Daily British Whig (1850), 31 Aug 1907, p. 10

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THE WORLD SH i hi i £ ; : 3 is E i i HE i 1 I g 2 3 § EF 8: y § i g 52 i i 5 ] § g i : 71 F74 8 Te jected his time J pleméht rds of ash, mud, etc, was rained from lake. To-day the sloping talu§ and steep upper faces of Tarawera are si gullies and couloirs, the work c rock, black and je mountain side and encumber the climber's track. The ex- i summit of the volcano great blocks of rhyoliti grey 'lava, cover. worth the trouble. One is. quickly on fhe rim of he. steam-split rift which rst its way through tl . {1eaving only narrow walls rock standing here course. 'This chasm, drearier and wilder j wilderness picture of Dore's, piled with shattered rocks and' volcasic ruin, extends from the bottom of Roto- mahana lake for four miles through the mountain heart. From the summit the gullies and rain-worn trenches radiate in in vegetation, and thick fern and high shrubberies of futu relieve the over the terraces. Gradually cooling, the ast hollow filled with wa Id Roto Jow and reedy, was less than a mile in and covered not quite 200 acres; the present lake is miles long by two 5,000 and 6,000 acres. ced its greatest depth at 420 feet. Its vel (1,140 feet) is 70 feet above that of lake. The water is still thickly charged with earthy sediment, the wash- s of ash-coated hills. . It affords the most wonderful boating in the world, A great cliff on the is steaming from water foot to Thousands of blow holes and boiling jets send their white clouds into the air. Warm billows of swirl an area between f the cli ED i with the roar of siren® Springs of boiling water line the shore, and cascades 2s in the sulphiitous. wall. But even in this i boil and bubble there ia Juxuriant 1 "1,7 rss te eat Bd $ when he's push near ing and heaving on is fain to . Call on our local agent or write us direct for the Er fast rx ce! ry beautiful tints are enhanced to_the broken summits and ves into every Kauss City Times. siact 4 Miss Mary , af attractive Ay i Sabetha, is a rural mail young gir! of Miss Matthews is a P. Matthews, a rural 3 Matthews has One of 18 t rural mail carrier records for ; he in the United States. For two years he has not had a vacation. This year he took:a month off and his er is delivering the mail. iss Matthews is 2 Toute carrier now. student at Baker | 5 8 3 8 2 i nh i I ffx gagifed > £2 £ i F5s sz 1%E Rw n't he captain's wife." you say that." him along "Not at all the entire passe for an h #7 for the last 20 sed T T As way "How about the tramp steamers that broke in one of the men in the grou "How can they salute when they don't know: it is customary to answer her sig- nal?" & "Easy enough," $eplica the man who owned the glass... "Every tramp steamer that comes in of goes out of Savannah, night or day, has to - take a pilot, and leave, it to the pilot to answer that white flag on the porch ef the white cottage." "But she doesn't wave to steam- ers at "Them the young woman. HS "1 should say she does. That little woman keeps of "all the steamers bound for * sch vamnah, and unless she goes up to the city, shopping, there isn't one gets past hei RR "But why does' shie do. it?" asked the y " \ : "Well, now yow've got me," replied the man with the | "I don't know that I ever the correct story of the woman's wigi say she lost a lover on ade every steamer in respect to his memory. Others say the ing of ships in the the oo is night or in the the only diversion that ever comes to that "God-forsaken marsh where the cott: stands." "What is her name?" asked the wo- man. "I'm going down to see her when {1 to Savannah." - "Her name is Miss Mortus," said the man with the glass. "I've forgotten her first name. mother and her brother. The brother is in rge of the range lights on Elba Botan Two weeks later, as the City of Mem- phis was steaming by the white cottage at on the south march, the same young American . flag r woman waved a small ¢ from the bow, and after Captain Drye give the customary three toots of the siren a tiny American flag waved from back to her stateroom the woman scrib- bled a hasty note on: arrival in New York. "There's great material for a novel on room-mate, "and the waving of that little American flag from the white cot: tage on the marsh was the signal that I was free to write the story." One Of Father's Tasks. "Bout every fortnight mother say$ "I guess I'll wash my hair;"" An' father grows un An' shifts round in his chair. For father knows what's coming foon, He'll have to climb the stair And sit till time to go to bed, Jus' fanning mother's hair. An' we can hear him telling ma, "It's dry enough by now ; An' ma says "No, it's soaking wet, Keep fanning, anyhow." An' father's arm gets weary, An' at ties we hear him Swear-- Kep' fanning mother's fa keeps on combing all the time, Pa at awful pace; ] An' he gets mad when ma sometimes Any he he ns sade pit e ki 5 Pa says 3 1 her one degli says it is her one t "To make him fan ge nie a, Says Pa one day to "1 hould die before' you do, An' go to Heaven, I would still Be thinking, dear, of you. x -- --- Compound 8 of Hypophosphites, our own make, equal to the best. Big bottles, 50c. and 75c., 'at Wade's drug store. : All the treasiré houses of truth open 10 the master key of sincerity, 5 | ik ik g g a g 3 8 g % ¥ 8x i 'many rs had taken' for Rook t the white cot- a a the curious woman wa : ; Why the. ship had whistled | The malt's a tonic. The best cereal you knew by this time," "You . saw the woman » he replied. "How silly to. have- ge it before. Of 'woman waving the flag on : "You'd better not § "he salute the woman Is she the owner . he salute syeryholy id the man, who by nger com- i he woman whom ) saluted a few min: utes ago is recogmized by every skipper who passes up and down the river, and years no steamer has that has not saluted fo-it fromthe porch." have ugver been to Savannah before?" to leave Sax ) ramp 20 years or more ago and she has saluted She lives there - with her the porch of the white coftage. Rushing 'Elba Island," she whispered to her g i £ # 1 Hi too much meat; ~ they can have all they want, but give hay cS me Malta- Vita. mex. If you only knew how good Malta-Vita is, you'd try it. It's good for the strongest man or the weakest woman-- children really thriye on it too. that ever went onto a table. 10c, all grocers. i WHILE AT THE TORONTO EXHIBITION COME AND SEE US MAKE WHEAT Triscuit iv THE Process Building. : o - A Twentieth Century Wonder. If you like Shredded Wheat Biscuit and Triscuit you will like it better after seeing how it is made; if -yvou never. tasted R. Shredded Wheat you will eat no other cereal food after seeing us make the elean- est, purest, most nutritious cereal in the world. All Visitors Welcome. All Questions Answered. : All Points Explained. Canadian Shredded Wheat Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Send for the '"Vitial Question Cook Book" post paid. Toronto Office, 32 Church St. TAYLOR'S GREAT SCHEME. Be -- r Proprietor Kept Stable Dark-- _. - Handy Shoe Factory. Down in the southern part of the state of New Hampshire, at a railway station where the farmers jor miles around used to come to take the train for Boston, a certain man had a house and a big stable, and in the long rows of stalls they kept their horses during the day until they returned from their journey to "the hub." Then they would itch up and. drive home. Everybody waits on himself in these democratic communities, so they were in the habit of unhitching their own horses, hanging the hargess on the pegs ut the foot of the stalls and giving each animal a mea- sure of oats 'from a big bin over in the corner. The stable was kept very dark, $0 that sometimes on a cloudy day they had to feel their way around, but Mr. Taylor, the proprietor, exphined its advantages--that it kept out the flies and other insects. One day Mr. Taylor was employed by a stranger to drive him over to: Haver- hill, where a shoe factory with all its contents and appurtenances was to be sold at auction under foreclosure. Every- thing was going very cheap and Mr. Taylor bought several barrels of shoe s for almost nothing. When he got me he put them in the barn without explaining what he was going to do with them. It was something more than a coinci- dence that about this time Taylor quit buying oats and the horses that were placed in his barn while their owners went to Boston almost invariably got "off their feed." 5 The owners unhitched and put them in the stalls and gave them a measure of grain, as usual, from the bin in the dark corner, but when they returned at night the feed lay untouched in the trough. Mr. Taylor had some medicine, made of burdock leaves, which he recommended as an appetite restorative, and he sold a many bottles at 25¢. each. He told is customers to give their horses a dose before they started to drive home and another after their' arrival before feed- nig, and he thought it would cure them. And it did. It worked like a charm and there was a great demand for the bur- dock remedy. One day an inquisitive farmer took his measure of oats to the stable door and found it full of shoe pegs. For nearly a year, ever since Taylor went over to that auction at Haverhill, his customers had been feeding shoe pegs to their horses, and paying Taylor 25 cents per animal for that privilege. As one might expect, there was a good deal of comment on the discovery, and Taylor went out of business. The Marriage Age. In Austria 2 "man" and a "woman" are considered to 'be capable of con- ducting a home of their own from the ages of 14--a fact which accounts in go Small degree for the spirit of "chill fatherhood of the man" so prevalent in Austria. " In Germany a man must be 18 years of age; but the age of the bride-elect is left to popular discretion. : In France the man must be 18 and the woman 15, while in Belgium the same standard prevails. | In Spain the intending husband must have passed his 14th year, and the wo- man her 12th. These figures, in connec- tion with the admitted poverty of Spain, socially considered, are full of the deep- . If you wanted a diamond, you wouldn't let the jewellers sell you a bit of glass, would you ? SANITAS | TOASTED CORN - FLAKES Rs _ |compare with other breakfast foods just like that. Get - In Hungary, for Roman Catholics, the man mst be 14 years old, and the |your grocer to send you a box and try iit for yourself. woman 12; for Proiestants the man must be 18 and the woman 15. "This * i E-- -- -- rticular matter. . | s well for Protestant common- sense in' this 3 In Greece the man must have seen at least 14 summers, and the woman 12. on Portiisal a boy of 14 is considered marriageable, and a woman of 12.* dn Russia and Saxony they are a little more sensible, for in both 'countries a youth must refrain from matrimony till he can count 18 years, and the wo- BEDDING ~ SUPPLIES _ THIS WEEK. man till she can count 16. In Switzerland the men, from the age of 14, and the women, from the age of 12, are allowed to marry. -- Odd Birth Notice. | The following amusing birth notice appeared in a recent issue of the:Dresd- ner Anzeiger: "To our seven hearty boys there came day in God's early morning, not the wished for little Sanne 0 Tego Ao | ys. We j this ef ry ers. event that these strenuous times demand Also Lock W i San more men than blossoms of the gentler Jd eave, Hercules Springs and - itary Sattress to Bt. console ourselves. with dames Reid, The Leading Undertake: sex, and of our fatherland, to which we call: Brass and I Beds i } i at Speci) on tead, in Fancy Designs.' We are selling off Also Feather Pillows, in the best of Goose, JJueck and Chicken fe 'Ph 147. 'Hurrah! hurrah! Now there are nine; ot Firm stand and true the watch on the -- w- - ----------. Se---- ine y "To all dear 'friends and acquaint- \ . sre EES S00 STE Soldor, Babbit, Ele may be of interest we ve thi P ' | notice--the last of its kind. --Eduard Y HALL Br. § d 7 Gs | Rost Sind wife." : . Only those who are not afraid of be: ing poor id , really become rich, Canada Metal Co., Ltd. , fragin "Ns 8 we EXPERIENCE, perties. tures, Peceived and in S. C. McGill Ma i i il, naging Dj wDftics, 87 Clarence stroet, Kin re ---- lt RT NewYork Chinese Resta et ------------------ e MYER'S 2 Kingston Post C 1000 Island C: Beautifally Colored and ). Designs, for vo 25e¢. 15 City Cards, C for 15c. T. McAUL Sm--------------a--_------ SOLEERALLLLLLALS When You Fk COAI1l From P. WALS You get gen Scranton, as handles noth ¢lse. : GASOLI Put in Your T: at Our Doc A large stock of I teries, Spark Plug ar always on hand. SELBY & YO! LIMITED. Wray DIAMONDS Diamonds" enter Canad free. We buy direct fro cutters, therefore, when buy from us you save nuddieman's profit stone We sell has our g tee Souvenir goods, Belt Brooches, Cuff Links, Trays and lat. Pins. Kinnear & d'Este Jewelers, 100 Prince 'hone 336, LEAs strbbbbidbdbttdd & ba «© & { ¢ 4 4 4 4 4 4 LECOOOOOPe- Oe $¢ COAL. D€ The sudden changes in ° ° ought to suggest the wis p putting in some goad Coa FL ooll Cont "It's the ki @® sends out the most hea comfortal ® We deliver it to yo p. ® Without slate, at the very @® Prices. $ BOOTH & CC $ Phone 133. Footer W - NOTICI We will remove t Premises by September 1 will occupy 206-208 Welling As an AUTOMOBILE G. and fully equipped Repair Moore & ¢ 18 Montreal St. FARMS WAN . ABSOLUTE bility and gopd judgment have guined for us an envi tation in the Real Estate and put us in touch with a of prospective buyers. If to, place many Real Fstate market. you will find it to Yautlage to communicate We want at pres®nt-a choic 756 or 100 acres, near King a large dairy farm with g ings in good locality. T. J. Lockh: Real Estate Agent, 150 We St., Rirgsten, Ont "GC. H. Powe Carpenter and J 103 Raglan Wm. Murray, duct; 27 BROCK §s° New Carriages, Cutters, : etc., for sale. Sale of Horses every Sa eset io ese HE FRONTENAC 4 T, , LOAN AND INVESTMENT & ESTABLISHED 186 President--Sir Richard Car Money loaned on City and Fy Municipal and County Morigages purchased. terest uilowed. Rejncess Street, Open frém 10.30 a.m. to 3.0 The Lest Lunch in the on shirtest. no Dishes o iy. place to get an all City. Meals of all English and TRY A POUND oF HOME S AUS J MADE

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