West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Nov 1913, p. 6

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J%€ wX Â¥ 8 tb 1 Claidens Those Who Regain Few Hâ€"alth and Strangth Strange Rules Prevail in Some Seotch Houses, In an Edinburgh hotel the bar counâ€" ter contains a slot, into which each visitor who is heard to swear must drop a penny, and a notice to that effect is displayed. These pennies are at intervals collected and sent to aid the funds of one of the local instituâ€" tions, says London Titâ€"Bits. A curious custom prevails at an} hotel in Dumfries. In one of the pubâ€" lic rooms there is an armchair which' was often occupied by Robert Burns, the Scottish national poet. Any Onei who enters the room and seats himâ€" self in this chair is expected to "stand | treat" to all present, when the mem-l ory of the bard is drunk. When the glow of health comes back to sallow cheeks; when lanâ€" guid weakness gives place to vigor ; when you notice some pale, exâ€" hausted invalid restored to active healthâ€"enquire. More than likely you will find the cure to have been yet another of the thousands alâ€" ready wrought by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Headache and neuralâ€" gia, S8t. Vitus dance and twitchâ€" ing of the limbs, indigescion and rheumatism, eczema and disfigurâ€" ing eruptions, and the ailments of growing girls and women all disâ€" appear when the veins are filled with the new, rich blood Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills actually make. Here is one instance among thousâ€" ands; Mr. F. Ashford, Haileybury, Ont., says : ‘‘Some years ago I comâ€" pleted a lengthy term of service in India, the last three years being spent in the beautiful but treacherâ€" ous Poshawar Valley. Ague and dengue fever were rife, and alâ€" though I was fortunate enough to escape a severe attack of either, on my return home it soon became apparent that the enervating cliâ€" matic ~conditions had left their ravages on my constitution. In short the reaction had set in, and inexhorable nature was exacting a ory ol NS Dard is GPuunR, At Aberdeen, in a temperance hotel, each visitor, on signing his name in the hotel book, is desired also to adâ€" hibit his signature to a card testifying that he is a teetotaller and will not bring any intoxicants into the hotel. In a Glasgow hotel it is the custom weekly, on Sundays, to go round the various rooms and take a subscripâ€" tion on behalf of one of the city charâ€" Itles. In another Glasgow hotel the proprietor, religiously inclined, holds Alvine service each Sunday at noon.! to which all the boarders are invited. At several of the large hotels in the north of Scotland the guests are beâ€" guiled from their slumbers each day by the playing of the bagpipes, while in an hotel in Inverness a posthorn is employed for this same purpose. eyes, insomnia, irritability, a genâ€" eral anaemic condition and an inâ€" definable nervousness. Life had lost its zest, work became imposâ€" sible and companionship intolerâ€" able. It really seemed that I was swiftly passing to that stage where nervousness ends and insanity beâ€" gins, when by chance I read an advertisement of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. I confess I was skeptiâ€" sal of them doing what doctors had failed to do, but concluded that was now as fit and healthy as any man and am grateful that the lucky perusal of an advertisement brought to my notice the wonderful curative properties of Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills." Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. tal ol them doing what doctors nad failed to do, but concluded that the cost was small, and perhaps, the chance in their favor, and so decided to try them. To my joy there was soon an improvement, and a continuance of the treatâ€" ment effected a complete cure. 1 severe toll from years of strenuous labor. My first warning of the imâ€" pending breakdown were severe pains in the back of the head and you kept your mouth shut you‘d make less noise. Husband (half awake)â€"So‘d you. Those Wives. CGriggsâ€"My wife has a habit of spending money before she gets it. Briggsâ€"Mine is worse; she spends it before I get is myself. Mrs. GGiabbleigh (nudging her husâ€" band who is snoring)â€"William, if LIQUID SULPHUR cleanses the blood Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. CURIOUS HOTEL CV!sTOMS. LIFE‘S SUNSHINE \ _ "Oh bother the speed limit. Neâ€" \ver mind the regulations. I am the | Attorneyâ€"General,‘"‘ thundered Mr. |Bowser. who ns o oC oys Cns t ce Cc o e P n e bor about three miles from the borâ€" der of Victoria, Mr. Bowser, who ' To the uninitiated, the engines of any steamer are noisy, tiresome, beâ€" | wildering. And yet every component, | every note of that great harmony, has | a special meaning for the engineer; | moreover, he can detect the smallest | dissonance at once. So finely attuned | to the music does the ear become, deâ€" | clares the author of "Letters from an | Ocean Tramp," that the dropping of ‘a hammer in the stokeâ€"hole, the ratâ€" ltling of a chain on deck, the rocking 'of a barrel in the stores makes the | engineer jump. o rridint s function at Esquimalt, the historic naval base on the pretty little harâ€" was to attend an important meetâ€" ing in Vancouver the same evening, hastened into a taxicab and inâ€" structed the chauffeur to drive him to the C.P.R. wharf in Victoria Harbor. ‘"‘There is just time to catch the steamer if you hurry,"‘ said the Atâ€" torneyvâ€"General. A little later Mr. Bowser again consulted his watch. "There aro just three minutes left,"" he shouted, able to contain himself no longer. *"Why don‘t you hurry }" ‘‘Yes, sir,"‘ the chauffeur replied, but he neglected to do anything to accolerato the speed of the taxi. | ""*Yes, sit.‘" Half way to the wharf Mr. Bow ser looked at his watch. "I said I wanted to catch the steamer to Vancouver," said Mr. Bowser incisively. "I can‘t help that, sin; T know the law,‘"" replied the chauffeur, glancing at a blue uniform as he passed a corner and recalling a finc for speeding a few days before. _ "I must not drive any faster," said the chauffeur. "I am making ten miles an hour, and that is the speed limit in Victoria.‘" _ When the chauffeur deposited his fare at the wharf, the steamer was two â€"cableâ€"lengths out. _ Thus it came to pass that the speed reguâ€" lations of Victoria were still intact, but Mr. Bowser missed an imporâ€" tant political meeting in Vancouâ€" Columbia has enforced the law half so majestically as he. It is not for nothing that his fellows in the Legislature have named him Napoâ€" How Mr. Bowser Was ‘"Hoist By His Own Petard." Hon. W. J. Bowser is Attorneyâ€" CGeneral of British Columbia, and if any man in the Province is not aware of the fact it must be because his habitation is far up in the Rockâ€" ies where the telegraph wires do not go. Assuredly it is not Mr. Bowser‘s fault. No other Attorneyâ€" CGenceral in the history of British But there is one man in Victoria, a chauffeur, who occasionally unâ€" folds a tale of a collision between Mr. Bowser and the law. VC Baby‘s Own Tablets aro the best medicine a mother can give her little ones. They are absolutely safe, being guaranteed by a govâ€" ernment analyst to contain neither opiates, narcotics or other harmâ€" ful drugs. They are good for all children from the newborn babe to the growing child. They cure conâ€" stipation, indigestion, expel worms, break up colds and make teething easy. In fact they are a cure for all the minor ills of little ones and a box should always be kept in the When the Engine Stops There Goes Out All Life. It is the same with the eye. It is even the same with the hand. We can tell in an instant if a bearing has warmed ever so slightly beyond its legitimate temperature. And so it is difficult to know "which is the potter and which is the pot." The man and the machine are inextricably associatâ€" ed, and their reactions, one upon the other, are infinite. Jt is this extrT ordinary intimacy, this ceaseless vigllâ€" ance and proximity, that gives the marine engineer such an advantage over all other men, with whom enâ€" durance and resource must accompany responsibility. I remember arguing once with a matterâ€"ofâ€"fact apprentice in the shop concerning the suburbs as suitable for such as he. He was not convinced. "There!" he said, slapping the shelf above his bench. "That‘s where I‘d like ter sleep. All yer gotter do at house as a safeguard against sudâ€" den attacks of stomach or bowel troubles. Mrs. J. P. Richard, St. Norbert, N.B., says : "I have found Baby‘s Own Tablets all that is claimed for them. My baby sufferâ€" ed from his stomach and bowels and the Tablets certainly did him good.‘"" They are sold by all medi. cine dealers or by mail at 25¢ a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine (Co., Brockville, Ont. B.C.‘s ATTORNEYâ€"GENERAL. Concluding his part of a public THE SPIRIT OF THE SHIP. BABY‘S OWN TABLETS Hon. W. J. Bowser, That Played â€" Out Feeling Was Quickly â€" Remedied â€" and Health Restored. Story of a Merchant Who Almost Lost His Business and His Health ‘Through Neglecting Early §ympâ€" toms of Disease. "My life for years has been of seâ€" dentary â€" character," writes T. B Titchfield, head of a well known firm in Buckingham, "Nina hours every day I spent at ofiice work and took exercise only on Sunday, 1 disreâ€" garded the symptoms of illâ€"health, which were all too apparent to my family, I grew thin, then pale, and before long I was jaundicodâ€"eyes and skin were yellow, my strength and nerve energy were lowered, and Weary Tiredness Changed to Vigor ’ The propeller is our religlon. When it drops away, as it somet!imes does, there goes out from that ship all life, all motion. Even as the mass of metal plunges downward, and as the frenzied engineer rushes through blinding steam and water to stop the maddened engines in their panic rush, the spirit of the vessel goos out of her in a great sigh. With dampened ashâ€"pits her fires blacken and go out, the idle steeringâ€"engine clanks and rattles as the useless rudder tugs at her chains, and the crew tell in whispers how it happoned just like that on the Gypsy Queen, out of Sunderland, or the Gerâ€" ald Doir. out of Antwerp. All of which is not to be learned in the study at home. I was quite unfitted for business. In the morning a lightness in the head, particularly when I bent over, made me very worried about my health, Most of the laxative medicines I found weakening, and knowing that I had to be at business every day I neglected myself rather than risk furâ€" ther weakness. Of course I grew worse, but by a happy chance I began to use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. I was forcibly struck by the fact that they neither caused griping nor nausea, and it seemed incredible that pills could tone, cleanse and regulate the system without causing any unpleasâ€" ant after effects. _ Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills acted with me just as gentle as natureâ€"they gave new life to my liver, strengthened my stomach, and won me back to perfect good health. My skin is clear, dizziness has disapâ€" peared, and my appetite, strength, spirits are perfect." Refuse anything offered you inâ€" stead of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, which are sure to cure. Sold in 25¢. boxes, five for $1.00, at all druggists and storekeepers, or postpaid from t:e Catarrhozone Co., Baffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. six o‘clock is roll off and turn to." Well, that is just what he would get at sea. In most steamers the engi neer walks out of the messâ€"room, bathâ€" room or berth, into an alleyway on either side of the engine platform. The heat of the engines becomes part of his environment. He sleeps with it pulsing in his ears, so that if she slows or stops he opens his eyes. It is a point of honor among us to know every kink and crotchet of dayâ€" today working. If a joint starts "blowing" ever so little away up in some obscure corner of our little kingâ€" dom, we know of it within an hour or two. One would think we were a mothers‘ meeting discussing our baâ€" bies, to hear the grave tittleâ€"tattle concerning the inevitable weakness of engines that passes over the messâ€" room table. A young fellow who drank much more than was good for him was adâ€" vised by his friends to sign the pledge, but he refused. "But," protested his friends, "your physiâ€" cian says that if you keep on drinkâ€" ing you will surely go blind. Now, the question is simply this, Do you prefer being cured of the drink habit and retaining your sight, or do you profer to keep on drinking and go blind?" The young man paced the floor for some time, and was in a brown study, Finally he turned to his friends and, with a resigned expression of countenâ€" ance, replied:â€"‘"Well, I‘ve seen whout everything." t ‘"‘Daddy," said a boy to his father, "I‘ve got a pencil which will write green, purple, crimson, or any color you like.‘‘ "Not the same pencil, my son.‘"‘ ‘‘You dareâ€" n‘t bet me ten cents it won‘t, dadâ€" dy." "I‘ll give you ten cents if it will," seaid the old man. The youngster dived into his pocket, produced the stump of a common lead pencil, and wrote on a piece of paper the words ‘""magenta, green, â€" crimson, â€" purple,"‘ _ &ec. "There, daddy, say it won‘t write any color you like now. Fork out that ten cents."‘ ‘‘What‘s the trouble now ?" Mrs. Newwedâ€"‘"When I told John that I would so much like if I had a moâ€" tor, he said that I must content myself with the splendid carriage that nature his given me." Mrs. Newwedâ€"‘"Men are. too mean for anything ?"‘ Her Friendâ€" ‘"Don‘t go near that old fellow in the pasture, sonny,‘‘ the farmer warned the freshâ€"air child. "He‘s terribly fierce." "I tried him out a‘ready,""‘ the lad replied. _ "He ain‘t half as fierce as an automobile in the city. Got any bears or lions around here ?"‘ Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, &c. John‘s Compliment, A Cool Reply. A Smart Boy. IS8SUE 4â€"‘13. Mistress _ (engaging â€" servant)â€" "Why did you leave your last place ?" Bervantâ€"*"I couldn‘t put up with the way one of the young ladies used to copy me, mum.‘""‘ Misâ€" tressâ€"‘"What do you meant‘‘ Berâ€" vantâ€"‘‘Why, I had a private solâ€" dier for a sweetheart, and what must she do but go and get an ofâ€" ficer for hers !" \ ‘"‘You knew old Dempster, who was said to be so well off?1 As you know, he died the other day, and now the story goes that his one and only possession was an old grandfather‘s clock."" ‘"Ah, well, there‘s one good thing about that. The trustees won‘t have much difâ€" fhiculty in winding up his estate.‘" "Well, did he pay you?" asked the wife of a dentist who had been to collect a bill for a full set of false teeth that he had made for a man almost a year before. ‘"Pay me!"‘ growled the dentist. "Not only did he refuse to pay me, but he actually had the effrontery to gnash at me â€"with my teeth."‘ Cramps at Night Require Prompt Remedy For more than a generation Cuticura Soap and Ointment have afforded the most ecoâ€" nomical treatment for affections of the skin and scalp that torture, itch, burn, scale and destroy sloop. A singloset is ofton sufficient. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oirtment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. For a hberal free sample of each, with 32â€"p. book, sond postâ€"card to Potter Drug & Chem. Oorp., Dept. D, Boston, U. 8. A. "I kept using ointments, â€"â€"â€"â€", â€"â€"â€" Ointment, but was not cured. Sometimes the remedies would help a little but L wasnot free from it altogether. I was that way for nine years trying everything. I heard of Cuticura Soap and Olntm“z and sent for them and before I had them half a dozen times I noticed an improvement. By washing with the Cuticura Soap and apâ€" plying the Cuticura Ointment frequently I was cured in three months." (Signed) Miss Florence E. Sanderson, May 20, 1913. Deadly crampsâ€"the symptoms are not to be mistaken. Suddenly and without warning the patient experienâ€" ces such agony in the stomach as to contort the countenance and cause him to cry aloud for help. Then it is that the wonderful power of Nerviline can make itself feltâ€"it cures so quickly. Ns *3 Carman, Manitoba.â€""A breaking out between my fingers was the first troublé. It was very itchy and spread to my finger tips affecting the nails, It first ‘4@ & appeared in watery blisters LZ Wh and they were so intensely + i': itchy I scratched them and T YJ let the water out making sores, ‘They would swell up, itch and burn and finally N C the nails would loosen and '\ & come off. I spent many sleepless nights. I did not dare to put my hands in water except to wash thom, "Last summer I was stricken with a frightful attack of cramps. I feared the pain in my stomach would kill me. "My eyes bulged out and the veins in my forehead stood out like whipâ€" cords. "My cries attracted a neighbor, who came to my assistance, and in a moâ€" ment or two handed me half a teaâ€" spoonful of Nerviline in some sweetâ€" ened water. "It seemed as if an angel had charmâ€" ed away the pain. In ten seconds I was well. Nerviline has a wonderful name in this locality, and is considâ€" ered best for cramps, diarrhoea, flatuâ€" lence, stomach and bowel disorders. I urge all my friends to use Nerviline. "MANLEY M. LEGARDE, "Williamsburg." No home is safe or can afford to miss the manifold advantages of hayâ€" ing Nerviline on hand in case of acciâ€" dent or emergent sickness. Large family size bottles:â€"of Nerviline, 50c.; trial size, 25c., all dealers, or The Caâ€" tarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. Agonizing Pain Prevented by Keepâ€" ing Nerviline Handy On the Shoelf. Between Fingers, Spread to Tips. Would Swell Up, Itch and Burn. Did Not Dare Put Hands in Water, Cuticura Soap and Cutiâ€" cura Ointment Cured. Brownâ€"‘"What‘s the mafter, old man? You look worried.‘" Blackâ€" NATERY: BLISTERS INTENSELY HOHNY "I have cause to. Hired a man to trace _ my â€" pedigree.‘"‘ _ Brownâ€" ‘‘Woll, what‘s the matter? Hasn‘t he been successful?" Blackâ€"*‘"Sucâ€" cessful, I should think so! I‘m payâ€" ing him hush money."‘ Carlyle once told of a lawsuit pending in Scotland affecting the succession to .a great estate of which he had known something. The case depended upon a family secret known only to one old serâ€" vant, who refused to reveal it. A kirk minister was sent to tell her that she must speak on peril of her soul. ‘"Peril of my soul!‘"‘ she said. "And would ye put the honor of an auld Scottish family in competition with the soul of a poor creature like me?" Fatherâ€"‘"I should like to know the intentions of that young man who calls on you so often.‘‘ Daughâ€" terâ€"‘"His intentions don‘t matter, dad. I know what mine are.‘" Doctorâ€"‘""You must be careful, man. The influenza is not so very dangerous, but it may have exâ€" tremely unpleasant consequences.‘"‘ Patientâ€"*"I noticed that when I got your bill the.other day.‘"‘ Blood troubles yield to LIQUID SULPHUR A Case in Point Hlustrated. Why She Left Mer Place. Romance and Reality. His Opportunity. A Good Thing. TORONTO Tells His Experience Of & Night With Mosquitoes. Richard Brinsley Sheridan said that hac the fleas of a certain bed on which he once slept been unaniâ€" mous, they could easily have pushâ€" ed him out. Arthur T. Johnson, who writes of a camping trip in his book, ‘"California, An Englishâ€" man‘s Impressions,‘‘ says that had ; Hd" 6 Jusl: use uo v Je REBBNNC M AERRHE tCt CC EST t the mosquitoes that attacked him one night been unanimous in their attentions, he thinks he must have perished. Mr. Johnson qontinu:a: yel IBIPOU. EDT SCME D All that night did I lie awake, the suffering prey of legions of thesg pernicious pests. ‘"‘Dopes‘‘ I had long ago given up as entirely impoâ€" tent to deal with the foe; the stronger the smell, the better they appeared to like it. With yards of cheeseâ€"cloth I now endeavored to parry their assaults, only to find the old truth verified, that one mosâ€" quito on the wrong side of the net is more venomous than a hundred when there is no net at all. I smoked until I could smoke no longer. I remembered the midges of Lakeport, how they so obligingly committed suicide by casting themâ€" selves into the flames, and lit a fire in the vain hope that the mosquiâ€" toes might be equally accommodatâ€" ing. But the taste of imported blood was far too good for them to dream of doing anything half so foolish. â€" The fire only attracted more. For every one I slew, a hunâ€" dred arose to avenge its death. My hards and arms tingled to the elâ€" bows, my neck and face were swolâ€" len and aflame. I buried myself in my blankets, but that only made the venom of the demons still more irritating; besides, it was so hot and sultry that the lightest coverâ€" ing was as much as I could bear. Sounds of the distress of others came to me; and there was a satisâ€" faction, however feeble, in feeling thai I was not suffering in solitude. Noi before the brief twilight of dawn had announced the sun did the pests depart. _ j j At the next campingâ€"place there weroe no mosquitoes to speak of. Still, I was not permitted to have the restful night I desired, for no sooner had I lain down than I was serenaded by a playful kitten. Whether it was the mere desire for company that brought her out of the barley barn to me, or whether she was attracted by my hairy blanâ€" ket, I know not. But she persisted in dancing about on my recumbent body, and catching _ imaginary moths with fore paws, like a jugâ€" gler with his balls I put her to flight; but she only enjoyed the fun, and returned to her capers as soon as I had lain down. Bhe toyed with my hair and clawed at my blanket. While the buggy whip was in my hand she kept a safe disâ€" tance, only to return with fresh vigo: just as I was passing off to sleep. Ultimately, a more desperâ€" ate determination to get rid of the pest possessed me. When a very small boy I once, with the best inâ€" tentions in the world, attempted to wash a cat under the scullery tap. That cat fled and never returned. The memory of the episode stirred me to make a final effort to put this ‘one to flight with a bucket of cold water. But I could not catch her. She had the lightâ€"hearted, _ wanton spirit of a butterfly, the slipperiâ€" ness of an eel. At length, however, after a considerable time spent in stalking, I managed to give her a fairly euccessful douche. But beâ€" fore I had got comfortably settled again, she was back, and, perched on my shoulder, actually began to lick herself with her tongue. I was beaten. She had come as near to my ear as she well could, to do her toilet: and as the night grew coldâ€" er, I dragged some folds of my tent over my head, and finally went to sleep to the monotonous tune of that scraping, insistent tongue. ADVENTURES OF A SLEEPER. ‘"‘What‘s the baby erying for now ?‘ asked the head of the house from the depth of his paper. ‘"He wants his own way,‘""‘ answered the mother. ‘"Well, if it‘s his," savul the absentâ€"minded man, ‘"why don‘t vyou let him have it ?" Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Auow, Norway, Me. Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N.8. Rev. B. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N.8. Pierre Landers, eonr., Pokemouche, N.B. Thomas Wasson, Sheffield, N.B. ‘"‘She told me to kiss her on either cheek." "And youâ€"â€"" "I hesiâ€" tated a long time between them." Try Murine Eye Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Egalids. Doesn‘t Smart â€"â€"Soothes Efie ain. _ Druggists Sell Murine l;J;ye emedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25¢c, §0c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An Eye Tonic Good for All Eyes that Need Care Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicage ‘"Do you assimilate your food, aunty 1‘ ‘‘No, I don‘t sah, I buys it open and honest, sah." Kittyâ€"They say,; you know, that love makes the world go round. Mariecâ€"Maybe ; but it cannot make the eligible young man go round. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Carget in Cows Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. We believe MINARD‘S LINIMENT is the LIQUID SULPHUR cures ECZEMA. Assimilation. His Own. Lingered. Gladstone, the. great English statesman, always took a keen inâ€" terest in.everything that related to rural life. The ©Tagliche Rundsâ€" chau tells of one of the earliest manifestations of that interest. "‘That is a very fine, strong aniâ€" mal, Master William,‘"‘ said the owner of the estate, ‘"And he‘s only two years old." P 2 P as a s s ane Very buey with the good work, but no more efficient than the old reliable Putâ€" nam‘s Corn Extractor, which cures corne and warts in one day. Fifty years use proves the merit of Putnam‘s. Use no other, 2. at all dealers. When still a very small boy, \Gladstone was visiting with his parents at a country estate, The owner of the estate showed the boy the farmâ€"buildings and pastures, The young Gladstone took a great interest in everything, â€"but particularly in a large black bull. "Why, how can you tell his age " asked the boy. "By his horns." ‘"By his horns?" the lad repeatâ€" ed, in an incredulous voice, He continued to stare thoughtfully at the bull; then suddenly his face brightened. "Oh, now I underâ€" stand,"‘ he said. *‘Two hornsâ€"two years."‘ ‘‘There is no gout in Sir Percy‘s family, is there!?‘"‘ . "Not now; there was formerly. It was introâ€" duced into the family by Sir Roland Highliver, but they have been #o miserably poor for the last two hundreds years that they couldn‘t keep it up."‘ HIGHEIT AWARDâ€"8T. LOUIS, T no Most n;jiclous Lord‘s Day Alliance Active: "CALADA" MRS. A. SAICH, of Cannington Manor, Sask., Writes:â€"‘"My brother sufâ€" fered severely from eczema. ‘The sores were very extenâ€" sive, and burned like coals into his flesh. Zamâ€"Buk took out all the fire, and quickly gave him ease. Within three weeks of commencing with Zamâ€"Buk treatment, every sore had been cured." ‘This is but one of the many letters we are constantly receiving from people who have groved the healing powers of Zamâ€"Buk. For eczema, piles, sores, burns, cuts and all skin troubles there is nothing like this wonderful balm. No skin disease should be conâ€" sidered incurable until Zamâ€"Buk has been tried. All Druggists, 50c. per Box. Refuse Substitutes. Bine A Winner at theRi JLACK NP A Paste "fl!t F. F. Dauey Q on No Waste HAMILTON, CaANADA Gives a Quick, Brilliant Polish T hat Lasts Perfectly Simple. CEYLON TEAâ€"BECAUSE OF ITS UNVARYING GOOD QUALITY . .. & OF ALL TEAS IS |POLISH No Turpentine Sold only in Lead Packeis. cial Boarder (on leaving)â€"*"Madam, you are one of the most honest per sons I ever met.‘"‘ Landladyâ€""I‘m glad to hear you say that, sir.‘ Boarderâ€"‘‘Yes, your honesty is even apparent on the very front of your establishment. _ Your â€" sign says ‘Boarders taken in.‘" ‘VAN-I'ED.â€"â€"PEuIIA!lENT MEN _ OR Women locally. Bahlr£ and Comâ€" mission. Make Five to Ten Dollars day, ;fare time m‘:ud s-‘lelm free. J,. L ichols Co., Publishers, Toronto, Canada Skin diseases yleld to LIQUID SULPHUR Cog!fl‘nr WEEKLY NEWSPAPER POR in good Ontario town. Excellent oPpenlng for man of energy. Write Wilson ubliching Company, Toronto. C TAmP COLLECTORRâ€"HUNDRED pir k) ferent Foreign Btamps. . Oatalogn» Album, only Beven Cents. Marke Stamp F‘ ACTORY 8ITE®, WITBH o wiTtnoUr Railway _ trackage, . in â€" Toronto, Nrampton and other town« and eities CA!CEI. TUMORS, LUMPS, ET internal and external, cured w out pain by our home treatment Wr ug before too late. Dr. Bellman Medi« On.. Limited, Collingwood, Ont NJ der Stones, Kidney trouble, Gravel, Lumbago and kindred ailments positively cured with the new German remedy, "Banol," price $1.50. Another new remody for Digbetesâ€"Mellitue, and sure cure, is "Banol‘s Antiâ€"Diabetes." Price $2.00 from druggists or direct. The Banol Manuiac mlnfpsompny of â€" Canada, . Limited, Winn , Man. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne $treet, Toronto. Camrnpne. Toronto H. W. DAWEON, Colborne $t., Torort F\)I BSALEâ€"&ILVER PATCHED FOXEsS also dark reds. Wieh to buy 100 5»& t of Mink for breedine purposes, Grahan Bros.. R. R. No. 1, Strathroy, Ont R 1 ELECTRIC DYHNAMC 30 K.W., 110 VOLTS, D4., $. FRANK WILSON & SONS, At a Very Reasonable Figure for Immediate Sale. N LLIOPT‘F BUESINESS _ COLLEGK®, To. 4 ronto. Oanada‘s Popular Commer x ALL STONES, KIDNEY AND BLaD We are the oldest RAW FUR HOUSE as well as the urgon collectors of CANADIAN RAW FW!R8 in Canada That means Iurgo.’ experience, larger markets and a LARCER PRICE to you. Ship direct to us. Returns made same ______ C@ay furs are received. Shipments held separate on request Fall price list now rsady. Write for it HIRAM JOMNSON LIMITED, 494 St. Paul St. Mail Dept. "C Why we pay more for your EAIDENTIAL PROPERTIES INX Brampton and a dozen other towns 73 Adelaide St. West, TORONTO Bchool. Magmificent Catalogue free RAW FURS P NEWSPAPER FOR SALE FOR SALE FARMS FOR SALB STAMPS aAND CON® ACENTS WANTED 675 R. P. M. MISCELLANEOU & OR GENERATOR EDUCATION. Lasier to Use Better for the Shoes Biy all Grocers, Montreal t al e rest of h blfi ney iss Smithe: ‘r of the sea erence to 1 t an Q Bey General nwea lt ) t the tru reprod V BEEF TRUST IX AnsTRA «d@eoided to : t of the l« rld. â€" Duri 150 deaths, usand, or e saddenin t _ dealing births, shows B ‘flngmg the _ thousand birt } 'NVIIIOO cont â€" of the illegitir ints below ity for Or appar ies and to rd of 2: le to rep ile the : "PERRIMN GLOVE es, had 32 rably beti number ths in 19 io bringin rriages, or thousand po; A despatch / -h.“ BB VE : # this fact pate continu« no report :« eral shows a the lowest s are the Standard of t| * PR s 50,870, w The province tess in the r« ‘e. and now | A « as never | Smithers a ROP IN Commonvwealth province ower to Figi Decrease In C of th AS d k W n h Styfi F it] alke Indis WO Du Hin 1j fo M

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