West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Mar 1903, p. 7

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

XTED «:‘ THOSE INâ€" settliers ma in Temiscamtoag niormation write LEY 12 Â¥ Â¥% 4 4% "f L‘E‘ £# . Chicago aterers oa and inviâ€" em so that wn from the ® same trouâ€" r when she when she u. nursery atock .rmgon i immedâ€" . VIEL & RAMSâ€" "LASS SA LOON . Address W. H gara Falls, N. go to al! the of keeping d get only ali the milk should proâ€" MmFC. CO. XTARIO. â€" new maps, the largest e Factors iry pleke . \Vlclll as, Out 4 Remedyv ilk reased. Flavor ts od Purifier with good jew ®n*. altry ADY AGENTs i1n.)some profit a Iy Corset Co. Dick‘s Blood Purifigr id Eggs T anted M.C.Ei3 $ Â¥ K % W Aftter. the Our that nace all i 20e mto. 14 3. We alsoâ€"Paul here changes from the second to the first person, putâ€" ting himgel{ in with those whom he hus just described. Allâ€"Jews and Gentiles altke. Once livedâ€"The R. V. brings out the meaning. The word ‘eonversation" is _ misleading. The whole course of the life _ was wrong. Lustsâ€""The evil, irregular and corrupt affections o the heart." â€"Clarke _ Fieshâ€"The carnal, corâ€" ruopt nature, fuifilling, . eteâ€"They livad in the actual commission of all those sins which their corrupt naâ€" tures inclined them to commit. Mind â€"Thoughts; mental suggestions and purposes as distinguished from the blind impuleées of the flesh.â€"J., F. & B. By natureâ€"Nature, in Greek, implies that which has grown in us as the peculiarity of our being, as distinguished from that which has been wrought on us by mere exterâ€" nal influences. f II. Salvation an act of _ divine merey (ve 4â€"9). 5, 5. But Godâ€"The: apostle . now shows the glorious change that had teen wrought in them through ‘the gospel. Three words are especiaily emphacize!lâ€"Gol, morey, grace Ri h in mereyâ€"God is rich in many things tesides merey ; He is rich in worlds ; He owns the goidandsilver in â€"a thousand hills, as web as the cattle on them. But while a knowledge of these riches is not necessary to our salvation, it is necessary that we know about the richness of His merey. Groat loveâ€"His inlinite love ‘or us is the ground of our salvation. He loved us and died for us while we were yet ainners. Together with Christâ€"liod has given us as comâ€" pleto a resurrection from the death of sin to a life of righteousness as the bodv of Chirst has had from ners in all ages Of k1©.. MEXTOUT Through faithâ€"Faith is, 1. The condition upon which we are saved. 2 The instrument in God‘s hands by which we are saved. 3. The means by which we continue sayâ€" wl Giftâ€"That is, salvation is the Iree gift of God4. I!l. The Cnrtstian life a divine creation (v., 10). 10. His workmanship â€"Insiead of our being the workers, (w««l is the worker and we are the work manshipâ€"the fact accomplishâ€" ed." Createdâ€"The saved soul is created anewâ€"a new creation. Thoughtsâ€"The children of wrath â€"1. They are spiritually dead (v. 1). Their only life is a life of sin. They have no conception of af‘izh- er life. Sin first benumbs, then parâ€" alyzes, and finally slays our epirâ€" itual sensibilities. 2. They are unâ€" der the sneli of an unseen evil se TVé Commentary. -â€"l-‘.xplanatory. "Thie epistle was written to confirm and «trengthen the bellevers in the faith and bhope of tlmt <l30ml. andtto give them some mos mmr‘?a, t teach, in the deepest and sublimest trum of the Christian religion." It of two general divisions. . The m three chaptera@ are doctrina!, the last three are practical. L. The children of wrath (va. 1â€"3). 1. aAmi youâ€"As Christ fills the whole bxly of Christian believers with His fumess (chap. i. 23), so had He dealt with the converted Ephesians, who before were dead in trespasses and «ins. Quickenedâ€"Made alive spirtuâ€" ally. Deadâ€"See Col. ii. 13. Death is often used by all writers and in all nations to express a state of extreme mieery. The Ephesians by trespassing aa«l sinning had brought themseives into a state of deplorable wretchedâ€" snees, as had all the heathen nations, and having thus sinned against God they were condemned by Him â€" and might be considered as “Lad in law," 2. Ye walkedâ€"They had sinned conâ€" timnually, not merely occasionaliy. They lived in sin and followed the evil praclises of the heathen world. Truc Christians separate themseives f{rom ‘the world (Rom. xii. 2 ; II Cor. vi. 11â€"18) and do not conform to its «infu! customs and practises. Prince ...Airâ€"This has reference to Satan, the prince of devils. He is also the god of this world" (II Cor. (iv. 4). "The air is represented as the seat of his kingdom. The devil seems to have some power in the lower region of the air; he is at hand to tempt men and to do as much mischiel to the world as he can. INTERNATIONAL LESsOXN NO. xn MARECH 22, 1903. Sunday School. Pau\‘s Message to the Ephesians.â€" Eph. 2:1â€"10, i0 grave of Delicious "BALADA" Ceylon Tea (Black, Mixed or Natural Green) will be sent to any pesson filling in this coupon and sending it t# es with a 2â€"cent stamp for postage. Write Plainly and mention Black, Mixed "A Free Sample Packet" Dealers all over Dominion say they give better satisâ€" faction than any others. The people say they fit better, look better, wear better.â€"Because they are honestly made out of pure new rubber. C _ mewe o «002 __ 9# Granby ill RIHORG ...« skerr« «is unerse aoreny Coeban Po adey oL Lo Address "SALADA" TBA CO., Toronto. "Granby Rubbers wear like iron." of ihe world OXE & ~HAERETRES 4./ 000. ocbe. Nusskeinle : Hol ) reserariiere * cb 4 3. The | . "Such boxes, of course, are not inâ€" ntinue sayâ€" tended to keep money in for any ion is the length of time, and the amounts in C Yis them at any time may not be great. we.s But made of wood and locked with a â€" divin? | anp ordinary lock they are liable to be orkmanghP | preoken open and rifled or the whole ie workers, | box to be carried off, for that matâ€" we are the | ter, by thieves. accomplishâ€" "These stoel boxes are bolted to the d soul _ is | wall, «o that they can‘t be torn loose, reation. While it is as easy to drop money i of wrath | into, this steel strong box is so conâ€" y dead (Â¥.| trived that money cannot be {fished life of sin. | out of it, and has a combination of a?izh- lock. It isn‘t intended to be fire and s, then parâ€" | burglar proof, but it is sneakthlef s our epirâ€" | proof: and «o it serves its purpose ey are unâ€" | and it is, moreover, comparatively unseen evil | inexpensive."â€"New York 8en. Why do we * ® e 0 0 0 0 8 0e s e e or Natural Gi;;n Aburdant mercy. God is rich in merey,. _ ‘This wonderful statement should encourage the sinner. One has eaid, "The earth is the Lord‘s and the fuiness thereol. They tell us that there are twentyâ€"five milâ€" lionse of suns with worlds revolving around them, and yet it is not said that God is rich in worlds, but it is s:ni:_! that he is rich in merey." PRACTICAL SURVEY. Our condition by nature. Dead in trespasses and sing. Not only disease. but dead; that is, spiritual death reigns throughout man‘s entire moral nature _ He is totally depraved and devoid of all spiritual life. There is RQlife in him. To die in a natural sereo means a separation of soul and body. Man‘s only hope. It must be rcâ€" membered that God is rich in merey ounly through his Son Jesus Chnrist. They who reject the one who shed his bloo1 for men that they might have life must forever remain dead , for the life is in the blood. â€" Mercy is urmerited favror. It rises solely oul of the benevolence of God. â€" Conâ€" sequently no good work or even muiâ€" tipticity of good works can rendor any man worthy of the mercy _ of Gol. The power of mercy. It quickens tho "dead." Man is utterly lost, but through mercy he may be saved. Merey knows no bhard cases and all It aske is a chancee, through repentâ€" ance and faith on the part of the sinner. The perpetuity of mercy. "That in the ages to come he might «how the exceeding riches of his grace." Salâ€" vation is not like a epent rifle ball which weakens in force, according to the distance it has covered. It is just as strong to quicken mon from the dead in this age as it was in the beginning. Goi is an ever preâ€" sent heip, and a thoueand years is as a day to him. With him is no varâ€" lableness, peither shadow of turning. "On the other hand, safes _ for church plate and «acred vessels might in some cases contain plieces of great value, and would be made for protecâ€" tion against burglars as well as again@t fire. Such safes might be speâ€" cially dGesigned and built to hold the particular vessels kept in them. power (v. 2) They are captives of Satan. 3 They are prompted to sin by the instincts of a depraved naâ€" ture (v. 3). 4. They are exposed to condemnation. The change made by the Gospel â€"1L. God bas quickened us. 2. Raised us. 3, Madonl gsit with Christ. This nOqh eR CC CPCCTP VHTETL LWV change is through the mercy and love otf God. It is wrought in the soul by faith (Rom. v. 1) ; but faith cannot be exercised until all sin has been â€"renounced. When we forsake our sinsg. we wili be sared from our sins. Salvation implies (1) deâ€" liverance, (2) preservation, (3) reâ€" Uses to Which They are Putâ€"Steel Poor Boxes Now. "Yes," said a safe manufacturer, "sales are used in churches, to some extent, but not to keep money in, beâ€" cause money isn‘t kept in churches. What they are used for here is to keep the church records and papers in for one thing, and for another, for the preservation and safe keepâ€" ing of tre church plate and sacred vessels. € "A charch buying a wafle for the proservation of its books and records amm»l so on would very probably buy one second hand. It would commoniy be kept somewhere in the basement of the church, out of the way, and it would very probably be buiit into a walil. It would not be essential that it should be burglar proof. "But while the use of regular safes in churches is confined to the purâ€" poses described, there arge now used in churches of all denominations many strong boxes of steel in place of the oliâ€"time boxes of wood, poor boxes anmd guild boxes for the recepâ€" tion of offerings and contributions, placed permanently in the churches attached to the wall in vestibules or in the bodiy of the church. atoration. ood works.â€"There is a seose in which good works are necessary to ealvration. We are not sauved by good works, but created anto good wiorks. SAFES IN â€"CHURCHES wear Rubbers ..« Overshoes Nearly All Drinks Used to Create a! Desire for Food are Harmful. [ 1 The Academy o Medicine of France ‘ at the unanimous request of the chamber of deputiee _ has recently | issued a report strongly cumiemning‘ the drinks used as "aperitifs," or| appetizers, by the bulk o‘ the French | middle and lower elasses. After earelul analysis Dr. Labordc, wl:o| was spedally comm ss oncd, declares that every qualiity of absinthe conâ€"| tains poisonous elements. . He disâ€" | cards the fallacy that vermouth, or j noyeau, is harmless. Chartreuse is dangerous in a lesser degree, and‘ ought only to be used in tiny mediâ€"| cat doees for specific purposes. | French gin is a form of wood spirit | and the euperstition which makes , vluneraire a popular remedy in cerâ€"| tain emergencies is perilous to hu-i man life. The Legislature ought, aeâ€" | cording to the report, to forbid the | fabrication of these liquors and the immediate enforeing of the law of 1846 against absinthe. Dr. Laborde considers that the fiscal â€"revenue loses as much as it gains by fraud or adulteration and by the eriminal‘ or mental heredity caused by the‘ terrible spread of alcoholism â€" in | been able to build up the worldâ€"wide trade which it now possesses. The heads of the Company are among the most experienced and enterprisâ€" Ing business men in the Dominion, and the success which has attended it ever since its establishment is, no doubt, largely owing to the fact that they have always been on the alert for improvements and have never rested _ satisfied with their agricuitural machines,no matter how well they. might work, while there remained any chance of increasing their efficiency. Those who remember the old factory in which the Comâ€" pany conducted its business for a number of years, have only to look at the immense workshops of toâ€"day, covering acre after acre of ground on King street west, to realize the enormous development of this busiâ€" ness. But, besides the Toronto facâ€" tory, there is one in Brantford as well, and â€" the two employ nearly twentyâ€"five hundred men. It will be readily seen that the output of so much labor must be enormous, especâ€" ially when the fact is taken into conâ€" slderation that the machinery used in the manufactory is of the very highest grade, and that every timeâ€" saving and laborâ€"saving invention which tends to cheapen or hasten production is employed. In Australia and South Africa the Masseyâ€"Harris binders are nearly as well known as in Canada, and the annual increase in the trade with those colonies shows conclusively that they are making their way into general favor. ‘The Masseyâ€"Harris implements have played no inconsiderable part in building up Manitoba and the Northâ€" west, and ha‘ve done magnificent serâ€" vice out there is lightening the labor of the pioneer and softening the hardship which must necessarily be feared by those taking up homes in a new and unsettled country." The Subject of a Patent Recently _ Granted. It is claimed in a patent granted to Oscar NewbLouse, that a ragor may be sharpened by merely placing the cutâ€" ting edge in close proximity to the surface of a bar magnet. The inâ€" ventor claims that the effect of the magnet is to draw into line the minâ€" ute teeth or projections of the sharp day, and though Shah Narsâ€"edâ€"Deen was killed on Friday, that $s the Moslem Sabbath, and he was actually shot while kneeling in the mosque. On Sunday. ton. Senor Cannvaa tha On Sunday, too, Senor Canovas, the Spanish Premier, was killed, while the life of President Faure was twice attempted on Sunday in 1896. Next Sunday is Saturday, and on this day General Garlield, the Empress of Austria and President McKinley met their fate, and it was on a Saturâ€" day that King Alfonso stood in peril of his life. Mere mortals hail the "‘The Masseyâ€"Harris Company not only occupies a {oremost place among Canadian manufacturing houses, but the amovunt of capital invested in the business, the number of men which it employs, and its vast operations, enâ€" title it to a place among the great industrial concerns of the continent. Outside of the United States, where the high tariff makes it practically impossible for a foreign company to do business, the Masseyâ€"Harris bincâ€" ers and mowers are known and apâ€" preciated wherever agriculture is carried on under modern conditions. The Company has had, and has yet, many keen rivals, even for the trade of the Dominion, and it is entirely owing to the merits of the impleâ€" ments which it turns out that it has MAGNET RAZOR SHARPENER. caudes, notes the London Chronicle, four met their doom on Sunday, and the other two on Saturday. Czar Alexander 1I., President Carnot and King Humbert were all slain on Sunâ€" week end with pleasure, but to monâ€" nrefic it seems a season of pecullar peril. wige, which normaily are at dilferâ€" ent inclinations to the blade. He states that aiter tests lasting for mounths he has {ound that the beneâ€" ficial effect is very marked, so much so that a razor can be used a great many times without stropping or honing, it being only necegsary to place the razor in proper position relative to the magnet after shaving, and allow it to remain until it is used again. He adds that the action of the magnet has practically the efâ€" feet of stropping or reâ€"sharpening, and that indeed a much truer and better cutting edge is thus obtained than c be secured by reâ€"sharpenâ€" DON‘T PROD THE APPETITE. Little Tommyâ€"Can I eat another piece of plie? _ . _ _ i * ing, _'l;odfinyâ€"Wen. may I? Mammaâ€"No,. «eas, you may not. Tommyâ€"Darn graimnmar, anyway! Mamma (witheringly).â€"I _ suppose THE TORONTO NEWS SAYs: 2 In Boston. Lippincott‘s. a good deal of activity displayed in whoiesale trade circles at Toronto; still, although the «pring conditions are making theselves felt in the country, values are firmly held in call lines of â€" nanufactured «taple goods; imports are large and retailâ€" jers are confident that they have | anotber successfui year before them. ; Business at Quebec during the week Il;u.s been active. Business hbas been rather â€" more. active ‘at Pacific D Coast trade centres for the past ! week or two than last year at the | same tlime. In Manitoba there is a ~big increase in the demand for staâ€" ! ple goods as a result of the. large influx of settlers since dast spring. Whoiesale trade at Hamilton this week has been quite active. The orders being sent in by the travelers ‘+are large and well distributed and !il.di(‘ill(,‘ every ~confidence on the ‘part of retailers . throughout the icountry in the future cosaditions of | trade. Shipments are large now, as ‘retuilers appear to be anxious to | cure early delivery of the good 3 ‘ bought, so as to be in a position ‘to meet the demands of an â€" early 1-']mng trade,. London jobbers are "eceiving wany orders for epring and i summer goods. _ They are very firm | in their ideas as to value. _ At Ottaâ€" | wa there is a very goo!l movement in wholesale trade Tor this time of ‘the year. Country payments on maâ€" ! turing paper this month have been ! good, and the conditions of trade are | generally healthy. Values of «staple , goods sra firmly held. i Failures This Week. | R. G. Dun & Co., report liabilities ; of _ commercial â€" failures in â€" March Horseâ€"chestnuts contain about 27 perwcent. of albumen, this remarkable proportion being greater than is found in any cultivated plants, but their hitter taste, due to the presâ€" ence of about 10 per cent. of bitter regin, has condemned them as unfit for food. By extracting the bitter princeiple, R. Fluggie, of Hanover, claims to have made useful another waste material. After partial roastâ€" ing to loosen the shells, the kernels are removed and pulverized and the powder is plased in a tight percoâ€" lator with, aleohol for about a week. To extract the bitter completely it may. be necessary to replace the fluid with fresh solvent. The aleoâ€" hol dissolvres out the resin, leaving a pleasant and nutritious meal, which containg all the albumen and starch ol the chestnuts, and is a valuable food. The spirit is purified by disâ€" Toronto Farmers‘ Market. March 16.â€"Wheat steady, 100 bush of white selling at 70 to 72c¢, and a load of goose at 67c. Barley, dull, 100 bush. selli'nÂ¥ at 44¢c. Oats steady, with sales of 100 bush. at 37 cents. $2,0323,070. against $1,379,280 last year. Failures this week in the United States are 239, against 229 last week, 211 the preceding week, and 232 the corresponding week last year, and in Canada 22, against 16 last week, 28 the preceding week and 34 last year. Of failures this week in the United States 84 were in the East, 74 South, 65 West and 16 in tho Pacific States, and 98 report liabilities of $5,000 or more. Horse â€" Chestnuts _ Made _ DPelicions After a Treaiment. There was a fair supply of butter and eggs. Choice large rolls butter, 16 to 17¢, and pound rolls at 20 to 23¢; new â€" laid eggs easier at 18c Dressed hogs are dull ; none offerâ€"/ ing. Light quoted at $8.50, and heary: at $3 to $8.25. Following is the range of quotaâ€" tions : Wheat, white, bush., 70 to 72¢; wheat, red, bush., 72 1â€"2¢; wheat, spring, bush., 69¢; wheat, goose, | bush., 67 to 67 1â€"2¢; oats, bush., :;7| to 387 1â€"2¢ ; pers, bush., 75¢ to 78e;! bariley, bush., 44 to 49c¢c; buckwheat, | bush., 50 to 51c ; rye, bush., 52 1â€"2¢;| hay, timothy, per ton. $12 to $15:] mixed, per ton, $5 to $9 ; straw, per | ton. $8 to $9; apples, per bbi., $1 to ; $1.75;, dressed hogs, $8 to $8.50 ; eggs, new laid, 17 to 18c ; butter, dairy, 16 to 22¢; creamery 21 to Trade has, perhaps been a little less active at Montreal, and it is «doubtless owing to ‘the fact that the roads are beginning to break up in some parts of the country, as4 is nsual at this season. Thovre is â€"1¢; new laid eggs easier at 18C per dozen. Vegetables in good supply at unâ€" changed prices. i k: © Chicago ... .. ‘Toledo . :.. ... Duluth, No 1, Nortbern ... Toronto Live Stock. Export cattle, choice ewt.. $ 4 10 domedtum‘.‘. ........... /0 10 do cows, per cwtb........ 3 30 Inferior cows................ 273 Butchers‘ picked............ _ 4 10 do;ood to choice........ 3 70 do fair to medium....... _ 310 do rough to common.... 2 00 Bulis, export heavy ........ 3 50 GO HERb:» : +s +<+ + nc«ssreeg. . c 00 Feeders, shortâ€"keep......... 3 9¢ do medium ............. _3 60 o H@Ht. .: ... :s cs6n.srss) .‘ Ah SP Stockers, choice............, 3 2 do common.............. 2 25 Milch cows, each..........,. 32 00 Export ewes. cwt........... _ 8 13 Bucks, per cwt.............. 300 LHMDI :. ... ii:+.:r2trkrsacrs o. . L 00 cCalves, each ................ 200 Hogs. select, per cwt........ 6 35 do fat, per cwt.......... 6 10 do light, per ecwt........ 6 10 Bradstreets on Trade. . Hay in moderate supply, with sales of 25 loads at @12 to $15 a ton for timothy, and at $6 to §9 for mixed. Straw is nominal at $8 to #9. berl 25¢ ; chickens, per Ib., 12 to 15¢; ducks, per i1b., 10 to 12¢; turkeys, per |b., 17 to 20¢; potatoes, per bag, $1.20 to $1.25. _ Leading Wheat Markets. Following are the leading quotaâ€" tions at important wheat centres toâ€"day‘: MC 8 * tillation and used repeatedly Mrs. Caseyâ€"I hear your son Mike has gone into literature. __ _ § _ YMres. Clanceyâ€"So h* has. He‘s got | a job as janitor in a library.â€" A NEW FOOD. A Literary Man. ce ewt.. $ 4 10 to 4 50 Noh en doa ie : i : wlit . bBS 3 ... thiil....." 3 30â€" Lo. > 370 marstirsis; ; #A8 ~‘to :.A 25 sys iessAE I0 > UO. ) & 40 NB.+........ #10 ho |A2d0 IM........." 3 (0> to" @6 mnon.... (200 to . 2 76 Frccii1+s : > SOU , ho * HRe craa%e sree .. o8 00â€" 10. : AhaD Pi.:.... ..‘ 300 "ho ~ 15 rareisrs en 1J B 00 /( Ap : ! 800 cextrares! .‘ Ab 20 _ AQ :: 8,00 ifiil+ s o to *to _ 340 issiasass, < TRR (to. A 1e +4ri+«+++ 0 00. + , 00 00 iirsirinss <â€" $40% +0 ; 486 rsarkzasss ©$00 40â€" +200 isrincsc.s, oA M ~te S o crsesenc. s‘ / C 00 * %o ©20 00 Â¥b........ â€" 63 ‘to ©#00 srrree.+s, * CAO t0.â€" 00 ib......s "UG 10‘ #00 X% & Y Cash. â€" May. T2 A«4 T4 1â€"4 T4 T4 76 | _A good deal of instruction is proâ€" vided nowadays for _ farmers _ by ! county counciis, not merely in agâ€" | ricultural chemistry, but in veterâ€" | irary science and in the manageâ€" . mest of stock. It is at least gratiâ€" " fying to find the need for such inâ€" struction being duly _ realized, for such recognition is the first stop toward the supply of the informaâ€" tion which will supersede the old . rule of thumb practice. â€" London ‘ Chroniecle. Put in a stew pan three ounces of butter, with eighi ounces of brown sugar; dissolve together; stir in oneâ€"half tin of condensed milk until it boils; allow it to simmer fifteep minutes; add vanila to the taste, and mark off into squarnes in a HORTICULTURAL EDUCATION. England Said to be Waking Up in This Respect. A sign that we are waking up to some exten‘t is afforded by a recent announcement that the ‘Technical Education Board has instituted a chemical laboratory at the Botanic Gardens, Regent‘s Park, for the inâ€" struction of students studying botâ€" any and bhorticulture. There is so department of ecience with which chemistry â€" shows â€" closer â€" alliance than that of plant culture. A kaowâ€" ledge of soil composition, of plant foods, and of the conditions invoAyâ€" ed in the successful cultivation of crops are points of ohvious importâ€" ance to the â€" agriculturist and to the gardener. _ The ordinary cocoon is white, yelâ€" low, or «ometimes green. The quesâ€" tion to be solved is why different colors should be produced by similar «pecies, and whether it is the direct result of the food taken by the worin. If this coloring matter comes from the leaves fed to the worms, Messrs, Conte and Levrat considered that it should be easy to color their food artificially and thus secure dilâ€" ferent shades of cocoons, although several naturalists have atteompted to prove the impossibility of colorâ€" ing matter passing from the intesâ€" tines of the worm into the siikâ€"proâ€" ducing glands _ . d The worms which served for their cxperiments were placed on branches of privet washed over with red. They ate the leaves without prejudice, and when the larvae began to spin the cocoon, the silk was a bright red. When fed on leaves colored blue, the gilkâ€"worms produced a slightly bluish gilk. The species that produces ordinâ€" greaged tin Quebec Bricklayer Quickly Cured of Lumbago The following report is made by United States Consul Atwell at Rouâ€" baix : â€" Messrs. Conte and Levrat havre recently been making interesâ€" ing experiments with silkworms, which have resulted, it is said, in the production of _ cocomm« â€" af _ varied shades, He Used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and is Now Telling Others what they did tor Him. French Sllk Worms Made to Die Their Own Product. GO0D STORY OF Mr. Ball for two years suflered from Lumbago, one of the most painful forms of kidney disease. His urinary organs were also affected so that he was frequently compeliâ€" ed to rise at night. Thus with broken rest at night and pains by day his lot was anything but an enviable one. "I purchased a box of Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills and after I had used them I began to see and feel a change. 1 used three boxes and am completely cured. You can tell anvone you like I said so." Lumbago is one form of Kidney Discase; Bright‘s Disease, Diabetes and Heart Disease are a few of the others. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills have cured and will cure any of them. Quebec, Que.. March 10.â€"(Special â€"To those working at trades which necessitate exposure to all, kinds of weather and who are in conseâ€" quence subject to such diseases as Lumbago, Rheumatism and Pain in the back, the story of John Ball, bricklayer, «l No. 57 Little Chamâ€" plain street, this city, is of peculiar interest. One lucky day he read of a cure of a complaint like his own by Do<dki‘s Kidney Pills, was tempted to try them and here‘s what he sayrs of the result : FROST WIRE FENCE CO. LUMITED, Welland, Ont., Winnipeg, Man. and a Wire Fence is no Stronger than its Uprights. A Chain is no Stronger than its Weakest Link Russian Molasses Candy. A GREAT SCHEME. JOHN BALL ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO A As Ahp The Frost upright wires are large and strong. The w / L ** Frost Lock holds them 6 â€" NPW in place and each support o. 20 APt YuWZS its own share of the weight, Light tie wires ’Loek give no support. Bending to tie ‘ weakens them and they are apt to break when the strain is severe. "ld.o Frost Fence never breaks. . arily a yellow cocoon, when fed upon leaves colored red, brings forth a deep orauge. The original yellow, it ie said, is due to the pigment in the leaves of the mulberry.â€"Philadelphia Record. Many peopie have the impression that they can grow large pumpkins from the seed of @mail pumpkins, good wheat from the seed of poor wheat, large potatoes by planting small potatoes. This is a grave misâ€" take. You cannot grow the best vegâ€" elables or flowers from the seed of poor vegetables and flowers. The best fertilized soil, the most~careâ€" ful attention, the most {favorable season will not make up for the lack of substance and breeding in the seed planted, The best planters beâ€" stow greatest attention in the purâ€" chase of their seed, and will buy only from reliable growers and dealâ€" ers. The hbest is none too good, beâ€" cause an unprofitable season is a season gone {orever, nor can the misâ€" take be rectified when the season is half gone. Moreover, the vost of good seed is a mere bagatelle in the total cost of production, and yet good seed nsually costs just a trifle more, than poor seed. Painful â€" Disclosures of a â€" Prison seandal â€"Is it Murder? A painful «tory, throwing a ldurid light on the methods of Russian 0‘ licvialism, is reliated by the Moscow cornaspondent of _ the â€" Standard. Nearly a year ago a young Rouâ€" manian girl was traveiling in the Unucasus, when _ a _ feltowâ€"railway passeager, one Pusepp, made _ adâ€" vances, which the girl ropuised. On arrivai at the next station the man, who turned out to he a locai magieâ€" trate, charged her with the theft [ his dress sword and umbrelia. Puâ€" repp, in his official capacity, held the preliminary inquiry, and a few days later the girl died suddeniy. The police doctor pronounced it a camse oi suicide and she was buried But the browbeaten muzhiks of the neighborhood, and a large body of workmen on the rmiiway, convinced that the girl had «u‘fered violence, attempted to lynch i‘=sepp and other ofliciaus, and troop< er> summoned to preserve order. whe matter creaâ€" ted such a stir in 8t. Potrsburg that the Minister of Justice sent down a «pecial commissioner, who brought back a whiteâ€"washing reâ€" port. The Rennies‘ Seed business of Toâ€" ronto, their reputation, their «ue cess «depends upon the most thorough system of selecting. No trouble is too heavy, no expense too great to seâ€" cure the best. Everything is done with Canadian thoroughness. fectively as St. Jacobs Oll. . Every family should have a bottle handy by them in the house. it ncts like magic, it always conquers pain. Bridge Burned MWith Elecizicity. A novel method of destroying & wooden bridge has recently beep tried with complete «uccess. Weightâ€" «@1 wires are placed across certaing beams and heated hby means of elecâ€" tricity the wires burn their way through the wood, aided by the weights, and the bridge falls. Now matters have taken a senâ€" sational turn., Prinee Michael Anâ€" dronicof! has made a personal inâ€" quiry on the spot, and is convinced that the girl was done to death by vicience. HMe states tifat her body was a mass [ bruises, and adds that there is reason to believe that carâ€" bolic acid was ponred into her mouth after death 10 give eolor to the police story of suicide. The Prinece also con{irms the alle= gations that the girl was, after her arrest, handed over to minor offiâ€" ecials ana Cossacks, and he has no doubt the poor victim was passed from hand to hand by "dozens of mongters." ~ Moreover, he alleges that the workmeon who attempted to defend the girl were dismissed from their employ on the railway,. and underwent terms of punishment. Bt. Jacobs Oll is a physician‘s formula, estabiished fifty years; the pain soothing virtues are so evenly balanced as to mect all cases where pain cexists, and where an outwurd application is generally applied. St. Jucobs Oil is truly worth its weight in gold, even for the cure of nerve pains (and protty w« all bodily In view of these aliegations the Minister 0 Justice has promiged to reopen the investigation. WORTH ITs WEIGHT IN GOLb SELECTING RENNIHE‘S SEED Write for Catalogue. RUSSIAN BRUTALITY. No one should expect a fence to hold up of itself between the posts.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy