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Durham Review (1897), 2 Oct 1913, p. 6

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*4 @4 right, Ruddy Cheeks @o Longer Any Need to Be Pale, Weak or Anaemic. By The pallid girl always lacks appetite. Khat little she eats is badly digested. At night she is reatlees, she dozes, but locan‘t sleep soundly. Vital foree must be increased, new yslood must be supplied and a general reâ€" milding take place before she will feel ike s«he ought. Pr. Hamilton has invaluable . experiâ€" mee in these cases and found nothing 60 wompt in buiiding up young women a# 14 vegetable pille of Mandrake and Butâ€" Pr. Hamilton‘s Pills DeR he system and purifying «iso improve digestion a seady for awbsorption. A The follow! Ktta McEwen self : "In ueing Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills I Ard ny system is wonderfully built up. It «s certainly the most effective remedy I wer used. I have now a good appetite, lcep more soundly, and awaken in the norning feeling quite retreshed. Formerly I felt tired and depressed. ° looked as if a severe illnose were hangâ€" mg over my head. ‘"Nothing could give quicker reaulte han Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills and I strongly wivise every young woman to use them." All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, bs. per box or five boxes for $1.00 by nail from The Catarrhozone (Co., Buffalo, K.Y.. and xm..wn,‘om.. Sweet Sally Smiled, Sir Samuel Sims saw sweet Sarah swimming. _ Suddenly she seemed sinking. Sir Samuel stood stunned, Striding seaward, sDUETEC eething surf, Sir Samuel swiftly swam _ Sarahâ€"wards. _ Sir Samuel ikilfully supported swooning 3arah ; #ewimming shorewurds, Bir Jamuel successfully saved Barah. Seeming wmow{nt shaky, â€"Bir Samue!l sampled some spirits speâ€" cial Scotch. Sir Samuel saw sweot Sarah‘s sweetness. Sarah saw Sir Samuel‘s selfâ€"sacrificing spirit. w ul RvVT SULl SORRRmRCCUD O CHOOOC Sir Samuel soon sought sweet Sarah, striding slowly. Sarah sighâ€" ed ; Sir Samuel seemed speechless. ‘"Say something, Sir Samuel,"‘ said Sarab. "Say ‘Sam,‘ Sarah!" said Sir Damue!. Sarah, â€" smiling softly, *‘Sarahâ€"Sally," stamt Samuel. "*"Sweet Sarah heart !‘ L al Try Murine FYQ §°m°"d7 If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Evelids. Doesn‘t Smart â€"Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eve Remedy, Liquid, 25¢, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, §0c. Eve Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonic Good for All Eyes that Need Care Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicage Following the Advice of Miss McEwen You Can Quiskiy Become Strong Again. "Lysander,"" said the wife sweetâ€" ly. "do you know what day this is !‘ "Of course," said hubby, pretending to have remembered all the time, ‘"it‘s the anniversary of our wedding day, dear.‘"‘ ‘"No such thing!‘ frigidly answered the wife. "It‘s the day you promised to nail the leg on that old kitchen table." Dr. Hamilton‘s Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sire,â€"While in the country last summer, I was badly bitten by mosquiâ€" toee, so budly that I thought 1 would be disfigured for a couple of woeks. 1 was advised to try your Liniment to allay the irritation, and did so. The effect was more than I expected, a few uzaik:.flonl completely outinr the irritation, and rnentlug the bites from becoming sore. il,‘ARD' LINIMENT is also a good wrticle to keep off the mosquitoss. Youre truly. _ _ _ Sam Saralh asked the Grouch BABY LOVES HIS BATH No other keeps the shnandu::s so clean and clear, so sweet healithy. Used with Cuticura Oint= ment, it soothes irritations which often prevent sleep and if neglected become chronic disfigurements. Millions of mothers use these pure, sweet and gentlie emoilient every purpose of the toilet, CUTICURA SOAP Cutieura Seap and Ointreat are sold throughout «e world. A UUberal sample of cach, with %2â€"page Noukiet on the care and treatmens of the skin and g-umn Address Potter Drug & Cho® Dept, 21D, Beston, U. &. A. C ob -!ron‘then-:i':n;l invigorated. ‘ spirit, ruddy and strong is the + assists her eystem by the use lamilton‘s Pille. Jlowing recent letter from Miss Ewen, of Haliburton, speaks for Query. My wife is an angel,‘"‘ said the How long has she been dead!‘"‘ ilton‘s Pills begin by cleansing a and purifying the blood; they ove digestion and render food wbsorption. Additional â€" nourâ€" « ale> eupplied and the pationt rengthenmed and invigorated. smilingly surrendered. five boxes for WOV D7 | . 2 ; ul NC o atarrhozone Co.. Buffalo, | raised terrace before the entrance |® on, Out. to the restaurant. The double glass 1 in roof which takes the place of a ceilâ€" 1 Sally Smiled. ing so filters the light, whether by | jims saw sweet Sarah | day or night, That there are no |@ iddenly sho seemed| sharp contracts, but always a genâ€" | iinuel stood stunned. | tle, diffused brilliancy. The pilasâ€" | seaward, _ spurning ters of creamy marble with gilt | Jir Samuel swiftly capitols and little dependent medâ€" | wards. _ Sir Samuel) allions of Wedgwood ware, the winâ€" |. xpportod swooning | dows of the corridors of the upper | mng shorewurds, Sir| stories, the walls light in color, mfull{l saved Sarsh. | make a charming background to a mewhat shaky, Bir charming scene. ed some spirits $peâ€" Luxurious Surroundings. saw . sweet Sarah‘s| Looking over the Howers and rah saw Bir Samuel‘8| evergreens which are banked up ; spirit. against the terrace, the floor space soon sought $WO6et| seems to be & living bed of blosâ€" g slowly. Sarah Mh‘}coms, with here and there a palm cl seemed 'p“chhl": rising from it. The flowers are all hing, Sir Samuel, ‘;move, for they are the hats of the o n n g e t d AJ “id‘cakos and chatter to one another. niling . softly, | The mogâ€"ior, of course, there is a k ._|reasonable sprinkling of the unimâ€" lly it S“::;xmifeiw e?tl: portant sexâ€"are the darkâ€"colored weev :nR do;s amid tbon::linbow sea. here are small tea parties and ngly surrendered. large tea parties, the latter groupâ€" esc cssc ed at three or four tables, the hostâ€" ne Eye Remedy| ess moving from table to table to red, Weak, Watery Eyes | chat with her guests. And the Evelids. Doesn‘t Smart | waiters threading the _ maze . of e tain. uggists tables and chairs carry silver trays :;ll‘:gvi'nx‘}?;fi'iczs"l:"u& ' with delicate china cups and teaâ€" e Books Free by Mail. | P°t% and plates with thin slices of od tor All Eyes that Need Care ‘bread and butter on them, and Remedy Co., Chicase little wicker stands with as many . hmue N ‘swries as a pagoda, and on each ,"‘ said the wife sWe6etâ€"| story different delicacies prepared know what . day th"j,by the patissier, and wooden platâ€" ourse,"" said hubby, | tors on which are the cakes of o have remembered ‘ll‘ every imaginable kind. For Pale Girls Carterhall, NAd THE TEA DRINKING HABN THE ONLY FASHIONABLE BEVâ€" ERAGE IN LONDON. Society Women Meet Amid Brilâ€" liant Surroundings of Big Tea Rooms. Nowhere is the "tea habit" quite so universal as in London. Engâ€" lish people have always had the habit, but it was not until the last decade that they indulged therein in the sight of all men. Bociety women used to ask each other to come to tea in their bouses, and a few men, a very few men, drank tea in the afternoon at their clubs, writes a London correspondent. Every pastry shop and bakery in ‘London is crowded nowadays at 4.30 with ladies drinking tea and ‘eming cakes ; the restaurants look to the tea hour as one of their great sources of income; there are tea pavilions in all the parks and pubâ€" lic gardens and in all the streets | which are the hives of men who tlive by brain work the tea shops | have sprung up like mushrooms VuSS, . . dno SEF €PF and are driving the bars out istence. i In the clubs the man who drinks a whiskey and soda in the afternoon is the exception; thoe man who drinks tea is the rule. A glancs into some of the temples of the godâ€" dess of tea may prove of interest. It is midafternoon in the palm lounge at the Carlton restaurant. The string band is playing on the for No tea party given in a private house has such luxurious surroundâ€" ings. All that the hostess has to do is to ask in the morning that tables for her guests shall be reserved, a:nd .v:vv};enD;.ix;-y: have left, as dinner time comes near, to pay the bill of halft a crown a head which the head waiter will present to her. Saturday Tea at the Zoo. And now another teacup scene. Time, Saturday afternoon ; place, the Zoo. The fellows of t.,p‘e sociqty CEmer EOEA ECE EVss i take tea in a lordly pavilion, with the camels as their neighbors on one side and the lamas on the. other. The visitors flock to a space which is bounded on one side by the platforms from which the chilâ€" dren climb onto the howdahs of the elephants, and on the other by the cages of the vultures. There is a terrace with an awning over it, and a building containing refreshment rooms, and a shelter, and in these comparatively aristrocratic encloâ€" sures, tea, bread and butter and a free attack on a plate of pastry is offered at 1s. a head. mliix;-th‘e- buffet tea out in the sunâ€" shine, at the zinc table, on the graâ€" vel, is the real zoo tea. The band is playing in the bandstand quite close at handâ€"a real military band in uniformâ€"the big elephants and the two small elephants, with red howday cloths and howdahs like the tops of jaunting cars, move down the wide path in full sight, with loads of small children strapped on, and then return to disembark their passengers ; the camels and dromeâ€" daries also go for short walks with smaller crews of tiny persons, and the llamas, harnessed to miniature carriages, stand hard by waiting to be hired. \ But the tea shop known to the | average man or woman is that run ‘ by one of the big milk companies. | Inside are marble toprped % | long counter with large cakes | glass bells. Waitreases in black Nailed to one of the trees is & large white board on which in black letters is detailed the tariff. Every chair is occupied, and the parties of trippers from the provinces and the Londoners have all brought their children. The cups and s&uc-‘ ers and plates are so t.htk that they defy any attempt to break them ; the bread and butter is thick also, and this is all the better for a z00 appetite, and the children do not grumble that the cake is cut in great wedges. Theo children are the important people at the zoo tea; there are one or two of them at every table. > y K Children at Every Table. of exâ€" dresses, white caps and aprons aro kept busy all the time from 4 to 6 p.m.. Groups of country folk seeâ€" ing London, tourists with red covâ€" ered Bacdeker‘s open on the table before them are to be seen. But the majority of the tea drinkers are Londonefs, â€" journalists, typists, lawyers‘ clerks and others of the black coated classes. Ailments such as constipation,. colic, colds, vomiting, etc., seize children of all ages, and the mother should be on her guard against theee troubles by keeping a box of Baby‘s Own Tablets in the house. If any of these troubles come on suddenly the Tablets will cure them, or if the little one is given an occasional dose of the Tablets he will escape these troubles. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealâ€" ers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co , Brockville, Out. Prince William of Wied, who has been designated to rule Albania. "So your uncle paid your debts that was very kind of him.‘"‘ _ _ _‘"Humph! I don‘t think so. He might have given me the cash and let me pay them.‘"‘ fordst. * _ ‘"What difference â€" would that make 1 o on se _ ‘"It would have reâ€"established credit."‘ Ethelâ€"This craze for gold seems to me very foolish; now a very litâ€" tle would make me perfectly happy. Jackâ€"How much! Ethelâ€"Just enough to reach around my finger. ADOPT KNIGWT MOTOR EXâ€" CLUSIYELY. Perhaps the most striking tribute the Knight Motor has received is contained in the following item of news published in the "Automoâ€" bile"" of August 7th, as follows: London General Omnibus Decision. "According to definite news pubâ€" lished toâ€"day, the big London Genâ€" eral Omnibus Co., which has 2,600 motor omnibuses on the London streets, has been so thoroughly satâ€" isfhied with the service given by the 300 Knightâ€"rigged Daimler ‘buses which have been running for twelve months past that they have decided to replace gradually all the pop.pet' engines in their 2,800 ‘buses with Knight Motors. The ‘buses in quesâ€" { tion are greatly favored by the public on account of their silence and smoothâ€"running qualities, while the great power of acceleration enâ€" ables the driver to pick his way through traffic to very best advanâ€" tage, with the result that the Knight Motor has now been selectâ€" ed as standard for future work. In view of the fact that the daily run of a London ‘bus is 110 miles of very strenuous work, it must be admitâ€" ted that the success achieved here is very notable indeed."‘ . The London General Omnibus Company is one of the most effiâ€" ciently managed commercial car companies in the world. It has spent hundreds of thousands of pounds in developing a type of motor ‘bus most suitable to London traffic, and its adoption of the Knight, not only as a standard for future new ‘buses, but to replace the poppet valve motors in the ‘buses on the streets, is the most striking feature the Knight Engine has ever had. CHILDHEUOD AILMENTS Madge: ‘"‘Don‘t you think a girl should marry an economical man?‘"‘ Dolly : "I suppose so ; but it‘s awâ€" ful being engaged to one."‘ Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Nouralgla. Three clothing stores are in the same block. One morning the midâ€" dle proprietor saw to the right of him a big sign, "Bankrupt Sale,"‘ and to the left, ‘"Closing Out at Cost.‘"‘ Twenty minutes later there appeared over his own door, in large letters: ‘"‘Main Entrance."‘ Could Then Run up More. Not Leap Year Either. woainrts 4 +c3 s th Hurrah, No Mort When it comes to determining the real merit of a medicine, no weight of eviâ€" dence is more convincing than the straightforward statement of some reâ€" liable and wellâ€"known person who has been cured. For this reason we print the verbatim statement of Juan E. Powell, written from his home in Carleton. "I am a strong, powerful man, six feet tall, and weigh nearly two hundred. I have been accustomed all my life to lift great weights, but ohe day I overdid it, and wrenched by back badly. Every tendon ard muscle was sore. To stoop or bend wae agony. I had a whole boitle of Nerviâ€" line rubbed on in one day, and by night I was well again. I know of no liniment lp(x;sessing ozeâ€"half the penctration and | painâ€"subduing properties . of Nerviline. I urge its use strongly a&s an invaluable liniment and houeehold cure : for all minor ailments, such se straive, sprains, swellings, neuralgia, sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, and muscular pain." No better medicine for curisg pain was ever put in a bottle than Nervilineâ€"rub it on and rub it inâ€"that rubs out all aches, pains, and coreness. Large fam ily eize, 50c., trial size 25¢.. all dealere, or The Catarrhozone Co., Buifalo, K.X. and Kingston, Ont. Greeks and Bulgarians have been coming into conflict in the neutral zone and the spot is associated with more famous names than almost any other even in the Balkans. Here Bacchus avenged himself_ on the Thracian King Lycurgus, who had banished him and his worship by driving the king mad, so that he 1 cut off his own legs, thinking they: were vine branches, and was torn to pieces by his subjects, who wantâ€" ed to have Bacchus (and wing) again. Seated on this mountain Orpheus charmed the trees and beasts. On the southwest it looks toward Amphipolis, for which Athâ€" enians â€" and Spartans struggled (Thucydides was banished â€" from Athens for losing it as general) ; and on the northeast Philippi, where the earthquake released Paul and Silas in prison, and Bruâ€" tus and Caesar‘s ghost met again. is Case Proves That The B and Strongest Liniment Ever Made Is Nerviline. is the most beneficent> medical discovery of the %resent century.. The ohymge in our methods of living has deprive the eystem of some of its most neceseary inâ€" gredionga. Our ghrandmm.hers gave . us ULPHUR, but the dootors laughed. _ It did not aseimilate with the bloo¢. The discovery of liquifying E!lU‘LPHU'R‘n‘?]% Some Remarkable Feats Performed By These Animals. Whether animals can actually reason or not is a perpetually deâ€" bated question. Occasionally, as Mr. George Jennison shows in the Manchester Guardian, it is decidedâ€" ly difficult to explain the doings of some animals on the ground of mere instinet. For cleverness, even dogs and eleâ€" phants must give way to monkeys. For the last thirty years ours have pumped their own water or drawn it from a well. Each learns from the others in the cage. Mr. Fitzâ€" simons of Port Elizabeth gives the chacma baboon of South Africa a. very high place. It is sometimes used, he says, ‘"instead af a boy to lead the front span of oxen,‘" and he wants us to believe that it can count. Our own young specimen is certainly very clever; in a day it learned to use a slot machine; and it will not put more than a single penny in an empty machine. It was, I believe, a monkey of this species that was fitted with a pair of spectacles in Breslau Gardens, and perfectly appreciated their use. It wore them with gravity, treated them with respect, and carefully folded them after use. Ordinary bolts are quite useless to imprison orangâ€"utans, and a nail at the head of the bolt is so ineffecâ€" tual that our kecper always fastens the bolts with a screw. The beasts probably draw the bolts and nail by chance at first, but they quickly learn how to repeat the trick. ‘ Indiscriminato feeding is bad for apes, and we keep them bohind double bars, as much out of harm‘s way as possible. But people insist on trying to feed them, and a largo number of nuts fall in front of the \cagcs, apparently out of reach of the animals. One day a chimpanâ€" zee passed his blanket through the bars, threw it on the nuts, and dragged them in. We took away the blankets and gave him a stick, with which he also got the nuts by sweeping them toward the cage. ‘But he could never learn the adâ€" vantage of a crooked handle. fa" LIQUID SULPHUR Herr Kerbert tells me their orangâ€"utan has gore & step further. There are palms in the apeâ€"house, and the orangâ€"utan used a strip of blanket to get palmâ€"leaves. When the palms were put farther away, the ape tore the strip of blanket down the middle,â€"almost but not quite in two,â€"so that it was nurly'! twice as long. With this he could reach the palmâ€"leaves again. ! _ Apes understand the action of a lock. â€" We taught the first Consul‘ to unlock his door, and it was amusâ€" ing to see him choose the right key ard let himself out. But the exâ€" perience taught us never to teach another. Twice he was found at large in the gardens; he must have opened with tools of his own two simple locks, and then unboited a Mr. Hagenbeck tells me that & chimpanzee, about two years ago, Historic Battleground. MONKEY CLEYERNESS. Lame Backs ! ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO door. â€" After the firet escapade, the door was fastened by a bolt far above reach, and he was given & cage companion. Alone, or aided by her, he pulled a small box to the foot of the door ; she got on it, md he, on her shoulders, drew the bolt and freed them both. â€" hoh But our koolokamba marks the height of animal intelligence. _ It has not only discovered what a lock is for, but it actually made a key: that opened it. This it did hangâ€" ing from the bars by the right hand, while with the left it poked a stick into the keyhole, biting off splinters until the end fitted the square aperture. We let the creature porâ€" form the feat a second time, to prove that it was not a matter of chance. Then we screwed the door up British Railways Taking Precauâ€" tion Against Fire. For some time past attention has been given in railway circles in Briâ€" tain to the question of fireâ€"proofing coaches, and such coaches are now a feature of upâ€"toâ€"date practice. At iSwindon experiments were first mado on two or three coaches, af-_ ter which it was decided to extend the principle to practically all new coaoges; consequently the comches now under construction at Swindon have fireproof floors. The base of tho floors is formed of sheets of galvanized corrugated ‘steel, rivetâ€" ed together and secured to the lowâ€" est member of the side framing of the coach. On the top of this are fastened expanded metal sheets, and on the bed thus formed the fireâ€" proof flooring is laid to an average ‘depth of one inch. When dry the material forms a hard fire resisting substance through which it will be impossible for flames to penetrate. As a further precaution against fire ‘the coaches are cased with galvanâ€" ‘lized steel sheets at the sides and )ends, screwed on to the wooden | framing. rIREPROOF RAILWAY CARS. Manslaughter in Second Cutting corns with a razor is dangerâ€" ous and uscless. The only remedy is Putnam‘s Corn Extractor, which removés corns and warte in one day. Bocause painless and safe, use only ‘"Putnam‘s," %¢. per boitle at all dealere. A clergyman was being shaved by a barber who had evidently beâ€" come unnerved by the previous night‘s dissipation. _ Finally, he cut the clergyman‘s chin. The latâ€" ter looked up at the artist reâ€" proachfully and said : i ‘‘Yes, sl consgolingly tender." ‘‘You see, my man, what comes of hard drinking." ‘"‘Yes, sir,‘‘ replied the barber, consolingly. ‘"It makes the skin Too Good to Lose. "Will you be my wife!" asked the star boarder. "Let me see," mused the landâ€" lady. ‘"You‘ve boarded with me four years. You have never grumâ€" bled at the food. You have always paid promptly. No, I can‘t accept you ; you are too good a boarder to be put on the free list !"‘ & WOKDERFSL BiISCOVERY An eminent scientist, the other day, gave his opinion that tre most wonâ€" derful disccvery of recent years was the discovery of Zamâ€"Buk. Just think! As soon as a single thin iayer of Zamâ€"Buk is applied to a wound or a sore, such injury is insured against blood poison! Not one species of microbe has been found that Zamâ€"Buk does not kill ! v’fine? -ag:m As soon as Zamâ€"Buk is applied to & sore, Of & cut, or to skin disease, it stops the gm_ar_tln;. That is why children are such friends of Zamâ€"Buk. They care nothing for the sclence of the thing. All they know is that Zamâ€"Buk stops their pain. Mothers should never forget this. Again. 4s soon as Zamâ€"Buk is apâ€" plied to a wound or to & Aiseased part, the cells beneath the skin‘s surâ€" face are so stimulated that new healthy tissue is quickly formed. This forming of fresh healthy tissue from below is Zamâ€"Buk‘s seeret of healing. The tissue thus formed is worked up to the surface and literally casts off the diseased tissue above it. This is why Zamâ€"Buk cures are permanent. Only the other day Mr. Marsh, of 101 Delorimier Ave., Montreal, called upon the Zamâ€"Buk Co. and told them that for over twentyâ€"five years he bhad been a martyr to eccoma. His hands were at one time so covered with sores that he had to sleep in gloves Four years ago Zamâ€"Buk was introduced to him, and in a few months it cured him. Toâ€"dayâ€"over three years after his cure of a disease he had for twentyâ€"five yearsâ€"he is still cured, and has bad no trace of any return of the eczema! All druggists sell Zamâ€"Buk at 50c. bor, or we will send free trial box if you send this advertisement and a 1¢c. stamp (to pay return postage). Adâ€" dress Zamâ€"RBuk Co., Toronto. Mothorâ€"Now, children, I want you to kiss Miss Lemon goodâ€"bye. FEider Brotherâ€"Come on, Billy, be a sport.. It‘ll be over in a second. It‘s Nature. "‘That cold seems to have strong hold on you."‘ 3 G it P i te T 4 Null » M distcbafecinets Aviti ‘Yes; it has a great deal of hoarse power.‘"‘ Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills A Houscohoeold Roemedy mctl‘ynmeet the need which so often arises in every family for a medicine : open up and l’egunlc the bowels. ot only are they effective in all éases of Ezr:c‘d:‘mn. but they help wreativ in ing up a Cold or La Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. way they relieve or cure Biliousness, Mnfi{k_ Headaches, Rheum» tly in A Sympathizer. :S}j}:!ani'ifafit the system -l‘y‘r:!' the blood. In the same v relieve or cure Biliousness, ullest sense of the words Dr. Indian Root Pills are a man, what comes Degree. Are manifested in millions of Toapots dally THE TEA OF STERLING BLACK en in n e 2t L ts 2 a FREE Sziapic Koilod on U opening for man Ppubl‘.s{ing Com; WANTED Pulleys & Shafting duidrinfirgims I;:d Process. Bimple, met v.;‘rna furnished. Positively no erperience req chomicals and supply you with etotum %o 00 P "URRI _ waal ar TeODth. Suitabl}e for Mils, Manutacturing Plants, Printigy Heuses, Eto. 2 WoodsBplitsPylloys, 12% x 48 in for 3 16/10 4n. d.& 1 Wood SBplit»Pulley, 12% x 48 in. "Jts pelicious nnm _Qualities" tomkeatinm. Aht w 1 Wood Bplt»Pulley for 2 1%‘:1{@-&41 1 Wood:Bplit Riilley, for 8 Wlfifi%flty 1 Wood Split Pollay, for 3 7/1% in. :m emicals ard 1 snicer payd prompay us Phg rrook o ol‘on tg_o goods and the Reld _I $200.00 IN COLD CIVEN AWAY FREE pleasant work bpeereieaiien ies ndien it Fag in t 4 reverence you can muke oU ive the ll’r of m&d Doliars Bollars Je the persom making the th | 45 4 TILCZ T mENEI! want k cBHT 0P YOUs MQ d Sn ho once enciosiag »cent stamp for out lh?fill"lf like a :omrleu list. wikte us at once enclosiag sâ€"cent StamP for WRITB AT ONCB, A dnn.oummoo..n‘ g1 MON sandwich,‘‘ a man grâ€"o-wl_ed, seated'CA!:UEB. TOMORB. BUMTT _ UV on a high stool before the marble | oy, prin br oo nobte iéumene . wrive bar of an oldâ€"{ashioned railway reâ€"| us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical staurant. ‘"Oh, you ain‘t come to | C° Limited, Collingwood, Ont. the l::im yefi,” the attendant anâ€" G AI‘J: %mxm.xsmnv AbI:D Jn.u:- swer ily. er Btones, Kidney trouble, Grav®l rhils 1 easlly The man ate Oll' t Lumbago and kindred ailments positively while longer, then growled again : |cured with the new German â€" remedy, "‘There ain‘t no ham yet.‘"‘ _ ‘"Oh," "'Scng}." price, .lll'i“' An::her new remedy said the attendant, ‘"you‘ve bit “%ranol’: Ant:i-l;h;:'..& Pr::o"l‘l.a;"?;‘m: over it now.‘" druegists or direct. The Banol Manufac / mrine Company of Oanada, Limited. Low Colonist Rates To FADING GBAP! Via Chicago and North Western Rail« way. On sale daily Bept. 25th to Oct. 10th inclusive, from all points in Canada to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Salt Lake City,_ Seattle, Victoria, Vanâ€" couver, Neleon, Roseland, and many other pointe. Throu? tourist «leepers and free reclining chair cars from â€" Chicago. Varimble routes. Liberal stop overs. For full information as to TAtes, routes and literature, write or call on B. H. Bonnett, General Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toronto. Wilson Publishing Co., Toronto. Everybody knows that Methuseâ€" lah was the oldest man, but even the Bible is reticent about the oldâ€" est woman. In Canal Zoneâ€"Steel Rails Used for Telephone Poles. In the telephone system of the Canal Zone steel rails are used as poles on account of ants. It is said that they will cut into a wooden pole and in a very short time leave nothing but the shell. Creosoted crossâ€"arms are used as a protection against these pests, according to & correspondent of The Telephone Review. "They bored through the bellbox into the interior of the desk and had removed practically the entire pine wood of the interior, when the desk suddenly fell to pieces. "‘There ain‘t no ham "‘These busy ants, in their operaâ€" tions, when they feel that their presence might be discovered, conâ€" struct a kind of tunnel of mud exâ€" tending along the floor beams f. the entire length of the buildidk}. and come and go through this conâ€" ccaled passage. "One of the construction difficulâ€" tics encountered has been the taining of the pole line t ¢ some of the swampy regions. L1 meaaaage e e 00000000AE >UN'I‘,B{Y WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR BSale in good pnurio town. Excellent P CECU C O Caretes Wileam several instances the poles of rail, road iron have gradually sunk into the ground until it became necekâ€" sary to splice on an additional lt. and in some places three such #8¢â€" tions of rail have been sink down in the ewamp twebty or thirty feet above the surface.‘"‘ The ine" LEasier 10 USC Modern Shine! _ pefie) 7or the Shoes Minard‘s Linimont Cures Burns, Minard‘s Linimtont for snle everywhere. LPAPE CPAKE prizes will have NEWSsPAPER FOR SALE. AxTS BECOME A PEST. Colonist Rates to '!th Coast. §UTE PTTOC0C Aifelee Wile man oronercy. Write Wilson Company, Toronto. s EO PMI AEVICALUILSL who en e out the )ut W FIiTENM o GREEN_Sealed Packets us esnt _ % QAI.ADA." â€"More Workars SALE RCYREUH RREOCA 12% x 28 in 10% x 36 in. in this here 31 COLLECE STREET, H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Coiborne H. W. DAWSON, MEN WANTED MEN WANTED b‘ mVEDMOL PRRMICY CCR NC Railway _ trackage. in _ Toroate. rampton and other towns and olties. Lumbago and kindred ai‘menis PM _ cured with the new German remedy, "Banol," price $1.50. Another new remedy for Diabetesâ€"Mellitus, and sure Cure. io "Banol‘s Antiâ€"Diabetes." Price $2.00 from druegists or direct. The Sanol Manufacâ€" t,urinf Company of Canada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man. m aAOTORY 81TES8, WITH oOs WITEHOUTR FREE! Easier to Use RUIT, STOCK, GBAIN AND DaiX Â¥ Farmse in all sections otf Ontario ESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES LN Brampton and a dozen other towns. m o ANCER, â€" TUMORS. . LUMPS, !l'l"\,;;, â€" C C n alllt lt ferent «napa MALE HELP WANTED FARM3 FOR SALL. AILROAD STAMP3 AND CONS EIONES, KIDNEY AND BLADâ€" Btones, Kidney trouble, Gravel, and kindred ailments positively ith the new German remedy, price $1.50. Another new ramod‘y MiSCELLANEOUA College, 219 Queen 8t BE A BARBER I -rm:a ahaanie. . thoroughily < WORTH Colborne St., Tororts mAUC 1 GIVE us a & BOYS! §X1.% chout time and get your eboios wWnoop HER UP, -!.-T- 'ple” e “‘.l”fll Bocbs, P.Q. & & I Decima rose and wen A 'e‘:t seemed «=udder r r heart. The en little garden, but y and cold. "Me may come nack "Re may," said Mr. Br "but MHobson doe Why, the Hall is few servanie reta u-bd to find th Africa, after a Decima drew a "I hope he wil ::: gone," che « voie steady woice shook. and "Well, J though: he eaid. "Of cou Ing me, Miss Do me ae Lord Gaun "He has not d "Me has left you the good and nol â€"youâ€"have no r ®tay here, if he . Mqld he not g« Bright sighed a "It‘s like you + ‘ou'n piught. â€" lis feel anxious an wee, I‘m fond of expoot you to s back to the Ha it up. This wil und the neight #plendid euccess well! Good moi He got his ha _Me got his of the room Decima etood by the windo straight before her. All the reemed to have gone out of h« remembered that he had «aid last nl’ht remembered the t« voice. 1t was significant enou was evident that he had res uho a0fâ€"what hnd Ahnppencd #o Pâ€" t happen learned bad news, or wee he t place, and ofâ€"all his friende? No answer was fortheomi back to the table, but she more. She wandered about if whe were in a dream, an mnf on her outâ€"do< the village. 3 Lord Gaunt‘s dep rtand and lieten : atione echoed @hr clond seemed to and darkened all She returned «lowly and ra Woodbines,. As che paesed t bail, the door leading to the wan fl"' and she heard her Mr. Mershon talking _ Rhe had not forgotten his j Decima went her . a dull aching at he more gates, sho «t and looked down t were taking down : had hbeen «tretched rome groome® were t.h.f‘moq* were ulk; ~oa t & tallcing offir‘ G the loss it would i Mr. Br fld to ing#. w en, her sullm but Lor 4t was 1i elgseâ€" d a wll thoughts of Mr. mind; but now the «« conservatory prose b drew back with a | breath. Buddenly «l utter an exclamatiorn groun. She pushed entered . r doesn‘t know, who does" . vold them in the city "What is the matter?" ack .g anything gone wroug * *\ QII.TE; I‘m afraid he wiid . thing the inven nT zunc to work out eomer "It dows; it must!~ broke in 'flfly. "I will explaie." "I‘m afraid it isn‘t wuch : ing to me," eaid Mershon. * «gon‘t . undepstand -nythmf imnvention, the machine; all ; was to Boat the company ; m have done that rght enough been for t)is hitch. + ns havds Gnt® ghip A t T head bout, his hair /: Mershon was, as usu bench; there was a mouth, aleo as uenal, ing Mr. Deane with ; curious expreerion Decima went straigh "Did you eall, fath _ _ "Just «0," said Merch whooting another glance Mr. Deane .n.:rpod in lue q fro, and regarded her wit troubled stare; then be pw« through bis hair and «\)fed ‘Ko, no; I didu‘t ceall!" 1 engaged on business with Gu'",d)eoxmu,” t-( turned to Merehor "Wh:.-zs this businese?" . anded. "What is 1 #oP" extinguished L ~ bing it on the beach, end & ”T fixed on the operation "I thought you knew," i this Electric Storage Compai "I do not know," said De t it? Tell me glanced ot her / ® t;t‘thto invention of y« he . "Am wmllf clover .n;t to be a lot of money thought there was. You « derstand this kind of th.og I relied upon Mr. Deane me P yP) "If 1 do not knew, who Mr. Deane, throwing on pitiful vanity. â€" _ _ _ ing to me,." eaid Mershon. gon‘t . undenstand -nythu* imvention, the machine; al was to Boat the company ; . have done that mght enough been for t)is hiich. "Is it some mistuke?" s« "Can d1 wot be put right* anxlouely . from Mr ‘Lfll father. C "I bhope «0; upon my soul, ‘ vey| ied Mershon. "I‘ve «un ney in the affair. But tha Ewrm on, quiokly 1t »nour i I lose it, everr penuy of afraid vour fatbere gone in ##% M I lose it, every ypenuy «» afraid your fathers gone in hewvily ." Mr. ‘Nno groaned 101 have spvested a gireat I'l-.’- very probable that e op l““ Guaranteed "ONE 1 All Kingds of Clo HONEST TE THE BEST PC CHAPTER XX. â€"(Continu ght was Johnsonâ€"Richardson Co. 1 4 im, Stmple, No Chance of Mis 1 Send for Free Color Card # Her 1 her at th but Lord « t _a fow words. rd Gaunt‘s depi ild mean io thet «lowly and hea ire rig d her Or, aA S h B W in 8 €4 g breath. : happy h & H h d hing« and fr prew M > amile v grow think osed And af Gaunt ghed ne DY to th rhed i fe d x pc tha ul

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