Durham Region Newspapers banner

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 26 Jul 1899, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

1'i111 -àery Grand Summer Sale of choice Millinery at Mrs. JJingman's. Sailor ilats in greatvariety. Latest styles and colors for ail trimmed goods. Chif - s, Mechlins, Fancy Mousselines, Wings,Foliage, 0 "/ments, Flowers, etc., always in stock, Ladies' Bonnets and Children's ilats a specialty. BowmANvILLE. Vw'ahiopable Milliner. Hampton General Store. We "IIoiýciuvaster stock than lias been," a~nd are as usual prepared ~to give bargains in Clothing, Dry Goods, Groceries and Hardware. Gents' Clothing. Good Tweed Suits to order $8.0. Good Serge Suits to order $8.00. We have a very large and well assorted stock to select from, in Serges, Worsteds and Tweeds, both Foreign and Domestie manufacture, We ,are bound- to SUIT ý ou. Groceries and Hardware. In our Grocery and Hardware Departments you will find our stock well assort-d, bonghit in thbe best markets at the closest prices, and will be sold at the r ight price. Some people want quantîty others quality, we can please both. I1ghest price paid in cash for produce. Give us a eau,. HAMPTON. Low Price is Low Quality. Paint as good as the --- Shr n- ila ms Pait (There is noue botter) cannot bc sold for 1 U17less than we ask. If less is asked you know the quality is lower and its flot cheap. Its poorly made, contains poor material, or is short measure. You get what you pay for * every time. The Sherwin-Williams Special - Uloor Paint is made for floors and uothing e ~ else. It is made to walk on and stand be- ing walked on. Paint your Window and ~ '~Y$~#. Door Sereens, we have a special paint for - them alone. Varnish Stain, Buggy Paint, Lead, Oils, Turpentine. Cail and get a Jcolor card. BQWMANVILLE. West End Hardware Store. Te'boaveycr, Block Sale Of ÎBoots and Shoes Stil coing O .. We have sold piles of Boots the last five or six weeks and have lots to dispose of yet, and veryeheap-first-elass goods at very sma]I 'nrices. My Spring stock is iu-most of it-and we find our shelves crowdecL. Wewant more -oom aud are bound to have it, if low prices have any. tbing to do with it. Oui carry a good assortment of Ladies' Oxford,eouored and black ai *l.OO. Men's Calf and Cordovan Blms, sewed and rivitted, from $1.40 to $2.50, worth $2.00 to $3.50. Childreu's Button aud Blms 25e, 50e, 75e, worth 50e, 75e, aud $1.00. Misses', Boys' and Youths' to correspond in prices. We will tell you what the stock is in each and every pair. The reason we do that is because we know. Latest Spriug styles uow in :stock lu every line. The public is invited to inspect our stock; no trouble to show goods-we do it with pleasure. Trunks, Bags, Satchels; ýShawl Straps, faney and plain ; Dresr5ing, the very best that eau be bought. Cheap trash dressing -As dear, it will ruin the boots it is appli- ed to. Repairing doue lu ail its branches in first-elass style. Fine work mtade to order, sure fit or no sale. Thanking my customers for pasij favors and boping for a coutinuance of the Lame. )i3eaver'Block. Bowmanviile. THE PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL and SCIENCE of HEALTH. Kflewn everyhere sin jeits Sixty-first year. Write FOWLER &CWELL 27 E. 21lst s., New Yrkt.r specinlen copy. '$1.110a ear, te new subscribers nUdee short surnmary of Charnetes De DAVIS. fI AIR W'ORK.-Ladies wtshing hair done over, eail at Miss DIcKiNsoN sjKing East and Cor of Ontario St Bowmanville. 34-tf BOARIDEIS WANTED-Two young men -,v, ut,,d whû will room to,-ether. Terms moderac, Appy vto MEts.W m'Mc Ko corner Ontario andâ Argyle sts., fiowmaavil!l., H-ELL.EN KELLER'S SENSE OF TOUCH. It Partly Serves thse Deaf and Blind Girl in Place o c ures ad Eyes. "the dellcacy cf Helen Kelier's seuse of foucb is crtinly keen, but its keen- nes Sas unquestionably been developed froni a nserely normai foundation", wrltes Joseph Edgar Chamberlin, cf Helen Kelier, the doaf and bliud prodigy, in The Ladies' Homo Journal. "She 'heurs,' as she expresses it-thut id, feels -a foffaîl on the floor of the mroe, and distinguishes footfaiis wbich differ mark- edly eue from another. Last summer, wbeu she was taking bier exorcise one day by walking up and down the ver- anda, I was seafod lu a chair near the door, and a little cbild. barely a year old but abie te walk freiy, camne wal k- lng lightly eut upen the verandu. Helen stoppad ut once, and coming up f0 me and îoucbing my lips asked, Is Marlon bore?' 1 auswered '-Yas.' Helen smlled and said 'I tbcugbt I fait a soff sounid.' She is purticularly sensitive te musical vibrations. She is fend cf holding ber ' bands apainst a piano wbeu it is beîng played, ant iber face shows keeu pleasure wbile sho is thus eccupîed. Sbe dis- tinguishes between hiph chords and lew chords struck on a piano, but bier soute cf feeling dees not distinguish btw eau major and mincr chords uer befweu concordant and discordant sonnds. It is f0 ho borne iu mind that shea Sas ne re- inainder of bearing wbatever, the drumis of lber curs Seing ruptnred. "A great deai baw beau saifi and writ- ton about ber power cf recognizing people by the touch ci the baud. Sho certainly dees racegnizo ah bler friands reudily by shaking the baud, and semetimes reog- nizes ut a second meeting, and tome tima afterxvard, a pgrton whom sho bus met but once before. 1 bave studied this acccmplisbmrent cf bers a goed deai, and am convincefi that she recognizes bier ucquaintances not Sy the feeling of the band, but by the slight individual or characteristie mnovomont or movements of each person." THE BOY AND HIS TRADE. Hie Should Begin fis Apprenticesbip se as tu lie Through Whea Twenty-Oeo. "Seveuteen is the pref arable ugo of geing te a trade, Sut in mauy cases 16 is neocteeyounp, uer 18 tee old,",writes Barton Cheyney, iu The Ladies' Home Journal. "But, allioditions being fav'orable, if is Nvell for a boy te arrange bis apprenticesbip se that lie eau finish bis trude by the time lio is 21. One of the advantages cf poing te a trade early is thaf if allotvs the lad fimie te mnake a change should ne diseover that ho bas made a mnistake lu cheosing bis vocation, and tSare is ne lufallible metbod or mile that can Se followed in order thaf sncb mistuket eau Se avoldod. But the basf course te pursue Ls for the lad te fully acquaint biniseif witb the details cf the trades te wbicb ho may incline before hoe makes a selaction. Ibis eau be easily doucetuth5e oxpense only of a little oS- serv'at ion and iuquiry. Thon the matter of nfurau aptitude eau Se considered- and if is a most imnportant factor-so that the lad eau avoiti poing into any- fbing for wbicb ho Sus ne especial fit- nets. It is asseýrted that cvery eue is ad- apted for semaeue thing botter than any. tbing else, and the boy should stria-e te 1 discover what t5 ut oua tbing is. It would Sie a great mistuxce for a lad withouf a natural bent for imechanies te attemut f0 learu the muchinist's trade, and the chances would ba against sncb a Sot 's properar dxanceeot, for one's hast work and developsuient are the outeome cf Seing congenially employed. " NÇo Fersoual Liberty te Do wrexîg. Even in the widomnett, a bundred miles froni the uearest savage tribe, aund boyoud ail range cf civil law, the roveller cunnof ludulge lin purity witb impun- ity. Even thore, for bis own good, bis liberty is encircio(I with law-tbo iaw of God, wrlta lun bis body, a law froni wblcb lie cannet escape. Even tbere, "Wbattoevar a man soweth, that shahl Sa alto roap. " For le that sowetb te the flash shall cf the flesh reap corruption. Even lu the solitude of the wilderness the tippler shah flnd thut ho who sows an act reaDs a tendency,' and ho wbo sows a tandeucy, raaps a habit, and he who sows a habit reaps a cbaracter, and lia wbo sows a chaructar coups a destiny. Nowhere in ail God's unta-orse is'tbere porsenal liberty to do wroug with impon- ity. The oui-v troc personal liberty la liberty te choose btween varions ways of doing right.-W. F. Crafts. Feit He Was Strong. A brilliant youug iman, 80 years ugo, was begiuning te ferra the habit cf in- dulgence lu the Nvine cup. VHo knaw ibat ether men were drunkards, Sut Sie felt that ha hinisaîf was stroug and. would nover Se anvthing but lear- eyed and strong cf uer-ce and firin cf fies. The years went by. He bus Sud houer and position. He bas becoma a drunkard witb It ail, and bis bonors ha-ce beau for noth- tnp. Whisky and aine bava doue for hlm avhat tbey bave doua for all the test and whut tbey will do for a h wh ae- eoÉs sue Rememnbers tuse Stocks.- Thora is au eid woman in Lincoînebire wbo eau rocahi Seing piaced la stocks. Her naine is Mrs. Mary Smith, but she is familiuriy lcnown as "Granule Hul. 1.," 85e celebrated b'er 102.udbiethday reoonfly, and is prond cf ber pipe. Lsrgest Library cf Smallest Bqokm. Tise largeof llbrary of smaLl heolsir the World baion«â te a Yr£,esn~halil besatâ à »h I IfePge L And Invarlabiy Disastrous to Those Who Engage in It. "To the credit of the tex be it said that there is only a symaîl proportion of maie flirts, wben we accept the word flirt in its general and accepted meaning, " wrltes Frances Evans, in her "About Men" article, in the Ladies' Home Journal. "The Lleasant nothings of social lifo can- neot, correctlv speaking, bie placed in the' Samne category as filitation. No more can the salutation of Mike to Natio w'ebech says, 'The top o' the mornin' te yoz, me angeit darlin'; ye're the cream o' the milkju', the tor note o' the lark,' simply because these expressions contradict themselves by their opeioness. Plainly, there is nothing bebind thora. Flirtistien is carried on more by manner than by speech, manner beinsr non-commital- sometbing one cannot place one's finger on, There is notbing so flattering as an oute-poken preference for one's society shown in varions ways. Tbis art of fiat- tory is the natural weapon of the flirt, -,vho rarely expresses bimself openly; 1therefore bis miethods are most insidious and almost impossible to resist, because intangible. Flirtation is cruel, whether the flirt be man or woman. The flirt is unkind, selflsh and frequontly disbon-r- able. The consequences cf flirtation are almost without exception disaistrocs-, theroforo, in considering tlie moral phases of the flirtatious inclination ut Nwould seem bosS te nip it in the bud according f0 the suggestions cf the Golcien Rule.' W.onders oM Nature. if two pieres cf looking-glass are held on the opposite sides, cf a lighted lamp or candie, an endless teries of bright flames may be seen ut one time. So, in the colti north. When the air is full cf minute floating ice-flakes, the sua with its halo is rcflected many times. and tho traveller sees two, four, or nore mock suas with crossing halo-rings cf "cnrtling patterns. In hilly countries. Nvbere the sun risos in a serane atmospbero, but opposite to a thin, vaporons cloud, if a human being stand on a high bih Sbe- twaon thema, a wonderful image is scen on the cleud-curtain, moving %s the man mioves, ab one moment cloar and the next fading away. Tbis is a kind of natural snagsc lantoru. where the cloud takes the 1 place of the white screen, and a man, or mon. of the slides. The higbest peak of the Hartz Mv.ountainis, called the Brocken, is the place where.this is oftenest seen. - se the image is called the spectre cf Brockien. But mountaineers seo it often on the bigh Alps. 'l'ho changlng rays of the moérning sun mako the giant shadows vanish and re-appoar andi the moving cloud-screen gives tbem motion. Thse Coriag Reigil of Pence. The implements of war bave becomo so terrible tbat rulars and peoplo alike stand lu fear and dread cf hostilities; and the more contemplation of ius horrors munst cause wvar te ceuse and the reign ot ppaëce 0begin. At Omdurman, lately, the Dervish arnhy was mnowed down liite grass before the reapor at the distance of a mile. With tbe macbine pont now in- vented the samne tbings that were seon in tbe Soudan could be donc on the plains of Europe. Wby, thon, should we wvonder ut the - unrest of the nations? Neither prines ýor their ministers eau leafi their peepl Jnto sucb shambles of death and romn, 11 the day has passed when wbole populations will bie driven like florks te the slaugbter. Kings and rulers no leonger leaf the people; they are pressing their ruiers before thern. Plot and sebeme as lboy may, pile armament on armament, ship on ship, it only increases the terrer and hato ol war.-Rear-Admiral F. A. Roe, in Self Culture,. Two of lisiarck'à Foot. Two of Bismarck's mot stubboru foes sf111 linger on the stage. Oue cf Shese, Cont Bernhard Rechberg, wvas fthem poror of iàustria's chief ad-ciser froni 1859 te 1864, and in thaf capa,7ity had a bard contett witb the "honest broker" over the Danitb war and the division of the spoils. He bus msst kept his 92nd birthday at Maner, near Vieuna. Then there Is Counat Benedetti, the great chan cellor's adversary in a yet muore eveutful struggle. Ho is 812, and i e retains bis mental and physical powers almnost un- impalrad. Year after year a frosh volume of diplomatic studios comes froni bis un- tiring peu. and ho is ut this moment pro- pariug. lu view of Biïsmarck's recent rovelations, a further account of bis mis- sien te Berlin and Emss lu 1870. Japsnese Secret rZevealed. The Jupanese have a reputation wbich ig worthy tise admiration cf ail other nations for the skill displnyed in the manufacture cf docorative articles andi the beauty of the material used. Lateiy the Secret of some c f thoir comnpositions of alioy bas been been ravealed. Sinchu. the fluet Japanese Srass, consists of ton parts of copper and five of zinc. The splendid hues of shafiko, another beauti- fui ailoy, as!e iceparted Sy treatment wltb acifis. It is formed by nJixing.gold and copprthe pnroport.ionncf -goid 50 the Strangers somotimes muldly wonder wby newspapers or shoots of blan'k paper are tied on the windows or balconies cf certain benses. A shoot cf paper thug arrauged is a sign, moaniug chat tSars are roonis to en anithe bouse voriý-icL ît is disý;played, and is just as giicn Ir Its iLsapori as -tbiree golden balîs ove7 a panboe-e'shp are in other co-un, ti, te3,.I Castoria is f'or Infants and Chidren. Castoria is a Iiarmless substitute for Castor 0O1, Paregbrie, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Mor phine nor other Narcotie substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castorla dest;oys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and 'Wind Coliic Castoria relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the F ood, regulates the Stomacli and Bowels of Infants and Children, giv ing he&althy ansd sntural sleep. Castoria us tihe Chlldren's Paiacea-The M1othcr's Fricnd. Castoria. Castoria. "lCastoria f5 an excellesnt medicine for "Castorla Is se çvell adepîrd to chiidrca chldtr si. Motistrs hav e rcpeatediy toi I sic that 1 seconmend it a s iperior to any pre. of its good effecý upon their chidreis" seription kssown to nie." DR.G. C. OsGocu, Lewell, Mass. i. A. ARciuoRM.D. Breai yisNYY THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE 0F APPEARS ONEVEf V /VTRAPPR. (oî~ypeople as a ruie tee the -,v ,nt of conIvec-i t bathing conveniences, Oïv' of the gýreat advantages of life hi the cîty is the lue and lxr of tho bath- roonîi1t h its hot and cold water. Thon there are in every uity special Russian and Tur.kish Baths where those suifer- ing from Rheumatism, Skin Diseases.I, &C. eau secure the advantagfes of these)veIl known institutions which have hitherto been Leyond the reacli of those living in the coun try. IN E EIRYHOÉ'ýVE. Now however ail this is changed and the humblest homne in the land ca-n have- the ad- vantace of onie of the most perfect bath.s-made, The Niagara Vapor Bath Co. manufacture a- fulllune from $2.00 up. See testimonial prices an! samples at S TOTT & JURY'S DRUG STORE. BowM.ANviLr r BICYCE QUREPBWAI 8UOP Hingadded considerable new muchierlamrnuow prepured t0 do Ahi, CLASSES cf Bieveie and eneral Ropair work. Braziug-aud Tire Vucnizng- doue bre-no need te send such work te the cita-. Wbceeqare buit te erder. Se THE FISHLEIGII "SPECIAL'5 bof ore buving. An up-to date Bicycle Livery. Wbeels always in A-i repaîr. iu8-tf. QOARS 1- -- E-'~(u A M TO BELL ~ ~ L) ie ekiî ,t" u dr: crs,~i- tojisatrosi r - ' ot t'ioC'2 l.,wcstIlaif of lot?2, cou. 7, Gl-oo ' b r -ô L ok g, )i dwe riîng lau- aoc"- itdi-s' Sire Oak L i~ ~ ~bhildinigs lin gooti repair.Lao t' erksis,,e aile £ ,. - - .sd.g art, ccit eeiars, excellerenù,i tw c,-, 'ILseeIon tri o-,,,, I, -I5evmavîLepionS of water. Ali is tir l""ei s-e. Pl.i' du[,, Oon rrwya motTawth ueromKîrb-yI. O. Iln,,,r7tou 55e prominses '.J. COL[,', upale Grcv, Bowmau-csl le P O or ' ,to Wsc1Aias oCNF5ý K i Sy.2-f FLIRTATION IS CRUEL what is

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy