West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 12 Mar 1908, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

3 % i | J) #\ &# 5 light. And every‘trn;”i;;fimrvu life ultimately makes the discovery that it is the good things of life that are the most real, while what seem to be evils are, in the long last, but blessings in dngmnâ€"(bn:?u Guardian, upon our blessings, and in so doing mage nify our trowbles and onlr fears, we will succeed in making ourselves genuinely miserable; but i"'tsun the other hand, we leave the shadows behind us and look into the sunshine, we will find hw&d and cheering and helpful it is. The â€" est shadows in most lives are those that each man casts by standing in his own de thrown down by disease, and trampled upon by pain, and threatened with death. Then all hearts are touched, and express their sympathy by doing all that can be done to minister, so far as in them lies, restoration to health. Ku.l sw s i L> Read the lan eyebeams, _‘ this kindneoss thrown down upon â€" by â€" pa love like fine soms we meet cely speak to, who honor us the street, or though silent Au 1 belongs, but _ also that of the whole neighbor hood. _ This gracious sympa hy is ons of God‘s natural laws, and it is unspeakabl and. It ims Fre true kimhipyngri brotMrm of m.n,. It brings to the surface, what the bustle and business of life coversup and in 1 great measure hides out of sihht, the genuine human affection each has for the â€" other. Naink Woalke . Winumecue "We has than is unselfish winds t AM L Its 8 Lren oT tr ma n times 1t othe imper to th The The warder called to him to stay. "Uome in! We‘ve heard you sing!* he Vingt J} Now, by some careless prank of fate, These four met on the Way to Deach, And journeyed to the Joyous Gate Where but the perfect entereth. The warder halted them, and told How all who entered must be known By goodly deedâ€"by deeds of golidâ€" By heipful actions all their owr. It But still the beggar sany away, With awkward music in each word; And through the balance of that day The three that chanting echo heard. ‘They heard, and held the fading strains As memories of things that bless, And added to their other gains The golden one of kindliness. By Their Deeds. A tattered beggar in the street Sang always some old crooning hymn, And held to those whom he nt meet His hat with nfied, greasy brim, Iwo menâ€"two mighty men â€"came byâ€" Two honored leaders of the town; Came, too, a dame of repute highâ€" Each passed the beggar with a frown. "You may go in," the warder smiled, "Alithough _ your fame we did not know, cup of water to a child Is more than all the passing show." ve hqgu turned to take his wayâ€" With humbled mien _ and _ drooping th of attention. _ To it an unabate« amof sympathy flows. It _ com ids lowâ€"voieed speech, noiseless foot s, subdued light, a muiffled knocker _ _open _ eyes, . minisatering _ hands ig heartes and everything it wills sovercignty is an undisputed sover ty, and its law is the law of love. bow to it, and no burden it im s, however heavy, is ever spoken of he honored men explained that they Hud given of their earthly wealth » help their fellows on the way To knowledge, peacefuiness and health ie woman told of visits made, The suffering and poor to greetâ€" 1 three told how the world had laid Its laureled tributes at their feet. mi at times i Ve W. D. Nesbit in Chicago Tribune it t wh mess . that _ chill«‘ "like" east he world, the whole human is bathed with an element of : _fine ether. _ How many perâ€" meet in houses, whom we sourâ€" k to, whom yet we honor, and or us! _ How many we see in t, or sit with in church, whom, silently, we rejoice to be with! : language of those wandering t m ts MA : family, and . ever far beyond it on ers about in eage es, we might more leenléss thought. The The Joy of L ure hides out of sihht, the man . affection each has for Ralph _ Waldo _ Emerson great truth in these words: a great deal more kindness r spoken. . Maurge ail the s that _ chills‘ "like" east world, the wholehuman bathed with an element of he ether. _ How many perâ€" h The heart kM)weifitr-m _ is revealed when one is hose heart oBAV every house, some time or wnme can be long without it. it discovers itsel{ it rules over every one belongine Charmed Chamber. it FIAt ther innet storati uching L. Dick Y mome + RomE even exerts its t on many others. eager, anxious and more truly say oft. ght. It is the cenâ€" To it an unabated is filled with ind whose life sight to look on, D. D. in int LN of in This eulogium on the virtues of the Jew and the loftiness of his ethics will come as a surprise to the ordinary Genâ€" tile who might admit that in many things the Jew maintains on the average superior morals, but for the rest would say his standards are different. And it will never be correct to say that the Jew assimilate well, so long as they maintain their rule of separation. They can become genuine patriots, but they never allow themselves to â€"merge into the general population. Perhaps the eleâ€" ment that has tended most to the sueâ€" eess of the Jew is his ability to "lauch at the impossible and say it shall "be done." as illustrated by Zangwill‘s poor immigrant, who already saw himself **5€" restaurateur and a professor of languâ€" ag."beenusehohdnhrgehnroom‘ in his lodgings, or by Mr. Fischel. of New York, who landed with sixty cents Magazine,‘ to the success of the Jews in America, are the fact that they asâ€" aimilate well and love the country _ of their adoption and its political tradiâ€" tions. He refers also to their intense earnestness. The books that circulate in the libraries in New York‘s Eastâ€"side are books of science, travel, biography and social economics rather than contemâ€" porary fiction. He also dwells on their belief in and love of humanity. In New York alone they have ten millions of dollars‘ worth of property which is givâ€" en up to the service of {umanity. such as asylums, hospitals and educational buildings, homes for the aged, ete. Anâ€" other reason is that they are a cultured race with intellectual as well as commerâ€" cial â€"leanings, and a final reason why they have succeeded is "because they have placed character above everything, because they have treasured the educaâ€" tional and ethical ideals, ad also because they have aimed to perfect themselves morally, as well as financially." Apart from his personci services to this continent, the Jew certainly deâ€" serves its thanks, for without him who can say where we would have been. It is said that Santangel, the rich Spanish Jew, made the loan with which Columâ€" bus‘ expedition was fitted out. Ribes, another Jew, drew the principal map for the navigator‘s chartâ€"house; _ anâ€" other Jew, Abraham Zacouto, compiled his astronomical tables; while still anâ€" other, whose name has been missed by chronfcolers, mado his astronomical inâ€" struments. The Fhrysician of the expediâ€" tion was Bernol, a Jew, and a Jewish aurgeon was also on board. The first saiâ€" lor who saw land was a Jew named Rodâ€" rigo de Triana and Luis de Torres, the Jewish interpreter, was the first to land and address the natives in the Hindu dialect. After the successful issue of the | voyage, a Jew, Gabriel Sanchez, foundâ€" ‘ ed American trade by obtaining a franâ€" | chise from the King to sell cattle and grain to the Indians. Among the reasons which have contributed, according to Mr. Edward Lauterbach, in the ‘Herald | ren. In thirtyâ€"nine Philadelphia schools, having an attendance _ of 21,495, there were 11,683 Jews, and in nine schools in Chicago, with a roll of 11,430, the Jewish children numbered 7,020. _ We know _ in _ Montreal how rapidly the schools in some districts are becoming entirely Jewish. In the higher educu«â€" tional institutionsâ€"Columbia _ Univerâ€" sity, New York City College and Norâ€" mal School, and in our own universities. oung Jewish men and women carry off Lfl honors, often from competitors who apparently possessed much greater advantages. Mr. Burton Hendrick says: | "In afl: of all drawbacks, the Russian | Jeow advanced in practically every drection. His economic improvement is ! paralleled by that of no other immiâ€" grating race. In accumulating wealth, in liberating himself from ignorance and poverty, the Irishman, the Italian, the German, even the German Jew, cuts a poor figure beside him." on mortgage and finally buys land and building outright. So, in twentyâ€"five years Russianâ€"Jewish immigrants have nequired proper? in New York running into hundreds of millions ni value. In Montreal _ and other citiee the same movements is perceptible. The Jew of toâ€"day believes in the old Hebrew proâ€" verb which tells him that to get underâ€" standing brings long life, riches and honâ€" or. In 1904, in twentyâ€"eight schools in New York, where the attendance was 64,605, there were 61,103 Hebrew childâ€" The poverty of the ghettos in cities on this side is no index to the true state of the people. These are largely inhabited by recent arrivals, the former residents having moved into pleasanter ard more smnitary districts. But even the poor peddler, with his pack or push cart, or the poor stitcher in the factory is not always as poor as he appears. Alongside of the Hebrew‘s ambition to be an employer of labor is anotherâ€"to be a landlord. This he also attains by degrees. _ He rents and sublets, buys in the hands of Hebrews. They are miâ€" nutely divided and subdivided into conâ€" tracts and swbâ€"contracts, and the _ new man going into the ranks of the most poorlyâ€"paid workmen sees in himself the prospective omployor of labor and dogâ€" gedly pushes his way upward till he atâ€" tains his end. There is ever a supply of new immigrants coming, from which the lower ranks can be recruited. The elothing trades are, however, not the only career into which the Jew has enâ€" tered. He has come into every field of effort. and in every field of effort he is | meeting with atmost startling success. _ (Montreal Witness.) The rapid increase of the Jewish popâ€" ulstion of the United States has recentâ€" ly received some comment. In 165 twentyâ€"seven Portuguese Jews obtained reluctant leave from the Dutch governâ€" or, Peter Stuyvesant, to settle near New York; in 1881 there were about 50,000 Jews in that city; since that time each convulsion in Russia has resulted in a new exodus, until toâ€"day there are between 800,000 and 900,000 Jews in Greater New York. One man in every five in the whole city is a Jew, and in Manbattan Island _ one man in e'vl:’y four. The " ," as he is called, whenbebnge::‘tbhfido,bwly‘ always desperately poor. For two days he is the guest of his people, and is alâ€" lowed to eat and sleep as their charges. Then be goes to work. And how he does work! "He believes in the eightâ€"hour ‘day,‘ says Herbert Carson, ‘eight hours before noon and eight hours _ after." Practically all the clothing trades are 'mqâ€"--, N Cug rabdl, *A Their Wealth, Growth and Affluenc in Canada and the States. THE JEWS. ' "Well, she climbed in and we started. |I made a tenâ€"mile trip that morning, | just as eâ€"eâ€"asy. | _ "Then Tuesday morning the agent came, | _ "I‘ve only got an hour and a half to teach you about this machine,‘ he said. ‘So Â¥u'll have to look close.‘ "*You look closer yourself, I answer. ’ed. ‘If there‘s nnyt{ing special about this machine that 1 don‘t know already you get your thinker busy and tell me about it. Old man, I‘ve been runnin‘ this car for two days.‘ German tourists head the list in Alâ€" pine accidents "Maybe he wasn‘t surprised."â€"From the Kansas City Star. "‘Wife,‘ I said, ‘I believe I ean keep that thing in the road. Get in and we‘ll try it‘ *"Well, I took the folks out and showâ€" ed ‘em the car, and they said it looked good. That was on Sunday morning. I got restless and shoved the thing out into the yard. And then I stood there lookin‘ at it and thinking. "I‘ll come around Tuesday and show you how to run it," he said. __"I guess he was afraid I‘d smash it up“?gt:gre_ he got at me. _old," he warned. "I‘m only 57. And don‘t think that there‘s anything unâ€" usual about buyin‘ a new motor car. We older people can‘t afford to get into ruts. Things change. We‘ve got to keep up. There are a dozen other farmers in my county who own cars. We need ‘em. Now, I live eight miles out of Abilene. With a car I can run in in twentyâ€"two minutes, see?" Everyone said it was perfectly plain. We can‘t have people telling us we‘re out of date. When I came to i{amu in ‘85 from Harrisburg, Pa., there was one set of conditions to meet. Now there‘s another set. _ When I bought my carâ€" there‘s one like it, that red one over thereâ€"the agent hauled it into my granâ€" His hat was a black felt, cheese box shape, with no dents in it and a straight brim. He wore a black and white hickâ€" ory shirt with no collar or necktie. But his manner was that of a city business ing car. He spoke as if he had purchased nothing more valuable than an incuâ€" bator. 3 FARMER BUYS A CAR. ‘ Although yesterday was society day at the motor car show, with an admisâ€" sion price of $1, the number of farmers attending was increased. But the dealâ€" ers could pick them out, and took elfe- cial pains to do so. For, as one dealer said, "When a farmer asks about maâ€" chines he means business, One of the most xgalct,ure:que of «the farmers was Isaac Page, of Dickinson county, Kansas. He spent a few minutes in earnest conversation with W. S. Hathâ€" away and then announced that he had traded his Maxwell runabout for a tourâ€" Mange, Prairie Scratches and every form of eontagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes by Woiford‘s Sanitary Lotion. Bs 2 C I uEBd BUs It never fails Sold by druggists. Goschâ€"It depends _ entireiy on the mode of transportation and the difficulâ€" ties in the way. I®knew a man in Jackâ€" son county, over in Missouri, who once had his house moved 300 miles by the simple process of building it a littie teo close to the banks of the Missourl Rivâ€" er, and he didn‘t have to pay a cent for it, in his pocket. Whatever may be the causes of the success of the Jew, no one need begrudge it to him. He is a good citizen, a good parent, and a good son. If he gains wealth, he contributes by his work, and still more by his active brain to the wealth of the community and, (even if we did not owe him debts that are really incalculable) his invinâ€" cible determination and his faithfulness to his ideals are object lessons which may be expected to add to the grit of the rest of the community. Exceptional Instance. Golliferâ€"I‘ve got to move my dwellâ€" ing house a quarter of a mile or more. Have you any idea what it will cost Don‘t get it into For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable ComFound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceraâ€" tion, fibroid tumors, irreiularities, seriodic pains, backache, that bearâ€" ngâ€"down feeling, flatulency,indigesâ€" ion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Yhy don‘t {nu try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick yomen to write her for advice. ‘he has guided thousands to ~alth. Address, Lynn, Mass. "* A friend suggested Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s V:geta.ble Compound as the proper medicine for me. I procured a bottle of this remedy and began takâ€" ing, and before it was finished, I felt so much better that I continued its use and gave it a thorough test, with the result I am toâ€"day well and a much healthier girl than I was three years ago. I have no more painful periods, dizziness or nervous troubles." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. ham‘s Vegetable Compound cures sick women. _ _ * Miss M. R. Morin, 335 Ontario St., Montreal, writes to Mrs. Pinkham : 1 was in very poor health and doeâ€" tored for months, receiving very little benefit I had lost all ambition, was nervous, and subject to dizzy spells and painful periods each month. q99 More proof that Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ITCHM your head that I‘m Deacon (meeting a boy on Sunday morning carrying a string of fish)â€" Johnny, Johnny, do these belong to you? Johnnyâ€"Yeâ€"eâ€"s, sir. You see, that‘s what they‘ve got for chasing worms on Sunday!â€"Pickâ€"Meâ€"Up "‘Cause évorytime I see him going by the house now, I stick my tongue out at him!"â€"Lippineott‘s. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, ONTARIO ARCHIVES A few days slfi)sequent to this the child said to her mother: ‘Ma, the doeâ€" tor don‘t have to tease me to obey him an{‘ more," Vhy not?" The day the doctor called to treat lit. tle Kitty for a slight ailment it was only by the most persistent persuasion that he succeeded in getting the child to show him her tongue. at me!" Bill stolidly shifted the quid of toâ€" bacco in his mouth, and turned to leave the court room with the marshal. Once outside the only thing he said was this: "Well, I suah am glad he wa‘n‘t mad Before pronouncing sentence the judge lectured the prisoner on his long crimâ€" inal record, and at last, informing him that the court entertained no feeling of anger toward him, but felt only mixed pity, sentenced him to spend six yours in the Federal prison at Atlanta. Glad He Wasn‘t Mad. A notorious mountain moonshiner, faâ€" miliarly known as "Wild Bill," was reâ€" cently tried before a Federal court in Georgia, and was adjudged gniity. Minard‘s Liniment Cu;u Garget in Cows. know the back of your You are Signor Arditi." out the money to the 1 further ceremony, s ooo o‘ _ "But I do not know anyone here," proâ€" tested the musical conductor. "I am very sorry," said the cashier. Signor Arditi thought for a few moâ€" ments, and presently said: "Do you ever attend the opera, young man ?" "Frequently," said the cashier. "I am very fond of music." "Then you must know me,‘ ‘and, takâ€" ing off his hat and turning his back upon the cashier, Signor Arditi beat time vigâ€" orously to an imaginary orchestra. _ "Oh, yes!" exclaimed the cashier. "I Signor Arditi, the wellâ€"known musical con.dgucwr, tells the following adventure he had with a bank cashier in an Amerâ€" ican city. He wished to have a cheque eashed; but, since the bank cashier did not kmow Signor Arditi, he told him he must get himself identified before he could receive any money, wDlir & . P Made by a Convict. In the gardens attached to the Houses of Parliament. â€" Melbourne, there is an elaborately sculptured fountain, embellished with human figures, birds, flowers, and various other ornamental work in stone. This fountain has a remarkablse history. It was constructed entirely by a conâ€" viet named William Stanford, withâ€" in the walls of the Melbourne jail. When a young man of twentyâ€"one, Stanford, in a weak moment, joined s band of bushranging desperadoes, was captured and sentenced to terms of imprisonment amounting in the aggrggate to twentyâ€"one years. One. day ‘Colonel Champ, the governor of Melbourne jail, was astonished to find a beautiful angelic figure which Stanford had carved out of a meat bone. He showed it. to the leading sculptor of Melbourne, who declared that the young man was a natural genius. The sculptor visited the jail and gave Stanford some lessons in the art. A petition for pardon was influentially signed, nndp Stanford was released. He became one of the most successful sculptors in â€" Mel bourne, and completely lived down his juvenile criminal escapade.â€"Dunâ€" dee ‘Advertiser.‘ It heals as it cleans. A medicinal and toilet soap combined. Soothing and antiseptic. Rlegantly perfnmef Inâ€" valuable for babies, to keep the delicate skin clear and smooth. 25¢ a cakeâ€"at druggists or sent on ree::rt of mi“lhe Chemists‘ Co. of Canada, Li ted, â€"chapped handsâ€"blotches on the face â€"scalp irritationâ€"all are cured by Motoring is ideal when it can be enâ€" joyed under mile after mile of arched foliage, past fertile fields and picturâ€" esque cottages. Just a litle skater, Blithe as he could be ; Just a sign of danger That he failed to see ; Just a little venture Where the ice was thin; Just a little flicker As he tumbled in; Just a little dear one Who will not return! dJust a little lesson Boys will never learn. â€"Chicago Record Herald. in front as straight as a die as far as the eye can reach. Another feature of the French roads is the entire absence of fences, says the Outingy Magazine. Fields come to the very edge of the grass bordering the rows of trees that line the romds and in Normandy and Britanny, especially, evâ€" ery foot of the acerage seems to _ be tilled in many places both gutters of the road on ‘hiils are carefully paved with stones so that the water may be carried off without cutting ruts in the macadam at the edges. A Condition Which Makes Motoring a Delight in France. s There are many sections of the chief roads in France which run for miles in an absolutely straight line. The country is invariably rolling and it is nothing unusual to come to the summit of some hill and see the road stretching away The Fish‘s Punishment. ilton Red, Itching, Skin An Obliging Patient. MILES OF STRAIGHT ROAD. A Perfect ldentification. TRADC SKIN SOAP Unlearned Lesson, TORONTO imaginary orchestra. _ exclaimed the cashier. "I k of your head very well. TY vw+â€"~~â€"â€"â€" MARK REGISTERED glad he wa‘n‘t mad ‘ _ And he handed musician without etc. Rising and Disappearing Islands. The number of islands in the world is not at all constant. During the past century, says the "Certificate Examâ€" iner," volcanic action caused the rise of filtyâ€"two islands from the sea, and the disappearance of sixteen others. "No, thank you," said the dignified little girl. "I have already bitten." "Now, Ethel, should they ask you to stay and dine, you must say, ‘No, thank you; I have already dined.‘" It turned out just as papa had antici pated. "Come along, Ethel," said the host "you must have a bite with us." and driven deep into the shady slopes wbove the village of Catalan. The wazer collected at the foot cf the catchment runs through the rock into a tunnel two thousand feet long and is Selivered into the reservoirs on the western side. The yield to each inch of rainfall is 240,000 gallons.â€"Baltimore American. s She was a little giri and very polite. ‘T‘was the first time she had been on a visit alone, and she had been told how to behave. On the eastern side of the rock of Gibraltar there is a curious looking white patch which recently led an Amâ€" erican tourist to ask whether the rock was being armorâ€"plated. It is really a catchment for rain water to increase the serve water on the rock. The catchâ€" ment covers ten acres, It is made of galvanized corrugated iron fixed to piles Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper The Judge‘s Turkey. During the civil war, especially during the last years, the Southerners were often in sore straits for supplies of all kinds. During this period a Southern Judge was rather surprised to find a turkey on his table, stuffed according to the best rules of the art. As he had no turkeys in his Koultry yard, and he knew that the sum he had given to his cook for household expenses did not run to a turkey, he called the sable servant and asked for an explanation. "Why, masea," replied Sambo, "it is like this: That turâ€" key has been roosting three nights on our fence, and last night I grabbed him for the rent of the fence." It is not on record whather the judge was satisfied with this explanation. my sway, £ Or talk back when upon some fault I pick? When I demand, who dares to say me nay ?* I‘d settle a rebellion mighty quick, Ab, home, sweet home; flove it, I must say, It‘s juet the one place where 2 man can kick. Away from home I am compelied _ to smile, _ Though in my heart is bitterness and gall. Be nice to people I don‘t like at all And speak quite softly, though I rage the while. At home I freely manifest my bile, If things dont‘ suit me you hear someâ€" thing fail, Yes, there they all come running when I call, And meekly listen if I should revile I‘m bo#sâ€"supreme. Who shall dispute Jewelry to sell at10cents each, When sold send us the e ry to sell a e send us guno and we willsend you these TWO SOLID GOLD led RINGS. We truet you with the Jewelry an d willsend 1t allcharges paid. Sead us your name and addressnow, STAR MFG. CO., PROVIDENCE, R. I., U. 8. A. The Congo Free State contains about 800,000 square miles of territory, and a population variously estimated at from twenty to thirty millions. In favor of the _ government it may be said that, along commercial lines, the state is being greatly developed, an important step in this direction being the suppression of the Arab slave trade. The capital of the state is Boma, a city of several thousand people, situated fortyâ€"five miles from the mouth of the Congo _ River. Just below the first great rapids, an impassâ€". able barrier to ocean vessels, is located Matadi, a city of about 3,000 people, and | the point from which is shipped most of the rubber and ivory brought down from the interior. From this eity a railroad extends 240 miles to Leopeldville, from which point the river is navigable for 900 miles to Stanley Lake. From Stanâ€" ley Falls to Lake Tanganyika, a distance of over 700 miles, a railroad is being conâ€" structed which will connect ultimately with the Cape to Cairo railroad, thus opening up a vast district, and furnishing much needed additional transportation facilities for the enormous lumber and mining interests of the state.â€" C,. . Stoddard in Leslice‘s Weekly. “\ac“wne big _ black plug chewing tobacco. Lake on Rock of Gibraitar. " 200° 22200 & man who has tested it. Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and all throat, lung and stomach trouâ€" bles yield to Psychine. At all druggists, 50¢. and $1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limâ€" ited, Toronto. "Psychine is one of the best mediâ€" cines on the market, and for all throat and lung troubles is unexcelled.".â€" A. word from a man who has tested it. "I have used your Psychine for about six months, and have found it an exâ€" cellent remedy for pneumonia and weak lungs." Ronald Johnson, Farewell, Ont., April 15, 1907. success. 10c. The latest Following Instructions Cure for Weak Lungs Where a Man Can Kick. Opening Darkest Africa. _ _Send us your name and address for 12 plecer of Send us your name and address â€"Chicago News, Razoring Women. (Toronto Mail and Empire.) Slashing women with razors is a fine old foreign sport that should be very severely dealt with when practised in Canada. We shall be interested to see if the law considers it a more serious ofâ€" fence than the stealing of money from letters. From Ocwober to May, Colds are the most frequent cause of Headache. . LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE removes cause, A W, Grove om box, 25¢. He He And didn‘t stay To cherish hbis wife and children fair. He was a man And every day His heart grew callous, is love beats rare. H:.’ thought of himeelf at the close of And cigar in his fingers, hurried away To the club, the lodge, the store, the He Ha Dear Sirs,â€"We wish to inform you that we consider your MINARD‘S LINIMENT a â€" very superior article, and we use it as a sure relief for sore throat and chest. When I tell you I would not be without it if the price was one dollar a bottle, I mean it. Whare‘s that weazened up o‘ soul Telt me I wuz gittin‘ ol‘ Defyin« Age. That‘s the story 1 am told: "Gittin‘ ol‘! Gittin‘ ol‘t* Well, mebbe so, but seems t‘ m I‘m spry as what I uster be, Git yer fiddleâ€"draw yer bowâ€" Rosum up an‘ let ‘er goâ€" Louder! Faster! Let ‘er sing! Watch the ol‘ time pigeonwing! What‘s the matterâ€"air y‘ done? Cracky, I have just begun! Minard'g Liniment Co., Liu;ited A hundred and thirtyâ€"two boys and seventyâ€"two girls in a Parisian school were invited to describe their preterâ€" ences in the way of toys. Among the former 31 voted for a railway train, 23 for tin soldiers, 10 for steam en gines, nine for building bricks and eight each for toyâ€"typewriters and meâ€" chanical horses. Forty girlsâ€"a solid majorityâ€"declared without hesitation that a doll was superior to any other implement of recreation. The superâ€" child seems haf)py a long way off. And as diabolo had only two boy and six girl supporters, the ‘Devil‘s Disâ€" ciple may st‘ill. be called an infreâ€" But he stayed at home And he guarded the family night and day. e was a dog ‘That didn‘t roam, He lay on the porch and chased the strazyâ€" The tramp, the burglar, the ben away; For a dog‘s true hbeart for that houseâ€" uent object of the playground he ‘Schoolmaker.‘ Quick ease for the worst coughâ€"quick relief to the heaviest coldâ€"and SAFE to take, even for a child. That is Shiloh‘s Cure CGures bold Reat :/ 5. 3. 8 /+ 050(0003 yyk C Ee At morning amd evening, in cold and The parents gave birth to eight boys, and from whatever cause it is impossible for me to say, the whole family have just given themselves up body and soul to evil. ‘The poor old mother escorted this, her seventh, son to the execution ground wa‘iling her dreadful fate the whole way. On arrival the magistrate, fearing she might cause trouble, had her forcibly removed outside the crowd until all was over, when she ran back to the hle:ading. headless body of her poor boy and again took up her wailing.â€"Suiâ€"fnu correspondence Shanghai Mercury. SHILOH‘S The man who was executed was found guilty of highway robbery and sentenced to be beheaded. He is the seventh of the family to suffer the extreme penalty in this city. Toâ€"day a remarkable execution has taken place in this city, the like of which I think has never happened even in the annals of Chinese executions. REMARKABLE CRIMINAL RECORD WHAT CAUSES HEADACHE In One Chinese Family Seven Sons Executed for Mighway Robbery. EDpDpY‘s “SHLENT" ParLOR MaTcHEs @o®» Silent as be had a right to go Toys Children Like Best THE DIFFERENCE. Yours truly Fairville, Sept. 30, 1902 CHAS. F. TILTON â€"Buffalo News â€"New York â€"From Vacuum From Blow Out Shot. Experiments made in Austria, says the Engineering and Mining Journal, show that a vacuum resulting from a blowout shot may amount to as much as 12 inch of mercury, which is equivâ€" alent to 8 lbs. to 9 lbs. to the square foot. This reduction of pressure cre. ates an increase in the flow of fire. damp in the ratio of 235 to 100. Un der the conditions stated blowâ€"out shots may furnish a considerable amount of gas that would not be drivâ€" (eln from the coal under ordinary conâ€" itions. the Sphinx! Whbt uo tpnisiaiiigsao & + chci wess s Pis cA sidese a turning s of 200 feet, which is swung by .p:n electric motor, and which when opened gives a clear 70 feet on either side for the passage of vesâ€" sels. _ At a recent efficial test every square yard of the bridge was subjected to a weight of 400 pounds. In order to give this weiiht the footpaths were piled with sand, while twenty tram cars loadâ€" ed with cement, twentyâ€"four water carts filled with sand and eight traction enâ€" gines were kept on the bridge a whole day. _ The deflection of each span was noted, and after that the whole of the huge traffic was driven at full speed ACrOSs the bridgeâ€"Fram i; _ ,_ 3 PCeG Minard‘s New Bridge at Caire. The Island of Rodah, in the Nile, where tradition says Moses was found in the bulrushes, has just been connected with Cairo by the iargest bridge ever built over the Nile in that section. The Rodah bridge, which took three years to build, is 1,740 feet long and 65 feet broad. There are fourteen spans. beâ€" dier "But you have my permission," said the King. "Your permission! Who are you*" "I am the King." "The King be hanged!" said the inâ€" paigns in Nilesia he made it his habit to stroll through his camp in dinguise at night to come in touch with his soldiers. (One night he was stopped by a sentry, but giving the proper password was perâ€" mitted to proceed. Instead of doing so, however, he endeavored to tempt the sentry into accepting _ a cigar, saying that ‘a _ smoke would solace his long watch. "It is against the rules," said the solâ€" Frederick the Great of Prussia often told a laughable story of an experience Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, bleod spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of ane bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by dragâ€" hose. Gray, helio, garnet, azure and tan in lisles; pearl, gun metal and old rose in silk, For best dress of course we are still wearing black silk.â€"From Brownâ€" ing‘s Magazrine. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS Combination suits in underwear like the coat skirt were a long time gaining a foothold in popular esteem, but their fortune is fixedâ€"they have E there. Beautiful are the new in half Tab collars with rounded pointse are sufficiently distinctive to make them welcome in dressy quarters. Soft hats in OVOILIhpO are popular among school and younger college boys, but men are favoring the stiff varieties almost exclusively. Red, green and brown are the momâ€" ent‘s colors in neckwear. of peau de crepe, takes the reefer form u.nnr‘l:“cverylon‘nyhmmof the ordinary. _ PB BC 0 h A Tuxedo waistcoat has . a deeply pointed front: The pattern is a echeme of dirgonal lines converging to the cenâ€" tre, giving to the wearer a slim, trim appeara nce. Full dress mufflers and protectors are Wrie The J $2.00 :373 We desire to employ a few gont Men and Women . » . â€" ENGLISH SPAVIN LNIMENT King Frederick and the Jentry. ISSUE NO. 10, 1908. Oe â€"stutities * dlltr enc As / ic e, bridge.â€"From Zion‘s Her: *~~â€"â€"+*++§â€". Liniment Cures Diphtheria, omm en iniment Cures Diphtheria. **~**D l m From Blow Out Shot. ents made in Austria, says eering and Mm§n¢ Journal, 2avu0 of 230 to 100. Un ditions stated blowâ€"out furnish a considerable s that would not be driv. coal under ordinary conâ€" WpGmmiinliaet i redih, sls Ph: . 3 ing span of 200 feet, which by an electric motor, and opened gives a clear 70 feet would my sentry. _ ‘"What FARMS FOR SALLE. W ANTEO Men‘s Fashions. HELP WANTED. :m%"& paper.) Zion‘s Herald, wOMEN . Y _A N D 1ss1 O N Intelliâ€" 6 t t A w Upas Amido hmm- about rinki and t] .‘fltL pro @r, 45 whet| in the had Toronto Italian W at M the Waa Wit KITCHENER®‘3 NEW MACHI tar na; @4 ITALIAN SUITOR SH SWEETHEAPR The khots Mlj-ll â€"1 far a> only ; burt â€" t land, = the MW; 'll!ll@fn addit ior Â¥a@rious seasol will _ went ; plough., and th before the _ st feuds : with t] ing abr lent to« Mahil f quer paigt whie] anit ie ’;rol.-, hiA + wheneve they wh British q; tured in ed the k ish _ arn th tr wi th pro the the Wt < 1A th al} th STABS HIS s Ais> Shot He: â€"But None F restedâ€"Nearlv A Menace on the Northern I for Centurie:. Foris Desiroyed ard Many Tribesmen Killed. l’u‘n Klldi:m Army n 14 h REFUSED HIM w1 t TD« The rmy at Work the Afridi.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy