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Grey Review, 21 Jan 1897, p. 2

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notice, Mr. Bersano, bad, as we know, a personal! interest in ti also was bent on busi he had no intention o mation for nothing. From the Grand Ho berland Avenue to Gat ing Cross, is not five yet, whiule Parkins and still sitting ove?s their mer establishmnient, Mr at the latter, was wai Miller, able seaman, w him there at three o0‘%0 chance delight in ":m; ences. Whila, howeve;: ington, and hWittlech disinterested partics, a & not unnatural desire comclusion, and, if posst! unravelling of a mys! been so remarkaiby ih "‘"Gatti‘s" is something of a comproâ€" mise between an Eng.ish refreshment their host, w mtorm them of ed in the matt what I wolt . detective, w! and it will h« the trace is _ After some ington and W tainty that thore is, there was â€" another church. _ Is it, the this individtat was at a certain tims. or wick fellows, was, t« most utter sneales a "COR TCAOWS, W#s, TOf most utter sneaks and ever stepped ?â€"What kins ?" Hiiso mave been a very black sheep inâ€" deed. Whby, a fsliow who could do a &l‘\ing like that as a youngster, would ve murdered a man or robbed a bank before he was twenty. _ Under ordinâ€" ary circumstances, however, [ should be inclined to accept the first theory. That there should be another fellow of your name, and that that f«llow should have been at a certain place at a certain time, is too much to assume. But now the case is altered. We know for a cerâ€" deed. Why, a &ing like that ve murdered before he was ary circumstanc inclined to gcce, there should he name, and that "Thore are bla« said Rimington carve your name, be expalled wich must have been : deed. _ Why, a | thing like that â€" "You havei" excolaimed at once both Rimington and Parkins "Yes. Dou‘t you remember that when I was kicked out of Oiswick, old Layiton said that bs had seen my name cut on one of the apple Lrees I was supposed to have robbed." " But hadn‘t you been there ?"* asked Parkins. ‘"No. I had not; and to this day, 1 remember my indignation when â€"the docitor refused to beilwve me. The quesâ€" tlion then arises how did the name get there? And to this question there are only two possble answers. Either ons of the fellows at schoot owed me a grudge, and carved it ; or else some one of the same name had been in that very orchard the same afternoon. _ A cynic would say that the first answer was the mmore likely, but I prefer to believe the second." ‘ Monday. ROskK COTTaGE, Dear d Georgie, â€"Why don‘t you ‘ome home? Mother and l go to the staâ€" .on about sixw times a day. I try to ‘mpress on her that you‘rs not worth t; but I know we shall go on doing‘ so until your majesty deigns to honâ€" wur us with your presence. But your poor sister‘s spirit is not yet quite crushâ€" ed, and she doesn‘t mean to wear out her best pair of shoes for nothing. So be advised in time, sit. Take the first train north, and throw _ yourself on the mercy of the court. Remember the cold pigs that somehodty got last year.â€"Mr. Forward, whom you introduced to us in Scotland, lras been hoare a good deal when he has been on lsave. His father is the nicest old gentlenman you ever saw. They ‘hasa been awflully kinad to The post has brought Rimington two letters. _ The one he opens first is in a ‘ady‘s handâ€"writing: CHAPTER IV. The Maharance did win the race, and now lay safely secured alongside the wharf. The crew have gone, and the officers, who are now at breakfast in the cuddy have only to send in their s<tore accounts and turn the ship over to the owners‘ agents, before they, too, will be free to go home. us, and take us out in a little yacht of theirs, We weat to Robin Hood‘s Bay in her last week; it was so jolly ! _ Colâ€" amel Forward says that he hopes you will coms in har a lot, if you do not have enough of the soa at other times. â€"The post is just going, so I must make this letter a short one, and say goodâ€" bye.=â€"Your affectianate sister, "‘Well," said Parkins, " this shall be & warning to me never again to conâ€" fuse probability with certainty. That there should be another Whittlechurch in the world is only likely,; but that there showld be another Ogilvie Whitâ€" tlechurch of about your age, not a ralaâ€" tion, I thought impossibls. "But I have suspactet his existence for a long time," quretly put in the young solicaitor Lunch was sorved in the diningâ€"room, and afterwards they ratired to Parkins‘ sittingâ€"room for cigars and coflee. Durâ€" ing lunch tho conversation had been chefly about Parkins‘ udventure ab Wangising, and now it again drifted back to the same topic. Rimington had agood deal to do that forenoon, and cowld4 not help arriving rather later than thes hour which Parâ€" kins had numed. He found them waitâ€" ing lunch for bim. It was so long since he had seen Whittlechurch, that it reâ€" quired some effort of memory to reâ€" eall his appearance; but, this made, he fancied that in the young man before him ho could still trace some resembâ€" lance tothe littis fallow he had known so long ago at school GRAND HOTEL, Dear Rimingtoo â€"It seems that we were entirely on the wroag scent. Our Ogilvie Whittlechuarch is at present in & solicitor‘s office. His father and mother are bothk alive. and he bas no firstâ€"cousms. is is going to look me up toâ€"morrow. Come and lunch with us at one o‘dlock. â€"Yours very sincerely, & solicitor‘s office. His father and mothor are both alive, and he bas no firstâ€"cousms. is is going to look me up toâ€"morrow. Come and lunch with us at one o‘dlock. â€"Yours very sincerely, John Parkins. P.S.â€"Wherse the right man is remains a mystery. The other lstter was from Parkins Monmday, Sept. 12. won‘t ventura an OLlILVIE WHITTLECHURCKH, who la, however, Pa bWit tlechurch partics, actuat ural desire to f nd, if posstble, f of a mystery arkaix‘y thrust Bersano, on the know, a very ( rest in the que: it on business, i itention of givic » tor him worth fo 10 is to w 17 Th But if a fellow did ne, and then altow you to chout saytng a word, ho m a vory hlack sheep inâ€" i fallow who could do a t as a youngster, would l a man or robbed a bank _ twenty. Under ordinâ€" ces, however, [ should be pl the first theory. That a another fellow of your t that fellow should have prog kguards every w But if a fello uip ilowing up. . conversation, Rimâ€" lmarch took leave of mised to write and hing which happenâ€" ‘r,. Parkins, Rimâ€" hurch were quite rctuated solely by e to follow to its ithle, facilitate the ‘stery which had hrust under their on the contrary, very considerable a question. Miller ness, inasmuch as ( giviag his inforâ€" i in Northumâ€" ‘s cafe at Charâ€" minutes‘ walk; ns friends were ffe» at the forâ€" Pedro Bersano, ng for Charles > Wa opiaion ) to Pry s to meet Thus does " comcidâ€" ut th Mary he d Their eyes met. "Make it two." "I will draw you a cheque for tifâ€" teen hundred, dated ten days hence. Tf the account of a certain dreadful acâ€" cideat does not appear in the papers before that date, it will be stopped." "Aund if e ain‘t at Whitby?" * "Well, then, he might possibly f&” over a cliff somewhere else, or even into a canalâ€"life is so uncertain." Two days after this interview, George Rimington was able to leave London for the North, and arrived at Whitby station at about nine o‘clock in the evenâ€" ing. 1t was rather more than two miles to Rose Cottage; but feeling rather stiff and cran;ped after his journey, he chose to walk, notwithstanding thal the night was stormy and threatened rain. â€"In view of the latter he took the precauâ€" tion to put on a big Flushing overcoat, which was strapped up with his rug. It was a good thick coat, an old friend, which had stcod him in good stead on many a cold nightâ€"watch, and was fit-l ted with an enormous hood, that renâ€"| dered its wearer completely secure from | | bar and a continental cafe. In shaps it er dimension being parallel to Villiers is long and .iomewg.a.t narrow, its greatâ€" Street, Entering at the end nearest to the river, there is a door on the left leading into the restaurant. Then comes the bar, which extends about bhalf the lenyth of the room. On a level with the upper end uf the bar there is a sort of ‘ semiâ€"partition, which more or less diâ€" vides the room into two parts. _ Above this, again, is the door which leads to | the ladies‘ cloakâ€"room on the left. Beâ€" hind the bar, two Hebas are in attendâ€" ance, and an Italian waiter looks to the wants of those visitors who prefer to patronize the numerous little marble tables which are scattered, in true Neaâ€" poiitan style, about the anartment. _i see you appreciate it.â€"Have anâ€" other?" And without waiting for a reâ€" ply, he refilled the glass. Then he conâ€" tinued : "Let‘s see what was it we were talking about ?iâ€"Oh, yes, the cliffs at Whitbhyâ€"L wonder if people often fall over them?â€"L wish this fellow would:; but of course he won‘t. 1 would give a thousand pounds to know that he had a thousa dons so.‘ "And overhanging ?" "In some places.â€"Why ?" "Mereiy cnriosity. But you must be thirsty. 1 have somse excellent brandy n‘. H.;"('.uplmeu(l bere; will you try a _ Slay," sat him fixedly. great service greater servic "‘Ow‘s that discreet in t} ever, someth When Mil "ames which are scattered, in true Neaâ€" politan style, about the apartment. When Mr. Bersano arrived, it wantâ€" ed ten minutes to three, and the cafe was absolutely deserted. H~ called for a tankard of lager, and sat down at a taile opposite the bar. Ha had not long tar Woubk . EP dn EL insy ce lb vepan hm efrlgngs t rance, Germany, or the United States of America, his course would have bean simple. He would have introduced himâ€" selt to Forward under an assumed nanmi> picked a quarre‘ with him, and sh> him. In other parts of America, a hunâ€" dred dollars would have paid for a few inches of steel, which would have done the business with even less trouble. But in Englandâ€"in England, one has to be to wait. At about five minutes to three. Miller entered by the upper door, glancâ€" ed round, and then accosted him: "Are you Mr. Bersano ?" "I am.â€"And you, I presume, are Mr. Miller? Come over here," So saying, he led the way to the farther corner of the room, where they woulid be out of hearing of any stray customers. i. ‘Now, what is your business t "I‘m thirsty." "Portert* "To begin with * & The porter was brought and paid for,. then Bersano continued : "You say that you have information of great imporâ€" tance to me. What is it ?" h °_ Tain‘t nothing to be given away. "Indged! "Antl maW T ant tho »mueimre The other had grasped the situation before be chad half finished, and was busy maturing a scheme of action while he â€"listened. _ _A shrewd unscrupulous cosmopolitan, familiar with the ways and customs of every state in Europe and America, he knew that England was the worst, from his point of view, in which this could have bappened. _ In France, Germany, or the United States price ? shinners,â€"then I‘ll spin the yarn." "As you will. But I don‘t carry the Banic o i(England about with me, so you must come to my rooms.‘" Both men wera now in earnest. _ As soon as they were safely in one of Berâ€" sano‘s rooms, he produced without furâ€" ther gaggling a cashâ€"box, from which be took tifty soversigns, and five tenâ€" pound Bank of England notes, and bandâ€" ed them to Miller. The latter then proceeded to give his information, waich ne did faithfully and fully, and without omitting a single deâ€" tail; and explained also how ths story of the wilt, and Bersano‘s address had come to his ears. "A hundred pounds." "You are drunk." .‘"‘And yet, I don‘t sgeak so axtraorâ€" dinary thick. There‘s others will give me just as much afor it." "Others will give you just as much, will they ? In what way does lyour inâ€" formation concern me ?" "‘Twouldn‘t do you any ‘arm if a cerâ€" tain Ogtlvie Whittlechurch was found. by any chance, would it, mister t‘ Cool and sharpâ€"wilted as ho was, Berâ€" suno could not help an involuntary start at this santence. The man eviâ€" dently did know something, and he had not come on a fool‘s errand, after all. Instantly recovering himself, he reâ€" plied: ‘"True ; it will be slightly to my advantages if they fail to find bim."* . "It would make you a millionaire ?" "Well, not quite; but L have yet to learn in what way you can be of service to me in the matter. So far you have tald me nothing that I did not know Di uen o t t us es o i Em I have your information a hundred pound.‘" "Yes?â€"L don‘t think t‘other way, please. Y shinners â€"than TH anir already For r ""Weill t"* "I can give yer the whereabouts of this chap for a hundred quid ; and _ if yer don‘t like thatâ€"well, T‘ll give ‘im the straight tip about the will.‘" "1 concliude, however, that he knows his own name, and will be fast enough to answer when they advertise for him." "Young men don‘t read the papersâ€" leastways, not carefullyâ€"and there ain‘t nsbody but an oid bioke to point it out. You see, ‘e don‘t call ‘imself Ogilvie Whittlechurch." _ "Well, 1 accenot vour tarmsâ€" Whan ard uPC 3 Th More porter ?* A Rum.â€"Ahl that‘s more warmin e‘s at yer, mister." er, there is a door on the left into the restaurant. Then comes c, which extends about bhalf the of the room. On a level with the ind of the bar there is a sort of reply, the other tapp cliffs are high on the coast? s that ?" § say that he lives at Whitby? nodded & : Ama may I ask the reserve ese iittle matters. _ Howâ€" ng must be done. s r had fimshed, he was risâ€" 1 the other, looking " You hnave been to me, but you can be e still." your terms k. Weul put 1 You shall out th We ill i his tank ONTARIO ARCHIvVED® TORONTO When give you at h it The world had a narrow escaps of never having known aâ€" Sit Walter Scott. When a tiny babe he _ was left jn charge of a maid, but the girl‘s heart was in Edinburgh, whither she wanted to go to rejoin her lover, Sha was, however, compelled to stay and look sfter the infant at Sandy Knowe, The girl regarded her charge as an obstacle to be removed, and afterward confessed that she carried young Scott up to the Craigs (under a strong temptation of the devil, as she expressâ€" ed it), fully intending to cut his throat with her scissors and bury him under the moss. \‘hr‘e ing: app end Phe audience smtled. There was a popuilar agisation in favor of a new reâ€" torm bi{t, and Lord Palmersion â€" had shown a disposition to evade the issue, and not to comimit himself on one side or the other. His reply came without a trase of embarrassmeat, but slowly, one word at a time; 61 tar he was interrupted by _ a loud voiced opponent, who demanded, with iatense earnestness : "Will my lord give a plain answer to a plain question ?" "Certainly, with great pleasure," was the courteous reply. "Will my lord tell us whether he will or will not vote for a radical reform measure ?* Phe audience smi‘ed. There was oa in innocent soit ry one laughed Ihe Liberals began «OmOBeer wildly. "Notâ€"" was theâ€"next wegd; and the Conservative took ‘up the appiguse with i counterâ€"cheer. the fury of the eclements. He took _ & handbag with him, and left directions for the rest of his luggage to be forâ€" warded in the morning. _ _ 2oR > EOW ctulcs AP lc lt s > BibP car in Adtndacy His thoughts as he walked turned natâ€" wurally to time ‘home he. was approachâ€" ing, and to his mother and Mary. Who but a sailor can appreciate that word home in its true sense? In all his wanâ€" derings, in ail his bardships, . the thought of it is there, _ shining ahead like a guiding star, a _ beacon of hope. Coming up channel on | no dirty night, the wind cutting him llke{ a knife, the snow blinding him, and with every chance of a collision at any moment, he remembers that hbe is only a few hours off Engiand, and the thought cheers him up. Rimingâ€" ton knew that they ware not expectâ€" ‘ng him till the next morning, and he amused himself by thinking of_ their surprise when he turned up. He picâ€" tured to himself his mother, sitting in ber armchair by the fire, with Mary on the rug at her feet, working or readâ€" ing. Then would come his knock at the door. and they would wonder who it could be at that time of night. But their wonder woulid not be for long. Mary would have guessed that it must be him, and be peeping from the top of the stairs when the maid !=t him in. Then what a kissing and hugging and asking of _ questions! How he would enjoy his supper that evening, "Judas! Judas! Judas !" Mr. Chamberlain did not pause to finish bis sentence. He smiled, glanced up at the galleries, and replied withâ€" out an instant‘s hesitation: "Not Juâ€" das ; but Joseph betrayed byâ€"his brethâ€" ren!" The aptness of the reply and the quicknass with which the point was turned delightad the audience. There was an enthusiastic outburst . of apâ€" plause, and he was not again disturbed during the course of his speech. Lord Paimerston had equal _ talent for disconcerting his critics when they sought to entrap him; When he was once addressing an audience at ‘Tiverâ€" Oe l ce teanddinin â€" 44 It was indeed a terrible night; and the weather was rapidly becoming worse. The wind blew in sudden gusts over the cliffs from seaward, while at the foot of them the angry waves broke with a deafening roar, which promised but little merey to any ship which, through bad seamanship or unfortunate cirecumâ€" stances, st.owh{) be wrecked that night upon the coast. Happily, the quiet which reigned both at the lifeboat shed and the rocketâ€"apparatus house was a sign that, as yet at anyrate, no vessel ha['} fallen a prey to the tempest. _ He was speaking one night at Birmingâ€" ham before an audience which showed many signs of reseniment and unfriendâ€" liness. When be was in the middie of one of his sentences he was interrupted with a shrill, sharply acceniuated outâ€" Cry : The Facitity of Nr, Chaimberlain and the Late Lord â€" Paimerston forSthencing Opponents Political orators on public platforms ire exposed to interruption from their audiences, and thoir success sometimes depends upon the cooiness and readiness with which they parry unexpected thrusts. Among â€" English â€" statesmen, Mr. Chamberlain has a remarkable faâ€" cility for silencing opponents who open firs upon him from the galleries. One of his quickest and best retorts _ was mads when the Home uRle agitation was at its height, and he was charged with treachery to his party in deserting Mr. Gladstone. NDLCl enjoy His aupper that evening, and his pipe after it, siiting with his mother and sister by the fire. He was now nearly there; and just as he arâ€" rived at the little iron gute leading into the garden, he was rather surprisâ€" ed to hear, during a temporary lull the sounds of a piano, andâ€"yes, there was no doubt about itâ€"a man‘s voice singing to its accompaniment. Who on earth could it be? He remained listenâ€" ing for a few seconds with the gate open, and was just going to reclosa it after him, when, as he turned to do so, his attention was drawn to the figure of a man standing a little way off in the path along which he Nad come There would have been nothâ€" ing very strange in this, but that he had happened to notice on his way that he was the only individual on the cliff. "some one who has walked across the common, I suppose," he thought, "to see whether there is a wreck, and get a blow through.‘" Just then, however, to his intense astonishment, he saw the man delibâ€" erately lie down on the ground. "By Jove!" he thought, "the fellow‘s in liquor. I can‘t leave him there, or bha‘ll either die where he lies before umrnin;t, or else wake up and fall over the cliff." So, hastily reclosing the gate, he started forth, like a good Saâ€" maritan, to rescue the unfortunate wight from his perilous position. (To Bs Continued.) WALTER SCOTT‘S3 CLOSE CALL er ‘ell you," concluded the orator, with unocent smile on his face. Then evâ€" one laughed, and there was hearty ring over the wily old statesman‘s nuity in securing recognition and ause from each party, and in the saying noihing. REPLIES TO THE GALLERY. 1! us \\"het_hnr he will for a radical reform baving used Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, pronounce it the most effecâ€" tive remedy they have ever known, but people everywhere are expressing their gratification at the effectiveness of this medicine. C. G. Archer of Brewer, Maine, says:â€"* 1 have had catâ€" arrh for several years. Water would run from my eyes and nose days at a time. About four months ago 1 was induced to try Dr. Agnew‘s gatarrhal Powder, and sincs using the wonderful remedy I have not had an attack. d would not be without it." 1t relieves in ten minutes, « . a F‘ew Hours, Ii is not alone the people of our own country, and prominent citizens like Urban Lippe, M.P., of Joliette, Que., and othar members of Parliament, who. Wal, do tell! Say, my friend, you ain‘t lookin‘ well, and el I was you, I‘d change my bordin‘ place. Catarrh of Long Standing Relieved in a Few Hours. Farmer, to Greatest Living Skeleton at Dime Museum,â€"Hello! _ Who be you? _ You ain‘t working here, air you? Living Skeleton, with dignityâ€"I ‘am engaged here.. ; Distracted by Excruciating Rheumatic Painsâ€"Seven Years‘ Untold Miseryâ€" No Remedy to Halipâ€"No Physician to _ Thwart the Ong‘nughtâ€"But â€" South _ _ American â€" Rheumatic Cure Cbarms Away the Pains im 12 Hours and the Suffering S‘inve is Emancipated. J. D. McLheod of Leith, Ont., says : "I have been a victim of vheumatism for soven years, being confined to my bed for months at a time, and unabl» to turn myself{. Have been treated by many of tns best physicians without benefit. I had no faith in cures _ saw advertised, but my wife induced me to et i bottle of south _ American Rheumatic Cure. At that time 1 _ wouss suffering agonizing pains, but inside of 12 hours after I had taken the first dose the pains ‘eit me. Thres botties completelyâ€" cured me, and I rejoice in having the opportunity of teliing what a great cure it has wrought in me. Kidney Disease Can Only Be Cured by a Remedy Which is in Liquid Form â€"Common Sense of Science. For . a disordered stomach or sick beadache, pi‘s and powders are not without effect, but when these same remedies are said to cure kidney disâ€" ease the common sense of science reâ€" bukes the claim. This insidious and growing disease will not be driven from the system uniless a medicine is given that will dissolve the hard subâ€" stanceâ€"uric acid and oxailate of limeâ€" that give rise to the distress and pain that is common to all who suffer from kidney comp‘rint. â€" South American Kidney Cure is a kidney specific. _ It disso‘ves these hard substances, â€" and while it dissolves it also heals. _ The cures effected leave no question of its merits. Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment wiil cure all cases of Itching Pi‘»s in from three to six nights, _ One application brings comfort. For Wind and bleeding piles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Eczema, Barber‘s Itch and all eruptions of the skin. 35 cents. No; just a principal in one of our schools. PILES CURED IN 3 TO 6 NIGHTS NOT A NEW WOMAN. What makes Miss Learnly so combatâ€" ive? _ Is she a new woman battling for the rights of her sex. Eight Years Hanging Between Life and Death With Acute Heart Diseaseâ€" And in 30 Minutes After Taking First Dose of Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart Relief Comesâ€"What it Did for Alfred Couldry, West Sshefford, Que., it Can do for Any Sufferer From the Same Cause. "I had been suffering from acute heart trouble forâ€" over four _ years. When doctors had tried and failed to give me relief, I procured Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. In thirty minutes after the first dose I had relief, and alâ€" though mine was a case of long standâ€" ing, eight botlles effected a Foxmauent curs, and 1 firmly believe, after knowâ€" ing what it has done for me, that there is no hopeless case, while this great cure is to be had. 1 cheerfully sancâ€" tion the use of my testimony in whatâ€" ever way it may do the most good.‘" FLAG SIGNALING. The flags to be boisted at one time in signaling at sea never exceed four. It is an interesting" arithmetical fact that with 18 variousâ€"colored flags, and never more than four at a time, no fewer than 78,642 signals can be givâ€" TENDER HEARTED, Landladyâ€"You look at that coffee as if you‘d like to throw it out of the window. Boarderâ€"O, no. I never abuse the weak. Three Months Without Sikepâ€"Wasted in Flesh and Given Up to Die,. But The Great South American Nervine Soothes to Rest ‘Yith One Dose and Efifects a Rapid and Permanent Cure. Mrs. White, of Mono 'l‘ownshi_p. Beavâ€" erton P. O., was dangerousy ill from neivous troublre. She was so nervous that she had pot sirpt a night for three mont bs. She was so fow that her friends despaired of her recovery, in fact, had given her up to die. She was persuaded to try South American Nervime. Her re‘ef was so instantanâ€" eous that after taking one dose . she slept soundly all nigh‘. _ She persisted in the use of this great cure and gainâ€" ed in health rapidly, so that now there is not a sign of the nervousness, and she feels she is entirely â€" cured. If you doubt it, write and ask her. An automatic restaurant has been opâ€" ened in Berlin, where, by dropping coin in a slot, the dishes are sent up on a tray. Rolls, wine and coffee _are now served, and more elaborate dishes are to follow. The inventor is an Italian, and the novel scheme is attracting great attention. Fatherâ€"Because he has always figâ€" ured successfully to get out og work and study. Professorâ€"What makes you think that your son is likely to excel in mathematics ? MUBT BE DISSOLVED. sSURE TO sUCCEED KINDLY ADVIVE A sLOT DINNER UNTOLD AtON Y HEART RELLEI INSOMNLA ) Baked bananas are also the ideal food for nervous persons and anaemics, also brain workers; 1 learned their great power to sustain mental effort in India, If people who are under great mental strain would on two mornings every week include a couple of baked bananas in their menu and leave out the chop or steak, thay would last longer. T am as hard a brain worker as any person in New York, and I have subsisted for ears entirely on baked bananas. ‘Wion {\'ea lean, blomiâ€"poor persous 1 adviso Bananas should never be ea they are fuil.of animal germs, productive of taps worm. . Raw are very‘ indigestible. Youngs o r raw bananas mearly alway from diseas>s of the intestinal c convuisions. .~Physicians call s dern "banana babies." t0 i.. 1 sgay from personal 2: that three bananas weighing o are equal in nourishmeni to tw pounds of bread when haked. 108 SUf. No poor cniia nesd go to school hungry. One cent will buy â€" a goodâ€"sized banans, which, when baked in its skin in an oven for {fifieen or twenty minutes until it is quite soft and burst open, alone makas a _ full mea‘t.. Now the banana sold at stree! corners are really plantains. Humâ€" boldt calculated the ford product af the plantain compared with the potato as 44 to 1, and compared to whes as 133 to 1.. 1 say from personal experieace The Baked Banana Recomimended as an Artricle of Food and » Care for Biscase. Besto w a boon ou humanity and help to popularize the baked banana as an article of fouw1 for rich and poor, especiâ€" ally the poor, says a writer in the New York Sun. No soor child ne>d #a +o Lumber, Shingles and Lath always Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" Sash and Door Factory. ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. Wood‘s Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominton, 11 %%% % % % 1 2 + %° 2 % 2 20 tA A~.*~.~.~ 2 5 % 4 g’ Is the result of over 35 years treating thousands of cases with all known f drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatmentâ€"a combination that will effect a prompt and permarent cure in all stages of Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mentel Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of C - *"*I which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood‘s Before Taking. | Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopelessâ€"cases that had been treated by the most talented physiâ€" ciansâ€"cases that were on the verge of despair and insanityâ€"â€"cases that were a totlering over the gravoâ€"but with the continued and persevering use of Wood‘s Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to dis, were * Â¥ restored to manly vigor and healthâ€"Reader you need not despairâ€"no matâ€" ter who has given you up as incurableâ€"ths remedy is now within your i reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefuiness and happiness, ‘ Price, one package, $1; six packeges, $5; by mail free of postage. LA Arapdal One will please, six guaranteed to cure, Pamphiet free td any address. |* *h € I D VARICOCELE CURED € IGUILTY Or NoT cultty EU >Moerciltfenr(s : = 17 YEARS IN DETROIT, 200,000 CURED READER! Ares0u a victim? Have you lost hope? Ar SNATCHED FROM THE GRAVE, : THE BANANA CURLEL. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Wood‘s Phosphoding. yin & w â€"â€"lli> ) ppraagam> enl In S&tocli. X. G. &J. McKEBCHNIE, siree! Humâ€" af the L0 as in 2y JP One Pill a dose, 40 in a Dr. Agnew‘s Liver [;ills are Coated like a Cinnamon Drop, very Smail and Delightiul to Take. Th ®. D P This subjeci which prepristely be called i because many disease eatingy ba‘ked bananas. prove of inves polat but d them to e unfeltingly ir Popularity is a Mighty Whirlâ€" wind Sweeping Competitors Before it Like Chaff. 1 pred above i in, no n size, â€"The Great English Remedy. Y¥‘ 10 VAs CINNAMON COATED , No gnpm'g, no incenvemence. z°, and plessant to the taste, isant aiter effects. eat baked bananas, and they #l1 the face, while the face They bhad other peculiarâ€" which was the rudimentâ€" veloped sondition of â€" the or back grinder tooth. The es that the first meo origâ€" ke,‘of the German Anthâ€" miety, recontly undertook ie physical characterislies men, as ascertained from ion Of yprehistortc graves. a yellowish color he said, e hair. Their heads were ped, the part of the skull is tha brain being larma mm C ~ C OVmeakk @. imectrenioneec a over, rrealer e ._ ‘ @ 1 l l A.e aking. Vial for 20 cents nelr man Anthâ€" iti the skull ng large h from d« U N N Assoricd

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