West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 29 Nov 1900, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

M; for the bettet end â€" ,,_6; m5. second bottle wee finished we. completely cundeed heve bed IO I'm d’the disease since. “ I hve greet faith in 3.3.3. ee e m hflood eed skin diseeeee." “he led line. “but“. 31.8. “I had Salt Rheum in myhcoundhaado h three years and could not {a anything new me till [used Burdock Blood Bittcn. “ On Faking fho §r8_bottlo £110qu a SALT RHEUIW: Anyone and!" a sketch and description msy ulckly ”3am", free. Win-tum u'l HIVUOLHZI I. mlmbly patentuble. (‘Olumnnfmmr-ns strictly .anfldontlal. Oldest agency !« {It-(unlit: patent. In Amen-fies. W0 have a ‘yhfi‘ninflhl. 003cc. Patents taken through Muuu a C0. WV. nodal notice in tho boulflfnlw Illustrated. hum- an? aciant ac Journal. wwk‘ ;, ‘ 1.50m month. bpeczuu-w I as PATENTS not. free. LUMIBER, sum-ages MI 2 a. FLOUR, OATMEALand FEE:- THE SAWMILL. BRISTIRG AND SHOPPE“ D01! That 5 why “ Monsoon.’ the perfect Tea. cash} we a the name price an inferior tea. \ at is t u in sealed caddies of ”1b.. 1 lb. mg) | log. . anffold 5: three flavours 31:40:" see. and 600 “ Monsoon ” Tea is packed under the nu Moi dtho Tea towers. and is advettiocd and sol: b then! it a amp of the best qunliticsof Indian and cyiml Teas. Fat that tea-um they see that none but tbl my fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. ’ If vour gr. war does not keep it. tellâ€"him to writ? '2 TEFL. ‘HAYTEP CO., I: mad :3 Front Its Local News Is Complete The Chromole Contains \Ve ar I III-4 UV" 0 6 ' ls completely stocked wltl DEPARTHENT all NSW TYPE, thus ae‘ brill; facilities {or taming out First-clar- mm fortranfient advertiments O cems p lune for the first insertion :3 cent? y “m . e 0 line std! subseqiem insemon-rmmu Pru‘asaimzl cards. not exceeding one inch F09 pet .mnum. .Ad vertiserulms without speciti reettom ml] be pubhahed till Iorhid and charged a ”dug: Transient noticesâ€"“ Lost." “ Found. [or 'e,” etc. â€"â€"50 cents for first insertion, 25 cer. k etch subsequent insertion. All advertise-teats ordered by strangers must be pm h in advance. Contract rates for arly advertisements furnished 0: icatinn to the o e. All advertise no 1ts, to ensure imen ’on in curre' week, should be htought in not Istcr than T0359» a In (manna: will be t loam addicts, face of postage, for .upc. .yeat, payablc m advanceâ€"3|. be charged if not so pmd. The dateto whic even .hcvipfloo is id is denoted by the numberon uh; “I!” label. afipcr d: ck nun Jed mm} a“ ma: .0. pad. except at t Optxon of the ptoprietor. Pâ€"- t. IE8 : chug. . 1 d B"pied '. ‘ - was! 2:0! re“ labeli‘g.I ls wnuwzo "IIV THURSDAY IORIINO um mm mm: um. um mi DURHAM, ONT. BOIENTIFIG 5" m fiflfiflfifil fiflfiflfllflu IN IT. NATIVE FUENTY. mom THE Tu puujr TO Tm.r In em- on worsen notice and nulfxctzon ' guaranteed. 361 Eric '., G. J. MCKLUHNIE THE PERFECT TEA and market reports accurate / Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on the household and farm, and serials by the most popuiar authors. now prcpar ed to do all Ends 0! custom wank. Emma up) norm-mm. : case Permanently Cured by .1be on uaud NWLhUM a! 'muSHJJg car: [”11 and 31: Address W W w .‘..2 "‘ ‘ ‘ their wealth and boast themselves in the multitude of their richesâ€"none of them can by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him, that he should live for ever and not see corruption. The successful man of the text in the night-time has his soul required of him. Again: The man of the text made sudden exit. There was no long lane leading up to this event. The only warning which he got was on the last night. It was not a gradual wasting away, but a shockâ€"and all was over. So removal from this world is always sudden. I have heard of rare cases where persons said. "Such- a day 01 such a month will be my last." and it was so. But the‘ man '01 the text was lit m7); amazed than most people. Even the moat confirmed invalid. It was in strong contrast with his life. His surroundings were as bright as could be. We know more about his Tbarns than his house, but I judge of the style of his house from that of his barn. Men do not take better care of their horses and cattle than of themselves. The house was full of Comforts and luxuries. When the ta- ble was Spread, there was everything on it to administer to hisappetite. When visitors came to that house,the master no doubt would take them out and say, " There are twenty acres of grain; ten acres of corn , fifteen acres 01 grove. See those sheep down in that valley. See those cattle on that hill. All mine! Come and look at those fig- trees. There are some figs ripe. Help yourself. Plenty of them. See how those grape-vines thriveâ€"and these pomegranates l” Abundance of every-l thing. Plenty to eat, plenty to wear, and plenty to congratulate. Yet, amid I all that, he dies! l What then? Is elegance of sur- rounding no defence?! Can not aman hide in his full barns or in his rich yan.ix'obe§__No. ‘ They that trust in EXPECT TO GET WELL. They expect some new effect of medi. nines. or a new style of doctor, or a 1 wish to make two or three remarks abuut this man‘s exit Cram the world. . THEIR. DAY’S WAGES. Prosperity is like salt water; the more you drink of it the thirstier you are. "soul, take thine ease 1” Ah! did a man ever give ease to his soul by such a procesai The soul is a spirit. Caa material things be expected to feed it: (an the soul eat wheat, or corn, or hardware! This man had til-ought only of the three or four yards of human lit'e, and regarded not the millions of i'urlougs stretching out into the infinite. What was the malady that took him immediately awayâ€"I know not. But that night he BXpired. He never built the extension. Before the remaining sheaves had been gathered he was himself reaped. 'l‘hey hauled in no loads of grain on the next day, but a long procession followed him out to 1burial. If the world expressed its sentiments in regard to him, it Would put over his grave, “Here lies interred a successful man, of great enterprise, and influence, and he departs, mourn- ed by the whole neighbourhood. Peace to his ashes 1” God wrote over his grave, and on his barn-door, an epi-: taph of. tour lettersâ€"“Fool.” That the, divine epitaph was correct, 1 infer; from the met that this man had liv-i ed so many years and made no pre-i paration (or the tuture, and because" he was postponing every thing untilii he got laigei barns. Additional bar n- Loom could not make him happy . show me the man made happy by worldly; accumulation. Who are the men Who, have the most anxiety, and WUI'K the hardest! The millionaires. 'lhe men who have the greatest freedom trom care are those who live on My text introduces us into a fine farm-house. The occupant has been wonderfully successful. As far as I can tell. he was an honest, industrious, enterprising man. The crops were com- ing in. The mow and the granary were full, and the men and oxen tug- ged away at other loads. The matter was a great perplexity. After you have gone to the trouble to raise a crop. you want some place to put it. Enlargement is the word. I see him calculating, by the light of atorch,‘ how much extension of room is need-l ed. 60 many loads of corn, so many of wheat. It must be so many feet front, and so many feet deep. He says, “ When Iget the new building donel I shall have everything. Nothing then! for me but to enjoy myseli'.” In an- ticipation of the barn enlarged, he ’folds his arms and says “ 1f anybody‘I in all the world is prosperous and happy, I am that man.” But his ear. is stunned with the words, “Thou,r fool in “Where did the voice come; from i" “ Who dares say that to me, the first man in all this country ‘3” IL was the voice of God! “Thou £001., this night thy soul shall be required? of thee l” ! A despatch from Washington says: â€"Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text: “This night thy 3001 shall be required of thee.”â€"Luke xii. 20. The Rev. Dr. Talmage Dwells on th: Uncertainty of Man’s Life. I THOUGHT FOR THE MORROW. How. much does deatn hurt s good man! Not: so much as the tip of his little finger. They who, in letting you down into your last resting-place, shall be scratched in the hand with s bricr, shall be more damaged than you by death. The grandest piece on If, between this and five or six o’clock to-morrow morning, the same voice should accost our souls, would it find us likewise disconcerted? No.1 can say for many of you. You are not so well dressed for church as you are for heaven. That dress you have on will wear outâ€"get out of fashion; but the robe of Christ’s righteousness will never wear out, for the latest age: of heaven wear the same pattern as the earliest. Ido not mean to say that you: are sinlesa; but Christ has made it all right. He has made a transfer at your sins and pollution, so that you ought to think of leaving this world only as you think of going to awed- ding. It is. weddingâ€"the mrriago o! the King's Son. Eighteen centuries have passed since that catastrophe. The body of that rich farmer has so thoroughly gone to dust that no one suspects where it is. But his soul still iiVesâ€"lives more actively than yours or mine. And he remembers, as though it were only an hour ago, the stupendous impression of that moment when, in desperate un- preparodness, there came crashing into his ears “This night thy soul shall be required of thee.” about the exit was that he was un- prepared for it. It was not alack of brain that kept him in unprepared- ni ness. Now a man who knows enough ti to do business, knows enough: to save t' his soul. All of the idiots with be 3 . saved at last. He was not an idiot. sf But, alasl-how many men are wise a; for time, and foolish for eternity! ti They know enough, when they sell a 3' thing, to get the worth of it, but 57' they barter away an immortal soul lffor nothing. They have everything liinsured but their souls. They are ,tcareiul to have all their titles 300d .fexcept that for heaven. They are 2 prompt in their engagements with ;: banks and brokers, but fail in theirf obligations to God. They pull down”: .: their barns and build greater.§ to hell the increasing cropsfl .: but have no shelter {or their; .geoals so gaol as a barn. If a man? Lshould come at the-m with asly game, ! land try to cheat them out of a huh-i filred dollars, they would say, "No, you; don’t! [u see what you are driving ! at 1” But they allow Satan to swindle ‘ ' them out of ALL THE RICH ES OF HEAV EN. Neither was it lack of time that ushered the man of the text linto the last hour unarmed. II {suppose he was very busy. Early up, iantl late to boil, overseeing the work- gmen. From the way things went on iabout that place, I know he looked after his own business, and had plenty to do. But might he not rather have ihail fifty bush-;.is of wheat less than be {caught in the last hour in such a mis- gex-abiu predicament? Yes, he had time jenough, as every man has, to prepare! ihimself for the [utere Men talk as ‘though’ in order to get pre- ipared for eternity, they must have a jinonth or a year to go and Sit down, 1 :and read and prov. 'H-raven is not al cloud that touches only the t0p of 1 some high mountain; it touches earth 1 all over. And that man who has time 1 to eat, or sleep, or think, has time to . 1 be saved. Yet that man died unpre- it pared. He. fell; not as a man who’g trips and stumbles on a road, but as 'i men falling from some Alpine cliff . c have been watched by the peasantryi‘ as they go downâ€"a thousand feet, l a whirling in the airâ€"dashed on the ‘t rocks. So this man, from the tip-top l. of wordly prosperity, slipped and tell. u ’ llut the most remarkable thing i 9O l. d I know not what had been the character of the last day that this man of the text hid lived-«whether it was sunshine or rainy, interesting or dull; anI know about the night. It was a great night. It was a thrill- ing night. It was a tremendous night. As the text comes rushing through the darkness, he drops 'his pen. Ue forgets his big barn and his nnsheltered craps. “This night thy soul shill be required of thee." change of climate will help them. It‘ is while men are calculating on long !days that their decisive hour comes 'â€"while they are expecting an en- largement of business accommoda- tions, or are getting in their crops. orare trying to draught anew barnâ€"a suddenly! 'Wonder not that the delicate bowl of life was broken at the fountain. Our life is at such delicate mechanism, so finely poised, so hair-strung, that the least colli- sion is fatal.. The wonder is that, with such exquisite machinery, the pivots do not oftener slip, and the spring break. and all the works in- stantly crash. i‘he vast majority of the race go out of this life with- out a physical pang. 'l‘hey flash away. L Dr. Chase’s treatment for asthma: Mrs. George Builden. Putuamville, ‘consists in the combined use of two Ont., says:â€"”I feel it my duty to re- ‘of his remedies, Dr. Chase’s Syrup of .oommr-nd Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed Linseed and Turpentine and Dr. and Turpentine, as I had the asthma Chase's Nerve Food. Asthma is a gvery bad;co'1ld get nothing to do me nervous disease and the attacks are any good. A friend of mine persuaded brought on by some irritation of the fine to try thin remedy, as he had tried nerves along the air passages. These it, and it proved successful. i tried it nerves are soothed and quieted and ianl it cured mu. lam thank'ul z._-.l;iy Immediate relief afforded to the pati- l to say [am a well woman ti.:-. - Th the out by the use of Dr. Chase’s Syrup of ; use of this remedy,l keep it. in the Linseed and Turpentine. In tact'houee all the time and woulJ not bs «than is frequently thoroughly cured without it." by the use of this remedy alone, as is Dr. Chase’s family remedies are for evidential In tbs tsstimonial quotsd ‘sale at all dealers. or from Edmanson. The symptoms of asthma are keenly distressing and are not easily confused with those of any other ailment. The victim is suddenly aroused by an in- tense anguish in the chest, the breath- ing is accompanied by a loud wheezing, the face becomes flushed, and bathed in perspiration; he gasps for air, be- lieving that each moment may be his last. After these paroxysms. which may last for hours, the patient usual- ly falls asleep to arise next day weak, languici and debilitated. Oh, by the Cross of Christ, get ready. Repewt, and say, “Jesus, thuu Son of David. have mercy on me!” I Ch, prepare tor it. Leave it not u:ntil the last hour. Leave it not. un- til you get sick; you may never be sick. Leave it not until you get more Mime; you may never get more" time. 'Leave it not until you get old; you may never get old. Leave it not' un- {'it may never strive again. Leave it Imot until to-morrow. This nightâ€" this night. thy soul may be required of ihte. And suppose, in that moment you should say, “Wait until 1 can kneel down and say my prayers.” Death would respond, “No time now to say your prayers.” “‘Wait u-ntilI get my friends together. and bid them good-bye.” Death would say, “You cannot stop to bid them good-bye." “But I cannot go into eternity with all these sins about me. Give me time to repent.” Death would say, “Too late to repent! This night thy soul is required. Yea. this hour! Yea, this minute! Yea. this secmidi” HAVE YOU ASTHMA? some great exception,you might be Swame, who was long at Berlin. was alive a hundred years from now. Then ' {nuch esteemed by all from K3130? t" h re will on be 1L th 'd f aquef; so was 001. Gnerson. who has w e y i e f“ 0 a ; Just accompanied Count Wa-ldersee to thousand years: \\ here W1“ you be China. General Slade, for many a million of years from now] A bil- ‘5'0411‘3 military attaghe at Rombe‘ “'23 ' ' z _ - - _ .. _. ._ :admjtted to close rlendship y t 0 lion OI. ye use A trillion or years? A ‘ill-fated King Umberto; and Am- quadrilliun of years: A quintillion'eriwn officers who serveJ in Cuba at years? But ahundred years are learned greatly to like Meatâ€"Col. nothing; a million of years are f Lee. who share! their hirdshipe. ° , .. - - . . f The task of obtaining knowledge nothing, a billion 0f yearsaxenothmg 3 has no doubt been greitly helped in atnllwn Of years are nothing; “ i this way; but a zealous officer has quadrillion of years are noxhing; a ; been known to go sometimes be- quimillion of years are nolhingâ€" lyoml the offxcwl channels and deal.‘ . . H a. . . H lsub-rom. With the secret agentsthatl COMPARED “UH L‘-LR‘\11Y' :are often pressing in their offers of: So I ask you. \Vhere will you spend ' purvey'ulg exclusive news. There lei gummy, . imore than one Eixeterhazy abroad| -Perhaps. like the mum of the text, you are about to build larger barns. You are planning for worldly ac- cumulation. Do not forget to project a plan (or eternity. You acknow- ledge yourself immortal; where. then, will you be a hundred years from now! You say that perhaps. by some great exception.you might be alive a hundred years from now. Then where will you be at the end of a thousand years: Where will you be In Christ you are safe. Out of Him I But, most of all. I want to know iwhst is to become of you personally. §This Inight may be your last night. Than. “This night. thy soul shall be required of thee.” What then? into what scenes would you be introduced: Would you go where your children, and kindred, and friean have gene, or where the main» of the. text wenm They who die without Christ are so thoroughly ruisned that they never get over it. The man: of the text is to-night just where he was eighteen hundred years ago. Thousands of Gospel calls have been uttered since then, He has not heard one of them. He has been gathering in his crops ever simce, but it is a harvest. of everlasting wretchedness. God call- ed him a fool in his last hour. and he who dies a fool is a fool ion ever. i earth to sleep. the softest pillow and coverlets. are in - rasonmsruuvs GRAVE. If there is tnyone on earth that is to he envied, it is the man who dies well. . Buitnot that way do all men make their departure. Men ought to have their wordly affairs settled, so that the executors and administrators [will not be confounded. and so that what they have honestly earned be not scattered among those who have no 1‘th to it. If the sudden anneuncemont should he made to you todniight, what fit them for heaventi Could you feel â€"“Whatever I, as father or mother, would do, I have done. They will re- member how I prayed for them and talked with them; and when they look at. my picture, they will say, “That was a Christian parent.’ I want to go in the same way. and gain the same heaven!” The keys of an organ may be twelve feet from the organ-pipes, but every time those keys are touched the pipes respond; so these parents are now exercising influences which will: respomd far on in ‘the eternity of‘ their children. If they play 1m anthem now, it will be an anthem them. If they play a dirge now, it will be a dirge for ever. A severe case of Chronic Asthma. whlch would yield to no other treatment cured by Dr. . Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine, t they never of the text is was eighteen Thousands of uttered since I Dr. Chau’l family remedies are (or Isak; at all dealers. or from Edmanson. Intel 0 00.. Tum-to. Mrs. George deden, Putnamvillo, Ont.. aayazâ€"“I feel it my duty to re- comm-and Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentinv, an I had the “than In most cases. however, it is found advisable to combine the two remudirs, Dr. Chase's Syrup of'Linsee-d and 'l‘ur- pontinc and Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. The formvr asa local treatment avling directly on the. bronchial tuba and air passages, and the latter asa nerve re- storative to build up and strengthen the whole nervous system. It is con. fidently believed there is no treatment extant that is so perfectly successful in the cure of asthma u the combined us_c_ of tllele two great remedies. Eperinl court got into trouble by li~.t- jening to the specious proposal of (me got these creatures. lie was sul- ' denly informed by his own chanr-ellm-y »that his passports were ready, and that he had better make his way out of the country with all possible (2e- ? sp'itch, as his Ambassador would ha ve lno power to protect him from arrest i Nevertheless, a good deal of confiden- 9tial, not to my secret, information {reaches our intelligence Demrtment gby degrees, bit by bit, a small scrap lat a time. so that all the items can i be pieced together by an expert hand.‘ !There may be some mitters stilll {shrouded in mystery, a new form ofi lexplosive. or a new weapon, such an: the French quirk-firing gun. whichi my long escape unraveling. but the! !desired information will come soon-l er or later. f The task of obtaining knowledge Ehas no doubt been greitly helped in ithis way; but a zealous officer has ‘been known to go sometimes be- }yond the official channels and deal. lsub-rom. with the secret agents that ,are often pressing in their offers of ’purveying exclusive news. There is imore than one Ezisterhazy abroad , realy to sell information true or false. end it is a well-«known fact that at 'the time Dreyfus became involved in ithe web which lei to his expulsion : from the French army. the same mat- iter which he was suppose! to hive purveyed was hamked about the in- telligence ott‘ices of Europe. It was -offered at Berlin and brought to our own people in Queen Anne's gate. ; THE RISK In" GRE \T in tampering with these unavow;ihle Ewurces of supply. Some years am a military attache at a certain Im-l Grancey and Count Pontavite do Heussey. Many English officers “on golden opinions abroad. General EAGER TO LEARN. These are. as a rule. courteously treated, made tree of the military clubs, are invited t6 be present at pro- fessional functions, min-oeuvres, ex- periments, and trials with new wea- pons. Some attaches, both our own and our neighbors'. hive become per- sonue gratae in the countries with which they have been connected of- ten for ye'ars. Two French ‘ofrflcézjs glare popular with us, the Baron de ' I can do nothing more. I leave you in the hands at that Saviour who diéd to redeem you. I leave you to that God More whom you must at last appear, and answer for present acceptance or rejection of mercy. Lord God Almighty! I have done my best to call them in. Into thy Lnâ€"A- " you perish. “O Israol! how shall give thee up!" By what inguinal!“ shall I. address you' By what impassionate appeal may I move you. - HOW ENGLAND SECURES FACTS immortal [f for any 11);; on n poultice cannot u put on as soon as it is made. put it 50- twpen two hot plates and stand it over n saucepan of boiling water. Never put it into the oven to keep hot. is the dry heat hay-Jens the outsjdo of it. and it I. my liszy to cbnfe tha skin. All poultlm ox- copt linseed meal should be out into muslin buns. Linseed should he cpl-and on muslin and the men] its.“ out W the nth. with nothing in m “that whvnmwr Tummy bd -. guard school I‘vlml't or maka {malmll nl' Ulht‘l‘wise disd " self h: any \Vuy itis the hnhl” my'e {athvr In fuwH‘ and p to Hm us ‘mv Shh. ’ But ’ Sthcml u put! r-«mu in gorv w " m .ming unsatiqmtun’f letT (luau! n«un .uhday xxhoolta or 101 llw llviginimlfi send in album bull pin} ing too “our 1* or<flfickvn vhu>iug.lheu “Li|.3' mv’s futhm‘ turns to me -7 ’ and glnans. Ah. my dog: I _; “hat you ‘re going to do l” ” “ 9, at $0018. A “’hooc Boy I. “a “I notice." said Tommi W cording to the New York: “that whmwwr Tommy ' i THE MYSTERX or Toucan. The COIzlmerv'Lal ‘value of W pends nuL mum in ni‘bqtino. on certain compounds, 7. ,. “ naiure of which is said hi A, unknown. that impart aroma which consumer. __ compounds differ to quantity in different 4 leaf. There is no minishes during the ' lug, while the flavor developed. It has that the latter are d. A of bacteria. 4' " Her Pet-III... [Inezband (looking at his 'Ide check 00k» You should number ever, check .m send out. . \erâ€" But I don't wnnt to. dear. I .H ashamed to let the but “0' how zany l use.-the. The Language 0! (I. '0... The menu. Oh. that coumopolltal 00" position which r-laims to be French or English. but is a little of both and .0! much of oitht‘! if aftvr having arranged the courses so that white meats do not follow upnn «me another. that a certain dosirahlo vali‘ioty of taste! may prevail and than tiu- articlos served blood a practically as possible. not all ridl. etc. l little careful consideration could .0 he- stowod on the spelling and 1-0an of words. huw much more attractive would be the delicate skvtch or (IR other'he daintily appointvd card! Surely this 5 nut a great trouble. nor in It dim bf achieve. ‘ “'omon with shiny complexion. m to indulge in an excessive I. .1 powder put that is detrimental 5 end to thoit skins. A substltnh u no harm and Mir-coeds. (or (it least, in suftt-uing the upmm' too highly glazed skin in topica- d " «is leather. A sppcially preplIfl' . ' INttln-r is Mild that acts ‘3 I, N ’ furt to a shiny or gross: skin. be”. fault of thv prepared article the Chamois will answer our pupa-o Well. A pad of tissue paper om ful. This or a square of chamoh ' will be found at great comfort when ing for country exvurslou in thc weather. ifutiei I :3 i, ii: 5'? lean-Ice. and Benelletl. An article in a Sydney paper disc“ the relative proportions of men to In“ in the colonies of Certain. It in true that the disparity of numbers ll not fl great now as it was. and the tendency h toward equalization. Yet even in “'0‘ Australia there are only $5 Beltrlcu - 100 Benedicts. and this is the most I” fawn-ed colony. In such coloni- .- West Australia. “where the (all a“ from.” there are only 59 spin!!!" w every 100 baehelors. In Queensland (h percentage of unmarried («titles to “-7 married males is .65 and in New m Wales .70. New South Wales and V!“- rin can take the largest mm d female emigrants. for the excee- d I. married mm: is 93.960 in the tor-er d’ any and 73.468 In the latter. [I M- nia only hfiTS heroines are MM III New Zealzind require! (3.551 N Nil} lty of the sexes. There is still an excellent market h Dublin and London for homespun III Woven goods. and many ladies of tho Io- ,bility have of late dune much to motor. the industries of Ireland to their W place.â€"Hnrper’a Bazar. The spinning wheel and the In! M are still found in the Irish out.” where may a girl has her wedding dew. ty of linen and homespun made at hole. Although it is more the task of the older women. there are still girls who do their spinning stint and lay by n certain amount for their wedding outfit. (he wen‘ther is wafinfiékfihy Irish wo- man. old or young. scum: a root except to sleep under. The free air and washing Ire her choice. and the sweet sky in t5, fairest root. A pleasant sight it is}; gelâ€"{tie elderly Irish women outside their cottage doom spinning the-flax or the wool. A; long a II.- Invitation “It in all very well," marked s society girl. “to he grateful for (area received. but it lserather hard to have to than! People for what you never get. It ssslm to me that I am continually called upon :to make acknowledgments of pro?“ benefits which are either forgotten et overlooked and which certainly are never beslowed. ‘Yon must come and stop with me next summer at New W dear.’ says Mrs. Tiptop. and. of course. I thank her profusely and accept with Pleasure; but. the season passes. and the invitation never arrives. ‘When are you coming to dine with us?‘ queries Mrs. Casual. ‘You must really come soon. I will write and see it we can arrange n day,’ But that dinner is never eaten. 80 it goes on. These invitations seem a sort of counterfeit coin which some noel ety people try to pass for good money. They really delude themselves. toe. lnl thinking these sham invitations call for a certain amount of gratitude from the re-‘ cipients.” A Sulmtltnte For a Paul" M. Putting on Poulticeo. ’pllnlng In Ireland. b. 1 got]; was; and tfler the thild don. better and slept well moved right fl . letdy cured.” ~ “I have used. thus hon fin hue “hen the pill in mtorod my thonilany 0th.! Kid-0’ Pill-fortune,“ Inn much plum in Kidney P111011." wondndnfly heath. I ha! boon “It: buck for . numb-t of you- I begin “In“ Dan's Pill! I mm. to do my homework. dines-«sod mums. u 90.. 11.18. neatly not. I a a :5. .3188 .8018 38 I8!- !3 .533 .5 F! In on 98.58 all». a: 33 3 ordcr. “Gaga-unit Dbordor‘od Kldnoyn bun] a mnldtndo of pain- And \‘id1 {if ills ard and lint

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy