West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 12 Nov 1908, p. 3

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acry vase ef P T i0 ORISTS ERIURY *u a*% 22+ Deakin &X 48 Moffatt Hart osed Min Wt w on Ne yo.~ lamily on ich is sitâ€" exas, not mong the ilm-:].'.fl... attention t she had trowm ent Opinio m maiman ty t or in w that m and unless he e intends uwurfl~ "t in case this 1a t it M i V sent day the ter eans olat ingt id they Ne irl lid at 1 some & girl atro,. n set »pea ls ndictâ€" separ ner fa We mit y + not a m to a ¢ it to is beâ€" ormed plated was in ither‘s t the his as could ut ourg Mss ks urt â€" in ite â€" of ing it n her n the it by loreée »ming irdeyr that and the Her have aurt h itch, und, mall it i i l ee tions WO â€" ‘eaph it on to the t e 418 not had A12 The Queen is having a book published â€"â€""Queen Alexandra‘s Christmas Gift Look"â€"containing 150 full pages of pho. tegraphs taken by the Quean herself, and with titles which her majesty has herself 'wn'uon‘._'!'he subâ€"title of the volâ€" ume will Camera,* be half a sale are Ȣ nail a crown and the proceeds of the sale are to be devoted to charity. "Kings and Queens at Home" might well be the title of the book, for it is filled with excellent snapshots of. royâ€" alties in private life. There are photoâ€" graphs of the King, the Prince and Prinâ€" ¢ss of Wales, the Czar and his children, King Haakon of Norway and his queen, the King of Greece, and our Queen‘s faâ€" ther, the late King of Denmark, A whole series shows little Prince Olaf romping with his father, King Haakon, While his mothar Hhea Purscrt ul NE naciwss 7, C ‘iaakon of Norway and his queen, the King of Greece, and our Queen‘s faâ€" ther, the late King of Denmark, â€" _ _A whole series shows little Prince Olaf romping with his father, King Haakon, while his mother, the Queen of Norway, watches thern with pride. They are man and wife and son in that picture, â€" not Kiny and Queen and Prince. Prince Edâ€" ward of Walesâ€""little David," _ the Queen calls himâ€"has often been anapâ€" shoited in naval uniform by his grandâ€" mother, and will appear in the Queen‘s picture book. The frontispice is a charmâ€" ing new portrait of her majesty. %'he photographs, which are of various aizes, will be reproduced by the latest and most perfect processes, They will in raost instances be mounted upon stifi green sheets, the book itself being demyâ€" quarto in size. "sat up one night until long after twelve writing titles for some of her photoâ€" graphs." * To two poor little babesâ€"a boy and a girlâ€"found by the police in the streets <i London and placed under the motherâ€" ly care of the mistress of the Maryleâ€" bone Workhouse, has now come a most amazing piece of good fortune. * So interestel has the Queen been in the publishing of her picture book that she sent for Mr. Raiph Hall Caine, of Messrs. Collier & (Co., the producers, to bring the proofs across to her in Copenâ€" hagen. "Her Majesty," said Mr. Caine, Under the care of a trim, kindly faced nurse, they were on Monday driven away from the workhouse in a smart broufh« amâ€"the adopted son and daughter of a lady and gentleman of wealth and posiâ€" tion. The matron told our representative the romantic story: "A few weeks ago a lady and gentleman drove up to the workhouse and had an interview with me. They said they had no children of their own, and wished to adopt two fcundlings. Could I help them? _ Alâ€" thought they pledged me to secrecy as regards their identity, I knew them at once to be people of social position and wealth. "Then I thought immediately of two of my tiny chargesâ€"William Seymour and Mary Oxford. Both are pretty babies wbout eighteen months old. The girl was picked up one night near a draper‘s shop in Oxford streetâ€"hence the name I gave her. The boy. a really fine little fellow, was found by a policeman in Seymourâ€" placeâ€"hence his name, also. "The necessary formalities which the gentlcman arranged were soon completâ€" ed. Making a furthor stipulation as reâ€" gards the secrecy of his name, he exâ€" plained to a committee of the guardians that he was quite prepared to enter into a bond in the sum of £100 for the proâ€" nr care, maintenance, and education of th the children. "The lady confessed to me a day or so ago that she and her bewband meant to bring up the infants exactly as though they were their ownâ€"giving them _ a hig{elua education and eventually beâ€" «neathing to them the whole of their POLICE AT A WEDDING. Many friends who were present in St George‘s Church, Hanover Square, at the wedding of Lady Cynthia Needham and Lord Villiers were curious to know why the guests included two policemen in uniform. A romantic little story was attached to the presence of Sorfeant Blewett and Constable Lightfoot, of the Metropolitan Police, in the church and afterwards at the house of the Earl of Kilmorey, the bride‘s father. After suffering cight years this woman Was restored to healt}: a:;ydh E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable pound. Read her letter. Mrs. A. D. Trudea Armprior, Ontario, writes to Mrs. hnkham‘ £ ZBRCish y C C wl «#©I suffered terribly from ulceraâ€" tion of the feminine organs for eight years. I tried four doetors but got no relief, and thought 1 would have to die. " One d.i’il saw an advertisement of Lydia E. inkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound in the g.per. I sent for some, and before I had used five bottles 1 was entiroly cured. I hope every sutâ€" Mnfiwomn will take my advice and use Lydia E Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound." I {2 L L2 L aas AFA RARRE CA C FACcTS FOR sICK WOMEN. For thirty m{m Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Comgound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills? and has positively cured thousands o women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceraâ€" tion. fioroid tumors, jmgnhrides, crtune WO ...~__ina hackache. t fodic p‘in,,b.ckncbe, that bearâ€" ‘mgdown feeling, flatulency, indigesâ€" tion,dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don‘t you try it? [BY C *Z0 2. ts write to Mrs. why u9 *4 c kn s Don‘t hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if youneed advice about BP * / _ at.a wrill treat YOUT ndcxneu. [s1 °. S i Acicclhie whapes. w r in confidence and advise you free. _ Becauso of her vast exporience she has belmhon- BP 2 Jvess. LYDD: Many Interesting Happenings Reported From About two years ago, while she was NEWS FROM THE OLD LAND FOUNDLINGS‘ FORTUNE. (London Daily be "Photographs From _ fiy The price for this album will She will treat your Mail.) riding in Hyde Park Lady Uynthia‘s horse boited and fell near the Achilles statue. Lightfoot was on duty close by, and he promptly rushed up and sat on the horse‘s head to keep it quiet. He saw at once that Lady Cynthia, who was rrtly under the. anmal, was severely urt. He managed to prevent the horse atruggling and probably doing its rider fatal injury, while his comrade Blewett brought a litter. Then, with the assistâ€" ance of a gentleman, the two policemen extricated Lady Cynthia and carried her to St. George‘s Hospital, where she was found to be suffering from a compound fracture of the ankle. ANT!Iâ€"SOCIALIST SCHOOL. Three times a day a band of pupils in oratory, ranging from barrister to artiâ€" san, assemble at 20 Victoria street to learn how to fight the Socialistic moveâ€" ment. lady Kilmorey personally called at Hyde Park Police Station and thanked the two constables for their bravery, and when she had regained good health Lady Cynthia visited the policemen herâ€" self, giving each of the men & keepsake. The school is organized by the Antiâ€" Socialistic Union, a body o{ politicians who recognize the "plausibility, skill, and experience" of the Socialist Teaders, and aim at instructing a body of earnest men so that they can permea‘te the conâ€" stitwenciesâ€"the clubs, the meetings, and the openâ€"air gatheringsâ€"with the anâ€" swers to their clever speeches. No stuâ€" dent is accepted without careful inquiry as to his convictions, and none is perâ€" mitted to engage in oratorical battle unâ€" til he has gone through a course of inâ€" struction and has passed a stiff examâ€" ination, based on a hundred secret test questions. 4 + The policemen were greatly surprised at the invitation to her wedding. They received every possible attention . as honored guests. Lord Newry, brother of the bride, sent his own motorâ€"brougham to bring the constables to the church, and the bride and bridegroom both shook hands with them and introduced them to many of the guests. ‘The brave constables were both given a piece of wedding cake to take away with them. "We shall pay our speakers well," said the Hon. Chuc{e Lowther, the chairman of the Union, in an interview, "for we want the best men we can find. In time we Y.ropou to establish _ provincial schools. We are bound to no political party, for our sole object is to fight Mr,. Justice Grantham, in his charge to the Grand Jury at the Cambridge Asâ€" sizes on Wednesday, said that he was sorry that at the present time they were too familiar with coldâ€"blooded murders. Owing to the evidence of doctors, those who committed these crimes, although perfectly sane, escaped the penalty of the law, and instead of being punished were sent to Broadmoor, He did not say the doctors did not give honest evidence, but their opinion was formed by the apâ€" pearance of a man. ‘They were, howâ€" ever, liable to be wrong, and then a gross injustice to society was done. lt was not right that a man, having committed a culg-blooded murder, shou!d be allowed to live the rest of his life with every comfort. He advocated two trials, one for proving the facts, and another for proving the state of a man‘s mind. They would then‘ have an indeâ€" pendent tribunal, and not, as often hapâ€" pened, doctors who became partisans. Men shrank from the obligation of citiâ€" zenship; women avoided the responsibilâ€" ities of motherhood; marriage had lost, or was losing, its intrinsie sanctity; and the luxury of the rich was the exrh.na- tion of the strong vindictive feeling which lay behind Socitlism. o Bishop Welldon, in a paper on citizenâ€" ship, at the annual conference of the National Union of Women Workers at Aberdeen on Tuesday, said that the preâ€" sent age was selfâ€"pleasing, selfâ€"indulgent. Just before the rising of Marlborough Street Police Court for the luncheon inâ€" terval on Tuesday, a respectably dressed old woman, the mother of a man, aged 44, who had becar fined 5s,. for being drunk _ and disorderly, applied to Mr. Denman to accept half a crown on acâ€" count of the fine and allow her son to go free. As an old schoolmaster he deplored the evidences of effeminacy among the sons of rich parents. He used sometimes to think that it would be well that everybody should learn once in his life what it was to be hungry, painfuily hunâ€" gryâ€"(laughter)â€"then he woulJY feel more for his fellowâ€"citizens in their lack of dry bread." ."Hear, hear.") On Saturday, Oct, 17, it was 300 years since Francis Bacon became trvasurer of Gray‘s Inn, London. burll The event is to be commemorated, probably by the erection of a statue of the great philosopher and lawyer. _ Bacon began to keep terms at Gray‘s Inn in 1579, when 18 years of age. {{e oceupied chambers at 1, Coneyâ€"court, now Gray‘s Inn square, and became & RBencher and Treasurer. He planted the garden, and the books show t.Ee payment of money to him for "planting trees in the walk," "for more young elm trees, ard a new rayle and quicksett hedge, to be set upon Lon%e“'dk." He repreâ€" sented Queen Elizabeth when she Ld promised to plant in the findem the cataipa that Sir Walter Raleigh had brought from Virginia. She was ill, and Lord Bacon planted the tree for her. Lord Bacon has one of his titles comâ€" memorated in Verulamâ€"buildings, in the Inn. His wholé li;? nll:y be ;aid to have been spent in Gray‘s Inn, and the library still e':;uiu books he gave it. arty, for our sole object ocialism." Mme. Clara Butt and her husband, Mr. Kennerly Rumford, fulfilled a longâ€" standing promise on Sunday in singing solos and a duet at the afternoon service AGED MOTHER‘S DEVOTION. CHILDREN OF THE RICH. pean NEW BACON MEMORIAL. SAVED BY DOCTORS. CONCERT IN PRISON. 66e "I think the men liked ‘Abide With Me‘ best. They especially asked that I should sing that hymn. They were alâ€" most gainfully quiet and attentive throughout; it was like singing to the blind, they seemed to listen so eagerly. "It is a dreadful thing to be shut up like that, and we are only too glad to think that we may have done something to help them." se 4 ¢ That wonderful material ferroâ€"conâ€" crete, which in nonâ€"technical language is ordinary concrete reinforeed with steel rods or wires embedded in it, is now beâ€" ing turned to use by the shipbuilder. In Italy it is being extensively utilized for the construction of canal barges and boats for floating bridges. Thus, the wooden boats on which the bridges over the River Po rest are being replaced with boats of ferroâ€"concrete, whicE cost four barges of ferroâ€"concrete of about practically nothing in repairs and have an unlimited life. "The chaplain asked us to sing two years ago, but we could not arrange it before. He told us he had found the inâ€" fluence of sacred music of the greatest value as a means of reformation. Mme. Butt also sang "The Promise of Life" solo, and the "Night Hymn at Sea‘" as a duet with Mr. Rumford, who gave "There is a Green Hill Far Away" and "Nazareth." "I was very much affected by the idea of singing to those poor men; not exactâ€" ly nervous, but it was quite pathetic tg IJ AECI PC butad uts id ie Alee Sattn dt td nc e t 4 see how the nice ones seemed sad and ashamed to look up. _ The Italian navy has recently ordered 100 tons burden, with double skins and water tight compartments, They are cheaper than steel or iron vessels, can resist shocks, and cost nothing in mainâ€" tenance. # 2 in the chapel of Brixton jail before 700 conviets. Mme, Butt, who has recently returned from Australia, gave our representative the following expressions of her experiâ€" ence in the jail;: _ _ s It is also possible that ferroâ€"concrete will be used for armor on warships. This suggestion has been put forward by Signor d‘Adda, an Italian engineer of repute. The armor is built up of alterâ€" nate thicknesses of steel or iron rods with intermediate layers of concrete. Such ferroâ€"concrete armor offers a high resistance to the impact of projectiles, while securing a saving in metal of 33 or even 50 per cent. Thus the future deâ€" velopments of ferroâ€"concrete deserve close attention. The time may come when the world will see concrete Dreadâ€" noughts. "She talked softer thar. mumma. Nurse said she was a princess." _ _ _ Little Joey lay, frail and ill, in his little white bed in the children‘s ward of the Royal Waterloo Hospital for Women and Children in London on Sunday afterâ€" noon and spoke in accents of excitement about the "nice lady" who had paid him a visit the day before. . _ It was the Princess of Wales he meant. After opening a new ward at the hosâ€" KINDLY PRINCESS. CONCRETE SHIPS pital on Saturday afternoon, the Princess made a tour of the wards where the patients }3 Her Royal Highness was accompanie by Prince and Princess Alexander of Teck, the Duchess of Alâ€" bany, the Lord Mayor and Lady Mayorâ€" ess, and the matron. . For most of the rtientlâ€"vomen and childrenâ€"her Roya B.xhneu had a kindly smile and a cheering word of hope. But there were others to whom a word meant nothingâ€"the little waifs of humanity with minds a blank, some times with limbs distorted. The Princess came to one, a baby boy whose wasted legs were twisted up around his body, and whose big, staring eyes carried no light of intelligence. "Poor, poor mite," she murmured; "what a pity; poor baby." After thirteen years of honorary serâ€" vice at the War Office, during which his attention to duty was so unremitting that he never left the building except at the tifme of the department‘s removal from Pall Mall to Whitehall, one of the most devoted retainers of the Governâ€" ment had died of old age. His name was Trilley, and he is deâ€" scribed by those whom he bas left to mourn his loss as a black and white cat of unusual size and thickness of coat. "He never took to the new buildings," said an official et the War Office reâ€" cently. "He missed the dark passages of the old place, where he could snuggle up against the pipes and sleep. "He was not ‘on rations‘ like the cats at the postoffice, who were allowed ls. 64. a week for milk, but he lived well for @ll that. He couldn‘t be described as an active mouseâ€"catcherâ€"in fact, he was generally so sleepy that the mice conld come and play with his tail if they liked. But he was always very friendly to officers, especially if they were generals. He would wait for them in the entrance hall and rub up against they legs as they went out." Trilley‘s body is to be stuffed. Majorâ€"he was second in command under Trilley, hence his namesâ€"a strapâ€" ping, finely furred, black Tom, has been invested with the blue ribbon which carâ€" ries with it the official title of "Waer Office cat," the highest office to which any Government feline can attain. Whenever any trouble starts Or anybody makes a row In Europe or in foreign parts, They put the blame on him, somehow. Every traveller knows that there are certain restrictions upon the introdueâ€" tion of arms into foreign countries. Among the weapons which it is forbidâ€" den to take into France is the "tromâ€" blon," which is expressly mentioned in the penal code as a weapon the carrying and sale of which is not allowed. And yet the "tromblon" is not a firearm which is commonly used nowadays, for it is nothing else than the blunderbuss, a weapon which old caricatures show to have Y)een carried by the guards of coaches as a protection against highway. men and to have been hung over hbis fireplace by John Bull at the time of the scare of a Napoleonic invasion a hundred years ago. The blunderbuss had a flint lock, a short barrel and a muzzle like a trumpet, the bell mouth being designed to scatter the slugs with whigx the primitive piece was charged. Any one who buys one at an old curiosâ€" ity shop had better take care how he introduces it into France, for the penalâ€" ty for doing so is a fine of 200 francs.â€" Bloodlessness is the starting point of consumption. When your blood is thin and watery your whole health declines. Your face grows pale, your appetite fails and your heart jumps and flutters & the least exertion or excitement. You are always weak and wretched and lose interest in everything. This is the point from which you may easily step into that hopeless decline that leads to conâ€" sumption and the grave. What is acâ€" tvally needed to bring back health and strength and energy is the new rich blood Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills actually make. In all the world there is no other tonic medicine like thein, and all who feel weak and easily tired should take these Pills at once, and _ regain new health. Miss Ada Burke, The Range, N. B., says: "I feel that I cannot _ say too much in favor of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. lin March, 1907, I was attacked with whooping cough which clung to me for several months, and when the cough disappeared I was left weak and run down. All summer I was ailing, but when the autumn came I seemed to be comâ€" pletély worn out. For a whole month I never moved outside the house, and could scarcely walk about the house I was so weak,. I had no appetite, my color was a greenish yellow. I had severe headaches and would be almost breathâ€" less at the least exertion. I took several bottles of medicine, but it did not help me, and then my mother got me three bexes of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, when I bad used them I was much better, and by the time I had taken another three boxes I was again enjoying the best of health, with a hearty appetite, good color and renewed energy." CONSUMPTION‘S STARTING POINT If you want new health _ and new strength try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, a fair use of this medicine will not disapâ€" point you. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Williams‘ Mediâ€" cine Co., Brockville, Ont. If Francis Joseph stubs his toe, Or good King Edward falls downstairs, It‘s up to German Bill to show He didn‘t cause those sad affairs, Lies In Weak, Watery Blood. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Make the If Frenchmen catch a new disease, Or Russia‘s pushed against the wall, Some London correspondent sees How William slyly planned it all. He says he looks on war with hate, But every time a wir begins / They all declare, as sure as fate, It‘s one of William‘s shamefulâ€"sins. â€"8. E. Kiser in Chicago Recordâ€"Herald. Twondon (ilobe George Husted, the New En{.nd golfer, was playing last month t Newâ€" fort, N. H., and with a particularly ong drive sent his ball clean across a brook into a fenced vale. W x . 0% As his caddy started for the fence Mr. Husted said: "What is that place, boy?" "The cemetery, sir," was the reply. "Ah, I see,* éaid *Mr. Hustedâ€""the last hole."â€"Washington Star, WAR OFFICE CAT DEAD. Blood Rich and Red. A Forbidden Weapon Emperor William. Another Golf One,. THROW AWAY ALL YOUR FEARS Backache, Grave! and Rheumaâ€" tism Vanish Before Doda‘s Kidney Pills. Proved Once Again in the Case of Mrs. Fred Krieger, Who Suffered From the Worst Form of Kidney Disease. Palmer Rapids, Ont.â€"(Special) â€"Lhe thousands of Canadians who live in daily terror of those terrible forms of Kidney Disease known as Backache, Gravel and Rheumatism, will be deeply interested in the story of Mrs. Fred Krieger, of this place. m Ese "1 was for years a great sufferer from Kiduey Disease, Gravel, Rhoumatism and Backache," Mrs. Krieger states. "It all started through a cold, but I got so my head ached, 1 was nervoys, my limbs were heavy, I had a dragging sensation across my loins, and I was totally unfit to do anything. se e "Reading about wonderful cures by Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis led me to buy some. After using a few I found they were doâ€" ing me good and this encouraged me to contimg their use. KEight boxes made me well. "I have been able to doâ€"my own work ever since and toâ€"day 1 am completely ecured. _ Dodd‘s kidney Pills gave me health and I feel like a new woman." If you keep your kidneys strong and healthy you can never have Backache, Rheumatism or Gravel. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills never fail to make the Kidneys strong and well. ) | Rudyard Kipling, addressing a recent medical gathering in London, remarked that among the r‘ri\'ilegeu of physicians was omne which they shared with kings. Policemen would not stop them if they exceeded the speed limit on their cars. A visiting card would take them through the densest, most turbulent crowds, By flying a yellow flag they could turn a centre of population into a desert, and by filying a redâ€"cross flag they could turn a desert into a centre of population, toward which men, as he had seen them, would crawl on hands and knees. They could forbid any ship to enter any port in any part of the world, and for the success of any operation in which they were interested could, if necessary, stop in midâ€"ocean the fastest Atlantic liner with her mails. They could tie up traffic and without notice order houses, streets and whole quarters of a city to be pulled down, calling, if need be, on the nearest troops to see that their preâ€" scription was carried out. The Old House in Which They Were Sold in Town of Hanover, A relic of slavery days in New England in the middle of the eighteenth century, the old Tilden house on Winter street, West Hanover, the only house in that town where slaves were kept for marâ€" ket, is now being demolished.. s "The watch advertised in another colâ€" umn of this paper is a BEAUTY, and you will be more than pleased with it." _ The Hon, Jedediah Dwelley, of North Hanover, who has spent much time in gaâ€" thering facts concerning the early history of the town, says: "While there was more or less buying and selling of slaves (as in the middle of the eighteenth cenâ€" tury nearly all the worthy families ownâ€" ed one or more) this probably was the only place where the traffic was carried on for revenue. I have seen two bills of slaves sold from this house. One was from Job Tilden to a Mr. Bailey, of Scitâ€" uate, a negro child named Morrow, 9 years of age, of good bodily health and a kind dieposition." The books of the First Congregational Church of Hanover record the marriage by the Rev. Benjamin Bass on February 8, 1751. of Jack and Billah, servants ownâ€" ed by Job Tilden, and also the death of a negro boy owned by Job Tilden, Febâ€" ruary 12, 1760. There are many other brief records of slaves kept in different families in Hanover.â€"From the Boston Herald. No one knows the exact date of the building of the house, but historians agree that it was long before the incorâ€" poration of the town of Hanover in 1727. Wright‘s Flight Spectacular Enough. According to cable dispate es, the French people are urging Wilbur Wright to make a flight across the English Channel. As to his ability to do this, says the Sciautific Ameriâ€" can, there can be little doubt; as t« the expediency of doing it, there is no doubt whatever; for it would be the most foolish thing that he could atâ€" tempt at the present time. A slight misfiap to the immotor would .aean a descent into the sea and a probable catastrophe. The work already done by Wright should prove sufficiently spectacular to satisfy even the exciteâ€" mentâ€"loving people of France. The house is one of the best known landmarks in Plymouth county and has stood for nearly 200 years, It was used as a tavern in its early days and later for a residence. Of recent years it has been abandoned to the elements and has rapidly fallen into decay. One of Mr. Tilden‘s slaves named Cufâ€" fee eerved as a soldier in the Revolutionâ€" ary war, and according to an old payâ€" roll he was stationed at Hull, March 1, 1777. He was with Col. Bailey and died at Valley Forge. He was known as Cufâ€" fee Tilden, and was so inscribed on the printed rolls. * Ther: was a sudden change in the wind, und the pastor of the Mount Zion Chapel saw that some of his parishioners drew their wraps about ‘their shoulders. He paused in hY- sermon. "Brudder Wilding," he said, r-hin, his voice, and waking the old sexton from peaceful slumbers in the rear pew, "Brudâ€" der Wilding, be kind enough to close all de winders on de eas‘ side ob de church. De wind has come round, an‘ we cyan‘t afford to lose a single lamb from dis fold by carelessness, vnl"g an outstanding debt on dis chapel, an‘ two families moved out ob town."â€"Youth‘s Companion, nervous and feverish. ‘Ten to one yoursleepiossâ€" noss is caused by a torpid liver. A fow days‘ troatâ€" ment â€"with Celery King the tonicdaxative, !nl! Don‘t lis awake nights, '0 nervous and feverish. Ten to one yoursleepiossâ€" ness is cavs d by a torpid liver. A few days‘ troatâ€" mentâ€"with Celery King, the toniodaxative, will make your nights restfcl ;‘nd lt:::'thenlng. cents, e or by mail _ 8. OrWQfllc Co., Toronto. s9 SLAVES IN MASSACHUSETTS. A Poor Time for Risks. Doctors ‘Privileges. A GOOD ONE. Scheme of Railway Brakeman Who Kept Himself at Work. In Kansas the railroads have a good dea! of difficulty in providing competent men to fill vacancies i~ the train crews and other positions which do not offer nttrmioiuntn_‘t are especially inviting. At each division terminal there is usuâ€" ally maintained a "crew board" upon which is written in chaik twice a day a list of conductors and brakem& availâ€" able for the following twelve hours. This list is posted by the "caller" or some othâ€" er employce familiar with the situation and from it men are chosen to fili the various runs. One day an accident happened which caused some dismay at hug:arun for, aside from breaking up some cars and tearing up some track, it shattered the plans of the superintendent, who was about to start upon a vacation trip, Investigation developed that a brakeâ€" man had forgotten to close a switch Pro- rerly mdotga following train ran into t, with the result noted above. The brakeman was dismissed forthâ€" with, _ Six weeks later the superintendâ€" ent boarded a freight train at a way staâ€" tion on the division and, mounting the "doghouse" steps in the caboose, was much surprised to find that same brakeâ€" man on guard. A "Workin‘," replied the culprit, with a dismal grin. se s d e o Tok ts "What are you doing here?" inquired the surprised official _ "Upon whose authority *" persisted the superintendent. . f ooo aa "Aw! I ain‘t lost no time -~uu." ansâ€" wered the brakeman. Further questioning brought out the fact that t?le industrious one had been marking up his own name upon the crew board and in that way was being called regularly to go out on the rum. Asked why he had takem such a course to keep at work, he replied: _ 5 "Well, boss; my credit for grub is good as long as 1 keep busy, but when me pay stops me chuck stops!" _ BABY‘S WELFARE MOTHER‘s CHIEF CARE. Every mother is naturally anxious that her little ones shall be healthy, good natured _ and _ bright. Enr‘y mother can keep her little ones in this condition if she will give them an occasional dose of Baby‘s Own Tablets. These Tablets cure all stomach and bowel troubles, break up colds, destroy worms _ and â€" make _ teething _ easy. Equally good for the new born baby or the well grown child. Mrs. W. E. Stewâ€" art, St. George, N. B., says: "I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets for my little ones for several years and have found them reliable in all emergencies. I canâ€" not praise the Tablets too highly." Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Boston minister says that not long ago he was dining with a friend. Another iuest present was a young man from tentucky, and the minister was much pleased by the youth‘s somewhat diffiâ€" dent yet selfâ€"possessed manner, He also noted that the young man had left his wine untouched. "Don‘t you drink wine, Mr. Clayton?" the charming daughter of the host asked, lifting her own glass and smiling across at the young man, ""No, {never do," he replied, blushing. "Oh, but I am sure you will this time â€"just one glassâ€"with me*" she insisted. "No, thank you," was the resolute reâ€" ply, and the minister looked upon him with growing admiration. The young lady very nearly achieved a pout. "You won‘t, then?" she asked, "No," was the firm reply, though the blush of embarrassment deepened on his cheek. "I never drink winc," he added, "but ifâ€"erâ€"you have got a little old Bourbon, I reckon I could stand three or four fingers."â€"From Harper‘s Weekly. THE BEST AGRICULTURAL AND HOME PAPER SAMPLE COPY FREE «THE FARMERS‘ ADVOCATE" First Printing Press West of Missourl. It is a curious anomaly ,says the Bcientific American, that the most gowoflul Dreadnaought afloat should elong to c Bouth American Republic, but it cannot be denied that the Minas Geraes is entitled to this disâ€" tinction. Bhe is the only warship mounting 12â€"inch guns, and they are so placed that she can concentrate eight ahead and astern and ten on either broadside, as against four ahead and astern and ten on either broadâ€" side, which can be done by our new North Dakota and Delaware. _ The first printing press in the United States west of the Missouri was set up at Santa Fe early in the last century. History does not disclose the date or its origin or its ownership, but there are extant printed proclamations dated 1821 and having the Santa Fe imprint, anteâ€" dating by fourteen years the first newsâ€" paper, El Crepusculo, prophetiuui namâ€" ed the Dawn, which was first published in 1835 at Taos and was in the main & periodical tract to make propaganda for the peculiar religious and moral ideas wo t _> F mu o arooa amocana of Padre Martinez. The first English newspapers in New Mexico appeared in 1847, shortly after the occupation of Santa Fe by General Kearny. They were the Santa Fe Republican and the Santa Fe New Mexican, both published at Santa Fe.â€"Santa Fe New Mexican, Their Golden Bond. "How did these two ever come to m“w each other !" ell, she was the only woman he ever knew that would listen to his anecdotes over five minutes at a time, and he was the only man she ever knew that could look at her that long without getting neuralgia."â€"Puck. Two Irishmen were looking at brickâ€" layers busily working. "I say, Pat, kin yer til me what kapes them bricks toâ€" thert" asked one. them apart!"â€"Philadelphia Inquirer. "That‘s where you are wrong," rejoinâ€" ed Mike; "the mortar‘s _ what kapes REFUSED TO BE DISCHARGED. He is working yet.â€"Kansas City Star Mention this paper. 1261. London, Ont "Sure, it‘s the mortar, Mike," was the on the American continent,. No progressive farmer con afford to be without it. Published weekâ€" ly. Only $1.50 per year. Drop post card for free sample copy. Agents wanted. Address: Would you like to have a samâ€" ple copy of the Farmer‘s Advoâ€" cate and Home Magazine? He Looked Not on the Wine. The Mission of the Mortar. Most Powerful "Dreadnought." ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO MODISH NOVELTIES. * bGrncime Roseâ€"fringed Scartâ€"Waletbandsâ€"as to Upon some of the new scarfs, there‘s a deep frings of little roses and daisi>« nodding from long staike. Gold, erys\« and silver fringes are also being used | the dressmakers as a completing touc: of elegance upon teagowns, evening (0. lettes, and full dress cloaks. The latest novelty in waistbands owâ€"s its existence to the crase for the sa>b The fashionable waistbelt of toâ€"day is made to appear like a sash as much is possible. it is high, and ewnathed, the broad ribbon ends VW with long tassels being brought over the hips ans loosely knotted in front. The sash ap pearance so gained is very charming, and gives an upâ€"toâ€"date touch to oune‘s The close fitting skirt that follows the lines of ‘the figure with ease is to be the leader. It is not probable that the greai makers will take a marked depariure from its lines for the next few months at least, At its best such a skirtâ€"is very graceful and suits all sorts of costumes _ Walking skirts continue short, During the summer they have been anywhere from an inch to five inches from the floor. The fall walking skirts are still a bit uncertain, but they will be short and probably of as many lengths as those worn now. ‘This material is of the greatest imâ€" portance this season, and the indications are that it will be used extensively for fall wear, instead of the plain linen or lawn, for @hirtâ€"waists, clu‘l(rren'l dresses, aprons and handkerchicfs, It wears well, Inunders beautifully and comes in variâ€" our widths, designs and qualities. Table linens of plaids and stripes are the very ne west. Perhaps most of the scolding done in the world is between bhusbands and wives or between pareuts and children, Parâ€" ecrts must instruct their children; they must sometimes reprove them,. They must often counsel them, But they are in great danger of "provoking them _ to wrath"â€"in the wise Biblical phrase. Chilâ€" dren have the keenest possible sense of justice; they are also very easily hurt, and when their minds are bruised the result is estrangement, and that is as sad a thing as can ever be. An imperious scolding father or mother frightens the children away, drives them into all manâ€" ner of evasions and subterfuges, and brands their minds forever with the meâ€" mory of cruel and blistering words, They must be cleaned. There should be three cleanings a day A brushing after each meal is best. Even a restaurant dl?: may use den tal floss in the toilet rdom. Mux business women may manage to rinse the mouth ~ /\ l e water, A rinse macs of a temspoonful of biâ€" carbonate of.od.lnn‘lglooleterh _ Persons who eat all their meals at home have little excuse for not using both brush and floss after each meal. helpful A brush should be chosen with meâ€" dium soft bristles, and it should be shapâ€" ed, else only the front teeth will benefit Jonesâ€"Did Smith tell {OI he hb pawned his gold watch and borrowed gilver one from the pawnbrokert _ _ Bonesâ€"No, but he said nes same thlna' He remarked that stances alter cases. by its use ©5.00 _ from solid goldâ€" and contains places for holding LLNGRAVED with any monogram and enclosed in suitâ€" able case; the price is _ $5.00 _ S=» (OUR Iandicently iHtustrated catalogue sent free RYRIE BrOS., | LIMITED | 134â€"136â€"138 Yonge St Barred Linens and Lawns Saying It Another Way. Beware of Scolding The Testh the Y

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