West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Jul 1906, p. 6

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The white caps ruffle the tossing wave, The wind of the olives is erisp toâ€"day, Are tming the dust of the world‘s way. And the feet of the Shepherd who came to save He is seeking the lamb that has wanâ€" dered far, He is climbing the hills that are rough and cold, He is secking the lost in the wood and wold, And calling it back beneath sun and star. Have you heard them ery that He‘s comâ€" ing near ? Then hasten out and be swiit to greet, And'kneel before Him and kiss His eet, For ‘tis heaven‘s own love that has brought Him here. Friend, would you walk on the Jesus road ? Then harken, for these you must walk with Him, He may come at noon, or at twilight dim, Let Him rest in your hearts as His own abode. The love what way morrelimes It 18 CIIICUIL 10 s°C WcP ie duties lie.: Yet, one seldom makes a ;q(;:)aort mistake by taking the first one that ofâ€" .'" c fers, no matter how simple it may be. im P‘ This was recently demonstrated when olglcl our janitor‘s wife invited us to her room cutl to see some of her needlework. She is m y a wageâ€"earner, with burdens of her own of ':. to earry, but finds an anodyne in minis in Al tering to others. Three paper boxes st904 | jagq ; on a tablc. _ One by one the lids were reâ€" ing in moved, showing an outfit of undercl9th" 1 wond ing for the coming birthday of a little } {apeg girl of soven years, whose sick mothc? | sept was unable to do any sewing for tht J , der ehild. The material was inexpensive, LUut | Thoy the carments were neatly trimmed vith ' the 1 lace ond, altogetber, the outfit was Worâ€" | apq ] “'._‘u «in y child‘s acceptance. In «very town ‘ight, women regularly meet in "Sewing Cirâ€" | the d cles" to make garments for the pOOT. | is ov This is well and commendable, but often, | eozy in the very house where we live, or in | on on a neighboring dwelling, the first duty i Iuere might be to lift the burden from some | that tired mother, by a little handiwork or | tion gertle ministration. > Th No worse fate can befall a man in this | to th was unable to do any sewing for tht child. The material was inexpensive, tut the carments were neatly trimmed vith lace snd, altogetber, the outfit was worâ€" “'._‘u «n y child‘s acceptance. In «very town women regularly meet in "Sewing Cirâ€" cles" to make garments for the poor. This is well and commendable, but often, in the very house where we live, or in a neighboring dwelling, the first duty might be to lift the burden from some tired mother, by a little handiwork or gertle ministration. » No worse fate can befall a man in this world than to live and grow old alone, unloving and unloved. To be lost is to live in an unregenerate condition, loveâ€" less and unloved; and to be saved is to love: and he that dwelleth in love dwellâ€" eth already in God. For Giod is love.â€" Herry Drummond. in some respe startling than are we in the CuNDdAY SynD*» The apostle is writing of love, and is saying the most remarkable things about love. "God is love." When you have said that you have saidl everything about tiod. I differ from all who tell me that love is a divine tribute. Love is not an attribute; it is an essence. As ars the character, so are the attribntes of God to the essential Love of His being. Holiâ€" ed in love, Then the apostle tolls us, "No man hath seen God at any time," and proceeds to declare that the only way in which mwen can see and know God is by secing and kpowing Him in us. That is the proâ€" found truth concerning all Christian serâ€" viee. Your work is to be a focal point, from which the light of God flashes where you live. It is tremendous, overâ€" whelming, humbling to the very dust, to remember that men are to form their estimate of God from what they see in l« ed Tommy‘s Popâ€"An expert, my son, is a person who is able to impress other peoâ€" re we in the world." The apostle is writ mying the most rema ve. "God is love." id that you have sa od. I differ from a ve is a divine tribnm ttslbute: it is an e rflUthP, _'hlt iO‘ Thorbur 1€ with their ignorance. The Feet of the Shepherd. n -l;;" Rev. G. Campbell Morgan, D. Nextâ€"Door Helpfalness h The n the wonderful sentences in the f the apostle of love, perhaps espects he never wrote a more han this: "As He is, even so H â€"Margaret E. Sangster. rere but Love‘s Patterm. Ar HOmE Christ constraineth us in » what extent have you omfort or promise of perâ€" n or honor of any kind, f Christ, Waat, in other ower of this constraining laily life? _ This is the Love of Christ, ur love made perfect. . . is. so are we in the world." come home again it is a good work complishing someâ€" Â¥ou have taken in not be done. You a w a y." sense my Master ness. ti con an expe_rt? no For the devotees of rod and gun the Georgian bay district holds out unlimitâ€" ed attractions. Fish are plentiful in the bays and inlets throughout this vast exâ€" panse of water lx the rivers and streams which empty into the water way teem with leveraT varieties of the more gamy of the finny tribe, among them being black bass, pickerel, muskellunge, whitefish, speckled trout, lake trout and saimon trout. Many of the smaller stretches of water, including the iakes inland a few miles from several pomnts on the steamer‘s route, are well stocked and, to the angler who wishes to rougn it capital sport is assured. For the hunâ€" ter during the open seasons deer, bear, muskrat, duck, partridge, geese and pigâ€" con are found in abundance, and the reâ€" gion throughout may be called the richâ€" est game land on the continent. From Slide Bay, near Sans Souci, the hunter or angler can reach the Muskoka lakes with ecase by covering sixteen lakes with several portages, the longest of which is one mile, the others ranging from ten to 100 yards. y The word "Temagami®‘ is derived from the Indian word "temagagmingue," and means "deep water," and is applied to a magmnificent territory in New Ontario that embraces all the attractions that are sought after by the canoeist, tourist, angler and hunter. _ It is, comparativeâ€" !y speaking a region known only to a few who have been fortunate enough to traverse the district under adverse cirâ€" cumstances, owing to the difficulty exâ€" geriemâ€"ed in reaching its confines. This, owever, has been overcome by the building of a new zailway through the heart of this grand territory, opening up the way for the summer visitors who are looking for new ficlds to explore aud to the lover of nature and outdoor reâ€" creation. Without a personal visit to "Tema â€" gami" no one has any idea of the amâ€" ount of pleasure that is expressed in this one word and versatile language is not subtle enough to impart an adequate description of its natural beauties and the story of its fourteen bundred odd islands in Lake Temagami, the principal lake of the district, and its thousand and one smaller lakes within a comparatively small area, holding forth unlimited atâ€" tractions to the canoeist and lover of rod and gun. The Temagami region is a forest reserve under control of the Onâ€" tario Government and covers an area of 1,400,000 acres. It is a land of lakes and fivers, incomparable in natural beauty, and scenery, with its heavily wooded forests, its cathedral pines, whispering health and strange sweet music. This region is a part of Canada that a few years ago was visited only by the Indians and the Hudson Bay Company‘s war canoes, and which toâ€"day is visited by dozens of college students and others who have heard of its attractions,though it is still the same untouched and uninâ€" habited wilderness, with the addition that all the necessary accessories are at hand in the locality to make a trip of any length with comfort. This form of vacation is typically Canadian. No othâ€" er civilized country has a great northâ€" woods, combined with lakes and rivers, where the lover of nature can study her unadorned loveliness in all its grandeur, "The shores of the mainland around the lakes are high and rocky and thickly wooded, while the islands in the larger lakes are covered wiht dense foliage to the water‘s edge. Of the two principle bodies of water Lake Tamagami is the largest and covers an area of about 100 square miles, with a shore line of nearly 3.000 miles. It is dotted with islands of all proportions from the tiny one bearâ€" ing a single cedar to those of hundreds of acres in extent, _ The lake is of a peculiar shape and by a glance at the map one will observe it in the form EO ene en ooi en es id ie Re 1 of an octopus with arms branching out in all directions. The coast line runs into innumerable bays and inlets, all bidâ€" ing in their seclusion views of charming wonder and delight. _ The water of these lakes is cold and pure and so transiuâ€" | cent that objects can be seen plainly ntl a depth of from thirty to forty feet. Thouch 300 miles due north of Toronto, the woather during the day is warm ard baimy, with little rain, and the nights pleasantly cool for sleeping. When the day‘s work of fishing and paddling is over and the pipes lighted around a cozy camp fire it just begins to dawn on one that, after all, the chase for filthy luere is not the only motive in life and that there are two sides to every quesâ€" tion worthy of consideration,. The fishing grounds in close contiguity to the Muskoka lakes proper and within a distance of from five to ten miles are of the best in this northern country and exceilent sport may be had if the anâ€" gler cares to look for it, Near Beauâ€" maris, on Lake Muskoka, there is a very good fishing in Brandy Lake, three miles black bass running from one to four pounds and pickerel from six to twenty pounds. Leonard lake, two miles, good fishingâ€"same species as found in Brandy ° 2. 104 W qi w00 lake. Near Banesdale, on Lake Joscph, there is excellent fishing on Kahâ€"Peeâ€"Gog and Sixâ€"Mile lakes, as well as half a dozen small lakes in the same vicinity; the fish caught here are chiefly bass and pickerel. _ A party left Barnesdale last summer for Sixâ€"Mile lake; their catch was a pike weighing twentyâ€"two pounds and a heavy string of black bass runâ€" ning from four to six and a half pounds. At Sixâ€"Mile lake there is a small house whore tourists can be accommodated at reasonctle rates and where guides can be secured. In close proximity to Gorâ€" don bay, on Yake Joseph, there are a number of lakes affording very good fishing within a radius of from three to ten miles. Near this place there is a cluster of small lakes which, in addition to the celebrated Blackstone and Cran» lakes, are noted for their abundance of fish, known as Portage lake, Clear lake, Silver lake, Long lake and several othâ€" ers. _ These lakes are casily accessible by wagon road or can be reached by a series of short portages. Bass, pickerel and salmon trout are very numerous and excellent syort is assured to the perseâ€" vering .n{er. Near Rosseau, on Lake Rosseau, there are three lakes which can be erached by portage from Roseau, a distance of about three miles, with portâ€" ages of 200 yards, These are lakes in which bass and salmon trout are abunâ€" dant. Sucker lake and Watson lake, fine bass fishing. Within a radius of nine miles from Rosseau are Black, Turâ€" tle, Star, Hicks, Whitefish, Trout and Clear lakes. (Chieago Chronicle.) ARIO ARCHIV TORONTO What Is a Gentleman? Among the Persians at the time of Cyrus the boys were taught to ride, to speak the truth and to draw the bow. | That meant manliness, truthfulness and icnumge, all essential to the character of a gentleman. The knights of chivalry, |who were the gentlemen of their time, added the duty of rescuing the oppressed and distrssed and this completed the {ideal by teaching unselfishness and serâ€" vice. If a boy is taught to be always selfâ€"respecting, courageous and truthful and invariably considerate, not outwardâ€" ly but as the expression of true kindliâ€" ness of spirit, of the rights and feelings of others he will grow up, whether he be rich or poor, a professional man or a laborer, to bhave the right to claim not by any artificial distinetion but in his own right, with all that it implies, "the grand old name of gentleman."â€" Washington Post. Characteristics Which May Be Modified by a Number of Things. A scientist in the Department of Agriâ€" culture gives some interesting facts with reference to the color of water. suspended in it the hwe of the water is greonish,. _ But, while pure water looks blue when light passes freely through it, yet when it is contained in a deep, opaque receptacle, like the basin of a lake or the ocean, it ought to absorb all light and look black. _ Experience shows, however, that the deepest parts of the Mediterranean,, for instance, appear not black, but intensely blue. This has been supposed to be caused by minute particles held in suspension, but the reâ€" cent experionce of the scientist quoted suggests a different explanation. 1 Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by GOOLD, SHAPLEY 2 MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. "* IMPEEIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL He has found that warmer currents passing through pure water interrupt its transparency, even when the differencs of temperature is very slight. _ Such currents may cause deep water to apâ€" pear blue by reflecting light back from its depths through the transparent layâ€" ers above. This, it is suggested, exâ€" plains the fact that fresh water lakes are more transparent in winter than in summer, because in winter currents of heated water are not traversnig them. Even the shadow of a mountain falling on a lake may increase the transparency of the water by cooling the surface. Ointment qmdLm res Itching Piles, Eczema, and *A ls Cotrigen, 475 Fergansss Auve / N Hami , ve., N. i doret sns iopoacy, bo sn iftsâ€" s w in i :ud dup.li:ul"o‘wcvel getting better. _ h s Don‘t put it ofâ€"get a box of Mira Ointment at once and be relieved. Price 50c.â€"6 for $2.50. At drugrits‘â€"or from The Chemi@s‘ Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamiltonâ€"Toronto. "I thougit Mira would be like other remedies I had tried," he writes, "but, to n/ delight, a few hours after the first application I felt great relief, 1t has worked wonders for me." _ ____. ____ d Four seashore excursions via Lehigh Valley Railroad, July 20, August 3, 17, and 31. Tickets good 15 days, and only $10, round trip, from Suspension Bridge. Tickets allow stopâ€"over at Philadelphia. For tickets, further particulars, call on or write Robt. S. Lewis, Canadian Passâ€" enger Agent, 10 King street east, Toâ€" ronto, Ont. $10â€"Atlantic City, Cm M;yj-fi_io Forty years ago there were 350,000 negroes in the Northern States; toâ€"day there are 1,000,000. Then 7.8 per cent. of the total number of negroes in the country lived in the north; now more than 10.3 per cent. live here. This fact is the more significant when it is reâ€" membered that the negro does not flourâ€" ish in the north. The bith rate here barely equals the death rate. Our inâ€" creasing black population wasborn south of the line; it has migrated hither. Last winter Virginia found itself foreed to invite laborers from abroad. Twoâ€"thirds of the counties of thas State have deâ€" ereased in colored population since 1880. The soil of Virginia is going out df culâ€" tivation because of the lack of labor.â€" Philadelphia Ledger. THE CLEARNESS OF WATER. CONTINUE ‘Those who are nlnlnglo.h and strongth by regular treat= ment with should continue the treatment In hot weather; smaller dose dnan oo $iohrang metjeosion way w r which is attached to fa pros ducts during the heated T o . !" Gend for frik +. score i bou m ie nunes . TRADE MARK AEGISTERED The Negro in the North. Scott‘s Emulsion goe. and $1.00 ; all druggists, Twenticth Contury Death Rate of Babies Would Satisfy Him. In one summer there were 52,837 inâ€" fants‘ deaths in the large towns of Engâ€" land, the rate being 275 in 1,000 for the same period. Frequently during summer the hospitals for children in London are taxed beyond their gupacity. In Birmâ€" ingham nually. uu-uJ. Germany has a record which, the World Toâ€"day says, is astounding for that doâ€" mestic country, where all young women ere supposedly learned in the domestic arts. Two million children are born in one year, and yet as many as 400,000 die before one year old, making the rate for the German Empire 200. In pretty Munâ€" ich, where it would seem that conditions are favorable for public hygiene, the death rate has been as high as 419, an average of 324 in 1.000, Our own country makes little better record, for in the district of Columbia the record in 1900 was over 275, other States being a little lower, but still too high. In Massachusetts eight cities averâ€" aged 186 to 304, and New â€" York was about 159, almost all the New England States being higher. From various â€" British reports it is learned that improper feeding is the prime cause of the great _ mortality among infants under one year of age, and in a German record of investigation the statement is made that of the 4,075 deaths of infants which | oc=trred in Munich in the year 1903, 3.393 were bottleâ€"fed, which would show concluâ€" sively thit artificial feeding has its very serious side largely because of the "unâ€" clean" milk given. MRS. HUNTER‘S STORY . Jfi & â€"â€" "I have suffered with i @ % V kidney and liver trouâ€" C % ble and chronic constiâ€" hss pation for some time. I \w was subject to dizziâ€" n exsBrpm., ness, bilions headache, w nervousness, drowsi Mrs. I. Hunter, . "°SS pains in the back and side, and a tired, weary fecling nearly all the time. "I tried almost every medicine, was treated by doctors and druggists, with little or no benefit. "I tried Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill, and the results have been truly wonderful. I am so much better. Antiâ€"Pill is & most wonderful 1'e1!}«-d)n:"_‘ uy Says lesults : EEoy TPMTSTETT CCOCSE All dealers, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. The situation in the kid glove market is conceded on all sides to be the worst experienced since modern fashions deâ€" manded the universal use of kid gloves. The scarcity of long gloves is the cause, and buyors are expecting another year of big business in these lengths. Skins I 10. wiu ut soucleckt NMisk: have*ad\'nncod in price and are not likeâ€" ly to again be as fow as formerly. In many cases it is said that the increase amounts to 70 and even as high as 90 per cent, over last year‘s prices. The storm contre at present, however, is over fabric gloves. No orders can be taken by manufacturers, importers or jobbers for long silk gloves during the next ninety days. The buyers of both kid and fabric gloves are at their wits‘ end, and in many cases unable to cope with the situation,. Already some of the doâ€" mestic manufacturers are accopting orâ€" ders on fabric gloves for spring delivery of 1907 at advanced prices. Meanwhile it is cvident that many pretty, wellâ€" manicured feminine hands and shapely arms will have to go gloveless.â€"Dry Goods Guide. Where Will You Go This Summer? "The River St. Lawrance Trip?" Folders des Rapids, Mor dousac, the on applicati ticket agent The director of a Philadelphia bank rot long ago spoke to his wife with reâ€" ference to her account, which had been overdrawn. â€" To bis suggestion that the mater should be seen to at once the wife replied that the would immediately adâ€" just the difficulty. _A day or two afâ€" ter that the busband inquired whether she had done what the suggested. UEWWBROITECOCC For illustrated guide, "NIAGA SEA,** send six cents in poou::AatI?n;Hg "Certainly,‘ ‘replied the wife. "L atâ€" tended to that matter the very next morning after you first spoke to me of it. I sent to the bank my check for the amount I _ had â€" overdrawn."â€"Harper‘s Weekly. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. ITRTDY ET M DC as! H. Foster Chaffee, Western ae ky promts. estern Passenger Agent, A Kansas university professor seated himâ€" self at his dinner table and, bowing nis head, started, ‘"Dear Lord, we thank," when the telephone bell rang. He went to the phone, had a short talk with the calling party and returning to the table bowed his head and made another start. Three words were perâ€" mitted to issue this time when "tinâ€"aâ€"ling" went the phone and the performance was reâ€" peated. He made the third and fourth atâ€" tempts to say grace, only to be interrupted by the phone. At the fifth trial he seated himself at the table, reverently bowed his head and in stenorian tones bellowed: ‘"Dear Lord, hello!" 1t you desire rest and recreation, why not (Philadelphia Public Ledger.) "You‘re a queer looking thing to want to fight with me,‘" said the young bulldog, conâ€" temptuously. _ *"You‘re not in my class." â€"‘Perhaps not,‘" replied the porcupine, quietly, ‘"but I think I can give you a few points." § When a master on Saturday night tells his men to come back next day, under penâ€" alty of losing their places, it is needful the law step in and protect the workingman in his right to a day of rest. A small boy‘s idea of importance is to have a speaking acquaintance with a policeman. The Market Short HEROD‘S OCCUPATION GONZ. more than 3,000 babies die anâ€" How the Professor Prayed. descriptive of the Thousand Islands, Montreal, Quebec, Murray Bay, Taâ€" the far famed Saguenay River, etc., cation to any railroad or steamboat Sunday Observance Law. Painful Points, Too. Frenzied Finance. are "Truly Marvelions." Mrs, I. Hunter, of 111 Raglan Road, Kingston, k cOnt., sayst _ . ... .. 0. of Long Gloves. The decision to use gas instead of the electric are for the artificial ligfing of the new station at victoria marks anâ€" other stage in the duel between the two illuminants. Few of us, perbaps, realize how long that duel has been in progress. It is nearly fifty years since the are Py P ie 0n CÂ¥H 004 ECmm oo n o nedad‘ stt i 7 It is nearly fifty years since the are light was used in the building of Westâ€" minster Bridge; it is nearly thirty years since it first illummated Waterloo Bridge a portion of the Embankment and the entrance of the Gaiety Theatre. . Since those carly days it has passed through man ystages of improvement, but at each o fthem it has been met by a correspondâ€" ing improvement in gas lighting, and it has had . a hard struggle to keep a place in Lordon streets. â€" Apparently even the rosy glow of the "flaming‘ ‘are fails to iluminate the atmosphere of â€" darkest London as suecessfully as pressure §28; and it is more expensive. But if elcctrici'ty cannot hold its own in the lighting of large open spaces in London, there is a stendily widening field for it indoors. The time is near at hand when, with the cheapening of the discovery of a more cconomical filaâ€" ment for the incandescent lamp, the use of gas will be confined to the kitchen and the street. Dear Sirsâ€"This fall I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest very badly, so I could not work, and it hurt me to breathe. I tried all kinds of liniments and they did me no good. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited: _ One bottle of MINARD‘S LINIMEXNT, warmed on flanne‘!s and applied to my breast, cured me completely, How It Was Translated by the Obliging Waiter, , One of the state legislators entered an Albany restaurant and ordered a porterâ€" house stcak, relates the Journal of that city. When the portion arrived it did not quite appeal to him as being suifiâ€" ciently cooked. Me called the waiter, "Would you kindly take this back to the cook and tell him to broil it a litte more?" "Sure," replicd he of the white coat. This is how the polite request was handâ€" ed to the cook: oay, Iil, Hxu Tb L L 0 d from this piece of horse. He wants a lit | tle more fire on it, or it‘s all up with you and your little pots. Get a move on, of vou‘ll have him butting in here and callâ€" ‘ m'gâ€"yo;;by your real name. Refuse of Michigan Mill} for Thirty Years Covers Twelve Acres. Probably the largest sawdust pile in the world is the one at Cheboygan, Mich, This is the product of one mill, The mill being run by water power had no way of disposing of its sawdust. The company was not permitted to dump it into the river, and for a few years an attempt was made to burn it. There was so much smoke that the vilâ€" lage passed an ordinance prohibiting that grm of destruction. As a conseâ€" quence it was simply hauled out into a vacant field, and during the thirty years of its growth has acquired monâ€" strous proportoins. It is a hill, 1,080 l feet long, 875 feet wide and ranges from twenty to thirty feet in height. The Lights of London in Bunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best whon used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap -_.nd follow directions. *SUNLIGH T f‘%fiz §SOAP EO Neinont s 0 oc i eae ts s t 1 es Oe The hill covers some twleve acres. It is almost entirely white and Norway pine sawdust, because this mill did not eut hemlock, except for the last two or three years before it was closed down. Rossway, Digby Co., N. 8. The pile is undoubtedly rotting a little at the bottom, but it is well preserved and bright when it is dug into, The top and sides having crusted over form a protection for the sawdust underneath. In its present state it contains rather too much moisture to admit of being used for fuel without treatment by some process of drying. A number of chemists have examined it with a view to extracting the chemâ€" icals which it contanis, but as yet nothâ€" ‘Say, Bill, that fat ing has been done in this direction. ‘There is no question that it has a conâ€" siderable chemical value, and. probably the time will come when someone will find a way of working it up profitably. BICGEST PILE OF SAW!TTST. HIS POLITE REQUEST, C. H. COSSABOOM, take this back t0 | _ Seek the sunshine rather than flee to broil it a litte | from it. Many shut their eyes and say there is none. £f the white coat. How many of our ills seem fairly imâ€" request was handâ€" ‘ mginary when those of others, who have |p{rhaps. lost a limb or suffered other quy backed away ‘I fringhtful misfortune, are considered. 4 nh tw 4 onl tw Seet" NiOumws VVaames C220( c J are cleaner and whiter than if washed in any other way. Chemicals in soap may remove the dirt but always injure the fabric. Sunlight Soap will not injure the most dainty lace or the hands that use it, because it is gbsolutelypwemdconu'nsm injuriot is chemicals. Sunlight Soap should always be used as directed. No boiling or hard rubbing is necessary. Caaâ€"lsbe Saan is better than Sunlight Soap is better than other soap, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Equally good with hard or soft water â€" $5,000 REWARP will be mil The scene was Tompkins Square Park during one of the weekly band concorts, The evening was warm and opprossive and the crowd was dense. _ ‘The band was playing a popular tune. Al noise and discord were stilled, the small boys stopped their romping, the tired m others hummed the melody and a happy Lght danced in their weary eyes, and the poâ€" licemen folded their arms and listened with satisfaction. There was nothing else for them to do. In that big crowd of listeners almost every nationality was represented. There were Germans, Italâ€" ians, Hebrews, Russians, Hungarians, and even a Chinaman or two, but al were under the spell of the music, for melâ€" ody‘s language is universal and requires no interpreter. The power of music was shown here as never before. It aroused sunken and depressed spirits; it gave new life to the disheartened and discouraged ; it held the attention of the unruly and rough eleâ€" ment and soothed the weary. And when the concert was over the crowd went homeward with lighter hearts than they had had for many a day. Said a policeman and a philosopher: "The good these concerts do cannot be reckoned in money, They are better than talks and addresses and schools in that they reach every one, young and old, and influence for good so quickly. Do yon know on the nights that the concerts take place we have really nothing to do to speak of. The music scems to have such a refined and elevating influence on everybody that the police can really take a night off in the precinet. Of course, on the fringe of the crowd there are some mischievous boys always,, but when the band strikes up a popular melâ€" ody even the youngst&®k forget about their mischicvousness and become spellâ€" bound. _ I tell you music is a great thing, and we cannot give these pecple too much of it. It means less crime, less poverty and less discouragements, for it engenders hope, ambition _ and a clean mind and heart."â€"New York Herald. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper, It‘s half the battle. Better yet, it is a habit. The person who whines, "I am unâ€" lucky, and ,therefore, melancholy," is a fraud. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc, Cry for Land and Liberty, It is stated that the estimate of the money needed by the Russian Governâ€" ment for aid to the famineâ€"stricken proâ€" vinces would amount to nearly $40,000,â€" 000 this year. _ The peasants are starvâ€" ing partly in consequence of lack of land to cultivate, partly becaus~ of specially bad crops this year. Meanwhile the rent of land is steadily rising. According to the latest report of the Peasants‘ Bank the average rent per desiatin rose in twelve years from 39 rubles to 108 ruâ€" bles. _ No wonder that the cry of the peasants is for "land and liberty." And the only reasonably fertile land remainâ€" ing is that of private owners, the public domain being mostly swampy or forest land.â€"New York Times. washed by That precious remedy, is a positive cure for all femabe Oiseases. ciroular and free sample. R. $. MeGILL, Simeoe Ont Farmers and Dairymen When you require a FIBRE WARE arnass MUSIC IN THE PARKS. Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan Qrange Blossorms You will find they give you satisâ€" faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE Insist on being supplied with EDDY*8 every time. E. B. EDDYS Cheerfulness, ISsUE NO. Unwritten Law Mre. WinsIWD#*® P un «ecthing. “”u“tc‘flm teathing. __It soothes the dbil8, remeir w« colle and is the best tor Diarâ€" l‘orobvlouuuon-uwunnnmun the Spanish should be anxious to secure the bomb which did not explode when thrown at the royal cople. There was a reason behind the desire to nip in the bud chance of further damage. Thore is an unwritten law in the reigning houses of Europe, 82y8 the London Standard, that all relicts of attempts upon royal lives, as well as the instruments used for treating the wounds caused in such attempts, shall be destroyed. There was a solemn assembiy in Geneva of Austroâ€"Hungarian officials to witness which caused the death of Empress Elizabeth and of the surgical implements used in making the postâ€"mortem examination. The custom is based to a certain upon superstition, but more solidly upon the deâ€" termination to prevent the relics from fallâ€" ing into the hands of exhibitors of such tragic trifles. T Lo A4â€" GUB%}am mman es %6 "The custom in XHB HBUUCY M 0 D Lesam grind to pieces the weapon which bad been employed. When, bowever, the dagger was secured with which Martin Merino attempted to murder Queen Isabelia of Spain, rather more than balf a century Ago, the blade was found to be of such finely tempered stcel that it resisted every effort of file and stone. Something like a panic was caused when the news got abroad. ‘The Spanish peasan‘s imagined that there must ben magic in the blade. So a Cabinet was specially summoned to deal with the crisis, and it was deterâ€" mined to submit the steel to the influence of acids. This proving succe&@ul, all imâ€" plements used for the like foul purpose have undergone the like treatmentâ€"knives, ewords, daggers, revolvers, unlI E-Mll bombs. e0c l.“ up in quantity, size Aaid nolnt fountain pebs Sangalli was dancing. Patti was in all her glory. Nilsson was singing at the _ Grand Opera. e o. _ At French balls the cotillon was dane ed to perfection. | AVOID POOR IMITATIONS. Sold by all Druggists and General Stores and by mail. TEN CENTS PERPACKET FROM ARCHDALE WILSON _The cab service was poor compared with that of toâ€"day. Americans were shining resplendently as entertainers. French hosterses frequently offered lemonade instead of champagne.. In the afternoon everybody who was anybody drove to the Bois de Boulogne. Sarah Bernhardt‘s beautiful voice was heard at the Theatre Francais, though she was not famous. Dressing was simple by comparison, though for a ball at the Spanish Embasâ€" # avom pgj) Eivza10as * jo optm oy3 4s "night and morning" _ costume worth $400,000. She had all her black pearls and diamonds unset and embroidered inâ€" to her dreas. A very plain man in Troy has a very pretty daughter. One day she was sit tng on his knee rifht before a looking glass, She contemplated the reflections of their two faces and then _ asked: "Papa, did God make me?" "Yes, dear," he r?lid. "And did he make you*" "Yes, Lookinfi again in the mirror, she drew a long breath and enjoined: "He must be turning out better work lately, isn‘t he?" â€"Troy, Kan., Chief. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, (Bankers‘ Magazine.) ‘The fact that France is able to hold sub« stantially all her own public debt, to fim« ance her own industrial enterprises, and stiil have so much left for outside investmont is a remurkable evidence of the thrift of the French people. One reason for the great prosperity of the French people seems to hbe the general distribution of wealth among the population, large fortunes and great industrial cobinations being comparatively few in numâ€" ENVELOPE BARGAINS MISCELLANEOUS. French Wealth Well Distributed. Showing Marked Improvement. ASSASSINS‘ WEAPONS., HAMILTON. ONT. Paris 30 Years Ago. in this matter once was to the weapon which bad been Destruction. 42, Hamilton, Write tor @ascriphtem 29, 1906 Syrup should alâ€" TOLl 1) Will Dicâ€"A â€"â€"â€"Who Had B Ag TRAIX the | Firer .'Hld tThe friends a ably his x nocence a wrk rAPTAI:: | 0 uT J oronto his head shallow 1 Booth, «o Rice Lew terday af Island. brothers, bay for a est, was â€" Tenâ€"yearâ€"old Dick Death : the spec ture of Matth & messe final fift y Drex Cour men viey of 1 cul P free the r('\bh Ud;.'l‘- golent ence | awere PDre: as 1 Story ol t} ©Oul SPIKECD 1 lét‘lotin ptai rv, me A \ @1 hi GAVE FAL B: f1 Drv L&AD WAS W M

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