Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 26 Jun 1903, p. 3

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Tea the world produces. and is sold only in lead packets. Black, Mixed and Green. Lager; tea. drinkers try “Salads” Guanta- Georgian Say’s Favorite Summer Hotels THE 'BELVIilERE PARRY SOUND THE SANS SOUS! MOON RIVER P.0. Write for rates, JAMES K. PAISLEY, Grand Union Hotel, OTl'AWA, CAN. THE REAL Lilly] SALISBURY cut glass and other articles until they shine and sparkle. Sunlight Soap will wash other things than clothes. ‘3 - use an, I cesarean carnal-implies 4,; On Your Work With the Cifififllflll UGllBSDOlllltllfie Cfllliflfi Wulevegmfill I crimes: YOUR moons and BATI r o swsirzox. i rite for Free Booklet. Agents a small allowance as a younger Son, and had to eko it out by writing articles for the newspapers and re- views. But we Were never worried by our shortness of money. It de- pends on a man’s wife whether povâ€" THE EX_I:REMIER ‘A'S HIS erty is irksome or not.’ NEIGHBORS SEE HIM. A Different Man From the Bitter- Tongued Cynic Known in Public Lie. A few months ago Lord Salisbury iwayed the destinies of the British Empire. To-day he is practically forgotten, even by the people of his DWn country. The long accounts of his career which were published when he resigned the Premiership read for all the world like obituary notices, and are remembered as such. Lord Salisbury has always shunned notoriety, and now that he has reâ€" tired from politics he is more reâ€" ticent than .ever about his private life. Few people know how he is spending the evening of a life deâ€" voted to the service of his monarch and his country. In politics the late Premier was regarded as a. bitter-tongued cynic-â€" "the master of the art of jcers and flouts and sneers,” Disraeli called him. In society he was the aristo- crat above all things, haughtin scorning the "new rich" and the “smart set.” Many of his supporters in the House of Lords and the House of ,Commons were bitterly incensed be- cause he failed to recogni‘te them in the street or the club, although they had been introduced to him and had spoken to him frequently. Not only :is Lord Salisbury near-sighted and :abscnt-minded, but he has a bad )memory for facesâ€"a rare defect in a public man. i It is said that he once asked Mr. iBalfouerhen visiting the House of iCommons, “Who is that man who spoke so intelligently just now ?” .That man was Walter Long, the fMinister for Agriculture, a member tof Lord Salisbury's own Cab’inet. ‘ THIS ABSENCE OF MIND 'is partly assumed in order to ward gof‘f intrusive intimacics. Similarly, fLor'd Salisbury’s apparent cynicism liand hautcur are only a mask cover- ;ing his real nature. l Go to Hatfield, in Hertfordshire, ,whcre his favorite ancestral home is '_situatcd, and ask the people there about him. ‘hey will tell you of a new Lord Salisburyâ€"of the real Lord (Salisbury, of whom the world never dreams. The statesman might for- get one of his own Ministers, but he ,‘never fails to recognize the country {people who live round his home at iH’atiield. He knows them all, from fithe oldest grandfather to the young- est child, and he takes the keencst interest in their lives. He may be cold and distant to a foreign Prince of doubtful character or a new peer of the realm, who has made his money out of beer and bought a coronet with his spare cash. but he never holds aloof from the poorest of his neighbors at Hatfield. ' When the writer was staying at that place as a boy in July, 1891, he saw Lord Salisburyâ€"then Prime Minister of Englandâ€"sitting down on a box in a blacksmith’s shop in the village and helping the black- smith's little girl to mend a broken toy. Next week he entertained the German Emperor at Hatfield House. Ten years afterward, on revisiting Hatfield, the writer asked an old vilâ€" lager what he thought of Lord Salisbury. “Think of him, sir ?" was the reâ€" ply. “Why ! he's the finest gentle- man God ever made. I don’t know :what we should do without him. I lo believe he knows every soul in lhe place by name, and he has never icon too busy to help any of us when we have needed help. And Lady Salisbury was A RARE GOOD WOMAN. llbr death was a terrible blow to be poor old man. Rare lovers they were all their lives. I grumbled to )is Lordship once about times being .lard in my business. He laughed in is cheery way and said : " 'Hard times don’t matter much, lohnson, when a man hasa good life like yours or mine. You may jardly cmdit it, but I was hard up r self when I was . t after my marriage. I only had a young man; "I remember once," the old vil- lager went on, “a young girl was jilted by her lover after they had gone together for years. Lady Sal- isbury, who liked the girl, was much upset, and told her husband about it. His Lordship went straight to the young man and told him he had done wrong and ought to marry the girl. The young fellow said he’d like to, but he was only earning tWelve shillings a Week and couldn’t supâ€" port a family. His Lordship got him a good job that very day, and they were married before the week was out. They are as happy now as any husband and wife could be, and you may be sure that woman doesn't forget Lord Salisbury when she says her prayers. “That’s only an example, sir, of what his Lordship has done for the people married, she is always sure of A WEDDING PRESENT from his Lordship ; and the old people know that he won't let them end their days in the workhouse if he can help it. He’s a rich man, but the amount of money he gives aWay in charity here must make a big hole even in an income like his. But that’s not the only way he helps the people. If he secs a man doing a job clumsily, he will stop and show him how to do it proper- ly. He's a rare handy man with tools. I’ve seen him patch up a fence as well as I could do it my- self, and I’m a carpenter by trade." This character given to Lord Salâ€" isbury as a handy man was cor- roborated by a visit to Hatfield I-Iouse. Every room in the mansion bears evidence of the old nobleman’s fondness for pottering about with tools and his remarkable ingenuity in using them. Hatfield House dif- fers widely from the average English country seat in being as well equip- pad with modern conveniences as a good hotel. . Lord Salisbury is a Conservative in politics, and still more conserva- tive in social matters, but he is thoroughly progressive and upâ€"toâ€" date in his private life. He has de- signed and fitted up several dumb waiters and electrical conveniences to lessen the work of his servants. He was the first nobleman in Eng- land to. use electric lights at his country house. He installed the plant himself, taking advantage 'of a. stream that runs through his park to get water power. The best electrical engineer in England could not have done the work better than this aged statesman, who stands in the front rank of scientists in the domain of EXPERIMENTAL PHYSICS. Lord Salisbury has never recoverâ€" ed lrom the loss he suffered in 1899 by the death of his wife. Like most Englishmen, he is reticent about the feelings of his heart. He makes no parade of emotion. But once, at a church meeting at Hatfield held to pay honor to a local philanthrOpist who had died, he spoke of the sorâ€" row which had come into his own life. “When a man has done his work, and those whom he loves pass one by one behind the veil," said he, “there is nothing better for him than to die as our friend has died, full of years and leaving behind him a memory fragrant with good deeds." The 'people of Hatfield say that it was a beautiful sight, to see Lord and Lady Salisbury together, the wife so proud of her husband, the husband so tender and courteous to his still beautiful wife. They were lovers to the end. It was Lady Salisbury who taught her huband to take an interest in the people of the village and help them in all their small affairs. After her death, he ceased for a. time to do this. He .gave money as before. but he Was not to be seen in the village talking with the old people and patting the children on the head.â€" . . . . . _ Such time as he could spare from tints that assists! in an ' farm laborer hereabouts. If a girl gets g ,iilnaid's Llnlmeni Ewes fails. it “Is it true thatâ€"your bride is vary the afl‘airs of State was spent in his laboratory physics. But since studying experimental his retirement from politics he has returned to all his old PIHLANTIBOPIC WORK. He takes pleasure in looking after the welfare of his dead wife’s pen- sioners. There is a blind girl at Hatfield to whom she used to be kind. Lord Salisbury has made her independent for life, and pays her a visit nearly every day when he is staying at Hatfield. So it is with many others. One of the marked traits in Lord Salisbury's character is his detesta- tion of cruelty to children or ani- mals. In Hatfield they! still tell a tale of his horscwhipping a burly in the days when he was Lord Cranborne. He caught the man beating a child and thrash- ed him so severely that he was ill in bed for a fortnight. No man is employed on the Cecil estates unless he is known by Lord Salisbury to be a good husband and father. He has no use for any man who illtrcats an animal, even slight- ly. Not long ago he dismissed one of his grooms for'whipping a dog. In the summer of 1901 a party of cockney pleasureseekers drove past the grounds of Hatfield House in a wagonette. The fagged horses were flogged cruelly to make them gallop. Lord Salisbury happened to be standing at his gate. He at once ordered' his carriage and fOIIOWed the party until he met a policeman and gave them in charge for cruelty to animals. _._._._._+____ How’s This i We odor One Hundred Dollars Reward (or an case of Catarrh that cannot be 'cured y Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY a 00., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known 1". J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WEST & 'l‘fiUAX, Wholesale Drug ists, Toledo 0. WALDING. KlNNA a MARVIN, Wholesale Druggiats, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Ball's Family Pills are the best. Never read the marriage service Untimely OVClI‘ before the wedding. PLAN NOW FOR SUMJVIER TOURS No matter where you are going, if in the United States, write to Fred. P. Fox, care Lackawanna Railroad, Buffalo, N. Y., for rates and routes. Very cheap excursions during the summer to Atlantic City, Boston and New York. Excursion rates now in effect to all resorts. Plan now. China holds the world's record in the way of executions. at least 12,000 yearly. [Va-“m legal executions I I l Dear Sirs,â€"Within the past year 51 know of three fatty tumors on the head having been removed by the :application of MINARD'S LINIâ€" INTENT without any surgical opera- ;tion and there is no indication of a :return. i CAPT. W. A. PITT. Clifton, N.B. Gondola Ferry. The” are CHEAP EXCURSION TO DENVER ADVICE TO BA‘CHELORS.‘ Failing to get the girl you want, you may as well be wedded. to .4'.‘ CEYLON TEA. It can-t refuse you and may be had. at all groo- ,. us.” .. : ~ . ~ x -..... ers. Lead packages. $4 King Edward '; “ Headlight " “ is is " “7%???”- “ Victoria " “ Little comet " Experiment with other and Inferior brands, Norway canries more of her ex- ports an'd imports in her own vesâ€" sels than even Britain. Sixtyâ€"three and a half tons out of every 100 of: British trade are carried in her own; ships, while Norway camries 68 out of every 100 of her own. The Wabash will sell round trip tickets to Denver, Colorado Springs 1 3r Pueblo, 001., at less than the one way fare. Tickets on sale July 6th, I '7th and 8th. good to return any time before August Slst, 1903. Passengers going via Detroit and over the great Wabash line, can go via Chicago and Omaha, return through Kansas City and St. Louis without extra charge. This will give passengers the grand opportun- ity of seeing the World's Fair build- ings at St. Louis. All Wabash trains stop at the Fair grounds. For full particulars address J. A. Richardson, as District Passenger 1 l l 759 " Agent, northeast corner King and LW Yonge streets, Toronto; The lowest paid ruler of any Euâ€" ropean country is the Prince of Montenegro, wh'ose civil list is only 691 inhabitants, and another with $210,500 a year. hard of hearing?" “It is. Why, when I proposed to her I had to shout so loud that all the neighbors ran out and congratulated me." JH'RISTIAN ENDEAVOR, DENVER For the International Convention at Denver. July 9th to»13th. the official route selected by the Trans- nortation Managers for Ontario and Quebec is via North-Western and Union Railways. Special train of tourist sleeping cars through to Denver. Tickets on sale July 6th. 7th and Sth. Return limit August Slat, 1903. Very low rates from all staâ€" tions in Canada. Write for official Christian Endeavor folder, rates and full information to B. H. Bennett, 2 East King street, Toronto. the Chicago and Pacific 637 different varieties of automoâ€" biles were shown at the exhibition do with Johnny? in Paris last spring. were motor boats. â€"eâ€"4â€"-â€" Fer Ore! Sixty Yen". Av Ono AND Wzr.i.~'l‘nns B or. â€"- Moi Winslow’- Sflthingfiyru has been alloygr over lkty { by on gm- 0‘ met m for owl: children wwe o In . Wit per out success. It soothe: the child. ID, , I 9 guns, allay: ell pain. curl ind cello. 90¢ ll the __, 4 pl. out to tho Mlle. a st] in M b w id. I‘vnp - veumabo no. It. mailman. lie so “duh f 1' Mrs. Winslow"! end «N do other 'ind. 23-74 H fingdxrfor Dinrrhu‘s’s oothln 8 Fl! ‘ ’ri’a France has waterfalls which would give between them five million horse power, and save the country 20 mil- lion tons of coal. ISSEJE N0. 25â€"03 -â€"Oâ€"-c--â€" There is a house in Bombay with 663. Bombay’s population is the1 most crowded of any in the world. â€"qâ€".â€"- island's llnlmeat litres litigate. lWife â€"- “If 1:70; to die, Phil, what would you do?" Phil â€" “I'd be nearly crazy.” Wife -â€"â€" you marry again?" Phil -- “No; I wouldn't be that crazy.” il‘iaali'i [lineal Ems initiate, January is the windiest month in the year. It has, on an average, five heavy gales. Lifeb'uoy Soapâ€"disinfectant â€"- is strongly recommended by the medi‘ cal profession as a safeguard against Infectious diseases: During the past ten years British imports exceeded exports by 4-6 per cent. ' ~â€" lMot'her *â€" “I Wonder what we can He has such a Ten of these way of exaggerating everything. He is always making a mountain out of a molehill.” Father â€"- "I think, my dear, we had better make him an aubtzioneer.’-'. I. III 'I III to WT make ournslf worse by wearing ‘prigg tr is. Y U GAN'T hope to at we tinder sue condition. We have w at 01; Want, comfort at work w it!!! 0! 5190;) as; Wiltu at once to; utiou ti. 0 c a on on. The Belt as ‘ruu mm. 0.,' Spa. ' ins Ave.. Toronto. 8“ T“ ‘ DAM .30. v - loiton of Pa out! Lilo Build}, onto. Write for free “up: WWWâ€"n...” . » 9â€"4â€"55 "teasers sents’suits slashed or Dyed; also Lndiea' Wou- of all kinds. Ind House Han inszfi of every description. GOLD MEDA 131‘ DYERS. BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING CO'Y, __ “optical. Toronto. Ottawa & Quebec. - dominion Line Steamships Mont-real to Liverpool. Boston to Livor- {IDOL Portland to Liverpool. Via Queens- own. Large and FaetSteamshxps. Superior accommodation [or Al plugs: of muses era. Saloons and Stateroom; Ire amidlhipe. Specie nttentionhas been given to the; Second Saloon and Third-Clan accommo atlon. For yet“ 03331335 and all particulars, apply to any agent mpnny,or :- ‘ Klahofiie Mills a Go. D. Torrance e 00.. ',_~__ . V git-{to BkBoseon. Montreal and Portland. 9-60 eraser rites Latest Novelties, all styles. Correspondence invited. En- close 2c stamp for circular. I'HE UNIVERSAL srscmnv ea; P. O. Box 1142, Montreal, m 1 We have Mexicans, California. Navcls, HAVE Valencias, and THE Sevilles. BEST Emmmmmm- Carload every Week. All the above at market prices. We can also handle your; Butter, Eggs, Poultry, “Would Maple Syrupand other produce to advan- 1 tags for you. I’ll! E'A‘HSDH CGNMISfilflH 00., Limited" Oar. West Market 5%., venom-9;, mfim‘fi" «I '. '“i‘fnimfifi‘”-.. ll A3335"? ddlidg. v: at Issues of Gounm- ment and Euniclsal 5;; debenturespurchasad after thorough expert ‘ Investigation. F o r is, . peopie who want an absolutelysure lnvest- ment they cannot be :2, excelled. We have other good condo yielding attractive In- terest ratesâ€"as high -_ as 0 per cant. I“; A‘<-p,,_. w 5.1. ' “3375 FOR “ET. v snags-3 BGMiiilQil SEGUfilTlES Come ration [Ignith ' 26 King at. East, forento. ‘Ltdhdé 2

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