West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Jan 1909, p. 3

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bu ‘. 1'71“”!‘H - h up do: NC was.» lath" " hen ISSIA chum It as have the , Ill-Oh '. Ah" no: IN. he do». wens-i... low; the II to the "why- In that 'r “Ion. mile. to mm mom ts, and nodal uni-p hiking Paid family During mini in the 'I ho- hung" Irly in ldldnu all. {Dada alkyd! mild! and! In W0 "sin ard Nut in at by hwy: "in nth, I Ite, " " baby Tho}: b any why hit ttr rt Ex the an of M " “H.504. The pair woman'll be fair - thinkin' she's Ion ye, and Int Ute. " MI up " (2-an street polio offiee "Inuit to the urgent. "is me 'trfted. 9nd I'lrtak' " lame." . . “lb-1 be comb " .0, Itrehio; it's 30' I conic an". thin," said the urn- "Mud cod-III; "itu I use of sul- 'mttu." _ - "I: lt you or her that has It?" Msked Ernie, “dandy. "l lye tent. yo that " should was: . “mph!" lockdt and Munro-1y “mall: the nose whey: "'" tnkin' cool. to'thu haunts wi' the wally closes. Mnybo an: no' be In awfu' bad me. lint new. I “MN. lot o' trouble 3mm about thr 300; it's "I. open weather. Nee the doctor: if” (to o lanai-ins in u bottle, assd " than” In oot in the nick: lit with“! . Minuet on." A Case ol 'uHrairsts l, ".. Dally I)": hlnhhurod. "nu no me ; that has it n a'," ho sold; "it's her, on' 1 Ibo has it bod. 1 love: aspect-<1 ony- 'r thin. ml Maeme, the nichs 90mm. tin-nod on the door an menutoo :30 pal " loll’t no tho In“ comin' hock. Ye I',', did]: no the onhnloneo, did yet" ond the coolmon I'M about. to punuo his in- N" tum: flight spin, who. Erehie caught it "n try the will: of the can. 1“ “There's one ambmom tterdrd for a. “ casq o' "ttragitiC' said Erehio; "they tttt tak' them 3' in the prison van." I.'", "My puir Louie!” mound Daily. "Thais four wool): to wash yonder, bla and loathing in tor my 'upper. " I had at int. it wad cone to this, I in! ho’e boon a better man to her. Do yo think be tttores ony rhanco o' her gettin' bet. 'tl “While. they Mat get boner," um Etude, "mpatutienlly, “but It's a tron. ble that a": for gun attention. Where duo " think oh. ttot it t" -- I -s,_IP, It. "I can tell ya.” urn-wand Dull]. "I mu head then w" such a about an Hume out in and tell't an. I In. to in bun. " 1'. o'clock tor my din. m, but I met A M o' chaps, nnd didnn an hum: till bull In hoot ago. trnd ttto want there. Ind the means won in Mm. Maciq. 'l'rn “my to tell ye that your wiieU awa',' said Mum to no; '.vo've when! her constitution wi' " trairry-on, and ulw's taken Summ- Mtis.' He lay: they'll maybe need to --. . A z- I ......... ml II.-. In! "J- ....I, _. """""qe cm". Whuur she got it I cann- tell in there's nobody also In the had it; and than I am. left wi' four vans, and uo' I bite o' supper." “An but u the supp" not." aid new, “nun I uwn' up to m., o manning t L desolation," foeted, went w: "H them had been may, in they mu. M wan ulna; it I)... She Wad u" if; took her break! it». '30 Aura and 01M," Ihe may, this: special for m no my. my m.’ n dinner w“ on her think they wouldn vithoot. my sanction "The victims o' IV -...." -- "That's in o' the symptoms," Ind Nit. "M I heard Jittnet ulklu' shoot. up rid“: o' women, I wad Nd. her boots, and buy her u present -an um- hdln or a pair o' glovu. or something. no great min. is to and; the trouble In tune. A mun am hag I wife showin' - of sattmgltu mould have! pm; 0'" the door at nicht except. to tak' in to a mine; he should pay her over? “union, the an. an if he wan eoortin , ainy he: pure-la, gie her the best chair, " notice o' her new hat, pulse her l " 'notlcé o' hee new mu, mkin' o' scones. and my ha . bowie! ginger. Me should shoot " busing... ask I It. on he! pan to tak' - be late for a me: temper, nor ha'e the loo! an his dirty boots on h nder. He should----" "Oh. Menu!" laid Du “I'm so", for ye, Dolly," “Id Ironic, "but Mann’- neht »ye brocht it on arrstl'. In than tutythin' minu’ not o' .00 boon besides the wile?" Wig?” reputed Duffy, “only; "'trnetttht' that l ken o'; whit would be "ri-ist'."' chance .0 i, ,'"'Uca"' LL '(innei'll ttk ling to run the nwlu' feelin' ion," Ind Duffy. A little com- m. with him. How to Check It. The Scourge "ihJ'TuJpi/"ioro , said nothing dtsePtt'u.eolet 1.. get, bony.” _naid |-w~~ suttrsrgitb," In” to u carried mu' in may mg themsel’S. them. I'm surprised 1 "any my he never saw should tell her tt' k her “vice. and lk’ it. He Ihould In}. nor lose his Scotch Corner o' drink, nor I new-polished ' . we, ban- to walk ttwa' and lens her id “not “on till the fit I” bye, hm the polio mp, look. - to be triehteued for the inhetion; banged the lift bank the nilin' turd the victim, lfak' than ura' in the prison Van, and aid Er his them ttsretittnted." ui’ fi,'.:} "Oh. Lowe! Moxie!” moaned Duffy. 1 "Fun-y her bein' lumigatcd'." Gi down tho new-paper and int. spew "l-lverywou ye ion ttht but cricket, guwlm’, I shootin', yuohnn’, nudge ' . (mammal benign; ye ms hey l naething in the “arid t [at games." Ir.) "Whit would ye like' A“. blindly ~"reuipes for mu us a "Here's a mu that's lost his wife," Wu kin-hick introduction to the coahnan as they entered Intel'- kitchtal, _ _ "Dear mo! did " lose Louie?" mad Jinnet, gravely; "that'. an awfn' nuk- w-rd thing to happen on a Setturdty. But there's plenty mttsir to be got where she eem' inc." -iiG- nérrvantil' onybody else but Italic. Ind duo's um wi' sttttraeitiy", "Oh, than “aliens Y' will Jhtnat, hold in. up he: hudu, and Duffy'n wife, un able to and it any longer can). om "on behind the pm: door, when ah; wu conceded. "Did yo think I was lost?” said she, so he stared at her incredulouly. “Mann said yo were " with the Buttrstritu," ho “annexed. "It was jut a but" we nude up to Richter: ya; I cam' here and an Erehie cot to look for p. I lee it tied yo tus' awfu' frieht." "And ye have“ Suffragitis " " "Not me? them'l nuthin. wrung vi me blindly eroehet clown" patterns!” "No," said his wife, "but there used to be nice wee bits aboot workirt'-men out. It Monherweu bein' left A hundred thoo. und pound- trae an uncle in Australia; or nhoot horse. that ran a” in the Gal- lowpte; l calms find anything to mod n00 except the drupen’ sales. 1 think the country's gum: clean daft tor sport-- look at you lwlu’ eairrrun at. the-the Stadium!" , ' "Whit did they the there'." Inked Dally, who was visiting. Nt's I place in Lon on," Jinnet ex. plsined; "they made B [dc o' pulr Ital. iuu and Americans and foreigners o' n’ kinds brumgo round and round it for three 'oorq till they got dizzy, and had yince wi' the m yer fellomen, to Ian. When I to: yon puir chap D the Stadium in t. countrymen, I fel ian nation I was street to Qua-hm um to jine him in "\Vus that him ' Isk'd Jinnet. "rt mm. If he "Serve them richt'." was Dally meat. "What guid's an Italian o it ye lien the thing; thee can!" treble lit his pipe, ttieked the the watch nt the eat which lay kitchen hearth-rug, and smiled wife and the coalman. kitchen hearth-rug, and numeu on m. wife and the voalman. "Ye musing misoa' the Italians, Dul- fy," he raid; they're Mein' their best, Ind it ye my . cheep about. the Ameri. can it'll hurt their feelin's, and they'll no play. Thu Olympic Games in Lott. don were laur mair important than Jin. net thinks; it's on our common Interest in whit the papers en’ the realm o' sport that the peace o' the world depends; it m iceve lang enough .ve'll are that in- head o' eomyetin' in the buihlin' o' big memo'iar ships, the Great Powers 'll put 3' their money into trninin' likely chaps for tuummtrthrowin' and the 100 yard-I sprint. The svouderia' enact. o' nthletics on the finer feelin'" o' human- ity hay jist been disrovered; if ye [my It shillin' to we a mixed lot o' champlom o' the world cluin’ the hop-step and jump or hemin’ hvolinu. ye're filled at yince wi' the deepest affection for a' yer fellowmert, foreign as well In Christ- ian. When I read the other day nboot yon puir chap Doramlo careerirf rooml the Stadium in the nirms o' his devoted country men, I felt that toml o' the Ital- inn nation I was nearlv gum along the stroot to ouv1raeini'n lcemream Emporl- "it was. " he had Army-inn they mul I jyle for " and up" wondertu' eff-wt o' all on the fhter leelin'a o' " to the nice. quntn, no‘ feared for." "Itrq a tine thing sport, though Jim net doesna understaund it," proceeded Erchie. "and Great Britain's glory is that she man tak' on a' the nations o' the wax-id at their niu Qantas and mak' a good thing act o' the gate money." “I couldnn tak' on the nations mysel' at anything." said Duffy. “unleu it was er.rin' coals and coupin’ bags in a bunk. er, tor I havena played any games since I played mush-y n: Nolwn's monument “l Indus the time." "Ye should mak' the time," laid Er- chie, firmly; "It's your duty as a Brit- lsh ratepayer to keep up the manhood o' the nation. Ye can get in to see ony fitba' match tor sixpeuee. There's far wider men than you. Bully, trampin' the golf links every ither day and lit- tin' u to n’ oor. cleanin‘ their club. in use Id lamentable need should ever "in for them to turn oot and preserve the land from foreign invasion. Duo " think when " Ice them hurryin' {no the offices to their trning wi' a has o' sticks that they're soul for the fun o' the thing? Not them; Their daein' it for their health and the glory o' Great Britain." "They're weel Mt," “id Duffy; I lu’e to pick ll? my health 3mm alang the streets wi a lorry." Erehie surveyed him tritlealtr, "Ye're be "Cain-yin' bag: is n’ rieht, but ith 'our tred, and it doerna count," said Cds'. “That’s no' enrol-use, oxerceese is durin’ wmetlllng ye're no' paid for Mein'. When a tpemekeeper's trampin' the hills all" deer and grouse it's work, and he's tut' nwfu' keen on't, but when the gentleman that keeps him trump the hills the same wye its sport, and ex. "cease. and heh willin' to spend . tot of money for the chance o' (Edit. " there was any money gnun for chuin‘ a wee by roond parks and puttin' it every Moo Ind then in . hole in the gran' an gen- tleman would dirty his bands " I golf club. me job wad be left to the caddies? no' the man ye wvre, Duffylrho "id candidly. "Ye're gottin' fat; your step’n no no lick: on a suir as it med to be; I are " come hame earlier at nichu (no the Mull o' Kintyrc Vaults-there’l In. tutor sign o' physical decline. Whit " 1ret's exereeese." . . , .. . _ "Did ye ever try at ed Duffy, tiiptitiea?tly "Ye wallm, smirly ha'n puir Mr. Du!- fy trampin’ eher deer or [mun nboot wt' tr"rt-bsgst" and Jinnet; "the nu: bu t [Henge round 'oor, till they . mUrried WW. on We them richt'." "What guid's a tom the thing; hu lit his pipe, match It the eat an hearth-rug, n ts'UDDEN RELIEF .1“ ye like':" asked Erei apes!” "up jam and m _vlraein" lee :m in n slider Recreation we had happened to be " ran! ha'" ai'un him the l spoiliu' the track, the f Mid-Mr omrneteetion 1's o' humanitv’n eontin. mm wee nations we're try carryin’ bags?“ Mk they gieul the cup to I the ambulance." " was Duffy's com an Italian onywye Ulusgow New: in; but play are?" uked tty a the proceeded ' glory is nations ty and mat: money." _ asked end of on the on his o' big out she PM}! .o' my?" r-‘--'.' v "--E - ___ . - his business" "Right'." said Duffy. "If I was gum in for recreation, gie no drattgttta.", "DraughU is use use for than like you.” did Emilie; "ity-it'. uamuy; l whit n chap nri' your rttrure nood- h Ici- l entitle physicnl trainin'; yo can mad about it in ‘Home that.' Get oat o' your bed on our More " rise and open the window wide. There's Bathing km the fresh air if it's no' blawin’ frae Ton- trant's chimney. Draw ten deep breaths, and then begin to swing a pan o' licht dumb-bells titl ye feel 3 gentle pumpin- tion. Then tak' a muld bath----" "Ach! ye'r roddin!" void the coalmsn, enlightened by the last suggestion; “I'm shah ye never try any o' them fancy tips youroei'." "Met" said Erchie. “Pitch me! I'm no' noedin'; I'm luur owen much interested in my wark to be bothered devisin' ways u' psmin' the time. The best recreation I can think o', waitin'; I Wm] dne't for naething if I hadms 1 wife to keep." How Savages Ham the Formosan Chinese. The most common victims of the head. hunters, my: Thurlow Fraser, in the January Canadian Magazine, are the workers in rat-tan and unmphor. The rattan is a vine which creeps through the fore“: and over the branch. of "was to a length ”meann- of 500 feet. The (‘hinooe laborer out: the vine m! the root, and going buckwudu pulls It out of the trees and bushes. It u when he is so engaged that the savage creep: up and strikes him from behind. Sim. ilarly the oamphor-workers have to labor in tho dame forests, chipping the trunks of the fallen emphor trees with I lhol't adze. Bending down and intent on their work, they cannot be ulways watchful. This is the bend-hunwrd op- portunity, and more of the complim- workers lose their heads than of any other single clan. , Formosa practically mpplies unwotld with mmphor. In 1898 the world's supply abuunted to 7,.500,000 pounds. Of that. "mun: 6,900,000 pounds were pro- duced in Formosa. In that year 635 eatnphor-worke" were killed or wound. od by the savagu. In a mo in which happily it can be mid of few articles of rummen-o, the camphor we use In our homes is purl-baud with the life-blood of human beings Can be Had Through the Rich, Red Blood Made by Dr. William’ Pink Pills. NEW SIRENGIH roll WEAK GIRlS There comes a time in the life of ll. moat every girl when sickness Attacks her. The strain upon her blood lupply is too great. and there come. hemlock“ 3nd backachea, loss of ',tt',.2t attacks of dizziness and heart no pitation, and a general tendency to a decline. The only thing that can promptly and speed- ily cure these troubhs is Dr. Willinnu' Pink Pills. This is the only medicine that actually makes new, rich, red blood, and a plentiful supply of rich blood is the one thing needed to unin- tain the health of growing girls and women of mature yours. The truth of this statement is proved in tho case of Miss Esther F'.. Spruulo. 't'rrrentattville, N. hl., who say": "At the age ot 91:- teen yours I loft my country home to at- tend high sumo}. The close tsonfine- ment and lung hams of study newly broke me down. My blood supply seemed to be deficient, and I grow pale and de- pressod. I was dizzy nearly nll the time, and pimples broke out on my face. I was altogether in o miserable condition, And it seemed impossible for me to continue my studies unless I found a speedy cure. T tried a. few tonic: prescribed by the doctor, but they proved useless. My mother urged me to try Dr. William.' Pink Pills, and I finally consented to do so. I had hardly finished the second box before a change for the better took place, and the um of a few boxes more fully restored my health, and I have ' - ‘I ' I _ 7 "AI Al-‘ .-.._, him", " , since been well and strong. I feel that T cannot say too much in favor of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I strongly w commend them to other ailing girls." You can get these Pills from my medicine dealer or by mail It 50 cents a box or six boxes tor 82.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock. ville, Ont A 8mm PLAN. Br. Bamur-You shank) never judge I mu by his clothes. my dear. Mn. Bamuv-I never do. I than 1min him by an wife’s dictum. sun's m lu-day) she climbed my um and twlned her “In: about In, to. And whnpered to me. joyouoly; "t bet you dad. was you don t know Win]. any can: is! ' I Lune-1 so think, mom we“ I knew what [he would my. And sham“! amylase whuu an. “chimed: “I'm “out“ wwl’m In. “may!" Barat u it, wncu the yoarn some on. um hold: I; man an; muse: " nun To when town-d A um. child sud mu 1 bad ttot noticed It botorel I am not. an“ maul to-dar'. Hot puyroam'a strangely silent. now. nu pt- ner doll“: um away! The little tiruwr mun we loved no so” trom at! the window MII-- Beneath the blonomod Ippll tn. m "ring l and. l. namely lull, And nuance hovers 'rouad (no how. u- brokon by her caudal: [lee- She's ttix today, and growing up! No In". a lmlo bub. to me'. You}. at: but"! Come list your dad All his tum. too, you llulo cu. Ad [.9 with Mug tmt plnyuwlthumn I. HfihIrWlil'rlNil. A- my In“: u... _.._ ,,__, at Nu why he's not him-em Just my" bun murder he (on Ind let Mn “to your mu. Band-- Don't at hm what he's thinking ot-r" wouldn't know or under-and! . Lev. no lumber down the has, mmnln. In your child-nun in} - " unnpt play Vice (Ms ter long! Yau'n qgxtivirta w-you're Ell co-day! -Jtttut D. Won: in “as“: “in and can". " L, f, ' _ ' I t rr , )1 , I 1; ' " V ' , ll 13313;}; was to atart, A Birthday. and cisirryitt' has! in a proved in tho case of Spruulo. 't'rrrentattville, : "At the age of sis. my country home to nt- I did not think Agony o F 'ilNI , 1 " " P M _ i " I 'il,)),,"::.,; a, i i' ONLY mos: who see), from miles know the', misery it brings! It rohsi life of its pleasure, meals" Ill. misery it brings! ll rebel life of its pleasure. ale-Ia _ the brightness from exist-l ence, end substitute: days ot dull: bain and moments of acute agony! Post so called "remedies" give: fttse only tor I time, an! thots-i mack comes the trouble and pain; {and misery! 14tLt1tar.,!.e.8 .c2.et.t..ti]ttLii, And cures permanently. irrariG5, Ithis lies all around you. Women) fund men in all stallcns cl life have; ‘proved It-possibly some of your itrlendst Let it cure you! I (New York Herald). This in the sort of weather that leads to omelet-nest in the matter of wnpo and moments, and an I result thous- and: of persons in this city every city "catch cold." Most of the disease: of the air pas- sages have their beginning in what is commonly known u catching cold. It is . well-known tact that the human body must be maintained under all circum- stances at a u-mpernure of About. 98 degrees Fahrenheit, otherwise disease will result. l Mrs. Wm. Hughes. of '253, Te..ltre.:ti St, Rochelngn, Montreal. sun _ l was i. sufferer for years from Lliml, ill-hing nd protrudinsririte. Thcagony “were” no one knows. Remedy after remedy rowed useless. Day followed day and there was no relief for me- pain, 105: o trongtb. dulneriw, misery, ml: was my T, rience until anlluk was immluccdl I now now that there in nothing 0': this earth like it.' It eured me of prles and once cured, I have hot no return of the evil. I would like all women who suffer u I did to know that ZaavBuk will cure them 1 Heat is produced in the hurmut organ- ism in two sraysr-timt, by oxidation of food, and, second, by the conversion of muscular movement into heat. The lud- den lowering of this temperature cause. I contraction of the small blood vessels in the spine, a disturbance of the heut'n action and n congestion of nome of the internal organs, panicularly those of the respiratory tract. Begidrg Mug tt "ree0tefor mlo an-Buk hm ma, butWpuistm'ma. emrked or chapped handt_ ulcm. can. bum, bum", scalp mm. mm: or by. .froet hue, cold um. and all 0km ttttir nd durum. All drawn“: and mm ell at 60c ' w from lam-Bu}: thr, Toronto for price. The heat which is generated within the body by the oxidation of food And mul- cular movement, would be lost by radia- tion it the temperature of the 31mm- }ihero surrounding the body was far be. ow the nonual tampernture of the syn- tem, and therefore this loss must. be W It a minimum by an interposition between the spine of the body and the air by proper clothing which is a non- conductor of heat, thereby keeping tho heat in the body, not the cold out, n is generally supposed. B""'"‘"-' "'l‘l'""‘ Here the question may be raised why some people take cold more easily than others. Those who live a sedentary life in overheated rooms and whose digestive apparatus is impaired, or those confined in close mums, voluntarily or involun- tarily, and those suffering from discus of the lungs, aim port-om who do not take the proper amount of outdoor ex- ercise, easily take cold from the slight- est exposure To irrevcnt catching culd one should take plenty of outdoor exercise at all seasons and in all kinds of weather, should sleep in rooms which are Well ven- tilated, the tetnperature ot living room not to be heated above 68 to 70 dogma Fahrenheit, and should not dress too warmly. The changing of clothing should not be confined to much to undergar- mntn u to outer ones, light underwear should be worn the your around and the outer clothing changed according to the weather conditions it: - cure The objection to eo-operation is that any concern run that way tends to be. come a. close monopoly, with a. number of when who jealously redtrict entry to its benefits. This is exactly what the Guild- of London have become. Origin- all y the Cordwuiners. Bowyen. Fletcher; The . ltr " CATCHING COLD. Repeat Shiloh's Cure will always my coughs and colds." PROFIT SHARING. and I“ the rat of the Landon city livery compute. were cooperative. Appren- tices, journeymen and culploycrs were banded together, something on (he line-s of a trade union. beau-o any to the or- nitration watt made diftiealt. The home. tita were shred in the emretttial respect that vary employer had been an appren- lim and every apprentice vould exp-wt in due course to become an emp'ro.ver. Th' result was the only combination of irndm unionism and profit sharing which Ema evrr proved workable. C" Thel result was not good. Civilisation demanded something more. Induatry ex panded and the precast“ of matutfttciur2 advanced peat the old corporation, hav- ing them high and dry. They wan wealthy. Their members handed on their rights from an." to son. yielt inlerett made than stringently limit their num- Mn. and ultimnteiy I corporation mun- "hiectionalrle than my “hi 4: Modem methods of industry have ulvviml, was mm (hm: stringently limit their num- bern, and ultimntely I corporation mun- objectionable than my whim modem method, of industry have devised, was created. tt may be said in hut that if the eo-operative society " tg sures-s it tends always to become a stock mump- oly with tt steadily deeres4tttt unmarr- ship. Of all these devices tor curing the in- curable, it may be said that they pre- suppose the invention oi a new kind ol man, Jevoid ot pas-ions. asshiciou, prejw dice or Ir‘fishumq. Govern-ttts have hem nglsln‘tiag fur thu kind 0. nun “Tor time the world begun. Slum spa-3- man of the breed may Hen mum alum: iome day to thaw us someth'ug which ha» hitherto mwr “Mal. We sh.” tell welcome him gladly. Me ought to ha pleased with hUuwlf. because Va will 'ur itnnlly puter into tho noblest 'teritsge the heart of nun ("HI mum-i“ n M, l, the true heir of all the Age: in the tore. most files of time. l'ulil he pun in an appearance. lum-vrr. we may as “ail Jeni-m nu “um um fur mdinary lut man Irvin One Reason u the Engineers, Anmhor tho Boilers Themselves. The agent for a cumpauy that in- cures boilers was one of a party of mm who wet-a discussing the un- pleasant work that Rome men have ts do, andhe insisted that iinmybody has a disagreeable job it is the boiler NO FUN INSPECTINO BOILERS inspector. “In the first place," said the speak- er. "the inspector duesn't know when he tackles a boiler “homer the ere gineer is telllu him the truth about its condition. fill experience has led him to believe that the cng'neer will find it convenient to overlook some detect that in the end will probably prove serious. ___ . . I - A _.r.‘l. P-.- WWW“ “Then the inspector goes to work himself with the intention at finding the weaknesses that may have been noticed or may have damaged the at- tention of the engineer. he inspec- tor has a hot, dit/agreetOle, dirty job of it. "The inspector is regunled in some) quarters the some as in the quorum tine officer when scarlet fever break! out and he comes to tack up the red card. His coming is viewed u I nee- eswry evil. and he is considered a. chronic fault finder. For that reason the engineer takes great joy in hidi a. defect, 1m matter how saviour. was if the inspector goes away without see- ing it the engineer will regard it " a huge joke and tell it to all the friends he can trust. "This attitude of the ongLeer In frequently due to his belief that bo. case he has been tending this one boiler all his life ho known more about it then an inspector who look! at thousands. The engineer is griev- ously mistaken, for the very fart that the inspector looks at so many boil- ers makes it certain that he will note ‘any detect. . . "Sometimes the inspector gets a real surprise, tor oeeasisaally he meets an engineer who wants to cooperate in sate-guarding the boiler, and this en- gineer wil have both the interior and the exterior of tho boiler as clean as possible so as to facilitate the impec- tion and make it, less difficult to notice defects. - A _ "The life he leads does not make the boiler inspector a merry. care free Eamon with an mgelic disposition. ut he in ready enough to respond to friendly advances. Whom one con- siders the different kinds of men the inspectors ntect and the different kinds of boilers they have to examine it can be seen that the inspector cm- not be expected to go around radiat- ing good nature and just bursting to tell the engineer , nfw joke." Only one “BROMO QUININE" Thu. ls LAXATIVE “HOMO QUININE. boat to:. tue signature ot E. W. GROVE. U006 tttt World over to Cure I Ctrld In One Day. 50 Repeat it:--“Shiloh‘s Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." The farmers in n Imp-growing section of Oregon, says Mr. P. O‘llnrn. eminent pathologist, U. S. Department of Agri. culture, Washington, D. c., in the Jum- ary Strand Magazine, built I tarmera' telephone hue out of lunch materiil " they happened to have at hend. The line we: built of Pt wire wuiuh hnd been used as trellis or the wan; hrd this wa. tied to the neck: of bottles, which took the piece of the ordimry glue or porcelain insulator. A lug. spike, with 3 leather head, fastened the neck ot the bottle to the pole or crou- When the trim 'ttted " the mar, umb- em union the northern tourist nuntcod out on an platform. more VII the anal nun»: of Iunbonneud women. an "cuck- en." a“ any day. Under a con“: not stood I lean mum! with m Irina... Tho tourist wu tstt.eruqted. "What do you all that?" he atrtaried at I lanky mum. "that be I luvs.” t1uttidated tho ether. “What kind of a hog?" "Razorback laws." "rm: ~07" "tau. than on." "Welt. mm la Rwandan is ho do!“ rub- bittr, “sum 'that poof; "'ziii'T-‘MEE iGiMr. may. an may on! gamut." The tourist madamwm uri, New: Teacher-Spell tough. Jotutnio--P1eage, mu'am, has it er two? A Now Use for Broken Bottlu. up THE ENIJGH'I'ENED TOL' RISE WANTED A CLU E had: Review aided dn their , Self interegt nit their tttttti. rporution tnore whi-h modem TORONTO h.eir num- Inst non mun- I .. u modern l ised, was bl " that if in moor-u- " I ~k tit9ttrrtp- l"' r membrr- one 'iiiiiifijiiijlas Of' POKER Skill in Dealing and Other Factors That Tend to Success- ful Playing. "TheteU a may thing- Iuppeu- in playin' poker." aid old mu: Gmnhut. "what you to show how a nun is . blame eight letter oft" to put his trust in Providence nor be is for to thiuk Ite's the hull works his own mM. "Take that there winniu’ 't Pete Ken. ney. made outon th' on? royal thuh 'tU been held legitimate in Ariana f'r a matter o' 20 you; or mote. 'Tnin'l nunays likely 't he'd ha' did nigh '0 null if hell hi' been mu- u' them Players numays likely 't lu-‘d hat on up w “an it he‘d tri' been "Me o' than: player: what fob" Hm": luck holdin' mud. up may .levves Ila he dune pluggin' along when ti'.l such time. up lh' good late seen it war yupr tsts' tittiu' fr him in hold that royal." "fth, t dont know," and Mr. Owen Pepper. "I ain't sa.via' nothin' lg'in Providence u a gcn'l proposition. but ’cordin' to what I been told chant that land o' Kenny's 'pearn like he kep' his- self tul'ablv' nigh dead broke " some years, al'ays pulliu' f'r 1 royal m’ not vouiidprin' nothin' has 'u thnt wuth playin'. EXPECT TO WIN. "O' course he win out in the end. but I reckon it must 113' been more or [en accidental, seein' at how there ain’t much dependence tu be put on Provi- dence in the way o' tiilia' that kind of a hand. O' mum it's filled sometimes, but more often 'taiu't. “Looks to me like it mought be well ruough for to look to Providence. " you say, but ith, a hell of a lot better tur to plug the game y'r on: self when it mm“ t' filliu' a hand. I notice Jim Blair- dell ld come good player when it com to Imvin' the cards drop where he wnnts them to, but I hain't never give Jim credit. {or wttin' round waitin' Cr Pro- vidence lo send him any p'lic'ln card he may need." It was not often that. Mr. Pepper said so much In this at one time in old mu) Unwnlmt'a saloon, one rel-on being that the quality of his roman-kl wu anally such an to move hill hon-en to interrup- tion, often of a violent port. This time. however, the boldnns. not to any the irreligious, character of his challenge of the old mun'n statement seemed to com- pel the attention of his Indium. SAT AS ll’ STUNti. Even old man Greenhut Minn-1f, though he lmked thoughtfully at hie humour!" for n moment. at. as if owned, offering no "ply, uni the others stopped smoking while they pad a the impundble Mr. Power in ur- prlse. Promtly Joe “an.“ said, with a. halt laugh: -_. . . .. " reckon it's up to you. maubdl. F'm what l e'n understand this hm yup Cm Tennessee 'peers to have the hive 't you'm a Ut more skillful nor the rule- o' draw poker cal-Io for." Blaisdell knocked the aatteo from his pin and put lt in his pocket. Then, producing a plug of tobacco from un- other' povlcet, he bit off one comer of it my! began eating it with whiny? ut- isfution. U _ “Spawn” of dogs," he said, after. considmmble pun-9, "Oem's I nigger Live! up in the woods a mile or two to the no'tlrwanl o' town what’- pot a. bull. dog “ll-1'» consid'able p'cooliar, f'r . bulldog. He ain't a mite qusr'uome. . t' Again there mm a pain] of antenna: while each man in th, mom mid strict, attention to his intranet). There leaned [ to be a genus! impression that Mr. Pepper was about to speak and n disposi- tion to allow him to do no withoutinm tertereuco. That gentleman, however, had no Apparent Want in anything but " pipe for noun: miuum Then he slid: "Queer how some“ put faith in. Providence an' things when the play. pirker. There meter in be a whooz teaeher up in th' Cumberland Mound” what had that trouble tolurbie severe. I never hcer’d him say nothin’ about Providence. but he had I nigger baby'- thumb 't be ustcr carry into I WI bladder hung 'mund hi; neck what I Voudoo priest gave him, he said. m sure did got away with the chip. when he let in. “Tum! like he couldn't never lose. There was some mid his own thumb w more use to him nor the voudoo charm was, brin’s " the boys vnn'n’t nor on , 'em slick dull-era up in than pt“. u’ Hui jut radially inutruated Mir“ o' in all.“ winnin', but I reckon T he'd ha' br? crooked he‘d hs' played "Might ha' been just practisin‘ up count-q. though, I heer'd he took to the river boats later on." AFRAID or THE CHARM. "You lure do make a nun think o' the Iloahin’ o' water when you talk, Pepper," said old mm GreenhuL "I reckon them voudoo chums in some powerful f'r some put-panel, but I Min’t never heer'd o' one 't 'd work into u poker game." ...’ .. __..2_» a. ALI" "ia Mr M mm B-..“ I "Ain't uyin’ it did," nid Mr. Peg- per, shortly. "AIN I said wtuft he " 'nyI win when he played." "There nought be .omettin' into it," said Jake Winterlrottotts, whom only days bid been spent in Loni-hut. “Any- wnyo, I ain’t tiHthrerin' .to play poker w... ....-., ..___V_ - _ do with the gum if there should le one. and Bsssett said he reckoned h." didn't learf to suck up agaimt nothin' M couldn't tackle into a fair rqtt. I Pan-H m nolitul, Ind old mm Gnonhut "id that, bein' as there didn't 'pear to be no that h I “76h”, 1355': know," said" Mr. Pepper 'They sly the reel voudoo's toNble an “F995. Mr, - with no nun who eerties a genooine voodoo chm." - .-- .. n. . I,II “I "1'lriiuriiiTand," said swam reckon 'tain't worse y l gun." .-.-..‘. "Mebbe you mought get a chant. o' tryin' of it, though, it you'm hell bent. I seen Iuker-- thath the teller I was tellin’ of-onto the Prnirie Belle Int week. He looked tol'nhle peoq'rour In' 'pered to be doiu' well into the gun when I seen him." "Well, Ill's he's got to do is to stop off at Arlumu City ii he's lookin' " a first class game," “id Elli-dell, can kill] . “I reckon Ins-El rurd it." ' 7 Tie roman, however. ld not seem tn be u confident u Blaisdsll. Winterbot- tom flatly refuted to have anything to - __ _ .. .. - ,L-..L| c.. A-.. be did lilly.' whether he Ind a mom's thumb in in bladder or not. Whereupon Mr. Pep ', per said mebbe he nought have . ABatet. ilmiu' n Baker'd been Impph' oft It .Inme o' the liver ton-m. s " was therein" “in. mind motion- that the party heard I few dun later that one Baker w“ stsyiete It t hot" up the levee, and had expressed a desire ito meet some locnl [that in . poker name. Mr. Pepper had gone down the l river in the maritime. but then med "g"or tamn be t-n-kmml there wait n ' mm in his Int-kiu' a turnout. . A,l I!” “germ Mr. Maiden ”and erair'y and ha dreuUred with funny! “(it that he drain! no uni-tam in tacking any player that might com» to Arne-y name" non. mica nun-3nd by the inte0igmtee and regarded Wilm- tom's glum looks with great coon. “hen liker entered the moon one Healing and after establishing MI foot. ing in the npprovod which, naked it then In any show [or to get into n gums, Bid-dd unwed hill that there mu, but he "I obliged to add that it would have to be twoannded, u be wu- the only no in the home an and to plny with strange". " --. ‘- u .. .. I --- "r.--." -... . Ir he no doubt that thht Baker in the um- lw Inn! told about, he wavering the deseriptiun of a "thin!“ touter with red hair" that Mr. Pepper had sing. . I"-.. ww____ -_.__‘_,-. "Won." mid Baker, "twat quits me as well " I new”. I'll (u you for I hundred in“ r I nutter. it you like." “You're on," "id ”Moll. “\Vht'll it bet Draw or and?” "I ain't wo hell mrln' trartie'ler,"eid. the “anger, "but don't you reckon 01ml 'e some "ville: 'n drew when it's two- handed."' . . of his cum at In! own-w, m ......-_ his “1qu to win ml and! you. Thou, judging that tho other had - and confidence, ho ritual the and: somewhat and pa Mat . king for kin tint card showing and duh. him-elf l jut-k. Bum put up a than", the Wu being " yet tuber modest, and BUI- dell comm! it. “on he an Baker I tam spot and him-M “other jnck, link» ing it, his bet. He put K, on the pot, and Baker. looking spin " his buried and, -tred “Mad to rain, but Mter some our gunman nimpiy stayed. The nut and. ”an. nun, giving Bake A pair of (In. tn light. but lam the bet mu wiat Bid-doll. “in u- the bet was '10. and Dakar promptly the bet was mined It $10 and the MI pawl. The next hand lemma! It first to indicate that WI luck would hold, for tha an“ fell to hint mm, " and queen show“. ”mind, “WHY! ton, eight and jack. Then wan uncut 320 In the pot M Ether, inning cm his queens, put in .9 To the surprise of all the oth-, [Hal-doll (um-coal the bet and that: allowed Ma and: forward. Only an. explanation of this play by a man of Blaladall'a skill m poulbla He waa beaten in "(ht and the only hand he could till waa a atralght. alaci his carda were of diffrrent suits, and the normal chance of making a straight “m not enough to ijustify hia bet, an that his friends raised that in coats way he must feel himself mural of getting the card he wanted, although at the time of betting he could only aaa the back of it. They masthead, how. ever, that Blaiadcll had bean no" u gum correctly at the faca value of a card by looking at lta hack, and thy did not, la Baker did, regard lt u an ill-timed bluff. - . mam Even Baker seemed at first to think there wu something dungeroul in no unexpected a. phy, And he Miami. but. after looking carefully at the two land. on they lay he now that his two queen- would bent auythittg but I airtight tint lllLiudell could hold unless be had o buried no or king, and be in. up his stark confidently enough 'ht dealt. the lut cards. llhisdcll’o card I‘ll a nine old Bak- er’s wu a third queen, but Blond.“ turned over hi: buried end, which IT; ed to in the can quell, while In Wu on Ice. “Tint our. vu can. lucky." aid Bohr, in "tottiaUtent, "but I reckon l c'n put, up q'n that kind o' pill fr o Ipe'l. Puy you fr five hundred. “Good? uid Bid-dell, and they pm immune" 'IOIIICU- "There was l nan aid you Ind I churn what. done give you eusidembU luck at poker," said Winurbowol, as they all 'stood It the but on Blaiulell'u invitation, "hut I reckon ho mutt hr' got (wilted none In. How than! it t" " did hue one." said Baker, “In' tht umber lost I leg 'n to have it Mole. like it" " last wait." IN A "M5 1‘" but“ may!“ um In all us W ttttt the out “It " up, tor . and. tow bind lat (mt. of an I at “an Indy?!"- qtrtts m - n-.. 1". band “night of Mu 1w Brm in an up W In "no! “out 8 01‘0th the out -aing. Thu "no: cu dark or can! for I cinch mud (has {on that bind In Iron of an nor-mom out 0M ttt the ttietrr0t- "rl" um Ion mm. ob served'. "Oh, look " the mound." The man Manny cdetarotreed him. "run; “Thu am"! no noon-h. nub rm. Tm- nmu no annual. vbk-h land (or men! mummy - 7- - u‘ .1..- - tho noon " 'TIIIIVII~. __-. __ 7,, as to whether the [low I’“ "no uoou " thm nu. FtttBlly me: Berittrd to lave " u "an ttrrt - by. who hug-end to I» on- other "bloc!" -tue'rPr?. Troy It?! Mm ma. 90mm: to the slow. and: ., no u "1|;an old tml: u thet the you or “a om'." Tho INN pom! nun-d know-15:)- m the not. for son-HI mum» (More in shoal Illa ttend Lad reviled: "mun-nu. I mu. coal-1 an you. In I qtrBMer " an GG7Leisuutlet Booed. "Jane." “and lawn um, W} Lett, Me. "nu-u. .- Mr.-- __ "It In Mn M.” {met - I "kt “a. at. gun to but Inf-m mm. lum- rs-tTir-r-sawn-jar.'.'.'"'- " "-reatueuandeoto." NOE LAND, -. mm. "It tbat t In" _ -- h, iil

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