West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 8 Dec 1904, p. 2

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The . etewar mo sor wouldâ€" be peaim siz Â¥ice. Everybody go most of ihem rig? they fourd the be! in the pui it BHe Church, and be sic might. U IT TTE EITC WCHE worn Bible kthat Booker T. Washington presented to the church three years ago, and said he would get down on his knees to no sinzers. lie sail he was going to ulcia and th.tt there wasn‘t one of the outâ€" ale ul ns eeauig h ns o o T fit bis The p had had remain : over the For the last fow we fNke a rough house th. mt the Second Baptist. would get up to read such agzrieved ones as had the nerve w K:ucher's volce with :; 14 a church meecting Bolen was accused of of his congregation h companions of the dev he should givo up the ; unanimous. give 1 rpectacies. He has been Second Baptist Church for and has succeeded in bost: :’aucn to geod size by prea med fire and brimstone se Ing it to Old Nick straight ir us. But he got a littie too discourses Sunday «mornings began to peer over the gol and point his finger at h hinting that they were getti with the devil, trouble brok worse and worse when th wanted a committee appoint eo_l_larthn every Sunday mor The preacher deepâ€"voiced dar spectacies. He For slamming his brothers and sisters with the Thirtyâ€"seventh Psaim, the Rev. R. A. Bolen, of the Second Baptist Church, colored, of West Park, N. J., was arrested yesterday and fined $14.50 by the village justice of the ge:ce. After he paid his fine the preacher ad six members of the congregation arrestâ€" ed, three of the brethren and three of the sisters, charging them wito disorderly conâ€" duct. ‘The schism in the Second Baptist Church has got the colored folks of Asbury Park and the nearby villages so ecited that it is next to impossible to get a job of whiteâ€" washing done or to get a carpet swatted. Colored _ Baptists are too busy devising ways and means to lose the Rev. Mr. Bolea, who refuses to be lost. "They get so tired and hungry in the playground that they are glad to eat and go to bed," Miss Crumley says. "Of course, they had their play before, but it was different. It excited them and did not make them healthily tired. For instance, they didn‘t even know how to run when this playground was opened. They had never before had space to set one foot before another, and any sort of rapid progression through the streets meant dodging under horses‘ heads, avâ€" oiding the trolley cars and keeping an eye open for the ‘cop.‘ To a visitor, of course, it probably doesn‘t seem worâ€" thy of remark, but to me one of the most gratifying things about the playâ€" ground is to see the children run. A PREACHER WHO WON‘T DOWN â€" "They are greatly \ changed, too, in other respects. When the park â€" vas opened they were very excitable, just like wild ducks, and geese. _ Now they ean enjoy their play without getting wild about it, and it is quite wonderâ€" ful to see them standing in the line waiting for their turn at a swing or a "tecterâ€"saw.‘"â€"From the New â€"York Tribune. THE GRAND PRIZE (Highest award) which Webster‘s International Dictionâ€" ary and its abridgments have received from the Superior Jury at the World‘s Fair is only another indication of the superior excellence of this famous serâ€" Emerges Thinmphantfi From Church Fight. *__ LEAVENS THE NEIGHBORKOOD. Another notable effect is that â€" the children, both boys and girls, get home to their evening meal in time, aad show little inclination to run the streets afterward. I One of the "My children never used to talk at home," said one mother. "Now their tongues run all the time." The playground has had a farâ€"reachâ€" ing effect upon the neighborhood, ind many things have changed since it was opened. It has added much to the interest of the home life in giving the ‘ghildren something to tell their parâ€" ents when they go home. $4 This useful lesson the little girl probâ€" ably lays to heart, and the next time it :, not so easy to get ahead of her. Why did you let her get ahead of you ?" she asks, after listening to the eomplaint of the injured party. "You should stand up for your rights." ‘"‘These children have never known what freedom was before. _ Neither have they known what respect for laws was. _ Order is maintained in the ‘tenement districts only by the presence of the ‘cop,‘ but on the playground the children learn that the laws exist for the god of the community, and obey them, willingly. They learn, in fact, that liberty is not license, and that is the most valuable training they could get for American citizenship." In some of the playgrounds there apâ€" B;:. to the visitor to be more law than ty, and there is a painful mechanâ€" fealness about the play. Unsupervised playing has been found to be out of the mtion, and how to supervise without ‘ king spontaneity is a problem which has not always been satisfactorily solyâ€" ed. In Hamilton Fish Park the comâ€" ibined spontancity and good behavior are marked by all comers . The children reâ€" g:ate their own play to m great exâ€" t. During the crowded hours there is always a girl in charge of each swing,‘ or "teeterâ€"saw,‘ and in return for countâ€" ing the swings that each girl takes and directing her to vacate in favor of the next girl in line at the end of the preâ€" scribed number she is allowed to have one turn in every twentyâ€"five herself. This works very well, as a rule, but occaâ€" sionally a girl succeeds in getting hold of the swing out of her turn. Then there is an appeal to Miss Crumley, but she Frequently declines to interfere. A Public Park Not Only Influences Chilâ€" dren, But Homes as Well. The playgrounds which the city proâ€" vides for tgre children of the pozr Pare usually regarded as excellent things for {‘lvmg the little folks a good time and eeping them out of mischief. but few keeping them out of mischief, but few have any idea of the part they really play in the life of the city. _ 3 "A properly conducted playground leavens the whole neighborhood," says Mrs. Caroline A. Crumley, of Hamilton Fish Park, "and the playgrounds of the ecity, even more than the public schools, are making Amer‘can citizens out of the foreign population of the tenements.‘ succeeded in bosting the congreâ€" | ; geod size by preaching old fashâ€" " > and brimstone sermons and givâ€" Old Nick straight in the solar plexâ€" | 1 he got a little too personal in his | t $ Sunday mornings, and when he { peer over the goldâ€"rimmed specs 1 t his fingor at his parishioners, hat they were getting too chummy | devil, trouble broke loose. It got 1 4 worse when the accused ones d committee appointed to count the every Sunday morning. 1 worse when the accused ones ommittee appointed to count the very Sunday morning. ast fow weeks it has been more h house than a religious service nd Baptist. When tre preacher up to read the Scripture lesson eved ones in the congregation * nerve would drown out the rolce with a song. Finally they y x; j ° CApust Chureh, colored, k, N. J., was arrested yesterday 4.50 by the village justice of the r he paid his fine the preacher ibers of the congregation arrestâ€" _the brethren and three of the ging them with disorderIvy ann. tion _ tried inced that mecting last Thursday night. ised of calling the members ition hyvocrites, liars and the devil. _ They voted that up the job and the vote was r to get a carpet swatted. ts are too busy _ devising i to lose the Rev. Mr. Bolea, be lost, is a fat, mild mannered, ky, who wears goldâ€"rimmed tried strategy. The that there would be morning, but that there ging and a praise serâ€" _ to _ the church early, * o"tor breakfast; but ‘ccce Nolen entrenched ® the keys of the & + _nre= Saturday been pastor of the ch for a good while 1 bosting the congreâ€" y preaching old fashâ€" *No." He said he which he was told to nd bang every sinner ‘r chey might forâ€" «= the church‘s parâ€" ammored the wellâ€" cer T. Washington i three years ago, down on his knees intoning a ea~ber couli a Negro MERerl T (Roston â€" Herald.) The New York papers are still inting with singular pride to the pew in a mhlon. able church over «.ere that has just fetched $1,550. That is just about 2 per cent. of th latest sellia@ nrice of a sinzle seat in the Csaalt Evobazse This leather trimming is a fad just now in Paris, and bids fair to be one of the ececntricities of the autumn. A parâ€" ticular‘y dainty t:rea't,ment was seen on a grey crepeâ€"deâ€"chine with bodice trimâ€" mings of white suede and a deep girdle o1 woven piecces of leather, Linen and Leather. An exclusive linen gown seen recently was strapped with orange leather and worn with an orange leather girdle. The Indifferent Bridegroom. The absence of all conventionalities and restrictions in Labrador is also very refreshing. A periphatetic minister was called on at a piace known as Spotted Islands to marry a couple who were awaiting a chance for the ceremony. The bridegroom was an elderly man, who was a kind of king in the place. When the minister arrived at tge island he found all the islanders assembled in the little school room awaiting him,. It was not till he actually entered the building that he discovered the bride was the deceased‘s wife sister. This being a forâ€" bidden relationship, he refused to proâ€" ceed, whereupon the intending brideâ€" groom quietly remarked: "Never mind, Mister, one of these others will do." So, turning to the expectant crowd, he seâ€" lected a suitable partner, and she being willing, "all went as gaily as a marriage bell."â€"Dr. Grenfell, on Labrador, in Lesâ€" lie‘s Monthly Magazine for December. _ And yet Russell Sage is not given to bridge, nor does Hetty Green spend days and nights over the game. ‘There may be other and equally good ways of whetting the faculties for business and social success than that of giving one‘s life exclusively to "bridge.‘"â€" Chicago Chronicle. With a sendâ€"off like that, every bridge player may give conscience to the four winds and resume the game, as a duty as well as a pleasure. If it is whetting the faculties for business and for social success, why not play morning, noon aud night? Ministers who haye condemned it doubtless knew nothing of its educational value. They spoke in their ignorance, and Mrs. Humphrey Ward, in her zeal for _ reforms, doubtless overlooked the meritorious side, and did not see that even if estates were lost, jewels were pawned, and friendships broken, the cost was nothing compared with the fitness the game gives for "business nad social sucesss." It calls it peculiarly a game for intelligent people, since it presents continually interâ€" esting and intricate problems more or less difficult of solution, and the individual feels that the play of every card is an expression of his rorsonality in controlling the result. Now the New York Sun appears with a flatering endorsement of the game, and calls it one peculiarly suited to the American type of mind, saying the qualities essential for success at bridge are precisely those in demand in everyday life, either business or social; that it is a game of judgment comâ€" bined with speculation, of combination balâ€" anced by competition. So intensely does Mrs. Humphrey Ward feel on the subject that in a recent paper she declared: "Bridge has ruined several fine ladies, brought some estates into the marâ€" ket, put up many thousand pounds worth of jewels for sale at Christie‘s, separated husâ€" bands and wives who rubbed along fairly well belpre. and ‘(_iestrt_:yed_ many friendships." No game has been dealt witk more merciâ€" lessly â€"football perhaps excepted â€" than ‘‘bridge." The pulpit has condemned it as a waste of time, physicians have declared that women are ruining their health by their devotion to it, and sociologists are saying that bridge players are in danger of being able to do nothing else, so great is the craze for it. ‘‘That‘s new to me, too," said a man who had witnessed the episode. "‘I‘ve been stampâ€" ing a good many letters for a good many years, and I never though* of that." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. LCUBUC Was m’¥l and that the taste in his mouth was of the ‘‘morning after‘‘ variety. The boy worked slower and slower, and the pile of unstamped letters was still very forâ€" midable when a neatly dressed young woâ€" man, passing briskly by, noticed his trouble. She stopped and went up to the woeâ€"begone youngster. ‘‘Why don‘t you lick the envelope instead of the stamp?"‘ she inquired, "like this," and, suiting the action to the word, she picked up an envelope, scrutinized it keenly for possible dirt, put the end of her tongue to it, and then clapped on the stamp. Then she was gone before . the boy could say *‘‘Thank you." How to Stamp Letters. A small boy was seen in the post offics the other day burdened with the task of afâ€" fixing stamps to a large bundle of letters which he had spread out on a window sill in the corridor. He was having a hard time and if he was stuck on his job it was only in the most literal sense, for after bhe had stamped a number of the letters he had gum on his fingers as well as al over his lips. The expression of his face indicated that his tongue was drÂ¥l and that the taste in his mg\:&hh!as otl!. 3 ‘;mogzlpgaf_ter” variety. Thoen he went out and had Jane Tucker, Mary Carl, Mary Howard, William Tucker, William Butcher and Robert Williams arâ€" rested on charges of disorderly conduct., ‘The justice continued their cases until Nov. 29th, hoping that the schism would be patched up by that time. Bolen ca«t his defiance to the sneering six as he left the court room. "I‘m goin‘ to be in mah puinit right along," said he. "I hopes you all will be peaceable like and quit yo‘ quahlin‘, but if yo‘ don‘t I‘m going to smack yo‘ in the face with the wud of the Lawd just de same.". f out.‘* ‘‘Yo‘ Honah,‘" said he, ‘"mebbe yo‘ has hud the song that runneth ‘I‘m agoin‘ tuh live until I die‘?‘ "I have,"" said the justice. ‘‘Well, sah," said the preacher, "I am aâ€" goin‘ to be the pastah of this chu‘ch until I die, an thub ain‘t no sinnah in thuh whole cong,regatlon that‘s lawge enough to put me Then they had him arrested yesterday morning. Half the congrezation crowded into the ofice of Justice of the Peace Borâ€" den, of West Park. Henry Williams, a deacon, made a charge of disorderly conâ€" duct against the preacher and recited to the Justice such passages of the Twentyâ€"seventh Psalm as seemed disorderly to the congreâ€" gation. Bolen didn‘t deny it nor that he had called some of thent liars or hypocrites. ‘The justice fined him. The deszcon stop~ W# _ dead beat, and4 another of his following started up a song, Then the fighting preacher dropped the Thirtyâ€"seventh Psalm and took up matters strictly persont!. Up and down the pulpit platform he charge‘, the pipe organ voice going full blast, the lon finger driving home his scripturally elotged taunts. One by sne the congregation tried to down him, and the nofse of the contest was heard as far as the seashore. It was no use. The preacher couldn‘t be downed. The conâ€" gregation slipped out ome by one, mad and throat sore. It was then the volees of several fell away from the deacon‘s opposition chorus. The eye gleaming over the goldâ€"rimmed specs was full of meaning. : counige, hok 7 The bass voice rumbled and the steady finzer began to single out certain members of the congregation with this application: ‘‘The wicked borroweth and payeth not azain Then, ‘"For they shall soon be ¢ ;:"“b. the grass and wither as th erb."" ‘‘The wicked plotteth against the gnasheth upon {lm with his teeth." ‘‘The wicked have drawn out the sword and have bent theor bow to cast down the poor and needy and to slay such as be of upright conversion." 1 O PHOCOCC PSCTCO P OTH WROD UHU UURUUE. The preacher took his time. He was selectâ€" ing carefully a psalm that he thought would have some bearing on the casme. Then he burst out, in a rumbling bass that roared away obove the voice of the deacon and the malcontents ,with this from the Thirtyâ€" seventh Psaim: ‘‘Fret ‘mot thgclf because of evildoers," with & wave of the hand that took in the whole comgregation» 9‘0 'e‘o_n:ée;a'tk_;n- l;'n;fl!' in with the Fews and Stock Exchange, grass and wither as the green Bridge. t temarine the fants Pillar of Christianity Attacked, (Bible Student and Teacher.) A drift in modern criticism is away from the Lordship of Jesus. The rule of C{ritt in the heart as Lord and Saviour is the essence of Christianity. When the deity of Jesus is attacked, the centre of Christianity is Pameny c Cnr ves TT V Moep Py + a Wnn 414 & 1 imper ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and Alemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbont, sweeney, . stifles, sprains; cures sore and _ swoolen . throat, coughs«, etc. Save $50 by the use of one gotâ€" tle. Waranted the most wonderful Blemisb Cure ever known. _ Guestâ€"Oh, I met a cyclone some distance from the city and we blew in together. Hotel Clerkâ€"That‘s queer; how do you exâ€" plate E1 _ °. }./ 9 o 5. _ Guestâ€"Nothing; I didn‘t even intend to come here. "I was in bed for nearly four years. I had pains up my spinal clumn, in my head, over my eyes, across my back, and through my left side. I took fourtcen boxes of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, and now I am strong and able to do a good day‘s work, thanks to Dodd‘s Kidney Pills." An Unexpected Visit, (Detroit Free Press.) Kansas Hotel Clerkâ€"What are you doing in this town? Strong Statement by Mrs. Jas. Hughes, of Morley, Ont.â€"Shbe‘s Strong and Mealtbhy Once More. Morley, Ont., Nov. 28.â€"(Special)â€" What Dodd‘s Kidney Pils are doing for the suffering women of Canada wiil never be fully known. It is only when some courageous woman breaks the secrecy that covers woman and her troubles that a passing glimpse of their great work is given. For this reason a statement made by Mrs. James Hughes, of this place, is of more than passing interest. "I was a great sufferer for four years," says Mrs. Hughes, "I was treated by five doctors and a specialist from the U. 8. I tried nearly every kind of medicine, I could hear of, but none scemed to do Painâ€"Racked Woman Cured by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. "‘Yes, I think he does, said Joe, ‘but the second time he always hollers in different places from what he did the "‘Well‘ said O, ‘I want to know if your fatherfloesn‘t preach the same serâ€" mon twice sometimes. first time.‘" SHE WAS IN BED FOR THREE YEARS "One day in Wheaton," Gary said reâ€" cently, "I took dinner with a clergyâ€" man and his family. The clergyman had an eight year old son, called Joe, and Joe was a very bright boy. "Look here, Joe," I said during the course of the dinner, ‘I have a question to ask you about your father.‘ Joe looked gravely at me. "All right, _ I‘ll answer your quesâ€" tion," he said. Judge E. H. Cary, the chairman of the executive committee of the Steel Trust, used to live in the Illinois town of Wheaton. Mrs. Cornwallis West, the London beauty, has written a magazine article in which she says: "It is not to be deâ€" nied that smoking is much on the inâ€" crease among women in England, and it is now more or less an accepted fact and is tolerated even in the most oldâ€" fashioned houses. There is no doubt that when indulged in moderation its efâ€" fects are beneficial, particularly to nervâ€" ous, overstrained or overworked women, and the prejudice against it is bound to disappear." S:moking Among Women. A Bright Boy. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Cryvfor se pP.â€"A pain in the back is a cry of the kidneys for help. Sou:.. American Kidney Cure is the only cure that hasn‘t a failure written ageainst it in cases of Bright‘s discase, Diabetes, inflammation of the bladder, gravel, and other kidney ajj. ments. Don‘t neglect the apparently insigâ€" nificant ‘"‘signs.‘"‘ This powerful liquid speâ€" aifia nmavasts and anroe __"A ‘"‘Why," asked the man who wanted to know, ‘"do laundrymen always change the marks on collars when they get them for the first time, even if the old laundry marB is perfectly plain?" ‘‘Each laundry," answoered the patient sufâ€" ferer, ‘"has a private mark:; by this means '»\.,... S â€" wl n 4* &.. * « * ® **~= three times and at the third time they are enabled to put a saw edge on it.‘" If the new moon appears with its points upward, then the month will be dry; but should the points be downâ€" ward, a good deal of rain must be exâ€" pected during the . three weeks.â€"Home Notes. Minard‘s Linnmeot cures Garget in Cows When the points of â€" the new moon are very frost may be looked for. When the moon is visible in the dayâ€" time, then may we look forward to cool days. T 27â€"3 °@2 VC 1106 weather is promised. If the moon changes with the wird in the east, then shall we look forward to cool days. Look at the Moon. ( A clear moon indicates frost. A dullâ€"looking moon means rain. A single halo around the moon indiâ€" cates a storm. If the moon looks high cold weather may be expected. The new moon on her back always inâ€" dicates wet weather. If the moon looks low down warm weather may be expected. If the moon be bright and clear when three days old fine weather is promised. e avor ut is Lie ie | In a Karsas paper, Socialist in philâ€" osophy, appear these words: "One free lodging house in New York City fed and housed fortyâ€"one thousand out of employment men since the first of the year. A majority of the inmates are men of middle age who are able to work â€"men who want work, but cannot get it, The average age of these men is prosperity which the great mass of manâ€" kind votes forâ€"homeless men, men willâ€" ing to work. Houseless in a great city teeming with imillions of dollars of wealth. I wonder if men will always be so blind? On reading these lines a woâ€" man in Connecticut writes indignantly to a newspaper that in the country, where she livesâ€""back from the railâ€" roads, no saloons"â€"there is plenty of work, good beds, good food, and godd wages, with men in constantly greater demand than supply, winter as well as summer. Undoubtedly, it is in the cities that subversive tendencies have their strengthb, and it is in the farming disâ€" tricts, in every country, that the preâ€" sent order of things has its surest proâ€" tection. The farmer and the farm hand work hard for what they get, but they live, and they have an independence and hard sense which remove them immeasâ€" urably from utopias. They would remedy discriminations and unfair privileges, They are the strongest supporters of moderate reformers like Folk and La Follette. But very few of them share those crass notions of creating a new universe which usually have their breedâ€" ing grounds i city slums.â€"Collier‘s for Oct. 15. ® Mixed in His Terminology. (Puck.) ‘‘Yes,"" said the city editor, with a note of regret in his voice, "I was sorry to hisâ€" charge Spacer. He was the best fire reporter we had. The trouble came last week. He wrote an obituary of Van Sandt Sapleigh and ended up by saying: ‘‘The loss was fully covâ€" ered by insurance." Mr. Blaize was several times offered a seat on the Legislative Council, but declined owing to an unfortunate imâ€" pediment in his speech which he thought would prevent him taking part in the debates. "I have never met a keener man of business," said a West African trader who had intimate business relations with the native magnate. "His busiâ€" ness methods were excellent and upâ€"toâ€" date,; his correspondence was always couched in the most perfect English, and looking at the handâ€"writing one would have imagined he was a hardâ€"headed, unimaginative merchant who had never left his Liverpool or London office." Minard‘s Lisiment Cures Colds, etc. _ But the great Manchester trade that is gom West Coast claimed him, and, inning in a small way, he very soon established a good business. His knowledge of printing was useful, for, carefully noting the designs which were mostly affected by the natives in their own weaving sheds, he registered the native patterns, and soon secured a large trade in Manchester goods bearâ€" ing the favorite designs. at Lagos, in which he rose.to be head It was to Sierra Leone that the reâ€" leased .child.. slave »was.taken, â€"and â€" a missionary society adopting him, he was educated in the Christian faith, and later entered the printing department How an African Black Became Rich and Famous. A British cruiser swooped down on a slaver off the West Coast of Africa, the human cargo Wwas set ashore, and among the ;‘g&nnhmes" saved was a little boy whom the missionaries christened Richard Blaize. This happened many years zo, and yesterday Mr. R. B. Blaize died at Lagos, a millionaire, â€" a great philanthopist and an honored citiâ€" zen of the Empire. | Will the Poor Always be Blind? FROM SLAVERY TO WEALTH. Explained at Last. very clearly \'isiblé: the crescent of ‘‘No," said the billionaire, with a conâ€" viction in his voice, "I would conlldo:?n"eu in error indeed should I die while 1 have even a tenth of the wealth I now possess, it is my wish to die comparctively poor." P o2 Srcienadinay Privdiny s 5 ins eatea> o Do0 Mnb C320 °0t Ueslust 5 is cold. Never sit with the bi rect draught, and when warmir fire do not continue to keep the | to the heat after it has become warm. To do so is debilitating, Lever‘s Yâ€"Z (Wise Heau) Disinfectant Soap Powder is better than other powders, as it is both soap and disinfectant, ;4 \than ‘$Hassul ~="@ +0 CEich back than they are generally .w&ldogn.t:: if neglected may prove a serious matter. The back, especially between the shoulders should always be kept well covered, and ney. ‘er lea'u} wlt_!g your back againer ...\ (;"C nevâ€" MINARD‘S LINIME most instant relief, made a complete ery no symptoms of ble since March. CEame CGentlemen,â€"I suffered for years bronchial catarrh. I commenced in uary last (as an experiment) to MINARD‘S LlNl;\IENT which cav MESSRS. C. C LN Li ann l ue L0 0 o mrermmmmncate Growth of the English Tongue. (Kansas City Journal.) Toâ€"day over 135,000,009 people speak Engâ€" lish. It has displaced French as the lanâ€" guage of diplomacy ,and is now making great headway as the universal language of trade. All North America, South Africa, Liberia, Australia, New Zealand, Samoa, Hawaii, most of Polynesia and various small states have permanently adopted our mother tongue, and there is every reason to believe that the 10,000,000 of Filipinos will be using it in the course of time. With the construction of the Panama Canal, Central America also will probably yield to its influences to a large extent. Shiloh‘s Consumption in milk, a trifle over 1 pound; in mackâ€" erel, about 1 pound; in round of beef, 3â€"4 of a pound; in salt codfish and beef sirloin, about 1â€"2 of a pound; in eggs, at 25 cents a dozen, about 7 ounces; and in fresh codfish, about 6 ounces. A quart of milk, threeâ€"quarters of a pound of moderately fat beef, sirloin steak, for inâ€" stance, and five ounces of wheat flour, all contain about the same amount of nutritive material; but we pay different prices for thom and they have different value for nutriment. Milk comes nearest to being perfect food. It contains all of the different kinds of nutritive material that the body needs. Bread made from the wheat flour will support life. It contains all of the necessary ingredients for nourishment, but not in the proportions best adapted for ordinary use. People are In 20 pounds of potatoes there are 33â€"4 pounds of nutriment; in 25 cents‘ worth of fat salt pork there are 3 1â€"2 pounds of nutriment; in the same value of wheat bread there are 2 1â€"4 pounds; in the neck of beef, 1 3â€"4 pounds; in skim milk, cheese, 1 3â€"4 pounds; in whole milk cheese, a trifle more than 1 1â€"2 pounds; in butter, 1 1â€"2 pounds, and in smoked ham and leg of mutton about the same; Vankleck Hill Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dipktheria. In this way from thirtyâ€"five to forty tons of coal have been transferred to the nold of a warship in an hour., while the vessel was steaming at the rate of ten or eleyen knots. With a sufficient number of colliers, the Russians are not likely to suffer for lack of steam power on their long journey to the other side of the world.â€"New York Sun, UTTC! TOCZ + The method now used is to have the colâ€" liee in tow of the steamer to be coaled. An overhead cable extends from the afterâ€" mast of the warshin to the foremast of the collier, and on the cable is a traveller proâ€" vided ‘with hooks for carrying buckets of coal. The full buckets are sent over to the warship and returned empty. We saw much the same method employed during the building of the subway, the buckets of earth or rock being transferred on the carriers to the dumping platforms, where the wagons were loaded; the sea apparatus, however, has various additions, as for example, an arâ€" rangement for taking un the slack of the cable or paying it out as the distance beâ€" tween the vessels varies. . % o SOTUSIONE No nation bhas since been compelled in the stress of war times to develop a system of sea coaling, though in 1898, in our WAr with Spain, we occasionally coaled at sea, but while our large fleet lay off s.ntltsa for many weeks we made a coal depot at Guan tanamo Bay, to which our vessels were sent for renewal‘ of supplies. In the early d4ays of experimentation it was thought that to coal successfully the colliers and warships must seek the quieter waters inshore, outâ€" side of the threeâ€"mile limit; but with the appliances and methods since invented vesâ€" sels have been coaled farâ€"out at sea and in stiff winds if the water surface were not too tumultuous,. ‘The Russians themselves have been prominent in these experiments, and & series of pictures published last spring showed the battleship Aetvizan coaling while under way. o coal in seas not too rough seem to have placed the work on a practical basis. Ever gince Admiral Seymour succeeded in coaling the British naval fleet in the Mediterranean @uring the short campaign of 1882 against Egypt, the problem has been refurdod as needing only better appliances for its full solution. f 8 L4 d Large quantities of coal have been carried tomtoroplenuhthobunkmotmnu- slan war fleet on its way to the Orient. The comparatively new expedients . for coaling steamships at sea will have the most thorâ€" ough tests yet given to them. The results of experiments with the transference cf enal i5 seas not too rough seem to have Results from common $oap$: eczema, coarse hands, ragged clothes, shrunken flannels, SOAP * The Lun urPre 12. °s cures consumption, but don‘t leave it too long. Try it now. Your money back if it doesn‘t benefit you. Prices: S. C. Wrerrs & Co. 301 25e 50c.$1 LeRoy,N.Y., Toronto,Can. y Neglect a cough and contract‘ consumption. His Last Wish Gratified, How Nutritive Value of Food. mt (Journal of He more likely to Gratefully yours wX"AQRL EXPELENSE mmmmm #3% Not to Cm Coaling at Sea. RICHARDS & co MARK BURX$3, , Ont., Oct. 3, 01. d *â€"** wWmiecn gave aiâ€" __And two bottles ire and I have had return of the trouâ€" Health,) nalFoatthiiiieas. 1605 ... 1e 3 inct vane Inot #* ‘" covered, and ney. elnst anything that the back in a ai.â€" warming it by the °p the back exposed funtascuuc 270003 B catch cold REDUCES comfortably years with Janâ€" use ""*-I and its connections via Washington or New 108t | York, to Florida, Virginia, Carolinas, Georâ€" ‘aVe | gin, Nassau, Havana, Cuba, and all winter and } resorts in Florida and ‘the South. Connecting the j lines, Atlantic Coast Line ,Seaboard Air Line, n / Southern Railway. For rates of fare, maps, tion ; time tables, ilustrated literature, etc., call also | on or address ) 4| ROBT. S. LEWTIS, Canadian Passenger Agent, 10 King Street East, TOROTNO, ONT. New styles of golf gloves are being worn. These have the familiar knuckie holes in position, but are distinguished by fastening on the back or outside of the wrist instead of in the usual place beneath the palm of the ha.«d. The gloves are made of soft chamois on the back, but the palms are of stout dogskin wit} 1 number af emall airho‘es, Exit the Milkmaid. "Where are you going, my pretty maid ?" _ "I‘m going aâ€"milking, sir," she said. _ But the maid goes aâ€"milking no longer, Dr. A. E. Harris, medical officer of health for Islington, England, in a reâ€" port presented to his council, states that during his inspection of dairy farms in various English counties, in no single instance did he find that a woman, as in the olden days, milked the cows. "The loss of the dairymaid," he prites, "is a national one, for she was at least cleanly. Now it is not unushal to find a man fresh from other work milking the cows with dirty hands." assaults, and no respecter of beuons. has met its conqueror in South African Nervine. This great stomach and nerve remedy ~stimulates digestion, tores the nerves, aids circulation, drives out impurities, dispels emaciati and brings back the f,l..“ of perfect heuth?.bum hundreds of ‘*‘chronics‘‘ that have baffled physicians.â€"C8 Indigestion,that menaceto human happ‘mess, pitiiess in its _ _"Oh, no," said the motorist, modestâ€" ly; "it is only ten horse. A hundred horseâ€"power car would be very much larger ‘ "I wasn‘t going by the size," the Highâ€" lander dryly explained. "I was going by the smell of it."â€"London Chronicle. FLORIDA AND TXE SUKKY SOUTH "I suppose a car like that will hbe nearly a hundred hborseâ€"power ?" sugâ€" gested the countryman. "That‘ll be a powerful machine," said a native of the north of Scotland to a motorist the other day. "Yes, it‘s a splendid car," replied the owner, proudly. /E i ‘The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one areaded disâ€" ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires con stitutional treatment. Hall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disâ€" ease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors bave so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send .or list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, T5¢. ‘Take Hall‘s Family Pills for constipatioa. To our awellâ€"wishers awwe pour out our joys and sorrows. They are interested. They understand. _ _ To see the best of those about us will cause us to wish them well. To be interested in those one meets needs but to wish them well. One‘s friends like one to be interested. They detest one who is curious. Interest asks nothing, but is glad of others‘ joys and sorry for others‘ misâ€" fortunes. Curiosity seeks to find more than is written upon the surface, seeks it for the purpose of distribution, for innocent slander, y vuriosity and Interest, < If you would have friends, advises the Chicago Journal, be interested in them. There is a difference between interest and curiosity, Never be curious. _ ‘Winter excursion tickets now on sale by Lehigh Yalley Railroad to m 2 C000 uw apve E‘OR SALE, SCALES, DOUGH _ MIXER and silent meat cutter; all makes of| rcales repaired. C. Wilson & Son, Limited,; Toronto, Canada. en e “7 ANTED, RELIABLE PARTIES TO Do machine knitting at home; good pay; everything found. For full particulare, adâ€" dress Box 359, Orillia, Ont. 22. C5° Goept H, London, qmsuEN WANTED, k9 nursery stock; choi« terms; elegant outfit fre tion this paper. Cavers always be use s0oths the chil« colic and is the L ISSUE NV. KRev. Lyman Ablmtvta D.D., Editor of The Out{ook. says: Webster has always been #ke favorite in our household, and I have seen no reason to transfer my allegiance to any of his competitors. FREE,"A Test in Pronunciation,"" instructive and entertaining. Alsoillustrated pamphlets. _ Publishers, Springfield, Mass. Should be in Every Home, School, and Office New Plates. 25,000 NEW WORDS, Etc. Mâ€"â€"i r Winslow‘ should New Gazetteer of the World New Biographical Dictionary 2380 Quarto Pages. _ _ G. 6 C. MERRIAM Co..® $100 REWARD, $100 An Odorous Comparison, New Golfing Gloves, Â¥ P x J WAICEIING * 777 42964 stock; choice specialties; it outfit free; pay weekl; CONTAINS FOR OUR HARDY 5000 ]llustrations. cures wirg , Meaâ€" )nt. On anese have captur Metre Mill With hills in possession part of the harb of aIC Port Arth the view « prompt d and burnit less surre lav. Fighting at i lowing Metre Hi neal now oToss No Refu lai sel‘s army southwest the La« water thei there wor food exce; which wor the Japan 18 cally Arthur splendi works, anese s entivre eaptur is exp Empo: The Oth Agains chang« thai last Sat Io‘rt â€"Arthur fleet severey with indirect They Have Abando ing M privaie de night | indic falling tb for several been atton After four cesful figh with the | is impossi movement cance. Fierce Attack BLOODIEST FIG parapets mg fit Sungshuslhan and tions ard the nort kwanshan. Simultancously tachments brough guns within range tack. Wahile the parapets and hu the defenders, th hreastworks with W a handâ€"coâ€"nand J3 fireconess as eclip eurred gince the be The valor of the be termed unpara the wellâ€"aimed ® Imn« the well ewordsme« the Japa fighting man at imen _ Ol driving 1 T4 anpm Phi har UPCC it t1 POR th st W stea at Aj t 1d JAPS FAL despat« IC M Or »1.0€ 1N f the a e heard Dead inclined attack aucht ptin £1 MX 4 14 not ret U} n n Arth aurh« will nd fi v of ture HILI of 1 M nta bel wou t1 t} the ians n din wo m n 11 n

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