West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 17 Jul 1913, p. 7

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LYE 10e on 444 a6A Doctor (to sick man‘s wife)â€"Does â€"your husband suffer from delusions, Mrs. Jones! Mrs. Jonesâ€"I nope so, doctor. He‘s been worrying for a week over what he thinks your hill will be. pkps _ Bver read the above letter? A new ons appears trom time to time. They ars yenuine, true, and 1!n of human interest. weret in our {amiiy, â€" Grapeâ€"Nuts is equally valuable to the strong, healthy man or woâ€" man. â€" It stands â€"for the true theory of health. _ ‘‘There‘s a reason," and it is explained in the little book, ‘‘The Road to Wellvilie," in wor! and food "In this simp baby‘s life and to a strong. hea laughing. The be perfect to ha effect as this. I thiuk it is th hours salt They Thrive on Grapeâ€"Nuts. Healthy babies don‘t ecry and the wellâ€"nourished baby that is fed on Grapeâ€"Nuts is never a crying baby. Many babies who cannot take any other food relish the perfect food, Grapeâ€"Nuts, and get well. ‘‘My baby was given up by three doctors who said that the conâ€" densed milk on which I had fed her had ruined the child‘s stomach. OQne of the doctors told me that the only thing to do would be to try Grapeâ€"Nuts, so I got some and preâ€" pared it as follows: I soaked 1‘ tablespocniuls in one pint of cold water for half an hour, then 1 strained off the liquid and mi.\;edJ 12 teaspoonfuls of this strained Grapeâ€"Nuts juice with six teaspoonâ€" | Ingenious Mexican Has No Trouble Drawing Water. * That the Mexican farmer is not the slow thinking, fazy person the average stranger imagines is illusâ€" trated by an ingeniously devised well coustructed by a farmer living near a little town just across the boundry line. The natives seldom go far away from their homes and they have very primitive ideas and ?fl%. This we!l is about fifty feet p and the owner has built a curious device for hauling water from it. If this Mexican had been an educated man he might have been an inventor. A tree flourished near the well which had two branches growing out of the trunk. These boughs separated into four branches higher up. The Mexican cut the branches in such a way that they formed a periect rest for a long well sweep. He fastened the sweep to a crossâ€" bar laid across the two upper branches in the middle, using stout thongs for the purpose. Then he fastened a weight on one end of the sweep and a long rope to the other end. The bucket is fastened to the end of this long rope, and all he has to do is to lower the bucket into the well. The weight of the stone pulls it up again, brimming full. s icast noise would completely upset me. Only those who have suffered from nervous trouble can tell what 1 endured. I doctored for a time, but did not get any benefit. Then 1 learned of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and sent for a half dozen boxes. By the time I had used these I was almost well, and a couâ€" ple more boxes completely restored my health, and I have had no reâ€" turn of the trouble. I can cheerâ€" fully recommend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to those who suffered from any form of nervous trouble." If you are weak, nervous or out. of health begin to cure yourself toâ€" day with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. You can get them from any mediâ€" cine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from‘ The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.. me. UOnly frum nerv 1 endured but did n« 1 learned Pills .nqn boxes. ‘ these I wa ple more } my health, turn of th fully â€"rec« Pink Pills from anv f W @1 € They Are Dus to an Impoverished Condition of the B.ood Nervous exhaustion â€"or neurasâ€" theon‘a, as medical men call itâ€"is one of the greatest evils of the preâ€" sont day, for it is destroying the ifo and energy of thousands of men and women, or worse, drivlng M to insanity. The causes of this trouble includo overwork, mental strain, worry, indiscretions, and ,\ imes it follows la grippe. The gas of this trouble are usually great weakneoss a‘ter any exertion, e is _ headaches, trembling x i 1 e wI ® u3 & 1 ' NERVOUS TROUBLES ON THE INGREASE a _ iembtcen ocess, for the above signs mean at the exhausted nerves are callâ€" 3 for more nourishment from the od supply. Dr. Williams‘ Pink !‘s make new, rich blood that «is the _ starved complaining rves, and in this way they have red thousands of times neuras nia, neuralgia, and other nerâ€" us disorders, and have restored ength and nerveâ€"energy to deâ€" vring people. Mrs. Isaac Wilâ€" :. Calabogie, Ont., gives thanks : having been restored to health s wreck ; I couldn‘t do ;y-w;;i; id not sleep at night, suffered n nervous headaches. and the kville s of this trouble are usually it weakness a‘ter any exertion, wous _ headaches, trembling ds, shakiness in the legs, irritaâ€" y of temper, weak digestive er, insomnis. The life of the A CURIOUS wWELL. ims‘ Pink Pill gh the use r becomes true treat: CVBs® FooDn. D cons > use of this medlcu)e, When I began using Dr. e, easy way I saved have built her up Ithy child, rosy and food must certainly e such a wonderfu! [ can truthfully say e best food in the delicate babies on delicious healthful ios as we have disâ€" nes full of miseries. â€" atment for this trouâ€" ist of & bx_xilding up was a nerâ€" In the hotel‘s $50,000 linen supâ€"| ply are, on the outward \'o.\’age,, which means the start from Hamâ€"| burg. 30,000 hand towels, 7,500 bath | towe‘ls, 9,700 sheets, 43,500 napkins, | 12,504 large and small pillows, | _ eushions and boister slips, 13,800, ED. 7 Each room has a brass bedstead, a marble wash stand, hot and cold water, and a convenient arrangeâ€" ment of mirrors, dressing tables and electric lighis. In the firstâ€" class are 714 beds and 184 sofa beds. ‘, She carries no more, or but few l( more, passengers than do ships of | half her tonnage. Besides the dinâ€" | ing rooms, there are ball rooms, grill roowms, smoking roofs, gymâ€" | nasium, roof gardens, public baths and lounges and the main lounge, which is hung with Gobelin tapesâ€" tries and fitted with a stage for theatrical and operatic performanâ€" ces, can be converted into a ballâ€" room. There are a winter garden, with a wealth of tropical vegetation, a running track, Roman bath and ’swimming pool, Russian, mineral and electric baths, candy store, ‘ book shop and bars. | _ There are eightyâ€"three lifeboats, | including two motor boats, capable Jnf towing the rest and equipped with wireless telegraphy, working | over 200 miles. 5 _ In the twoâ€"story dining room are _more than six . hundred chairs. [()ther eating places are the I'!itz-I Carlton, the Grill, the Winter Garâ€"i den and the Verandah Cafe, the latter comparable in itself{ to a roof garden. There are also small dinâ€" ing rooms. some in suites, breakâ€" fast rooms and private decks openâ€" ing from suites. Provisions for an Army. i At New York, preparatory for a | trip to Hamburg, the Imperator ; will take on board 48.500 pounds of . fresh meats, 48,000 eggs and l'.)l.-“| 000 pounds of potatoes. Her larder‘ contains, besides 27,500 pounds ufi fresh vegetables, 6,000 tins of canâ€"| ned regetables. 10,500 â€" pounds of| fowl and game, 9,000 pounds of fish: and shellfish, s00 pounds of mushâ€" rooms, 4,000 cans of preserved fruits, 12,500 quarts of milk and cream, 400 pounds of tea, 300 pounds of chocolate and cocoa and | 7,000 pounds of coffee. f The ship is nearly oneâ€"fiith of a mile longâ€"919 feetâ€"and 98 feet broad, and her tonnage is 50,000. On her trial trips, it is sworn, she made twentyâ€"three knots an hour. SBhe will cross in six days. The current is developed by five turbo dynamos and a motor dynamo driven by a benzine â€" motor high above the water line on the boat deck. The ship has more than 10,â€" 000 electric lamps, four electrically operated passenger elevators, five provision elevators, pivotal cranes, call bells, heating apparatus, etc. Wave Motion Absorbers. There are also Schlinger tanks, or ware motion absorbers, which reduce the rolling motion. for special sauces, head dishwasher, twentyâ€"one silver and glass cleanâ€" ers, sixtyâ€"two stewards for subseâ€" quent work pertaining to meals, a total serving personnel of more than 500 stewards, bathroom atâ€" tendants, rubbers, manicures, chirâ€" opodists, _ florist, _ stenographers, photographer, interpreters, bandâ€" master and band, and perhaps, guides, with a crew of 1,180 all told, selected for their long serâ€" vice on other ships. She has acâ€" commodation for 2,496 passengers. Always in Touch With Shore. Her wircless telegraph will carry to either shore of the Atlantic, working over a radius of more than 1,500 sea miles. The ship has two reserve antennae, two receiving inâ€" struments, for long and short Herâ€" tsian waves and designed for news service and rescue work. She is in communication with land throughâ€" out the entire crossing. & paymaster and three assistant paymasters, storekeeper, provision superintendent, five provision overâ€" seers, three baggage masters, a suâ€" perintendent of materials, three wireless telegraphers, two teleâ€" phone operators, four barbers, a hairâ€"dresser, an editor, three printâ€" ers, cabinetâ€"maker, tailor, four purâ€" sers, four elevator operators, two chief chefsâ€"one for the firstâ€"class kitchens and the other for the Ritzâ€" Carlton restaurantâ€"116 assistant cooks and scullions, including five. pastry cooks, five butchers, a cook vas oe onl Lo 4 VC o h MW VUT y Capt. Hans Ruser of Hamburgâ€" American fame. Under him are an executive skipper, corresponding to the executive officer of a battleship, and three watch captains, one in charge of navigation, correspondâ€" ing to the navigating officer on a warship, and one in charge of safeâ€" ty conditions. All have firstâ€"class master‘s certificates and all are master mariners of experience. They will be assisted by seven subâ€" ordinate navigation officers. An Immense Crew, The Imperator will also carry a gardener, one chief engineer, three watch engineers, all ‘"Airsts,‘""‘ twenâ€" tyâ€"five engineers and electriciaps,i three doctors, two medical asslst-] ants, trained nurses, apothecaries, THE WOrLD‘s Biggest swip Every Modern Device for Safety, Comfort and Luxury is Found on Her. The new Hamburgâ€"American line leviathan, the Imperator (pronounâ€" ced, according to Capt. Ruser, with the accent on the third syllable), which recently made her initial trip to New York, is the only ship in the world to have five captains. First comes the commander, the auâ€" tocrat of the big floating hotel, Frawk > NB .. tm Wns NEW HAMBURG . AMERICAX LINER IMPERATOR. B Aioos. Autbtrtantbrtbraixtutndnt d three assistant If you take & saw and hold it at right angles with the wind, teeth upward, and look along the tips of the teeth, you can see the wind streaming by and through the litâ€" tle notches just like a flowing stream. The explanation, says Mr. Lawrence Hodges, must be practâ€" ically the same as for the little streams of wriggly air we someâ€" times see over our radiators ; that is, that the air is broken up into currents of different densities, and, consequently, light coming through these eurrents is beat to our eye and their form noted. The wind,. coming with some force, is interâ€" rupted by the saw, and this comâ€" pressed or dense air streams through the notches. The form of the stream is visible to us by the‘ refraction or bending of the light' that reaches our eyes from objects' or particles seen through the | or â€" particles streams. The Association has arranged with all the railways for singleâ€"fare rates, good to return several days after the mecting. All details of the meet are given in the proâ€" gramme, copies of which may be obtained from the secretary of the Association, 157 Bay Street, Toâ€" ronto. Changes in the regulations govâ€" erning the moet are evident in the programme. These are not extenâ€" sive, the chief one being a restricâ€" tion prohibiting the use of any exâ€" tension bridge which projects to the réar of the bolt when cocked. Of the older matches, the Taitâ€" Brassey is again to the fore with 198 individual prizes, in addition to team prizes, amounting in all to over $1,000.00 in value. The Taitâ€" Brassey is the big military match of the meet. The City of Hamilton Match for Tyros is one of the important matches from the point of view of the younger shots,. This year the city celebrates the 100th anniverâ€" stry of its founding by contributing a new cup, value $400.00, for team competition. Besides this cup the match this year contains 100 indiâ€" vidual and team prizes of over $500.00. Colonel W. C. Macdonald, Chairâ€" man of the Executive Committeo of the Association, has donated the first prize of a Ross Rifle, valued at $50.00, in the All Comers‘ Aggreâ€" gate Match. "Grapr ~ Association. _ Capt. Armour A. ,| Miller, Secretary of the Associaâ€" â€"|tion, has just issued the annual \ | programme, and it is full of interâ€" |esting features. The aggregate of » | this year‘s prize list is seven thouâ€" ) | sand six hundred dollars, about one ~| thousand dollars ahead of any preâ€" ) | vious year. The cities of Toronto ~|and Hamilton have vied almost ) | with each other in donations to the ‘ | prize funds. Among the wellâ€"known < [ Toronto people whose trophies will [ be contested are His Honour the Lieutenant Governor, Mrs. H. D. Warren, Sir Henry M. Pellatt, and Colonel W. (C. Macdomald. Mrs. | Warren has donated prizes to the |amount of $275.00 for competition |among school cadets. Last year, |the youngsters to the number of Jone hundred attended the meet, and this year, as the Council of the | Assoctation is offering to pay half the railwayâ€"fare of each cadet from Ontario, there should be a regiment of them anxious to shoot bulls‘â€" eyes along side the grizzled veterâ€" ans of the militia, Teams of six members each from the nine proâ€" vinces may shoot for Sir Henry M. Pellatt‘s magnificent new cup in the Interprovinceial Match. Each marksman of the winning team will get a miniature of the cup and a share of the one hundred and twenty dollars in cash that goes with it. RBir John M. Gibson‘s genâ€" erosity has made â€"possible a new match called the ‘"Lieutenant Govâ€" ernor‘s,‘‘ with 200 prizes, amountâ€"|| ing to over $1,000.00, in addition to | â€" the Lieutenant Governor‘s gold | medal. This match will be a perâ€"|! manent one on the programme of | â€" the Association, and will stand a , fitting memorial to his Honour‘s| â€" many years of active service to the | advancement of rifle shooting and | military education in Canada. An| individual competitor in the Lieuâ€"| * tenant Governor‘s Match, who is lucky, may receive a Ross Rifle, i offered by Hiram Walker & Sons, of Walkerville, and other prizes, 1 totalling in all $150.00 in value. 8 4s Will Be Given at the Ontario Rifle Association Meet This Year. There promises to be much miliâ€" tary activity at the Long Branch Rifle Ranges from August the 18th to the 221nd during the five days‘ annual meet of the Ontario Rifle In the building of the Imperator 1,800 artisans worked more than 1,000,000 working days, or three years. The contract was given to the Vulcan Works at Hamburg on June 18, 1910; she was christened by Emperor William and launched on May 23, 1912. waiters‘ towels, ers. Seeing the Wind. $7,600 IN .PRIZES. ISSUE 28â€"‘13. and 2,000 linen covâ€" Love will often modify the misery occasioned by her piano playing. No true wife will allow her husâ€" band to lay waste his life by unâ€" ceasing work day after day, so that his life slips away without his hayâ€" ing the leisure to enjoy it. Yet it is too often the case that a wife will force her husband â€" into this dangerous path instead of keeping him in check. She sees that his excessive work brings in â€" money plentifully ; and spends it lavishly, regardless of the harm he does himself in providing for her whims. Some men are so absorbed in monâ€" eyâ€"getting for the sake of their families 5\“ their homes have beâ€" come little more than & sleeping place, their chief function is which to pay the bills. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Carget in Cows. Mr. Cook has submitted the worked flints to several experts, inâ€" ©luding Reginald Smith of the Britâ€" ish museum, and the conclusion is that the implements belong to that indeterminate class w‘ ich occur both in late palaeolithic and early neolithic times. They show, howâ€" ever, more distinet affinities to the older than to the newer type of worked flints. It is probable that the remains were buried by the men who sat around the hearths on the old land surface. The junction between the stratâ€" um in which the skeleton lay and the overlying or fourth stratum clearly represented an old land surface, for at this level, but at some distance from the human reâ€" mains were found traces of old hearthsâ€"charred wood and bones, flints fractured by fire and also seyâ€" eral worked flints. A â€"subsequent discovery threw light on the probable period at which the burialâ€"if it were a burâ€" ialâ€"had been made. â€"that is to say the time between the palaeolithic and the neolithic period, when our present climatic conditions became _ establishedâ€" perhaps 15,000 years ago. The bones were forwarded to the Royal College of Surgeons, where they were examined by Professor Keith. He found that there is a close resemblance between this man and what is known as the Tilbury man, who, found in 1883 at a depth of 34 feet, is usually regarded as the solitary representative of Engâ€" lishmen of the transitional period The skeleton was revealed during some excavations made near the Medway. It lay in a distinct stratâ€" um of brick earth and there were four overlying strata, the lines of which were unbroken and undisâ€" turbed. It was evident, therefore, that these had been formed since the human remains had been deâ€" posited. As was the case in the Tilbury skull, the teeth of the Halling man are much worn and most of the molar teeth have been lost premaâ€" turely through disease, probably as the result of overwear. W. H. Cook, a member of the Medway Bcientific Research Bociâ€" ety, has reported the details of the discovery and submitted the bones to the inspection of the Royal Anâ€" thropological Institute. The skeleton is that of a man apâ€" i)arently five feet four inches tall. t has a brain capacity of about 1,500 cubic centimetersâ€"a trifle above the modern average. The forehead is well formed, there is no trace of the great overhanging brow ridges which characterize the Neanderthal race. uies Hank o In addition, several flints and earthen vessels were uncovered, showing a primitive, but none the less certain advancement in civiliâ€" zation over the conditions that surâ€" rounded the Tilbury man found in 1883. A Wellâ€"Developed Men Who Lived 15,000 Years Ago. A skeleton of a man of 15,000 years ago has been found. This second link in the development of the human race was discovered at Halling, near Rochester, England, and throws a great amount of light on life in those periods. When Husbands Overwork. treatment of Cuticura Soap she was cured." (Signed) Mad. D. Coubure, Feb, 12, 1912, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, For a liberal free sample of each, with 32â€"p. book, send post card to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. 50D, Boston, U. 8, A, Anso du Cap, Quebéc.â€"‘*" About one year ago my daughter had her hands covered with eczema. It broke out in a rash. She was unable to put her hands in water and she used to scratch them until they were red and inflamed and cracked and used to bleed. She was unable to gleep by spells from the pain and burning. We tried seyâ€" eral remedies without receiving any relief. After sho began washing with Cuticura Soap and applying Cuticura Ointment she got relief at once and after ten days‘ treatment was entirely cured. *‘My baby when teething, broke out with pimples on her face. After three days‘ HANDS COVERED WiTH ECZEMA dandruff was very soom removed and my hair stopped falling out. ‘Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured me." (Signed) Miss E. Chamberlain, Mar. 31, 1912, 42 Lippincott St., Toronto, Ontario.â€" * About 2 year ago I had a very bad attack of typhoid and my scalp was in a very bad condition. ‘The dandruff could be seen plainly and I lost most 6of my hair, My hair foll out gradually, but after having it shamâ€" pooed it came out in handfuls, I used Cutiâ€" cura Soap to shampoo my hair, then rubbed the Cuticura Ointment fhto the sealp. ‘The Scalp in Very Bad Condition, Danâ€" druff Could be Seen Plainly, Lost Most of Hair. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment Cured. HAIR CAME OUT â€"â€" N HANDFULS HE WAS AN OLD TIMER. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORontTto Johnnie hesitated a moment ; | then "Yes‘m,‘""‘ he replied. ‘‘The . } boy opened the doors and in come | » a cat." | John Goes Up Head. ‘‘Johnnie,‘""‘ asked his teacher, ‘"can you give us a sentence, using the word ‘income‘ in it?" =â€"Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25¢c, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25¢c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonic Good for All Eyes that Need Care Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicage If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyc:s or Granulated Evelids. Doesu‘t Smart flfry Murine Eye Remedy When your razor is dull as a hoe, ask your wife if she wasn‘t paring her corns, Get her Putnam‘s Corn Extractor; it‘s the only painless and safe eure. All dealers sell ‘"Putnam‘s" at 2%¢. per bottle. ‘‘Well, you might have made y(nllrsclf‘mu}'e agreeable," respondâ€" ed the Boob. "I‘m a selfâ€"made man,‘""‘ snapped the Grouch. ‘‘The cheeks are redder than mine,‘‘ was the hesitating reply. ‘"I‘ll soon fix that!" thundered the old king. | o he seized his brush, and paintâ€" ed both cheeks of the terrified grenadier a brilliant red. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Ets In his later years Frederick Wilâ€" liam, King of Prussia, was sorely afflicted with gout. The twinges of pain aggravated his naturally irasâ€" cible temper. During the attacks he was accustomed to divert his mind by painting. His models were always soldiers. One day he kept a tall grenadier posing for a long time. At length the picture was finished. The king turned to the man, and in a terâ€" rible voice asked, ‘"What do you think of that ?" A daring robbery tock place in County Limerick, when Mr. Chamâ€" bers, manager of the Provincial Bank, Listowel, while on his way to the branch bank at Abbeyfeale, was held up by four men and robâ€" bed of about $3,000. sioners a special campaign pension of 18 cents a day. The members of the Committee of Management of the Bel{ast Savings Bank were entertained to luncheon to honor the fact that the funds of the bank now exceeded one million pounds sterling. FOR MARRIED MEN ONLY An aged feeble veteran named David Davidson, Belfast, late of the Royal Irish Regiment, has been awarded by the Chelsea commisâ€" The Roscrea show, to be held on the grounds of the Roscrea Castle, recently acquired from the military authorities by the North Tipperary County Council, is to be held on October 2nd. M uie Ne â€" hn ines ~1 _ William _ Faulkner, permanent way inspector, and Hugh Milling, district engineer on the Great Northern Railway, were both killed by a train near Raheny Station. Phineas John Davidson, postman at Hilltown, was, at the Newry Quarter Sessions, sentenced to six months‘ imprisonment for the larâ€" ceny of a postalâ€"order, value for about 816. w Aouliinical tss td sc ad An outrage is reported from Templemore, County Tipperary. A memorial cross has been torn down and other headstones chipped. The po‘l‘iq‘a‘ aroe investigating,. The annual motor outing for the benefit of the cripple children in Belfast took place from the exhiâ€" bition hall to Mount Stewart. About 250 children took part. Arrangements have now been completed for the erection of a new Palace of Varieties at Dublin, the site chosen is close to the General Post Office. Damage to the amount of $2,500 was done by a fire that broke out from ‘"Duntreath," Kingstown, the residence of Miss Craig. One fireâ€" man was slightly injured. The band contest held under the auspices of the North of Ireland Band Association took place at Windsor Park, Belfast. A shocking affair occurred at Bree, Malin Head, when a farmer named George Thomas Boggs was attacked by a bull and fatally inâ€" jured, A serious riot took place on the lands of Lord Ashtown, and sixteen men have been returned for trial. At the present time the agents of more than one continental army are engaged in purchasing reâ€" mounts in Ireland. Happenings in the Emerald Isle 01 Iuterest to Iriskâ€" men. The carpenters employed in the Drogheda building trade, to the number of about 40, have gone on strike, _ Mr. Andrew Carnegie has given a donation of $650 towards an orâ€" gan for the New Ross Protestant church. % NEWS BY MAIL Frrom LAND‘S SHORES. FROM ERIMN‘S GREEN ISLE Altering the Model. Wuft. SPECIAL PRICE TILL AUGUST 18t. Our stook must be reduced by that time for the annual stockâ€"taking. t Bonora Brass Horn (Moter Driven) .... Rog. #20.00. Sale price $13.25 "~Bonora Nickel Horn * «... Reg. $24.00. Sale prico $14.%5 Sonora, Comb. Hand & Electric, Brass . Reg. $30.00. Sale price $17.90 Sonora, 6Â¥ * Nickel . Reg. $38.00. Sale price $22.00 Phone or Write ‘"I haven‘t seen Bangs for a long time. He used to be a dickens of a fellow among the girls." ‘"He‘s been cured of all that." ‘"‘What cured him?‘ ‘‘Marriage .‘ Yours, ete., WILFPRID GAGNE, Prop. of Grand Central Hotel, Drummond ville, Aug. 3, ‘04. Gents,â€"I cured a valuable hunting dog of mange with MINARD‘S LINIMENT after several veterinaries had treated him without doing J_a}m any permamnent good. TOP SPWP COL O SDOLOLY TID TVE EODVOTE Unelp nsc efi d lcal Procvees, Rimple, mechanical work, nptdl‘ done, All patâ€" terma furnishod. Positively no experience royuired. We furnish the Process and chemicals and eupply you with picture® t color, which you return to us. Good prices paid promptiy by the week or mouth, Ko canvassing or sollingâ€"our travâ€" ellers seell the goods and the ficld is unlimited for our work. If you want clean pleasaut work the ge;r round for whol+ or spare time, write us and we will un‘ ou contract .“t the srvees we pay. éouneuouu. ART WORKS, 375 COLLEGE STREET, TORONTO, ont. M WANTED â€"More Workers :: Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited First and last you must pay your entire debt. Persons and events may stand for a time between you and reckoning, but it is only a postponement. You must pay at last your own debt.â€"Emerson. come.â€"Maeterlinck. Not content with worrying over our own affairs we go out of our way to bother ourselves and break our heads over the affairs of our friends . and _ neighbors.â€"Montâ€" aigne. Mizard‘s ‘iniment Cures Diphtheria JISSELL MOTOR CAR It is well to have visions of a better life than that of every day, but it is the life of every day from which elements of a better life must come.â€"Maeterlinek. To mount from a workshop to a palace is rare and beautiful, so you think; to mount from error to truth is more rare and more beautiâ€" ful.â€"Victor Hugo. The most gladsome thing in the world is that few of us fall very low ; the eaddest that, with such capabilities, we sel€gom rise high.â€" J. M. Barrie. Accessorics Department. _ But Paris was determined to have trees. A trench 10 feet in length was dug about the site of each new tree and filled with rich, black dirt. Then in the municipal nurâ€" series the young trees were pruned and trained to grow their roots horizontally instead of straight down, so that they might get the needed nourishment from the layer of rich dirt provided. As a conseâ€" quence of that good start and of the continuing care which is exerâ€" cised, the trees of Paris are, perâ€" haps, the finest in the world, and their average life is nearly 40 years. Work Begun Under Napolecn HJ. Average Life 40 Years. When the Parisian work of tree planting on a great scale was beâ€" gun under the reign of the ill {ated third Napoleon, holes five feet in depth were dug in the parkways along the streets. They showed that the soil conditions were not favorable to tree growth. It was sandy and pebbly, and at the depth of five feet an impenetrable layer of hard clay was encountered. ‘ PARIS TREES ARE FIXEST wRELE To co _ is Niagara Falls, Toronto, Thouâ€" sand Islands, St. Lawrence Rapids, Montreal, Quebec and the Saguenay Riverâ€"one of nature‘s most impressive scenie wonders. Low rates for tickets including meals and berths. For inforâ€" _A mation apply to local s C 3‘1& ticket l?lfl. or t y ;14»3; MA,. Hugh D. Paterson, s( W Gen. Agt., Toronâ€" /:1., KNL, * yiR to, Ont., or H. a s t ASUARh Forter Chaffee, t o i9 k P.T.M., Mont se s id eYyubat â€" treal. Que. Narionat Dave (c.u.ocn. Co. or Samapa, LimrTco. Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Headache Wafers ‘They do not contain phenacetin. anetanilid utd fihgiai). mt *sns un Tsc s tncccicss s d morphine, opium or any other dangerous drug. 25¢. a box at your Drugyist‘s. 123 Sickheadachesâ€"neuraigic headachesâ€" tti M:%â€"m“fmm#};fl Pearls of Truth. The Cure. By a new device the Sonora does away with the rasping and metallio screechos so much noticed. It proâ€" duces a smooth, earâ€"pleasing torm PROVED by several years of experience a most atisiacâ€" tory hora. The Sonora is motor driven, using but little currentk. SONORA their home with anr wnandonfel Ancls beir home with our wonderfu! OChemâ€" cOMPANY, LIMITED * _ WEEST ToRoxto RUSSELL MOTOR CAR Co., "BLUE FLAME" » SPECIAL anoo to CoJiomn coloring for us in 1E EC C ons E P TD Limited, Accessories Dept., WEST TORONTO Co.. Limited Callinewond Ont g T ONCEâ€"MEN TO LEARN BARBER trade; expert instruction:; constant practice; tools free; always eure employ« ment for barber. Write for catalogue. Moler College, 221 Queen E., Toronto. out pain by our home treamtment Write us before too lats Dr. Reliman Medical g TAMP COLLECTORSâ€"HUNUEKED bie kJ ferent Foreien Btamn« Catrlavaa T NS t mm VW T Eel‘e MA Railway â€" trackage, â€" in Toronto, BRrampton and other towns and cities. k3 ferent Foreign _ Btamps,. Catalogos Album,. onle Reven Cents Marks Stamg famnany _ Tarronta Rome FREE HOMESTEADS AND IMâ€" 39(m proved farme, £15.00 to $45.00 ner acre. Best grain and mixed farming ‘ountry. Write Commissioner, Board of "rade, Humboldt, Saek. H. W. DAWSON, Colborne $t., Terorto R men are made of dustâ€"for dust alâ€" ways settles., FR('IT‘ Fari And the fife aiter death, â€" «U pages, only 25 cents postpaid. _ H. Law, 486 Eunclid Ave., Teronts, Ont. Swedenlnvf‘- great work on Heaven and Hell and tlvgllife after death. 400 pages, only 25 cents h acrory GUARANTEED for one yoar against all mechanical defects St. Lawrence Sugar lefl-flu.'l.ult‘u. Monireal â€"buy St. Lewrence Extra Graâ€" nulated by the bag. You get the choicest, pure cane sugar, untouched by any hand from Refinery to your kitchenâ€"and FULL WEIGAT GuUaraANTEED For Preserving Minard‘s I.!anti Cures Distemper, 'l" Soul of a Pianois the Action. insist on the "OTTO HIGEL" W. DAWSON, Ninety Toronto. ANCER, _ TUMOR®, _ LUM® . ®r0, internal and external. cured with ESEDENTIAL _ PROPERTIES _ IN Brampton ind a dozen other towns. UIT, 8STOCK, GRAIN AND DAaIRY Farme in all sections ot Ontario. snaps. Bags 0o 1be., 25 lbs., zoilhu’ Cartor® 5 lbe., 2 lbe. Bert deaiers can supply you. Piano Action MALE HELP wanTeDn STAMPS aND corns FARMS. FoR saue. MISCELLANEOUA tR > SITES, WITH orf wWTTHOUT "BLUE PLAMES" give perfect igniâ€" tion and will give a hotter «park than any plug at this price, To lower our stock by July 21st â€"our stocktakingâ€"we ofâ€" fer these excellent Plugs at Per Set of Four Btamps, Catalogoe MOTOR HORNS

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