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Durham Review (1897), 13 Aug 1908, p. 6

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H W 1»x 5@‘@.‘&? Emily Surt Lawret 1 Pray for You Prayer Measure zs home! tha M their it Lr Ar Knickerâ€"It is a completely equipâ€" ped house? Bockerâ€"Yes; it has a cyclone celâ€" 1=** flaad raaf and a camnaign norch Diving rarely has bad results if a perâ€" son will exercise just ordinary caution. Persons should make it a practice never to dive into unknown waters. Investiâ€" gation of the nature and depth of the water should always be made before & dive is undertaken. There may be less water than one supposes; a broken spile may be concealed by the water, or a heayy picce of waterlogged wood may be floating a few feet below the surface. â€"New York Sunm. clal dives, so there need be no check upâ€" on originality. However, it is the object to confine even these specialtiee to evolutions which shall invariably end with the enâ€" trance head first to the water, although no attemept is made to hamper or reâ€" strict the movements of the diver in the Every young swinimer now knows the regulation American dives sanctioned by the A. A. U., and these youngsters are becoming very efficient. While but five regulation dives are scheduled, still the rules in this country permit three speâ€" The American performers followed with a great deal less fuss and even grace, jumped far out into the air and entered the water head first, at times with such skill as searcely to cause a ripple. When the contest was decided | the judges had no other alternative than to award the event to the American conâ€" l testants. beteids tmrettciy Arisameihis tias: Aircat cand tro dlitate l Norfan ue 2 sides, the German diver with a spring of | How many American women in marvelous ease would describe a beautiâ€" | lonely homes toâ€"day long for this ful evolution through the air and thenâ€" ’ blessing to come into their lives, and hit the water broadside with a resoundâ€" | to be able to utter these words, but ing smack that would send showers of | because of some organic derangeâ€" spray over every one near by. _ _ | ment this happinessrgdenied them. Magnificent work was shown by the liermans at the World‘s Fair contests in all these particularsâ€"in fact, they comâ€" pletely outclassed the efforts of the Araâ€" erican contestants. But the Germans did not care how they entered or struck the water. Walking down the plank of the springboard with head erect, eyes front, chest thrown out, feet close toâ€" gether, legs working like those of an automaton, hands rigidly held to the It is on this point that arises the difâ€" ference between the diving experts of American and those of the continental countries. Americans hold that the very essence of the dive rests upon a clean entrance, head first, with the least posâ€" sible disturbance of the water. It was on this part of the dive that so much discussion was created at the St, Louis World‘s Fair. Germany was represented by a team of splendid diversâ€"from the continewtal point of view. In Germany points count for the diver‘s manner of «pproaching the takeoff, his form in preâ€" paring himself for the dive, his moveâ€" ments in the air, and then criticism of his actions ceases. leet close together and hands helid over head, must describe a long or short semiâ€" circle before entering the water, that detail being left optional. This is the easiest of ail the dives and the first one mastered by the beginner. The front jackkmfe is executed by jumping a few feet in the air, turning sharply and descending so that the head shall enter the water not more than six feet beyond the edge of the platform from which the diver has jumped. This is quite a difficult dive, as the contestâ€" ant is very apt to make it a plain front dive instead of embodying the features of the jackknite, and thus leaves open a trap into which many good divers have fallen on the day of a diving contest. In accomplishing the third regulation dive, the back jackknife, the contestant stands, feet close together, on the edge . of the takeoff with his back to the waâ€" ter. Jumping upward his body turns quickly toward the point of takeoff and he descends with his face outward. As in the front jackknife, the regulations require that the diver‘s head shall not enter the water more than six feet beâ€" youd a line drawn from the edge of the takeoff. The last of the regulation dives, the one and a half, is the most difficult, and few even of the most expert divers ofâ€" ten succeed in performing it perfectly. This dive as a matter of tact is literally a somersault and a half. The body must describe a complete somersault in the air, and then continue half way around again, so that the entrance to the water is head first. The regulation dives altogether numâ€" ber fiveâ€"the piain front, the plain back, the front jackknife, the back jackknife and the one and a hali dive. ‘The takeâ€" offs, which are from a solid platform, number three in allâ€"ten, twenty and thirty feetâ€"and the diver gets credit for a greater number of points as the height of the takeoff increases, Rules were then adopted by the A. A. U. to govern diving contests, defining the standard dives, and now this branch of sport is as firmly established as if it had been followed for years. The regulation dives altogether numâ€" ber fiveâ€"the plain front, the plain back, the front imckknife. the back jackknife Later still the colleges took up diving and made it one of the principal feaâ€" tures of the programmes of their dual swimming meets when the intercollegiâ€" ate swimming association was organized, Then they created an intercollegiate divâ€" ing championship. than half a dozen good divers in the whole country. The graceful and spectacular work of the few metropolitan divers upon this occasion, chief among whom were Thos. (PCallaghan, Walter Lee and Fred Wenck, caught the fancy of the spectaâ€" tors, and diving was an established feaâ€" ture upon each programme of swimming events thereafter. A little later the inâ€" terest created by the sport coming to the notice of the officials of the Amaâ€" teur Athletic Union the latter added « national championship at the sport, which has been one of the most interest. ing features of the national swimming championships. interest in the sport by adding a diving contest to it« monthly programme of ewimming events held at Travers Is land.. At this time there were not more than half a dozen good divers in the Diving is a sport which is taking up much of the time of American swimmers aowadays and in which they have made great advances during the last three or four vears. Three yvears ago the New in THE FINE ART OF DIVING Up to Date. nt dive h liver, with the and ofâ€" tly. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable ComEound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female l.llsI and has positively cured thousands 0: xgmlgge who have fib‘;een troiublmith isplacements, inflammatio Taâ€" tion, fibroid tumors, umg[xlx']aflties, periodic pains, backache, that bearâ€" ingâ€"down feeling, flatulency, indigesâ€" tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don‘t you try it ? She bas guided thousands to health. Agclil:'eu.l.m.m Mrs. Josephine Hall,of Bardstown, Ky., writes : "I was a very grel.t sufferer from female troubles, and my phisician failed to help me. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" table Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but I am now a proud mother." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. Every woman interested in this subject should know that preparaâ€" tion for healihy maternity is accomplished by the use of "I was greatly runâ€"down in health from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It not only restored me to perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother." LYDIA E.PINKHAM‘S VEGETABLE COMPCUND Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West Union, 8. C.,writes to Mrs. Pinkham: Riw A MOTHER "And then she 7?371':‘3-(3.‘â€"1"?:}1;-5;!.1(‘9 .1f her husband happens to carry a ‘yard or two of it on his coat sleeve.‘ "IT read in a book of statistics that the average woman carries from 30 to 35 miles of hair on her head." . The Optimist : Why think of April, which is dead? Why contemplate May with a sigh? Think of the June that lies ahead, And if it turns out to be a disappointâ€" ment, you can still look forward to July. nature. He had his prejudices and preâ€" possessions, but there were no "kinks" in him. He was the soul of sincerity, a food lover, a good hater, a true man. n proportion as we become aware of this, we become aware of a new inâ€" tegrity and importance in his work, alâ€" ready so securely fixed in its place among the choice treasures of Amerâ€" ican poetry.â€"August Century. The Pessimist: There‘s no use talkin‘, things are bad, And gittin‘ worse from day to day ; Think of the ‘April that we had, And now see what we get in Mayt A True Man. Aldrich‘s neat and telling wit has long been a tradition, his haunting lyrics and delightful prose are bound together in his collected works for all men to read, but only one who has read his familiar letters can adequately know the fineness and soundness of his best herd average was 1,042 pounds of milk, 32.3 pounds of fat from a herd of 26 cows. This association record is in rather sharp contrast to the one above, and indicates the great differences that exist between the results obtained in dif/erent sections of the country. Stated in another form, if the Ste. Emelie cows were as good milkers as those at Warâ€" saw, they would have given an extra weight of 54,340 pounds during the month. C F. W. ‘COwW TESTING ASSOCIATIONS. At Warsaw, Ont., in June, 118 cows gave an average yield of 929 pounds of milk, 3.2 test, 20.9 pounds of fat. The best herd average was 1,042 pounds of milk, 32.3 pounds of fat from a herd of At Ste. Emelie, Que., in June, 142 cows gave an average yield of 546 pounds of milk, 3.8 test, 20.% pounds f:’:. The best herd average was 631 pounds milk, 3.8 test, 24.3 pounds fat. The highest yield of any one cow was 1,0}30 pounds of milk testing 3.50. The poorest herd was one of 13 cows that averaged only 392 pounds of milk and 16 pounds of fat. If the 13 cows in this herd h@d given only enough milk extra to bring them up to the average yield of all the 142 cows in the association, they would have given enough milk in the month to make an extra 182 pounds of cheese worth $20. That would not be much improvement to ask just to bring them up to the average, not the best herd; and if the cows are such that they canâ€" not be made to yield «n average quantiâ€" ty, should they be kept? ‘ Always Something to Hope For Branch of the Dairy ard Cold Storâ€" age Commissioner, Dominion Deâ€" partment of Agriculture. HAD BEEN Chicago Recordâ€"Herald THERE cows Warâ€" extra the Sentence Sermons. Faith in God is best cvidenced by felâ€" lowship with men. Too many measure their means by their meanness. Trouble that might break us may be made to make us. The hardest seats in the world are those on Easy street. Nagging people are always praying for peace in glory. Worms of the dust make poor leadâ€" ers of men to the divine. Social sympathy is the solvent of many theological barriers. The world is not lifted to virtue by picturing it as wholly vicious. You cannot have harmony within yourself without conflict without. Formalities are the substitutes with which the empty heart tries to make up for faith. Didn‘t Want to Hurry. "I saw G. Whizz in his automobile yesterday and it was actually creeping along at a snail‘s pace." _"I dunno. Maybe his father vas a truck driver." "Good gracious! Why, Whizz is one of the most notorious speed maniacs in town. What do you suppose was the matter?" His Ancestors. "What does Rarlow mean when he speaks of his ancestral halls" "He was going to see & dentist."â€" Birmingham Ageâ€"Herald. A prettier custom prevails among the Ooraon maidens, who at stated interâ€" vals assemble in the market place. In front of each is a lighted lamp, emblem of conjugal fidelity, A young man feels attracted. He gently blows upon . the flame, extinguishing it. The girl relights it; it is a rejection. If she leaves it alone the offer is acceptable, Even in England these curious marâ€" kets are not unknown, although they are not openlfv ackmsowledged as such. One has been held on St. Martha‘s Hill, Surâ€" rey, on each recurring Good Friday durâ€" ing some centuries. And the statute and mop fairs that are still celebrated in various rural localities _ are marriage marts in all but name.â€"Pearson‘s Weekâ€" ly. Prayer is measured by its aspiration rather than by the information it sends to heaven.â€"Henry F. Cope. _ No preacher ever caught men who was fishing for compliments, & passing gallant and pres:enrtlrv»}';t‘ur: ed it means that a proposal has been wiag. p‘=ess a fiower from her bunch. â€" She pretends not to notice, but when â€" the merrymaking breaks up at dawn she will if she reciprocates his feelings, tie the entire bouquet by the ribbon to the hanâ€" dle of the door of the cabin wherein he resides or alternatively fling it through the open casement of his bedchamber,. The famous Tunis marriage mart, of which so much has been written, is held twice a year, in the spring and the auâ€" tumn. The Tunisian girls attend in their jewelry disposed about her person. The ‘‘goiden girdle of maidenhood" encircles her waist, and in it is an unsheathed dagger. When this is gently removed hÂ¥ Queer Swiss Marriage Marketâ€"Pecuâ€" liar Ways Men and Women Seek Mat The marriage market (or fair) which was held recently at Ecaussines in Belâ€" gium has many counterparts elsewhere. In several of the more remote Swiss cantons, for example, there is held what is known as the feast of the garlands. The marriageable maidens assemble at sunset, sing, dance and â€" make merry, Eac.l'i wears a chaplet of filowers on her bright If a Will develope your bust in time. DR. HUNT‘S BUST DEVELOPER "Landlord, I have my house in the city ground last night by phone!" Apparently the person at the « end of the wire did mean it, for the turned to :the proprietor of the and gasped: The man mer resort pale. u“'h.t ! J mean it!" B C PC WTC UTP TeL rehcad and earries a nosegay tied with ce d ic oo oo 3 TE 1 1 ’aorbs it greedily and rebuilds from it new healthy tissue. _ Miss Susan Peake, Edward Street, Toronto, says: ‘‘My arm and face broke out with Eczema, which was both very painful, and very unsightly. I used various kinds of salves and ointments, but received no benefit until I began with Zamâ€"Buk. The first apâ€" plication proved it different to other ointâ€" ments used; it relieved the terrible itching, and also soothed the pain. In a very short time after commencing with Zamâ€"Buk I was cured entirely of Eczema, and my face and arms are now as smooth and clear from pimâ€" ples and sores as they ever were." Zamâ€"Buk also cures Ulcers, Abrasions, Itch, Insect Stings, Blood Poisoning, Scalâ€" ing Scores and all Skin diseases and Inâ€" juries. For Piles also it is fine! All drugâ€" gists and stores at 0c box or post free from Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto, for price. 3 boxes . for $1.50. ‘ Price $1.00, express prepaid. The Edward‘s Medicine Company, 611 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Ont. Why continue to suffer from Eczema when neture has provided a certain cure? Zamâ€" Buk is a combiaation of vegetable essences and juices so refined, so purified and yet so WOMEN WITH ECZEMA Read ThisCureby Zamâ€"Buk FEAST OF THE GARLANDS colored ribbon in h‘;?-l:a;d‘a' lad is attracted by _ a ms a flower from her bunch ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS Introducing a New Peril ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO at the telephone in the sumâ€" hotel was observed to turn he exclaimed gently re_moved bi just learned that was burned to the long distance teleâ€" a maid he very short vyou other : man hotel don‘t While the King was still not quite decided he saw the Duchess of %od. ford in a riding habit of blue faced with white and enlivened with gold lace. It was a revelation. Here, the King declared, was the uniform for his sea service officers, and no more was heard of French gray. The navy took to blue, and every other navy has taken to it since. Naval uniforms all the world over pretty well are navy blue, say the Pall Mall Gazette. The British fashâ€" ion in this matter has been the rule with maritime people in general. That blue was ever selected for the king‘s naval service was a fortuitous happenâ€" ing. When, in 1747, the question of uniform was being considered the color selected had very like to have been French gray laced with silver. Stellaâ€"She‘s a mean thingâ€"I told her not to tell you I told her. Ellaâ€"Well, I told ber I wouldn‘t !dl you she told meâ€" so don‘t tell her AS THEY EAY. Ellaâ€"Bella told me that you told her that secret that I told you not to tell her. "Now," said the avarden to the forger, who had just â€" arrived at the prison, "we‘ll set you to work. What can you do best?" "Well, if you‘ll give me a week‘s prac tice on your signature, I‘ll sign your of: ficial papers for you," said the prisoner. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper, "‘So you are engaged, a manm said to my friend, ‘to one of the beautiful Vronâ€" sky triplets, echt‘ "‘Yes, my friend replied. "‘But how can you tell them apart?t the man asked. ""I don‘t try‘ said my friend." "Nowhere, not even in Russia, are the girls so pretty," he said. "It seems wrong and stingy that a man can only marry one of them. Every American, surrounded by all this beauty, must envy the snap that a friend of mine in Russia had. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, Hackenschmidt, the Russian wrestler, praised in Chicago the beauty of the Amemican girl. "please _ are the; brown *"â€"Answers A few minutes _ later, however, heard the young boy‘s voice calling her from below. "Well?" she answered. "What is i "Please." called un the emhron aba Overdone. "Now, Arthur," said the housekeeper, "I‘m going upsairs for a moment; but while I‘m away I want you to look well after these nice white aprons I‘ve put before the fire to air, because the Duchâ€" ess of Blankton is coming to call toâ€" day, and I want the girls to look partiâ€" cularly smart." Little Arthur nodded wiscly, housekepeer, satisfied, departed higher mission. House flies spread contagious diseases such as typhoid fever, scarlet fever, smallpox and consumption. Wilson‘s Fly Pads kill the flies and the discease germs stuff, whether it touches the spot or not. And was it nto Voltaire who described doctors as men who pour drugs of which they know little into stomachs of which they know less?â€"Rochester Post Express. _ One old woman in Lambeth has lived for years on the medicines obtained in this way. She will artfully obtain perâ€" mits to several different hospitals, for she is always supposed to be "ailing," and will get a bottle of medicine from each at the carliest intervals possible. She plants relations, too, upon the hospitals, an dgets the medicines they recelve. In this way she procures quite a stock of medicines intended for difâ€" ferent ailments, and these are doled out at a farthing‘s worth at a time. Her medicine no doubt gets badly mixed, and no doubt the 'put.ienu do as well, but "doctor‘s stuff"" is doctor‘s Recently it has come out that in many a slum street in certain parts of London there are old women who will supply to their neighbors, for a penny or so at a time, small quantities of medicine, all this having come free from various hosâ€" pitals. oK â€" ) CH Sufferers from Fits, F,&v’]m»-\-, St Vitus‘ Dance, Nervous Troubles or Falling Sickness should write the e ME#KIG €0., 179 King street, Toronto fora trial bottle of their Fit Cure and Treatise. Euclose 10c tor postage and packing. Why Naval Uniforms Are Blue. 500 The foundation and walls are of con crete blocks. These blocks were mould od right on the ground as they were re quired, so there was no waste of mater jal. This model twentieth century home at | Carrollton is thirtyâ€"four by thirty foet, two storeys high, with attic and baseâ€" ment, and has eight rooms on the two main floors. out ashes, without dangerous gases." ; ‘ _ The pleasing picture is the way Frank | ___" N. Bauskett describes in the %4ccnical | â€"â€"â€" World his idea of the house of Xu'.nor-’ row. But it is not altogether a house "Â¥ of toâ€"morrow, for the reality already exâ€" l pros ists at Carroliton, I!I. the A Specimen Already Completed Out in Illinois. "A house of cement, a house without a chimney, a hous@with plenty of artifiâ€" cial light and heat and yet without a bit of fire, a house without coa!, withâ€" out ashes, without dangerous gases." â€" The pleasing picture is the way Frank Good at His Trade. â€" she answered. "What is it?" ," called up the embryo chefâ€" are they done when they‘re THE COMING HOoUuSE. Preys on Hospitals He Didn‘t Try said my friend 1 wisely, and ‘SUreot, i oron ir Fit Cure nm Lor postage and the her "What do you want with this auto mobile catalogue*" "I propose to write some dialo it, and then it will be a motor lng:lfl.";2 Washington Herald. In reply to the question, *"Please tell when and where are, or is, the correct time for a gentleman to lift or remove his hat," we reply: Withâ€" out consulting authorities of etiquette ; in fact, giving it to you offâ€"hand, so to speak, we should say at the followâ€" ing times and on the following occaâ€" sions, respectively, the hat should be lifted or removed as circumstances indicate: When moppini the brow ; when taking a bath; when eating; when going to bed; when taking up a collection; when having the hair trimâ€" med; when being shampooed; when standing on the head.â€"Wichita (Kas.) Beacon Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. Diphtheria is spread by the common house fly. Wilson‘s Fly Pads are the best fly killers known. Refuse unsatisâ€" factory substitutes. "Yes," said Dubley, sentimentally "this is a lock of Mabel Browne‘s hair Although she rejected me I still trea squre it," "Really?" remarked Newitt. "By the way, you haven‘t seen _ Mabel lately, have you*" "No. Whyt" "Well, you‘d better have that lock bleached."â€"Philadelphia Inquirer. Directions tor Making Iced Tea Warm the teapot. Put in a heaping teaspoonful of "Salada" Tea for every two cups. Pour on freshly boiled water and allow to infuse from 6 to 8 minâ€" utes. Pour the liquor off ‘the leaves and let cool. "Salada" Tea iced is a most delicious and refreshing be n 1 allke small piece of lemon wiuwmeto its flavor. all unhurt, Looking toward the house PAts. Tucker saw all of it swept away except the floor, But the bed still stood where it did before the storm and her husband was still lying upon it, without a scratch.â€"Smi‘h County Pioneer. After tne storm Mrs. Tucker found herself about fifty yards away, two Mtâ€" tle girls down in the bed of the creek, the little boy siiting on & pile of straw, all unhurt. Looking toward the house Freak of a Kansas Storm. A curious freak of the tornado took place on the Tucker farm. Mr. Tucker, who was lying in bed with a broken leg, could not run to a place of safety when the storm was seen coming. His wife gathered the three little children and they all piled on the bed with Mr. Tuckâ€" er, the wife saying that if all were killed they would die together. hand and wrist bitten and badly mangled by a vicious horce. I suffered greatly for several days, and the tooth cuts reâ€" fused to heal until your agen‘t gave me a bottle of MINARD‘S Ll;filfl.s:;‘, which I began using. The effect was magical; in five hours the pain had ceased and in two weeks the wounds had completely healed and my hand and arm were as well as ever Minard‘s Liniment Breeden, eer. Get the genuine Wiison‘s; killers compare with them bad 25¢. botties. â€" Refuse substitutes PUTNAM‘S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR in You can painlessly remmere '.;n}'â€"cT)fii.'eTli.}fr hard, soft or bleeding, l-{‘ applyIng Putnam‘s Corn Extractor. 1t never buras, leaves no scar, CORVTN S 8t. Antoine, P. Q After existing in ALWAYS, 1&&&:&:“&:0&.5 Washboards ; the Features of the " The Crimp and the Consequence " is the title of a Mighty Interâ€" h har e m e You were having a quarrel with th secuting witness, were you not?" sai judge. in an effort to straighten ou Time, the Wonder Worker judg mpli Making Literature National Dish By Way of Comparison Lifting the Hat thing to eat," said a San Francisco n ba room and kitchen can be flies by using Wilson‘s irected on each package. Yours truly, A. E. ROY, Carriage Maker WB w of Brazil South icht a IN 24 HOVRS CURED no other ily LnaY 1 xPDel ne worser rican The fellow hung his head. : ry to have wounded him, but I oughly tired of this cultivati esoteric to no effect upon pr fairs.â€"Detroit Free Press, "I can call spirits from deep!" exclaimed the mystic "But can you find a polic you want him?" I demanded, ture of impatience. Three packets of Wilson‘s Fly Padse cost twentyâ€"five cents, and will kill more fliees than twentyâ€"five dollars‘ worth of sticky paper. Vered the cellar, a gaunt, gray animal, with haggrard eyes, and despair engrayâ€" ed on every feature, was found still making strenuous efforts to attain its object. ‘The wheel was still spinn« ad the cyclometer marker 28 mileq.'?l was probably very little camfort to the little beast that it had made a record tered the cellar, a The Mouse Bicycle Record. Just fancy a mouse with a bicycle face! Yes, really! About the time the whecling fad was on the wane a certain lady enthusiast had her wheel slung from the ceiling in the cellar. One night a mouse ran down the ropes on an exploriniexfedition. and presently land. ed on the front wheel. His weight caused it to revolve, and the harder he tried to clamber up to the top of the waeel the faster it went round. In (h: morning, when the servant enâ€" HNere Singe 1851. ____ No Difference. "It was not a divided household, though it may seem #o." "How *" "The mother brought the children up, while the father had to take them down occasionally"â€"Philadelphia ‘Times. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. u-l it Tells the Kind of Crimp is the Better Crimpâ€"AND WHY. z_': You are Interested, a Postâ€" will this Littie § Ask Yourseif â€"Why not let us You a Copy Toâ€"day ? of the Better Crimp. Heâ€"Oh, Annabel, when we are seated thus, with my arms around you, I am the happiest of mortals! The Parrotâ€"Oh, there are others! M achanme,. . ~:* ~ â€" or mice rying a very unprepossessing woman. "Why hast thou got spliced, lad, at thy age*" one of his friends asked him. "Oh, that‘s not much of a tale," anâ€" swered the old man. "I agree wi‘ ye ‘a Betsy yonder is no beauty; if she had been, 1 shouldn‘t have wed her. But that there dog 0‘ mine, he was simply pining for some one to look after him while I was away at the pit. I couldn‘t bear to leave him in the house by hissen, so I hit on the idea of marrying Betsy. She‘s not ‘andsome, but she‘s might good company for t‘ dog.”â€"Purson‘ Weekly. prizes; animals An old children troubl« blame the child, help it. This tr and aged people ficulties by day bedâ€"wetting. There is a constilutonal cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sumâ€" mers, Box W. 8, Windsor Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatmsent, with full instrutions, Send no money, but write her toâ€"day if your The E. B. Eddy Co., the « ing t the rai« ASK Fror trbov‘s marcrrs In the ursing ained flavor. The big black plug chewing tobacco. BETTER THAN SPANK!ING. Waitch ":;} Black &« JssUFE N Why the Parrot Was So\ .. ainkir eficreney n y s expenses that mplish e child, the chances are it can‘t This treatmont also ewres adults | people troubled with wrine difâ€" by day or night. rprised Dog‘s north of nsc est Or ided him, but I was thos [ this cultivation of the effec'.__npon practical afâ€" Esoteric. uen shir find a policeman when I demanded, with a gesâ€" and the Features { England, where rabbit at sport, swift, wellâ€" en win large sums in ntly the owners of these much attention on them. <p 4@&â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Company pleasing richness the vasty t, well« sums in of these on them. known of al w# aged in t} those | wh fire excit« ginning that 1= modatic that an the ma w Lady Gave Up Ch to Three Ch plica and that pract wher comy dook: M# it Extent of the Dis Heip Being 1 hon fas @1 the AU ed Winnij through V Nest Pa=> th Lata eweep and ©xJ* .” than can © who were not «cenes qrobably of this co that matt T cannos CC these. 1¢s <Of to save egniy are thr them i she evi not see ©uels ti ti flagratio @] to des just in 1 d _ + neat lfit‘d!e y owaks ib the cars greight 1 ing to « waere i men, des their liv aVelle 4 bers in 4 searcel v fishnes there . "~Om« in the heve Ti were se ai the P Mor Moere Pm RIGCHT S OF FERYI OfA Winnip y wccount €C Th it waty @Ano w Y Jtal w oism of Trein | Train Load «© sil VE FERNIE + Mn ® 1t t Rocok id o+ H

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