West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 12 Nov 1914, p. 2

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=3 il) t _ if; It odd to "t ti " Realize this ambition, when assisted by Cuticura Oint- ment, by keeping your seal clean and free' from 'itllilflll', bhin tt and irritation. _ Cutlcum Soap "lilll)jl.i)ll) Mn Would lin the Mr the THIS Wot " maiden urged m" to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, but I said “want/a the use: medicine can't help me." How- ever. my hunband gut. tix boxes of the pills, and to please him I began to tab, them. By the time I hid tinisised them I undoubtedly had improved. and there was the signs of returning lIr-alth in my cheeks and hand.,. My husband thought t.lre imprxrsrmerit so great that he all another bulldozer: boxes. 5nd lama there were completed I was enjming stwh good health as I had not had in wars: in fact, I was I well unumn. and have since enjoyed the bent of health. I sincerely feel that I uwn my life to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and dull always recom- mend them to all sick people." You can get these pills at, any medicine dealers. or they will be sent by mail, D: stDaid. at 50 cents mend them to all You can get t medicine dealers sent, by mail. pe I box or six u writing The Dr. l ‘1'“. Brockville, 1 mnard's Linimnl 'Cuns omen.“ tl Thot n. I" one no. so may wo- men with 'ttt thin. cinch, dun try-6 and drooping 'hr-tr-our" sign that th eblood is out of erdtr. All summing Womet ahoold gun the right to be well by refreshing their weary bodies with the new, rich “bod of health that promptly transforms them into healthy, st- tractive Women. Show is no ott.rtr medicine can supply this new, rich blood so speedily and no surely as Dr. Williams' Pink Pilh for Pale People. Through this medicine thousands of tired, ttuttering wo- men have found new health and strength. Mrs. James Bron, 1'hiprmsn, N.B.. says: "For years I did not know what it was to be en- tirely free from headache or back- nclw, My hands were cold and dummy all the time. lt was diih, h To {any wow belongs the m urenjny a healthy, “in, happy life; yet nine oat of ton maer, od- ten in silence, from arlittag head- ,arhes, tonal-i! Mad“, virkat heart, p'upitatidn or some Gtbee .01 the my!" evils that follows antenna, or MoraleM‘ No Reason Why They Should Surfer From Bunches and Headaches and h WOMAN’S . RIGHT TO mm 1iey.yyrruosvautr/i, ll en (In t beard " " 0n " 1iear Punting l KIT hm Mulch-n. at W h d sold me a parrot. and Would repeat every . Well, I can't get a ."' "I must have for, you it. was deaf." we l the mid? mean Mt who in the I bk ’lt ff who occupied 'a I the North of Ire- ears of 309. of rent rd. Bis lundlord, lo chance of getting tto Pat one dl throw off one hafl e to encourage him stpaid, at oxeg for Williams' Ont. “ho had just giv- ttiest nods to a ome in and sat pposite. “That's m): fellow. n he n oosite. "That's g fellow. Is he "Yes. indeed; . laughed the ask him to join anxious to dis- of nature. "0 a "Sudden?! asked no that's our JO cents $2.50 by Medicine dining Well 1mg "A lay worker'. vpeeeli'.” ' F “I don't get you! "Be shun knows when it quit tins tino.” make t" With a brush. which is made of dried brass bound together with a [string of calico, the meal is then gathered up and mixed with water 1 until it becomes a thick batter. Here enters thv art of the baker. ‘She takes a single handfui of the batter and spreads it. over a, long, tlat stone, under which a fire has been burning for some time.' The hatter is made to cover thinly the entire surface. When one side is baked she takes the bread by a. cor- ner and pulls it off, dexteroudy turning the other side up. When it is done a long. flat basket re- ceives it, and the baker turns the edges up all around. so that the air, can get at it. Sheet. after sheet is‘ baked until the basket is piled high‘ with the blue bread, or "piki," which the baker pronounces -peka." No salt is used in the batter, and the piki has a sweetish taste. It is usually blue, partaking of the. color of the corn from which it ul made. It is eaten dry or in . sort] ot' tnup. When the men so on a journey they take piki made into! mils. very much a one would roll up a sheet of wet per, the broad being of the tune thickness u the paper. The stone: upon which tho bread is baked an pupa-ed by the old women ottU who with nutm- recy and much (56rMrlt0thr. _ The, no very valuable and mind-damn as heirloom, ftp- mtzkjlugh’ tor. l When bread is to be made a squaw kneels behind each compart- ment, shelled corn is then placed on the flat stone in the first compart- ment, and with a. coarse, oblong stone, the first woman proceeds to rub it. The course meal thus pre- pared is passed on to the next com- partment. Here it is again rubbed with a stone less coarse, and passed on to the third stage. The result is) a decidedly Boury meal. l l Into these baskets are dropped lthe hot stones whereby the water is l heated. Upon the mass of crushed l bitterness the Indians ladle the hot water until it is about the color and (consistency of cream. Not a speck Ci',',';';';')'.' A strong squaw stands by ‘ each vat and with a small fir bough lstirs the mass, skillfully removing any speck that may appear upon I the surface. The preparation of bread in sheets hardly thicker than sheets of paper is a real art among the wo- men of the Moki Indians of our Western deserts. A corner of the principal room of the Indian habitation is set aside for the accommodation of a shallow trough, walled in with slabs of stone set on end. The trough is divided into three compartments. and in these the first process of brendmaking occurs. The soil gradually absorbs the bit- ter waters. leaving a firm white tsub, mama. This the Indians remove so adroitly that only a small portion adheres to the soil. They spread it upon rocks to dry and afterwards mix it with water, pat it into thin cakes, and bake before the fire. The Indians of the Sierra. country employ their own method of trana- forming the bitter kernel of the acorn into a kind of bread that ids said to he extremely palatable. The pmae-Ss is as follows: There is slum-kw! and ground in the usual manner a. large mass of acorn meat. A number of circular vats are hol- lowed out of the black soil in the shape of a punch bowl. Into these is placed the acorn pulp. At hand stand several large clothes baskets Elled with water. The California Indians, collect the pollen of cab-tails in Urge quantities by heating it off the plants and catching it in blankets. They make bread of it, but as a real delicacy they prefer bread of "grasshopper flour." lino" When to Quit. Why. sort at a speck doea Along the Columbia River bread is made from a. son of moss that grows on certain fir trees. After be- ing dried it is. sprinkled with water, allowed to ferment, rolled into balls of the size of a man's hand and baked in pits with tho help of hot stones. This bread is said to be by no means unpalatable. the Product. of German ingenuity. The and!” i.Hirst subjected to . prowl. cl tom and “dons chemical Mullah”. Eventual- ly it in mixed with one-third part of rye flour, found into lone. and licked inmns likeanyother bread. This bread in not intended for Inv. mu WM. but in for horses Mis, although some authorities oon- tend that pain de boie, u it is call- ed by the French, who have inves tigated its merits, offers a. nutri- tious and highly satisfactory food for.hunusn beings. In upland the inner bark of pine trees, well ground and mixed with oat flour, is made into cakes, which are cooked in a pan over the fire. In Kamchatka pine bark and birch bark are used for bread without the addition of any other substance, be ing reduced to powder by pounding. made into loaves and baked. Irttl [Sis e! iiii.ii'iil In various parts of the world, bread is obtained from trees. For instance, in the Molucca. Islands the starchy pith of the ago palm tur- nishea a white floury meal, which is made into Bat, oblong loaves and baked in curious little ovens di- vided into small oblong cells just big enough to receive tho loaves, 8traettreraaittna seem, thanks int. ot yread as; from Inuit-t, 'hre?tystrsercm, ofboth kindsis about the tune. "Oem's a Rea'son" for Poutum. bseoId by Grocers. Int-It Pom-1%. 'rii'iict'iii' pow- der. A “spoonful dissolves quick- ly in a cup of hot wtster and, with 1y m a on ot hot water and/with cream "dt,tJ,1 makes ' delicious Revenge 1ttAarttir. Me and Me myself and the other members of the family, but not in so marked tb degree u in the one of my mother, page t,ttr-i1*irnof1oiyrsterf- Poetum Co., when, Ont. Postm comes in two forms: will! Pest- - must be well boglef!., 'lt ayd 969 New. in.” "I had really been at. times very anxious concerning my mcther's condition, but we noticed that after using Postum for a short time, she felt so much better than she did prior to its use, and had little trou- ble with her heart and no sick stomach; that the headaches were not. IN"trequent, and her general condition much improved. This continued until she was well and hearty. myself "I was so pleased with it that, after the meal was over, I bought a package to carry home with me, and had wife prepare some for the next meal. The whole family were so well plesed with it that we dil- continued coffee and used Postum entirely. l "My mother, since her early childhood, was an inveterate coffee drinker, had been troubled with her heart for a number of years and complained of thot 'weak all over' feeling and sick stomach.” (The effects on the system of tea and coffee drinking are very similar, be- cause they each contain the drug, caffeine.) A - "Some time ago I was making a. visit to a distant' part of the coun- try and took dinner with one of the merchants of the place. I noticed a somewhat unusual asvour of the "eoffee," and asked him concern- ing it. He replied that it was Pos- tum. When people realize the injurious effects of tea and coffee and the change in health that Postum can bring, they are usually glad to lend their testimony for the benefit of others. . For quick destruction of buildings and for blasting entrenchme0ts r8.- pidly a new military explosive has been invented. handled like dyna- mite, but with greater safety and more effect. For use in French colonial waters where rank vegetation would foul subrnerstml wheels, shaJ.low.dra,ft boats have been built that are driven by aeroplane motors and propellers. Without an arched supper cont-re pier, a single-span con bridge 64 feet long, strong en for the heaviest vehicle traffic been built in Illinois. Efforts are being made to increase tho tobacco industry in Ireland, the soil of which is said to be suitable for, raising almost all varieties of lea . A motor sleigh built for a, Rus- sian grand duke has a cigar-shaped body and is propelled by a, suction turbine, operating against the air in front. Deaf patrons of a London thea- tre have been provided with head telephones, the sounds being gath- ered on the, stage by megaphone transmitters. A one-piece suit, including 4yoat 'and trousers, has been invented for men to wear while gunning or in- dulging in other outdoor pastimes. Wireless telegraphy works better on the Pacific than on the Atlantic and experts are trying to find an adsqugte explanation for the fact. An artiEoial butter coming into use in Europe to replace the cream- ery variety is made of cocoanut oil and hydrogen, blended with milk. Of English invention is " magni- fying glass that may be wbtwhed to a pencil or engraving tool to aid B Quit-smug qr engraver. The germ theory of the transmis- sion of contagious diseases was en- tertained as Ur back as 1657, when the plague ravaged Rome. A wire lemon-juice extractor has been invented that resembles the familiar glass one with the advan- tage of being unbreakable. There are more than 85,000,000 sheep in Australia and nearly 25,- 000,000 in New humid. or more than eighteen for each resident. q Operated by hand. speed being at. tained by gear wheels, atiny emery wheel has been invented for grind- ing off oorns. A drinking fountain drom which the water bubbles upward which may be fastened to an ordinary faucet has been patented. Sound lumber, 25 yum old, has been proved by a. German govern- ment test to be materially stronger than new stock. Folded paper drinking cups, bound together like a. cheque book, are a novelty for_trsveilem. For cleaning bath tubs there has been invented a Bat metal handle to be covered with txrweling. Ihre. out of every four German mmotrerwriams are women. An oleobrie whim-e that works ,utonatieally bu been invented for smiling sausages. ". Railroads in Southern Russia are preserving their ties by soaking them in a strong solution of crude sea. salt. . A flotsting buoy made cf cognate " used for mooring vessels In the harbor of Kingston, Jamaica. Traps have been invented to catch flies at their breeding puees before thee become old enough to move away. Srheepakin is used no a substitute ly almost every other kind of. leo- TORONTO Heavy Weight on Old Age. .Imow_ Begum; has btsnefited NTES OF SCIENCE I'RESSED HARD '3ng bt 7 IGiiiiG, arched support or single-span concrete long: .strong fnoggwh hiss The strain on the gun is so tre- mendous that it an hardly be fired more than twenty times before it becomes useless. There is, there- fore, a limit to the number of fort- resses that en be taken by such means. _ _ The Germans have also some still heavier siege guns with which they reduced the strong fortresses of Liege, Nsmur, Mueihsusen and Antwerp, to heaps of ruins. These mighty “not: are said to throw a projectile that weighs over 5 ton. Whenever the gun is to be dis- charged. the firing party has to re- tire s hundred yards or more, and explode the piece by electricity. The strsiq on the gun is so tre- The rapid advance of the Kaiser's army was owing to the support of this wonderful artillery. The'al. lies could withstand the assaults of German infantry, but they had no guns equal that could vie in range and power with these great howit- zers. and they had scarcely fallen back to one position before the heavy guns of the Germans were again within range, and making their position untenable. It was the gasoline motor and the pedrail that enabled the invaders to mow long-range cannon Over ordinary farm lands at the rate of thirty-five miles a day, and bombard each in- trenchment of the French and Eng- lish line as fast as they were thrown up. The two sections are much too heavy to be drawn by horses, and so the Germans haul them with gas- oline tractors, and use the Diploek wheel construction to support the excessive weight of the gun. The Diplock wheel, or pedrail, is not a ‘new invention. It has been used to carry great loads over soft ground for many' years. and resembles the "caterpillar" form of traction that is often used on excavators and en- gines that must, move across open freldia. The pedrail has a series of platforms hinged to the usual wheel tire, to offer a large supporting surface on yielding ground. These "feet" are clumsy in appearance, but on soft and light soil, where the ordinary wheel would not move an inch, they will travel about as well as they would on a hard road. Siege operations, writes a cow. tributor to the 8eientifie American, are usually long drawn-out, because of the time it takes to change the solid firing platforms, as the lines round an invested citv. or fort, are drawn closer. To overcome this difficulty, the Krupps designed a new type of howitzer, mounted on a carriage that can be readily mov- ed from point to point, and can (even accompany the ordinary field artillery into the battle line. The great. gun is reinforced with a heavy jacket of hardened steel that measures eleven feet in length, and it has tocbe carried on a spe- cially designed bed. The gun is moved in two separate pieces to the firing line, where the carriage that contains the firing platform and eompressed-air recoil brake is first put in position. The truck that carries the gun itself is then moved) up from the rear. The gun is pull- ed from that truck to the firing platform, and adjusted to the re- coil brake. The spare wheels are then drawn back, and the arm is ready to fire. Become l'seless After Being Fired Over Twenty Times. One of the surprises of the war has been the extraordinary mobility and effectiveness of the German siege artillery. The advance of the German forces into France has been described as a succession of sieges, and the speedy capture of one fortress after another was ow- ing to the tremendous power and accuracy of the attacking gunfire. can highly recommend them to all mothers for babyhood and child- hood ailments.” The tablets are sold by medicine dealers or bs mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brookville, When the baby is ill or out of sorts give him Baby's Own Tablets. They are the ideal medicine for littlepnes and never fail to relieve oonstiptrtion and indigestion; care colds, allay simple fevers and pro- mote healthful sleep. Concerning them Mrs. F. Wurker, Ingersoll, Ont., says: "I have used Bahy's Own,Ta,h.leta for eight years and "Then make the man take it straight back to the dealer. I order- ed trout." “Ma'am, here’s a man at the door with a. parcel for you." "What is it, Bridget l" "it's a fish, ma’am, and it's marked C.0.D.” Who dmpped three bombs on the Zeppelin shed at Dusseldorf. m formerly lived at Winnipeg. WHEN BABY IS ILL. G ICRMANY’S BIG GI'NS. :ght Lit'llt, C. II. Collet These June Bridvs. “You never know what you can do till you try," says a. writer, "and then you are generally sorry you found ' utt" bin-N's Llnlmcnt Cures earn! In "Are you married. my man l" a. lady asked a sailor. "Yes, indeed, mum-married and fourteen chil- dren." "Poor fellow, travelling about like this.' And don't you ever get homesick I" "Only when I'm home, mum." Invariably results when cheap corn 'talvo. Be g' '""e""MY mung when you m a cheap corn salvo. Be judicious. use "Putnam's." tor ftitr you. It has cured corn. and warts that nothing ohe can touch. Ask far Putnm'. Puma“ C'orn Extractor only, tse., at tll dealers. quartered The Valuation Roll of the burgh of Aberdeen for last year has I/en made up. The valuation of the rc- spective' wards show a total increase of $45,400. Under sad circumstances Alex. Eadie, a Dundee Boy Scout, was 1uti4entally shot dead at Dudhope Castle, when, we Territotnu!s are Mr. Harvey, Weadiings Hall, Pol- mont, has furnished and equipped a. recreation and reading room for the use of Territorial, at Grange- mouth. Damage to the extent, of about $100,000 was caused by a fire at the distillery at Cambus, near Alloa, belonging to "he Distillers' Com- ptypy, Limited. Mr. William Muir, wife of Coun- cillor Muir, Edinburgh, and her two children were seriously injured in a rungay accident at Bo'ness. The death is announced, in his 80th year, of Mr. William Paton Mains. of Airles, one of the leading 11hrtotyshire ggriculturists. Mr. George A. Clark Hutcheson of Eriska, Unionist candidate for Argyll, has given his yacht Ariani to the ,9.y,r.ernm:Pt for patrol [work A seva-ymvr-oid boy named Alex- ander McLeésh of Glasgow wanders ed on to the midway at Whiteinch any, was killed by a, train. M Appalling Condition The death has occurred at Dun- dee of Mr. John Campbell Smith, ox-faerie-Substitute of Forfarshire, at the age of 80 years. The Chamber of Commerce bats talion of the Highland Light Inlan- try, left Glasgow for camp amidst scenes of enthusiasm. From all the ccslanining centres the demand for pit-props has be- come urgent. Steel substitutes are being suggested. Mr. John Hutchinson, the oldest t.eryyuseptatiye of the building trade In Dunfermline, has just died in his 79tlt ye4br., Kilmarnock will constables are to have a y set apart for themselves for practice at the shoot- in; may. The War Ofhee has taken over the Marine Gardens, Portobello, for tht glowing pf Territgriulls. _ _ Arthur King, a recruit. tirom Coat- bridge, was killed by falling over thtwa1ly of, 1htirlimr Cafstle. - Since the Suthreak of the war there have been practically 20,000 re1aruits {moi-led In WM; Th; Edinburgh Academical Foot" ball Club has cancelled all fixtures forthe coming msop. - 7 Colonel David Laidlaw is to com- mand the 2nd Civic Battalion in GLaygor, _ - A _ _ . _ What Is Going On in the Highlands and Lowlands of Auld Scotia. _ NOTES or INTEREST mom HER musk“ BRASS. HUM MINNIE SCOTLAND The above tstraightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife a well- known miller in Rogersvllle. is proof tsufficient that Dr. Hamilton's Pills are a wonderful woman’s medtclne. Use no other pill but Dr. Htutti1tort'ts, Me. per box. All dealers or The Catarrh- ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. “For yeers I we: thin Ind delicate. I lost color end w - tired: 8 yellow ttlor, pimples and blotch“ on my face were not only modifying to my feelings, but bee-use I thought my akin would never look nice again I grew despondent. Then Arty “petite tailed. I - very week. Various remedies, pills, tonic: end tnhlets I tried without permanent ttenedit. A ‘visit to my sister put into my hands a box ot Dr. Hntniiton'tt Pills. She placed reliance upon them and now that they have made me a well women I would not be without them whatever they might cost. I tound -Dr. Hamil- ton’s Pills by their mild yet searching action very suitable to the delicate character of a woman's nature. They never once griped me, yet they estao- [ lished regularity. My appetite trrewl keen-my blood red and pure-heavy i rings under my eyes disappeared and to-day my skin is as clear and un- wrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr. Hamilton's Pills did it all." lkit ' Sick Wan . .Cau Regain Health READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY. Cows. vlvcrw mun ulna I. long time atro. Waiter-Yes, air; it will be ready directly? r-' . _ Di-r-Null, kill "tte; Idon't want mutton. Diner (tsarestieally) - Waiter, you may possibly recollect that I omJ.tr.td 'etrt In?!) , long time an. tanks are filled with' righiih'g cu. A SI“ at Parting. She (after their quarrel) - Of course you will want the ring back. Be-No, you my " well keep it. No other girl of my “quaint Inca could wen it except on her thumb. An 95min imagines: that the world thinks as much of him n he thinks of himself. I ' Eyelid} No JaGiiE F y as just Eye Comfort. At Your Dug.“ 50c per Bottle. Murine En “REIT Mc. FtrrB+eEterteaik" Dnlggisu or Hm Eye My Ce., “in” Interested Party-You bet cannot you” Inventor-IN - fmpossibh. The tanks are filied with riEthw Auid "Father, don't men call them- selves bachelors before they get married l" “Yes, my bov." "And what do they call themselves after, dad I” "Hush! It isn't fit for little trors to kuow." Eyes inflamed by upo- Cr u r u sure to Sun. “Blind Will uickly relieved by Nari-c yes Eyck-Ody. No bmaning. F -- just Eye Comfort. At Sore new. R. o.rkriGirGFrsrdiirGi".' rm. Pierre Landon. sent” Pokcmnuche, ICR, Thomas Wacson. tghettield, NJ), but} "e_e_NrFV --.......... mm”... Kathi“ Foley. Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Nonuy, Me. 92:19, thoten, lulcygvg. N . "Pat," said Sandy. "why i: I short man struggling to kiss a tall woman like an Irishman going up Vesuvius " "Faith, and isn't ,it because he's trying to get at, the mouth of the crater?" replied Pat. ', Travelling in Donegal not long ago a. clergyman engaged a hr. quncious bontman to row him on one of the lakes and show him the sights. They inspected e ruined castle with the legend of ' banshee. The clergyman, thinking he would put a, poser to the Ioquacious Irish- man, who knew everything, in. quired, "Have you ever seen a banshee, Patt" "Aye, bedul, that I have, your reverence." "In. deed y' said the clergyman with an incredulous smile. "And pray where did you see one?" "Stuffed in a. museum," replied the unahssh- ed Celt without any hesitation, Out comes the pain every time you rub on Nerviliue, which contains some of the moat valuable ptutrnsubduing remedies known to science. Worth its weight in gold to every family in the land, and sure to cure the emergent and minor ills of a hundred kinds that constantly arise. Get the large 50c. family size bottle; small trial size 25e. Nerviline is sold by every dealer. PA" erywhere. Ilnarl's Llnlmm Cures can, Nervlllne is highly concentrated - about flve times stronger than the or. dinnry white ammonia liuiment-- therefore it penetrates quickly-sinks In deeply-and gets right at the core ot the pain at onee--draws out the lameness, lakes nwny the stiffness-- eases the Joints that have hurt you so much. With reliable old Nervillne you can rub out the pain of Rheumatism. Scin- tlca, Lumbago. or Neuraltrita---rub " away so completely that you feel like new all over. It matters not how deeply seated the pain is, how long you have had it-rubbing with the king of all lint. meats "Nerv11ine" will cure you. Et believe MINABD‘S LINIMBNT is the Tertm'es of Rheumatism Yield to This Remedy A Marvel of Speed, an Unfailing Cure for Old Chronic Cases. _ This caricature, by Edward Gila, a famous Bel . artist, is ' won- derful 1ufatfld of the looting Prine-hose animosity to Eng- Und u the outstanding trait of a. blatant, trhaliow and conceited character-Au Crown Prince has set an example of uncivilized war- fare to his misguided mldiery by the plundering of the Chateaux of norr.combatanta.---London Tatler. GET A TRIAL BOTTLE TO-DAY. Pat Gave Him An Annwr. The German Crown Prince. Too ttld to. huh. Pat's Decision. Tery Simplr. 1imtt.otedIrelids, say this . Ac I An Irishman was _ railway carriage bank passenger who lumen pommercial traveller. to be friendly, started him about Home Itule. Crowds in nu and similai‘ y strain equal in of their weight ed to irritate the gentlema we: e Unionist. Ile turne/ rather sharply and said. talk to me, as I am a (w: traveller." Pet, t.uilied in net until they came in a j and there they escpirxl " Itil donkeys going by rail. Tr ler, wishing to Law a JI/to expense. said, “lib. Pat. v. you call them." "Huh"! said Pat, "you mud” tnt krr, n they are aii (wmrmm 'u lets.” 7 IIM': Linlmcnt Cures D CANCER. TUIOBS. LEM} intern-l Ind external, H. on nun by our home treattn,, u bolero too ha Dr. Bvlhlm Oo., United. Collinxwood. (m: REGISTERED HAMI‘KHIIH urine winners. Ali -IL sex". Maker Bram Benmillm G OOD WEEKLY 1N LIVE I York County. Stallonrw Business in connection. Pr", Torn. Is'",".':', Wilson Publ- pany. " We: Adelaide Sin-m I. '. aerial. luau:- cmbuzu ls P You Wm To any nu NM. " Mt. Inch. Grain or hairy Hm I'll“ K. W. Dawson. Brumy‘mu w a Colm- at. Toronto, - COPELAND’S L,,' can: run cousumnon CHESEIROUGH MFG cc (Candida-ad) I. am AVE. nownw so, gin: gkiiii's%oiisra/ tig/tyt',': of all fund " eczcmg. potsot1 n and barber's itch Als good for com. hid br, in and department "or, on keioe of 'reirr-2tk m ' In“: Haw-101m Willb it to heal qu..i andpeGenariskofirfe'c:io CiAtyktasd "Vaseline "'.nPIn.' “2% ofCarbcl fend, blended with a pm 'Yaelirte'hase. Imam In I”: ATB., . TORONTO. COFELAND IEDIOINE COMP AN ( LIIITED. CARBOLATED a, ' of qhiiaGaCte;/', gill. gm} “squishy otherw- with tiTuia"treTiii"eGG"ii tit'""" ot over so with Just A Scratch A doctor sad . apeciahat at David Wax-nook uni [nn- h hope. That was In Marcy Pour month. Ina-wards; the well an and had cammd on you antler. or know of an», " your "der. and we an m "Now that I am well and lawn. I write to rtate that 1 I In dive today Minn-:11- not“ of your Immune T tom gave me only 8 to 10 d tire. . . . I with every on. law the worth of your up especially those atflictod w. carnation. " I was. for I tll all: and my life to he um Vaselam bum thrrnoca, 202 mum Toronto. wring that he nu. life to the above remedy. w. guitar. Comm. iri' VritoeedelosAinsr, an: I hutch: same. First cud your 'exraltst or tttrect trom In " II.“ per bottle. “mum“ row s“? Pat Naeuod Tin-m run- ron IALL "f-tiii/f))) IISCELLANEOUS pmisepti; dre pon SALE hawk to -?Nsfii?: b0 " “d an dad WEB and ETC. to I... M ll tira", T.. Ttti",,',','; "t Mire In her, the n.:.. It',', - tL"digiey W” u.,. - Mad n, ', TPd, ~ “Winnie ." ad te,', Firl'r,ieE'i,T,Ci'iii, U. h . M? til and .teua.. - d, not It 'l'tltf bitiir by pro-1.41m I 'at L-.-.---- It tts CI“. Ulf/p.'"?.';-, Cl,' u 3UttVii' urn. _ I... I Ifott you, Ut". -» - -. In“ M. vkud the 4 otur, “I In. H. " trtMt I mm [In "ur. 1km: EE),? to br p s but than " I Clog. aatd I tret tttrf “I: List, " I! mg lo .t1ff. .1 charge 'deli'."".) "ll .4 . ’0. We h.“ Wilde “I '- too an. PPP. tbn lull m. will tt in .7 that $7: , Ua 011“ the Jam. any. and In new." I "t m I um Inn: on! WI,“ [gnaw A II pain-n: ' but “on. ill I lun t... at: m u. a. tiii".', titnit. I r.l I h 1"." to I "ot, "hte Ito-oat. Ida, pi '4- 9-“ u the m... h" but qtartled Ira: "..ptt '0'“? tone .1 o. In boner " NV t.teu, le. like 'lid :0" "tGi; h: dunk! mu way it in he o00"ehrtties" mm with“ under the Ir. George Pork-r 'lh " leave. m. “a: pull to dinner though Into-‘04 “with; lulu. m aad Currie: pimp.“ not with his um. “I: Bad Darvon": . " will my " a! m h hld trrtt'r' “in: all bolt mung M I“ ”on them trape Pts, wonder, . a )m trr '50. .~. Karon haul "the: wink-l; 3.4;:3' mum of till-e wt “it nun-a! tmrte -"".. --..,.. r"... Iqbal won to tiw " Io due a Very nad the Door air; a taco-mien- uni u that he broke down PP. ye than Indemn- tr, vom ttf wrmurh' - d. ”All. beat ttt in“ and bully [mum 'mth-ia.'- in " pm Io (“animal Mm. .4. eemo+d In appeal lo 1 "fl!!! (and pulllvln .., Uh. nn: plum» a. and In. trying to ' all a“. van u th- an Ion; " _ I. qei_eierr 5. “It. tor it cum stately Banner. um! uh. In new! lulu ulna that In. iv/f/ tesetMd "d qttimne I labor. loot- Worm v“. on: and mum-m the - sun had u trtUd 'OII. Woman u won.- that It. my their .ern “to "-ttmindedrre thot ... that unmmh all do not up. m M. Mr. 1uP.ie Powlpr'.~ fi at!“ ”W19, and H a her to p', '.r Intel luhul. “Zak!!- had helm CfiToud her tl. a In; nil-ten. it; at r. M , his "eorite nth).- the mum “a closed her 4m. build. 'l'l'.Uig,il I',', w .0 . II tote ' In of” own at.- M Parlor no d her ”My. new" --ioar-qttah'tim. (h eo.. to which h: “on. and to h. to.“ hinge]! an.“ luau] to ths - 1m whore m: 1"“ had "tuwis "numb". com-[mm Id. ttad “led tum ' 'ioutt At-ttalia, “MI ot u. Hie there Ali, "“l-“T " Po. ttp: been um [Ne and '- ho '"teaaed l a lull N,",,',','.'" " -3 Md t on. In on do-tt't 'le “a. we. to mum I not Win Mo" nw " m up. n“ he an". - thaw"! Yew. t)“ dim but and load- a you I“. alerts, t I - be Itus h an do no hum to h. I - You'll oome link I“. “O? rm qqtttN' Yer “My: Ind tte tt a oeee, In I “I d ll, 'trid “Unfit u 9.:2' voioo ’1" on Ibo went u an: qeqett on. rm :u. futon. "We ttred in w tatt--" but he u ed = at": 1nd "mun _ in ”(in the-hum: mint. _ H. 1 “a . - wht.m '1” won; but. itn hh'l "I. in: um - no a of “O Mdoumh M on .8"! In: I. Mum: "an”. tsl u amen " her, t, 1. mun-u: Omnu'l' .M‘em, pot old m4 h fali cums: IKXIV ' " from would the on. you lend It and)! Ill H Or. the duh Beaulif Id Hon

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