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Durham Review (1897), 14 May 1908, p. 8

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(\ tion? So much faith, wrayer ance for so many slices of t life. Nicodemus was neith nor immature, when the M "Ye must be born again." V tions are attached to the o birth? _ As I look at the « the cradle, 1 see helplessne tary and irresponsible. Is th vital, actual beginning of The Master gives an illustr: was as perplexing as the ori ment, and He gave no other. bloweth where it listetn." saie ground here? These | out like mighty cliffs in the is this view confirmed by mt lusions; "born not by the flesh, or et man, but of God ginning of all life is by bir ginning of all spirit life f same law. We do not ignore alism, but we must look for on, where the fibre is coars faith is often erude. It would be difficult to say ehief has been wrought by th ment of this clement of rvli'g ing. It contains a lack of which need not be profound not to be difficult to dist tween beavenâ€"born life and t accompany salvation. When born it cries, because the im; air in its delicate lungs p shock. It is not & ery for lif a cry of life,. Stillâ€"bocn inf «iÂ¥. Heavenâ€"born infants A* In the holy of holies, life life (not far from the Yhadow 14# s we find no conditions. dition did Saul bring on the road* He brought "threate "why so?" "I hear that your daughter filted the «in who runs the elevator in your ~@artment house to marry a poet!"â€" Goung‘s Magazine. same law. We do not ignore conditionâ€" alism, but we must look for it further on, where the fibre is coarse, and the faith is often erude. It would be difficult to say what is ‘ ehief has been wrought by the misplaceâ€" ment of this clement of religious lelt'i" ing. It contains a lack of perception which need not be profound. It ought not to be difficult to distinguish beâ€" Lween beavenâ€"born life and things which Accompany salvation. When a child is born it cries, because the impact of the air in its delicate lungs produces a shock. It is not & ¢ry for life, but it is a cry ol life. Stillâ€"bocu infants never «iy. Heavenâ€"born infants Are all alive. In the holy of holies, life is born of life (not far from the thadow of dpath). 1Â¥ ¢s we find no conditions. What é&SZ dition did Saul bring on the Damaseus i road?* _ He brought "threatenings and | slaughter." When asked to relate his experience, a man said, "I resisted ut long as 1 could, and God did the rest." Whant condition did the child Samt‘]} afttord?* He heard a voice, "Surely «hoy didst call me." What is a .-ohaitkm?* It means to make terms, ‘, stipubute go' join together. * g ‘ I #H4 DOCM" _â€"u on .o k. o sMM SWike . I rection, contiau: togetber beyond avail; what we a procuring canw but rather a r am on the side connected. â€" Thi Opposed to Change. "We must have purity in l»li'.its!” ex elaimed the speaker, earnestly. Refused a Good Chance. "I‘m afraid there nvast be insanity in vour family." "But then we wouldn‘t have any poli* tics," remarked an old campaigner, shak ing his head disapprovingly.â€"Philadel phia Ledger. 6 no conditions, Myslery ( are born in absolute others; slowly new . sy and we are conscions of mind with raind. . Slow difference between life one can never be rewaln «an be, and must be. the kingdom of God is abs reign; here is a debt we and it is never demande beyond our power; it is rewarded according to on ditions belong not to sa service. If we sow sparingly, w ly. some have no rewa actually suffer loss, dra; door posts of the city, fire. The soul is saved them; saved because the cause they are children Angel Life Brigade, wh life! When will teachers the word of uth?" "O grant us light that 1 H they were "resting." Some of them were pitching quoits, and others were putting the shot, with a great round boulder. ‘They were workingmen "resting." And saitting on the curbstone watching them too lazy to even stand up and look at them; their lazy chins resting on their lazy nands, and their lazy elbows supâ€" ported on their lazy knees, were the loatâ€" ers who had been watching them work all the morning. These fellows were too tired even to join the games by which the workers rested themselves. You have no need to loat all day Sunâ€" day. Two hours in church; two hours of"the quiet; the sermon; the reading; the uplift which comes from the new channels into which your thought, your mind is led, will rest you more, physicalâ€" ly, morally, intellectually, than will all the day spent in trying to "rest." Conditionalism. How often have 1 seen salvation preâ€" sented as a sort of commercial transacâ€" tion?* So much faith, wrayer and repent. ance for so many slices of the bread of life. Nicodemus was neither ignorant nor immature, when the Master said, "Ye must be born again." What condiâ€" tions are attached to the ordinance of birth? As 1 look at the oceugant of the cradle, 1 see helplessness, involunâ€" tary and irresponsible. Is this the real, vital, actual beginning of spirit life? uJ 10N ure "too tired to go to church"? That‘s sheer nonsense. _ There isn‘t a place on the continent as restful as the «hurch, You are going to lie around the house all day; snmooze in a hammock; loll it a rocking chair; go to sleep over a book. That isn‘t resting; that‘s loafâ€" ing. Tell yourselt honestlyâ€"you like to think you are honestâ€"did you ever in all your life see a loafer who looked restâ€" ed* Did you ever see a loafer who didn‘t look tired all the time* The people who try to rest are always tired.. Resting is the hardest work in the world, when you make work out of it. About a year ago, 1 stopped in a Bosâ€" ton street to watch a group of laborers. It was noon hour. _ They had been at work all the morning digging a sewer excavation. They had eaten their dinâ€" ners from the little tin pails and now they were "resting." Some of them were pitching quoits, and others were putting the shot, with a great round boulder. ‘They were workingmen "resting." And "O grant us light, when soon or late All earthly scenes shall pass away, In Thee to find the open gate To deathless home and endless dli." â€"â€"H. T. Millet loll it a rocking a book. That is ing. Tell yoursel think you are h all your life see a ed?* Did you ever look tired all the trv to rest are a H > word of uth?" es s grant us light that we may learn low dead is rife from Thee apart; w sure is joy for all who turn To Thee an undivided heart. Why must distin{uish or we get into sion. In the birthâ€"throes there are nditions. Mystery of mysteries, we born in absolute dependence on 3; slowly new symrthiel arise, we are conscions of the contact of with aind. Slowly we see the ence between life and duty; the an never be rewarded, the other 1e, and must be. Our birth into ingdom of God is absolute and soveâ€" ; here is a debt we can never p.‘y, t is never demanded; it is utterly id our power; it is free! We are rded according to our works,. Conâ€" is belong not to salvation, but to "J\E-u Weariness, (Robert J. Burdette.) u are "too tired to go to church"? h W (Ch#are sparingly, we reap sparingâ€" ave no reward at all; they ‘er loss, dragged round the i the city, saved so as by oul is saved; no thanks to because they are born, beâ€" ire children; saved by the Brigade, who never lose a will teachers "rightly divide ife is by birth, the beâ€" spirit life follows the little tin pails and 1 ng." Some of them w ind others were putt a great round boul ingmen "resting." 4 irbstone watehing th : stand up and look c chins resting on t] their lazy elbows s the will of the \ God." The be | of salt and pepper, a layer of flaked and freshened cofii‘:‘x, nTJyér o{ bro{on milk erackers, sprinkled over with bit’ of butter, and, Lotly, another layer 0: fish; pour on enough milk to cover and a slowly until the potatoes are done; [ fi * ee», more milk before serving, if | ME . nec@ssary, 3 Gingerbreadâ€"One cup New Orleans imoluses, one even teaspoon soda, oneâ€" | fourth teaspoon each of ginger, nutmeg, cinnamon, oneâ€"half cup sugar, one teaâ€" ’cpoon butter. Beat well together and add one eup sour cream or milk,. _ Stir | in flour so you ean pour batter in tin. IBakc in slow oven. Fried Salt Codfishâ€"Cut the fish in uares and soak in cold water overâ€" :}‘ht; dry on a cloth and dip each squaré in beaten egg, to which has heen added one tablespoon of cream; roll the fish in flour avd fry a golden brown in hot }ut. The British Treaty. (Chicago Tribune). Iritshâ€"Americans _ are _ considerably aroused over the action of the adminia tration in ligning a treaty of arbitraâ€" tion with Great Britain, Codtish Chowderâ€"Brown one cup of finely minced salt pork and place it in the .chowder kettle; add a layer of aliced raw potatoes, with a seasoning They have filed protests with the SPnâ€" ate, demanding the rejection of the conâ€" vention And?“o sent delegations . to the president requesting him to withâ€" draw the instrument from the senate. ‘The President‘s answer to one of these delegations tok the form of a quotatin from Washington‘s celebrated farewell address. Hhis quotation is as follows: "Nothing is more essential than tchat permanent, _ inveterate antipathies against rrticuln nations and passionâ€" ate atachments for others should be exâ€" eluded and that in place of them just and amicable feelings toward all should be cultivated. Virginia Biscuitsâ€"These are thin, and if well made they are crisp and wholesome. Any bread that is suffiâ€" clently hard to require mastication is preferable to soft bread. Add a teaâ€" spoonful of salt to a quart of sifted flour, and sift again. Mix hal a pint of milk with half a pint of water, and add it gradually. Knead the dough until it is elastic, and then pound it until light. Take off a portion of this and roll it out as thin as a wafer. With a pastry jJagger or sharp knife cut it into square biscuits about half the size of an ordinâ€" ary soda cracker. Prick over the "top with a fork. Place in a baking pan, and bake in a slow oven for from 20 to 25 minutes. These biscuits may be served warm, o+ they may be baked in large quantities, put aside, and warmed up at serving time. f Imitation Sauerkrautâ€"Select a small, solid head of cabbage and chop it up fine. _ Place in a granite or porcelain kettle for 24 hours. Before putting away add salt and a little water; cover well; next drain off the water, rinse well and fry in fat, lard or butter, as way be desired. It also can be boiled with meat. "The Government sometimes particlâ€" pates in the national _ propensity and ldd?l through passion what _ reason would reject. Baked Codfish Hashâ€"To each cup of finelyâ€"flaked and freshened codfish alâ€" low two cups of chopped cold potatoes; mix in two tablespoonfuls of melted butter and one eup of milk; pack in a buttered pan, cover and bake 30 minâ€" utes, "The nation which indulges toward anâ€" other an habitual hatred or an habitual fondness is in some degree a slave. "It is a slave to its animosity or to its affection, either of which is suffiâ€" cient to lead it astray from its duty and its interest. "Antipathy in one readily to offer inâ€" sult or injury, to lay hold _ of slight causes of umbrage, and to be haughty and intractable when accidental or trifâ€" ling occeasions of dispute occur. "Hence, frequent collections, cbstinâ€" ate, envenomed and bloody contests. The nation prompted by ill will and resencâ€" ment sometimes impels to war the govâ€" ernment contrary to the best caiculaâ€" tions of policy. "At other times it makes the animosâ€" ity of the nation subservient to projects fo hostility, imtignttd b{nsride, ambiâ€" tion, and other sinister pernicious motives. p _ "The peace often, sometimes perbaps the liberty, of nations has been the vicâ€" tim. "So, likewise, a passionate attachâ€" ment of one nation for another produces a variety of evils. Sympathy for the faâ€" vorite nation, facilitating the illusion of an imaginary common interest, in cases where no real common interest exâ€" ists and infusing nito one the emities of the other, betrays the former into a participation in the quarrels and wars of the latter without adequate inducements or justification. "Against the insidious wiles of forâ€" eign influence (I conjure you to believe me, fellow citizens) the jealousy of a free people ought _ to be constantly awake, since history and _ experience prove that foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of republican govâ€" ernment. #3 ican r pulp, a hlh-?oonful of mmhr! and a Tittle salt. To this add & half pound of cheese cut in smal!! pieces. g\?ben the cheese is melted stir in slowly three or four tablespoonfuls of milk, and then add one beaten egg. The mixture should be stirred constantly while cooking. When sufficiently thickâ€" ened, serve on small squares of toasted bread. Luncheon Hamâ€"Fill a mediumâ€"sized baking dish with alternate layers of dry bread erumbs and finely chopped ham, Cover with two cups milk, mixed with three wellâ€"beaten . _ Salt if required and bake 30 n:gf\:tu in dish suitable to place on table. Baked Fish, Spanish Styleâ€"Prepare any fish suitable for baking in the usual manmer and stuff it with a potato dres=â€" ing, seasoned with a smal{wumount of garlic. When the fish is nearly cooked, pour over it a sauce made of two eups of ohomod ripe tomatoes, a tablespoonâ€" ful of butter, salt to taste, and the pulp of two Chile pofl;ers. Mexican Rarebitâ€"Melt a tablespoonâ€" ful of butter in a chafing dish. When well heated add a ublel’;,onlul ican pepper pulp, a haliâ€"teaspo _ ""But that jealousy, to be useful, must L= imnartial else it becomes the instruâ€" RECIPES oonful of Mexâ€" teaspoonful of perbdic ps!ns, backache, that Dearâ€" ingâ€"down feeh.n% fiatulenm- tion, dizziness or fervous pj n. Why dop‘t you try it? | _ _ _ Mrsg, z2 mmkuau invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to oo Haii in un u. Piny. se io S e srt::aa!!l m r‘% Temale s health:" Address, Lynn, Mass, trou * I most heartily recommend L((dia E. Pinkham‘s ,{?mble Compound to all women who suffer with female Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians. **When 1 wrote to you some time ago, I was a very sick woman suffering from female troubles. I had inflammaâ€" tion of the feminine organs and could not stand or walk any distance. At last I was confined to my bed and the doctor said I would have to go throngh art operation, but this I refused to do. **A friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound. After using three bottles of it, I feel like a new woman. (n the occasion of the commander‘s latest dash for the pole his former native friends took him aside and showed him a rude mausoleum. By it stood a disused siedge. Its six dogs had been strangled to make an appropriate funeral offering, and on the piles of stones lay what was left of the Prince Albert coat and the sombrero. A Valued Possession. When Commander Peary made his first trip in seach of the pole, he gave a Prince Albert coat and a weatherâ€" beaten sombrero to @n Eskimo. . Years afteryward, when again in the north, the explorer received a ceremonial visic from a native, and, to his surprise, says the Youth‘s Oomsnnion, set eyes one> more on the discarded vestments. This woman says she was saved from an o%ention béoLydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound. i‘inkham‘s Vegetable Comlsgund. Mrs. Frank Emsley, dsay, Ontario, writes to Mrs. Pinkham : suka, in sapan, ofi Will Adams, famâ€" ous in history as the first Englishâ€" man to «et foot in that country, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, has falâ€" len into decz‘;"y and needs considerâ€" able repair. Will Adams was so highâ€" ly respected that he was ennobled by ths founder of the lass family of Shoâ€" guns, and his memory is still so highly revered in that country that a movement has been set on foot and a considerable sum subscribed by the leading Japanese statesmen, Genâ€" erals, Admirals and others to restore the imposing but fast perishing tomb which marks the place of his burial among the beautiful hills that over: look the great naval station of Yokoâ€" suka.â€"From the London Evening standard. tools and dupes usurp the applause and eonfilence of the people to surrender their interests." First Englishman in Japan. Mr. Wilson Crewdson, chairman of th, council of the Japan Society, points out that the grave mear Yokoâ€" suka, in sapan, ofi Will Adams, famâ€" ous in history as the first Englishâ€" ment of the very influence to be avoidâ€" ed instead of a defence against. it. "Excessive partiality far : one foreign nation and excessve dislike of another cause those whom they actuate to see danger. only on â€"oneâ€"side : and ~serve to veil â€"and even secornd the arts of inâ€" flnence on the other. "Real patriots who may resist the inâ€" trigues of the favorite are liable to beâ€" eome suspected and odious. while its I‘ve told you all about the time That father rode the goat; The way he tried to came a duck, ‘The way he rocked the boat. But. O, I dare not tell you how He sworeâ€"the air was blackâ€" ‘The night he left the downy couch And stepped upon a tack. Kind friends you must imagine now Some things that have occurred; At home there are occasions that Defy the printed word. Housccleaning time is now at hand, To tell you I don‘t dare What father «aid the night that he Walked plump into a chair. I‘d like to tell you everything ‘That bappens where I am; I want to lead an open life, And shun forms of shame; But there are things I must not tell In doing it I‘d stammer; For instance, what Dad said the day His thumb nail felg the hammer. ‘There is a secret I must keep, In fact I coudn‘t print it; It would not even do with dots And dashes just to Rint it. I cannot tell what father said, You would not understand, The morning that the ice lid Feli down and smashed his hand es." 1 %m&i" for female ills, 3os vclycumdthousandsof : who have‘!been troubled with Secrets. laramation, ulce PSR w ra~ s rregtlagites 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? Your kidneys are affectedâ€"ecither through over» work, exposure or disease. It is the Kidneys that ;l;ednmking {gn feel so wlxietch;d Gin Pills cure cicdk‘ eysâ€"make well and strongâ€"give your old time ean;y and vimi?. Cheer ug:nd take Gin Pills. “soe. a boxâ€"6 for $2.50. t on receipt of price if your dealer does not handle them. BOLE DRUG CO. â€" W!INNIPEG, Man. 98 will make you well Miserable All The Time? GIN PILLS Deepâ€"water diving can be carried on with safety to a depth of 210 feet proâ€" \'jq_ed proper precautions are taken and suitable appliances used, according to a report of the British _ Admiralty Comâ€" mittee appointed to investigate the eubâ€" ject. weut Fishâ€"hooks have been made on pre cisely the same design for 2000 vears The Mikado has a corps of 60 doctors and 30 priests. 8 o England consumes 30 ounces of . to baceo per annum per head. _ Antwerp and Amsterdam have the best health records (u! all Eumpu,l! efâ€" Although electroâ€"deposition is one of the oldest arts in which electricity is practically employed, some remarkable improvements have been _ made in it during the past few years, One of the most novel of these is a mechanical deâ€" vice for plating amall articles, such as screws or pins, which formerly had to be strung by hand on wires or plated in baskets. These are now domped into a porous barrel placed into the plating solution and revolved _ by machinery. In the erection of a railroad bridge over the Susquehanna River at Havre de Grace, the American Bridge _ Comâ€" pany will make use of what is probably the largest wood block ever made. _ Jt has been made especially for the work and weighs 1.350 pounds. measures 30 inches across the shell and is rated at 80 tons capacity. The shackle is a solid forging 3 12 inches thick. ties No Occasion for It. 14 "My dear," said the old man to his only ‘daughter on the morning of_ her wedding day, ‘L don‘t see how I am going to get along without Yyou." "Now don‘t let that worry you, papa," replied the fair mard, as she Adjusted her bridal veil. "George confessed to me last night that be hadn‘t money enough even to buy a secondâ€"hand stove so instead of losing me it looks as if we were Despite lower tolls, the receipts of the Suez Canal were greater last year than ever before. The Russian Government â€" has disâ€" patched a party to investigate the disâ€" covery of mammoth remains which was reported from the province of Yakutsk in Northeast Siberia. A remarkable feaâ€" ture of the discovery is the existence in the intestines of this extinct animal of perfectly conserved food, relics of a vegetation until now unknown _ to science. The expedition is expected to be absent for a year or more. _ The framework of this mammoth is to be deâ€" posited in the St. Petersburg Museum of the Academy of Arts, where there is already one other specimen. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. Finaly the Worm Turned. A muscular Irishman strolled into the Civil Service examination room, where candidates for the police force are put to a physical test. "Strip!" ordered the police surgeon. "What‘s that?" demanded the uniniâ€" tiated. "Get your clothes off and be quick about it," said the doctor. The Irishman disrobed and permitted the doctor to measure his chest and legs and to pound his back. The man who can talk to himself while shaving doesn‘t miss the barber. The Snl\'ati;nrA;r-ny"fll;;'sfla factory in Europe where musical instruments are made for its warriors. “u(m tor. back. The little girl of Mrs. Lewis Best, of ‘Carlisle~P."O.,~recently fell against the stove and burned her forehead very badâ€" ly,..Mrs. Best says: "The burn was about the size of a fiftyâ€"cent piece, and was near the bone. It made my little girl‘s eye swell till it almost shut, and then she got cold in it. It began to run matter very badly, and I could not stop it, although I bathed it good every night and morning. At last I sent for some Zamâ€"Buk, which soon stopped the matâ€" teration and very quickly healed the wound. I have never seen a burn heal so quickly, and I am sure Zam Buk has no equal for curing cuts, or burns, and I shall always keep a box on hand in case of emergency." Hashish, which in its eff the same as opium, is P the gum taken from hemp _ "Now double up your knees and touch the floor with your hands." _ A ""‘Jum‘f under this cold shower," orderâ€" ed the doctor. P _He sprawled, face downward, on the floor. He was indignant. but silent. applicant. ""Now, run around the room ten times to test your heart and wind," directed the doctor. 98 dary In China the fi?&gfly of the parent must be equally shared by the children upon the death of the former. The condidate rebelled. "I‘ll not; I‘ll sthay single." "Single?" asked the doctor, surprised. "Sure," said the Trishman; "what‘s all this fussing got to do with a marriage license*" Every home needs Zamâ€"Buk! All disâ€" eases of the skin quickly yields to it. It is also an excellent remedy for piles (blind or bleeding), rheumatism, etc. All druggists and stores, 50 cents a box, or post paid from the Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toâ€" ronto. _ He had strayed into the wrong office â€"Tilustrated Bits. "The man did his best, landing on his Science Jottings. The bee can outfly the pigeon. The mole will starve to death in CHILUD‘S sEVERE BURNS HEALED BY ZAMâ€"BULK. é;?;gvid lin§ right with you." ';A that‘s funny," muttered the over‘ this bar," ordered the doe ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO opium, is prepared from its effects is much ‘The person who has ence experienced the pleasure of a cup of delicious ‘‘Saiada‘" Tea â€"that feeling of satisfaction that its purâ€" i#y and flavor guarantee, is not easily perâ€" suaded to accept a substitute. nail the laths to." "Yon don‘t mean joists*" "That‘s it! Joyce! I was playin‘ with Fred Joyce," "Why, that‘s Fredâ€"Fred, maw, what‘s them things in the top of a barnt" "Rafters ?" "No, that ain‘t it. It‘sâ€"â€"" "Shingles *" ; "Aw, no! Furder down." "Pigeons?" suggested his father. "Naw! Nothin‘ like that." “O’t!’" Wireless telegraphy proved of jnestiâ€" mable value during the past season in the movement of vessels of the great lakes. By its use the captains of vesâ€" sels were kept in almost constant touch with the offices of their companies and in many instances orders were given them, changing plans by which thouâ€" sands of dollars were saved to the shipâ€" owners, â€" under _ circumstances _ which could not have been accomplished in any other manner. In some cases, it is said, that rush messages were delivâ€" ered in three minutes‘ time. The value of the service in this capacity is demonâ€" strated by the fact that although it was not fully in operation until the latter part of the season, no less than 70,000 were exchanged. At the opening of the season there were but two stations in operation and three were put into serâ€" vice. A stentorian voice from a neighboring tree cried, "Leave those kiddies alone. The park is for them and they shall not be turned off." And down clambered the president of the Local Government Board.â€"British Congregationalist. With a Liitle Help. "Willie," asked his mother, "who is that boy you have been out playing with *" A colleague on the staff of the school was accustomed to take his boys to Batâ€" tersea Park for games of football and cricket. A small tip to the policeman, it is said, was found to secure the best pitches, and the small children of the neighborhood were turned off to allow the boys to play. One day the policeâ€" man saw the master and his class apâ€" proaching and began to clear the ground. From October to May, Colds are the most frequent cause of Headache. LAXATIVE BROMO (ll,'l.\'l_‘\_'gfl removes cause. E. W. Grove on box, %e. MINARD‘S LINIMENT. * CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERS Dalhousie. I cured a horse, badly torn by a pitch fork, with MINARD‘S LINIâ€" MENT. St. Peter‘s. C. B. EDW. LINLIEF. MINARD‘S LINTIMENT. * Bathurst, N.B. THOS. W. PAYNE A characteristic story of John Burns is told by a correspondent, the correâ€" spondent having had it from the master of a London secondary school. "Hello, Throggins! The last time I saw you, I think, you were in a peck of trouble. Some fellow had bought a subâ€" urban lot alongside of yours and put up a livery stable on it. Is he there yet? "Then he worked his littls scheme all right, did he? Made the property holders in the block pay him a big price to get _ "No; he‘s gone away, and taken the stable with him." §# out "Not at all. We bought the lot from him for about half what he paid for it. He was glad to get away." "How did he manage it?" "I bought a dozen hives of bees and put them along the edge of my lot, next to his stable. The man on the other side of him did the same. The fellow stood it till about the middle of June, and then he hiked. There‘s more than one way to skin a cat, old chap."â€"Chicago Triâ€" bune. Mistoric Houses of Londonâ€"Somerset House. set House was cleared by the Protector Somâ€" erset for the erection of a palace. To obtain the necessary stone at least two religlous buildings were demolished. But before the building was completed the Protector was beâ€" headed and the property reverted to the Henceforth Somerset House became a royal residence, both the Charles assigning the house to their respective wives. in â€" later years it seeme to have been converted into a sort of Hampton Court, where favorites were given apartments. But the Somerset House here spoken of is not the same building as stands toâ€"day. The original palace of the Protector was pulled down about the year 1775, and the present house erecte@ in its place. The architect was Sir William Chambers. One the grandâ€" est features of the building is the terrace toâ€" wards the river, which is a copy of that built by the brothers Adam in 1768 for the Adciphi. Few houses have entertained a greater number of famous people. Here Walpole, Hallam, and Watt, all spent many bours; Wilkie, Flaxman and Chantrey knew it well; and here Sir Joshua Reynolds delivered some of his finest discourses to the students of the Royal Academy; and last, but not least, Nelsor himeelf has many a time trod the cobbled court yard, for in im'i’.’i the Ad miralty offices were at Somerset Heâ€"I came within an mce of winning $25 this afternoon. _ Sheâ€"What â€" vented you! Heâ€"The other fellow i?d the ace.â€"Chine. I cure a horse of a bad swelling with / gamat The big Pul Wireless on the Great Lakes. John Burns and the Kiddies cured a horse of the Mange with success. WiHAT CAUSES HEADACHE 10c. Stood Their Ground not. It‘s them things you * â€" The big black plug chewing tobacco. "I‘d like to get some nice shirts for my husband. Toâ€"morrow‘s his birthday, and I want to surprise him." "Yes, ma‘am,. What size?" "Does that make any difference! O, assorted sizes, 1 suppose, George can wear almost anything. But there mustâ€" n‘t be any saw teeth on the collar, He‘s got some of that kind, and he doesn‘t like them." "How do you do, Dr. Fourthly?" she said, extending her hand. e moves all hard, soft and calloused lum and blemishes from horses, blood npwa curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, «prains, sore and awollen throat, coughs, etc. ‘Bave $50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists, "Your face is familiar, my dear you lady, but I can‘t quiteâ€"erâ€"*". yoeunk "Why, I sing in your choir, you know." "Ohâ€"ahâ€"yes, to be sure!" said the Rev. Dr. Fourthly. shaking hber hand warmly. "I knew I had seen you someâ€" where." Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablete Drus{im refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE‘S signature is on each box. 25¢ Minard‘s Liniment Lumbermen‘s Friend Guyerâ€"Why, he is dreaming of his gréeat schemet Gunnerâ€"What scheme? Guyerâ€"Why, a scheme to form _ a stock company and drop the north pole into Vesuvius and supply the world with steam. It Can be Done. "So you tried to drive a sharp bar gain and got cheated again," said Mrs Corntossel. Sure to Sell Stock. _ Gunnerâ€"Why . in the world does Brainwood roll in his sleep and blow like a steam engine? farmer "Canvassers must go to the « rear door." "But I am not a canvasser, miss. I am sent here by the agent of the buildâ€" ing to take measurements for putting awnings over the windows on the sunny side, andâ€"" lt 9 To All Women: I will send free with full instructions, my home treatment, which positively cures Leucorrhoea, U ceration, Displacements, Falling of the Womb, Painful or Trregular Periods, Uterine or Ovarian Tumors or Growths, also Hot Flushes, Nervousness, Melanâ€" choly. Pains in the Head, Back or Bowâ€" els, Kidney or Bladder Troubles, where caused by weakness peculiar to our seXx. You can continue treatment at home at a cost of only about 12 cents a week. My book, "Woman‘s Own Medical Adâ€" viser," also sent free on request. Write toâ€"day. Address Mrs. M. Summers, Box Since milk is so extremely variable in quality, and is so easily aduiterated; since often considerable variations are not readily detected; mabove all, because the amount Of milk used by any given person or tu;lly"l: "Maybe you that you can‘t img" 000. 0C _ "No, I can‘t. But it seems like the other fellows can."â€"Washington Star, "1f Putting up window awnings isn‘t canvasing 1‘d like to know what it is." (Slams front door in his face.) per cent. of fat, and form 11.5 to 12 per cent. of total solids have been the minimum reâ€" quirements. ‘These standards, while efficient in securing honest dealing where they are rigldly enforced, nevertheless may work inâ€" justice. so far as honesty of the/‘dealer is concerned, under various circumstances, and may prevent the production and sale of & comparatively low quality product at a reAâ€" sonable price. It would ssem, therefore, that the best means of regulating the traffic in wilk would be, not to set up an artificial standand to which all must come, but to require each individual dealer to guarantee his own standard, and hold him r.tzond.blo If hi« milk were found below. In this way it would be possible to sell milk of various qualities, from strictly skimmed to heavy if hi« milk were found below. In this way it would be possible to sell milk of various qualities, from strictly skimmed to heavy cream, upon a grading scale of prices, with exac justice to everyone.â€"Prof. H. H. Wing, Corne}; University. H, 8, Windsor, Ont. Prayer is the key of the day and thâ€" lock of the night. â€"â€"Hebrew. milk used by any given person or family °s comparatively small, the consumer of milk is almost wholly at the mercy of the proâ€" ducer and dealer, and must rely for a g00d product very largely upon their hozmor. The State has recognized this, and to prevent imposition by unscrupulous people, has in various ways sought ‘to regulate the saie of milk and such products. ‘The chief means used has been to establish arbitrary standâ€" ards of quality, and to -umect to fine those dealers whose goods skould us found to be below the required standard. The standards established by various states and municipalâ€" #ties have varied widely. From 25 to 3;7 Mira Skin Soap is a delight to every woman who values a soft, beautiful skin. Mira Skin Soap takes away all skin irritationsâ€" cures skin troublesâ€"and keeps the skin clear and smooth. _â€" Rlegantly perfumed â€" refreshing â€" unsurpassed for toilet and bath. 25c a cakeâ€"at druggists or sent on rfceirt of price. The Chemists Co. of Canada, Limited, A WINDSOR LADY‘S APPEAL. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY That‘s what Eddy‘s Fibreware Control of Milk Supply Dimlv Remembered Her. A Toillet Luxury Why do you use WOODEN Pails and Tubs, when those made of FIBREWARE are away ahead? They have no hoopsâ€"no seams. will not leak, watersogk, or rest, and they LAST LONGEK and COST LESS MONEY. TRHADL MARK REGISTERLD Now Look Here! SKIN SOAP All Good Grocers sell itâ€"and Eddy‘s Matches Not Particular. No Exceptiuss. will learn after awhile get something for nothâ€" happened answered the â€"you must ask for mount 0f | 4 tamily is | Bra" r 8‘ milk | some the proâ€" | part. or a good M mor. The | 4e rADE "Ie | cce , n the sale “5; jof mean®s | . iry .:;na- cious fine those | date ‘nd to be standarda | M#! :mnlclp;l- .5 to 3.7 _per centf "" imum reâ€" A". 22 "My clerk over there at the liquor counter," said the proprietor of the la: establishment, "is a believer in ooe:fi phenomena." "So I see," replied the cusâ€" tomebr, as he note;l the clerk denl{ making a bottle up into a package. "A | this very moment, I observe, he is enâ€" i gaged lin spiritâ€"wrapping."â€"Baltimore American. stead. Rome of our readers didn‘t like it, but we stood firm. Two Hi:tfle- ships, we said, was enough. him have two. And Congress done it. We have nothing more to say. The Blizzard is vindicated." Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house City Visitorâ€"Almost every :m in this town seems to have had its in making history,. , Now / old house over :gereâ€"l kl”m‘t part in the revolution*?" P Vindicatéd. "Our readers will remember," wrote the editor of the Spiketown Blizzard, "that when President Roosevelt sent that message to Congress asking for four battleships we printed a double leaded editorial in big type, promiz in the name of the people 11|h-t such a reckless expenditure of their money. We said, respectfully, but firmly, that {t was time to call a halt. ‘_q; insisted that Congress should refuse to let him have four battleships and give him two inâ€" suited, it is asserted, for working. With 15 rr cent. of magnesium, the alloy is said to resemble brass in the readiness with which it submite to the operations of turnina;ehoring and cutting. By inâ€" creasing magnesium 25 per cent. an alloy resembling bronze is produced, but the color is allvery white. Nativeâ€"Oh, shorely! Thatâ€"erâ€"why, that _ houseâ€"erâ€"whyâ€"that‘s _ where Washington became the father of his country.â€"Puck., Under the name of "magnalium," Dr. L. Mach has produced alloys of alumâ€" inum and magricesium which, while conâ€" siderably m than pure aluminum, are harder tliut motal and better Mange, Prairie Scratches and every form of contaglous Itch on human or animals cured in 96 minutes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion. Jackâ€"What‘s the matter, old mant You look worried. It never faile. Sold by druggists ts HePCUTOT OO c and pressed air; automatic. ers Bros, Gait, Ont. We have for sale the Canadian patent for Smith‘s Fruit Gathering Apparatus, which has proven on test to be a valuâ€" able u-quilfiion 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 kinde 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. For particulars apgy to J. B. Rittenhouse, Tomâ€"Ob, Miss Fainthcart keeps me guessing. She hasn‘t proposed yet. Jackâ€"But you told me you didn‘t inâ€" tend to marry her. Tomâ€"IJ don‘t. But, after all the time I‘ve wasted onfhflm sahe ‘might at least give me a chande to refuse her. was FORZ OM MMCCCCOR CA 40 4t F him. This was particularly the case in the famous baccarat case. M‘l{:" terwards Sir Henry Hawkins (Lord Brampton) WAA tryillg y:d case in which some marionettes pla & t part. Two male do{h and a m ure were produced in court, "Where shall we put these figures*" nsked a lawyer. mIB® se uNP Sn omcs * doaiit . “;‘ ‘-;p;o;ei,"’"replied Sir Henry, mall ciously, "the lady ought ‘to be accomnio dated with a seat on‘ the beneh."â€"Daily Mighest prices paid for SWEET AND SOUR CREAM shipped to 0' % 4 A]avde INTERESTING TO FRUIT GROWERS PAZO OINTMENT is gusranteed to cure any case of Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protrudâ€" ing Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. Gunbustaâ€"Â¥7hy, and he said we of his rope.â€" sumetaeatnamanaenatee e q‘ wANTED â€" FOR "AUTOâ€" 12 gpray." Best hand sprayer mede. COD~ reâ€"lt *Yâ€"_ iW omatic. Liberal terms. CaYâ€" The appointment of Lord Coleridge reâ€" calls that his father, when on the bench, was fond of .llowiy l‘sd_i‘u b: sit 'i:h De Styleâ€"What makes you think Gotâ€" rox has almost finished the.cigars his wife gave him for Christmas? Ontario PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS ISSUE NO. 20. 1908 IMPORTANT TO FARMERS. ANTEDâ€"STOVE neyâ€"Tilden Co., Lighter Than Aluminum AGENTS WANTED. Leapâ€"Year Worries. Joke on the Judge. HELP WANTED:: ».____ ITCH A Star Part. His J. B. Rittenhouse, 70 Pearl st., Toronto TORONTO at HAVE FOg ELEVEN I «i da pt tr t M

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