West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 Apr 1914, p. 6

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q'rPaye your disco-anon In the spring. l The cause-winter has left its mark on you. These troubles are} signs that your blood in poor and Utter). that your nerves are ey haustml. You must. renew and ed- rich your blood at once turd restore tone to your tired nerves, or thou may be a complete breakdown. Tb most p'merful remedy for these npring ailments in men, women and children is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, became these Pills cleans. bad blood and strengthen weak nerves. :hgusud at times, and cannot. ff vote' real may to your work. sup}, dnt'i not not. you and you wake up {penny "all tired out." Perhaps rheumatism in ftrirtt, through your muscles and ioints, or ma} Le your skin is dirdigured by radrec. boils or pimplu. Bead- aches twinges of neuralgia. fits of normusness, irritability of temper and a disordered 9310th often in. 4'res'tse your discomfort in the Just 130' , .orts"--oot , aghast"! at volc real Cl New. rich. red blood-your great- est med in sprintr--is plentifully created by Dr. William' Pink Pint, and with this new, pure blood in your wins you quickly regain health and increase your strength. Then your skin beeomes clear, your eyes bright. your nerves strong; and you feel better, eat better, sleep better, and are able to do your work. REPLENISH YOUR moon IN THE SPR! Begin your spring tonic treat- ment turday for the blood and nerves with Dr. Williams' Pink Pilu--the Pills that strengthen. These pills are sold by most deal- erq, but do not be persuaded to take "wmrthing just the same." If you can't. not the genuine Pills from your dealer they will be sent yuu by mail. post paid, at 50 cent: n Irox or sis boxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr. Williams' Medicine (0.. "to"sxille, Ont. tiqrerttmet" harm to Proposal to Destroy ttteient Structure. n d IS m " mam Th th in I390) be Hu the Ming I); O 1133!. man l form onc M tun! Evatures oxen-Jul in [less eve-n by Pekin. which i Pats. They a in cireurnfere points they ra feet in height of " thes “ "Ln' of N bthlNt; T0 GO. feet in height part cf their carriage-s can aum mg " Dc " kl" tr A Sure Favorite at The factory cooks them perfectly, toasts them to a delicate, ttolden-brown, and sends them to your table ready to eat direct from the sealed package. Post Toasties w wall,-. which now completed Mtt) in Hungwu, the rounder of Ming Ilynnit). possibly the it 'st man China ever produced, 1 um- of the noblest architec- , [vault-es of China, and are not “lo-d in dignity and massive, l awn by the famous walls of ‘n. which in oxtent they far sur- . They are over twenty miles -in-umferen-‘e and " various tts thry range from 60 feet to 80 in height. while for the larger _ cf their vast perimeter two hue-s can easily drive abreast g the top. Once the work of ,ruction begins there is no know- uhvre it sill end. It is earnest- o be hoped that when China is ady being stripped of so many ho splendtrrs of her antiquity H (I Fresh. crisp, my to serve. and Wonderfully Appetizing Cal-dial MI- Cereal 00.. ue mun". om _ manship." “Well?" 'e “plains that she is the u , many bills in the house mu --N'aved the house- wife much thank- less cooking-. Ask any trroeer-- " n th the you are feeling "out of your usualPeit. Quite Post Toasties " ht ther th not. "grtuv'rtt is conclusive, be-ous function of Nan- sr‘ru- as a strong Gov- {phat to control the May. while the com- nnkimz is so inconsider- ', is ttot likely to be " ther the walls are dis- 1d " b al petition of Tutuh. and he rty RING ,h that part of the walls of Xanking river. The petition 1. prompted by the ' argue that while ‘ll there is constant " city may be used punters and further will benefit by their of Kiangsa 'h that part l walls of Na brag about his wife's be spared vernrnt lSSlIB tr---'" Pl! I" "Now is the author ited by at has Feng , ‘I‘ng Kno- Han. the the HAPPENINGS , HIE BIN LIFE or l BRITISH If. AN AN .\R!)l'0l'S ONE. The lean-e " Mis Daily Day Ben. cribed By a Member 9! Parliament. St. Stephen's has been declared to be the most entertaining place on earth-the beet club in the world. On the other hand. many members of Parliament say that the life is so exacting as to be practically in- ‘tulerable to a man who has other Lbusiness to which to attend. Mill, it has many cotnpensations--besides Phat, distinction, says London An- awe”. The late Dr. Robert.Wallaee, the once popular member for East Edinburgh, used to say that, al.. though the work was exacting to those who desired to get 1'lii, re- cognition, it wt" amply reps in the end. That is the opinion most general- ly expressed by those who have sat on tho green benches and responded cheerfully and luyllly to the sum- mons of the party whip. Of Course, there is an everyday routine through which all members must go through if they are to dis. charge their duties to their con- stituonts; and no one can expect to carry on his own business at the lame time. Yet that is what a great many hon. gentlemen attempt to do. But it is only the strong man and arduous worker who can do this without detriment to himself, for, after all, mere attendance at the House for eight or ten hours, or perhaps longer, without a break in- volves a considerable strain on one when the same performance is re- peated day after day through a long and arduous session. Perhaps the heaviest part of the duties of a member of Parliament is the work he has to do in commit- tee. Day by day, especially in the earlier part of the session. there are committees sitting in several Mums of St. Stephen's examining private bills, while public bills are examined by what are known as Grand or Standing Committees . Thrro are also Select Commit- tees for specific purposes, and the numbers composing these, as a rule, consist of fifteen members . Under a standing order, Select Commit- toos can sit during the sitting of the House, except while it is at 'prayers. It is amazing to find how M.P.'s are inundated with letters, not only from their constituents, but from people of whose existence they know nothing. Of course, attention must be givenl to these communications. and the' number of hours that members spend in the writing-rooms can be gauged by the number of letters that are posted and delivered at the House. and also the amount spent on postage stamps. Some M.P.'s open their mail.. bags with something like fear and trembling, but wealthy representa- tives make light of their bulky cor- respondence. They keep private secretaries. and, as being a mem- ber of Parliament is at once their occupation and hubby. they do not regard letter-writing as particular- ly irksume. or their correspondents as bores. Having attended to their private correspondence, members have next to study the whips. Then the real work of the day begins. The duties of private members are, of course. " no means so onerous as those of Cabinet Ministers, and especially the Premier, who is expected to be in his place on the Treasury bench to lead debates, reply to questions, and attend generally to matters that may arise during the sitting. Then the Prime Minister has to receive numerous deputatiuns and listen to their grievances; he has also to interview his colleagues and attend to other calls that are made “n his time and energy. Another important duty that used to devolve on the Premier, but which, it seems is now to be discontinued, was to write a letter to the King every night when Parliament was sitting, giving a summary of the day's pro- eeedings in the Commons. Nowa- days, this duty is usually performed by one of his Cabinet colleagues. It is the division lists, however, that bear the strongest evidence of the member of Parliament's devo- tion to duty, and it is to these that his constituents look. It has blculne the practice in re- cent years for local newspapers not only to publish the lists showing how many divisions the member for a particular district has taken part in, but to print details setting forth how he has voted for this or that particular bill. . , , Constituents are thus enabled to see whether their representative has been faithful to his promise, and to catechisp him with confidence in regard to any measure in which Ite.mas have given a vote in oppo- sition to their wishes. America hu discovered a new use for the vacuum cleaner. The Park Department of New York City uses it for currying horses, of which eighty are sent out every morning from the stables. The vacuum curry-comb not only keeps the) horses' coats 1n better condition, but relieves the stables nod the m- blemen of the dust and aenmyhich usunlly ”comm? the currymg ot 'horses. The groom in.“ no“ to (trif?w and his! " ?tytEii, Trauo New tue In Taet"msMetsner. ‘the was"; She Got So m That's Why In. Wellington Dul- lop Says Dodcl's Kidney Pills are the Best of all Medicines. South Waterville, York Co., N. B., April 6.--09pecial).---Mrs. Wel- lington Dunlap. an estimable resi- dent of this place, has given an interview in which she states that she believes Budd's Kidney Pills to be the best of all medicines. Mrs. l)unl-:p says: -. AND TRES' FOUND , (THE 1.N DOBB'S KIDNEY PILLS. "When I commenced taking lkdd's Kidney Pills I was in a terrible condition. I had been sick for over a year and had paid out more than one hundred and thirty dollars for doctors and medicine. I would get Fome better and then get just as bad as ever. "The doctor said my trouble came frum my stomach. His medicine relieved me for only a few minutes after I had taken it, and I got so that I was nearly insane. _ “I had not talien Budd's Kidney Pills two days till I was some bet- ter. I took twelve boxes in all, and I can truly say they have done me mare good than any medicine I have ever taken." Dudd's Kidney Pills are suffering woman's best friend. If you haven't tried them yourself, ask your neigh- burs. May Spend Year in England to Train Hounds. Signor D'Annunzio has been spending a few days in Limdon. He came to England to see the' Waterloo Cup, the great coursing race at Altcar. D'Annunzio has always been a lover of the dug, and has seldom had fewer than a, dozen dogs at '3ettignaru'. Greyhounds are his passion, but he has given swine of his affection to the English bulldog, of which he has several. He was one of the founders of the Greyhound Club in France, and he has entered his own hounds m French races, and so far has two second pmes to his record. His plan to stay fur a year in' England is pussibly dictated by his ambition to race a hound in next year's Waterloo Cup. Under the quarantine regulation it is almost impossible for him to train his hounds in France and race them here. lt'Annunzio has expressed to friends in London the great stimu- lus he has received from England. The eager coursers at Altcnr, the di.licate English country scenery, the pale glory of London in the dawn as his train steamed into it and he beheld the river-all this has fascinated him and made him be- lieve that England will give him a new stimulus and revive his art. Above all he bases his hopes on the eternal bath of youth, which is Eng- lish sport. "'hN?ir?iXio POND " DOGS. Will Quickly Cure Any Sour Stomach "When I was walking around thel farm last winter I had an attack of in-l tiammation," writes Mr. E. P. Dawkins, l of Port Richmond. 1 was weak for ii) long time, but well enough to work' until spring. But something went' wrong with my bowels for I had to use salts or physio all the time. My stomach kept sour, and always after eating there was pain and fulness. and all the symptoms ot intestinal indi- gestion. -Nothing helped me until I used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Instead ot hurting. like other pills, they acted very mildly, and seemed to heal the bowels, I did not require large doses to get results with Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and feel so glad that I have found a mild yet certain remedy. To-day I am well-no pain, no sour stomach, a good appetite, able to digest anything. This is a whole lot ot good for one medicine to do, and I can say Dr. Hamilton's Pills are the best pills, and my letter, I am sure. proves it. Refuse a substitute tor Dr. Hamil- ton’s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut, sold in yellow boxes, 25c. All dealers, or The (‘atarrhozone Co.. Kingston, Ont Vreihane Said to Be Loss Hurlnfnl than Ether. than Ether. Interesting, experiments with a new anesthetic have been conduct- ed at the Cambridge lgborgtory:_ _ The substance, which is called Urethane, is a combination of urea and alcohol. It is administered hy-l podermically, and drowsiness soon) becomes a very deep unconscious- ness. and insensibility to pain is complete. There is perfect security when it is used in any operation. The advantage claimed for the new anesthetic is that heart failure ne- vcr occurs when it is properly used, while a majority of the deaths from chloroform are due to heart fail- ure. When the breathing stops, as ,it frequently does, during the ad. ministration of an inhaled anesthe- tie, it can usually be started again by artiffeial respiration, provided always that the heart is still beat. ing. The assurance, therefore, _ that in cases of an overdose of this anesthetic the breathing would be ntteeted before the heart will be of immense comfort to surgeons and anesthetisu. Another advantage in that the choking sensation experienced with ether and chloroform is not present. Moreover. after urethane there is no sickness, and thus the denser of agitchcs giving vgy end ligaturrs slipping off during retelling is avoided. A disadvantage is that experimenters have not yet. been able to reduce the Rqriod of insen- N E“ A N F',tiTHFlTV F0 U N lt. Relieve: Fullness After Meals. Was Almost Insane Its turd " All English Ctttrer--Atso In Europe. . It has been stated that. creosoted wood blocks ,Gield make the ideal pavement if the follvwin faults Could be eliminated: tr) hd ten- dency to expand. resulting in bulg- ing, and sumetimgs upheaval of the pavement. discoluration of curbs, etc. ; (2) slipperiness; (3) bleeding of oil. Of all the wood wsvemefits'thtst, I saw in London, Paris. Berlin and other places, none exhibitcd any of the foregoing defects with the ex- ception of two or three slight bulges noticed in London. writes an expert in the Engineering News. , Creosuted wood is the most highly esteemed paving material in the English cities. In ten of the twenty- eight boroughs constituting the city of London, and comprising the most thickly populated section of the city, the total mileage of creo- soted wood block in 1912 was 121. Livsrpoul has about 150,000 square yards; Birkenhead, 95,000 square yards. In fact, all English cities of over 50,000 population have wood paved streets, and in most cases these are the principal thorough- fares. There is not much wood-block paving in Berlin, but a condition which seems rather remarkable ex- ists in that on streets paved with, lall3 All ‘11“y VA: ull‘u'v-v l4... -"ee asphalt, wood-block paving is used where the grade becomes too steep and the asphalt will prove unduly slippery. Most of the approaches! to bridges are paved with creosoted wc-cd-block. This city has probably the finest sheet asphalt paving in the world. The woud paving is rough and comparatively noisy. woon’BwOKR BEST Rom. Croosoted wood-block waving in Paris is more noticeable for quan- tity than it is for quality. The re- port of the Chief Engineer of Bridges and Streets of Paris, at the London Road Congress, stated that the average life of the hardwood paving was six years. BABY'S OWN TABLETS . USED FOR YEARS When a mother uses only one medicine as long as there are little ones in the home it certainly bears grand testimony to the value of that particular remedy. Thousands of muthers use nothing else but Baby's Own Tablets. Coneerning them Mrs. M. LeBlanc, Memramcuok West, Nm., writes: "I have used Bahy's Own Tablets for my little ones for the past ten yours and know of nothing to equal them dur- ing teething time or for colic. con- stipation and indigestion. All my nrsighbors who have used them think as I do." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. "Ah, poor man," said a. kind-‘ hearted old lady visiting a. conviot‘ prison to one of the "boarders," "I l suppose you‘ll be very thankful) when the time comes for you to; leave this dreadful place l" "No, I shan't," returted the convict sur- lily. “What: IJon't you want to be at liberty again y' exclaimed the good dame in surprise. "No," re- turned the man. “Don't want no bloomin' liberty! I'd a bloomin' sight rather stop 'ere'." "How strange.” said the visitor as she turned away. “I had no ides the prisoners were so contented. What was the poor man's offence I." she continued. ct 'E were a. bit absent- minded, marm," replied the ward- er with a, grin. "Absent-minded," exclaimed the ladv. "Yes, marm," exclaimed the official. bb 'E kept forgettin' as 'ow 'e were a married man. 'E's got five wives awaitin' l’im outside."---))) paper. h Confining Job. Mrs. Exe-My husband's occup- pation is quite confining. Mrs. Wye- Not so much as my hubsand-he's the jail keeper. Illnard's Llnlmonl Guru lurm. Eu. PROMOTE fihlfl(illi)Vlfi And Cuticura Ointment. They do pluch for jui- CUTICURA SOAP _ tated, itching seal s, dandruff and dry, 'tlb",; and falling hair, and do it speedily, agreeably and economically. manual Dim Irv-claw tum. All“ numb of mu. with It” ”can. around "at"! a! mum mutmm Mackinaw.“ QiDqkuNiBaaatu.na. lit-pt Forgetting. Painful Swellings Reduced Muscular Slrains Ended SUCH THOUBLES NOW QUICKLVI RUIIED AWAY BY POWER. FUL REMEDY. If you have any muscles that are strained and weak. that are frequent- ly subject to rheumatic pains; if you have any painful swellings that refuse to so tswtt--get busy with Nervillne. This is the very sort of trouble that Nerviline is noted for curing quickly. "I have proved Nerviline simply 3. won- der in reducing a hard. painful swell-l ins. It followed an injury l receivedi in my left leg and caused me swat“ pain and discomfort. The muscles were tstrained.and sore. and no other remedy gave the ease and comfort I got from rubbing on Nerviline. There is a soothing_ pain-relieving power about Nerviline that touched the root of my trouble. Nerviline reduced the swelling. it destroyed the pain, it Jorought my limb back to perfect con- dition." The experience of Mr. Bow- ien, whose home is in Middlesex, is not unusual. Thousands are proving every day that muscular pains of every kind, chronic rheumatism. lum- bago, neuralgia and sciatica will yield to Nerviline when nothing else can possibly cure. Nerviline is an old- time family pain remedy, used nearly forty years with great success. The large family size bottle costs Goc., trial size 25c. at all dealers. t'nsatbstaeiory Results Attending Operation on Boy. A recent despatch from Paris says that Doctor Moreau of Be. Etienne has published notea of the results of an operation to restore the sight of an eight-year-old boy. The boy had double cataracts from birth, and could hardly distinguish day from night. But he gut the con- sciousness of exterior objects by the sharpening of his other senses to such a, degree that he could distin- guish the different cows in his fav- ther's stable merely by hearing them walk about in the barnyard. After the operatiott, the boy spent l 'IU,.',.', 'flG'1i'"i'"iCG'i Iii; 1222-51ng 6.13M days tn , dark “Jon" 1tyy/t'tliililu Now at my age of seventy- 1Urh.t was admitted. and every one I five I can hear like 11 child, and I am anxiously srwaited the boy's first 1m- lthankful to Collins' Drug Wore for pressions; but he said nothing, and Pens recommended Catarrhozone to only uttered a few inarticulute me." cries. The new sensations “we“lMilt-Eli?£5u3?12'$°§%.m§'§‘1§'3 c.5351: to be confusing, it not actually. pam- 1atart.'ttozone H every physician and ful. After a few days more m the drugzist says so. and we advise our dark room, he was allowed freelreaders to try this treatment. large sight again; but he showed no emo- ' size containing a beautifully polished tion, and said that he did not know lhard rubber inhaler Hy' trufficient what various objects were “it“'E93133$2n£2rtfiamxlgsaogsihdpggc: w.hich, he was perfectly familiar pre- Sold by all druggists and Storekeepers viously by touch. . or post paid from The Catarrhozone He only recognised the hand of Co., Buffalo, NA'., and Kingston. Can. the surgeon when he took it into his I ada. own. could tell wine only by smell- ---F------- ing it. and so forth. It was. boma Irrr Batting Average. time before he acquired thoscnse of Magistrate If)” exidenee thows. ‘Culur. but as won as he did to, It that you threw a kettle at your ituti- ‘seemed of supreme importance, and hand. l am , ., vi , l1 V-- .L_L overshadowed everything else. Everything that he saw was “black" or "white," according to whether it was turned toward the light or otherwise, and he decom- posed everything he saw into color points, like a, silver-point artist. I, _ _. .r 1,__._,:..‘ " hospital he had not yet, learned to read, in spite of the assiduous ef- forts of the nursing Sister to teach him the alphabet. His father then took him home. A year later, when Doctor Moreau saw him there. he had lost most of the ideas he had gained in the hospital without ac- quiring many new ones. The case is extraordinary at all points, and the patient see-ms less able to enjoy lite than when he was totally blind. h Problem for the Editor It has been asked wnerner Etc} on a man's corn: an" provocatio: swearing. Answer: Keep the (on l of Corns by using Putnam's Corn "Sorry I'm she Ute, m' dear.” began Tippler when he arrived home new midnight. “Couldn't get a car before." tractor. It'g the best Ji,, a, cars were full too, were they," returned his spouse as a start-off. I was cured of Acute Bronchitis by MINARD‘S LINlMENT. Bay of Islands. J. M. CAMPBELL. I was cured or Facial Neuralgla by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Springhm. NS. WM. DANIELS. I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Albert Co., N.U. GEO. TINGLEV a sour expression. "Why, you don't know what hard luck is," said the friend. "I have always had it. When I was a kid there was such a bunch of us in the family that there had to be thee tablea pt 'meaJ times. and I always gol the thlr one." “What's hard about that?" snapped the other. "Why," uys his friend. "it was fifteen years be- fore I ever knew a. chicken had any- thing but a neck." luck, Miss G,ucdrioi--1 hear your hus.. band is a great lover of the aesthet- ie. Mrs. Nurieh---Oh, yes'. He takes one every time he gets a. tooth pull- Dragging refund money " PAZO 015 AMEN? nuls to our. Itching. mind. or Protruding Piles. Firs" upyzicnuoa gnu tenet. 60c. Explained. “However did you hear Euch dreWul things about Mrs. Hu- "You forget the was once my _dearest friend.” , _ ,,r', 'usareri.i,Gitit in an "dev-ri' Fifteen months after he was in the bert" Ilnard'n Llnlmom Remus Mourns“. man was talking about hard , and his friend listttrrd with pun may. a to " Day. "starooit" is Correet. Pl RST SIGHT. en asked whether atepplng corn: glves provocation for Answer: Keep the (on clear 250. at all dealer: Only Few of M Presented Are Invited to Functions. Bresentation at court u, of course, a. desirable thing. but the stories printed in the London gos- sip papers about the privileges it eonters---such as at least one royal invitation in the year for the state ball-do not in fact accompany it. The ordinary presentation at court has no further results than the appearance of the names of the presented in the following morn- ing's papers. Without having been presented, however, no one can be invited to meet royalty. The names of all presented people are inscrib- ed at the Lord Chamberlain's office, and from this book the formal list of state invitations are compiled, but the list by no means includes all whose names are recorded. That for a state ball, for instance, is confined to those connected even remotely twith the court. It is of course submitted for royal appro- val, and by the King's wish the Queen now gives the final decision as to the invitations. The list is returned to the Lord ‘Chamberlain's office, and thence in- . vitations are sent out. COURT LIST IA!!!) BY 0111333 “I Hear Now Deafness All Gone” Am Tickled to Death at the Miracle Catarrhozone Performed for Me. At " Can Hear "Atter Butterhut so long from a bad case of catarrhal deafness. it is no wonder that I am tickled to death at the miracle catarrhoBone performed for me, writes T. Y. Weightman, trom Bridgetown. "I bad dreadful head- noises, a continual buzzing in my ears. My trouble was due to catarrh of the head and ears, and it also affected my throat. which was irritable and sore. Catarrhozone seemed to reach to the very bottom of the trouble. It cleared up my throat weakness. rid me of catarrh and as a result, my hearing In case of deafness. asthma. and bronchial irritation, nothing can equal Catarrhozone -- every physician and druggist says so, and we advise our readers to try this treatment. large size containing a beautifully polished hard rubber inhaler and trumcient medication for 2 months' use, price $1.00; smaller trial sizes 50c. and 25c. Sold by all drugglsts and ntorekeepers or post paid from The Catarrhozone (73.. Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston. (‘an- a a. to can I Gold In on any Take LAXATIVE BROMI) QI'ININI'} Tuhlets. Dru‘giuu refund money " it ram to cure. E. W. GROVES “gna- ture is on each bor, 25c. Culprit-lt 9lcowr: more than that yer honor; it shows that I bit him "or Batting Average. Magistrate -Thv midence shows that you threw a kettle at your hus- band. Oxford Grttdttttte Will Commaad Expedition lulu Siberia. Miss Mary Czapl'wka, a Polish girl, and a, native of Warsaw. Rus- sia. is about to .cct out in charge of a, seientific expedition to Siberia. sent thither by the l'niversity of Oxford. Her companions are Eng- lish. “I Went, several years in the depths of Russia, where I was obliged to earn my living by giving Polish lessons in the houses of Pol. ish immigrants during the revolu- tion," the young woman said when asked why she was made chief of the party. “I have always taken a deep interest in anthropology and managed to find out some interest- ing details about the native Siber- ian tribes which I set before the authorities at Oxford when I was able to go there to stud). "The human anatomy department of Oxford University was so pleased with my report last year that it offered to send me in charge of an expedition to inquire into the ori- gin of native Siberian tribes, of which very little is known." Miss Czaplicka was educated in Warsaw and at Somerville College, Oxford. She was the first Polish student to be received at Oxford on the strength of English scholar» ships. Try Murine Ere Remedy If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes Sr Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart --Soothes Eve Pain. Dmggists Sell Murine Eye fumed}: Liquid, 25c, MM. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, Mc, 50c. Eye Books Free bv Mail. "qoVmthtt'oojrgt88Woirt'6qode- Kurt-o lye Remedy Co.. Chicago The Whincr. To him the world is never fair, He longs for wealth, you we; I think that his wishbone is where His bwkbone ought to be. A clerical gentleman was walking along the main street of a. Scottish town, where he had once been a minister, and on meeting one of his old paruhioneris paused to speak with her. “How are you/ Mrs. Jones c."' said he kindly. “Vern weel, sair," replied the woman plaintively. "And how in your 1syslsandr.' "My man, air, in in Heaven, sir, this two year." “I an very sorry to hear it," responded the clergyman aboently, as he pm- ed on, leaving the poor woman dumb with netoniehment. GIRL HEADS EXPLORATION. Imard'a Llnlmem Cunt annual. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Like a Young Child. M Pink lye. Epmootlu Shippmg DISTEM PER Favor and Cu tn: rhul Fever. Sure curls And pond" preventive. no Inner how born»: ttt raw! an ire "ttett1tsd_or ‘jegponqdf' Littuiti, trie'" nn the twv‘aux'o K, W. DAWN)“. “In." album “rul- '07.“..- IF YOU WAIT to BUY on BELL A Fruit. Mock. (Ir-In. of mm Fun. writ; B. W. human. Br-tttOtt. or I Colborm IL. lbw-onto. AGENTS FOR “'EATHER INSI'R- taco. low rules. liberal commlsmun. Apply. The Cnnuds Wanner Imurunrro Companv, Torottto. c, ooo WEEKLY IN LIVE TOWN IN I York County. Stutlonery and Hook Rushes; In connection. Price may “.000. Terms "berm. Wilson Publish- ing Company, " West Adelaide Street T/tronto, STRAWBEBBIEB. BAHPBBBBIEB. “FT! Variation. Free can“. “Council ' Son. Grovelend. Onurh. HOLSTEIN “I'LL I tered pedigrees. 2 Twenty-tive to Su'c-my Lam-h. Southend, um. u w. 0“"?ch cabana u. Tannin. CANCEI. TUMOR LUIPI. 'tr. mun-l and aural. cum mm on pun by our home treatment. Writ. a Micro too nu Dr. Balkan ladle-l tht.. ”mind. Calling“. on. Israel angwill. the London r, -~- dist, once visited the city of ( in .. Mo. Among other places of inuu- at he was taken to the stock .xarsi-, where luncheon was sor1sl for lot party. During the meal a pert miss. Belted next to the guest of hnlzuzx asked him_ this; gut-gum; "M:_ Zuni“, how do ftht like Chiragc ham!" “no Dreamer of the Ghet, "o raised his Borr0% ful face and 15311 quUtlr. " like it, I like it hunch bower than Chicago tonal!" . .'rmsest grade hun- kept wh ole _ Ind manly by perfect baking, retaining their full strength. _ gn.vored with deliciom canoes. Ourlarze and beautifutlyilhtstrated CATALOGUE FREE J. A. SIMMERS. Limited any: use Used by success- ful planters for over half a century NEWIPAFER$ FOR SALE Inner. .k‘auw-w "ml 'lMFf _-art,. WHOLESALE “REGENTS allocudJous t. C an Md m Minn-omni- t - '0. "" NURIEIV STOCK. IIICILLANCOIII pon " may. Care. La Grlpr In kidney "MM!" Cut ttr drum“. who wt an it h Enum- r-wd Inga“: _,_AA WANTED‘ whereas ("an gin-em and [in]: ‘ALVEB. REGIS- to ' months old. '-ttee Dollars. A. tr " til "mun!“ IN ninth-d witt my "Ir lul- u the fuat “undo-u: I “up. but aCneelry1. trl But rm ttt hom two “r ’)'u “w I'M“ “not! and mm um um -ed. tgt tto. - difricult t . few Imurr an only tart duh and KM" hum». " mn- oomr mmm- "I not hun- ber-t qrrast-'rrow? "tome c-ruldm 'etr?"ol, um! I r. “6004 El" m [monk - UHF pt think of tut Inn" father" Me w." . rlllh‘ I glow”. m the terrtr on'uw In mum”! could n which , one ot' hull! noutl Imam redly hem n ennui!!! tttttt l h Malian Ahe I linked "In In 1 ed from a"! " A he Ir N iiiiiiiif f100 . take chances sting for "A Us Worth of CANADA SUGAR REFTNINC ( th " clue: k " " " H n H '4 wear- rough SENO tl father wear " MAR nd pron It's the i "s time' IOO and ISM

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