West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Nov 1907, p. 6

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\E all, the !n'l:|{\"‘;‘(i'7)’ will not mike a man of him. It can do but little more than erush the spirit and harden the heart, making reform a difficult, if not impossible task when he again faces the world. Is not that the reason why so many young men with a dozen convieâ€" tions against them appear in our police eourts? _ Because they feel that the world is against them and they have deâ€" cided to be against the world. Surely there is great room for the service of Christian men and women in the beâ€" friending of young fellows who have gone astray, and should not wellâ€"meaning police officials encourage ratherâ€" than refuse the aid of good people who want a chance to help a brother mantâ€"J. J% Kelso, in Presbyterian. face hardened against those whom he eonsidered his enemies, and he took his senlence in a spirit of bravado that scemed to justify the beuch. But, after FOOY last M t of 1 thor ingt atoi ma yc P W goua hoine another cha offence has thisk that mat a girl who had He wrote for : t ime th chil to th M Gran4ly guiding sceptros sway, Mvriads througn the liveâ€"long day, Equipned w‘th mind‘s eternal law, Adorned with majesty and awe. Communion, linking bonds so dear. Increasing light our only sphere, And all the while our home shall be Pertect in simplicity. Will Be | Silen: Bring t Sh Th ethe the _ flag. Elija of y with silve: Koomy chariots with welcome sweet Putiing clouds beneath the feet. is life to know." H awed,. there came a cribable restlessnes: my large experience mony, but only a : sounded a question wishes give us not my agony I cried, w privilege to soar? C ether, szil on those the commerce, hoist flag. hail the retaini Elijah this way, rou of yon chain of m with colden manes. 1 nevertheless who saw clearly." " is life to know." Humbled, subd awed,. there came a period of in cribable restlessness. I found my large experience was not my p mony, but only a void, in w soumded a question still. "Our â€" wishes give us not our wisn." my agony I cried, whither? It is privilege to soar? Can I pierce gone, the stars invited more extensive research. Oh, islands of the mental sea. undiscovered capes, and bays, and harbors, in short a ship without a name, reeling under the wealth of these overpowering _ discoveries, ! rested, wondered and kept down my desires. What wealth unused, what power unappropiated, what feebleness in untold richness. Giant strides deâ€" manded of an untrained child, a child 11 Beamsville, Ont The Spirit of Forgivenese. VThere are only a few people who have e patient spirit of forgiveness in dealâ€" ; with the faults of young people. st philanthropic workers are willing lorgive onee or possibly twice when ildrer in whom they have trusted fail r:a yed, my fi¢ets reiurned richl{ aden, time enriched imy store. gathered harvest from my environâ€" meut, and from heaven came enlargeâ€" ment; the mental cottage became a manâ€"ion, this expanded to a palace with a throneâ€"room for the king. Over the throme these words were emblazoned: "This is life to know."‘ Then came a period of concentration, appraisement and distribution; the compression was painful, growing pains ended in smallness, as gold is tried, 1my icheritence dwindled to a question, and in subdued dignity I said whence? _ The trailing â€"clouds brought answer, the ancient billows sans the murmur of a thousand ages Lk the 1 stovd in silence, my heart said what. Te aitention was trained, the ner.s was steady, the sense of want was keen. I extended my survey, sent out messengers, rounded capes, crossed deserts, heard the roar of the sea. 1 waited, 1â€" watched, I prayed, my fleets returned â€" richlv 1 Ken i 11 surrounded who looked n re, souls we woa I are stored up there ely â€"suscained. TY CynpNY & hy nG D h we in the silent night out questions to the light? mighty, ever new, ag wondrous worlds to view faith ar m furtl st wish to y repent > do any it On ul the retaining fleet? Passed this way, round the shoulder _chain of mountains; horses n to destiny, saints‘ sublimest vern worlds apart? ice, the mission. and the of patiet sUTTOURGLIS, ree. He now w been repeated there is no £ VNW‘D‘\M’ NCn * 4| PoRvy HOmE i th 100meé of manes, whe do the a«icht evea waea _to. The other day an the societies wrote about been charged with theft. ivice ard was requested se on nrobation. seeare T wWrO thit ake at WHAT? ol stirmiag, acd d up large in vie H. T. MILLER and professed will g in his power t« _bout in the court officials and spec him with idle eur w id ty $ a l saw clearly. "This Humbled, subdued, loft t y 1te ti _ distinectiv> fleet? Passed the shoulder pierce AT of molten in â€" which ‘Our very ViCUORS of indesâ€" und that U / M A L T In my the ark hascertain foodâ€" clements which the body can transform in to healt hy blood quicklyand with the least digestâ€" ive effort. H O P S contain a mediâ€" cal principle which tones the nerves without reaction, and so suppliesnervous energyand saves it as well. as brewed in Ontario is made from choicest Ontario bariey malt, selei‘:ted hops, and t râ€" est of water, (Et:lt with under condiâ€" tions which insure purity and quality. Spain leads in the production of lead. Germany is~ second. The wings of a fly in flight move 350 times a second. Wives are still obtained by purchase in some parts of Russia, B E E. R* The Chinese issued bank notes more thfl: 2,000 years before Christ. The coolest part of the tween 4 and 5 o‘clock a. m. reade under most hyglenic conditions from Ontarlo barle (the best in the wfld malt, hops, and pure wator. £. B: is a term which covers lager, porter, and stout ; w th Tar prooind of Ontine mnowere Aiopinm: "rsmait! There are 44,000 total abstainers in the English army. wall paper A cannon report has been heard as far as 146 miles, The Pope has a million dollar lace col lection. the Baltic Sea. M «obied The Chinese are being introduced to Cartridge« are coin in Abyssinia. Rapid nail growth is an indication of health. _‘ SEER MAKES BLOOD Dr. Julian, by the way, tells us that the total number of Christian bymns in the 200 or more languages and dinlects in which they have beon written is not les sthan 400,000. Germany coming first with 100,000, and England next. The most popular hymns, according to a cenâ€" sus which he has taker, are, "When I Survey the Wondrous Cross,"* ""Awake, My Soul, and With the Sun," "Hark, the Herald Angels Sing," and "Rock of Ages, Cleft for Me." not enjoy the evening at all and returnâ€" ed home miserable. _ Charlotte Elliott (for that was the young girl‘s name) went to confess to her priest all about It, and asked what she should do. He advised her to go home and tell Jesus all about it. "Just as I am*‘ she anid. "Yes, just as you are." _ She returned home, and on her knees composed the hymn. The proofs, however, seem to point to the first story, which is given by Dr. Julian. On the other hand. the story is that a young girl was going to the town to choose a new dress for a ball. On her way she met a priest, who said she ought ve@ E2 CZC sw ol 1 PS There aro two accounts of how "Just As I Am" came to be written. One authority asserts that it was while she lay in great physical weakness on _ a sofa, the other members of the family being present at a bazaar in which all but the invalid were taking an active part, that Charlotte Elliott, the author of the hymn; wrote the words which have stirred the hearts of thousands. not to go. Ht;wevgr', she went, but it ht aP Wls dn c PB ht id An example of a fi_vmn being written to suit a certain tune is furnished by the grand old favorite, "I Think When _ I Read That Sweet Story of Old." _ Mrs. Luke, the author, _ was very much ‘imâ€" pressed one day by an old Greek tune which she Ahad seen the children of the Normal Infant School, Gray‘s Inn road, marching to, and while going home on the stage coach she wroto the words to suit the music on the back of an old enâ€" velope. BPAE W tr ui Bicts uiscc w0 and, it being natural to him to express in verse the spiritual comfort which _ he desired to convey, the Bishop took up a sheet of paper and there and then wrote down the hymn just exactly as it stands and read it to his dying friend. It was characteristic of the late Bishâ€" op Bickersteth, who wrote "Peace, Perâ€" fect Peace," that he always found it casiest to express in verse whatever subâ€" {oet was uppermost in his mind. One day e heard a sermon delivered by Canon Gibbon, vicar of Harrogate, on the text, "Thou wilt keep him in g;:-fect peace whose mind is stayed on ee," _ and shortly afterward went to visit an aged and dying relative, Archdeacon Hill, of Liverpool. Bishop Bickersteth found the Arghdeacon somewhat troubled in mind, Wls 5k Xis. i cizc uh s 4s L Then, again, it is a popular belief that Augustus Toplady wrote "Rock of Ages" while sheltering from a storm between two limestone rocks in the Mendips. No proof of the story is forthcoming, howâ€" ever, and consequently it must be acâ€" cepted with caution. But there is no doubt that the author of "Christians, Awake," John Byrom, composed _ that magnificent hymn as a Christmas gift to his favorite daughter, Dorothy, for he inscribed upon the manuscript, "Christâ€" mas Day for Dolly." MHow Some of the Most Famous Were Written. Strange and pathetic are many of the stories conueul: with the origin of famâ€" ous hymns. In some cases, however, ficâ€" titious romances have been built around the beautiful words sung in our chapels and churches. For many years it was believed tiat Cowper‘s "God Moves in a Mysterious Way" was written as an outpouring of the poet‘s soul in gratiâ€" tude for the frustration of his attemptâ€" ed suicide in October, 1773. The fact, however, that this hymn has _ been found in a manuscript in which . the latest date is August, 1773, proves that it was written before Cowper‘s attempt ‘ on his life. ® SNAP SHOTS OF SCIENCE. MOST POPULARK HYMNS. TH E b e tteor the blood the sounder the health, a n d the surer the body to combat disease effective~ ly. Beer, by some counted an intoxâ€" icant, is not so â€" it is & bloodâ€"maker with barely enough alcohol in it to help the stomach do its work far better, Beer with meals is good for 997 peoplie out of every thousand â€"and is specially good for women. Ask your own doctor about itâ€" beer is probably good for you. dey is beâ€" for did I T is mt _ "‘The above is, Yackily, a somewhat unâ€" usual experience, for a tiger generally avoids the presence of man if he can. Had it been a tigress. with young cubs, suddenly disturbed by one of us, one could have understood her behaving in this exceptional manner, but this was a male tiger and there is no way of exâ€" plaining his conduct." "I reserved my fire for the last emerâ€" gency, not caring, unless absolutely driâ€" ven to it, with a light rifle, to risk a shot which would most probably fail to stop the tiger. The tiger continued to growl and play round us like a big cat, giving us an uncommonly bad time for about ten minutes. After a while we managed to back slowly over the top of some rising ground behind us. and. once we were out of sigt, I am ashamed to confes;, that we went for all we were worth, hnltinieooealionally to make sure we were not being followed, until, to our great relief. we got out into the open. ‘‘That bill collector is still downâ€" stairs, ,sir." ‘"Didn‘t T tell you to say that I died quite suddenly half an hour ago?" ‘‘Yes, sir; but he says he would like a few moments‘ conversation with the remaing." NOT THE ROUTE. Wifeâ€"Where have you been all this time? 3 Tipsy Husbandâ€"Hicâ€"on a trip, my ear. Wifeâ€"Well, you evidently didn‘t go by water. growfing and watching us. After this e charged almost up to us, but did not come quite home, and then passed backâ€" ward and forward in front of us two or three times. My men behaved exceedingly well, standing quite steady facing the tiger, shouting and throwing stones and bits of stick at him. Had either of them tried to turn and run, or get up a tree, the tiger would have been on to us for a dead certainty. How he met & tiger in an Indian jungle is told by.g hunter: "I was out stalking with a very light rifle, accomâ€" panied by two native shikaris, who had no weapon at all We were _ passing through some rather thick jungle, when I heard sounds as if a tiger were afoot, and glancing at my men, saw that they were looking rather queer. Allof a sudâ€" den with a rush and a roar a very large tiger sprang out of the jungle about 30 yards off and made straight for us. He passed close along our front, went a few yards, then turned round and sat "All of these comwodities must be handled by various clerks and delivery men before they pass from the grocery store to yoyr pantry. Don‘t you think it is about time you got acquainted with your grocer and hin.belgen. Are the men and boy who handle the food for your family worthy of the trust?" "Eightyâ€"four million stomachs to be fed this year at a cost of twelve billion dollars. Allowing as a very small averâ€" age that half the marketing will be done by mail, telephone or through solicitors and children, fortyâ€"two million people will be fed by women who do not know nor do not try to know their grocers; and six billion dollars‘ worth of food will be bought without the supervision of the woman who knows her grocer. This food, distributed by grocers, clean and unclean, includes nearly 3,000,000 tons of sugar, 834,667,023 pounds of cofâ€" fee, 175000,000 pounds of prunes, 17, 854,768 bushels of rice, 84,000.000 barâ€" rels of flour and 84,000,000 pounds of tea. "There are eightyâ€"four million people in the United States. For their food twelve billion dollars are spent _ anâ€" nually. Grocersâ€"Clean and Unclean. In the November number, Woman‘s Home Companion gives these impressive figures in its campaign for clean grocery stores : Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. & â€" mission, _ delivering _ addresses whereever they go, warning the pubâ€" lic against imposters. The head%uarwra of the associaâ€" ;ion are to be in Paris, and the orâ€" inization will be under the direc tion of one Doussineau, who though he walks on crutches is said to be a man of devouring activity, going up and down beating up rectruits. Some diificulty seems to have arisen in regard to contributions, many of the members preferring to keep their earnings to themselves. A feeling of uneasiness seems also to exist lest the list of members should find its way into undesirable hands.â€"From the British Medical Journal. utes and byâ€"laws. It was decided that only French subjects with genâ€" uine malformations or sores could be admitted for membership. Compliance with this condition may not be altogetherâ€" easy to enforce, for the limitation of ‘diseases is a fine art. Readers of the life of Amâ€" boise Pare may remember that when he â€"was still a barber‘s apprentice he won some reputation in his naâ€" tive town by the exposure of a begâ€" gar who used to stand at the door of the parish church exposing to the pity of the faithful a frightful fun gating tumor of the arm which proved to be a piece of decomposed mutâ€" ton. Since the foundation of the asâ€" sociation two oneâ€"legged menâ€"named, we learn from the Journal des Debats, Roisin and Carlierâ€"have started on A meeting of street singers and of the lame, the halt and the blind who extract voluntary contributions from the charitable public was held at Marseilles, a oneâ€"legged man being in the chair, for the Furpose of orâ€" ganizing themselves into a body strong enough to resist the encroachâ€" ments of pretenders. _ The associaâ€" tion was duly constituted, with statâ€" Fremch Organiation for Protecti>~ Against Pretenders. Not lo: an Austrian associaâ€" tion of m. masters sought reâ€" dress at the hands of the law for the infringement of their prerogative by an unfortunate doctor of medicine who had found it impossible to make a living by the flractice of his own profession. But the most remarkable trade union of which we have heard is one in the south of France formed by beggars for the suppression of unâ€" qualified practice. COULDN‘T LOSE H1IM. Encountering a Tiger. BEGGARS‘ UNION. ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO a bo%y I‘ gr: ncroachâ€" :.l:soeia- ’ ihich ith statâ€" decided | j ith genâ€" | ; s could ]' be '.‘ionf may ;‘ ing enforce, es is a l g. the "Needn‘t shave my upper lip this time," said Archie, as he took his seat in the barber‘s chair. ‘"You may start a mustache for me." At dinner subsequent to the Sunday sermon, she heard delivered by her nephew, it was observed that she was singularly reticent. Suddenly she broke her long silence by asking her nephew: "Why, aunt," exclaimed the young man, "what a question. I entered the ministry because I was called." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, "I can‘t do that, sir," said the barâ€" ber. "I‘ll let your upper lip alone, but you‘ll have to start the blooming mustache yourself, sir." "Frank, why did you enter the minâ€" istry ?" s Frost ie r P "Are you sure, Frank, that it wasn‘t some other noise you heard ?" An old lady was visiting some relaâ€" tives, one of whose sons had recently entered the ministry. She had not seen him since his boyhood, and was therefore anxious to attend service at his church. Just a suspicion of a smile . came to the old lady‘s face as she responded: Tommyâ€"Pop, what is the difference between a D. D. and an M. D.! Tommy‘s Popâ€"The difference is, my son, that one preaches and the other practices. _"Waâ€"al, I give cows just a pound. Your father is a quarter as big as a cowâ€"give him a quarter of a pound." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. "How much shall we give himt?" inâ€" quired the son. Dose by Size. A man living in the country far from any physician was taken suddenly ill. His family, in great alarm, not knowing what to do, sent for a neighbor, who had a reputation for doctoring cows. "Can‘t you give father something to hol&vhimf" ui‘ed one of the sons. "Waal, I don‘t know nothin‘ about doetorin‘ people." "You know more than we do, for you can doctor cows. Now what do you give them when they are sick?" __"Waal, I allers gives Epsom salts. You might try it on him." Do What You Can. There always are those who wrap their talent for service in the napkin of notâ€" worthâ€"while. They feel that they could not do much because their ability is so small, and therefore they do _ not try to do anything. They suppose that they are practicing the muchâ€"praised virtue of humility, while really they are evading duty and responsibility and thus incurring blame and guilt. The _ truth is, no ore, hawever small his ability, need live uselessly. (God bestows no talents which He means to be wrapped up in napkins of any kind. Of course, we cannot give what we have not. _ But we should give always what we have. : We are never to say, "Theore is no use in my giving, for I have so little. It can do no one any good." We have nothing to do with the matter of larger or smaller. We are responsible only for what we have. If it is but one little talent, one little talent is all we shall have to answer for. But we must answer for that, and if we fail to use it, we shall not only lose it in the end, but also shall incur the penalty of uselessness.â€"J. R. Milâ€" ler. NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL LIMITED, MONTRCAL A Horse with a Strained Shoulder Fellows‘ Leeming‘s Essence ___â€" dish of the finest silver plate, having a removable granite lining, and richly ornaâ€" mented handles. OUR large and handsomely illustrated Catalogue will be mailed upon request showâ€" ing a very large assortment of these serviceable dishes. much appreciated gift. AT $5.00 we are offering a Rxr:r Bros., goc. a bottle. At dealers, handy so you can have it when right out â€" strengthens the weak back, shoulder or knee. Whether you have one horse or twenty, accidents are liable to happen any time. Keep a botile of 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 134â€"138 Y onge St. TORONTO The Noise h: Hceard. BAKE DISH makes Limitations. Limited A novel proposition is occupying the attention of a 3pecial committee of the Paris Municipal Council, in the form of a scheme to construct a series of moving platforms which are to form a cirele in the centre of Paris underneath the grand boulevards and the Boutevard St. Germain. It is proposed to have three running roadways moving at difâ€" ferent speeds. _ Passengers would step of the fixed platform to the slowâ€" rolling platform, and from that to the faster ones id turn. A trial has proved that getting on and off the ght!onu is as easy as boarding an omnibus. ccntagious Itch on buman or anim4ls cured in 30 minutes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion. It ngver fails. Sold by druggists. Uneleâ€"Bobby, I hear you are learnâ€" imBog‘b * To Bo yâ€"Yes. are you, ain‘t you, Uncle? Ji" Uncleâ€"No, my boy. Why? Bobbyâ€"Oh, I heug father say yesâ€" terday that you had a hard ]{)b to keep your head above water! "Well," sighed the author, "what would you advise me to do with it?" "Throw it in the fire." "Butâ€"I have no fire." "Here," said the editor, "I‘ll lend you a matchâ€"and imy stove!"â€"Atlanta Comâ€" stitution. coughs, etc. Save $50 ‘by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drugâ€" gists. + "How long have you been writing this story?" asked the editor. "Ten years," replied the author. "That‘s a long time," said the editor. "I‘ve had & dozen bills outlawed in that Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, __Not clumsy, but too fragile, were the shells in use as money by the negroes of Africa, and = throughout ancient Asia, where the natives, takâ€" en by its beauty, gave the shell a money value. When metal took the place of money, the dollar clung to its traâ€" ditions, and coins were still called after live stock. Thus, "pecunia," applied to metal money, derived its origin from "peeus" (cattle.) From the custom of counting heads of catâ€" tle came the present designation of a sum in cashâ€"capital, or "capita" (heads). In Sanscrit, roupa (herd, flock) made roupya, or the Indian roupeo. While ingots of electrum, or admixture of gold and silver, when first in use as money, bore the imâ€" press of an ox or cow. other hand, weas given i for only four such beasts The Adolessence of the Dollar. The dollar took some rounding. Nor did it formerly ring true, but, much alive, siraply gave a bleat or bellow. Cattle, among country folk, at one time constituted the dollar, while primitive, man generally made use of any article sufficiently abunâ€" dant for the standard payment ot all merchandise. Thus, in ancient Greece, says Harâ€" Eer's Weekly, a large bronze tripod ad the value of a dozen oxen. A good hardâ€"working woman, on the _ CHRONTC ULCERS. 40 years suffering from Ulcers which covered _ her body made Mrs, Jane Beers _ of L‘Orignal (Ont.), long for death. A few weeks‘ trial of Zamâ€"Buk brought complete resâ€" toration. No wonder she writes: "The like of Zamâ€"Buk has not been seen since the Great Healer left the earth." 50 cents a box of all drugrists and stores, or postpaid on receipt of price from Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto. Three boxes for $1.2%5. The folowing remarkabrle cures are convincing proof that Zamâ€"Buk is the most wonderful skin cure known. Zamâ€" Buk succeeds when all else fails, and no home is complete without it. ECZEMA. 25 long years Mr. T. M. Marsh, 101 Delorimier avenue, Montreal, wore gloves day and nightâ€"his hands were so bad with Eczema. Five doctors failed to cure him, but Zamâ€"Buk triumâ€" phed. Ask him about it. No "Regret" Blanks in Georgia. root in its original state can also be found in any drug store in America. Annual exports to the United States amount to about 14,210 tons, valued at $550,000. It is converted into licorice paste for medicinal purposes, and is especialy used for flavoring plug tobaceo. Licorice The root is piled up and exposed to the air until about May and June. _It then weighs only half as much as origâ€" inally, owing to the thorough drying process to which it has been subjected. The root is sorted to obtain the qualities known as "debris" and "bagatelle," both of which are highly valued. _ & ice, which is shipped there in its natural shape as raw material, being mdnufl:ed Licorice root is s}:ipped in bales weighâ€" ing about 220 pounds each, pressed by hydraulic machinery and strapped with iron bands. ‘The United States is the principal consumer of this class of lioor: The exporters of the root lease licorice bearing lands for a period of from three to five years. Digging usually begins in October, and is done by peasants, who at the end of each day deliver the root to the various depots and receive payment according to the quantity they bring. . ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Underground Moving FPlatforms, Until fifty years ago it was practially | month, unused, says Fur News. The root grown | fit and on the Meander plains is the best in the | plaines world, being superior to that found in | ate dre Syria, Mesopotamia, Caucasia, Siberia or | ON8 CO tion. a Year From Asia Minor. ‘ulil"""':'__': Licorice root grows wild in the fields | To enable all to l« of Asia Minor, and few attempts have | cash orinstalment plan. been made thus far wvard#rcnm“' personal class at scho« We Buy Half a Million Dollars Worth ZAMâ€"BUK‘S$ WONDERFUL SUCCESS. Prairie POOR OLD UNCLE. LICORICE ROOT. ITCGCGPHM was given in exchange REGEVEE® Wwms MPAHERCL CC 000 | Class commencing last Tuesday of each ctially | month. These lessons teaches how to cut, grown | fit and put together any garment from the mthe’p:.w-unw;inwu.wmmm ind in]lwdrul- The whole family can learn from ria or | one course. We have taught over seven thousand dressâ€"making, and guarantee to corice | give five hundred d:g-rl to any one that three | cannot learn between the age of 14 and ins in 40. You cannot learn dreu-auki-? as vho a; | thorough as this course teaches if you wtw?workiusbopforym B«nnofla{uâ€" yment tions as we employ no one outside the ag. school. This is the only experienced Dress oT to Cutting School in Canada and excelled by c‘ It none in mmber country, Write at once Ofixâ€" for particu , as we have cut our rate oneâ€" f "8~ | third for a short time. â€" Address :â€" Coted | SANDERS‘ DRESSâ€"CUTTING SCHOOL, ected. atktes | 81 Erie St., Stratford, Ont., Canada, the common law, me hut;een;wen u. fair trial by a jury of his peers." The prisoner was acquitted.â€"Titâ€"Bits "Gentlemen of the jury," said the secuting barrister, ~this prisongr, i unmitigated scounarel; he acknowli it. And yet, thanks to the wisdo "I don‘t know just what ails doctor. It doesn‘t seme to be throat, and it isn‘t rheumatism, yetT“" _ ‘"I know exactly what it i madam It‘s the balloon neck. %"n soor straighten that out." Mniard‘s Liniment Cures a wag of the head, “ooVr“J(;i;l-':“lm;fl;i.‘ because he‘s gaun to ‘be hanged the morn," and marched‘ out of the cell. In the olden time a woman in the north of Scotland went to visit her husâ€" band, who was condemned to be hanged on the following day. ‘The doomed man began to give his last instructions to his wife preparatory to bidding her fareâ€" well, when all at once she broke in upon the conversation, and exclaimed : "By the by, John, whaur will I plant the tatties this year?" The unfortunate man, as may be imagined, grew exceedingly inâ€" dignant at the indifference of his wife, and exclaimed, angrily: "What need I care whaur ye plant them*? I‘m no likeâ€" ly to need ony o‘ them." "Hech," repgzg the wom’n,_tufning to the warder w stroying all kinds ard varietiese . of the germs which cause disease and pain in the human body. _ The acids, citric and malic, contained in the fruits menâ€" tioned have probably the effect of killâ€" ing these discase germs. Cholera germs are said to be killed in fifteen minutes by lemon juice or apple juice, and even typhoid germs, which have .fi“ resistâ€" ing power, are killed in ut thirty minutes by cither of these acids, even in a diluted form. A tumbler of cold water, saturated with cholera bacilli, to give rather a frightening instance, ialy be gulped down one‘s throat with impunâ€" ity providing a lemon has been squeczed into it fifteen or twenty minutes before this. One isn‘t going to run this risk, of course, but still it shows what value . these fruit acids have in serious disease; ; but their value is great, too, in keeping the body in gooi general health, providâ€" ing always the truit is in good condition and is eaten in moderation. To encourâ€" age children to spend their "sweetic penâ€" nies" in fruit rather than in eweets is a wise proceeding, though a few sweets are good for growing children,â€"Mar garet. Fruit and Health. Perhaps some of you have thought that I have insisted too much, '.‘eek} week, on the value of fruitâ€"govd, fresh, wholesome fruitâ€"as an article of daily consumption; but of its health value too much cannot be said. Fruit should â€"let me say it againâ€"be looked upon as a necessity, not a luxury, as it is at preâ€" sent, and form a part of every meal, either raw or cooked. _ Our _ doctors have been laying this law down for a long time now, but of late an eminent man in the cast has shown with much success that the acids of Iemons, ?h, and some other fruits are capable of deâ€" _ Sn your epare time at home, or Take a Personal Course at School Oshawa Moutreal Ottawa Toronto Lond;-‘“ nammer and snips) and save you w because they A:pmof windJ-rool :3 woerntherâ€"proo? the building the cover, Write us about it and bear -I.fylho\n eo7 â€" ROOFING RIGHT. Address The PEDLAR People Tz\ LEARN DRESSâ€"MAKIMIG BY MAL Ams roof saves you work because its so easy to put on (do it yourself with a hammer lbdp.:m'éu). and save you w because they fireproof. _ wind>roof m wertherâ€"sroof the Buildta.. 6 l 0_ _ MBE "OsSHAWA~ GALVANIZED STEEL SHINGLES There is one roof that saves mone because it will last 100 years. Guaranteed iniwritin‘ for 25 years. John Was Huffed BOG spavin CcurBe s Lamenecss BONE SPavin sPLINT SWELLINGS RINGBONE POLL EV sOFT BUNCHES nncnkxbâ€"luvh.thhomcous:.do!haâ€"b’ HKENDALL‘S SPAVIN CURC â€" â€" No matter what wasm gull . . 1 onnmmed W _A with â€"the fiv. Thing my Bore. fesevane Kendalh‘s Spavin Tare and mun ty find my horses much ve used many remedies but find Kendalis The Risg 9; An. GBO. ARoDEUR . a bottleâ€"6 for Our "‘Treatise On The * will give man :hl;;hww:p“(ml:&“ded or free copyl.« Badly Put. Prevalent ‘ what have tried ies he â€"ge Eehparl‘s eravin cony, aor meng reterimartes har Noraz Dax® pms Bots."P.Q., Sept. 30 ‘06. 0“ : wiem pou ao°i o oo Sop Dorsesâ€"one with Spavinâ€"the other inks to the wisdom of , me has been given a We also teach a A8 n ledgos ! Chicago News:â€"It‘s awfully hard for a woman to etand the ity of her l prosperity o neighbore. Vancouver Province:â€"Sudden ebulli tion of reckless bruulitgn among. _ out shopkeeping classes. A f of shoemak Ts Auvertise. at sin, for at each look it is apt te :'«-. better looking. Ahey appear to fa that the public ::a not even the mo::’ elementary notion The fox may lose his hair, but not his "Her debut is going to be the grandest affair of the season." "Having it made in Paris, I suppose.â€"Houston Post. 1 deem the presence of the master to be the eye of &e home.â€"Aeschylus. The little oneâ€"But if I give me penny, wot do I git out of it?" m big mâ€"wx, gdidn‘t I ’ect tell I‘d let you watch me spend it! Wot X's'.:r want, anyhow?*â€"Chicago Tribune. Patientâ€"What is astigmatism, doeâ€" tor? The oculistâ€"It means that you can see better with one eye than the other. Patientâ€"Oh, yes! I see, on:’pil is more apt than the other.â€"Syr@ruse Herald. to convince him that beauty unadorned is adorned the most.â€"Chicago News. "Parson, somebody dared us to get / married, and we never take a dare. Here we are." ‘"Well, my young friends, I dare you to go home and endeavor to cultivate some common sense."â€"Louisâ€" vills Courierâ€"Journal. About the time a dressmaker‘s bill has set a man back $100 or more it is easy football she will lose three million dol: lars. Bockerâ€"And only get a quarter back.â€"New York Sun. things that he had mever expected to leara.â€"â€"Florida Timesâ€"Union. Soap has been known Buccess Magazine:â€" Beware of look Matthias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norwa , Me. Charles Whooten, Mu‘vann, N. 8. Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave. N. 8 Pierre Landers, sen., Pokemouch». NB Thomas Wasson, Sheffield, N. li‘ We believe mese sacred cattle in India before the experiment of bringing them over here was tried. It was found in these investiâ€" gations that the Burmese cattle were not subject to the splenetic, or "tick" fever, which is the bane of the cattle of southâ€" ern Texas, particularly when introducing stock from "mbove the line." The claim is made that the Burmese as beef animals are the equal of any of the breeds of cattle commonly found upon the ranches They fatten easily and their flesh is of good quality,. . When crossed with other breeds the result is an improved animal both as to stand&d of wdflnt and other important qualitics, it is‘claimed.â€"Kansas City Star. representative cattlemen of the Gulf coast region made a study of the Burâ€" Knickerâ€"If Swarthmore votes for variety will soon be found upon many of the ranches of southwest Texas, A. P. Borden, of Plerce, Tex., and other A herd of Burmese sacred cattle, which Tom. O‘Conmor, a stockman of Goliad, Nationa! Drug & Chemical COo. of L. Canada, Limited, Montreal. ‘"‘And it gives such a fine fiavour to the b.kgg.uecpeorh-c :A Shaw amant it Aanmses Sleees $ ® they want it every time." Write us for our "I its strengthâ€"the last qm:fm-pod-thefin:." StL George‘s Baking Powder "And it ; Busmese Sacrod Cattle in Texas, HERZE AND THERE. WISE AND OTHERWISE. * riage will teach a man a lot of wE HOPE To caTcon YOUR EYE wiTTH QaUR XEW BOOT. * There‘s nothing like MINARD‘S LIXNTMENT is NO. 46. 1907 sally among. _ our A firm of shoemak« two themselve General Alarn of Orienta Aroused th NO FEELING A SsHOWN BY SLr me Â¥i Capt. Letcher His Porchâ€" Result Till Which Pan gott« nize shou 1J THREE $00 C MAND: said. * will be ation : We wi back fr ict wat ntioned Westerr would were va ton ** men They ) «trike," of striki cessions the strik companic making Are asse victory. Pyrrhus *If we undone Wia l word . wh service . 1 stored. * been imp all motitie ballot toâ€" ealling of to 54. During plied for the. West um ber is at an e to this ef, the strike; eould retur a.. vote 1 that the s by the na Compan ing any ma ult throughout ti Chicago strike. w TELE re Th '“_i}’.“ rty W iA W As a matik We i BLA Aj the ot whi t 11 at W V

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