West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Oct 1908, p. 3

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BARRIE a Trip. Schw Stalin . Him. ALIVE. b use C. P. CHM) ’LLIDE. Men PRISON FIRE YCLIST Ox " aml co.- ond freight did not pt rashed into " mnductor huley, h.. Who Kitten am In; lb Hurt in yrliat " until.- angina hitryeiUt 50 El- . Putn- t and b Md, 'Mad wilt co.- t arm": I "05.53 who, a tht an. " "In " more. I It”, in. in ISIAH" admit "W"! tho when dith- melon ‘on ix! "in. " an My other an.- and this "In sthq tent. thile an " ttt tark Mm ant ht " What in tho put I. bun termed nigh mt. had! low to the scion- tttr-hd-ni-tua" tom- tho {all howlodgo ot which w. have yet to main. Tho had priest ot old, a toiling: n he wu eralUd, wu mu- tee of my powers which an now be lphimd by hypnothm, although his methods of wounding to rocuxe me.- - trom the god. won tdTl'd, due to can. 'uniriloquum.auo wu puc- M by tho prints, putlouhrly when communication was denim with a der med "nun. Thu. "Inning, how. "of, u an. of oridm- moving that them men pone-nod pawn: which on: leur be "planed, up I correspondent u"! 00 "planed, up I non-spunk“ of the Pall Mali (hand, by prom“ hto use. In no only now beginning to)". my my». MAGIC OF MAORI PRIEST? Strange Powers of Which Tohungas Were Masters. Many white Tun In hum" with loan of tho outwud lot-n of the ob “unnee- of tho Nani Itriott, but of the inner mania. Ind origin of that ritual we know nothing. In the “the land- " down to than one... 3mg their direct iltasoondaau under dun-num- of 'reet agency the pupil ,',"lu", to “and tutu in order to you pro- My. 'ipiuudtotauinhuuaa. Ind. smooth sud round “on, and. n- pottmg . hath, or ina-taus. all“! 3 lion, to shutter the “on. into trag- nonto, tad that only by tho mental op- .Itlon of willing, without my phyla-n] effort. To all tho priest's opoutwnn tho huh: mu . “can" adjunct. It Dupplhd to the Polymiu mind In out- :ud sign 00th - and aunt. Thr old time Maort buried, Mood, that the karakU, the form of words and, wrought tin desired “but; and the .tfieaoy oi um inoaatation doma- Od on the nbwluu fidolity with which the formal. was "announced. Tho Action ot Club! m tic-tram the barren in; no. pct-unto an amt “In tration ot' this dean-owing In in tin-M The action of Chm in 'uatroring the barren n; no. puma In use: “In union of this annoying by a. power ot the will which their word has cov- “I. The latest - ot Month“, that any Misting object in tho univom In computed of on. than“, and that the an]: ot that demon". in nu about» con, lad: one to an pa ot a tUld of - nlnuon in will“ tho mind my wander In. It the pupil wu oumteantul in the atom teat be wu nut and. to try his pow." on some animate objoot, such a A nr In; bird, the pl’ocell being the am. as below. According to the huoru, the NM Wu aways killed if the pupil mu 'rotkisnt. Or ho might. ho- . 'Ntt 1tf1u',1gt,te'Aut2,U,ti,tr1at alt t on T',',ftt of "wanton which '0 an d] mum with what mm. from nightmare. Than who the tinnl test, the pupil be ing ordered to narcis- tho - of will. h. to death none no" "uttee of In. on in order to show that In the “or do. of his power: he could rho superior to the tooling: of mm“! “faction. Thin '1. the dread makukn, and it h well known that if a Maori believed he wu than howitched he run run to die. Her. " no the affect of hypnotiun And lug- ation conveyed by icky-thy. some. . a rial. who committed himself trtg 2,'rd, bu bun known to will ttt oath . whole family tor the act of on. individual, and Bil, oven tho babe a tho brunt, hue wilted any The tohunge we. even credited with the power of intlumteitstt the dead. The rent writer mu . Witness of the fol, will. Incident. A bunch ot the Ara- '0, the tribe of the diettiot of Rotorua, being " war. had euMend defeat, and one at their brevee had been brought home and. The venqubhod sought at one to "tut out, by some one: connect- ed with the dead ohiel, whether they would be enceeaeful In their next encoun- Tho whim Wu roquutod to poem. the (hired omen, the people squatting tn I ring about the Mer. Advancln a M - from the dad body, the pin-t hogan to recite a powerful incantation, hunt on making tho 'i.eeased gln will. sign. the eye. of all preunt fixed on the shin wnrrlor. Presently the Corps. Wu churned to move Illgbtly to one iido, on which u put cry of joy "on from the people. Tho movement wan interpreted u a sign of future vitt. ton. This but wn on" performed by the tohungn of olden an... Tommi “In the int of the old tohum th The numer of hie yeere could hard. y be gunned at; ho wee elmoet e Me. thueeleh of the Maori, hie nee, end,‘ eereleee u to his personal eppeei'enee,l he wore bin long heir. I united himl were] times in the '7N, but so ex-l namely Ill'i'wl was his person held that it wee only after repeeted delays 'dit/ I wee elicited to eee tthnt indeed, he eoneidered that white people were not) ftt to eeeouiata with, as they lied no Item of tepu, nor did r rd Kings which were bra tom Iii-or” with eny reverence. wee deeply in. tueeted in hie manifestations, partly been). I had myself eeeimlleted many of the Maori euperetitione by the were form of t',,oti,",,t'ih'.r from the int he had reeleted ell " M of the mieeioperiee to induce him to ebendon hie endent inith for (Xu'iet- l buity. Ae he etill had e lei-go follow. j k. who for hie eeke refund to recog- nise Christianity, his convereion Wee greedy desired. New Zeelend’e greet- eet Biehop ley siege to the old heethen " Mekoie. that tree clad iele in lake Interns. to which the beautiful Hine- gee men). For home the Bishop en- deevored to win the Fleet over. But " pow“ of pereuae on.9ow great “do were is wall known-Mor once "il. ed utterly. Tohoto set in moody sil- .00. At length he lifted hie heed. qeerken unto my words!" he eeid. “It you on do thie T will eeeept your God." Thea picking up the deed leaf of e We tree which bed nuttared to the ground he held it out loosely be. tween his tltttters " erm’e length. we withered body wee Inked to the hlpe; the eun wee high in the mom; 'edt, uption wee poeeible. r repee " a ineatntauon he invited hie vieitor to my, Tar, the lest had become green! no dung rt,',':,",',)",',,' educated Eng- lgrutBtagt bed no he in either Note a u. Po'm, yet by none mental in- Me the drererlt Polyneeien wee eble to .eke the virile white men believe that what be new wee e ireeh green 1.1; yet " wee in reality still e dry - eee. e no oH_ot the 'n1t_t2ttA'ly'.',t.ryl m in! White Terrace: In Zechnd. and dukm the had, Touch was the}: W. He was buried be If all... Ind it we. no" kin-dugout of them I. 1.: very fable In" ”It In I boie that I In: . the my - - All it VII butt , ‘MI “ll-Iv nu. "W - leaf; yet it was in reality "ill I dry brown on. Tho and of the last of tho tnhnngas "a both ningulnr Ind pathetic. On that Carib}. night in June, 1886, when the M and White Tonnes were lost to In Zed-ad. and (brine- - over m hid, Tonto w” sleeping at Wsiroo M. Ho ”I buried tauth the rain d at... 3nd " In. am: IT bum; to VII (In. out of the min tt his hut. . VII vary hello am ii In! con. Whlhhtht Indium PPe"'rs.rjirG-Nsti" Ate . an. mum-J ._ *" 'Jd.',uiiVGFfetty'V2t Bsstte' ..mvdnd-m - GE been left alone he might hue recovered, but they took him to the Mn] " Rotorua, when, probably in ignorance of the l'ful Incredneu in w ich the land is held Among work, and upeciv Inna ‘tSuno I o u ' glad'lalr hi beta Lego 'ld & [R was the moat terrible and degrading thing that could have happened to To. hoto, hi: personal tapu had been violat- ed am this, praying on his mind, killed Even the Older In Admitted That the Yttttth Had Cause. "You, Jim.'" called the Inn with the ho. to the young fellow with the ' bling gun, who was making tor the meet. exit, putting on his out. up he "11‘ The young mm swppod. hinting), And wand about. "What Jou doin' with your out. ont Why. Jou, ttuw"..", -- -- _ _ "00m. hm and tell me why you quit," aid tho mu with the hoe. "What’s the trouble with Tout You ain't been on Limo clap." "Mac’s been n in' me again,” said the young mm. “at. picked on me right trom the Hm, m’ I told him jut. now I wouldn't stand for it. I'm through, And any. All there u About. it." “Ram" aid thq man with an hoe. “You don't mat to quit on? time the bot. give. you n lick with be rough dd. od his comm. If you do that you'll work just about one day out o' the weak An' put In the "at huntie another job. Hon, PII go talk to Mac. Como Along o' 330 Ind wo‘ll fix it up." -_- " Tho you; w lhook his head. "No," he mid. "I told him i ,eouldn't mud for it, An' I won’t. I don't an every- thing. I don't have to. I know when n {one (an treat me righe" _ . “800 hon,” aid the mVan with the hoe. "Md: Urkh worse than his bite. He don't mun onrhall o' what he Anya. Than Ain’t n man on the job he nin't an that 90m. time. What do you think - no for, uywny, " they m’t an: t little. They've gotUr do it to cum thdr pr You’re a too summing. Any lit- tle _tltintr puts you out." "Oh, I gut-M not," said the Young mun. “Ho told me I mn't worth my melt In' that I moved around like I wu f)”, to sleep H. oaid J. was no Mow that made n Gdti look like it m exceodln’ the sped thnit." "What of itt" mid the man with the hoe. “You don't think he’s fool enough to pr you wagon it he don't think you an on, do you? If ll do you’ro fool, " Mu ain't that Il of a mu. He was“ you to move a little quicker, that's all. The more work he can get out of u- the better he'll anti-{y his boot. Thath all than u to it. Rumor him, my 'ron', humor him. Step tround lively; it won't do you no harm. I tell you you've got to st your hide toughmed It Jest hung an' let it no " thas-on y don't Int Mae no you Inughin'. You’ll get 'tpu", right as Man’s you realize tint the qC'q ain't got time to be 90mm: "m culled me u knock-hm loafer,” laid the young man, with u highly In- jured air. "Your knees do kind o' Interfere a. lit. tle," aid the man with the hoe. "I arn't my he ought to have [twinned it, 'cauu it ain't your fault. You can't. b't the way you look or the way your noel bend n, and I don't blame you for feel. itt' . little mm. But. you don't want to quit on that account.” "rut's not. all he said to me by a good deal," muttered tho young mun, uniting toward the door Again. "No In. o' your bein' too thlxuk'muod. Youll prob'ly have u darned sight “one things than that said about you before you’n as old as I am. You‘ve got to get. used to It. Here, (you'll " Come on and we'll see Mae about it.' l, Do Now-pope" Need 1 Connor? l (la-Ho's Woolly.) 1 HM the any of m: play "no by t m I nomoporo " hunt on tho unuuonol that 1 tho on “new” tho ordinary cannula li/t bl m puttintt tho truth In tho byt- Hound? In it so popular to chain non at [ wuuh and We tr", um thoy on to ho punuod IU houn od wholhor any on at l than at not! Wo an lod to than rotun- uou by gonzo neon: noun-xenon u apex-ted l " tho no. in our - clam. “I“. Mr. Horrlnnn was round}! “and mono tt W” odd that he tofu. to who Mo molar-boat ott the couroo of mo Yola- I "arvard roco when ordarod to do on. After f rt-tion bod exhausted In." Mr. Har- i run-n was mind to explain tint ho on l out on tho oouroo in n motor-ttOrt with No chum. that ho was ant-mm“ vuh the mica. and when ho w... qedered on the eouuo ho ouppoud ho was rooolvln‘ o Mond- li; “Imam. " Mr. Harman'- oxplnnn. i non II true-tsod lhoro to no rot-on to doubt I It. tor " will o otrughxlorwnrd .tat-rtt-- .m mum you out ot In lnndvononco. "thou who not even an maceration " Mr. I Harrison‘s part. l Nut. Sonuor Dick ‘u declared itt tho _ -n -" .L‘ -s-F._ On hi!)- mun "What. does that amount tut" said the nun with the hue. "(fluid don't break no butter. Don’t take no notice of Is Jest go on " ii he was rmuiin' out loud an' N Bo 'tention to him. rd let him on. I blue streak if ho wanted to. He don't hurt nobody but himself. But it don't new anythln’. A low little pet name-thath all. You unit till he boom you off the place More you get mad. He’d an it quick Enough if tie didn't I' . you. Than P" have 90m. can“ to get lore about. “Ho done it," laid the young nun. "Br tg That's what he done." "rt hed you." “Sun, the big slob." Tho mm with tho hoe rubbed his bring chin with " limooruated hand. “If It's the one," be said, almight- fully, "I don't know but what you one right to quit. You don't want to be too Ion-hive, bat It look: to mo u it you‘ve gutter draw the line oomewhere."-ChG “ml-III yin-- Nut. Somm- Dick is declared tn tho - ally-keba- of I“ the puma to luv. borrowed public tub of I county "can": In ONO. Nobody. nppuemly. naked tho Sen- Mor for m owlnnnlon. but no land on. mu must be command a wwxp.telr nuanc- torr. An “min-Hon vi the (nu showed that they but bun tanned. The Sen-tor had not bummed from I tttuttt, And " not" tad [on Into the poo-anon of the county trauma in the ordinary can”. of bull- nu. __-_A --..v uni Immune J'reUuiftt", job," replied the young Next, a tttost ram-rum)": nun "up...” Itntoment was “tritium! to Ambassador Bryce. it Win laid thlt ho ind violated Bll m. dtpiotmstie proprietiu in an interview mm mm which had been printed in Olig- hom- vhiio he Wu winning the new State. aid winch Doro on the question of the no- npubmty of In ettmstitution. Mr. Brno m within roach. but no one and him who- thn the statement will true, and in was Mun“, In "it-detetteo, to “tempt: his will. It VII straight Ind to the point. He aid tho outcast“: About MI Interview um talcum. no added that he had in- - "(and " - " opinion on “y Abreu" political auction since no u... h the VIM States in oliicili - u. cussed me, too," said the young " "A' . wonderful “one; mm told at n 2Miu'G't who. by 0 on ot I”. n tr' WM a: tmir. - rqlrknyle A ind 11et.12??. wu- uld. had Income: " an!“ o aub- poonu on John D. Rooneiolkr, at an real- donco ot tho lulu-'0 non-“Haw At Plttltlold. Mm. Tu.- we" told a Mr. Rocntollor'. Hunt from one part of the country to tho other to "old the mm ot the ”bacon Nobody and Mr. Rook-tollotI to "own. but Mr. John D. Archbold. vlco-prelldont of tho Studs": ou Compton dld no tor him. It cuckoo-that Mr. Roch-Lulu Nun-0K an: word to the much“ when no could Do found no the union of the whom van on any mutton Mahatma". It spoon- um Mr. Rachael!» sound the court ct can... that no lubpoouu tor mm w" “can”. u he was tndy to lppoll’ whoa wound. A public censor I- not noodod for tho N; In the United sum, but A unobb, m . minded, not! Intolllaunt con-or would ttM In opportunity tor excellent work It ho won uppolntod In ovary ttrest ovum" omce. to tC.'"" the dutlu that men-1n to ouch u 0 an. It BM the Paul Gift of Beauty and It Wu Coveted by Many. "Don't have your “wick: up than on the advertkintt boards," odd Tow my's mother; "tho train will com. along soon and you will forget it." But Tommy did notheed an waning, the tum cum and wont my with Tommy and hia mother and. the om bound for 0000] Island, and tho cand- wich rammed. it we: a. remarkably nut pong. tor a sandwich. Lying more on top of the advertising boards it looked at if it had been done up by a jewellor, no rectangu- lar wan it and no precisely were the and. of the wrapper lowed over. An ourif man mood near by reading his newspaper. He had heard the Mk about the mndvich and tto noted that the event had turned out an Tommy'l mother had predicted. A young girl can. up the thin and walked along the platform. BM “w the neat package and looked from it tom the man. 0 drew a up nearer to it, glared at it u if to “we him" that it wu mu there, Bud mourned mm; M: paper. sivdnu pamngws alighted from ttte next brain, and " they passed we send- wich moqt of them saw it and new to mun tho distance between it and the nun 1nd tried to dwide whether it belonged to him. 01101an fellow strolled back, after going as in u the door of the waiting room, and walked slowly up and down the platform. The elderly man nteryod to the edge of the platform and ooked along t a track, u if to no whether his train was coming. Jun u he tuna! to take his formar position ho aw the young man lingering clone to the andwidl. -. I "It mono this," aid the had of the hm- I11y. "w. hams been tune 6out ot our Inher- able room by the authorities, who "id t I vs; unhnlthy; so there Is literally nowhen le, to. no on. who can uh us In tor m "ell tum I m lb]. to my. At Inn. 111 , on. an say that the Pan: 0010mm 1: no _ " enough for no; und but. we have con to My." Police would“ to the contrary n _-s-.-" v... m. urn-l at a Dttrter 0 He cleared his ,Lhmt with . loud "Ahemi" and new hi: can on the ad- vertising board: a few feet away {mm the package. The young man took the next. train that came along. A huge woman rigged out in clothe. that the evidently thought were Just an thing bunk-d up the stain and Will running toward tho train that. had just come in. Her eye on, u the _ a, with ita jewelry sun-:8; utterly she did not enter the t3: She looked up and down the tuck and glanced toward the undwich, and from it townrd tho mun. He folded his pa.- per, put his reading glam in Me pocket and again stepped to tho edge of the platform and looked along tho mile. The woman eyed him and his package tslterstately. The roar of a train we: hearth A: it .lowed down the man, all unuvlndful of tho I,'tt'xahuatd, to- ward one of the car gt The ma Mod on tho our platform " the thin moved out. By leaning outward u the twin rush- ed any he could watch the package long enough to we the large Woman gm it from the top of the Mgnhoarda, thnnt it under her Hummer wrap and hurry down the phtform stairs faster then ite came up. Quite naturally be mailed. nu Wily. “an. n... -...V_.,,,, mule pots. And a porter puma: I barrow, on which we" piled Ibo Bctubty effects ot I In." family. Arrived " the bushland, the unloading of the burrow "a bum). when the tumor on duty put I stop to the proceed- Inc. with n Mn Inquiry u to nut It Bil must _. . .. __-q, .L- 1....I a! 05. km. Thy be So Scarce People Want to Confiscate the Conn“. The polka on duty in the PM“ Colon!“ (the mum: nut.” ot Rom.) we lslon- 1 MA I tow nights ago to no it invaded try a YS/l lime prov-sown. con-Ian“ at I man. ttin wifo, their tour chUdren, with the do- . _ --A,- “um... " Inn-mi They no So Scarce Continue the The yolk. on duty in an. mum: square ot um . tr. whim to Hy. ”In hove been turne cont m mu ”my able room by the authorities, who end It wu unhoolthy; so there Is literllly nowhere to to. no one who can take us in tor the and] eum l m em. to my. At lent. no ooo an say that the Panza Colonno is not " enough for ue; end he" we have come to my." Police per-union to the contrary we. urn-them by the ernul of a porter or two. who. un‘er the dlrectton ot I consume. removed the sorry heap of goods Ind chat- tole; and In the end the family were con- ducted to the station, when the Iuporlutond- out an them eumcont money for one alght‘e loam; But tho queouon iq not eolved. Seized It Inth be. tor " " the question at tho hour in Ro-tser. to tind room tor the mph. It in I question which tombs! not only the poor Ind necenilou'. it touches with " most equal force male who Are moderately comfortable in circumstancu. but who find it imiblo in Rome to get u habitation, clan. convenient. and nanny. for a fairly nuansbio rent. There, no not enough of hon-u to go round. and the building allure- of the eighties have nude people timid to out their money Into that kind of emu-prim. Plan- Mvo been discuszed tor the extension of the city. hut they Ire not likely to get beyond "mt" for years to come. Home. in the mun. or 10 years. but don- bled in population without Mnblinl its Mun-room. can (in present. deadlock. 18-. w. Jim new. new» tho will! TEE DESERTED SANDWIGH. HOUSES IN ROME, oe my. a. number ot ita tendon: We. comma. mowed”, when. “mantle... “a. has Dun and“, new. um they no! occupy may at no chow-u positions In the central quart.“ ot a. 0111. The "Vita" MI Jul. published . pin: of Rome. shaving mwmduoduoocu- 9604 " (I. wall-haul“. The moon toe their atutttptienttoet m1! In: In tho that of tho m d.eoMettt ttfthqgtttm- tie or semi-mom m which an" been Multiply!“ lot you! out. Bury no. our or manual“. to mum“ in hush-u ,rttlt the Vale“, not: to In" . nun] house In Rom; Ind tor an. autumnal“ In prepared to my manly mouth to tempt hon» ovum w to! rid of man u- isunl mm to nuke room for the wou- en ot some plant-qua tuba mm or la- med-inn}. _ - An lulu): bay ot I, emulate-0e. we“ to have e nu witch ehe Ind occupied tor some were. beau-e her rent we: rule“ 40 we cut, unneeded In nndinq another In e perfectly new house In . let! mm- or. to put It plelnly. In 0 rather dummy unmet ot the any. She we: no leaner ln- when than lb. we: Informed that I!” might have to lane at any moment I. I he nuous order wu In trusty for the purcheee of the bulldlnc. and In the event at the uremlue clung!“ Made. the contract made by the taetagttq with the exiting Imam-d would become wold. And the uncerulnty " (till healing over her heed. Roms, then. whether for the poor or the moderately welt-tttMo, le probably the meet expensive omit-l In Europe. tor the Ina-nee in the who ot wovlelone bu kept pace nth the rise in rents. Here And then. It In true. model dwelllnge no elowly rising. but near them. too. are Helm bis factor-lea. which wlll supply the tenants. No tuteattrt on I .tgttieitratly large mule l. being made to oolu the dlttlcully as far u the poor are manual. Aa for tho mud]. on“. Ahoy accumu- lle mu: . wall, but no node. In nun. Thu no around than on every dd. pal-- Hal convonu, mom-hen». Bad colleges, with puny not pram. 1nd traded Mr- tIcoI. whtk they than-elve- bus to llvo in nutty rooms, In which there u no: we to ruin; a on. Tho enormuu lncrouo in then tenuou- houn- no doubt brlnn money Into the city. The communities an largo hay"- md con-um. 001101119". for an! very xenon "say an .91. to buy or the but at comma fries. Ind In the and UV. much mom chow y than the .truitqt1ug iantt- 1133 who envy their nucleus and comlorublo gunners. Corporate homes of (hi: kind an rich. and tlttt poor Raman household“ can make no and against them. And tho worst ot it u that the condemn: of the Hun. be- ing manly in I. clarion direction. there in link or no chine. that the municipal aloe- (onl now Imminent. In uome. will do much “Lyell." the woa ot tho htuttPtt,Pt: . ~» A __..a,- -L- A .__-n_ _ ..,..-.- -_- an. -- --' Than " c pretty wot under thc old talk at the city, with I glorious View or the dome ot Bt. Year'- had Monte Mule hchlnd it, when a family. win-r than the man who mum to camp In the Hun Calonna, In" llvod to: months under I little tent on the [2'00an without molestation. Tired ot cllmbins 160 Mair: to my too upon-Ive bau- tation, I mean to seek a similar cum. and pan- the rent. ot tho summa- under the can“. qua read my "ettiatt up“ by - light at GT xiii} I; "Iiiitern-t?, iho cioaklux Show. of m. tron, vmah ruche- the on: from I din-n: maratt urea tho Hulda. - Landon C010 BROUGHT 0N KIDNEY DISEASE Brantford Lady Suffered Till Cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mu. A. H. Thomson Md Heart Disease, lumbuo and Rheumatism. and Tells How She Was Restored to health. Brantford, Ont., Oet. P2.--t8pecGl.)- How Colds, La' Grippe and other minor 111: settles on the Kidneys and. develop Rheumatism, Heart Discus, Bright’s Discuss and other terribly dangerous ailmentl; and how any and all of them no cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills is fully shown in the can of hire. A. u. Thom- uon, when home in u " Albion street, this city. Mrs. Thomson wu, Iome years up, taken with Cold and u (hippo and Strninidg, which affected her Kidneys, And the result was Blanche, Lumbngo, leumuilm and Heart Discus, which earned both her and her friends an" anxiety. t .......-.,. She had suffered some yesrs when she hesrd of cures effected by Dodd's Kidney Pills, sud bought a box, which she used with such splendid results that she con- tinued to take them till she was cured. Since then she has used Dodd's Kidney Pills in her own ismily and recommended them widely to her friends, all of whom have warm words of praise for the stand- ard Canadian Kidney remedy, Dodds' Kidney Pills. Heart Disease, Rheumatism, Lumber) and Bright's Disease are all Kidney DI- cnses or are caused by diseased Kidneys. You ean't have my of them if you keep your Kidneys sound and your blood pure. Dodd’s Kidney Pills make the Kidneys nnuvnl Sound Kidneys strain all the im- Must Be Women First and Heroine Afterward. The stage reflects the manners and thoughts of the time in no uncertain way. Types of states heroines are almost in numerous us types of women. Most of them var ternperiuertttuly according to the periorivin which they are created, and cone to exist at the end of that period --because for lasting lame u. bed-rock of true womanlinees is essential. The greatest heroine: of the 'stage-- Portia, Rosalind. Beatrice, Juliet and Desdemona -will live for all time, be. - the greatest characteristics they pauses: is their true woumnlineu; end where a heroine lacks this quality she is unlikely to outlive the period in which she we- created. my. Kidney Pill sound. Sound Kidne puritirs cut of the The early Victorian nnmby-pamby type of heroine has practically ceased to ex. lst. Modern audiences no longer crave tor mere maudlin sentimentality. The morbid heroine, too, with her inevitable c.turraetoristks of over self-Wylis, has had her day. The period when she was Appreciated has passed. The stage hero- in. must. it elm is to live for posterity, be e womnn first and u heroine alter wnrds. In spite of the strong unitary argu- menu advunoed in favor of it, the prac- tice of cremating dead bodies of human beings is but slowly aining favor. This tact in confessed in re,' annual report ol the French International Cremation So- ciety at Paris. This society is doing its utmost to induce the French people to burn “the: than to bury their dead. Owing to ita efforts the number of in. cinentinne is growing from year to year, but the lncreue is hardly pergeptibln. Most of the oremseioui in Prince no- cur in Paris, as the counrty people do not take to this method of dimming of LASTING STAGE HEROINES. Cremation Still Unpopular. m mood W33 ONTARIO "eriiim, TORONTO the dead. Amelia, the "port up. bu the largest annual number of crmnatious. There are thirtymix erertutiies in the United States, in which last year nearly four thousand bodies were eousumed, The greater number of the cremation. In thin count! . it is chimed, take plus. in the cue of foreigners. Getnuuy he) fifteen cretuatodea, which hut year in- einerated nearly three thousand bodiés. la tho Argentine Republic there wave 976 ereraations, in Switzerland 721,.in Greet Britain 705 and in Italy "e.-- From Leslie's Weekly. Repeat it ..--oShiloh's Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." Le Man: a Fine Old French City With a Long History. Le Mun, when Wilbur Wright in per- forming aerial marvels, is tbout 125 miles southwvst of Pnril and thirty miles north of Tours. It is a fine old French city of about. 00,000 inhnbiunu. The binary of be Mans guel buck to even before the time when the Romm- took poluuion of it. The present thu- tre was built on the site of an old Roman amphitheatre. Under Chulem‘ne the city was one of the most. importnnt in the whole kingdom. There are two fine old ehurcheg in Le Mans, the cathedrnl being one of the molt noted in France. It conulnn the tomb of Queen Berenglrin, the wit. of Richard Coeur de Lion. Henry II. of England wan born in Le Mam In 1188, the tint of the Plantagenet Xingu. The town is the chief plnce fn the Department of the Sumo, and in the headquarters of the Fourth Army Corr. The flights made by Mr. Wright ta o plnce on s plnln which is used In the military manoeuvres in which the French army in especially addicted. Some Long Distance Performance. in the Late mN. The twentrtour hours walking match which is to begin at the stadium to-mor- row takes the memory back to the late '70s, when similar long distance competi- tions flourished amazingly under the aegis of Sir John Astley and when E. P. Weston, llowes, Vaughan and Hibberd were the. heroes of the hour. Though Weston, the pioneer, accom- plished some fine performances, they were soon eclipsed by our own walkers, whose feats created a great sensation at the time. One of the best of them all was Billy “owes, a little one-eyed ath- lete, who walked loo miles in the truly marvellous time of 18 hours 8 minutes 15 seconds, a record which still remains unapproaclwd. lliblwrd revered 50 miiles in 7 hours Cl minutes 16 seconds, and without stopping lowered all existing re- cords up to 70 miles, for which distance his time was ll hours 88 minutes " seconds. Even more wonderful was the perform- ance of George Little wood, who " Shef- field trumped MI miles in IM hours so minutes 30 seconds, an average of not much less than four miles an hour, night and day, between Sunday and sunday.- Westminster Gazette1 W'Ir‘t; accom'mod-de the crowds “trucked by the 1irshlp flight|_th_e town in}!!! a dozen hotels, none of them pnrucnluly good. In ordinary times the price. It the best of them wt" moderate-trom 60 cent. to $1 for a room, M cents for break. fut (rolls and coffee or chocolate). .0 cent: for luncheon, Ind 70 cents for din. ner. Since Wrlght's aeroplane has been uonring, the hotel prices hue doubtU" followed it. examitlt, Repeat it: --"Shiloh's Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." rOR my mauTuvul‘inng in a madly. Thu d is left mu. (at gift purpooeu at this man. com-In a pair of pnuine Ebony Military Brwhes, with dahng shield, lor engraving. Com- terswitts"'combitste.lkoeocauad- END. cue. The pin is The Little Mun. "Hello, Harry! How no rout You seem to have a pretty nice cities here. How are you making out?" "I am at the top of the ladder. I am the vice-president ot thin mining concern.' ' "ls that so? You do 3. large busi- ness, I guess?" "Immense. The _ teyspopsittt1.itr 4r I mmensu. The responsibility weighs m me quite heavily, but PG got to shoulder it. No way of getting around that, you know}: . . '"Hifi aiii'o1G- tGre at that elegant desk is one of thtottieer' ot the com- V""." - ~‘-r ---. "Yes. He]; the secretary. And thou other two men " those tine duh are his assistants. He has A wonder- ful amount at work to do. Simply astounding! But remember. he‘s u first-class men. We pay him I big salary." _ . .. . . -____- -' â€"--' 7 '5. my} 2?8f".'I',r, "wigs. man over there behind that railjpg is_§nqthpr foicinl. in 1.13300“ ........, ... ....--..__ WW“, - - "Yes. Hes' the treasurer. mu in- other great man. We pay him big money; but we require a large bond. Got to do it. We handle too much money to mu PV. risk?...'.'. . . "Vida "widriis"that little unmea- Mee old man over there in the corner at that old degk?" -- _ -uiiiUtriai Bangs. He-tut-twrt' the mite, you know.'uiom the oe. tober Bohemian. . WHERE W. WRIGHT FLIES. Tommy-por er on a down my's Pop-Yo young mu. sign RYRIE BROS. ”mun 184-138-188 Yong. at. TORONTO WALKERS OF THE PAST, 'op. evtyrything move- Nat. m 31114.0, doesn't itt Toll- ", my bon, especially a In: Ff xiii . “I has owned and managed I be. and: in California for something like twelve if)..." now," said Min [an Coo. ley, of Angola county, WI., who u on her way for a thee months holiday in Europe. "My panama moved tron Tenneaaoa to Calilonaia when I was 5 yuan old and hag-n railing honey tor ml». While I can't. claim to have known Very much about the work until after I In grown and left school. simply living on such a place one in forced to imbibe a curtain amount of kosledge. I knew la a n- eral way how thing. should be don“tut u it had never been my duty to help or ace them dona l oan’: claim to have known much from actual experience. wonian Runs tll Bee Ranch "While quite young I developed what my patents believed to be u wonderful voice Ind they decided that I ohould be I concert Jhier. For that reuon I Wu sent to Boston to study [tunic while mil in mi euly teens. l lure I good voice And fancy had either of my puonu lived to see me start out for myself their dream for one might hue boon unlined. "A year baton l was to have been graduated at the New England Comor- vatory of Music I was oaled homo by the death of my father. Ttro hours " to: l reached home my mother puncd away. lt wu just " the beginning of the seuou for gathering the wring honey. While there were several skill-d men on the place, my tube: had than acted n his own manager. The question no» who would take his place. I step- ped out, And as far u it lay in the power of a young girl 1 tilhut it. "ut oouru I now believe that it In: the beet thing tut could luv. buppened. mung alone In new". 1 had nude my Acquulutunoen um were not altogether desirable. “Ed I gone back there with the liberty to do Ind upond what I [Hesiod the result mum not have bun what either of my puma could have wished. As it wu, my work studied no, led my thought- into different chunk. and when the autumn can» Around will: l mu convinced that 1 would be 1tappior if I renamed in carom. and managed my bee ranch Hun it I remand to my mulled studies uni prepared for the con- cert stage. "For . Cnmorniu boo ranch of the present day "if nuch h num- small, A. there are on y between (in aad six hundred hives. It is an. the foot of the Sic": Mudre Mountains and u the head of . beautiful gorge. Their ttt tlower, or pasture, u we all it, I. Rocky Mountain Inge, the ntygrer of which imparts I delicious “not to tU honey, which yin}: the mu (mom Br mctlul land. "The “enrol climnu of Los Anglos county moureo o boo puturo sll the yl-nr, for when the up in not in bloom there are plenty of other honey produc- ing flowers to be had. You." Alto whoa I Wu! ulto 1 little child, 1 can remember that C, get honey from the comb it was necesssry to crush tho comb cud otrsln tho honey. Ot com-so wo do better than that now. Such o process now would be considcrod not only as t:oublooomo wsy of gating tho honey, but It would re quiro oo ortq for tho boos to "build their combo. To build comb tho booo must firot est honey, ad to Inks ono pound ot comb they must conouno shout ten ot honey. "To oovo the hoes this troublo and our. aelveo the Ion of the honey - ot lotompcd poroflin are slipped into tho frames of the hives. On theae ohoeto tho boos build the cello and till then with honoy. If they detect tho choot they on too busy to wssto time in pro- teat. "When the cou- m filled lad the boa excluded the frames are removed from the hive sad put in . swamp! utmo- tor. From mu the enacted hon. nun into I large iron tank, trum 'lttl It II drawn into sixty pound on and in than read tor shipment. My extractor! In run ' water pawn, which in not only n grant uving of labor, but much more rapid sud purer. “I use “at, top hive. with {runn- or drawem exclusively, and while they an not nearly so picturesque u the old tree. gums, they are more human Bad pro- duee many times more lunacy. In a. old beeswax- u half and sometime. mm of the bees would be klllod in getting the honey, and it wu almost twat-(bk to take the honey without In 3 hot. of smoke or earbolie acid. In a. upto- ste hive. you have only to in." your bee escape or excludor, wait, for the but to go in the lower part of the Mn and then remove your filled drawer. Another nplpinnco of CQ numbness is the queen exoluder. n all combo to which the queen bu acce- Ae may by eggl from which a brood will bush and and contaminate the honey. Now the new is confined to the yower t of guise" u the body box or C',',uelu'. ber. This is done by pitting over the frame. a. grating or perforated duel. with holes sufficiemly large for workers to pun, but not Urge enough for the quein or the drones. _ "The old way at preventing no: swarms from taking flight W to but tin pans, blow horns and rain alt man» not of a racket, the real object of which was to drown the voice of the queen. Now the way ii to "cure the quoon In . little wire cage. here It not tho slighteat danger a! not knowing royalty nmong bees. Once beheld. the queen boo can never be nil-(den for either of her plobelm subjects, the dram or tbe warke‘r. Not only (alt hr Tat; t n . and Hunt in oolo . Cl oh tr: the dUtfnetivo Uhtt of crooning the tipr. of her Will“. It always remind: me of the helplcu my which lame women have of diapoWtg of their hath. “By securing the queen the "mrttt an they be controlled and no end of trow ble avoided. I keep I record of the we: and the pedigree. of ell my queens end have only to refer to the number end letter of the hive. to loan If they an old enough to be superseded. I " IT kill on old queen myself. thug It I I thing that I still dread to . They no ouch pretty little (Tatum that I lunrlnbly Ihut my eyes when 1 execute their sentence. "Of late you. a great deal he: been done in Onliforni: In the way of Improv- htgthtrreed of bees h " hsdidoua eye- tem of arousing, and minted queens have been imported from Europe. This In: 1110er the yield of honey to e considerable extent, and it In uh! by name bee keepers that in time it will produce dinghy: been I am not " I“ tune that I could remove the sting from the little insects. It in their only we:- poll of defence. and when one remember. that the me of " cost. them their “we. it doeen't seem fair to rob them of lt. ' "As to the Ftols1 of I hive It it herd to make my definite statement. I believe tor a Iummer'a product a hive mty be nountod on tn produce between seventy- tive on! 100 pounds of honey. In no! and the heather bout, of Boob MISS t00LEY OF CALIFORNIA DESCRIBES "If. WORK mg," [The Process Empuryed In Grout Bet. and I cling“ us In In. that. u. may that“ wtae" t can“ “dun our. W n tho-dire pound. olfiut-cluohouylncnuol. Al. umni: tHriddofbmeriatotiroett" l. enormous, and every 30.: inure-ling. than in always . steady d-adsl u at good prim. It can mun, ret in ppm: ot the tact that bone) all: an n low price, unenl- "tsrt'tioialttexduct ou the whet. lt h in trhqt upon: so any but In expert genuine honeycomb and in and. ot my” and glam». l luv. had may pawns hem in the Eu! tell nu that ttary were can of the gen unenc- of their honey beam We} bought only that In the comb. lining can and heated the artificial luxury, I knew laow inrpoolible it Wu m use". to be cute they were getting the Ptu"' uncle. “A: an occupation I know ot mum that In. the chum of beekeepin‘. 'Abe W to [tin and Mm. “hen he considers at to [undue hoary bowrm or Join. - producing [ruin in my nary it - ts me surprising that more women In the United sum do not take it up u I “was. l haw two school (that In Polluylvclh who on paying II. n visit became eouveid 1,, the business of banning, And now make addition: to their )urly [mun-I by the ule of Mr hon . "T8ttry both begun 'at, n in dummi- bought somewhat. near their homes, and I Inpplivd the queen. Of course, tho yield of their hive. la u Att. Intt comical with mine in 1alitorttea, nelthor ls their anon u long, but they make, enough to 93y than for their troublo. A. both of them no woman with Artistic an“ they have puma! pasture. for their but: In ouch I 'NY that their homo. no now ream-hm. for their Nomi: well u foe an ex- cellence of "I. or." - tty--" my. 0m will u- wnyI can my cough- snd can." JOKES FROM THE“SMART SET." th-ttor-Tour new home but“, look much like th, oyhitrt? 911.6111! dei. -iietome--so, but it ioouaur. ttbitt than the coat looks like In: original - veil-1" V "To cones-l their "tt'Maasttara, l pro In. P.rk-No vendor. No no try- ing to md out from you: [that what they'd like to have for Chm-a win- out conveying “a. imprison that they may expect to from you. Mrs. Gr-er-You look att and out. Beuo--Did Fred find nun-Mg. u 9|.- 'rating ey Ihtu.qht. it whould bet -ia-ud" It kid to lift Mn out ot debt. “For (on yam I’ve been trrutg to drown my .orro-nd they won't drownl‘ mu Broidny-vu, can, but am marble, you know. “In Biston--And that Minerva'. How ch99; 13d pug" uho_l_oolu_l _ _ "No wood.” new. had up. to but to swim.” "Yea, children," said the nurse. “at. dork Bu brought you and: l mu. brom- er." "Oh, 309d!" 'reted they, and mud their "in In Explained. Although it can. my to ho and. n peer, no mm on actually buy a Bridal: title, to In In do" In come Europc-n oouqtriq. ion?" ot I?“ dmteriptlmt If. in the giving of the Kitt-r, {mm In. Majesty beacon them on may " the reeommendation of the Prim. umber, who rally bu the tirsat new In the mu ter. T1110. In or” ~’ 4 ”that Manly or indirootly, my. the (lingo “My New. Directly, who]: no third per-u- recommend. . undid“: for royal recon nition, at! indirectly, who. a third per- son brim. a “Alba's an. toward. he but“ ood ad and grounds for doing so. a. former method. howovu, in tho one which I. anally am. It is the duty of the Prime “who" to dis tinguhh I mum o.lebeted In politics. onion“, m or liter-tun at! to be“. whether the and“ of my Mt pront- mnt person dour" no a tho hand- of the King. If, in the opinion of tho PHI- Imb- ter, Inch A sum par-on daun- don- tion to new rank, Won in Minutae “hen taff/l In an mm a. favor. edindi t,tLtat',tuutM'tr, widow’s Intention y C would hunt, in witch k convey“ an an" an. it I: proposed to et'", on tAt.? Il?,t", to id {pron}. In tour out ot live can the opprovd u (inn. IN tifth ' who my have has ttft.rod . IlTilt'dT-'dr, par-hum, a Duo-any --refuses, beam N. "I“! may lu- creue bis chance. ot chaining at u later day A higher title stW--= put. Armed with tho penon'a ”prom, an Prime “(or now puts, up up on. Be-Mr friend untried for money tttte-Doe. he regret In "He doun'c regret the money." dint u. tMeg his Muse-cf. uni tion, which it any "and. It ia uldo- that n puts. "Mr." bloo- m- "mightforward Into a "lord" l.- lou the cinema no "rr “and. ouch u the ranch why a P"me In conhrred on Mr. Morley neatly, or honors eonferred on ween-(m ranch in the field n In the cue at woueur, Roberta uld Kitchener. AI a germ! rule a an "Mr." is trunnion-med "no Nir"--t t in, knight or tnroast-aatd one who is already I "air" and has done some “in! recognition finds nie Ir want In to ultimate service to th, m. 1. entitling him to royal dQVltiun tt 110 wrap. ' A A [madman from the [1va no Wu 1113 a prolonged visit, to M Maxi“ hnir was lea-int him " .0 to]. of ht. head, and took in barber I. tank about it. "You sold me two bet. tle. of "uit to make the hair grow! "it in very strange- it wou't grow mu," said the modern Figaro; “I can't - Illnd it." "Look bete." said the country- man. "I dont mind drinking "other bet. tie, but this must be the list.'--' pug Inquirer. _ '91-). _ "Do Inf; all nut and tell poor not!» Would Risk One More " OBTAINING TITLE! why do brides wou Ion. ‘I

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