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Durham Review (1897), 26 Sep 1907, p. 6

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A thorough draught ought to blow through every room at least once a day in order to dislodge the stale air from eorners and from under the furniture. 1d His disciples infinitely more than His disciples Him, because His heart was inâ€" finitely largor. Love trusts on, ever hopes and expects better things and this a trust springing from itself, and out of its own deeds alone. And more than this: it is this trusting love that makes men what they are trusted to be, so realizing itself. Would you make men trustworthy?* Trust them! Would you make them true* Believe them!â€"F. W Robertson. portunity to know something h y srd | M wagews] Do Y Pass it on; t its music live and grow, t it cheer another‘s woe, u_ have reap‘d what others sowâ€" Pass it on. if t} Pass it on; are groping in the night, Daylight fUM; thy lighted lamp on high, «tar in some one‘s sky, avy live who else would dieâ€" Pass it he sing LN Love a Preservative tue Main ard Christ The Rev. Henry Burton fish in thy greed; i thy brothers‘ need sunshine of a smile, the little thing, es the flow‘rs of spring silent birds to singâ€" it on. it C r the living word? Good Cheer. t, you live again; with Him you reign iny â€" American » kinduess shown () »xf a bird? 1 while, heav‘nly light? and wh »t L1 In 1 alon t LT 11 » has op of the families iat1 n 13 alt lif ie and water tight. Then after it is framed in \~* . the sash it is cleaned off with pumic stome and is ready to be placed. In the ordinary iost | windows figures, such as that of the face 5 and robe, are first painted on clear glass, * which is then baked in a gas furnace. In 10W | the costlier windows the entire figure is s is~ made of stained glass, a work that requires hy . the most expert mantpulation and a high , _ order of artistic ability. In bevelled plats Ne work the plate glass is first cut to size il}y «nd then bevelled and repolished. Channelled r «‘nc strips are used to bind the pleces toâ€" it LI other. If copper is desired the wholo deâ€" flgnh,. complete, is placed in a copper plating bat There is a wide range of the cost of stained or bevelled plate glass windows. Some of the work may be had for as little as a dolâ€" lar & aquare foot, and from that price runs up to $10 or $12 a square foot. For mcsrle "igure work the price is higher yet. The cost of the ordinary window dapends upon mither the number of pieces of glass in it or the number of figures. Mange. Prairle Scratches and evéry form of ‘ontaglous Iteh on human or anin#ls cured n 3 minutes by Woilford‘s Sanitary Lotion. : ugver fails. Sold by druggists. chouse and still later another long unâ€" rground passa was constructed to <tend beyond tiee wall containing the {cors to a great arch of substantial and iassive structure which gave entrance to "covered way" leading from the Bonaâ€" oarte mansion to the Lake Houseâ€"near the Trenton road entrance to the park in which his daughter Zenaide resided. The passage to the Lake House was built upon the side of the bluff, was {aced with latticework and afforded a shelter from the inclemency of the weaâ€" ther. The entrance also served as a shelterway in case of sudden showers for parties who had been pleasuring on the water, and with this idea the count had carved in Italian over the doorway: "Not ignorant of evil, I learn to succor the unfortunate." sign is latd out on & wide board and goes to the workman, who assembles the window and binds it together. The binding is done with what is known as calm lead,, a flat thread of metal containing on each side a channel into which the edge of the glass fits. ‘The lead is cut into lengths to fit each particular plece of glass. After the whole design is thus assembled each joint is solderec together. From the assembler the window, bound in an fron frame, goes to another workman, who flls in between the glass and the lead with a cement that makes the window air he work may be had for as (tHe &8 a dol | though oddly enough it was regarded as s . and from r ini :Dr;?im ;;2 . Squire foou F%r rittharca |u purely feminine appanage, and one "gure work the price is higher yet. The which men might never condescend to cost of the ordinary window dapends upon | adopt. But all over the East the umâ€" ither the number of pisces of glass in !t | breiin has for gencerations been well r the number of "‘“. C known as an insignia of power and royâ€" alty. Thus, on the sculptored remains ITCH of Egyptian temples one sees representaâ€" Mange. Prairle Scratches and ever;‘lorm $ | tions of kings going in procession with 4 l m n o o amfene on ARan‘ S0red | umbrelias carried over their heads Even * "1‘;":'”,'3‘1’:_ e lbl;ozdrslzf.'wa'y 19998 /in India toâ€"day some of the great Mahaâ€" sumumemeuyfiefreiffmmcmmmuese rajahs still call themselves "Lords of pa the Umbrella," and in an address preâ€" CCRET UNDERGROUND PASSACES. sented by the King of Burmah to the That Were Constructed on the American | ‘V¢er0oy of India in 1855 the British reâ€" Estate of Tosech B A presentative is described as the "monâ€" state of Joseph Bonoparte. | arch who reigns over the great umbrella l‘lain truth seems mild when compared | wearing chicfs of the Fast." One has vith the thrilling legends told in the | only to walk through the streets of any «ast of the subterranean passages leadâ€" | Indian town toâ€"day to see how important ng from the home of the exâ€"King ‘of a social distinction the umbrella has beâ€" ipain to the river at Bonaparte Park,| come. For a native to go without an cordentown. In reality there were only | umbrella in the streets of Calcutta, for wo short underground passageways conâ€" | instance, is practically a mark of degreâ€" tructed by Joseph Bonaparte, but these, | datica. â€"London (Globe. Very few traces are now left of the underground gallery leading from the site of the original mansion to the Lake House, but the substantial brick walled passage leading from the site of the origâ€" inal mansion to the creek and thence to the Delaware River is the same toâ€"day as when built nearly a century ago. It has of late years been walled un where it entered the cellar of the old house.â€" Philadelphia Public Ledger. used. The cutter uses shears, so made that in cwiting the duplicates exactly enough space is left to allow for the lead which goes between each plece of glzes to hold the window together. Some idea of the work inâ€" volved is shown in a window now being made for a private residence. ‘The window ontmins a peacock, and in the tail 750 pleces of glass are used. In the whole design are more than 1,800 pieces of glass. From the cutter the duplicate design, in pdeces, goes to the glazler, who cuts out rach separate plece of glass. Diamonds are ised exclusively in the cutting. The glazier must match the glass for each plece. Ofton shere ‘ju the exact tint cannot be obâ€" taimed in a single plece of glass two pleces are overlald to get the effoct. He may have to cut only one piece of each duplicateâ€" {or a sapecial designâ€"or he may have to cut a dozen altke for an order for church windows. After all the glass is cut the doâ€" A woman is a Endox. It is when she‘s fair that she takes a fellow by storm. grades comes in huge sheets, 6 and 8 feet in length and from 2 to 6 feet wide. Boâ€" sides the ‘"antique" and the plain plate glass there are four grades, known as ‘"cathedral," ‘ondoyant,‘" â€" ‘‘opalescent‘" and "drapery." Dach of these grades comes in all the shades of the rainbow. The drapery glass is fluted and is used to represent clothing in windows this a full size pattern is drawn. When this is complete it goes to the cutter, who uts out duplicates of each picce of the wo short underground passageways conâ€" tructed by Joseph Bonaparte, but these, vith the mansion observatory, gave rise » the fanciful stories that he had subâ€" ervranean passages dug all through his rounds; that the passages bad irop cors and could be closed and boited on he fnside. When Joseph Bonaparte purchased the «tensive park in Bordentown for his .«merican home it included about 1,000 res, situated on the clevated plateau of rdentown, on the south side of the rosswicks Creek and extending from ho confluence of the creek and the Delaâ€" care to the White Horse bridge, more han a mile above. After occupying for a time the subâ€" ‘antial frame building which stood in \~ park Konaparte built a mansion near ‘\o edge of the bluff and named it Point ~ceze. From the cellar of this manâ€" on was the first brick underground ~<sn7eway, about ten feet wide and ty feet long, leading to the side of the ‘uff, and from the entrance to this cderground passage to the water‘s edge «as an enclosed path of easy ascent. his subterranean passage was walled stands contadnd figures. In n&na‘. window the first thing, of ourse, is design. This may be a stock lrawing or & special design w_ocdm'. -l_-‘_xzom ) and ceiled with brick, and it was terward divided into two passageways mere it entered the mansion, one leadâ€" x to the cellar and one leading to an ner room in the mansion. Later a third door gave entrunce to the Down in the cellar of an old two storey to PÂ¥ magl comes that (iive me a sinner trying to be good. Keep, yourself, for all I care, the idle saint. The Umbrella an Insignia of Power. With the seasons upside down as they are at present, people are beginning to realize the absoiute necessity of never stirring out of doors without an umbrelâ€" la. If social history is to be trusted, the first Englishman to carry an umbrella was one Hanway, who lived at the end of the eighteent{x century. At first ho was regarded as an ececntric individual, but by degreees they discovered much method in his madness, and before he died in 1786 the fashion he set was adâ€" opted by society in general. Of course Hanway was not the originator of the umbrelKa. Among the Greeks and Româ€" ags some such article was very common, Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. There are beautiful flowers which, if worn in the hair, will smear a belle with sticky juice. 4 6 C He who has been wise enough to get plenty of salve will be too wise to have much need of it. / Constant scratching will change the itch into an awbscess. So beans, so children. Becoming ripe, they forget their pods with speed. The back of a machete would cut as well as the front if time enough were spent in sharpening it. _ _Locked in Cabanas one does not shout because the, day is finc. 6 th;{v forget their pods with speed. icked by the bare foot of a pauper one is more hurt than if kicked by the king in golden sandals, and more reâ€" sentful; and hard and sharp edged jewâ€" els on the hand that pats give comfort and not bruises to the patted head. I force my mule to walk, to trot, to run; yet he weighs thrice as much as I. I canrot force my newâ€"born babe to smile, yet I could crush him with one Could we see through a man‘s shirt, how often would we refuse to give him friendship. _ , f C Sailors, in calm, pray for another ship so that they may visit; in storm they pray for solitude, that they may avoid collision. And O, remember that storms ‘rise quickly out of ealms.â€"From the September Bohemian. When complated it will be transported by an auto truck up the narrow trail to the observatory and there will be mounted under a rotating dome fifty feet in diameter. .With this monster eye it will be possible to penetrate further into the depths of space than by any instrument ever before deâ€" signed by man. Thousands of tourists from all parts of the word visit this observatory every year. So great is the popular interest in the work there it has been decided to establish a muâ€" seum of astronomical photographs in conâ€" nection with the observatory, to be open to the public at all times. Changeable Electric Signs. Brilliant effects fer electric _ @igms are now to be readily obtained with litâ€" tle cost by the use of small colored traneparent caps, which fit over . the rounded ends of the incandescent bulbs. This permits the owner of a change able e‘,:ctric sign to alter the legend it will and to indudie in the use ofeeo&! without the necessity of keeping on hand a large supply of colored lamps, some of which are very _ expensive.â€"Scientifit American. The greatest reflecting telescope in the world is to be the climax of the equipment of this observatory. A huge lens five feet in diameter, eight inches thick and weighâ€" ing a full ton is being perfected at the Mount Wilson laboratory in . Pasadena. To such an exact nicety must its surface be ground and polished it will require three years to complete it ready for mounting. . Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. The glass in the rougn costs $1 a pound. With great patience and the highest mechanâ€" fcal skill it is being fitted for :ts momentâ€" ous work. ‘The popular opinion is that the astronomer points his telescope directly at the sun and fires his vision point blank across the chasm of millions of miles. Instead, says a writâ€" er in the Ohio Magazine .the errant sun rays are lassoed by a coelestatâ€"a great cirâ€" cular mirror driven by clockwork in such & manner that it throws its light into anâ€" other mirror above, and this in turn sends the long, concentratel beam far into the inâ€" terior of the telescop$ house. uk One of the most important subjects of reâ€" segrch will be the apparent decrease in heat radiation from the sun in the last few years. Another problem will be that undertaken by Prof. E. E. Barnard, who is not satisfied with the theory of the nebular origin of the earth and who will try to determine how much faith can be put in the nebular hypothâ€" The two mirrors move in automatic adâ€" justment to each other, so that the solar beams may be shot into the building, no matter in what portion of the sky the sun may be situated. At the further end of the building the reflected sunbeam strikes . a concave mirror which catches the light, and flashing it back toward the opening whence it first entred rocuses it into a perfect image of the sun. g son, a peak in southern California, is a soâ€" lar observatory which will outclass any othâ€" er designed for that purpose. It is under the patronage of the Carnegie Institute at Washington. The intention is to spend at least $300,000 upon its equipâ€" ment. Mount Wilson was selected as the site because the atmosphere there was clear and tranguil for a greater number of days than at any other place tested. _ _ Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff Soon We WiH Add a Wonderful Reflectâ€" ing Telescope. One by one this country is equipping itself with a group of the greatest observatories in the world. On the summit of Mount Wilâ€" "Dear father," wrote a youngster of' Waztedâ€" twelve, "we are all well and happy. The | P%%, % I" baby has grown ever so much and has | ag as one a great deol mcore serse than be 1 =<Â¥ | , wanted to have. Hoping the same of you, L reâ€" ‘ h“‘?‘:'.-*.._ main your affectionate son, James." of 2000 *" OUR GREAT TELESCOPES. CUBAN PROVERBS. Dear Sirs,â€"I had a Bleeding Tumor on my face for a long time and tried a numâ€" ber of remedies without an{ good reâ€" sults. I was advised to try MINARD‘S LINIMENT, and after using several botâ€" tles it made a complete cure, and it healâ€" ed all up and disappeared altogether. DAVID HEXDERsON. Belleisle Station, King‘s Co., N. B., Sept. 17, 1904 Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited.: Ancient and Modern Alchemists. Mr. Berthelot, a noted French scient ist who is dead of grief over his wife‘s death, claimed to be on the point of disâ€" covering the scereis of the old alchemâ€" ists. Did the old alchemists know things unknown to modern alchemists? Is not much of the talk of their knowledge and mysterious performances akin to witch tales? The aged alchemist in skull cap and dressing gown, among his retorts And crucibles &# & familiar figure in roâ€" mance and Be is always about to do sometfing vory WoOnderful, but if he ever did there is no prooi of it.â€"Nashâ€" ville, Tenn., American. We have just received from the pubâ€" lishers, A. McKim, Limited, of Montreal anrd Toronto, a copy &f the 1907 edition of the Canadian Newspaper Directory. This is the fourth edition of this valuâ€" able work, which is filling a very real need in Canada, and deserves a place on the desk of every business man. It is the only Newspaper Directory published in Canada that has gone beyond a first edition, amd # hes now become the standard work of reference for all inâ€" formation about newspapers. It not orly lists and describes fully every periodical in the country, giving full particulars, but it supplies, as well, a compreneasive Gazestesr of the Domin Gempiiing this cditien with former ones, we note a large fmerease in the number of papers whig bave supplied detailed statements of clreolation supâ€" ported by alfidavit and thereby rescived the Star of Honoz. This is as it should be, and helps to put newspaper advrertisâ€" ing on a mose businessâ€"like basis. The rapid growth of the new wesigrn proâ€" vinces is very m!flt. for they are credited with twice as many papers as in 1908. . _ _ t The McKim Advertising Agrg, pubâ€" lisher of this work, has been formed into a limited company, capitalized at $200,â€" 000, to hbe kno@wnmn as A. McKim, Limited, with headquarters st Montreal, a branch office in Toronta, and repreâ€" sentatives in New York, £nd London, Eng. This change has been made to fatilitate the handling of their steadilyâ€" increasing business. _ 10n Ever since this business was founded by Amson McKim, more than twenty years ago, the MceKim Agency has stood high im favor with both publisher and advertisor. Their methods are right upâ€" toâ€"*?ate â€"enterprising, progressive and systematic to a degree. The firm has won @ii enviable reputaâ€" tion for fair dealing and prompt payâ€" ments, and is undoubtedly at the head of the profeesion in this country. To enable all to learn we teach on cash or instalment plan. We also teach a personal class at school once a month. Class commencing last Tuesday of each month, â€" These lessons teaches how to cut, fit and put together any garment from the plainest shirt waist suit, to the most elabor ate dress. The whole family can learn from one course. We have taught over seven thousand dressâ€"making, and guarantee to give five hundred doliars 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. â€" 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, 31 Erie St., Stratford, Ont., Canada, "Tommy," teacher began, "you can lear,. this if you make up your mind. It‘s not one bit smart to appear dull. _ I know," she continued, coaxingly, "that you are just as bright as any boy in the class. Remember, Tommy, where there‘s & will there‘sâ€"â€"â€"" "You should not have interrupted me," reprimanded the teacher, "but 1 am glad that your father has taught you the old adage. (an you repeat it to me?" "Sure," said Tommy, confidently. "Me fadder says dat where der‘s a willâ€"der‘s always a bunch o0‘ poor relations.‘"â€"Lipâ€" pincott‘s Magazine. Few visitors to the Metropolitan Muâ€" seum of Art in New York are aware, while admiring the iridescence of the glass bottles, plates and other ancient articles of ornament and use discovered in Cyprus, that the prismatic hues disâ€" played are a result of the decay of the glass. When disintegration sets in, the subâ€" stance of the glass splits into exceedingâ€" ly thin laminae which, as the sunlight traverses them, gives rise to a splendid play of colors. _ Like forest leaves, theso _ delicate glasses signalize their approaching dissoâ€" lution by becoming more beautiful. "Aw," broke in Tommy, "I know all dat, I do. Me fadder‘s a lawyer, he is, an‘ I‘ve heard him say it lots 0‘ times." in your srare Qme at home, or Take a Personal Course at School. Wazteiâ€"A yourg man to take care of & pai of mules of a Curletian cis,Osition Wanteiâ€"Two eppreatices who will be treatâ€" a4 as one of the frmily. s HILS. Wartedâ€"An Infnatrions ~>~ *~ t1%= charge of 3,000 Ts« we can spent rmen. What Papa Said. Tommy was stubborn, and his teacher was having a hard time explaining a small point in the geography lesson. LEARN DRESSâ€"MAKING BY MAIL THE CANADIAN NEWSPAPER DIRECTORY FOR 1907. (ARumor of Bulls : The Decay of Glass. TORONTO A Few "VWants." nurse for . bottled .A RI=ndors nd RI Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€" wetting. ‘There is a coastitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful bhome treatment, with full instructions. Send no money but write her toâ€"day if your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child, the chances are it can‘t help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night. Mob vs. Society. (Montreal Gazette) It is a serious thing when peaceable men, because of their color, are lawlessly assailed. It may be a costly thing when the victims of mob wrath are subjects of a government which has both the power and the will to fromct them. The nationality of the victims s, however, a matter of no importance. The law of the land has been outraged. Its power should be vindicated, and this not for the sike of the yellow strangers more than for that of the white residents. A mob that is permitted to persecute one class of the people will soon think it can tyrannize over any class, and will become a public danger that only the shedding of blood may check. (From Londos Punch.) From lm:lrmn‘ till evening, from evening til night, I preach and I organize, lecture and write; And all over London my gaitered legs flyâ€" Was ever a Bishop so busy as 1? No table is snowy with damask for me; My cloth is my apron that covers by knee. No manâ€"servants serve and no kitchenâ€"maids dish up a~ amagernore ns The frugal repasts of this Suffragan Bishop When wrl:tlnx my sermons, the best of my work‘ll Be done in the trains in the underground circle; I can write one complete, with & fine perâ€" oration. Between Charing Cross and the Mansion House station. For luncheon I swallow & sandwich of bam, Asg I rush up the steps of a Whitechapel Or with excellent appetite I will discuss A halfpenny bun on a Waterloo ‘bus. SECRET skiN TROUBLES on a sore, m&‘:"&-".’ ototheot?. yet “::.tc;.“ hou: and hours of pain and inconvenience P i o e is Tant Sack chroute caces as Fours! ‘It heals skin diseases, ulcers, The last very serious onslaught was made in 1896. It is reported ‘that the German Govâ€" ernment have under consideration the exâ€" cavation of three great waterways, one connecting Gruhl, on the Kaiser Wilâ€" helm Canal, with the River Schlei, anâ€" other running from the mouth of the Elbe opposite Brunsbuttel and thence to Jahde Ba[\;. The dimensions of these canals wi s&ermit navigation by the largest warships. The third canal will form a channel from Wesel to the River Ems at Ksionisch, Silesia. fos&erlng' sores, ringworm and sores due to blood poison. Write Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto, for free trial box, sending 1c. stamp. Ail stores and druggists sell at 50 cents a box. The Army Worm. He‘s a notable pest. He ruins the crops. In 1743 he appeared by millions. That was in struggling New England. Dr. Bouton, of Vermont, saw ten bushels in a heap. Fortunately h{ has a host of natural enemics. His mamma is a light brown moth, who lays her eggs in meadow grasses. BETTER THAN SPANKING. will waste your labor in cultivatin§ a stone. The moral life is the counterpart of the naturalâ€"alike mysterious in its origin, and alike visible only in its efâ€" fects.â€"J. A. Froude. He feeds on the succulent stalks of wheat, corn, oats and the like. y Words of the Wise. Never give up to despair. To regret a wrong is good; to stop to think of it too long, and to plunge into remorse, is to lose the power of reparation.â€"Charles Wagner. f & 5 In his six weeks from egg to moth: f1; he does his great damage to the pre cious crops.. hre T If to be true in heart and just in act are the first qualities necessary for the elevation of humanity, if without them @ll else is worthless, intellectual culture cannot give what intellectual culture does not require or imply. You cultivate the‘ plant which has already life; you He‘s a juicy morsel for the meadow lark, the bobolink, the blackbird, robin redbrcast and many others. The black bectlc also devours him wholesale. Carefully Concealed. Chic:go Tribune:â€"The McSwatts had returned from their vacation. Sobering, almost alarming, to some of us is the thought of Christ as Judge. On the other hand, what judgment could be kinder or fairer? We are to face the judgment seat, but let us never forget that it is the judgment seat of Christâ€" the Christ who flow- man, who sees and sympathizes with every individual, who, having himself suffered, being tempted, is prepared to make allowance for human infirmities, who judges us not so much by what we are as by what we want and strive to be.â€"Howard Alâ€" len Bridgman. :)b,duch h:;l:f. as this l‘zonderhd Oumll:euln: is applied 1 i , angry places healâ€" undhashoalg:eq;:wifl not fln. ign of skin disease. 50c. boxâ€"6 for $2.50â€"1!ml size 25¢c. At druggists or The Chemists® Co. of _"Now, Billiger," said Mrs, MecSwatt, "where did you hide the jewelry that we didn‘t take along with us." _ "You hurried me so. Lobelia," he anâ€" swered. "that I‘ve forgotten just where, but T know it‘s cither stuck behind some of the rafters in the top attic or buried in the ccal nile in the basement." Continuous Itching with Eczema, Salt Rheum, Tetter and constantly scratching until the skin is .aw and biseding 2 Nothing gives relief 2 You‘re wrong. Just try Red, Itching SKin Three Great Waterways. TRADL MARK REGISTERCD BISHOP INGRAM. amiltonâ€"Toronto. Canadian Will restore graY hair to its natural color,. Stogl falling hair, causes to frow on bald heads, cures Gandruff, tching and all scalp diseases, Contains no oily or greasy ingredients, Not a dye. Price 15 centsâ€"Tointroduce will mail first order for 30 cents, coin or postal note, Address THE MERWIN CO., Windsor, Ont (By Ellia Wheeler Wilcox.) Pon‘t shoot! Consider this one tact, ‘The lack of manhood in the Act; How could a creature of your size , Take aim at any bird that flies? We are so helpless, and so small! ‘The very tiniest boy is tall Compared with us. Put down your gun, And seek some manlier kind of fun. "There are two traits about the Amerâ€" ican Indian that civilization and contact with his white brothers cannot overâ€" come," said Frank L. Campbell, who has spent several years as a school teacher among the Sioux and has learned to know them well. "Those peculiarities are his aversion to paper money and his appetite for dog. An Indian will never take paper money if he can avoid it. He wants, il:: the lanâ€" guage of the Sioux, ‘muzza ska,‘ which translated mm::l‘ white iron. The red man cannot bring himself to believe that a emall piece of printed paper can be worth as much or more than the metal itself. Stnnge to say, an Indian would also rather have ten silver dollars than one ten dollar gold piece. I do not know whether it is because the ten pieces of money appear to be more or wgether it is, simply because he likes to jingle the is simply because he likes to jingle t mim."â€"Fm[n the Washington Post ‘The forest area of Ontario and Quebec has been estimated by R. H. Campbel} Dominion Superintendent of Forestry, at 40,000,000 square acres, Of 12,500 square miles of pine, and 120,000 geres, Of 18â€" 500 square miles of spruce. The forest area of New Brunswick, according to the same authority, is calculated at 7,500,000 acres, or 11,720 square miles of mostly spruce lumber. In Nova Seotia the forest area is placed at 5,000,000 acres, or 7,812 square miles. Canada has therefore, inâ€" cluding the rest of the country unmenâ€" tioned, a total forest area of 500,000,000 acres. At 3,000 feet to the acre, which is a low average. there are 1,500,000,000,000 feet. In Canada the forest area is mostâ€" ly situated on rocky elevations. The immgiration statisties show that in 1904 immigrants came from the British Isles numbering ©0,374; in 1905 the number _was (5,350, and in 1906 the number was 86,796, made up as follows: . CANADA‘S FOREST AREA. The Official Estimate is 50%0 Don‘t shoot! But leave us free of wing To build, and nest, and soar and sing. We ask so little, just to live~â€" And for that privilege we give Our souls in song, till life is done, Put down your gun, put down your gun Don‘t shoot! Earth has enough of joy, Of space, and food, for bird and boy; !_!_noux_h for both of light and sun, 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. Rave $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drugâ€" gists. Don‘t shoot! Out there in tree and glade, In pretty nests that we have made, Our hbungry little birdlings wait. Ab, think of their unbappy fate If wo came not at sct of sun! Put down your gun, put down your gun. Put down rour gun, put down your gun English and Weish Scotch ... ... ..> NFISH | . .« â€" uns i win o ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT English and Welsh Scotch .. .... ..> +> TNON .111 ere ues as No Paper Money for the Indians, Beotch . Irish ... English and Welsh The PEDLAR Peogle Oshawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto London Winnipeg This roof saves you work because its so easy t.on{m on (do it yourself with a hammer a ni‘?:). and save you -m fnlad Reming in weatherâ€"proof . t ilding cover, Write us about it and hear AI(M soy â€" ROOFING RIGHT. Address "OsSHAWA" GALVANIZED STEEL SHINGLES There is one roof that saves money because it will last 100 years. Guaranteed in writing for 25 years. !’5."\'»‘7»-.’..\5 OUR IMMIGRATION. Toilet Papers Always Everywhere i Don‘t Shoot! Hair Restorer. Eddy‘s 65,982 15,848 5.018 50,274 65,359 36,604 10,552 A9,617 11,744 $,998 re in Canada, Ask for S MATCHES ‘There is an old and foolish conundrum, “Wbyuuhenf"cutothi-thmhn logically satisfactory answer. This conâ€" undrum might, however, have been askâ€" edreocutlywtomepurpooehshldon courtroom. A hen flew into a bicycle It upâ€" set the rider and smashed the . maâ€" chine. â€" Was the owner of the hen liable for damages? One lawyer contended that hem,forthchnwutnlpulh'on the highway. The other bv‘yor said : "No," l?qr }ien. was no proof dl‘.At.dn hen might have been expected to act in a violent and destructive _ manner,. The judge agreed to this, and gave judgâ€" ment for the defendant, But should not a bicyclist feel reasonâ€" ably secure on a highway from unproâ€" voked assaults of hfidflo fowls, _ A wil<vithfovl is up-ble.x .honwld , of anything. Suppue A a hole in the tire of a standing bv“q on?â€"From the Boston Herald. @ _ Sm M CC l ACRES, 1 MILE FROM 3 "‘n"“l ”uumu,ulfll““’“" ler who! on Soverep in m ts Sm poot repan of house. barn, 85 x 65, m t Soli sand and gravelly loam. mn' §$00 down, balance 5%. A "‘8‘_ ANGE WESTERN RBAL BSTATE Making Telephone Poles Picturesque. For some weeks past the aesthetic soul of Epping has been aroused to fury by a threatened invasion of the National Telephone Company, It was felt that for a stranger to emerge from the dl?td haunted glades of the forest upon a vista of telephone poles would prove as disenâ€" chanting as if the Venus of Milo sudâ€" denly exclaimed "By Jove!" A mflm- mise has now been effected by w-t only five poles are to be erected these will be relegated to an obscurity where they cannot spoil the old world charm of the little town. "On Pragmatisâ€" tic principles," as Prof, James would say, there seems no reason why telephone and telegraph poles should remain un» pktmue when they might «o easily be wre with climbing proses or ers. Hop poles, the most prosaic objecz in the universe, are being transformed into the most rol:nmiengenuty at the present moment t! roughout the h C :i‘enc.‘ :)f Kent.â€"From the \Veotx?n‘i,n‘::rer Dealer (pocket see it when you all cracked â€"_£&A. WBEEIRTET CCDRAs a LIMITED, LONDON, ONT Gazette. Customer (to news d;ul:-;)“â€"l want to purchase a book of jokes. News Dealerâ€"l’d sell you this joke book for half price because it‘s a little damaged. * Customer (examining book)â€"I‘ll take it, but I can‘t see where it is dnmn‘d w&dq â€"Yowl _ "®aier (pocketing the money)â€"Yow! A Romance Srofld. The beautiful girl waded into yeasty stuff. . _ Minard‘s Liniment for "Save me!" There were seven men on the hotel piazza. They conferred hastily, _ Then the lovely ‘g'l:}, %u::;l her etrugâ€" gles and tly e mâ€"M land PlJn Dealer. _ Then the one with the clearest voice called to the struggling maiden. . "Awfully sorry," he shouted, "but there isn‘t an unmarried man emong W _ Presently she uttered a shrick of terâ€" TOr. â€"safest regulator for baby, Prevents colic and van(tin‘:fim healthful rest â€"cures diarrhoea without the harmful effects of medicines containing opium or other injurious drugs. 424 â€"at dru; Cures _',';fi',& Diarrhoea‘*": ISSUE NOQ. certainly do need Kendali‘s Spavin ( Whetber it‘s from a Bruise, Cut, St Swelling or Spavin, nubul-u cure the lamenessâ€"quicklyâ€"compl o _ Opram, Bagc., May 16th ‘o6, "I have used Kendali‘s Spavin Cure for 20 years and find it a sure cure." 3\ , 3 FPC~Rcumg the money) it when you read the jJokesâ€" cracked.â€"Somerville Herald. FOR SALE Lame Horses YÂ¥ Nurses‘ and Mothers‘ Treasure , for the hen was trespassing on ghwn‘i. The other lawyer said: for there was no proof that the ghthsveboenoxpoohdtouthl and destructive _ manner. The agreed to this, and gave judgâ€" FARMS FOR SALE, 40 Damaged Jokes. B5c.â€"at drugâ€"stores. National Drug & Chemâ€" 39. 1907. â€"they‘re ~HIN The mo resolution an advis gentlemen he chosen ol prisons It was no biennial number of cat res At W Le‘ it T dis No Citizen Wan $UITM of drif Jason Nicke Went Acro Logâ€"endsâ€" the Accid V BOAT WITH H has hbeen i Being i sulted i and ~can eity, ha of the throuzh those at Hin f1 British M BOTH SIZED AT () in th GALT I ppP mp Th ided tion ) rta 1)

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