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Durham Review (1897), 11 Aug 1904, p. 6

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The whole cry was aging. Men with dinner pails hurried to King street; busi- ness men loitered a little' to ese it " they went to their lunch; the " mins" were there in full force. everybog; look. ing both ways, to catch a sight' of th "ogte-whpeled wonder. Out of a hotel yard on James street and round the corner of King street am. A big "darker," all fluttering with gay ribbons. tmndling a wheelburow; and in this one-wheeled teh?eipde" set I little darkey. also bedecked with rib- bons, and scraping on a fiddle. A roar went up that might have been hurd‘ " mimics, the mites oth The whole city was sold, and people remembered then that they might have thought of Tutu., being “All-fools' 1yt'fi--onii the didn't.---Wiqliam Tye Smith, St. TLfl'fll," 0nt., in N. Y. Scottish An- An Old Story. In the winter of 1368-9, I well remem- ber every young fellow was wishing for spring, that he might try his velocipede. There was a great furore on the sub- ject. And one. of the best "April fool" Jokes ever perpetrated was connected with it. A notice appeared in the adver- tising columns of the Hamilton (0nt.) papers on Tuesday. Maroh 30, 1869, 'ttying that a certain professor (naming him) of Buffalo. wanted to introduce a "one-wheeled velocipede of his own in-i vention and would meet the you maul or Hamilton at a certain hall on W,'le day TgtE','y,ttf, careful not to Day April lot) and mm d give an exhibition of hi. invention on King street (the principol business street) at 12 o’clock As it is rounded that what will cure Diabetes will cure any Kidney Disease it must be admitted that Dodd's Kidney Pills will Pure and Yidney Disease. "Yes, I had diabetes for six years. I tried all kinds of remedies hut to no use. My attention was called to Dodd's Kid- ney Pills by an advertisement and I be- gun to use -them. I only nag! LTti,ii, when I Wits oomItletely cured," um! "tqrqet In the Cute on People Rodin. what will Cure Dish“. wul Cure my Kidney Dian-e. Toronto, Ont., Aug. V-l-isp-ar)--:, the people learn to realize how much the general health depends on keeping the kidneys right, and how many diseases are the direct result of bad kidney ac- tion every verified cure of a severe kid. ney disease is received with interest. For that reason the vase of A. w. Hol- man, the well known butcher, of 19335 Mutual street, this city, is well Torthr of attention. Mr. Holman had diabetes. 1 Now he is a well man. Dodd's Kidney Pills cured it. Asked concerning his use, Mr. Holman said : Grout Interest In the Had Diabetes but was Cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. THIS 1yhlft"lfff,"" Is ALL RIGHT And now the ttrtifleial ivy (which must be of a small Ieaved variety) may be. called into requisition and trained around the broken columns and upon the crumbling walls until a most realistic appearance in given to the. whole. The floor should he strewn with and, with which a little powdered moss has pre- viously been 1timrud.--Memphu' News. Broken columns are quite easy to im. itate. and if an ordinary eork be roughly carved with a sharp pocketknife and then carefully painted and sprinkled with a small quantity of moss, which should be rubbed between the flngert, until I. light powder is formed. it will be found to serve the purpose moat effectiwly. The particular portion of the castle which has fallen into absolute min and decay should have rough and jagged edges. The walls should be darkened by means of 1 little brown paint judieioui, ly applied, and small. irregular pieces of cork may he heaped against the sides to represent_ fallen masonry. In Fed to While Away the Long Winter Evenings. An interesting end extremely fescinet- ing oeeupetion for the long winter even- inks is that of modeling in cork, end after e little practice the persevering ones will be surprised to tind what clever end ingeniou young erehitects they will become, while they will be greatly cherud es the crude designs grow be- Ieeth their nimble lingers. lat us "ppoi0hat it is deeired to menulecture e model of some old mined cestle, u n which the clinging' ivy twines T' tenderly, end eround which hover meny memories of bygone stete end splendor. Workers must ihst supply themselves, with the necssery materials and proper] tools. Of the letter they will r ttti some Print brushes, e hammer, e an? Et,.,',',",",', e pencil and e pair of scissors. I ving procured these, they must obtain e quantity of cerdboerd cork sheets, e few old bottle corks, e little itne send, points, glue, wire end e smell quantity of ertillciel moss and ivy. I And now, having decided upon the , building end procured the necessary ( materials, the next thing to be done is: , to draw e plan of the cestle you intend to reproduce. This eccomplished, you . mey proceed to make it frame of light , cardboard, cutting it carefully to the_l requisite sin, and then securing upon: the millboard framework 1; layer of the' n sheet cork to form the walls. This may 5 be made to represent stonework by meens of uneven pencil strokes, which) u should afterwards be colored in with. TI black or dark brown paint, in order to o give the structure a suitable appear-ia unn- " an may um charmed u 1 math their 1 [at in In] manhunt. cutie, upon twine: BO te hover may 1 “1 splendor. of an a. may}... m - a.GG In. '- m 'hm.-.. Sauna." “New." “Your." "Mammoth! " In M“ Imam.- " Icy-I." “log-I.“ “0mm.- M. Use (my the son, scum TOUGH W CICS;?, ksrii;r'1r", PAPERS IODELING IN CORE. x. Y." ssoiirG"iiii.' oedema! with rib- trt a fiddle. A r01: t have been heard as off. The whole people "momma teh tt Sight' of a i on James are“ ' of King street all flutteEng with at 12 o’eidéi diltt iiii'iii) ,"r"WaqytmEtt n m. um. um own, when: were was ; “W - "u" Te""."" 'f""!'.? to inquire, Gu choice, but he obliged him to Uke Where nre Alpencan families t What the home which stood next to the stable P the world Is the matter with Amer. door, so that every customer was alike lean men, and who taught American well and according to his chance, from girls their munngrs. I law men and which it became a nrovery when what women propemrding together gnd I ought to be your election was forced - not u few children romping mt- upon you to any “Hobeon'a ohoUe." tended by their elder, or else in the Tobias Hobeon was the first man in England that let out hackney horses. When a man came for a. horse he was led into the stable, where there was . great choice, but he obliged him to take the horse yhich stood next to the stable 'tf At this unexpected compliment Renan removed his hat and bowed, and there was an unusual tremor in his voice as he thanked the sergeant for his courtesy. Thereupon, turning t: his fo’ur men, the worthy sergeant bade them stand in line as a guard of honor, and then, draw. ing his sword, he said gravely, "Present me rcpueu ponLer: "All rt ht, serge: I'm sure I'm much obliged“ to you." mx..-......-_ _.--_t_, ' .. - Renan was taken aback at his words, but seeing that the man was in earnest, he replied politely:- "All right, sergeant, I,” an.‘ Yr... -..- -Lu,r . ‘- "Sir, I want you to do me a favor. We are alone here, and as no one can see us I shall consider myself greatly indebted to you if you will allow me to give you a small token of my respect and admire. tion." One Bummer afternoon while walking near Treguier, Renan, the famous French writer, met a sergeant and four col- diem, and the sergeant, after saluting him moat courteoualy, said: The head ot a department store, which employs 500 girls, says that his social secretary has been worth to him in cash three times as much as her ser- vice has cost him. She has given the girls talks on hygiene, thus improving their health and their physical effec- tiveness. She. has organized literary clubs among them, thus stimulating them mentally, arid improving the so- cial atmosphere of the store. She has mothervd the girls, many of whom are the daughters of immigrants, and who in our public schools have enjoyed op-; I ortunities which their mothers never had. These girls, accordingly, at the most critical age, make the perilous discovery that they know more than their mothers do. The social secretary is one whose knowledge and position they respect, and one to whom they can go as a friend. And if she is what she ought to be, she acquires an in- fluence over them which is as valuable to the girl as it is to their employer.--- Josiah Strong in Social Service. Miuard's Linament Cares Diptherla. ORIGIN OF "rroBstmlcrrorcz." Long9traemie Believed tCi, be Running Itself I Out in Indin. tion. Very often the question is asked, " What is a. social secretary t" One of the writers in Social Service has given a. definition of this new Protea- sion. He says that the social secretary is a. paid officer of a firm, whose busi- ness it is to establish a sympathetic touch between employer and employee for the promotion of better relations. 1The social secretary, representing the workers, brings to the attention of the firm any grievance that may arise,i or suggests any improvement in the} workrooms that may make the workers! comfortable and happy. Representing the employer, the social secretary looks to the maintaining of better relations between heads of departments so as to secure the most intelligent co-opera- n..- y” Shiloh’s Consumption Cure Ttre" I 1‘1“"w;‘§"* 2lt But the same week gives the first stresk of hope that the pestilence is I burning itself out " last wherever sunl- terv reforms on a sufficient scale have been effected. In Bombay the total mor- ,telity from all uses, including plague, i fell steadily to 38 1-3 per 1,000. --"e- ""'"'"""ar “a UV r0 1 1,00“. : The mortality fell 'rl,',",',, 1,000 . week ‘in February to only 578. The specific cause of plague and the life of the bacillus outside of the human body are not known. But this much Bombay has made plain-that the pestilence is a disease of locality, and that the re. medy is the clearing away of the sites which it haunted and the reconstruction of the quarters where it occurred your} after year. [pas-ed by In normal or of no uceotmt. [In the last week if Mir 28,219 dentin from plague were recorded in India, I ehierfly in the Ptmiab. MENAN AND.THE SOLDIER. Nearly eight years ago-in Septem- ber, 1896--bubonie plague appeared for the first time in modern India on I widespread scale. Beginning in the mt. infested grain stores of Bombay and its irysoneeimbly filthy lanes and tenements the pestilence was curried by penic- stricken crowds all over western Indies Every year since the mortality has spread, defying every attempt to check it, till the surviving Hindoos have be- come indifferent, after successfully re. sisting the 1ntmanitarian and scientific notion of the government. Every mall brings its ghastly record of the mortal. itv, tyt the figures and the {acts ere At I" druggistu, 25c, Mht and 01.00 . bottle. 401, In the hardest kind to got rid of and “a most. humorous kind to neglect. A Summer Cough THE SOCIAL SECRETARY. PLAGUE NOW ON THE WANE. Mfr-m... J _ wrF ', aha acquires an in- n which is as valuable is to their employer.--- Sorial Serviee. Walking up Fifth avenue and out through Central Park the Sunday that I landed in New York, (along .11. the varying and and impressions made upon me, I was especially moved to inquire, Where are American familiar: , um“; , Shall see its beauty smiling over I there; » Surprised to tears his beating heart he i stills, like one who finds among Athenian hills A temple like a lily white and fair. trom any cause a disturbing element enters into their baliwick they re- bel, are beyond the control ot the will. and, having no guide, as it were, run away, and, like any run.. oWny,hnvo no care tor the damage done., The oitort to remove the disturber the cause of the hic- cough, and the following method of treatment arrests these muscles in, their wild oscupnde, brings them back to their duties, and, like the patient servants they are. they re- sume their work, and Me becomes as placid as before. . First, expel all the air from your lungs very. very quickly. The por- tion of the body they attend to is. as it were collapsed. and now com-menses the next and concluding part ot tho cure. Second. commence to fill your lungs with air, but do so Very atom. tr, but steadily. Peeker your mouth. and if possible leave an opening of your lips no larger than a. 1in.and through this inhale the air. Pitt , Four lungs. raise your arms. and i throw, out your chest. and when I you are tun, these muscles resume , their regular duties and the hie- coughs are tror"h--Brootrirn Eagle. 1 Brakes to thy healing face and dewy hand; When the great noise hath rolled from otf the land. Where all these fallen Englishmen of ours Have bloomed and faded in Crimean tlowers. Thy perfect charity unsoiled shall stand. Some pitying student of a nobler age, Lingering o'er this year's half-forgotten page, Shall see its hem-hr “an“... -..__ ianeous with the merciful labors of :English gentlewoman, whom it ' hates: FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE. Bow must the soldier's tearful heart pand, Who from a. long and obscure dre of pain-- Bis foeman's frown imprinted on l brain-- So long as the English-speaking race retains, its high ideals of womanhood these lines of the American poet will be read and remembered. But there is an- other very beautiful tribute to Florence Nightingale, written by the Scotch poet, Alexander Smith, which is almost un- known to the present generation of readers. This sonnet, too, is contempor- aneous with the merciful labors of the] w...1:..1.. -..-_t, - And slow, as in a. dream of bliss, The speechless sufferers turn to kin. Her shadow. as it falls Upon the darkening walls. l As if a door in heaven should be wOpened, and then closed suddenly, I The vision came and went, The light shone and was spent. On England's annals, through the long Hereafter of her speech and song, That light its rays shall cast From portals of the past. A Lady with a Lamp shall stand In the great history of the land, A noble type of good, i" Heroic womanhood. _ "l ,V w_., -- -u-v-uv-V v: A".6V"aR"Mb. LII! poem, which is too long to quote " a whole, appeared under t e title of Santa Filomemi, and, though Florence Nightin- gale’s name was not mentioned, the a? :'p1ieation could not be missed. la In. dream-vision the poet saw: The wounded from the battle plain, In dreary hospitals of pain, The cheerless corridors, t The cold and stony floors. in) '. a" . Lot in that house of misery I)'.', A lady with a lamp I see Pass through the glimmering gloom, And flit from room to room. Her Christian name of Florence we derived from the Italian city in which she was born, end this fact gnve Long- fellow the motive for the beautiful verses he wrote in her honor. The poem appeared in the ttrsrt number of the At- lantic Monthly, November, 1857, at which time the Crimean War wee s mt- ter of yesterday. "Por the legend," wrote the poet to Senator Sumner, “se'e Mrs. Jemeson’s Legendary Art. The modern application you will not miss. In Italisn, one may‘say Filomelo or Filomena." The 1 PARIS AND NEW YORK. ' Florence Nightingale Eighty-four [ - Years Old. The famous Florence Nightingale was born on May 15, 1820, and, therefore, is four-score years and four. The work done by her and her nursing sisters in the Crimea during the terrible winter of 1854-55 should not be forgotten by men and women of English blood on either side of the Atlantic Ocean. Great as were the immediate results of her labors in the barrack-hospital at Scutari, they seem dwarfed beside the far-reaching in- fluence of her example throughout the civilized world. The courageous women who went to the front during the great American civil war were directly under the spell of Miss Nightingale" benign nature. They drew knowledge from her experience as a military nurse; they gained strength and fortitude to face the terrible realities of war by the ex- ample of patient endurance and self-re- pression she had set them. The enthus- iasm aroused in England by Florence Njghtingale's labors in the Crimean hos- pitals was indescribable. A man-ot-war Was ordered to bring her home, and Lon- don prepared to give her a triumphant reception; but she returned quietly" in a French ship; crossed to England, and im. mediately sought the shelter of her country ome. With the $260,000 raised _ in recognition of her services she found. ed the Nightingale Home for Trainlnf i Nurses " St, homu' and King's Co . I legs Hospitals. The praise of her own I people must have been sweet to her, but I she cared nothing for public honors; and l money was to her but the means ot do- , ing goof, A A 1 "A LADY WISH A LAMP.” imprinted on his obscure dream it cele; TORONTO ex- A mun in seldom '" his own words. Your dress may be as soft and quiet in tone as a "dim religious light," but fashion decress that the one spot of grandeur and gorgeousness, the" hi h note of your church costume, abouldlg. the covers of your prayer book. Of much interest to ocean travelers , is the department over which the port steward presides. Ilia task is to pro- vision the ship, and he is kept working almost night and day preparing for the hundreds of passengers who will board the ship on her next sailing day. As soon as the amount of provisions needed for the next trip is estimated, the reg quisition sheet for the voyage is made out, and the poor stewaml. with his as- sistants, begins the marketing, and the purchaser run something like this _ Thirty to forty thousand pounds of fresh meat, 600 to 800 chickens and ducks,4000 to 6,000 pounds of ham and bacon, 3,000 pounds of fresh fish, 2,000 quarts ot fresh milk and cream. 5,000 pounds ot butter, 1,500 quarts of ice-cream, 150 to 200 barrels of flour, 25 tons of pota, toes, several tons of sugar, and other things in proportion.--) York Even. , ing Post. l Minard's Linament Cures Colds.etc The lit,'tr,es',', and Emperor of Austria have simply written their signatures, but the Kaiser has added these words: "Der Nachtigalle aller leiten." Czar Nicholas wrote.. "Rien comma votre ehant." The Queen Regent of Spain's words are: "L'Eapagrtold, une reine qui! In est fiere de compter an nombre de ses sujets." The Queen of the Belgians he: wriEten the first bar of the "Russia!- -‘_ I l A treasure which Mme. Patti values highly is a fan which bears the auto- graph of nearly all the European sov- ereigns of her time. The late Queen Victoria has written: "If King Lear spoke the truth when he.said that a sweet voice was the most precious ift a. woman could possess. you, my (Ear Adelina, must be the richest woman in the world." I LAST NEW YORK EXCURSION or SEASON. Everybody is going. It will be the great and grand event of the season, and what is more will be the last chance to visit the great American Metropolis " an excursion rate. The Wegt Shore Railroad will run a cheap excursion to: New York on August 15, good 15 days for return, giving privilege of trip on Hudson River steamers between Albany and New York, without extra charge. Fare will be $9.00 return from Suspen- sion Bridge or Buffalo. In addition to regular trains, there will be a special leaving Buffalo at 10.15 p.m., arriving New York 10 a.m., and makin good con- nection at Albany with Hudson River day boat for New York. Positively last of season. Write L. Drago, 6955 Yonge street, Toronto. ,Vr. -"-'. View " l and one day a weasel put in " GA"; anee. We had the pleasure of seeing a battle royal every day for several days, and by and by the weasel had killed every rat in the colony except one, which was nearly as large as a cat. They fought several times a day, and the weasel always got the worst of it.. One‘ day we noticed it indyrrioustr digging a hole under the woodpile and thought little of it. A little later we saw it challenge the rat to battle, and as soon as the fight began to warm up the wea- sel suddenly turned tail and sneaked to the hole like all possessed. The rat followed in hot pursuit and both dis. appeared in the mouth of the weasel’s hole. It was only a twinkling until the weasel reappeared and f1tushiid into the hole again. We watched a long time and neither animal appeared. Fin- ally we moved the wood and dug up the weasel's hole. We found the rat--. dead-and the weasel had dug itself out another way. The weasel had trapped the rat and killed it at leisure, the hole being too small at one end for the rat to escape, which the weasel knew all the while." f CUNNING " THE WEASEL. l "A weasel is a wizard as well " a fighter, and often wins his battles by strategy," said Emmet Wolfe, of Minis sippi, in the Louisville Courier-Journal. "I was recently in a fishing camp that was near a large stack of lumber. It seemed that a large number of rats in- habited the cool crevices under the pile, and nun 3-" - ‘-““-' M“ . PROVISIONING A STEAMEI. COSTLY PRAYER BOOKS Mlurd’l Linuent Cures Dilemma; company of nurses. I saw nowhere what makes the chief beauty of all Paris avenues and Parks on Sunday after- noons - innumerable family parties - fathers and mothers with their children, [small and big, often the grandparents, too, gayly going along, glad of the sun- shine, the fresh air, the exercise, and, ‘I most of all, glad to be together in their" ‘pleasure. Then the girls I saw on! Fifth avenue, promenaaing in pairs or in groups, with swinging stride, laugh-l ing loud, and talking louder. Where do they get their manners? In Paris, the home of the grisette, les petites fem- mes, it is the rarest possible thing to see a girl of immodest bearing on the street-myself, during two years' resi. dence here, I have never seen. This, I think, results largely from the subtilely 'refining influence of schols taught by religeuses.--Harper's Bazaar. PATTI'S FAN, ' like all possessed. The rat hot pursuit and both dis. 1 the mouth of the weasel'a was only a twinkling until reappeared and flushed into hungry enough t. owe amen w ner Denettuttions. Rijnh Broke diapering chcrity for her in San.- wait. She established in 1861 the East London Weavers' Aid "mention and earlier still stated the shoebhck brigade upon I: Mu! are“. ,-_____, nun Dull]; upon its site the model fut: of Columbia Square and the stately and useful Col- umbia. market. She built and endowed St. Mephen'ts, Westminster, and endow- ed the bitshopriea of Adelaide and Colum, bin. My other parts of the empire owe much to her benefections. aneh Broke 1idptneetritridr" her in Sen- “DRESS mntDrtrr-corrzzs. Buoneau Bydett-ooutta, who is 90 year: of age, is one of the best known of English philanthropists. She abolish. ed Non Scotia Gardens, one of the worst 31mm in London. “a 1mm ..--, Lever- Y-a (Wine Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder dusted in the bath, soften. 0.. --6-.-, .. . - the mud who}; uououeas and us compenssting advan- tages when domestic differences arose between I. tyrannical husband and his former footballing consort. __ -eeee »' . wave. t" "NF. The honors of these unusual combats, strange to say, rested more often with the married then the single, for the men selected their wives from those ‘who showed most prowess and endur. ence on the football field. Hence ell the better players were meted, and fre. quently more than e match for the less tough end skilful meidens. though the" letter fought like the knights of old for the lady of their choice end to the death. A strenge reversal of positions, which doubtless had its C0mttentgntiner Mun-L Br ----v ""r".-VNP." lunLLle at Inverness for the spinsters to meet the matrons in an annual game of foot- bell. All the available women took part, and the men surrounded the players and urged on their sisters, wives and sweet- hearts in their struggle, directing thtir efforts by word of mouth and encourag- ing the exhausted to struggle on and Be- suce the much coveted prize. Until early in the nineteenth ventury it was a. very ancient custom practised a; r.--..., t-.. AL, . . Level”. Y-.: a horse of ring-bone, with five bottles. It blistered the horse, but in 1 month there was no ring-bone and no lame. mess. C. C. RICHARDS & CO. Dear tr1rs,---a have great faith in MIN. ARD’S LINIMENT, " last you I cured a horse of ring-bone. with five, ham..- I just auhiii't' lieprtT'I' girl of my own " home." been all over, and after reversing and Ill;.';,'),.')?, the brake I shut my eyes. I didn't want to see any more. “As We slowed down my fireman stuck his head out of the ab window to see what Pd stopped for, when he laughed and shouted at me, "Jim, look here!' I looked, and there was a big black New. foundlsnd dog holding the little girl in his mouth, leisurely walking toward the house where she evidently belonged. She was kicking and crying, so that I Knew, she wun't hurt, and the dog had ssved l her. My fireman thought it funny, sndi kept lsughing, but I cried like s women. ’ "r was running along on'e afternoon I.tretty. lively when I approached a lit, tle village where the track cuts through the streets. I slacked up a little, but was still making good speed, when suddenly about twenty rods ahead of me a little girl not more than three years old tod. led onto the track. You can't even im- agine my feelings. There was no way to save her. It was impossible to stop or even slack much at that distance, as the train was heavy and the grade de- l mending. In ten seconds it would have he, all ITr, and after reversing andl In“ ”in" ' A -c, . A . DANIEL MURCHISON. Four Falls, N. B. Engineer'l Story of Why Be Cried. "Yes, indeed, we have some queer lit, tle incidents happen to us," said the fat engineer. "Queer things happened to me about a year ago. You’d think it queer for a rough men like me to cry for ten minutes, and nobody hurt, either, would you? Well I did, and I can almost cry every time I think of it. FOOTBALL FOR A HUSBAND: DARRLEY’S ROHNCE. Quite an romantic u my novel is the true story of how the Earl of Darnley met with his clever and cheming wife. Re was then Ivo Bligh, and while vis- iting Melbourne with the English eriek. eters injured his hand " . cricket match. The wound was bound up for him by A Indy who wen present, who used her own hnndkerehief for the purpose, and when, later on, Mr. Bligh wanted to think his good Samaritan and return the hnm1kerehief, he we: Introduced to Miss Florence Brophy, daughter of A loan] magistrate, A charming young girl, with whom he fell instantly in love. The sequel reads like u story book, for they were [hurried in 1884. Sixteen years later Mr. Bligh, b the death of Ihis brother, became eighth Earl of Dem- ey., What shrunk your woolens ? Why did holes wear so soon ? You used common soap. __ ' ---v v. we London, Ind built upon uh] (1-4.- -* " . - Hm EXPENSE All M the - III. p 00min; womnn. 3 little f ' ”A 'itii,"""i'i. ‘1“ - nune o ‘quunn ts," is "ttttrd. ohow that 80 per cent. of than afVirtaq on women. nd that nine out " h m “IIJAJA A- _-nl A French phrieian place: “qt.- mmin in the list of disease. and. a. name of “mums,” Hi. we. "-- AL_L an Mlllrd’. ”It-ell Cares “If!!! h 6...: ,'" There in " story going the round; In London of e cruel revenge Vaulted by a women on I rival whom Ihe hated. It wu not a sense of fineneial ruin. but h its way it Wu quite an effective. Sh. simply asked her victim to e pretende- dinner and 'll"llfr', 1 colored light .. that it should fall full upon her" all make her look ghnetly. To add "an. ment to her vengeance she laesed In. enemy’s particular admirers than, + polite. . i b 1m! applications M they cannot who. (go oil-cued portion ot the ear. Then-i- only one way to cure denim-a. nnd that la by con. cautioned remedies. Deaths. in can.“ " an inttamed condition or the mneoua liningot the Enomhinn Tube. When thin tub. is in- liunod you have n rumbling nonnd or [Inpu- l feet hearing. nnd when in. until-sly closed, I Deana. in the vault. and union. the mum. I mntion can botuen out and this 'ut-toh. l ed to in normal condition. hon-ins will 1.. (intro ed ionnr- nine eno- out o In In ! PG'JIT,' ennui, which in nothing. but .- a---_-A __-- "u - cull-ea " churn, which I. notuiifiGit"G' manned condition of the mucou- can”. We will give Ono Hundred Dolls" tor any can of Deane-a (“and by wank) tint CBgtgtot be cured by um'n Cumin Can. I.“ tor clrculm. free. P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. o Sold tt S'met Ttbe. Take in“ All!) Pul- tor Con-um Dgafness Cannot be Cured He was painting the under side of the structure from a swinging scaffold, and pushing his brush filled with paint into ‘a crevnce where the under beams rent Ion the abutment, he received an intro- duction to the o hidian which was not to his liking. (ih','d his snakeahi we. disturbed he quickly darted his has With wide open mouth and darting tongue to. ward the intruder. Having no weapon but a large putty knife, the painter gave battle, and In a short time the reptile'e head was severed from its body. The snake measured five feet in length.--. Lognn (Cio) J ournel -Gazet te. "'-'"_'eW_e_- -v- - m Mr. Moorehead had taken the contact to paint the iron bridge which spun the Hocking river just south of lu-yd-iii. and was engaged It his work when he encountered the neptile. Fred Moorehead had nu encounter a mi black snake Inst Friday no: whicnhe Till _r¢member for some I Pf FIGHT WITH SNAKE on SCUM“). NINE MILLION ACRES Government Landau lor Home.tetaderu. In western Nebruke our the Union Puma Railroad in section Iota of m I acres each, for almost nothing. The eel- ubrity of these lends is something re- mukeble. Distence from railroad in three to thirty miles. There will be e grend rush of homesteadem. This is the lost distribution of free homes the Unit. ed States Government will ever mete tn Nobruke. Write for pamphlet telling how the lends can be ecquired, when ee- try should be made, end other interme- tion. Free on epplicetion to on, Unle- Paeiiie egent. "The silver salmon is a misnomer. The king of British fish should be at once re.ehristened the "golden salmon," for the man who takes a beat on a Scotch river nowadays may be well excused for muttering "that fish cost me exactly fifty sovereign." when he lunds I 80. pounder, or even I. griue.-akndon Ex- press. on a Scotch or Irish salmon river, or the right to fish a small portion of . West Country trout stream in the brief dry-fly tgeasort---that kind of fishing is fast becoming the monopoly of the rich. "Fishing" to%'the"iG1," aportsmln mans something infinitely more exeit- ing and more diffjeylt to obtain. A beat new". to him the indent "iraviiiirillo my be seen on any of the quiet resches of the Thames, sitting on s kitchen chair in the middle of a punt, with a ‘rod, s black bottle. o. dog and s psper bag, listlessly watching 1 float. Or perhsps the quiet looking men who may be seen by their fifties and sixties sitting on soup boxes in the summer time on the bunks of the canals near London, watching each other’s rods ap- parently ownerless lying on the banks. This is the poor man’s "fishing com- petition," and there are many worse ways of spending a holiday. "Fishing" to the sanu- sportsman narrow new!» 7 1 “God never did make s more cslm, quiet, innocent reelection than angling," mote bank Walton some 300 you: s30. If the philosopher could come to Me aria in this twentieth century country o pteservcd waters he would pmpsbly hasten to Add “expensive” to the list at nd/tttire. The sporulnnn whose thoughts nm to trout strum: or salmon pools and sn infinite verietv of 1taking" flies will tell you that "nnsrling" is still s "ealm, quiet. innocent mereation," within the reach of the r nun’s um, but “a li " mango; him thegstient t'f,L,2,'lf 'ltd an...“ icon Kantian 1 In... ra,Go 7.80 p.l.. Bu ot Quinn pom. loam and ummo that 'A'put'hu'S,ieifSf ply to R. c o on: . “a, or writ- to " nu -.-w. - IWGI. up”: lawn-e0. Ito-wed. Quoboc, Mun-n, 'edotee and ”an, River. for tfaichea. and on Easy to"... gum». mud mutual tlat In. Wlmow'a locum w” Atml,t Al's." bo M tor Child“.- thu‘. " new. the child when: 2tfJ."it summit cone “a In the in» named, or rilii7GUd. ISSUE N O. 83 1904. HER REVENGE. M. [OUTII CHAFFLI. Wm Pan-om Ago-t. Tom-co. HOTEL PROPERTY AIM! to JOHN wer, GOLDEN “LION. m FONTHILL. ONT., Hill "um- Par for ttte Plant: they Seek. in the summer the canals near other?. rofts H" Rumba. Ont. {if}; Sunday M. - ifi,"i' griilwi' the Pi Was it ', Icems lo Pothin,: I! t't"tey, ad l 9f OWL-x das," This may “appear. Bounced I tr Obadia' " only I Once. I _ Collowing b.anatin.u P the art-pi. love lil'. heme-:1 a death. TI the IIurmundm “New. as it CI countries. 1 " Willllmldn': qtmtvent of li, tteve that th,-, - or shunni- disperse or 11 i, mu."--stutr, H. The Sn, _ ~01 cournv «H to those mun Incl into M N to Imu- employs the 1;: we. no frmluw mt.~( um. -llmd each tlit - affirm an “a not in th, the influon, ' t. Met him "llv to rush tvitlorut Cl' to the prownw :.f _', Mud Obadiah tir ' to the king." -ixv,. ll ’I'b would tvak, in I“ he must how , one in Samaria I -'Do Obadiah. Elna}. Native. B) In. ahowrd his prufww In the prophet. I III language and am. “I and surpri-u M P"t.r royui I m: Thou 1:19;. tee,." near th, ' on. R. Tell tl his“ of great in., O. Wherein Law MW! fear " It w to carry a Inc-- -thrr dinmwurmy one. to make nmru. m“! of tho king w To - him- Thus v Muted Ahab. l “It in said t, M C publh out point. fot m ministvl lac”. Thi. RI position and eonfidt.rw 'tttF-That i. (my in eat-i1 whom the w timed in llvl of faith." Po mtly. nt hi, rhk of 1min: and would. 11 that he 4. Cut oft t d Jumbo!) 4;; h not given u-. this lesson and MN in est,; Btsal, this wirlo Grumman) the "This perwounu dared in vengvm not be found. an you privy to irrterrrity and m that Al - bin hou, to find wick-e “may emph to others. si: Interest. to u ace in Ah; ..-It is ind Minh. a " was snowed label “1.5 pu to rid the Coun' m. No dnuht “I! be [tuna - cunslnr‘ M, the pr an officer to! “dell Rwy It in still pro! maxim! in median!) glut havo in In. Egypt ' a” life (-m. so Iona." n. Alum x [and (vs. 3a; bu than H feered to in ths people were in s - the benefit 1 h meeive thruugh ti u had come upon -abe king had 1mm wormed. Anoti.o “ be given him of r wna tient in g cause of vim b minis: Mm. -intr it. 19:.- -iuu that he du . . your and at la " months. h Mit - he went to - no move tMi .3. God. Tin- Commentary: l. F, ”I. (VI. 1. 2. l. “my time must It; ”in. The third 1 umusnrmxu AUG UtiT m. Eli Olsa Elli: Em 'Artt mm: “a mu. W R " Al " law was In It ti

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