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

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thi ture, Rum® teiag is Df . with ’.t" D I o i tors sett mar insu rais spir! stoc im J wise libe cale ther Chr ate Je# to the of It se# the te the man who has .hvlr;l'caâ€";h' doe-‘n':t i;:; hard luck. ouisice of enveiopes, Bu who took the trouble to < likely take the trouble to proper address was on the More than 11,000,000 pieces of mail woent astray in these United Statos last year because they wore not directed even well enough for the experts to decipher the names and addresses, says the Balâ€" timore Sun. The Assistant Postmaster wants to get the people into the habit of writing theizs own addresses on tha outsi A French Russianâ€"American syndicate is plarning a Transâ€"AlaskaSiberian Railâ€" way, with a capital of £$6,000,000, to conâ€" struct a railway between Alaska and Kiberia, with a tunnel under the Behring Straits. The main line will start at a station known as Kansk. on the Transâ€" Siberian Railway. It will run easterly to the boundary line of the Province of Amour to 123 degrees wost longitude, a‘culated on the meriJian of Paris, Then the line goes direct to a place between Yakougsk and Okhotsk; then up to the Behring Straits, with branch lines, On Th Amertcan sls ho hi. o ul ons 2 the American side the line will begin at the tunnel and striking the Tanana kiver follaw it to the Yukon boundary line. It is a big scheme, and many times ¢6,â€" 000,000 will be needed to carry it out. whereabouts is discovered, spend some time in jail a that he should have seen â€" ily was provided for in his euses do not go over there The law works all rightvln the country. A man who goes away allows his family to go on the * rates L EnE 0 Ees S eveentomie cce es is impossible to prove desertion after they are brought back. They all preâ€" tend to have gone off to get employment and to have been unfortunate, and to re but their stories would cost another pile of money. What is needed is some genius who will invent some cheap way to punâ€" ish cheap husbands.â€"Chicago Chronicle. If any man wishes to immortalize himself let him invent some way to punâ€" ish wife desertion. _ This crime has inâ€" ereased in Chicago 100 per cent. in three years, and the county is now supporting 1000 deserted families. To bring the faithless husbands back, prosecute and punish them would cost just as much as it does to support their families, and it 0 is now estimated at not far from four hundred million dollars, which is said to be practically twice as much as was proâ€" duced ton years ago. In the last 500 years over twelve billion dollars‘ worth is estimated to have been dug from the bowels of the earth, but not much more than oneâ€"half of this is definitely known to be in existence in the monetary stocks of the world. _A good deal of gold is absorbed in the arts and manufactures, and a large amount is hoarded by priâ€" vate families, especially in the East. The question "Where did the money come from*?"* has been changed to "Where does the gold go to*" The reâ€" cent action of the Bank of England in raising its discount rates to six per cent., a level which has on‘y been equailed three or four times in a quarter of a century, adds interest to the question. The yearly product of the precious metal In few countries are professional vagâ€" rants and loafers treated with as much lenity as in Great Britain. _ A resort to sterner methods of dealing with those who can work, but prefer to beg, and a provision by which all who are able should be made to earn their keep, would do much to wipe out the evil. And the British people are thinking about it. The net cost of a colonist is estimated at 4s. to 5e,. weeklyâ€"from £10 to £13 a year; while the net annual cost of a prison inmate is from £23 to €27. Habitual vagrants should be sent to the labor colonies for detention for not less than six months or more than three years Way tickets, given by the police to vagrants who are bona fide in search of work, would contain the man‘s personal description, usual trade, reason for wantâ€" ing to travel, and his proposed destinaâ€" tion, also his signature, and possibly his fingerâ€"prints. It should be in the form of a book, something like the Swiss trayâ€" eller‘s book, with spaces for the name of each casual ward visited,. It should prescribe a definite route, be available for a month, and entitle the holler to lodging, supper, and breakfast. (2) "Preferential treatment and real assistance" _ for the bona fide worker when he takes the road; and (3) For habitual vagrants the estabâ€" lishment of walledâ€"in labor colonies. (1) A new and harder regime under police control instead of the poor law for the "casual." of the type of the poet‘s "jolly beggar" appears to be nearly extinct in England and Wales. But while no reliable statisâ€" tics are available it estimates that there are 20,000 to 30,000 "habitual vagrants." Their presence in the community is attriâ€" buted to "persistent doleâ€"giving beyond the power of legislative or administraâ€" tive action." A committee whose object is to advise the local Government Board has been studying the vagrancy question, and it proposes a vigorous special treatâ€" ment for them: ive cas The Overâ€"s is snapped up as s to have luck °C _ Up as soon as his discovered, and has to : in jail as a reminder ‘ave seen that his famâ€" Seas Mail says that the to do that would to see that the the envrelope. ut the peop! absence. Exâ€" (Kansas City Journal.) ‘Ihere is this in fsvor of the automobile, eays Mauck Cretcher. It doesn‘t get its tail e@ver the line or shed its hair in your face en a windy day. Sermons are preached on the evils of overâ€" study. All nonsense. Very few people are Injured by hard, regular mental work. The evil is in trying to do in three months what ought to be done in ten. The hard fact is that hbalf the money spent by parents and by the Province in university education is wasted by a lot of university amusemenis and customs that are altogether out of place in a country where everyone must make his own living. Yhere was Mme. withstood the siege Breton (1758). Day be found on the Minard‘s Liniment Cures uw2 Snd " _â€"lel00d the siege of Louisburg in Cape Breton (1758). Day and night she was to be found on the ramparts, cheering the soldiers and berself loading and firing the «uns. ie tenndive s lc ccciclcd 1 There was valiant "James Gray BSnell). a hosier‘s daughter who foug war of the Spanish succession, rec numerable wounds, was pensioned Anne and at her death was buried military honors in the cemetery o| Hospital. There was hardy Mrs. Christta trooper of the Scots Grays, an Irish who was wounded at Ramillies. A was "Able Seamamn‘‘ Repecca Ann J whbo fought and died on one of ships. 7C/C was English Moll (Mary Ambree), who in 1584 headed 1,000 menYagainst the Prince of Parma and sustained an unequal combat with 3,000 Spaniards for eavan i cQ2" MCDdnerreaprvienisoasi® lc ic combat with 3,000 Spaniards for seven hours, challenging any three Spaniards to try their powers against ber single arm. 0.3 Onn meaie T 1 e e e cE Mary Owens, of Danville, Pa., wanted to accompany her husband in the war and share with bim his bardships and its vicâ€" tories. The brave little woman fought at bis s{de until he was killed. In the next battle she was severely wounded and had to be sent home, her discharge papers bearâ€" Ing the tribute: "A more faithful soldier never shouldered a musket." The civil war, of course, did not have a monopoly of women soldiers. There have been female warriors in all countries from Boadicea and Joan of Arc to the ‘"Amazons of the Cossacks," who startled the world at Mukden. Among the bundreds of such ox;‘mlu a few of special interest may be ab There was never a time when this heroic and sacrificing little woman flinched or hesitated {n flmlg of battle or on long marchâ€" es. On the field after m conflict she would o about ministering to the sick and dying, and at last she became widely known as the Angel of the Regiment. Like Pauline Cushâ€" man, she eventually received a commission as Major in the army. Mis. Kady Brownell, a skilful sharpâ€" shooter, joined the ranks and served as a color bearer. Romantic Elien Goodridge enlisted in hber lover‘s company, and rode As a common soldier by bis side right through the war. ‘"Frank Henderson‘‘ of the Nineteenth I!linois was really a young kirl who enlisted because she could not bear to be parted from her brother. IOos rogegmai? esn esP olsc i i c i A faithful spouse who refused to be partâ€" ed from her husband was Mrs. Reynolds, wife. of Capt. Reynolds, Company A, Eevenâ€" teenth lllinots Regiment. She rode at his elde, in male attire, through almost the entire campaign. A woman known as Framk Thompson carried messages through shot and sh«e!l at Fredericksburg disguised as an orderly. Her name did not aspire till twenty years after, when she obtained a pension and was admitted to the Grand Army of the Republic. A faithful spouse who refused to be partâ€" ed from her 'l:uuband was Mrs. Reynolds, wign 2s mall pamege Wod wal_ 1 T_ the Rockies and engaged in cmpafgns againâ€" st the Indians. There was English Mo!l ho in 1584 headed 1,000 Still more successful was Bridget Danâ€" vers, known as ‘"Irish Biddy." Bridget performed wonders as nurse, hospital stewâ€" ard, surgeon, vivandiere and private soldier In one battle she had three horses kill0® under her. The war did not give Bridget her fill of fighting, ss she afterward crossed was so successful in the field that for her faithful services there was conferred upon her the rank of Major. Psuline Cushman, an actress, was captured in male uniform by the Confederates and was rescued by her companions just as she was about to be.h.tnxed as a spy. Pauline Negative Advantage at Least. The American civil war bred a whole corps of women soldiers. Many women served throughout the entire war without their sex being discovered by officers or comrades. An attempt to make amends signalized her burial in August, 1905. A picket of soldâ€" lers followed the coffin to tge grave and old soldiers who had been her comrades in the field mustered from all parts @f France to say farewell. medalg, Yet she died forsaken and in povâ€" ‘‘Mother Jarrethout‘s‘"‘ end was pathetic. She had made a great name for herself as the Florence Nightingale of the Francoâ€" German war, had received the cross of the Legion of Honor and numbers of lesser heroine of the Francoâ€"German war, died lost year. She fought in male uniform on the walls of Chateaudun, and at Ablis she too two prisoners. There died in Florence last March an It«lian woman, Signor Mario, who fought with Garibaldi, ADP ‘‘Mother Jarrethout," a tinguished herself greatly in the Japanese war and at the beginning ‘The ‘"‘Amazon of the Cossacks" is the daughter of a Viadivostock merchant. A @killed horsewoman and rifle shot, she disâ€" es " ts in o d o aae e itc o n Losdon Express. Jeanne Lacombe, comeâ€" dienne. forsook the stage for the field. Therâ€" esa Giguer esaw four horses die under hber in battle. Other Amazons were pensioned by Napoleon and one was decorated with the Legion of Honor. We send upon request free of charge our large iilustrated catalogue. Bad Habits of Students (Toronto Star.) Our illustrated catalogue will tell you of other remarkâ€" able priceâ€"savings in highest quality cut glass. * is it possible for us to offer our special eightâ€"inch Cut Glass Bowl at $5.00, packed at our, risk and carâ€" riage paid to your door. It is of clearest crystal glass, deeply and brilliantly cut in ONLY as manufacturers Tvir mmerilelhy um sn se Cut Glass $5." Bowl w o CERCET TE ler‘s daughter who fought in the Spanish succession, received inâ€" ounds, was pensioned by Queen her death was buried with full ors in the cemetery of Chelsea Mme. Drucourt, who yrig Baos Gmita 478, an Irish Amazon, Ramillies. And thero Christlan Davis Ann Johnstone one of Nelson‘: Distemper. Gray‘"* (Hanna C valiantly Russoâ€" of the of the |_ Gray‘s Syrup . ,lRed Spruce Gum A Philadelphia minister told a story recâ€" ently of the conversation to a religious life of a worldly woman. "I used to be," said she, ‘‘foolish and vain. Worldly pleasures and fashions were my only thoughts. I was desperately fond of silks, jewellery, ribbons, laces, automobiles, ete. But my friends, I soon found that these worldly things were dragzing me down to perdition. So I gave all to my dear motherâ€"inâ€"law." each 50c. a box. Mira Blood Tonic, $1.00 a bottle. At druggisttsâ€"or from The Chemitts® Ca, remedies will soon set you rightâ€"made to work To p is Shooriee of the neoul hnd shaond to root Te blood. â€"Nine Ointwest and io Tiblas from bad bloodâ€"with irritated or diseased skinâ€" nervouuyfiemodololderâ€".ouwhrd: i# you are anaemicâ€"with cold hands feertâ€"â€" palpitationâ€"shortness of breathâ€" King Edward as a Reformer. (New York Mail.) Future historians will be likely to couple Edward VIl. with Henry V. as an example of the roistering prince who becomes an exâ€" ceedingly wise king. Diplomacy has furnishâ€" ed numerous proofs of Edward‘s wisdom since he became monarch. More important than these, however, is his latest edict that the dinner hour shall be at 6.30 o‘clock.* Dinners are of more moment to mankind than diplomacy. By declaring against the late dinner bour the king is only reforming a bad custom of his own making. London dines toâ€"day from 7.30 to 8.30 because "‘the prince‘s set‘"‘ made earlier eating unfashâ€" ionable in the days gone by. Past errors are now forgiven, however. as he comes to the aid of the art and digestion of the world. $1.00, all dealers, or the W Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Or 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. Some Time in the Future, (Judge.) We see the seriousâ€"faced, highâ€"browed litâ€" tle boy take his antisepticized, disinfected fireâ€"cricker in his rubberâ€"gloved hand, strike & safety match and apply the radium flame to the sparkless fuse. Then he lays the fireâ€" cracker on the ground and steps back a foot or two and watches expectantly until the fire reaches the charge of smokless pow der. The firecracker breaks apart silently, but the boy smiles almost gleefully. He is fancy â€" ing what racket it would have made had it been one of the style that were favored in the days before noiseless _ firecrackers were invented. \pnntinuag ) 2 2+ ARGEP Gt, : If the Lords continued to. put forward their claims to decide the fate of this or that bill. (Cheors.) It was not too early to begin to conâ€" gider carefully, and calmly, _ before the hour of anger and real imagination came, what claim an assembly of this sort had to set itself up as a court of appeal in respect t(; the decision arrived at by the peoâ€" ple. There was a billâ€"the Education â€" Bill â€"which would &0 up to the Lords hy ard by, and that was why he was talkâ€" ing about them now, No _ Cabinet evor aensider>" 1 megasure with _ @ ea‘er care than _ the Government considered every item of this bill before they introduced it. The Government thought that they had met the just demanas aÂ¥ /.. * TTere was a billâ€"the â€"which would go up ard by, and that was | y ing about them now, #cnsidepa* 4 measitre . a than _ the Government item _ of this Bill haes. There y â€"which and by, ; ing about pogi n pem The only part of the peers knew was of «it . Partly by ~ t they sat in judgme peal upon those rep people. It was an arrogance. (Loud _ c Government could po the Lords enntinusg The House of Lords represented the idleâ€" ness of the country. There was not a workâ€" man there, Way â€" should not his friend Mr. Vivian be Lord Birkenhead ? (Laughter,) Why could _ not he (Mr. Lloyd George) be Lord Carnaryon? (Great laughter â€"and cheers,) The gentleman known by that mame bad never been inside the town. (Laughter, ) He would not â€" so much mind about the House of Lords if they were men _ of _ superior intelligence. (Laughter.) There were, it was true, men of great intellect amongst them, but they had mostly goue up from the House of Commons. (Laughter,) The only part of the art of life that the peers knew was the expenditure part of «it . Partly by the accident of birth they sat in judgment as a court of apâ€" . peal upon those representing millons o(l people. It was an intolerable plece of arrogance. W seuk i cce T IF YOU SUFFER L on m ee MTAAOrCY Whs & great standing menace to progress, and he bad never felt it so much as since he had taken his share as a responsible Minister. It was like a skeleton at the Cabinet table. It would not reject great meaâ€" sures. The Lords would hardly dare to, but there were other mensures which large sections of the _ community _ deâ€" manded in their own interest apart from the rest of the people. _ These they cou‘d eject with impunity. Still worse, they could disfigure and mutilate them. (‘Shame.") _ That was where the mischief of this House came in. He was glad to see that the National Liberal â€" Federation was beginning to realize that part of the work they had to do had reference to the House _ of Lords. (Cheers.) . It was time to â€" think about it again. (Cheers.) It had reâ€" cently given a reminder to the mischief that was in it It was time to begin to serutinize _ calmly the claims â€" of the l:ord: to override the will of the peonle Tz _ j ___Dretride the will of the peo;;l_e? (Loud â€" and prolonged cheers.) He â€" had always felt that the House of Lords was V OB OR IOorme, Ceiiighaihies ds s froversial measure â€" (laughter) â€" which the House was now considering. Although _ there was nothing to be frightemed.. at, they had to deal with a powerfui federation _ of interests and syndicatesâ€"landed interests, the Estabâ€" lished Church, and the brewing interest. Then there was the Press; . and â€"their opponents had also got wealth and society â€"with a big "9." They had got the House of Lords. In the absence of Sir Henry Campbellâ€" Bannerman, Mr. Lioyd George addressed a big meeting in the Sun Hall, Liverâ€" pool, on May 2%th, in connection with the visit of the National Liberal Federation. The Government meant business,. and had not made a bad start. ,They had introduced a few little billsâ€"the Workâ€" men‘s Compensation Trade Disputas, and the Education Billâ€"a little unconâ€" troversial measure â€" (laughter) â€" which the House was now considering. For Coughs and Colds. WARNS THE LORDS. Mr. Lioydâ€"George Says They Are Guilty TRAOL MARK REGISTERED A BROAD STATEMENT. A Philadelphia Story. should not his friend Mr. Vivian Birkenhead ? (Laughter,) Why ot he (Mr, Lloyd _ George) be rnarvon ? (Great laughter â€"and The gentleman known by that id never been inside the town. d He would not so _ much ut the House of Lords if they men _ of _ sunerior Seqn i aall d Sllc q C CBUT TUHAT Just demands of the case n lntoler;‘l’;le_l:)i;co cheers.) No Lib possibly sit under it 3 WB I . 7 Sit under it, Jf put forward their ilsonâ€"Flye No Liberal ‘ Result of Wearing High Collars, That high collars tend to produce nerâ€" vous headaches among both men and woâ€" men is the most recent discovery of a !well-known Viennese physician. " Quite accidentally the doctor‘s attention was ' directed to the very high and very ‘tight style of collar worn by a patient who was always complaining ofp headâ€" aches and giddiness. The collar was laid aside, thus removing the compresâ€" sion of the neck, and the patient‘s headâ€" 'achen and giddiness disappeared. Sthuck | by this result the doctor paid particular : attention to the kind of collars worn by | his "headprche patients," and in very many instances the change to lower and easier fitting collars brought immediate relief. In the case of women wearing high, stiff neckbands it was found that doing away with these had a similarly beneficial result. The doctor declares , that nobody with any tendency to headâ€" | ache should wear high collars. to look at *‘ Look But Do Not Touch, (Milwaukee Sentinel.) ‘"Has your wife got your den fixed up yet?" **Yes, and you ought to see it. It‘s the eosiest place in the whole house." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. "I suppose you find great comfort in It, don‘t you?" o um winp on wore Aaigamroomemenen ui + ostmaster Works With His Feet. New Zealand possesses a postmaster who, for all practical purposes, is armâ€" less. Owing to a physical deformity, which renders his hands useless, he is obliged to do and actually does all the clerical work of his office with his feet. He uses an idelible pencil in his office work, with which he writes clearly and legibly. _ He has been in charge of the post office at Te Uku for the last eleven year. The official reports of the inspecâ€" tors of the New Zealand Postal Departâ€" ment show that he has given every satisâ€". faction in the discharge of his duties. He: makes out money orders, postal notes, and the periodical official statement by using his feet. In the same way he applies the date stamps to letters with wonderful rapidity. He can also use a hammer, saw and other carpenters‘ tools with his feet. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ‘"Oh. she won‘t let me go in it. It‘s merely We believe MINARD‘S LINIMENT is the best: Matthias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N. 8. Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N. 8. Pierre Landry, sen., Pokemouche, N.B. Thomas Wasson, Sheffield, N. B. ‘‘To The V Postmaster Works With His ‘ress on and strive,"" the Seal replied, ‘To make a good impression.‘" e Window framed its answer thus : ‘Take pains‘‘â€"that closed the session. â€"Boston Transcript ‘7 boot. The foot and ankle were sw f: nearly double their ordinary size Mrs. Lizzie Gilmour, of Kingston, says: "I had an ulcerated leg, which became so bad that I could not wear a Experiences of Housekeepers Who Keep It Handy. In every home cuts, bruises. scalds and similar injuries are sure to occur, especâ€" ially where there are children. In most homes too chapped hands, chilblains, eczema, ringworm, ulcers and other skin EVERY HOME NEEDS ZAMâ€"BUC I Success ankle were swollen stuck im: Recognized the Symptoms. (Houston, Tex., Post.) ‘‘I presume you spend all you make?" *No; I don‘t spend a tenth of 1t." **Then you must hrre a nice little balance in the bank?" Criticism Beginning to Pall, (New Orleans Timesâ€"Democrat.) ‘There is a world of wisdom in Disraeli‘s biting remark, ‘‘You know who critics are? The men who have failed in literature and art?" By the same token we sre being surâ€" feited with essays on ethics and finance by people who have themselves been neither honest nor prosperous. This sort of ecritiâ€" cism is beginning to be appraised at its true value and we shall soon see the mere iconoâ€" clast relegated to the obscurity from which he should never be suffered to emerge. Wednesday, November 28th, Tickets only $9.00 round trip from Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls, _ Tickets good on regular express trains leaving Susâ€" pension Bridge 3.50 and 7.15 a,. m., 7.15 and 843 p. m,. Tickets good 15 days. For tickets and further particulars, cal! or write Robt. S. Lewis, Canadian Pasâ€" senger Agent, 10 King street east, Toâ€" ronto. ‘‘Yes, but the thief is already caught. Just think, the fool took it to the pawnsbop and there they immediately recognized it as mine and detained kim." _ _ (Fliegende Blaetter.) ‘"Hello, Rummel, I hear you had your watch stolen the other day?" ® t Fifteenâ€"Day New York Excursion Via Lehigh Valley Railroad. Sbake, old chap; I‘m married myself." Then comes the upper sheet, and last a blanket heavy eough to keep baby warm. Aired daily in the sunshine, this is hygienic, if not orthodox. Next to the blanket is placed a rubber blanket. And over the rubber blanket is one of softest white cotton. This blanket should be put on a good wire spring. _ _ A soft, thick blanket is best, folded four double. It must be soft. It must be aired. It should be in the sun. * Mattresses are declared unsanitary. Baby should not sleep on hair, feath ers. wool or cotton. Cheap German Labor. (New York Journal of Commerce.) But there has probably been no more patent factor than the difference in labor conditions. Labor is cheaper in Germany and more amenable to discipline. Laâ€" "bor â€" unions in _ England â€" and _ Wales ‘have established classes among workmen, and by their restrictions have created a bermanent grade of the unemployed which is nresenting a perplexing problem to the Govâ€" ernment. By limiting apprenticeships, reâ€" stricting production per man, and forcing higher wages and shorter bours in favored ©ccupations, they have done much to retard the progress of the country. Germany bas been free from this trammel. Dear Mother He is charming, he is frivolous. Then of a sudden his face darkens; he beâ€" comes serious; he stares at her royal highness, studying her form from head to foot; he smites his brow and cries despairingly: "No! no! I can‘t see you in that gown toâ€"day!" _ The mere man who comes into a dressâ€" maker‘s shop of an afternoonâ€"in Paris no one goes to the dressmaker‘s save only in the afternoonâ€"hegins by sneerâ€" ing at this fantastic creature, â€" That mood does not last long. Contempt gives way to admiration. There is something marvellous in the way this lord of lace and ribon dominates the womenâ€"the royal highness as well as the spoiled actress. His manners are a strange mixture of ‘humility and insolence, for he is at once a salesman and an artist. And he talks, talks, talksâ€"bending his slim body into polite curvesâ€"gesticulating with his thin white handsâ€"rolling his eyes in their painted orbits, and while he fumbles silke and velvets and satins and lace and wool. Man Dressmaker of Paris a Marvel and a Magnate, % 'Tbe dressmaker is a slim young man with a long nose and big, winsome eyes. Wearing a grey frock and patent leather shoesâ€"corseted and powdered and perâ€" fumedâ€"he is more than a man; he is & dressmaker. He is saturated with danâ€" dyism. It is not of an offensive kind. It Had Been There Befor. what it has done for so many 2 It is said to be the only reliable remedy for all diseases of the air passages in children. &"f"fifim e iy . Itis tocureotyoulmouy is returned. The price is 25c. per bottle, Sud all deglers py uy un on oo No it This remedy should be in every household. S$HIL O H tion Cure, the Lung Tonic, and O ie tep on Cure: the Lung Tonk, and Your little ones are a constant care i Fall and Winter weather. They wil Sich ould, . 1an rou Paop abou Sbhin eatch cold. Lo you know about Shiloh‘s LORD OF LACE AND RIBBON. Baby‘s Bed 314 Great country, though. Where else on the face of the globe would you find Coroner Acritelli investigating the case of Aram Tashjiam, charged with chopping up his brother, Markhear Tasbjiam, the @risoner being ably represented by Harold Spielberg. Were it rot that Dr. McGuire, the Tombs physicians, testified in the case nobody would ever know it bappened in New York. It is uscless to cry for the i to the City Council or the p vestor. Men of enterprise & homes because it no longer another way of saying that . reached the point at which th ductive worker can no longer Sunlight Boap is ;tn:»r ti;aâ€" other soape, but is best when use in the Sunlight way. Buy Surlight Sonp ead follow Cirections. _.__L.._.. s€ Sufficient for Location EDDY‘S SAFETY MATCHES ror November 2nd and November 20th are dates of New York excursions via West Shore Railroad, $9.00 round trip from Suspension Bridge or Buffalo, qficketl good going only on above dates in all regular trains. Good ten days for reâ€" turn. L. Drago, Canadian Passenger Agent, 6016 Yonge street, Toronto, for all parâ€" ticulars. PARL ’ Suddenly the squardon of men in front opened, wheeling off to the right and left, and we were looking into the iron throats of a masked battery, They openâ€" ed fire upon usâ€"a moment after the ear aplitting thunder, and 1 was in a hell of smoke, duet, blood, and metal; every piece seemed to sing a war chant of its own. Then I awoke and I was shouting "God! T never knew it was anything like this." Here surely is something experiâ€" enced by an ancestor which has descendâ€" ed from generation to generation _ and taken its place in my collection of imâ€" pressions.â€"From the Nineteenth _ Cenâ€" tury. ’ We dream of things which we have mnever experienced in our waking momâ€" ents. I remember a very realistic dream. It was a battle, and I was in a regiment of cavalry that _ received an order to charge, The whole scene is vividly beâ€" fore me as I write, and were I an artâ€" ist I could sketch the face of a man who rode by my side. 1 can feel the throb of cagerness the thudding of the horses hoofs in the mad rush as we quickened our pace to get to closer quarters with those we were pursuing. I think very often our dreams are & jumble of ideas that we have inherited, and that dreaming is largely a kind of free play of what 1 have called ancesâ€" tral memory. November Excursion to New York Via West Shore Railroad. And so, evilâ€"boded, This monatrous lie goaded 'l‘i.ll at last it exploded, In smoke and in shame:; While from mud and from mire The uleces flew higher, And u1 the sad liar, And killed his good name. A terrible crew. An while headiong they hurried, The people they flurried, And troubled and worried, As lies always do. This lie brought for others, Dark sisters and brothers, Aqd fathers and mothersâ€" Aunr frightened the moon; For she hid her sweet face, . In a veil of cloudâ€"lace, sir, At the dreadful disgrace, sir That happened at noon. It grew deep and high, sir, Til it _reached to the sky, sir From a very small lie, sir Till they got it outside; When the crowd came acr It never once lost it, First, somebody told it, Then the room wouldn‘t hold it, So the busy tongues rolled it To Account for Strang« Dreams, Till it grew long and wide. THE SUNLIGHT m â€" & 1 ~â€"WAY # PA | | | Looo RUB ON SUNLIGHT SOAP What Became of a Lie? Toronto‘s Calamity, (Globe.) MATCHEsS _which the no longer : the impossible either the philanthropic inâ€" ise are not building onger pays. ‘This is that our growth has afford a home face, sir, CSULEMDM L 1 CLOuK 14." , HOSPITALS, 3nm ETc ArEROUSEs it, HOTELS wl P Ge _ Offers Prima Facie Evidence. Judgeâ€"You mean to say that you base your demand for divorce on the allegation that your wife can‘t cook a decent mea}* That‘s no g;ound for divorce. Plaintiffâ€"Your honor, would You . main® naomint mmeamsa . _ s 6 Minard‘s Mrs. Henry Peok._ had a wife '{o was a Well, who taught you did. Who uught you baby? I did. Who 4 thing you know ab housecleaning and w did. Bah! The tro that you don‘t appre when you have one. soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures wiza colic and is the best remedy for Dis â€" 16 for i0c; 50 for b0c; 100 for B0c; all ditâ€" ferent; 500 for $3 mssorted; 1,000 envelopes 50c and 60c; 1,00 foreign stamps B%c. W. R. Adams, 401 Yonge strect, Toronto, Ont. Winsiow‘s Soothing Hyrup should aiâ€" ":_".‘b,u-l for dm-é.‘c- teothine â€" It PICTURE POST CARDS F on saue. 2 ONCE, CHEAP vn&i& mo + mores grazi farm good bulglnn. in County of "Sm-; only $200 down or secured and balance in easy paymente. Address London Loan Company, London, Ont. To ladies and gentlemen; pernament posiâ€" tion; rapid advancement; salary and exâ€" penses; genteel, dosirable business; experâ€" fence unnecessery; full instructions given. Write THE J. L. NICHOLE CO., LIMITED, TORONTO. (Mention this paper ) A Good Salary ISSUE NO. 45, 1906. "The reason for this is because Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure, contains no injurious chemicals i rofwap thm is noling but soap. Equally good with hard or soft water. Sunlight Soap will not injure even the daintiest fabric or the Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way (follow Liniment Cures Diphtheria. any / by the dealer from whom 1 and washi fis?.?-"; !.‘The tmubl::..with you is don‘t appreciate a good wife have one. Hard rubbing and boiling are ‘"5 J eckâ€"What? Wish you w{o was a helpmeent to yout taught you how to sew * 1 taught you how to mind the id. Who taught you everyâ€" know about dustine _ 1. FARMS FOR SALE. AGENTS WANTED., MISCELLANEOUS, W A 3C is used as ie ‘We CHAPLES V U It Chi M ar LARGE SC Def HUG th List a Meeti )

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