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Durham Review (1897), 20 Aug 1908, p. 6

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3 eez D flgs&'é/} W On H W ifter reading the w1 a dollar a cor Monarchs of tha 90 4 t h ement, inclu five thousa rineipal salo sumptuousl y is stately a ueting halls Purity of The Green Inn th NA n liner is indeed _ a : vessel. Instead of ‘commodation of one he largest of these as have ample space ncluding passengers musand or more perâ€" saloons are magnifiâ€" y decorated pilâ€" ind as imposing s of almost any Briton W ishingt on along H H 41 the ‘‘"‘It was an anxious moment," said Bismark, "a moment on the decision of which the fate of the empire deâ€" pended. I confess I felt not a little nervous. I looked at Moltke, who sat quietly on his horse and did not seem to be disturbed by what was going on around us. I thought I would test whether he was really as calm nax appeared. I rode up to him and OS him whether I might offer k#m a cigar, since I noticed that he was not smoking. He replied that he would be glad if T had one to spare. I preâ€" sented to him my open case, in which there were only two cigars, one a very good Havana and the other of rather poor quality. _ : ‘Moltke looked at them and even handled them with great attention, in order to ascertain their relative value, and then with slow deliberation chose the Havana. ‘Very good,‘ he said, composedly. This reassured me ve‘y ‘Then he came to speak of the batâ€" tle of Koeniggraetz, and especially of that "anxious moment" in it before the arrival of the Crown Prince in the rear of the Austrians when some Prussian attacks had failed and there were signs of disorder among the reâ€" pulsed troops. p In telling in the August ‘MeClure‘s‘ of an interview with Bismark in 1867, in which they discussed the Austrian war, Carl Schurz says: Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. earnest word _ _â€"__ 4 £ Between the idle talk, Lest with thee henceforth, night and day, Regret should walk that toâ€"morrow comes? C Men have been known to lightly turn the corner of a street. And days have frown to months jand months to lagging years Ere they have looked in loving eyes again. Parting at best is underlaid with tears and pain, Therefore, lest sudden death should come between, Or time or distance, clasp with pressure firm The hand of him who goeth ferth, Unseen, Fate goeth, too; Yea, find thou always time to say some may be, Press thou his hand in thine. How can‘st thou tell how far from theo Fate or caprice may lead his steps ere In Parting With Friends. If thou dost bid thy friend farewell, But for one aight though that farewell All Druggists, Grocers and general stores sell Wilson‘s Fly Pads. Into two quarts of rich, sweet milk pour oneâ€"half pint of strawberry juice, sugar to make quite sweet, and a little lemon juice or rose water for flavoring. Beat to a froth with an egg beater and set on ice until time to serve. Just beâ€" fore serving, stir in one pint of bleached and pounded almonds sthat have been soaked in orange juice. Serve in small glasses. Bismark‘s Test of Von Moltke One and oneâ€"half ounces vanilla or strawberry syrup, oneâ€"half ounce each of lemon and orange syrup, add four ounces of shaved ice and some plain waâ€" ter. Shake, drain, fill with white soda water or seltzer and mix. Ome ounce pinapple syrup, oneâ€"half glass shaved ice. Draw into 12 ounce glass, fill with soda, stir, add spoonful erushed strawberry, top with slice of orange, serve with straws, or draw ounce of syrup into eight ounce glass; add large spoonful of either canned or fresh grated pineapple, fill with shaved ice, stir, serve with spoon. it; then fill each glass oneâ€"fourth full of shaved ice. Homeâ€"made Ginger Ale. Home made ginger ale is liked by many and it is easily prepared. To one ;um of boiling water add one cupful of orto Rico molasses, one tablespoonful of pulverized ginger, stir well and put in a cool place until you wish to serve Frosted Coffee. A beverage that is a favorite with men is frosted coffee, and have it hot. Fill a glass full of shaved ice, one heap ing teaspoonful of powdered sugar. Pour the hot coffee over and pile high with whipped cream. Summer Tea. Brew some fairly strong tea and add it to a rich lemonade, Pour into glasses, oneâ€"half full of claret and ice. The comâ€" mingling fluids make a delightful beverâ€" Egg Lemonade. Make a thin syrup by boiling one and oneâ€"half pints of water with two cupâ€" fuls of sugar, Add the grated rind of one lemon and juice of two. Cool with ice. Just before serving whip lightly in two eggs beaten separately and a small quantity of bicarbonate of soda. Serve while foaming. Summer Delight. For a quart of strong lemonade allow & half pint of bottled grape juice or home made sweet grape wine, and two tablespoonfuls of shredded pineapple, if freah is not swnilable. And, if in seaâ€" son, crushed .rawberries. Stir well; serve with crushed ice and seluzer or mineral water. Ailasica Snowball. White and yolk of one egg, on@e4*‘@ ounce lomon syrup, oneâ€"hbail ounce orâ€" ange syrup, oneâ€"half ounce raspberry syrup, oneâ€"half ounce fresh cream, one tumblerful shaved ice. Shake well in milk shaker, then add one tumblerful plain soda. Stir and serve with straws. Pineapple Sherbet Creol: Syllabub. Persian Sherbet â€"Coventry Patmore _ Etssemanâ€"Well, of all things. Th Heg of his accusing me of making a lie out of the whole clothâ€"â€"â€" Peppreyâ€"Yes, the idea! Klosemanâ€"Ridiculous, isn‘t it Peppreyâ€"Oh, very. Evidently he doesn‘t know how economical you are.â€"â€" Philadelphia Press. The Parsonâ€"I intend to pray that you may forgive Casey for throwing that brick at you. The Patientâ€"Mebbe yer riv‘rence ‘ud be saving toime if ye‘d just wait tll Oi git well, and then pray for Casey.â€" Sloper‘s. "Oh, but I‘m sure ffiey pleased!"â€"London Opinion. "Indeed, the audience did not seem to think so. They did not applaud a bit when I came off the stage." Tomâ€"No; I‘ve been both life insurance agent and book canvasser.â€"Pickâ€"Meâ€"Up. "Jove! You acted awf‘ly well last night Stellaâ€"Started your campaign? Bellaâ€"Yes, I‘ve announced that I won‘t accept any ring costing more than $10,000.â€"New York Sun. Tomâ€"I‘m going to ask your father toâ€" night for your hand. Tessâ€"But you don‘t seem to be a bit nervous. We Journey Free. Even as a rose, Fulfilled of beauty and desire, Lets fall its petals one by one, The good day goes. Subsides with mellower _ note the wave‘s long swell; The twilight gathers in the dell, And all hues melt in one. A small bird tops His cedar on the cliff And in the listening quict of the copse Thrills forth his evensongâ€"Tis evenâ€" ing‘s ownrâ€" The rest, the peace, The strife of day outgrown. We know the sign and heed the low command; And hand in hand, Bearing our treasure safe above the blight And waste of yearsâ€"the slow surâ€" cease Of Life‘s full fountâ€"we journey free With trust in the great Mystery. Toward the fastâ€"coming night. â€"Annie Whitney. Their laughter and noise can be heard half a mile. But every one nods or responds with a smile, Pd far rather ride with this Manâ€" wouldn‘t you? Than dwell with the "Woman who lived in a Shoe." You cannot Are singing are. Just flying around, like the wind, on the Some morning you‘ll see themâ€"oh, such _ _ _ a big load, And as for the children, there‘s room for each one. (They all are so happy, so brim full of fun!) What sport by the roadside to pienic each dayâ€"â€" Pick berries and flowersâ€"then up and away ! A little Old Man, who is popular here, Has a way of his own, that is almost as queerâ€" His house is not mostly of leatherâ€"but steel; And, innt.ca:d of a Shoe, it‘s an Automoâ€" bile. As all of her children were supple and young, #% 1 She packea them in closely, pulled up the shoe‘s tongue, And then laced the shoestrings across, very tight, And her children all slumbered until it was light. What would we all do if she lived in these days? Does it pay to add to the comfort and happiness of our selves and those about us by being brighter and more cheerful ourselves?â€"Succesa for July. Does it pay to get rid of so narrow prejudices, hatreds ousies that are encouraged strenuous city life? Minard‘s Liniment Cures Listemper. o Lt d‘ Ne mm Does it pay to get rid of ging, rasping disf)osition so can attract people instead ing them? il0es it pay to renew the buoyancy and lighthcartedness, the spontaneity and enthusiasm of youth? Does it pay to get in tune with the Infinite by drinking in the medicinul‘ tonic from the everlasting hills? I Does it pay'vi ?t)wtâ€"';r:e‘;ut..f;é and lighthcartedness, the s and ent_husiasn_x of youth? _Does it pay to put iron into the blood and absorb â€" granite strength from the everlasting «hills? Does it pay to ié-tfl:'n;;"g.;i;; ".;': life and to J:)uble your power to do good work? 197 c dbetiinne ut teric: anbd Will a fresh, vigorous brain serve you better than a fagged, jaded oneâ€" Does it pay to exchange flaceid stifâ€" fexled muscles for strong, elastic ones Do you want to get rid of the sears an'd stains of }he year‘s campaign? _ Does it pay to regain your lost con fidence by upbuilding your healthâ€" Does it pay to get a firmer grip on your business or profession? Does it nay to increase your eras tive power and originality? Does it pay to sip power from its very fountain head? Supposed to be Smileable. much. I thought if Moltke can beâ€" stow so much time and attention upon the choice between two cigars things cannot be very bad. Indeed, a few minutes later we heard the Crown Prince‘s guns, we observed unâ€" steady and confused movements on the Austr‘an positions, and the battle W&s wom 20868 &. pay to regain your cheerfui reac mistake them, for all in the and shouting wherever they 109 is a Vacation Pay? to get rid of your nagâ€" HEoPAGET C IZ rid of some of our hatreds and jealâ€" couraged by the ition so that you instead of repel! were awi‘ly tion, fibroid tumors, nreiuh rities, periodic pains, backache, that bearâ€" ingâ€"down feeling, flatulency, indigesâ€" r‘lgg, dézzix’atess or tnex"iv';o;l.s prostration. y don‘t you try § Mrs. Plnihum invites all sick women to write her for advice. she has sulded thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. For thirty flears Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Comgound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ill and has positivelycuredthousandsc?f women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceraâ€" *i heartil’y' recommend Lydia K Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound for all women‘s ailments, knowing what it has done for me." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. "Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound completely cured me of all my troubles. f gained in flesh, and am free from backache, female trouble, sick headaches, and nervousness, "I was very much run down in health from a female trouble, was thin, nervous, and very weak, and suffered from bearing down fcins Indeed I did not care whether I lived or died, I felt so badly sometimes. n Wt More proof that Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound cures female ills. Mrs. John Scott, 489 Grand Trunk St., Montreal, writes Mrs. Pinkham : INSULTING. First Girlâ€"Is that your brother? Second Girlâ€"Pardon me, but do I look like a girl who can‘t get no one but her brother to take her out? Mlle. (Genee, the ballerina, says of dancing: "To dance well one must love to dance,. Gloomy dancers don‘t, I‘m sure, dance for the love of it. They make me think of a French prince who waltzed at a State ball thrice rumning with a pretty matron. Though he danced exeâ€" crably,. the matron was flattered, and when the prince claimed a fourth waltz she smiled and said: ‘Thank you, sir, for this marked compliment.‘ ‘I don‘t inâ€" tend it as a compiiment,‘ the prince anâ€" swered. She bit her lip. ‘Then,‘ she said, ‘you must be very fond of dancing.‘ ‘I detest dancing,‘ he said. ‘May I ask, prince,‘ pursued the lady, ‘why you dance?" ‘Madame,‘ he answered stiffly, ‘if you must know, I dance to perspire.‘" The New York American of Doc. 18th, 1907, says the common house fly is one of the greatest enemies of man. It is a solemn scientifically ascertained fact that he is one of the worst disseminators of disease known, far surpassing the mosquito in this respect. Wilson‘s Fly Pads will kill many times more flies than any other article. Tall chimneys emitting smoke _ that carries moisture with it are more often struck than other objects, barns conâ€" taining hay that gives off moisture by evaporation, and porous tree barks are frequently struck.> For the asme reason ice houses are more attractive to lightâ€" ning than other storehouses.â€"Suburban Life. Fire insurance me nestimate that 40 per éent. of barn fires are due to lightâ€" ning, 10 to 15 per cent. to carclessness, 8 to 12 per cent. to overehated flues, the balance to other causes, including incendiarism, _ According to the report of the weather bureau of the departâ€" ment of agriculture for 1900, the total number of strokes of lightning in 1899, which caused damage, was 5,527, the number of buildings injured 6,256, value of property dost $3,016,520, npmber of deaths by lightning 563, number of perâ€" sons injured 820, number of live stock killed in the field 4.251. No other household remedy so uniâ€" versally advertised carries upon the label the principal active constituents, showing that Peruna invites the full inspection of the critics. the disease. The only trouble is the remedy. ‘This doctor has tried to cure them. ‘That doctor has tried to preâ€" scribe for them. The fact is, chronic catarrh is a disâ€" ease which is very prevalent, Many thousand people know they have chroniccatarrh. They have visited doeâ€" tors over and over again, and been told that their case is one of chronic catarrh. It may be of the nose, throat, lungs, stomach or some other internal organ. There is no doubt as to the nature of dies, Becond, wellâ€"known and generâ€" aly acknowledged tonis remedies. That in ouwe or the other of these uses they have stood the test of many years‘ experience by physicians of different schools, There can be nodispute about this, whatever, Peruna is composed of some of the most efficacious and uniâ€" versally used herbal remedics for caâ€" tarrhal diseases, and for such conditions of the human system as require a tonic. Each one of the principal ingredients of Peruna has a reputation of its own in the cure of some phase of catarrh or &s a tonic medicine. Should a list of the ingredients of Peâ€" runa be submitted to any medical exâ€" pert, of whatever school or nationality, he would be obliged to admit without reserve that the medicinal herbs comâ€" posing Peruna are of two kinds. First, standard and wellâ€"tried catarch romeâ€" Is Peâ€"ruâ€"na Useful for Catarrh? Why He Danced Lightning Strokes ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO man ?" "I am," answered Diogenes. "What is the lantern for?" "That‘s to test him with. I am going to lend him the lantern, and if he brings that back I‘m going to try him with an umbrella."â€"Washington Star. At last, however, she turned her head slowly and looked at the other members of the party. _ eA Cw o But there was one young woman in the box party at the theatre who took no part in the noisy chatter and giggle. With her gaze fixed upon the stage she watched the progress of the play, indifferent to the gayety around her, except that her delicate, aristocratic, finely chiscled features bore a look of weariness and a scornful smile curved her lips. _ A fl e m Then she spoke to the elderly matâ€" ron sitting by her side. "Some mulattoes I know of, one a prominent Wall street broker, _ have ‘crossed the line, by declaring that they are Mexicans, Brazilians, Spanish or French: one says he is an Armenian. Under a foreign nhme they are readily accepted among white people where as negroes they would be instantly rejectâ€" ed. No one of course can estimate the number of men and women with negro blood who have thus gone over to white ; but it must be large." "‘That girl in the blue kimono," she said, "thinks she‘s the whole custardâ€"" "Only a few days ago the newspapers were filled for a day or two with the story of a girl who had been at Vassar College and upon graduation by merest accident it was discovered that she was a negro, A similar case arose only last summer at Chicago University. _ "In Philadelphia there lives a colored woman who married a rich white man. Of course no white people know she is colored, but the negroes do and do hot tell. Occasionally she drives down to a certain store, dismisses her carriage and walks on foot to the home of her mothâ€" er and sisters. "‘Let me carry your bag,‘ said the porter, ‘I won‘, give you away‘ According to Mr. Baker, "a New York man who holds a prominent political apâ€" pointment under the State Government and who has become an authority in his line, is a negro. Not long ago he entered a hotel in Baltimore and the negro porâ€" ter who ran to take his bag said disâ€" creetly : "‘Hello, Bob.‘ "As bors they had gone to the same negro school. azine of a supposed white actr;s, -;:r?' well known who oceasionally pays a seâ€" cret visit to her colored relatives in Bosâ€" An Actress, a Politician, a Broker, a College Girl Among Tnem. It is said that the number of mulatâ€" toes who pass as white is much larger than is commonly supposed. Ray Stanâ€" nard Baker says he knows of "scores of them." He tells in the American Magâ€" poemirltey enc nds . Sls NEGROES WHO PASS AS WHITES Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. What are man‘s greatest pleasures? While the great thinkers of thought have been publicly trying to answer this allâ€"imâ€" portant cuestion, and as usual have only inâ€" volved a mere intellectual controversy, we have been working quietly and have obtainâ€" ed4 some startling results. Here is the list com;lete: Hearing ourselves talk. Articulating. IAstening to ourselves. Ejaculating. Sociking.~ ng. And last, but not least, Talking.â€"From The Bchemian. So you are still looking for an honest "Fill another one for your feet, and if you aren‘t comfortable in a little while you feel the heat worse than.I do." â€"Detroit Free Press. "When I want to spend a comfortâ€" able night and dodge the discomfort of a hot feather pillow that seems hotter than the sun soaked asphalt, I get out my three quart bot water bag. I fill it with ice water, not too full, but just so it‘s a little soft. Then wrap a smooth towel around it, and there‘s the finest hot weather pillow that ever was. ! "You hear a lot of talk these hot | davs about the troubles folks have in _ getting to sleep," said the fat man who stays in town all summer, "The trouble | with them is that they don‘t know how | to keep cool." t His remarks aroused _ the chronic | kicker, \ _"Sounds fine to me," he remarked. "You tailk as if you really knew someâ€" thing. Perbaps you‘ve got a cold air current piped down from Greenland onâ€" to your bed or have your pillows stuffâ€" ed with cracked ice. I don‘t suppose your pillow ever gets all sticky on these huâ€" _mid nights when there isn‘t a breath _of air stirring; mine does, and I‘ll tell you you can‘t beat it. If you can, isesen up. We‘re listening. What‘s the answert" "Hot water bag," replied the fat man. A_ chorus of jeers greeted this remark, so bhe went on to explain. "I don‘t #uppose it ever penetrated your thick skulls, did it," he asked that there.are more than a few uses for a hot water bag? Never took one to bed with you in the winter, did you, when your room was so cold that the sheets seemed freezing together and put it at your feet? "Never did enough thinking with that idea factory of yours, did you, to realâ€" ize that a hot water bag can be a cold water bag just as well? Fact. F Way to Keep Cool These Hot Nights Says Fat Man. Chewing Tobacco Rich and satisfying. The big black plug. Black Watch Her Superb Disdain. MAXN‘S GREATEST PLEASURES TRY COLD WATER BAG. Terrible Tests. For many physical researches a perâ€" fectly noiselesss room is a desideratum. If such could be devised it would open out new possibilitiesof research, At the University of Utrecht ‘the problem has been apparently successfully solved by the room â€" designed by Zwaardemaker, The walls and ceiling ‘of the room are eleven inches thick, and are formed of six separate layers. The first consists of a feltlike material of horsehair, known as trichoplese, this is followed by a layer of porous stone isolated from the floor by sheet lead. An air space of about an inch is followed by wood, and then a course of ground cork and sand, The final layer is of specially prepared ground cork, known as corkstein.â€"From the London Globe. ‘"There is only one oneâ€"word epitaph in this country," he said, hanging his tape across his shoulders. ‘It is in the town of Worcester. I believe it is quite a drawing card. Holidayâ€" makers come to see it from miles around." ‘"The epitagh consists of the word ‘Gone." A Worcester auctioneer la dying. He whispered to his wife witg a quiet smile: "I‘ve been ‘"Going, going," all my life. Now I‘ll soon be ‘"Gone." Put that on my tombstone dear. That one word “éone" only.‘ “"The I\'uvife complied," concluded the nndarta lraw ‘"‘The wife com 1)-l-iiel‘l\ undertaker. The Shortest Epitaph. (Philadelphia Bulletin.) The undertaker paused in hi: urements. Your dining room and kitchen can be kept free from flies by using Wilson‘s Fly Pads as directed on each pack: Get the genuine Wilson‘s; no other.m NESIL s css s NOCE ce / un killers compare with them ) CC TTVE W °T to be eccentric. 9e Because it seems to be one of the reâ€" quirements of civil service, Because I will not feed well unless he is well fee‘d. Because if I didn‘t tip him he might tip the soup.â€"Boston Transcript, self Why 1 Tip My Waiter. Because he holds a good deal ove head. Because I detest being a waiter Llre Because a little change is good for the poor fellow. _ COLORATOR is the only preparation that really restores GRAY or FADED HAIR to its original color, All drugâ€" gists, $1. Confidential advice given, Xg- dress the Colorator Corporation, 179 King streot west, Toronto. GRAY HAIR A DISFASE "An* to know "what for new soldier man catchee cloths alle same missis?" which recalls the story of the Russian Crimean veteran who declared that the best fighters in the British Army were the women.â€"Santa Fe Mexican. According to all accounts, the arrival of the Cameron Highlanders in Pekin to replace the Middlesex Regiment as legaâ€" tion guards has created something of a sensation among the inhabitants, . ‘The kilt is a source of great wonderment. The China Times asserts that the natives are hard at work trying to assimilate the Scotch language, "They are reportâ€" ed as already _ making favorable proâ€" gress. Instead of their favorite expresâ€" sion, ‘me no savee,‘ they now employ *L dinna ken,‘ and they greet the foreigner with ‘Guid manin‘‘ with _ an excellent Auchtermuchty accent." _ Jt is added that some Chinese compradores, who are | men of an exquisitive _ turn of mind, want to know "what for new soldier man catchee cloths alle same missis?" which recalls the story of the Russiam Because I bought a horse with a supposedly in curable ringbone for $30, Cured him wit} $1.00 worth of MINARD‘S LINIMENT and sold him for $85. Profit on LINiâ€" ment, $54.00. _ â€" Silas Whipperwill had not been in colâ€" lege nfbre than a month until he began using all the student slang in addition to university mannerisms& Then he wrote his father like this: "Dear Father,â€"This college game is certainly expensive. I can‘t stay in it without more cash. It is hard .to get good results without the necessary money. 1 am a stranger here and my credit is no good. Your lovinq son, "Bilas." By the next mail he received this: "Dear Silas,â€"Quit the game. Your father never could play poker, so I don‘t see no use in your trying to win. Your loving "Fathor," â€"From the Bohemian. You can painlessly remove any com, elther hard, soft or bloedh’ng. b{) -pply{ng Putnam‘s Corn Extractor, It never burns, leaves no scar, contains no acids ; is harmless because composed only of healing gums and baims. Flft&' years in use. Cure guaranteed. Sold by all druggists 25¢. bottles. Refuse substitutes. PUTNAM‘S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR ALWAYS, CVErywnere CORNS CURED is the title of a Mighty Interâ€" ing Little Bookiet on Washâ€" boards,tlutltalou‘;tfleen MOISE DER Hotel Keeper, St. Phillippe u&k*dhoh. ushboards ; the Festures of the * The Crimp and the Consequence " A Noiseless Room Highlanders in Pekin 1 am really not The College Game. successfully solved by med by Zwaardemaker, ceiling of the room are rich enough his measâ€" IN 24 HOUVRS over my It takes bravery to die f« and courage to lve with on tists declare the lastâ€"named istic less vrevalent than th "Are you related to the bride or groom elect?" asked the busy usher, "No." "Then what interest have you in the ceremony ?" "I‘m the defeated candidate."â€"Chrisâ€" tian Register, all. The source of all intestinal trow is the common house fly; his buzz is first symptom of typhoid. Wilson‘s Pad is the only thing that kills t La% Nere Singe 1851. Ask Yournelf _ LVncC.ytm; A popular idea used to prevail that all teas were pretty much alike, but "Salada" Tea is proping a pleasant ourâ€" prise to thousands ,of particular temâ€" drinkers, Sold by grocers every where. Ta on the back of your waist andâ€"_â€"‘" But with an arcticâ€"circle stare she ewept by him and George was alone. _ "Cracious. What is it you wish to tel} m6, NMr. Basswood ?" ‘"Wellâ€"erâ€"I don‘t know exactly how to go about it." ‘"Ob, don‘t be bashful." ‘‘Why, you seeâ€"* "Yes! Yes! Go abead, dear." "Erâ€"I brought you off from the crowd to hll‘vouz:o" ‘Yes, mae.‘ ‘ _ ‘"Toâ€"to tell you that there are two buttons "‘Iâ€"I have brought you here to toll you oomothlutbumtnononnymh some time," be whispered nervously . Visions of a romantic proposal flitted acâ€" ross her mind. ‘‘You have?" she answered coyly . ‘‘Yes, something I know will interest you.** Now she was almost looking for the gleam of the ring in his hand. _ *‘Gracious! What is it you wish to tel} ma. He led her away from the crush on the :mlnl( floor to a bench beneath an artificâ€" 1 was up to 8i Simlin‘s place and I thought all the mosquitoes in the wor‘lls must be in his front yard."â€" Washington Star. ‘"‘Well," answered Farmer Corntosâ€" sel, "I thought I was tellin‘ you corâ€" rect. I didn‘t believe they was any mosquitoes here. When I wrote that Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cown no mosquitoes at your place," said the visitor. ."RE.B.M Co., If you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment; and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with references from your own locality if requested, _ IJmmediate relief and perâ€" manent cure assured, Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write toâ€" day to Mrs. M. Bummers, Box P. 8, Windsor, Ont. PIL°S CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METMOD ~ ASK Por tbov‘s marcres An easy polish for the daily rubbing of the dining table is an emulsion made from two parts of table oil to one part of vinegar. This applied with a soft cloth or flannel and rubbed afterward with a dry one, will be found efficient in removing all ordinary stains. W To clean the ivory handles of knivés, mix ammonia and olive oil in equal parts, and add enough prepared chalk to make a paste. Rub the ivory with this, and let it dry before brushing off, Beyâ€" eral applications may be necessary. A gentle friction with emery paper will remove the shine from the shoulders and elbows of one‘s gown. _ Rub just enough to raise a little nap, and then go over with a warmed silk handkerchiet. "% thought you wrote me there were A piece of narrow webbing, such as is used in furniture, sewed on the inner side of ruge, will prevent the corners from curling. If absorbent cotton is applied at once when milk is spilled on a woollen dress or coat, all traces of the stain will be reâ€" moved. Worth Knowing. \a# Celery rubbed on the hands will reâ€"â€" move ge odor of onions. lIodine stains may be removed by wetâ€" ting them with strong unmom yyw. scenery, productive orchards, ideal climate For illustrated literature write to Mutrie & Mutric. real estate, Vernon, B.C. FARMS IN MANITOBA, . SASKATCHE: wan and Alberta; improved and wid Get our list, it‘s free. Write us. E. 8. Milâ€" ler, Limited, No. 217 Mclutyre Blosk, W.2â€" nipeg, Man. g MALL DRY GOODS SNOCK FOR SALE J A. J. Ford, Lindsay. ISSUE NG. 34, 1908 HIS IMPORTANT MESSAGE Goop INVESTMENT â€" OKANAGAN fruit land is a money maker. Beautiful How He Was Fooled. His Status, FARMS FOR SALE. A PLAINT FOR SALB, with one; all scien intestinal troubles (ly ; his buzz is the ed character the first. for a tone it is | nate turn relati the a F3Japa UTiERANC couxt ol LCaus a; â€" Stre.ucs â€" from Japai buting United aneso t er is @ntind 4 America ms Ou ting ns of al Jajpm real NiCW ® mask . ext! wl Ml® 'Ml b t m nat ta $J eV ON wWORKING JAPAN WILL MAKE MC TURN OF EMIGF P di Arrangements C sioner Drur Dh auQ i i Mn ing cla officials rivals t the agre Japanes ec in Turns. Th nit nt T adlia n shoulid Jay W hat ment Can anese Labo t 17 umbia 1t Ma . €$ Li y s p i JeP

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