Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 12 Feb 1913, p. 7

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aid [if you don't beat the dio 'his' disgust, the old man op The beiik of this ejaculation. en |" > a 1 don't si %thave any. lifting 36 o "Here you, L"Aigg-loo;'" he pro- nounced the ame ith labor and distinctness. ¢ 'Ye can have it, for the old cat don't want ib. 'I give it from to her first," he felt it necessary to lon came to the feast; he was not partioular who was invited first. In a moment, it seemed bo She delighied old man there was no vestige left, and the n search- ed industriously for more round the "Want some more, do ye! Well, ens."' A he added, with don't reckon ye but it ye can--"" ~ I.'Aiglon had fimshed it; and was aking for more. - 'Nigh starved, ain' ye?' The basin stood in the sink, and he poured it full of water, as if in My | the joy of giving he feared some- 8 | through the window at the fugi- 8 tives. He rubbed pe Jezedly at the High light on bia polished bald He opened the door of the cup- board and took out a small plate, | muttering, "Oattery -- ee -- oi see!' wd other ! 3 y | fragments. TOWN paper parce came forth from ons of the shelves, "land he untied it with fingers that fumbled clumsily at the knots. Un- rolled, it disclosed liver, fresh and inviting. re a aap euarton Strips of ver, d them ei on the plate, "Then be spoke to the old ingly. "Come on an' get i ig wotlt, close to her and stroked her With gowned, snified ome md neni, arobed her back under roug © turned indifferently. to caress; then ly her cushion, from which she blinked unres rely at him: Ni ¥ is -| fuse thing empty might wish to be filled, Again he scooped great handfuls up to his 'and emerging red and chuckling, he beheld ma standing Sphrchajisively in the doorway, wing the still unappeased kitten. * "That there kitten," he said, im- pressively, striving to find words to maintain his former declarations, and to explain his too evident aban- donment of them, "is the biggest little pig I ever see." The towel hung conveniently near, and he buried his face in its folds.--Youth's Companion. ail EL Chest Colds, Wheezing Cured Over Night You Can Break Up Cold, Feel Fine Next Morning, by Following the "*Nerviline" Method. Experience of a Trained Nurse. Every mother knows how difficult it is to get a young child to take a cough mixture, Seldom will one help unless given in large doses, and the result fs to completely upset the etomach and make' the child sick. Speaking of the promptest ' oure for chest, troubles and children's colds, Nurse Oarrington says: "In all my experience ii nursing I haven't. met any prepara. tion so dependable as Nerviline, It Ia the ideal liniment. Every drop you rub on is absorbed ' quickly, sinks through 'the pores to the congested muscles, cases, relieves and oures quickly. Especially for chest. colds, pain' in the side, stiff neck, earache, toothache, 1 have found Nervi line invaluable. - In treating the minor illa of ghildren Nerviline has no equal 11 think Neryiline ehould = be in every Hundreds of thousands of bottles of : i avery Foar-givol that 4 "| English | a r | must |oeive the guest durin thab Suive coming gu 8 that © The Churchyard family, at Stoke Gabriel, Devonshire, can boast wonderful tenancy, which mus come = almost next. to that of the Cumberland one already mentioned. The Olrurelt yards entered upon ssession their house at Stoke dat briel in the fifteenth century, and have never left it since | Generation after generation of s | them has succeeded to the house for - the nation is really A Bad Heart, Its Cause and Cure Many Firmly Convinced They Are Dying of Heart Trouble, Have 0f- ten the Strongest Hearts, Sometimes you wake up at night, heart throbbing ' like am engine, Your breathing {a » and irregular: pains shoot through the chest and abdomen, and cause horrible anxiety. Your trouble isn't with the heart at all. These sensations are the outcome of indigestion, which has caused gas to form on the stomach and press against the heart. Just read what happened to Isamo Malloux, of Belle River, Ont.: "Three months ago I was a weak, siokly man. My sppetite waa poor, food fer- mented in my stomach, I had sour ris ings and indigestion. A¢ night I would often waken with gas in the stomach and heart palpitation. "I consulted my doctor and used reme- dies 'that my friends advised. Nothing helped. : "One day I received a sample of Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and my oure commenc- ed. To-day I have a vigorous appetite, strong heart action, and no sign of in. digestion. . I feel younger and healthier than ever before." Your druggist or storekeeper sells Dr. Hamilton's Pills, 250, per box or five boxes for $1.00. By mail from The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Osnada. eee TENANT FOR 600 YEARS! Marvellous Instances of Long-Con- tinued Residence. At the last Revision Court in North Cumberland it was proved that a cottage fifteen miles from Gilsland had been in the continu- ous occupation of one.family, gen- eration after generation, for over 600 years! It was further elicited during the -evidence that the kit- chen fire of this cottage had never been allowed to go out for well over 200 years! says London An- swers., Burely both these things must constitute an actual record of their kind in England! Yet there are other similar long tenancies and continuations of various things amongst us which may well make the world stare at a time that is so prone to new and changing life and environment, 8ir Laurence Gomme, of the Lon- don County Council, mentioned, at a meeting of the Folklore Bociaty, that he knew a case where the kit- chen fire was no. only a perpetual one, in go far as it had been kept alight for hundred: of years, but that whenever food was cooked at it, a small part of the 'food was thrown <back into the fire "for luck," the family said. But he be- lieved that, in reality, this custom was but a relic of the fire-worship- ping propensities of the older gen- wife + t il erations of this ly. _ What Shai] we say about a noted 1800, more than 400 years; and Mr, Fred- erick Churchyard, the present hon- ored tenant. erected a stained-glass window in 'the church not long ago as a thank-offering on the 420th an- niversary of the familyls tenancy there. ' Whilst speaking of these splendid tenancies, it may be worth men- tiohing that Florian's, the oele- brated hotel 'at Venice; has long boasted that ite doors have never been closed at all, night or. day, for three centuries; whilst the Mai- son Dore, in Paris, known to be a favorite house of call in the.Empire period, can proudly claim that its doors have never been shut sifice they were first opened, during those great days when the glorious Court of Louis XIV. made France the wonder of the civilized world. reer Wn HOW KINGS REPOSE. Sleeping Apartments of Royalty Simple With Few Exoeptions. The, Corriere delia Sera of Rome, Italy, prints an interesting article on how famous millionaires sleep in palatial bedchambers, whereas the reigning monarchs of the world are simple folk in the matter of their night's rest. Thus, the Kaiser fa- vors an ordinary camp bed, while the sovereigns of Italy and Austria slecp in small iron beds. The new Mikado sleeps on a rug on the floor with a couple of bamboo sticks for a pillow, while the King of the Bel- gians can only be assured of a good night's rest in a hammock. King Alfonso, on the other hand, has a luxurious bed, while George V. and Mary are particular that their sur- roundings are ing to their state. The Czar and the Pope have small rooms and beds. The only one who turns the key in the door is Alfonso. All, however, have sen- tries or servants pacing up and down outside. Ry... Partly Right. 'Say, Bill, wot's a pedigree 1" "Same as hydrophoby, I guess." "Hydrophoby, nothin'! You're «ay off." "Well, it's somefin' dogs have, anyway." heey

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