West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Jul 1919, p. 3

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bappen. It i ted, captured by mon â€" gense" #" rrom Scotlang of which violet is cause the touch its h the ut the high round, ned th ll, beâ€" tance, WQW im th.~ thousand ounds of D s, are kwood, And uly. who hag > O.B.E, Elgin, 2, Allar award m Meft Mrs., and, lieuâ€" Â¥ W.r‘, Lovat on who ‘ of pany, ward. n of ad, Ft ry Sist ‘he ( ng t NE SECRET OF NAILâ€"DRIVING. ‘ause farmers persist in keeping own special brand of time they constantly figuring out the dirâ€" ce between their watches and the ies that govern the rest of the ~«s world. "Let‘s see," one man studying his watch; "it‘s now teen minutes past nine. The leaves at twentyâ€"two minutes en. I have a little more than an and my watch is little better: ilf an hour fast. That gives me e more than an hour and a halt. ~as if he had correct stardard nd it‘s easier to have standard n any other kind of timeâ€"he ince at his watch and say: seventcenâ€"have exactly an nd five minutes to catch my ; (ter how simple the task at 0 it efficientlyâ€"do it better ias ever been done beforeâ€" vi!l be surprised at the rapidiâ€" ‘hich you cut down the length ecessary to do things. your eye, your heart, your the thing you want to see d you will do it! ‘Cadian people this year in * high cost of living probâ€" Old Coin in Tree. U°O farm tractors will asâ€" enter, nailâ€"driving is such ire, that about two swings mer places an ordinary nail But, you see, a carpenter‘s onds upon his ability to hit he head. If he kept knockâ€" ldewise or missing them, s wouldn‘t go up. 0S nail with your eye! the reign of George IL, was found by a cottager Beeches, says a London : coin was wedged tightâ€" . Experts who saw the ¢ opimion that it must pped into a cavity E e bark gradualiy gre Mlacadam, both Efi roduced CQ%. 4 wilding in ~which :t extent, the basis of uction. ire business world runs on timeâ€"except farmers. The ats, interurbans all run on time. ‘The rest of the bust ! goes to work and closes up tandard time, whether it is ‘entral, Mountain or Pacific time. _ This is right and .c way it should be. It is imagine the confusion that ult if each industry should Nerent time. farmers persist in keening {seping Time n ym 0 watch the hammer the same time, so the the eye tells the brain the eye keeps saying: n the head"â€"on the : nail is going to go in _ been able to underâ€" in the farmers‘ reasonâ€" » time. Why not keep t time and then lmow’ me it is, instead of usâ€" as a basis for guessing nown of farmers actualâ€" hours for a train beâ€" ©808 8moc‘ D tch was a little fast." 'fi?‘.:.'&m light saving" law is m‘u.?:: o O Inere ivorae? . This emock ‘dress Has a twoâ€"piece the right "'mf’ if Y94 | skirt, which measures about 1% yards C any aood eP tee oiP [eround the bottom.â€" Motall Pottern t any hour of the day | 8868, which comes in four sizes, 14â€"20 n_"'r"]) (torrect time. lf’ years, price 25¢c. The smocking is d clocks do not Ke€SP | faken from McCall transfer pattern ow se mwaeoeee =9 [ No. GO0NUbITE of yellow), price 10c. Then set them exactly Made of plaid gingham and white hprapa ,“"d get in step percale, the frock is most attractive. ‘ the world. These patterns may be obtained | " oOF NaAH from your local McCall dealer, or| ?:~All' PRIVING '{rom the McCall Co., 70 Bond st.,: ustration of the Philâ€" Toronto, Dept. W. rive a nail is to keep tely on the head. It r eye, ynn{a heart and e thing you desire to if you concentrate ster faith sufficient, but succeed. Hit the n stration of the Philâ€" of Success. ‘has. H. Smith. tioned many farmers as t time they keep. One eep sun timeâ€"it‘s about minutes faster than except that our clock ne of the finest il philosophy of sue e sure you hit it on ne. And if you do, is this operation is )t one person in ten iil straight, or who ut half the time at , there is really no & a nail. The only nother says: ‘"Well, I time. I set my clock faster than the depot clock loses a little another answers: . "I ‘lock about threeâ€"quarâ€" faster than standard be late for the train. when it‘s just wound on it‘s rumning down." »bout to conclude that n every poor old clock »joiced to hear a man op correct standard atch and clocks are rs, tco." And I said at faurmer is a good tred trunk ' The lighthouse contains many inâ€" Igenious electrical devices, controlled itrom the shore by a submarine cable l nearly a mile and a half long. By its | aid the foghorn and siren are regularâ€" | ly blownâ€"they have been heard thirty | miles away on the French coastâ€"while ’ the current it carries also controls the | light in the lantern. By adding 50 per cent. coal ocil to the waste oil drained out of the enâ€" gine, a very efficient mixture is obâ€" tained for the use on springs, which will keep them in the finest condition. The automobile horn was adopted in this country in 1900 to substitute whistles, bells, gongs, etc. It is proposed to use this type of | _ Uranus has four little moons, which, automatic lighthouse for illuminating [ oddly enough, rise in the north and set Hudson Bay and Hudson Straits in in the south. Neptune possesses only connection with the opening of these ) one, rather diminutive, which traverâ€" waters and the carriage of wheat by | ses the sky from southwest to northâ€" the new railway to Fort Churchill. A | east. proposal to establish similar lights on| The most remarkable guess on reâ€" the more exposed and barren coasts cord had to do with moons. Dean of South America has also been conâ€"| Swift, a century before the moons of . sidered. i Mars were discovered mada (Anliva« Near the Isle of Guernsey, Scene of Hugo‘s "Toilers of the Sea." The first unattended rock lighthouse with‘ a powerful fog signal is the reâ€" cently completed Platte Fougere lightâ€" house, marking the entrance to Rusâ€" sell channel leading C St. Peters Port, Guernsey, a spot which figures in Vicâ€" tor Hugo‘s romance, "The Toilers of the Sea." This boy‘s blouse suit may be made with or without yoke, long or short sleeves, nickers or straight trousers. McCall Pattern $362, five sizes, 4â€"12 years, price 20c. KEEPERLESS LIGHTHOUSE. :s is due to a disturbed ;. â€". digestion. Tea or . â€"â€" ad MB3 â€" i. i in t AS WV BP L. d.c e i o * % i@_ coffee is often the .« ~;. mischief â€"maker. â€". If you have suspicions z.. ho abgl.!;r tea or coffee,try * is . AAoniasnt «ernit. Ts A*~ ty > ., ifi se »! ApgpintWenks vuat we Many an Offâ€"Color Day €¢ There‘is a Peason" Seasonable The most remarkable guess on reâ€" cord had to do with moons. Dean Swift, a century before the moons of Mars were discovered, made Gulliver say of the astronomers of Laputa: "They have found two satellites which revolve about Mars, whereof the inâ€" nermost is distant from the planet exactly three diameters of the planet. The former revolves in the space of ten hours and the latter in twentyâ€" one and a half hours." At least two or three of Jupiter‘s moons are still hot, as proved by the fact that they give out some light of their own. It is very interesting to watch, through a telescope, the shadâ€" ows thrown upon that giant planet by its moons, observation of the eclipâ€" ses of which furnished the first data for estimating the velocity of light. We are rather poorly off for moons. Saturn has eight, the biggest of them, Titan, being nearly twice the size of our orb of night; and Jupiter possesâ€" ses four, the largest of which, Ganyâ€" mede, is greatest of all moons in our planetary system, having a diameter of 3,480 miles. On the other hand, the two little moons that revolve about Mars like golden shuttles are strongly suspected to be asteroids (minor planets), capâ€" tured out of space. The larger of them, Phobos, only sixty miles in diameter, is much smaller than many of the known asteroids. The origin of moons is one of the mysteries of astronomy. If, as some starâ€"gazers assert, our lunar orb was thrown off from the earth when the latter was a molten, flery massâ€"the Pacific ocean being the hole left by its debartureâ€"we have a special right to feel a proprietary interest in it. As a matter of fact, the inner moon MOONS OF PLANETARY sYsTEM. Through the New Blood Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills Actually Make. No mother should â€" allow nervous weakness to get the upper hand of her. If she does worry will mar her work in the home and torment her in body and mind. Day after day spent ‘@amid the same surroundings is enough to cause fretfulness and deâ€" pression. But there are other causes, as every mother knows, that tend to make her nerves run down. A chan o‘ would benefit her jaded system, (:d rest might improve her blood so as to give the nerves a better tone. But rest and change are often impossible, and it is then that all worn out woâ€" men should take a short treatment | with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which make new blood, rich with the eleâ€" ments on which the nerves thrive. In this way these pills restore reguâ€" lar health, increased energy, new amâ€" bition and steady nerve. There is a lesson for other womer in the case of Mrs. Harry P. Snider, Wilton, Ont., who says:â€""Five years ago my twin babies were born, and I was left very weak and very miserable, hardly fit | to do anything. The doctor gave me medicine, but it did not help me. Then I tried another doctor, but with no better results. One day I went home to my mother, telling her how miserable I felt, and that the doctor‘s medicine had not done me any good. Mother asked me why I did not try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and as I was glad to try anything that might help me, I got three boxes when I went back home. By the time these were used there was no doubt they were helping me, and I got three more boxes. But I did not need them all, for by the time the fifth |box was used, I was entirely cured, and never felt better in my life. Now when I hear people talk about feeling weak or miserable I always recommend Dr.| Williams‘ Pink Pills, and téll what they did for me, and in similar cases 1 shall continue to recommend them." + At the first sign that the blood is out of order take Dr. Williams‘ Pink|â€" Pills, and note the speedy improveâ€" ment they make in the appetite, health and spirits. You can get these pills | ‘ through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€"|‘ cine Co., Brockville, Ont. REGAIN HEALTH The number of individual landings at the ports managed by the British armies in France exceede@ 10,000,000 up to the armistice, while in the last eleven months of the war the avers~> weekly tonnage landed atthose s«:!> was 175,000 tons. f In 1914 there was one machine gun to 500 infantrymen in the British army, at the armistice there was one machine gun to 20.infantrymen. * Over 700,000 tons of ammunition were fired by our artillery on the western front from last August to the armistice. tained In six weeks 5,000,000 rations were supplied, by our armies in France, to 800,000 civilians in the relieved areas. The total daily ration strength of our armies was 2,700,000. An addition of one ounce to each man‘s ration reâ€" piesented ar extra 75 tons. Over 400,000 horses and mules and 46,700 motor vehicles were used, and 4,500 miles of road made or mainâ€" sn allh ts x nendiacatntitaantsc lc d t s L dA 1 There were 1,500 miles of teleâ€" graphs and telephones, and 3,688 miles of railways, on which 1,800 trains ran weekly. General Headquarters received 9,â€" 000 telegrams in one day, and 3,400 letters by despatchâ€"riders. One army headquarters had 10,000 telegrams in a day, and the daily telegrams on the lines of communication were 23,000. Some War Facts and Figures. These are some of the amazing facts in Sir Douglas Haig‘s final desâ€" patch:â€" Into a grim and cheerless home Love forced his way through barâ€" *‘ ‘riers tall, Wed wretchedness and chill and gloomâ€" <‘Bhe golden sunshine flooded all. & â€"Jean Blewett. Love met a worldling on the way, And softly crept into his breast; Straight self and greed refused to stay Where love had dared to build a nest. Julyâ€"the month of oppressive heat; l red hot days and sweltering nights, is extremely hard on little ones. Diarrâ€"| hoea, dysentery, colic and cholera inâ€" fantum carry off thousands of precious | 1 little lives every summer. The mother | must be constantly on her guard to‘ prevent these troubles, or if they come ; on suddenly to fight them. No other; medicine is of such aid to mothers | during the hot summer as is Baby‘s | Own Tablets. They regulate the,’ bowels and stomach, and an occasion-l‘ al dose given to the well child will prevaiit summer complaint, or if the | trouble does come suddenly will| banish it. The Tablets are sold by | medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cts.| a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" | cine Co., Brockville, Ont. [‘ RED HOT JULY DAYS HARD ON THE BABY To find within the morning all we‘ve lost, # t The suffering soul‘s surcease; To find at dawn of day an ampler life; Yea, this is peace. To find a strengthened faith in powers of goodâ€" Humanity‘s deep song; To know that thus e‘er reigns eternal love Above the wrong. And, though the darkngss cloud earth‘s fairest things, We still may find the healing of Thy wings. To know above the flelds "where popâ€" pies blow," Their spirits glad and free; That they have won e‘en sweeter dwelling place Than this could be; That they have found the rainbow in # the skies, And gained the light reflected in our eyes. The right to strive, though fail, to rise again, And thus, with courage strong, To hold for them a purer heritage In days to come; Friend of the weak, balm of the wearied heart; Ah! this is worthy of a conqueror‘s Peace! Peace! How often have I heard thy voice ue In solicitude‘s release; The peace of woods, of fields, of hill, of vale; Yet more than these: For there amid the darkness, seems to me, That we have caught the purport of thy plea. ‘This morning with the whistles ringing shrill, Bells peeling loud with glee, From out the darkness stole a whisâ€" per sweet, Peace, peace to thee! The nations from their Calvary have passed, And lo! on earth the morningâ€"breaks at last. is 10,000 miles from Mars, whereasâ€" the diameter of the planet being 4,000 milesâ€"Guiliver‘s estimate would place it at a distance of 12,000 miles,. For the outer moon he gives 20,000 miles as the distance, which is really 15,000 miles. The time of revolution for the inner moon is actually seven ard a haif hours and for the outer one thirty hours. The Miracle. Peace. "‘"’, Sometimes electricity generated by °0" ; the friction of flowing gasoline against vill | the bottom and sides of a can, or even b€ / by the flow of gasoline through a rubâ€" ill | ber hose, produces aâ€"spark which, disâ€" Y | charged into an automobile tank that *®â€"| is being filled, ignites the fluid with diâ€" | serious or disastrous results To guard against accidents of this kind is for obvious reasons most difficult. More than 40 per cent. of the motor cars in operation toâ€"day are owned by "ermers. "Blurting out facts, in season and out of season, is not necessary to truth; to hold the tongue is also a morality.‘"â€"Ibsen. Earl Dartmouth, the Goverhor of the Zingari Cricket Club, has related a new story of Sir Douglas Haig. When Sir Douglas was invited to accept the freedom of the club, he was reminded by Earl Dartmouth of its three prinâ€" ciplesâ€""keep your promise, keep your temper, and keep your wicket up." The Field Marshal promptly replied : "Your principles are worthy of the nation that entered the war to keep its proâ€" mise, that kept its temper through illâ€" fortune and through good, and please God, will keep its wicket up until its promise has been redeemed." Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter ?int of this sweetly fraâ€" grant lemon lotion and massige it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. [ At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full quarâ€" ter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautiâ€" fier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion__ will keep‘ fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to’ bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles. sallowness and tan and ls‘ the ideal skin softener, whitener and! beautifier. uzsil‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Ete. Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands. LEMONS WHITEN AND Frothy mixture solutions of the kind above described, when put up in portâ€" able containers of convenient size, are useful in extinguishing small fires about garages. For putting out small gasoline fires (especially on the floor) sawdust works surprisingly well. It floats for a while on the surface of the burning liquid, forming a blanket which exâ€" cludes the air and smothers the flame. Dry sawdust seems to serve as well as moist. & The steam method works very well with gas well fires, a number of porâ€" table field boilers being set up and steam thrown from them upon the burning gas column in the form of spray. If the gas stream can be inâ€" terrupted for only a moment just above the point of discharge the fire will be put out. Much more satisfactory, however, is the newer method of bringing together two chemical solutions, and spreadâ€" ing over the surface of the burning oil the thick foam resulting ftom their combination, thereby excluding air and extinguishing the flames. Steam turned upon the flames through pipes is often highly effective. If its volume is sufficient a cloud will be formed ‘that serves as a blanket, filling the tank about the oil and exâ€" cluding air from it. Water is not of much use for putting out an oil fire. It may, indeed, be much worse than useless, for burning oil floats on it, and may thus be carâ€" ried to considerable distances, spreadâ€" ing the fire far and wide. FIRE THAT IS HARD TO PUT OUT. HOME BANKS After the payment of dividends and various appropriations, includâ€" ing .$100,000 to. Rest Account, the amount carried forward was $158,â€" 348, as compared with $160,371 for the previous year. [ The Profit and Loss Accoq&lt is alâ€" so of saeclal interest to shAreholdâ€" ers, as it reflects a gain in profits and has permitted of an appropriaâ€" tion to rest account of $100,000. The net profits for the year amounted to $238,753, equivalent to 10.63 p.c. of the paid up capital and reserve fund. The general statement of assets and liabilities everywhere reflects the progress made, the total assets of the bank now standing at $28,â€" 635,9024, as compared with $23,675,â€" 173 at the end of the previous year. Total deposits now stand at $18,500,â€" 000, as compared with $14,600,000 at the end.of the previous year. _ «_ The increase in deposits during the war neriod had amounted to over ten million dollars, an incresse of over 105 p.c.. and reflects the inâ€" creased patronage extended the bank by the public in both savings and general commercial lines. None of these figvres include deposits Af the Dominion Government. The progress made by the Home Bark during the past few yvears was referred to particularly by General Manager Mason, who pointed out that the lgguld assets now amounted to over 57% of the total liabilities to the public, or actual cash assets were the strongest in th« history of the Hank, representing approximateâ€" ly 22% of total liabilities to the pubâ€" lic. Large gains were also made in deposits. the increase for the past twelve months having amounted to over three and a haif maillions, notâ€" withstanding the fact that 9,508 of the depositors had subscribed over $4,900,000 to the last Dominion Vicâ€" tory Loan. The report submitted at the Anâ€" nual Meeting of the Home Bank of Canada indicated that the Bank had enjoyed the most successful year in its history. Another Haig Story. BEAUTIFY THE SKIN. This new way to rid one‘s feet of corns was introduced by a Cincinpati man, who says that, while freezone is sticky, it dries in a moment, and simâ€" ply shrivels up the corn without inâ€" faming or even frritating the surâ€" rounding tissue or skin. corn, root and all, dries up and can be lifted out with the fingers. Don‘t let father die of infection or lockjaw from wililttling at bis corns, but clip this out and make him ty > You simply say to the drug store man, "Give me & quarter of an ounce of freezone." This will cost very little but is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn fromâ€"one‘s feet. A few drops of this new ether comâ€" pound applied directly upon a tender, aching corn should relieve the soreâ€" YES! MAGICALLY! CORNS LIFT OUT WITH FINGERS All, all are rooted in the dust Of heroes o‘er the sea, Who perished in the righteous cause Of God and Liberty. Immortal is the wreath entwined On this Memorial Day; The tribute of a grateful world, It will not pass away. The wattle from Australia‘s bush, Japan‘s chrysanthemum, Canada‘s mapleâ€"leaf that decked So gallantly her drum; Italy‘s laurel, spring first To crown a classic god; And, plumed with glory like the sun The U. S. goldenrod. l The nations weave a garland gay To deck the allied dead, iWho died that earth might feel no more » ' The tyrant‘s iron tread; Old England‘s rose of velvet red, The fleurâ€"deâ€"lis of France, With Cuba‘s jasman, waxenâ€"pale, The blossom of romance; The Irish shamrock filagreed With drops of silver dew; Brave Belgium‘s forgetâ€"meâ€"nots ' So softly, sweetly blue; ‘ The sturdy thistle, purpleâ€"dark, From Scottish glen and hill; And from the shield of Portugal, The yellow daffodil; 1 fell from a building and received what the doctor called a very bad sprained ankle, and told me I must not walk on it for three weeks. I got MINARD‘S LINIMENT and in six days I was out to work again. I think it the best Liniment made. "Why have you stopped, Murphy?" asked the officer. After a short effort one of the men stopped. "If ye plaze sir," was the answer, "Oi‘m coasting." An officer on board a warship was drilling his men. "I want every man to lie on his back, put his legs in the air and move them as if he were ridâ€" ing a bicycle," he explained. "Now commence." Now there was a man on a pam.;like. Don‘t seem to want to do any cular section of the line where no| thing only lie down and sleep." flooding had taken place, and he deâ€"| _ "WbY, I‘ve had that disease for th cided that the message was a joke, so | last twenty years!" exclaimed the first he wired back as follows: "Look 'ml speaker; "but this is the first time I‘v the Book of Genesis." | ever heard its name." «In the Book of Genesis. ‘ "Have yer been to the front?" asked There had been a heavy downfall of O0®. "Ain‘t seen yer about lately," rain, and the district manager of a| "I‘ve had influenzy." Scottish railway was quickly on the | "Influenzy? What‘s that?" warpath. He telegraphed along dif| "Well, I don‘t know howo I can exâ€" ferent sections of the line as follows: | ACtly explain it, but it takes all the "Send full particulars on the flood." I fight out of yer. Yer feels sort of tired The Butlerâ€"Well, sir, the missus and the young ladies is up in the sky learning to fly and the master‘s in his submarine in the hornamental lake; it‘s very seldom you catches them on Terry Firmy these days. Friend of the everybody, Bennet? "What did you say you call your wife for a nickname?" "Uâ€"boat." *‘Why?" "Because whenever I come home late she blows me up without warnâ€" Sheâ€"She found a label on the back of her picture saying, "The original of this photograph is carefully preâ€" served." Resented the Implication. Heâ€"Why is Adeline so angry with the photographer? Edmonton He Knew Why. Mrs. Henpeckâ€"She‘s very pretty, but she hardly says a word. I can‘t understand why so many men propose to her. Mr. Henpeckâ€"I can Visitor‘s New Problem. A Wreath Immortal. Bubr}nrl:eâ€"erfnre. ARCHIE E. LAUNDRY Taking a Rest. Family â€" Where‘s Asperin is the trade mark, registerâ€" ed in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticâ€"acidester of Salicylicâ€" Handy tin boxes of 12 tabletsâ€"also larger sized "Bayer‘ packages can be had at drug stores. During the war, acid imitations were sold as Aspirin in pill boxes and varlâ€" ous other containers. The "Bayer Cross" is your only way of knowing that you are getting genuine Asperin, proved safe by millions for Headache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Lumâ€" bago, Neuritis and for Pain generally. Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Asperin‘" are now made in Canada by a Canaâ€" dian Companyâ€"No German interest whatever, all rights being purchased from the United States Government. If You Don‘t See the "Bayer Cross" c the Tablets, You Are Not Getting Asperinâ€"Only Acid Imitation! ONLY TABLETS MARKED witH "BAYER CROSS" ARE ASPERIN. OTHER TABLETS NOT ASPIRIN® AT ALL Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. Thirtyâ€"six counties in Ontario inâ€" tend expending nearly $5,000,000 on road construction and maintenance this year carried. The patrons pay their bill as they leave the car. The terror of the highâ€"rent districts is thus eliminâ€" A grocery store on a large truck is one of the latest uses of the motor car. A complete line of meats, grocâ€" eries, green vegetables, and everyâ€" thing typical of a grocery store is MoNEY ORDERS. Send a Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. "Why, I‘ve had that disease for the last twenty years!" exclaimed the first speaker; "but this is the first time I‘ve ever heard its name." s oo on se o cten in oit often when all else fails. In terrible rash on face which made :.k;n sore and inflamed. Irritated by ecratching and was " Couldw.hepmulndm :rhum. ‘Trouble lasted 3months ore used Cuticura and after using 2 cakes of Soap and 1 box of Ointâ€" ment was completely healed. From signed statement of Mirs Gladys Neabel, R. R. 3, Brussels, Ont. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talâ€" It Was His Old Complaint. Two weary tramps met after a lengthy separation and sat down to compare experiences. TEACHER WANTED FOR 8.8. No A Huron Tp., Bruce Co.; Protesta A Huron Tp., Bruce Co.; Protestant; female; _ 2ndâ€"class certificate; â€" salary $600; duties to commence after holidays; board and lodging convenient. ARply to C,. W. POLLOCK, See.â€"Treas., RKR CANCE& TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. internal and external, cured with» out pain by our home treatment Write ts before too Jate. Dr. Beliman Medical Co., IAmited, Collingwood. Ont L/copy; _ 50¢. year Monthly, Brantford. se WR!TE FOR QOUR FREE POOK OF House Plans, and information tellâ€" ing how to save from Two to Four Hunâ€" dred Dollars on your new Home. Adâ€" Gress Halliday Company, 23 Jacksor W.. Hamilton, Ont. u18 148 14 £000 NT BOT NOC RERE ¥¥ and job printing plant in Nastern Ontarto. Insurance carried $1,600. Will #o for $1.200 on quick sale Boxr 64 Wileon Publishing Co.. Ltd. ‘Toronto. _ 202 OCTTTTIMNR Co.. y en mm W:u. EQUIPPED â€" NXNEWwSFP and job prinfine atame 4. an WANTED~PROBATIONN FOoR the Montreal Women‘s Mospital. Two years‘ course. Monthly salary durâ€" INg period of training. Apity Lady Superintendent, 1002 St Catherine Street West. Montreal L0 e NE\VSPAPER. WEEKLY County. Splendid opport Box T. Wiison Publishing « T3 Adrlatde St. W. Toronto. tazl mulll~ LCC PVR SALC IN Â¥VÂ¥ Live Poultry, hn&y Hens. Pzeonl. Esg®e etc.?> Write L einrauch & Son, l.â€"}iqt. Jean Baptiste Maurket, Mont» real, Que. 0 e ‘V HAT HAYE You © Live Ponltre Jm.. PIMPLES LASSY RABBIT MAGAZINE, i0c Kincardine, Ont ISSVE 22â€"‘19 POVULTBY wasTED HCOME BUILDERS! MISCELLANEOUS AIlL WEEKLY IN BRUCE . Splendid opportunity. Write ;flmn Publishing Co., Limited. FOR Fur and Food IN y *Â¥ w

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