West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Sep 1903, p. 2

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t I it The girl who marrles a man thinking hbe is wax in her hands, to be mou‘ded according to her desires, :'akes the biggest mistakes of her o. When a man has been fond of cards and the races and his club in his bachelior day marriage isn‘t going to make him forget them. He may like all these things and be the best kind of a husband. What a girl rmust realize is that she has married an «Jndividual. He may have some bad habits that he wantel to get rid of anyway. &he may amuse him while he does it. But the minute she attempts to she has n He may he wanote &he may a But the carry her she makes goes on w She may cause him to replacs bad habits with go««l ones, but never did any woman change the real charâ€" acter of a man. He was what she fancies sh> has mad> him from the vyery beginning. If( ho gives up bhurtful habits it is because ho meant io. anyhow. If she would only stop to think a minute she woulda‘t want that kind of a husband. As a matter of fact, no man ever change i his character because of his wolfe or any othor woman. ‘The only influence a woman has over a man is in the matter of habits. The very first time he doesn‘t walk her chalk line she comes at him with those promises. By that time he has forgotten that he ever made them, and there is a row. If he‘s an angel kind of a man he *Goesn‘t talk back. But he thinks a lot, He never expocted those engag»â€" ment assortions to turn up in real fife. He thinks sho is foolish, and the rift widens. carry her point by tears and sobs she makes an awin! mistake. If she goes on with the toirs there won‘t The girl, unless she is a widow, always swallows the whole story. More than that, sevenâ€"eighths of her Llays it up against him. Belfore h> is married he will swear a dozen times a teteâ€"aâ€"tote that she has made a changed man of him. No matter whoether he is & saint or a sinner, h> will swear it Jjust the same. He likes to think he is wicked just so h> can tell her how she has changed his life. woman can a man. t But he gets over it quicker. ‘Then he wasts a good companionâ€" a sort of awfully feminine other man that be can talk to about all bis tribulations, as well as all the pleasant things that happen to him. 0. course he made her all kinds of promisce while they were engaged. Every man doos that. And overy woman accepts those promisow as if they were the only promiscs he had ever made or any othor man had ever made. As a matter of fact, a man idoalâ€" Izeos a woman &A lot more than a can be. Perhads I‘d better write it, "was In love." If the truth were known I‘ve no doubt he thinks jJust a shade less of her because she objectâ€" e to that night at the theatre with is mea friends. Ho says to himâ€" Sell all the time, "She shoul1 know me better. She is ungenerous." Nothâ€" Ing lhmurts a man like finding out that the being he worshins is not ‘quite so bigâ€"haarted as himseli after all. "You never id while we were enâ€" gag®!," sald she. "T‘ll own I was a fool thâ€"n," eaid he. "You saslid you never would if you bad ms," she went on, tearfually. "You want to make a ninny of me," s#ald he. Ane so thoy let the talk fly back and forth in a mannor that was abâ€" surd and disgusting. _ That quarrol moans a break in their two lives. No quarrel was ever yet so well made up as to be entirely headed over. Things are never the same after it. Toars ar> the worst kind of a nagâ€" glog a woman can give a man. _ The toars: ho thoght were charming in his awsetihieirt he feels ke swearing at in his wi‘o. Tae reason for it is alm"1~. HMe thinks his wile ought to take Lis good qaali iss for granted. That bizz so, he wonders what on earth #h~ can find to cry about. The young man of whom I write is & thoroughly fins fellow. . He is as muc! in jove with his wife as a man "You know will enough I spent the evenings with the fellows before we were marrled," said he. This sounds as if she were accusâ€" Ing him of some sort of a crime. All he did was to spend the evenâ€" Ing downr town with some of his old friewxisâ€"onre or two from out of town. They met him and said : "Let‘s go to the theatre." He telephoned his love to his wife and told her he wouldn‘t be home that evening. It was the first evening he had spent away from ber since they were married. When be came home he found her sobâ€" bing aad sitting up very straight in & stif{â€"backed parlor chair. Tier eyes and nose were red. When he asked what was the matâ€" ter she said he ought to kaow,. It was half an hour before he got it out of her that she was sure he didn‘t care for her any more or he would fhare come home. When he understood he laughed heartily. The idea was so preposâ€" terous that he founad it funny. At that she sobbed so he was afraid the whole household would be a&roused, He got cross, as was perfectly natural, aad they bnd' their first row,. «e >‘ o o o i S a S# E 6 E C 6 6 _ P 21. V EL P x mmmmmm (Chicago Chronicle.) be any happiness for either one of the The silly Jlittie woman‘s tears t tss made me resolve to putr her in a I know men whose iives have been story. She has been married about | one long martyrdom to this sort of a year. That is why she cried. Afâ€"| treatment. Some of their wives ter she had been married a little| B2Ye been my best friends. fouger, . she: wit ervr much 1955 in woman in maitid ie is that m + wom From _ the cireumstances of the| man won‘t usually leave home and l':a'o I should say that will be raâ€" " go to a mamma, and a woman will. g;.ahlo:;lgdlfi;ne.""’ nBrestonktbie] He suffleris l: lflen‘eeâ€"a bea,prof gnf-‘ lUittle woman. Nothing I could say l ‘e(?;:.lgs!t I?ear en;arg:dk;tlr?i c;::-'él to her made the least difference, i take your sweethearts at all their Bhe kept on crying. The more l‘wordle‘ d talked the more she cried. Finally » I told her 1 didn‘t blame her husâ€" ! ta"lrkr;e’ d?,g:t k;:ow whatththeyd af;e band one bit for what he had ng Aboulâ€"honestly, they don‘t. dore, Sudawent homg ' If they don‘t care about their clubs | A.' & ‘matter of fact, he hadn‘t| DOW and like to spend the evening done anything. She only thinks he | With you let them do it. has and won‘t believe him when he! But don‘t imagine that will last say she hasn‘t. | after you‘re married. A Silly Woman‘s Tears > the real charâ€" was what sho him from the ho gives up RARERETrAnTir:â€"armopnonnaninetatzs ismm cce "Death of Bonaparte. We announce the death of Bonaparte. The official announcement was received this morning at the Admiralty. His death took place on June 5th. His health had been declining for a long time, and the cause of death was & canâ€" cer in the stomach. He was born in 1769. The cost of his maintenance at Saint Helena was each year beâ€" tween two and three hundred thouâ€" gBand pounds." ; ; | a% After figs have been collected they are dippad in boiling brine and then dried on trays for from two to four days, according to the weather. The dipping is supposed to bring the sugar to the surface and hasten the drying. After being dricd the figs are placed In "sweat toxes," holding 2,000 pounds each, where they remain for }wu v‘\"P('ks‘. Then they are washed I paotrictatin it ds i: Buith id i h s ic is 4 oc In cold sait water to removre all dirt, and are prkod by women and girls in halfâ€"pouad, oneâ€"pound and tenâ€"pound boxes, in â€" layers, being ;phrt primarily with a shortâ€"bladed nife. ~. Whan the great Napoleon died there were doubtless among the readers of the London Globe, many persons who would have liked to read a full account of his life, but, if so, they were disappointed, for the Globe, in its issue of July 4th, 1821, contained only the following brief notice : And here is a nice point in combiâ€" nation. Not far away from the canâ€" ning works, on Newtown Creek, is an ol refinery. Tiis oil runs to the canâ€" ning works, and, as the newâ€"made cans come down by a chute from the works above, where they have just been finighed, they are filled, 12 at a time, with the oil made a few miles away. The cans are placed at once in wooden boxoes standing ready, and, after a 24â€"hour wait for discovering leaks, are nalled up and carried to a nearby door. This door opens on the river, and there at anchor by the side of the factory is a vegsel chartered for South Amâ€" erica or China or where notâ€"waitâ€" ing to receive the cans which a little more than 24 hours before were tin sheets lying in flat boxes. It is a marvelouw example of economy, not only in materials but in time and footsteps.â€"Ida M. Tarboll in Moâ€" Clure‘s. | lon can." The machinery for making the can has been go developed that while, in 1865, when Mr. Miller beâ€" gan his work, one man and a boy soklered 850 cans in a day, in 1880 three men made 8,000, and since 1893 three men have made 24,000. It is an actual fact that a tin can is made by Miller in just the same time it takes to walk from the point in the {actory where the sheets of tin are unloaded to the point where the finâ€" iwhed article ig filled with oil. No man, no woman can truly love without it. All the little quarrols that grow Into big ones comes from lack of it. | That mearns that a woman doesn‘t love her husband as a‘ wile shouald ' «ubless she has faith in him. |_ And by the same standard the busâ€" , band may be judged. The fiveâ€"gallon can turned out at the Devoe is a marvel of evolution. Tho present metho«lg of manufacture aro aimost entirely the work of Mr. Herbert Miller, known in Standard clreles as the "father of the fiveâ€"galâ€" Shown in the Canning Works of the Standard Oil Company. NowThere Coos the prlitcy of economy which Mr. Rockefeiler has worked out show better than in one of the Standard canning works. Several months ago the writer vigited the largoast o the Standard can factorics, the Devoe, on tive East River, Long Lsland City. It has a capacity of 70,â€" 000 fiveâ€"gallon cans a day, and is probably the largest can factory in the world. I write thi« story because of the gilly little womam I mertioned at first, _ Also because anrotber silly woâ€" man wroto me four pages of the «lirmdfnl things her husband is doâ€" ng. Bo far as I can se he‘s a very nles sort a man. I should say his life is far fron: happy. Next to a bigâ€"minded woman‘s faith in God is faith in her husband. It is the same with a husband. If there is faith, how can there be doubts 2 ' If they don‘t care about their clubs now and like to spend the evening | with you let them do it. | But don‘t imagine that will last aiter you‘re married. | ‘The husband of the sweetest girl among you all will grow tired if you try to smother his evistence. _ Lcet him be the man be bhas always beenâ€"a nice man, or you woaldn‘t love him. We all know that. _ It‘s enough. ___And don‘t you think you are to give up all your old associates just beâ€" cause you‘re married. The husband and bwlre who â€" have complete faith in each other will be happy if they‘re as poor as church mico or as rich as Croosus. all I‘ve writtern means only one thing. It is so beautiful that I must menâ€" tlg_n it. alth, that is what all I‘ve spent a column‘s scriboling in time to tell. If he is the right kind of a man he doesn‘t want you to. ROCKEFELLER‘S ECONONY. The difference between a man and a woman in married life is that a man won‘t usually leave home and go to a mamma, and a woman will. He suffers in silenceâ€"a heap of gufâ€" {ering it is, tooâ€"o‘er a lot of cares. I know men whose lives have been mgedmma rIym,. one long martyrdom to this sort of tmz treatment. Some of their wives have been my best friends. i W.E. Ellis got so He Could not Walk 'Whon_} rome to think it all over, How They Pack Them. Obituary of Napoleon. Jean Cowglll. ber of the company, and he was guarantee for one‘s â€" safety.â€"The King. * would be. The very word "toast" shows that neither wine nor water is the exact liquid essential to the ceremony, but punch. Though now long disused as an ingredient, toasted biscuit used to be an invariable addition to the punchâ€"bowl. By a simple connection the person pledged, and afterwards the mact of pledging came to be known as a toast. This other word "pledge," too, recalls the very orâ€" Igin of healthâ€"drinking. In the old days, when people were {requently murdered while they were drinking, one was ‘obllged to hail some memâ€" "Whoever finds this letter, telling ol our misfortunes, is requested to the Admiralty. Manner." all like lunatics. Our vessel _ was wrecked on November 1st, 1702, and and she went to the bottom so quickâ€" ly that we had only time to put a very small quantity of water and lood on the raft. The captain‘s wife cooked her little dog and after eatâ€" it became insane and committed sulâ€" A bottle, which was hef@etically gealed, was recently found {floating on the ‘water near the Island of Carpathos. When it was opened the following remarkable letter was disâ€" covered in it ; . "29, 11, 1702. "Latitude 49, Eastern longitude 524. "His Majesty‘s vessel Clown. "May God help us. We are on a raft in the middle of the ocean and have neither water nor food. We have alâ€" ready eaten one man ,and after a bitter quarrel we have now decided to draw lots in order to decide which ol us is to be eaten next. We are timonials in the daily press and ask your neighâ€" bors what they think of it, You can uso it and got Jour money back if not cured. 60c a box, at all dealers or Epxmaxson, BaTEs & Co., Toronto, Dr.Chase‘s Ointment it To prove to you,that Pr. Chase‘s Ointment is a certain and absolute cure for each 6 and every form of itching, #2 bleedingand protruding piles, the manufacturers have guaranteed it. See tesâ€" ‘A tax on marrlagoe is still imposed by the proprietor of a leading Bomâ€" bay hotel. In a revised tariff of prices the daily charge for a single lady or gentleman is set down as five rupees, but if the lady or gentleâ€" man be married the charge will be seven rupees each. No explanation of this singular regulation is given. | RELIEVED IN 30 MINUTES. ’Dr. Agnew‘s Heart Cure is the ‘ Mystic Remedy. This remarkable preparation gives perfect relief in 30 minutes in all cases ol organic or sympathetic heart disease and speedily eifects a cure. It is a magic remedy for palpitaâ€" tion, shortness of breath, smotherâ€" ing epells, pain in ieft side and all symptoms of a diseased heart. It also strengthens the nerves and cures stomach disorders. Dr Agnew‘s Liver Pills are the best. 40 doses 10¢, 2 Ab, There!} _ Philadelphia Ledger. Mr. Braggâ€"She‘s just crazy â€"to arry me. Miss ‘:l‘weetlyâ€"Naturally; any girl maslA Heart Disease Dood‘s Kidney Pills cure Rheumaâ€" tism by removing the causeâ€"by putâ€" ting the Kidncys in shape to take the urlc acid out of the blood. They alâ€" ways cure Lumbago and Sciatica in the same way. 4 id "I got so biid I cou‘ld not {feed myâ€" ecll or walk alone. Then I was incucâ€" e to try Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. I took elx boxes o( them, which drove all the Rheumatism out of me and leit me ln__good health again." "At last my wife would send for a doctor. When he arrived I eaid, ‘Docâ€" tor, can you cure Muscular Rheumaâ€" ilism ‘? ‘No,‘ siid the doctor. ‘Taea,‘ I sail, ‘you are o0‘ no use to me.‘ "Two years ago" says Mr. Ellis, "I got Muscular Rheumatism. I tried all sorts of medicinas, but none of them did m>s any good. t / _ _ Alone or Feed Himselfâ€"He Tells of _ His Cure. Cedar Dale, Ont., Sept. 7.â€"(Special.) â€"Every day seems to furnish fresh prools that Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are the one sure and permanent cure for Rheumatism.; This village f{furnishes evidence that no one can doubt in the person oi W. E. Ellis. His story si baâ€"t person of W. E. kllis. His story is b:aet given in his own words. That Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are the One Sure Cure for Rheumatism. EVIDENCE THAT NONE CAN DOUBI. And never bite at all. Chicago Chronicle. There was a little dog That looked for all the world Like a doggie in a fog! His hair was like a cloud bank, Ris eyes were very pink, And he used to growl at everyâ€" thing And at himsel{f, I think! He used to bark at little boys, Until with fright they‘d fall! **Toast *‘ and " Pledge." And then he‘d laugh to kill himâ€" The Laughing Dog. Lost for a Cent:rf Tax Extraordinary. ONTARIO TORONTO TD ces m me e net over the window will absolutely keep the flies out, although the meshes of the net may be an inch apart.â€"From ‘the Lancet, : sant accessories in the household. Yet it is a matter not only of comâ€" {ort, but also of health that the fly should be excluded. The {ly may eagâ€" lly be a pathogenic agent owing to the Jact of its choice of environment being oftentimes of the most disâ€" gusting character. When a Ily walke across a su"table culture medium it leaves infection behind it, as shown in the colonies of organisms, which develop on the points with which the ingsect‘s legs have been in contact. The {ly, therefore, should be driven out of our haunts. It is a curious fact that files will not pagse through netting even though the meshes be quite large unless there be a source ol light, as from a window, behind it. Thus in rooms with windows only on one side m net over the window will ahenlntials is very dilficult to keep habitable places free from flies. Poisonous flyâ€" papers are unsightly, and glutinous cords and traps are not very plea. ‘The presence of flies in the house is a refroach It is a {alling away from a high hyglenic standard, Tor the {ly is a pestilential fellow. It must be a*%mitted, however, that it I was Cured of Acute Bronchitis by MINARDS LINIMENT. Lt.â€"Col, C. CREWE READ, K9ee sccamas I was Cured of Acute Rhoumatism by MINARDS L1NIMENT. I was Cured of Rheumatic Gout by MINARDS LINIMENT. e eaoy 4 ANDREW KING. Derroit Times. " When Mr. Casey died he left all he had to the orphan asylum." ‘"Indeed! ‘That was nice of him. What did he leave ?" : How to Eat Mushrooms. An English lady in Japan bought a can of mushrooms and found the direotions translated into English as follows : Directionâ€"If geveral perâ€" eons will be eat this in that manner they shall feel eatisfied nutrition and very sweet or it can put in the hot watar for the half hour and then take off the !id. They shall be proper to eat. It can be eupply without putridity for several years. PAINKILLERâ€"Its effects are almost instanâ€" taneous. Cures ents, burns and bruises. Taken internally, cramps, diarrhea and dysenter{. Avoid substitutes. ‘There is but one " Painkillerâ€"Perry Davis‘. _A correspondent dewcribes a "litâ€" ' chen shower‘" given the other day at a wedding near Glaegow. Every guest was requested to bring a gift for tho kitchen of the future home, and, as there was about fifty guests, the shower represented a nice collection of useful presents. The harpy couple were brought blindfolded into the center of the room, where they stood whilo their visitors hung their offerâ€" Ings on their arms, nock, walst, etc., by means of string. The bridegroom had a bucket put right on his head, with a huge teaâ€"tray on the top of that. A coal scuttle, poker, and sevâ€" cral brooms were suspended from his shoulders. A mouseâ€"trap gave rise to loud merriment, afso a saucepa nful of rice. They had a fish kettle and all sorts of saucepans and stewâ€" pans. clothes Gaskets, cordâ€"pegs, "dolly," pattyâ€"pans, moulds, graters, a very nice woodenâ€"tub, for bread etc.â€"British Weekly. Eussex. I was Markham, Ont. Halifax, " His twelve children." GOOD THING FOR SPRAINS AND A LAMENESS. Woodlands, N. B., June 16, 1903. Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., * Enosburg Falls, Vt. I have used your Kendall‘s Spavin Cure on my horses and I find it a good thing for all sprains and lameâ€" ness, and it is a fine family liniment. Will you kindly send me one of your books, "A Treatise on the Horse and his Diseases"? Very truly yours, Minard‘s Liniment cures Dandruff, "Indeed," exclaimed the magisâ€" trate, raising hig eyebrows in afâ€" fected _ astonisghment. "Hare you not even that excuso? Then you will go to prison for six months." Casgsoll‘s Journal. "Nothing, Your Honor," was the reply. ‘"Were you drunk?"" pursued the Jjustice. "No, Your Honor; I was hever drunk in my life." __"We‘l, sir," he said, addressing one of the prisoners, "have you anyâ€" thirg to say in extenuation of your offence ?" 4 The prisoner hung his head and replied meekly : "Your worship, I was drunk when I did it." "Drunk," exclaimed the magisâ€" trate; "that makes the offence all the worse. You will go to prison Ior three months. And you, sir," he continued, addressing â€" the other prisoner, "what have you to say for yourself ?" two young men before him on & charge of theft. They pleaded guilty and as this obviated the necessity for evidence being given the magisâ€" trate was somewhat in the dark as to their â€"culpability. â€"____ _ _ _ _ Igtorication Cannot be Urged by Offenders to Escape Punishment. Being under the influence of drink is usgually considered no excuse for having committed a crime, but it would seem that one magistrate is inclined to be an exception to his brothere on the bench in this direcâ€" tion. Recently a Jjustice of the peace had NO PALLIATION FOR CRIME. A Scotch "Kitchen Shower." Flies That Pester. Gave All He Had. "Melchoir Jones. C. 8, BILLING tek :# To Save Time. Neward News, "My Cut this card out, past» it on % | Infatu: board, and hand it to peorle you "My know when you return from your vaâ€" brushir cation. Yes, I‘m back. I:g:..' YoRm I had a good time. ca Yom, I caught a lot of fish. $ Yes ,the mosquitoes are bad down Mina there, algia. Yes, I enjoyed the bathing. Yes, the beds were hard ‘as ever. Yes, we had to fight for our meale. Yot, I gained ten pounds. Yes, I feel much improved. "You Yos, I got badly sunburned. * to pas Yes, I‘m proad of it. "No; Yes, I‘m glad to be back at work | French again, "How Thank you, thank you, thank you. "W hy gs Nidatiia, 3h:(Â¥ it turech i 1 ETY lion. To the hunter he is a cowâ€" aroly, skulking brute, far more danâ€" gerous to the horses and oxen at night than to the human part of the expedition, always ready to slink off and escape a fight if given a chance, There is nothing kingly about him, and a single man can usually put half a dozen lions to flight. Lever‘s Yâ€"Z (Wise Head) Disinfectan* Socp Powder dusted in the bath, softens the water and disinfects. ab Men who have shot nearly all of the dark continent‘s animals have, as a rule, nothing but contempt for the soâ€"called "king of beasts," the At the review before the King of Italy recently, the pet donkey ol the ship Bacchante, marched in iront of the men. A donkey is rather a bulky sort of a pat, but probably no more troublesome than the pet deer of the English warship Terrible. The priâ€" vilege of keeping pets is very much appreciated by the bluejackets ol all navies, who lavish their spare time and some of their spare cash on strange animals. The Centurion once hbad a tame monkey that used to eat with a spoon from a plate and drink from a glass, with a dinner napkin tucked under his chin the while. The Caesar had a pet goose Tor some time back. Cats and dogs Minard‘s Liniment for sale everyâ€" where. 4 _ Prisonerâ€"(term expired)â€"Well, no. I didn‘t commit a b‘g enough crime to wiake me prominent. Minard‘s Liniment curres Burns, etc. Shortâ€"sighted. Detroit Free Press. Wardenâ€"Well, I suppose you are glad to get out of jail, _ . iss lnd.lsfmto,ble: that the honey bee has it in its {ullness and perfection cannot, after the careful experiâ€" ments of Aibrecht Bethe, in Germany, be doubted. Examples of insects that possers | an Xâ€"ray wense, not only u.mong' continental, but our own hymenopâ€" tera, can be multiplied indelinltely.l Only one or two of these senses peâ€" cullar to the. lower animals are hbere noticed. Lord Avebury suggests that there may be fifty of them." J1qp Nes EATERRE CPNRETT ET ENPW deniably affirmative evidence 1s, bowever, now being offered on this point thiat there can be no longer any substantial reamon for doubtâ€" ing that the five senses maAn imâ€" perfectly exercises are by no means all that are possible to sentient creatures. One such sense not possessad by human beings, but to a greater or less degree almost universally preâ€" sent in mammale, birds, reptiles, fish and insects, is what, perhaps, may be called the mense of localization. It enables its possessor, apparently by ite sole use, to find a desired spot. It is evidently closely connectâ€" ed with an instinctive and perfect memory of distance and direction. That the homing Elgeon exercises it to some extent, though undoubtedly alded by the landmarks it recognizes, CSUVPERIO P than ours. So much new are superior to other Kidney remedies. One reason is that Gin Pills are antiseptic in their action, cleansing, healing, purifying from the start, thereby effecting a speedier and more certain cure. The effect is immediate. All Druggists, gects. per box, 6 boxes for $2 50 or direct from A Gin Pill Reason The Lion is Cowardly. THE BoLE orug co., course, common on shipboard â€" Gin Pills y people are veritable human interrogation They invariably want to know why ? Bhip Mascots. = y‘ 10 0 TCJ " Bm uyy tm t & P‘td""lflmehu‘ulon _ on e@ctTino copry‘s â€"aâ€" it iesd d c h i T t 300000 1 os WINNIPECG, Man o P Chicago Post. "You don‘t turn your horses out to lsn-turo 7" "No; I give them their grass the & ! French way." "How is that ? . _ _ "Why, in the barnâ€"a la mowed." Minard‘s Liniment relieves Neurâ€" algia. j Two Years Abed.â€"* For cight | years I suffered as no one ever did \with rheumatism. for two years I llay in bed ; could not so much as feed mysell. _A friend recommend»d ISoutll American Rheumatic Cure. Afâ€" ter three doses I could sit up. ‘Toâ€" Idny I am as strong as ever I was,"* â€"Mirse. John Cook, 287 Clinton street, ( Toronto.â€"2 But alil the same there will be "no cards" at the wedding. "My queen!" jondly exclaimed the Infatuated youth. "My Jack!" softly responded the blushing maiden. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and birmishes from horges ; blood spavin, curbs, spliuts, ringbone, sweeney, stifies, sprains, sore and swolien throat. cougse«, etc. SBave 850 by use of one bottre. Warranted the most wonGerfur blemish cure evetr " Where does the dark go when daylight comes?" queried the little information seeker. ‘" Well, what is it, dea her mother. Cincinnati Enquirer. " Mamma," said small Floramay, "I‘ve got a question that needs an answer." Allkk OTHERS E. B. EDDY‘S j NEW INDURATED FIBRE WARE Not Musically Educated. Washington Star. "You never applaud at a concert," "No," answered Mr. Cumrox. "If I enjoy a plece well enough to applaud it I know by that fact that it isn‘t the sort of music that mother and the girls would approve of my ap plauding." or address Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., I have used your Kendalls Spavia Cure for 2o years and have found it an in/ai/ible remedy, Please mail â€"‘x?ur book at once as I have a coit I am now having trouble with, Yours truly, L. L. JA+â€"VIS, Dayton, Texas, As a liniment for family use it has no eq=a‘, Price $1 : six for 85. Ask yo\vrwa for KENDALL‘S SPAYVIN CURE ; also " A Treatise on the Horse." the hook free, i Toronto, Ont. o $000 0000499949099 448088 80484 § M “[adles’ College, TUBS, PAILS, ETO 0490000090000 900099000 08984 Another One for Mamma Domestic will be given especial attenâ€" tion at ‘this residential and day echool. The work may be takea in connection with regular _ collegiate studies. Term opens September 9. Send for calendar of On the French Plan. Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., Enosburg Falis, Vt,. Science YOUR MONEY BACK IF €IN PILLS DO wOT CURL Answers. r?" morday & INTERNATIONAL LES SEPTEMBEN 23 sons. Luquirc ol Abiaiznar, | Davic during that docisiv, via wished gr\:. He saw ng .oul wials him. As he « in tue Jand must return as the north 4: by tue i Commentary .â€" king as Hobron ( â€"Ailor tne deas the territos most natuor had a long t Xxii. 5), i« [ollowing, a Lection agai cool head and a s experience. 8. A Thitherâ€"We are journey as a ma rather, the migr: pany 0f guerilia householqa effocls and Children in t made up 0i bron: hardship, among fame were secus rather than by & to modern milita 3, 4. His menâ€"‘* oi his chosen ba hold. There was ing in exile, but « tle down to the ful and quiet lif The smail town Hebron. Men of . Judah, the offici the tribe. Anoin privately _ anoin which he had to the kingdom : ointing he had kingdom. The 0 kingdom, were, the Tfamily of & the family of Sav 5. David s#sent was David‘s Tirst : was worthy ol hi formed of the ma Philistines had «© bodies of Raul and battle. He had al the inbhabitants« of sont forth a pari) taken the bodies | carried them + town ahd buried â€"*"David respoct leritimate soyer athan a«& his Saul bad great! that did not e him as the ano the King of Lsra 8, 7. Will re you this kindn« tention and how ings I give you gengere.â€"Torry . good courage : yourselres bray And therefore y unless ye ack rmy us Jucalâ€" house of Iuda I1, 1Jshâ€"Bosh« (Â¥s. ®Râ€"10). ®. Ishâ€"Boshe only euryiving tool it the h: was a great bogheth, who § A prominent cle Mrs. Danforth, of Mich., tells how si of falling of the w accompanying pain "Life looks Gark 1 woman feels that her ® ping away and she hi ever being restored. #eeling a few ronth was advised that my p eaused by projapsus or| womb. The words & knell to me, I felt that 1 but Lrdia 3. Pink table Compound c elixir of life; it r:j forces and built me up health â€"returs« d l»pJ months I too« the m each doso added healt obtained FporzxcE Bt. Joseph wbove ietter J The record of 1.3 ham‘s Vegetable (3} not be equalled 1 medicine in the wol Women w old % much sickness_ if write to Nirs. Pin Mass.. for advice C distressing sympto * EREE MEDICAL AD David Becomes Kir nerk 1 most )t I W a ® uda al a% yXX Iny m LA m n C 1t ie h.

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