Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 22 Nov 1907, p. 2

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' "“sl‘flwm‘i’wwrmcm wastage-31m.)me s [Namammmwmwm Eliikttll ream unclear Every Man Has to His Breast the Keys to His Own Heaven. “The Kingdom of God is within you.‘ â€"â€"Luke xvii., 2]. The religion that has relations only to heaven and angels, or only to a su- preme being remote and detached from daily life and from our families and friends, our business. and affairs, issues in personal selfishness and is one of the causes of social dis-organization and need. ' It postpones to problems that ought. to be solved in the present. It promises those who were broken with injustice and greed of their "follows a place where right. would prc that dim future the vail and rest would be their portion. in the future. It. shifts to an imaginary and ideal world all the perplcxitics and wrongs of the present. world. That kind of teachingr ingrained in generations accounts for the dull pati- ence, the stol'id, bru-tclikc content of the peasant. in Europe; he is born a bear- er of burdens. a litter of the soil, to walk bent. and never look up; it is all endurable because it is all so short; be some day will be butler off than kings and emperors are now. But. as the generations are born the inspiring vision of that future loses its force; the ideals are gone and the chil- dren. come. into the world with their fa- thers content with their present condi- tion, but devoid of aspiration and also devoid of their father’s faith in the com- pensations of the future. THEN COMES TIIE REACTION. Some daring spirits assert that. if there is any good, if there is equity and rights, men might to enter into and en- joy them here and new. And some who catch the vision of a God of real love are unwilling to believe that. he keeps from his children the present joys of his home; they invite to a pre- sent heaven. Then how easy itis to fall into the error of seeking mly a material pre- sent day paradise, to live as if the only. thingsfivorth living,r for were food and clothes and pleasant circumstances. Better a worthy, beautiful ideal. afar offl than an unworthy and dcbasing one al- ready realized. The heaven that. so many are seeking will but bring all men to the level of the. brute. The danger is that. we shall miss the real benefit. of this great. truth that SHARP llE'l‘OiI’l‘S. Ans‘n'crs “’liich Turned the .lokc on the {lilier Ft! lmv. Elna dy In. a London auction room two men ,worc disputing the possession of a pic- ture by a celebrated English painter, which faithfully represented an ass. ,Each scemcd determined to outbid the other. Finally, one of them said:- “My dear sir, 'it is of no use; I shill not. give lin. The painting once bu,- longed to my grandfather, and I intend l-‘ have" it." “Oh, in that case.” replied his rival, ysuavcly. “I will give it. up. I think youl are fully entitle-:1 to it. if it. is one of your family pain-trails.” at. which lherel was great. aughler throughout. the room. ‘ \V‘ltl’l this sharp retort we are lflf'llll- cd to rank the reply of the Irish girl ,who. caught in the act of playing on Sunday morning, and being arc-.isted by the parish priest with the greeting, “Jood morning. daughter of the livfl One,” replied promptly, “Good morning, father.” Lord Cockburn. after a long sfroll. sat down on a hillside beside a shepherd and observed that the sheep selected the coldest. situation for lying down. “Mac.” said he, “I think if I worn a sheep I should certainly have preferred tho other side of that hill.” The shepherd answered: “Aye. my lord; but if ye had been a sheaf-i ye would have bad mair sense.” and I.-::r.l. Girihocd and Sccgi’s Emceh‘z’efi are linked together. The reason is that at a: 2% i provides her with pow easily digested tic-rm. girl’s strength. @drdei’rldlddfi” The girl who takes 5.901395 Ema?” 559?: has plenty of rich, red blood; she is plump, active and onergeéic. digestion is weak, Scott"; Ernuixfon it is a food. that builds and keeps up at. ALL DRUGGISTSI 506. AND 81.09. »ooeaaoeeacsesoseeeeeeo~ whatever good is designed for man may be realized in large measure while he lives and shall make his good to consist only Ill goods. Better conditions of liv- fug easily become the foe .of timbesl. Heaven is not meat and drmk; it is the boiler heart. Making houses and lands the supreme end of living is little better than look- ing forward to harps and crowns. u- is easy, being freed from slavery to a superstition to relapse into slavery to our lower selves. \Vc are in danger of livinl,r for a livingr instead of for our lives. We are “on the make" instead 4:! being engagcl in making manhood. We are digging the lead of commercual advantage with the gold shovels of cha ’aclcr. We may be measured by our own measurements. In sermons and ora- tions we assure ourselves that we are a great people because we have here so manv acres. so many millions of bushels vol corn and of wheat, so high wages, so VAST FINANCIAL RESOURCES. We are living in the glut of things and selling these .hings at the end of liv- ing. All this does not mean that prosperity is wrong; it. does not mean that misery or poverty is a virtue. The danger is not in our many acres, our high wages, our millions of money; the danger is that these are the ends instead of the means; that. we are existing for our liv- ing; that we make the man the tool of his money instead of the money being the making of the man. . If he will man may find the riches of character; he may enter into the para- dise of a mind at peace; be may taste of the divine joys of serving his fellows; he may, in thought, commune with all the good and great; he may hear the morning stars sing together. The eternal crown of glory is the crown of character. The streets paved with gold are the fair. clear ways of virtue. The harps of whose music we nexer weary are the strings of sympa- thy and love and pain; these make the heavenly harmony. The angels are in the faces we learn to love. These make heaven when we see them in the light of the presence of eternal love. uuuuv F. corn. Cockburn was never tired of relating the story, and turning,r the laugh on himself. A man who ‘was offering: gratuitous information at. a country fair was d-ls- paraging the show of cattle. “(fall those here prize cattle?" he soarulnllly said. “Why. they ain't. no- thin' to what our folks raised. You may not think it, but my father 'aisod the biuges't calf of any man round our Flarts.’, . v e- “I can very well believe il.‘ observ- ed a bystander, surveying him from head to foot. It is not everyone who enjoys a joke at his own expense. The judge who printed with his cane and exclaimcdzâ€"v- “There is a great rogue. at. the and. of my cane," was intensely enrang when the man looked hard at him andavskcd, coolly:â€" “At. which end. your honor?” ~ A friend of Curl‘uli's was bragging of his attachment to the jury system, and saidz~â€" “With trial by jury l have lived, and, by the blessing: of God, with trial by jury I will die!" “Oh.” said ('lurran. tin much amaze- ment. “then you've made up your mind to be hanged, Dick?" ._..__/,v,-.__. . i because they are. where the shoe Somempcoj'ile kick unable to discover pinches. seesaeeeeeeaeaeeeeesaessee , 22. period when a girl’s ca“qu nourishment in cooaawaaaaaoawaaa ‘icdicme dealers or by mail at 50 cents introduced. . BADLY R-I'N DO\\’N. Dr. “’illiams’ Pink Pills Came to the Rescue After Doctors’ Treat- Thc life of any constant traveller is always a hard one. but. those whose work compel them to take long tire- some drives over rough roads, exposed to all conditions of weather, are in con- stant danger of losing their (health. The extreme heat of summer or the pierc- ing winds of winter sap their strength, the kidneys become diseased or rheu- matism sets in. What is needed to withstand this hardship is rich. red bloodâ€"dire pure blood that Dr. Wil- bams‘ Pink Pills alone can make. These pills are the travellers never-failingr friend. Concerning them Mr. George Dalpe, of St. liloi, Quc., sayszâ€"“I am a grain dealer and am obliged to make frequent trips, sometimes very tiring. I returned home from one of these hips last summer very much fatigued. l was overheated and tried to cool and rest myself by lounging on the veran- dah till late at night. I caught cold. and the next day I did not feel at. all well. I had a headache, pains in my stomach and was very weak. I went so see a doctor, but he said I would be alright in a day or so, so I started on another trip. I had not ,gone far before I felt very ill and had to return home and go to bed. _I had chills, headache, iains in my stomach and kidneys. The doctor came to see me and he said I was overworket‘l. Ile treated me for several In ‘nths, but. instead of improv- ing 1 continually grew worse. I wasted away almost to a skeleton and really thought I was goingr to die. One day my wife returned from the village with a supply of Dr. \V'illiams’ Pink Pills. She urged me to take them, as mended to her. I did so, and by the time I had taken four boxes I fell- cnough benefit to decide me to continue them andl look about a dozen boxes. They fully cured me and lo-day I am able to go about my work without feeling,I fatigued.” Fatigue. on the least exertion is a Sign that the blood is poor. Replace the had blood with good blood and labor will. be a pleasure. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills make pure. red blood. That is why they cure una-mia, rheumatism, kidney trouble, indigcsli-zul, heart pal~ pitalion and the nerve-racking ills of girlhood and womanhood. Sold by all a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams" (10., I‘l'ockville, Out. _...,,I‘.__._,_,, l-‘DIliCS'I' hi-ENAGEREEN’I‘. flow to Supply a Permanent Supply of Fuel for the People. The setting aside of a timbered tract of country as a forest reserve does not mean that this tract is to be a sort. of sacrct't enclosure within whose- lmunds no free is to be cut. ()n the contrary, the purpose of suiting aside the reserve is that. it. shall furnish a pcmnaneut and perpetual supply of timiw axd fuel for the people depending,r on 'l. In order that tins olg ct. nay be effected, the timbcrc-tl land- must be out under prompt manageulcim The Cc."â€" lral idea of this nmnagemcut '8 ll. it. the quaulily of timber vnica ll iv: a?- lowed to be taken off the are- in any period shall not be greater that the anmunl. of timber which. is grown o" the area. during this period. This is the.- idcal of forest maiiauemcnt. NGiâ€"xtff‘ss to say, the carrying out of this idea meets with various n'iodilicalions, espe- cially when scientific management is In order that. this pt‘ilicy may be. carâ€" . ried out, it. is necessary to know, u;.. only the actual amount. of timber in the ' reserve at- present, but. also the ru; ‘ a? which the timber is growing and \v '=t amount of timber is being produced When these have been found out. the amount of timber which may be removcd from the tract. vacli year may be calcu- lated. It. is to ascertain the points re- ferred to that. parties have been sr nl. out each summer since 'l905 by the. Formiry Branch of the Department of the Interâ€" ior, in whose charge the management of I the reserves lies. The number and diameter of the trees on the. tract are arrived at. by going over a certain proportion (ya-eviously d-ctcr-. mined) of the tract, counting the trees thereon and measuring the diamele‘s accurately with “tree calipers,” record of all which is made at the lime and kept. The relation between the diameter and height. of the trees is also studied, for instance, how high a tree four inches in diameter will be. 'lcprusc-inative trees of canjh diameter are also felled and “stem analyses” made. From measure- ments taken in these, “stem analyses" it. may be, determined, not. only what are the actual cubic contents of the tree at present. but. also what. were the conlcnlc of the free fun, le-nty, or any mnnlwr of years ago; and from what it has done in the past, the future growth of the. tree may be. arrived at. By subscâ€" qucnl. c-alculali-zins in the. (dune it may be determined what. is the actual mun- bF-r of timber (in cords. board feet- or other measurement) standingr on the tract, what. is the rate of growth and what quantity of timber will grow on lb: tract. in a given period. Another object for which forest. re- serves are often srl apart. is that of regulating water supply. It is well known that in regions which have been stripped of their timber the streams in spring,r become torrents. \vhilc during llu: summer the amount. of water flow- ing, in them is much less than if, was during the same period; before the. tim- l'c' was removed. The value of u sup- ply of water. cilher for manufacttiring,r [llll'l’lOSt’S or for agriculture. dciwuds on “ml flaw of water. (’lbvit‘iusly the can I vvny of keeping the flow of water constant is to retain the f0r‘£+<'.l$, .cutlmg only the mature timber, which ______ ____________..â€".-â€"â€"__. __ __._.._.___... ._. .. . ought to be removed anyway. In several of the Dominion Forest Reserves this question of water supply must. play an important. part in the management. Besides these principal objects aimed zitâ€"namely, the preserving (if a perma- nent timber and fuel supply and the (observation of the water supply, there are various other ends to be aimed at. In some cases, for instance, while these objects are the primary ones, inhabi- tants of the forest region make consider- able money from the summer visitors who come there. But the former con- siderations are usually head and Shoulâ€" ders above any others that may be offered, aad must. always be of prime importance in the management of the. forests. ...._.4.y§¢.- _..._ SENTENCE SERMONS. Ile cannot do who does not dare. Opposition often is the best aid. Living for men is the best evidence of loving God. It. takes an clean heart. No man can be great until he can see greatness. ‘ uplifted eyeto keep a He cannot pray for himself who prays. . only for himself. It takes some frost. to ripen the best fruits of the heart. He denies himself the best who cannot. deny himself. The weeds of prejudice grow in an intellectual desert. If there is nothing .bcavenly here there is no heaven there. A heavy heart does not prove that you have a burdened train. ‘ Many a preacher would be seldom at church but. for the sermon. The best way to maintain good cheer is to comfort the cheerless. Corns on your bands will do more ‘ She. for the good of the world than crowns said Lay had been very highly recom-* on your head. There are too many trying to whiten the world by blackening others. ' You can as; soon cross the ocean on a chart. as save the world by a creed. livery choice in life is an impact that determines the shape of character. You always. can measure a man by the things that provoke him to merri- ment. There no vital power in a religion you can plgeonhole into one day of "the week. Your religion is not to be measured by what. you are giving,r up. but by what you are giving out. The difference between what. you are and what you would be is the prophecy of what. you will be. _J¢____..__. ararv Arena PASS "TELLS HGVJ TO 11-! 1‘ {{E THIS SittiPLE RISEIIMA'I'ISM (HERE. â€"â€" - u [Prescription Given \‘Vhich Sufferch oiland Dread Disease. Can Make {'p and Try at Home at Small (Just. To relieve the worst forms of Rheuma- ltlsm, take a teaspoonful of the following 'iixture after each meal and at bed- lb‘le 2 I‘luid Extract Dandelion, one-half zunce; Compound Kargon, one ounce; l‘iarnpound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three snnces. _ These harmless Ingredients can be ob- tained from any druggist in the smal-g lcr towns, and are easily mixed by shaking them well in a bottle. Relief is generally felt from the first few doses. 1 ’l'his prescription. states a well-known t nlliority in a h-‘lontreal morning paper, llamas lbe clogged-up, inactive kidneys [to li‘ler and strain from the blood the “Olaf-nous waste matter and uric acid, i. ‘uc‘i causes Rheumatism. I M fthcumalism is not only the most, ,an’nful and tortuous disease. but dam. 'rcrous to life. .uis simple recipe will no Ioubt be greatly valued by many sub. larers here at home, who should at. once lprepttrc the mixture to get this relief. take this prescription regularly, a dose yr two daily, or even a few times a week, would never have serious Kidney rr Urinary disorders or Rheumatism. Cut this out and preserve it. Good Rheumatism prescriptions which really. ‘elievc are scarre, ii'idced, and when you need it you want. it badly. 4...“- CONSIDERATE. “Say, pa, won‘t. you buy me a drum?" “No, I’m afraid you‘ll disturb me with the noise.” “No, I won’t, pa; I’ll only drum when you’re asleep." "awâ€"5......_ ACCORDING TO Dlili‘lNl'l‘ION. “He’s only a glazier, but he’s a genius in his way.” “Indeed!” “Yes; he has taking pancsl" Get: a bottle to-day from your druggist. It. is said that a person who \vouldl an infinite capacity for cough 8:. cold ,‘1; ,_â€"â€"â€"-â€"-nv.v)w‘ w-r . , . ..A-.___._____‘ use lidâ€"BEES liliiiiii Men I p j l V' E : g.â€" rcaaiu scene's lAnatlier Triumph in Canada. President Edward bousquet Lauda in Glowing Words. Mr. Edward Bousquet, 248 a Panel ,street, Montreal, (jam, president of’ 'lilarbers International Union, Local 455, writes: ' “For several years I have suffered liroxn calarrli. I tried many remedies lwith little or no results. “I was advised by a friend to try, Pcruna, and after using a few bottles,â€" I am much rcllcved. “I believe Peruna to be the greatest. known calarrh remedy of the age. I ,chcerfully recommend Parana for one ltarrh.’ The truthfulness of Mr..l'30usquet's. :slatcmcnts cannot be questioned. Ila ihas given a clear and frank recital of this experience with chronic calarrh, and how Pcruna helped him when all other remedies failed. . .‘v‘A‘tfi: ..s-.... «mm-- A (ZAHEFYL ‘i‘t’iEE. An Incident at the Nuptial Ball of the: ‘ Pearl of Savoy.” Royalties are much like other folk, after all. A pretty little story is told in Mr. \‘v’. [testify Kingston’s “Men, Cities; Events,” which givn: a pleasant picture of the present Kaiser’s father, 5'then Crown Prince of l’russsia, and afterward the limpcmr l“1'€l‘l€‘ltlt Ill. The: incident took place at the nupi'al lull of the “Pearl of Savoy,” now the - Queen Dowager of Italy, the. wellâ€"beloved % Marghcrila. She was dancing, when her dress caught, in the spa" of a cavalry ofliccr, and was so badly torn that. a visp of gauze trailed from the skirt. along the floor. g Quickly the Prussian heir apparent 3 came up, produced a dainty little morocâ€" co case, took from it a tiny pair of scis- . ,, and kneeling down, deftly cut. away the wreckage. When her royal thighncss had mourned her dance, li'rcdâ€" tclriclv \Villiam went. up to Prince llum- |l;crl and craved permission to keep the Halter as a souvenir of the (piecn-toâ€"be. i'l‘hc requnsl. was cordially granted, and ’; ll.u pr'ncc carefully folded up the bit. of lguuzc and put it. in his pocketlwak. l 7 King Victor Emmanuel cmnplimcntwl ; the young man on carrying such an out- Ilil- even in the ball-room. ' l I Q. “Thu imvril, belongs to my wife, sire.” :msvered the. crown prince. “Long ago Slu- gavc me a pocket necessairc with ,ttll sorts of useful it “gs, uccdlw, =lln'cad, buttons, hooks, mus, and so 'fortb, and made me. promise to keep it. always about. me. What took place just now only proves that I am a lucky fel- l-::.w to have such a clever wife to look joul for me.” it A SUGAR STICK. “Do you ever drink to excess?” ask ed the girl’s father. “I never touch liquor of any kind. lsir.” “flow about mime-co?" “I do not sn'zoke. l have never had a rigrr or u c'garette in my mouth." “Ever gamble?” j “Never! [do from another." “I suppose you swmir sometimes?" “N-z‘ sir. An oath has never passcc ) n my bps. "llm. All right. (:‘OIIIO out have a stick of candy with. me.” CQEE not know one card and "-â€" wr: mu- “tux:- mfg. m-vsaur-dn. .- - ~ If it doesn’t. cure you QUICKER than anything W I 4;; H;..~J.J’-~':.n..'.~- ... . .2; you ever tried he’ll give you your mom *- "Ta .vaxâ€"yw a w»14*~l\~ ey b cl; Shiloh’s is the best, safest, surest and quickest medicine for your children's couglu and colds. It has been curing coughs 25c., 50c... and $1.00 a bottle. . 55-: Gamerâ€"31;»: sfizfigfi, and colds for 34 years. All druggists-« 60‘ is _____.__...â€"..__..._.V.A.._._-...-_._,_. 3,

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