West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Jul 1898, p. 3

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@ cured there. ne world have nog beâ€"m the ingquiry into the suc» merioan Nervine Peoâ€" ® true. at its wonderfui es but they know beâ€" lon that it does every. imed for it . It stands REVUEY _ of Canada r lranca m all pod been â€" cured hen they have to bafie the t pbysicians, Nervin«e Ras vil o lieat the ofg sed. South A.uflta y the organs, and im« lis ourative powere tres. from which the Fy receive theair supply The â€" nerve cantres necessity the orgea ®& L the outward evidence :nr.v. is healed. _ Indtâ€" sness, . impoverishe& mplaint, all owe their angement of the nerve sands bear testimony , been cured of these when they have become ‘ndp.l poin“ i. oba United States Ges. P. Reid, Managet orning. "® Efeat certain cur ‘inetsenth century .. w9 suffer CM!.- 2nd gi IÂ¥ ADVAXCR » is Propriston won and everyfaoile ut a distando . ral treatment enie nrl.vr all medicines. isw wh" Inclples. that ENCY oronto ELLX, Agont. &D If CY Discovery e# Dours A NY I% Amertâ€" 14 w0 $2,000,008 to treat the neacted Drafte poluts. Depos od at current 1,000,006 600,0008 the skill of ins, because has gone to of #1.00 I horas Munro roms If @in curing * g "ITI8 AN EBARTEQUAKE For Two Centaries Port Royal Has Slamâ€" bered Beneath the Blue Carlbbean, Â¥Yet Even Now in Calm Weather Mer Subâ€" merged Buildings May Be Seen in the Crystal Depth, There is little of poetry in war. The gentle muses wing their flight before the deafening roar of cannon and the rattle of musketry. The newspaper corâ€" respondents in Southern waters are too busy with the stern realities which confront them to pay much heed to beauties which ubder other circumâ€" stances might inspire them to dainty bits of descriptive writing. R A SUNKEN CITY OVER WHOSE SPIRES WAR SHIPS FLOAT. To illustrate my point we shall quote from a despatch dated from Kingstorn, Jamaica. "For two days," writes this correspondent, "our desâ€" patch boat bas beenm lying here in the beautiful harbor of Kingston. Under the clear blue water. a few fathoms beâ€" neath ber keel sleeps the sunken city of Port Royal. Not a gtone‘s throw from our boat a red buoy swings and rocks in the moonlight. It marks the spot where the old city‘s cathedral sank and where the spire still reaches up nearly to the surface," That was all. That was the only reâ€" ference to a subject rich in historical lore and the possibilities of unwritten Fromance. How little is known of the mysterious city beneath the waves of Kingston barbor, a city which at once suggests the hidden wonders of fabled Atlantis, which Jules Verne bas deâ€" scribed with such a wealth of imagery in his " Twenty Thousand Leagues Unâ€" der the Sea." But Atlantis was probâ€" ably a myth, while Port Royal is not. T!e traveller who visits the capital of Jaimaica should pray for clear weathâ€" er, without wind. When the water of the harbor is ruffled by breezes the hidden city is obscured from view. But on a cloudless, still day, when the surâ€" face of the sea is periectly smooth, the ruins of e may be plainly seen in the depths of the transparent water. The spire of the old cathedral is the most prominent object. In the clear water you can see the fishes, lazily swimming in and out among the ruinâ€" ed turreis, more suggestive of owls and bats than of the {inny inhabitants ?I th.e sea. Occasionally glimpses can be had of the ruins of other buildings â€"buildings which for more than two centuries have kept their ghastly secâ€" rets and will keep thern until the end of time. to the sea with their homes on that awful June day in 1692 An earthâ€" quake, suddenly and without warning, smote the profligate city of Port Royâ€" al, which slid into the sea. The waters opened and swallowed it up, and there beneath the silent waves was hidden the wickedness and debauchery of a community described by historians as being almost without parallel. . Buccaneering and piracy were recogâ€" nized industries. The treasure ships of \Epain were legitimate prey. The riches ‘of Mexico and Peru were levied upon ‘and the people of Jamaica were literâ€" !ally rolling in wealth and splendor. ‘Vice and debauchery held sway. Bacâ€" ‘chanalian revels which might put to Roden‘s, whither I was invited, whose of nightly occurrence. There was no virtue. «xo onl ie wl Down there, in that peaceful depth, lie the bones of three thousand men, women and chiidren, carried down inâ€" The survivors said it was the venâ€" geance of God, and likened it to the deâ€" struction of Sodom and Gomorrah. And in very truth the history of the city seems to show the unceasing wrath of divine power, From the richest city of its time it has dwindled into insigâ€" nificance, until now it is a most wretchâ€" ed place, used only as a naval station. Disaster after disaster has overtaken it. After the earthquake the town was rebuilt, only to be completely destroyâ€" ed by fire in 1703. On August 22, 1722, it was swept into the sea by a hurriâ€" came. It was once more reconstructâ€" ed, but again, in 1815, it was reduced te ashes, and as recently as 1880 it was visited by another hurricane. Eyâ€" ery disaster was attended by GREAT LOSS OF LIFE. The city of Port Royal was originally built upon a narrow strip of land exâ€" tending out into the sea, which acâ€" sounts for its strange disappearance at the time of the earthquake. Like the house of the foolish man of Biblical lore which was builded upon the sand,it literally slid into the water when the earthquake shock came. _ t Previous to that fateful seventh day of June, 1692, Port Royal had been known as " the finest town in the world." It was, as it now is, a British solony, but there was little either in its government or its customs of Briâ€" tish morality. We are told that it was a place of luxurious debauchery ; that in their excesses the colonists rivalled the: profligates of ancient Rome. And like the crack of doom came the earthquake. The thunder of the elements sounded in the ears of the heedless revellers. The earth opened in great fissures, and closed again like the jaws of a mighty trap. And in closing it gripped many of its victims in the middle, leaving their hands above ground. Then came the awful sliding, grinding noise, as the city, built upon its foundation of sand, eank into the caressing embrace of the sea, which forever closed upon its wickâ€" edness and will forever keep its dread secrets. _ a * cas _ In his " Annals of Jamaica," publishâ€" ed in 1828, Rev. George Wilson Bridges gquotes from a letter written by one of the survivorsâ€"a rectorâ€"two or three days after the disaster, which is, in part, as follows:â€" " After I had been at church readâ€" ing, which 1 did every day since I was The shock came close on to midday. The air was bot and sultry, The sky was witbhout a cloud. A great stillness geemed to hover over the city, and then, without warning, THE EARTH TREMBLED. Men and women left their houses and ran into the streets, only to meet death in the bowels of the earth or in the hidden recesses of the sea. . _ . THE PHANTOM CITY Despite the President‘s assurance, he disappeared, and was never heard of again. Continuing, the rector wrote: "'l made toward Morgan‘s Fort, beâ€" |eause I thought to be there securest \from falling houses, but as I was goâ€" l ing T saw the earth open and swallow | up a multitude of people, and the sea | mounting in upon them over the forâ€" tifications. Moreover, the large and ‘famous burying ground was destroyâ€" led, and the sea washed away the carâ€" |\ cases. The barbor was covered with | dead bodies, floating up and down." rector of this place, to keep up some show of religion, and was gone to a place hbhard by the church where the merchants meet and where the Preâ€" sident of the Council was, who came into my company and engaged me to take a glass of wormwood wine as a whet before dinner, he being my very good friend, I stayed with him, upon which he lighted a pipe of tobacco, which be was pretty long in taking, and not being willing to leave him before it was out, this determined me from going to ainner to one Captain Roden‘s, whither I was invited, whose house, upon the first concussion, sunk into the earth and then into the sea, with his wife and family, and some that were come to dine with him. Had I been there I had been lost. But to return to the President and his pipe of tobacco :; before that was out I found the ground rolling and moving under my feet, upon which I said unto him, "Lord, sir, what is that?" He replied, being a very grave man, ‘It is an earthquake. Be not afraid ; it will soon be over.‘" k _ _"iIn the oid days, although the broadâ€" sides made a good deal of noise, no doubt, a ship went down much more \ quietly than now. Just think of the | commotion in the water when the big fires and the boilers go under. No shark will stay within a mile of such an upheaval. ! ‘"‘There is a way of helping yourself when you get into that fix. That‘s ljust. why 1 say that in these modern battles the danger from sharks is not |likely to be anything like what it was in old times. _ Perhaps you are not \aware that a shark is the most timid and nervous fish of prey that lives, but it is so. When you find yourself \floating about in those waters and think a shark is anywhere near you |\ just you kick and splash for all you |are worth. If you don‘t think there are any sharks about kick and splash on general principlesâ€" that is, if you want to see your home and your famâ€" ily again. A shark that is making | straight for his prey will turn tail and | sheer off as soon as the splashing beâ€" gins. Now I believe that in a general engagement between these modern | ships, what with the tremendous conâ€" cussion of the beavy guns and the churning of the water with propellera | on all sides and an occasional torpedo | raising a disturbance every now and then in the water. the whole neighâ€" borhood will be cleared of sharks. _ "I am not talking mere theory when I say that a shark can be frightened off by splashing. I have seen it done, or, to be quite exact, I saw the man who did it just after he had scrambled out of the water. He had been in bathing in one of those sea baths they have in Kingston harbor, where they fence in a good piece of water with piles driven into the bottom close toâ€" gether. One of the piles had got broken somebow, and a big basking shark bad squcezed through and gone | to sleep in the bath. _ When the man ‘ plunged in the shark woke up and comâ€" menced to charge around. By that |time the man was some yards away | from the steps. _ He immediately turnâ€" | ed on his back and kicked as hard as ‘he could. the shark, instead of chargâ€" ing at him, went into a lively panio and bumped his nose against all the 1 pih;)s looking for the hole he had got in by. ; "I know it sounds like a fable to say ; @a shark is timid, because they will do | RiofhratnetriendineadiPrisiencartes Wsicaircira srincar itsianr 6 W iricniihaivl | things that you would hardly expect | a timid fish to do. 1 mysel{ have seen a shark leap out of the water close enough to a rowboat to tumble on the ‘oar blades but that was my own dingey, and my boys knew how to row, and didn‘t make a splash with the blades or try any of this landlubberly \‘feathering‘ business. _ Then there is & place at Port Royal where a little ‘flight of wooden steps goes down into the water, and they say that a British artillery officer who was sitting on thos> stepsâ€"or some other steps that were in the same placeâ€"one morning, smoking a cigar, bad both his legs torn off by a shark that swam close in shore and rose at him as a trout rises at a fly. But all that only shows that a shark is a queer, inconâ€" sistent kind of a fish, and in spite of all his impudence, you may depend upon it, he can‘t stand anything that makes a disturbance in the water. Impudent in General, but Can‘t Stand a Commotton in the Water. "One horror of sea fighting I believe the United States sailors will be spared in this war," said a veteran sailor, "and that is the large chances of beâ€" ing killed by sharks. The whole of the Caribbean Sea about Cuba swarms with those infernal things, and, as a rule, when a man drops overboard, the chances are that in another minute noâ€" thing will be left of him on the surâ€" face but some red stains in the water, unless he keeps his presence of mind and knows just what to do. x ‘"Oh, yes when the battle is over he will follow the ship that has any wounded men on boardâ€"follow it for â€"miles. I don‘t know how he knows there is a wounded man or a sick man on board a ship, any more than I can tell how Mother Carey‘s chickens can read the barometer, but he does know. You see, a seafaring man has to be satisfied to know a good many things that he can‘t explain." but offer nothing toward disarming the thunderbolt. Locusts swarm in South Africa. They have been so numerous during the past two months that railroad trains have been stopped by them. ; A lightning specialist maintains that rods are no protection, and that most precautions taken by people to keep out of the path of a possible electrical discharge are useless. The recent wonderful discoveries in relation to the uature of electrical force prove the worthlessness of the lightning rod, THE QUEER WAYS OF SHARKS. LIGHTNING RODS. HAIR JEWELRY. The times are modern, and the days of our grandmothers are in no wise reâ€" turning yet one of the most popular fashions of long ago is coming back. Hair jewelry is in vogue again, and in no halfâ€"hearted way, for very many of the younger generation are taking a keen interest in it, and if all signs are true there will be any amount of hair jewelry seen a month or so from ‘The popular shades of hair for these ormaments are golden brown and red, but it really matters little what your bair may be in the way of color and tint. ‘The main thing is that you should have some stray vagrant strands of it made into some bit of jewelry. Just what sort of jewelry fashion does not attempt to decide definitely. It allows belle and beau a wide latitude in point of view of taste and idesign. Crystal lockets are, however, the orâ€" naments in the way of hair jewelry that are the most popular at the moâ€" ment. Through the crystal the hair of the adored one is seen in a true lover‘s knot. Also very fashionable are crysâ€" tal rings, with the girl‘s hair braided in curious and artistic designsâ€"hearts, fourâ€"leaf clovers, etc. Some of these rings have crests and coats of arms in them, all ingeniously worked in hair. There are, too, hair bracelets, hair watch charms and hair scarf pins, each of artistic working and handling that is remarkable when the difficulty of handling such an intangible substance as a strand of hair is considered What has been done already, though the returning fashion is very young yet, shows that the olden art has not been lost in any way as yet. Even more difficult designs than those already mentioned have been and constantly are attempted. Tiny pictures are embroidâ€" ered in hair, just as they are embroidâ€" ered in silk. No design " stumps" the operator, even landscapes that are realâ€" ly complicated forming under her skilâ€" ful fingers. Such pictures in bair are much in demand, the more especially if they are done on an exceedingly small scala He Became 8o Run Down That Work Was Almost Impossibleâ€"His Whole Body Racked With Pain. From the Bridgewater Enterprise. Mr. Austin Fancy is a well known blacksmith living at Raker Settlement a hamlet about ten miles from Bridgeâ€" water, N.S. Mr. Fancy is well known in the locality in which he lives. He is another of the legion whose restoraâ€" tion to health adds to the popularity of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Mr. Fancy related his story of illness and renewed health to a reporter of the Enterprise, as follows:â€"‘" During the last winter, owing, I suppose, to overwork and imâ€" pure blood, I became very much reâ€" duced in flesh, and had severe pains in the imuscles all over my body. I felt tired all the time, had no appeâ€" tite, and often felt so low snirited that I wished myself in another world. Some of the time, necessity compellâ€" ed me to undertake a little work in my blacksmith shop, but I was not fit for it, and after doing the job, would have to lie down ; indeed Iofâ€" ten felt like fainting. I was advised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and after usine a couple of boxes, I felt a decided relief, _ The pains began to abate, and Ifelt again as though life was not all dreariness. By the time I had used six boxes I was as well as ever, and able to do a hard day‘s work at the forge without fatigue and those who know â€" anything about a blackâ€" smith‘s work, will know what this means. Those who are not well, will make no mistake in looking for health through the medium of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. i Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the disease. They renew and build up the blood, and strengthen the nerves, thus driving disease from the system, Avoid imitaâ€" tions by insisting that every box you purchase is enclosed in a wrapper bearing the full trade mark, "Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People." _ Winksâ€"There was with me. I had to come backjin the steerage. Jinksâ€"Has there been any scarcity of money fin Europe since the war with Spain began ? t .. The Kragâ€"Jorgensen rifle, now the arm equipment of the United States infantry, has a range of three miles. At this distance an expert can easâ€" ily pick off a man, while a soldier unâ€" accustomed to it‘s use could not hit a barn. It is customary, on the birth of a Japanese baby, to plant a tree. This is carefully tended until the child is grown, and about to be married. When it is cut down, and made into furniture for the home of th> young couple. ‘The oldest bhouse in the . United States is at Saint Augustine, Florida. It was built in the year 1564, as a monastery, and is now occupied as the winter abode of a Northern millionâ€" aire. The walls are forméed of seaâ€" shells mixed with mortar. Japan has a breed of mice which are| {,‘h‘;"."{ a puzzle to naturalists. At different | m;l millq periods of the day they whirl round I‘b"«‘fo‘cfil and round for bhours at a time. If a Onials i1 person should lift a mouse when it 4 Bold'b‘: whirling the animal will resum~*â€" Hall‘s F Japan has a breed of m a puzzle to naturalists. perivds of the day they and round for bhours at â€" and always the same. Lead ,.Ahc-u.w-.nhln SHIEIA . â€"â€".~ _ em8ee8f°OURSBLF FPRON ALL IMPURITIES, BY UsiNG AN EVIDENT SCARCITY A BLACKSMITH‘S STORY. TO CURE a CuLD IN ONE DAY. LUDELLA Ceyion Toea And suffer at leisure. When your abused stomach can no longer cheerâ€" fully and properly perform its duties, a few doses of Hood‘s Sarsaparilla are like fresh water to a withered plant. This medicine tones the stomach, reâ€" stores digestive strength, creates an appetite and with a little care in diet the patient is soon in perfect bealth. Try it and you‘ll believe in it. Te Canada‘s Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5 Hood‘s *3 A Few Paragraphs Which May Prove * Worth Reading. One of the bospitals in Moscow is large enough to accommodate 7,000 patients. All freshâ€"water snakes in India are harmless, and all salt water snakes are poisonous. Robert Taylor, the Postmaster at Scearva, County Down, Ireland, is said to be 134 years of age. Customs bhange. Among the Phoenâ€" icians, in ancient days, the wearing of earrings was a badge of servitude. . A passenger car on a steam railroad costs from $4,000 to $5,000; a baggage car, from $2,000 to $2,500; a sleeping car from $10,000 to $20,000. In Sweden there are floating canâ€" neries. They are small vessels, which follow fishing fleets, and men on them can the fish while they are fresh, A female monkey in the Zoological Gardens of Vienna is a trick bicycle rider. She pcrforms wonderful antics, and ber imitations of the buman ridâ€" ers are irresistibly droll. Warm meals are -supplied to all the pupils in the public schools of Paris. The cost of a meal is about two cents. The title " admiral" originally came from the Arabic phrase " amirâ€"alâ€"babr," meaning " ruler of the sea." When the last word was dropped and a " d " was added, it became " admiral," It is said that berrings are so proâ€" lific that if a pair of them could be left to breed and multiply undisturbâ€" ed for a period of twenty years, they would yield an amount of fish equal in bulk to the entire earth. Attached to the army of Norway is a corps of skaters armed with rifles. They can be manoeuvred on the ice or over the snowfields of the mounâ€" tains with a rapidity equal to that of the best trained cavalry. An old lady at Teplitz, Hungary, who had just passed the 99th anniverâ€" sary of her birth, had a fear of living A marvel of cheapness, of efficacy, and of promptitude is contained in a bottle of that famous remedy, Putnam‘s Painâ€" less Corn Extractor. It goes right to the root of the trouble, there acts quickly but so painlessly that nothing is known of its operation until the corn is shelled. Beware of substitutes ofâ€" fered for Putnam‘s Painless Corn Exâ€" tractorâ€"safe, sure and painless. Sold &t druggists. to be 100 years of age. To prevent this undesirable condition, she deliberâ€" ately held ber head in a tub of water until she drowned. ‘A witness in a London police court described the defendant as a gentleâ€" man. " What is your idea of a gentleâ€" man ?" asked the judge. " He seems to be a gentleman,." replied the witness, " because bhe walks about all day doâ€" ing nothing, going from public house to public house." An instrument for seeing objects unâ€" der water has been invented by a hyâ€" drographic engineer of Russia. By its aid the bottom of rivers, to a depth of from fortyâ€"five to sixty feet, can be distinctly viewed. In the examinaâ€" tion of wrecks this submarine teles cope will be of great service. Judge C. Panet Angers, Quebesc, writes:â€"*"‘Quickeure has always givâ€" en relief to my child." Hood‘s Pills cure constipation. 2 cents. Eat in Haste The new "shelter cloak tent" is made in two pieces, and is intended to be carried, when the army is on the march, by the two soldiers who occupy the tent. The balves are so arranged that when the tents are taken apart A plaster made with "Quickeure" spread on canton flannel, linen or cotâ€" ton, will give more prompt relief from crogp. than camphorated oil, or musâ€" tard. each half can be used by a solier as a waterâ€"proof cloak. The eldest of five married daughâ€" ters was married at a farmâ€"house in Erie, Pa. A plainâ€"spoken guest, desirâ€" ing to say something cheering to the groom, .remarked aloud, " Well, Jim, you have got the pick of the batch." The other four daughters stared at him with stony visages. as mercury will surelJ destroy the.ole sysâ€" smell and completely derange the:ucous surâ€" tem when entering it through t9r be used exâ€" faces, buch articles shoulfieput&ble phruio- cept on prescriptions frm1!l do is ten fold to ians, as the damage c;aly derive from them. t#e good you can ,» Manufacturcd by F. J, «li‘s Catarrh #+40.0., contains no mercury Cheney & Co <"DAlly.acting directly upon the ud is axr.'xcons eurfaces of the system. In %lood&‘ I‘s Catarrh Cure be sure you get bugl“ ine. It is taken internailly and made 1: dledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testiâ€" Beware of Ointments for Catarr that contain Mercury. .., of d by Di rice T50. lI‘s "mh‘y" fifi?’.'lr&fu. bog: A Cood Corn Sheiler for 256. ITEMS OF INTEREST. price 750. per bottle. TALENTED GREAT LADIES. The Princess of Wales is an artist in water colours whose works are very interesting, apart from the fact that she is who she is, writes a correspondâ€" ent. I saw two of them last week at the amateur art exbibition, hbeld in Mr. Reuben Sasson‘s house in Belâ€" grave square. Both looked as if they might have been done on the coast of Norfolk. They were exquisitely fresh in colour, bold in treatment, and yet well finished, and with none of the uncertainty that so often mars the work of an amateur. I am sure if the Princess of Wales wanted to earn her living she would only have to set up a studio as a waterâ€"colour artist. Other great ladies who could easily make a good income, are Lady Granby, who is fond of taking portraits of her friends in pencilâ€"and very delicate and beauâ€" tiful ones they are tooâ€"and Lady Cotâ€" tenham, who does exquisitely fine work ‘like ancient missal painting for the covers of books. . What‘s your friend Mrs. Lord‘s maidâ€" en name? She never uses it in writâ€" ing her signature. " i e No, it wouldn‘t do at all. Her maid« en name was Goode. Weoan out your 1898 Fence FBIIOG, Fel'lce-'.cmum in half. We claim we have the best and most practical frnce on e.n?; gonr mil:s 0° it in use at the Experiâ€" mental Farm, Gncl&b Ont. Send for prices. Address Toronto Picket Wire Fenoe Co., "rORONTo CUTTING SCHOOL offers special inducements to Aoung men desirous of taking up Cuiting. Pull particulars on appli« taking up Cuiting. PMull particuiars ol cal.il:nf. P H3 Y(fNUE ST., TORONTO. Mills, Mills & Hal Barvisters, etc.,remov to Wesley Blags., Ric mand St W Toront 821 River St. Toronto, Ont. ROOFING and Sheot Mota! Works: 4 UVFTIMUQ "rooFING SLATE, in Black, god or Green. SLATE BLACKBOARDS (We supply ublic and High Bchools, Toronto). Roofing Felt, Pitch, Doal Tar, ete. ROOTING TILE fieo New City Buildâ€" Ings, Toronto, done by onrflrm} etal Ooillng:, Corâ€" ices, eto. Estimates furnished for work complete or for Emor%l'e shipped to any part of the country. Phone 1930 . DUTHIE & SONS, Adelalde &Widmer §te., Toronto. "Quickeure" cures toothache, and all "The ,Money KNITTING RiBBING l aâ€"â€"MAC fi Maciine ol “l.l::.t:-.:-glmc- ‘\*‘* * Cook Hfg Co., London, Ont. /« oÂ¥ . \3 sure: /3 _ Removes Dandruff in One Week. Cures Itching of the Scalp. Prevents Breaking of Hair. Stops Falling Out. POSITIVELY CROWs HAIR D& sWORN TESTRMONIALS SENT FRRGL BPA A 4 A td A P tbA Only institation in Canada for the cure of every phase of speech defect. Established in Toronto, 1890. _ Cure guaranteed. CHURCHB AUTOYOCE IN8STITUTE, 9 Pembroke §t., Toronto, Canada. HAD A GOOD REASON. THE TRIVUMPHâ€"~ ADJUSTABLE STOVE PIPES. Easy put up and taken down. Can Easy put up and Caken CoWn, URN be cleaned, nested, and put away in a emall ;rwo Ask your dealers for them. apufactured by CG. B. BARCLAY, 168 Adelaide St. W., Toronto. TORONTO P e amstiane % esear 300 arae using it in Mamiltom. ©ver 1000 in Toromto and Londop. to Wesley Bl"d}rti',"lii'éh'- mond St. W., Toronto. w P C 926 Tms is For v@uâ€" Clothe your family from head to foot with our CREELMAN BROS., Georgetown, Ont. RPRODTU OBE " Prices only $15, $20 $30, We Undertake To Please«= INDOâ€"CEYLON_ TEA Is Pure, Healthful and Delicious, BOLD BY ALL CROOERS. In Lead Packets only, | _ 85, 30, 40, 50 and 60c per pound. W.C. HARRIS, Toronto The DAWSON COMMISSION CO., Limjted. PAID UP CAPITAL, â€"+ + $30,000. Cor. West Market & Colborne‘Bt., Toront@ Rubber Etampa and Shipping Cards plied. Correspondence invited. wcnel Dominion Line Steamships. MmoONSOON to Local A;enué‘or Davin TORRA Gen‘l Agents, 17 St. Sacrament St., CONBOY S IMPROYED CARRIAGE TOPS The WILSON PUBLISHINC 00., For Sale §T. GHARLES, JAMES B. REILLY, Owner and Prop. ALLAN LINE Royal Mail Steamship Co., Montreal to Liverpool. Steamers sail from Montreal eve morning on arrival of trains from the W est about 9 o‘clock. Fyruit, Buttor, J And other Produce to Cabin $5250 and upwards; Second s: and and $36.25; Swencfnbo Liv ndon, Glsgnv. Belfast, ndond« Queenstown $22.50 and $23.50. _ _ _ Nee e o e CCA A reduction of five per cent. is allowed on round trip first and second cabin ticket«. F sailings of stenmers or other information gpp‘; to any authorized agent. Iron Turning Lathe, sixteen inch swing, six foot bed, rod and gear full, counter» shaft complete, good as new, VERY CHEAP. Apply, MACHINES, OLD AND RELIABLE 13 to 81 Adelaide 8t. W., H. Bourlier, : King 8t. W. Toronte, Pays the m YOU, Or Roturn Your Money RATES OF PASSAGE MONEY MAKERA Price for Th } $8 An 2 3 11 16.

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