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Port Perry Star, 9 Jul 1913, p. 3

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ga ; B S¥s if B u S EB 38 B 5 » | 'were getting 07 cents an FA street cosume with skirt of blue 'moire and waiste off blue and creme rocade silk, : rdinary "box-leg,'"' on which the 3 kneels. with = the stump ng to the rear, can be had for 15 shillings. while a jointed One of the greatest triumphs ever reported in. this curious industry, however, is undoubtedly the mech- 'apical face worn by a man whom | Dr, Delair (a French dootor) exhi- "| bited recently to the members of | the French Medical Academy. Ow- "ling to the 'accidental discharge of le|a fowling piece the whole lower portion of this man's face was de- {etroyed, and a portion of 'the tongue seriously damaged, but by a vellous piece of mechanism. the eanin "| his own o, the Hel 17a Looked thia wars «Well aware of the | ~ 18, The second day--Actually, the hour and wanted 75 cents. p ' Property owners of Edmonton are protesting against the sign eye sores which are said to spoil the beauty spots in that city. Four hundred homeseeking Min- nesota farmers, with their families, will 'establish in Alberts this sum- mer. This is only one party. Farmers of Southern Alberta are after land leases on the Blood Re- serve, and applications at Leth- bridge now reach a total of 150,000 acres A new Hudson's Bay department store, with a salary list of half a million yearly, will be opened in Calgary as the end of July. Business men of Saskatoon, ¥o the number of 75, chartered a spe- cial train of eight oars for a busi: ness trip - through » Saskatchewan and Alberta. The Manitou Hotel at. Watrous, Bask., was closed for a time owing to a strange gentleman coming into town end putting up: at the hotel. He had the smallpox. Dr. Lambourne, of Chicago, who owned much land (in the district around Moose Jaw, was killed hich { when a fiery horse fell on him. His | body 'was shipped to Chicago for in- iE torment, In Macleod, Alta., they ave build- ing & $656,000 filtration plant, a $100,000 municipal building, 'a $560,- 000~ land titles office, and a 75,000 post office is expected in the near future. Calgary retail clerks ask the pas- tors of that city to co-operate with them in securing an earlier closing . | by-law. They want eix o'clock on In one week during June, 1,800] | An crossed the border and week days, exoept Baturday, and 1 p.m. on Wednesday, A university student named Cun- der Brock, who works from philan. thropio reasons; has been granted 'the uss of a school room in Edmon- ton for the purpose = of teaching English to Beandinavian = immi- grants, i Aa Edmonton woman, who h for drunkenness in that city, raid that in the old country he had ha.d- ly. touched liquor at "all, but in Canada he seemed to have a mania for it, : In 'one day at Gleichen, Alta. the Btobbart stock yards. shipped 1,000 head of horses to the eastern markets. The' shipment madel a full train load of 45 cars, and the full price realized was over $130,000.. sg on their est. «| ses: In Londo f his lif rding to tier husbands sighth bad | of hin lite were, according following day. : ~ Thy fellow--Neighbor. . : 14, Who made thee a prince and a judge over us The royal train- ing Which Moses was = doubtless known 'to have. received, together with the wrongful act of which he had been guilty. made the Hebrews suspicious of his sincerity of pur- pose in taking their part. Thus the first great opportunity "which Moses might have had for quietly aiding. his brethrén and 'making their burdens lighter wis forfeited. 15. Bought to slay Moses--Deter- mined to put him to death, being prevented from so doing only by the sudden disappearance of Moses. The land: of Midian--The Midian ites being nomads, any reference to the land in which they dwelt is of necessity somewhat. vague, since they occupied different and widely separated localities abt different times. Their principal settlements appear, however, to have been on the eastern side 6f the gulf of Aka- hah, extending from there north- ward ag far ag the land of Moab, and eastward into the Binaitis pen- insula. 16. Priest of Midian--Compare Sommer; on Reuel, verse 18, be~ ow. 17. Moses stood up~ and helped them--Took their part' against the disobliging shepherds and watered their flock. . \ 18. Reuel=Elsewhere called Joth- ro (Exod. 8. 14.18; 18. 1), though the name Revel occurs also in Num- bers' 10..29, "This. apparent 'incon- nistenoy is explainable on the basis of various earlier narratives which in our book of Exodus have 'been combined into" a single continuous story. 19. An Egyptian--Judging from his' dress and speech, they could : come to no other conclusion. 20, Eat bread--The unfailing sign of Oriental hospitality: is the prof- fered meal. with the 21. Content to dwell man---The Bible narrative divides the life of Moses into three equal periods of forty years éach. Ac< cording to Acts. 7. 23 the first forty: years were spent: in A Exod. 7.7 makes his stay in Midian of like duration; while the last fort- years i ub 34.7, spent in the wilderness, Tol. : lowing the Exodus. 22. Gershom--The name is appar- ently derived from the Hebrew ger, meaning 'a sojourner, and meaning. * "there." The incide shows that the heart of Moses was with his countrymen in Egypt. In Exod. 18. 4 and 1,Chron. 23, 16, 17 snother son of Moses Eliezer, ia mentioned. Friant Bima SP . Unwanted Floods. 'A' short' time ago; in New Ore" leans, many huge tanks of molasses i over the low-lying porti the ity. Hundreds of peopl rowly escaped drowni they were half buried in th nonce a flood broke loose from a brews ) gallons rushed:

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