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Durham Review (1897), 28 May 1908, p. 6

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}}| y‘ Trying It On Hubby. "John, dear, I wish you would tastso this milk and see if it is perfectly sweet." "What for?" "Because if it‘s the least bit sour I don‘t want to give any of it to Fido. 1t isn‘t good for him." like Heaven, If, with the power of and long, That other gift of syn given. W Ar he was slain in battle plainly ‘visible; Rameses the Great, the Flmrnoh of the oppression, who ordered the Israclites to make bricks without straw; his featâ€" ures indicating strong will power and determination; _ and Menephthah, the Pharaoh of the Exodus, and, that being so, the manâ€"the very manâ€"who said to Moses, "See my face no more; for in that day thou seest my face thou shalt die!" Ah! little thought the monareh when he sent his host to pursue the Israelites through the yawning gorge eleit up the blue waters of the Red Sea that after a lapse of three thousand four hundred years he himself should be exâ€" posed to the gaze of, amongst others, many of the descendants of those very lsraelites whom he so vainly attempted to destroy. And as the visitor eantamnlatas that But of infinitely greater interest than any other object in that wonderful muâ€" seum, are the three embalmed bodiesâ€" not mummies, but the actual bodiesâ€"of Egypt‘s greatest Pharaohsâ€"Seti I., the builder of some of the finest of the temâ€" ples, the swordâ€"cleft in his skull by which CC\ 20C SACECâ€"GICzC N ms sKun by wht Down the Vista of the Ages, (By a Banker.) To those who take an interest in the history of the remote past and in glimpsâ€" ing down the dim vista of time, a day «pent in the great museum at Cairo is a day of keen gratification and enjoyment. Entering the splendid and massive vestiâ€" bule the visitor is immediately in an atâ€" mosphere of antiquity, and surrounded with relies both of the very dawn of eivilization and Also of the more refined and artistic period of those powerful monarchs whose conquests raised Egypt to the zenith of its power, and whose massive achievements remain to this day almost untouched by the disintegrating and despoiling hand of time. Here for instance is a magnificent élate chariot, its gilded frontal of leaâ€" ther embossed with warlike figures or with an artistic design; perhaps the very chariot on which the great Rameses eareered at the head of his victorious army through the palmâ€"bordered aveâ€" nues of Memphis after some great conâ€" quests; here a number of cases of valuable and handsome jewelry, worn by ..the queens and princesses of Egypt in those days of regal splendor; or here a series of painted papyri, still fresh and bright, figuring the fanciful experience of the soul after death, and depicting its apâ€" pearance before a strange and dread tribun=l, which is to adjudicate upon its final doom. Preoccupy your heart with good; preoccupy your time with honest inâ€" dustry, and you are safe. _ ‘"Whatâ€" ever things are true, honest, just, &l:re, lovely, of good report; if there any virtue, any praise, think on these things." Evil can as little enâ€" croach on the domain of good as darkness can force it way into the cirele of radiance which a lamp flings into the night. Remember that since all sin begins in thought, if your thoualbts are safe, then you are safe.â€"F. W. Farrar, D.D. 1 Oh, beware of idleness in its every form; idle procrastinations, idle talk, idle habits, idle thoughtsâ€"these are the certain ruin of the soul. The laborer who stands idle in the marâ€" ket place is ever ready to be hited in the devil‘s service. The worm of sin gnaws deepest into the idle heart. You will remember that terrible truth in one of the Lord‘s sternest parables, about the evil spirit‘s reâ€" turning to the house whence he came out, and finding it "empty, swept, and garnished; then goeth he and taketh with himself seven other spirâ€" its more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there, and the last state of that man is worse than the first." _ What does that "empty, swept and garnished" mean? It means that if your heart is not preâ€" oceupied with good, it will be invadâ€" ed by evil. "Be not overcome of evil, but overâ€" come evil with 1ood." Aim at Khfi which is good, cleave to that whic! is good, occupy your time with that which is good, fill your thoughts with that which is good, and the assaults of evil will have lost half their power. An earnest employment, a steady purâ€" pose in life, a diligent use of timeâ€" these are an _ irresistable . panoply against vice; these strike out of the devil‘s hands his worst implements of temptation. o 8 t M len fte SyNPY hone re Overcome Evil With Good. are spent. large gi!t of Love is s around, thankful, Earth were trngs, soul‘s slumb to life gh its halls t rIng hary D Whnot t} Sympathy cun hand â€"Hamilton Aide that vibrate t sympathy â€" were unc npl V n responsive 1sC10Uu8 ites that ught may ind that ipotentlv de engers who travelled on 8,000 mam did not represent enough business. _ "Anti‘" again. _ Railroad development iteelt gives jobs and cirâ€" sulates money to an exten} not dreamâ€" missed. It was only that the railâ€" roads "held up" orders for Pullman ears, but also because the 14,000,000 _A year ago the railroads themâ€" selves em?loyed 1,3?,000 men. Three hundred thousand of those men have been thrown out of jobs by the "anti." How many other fellows‘ jobs have been affected by that laying off of :l;ilroad men? The Pullml-n people one a year ago gave em ent +0 18,000 men, w‘;s) glo.ooo.o&oi’;mw es. A couple of thousand men were‘fiis- Kansas farmers needed 100,000 harâ€" vest hands. What would those farmâ€" ers have done if the railroads had not produced the 100,000 by means of special rates? The railroads brought 1,000,000 visitors to Saratoga last sumâ€" mer, and 3,000,000 to Atlantic Citiidur- ing the year, and 40,000 to the Maine woods, and 200,000 to a G. A. R. enâ€" campment, and 50,000 to a Chautaugua assembly. Those ;iooplo put a heap of money into cireulation. That travel created jobs galore. We all benefited because the railroads hustled and got the people out. That‘s how the thing works positively. _ Now see how it works negatively. I was in the Northâ€" west( opened, built up, develop d, and populated by Hill‘s railroad) last fall when there was so much freight to be moved that shippers complained because they couldn‘t get cars. Unâ€" reasoning antiâ€"railroadites hit tha Northwest soon after thatâ€"and now u({) there are noarly 100,000 empty,| idle cars. There‘s nothing to move. I was in Florida this winter when the "‘anti‘‘ business compelled the Southâ€" ern railroads to take off some of their crack trains and to shut up most of their big shops. Travel was only half what it was in other winters. Result, only half the number of jobs open to you and to me. _ (Gilson Willets in Leslie‘s Weekly.) Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Moving Heavy Furniture. In housecleaning time, when it beâ€" eomes necessary to move a piano, organ, or other heavy furniture from one room to another, much lifting may be avoided by taking two boards about a foot long and five inches broad, shaped like a wedge. Have the thick ends on a level with the door sill, place them against the sill, and the castors may be guided on to the thin ends of the bulky piece moved into the next room with no unâ€" necessary lifting. s Wash Oil Cloth. ~** **~ Always take milk and water. Never use soapsuds, as this dulls the colors. Rub over with a mixture of oneâ€"half beeswaxr, melted, and while warm stirred irto a saucer of turpentine. Agply with a dry flannel cloth and polish with a dry fiunnel. Or wash as above, and oil with sweet oil or butter. Polish. Clean Wall Paper. Pulverized pumice stone, four ounces, flour one quart; mix thordughly and knead with water enough _ to make dough. Form into balls two by six to eight inches, sew in a cotton cloth, boil forty minutes, or until firm. After eooling allow them to stand _ several hours. Then remove cloth and use. Pumlice Stomne for Pans. When washing kitchen utensils, such as skillets, frying pans, etc., scour with a fiat piece of pumice stome, which can be procured at any drug store for a few cents, and lasts for some time. . You will find it a good help in keeping such articles bright and clean, and the blankets will be like new .Lgin. At this time of year one can find barâ€" finhn in blankets which happen to be a ttle soiled on the exposed side. Treatâ€" ing them in this way will remove all trace of dust. White blankets often become |liihtly soiled, but not enough for washing. They can be dry cleaned _ successfully with flour and salt. Take a medium sized dishpan full of flour and a small sack of salt, mix well, and rub soiled parts in it. When the soil disappears, shake well and hang out in a goo?:vlnd What the Railroads Do For Us. To keep woolens and furs from moths, be sure that‘ none are in the article when put away; then take a piece of strong brown paper, with not a hole through which even a pin can enter. Put the article in it with several lumps of gum camphor between the folds; place this in a closed box. Cover every joint with paper. A pirce of cotton cfoth, it thick and firm,, will answer. Russian leaâ€" ther, tobacco leaves, whole cloves, also are used to preserve furs or woolens from moths. Kflco never get into trunks or drawers where gum camphor is placâ€" Destroy Insects. Dissolve two pounds of alum in three quarts of water. Let it remain . over night until all alum is dissolved. Then with a brush, apply boiling hot to joints or crevises in the closet _ or shelres where cotton bugs, ants, cockâ€"roaches, ote., intrude; also joints and crevices of bedsteads, as bedbugs cannot live where this solution is applied. Clean Velvet. Rub lightly and rapidly with a clean, soft white cotton elm, d‘:p.d in chloroâ€" form; repeat until clean. To restore the pile of velvet steam upon wrong side over boiling water. In housecleaning time, when it comes to the hard task of stretching a carpet uua‘wnytodoiti.toput on a pair of rubbers over your shoes, and after one side of the carpet is tacked down, begin from that side of the room _ to shove the carpet with your feet, tackâ€" Ing at the other side of the room as you go along. w Stretch Carpet With Feet. Dry Clean Blankets. Sure of His Mother. "Now, Jamie," said a school teacher "If there were only one pie for dessert and there were five of you children and papa and mamma to divide it among, how large a piecce would you get?" "Omeâ€"sixth," replied Jamie, promptly. "But there would be seven peopfe there, Jamie. Don‘t you know how many times seven goes into one?" "Not a bit of it," said the other. "If I didn‘t decide on the cclor of the dressâ€" es the stage manager would. Why, that must always be done. Otherwise, in their overmastering desire to draw all eyes to themselves every actress would wear bright red. In my first play the frocks were forgotten in the general exâ€" citement, and at the first dress rehearâ€" sal all six actresses came on in the disâ€" civery scene in scarlet gewns."â€"Philaâ€" delphia Bulletin. "That is carrying the regard for detail too far," said a playwright who had failed. The playwrights over their supper of lobster and champagne boasted. "I," said the greatest of them, with a complacent glance at the two pure pearls in his shirtfront, "decree the colâ€" or of every actress‘ frock." For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Comgound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female l.ll.s{ and has positively cured thousands o women who have been troubled with displacements, inflamm ation.,]uloem- tion, fibroid tumors, im? arities, periodic pains, backache, that bearâ€" ingâ€"down feeling, flatulency,indi%ua- tion, dizziness ornervous prostration. Wn‘l}v don‘t you try it ? rs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. «1 did so and now 1 have no pain and am entirely cured. Your remedy is deserving of great praise." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. This woman says that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound saved her life. Mme. Emma Chatel, Valleyfleld, Belleriver, Quebec, writes to Mrs. Pinkham : "I want to tell you that without Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound, I would not be alive. For months I suffered with painful and irregular fl;:riods and inflammation of the feminine organs Doctors could do nothing for me, and said I must subâ€" mit to an operation as I had a tumor. On: of these mominf.. when there has drifted over the fields a Presence, which the ancients called the Angâ€"l of the Rainâ€"you awaken to find every orchard, every lilac bush, all the wild fruit trees of the woods aflame with lights the color of a cataract in sunâ€" shine. The air is bewitched with the perfume of a thousand orchards, and when the bloom hangs in midâ€"air like Eron flakes of snowâ€"shower, you can ear the hum of an invading armyâ€" the bees harvesting the first fruits »f the year. Do plants feel? Do they ser} Do they know? â€"~Else why did tth awaken to life just at dayâ€"dawn wit a beauty like the incense of a mornâ€" ing sacrifice to a Sunâ€"God? Science can‘t answer that question. In fact, It took a Jong time to learn just at what moment the simplest things of the farm do bloom, like wheat for inâ€" stance, whose tiny florets open to life juat at sun dawn; or to be accurate, in northern lattitudes, between four and five." All science knows is that a simething in the sun compels and wooes and awakens a something in the nlumberinq life of the flower; and reâ€" ligion itself, can‘t give a very much better explanation of human worship, As I said before, everything is doing something in spring, if it is only the dumb worship of the flower world at day dawn.â€"From "The New Spirit if the Farm," by Agnes C. Laut, in the Outing Magazine for May. 000 out of his own pocket, building the newly completed Salt Lake Railâ€" road. That emplgiod 5,000 men for three years. H. M. Flagler paid out nearly $10,000,000 in ‘ugea on _ his new terminals in New York. These and a score of other ‘"developments" in the railway world have been checkâ€" ed by the "ant1." Public hysteria on the subject of railroads has caused head railroaders to order ‘reir enâ€" fl;xleer;s to "‘stop work wherever posâ€" sible. ed of until you get the facts. Ex-&xâ€" ator Clarz, of Montana, spent $20,000,â€" 4 OI‘; my cousins tév,iled"r_ngf) icks, Frmapy fls did so and now I have no nain What Science Doesn‘t Know. Centre of the Stage. 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 strongâ€"give you all your old time energy and viuli?. éheer K"'d take Gin Pills. Joc. a boxâ€"6 for $2.50. t on receipt of price if your dealer does not handle 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 DRUG CO. â€" WINNIPEG, Man. 98 will makKe you well Miscrable All The Time? GIN PILLS ‘"Was Hamlet insane?"". "No doubt at all about it." ‘"You seem posiâ€" tive." "Well, he killed a man, didn‘t he?""â€"Pittsburg Post. Uncle Jerry. "It‘s no trouble," remarked Uncle Jerry Peebles, "for a man in this cliâ€" mate to get a reputation as a prophet. All he has to do is to look wise and preâ€" th urritrerdt Wrubee drarts o elimice‘ t 4 }'AI"L’I. "Tell him it will not be necessary for him to come in; we‘ve already iczken back everything we printed yesterday." â€"Smart Set. *Man to see you." "What does he want?" "Wants you to take hack something which was printed in yestarday‘s paper." "I would suggest that you remove the dark pants which have filled the broken pane in your parlor window all winter and substitute a discarded shirt waist or something summery."â€" Louisville Courâ€" ierâ€"Journal. "I think we ought to go in for the town beautiful. Any improvement that you could recommend * Minard‘s Liniment us>4 by Physicians. is practically no blood lost, especially none from the main vein; wha.mttlo blood is lost is from the skin,. Convalâ€" escence is much shorter a week to ten days‘ time being sufficient for the patâ€" ients to stay in bed; they should be up Surgery for Varicose Veins. A foreign medical man, Dr, C. F. Kivâ€" lin, makes a‘ plea for operating on variâ€" cose veins by what he terms the method of multiple short incisons, claiming that it does not take so long to do the ?cr ation as it does with other operations where the vein is removed, tfic it is not so apt to become infected, and that if onme incision becomes infected it can be dealt with more readily and without infecting the others. There is no scar tissue at the knee joint, thereby causing no pain or limping while walking. There 52 L eccas im M aa & & 1 9 u.m:tic value of which he m;y be abâ€" solutely ignorant, and by the simple device of packing them qs a medicfile and keeping the compostion secret he is able, b{x means of advertisement, to subâ€" situte himself for competent and. qualiâ€" fied medical and pharmaceutical erâ€" vice. ° In most countries the dealing in mediâ€" cinal drugs and chemicals is reserved only to persons qualified by training, studies and examinationâ€"that is, to pharmacists. In England, by a curious misunderstanding of the functions of a pharmacist, he is recognized by law merely as a "poison seller," and any one who pleases may supply the public with medicines the identity or purity or ther. for the safety of the public to regulate the sale of poisons, but patent medicines, curiously enouih, were exempt from the provisions of the law, a privilege which th? enjoy together with legally qualiâ€" fied practitioners. In the United States and in most Euâ€" ropean countries some legislation either exists or has been attempted to limit or to stop the traffic in secret remedies. In England, based on the principle of nonâ€"interference, absolute free play is given to it. It has been found expedvient Great Britain is the happy hunting ground of the medical quack, if one can believe a member of the Chemists‘ Asâ€" sociation of London. He is quoted in Derrick‘s British Report as saying that two years ago the annual sale of proâ€" prictary medicines in Great Britain amounted to $40,000,000. Free d the metal cheaply. When this has gn accomplished the problem will be settled for all time. Here is another opâ€" portunity for inventors. one of the most indispensable of metais â€"when the deposits of beauxite give out? Beauxite is a kind of clay and the deposits have already been pretty well worked out. If aluminnum is to remain at a low price other sources of the meâ€" tal must be discovered. On the face of it the problem would not seem difficult, inasmuch as every clay bank, it might be said, is an aluminium mine. But the difficulty .lies in extracting it. In beauâ€" xite the metal occurs in the form of an oxide and is easily separated by summoning electricity to the aid of cheâ€" mlltx..Bm in ordinary .cl:dyl it assumes the pe of a silicate is costly to extract. It remains, then, for some inâ€" geniue chemist to devise a process by :h‘igh _the silicate may be compelied to totlet soap gi-nbined. Soothing and antiseptic. egantly perfnme(‘ Inâ€" valuable for babies, to keep the delicate skin clear and amooth. . Te a cakeâ€"at druggists or sent on receipt of Efiinfl? whence will it be practicable to obâ€" tain aluminiumâ€"already recognized as ’I't ‘he-h as it cleans. A medicinal and Play in Sale of Patent Medicine in England. PARADISE FOR QuAcks. In Yellow Journalism. cakeâ€"at duqim or sent on receipt of The Chemists‘ Co. of Canada, u-n;‘, TRADC MARK mecistCriO SKIN SOAP Improvement. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Aluminium Gives Out. How hard for you to curb your will And learn the lesson, ‘"Peace, be still!" How eager seems the boast to slip From your tooâ€"active, agilo tip; How easy for the hasty phrase To rasp and wrankle, then for days; Few beads were hurt, ftew hearts were wrung, If you bn* rested, Mr. Tongue. Mr. Tongue. (By Edmund Vance Cooke.) You forward fellow, Mr. Tongue! I met my friend, and out you fiung With ‘"Glod to see," and "How d‘ye dot" Ahough hbe bowed to me, not to you. If 1 would eat or drink, you haste To claim the first and freshest taste; And Mirard‘s Liniment Lumbermen‘s And when my docior vieits me, Why, out you pop for him to see! The sequel reveals the fact that the whetstone was found on the top of the post, thus vindicating both the honesty and the memory which Mr. Lincoln posâ€" sessed.â€"Washington Star. * "That may be," said the young man, "for it is so high that no ordinary perâ€" son can reach it." "Yes." interrupted the young man, "and you must have carried off the whetâ€" stonc, for we have never seen it since that day." it I laid it on the top of a post in the barnyard. _ I think you‘il find it there if you look carefully." _ "I did not take it," replied Mr. Linâ€" eoln, "but when I was throus using "Very well," said Mr. Lincoln. "I reâ€" member that on one occasion I was on imy way from Indiana to lilinois. I stopâ€" ped at your father‘s house to eat dinner, and while there I had occasion to sharpâ€" en my knife." asys On another occasion an appeal was made by a young man in Southern Inâ€" diana for some favor touching military operations. _ In presenting his case to \Ks‘ President the young man said: "By the way, President Lincoln, you knew mz family." Highest prices paid for SWEET AND SOUR CREAM shipped to fessor. S h "I can‘t discover whether a lot of peoâ€" ple go broke because we have hard times or whether we have hard times because a lot of people go broke."â€"Washington tar. Problem in Political Economy. "It‘s no use," said the young man with heavy rimmed eyeglasses. "I can‘t get this _gollticd economy straight." "Hi, skipper, come up and find us anâ€" other star. .I‘ve prassed that one!"â€" Philadelphia Reootgfn $ The boy began to steer the boat, and soon he got her out of her course. The star now astern instead of ahead. He shouted down to the captain: PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any qase of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrudâ€" "Here, take the wheel. I‘ll be back in a few minutes. Steer by tha* star and you will be all right." ing Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. The boy stood on the bridge of a schooner beside the captain on a starry night. It suddenly became necessary for the captain to go below, and he said to the boy: _ Oegoode Dairy 1 was very sick with Quinzy and thought I would strangle. I used MINâ€" ARD’S LINIMENT and it cured me at Mi_n'ird's Liniment Co., Limited ranchers who want fish angle for them in the irrigation ditches in preference to the streame, the ditches being more accessible and the water slower and therefore better.â€" North Yakima carrespondence Seattle Postâ€" IntelHigencer then turn off into the laterals, finaily endâ€" ing their life in muu- whore the water has plyed out and them. Attorney Edâ€" ward Parker a fow days ago caught a eix pound rainbow in his pear orchard. Clinton or. found several trout in his orchard A numerous others bave reported similiar Emall boys catch long strings of small trout by scooping them from the pools with their tecting the game fish which are now being slaughtered in thousands by being dumped on the orchards and alfalfa flelds from the trrigation ditches. _ ‘The trout and saimon enter the ditches and Game Warden Thomas Mulien, of Yakima county. has called the eportsmen of this disâ€" used caused me much suffering, but Zamâ€"Buk soothed the pain, and although it appeared for some time to be doing no good, yet I persevered, and as soon as the wound became clean, it was only a matter of three or four days before it was healed." Zamâ€"Buk cures cuts, burns, pimples, ulcers, ringworm, itch, .fiil«, running sores, blood poison, and ekin diseases. All stores and druggists, 50e box, or from Zamâ€"Buk Co,. Toronto. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYs ed on my right caused by a rup tured blo{;dfxoel.l*h time went on ?l got worse and my sufferings were inâ€" tense, I had a very sore leg indeed, and had very small hopes of ever seeing it healed, in fact I was told by several who had known such sores that I would suffer with it for life. When I was alâ€" most in despair I heard of Zamâ€"Buk and commenced using it. Other saives I had uDCP 2A €MPASOU, (0% POpIAr Hii Creek, Athabasca Landing, Alta., says: "About nimne years ago a running sore commenc m e t e ag o. & ng C 9 YEARS BAD LEG. =â€"â€"â€" HEALED BY ZAMâ€"BUK. I am never without it now. Yours gratefully, M & MRS. C. D. PRINCE. Nauwigewauk, Oct. IMPORTANT TO FARMERS. Mr. C. Johnson, of _?o;;lu_flâ€"i_uâ€" Creek in some sections of the valley the at‘s the trouble?" asked the proâ€" Catch Trout in Orchards. Honest Lincoln. Star Flits Away. 21 TORONTO Cookâ€"Yes:; but he‘s complaining now because he hasn‘t been able to thaw out any of it.â€"Ilustrated Bits. ho ds o a d 2 2e *‘‘Mustering all my professional sang froid I calmly replied: ‘‘That, sir, is a part of the treatment,"" and he went away, greatly to my relief, entirely satisfied.â€"Indianapolis «ns Cold Storage. Hookâ€"I understand he inarried & cool million. *L 2':‘4; email b;tt-lo of d;lonfu‘. and with ardihogl 0f youth I made up mind to use it He readily went under 3 influence of the new anaesthetic, I pulled manfully and the grinder came out. I waitâ€" ed. but the patient did not return to conâ€" sciousness. I was badly tnmma. and hastily seizing a bucket with t two galâ€" lons of water in it I poured it over nim. Gaeping, he came out from the influence of the chloroform. Then he wanted to know what I %nt t:{ giving him euch a soaking. rvâ€"ASnivan vezeiie U sthap. BP reatP se e â€" K Victim of Delusionâ€"Doctor, I‘m awâ€" fully afraid I‘m going to have brain fever. Doectorâ€"Pooh, Ywh’ my dear friend! That is all an illusion of the senses. There is no such thing as fever. You have no fever. You have no brâ€"h‘m!â€" no material substance upon which such a wholly imaginary and suppositious thing as a fever could find any base of operation. Victimâ€"Oh, doetor, what a load you have taken from myâ€"from myâ€"I have a mind, haven‘t I, doctor? hardly dry on my sheepskin, when a man came into my office to have an aching tooth Cl s 4 "I believe," said Dr. John M. Kitchen, "I was the first physician in mortbern Indiana to make use cithclauolu. 1 was a young k00 .20 Lus W We C RC d TTE rre%uom fls of Headache. _ LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE removes cause. E. W. Grove on box, 25¢. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. From which we learn that even among the ancients the scorching chauffeur was a discourager of piety. The time had come when devotees no longer sought to cast themselves under the wheels of the car of Juggernaut. "Why this lack of zealt" asked the scoffere. ""What‘s the use?" said the devotees. "No matter how hard we try, our lumâ€" bering old ice wagon can‘t compete with the deadly automobiles!" ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT re moves all hard, soft and calloused lum and blemishes from horses, blood qnvE curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, lgcniu, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Bave $50 by use of one bottle, Warranted the most wonderful blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists. "It is true, fellow citizens, that I have not always been zble to do as much as I should like in the matter of internal improvements in this district, but I have never lost sight of your interests for a single moment. You have no idea of the obstacles that lie in the way of a Conâ€" gressman who tries to secure appropriaâ€" tions for public buildings, the improveâ€" ment of navigable streams and the like for the benefit of his constituents, but I want to assure you, fellow citizens, that I have labored constantly in your behalf to the very best of my ability." "We know it!" shouted an old farmer in the audience. "That‘s why we want an abler man."â€"Youth‘s Companion. A man who had served two terms in Congress was making a campaign for a third term. In the course of a speech in the Town Hall at Broomeorn Junction, a village near the further boundary of his district, he said: to the difference between rough .phlo ani polished plate, we find polished plate the stronger. This is &e.rhflpi to be attributed to the fact t all these very fine surface hair cracks ar; polished out. These only !o into the glass to a certain depth and when they are .t? or nearly all polished and ground off, there is less chance for some of them to form the basis of a crick, and thereby the glass is inâ€" creased in strength. Tests have been made and some formulae have been artived at. As was to be expected, they show very irregular results as to the strength of glass. we are familiar, says the Scientific Anmerican. lt varies greatly in itself. The strongest glass, as a rule, breaks intu the greatest number of fragments. Comparing the strength of thin glass with thic the former is rehuvel{ the stro: ; this is a thing very ofâ€" ter. lost sight of. Then, again, as Harder to Figure Than That of Many Other Substances. Glass is not a subsiance that we cana figure the strenfih of as we can a «reat many others things with which EDDY‘S 321" WASHBOARDS The Eddy Crimp WHAT CAUSES HEADACKHE Black Watch The Chewing Tobacco Part of the Treatment. °s C New wrinklie im the way of Crimping the Zinc in Washboards. it makes the Washing Process very much easier, and it insures Few Destroyed Linens when the Washing is over. l.ikeEddy’sMatdmâ€"illubmmdle best ever. To be had only in STRENCTH OF GLASS. Triumph of Mird. What Was Lacking. Out of Date. out The estimated cost of a Bridge over the straits of Dover is $34.000.000, h& In making his way stealthily through the back yard to the window ‘he intendâ€" ed to enter the burglar found his proâ€" gress impeded by several lengths of clotheslines stretching from leme to fence, from which depended a formidable array of sheets, pillow cases, unde: = ments, and other evidences that nrt‘ been a day of sctivity in the basement laundry, "Delayed by a wash out!" he muttep ed, stooping down and crawling al on his hands and knees. id ad "I observe," said u:e;umr of the magazine, looking over the man: i th-thndbmlxmitudtohimm ule:Lmttor thereof, "that g;u'n used phrase, ‘lean hours.‘ can there be such a Thing ns a *nnn!Lasteam There: rted" Wls w se is tsad boateiitsmsss 4d "There is such a thing as a spare momâ€" ent, isn‘t there?" Mange, Prairie Scratches and ev form eontagious Itch on bhuman or ngu. eu’ in $0 minutes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Ltion. It never fails. Bold by druggists, sang about in Sunday School lest time, "Let me to thy bosomâ€"fly." et af mt er this is a bosom fly *" Mammaâ€"A bosom fly? I don‘t underâ€" stand you, dear. )hbolâ€"an‘t you know the kind we "won‘t you er this Eo. Mabel saw a fly buzzing on the winâ€" dowpane. "Mamma," said the lttle girl, Publicity makes a product noted, n h e e is both n and famous, These young fishes, each about two inches long, would eat so much that their little stomachs fairly stuck out, and yet to feed the whole 20,000 took Greedy Little Saimon. Little creatures may be very greedy and yet not be able to eat muc{ because of their size, as was illustrated, for inâ€" stance, in the case of a batch of about 20,000 litle Chinook salmon that were hatched out at the Aquarium. daily only one pound of lver and a qumd{wrh‘rm.bothuondflu but tell others of this offer. Write to day to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P. 8, Windsor, Ont. ie * ) treatment; and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with references from your own locality if requested. _ Immediate relief and perâ€" yourself at home by the new absorption If you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure ay. Nondreds of testimonials. To introduce 11 we will send io‘-‘lfuflu‘.lom!‘ty_ of :q-u“::dunu Free Premiums. PILCS CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METMOD mint air bubbles get into them someâ€" times. When the metal is rolled out and _ the coins are made _ the bubble sometimes stags there, and there is no telligencer. coin. "It is very probably that there is a emaill cavity in this am}!lr_ pens very often and gives a great deal of t:onfi. When the Tn(oh from which night by G&Mfius H. C. Adames Satnly. Ts ts golt prawg aupuae d ut have been stolen was found on and was ‘held as evidence. Clerk m‘ dropped the golkl piece on the at the station and it fell like a piece of ‘l:d. ‘There was absolutely noâ€" ring to ?onfive Foster was called in, with a view of capturing a band of counterâ€" feiters. "Just as good as any coin ever turnâ€" ed out at the mint," _ said the Seoret Bervice man, after he Momhodth "2~wNC, looking over the man i mthndbocn;mitudtohimm npkdl:g‘md:or thereof, "that g::'n ied phrase, ‘lean hours.‘ can ere be such a thing as a ‘lean‘ houd?" ‘"Why not?" demanded _ the other. rhenhoud:;thlmng.mnm_. as a result Aimee Eykes, alias Gere Oveu.,'llbo?d'lfi““. in lawful money of the g-lud Btates Not Always a Counterfeitâ€"May HMave Only a Smah Cavity in It. Gold coins which do not ring are not. always counterfeits, anccording to Operâ€" ative Thomas B. Foster, in charge of the United States Becret Bervice work for this district. . He demonstrated that fact at the police station yesterday, and We want every to Il"c ;;; nese ce . int embreiyr, Rreh nnonsnte h arag Hundreds 6f testimonials. To introduce 11 we w1ll CcoIN THAT ISSUE NO. 22, to such a coin."â€"Seattle Post Inâ€" Point Not Well Taken. A New Kind of Play. AGENTS WANTED. SN _ WAmERRE _ _ AUCC °~ fn o sprayer made. Comâ€" , -!’_.‘:.“ * tmaral terms. CaYâ€" ITCP ree to Housekeepers Crime. * 100004 his proâ€" ral _ lengths of from fenme to ded a formidable cases, unde = nces that itrm in the basement at “. The hotel wa years ago, but w on which there y @wvided as follows and BL500 dividn of H. of J. . Austir Harris the thri unk elle: clu his ©f1,. J was 11 at the trene! born +# #l The the } attenc MSB18t Che ing the M Ye re te W Fire Escapes 6e Re in int fire bee five ar ir Li jure Some Oth H The 2 THR TT Rescued W hes man T ar He

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