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Port Perry Star, 4 May 1910, p. 7

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ong as mer ly contentions over d, in their angry wrangli flirt wounds without cause; he il be these sad outcries of dis- 30, Mixed wine--Wine to which | spices have been added to make it hotter and to enrich its flavor. This . is 'the drink which Isaiah says (6.1 ys 22; unbalances the mind. 5 © whe 81. Three qualities of wine which They raised the | enhance its peculiar charm -- J Sared Yery little Fichuess of iia, olor, Ja Hvelines pe v IT RuCCess 11 | and its delicate flavor. In the Oldi tthe deceased into this direction could be judged from | Testament there 'are nine name m. He was, however, quite She fact that 34 pounds 'of wool was! fe wine, but they are' all practi- ible, and could give a connect- | BOY unfrequently taken off one cally: the same, and - stand for unt of his illness," = sheep, whereas the average in Ca-'beverage which, if drunk to excess, : s| dada was 6 or 7 pounds. Their fa-| will result in intoxication. : ; -| cilities for handling , Wool were. a9. However smoothly the wine. : and he re-| wonderful, With their machines may go down, there is at last he attendants, |men could easily clip a hundred! sting and a bite in it, which reminds. ; How hard it is for a young fellow | steep a day, and in competitions as! us of mankind's old foe, the ser-| me to be brought to this mis-| many as 300 or 400, had been clip-/yent. = The particular species 2 condition by a dog." The P¢d The country produced 100,- d t t be deter ? added that yo 16-33 no de- [000,000 bushels of . wheat, besides atides and serpent canno de # time in which the disease|the vast wealth turned out of the uld manifest itself. ives, so that it isn't any wonder WA NTED HIS OAT CUT. that so many of the people they met LEE * |looked like millionaires. 'The Coroner-- You never can Ries t may develop in a few days, al months, or it may not make its HONEYMOON IN BALLOON: until years = after- F amy reach Aeronaut and His Bride stepidity, vomiting, incoherent Took It Recently, speech, abnormal exuberance of A curious honeymoon _ trip was spirits, loss of judgment, conten-| made by the aeronaut M. Emery ticusness, shamelessness. All this Tierlynck and his bride, Mlle. 'An-|agrees well with the scientific fact' gole Quesnoist, daughter of a many. | that drink is at the bottom ef a vast' facturer of Roubaix, France, After amount of insanity, disease, and the wedding ceremony was over Crime, as well ag pauperism and they left Roubaix in a balloon for a racial degeneration: One differenc | short aerial journey. It was the| between the drink probreni of th IN AWFUL AGONY. 130th ascent of the aeronaut, who | olden hime Fir Bow is ie then § v el ne, Sits hal just returned from Morocco, | Was confined almost entirely e -- ; Eventually, yimess Loutinued, where he did his military service as Sealthior Classes, ing Ross She ny rocks, and. bo x i : {ni military aeronaut at Casa Blanca. |8reat cos Of intoxicating liquors, the lowest bottom. d that Sesrible hat ier. had fo in ost As for the bride, she had never Nowadays it is easy for the poores body of Eno dus, half = con-| :30 in the morning, after an aw-| been in a balloon before. After lo procure enough to dethrone the med with light is pressed; night's suffering. Witness had lehving the church: the wedding |-reason. In a recent discussion in | down with this pile, and that cum. | ¢ a post mortem examination, | PATtY proceeded to the Velodrome, | England it was said that "when | brous Bina, laid "above him, is 4 from the symptoms he ¢onclud-| Where the balloon Neptune was in | wealthy people feel run down, they {therefore stil spouting forth flames ed deceased had died from hydro-| Waiting. The balloon and the car| take a trip to the South of France. from its burst furnaces; and that p were gaily decorated with flowers Sixpennyworth of gin is a working a3 often as he shifts Bia wonry sides] and flags. The young *Ouple enter: | Ian's mistaken way of going to the ] TIBACTIA, A veep 8 hl 5 ing from|ed the car, and the balloon was|Scuth of France, tremblcs and ovérspreads the Jeht 10 oe. a r an suffer; gh in] sent off amidst the cheers of a large | 34. In the midst of the sea--Like, ke.' hal my medical student days, and. the! crowd of people who had gathered orie rolling in a fit of sickness in Batvait ron | sight will never be effaced from my rcund, Tee houts after it came Tobe eens. of '& mas hed | STERILIZED WITHOUT HEAT. ory." own at a little country place npar t hieth : : things. SER Alma Sil 3 : Memory : Arras, in the Pas de Calais depart-|--A vivid picture of the peril and mined from the Hebrew words used. 33. The effect of wine upon the imagination, distorting natural ob jects into fantastic 'shapes, snd { stroying. regard for the truth.! . Among the physical and mental ef fects of intoxicants mentioned in the Old Testament are dizsiness, Ir, 'Gordon said it was «by twenty- eight years since he had i the last Th thunders wi rites ends , mode hard: 'ease. The symptoms were like the PRO ue hts The Coroner--*t is a terrible start, and then the young couple mind is under the dominion of in! Could Tie Up action It. Bay, N. B., it is interesting to note light' what the result to America if an microor-| international coal strike had been "It commerce would be mentfi, about thirty miles from the unsteadiness of the man whose! RESULT OF COAL STRIKES. Commerce in a Few Sk Days. In view of the strike at Glace declated , might be. "i Millions of money would be lost i1 a very short time, for trade and ou x ul ipamoss som, letely paralyzed; railways wou r, be stopped, and everything there would DE amuation say nothing : ufferings that would be en- hundreds of thousands of n every large centre of po- who live by the sweat of In' faet, one can received an ovation from the peas] strong drink. : ants. M. 'and Mme Tierlynck re-| 38.1 felt it not--After a man has turned in a motor-car to Roubaix |deadened his nerves with excessive, in the evening for the wedding ban- | guzzling he becomes insensible even quet. The bride declared herself | to hard blows. ra glehighted with the aerial honey- will seek it again--An insati-, moon trip. ablc thirst for more is one of the commonest marks of the confirmed il Min carouser. CAN YOU COUNT A BILLION? Would Need a Lie-time of Over 18,000. Years. Suppose some king of a land of golden sands should offer you a bil- lien paper dollars if you would count them? You-would go to work as though your life depended upon your speed, counting for about eau RAIL ANOTHER GORDON. A Young Englishman is Commands er-in-Chief in Morocco. Kaid Belton, the intrepid Young Englishman who placed Mulai Ha- fid on the throne of Morocco, is now in London, writing a book ¢ his experiences, of realize the gravity of the : : that" would: be created twelve hours a day. How foolish PHT AS *ithat would be. ' You had better the coal mines in the coun-| {pany hin ax good a grace as pos: down, even for & very pfs and go to some country where Kaid Belton has been nick-name 'The King-Maker,"" and, as a sol dier of fortune his achievements are almost worthy to be ranked: with those of General Gordon, Va- lentine: Baker, Hobart Pasha, Col}. 4... 'imoney is not so plentiful. and pee A Billion is @ million times a mil- aL sit +1 opel Sherrington, and other. dis- tinguished British adventurers. r pract'ce, learn to keep up that! When only nineteen years old, of speed. That would give you | Kaid Belton, then a trooper in thel: 000 an hour, $288,000 a day|ysomanry, received a commission in the regulars for distin; on the Roll: and Bo po lion. By strict application - you 1 count 200 bills a minute, and

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