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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Sep 1898, p. 7

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SOUTH fBINNA tHope. Onlt. N,: th Klng NOTIrr BoDýD. 7.0 P. nm- Charlotte. N. Y.8.0a.nin. Uob)oInr. Ont. 1-0 p. n. Port liope. 1.415 pnm. !JECT Ti CEl AN WIT14 LTNOT4ICE. >r further ra rtialu'ai' 1 THE LEAllNG ý'ý 'Im e- àDPIC0-EG FOR YOUNG WOMEN Loented inthe splendid1h interlake region of the mostsuhel ar of Canadia, and in a city of 12,00 inha hitamts. About three hours ride from Toronto, Detroit or Buffalo. Four transeýontinental railrojadsi Colleze Course:md Nilusic, FineA-rt.Elcution lBisineýs anldomsi cec eatet Fndelocalildetiis etenie runs hm cm fors.trnesta llig hes he 1t e 1r. B S 'ADVT AGES1 AN-D LuWEST ÏRATES Opens Se ptemtber,,8. Forcaloean full particulars, address. mentioning Ti: S.rrrEsMAN, Rev. R. L. Warner, -M. A., Principal. St. Tho, ot Notice to Creditorss In the mjatte,- of the estate of Jo-hn FranAk, late, of the toten of Bt man cillel in the. Count y of Dur- ham, TFarmer, deceased. Noti 0'e is hereb1y given pursuant to the Revis- ed Sfýit ttes of Ontario. 187, Chapter 129. Section 38 thlat all p)ersons havime claims against the Esta Lte of the said JOHN FRANK., deceased. who, cided on or nout the Twen-ltyiifth day of A unt A . D.), 898. are hereby required to de- iver or to sendii by post rpi and registered to Johm K. Onlbraith ofsahlTw o lwan- ville, Solicitor, onOý e ot te cen1ls of the hast 1\ ul and Tesnet of thie said John Flra.tie- eansed, on or beore Satunlay the Twenty-se,- ond day of <>ete Jr1A. 88, a tliýti imesad- drees and der, ii!ý, n d 4n( : .æ:lula ofe ther;elaims dily -veritied and the nature ýofthe sem i ics ifàli ani i ' i 'them. And f::r ::er take n, i i e that afteri-thé, mid T woysecondiCa i 1% h æir signed th uc lr tth at i!idTesta- memtof thie si. nrnk ees ill lire- reed todistribute theastso the said deceaset anoong the µartos entletiit-:rto ha-ing re- garti only to the chumrs of which tlwy then shall A.dmi au 'lie sa id execentors wil ti esonýsih!e for tune ass:ts of said est at !' .l part 'thereof ch:nns tlwy sall not have r-eceived niottee, at it U.e timne of suchdistribin Datedtlowmtlr ilethiissixth day of Sep- tembwr A. D. 1898. 8G . d4w. 01;URGr1 2. cG iLL W. 3. JON:S Executors. J(i-iNK.GALERATI AN, AWFCL COLD.-Mrs. Win. iarkes Fine Grore. Ont., says : "I recommend Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup for cou;rbs, coids, oar-seness and sore throat. 1 i had an iawful cold and coul not 'speak. One bottle of Norway Pine Syrup cured me completely. TTsI \We have thelaes and best assortment of New and 71,to-date Furniture a t the lowest possible puices ever fitred in Bowmanville.. - Call and see.Full Lines and Dainity Designs in all -sses of F ul'itui'e. .:New goods arrîvng almost eve y Havino bbowrht the Furniture and draigbs- (i, r(h'ot r om) we sell Ralthe old-Stoek - Henr y E 101 tJ.1 AA N INE Hasty words. WV e are told thiat we ought to think twice befor- we seak. Sometimaes we are advised if we are feeling unkindly, to, count ten before wu open our mouth. Yet basty words ofttimIes fly from Our lips in the omyent of, excited feeling, a8nd be(foàre we a ve timue to think twice or count half of ten. the liarm is done, the keen word hias flashe:i like a dart irrto mo gentle heart. These hasty words are spoken, too, most frequently between thoc- who love each other. We control our r- eech fairly well when it is with strai. mrs or ordinary acquaintances we are -.eaLking; but with those wo love the best we0 are less careful. 'W ý let Our worr or our< weariness makeys irritable, and then we utter hasty words which, flye mninutes afterward, we would give all we have to reeall. But such words never can be recalled. They may be forgiven, for love forgives till seventy times seven tianos;, but the wounds, the scars, remain, How Imsects Make Music. Everyoay is famniliar with the musio 1 -1 -t a! toc - mn tionin floie 1oDrsn r -V -r 1 e s . . - -LI f-ý -1 of Furniture, etc , regardless of price to make room for bran ne w ooodýs as -we inýtend Itu keep a first-clas s Furni- ture stol'e in the, store ltely k-:ept by him in Orono. - 1 Q1erlDirectornd F urniture Dealer, Bowmanville and Orono There are many kinds of Sewing Machines, but where purchasing à ine wmahn you sol by all means get the very best-This is the kiI)d 1 sell. , For Tilors' and Dressmùakers' use,, our Machines have no equal. Prices reasoniable, terlns made to suit thie pure aser, Fl guarantee with every 111achine., Intending purchasers should call and investigate, or sent postal eord and agent will be arounid, best machine oil for sale. Buy no other. Machine parts and repairs supplied. . I have a beautiful Six-Octave Piano-Case Organ for sale, a big bar. gn.New suipplies of Boots and Shoes, Wall Paper, Pure Paris GreeD. adbest varieties of Turnip Seed. A re Now Att ractin g In Grocede*s we carry only the best goods and will always be found . tat the observance of cor;-a n laws is omu.nn sepes-esa wenrlrahigoeoohsln okr vrrh culadsalpoe of Gs aoduandhes with a fll1assdzrtment o i !.4i ulcdmn-l rcdbran eesr o h ltoof herwisweakness so otten met with. It is well caunght Aitno the clothes of the.hohoi Christ withi all who vearn for it.--Alfred ishly. boy and girl into, the healtby man and knowvn that in the body there Is a petpet- and tried to pull him off and into the Tennyvson. IS 13 .woffla. . , ual disi atogration of tissue, sleeping or safety of the tank. But he couldn't hudge fý.b .im 11bxilmim ititi- - , - - - - .. 11 -.- I . 1 1 1 1 We also caii frr l'ocery, Mactle meun, ri l i ritii Fene W1re, Nail.s, Binder Twine, F'ield and Garden Seeds, and .Patent Medicines in full linie. We don't ask you to belicve, but ask you to investigate. HIAMPTON. 1 MOTHER, DAUGHTER CURED. Mrs. Lydia A. Fowler, Electric Street, Arnherst, N.S., testities to the good effects of the new specific for aitl heart and nerve trouboles: IlFor som!e time -ý past I have been tro ubled with aIlu-'Lttering sensation in the r-egioni of my,, heart, followed by acute painý1s wibh gave mne great distressl andwekenedcmi a timecs so that I could avrrcely breathoe. I was very mnuch rua down and feltnevuad irritable. "I1 hadtae a great many remedies. without receciving , aybenefit, a friendM induced Me" to try Milburn's Heart and'ý Nerve Pills. I had ý o-nlybeentakingthema a short timne when 1 felt that they were doing me great good; soa entt1 e their use and now feci all right. 1 a eatl recommen d Milburn's Iletrt and(I Eerve Pille for nervous prostration." Mrs. Fowker adds: 1 My da ughter, now fifteen years of age, was pale, weak and run dows nd se otoo Tibun' am nd Nerve a nLoe ime, and Ma'sUmrtad NrvePIS cure palfatio, sothemg ensaimdizzy femaetrouýble, etc. lri 5flc _,,boX or arebxsfor $1.5. old 1by t'ldrug- GOOD COUNTRY ROjADS. with Proper Draina;ge Goori Roa<1s Are EadIý Mainitained. "The great -secret of sucess in road rýa!zin:gand rikeeping Is 11o drain the rod.an.1keep the iroaidý(dratined by l-eî,pin,,,the itehas opcn," wvrites Jo7,hn Gd:nýier Speed on "Hlow to" aveGum(,I Country Roads," in theý Ladieýs' Home li Jt2urnal. "The old method wasj to run a plow through the side ditches and thro)w the disturbed soil, sod and alïl, in the middle of the road. There it would stay f tilla heavy zain came to wash this soil back into the ditches' and 11 ti hemun again. It there weremoney .nough this kInd °f thi"g "°"ld bc d°"e °ver and I over again, as often as tour times in a year. where ther. were wet spots broken atone or gravel would be placed in the road and loft for the passing- wagons to wear th 'is metal Into ruts. The maoney spent was absolutely thirownv away. "By the Dew procces all the rea- mander needs to de is to provide ditches and onH1nte for theniwaldthen sa ghatL THE FOROE OF CANNON 85ALLS. 13eing Hi by a I.comotiveisNtig to IL. ,An interestinig comipairison was made by th meianchns last1 week for the3 purpose of givýing, its reaýders anu accýýato iic of the tremendousfOrcce do- velo-ped by big cannonnoaday. 1Te largest iunqusd on naval vesseios to diay have a 13-inch bore. Tfhe projectile for a gun like th,-s weighs 1,100 poundiýs and r Charge of powder amounting to 500 pound'is ignited behind it. The, shot acquires a muzzio velocity of abouit 2,000 feet Per second.Fw people havfe any notion of the energy that is heru re)pr(,- seated. Ouir contem1porary asks its readers to think of a locomotive engin6 weighing 100),000 pounds. This is fifty7 tons. Nw If the locomotive were moving at the'a rate of forty miles an hour its energy wouild be scarcely muore than one-thir- seeanth that of the cAnnon ball. la other words, if thirteen locomnotives wmere to .... . . . ..,- . - - m. il a , e SPEED CREATED ADHESIVE FORCE. Train 31atle Such Headway That the wind voedaHooAgistaCa. Mrm. Gripitts of theý Burlington has a little pi!eu of recenit history which he re- iateS with cniealeeln.Tbe Burl- ingtem reir-attd the swift oldsFair ilyer No1 a few thys ago, afterý a long discontonuance, amd the question fte s 1peed she would'be able to maintain was uppermost ln the minds of the railroad peoldo. By the schedule No. 1 had toebeo fleet of motion, leaving ChiÇ Lgo at 10 o'clock in the morning, reaching Omlaha at 11.50 that night and running into Denver at 1.30 the afternoon of the next day. A man who was aware of the keen in- terest Mr. G:rifMtts had taken in the initial trip met the railroad per-sonage a fewv days after- the resumiptioni. "e" he said, Iin greeting, "did she go fast? Keep *up toý her card time?" "geep tir,"' witheringly, "Ishould say so. Why, she-but say, what's the use of the road that the water flling in a raia- storm wil run off at once into ths ditchesý The water miust not be suffered to i u" in the road, but off the read. The rainfall, being thuis simpfly anid effe ive' ly dpsdof, becomnes ka most benefficial Mt.lor a destructive agent; it clean, an, haeand hardens th oawaIn- stead o f -wa-shing it away and deepening t.be rutsý. VWen there are wet places, such as snrings. in the roadway, gravel and broaen stone will'not cure suich hrs. The water musLt bo drained off under- neath the ioaawazy and into the ditches by means of pipe or blii drains. The whole thing is so3r.imple that any one can easily master the- princip~.As and put the detaýils into practical operation. WHAT STAMPS TH E GENTLEMAN. courtesy th. Cole That T§ Alwars ©=lrrent In th. n.tSi e.tr. "In all questions of mannels a young man snoiuld always remiembeir that while politoness is a good trait to acquire, cour- tes.,y is infinitely botter," writes Edavrd Poko "What Makes a Gentleman" in the Ladies' Home Journal. "'Politeinoes Jesimanners, but courtesis :at. Mingl- Ing in good society can gisve us that veneer which the world calls a polish of manners, and true politeness is not to bx) made little of nor scoffedl at. Politeness is a fine art, but IS an art pure and atm- pia, even at Its .best. Infinitely better la the cultivation of that courtesy of reuine' muent which eniters into the feelings of others and holds themi sacred. Whatt we want our young men to have is courteay of manners not regulated by socialý code or professional censor. It la idle to 3ay that courtesy is a relic of old-fashio)ned days and is no longer looked for. It is ai much the current coin of good society asi it ever was. 'More than. a.ny other eloeen t or grace in our itves, it is Instantly felt and recognfzed, and has an unfaiiling in- fluence. It calls for respect as noUthing 1 else does. Courtesy of manner and o.r- tesy of speech are the gifts a yougma should oultat." Hfealth and Physieal licauty* Healthfulness and physical beauty are More nearly synonymous than we are accustomed to think. The ancient Greeks strove to attain physical perfection -beauty of figure and faeu-by means of exèr!ess, bathis and every means known te them of stimulat - of ea °9. hey wreine nse âdnirei o physical beauty, and appree ated the ac tat heatn oe ofits prie condiios the lowwhih they wouddliverwud be no more severe than thalt of one shot fromn ýhe 13-inch guin, assuinig that the mruzzle of the latter was placed only a few inchesl fromn the same" wall. Ina«muich as the projectile would b1eismall I1r would corncerrate its action on one spot . d(do more harmn, pparently, than Ethireen engine. But the amnounit of ý'eegy would beà the mamne. In one case there oudbe a al mass and a high velocitv. ari,. the ether a large miass and a compr ly lowy veloci',y. Forty imiles an h sa pretty eood speed for aLi comt ive.Lt7 t not for a cannon hall. The mm ütu f a mioving object liscomýpute b mir- ply'ing the wyeight by the zeo ityand thisý was don& in the verysuýrge,3tvc and! surprising calculation herequtL 1It bas been estimýated by ordr.anes, ex.- porto that if a shot fromi a 13 t! un should strike an armocr plaýte on , few inches from the muz -f t -ýn. it would pec wnysxinches 0 L !VaY- Ised alckel steel. HOT EL CLO-CKS ALWAYS T R U-H UL. But the Family »Mantel TimePIecý4 Are conscieneeles. Prevaricators. , "Wh m travo1 gI n rpt the ,lig hest confieneJ ia househo d ock, Nritel-iRobe)rt J. Burdette of 1" Tongueleuss lir, n te Ladies' Home Journal. "Ahotel clock I cani depend upon. There ar to imy%,iiceyinabotl1 od was.hes watchesT h'oeabs-olut".'co-rrec°t- nessî means money to the commercial meýn who3 regulate the traveling life of this country. A,'.lying clock would bec spotted! in a quarter f a second, and the unhappy clerk scourged with ptls sar- -easmn therefor. In the course of rny wan- derings up and down this part of the glrtoe1ImiRsed a few trinsi and lecture engagemetnts by depending upon o s in the homes o>f my friends. Having thus paid for -My lesson-fif-taee or twenty thousand dollars, 1 think-by m-y own comiputation of the value of my lectures <set ahead a little bit. you know, it may bu a trile less; I haven't time to look up the exact figures,) I withdraw all my trust from miantc, clock,, especiall, the highlyornamentad marble andglat variety with silvar nesus or cathadral chimes." ,On oeing to tied Hamgrr. AUllianimals, except man, eat before sieop)ing, and thýere is ne reason, why mnan shoulLt formi an exception to the rule. Fasinig during the long interval between supper aind breakfast, especially the com- plcteemtieso th e stomach during - -_15-t5 . ap m - what'count. Circumistancos, you know. Incients. Those give you the best Idea. lI'l just mention one thing'that happened ln connection with the run. You know there's a stretch of about twenty miles fromn Portsmouth into Omaha after we cross the bridge into Nebraska? Well- and understand this is an oficial report from the yardmnaster ýat Omaha-there was a tramp wýaiting at the end of the bridge on the Nebiraska side hopingto ride fromn there inito Omaha on the plat form of the baggage cars. But he made 1 a miscalculation. There are no platforms on those baggage cars. They come out flush like a box car. In the darkness the tramp didn't notice this. Hle swung on board the tank of the locomnotive,- worked his way over the coal to the rear, and jumped down, expecting to, light on, the> platformn which wasn't there. It had taken himi a few inutesý cautiously toe reach the edge oýf the tanik, and by the time Lvh hadgot to the Ujmpig-ofi place 1 the trai.n was; going at its -regular gai-t, "raThe faster. realizing that this 4was the firs;t run of the train and desqirir.ýg toe makea a graceful f1nmsh and a good record, ^ had pulled her out just a littl. She got ta go° "and g°irace ed.She as doing T-w what dvas ixehink hppened long thec roadbed? No, sir. Not a6 bit. i asn't hurt at all. You'veseen an ama. flat pa ° o h bad andmove thýon hand so swiftly through the air that the coom didn't drop off, haven't Yeu and the magician p etended that it wasn't there just because it didn't drop? Well, sir, that was what happened to that tramp. He wasý lire the coin against the dat palm. He rested against the blank front end of that bagga car like a fly on a window pane. There was'i n- thing below for him to hang to.H ws just held there. as I «ay, by that foree which came from the fast forward motion of the train.Bel.ow him there was space and car wheels It was a prett, ikls position. I want to tell you. No wonder t'ho fellow roared and shouted and said as man, pions things as he knew ho , and said themn very loud. Of course he Understood that wheni the train bogan to slow tip for the Omaha yard thiat force would diminish and he woüuld7 drop down a.nd bemarae. "'Well, he was a lucky trainp. Just as tbey were passing Bellevue, four miles ouzt ot Omaha, the fireman heaWd him1.1 an2d hurried back and saw himi. Hewas a quickwitreed fireman and yelied to the of the katydid. ir aan sy he WVashington Star, it is the male t as a th e voice. At the base of each wing is a ving co es andr athe woplavtesto- get ler. I you couldrub your shoulder blades together you could Imitate the operation very ie y.' Certain grasihopipers make a sound while flying that is like the old watch- inan' s rattle-clackety-clack, very rapidly repeated. There are also some moths and . ùeuterbs headlb ot-h' kes a oise whou frightened that resembles strilingly the cry ing of a youno- baby. How it is pro' bue r nt kno>wn, though volumes have "ýmourning cloak" buttertiy - a darlk species with a light border in its wings-- mnakes a cry or, alarm by rubbing its wings together. The katydids, crickets, grasshoppers and other musical mnsecsae a11 exg- forms. Thus their cries are proportion- ately louder. There is an Eastlindiani cicada whic i makesq a remai:rkably loud noise. It is called by the nat.iveýs "dun, dub,"> which meians drumn. Fromn this namie comeis thiat ofth-e ge-nus which is cýalled dundubia. Tis is one of the few scientific terms derived from the san- skrit. The "deathwatch" is a popular namnE applied to certain heetles which boreo mto the floors and walls of old hoss.'hey mnake a ticking sound by standîing2 on ter hind legs and knocking their heaLds agamnst the wood quickly and forcibly. hIany superstitious have been entortaamed respecting the noise produced by these in. sects, which is sometimes Imagined te, be a warning of death. Entomnologists have suicceeded mn record- ing the cries of insects by tne ordinary system of musical notation. But this miethod doe7 not show the pitch, which is usually several octaves above the statl. It Inerely serves to expres te nmumu m-in tervals. It 1s known with reasonable ecer- tainty thar miany insects have voices so bihypthed that the cannot eb r far s that somne people can digt.nguish cre fiscts which are not audible to Nearuess to God. tw t ist sonethi dwn. as wa as Ch!rist- was with the two d!5ciples on the way te Emimaus. W#3 eienot see lHim., but lie, the r athcr and the Saviour and the Spirit. is nearer, la rhaps, now than then to those who are not afraid to, HAxeros. Pu blic Atte ntion, But the most mor tant bill s the DOLLAR BILL. For thus bil e are now prepared tog-i ve the publie, better value than ever before. For Ordererl Clothing we carry a tasty and up-to-date line of Tweeds, Serges and W\orsteds, at prices just exactly even with quality. ýWe hlave jast l'eeeived a llew SÌlipinent of Dress Goods, Prints, Lad eýs' Blouses, and Straw Goods for every day and Sunday weal-, and the prices-will sell theln. . ersonal cleanliness. To obtain and to retain a healthful and active, condition of| the skin, frequent bathing is necessazy, followed by active friction with brush or towel. It should be remiembered that the skin li.s an excretory organ; that miateris which have beeil expelled through it col- lect upon its surface, and niust bie ru- moved. Tn. skin.also seeretes an oly matter which keêps it moist, tiexible and health- ful. This is partially removeod by hathing and the heialthful secretioa is againi stimulated by active ruibbing,. To at tain a good development. of the muscles physical exorcise mnust bie tak2n. The growinig boy and girl should have a f4xed time for exorcise, either at home or at school, as well as for'study, for eating aud for sleep. An athletic trainer tells his pupils that temperance irhill things i s nec~essary for even a fair degree of physical develop- muent; hie insists uipon regularity in exer- cising, eating and sleeping. Such a temperate and regular mto ef living should bie th--alim of ever.oe TIn that sense of that word, every on should keep himself in 'ýtraining." Ti is especially imnpor'tant in youth, whenl not onl.y are hits fýý or'ming, but thýe foundations of fuituiregoodu,]or Mllhealth are being laid.An let it be emmbre thiat the imeans 'hy whiLh healthi 1,be-st Atftained are tche sam1ýenias 1by which one's persoiýal appearanc-e is best nii- proved. MoeThna Hisha1re. In the sumiimer of 1864, says a writar in t'heo- hr Bivouac, several wound- ad oceý-rs and twvo or three privates were going uip the valley of Viremlia. A raýin cae4àï on, and allhands took shelter for the niight in a schoolhouse. I, haipp'e.ned that in thie course of the night a skunk found its way under the floor, and bYy ari biy announced its pres- ence after its well kncwn effective man - ner. The oflicers all waked up, but being gentlemoen and each supposing that the ,éthers were still, a:deep. they kept silent. At hast on of the privates, a German, could resr-tn himaself no longer. y ! my !" he exclaima,1. "Dish ish too bad! :. shleeps, und I wakes. umia I ish got tu shmnel it all!", That broke the charm, and oflicers anC, privates burst iuto peals of laughter. The London Journal of Education publishes th(. following schordhoy an.zwers which are warranted genuine \\ har do you kiiow of L'>rd Wols3Lh.ý the aiiwer was given: "Hie was a Eirof 1H6erv VIUI., who exehtlimed. 'If I had sm irvc mny God as 1 h:ave ene m317Ki.ig. I should not ha-ve been !elied(l! --e Confusion her-ween lahyand &l 1pcrhapo not ,arkah- a pa mortem s-Peech of thn inn j notice. A botter stoy, b--ý r , definlition of "tithle wh wll b ocf Snecial interest te the ehuh andate guilathngswort byladr n circusea and :pantomimnes " waýýng', t1,s therebore nature! to be- lieve tha:t the supply of nourishment should be somnewhat continuous, especi- ally in those in whomn the vitàlity is lowered. As bodily exercise is suspended during sleep. w,ýith Wear and tear correspondingly imihdwhile digesti!n, assimitation and nautritive activity continue as usual, the food furuiished during this period addsýmore than is destroyed and increased weght and imiproved general vigor is the resu1lt If the weakly, the emlaciated and the sleeples were to tako nightly a lignt meal of simphe nutritious food be- fore going to bed for a long period they would ba raised to a better standard of health. It has been our experience that after elgsiga 1kwi of bread and milk or a sau1,-er of uu:neal before gocing to bed, for a fýew vmonths. a surprising increase in weight, strength anid general tone has re. sulWe. This course is not recommended to those pveons who are stout aud plethoric. God even seems to break them some. times, that they may become truly useful. iAt least he can usfe broken lives In his service jusýt as well 1ai the wijcle;, indeed. itapar as if mnu-)enn néee do much for God urntil they are "brokena vessels."1 H le choe(he weak things of this world, that no0tiesh may glory. We ogt te)retore, never to be afraid of God's-p'rovidences when they seem to t break up eur lives and crush our hopes, and even to turn nLs away fro,ý our chos4en Paths of usafniness and sercvice. WhEon he shiuts one door it is beoaun he has; another samd1ing Open for Our feet. Whe h b k oi-r 1ves te pieces iA is becaunsett hý vw; d1 morefor blâ glory and the w ril9j >dbruken and shac. tered, than whGle. aladstoe coa ax at, A larmer came into the office o;f an at- tQrnegy at law with whom I1 was studying a feiyers ago, says an English corre.- pondeIFnt, and in the ab e f the lawyer I nv1ited him te sit down ,and w-,ait a few miue.While waiting the old gentle- mn a uused himself with, walking around the rom and looking at soera pictures of emnrit jurists and Statesmnen which adorned the wall, A particulrly flne portrait of Mr. Olastne ttactedhisa 0enio , l aftr rgar iitfor a few 1minutes heli Gi nqired "a', is thi " e t 1, 'i "Don live here in tw? ea d "Oh. os l; e uanI um me isimeNirlf 'Ibe urs wlls of f houes ini are froi:iiý dI feet ti2L is e M1any rifles of the odRmntnpaz- tor, are sti in use2 iu the Spanish army. Lnm. Ilbein e gEot 'm1re,0s>"Im. and n0 : fiaw they'd have to)slmiuL and euse Eni mn rea itk. down before' the adhesive force of the A n-ihgàvsoc e;Iio z speed would lot the àman he 00prginioedd uott ti The engineer slapÎped on the air and pawo ohpue elo o threwlher over, and after two miles ofamoetafu icug hi ute easing them got imeto a pace that ad- eradkâce insnees 1 mitted of loosening the fellow.1 1 ntehmlfeasdfinly "It was very interesring. We have a iwsil Afu-nyafu. ý full report of it in the ofilieu, written by haes"h xlie," hulti the head of the mechaniical department aainl. at Omaha. IHe explims it technically. Of course I can only give you the bald facts.-Chic--AnoEngclishan w as onetrfesuaodt E a amof bnasebialiti, adring thýciÈ by the River Tinto in Spain. It lw4ens and petrifies the s,,ýnd of its bedl . ad f stone falls In the stream amdLtil:ht e another in a few months thev unite anTd becomie one stone. Fish enunoýt livâ in it wateF, Good Example for Doctor and Patilent. A good true story is told of a San Frranicisco womnan and a L, doctor with a Conscience. The dioctor porformied a sue. cessful operation for a rich, womani,- and when asked for his bill, presumted one for $50. The ly smiled and said: " Do you consider that a reasonable chargo, consid- ering my circumstan'ces?" The doctor re- plied: "That is mychare for that oper- ation; your circumistancesj have nothing to dlo with it." The lady drew a check for $-ý500 and pr-esenIedO it to him. He handed ir, back ay1ng: "I anot accept this. My charge for that operation is $5ý0. ' "VNery wel,"the lady replied, "Kýeep the check, and put theblaceto my: credit." Some months Lafter she re- ceived7 a long itemized bill, upo(-n wiceh was entered charges for tre3atmenIt of Var- ious kinds, rendered to aill sorts of odds and ends of humitiày, Imale and femnale, blacok and white,wh had beeni mendfed at er epe3nse. Shie was so delightedUt ,, ,ý1r ...heimmeduiiately 'placedantr check 'for $500 to his credit on th. s:ane termes, and it is now being earned ln the Amiong the enrious t.hings to be se-en in th,, rdi r st.ores nowadays ar woenwire door mats for sale by the yar1, , oot or inch. It is only a few year-, sinc'e the nmanufacture )f the woven wire mat was hegun, but these m:atsimg proved so effective as dirt carchers and so ighAt, and easily cleanei th:atheir use has oaed very rapid ly. During the ariryea:s of thoir mnanufacture each ma+ was woven :and fini,!hed seréàt ly. Nwsome of t:n lann:tures are wear- ing them in Ileuths iof 50 feet. and Ïin su-ch a way tLh:n thu will not-wLà w -%heni theýy are em.u The mia are ioen diiYeent vHL ad done up in roisâ like hauk asSa After a fw nenens helu le felo called to hi-, -it,b'erI: M m a, h r a Jpobr, tiny sp)ider all tanigled up1)in its Same -Day sTEAMsHU's . MONTREAL. Num dia ........, 1 Sept. P rs n...... ...... 8 Laurenitian...- 15. Califor-nian Nýumidian........ Parisian.1-- . ... . Coniforninn ...... ..... : steamers ma);rked thns direct to Liverpool. auetin st aboy, Crtag nia,:d ssneswill b, rnserd ihthi ag- e. fr nhe rilwa istt ionito the1 uwh1a rf ree c at.e RATES OF PASSAGE. ivro l oan ,lmond rr- "-,st CbnW vérpýoolDerry, BLelfast. Glasgow' , London- .isianL orC lionan 335 Castilian, or Nu- ew yo(ýrk to L a is gow and Det r ryv Stat ýe ,of C bn 32 ;ste eg 3.. For tickzets and every iniformation ap- .to Allan Line AL'eut, B w aville. KELTROAD A fQIT STEAMB3 CGT NW G

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