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Durham Review (1897), 29 Mar 1900, p. 2

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o 6 When a man goes to seeâ€" "Ten Nights in a Iiarâ€"room," and slips ut between the acts it is pretty hard So maintain that the stage is an eduâ€" A polhce raid on th Highbinders last nig the arrest of six of th members o{f the Suy i of the men in custod at least one murder, s#uspected of having or more members of : If the children require physic none nets so nico as Miller‘s Worm Pow. gers; very pleasant to take. Miller‘s â€" Corf great satisf The bigger the gun the shorter its life. Those monsters, the 110â€"ton guns, cannot be reckoned upon to fire more than eighty {fullâ€"charge rounds withâ€" out becoming quite usceloss. The 67â€" ton gun can fire 105 rounds, while the Gâ€"inch breechloader is good for 400 or 500 fullâ€"charge rounds. xeduced the dose to ons pill a day, and by the time the sixth box was g:: a complete cure was effected. Cleveland is now as vigorous Ruad hbhealthy as could be desired. Her randâ€"parents are porsuaded that Dr. _\hlitm' Pink Pills are alone responâ€" sible for ‘her cure and are devoutly Whankfel for the results which, under Providence, they have produced. ‘ Mexico has a clever bird called the melanarpes, which has discovered a new use for the telegraph pole. At the foot of the post this bird makes a large hole, in which it rears its famâ€" ly. Someswhat higher up the post it makes an observatory, from which bored holes permit it to observe the horizon in every direction. Still higher this sagacious bird makes its storeâ€" house, and thus the pole serves as its house, fortress and warehouse. There is o disease caused by gerins that Dr. Arnold‘s English Toxin Pills for Weak People will not cure permaâ€" nently and absolutely. Rheumatism, nervousness, poor blood, kidney‘ comâ€" plaints, dyspepsia, female troubles, etc.. all yiecld positively to these wonderful pills. ‘The greatest blood and norve remedy ever known. Only 75 cents a large box ; 25 cents a small box, at all druggists, or from the Arâ€" nold Chemical Company, Limited, Canada Life Building, Toronto. In the West Indies and southern countries they a lemon bath. The jaice four lemons is squeeze bath, or slices of the fr water for hall an hour This is said to impart sense of freshness ard cl the skin. mse as befores The sufferer rapidly began to recorer. Wihen she had conâ€" ‘sgumed the fifth box Mrs. Cleveland sible for ‘her cure and are der Whankfel for the results which, t Providence, they have produce Sold by all dealers or sent paid at 50c a box or six boxes $250, by addressing the Dr. liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, vyary symp.oms of N. Vitus‘ dance began to show themselves. &t first Ahese were not very prominent, but it was not long before se was rendâ€" ered altogether helpless by this terâ€" iible malady. In a skort time she lost all control over the movements of her hands and feet. For weeks she dad to ba carriec from room to room and was unable to {feed Jerself. Her grandâ€"parents naturally became very much alarmed, and having tried othe: remedies without effect determined to give Dr. Wiiliams‘ Pink Pills a trial. Developments showed that their confidernce was not misplaced. Wihen three boxes had been usad the condiâ€" vion of the patient had improved conâ€" aderably. Then Mr. Cleveland bought mix boxes more ard continued their )o not be persuaded thing else sail to be Clovel $When Adroug h aystem i in a weakness 4 The mails from Wolfville to Gasâ€" ®poresu. are carried every day by an ‘officiat who is noted for his willingâ€" ‘mess to accommodate and the puncâ€" #Wmality with which he discharges his Fltibs. His name is Mr. Merriner Wleveland, and his homes is in Gasperâ€" weanu, where he resides with his wife ‘and grandâ€"daughter, Miss Lizzie May Wleveland, a bright girl of fifteen ‘gears. A few months ago the health BC lie th Early Jand tack wecovery _ were nursing, _ Ahows? theads Â¥he Story of a Bright Toung Cirl‘s Recovery. gears. A few months ago the ‘of their grandâ€"daughter was a wf very great anxiety to M frs. Cleveland, and the nel who learned of the physical co iien n Shealth stored. too e Bho Was First Attacked With La & Grippo, the After Eftects Resulting ‘in 8t. Vitus‘® Danceâ€"Friends Desâ€" \ paired of Her Recovery. Â¥From tho Acadien, Woifville, N. S.) Minard‘s Liniment cures NO OI Clever Bird in Mexico. #â€"H€ 8T. VITUS CURED, ronto man says: "Have used Permanentiy Cured. Tais show Fhe Life of a Gun. the Suy Sing in custody is murder, and cou girl a Lemon Bath Fe les and other warm s they luxuriate in 1e jaice of three or squeezed into the _the fruit lie in the L( y tn? San Prancisco night resuited in the most notorious y Bing Long. Each wly is acccagsed of ‘r, and several are ¢ assassinated two M rival Longs. »part a . pleasing ind cleanliness to he fruit lie in the hour before using Iron Pilis with is a tonic." phys ly IT M selves ‘andâ€"p n dandruff. gr d o wn Dr. Wil ille, Ont ry some as good.‘ Mr. and neighbors condition 1€ In Jan Caref ren post for he 1rce ilt D on LT his reign, more than three thousand years ago! Upon the stone he had engraved in big hieroglyphics the whols story of his hunting expediâ€" tion, his dream in the shadow of the chin, and the command of the god. And of course he must have cleared away the sand, else he could not have set up the stons. But the sand soon drifted back sgain, and ever since, though it has been several times dug out, the Sphinx is always being covâ€" ered up by the drifting sands, and perbaps some day it will bs â€" overâ€" whelmed and disappear altogether, aa} then the sand is whirled along through the air in such quantities that it is worse for people to be out in than i rain storm or snow storm. _ Each jrust of wind carries along just as much smm as it can support, and when anything obstructs the path of the wind, then and ther> the sand is dropped and falls again to the ground. The Sphinx was covered with sand in the year 1818, cightyâ€"ono years ago, when an Englishman named Caviglia undertook the task of digging him out. He had heard many interesting stories about the great Sphinx. In a book written _ by the celebrated _ Roâ€" man, Pliny, it was stated that a king was buried under it. Caviglia desired to find the tomb of this king, so he engaged a large number of In 1896 an American, Col. Raum, of San Francisco, made another atteimpi to uncover the Sphinx and find the burled king. With the help of a hunâ€" dred Arabs, men and boys, he dug out the rubbish from a hole about forty feet deep, which had been cut down into the solid rock of the lion‘s body ages ango. The bottom of this hole was blocked up with stones. The Egypâ€" tian Government would not allow him to remove them, so he was obliged to stop just at the very spot where is probably the entrance to an ancient tomb. He cleaned out the little temple and found in it a piece of the stone beard, which had broken off and been buried for centuries. And more interâ€" esting still it was to find a part of the royal crown. This stone crown was gigantic. It was ten feet across and about filteen or twenty feet high, and fitted into a hols in the head by a stem seven feet long. When the writing upon the stone which Mr. Caviglia found was finally deciphered, it was learned from it that King Tehutimes IV. had built this littls temple in the first year of his reign, more than three thousand and the nobles made their graves in the desert land. And it is thus in the midst of a great cemetery that you would find the S{;)xxlux. i# you should go now to look at him. | Now, the burialâ€"ground in which the Sphinx is was the cemetery of Memâ€" I phis, and it stretched for forty miles along the River.Nile. In it there were over sixty pyramiâ€"s, which are the big tombs built by the kings. The nobles and the princes also built very large tombs, the walls of which are covered with colored pictures, very beautiful to look at. FEgypt does not have snow and hail and rain, as we do; hence its sand keeps excecdingly dry and powdery. Often there aro terrific gales of wind The Egyptian people thought they could not have any better placo _ to bury their dead than near the image of their beautiful sungod. So, year after year the kings and the princes man, Pliny, it was stated that a king was buried under it. Caviglia desired to find the tomb of this king, so he engaged a large number of laborersâ€"men to dig and women and children to carry off the sand in basâ€" kets on their heads. They dug over a space of more than a hundred feet, carrying away the sand for days, and finally what do you think they found ? Right under the chiu of the monstrous idol, at the end of a long passage beâ€" tween its paws, they found a little temple. The back wall of this temple was one huge block of red granite, covâ€" ered all over with pictures and writâ€" ing. they ever made was to represent this sungod. It is what we call the "Great Sphinx of Gizch." No one knows who made this Sphinx, or when it was made; but, in all likelihood, it was already there in the desert more than six thousand years ago, when the first King of Egypt whom _ we know anything about ruled _ over the country. and rose anew, as briglht and beauâ€" tiful as ever, to give light and warmth to the earth. The Egyptians had many _ names for their sunâ€"god, among these, one for tho rising sun, one for the midâ€" day sun, and one for the sun when he sets in the west. The risingâ€" sungod was _ called Horemakhu, which means, in English, "Horusâ€"onâ€" theâ€"horizon." ‘The very biggest idol they ever made was to represent this sungod. It is what we call the "Great Sphinx of Gizch." No one ‘The religion of theso people was wha we call "polytheism"â€"that is, th worship of many gods. The Egyptian like all pagan nations, made imag« of their gods, and built temples wher they might be worshipped. It was th Anything concerning Egypt is of special interest nowaaays, in connecâ€" tion with tho general subject of Engâ€" land in Africa; and nothing is more typical of the land of the Nile than the colossal image near the site of ancient Memphis. Five or six thousand of years ago, writes Emma J. Arnold in the February St. Nicholas, the little country of Egypt, whose wholo territory, desert and all, is only about twice the size of the State of Illinoig, was yet the greatest kingdom on the earth. That certainly was more than fivo thousand years before Christopher Columbus sailed acros the Atlantic Ocean and discovered America. Egypt had a large population even then. Thousands, perhaps m.llions, of people swarmed along the banks of the River Nile, and rowed their little boats in and out of the network of canals which led the waters of tho " sacred river‘" between the cultivated ficlds. business of the pr this . worship, and business they made When the Egypti When the Egyptia tiful and bright th how at his rising e ugly black _ dark: they thought that a god, and so they STORY OF THE SPHINX BATTLE WITH THE SAND STORMS Facts About the Ancient Egyptian Monument. ol ine pritsts to carry rship, and a sery profit they made of it, too, the Egyptians saw how b 1 bright the sun was, his rising each morning L1 as Miller‘s Worm Powders ; no physic required. f Bs a » A Londoner says: "Was suffering from Blood Poisoning. Was recommendâ€" to try Miller‘s Compourd Iron Pils. I did, so, and they cured me." * He is in hopes that his congrega tion will send him on a tour of investi gation."â€"The Smart Set. "* No, sir; Rev. Mr. Spicer has never seen a play." % * Why is he preaching so vigorously against the stage, then ?" Dalhousie I cured : pitchfork MENT. Curious Lace No Longer Made. Of all the curious kinds of lace, especially old lace, the most curiâ€" ous is that which is called _ point tresse. _ It is very rare and was made of human hair. French collectâ€" ors say it exists in the present day only in their cabinets. It was conâ€" fined to the early part of the sixâ€" teenth ~century. Lingeed lemonade makes a soothing drink for a relaxed throat, and should be made in the folowing manner : Into a basin put two tablespoonfuls of linseed and over it pour a pint of boilâ€" ing water. Cover the basin and allow it to stand near the fire for about four hours, after which strain, and to the liquid add the juice of two lemons and as much sugar as liked. The drink may be taken hot or cold. Putnam‘s Painless Corn and Wart Extractor removes all sorts of corns, warts and bunions without pain in a few days. It has been the standâ€" ard for thirty years Beware of acid flesh cating, dangerous substitutes and insist on having the genuine Putnam‘s. Sure, safe, painless. with MINARD‘S LINIMENT. 6 posts ~ FHOMAS W. PAYNE, I cured a horse of the MINARD‘S LINIMENT. CHRISTOPHEL Permanently and Paintlessly Cured in a Few Days. As soon as the transfer has been made it proposes to enlarge and imâ€" prove the works, which will give employment to about 300 hands. The company bas unlimited eapital. â€"Alientown The local people are still making a strong effort to have the battery manufacturers locate their factory at the lock works. They are still undeâ€" cided, having a number of offers. Hon. Fred. E. Lewis has chargo of the local affairs of the enterprise, being a director both in the Electriâ€" cal Development Co., and Lehigh Valâ€" ley Automobile Co. There will be a meeting of all the parties concerned in New York on Monday. novelty E. B. Byington, H. M. Posten and Chas. F. Walter, of tne Lehigh Valley Automobile Company. have just reâ€" turned from a trip to Hamilton, Ont., and Cortland. N. Y., made for the purpose of obtaining automobiles. They arranged for several to be built in Canada, and contracted for 68 large and small buses with the Cortâ€" land Carriago and Cab Manufacturâ€" ing Company, of New York. They have also contracted for 50 cabs or Victorias, and 10 baggage vehicles, which will give the Elecâ€" trical Development Co., the parent Manufac largest ¢ is intere that an company, high Vaile May Ist. buses an Allen tov effort h once, }x to keep because VALUABLE ACCESSION TO CITY. T0 BULOD AUTOMOBILES. Hamilton Canadian Centre for a Great Firm. This is the story of the great sun od Horâ€"enâ€"akhu, which we call the gpbinx; and if, some day, you go to Egypt, you can see it for yoursel{tâ€" that is, if it is not buried by, that time. No worm medicine acts Bo nicely St. Peter‘s, C. B. I cured a horse of Bathurst, N. B CORNS. A Simple Throat Remedy. horse with An Ingress. ZDW Leader badly torn by : MINARDS â€" LINI ARD LINLIEE torias in service in date. This strong de to get them at ories have orders a year. It is only nd Carriage & Cab year. It Carriagt nv. one bad swelling mange with SAUNDERS 11 making a the battery r factory at t] to n "I‘m sorry you‘re to leave, Bridget," said the housemaid to the cook. woman," the lawyer said, "will you be good enough to tell the court how the stairs run in your house ?" " How do the stairs run?" the witness reâ€" plied. *"Shure, whin I‘m oppstairs they run down, and whin I‘m downâ€" stairs they run opp." He is bat the eounteiiélTot a man y\‘]lo.“l}_@\l not the life of a man. â€" Minard‘s Liniment for sale every where. 4 "But oi‘m not to lave," replied Bridget. "Who tould yez I was?" "The missis.‘"â€"Harper‘s Bazar. Doctors and Druggists pronounce Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills the best on the market; 50 doses 25 cents. A\ lawyer was crossâ€"questioning an Irishwoman, the point underâ€" inquiry being the relative position of the doors, windows and so forth in a house in which a certain transaction was said to have occurred. " And now, my good woman," the lawyer said, "will yvou Tomâ€"The trouble with me is that I‘m a bit hasty in my speech ; I should weigh my words. Miss Pepperyâ€"Yes, do. Ard don‘t give such generous measure. ht e y aal t The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that thore is at least one dreaded disease that sciâ€" ence has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrbh. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is the only poâ€" sitive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constiâ€" tutional disease, requires a constiâ€" sutional treatment. â€" Hali‘s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting diâ€" rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby deâ€" stroying the foundation of the disâ€" ease, and â€" giving the patient strength by building up the constiâ€" tution and assisting nature in doâ€" ing its work. ‘The proprietors have so much faitl, in its curative powâ€" ers that they offer Ong Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., the table every member should quart or pay $10 fine. That sett The landlady foundâ€" prunes too « sive."â€"New York Week!y. druggi In Jersey City the clothing of a spinster was ignited and $800 sha had banked in her bosom was incinerated. So long as the New Woman will foreâ€" go time honored customs such calâ€" amities are to be expected. Had sae deposited the roll in her stocking after the good, old fashioned manâ€" ner she might not now be bewailing Lhe 1. have peach Fierca and Ravenous, is Diabâ€" etes, Which Defies all Mediâ€" cines Excopt Dodd‘s Kidney Pills,the Only Remedy on Earth That Removesthe Cause of the Discaseâ€"Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills Never Fail. Quebec, P. Q., March 19. â€"There aro certain disceases that sap the brain. and dry up the springs of life, besides undermining the strength. Diabetes is such a discase. Its symptoms are great thirst, fatling _ sight, dry mouth, coated tongue, paleness, numbness in the thighs, pains or aches in the loins, or small of the back, increase of urine, sugar in the urine. Any one, or two, seldom more, of these appear in the same case. Diabetes is caused by poison _ in the blood. rowon defoctive which &! Minard‘s Liniment cures burns, etc Sold by Druggiste, 75c. Hall‘s Family Pills are the be New â€" life for a 1 mpound Jron Pills Heal and Fo Cure a Coid in One Day How Just the Stairs Ran Phe A MAN KILLEBR preserve jam inst« Boarderâ€" ixative Rromo Quinir « refund the money if W. Grove‘ssignature i Bc $100 Reward, $100. GCreaking it Gently. gets into t arC Gentle Advice. #C A Bad Bank 6 filter it out. strengthen the kidneys will cleanse the blood s will vanish, + ey Pills are the only earth that can â€" cure of VC 10 Quinine Tablets. money if it fails to gnature is on each be W Ora struck tue clergymen of to visit his school of the school law instruction in the ) accommodate all art a stated time ever succeeded in i to give five minâ€" ‘oxdstock Express. the blood throt the _ kidn« out. n the kidn Toledo, O miy med s through kidneys. eat a ed it. xpenâ€" All ‘The following are the names of a few prominent citizens who are using this closet, and from whom we have very flattering testimonials : Dr. D. L. Thompson, Toronto, Ont. Dr. McGlaughlan, Bowmanville, Ont. Dr. M. L. Dixon, Frankville, Ont. Dr. C. F. Ferguson, Kemptville, Ont Dr. Ujlrie Gabourg, Plantaganet, Ont. Judge A. C. Chadwick, Gueliph, Ont. C. J, Mickle, B. A., Chesley, Ont. Rev. John Downie, Watford, Ont. L Dampier, Mgr. Bank of Commerce, Strathroy, Ont. Peter Hope, merchant, Perth, Ont. Jas. Moffatt, merchant, Amherst, NS well other To the Odorless Crem Hamiiton, Ont. Dranr Sims:â€"About you one of your Odorl av future sibilitl Stephen Townsend is a son of th late Rev, Geo. Tyler Townsend, one chaplain to the Duke ef Northum berland, and also to the Bishop Tasmania. _ By profession he is physician, having received the d« gree of Fellow of the Royal Colleg of Surgeons, but he preferred th stage to the medical profe«sion, an met Mrs. Burnett after he becam Mis Position Mrs. Hodgson Burnett Weds Her Secretary. Mre. Frances Hodgson Burnett, in Genoa. italy, on Tuesday, became Mre. Stehnen Townsend. The odd features of this bit of information are that Stephen Townsend had for years been employed by Mrs. Burâ€" nett as her private secretary, and the extremely forceful denials made by the authoress more than a year ago when it was hinted that Mrs, Burnett was sning for a divorce so s!m could wed her young amanuenâ€" 818. Mrs. Burnott‘s first husband is Dr Swan Burnett, of Washington. They could not agree and the doctor did not contest his wife‘s sult for diâ€" vorce. ve since used it constantly iderce with splendid satisf ‘ll pleased with it that you c her_at once for ngllmwl. YÂ¥o H. March, Markdale, Ont. Minard‘s Lit FDDV S MATGHES Id stick muq(),nc ana price list wr toe to The Odorless Crematory Closet Co., Hamilton, Ont DON‘T EXPERIMENT WITH UNKNOWN BrANDS. it ttaps To BFD RESULTS. PHE HIRISH TENXANT THE SECRET OUT. 1Ourer it RAVE A WELLâ€"EARNED REPUTATION. Ameri octor aring heor for him it nenut y Abead of That in Renters. 1J yoar ag Cremat 1t He he Babs rl ie Royal â€" prefert il profess ifter he baby it I boughtfro ry Closets as i my priva ion. 1 am ship me : s very tru nI ibj n n AJ 1e OncCé 17 n ! JSSUE NO 13. 1900. pectus free. If rangements fort Briggs, Mcthodi and is the best re: five cénts a bottle delphia, Pa., for troat For sale by J. A. Har Montreal, Que. written an old matter extra liber take hold ways be u the child, FITS (Lou The Ma GERMAN BRUST BALSAM Ofl land f0 Kittrick O where fortu: A VALUABLE RECIPE For Couâ€"hs, Colds and Lung Digseases i. dose of E8Y‘8 Mrs, W Oi] i Scott‘s Emulsion i The result will please you. If the baby nurses, the mcther I should ‘take the emulsion . s It makes the baba&s food richer and more ndant; only buy the dollar sizeâ€"it‘s 1 more economical. sal Add Pak GENTS WAXTED FOR Un Two xEw alfa 1 book The fil:,y::ent size is just rifv,ht for the baby. A little : it in the bottle_nflm or our times a aay wi supmy precisely thc?:{all thin baâ€" bies need. If your baby does not gain in weight as fast as you would like, try Both mott once its stre and fatâ€"prod For the Baby aarmem 64 ) cmen | / emans |( ns $ | ammie $ ) «mm FOR SALE OR EXGNHANGE. PERMANEXNTLY (‘U;‘uzl)“sz DR Kline‘s Great Nerve . _ Ne lits or nervousness after first day â€" use. Send to 931 Arch stroet, Phila ed for cu;luam\ Tecthing, 'l”v.';;:;; softens the yums, cures wind 10 best remedy for Diarrheea. Tweny. nslow‘ ed for ( 1 His M once If y APC Â¥i r and child will feel at "hening. upbuilding othing Eyrup should al brary of South Africa" ind "Dwight 1. Moody sion"; the books are well 10 vassers benefit. WHl k Room, Toronto. and free $2 trial bott 178) Notro Dame stre $ properties. re low, and the terms« n make money if they sell our books. Pro= Iruigch® isincss, olher ns, " Oull » husther P wok k BOb xi *4 guty 2398, <roa k BGOT If U#

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