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Durham Review (1897), 19 Sep 1907, p. 6

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"If you want me to be careful you are showing me a bad example." "Why*" replied the former. "Because." said the boy, "you have thrown that fly away without brushing the sugar oif his feet."â€"Stray Stories. Showing a Bad Example. A grocer who was noted for his careâ€" fulness had an advertisement inserted in a local newspaper for a message boy, and a young fellow who understood the kind of a gentleman who was advertising came to apply for the situation, and while the grocer was telling him how eareful he must be a fly settled on a bag of sugar and the grocer caught it and threw it away. The boy then said: Anc having placed her trust for eterâ€" val life in the Atonement made for her tonce for all, upon the bitter cross by the Saviout of the world, and having, acâ€" cording to her ability, obeyed His beâ€" hests by feeding the hungry and clothing the naked, the noble young girl, through the merits of her Redeemer, obtains a glorious inheritance in the Paradise of God.â€"By a Banker. eally whic time thot time before gone forth to his doom, Alâ€" though ill, she was dragged from a dis tant place, a seven days‘ tedious jourâ€" ney, and after lingering a few days in prison, one morning the fair young girl left, unattemded, to die, was found to have breathed her last; her Bible, which she loved so well, open upon the bed beâ€" side her. And there, in that very cham. berâ€"still pointed out to the visitorâ€" the angclâ€"guarded spirit of the gentle young princess, released from its earthâ€" trammels, took its flight from the trouâ€" blous scenes of this life to those shining realms where sorrow and sighing are no And then came the conqueror. with his well disciplined hosts, who, razing to the ground the crude defences of the Angloâ€" Naxons, erects this stately and imposing castellated fortress, which, all down the eenturies, has withstood bpth the devasâ€" tating ravages of time, and the repeated onslaughts of bitter foes in the constant internecine warfare which from time to time dectmated _ the population of the England of those dark days of discontent and strife. when brother forght to the death with brother, and father with son,. But perhaps the most pothetic of all the scenes which these hoary old wails and casements donjons have witnessed was the eruel incarnation of the fair and devout young daughter of King Charles the first, brought here to occupy practiâ€" cally the same apartments, or cells, from which her loved father had but a short e eE m e ons n defend their country against the overâ€" whelming onslaughts of Goths and Huns, a great horde of Saxons awept over the land, driving all before them, and capturâ€" ing even this almost impregnable fastâ€" ness, 20 mt HoP PC HeRTE Ol that garden of England, _ the Isle of Wight, stand upreared in bold relief the frowning battlements, the massive roundâ€" towers and ancient bastions, and the mediaeval buttressed ramparts of that stately Norman fortressâ€"Carisbrooke Castle. But long before the time of those valiant Normans, to whom we Briâ€" tish owe so much, Carisbrooke was _ a notable fortification. Here may still be seen the scarped entrenchments of the skinâ€"clad British islanders, _ whom even the legions of Caesar _ found to be no mean foes. Here, with the greater skill in the construction _ of fosses and basâ€" tions, and palisaded rampants those conâ€" quering Romans could defend themselves against all attack. And bere, later on, after the depurture of the Romans ta any better by it. Neither sin, remembrance of _ sin, can m echaracter pure. "Thou art ever and all that I have is thine," spoken _ of the _ prodigal. membrance that a man â€"once himself with filth does not r e se CCR . eule PMeCu20l. lhke _ reâ€" membrance that a man once smeared himself with filth does not make his complexion any fairer. There is nothâ€" ing in sin to make any one‘s character beautiful or his life better. Grace and purity do not come from beneath, Lut from above.â€"United Prochutania. say, "By the grace of God, I am wha am." Peter was not better because denied his Lord. The remembrance sin may _ stimulate a good man greater zeal in religion; but it is grace of the Lord }t:sus Christ, and 1 the remembrance of his evil life t makes him what he is. Thousands men have recalled the iniquity of th earlier years and have not been ma any better by it. Neither sin. mor t wit) Then answered Him the Lord of heaven. "Son, how can this thing be? Are not my saints on earth? and they Had surely succored thee." Charity. A beggar died last night, his soul Went up to God and said: "I come uncalled; forgive it, Lord; I died for want of bread." _ihey satrive to save our wicked sou And fit them for the sky; Meanwhile, not havin bread to eat, (Forgive!) our bodies die." "Ahy saints, O Lord," “zive holy lives of How shall they know We perish unaware On an CEean? zâ€" i SSÂ¥A hong | led rampants those conâ€" could defend themselves k. And bere, later on, ure of the Romans to Lord," the beggar said, es of prayer; know of such as we? 1 sinners." | of God, I am t better bec The remembr ver wi t m what J man to --11‘;';{;:;! is _ the | something lik and rot m%m. ife that m-' ."“ r‘: ands of The mfi‘ of their | food and fodd n made : known as the 1 mW n the the no of xh ds t ty »"escass un PC C â€" CEeeme ~TOsk very fat young women are most popular in the desert simply because camel‘s milk is fattening and if a girl is fleahw it «paws mchorm'bumunhu-mm-d\ milk she can drink. Such a father mast have a number of camels, is therefore a wealthy man. and it will be a good thing to marry Into bis family. « uw Oe UVE as much as four camels, while thoJrleo of a chief‘s daughter can be commanded only by the wealthy. Some explorers believe that WAEV TÂ¥ SAMM® ssesae calllo 1 about time before he learned that the servant did not refer particularly to his horse, but to his possessions. When the Frenchman Hourst succeeded in navigating the Niger from his mouth to Timbuctoo, some years ago, a desert dweller Primitve peoples who have no money measures al vaiues by that possesion which is most desired aud mos teasily transferred. Thus among most of the inhabitants of the Sabara the samel is the measure of all values. Property, riches and camels are synonymous terms among most of the dwellers in the Sahara. uUr. Goldstein of Germany wrote a while ago that if a Tuareg were set down ia the streets of Berlin the business blocks and residences would conâ€" very to him no idea of property. He would simply ask the greatest of real estate landlord in the city has many camels he owned. While Barth was sojourning in Timbuctoo there was danger for a fow days that the street mob would a:tack his house. One of his women servanis «dvised him to move his ‘"haivan‘‘ to a piace of safety. This word means live stock, such as cattle or camels, and Barth told the woman that he had only his borse with him. It was some Wher Richardson met the Tuaregs and was entertained by one of their chiefs the traveller was told by bis host that he wished to make Queen Victoria the finest present that any one could give her, and so he asked his guest to take back to her a mehari, which is a camel trained to fleetness and the most costly of Sabaran camels. In the Sabara All Property is Expressed by Camels. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. layer of sand or salt is removed and crops of all kinds are raised in great quantity considertng the limited area cultivated. Most of these oases are situated within conâ€" veniont distance of the nitrate stations, and many wagons are constantly plying to and fro between the little settlements and the nitrate worb.. ‘The soil io kept in the highâ€" places in the desert. ‘The cases aro extremely useful also as timber producers in a desert where the nitrate works require fuel. ‘Three varieties of seacia grow rapidly into fine trees and the amount of fuel which the cases supply is now becoming important. est state of fertility u.si feow ros‘:»ts proâ€" It has been found that in various parts of the desert the earth undorneath the surâ€" face layer of sand or salt is sufficiently molet to grow crops. Comparatively little of the water gathers into reservoirs such as underiie Pica apd Matilla, but capillary attraction epreads it through the soil, keepâ€" ing it mfly in just the condition required for growing crops. _These oases are called canchons. The The wine of Pica, a heavy, swoet beverage unothlx:'(h like Madeira or port wine, is famous throughout Chile. Many kinds of fruits earo raised and also tons of vegetables and foddor plants, particularly alfaifa. The )uafh casis swells the euwpply of food and fodder, and tiese two oases are known as the vegetable gardens of the nitrate territory. Without them the thouâ€" sands of laborors ard hundreds of offiicals in the numerous saltpetro works would be wugo‘cjo live almost entirely upon preâ€" served s. _ The oases therefore play a very importani economic role in the indusâ€" triee of this region, although the demand for their products is much greater than the supply. The alfaifa is turned into hay and is cut five times a yoar, The population of the cases is important, for hundreds of workpwople are required to carry on their industries ‘There are many other smaller oasee which are created in a somewhat similar mannor. which Iquique, the great nitrate port and the capital of this mining region, depeads for drhiuking water. The fluid is carred down to the sea in pipes, a distance of sixty miles, There is abundant use for much more water than the Pica oasis yields and every drop is busbanded. There is no part of the world where agricuicrue is more inâ€" tensively carried on than in this green epot in the desert. The source of this waeter is of course the high Andes, but the particular streams contributing it are not yet known. It is belioved that the little rivers tfrom the Andes which contribute uie water supply of Matilia bave been identitied. This desert water is very warm, its temâ€" perature being from 70 to 80 degrees Fahâ€" renheit, and the oases are called health reâ€" sorts, for though the imineral constituents of the water give it a scarcely perhceptiole flavor it is thought to be beneficial in the case of some diseases. :l:bg ousis of Pica yjelds the water upon and Matilla. _ Pica has been known since the Spaniards first visited this region as a place where wator came near to the surâ€" ranges and the high cordillieras stretches the Atacama waste, the northern part of whih is the clevated plain called th8 Pampa the officials in Chile of the Nitrates Syndiâ€" cate. _ Hie first describes briefly the geoâ€" graphical conditions. In morth Chile near the sea and parallel with the coest and the high Andeg &re the coastal cordilleras. besween these lessor Tae color of gold is sown far and wide over the broad surface and strips of purple till every valley. A recent writer says that in all the regions bordwring the Pacific he hgs never seen anything so besutflui as this desert at the hour of sunset. ‘The best description that "has been writtn of the ommes of the saitpetre region has just wpposared in a report by ir. Simon, one of and low mountain FAAges is clothéd with gorgeous hues. hoi & k thought of vegetation. The fact is that this rainloess has its besutiful little oases, which are of great value. There are times when this naked surface, yellow with sand or white with salt incrustaâ€" tious, is very beautiful As the sun is goâ€" ing down the rolling langscape with its biils TREASURE OF THE DESERT. the acre than these verdant "NUs are common to all property in land. The n a tent and why should equire the means to build s and substantial dwellâ€" s to move to some other s or months? He simply mels he can get for the . the Kindest. | (Exchange.) A Sunday school teacher was giving a lesâ€" son in Ruth. She wanted to bring out the kindness of Boaz commanding ‘the reapers to drov large handfuls of wheat. ‘‘Now, children," she said, "Boaz did anâ€" other nice thing for Ruth; can you tell me what 1t was Steel box cars have been built recentâ€" ly which will weigh about three thouâ€" sand pounds less than wooden cars of the same size and capacity. machinery mnufaéiu}iflé'-;;m;ar;}:a&l St. Louis, Mo., shipped 553 cars of machinery from its plant. Good counsels observed are chains of grace.â€"Fuller. The Catskill extension of the New York water supply, on which work has been recently commenced, will cost $10,000,000, and will give the city an additional supply of 500,000,000 gallons per day. Bixtyâ€"three steam shovels are working on the Panama Canal at the present time . Twentyâ€"two other shovels are to be delivered during this year, The storage capacity of the yards of the Pennsylvania Railroad has increased ed 200 per cent. in ten years. It is probable that the last power exâ€" tension of the Niagara Falls power plants has been made. _ Public sentiâ€" ment is opposing further use of the great cataract for industrial purposes. With few exceptions all turbine steamers have three shafts with the highâ€"pressure turbine upon the central shaft and the low pressure turbines on the wing shafts. Keutucky, with a population of 55 to each square mile, has but 8 1â€"10 Tuiles of railroad line for each 100 square miles, and but 14.5 miles for each 10, 000 inhabitants. Indiana, just across the river, with a population of 76 for each square mile, has 19.2 miles of railroad line for each 100 square miles. More persons crossed the Atlantic Ocean from this side during the first six months of the present year than during any other similar period, _ There were 81,000 stcerage passengers in that time. The manufacture of an absolutely weldiess chain is now an accomplished fact. *‘Married her," eald Mange, Prairie Scratchos and every form of contaglous Iich on human or aning#As cured in 30 minutes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion. It never fails. Sold by druggists. For a young Peruvian to be seen on the street winti a girl, other than from his immediate family, no matter how well he might be knowy3 to her, would involve either a marriage or coffee and pictols for two. If you are not content with gazing, you had best follow the cusâ€" tom and purchase as many photographs of her as you may desire from the stock kept on hand in the shops. If you hesiâ€" tate to pay the price asked you as a forâ€" eigner, you must be prepared to meet the indignation of the clerk that one of Lima‘s fairest daughters should be cheapâ€" ly held. Perhaps, as the senor desires the E‘cturo merely as souvenirs, he would satisfied to accept others at lower pricesâ€"lower because they are ostensibly cheaper prints. But Senorita X wears a vacuous expression, while Senorite Y squints markedly, and so you pay twiceâ€" over for your original choice for the sake of honoring her pretty face. And it is . considered an honor, for a girl‘s standing in the community is judged by the numâ€" ber of her pictures that are soldâ€"a sort of continuing plebiscite to decide on "The Most Popular Young Lady in Our Midst."â€"From "Famous Arteries of Traâ€" vel," by Aubrey Lanston, in The Bohemâ€" ian for September. During one month recently a single wostrencs Lo _ me k & It‘s a medicated soep, and a toilet soap. Two scaps in one for the price of one 10c. a cake. 3 large cakes for 25¢. â€"on their Pullmans and ocean liners â€"guests and passengers are provided with «Royal Crown‘‘ Witchâ€"Hazel. Place Viger Hotel, Montrealâ€"at Banfi'â€"_R_oy:al_‘Alexmd::a, Winnipeg Insist on having "Royal Crown" Witchâ€"Haze! Tollet Soap. , When You Admire a Girl in Peru. (Individual Size) _ At the Chateau Frontenacâ€"at "Royal Crown" Witchâ€"Hazel The PEDLAR People &\ Oshawa Montreal Ottawa 2oronto London Winnipeg F\uflnuod in writing for that longâ€"good or a century nlllyrâ€"“n ean‘t bother such a roof-proo‘ .[f.in“ all the elementsâ€"the ch“&“ GOOD roof there is. rite us and we‘ll show you why it costs least to roof right. Just address Rain can‘t get through it in 25 years Toilet Soap INDUSTRIAL NOTES. JC HO® 1TCH ene of the boys. ] There are seemingly more types of wemen in Cairo, all of them natives of | Egypt, than in any other city of like | population in the world. Their variety \ is due largely to the difference in cosâ€" tume, which is regulated by religious beâ€" liefs. All the women of Mohammedan faith wear veils. Some wear queer little spools of brass or gold, which are atâ€" _tached to the headâ€"piece, and which hang down to cover the nose. This signifies that the wearers are married. Others wear veils without either headâ€"piece or nose covering. The veils of the Turkish women are the handsomest, and they are also the most coquettish, for occasionalâ€" ly they are thin enough to show the outâ€" line~ of the features beneath. Nearly all of the aristocratic male Egyptians of Cairo are married to Turkish women, who are supposed to be superior to the natives in both beauty and intelligence. The majority of the Turkish girls otf wealthy families are educated as are their European sisters, and many of theimn are talented in music and painting. This enlightenment which allows the daughters to be educated applies only to those families which have had the adâ€" vartages of English association. But this class is very rarely seen by the tourist, unless he gets just a flash of their veiled faces showing through the closed windows of a carriage in which they enjoy their daily outing on the fashionable Gazera drive of Cairo. It is the middle class which one will see on the streets and in the bazaars in the naâ€" tive quarter. Occasionally the aristocrat visits the jeweler, but when she does she is ushered into a private reception room, and is so hedgeor in by ceremony and servants that the European customer in the same shop cranes his neck in vain to get a glimpse of her.â€"Harriet Quimâ€" by in Leslic‘s Weekly. i Still Canadian. (Toronto Saturday Night.) It is said that Lord and Lady Aberdcen still cherish affection for this country. The story is told of a Canadian visitor to Dublin who the other day let slip some slighting remark about ‘"you English people." ‘‘Please don‘t forget," interrupted Lady Aberdcen, "we are Canadians.‘" And she added: ‘"You see my husband is allowed no privilege over here. In Canada hbe has a vote being a Canadian farmer (by virtue of his Okanagan fruit farm); in England he is classed with minors, women and paupers, and he doesn‘t like it. So we‘re still Canadians, whether wo live in Canada or not." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. Dear Sirsâ€"Your traveller is here toâ€" day and we are getting a large quantity of your MINARD‘S LlNIMEN’g. We find it the best liniment in the market, making no exception. We have been in business thirteen years and have handled all kinds, but have dropped them all but yours; that sells itself; the other have to be pushed to get rid of. ______ _ _ Bear Island, Aug. 26, Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited: The face of the old man also grew out of the oldâ€"time tradition, but the figures are quite plain if one puts on the glasses of imagination. Like so many of these belicfs, says The Washington Star, it began way back in Bible times, and in quite anâ€" other dress. By many nations the old man is supposed to be the one who first made his appearance in the Book of Numbers (Chapter xv., verse 32.) Then he was found by the children of Israel gathering sticks on the Sabbath day. He was taken before Moses and conâ€" demned to death. _ He was taken later outside the camp and stoned until he died. One would think that was punishâ€" ment enough even for so awful a crime, but superstition took him in hand at that point and consigned him to the moon, where, with a bunch of sticks on his tired old back, he was destined to climb forever up the shining bill and never reach the top. The story goes that his faithful dogs were permitted to share his fate, and if you look carefully when the night is clear and dark you will see the pair toiling away upon their endâ€" less climb. . Curious Legend About the Origin of That Being. There is a quaint tradition about how the belief in the man in the moon origâ€" inated that is worth retelling. and waiting for some night flying insect to strike the snare. In this position epiders will sometimes wait for hours, and it is just possible that they may then take a little nap. ‘They might easily do that and yet not lose their game, for the agitation of the web would rouse the sleeper and then it would run down the trap line and secure its» prey. The question, ‘"Do spiders sleep at night?" is not easy to answer. I have made a careâ€" ful observation of the sleep of ants, and that could readily be done by watching colâ€" onies in their artificial formicaries. It is almost impossible to deal with spiders in the same way. 1 would answer, however, in generals terms, that spiders sleep, as all aniâ€" mals do, and doubtless parts of the night are spent in slumber. Many species, however, prey on the night flying insects and so must be awake in order to catch their prey. If you will watch the porch or outbuildings of your home on & summer evening you will be likely to see an orb weaving spider drop slowly down on a single thread in the gathering dusk of the evening. From this beginning a round web will soon be spun, and either hanging at the centre thereof or in a little nest above and at one side is the architect, with foreâ€" feot clasping what wo call the "trap line," Some species of spiders do the chief part of their hunting at night, and there are some who chiefly hunt during the day, but as a rule these industrious animals work both day and night.â€"From the St. Nicholas Magazine. PILES A SENSIBLE MERCHANT. Mysterious Women of Egypt. THE MAN IN THE MOON. Do Spiders Sleep? TORONTO M. A. HAGERMAN Mr. Benedictâ€"Yes; we burn nearly twice the gas we used to.â€"Answers. Mr. Richâ€"I suppose you find that a baby brightens up the house? of the process, and cooling plants are being rapidly installed at all shipping stations of importance. ‘When t.> shipments from a staâ€" tion are not large enough to justify the inâ€" etallation of a plant the cars can be cooled at the first cooling station on the journey. It is evident that within two or three years the cooling plants will be generally installed, and it is believed that the invention will be found one of the most profitable improveâ€" ments in the art of handling fresh fruits yet made. for a week after starting on its journey in a refrigerator car. The expense is said not to exceed two or three cents a crate. The fruit, can therefore be allowed to get rips enough to acquire its distinctive flavor and still reach its destination in far better conâ€" dition than formerly for correspondingly betâ€" ter prices to growers. The evident remedy for that was to egol the fruit before shipment, says the 8 Francisco Chronicle, and ingenious men g’ to work devising practicable methods of coolâ€" ing the fruit to a proper temperature befors starting the car. This is accomplished by exbausting the air in a car or in a room before loading, and replacing it with air made cold by pmésing over ice. By the use of machinery the warmed air is continually drawn out and replaced by the cold air, the circulation being continuous. By this method a carload of fruit can in two or three hours be reduced to the temperature in which the spores of decay will not grow and which under former conditions it might not reach Experiments have now been made for a long enough period to demonstrate the value Fruit picked in a tempereture in the sun of more than 100 degrees and packed into boxes at once carried very nearly that temperature into the car with it, and it was found that ma carload closely packed would probably be more than 1,000 miles on its journey East e:; fore being cooled by the ice to a temperat! unfavorable to decay, and by that time much of the fruit which was reasonably ripe beâ€" fore pickling was in a bad way and went right to pleces when exposed to warm air on arrival. Rit in : New Method Which is Proving a Great Saving to California Growers. KFor years there has been great loss from decay in shipping fresh fruits, both citrus and deciduous, from this State to Eastern markets. ‘The railroads .have seldom been able to get fruit trains through on schedule time, and the necessary allowance for delay has compelled growers to pick their fruit before it was fully ripe, to the loss of some of the flavor and also to the loss of some of the weight which the fruit would gaina if left on the tree. Some fruittâ€"pears, for exampleâ€"Ripen best after picking and are aegularly picked quite green, but other fruits o not. PREâ€"COOLING FRUIT SHIPMENTS. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. And then from Washington‘s utmost ends, _ Where strenuous hearts were stirred, Then what did the tender shepherd doâ€" Fare out in the night and cold And search the desert and tempest through To bring it within the fold? Not much. He lifted the great big stick Which served as a crook to bust And he dealt the ninety and nine a Mok There were ninety and nine who safely lay In the shelter of the law, But one had wandered and gone astray When noboay cared or saw. Before leaving the office the young man observed that most of the other clerks were shod in softâ€"soled slippers, so, strange as the idea seemed, he, too, on the following Monday, joined the noiseless brigade. "There‘s one thing I forgot to menâ€" tion," said the cmp?oyer‘ "When you come to work Monday morning bring a pair of carpet or felt slippers along. All the clerks who come into direct commuâ€" nication with me wear them. I can‘t stand the sound of a footfall. In most things I am not nervous, but the scrapâ€" ing or squeaking of a heavy shoe upscts here rose a cry from his faithful friends; ‘‘Rejoice! He has licked the herd!" me so that I am fit for nothing the whole day long." A young man who got a clerkship in a downtown office was called back by his employer after the terms of service had been agreed upon, says the New York Sun. To enable all to learn we teach on cash or instalmeng plan. We also teach a personal class at school once a month. Class commencing last Tuesday of each month, These lessons teaches how to cut, fit and put together any gariment from the plainest »hirt waist suit, to the most elaborâ€" ate dress. The whole family can learn from one course. We have taught over seven thousand dressâ€"making, and guarantee to give five hundred dollars to any one that cannot learn between the age of 14 and 40. You cannot learn dressâ€"making as thorough as this course teaches if you work in shops for years. Beware of imitaâ€" tions as we employ no one outside the school. This is the only experienced Dress Cutting School in Canada and excelled by none in any other country. Write at once for particulars, as we have cut our rate oneâ€" third for a short time. Address :â€" SANDERS‘ DRESSâ€"CUTTING SCHOOL, 81 Erie St., Stratford, Ont., Canada» in your spare time at home, or Take a Personal Course at School. LEARN DRESSâ€"MAKINC BY MAIL NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL CO, LIMITED, MONTREAL 18 â€"Mclanburgh Wilson, in N. Y A Horse with a Strained Shoulder Fellows‘ Leeming‘s The Good and the Bad Trusts. goc. a bottle. At dealers, Essence handy so you can have it when is sound as a dollar in 24 hours after you rub the sore spot with Fellows‘ Leeming‘s Essence. It gives instant relief in all cases of Strains, Bruises and Swellings â€" draws the pain right out â€" strengthens the weak back, shoulder or knee. Whether you have one horse or twenty, accidents are liable to happen any time. K & bottle of °°P The Nervous Employer. Sure Enough. in f service ' -u-' hss 'â€"' l e w-idi- B-EI- 'P'. uvlts, he New &'*,h“o::lhr&-n.bbnp.blod. | it the stomach is upset, bowels, liver or kidneys to menâ€" | out of order, digestion poorâ€"you need Some Other Day. (Toronto Saturday Night.) A couple of weddings which were to have taken place this months have been postponed. One of the postponements is, I hear, until Christmas. ‘The other is sine die. Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, Blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drugâ€" gists. "Well, well! Childre nare a blessin â€"Translated for Transatlantise T from Fliegende Blatter. "She hasn‘t the time. We hay children." ve two There would be fewer prayers for the removal of mountains if all were called by their right names. Some think they are wonderfull brave because they screw up onow.{ courage to give poor old Jonah a lamâ€" basting. "Your wife used to like to sing and sh> played the piano a lot. Now w., don‘t hear her at all. How‘s that ?" F y < onl aranl? o ult ol v0 00400 h Some think they are full of faith be cause they turn their backs on the facts Often the best way to understand your brother is to look in the face o your Father. You cannot I'seel; hi;n-&eet‘,_anud whole some by taking all your salt on Sunday ~Pmemngp. y ve / ank Adalo s reli?cP s zm The beautiful life wastes no time lookâ€" ing for a mirror. When faith gets to dreaming there son is omething doing. A great deal of piety is only a game of trying to dodge the Almighty, s If you have faith you will see someâ€" thing glorious in every face. The poorest way to make an impresâ€" sion is to give up to depression. You may know the greatness of any man by the way he treats a child. The love of truth goes before likeness to truth. Ornamental piety usually adorns an cul?ty helart. ‘very life may be known by the w it Iemd{ C it C God is not in the closet if He is not on the street. Nursing sorrow is raising sin, You cannot fatten folks on phrases. There are no friendships without faith, The poverty of life is due to the things we miss, and natural action. You can feel yourse! fgmnf' iz better when you nth'luBloodTonic. $ bottleâ€"6 for $5. At druggists or Chemists‘ Co. of Can=da, Limited, Hamiltonâ€"T oronto. tizer, it ranks ahead of all the French deâ€" coctions, and for clearing the hoad after a night spent in riotous living it is more efâ€" Blood Tonic. ‘This Tonic builds up the system. And while T:fm the blood, it also restores the stomach, liver, bowels and kidneys to hecithy fectual than soda, vichy or bromides ALITY ANTITY p â€"/~_ w regasts nuke : by ectual count of paper suppHed. Compare 'l“'~~““ quU,. bc.:fdlhmo:hhfluw“ # ‘ and you Are the VERY BEST values going. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Kendall‘s Spavin Cure If Your Horse Gets Hurt? If one of the horses should be kickedâ€"cut a kneeâ€"strain a shoulder â€"go lameâ€"have you the remedy at hand to CURE the injury ? Toilet Papers Alwaysfvuywhmiuc...d.,u,' EDDY‘S MATCHES Clam Juice a Nourishing Food. DR. B. J. KENDALL co Apropos of Nothing TRADE MARK REGISTEAED. _ ,, Tonic You Need Sentence Sermons. Eddy‘s of Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. wants the Chinese excluded, the Japanese excluded, the Hindoos excluded, and no white labor imported from Europe. In a country such as theire, situated as it is, they cannot permamently succeed in all these points. The fisheries, mines, railways, @rchards, and doâ€" mestic service of the Pacific slope must have men from some source. It seems clear from the way the matter stands out there that orgamizsed labor will have to come to terms, orbolmndlnt.he;djucmontthu“u bringine in of all.kinds of inborâ€" opor x B8 ringing of of labor will be brought in. Her very fleshy suitor had managed to get upon his knees before her, and was panting out his proposal, when the ulepfizne rang. "Please," she suggested, “pimse stay still; I‘ll answer it and bo‘ right back!"â€"Translated for Transatianâ€" tic Tales from Fliegende Blatter. _ "Yes, your Honor," replied Long; "six of them know nothing about this case, and the other six know nothing at aZP. "Well, Mr. Long," asked the Judge, "have you at last secured a sufficient number of jurymen who know nothing about this case?" The dififculty of unxunl a jury in the early courts of ’inwm may be seen from a story related by a lawyer of that State, afterward a Senator of the United States, according to the New York Times. A Juage Irvin was on the Bench, and a murder trial was pending. G. T. Long, familiarly known as "Lucy" Ion.s, was under sheriff. There was diffic t{oln {ttting a jury that knew nothing & ut ho facts of the case. The ng\.xlu panel had been exhausted, and t special venire had beer issued and was lg::lly returned. if only for the reason that it is wholeâ€" _ T bC ApSRIAIGC that wor are ‘“.l nlnni lime, ...-ul" and add in ’B:‘T o ldeu:n(lor:’rml-l," Cream of Tarter." S qL * 0+ Write for free copy of our new Cookâ€"Book. A Dogâ€"inâ€"theâ€"Manger Attitude. ISSUE NO â€" SL George‘s _ Nations! Drug & Chemical Co. of Mfilu. Montreal. (Toronto Saturday Night.) Considerate. An IGeal Jury. 1907. e f NO MORE FOR Professor Di €ime at emincl of causit miared, will nc ansesthetics The discovery the effects of the kn« z offer 1 GROSS EARNINGS TWO MILL1IO Working Expenses Nearly Sixtyâ€"fiy Earningsâ€"Encov Company 30. 1907 , angua! meek tory of the : 2nd at noon. Fe annual «ta 1 mileage of Â¥ made up 0 struction, . 823; worked, 262; mile traffic returns, 9 above. Leased } 'hip‘ 10 be v. quine «dsccuriti , properties mnpan,\'. #3.41 on land and t« acvances to Du: lantic Railway « vances to lines 702,000 ; materia $0,425000; etati accounts | receiv; 46] 000 ; | accoum: portation from the minion Government arnyd, $21,394.000 ; \1 nt is placed Pa ri« The total ext amounted to 48 items being a« transportation, ® of way . and * general expenses FEarnings in d From passengers $45 885,000; â€" ma cars, express, elva miscellaneous, inc“‘ ocean «teamships, 1 total of '72.'!1’..(5 balance for the x Small Hole Throug ’ of Fatal Mistal tical Jokeâ€"P: BElame@ for Ac »ID NOT XKNOW BUT IT KILLE to LWoam 1jo «nufted out able but fe CBis «sLory Edua (a mer Sudge Â¥. 1 aged 22, Miss Ca the delis im the : &Id the volve; ing all and ex} Alde: The i pu Montreal 11 son, form On mother on the yespect clothes bo v rt M <hir ut Deny SHOT B W D the aslaway car o lines ulfi material 0; «tation 4 s receivable accounts . 4 n from the Governmen 21304 .000 : & nt is placed t4 t1 ] he NC #3} .4 ] 4 Jb n M aiedge 1) ri

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