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Durham Review (1897), 11 Apr 1907, p. 6

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3# 4) 3y $ be provided. 1 think in time the latter will be more feasible. The locomotive, with the present gange of tracks, has reached its eapacity. The freight car of the present will have to give way to an aB-steel freizht car which will be two feet wider, two feet higher and several feet longer. wiin much heavier rai gaugze of six feect inste gavuge of four feet inckes. _ This change in the mexi ten years «<f 1917 will be as muc the roads of 1907, as t cay are an improvemen in 1897. _ Either locomw #ize that nobody now theim _ or electric h:h be provided. 1t in I= it possibl sncbh coneros the boon of are nmiebted Campbeilâ€"Ban position to t] granted them never have 1 dence reposed oral party. Mr. E. H There is danger of the dise of the medical inspection of real public schools, begun thi The railroads will have to th much heavier rails, an uze of six feect instead of : uge of four feet eight hes. _ This change will c 1t No powerful nation quished foe after a costly war, more & . onA PeC boon of selfâ€"government, the Boers muebted to the Government of pboeilâ€"Bannerman, which, in direct opâ€" ion to the wishes of the Tory party, ted them a constitution. May they r have reason to regret the confiâ€" e reposed in them by the great Libâ€" party. f bo tness says that it is morally certain t already the inspection has been & ins of preventing the apread of infecâ€" CURRENT | COMMENT ‘te, especially in the & frichtful. It is alway 1 an orde if vlimio Commercial. Premier Botha itly is of the same opinion, for he ecently that "Loyalty to the great c, of which we are now a selfâ€"govâ€" : part, is dictated to us, not only nor and interest, but by gratitude. possible for Boers ever to forget ouerosity? For this generosity and lie uinously than the British ; as treated the Boers of the id South Orange states," d ffalo Commercial. Premier luis change will come withâ€" nexi ten years, and the roads will be as much in advance of s of 1907, as the roads of toâ€" an improvement over the roads Either locometives of euch t nobody now _ can imagine â€"electric ines will have to led. 1 tbinE in time the latter Â¥, here comes FThe underiakers hay @ase aFr y rev s Health Commi M Con 1 the State Senate has passed a tke the playing of bridge whist v or valuable prizes a crime. It a sad thing if this fashionable of the mansions were placed with the fashionable diverâ€" mouncement, subscribed to ading British physicians, t alcohol is a rapid and tm storative, while as an art moderation, for adults i# Wl i0re to the lack ¢ We‘ll have ti 13 TaciOus C ew act for the prevention of sckouts may soon be tested. lie will hope that it may tous. . There should be no ike or lockout troubles on in cocl mines in this coun: the mans h the fa alley ways was se hetter o4 it W nt a hardly contested & generously and the British governâ€" Boers of the Transâ€" re states," declares such bodi e the Ned the London An torce in the enbal obd uw t f1 or adults minc » set th of the M Ln@t FC ridge ime favor month‘s In this « w T\ JÂ¥ its old on i half 61 montns p! 18OF K tritst The be The me H whist it enc th C r€ M t We must he«t the water under presâ€" sure, it seems, instead of boiling it. Then the getms wiil be killed and the water will be po‘atable. While the heat that makes the water boil will kill the maâ€" jority of the germs, certain spores reâ€" quire a much higher temperature for their destruction. So mnumerous machines have been devised which subject the water to pressare at a temperature which must range bhetween 266 and 302. Then it is to be absolutely healthful and a« pleasant to the izste as at first.â€" Cleveland Leader Now comes a writer in Cosmos of Paris, an authority in science, who makes the startling assertion tnat boilâ€" ing water does not completely sterilize it, as we have been fondly imagining. It simply makes it unpleasant to the taste, while many troubles of the stomach and intestines follow its use. Here, for example, is the case of water versus the public health. Judge Mediâ€" cine, sitting on the bench in solitary state. handed down the decision that it was not elouih to filter water of the impurities it held mo + or less in soluâ€" tion; it must be boiled to destroy the moxious germs. Whereupon we all set about carrying out his mandate and a precious lot of trouble is has made, as every housewife will testify. Still, it was for our health, and so the work went cheerfully on. What was onr moat yesterday is our poison toâ€"day, and heaven only knows what it will be toâ€"morrow. Things inâ€" sanitary become sanitary when a doctor dips his ren ia ink or a scientist taps his keys of his typewrit r. Food values come a~d go from our favorite dishes, the medicinc that bas marvellous curaâ€" tive properties a few short months ago loses them in a jiffy at the pronunciaâ€" mento of some great man. Everything is unstable, everything is shifting, everyâ€" thing is mystifying and, in a measure, disheartening. _ If there were some fixed standard; if when science laid down its dictum it were always sure to be the true word and the last word; if medicine could prove as well as affirm it would be all right. The ordinary man would then aimply follow directions, But what, in the name of common sense, is he to do when the doctors disagree and the scienâ€" tists are at loggerheads? Water Must be Heated Under Pressure to be Thoroughly Sterilized. The man who wishes to be well and to keep well is in hard straits these days. The jangles between science and mediâ€" oine put him. if both parties will consent to see no special application in the phrase, between the devil and the deep If you are fond of fishing, canosing, campâ€" ing or the study of wild animals look up the Algonquin National Park of Ontario for your summer outing. A fish and game preserve of 2,000,000 acres interspersed with 1,200 lakes and rivers in awaiting you, offering all the attractions that Nature can bestow. Magâ€" milicent canoe trips. Alititude 2,000 foat above sea level. Pure and exhilarating atmosphere. Just the place for a youss man to put in his eummer holidays. An interestinzg and proâ€" fusely illustrated descriptive publication tellâ€" ing you ail about it sent free on application te J. D. McDonald, Union Station, Toronto, «nvum ../.. ... ..... ....}2002,000 48 With interest at 4 per cent. per Cenihuik, :. s «. +2 /. .. . ~ e lc YireW 80 With interest at 3 per cont. per ORHUNE . . . ... . +.)« no@.« £ cace ts RRT 9D With interest at 3 per cent. per TUHRUINE: ... .. ... .. << + /.+ 1. â€"B40 90 A calculation such as the above gives very good reason why land, if fertile enâ€" ough to produce agrieultural crops, should be devoted to these crops rather than to foreat. _ Trees will grow satisâ€" factorily on land that is altogether too poor for agricultural crops, and all that the advocates of reâ€"foresting ask is that the land which is too poor for agriculturâ€" al crops shall be permanently devoted to foreat. _ When that is done, there will be sufficient forest to provide employâ€" ment for a large number of foresters. ‘ NeWe A Now compare the barvests. On the woodâ€"lot the wod is allowed to grow unâ€" disturbed for the fifty years, and then when cut off, brings five hundred dolâ€" lars. â€" Or the grain acre, on the other hand, a crop worth ten dollars is taken of at the end of the first yearâ€"fortyâ€" nine years before any crop whatever is taken off the wood lot. pose we have an acre of trees which must grow fifty years o reach their best at which they can be marketed, and are worth $500, and that we have beside this an acre of land on which annual erops of grain are grown. _ Five hundred doliars, divided into fifty, giveg us ten dollars as the value of the annual growth of the trees. Let us suppose also that the net value of the grain grown on the other acte is also ten dollars, for purposes of comparison. Even if the annual crops (i.e., the amâ€" ount of grain harvested and the annual amount of wood put on the trees) are equal in value, yet the advantage reâ€" mains with the grain crops. Let us supâ€" A farmer, for instance, sows the grain in the spring of the year. 1t sprouts, goes through the different stages in the blade and tr:e nead. and ripens, all in a few months, and in the late summer is harvested. The raising of a timber crop is a different matter entirely. The tree rarely, if ever, is fit to cut (for sawâ€" timber, at least) before it is forty or fifty years old. S 8 & IN ESTIMATING COST, LONG TIME TO BE CONSIDERED. A very important distinetion between a crop of trees and a crop of grain or other farm produce lies in the length of time it takes to produce each of them. BOILING IS OF NO AVAIL YOUR SUMMER OUTING TREE CROPS. second husband. The fellow who marries a widow is sometimes known merely as his vife‘s ceed in doing it. "Oh," sighed her best girl friend, coming into her toom one day and commenting upon some of her auccesses, "I always wonder how it is that you succeed in doing things _ so well. It seems to me that every time you try to do a thing you manage to do it. Now, it‘s different with me. I wish to do a great many things, but somehow I never do them. I wonder why it is?" "Why." laughing!y exclaimed the aforeâ€" said wise young lady, who had probably studied the weaknesses of her visiting friend, "Tll tell you why it is my dear,. K# bevause you‘ve got such a ve Mwbbbom-ndsuchsmyvx back vone."â€"Philadelphia â€" Record. C Minard‘s Lini}nent fo: sale everywhere, Burglars and the Underwriters. Burglary is getting to be too much like an exact scicnce in this city of New York. Ramilies that have been robbed are much diseatiefied with their experiâ€" ence. Families that have not been rotâ€" bed dislike the feeling thut they must perch at bome like pigeons weitinz to be potted. Insurance against burglary is getting to be as commen among houseâ€" hoiders as insuraznoe aaginet fire, Pos. sibly relief may come from tivis veny practice of insurance against burcary, The board of undarwriters is compeiioq by its business to be systematicaliy abert to diminish the chance of fire losses. If burglary imsurance becomes prevalent enough there m#y be a boand of burglor fighters, whose business it is to abate housebreaking.â€"Harper‘s Weekly, She is a very young girl, but she exâ€" pressed the difference between posessing the aspirations we all have for doing something and the perseverance to sucâ€" ceed in doing it. "Oh," sighed her beat Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Nenralgia The most stupendous of all leapers of the sea is the whaleâ€"but the whale [0 not a fish. 1 have ssen a monster weighâ€" ing hundreds of tons, possibly eighty feet in length, rise slowly and deliberately out of the water until it appeared to be dancing on the surface, entirely clear of it, then sink alowly back. Such a leap is on record in the annals of the British navyy. A large whale cleared a boat, going completely over it, an estimated leap of twenty feet in airâ€"how many in a lateral direction was not known.â€" From "The High Leapers," by Charles F. Holder in the Outing Magazine for Febâ€" ruary. F ho ty mmtey | that Viceâ€"President Mohler of the Union ; Pacific had announced that the limited would | be cut off because of the 2 cents per mile | maximum passenger tariff law passed by the | Nebraska legislature. Minard‘s Liniment Cxires Dandruff This reason was contradicted by Mr. Kruttâ€" schnitt. He admiited, howover, that it is probable that the cut in earnings which eimâ€" ilar laws now being gonernily _ enacted throughout the United States are causing will result in the curtailment of the "extra‘‘ ©xpenditures which the roads have made for spectal equipment for their ‘‘fivers * It was announced last night that as a reâ€" sult of a washout one the San Podro line, one of the subsidiary companias, the Chicagsâ€" Los Angeles limited would be discortinued after Monday ponding repairs of the road bed. For several days the passengers have amv boon tokeq s« far >s Salt Lake City and there transforferl to the Central Pacific or Los Angeles limit after Monday pon bed. For several there transferred to the Ogden and San it asters are extremely probable, may result in awful loss of life. All of us are becomng apâ€" palled over the recent loss of life and I can safely tell you that within six months there + ‘m decremas in the speed of trains throughout the United States. . The matter has reached ouch a pass that we feel trains throughout the Unit matter has reached cuch a ; that we must do somathing "‘An‘ a‘ that want tae hae a An‘ in the glory share, Juist send yer siller hame, wi Tae mend the brig o‘ Ayt." "Ma e‘en they fill wi‘ saut, saut tears Ma _ hert maist breaks in twa ; For I hae nane tac plead ma cause Since Robin gaed away‘. "Auld Seotia‘s bairns ayont the sea Tae you me hert noo turos; Juist think that when yer mendin‘ me Yor crownin‘ Robbie Burns. ‘"‘The officials in general throughout the country are considering the general reducâ€" tion of upeed on these trains. I have always felt that the speed on our road is too high ard it «ol oo lessoned if I can bring it about. "A train is the safest eart of a thing under ordinary cireumstances and proper speed. but under the schedules now being made the < gorc. and at such times disâ€" "But there wes ane t} He often looked on I see the sweet smil« The loveâ€"licht in isi« ‘‘We are going altogether too fast," amid Mr. Kruttschnitt last night; ‘"the roads are congested with freight and the specd required of some of the passenger trains involves great danger and the irregular making of schedâ€" ules. The freight moving is of enormous volume and there is danger in handling the vasscuger trains under these condiâ€" This was the remark made by the official whom Commissioner Harlan of the interstate commerce commission recently characterized as ‘‘one of the very ahlest railroad men of the country" and the man to whom the great traffic operations of thes Harriman interests are intrusted in Chicago and the west and who is a specialist in the pbhysical conditions of railroads, their speed capacities and the movement of traffic. The historic -tvsrlv,'fin' -.:); yon‘ The brig that Burns immortalized Then listen tae his prayer. The auld brig Ma props are gaun Oh! hasten then an‘ br Aiore I‘m swert awa trams:> ‘"*In compotition we are often forced to do foolish things simply because someone else does them." (By Mrs. Leyden, Ottawa, Canada). Aul Scotia‘s loyalâ€"hearted sons, Her daughters bricht an‘ fair, Oh! list an‘ hear the earnost prayer O‘ the Auld Brig o‘ Ayr. Recent Wrecks Supr Roads to Check Glare of the Fast Trains. l (Chicago Chronicle.) ; _ L am appal As a result of the ‘vmb which have oc; â€" while snow is â€" curred in all parts 0 country a genera s reduction of speed in the passenger traffic :ll:.l'u' babies v of all the great trunk lines of the United eir carriages States is under consiferation and the Chiâ€" tected from th« cago represontative of the ‘Harriman Paciâ€"‘ This is bad â€" fics‘‘ has announced that he will make every with the sn effort to have the vast transcontinental sysâ€" ow tom under the control of the wizard of Wall g948. There is street lead the movement. i i from the little .. Amcursscanitt, director of maintenamce j c omeration of the Union nad Southern fro.m yeils. Af Pacifics, yestorday characterized the excesâ€" '_"'mg"d for ev sive speed under which the trains are ofter Ti@go has a ho« run as dangerous in the estreme and said may be strung in regard to the completion for the fa@tsest +na fouse ce uP Cchonoree! (I‘m Some silly bodies lackin‘ sense ‘They see nae guid in me; hey ca‘ the feelings o‘ ma hert Champion Jumper Strength All in Her Wishbone Sentimentality Prayer of CUT SPEED OF FLYERS. °O ARCHIVES TORONTO the "Auld Brig o‘ Ayr." the auld brig unco frail, gaun tae fa‘; an‘ brgce me up that lo‘ed me 1 States are causing rilment of the ‘"oxtra‘ roads have made for their ‘"flyers." of the Ocean. on his face bae a haund last night stated speed doing > sueâ€" weel, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. _ ‘Heavens, no! I mean I toot when I see him lying in the road back‘ of me so the people may come and take him away." One Kindâ€"Hearted Chauffeur, (Philadelphia Press.) "Yes." said the first chauffeur, ‘I always give a series of loud toots when I see a man in the road." ‘"What!‘" cried, the second chauffeur, ‘you don‘t mean to say you give him warning?" The Wise Girl of the Day. "You have been engaged more than a year, haven‘t you*" "Any talk of marriage" "No. And there won‘t be as long am I‘m having such a good time." â€":}feve- land Plain Dealer. Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and biemishes from horses, blood spavin, ecurbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etec. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warâ€" ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists, "I see by the paper," said Mrs. Blinks at the breakfast table, "that a delegaâ€" tion of women suffrageites is coming to this country." Mr. Blinks said nothing. "And they‘re going to invade Washâ€" ington and make a speech to the presiâ€" dent and all." Blinks still eilent. "I declare," snapped the lady, "you‘re the most tantalizing man in existence. There you sit like a statue, never sayâ€" ing a word to show that you don‘t know what you‘re talking about."~â€" Atlanta Constitution. 40 3you encourage nare { ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Countries get ready to fight. Grudges aceumulated, principles are arrayed on either side and each puts a chip on its shoulder. To dislodge it only requires a trifling incident. Not many wars have had the spectacular prelude which went before America‘s whirl with Spain. The destruction of the Maine sent a flame rushing over the country which nothing but avenged deaths could put out. It was like the immortal shot fired at Concord bridge. But for every internaâ€" tional war that has had such a thunderâ€" ous introduction a dozen have been set off by the mereat triile.â€"Philadelphia Preas. If the cariage has not a hood the same thing may be done by taking a piece of rattan and bending it into the carriage from eae side of the back of the seat. Its own spring will hold it in place withâ€" out other fastening.â€"Philadelphia Reâ€" cord. Glare of the Sun on the. Snow is Ruinous. I am appalied when in the streets while snow is on the ground to see the many babies who are lying face up in their carriages with eyes quite unproâ€" tected from the sun. This is bad cnough at any time, but with the snow glare it is really dangerâ€" ous. ‘There is no protection to the eyes from the little caps, and not eno\%lex from veils. A darkened shade should arranged for every carriage. If the carâ€" riage has a hood a green grenadine veil may be strung on a tape and tied across the front of the hood like a curtain. This is well away from the baby‘s face, giv ing it plenty of air, and at the same time protection, says a writer in The New York Evening Telegram. 4 Made Carhoun Wire.â€"we‘ll prove it to you. COILED_not ¢rimped. . This © m"t‘;%wmm t stays taut. Mudflpfiflov:h“y THZE PAGL WIRZE TFLNCLEI COMPANY, IMITE D "PAGE FENCES Local representative wanted in each county. Write us for full information about crops, climate and special railroad rates, etc. Before deciding where to locate in the West, let us tell you about these lands. The best wheat fields â€"the richest grazing landâ€"are in this Provinee. Write us for full information TELFER&O0SGCOD Eastern Selling Agents 200 CORISTINE BUILDING MONTRZIAL Most Aggravating Man. GUARDING BABY‘S EYES. Wars Started by Trifles Oris Mistake of a Lawyer. ¢ Chicanelli, who had to leave on a jourâ€" ney before the end of a case begun against him by a ncighbor, gave orders to his lawyer to let him know the result by telegraph. _ After several days he got the following telegram : "Right has triumphed." o «t anc« telecraphed back: "Appeal immediately."â€"Il Mundo Umâ€" Of the common European â€"languages English is the most widely spoken at the present time, and seems to be increuing in popularity more rapidly than any of the others. In 1800 about 21,000,000 peoâ€" ple spoke English, and in 1900 about 120,000,000. In the same interval of time the number speaking Russian inâ€" creased from 31,000,000 to 80,000,000 ; German, from 30,000,000 to 80,000,000 ; French from 31,450,000 to 55,000,000 ; Italian from 15,000,000 to 33,000,000 ; Spanish from 26,000,000 to 45,000,000, and Portuguese from 7,480,000 to 13,â€" 000,000. â€"Chicago Chronicle. ' His possessions were then all given away to his friends after the lengthy funeral orations had been given. His beâ€" }rea,ved wife, who is nearly as old as he was, presided over the distribution. No tomtoms were beaten during * cereâ€" monies and from the time they began unâ€" til he was left in his long home not a drop of liquor was drunk,. Anyone who knows the Indian character will underâ€" stand this was the suprome testimonial to the respect in which the memory of the dead chief is held.â€"Holton, Kan., Reâ€" corder. ' This feast was spread upon the floor and all present, including the white peoâ€" ple, were expected to partake of it. A long grace or prayer was said before eatâ€" ing and the peace pipe was smoked. The first feast was held on Sunday and anâ€" other one at the house Monday, followed by one at the grave, Monday afternoor the box containing the body was taken to the grave, which was a hole only about a foot deep, intended only to steady the coffin, The bov was place in here and a peaked top was put on with holes bored in it to turnish air, _ Kackâ€" Kack‘s carne and his bow and arrows were buried with him. _ After the coffin, which was a square box, had been made the body was dressâ€" ed in moceasins and leggings, much beadâ€" ed, being left bare from the waist up, excepi for much paint of many colors. A 2 x 4 scantling was placed across the top of the box, on which the chin restâ€" ed to keep the body upright. The funeral feast was preparea Sunday and consisted of two hogs and ten turkeys cooked toâ€" gether, with whole corn boiled with it. "Squaw bread" was also made in large quantities and other delicacies furnished were pies, cake, canned _ blackberries, dried peaches, tea and coffee. | Last of the Pottawatomies Laid to Rest | With Unique Ceremanies. ’ The "Last of the Pottawatomies" is gone and probably never again will the members of the tribe see a characterisâ€" tie tribal funeral. Kackâ€"Kack was buried last week with all the honors due to his age and condition. The tribal ceremony used had not been employed before for many years and it is likely it never will be again,. The body lay, or rather sat, in state from the time of his death until the funcral, Iimnmediately afteg, death it was placed in a sitting position so it would stiffen. It was then put in one corâ€" ner of the room in his home. Here the funeral service began _ Sunday afterâ€" noon, to ¢end Monday aftenoor at the grave, which is in his front yard \ This lady seemed to be a little vague about it, but it eventually transpired that the ambitious young bride had reâ€" moved the card of the donors and had substituted that of a conspicuous society leader with whom she happened to have the merest calling â€"acquaintance.â€"Harâ€" per‘s Weekly. The gift sclected for the bride was a beautiful and expensive clock. It was bought at one of the best shops, and the cards of the givers were left to be sent with the clock at a certain date. Time passed, the wedding came off, but no acknowledgment reached the people who sent the clock. The clerk remembered shipping it with the cards. but nothing further was known until a mutual friend of the two families was moved to make inquiries of the bride‘s mother. Mauge, Prairle Scratches and every form of contagious Itch on buman or animals cured in 30 mirvtes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lot‘on. It never fails. Sold by druggists. a wedding among people whom . they knew very well, but whose social aspiraâ€" tions were rather more pronounced than their own. Untold depths of snobbishness among freeâ€"born Americans seem to be revealed by a recent incident that is worthy a place in literature. A wealthy and culâ€" tured family of good ancestry, but who did not happen to figure as social leaders in a certain city, received invitations for Substitutes the Card of a Society Leader for a Friend‘s Name. Adopt this method and increase your inâ€" y co m e. Satisfactory bank references given as to your safety in remitting money to us. For full perticulars _ write toâ€"day. ELITE DORESSMAKING SCHOO0L DRESSMAKING SCHOOL ‘Teaches Dress Cuiâ€" ting and Making in all its branches _by mail (8 lessons). The best system ever inâ€" troduced in Canada. Cost of full course is now only $15, includâ€" ing one of the most perfect fitting systems in use given free. FUNERAL CF INDIAN CHIEF P. 0. BOX 91 DVNDGAS, ONT. The English Language. Miss Valons, Instructor ELIT E&E ITC i r nee exirenitnnsenstprest Beretement dovien u n u !-‘-..._I-':,,-'-,, TED, WalZXorc‘:l"~, TOPOMED. Minmneaa.s "G,,. A P "Really*?" replied her husband. "Well, you don‘t appear to be grieving very much." "No; you see I can have it stuffed for my spring hat and so the rest of the maâ€" terial won‘t cost you so much."â€"Philâ€" adelphia Press. "Oh, John!" exclaimed Mrs. Young "my canary bird‘s dead." At Young‘s Pier, Atlantic City, a new wave motor is lighting a portion of the pier. It is the first really successful vontrivance of the kind in use. It is a vig float or buoy, and so arranged that the motion of the swells wil work it, no matter at what angle the waves run, The motor drives a compressed air enâ€" gine, which fills large tanks. The tanks in turn fed a compressed _ air motor. which drives the dynamo that furnishes the current for the lighting. J got bathed MENT, next day BEST liniment in use "We dig and plant and produce and having eaten at the first table we pass what is left to the bankers and millionâ€" aires. Did you ever think, stranger, that most of the wars of the world have been fought for the control of this farmer‘s second table?t We farmers sit back comâ€" fortably after dinner, and joke with our wives and play with our babies, and yet all the rest of you fight for the crumbs that fall from our abundant tables.‘ Farmers Before Millionaires. Farmers have the advantage over milâ€" lionaires, according to David Grayson, who, in the American Magazine for March, reports an argument he had lately with John Starkweather, a very rich man. Here is a little of the plain talk which Farmer Grayson gave to Milâ€" lionnire Starkweather: wW. C. GOFFATT CHIPMANâ€"HOLTON KWiTTiNG co ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Duchess ans PFriSCill@ Fine Hosiery For Ladies Rock Rib ans HerCHIes Schoot Hose Philadelphia Record TRAPPERS MUSKRA TS "Dear friends and neighbors, before taking up the matter of prizes for the more fortunate ones this evening I would would like to make a few remarks. As with one exception all those present are indebted to me for merchandise to a greater or less amount, I have decided to eliminate prizes and to give the winâ€" ners for both ladies and gentlemen credit on their accounts as follows: Firstâ€"prize, $2; second prize, $1; third prize, 50 cents; consolation prize, 10 cents. "Mr. Brown, who wins the third prize, is fortunately clear on our books, and to avoid any discrimination we will merely give him credit at our store which will apply on all goods purchased during the month of February. You will now step down into the dining room."â€" Host Introduces Substitute for the Cusâ€" t Tomary Prizes. ° At a progressive â€"euchre. given a. few evenings ago in, & tu'burbi town the hostâ€"proprietor of a large general store and the big maa in the communityâ€"At the close of the game arose and said: The E. B. EDDY CO, 1 ; In three and sixâ€"foot rolls, is unexcelled for all 1 poses, inside walls of summer houses, refrigerator GET OUR PRICES. I consider Write for price list EUCHRE PARTY PAYS DEBTS. HULL w Agencies in all principal cities Electricity From Waves LARGE OR SMALL LOTS Little Darling ans Little PEt For Infasts Lambes‘ Woo! and Silk Tips All Wool m.".fl.u.mm..m"'“..’“ my foot badly jammed lately. 1 it well with MINARD‘S LiNIâ€" and it was as well as ever the IMPERVIOUS SHAEATHING Strong as Gibraitar Limit of Mfi * P Princess Eeyptian Lie For Childrent ORILLA Not a Total Loss. Yours very truly MINARD‘S LINIMENT the I WANT T. 4. MeMULLEX »»_LIMITED, HAMILTON, ontario, "Pretty well," answered Mr. Cumrox, "only it‘s kind of embarrassing to have to address a man as ‘your grace‘ when you are cailing him down for spending too muc! money." (Washington Star.) "How do you get on with yaur titled somâ€" inâ€"law ?" The Spaniard disdains us. He will none of us,. _ What does he care for our singing? What, even, for our .fi::.; dollars? Beholding with a kind of stoli ecstacy the recent sad disclosures which have overtaken high finance in the Unâ€" ited States, be points with pride to a line of corruption a thousand years old, begat by system, born in tradition, exâ€" isting by sufferance, one layer of pecuâ€" lation resting upon another, all perfectâ€" ly understood and nobody ressisting or even protesting. "There," says he with an air of triumph, "with us it is live and let live; with you it is dog eat dog. Give me the good eld vices of Spain."â€"Henry Watterson‘s Letter. poor and proud folk themselves, they especially despise the rich. No doubt there are a few college presidents who ’I'ill toady: for a big gift ‘or legacy, but the professors are mostly a stiffâ€" necked °'enention. In the few reported cases of interference personal grudge or crankiness has been at the bottom of the ‘trouble. "As a matter of fact, the Smith : professor â€"of political, economy, for instance, is apt to care considerably less about Smith than he cares about the ol‘ man. Smith dies. The professorship goes on, and in the course of a few years o-:y the OIlme antiquary can tell who Smith was, His money keeps on talking, but it talks the professor‘s opinâ€" ions.â€"â€"New York Sun. Makes Baby Strong Cet one toâ€"day. At drugcits â€"or from The Chemitts® Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamiltonâ€" â€"Eczema, Salt Rhoum, Teter, etc.â€"yicld quiddy u&.h.b:md Mira Ointment, Why with the bummt:nd ‘mch'1? %dfi&ifipu? Don‘t be miserable ira costs only 50c. a box â€"6 for $2.50, Any "millionaire" who endows a colâ€" lege or founds a chair under the impresâ€" sion that his opinions will be taught therein must be an ass, Some professors are "queer critters," but as a class they are democratic and independent,. They think too much of their opinions ta borâ€" row anybody else‘s, and, being mostly __ "A fey hours after the forst appiication," cvrite laémp- 475 Ferguson Ave.. N. HAomilton, Leo Corrigan, Lerguson Ave.. IN., 1TOMIECOR "l/gt'â€"’mln\fi{. ;!rtn has worked IW:MM me." (He hod :m/or,au&' Lasist on getting the gemuine, with this trademarkâ€" P e C e CC Es WM~HA~ ©0OK FoOFr ** family of five, on the mountain top Hamilton; all modern conveniences; house maid and gardener kept; good wages. Ad Scaly Skin Discases to ® ‘h. a 006 l o 44 AIG!â€"O..Z'Sc.6m L National Drug & Chemical Co. L.1d., Moztseal What the Spaniard Thinks of Us. Embarrassing to Fatherâ€"inâ€"Law Veed over JV P arst by Dr. P. E. Picauk in 1855. Nurses‘ & Mothers‘ Treasure =â€"most reliable medicine for baby. VUsed over 50 years. First ocmpounded mummb* ISSUE NO. 15, 1907. WV Limited CANADA Millionaires and Professors. TRADE MARK RLGISTERLO T Ns s Fine Dress and lining purâ€" I P That He Caunal las e\ And l!te May Stop ' Weeks or B "Ri m Th« m artil -‘_hfi »\ ,PF'T. 1 10000 adant ar th« h o th «+ Thousand I: wives and C SPERA ROUNM #14 -n(tl' willa the tie Fit v 14 HAW MA LONG Di th t tha d eTa ht People 1 w1 M ti again nves Thaw is sA the Commi beon placed avd hbe is ind FNTYâ€"FIG me to Appeal fr Findia hy The at w T n wout h hild1 j yesis sane mission in ed in Justi Dest Apr the accor j0

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