West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Sep 1908, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

i1 aps. w H th Hiim of whom the whole family in heaâ€" ven and on earth is named. And yet, as we think of Him who remained spotless ainid all the defilements of earth, and whose whole life was one long act _ of selfâ€"denying service, finding its highes. expression in the Cross, we feel that we are yet only feeble beginners in the Chrisâ€" tiar life. Every day we yield to the lowâ€" er influences that surround us,. and too oiten are selfish in the spirit of our lives, Help us, our Father, to rise to higher heights that we may breathe a cleaner and a purer air. Hiy we . so eatch the spirit of our Divine Master, in all gentlemness and forgiveness and loving service, that men shall feel in our presence that Christ is not far away. Prayer. Our Father in Heave selves Thy children and school of Christ. We d Him A ry beach, on which she found Seizing this, she rushed bo water again, striking at th : the rod in order to save . ons. She ovehbalanced her at full length in the wats of the sharks seiz h and bit it off comparions dragge lied from loss of A pa (SySHY hone A} Where PT it rl Seized by a Shark mintry can n Enaland c come to when am be bat] tunity ¢ ive just : that ec ir â€" chure r.â€" Her had preached an eloquent serâ€" heaven,. A wealthy member ch met him the next day, Doctor, you told us a great d and beautiful things about terday, but you didn‘t tell Heaven Can be Found. xt f mecting is sacred; it ilways will be; fold withâ€" ly of holies. He hideth m policy, but from necesâ€" the past Darkness pastor, "I am glad f doing so this moi come from the hillt ttage there is a me m Wh sharks r tidat es they * ed her above d Miler blood. Da M h the balance of call them not not two sparâ€" The measures they have life. ‘arn one secret cret of separaâ€" ibas and Saul I have called ~run atand transactions arkness . we 1 fit for the in delineate t} it ut the outâ€" w small a the thunder stand ? th arners t vamance t to send the way; s painful. sacrificial n th NS t a sign. sanctuary ur thinkâ€" f thought Thought life shall life for M h there tions 1N morn mem f1 it t1 ULLV MiS h )fl atmospheric laxity none is more inâ€" teresting to a North American than the haziness of the color line. This land of coffee and sunshine is a land tingâ€" ed with African blood. Of the sevenâ€" teen and a half millions of people in the country only six millions are whites. There wore 750,000 slaves in Brazil when the Princess Regent emancipated them in 1887, and there are neighborhoods where the negro oblem is a _ problem _ only, K so _ far as life may be & problem to Africans in their naâ€" tive jungles. You go ashore, for inâ€" stance, to buy cigars at Bahis. It was a gre«: prace in the old slave days, before the centre of industry moved down to Sao Paulo, is a fine place still, with its tall stageâ€"scenery Of the .v atmospheric teresting to who enjoys the cup that cheers and doesâ€" n‘t give a hang whether it inebriates or not, was arraigned in the Taunton poâ€" lice court for getting extremely funny and picturesque on the public _ streets. Wherefore William explained thus: "I drank four Brockton cocktails and on my way home I looked up and saw a herd of elephants flying on pink wings, with baby blue ears, one eye and pink patches, When they lit on the telegraph wires and began to dance I got excited and when I came to I was in the station. Never again." We will leave it to competent judgos in Maine and Georgia to decide if Brockâ€" ton doesn‘t come close to the record for a prohibition town. Those Brockton cocktails must be like a Highland Holler, mixed with Virâ€" ginia Vision and a Southern Scream. But, considering it is a prohibition town, Brocktonm, Mass., certainly has disâ€" tinguished itself by its cocktails, sayâ€" the Baltimore Sun. One William Havot, | _ The law at present compels plumbers | to submit plans for alterations and new | buildings to the Drainage Division of the | Bureau of Health, and these plans must | be duly approved before any work is | done. _A similar law should be passed ’ governing the rental and sale of houses, sompelling the insertion in the lease or | deed of a clause, protecting the purchaser | or lessee from these evils. Renters | should demand from real estate agents | and owners a certificate to the effect that the house has been examined by the | health officials and that it is in good sanitary condition and free from contaâ€" : “On. _ Tuberculosis germs under favorable eonditions, such as the absence of light, live for a long time after the room has ceased to be occupied by a person sufâ€" fering with consumption. A great many ecases of consumption are contracted by healthy people moving into apartments that had previously been occupied by a person nu"erin,i with the disease. As an illustration, in ‘ebruary, 1907, the chairâ€" man of the committee of a certain home for incurablea where consumption is treated wrote to the Department that during the preceding few years about 25 applications from consumptives for adâ€" mission to the home were received from certain houses located on Monroe street, from Second to Fiithâ€"a larger number than had been received during that perâ€" iod from any other street in the city. A list of these houses was obtained, and all were thoroughly disinfected. Since that time there has not been d single apâ€" plication filed from any of these houses. | _ No sane person would move into a | house where there is a serious nuisance | piainly visible to the eye, or where there | are foul odors from im{:r'oct. o« improâ€" | per drainage, without having the owner ! sorrect ‘the trouble; yet a much graver | danger, that cannot be detected by the | senses, may exist in germs of contagious | diseases. |_ If the‘room or house has previously | been occupied by a person sufi@r;lzf from | contagioun diseases thorough disinfection 1‘ should be made before ocupancy. Teleâ€" phone or write to the Bureau of Health, | City Hall, where complete records are | kept of all contagious diseases reported | to the Bureau, and the desired iniorma- tion will be furnished. There will be a few houses where contagious diseases have occurred of which there is no reâ€" _cord, owing to failure of physicians to report them, although required to do so by act of Assembly. The responsibility ’ for loss of life from ‘their negléct must _be assumed by them. Upon application _such dwellings or rooms will be fumigatâ€" ed by the disinfectors of the Department, There is No Colior Line in Bâ€"azii l Fits, Epilepsy, St. Vitus‘® Dance, Nervous Troubles, Ete., positively cured by LIEBIG‘S FIT CURE. Fre: trial bottle sent free ca application. Write the LIEBIG CO., Phoebe St., Toronto. (Philadelphia Record.) Some timely suggestions or hints to persons about to move into new 2dmes are given in the weekly bulletin issued by Dr. Neiff, head of the Department of Heaith and Charities. _ Every one, he points out, should exercise the greatest care, in changing his domicile, in safeâ€" guarding against the contraction of disâ€" eases from which former residents of the houses may have suffered. In order to be certain of the cleanliness of the houses the Director suggests that inforâ€" mation as to former tenants be sought from his department, and ‘that it would be well to avoid a building recently ocâ€" cupied by a patient suffering from some contagious malady. In his warning the Director says: RENTERS‘ WARNING. Find a Honse‘s Health Record Beâ€" COCKTAIL WITH ALLING SICKNESS arious _ manifestations of fore You Move iIn. It is, I think, one of the most astoundâ€" ing facts in the history of man that a man was able to contain within his mind, to conecive, the conception of the Sphinx, says Robert Hichens in Century, That he could carry it out in the stone is amazing. But how much more amazâ€" ing it is that before there was the Sphinx he was able to see it with his imagination! One may criticize the Sphinx. One may say fmpertient things that are true about it; that seen from behind at a distance its head looks like an enormous mushroom growing in the sand; that its cheeks are swelled inorâ€" dinately; that its thinâ€"lipped mouth is legal, that from certain places it bears a resemblance to a prize bulldog. All this does not matter at all. What does matter is that into the conception and execution of the Sphinx has been poured a supreme imaginative power. He who created it looked beyond Egypt, beyond the life of man. He grasped the conâ€" ception of eternity, and realized the nothingness of Time, and he rendered it in stone. The Other Fellowâ€"Fine! Did the auâ€" dience ask you to come out? The Barnstormerâ€"Ask met Why, mo», they dared me! Enthusiasm. C The Barnstormerâ€"Great reception we had in Podunk! Great audience! I got & eurtain call! To hear the stormâ€"beat of applause Fill our desire When the dark Prompter gives us pause And we retire. Yet wistfully we keep the boards And as we mend The blundering forgotten words, Hope to the end. In front, unknown, beyond the glare Vague shadows loom; And sounds like muttering _ winds are there Foreboding doom. Before our eyes as we come on From age to age, £ Flare up the footlight of the dawn On this round stage. There is no record of the land From whence it came, No legend of the playwright‘s hand, No bruited fame. Of those who for the piece were In the first night, When God drew up His curtain vast And there was light. We are the ‘players of a play As old as carth, Between the wings of night and day, With tears of mirth. In Grove, near Lighton Buzzard, there are only about a dozen inhabitants, the parish containing a modern farmhouse, two cottages and a tiny church. At Rhyd, in Flintshire, while there are only three adult inhabitants, the village conâ€" tains five cottages and one shop. Till recently there were two licensed houses, one of which still remains.â€"Titâ€"Bits. For instance, Upper Eldon, near Stockâ€" bridge, consists of two houses, which with an eleventh century church and a tiny "God‘s Acre" in the middle of a farm yard adjoining one of the dwellâ€" ings comprise the whole parish. Not much larger is the })opu]ation of Lulâ€" lington, five miles from _ Eastbourne. Smail as the church isâ€"the interior diâ€" mensions are only sixteen feet square â€"it is quite large enough for the inhabâ€" itants. Only a Dozen Inhabitants in One; in Anâ€" other Only Two Houses. Probably few people know that Engâ€" land contains a number of parishes so small that their population can be housed under one or two roofs. If the cigarette when not between the lips is held with the lighted end downward three or four cigarettes a day are sufficient to leave their marks on the fingers of the emoker. The man, however, who always holds his cigarette with the lighted end ug- ward may emoke as many as 20 a day withâ€" out diecoloring his fingers. All artists and moust chess players who happen to be cigarâ€" ette smokers invariably hold their cigarettes with the lighted end down, and consequently seen to smoke far more than is actually the Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. In a recent County Court action, says the London Tatler, it was stated as evidence of the debtor‘s means that he was evidently a persistent umonr‘ The judge, however, reâ€" fused to listen to this novel story. All smokâ€" ers, of course. know that the unsightly sta{ns caused by cigarettes are not due so much to excessive smoking, as to the manner in which the cigarette is held in the fingers. of the ruling class.â€"From "Brazilâ€" Where the Coffee Comes From," by Arthur Ruhl, in the June Scribner. It is the Manner of Holding That Causes It. About oneâ€"third of Rio‘s population are negroes. From blacks who might have been landed from a slave sgip yesterday the African tinge fades out through every gradation of mixed blood up to that of the cultured whites the Dutch visitation of loxv agoâ€"ofâ€" ten decorated with tiles. You climb the narrow winding streets to the upâ€" per town, looking out on the turquoise sea. _ Ev here are negroesâ€"huge women, wix enormous chocolateâ€"colâ€" ored arms, in white cotton wrappers and turbans. _ They come swinging down the cobblestones, squat beside their fruits and green parrots, lean out of the groundâ€"floor windows smokâ€" ing fat black cigars. Try to take a photogtaph of one and her broad, shining face clouds over with fear of the unknown, and up goes her apron over her head. In the cool inâ€" teriors of these houses with spotless patios and doorways, white folks doubtless must be hiding from the sun,@but one scarcely sees them. Eighty per cent. of the inhabitants are negroes. You feel as though you were walking through a deserteg white man‘s city held by a black army of occupation. ‘ buildings, painted white ‘or pinkish or pale blue, the frontsâ€"an echo of STAIN OF THE CIGARETTE. SMALL ENGLISH PARISHES, White Native Africans x The Players. â€"Bliss Carman This advertisement is only for doubters. The great army of women who know from their own personal experience that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Xfifetable Compound for female ills still go on using and bem% benâ€" efited by it; but the poor doubting, suffering woman must, for her own sake,be taught eonfldencefiorshe also might just as well regain her health. Have th@g proof that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound has cured thousands of these women ? Come and See. Have they really got letters from over one million, one hundred thousand women correspondents ? Come and See. Was there ever such a person as II;‘vdja. E. Pinkbam, and is there :::Z rs. Pinkham now to whom si woman are asked to write ? Come and See. Is the vast private correspondence with sick women conducted by women only, and are the letters kept strictly confidential ? Come and See. Do the women of America continuâ€" ally use as much of it as we are told ? Come and See. Is it a purely vegetable compound made from roots and herbs â€" withâ€" out drugs ? Come and See. won is extended to a;xfione to come and verify any and statements made in the advertisements of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound. It means that public i%?:ction of the Laboratory and methods of doing business is honestly desired. It means that there is nothing about the busâ€" iness which is not *open and aboveâ€" board." , It means that a permanent invitaâ€" tion is extended to anyone to come This sign is permanently attached to the front of the main building of the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. What Does This Sign Mean ? It moans that nhlin inenaakion a# You get into your morning secondâ€" class compartment on the S. E. & C. Railâ€" way to come up to the office. You meet in the main the same nine other men every day. You do this for months, nay, years; but you never speak. If you venâ€" ture to make the bad, bold, rash experiâ€" ment, you are frozen to death with a look as if to say, "What the deuce do you mean by speaking to me?"â€"Grocer‘s Assistant. THE COME AND SEE SIGN As I got into bed. ; / â€" â€"Burges Johnson, in Harper‘s Magazine. PP oninintiants . i Bacaimliaant A â€" Aâ€"trying to dicide Which foot sha‘i go ahead, ‘Cause I‘m sure I‘d tumble dead i1 something ever grabbed my toes*~ And when there‘s nothing more to do, , _ With bed clothes open wide, It makes me shiver through and through ogeuk 07 oll I try to think of pleasant things Fack time I get undressed; And how each day no evil brings If children do their best. But the thought comes in my hes, As I‘m turning down the spread, That something‘s going to grab my When I climb into bed! When 1 get Into Bed. I‘m never frightened in the dark, Though I am very small; I never sit all scared, and hark For ogres in the hall. But when my prayers are said I have one awful dread, That something waits to grab my toes When I get into bed! ** A horrld isw h n ol rash came out all over my baby‘s face and spread until it had totally covered his scalp. It was irritating and painful, and caused the little one hours of suffering. We tried soaps and powders and saives, but he got no better. â€" He refused his food, got quite thin and worn, and was reduced to a very serious condition, > I was advised to try Zamâ€"Buk, and did so. It was wonderful how it seemed to cool and ease the child‘s burning, painful skin. Zamâ€"Buk from the very commencement seemed to go right to the spot, and the pimples and sores and the irritation grew less and less, Within a few weeks my baby‘s skin was healed completely, He has now not a trace of }nzh, Oor eruption, or eczema, or burning sore,. Not only so, but cured of the torâ€" )nentinr skin‘ trouble, he has improved in general health," _ Zamâ€"Buk is sold at all stores and medicine venâ€" (revices Ts grice Sinaw in $a e ‘Avorigs ons 'fm all skin dhsentes, cute, burns, eic., and for prigs. The English Way. <10 ARCHIVE TORONTO Many excellent voices are ruined, according to a communication which Dr. Weiss has made to the French Academie du Medecine, by practicâ€" ing in too small a room. A public singer must throw every i#ntonation of his voice a distance of 30 or 40 yards, he says, but a student practising in # small room is only able to throw it a yard or two and the consequence is that the voice, instead of expandâ€" ing, becomes telescoped. The German (producing the adverâ€" tisement and reading it aloud)â€"*"For sale, von almost new bedroom suit, cheab! Gall and see it.‘"â€"From the January Bohemian. Ruthless Treatment. "What makes you think that man dislikes music?t" Boardingâ€"house Mistress (indignantâ€" ly)â€""Pajamas! You old fool, do you think this is a department store? Where is the advertisement?" Elderly German (of the Weber and Field Type, as he calls at a lodging house door)â€"*"Gind lady, I saw, yes, der advertisement in _ der evening paper dat you have a pair of pajamas to sell, yes?"‘ "The manner in which he whistles a tune."â€"Washington Star, 8 "Why, Uncle Sam. Doesn‘t he charge me 2 cents an ounce for‘all the poems I send out? Isn‘t that firstâ€"class matter?" â€"Chicago News. "Indeed, miss. And may I you consider the highest a the land ?" The Judge of the Land. "But these poems appear to be medio ere," remarked the blunt editor, "the; are secondclass." "I‘ll leave it to the highest authority in the land that they are firstâ€"class," reâ€" torted the pretty verse scribbler, inâ€" dignantly, rhought He Could Buy Them C reap "The fact is," explained the father, "he always had ‘em during the holidays."â€" Harper‘s Weekly. On one occaion the proud father was asked to explain how this apparently impossible feat had been accomplished. "Did he have thoe usual childish diseases â€"measles, hooping cough and so on * the father was asked. uo' yefl." "How, then, could he have always been at school?" Fun tor the Boy. The parents of a Baltimore lad, a pupil in one of the public schools, are fond of bossting that their hopeful has never missed a day‘s attendance at school durâ€" ing a period of eleven years. A farmer wrote as follows to his home newspaper: "When i «1 ready to sell my stuff I insert a little adverâ€" tisement in the local paper telling. the people what 1 have to sell, and if live stock, how many head of each and when they will be ready to ship. The result has been that the buyers aze right after me, either personally or by mail, and naturally 1 always get the highest price. If i want to buy a cow, a steer, a horse, or a dozen of each, 1 insert a little ad. that costs me may be 25 or 30 cents, and instead of travellnig over the country inquiring of my neighâ€" bors who have this or that for sale, the newspaper does it for me at less expense, and those who have what 1 want Painâ€" age to let me know in some way.. OI1 save the time and expense of travelling aimlessly about and get a better selac. tion to choose from." ~Newsâ€"Times, Maâ€" roa, Il!, DR. AUNT‘S BUST DEVELOPER Times Ask the treasurer the significance of the placard, and he will say simply: "Just keep smiling. That makes everyâ€" thing easy. That‘s what smiles are for. A good, unfeigned, sincere smile is a veritable batteringâ€"ram to knock hard things out of the way. Sometimes 1 simile out loud, all to myself, when 1 run against anything hard; and the inâ€" vitation is out to whoever enters my door. 1 take it that people will smile as they read the card, and 1 want them to continue the act while in here!" He tells of a visitor who came to see him last winter, a Bcotchman, who had served in India in the army. "My dear sir," said the visitor, "I am greeting that legend heartily. Many years ago, when the plague was raising 1 was in Calcutta, and sick. ‘The hospitals were full, and with other patients 1 was 1yâ€" ing in a shed, a very sick man. _ On each side of me a poor chap had died, when a man came around with one of . the doctors to measure the bodies. As / they finished the second fellow‘s meaâ€" . surement they looked at me, and the man said: "Three of ‘em, heigh?" and whipped out his tape measure at my side. In spite of all effort, I could only stare. To save myWlife I couldn‘t speak or move. All I could do was to smile, and 1 just smiled. Instead of the meaâ€" suring line I was given better attention, and recovered. The smile did it! That‘s right! ‘Keep _ smiling!‘"â€"Hartford What It Did for a Scotchman in Calâ€" cutta During Plague. (On the door leading into the private ofiice of the treasurer of one of the liartford banking institutions may be seen by all comers a plain white card, on which are these two words: "Keep Smiling." Pric THE VALUE OF A SMILE. How One Farmer Does It Telescoped Voices I ask whom authority in young The next day Mary was again playing with the kitten, and again trouble arose, when she was heard to remark: "You is just the same kind of a kitten you was yesterday!"â€"The Delineator. utter such a naughty word again; and to be sure to impress it on her mind washed her anouth out with soap and water. "I say, huve you heard that Smith has failed ?" "What _ Smith?" queried the whole fifty, one after another; and it was deâ€" cided that the bet had been fairly won. â€"Philadelphia Inquirer. Little Mary was playing with her pet kitten. The kitten scratched her, and she exclaimed, "You is a darned old kitty!" Ier mother told her she must never Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia, A witty individual one morning wagerâ€" ed that he would ask the same question of fitty different persons and Feceive the same answer from each,. The wit went to first one and then to another, until he had reached number fifty, And this is how he won the bet. He whispered halt audibly to each: Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandraff After a theatrical performance in & madhouse a purti of actors were shown over the establishment by the director, They saw a lunatic disconsolately sitâ€" ting alone on a beneh. "That," said the director, "is an unbhappy man who went mad for love of a woman who jilted him and married another." "He looks quiet enough," an actress observed. ‘The parâ€" ty moved on, and came to the dangerous patients. Jn an ironâ€"barred cage n')um- | tic, raving mad, was behaving Tike a | wild beast. "That," said the dimtor,’ "is the man she married."â€"London Tele. graph Dear Sirsâ€"I had a Bleeding Tumor on my face for a long time, and tried a numâ€" ber of remedies without any. good results. I was advised to try MINARDS LINTâ€" MENT, and after using several bottles it made a complete cure, and it bealed all up and disappeared altogether. DAVID HENDERSON, Belleisle Station, King‘s Co., N. B., Sept. 17, 1904. The Government has therefore to deâ€" pend chiefly on draining and filling up the pools where mosquitoes breed and on what is called bonificamento, or the improvement of the land _ in various ways. Last year the Government sold to the peasants about $300.000 worth of quinine, with a net profit of about $75,000. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited State Sells It and Uses the Profit to Fight Malaria, The sale of quinine in Italy is carried on in a peculiar fashion. The Governâ€" ment selis the drug to the peasants in malarious districts and then uses the proâ€" fit to fight malaria, As for their wearing veils and gloves when they go abroad, as they are urged by the authorities to do, anybody who knows the Italian peasants can guess how many of them will do it. The first aim is to protect the peaâ€" sants from mosquitoes. But it is almost impossible to get them to take care of the wire screens which are given them for their houses. "I suppose George has left, you," she sniffed. "Yes." (Sob.) "Then there‘s a woman in the case?" she asked, her eyes lighting up expectâ€" antly. * "Yes." (Sob.) "Who is it?" she demanded. "You." (Sob.) "Gracious!" exclaimed the motherâ€"inâ€" law. "I ant sure I never gave him any encouragement."â€"Philippines Gossip. A Manila motherâ€"inâ€"law had stayed so often with her daughter as to cause a quarre! with the husband, and one day, when she again came to stay, she found her daughter in tears on the doorstep. . contains no acids ; is harmless because only of healing gfimh:fl'lbm-. nnxnmm. in use. Cure guaranteed. Sold by all Ists 254 bottles. Refuse substitutes. L PUTNAM‘S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR t# %§7 a&®2 i 1 t# |"““°3F' nnm“a?nnd’r.m u';. b lpp‘ll;{n( Putham‘s Corn sxum:ofipefi‘up-. leaves no scar, CORNS CcurED| IssUE No. ALWAYS, C it tells the value of the Crimp in Washboards; the Features of the is the title of a Mighty Interâ€" ing Little Booklet on Washâ€" boards, that has Just Been Wattch picawc Black & Mary and the Kitten. " The Crimp and the Consequence " Degrees of Madness QUININE IN ITALY. A Misunderstanding. Winning Bet The big b 1 a c k p l u g . A real n e w There is a son of Erin in this town who is quite a character. He has a number of children, and was asked one | day how long he had been married. | _ *"Well," he said, "there‘s Eugene is forty, and Norah thirty five, that makes | sivintyâ€"five, and Lizzle is thirtyâ€"two, | and how many do that make "â€"Quebee | Telegraph, "Booâ€"hoo! Pa fe "Don‘t take on. H "Sister saw him never saw nuffin‘t" "What are bO_V ?n turn ticket, "A single one for : the other, Whereupon the first 1 with a sneer:; "So you are af won‘t come back again?" "Xo," quiet retort, "I always take th half from the fallen man‘s p London News. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Before the Duel. Two Parisians who had arranged fight a duel happened to meet at station from which they were to j ney to the rendezvous. At the bool office the first duellist asked for m Only the choicest selected hfll;! tea leaves are used in "Salada giving it a delicate fragrance and cious flavor. Here Since 1851. u-d it Tells the Kind of Crimp is the Better Crimpâ€"AND WHY. z_l:Yo- are Interested, a Post. will this Little ‘f”whzmumm w Yourself â€"Why not let us You a Copy Toâ€"day ? en # Has a Blind Beggar Woman to Adverâ€" tise His Business. Enterprise takes various forms, even in Warsaw. A young oculist, finding that patients were few and far between, hit upon an original means of advertising. Hecngl;z‘nbund woman who sits and begs by the Church of the Holy Cross to hol{l a light board whereon are written his name, address, professional qualifications and consultation hours. As the church is in the busiest thorâ€" oughfare of the town the notice attracts a good deal of attention. The bqrr herself says she is quite satisfied with the results, as many people notice her who would otherwise pass by, and as the doctor has added his assurance that she is hopelessly blind, benevolent old ladies throw coppers into ber tin mug, sure that their money is not wasted on an imposter. Jt is not yet known whether the number of patients has increasod.â€" Warsaw correspondence Pall Mall Gaâ€" zette. of the Better Crimp. If you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure yourseif 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,. _ Immediate relief and perâ€" manent cure assured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write toâ€" du’y to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P. 8, Windsor, Ont. GENTS ‘Aboud | Hall & Co. PIL‘S CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD qou'udoddodwuywmduoethe number of rats which had boarded the vessel at the latter port. . The end of an ordinary cask was planed perfectly smooth, coated with grease, and a meat bait tacked in the centre. _ The end was fixed on with two nails, balansed so that should anything touch it off the centre it would go down. The cask was M‘L.Ifitu with water and buried in the to within a few »~inches of the top. The first night more than two hundred rats were caught, the second night few, and the third night none were caught. It was found by the marks of rats‘ feet in the grease and the missing bait that they had discovered the exact centre and took the bait as they liked. Half an inch on either side of the centre meant death.â€"Kansas City Star. The average rat possesses extraordinâ€" ary sagacity. On a sailing ship bound for Calcutta from Capetown some years POBeenth‘y TECC NC P cscunce Oollege, Yonge and Gerrard, r‘ BVURE PPUCTTOJO.Oh $1,500.00; good buildings; semd: w!l kinds of fruit; close to aity. Box LA ped business schoo! in reshits; that schoo! is the The E. B. Eddy Co., smm mm 10002 C A GOo0D INYVESTMENT â€" OKANAGAN fruit land is a money maker. Beautiful scenery, productive orchards, ideal climate. For illustrated literature write to Mutrie & Mutrie real estate, Vernon, B.C. nipeg, Man. FAR.I! in HAARAEPOMmmd CCC CCR CS wan and Alberta; improved and wild . Get our l& it‘s free. Wriie us E. 8. Mil= ler, Limt No. 217 Mcintyre Block, Winâ€" FAmu IN MANITODA, . SASKATCHEâ€" wan and Alberta; improved :nd vflf ME L o 442 "RUIT FARMâ€"BARGAIN; 2% L 72@ N OMdinoss Aa A RESOURCEFUL OCULIST No Share in the PoR EDDY‘s matcHrs AGENTS WANTED. Long Married. FARMS FOR Sagacity you erying for, my EDUCATIONAL. m. He‘ll get better soon.* him fall all the way. I in‘!"â€"Answors. fell downstairs and the Features you are afraid you °. 37. 1908 of Rats. ‘lected hill-’rown in "Salada" Tea, ABSOLUTELY NEW were to jourâ€" t the booking arranged to the return pocket,"â€" me," said remarked little delâ€" the Pnr-d_\- had « that he intend Kingston. but postoffice taining the regietration the one of the other. 1 of the 3 emith, h: ©ontainin glever scl ernu arran eomir of hi young c ®r mgen ’r(n'lll Abd «l Clever Ruse N of Metro smithâ€"R BANK CLERK thing someil ALLEGED Ber ©once Dr. out he ha Frenct fron it Mul: hav pers France Greatly W Germany‘s m El Aziz to R« Obit men to ix Mu Agi ne\ London day tha: hbolding a Bultan o It propos British o ©ourse i; march < tions ar Britain, The ne Right an less oper of Germa to the fin @lt} he #gide eith: Mequines l.ho The Ausual tens prov coul in i gene! Cans Petit R« been op} of the : the Gern prt Bid: tha or â€" Lan undersiar regarding Mulai H: all the | Frar defona Hafid tior Fran insis tories Off Ca« It I Demand As Mulai Hafid the Ca NT @I18 thi d h SAT B AND I Or Loruy

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy