West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Jan 1905, p. 6

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551 The feats of which the Japanese rick- .haw men are capable are almost in- credible. I remember some years ago being driven ashore in a yacht in the Inland Sea during a typhoon. lt was far beyond the treaty limits which then existed, and foreigners were not alloWed to travel outside those limits without special passports. But the mayor of the nearest fishing village was kindness it. self. lle promised to supply the best rickshawmcn which the neighborhood could afford, so as to take us to a rail- way station some forty miles away. And he.kvpt his word, for the distance was covered in less than th hours, including A halt for rcfreshmrnls. Each rick- Ihaw wn-i drawn by two men, tandem wise. the usual fashion when long dis- tances have to he corned. The leaders in each went through the whole distance while the wheelers, so to speak, were changed half way. The road was over a great part of the distance little bet- ter than a mountain track, and it was mining most of the time, but there Will never a break in our progress except to allow the coolies to take off or put on their clothes. They prefer running in nothing but a 1oinelirtti, and do so when. ,over they get safely beyond the eye o, the police. who have orders strictly to administer the law against nudity. C"' "V ""“"'J' The fare paid for the prolonged jour- ney was. if I remember rightly, about three shillings for each rickshaw, the ex- tra shilling being a gratuity thrown in for good service. I know that it pur- chased so many blessings on my honor- able head as cannot he quite exhausted. And having made our farewell: " the ‘lway station, the coolies started buck, waded for their own 'i19.--aansded - Comfortable sofas stint-(led luxurious re- pose to the weary. and diving boards at various heights gave opportunity tor the cultivation ot nerhaps the most graceful pastime in existence. in divers manners were the slim figures in their neat dark- blue costumes occupying themselves. Three tall sisters were indulging in s privnte competition of their own: a blonde expert. whose becoming scarlet dress formed an effective touch of color. was swinging her. Belt across the hell try means ot rings hanging from the glass root. \ A fluen- headed youngster o: 4 waited impatiently his desired lesson. A small group of frienas were amusing themselves with her diving. the bar being raised utter each successful attempt higher and even higher, the lithe figures taking the Jump and the succeeding header in such neat fashion that the scribe could not restrain In ttdtr.itnttitttt. Upon the wniis hung pictures and some remarkably tine specimen: ot “an caught by Mr. W. H. Grenieli. the President ot the club. At one end of the gallery gym- nastic apparatus, temporarily neglected. and fencing foils, shown the variety ot ex- crete enjoyed in this home of gpon. ,Then Jos. Boone Found Health In Dodd's Kidney Pills. Bright sunshine and the pleasant music of many voices greeted our scribe, "" the Picture]. as she entered the pretty hall. with its large bath, in which the swim- mer. were indulging in those evolutions most to their individual tastes. From the lofty root hung large baskets of drooping terns. and the palms dependent from the balconies were reflected in the clear - water below, through whose limpid depths the plate which an eager diver was Just about to bring up trom its watery resting piece we: as plainly to be seen as it It W.1. not sunk six met below one ordinary eve The Viscountess Castlereagh la celebrated In the Lady's Pictoral as one of the dir- unsubhed pun-on: and trequeatera ot the Bath Club in Dover street, London. Here the closure. ot England disports nun. Mr. Boone had been ailing for eight ”In, seven of which he was unable to work from the effects of Baekaehe and Kigney Complaint. He wos all aches and puns. I He was treated by several doctors, and After seven months in the hospital was lent home as incurable. It was there that reading of cures in the newspapers led him to use Dodd's Kidney Pills. It took twenty-one boxes to cure him, but to-day he is strong and well, and hard at work lobster fishing. Description of the Bath Club Gymnasium in London. pTheuseolltnowexteueW‘lib- h. whm reeee upon tit "is.“ costume one at the mod. hm - id - " winter. Amen: othar "e 'the north. in Route. tRttttNnd end my. on - is 'gep,luaW'"J',',,' e {not that is somewhat extrnord on, maiden; that the enema“ he employed tn ell “new In the run-s e! winter per- mit of the I. of when sleds. Page, 2't'g.%f. ‘53.“th t Ith' " . o eon - on teen ”who no more then 0% gonna. It consists or two runners. curved award In trout. end six and one-halt feet in length. To each or the runners in ftaed an upright that serves both " I point of sup- port end e tiller. The entire ensh- is con- nected by two or three crosepieces. one at att supports s light sent placed twelve shove the surface. The Noni-ad sled diners perceptihly from the Vesterbotten type, in which the run- ners, which ere much shorter, nre not shod Vin iron. but ere well greseed or impreg- nted with boiling tar. The lightest end best 8,'lt tor ruins is the one manulnctured at' Ines. Norwsy. In order to push the Sparks- .uottlns the racer, honing with both hands upon the extremities of the uprights, places his left foot upon the runner to the left, and then with the right toot strikes the ground at regular intervals so as to propel the sled forward. It the snow " very hard and the racer is not provided mm spiked shoes it is necessary for him to fix steel calks ta the soles. in recent times I horizontal bar, breast high, he been placed between the uprights. This modification renders the steering easier and besides permits ot governing with a single bond. Upon a level route the ssparkstottititr reaches a pretty good speed without great Be was Unable to Work for Seven Years lie-fora He Used the Great Omndhn kidney Remedy. Cottel’l Cove, Nfld., Dee. 26.---(speeiah) ---The days of miracles are past, but the one of Joseph Boone, of this place, al- most ranks with the sensational cures of the earlier ages. - People here have leiinod that if the disease is of the Kidneys or from the may. rum." 13:"; “in my. jf.: -3” An experienced ncer. when the snow is in good condition. an euily nttain the weed d a hone on n trot. In ascents it is neces- ury to push the aparestottlrm or to drag it. but this does not “use much fatigue, owing to it: lightness and the feeble surface in con- he; with the "Pr, With this sled it is pos- El} "GEE? Ferry my. WAS SENT HUME AS lNGURABLE ', _:tt,a.gutnCttsmneric . Thoreau is" Mum-mob“- helr (an! sled tn and mm- nc no b m exceeding]: light ll u mumunu or Xonlum. _ . ‘ptovl'ncoam and u the north of 181106011. 0:119)”.de wivmur up} men- of Wynne! - .14 -----te.H"ee :14! my mam no unnum- JAPAN’S "HUMAN HORSES." IN A SWELL NATATORIUM. It will nourish and strengthen the body when milk and cream fail to do it. geottkEmulsion is always the same; always palatable and always beneficial where the body is wasting from any cause, either in children or adults. Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil There is no fat food that is so easily digested and assimi- lated as If your blood is impoverished your doctor will tell. you what you need to fertilize it and give it the rich, red corpuscles that are lacking in it. It may be you need a tonic, but more likely you need a concentrated fat food, and fat is the element lacking in your system. Impoverished soil, like impov- erished blood, needs a proper fertilizer. A chemist by analyz- ing the soil can tell you what fertilizer to use for different products. "Because my mamma Is a good deal more relation to me than you are." "How do you make that out?" “Well," replied the bor, "I am related to mammal by bomation. and to you just by your being married to manna. Bee'."-" man's Home Companion. Hubert, (an s 3 dollar " . ' h gifts t 1 th some d should s d q veen (out: tor his father "How is that?‘1;ked li" father, In affect- ed displeasure. . by d you spend three- tourtns of yucr money for your mother and butu one-fourth for me?” Past the Lake of the Woods. in tile shadow. of Mount Pitt, we followed the Dead Indian road, driving deeper into the land of ever- lasting greenness. Above all is a protecting, impenetrable canopy. As we march along si- lently, there is but little change in the gen- eral aspect. Sometimes the ground is matted with undergrowth, with manzanita. cinnamon and ohapparal; at other times it is as ft',',', as carpet of deep grass, and the sstraU1tt town trunk bars ot limbs for many feet up; again the fabled forests of Robin Hood, with a we pass through frowning depths and over ground strewn with dead leaves, twigs and had gone on before. But always and above all there is the primeval woods, the deep shadows. unbroken save by a few filtered beams at noonday. The giant trees ot ehls great forest tower 200 and 300 feet high and are excelled only bv the famous redwoods of the Golden State. While the sugar and yellow pine predomi- nate, there are also many firs, spruces. cedars. “digger" pines. and on the higher altitudes the sombre black hemlocks. in nolnt ot value the sugar pine is supreme, In the qualities of lightness, durability end strength it is superior to the celebrated and now extinct white pine ot the Eastern States. For finishing, sash. door and box material sugar pine is unsurpassed. On the borders of this great forest and in the sur- veyed and open districts a hundred mills buzz industriously, the products ot which reach north to Canada-and Alaska, south to Mexico and across the Pacific and Atlantic to foreign lands. Over 2.000.000 fruit boxes made of sugar pine rut from the border ot this forest are manufactured each year for the orange orchards of Southern California At frequent intervals along the roads and trails warning signs are posted con- spieuously. mutinnlng hunters or campers against leaving camp fires burning or smoul- dering. Violators of the forest reserve rules are liable to a fine of Wit), and each ranger as a Government oftieer,,-haa tall power to arrest. It in murder to cut a tree in this forect empire. Fallen ‘wood, and broken boughs can be freely us i, but no tree can be hewezl without a pe it from the ranger of the district in whic tt is located. The purpose of forest preset ation is. primarily, for the benefit ot tutu 9 generations, and in setting aside the ' not: of the Upper Rogue. Oregon. the .GGG.teisf has placed a guarding hand over '25 valuable a belt ot timher as the world 'ii3fiiLityray', Oral 1 -- I 'ft', 33.30! -i llllymlttil 8011 alone In This Reservation World's Greatest Tract of Sugar Plus. The greatest forest of auger pine on the globe begins at the Kismet): and extends northward past the glittering peeks of Mount Pitt. Diemond. Thleleon, Scott and the Three Sisters to the very toot ot Jefferson. 200 miles to the north. It is e "at forest empire, ruled over by the wild things of the tgl; woods. It embraces a territory of over 4, square miles in extent. Think of it! As large as the entire State ot Connecticut. one-halt as large as Massachusetts and three times as large es the State of Rhode Island. Five hundred square miles ot this is protected by the guarding hand of Uncle Sam, an army ot vigilant rangers paerolllng every Intrict ot it during the summer monthsu " _ - if: Tr" " ' I ' ht' ','_','::::,A,:’. I DURABLE. . 'tal, - [1!GHT. ' w Erill rousr or 4,000 sown: Inns. We will and you a ample mo. In: [0131 in he a nalnced that he cents to [his mother and 25 Be sure that this ft ture in the form 0 . label is on the wrapper of every bottle of Emul- sion you buy. sum t DWI! h "In“. "It. /'ltiggil,'hd) _': At dabroak some red flecks from the ' dragon's jaws drifted back from the mist and dust through which he was writhing ',, forward. It looked, some man said, like the procession of the damned who filed past Dante in hell. . Each man had a red roll around him. They uttered no sound --they looked not at one another, but stared vacantly and mildly at us as they shuffled silently from the mist and that. fled silently on. The expression of each was so like the expression of the rest that they looked like brothers. A more creepy, ghost-like thing I never saw. I knew not what they were, but they fas- cinated me and made me shudder, and I found myself drawing towards them. step by step, hardly conscious that I was moving. I do not recall that any of us uttered a word. Yet they were only sick men coming back from the frone-- soldiers sick with the kakke, the "beri. beri," the sleeping sickness. It Iwas hard to believe that the face of any one of them had ever belonged to a tsoldier--... hard to believe that sickness could make a soldier's face so gentle. That man in the red shirt and those grey ghosts that shuffled so silently out of one mist and so silently into another are the high lights in the two most vividtpictures Pre seen thus ftsr.-9tom On 0 Dragon’s Trail, by John Fox, jun., in the January 8eribner"s. The post offiee at Le Beau, in Wel- worth county, has been removed by the newly appointed postmaster from the town site to his farm, a half mile dis- tant. This marks the final downfall of a town which at one tome hoped to be- come a metropolis. In the early ’ou’s Le Beau was the county seat of Wei- worth county, and a. rival of Aberdeen. The enterprising residents of the town believed t It in time it would become the eepitel of South Dakota when the Territory should be emitted. Then it lost the county seat, the railroads fiiitrd to arrive, the Territory we: dim into two States, end it wee st one edge in- steel hgh' ' tn. of the Cannon- ‘weelth, 'lAgrtid end came in the, maul of the poloffue to er fenn- ho-at. Pull Dupeteh. --r.t - -___'____ .V--'e_ .rrMeFV “A.“ valluV t'" Cl. Chicken broth made from {bye feet of fowls is no new thing in French kitchens. Down in the neighborhood of Washing- ton square you can buy the feet, but a good cupful of broth may be made of the feet of a pair of towls purchased for rwsting. The molt unscientific observer hue noticed how often plants appear in old ground which has been trenched which have never Ip- penred in such spots previously, end tint after tires pass over localities piantl equnily strange to the neighborhood appenr. It in noticed that when a. forest is fired the tree. thattake the piece of the hurneci 9303 Auto 3! irduiiriiniGpUau '{ro'Ef {h'difhitimb ’ob- :erved in that nefghttortted. _ _--- ._ __. After the great London tire in 1666 the yel- low rocket appeared in great profusion for the first time in the district swept by the fire. These facts, which can not he denied, have led to the theory that seed: may lie tor long periods dormant and only wring into life when some stimulus. such " expo- sure to the sun, rain or heat, in applied to A scientist has recently discovered that " extensive tract of land " the silver mines at Laurium, in Greece, is covered by e lux- uriant growth of horned poppies belonging to a hitherto unknown species. These punts have shot up through soil which .hsd been covered to the depth ot ten feet with the masses ot cinder and slag thrown out by the workmen in ancient times. when the mines were worked by the Greeks, and which he" been recently disturbed in order that the imperfectly used materials might be sub- jected to further process of fusion for the purpose at extracting their silver contents. One of the nicest chafing-dish messes is oysters a la poulet. Make a thin cream or a white sauce with a tablespoonfu1 of butter, the same of flour, and nearly a cupful of rich milk or cream. When this is smooth and creamy stir in the beaten yolk of an egg. 000k the oysters in this sauce until they are heated through. Season with salt and white pepper. No well authenticated instances of such find: are extant. while among other articles laid by the Arabs to creduloul traveler: u coming one of the lame tomb u the ancient when have been dahlia bulbs and maize. the deposition of which, in the receptacle from which they were said to have been taken. makes it necessary to believe that 3,000 years ago the subjects of Pharaoh were ensued in commerce with America. Rye and wheat only 185 years old could not be Induced to germinaee. the place of the embryo being filled with A elimy and putrertre ing liquid. When kept secluded from light md dampness needs have been known to keep tt1erurthened periodg. _ _ .. - them, The length of time need- will rue!" their vitality amen emulngly in at erent punts. The need- ot the willow, tor instance, will not germinate titer having once been dry end their germination power in lost in two weeks even if during that interval they have been kept treeh. The seeds of coffee do not germinate utter having been kept tor any considerable length of time. The grains ot wheat lose their power and Itrength alter a lapse of eeven yen“, though wheat over two centuries old has been quite capable ot belng used for food. The story ot "mummy" wheat. sprouting utter having lain dormant in Egyptian tomb- for thouundl of years. to any the least Io_u_nde "yyutdipyr1r_dutsi9us, _ - A t,ever't, ya (Wise Heed) Disinfectant Seep Powder is a. boon to any home. It diain. fects and clean- at the same time. sk time. Anyone who is in the habit of maid” snow pudding will find preserved pine: apple a great addition to it. When' the snow is ready, pour it into the mould until you have a good foundation, add your pineapple, and then the rest of the snow. When it is cold, serve as usual, with soft custard. wroronta' r a 2:. - tr, 1 nin the poigxnclzih be presun Stories of “Mummy What” Found in the Pyramids Doubtful, However. If silver is ,ashtcl 'overy we One of the Chief Horrors of War. SEEDS HAVE GREAT VITALITY. End of a Famous Boom Town. Useful ,Hints. _ teqlllllF' Rus F, , od tttr , big habit of makin’ ONTARIO ARCHIVES . TORONTO k; i' i mm: Harm um. E; afar“ the shop, Male and Female Buyers. (London Truth.) Whereu some woman will go into a volt ttgttaliMttrtettt intent on spending a certain sum, say. on an article of are" and will successively scrutinize half a. dozen things besides what she originally wanted and re- tire without buying any. I mun will sin! in without my fixed plan ot purchue no! will sometimes purchase inn annuities of good- fttatly! nev_er droamod ot wanting when Practical Joke Costs a Wife. Because he pulled a chair from under her at the moment she was about to sit down upon it, says a Kansas City spec- ial in the Chicago Tribune, Flay S. Att. demon yesterday sued Martin E/Anders son for divorce. She alleges that she hit the floor so hard that it permanent ly disabled her. Mind’s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. “I canteen, indeed thet I on not under- etnnd how 'avCii7G%i lone entlneh. or ever hen devoted eny study to them cen doubt that they pone“ some power ot reuon. Many ot their notion- ere unconscioue end Instinctive. eo ere none ot ours. no we my I“ by wetchinx e child, but prectiee enehlel III to well or run elmoet eutometicelly. "Mr. Olen-tone told me that once when he wee tor-min; one of hie gunman he hed lone dittieuRr in men I the gluon. no end Ire. Cindetone wrote down t e titles of the offices end the hence ot the libero! leec- m on piecee ot new end tried ell the "null. but in vein. to m them together. At begun gve_it Yr? n. went to Red. It Pays Manufacturers. A manufacturer who sold only to job- bera, and could not see the benefit of ad. vertising, has had a year's experience with newspaper publicity, and he Guys: "By newspaper advertising we have in. creased the popular demand for our products, and this has enabled us to deal more advantageously with jobbers. They are bound to have our products because the people want them." ' Thte-ttma Celebntion. it"! Avebury, better known my tur John Lu been. the isMeheatqd naturalist, writes: "H my are prone to mm: the in- when“: more ot dogs and end ele- tlttltuf.tht': so to the opposite extreme. . we know. looked on minute " more “tonne. Even recently Bethe, Unn- ml ":1 other we)“: have deleted 'dl T, nee my P powers. e my " e, tunnels-nu numb, witch they explem u renex whines, - - _ _ _ " I” uuwumuu- "iq".....""". In further proof the: nun doe. mnny thing! almost nutoinatieattr Lord Avehnry given this incident: "I hove been for over arty years e director of n oompeny. which cheapo its offices twenty yesrs ego. and I hove not since had any occasion to enter our old house. "One morning this summer. however, I was ttoing to n committee in our present house. but, thinking of other things. I waited past our door and two or three intervening housu and into the porch of our old office." - u.-. ....- .. _.. _- we“ _'" “When Mr. Gina-ton. awoke In the non- In: everything we: "tisfactoritr nee.' In " head; ho: hum bu! worked It out or him during ht: sleep. This was not conscious reason and certainly was not metlncttve. Dr. Cnrpenter on to such ectlon the nuns of unconscious istrrptrratiort.". “. - The Poisoned Spring. -As in na- ture, so in men. polluting the spring and disease and waste are bound to toIiow--ttut staunch nod non-Veg out of kiltor moon! poison in the spring. South America Ner- vine in o great purifier, cum Indigestion, DyIpoplin, nnd tones the nervel. The best evidence ot its efficacy is the unsolicited testimony ot thousands of cured ones.--O I In: tolduby " eouifn, who is a gen- eral, that Britain hm; 600,000 men ready in Indio. at a moment’s notice. In the Chitrul campaign he commanded a re I. ment of Sikhs or Ghoorkgs and 'tlt", “h 3 , " A Substitute. , Ad, mdoiph Churchill was election- .ip' Wand at one time in behalf omit. Ashmead-Bartlett. One bold el- ector whom she was trying to secure, hinted that if the ladies would imitate the famous Duchess of Devonshire they would have no difficulty in securing votes. The duchess, in one memorable canvass, gave a kiss for each doubtful vote. Lady Churchill considered for a moment and then said demurely: “Thank you so much. I’ll suggest that idea to Lady Burdett-Coutts.” The elector laughed, remembering that Lady Bur- dett-Coutts is over 80 years old. Britain's Readiness. An Englishman says: “Lord Kitchener m Bent to India for the especial pur; 9033 of (Kayaking a big army there, and {mule} were the nonpareil, so far " fighting' was concerned. They are not unlike the Japs, but Itpekier-" Russell Sage thinks that smoking is a bad habit. "I overheard one day," he said, recently, “a conversation that de- lighted me. It was a conversation be- tween a young man and his wife. He ap- peared, to be a rather extravagant and lazy fellow. She appeared to be eco- noinieal, industriaus and ambitious. The wife~was trying to urge the husband to give up smoking. She was pointing out to him how mueh in the course of a year he spent on tobacco. showing him that mentally, and financially he would be s.ritlyrttt _his pipe.. 1But all iiirirGGidu.y he would Be beiter off without his pipe. "But all great men tet he grumbled. 'Well,' she de- a , 'if .will give up smoking till you’re M41 be quite satisfied." Mind's Lillment Cures (inrgct In Cowl Lad tutu-y. the tbeiattist, Discuss! Miami's Liniment Cures Colds, etc. In , 3345‘! Bil Wife's Retort. rXilliairrsT She was physicallz “Moral“, W." “normal. What can I do for rout" "You told me. Mr, when you hired me Mar months no tor :10 a week that u noon u I showed tw"' ot improvement you would also my Pl!- "That in still my Intention. Mr." “Good mornlng. sir." “Good morning'.' If the ostrich knew how much his tea. them were worth he would be prouder than the puoock. Good Reno]: for Envy. (Clcvolmd Lender.) They were buzzing Ibout their home him. “a.” am one. proudly, "came from Cincin- n. " "I em you," “netted the Clevehnd mun. “Ind t" "Yen. Pm just sou); there." 'v wttt be aid Limited. Toronto. to my person who can prove that this mp contains any form of ministration “mm. or main: my Injurloun chemicals. Heart-Slat People. -Dr. Mum's Cure tor the Heart in I been tonic that never an. to ctgrtt-iq "In In It: 'rtteets-- closer to the "border land" and matches trom death's grip more Butterers than my other remedy tor my [many tt diseases end ailments in the cantor! ot human suffering. Gives relief In " mlnuteI.-75 The peculisrity of the rice table con- sists in the number sud variety of dishes presented. From these dishes the guest hes to select the materials which, together with the rice upon the soup plate before him, are to constitute his curry. It is also as well to know be. forehnd that one is not required to lunch solely on curry, but that the rice table is succeeded by courses of ordinary luncheon dishes. It is a one therefore of "embturaa de richness,” The second danger is tat of making no one’s curry "not wisely, hut too Mrs. Chadwick is to bt; put upon the stage. She has been dramatized, aid with Andrew Carnegie and other well. known'people will be shown to New York audiences after Christmas. Sov- enl playwrights tried their hands, but a newspsper man turned out the first promising-looking melodrama with Mrs. Chadwick as the villainess. The title is "For Love and Millions." Mrs, Bad- wick, as the charscter will be called, is arrested on a charge of forgery. She escapes several times, but is often re- arrested, What becomes of her finally Mr. Niemeyer doesn't tell in his play. She kills her hwyer and two or three other people during the first three acts. Mlurd‘s Llnlment Cures Distemper. In Jul. u in most sully worm coun- tat0""il"iiUrofFrrtkitt1e1r.,te! to take I cup of he or coffee, together with . biscuit and some fruit, imme- diluly on leaving one’s bed. This is fol. lowed by n more substantial breakfast; but the first really serious meal is serv- ed at hell-put twelve o’clock. and is the equivalent of the French "dejeuner . ls fourehette" or the Anglo-Minn tif- fin. This meal is called rice table---'Y.w "ate1"--from the principal dish, a. very elaborate curry. in the preparation of which the Malay cooks are especially skilful. The second anger is tot of making up ons's curry "hot wisely, but too well," null leaving neither appetite nor capacity for the besistenk or for any of the other solid dishes which subse- quently appear, and which under these circumstances only produce s. feeling of mingled horror and consternation. It is then that one suddenly reslizes that the rice table is merely s sort of tremend- ous "hom d'oeuvre." There as two dangers to be avoided. In the first place it is quite possible, in spits of thevnumber of dishes present- ed singly, to say noting of an octagonal tny, containing a. separate chutney in each of its nine compartments. to get no lunch at all. For nothing is easier than, after saying "nein" to a surccsaion of frivolous compounds to dismiss the one solid end palstnble dish capable of sustaining an Englishman until dinner We publish simple, straight testimon. his, not press agents' interviews, from well-know]; people . .. V . "iiiGiriii- o'vi/r' America they testify to the merits of MINARD‘S LTNIMENT. the best of Household Ronmdios. C. C. 1t1crrNu?s , oo., time. gums muons me: man. ,.'.r)'Fi"rRr,ts] Still of the Same Mind. (Summon American.) - - "e m -. A Chadwick DFise a" TAKE NOTICE. [y2iWj, mg, but first Mrs. title M I“: Somewhere. V 0hatoet Tramreript.) In. M (when husband had told I that the Wt house was the prop! “In: Ne k. on the priuciple or suite., to tNntti,'."'"' and m wruny nice win: In. ftitri.-ri., , In. tub-Yd. an aid this WIS Jul! at. tttttt m to tte-why, ”mellow that 't and Mt. um- all. , Quito I Tank Ahead of Him. “that: t3ttttatittttiorr) a,“ M Beer." w tha 3.307.. qttt% "no .0 - ." A 'ei2iiiiiih.p". “a: 5':'Jé'&£‘§::.' WWI?“ i905. There is . township in Nari h Carolina that for My years greeted (‘hriatmu with n balloon ascension and a shower of gifts. At prompt 2 of the afternoon people gathered from all the country mund to watch a large rod balloon carry up . profeuionlll tgeronaut. When he reached t proper height he dropped from his bl..th I dog attached to parachute. which floated down to the waiting mul. titude. who mumbled for it. The for- taut. one .that gripped it became its owner. When the balloon had climbed the t, . hm we rods the holmsmgl 'eteaaei1 . fit and desirable gum-‘0. Thu {W “I my down and was welcomed an. In. warmly than tho dog. The- ttte Ml united home, well oontcnt‘ clan and m plant. with or without mm. Gan "no" It. “god order. an all or put. Chap. Sup. x C. Oakvmo. FOB BALI. A "an GRIST MILL-tEN- ”: county. an: Napalm; water power, with m u autumn; ' run, 4' stone; two on M; punt-u - was: dwelling an “alumnus; church. whoa! ind postomce. with an matt, with": so rods; one mu. term, "rdu'ltl'ar'ii; cation. G. T. R. For ttMPI.? ar."'" Juno. A. Clo-e. Chun- Shiloh’a Consumption e 'Gairmi Snifwiu regain .u for on urethane won my. q on": LII-_ - writ. DWI. “dru- Box MO. iiuot pha- attd urn-z .. can. an. a all: W" are new; “but! was. , “.60 Winter Sula Ind up " ES to as. tho Skit-u. Clo-I: nnd w-ms. Send tor {£119,394 slot? Fri-i THE soUTHCorT America. is usually considered to be the hnd of eccentric clubs, but Belgium is trying to equal it, any: the London Sketch. In Brunei: tt Bald-bended Club has been founded, the entrance to which is very strictly guarded. It is not sul- ficient to have a. bald with on the top of the head, or very thin hair; a nun. to be admitted, must be absolutely and eompietely bald. Cons Cure I f§n22°25a Prices; 2Stt SEC $1. lb]. Cunning Agent- wanted. an SPECIALTY CO., Toronto, LADIES. WHEN IN NEED. SEND FOR (no trill ot our never-ulna; remedy; "In! Ie,'." and “10. Pull Chemlcll Oo., lilwnu se, Win. 6 PNUif,'.,'Lt POSITIONS SECURED qutckly; help supplied; send stamped envelope tor engagement forms. Toronto Em ployment Agency, Mt Bar, Toronto. i CORSETS style. and cloth 1trtlth THE P.' SUIT 00.. Dept. H, Mon, Can. Eva-mg In Furl u lowest t',l'rll1't tor ILLU RATED CATALOG E. RAW FURS. We will my highest New York prices for link. Skunk. Coon, For, at! Bll other Furl. Bond tor prlco list. In t recent use where a Brooklyn policemgn .killed} lilac boy while show in; . fleeing criminal o motion to dis- miu the criminal elm-gee brought against the rsolicemui was denied b Supreme Ccu Jultice William J. 'dl, in thesw wordn: "You want me to rule as a mat ter of low that the officer was Justi- tied? A police officer bu no more right to discharge a revolver in the streets than you or I have. Motion denied." This may disagree with the preconceived notion of Eoliuomen generally that ting; have a rig t to shoot a gun at anyb y anywhere, but whether it is good law or not it is good sense. A policeman ouglr ii to be allowed to use firearms ' "vapor“ mien; it is to ro . lives of (,'),s'r',iC'i,'r?a'l The readers ot this psper will be pies-ed lo lesrn that there is st least one aresded dis- use that science hss been nble to cure in all its sages. nnd that is Cstsrrh. Hnll‘s Cstsrrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medial trater0ty. Cstsrrh being s constitutionsl disease, requires con stitutionsl trestment. Hall's Catsrrh Cure h tsken internsily. acting directly upon the blood snd mucous surfaces ot the system. thereby Guttering she foundation ot the dis- esse. and ginn- tne pstient strength try building up the constitution nno Assisting nsture in diam In work. The proprietors has so Inch (nth in its curative powers (in: they otter One Hundred Dollm for my use tint it tul- to cure. lend .or list ot testimonisis. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, o. Sold by sll ”waists, 75c. rm Hall's - Pills for constipated ii. u. BASTEDO & co. %fiii iiiciffata" aaaua" claim - to“ m I. the ”the. ot - It. In at Juan!" 4”») In: an m no”! my The Policeman and Hi: Revolver. When you think you have cured a cough or cold, but find a dry lyac ing cgugh mains, them '4 Prices; s. C. WILL: & Co. 305 15: w: tt. uTtor.N.Y.,Torortto.Can. b The tad .ure Toetttt " at once. It will strengthen the lungs and stop the cough. Fa " King St. East, IORONI'O. ggiimtfllfEllt [If Mt ANIMALS OUT OF THE SKY. $lil0 REWARD. $I00 38sz was“ ARE d to qrettq b. In Lttq Aunt- - "attrtbnt, "q.). TONE“). for u at“: - Innurod n - 1 an: WW “Wen“ won CALI; AG“ " WANTED. A Bald-Headed Club. HISCELLANEOUS. m: btnt sun. mom. mums» MADE TO OR- der. Write tor menu“ alip- um trtatruetlttttt1. Athi- SEND FOR a dam A tne. " an. 'b- F -iiitt COR- . ru. but r ‘mm thom. r for nu chef." “In; imul his “no. Whore .ou staying‘. ttt of abodi, this qu b be better w h the inn wh b reoeiw inst Commenun); -i. “I. to Jean: up. Hir-There Weru th d John u, Jesut,: M the Eauhedrin my, to the people ml}, to “to than ation." 87. They John' u they II if all It. w, mor. I L', y mu} T tths loch med-- ll.- rty Wclt your do- v worv _ Jou- Wllu “A! i WKNATIONAL JANE Alt i I " dueiplea- the author o - using 36. And lo, - him, an tttg ttim yul away the the lamb ot 'tttqtgn. afu-r I ' verb.) "A - had bee - "I prov -ftheieast no -H."--A'larr to them equiv 'ttrr him.- tico h his office a “on that In "of from MI h, t. God's pit Hit, 6, I". 3 IL, 14). 4.l Sunday B.tion of li, tgtnnd of Il In with h and in his I The. tenth I Tr,," w us tha There its 1 Whether I to the Jec, qordin,e lo 39. Come b them to Aode. “If with [new The C tion. ultit his! 1 III. l they sialr the intm mm I n Twine scribe 0X] brim thew to I him that “on Th lerri fit! u new. be a d; " " 'tl ree lt' our " wr 3“ ad ' Orme the t all!" 111. tes. q in! i "rted if faith b new H mut tl " tl ‘Wu lll um Bit u H HI "

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