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Durham Review (1897), 7 Nov 1907, p. 6

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uo DC er oS Te t us ready to appear before Thee and render our account. If Thou shouldst give us many years of life, grant that as they pass they may leave with us gifts of grace, that we may grow rich is virtue and may accumulate the incorruptible treasure of holy character. May our latest days be filled with peaee and overâ€" flow with blessing. Amen. Mothicn S + râ€"lipteripegedinintolian ie ... â€"© 2 be, whether Thou wilt spare us to old age or shortly call us hence. If the sumâ€" mons should come soon, may it find us semths (gut oc hss m Holy and most merciful Father, we thank Thee for the care that has guided us through life‘s jJourney and has kept us even to this hour. Forsake us not, O God, but send us Thy light and truth, and lead us even to the journey‘s end. We know not what Thy will for us may Te CE . SML 3:\ iesd 1 besk sniv;, ; _ _ 11 _1 Present "life.. ‘The best spirit in which to fulfil those tasks is the spirit of waiting for Christ and for the everlasting life. To those who wait for Him and it, they will come. _ 2M CCC OOP ied judge of the issues of life. We are wnitini here until that larger life can begin, but we are not "only waiting here." In a true sense we are, for that is our real life, and this is only preparation for it. But the preparation consists in present duty ana work, and faithful devotion to our tasks, within the limitations of this present life. _ The best spirit in which to fulfil those tasks is the spirit of waitine far c«a..: °V "RSKS We do enti‘;ely right, however, when, after guarding ourselves in these 'ai' against wrong ideas, we think of the future and of our duty to prepare for the future. Beyond our â€" life here there is an entrance waiting for us into the eterâ€" nal life, which we %ive here under many limitations, and shall live there in perâ€" fect freedom. And our loved ones who have gone before are waiting for us there in what Jesus himself called His Fathâ€" er‘s house of many mansions. In that life and peace we shall work with God and serve Him. That life there is the whole of which this life is a part and those who reject what it offered them of it here have rejected the possibility of it there, so far as we may know or can judge of the issues of Wifa C TT betainfiies Asss dhl ic ind The language of John in his epistle, is very careful lan age. His distincâ€" tion is not ptimarig: between what is present and future, but between the world and God. That is the choice beâ€" tween the present and the future, but it is that because it is much more. It is the choice between the unworth and the worthy, the low and the hig{, the transient and the enduring, between the fatal choice of the world‘s fleeting joys, and that living connection with God in the doing of His will, which relates men to the abiding. REMEMBER ETERNITY. If eternity is simply tmie indefiniteâ€" ly prolonged into the future, how can any one remember it? We can‘t reâ€" member the future. Memory has to do with the past, with something that has already touched our Jife. If we are to remember eternity accordingly, it must be past as well as future and must alâ€" ready be near our life, as indeed it is. For eternity is no indefinite time. It is above all time. It is timeless life, the life that is atove change and deâ€" eay, wbove all evil and sin. "This is eternal life," _ said _ Jesus, " that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent." Of course, we can only think in terms of times and space, because these ideas condition all our life. But in God there is no space and there is no time. All is always present to Him. And the life that is in Him is also above all the limiâ€" tations of this earthly life. To be sure we must, while we are here, live the life of God and have the knowledge of God in our bodies and under the conditions of space and time. And, accordingly, we cannot talk of the eternal life and of eternity without using ideas and words which ‘belong to time and space. But we need to remind ourselves that these are only lifuru of speech, and that the refx.‘lkity‘i: ar and beyond them. Shame on my foolish frettings ! Here are letters, a perfect sheaf ! Open them quickly. dearest ; Ab, me ; "Tis beyond belief. By ship and by train they‘re hasting, Rushing along on the way, Teli the neighbors that all my children W1l be here Thanksgiving Day. â€"Margaret Sangster, in The Standar 1 ‘tr;l! ’:“I' Jessie, my da:ll.i‘n‘. it is living for money pelf, It takes the heart from life, dear, It robe a man of himself. This old bleak hillside hamlet, That sends its boys away, Has a right to claim them back, dear On this Thanksgiving Day. I tell es s C eP To halt and help the blind, And the homesick ‘11:“‘ desolate At the festal hour mind. Of the fat and the sweet a portion I‘ll send to the poor man‘s door, But I‘m weerying for my children To sit at my board once more. But + mother must bear her burden When her babes are bearded men; On ‘change, or in the army Or scratching with a pen , In some banker‘s dusty officeâ€" As Martin is, no doubtâ€" * A mother must bear her burdep And learn to do witnout. i* when her bairns are small, And into the nursery bede at night She tucks her darlings all. 4 When the wee ones are about her, With gleeful noise and ery, And she husbes the tumult with a smile, Her brood beneath her eye. Oh ! the happy time for a mother Bamue!, my son, in Dakota, Is a rich man, so I hear, And he‘ll never let want approac Save the wanting of him near; While Jack in San Francisco, And Edward over the sea, And only my little Jessie Is biding at home with me. And one dearer than even the children Has passed througn the gates ajar. I‘m wanting my bairns for Thanksgiving I thought last night as I lay Awake in my bed and watching For the breaking of ths day, How my heart would leap in gladness If a letter should come this morn T> say that they could not leave us here To keep the feaet forlorn. know the Scripture teaching, To set the table for two Where once we had plates ‘or twenty, Is a lonesome thing to do. But my boys and girls are scattered To the east and west afar, x Rome two are the last, my daughter ! set the table for two A THANKSGIVINS FEaAsST PRAYER. want approach us, The Standard BEBR is a term which covers lnger, alos, perter fb the practise MMâ€"' ‘ i‘-“ ss of Outarie brewere, implies tthe bast in tha waslt ‘rom Ont fthe bast in the world) mait, hops, and pure wates. BEER* IS GOOD TO ENRICH THE BLOOD Mechanical appliances are now used for cleaning colliety tubs, which soon become caked with fine coal and dirt and have hitherto been cleamed by hand. The most expeditious device is a cirâ€" cular scraping tool workd by an electric motor, which cleans a tub in a minute. It is estimated that the total capital employed in British coal mines is fully $500,000,000, and that the present wages annually paid amount to $300,000,000. "We‘re all the same," said Jack, risâ€" ing; "all except about one man in â€" a hundred. The satisfied man either dies of obesity or else he‘s some kind of genâ€" iue who goes crazy or gets robbed of his invention. It is just as well not to be too well satisfied; the little sore point, like the engine the woman is worrying about, is what makes us all look for friendsâ€"we want to tell them about it." nd _ "I don‘t suiipéue she ever vs;';v"o‘;;'fi;- ing made at all. Possibly she‘s heard someone talking about them." "Perhaps she doesn‘t realize that enâ€" gines are rough, heavy and often dirty." "Of course not. That‘s where the moral lies. If she had wished to make a certain cake she could have done it, no doubt. But no, as she draws an appeâ€" tizing, light brown cake from the oven there‘s a far away feeling she‘d rather be building an engine." wader mast hesizein â€"__ .210 9m Tmpliss bor -.M-I‘n-.n nenditions, from Ontarie shex HUke is‘ .. > s ie l "And she will never build engines," reflected. L T bevtdPrraperercg 16 b+mâ€"s4 me she‘s tired of cakes and dishes, "It seems," she said, "all my labor is thrown away. I work all morning to get dinner ready, and after dinnerâ€" where is it ail?" I told her that cookâ€" ing had always seemed to me a most honorable art. ‘I know,‘ she said, ‘but sometimes I feel I‘d like to be a man and have my work always before me. I‘d like to make engines, for instance.‘" "Did you tell her that when a man has made an engine he is either â€" disâ€" charged or put to build another one?" "I told her that, but she said that would be different to see your work eaten right up. I Kointed out that enâ€" gine building was ardly a recreation,. yet whe still has a fixed notion that Put aside prejudice and learn just how good for almost every !dlhgoodboerreanyh. Because beer, so drank, actually supplies the food eleâ€" ments that make the blood rich. Also beer assists the stomach in getting all the good possible out of all the food that enters it. PEOPLE who drink good beer with their meals can‘t be aenemicâ€"thinâ€"blooded. "Certainly," Jack admitted, "I‘m talkâ€" ing of the days they‘re not. And woâ€" men are the same, only they seem to get dissatisfied with what they make rather than the work of making it. I know a womanâ€"a good, hardâ€"working, practical woman, who can cook anything. _ Her pies and cakes are delicious, _ and her house is always clean. One day we were talking together and she suddenly tells TB e TB\ Oe ® & & FF _ "The curtious thing is that the blackâ€" smith makes the same mistake with reâ€" gard to the carpenter, say. He thinks to himself, how foolish I am to hammer and sweat here, while Bill, that‘s the carpenâ€" ter, works away quietly, and never even dirties his hands and, while he thinks of it, he grows ill tempered and dissatisâ€" fied, because he didn‘t happen to be a carpenter, while upstairs Bill is wishing he had a job near the warm fire and only a hammer to keep in repair." "I think sometimes men are contentâ€" ed," I ventured. _ "If more of us tried we would think more highly of the blacksmith‘s skill," I observed. "Because we haven‘t been doing it for years. Long practice tells the blackâ€" smith where to strike to obtain certain results. _ A novice strikes the wrong place." "I suppose it‘s because other people seem to do their work more readily than we do ours," I remarked. "That may be. In fact, I guess it often is so. We see a man make a weld, letter a sign, or sell soap on the market, and we think we could do it just as "It seems to me,‘" said Jack, "that we‘re all dissatisfied with what we‘re doing and aÂ¥W wishing to do each other‘s work." British Coal Mines. as London‘s the former. Sudden death may be defined as death due to a sudden injury from without or within the body sufficient to destroy at once all irritability of both the sensitive and vital systems. It requires no arguâ€" ment to prove that & person who is sudâ€" denly stricken dead can suffer no pain. The element of time must be present in order to suffer physical pain, and in the sudden death of a person the element of time is absent. We come now to consider the third and by far the most frequent form of death, namely, death from diseuse. For our purpose death may be considâ€" ered under the three heads, natural death, sudden death and death from discase. Natural death is death from old age. It differs from natural sleep only in degree. The gradual loss of sensibility by the sensitive organs which precedes sleep now takes place in the vital systzm, and all the organs pass into permanent sl together. There can be no pain precx ing or at the moment of such a death, any more than there is pain preceding and at the moment of passing into temporoary sleep. sÂ¥ W i Ety Secondlyâ€"This death is temporary beâ€" cause the vital system continues to perâ€" form its functions during sleep and restores the sensitive organs to their normal condition. Firstâ€"Sleep is temporary death of the functions of the sensitive system, due to exhaustion by fatigue. P vepmmints » snn hsPs c o2 * Neither Pain Nor Consciousness at the Instant of Kither . The phenomenon called sleep may be summed up in the following propositions, says a writer in the Cosmopolitan : Minard‘s Liniment Cu;es Garget i M WS OA cciels cnt ues is EmIee; of the subsidience of the land are and in the concluding note attent ed to the elevation of the mounta sinking of the sea bottom now & the vicinity of the Aleutian and lands, in the north Pacific, The cause of the disaster perplexed the Athenian sages, and has remained one of the mysteries of the centuries. Now comes Prof, See, who shows that it was due simply to the expulsion of lava from beneath the Guif of Corinth, which thus made ‘the sea bottom unstable, and when it gave way it also carâ€" ried the shore on which Helike stood; inâ€" deed, the city was first devastated by the movement of lava beneath the crust and afterward subsided about one hundred feet, so that it was covered by the waves until only the tops of trees remained above the water. Dr. See concludes by a mathematical inâ€" quiry that the age of our encrusted earth does not exceed some ten million years,which is a much shorter time than geolog!sts have generally allowed. He also finds that raâ€" dium plays no important part in the developâ€" _ment of the globe. Prof. See translates Aristotle‘s theory of earthquakes, which has never before been made accessible to English readers. _ The Greeks all held that earthquakes were due to the agitation of vapors within the earth, which tended to escape and diffuse themâ€" selves in the atmosphere, Aristotle obseryâ€" ed the eruption of a volcano and concluded from the vapor noticed to escape that all earthquakes were dus to the same Cuuse as that producing eruptions. When Plato was 64 and at the head of the Academy in Athens and Aristotle was a boy 11 years old the Homoric city of Helike, on the southern shore of the Gult of Corinth, . was thrown down by an earthquake and overâ€" ‘ whelmed by a seismic sea wave. [ L C D Om ow M CRV TUFO mation of pumice everywhere beneath the crust. The old theories that mountrins are due to tho secular cooling and contraction of the globe must therefore be abandaned. _ The mountains are formed by the expulsion of lava from beneath the sea, and hence they aro parallel to the coast. Dr. See concludes by a mathematical inâ€" quiry that the age of our encrusted earth VE pouk "sve e l o e (London Advertiser.) rise in the price of whiskey has no inâ€" ‘frl'dty'hlchmm.pfln‘m Secular cooling is infinitely slow, and afâ€" ’tects only tke crust, whereas world ehaking _earthquakes proceed from the layer just beâ€" neath the crust. As earthquakes occur mainâ€" ly along the seacost, they cannot be due to the expulsion of lava â€"from benerth the oceans, Hence great earthquakes are not due to seâ€" cular cooling at all, but to the leakage of the oceans, which produces steam beneath the crust. ‘This eventually pushes out at the sides and raises mountains along the coasts. As the effects of secular cooling are insenâ€" sible, it follows that the earth is not conâ€" tracting, as held in the books for three genâ€" erations. Dr. See shows, indeed, that at an garly ‘Stage of the AAMh!‘S MiGhhee . enaugis ns As the earthquakes al havle a superficial origin, and no shakes have a Aeeper source, it follows that there is no deep seated conâ€" traction of the earth. Consequently â€" all changes in the crust are due to ordinary earthquakes, and no other cause, _ M 2 0CS, _ S No of Hence the crust is thin, with a thickness of not more than twenty miles, which agrees with the depth deduced from the study of the world shaking earthquakes. ‘The great earthquakes originate at the depth ot about twenty miles, and none is known of a depth exceeding forty miles. u‘l?. As the earth slowly cooled, t} wad‘the only part which experienced preciable fall in temperature. tho London‘s Tipple is Beer. Prof. T. J. J. J. See, U. 8. N., has a memoir on the cooling of the earth and the theory of earthquakes held by the ancients, In part the memoir is a fusther elaboration of the paper published last March by Prof. See to show that earthquakes are due primarily to the leakage of the ocean‘s bottom. See Concludes. In the September number of the Proceed ings of the American Philosophical Society And Not Growing Any Cooler, Prof. EARTH 10,000,000 YEARS OLD SLEEP AND DEATH. tops of trees remained above the llnkln_s of Helike, other ¢ usted. wl j . 00 CCCCT CRser the land“l.rq_menumd, we did about o attention is callâ€" mountains and the _now going on in ‘istotle obseryâ€" and concluded scape that all same Cuuse as Kurile isâ€" in Cows, a man who had insulted her, and disâ€" charge her cook. Mrs. Jonesâ€"That old maid next door is the most brazen borrower I know! Mrs. Brownâ€"Indeed! Mrs. Jonesâ€"Yes. Why, only yesterday she came over to inquire if she could borrow my husband for an bhour to mow her lawn, thrash a ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO Weekly. â€" SmA wigr e <â€"â€"â€"â€"#+@G.. Minard‘s Liniment Cures __"Last night all the fashionables and elite of our town gathered to witness a rformance of "Hamlet" at the Town ;ull. There has been considerable disâ€" cussion as to whether the play was writâ€" ten by Shakespeare or Bacon. All doubt can be now set at rest. Let the graves be opened; the one who turned over ‘b-tunigbt is the author."â€"Harper‘s paper next morning In a North of England town recently a company of local amateurs produced "Hamlet," and the following account of the proceedings appeared in the local Minard‘s Liniment Cures I leave crippled poultry behind And swerve not to left nor to right; Men curse me, but I never mind, In a moment I pass from their sigh¢. I scatter dust over the land, And leave a foul stench in the air; There‘s nothing on earth that‘s as gran As to go it like mad, and rot care. I am monarch of all I survey, My right I let no one dispute; ‘ Let people get out of my way When I warn them by giving a toot, I frighten the teams from the farms, With goggles I cover my face, Igroring the countryside‘s charms I go as if shot into space. I‘m out of the constable‘s reach Before his authority‘s shown; With a whidz and a rush and a scratch I paes ere my number is known. I frighten the ebasts of the field; If children too tardily flee T can‘t pick them up to be healed, ‘Their agony‘s nothing to me. coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drugâ€" gists. Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, lpmins,'_ sore and swollen throat, He that is down needs fear no yan. ‘‘Is Henpech in the theatrical *‘No; why ?" ‘"He poi+ted that there out as his leading lady." his wife.‘"â€"Houston Post. A fiftyâ€"dollar hat is a conceit. A thirtyâ€" dollar hat is a confection. A twoâ€"dollar hat Is m sin and a shame, and a perfect justiâ€" fication for going home to mother.â€"Louisâ€" ville Courier Jcurnal Jealousy is the proof a little man gives of his recognition of a bigger one.â€"Florida Timesâ€"Union. Since we are in the airship age, And folks go sailing to and fro Across the sky, on pleasure bentâ€" Man wants but little here below. â€"New York Sun. Open the door to a little vice and a big one will crawl in at the window.â€"Chicago Nn- ‘‘Pa, why do they call these the melanâ€" choly days ?" *‘Because so many people haven‘t saved the money they will need to bu‘y the winter coal.‘"â€"Qhicago Recordâ€"Herâ€" When anger spreads through the breast, guard thy tongue from barking idly.â€"Sapâ€" 2Â¥ _ pho ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT BOTTOM OF san FRANCISCO BaAY What a melancholy sight the bottom of San Francisco Bay must present? A diver recently told me of going down to the City of Chester, sunk many years ago at the mouth of the harbor by one of the large China steaméers. He deâ€" scended with a stout heart and a mind inured to the t agedies of the sea, but when he saw two sisters _ of charity sleeping quietly in their berths, and, near by, a man on his knees, swaying back and farth with the motion of the tide, and a dim mysterious light over all the sombre objects, his heart failed him, and he gave tixe signal _ to be hauled above. ‘The San Rafael lies there, too. Fhe went down in 1901, sent to the botâ€" tom by a collision with another steamer in a fog. The relentless tide runs over her cozy cabins and beautiful stairway, dank with the passage of time. And there lio also, caught in the seaâ€" weed, the City of Rio Janeiro, the Eeâ€" cambia, the May Flint, and the Caleb Curtis, the last a pilot boat, sunk in a blinding fog. Truly the bottom of the bay is paved with memories.â€"San Franâ€" cisco Call. h e e oo e on se o c ceipt of price. 3 boxes for $1.25. 1O MORTE POR dNHP UE UIRCTHT with excellent results. Zamâ€"Buk did mf’ children a world of good, and I will alâ€" ways keep it handy as a household reâ€" medy. I would recommend it to all moâ€" thers, and think that no home should be without it." Zamâ€"Buk cures Cuts, Burns, ped Hands, Ringworm, Spains, Bad y Boils, Ulcers, Running Sores, Sealp Irriâ€" t’ationi Poisoned Wounds, Piles (blind and bleeding) Abscesses, Eczema, etc. OfallswruunddruggisuSOoenun bo_x, or Za!p-Buk Co., Toronto. on reâ€" The PEDLAR People Ti\ Oshawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto London Wianipeg More than 2,000 designs, suitable for 2 Si:i‘:\ull-in equal vq-u'cietfi.b mlch'"?u-;l send you a book that tells the who‘e story of the ceiling that shows no seains. â€" Addressâ€" 211 To Settle That Question, and the Buch a ceiling is easily put up, and costs no more than the common l-r‘ Learn the facts about The right metal ceiling lessens fireâ€"risk, beautifies :!'fl"’:‘:’{;,“m“dh* almost forever, WISE AND OTHERWISE. PEDLAR &5,.1L C £ I L I N G S S sn 0 briefitngusengcnge Asar uid three children have had the Mumps, I used Zamâ€"Buk for all of them THE SCORCHER. MOTHER‘S$ SACRIFICE. â€"Chicago Recordâ€"Herrld. the theatrical business t" “lk‘!‘ol-ted that lady over M oi datdats s 1+ .220 _...> Ath "Oh fall.â€"Bunâ€" "I'benilro.d-.uonthebllnk.lt‘l hard on the poor subordinate." "How so?" "Hutocarrzhl-lifoinhhhldnh addition to his other packages."â€"Washâ€" ington Herald. They insist that Indians always wore feathers. They add hides and skins as additional ‘‘They dubiously indicate the heads, paws, claws and fangs as sartnriaiiw WwWhat do you want o‘ the editor?" asked the ofice boy, blocking _ up the doorway. _ _"I have a manuscript poem," said the long haired caller, "which I wish to subâ€" mit for his inspection." The office boy closed the door, but mgreued a moment later. "Nothin‘ doin‘. We ain‘t printin‘ mo poetry now," he said, slamming the door in the caller‘s face. "Bard out!" exclaimed the poet, tearâ€" Ing his hair. ""Chestnut!" yelled the boy over the partition, "I‘ve hcard that ‘un before." Mniard‘s Liniment Cures M SSPLOU DCTeZHZ® scratches and every form of contaglous Itch on human or anin®is cured in 30 minutes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion. It ngver fails. Sold by druggists. Lippincott‘s Magazine uEh oo o d egrenl 00 c on t 1 en roenatiige Among Men and Women there an strongâ€"minded and weak. No Woman likes to be called -tror‘x,&minded. Among Men and Women there are Bosse and Bossed. No Woman likes to be called a Boss, Among Men and Women there are those who are too sweet for an thing, and those who are the reverse. ){) Man likes to be called too sweet for anything. Atnnstce o Dupals C3 es ws They liken us to savage. Theydeelmwelikebendalikoufl. Some say no. They judge by our clothes. Among Men and Women there are Thorns and Roses. No Man likes to be called a Rose, * Among Men and Women there Beuutieo_ and Beasts. No Man likes it. This greasy imitation is the poorest one we have yet seen of the many that every Tom, Dick and Harrry has tried to introduce. Ask for MINARD‘S and you will get 4 "What do A druggist can obtain amtimitation of MINARD‘S LINIMENT from a Toronto house at a very low price, and have it labeled his own product. There was a kind of public record ofâ€" fice attached to the palace and temple at Nineveh, in which it was customary to deposit important legal and other doeâ€" uments, such as contracts and agreeâ€" ments for the purchase and sale of proâ€" perty, marriage settlements, wills, etc. Among these there were discovered offiâ€" cial statements as to the history and transactions of the eminent banking house of Egidu at Nineveh. Assyrian chrenology proves that these refer to a dat» about 2,300 years before the Chrisâ€" tian era, when Abraham dwelt at Ur of the Chaldees. as is stated in Genesis,. We may, therefore, claim for this firm the reputation of being the oldest bank in the world, at least, of which we have any record, or are likely to have. The acâ€" coints are very voluminous, and cover the transactions of five generations of the house from father to son. The firm grew rapidly in importance during this period, during which they attained great wealth; for they had succeeded in securâ€" ing from the King the appointment of collectors of taxes, a position which in the east always leads to fortune. They afterwards framed the revenue for sevâ€" eral of the Assyrian Provinces, with very grea‘ gain to the firm.â€"T. P‘s. London Weekly. Among Men : called a Betutj. Among Men and OLDEST BANK Quick case for the worst coughâ€"quick relief to the heaviest coldâ€"and SAFE to take, even for a child. That is Shiloh‘s Cure. Cures Sold under a guarantee Coudhs to cure colds and coughs & Col d quicker than any other oids medicineâ€"or your money back. 34 years of success commend Shiloh‘s Cure. 25c., 50c., $1. 316 uJ td Ni e t PP n emtny m We har Jan, a well known nautch girl of Calâ€" cutts and one of the finest native singers in India, A rich Marwari tl.mlrlI of Bomâ€" bay recently engaged her to perform at a marriage ceremony, paying her a fee of Rs 15,000 (£1,000). Later she visited the Lady Northcote Hindu Orphanage and consented to sing in its aid gratis in the town hall. The citizens of Bombay, male and female, flocked in large numbers :o listen to her, as the gramophone has made her name a household word in India. ‘The handsome sum of £400 wan collected on the spot for the orphanage. At the close of the assembly the Hon. Sir M. Perozeshah Mehta pinned on medal on her breast. Hearing this, Mr. Justice Chandravarkar, of Bombay, a well known social reformer and Brahmin leader, ceased his connection with the managing committee. A hot newsâ€" paper discussion has followed. Mr. Tilak and others have written in defence of Sir M. Mehta, while other correspondents a re against bim. _ On another occcasion Gaubar Jan sang in aid of the Mohammedan College of Aligarh, but Nawab Mohsanâ€"ulâ€"Mulk reâ€" m'nd ‘t‘? r:o?ln any profit from that source. â€"London Telegraph SHILOHS This view, however, is by no means uniâ€" versal, and the conflict of opinion is strikâ€" ingly illustrated by the experience of Gauâ€" -;::ulm' natt "v'&; E’x that "E('viiv"ét'&o ua 0 e tome of society the evile -l:;e‘m with her profession should cease to enjoy the toleration accorded to them in the past. °r what it was in the Indian social system. Not merely Europeans, but some of the best The position of the nautch girl is no er what it was in the Indian social s Question of Her Position in Social Sysâ€" MEN AND WOMEN. Are We Civilized? Men and Women there are Mice. No Woman likes to be Mouse.â€"W, J, Lampton, in me e ts t w ts ITCrH tem Troubling India. THE NAUTCH GIRL. Despair. IN Distemper, THE WORLD. sartorially terialised to have been erected in honor of the late Sir Henry Irving not one has so far ma. "Miserly gave the fireman io saved his liffe whenyihh l:nioun was ::ofln 50 cents for carrying mdowuthhddq-.' "Did the “I?n“ take it 1® "Partly. e gave Miserly 22q cente M’â€"Bdtimqr‘o‘émerh.. larc& o0 Caut o COT econrt ‘"No," replied a deep volcelg from the full beard addressed, "I am the bride." "I beg your pardon," said Mr. Bailey, "I did not recognize the bearded lady, But, tell me, which is the groom," _ "I am," proclaimed a very thin voice, _ In astonishment Mr. Bailey anced up at the figure towering near ilh elbow, "I congratulate you, my man," said the man. "Sit down, let us on with the feastâ€"sit do:!l:i." The guest ressed at once began ascend seemingly until his head was z the neiflxborhood of the canvas r00f, from which height he looked down and said: *I was sittin‘ down, popâ€"I was sittin‘ down! "I am -orr{ I kept you waiti said, taking his place at the < believe there are several new a to the company. Is this the orn the festal ccuyl _ °30 T CEeopitiily dwarfs, Circassians, snake charmers, the "girl that spoke seven languages and had two heads, which made 14 languages in all;" the "dogâ€"faced boy" and others. Beaming upon them with paternal air, the"happy manager acknowledged _ the genial "Hallo, pop," that went sround ed to a bride and groom among . the "freaks" of his cirevus. He was late in 1rrivh£ and found the .mspuy politeâ€" ly aw tiflg him, says the Success Macâ€" He Was Sitting Down., The late James A. Bailey, famous as the successor of P. T. Barnum, once acâ€" cepted an invitation to a dinner tender. Of the numerous memorials 'h”:‘.m‘;‘w“m Teething Babies._ \ What Does He Do? A teacher in one of the public schools of Baltimore was one day instructing her pupils in the mysteries of etymology, when she hid occasion to"%:tettion a boy pupil with reference to the word "reâ€" cuperate." "As an example," said the teacher, "we will take the case of your father. "He is, of course, a hardâ€"working man." "Yes‘m," assented Charley, "And when night comes, he returns home tirâ€" ed and worn out, doesn‘t het" "Yes‘m," in further assent from Charley. "Then," continued the teacher, "it being night, his work being over, and he being tired and worn out, what does he do?" "That‘s what ma wants to know," said Charley. _ "Darling," he said, "do you think I had better go down town at all toâ€"day, in view of the dangers that threaten me? It is payâ€"day, I know; but is it worth while to run such awful risks for the few paltry pounds that I shall bring home with me?" Byut his wife never faltered. "Yes, dearest," she said. "Goâ€"go and earn our daily bread. But, oh! please don‘t bring that money home witz you un;il it has been thoroughly sterilized." â€"Titâ€"Bits. The brave young husband turned and faced his thoughtful wife. _ "And oh, darling, have you got on your new sanitary underwear, the kind recommended by our family physician the day* before yesterday?" "I have." "And while I think of it, dearest, please don‘t use the telephone. I heard yesterday there isn‘t an antiseptic inâ€" strument in town." Quickly relievesâ€" regulates the bowelsâ€"prevents convulsions. Used 50 years. Absolutely safe. At drugâ€"stores, 25c. 6 bottles $1.2%5. National Drug & Obemical Co., Nurses‘ and Mothors‘ Treasure are saved suff;ringâ€"and mothers given restâ€"when one uses "All right, dear." "And remember, darling, not to eat oysters. Every oyster contains three million horrid germs, and they may all bQ"/V‘ ery :.e’; "Darling," she said tenderly, "beware of motor cars. Do not cross any street, or you will surely be run over." As the young and beautiful wife stood at the door to bid her husband goodâ€"by, she put her arms around his neck, while a look of painful anxiety came over her Appraised at Full ;.m. 40. You cannot learn dneu-uukir:’ 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 mmber 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,. Here is just one case out of thousandsâ€" Hanrota, Ma®., March 13, ‘06. "This is to testify to the value of Kendall‘s Spavin Cure as a s?avin Remedy and IAniment for general use. 1 used it for Spavins on a colt two years ago, and found it a complete cure." W. / A Save your horse with Km‘â€"tlt sure cure for all Bony Growths, Swellings and Lameness. $1 a bottleâ€"6 for $5. Our fmt bookâ€"â€"‘**Treatise on the Horse‘"â€" ree from dealers or s Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., Enosbarg Falis, Vormont, U.8.A. To enable all to learn we teach on eash or instalment plan. We also teach a 1 class at school once a month. mmmencing 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 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 Kendail‘s Spavin Cure ts LEARN DRESSâ€"MAKINCG BY MAIL Limited, _ _ Bole Proprietors, Montreal. SUCH AWFUL RISKS. in your epare time at home, or a Personal Course at School. ind Arddcadh.s..A .4 “ t one case indsâ€" Max., rch 13, ‘06. testify to Kendall‘s re as & edy and c general d it for colt two d found it‘:’m.-/pleh cure," we. 4. horse with Kmâ€"&e ll Bony Growths, Swellings 6. $1 a bottleâ€"6 for g5. Our ‘Treatise on the Horse‘"â€" were living skeletons, PV En ./ â€" _ Vms the groom ?" deep volce from the a oa Pz ud T am the bride." the table, "I new â€" additions ing the \ In $1.00, 73,000 Microbes., 1 (From Leslic‘s Weekly.) "Clean money" is the slogan of A. Cressy Morrison, who is endeavoring to create a public sentiment which will render impossible the circulation of pa per and metal currency which is "taintâ€" od"inthollunlo-oo(u:ew¢no huhdoombfllcudeoimcnnimd by a New York bacteriologi t, and _ has lount:dfiut c;ne dirty m,.aueh as is hand n change b grocer or butcberyo.ni. inhaldL.4 E_ your girc BETTER THAN SPANKING. Our Cataiogue ' will be sent upon * nipt of your name and _ | A SPECIAL FINISH, which will not tarnish, is a wl exporters in Canada to try to meet this doficiency and to assist them in obâ€" taining the best market prices. some large estates has had to be doned in consequence of the sh of birds, the few that there are required for breeding purposes, importers will rely largely this : PoC Geaee io VeEery d"‘_‘H’ fl‘lut d:¢ can be Canadian Commercial agent at Leeds and Hull, Eng.. writes: At the present mement there is every indication that Canadian turkeys 'iIly meet with fair demand on the British market this seaâ€" son. According to the opinions reasâ€" ed by well informed dealers the unseason. able weather which has been experienced at different periods of the year in this country has seriously interféred with the rearing of all kinds of game. In cerâ€" tain parts of the country this is the ease to such an extent that shooting on this Sugar Bowl and Cream |» Jug, which we sell at $5.00. | TT HEY are of ordinary size, J....LI.M d‘. plating is very RYRI_E BROS.. 134â€"188 Tonge St. closely approaching £2,000, and periodiâ€" cally there is a heavy "call" for special redecoration, _ the amount spent last , for instance, on the Egyptian Hall m £560. Q::ilt lh-;“ are: "l':a on e Lord yor to the mfi:::fior, £7 154.; and expenses of Lord Mayor‘s "vestry," £3 6s. 64.â€" London Standard. ance absorbs £135. Next structural and other repairs represent an expenditure Corporation of London a yearly sum of < ose upon £18,000. The Lord Mayor reâ€" ceives £10,000, and the income tax on that sum is paid for him, while he is alâ€" lowed £100 for the cupp‘y of new furniâ€" ture, and his robes cost close upon £200. ‘Then the rates, taxes and tithes payable on the Mansion House total upward of £3,000; the lighting involves an outlay of upward of £570; the water supply costs £180, and fire and boiler insurâ€" : ISSUE NO. 45, 1907. Nationa 1 & Chemical Co, »« of Qumu Montreal. so satisfactory. It is the purest Cream of Tartar Baking Powder that Science can make. Send for our free Cookâ€"Bookâ€" full of choice new recipes. SL George‘s Baking Powder The maintenance of the pride, pomp a circumstance of civic state costs the to show the beauty of What the Lord Mayor Costs. at, but physicians agree that adian supplies, and it rests rters ln_(hAlndn.to try to meet 99.90%1 Pare â€"That‘s what makes for Canadian Turkeys. tily t PDuch« din m t ©4 l Bi W ie : Admitted to Roonm in Her Bosom Being Arreste SUPREM h W Ambass brought SHOT BY Ambas Echofiel d when Nir imitiating and Gern h encan, hamoper ag Â¥ar ters His Appoint F1 \\ h de th PPISONS AS 811 PROF. in U fi'ipl« ambay Ki Ten PA Memphi tra t19 de 1t

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