West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Feb 1905, p. 2

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Imagine a park or garden in the Jap- Anese style, with dwarf trees, surround- ed by a. hedge instead of a wall, in this park a. group of Japanese houses, like those occupied by the peasants. The prisoners are all at work proportioned to their physical ability. Some are threshing and grinding rice; others are weaving coarse cloth of a. dark red color, of which the prison uniforms I!!! made," the old nod infirm are ”panting levee of paper. All of them receive . per- ”up of their anmiatau. The Vanna-v in military in reformatory. There are few in; the use wi yriaolien Ire "So you so our destiny is arranged} for us sometimes by accidents over which we have no eontrol," continued the inventor. "I have always been sat- isfied that if it had not been for the' tears of that beloved woman. now my; wife. the telephone would not have been! exhibited at the Centennial Exposition,,' and therefore, might not have been} brought into common use for many! years to eome."--Joe Mitchell Chapplej in January National Magazine. l ,V ~_â€"~w -"-.r uni-J wry”, III-IIC Inc "Well, the end was that the eommit. ' evening prayers were said. and???“ that tut yehng,', rtl',1t mu“: “3:333 gammy; 1tuse is; tX an em eror, an onora nos ' - 3; the United pStntos. must sun-of: be fortable as possible for the night, and worthv of a place in the CentenniafEx. soon all but the mother were asleep, position but even then I did not realize ' I‘Yhik' ithteh mgsitened eyes anibquitverinlg y helmine im rtance of the in. 195 o o er passengers, e rave . ',tia,,TI") 'l'r'if,n2Pi',r, Boston, and ling man with his grips, the politician nmonw theG that. revered man. Boon to with his schemes, the business man with hem"; m" father-in-law, had often! his worries, paid a ty?en.t..ty.t mighty chuffed mi, about my scientific toy, and] tribute to the greatest teivi1,i.ziryr agent although I never doubted that it would of all 'yf51, the Christian religion. sometime come into general use, I had God .save the mothle;_and he; broo.d, no idea of its ever reaching thy pro- and 3""??? than to t err last ome " portions of general use that it en- peaee'.--Selected. joys to-day in city and rural life. -__ -. - r-_------ “It bed been a long and arduous day for the committee, they were almost worn out when they got 'round to the, telephone, and they Were on the point, of deciding that it was scarcely- worthy of a place in the exposition.; I was feeling pretty well discouraged, and was thinking of leaving, when in came Dom Pedro, Emperor of Brazil.! I had met him in Boston, where he visited my school, and was very much, interested in the project I had on hand ,but little did I dream that he would recognize me again, having only met me in a casual way. However, he took me by the arm and spoke most enthusiastically about my telephone work, which rather opened the eyes of the judges, tired though they were with the day’s strain. When he took one end of the line and I took the other and began to repeat Shaker _ pure to him in the best dramatic l istyle at my command, and "To be or not to be" whizzed into the ear of the 1 venerable emperor. my victory was a complete. He made a careful examin- [i'. ation of the receiver, while I waited - off as far as possible with the other t end of the line and continued to recite t to him the memorable words of the a bard of Avon. t At I "out reception in Wuhington, ', I heard one of the most interesting 'gmnanee. of modern industry that has torer been brought to my notice. It was Jointed by n stalwart gentleman with l bushy grey hair, flowing beard and Ilporkling brown eyes, and the telling "'1 was not much interested in haw 1 train passes overhead; learning TO no a ing my invention repented in Phila- i fireman by climbing water spouts; learn- delphia, but Mr. “bard was de- ' ing to bo a soldier by exploding powder termined, and equally determined was in a teakottle; learning to be a sailor his daughter. So the time came for' by tattooing his l.eirs and arms with the committee to give the final de- i house paint; learning to be a juggler by cision as to whetuer or not the tele- I swallowing the potato peolor; learning phone should be permitted to appear to be a man by using his father's razor. .38 an exhibit. I received a. telegram‘ The astounding thing. in fact, 13 not to the effect that I must came to l that so many boys die young as that “to Philadelphia not later than the follow- ', many live to die old. _ Jug Sunday. As I was in the midst of. ------r-r'--- _examimstions at my school I felt that'; Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds. etc ,1 could not go. That same afternoon . F . there came a message informing me WHEN BEDT $915159! 'that the young lad): was going, and ll, On a Santa Fee, , ming.out of ‘was.to pet her oif..1 uppmrt-d at the': Kansas City one m' re 1 mother ntatnon m Boston. m good time, and and her brood of, f ur girls and dust as the train w.as, about to start one boy. Th ”(1 . inois the day aha suddenly busrt into tears. This before, and l r way .. th '1'“ too much for me; T sprang on "new co, Mei “.husbuld tll 'tho tries, and ‘21}? mom? was , fathe hs‘d'et' _ A _f., h was at“ ,trri “of; "iiiiT"iir; i" 2:];thwa mildly“. pit -v" 'r: _ J' A "r.', mum! me, that Willie “”1th helm“ Although . ahOWed that to all that," (uni that irrepr _ 'ey "ucv'c-v.mst. "of in the midst ther of hers, sent me all I . luxury and , r n but withal they the next train,) .0 I went on were "pefiet n' a d scrupulously the committee who were to (let clean. The m r was thin turd Ir, destiny of my telephone. . her face pale trt: il, with t} .. "It had been a. lone and amino d I trip and the c e.o on; precious for the ooiaita"'tiii; were 'll' " 9 for there wer twenty 'our hour wl, worn out when thr,, _ an...” 1Ptt i before the Jiouneylt.en . b f l i But it was the irrepressible son of the house, Willie Hubbard, who seemed to take special interest in the work that whiled away the leisure hours of his brother-in-law to be, and it was he who enthusiastically mastered the work, ing details of the wonderful instrument which has since almost revolutionized the means of intercourse between busi- ness men and given to spoken languages an nndreamt of value. But the story is best told in Dr. Bell's own animated WI! t even the great Beethoven himself, but his csnny Scotch father seems to hove considered musician as another term for "ne'er-do-woel," and especi- sly disliked the idea of his son’s be. ing s. "wee bit fiddler." The young man's attention then turned toward the education of the deaf and dumb, and in this work he was absorbed when he commenced the line of studies which led to the invention of the telephone. It was about this some time that he Wes paying court to a young lady who afterward became his wife. His tower was in charge of the Massachusetts ex- hibit at the Centennial Exhibition in 1876, and in this way Dr. Bell had an opportunity of placing before the pec- ple the wonderful scientific toys which had a place in the Massachusetts build- mg. too," no more than 15 minutes, though it in the history of a. complete revolu- tion in modern business acomplished by the namtor, Dr. Alexander Gn- ham Ben, the inventor of the tele- The doctor is n Scotchmnn and like may of his countrymen is ambitious. Be old me he had dreamed of being a and composer, and I gathered that in his yopth he had aspired to surpass Jail late in Japan. ew unions, withstand. with which P.ereo1tid be pawn unnorms :re madei firm are ”panting leaves I of them receive n per- dr earnings. The younger in: school. The dnciphne "no: for this" i a; "e: form, but ti: it. ipirit Don't use 1ntoxipatimr drink; debts promptly. Invest your I and treltPfitte.r to_chnnce nor Be steady ind iimTiiri' success will come. After careful consideration. come to a de- finite decision. so nhead bravely and - be discouraged. ' Stand up tor your rights and “Vance your interests stoutly. but honorably. Do not burden yourself with useless ac. qgninunces: do not be Inobbhh; be polite to These precepts were laid do 1t,Phi,,R2?vtitemad,,' of b1llh.l'l'r's?l,t'r',yuga- or s " in life: woe is to the way of getting ahead Inquire thoroughly Ind conselantl the partieulam ot th out], Into torengase in, - e business Writ Propose Miami's Liniment Cures Distemper, -yps, even timidly-the mother and her children knelt together at the long seat, the baby bowing his head with the rest and rubbing with chubby hands his eyes that would hardly stay open, while the evening prayers were said. Presently the cause of ap. this excite- ment was made plain-it was bedtime, and they had not said their prayers. Quietly, modestly, without ostentation This others"birgan whispering among themselves and then to the mother ,as if something exciting has happened, or would happen soon, all of which at- tracted the attention of the other pas~ sengers, who sat in wonderment as they tried to divine the Muse of so much whispering to keep the last one awake. They occupied seats in the front end of the car, including the long seat which ran along the smoking car partition. It was after tatiR e “"hentthe train left Kansas City,-. and are "iGuGi'r ones were soon yawring and pscarcely able to keep awake. Ir fact, the pet of the family had closed his eyes and was fast approaching “shut-oye town," when the next eldest tugged at him while she looked appenlingly to her mother with an expression that was pitiful. He must not go to sleep yet. I _ -iiiviirtning ‘himself a trapeze performer and jumping from the barn roof to the clothes line. 7 Learning to swim in water that is over his head. Learning to skate on thin ice. Learning to play football with boys of twice his size. A Learning to flip trolley cars and box cars; learning to jump from trains while in motion; learning to dash in front of locomotives on grade crossings so as to fool the engineers; learning to hang by his hands to a railroad bridge while the train passes overhead; learning to be a fireman by climbing water spouts; learn- ing to be a soldier by exploding powder in a teakettle; learning to be a sailor by tattooing his legs and arms with house paint; learning to be a juggler by swallowing the potato peoler; learning to he a man by using his father's razor. ficiency of the Juana. lies, which is t'd'ir"i',rdr'dYl1'ulTal'l. The prieonert.hm dined!!!” ttpe trrtyt, Quid no differently fed, 1t'g,',tti', they are idle and refractory, numb to dis- gipline, _or txeeptioelly yd! Inland. Stiffenening his legs beneath his high chair and the dinner table and falling backward with a. dull, sickening swish. Going to sleep in the bathtub without turning the water off. Falling downstairs. Imagining the window-ledge of third storey front a river bank and fishing with a pin hook in the street below. The only other punishinent is solitary confinement in s sort of dungeon, not exceeding five days. No risoner msy be disgraced, however short tll term of sen- tence, unless his family or friends ss- sume responsibility for him. The result has been the organizstion of s lugs number of prisoners' aid tsoeietietc--Pal1 Mall Gazette. THE szs or ”HOOD. The census analysis mid e by Professor Wilcox, of Cornell University, again brings out the fact that, although more boys than girls are born in the United States, the girls eventually outnumber them. Why? From the moment a boy discovers the use of his hands and feet, says the Chicago Inter-Ocean, he engages in blood-curdling enterprises, such ar-- Diving from the bed to a hardwood floor. Removing the foundations of the En- eyelopedia Brittanica and burying him. self beneath that heavy compendium of useful information. 7 - -.. "Giiigiiiririiireovers of the library stand until the bronze lamp tips over on his little head. __ _ _ _ _ _ On a Santa Fee. F ming out of Kansas City one ni . ere , mother and her brood of trv' ur girls and one boy. Th ""d- inois the day before, and l ". r way Q the "new 2lll. "We . “.husband and father ,htLd'nu-h" " h was that WHEN BEDT n ttt On a Santa Fee. t V 1 Kansas City one mi Cl and her brood of trv' 1 one boy. The ‘-"d- i, before, and l ". r “new co I ”at? . "d who {Janna = 7 , re onldn'! mic. a t" hem." Alt-hung" . l '"V'ucrc'. we not. _ ow' i; f Rothschild’s Advice, An t with useless ac- obtstsh; be polite to drink. Par your rour money are”, e nor to mm. in Your work, and 33:81:16 _theil homes,yfnd pOose presor ar, W' ._ ' ' '1tetttqpa, what iv 'ed that Hamilton Time ,’ which. min e midst pretty busy, is nevertheless y1tPrr Tady ly fu ther employment. h CONUNDRUM COMICS. Why is the letter "k" like a pig's tail? Because it is at the end of pork. On which side of a pitcher is the han- dlet On the outside. What plant is fatal to mice? Cat-nip. What is heavier than lead and lighter than a feather? The sun. What word is there that by adding a syllable you may make shorter? Short. “_:_,... _.. - Dodd's Kidney Pills cure all Ki Diseeaae, from Baekaehe to Bright's ease. Ste. Marguerite, Dorchester W., Quebec, January 23. - (Special).-- That the most serious forms of Kidney Disease cannot stand before Dodd’s Kidney Pills is daily proved in Quebec and one of the most convincing proofs is given right here in St. Mar- 'iruerite. Donut Laflarrune whom every- body knows, had diabetes. This is one of the extreme stages of Kidney Disease and it baffles ordinary medical skill. Consequently it is not surprising that the doctor who attended Donal, Lailani. me could not help him. But let Mr. La. flnmme tell the most wonderful part of his story himself: "Two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me," he says. TMy Diabetes is all gone, and I recommend Dodd’s Kidney Pills to all my friends and to all those who Buffer." They Always Cure All Forms of Kidney! Disease From Backache to Bright'si Disease. I Denat Latiamme Found a Cure in Dodd's Kidney Pills. HIS DIABETES IS --"_ ALL GUNE NOW 4 Iwi, Hamilton Time ,"w;1ich. while always pretty busy, is nevertheless always ready for fu er employment. It is the pre1iaftiitry work of the daily news- pappr"aesmen that keeps other sales‘ An Efficient Salesman. If it were possible to engage the serv- ices of a salesman of pleasing address who could personally privu'nt the merits of any line of goods to thousands of buyers dail'y in Hamilton and neighbor- 'ing Naees--one who mould visit them at their ho‘mesva’nd yhgse presqnee would JkkAteioci'esgtais1saiwhat ivideawake Fat is of great account to a baby; that is why babies are fat. If your baby is scrawny, Scott's Emulsion is what he wants. The healthy baby stores as fat what it does not need immediately for bone and muscle. Fat babies are happy ', they do not cry; they are rich; their fat is laid up for time of need. They are happy because they are comfortable. The fat sur- rounds' their little nerves and cushionsthem. When they are scrawny those nerves are hurt at every ungentle touch. They delight in Scott's Emul- sion. It is as sweet as wholesome to them. For Thin Babies occupied. Send for free sample. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Be sure that this picture in the form ofalabel " on the wrapper of every bottle cl Emulsion you buy. Scott 4. Bownc Chemists Toronto, Ont. 50c. and $1.00 INDURATED I FIBRE WARE l, all Ridnov All Druggml Did. mow mauuru was selected for the teat, and the smoker took a seat and began. He puffed like an engine tor about two tttin- utes and accumulated something under half an inch ot ash and then he began to web. his. He shifted the cigar trom side to side. pulled slow and fast and seemed to have difficulty getting his breath between the draws. At any rate, he kept turning his head to avoid the smoke. and finally got to lamzhing. I rouid see he was in torture, but he stuck ‘to it until he got within ttatt an inch of the mark. Then he Jumped up suddenly, threw the cigar “my, ttttd Wllked out of the shop. I paid the Jret end an“, it to his account, and he told me last Waning that the very idea ot tobacco made him sick. I doubt whether it would be possibi. for anybody to smoke even a. Pmter1ttetr' strong cigar through in the manner 1 my. described."-Kamsiii City Journal. v V -- “nu vvu‘ nuuleu witnout taking it from his lips. ‘Bosh!’ said the man; 'I do that right along, and think nothing ot it.' 'r'n bet you a box of perfectos you can't do it right now,' said the other, end In halt a minute the wager was made. Br its terms the cigar was to be consumed in a steady, con- secutive puffs, and not removed trom the “pa until burned to a marl: one and 3 half inches from the tip. A clear Havana coi- orado meduro was selected for the teat, and the smoker took a Beat and began. He puffed like an engine tor about two min- utes and accumulated something under halt an inch ot ash and then he began to web- ble. He Ihlited the cigar trom side to side, pulled slow and fast and seemed to have difficulty getting his breath between the draws. At any rate, he kept turning m, head to avoid the smoke, and finally got to [ Iattsrhing. I (-ould see he was in torture ( I... In ..."a. ur. " .._... L - Vo-_-~- -.... an] um“ In a boat on the subject In my late led to a; curious bet. He declar- trin with. that he could smoke t nary cigars in half an hour. A remarked that no man alive CO' even one cigar continuoully until I sumed without taking it from 'Baa." said the man; a do th along, rand think nothing M "I "I have a customer who thinks he make: l twenty cigars a day," laid a dealt:- to a, reporter. “As a matter of fact. he give. away many of them and throws uni sumo that are only partly consumed. However, he is tirm In the belief that he smokes man actual tobacco than any man in town and a boast on the subject In my store recently led to a curious bet. He declared, to 'tlf.} gin with. that ho mum ..__--., A- - . - 'i-_-MP... any-v “VIII“ II condemned 'ott."'-ishington Post [explain how, although it was of single action, he could fire it as fast as though it were double action. In some way his hand struck the hammer, causing the weapon to explode. In a. second my friend turned deathly pale and became so agitated that he could hardly speak. "Having noticed that the bullet struck a rug and took a downward course, I didn't see any cause for excitement, and, lifting up the rug, showed him where the lead took lodgment. He became calm pretty soon, and then he explained his agitation. 'Had that bullet gone into the eourt'--all the hotels down there open into a court-vin-d of the floor, and had it struck any Mexican, my life 'would not have been worth a ten-cent _ piece.. I have lived here long enough to know how swift is the punishment meted out to foreigners, even in case of accl- dent, where a, native is injured. Indeed, had I been unfortunate enough to have caused the death of one of them, it is quite probable that Sou, as well as my- self, would have been executed. The fact that you had nothing to do with the shooting would have been of no avail, for your presence here would have _ ”mam..-“ .t----- n: WWV " . More and more pressing becomes the question as to what should be done with the ineorrigihly idle vignnta who ap- pear to be increasing in numbers every year. As examples of such I cite two cases which were reported in the papers about four years ago. The first was that of a man who appeared before a bench of magistrates in Warwickshire. The prisoner had not slept in a bed for sev- eral years, but when offered employment declined it on the ground that he pre- ferred working at the local jail to any- where else. The man, apparently to nus satisfaction, was sentenced to a month's imprisonment with hard labor-Le., he was maintained " the expense of a heavily taxed working community under conditions, which were confessed more agreeable to him than taking honest em- ployment, and he would naturally resort to " vagabond life on leaving prison. The second instance occurred " Shef- field, the case being that of a confirmed idle loafer who, though only twenty-one years of age, refused employment when offered, made away with part of the clothes which he had received on enter- ing the workhouse, and lived an abso- lutely idle life, except when obliged to work in prison or in the stone-yard. 'Phe above two cases merely represent types of a worthless life, but steadily increas- ing class of half-fed parasites, who prey upon and are a positive danger to soci- ety; witness the spread of what is call- ed "hooliganism" within the past few years. Owing to this organized system of ruffianism, entire streets in London have been rendered unsafe, and the abuse “has become so defiant of the law that respectable law-abiding residents in the neighborhood have been frequently restrained by threats from coming tors ward to give evidence before the courts. ---Westminster Review. srresorwortueo1eaastste"iir mereaainginBtteiand. Hard on Foreigners in Mexico. ‘Once while sojourning in the City of Mexico I happened to call upon a friend at one of the principal hotels of that, capital," said Representative Southard, of Ohio. If, at almost any time of the year, we walk through the woods where the red, scarlet, black or pin oaks are growing-- that is, where we find those that ripen their acorns in two seasons, and there- fore belong in the pin oak group-we shall probably find on the ground fallen branches that vary in size from that of a lead pencil to that of one's thumb. or even larger. These, at the broken end, says a writer in St. Nicholas, appear as if cut away within the wood, so that only a thin portion is left under the bark. Within the rather uneven cut, generally near the centre of the growth, is a small hole tightly plugged by the "powder post" of a. beetle larva. Split open the branch or twig, when a. bur. row will be seen, and the little, white, soft, hard-jawed larva that made it will be found, or perhaps the inactive pupa. Minnrd's Linlment Cures (large! In Cows l'While in his room I noticed a. very “GREASE " IDLE newts. The Baby Beetle's Cradle. Smoking a Cigar, mm an hour. A bystaKJé no man alive could smoka "'"/nJee"r, until it was con~ " Inc: . l-w' . ’ 1e. By its terms the umed in a steady. con- not removed trom the a mark one and a halt A cigar Havann col- t-IAAO- ‘-' .. y.eitiFeeror'iiT' ___ -_ -_... Mae-um, manger; 3,. 582 1t'adett-yneaie"iiU, mu; luv, 2,. 750, and theology. despite the emi-sie of its prxtfeeeoii, only 335. Almeria sends 123 Itydertta, " 8, Amtrak s, um m 31. tha Berlin University's 9,000 Students. The year book of the German uni- rereities, just published. nukes it den that Berlin Utiuversity is the m1; num- erously utten ed out of learnt in the world. It contains 7,774 111““ng and 1,330 '?P1'y,etritiatud than“. The philosophical t'iehriiieire'4 phil- ology and mtun! mane”. “when 3,- 532 1ty,1eu-rmeaieiiic Lttt, "- - “it. It one is caught in wet toe between shoe an: m with a smooth-shod hm may be got safely home horse's feet with a few t ends under the shoe. cro tween shoe tat heel) nd foot, cross again on a (it over toe. Repeat this tot and your animal is fair] and will get along with distance. Even the fluent although eczething exm like piano wire. In the be: meat beats ell the put; nude for the purpone. can be instantly Inplled 1 For Eycgim Chains. Hoe do or Eyesha- Cues: In the Optical line. Call In: mined. “I would say that I do not a medicine that has stood the time like MINARD’S LINIME.‘ has been an unfailing remedy household ever sinoe I can re and has outlived dozens of l competitors and imitations." The publisher of paper in the Mari writing to us states Although we are told when the ques- tion is naked, What becomes of pins? that they fall to the earth and become terrapimi, a gentleman has gone to s-“mc trouble to find out that this is not so land to give us the correct answer. lie has found that pins are ranked into dust. Hairpnis which he watched for 154 days disappeared by rusting away at the end of that time. Bright. pins took nearly eight months to disappear; polished steel needles nearly two years and a half; brass pins had little endur. ance; steel pens were nearly gone at the end of eighteen months, though their l wooden holders were still inn-m SAVES HORSES FROM suAriiG, It no In cumin In ---= -- - Shiloh’s gonsgmption The chief uses of food are two: To form the material of the body and re- pair its wastes; to yield heat to keep the body warm and to provide muscular and other power for the work it has to do. Dr. Atwater prepared, two tables show- ing, first, the composition of food mate- rials, the most important of which are the nutritive ingredients, and their fuel value; second, the pecuniary economy of food, in which the amount of nutriment is stated in pounds. Butter has the greatest fuel value, fat, pork coming sec- ond and the balance of the foods men- tioned being valued as fuel in the fol- lowing order: Cheese, oatmeal, sugar. rice, beans, cornmeal, wheat flour wheat bread, leg of mutton and beef sirloin, round beef, mackerel and salmon. TRathd very ow , " and potatoes What shrunk your Why didtolet we Yeti REAL VALUE " FOOD. In 20 pounds of potato" the" are 33.4 pounds of nutriment; in 25 can“ worth of at salt pork there are 81-2 pounds of nutriment; in the game value of wheat bread there are 2 1-4 pounds; in the neck of beef, 13-4 pounds; m skim milk cheese, 18-4 pounds; in whole milk cheese, a trifle more than 11-2 pounds; in butter, 11-2 pounds, and in smoked ham and leg of mutton about the some; in milk a trifle over 1 pound; in mackerel, about 1 puond; in round of beef, 3-4 of e. pound; Ill salt codfish and beef sirloin, about 1-2 a. pound; in eggs, at 25 cents a dozen, about 7 ounces, and in fresh codfish, about 6 ounces. mart of milk, three-qtyulen' of a po of moderately fat beef, sirloin steak, for instance, and five ounces of wheat; flour, all contain about the same amount of nutritive material, but we pay different prices for them and they have different value for nutriment. Milk comes nearest to being perfect food. It contanis all of the different kinds of nutritive materials that the body needs. Bread made from the wheat flour will support life. It contains all of the neces- sary ingredients for nourishment, but not in the proportions best adapted for ordinary use. A man might live on beef alone, but it would be a very one-sided and imper- feet diet.; but meat and bread together make the essentials of a healthful diet. Such are the facts of experience. The advancing science of later years explains them. This explanatio_n takes into tur. count not simply quantities of meat and bread and milk and other materials which we eat, but also the nutritive in, Eedients or "nutrients" which they con- in. b The Lu; Dare Tonic S The cure that is guaranteed your druggist. La grippe, pneumonia, and ittflu- enza often leave a nasty cough when they’re gone. It is a dangerous thing to neglect. Cure it with WHAT BECOMES OP PINS .Priqesz. "'â€"' a. L. " 50c 01 rickovmx ar* arm -. -. _------ the Mar'itiHiE "tttttt extn m " the best. I the pun!” I P,'lil',rrg s",' e , MP ed , a: ulna. "ooh. t C5953 “Um states: -.-.. y that I do not It 1t1y1ood the w, _ ”v.5; walker um- roronet: pal. loom td horse on nsphtlt be home by wrapping the few turns ot wire, says re. crou tho-W .c, -..-.... wen be- ad heels: then under 1 different spot Ind s for rm or six times. fairly well roughlnod with an“ Pas.. - ‘ your woolens ? s wear so soon t common soap. “It! best still in“; tood the tent of LINIMENT. lt , remedy in our I can remember, Pttg of would-be "“auuuou ease for . long wire will answer, well t1yntreriid t. This .mn‘e_ it mum, ate.. I ”Mush. Ind , Mr one. B, CW. 8m- 'th mum" la I"- --, or (rout, hird otatoes there axe went; in " eenta rk there "* SI-g in the came value no 2 1-4 pounds; 13.4 pounds; in WILL: & Co. so: in Tomato. Can. ttost Farmer's Provinces in not know Four ara tougher by of much "P""""""""", uuuuecunt tetPreiiiiiiiiG"iih'iC,"2it"C, tho “and Mach. 5 at her I a}; without the iea.--New Y I Shortage in Medical Phat: l It is reported that there is n srarcity of various' medicinal roots and herbs. e0- pecially those of American product. m. and that in consequence the mankct prices of those crude drugs have bum decidedly ruined of late. We may ima- gine that the activity of the synthetist " driVing the herbal“. out of busines- though it m be that the. .on has mi reeeptly yiehfed the usual amount of k"dd'tiNtti. Whatever may be theJ - of Pre-tt fefieiener, it is to be 50M tint it will be remedied in HP 1ttet Pet, for " an Innilv vet do Mind's Ulumeat‘élvre; Emma. Then the Philadelphia: a good old Quaker out won't read the pipers. glasses, says he." All three lurk-f 'mi man from New York, smiled and ring for the the ordeta.-Feiir-,, Ru "A friend o' my {nth even wus then thet," c from the Baltimore“. "l clocks at night, suh. leeeat and tear on the Works.” Then the 1lyhyielphian.. . ”A; AI: " . Imam Y4 There were four of iug compartment of traveller from Chicam "That reminds me of town who is so mean members of his house in order to cave ink.” The Chicago, Union Pacific and North weatern line rum through {ma-clan Pulimnn and Tourist tsleeping var! t, points in California. Personally con duetmt excursion from Chimp.) over] week. Lowe-t ratea. Choice of routes Finest scenery. Special attention giver to family parties. For maps. illustrat ed folder. and rates, address B. U. Ron nett, General Agent, 2 King strewn cast Toronto, Ont. a Green is easily recognizable, tl r he is obliged to cut his hair short and to went . low collar and a black tie. If . boy In! come to the university Iolely with I view to working, and with. out the least intention of joining in the sod-.1 Amusement: of his follows, he is instantly "hinted to the ranks of the 'SW'.' and lendl a life 'qmrt.--NaeMil. Ian I Mine. I For the fimt three wecks the life " I (Tubman, or "green," as he " called .1: Holland, in a perfect Purgatory. Front 8 o’dook in the morning till lg dclocY at night he is absolutely at the beck an call of every member of the llllh‘ehliy‘ and more especially of the second y'll' men. They can send him on vrmulu, compel him to amuse them, bully nun and tease him to their heart 's desire. A Gwen in easily recognizable, tl r he is obliged to cut his hair short and to we.) . low eoliar and a. bleck tie. " iitt mu 1lttlPtliTlicyr/ ISSUE No. 5. 15m. D'W, SO". GRAIN AND ( t?“ to: ale; near Yorknw J bout tt - payments. "mes Arm 4 New itrqqt out, Toronto. E mums-no WORKERS E v F. I: V' to attribute circulars. 83mph "rel-mg mutter. Good pay. No t'l' Competitive Adnttlsing Co.. New l d, AGENTS WANTED. ma PR., 1T< I In your own town; our guurmv'x out“ tor front doors sell on mzwj some aluminum lame holds mm'uhlu 1 put m also. with pocket Forewdnn-g not umlsh or crack; guarunlrm b yes": In my Caller; you never hurl a union Ilka we ofter; w- . uxnnvy Write tett_tyY pal-glow!"A (Mammy kokn. Bplendld Inn-aun- nbla. D. T. Hodgoon. In. uiarg.'1'i,'c,f,'gt LINE It? JUST mm the poop]. mt; our prieey are lim'. mm at“: what "iatl2 van; grits for full m- tgtt't"t tuinat Brie, Wetslcy Building. wore., LADIES --WHEN IN NEED, 5 tor tree trial of our n mung remedy: relief quick and my: too. Part. Chemical Co., Milwaukee, Wig BABY WARDROBE PATTERNS-AO co pattern: of both long and short plump“ 25 cents. Full alt-actions for making, mam. lnl to be good. 9m. with each set. Mrs. King, iilik -titt. Toronto, ”and!” In I'm- at lowest priceu. Sena tor ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. RAW was. We will I,“ highest New York prices for link. Skull ' Coon. Fox, and .u other Flu-I. Send tor prion mt. Why do South to Avoid the Discom- tom ot Winter? o. H. BASIEDO & C0. Como was: to the Ptteitie come a with III the advantages of a 111.11, and healthy culling. where you Ci “to. under our own Canadian m vet-{tum [and or Prumtse, a cw vut manure“. Iwa from the e: Influences or not ' and the exact' below, when we h o tonne sou. tp ken Ind when; _prosr\ect pig -iri,r further informluon. mam an tive pamphlets, write or up“ THE Q CALIFORNIA Excuusnov MEAN, " CANADA [ORB/LR " " King St. East. IOROKIO. "illfgtT1lflNt (lf FURS “I. [or we an hardly yet do " Old Vegetable matcri. med- York ladies! Journal. ET 'diieis,Rr? a-rd/ff OLUM BIA up in Medical Plan". ported that there is a scarcity medicinal roots and herbs, e0- hm of American production, in consequence the market les. Clyde drugs have been in? WANTED-MALE in -raa mm. Toronto Nt Inch-I 'utir.iri 1y at tho New York, 'd,rl'Yi' more]? I an for the waiter to talte C-lard','., Smut Set. a firing and) Dung-um I. KEANER. MEANIST. Dutch Undergraduates. m- me of a au out in my I to men that he make: the his home write small hunk. an ink." _o' my faather's. «*"h. wug AGENTS WANTED. MISCELLANEOUS tour of then in tho "tnok an of the our win-u the Chicago Inppened to say: Union Pacific nnd North- runu through first-eta" Iourjst sleeping can to FOR SALE. Ker out in v, .1) an who lupus. “can out his 'min. 1'etuorrauy con- 1. from Chicago every It”. Choice of routes. Six-gin] attention given nit mini-lied 'entnu other. New “'e-tmlmter. BA lic it tr9e o' no I cotiutn n: We: ED. SEND our never- h, was "tnptlr ,'s u' the 1. oqulblo an enjoy a. In! herd. who pf! HE Pl Dept PM it interest) tit-a m Ne ith' w

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