West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Dec 1903, p. 7

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[ As you disembark, a shabby old man hobbles forward and holds your gondola steady with the hook at the end of his stick, for which grateful but unnecassary service you pay one cent. The man‘s hook, called a ganzo, mssy be worth exâ€" amining. . These old fellows spend much of their time in ornamenting their hooked sticks with stray bits of copper and brass, and small coins fastened on with copper â€" tacks. Here and thore you may possibly find an osela imbedded in some old fellow‘s: ganzoâ€"this is a small silâ€" ver coin with an interesting hisâ€" tory. As long ago as 1275 the doge of Venice wias required once a year to send five wild ducks, fat and lean, turn about, to every nobileman in the city. The custom grew tireâ€" some after a while, and in 1521 the doge was allowed to have a silâ€" ver coin, struck with a bird upon It. called osela, which was sent to. the nobles instead of the ducks. In timeâ€"these coins began to be regâ€" vularly circulated _ as Venetian woney, and so continued till 1796. They are now very rare, and among curiosity col\lectors command _ a good price. Sometimes as old ganâ€" zlero will sell you his hook, and if among the peepâ€"show of ornnmentl on the atlc:k you find an osela, you Havre a panion. "Stali!" is the gondolier‘s musiâ€" cal warning cryâ€"*To the right !" "Preme!‘"â€""To the left P of two gondolas come into collision, the cries are less musical, but more ‘picturesque. "Blood of Diana ! Why ‘dldn‘t you call "Stali‘? shrieks the gondolier whose craft has â€" been ‘bumped. "I did, figure of a pig !" "You didn‘t!" "What sort of â€" ass ears wag on your head that you can‘t hear a fellow. call?" "What sort of a croak was it came out of your ginâ€"soaked throat ? Body of Bacchus !" "Your wormâ€"eaten hulk couldn‘t stand _ another scratch, o# ?" Thus the tongue lashing goes Webus Nq en P enc e o 2 L oSg â€" on long after tflgu\â€"vin(-fi;;";fathe canal has hidden the disputants from each _pthe}"u angry gaze. A QUICK, SURE Ligkt by using any one of Our Partor Brandsâ€" "LITTLE CoMET" Quiet on the soft cu the black drapery, you sliding gently _ and over the green water i funeral procession. The general blackness dates from the 16th century, when the repubâ€" lic ol Venice iszsased an order that all gondolas, save those of loreign embassadors, should be Dlack â€"this as a check upon the great extravaâ€" gance in 4ecoration which had beâ€" come the fashion. With wood work heavily gilded _ and carved, ornaâ€" ments of sgllver and gold, pale blue and roseâ€"colored silk curtains and cushions _ richly embroidered, â€" the gondolas of that time must have been beautiful indeed. "KING EDWaRD® "WEADLIGNT®" ALWAYS SEE THAT THE A good gondola has three characâ€" teristice , it draws little water, turns readily, and obeys the poling of one gondolier. At the prow is the gracelul lerro with its aix teeth, â€" standing «bigh as the roof of the cabin, and serving as guide to the goldolier in ‘passing under a low bridge, as a cat‘s whiskers are said to glive her warning of a tight squeeze of her ‘body in an unfamillar hole. A good steel lerro costs $20 ; it requ.res [reâ€" quent and thorough polishing, twice ‘a day, at least, in damp weather, and a good gondolier may be known by the gleam on his ferro. | Astern is the branched prop for the scullingâ€"pole, by which the gondolier wends nis boat‘s black nose prying into every corner of the water city. The snug little cabin, called the feize, holding two or four passengers, is covered with black eloth, tufted and fringed with black, and is provided generously with soft, black leather cushionsâ€"all very hearseâ€"like in ap pearance, save lor the brass seaâ€" borses and dolphins sporting among the straps and tasseis. It is carpeted and curtained, and usually the picâ€" ture of a eaint haugs above the cushâ€" ions. Thp felze, with all its belongâ€" Ings, costs $100; and the gondoia complete in all its equ‘ipments has a valne of about $250. « year old, the unpainted state being & proof of newness, as well as disâ€" closing any knots or other imperfecâ€" tions. After the defects are covered with paint the boat loses in value. A gondola is usually 36 feet long. Only a email portion of the flat botâ€" tom rests in the water ; prow and stern slope sharply upward, and the craft turnse as eas.iy as if on a pivot. Bo fully under control is it that there are only two places in all the intriâ€" cate meanderings of the Venctian canals where goudoias cannot passâ€" one hbard by the Phoenix Theatre, n‘ngd the other negar the Palazzo Moceâ€" J oigo. in asuch wanderings it is amusing to come upon a squero, where goundolas are built and repaired. The water ap~ proach to one of these dockâ€"yards is by a long, mudâ€"plastered slope, at the top of which the black gondolas drawn up for repair look like zo many atranded whales. Here are floods of black paint and pots . of pitch and tallow, always boiling and bubbling. In former times the Venetian craft were made of walnut, beautifully carved by hand, but common pine is mostly used ®t present. The boards must be thin, wellâ€"seasoned, and as Iree from knots as possible. The regaâ€" lation coat of black paint is not apâ€" plied to a gonaoia until the boat is FOR SALE by e la ol o s es POeenie Eoo CCA prize, indeed.â€"Youth‘s Com urapery, you seem to be ently _ and comiortably green water in your own the soft cushions under 4BD% MATC"T:S YOU BUY BEAR THE NAME ETT 5on w o ant d t e o s ls really accomplished by the fricâ€" tion which the sand sets up. Then another workman with another steel wheel and plain water brings the cutting up to a #harpg@r edge. A third workman with a soft woodâ€" en tool takes:off the cloudiness causâ€" ed by the friction of the steel, a fourth polishes the glass, a fifth with a preparation of oxide of tin glres to it that iridescent lustre which makes us value cut glass so highly. J £ne process of glass cutting re guires great skill and care. _A de.â€" sign is first lightly copied on the glass and the cutters take it in hand. _A fine ‘stream of sand and water falls continuously on a repâ€" Idly revolving steel wheel. To this the glass is applied and the cutting Tus : yerman Khew : ho se remal on in l ie us OF. Punishing a Cranky Bride. Atchison, Kan., Globe. A wedding occurred last night that the Globe bas concluded not to menâ€" mention. A reporter was sent to the bride yesterday afternoon to inquire the particulars, but she acted like & crazy person. So we have con. cluded rot to make any reference to the wedding ; the bride may shoot the editor or set fire to the office. We neyer saw a woman act as she did. If she wants her wedding noâ€" tice ~printed let her get out a hlandbill. IM® man es ek ds ns Awches P "Proetty well. Come in and see me toâ€"morrow. I must run along now." "Oh, so sorry, Mr. Barnoy ! I‘m sure Honry and I have enjoyed your call." "I think ho might have let you finâ€" Ish your story," said Margaret, when Barney had gone. pon ue c Honry is silent for a few seconds, with a weak, concave expression on his faco. Margaret waits in smiling cxpectation, then says ; "Go on, dear." "Ahâ€"h, oh ! Wasn‘t it at the corner that wo met Timkins ? That is, it was at the corner that we met Timkinsâ€" andâ€"we met Timkins at the corner." As thore were no objections, Henry regains the courage of the declaraâ€" tive sentence. 6 "Timkins was carrying a big bag of thingsâ€"â€"" ‘"*Not a very big bag, Henry ; that is, not big for such a huge man as he is." & "To be eure, he is a large man, my coar. You are quite right. How, are you[f‘st ocks panning out, Barney ?* +4 TV O Pvemnt in en is AdestaCh Bast 4* . sls ‘"Why, Honry, I didn‘t buy many things. You know wo had just paid tho rent, and I didn‘t have my Monâ€" day shorping allowarne»~ at all. That‘s why I waited till Tuesday." "Woll, I had my pockets full of thin_gs that Margarct had bought "But it wasn‘t rery cold, Henry, at least not so colda s you said it would be," i "It was protty cold, anyhow. Wo had just pabssod Moran & Piper‘s atore." "It lsp‘t Moran & Pipor‘s any more, you know. It is Moran & Co. now." "Yos, of course, since the failure." "‘They didn‘t fail. Piper sold out. But go on with your story, dsar ; I know Mr. Barnoy wants to bhear it." coantâ€"â€" The readers of this paper will b:flonod to learn that thereis at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and thatis Catarrh. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh, being a conâ€" stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken inâ€" ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby desâ€" tro‘yin‘ the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in aol::g its work. The proprietors haveso much fai in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to eure. Send for list of testimonials, Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Bo!d b& all druggists. T5e. Take Hall‘s Family Pills for constipation. Makes a Heap of Difference. Philadelphia Preas, ‘"Rev. Mr. Smoothly doesn‘t preach ‘Tire and brimstone so much from his new pulpit as he did when he was your pastor." | "No, he‘s getting more ealary now " Curiositles of Cut Glass $100 REWARD, $100 RUPTURE CURE he‘s getting more salary now," ie ie DR W. S. RICE, ich th is ensurad EVERY time thase brands :: :: :: Our Suighur Brends "Telegraph" "Telaphona" Our Forefathers. Buffalo Express. Arguing on the subjct that man is descnded from the monkey, the Bosâ€" ton Globe cries out to know what the monkey was descended from, and thinks maybe plant life is the anâ€" awer. Well, then, what was plant life descended from? Might as well have this question of ancestry settled, , I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. Â¥â€".)~.__~«x~@ <_ â€" URBOâ€" RINGLEY, I was cured of Faclal Neura b MINARD‘S LINIMENT. lKh . I was cured of ‘Acute Bronchitis by MINARD‘S LINIMENT. 4 Philadelphia Ledger. Mr. Elderâ€"There is something I want to say to you, Bessieâ€"erâ€"that is, Miss Kuteley. Miss Kuteleyâ€"Call me Bessie i {you wish. Mr. Elderâ€"Ohb, may I% t Miss Kuteleyâ€"Of course; all old genâ€" tlemen call me Bessie. Albert Co., N. B. Margeâ€"No such thing; she hasn‘t come to that yet. She only goes out washinug. ; F Springhill, N. S. Not Quite as Bad As Reported. Boston Transcript. M:dgeâ€"They say your mother takes in washing ? Bay of Islands. Sick headache, indigestion, loss of viror, failing memory, nervousness are all infal ible signs of weakening nerves, and indicate that your nerves lack rich blood with which to build up their broken tissues. Dr. Agnew‘s Heart Cure heals and strengthens the heart and gives it the power to send rich blood coursing through the veins, when most diseases disappear as by magic. It relieves gwlart disease in 30 minutes and is a wonderâ€" ul cure. Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment cures plles in one to three days. 35¢. 17 UNLESS CIRCULATED. Health is assured by the new proâ€" cess of curing disease. RELIEF IN 30 MINUTES. Blood is Worthless But Think of the Teacher. Pennsylvania Prach Bowl, Surenuffâ€"Gosh. I wish I went to school in Russia. , R Satystiedâ€"lWhy? Shureenuf{â€"It must take all day to call the roll there. Shiloh‘s * Consumption Cure The Lung Tonic , "Why, Teddy," said little Mary, with a superior air; "don‘t you know ‘thiat yet! It‘s to glive the singers a rest, of course.‘" "Well, now," said Teddy, with a aw frowpn, "I‘d like to know what the sermon was for, anyhow."‘ have no use for wash boards. It cleanâ€" ses perfectly, You cannot afford to be without it. Order through your dealer. We will mail you a booklet on application. The DOSWELL MFG. CO., Limited HAMILTON, ONT. and a couple of five year old childrenâ€" the washing need not stand over. Five minutes to a tubful and you will weill c oauig: . L0 â€" I 1 Uses of the Sermon. _ _ Philadelphia Ledger, Teddy and Mary blad been taken to church for ‘the first time, and on the wiay, home they discussed whiat they had heard and seen. _ _At a practical test of selfâ€"binders held at Mooresburg, Cape Colony, South ‘Africa, on Nov. 5 last, under the ausplces of the Western Provicce Agricultural ~Society, "the Masseyâ€" Harris Binder was awarded the first prize â€"of £10. There were seven comâ€" petitorse, three Masseyâ€"Harris, three McCormick, and one Champion. The judges, in determining their awards, amongst other points, also took into consideration the length of the stubâ€" ble and the tightness and compactâ€". bess with which the sheavres were bound. . $ | About eix hundred agriculiturists, some of whom came from a considerâ€" able distance, witnessed the interestâ€" ipg competition, which was a comâ€" 178 CUOInpetition, which was a comâ€" plete victory for the Magseyâ€"Harris And So He Did Not New Century Ball Bearing Washing Machine A SOUTH AFRICAN TRIBUTE. The cure that is guaranteed by your druggist. La grippe, pneumonia and influ enza often leave a nasty cough when they‘re gone. It is a dangerous thing to neglect. Cure it with Prices 25c., 50c. and $1.00 S. C. WELLS & Co. Toroato, Can,. LeRoy, N.Y. 9 ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO J. M. CAMPBELL, WM. DANIELS, it. N. Y. Sun. Mrs. Knockerâ€"So your husband has no idea of the value of money ? Mrs. Bockerâ€"None whatever. He absolutely doesn‘t realize what a lovely ‘bonnet $50 will buy. ; j ‘"The annual expenses connected with the office amount to about £25,, 000, of which about £10,000 is the kum allowed by the Corporation, the remairder coming out of the Mayor‘s private purse.â€"St. James Gazette. . House is set apart for the Lord Mayor‘s residence for the year. The first stone of the Mansion House was laid in 17390, the house and the {urâ€" niture costing £70,985 13s. 24. Formerly the Mayors during their term of office used to reside in their own private houses which in past days were always in the city itself, and therefore within easy access of the Guildhall. Now the Mansion U any public fast is ordered by the sovereign, the Mayor and Corporaâ€" tion attend St. Paul‘s Cathedral in black nobes. The Lord Mayor has the badges of royalty attached to bis office in the sceptre, the swords of justice and mercy an dthe mace. The gold chain which he wears is one of the myest ancient honorary distinctions and can be traced to Eastern origin and manner of conferâ€" ring dignity, instances of which we find in the Old Tastament. on election he refuses the civic chair he has to pay a {ine of £1,000. No one is chosen who has any blot on bhis private character, and in case of bankruptcy or compounding with creditors an Alderman is passed over until he has paid twenty shillings in the pound to his creditors. The election of ‘Mayor is subject to the approval of the Crown, and He Doesn‘t Take the Dust of Any Man in England, Not Even the King. As matters now stand the Lord Mayor takes precedence not only of all peers pyt of the reigning saverâ€" eign within the precincts of the city. He has the right of private audience with the monarch and, as a Privy Councillor, is summoned on the death of England‘s ruler. To beâ€" come Lord Mayor he must have preâ€" viously served as an Alderman. If THE LORD MAYOR‘S FRILLS After his death the authorities found among his papers account books very well kept, in which he had entered each evening his proâ€" fits for the day, including the result of his stock exchange transactione, much of his money having been inâ€" visited in this way since 1880. Up to that time he hbad received as alms from charitable souls in the streets of Vienna, Budapest and other places $115,000, and of this sum he had invested $60,000 in foreign securiâ€" ties. The exact amount of the old man‘s wealth at the time of his death is unknown, but that he wali very rich is certain. Richest of Beggars. In the Austrian journals is recordâ€" ea the death of one Simon Oppasich, who was, it appears, the richest proâ€" fessional beggar in the entire world. He was born without arms or legs, and for more than hall a century he exploited this terrible infirmity for the purpose of making money. First he begged in Vienna, where he was born in 18382, and afterward he plied his calling in all the cities and most of the towns and villages in the Austroâ€"Hungarian Empire, with the zresult that in a few years he acquired a considerable fortune. ‘ After his death the authorities Defficient in Sense of Value. with the purpose of. subsequently having it interred in a Catholic cemetery. ‘The dead man‘s son apâ€" peared and. demanded that his faâ€" ther‘s remains be buried with those of the deceased members of his famâ€" ily. The case went to court, and the deciston is foreshadowed in a remark made from the bench by Justice Bceott, who said ; "When a man proâ€" vides himsel{ with a graveyard it seemse to me he has a right to be buried there." 45 4 A case came up before the Supreme Court of New York the other day for which no parallel exists. A rich man, who all his life had been a Protestant and who had buried a wife and child in a Protestant cemetery, recently married a Catholic woman, Last week he died, and his wile had the body sent to a Catholic receiving vault Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever‘s Dry Soap a powder. It will reâ€" move the grease with the greatest ease. 30 After this, it is understood, they will separate, and enter society.â€" New York Life. h C F ‘The groom will pass the next three weeks with his bride at his estates in England, after the roof has been repaired. | t At 11.50 a million dollars in legal tender Changed hands. At high noon all the railroad first mortgage bonds known to be the bride‘s possessions were handed over. A vote of thanks was then passed to his Jordship for leaving the bride‘s father enough to live on comfortably until the next rise in Wall street, which is predicted for next spring. ‘ At 12.15 two bishops, four clergyâ€" men, two real estate lawyers and a barrister, representing the plaintiff, pronounced the benediction. | At 11.45 the real estate in the bride‘s name was trans{erred to his lordship. â€" 1 The bridal party, including the Atâ€" torneys [or both sides, formed in the alcove promptly at 11.30. f Foreign Lord Were Linked. ‘There was a wedding yesterday in Graceless Church. : Lord Baldknob, of Kiltshire, Eng., married Miss Sallie Panbandle, of East Pittsburg. _ inss sau0A" * How the American Heiress and the .. WEDDED IN MODEKN STYLE. Odd Litigation Over Body . DR. A. W, CHASE‘S CATARRH CURE ... 259- is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops dropplnf. in the throat and &eflnmant y cures Catarrh and Hay Fever, Blower free. All dealers, or Br A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. Apply to the Recorder in ilton, Ont. or W. F. Campb 18,238..... 20,917..... 22,574...... 28,829...... 25,000...... Members. p|||.°.°phy,â€"'rhere are pills and piliaâ€" but Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills at 10c a vial lead in demand. The sale borders on the phenomenal. Sluggish liver, constipation or irregnlar bowels are the precursors of many physical disorders. These little wonâ€" ders remove the cause. 40 in a vial for 10 cents.â€"45. Speaks for ltself. o Batlimore News. "What are they going to do when they get through tearing up the streets ?" ; "Lay ‘em down again, of course ! How else would anybody be able to tear ‘em up later on, gilly ;n CANADIAN ORDER 0o FIVE YEARS‘ Boston Herald. What‘s to be sabd of the status of business morality in this country when so many prominent manufactâ€" urers of postal supplies are found to have been divying with the postal employes in order to sell their goods at high prices? It looks bad. RAILROAD MEN and others subject to severe oxgouure find the greatest relief in the use of ‘‘the D. & L.‘ Menthol Plasters for all musâ€" cular pains, whether in the chest, @side or back, which are the foreâ€"runners of chronic rheumatism. It stops them almostinstantly, "It‘s a very old ‘plot." * "Yes, but whiat is a plagiarist to do? If hle steals a new, plot there‘ll be twice as much comâ€" plaint," ; » Gray‘s Syrup or Ren Spruce be reduced several thousand dollars an ounce. Kansas City Star. It may comfort the consumers of meat and buiter and eggs and coal to learn that a German scientist claims to have discovered a process by which the price of radium max Misard‘s Liniment cures Garget in cowe. Life,. Queen Alexandra has just celebratâ€" ed her fiftyâ€"ninth birthday. This is another one of the unplensant bits of publicity ‘that is in the list of pesalties for being a ‘queen. Birthâ€" day juggling is impossible. 4 Peuifiontabiatisiminantinindicasiacd Mssc cce 2 d M M 1A A s Euro‘poon neam-hfp docks, saving passenâ€" geu or Europe a loniand expeneive transâ€" r. Becure your tickets of Grand Trunk agents. Robert 8. Lewis, Canadian Passenger Agent, Yonge street, Toronto, Ont, "I dunno. She locked it away in A& nl{net before I had a chance to see it." A ; * ie i ie t Minard‘s Liniment cures Colds, eto. Can‘t Tell. Chioago Recordâ€"Herald. ‘"What are you going to give ‘your wife for Christmas this year ?" _ Below the Age Limit. Chicago Tribune. ‘ Dickey and Lis younger sister had "I‘ll go to heaven when I die, and you won‘t !" she said, making a face lat him. \ i A 1 ! ‘"‘That‘s cause you can go anyâ€" I!where {you want to, ‘thout havin‘ Ito pay any fare," he retorted, conâ€" temptuouslyi. , i Lud $A & Minard‘s Linimeat cures Dipkhâ€" theria. , MEstinh| 337. Minard‘s Liniment cures Distemâ€" per. _ ) wÂ¥ _ Before and Aiter Marriage. Atchison, Kan., Globe. An Aichison bride had printed on her calling cards, "At home Wednesâ€" day alfternoons." After six mon this‘ marriage she has had added; "And every day in the week and can‘t get the work done then." | Low Grade Business Morality. The satisfaction of having the washing done early in the day, and well done, belongs to every user of Sunlight Soap. 10B 25 ¢ rrrreersememsnserssssessssnsecessensersesssensceses» 1 908 *rhertrenennennennessennsenes808 £s24+8 se0008 s0008 4000 Quite a Boom for the Poor. Always in the KFierce Light. J one bottle . -;.m;:;;pl_ntbhh. M ust try one tle and see quickly you rid of that cough. At your druggists. ”t.bdtlz get ASSESSMENT Special Inducements:to JoIn Now to the Recorder in your own tnwn aâ€" urhm .. _ I No Other Course Open. Puck, 4 It cures those heavy, d 7 . deepâ€"seated coughsâ€"takes way N?:emex TCO ‘he throatâ€"strengthens the lu.nn ess effective beca Tust trv ana hnl.‘l?.-.l ft‘.‘:fl"_“”hh. 4 rerereenenesentennen ns cnnens seeseen 08000000 TGer in your own town or 1 Campbq{l, Grand Organizer _ which ordinary remedies have not reached will quickly yield to f That Cough 1901 1899..... NT SYSTEM “* oF CHOSEN FRiENDs . 3‘ PROGCRESs *ersersessssssnses T .--â€"."--o.-nn..ou.ouun-nuuuun..-u «» ....mo-u.u-..-un.n..uu....uu.uu.uo Whitiiahsidts ic s 2. 00 POOPe PRAAA \hrerseesnnnersennnrentrtertnasrr+e **unsse80s0000 There is a big factory in the Uni‘ei Btates nowâ€"in New Jeneyâ€".mm mena l Twitchy Muscles and Sleepiorsâ€" messâ€"The hopeless heart aickneas that ; settles on a man or woman whose nerveg { are shattered by disease can best be pictured 4 in contrast with a patient who has been in , the "depths" and has been dragged from , them by South American Nerviqe. Gecrge Webster, ot Forest, Ont,, saye: "I owe my , ie to it. Every thing else fatled to cure."â€"44. > C Cocuans s oi tn Good Housekeeping, which makos , dolls, very perfect and durable ones, of : wheet steel. They are light and lh‘%“ so strong they cannot be broken even if. stepped @n. Their smile is the kind which will not come off, for their comâ€"\ plexion is of baked enamel, not to be this Lnstant. °* ° ~:." t Tommyâ€"(aged 5(â€"No! : Papaâ€"What ? Don‘t you . «_ * apaâ€"~â€" w nat . Von‘t you * > y (determinediy( â€"; No, sir! C !rHE ARNOTT IN8TITUTE, BERLIN,, Ontario, for the treatment of all forms" of SPEECH DEFECTS. We treat the cause, , not simply the !ubl.l:i and therefore produce natural speech. Write for particulars. ‘ouuoooloootmooo.ou-nc.mo..m-nno- % STAMMERERS ETVE PR PDETY mUWBC WNH * * 4 golnu to British Columbll'} ar;lué bargain, Act quick. R. E. G. Bu J‘ business. Po&aluuon twelve bundred, malleable iron factory, good farming coun» try, steady trade, upâ€"toâ€"date stock and #fi tures complete; about $1,500 . sell or rent bhouse and store. Proprietor Westport, Ont In lots of 10 to 100 acres for sale in the‘ heart of the Niagara Fruit Bc& near : Grimsby. _ Steam and electric roads su' this property. All conveniences of the day.: Terms very reasonable. Apply J. CABPENTE% i P. C. Box 68, Winona, Ont. FOR SALEâ€"ESTABLI8HED TAILORING business. Popalation twelve hundred. orders. Our board ronom is flpu:llle. make it your headquarte on GM j necdgu nBlo ::.so execute orders h!" lch:.m on as favorable terms as 100 share ote. Write toâ€"day for our bookietf} entitled " Wall Streot‘s Opportunities." Special attention given to outâ€"olâ€"towa So. Pac., B. & O., Un. Pac., Mo. P.c.g‘.!:‘ Com., Eries, Reading, N.Y. Cen. n:d { R R.,‘ we regard as PARTICULARLY AP TRACTIVE at present LOW prices, and trades in these" securitiese copservratiyely handled will, without doubt, show substan« tial srolu in the near future. While you are waiting for fld?o‘to“ down the 1u..bt. eteady accumula of the‘ Standard ues is apparent *o the closs student of conditions. A Word to the Wise is = Sufficient. Stocks Are Cheap! 4 y .-fifo':fl{' Grand Recorder, May wheat will sell %100 per bushel before this o%flon expires. e handle accounts of 1,000 bushels und over on 1 percent margin. Write for our special letter. Branch Office, 166 Simooe St, Poterboro ‘*Prox® 860. BUY WHEAT e To« "Cohints Fortkies: M. J. CUMMINGS & CO. ISSUE NO. 52. Rooms 48â€"49 Victoria Arcade, 18 Victoria Strooet, Toronte, Ont. All losses, if any, reduced tol.‘sar cent. Aplcnphdniyononbofll os of the market, $75 enables to operate 50 shares. Write torp‘nmhn. on the STOCK EXCHANGEK without HOW Direct private wires to all exchanges. MILLER & CO., Philadelphia Press, â€"Tommy, fyou must go to be@ Dolils Made of Steet. JAMES & CO., FRUIT LANDS \ WW _ SUCCESSFULLY SPECULATE * 7. GIaWwor, avos, %ORONTO, ONT. A Correction. ‘Phone Main 3704. DEALERS IN fene 3 9 particulare, \0 "o4 ht thart _ H« throne fore III. Topic giveness. \\ tyears of, a y form the great w house for the Lord sons, but among 1 Arad been chosen for «tharges Solomon 1 werve Him perfecti X. Topic: Rolon God‘s reply. HBoon : came king he assem Gibeos ; the Lord : mon and asked hin most ; Kolomon rep he was young and | the kingdom was g all desiped wisdâ€"m a 4n order that hbe mi faire of the nation was pleased with : mot only gave him gave him riches an« ance. Jinea. After sBajom he 1« was now q king must choice was uripeces of ] we slouid s 0j "Â¥inchibbere ; rmong rioters G@runkard and to porerty ; th comes to rags 2awvio comims ance. Ts marse of stt :enl to the se drunks1 celved "Ttroys YI. Topic ‘bellion. Wi awsaiem ho with him ; wearching . | Jeruealem â€" mt Tinst in Ammediatel y er while he mlly decided raise a lai king in J months ; he tle with 1 lom‘s army was slain. seath of h for God‘s goodn« :‘mu supposed David during "Mfe. It contains RBhepherd and hi and his guest. Cl herd ; His peopl divine Shepherd #atisfaction and 3@ abundanily su runneth over, YHL Topic : T Etrong « mocks px awicgs # »Qncss < laid a plot *eroment an stoie the h bis subtlety father and ap a gover oon slarte Jerusaiem. 1 and crossc@l lished heads For merey ; tence of th ay, *‘Bless~ gression is ecovered ;" ) Jhis deep rep fidence in C mighty deli1 Â¥. Topic. bitter fruits Bboly course David‘s sons wias a wick hrie was reno granted ; he mnd there w ‘tabliching : prepare th. @hould build ains. About a y TLord soent Naths Kim to show hin wess : the king‘s h saw bis «in and 1y. This psaim «h Frepentance. He ; meses, and that may) be bloited may be waehed ; has groat rontid prayse earne«tly t #till uphold him 1 BQ resobves to e tkie time fully in and David was | bis own house ol to Nathan the 1 aire, and Nathan him to proceed w God epoke to Na of Obedâ€"edom ; David takes the to Jerusalom : wites and chief gotier ; a great «acrilices _ ane and his sons we «emplasized that wowell, that sh PDuring the quari mercy Lave lbee taveseen the joy Sorgivences . Bumnrary, â€"Le#i Ing the ark to . awas a small chos ithke mercy seat. ] ‘divine presence ; 4t Lbad lain in nog clides to bring it i IV. Topie This is one penetential p to the forgi~ ed David, al bis great s awe see hm : i Introduction.â€" er mark th mng in of t upder David, an #he temple. In t thepre is musi the greatest « IL Topic. Go David desires thke Lord. The KXL Sunda ger reverence is dies for touctin wleasod ; the ark IETERNATION, DECMB IX. Topi« YTI. T Reoview. â€"Re D A T various

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