West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 26 Nov 1908, p. 3

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

nlesses to Wholesale Thefts at the Mines. ‘as ._ _ ""m€ Tor senâ€" This scholatly genâ€" n of the lowest type. elfish. Were he in. . he would protect L citizen just as he essional interests. â€"â€" ine. each the highest. be LD THIEVES. Mv ild XPENSES Moose Near Flor ay for Ef B. R. Reed T. Barnett PER M : paid a a return municaâ€" »art ment atating pav the K« al te me, Near it month from his his guilt in _ the his comâ€" the gold & rfl&, loves or hed out. : to $100 ome the. ma dis D it ork the = tha ny of v and t t95 h t El aned have ip im from thes stit y akem bail. has ilted id ID€ 3 M th h ew C door. wach V draughtiess wind M that eve # cheerful. _ There tiled . fireâ€"places in the sittingâ€"ro« each d'dlllt w tevel or on the Crossâ€"examimed by Mr. Barnard: There are hundreds of letters hers which passed between you; can you rl.nt out any aingle letter written by r. Brand in which he speaks of your ingagement or marriage>â€"Thero was occasion for such a thing. I was E:nbly engaged to Mr. Brand for g::lno years. He loved ms and inten to marry me. * The Li‘l‘ry found fjor the will, for hich lordship pronounced, refusâ€" E: an application of Mr. Barnard % the costs should come out of the estate. The fourth candidate in the millinâ€" ery fiecld resembles in shape an inâ€" wverted basin. Covered with the softâ€" sst and fluifiest of brown marabout, when placed on the head it suggests an exaggerated coiffure rather than a hat, for if the wearer‘s hair is brown, like the marabout, it is impossible to distinguish between the two a fow yards away. The trimmin' is not a little daring. mr "feathers‘ ‘composed of the bncfl- es of stiff quills are finished at the tip with the ends of peacock feathâ€" org. gho quills are %lloed upright in the front of the busby, and the peaâ€" cock‘s "eyes" gleam forth their green, blue, and ple shades with each movement of“si. wearer‘s head. suffrage is already divided between the conflicting claims of the . large Merry Widow, the flat lplateau, and the compact pillâ€"box styles. Busbies for women. That is the iatest from the Mint of Fashion, and the arrival of the new hat will add to the lexities of femhinitg whose uffrage K already divided between Detectiveâ€"Inspector Bradcock deposed co arresting the general at his house. In npl{dto the warrant he said: "All rfi\ old boy, I‘ll be there." The witness t he would be arrested immediâ€" ately, and the general exclaimed:; " It will kill my poor wife." On being told the name of the camplainant, he said: "Well, 1 gave her mother some money." A remand was ordered, bail being alâ€" lowed, the defendant in £1,000 and one surety, a medical man, in £1,000. upol.poozbnildin‘vhichrisesukoi palace amid the dlnf streets of Bethâ€" nal Green,. Intended by the £2,000,000 Sutton Trust for the exclusive occupaâ€" tion of working men, it will reach . a volnt of luxury hitherto nndfemt of at CCC q caccs rents so low as 2s. 6d. se C . Lomk a week rent or 10c.â€"will step into _ a neat little hall when he opens his front door. Kach tenement has _ patent draughtliess windows, so large and well placed that every room is bright srd cheerful. _ There will be nrthfi‘o gasâ€" brackets in each apartment, prettily tiled . fireâ€"places also, and ?ietun-nfl. in the sittingâ€"rooms. _ At he back of each dwoml% whether on the groundâ€" level or on the higher floors, is a little U C anaved vard and & tiny balcony. u4 a c th iB s ho l stoneâ€"paved yard and a tiny baic Buch ingenious boilers are Kl:'eed in mflltthtlnlouthn t an 1 Lo ar a" C020 20 Wwenl to :Mhnd. He died about three months + :7! of bronchitis, on December 16, , Mt. Thomas W. Ta lor, â€" retired «guilder, of Stoke Newinzton, said he &l.lmmu‘mmt ltn n§ho Otklefi AmuMnt 0 e will and saw Mr. nq&.ndt sign t.n:: nn%. at hMr. Brand‘s uest wi s added his name to the document. Crou-.umflod by Mr. Barnard: You do mot know tKat on September l (the date of the will) ho was out & before breakfast, and was ander the influence of drink early in the morning?â€"He was not in the »vening; he was sober as a jJudge. m&m in which his Lordship L q C C OCV w ECE IL InQ »vening; he was sober as a jJudge. g;lnl:sl)lhr in which his Lordship The plaintiff, Miss Laura Lo gett, piving evidence, stated that Mr. lgrand was engaged in the Bamk of Scotsland lor twontiiflvo years, and he resigned in 1902. He mi&od to her a policy topr en ouid on O s O0e, and she had un present time. e had {ivon her heaps of presentsâ€" bracelets, pearls, rings, and ?fis mothâ€" »ws‘ watch. He visited her father‘s house once a week for twentyâ€"one Kagwa _ ARRSET OF A GENERAL. Majorâ€"General Gardiner Frederic Guyâ€" m, of Egerton House, Richmond, was ‘harged at Richmond Police Court on Friday with an offence against a girl ~ged eleven. e mg t T9is Beotland later of hus L.3 . *CCUcUd like twenty pears had been on hfimu‘ of the greatâ€" »st friendship with Mr. Brand. _ At me time they wore engaged to be marâ€" tled, but for some reason the wedding was postponed. In August, 1907, Mr. Brand contemâ€" plated a trip to Scotland by water, and the da{ gn!oro lix; atarted m}:t Mias Louot y ap tment at the Dlll!; Arms, Goowofioroad, which was kept by Mr. and Mrs. White, her lfllnd_.. They had tea in the saloon Jar with Mrg, White. There he wrote lhe will and gave it to Miss Leggett, md the following day he went to RBeotland Tr. .. 008 _ 1 s 3 ; _ CCG Fears had been on “flm »at hu‘;nd‘lhhip with E. me time they were encag rled, bmt for some ru‘::i'x was postponed. In August, 1907 Mror "MICS k : ._â€" "> * ~ _ nt.‘;gtgmn. K.C., said t L‘llo‘t“a t something like theet of »,,, _A Was written on a of notepaper in the saloon bar Â¥ a public house in Goswell road, was b{ Mrs. Magy Goodanough lere Â¥rt; s ooee wincs Simpson, fls of the deceased, they allegin t f’t M_ n0t been m»m.h. g-!,,A, * that My. vB-n rontents, and s,fby _undug â€" 3 8077 o# an engagement that Insted for twentyâ€"one years and then lid not end in matrimony was told in the Probate Court on Wednesday, wher Miss Laura Leggett, daughter Â¥# a veterinary surgeon practising in ml Parkâ€"road," sought to proâ€" the will of Hr._;!ohn Creighâ€" on Brand, formerly & clerk in the Bank of Beotland, who died: on Decâ€" unber 16, 1907, The will, which was written on a I;teet OE, notepaper in the salson ha» S & esckas is LUXURY FOR 28 6D A WEEK. A thousand men are j‘.ult_‘now busy GoLD Many Interesting Happenings Reported From NEWS FROM THE OLD LAND BUSBIES FOR WOMEN ts s (London "i- o youg M&Y Goodanough izzle Wilkie Simpson, sisâ€" > deceuod, they alleging that ot been properl executed, Brand did not {now ef its and that it has been obtainâ€" dll’ influence on tha nart af ; 2s. 6d. a week. â€"whether ho pays 28. 64. Daily Mail,) LAID WATCH FREE ! said that Miss s been obtainâ€" on the part of ev erals De Wet and De la Rey had been whaling that afternoon, he said, and they got their whale; in their language it was a "dood schoot"â€"Anglice, "dead shot." To the Convention whalers he ofiered the motto, "Dood Schoot," as typifying a successful effort. Sir Henry de Villiers said that the Convention‘s dead shot must be directed "MIRACLES" OF FATHER 1Gâ€" NATIUS. We regret to announce the death of Father znauus, who passed away at his sister‘s residence. Darjecling, near Camberley. Father Ignatiusâ€"the Rev. Joseph Leyâ€" cester Lyneâ€"wias born in London seyâ€" entyâ€"one years ago. He was ordained in 1860 to the curacy of St. Peter‘s, Plymouth, and subsequently held variâ€" cus other curacies, but very early in his eareer he conceived Kc idea of forming an Orderi of St. Benedict with in the Clairch of England. The ultiâ€" mate outcome was the Benedictine Abâ€" tey at Li@nthony, which he founded in 1870. To the last, however, he remained in the chyrches owing to what he conâ€" rended was tha rationalism permitted by the bishops. Lox before the foundation of the abâ€" bey his preaching attracted great atâ€" tention, One of his objects in those days was to purge Lombard street of its unâ€" dereurrents of money worship and sordâ€" I¢ness, (On one occasion, towards the close of 1508, he was _ announced to preach the midâ€"day sermon to City men at St. Edmund‘s Church, The church was crowded, and at the close of the sermon there was great confusion. He was surâ€" rounded by a mob, but insigted despite the protestations of eight pulicemen, in making his way through the crowd to his cab, which he reached in safety. | At a quarterly meeting of the couneil of the Royal College of Surgoons in London, the following resolutions were adopted : To C BOER APPEAL TO SRITISH PUBLIC Lord Selborne, reo&onding to the toast of his health at the Government banquet at Durban to Sir Percy Scott and the ofticers of the cruiser squadron, gave the South African Convention a motto. (ienâ€" in Among other stories told of him was that he raised from the dead a laborer who was said to have been killed duri building operations at Llanthony, n.:fi that he brought to life again a girl who had died of typhoid fever. He is said alâ€" #v to havo revived a dying woman to normal vigor and taken deadly poison with impunity, while many who had moeked and opposed him were reported to have been visited by swift superna tural retribution. He claimed that a vision of the Virâ€" gin Mary appeared to him at Liam thony Abbey, and he and his Little comâ€" mun(ty on each anmiversary of the apâ€" pearance celebrated the festival of "Our Lady of Lianthony." Then occurred one of _ the miracles which Father kmatiue firmly believed were connected with him at various inâ€" tervals in his life. He had no sooner taken his seat in the cab than a man, picking up a stone, hurled it through the cab wfndow. The stone, however, did not strike Father Ignatius, butâ€"â€"so the story goesâ€"it was caught by an unseen hnm{ and deposited gently at his feet. Examination of the case showed that the lock had ben tampered with, and it is possible that the glass was smashed while the thief was endeavoring to abâ€" stract the ingots by opening the door of the case. Altogether platinum of the value of £14,000 in ingots was in the case. was loud enough to attract attention. The theft of the two ingots was discoyâ€" ered almost immediately, but the thief bad vanished, and, as yet, there is no elue to his identity. ¢ Tss About 10.30 each night the day staff of attendants leave duty and the night staff take their place. At 10.35 on Monâ€" day night, just before the day staff had left and at a moment when a double staff with the police were on duty, a crash of glass was heard. The turbines driving the machinery were running at the time, but the noise of the smash £1,000 THEFT OF INGOTS. Two platinum ingots, weighing 214 ounces and> worth upwards of £1,000, were stoien from the show case of Messrs, Johnson, Mattiey & Co., in the British sectinnm of the Machinery Hall at the White City late on Monday night. _ A perambulatar house is provided, diâ€" vided into separate compartments, and all with numbers and keys. A similar plant is to be adopted for the men‘s bicycles, A workshop, complete with every necessary tool, will be at the disposal of amateur carpenters who deâ€" sire to construct some devica for houseâ€" hold use water may be made hot for the model baths. When they are not in use these :thl are transformed into kitchen taâ€" es. By a device which should become dear to the heart of thrifty housewives one fire is made to do duty for both kitchen and sittingâ€"room. The two grates stand back to back, and when the fire is not needed in the kitchen the pulling of a lever will raise a dividing metal bar and tilt the glowing coals into the sittingâ€" room fireplace. That steps be forthwith taken to adâ€" mit women to the oxaminations of the Conjoint Examining Board in England, and to the examination for the dipâ€" loma in public bealth;. : That women be admitted to the exâ€" aminations for the Feltowship of the Royal College of Surgeons, and to the examinations for the license in dental surgery. A committee was appointed to prepare formula for the necessary alterations _ the college byâ€"laws. wWOMEN SURGEONS. construct some device for house Mre. Chiliconâ€"Kearneyâ€"Yes; it was a mean trick. The {Mure looked just like you, too, didn‘t it? Mrs. Goodsoleâ€"I told the editors of that paper I didn‘t want them to print my ;rtnro, but they went right ahead and did it." The Republicans of Minnesota, hay ing read and inwardly digested the useful lesson of 1904 and 1906, have nominated for Governor this year a plain farmer who, according to nis convention eulogist, "eats pie with his knife." If he should be elested it would be a big triumxh for the lain folk of Minnesota. And yet he Soes but follow the table etiquette of George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and James Monroeâ€"of each of the first five Presidentsâ€"in "eating pie with his knife." It was not until John Quincy Adams entered the White House that the substitution of the fork for the knile seems to have ocâ€" curred to any citizen of America." He contracted the habit while in France," said Mrs. Adams in an apologetic tone to some of her guests, "ang he finds it difficult to break himself of it since we returned home." Bo the first great general of the American army, the sturdy patriot of Massachuâ€" getts, the author of the Declaration of Independence, the chief advocate of the Federal Constitution and the originator of the Monroe Doctrineâ€" all ate pie with the knifo. et After Years of Suffering Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Cured Her. Pleasant Point Matron Tells Her Sufâ€" fering Sisters How to be Free From the Terrible Pains That Make Life a Burden. Pleasant Point, Ont., Nov. 16.â€"(Speâ€" clal)â€"That most of the ills that the suffering women of Canada have to bear are due to disordered Kidneys, and that the natural cure for them is Dodd‘s Kidâ€" ney Pills, is once more shown in the case of Mrs. Merrill C. Clarke, a well known resident of this &l‘nce and a prominent member of the Salvation Army. Mrs. They were now being asked to make sacrifices for a high idealâ€"one State, one Govern/ment, one people. That was their aim, and he contemplated the fuâ€" ture with hopefulness and trust that the people of Bouth Afirea, springing from the best stock of Europe, would be one of the finest peoples on earth,. Clarke is always ready to give her exâ€" perience for the benefit of her suffering sisters. "My sickness commenced twenty years ago with the change of life," says Mrs. Clarke,. "My health was in a bad state. Water would run from my head which would make me faint. When I came out of the fainting spells I took fits, I was bloated till I was clumsy. The pain I suffered was awful. It would go to my feet and then to my head. Many doctors attended me and I tried many medicines but nothing gave me relief till I used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. The first box stopâ€" ped the fits and seven boxes cured me completely." _ e Ew‘lery suffering woman should use Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. They make strong healthy Kidneys, and the woman who has good Kidneys is safeguarded against those terrible pains that make miserable the lives of so many women, General Bmuts a.pPeuled to the public to banish its suspicions. The delegates were ttyini, on & basis of perfect equalâ€" ity and justice, to arrive at a settlement which would endure and be nonâ€"racial. Discord and bickerings, which were worse than war, might strangle South Africa‘s future. to killing disunion, distrust, suspicion and racialism HOW MRS. CLARKE FOUND RELJEF MAGISTRATE AND SCHOOL COMâ€" MISES!0ONER HEALED BY ZAMâ€"BUK. Zamâ€"Buk by its healing power has earned ‘the praise of men and women Zamâ€"Buk also cures burns. cuts, ulcers, blood poisoning, ringworm, scalp sores, chapped hands, cold sores, and all skin injuries and diseases, Rubbed well on to the chest in cases of cold it reâ€" lieves the tightnees and aching. _ All druggists and stores seil at 50c. box, or post free from Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto, for price, 3 boxes for $1.23. "I have also used Zamâ€"Buk _ for itching piles, and it has cured them completely also. 1 take comfort in helping my brother man, and if the Eublication of my experience of Zamâ€" uk will lead other sufferers to try it, I should be glad. For the cure of piles or skin diseases, I know of nothâ€" ing to equal Zamâ€"Buk." inmhi‘h.tltsfio-ofllh. One of the latest prominent gentiemen to speak highly in Zamâ€"Buk‘s favor is Mr. C. E. Sanford, of Weston, King‘s Co., N. 8. Mr, Weston is a Justice of the Peace for the county, and a memâ€" ber of the Board of School Commisâ€" stoners. He is also deacon of the BHapâ€" tist Church in Berwick. Indeed, throughâ€" out the county it would be difficult to find a man more widely known and more highly respected. Some time back he had occasion to test Zamâ€"Buk, and here is his opinion of this great balim. _ He says: "I had mttch of eczema on my ankle, which been there for over twenty years! Bometimes also the disease would break out on my shoulders. I had taken solution of arsenic, had applied various ointments, and tried all sorts of things to obtain a cure, but in vain, Zamâ€"Buk, unlike all else I tried, proved highly satisfactory, and cured the ailâ€" men*, THE FAT OF THE LAND. Heâ€"Yes, ho lives on the fat of the land. Sheâ€"What business is he in? Heâ€"He‘s proprictor of the antiâ€"fat mediâ€" ECZEMA AND PILES CURED The Old Fashioned Pic Eaters. Sympathy. standard remedy for female i.l].sl and has positively cured thousands o women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceraâ€" tion, fibroid tumors, irre&J‘I:rities, periodic pains, backache, bearâ€" ingâ€"down feeling, flatulency, indigesâ€" tion,dizzinessor nervous prostration. Why don‘t you try it ? "It has cured me of all my troubles, and I did not have to have the operaâ€" tion after all. The Com{)ound also helped me to pass safely through Change of Life," FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty Keam Lydia K. Pinkâ€" ham‘a Varatahla (nmnaumd â€" marla ham‘s Vegetable Com made Froim roote aink horce hes book the Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Amnmmn. C1 wrooetomlisterabonz itand she advised me to e Lydia E. Pinkham‘s "I was sick for five years, One docâ€" tor told me it was ulceratior, and anâ€" other told me it was a fibroid tumor, and advised an operation. No one knows what I suffered, and the bearâ€" inF down pains were terrible. iÂ¥ vsurth toa vaw olstau alnut it and sha Proof is inexhaustible that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Ve&:bble Compound cures fomale and carries women safely through the Oliang(ie o& t'il‘;‘n'o. P Blair, Cannifton, Ont,, writes to Mrs. Pinkham : Vegetable Com; What a Few Seeds Did for One Town â€"Everybody Happy. In 1885 William S. Ross, familiarly known as "Uncle Billy," having lived for some time in Texas, returned to Alma, with some melon seeds in his pocketâ€"a bare handful. In the spring following he planted them in a piecs of rich botâ€" tom land, and in August he peddled the fruit about Salem and Kiomundy _ and among his neighbors, _ Later, growing more fruit than the local market would consume, he shipped a barrel of the melâ€" ons to Chicago. ‘The commission merâ€" chant on Water street tore off the canâ€" vas, gave a startled glance at the little netted globes inside, and said: "What in hâ€"â€" will they send us next _ from Egypt?" However, he took one of the unnamable things to a fancy grocery; between them they split it open, dropped on a little salt at hazard, and tasted it, not sure whether they would be poisonâ€" ed or not. ‘The fancy grocer smacked his lips and said: "I‘ll take all of those things you can furnish But what do you call themt" g The commission merchant wrote Mr. Ross to know what he called them, and Mr. Ross answered, ‘"The Alma gem melon." Thus the trade in melons beâ€" gan. One farmer after another bought seed, followed his neighbor‘s _ example, and planted. Alma and the neighboring country has developed wonderfully as a result. Seventy thousand dollars a year has been poured into that neighborhood for twenty years, a total of $1,400,000. Men who were once so Eoor that they had no windows in their house, no linen on their tables or beds, are now prosperâ€" ous. Pianos, books, good clothes, fine horses and carriages have come, The whole plane of living has been raised. Land which was onee worth $10 per acre can now scarcely be bought for $10w. Where once there was only pinching adâ€" It is calculated that the ex;ense of inâ€" stallation for each space of 2,500 square yards in Germany or France is about $250 plus the steam generatin7 apparaâ€" tus, which may be large or small, accordâ€" ing to the tract to be heated, and which may be used for other purposes. _ The cost of the heating is figured at $15 a month. The annual increase in profit for the same fiatch of ground sown with early vegetables is figured at $500 on a three months‘ heating of the soil. Asparagus, letuace, young onions, cuâ€" cumbers, radishes and other spring plants are the ones on which it is exâ€" pected to use the system with most effect. Later in combination with foreâ€" ing frames it may be used on strawberâ€" vies, and experiments may be tried on various fruit trees. â€" The method is likely to be applied to floriculture and the growth of plants for seed purposes also. EDA CVE » Of course the plan does not contemâ€" plate heating the soil in the dead of winter, when atmospheric cold would kill any plants that might be artificially caused to germinate. The idea is simply to aid nature when the spring sets in. Leakage of heat is very slow. Experiâ€" ment is said to show that when the surâ€" face of the ground is about freezing r:int. the soil at a depth of 12 to 20 ches has a temperature of 42 degrecs. Assuming that the artificial heating were begun early in March, when this condition existed, a very small expendiâ€" ture of heat would be needed to cause the desired stimulation, and the radiaâ€" tion into the air would be exceedingly gndlul. In warmer weathor the surâ€" ace heating. from the sun would actually counteract the radiation of the artificial HEAT THE SOIL FROM BENEATH German Has a Plan to Increase Crops of Early Spring Vegetables. Dr. Mehner, a German, is responsible for the latest agricultural idea, which is now the subject of experiment in Gerâ€" many and Franceâ€"that of artificially heating the soil for the purpose cf pushâ€" ing the growth of vegetables. It is said to promise remarkable results, especially in the quickening of spring vegetables and their development in size and luxuâ€" riance. The method consists in burying at a depth of 20 to 40 inches under the field to be treated conduits of earthenware, through which steam pipes about an inch in diameter are laid. Steam at a temperature of about 300 degrees is fgrtgd through the pipes; it warms the air in the conduit amd the heat slowly radiates through the clay conduit, warmâ€" ing the earth. heat pe in eGarpen MELON PROSPERITY. eyet C l2 From the current report of the French horse breeding bureau it is learned that during the fiscal year 161,414 mares were used to drive hither and thither "behind 81,207 to approved st:ilions, 9,467 to authorized stallions. ‘This is bureauâ€" cratic, isn‘t it*â€"that a country should be able to report a thing like that. And in the archives of the French Government is the name and description of each mare in France, together with data about hte horse to which she was bred. The French never dream of breeding When George Sand wrote the Perâ€" cheron was famous as a road horse, a traveller, a ground coverer. Her heroes used to drive hither and thither "behind four splendid distanceâ€"eating Percherâ€" ons." No modern Frenchman would dream of driving up to his Ninette‘s door behind four Percherons. The Perse peasants are artists, sculptors, who within the limitations of their material most wonderfully fashion into being their equine imaginings. It Ll much easier and simpler to carve a orse of the shape you want on the Parthenon frieze than out in a Lucerne pasture in the Eureâ€"etâ€"Loir district. Dazed by this artistry, the French Minister of Agriculture gravely reports: "These men of Le Perche are 4ncredible! Command from them a horse they will build you one to your specifications." . The foundation blood of the Percheron is, or is said to be, Arab. The Frenchâ€" man will tell you that a Percheron is an Arab "made heavy" by the climate. But whether Arabian extract or not, it is sure that the breed has been made heavy by the climate or human selection during the past half century. . _ The favorite draught breed in America â€"â€"6 or 8 to 1â€"is he Percheron of France. He comes from Le Perche, southwest of Paris, and nowhere else. The horse breeders of that district have ~ banded themselves into a %uild, or union, says Collier‘s, and decreed that no horse from outside the borders of their district can ever be recorded as a Percheron on the stud book of the breed. A colt foaled just aecross the line out of a mare and by a sire correctly registered cannot himself be registered. The draught horse is getting bigger and bigger, In the late ‘80‘s if one weighâ€" ing over 1,600 «unds came from France it was an event, and the horse papers talked about himâ€"with pictures. Toâ€" day the draught importer will touch nothing under 1,800 pounds, and threeâ€" yearâ€"old colts often run up to a ton. _ How the Present Huge Percheron Has Been Evolved. Dr. Williams‘ Pills cure troubles like these because they are rooted in the blood. Bad blood is the cause of all common _ diseases like anaemia, rheumatism, _ indigestion, _ neuralgia, St. Vitus dance, fieneml weakness, and those ailments that only women folks _ know, with their attendant headaches and backaches and irregulariâ€" ties, Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are a sure cure when given a fair trial, because they enrich the blood and thus reach the root of disease. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr, Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. without ltoppix:fi on the way to get breath, and timately she grew so weak she could not sweep a floor withâ€" out resting. She tried several tonics, but received no benefit. ‘Then I persuadâ€" ed her to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and got her a half dozen boxes, After she had used a couple of boxes her appeâ€" tite began to improve and the color to return to her face. She continued using the Pills until _ she had taken the six boxes, and toâ€"day she is perfectly well, feels stronger and looks better than she has done for some years. While she was taking the Pills she gained twelve pounds in weight." Through the whole month of August and into the first or second _ week of September the industry continues, Each morning there is a jam of wagons in the little town. The good wives come wilh their husbands, and with the assurance of a neat cheque for their wagonloads the wives shop industriously. The little restaurant _ close _ to the railroad is thronged with farmers by noon. . The railroad agent has a busy time of it. Everybody is heppy. _ And why not?! With a few acres _ in melonsâ€"seldom schooling is assured. Their books and more _ than fourâ€"the children‘s winter clothing come easy.â€"St,. Louis Globeâ€" Democrat HUSBAND AND WIFE o us, and we are constantly . recomâ€" u-ndl.bi(them to our friends." _ Thus srites Mr. Ernest L. Archibald, Truro, N. 8., who further says: "In my own case I had been subject to dizzy headâ€" aches for over a year, and three boxes of the Pills completely cured me of the trouble. About a year ago my wife beâ€" An eminent Chicago, IIl., skin specialist has discovered a simple _ pure, mild compound that is a positive cure for ecrema and all forms of skin disease. This wonderful remedy is an Oil of Wintergreen compound called‘ D. D. D. prescription, and is a clean, pleasing liquid that is applied direct to the itchâ€" ing skin. The result is almost miraculous versity, and little hope for the future, prosperity now similes. In one instance, when the melons were yielding a Hitle better price than at present, an zcre of land yielded $350. From $100 to $200 an acre in return is not uncommon at all. Both Restored to Health by Dr. Williams‘ Pisk Pilis. gan to complain. She seemed to be comâ€" pletely run down; was very pale and weak; she could not _ walk up stairs â€"the sufferer gets instant relief and often a few applications areenough to take away the eruption, clear the skin and effect a complete cure. The discoverer of D. D. D. has proven to medical authorities how very uscless it is to dose the stomach to ceure skin dissase. The dissase is in the skin, and must be treated there. If you have never tried D. D. D. Preâ€" scription, write us toâ€"day, enclosing only 10c. to help pay postage and packing, and we will seml you free a trial bottle of this wonderful remedy. Tet us prove its merits to youâ€"SEXNXD RIGHT NOW "Both myself and my wife can truthluli( say that Dr. Williams‘ "ink Pillis have been of great benefit "Doctor the itch where the itch is." This wowlerful remedy is now being used in all parts of the United States by physicians and in hoepitals, Thouâ€" sands have been cured by it. 23 Jordan Stret, Dept. D2, Toronto, Ont FOR THE FREE TRIAL BOTTLE You Can Stop That Itch at Orce ECGZEMA SUFFERERS FRENCHHORSE BREEDERS. TRIAL BOTTLE FREE bD.D.D. COMPANY, Mrs, John Eweeney, 1579 Kenmore avenue, and seven of hor“oflht daughters belped to make up a unique wedding The brides were attended by the twin sister of Miss Katherine, Mrs. Walter Birmingham, while iour other sisters fell in line as bridesmaids, one #ister being ill, The bridesmaids were all similarly attired.â€"From the Chicago News. Hunting Gold Nugeet in Sand at Sidâ€" neyâ€"Prawning Contests, Notwithstanding their natural charms "THE FARMERS‘ ADVOCATE "‘Overdoing it? No, indeed. It may look overdoing it, but Juggins knows his way about. As long as he holds both thq‘~ fellow‘s hands he knows his purse is safe.‘" When it comes to doing business even the dealer in phonographs may try to break the record. Dr. A. F.W. Ingram, the Bishop of London, said at a dinuer in Washingâ€" ton, according to the Sun: "They say 1 overdo athletics, but I dorn‘t, really, Exercise keeps me fit. 1 don‘t overdo it any more than the Parâ€" lamentary â€" candidate, Juggins, overdid his cordiality. "Juggins was running for a slum disâ€" trict in Birmingham, and his cordiality among the sglum voters excited a good deal of surprise. Two canvassers fell into talk about it. "‘It‘s a grand idea of Candidate Jugâ€" gins, said the first, *Instead of _ just shaking hands with a voter in the ordinâ€" ary way hbe rusbes up and grabs the man‘s two hands, shaking them long cnd warmly.‘ ul me i "*But ien‘t that rather overdoing it* said the other canvasser, No matter whether baby is sick or well Baby‘s Own Tablets should always be kept in the house, They not only cure the minor disorders of childhood, but prevent them and should be given whenever the little ones show the slightâ€" est signs of illness, Children take the Tablets as readily as candy, and they are absolutely safe. Mrs. Geo, Howell, Sandy Beach, Que., says: "My baby was greatly troubled with colic and eried night and day, but after giving him Paby‘s Own Tablets the trouble disapâ€" peared. 1 advise all mothers to use this medicine." Sold by all medicine ealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. and attractions seaside and other holl day resorts would not afford the enjoyâ€" ment they do if it were not for the exâ€" tremely interesting, ingenious and popuâ€" lar comrtit.iom which are occasionally arrange A novel prawning competition took ghm the other day at Birling Gap, near hy Head. It was believed to be the first ever arranged, and it afforded three and a half hours of enjoyment for the contestants. ‘The first honors weut to a team hailing from Eastbourne with an average catch to a man of nine ounces. ‘They at once started digging frantiâ€" cally with spades and shovels with which they had come provided. As they dug and dug the excitement became intense, and as might be supposed, the onlookers numbered thousands. But, alas! nobody had the good fortune to unearth the nugget, so its value was presented to charities. Last August sack and other races were held on the _ sands at Filey, a select Yorkshire watering place. Among the competitiors were the sons of gome of the ruling chicefs of native states of Inâ€" dia, In a sack race for boys under the age of 12 years the competitors included the heir _ to the Sultanate of Johore, Prince Abu Bakir and Prince Ahmed, The latter was successful in carrying off the second prize.â€"London ‘Titâ€"Bits. SAMPLE COPY FREE THE BEST AGRICULTURAL AND HOME PAPER The prize for the highest individual eatch was awarded J. Bernard, who outâ€" distanced all competitors with seventeen ounces. The competition was voted a preat success and willâ€"doubtiess be reâ€" _ Last season at Sydney, N. 8. W., an execedingly popular competition was orâ€" slniud by the proprietors of a "Wonâ€" erful City." A gold nugget valued at £20 was buried in the sand and at a given signal iiterally thousands of men, women and children were admitted to the treasure grounds. to stallions of mixed or unknown blood. But the American faermer who bred his mare to a Percheron for a heavy colt, usually changes his mind a couple of years later, puts what be got from the first cross to a coach horse for sigle, this product to a trotter for speed, and the grand resuit to a jack or a mule. As a horse breeder he doesn‘t shine, > M. Valiee de Loncezs remarked. 1% looks only at the ocutside of a sire (and apparently not so very comthally at that) and cares little what kind of blood is running inside SOME NOVEL COMPETITIONS Mention this paper. 1261. London, Ont Seven Sisters in Wedding Party, 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? Makes Him Confident. KEEP BABY WELL TORONTO ‘‘That‘s not a bad summing up of it all," I said. "And the end. How would you like that to come?t" "How would 1 like that to come*" he repeated my question lightly, yet mediâ€" tatively, too, Then he was silent for some thirty seconds before he snapped his gmger- ~the action again before the words : "Like that!"â€"Ellen Terry, in Me Clure‘s Mag,_zine. â€"â€"â€"*"__ Here he kissed my hand with courtesy, Always he was so courteousâ€" always his actions, like this little one of kissing imy hand, were so beautifully timed. ‘They came just before the spoken words and gave them peculiar value. "What have I got out of it!" said Henry, stroking his chin and smi slightly, _ "Lot me see. Well, a :fi cigar, a good glass of wineâ€"good friends "Turn around and come back to town with me," said the stranger. "You were goln, at least 35 miles an hour." "You‘re a constable, I sappose," said the automobilist, with a covert sneer, when they reached the village. "Me?" replied the passenger. "No, I‘m the farmer, and had to come to town when all the teams were busy. _ Nise growing weather. Thanks, ({ood-b”." "Stop" shouted the man on the courâ€" try road, holdin&‘up a warning hand. Muttering something about rural ceps, the automobilist obeyed. _ The minister had just been giving the class a lesson on the Prodigal Son. At the finish, to tost what attention had "I have watched the festival of the cherry blossom in Japan. I have seen the pageants of China and the beautiful bay of Sydney, New Bouth Wales, but, after all, I believe that in America alone __"I do not refer to the grand canon of the Oolorado, to the seenery in the Rockies, go the great stretches of grairie, but to thou;:fhu of great cities where steam and s are kings. "Cettainly, I have never seen un:? more typical of progress than the » road yards of Cnengo at night, Has Europe nnyflxin%mon majestic than the night view of the great mills of Pittsâ€" burgh and Allefheny? To me, the ruins of some city old as civilization have not the same appeal as have the glant skyâ€" scrapers of New York city, And where intfle&u't:r, exceptiniodonu“v- erpool, is .dl hnnuu!tflmof commerce more splendidly than along the water tmnt.:.tn&n Francisco ?"â€" " "The fianmalled fools at the wicket, ‘The muddted cafs at the f B J YXLâ€"_iKâ€", 34 ltto\-humho'hv-m‘-oby to his club in footbail clothes when a pewsâ€" been paid to his teaching, he lfi "Who was sorry that, the Prodigal returned?" The most forward youngster ln the class breathlessly answered, "The fetted calf!"â€"Home Herakl. "I have seen the boasted sights of Europe, the Alps, tne fuords of Norway, the ruins of once mighty cities, the gloâ€"â€" ies of the Ihine country," said William Anderson in the Blate. man to whom the evidences of power apâ€" peal, can find enough to satisfy him. _ the water front at Milwaukee Sentinel. Impressed With City‘s Night View. ‘‘The foctballer walked on; whereupon the boy ‘cud after him. "" "Â¥Yah, ye muddied caf! Iike as not ye cun‘t even read‘!"â€"Washington Star. the man with red blood in his veins, the How Irving Wanted to Die. aJUCH a gift would be this Carving Set shown here. The set consists of the carving knife, fork and sharpening steel. $5.00 (OUN cenlopues is your for RÂ¥YyrIE Bros. Buckhorn and contain the velvet lined case 1 HE gift that combines beauty and usefuiness is naturally the 134â€"136â€"188 Yonge 8t. PORONTCO The TChief Mourner. A Smart Farmer. a J ‘ & ®

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy