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Durham Review (1897), 15 Aug 1901, p. 6

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Sozopont \ Teath «»« Mouth "Secing is believing" is the old adage. But, is it} After all, what is more deceptive than human visâ€" ten t Is not the optical illusion an Important item in the stock and trade of every professional magiciant Besides, how many pairs of eyes are perfect 1 Even granting perfection, knw far shart of nhotorraphic acâ€" a perfect liquid dentifrice for the e s C e c ME how far short of photographic acâ€" curacy do they fall ? The comparison of the eye with the samera, as Dr. George Lindsay Johnâ€" stose points out, cannot be carricd ont in every detail. The resomâ€" blance really coases when the reâ€" tina is describ>d as taking the place of the sensitive plate. In the case of the camera the intensity of the image increases with each moment of the exposure, whereas in the eye the reverse is the caseâ€"in other words, the retina bscomes fatigned H an object is gazed at for any conâ€" giderabls length of time, and the brighter the object the sooner the fatigne will b»> noticed, more especâ€" ilally if it be placed side by side with a dark objct. If we look at the stars at night, they do not app>ar as points of light, but of quite appreciable size, and to shortâ€"sighted people immense. As a rule, in addition to the diffused brightness round the point, one m&Y Gboserve seven or more short rays pointing out from the centre. You will probably see the same thing if you look at a street light. These rays are due to the lines which traâ€" Â¥verse the lons of our eye from the gentre to the circumf{ference. They nre usually from seven to ten in number, radiatiog from the centre like the arms of a starfish. As these lnes aro formed of lens matter Mightly denser and less transparâ€" ent than the rest of the lens, they give ris= to these rays of light. The increased size of the stars is also partily due to the fact that the front of the eye is never a portion of a perfcect sphere, but is slightly more curved in one direction than another, the direction and degree of the curves varying in different eyes. Here is another illusion : If vertiâ€" gal lines be drawn on a picce of paper a| the paper be hold nearly parâ€" alloi to ,the lize of visionâ€"so that the eye, as it were, skins the paperâ€" the lines appear immonsely foreâ€" shortened. In this way writing which was otherwise quite illegible, beâ€" comes perfectly evident. _ i mas was Olnor w iC qureo AUCBAUEEY MEM oo;nec pflrfcct’ly hov}dent. y An Early Adventure of Robert Lin«â€" s you read the impression of the coln, b Neighbor. type used in making this page, YOU | | uw DyARNIALENUOT doubtless imagize that you read the While my brotherâ€"inâ€"law, | Mr. whole of each type‘s impression. You | Boynton, was in the hardware busiâ€" are mistakon again. You only notice | 089"° in Springiield, Lincoun‘s son Robâ€" the upper edge of each letter. You ; PUU then a boy of ten or twelve, enâ€" ean ouly prove this by covering the | tered the store ome day with another upper hall of any line with a sheet | boy of his own age. Tive lads had & ef paper, being careful to bhold the | quantity of leas pips, which they mt exactiy in the middle of the | WiShed to sell. A bargain was mado tter, asd you will not, without.i“'“d the money paid over to the the â€"greatest difficulty, decipher a | NCY with uo quescions asked. Later eingle word. Now place the paper In the day, however, Mr. Lincolin was yver the lower hall of the line. You l visited at his home by the owner of "an read It â€" without the siigitest | & Mote® OME . ES undergoing reâ€" trouble. Q(;{aua,t ‘ntgd informed tiat l:.ih uool} The rost Important ‘because tno | tobert, td (StOlMi A8 [ANDH ty most freqflfifll.pgec(vpuon o;a:u' 1;‘: : leau pipe from the place, which the Johnson says, is due to the errors owuner desired to ecilher have paid made in Judging the size and distance ; ‘o.‘: or returned. | of objects. Thus the moon is invarâ€" Mr. Linco.n was shocked. He called fably drawn soveral times too large | ROXAE: and, without askIN€ «NY Pss in eome faregt Pouothy A very @triking illusion is to be freâ€" | WY PILC ows to ols uis quentis met wilh when driving r()r | when they entered Mr. Lincoin was chling * ng a straight road. _ The ; looking very stern. £ oaly re uiremonts necessary are that | Mr. Boynton," said he, ‘did my ROU ho road shoud drscenud nfung 4| Robort soll you some lout pipe toâ€" Wizht Incline, ana th>n ascend at a "CKF. @orrespondingâ€"or, better stil, a My brotherâ€"inâ€"law _ was greatly greaterâ€"angle. _ When you arrive embarrassed. Everybody in Springâ€" mearly at the bottom of the incline, | fie.d kuew Abrabam Lincoln. His honâ€" the ascending portion of the road, l osty and integrity woere never ques which mast b> la a perfectly strai; ht | tioned, and the idea that his son Une with th: portion you are on, will | wou.d steal was highly improbabie. appear so stcep as to seem quite inâ€" | Mr. Boynton had, however, been noi agcessible; but as you proceed the tiied in some mannaer that the pipe road appears to beojme less and less ‘ was stoioua properiy. . Nevertheless Steep until it becomes nearly level. | ha did not want to iimpicate the son ep uantil it becomes nearly JC¥€â€" | o; apraham Linco.n s0 he sall: A very @trliking illausion is to be freâ€" quentis met with when driving or chling * ng a straight road. The O@iy re uiremonts necessary are that &ne road choud d scend along a Wisit Incline, ana th>n ascend at a @orrespondingâ€"or, better stll, a greaterâ€"angle. When you arrive nearly at the bottom of the incline, the ascending portion of the road, which mast b> la a perfectly strai. ht Une with th: portion you are on, will appear so stcep as to seem quite inâ€" accessible; but as you proceed the road appears to broome loss and less Steep until it becomes nearly |9ng The reason for this is twoâ€"fold, In the (trot pl co, when the road as:ends drectiy lu iront of us ic appcars foreâ€" @hortonxl. Now, we hive no means of mglng the amount of foreshortenâ€" , and the Imagination leads us to think it is much stoeper than it really is ® There is a class of cases where our gonâ€"eption of an object can be interâ€" rupte| in more than one way. Our imâ€" agination can accept either one or the othor of these interpretations at will. This property of alternating eonceptions is called intultion,. ‘A story is being told, which may er not be truc, about a rising young iflfiiolni who hbhad unusually large eet. His mother is a lovable old woâ€" feet. His mother is a lovable old woâ€" man, but very deat. Sie lives in a esmall house in ‘Torquay, and is alâ€" ways delighted by a visit from her @on. When the Britith fleet, which was anchored in ‘Tor Bay lately, fAired a salute, the old lady was ob swerved to start, fix her cap, and mooth down her apros, Then she sall with a sweet smile, " George is coming ; I hear his footsteps on the stairs !" The Mayor of Noew York to be dhosen in November will sorve for two years only. Hs wl have the power of removal during the whole of that period. ; No Immediateness. Heâ€"Do you believe in love in a cotâ€" Bhoâ€"Nx» indeood I don‘t. Hoâ€"How about lbre in a palace ? Bheâ€"Oh, George, this is so swdcen. Hoâ€"Well It wom‘t beâ€"if we‘ve got o walt t!l I eara the palace.â€"Aa@ ust Smart Set. Klepban.ine Feet. Not by any means the least impresâ€" sivre evidence of the huge size to which the modern _ transatlantic gleamship has wn is to be found in the bewUderfl:: amount of proviâ€" sions that have to be taken aboard for a single trip across the ocean, says the Scientific Amenmican. _A mere tabulation of the various kinds of food which to replenish the ship‘s larder (g:-lng the few days which she spends in port fall to convrey any adequate idea of the vast amount of ftores taken nboafd. ‘The United States paper gives a plctorial representation, of course, purcly imaginary, particularly as reâ€" gards the live stock, the beet, mutâ€" ton, game, etc., being received on the ship in the dressed condition, no live stock whatever bcing carried. The drawing was made up from a list of the actual amount of provisions carâ€" rled on a recent eastward trip of the Hamburgâ€"American liner Deutschâ€" land, and the number of live stock which contributed to meet the supâ€" pliles for one voyage was estimated from the actcal number of cattle, sheep, etc., that would be required to make up the total weights in dressed meats on the veasel. A Marine Monster. ‘The dimensions of the vessel are: Length, 686 feet ; beam, 67 feet, and displacement, 28,000 tons; her highâ€" est average spceed for the whole trip is 28.36 knots, and she has made the journey from Sindy Hook to the Lizard in five days, seven hours and thirtyâ€"eight minutes. In considering the question of feeding the passenâ€" gers on a vessel of this size, the thought is suggested that there are hungry mouths within the hull of the ship, besides those to be found in the dining saloon of the passenâ€" gers and the mess rooms of the crew ; mouths that are so voracious that they require feeding not merely at the three regular meal hours of the ship, but every hour of the day and ‘nlght, from the time the moorings are cast off at one port ustil the vessel is warped alongside at the other. The United States‘ paper refers to the 112 furnaces in which the fuel of the 16 bodlers in the boiler room is consumed at the rate of 572 touns per day. Now, altivuzh the voyage from New York to Hamburgh lasts only s‘!x or seven days, according to the state of th»> weather, the bunkâ€" ers of the ship are constructed to bold a sufficiently large reserve of coal to cover all cont‘ngenci~s. her total coal capacity bring about 5,â€" 000 tons. and at each voyage care is taken to see that they are pretty well filled. the Passenger List. The total number of souls on board of the vessoel wion she has a full passenger list is 1,617, made up of 467 first cabin, 300 secon | cabin, 300 steerage and a crew of 550. the crew comprising officers, seam>»n, stewâ€" ards and the engine room force. Sixâ€" teen hundred and seventeen souls "There was a tirshop at the rear of the store, and just as my brotherâ€" inâ€"law was congratulating himsel{f that young Lincoln would get out of the scrape, the sharp voice of the tinâ€" smith exclaimed : " YTes, ‘tis, too. That‘s the chapâ€" that Linc.is boy, and anviher one about his sizeo. I remember ‘em." "Mr. Lincâ€"Iin drew out his pocketâ€" book and laid a till upon the counter. * Pease let me bave that pipe, Mr. Boynton,‘ ne said. .. o fÂ¥. " ‘aAbein |â€"orâ€"well, Ar. Lincoln, let me see. No, I don t thiuk it was your boy who brought that pips in here. He don t look lika tne boy." â€""The ];lp; was accordingly brought out. Mir. Lincoln placed it across lobâ€" ert‘s sghoulders. The two thon left the store. "Iit was an extromely bot day, and Robert Lincoln was barefooted. The store stoo~ in a se=g of e uare, which was paved with brick. Th se briiks had become heated by the sun and producad an uncomfortible feeling to Robert‘s feet, as his father, with long strides, led him across the square. Tne boy danced along, lirst on one foot and then on the other. Sudderm‘!ly he erxclaimed : * ‘Say, pa, L can‘t stan‘ theso hot bricks on my bare feet. Le‘s git over in the shade.‘ wl HOW OCEAN LINERS ‘"Lineo in senlor looked down at the boy with a quizzical smile, then drlly replied : * 9m # * ‘Well, my son, you‘d better get used to the heat. If you ever steal any more lead pipe you‘ll go to a placeo that‘s hotter than theso bricks are.‘"â€"Leslie‘s Monthly. alist who resigned his seat in the British Parliamont some time ago as a protest against the Boer war, arâ€" rived at New York on Saturday on the St. Paul from Southamptos. Michael Davitt, the Irish Nationâ€" TRAINING FOR HEAT. ARE PROVISIONED. name oi _ USSJ» To feed th aâ€" people for a period of six Cays requires. in mâ€"at alone the equivalent of 14 stsers, 10 calves, 29 sheep, 26 lambs and 9 hogs If the flocks of chickens, geese and game required to furnish th> throee tons of poultry and game that are eonâ€" kumed were to }An the procession would constitute the total inhabiâ€" tants of many an American coimmu: nity that cignilies itsel{l with the LIEDL PCBI WRIERAT PC CC C OCOH The ship‘s larder is also stook»d with 1.700 pounds of fish, 409 pounds of tongues, sweetbreals, etc., 1,700 dozen eggs and 14 barrcls of oys ters and clams. The 1700 dozen of eggs, packed in cases, would cover a consiljerable arca. while the 1,00m7 bricks of Iceâ€"cream woa«uld require 100 tubs to h>ld them. O table butter there would b> taken on board 1 800 pounds, while the 2,200 quarts of milk would require 64 cans to bold It, and the 300 quarts of cream eight sumed were to JAn the processlion aboard the ves@â€"l, they would con:â€" stitute a contingent by th. mselves not less than 1,200 strong. ol cans. Vegetables aâ€"Plenty. s In the way of vegetables, there aro shipped on board 175 barrels of poâ€" tatoes, 75 barrels of assorted vegeâ€" tables, 20 crates of tomatoes and table celery, 200 dozen lettuce, while the requirements of dessert anlone would call for 4% tons of asâ€" sorted fresh fruits. For making up into the daily supâ€" ply of bread, biscuits, cakes, pies and the toothsome odds and ends of the pastry cook‘s art, there are taken on board at each trip 90 barrels of flour, cach weighing 195 pounds, this item alone nandding a weight of 8% tons to the cooks‘ stores. _ To this also we must add 3530 pounds of yeast and 600 pounds of oatmeal and hominy. o Under the total of liquids the most important item is the 400 tons of drinking water. This is suppleâ€" mented by 12.000 quarts of wine and liquors, 15,000 quarts of beer in kegs, besides 3,000 bottles of beer. Last, but not by any means least, is the supply of 40 tons of ice. Supply of Coalâ€" Of course, it will bae understood that, as in the case of the coal, it is not to be supposed that all of this supply will bo consumed on the voyâ€" age. There must be a margin, and a â€" fairly liberal margin, of every kind of provision. Morcover, the extent to which the larder and celâ€" lar are emptied will vary according to the conditions of the voyage. . In temp stuous weather, where the trip is a succession of heavy gales, and the dining room tables are liable to be practically deserted for two or three days at a stretch, the conâ€" sumption will be modified â€" considerâ€" ably. Stormy vyoyages of this charâ€" acter, after all, occur at Infreqnent intervals, and as a rule the supplies are proetty well consumed by the time the passage is over. The Morganatic Marriage of George IV. Recalled to »ind. In Justin McCarthy‘s "History of the Four Georges and Wiliam I1V.," published recently by Messrs. Harâ€" per and Brothers, the author gives no details of the matrimonial aliiance which the Prince of Wales, alterward George I1Y., madeo with Mrs. Fitzherâ€" bert, passing the a.{air by with alâ€" hsé#ons to the prince‘s gonerally acâ€" cepted "heartiess" treatmeut of the lady. Mrs. Rawwson‘s novel, "A Lady of the Regency," also published in the spring by the Harpers, is the only romance we know that detaills in fiction the royal escapadaes and court intrigues of this period, and it is gratiiying to note that it is among the few genuine historical novels that aro likely to survive the deluge of the last few years. Mrs. Rawson‘s eympathies are wilh the actual wife of the prince, the unlucky Caroline of Brungwick, and sho is as near to the historical character as an absolute creation can hope to be, which is more than can be said of most real personagas in fiqtlou. @ 7 An additional interest attaches to the subject at presont because of Mr. Fyvie‘s instructive article in the Nineteenth Century, which for the first time unfolds the facts underâ€" lying the sentimental morganatic marriage of Georgo IV. to Mrse. Fitzâ€" berbert in 1785. This wollâ€"docuâ€" mented paper would show that the lady was [ar from being illâ€"treated, and received an annuity and lived in comparative luxury to the day of her death in 1837. Even when Caroâ€" line Brunswick, at the accession, took ber place.beside George IV.. as the actual queen, his morganatic wilfe could scarcely havo envied lher. Prinâ€" cess of Wales sho was not, and quren she could never be; but, as Lord Albemarle says, "as far as the laws of her church could make her so," she was the wife ol George Prince of Wales and King of England. They were sitting side by slide in the street car. and one of them ob served that it was beastly weathor. The other pald mo attention to the observration for live minates, and then carelesaly said ; _ % "I think you expeeted me to rep‘y to your remark on the weather ?" "Well, perhapsg. At any rate, if you have got ready to answer a civil questi>n, go ahead." EM y "I want nothing to say about the weatner," continued the othr. "A year ago in a car I began talking about the weather with a stranger, and he handed me h‘e card and asked me to call at his office." "Aml you called ?" "I aid. Ho was a Inwyer. I had asked him if he thourht it was going to snow. and he had written out a lPE.:ll opinion and charged me $10 for it. "But, sir, I am no lawyer." "No, of course not, but you may be n doctor. Â¥on want to start in about the weath*r and lead up to grip. catarrh, rh>umatism _and nll thait and get off a bit of andvice and senm1 In a bi‘l. The weathor. sir, is damanib‘e. and an nre you, and so am L and that‘s all there is to it, and now les‘s shut up." ;* i MRS. FITZHERBERT. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO A Bitter Experience. A STRAIGHT CASE AGAIN TBIS TIME Sam NDerrochers OCured of Diabetea in 1898â€" Had it for Over Flye Years â€" ts ttecont Lotter Provea Phat is Cure still Hoelda used. rochers, of wre borttcssa tUuty, wAs curael of iNabetes by lhabkle Aalbiny Pulls in 1848. His case is well knuwin hore, it havinyg bâ€"en pubsished in ‘tuo‘ papers at the t.ms, and a q{rvnt deal w attent.on was drawa to Dodd‘a Kiuduey Piis on ita accouint. Diabetes, however, Is known to boe an incurable ulsâ€"ase, and many of the more sk.ptical of Quebee eltlh zens crpreossol doubt As to the per: manepoy of the curs. Tlhose qlm.nbtn may now boe sot at rest, Mr. Derâ€" rochers himself attests that in three y.ars ho has had no sign of Dabotes® return. la May 28, 18)8, Mre. Bam Derroâ€" chers published the following letâ€" ter in the Qu bwo papere: "! have been a viotim to l?“h tee for over five yoars with torrible paing around my k.uneys. My feot were always cold, and my thirst could not . be quenched, no mattor what 1 drank. I tried rom dy aftor romedy, but re celved no h\p. I rurnlmwd one box of Dodd‘s Kidney Pisa and found im mediato relof. 1 have now fiaished five boxes, and can way 1 am porfeotly cured." o Now, to cloar away all possible doubt that Mr. Dorrookers was not cured, to show bsyond qu «tlion tihiat Dodd‘s K‘dney Pi\s did mt morely relieve him for ths time, but notual ty cured h‘m of Mabetâ€"s, and oured him to stay cured, woe publish his letter of April 4, 1901. _ J "Dear Sirs,~My curo of Diabotos by Do#d‘s K‘dney Pills has been porâ€" manent. I have not bsen troubled with a sign of Mabstes sinco my cure three yoars ago." _ Dodd‘s Kidney PIEls curo all disâ€" eases of the k\dnoys, and the trou: bles arising from woeak action _ of tho Kiineys. Thy aro used throughâ€" out the world. A WARNVING CJ PREKEACHEKERS. Beitter to Allow the Audience to Sleep Than to " Talk Back."‘ 3 ""I thought it would be easy enough to convert the lay people of the town, but realized, of course, that the ministers would be a harder task. I rementbar one of the first sormons I pros@aed with that idea baforoe me. It was a hot summer day, and a gonâ€" tleman very m or undor the influâ€" ero> of liquor slid into the rear part of the @lurch and wunt to sleep. It was somewhat disquieting at first, but I soon warmed up to the subj ot and forgot him. What happened has always been a warning to ine against very loud pre chingâ€"I waked him up. My veheme o0> so disturbed him that he arose, walked unsteadily up the aisle, and stopp»d in front of the pulpit. I was dreadfully embiarâ€" rassed, I remember, but I retained suffeient presence of mind to take what I thought was an eff @lent and brilliant means of bridging over the gap, for, of course, I had stopped presching when he stood still and looked at me. Leaning over the pulâ€" pit I remarked suavely : 7 1 F 1 loshons oeiee kess ~"‘I porc ive that my good brother is II1. Will someâ€"‘ _ a "Before anyone @ould move, howâ€" ever, he lifted his hend and, fixing his blinking eyes upon me, remarked in perf cily distinct tonss heard throughout the church,â€" â€""I sh‘l think s~ch preachin ad make everybody ill !"â€"Cyrus Townâ€" send Brady, in August Lippingstt. In the Highlands of Sutherlnnd-1 shire there lived an old crofter, who had been long knuwa as a hyâ€" pocrite by all who knew him. On various occasions he had stolen his neighbor‘s potatoes, and usually in the morning he retired to the back of a dryâ€"stonse dyke to ask Torgiveâ€" ness. One day while he knelt down at the back of this dyke a group of youths bent on mischiel foliowâ€" ed him up, and listening at the other side of the dyka heard him pray thus: "Oh, may 1 be forâ€" given for stealing the potatoes yesterday. â€" May this dyke fall on me if I ever do the like again." The youths on hearing this put their shou‘ders to the dyke _ and toppled it over, thus nearly killing the o‘d man, who, rising from the da=bris, was heard to mutter ;:‘"Weel, it‘s hard that a man cannot say a thing in fun but it must be taken in earnest." A Spider‘s Instinct. A correspondent sends us a remarkâ€" able instance of adaptation of inâ€" stinct in a trapâ€"door spider, . Says the writer: "A friend uf mine noticed near his camp a trapâ€"door spider run in, front of him and pop into its hole, pulling the ‘lid‘ down as it disapâ€" peared. ‘The Iid seemed so neat and perfect a circle that the man stooped to eximine it, and found, to his astonâ€" ment. that it was a «ixpence. There was nothing but silk thread coverâ€" Ing the top of the coin, but anderâ€" neath mud and silk thread were coated on and shaped convex, as usual. ‘The coin had probably been swept out of the tent with rubbish." Commenting on this, a contributor to Nature says: "As is well known, the doors of trapdoor spiders‘ burâ€" rows are typica‘ly made of flattened pellets of earth stuck tozether with @ilk or other adhosive material, The unique behavior of the spider in quesâ€" tion ahowed no little discrimination on her {sart touch‘ng the suitability as to size, shave and weigcht of the object selected to fulfil the purpose for which the sixpence was used."â€" Bydney Bullstin. Blegsed are the peacemakersâ€"upon some other planet. s Permanency of Cures by Doda‘s Kidney Pills. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemâ€" SOZzODONT Minard‘s Linimont Cures Colds, ete. Letters Which Prove the Taken in Earnest. b.â€"8Sp clal)â€"Gam Der w for the Teath a« Mouth 25° Learoing \Voouuâ€"lâ€"dou In » KFashion= abte Boarding sehool Near Paris. on evou EEmERAII TE 0C if a tail blaok man and two fat wo-l wen, who when they perceived any wmo â€" approanching . the pavilion, eagerly hid their charge from view. The lady principal of the ostublishâ€" ment used to spend two hours every murping in the mysterious rotreat, while in tho afternoon various masâ€" twts euodvedod one another. A iuXxâ€" urione carriageo came evory day to fetvh the young recluse for a drive In the Bola, Thanks to an Indiscretion, says Moudcen Boclety, the mystery has been unveiled, It seems that the flrl is one of the numerous daughâ€" eea of Abdul Hamid, who has taken into his head to make one of them, at loast, uequainted with wostorn idene. Mina courage did not go sn far, howover, as to let the child be free among girlis of her own age and nx»t likely she will go hback to Cuonetantinople a total failâ€" ure and An unhoppy creature. She learna very qyuicky, they say, and everyhxly could hear her from the %mrdnn. her â€" fingerse â€" Nying along he keyboard of her piano, while her deep contralto voice tried to eing Fronch songs. Alul! Hamid bas a regular bevy of _ danghters, legitimate, _ semlâ€" legitimate and otherwise. Among the first ones, the two eldost, Zekâ€" kie and Fatnvsa, aro his well beloved. Lekkie is bonde, plump and aulite English looking; Faima is tall, thin and sickly looking. They have «@nrried the two sons of Ghazl Os#sâ€" man Pasha, the hero of Plevoaa. The third one, Naile is a rather disaâ€" grocable girl of 18 ; Aiche, the fourth one, who is 1%, promisos to be a porfect beauty. Then comes A legion of others who are unknown. | But, strange to say, the cruel Bulâ€" tan, who is sometimes spoken of as 4 e 420 4ih 1 A 1 4.; ..A .424 Andscntrmistadii o. on a most beartiess tyrant, never forâ€" got his little Hailie, a lovely croaâ€" ture, whonm he had by his first wife A iA tharc ~ndakn 4 2 $.5 MB . 4.2.4... Ah cindiPet mt titnr~ 4 LECT and who was burned alive through playing with matches. It is really too bad that His Maâ€" jesty of England should be offeaded at the attention pald him by the press, and by the fact that all his movements are watched, A man of his experience and resource shouuld be able to abate the nuisance, and at the same time do a lot of amused chuckling. If he would only observe the methods of some of the sovereign Amorican voters who visit his dominâ€" ions, he would learn a trick worth more than all the laws against lese majeste enforced by his irritable nephew, the Kaiser. Let him jlearn from them how to use a press agent, and it will not be long until the bare mention of his name wili be enough to throw a whole press associatham into an ague of terror. Let him not only furnish the papers with fuil adâ€" vance notices of all his movements, but also insist that they be pubâ€" lished, and at the same time keep shedding â€" typeâ€"written Interviews with himself, full of spontaneous opinion on all kinds of subjects of which he is ignorant, and I will guarâ€" antee that in a very few weeks even the most hardened newspaper men in his kingdom will wear a hunted look, and If he happens to come on a group of them unaware they wlll go through doors and windows without the foâ€"mality of opening them. It is the fact that he makes his doings andi thinkings hard to get at that \makefl every paragraph about theam so valuable.â€"Harper‘s Weekly. 1 Beddock, June 11, 1897. a C. RICTRARDS & Co. Dear Sirs â€" MINARD‘S LINIMENT is my remedy for NEURALGIA. It relieves at once. Minard‘s Liniment A Round Waistâ€"Line Effect. < May be secured by wearing a girâ€" dle made of soft satin or any othor pliable material. Cut the material on vhe bas, about twelve inches deep ; blinistitch the bhems, and fit it in easy folds about t# corsage, pulling th m snug an | fastâ€"ning on> end ; the other end should hook over to the Iâ€"ft elle under a large bow ol the material from which the girol»> is madje. A black girdle mads in this way may be worn with a gown ol any color, andi is certainly one of the most useful accessoriecs for a remodâ€" elled gown.â€"Matron and Maid. "I am told that you‘ve been marâ€" rled before, Mr. Sooter," said Miss Bunting to her proposer. "Yes, erâ€"yes." "Your first wife had at least a porâ€" tion of your heart t" "Yesâ€"erâ€"yeq," "That‘s what 1 thought. Well, I conldn‘t consent to marry a halfâ€" hearted man."â€"Detroit Free Press. Those who go Into the water most boldly have the least sand. The "warmor‘ the costum» the legs It protects from Father Neptune‘s chilly embraces. The older the girl, the more antâ€" lous she is to be taught how to float. While thore are many good fish in the sea there are more on shore. The King and the Reporters. There is always a roar when the ewells go broke.â€"Smart Set sULTAN‘S DAUGH TER Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in By the Sad Sex~ Waves. The ugly duckling is most in the Fractional. es of a fashouable in the environs of very much puzsied in & privatle pavliâ€" ‘of the groanue, of A. 5. McDONALD., Cures Diphtheâ€" | to fight consumption, with Scott‘s | Emuision of codâ€"liver oil, is long lh‘dm If it threatens, you can A, resist ; and you may overcome it. Ipon't be afraid; be brave. But wackle it ; don‘t waste time. The tims How a Writer Sought to Trap Him by Placing it in a Manusoript. "One beautiful spring mornieg am® editor found a goliden halr Iybeg P% tween th: pages of a manuser . pt," writes Edward Bok concerni ag *The Case Against the Editor," in the La ies Home Journal for July. *The moment he reached the page it gracefu‘lly fNuttered out. eC m Pnd avev e y~ .\ the EDITOR AND A GOLDEN HAIR. "Flushed with excit m®s®, _ """" editor caught it. It was not hbis hair, ho argued, th rofore it was not his property. Then, again, h> thought the owner probably lost it an| wmipht need it, so ho put it back. H+ was & methodlicat man and he roplaeed 1 exactly as he had found it. H+ was not many days older when ®* reâ€" celved a |»tter proving by the '::n‘ halr he hbad so Aogtorounsly can and consclentionsly replaced, that he never ha\ roead, nor even open d, tho manuseript of the writer. . Caw i. <orvaik VC TBE > "Could M}th'nt have clemrer cass again«t thâ€" e certainly not. It was cont final, don‘t you see?" Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury As meroury will surely destroy the ~onse af «mell and complotely d«mv&c the w.ole =yâ€"Ltem when entering it . bhrou. h the mucâ€"ms surfaces. Buch articles shou d never he need except of sro-ncr ptions from renuuble ‘physichna. a â€" the amage tney wili do is ten told to the gond you CNog CA TS TB . Maillls finkarrh h d L URSULGIL B Absiterdadhai aaperey 1 Buch articles shou d never he need except of srrucr ptions from renuuble rhysichvs. a â€" the amage tney wili do is ten +o d to the gond you cau possibly derive f om them. Hail‘s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J, Cheney & Co. Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is Mu intervally, acting directly uron the hblood mucous » urfaces of the system. I. buying Hail‘e Catarrh Cure be ~ure you get the genuine. It to taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cueney & Co. Testimonials free. We had a party of Arabs along with us, and touk them all over a gr at newspaper office. Everything wa® wildly astonishing to them. They had imasiaed that the Ko an conlaiR PJ all the wisdom and knowledge of the world, yet here was the t« begraph, the tel.phone, the electrotype, the printing press. The place was a verk wable enchanter‘s castl»> to them They wou‘ld never hay» b 1 eved in the tol. phony if I had pot called up th is hotel and got one of their ow n p;ut.{ at that end of the wire. The Dervis who had come along was bold as 'c-,‘l ;l“p:;u_s."i’â€"h?-t;"h;; hâ€"ard that . h friend five mils away was talkin friend five mil s away was talkinkg through the instrument, h> male & dash at it. He was greatly excited and yelled in a m gaphone volce He thought we were tricking him. But bore was hbhis frinmd talking Arab’ He rolled his eyes at me in a deepairâ€" ing manner, an i thon b gan a search for devile, blag quit»> convinced that the phone was an invention of Batan. â€"â€"Independent. ISsUE NO 33 1901. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tableta _A druc%?u refund the money if it fails to cure. v5¢. W . Grove‘s signature is on each box. Hint About Paris Hats. As to hats, everything so far is fliat and low, and â€" generally with two brims. Quilis and currants and cherâ€" rles are what Ihave seoen most of 18# trimmings on the summer hats. But nothing is more evanescant than the Parls hat. Before we have fairly begun to talk of fruit and tullps o# our hats we find that we have rus Into wheat, and sear and yellow leaves.â€"Katharine de Forest, {n the Ladies‘ Home Journal for July. L# Sold by druggists, price 75¢ per boitle, Bultal0 HObGIS Canadian houses for Canadia~s at Canadina prices and managed by a Canadian. The Hotel Buckingham, The Mariborough and; TPhe HM41ltam, All up to date buildings. Roof gardena on the Buckingham. Roomsâ€"$1.00 per day. _ Apply F. 8. ROBINS, Hotel Buckingham, Bu: Oldest and Best. _ Established 1750 The best medicine known for general family we A positive cure for Piles, Kidm Dis ease«, Constipation, Cramps in Stomach, «a Sample botile sent for 10c to pay for packi anud postage. All siz a sent postpaid on rsoola of ‘?flce. Stamps accepted. rices 25¢, 50c and $1.00. WM. BROWN, Pnrlem Button, Qua A live agent wanted in every town. Agoents in every town and villag : in Canadate 8cll made to measure c othlnq‘: good commie sions, Crown Tailoring Co., Poronte, A CANVASSER WaNTEDâ€"SA~%PLES free or returnable, freight charge= pre paid, exclusive territory, regnu‘ar customers; «»lary or commission; no security; write quick. Cooper, drawoer 31, London, Ont. TL agents to sell our new book, The Porteck Woman; beautifully illustrated; a book that sells at almo«t every house; average earninge §210 86 a day; credit given; circulars, ter ns ©210 36 a day; credit given; circula and us free, Bfl World P Co., glm Ont. y 1’:0& RUPTURE "THE WM. PAYNE IMPROVED TRUSS " has no e‘rnu\: dif~ fors from all other«; can be worn continuouâ€"ty; absol=te comfort in any position: when d& couraged with inferior trusses try "PA Y N K‘ â€"it is gugranteed. â€" Fend for illustrâ€"ted pam* &I\Iet.. Urpable representatives wanted. The illizm Payne ¢ o., London, Unt. JA fnest in the Niagara Peninsula, ab Wlnm;lomn- from Hamitton on two rail ways. 130 acres in all, 35 of which is in frurn mostly pea: hes, Will be sold in one par el or divided into lotsof 15 to 20 acres to suit parâ€" chasers. Thisis a decided bargain Address ;!gt:u_;h‘u Carpeater, P. 0. box 109, Winona. The Arabs and the 1 clephone. Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Eyrup should alâ€" ways be used for chnam"&ru.m. It soothe« Td in she ToR rmmedy 24 Sitrzng a Enonly r emeé five cents a boitle. © Bcuo ron PACt samPLE anp TAYy 19. * pasnpient t AP Eid a BOWNE NRUIT FARM FOR SALEâ€"ONE OF THE GENTS WANTEDâ€"WE wWAaNp LADY Liz 'wl‘ @r m~ BROWN‘S DROPS WANTED PeEReR PCE C000 IP a golden hair Iybg be ages of a manuser . pt," rd Bok concerni ig "The t the Editor," io the » Journal for Julyâ€" *The reached the page !t uttered out. with excit mont, the t it. It was not his Cad thswrofore it was nU‘t nin«t th> e ‘itor 7 Mo 1t was conclusbre af curmiere, L9+ d us oorletbe 3 °€ 1Â¥ asked by Dr & secret to anot It appears th as in all subse world, there w« wealing the «< mer. ex[uuSi ef their clionts #the faults 0f _â€"Onceâ€"4balf â€" of eommunity con my Arst 3: ## L tell s against you o tell everybody and they go o Rold them tha ge out, some | af the story : mot a seer Bolomeon flike cincle. wery con! ©00 much Ye 88 a time to Rs to speak. Al any of the groa uthen- hi O ion, J ha Cemale do eussing 0: Hies betwe tween Cl lhe ancho: Uhe sea, | erying, Of Gia oution where. whose pacity Ohristian « «d . Men may . pl theartses ArlDied 0e Wther 1. Plants | gect and family i surance have no terprices When t} Â¥all uno« wil: There i« Â¥or the © ahould p Ontentions mever se informati< Bhall we to plot Sebauc! with a: mista kc UCefence Against ®f the : ®i the m Rbeart, th defense o pation of pureâ€"hea» Wwith just ©ause of sing in t! “ this te: Rogether â€" in â€" chur gather to some to state, C themes, s some to s You s outbran ture is @alilor have a wlimb t their w mit th t deper the obj it to pa otended _ fri Washiagton tion which es, and for Dis ba the unf Proverbs bla 1« Object th @An vÂ¥ita to th a te

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