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Durham Review (1897), 18 Oct 1906, p. 6

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yer ending. eternal space. ' ind doubtless each one of ail those _ _lad flashing suns in each one of all : L inconceivably mighty universes, _ yher they shine with a pure white Tytt or whetber their rays are in any " brilliantly glowing, lustrous inbow hues, bss its atterdant planets Iving round it; some, like Jupiter. babitable for cons upon eons, some, ) our moon, dead and cold, ard nome] our fair earth. or like probably ‘h&lfl and inhabited by senâ€" crea like ourselves. (_ _ {unBAy «‘__ All that is solemn, ttantâ€"all that is blesseq th for time and eternity ortal soul, is included in â€" Nere every reader of thes, very hearer of the CGospel t according to truth, thes ould suffice for all. There ssâ€"no middle ground in ce we read that "He th Blessed be God, tho day of grace still gave his only begotten Son, that whoâ€" ver believeth in him should not perâ€" but have everlasting life." (John 16). _In the eross we see God‘s perfect love to the sinner displayed and how perfect. , he has through the sacrifice of Christ lly settled the whole question of for the believer, and fully met every vine requirement, and that according his infinite holiness and justice. Such God‘s great salvation, which he freeâ€" offers to you. If you simply believe Jesus as your Savior, and his blood as ving made a complete atonenient for . , you are warranted in knowina that ttered in eountless multitude deep down in the abysmal ; of terrible space and disc by the eagle eye of the cam the most powerfui of lenses; rer our own solar system and â€" the unaided eye; some cluster , others solitary amid their br , roll ever onward in their e ty suns flashing in varied vivi ing hues. Here a scintillant : his beams a wondrous _ er far, and more splendent deepest ultramarine of the I ; here another fiercely flami red rays,. a great globe of s or here a mighty orb ever abla icanes of flames of intensest . Or here, as in the constellatic meda, a stupendous glowing ams a rich lustrous orangeâ€"suly in apparent close proximity g of lesserâ€"or perbaps more di starsâ€"each a _ beautiful wint Rero x dAnithks" shaw . (1,3° _ , _ _"J Of hy glory, O infinite God, who surroundest all Thy works without, and fillest them all within, me the work of Thy hands, who !.-p:dolly in Thy merey. "Guard me, I pray Thee, here and every where, â€" now ld always, within and without, and on every side, so that in me the ¢nemy may find no opening for his treacherous asâ€" Saults. Amen, â€"Augustine. he hath not belie, only begotten Son ). _ Cod‘s salvation the difficulty lies in PO Pm TS 10, aP ), is difficultâ€"more thamr difficultâ€"for Ffi writer or preacher fully to realâ€" ‘ the foree of the 2words, "Savedâ€" st." _ All that is solemn, weighty, imâ€" tantâ€"all that is blessed or miserable, h for time and eternity, to the imâ€" rtal soul, is included in those words. re every reader of these £*8, and ry hearer of the Gospel to m describâ€" according to truth, these two words uld suffice for all. There is no third &â€"no middle ground in Seripture, . hee we read that "He that believeth Lin is not condemned: but he that eth not is condemned already, be. mhe ‘ba‘th not believed in the nama T i are .through faits m all things (whet) ) just because God ar his word, and | t "for by him sH not believe 0; * for by him all th ifled from all things," 8 a#aae xs , God, true ks . insd CE ROIn Who can answer « Which of you da "Rise, and come to _ Whose iim.e" 4** €irt, stand forth! lamps are "burning bright, Worthy. in your Saviour‘s worth, To walk with Him in white; Jesus bids your hearts be clean, Bids you all his promise prove; Jesus comes to cast out sin, And perfect you in love. Wait we all in patient hope, THll Christ, the Judge, shall come:; We shall soon be all caught up To meet the general doom ; h‘.n 2:1?1 1@ ns unknown, § in deepest night, Christ shall suddenly come down, With all his saints in light. Happy he whom Christ shail find Watching to see Him come; MHim the Judge of all mankind â€" Shall bear trimemnma., " E00E A Patbom]m Abj (By a Banker.) Saved or Lost. i more splendent than amarine of the Italian her fiercely flaming in great globe of scarlet ghty orb ever ablaze in € to see Him come; Judge of all mankind ear triumphant home; answer to His word? in eacn one of all mighty universes, with a pure white ir rays are in any aivation, which he freeâ€" «_ If you simply believe Savior, and his blood as complete atonenient for (Onward.) and blghest_ life, by whom neneved in the name 1 Son of (iod." (John ition is for lost man, ¢s in this, that man own he is lost. less multitude, some the abysma} profunâ€" ace and discernible ve of the camera or ful of lenses; some system and visible some clustered toâ€" y amid their brighter ard in their courses in \'ari?d vivid nlldl & uinpllant stellar , the day of grace still begotten Son, that whoâ€" in him should not perâ€" nted in knowing that ait", fustified by him hether you feel it or iod has said you are. id have peace with Prayer. Jh*l, fuaA aa AÂ¥ OME intensest emerâ€" constellation of dares meet his day? to pudgment!" Lord, come away. Abyss, 1 that believe ar; 18." (Acts 13, 30). tharm difficultâ€"for azure, arteale 41 _, 230 _ 13 Y Roolt it Hedessary qo admit that the thickness of the earth‘s erust is at least two thousand miles." He cites another theory _ that the earth, having passed through the stage of alternate solidity and fluidity, is now solic throughout. but with large flnid cavities existing in the mass, which would go far to account fof" volâ€" ecaroces and earthquakes, e :A "If," says Mr. Ingram, "the earth‘s crust is so thin it would yield to the deforming influences of the sun _ and the moon, in which case the water would be drawn up with the earth, anrd thus no sensible tidal effects could be produced. In order to counteract Shuw " tw clloks. .. Tas _‘ NOC FnpadiBivienpaiiianih unurd ducannbmetd a s Aeih 2. .B .1 exercises a pressure upon the _ warmer northern air below _ and produces opâ€" pressive heat that continues until the cold current of air has obtained masâ€" tery over the warmer air beneath. And further, say those who do not agree with the generally _ accepted theory, if the interior of the earth was composed of an intensely heated liquid mass, enclosed within a shell as thin as we have been taught to believe the earth‘s crust to be, it would long since _have found vent and overwhelmed both | land and sea. Beresford Ingram, B. A., F. €. & who has given much thought to this subject without having reached a conâ€" elusion to which he will commit himself, very fairly states the theory _ held by some geologists that the earth is a cooling body, with a thin crust gnd an _ interior composed of a molten, liquid mass of some unrknown _ subâ€" stance, but, presumably, melted rocks, while others hold that the pressure in the interior of the earth must be so great that through the greater proâ€" portion of its diameter it must necesâ€" sarily be solidified, leaving only a comâ€" paratively small strata of intensely heatâ€" ed liquid between this nucleus and the outer crust. & Mr. O‘Rourke is the wellâ€"known breeder of builâ€"terierdogs. Everyone in Hamilton knows him. Mia Ointment brings quick, lasting telief, and r’,m'hmwo‘mh Sores, Chafing, Bums and other skin woubles, 50c. a borâ€"6 for $2.50 At draggicts* Â¥ " For years I had Piles, which protruded and dled APuly. The iiching pain was sometimes almaost umbearable. Ofien I sufered so severely it was next .mbrnm:‘-ouduly. Tt was a hardship to walk. T wied many remedies, but wilh poor success, 1_ * This winter, in New Yorkâ€"at the Bench Show«» 4 suffered greatiyâ€"was almost conipelied to remain tie my room. /( ied several remediesâ€"without velief. 1 _ On my return home, Mira Oin{ment was advised, Tusedit. In only c short time, all the irritation and Amis aament you 8 ~ pmin ceased. / can now walk with ease and attend way dutics as a member of the Fire Depas iment, * I strongly recommend Mira Ointment loanyone snffering from this annoying complaint. " Hamilton, March 9, 1906." _ (Signed) _ Mark O Rourke, 186 Hess St. N. Look for the trademarkâ€" Wiles? Some say the only cure is the knife. We aay, operations are unnecessary. Read this letter: â€"say Hamilton People __ Bleeding Piles Cured ; â€"after Years of Subering. H-dayl may be patâ€"but the e " _ nere are those who question [ all this. They even quvestion whether the interior of the earth is in any _ degree warmer than its surface, â€" and if those skeptics should be right the inâ€" genuity of man may yet devise means to make exploration far beyond any on which he has yet ventured. _ The objection will arise that it is a fact that it does grow rapidly warmer as descent from the earth‘s surface is made. | Mr. Frank Harris, an English geoloâ€" gist, in replying _ to this objection, says, that instead of the increasing heat perceptible when descent into the earth ho any considnrants | Ascak 1â€" CC SmTP TRCY TE A2CO is that in the mines or o:her deep borâ€" ings hitherto made in the earth‘s strâ€" face, it has been found that heat inâ€" creases in a degre@ proportionate :o the depths descended. In has been found that this heat increases one degree Fahrenheit for every fiftyâ€"one feet beâ€" low the surface, and that at a depth of two miles the temperature is equal to that of boiling water. But ‘#here are those who anasiam The one fact upon which scientists base the theory that the interior is a liquid mass of intense degree of â€" heat is that in the minag mF nthie oc t L If the existing theory is a mistaken one, it must be admitted that it may yet be possible for man to descend to depths far below any he has yet atâ€" tained. yovien‘ Ts d 25 4 307. Sinpeiies . Acrathise aint so much thinner is our earth crust, or shell, than _ is the shell of the egg, when the thickness of both is measured by the respective volume of the contents of each. 0f a surface crust; that within this crust there is a molten mass heated to a degree beyond anything the huâ€" man mind can conceive, much less measured by degrees, or describe in figâ€" ures. We have been told that this crust can only be compared to the shell of the egg, and that even this compariâ€" son does not do the subject justice, TRADL MARK REGSTEREO. IS A MIRACLE!" any . considerable dei)fh' by much greater it is, in reality, > of the air from well known inâ€" or other deep berâ€" n the earth‘s sirâ€" he earth‘s eld to the sun _ and the water Turning It to Good Account, (Columbus, O., Despatch.) Scribblesâ€"Would _ youâ€"erâ€"mind _ repeating your refusal of my offer of marriage? Miss Chillumâ€"Certainly not. But why? Scribblesâ€"Oh. I want to take it down in shorthard for use in my next novel. & w us t id difichith indb iss t 1513 wven love may forget that he laughs best who laug®s last. Her complexion is fair and clear, the color of her eyes is forgetâ€"meâ€"not blue, her hair is nut brown and her eyebrows are dark and heavy.â€"Special Cableâ€" gram. 1$ Since La Milo at 21 tips the scale at 162 pounds, it will be interesting to calâ€" culate just what degree of increase may be expected with the maturity of 40. Her complexion is fair and clear, the _ _Social and artistic London has a new idol. _ She is La Milo, who is giving repâ€" resentations of seulptural masterpicces at the London Pavilion. La Milo, whose stage name is a suggestion of her claim to public attention, is considered the nearest approach in measurement and physical beauty to the perfections of the Venus de Milo. We‘ll send you a sample free. SCOTT & BOWKIE, cLzXxszs. we place this label on every package of Scott‘s Emulsion. Tke man witha fish on his back is our tradeâ€"mark, and it is a guarantee that Scott‘s Emulâ€" sion will do all that i« claimed forit. Nothing better for lung, throat or bronchial troubles in infant or adult. Scott‘s Emulâ€" sion is one of the greatest fleshâ€" builders known to the medical world. "‘No!‘ said the poet. "‘Yes, he doesâ€"on is toof," said the littlechap." Cynicusâ€"When do you consider a woâ€" man is too cld to marry? Miss Oldgir) «Well, I am only 28, you know. Cynicus â€"Yes; I‘ve known that a long time. The grouchy man either forgets that he was ever a boy or else tries to live Sown the memory. Worry kills more people than work, gutomobiles and appendicitis put toâ€". gethar. ‘ Blobbsâ€"Is there any hard vork atâ€" Rkeched to a political job ? Slobbsâ€"_\’ot‘ after you get it. Love may laugKA at locksmiths, but For Your Protection "A little chap in the front row, ing the poet‘s friendly eye, piped: "‘My fader wears one now.,‘ "‘And, my little friends, do all these things, some ¢ wear a crown of gold.‘ Yes some day will wear a gold "Dunbar, towards the marks, said: »ihed Desbiabis d B sc d ds s t o dE 14 1 I heard the address. It was delightful. An odd incident happened, though, . at its end, an incident _ that _ Dunbar laughed at as heartily as the rest of The Crown of Gold. "The late Paul Lawrence Dunbar, the negro poet," said an editor, "once adâ€" dressed a Sunday school in New York. Dr. Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid will cure any case of Piles. This statment is made without any qualifications, It is in the form of a tablet. It is impossible to cure an established case of Piles with ointments, supposiâ€" tories, injections or outward appliances. A $1,000 guarantee with every packâ€" age of Dr. Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid. $1.00, all dealers, or the Wilsonâ€"Flye Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Tnosvhar-ybouolthmt remarkable of her political institutions. It htheidultovanlm&-m- mon people of every European counâ€" try, weighed down with taxation to supâ€" > |Port huge standing armies, turn with p | longing and hope, g J According to the Arena the Swiss ; | system «of militia saves millions of , | money to the taxpayers and gives years j |0f freedom from militar yservice to the . | soidiers. y Practically all Swiss serve from the . |age of 20 to 50 in the militia and reâ€" serves. The raw recruits go into J schools, the infantry for 45 days, the | cavairy for 80 days. After this the cavairy serves 16 days each year and the infantry and artillery 14 days each ever other year. _ The reserves serve only five or six days every four years. The officers, of course, are carfully traind in good schools for a priod of yars. This short service would be insuffiâ€" cient were it not preceded and suppleâ€" mented by military training for boys in school and rifle practice every year by | practically all Swiss citizens. ‘w Target shooting is the national sport, and in accordance with the law a place for target practice must be supplica by every town in the country. As an enâ€" couragement prizes of all soi*s are | t offered by the national Governmnt. I Thus little Switzerland, with a populaâ€" | & tion of less than 3,000,00 of people, has | ! an army of 337,000 of the most martial | k soldiers of Europeâ€"armed, equipped audl | 4 ready to take the field at a moment‘s |® notice. e A Substantial Vequs De Milo HOW THE SWISS MAKE AX ArNuY. 337mo8dfimtga__{guhfin of Only A BROAD STATEMENT. ends, if you will some day you will ‘ Yes, each of you a gold crown.‘ close of his reâ€" row, catchâ€" Little Gustay (handing her the atomizer)â€" Now that I‘ve filled it with petrol, spray me well all over, Mathilde. I want all the boys at the school to believe that father‘s got an auptomobile. "‘We don‘t care anything about what you think!‘ said the lawyer, with a sort of contempt. "‘Don‘t you want to hear what I think? said my young friend, mildly. "‘Certainly not,‘ the lawyer roared. "‘Then,‘ said my young friend, ‘I may as well step down from the box. I‘m not a lawyer. I can‘t talk without thinking."" f "‘I thinkâ€"â€"‘ my friend began, but he was at once interrupted. "Well, the thief‘s lawyer crossâ€"examinrâ€" ed my young friend shamefully. He roarâ€" ed at him, shcok his fis; at him, raved at him. "‘And at what hour did all this hapâ€" pen? the lawyer, sneering, asked toward the end of the examination. "I confess that I am not in sympathy with harshness in crossâ€"examination, and wenever I hear of a witness turning on an overbearing liwyer my heart rejoices. "My heart rejoiced last week. A young man in my company was a witness in a case of robbery. He had seen a thief snatch a yeung girl‘s pocketbook and make off. # "My advice, then, is that you make your crossâ€"examination less rigorous, less harsh. _ What is the good of treating an honest, sensitive witness in the witâ€" ness stand as though he were a sneak thief?" ""You, gentlemen, have given me most helpful advice in the art of acting; will you permit me to give you in return a piece of advice regarding your profesâ€" sion ? Irving‘s Advice to Lawyers, Sir Henry Irving was once the guest of honor at a lawyers banquet in New York. _ In the course of a gracefual adâ€" dress he said: 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 a MUIR CO. LIMITED, _Brantford, Canada. "* IMPERIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL T hP O c itc A n nc "My heavens!" exc.flnim?d t minded beggar, "that reminds errand. My wife is in a fit!". Up. 71. â€", 6 0ia friend, the family physician. After a chat of a couple of hours the doctor saw him to the door and bade him goodâ€"night, saying, " Come again. Family all well, I supnose» TORONTO The champion absent at Balham. On one 0 upon his old friend, the After a chat of a com Pp C n PACEmM OE TRre tea! All experienced campers in the north; woods are familiar with the fried bread dough,. It is dough mixed as you would mix it for squaw bread, but not quite so stiff, pulled cut to the size of your frying pan, very thin, and fried in ewimming pork grease. In taste it reâ€" sembles doughnuts, _ Hubbard used to call it "French toast." Our young men had never eaten it before, and Richards, taking one of the cakes, asked Pete: "What do you call this?" ‘ ‘I don‘t‘ know," answered Pete, "Well,‘ said Richards, with a mouth» ful of it, "I call it darn good," ‘"That‘s what we call him, then," reâ€" torted Pete, "darn good." And so the cakes were christened "darn goods," and always afterward we referâ€" red to them by that name.â€"Dillon Welâ€" lace in The Long Labrador Trail, in the Outing Magazine for September, _/ j,! C _‘PPmg wet and hands full of kettles, he pushed his way into the tent! A steaming venison potpie, broiled veniâ€" son steaks, hot fried bread dough, stewâ€" ed prunes for dessert and a kettle of hot tan 1 Py P . | When Pete went out to cook dinner 1 told him to make a little cornmeal porâ€" ridge and let it go at that, but what a surprise he had for us when, a little later, dripping wet and hands full of kettles, he pushed his way into the tent! h cey ce i > & P â€"] _ Saved the Life of Columbus. | License rers in Encuianp or post free from the to, on receipt of price was in this country that the herbal remedy Bileans was first produced. Their use spread as their value was made more known, till toâ€"day all over :l:l; globe Bileans are a household remâ€" Miss E. Reed, of Kingston, (Ont.), says: "I suffered terribly with acute indigestion all last winter. Pain followâ€" ed all food, with wind spasmse, rifting, etc. My sleep at night was fitful and broken and my strength failed. Bileans were introduced to me, and I found reâ€" lief from their use within a very short time. They have now cured me." Bilâ€" eans cure constipation without causing griping, cure piles, biliousness, indigesâ€" tion, sick headache, _ etc., and give strength and energy to rundown systems. All druggists sell at fifty cents a box, Or post free fram tha RitLel Al o m __ Sacrifice to Fashion. times conceded. Whe discovered Australia he by the freedom from di natives enjoyed, in conse certain roots and herbs . VY NCB lmhr Columbus was in Jamaica he have died but for the herbal medicines the natives brought him. Thmianodoubttbgtlboriglul tribes know more of the medicinal virtues of herbs and roots than is someâ€" 0 +TVIORRNErAmreAcoud uB (Bon Vivant.) "Darnâ€" freedom from disease which the enjoyed, in consequence of using roots and herbs as medicines. 1t t.hl,l country that the herbal , I supposet C " exclaimed the absentâ€" "that reminds me of my fe is in a fit!"â€"Pickâ€"Meâ€" A Record. Goods" in Labrador. Oone occasion he called . _ When Captain Cook B eees T08 1e00 faachee her minded man lives rundown systems. ifty cents a box, Bilean Co., Toronâ€" The origin of the phrase * holding a }mnd‘le to you," im somewhat «@oubtfui, but some authorities trace it to the tact that as the small light stand had not yet been devised anyone who dosire1 to read in bed had to have a servant stani beâ€" side him to holid the candle. One canâ€" not imagine that reading in bed under these cireumstances would bs very enâ€" mble, certainly notlto one who has accustomed to solitude and a jet easily turned on or off, bit mmg‘; everything in habit.â€"Gas Logie. F dR M olsc h actualt 3 _Paris was, however, considecably in advance of other cities of the worid at this tme. In London link boys siond about in public places, callinz out in lugubrious tones, "Gentlemen, a lisht!" CE sony TTTS CTC poor slid along, feeling their way by the walls. In his edict of September, 1667. the king provided that candles en ‘‘osed in a cage of glass should be hung by cords at the height of the first story of the house, three lanterns tor _ every street, on» at each end and one in the middle. At the sound of a nell, strack by a watchman, they were lightai. mile 1 2 Lamps fell into disfavor at the beginâ€" ning of the seventeenth century and were only used by the poor and in passâ€" ages and stables where the smoke could evaporate and a great deal of light was needed. Candles had then reached their perfection and candlesticks their most exquisite form. A candlestick of erystal given by Louis XIV. to La Valliere is still in existence. 1t was at this time, also, that the erystal pendants came into fashion, Street iMumination was not seriously attempted in Paris until about the midâ€" dle of the seventeenth century. in the first year of that notable century the streets of Paris were dark. ‘The rich were, escorted y lackeys be?rmg ‘ torches, and middle clase folks pleked ‘ their way, Jantern in rand, while the Magic lanterns were invented in the time of King Francis I A device on a somewhat similar plan was used as a sign before shop doors, to attract cusâ€" Je tom. o vuPr ol vite P ramit tmiscrasimanc. 1 flambeaux at festivals also became genâ€" eral about this time, and a sirange and tragic incident is comnected with this fashion. At a ball given by Charies \ i. the torches carried by some careless serâ€" vants came too near the headdress of certain persons dreseed as sages and set them on fire. The unfortunate guests were burned to death, and the king, at the sight, lost his reason, a madness which had a serious effect on the history of France. Noblemen and rich mercha; having Juxurious little trave ments made for them, and a were travelling candlesticke basins in fine enamelled work of which is now lost. ifiA iibahiiffccca c acas dP d it the wind by thin sheets of horn. Lanâ€" tern making was an important industry in Paris, Noblemen and rich merchants took to Molign o Le c Tai% NVA Lanterns in the Thirteenth Centuryâ€"A Strange and Tragic Incident, The sconce and the lantern were in general use through the middle ages. The sconce was a light, covered and guarded from the wind, lifted down by a haniie and distinct from the lantern, serving somewhat the same purpose, but hung | by a chain, Ianterns in the thirteenth eentury were made of gold, silver, 2copper or iron, according to the means of the owner. The light of the latter was shielded from hx ‘2e 5200. 0_ _( ouale A ! Your Doctor Mr. Stingy (just going out)â€""While I‘m away, Marie, don‘t forget to work the alarm clock every half hour or so. My neighbors must continue to believe that I have the telephone."â€"Pele Mele. iC + sptaishet Aiinrir it ntsaciatnise. â€"3 the number of public houses has resultâ€" ed in creating a monopoly of the liquor traffic and has increased enormously liâ€" cense values, without a similar increase in the scale of taxation. In the 164 British towns having a poâ€" pulation of 30,000 and upward, the proâ€" ceeds from this source is approximately $4,080,000 ; whereas, in the 122 American towns of the same size it is $36,975,000, or more than nine times as much, The number of retail liquor places in Great Britain is less toâ€"«day than in 1880, alâ€" though the quantiy of liquor sold is much greater, _ The policy of limiting the number of withlin~ hama. 3 _ _E CHM SHILOH The average rate of license taxation of 122 towns of the United States hayâ€" ing a population exceeding 30,000 is $835, as against an average of $175 charged in similar towns in Great Britain. If the comparison be made with parâ€" | ticular States or certain geographical diâ€" visions, the difference is even more proâ€" nounced, The average license duty in twentyâ€"one New England cities, says the Independâ€" ent, is ten times the average rate in simâ€". ilar cities in the United Kingdom. Natâ€" urally, the revenue thus received is much greater in this country than in Great Britain. Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, butâ€" why go to a‘l the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and then of having hisprescription filled, when you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH‘S CURE for a quarter. Why pay two to five dollars when a twentfi'-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you as quickly ? \ghy not do as hundreds of thousands of Canadians have done for the past thirtyâ€"four i'om: let SHILOH be your docâ€" r whenever a Cough or Cold apgem. HILOH will cure you, and all drufigiats back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you have a Cough or Cold cure it with custom ARTIFICAL LIGHT Average of 8175 Against One $835 in This Country. of having eervants Saving His Face trave“ing eqmi,-. Or places in Great than in 1880, alâ€" of liquor sold is policy of limiting among these and wash , the secret resultâ€" Outlateâ€"Yesh, m‘dear; jesh water wagon to shee why it Mrs. Outlateâ€"Didn‘t you come in OI; hands ard knees? fort _ e Witnessâ€"Nothingâ€"the christened me stuttered. ‘ The new steamship H. H. Rogers has carried over 15,000 tons of freight down Lake ! Michigan from Escanaba to South Chicago. The load of iron ore will go into the records as 13,333 toms, but ore is reckoned in gross tons of 2,240 nounds. It is only twentyâ€"five years since the first lake cargo of more than 3,000 tons was loaded. ‘The carrying capacity of the largest lake vessels has been multiplied by five in a quarter of a century. The gain has been most rapid within the past five years, It is going on faster than ever before. The end no man can determina Minard‘s Liniment Cures Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia, FIBRE WARE mmcus _ The lady on horseback who was struck by a red automobile on Thursday hereâ€" by notifiee her assailant that she was not killed and is able to identify the driâ€" ver of the machine, notwithstanding his rapid flight from the scene of the attack, and will hold him responsible for damâ€" ages to the horse as soon as such damâ€" ages have been determi~ed.â€"Oil City Derrick. Dilemma at a Christening. (Boston Trnnscript]) Lawyerâ€"What is your full name? Witnessâ€"K. K. K. Karl Benson, Lawyerâ€"Whkat do all the K‘s stand L% Farmers and Dairymen 1 was cured of Blac MINARDP‘s LiXnEXT Inglesiille, 3: 1 1 was cured of a terrible sprain | MINARD‘s LixtTMEXT. FRED COULSsON, C i mm mand L. s NÂ¥ uy Eut 1 was cured of a ARD‘S LIXTMEXT Oxford. N. &. Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or MiAk Pan Lhis is one of many odd tricks whereâ€" by in a run, a bank has saved itself from The result was that the people who made the run on Monday made rather a walk of it. They wanted their money, but they rushed no one. On the contrary they came on with a caution and delibâ€" eration that were just what the bank deâ€" sired. So careful were they lest they get paint on their clothes that it took longâ€" er to pay off one of them than it would havg taken ordinary to pay five. | matl 20 0 d F] uP P Before sunrise on Monday morning a painter put a fresh coat of paint on the front doors of the bank, on the wall panâ€" els, and on the counters. you m ogo, ooo Gveycveaue â€"â€" C THERE Is NO SUBSTITUTB Thus a rich bank knew that a run was to set in on a certain Monday morning â€"#for it had been robbed of some postâ€" age stamps on Saturday night, and the robbery had been exaggerated in the newspaper reportsâ€" and if this run was not kept within reasonable limits, the bank would have to close its doors. It had plenty of money, but not plenty of cash. It needed twentyâ€"four hours‘ time. Studies in Liquid Equilibrium, Yarmouth, X. & ‘ Stopping Runs on Banks, Runs on banks, as all the world knows, are often stopped or restricted in che oddest ways. 200 0 C ts C . TL dind ln.htonb.u,.wum Â¥"s PC UORErGNOGLGNr Db atatznâ€"mamemens an . n , ’ .~ Big Ships on the Lakes, (Cleveland Leader.) SUNI.IGHT Taokome uen and linoleums with o warm water and OAP dry. The colors will be preserved and the surface unharmed. Common soaps fade the colors and injure the surface. â€" Sunlight Soap cleans freshens and preserves oilcloths and lincleums. Sunlight Soap washes clothes white without injury to the most delicate fabrics, or to the hands, for it contains nothing that can injure either clothes or hands. ; Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight ‘ wey (follow directions). / ; ._B. EDDY‘S Fair Warning. When you require a [r:\f' 'R!{l:k Erysipelas by a severe cold by MIN man can determinc R. F. HEWSON. wW. RUGGLES, crawling under don‘t go minister who etc. your by Discorraging Prospects, (\V‘Chmgton stlf.) ns government is becoming and more centralized every year, the student of nolitins The wife of a farmer had a sister come from Chicago to make & visit. One day last week the threshers came and the guest insisted on doing the work mlone and sent her sister away to rest. When twentyâ€"seven threshers fled in to supper that night they found a sandwich tied with ribbon, one chick~ en croquette, one cheese ball the size of a u:ml. and -bunonhhm.t“ Dlate, Minard‘s Liniment Prospective _ Moth excuse me, sir, I‘m s only when hce‘s drun to take my danchter lnl!m h’““;fmm~n but is best when used in tholun‘h;“,. h:auughtlupmlflhwfim Intermittent Bri Rogistrar (about to c riage ceremony) "Oh, J do. _ The bridegroom is drink." Minard‘s Ahne poison cup of fame, the bitter gall Of fickle friendship, and the fair, falee heaven For which in ignorance I vainly yvearned, But which Thy love withheld. Now, for Thy ‘Nay, When toward those harmful things I would have turned, I give Thee thanks un this Thanksgivâ€" ing Day. â€"Gussie Packard Dubois, in Standard. For all the garnered harvest of the year, For golden grain of 1ove and hope and thought ; For health and strength of those I hold most dear; For goals attained through weary jourâ€" neys sought; For anxious fears removed, for faith grown bright; For friends whose love and kindness cheer my way; For stars above me in the darkest night, I give Thee thanks on this Thankegiv â€" ing Day. Yet not for these alone, since most of all I thank Thee, Lora, for what Thou l ,~~â€"â€"- -:- _â€"-hâ€"-q.“r: wire cotic and is the best remedy for Dia > Mre. Winsiow‘s Soothing tyrup should alâ€" ways be used for chilldren tastnine lt 15 for 10c; 50 for §0c; 100 for zxe;i 7-?1 ditâ€" ferent; 500 for $3 assorted; 1,000 envelopes the and enll um cce Y P CC PE 4 cradle to the grave; matters of busiâ€" ness, love and marriage made clear; what I tell comes true; send birthdate and 10 Prof. Lavas, box 16, Delorimier P. O., Mont» real, Que. PICTURE POST CARDs YOUR PORTUNE TOLD FROM THE cradle to the prave> mauttame a# qusic Adams, 401 Yonge strect, Toronto, Ont. Diss ISSUE NO. 42, cuve .\"utl:m'~in-Ln\vâ€"“You’ll ne, sir, I‘m sure. You see, it‘s en hc‘s drunk that he‘l] agree my daughter."â€"Bon Vivant. Threshers‘ Pink Tea Liniment Cures Dandruff. MY THANXSCGIvInc Koack ore than fu and popular for to conduct the » 1 say, this won‘t is the worse for everywhere CH York, 1 «upon her Wilson fel floor of t a number The aoti The ch nurse an ed out 0 remons i; leaned 1 _Illl.e ) Eyeâ€"wit thrown a window child in surance 1 rangemer and his room wh The ch A. L. Wil Wilson c# The $ Conaho! John Ri into wit the gues upon th to deat save hi the we Rosine being p Mre. â€" tion in is agair The 1 pretty theater gie Va lost. Mrs. V eust oMm. she tol AD ®toa un hlfl".' erica® wh Ot h EXP moet0 Grand here t Rivers seli, # #dend This % ing w :&iicy evote @rease fan Go in the If + in the increa als in crease ;(onlt. ailw also ¢ taxat ernme i{em PE not appoit at the Charle )OAPu direct tione â€" struct Trumk C vang New the « Mre 1x nder We h

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