West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 May 1908, p. 6

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cons sesstivnnnih be all right!" friend who had when the seas the faith that that God has i seekers on knew they it nigh m those 1 1rsappointment sponsible alwa,; ‘ssing. But gry intment does n« 4 it is exercise, D can only play for one side. If you are playing for one side you must necessariâ€" ly be playing against the other. It is the same in life. There are only two silesâ€"the good and the bad. But in the church, and in the fight for the good of the people, it would seem that although professedly on the Lord‘s side, yet there are many Christians who do not activeâ€" ly engage in the warfare. In a football team that would not be tolerated for a moment. Every member of a team must play, and play his hardest and best, too. We do not like professionalism in footâ€" ball, nor do we fike it any better in a Christian. Is it too much to say that, in the work for God and humanity, all should take part and do their best? There ought to be no onlookers or sight. seers, that ought to be left to the angels, the "great cloud of witnesses," Paul said: "I press toward the goal." It is the motto, on a lower plane, of â€"very footballer. And is it not even in picture of life in the world. There are and can be only two sides. Each man al ul that our ‘aul said: "I press toward the goal." is the motto, on a lower plane, of ery footballer. And is it not even in »tball a fine thing to be on the winâ€" ig side? What solid satisfaction there in that! Can it be spoken of in the ne breath with the solid satisfaction the man who is aiming at Paul‘s i1* It is always a great thing in life have any worthy aim. As George Berâ€" d Shaw says. "Better make the horiâ€" your goal; it will always be ahead you." Better far is it to place your 1 still further on. Place it where il placed itâ€"aim at the highest â€"an ndant entrance to the tweiveâ€"gated . Play the game of life so that you| find an entrance through some gate | pearl, Life is not all play. We can,|â€" many do, give too much attention | ! footba}l. _ The newspapers, during e winter months on a Monday mornâ€" | would almost lead one to think | England was just one big green | C , and all the men and women merely } i halt stua.l. P e football season _ ends,. also ends. The last da ome. Shall we reach the ga ave a crown of life as t r present method of life? d the goal! Ready for the Blessing. Ur i gloom. "ihink w st if we had finishe it, according to pla e head winds!" was one passenger. "I k everl name There" has often come to me when itching all the men in a good team coâ€" erating with each other, all playing gether with one cbject, a great longing at the same spirit could be seen in all r church workâ€"all aiming for one al, the salvation of the world. That a lesson from the football field we uld all do well to learn by practice. \ football field is just a miniature 1 faws such crowds of sightseers and adâ€" irers. The players have the exercise, id the onlooEeru the fresh air, neither them bad things. Its everlasting ovement and push suits the British mperament even more than the beauty movement and exhibition of skill to found in our national summer game cricket. th ho vinter months on a ould almost lead ‘ngland was just nd all the men and (), great Keeper of the destinies of man, be near us upon this Sabbath dli There are times when all seems dar s when life seems so much a part of death ‘hat our souls cower in the gloom of 1opelessmess and refuse to be comforted. \t such seasons, we pray Thee, send us he blessed hope, and assurance which ells us that man‘s end is not death, but fe, not defeat, but viectory and life verlasting. And this we ask in His . ame who died that we might have this | ire knowledge and comfort. Amen. | Shall We Reach the Goal? | (By the Rev, James Learmqunt.) / Fhe author of "Tom Brown‘s Schoolâ€" tys" hit the mark when he said of footâ€" ll, "It is more than a game, it is an stitution." â€"It is very old. It has had | long history in the world, and several | tions claim to have originated it. The it twentyâ€"five years has established as our great winter game. No other aws such crowds of sichtaaare andk ai | D Te was wound in linen grave clothes, (Hé who came the world to save) ; Was embalmed with myrrh and aloes, Laid in saintly Joseph‘s grave. He Through And a Tragedy and Triumph, (By (Geo. W. Armstrong.) Saddest page in human story, Was the day when Jesus died ; Whenâ€"nailed to His cross so goryâ€" M Oe orolE ie C us Good Friday‘s gloomy To a triumph leads the wa id a glorious Easter morn Hails Christ‘s resurrection London, Ont. + through sorrow, grief and sadness, Duty, danger, death may lie; i1 Golgotha beams with gladness, Calvary teaches Death shall die. ath and tomb enthroned before Cannot cast dark shadows now r their usurped reign is o‘er, ilory crowns the Victor‘s brow. shall triumph on the morrow And God‘s just decrees maintain At Goigotha/erucified CNT sea, and along a ern river. ‘Then smiles "Think what. we would had finished the voyage ding to plan. Blessings rinds!" was the exclamaâ€" enger. "I knew it would was the response of a not ceased to smile even were heaviest. That is a tragedy of sorrow, death of grief and pain; tril'un_ph- on the morrow, ss toward the g n a lower plan« nd is it not eve ig to be on the lid satisfaction t be spoken of in he solid satisfac s aiming at P; Prayer ‘v the blessing nds and heavy ty of pleasure umer until they ongedâ€"for drive iny complaints. voyage was on . and along a o ut CY Rome loomy dawn, with it a such disapâ€" c much unâ€" blessing is e thankful . lLife on day‘s fight gaol? Shall the result * Press of are not ] ,' Asbestos is the name of a thriving | Oregon settlement and one might supâ€" | pose it to be the hottest town in the | State. But it stands well up in the mountains of Josephine County and seâ€" cured its name from the asbestos mine | near by. Other Oregon towns which | were named after nearby mines are Greenhorn, (Greenback and Lucky Boy. There are also Mineral, Promise, Agate, Nugget, Oretown and Prospect. A historic name is Grant‘s Pass, counâ€" ty seat of Josephine County. When U. S. Grant was a young lienâ€" tenant in the regular army he led a deâ€" tachment of soldiers from California northward through Ozegon to Vancouver barracks. In crossing the southern Oreâ€" gon Mountains the soldiers wandered away from the regular trail and found their way down out of the mountains through a new pass. In later years when Grant led the Union armies to vic., tory and became famous his name beâ€" eame associated with this pass, and the city which grew up in the pass between the hills took the name, In early days the settiors in order to be near wood and water went well back into the hills to take donation land claims, ignoring the rich valley lands, which are now the scene of trade and wealth. A party thus seeking new homes found a pleasant little valley in what is now the eastern part of Linn County. Believing they had found a Utopia, so far as natural conditions were concernâ€" "_ °J _ _2%wet0 1} no town at Mule, but the ‘an | ranchers wanted a post office. When Maâ€" aire | hon, who headed the petition, was asked u-i-, to select a name he suggested Anderâ€" is | son, as his ranch is in Andezson Valley. wo | But the Department repliel that there :he! were too many Andersons in the counâ€" of | try already, and a shorter name would gh } be advisable. So Mahon suggested Mule, ‘re | and it was accepted. veâ€" | _ Other animals or birds whose names all | decorate Oregon‘s postal list are Cayâ€" ‘“J use, Crow, _ Grizzly, Grouse, Antelope, st | Fishhawk, Hare, Fox, Pelican and Salmâ€" 0. | an. LDY knw»,. .4. .. 3 qUHHOMer, too, for if any town ever lacked push it was this one. A{pficiating that fact and belieyâ€" ing tha possibly the name was a hooâ€" doo residents have changed the name of the town to Necanicum, after a river on which it is situated. # 21. _,_ COCCC ‘C=UF stakes, a _ kind of shingle, were manufactured there, Bridal Veil might hint of a romance, But there is no tradition to live up to the name. The post office stands near a beautiful water fall in eastern Multnoâ€" mah county resembling a spreading white veil. Steamboat is also a misnomer, for it stands on & creek not big enough to float a canoe. But in early mining days the creek was named Steamboat Creek and the post office name came from that of the creek, There Wi#® m Wiltnss in Prosacl L 4. There are several names wh'nch, while they may seem atrange for post offices and towns were really natural selections. Such are Reuben and Rufus. Each was named for the man on whose land the town was established, the former for Reuben R. Foster and the latter for Rufus C. Wallis. Shake is another post office of the same class. The name implies nothing as to cordiality or the lack of it a« might be suppoud{ but it stands in a southern O‘regon sugar pine belt and whan 41. Vregon sugar pine be'l?,wa;-c-i omc_e_wu named a @reat m« C OBBOCCTT AMRIUE! Pn S renpes en tinnn 6 Msm menizataiizieis diutccvine: son, as his ranch is in Anderson Valley. [ writes to Mrs. Pinkham : But the Department repliel that there «e ; were too many Andersons in the counâ€" | tor LY;.m.écl;tf::.flgez::&,n'md: try already, and a shorter name would | other told me it was a fibroid tumor be advisable. So Mabon suggested Mule, | and advised an operation. No one. and it was accepted. | knows what I suffered; ano thy bearâ€" Other animals or birds whose names | ing down pains were terrible. decorate Oregon‘s postal list are Cayâ€" | "I wrote to my sister about it, and she use, Crow, _ Grizzly, Grouse, Antelope, I advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Fishhawk, Hare, Fox, Pelican and Salmâ€" Vegetable Compound. on. | L The post office of Mule is in Harney county. It draws its name from the fact that its postmaster, J. F. Mahon, in whose residence the post office is locatâ€" ed, conducts one of the largest â€" mule ranches in the West. There is no town at Mule, but _ the ranchers wanted a post office. When Maâ€" hon, who headed the Detitinn was sclai bitvintaiice: : BW si 22 20 i ic frowm the clear stream which runs near this post office. Among other names chosen on account of aurroundings â€" are Juniper, which stands among the juniper trees of eastern Oregon; Peak, located near the foot of Mary‘s Peak, the highâ€" est point in the Coast Range; _ Fossil, county seat of Wheeler county, and near fosil depositg. and Lime, Lava, Mineral and Meadow, a!l named because of the chief characteristic of their natural surâ€" roundings. United States. _ His ins.i)irntion came from an immense gooseberry bush. There is also a post office in Oregon named Strawberry. Gooseberry, Looking Glass and Mule all appear on Oregon‘s map. When a post office was established at Gooseâ€" berry the Department told I. R. Esteb, who was appointed postmaster, to select a name different from any other in the United States, _ His inspiration came Similar in origin to Bakeoven are Hayâ€" stack, Tanks, Echo, Box and Apiary. Haystack was named for the only thing standing on the ground when the post office was established, and Tanks is a station on the O., R. & N. Railroad in Umatilla County, where the watering tanks of that division is situsted. on the site of the Frenchman‘s camp is named Bakeoven, and residents yet point out the blackened rocks which were a part of the original bakeoven that gave the place its name. The bread was sold to passing miners and travellers along the trail at a much greater profit than he would otherwise have received. As a result of this occurâ€" rence the little town which now stands The first night he went into camp a band of Indians came along and drove off all his mules. Unable to move his flour, he gathered some rocks together, built a big oven and then gradually bakâ€" ed his flour into bread. The part chance has played in forming Oregon‘s post office list is illustrated in Bakeoven. _ In early days a Frenchman started from The Dailies, which, by the way, takes its name from the dailies or falls in the Cojumbia River, with a cargo of flour for the mines at Canyon City, another town named from its geographâ€" ical location. Albany, Ore.â€"For queer names _ of towns, Oregon excels any State in the Union. _ Natural statistics and freaks of fortine made many names, and the pioneer. who settled in this Far Western State often selected a name for their new location from the very first chance occurrence in connection with it. Indian names and some drawn from tke classics appear in Oregon‘s post ofâ€" fice list, but predominant are the names indicative of the life of the West. Aniâ€" mal«, birds and trees have also contri-j buted their names to settlements. It £ un was a misnomer, too name of Looking Gilass comes 6 °*‘ army he led a deâ€" ldiers from California gh Oregon to Vancouver ssing the southern Oreâ€" the soldiers wandered regular‘ trail and found out of the mountains pass. In later years nc Union armies to vic. * famous his name beâ€" with this pass, and the up in the pass between e name, the settlers in order to village tlest town in the s well up in the ne County and #eâ€" the asbestos mine in Oreson ‘m.d nd when the many shakes, manufactured office of the ies nothing as it as might in a southern was the for for Mrs, Hookafusâ€"Not at all, Hiram. It will set you back about half as much as that new fishing‘r?d of yours did. Mr. Hockafusâ€"Perhaps you vouldn‘t mind te‘ling me, Amanda, how much dough I will have to dig up when the bill comes in for that new spring hat of yours. "Yes, madam." replied the shopman, "we have had them in stock only two days." "I didn‘t think they were, because the fcshion paper says black mids have tan stitches, and vice versa. I see the tan stitches, but not the vice versa." The shopman explained that vice verâ€" sa was French for seven buttons, so she bought three pairs.â€"â€"Detroit Free Press. gloves," "These they ?" s produced. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick | women to write her for advice. | She has guided thousands to | health. Address, Lynn, Mass. | |__"It has cured me of all my troubles, | | and I did not have to have the operaâ€" | | tion after all. The Comronnd also | | heiped me to pass safely th:on.h’ | Change of Life." He that wants h an alive.â€"Italian For thirty geazs Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Oomgound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female illsI and has positively cured thousands o women who have been troubled with displacements, inflam mation, ulceraâ€" tion, fibrofd tumors, irre larities, periodic pains and ba.ckacg:. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For proof of this statement reud the following letter. Mrs. Letitia Blair, Cannifton, Ont., writes to Mrs. Pinkham : LYDIA EPINKHAM‘S VEGETABLE COMPOUND We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hunâ€" dreds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hosâ€" pitals which are entirely unnecesâ€" sary and many have been avoided by Let 100 eeenemes If there is any one thing that a woman dreads more than another it 18 a surgical operation. A SURGICAL OPERATION _ Billsburg got its name thus: A few years ago only seven men lived there, all being miners or hq@mesteaders. They met one evening to choose a name for their settlement, and it was then disâ€" covered that che first name of all seven of the men was William. That settled the discussion of a name and Billsburg was at once adopted. Corvallis, county seat of Benton Counâ€" ty, is Latin in origin, meaning the heart of the valley. It was originally named Marysville. About 1870 this town and Salem, the capital of Oregon, and Alâ€" bany, the county seat of Linn County, desired namek which were not so comâ€" mon. . Marysville became Corvallis, Alâ€" bany changed to Taknah and Salem beâ€" came Chemeketa. The first town kept its new name, but the latter two soon changed back to the old names. The Very Latest. f me se« some of your black kid ‘ said s lady _ to a shopman. are now the latest style, are she asked, when the cloves were Anidem seeured ‘its name in an unâ€" usunal way. When a post office was esâ€" tablished in the Quartzville mining disâ€" trict in Linn County, Lawler, the Lonâ€" don capitalist who owned the mines, wanted to name it for his friend Medina. But this name was so similar to Mehama which is only a few miles away, that the Post Office Department rejected it. Lawler reversed the letters and called the post office Anidem. {ed, they named their settlement Sweet | Home. But though thriving cities now .dot the valleys far below it Sweet Home !is yet a foothill village. | San Francisco capitalists founded a fown near the mouth of the Sinslaw River and thinking they had an ideal location for a sawmill town, both in timâ€" ber supply and shipping facilities, they named it Aeme. It has never attained the dignity of a city. Just $So. hope is the poorest Your kidneys are affectedâ€"either through over work, exposure or disease. It is the Kidneys that are making you feel so wretched. Gin Pills cure sick kidneysâ€"make you well and stronggive you all your old time energy and ntaht{ eer lz;nnd take Gin Pills, ‘Isoc.cboxâ€"6 or $2.50. t on receipt of price if ydur dealer does not Landle them. Dull headachesâ€"back achesâ€"low spiritedâ€"hate the sight of foodâ€"don‘t sleep wellâ€"all tired out in the morningâ€"no heart for work ? BOLE pRuG co. â€" WINNIPEG, Man will make you well Miserable All The Time? GIN PILLS whnen Buds Begin to Burst. Gladysâ€"I hear you married a car conâ€" ductor. Aliciaâ€"Yes; but he doesn‘t love me, Gladysâ€"Why don‘t you get a transâ€" fer?tâ€"Young‘s Magazine. i as > memapr td / ons ies + asen s i3 â€"about four ounces of each with one ounce of soda in a little water. When thoroughly blended, lay the mixture _ on while hot; let it remain a day or so. Wash off with clean water, and dry with a leather. r%o polish new gratesâ€"First of all take a piece of old flannel dipped in sweet oil, and rub thoroughly over all the grate. Let it remain for a few days, then repeat the same a second time, letting it stand for anâ€" other couple of days. Then take a pail of warm water, with a little exâ€" tract of soap dissolved in it, and wash the oil all thoroughly _ off again. When dry, blacklead and polish. To clean bamboo furnitureâ€"Dirty bamboo furniture may â€" be cleaned with a small brush dipped in warm )water and salt. The salt prevents it from turning yellow. and the washing makes the bamboo look bright. Rub very dry with soft cloths. e dWtoigtads o tsate‘ P tstvr enc t i 33111 To restore marbleâ€"If the marble is much stained and soiled, boil equal parts of soap and powdered whiting cectthennnt Emtc envensk s h t log vil To clean> decantersâ€"To clean disâ€" colored decanters chop some potato skins finely, and fill the bottle with them. Cork, and leave for three days in warm rln(-e. When the skins have fermented, turn out,. rinse well, and the decanters will be quite clean, To restore gilt framesâ€"Put enough flowers of sulphur into a pint of water to give it & golden tint, and in this boil four or five small bruised onions. Strain them, and when cold, paint the frames over with the mixâ€" ture, using a soft camelhair brush, _ ‘ To keep maidenhair fernâ€"Maidenâ€" hair fern can be kept fresh for a 'week. if when it is first picked the 'ends of the stalk are sealed with sealâ€" | ing wax, or else held in a flame until | quite black. To clean knivesâ€"Take a piece of felt and sprinkle with a drop or two of methylated spirit and fine bathâ€" brick, roll round, and work the knife in and out while pressing on lightly with the other hand. The moral cowardice of a woman with regard to the flight of time is proverbial, In the presence of the census paper evâ€" ery woman over five and twenty is an object lesson in the lack of bravery. Men are braver than women in their eode of honor. Men are braver than woâ€" men in defying Mrs. Grundy. They are braver in resisting temptation to perssnâ€" al extravagance. They are bravr in acknowledging their faults, thair peeunâ€" iary position, their poor relations and their age. A woman is rarely brave movch to acknowledge to herself that she the wrong. 4 Pn ay o Ssn Â¥niaaliica s a l dR s ci c idb i o by strong emotion und great excitement. : | The bravery is the result of a 1052 imâ€" pulse, but it is generally a swift and sudden impulse. The bravery in which women‘excel men is a bravery of selfâ€" conquest, a bravery which, with a fnll knowledge of periis, pains and penaities thought out and appreciated, endures and dares. The bravery is the result of a noble imâ€" ten accomplished by timorous women, #ays George R. Sims,. A braive woman, whose whole lifeâ€"story was one of anâ€" flinching braver yin the face of calamâ€" itiee which would take the heart out of any ordinary man, was afraid to pase a cow in a Sountry Tane. In the trials and tribulations of fampâ€" ily life the woman is braver than the man; the good wife is braver in domesâ€" tice stress than the good husoand, the good mother often sets an example of the noblest form of bravery +o the best of fathers. In the homes of the poor the lif» cf the woman who loves her husband and her children is sometimes an idvil of herâ€" oic selfâ€"sacrifice and brave endurance. And yet in many things it may be conâ€" tended that men are braver than women. Men are braver, far braver. than women in acknowledging error, A man will often | though the confession carries a certain amount of humiliation with it. confess ; that he is mirtaken. When auds Begin 1 & imagnificent record, though here she would be the last to claim superiorit y to man. In the bravery that gives its life to save, all heroic souls are on the same plane of perfection. Alice Ayres the little servant girl who sacrificed her life for her master‘s chilâ€" dren, perishing herseif in the flames from which she had rescued them, and the stewardess of the Stella, who gave up her lifebelt to a passenger and remained to go down in the ship, are heroines in the green Valhalla of the City arden, side by side with brave men who perishâ€" ed in an act of hervic selfâ€"sacrifice, The acts of physical courage d‘spln.y-‘ :d by men and women are often assisted George R. Syms, Playwright, Takes Both Sides. In acts of physical bravery in which lelf-mcrfifjce is involved woman holds T. G, IRWIN, Little Britain, Ont. Run down conditions from Jung; stomâ€" ach or other constitutional trouble curâ€" ed by Psychine. Atâ€"all druggists, 50c and ;fl.uo, or Dr. T. A. Slocum, Ltd., Toronâ€" to. aeit ‘ous eures â€" accomplish â€" 20008 Cures aceomplished insiGe th last 18 years, of which 1 have know ledge," A friend of Dr. Siocum _ Remedies writes: "Send a bottle of Psyehine to Mrs. Wâ€". They have a daughter in deâ€" cline, and I believe it would heip her. I have inentioned your remedies to the family, and also cited some of the mirâ€" Psychine Missionaries The Best Wayâ€"â€" ARE MEN MORE BRAVE ? ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO )8 in , Literature‘s Narrow Escay With the fire of genius flashi ‘eye, Rienzi raised his voice, magnificent exordium rang out "I come rot here to talkâ€"" "The hook! The hook!" yelled leries, "He didn‘t come here to ti he‘s talking. Give him the hou Instantly the long handled im shot out from the wings and howling and protesting. was from the stage. Later, however, he secured k print, and his address, as every boy knows was given to the pr full. But when she cleans the closets out In morning‘s early gloam, She reads the papers on the shelves Until the cows come home., She knows not how the world wags . Or what the changing views; She cannot waste the preécious hours To read the morning news, mhe says she can‘t afford the time For storing of her mind ; She cannot at the classics glance Or she would fall behind. She says she c When mother starts to clean the So full each moment flies, The week‘s best seller all uncut Pn lar sn Reve es When Mother Starts to Clean (New York Sun.) Mr. Griggsâ€"Never _ mind him, dear. He‘s only trying to provoke a smile.â€" From the Ma; Bohemian. "I have never loved before," he said. "Well," she replied, "I am rot running a kindergarten â€"From â€" the May Boâ€" hemian. Mrs. Griggsâ€"The way that _ friend Brown of yours hints ‘for a drink of whiskey every time he calls here would provoke a saint. Upon the table lies "No. He takes us for a ride on Sunâ€" day evening, and the nights thro: the week he‘s busy in the barn try“g' to get the machine in shape for the next Sunday." "Since dad bought that he‘s never home nigh ts." "Is that so? Does he go night ?" â€"FORMUI,AS of all the standard patent medicines and toilet preparations now in use; seud 2â€"cent stamp for free list of formulas, Address DR. MERWIN, Windsor, Ont., Canada boime ralouin fiatictniin aitantolitise tA sds iacces 5.2 Neb ’ Yarmouth, N. 8. Gentlemen,â€"In January last, Francis Leclaire, one of the men employed by me, working in the lumber woods, had & tree fall on him, ecrushing him fearâ€" fully. He was, when found, placed on a gled and taken home, where grave fears were entertained for his recovery, his hips being badly bruised and his body turned black from his ribs to his fee@ We used MINARD‘S LINT MENT on him freely to deaden the pain, and with the use of three bottles he was complet»ly cured, and able to return to his work, SAUVEUR DUVAL. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited Elgin Road, L‘Islet Co., Que Plug Chewing Tobacco ‘"Biggest and Best‘‘ It is Black Watch Let us look in our hearts, and see If the twilight bell of angels Cart ring for you and me? So, then, let us ponder a little Can purer thoughts enter in To a soul if it be already hx o3 iL 2 Loul â€" He can If he thrust from his soul all hated, , All thoughts of wicked things, If he put from his heart‘s inner chamber All the paston, pain and strife, H:ruehe. and weary longing aeviia x es 2s 2l Contains the famous healing principles of Mira Ointment, combined with the purest vegetable oils It is really a medicinal soap and a toilet soap in one. Invaluable for all skin troubles. Ideal for the bath on account of its elegant perfume. 25¢ a cakeâ€"at druggists or sent on receipt of price. The Chemists‘ Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamilton. n# He stood by the deatabedof the Czarevitch, who, in the presence of the Emperor and Empress, placed the hand of ihe weeping Princess into his, saying to her with almost his last words: ‘"‘Marry my brother; he i* true as crystal, and 1 wish it." Enforced by political reasons, this bequest was law to the bereaved girl. 6 can hear in the boly twilight How the bell of the angels rings, Marriage of Princess Dagmar, of Den mark, and Grand Duke Alexander. riage of qaa qo t tm That throb in the pulses of life RUSSIAN EMPRESS‘ ROMANCES s said, somewhere, at twilight A great bell softly ewings, nd a man may listen and harken To the wondrous music that rings, dwelling of thoughts of ein? A Way They Have. ‘ ‘ong handled implement _ the wings and Rienzi, protesting. was yaniged Dad‘s Occupation TRADL MARK REGISTERED many people are aware that the mar f the Eampress Marie Feodorovns 0 of genius fiuhi;ngrin his , he secured leave to SKIN SOAP Bell of the Angels. in , as every school our hg;u. _and question " yelled the galâ€" ere to talk, and the hook!" clean the house, "amel . Escape. public in wags on riding every automobile House his cago. "That would make addition to our povula tin "Yes," remarked the regard ourselves as your in case of an emergency half a million men into three months, and have in two more months, Wh of that?" "Splendid," replied the Ask for udbtrinadns s d s th uc o an ornament. Nothing more exalted than _ feminine vanity is to be gratified by this innocentâ€" looking little trinket, which when opened will be found to contain the tiniest of powder puffs, a perfectly adequate afâ€" fair, though so small, and a mirror of like limited but practical dimensionl.‘ The locket is worn dangling from the long neckâ€"chain, or is fastened with a fob safety pin at the waist. n 2 .,, 4; ; RRIN€, either, that there is a romantic element in the gift. It is not intended â€" to carry a~ photograph or miniature, neithetr have our elegantes returned to the oldâ€"fashioned plan of wearing a lock of beloved hair in such &N ormamant ’Romnnco Has No Visible F Milady‘s Latest Locket An absolutely plain round go is one of the most popular pre the moment. It is not large ; sonal odds and ends, such as ch; kets, watches and chatelaines ar ably smaller now than formerly Do not imagine, either, that t romantic element in the gift. I intended . to carry a~ photogr mini-tu_n._ neithetr have our e Mange, Prairle Scratcbes and every form of ccntaglous Itch on human or animals cured in 90 miputes by Woltord‘s Banitary Lotion. It never fails Sold by druggists. maiter is also being given same attention DÂ¥ the .fllflmlfiom uC Aot sceem to be materially lesened. It is very evident that further relief must be offered in a short time, and steps have alâ€" ready been taken by the Department â€" of Bridges of that city looking to the construcâ€" tion of a new bridge in the immediate vietn â€" ity of the ol6 one.lt is also agreed that some nadbast | atp sc ce s L PR CTCL Avaacall l P POTCE HEVe bee recent!y opened between New York and Brooklyn, the drain on the Brooklyn Bridge does not seeem to be materially lesened. It is mame mobMang sA LCAE 1 9T Minard‘s Liniment Lu-unbennen'l "Yes," said the oculist; "I think I can assure you, Mr. Pinchnickel, that your eyes are cured. But there is one more test I should like to apply. See if you can read that at a distance of twelve or fourteen inches without blw Whereupon he laid his bill before him. "Doctor," asked the patient, _ whose eyes had been undergoing treatment for a period of six months or more, "do you think they‘re all right now ?" Efidl@)f'g"fi‘:ifl;ewam Mr. McSwatâ€"All the decorations I could see, Lobelia, were worn by the young lady in front of me. I liked the grand sweep of the brim, the floral disâ€" play, and the general arrangement of the ribbons, but I thought the dead bird looked out of place. No Lie, Either. Mrs. MeSwatâ€"Billinger, how did you like g.he_decontiun- at the church this With all the tubes and bridges which Provincial néhu for be reâ€"sold in counties 4 For particulars apply to We have for sale the Canadian patent for Smith‘s Fruit Gathering Apparatus, which has proven on test to be a valuâ€" able acquisition to any fruit farm. With it two men can do the work of twenty, do it better and with less injury to the fruit. Can be used in gathering various kinds of fruits and nuts. Will pay for itself in one day in saving wages. Provincial rights for sale, which can be reâ€"sold in counties at good profits. uind n c â€" and COST 1 ce ‘,01, [S and they LAST LONGER and COST LESS MONEY. BUTâ€"you must ask for m ( .m‘ 5 _ We INTERESTING TO FRUIT GROWERS s 22 "O_ _ You. use WOODr those made of FIBREWARE reus P o edPs n vinnian mt ns &7 ras .A t iss zo is athntâ€"~don‘t you think the women‘s hats this spring are the blamedest lookâ€" ing things you ever saw, Mr, Markley?" "I know just what anâ€"an inconveniâ€" ence it must be to you, Mr. Markley," he said. ‘"I‘ve never been burnt out of house and home, but some boys were playing in my back yard once, and they _set my dog kennel on fire. Singed all the hair off a Scotclhcollie 1 owned. 1 remember now, though, that he was just a worthless cur. Still, you feel kind of sorry when such a thing happens, even if you don‘t lost anything worth menâ€" tioning. I‘d be sorry even for a dog that had been burnt outâ€"1 don‘t mean anything personal, of course, butâ€"erâ€" I car sympathize with you, you know, just es if it had been you thatâ€"or, ratherâ€"if it had been any worthless dog thatâ€"what 1 mean to say, of course, Now Look Here! Tangled Up Again. (Chicage Tribune.) Mr. Makinbrakes was offering . his sympathy to a neighbor whose house had been visited by the fire fiend. _ Quick ease tor the worst coughâ€"quick rehef to the heaviest coldâ€"and SAFE to take, even tor a child. C That is Shiloh‘s Cure ures Sold under a guarantee Coudhs to cure colds and coughs quicker | than any other & COId' medicineâ€"or your money buck. _ 3i years of success commend Shiloh‘s Cure. 25¢., 50c., $1 316 Drain on Brooklyn Bridge Minard‘s and take no other. All Good Grocers sell tâ€"and Eddy‘s Matche SsHILOH‘S THE BEAUTY aAgEe Applying the Final Test. 8, and have them in"CI-l'icugo"m“ months. What do you think ves as your friends emergency we con Â¥2% (6 y s Latest Locket. ‘ly plain round gold locket most popular presents of It is not large; all perâ€" d ends, such as chain trinâ€" and r!latel_dnes are noticeâ€" ITCGPMM Great °C make a magnificent population."â€"Puck, beuul o te No Visible Part in your friends, but yet, ‘ncy we could throw into America within J. B. Rittenhouse, 70 Pearl st., Toronto the citizen of Chi Tapanese What one knows not how to ficult; what one knows haw not "Aw, mebbe," said t-l;emc.)ld Scotchman "but I‘m nae gaun to tek ver advice." The Scotchman rose silently and was about to withdraw when the doctor deâ€" tained him to mention the allâ€"important topic of the fee. "My advice will cost you two dollars," he said. Fooling the Doctor. (Lippincott‘s Magazine.) An old Scotchman, not foeling very well, called upon a well krown doctor, who gave him instructions as to diet and exercise and rest. Among other things be advised the patient to abstain from all forms of spirits. "Do as I say," be added, cheerfufly, "and you‘ll soon feel better." Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house, An alarm of fire was given about 7 o‘clock Monday morning. It was soon learned that the fire was at the home of Fred Manlove, in the First ward, There are no less than five Manlove families in town and all of them were visited in the confusion following the giving of the alarm.â€"Fairfield Reâ€" publican. ine fines? tea grown in the world hfiod‘adudofqumh’tyluod in pre paring "Salada" Tea, _ Sold ofly in lul:lud packets, Everything § Lovely. “Whtinitthunih&epoh‘t.-ol your city*" asked the intelligent foreign er, who was investigating conditions in New York. "Alils it? Nothing!" answered the Tammanyite, astonished at the question "Ain‘t we on top? By sir, we‘ve got the dink;' reformers right where we want them!" Minard‘s are making a oyli;uie_vz;r increase the length of their leg "Yem" said the Trdeuor; that the mikado is pulling thei io C m mJ ied CHAT their bodies are enozh and they are making a .yl_tk;‘.&h ort now t« "It‘s a curious h;t," tor, "that the Japane increase their stature. If you suffer from bleeding, itching, ’ blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment; and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with references from your own locality it requested. Immediate relicf and per manent cure assured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write to day to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P. &. Windsor, Ont. PILES CURED AT HOME By N.W ABSORPTION MTH "In fact, I never have seen a ecarry his mourning to the exten cane, and I imagine that most would not care for it for that pu â€"New York Sun. bigger n;vf "It was intended to go with mourning wear. There was a dull finish to the ebouny that made the stick a fitting ac companiment to other trappings of woe. but the cane l?ell could not have been carried without any suggestion of being in mourning, "In fact, I never have seen nnyl»«_‘ Wemuutr IIS nemumuntfis 2o a% "When I was in Rome rece a New Yorker, "I saw an a dress that I never saw anyy It was a walking stick, an e} simply and beautifully fash with a plain gunâ€"metal band handle. sprains, sore and swollen throni,, cough etc. Save $50 by use of one hottl Warranted the most wonderful blem;s Cure ever known. Sold by druggists, We follow Elltllnd very closely, i w 0‘ "lifts" as an Ellglimlm.u; Gors and not as "elevators," as the Am»; heg n but we have "paddocks" instea L %9 "Tields" _ and "creeks" instead " of "streams," and _ "serubs" instes; of "woods," and "pannikins," and "quart pots" and "billy tea" at picnics ani a} sorts of lovely Australian things, wii) make one perfectly homesick to thin} ebout. All the same, I am never home aick for the crude Australian ac~».; British Australian. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINTMZ moves all hard, soft and callouse and blemishes from horkes, bloog curbs, splints, ringbone, sweensy w ANTEDâ€"STOVE MOUXTEr nweyâ€"Tilden Co., IA4mited, Ontario. &" Spray." Best hand sprayes . pressed air; mutoritig. Libera} i ers Bros, Galt. Ont. »ALESMEX WANTED _ ror Busy Fire Fighters Liniment used by Physicians ISSUE NO. 19 ju0~â€" Promising Aniove, in the First ward, no less than five Manlove town and all of them were he confusion following the the alarm.â€"Fairfield Reâ€" Mourning Canes Australian Accent AGENTS WANTE® not how to do is difâ€" knows how to do is i r l'-;or is pulling their HELP WANTED ," observed the doe Rome recently," savy the extent of an m«;r_v 0 W .I!'bere €lse , an ebouy stick * 1008t _ men that purpose." sweenty, stifjes ealloused Jum; fashioned LINIMENT ,,. elosely, i. ishman does l” .‘m'l‘fi:‘"‘ inst ¢ illl'.l'::'?f instead _ of and "quart â€"THOD near the & to that Mar spavin | l * _ High Water Does Im to Property T that t ‘uim'. most iW it m is likel, viokent prosent mtiva fPerstin By Looking Through 1 Electric Bulb. d H SEES STOM Buck Stove Com Against a $5 Brantford Police M That it be TWO LE AN d d 1,000 ISLA AETNA AC ne of the j Crowd ir paR h THE RIQ M O

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