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Durham Review (1897), 12 Aug 1897, p. 3

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ank deposits of $1 tion and everyfro at a distance. a Health and urses through r, lWeâ€"maintal ; transacted n all points. illowed at « ING ER iN CANADA EN YFARS. tFaubles of the psst. of Canada ELLX, Agont, 4s ! our â€" &ergymen ire doing in the »d they wourd be it not the relief Nerviae brings to _ ills overtake system, @&* a re* and cogtinuous Nervine treats the g\rmn treats f: at. It atrikeg ¢$ oB the STFRIEND ENCY . J > IER. IX ADVANCR N , ONÂ¥. orning, erontoâ€" en it become* y, the case w.th covcaed such ia« + wisa comp ele= diticn a friâ€"ad nization of PP 2\ y Un ‘S-Mum 1,000,0008 1 points in ip.oylug J sl of Sout y velier mit up -j. Manager was taken Â¥e yUmng, rea the secured & Lis e nnit es 3 9e & mill. The foremag bad the ‘ffi' lookâ€" ed and proceeded to harangueé the workâ€" men, but it was to no purpose. Severa‘ were notified that they were dischargâ€" Mr. Grundy was employed in a cotâ€" ton mill himself at the time this last strike iook place. The workmen simâ€" ly quit when they had worked ten Eoun one day, aend so inaugurated a movement which was successful. Mr. Grundy says that at that time there was so little general education that many persons could not tell the time of day by a clock, and sc in passing around the word for the inauguration ol the strike ovorybodeaa instructed to stog work when the clock pointed stra‘ght up and down, this bei & method of securing a more mus?‘nnâ€" ders‘ anding than to say 6 o‘cleck in the Mr. Gru.~*â€" remembers seeing bodies of the strikers marching along the hiqhwnyo thickly massed together and filling the roads from side to side as far as they could be seen. ‘l‘l:{ were always armed with clubs, & when marching would line up close togethâ€" er. each graspi the club of the man on sither side fl him, and so weaving themselives into a solid mass. In this way it was rendered imposaible for anyâ€" thing or an&body to occupy the road but the strikers, and their o:!’ent of forcing a general suspension busiâ€" ness in the district was obtained. This was only for a little while, however, as large bodies of the troops of the emâ€" Kire were ordered into the district held y the strikers and soon obliged them to preserve the peace and desist from interfering with the affairs of those wheo desired to w on business. Mr. G h:':..d::b htwth of tdh‘::‘l:t- ler is that m sy y was yâ€" 2d for the strikera !y the tno&. and that the latter were of very little use a«» {iar as breaking the strike of the weavers was concerned. ‘The strike was lost, however, the weavers going back to their work at the end of six weeks without having obtained any inâ€" rrease of wages, or any shortening of their hours of labor. It was not lonf, bowever, until Parliament, as a result of this satrike, began to pay some atâ€" tention to the condition of the weavâ€" ers, and laws which served very effectâ€" aally to ameliorate their condition were passed. Cobden, Bright and other great Engâ€" lish statesmen took up their cause, and investigations and discussions, resultâ€" :d. tbfin‘g‘ood effeots of which are still felt. ‘ evenng. In the mill where Mr. GrumH worked the clock was watohed all afternoon, and when the time came there was a general rush for the outside of the eC m B ul B2 2c ie N6 ies sewk ues Yecalis bi which English workingmen were enâ€" abied to obtain chou'per food, Mr.Grunâ€" dy thinke, was largely due to the strike, though it had been advocated before the strike took um Another law which was of great nefit forbade women and children under eighteen years of age to be employed in the cotton mills longer than ten hours a day. This law was not only a good thing in itself, but it caused the workers generally to think and agitate for a tenâ€"hour day, and some ten years after the great atrike of 1842 there wawa general strike for ten bours which resulted successâ€" fully, and which was the he?inning of vetter times in the matter of bours of labor in nearly all English industries. forcing of his teacher to disiaiss School! and the obliging of his father to susâ€" penod business. Mr. Grundy‘s father was a hatter, having a snop of his own and employing a few hands in the town of Ashton, near Manchester. The strikers came in a large body, and it was only necessary for one of them to -:.LP‘: out that fire, Grundy," and hal tor immediately suspended all work in his little place and sent his men home to wait for the strike to be over. â€" During the sizx weeks industry of ovâ€" ery kind was entirely suspended in the district affected, it being estimated that in the neighborhood of 3,000,000 PEOPLE WERE IDLE. ‘This included the weavers themselves and persons of every other occupation whom they obliged to leave work. The emall tradesmen and manulacturers. were obliged to close their places, the teachers in the schools, had to send their pupils home, and the strikers even prevented the pamsing of vehicles upâ€" on the highways by massing themselves in compact bodies through which no horee could be driven. Mr. Grundy having been very young at the time this strike occurred, most of his information about it has beea gathered trom reading, The incidents. which he remembers are principally the forcing of his teacher to dismiss school since seen duplicated. He had someâ€" times wondered at the tameness of }aâ€" bor struggies which he has since witâ€" nessed compared with what he saw in his boyhood‘s days, but as be rememâ€" bers his feeling on the great occasion, it was simply one of satisfaction that the strikers should relieve him of the necessity of goingâ€"to school. mecording to Mr. Grundy‘s descripâ€" tion of this strike it must have been one of the greatest laborâ€"struggles that ever occurred. In 1842 the condiâ€" tion of the cotton workers in Lancaâ€" shire, Yorkshire and Cheshire, bad beâ€" come so bad, owing to the introduction of machinery, that a general strike movement was brought about without any organization and at first without leadership. dy was seven years old, called at the schooibouse where he was beginning bis education and compellied the teacher to give the scholars a vacation. This was a unique form of enforced sympathy strike, which Mr. Grundy has never When All Linds of Industries Were Nearly at a & B4 c Weeks â€" The or Struggle That Ever Oc curred â€" Ignorance of the Poopic These Days â€" The Strike Was Lest. Thomas Grundy, of Pittsburg, was & participant in some of the famous strikes which occurred in England forâ€" ty or more years ago, amd his recollecâ€" tions of the manmner in which they were conducted and his comments upâ€" on the good which they accomplished are interesting just now. Mr. Grundy is now upward of 60 years of age, and has been a hard worker in the labor movement nearly all his life. He drew his first inspiration from a mob of striking weavers, who when Mr. Grunâ€" CREAT ENCLISHE STRIKE A PARTICIPANT‘S RECOLLECTION OF THOSE STIRRING TIMES. REPEAL OF THE CORN LAWS Weeks â€" The | this occasion 3 _ and That Ever Oc thoroughly that : Peepie These | terward a genera st. g:ct.we gl. woi':ij r8 a y sbaurg, Wws | Grund waz tapl the famous ger, aiter â€" the W England forâ€" n in force for : buffet 's'bio?‘iixé cars. Time two Rours ahlgad of a olthetEllnu. § 6 thi assengers lor Europe, otec., via this line u‘e“‘llnded in N:E: York at éu- brosses, Cortlandt or West 23rd Bte., in close proximity toall European steamâ€" Lehigh Vall T4 ouD aifices be used in battle, on account of the risk involved in not.t.lnf. fire to inflamâ€" mable woodem ships. ‘There was then a maval amstinct | against treacherous methods of fighting. ‘This bas ‘fianed away. Every -“I now has the moiern resources for setting on fire :; aimk:ing by secret assault an enemy‘s ip. in naval reviews the btttleshkiopu are floating batteries which seem defy assault ; but turpedoâ€"boats have never been used Against them. _ With a single sting of the little ateel wasp the great leviathan with its heavy armor and longâ€"range guns may go down with a quick plunge. If the exâ€" perts only knew what was the real, efiective valug ol the torpedo in naval warfare, they could tell with a fair deâ€" free of confisience what the fleets of the uture would be like. $ T.hu:{ do »not know, and the buildâ€" ing the ficets goes on in a fog of uncertainty. "I command one of these ships," said an old seaâ€"dog at Kiel, "but let me teil you frankly, I would mnot like to go into battle with ber. close proximity toall European steamâ€" sahip Sooku, .flon‘t.fl.fl to ask for. tickâ€" ete and alowhg car accommodation via Lehigh Valley route, at all Grand had been property manned and well hundled, Meanwhile, the art of naval warfare has beein revolutionized, and every maritime nation has been expending imâ€" mense sums upon battleships and other fighting vessels without knowing wheâ€" ther armor will adequately protect them or whether torpedoâ€"boata do not hold the proudest fleets at their meroy. ‘Two years ago there was a wonderâ€" ful naval review at Kiel when the Balâ€" tis Canal was opened, and this year there has been another off Portamouth at which the most pPOWERFUL ENGLISB FLEET ever arsembled in any. waters: has bees. sBeen on holiday parade. â€" ‘These fleets were immnense combinations of machineâ€" shope, engineâ€"bouses and gunâ€"factories. What their value may: be in a seaâ€"batâ€" tle is one of the mysteries of the sea. | The best expéerts frankly say that they do not know whether these comâ€" plex iron bokes filled with steam and electric mnr’hlnel?' will remain afloat umder heavy fire from shore or torpedo attack. They readily admit that navies will be transformed as soon as there is a great engagement between modern fleoets. n Nelbon‘s time there was an unâ€" written law that bot shot were not to We shall know more after the next naval war than we do now." During the last quarter of a century there has been no naval battle worthy of being mentioned in the same breath with Trafalgar or the Nile, or with Rodney‘s great victory in the West Indies. Lissa in the Adriatic was a emall fight at the opening of the new era of naval progress. A fow ironcluds have been in action on the west coast of South America, and a British fleet shelled the illâ€"armâ€" ed forts of Alexendria. There was a battle between fleets on the Yalu not long ago ; but the menrtal inferiority of the Chimese to the Japanese rendered it imposslble for experts to judge what their shins wouid bhave dome If they The Building of Great Tronclads Ouly am Experiment. The most remarkable experiment in recent years is the building of navies at enormous expense, when there has _ Records iike the following carry conâ€" viction with them, and in a practical sense it might be said that this is still the age of miracles, Mr. Edward Dowâ€" ney, of Macoan, N.B., says:â€"‘"I have been a resident of Cumberland Co., some years. I have been a @reat sulferer from upwards of ten years )w;th sciatic rheumatism. I was torturâ€" ed with esvere pains which at times would become afx:wot. unbearable, and I think I suffered almost ovorythlnfi‘: man can suffer and live. I was soc pled that I could not work and part of the time was not able to even move about. I became so weak, and my sysâ€" tem so run‘ down that I'deqn.lrod of ever getting better. lg case was an almost hopeless one, and as I bad ab andoned work I was almost he.lvylesa for over a year. I heard of Dr. Williamsa Pink Pills and I was induced to at least ive them a trial. In a sabort time I goan n to recover and the mm:ln% fa.ma left my back and limbs, so tha was epabled to walk out of doors. Before I had umed more than hbalf a dozen boxes I was almost enâ€" tirely _ well and _ could do . a a hard day‘s work. I had a good apâ€" Feuu ‘nd{uecm to gain flesh and feel ike a new man. I am free from aches and %ms mand have Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to thank for it all." The reâ€" m:'.or could not help fesling that Mr. ney‘s case was a striking one, as he now presents a stout well built figure, straight limed and as smart in been no ppportunity of testing the valus of the new machimery in actual twenty. Bowed Down With Rheumatism and Sciatica. From the Post, Backville, N.B. hours a day. In the mill where Mr. GrundI was employed, too, the manaâ€" g::. after the tenâ€"hour «ystem had n in force for some time, called the workmen together, and expressed his satisfaction with it, sa.ying that the reâ€" sults obtained were much more satisâ€" factory from the standpoint of the proâ€" prietors than under the old way. them or the others. Mr. Grundy thinks that among iznorant workmen, that is, among those who are ignorant, in the matter of education obtained from books, there has been as a rule more loyalty to each other displayed than by those who are fairly well educated. Uy those who are fairly well ©OUucaled, At any rate they otunz together. upon this occasion, and won their strike so thoroughly that there was never afâ€" terward a general return to the old practice of working twelive or fifteen HELPLESS FOR A YEAR A SEA MYSTERY. no effect upon man of must never hirm another maliciously. Cutâ€"Quite ri'.gt. quite right ! If you want to get full mfiymnt out of it you must take care to hbarm him in a spirit of Christian charity and forgiveness. mctress, who thinks of havi her diamonds .to{?g for the gake o!nffiq adâ€" New P fresh from the East â€"I know exactly what you wmt,Jc;n- tlemen. _ You do not wish a lot of inâ€" consequential facts crammed into the children‘s heads. You want me to A plaster made by spreading "Quickâ€" cure" on canton flannel, linen or cotâ€" ton, removes "pain in the back," more quickly than any known plaster, its effect is almost beyond belief. Doctors now use it instead of those Plasters, that contain the powerful poisons Acoâ€" nite or Belladonna, which should be used only when your ph{sicinn.per- mits, as your system might be, poisonâ€" ed by absorption of the drugs in these plasters kidngs to healthy action. It cleared out all the â€"poisons that were P“t up in the blood. It made him well. children‘s heads. You want me to teach the {m idea bow to shoot. _ President, of the Echool Board, enâ€" thusiastically.â€"That‘s it. stranger. don, at the Queen‘s Jubilee, an‘ did ye talk with himf?" Popâ€"I saw ‘im, but ths crowd was so big hbe didn‘t see me. "Quickcure" cures cuts of all kinds or lacerated wounds; ,applied early, it prevents blood poisoning. ight‘s Disease. His gkin was pale and + %e had Indi . Heart Palpiâ€" ion, tuess of Breath, and Jreat weakness. ‘There was puffiness the face and -wolun’ of the legs. Hia urine was scanty, painful to pass and loaded with albumen. He felt that life was slippirg from his glaap with great rapadit‘y. Kootenay Cure came to his resous. It restored his _ Chart book free on application to the 8. S. Ryckman Medicine Co., Limited, Hamilton. Ont. Miss Gaswellâ€"Pop, did you see the Prince o‘ Wales while you was in Lonâ€" tioular piece of statuary with cane umbréllas? asked a vieitor at the EIR KENIGHT JAMES O8BORNEB, OP. BARTON TENT, No. 2 CURED OÂ¥ BRIGAETS DISEAAE. "Mootenay" was the Remedy, Word was received by nrt@:‘n&g No. 8, of Hamilton, Ont., James Osborne, was very i11, Efi% .‘u-& mflw was instruct» *A was fousd that hbe was suffering from Bright‘s Disease, a disease hereâ€" tofore pronounced m:. by ml as a matter of course that death was inevitable, and his lodge insurance would have to shortly be hgnl What was their surprise to have ; enter the globe, with the solitary exceEt.ion of Auscralia, produces wild roses. Even the frozen regions of the north, where the summer lasts but two or three months, and is at best a season which may be descrihed as vo? late in the hll.‘sro- duce their wild roses, and travelers through Greenland, Kamaschatka and northern Siberia, found in the profier season, an abundance of blossoms, while the crows of whaling vessels which call at S&itzborg:n come off shore with bouâ€" 11}0 of the native Spitzbergen rose. 1 wild roses are not of the same kind, for there are over 1,000 species of the wild rose. known to botanists, and the varieties are innumerable. That to remove corns, warts, bunions in a few daya, all that ilr«t:idmd is to apply the old and wellâ€"tested corn cureâ€"Putnam‘s Painless Corn Extracâ€" tor. . Bure, safe, painless. Putnam‘s The antiquity of the rose is so great that all account of its origin has been lost. It is not mentioned in the Bib lical writings earlier than the reign of Solomon, but the allusion to it then made is such as to indicate that the flower had already long been known, for the essence of roses was extensively used in Jerusalem and Judea during the reign of the luxurious and muchâ€" married king. ln Egypt the rose is deâ€" picted on a number of very early monâ€" uments, believed to date from 3000 to 8500 B.C., and in the tomb of an Egypâ€" tian princess, disinterred a year ago in southern Egypt, several hermetically sealed vials were founad, which, when opened, contained genuine attar of rosâ€" es, so that the modern claims for the discovery of this delicious perfume are vein. Rose waler. or the essence of roses is mentioned by Homer in the "Iliad;" Homer and Bolomon were nearly conâ€" temporaneous. Both the Greeks and Hebrews frobn.bl,y borrowed the idea of its manpufacture from the Egyptians, and these, for aught unybodly can tell, may have had it from the Indians or from the Chinese. for the latter claim for each of their discoveries and invenâ€" tions, a most marvelous, not to say, inâ€" credible antiquity. The rome is one of those flowers which by the people of every land are taken for granted as so well known as to need no fiuaimon and hardly mention, for it is a singuâ€" hnsd to heel, sls quickly ‘and painâ€" ac an = lessly on hard and soft corns. UNFORTUNATE. HOW TO DO IT. Cantâ€"If you would enjoy lif« ust never hirm another malic EXPERT CRITICISM (Why this sign not to touch this parâ€" cular piece o‘!( statuary wi em:.eg‘ or E&Tnu., smapped a competing artist, ou could only do it justice with an ANTIQUITY OF THE ROSE. I DON‘T FORGEN have. We all took the preâ€" to settle about rates before we ; of Maceabooes Delighted. IN TEXAS. every continent on the one ever ife, you iciously. TORONTO The Sistersof Charity, "Grey Nuns," Guy street, Montreal, writeâ€"â€""Hayâ€" ing made use of your ‘Quickeure‘ in our establishment, we are happy to add our testimony. also in its favor." ARCTIC POSTOFFICE. The most northern postoffice in the world has recently been established by the Norwegian Government on the Isâ€" land of Spitzbergen, off the north coast of Norway. There are pracâ€" tically no inbabitants in the vicinity, but the offise is established for the convenience of excursionists who â€" go there during the suwmmer months. | If anyone speake ill of thee, consider whether be bath truth on his side ; and if so, reform thyself, that his cemsures may aot affect thee.â€"Epictetus. "Quickeure" destroys the germs, called cocci, that cause boils and carâ€" buncles, reduces the inflammation and removes all pain;â€"read what ghysici- ans, who keep up with the advances of Medical Bcience bave to say about this in the Quickceure Book (free at all druggiste). The Berlin Shirt & Collar, Compana% compromised with their creditors at cents on the dollar. Major J.. 8. PDunbar, B8th Royal Riâ€" fles, ‘adjutant Bisley Team, Quebec, writesa:~â€"‘*"Quickceure" lwgo toothache imm‘edhte) . _ I bave wn of the merits of 'Aaumkcuu’ for many years." don asylum 'f"roun'"an'â€"i."tb" Saturday night or y Bunday morning and :ti%léo fifty pheasants, valued at about W. P. Abbey, aT., H. & B. embloye, has disappeared at Btratford. His acâ€" counts were all right. HOWs THIA 1 We oÂ¥#fer One Hundrod Dollars E:mrd for any case of Catarrh that cannot cured by Hall‘s Cssurh Cure. F. J. CHKENEY & CO., Prop«, Toledo, Q. We, the undenlgud. have «nown F. J. Cheney fer the last 15 years, and believe hbim perfectly honorable in all business tramsac tions, and Imd&ll& able to carry out an» obligation made l‘)‘ eir #rm. Wrst & Truax, Wholesale Uruggists, Toledo, ;,‘.‘::..:‘m' Yeast â€" One bait Tti?m‘% ungnark Watee > > -o"'rwowhu' Dissolve the sugar, cream of tartar and yeast in the water, add thuxmo? and bottle ; place in a warm ::].“ for twentyâ€"four hours untll 1b ferments, then place on ice, whon it will u sparkling, cool and delicious. The ginger w0n id sAloiind in Inr drag and Grovess seorer m:fiu ed in all dru udm'.'”'" :‘u":...“:a..umt.'o 16. _Unknown persons entered the Lonâ€" Mr. Massive, of Colborne, has won five humdred dollars at Cornell Uniâ€" pain. Every dentist, without exception, who has '{hp_rougl'fiy_ inves@i_gatu{’ this Nothing equals "Quickceure‘" as a dressing for Burns, Bcalds, Cuts or Wounds:â€"read &s‘nians testimony in "Quickeure" (free). new fiirsntion.'onaom it, and preâ€" scribes its use, in emergency, for all toothaches.â€"Read Quickeure Book, Karl‘s Clover Root Tes is a pleasant lazative. %‘ulat& the bowels puriâ€" fies the blood. Clears the complexion. Easy to make amd pleasant to take. 25 cents. Sold by all druggists. Lisut.â€"Governors Dewdney:of British Columbia, and Mackintosh of the Northâ€"west â€" Territories,â€" were â€" banâ€" quetted at Rousland. Cu1i | the cough with Shiloh‘s grnre. The bert Cough Cure. "Melieves ou’g promptly. One million bottles sold las year. 40 doses for 25 cents. Sold by all druggists. & I suffered for days from a vory seâ€" vere attack of rheumatism and tried various remedies; several lotions, elecâ€" tricity, etc., with little, if any welief; but after. applying "Quickeure" as diâ€" rected, the pain was much relieved, and in a few hbhours had disappeared altoâ€" gether. I can therefore conscientiously recommend this remetg. Bigned, W. Noble Campbell, Notary Public, Quebec. A street car horse ran away in St. Thomas Monday. It just forgot its busiâ€" ness for a minute. 1 Rheumatism for years, and Nervilinse -Ulboulyrenm{vthnthudoneme anmy good." o writes Thomas Mcâ€" glah, n, North Pemtod am, a& his dt:.tli on‘y is 'flm"r llz sands 0 derfully penetre T tlik tubdd. y pene ting an n subduâ€" E&_Meyr of Nervilm-thop:;'ut nerve pain care. Gas has been struck on a farm beâ€" }__on‘glns to David Mitts, near Tillbury, Among the mamy remedies for indiâ€" gestion is the agreenble one of the rockâ€" ing chair. An excellent medical authâ€" ority declares that the slow,, rocking motion after meals stimulates the diâ€" gestive functions and gives marked reâ€" lief. The patient oufht to be placed in an almost horizontal position. 4& DEPLOMATIC ASSURANCE. The British Government, said the Turkish Minister, will not consent to the permanent occupation of Thesâ€" Beld by all Drugwists. Hall‘s Family Pille & "I HAVB HAD Rheumatism for years, am Mem for work on the Urow 8 NeBC Rflwuz are being engaged at Regina at $1.40 per day. "Quickoure" cures toothache, and all ADAM‘G GINGER BEER. FOR INDIGESTON. the Crow‘s Nest mandant Bisley Team in 1894, writes: â€"*"*‘Quickoure‘ is a treasure, and does just what you say for it ; when it is known, eve’r{ household will have it. It is worth its weight in gold ko parâ€" ents whose children suffer from toothâ€" % » B[f:rud a little "Quickcure" on the surface of corns and cover with thin paper; the soreness will be removed at at once, as it reduces the inflammation which causes pain. _The new Presbyterian church, Woodâ€" ‘"Quickcure" removes all pain, and reduces all inflammation. Its effect is Btof that Cough! Take warning. It may lead to Consumption. A 256. botâ€" tle of Shiloh‘s Cure may save your life. Two members of the Hornerites, an advanced religious sect, are in jail in Montreal pending examination as to to leave town. . * _ _ _ The body of an Indian woman was found near Edmonton. Bhe had been strangled by tying her hair about her stock, which promises to he one of the fimest in Westerno Ontario, is nearing completion. i For H I C Intositd bnutalf ceb dA 11. A 11â€" 0 d menmtfor your weakness which wiil not fail. Y 1 will m forward full private .'d;;e. s'ck and description upon receivi our 4 address with sump.b‘ zhh & to reach those women only who require assisâ€" tance, bence I adopt this method, as I can exâ€" I ce y s ter . § my remedies. ® U om e n hood of Marmora station. testing The Ontario Government has a diaâ€" mond drill working in the neighborâ€" POocTOoRS RECOMMEND â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Ceylon Tea i. }}XW & "CSALADA Conboy‘s Improved Carriageâ€"Top FORONTO, G. DUTHIE & SONS SLATE, SHEETâ€"METAL, TILE & chavel Roorers All Pain tss d i2R evgen oi uen boaniage. “xa.u&;;%af,, *4 has no equal at any price. If you want something new, stylish, convenient and durable buy a Carriage with a Roll Curtain, Birest Rast, Torohtt. Moncy to Loan. _ 0. 0. Mills, B.A.â€"A. Mitls â€"Ja&s. Halos. LL B Dr. E. B. Ibbotson, Montreal, Comâ€" The police of Berlin are raiding disâ€" If your grocer sends you anything in place of SAPOLIO, send it back and insist upon having just what you ordered. SAPOLIO alâ€" ways gives satisfaction. On floors, tables, and painted work it acts like a charm. For scouring pots, pans, and metails it has no equal. Everything shines after it, and even the children delight in using it in their attempts to help around the house. SM Grocers eften cubstitute cheaper goods for AAPOLIO to make a be@er proft Soad hack such artisies and lasist on having just what you erdered Looking out over the many homes of this country, we see thousâ€" ands of women wearing away their lives in househoid drudgery that might be materially lessened by the use of a few cakes of SAPOLIO. If an hour is saved each time a cake is used, if one less wrinkle gathâ€" ers upon the face because the toil is lightened, she must be a foolish woman who would hesitate to make the experiment, and he a churiâ€" ish husband who would grudge the few cents which it costs. Mre. E. Woovs, 678 St. Paul St., Montreal WITH ROLLER CURTAIN THE J. D. KING CO., LTD., -..“...’.’Q.‘ A REAL LUXURY! bouses, and a number of unâ€" Has your doctor failed to cure r you? l am an expersienced woman‘s nurse, sad l have A Home Treat»> your weakmness which wiil not fail. bKCURE cures Doctors‘ Bills Are High have YOU SAY HOW? S:zrtw5,fsm ropm 224 ds Patent Sleeper Fiexible Insole _ PAMRR Barristers, Sol W P C 879 tN COMBINATION WITH CORK Used in t.b:.?uu!uttn 300 Wing & "Cey 12. . 1. ., ‘Toâ€" ronto. â€" "‘X Goodyear Welited upâ€"toâ€"dats Boot. No cacks ; no nails; flexâ€" ible; easy. It wili not gold ONTARIO. ALBERT COLLECE, Beliovilie, Ont. Arts, Business Courees, etc. _ Will re~opep Tuesday, Sept. Tth. Mustrated circular a Address, Prinormrar Drenm. OPEN TO BOTH e 200 studente enrolled. 8 : NC Matriculation. Teachory chpa ht Comiiriiemicale Pdan Ees Shoir best customers. Its just as che '-!t-g::mwg-o-qqu.. Uumumc& Axle Save a progt when ypou cna use Poa? uesnlon man} Ap leernond repll to nee â€" 8. GORRIOAN, 118 Yonge St., Torente. Cood Pay ::*::=>~â€" Winner is & Euiss VDisnor is better thee Prize TRINITY COLLECE SCHOOL PORT HOPE, ONT. A boarding school for boys, founded in 1866, Srlwloul and handsome new ImlldiT- tur nished with all mâ€"dern appiances for the comfort and heaith o# the . _ Noxt term begins on Wednesday, S¢p:. I5th. For a copy of the nalendar, etc., apply to the Patent Stopper Soda Water Bottles, com plete, for sale cheap. Peserlese Machine Manufacturers Truth Building, 73 ADELAIDE 81. WEST. TO POP MANUFACT URERS Can‘t beat it for Woar â€"stands 5_{0}??1@!.. OI.I.‘f Dealore THECOOK‘SBESTFRIEND DUNNS BAKING POWDER FOR TWENTYâ€"SEVEN YRARS vhup TL To tatey Ieoanee uns ns nesseesss LARGEET TaLer in ~â€"@~aps Coming to Toronto will find flats of any size, with power, heat, elevator, and all conveniences. rermmonr The I.-‘v' CariCGan College k for Young Women. Avor®ss : o, Ont, Toronto, St., iam 25 Will SANADIAN NOME JOUVRNHAL Mcklirxor Buiipine, Tononue y, Sep:. 16th. _ For a copy appiy to the Rrv, Dr. Bervuuxne, or Gem Axle Guédge,

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