West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 23 Aug 1906, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

4 1 How High Kites Fly. A twentyâ€"threeâ€"yearâ€"old student initiâ€" * ® ated the modern system of flying kites with st=el wire for scientific purposes. T“[ CHLST He is Mr. Douglas Archibald, and calls attention to the remarkable kite accent a short time ago uuder the direction of x â€" b+4 Dr. Aâ€"am, of the Lindemberg Aeronautâ€" eal Obsowvatory. With a sori= of «ix ! (From Wood Craft.) kites having a total area of 323 eqmtare One of the very earliest, as well as one of feot aml employing about nine miles of the most important, picces of furniture to bs wire a height was attained of no le=s tound in mediaeval homes was the chest. than €,430 metres, or almost exact‘y f0"r _ (ts companions in the rude dwelling of that miles. According to the aeronautic auâ€" seriod were a stool of most primitive form, tomatic recording instruments sent UpP & board set on trestles,which served to hold with the kites at the highest point th@ the wooden trenchers and drinking cups, and temperature reached was 13 degrees Fall »ecasionally a bed. When the bunter, lord remleit. that on the ground being 40.3 of the manor or ploughman came home ;rOE while the veloci of the wird hrew bimselt on a cout 3 '-:L;J lift ‘.':M "".‘ o ”,\1‘ .u’r against E‘l:: lr?:::'o:.wlmch was spread some skins pdlioan Arvroadra ve e ies a +. or rough woolen cloth, which served for about about eightcen on the lower strat warmth. In many homes of some pretensien wn. This performance shows lfn: 8"*A4 _ there was gu; nls‘i’ngl:“?:g. i:m;bi(%: ';3: oune i we art Ol knight an is lady » e e e Hiie i ons conar on â€" aintgder 3t the nelsensio 1ey" upon <b¢. f1oos, wn. This performanee shows that gr advances have been made in the art using kites for meteorological obser thons in the upper air, for in Mr. Ar bald‘s early experinemts the kites r onby some 1500 feet. and a few vye Tribune through sand of gathers w in Watermelon to Make Faces Fa.. (New York Press.) Beauty doctors are telling remarkable things about the results of rubbing the face, nock and arms with watermellon rind after exposure to the sun or wind. As economiâ€" eal girls don‘t care to waste the fruit, there is is an increase in the eating of melons. A maid may keep her complexion in good shape and at the same time give pleasure to her callers. Another expert says nothing is so mfor sun ‘blisters as to apply a slice of o. ‘The juice must be rubâ€" bed in !.&3 and the vegetable muast be bound in place. This use of the daily SUpDly of veretahlas far Intinng ingtand . af acainâ€"an easy and efficacious development oi the portable shower bath idea. The male population of ‘‘Tin Town‘* does not arrive home until evening, but always before nine o‘clock, for by the law of "Jo‘â€" burg‘" no blacks, save those in chare of ‘rickshas, is allowed on the streets after this hour. ‘Then be can loll against his tin walls â€"making them crackle and rattle like coaâ€" «entrated thunderâ€"and smoke ihs clay pije while he discuses short, but seditious, cuts to freedom. In the frail habitation of "Tis to freedom. In the frail habitation of "Tin Town"" the flames of revolt have been stealâ€" 1y fanned since the Angloâ€"Boer peace, and it woult be a suicidal policy to underestiâ€" mate the present menace or to ignore what is behind it. If trouble is averted it will be directly due to the Johonnesburg authorities, who understand the situation and the nexis of the country much better than the blatâ€" ant armebair labor critics at home.â€"Londo# SNUDD‘Y of vegetables for lotions instead of food may cause rebellion among the men of the family, but they should be pacified when they see the fair skins of the feminine conâ€" tingent. Another complexion doctor advis*s the use of fruit juices as a morning drink imsteads of salts or hot water. ik "TIN TOWN" xcitedly High Kites Fly on=l qprove the innil UO wuld be clevated.â€"Chicago W z hard for half an hour brickflelds of _ arid . clay, eat of the sun into a thouâ€" dging shunting trains on a ig, the inquisitive visitor to ds himself on the outskirts @p t ts > ule or cleared out of the ; ox team as it rolls veldtâ€" a group of jabbering woâ€" t one of the doors, and, ly hold converse in gutturâ€" lulge their babies with an Their method of infantile resting. ‘The naked little front of its mother, who he district is Yvededorp e ‘"expropriation area; Kaffir quarters of . th re the black man fore nd family, and here th it is being raised, wit rly pounced upon building . wall M »wn architect and bui f erecting these twe h sties is simplicity und is marked outâ€"& ‘eâ€"and at each of t battens. in ifficient supply alls are comple re than a mile arters of a mile . it with great regula block system. One of its vicinity by t! lecaying animal matt futur rrately ham mer s. . ‘The roadway crawling . Kaffi leasant undulation aganant rainwate ignacious mosqult An f ‘‘Tin Town‘"‘ does vening, but always by the law of "Jo‘â€" umer | amp ar As the some n the wand ooking utensils, other familiar accommodative â€" to the ruboisa ed upon by the »id 4 the attempts alks are pityâ€" in petroleum h coupi f ma i ML the t I Ouolmovorymlmt.uwouuonoot ( the most important, pieces of furniture to be + found in mediaeval homes was the chest. °_ (its companions in the rude dwelling of that â€"â€" period were a stool of most primitive form, ) & board set on trestles,which served to hold ‘ the wooden trenchers and drinking cups, and * _ secasionally a bed. When the bunter, lord ) of the manor or ploughman came home from 1 his labors be threw bimselt on a couch on : the floor on which was spread some skins . or rough woolen cloth, which served for t warmth. In many homes of some pretension there was but a single bed, in which the i knight and his lady rested, while the reâ€" â€" _ mainder of the household lay upon the floor, . or stretched themselves upon the chest, which °_ contained the fortune of the family. ‘There were no banks, no places where 43 property might be stored and papers deâ€" , posited, and each man held on to his own y zoods by force of arms and the strength and secret contrivance of the ponderous locks 0 wheh be had placed on his chests They are sendered more secure at night by having a sleeper, with bis sword near at hand, ocâ€" upying the lid, and in the day the mistress & of the manor and the maidens were at work all the time on their endless spinning or tapestry work near at hand. There are very tew chests remaining which can be identiâ€" fled as having been made prior, to the thirâ€" teenth century, only one or two, in fact, " ind ene of these at Stoke d‘Aberon Church, 9 in Surrey, England, is made of oak, with r he remains of three ponderous locks and soma, â€" simple Gothic carvin>. One or two, gnld 10 be equally anclent, have ornamentation of iron work upon them, the design showing great skill in the working of the metal and beauty in the design. By 1233 we come to the period of documertary evidence as to what was in use by royalty at least, and from that series of papers known as the "Close Rolls," still preserved in England, can be Jrawn many details as to what was in use. Commands of the King in reference to paintâ€" ing the rooms of himself and his Queen date from 1239. Though chairs did not come into common use till the sixteenth century there were benches with high backs for t:ose who could afford themâ€"and always the thest. The chests in which we are interested are of a later period, and the earliest are of oak, â€"arved or inlaid, standing flat on the ground, »r on legs made from the continuation of the | stiles. The decoraglon was applied to the panels of the front, &f which there were comâ€" monly three, and to the upper raill the lower »ne being plain. It was in choice specmens only that the sides were panelled, and where th carving was made in Holland (as was often the case in the seventeenth and eighteenth ~enturies) and then sent to England the wood of the body of the chest may be different . from the panels. ‘The tops or lids are plain , with few exceptions. Many of the chests ‘ to be found here bave the lids of pine, | though I have also seen of them ofbanym | though I also seen many of fine black oak, . heavy and solid, though the mortised ends | have had to be strengthened with nails. "Standing chests,"" or hutches, as they were also ~alled, were named from a chest of similar style and of French make called "huche.‘" Every nation used these articles, and the individuality of each is stamped upon their product. No Italian family was without it ‘cassone," or marriage chest. In it was stored a wealth of linen ard silk, jewels u;g velvet. the portion of the daughâ€" ters of e house, which were freely disâ€" nlayed when callers came, so that the wealth of the family would be known and bring suitors forward, no matter how unattractive the lady. All Italian literature deals in one way 0 another with the chest. Lovers and other criminals hid in them. Painters lavished on them the choicest labors of their hands. Cabinet makers view one with another as !o which shouldu produce the finest specimens, and besides the wood carvers artisans were emploved to inlay them with ivory, tortoisse shell, pear!, lapis lazuli and anything that could add to their richness. Gold leaf was added to all the other things, and a little cofter or chest for a lady‘s jewels had, in addition, "trays lined with choicest Genoa velvet or silk from Damascus. Spain was not bebind other Continental countries in ber work upon chest and proâ€" duced a kind of standing cabinet or chest which is always handsome and usually very orpate. I have seen some made of ebony and p@inted with the most charming designs, cach one diffcrent, even the small drawers behiz1 the doours of the larger, panels having their painting, too. Red velvet and gilt rails were affected occasionally by the Spanish on the legs of these chests, which was very poor art and perishable as well. It is rathor interesting to compare theso flowers of art with the simple pieces whica were made in such numbers in England and later in this country. There were sometimes called "Bible boxes,"" since the nreclous book was carried in them along with such small store of money and few papers as the owner had. There were small, twelve or fourteen inches long, and had occasionally slanting tops, on which writing cou!d be done. In some the two upper sets of drawers are false, being really a chest with mock handles and locks, only the lower locks being in use. This was a common usage after the chest acquired drawers in its upward flight. Just why it was so made it is hard to tell. Perâ€" hans it saved the work of srooving the side# of the drawers so that they could move on runners, which were fastened on the carcass of the chest. ‘This is of the kind called a wainscot chest, made of mouldings with the upper and lower sets of drawers splayed and he nail beads set on for ornament. ‘The grain of the oak shows plainly and the plece is enormously heavy, as it is oak throughout. Indeed, the usage of making part of these chests of pine was not without its merits since it made them lighter articles to handle. It was not the cabinet maker only who put toxether these wainscot chests, for the local carpenter was often called upon to do it and to set up the wainscot, which was bought by the foot, as well, and it was not difficult to make such a chest. Iron was the metal allied to the ancient oak furniture. _ Wooden knobs were not usual on these chests, and I thing these have been added, too, though I have found them on some cupboards of about this same period, that is, the last balf of the seventeenth or the first quarter of the elghteenth century. When the chest once began to rise on legs it went up very high. In fact, it became decidedlyk Inconvenient, for how was it nossible to see the contents of those uppor drawers? Presumably women did not keep their bureau drawers in any better order than they do toâ€"day, and it must have been discouraging to try to find a handkerchicf, say, in one of the two small upper ones. It was a curious fancy which led the makers of these chests on legs to put four legs in front and only two behind, with stretchers to steady them. ‘This was a pattern of all the the early ones, and when the two middlo lexs in front were no longer used, the places where they had beeen were marked by two carved drops or ornaments. Many of these chesst, ‘‘lifeboys" we call them now, have ornate tops, being finishad with a broken arch cornice, or carved ornaâ€" ments, or with a lattice work arch. Future of the Sailing Ship. The arrival in New York a few days ago of the largest sailing ship ever built has revived the old question of the suâ€" periority of the sailer over the steamer as a freight carrier. A dozen years ago when the modern tramp steamer was nearing perfection in point of construcâ€" tion and economy of operation the buildâ€" ing of sailing ships almost ceased, and while the European yards were crowded with orders for steamers there was at onme time not a single new sailing ship under construction in the United Kingâ€" dom. With cheap fuel, cheap crews and high freights, the tramp steamer increasâ€" ed in numbers at a pace positively alarmâ€" ing to the owner of the sailer, . But with the deciine in freights om the longâ€" distance routes the sailer has succeeded in holding its own, and the Genmans have been adding t‘:leiullllm.‘m sailing ships to their mechant marine freet.â€"Portland Oregonian. Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP or THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by GOOLD, SHAPLEY @ MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. o "* IMPERIAL‘ PUMPINS WINDMILL Massachusetts Sayings and Proverbs. Don‘t stay till the last dog‘s hung. Joy go with you and a good breeze after you. g us oks ie ERRRIE Mn CC) To drown the miller. (Said in bread making when too much water is put imnto the flour.) The still pig eats the swill. No man dies without an heir. Three removes are as bad as‘a fire. What comes over the devil‘s back is sure to go under his belly. There‘s as much odds in folks as there is in anybody. A short horse is soon curried. Dunghills rise and castles fall. He‘s got a gait like a pair of bars. Her tongue runs wiggie waggle like a dead lamb‘s tail. _ Her tongue runs as if it was hung the middle and wagged at both ends. wrll"‘fl don.“ in two shakes of a lamb‘s tail. Fie#s. & . Don‘t try to come your dumb Isaacs over me (ie., mislead me, pull the wool over my eyes). 4 Sitting on the little edge of nothing. That beats my wife‘s relations. Also; That beats the Jews; or, That beats all creation. The fire hazard of electricity as comâ€" puted from the fire losses in ~new York city from 1902 to 1905 is very slight as eompared with the other causes of fires. The total number of fires traceable to defective wiring or other electricat causes was in that time only 361, which is 1.34 per cent. of the total number of fires. The total loss from these 361 fires was $207,610 which is 1.15 per cent. of the total loss from fires due to all causes. Much of the credit is due to exâ€" pert inspection and to a rigid insistence upon good work in wiring,. â€" OUmaha W orldâ€"Herald. _ Don‘t need it any more than a cow needs two tails. Let us trust that the Government‘s interference with the chain prayer letâ€" ter business will put an end to one form of impertinent demand upon the courâ€" tesy of men and women. This particular letter was especially offensive because it involved 2 kind of threatening of the persons receiving the letter if they "broke the chain." Th object of the letâ€" ter was not in itself dishonorable on its face; it was to circulate a gmyor alâ€" leged to have been composed by Bishop Lawrence. The prayer was all right, and it would do no harm to those receiving it. It was, nevertheless, an act of impoâ€" sition to send it to persons with a reâ€" it. It was, nevertheless, an act of impo sition to send it to persons with a re quest that each receiver should send : eopy to nine others.â€"â€"Boston Herald. Minards Liniment Cures Distemper, Sunlight Soap is pettor than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunilight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions The marriage customs of the Burmese are simple in the extreme. A man and woman are married or are not married, mccording to whether they live as husâ€" band and wife or not, _ A man may have several wives, though in practice he rareâ€" 1y has more than one, A woman may have only one husband Divorce is a matter for the village eldâ€" ers. â€" No court is necessary, no decres, no appeal to legal or ecclesiastical authâ€". ority. Divorce is but the breaking cof m status. A wife retains control of all her property acquired during marriage. 1f she is divorced she takes her own proâ€" perty and half that jointly acquired. There is no blending of her authority with that of her usband. She may do wnat she will with her own. There is no rule of primogeniture and mo power of bequeathing property by testament. All the children inherit equaily. No Buddhist may make a will. Whatever a man or woman dies posstesâ€" ea of must be divided according to the fules of consanguinity. ‘There is no preâ€" ference of either sex. All children are equal in this matter, ‘The eldest son shares alike with the youngest daughâ€" ter.â€"Lanore Tribune. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria,. One good thing seems to have come out of the marine hospital service experience. It is the discovery _ and announcement that the burning of a distillation of pine wood called pyrofume will effectively free houses and single rooms of mosâ€" quitoes. It is more deadly than sulphur and it not injurious to paints, metals or clothes. The fumes of this pine tar kill mosquitoes instantly, but do not harm human beings. But while this may be an excellent discovery and handy to use about the house, it in no way approaches in the value the drainage system . of mosquito destruction. While pyrofume kills the few mosquitoes in a house, the system which destroys their breeding places aims to kill the great bulk of the whole noxious, stinging, pestiferous brood, and in some places has already accomplished this desired regultâ€"Newâ€" ark News. A Divorce Among the Burmese. Electricity‘s Fire Hazard. Chain Letter Nuisance. Kills Off Mosquitoes. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO in nouhonvrongmxthm to Heat. Lord Carrington used to be a great practical joker, but he was once the vicâ€" tim of his own reputation. According to the Dundee Advertiser, he was at a hotel in Cape Town. In the same hotel were a young couple, and the husband having a bad cold, his wife left her room to obâ€" tain for him the solace of a mustard poultice. She left him asleep, and, thinkâ€" Em t PP td 3 ET & ing she knew the way, descended the stairs and, procuring a particularly viruâ€" lent concoction, made her way back to her room. The doors are much alike in hotels, and seeing one ajar, as she had left her own, she entered. Creeping quiâ€" etly to the bedside, she saw, as she thought, the form of her sleeping lord and master. Hastily bending over him, s}l:fa placed the fatal irritant upon his chest. No sooner had she done so than the movement of the sleeper revealed, to her horror, that she had made a terrible misâ€" take, Too frightemed to recapture the inâ€" criminatifg poultice, she fled from the room, and, rushing down the passage, discovered her own door and bolted herâ€" self in. It was but a minute, and the storm broke. The hotel was in an upâ€" roar. The mustard poultice bad been placed on the chest of the elderly goverâ€" norâ€"general! The explosion of his wrath, his howls of rage as the mustard did its work, brought servants and manager to his bedside. The situation did not perâ€" mit of an explanation,. Furious with inâ€" dignation, he declared himse‘f the victim of a gross joke, and the efforts of the maitre d‘hotel to pacify him were in vain. He swore that the practical joker was nobody else than Lord Carrington, and the next day, fuming and infignant, left the place. So did a yery contrite young wife and a husband, whose cold was no better Dr Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid is an internal Remedy that entirely removes the cause of Piles, and cures to stay cured any case, NO matter how long standing. If you hbave Piles, and Dr. L Hemâ€"Roid will not cure you, you money back. A thoul-;:d dollar Guaranteeo goes . with every bottle of Hemâ€"Roid sold. $1.00. All dealers, or The Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Rarey‘s Little Trick for Curing Balking â€"Causes of Shying. Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont A balky horse can be eured, when unâ€" der the saddle, by a very simple method. Turn him around and a@round in . his tracks a fow times and then suddenly straighten his head and he will willlingly, and even gladly, go forward. This was the method of the celebrated John Rarey, and fail. he *fjibbler" differs from the balker inasmuch as his soâ€"called vice is caused bg' congestion of the brain. The horse thus affected is liable to bolt or run away after one of these attacks and is a dangerous animal. Bearing, although commonly termed a vice, is often caused by too severe a eurb, Sometimes the rearing horse Toses his balemce and falls over backward. It is needless to say that the rider is then lucky if he or she escapes without serâ€" ious, if not fatal, injury. When the horse rears loosen the reins and speak to him in a soothing tone; but if he persists give him a sharp blow between the ears with the butt of the whip. This will bring him down on all fours with amazing quickness. seeeC Men on ( SE L CCCRmR C OR Y Kicking is certainly a vice, Someâ€" times, however, it is caused by fear, in which case much can be accomplished by gentle management. Exactly the oppoâ€" site treatment of the rearing animal should be applied to the kicker. Hold his head with might and main, for the horse cannot throw out both hind legs at once when his head is elevated. Kickâ€" ing straps are what the name implies. A scrap fastened to the shafts over the horse‘s croup prevents kicking, but this is only serviceable when driven in single harness,. Shying is a dangerous fault. It cannot properly be termed a vice, as it is generally the result of defective visâ€" ion. (Gentle treatment, soothing words and patient persistence in accustoming the animal to the dreaded object will often effect a cure. To lash a horse beâ€" cause he shies or is frightened only agâ€" gravates the evil. He will associate the punishment with the frightful object and will fear it more and more each time he encounters jt.â€"Country Life in America, No Time To Be Lost. I "Why don‘t you propose if you love | her * H "she hasn‘t known me long enough." ; "Great Scott, man, propose at once, | then. Don‘t take any chances."â€"Cleveâ€" land Leader. t Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cowsn In Full Dress. \ "Just think of it!" said a prominent young society man, of shadyside, the other night, as I met him and his wife in Fifth avenue, "here we are going out in the street in evening dress and think nothing of it in _ New York. Everybody does it here and it goes. Why, in Pittsburg I would not think of going two blocks in evening dress withâ€" out taking a carriage." And he was right for the day has passed in New York when aâ€"hotel guest orders a carriage to convey him to a nearby cafe or theatre simply because he wears & tuxedo or his female companion is in evening dress. â€" Pittsburg Dispatch ONE MUSTARD POULTICE, HANDLING VICIOUS HORSES. HAVE YOU PILES? starved system along until it can find Cirm support in ordinary food. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, ~\ SUPPORT has never been known to goc. and $1.00; all druggists. Dr. Leonhardt‘s 1, you get your Business Men Drinking Tea, (New York Sun). The custom of serving tea in the ofâ€" fices.of the heads of prominent bankâ€" ing houses at the close of banking hours has spread rapidy in the Wall street disâ€" trict. The custom is of English origin and was first introduced by the _ New York houses of London banking firms. Subsequently it was taken up by some} of the younger bankers who had spent much time in London and now tea and wafers are regularly served every afterâ€" noon in the private offices of many a large institution, An interesting feature of the spread of the custom is its adopâ€" tion by the head of a prominent departâ€" ment of one of the largest banks. This banker is an Irishman and his assistâ€" ants are Germans, yet all gather at a fixed hour every afternoon and sip their tea as contentedly as if such beverages as Irish whiskey and Pilsener had never been invented. Exercise in itself is no doubt excellent, but is it well for a sane man to make it a fetish? Does it do a business man any good to swell the muscles of his back by wrestling with a rowing maâ€" chine or to make his legs as hard as railroad ties by galloping about a canvas track? Is there any advantage, aiter all, in developing the sinews abnormally ? | _ Tsn‘t that the sort of proof you want 2 !‘ _ Mr. O‘Rourke is the wellâ€"known breeder of bullâ€"terrier dogs. Everyone in Hamilton knows him. 1 _ Mira Ointment brings quick, lasting relief, and pumuadycurulbewomumofl’ilu.flama. Ulcers, Sores, Chafin& ’Bn:::: nndAod:u skin Does a man who works with his brain gain anything by trying to imitate a hodcarrier? The notion that the average business man will be benefited by deâ€" f â€"after Years of Suffering. Miracleâ€"days may be patâ€"but the day &# eaving people from suffering is everâ€"present. What is more distressing than Itching, Bleeding Piles>? Somé say the only cure is the knife. We say, operations are unnecessary. â€" Read this lettert * For years I had Piles, which protruded and bled freety. " The itching pain was sometimes almost unbearable. Ofien I suffered so severely i was next to impossible to remain on duly. It was a hardshipto enalk, I tried many remedies, but with poor success, *# This winter, in New Yorkâ€"ctthe Dench Show«» I suffered greatiyâ€"was almost compelled to remaim in my room. Its ied several remediesâ€"without relief. * On my return home, Mira Ointment was advised. Iusedit, In only a short time, all the irritation and pain ceased. I can now walk with ease and aitend mey duties as a member of the Fire Department, * / strongly resommend Mira Ointment toanyone suffering from this annoying complaint. " Hamilton, March 9. 1906." troubles, 50c. a boxâ€"6 for $2.50 At druggitts‘ â€"â€"or from The Chemists® Co. of Canada, Limited veloping the muscles of a stevedore is based on nothing more tangible than wild theorizing. In favor of it is the allegaâ€" tion that physical or brute strength spells health. _ Against it the obvious and undoubted fact that millions of men who take no more exercise than their ordinary avocations require live to hale and hearty old age and the further fact that the average athlete, for all his sinew and vigor,, is seldom more healthy than the average desk slave or softâ€"muscled busiâ€" ness man.â€"Baltimore Herald. Hustling. (London ‘Tribune.) The days are past when placid men Could live in ease and plenty By half a year of toil and then ‘The dolce far niente. For now ‘tis labor that is king, And sinew, brain and muscle Must join the chorus that we sing In constant praise of hustle. Before we leave our sleeping room We dodge the gay, bacillus ‘That lurks in spongesâ€"unto whom "Pwere rapture could he kill us. At breakfast we must scan the fare And make the servants answer That fever is not hiding there Nor bhousemaid‘s knee nor cancer, On roads where moter cars rush and roar Our wits must be our saviors; l In streets we need beware the more ' Of navvies and of paviors; On sad sea waves the dancing boats Are risky, minus tillers; Beneath the trees we find our coats Alive with caterpillars. dhplbfiyo-â€"bw“ having to spend tme betweem n io cce oT t s es is o uo eajor the paths _ _ _ . â€" Libby s Products are sciecied meats, mbldhbyfiwbob\vhv.-d fian&:‘dflld-y time, in doors or out, try Libby‘s Melâ€" rose Pateâ€"with Libby‘s Camp Sauce. Booklet free, *‘How to Make Geod Things to Eat." Write Libby, McNeill 2 Libby, Chicage IT 15 A MIRACLE!®" Look for the trademark=â€" And so, wherever we may go, Whatever course pursuing, "Tis our to chase some dreaded foo Or see what he is doing; So much attention to our life We must be always giving, Bo many hours are spent in strife We haven‘t time for living! A fool ana his money may be soon parted, but other foels are constantly â€"say Hamilton People Bleeding Piles Cured Common Sense in Exercise. TRADE MARK REGISTERED, Mark O‘ Rourke, 186 Hess St. N. It began with the sending of the offenaâ€" ing missive last February, and wase then enlivened by the recipient‘s lawyer ae manding that the gender be brought into eourt to auswer to the charge of crimâ€" inal libel. Both the complainant and deâ€" 1 100 3 q. maw. uEL MERPER PECAC CC EC fendant are women and related by marâ€" riage, and the proceedings show an added bitterness on this account. Reveral pmonths after the charge was made the grand jury returned a bill of indictment . and then the lawyer for the defendant . filed a demurrer to have this indictment quashed. But the judge refused to sus: tain it. He declared that valentines of the character ofsthe one under disous sion, in which the recipient was alluded to as a scandalmonger, & busybody, & mischiefmaker and a person of untre strained _ mendacity, _ afford ample grounds for suits of the character instiâ€" tuted, and that when such a libellous valentine leaves the sender‘s possessi0D it is clearly in circulation according to the letter of the law. It is possible that this Philadelphia case will prove a warning and a deterâ€" rent for those persons who under the iC‘Oa!( of anonymity use the soâ€"called s comie valentine as a meane of venting [their malice. If so, it will not be proseâ€" ‘The multiâ€"millionaire was very considerate of the strange young man‘s welfare. "Ah, my poor brother," he said in silky tones, ‘"are you serving Mammon *‘ "‘No, sir," replied the young man, as be reached in his pocket, "I am serving subâ€" poenas,"" With a wild leap the multiâ€"millionaire reached his motor car and vanished toward Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited: Dear Sirs,â€"While in the country last summer I was badly bitten by mosquitâ€" oes. so badly that I thought I would be disfigured for a couple of weeks, 1 was advised to try your liniment to allay the irritation, and did so. The effect was more than I expected, a few applications completely curing the irritation, and preventing the bites from becoming sore. MINARD‘S LINIMENT is also a good article to keep off the mosquitocs, Yours truly, w Y. &. V. K. & Lov®. Fountain of joy, of peace, of all that‘s good, Born of the heart, sweet essence of the soul, Great mighty stream, O Love, on doth thou roll, Forth from thy depths to join thy brothâ€" erhood. For thee the cagle builds its eyrie wild; The birds sing lon, bleats loud the lamb astray ; Toils hard the father for his child at Libelous Valentines, (Cleveland Piain Dealer.) ‘The Philadelphia comic valentine case is reached another interesting stage. ul ks L4 lay, And, tr(,) its mother‘s breast, clings close the child, Such is thy sway, in thee all things prevail; Of all that is, or was or is to be. Thou art supreme, and ah! to life the key, Compass of truth, and light beyond death‘s veil; In thee is God, is all eternity. The world of life, the Holy Trinity. â€"â€"W. M J. Winston Churchill, who triumphantly carried through the parliament just adâ€" journed the bill for a constitution for the Transvaal, has been given the sonâ€" riquet of the "Blenheim pup" and for several reasons. One is the fact that he is a Churchill, a descenQent of the great Duke of Marlborough who humbled the pride of the French in which he fights his political battles. His face is said also to have a bulldog look. He won his vicâ€" tory for South African autonomy as un der secretary for the colonies, a posiâ€" tion that does not give him a seat in the cabinet. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc, A Great Engineer, | (Chicago. Chrinicle.) 1 Sir Douglas Fox, who has been comâ€" missioned to prepare the new plans for the longâ€"talkedâ€"of channel tunnel, is reâ€" garded by the members of his profession as one of the greatest engineers of his time. It is owing to his marvelous creaâ€" tive and constructive genius that the Cape to Cairo railway hbas developed inâ€" to an actuality instead of an impossible dream of the empire builders, the late Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Beit, who has just left the scheme &1,200,000, The great bridge across the Victoria falls on the Zambesi river will always remain a monument to his great abilities. The Mersey tunnel, 'onened in 1885, which nects Liverpool h Birkembead and the Cheshire side of the River Mersey, is another of his _ engineering _ achieveâ€" ments, as is also the Liverpool Overâ€" head railway and the Dawarden railway bridge across the River Dee. Fairly tall, with clear eut determined features and businesslike grey side whiskers, Sir Douâ€" glas was 66 years old in May. Farmers and Dairymen in vain,. FIBRE WARE â€"anass Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan Not Serving Mammon. (Chicago News.) You will find they give you satisâ€" - faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE mnmmam ncfi se n mm The Blenbeim Pup. Insist on being supplied with EDDY‘S every time E. B. EDDYS Carterhall, Nfld. IssUE fucurymamt t / 0. 1 PICTURE Post CARDS C * "Top tor soc; all dif> Unna of Hawm®"‘s> conspicuous dermatold opinion that there is & ing lepro®syâ€" In his ® the International Me Tisbon he states that cessful in attacking © not macular or anaest gives his experience, & .ing sixty lepets dus twentyâ€"two years. F private patients, nvore all leading & useful life lem{'b‘tiully to be © 8 2. Autre anm 1 pations. This fact 18 *"T"""."" 3 corve thinks, in contrast to what is observed in the patients of loper hospitale, for €xâ€" ample, in Norway, who are very poot people, coming from the worst kind of surroundings, shunned by their neighâ€" bors, and finding in the hospital an asyâ€" lum with all possible comfortsâ€"cleaniiâ€" ness, sympathy, and freedom from the eares of poverty and the daily fight against hardshipe. Externally, Unna advises hot baths Pud natural waters containing sulphur and sodium or potassium, but especially his 0 a a oo 4 co4h ~AMiintenhadt, containâ€" "Externally, Unna 2099""" _ / //_ ond natural waters containing -ulplmfi u;:d. sodium or potassium, but ially his soâ€"called inzobcth (l)inu-fi)e.fl:flwn- ing ferrous sulphate and tannic acid; the washing with earbolic acid or green soaup; massage and pressure upon the skin; the use of pyrogallo! and resorcin, chrysarobin and ichthbyol, and later the use of Paquelin‘s cautery. Internaliy, the author uses ichthyol, eamphor, saliâ€" eylieo acid and chaulmugra oil, which he calls the specific par excellence for eutâ€" aneous _ leprosy.â€"New â€" York Medical Journal. (Lippincott‘s Magazine.) Pat is sexton of a Buffalo church and beâ€" fore holding his present position he was A s wYin caliae af wit are Tore NORRBE C107 20°C aars walM gtreet car conductor. His sallies of discussed and keenly enjoyed by ! gregation gregation. Pat presented the collection box to a ‘"pHâ€" lar of the church‘ ome evening and in fishâ€" ing out some change fom his vest pockâ€" et, where he had slipped it for convenience, the man brought to light two cigars. Pat leaned over him and in the most solemn of Ee U NOAE acvatie volces said only." $10â€"Atlantic City, Cape Mayâ€"$10 Four seashore excursions via Lehigh Valley Railroad, Jul{ 20, August 3, 17, and 31. Tickets good 15 days, and only $10, round trip, from Suspension Bridgr. Tickets allow stopâ€"oxas at Philulelrhh. For tickets, further partivulars, call on or write Robt. 8. Lewis, Canadian Passâ€" enger Agent, 10 King street east, Toâ€" ronto, Ont. The seasons pass in opulent procession, parties and governments succeed each other, throne totter, dynasties peter out, but the human hog survives all change and accident. He is as superior to arguâ€" ment and denunciation as the whiskey drinker is to prohibition laws or the gambler to municipal prosecution. He does not limit his activitiee to street cars. He is omnipresent, pervading, inâ€" domitable. No pentup Utica confines his powers. He ravages alike the xrlblie vehiâ€" cle and the drawing room. He is everyâ€" where, like high temperature, mosquitoes and bad smells.â€"Arizona Journal. Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€" wetting. ‘There is a constitutional cause for this trouble Mrs. 8. M. Summers, Bor 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother BETTER THAN SPANKING her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money, but write her toâ€"day if your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child; the chances are it can‘t hbelp it. ‘This treatment also cures adults and aged peeple troubled with urine difficuities by might or day, «Now," said the revivalist, "all of you that want to go to heaven, stand up." Bo far as he could see everybody in the house arose. «Now, everybody who wants to go to the other place, stand up." No one avose at once, but after a brief pause an old man near the door slowly got to his feet. __"You don‘t mean to tell us that you want to go to perdition, do you*" said the astonished preacher. "NXo, not enctlf' want to," said tre old man, "but as I looked around 1 saw no one standing but the preacher and thought that he would be lonesome." again Ubiquity of the Human Race. Curability ability of Leprosy» Hamburg, like many dermatologists, is " _ sadlita Force of Habit. Smokin" in the three rear seats NO. Dinner Stories. is important, g‘!l rined from treatâ€" ng &A period of s sufferers were or less wefl-tomv and wishing most reod, «o that they 34, 1906 nany other is of e the _ Cavalry Mad Rema Her char; then then her had puwr® &Q it M W direc to c Guar beio But Train urdet shoul One Non Woman Charge Police Co middieâ€"age charged Gwendolet the libel. tita« Declared to be lils her lad y 5 late Mar of the p prsor Matfi in 18 The y t the ex that orrl Impressive Cer th D UNION USSI FRC m M U a tur eaunria 5C LAID STO Birmir THE SU â€"To C NFG M wit h pi h 1«

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy