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Durham Review (1897), 30 Aug 1906, p. 6

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iN $1 SEP SEP Reop Prayer. Our heavenly Father, we beseech Thes *o cleanse us trom â€"all unrighteousness and give us purity of spirit,. Nelfishness lurks in ail our thoughis, pleasure enâ€" tices us, temptations _ master us, and pride rules our wills. Set us free from all this bordage and bitterness and let us ut into the life and liberty of the sons Of God. May Christ dwell in our hearts by faith and love, so as to fashion us into His likeness and clothe us with His beauty and fill us with His blessedâ€" ness. May we measure life by this inver treasure of spirit. and not â€" by outer things. Move us to consecrate all out life to service and to find our joy in the joy of others. Teach us the way of the Master and lead us in His steps. And so may we walk along the path of life in trust and service and peace until we reach the end of the iflrfl and the %inal step takes us home. Ard this we ask in Jesus‘ name, Ames. _ . â€" glory and +] and eve Niay your hearts ma radiant with this same jo wa‘ting to see for yours has promised to consider as "done unto Him." Nay from responsibility. Do 1 enxiety and the real s ofien entails. For in n« will a follower of the Chr things. Only when the go elosed behind us can we of heaven. Only amidst i you and so give you that ance which communion v ever given, and must of Oht f Wi And A ; Yor ar And 1« And Â¥ou h: }I('!d No wonder But stay and :. face to face with trouble, Friend, I have often stood, ) learn that pain hath sweetness, To know that God is good. ise and meet the daylight ; Be strong and do your best! ith an homest heart and childlike faith That God will do the rest. _ ~gaAY 4&=~>> Gâ€";,"f“‘@fiv is @ l s‘ >ar n0Mk Pressing Toward the Mark w 1t What She Hath Done. * your hearts make your faces t with this same joy when you are & io see for yourselves Him who omised to consider all these things ne unto Him." Nay, do not shrink responsibility. Do not dread the y and the real |uflerinF it so entails. For in no earthly home follower of the Christ escape these _ Only when the golden gates are behind us can we expect the rest ven. Only amidst it all God gives d so give you that joyful countenâ€" vhich communion with Him â€" has iven, and must of necessity give tC iace to face with troubie! wonder you cannot sleep. ay and think of the promiseâ€" Lord will safely keep, ‘ad you out of the thicket, into the pasture land; ive only to walk straight onward ing the dear Lord‘s hand. God Will Do the Rest erest in the Lor nds all work a and opportunity vith indifference en are at stake oud and strong. d Hi : of Music Banker.) ivthm tr t t) PWn al t1 1 to earnestly that continuâ€" with, to fuller perfect knowâ€" se. to â€" larger Lord‘s work. a drudgery, ity a thing nce, thonught ake, and the t] win h emseives, and light, which ks and rays red shaft and his positively or,. and overâ€" it vh uld i $UT nterest tun #] t of of n In in D sacrifice of dignity in surrendering in the interests of the highest harmony of the two rather than the personal vanity of one.â€"From the Sentember Delineato® t "It wouldn‘t do no harm tew ask her,‘" she whispered, mischisvously, "bein‘ ashow you‘re not over partickilar."â€"Woman‘s Magaâ€" zine. "An‘ Mary Aun Higgins," Ezekiel sugâ€" gested, bashfully. ‘Then he plucked up courage as \ he saw Mary Ann blushing axain. ‘‘"Would she have me, dew you reckon?**‘ he asked, tenderly, as ho placed his arm about her waist. ‘There was the sound of a sob, and a laugh together, as Mary Ann buried her head upon his shoulder. Mary Ann grew crimison. ‘There was an unmistakable meaning in Ezekiel‘s tones, and that ‘"would be willin‘‘‘ was such a comeâ€"down from his first position in the matter that she felt bumillated at once. Curiously enough, a dozen names were on her lips in an instant. ‘‘There‘s Sarah Martin, an‘ Eva Me an‘ !h9 3’ld‘ov AJy}:nl'._‘an:-"__lhg began ‘‘Mary Ann," he began, gently, ‘"‘could â€" coudld you p‘int out that you thisk would be willin‘ tew have me?t" That night he resumed the cor but op an entirely different plan T0NTY _Ann commented, sbortly, as she glanced in the lookingâ€"glass above the sink Aud caught the reflection of her own natâ€" urally wavy locks. _‘Of course, a woman like that may suit you, but I‘m surs I couldn‘t never git along with her,‘" she added, nalvely. Ezekiel was silent. _ He, too, had caught a glimpse of the curly tresses upen Mary Ann‘s forehead, and it had just occurred to him that in the whole year wherein she had/acted as housekeoper for himself and his invalid mother he had never before discovered how pretty she was until this very minute. Strangely enough, he went about his duties, and not another name was considered as a possible addition to â€" his family after that disparaging comparison between Emma Greenby anrd Mary _ Aun. That night bhe resumed the conversation, Nomeiiiiimg ~arindiier // B restr n > I Aud caught the reflection of her own urally wavy locks. ‘Of course, a w like that may suit you, but I‘m su couldn‘t never #it along with har ‘* aha a Mar "An‘ git so on fer your pains!" Mary Ann responded, promptly. "Ezekiel Waterâ€" bury, you must be stark, starin‘ mad tew think of proposin‘ to the schooimarm!‘ What on ‘arth dew you think she would do in this ‘ere kitchen? Why, she couidn‘t try out a pound of lard if her life doâ€" pended on it!"" she said, scorpfully, adding with a very emphatic toss of her head: *‘An‘ I‘m mortal certain that there‘s one woman that won‘t keep on doing the work 'nn' lettin‘ your wife play lady in the parâ€" 20998 loz ‘‘See here, Mary A: a congratulstory simpe of the very one. I‘ll : schoolmarm, on my wa toâ€"night.** And now It was Ezekicl‘s turn to fly, and he pulled the old straw hat down over his oyes and rubbed his car reflectively _ as he began searching azain among his acâ€" quaintances for a wife that Mary Aun would like, Suddenly a bright idea ocâ€" curred to him. lie rushed back to the house in a perfectly hilarious mood. But Mary Ann would not even listen. ‘"‘Amarinta Smithers, indeed! _ The sauc}â€" est minx in the whole village! No, Ezoâ€" kiel Waterbury! I‘ll go away at once and not wait to be ordered out by that redheaded Httleâ€"* ‘"Hold on, Mary Ann!‘ Ezekiel â€" called, with a sudden thoughtâ€""What dew you say to Amarinta Smithers? You know sho‘s pathetically, ‘‘but don‘t you mind me, Ezekiel, Go an‘ marry Anna Maria, if you want tew. I can go away, of course." And she raised the corner of her apron to her eyes, and turned to leave the room. Mary Ann sniffed a little warningly. ‘‘She an‘ I haven‘t spoke since the night of the ‘speliin‘ bee‘ tew her house," she sald,. shortly. ‘Then she turned with a martyrâ€"like look upon her face and added He swung the axe over his shoulder the next morning, preparatory to filling the woodbox betore starting his day‘s work, but his mind was stiil busy on which of the ‘"ready an‘ waitin‘‘ maidens would do as a starter for his somewhat deilcate venture. "How do you think you would get on with Anna Maria Parsons?"‘ he asked of Mary .An_z!. when he had completed his morning‘s ‘‘There‘s no one tew be suited but me an‘ Mary Ann,‘" he decided again, for he knew that his poor old mother was too demented to know or care who held the reins of government in the Waterbury estabâ€" lishment. ‘‘Mary Ann is afeared of losin‘ a good home, I s‘pose," he _ argued to himself when left alone; "but law sakes! _ she needn‘t be, for 1 wouldn‘t let no wife of mine lord it over Mary Ann, nowhow! No, s‘reo! She‘s took care of the house tew long tew git the cold shoulder from Ezeâ€" kiel Waterbury now! And with this deâ€" termination in mind, he began to think over his list of acquaintances for a wife who would be most ilkely to suit himselt and not encroach wpon any of Mary Ann‘s lon!-ntlbllshed privileges. Ezakiel reckoned this was recommendation enough for any man in search of matrimonial adventure. Mary Ann‘s seorn deepened considerably, but Ezekie!l was in no wiso _ disturbed. He was the owner of a small farm, _ sevâ€" eral cows, a somewhat antiquated horse and lumber wagon and bad as good a garâ€" den as any man in Berryville, and besides that, who but himself had led the choir in the church for several years, and carâ€" ried the tunin‘ fork into every school that the village had ever known? ‘‘There‘s enough on ‘em that‘s ready an‘ waitin‘,‘ Ezekiel _ answered, with equal loftiness, adding carelessly, * but If the first ome ain‘t agreeable I can jest ask another, bein‘s as how I ain‘t over parâ€" tiokileg." ‘‘You ain‘t got spunk enough tew pop, tew begin with," she said, in lofty disâ€" dain; ‘"an‘, if you have, who be you Avin‘ tew pop tew}! ‘There aP‘t many decent girls tew be had just fer the askâ€" in‘"‘ she added, with a tinge of reproof in her tones. Ezekiel Waterbury was determined to marâ€" ry. He told Mary Ann Higgins so one night as he sat by the kitchen table watching her knead some bn.:éor the morning‘s baking. "It‘s took me e time tew make up my mind, but I‘m going tew dew it, sure as sixâ€" pence!"" he said, empbatically. Mary Ann looked as him a little scornfully. e‘s got curl t kiel looked downâ€"hearted for a moâ€" Ann pApe=TS ptember Delineatox, pily. "Ezekiel Waterâ€" tark, starin‘ mad tew to the schoolmarm! you think she would t in in,‘" he began, with t, "I‘ve jets thought ask Miss Millens, the y home from meetin‘ nby aliy mak he suggested, Eva Merrill, er hair firs." If her earnings have been enormous, her generosity is great. I know that her gnrilh priest, when she lived in the Ruy Prouy, never appealed in vain to her to relieve cases of distress. She aiways did so with an ucaru@g‘az spirlt and an open hand. a stalk of corn. We did not measure it, but our readers can get some idea of its length when we tell them that while Mr. Peery stood on the corner mt the Citizens‘ Bank, showing it to some friends he turned partly around and the tassel end of the stalk knocked off a lady‘s hat one block west. Telling the Plain Truth, (Carnegie, Ok., Herald.) Dan Peery came in from his corn field in the west part of town Monday evenâ€" ing, carrying a stalk on his shoulder that looked more like a younrg sapling than A BUSHEL OF FLIES Sold by all Druggists and General Stores and by mail. TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM The hopolessness of weaning men and women from foolish and fanatical beliefs, so matter what exaimples may be preâ€" sented to them, is illustrated afresh by the announcement thta during the presâ€" ent week twentyâ€"five men and women will sail from a port in Maine to estabâ€" lish a new religion in the Holy Land, Their boat is an old brigantine, their faith a belief in a "prophet" named Sanâ€" ford, while their religion is known as the "Religion of the Holy (Ghost," or, as the vulgar term them, "Holy (Ghosters." Not only their faith, but thiir wealth, and their doimestic happiness, are in the aands of this pretended prophet, who is equipping two other boats to carry his crackâ€"brained followers to Palastine.â€" Philadelphia Pross, i Baking soda is good for an aching tooth; j for bathing surface which is broken out | with hives or prickly heat; to take internâ€" ;ally for sour stomach. t When children swallow hurtful things, if | it causes choking and smyptoms of suffoâ€" i eation, eitbher turn the child upside down i and strike quickly between theshoulders or | run the finger back into the throat to hook t it out. or last of all, pusly it down. St. Joseph Lewis, July 14, 1903. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Gentleman,â€"I was badly kicked by my horse last May, and after using several preparations on my leg nothing would do. My leg was black at jet. I was laid up in bed for a fortnight and could not walk. After using three bottles of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT I was perfectly ecured, so that I could start on the road. With hurtful liquids, use an emetic; a teaspconful of mustard mixed with oneâ€"half cupful of warm water, swallowed at once. Then cup after cupful of lukewarm water must be given, pressing the finged down the throat to encourage vomiting; if it does not come in fifteen minutes, repeat. After vomâ€" iting is induced, give castor oil. To extract live insects from the ear pour in sweet oil, glycerine or salt water. Someâ€" times the insect will crawl out if the ear is turned to a bright light.â€"Table Talk. When things with sharp edges, like bits of glass, are swallowed, feed on potatoes in every form for two or three days until the fragments appear. Use with this diet freâ€" quent injections in the bowels. With hurtful liquids, use an emetic; a teaspconful of mustard mixed with oneâ€"half cupful of warm water, swallowed at once. Then cup after cupful of lukewarm water Lime water mixed with linseed or table oil makes a good dressing on absorbent cotâ€" ton, or use a carbolic solution, using two parts of hot (as can be borne) boiled water to one part of carbolic solution. _ One of the most soothing applications for a fire burn is raw potato, scraped or gratâ€" ed, and bound like a poultice on the injured surface. i e 6 I ARCHDALE WILSON, HAMILTON, ONT. Bicarbonate of soda (ordinary baking soâ€" da) is a safe and effectual remedy for burns or scalds. Make into a paste and apply to the raw surface, keeping in place by a thin cotton or linen bands. Renew from time to time until the skin is healed. The white of an egg is good for slight burns. Never use flour or coton batting, g their tendency is to stick to the raw surâ€" ce. Hold a piece <f ice to a burned finger untll the smarting seases, and no blister will form on the skin. The first crop should pay for the land and increase its value t{mr-fold. Special Reduced Railway Rates. Write for illustrated folder. They are cheaper now than they will ever be. _ Climate the finest in Canada. Cattle graze all winter, and fatten on prairie hay. Solil the richest in the Northwest. Will grow, without irrigation, Winter Wheat, Oats, Barley, Sugar Beets, Alfalfa, and almost anything that grows in other parts of Canada. With irrigation a crop never fails. 1f the best Ontario farms could be irrigated, they would double their Erescnt average yield, and could e cropped ten years longer without running out. Ready for the plough. Convenient to Railway and Post Office, Market and Schools. FCOR EMERGENT OCCASIONS. Foolish Faiths of People, Selling Agents 216 CORISTINE BUILDING MONTREAL Generous Barrhardt. (London Truth.) Telfer & Osgood (Calgary District) JOSEPH DUBES, Commercial Traveler Wilson‘s FLY PADS ONE PACKET HAS ACTUALLY KILLED ONTARIO egg3 is good for slight flour or coton batting, to stick to the raw surâ€" TIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Blueberry Pie Time, (Bath Me., Anvil.) Now has arrived the gay and festive season of the year when the blueberry pie sharos with the summer girl the esteecm and passing affection of all healthy people. The pie shouid have a thin and flaky crust and be allowed to come to just the right shade of brown. The lower ‘"crust‘"‘ should be not too thick lest it be soggy. Some paste around its rim strips of muslin to prevent the juice running out in some mysterious way. The blueberry ple properly made is woman‘s best gift to manâ€"in the culinary lineâ€"but a soggy one is something that is truly awful. And the same holds true of the raspberry pie and the strawberry pie, which latter few even otherâ€" wise good cboks can successfully make. Dick meets incoming flocks of sheep and pilots them through the town to the vices in this line application may b abattoir, where they are placed in the buck and have knives stuck through their throats by butchers. For its serâ€" that leads to chops and roasts. The firemen know Dick, for the lamb often runs to fires. In its trips around town when it encourters a dog too big for it to handle it will drop in between a team of Armour Company‘s horses, where it will trot along in safety, The hores will draw apart to give Dick plenty of room. Dick‘s favorite comâ€" panions are the Armour horses and six or eight cats around the big cooler in this city. The only cat it dislikes is Icghouse Jimmy, so named becouse it lives in the refrigerator, where the air is kept three degrees above freezing, and camnot exist outside. A few minutes in the outer air cause it to drop in conâ€" vulsions. Dick saw Icchouse Jimmy in one of these convulsions, and ever since has kept shy of the cat. Dick is a regular figure on the city strets seated beside one of the Armour company‘s drivers on the wagons that haul the carcasses of the less fortunate brethren around to: meat markets and eoolers. It has the run of the Armour plant and sleeps in the barn with the horses, going right into the stalls and sleeping beside the head of one or anâ€" other, as the fancy seizes it. It often passes a day with Cashier William J. Davis or Manager Charles Wright and is also friendly with the clerks in the shipping department. When disappointâ€" ed it expreses its chagris by butting everybody in sight. It Will Chew Tobacco, Waltz to Any Whistled Air and Otten Runs to Fires. A lamb that will chew tobacco, waltz to any whistled waltz air that is not too dreamy, chase cats and dogs and is the Judas who betrays his kind to the knife of the executioner, is a pet at the Poughkeepsie branch of Armour & Co‘s. big Chicago packing house. Thke lamb has been named Dick Armour. The branch employees are now â€" somewhat perturbed over a rumor that Dick will have to go the way of most lambs beâ€" fore they become mutton. If necessary to save it from this fate it will be purâ€". chased in the regular way and provided . with a private pen, with tobacco nndfi waltz music ad libitum. ‘ All Dealers or The Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limâ€" ited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 601 N 4 "I have been a sufâ€" _ erer from Dyspepsia "@‘ pes Â¥ 8 ) â€" for years. I have ‘\ 4 * , been treated by docâ€" \\ ) ,') tors and have taken y h,! many medicines with / enly temporary relief. ts . on‘ Since using Dr. Leonâ€" 4 hard‘s Antiâ€"Pill I can eat anything the same as when a boy. I find they _ regulate bot h ‘a stomach _ and bowels. 4 Q My old time vigor Ds has returned, sob that my spirits are buoyâ€" MR. M. N. DAFOE int and temper porâ€" mal. I give all credit to this wonderful remâ€" edyâ€"Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill." };:" iA R t x »*2 rany‘ 7v| y ‘[i £. On the cccasion of these overhaulings the trucks are removed from the car bodics, the motors taken out and examined, the armatures cleaned and the whole machinery thoroughly tested. In addition to this tha car body must be painted and varnished and thoroughly renovated at loast once a year. After the overhauling a car is ready for the road again, but any time it is likely to develop that most troublesome ailment, a flat wheel. A ?;g wheel is the terror of the operating depa ent of a trolley line. |{ may be compared to appendicitis, because i comes when least expected, but while a huâ€" man being has but one appendix. s car may "‘go lame" with a flat wheel cver and over again, and pound over the roat, punching holes in the rails and wearing ent the equipâ€" ment at an mstonishingly expessive rate.â€" New York Evening Post. Something New and is Delighted Feels Like a Boy. CONTINUE anshewehath 5y resular treas: ment with This is supplemented by an occasional thorâ€" ough overhauling. The superintendent of the largest of the New Jersey trolley companies says that in his lines a new car may run 10,000 miles before it has to be overhauled, or, in other words may run about one hunâ€" dred days. Cars operated entirely in crowded cities have a shorter term of activity, about sixty days, before they go under the doctor‘s hands. As a car geis older it has to be overâ€" hauled with graeter frequency. In addition to regular care connected with windowâ€"washing and sweeping, the trollay car must be inspected every few daysâ€"ou most roads twice a weekâ€"to see that the apâ€" waratus is all in good order. They Require More and More Care as They Grow Older. ‘The average passenger in a trolley car probably has an idea that & car simply need be purchsed nnkg_ put on the rails, whereâ€" upon it can, like the brook, go on forever. But trolley cars develop all sorts of unexâ€" pected iliness, they have to be taken to the doctor‘s or, more nrosaically, the ro%ulr shops, at frequent intervals, and their Iives conâ€" sidered upon the point of view of the human three score and ten, are very short indeed. Under the most favorable circumstances a trolley car is not expected to last much longer than twelve years.And, unlike babies, reâ€" marked the car manager of a big traction company, trolley cars require more and more . care as they grow older. ] BEATS THE LAMB MARY HAD. A TORONTO MAK TRIES Scott‘s Emulsion AGES OF TROLLEY Mr. M. N Dafoe, 2 Colborne street, Toronâ€" to, says: "Heavens!" exclaimed Littlefield, "I am not usually so fatal as that. T spoke for Dave Mercer out in Omaha in 1900 and they CJidn‘t beat him until 1902."â€" After some consideration, the girl deâ€" termined that the thing to do was to g®» up to the member of her own sex and beg her indulgence and assistance. She. did so, and when she stated her erâ€" rand was received with a lovely smile. Representative Littlefield, Maine, was introduced to a man from Pittsburg. "I made some speeches out in your town once," said Littlefield. _ "Yes," said the Pittsburg man. "I ran for office that year and was beaten by "You see how I am backed upâ€"against the wall, whispered the stranger; ‘well. that is to conceal the fact that my waist is unfastened also. I was just wondering what T should do. Let us go to the back seat and help each other," which they did to the immense delight of the men. who, while apparently reading their papers. were really re. garding these maneuvres with interest. She thought the situation over careâ€" fully. «_ There were five men in the vehiâ€" cle and only one woman. The woman was in the very front seat. Yesterday a young woman got on a car, sat down and made herself comâ€" fortable, and was immediately â€" seigzed with the conviction that her waist was unfastened,. She has bhad these convicâ€" tions before, and they are always wrong, but this time when she put her hand back surreptitiously, sure enough, not one of the little buttons was in the butâ€" tonhole appointed for it. The girl knew that if she attempted to fasten it herself her contortions would be such as to attract the attenâ€" tion of evervone in the car. Blobbsâ€"Are _ you fond of Blobbsâ€"Yes, indeed; I even re magazine poetry. The fashion now prevalent of wearing bodies fastened up the back makes strange friends, says the Baltimore News. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. _ As a result of this, two wealthy Greeks of Egypt, Messrs. Rostovis and Tsanakles, have presented $60,000 to the Government for the erection of a gymâ€" nasium at Athens, the building and the equipment of which will be personally superintended by Crown Prince Constanâ€" tine. The Swedish syatem of gymnastics will be largely followed, and, if present plans are carried out, officers of the Sweâ€" dish smy will be employed as instructâ€" ors. _ During the first three years the runniag expenses will be defrayed by the two founders. A New Stadium. The Olympic games recently held in Athens with such success, and in which American athletes so successfully â€"comâ€" peted, have aroused a very general inâ€" terest in athletics among the Greek peoâ€" ple. »‘4n) teds that cost more money, but none so valuable when you are looking for purity and delicious cup quality, "Salada" is packed in sealed lead packâ€" ages and your grocer sells it. in differâ€" ent ecolored labels, at prices ranging from 25¢. to 60c. per pound. There are seventeen metals more able than gold, but there are no more _ valuable than "SALADA" Many teas that cost more money none so valuable when you are lo for purity and delicious cup au The piazza fete coes on, For sweet, eweet charities; But a roundâ€"trip ticket to take me home Is all it has left for me! The excursion barge glides on â€" To its home port under the bill: Ah! had I the luck of my neighbor‘s kand, My money were with ime still! Oh, well for the lobsterman‘s boy As be shouts with his sister in play! Oh, well for the college lad In his power boat on the bay! Broke, broke, broke, By the cold, gray stones, O sea! And no tongue polite would utter The thoughts that rise in me! Lewis county is entering upon a pracâ€" tical good roads campaign. ‘The county commissioners have made arrangements with the state board of control, by the terms of which the county is to have asâ€" signed to it fifteen convicts from the state penitentiary, who are to be put at work preparing road material with which to improve the county roads. The state is to furnish transportation for the conâ€" victs and will send clothing, bedding and three guards from the penitentiary, The county is to pay the actual cost to the state of preparing the road material in the manner suggested. It is expected to have arrangements completed so that convicts will begin work on Aug. 1 and be employed about six months.â€"Seattle Postâ€"Intelligencer. 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, "wh Brantford, Canada. "* IMPERIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL â€"Ella A. Fanning, &n New York World Makes Many Friends. Convicts Building Roads. Bridge at the Beach VALUABLE TFA. Quick Action. you fond of puzzles? ut there are no teas than "SALADA" Tea. all the valu & dE o f such : -r-:rs Baseball as a Tonic. ghost! Just the thought .of such a catasâ€" There is no subject talked s0 muck trophe is enough to give a man the about in this counllry as bascball. There "buck ague. is nothing that is 5o much read about, j War extras in the days of the rebellion Good Work of the Chorus Girl, were no more cagerly snatched up than We are schooling ourselves to regard the $ baseball news of toâ€"day. 1t is the daily chorus girl as an admirable and very '"?t‘;" diet of millions of people who think or fNe 2ithod for keeping the rich from growing talk of little else.â€"Ohio State Journal c + eummmnemmetnetnetemmmsessn,......_ mm WeEA HEZL mâ€"sa E ‘baâ€"k yard, worked the garden, c'l’mrned the butter, washed the dishes, nursed the baby and performed other variouse and sundry disagrecable tasks in our time without a murmur, but when it come: to cleaning streets under three lady bossesâ€"excuse me, please. _ Three women to boss you. Great Cresar‘s ghost! Just the thought of such a catasâ€" trophe is enough to give a man the "buck ague." Minard‘s Liniment Cures oases the influence of unde also, doubtless be taken into the Scotsman. We have followed the plow, wielded the hoe, served time on the public roads under an austere overseer, swept the on yelment iesianks:i.~â€" // C E some boat lengths after th had been slackened. When tained a layer of frosh w salt water, on the other han« ened speed quite suddenly . a very short distance. Th carried out on a small se clusively that the difficulti within a dead water zone a the resistence experienced |t generating invisible waves at rithin a dead wa,.. _ ____"CC8 encountered within a dead water zone Are really due to the resistence experienced by the vessel in generating invisible waves at the fresh water salt boundary, although in some particular oases the influence of undercurrents must also, doubtloss ha +am.. ; _)~"CUPrents | ; One of the most curious marine phenoâ€" mena known to seamen is that called by Norwegian satiors "‘dead water," which withâ€" out apy visible cause, makes a vessel lose her speed and refuse to answer her helm. ‘The sailor‘s only definate knowledge of its ’orlmu is that is exists solely where there is a surface layer of fresh water resting upon the salt waters of the sea. Several exâ€" planations hbave been advanced by the capâ€" tains of ships of the effect of dead water, the commonest of which is that the two water layers move in different‘ directions. The true explanation, however, recently ofâ€" fered by Swedish navigators and verified by mathematical calculation and direct experiâ€" ment, is that in addition to the "resistance waves‘‘ at the surface the vessel creates a second line of subagueous waves between the two strata of water. The experimant carried out to demonstrate the truth of this theory was an exceedingly pretty one. A large plate glass tank was first mounted on a woodon frame. The tank was then filled to a certain depth with salt water and a layer of fresh water was care= fully poured onto the surface, so that the two separate water layors were obtained. The salt water was blackened with liquid Chinâ€" ese ink before the water layers were preâ€" pared, and in this way the different layers were made more visible A boat model was then towed along the tank, and m silhouette of the waves produced was obtained by plac= ing a white screen at ashort distance beâ€" hind the tank. ‘The waves were also photoâ€" graphed by flashlight, and the results showâ€" ed conclusively that waves mactually were set un at the boundary line between the two liquids. Further experiments were made to verity the sudden loss of speed due to dead water, '!'h?. boat model was Grawn anrase «ns jillt C e meP mE EU and the towing string sudden when the boat was about half In cases where the tank cantain Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. What Senator Kean remarked when he tasted the soup which was to have been so delectable cannot be recorded here.â€" Washington letter in New York Sun. "Oyster stew fur in it." What he did there, however, was to proceed to the dumb waiter and call down its cavernous depths the simple words: again, and how the other room him "Go down and tell him to take three dozen Lynn Haven oysters and dry them carefully on a towel. Then tell him to take a stew pan and rub the inner sides with a slice of onion and a slice of garlie â€"but mind you, not a shred of the vegeâ€" tables is to be left in the pan. After that he is to put a small tablespoonful of flour in the pan with two generous ones of butter and let them cook to a smooth consistency, when he is to add a pint and a half of cream and a pint of milk. When this comes to a boil he must add the dried oysters and a small bit of mace with a little red pepper and eufficient salt. _ These are to cook exactly two minutes and a half, when he is to send the stew at once to the table. Now, do you understand what you are to tell "Yas, sah; yas, sah," replied the darâ€" key, pocketing the money with alacrity and bending an attentive ear to the sonâ€" ator. Arm in arm they proceeded down the east marble stairway, crossed to the pubâ€" lic restaurant and seated themselves at one of the small tables in the dining room reserved for the members of the upâ€" per branch of the national legislature. "Now," said the New Jersey senator, who _ has been called the epicure of the Senate, as he seated himself with an air of happy expectation of the good things to come, "I will give you such an oyster stew as. you will dream of, Lodge, "Waiter," turning to the son of Ham at his elbow, and slipping a shining dollar into his palm, "waiter, I want you to go down stairs and tell the chef exactly how I want this soup made." FIBRE WARE 2noss Farmers and Dairymen John Kean‘s Orderâ€"and the Intelligent Waiter‘s. One day in the Senate Chamber Senaâ€" tor Kean, of New Jersey, slippd over . to the desk of his fric=d, Genator Lodge, of Massachusetts, aud whispered someâ€" thing in his ear, whereupon Mr. Lodge arose smilingly and the twain left the chamber. Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan “}'as, sah; yas, sah," said the darkey Editor Draws the You wl;l fltr:d they glvg you satisâ€" - action every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE 9# DEAD WATER AND SPEED , g15 30 ", AHHE the towing string i slackened. When the tank conâ€" _ layer of frosh water resting on r, on the other hand the boat slack~ ed quite suddenly and moved only short distance. ‘Thesa awaaa. NY Insist on being THE OYSTER STEW. . B. EDDY‘S bowing low disappeared into iuta».,, _ ", tnG moved only istance. _ ‘These experiments a small seale, proved conâ€" K.. Eui /o ring suddenly !l;;:k;;l; ; about half way across. tank contained salt water When you require a ced due to dead water. drnwn‘ across the tank two, wid some mace Dead Line. Distem”t. account.â€" Hy It is the most ’un'ml m:. One may haeve it fine and fresh, It may* also bo“b::‘xhc salted or Its tongue is ered a great Its swimming bladder furnishes isinglass. Cod liver oill is famous the wi as a medicine and food in wastine M‘ Lm Cures o.".t in Co _ In Norwq _2 2 2__ 100. it wasting Aissases. In Norway m feed of cod‘s heads mixed with marine &Inu increases the cow‘s modlk., In lceland the cods‘ bones are given to the cattle, while in Kamachatka they go to the dogs. in icy wastes destitude Of trees the dried bones are frequently used for fuel And the supply is likely to hold out, as Mrs. Codfish lays no less than 4 aninmam *._"* in a single season ‘ Is Painter‘s Colic a Myth? In 1903 the French Sanate appointed a committee of scientific men to investiâ€" gate the effects of white lead upon the health of journeymen painters. The comâ€" mittee has just reported that it has made a careful investigation of the subject in cightyâ€"six of the eightyâ€"eight departâ€" ments into which France is diveded, exâ€" tending its inquiries even into Algeria. According to this report, out of 194 jourâ€" neymen painters who were in the hosâ€" pitals of France in 1904 only dwentyâ€" seven were sick from diseases originatâ€" ing from their trade. "If this number were double," says the report, "we are still very far from the ravages which have been attributed to the use of white lead." The committee has not been able to discover any evidence of the excesâ€" give mortality which was reported to prevail in this business. The Ieo-th rate among house painters is very low, averâ€" aging only one in every 7000 or 8,000 journeymen. Mira Blood Tonic and Mira Ointment are diso cacellent for blood and skin troubles, TRY them. At dr:yuaâ€"orfnu The Chemists® Co. of Canada, "imated. HamUHnme.Tremscs Tablets are to be had. They the blood with red corpuscle: and Mmm clearing ie skinâ€"punfying the whole system. Thc’buildfi-an..a-.a..-a-a.n. well worth living. 50c. aâ€"boxâ€"6 boxzes, $2.50. Four seashore excursions via Lehigh Valley Railroad, JI;IJ 20, August 3, 17, and 31. Tickets good 15 days, and only $10, round trip, from Suspension Bridgr. Tickets allow stopâ€"over at Phihdelfihil. For tickete, further particulars, call on or write Robt. S. Levis, Canadian Passâ€" enger Agent, 10 King street east, Toâ€" ronto, Ont. $10â€"Atlantic City, Cape Mayâ€"$10 w imited. Ham{ltonâ€" T ISSUE PICTURE POST CARDS i far 10¢; 50 for 50¢; 100 ‘ermw;n:lello%‘: A SALLOW SKIN offer TRAEE MARK REGISTEALD, JE NO. 35, 19086 fl MISCELLANEOUS. LE ROY PILL CO., The Codfish. â€" 1 orento °s ,iRely to hold out, as no less than 9,000,000 eggs famous the world U# 7 ‘Pom' CANADA furnishes the best P t Py ti T th MD Wil x O M aI tre

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