Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Millbrook & Omemee Mirror (1905), 27 Sep 1906, p. 4

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' October 17, I906 A§R§Hmis Win sell by public Auction. 50 head or High-class Ayrshire Cattle, also Agri- cultural lmplements, etc., propefly o! Hon. W. Owens. River Side Farm, Montebello, Que, on C. P. By. North Shore Line, between Montreal and 0t- hwa. Sale at 1 pm. sharp. mt sounds good. doesn’t It? 5 Never a. cold or a cough but always .â€" M well and hearty. You could be like that with a. little are and A '15“; {an the house and use a: at the slightest W 3].. of an approaching cold or cough. It positively cures Colds. Coughs, Croup. “lumping Cough. Asthma end an Throat and Luna troubles. A pure vegetable syrup. Your druggist keeps it and recommends 81. Price, 2539mm_1 K . ,‘ A novel by Arthur Goodrich, entitled f't'he Balanee‘ot Power," is announced tor early publication. It is the story oi the loves ct two friends for the same girl, with a gripping, vital struggle of 'every-dny American life as a back- ground, a story of high Tdeals and cour- ageous optimism. The publishers of this book, The Outing Pubiishing Company, say that it. “grips you in the beginning and sweeps you off your feet in the end,” and they boldly prophesy There is living at Recife, near Per- namhuco, a child or five and a half years of age who is 4 feet 2 inches in height, and who boasts a moustache ad a deep bass voice. 0 ("U Cllu, uuu u -_w "w...- .rVr <-v am: it will be one a! we best selling books or the year. It is only necessary 10 read the testi- monials to be convinced that Hollo- way’s Com Cure is unequaled tor the removal of cons. warts, etc. It is a complete extinguisher. A tombstone has been erecr-ea m we West Hampstead Cemetery over the grave 0! Mrs. Louisa Day, the inscrip- tionvon which, including a. verse of Item“, is in shorthand. ‘ Nearly all infants are more or less subject l0 diarrhoea and such com plainls while teeming and as this period or their lives is the most critical. mo- thers should not be without a bottle at Dr. IND. Kellogg’s Dysenlery Cordial. This medicine‘ is a specific for such complaints and is highly spoken of by those who have used it. The prnpn‘e- tors claim it will cure any case of chol- era or summer complaint. V ONE. “It’s awful for a young man to lose a good oportmfity? , . “Yes, because he doesn‘t do anything .11 the rest of his life but lose lime talk- ng about it.” {NSTEAD OF LOOKING FOR ANOTHER COLTSFOOTE EXPECTORANI Send {or live stock catalogua. THREE/STONES SOLITAIRES the mgtfavoredof all finger I'n'both styles Diamond Hall has particubrly altract: ive Values at $25.00, $50.00 and $100 00. OLITAIRE and Three» Stone Diamond Rings are MEN-i“ NE“? AMERICAN NOVEL. Auctions". RES in the HOW BRITAIN GETS MEAT GLIMPSE The Poor Cattle Sufler Terribly it the Vessel Encounters a Storm. Every day in the year the Unueu Kingdom consumes nearly 3,000 cattle which have been imported from abroad. In the same space of time we eat 6.500 foreign sheep and more than 1,000 forâ€" eign pigs, to say nothing of other meat. such as rabbits, of which animals we take over 16,000 tons yearly from Aus- tralia. Last year over $400000 worth 0! lrozen Bunny came to our ports from New South Wales alone and the trade is an increasing one, says Lon- don Answers. Nearly all this foreign meat is brought to us from foreign countriesâ€"the Unit- ed States. the Argentine Republic, Can- ada, and Australasia. Some is alive. some dead and frozen, some in tins. 0! the meat, we annually import over halt a million oxen and about the same number of sheep and lambs. - n, . e I.-n.cA The most interesting part. of this huge import trade is .withoul doubt the car- riage of live stock. Some years ago the writer crossed from New York to London in the depths of winter on a huge cargo vessel. which carried 600 cattle. about. 300 sheep, and a large quantity of pigs. These were penned run the lower decks. and as the Weather, though cold, was fortunately fairly fine, the'losses were small. ' BELLO\\'1XG, BLEEDING HEAPS. Yet even so. almost every morning' three or four unfortunate cattle which had been injured and consequently slaughtered. were slung by the horns and tlung overboard. In bad weather the losses among live-stock on the At- lantic passage are sometimes very heavy indeed. Cattle ships roll tearfully. This is no doubt largely owing to the great weight so near the top of the ship, but it is an odd fact that cattle have the power of making a vessel roll even in calm water. Cattle on board ship are confined in pens. In the modern first- class cattle carrier these pens are of stout material, but on some tramp steamers the timber is much too frail. Consequently, when a gale comes and the heavy beasts are flung against the rails, they give way, and the unhappy creatures, perhaps horribly wounded by the sharp splintered ends, are thrown in bellowing, bleeding heaps. Then if a wave breaks over the vessel, comes; confusion worse confounded. Thel poor brutes with horns and legs smashed j are swept from side to side of the, ‘ streaming, slippery deck. it is as much‘ as a man’s life is worth to venture among the frenzied, helpless creatures yet the cattle man is here, there, and cveiywhcre. and is often nobly backed up by the “stiffs,” as those men are called who are allowed to work their passages by attending to the needs or the'floating farmyard. CATTLE SMELL THE LAND. it is too dreadful a subject to dwell upon, but that this is no fancy picture can be proved by actual statistics. One vessel bound from the Argentine to Liv- erpool lost 103 cattle out of 140. an- other 59 cattle out of 109, and nearly Such cases as these are happily the exception, and not. the rule. The Royal Society for the Prevention of‘ Cruelty to Animals has done a great deal, and now-a-days, unless the wea- ther be exceptionally bad, the public may rest assured that cattle suiier very little indeed on the sea passage. Most of them feed very well. and drinking water is always plentiful. The modem cattle boat is so largeâ€"some of them are over 10,000 tonsâ€"that, rolling is largely eliminated, and, indeed, the beasts have more to-iear {mm the heat at summer than from the storms of winter. {we sheep out of 600. A third vessel landed less than 100 sheep out of more than 700. Two curious facts about the carriage of live cattle are worth mentioning. One is that they have a peculiar power of discoloring white paint all over the ship, and the other that, they are able (0 “smell” land long before it is in sight. Most of our froken meatâ€"mitten especiallyâ€"comes from New Zealand and the Argentine. The freezing is done in great chambers which each hold 60-. 000 carcases, and three great refrigerat- ing engines produce the, appalling con 01 30 degrees below zero. [Such carcase, after being frozen as hard as stone. is wrapped in a cotton cloth, weighed and ticketed, and tmnsferred to the ship, where they are stored in the cold-air chamber, the temperature of which is kept at about twenty degrees, or twelve degrees of frost. Remember, these ships have to~pass through the tropics. -lt is odd. when gasping on the deck in the Red Sea. in a temperature of perhaps 105 degrees in the shade, to think that one might go snowballing in the hold just below. To turn to the importation of dead meat: ~As: most readers are aware, it is frozen before being shipped, tsrcarried in a refrigerator hold: and on arrival in this country is at once transferred by insulated lightersy to cold storage. London's cold storage warehouses will hold over two million Irozen“cawâ€" cases. Nelson‘s Wharf at Lomheth is one of the largest. It is six storeys high‘ and if you want to enter, you have to do so by a door on the top floor. There are no doors below, far if there were, every time one was opened-warm air {vould get in. and, of course, rise to the upper floors. Here the meat is stor- ed until it is needed; and then very: care- fully “unfrozen.” The latter process is a most importagpue. It usually takes THREE DAYS TO THAW. AT LIFE ON A CATTLE- BOAT AT SEA. the United three whole days. If it is done too rap- idly, the meat is soggy, wet and nasty. and quite spoilt. On the other hand. it slowly and carefully carried out, the thawed meal 19 left dry undfix‘m, ex- actly resembling that newly killed. .1 u _ 1...... uvnd _ -, n, The enormousmroporlions o! the froz- en meat industry are really almost. mim- culous when one considers that the first cargo of frozen mutton came to England only twmly-six years ago. It was in 1880 that the Slralhlevcn brought the first‘cargo of 400 curcnses from Mel- bourne. to London. Your hard task is a great invitation. The problem oi living cannot. be solved by talking. Things are not heavenly unless they eSSCnliully are happy. Human kinanSS is the greatest law of the heavenly kingdom. Cursed be the success that, crushc‘ aspiration. ' Back of all public corruptions are our private compromises. ‘ Our great losses are not the things itaken from us but. the things we miss. The damage is not. in the corruption of our riches, but in our corruption by them. He only can walk in the high places who walks humbly before the Most, High. He who has learned to do deeds that. are immortal no longer worries over the immortality of his soul. A -I‘ J ALHune JIIIIIIUI lull-J V. __ NV, ‘ It. is no use shouting the glad tidings as though you were reading a death warrant. You are most likely to find God's lace when you are wiping anotherfls eyes. The question is not how much money have you made. but how much have you made with your money. One of the meanest men on earth is he who talks to Peter 'nbout. his gifts to Paul and to Paul about his gifts to Peter. ‘ An unearned“advantage is a disgrace it there be no unrecomponsed service. It is an ill time to boast oi your speed when your lusts are running away with you. ~ No man has a poorer outlook on life than he who always is on the lookout for himself. lt-II'ISISll;.Vllll001' wlu‘n :1 man backs up a petition for a. million dollars” worth of blessing with a penny lo pay the freighl. NOTES OF INTEREST FROM BANKS AND BRAES. FROM BONNIE SCOTLAND What Is Going On In the Highlands and Lowlands ot Auld Seotia. A bed of coat of considerable depth and good quality has been discovered in Skye. Aberdeen Town Council have decided to widen L'nion Bridge at. a cost t‘t $9.500. The death has taken place of Mr. James Arnot, Clerk of the School Board of Edinburgh. He was born at. Balgonie sixty-tire years ago. ‘ ‘ Mr. James Milne, alter seventeen 1 yenrs’ service, retires from the position of superintendent, oi the Assembly Rooms and Music Hall. Edinburgh. The tlhiet Inspector of Factories has appointed Dr. A. B. Spence to he cer- tifying surgeon under the Factory and Workshop Act. for the Kinghorn dis- trict. of the county of Fife. .. . Mrs. t Zrmvtord, a widow. residing at Courthill street. Dairy, Ayrshire, was accidentally killed at Glasgow South- western Stution by stepping of! the train before it stopped. 'I‘im nnmnhlh‘ failure of ”K! crab and The cumplete failure of the crab and lobster fishing on the Haddington coast has been the means of causing many 6! the fishermen to abandon this branch of their calling altogether. , ,.__.x-- 1...‘ Ul \IIVII yu-u....° .V_, F . The Chief inspector of.Factoi-ies has appointed Dr. F. l. It'ln'clginlosh to be certifying surgeon under-’lhe Factory and Workshop Act for the Strnthmiglo district of the county of Fife. Capt. J. D. Clink, a shipowner. one of the best-known men in Clyde ship- ping circles, has died at Greenock, in his 83rd year. On retiring he became a member of the Clyde Pilot. Board. The election of the Rev. Moi-tin Jan- sen, Roman Catholic clergyman, to Car- dross School Board, has been decided to be null and void on the ground that he is noto British subject. In. ., ”v“ ___ Gl§sg()\vCCox'1$6}atiOn 'has received a cheque {or £l7.000 from Dr. Andrew Carnegie, being the fourth installment Equally good Your Honey IMundqd 33337139" on buy Surg- igbt_8<)_np If yam in! cm: liq for from whom youbuy Sm}: SENTENCE SERMONS. bridgt to any the weakened and stand systcm along until It can find firm support In ordinary food. Send for (me sample. fiCO‘I‘T BOVINE, Chemists, In .4_ - tho-.1. Tomaso. SUPPORT SCOTT’S EMUIJION serves as I .500. ”ammo; All drum-u. Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. maroon.“ Linnea. Tonnto with hard or soft water. Sir James King has been appointed chairman of the Caledonian Railway Company, in place of the late Sir James Thompson, and Sir Charles Pine Ren- sbaw was appointed deputy chairman. Mr. Guy Speir, who was private sec- retary to the Secretary for Scotland un- der the late Government, has been ap-‘ pointed chief Conservative agent for Scotland. in succession to Colonel Haig. At. Eglington station, Glasgow, John McCrum of Govan was crossing the line with his son when he was run down by an approaching train and killed. The son saw his father struck by the en- gine’s butter. The city and. couty of Perth Royal Infirmary, the Fechney industrial school, Perth, and the Wellshill Girls’ School of Industry, Perth. are to bene- fit largely by bequests by the late Mrs. Kelli, Kinnoull, l'erth. Alexander Ferrier, a litter in the em- ploy of Messrs. A. Ballantine Sons, New Orange Foundry, Boness. was at work when the emery wheel measuring fourteen inches in diameter- burst into bits, killing Perrier. The death has occurred of Mr. Thos. Robertson, C. V. 0., of Cairnleith. (Iri- eif, formerly supertintemtont of the. Highland Line, general manager of the 0! his gift 0! £100,000 towards the es- tubtishmcnt of district libraries in Glas- gow. -. _ IF‘,‘_ L-.. hnnn nnnnintml Great Northern Railway of Ireland, and chairman of the Irish Board of Works; An interesting ceremony took place in the postmen’s room of Etgin Post Office. when in the presence of a large gathering of officials and postmen, Mr. Alexander Riddoch, ex-rurul postman, Orton to Foehahers, was presented with the Imperial Service Medal. Mrs. John (juddy. Killoloc Station,| Ont., says:â€" “My baby was so nearly1 (lead that i had to place my our close to his breast to know that ho was breathing. lie was in this condition when l tlrst gave him Baby's Own Tablets and l hzmlly dared hope that thoy‘wnuld save him. But [hey helped him uhnust at. once, and soon made him a well child. He is now two years old and weighs iorty-tivc pounds and has never known a sirk day since I first gave him the Tablets.” Baby’s Own Tablets cure constipation, indiges- tion. diarrhoea, teething troubles. break uuu. uu- up colds expel “tn-ms and give little ones natural healthy sleep. And the "miller has n gumunlce that, this medi- cine contains no opiate ur poisonous suolhing stuff. Sold by all medicine dealers or sent by mail at :250 a bo.\ by “tiling The Dr. \Villiams’ Medicine (:0., Bi'oclwille, Ont Nimrod was il mighty hunter, but had he hunted. in the ‘flâ€"lighlunds cf Ontario," he would have been u might- ier one. Nimrod hunted for glory, but those who go inlodhe several districts of Northern Ontario hunt for game. T hose Indiansiwho made the first canoe of birch bark long ago, were our great- est benefactors. The children of those Indians know the canoe. and they know how to use it, and they know just where the moose and deer are to be found. They will be the best guides you ever had. The “The Muskoka Lakes.” "Lake of Bays," “Magnnetawnn River,” “French River," “Tenmgami,” “Georgian Bay” and several other dis- tricts in this Great North Country abound with deer‘hnd moose. The best hunting on the American Contin- ent is offered here. Write the under- signed for copy of “Haunts of Fish and Game,” an illustrated ublication issu- ed by the Grand 'I‘ru . Railway Sys- tem, giving an information, game laws, maps, etc.. to G. '1‘. Bell, General Pas- senger Agent, Monlrenl. It takes an .eyelnsh twenty Weeks to reach a length or half an inch.and then its life is from 100 to 150 stays. By means of a camera lhu wink of an eye- lid has been n’yeasurcd, and it was found that lwenty winks can be made in 4 seconds. Mother Gr-aves’ Worm Exlorminator has the largest sale of any similar pre- paration sold in Canada; It always gives. satisfactioq by restoring health to the little folks. T HE GREAT NORTH COUNTRY. BABY NEA “LY DEAD. Rfifliwmy person who groves that unligh tSonp $5,009. dentin! uni injurious chmiedl or “alteration. will Eleven Gallons Were fiistilled From. One Ton. 1n the manutacture of alcohol from corn cabs and corn stalks, at small Cost the United States Department of Agriculture is developing-'21 new indus- try that is likely to be of large com- mercial value. Investigations which the department is making at lloopps- ton, 1115., have proved that. the large quantities of corn cohs which every year heretofore have gone to waste can be converted into alcohol in suffici- ent qutmlities so as to justify the erec- tion of a distilling plant in connection with :1 Corn cannery. The Depm'tment of Agriculture sent two chemists to lloopeston to make experiments at. a large cannery there. They have succeeded by simple methods of fermentation in gettingr a yield of eleven gallons of alcohol from a ton of green .cobs, and six gallons of alcohol from a ton of green corn stalks. It. is a peculiar fact that Africans never sneeze, neither do their descend- ants. it they be pure blooded, although domiciled in other parts of the world. “\Villie didnt I tell you not to play \xilh you: Loy soldiers on Sunday. 9” quelied the moihcn “\es, mamma," replied Willie, “but im playing they me Suhution Anny soldicls.” During 1905 more we1e wrecked, burned and toundcxed at, sea 297 steam vessels or a net aggxcgntc tonnage/of 253 611 and 296 sailing vessels of 2111- 600 tons, says Lloyd's. Uncle you out follow.” little as A Pill for Generous Eaters.â€"There are many persons 0! healthy appetite and poor digestion who, after a hearty meal, are subject. to Illth‘h suffering. The food of which they have pal-taken lies like lead in their stomachs. Headache, depression, a smothering footing follow. One so afflicted is unfit for business (SIT-@5114; fit any kind. jg this condition I'urmoleo‘s \ogctnble Pills “ill bring relief. 1le will :msisl the assimilation of the ailment and used according to direction will restore healthy «Ji«res~ Lion. birds. birds" nests. and (*ggkfind hv is the only man in the empire permitted ts do so. A professinlml bird-catcher is mnplny- ed in Berlin. who keeps scientific and educational instilulions supplied with It is :1 Liver |’ill.â€"â€"Mmiy 0i tlmgiil- nwnts that mun has to contend with have [hair origin in a dism-(lvrod liver. which is a dclivute oFgun. pal-liailai-ly suscvptihle tn the disturbances that come from irregular huhils or lack of care in eating and drinking. This ac- counts fur the great many liver roguli- tors now pressed ml the attention u! surlm'm's. Of those thm'c is Don“ su- perior to Purmeloe's chvtable Pills. ’l‘hvir npvraliun though gentle is effec- tive, and the most. delicate can use them. In parts ui Australia whn'ro llm aver- age yearly rainfall is not more than 10 inches n Square mile nl land will sup- purl only cighl m- ninc sin-up. In ”10 Arognline, the same area. wilh 34 inches 0'? rain. supporls 2,560 sheep. The manufacturers number of the Winnipeg.r “Cnmnmi-cial" published by the Hugh C. MucLeun Company Limit- ed. of Winnipeg. Vancouver. Toronto and Montreal. is (*xcoptionally brilli~ ant and reflects great credit on its pub- lishm‘s. livery nnniut‘uctux'er in Canada should see this publication. \un ....... . card has i'ecenlly been formed by soci- oiy ladies in Berlin. The principal con- dition of membership is that the appli. cant, must be deaf. The club has over a hundred members. who meet rogu- larly once a week in linmisomely-fur- nishcd rooms in the \Vilhelmstrasse, where they conversn by means of car- ti-umpels and sign language and drink tea. Snniight Soap 1| better that other you”, but in best when med in the Sunlight V1,. Buy Sunlight lap and tollow diregtiona. ALCOHOL FROM CORN COBS. “Man is Filled will) Misery."-â€" This is‘ not true of all men. The well. sound Description 0! Diamond Mining as Carried On In South Atrica. Tfiis inscription appeared as long ago as 1750 on a map of South Africa. It. was not until 1867. however, that they were actually discovcred. In 1889 the famous De Beers Consolidated Mines Company possessed the richest diamond fields in the world. ‘ , 1,i_i_,. AA IV “In ||u\. ..- »-.. V, 0! lung. clear of eye. alert and buoy ant with health. are not miserable, whatever may be their social condi- tion. To be well is to be happy. and we can all be well by getting and keep- ing our bodies in a healthful stalv. Dr. Thomas” Ecleclric Oil will help to do this. ”\‘Iun All lllv 1' Diamonds re found in the large de-' posits of lava or “blue ground" that has been forch up from the depths in past ages. Each mine consists of a large. basin-like crater gradually tapering to a great depth. Within a radius of three and a half miles. five of the world‘s leading diamond mines are located. Here the Kamr boys work in gangs of twenty-five to forty, drilling and blast- ing the hard blue rock. The walls are worked until they break through into another chamber. When it reaches the surface the pre-i ‘cious earth is automatically conveyed tot the dumping grounds. Here it is spread to a depth not. exceeding ten inches and allowed to remain from three to six lmonths. according to the rapidity with which it disintegrates. When finallyt sent to the washing machines it. ist mixed with water and passed through revolving.r screens titled with holes. This method of handling is lieing superseded by mechanical sorter-s which consist of several inclined perforated shelves, loaded with grease. The dia- monds stick to the grease, while all other material passes from one shelf to another. " Great precautions are taken against theft. All employes are engaged for three months, during which time they are kept- under close guard. While they fine of the most curious clubs on re- VLndies to do plain and light sewing at home, whole or spare time; good pay; work: 59m any distance, eharges _ 1.." _....L:..ulnne paid; sénd étémp for fun particulars. National 'Manufacturing Company. John: “My goodness. Tommy. an awful lot [or suuh a little Tommy: “I expect 1 un-n't so 1 looks from the outside." “ HERE BE DIAMONDS.” WANTE D. OEYLON GREEN TEA. THE TEA THAT OUTCLASSES ALL jAPANS. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. LEAD PACKETS ONLY. “Amara: Near Neudorf, Saskatchewan. A rrreat bargain. $12 per acre. Close to two railroads. Branch line of Grand '1‘: uuk Pacific su1ve3 ed almost through the property. 640 AGRES 5' are not at work they are confined in a large compound isurrounrdeq b): {ugh Water, “ OSHAWA ” Steel \ Shingles. In Spite of all this care ten to fifteen per cent. of the diamonds mined are stolen. in order In discourage the buy- ing of stolen gems. a penalty nl from five to fifteen years is enforced against the buyers. Storm The De Beers Company operates seven mines and employs fourteen hundred while workmen and seventy-two hun- dred blacks. The annual output is from six to eight million carats. or from one to one and a half tons a year. Proof It is eight months from the time the rock is drilled until the extracted dia- mond is ready tor the assayer's exami- nation. Kflfllffifll. 008. 321-3 w Cnig sc‘ Something Ne“ and is Delighted, Feels Like a Boy. 'hich “l have been :1 sum-rm- Irmn Dys- pepsia fm- yours. 1 have hovn :routudl by doc-Imus undq hnvn lnkvn many} mediuim-s with oniy ‘ tmnporury wlief. Simtc\ using Dr. lmnnhnrdt's Anli- I’m 1 can out any- . .lhing [ho sumo us MF- “- N- Dame. MM] :1 boy. I find they regulate bum slumau-h and hmvâ€" els. My Old 1imc vigor hus whn'nvd. Sn lhat. my spirik :m' hunyzml and tamper nornml. l gin} all mum in Ihis \x'ondurful rcmcdy â€" ln'. Lennhmwll's Anti-Pill." Made from Painted or Galvanized Steel, at prices varying from $2.85 to $5.10 per hundred square teat covering measure. Thisvis the most. durable oov- ering on the market, and is an ideal coverin r for Houses, Barns, Stores.Ele- vators, Churches, etc. Any handy man can lay the “OSHAWM shingles. A‘ hammer and snips are the only tools required. We are the largest and oldest. ccompany of the kind under the We!) flag, and have covered thousands at the best buildings throughout Cunade. making them , FIRE, WATER AND LIGHTNING-PROOF- We also manufacture Corrugated Iron in lon‘g sheets, Condu EAVESTROI’GH, Etc. METAL SIDING, in imitation of brick or stone. METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 designs. Write for Catalogue No. 14R and free samples of “OSHAWA” Write toâ€"duy. TEE! PBDLAB PEOPLE, ctor Pipe and Shingles. (Inn . ... All doa‘Ms u!‘ The \V'ilsnu-l-‘ylo «20.. Limiied, Nzugm'n Fafls‘. Onl. ’ Mr. J. E. 'l'hornycrott, an English au-' thority on engineering. in reviewing re- cent attempts to adapt the internal combustion en vine to marine use, says that this adap ation may now be re- garded as an accomplished fact. Trials‘ made between Hamburg and Kiel with‘ a motor of 7Q horse-power showed that the gas-propelled boat consumed 530 pounds of anthracite, as against 1,820 pounds of steam coal consumed by a steamboat of practically the same di- mensions and making the same speed. Gas-engines of from 500 to 1,000 horse- power for marine use are now being i constructed in England, and Mr. Thor- nycrott expects to see such engines in- stalled in large sea-going vessels. oazfimuuhaMMmr mummuaeomua. wamumowamwumu nun-“n ..__a 9'7 Icu‘fiIâ€"n {III “an“!u..-’ 23' fit. 1. II‘ a [Ilvlilra .rr flit... 33‘s; >20 a??? t I“ I #rfllfilurbnotmmolm-g {Eloisttlo‘VFMoâ€"vliâ€"r rrfizgllgng‘uuln’ OaIaQIrEVIP-rg' Par. rguvoo. Into 231125 Feet {9:} $100 BOX 21, 73 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. ighhoth-fi-S A TORONTO MAN TRIPS 'ashington 341311“ GAS ENGINES ()N SHIPS. Write your Nate“ Ofllcmq AG RE Ti‘fi'.“8§»'é'.‘fi'. I'OR SALE OllflWfl, 0m IOfOflIO, am. 423 Sussex at. 11 Colborno st Mr. .\I. N. Damn), ‘29 Colbm-xw 82., Toronto. says: ls used HEAD OFFICE AN D WORKSâ€"OSHAWA, ~§ ~ , , . . cash. The Eastern Townships Nurseries an than t abie to one:- gnu Standard A e Trees 4 to 6 feet high, grown ere, My end I“: ”not (or Fell I and Spring getivery. (or 815.00 per united. ....... nun-v A I" u..â€" l0flflflfl.0m. WHEEL]. Iflll. VGMOHVBI,B.G. 69 Dundas at. 76 Lombard sc. 6l5 Pandora: in the prepa'afl‘” WENTY THOUSAND ACRES IMPROVED: and. unimproved lands, in the Penbold {am when district ; tram eight to twenty, dnllu-u pen acre; correspondence solicited. A. J. STBOXGJ Penhold, Alberta. : 1‘ FAYâ€"43800 \Xii L TAKE YOU TO Eumpe {mm New \ork: agent wankd in mu: cih. Bostnn Shipping 00.. 18 N01 folk street, New York City. General Agent Wanted- Tn take charge of your County. Ap- ply to Imperial Company, Jay St... 0311, Ont. one of the host stock. grain and dairy farms ii central Alberta: about, 125 acres under cultiur; tion, 80 acres tame hay. first-cl”: springs, 300d! wells, buildings and knees: about "More. ph; grove; half mlle from pout-office. score swim-ck- smith shop: good school on land: government creamery wagon collects cream from hm; price 815 per acre. H. W. HUNT. Cdguy, Alberta. Fruit Growers, Attention Different countries have different, ways. own of approaching or announc- ing the Sovereign: succession. ln Tunis, the traditional usage is tor the reigning Prince to sent the Court barber to tho person on whom the choice has fallen as n cuccosson to notify him that he may 3-30 gages in the Kn.“ pm Valley. near lnnislal'l, , ,2, ._J .I_:.__. :_____ ._ «u .. u.\...ri_-_ wear a board. T1311! intimation is equivalcm‘ lo a formal announcnmcm. (llunvunuu- u; u _‘,____y_ 777777 . , , that he has been selected as heir-pré; sumptive. The reason is that in Tuui§ the wearing of hair on the (ace is me exclusive pi'iViioge n! sowrcignty. 'i‘iIe new Boy the uther day sent his hair- dresser with this intimation to Si Mei- muun 0] Hal». who is now, therefore, iii‘ir-prm‘uniptive. After the barber's. imissiun there was a family gathering at. the Bay‘s house. over which the Boy prosidm]. and the new heir received the [general congratulations. unkmumuumm Send lamp for not 111mm MM:- App] to: Guides. Timetables, Maps. 0%.. to the ‘ pany's Passenger Agonu. Maul-I. 1'. Cook tSon.usandm00 Broadway.ufluD Madison Avo., New York. ad a» Noun. Thor Meadows a Co., 37 Boner st" London. In“ Midland 450nm} to; {night mm, for (wig , , A n_u- :â€" Between Liverpool and London (St. Pancras) and principal towns and holiday resorts in the British Isles. l-‘roquonliy a would-be optimist de- gvnoralcs into a pessimist because of his. inuhilily in diagnose a bad case of bil- lousness. Dear Mother The lost Rout. In the Old Country for comfortable Travel an! TNU ,__ “r, -.. _-. _ .- to 3.11 pm of Great Britain. W. GUY GBAXET. SHILOH TQMWbeinauyM, REGAL “ PRIVILEGE." FOR SALE. ISSUE H+¢++++++++++++++H *+$+++++++ puwm‘ over me dwindI-d a: ska-(3311: mturmxi. Being chiefly anxium 10 pm ixmcgsdw, l hoxilated 5‘2'219 1i: pun-mining Janos to acuaupan wsonal appearance :mfurtur. ing of a kind unlilu-LV h; be MM] 0110’: soon. Rm. {mama that I cum: not find it. u: I It hm" (m whose flchy and absoialely rv‘ckon in n ly in prove of 0UP»); pt‘l’hap‘: or peril. M “quid hme foiiow-d 2: I ins§~zh~d. however. I pr ch- ”14,111 (5031! . 1311:! 5 law. we I: As 11‘ I ”14211;. skins. 1 tau 1m lion (Iii his al1ondzml duet-arter- M; “My ennMo‘d [mm London hum-able >93 slmngth. M Rudi<~m \v- y co 11:40 at n d‘.’ .‘vren! hasten} crimson upon on: first wnhxre ‘ M' away {rum the min in invigorate n u‘iLx‘ and pmm‘ b; easy stages 0! my izxirativn son :4 [hr m'ace afh'r my [on ion “as :0" gnu-at to be onto” a moxm-ul. I had therefore 1. myself “in: dmpafching J make nautious inquiries as In ( loin Pahlen and Mr rulflhl‘e“. new”: a bulky gemlnmun hfi The lime h~\\'n r-remzxted nm diffvrent 3‘11er Ind-v0.1. ik chem-(u! bustle. nnd 1hr- (-x-is umflm- which greetcd us lher have} raésod inspiriting ”mud it was with a heart wry mi! 911:, with "10 deformjnutinn 1' face in fez-tune bran-5y mm: ‘ of good. ma! 1 passed me 11% no! but linle s‘u-ogv. for. having my goal. I Sharrr-ly krwu‘ hm gin. NH!‘ a: 1mg 46 The ri~l 51d!) in l'n lll‘. “on I might A! ”I“ \‘NT Im- mnn'mg 1mm in Ihv 91'. ms ilé Irrm.‘ {In} c-H/ens' brow I had lnken a mum :.~ amid ;. mum guard. and wax In and U! “God in heavenâ€"yout- God i: â€"â€"'ou!" be black eyes went as hard m, {nose of a shepherd's dag. \ with the same earnest look m he loves or the enemy he susy. as We stood thus. the sgvace hecnnds. my mind misgaw 1‘ whether I had not already ja an my pquscls by this impu closum. It was evident Um‘ man had heard the stow of a: which in {his hostile place was security. Burma die was as! chance of informalion was 100 The recognilion Ilznsl simultaneous rimming cloak {us than ihc dull um l-.~n:mcc that sh“ ‘ ordinary emotiofi. She gaw a cry. Then she chapped her 113' gelher. pressed them clasped : her cheek. and stared at me wit! mg intensity, crying again and nr. , ‘ hurry dark ligurv Arm-f: mo minivan-o. ’l‘hv nvx would iune 98*. m- the shoulder. “Anna!" I cried \\'Hdi_\‘. “('- r-d. Anna!" For upon 1m morning of my qu'S! [- lromuglu me {see to face “-5 person than Ottilic's old n up} to be seized cvcn a: E ‘. was towards the xuiddie of Demâ€"u that we Marla! uguvn the jam-m mue sounor ind-3w! than my 5:: ‘n and mentor appr-.-\ed 0!, but !I mm "15‘ human ading VOL. 18. EU. 19. fie; emry fizz. wmv w! NS JV (Th m \‘ which r“ hr m‘ace :r in m definite U 'omded with 1 am of one t Y l't‘RV \\ cmn‘ulsod h; m! H MI in my plainesl ( LHAPTER ll pand umMe us It) S‘dflihh‘l <01 s in Hamburg . and after massage. “him did mu 19. we Mod u! illltl ml ar‘du U10 1ch «c for. i \‘i murniug had I onchzsinn. mums m3 In 8H .Inm {(-11 lh Princess. 0r. m in s [l ‘-\\' her IN la lune be many me. Hunutely ,- he {ergo ‘2‘,"ch ”10 u: me lo q-xcelh‘ni mu: adv M fl‘ we mm 0 ma sail. and “ uflnvr. m: r:'1.\’_\'$!135 ,icu 032 $05 SCXW |" l” {rut om ‘l m 'Q‘I‘S' UHL‘ ‘Q U H“

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