HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-6-14, Page 3THOUSANDS OF VICTIMS
SLAVE TRADE FLOURISHES IN
TUGUESE1 AFRICA.
PALE, WEAK WOMEN.
Gain New Health and "Strength Thronifh
Dr. N ]. ams' Pink Pills.
1'OI- Anaemia is just the doctor's name for
bloodlessness. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for Pale People aetually snake new
blood. Can any cure be more direct. or
ce' ' blood -
The 1 r 1
l n t cu
a Blo ow d e
od i b. a o
s
The Poor People Are Sent. lo Work in
Plantations. Under Alleged
Five-year Contracts.
Henry W. Nevinson writes as follows
concerning the slave trade in Portu-
guese Africa
Just a year ago I. was starting for my
Walk of 300 miles across the Cuanza
River and through the Hungry Country
of Angola, south of the Congo State. 1
had already come up from the West
Coast by a roundabout route to the dis-
tziet of Bihe, and there I joined the path
which has for centuries been one of the
Chief trade roads into the interior. It is
merely a track fn most places so nar-
row that you have to' walk like a na-
tive, putting one foot exactly in front of
the otber, but it leads in almost a• direct
line from ,the sea near Benguela across
the thirsty mountain belt, to the copper
ranges of Katanga, and so to the lakes
and away to the eastern sea. And this
little track, which turns' and twists _lo
avoid every tree stump and tuft of grass,
has from time immemorial been one 01
the great slave routes of the world,
SHACKLED SLAVES.
It is so still. As I entered the Hungry
Country T found slave shackles hanging
on almost every bush. They are the
wooden fetters with which the hands or
feet of the slave are tied at night, or
with which slaves are linked together
on the march.
The path • through the Hungry Coun-
try is strewn with bones and skulls, and
I found there the fresh bodies of slaves,
some murdered, some left to starve, be-
cause through fever or fatigue they had
been unable to keep up with the party
on the march, and in going through the
Hungry Country no one waits.
STOLEN OR BOUGHT.
In most cases the slaves are originally
obtained by natives, who buy them on
some charge of witchcraft, or for debt,
or for drink. Sometimes they are kid-
napped, or captured in raids. Some-
times they are mere plunder of Portu-
guese traders. They are brought to the
so-called "emigration agents," who are
established ablislhed at variouspoints in the coun-
try
try under Portuguese regulations, and
are forwarded by them to the coast,
where they are received by other agents,
chiefly at Benguela, but also at Novo
Redondo and Loando. Tele average
pre given for emigration slaves is £16,
ache igh I have known a' man give as
=itch as £25 there for a really nice -
los ding girl. She, however, was not re-
quired for emigration.
TO WORK ON PLANTATIONS.
Large numbers of the slaves are kept
to work the plantations on the main-
land or other industries along the shore.
But i wish now to speak only of the ex-
port, trade to the Portuguese islands of
San Thome and, Principe, in the, Gulf of
Guinea. The slaves are conveyed on the
ordinary passenger steamers, which run
about once a fortnight. A day or two
before the steamer starts they are col
leeted in a public building before a
Portuguese official called the Curador.
They are asked whether they are will-
ing to labor on the islands for five
years. Not the slightest attention is paid
to their answer.' A tin disc with a num-
ber and a tin cylinder . containing a
paper with particulars as to their
names, etc., are hung round their necks,
and having entered the office as slaves,
they go out as "contracted laborers."
The planters pay from £26 to £30 for a
grown slave delivered in good condi-
tion.
NEVER GO BACK.
It is almost entirely for the cultiva-
tion of cocoa that the slaves are re-
quired, and the cocoa trade is now of
great and increasing value. I believe it
amounts to about 11,000,000 a year. And
the value of the slaves is consequently so
great that I think their masters try in
most cases to keep them alive. Yet, as
our Consul, Mr. Nightingale, said in his
last -published report, the death rate,
where we can check it, is enormous.
Among the slaves of. the Principe, one in
five dies every year, and where I have
been able to test the rate on San Thome,
D is almost equally high.
At the end of the five years the sur-
vivors are called up in batches of about
fifty before the Curador and are informed
that their contract has been renewed for
another term of five years. They never
go back.
BRITISH INTERFERENCE.
As a nation we have the right to inter-
fere. In 1830 we paid Portugal £300,000
to stop her slave trade. By the Berlin
and Brussels Acts of only twenty-one
and sixteen years ago, Portugal bound
herself, in. common with us, to put down
the slave trade from the Congo, Basin
and Central Africa generally. We have
also the right of common humanity,
which we have always claimed. I go
about the world a good deal, and I know
only too well how much of her repute
tion for humanity and justice England
has lost in the last ten years.
---
SWEETHEART'S "GHOST."
et Dead, Girl . Revisits Her Praying
Lover.
The story of the return of the spirit
of a dead sweetheart is told on the au-
tlbOrity of the lieu. A. Chambers, of
fib Frockenhurst, Hants, England, in the
ir Omit' Review.
The vicar relates how a young man
fill grief at the death of his sweetheart
prayed earnestly and constantly for a
sign that she lived beyond the grave.
The sequel was that while at work in
this office one day he looked up and saw
the dead girl on the other side of the:
rcom. She moved a little toward him
and tried to speak. When he rushed
towards her she vanished.
After Ibis occurrence he woke one
h girl star
found the dm 1w
night and g g y.
Itis bedside. 'Three times she laid her
right hand across her mouth in a re
cutter manner. Later he rernenhhered
that before the body of his sweetheart
was put in the coffin he had tried to
kiss her, and a sister pulled his head
tack and laid her hand across his
mouth.
lessness. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
cure anaemia just as food, cures hun-
ger. They oared Mrs. Clare Cook, a
young English woman who recently
came to this country from Portsmouth,
England, and is at present residing at
Prince's Lodge, Halifax Co., N. S., She
says: "I am an enthusiastic believer in
the value of Dr, Williams' Pink• Pills
as a cure for anaemia. I had suffered
from the trouble almost from child-
hood, but a few years ago it developed
into a severe type of the trouble. y
skin was pale and waxy; my lips seem-
ed bloodless, and my entire system was
run down. I suffered from headaches,
dizziness and weak spells, and my
friends feared that 1 was going into a
decline. I tried tonics and emulsions,
but without benefit. Then a friend who
had used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
the same trouble advised me to fry
thorn. . In a short time they began to
help me and in a couple of Months. :1
was quite . well, the color _having re-
turned to my face, my appetite im-
proved and 1 had gained in weight. 1
can strongly recommend Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills to all anaemic girls and wo-
men."
The pale anaemic person needs only
one thing—new blood. Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills do only one thing — they
make new blood. They won't cure
any disease that isn't originally caused
by, bad blood.. But when Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink PilIs replace bad blood
with good blood they strike straight at
the root and cause of all common dis-
eases like anaemia, headaches and
backaches, rheumatism, indigestion neu-
ralgia, St. Vitus dance, kidney trouble
and the secret troubles that every wo-
man knows but none of them like to
talk about, even to their doctors. Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all
medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents
a box or six boxes for $2.50 from the
Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
AN ATHLETIC BABOON.
Defies Recapture in a Steamship's
Hold.
On board the Comrie
Castle,
of
the
UnionLine,
Plymouth, England, recently (roan. South
Africa, is a large collection of wild
animals, brought home by Mr. H. Wind -
horn, a German collector.
Mr. Windham stated in an interview
that on the present trip he had lost a
large male sphinx baboon. About a
week after leaving Cape Town it broke
out of its cage, and for two days it was
at liberty in the Bold, and defied all at-
tempts at recapture, showing fight when-
ever anyone ventured near.
Efforts were made to recapture the
baboon, but whenever netting was
thrown it would leap clear, jumping
fifteen feetat a time. It was allowed to
quiet down, and while the keeper was
offering it food, Mr. Windham got to
close quarters with it.. He, however,
slipped, and the baboon fastened its
teeth in his leg. He forced open the
animal's jaws, and then it fastened its
fangs in his hand, badly maiming it. It
also bit the keeper and the boatswein
of the ship.
They attempted to drug the animal,
but it swallowed half a bottle of whiskey
without effect. They gave it opium
enough to kill ten men, in a bottle of
lemonade, but this had no effect upon it.
Finally the baboon was coaxed
through the companion -way, bound se-
curely and conveyed to its cage. It died
four days later, however—from a broken
heart, in Mr. Windhorn's opinion.
CHILDHOOD AILMENTS.
Most of the troubles that afflict lit-
tle ones may be traced to the stomach
or bowels and if these are put right the
child will get well and thrive well.
Baby's Own Tablets will cure all sto-
mach and bowel ailments, and all the
ether minor troubles of babyhood and
childhood. And the mother has the
guarantee of a government analyst
that this medicine contains no poison-
ous opiate or harmful drug. Mrs. Wil-
bert McKenzie, Chelmsford, Ont., says:
'My little girl was troubled with obsti-
nate constipation to such an extent.
that we did not think she would live.
She cried almost constantly and was
wasting away. I got a box of Baby's
Own Tablets, and in three days found
a great improvement. .I continued giv-
ing her the Tablets for nearly a
month, and every trace of the trouble
has disappeared, and she has since been
a bright, healthy child and has grown
nicely.' You can get the Tablets from
any medicine dealer or by mail at 25
cents a box by writing The. Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
VOICE FROM GRAVE.
Robert Louis Stevenson's Prophecy
About 'Frisco.
It is almost startling, after reading
the accounts of the San Francisco dis-
aster, to turn to the late Robert Louis
Stevenson's essay on that city. After
an extremely beautiful description of
the place and its suburb, Oaklands, he
goes on :—"Thus, in the course of a
generation only, this• city and As su-
burbs have arisen. Men are alive by the
score who have hunted all overthe
foundations in a dreary waste. But 1
wonder what enchantment of the Ara-
bian Nights can have equalled this
move tion of a roaring city, in a few
years of a man's life, from the marshes
and the blowing sand. • Such swiftness
of increase, as with an overgrown
youth, suggests a corresponding swift-
ness of. destruction.. We are in early
geological epochs, changeful and inse-
cure, and we . feel, as with a sculptor's
model, that the author may yet grow
Weary Of and shatter the rough eketeh."
Never, surely, have the musings of a
poetic genius been so suddenlyand
tartlingly verified.
",'Marriage," remarked the moralizer,
"le a lottery." "Yes," rejoined the de-
moralizer, "but it's one of the genies of
chance that clergynlen •40 hot try to
discourage."
Sensaa
CHINA OPENS HER EYES
COMMISSION VISITS TIIE WORLD'S
METROPOLIS,.
Study People,e, Mannerss an
d_
C
u
sta
ns—
Visit
nubile . Buildings and
Scotland Yard.
Members of the Imperial Chinese Com-
mission did not enjoy the sights ` of
London, Their object in visiting the
world's metropolis is to study the cus-
toms of the English people, and they
go quietly around in hansom cabs, with
note books ever in use observing and
observed.
KIND OF. FIELD DAY.
They drove on to the Law Courts.
and were duly introduced. to Mr. Jus-
tice Grantham, of the King's Bench. Di-
vision. His Lordship took the commis-
sioners with him into court, and invit-
ed them to tale seats on the bench,
Mr. Justice Grantham explained to the
jury and the bar that the commissioners
had come to England to study our cus-
toms; and particularly our laws, With,
the object of seeing an English court of
justice, with its jury, barristers and
ledge at work, they had therefore visit-
ed this court. Unfortunately, his Lord-
ship continued, the chief commissioner,
Duke Tsai, had found the English, or
rather London, climate exceedingly .try-
ing, and was at present laid up suffer-
ing from the effects of the London at
mospherc, with its very large admix-
ture of smoke and coal fumes.
VISIT SCOTLAND YARD.
Through the interpreter, his Lordship
then with great care explained the mo-
dus operandi of court procedure to the
commissioners, especially the first case
on the list about to be begun. The
commissioners took the deepest interest
both in the explanation and in the sub-
sequent proceedings as the case went
00. The commissioners then went into
the Lord Chief Justice's court, and for
a whi]d observed the court at work
there.
In the afternoon a visit was paid to
Scotland Yard, where the head officials
did everything in their power to exnlasr
the principal workings of the great
criminal bureau. The detective section
greatly interested the visitors as the
system was unfolded for their instruc-
tion. The Thieves' Gallery, the finger-
print section—copied directly from the
Chinese criminal department, where it
has been in use thousands of years—the
criminal measurement department, the
offices and elaborate system of photo-
graphy, bookkeeping, and reference, all.
excited the wonder of the visitors, some
of whom have had extended experience
in the Imperial Chinese police service.
Yet another event was a visit to the
headquarters of the London Fire Bri-
gade.
The commissioners visited Fleet street
by night to see the great newspapers be-
ing produced and despatched.
1
A Successful Medicine. — Everyone
wishes to be successful in any under-
taking in which he may engage. It ;is
therefore, extremely gratifying to the
proprietors of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills
to know that their efforts to compound
a medicine which would prove a bless-
ing to mankind have been successful
beyond their expectations. The endorse -
tion of these Pills by the public' is a
guarantee that a pill has been pro-
duced which will fulfil everything
claimed for
Wife (wearily)— Woman's work is
never done. Husband (struggling with
a buttonless shirt collar) --That's just
what I thought.
Being l% neap m better teas ecaer Neaps,
bet is best when used in the Sunlight way.
Buy Sunlight Soap and follow &motio &
Clergyman (on Sunday afternoon con-
fronting small boy carrying string of
fish) : "What !' have you been fishing ?"
Small Boy (readily) : "Well, I've just
been letting these fish see what they get
for chasing worms on Sunday."
Cucumbers and melons are `•`forbidden
fruit" to many persons so constituted
that the least indulgence is followed by
attacks of cholera, dysentery, griping,
etc. These persons are not aware that
theycan indulge to their heart's con-
tent if they have on hand a bottle of
Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial,
a medicine that will give immediate re-
lief, and is a sure cure for all summer
complaints.
Husbands are like new boots - you
can't tell where they're going to pinch
till it's too late to change them.
A Medicine Chest in Itself.—Only the
well=to-do can afford to possess a medi-
cine chest, but Dr. Thomas' Ec]ectric
Oil, which is a medicine chest in itself
being a remedy for rheumatism, lum-
bago, sore throat, colds,' coughs, ca -
tenth, asthmaand a potent healer for
wounds, cuts, bruises, sprains, etc., is
within the reach of the poorest, owing to
its cheapness. It should be in every
house.
"Ah," she sighed, "I shall never hear
his footsteps again; the step I have list-
ened for with finger cars as he came
through the garden gate; the step that
has so often thrilled my soul as I heard
it on the front porch. Never, • never,
again!" "Hos he ]eft you?" asked the
sympathetic friend. "No; he has taken
to wearing rubber heels!"
6146*:.
r+ c
Gprt-cs G•
ohIAck
41 qn, ,n B i, us °� ur A.tdF
'` urTme a.iia lei) el
Thilindeee sold only in
GIANT'S DtIEARY LOT.
Maehnow's Health' Suffering 'Exams iilis
Close Confinement,
They have in England societies far
the prevention of cruelty to children,
and for .the protection of birds and tdl
sorts of animals, but not a society for
the protection of giants.
The lot of the giant is in many ways
a hard one. If a man is of such abnor-
mal size that people will pay for the.
privilege of shaking him by the hand,
it almost certainly means that he will
die" before he is forty. Very few giants
have lived after that age,.
And Machnow, the Russian giant,
who after a long tour has reappeared.
at the London. Hippodrome, is . of ell
men in the kingdom one of those wiry
should be most pitied.
What eon a poor giant expeet when kr
him to be seen walking out of doors de-
creases his market value by about half.
The only exercise Machnow can take
has to be taken under a roof, and . so
tired of this restricted exercise has he be-
come, that his appetite has fallen off
almost entirely, and he has lost all his
interest in life,
During his stay in London he lives
ie a room on the top of a high build-
ing, fromwhich he can only see the
Sky, and during almost the whole cf
the day he lies upon a,, bed scarcely
caring what becomes of him. Not know-
ing the language, he cannot talk or
read the papers, . and so hue nothing to
c1c but brood.
Of course his salary is a fabulous one,
but salary is, after all, not much when
one's interest in life hos almost entirely
vanished, and when, like Machnow, one
rally finds a pleasure in smoking cigar-
ettes.
JAPS WANT LONGER LEGS.
Japanese scientists attribute the su-
perior stature of the English-speaking
races to their pleat eating habits, and
the Emperor is reported to be consider-
ing a scheme to put the kation on a
meat diet to make his subjects grow
taller. A native physician of Tokio,
who was educated in England, is ad-
vocating the general use of the bicycle
to achieve the same purpose. In his
opinion the bicycle is the most suc-
cessful body builder and muscle de-
veloper the English people possess. He
envies the English length of limb. Ile
recommends that young Japs, of botb
sexes, be taught early in youth to ride
the bicycle.
He "I suppose you thought you had
'done a good day's fishing' when you
caught me ?" She : "Weil, I used to
think so, but now I know I must have
been bear -hunting."
A Carefully Prepared P111.— Much
time and attention were expended in the
experimenting with the ingredients that
enter into the composition of Parmelee's
Vegetable Pills before they were brought
to the state in which they were first of-
fered to the public. Whatever other
pills may be, Parmelee's Vegetable Pills
are the result of much expert study,
and all persons suffering from dyspep-
sia or disordered liver and kidneys may
confidently accept them as being what
they are represented to be.
"I am afraid it is all up between
Jones and the rich widow." "Made one
of his ridiculous slips, I presume?"
"Yes. He_ asked her if be was the only
man she ever loved."
If n dog bites you don't be scared. Bathe the
wound with cold water and cover 0 with a cloth
on which Weaver's Cerate has been freely
spread. The Cerate relieves the pain caused by
the sting of insects
Growell (in cheap restaurant) : "Here,
waiter ! Are these mutton or pork
chops ?" Waiter : "Can't you tell by
the taste?" Growell : "No." Waiter
"Then what difference doesit make
what they are?"
Are your corns harder to remove
than those that others have had? Have
they not had the same kind? Have they
not been cured by using Holloway's
Corn Cure? Try a bottle.
"There goes the slowest fellow I ever
saw in all my life. There is only one
thing he can do quickly." "What is
that?" "Get tired.''
PORTLAND AND THE NORTHWEST.
To accommodate delegates and others
to meeting of the Hotel Men's Mutual
Betnefit Association, at Portland, June
25.29, 1906, the Union Pacific has placed
in effect the remarkably low rate of one
fare for the round trip to Portland, Ta-
coma, Seattle, Bellingham, Everett,
Vancouver, Victoria and New 'Westmin-
ster. • Tickets on sale June 18, 19, 20,
21, 22, 1906, with final return limit six-
ty days from date of sale.
This route affords you a view of 200
miles along the matchless Columbia
river and an opportunity to visit Yel-
low -stone Park en route. Inquire of J.
0. Goodsell, T. P. A., 14 janes Building,
Toronto, Canada; or F. B. Choate, G.
A,, 11 Fort Street, Detroit, Mich.
JEALOUS TORTOISE.
Attacks "Undesirable Alien" Savagely
In His Garden.
It has long been believed that the
tortoise had no other feeling or emotion
than a desire to live. Its energies, it
was thought, were all devoted to this
end; but a letter which appears in the
London Spectator proves that even the
tortoise Can labor under such emotions
as jealousy or hatred.
A certain tortoise called Tommy, the
property of Mr. J. Barker, of Kew, Eng-
land, woke' from his winter sleep some.
days ago and found another tortoise to
the garden of which he long had had the
monopoly,
Ills wrath was at once roused, and he
attacked the undesirable alien savage-
ly, biting its head or legs whenever they
were protrudes] from the shell. This,
after the first few attacks, was not often,
but Tommy was not to be beaten, and.
he took to charging the intruded side-
ways with his shell, as it on the foot-
ball field
This last method was successful. The -
"alien" was removed, and Tommy the
valiant is once more sole tenant of his,
gerden.
"Aren't you ashamlelt' to ling?
"Sometimes, mum. When I'tied bow
stingy people are; 1 fairly blushed told
them."
a„
H T Wash oilcloths
" i
oleu s with
and m w
n bra
waren water arid.:
sunlight Soap, "rinse clean and wipe
A P .dry. The colors will be preserved
and the surface unharmed.
Common soaps fade the colorsand
injure the surface. Sunlight Soap cleans, freshens and preserves
oilcloths and linoleurns..
Sunlight Soap washes clothes white without i.nfuryto the most
delicate fabrics, or to the hands, for it contains nothing that can
injure either clothes or hands.
Sunlight Soap is better
than other soaps, but is best
when used in the Sunlight
way (fo'.iow directions).
Equally good with hard.
or soft water.
x52.
LEVER BROTHERS RS LIMITED. Toronto
ID, CD 3L IX al -1t gid. 1.
" Keeping Everlastingly at it Brings Success."
PEDLAR'S
CORRUGATED O iRUGATED I
R dis made on a 36,
3t0 D. press
the
only
one in Canada) one corrugation at a time, and is guaranteed true and
straight to size.
We carry a 600 ton stock in Oshawa, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto and:
London and can ship ordinary requirements the same day order is received.
Made in 1 inch, 2 inch or 2% inch corrugations in sheets any length up
to 10 feet in 28, 26, 24, 22, 20, 18 gauge both Painted and Galvanized.
This class of material is most suitable for fireproofing Barns, Factory,
Mill and Warehouse Buildings and is water and wind proof.
Corrugated Ridges, Lead Washers and Galvanized Nails carried in stock.
Send Specifications to your nearest °Mee for 'dialogues and prices.
THE PEDLAR PEOPLE,
Monireal, Qac.Ottati a, 001 a, oaf. 1Uci , f1. ilall er,S.O.
767 Oraig St. 1428 Sussex st, I f Toronto, O. two, 11 Colborne at. l 69 Dundas st. k 76 Lombard et, 615 Pander st.
Write your Nearest Off ice.—lirtAr) OFFICE AND WOR KS—OSHAWA, Ont
Largest makers of Sheet Metal Build ing Materials under the British Flag.
1
triestern Canada eagion=tG
ed lands in
Saskatchewan, only 8 miles from two railways, G.p.B. 6c a.!P.P
Strong soil, 90 per cent. plough land, spria4 creek, no sloughs
About 40 miles N.L. of Indian Head. Price $10.66 per ,sera
Write for map and fall particulars.
R. PARSONS, g1 Wellesley Street, Toronto, Canada.
The man who never made a success
of anything in his life always wonders
why other men do not heed his advice.
A Quick Recovery from Fever and an sick-
ness 1s always the case when "Ferrovim" the
best tonic is used. It builds, it strengthens, it
gives new life. Try it.
Life Insurance Doctor : "Do you con-
template any enterprise involving great
personal risk or danger ?" Applicant :
"Yes; I and going to discharge our cook
to -night."
The healthy glow disappearing from
the cheek and moaning and restless-
ness at night are sure symptoms of
worms in children. Do not fail to get
a bottle of Mother Graves' Worm Ex-
terminator; it is an effectual medicine.
Housemaid : "I'm goin' to leave you,
mum. I'm goin' to work for Mrs. Monk,
an' would you give me a good reference,
mum?" Mistress : "To work for Mrs.
Monk? Certainly; I'll give you a glow-
ing reference. ' I hate that woman."
Grandfather (enthusiastically): "1 say,
Willie, don't you want to go through a
toy shop with me this afternoon and see
all the pretty things?" Twentieth-Cen-
tury
wentieth-Ceptury Child (indifferently): "I'm willing
to, grandfather, if you will get any
pleasure out of it."
Ted "I want to make a match with
Madge." Ned : "Why don't you do it?"
"Her father says that it takes money to
start a match factory on his premises."
fit WEE EEL1ECsE.
Here its Something that will be Wekoni
News to Many a Discouraged One.
" For several years,
I have been troubled
with gas around my
heart, shortness of
breath, in fact, if I
walked my usual gait
my breath would get
so short I would be
compelled to make
several stoops during
Wxu.u.ai H. hisser my walk.
Of late my food did not digest properly.
it turned sour in my stoinach, causing the
great distress; often, too, I had disagree.
Ode atteelu of belching gas and heartburn.
"I was bothered with severe pains across
the small of ray tack and the IeM$ bending
srturafng would eauessmio.,aletost ery out.
I wits induced to try Dr. L ooiibatdt s
Atd.Pill and i>ooae $ vary Arai found
tali"(
"Far the Jud titres
ito reeuriancs of
010,/,10010111,
es. 4 _.
l�
menthbeim WI
OW=MAtolls t sa.clatMs
T M!
eashealsoll al 'W te.
One
THEN HE PROPOSED.
Miss de Muir : "Papa has forbidden
you to come to the house. He says you
are a dangerous man.'
"Dangerous! What can he mean?"
"He says you are the kind of a man
who will hang around a girl all her life
and never marry her."
a s 's
FLY
PADS
THE ONLY
THOM THAT
KILLS THEM ALL
AVOID POOR IMITATIONS.
Sold by•all Druggists and GeneralStores
and by math
TEN CENTS PEKBACKET MOM
ARCHDALE WILSON
HAMILTON, ' orfs '.
200 Men Wanted at Once
In various parts of the Dominion, Le
Whole or spare time agents, to sell 4
high grade stock of hardy and well
grown trees and plants. Go-ahead and
energetic men can make a very profit,
able business of selling this stock, 'which
is well known. Liberal terms and a
complete outfit. Commission paid week'
h. Apply at once to
E. D. SMITH,
Beiderleigh Nurseries,
Winona, Ontario,
t'stablished over a quarter of a century.,
e.
vrte OLJ 4+�
.BOR
F.T�ER ;
WOE C,.LTpk.
Sveertia>!a 0•,fireC,.wrCo
40/01.6aerraV4D4.
_ r&'atnndCheapest
'-'• '-4 Canocs.5hitg1ltnctiiI
ST. 5Tye AT;*---a,rttar�radiPaittselwasBgrntt.
ri HS NEW COLTRIN FACE DOWN.
cement block machine; no levers
nor e.ogwheeis to get out of order; very
gild simple in operation; makes
Scar 12 inch walla 4 o 8
orinchhigh,
wirers designs; we also rnanuttactu
heath nfechines, rill moulds, chimney
Mock, anig% and various other moulds;
write Or catalogue obeying outs epd
date Your requiteratmts. The cottei
Mat CAyi Vialkervtlle,' Ont.
Satin 2B.,dli