of life and in three particulars their condition was really remarkable. To quote again this same Italian : j Woman Enjoyed Privileges She Has Never Regained. ‘"Under the Roman empire,‘‘ an Italian historian said recently, woâ€" man arrived at a point of freedom and dignity which she later lost and has never regained. ‘VUnder the empire women were physicians and lawyers. They enâ€" gaged in all kinds of retail and wholesale trade. They were barâ€" bers and charioteers and as vestal virgins of the state. They were innkeepers and shopkeepers. TORTURE IN LEAYVE EARS TO NATURE. WHEN ROME RULED. Bright, or Lazy. CALCUTTA. pot Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Eta wne says she went abroad to finish her‘veducation. I wonder if she learned much ?" "I am stronger than ever and I consider the effects of Grapeâ€"Nuts on a weak stomach as something really wonderful. It builds up the entire body as well as the brain and nerves.‘" Name given by the Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. k ‘‘There‘s a reason,"‘ and it is exâ€" plained in the little book, "The Road to Wellville,"‘ in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new ons appears from time to time. They ars genuins, true, and full of human interest. Even if a man doesn‘t hesitate he may be lost anyway. "I tried about every medicine that was recommended to me, withâ€" out relief. Then I tried Grapeâ€" Nuts on the suggestion of a friend. By the time I had finished the fourth package, my stomach was all right, and for the past two months, I have been eating with a relish, anything set before me. That is something I had been unâ€" able to do previously for years. ‘‘She told me she had six new ways to fix her hair." ED- 7. The taste of the Prince in the matter of socks, however, delights the heart of the youth of fashion, for he frankly confesses to a taste for gaily patterned socks. These socks are made to order from deâ€" signs that are submitted to the Prince, who has two or three pairs made to go with each of his suits. The dress bills of the Prince are naturally beginning to . rise, but nevertheless, he does not throw money away on clothes. He generâ€" ally orders half a dozen suits at a time, and does this at most three times a year. Though the Prince is "fitted"‘ at his tailor‘s when neâ€" cessary his tailors have an accurâ€" ate model of his figure and one fitâ€" ting is the most that is necessary. ‘"‘Like magic, fittingly describes the manner in which Grapeâ€"Nuts relieved me of poor digestion, coatâ€" ed tongue and loss of appetite, of many years‘ standing. New Food Makes Wonderful Changes. When a man has suffered from dyspepsia so many years that he can‘t remember when he had a natâ€" ural appetite, and then hits on a way out of trouble he may be exâ€" cused for saying ‘"it acts like maâ€" gic.‘" The heir apparent has a great liking for soft shirts and wears orâ€" dinary white shirts as seldom as possible. © f In the matter of walking sticks the Prince bids fair to exceed his grandfather‘s famous collection in number and interest, but of the thirty walking sticks he possesses the Prince rarely carries any but a large crooked gold mounted stick given him by the Kaiser when he came over to attend King Edâ€" ward‘s funeral. When it is a simple, wholesome foo@ instead of any one of a large number of so called remedies in the form of drugs, he is more than ever likely to feel as though a sort of miracle has been performed. A Western man, inâ€"the delight of restored «ligestion, puts it in this way : His favorite day attire is a knickâ€" er suit and soft shirt and collar, and directly he gets out of London he gets into such a suit as early as possible. This particular stick at Oxford is known as the ‘"Prince‘s Crook," a designation that when it reached the ears of the Princess Mary, she at once gave to the stick. Beveral members in the royal household, it may be mentioned, have lately followed the young Prince‘s example in this matter and have discarded the stand up collar altogether in the evening; by genâ€" eral consent a stand up collar with small wings looks smarter in the evening than a turned down collar and such a collar is always worn by the Prince. Prince of Wales Refuses to Comply With Fashionable Customs. : The Prince of Wales is yet too young to be ‘"arbiter elegantiarâ€" um,‘‘ but the time may come. At present our fashionable youths are much perturbed because they do not find that the Prince sets the seal of his approval on their taste in elegant attire, writes a London correspondent. _ While they are specially punctilious in the: obserâ€" vance of certain modes the Prince makes a point, it might almost be said, of ignoring these customs. For example, he invariably wears his gloves buttoned, and never leaves the ends open and tucked down over the wrist, as is the cusâ€" tom of the young "swell.‘"‘ He wears a stand up turned down collar with a frock or morning coat simply because that sort of collar is more comfortable than the plain stand up collar. SELECTS HIS OWXN STYLES. "LIKE MAGIC.*" Her Diploma. ISSUE 22â€"13. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. ‘‘Yes, I am a little on the outs in that quarter just now, and â€"â€"‘ "And this is to square yourself?"‘ ‘‘No, not exactly. These flowers are for the centre of our dining table. Always get ‘em when the wife and I have a tiff. Big bouquet in the centre of the table gives us each something pleasant to look at while we eat. She can‘t see me and I can‘t see her. Get me?" * ‘‘No, I don‘t," replied the father. 2 ‘‘Why I suppose the man told your mother to look pleasant and she was trying to do it." Tour drnx'fllt will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itchâ€" ing, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in Ever Try This? ‘‘Whatâ€"#a magnificent bouquet of flowers! _ For your wile, I preâ€" sume ?‘ Happiness is a condition in ourâ€" selves, the outcomeâ€"of devotion to something better than our selves. ‘"What do you suppose is the matâ€" ter with it ?" Day nurseries in Japan are all private institutions under the care of Japanese women. There is one at Tokio, one at Osaka, and four at Kobe, on the coast. One advanâ€" tage which the Japanese day nurâ€" series have is that they have grounds, and the children spend their time out of doors in good weather. Mr. Takata has made a study of institutes for the feebleâ€"minded in this country, but there is a small proportion of such children in his country, he says. There is one priâ€" vate institution for them, accomâ€" modating from 60 to 100 in Tokio, and experiments are being mado in the treatment of children only a little below normal. Government Gives Splendid Care to Its Destitute Children. There are few foundlings in Jaâ€" pan, it is said. Occasionally an abandoned baby may be found in the streets of a large city like Tokio, but never in the smaller towns. For the babies who reach the asylum there is what is called the placingâ€"out department, and they go immediately to a home in some village where they can have fresh air and a mother‘s care. For this the mother, who takes the strange baby, is paid four yen a month. This amounts to $2 of our money, but has the purchasing power of $4 in Japan. The baby is supplied with clothes by the asyâ€" lum authorities. The asylum holds the position of guardian to all the children coming undor its care until they are 20, receiving reports as to the welfaro of the children who go into homes and visiting them occasionally. Frequently a child will} be legally adopted by the family in which it has been placed, and the asylum reâ€" sponsibility ends. "Do you think this new photoâ€" graph of mother looks like her, father?‘ asked the daughter. A second department is the Suâ€" gamo or school where the asylum children are instructed from the tiny tots who go to the kindergarâ€" tens to the elementary students, and from which they go to homes found for them as far as possible in the villages, There they become members of the family, the girl learning household duties, as well as some feminine occupation, hairâ€" dressing, making flowers, toys, and needlework. . The boys learn to be fishermen, _ farmers, _ carpenters, masons and dyers. There is a sixâ€" year compulsory education law in Japan, and the children must atâ€" tend day or evening school up to the thirteenth year. i to 14 days. 50c Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are no cureâ€" all. They simply cure discased kidâ€" neys. The reason they cure backâ€" ache, dropsy, rheumatism, neuralâ€" gia, diabetes, urinary troubles and Bright‘s disease is that all these are are either discases of the kidneys or are caused by disordered kidneys failing to do their work. It is cures such as this that have given Dodd‘s Kidney Pills their reputation. ~They are now known from the Atlantic to the Pacific as the remedy that never fails to cure kidney disease, no matter where or in what form it is found. That‘s Why Mr. David Heon, of Nicolet Co., Quebec, Is Recomâ€" mending the Great Caradian Kidâ€" ney Remedy To His Neighbors. St. Wenceslas, Nicolet Co., Queâ€" bec., May 26 (Special).â€"*"I started to take Dodd‘s Kidney Pills because the doctor told me I was threatened with diabetes.â€" After taking ten boxes I was again examined by the doctor, and he told me that all trace of diabetes had disappeared.‘"‘ This is the statement of Mr. Daâ€" vid Heon, wellâ€"known and highly respected here, and he is only one of many in this neighborhood who have found a new lease of life in z}&e great Canadian Kidney Remâ€" \ Doctor Said He DODD‘S KIDNXEY PILLS CLEARâ€" ED OUT EYVERY TRACE oF IT. LUCKY ORPHANS IN JAPAX. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS TORONTO An Unusual Look. The Biggest One. It‘s almost time To hear men say : "A sevenâ€"pounder Got away."‘ Had BDiabetes Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited, Yarmouth, N. 8. Gentlemen,â€"In January last, Francis Leclare, one of the men employed by me, working in the lumber woods, had a tree fall on him, crushing him fearfully. He was, when found, placed on a eled and taken home, where gravoe feare were enâ€" tertained for his recovery, his hips being badly bruised and his body turned black from his ribe to his feet. We used MINâ€" ARD‘S LINIMENT on him freely to deaden the pain and with the use of three bottles he was completely cured and able to reâ€" tuirn to his work. BAUVEUR DUVAL. Elgin Road, LiIslet Co., Que. A Sunday school teacher had just told the story of Dives and Lazarus to his class, and at the close of the lesson he askedâ€"‘"Now,. boys, which would you prefer to be?" ‘One smart lad replied quicklyâ€" "I‘d like to be the rich man while I lived,â€"and Lazarus when I am dead." k It is Mrs. B. V. Erlanger, well known at Gloucester, who relates the above exâ€" perience. She proved what you and all others, men and women, can proveâ€"that Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills are best for restorâ€" ing health and best for keeping the syseâ€" tem in perfect running order. Don‘t be misled into using anything but Dr. Hamâ€" ilton‘s Pills, %5¢c. a box, five for $1.00, at all druggists and storekeepers, or postâ€" paid by the Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININ® Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE Cures a Cold in One Day. Cures Grip ‘a Two Days. 250. "I saw your mother going to one of the neighbors just as I crossed the street,"‘ said the lady caller to her friend‘s little son. ‘"Do you know when she will be~ back t‘ ‘‘Yes‘m," answered the truthful Jimmy ; "she said she‘d be back just as soon as you left." I knew they had been actively engaged in cleaning up my system. They did the work of a tonic and blood medicine comâ€" bined. I impr«;ved to a marvelous degree with Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, and I now maintain the most perfect kind of health by using them just once or twice a week." Hewittâ€"What are you doing these days? Jewettâ€"Resting up so as to get strong enough to go on a vacation. Women teachers who were forâ€" merly liable to dismissal upon marâ€" riage, are now not only continued in their positions, but are granted one month‘s leave with full pay beâ€" fore the prospective birth of a child and two months‘ leave after the event. Do You Feel Moody, Irritable, Depressed ? The wife‘s freedom is safeguardâ€" ed in many ways; for instance, the husbard may not take his wife inâ€" to another country to live without her consent. Women may now pubâ€" lish their own manuscripts without their husband‘s consent, which was forbidden under the old regime, and both wives and husbands may now sue third parties in the courts without each other‘s permission. When That Languid, Laggy, Easily»â€" Tired Fecling Comes, Your Liver Is Slow. A little later a law was passed, similar to the new French law, holding the fathers of illegitimate children responsible for their supâ€" port, as well as for the support of the mothers. The marriage laws also were reformed, on& phrase of especial significance being incorâ€" porated, that ‘"conjugal society is based on the freedom and equality of both parties.‘" Lees than two months after the overturning of the monarchy, the divorce laws, which before had withheld from women the right to petition for dissolution of marriage under any circumstances, were so amended that they now enjoy equal privilege in the courts with men. years ago. Portugal‘s â€" Divrorce Laws Give ._ Equal Rights to All. Portugal will probably be the first Laiin country to enfranchise its womer, says the National, the leadâ€" ing Radicalâ€"Republican newspaper, in an article recently in which is reviewed the various laws enacted for the benefit of women since the inauguration of the Republic three EXFRANCHISINXG ITS WOMEXN. Only One "BROMO QUJININE® Tolls How to Cure Quickly. That Coming Strain. ug Winard‘s Liniment Cures CGarget in Cown a cornâ€"what he noeded was Putnam‘s Corn Extractor; it‘s seafe, painless and cure. Try ‘"Putnam‘s"â€"cures eo fast, 25¢, at all dealers. creni':;e--i;;;i.:;ieâ€"éxpecwd to see! "And can‘t you find anything to do on the stage?" ‘"‘No, ma‘am ; they ain‘t usin‘ any real actors on the stage these days." Health is the greatest of gifts, contentedness the best _ riches Truth is the best of relatives. And then the mother realized that it was the litle girl‘s confused version of the text, ‘‘The seas and all that in them is !‘"‘ What sort of A man, razor in hand, was caught by his wife aesassinating not an enemy, but The chap with the loudest yoice doesn‘t always win the argument. A Strange Kind of Fish. . ‘‘Mother,"" said the little girl who was enjoyin{l her first day at the seashore, "where aro the tiniâ€" mies 1‘ "The what, dear ?"‘ ‘‘The tinimies; the minister alâ€" ways talks about ‘the seas and all the tinimies.‘"‘ The kindâ€"hearted woman had given the frazzled tourist a generâ€" ous supply of cold victual!. s nl ul ink / s <o. Jnt onl eb is i “Hsvend't you any regular trade or occupation ?‘ she asked him. P ‘ 3 »03 & PC Nt enE ECnt 1O ow C PSR ® ‘‘Yes‘m,"" he answered, with his mouth full, "I‘m cAac_tor." ; If You Have More Cows Guilty of Assassination. BRANCHES: SUSSEX, N.B.; SASKATOON, SASK.; CALCARY, ALTA you will get $15 more profit from «ach cow per yearâ€"and this is a low figure. Moset dairymen doâ€"much ‘better than this with the Standrrd. You can thus readily see that it takes but a short time for the Etand. ard cream separator to pay for itse®f. And by taking advantage of our EABY PAYMENT PLAN you can pay for your Standard out of the extra profits it earns for you. You‘ve heard a lot mbout the Standard. It‘s the separator that has made new world‘s records for close skimâ€" ming at experimental farms, chesee and butter factories, and on the farm. Write for folder, entitled "Skimming Results." It gives the proofs. Also ask for our catalog. The Renfrew Machinery Co., Limited } Evil Days for the Stage. it will pay you to use the Starparp CrEar SEpararor instead of skimming cream by the old method. By using the PC m e efi mm llslll. It bakes, roasts, broils and toasts to perfecâ€" tion, and it does not heat up the kitchen, Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners. Stocks carried at all chief points. The New Perfection Stove with the New Perfection oven is just the convenient height. Everything about this new stove is just right & New Pb%ion Oil Cookâ€"stove Don‘t Break Your Ba To Baste Your Bird ipeg, Montreal, Toronto, V;uuver, Halifax, St. John Royalite Oil is the best horeâ€" cm!:r all stoves and lamps. Head Office and Works, RENFREW, CANADA. THE lMPERL?:IL_O_lL COMPANY AGENCIES EYERYWHERE IXx caAxipai had OUI' OF EMPLOYMENT?» @ERVEs Yyou right. Learn barber trade; always sure emplovment for barber. Our im. rnnd methode, constant practice and netructions qualify you for position in ghort time. _ Rend for. catalogue. Moler College, 221 Queen E., Toronto. LADlBB. LISTENâ€"ROGER‘S MAKEâ€" Coin Bilverplate Tableware, extraâ€" ordinary prices, handsome gift with orders, prepaid,. Write quickly for in« formation. Russell Supply Co., Box 162, Westmount, Que. druggista or turing Comy Winnipec. M H. W. DAWSON, Colborne $St., Toront« GALL STONES, KIDNEY AND HELai» der Btomes, Kidvey trouble, Gravel, Lumbago and kindred allments positively eured with the unew German Remedr, "Hapol," price €1.50. Another new remedyg for Niabetesâ€"Mellitus and sure cure, is "@anol‘s Aut!â€"Diabetes" Price $200 from FAO!'OIY SITEA, WITH OR WwITHOUr Railway â€" trackage, . in _ Toronto, BRrampton and other towns and cities. C‘!CE& TUMOR®, LUM PSR ETO, internal and external, cured with out pain by our bome treatment. Write us before too late Dr. Relilman Medioad eommenengeene e en ze H. W. DAWSON, Nincty Colbevne Streeq, ESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN Brampton and a dozen other towns, The Soul of a Piancisthe Action. Insist on the Limited, Collingwood. Ont "OTTO HIGEL" UIT, STOCK, GRAIN AND Dalry Farms in all sections ot Ontario, MALE HFLP WANTED STAMPE AND COINS FARMS FOR SALR Two or MISCFLLANEOUS direct. The Ranol Manatae any of Canada Limite4& Centa. PRIGES OF FAR #riges of Cattis, Crain, Produce at Home Wmu Cana = 81 i2¢ ftor ent. Peas The m Bariey â€"Pric Cornâ€" No. 5 pail, and at 0 Woron tw Butterâ€"Da Anferior, 17 | wolis, and Z 18o outsiue. Choose 15 14 t 1e for large; 0 Beaus diand4 primeos, $2 to . ho. 2. Poultry â€"»@llâ€"{attod stook OChickens, 19 i 16 to 17¢.; turkeys, 2 -‘, whout 2s lower | Ontario 6L rack, and Delawarcs track. 2 to Btc; heavy, 17 l14¢; breakias bacd 1b Lardâ€"The â€" mark« #1%¢; tubs, 1434¢; Baled hay â€"No. . track, Toronto; N is quoted at $10. Baled Strawâ€"Good on track, Toronio. e Smnlm. June Noithern, #4¢; No. 34 Northern, 86e; N No. 6, e; feed, 58 Bi4c; No. 2%, do., No. $ tough, #%¢; No. 2 red Winter, Barley â€"N ed, 4214c %#1.05 54 No. 1 feed Montreal, J1 yellow, 6 to ( ern, No. 2, 4 ern, No. 3, 3 1 feed, 41 to 49 to 00¢c; mal No. %, 88 to 6 m-u. firets ene, ©4.70 Rye ri Buck wis Branâ€" M straight roliers, oats â€"Barreis, Bran, $17; sh moullic, $26 to ear low, #14 weeterne, 1214 Mi2 vo 11546 ery, 12 to 2 Eggeâ€"Fresh, 2% Minnoapolis, May, 9#1%¢; . §21%¢. . Cash DN Northern, 9234 9054 o 91 36. to bl¢. No. i . rye, 55 to §8c. F Montreal, 3 cows and «pr and lambs, | o $12¢; med 4 to 6. Milch Be to 612¢. 8i #4 to $ each Toronto, J1 Duluth, _ M §§54¢; No Northern, 6 asked ; July, «eed, $1.29 58 $1.50148 acke OQctober, #1.4 #6.95 €7.15 #5 + ©5.75 #8 to $8.50; com and feedersâ€"St to $6.2%; yearli choice heavy fe« Milkers and #; Bheep and lan #6.50; heavy, $4â€" $7.50 to #8 50; bu lambe, #1.50 + fed and watrered ; $10.10 to $1015 of found on Thursd cistern at her Grove, five miles There was little feet of water in Bo The body of Mr Woman Near Gal Feet of feet of water in head was subme no other person i time except her h a lounge in the scar on the head rope, which susf wherein butter w cating that the leaning over to ré the rope snapped first into the well. Bacon, long clear lb to 140; feed $1.14; No Nighty t« $ FRom THE CENTRES OF WELLâ€"ROIT Extra June Business at spat United $ta IRX Cou.iry Winnipeg Live $t Nurtat Breac 13 SQHJ Provis ABLÂ¥ H ana

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