West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 Jun 1906, p. 6

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# _ It_isn‘t always the ungainly t h ie The old adage>about not throwing stones doesn‘t appeal to the glazier. _ wl.’gh! To think of pgohe eating food handled in such a filtby manner is enâ€" ough to boom vegetarianiam! about to take up the further of the combines. Alfred Harmsworth pronounces absurd the rumor that he is to found a daily* newspaper in Canada. A paper on Harmsworth lines in a Canadian city would be a curiosity, but it would hardly be a money earner. If King Edward were to come to Canâ€" ada, and it is to be hoped he will, it is almoet a certainty that he would also visit the neighboring Republic, where, judging by the United States press comâ€" ments, he would reecive almost as warm a welcome as he would in this country. The Buffalo Commercial, for instance, says: "Such a visit to Washington would attract the attention of the world to m far greater extent than any tour King Edward could make. 1t would break all precedents, and open a new éra in international intercourse." Britâ€" ain and the States are seeing eye to eye more and more as the years roll by, and simply as the King of Britain His Maâ€" jesty would meet with a big reception from the United States people. But we imagine that the services he has rendered to the peaple of the world would appeal more strongly to them than would the mere Jact that ke was Great Britain‘s Kine. The Presbyterian, published in Toronâ€" to, says that gambling at the Woodbine "bas attained such proportions that it must be squarely faced. It has become a scandal :o a city that makes a preâ€" tence of decency and consistency." ‘Toâ€" ronto the Good seeme to be a sort of a whited sepulchre. The average age of the nine justices of the supreme court of the United States is a fraction over 6614 years, two being 73, one 70, one 69, one 68, one 65, one 63, one 61, and the junior 57. Justice Brown retires at 70. Facts like these should make doctors and scientists hesâ€" itate before they tabulate the value of a man at different stages of his life. Will you vote to give trolleys the right to carry freight?* _ Do you pledge yourâ€" self to not accept personal trans;irta- tion favors from any transportation eompany during your term of office. Will you support a bill for a uniform Will you support a bill for a uniform passenger rate of two cents a mile ? Will you favor enforcing the Constiâ€" tution of Pennsylvania, especially the Seventeenth article, relative to the The Legislative Committee of the Pensylvania State Grange has prepared the following set of questions for canâ€" didates for the Senate and General Asâ€" sembly : Neventeenth article, relative to th« powers and duties of transportation com panies ? Will you support mit the counties t personal property a Will you favor an increased appropriâ€" ation for centralized township schoois, also for township High Schools * The Pennsylvania farmers evidently know what they want and are taking the above means of getting it. No doubt they will get promises in abundâ€" ance, The question is, will the promises be kent? Will you favor aid for township per cent ? Will you favor equalization of taxaâ€" tion? Viee Admiral Rojestvensky, who comâ€" manded the Russian fleet in the battle of the Sea of Japan, has been indicted for eowardice and will be tried f6r his life. But the Czar can hardly afford to hang Rojestvensky,. The sympathy of the army must not be alienated if the burâ€" eaucracy is to stand. To Toronto‘s new exzenr comon, | t a measure to perâ€" to retain all of the and license taxes? an increase of State roads from 15 to 50 Crown Attorney prosecution A red granite rock lapped by warm seas. A coast line, stern, rugged, and memacing, holding close within its minâ€" atory borders a succession of entrancing bays and sheltered coves, and an interâ€" ior of fertile valleys, pregnant slopes, and green lanes. £ 3 Such is Jersey! In these winter days when men shiver in England and wrap their topcoats tighter around them, the Gulf Stream gives Jersey soft winds and balmy air, fields already flourishing in new foilage, crops peeping from the ground and trees flourishing and bloomâ€" ing in semiâ€"tropical luxuriance. ‘fe is difficult &o realize that this place is only a night‘s journey from London. All around speaks of a different life, a life no more French than English, but possessing a distinctiveness of its own. The Breton peasant works, in the fields im his characteristic garb. The houses risâ€" ing in sharp terraces from the sea beâ€" speak in their proportions a goodly prosâ€" perity. The old forts and great sea walls and embankments _ tell _ of mediaeval fighting days. Sprung from old France, long member of the household ef Engâ€" land, Jersey stands between both, a mingling of the sister nations. For m yown part, I have learned a great deal from dogs. If I am natural they set me the example in early childâ€" hood. If I am faithful to a friend through his disgrace and disaster, I cannot deny that _ dog revealed this nobility of character to me for the first time in my life. If I have gratitude, I saw it first in a dog. If I have enterprise, he did not neglect my early lessons. If I have initiative, so had my first dog friend; if I am affectionate, so was he. If I am patient in adversity and without arrogance in affluence, I could not have acquired that poise of mind better from men than from dogs. If I am watchful over weakness entrusted to my care, I I am forgetful of self in guarding my beloved; if I have the courage of my convictions, if I have an heroic inâ€" atinets, I could have had no better teacher than a dog. Indecd, the love of dogs, their association and example, have filled my life with joy. The stranger who comes to Jersey for the first time must be careful not to fall into certain common mistakes. First, he must not suppose that Jersey and her near neighbor Guernsey have anything in common. Such an idea is scouted . by both. A deadly and long standing rivalry exists between the two isles. For cenâ€" turies it has been a point of honor with them to differ in everything. Each has ite own Lieutenantâ€"Governor, its own administration, and its own ways. The Jurats and Bailiffs of Jersey have no more .ntbofi.t‘v over Guernsey than over the Isles of man. Nor must the stunir imagine that Jersey is in any way subject to England. It is true that the Duke of Normandy, who chanced to be overâ€"lord of the isâ€" land, conquered England. But, as your Jersey man argues with invineible the conques?® of England by their Scaly SkKin Diseases â€"Eczema, Salt Rheum, Tetter, etc.â€"yield quickly EL ECTSM, «/N I'\l'“-l‘ ECY w;-â€"’“i'“.l, to the heali er of Mita Ointment. W'h‘:nbflh'n(pen? Don‘t be miserable > Cat or egey t Hromake <at haoee The one . Aut â€"or pemidy uo+ uf Chnede, Lunied, Hamiteonâ€" There is some hope for the man who is capable of feeling ashamed in the presence of an honorable dog. That man has avenues open to him for adâ€" vancement. His soul is still fit for exâ€" pansion. His brain is something more than a dried nut. His heart has not turned entirely into a thing of rubber and valves. When a strange dog greets him he thinks better of himself. Unâ€" consciously he reasons: "Villain that I am. I am not so bad, after all, as I might be. You can‘t fool a dog, and a dog is no hypocrite; therefore I have good in me which he recognizes." The fellow is a little surprised at himself and not a little flattered. If a noble dog shows him marked favor he becomes stuck up almost immediately. If several dogs should display great preference and affection for his person he would soon become unendurable to societyâ€" quite too vain for association with men. Contrariwise, should dogs bark at him generally, or, perchance, should one bite him, he would not feel himself good enough to associate with snakes; but would forthwith get himself locked up as a victim of hysterical rabies; and, if he had any pathetic kinfolk at large, they would at once insist upon having the dog put to death. _ _ "A few how the first application," writes Leo c.r,-':a- 3‘4‘:;-.-4 ‘Ave, N., Hamilton, *4 rdk grout retief. "Afra has worked wouders for se." (He had Eczem . * . Sisin oo peting he anoeee, w Ts radimatâ€" I have seen a few wretches in my day; but I never saw one so utterly lost to decency that he could not be battered by the friendly attentions of a strange dog, says a writer in the Culturist. There is a great lesson in that. No matter how superior we try to seem to ourselves and others, a small voice within us will not let us wholly forget what humbugs we are. In the presence of our kind we are brazen. The calm gaze of a child sometimes shakes our melfâ€"confidence; the knowing look of a dog shatters it. There is somewhat in brute psychology that perplexes the inâ€" tellect of man and disorganizes his inâ€" tuition. Man is so made that what he cannot understand exercises greater in« fluence over him than that which he can. In the presence of many pheaomenn he reveals himself openly and quite unconâ€" sciously. He is then no longer master of the fortifications of his soul. He drops his maskâ€"his grotesque outer garbâ€" his brazen shields falls to the ground, and he either cowardly retreats or sucâ€" eumbs without resistance. TRADL MARK MEGISTERED. It‘s a wise son who knows when to ask his father for money. The best policy is paidâ€"up life inâ€" surance. A lawsuit is the thief of time. A dollar in hand is worth two loaned to a friend. Church and State in France. The separation of church and state is complete and permanent. There is not the slightest hope, or fear, that it will ever be abolished or weakened, _ The church must, in such way as it can, live by itself, on its own resources, materâ€" ial or moral. Meanwhile there will be an interval of reflection and planning. The new law as to associations for worship does not go into full effect until Deâ€" cember. If by that time the church does not organize, as required, to use the proâ€" perty inventoried, the funds will . be turned over to lay charities and most of the buildings will be appropriated to civil uses. That is an alternative that the church will _ hardly _ invite.â€"New York Times. Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Frieng. It is folly to be wise to all you see and hear. Where there‘s a will there‘s a feast for lawyers. pyetel An honest man‘s word is as good as his bond, when you‘ve nothing to lose. Don‘t look before leaping when an automobile comes ing your s â€"Lippincott‘s uwle;ehmg s Do a man toâ€"day; he‘ll do you toâ€"morâ€" row. M.nflhfiéi'{-tdsm and sleigh and he is human emough to pray for snow. > * The aim of the reformes in school and college athletics should be clealy and directly the betterment of conditions, not the extirpation of the love of combat which is inherent in the nature of manâ€" kind. The notion that hard general work, resulting in full muscular development, saps vitality, weakens the organs and is a wearying incubus to the individual is so illogical as hardly to deserve an anâ€" swer. _ But some persons believe this, Such should pity the wild animails that, guided only by an instinctive physiologâ€" ical need, run, jump, pursue and wrestle with one another, thereby using and deâ€" veloping fully their whole bodies.â€"Bosâ€" ton Post. It is never to late to love or go home. Where there‘s a will there‘s a feast for do yourself if you don‘t know how. Go slow and get left. When the cat is away the night is quiet. o _ Pain.â€"Usually strong and sharp, but not generally continuaus; it is accomâ€" panied by contortions of the features, drawing up of the legs and other sympâ€" toms of distress. Temper.â€"Loud and strong and usually violent; accompanied by kicking and stifâ€" feninz of the body. Iliness.â€"Usually more of fretfulness and moaning than real crying, although real crying is excited by very slight causes. # Indulgene or Habit.â€"Stops short when the baby gets what he wants, only to beâ€" gin again when the‘_ohject is withdrawn. _A friend in need is a friend to steer shy of. An honest man‘s word is as good as Hunger.â€"Usually a continuous, fretful ery, rarely strong and lusty, _ _ â€"Frank Barkley Copley in "Give the Baby a Chance," in The Outing Magazine for June. Different Cries of the Baby. Normal.â€"Loud and strong, and the naâ€" ture of a scream; baby gets red in the face with it. This place was made for the holidayâ€" maker tired of strenuous life. Great coves and sheltered inlets invite you to bathe. and sheltered inlets of strange shape and romantic names tempt you to explore their depths. Castles and churches reâ€" dolent with memories of Norman strife or Roundhead violence raise their reads. He who is modern can find his pleasure in the famous golf clubsâ€"is not Jersey the home of the Vardons?â€"can _ visit the childhood home of Mrs. Langtry, or can enjoy some _ admirable _ modern plays in the fine new theatre. But give me the rocks near the sea, where the French shores gleam in the distance unâ€" der the afternoon sun, and where mild skies and soft air call man to rest. Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions, Money goes further. The retired Angloâ€" Indian finds that £250 a year goes as far as £400 does in England. With a population of only 55,000, the local sayvâ€" ings bank _ boasts deposits reaching £386,000. Personal services tikes the place of costly taxation. The ableâ€"bodied man has to qualify himself to bear arms, by what is practically a system of compulâ€" sory voluntering in the Militia, being liable from sixteen to sixty. The prosâ€" perous citizen is expected to serve the state without remuneration in offices of public dignity and public labor. Men are taught to esteem the service of Jersey a matter of honor, not of profit. And the man who offends against the common good can be banished. _ There are no very rich men on the island, but equally there are no very poor, and the workhous is unknown. did not make England conqueror of them, but rather the reverse. The Parlament of England has no authority in Jersey, although the King through his Prlvz Council has. Jen? has home rule in the most absolute form, guaranteed by many kings as reward for her great services to the Empire in the past. The islazr« is outside the British revenue system, and the happy residents are mulcted of neither income tax, death duties, nor succession dues. The Jersey man‘s tobacco yields nothing to Somerset House, and his brandy knows no British gauger. Taxation is a very minor trouble There is a tax on land and property, which is paid by the owner whether his estate is occupied or not. The tenant pays a similar rate, on five per cent. of the value of his goods. This rate varies from 8d. to is. 7d. in the pound. Thus, a tradesman holding stock to the value of £1,000 would pay 1s. 7d. in the pound. on five per cent. of that, or say, in all, about £4. This is the taxpayers‘ Paradise. Reform in College Athletics. Revised Piuverbs. TORONTO F. A. McKenzie. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited Gentsâ€" I have used your MINARD‘S LINIMENT in my family and also in my stables for years and consider it the best medicine obtainable. C The German Government‘s proposed way of punishing automobilists who run down the people of the countrysile is worth considering. Embodied in a bill is the scheme obliging automobilists to pay life annuities to those dependent on perâ€" sons killed by their motor cars or to those permanently injured by them. The owners of the cars and not the chaufâ€" feurs would be held responsible and the annuitiee would be assessed _ by the courts.â€"Springfield, Mass., Repugliun. a Yours truly, ALFRED ROCHAV, Proprictor Roxton Pond Hotel and Livâ€" ery Stables. Sir Henry Campbellâ€"Bannarman beâ€" comes Prime Minister at an age exceedâ€" ed onlcfv by one Premier of modern times â€"Lord Palmerstonâ€"who was 71 when he attained the leading place in the Governâ€" ment. _ Disraeli comes next. He was 064 when he became Prime Minister for the first time. Gladstone was 59, Lord Salâ€" isbury 55, Mr. Balfour 54, and Lord Roseâ€" bery 46. The shoe should be nailed on firmily, with not over six nails, and these driven so that while they take a wide hold of the horn, they come out for clinching low down on the foot, thus minimizing the chances of pricking the sensitive porâ€" tions, and also enabling the nail holes to quickly grow down and disappear. The nails should be driven with sundry raâ€" ther gentle taps, rather than with a few blows, as thus any splitting or indirecâ€" tion of the nailâ€"points may be readity detected; as the animal will flinch beâ€" fore the quick is really touched. The driven nails should not be "drawn" too vigorously in clinching, lest discomfort or pain ensue; should be filed gently, that they may clinch easily; and the clinches themselves hammered smaoth, and rasped with as little disturbance of the horn as possible, that the beautifu! enamel with which nature has covered all hoofs may be uninjured.â€"Frank M. Ware in the Outing Magazine for June. Ask for Minard‘s and take no Other, Bileans for Biliousness are the proâ€" duct of the latest scientific research. They do not merely purge, and give temporary relief, like the old fashioned remedies of forty or fifty years ago. They act directly on the liver and diâ€" gestive organs, strengtheninzg _ and stimulating them to do their own work, so that further medicine taking becomes unnecessary. They are pureâ€" ly vegetable, contain no harmful drugs, and are a certain cure for indigestion, headache, debility, sickness in the mornâ€" ing, dizziness, wind, pain after food, bilâ€" iousness, female ailments, blood impuriâ€" ties, and all liver and kidney ailments. Of all druggists at 50 cents per box, or post free from the Bilean Co., Toronto, upon receipt of price, 6 boxes for $2.50. Keep Minard‘s Liniment i "They _ did wonders. Before the third box was finished I was lil# a new woman. In two _ months they cured me, when as doctors had failed to do so in two years. I am writing this letter almost a year after my cure, and during that time I have had After trying everything I could get, and doctor‘s _ medicine and hospital treatmeat so long, with so poor _ reâ€" sult, I ndopted a friend‘s adviceâ€"gave up everything else, and tried what Bileans could do for me. no recurrence of my old symptoms .So there is no question as to the perâ€" manency of my cure." For the next three months it scearcely ceased. Then there came a nasty sickâ€" ness in the morning, followed by dizziâ€" ness and, occasionally, fainting during the day. I attended the Women‘s Hospiâ€" tal for months, after having advice from three doctors. Yet, though at first I benefited by the treatment, I soon went from bad to worse again. My friends told me I looked like death and I think I gave up all hope for I was almost a skeleton, and the pain in my side, due no doubt to liver complaint, was like knives going through me! ‘The above ailments _ frequently â€"acâ€" company each other. Indeed the first is the commonest known cause of the second. For both of them Bileans for Biliousness are a cure. To the hunâ€" dreds of women who suffer from these ailments the following facts will be of interest, _ Miss A. Campbell, of Monâ€" crieff, Peckham, says: "L suffered some time from constipation and did not seem able to get anything which would relieve me. One morning _ I awoke with a violent headache, a thing _ almost unknown to me prevâ€" iot:sly, but I found it had come _ to stay. "I ain‘t." "You are." "So are you." "You‘re another." "I ain‘t." "Then we are both liars." "All right, let it go at Sample of Senatorial Courtesy, (Cleveland Plain Dealer). "You‘re a liar!" CONSTIPATION AND HEADACHE How Germany Curbs Automobilists, Scorr‘s EMULBION Mother‘s Lar BILEANS A CERTAIN CURKE. A wORO IN MOTHER®‘® AAR: WNHERM How to Shoe Your Horse. _ Send for free sample. oath, f, _-% gee. and Jame; all draggists. in the house. that. Have a A Broadway fiorist who had just reâ€" ceived an order for table decorations called up the customer in haste. "Say," he eaid, "those bouquets and centrepieces won‘t last hbalf through the dinner, You‘ve mixed roses and mignonette, and those two flowers simpiy won‘t hiteh. You‘d better let me carry out the deâ€" signs to suit myself." The customer at the other end of the wire evidently agreed to the suggestion, for the florist hung up the receiver with a satisfied air. _ "Most people who order flowers make the same mistake that that woman made," he said. "They do not know that certain flowers positively cannot get along together. Take roses and mignonâ€" ette, for example. Each has a bad effect on the other, and when combined in any floral piece the whole thing wilts in less than an hour."â€"New York Sun. 13. Domino 2nd, 3,072, at 3y. 8m. 14. milk, 208.25 lbs; butter fat, 10.24 lbs.; equivalent butter 11.94 lbs; owner, J. D. Truesdell. 14. Queen Ann DeKol, 4,836, at 2y. 8m. 28d.; milk, 270.75 lbs.; butter fat, 8.68 lbs.; equivalent butter, 10.12. lbs.; owner, S. Macklin. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. 10. Hulda Wayne‘s DeKol Pictertjec, 3,550, at 4y. 19d.; milk, 411.38 lbs.; butâ€" ter fat, 12.17 lbs.; equivalent butter, 14. 22 lbs.; owner, J. D. Truesdell. 11. Lady Wayne M‘s Posch, 5258, at 1y., 10m .; 26; milk, 334.1 lbs.; butter fat, 11.24 lbs.; equivalent butter, 13.10 lbs.; Thirty days, milk, 1381.5 lbs.; butâ€" ter fat, 45.76 lbs; equivalent butter, 53.â€" 39 lbs.; owners, Walter 8. Schell. In the spring he follows the plough, eating up the larvae, field mice and worms in the furrows. gets his gun. 12. Miss Hengerveld DeKol, 4534 at 3y. 6m. 6d.; milk, 345.5 lbs.; butter fat, 10.71 lbs.; equivalent buter, 12.49 lbs.; owner, 8. Macklin. He desolates the nests of beautiful song birds, . â€" > Scientific agricultwasts now declare be is the farmer‘s true friend. He was in bed and told his man to mix him some whiskiery ':d ih,ot water. ‘"Here‘s your grog, sir, but I‘m afraid it‘s not warm enough." "How do you hov?mveyoututednr"“x'v.]znrg hbnehslibcty,dr.lu}, dip myfin'erhth(h.. Undoubtedly he‘s the heavy villai birddom. * C3 in of In the very early days a rewar4 was offered for his head. Bold by all Druggists and General Stores (Toronto Globe.) The aldermen are getting busy over the smoke nuisance, but the smoke still continues to spread over the aldermen and their docile constituencies, 1 There‘s no denying he‘s a chicken thief. 5. Coral DeKol, 2816,. at 6y. 6m. 21 d.; milk, 441.62 lbs.; butter fat 13.39 lbs.; equivalent butter, 15.62 lbs.; ownâ€" er. J. D. Truesdell. NO DEAD FLIES LYING ABOUT 1. Bessice Talmana, 5,701, at 5y. O9m. 14d.: Milk, 493.7 lbs.; butter fat 17.07 Ibs.; equivalent butter, 19.91 lbs.; owner, VWalter S. Schell, Woodstock, Ont. 2. Wyola DeKol Netherland, 2.980, at b5y. 4m. 28d.: Milk, 465 lbs.; butter fat, 15.04 lbs.; equivalent butter, 1745 lbs.; owner, H. A. Layng. Spring Valley, Ont. 8. Oxford Maud, $4,698. at 2y. 9m. Td.: Milk, 361.3 lbs.; butter fat, 14.91 Ibs.; equivalent butter, 17.39 Ibs.; 30 days, milk, 1,515.6 lbs.; butter fat, 62.09 lbs.; equivalent butter, 72.45 lIbs; owner, P. D. Ede, Oxford Centre, Ont. 4. Mertie, 1,167. at 13y. 124.: Milk, 429.â€" 87 lbs.; butter fat, 1341 lbs.; equivalent butter, 15.64 lbs.; owner J. D. Truesâ€" dell, Spring Valley, Ont. _ _ _ _ | ; Since last report fourteen cows and heifers have been admitted to %: Canaâ€" dian Holsteinâ€"Friesian Record Merit os the strength of officially authentiâ€" cated tests conducted under the direction and supervision of Prof. Dean of the Ontario Agricultural College. . Except where otherwise specified all tests are for a period of seven days. ‘The amounts of milk and butter fat reported are actual; the amount is estimated from the fat by adding oneâ€"sixth. Although no phenomenal records are reported, two or three are worthy of special notice, viz., those of Bessie Talmana, 19.91 Ibs. of butter; e Oxford Maud, a twoâ€"yearâ€" old, 17.39 lbs, of butter in 7 days and 7245 in 30 days; and of Lady Wayne M‘s. Posch, a yearling, 13.10 lbs, of butter in 7 days and 53.39 in 30 days. . The cows and their tests are as folâ€" lows: ARCHDALE WILSON, HAMILTON, ONT. He‘s a big bird. He is beautifully plack. His lady is less brilliantly black. He is about 17 inches in length. He knows no such word as fear. Offic:a\ Tests of Holstein Cows. TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM Flowers That Will Not Mix. Not Tobacco Smoke, and by mail. The Crow. G. W. Clemons. Secretary. Wilson‘s Three hundred times betâ€" ter than sticky paper. FLY PADS First Day of the Voyage. Stewardâ€"Did you ti-g, sir ? Travelerâ€"Yes, steward, Iâ€"I rang. Stewardâ€"Anything I can bring you, sir? Traveler â€" Yâ€"yes, stâ€"steward. Bubâ€" bring me a continent if you have one, or an islandâ€"anything, steward, so long as it‘s solid. If you can‘t then susâ€"sink the ship. The Enemies of the Rose, Be on the lookout for enemies of the rose. You will have to fight for every fine flower. I have given up the use of hellebore, because it is so unreliable, Paris green is likely to burn the foliage if strong, and if weak it fails to accomâ€" plish the purpose for which it is used. I depend on a homemade remedy which is made by melting half a cake of the orâ€" dinary size of Ivory soap and mixing it with a teacupful of kerosene. Dilute this mixture with ten gallons of water, and apply with a sprayer, being careful to have it get to all parts of the plant. This preparation is far more satisfactory than any of the insectisides for sale by the florists, and will never injure the foliage or flowers. It is a good plan to begin the use of it before the various rose enemics put in an appearance, and keep up its use until their season of acâ€" tivity is over.â€"Eben E. Rexford in Makâ€" ing the (‘oun.t'.ry Home, in the Outing Magazine for June. "The River St. Lawrence Trip?" Where Will You Go _ For illustrate guide, "NIAGARA To THE SEA," send six cents in postage stamp»s to BEA, seng sik cents in postage stamps to H. Foster Chaffee, Western Passenger Agent, Raxanéa In order successfully to accomplish desired results with the diving method it was thought necessary to employ Greeks who are accustomed to the work, as it seemed doubtfu, whether many of those who have followed the booz“qg process would care to don the helmet and leaden shoes and pull sponge with from thirty to sixty feet of water overâ€" But recent experiments by a few have demonstrated that a little practice and confidence, together with good physical condition, are all that are needed to beâ€" come a diver. Already a number of our native spongers have become proficient in this line and the probabilities are that in the near future a large percentage of the catch will be obtained in this manâ€" ner.â€"Tarpon Springs News. The practicability of the method now being employed extensively in the sponge industry in procuring this product is no longer in doubt, and a large percentage of the Tarpon &prings vesse}s are changâ€" ing from the old method of hooking to the new one of diving. e It can be cultivated and the profits are enormous. _ If intemste(f write us for information. I. E. YORK & CO., Waterford, Ont. t 1 e enrmmermmrmemmmmmmmme ns Orango Blossoms Thouiprvaeoh ceneiy. is o positive oure for all femaie Gimmazcs. Write tor Gesertpfine GINSENG This Summer? Diving for Sponges on Florida Coast. FIBRE WARE »nous l"armets and Dairymen Tub, Pall, Wash Basin or Milk Pan ‘THE SUNLIGHT s â€"a& i1 WAY RUB ON SUNLIGHT SOAP You will find they give you satisâ€" . <@gffii faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE E. B. EDDY‘S in summer! He should by all means have the extra $4 to help him along on his pinched and painful way. Think what a sum it is under such pressing cireumâ€" stances! Fortyâ€"cight dolrnn a year addâ€" ed to the $96 that he already draws in pension checks will be quite a help to the aged man.â€"Portland Oregonian. Congress is asked to pity the deplorâ€" able condition of Millionaire Reeman of chewing gum fame for his "total inabilâ€" ity to perform manual labor" and to show this pity by increasing the disâ€" abled one‘s pension ms a veteran of the civil war from $8 to $12 a month. "Pity the sorrows of a poor old man," whose trembling limbs can scarcely bear his body to the Einte car that waits to take him to Florida in winter and reâ€" turn with him to the White mountains The Sugar and the Sait. If the men are the salt of the earth women are undoubtedly the sugar, Salt is a necessity, sugar is a luxury. Vicious men are saltpetre; stern men are rock salt; nice men are table salt. Old maids are brown sugar; goodâ€"natured matrons are loaf sugar, and pretty girls the fin pulverized sugar. gm the pnlvc"u& pulverized sugar sugar, please. mal. I give all credit to this wonderful remâ€" edyâ€"Dr. Leonbardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill." All Dealers or The Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Lim ited, Niagara Falls, Ont. @0 ISSUE NO. 25, 1906 §5; all ii&ai“urs-‘"' st anf finest stook in Canada; 500 mixed, $3; albums, all prices. soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarâ€" Many Toronto people, it seeme, have ken to eating sand. It is, of course, ipposed they take it in the form of Souvenir Post Cards 12 for 10c; 00 for 50c; 100, §$1; 200, $2; 500, Mre. Winslow‘s Soothing Byrup should alâ€" Tbemsanfordisisbecame Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure, contains no injurious chemicals cleansing, properâ€" be of shap thmt is nothing but soap. soft water. by the dealer fr h :.'.,"a:.‘,nfs::'.:' you find * any cause for complaint. 155 LEVER BROTHERS LIMITTD, TORONTO Sunlight Soap is better than used in the Sunlight way (follow rections). avinaitie in homes Msmfi‘htmisusedas directed. Sunlight Soap will not injure even the daintiest fabric or the hands, and the clothes will be A TORONTO MAN TRIES MISCELLANEOUS. 4 circular. Price $1.00 per box of P ) Hoil reonel nekles, on secelge of price LE ROY PILL CO., Millionaire in Sad Plight. Toronto Sand Feels Like a Boy. Mr. M. N. Dafoe, 2 Colborne street, Toronâ€" to, says: â€" MAS Crow Rome, Cattolico, thoritativ menting the Pope months a if the Po No Politi Follawn The & month workmen bakeries â€" and that bread. ATe men la XKamen here mnve liaz m enl Outt Stat 1

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