West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Sep 1906, p. 8

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B# $Â¥ h A~ man‘s imagination reveals . more than the imaginary man. Master your tools and your treasure will take care of itself. Hard is the exit from | Easy satreet and many there be that find it. ‘Some people think they have peace It‘s n ment to 3+ W1l Wrong rather erjoys the blows _ it gets from blowers. For every real sorrow there are a hundretl shadows. # Xo man ever became wise who feared to be called a fool. _ Happy is as the heart does. He has no friemds who makes no foes Piety does not prove itseli by potu lance. C "Supnose that out of the world there should be slowly or suddenly destroyed all the seed of corn except one handful, just =o much as one man could hold in his palm. Can you picture to yourself the care with which that hardful would be guarded? Can you imagine the in terest that would gather about it, the poetry and dearness that would be in it; how men, looking at it and knowing if little by little it bas slipped away â€"would see in it the assurance of days yet (~ come when all the fields should wave once more with harvests? That is the way in which you ought to treasure your faith if there is not much of it, i@ little by litle it has slipped away from you. You say it has grown to be very little. You say that many things which you used to believe seem to youn no longer to be true. You stand holding in your hand the remnant of a faith. What then? _ Is it real? _ Is it true faith? Whether it be little or great, do you really believe it? If you do, then surelvy that belief ought to be veri preâ€" wiovs to you. A little, a very little, beâ€" lief it may be,â€"nevertheless treasure it Iwouuse it is belief, instead of despising it because it is little. Value it for its quality, instead of dishonoring it for its «puantity. See in its meagreness the promise and power of a great and maniâ€" fold Lolief that may vet some day cover your whole life with verdure. Put it whorve it will be safe; and the only place whore a faith ever can be safe is in the sahrine of an action. Put it there. Do what that belief would tempt you and command you to do; and trust to its true quality to grow under the care of God who knows in heaven every parâ€" ticle of true faith that there is seattered about the earth. In His sight it is all too precious to forget." Tie L In one of his "The Law of G man, asd inspiv Brooks said: "Supnose that should be slowl all the seed of just o much as his palm. Can ; the care with w he enarded? Ca What then? faith? Whet you reaily I surely that l cious to you lief it may | hbecause it is it because it Under every roof a woman tends the hearthâ€" place on her knees,â€" Kach a priestess of the white dawn of duties after nightâ€" Kindling home‘s fire ere she passeth on to labor‘s ministeries, And sets out the hallowed Daily bread. Every chimney is a corner in the chancel of the sun, Sending un the cloudy spice of its humble sacrifice, Â¥ill the huo* grows consecrated with ths myrrh of work begun, While a lark drops down the calm Morning‘s psaim. Hush! the stillness of the darkness to the silence of the light Has been changing, and the peace scarcely suffereth decrease, * As the sun above the little darling hills burns into sight, And the world wakes to obey Simple day. O, the bosom of the morning is an altar to the Lord! See the incense of its prayer spring up the early air‘ All the moorland hearths are smoking up to Heaven with one accord, And the smell of newâ€"lit peat Rises sweet. it "Of all forms of selfishness religious selfishness is the mst subtle. Religion we count as a possesion. We "get reâ€" ligion." It is something that belongs to us. We pay for it; world here, for Heaven hereafter; so much premium down, so much insurance hereafter; â€"reâ€" nntanee toâ€"day, reward toâ€"morrow. Per ps we even get our reward now; then we call it a "present salvation." _ "I feel to say, brethres, that I enjoy my religion." What difference does it make whether you do or noi? Do other peoâ€" & enjoy it. Does your wife enjoy it? your children ezjoy it? _ Do _ your servants enjoy it?! _ Does your neighâ€" bor enjoy it? Does the _ man on the other side of the counter enjoy it? These are the real questions, Religion was not given you to enjoy it; it was given you to work with. What are you doing with The way to duplicate a fool is to argue Don‘t Be Selfish, Is not that eloquent, practical minis ter, Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott, right when he says: _ Y Chorus: Then trust in God through all thy days; l'-rlu.lorl!o‘uhholdnyhnl; Tho‘ dark thy way, still sing and praise Sometime, sometime, we‘ll understand. Then trust in God through all thy days; Fear not, for He doth hold thy hand; Tho‘ dark thy way, still sing and praise, Sometime, sometime, we‘ll understand. Not now, but in the coming years, It may be in the better land, We‘ll read the meaning of our tears, Aud there, sometime, we‘ll understanl It takes more than rust to win rever We‘ll catch the broken threads again And finish what we here began; Heaven will the mysteries explain. And then, ah! then, we‘ll underst Why what we long for most of all Eludes so. oft our eager hand; Why hopes are crushed ard castles fall; Up there, sometime, we‘ll understand. God knows the way, He holds the key, He guides us with unerring hand; Sometime with tearless eyes wo‘ll see: Yes, there, up there we‘ll understand. We‘ll know why clouds instead of sun Were over many a cherished plan ; Why song bas ceased when scarce begun; "Tis there, sometime, we‘ll understand. 409 e C «& SS fone .l‘.h_t.t:e ~exit from _ Easy street any there be that find it. e ’2)0 think they have _ peace they are only petrified. |_ . never hard to fird a good arguâ€" to back up an inclination. Some Time We‘ll Understand. May Daney, in London Spectator Sentence Sermons. his best sermons that on f Growth"â€"that _ splendid spired _ preacher, _ Phillips Incer cense Crewth the blows _ it ' The programme is as homely as the meetâ€" ing. Nothing imposing is exnected; the orâ€" ’uu effort passes without comment, and the impromptu commonplace often hits the . mark. A quiet talk from the chairman, 1 Rev. A. Drummond, as chairman of comâ€" ‘ _ mittee, opens the proceedings. The subject } is Jesus Christ and personal selvation; our ‘ need of bhim and bis care for us. They are not come together to be amused, and the | speaker feels that touch of humor helps : nothing and a funuy story would insult his ‘ gudience. Most of them are come for "a i drink of the brook by the way," and nothâ€" + else else will satisfy. Then a young lady . sing a solo. The harmonium liee invitâ€" ingly open, but none offers to use it, for . some of the audience have objection, and those who have none can enjoy, the sweetâ€" voicer singer without its aid. The solo is a soft, tender appeal to believe in Jesus, to . trust all in the hands of Jesus. Impassive faces lead you to thing that the listeners : are unmoved, but the swaying forms of some tell of the thoughts within stirred by \ Miss Hendorson‘s song. Now it is the turn . of the Gaelie folk, and Miss McKenzle, Biâ€" . ble reader, d;tve- out a psaim in the ancient . tongue, and instantly ihe majority are strangers in the land. Tae leader talks for some time in Gaelic, reading and explaining the psalm, then the oldâ€"world melody strikes up,. and one is strangely moved. The tune is a minor one, with strange cedances at ‘ times that strike the ear as familiar, and 'll’l‘n one loses it in a bewilldering wealth of semiâ€"tones and graceâ€"notes. Involuntarâ€" ily the tears start to the eyes as the soft voices rise to the higher notes, and one | seems to hear the poignant keen ~of the coronach of the shrill challenge of the piâ€" | broch. To us ‘"there was no voice or lanâ€". guage."" but we folt the keen longing of the Highland heart. As we sat and listened ! we added words, "If 1 forget thee, oh Jeâ€". ! rusaiom, let my right band forget its cunâ€". aing." l 'lv‘rmln :.Il:e lone ehieling on the misty isâ€" an I Mountains divide us and world of seas, | But still our hearts are true, our hearts are h highland, ; And in our dreams we see the Hebrides.‘" ‘ . It takes a long time to sing a Gaelic , psalm, as each line is chanted by the leader ; before it is sung, but none wearied, for the ; oldâ€"time flavor and the newâ€"time fervor | made it intensely interesting. Curious enough, an usually large numâ€" ber of motal steamships and sailing vesse!s of metal or of wood were posted as missing during the twelve months of 1905. At least nineteen steamers, seventeen iron or steel sailing ships and six wooden sailing ships were néver heard from after they had sailed away beneath the boundary line of sea and sky under the bapplest of auspices. In the previous year the totals of missing ships were five, tem and four respectively. As a ruie, the steamers were ma&-u from 600 to 2,500 tons, and laden with vy cargoes of coal or lumber; the metal satlers ranged from Sailing and Steam Vessels in Davy Jones‘ Locket. ‘Those err agregiously who venture to assert that sailing ships are rarely, it ever, posted as missing with all hands, and even the steamship comes on the missing list far more frequenily whan some suppose. Nevertheless, having due regard to toe enormous numoer OL ail sofis auu cundiiisus Of sulps id Active service, toe kreater rapidiuy with wuch vovazes are made by many of them and the curious cargoes occasionally carried, of a nature quite unknown to the old timers, it goes without saying that the percentage of missing ships is comparatively insigniticanc. It is to be feared that in some instances shipâ€" master feel they have but Hobson‘s choico in the course to pursue; and therefore proâ€" ceod to sea with vessels so trimmed as posiâ€" tively to invite disaster should bad weather be experienced after sailing. Sailing ships Bave had quite a bad time ot late, despite the introduction of labor saving appliances, both under the head of missing and loss by straudâ€" ing. It is open to aucstion whether the age of stoam and steci is favorable to the proâ€" duciion of the class of smlor aud oliicer which was in evidence on voard American clippers forty or fifty years ago. Even in that remote period there were deadheads going to sea for a living; but the smart seaâ€" man of every grade had plenty of opportunity to gain experience which is wanting to the rising generation, and the modern sailng ship of metal construction is much more like a machine ship than was her wooden preâ€" decessor. 300 to 3.500 tons, several being in ballast, aud four of the wooden sailing vessels were samples of the gallant little schooners, comâ€" maunded and manned by sterling seamen, that are engaged carrying fish to the Latin races on the other side of the Atlantic from Newâ€" fundiand and returning thither with cargoes of salt. Of the steamers four were bound from Guif ports to Europe with lumber, and at least three had deckloads such as may not belegally brought to a United Kingdom port in the winter months, but which are froâ€" quently carried to a port of France, disâ€" charged there, and the under deck cargo taken on to a United Kingdom port, thus strictly complying with the Itter of the law and breaking it in the spirit. Two of the four were British, one was German and one was Spanish. Wreckage was picked up from but two of the whole of the ninteen missing steamers, which included two small liners laden with general cargo, one for Buenos Ayres, the other for the West Indies. Among the missing sailing ships were rep. rwlvu of England, France, Germany, Ita@f. Norwa and the United States. One of the most modern type of motal bald headed schooners, a four master vessel built in the United Kingdom in 1896, the Honolulu, which nassed under the American flag when the Hawallan Islands were taken over by this . met her fate between Shanghal and mucnd while in ballast. Built under As the girls fled out, Mr. Gulland, the Niggedeputy, shcolk hands with them and the Gaelic voices rang in bappy laughter and retort. Miss Macpherson, wro is here to look after the giris, binding cut fingers, tending them in siclness, and mothering them in a hundred ways, makes kind inâ€" quiries as they file past her, and nothing is left undone to make them feel that Christ the Healer is among them, and the God of the ancient covenant finds a tabernacle among them.â€"British Congregationalist. After the psalm an old sea rover spoke some kindly, pointed words, the burden of which was Jesus Christ and him cricified. He spoke well, as one who knew his busiâ€" ness, and the girls listened. Two girls from Buckle volunteered to sing a duet. It was a good hymn and beautifully sung. The voices were good, soprano and contralâ€" to, and one felt that the singers had got a hold of that which makees all good accordâ€" ing to the purpose of God of Christ. Mr. James Drnummond sang the solo, ‘"Forever With the Lord," to the evident delight of the audience. As a closing item, Mr. Stevenson, N. Coast missionary, a hearty man, sang favorite hymn, and the audience joine« the chorus with vigor. M 2t o fe ue 1 4 h1 22B d i: Prentnhrs P agn drcerges e uid NO If you listen intentyl you will hear soft voices siding smoothly cover the rough gutâ€" turals of the Gaelic tongue, and turning to locate the sound, you find a group of quietâ€" faced girls who smile at the pleasant words of a tall, darkâ€"haired young minister, That is the deputy from the U. F. Church of Nigg, in the Black Isle, who lights up their faces with the sound of the Gaelic tongue. They are in a foreign land, and cannot speak our tonzue, and his words are as the sound of the wind on the heather. # Muun-tlumtotmvorkltthu season is that which is done in behaif of the women and girls who come to Wick at the fishing season to handle the herring. They gather in great numbers from Orkney and Shetland, from Stornoway and the westâ€" ern ‘sea board, and from the fishing ports lying along the shores of the Moray Firth. ‘The ministers of the town eooperate with the N. E. Coast Mission in organizing meetâ€" ings in the market place and on the bracs for the fishermen, and Saturday night and Sunday are busy with effort in that direcâ€" tion. The ladies‘ committee of the mission carry on a special meeting on Mondoy night for the women and girls, one of the ministers presiding. It is a homely meeting, the invited guests, sitting with bare heads and shawls of subdued color on their shoulders, speak only in whispers to «Qh other while the ladies of the committee"serve out the tea. While the tea is in progress they talk more frecly to each other, and here and there a low laugh rises about the murmer of voices. # n ccanicantndster eP van in t > MISSING SHIPS. in Pickled â€" Watermelon _ Rindâ€"Remove thick paring from watermelon rind, and cut out all of the pink portion; then cut in pieces of uniform size, cook in boiling water to cover until soft and drain. There should be seven pounds of rind. Put in a preserving kettle, add three cupfuls of vinegar, three and oneâ€"half pounds of brown sugar, one ounce of stick cinnamon broken in pieces, and half an ounce of whole cloves. Bring slowly to the boiling point, let simmer two and oneâ€"half hours, pack into jars, add the syrup to fill the"jars to overâ€" flowing, and adjust the covers.â€"Fannie Merritt Farmer in Woman‘s Home Comâ€" panion for September. Tomato Catsupâ€"Peel one peck of ripe tomatoes, and cut in pieces. Put them in a preserving kettle, bring to the boilâ€" ing point, and let simmer until soft; then force through a sieve. Add three eupfuls of sugar, oneâ€"fourth of a cupful of salt, one tabiespoonful of black pepâ€" per, one teaspoonful of ginger, one teaâ€" spoonful of cloves, oneâ€"eighth of a teaâ€" spoonful of cayenne, and one quart of vinegar. Bring to the boiling point and let simmer until the right consistency, the time required being about two and oneâ€"half to three hours. Turn into botâ€" tles, filling the bottles to overflowing, cork and seal. It must always be reâ€" membered in filling glass jars or bottles with a hot mixture to place them in a eloth wrung out of hot water. _‘‘Yes. He said he didn‘t want to have to break in another motherâ€"inâ€"law.‘"" The Wise Brotherâ€"inâ€"Law, (Exchange.) "I see Robinson‘s married againâ€"mar. rled his first wife‘s sister,‘" & Onion Picklesâ€"Wipe three quarts small unripe cucumbers, and cut in slices. Remove the skins from one pint of small onions, and cut in thin slices, To the cucumbers and onions add one cupful of salt; mix thoroughly, cover and let stand for six hours. Drain, and add one quart of vinegar and one pint of olive oil. Pack in a crock or stone jar. GOOLD, SHAPLEY A MUIR CO. LIMITED, Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by * IMPERIAL‘ PUMPINS WINDMILL Even this year there are no*t wanting exâ€" amples of missing sailing ships. The Culâ€" doon has not been heard of since she sailed from Jacksonville, Fla., for Grenada, W. I., with a cargo of lumber; the Norwegian bark Lafuna, from Pascagoula for Colon, with lumber, bas also gone; the French ship St. Donatien has disappeared between Bordeaux and Adelaide; and the St. Johns schooner Energy with salt for Oporto for her home port; the metal ship Drumcraig, which left Astoria for Manila with lumber, and the Gerâ€" man ship Rodenbek, bound from Liverpool to Australia( are more than enough for the record of 1906. There are several steamers also on the missing list.â€"From Shipping I1â€" lustrated. cause of this vessel‘s ?-nm must forever remain a -‘:tcr old ocean, alâ€" though it must not forgotten that a sailâ€" ing vessel having in her hold baillast of a nature such as is occasionally supplied , at ports of the Far East is at the mercy of wind and wave. Case oll is a cargo which requires careful ballasting, and several sailâ€" ing ships thus laden have either disappeared or madé inordinarily long passages between Atlantic coast ports of the United States and either China or Japan. Last year the French ship Lafayette, only launched three years vreviously, was never heard of after sailing from New York to China with case oil, and the German ship Robert Rickmers, of 2.174 tons, shared a similar fate on the way from Philadelphia to Japan. Sailing vessels missâ€" ing in ballast last year were the Eulomene, the Edith Mary, the Vare the May and the Honolulu. It is supposed that five of the total number of missing sailing ships last year foundered during a severe gale while making for England with full cargoes almost within sight of port. FIFTY CENTS SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, THREE TIMELY RECIPES. * gain from the : of gcott's Emulsion very rapid. For this reason we put up a fiftyâ€"cent size, which is enough for an ordinary cough or cold or useful as a trial for babies and children. In other conditions the gain is slowerâ€"health cannot be built up in a day. In such cases Scott‘s Emulsion must be taken as nourishment; a food rather than a medicine. It‘s a food for tired and weak digestions. lN some conditions the ssin fram the mea Toronto, Ont. goc. and $1.00. _ All druggists Erantford. Canada. flend for free TORONTO * a young face. No honor has been awarded to the thirtieth or the fortieth anniversaries, One bright woman announced her thirâ€" tieth wedding day as "the close of the Thirty Years‘ War"â€" a fashion few would care to follow. The first authorâ€" ized celebration after the twentyâ€"fifth wedding day is the golden weddingâ€"the fiftieth year of married life having been completed. _ * It seldom happens that a wedded pair live together 75 years, yet this is listed as the diamond wedding. I account it as one of Fate‘s little ironies that the only couple I have ever known to comâ€" plete this term were an old man and woman in the Jersey mountains, neither of whom had ever seen a diamond.â€" Marion Harland in Buffalo News. # Pretty Accessory That Ends in a Sash. The expression, fichu peplum, requires a little axplanation, which is very easily given. It comprises a shoulder wrap passâ€" ed from the waist at the back to the waist line in front, an dthen alowed to flow beneath a belt, almost to the hem of the dress, with shawlâ€"like points. The sash is a silk one, shot with the colors of the peplum. Here is a really original idea, and one that is distinctive enough in character to stamp the frock one specially devised for special occasions, and yet not of too marked an appearence to depart from complete refinement, Another fichu suggestion lurks in the lovely striped gauzes. _ Trimmed with taffeta in a solid color. One gown of white silk gauze striped with old rose has the skirt trimmed with bands of allâ€"over Valenciennes put on in shallow scollops and finished on the lower tdge with narâ€" row pleatings of roseâ€"colored taffeta. The lace blouse is nearly covered by one of these draped fichus, which crosses on the bust, with the ends carried to the back, where they were converted into long sash ends. The fichu is trimmeed with the narrow si‘k pleatings. The Names of Wedding Annivesâ€" saries. The tenth is the tin wedding, the twentieth is the crystal wedding, alâ€" though some contend that the fifteenth claims that place, and that the twenâ€" tieth is rightly called the silken. Don‘t sit facing a strong light. Don‘t stoop or bend over while writing or _ reading. Don‘t go too long without food. Hunâ€" gor gives a strained look to the face. Don‘t worry; but if worry you must, sep the forehead smoothâ€"don‘t wrinkle Further experiments were made to verify the sudden loss of speed due to dead water. The boat model was drawn across the tamk and the towing string suddenly slackened when the boat was about half way across . In cases where the tamk contained salt water only the boat stopped gradually, moving. some boat lengths after the towing strinig had been elackened. When the tank containâ€" ed a layer of fresh water resting on salt water, on the other hand, the boat slackâ€" ened speed quite suddenly and moved only a very short distance. These experiâ€" ments, carried out on a small «cale, prove conclusively that the difficulties encountered witnin a dead water zone are really due to the resistance experiâ€" enced by the vessel in generating invisiâ€" ble waves at the fresh waterâ€"sait water boundary, although in some particular camses the influence of undereurrents must also, doubtless, be taken into acâ€" count, Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgis. bring a yerimanent agonized expression that is not beautiful to behold in even it. The experiment carried out was an exâ€" ceedingly pretty one. A large plate glass tank was first mounted on a wooden frame. The tank was then filled to a certain.depth with salt water and a layer of fresh water was carefully pourâ€" ed on to the surface. so that two sepâ€" arate water layors wore obtained, ‘The salt water was blackened with liquid Chinese ink before the water layers were prepared, and in this way the different layors were made clearly visible. A boat model was then towed along the tank and a silhouette of the waves produced was obtained by placing a white screen at a short distance behind the tank. The waves were also photographed by flashâ€" light, and the results showed conclusiveâ€" ly that waves actually were set up at the boundary line between the two liâ€" quids. Swedish Scientists Investigate the Phenâ€" omena of "Dead Water." One of the most curious marine pheâ€" nomena known to seamen is that called by Norwegian sailors "dead water," which, without any visible cause, makes a vessel lose her speed and refuse to an<swer her helm. The sailor‘s only detiâ€" nite knowledge of its origin, says the Scotsman, is that it exists solely where there is a surface layer of fresh water resting upon the salt waters of the sea. Several explanations have been advanced by the captains of ships of the effect of dead water, the commonest of which is that the two water layers move in difâ€" ferent directions. The true expianation, however, was recently found by Swedish investigators, At least so it would seem from what folows,. Room 19, 43 Scott Street District Agent Wanted DL DDOD _ ADZRLIAIIAT ANOUgUANUCE L2CCCCCR °U QAnBAZILLN DVDEVLIS SNG KPHEECUEE C STORIES. The magazine of the Canadian Preference League.eOf interest to all. WE WANT YOUR subscription. If you send your name in now for one year‘s subscription at one dollar, we‘will mail you the magazine FREE for the balâ€" ance of this year. m Don‘t wear tight shoes. In time they To Secure Subscriptions on a Commission â€" Basis. No one but a LIVE Agent need apply. _ THE C.A.\'ADA FIRSI .\%GG'AZI'NE. now in its 'second year, is an all Canâ€" adian MONTHLY Magazine. Devoted to CANADIAN SUBJECTS and SHORT MYSTERY OF THE DEEP SEA. FICHU PEPLUA NOVELTY. Canada First Publishing Co,, DPDIAMCNKD WEDDINGS. Sensible Don‘ts. (exnywe in â€"9" Address, Some miscreant entered the stable of | Dr. E. Bowman, V. S., of Gladstone, J Man., and chopped the hind legs off his I have been taught a lesson in these twelve strange yearsâ€"that honesty is the best policy, and, more than that, 1 have found out that the best investment is honesty for honesty‘s sake alone. I have lied in writing insurance, but always found that it recoiled wpon me, and if I gained thereby the little increâ€" ment of commission I straightway lost a hundredfold as much. He Did His Best. This story is told in Leslic‘s Weekly; An Angloâ€"Saxon citizen in New Ornleans attended the funcral of a Fremchman‘s wife. Several days afterward, meeting the bereaved husband on Canal street, the latter asked, with Gallic janntiness: Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere: "Ah, were you at ze funeral?" _ The American said yes. "How you tink I didt" "Oh, splendidly. You appeared to be fond of your wife, as it took four men to hold you and control your prief and active emotion." As the young man was taking leave for the night his voice as he stood at the door, rose passionately on the still night air. "Just one," he pleadedâ€""just one!" Then the young lady‘s mother interâ€" rupted, calling from her bedâ€"room winâ€" dow: Nothirg can disturb us and no human being can bowl us over. It is all the same whether you call it wise or foolish, Because we know how little we know, which is the beginning of wisdom. When we are glad people will know it, and if we have the blues no one is aware but ourselves and the manager. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. "Just one?" she cried. "No, it ain‘t quite that yet; but it‘s close on to twelve, and so I think you‘d better be goin‘ just the same." We are actors, essaying burleaque comedy sometimes and often _ tragic roles, but always holding ourselves in readiness to smile when we may feel like fighting and to weep when it would be easier to laugh. "You were only at ze house, ch? You should have gone to ze cemetaire, for there I raise ze Caimâ€"it take ten men to hold me!" We know how to enter a drawing room and we know how to sit in a farâ€" mer‘s kitchen and disen pork while the wife is trying out lard. _ We know lots of things because we must, and possibly some which we ought not to know, but men, women and fate conspire to give us wisdom and we would mot quarrel with the three of them for the world. We can turn our backs on hard winâ€" ters and go southâ€"we can go north where the cool lake breezes are and leave our friends to the midsummer madness of "a hundred above." A gentleman was disturbed in bis rest in the middle of the night by some one knocking on the street door. _ "Who‘s there?" he asked. "A friend," was the answer. "What do you want?" "I wan to stay here all night." Not a Bad Way to See the World and to Study Human Nature. After all is saidjand done, we life inâ€" mwrance solicitors do not have such a hard time of it, writes one of tham in the American Magazine. We get a drop of appreciation now and then, whic compensates for the rebuffs, We know no boss and can go anyâ€" where in the world we wish and work for the same companyâ€"if we are good. The valuation of thd Temple Emanuâ€" El is $1.530.000, of St. Patrick‘s Cathedâ€" ral $6,000,000. of the B‘nai Jeshurun Synâ€" agague, $300,000, of the Temple Bethâ€"El, at the corner of Fifth avenue and Sevâ€" entyâ€"sixth street, $1,300,000; of the Broadway ‘Tabrnacle. Broadway and Fiftyâ€"sixth street, $700,000, and of the Christian Scientist Church, Central Park West and Sixtyâ€"eighth street, $300.000, The West Presbyterian Chutch, on West Fortyâ€"second street. is valued at $450,000. St. Thomas‘ at $1,700,000, and the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, 9 and 11 West Fiftyâ€"fifth street, at $1,â€" "All right, stay here, by all means," was the ieneovelcnt reply.â€"Judge. The Church of St. Paul the Apostle (the Paulist Church), at Fiftyâ€"ninth street and Columbus avenue is valued at $700,000. St. Mark‘s Church, on Second avenue, an old landmark in that neighborhood, is valued at $275,000. The Marble Collegiate Chureh, Fifth avenue and Twentyâ€"ninth street, is valâ€" ued at $1,000,000. The First Presbyterian Church, Fifth avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, is valued at $750,000. ; Arinity‘s Value Put at $12,500,000, Inâ€" cluding Land. Trinity Church is valued at $12,500, 000. This estimate includes the land 0¢câ€" eupied by the churchyard. lt is in the most valuable part of New York, if not in the most valuable division of property in the world. 7 Bt. Paul‘s Church is ‘valued at $5,500,â€" Grace Church is valued at $5,500,â€" RUSTLING LIFE INSURANCE, COSTLY CHURCHES; An Interruption. A Kind Man. TORONTO To take rust from steel, cover the steel with fresh lard or sweet oil, rubâ€" bing it well. Do not touch it for two days ,then polish with unslacked lime until rust disappears. Don‘t take fright because you hapâ€" pen to fall into the water in your clothes. Clothes will fidat. To remove grease from books, cover the spot with either magnesia or powder~ ed chalk, and set on it a warm flatiron over a sheet of brown paper, To stop noseâ€"bleed, chew a plece of paper, or bathe the back of the head and neck with cold water. What has become, also, of the "Tiger," the perky little being in top hat and top boots, who sat with folded arms and suâ€" percilious air on the back seat of the high dogearts driven by the young bloods of thirty years ago?â€"The London Daily Mail. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. The loss of many lives by drowning this season has led William lienry, honâ€" orary secretary of the Royal Lifeâ€"Saving Society, of London, to draw up a list of a few "don‘ts" which bathers ought to observe. They are as follows: Don‘t bathe in quiet, secluded spots Don‘s swim out from shore in the sea and other tidal waters unattended by a boat. Don‘t take fright because taken with eramp. Keep calm and turn on the back, then rub and stretch the affected limb. If seired in the leg, turn up the toes, straighten the leg to stretch the muscles, and apply friction by kicking the surface of the water. Leave the water as soon as possible. People nowadays prefer to have a smart parlor maid to open the door and receive callers. or to employ a young forâ€" eigner of 18 or 20 years of age, who not only acts as footman, but also as winâ€" dow cleaner and general handy man for a trifling wage, leaving after he has learned the language. Don‘t bathe alone if subject to giddiâ€" ness or faintrness. In the West End clubs and hotels, however, there is still a demand for the services of the boy in buttons. |_____ _ meal Within the past nine or ten years the demand for page boys for private houses has dwindled to @imost nil, except in the case of doetors, who combine in, them the duties of door opener, medicine carâ€" rier and boot cleaner. Mr. Henry concludes by drawing attenâ€" tion to the need of making swimming a part of the national education. "For years a mMaArâ€" / \ tyr," is how Chas. H. OS â€" Powell, of 105 Raglan y street, Kingston, be ' . J gins his story. "A C/*>4 martyr to . chronic e h‘ ' constipation, but now ;}:\,-‘ I am free from it and .‘ all through the use of CHAs . Pomll’)url Leonbhardt‘s Antiâ€" "I was induced to try Antiâ€"Pill by reading the testimony of someone who: had been cured of constipation by it. I had suffered for eighteen years and had taken tons of stuff recommended as eures, but which made me worse rather than better. Doctors told me there was no eure for me. Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€" Pill eured me." e P "”"‘(‘ ) 3 .‘.‘»' . U ) CHAS. H. POWELL "I was induced reading the testim had been cured o I had suffered for _ All dealers, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Girls Displace "Buttons." The charity school boy and the boy in buttons were two types of boyhood out of which Dickens contrived to get a great deal of humor. The first named has entirely disappeared, while page boys of the "Joe and Fat Boy" class are alâ€" most extinct, and the last specimens are to be found in clubs and hotels. _ _ _ At one time the possession of a bright little boy in buttons was held to indiâ€" eate that the mistress had risen above the rank of a mere suburbanite and was reaching the fringe of society, but now the pnrfor maid has taken his place. on the St. Lawrence. Six miles above Quebec, near the point where the St,. Lawrence at loOw water is somewhat less than 2,000 feet wide, a cantilever bridge is being built. It is of the American pattern and steel, As Brooklyn bridge had to yield the palm to the Forth bridge in 1890, so now the Forth must yield it to the St, Lawrence says Everybody‘s Magazine. The central span of the Canadian bridge is 1800 feet long, stretching alâ€" most from bank to bank. The central suspended girder is 675 feet long and 130 feet deep at the centre. The width of the anchor spans is 500 feet; of the approach spans, 210 feet. Two tracks will carry the railroad traffic. There will be roadways for road and street car traffic. _ So our Canadian cousins are to have the longest bridge span in the world. _ _ LONGEST BRIDGE S$PAN. Triumph of Engineering Being Achieved Kingston Man Tells How He 8 and How He was Cured. Don‘t bathe shortly after a hearty Farmers and Dairymen Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan FIBRE WARE asamours MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED. You will find they give you satisâ€" faction every time. DON‘TS FOR BATHERS. THERE ISs NO SUBSTITUTE Insist on being supplied with EDDY‘S every tim . B. EDDYS Useful Hints. Close by the tree is a solid marble seat, which is said to be the cheir of Hippocrates, the father of _ medicine, and it is supposed that he taught the art of healing from that seat. He wuas born at Cos 460 B. C. This gives a clue to the age of thecelebrated plane tree, which must be considerably more than 2000 years old. MINARD‘S LINIMEXT "and also preâ€" scribe it for my patients, always with the most gratifying results, and I conâ€" sider it the best allâ€"round Liniment exâ€" tant. nNew Kind of Dialect Story. "What‘s this *" demanded the puzzled critic,. reading the manuscript. "Go ‘long wid. ye or (m. gif you a punch mit der nose yet already." What sort of lanâ€" yuage is that to put in the mouth of your: hero. "Thut‘s Wiby Whtt nnusd Enatuss ce _ yuage is that to put in the mouth of your: heroâ€"* "That‘s the most move! feature of my book," replied the young author; "you see, the hero‘s father was Irish and his mother German."â€"Philadelphia Ledger. tree, measuring nearly 18 yards in cirâ€" cumference. nft is awrrounded by a podlum, or raised platform, breast} high, doubtless built to na-t the trunk of the tree after it become hollow and weak from age. The lower branches are still well preserved and have been shored up Bby pieces of antique columns, over the upper ends of which the branches have grown like caps in consequence: of the pressure of their own weight. St. Isidore;.P. Q., Aug. 18, 1904. , Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,â€"J have MINARD‘S LINIME! ues o 2e Aemeeace here, egg him out of town every time he sticks up his head. Use eggs with whisâ€" kers on them, too, if you want to more positively punctuate your order. A busiâ€" ness that the law will not touch must be met by outlaw methods. Sail in and clean them out of town.â€"Pratt, Kan., Union, In the island of Cos, in the Aegean sea, says the London Times, there stands, jealously guarded, a huge plane on the outside or by needles to the i« side of the ventricles. Danilewsky has started heart beats in a rabbit 24 hours after death. ‘This he accomplished by perfusion of the heart by Locke‘s soluâ€" tion. Inhibition of this heart action can b> brought about by applying electrodes at the root of the morta. Locke and Rosenheim perfused a heart that had been hanging in the laboratory for five days since its removal from the rabbit‘s body, and caused it to give beats of considerable _ maâ€"nitude,. _ Howell, of Johns Hopkins, concludes from his exâ€" periments that inhibition of the hbeart depends om the presence of â€" diffusible potassium and eompounds in the heart tissue, and that vagus impulses act indiâ€" rectly by increasing the amoun of potasâ€" suim compounds of this character. From the physiological standpoint, therefore, it looks as if the day may come when death will be cheated of its prey, and the heart forced to take up again the work that it has laid down.â€" North American Homoepathic Journal. Floresco claims to have brought back life to dogs whose hearts have stop from 25 to 40 minutes. . He i electrodes directly to the heart, eitwher 1 P9" """‘.o» § assorted envel®pt® ferent; 500 for B P se 50s ana‘ 0oc; 100 toreign stamps, MG, * * homse 401 Youge strest, Toronto, OBE â€""i',ll I' indi + fipaâ€" lion.boikâ€"-m.ufl-cd--*d imp-hbhdâ€"enuwa'.-' Bicod Tonic. tones up ftomach, liver, kidney» and bowels. . . _ virtues of curstive herbs which act in a natural manner on the syftem. . Price, $1 aâ€"bottleâ€"6 for $5.. At drugâ€"Roresâ€"or from ‘The Chemits® Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamiltonâ€"T oronto. Be sure to get the genuineâ€"ask for Everyone Ran nn"”u..u-l a " santhes the GUMS, CUr®® ....l.fl-.obduâ€":r'w Yours truly, Again we say to the 15 for 10¢; Pure, safe, pelatabl A Tree of Twenty Centuries, Eggs for Whiskey Salesmen. DR. JOS. AUG. SIROIS. is a Man Dead? Pratt ladies, if booze drummer ““d- *¢ S nuaths ivge, 38 beats of owell, of _ * m his exâ€" the heart diffusible the heart s act indiâ€" ‘ estate Distri callv Made M PHILAD CO. | @11« wibl The har in th secu KING OF TURN D insert He un while in Gets Oneâ€"sixth xpC tenant, and thrifty and almost unkn xt resides in YÂ¥ with the othe of his late ut Wi Sp H LEFT F D the Ni F0 ht o W

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