West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 13 Dec 1906, p. 8

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| There is plenty of trouble here, but we need not increase it. There is a lot of dying done ahead of time. There are living men who have already crossed Jorâ€" dan two or three times, and, unfortunâ€" ately, they are not of the type who "oross the river of Jordan happy in the Lord." but who sing, if they sing at all. dismalest, dreariest, deadliest music. The very tone is fatal to happiness. If you have faith .preach it; if you have doubts, bury them. If you have jov, share it: if you have sorrow, bear it. Find the bright side of thingsâ€"God‘s side â€"and help others to get sight of it also.â€" Zion‘s Herald. We love the man with a smile, the man with the roses on his tongue, the man who sees your boy‘s dirty face but mentions his bright eyes, who notices your shabb{ coat but praises _ your studious habits, the man who sees all the fxults but whose tongue is quick to praise and slow to blame. We like to meet a man whose smile will light up dreariness, whose voice is full of _ the music of the birds, whose handâ€"shake is an inspiration, and his "God bless you" a benediction. He makes us forget our troubles as the raven‘s dismal croak is forgotten when the wood thrush or the brown thrasher sings. God bless the man of cheer! ie 2. G" â€" nature, probsbly t and at the same t and sppailing, is th of a volcano during toilsome ascent, nc hard sclidified lava more recently disch warm and sufiicient the impression of For God‘s tender mercy brooding Sends the Dayspring from on high To remove sin and transgression, To enlighten every eye; Yea, the light will cause the darkness And death‘s shadow both to cease ; He will guide the feet that stumbled In the blessed paths of peace. "They were not able to enter in beâ€" eause of unbelief. We who have believed do enter in. Wherefore, toâ€"day if you shall hear His voice burden not your lugart.” Hebrews iii. 19; iv. 3,7. Rev. Verâ€" siomn. When the promised son was born Aughanah (like Thomas) was forced to believe. Then he dared to affirm his deâ€" lhef in God‘s covenant to Abraham. Let God‘s word be accounted true. Rom. iii. 3, for with God nothing is impossible. Matt. xix. 26. "Blessed be the God of Israel," Cried the priest with loosened tongue While in high and holy rapture O‘er his infant son be bung; Though his faith in God hath faltered, Yet. despite his faithlessness, Lo. Jehovah had proved faithful To his covenant to bless. Thou, my child, the bhonored prophet Of the Most High shalt be known; Thou shalt go before Messiah That His coming may be shown; As the herald of the Saviour Thou shalt go before His face To prepare the people for Him With the message of God‘s grace. C1 Zachariah, the priest, was burning inâ€" cense in the holy place when the angel, Gabriel, appeared and ghve him a gloriâ€" ous message from God. Could circumâ€" stances mode conducive to faith be imagâ€" ined? Zachariah, however, did not beâ€" ‘l’iove the message and as a result became umb As he snoke by holy prophets Since the world began to be, That He would the race deliver _ Free us from our enemy, W Whe W\ Blessed be the God of Israel, Who His coverant hath kept; He hath wrought for us redemption Wiile in faithlessness we slept; He hath raised a mighty Saviour Of our royal David‘s seed, He hath visited His people He is the son of faithful Abra‘m. Who from infancy had heard Of the wondrous birth of Ismac, Dared to doubt God‘s promised word. Now hbe saw that word fulfilled, And, in fervor deep and strong, From his heart convinced. believing Woelled this great thanksgiving song In The Man of Cheer. ntly discharged henee these swirling floods orth from the mighty furâ€" r secns tpon ocons has The Dumb Priest. Luke L. Fiecy Orgasm, of di mes the merey promised ‘ore the world to bless, htcous we shall serve Him . in holiness. ‘harged, _ and _ still itly plastic to receive a coin or seal, and respeciful distanceâ€" nts of hot, stcaming alownwards in molten icts, and deluging the of the mountain in a and devastation, the it lengih the dread is that vast seething and majestic displey _ wrath is Leing cenâ€" of fire whist hither s the carth opens her 70 Y3amn2d wong@ers of e mosi stupendous, me the most weird > view of the crater an eruption. After a w over streams of _now past currents lea upon ocons has candescent inter need mm cepens o e non in sls sc mopnie ns Anily on llay Sn n n ereed P W Â¥eifas Â¥ade. eb teniiirng t en s of + Varied Englishman. (Pall Mall Gabette.) The system of inquiring into your aationâ€" ality when you are embarking on the boat &rom Boulogte or Calais is a complete farce. MWithin the iast month I have crossed five times. On being asked whether I was a | British subject, I have given the following ! answers: i 4) "Yes." ; / C . ‘‘No.‘* (¢c) "I am a Presbyterian." (d) "I am a Welsh Jew." @) "I am a Nonconformist Beaver." } Nothing seems to make any difference. ene of these accumulations the whole of Wales sank beneath the sea level, rising again to its existing height as the ice melted away. In hotter regions masses of coral are forming reefs and atolls, rising in some cases from water bundreds of fathoms deep. ‘The polypes forming the coral can only live in surf near the surface, and unless subsidence had continuously kept pace with deposition no such masses could bave been formed. Many of the great rivers empty into bays sheltered from coast currents and there forin deltas which have been proved by borings to be thou:ands of feet thick. yet each foot has been formed in water a few feet deep, as proved by the angle of bedding, the fauna, drifted land debris and the sorting action of the . waves. In all these casos the crust must have sagged under the increasing load of ; give way under the additions of weight along | added material, and did nit not similarly the littoral zone overy island and conunentl would be surrounded by miles of shoals | no deeper than the disturbing motion of the} waves. When the crust sags out to sea the column of water over it deepens, augmenting j the pressure. The pressure acting on tho . molten layer tends to squeeze it, not seaward | where the water is deeper, but toward thei shore where a line of least resistance is alâ€" , ready prepared by the breakers. 1 The effect of steadily increasing latoral i pressure acting on a long and relativ ely weak : shore line of heterogencous materials must be extremely complex. The molten matter is able to eat its way upward like a corrosive fluid melting the rocks it successively comes , in contact with, until it finds relief in pouriag , out lava in streams of appalling magnituds. : This was the fate of the seaboard of the | northeast Atlantic in tertiary times, remains of these eruptions existing in the masses of basaitic trap rock in Antrim, the Hebrides, | Faroes, Iceland, Spitzbergen and Greenland. | But where the superincumbent strata are sthil ; thick and massive, and especially where they have been already arched into lMnes of hills, as. jJudging by the watershed, must have been the case along the Pacific coast of Amerâ€" fca, the molten mater would continually and irresistably force the crust upward, proâ€" ducing a chain of mountains, volcanic or otherwise, parallel to the coast. Simultaâ€" neously, owing to the pressure being lateral, the molten liquid would force itself along existing cléavage planes and lines of bedding of laminated and stratified rocks, for it must not be overlooked that all sedimentary strata upheaved above sea level are bent and strainâ€" ed, dried and shrunk and infiltrated, everyâ€" where presenting lines of fracture and partâ€" ings, like masonry on a Cyelopean | scale. On these the moiten matter, capable of disâ€" solving as well as penetrating, presses with ever increasing insistence, gathering force perhaps for years, until resistance suddenly yields for the fiery liquid is injected with terrific disruptive force slong the lines of bedding. ‘Thus the shocks of earthquake which startle ctvilization and destroy opuâ€" lent cities are produced at uncertain interâ€" vals and without warning. On the west coast of America we are witnessing this majeatic action in full force toâ€"day, for the mighty Pacific is slowly deepening along , Its eaztern margin and raising its long shore t line into colossal ridges which now form | almost continuous chains of mountains. 1 The United States Census Bureau on the 14th inst., estimated the total wealth of the country in 1904 to be $106,881,â€" 415,000. This shows an increase in the wealth over the estimates for 1900 of nearly 21 per cent., and of mearly 64 per cent. over the estimate for 1898, when the total wealth was $65,037,001,â€" 107. If the crust were undisturbed, layer upon which it rests would â€" but atmospheric agencies, frost are ceaslessly at work transport from the hills and depositing it sea, decreasing the pressure here to it there. ‘The rivers de‘ous sea charged with silt, which is deposited outside the influence ‘3:Id Llhe breakers acting like a Tosonto. â€"Eczema, Salt Rheum, Tetter, etc.â€"â€"yicldquickly to the healing power of Mira Ointment. _ "A few hours after the frst application," writes Lro Corrigan, 475 Ferguson Ave., N., H'un'#al, "I/(U,rtal relrrj, Mira has worked wonders for me." (He had Eczema for years.) 6 h It the crust so flexible as to be sensible to such readjustments of weight? In a past age when perhaps man was already among its inhabitants the earth suffered in places from a glacial period, when vast ice caps formed over the elerated regions. Under 2. _ 2,8°C WR sit, which is eventually deposited outside the influence of the sur?, and the breakers acting like a rasp along the base of the cliits contribute their quota of sediment, eroding and breaking up the coast, the material boing carried out by the waves to swell the doposits forming parallel to the shore within the littoral zone. Geology reveals that these deposits may in time reach thousands of feet in thickness. Simultaâ€" neously the removal of weight by the breakâ€" ers impairs the reslsting power of the crust along the actual sea margin. Thus two parâ€" allel lines are continually forming, the one of increasing pressure and the other of deâ€" creasing resistance. Our globe would thercfore consist of an outer cooied heterogeneous and flexible crust, wihh a temperature increasing downward and passing into rocks at and above the melting point in a liquid state, which in turn overlie the heated nucleus, kept solid by compression and of the rigidity of steel. at some not altogether inaccessible depth by rock in a molten state, both fiuid and pastry, through heat. Below this is tie inâ€" tensely heated solid sphere. to which astronâ€" omers assign the rigidity and density of steel and which is kept solid by compression of the external layers. Between the superheated nucleus, kept solid by compression and the cool enveloping shell in which lies the comâ€" pressing force, some intermediate condition must exist. With lessening pressure nearer the surface normal conditions must prevail, and rocks at their melting temperature must be in the liquid state of slag from a smeltâ€" ing furnace. Of the conditions prevailing beneath the crust we know far less. When pits are sunk the temperature increases at a progressive rate with the depth, boiling springs are encountered, some making their way to the surface, red hot stones and ash and molten rock are violently extruded through vents, but most significant of all to the geologist is the metamorphism of rocks, which must have been melted at relatively moderate depths but are now exposed on the surface in every quarter or the globe. ‘There is thus the cerâ€" h.inll imat the cooled surface is underiain Scaly Skin Discases The earth‘s crust is composed of heteroâ€" gencous elements; but all possess oue imâ€" portant property, flexibilitq, though in varyâ€" ing Gegrees. Alike in very mouerate eleâ€" vations and in lofty mountain chaiss the rocks are seen to have been thrown into arches and troughs and even to nave been crumbled and folded like sheets ‘of paper or disiocated or broken up by the enormous strains and stresses they have been subjected to. These are the strikes, dips, synclinals and anticlinals, faults, folds, upthrows and downthrows of geologists, modest examples of which can be seen anywhere in cliffs ll’?‘ even in a_uarriu and railway cuttings. * (He had l-.':zmaforyears.l)l. .O Insist on getiing the genuine, with this trademarkâ€" i 4 TRADEL MARK REGISTERCD, ° fhe deposits forming parallel ithin the littoral zone. Ueology ese deposits may in time reach feet in thickness. Simultaâ€" moval of weight by the breakâ€" e reslsting power of the crust ie t mm t mtc d duw B disturbed, the molten ts would be inactive; ies, frost and rain. orting weignt it under the re and adding uch into the tin A hardy breed of men doing their duty as they find it, the sailors o fthe Great Lakes are more and more in demand to man the new fleets that are building every year. While the shipyards of the sea coast were wailing over the dearth of business, the shtpyards of the lakes booked orders for thirtyâ€"one steel vessels for the season of 1906, in size from six to twelve thousand tons capacity, with a total value of $14,000,000. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, ‘‘Well, I ain‘t got it," answered the woman fiercely. And the door closed with a bang. Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by Called at the Wrong Place. (Ladies‘ Home Journal.) ‘"If you please, mum,"‘ said the anctent hero, in an appealing voice. as he stood at the back door of the cottage on washday, "‘I‘ve lost my legâ€"â€"*" GOOLD, SHAPLEY @ MUIR CO. LIMITED, . â€" Brantford, Canada. * IMPERIAL" PUMPINS WINDMILL Tarred Roads Free From Dust. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) An excellent suggestion for the improveâ€" mept of country roads comes from France. The French as well as all other peoples suffer from the clouds of dust which make travel disagrecable during the . summer months. ‘To provide dustless roads an oxâ€" tremely inexpensive application of tar has been used with the most satisfactory reâ€" sults. Not only is the dust prevented but the roadbed is improved. Automobilists may now spin along the dryest French roads withâ€" out spoiling the millinery of the women, while the householders, relieved from the comstant clouds of stifling dust, hail the inâ€" movation as a godsend. The fact, however. seems to be that the three balls were taken from the lowâ€" er part of the coat of arms of the Dukes of Midici, from whose dominions _ the first money lenders cmigrated to Engâ€" land. This explains why some of the anâ€" cient pawnbrokers used five blue balls, for the coat of arms in heraldic language is described as five bezants azure. A nobleman, so the story goes, sudâ€" denly becoming poor. found himself unâ€" able to provide for the marriage of his three daughters. The nows of his sad plight came to the ears of the saintly bishon,. who immediately came to the resâ€" cue by placing three bags of gold _ in the nobleman‘s window at night. each bag containing a sufficient dowry for one maider. The three purses accordingly became the emblem of St. Nicholas, and when the bankers of northern Ttaly gook up the business of iending money they appropriated it, considering themselves #ood followers of the generous saint. Pawnshop Emblem Taken From Dukes of Medici. The origin of the pawnbroker‘s the three golden balls. is accounte by Rumor, legend and fact. Some English wit said the chanees we â€" Gray‘s SyRup or Reo Spruce Gum Has never yet failed to Cure Rheuma tism. $1 per bottle. For $5 we will send you the Complete Rheumaticfoe treatment, acccmpanied by a signed guarantce that if a cure is not effected your muney will be returned to you. Ii you have Rheumatism, fill out the attached Coupon, and send it to us. You have nothing to lose, but everything to gain. Rh t. f RHEUMATICFOE is the only mediâ€" cine that is purely and simply a Rheuâ€" matism Cure. It cures Rheumatism by cleansing the blood of those impurities that cause Rhceumatism. In many cases a single Dollar Bottle will cause a cure. A thorough treatment of Rheumaticfoe will cure the most severe case of Rheuâ€" matism. That is why we make our GUARANTEE OFFFER Dept HOPE & HOPKINS, 17714 Yongze Street, Toronto. Dear Sirs,â€"Please send me parâ€" ticular= of your guaranteed Cure for Rheumatism to NAME . 2 200 is ic ol es t c o SIGN OF THE THREE BALLS The Great Lakes Fleet. (Outing Magazine.) l the mealle lungsâ€"ward off the cough. . *;"â€"â€"" ing, w“. curative wt‘“ Canadian mâ€"eonblnedn‘m'tb aromatics, PI::.: to take. 25 cts Address A few doses, at the first sign of a cold, will allay all throat ationâ€"take away hoarsenessâ€"check the inflammationâ€" Indispensable in Winter. ONTARIO ARCHIVE TORONTO ‘There‘s a need in every home for the ‘ No Longer of Any Value. | (New York Weekly.) i Confidence manâ€" I should like to see Mr. Hayseed of Hayseedville. _ f ‘‘Well, sub," answered Erastus Pinkley, "I *spose I could do mo‘, but I never was much of a hand foh showin‘ off." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. (Washington Star.) t "‘Is that all the work you can do in a dayt" asked the discontented employer. _ He varies in color, a deep brownish hue being natural, but he has been seen in orange and in white. t $ Commendable Business Enterprise. (Sedalla, Mo., Sentinel.) W. W. Cecil, the genial barber, has purâ€" chased an attracuve barber‘s pole, which he has placed in front of his shop on West Second street, and many complimentary reâ€" markg wore heard as a result. Eo P ie en o use He is very industrious, having tunnelâ€" ed as much as 100 yards in a single might.s !:;s <} 8 His eyes are remarkably small, as he has very little need for such luxuries, while his nose and claws (he digs with them) are highly developed. â€" Hotel Clerkâ€"He is over there at the cashâ€" ler‘s desk paying his bill. Confidence man (sadly)â€"I‘m too late. His fur has become very fashionable in the last few vears. He is a splendid swimmer and is not phased by a freshet. . He lives chiefily upon insects and earthworms. He appears above grourd only after darkness has fallen. He was one of the original tunnel exâ€" cavators, undoubtedlv. He has ‘been altogether wrongtully blamed by the farmer. C * He is extremely retiring. He always lives underground. He constructs avenues under the sod. His nest is about six inches under the surface. | _ We suggested at the start that it is dying down in many plsces. Having been so long lived in the past, it is dyâ€" ing hard. And. as #ll well adinit, it has been the missionary foreigners, or the more genial mes and women of that class, who have heen the chicf agents in changing it for something better. Not that the forcign babies have not helped, When in the ‘60‘s Dr. ‘Porter Smith, of Hankow, walked in the Chinose strects with his liitle child on his shoulder the Chinese exclaimed: â€" ‘He cannot be a forâ€" eign devil. See! he is smiling at his little child."â€"East of Asia Mazazine. Your Doctor ’urocu.\'. inen ailer a generation or the term "foreign demon" was utiliz }by mothers with fractious children. mus« as the name Bomsparte was for a whi in England: "If you don‘t stop ths noise, I‘ll teil Boney to come and tal you!" The moenticn of "ccean flends was fourd to afford a potert; sedatir for blatant juveniles, and #o it has cor tinued in use. since the sixteonth »as iue C:ina seas, in addition to their | own bands of native pirates, became in« { fasted in those eatly years with far‘ more Garing piratical spirits from these , three ralions. And, at first confined | to the eoast, the term "occan demon" or , pirate gradually spread into the interâ€" | ior, being propagated from place to place : in reperts and rumors which doubtless magnified the actual doings of the lawâ€" less Furopeans into doeds of fiendish atrocity. Then after a seneration or so the term "foreign Gemon" was utilized by mothers with fractious children. much as the name Bomsparte was for a while in Tinelaruts +1E s4imn ARRIE : nkme Mc 4 There are more than 4,000 fferent itions of the Bible in the British Muâ€" Lurepeans, but did England, i lowed. C $HILOH The as ‘%uickly 1 hy not do as hundreds of thousznds of Canadians have done for the past thirtyâ€"four years : let SHILOH be your docâ€" tor whenever a Cough or Cold apgears. y HILOH will cure you, and all drufigists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. The next time you have a Cough or Cold cure it with Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, butâ€" why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of loocking him up, and then of having hisprescription filled, when you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a botile of SHILOH‘S CURE for a quarter. l AW Why pay two to five dollars when a twcntg-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you Of an Unostentatious Turn. at a w «_Â¥ OF "FCOREIGN DEVIL" THE MOLE much while that take L7 ie tnivintit Aprithisters Th ss...~3 you don‘t if you are poor, is because they seldom pay for articles until they are received, and not then if they don‘t suit, but in your case it is you and not the other fellow who seems to get stuck on the transaction. This is because this olase of people put into practice the prinâ€" ciple I, am expatiating upon of never paying for things in advance.‘â€"Was. "Never pay for goods, or a garment, for instance, until you get it and it suits you and not its maker, though this has no reference for goods bought outright in a store which are to be delivered. And in this class of purchases, if you wish them at a specified time, otherwise they would be of no use to you, pay on delivâ€" ery; then you will in all probability get them at the hour you and not the other party want them delivered. "If you will take the trouble to opâ€" serve in lawsuits brought by tradesmen most of them are for balances due rather than for the entire amount of the bill. One of the main reasons why the weilâ€" toâ€"do seem to get what thew want ... Business Man Shows How Many Persons Make a Great Mistake. "Never pay for anything in advance and half the trouble in households and in housckeeping will be avoided," said the manager of a large business house. "It is a habit on the part of some peoâ€" ple, this paying in advance habit, and if you will take the trouble to keep tab on it you will observe that such people are, more or less, considerably more than less, in hot water figuratively most of the time. This is particularly true as regards the performance of labor on the part of other individuals, or where cerâ€" tain things or articles are to be made for another. It is the indulgent, easy houseâ€" keeper who ray\s her help off before it is due who always sings tL saddest and the longest song on the household doâ€" mestic problem. From all over America they testify to the merits of MINARD‘S LINIMENT, the best of Houschold Remedies. We publish simple, straight testimonâ€" ials, not press agents‘ interviews, from wellâ€"known people. Last of the Widows. (Buffalo Exchange.) A peculiar interest aitaches to the death of Mrs. Esther Summer Damon of Plyâ€" mouth Union, Vt., who died the other day at the age of 92 years, from the fact that she was the last of the "Revolutionary ’Widows.” That account is now closed on the vpension books of the United States. _ ‘The War of National Independence endcd in 1783, and yet we find a wigow of a soldier of that war a pensioner of the Government in 1906. The question will naturally arise, how can it be? Well, according to the records, Esther Summer, the old lady who has just died, an own cousin of the famous statesman, Charles Summer, was born at Bridgewater, Vt., August lst, 1814. At the age of 21, she met Noah Damon, a veteran of the Revolution, then 76 years old, and after a courtship of two weeks they were married. lHe served more than five years during the war in various organizations, and heard British bullets whistle in several enâ€" gagements. There is no doubt about that, according to the records of the Pension Bureau at Washington. Why the young woâ€" man married the old soldier is a matter of conjecture, but she was one of many who about that time imade similar matrimonial venture, presumably for, the scant pension that congress had decreed to ail widows of soldiers of that war. Damon is said to have been impecunious and helpless and his young wife had to aid in his support during the few years that he lived. Then she was awardâ€" ed $8 per month ponsion, which was afterâ€" wards increased to $12, and a few years ago was doubled. She was also awarded $200 a year by the Vermont Legislature and the Daughters‘ of the American Revolution in that State contributed to her support during the last few years of her life. But at best the income was meagre, and she earned a little money by sewing and nursing, until old age made work impossible. She had other offers of marriage, after her veteran died, but refused them all. Mrs. Damon was legally entitled to all she got from the Govâ€" ernment. But the law was defective and has now been so modified, that there is no longer any inducement to young women to marry old soldiers, for the pension money. ‘ MINARDS LINIMEXNT CO., LIMITED EVILS OF PAYING IN ADVANCE. Of all druggists at 50c. per box. Mrs. R. Saville, of Oakwood, Ont. says :â€"*‘*For headache, debility, inâ€" digestion, and biliousness I tried many medicines, but I never met with anything to equal Bileans. They cured me. Bileans are purely herbal and Nature‘s remedies are Mwa‘yu best. Don‘t dally ! Write for sample box to" B:leans. Toronto," (sending le. stamp for return postage), or buy a box from your druggist. Have you headache, back pains or pains in the chest ? Have you that "allâ€"gono" feeling? Do you have fits of acute pain or wind after :ood ? If so remember that health deâ€" pends on three main organsâ€" liver, stomach and intestines, and Bileans regulate all three. A WORD T O woM EN TAKE NOTICE. advance.‘â€"Wash . A cheap disinfectant to use in serubâ€" bing or washing utensils in a sick room is made by adding a teaspoonful of turâ€" pentine to every bucket of hot water. Turpentine is a powerful disinfectant and will dispel all bad odors. If a tin of paint has to be left open, stir it thoroughly, so as to dissolve all of the oil, then fill up with water. When it becomes necessary to use the paint pour off the water and you will find it as fresh as when first opened. Eggs covered with boiling water and allowed to stand for five minutes are more nourishing and easier digested than eggs placed in boiling water and allowâ€" ed to be minutes Useful Hints. Wooden breadboards should be serubâ€" bed with sand or salt instead of soap, in order to be kept in good condition. Flatiron holders, if lined with a layer of soft leather, like the top of a boâ€"t, will protect your hand from heat far better than if made in the ondirzry way. f "I began using Dr, Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€" Pill. From the start I improved. I feel much stronger, look better, and altogeâ€" ther Antiâ€"Pill has made a new woman of me. "I am entirely cured." All dealers or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 604 "Sometimes I would have to lie down to keep from falling. My hands and feet would seem to go to lleer and a sort of numbness would come all over me. "I was afraid to draw my breath, it pained me so. I was 2# ® so nervous, short of 4 breath and dizziness, Mrs. Robert Eaton. _ loss _ of _ appetite, smothering and sinking spells, and I could not sleep, es mt ASTONISHMED THE DOCTOR. Physician Said She Might Drop Dera at Any Time. 1 ooo I LÂ¥ Y R /’ 59t $ °4 t )l'ul DL n ETWE T T OV "Rash!" * scornfull y ropeated Jenkins. "Depend upon it, I shall do nothing rash, I‘m going to help those fellows. You don‘t suppose that they can get that piano out unassisted, do you ?"â€"Lippinâ€" cott‘s Magazine. Christmas Bargains 2« auRR0, APCRTRTaRe PCw C CC P "Oh, Richard," she wailed, "don‘t, for my sake, do anything rash. Remember your familyâ€" Don‘t be rash!" > VW ol oo n o Ainoaicnas Whereupon Jenkins, with demomPi"" smile, hastily leaped from the bed ln.d began to slip on his dressing gown, eVviâ€" dently with the intention of immediately interviewing the nocturnal visitors downâ€" stairs. _ Observing his determined air, Mrs. Jenkins began to be uneasy. 5 BDDY‘3 SAFETY MATCHES ror RoTeL, en h Astivam, who "Nonsense!" growled J°NMIM® . "" " ° «l:'er preparatory to renewing his slumâ€" Tg. "But, Richard," persisted his wife, "I am sure I heard men in the parlor. Some one stumbled against the piano several times, striking the keys!" o d C L is Lenamia ns PARLOFR t METHOD IN HIS RASHNESS. Jenkins Fight the Burglars? Write : boil furiously for three and a half MATCHEsSs "The Doctor told me I had heart disâ€" ease and was liable to drop on the street at any time," _ says Mre, Robert Eaton, of Dufferin, Ont. .UL-HU. NMo, Maine." Mrs. Sternâ€"My child never annoys us at c.l‘!. He never makes a bit of noise in the MRA . Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. But the achievement of Dr. and Mrs Williainm H. Workman last August ove shadows that of the Italian Duke in in Africa, for they succeeded in climb ing to 23,304 feet on the peak of th« Chago Lungma @acier in the Himaâ€" layas. This, I believe, is a record in height; though by no means so diffâ€" cult an undertaking as McKinley, Th« Workmans camped for two nights a: 21,000 feet, which becomes also a record for a mountaineer‘s camp. Thus, the mountain climbing honor« of 1906 may be said to justly belong to America, for Dr. and Mrs. Workman and Dr. Cook are Americansâ€"Caspar \\'biu:rzh': ‘"The Viewâ€"Point," in the Outing zine for December. The year 1906 has been distinguished for performances in mountain climbing The Duke of Abruzzi, whose ascent of Mt. St. Elias has been eclipsed on the North American continent by Dr. Cook‘s more recent feat, succeeded last Jun» in surmounting the second highest (19,â€" 024) summit of the Ruwenzori Range in Central Africa. The highest eunnnt (Mt. Kibo), of this range being 19,912. The Year‘s Mountain Climbing Honors. The Torento Musical & Novelty Co. Each outfit is sent eomphfi vfih violin, box, bow, resin, strings, etc., as illustratod .A_ll 20‘. sent charges prepaid. No. 1â€"Our special, good tor well shaped, fine finish ... . No. 2â€"Our Orchestra Violin, highly polished, very fine tone ‘ You surprise me. What was the trouble*" She got off a trolley car the right way p_d_t‘_?g!imn thought she was a man in These instruments are imported direct from Germany for the holiday trado. We are enabled to offer them at 40% less than the retail dealers. Violins==â€"Violins ‘"How‘s the hy of those ‘‘Not fit to eat Elt the time." Auaeee 0C Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup should a}â€" ways be used for children teething. It soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarâ€" rhoea. THE FARMERS‘ MANUAL contains a serâ€" fes of special lessons in farm bookkeeping, with full instructions, separate rulings and printed headings for grain account, poultry account, cattle wecount, hog account, labor account, dairy account, expense Aaccount; department for each kind of grain, cas# received account and cash paid out .coau:# The Manual also contains a complete insec department, a veterinary handbook, a perâ€" feet system of horseâ€"training according to the methods used by Prof, O. W. Gleason, ‘ LL 1000000080 gazat â€" Aanartmant 400 THE FARMERS‘ MA jes of special lessons i with full instructions, printed headings for & account, cattle account, mccount, dairy account department for each 1 received account and c (Mention this paper.) Agents wanted. besides the farmers FARMER‘S SONS No. 3â€"Grand artist‘s solo vio ? ebony trimmings ... ... ... Nlo..ntâ€"muur'n favorite, only Foreign Words and Phresos, the i rades, I:& and lchn‘ooc loos.glutnuoz;si ¢ ‘ necessi eve culâ€" tured hoter ICis the best Christmas girt â€"â€" TEBSTEIYS «OLLEGIATE pierioxary Largest of our abridgmenta. Regular and Thin Poper ‘ editions. 1116 pages and 1‘>) illustrations Write for *The Story of a Book"â€""Dent . C G. & C. MERRILAM CO., Springficld, Mass. BDY4 INTERNATIONAL A GRAND FAMILY EDUCATOR, It not answers your questions n Swm-flmuchtzm. Detinition, New Words, Etc., but also answers quesâ€" Woes of Touring in Maine. (Louisville Courierâ€"Journal.) snent my vacation travelin‘ through The ISSUE NO. Something Wrong for Sure. ‘s Liniment Cures Distemper 96 Victoria St., Toronto WARERREOUSES, ROSPTTALS, pICTIONARY A safs, sure anu reliao‘e monthly regulaâ€" tor. These Pills have been used {n France :"lh“ Afty ymfld'.-::t found invalumble lor purpose and are guaranâ€" teed by the :nakers linclose stamp for sealed ‘circular. . Price ©1.00 ‘x-u box (of Or by mail securely sealed, on recelpt of prage J. L. NICHOLS CO., Limited, Publishers, _ C oies DIFFERENT OUTFITS Excited Suspicion. was arrested yesterday." MISCELLANEOU® is the matter with him* FEMALE PILLS DR. LeRors * legal department,. 400 UA A X 2.98 3.98 Canada hy \6 the be the Mrs. Pin niéw p! SUC JUD \M f1 he at

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