West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 May 1909, p. 3

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l numb: if “lope. with . " math on. 1 d gm.- . bay] “I bo to do a}. tnet tho ht“. itt o no 'ort . 'tlet in the h nova in“; h DH! 2 " can ya I. in cyrdi convened hot mom" in m 3.7km. , nd y took l RM." aid In. to' - "-"' t the p22 Mute'; n Me. an“: ft . hul- as... h ot 'l'utttta. no A L 5-. "I I 'd'f), bet hIN. and mo- P.2oytur ff... building to h on the m ioocod In. 2-0.-rTho all n boards at a " Penn! I“ i. sud GTI' t an "out 0- . not“ Igtg ninth so!“ ikr. At lull rF.o.tum, ”mummy rpm FG'iiiC'Cl,'t, d hate RI t9Vdud. _ te? Why 'ttemu am cot “in mnnoction vi a night be " again“ mo on all tho troubU hat in so, It . mo to [at up 9 than“ "C country thy " n and I" II. " a is the "I”. ppiattr W.’ van! ttttea . hm orders! ieqn I" on “I to June. t n beta-in. I I The now-paper. " daily "eoeded 1 no.» persons who nrd or seen it 'lt aunties and the In: Flying Dutc- Ildenly in I). I.“ have . wnyuyse, I mount, lava land on t very siren-ad Ne I. wnteUd tho new may until :3, - th ey tootily all: A local 30'." the went and I n though by .1 Led pop". 0-0 this] dim: lpOI’ until, H p ”top-’0" mud the do“: l the public. - u” unit. on mane-y in and kl. ttem' hi {$311133}: A . 'yt,?bljiif,i? not 'lt'ltutlPt u 24.-w t today. W' - quion. that a. in Comb this" BY GREEN " Annun- ' "gtt ,0- I 0‘" - they put. m lulu. n. M md I copy od t I” ham I.” mpg; is it to I got any mom. 'en't. ham I be n imt tho Nt no as, and I had L some saucy 3 But when I h‘ the monor-al FESMIQM than? "OI- it Till main at About stun [we had gilt" y "- Tho q Air-hip, the It which in" but. mono- M‘ h"4 LY mill in If. rep-noi- but it I “will“! "in long. in'uul Wayfarer. trelA Cl] FM u. i... David . Sum m Lul‘d try I R to 'lt h 'uid In & M Chum! any by the irritation of hu mind. he noticed the tab that nu still lying on tho table, held it care- lessly toe u moment, then instinctive. ly ruched tor his ionntnin n. Back at business collage they 'hu1'la'lti'l him lover-i prim tor ttti',',',","?,,',?.. and ho could write it he couldn't tal . And thU was the awning during which he had decided to Ink her the big question that was troubling tho wean-on] of mm! , fountain pen Wu now moving hesitatingly across the blank paper, ultimately [taming beautiful doves and birds and drawing lines [museum in: true curves. Then the hand be- an to move inter and meter. Ho inbound tor the moment in an"! an nninln. Thoy had the choice nook of thu cue. Shielded by the " palms they could no, but yet not be seen. Tho fountain pen Geo. Adams, " odds with the world not. the order very cuddly Ind correctly. tho slip in tom trom the ultny other! on tht pad. and then they won along unit). the nun It"! " dineorttentrd, while the piquant. bmhml swim") at approaching womanhood opposite to him been». Adamo our Nuns: WINM: tto.NTRK tr. OTTAWA TORONTO LONDON CHATHAM WINNIPEG VANCOUVER QUEBEC than“: " W. H Stud st. ll (‘olborun " " Kin. M. 200 West in“ M. " an” at. In Powell at. 1:: Run an Pall ST. JOHN. NCB.. .246 Prince Willis-N- EALII‘AX. I. "be. it. q. F ,“MM‘ And, M tor the looks of a plaster veiling compared with the beauty of a Pedlar Art Steel Why shouldn't it Jastr-it's STEEL. It oau't crack, no mat- ter how unevenly the building sunk-s. Its snrfaoe can't flake off. Moisture ean't possibly get through it. The heaviest jarring overhead cannot loos-n it. It is THE permanent ceiling. Which one of those facts is true of a plaster veiling? ing my room, oi course; 'r-ri-aa-. for it ean't be a low-priced ceil- ing if you have to repair it every year or two. My Art Sled Ceiling will last as long as the building. tho very best decorated platen and yet it will be I perfect ceiling long after the best plaster hm become a dangerous network of cracks. Economy is the first thing to think of in ceil- , Bl"? n Ped- lar Art Steel t" , g-éceiling in any g Qbulldxnp of , yours it you really knew LA Af) how lnrlhud 7 - A V dh , otevery other It ligiliil tlr)' kindofcoiling ' Ita ', mine really " r7 W/ In. Just as a matter of cauumuyw~ for a Pedlar Felling mats no more to start with than The Pedlar People of Oshawa, "ttlt? - rii , .9 ll itiiilt, , “7 .3, , htrrisomoart um pen wu now moving t across tho blank paper, framing beautilul doves and waxing lines possess- nln pon w” now mavln. new» the "per. I The Ceilings for looks--And All Else w. want Agents in tom. actions. Writ. for details. Monti.» this paper. You wouldn’t Ceiling- pm nnything pnssilde cad oeil- Some metal ceilings are blunt pair it and vague in deiistn--sitampet1 My Art badly. Mine are not. For Churches. Residences. Civic Ediiices. Schools, Libraries, Hotels. Club Houses, Office Buildinds, Factories, Shops, Stores. PEDLAR J all but one tyutt'ered--the professor. He had mysteriously disappeared when the ruin come on, and he did not join the party until the sun was shining once more. To the lmnzement of the others the erudite one was as dry an a bone. The others, drenched and disgusted, in. quired of him how it was he had escaped a wetting. "Directly the rain came on," rt plied the professor, "I went off by myself, stripped off my clothes. and ant on them uhiil the London Telegraph. The patterns are doubly stamp- ed by huge and very powerful special Pediar machinery, into sheet steel, in a way that em- Know How to Kup His Clothes Dry. Among a large shooting party on s northern grouse moor was a twrtain elderly professor whose skill with his gun was hardly equal to the protundity of his lutolleot. Smhlonly a. heavy storm of rain ume on, and as there was no shelter on the moor the shooters got thoroughls drenched through. At least, homes the design in clear. sharp, high relief, with every detail wrought nut to perfection. There is a. Pedlar Art Steel Ceiling for every style of arehi. tecture or fashion of furnishing --Oothie, Preneh Renaissance, Louis NIV., Greek, Colonial, or whatever; and in each architec- tural period you can have a choice of patterns that is wider than the whole range of some makers' output. 1'eilinr--vomparison simply isn't pnssiMe. Fur my ceilings, de- signed by notable artists-some Two Thousand Designs-are ah. solutely correot from an artistic viewpoint. With paint and judgment. my Art Steel Ceilings lend themsel- ves to color effects as dainty or For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes. Granulation, Pink Eye: and Eye Strain. Murine doesn't smart; soothes eye pain. ls compounded by experienced physi- cians; contain. no injurious or prohibit- ed drugs. Try Murine tor your eye troubles. You will like Murine. Try it in baby's eyes tor sealy eyelids. Drug- guts loll Murine at 500. Murine bye Remedy Co., (Home, will send you in- The pen dropped to the table. and with both urns outstretched he lift- ed the diminutive piece of paper to- wards her. Her two hand: met both ot his tut she knew instinctively what it all meant. and she was kindly above all other traits. "Sumo here, George." sho assured him, very bluntly but none Mn: less “1390va ,pdParntsstly. _ _ A He inddenly wondered how he could over have doubled her in the but. "Joy or eorrow I an. I); thy aide," he remembered the woe s distinctly from the pley. They hed nude " greet lmpreeeion upon him end he wrote them without e (alter. The It was torn hutily trom the others, . iged gently ecrou to her. end then was writing agein. test- er. more enthusiastically, more beau- tifully than ever. The position ot his entire being was behind it all. "It in never cold beneath thy smile.” He had remembered that also, end he nude it his own mee- Iage end it reached her the same as the first. but he dared not look up to see what effect it was having. For the third time he was fillin a piece of paper with the objects 'd his imagination inspired with the substence of ail his dreams. This wee to be the but. he decided. and the words were to be his truly own. The soft, tradent, ravUhing music of the orchestra uerud him an "I love you." he that the words were deed more ancient others. looked up foe In Jul-tam and she wu lilomly watching him. But his hand one: wanted. Two, three or tour you. Mo, was it. since he had last done this. " mattered not. It Doomed but an yrnterday. And then it In. all done, all except that een- tral vacant space. were wu n place thug to write something. _ _ _ CORNS.EH§.§E no. an 'NA"MAr won an tou/Yule.? 8L%tt1'gt2Pfititg' trt,'ts2'i7r,F'hio.iiiti'iti:' mfi'fifiazflgrmgflm 'ltf.dd'lfP'ilettest1t,f2.r m mum, PUTNAM'S PAINLESS - CORN EXTRACTOR “Input TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY CEllLllNGS wrote. forgetting not new, but in. thtus in of the ART STEEL __J| repair any structure worth ceiling at all. Tell me your address (write. to our nearest place) and I will see you get the information you ought to hare about the ceiling you ought to have. And, of course, my eeilings,are fireproof-which is one reason why anybody who carries insur- ance will save their whole cost: in a few years' time, simply through reduced premiums. I wish you ennld see some lit- erature I would like to send you “free, of' eourse--upon this ceil- as brilliant as one might wish, from the most delicate pastel shades, to color-schemes inirly Byzantine in their strength and strikingness. Peder Products include every kind of sheet met-l building 'ttateriat--.tott my items to even mention here. You can have . eatalo-sttmato--prte-dvioe in". for the taking. We'll like noel-l- Ir to interest you la our Art steel Ceil- i. " “d Side wan-ttser no a revelation to mm ”is. not. than IMO denim But one of the home of Grant, riding home in tho dusk and hilarious from too much of the white, hot moonshine iruni Almond" Bend, yelled defiance a. hu passed the cabin home of the Lath. Itmru, and reeled in his saddle when the revenging bullet came. This started the thing nfth. and in six years a dozen men had gone to their account. Then tlwy will Hide away to the mission boarding svl"rol at the edge of tho hill munlry, and Sammy wrote her long, impasmioned letters, ond, having become At the and of the month two more green mound, showed in the tangle-grown New Hnmluny remetery; at the end of a. year two more were dug amid the briars and the eternal 1'rPepers. Then the blomHu-ud lagged for I while, and Elsie and Sammy, when the older guar- dians were not looking. held sweet com- munion at rec-en, exchanging ginger. bread and parched corn, while the heed- less others bubbled and Para-red about the playground. ' In a month the feud had accounted for two-USU', long, lanky brother, Si- mon, and Sammy'. sullen father, Jonas Grunt. And Mr. Sammy wrote this note to Elsie Latham, so that there might be no more misunde-rstmnling on his ac- count: "Deer Elsie: Me and you lint in enny iude are we Elsie. I love you like aiorty your true hart. SAMMY." Elsie splotclned the me'il sol-aw] terri. bly with her bitter-sweet tears. back- and the Lutham-(irnnt feud wan on, N thing grim and fearful. And that night Elsie Latham, who was given over- much to tears, "ried her little heart out, for she feared that harm would come to young Sammy. . . siyiMy GRANT FOUND THE GAUOY TOY AND RESTORED IT TU BLSIE. (By Stuart B. Stole.) . When use patient, long-outlet“ tenchcr “mounted recon, the Ion-tu- children -ered out upon “I. phy- ground and tell to " their noisy pm. There mm. tops and marbles, but the greatnt interest hung shut the twirl- ing tops. Ehio Lillian, the slim, dare, solemn, Humid. had the brightest top and lost it. “may Grant, who in fair, Hume-ya! and eurlrlretuled,.tound the gaudy toy and matured it to Ellie, while the girl wan still weeping for the bmlet'. Elaie'n big brother, Tom, think. ing Mummy had canard the team, "ruek the lad. Then 1 still larger Grunt struck ing question. Between the illustrations and the text I [111088 I could show you? that Pedltst text I Itut'slrl I could show you? that Pedltsr Art Steel Ceilings are the kindwf ceilings you really want, to get the next time you build or Mash ”-422; 'gia"i' , l Estnblishcd 1 "The German adn French Govern- ment: realize the value of a plentiful supply. They hare their own Govern. ment breeding establishments And en- courage horse breeding by subsidy. I i believe France pays something like 300.- L000 francg I year in this respect. Then they take great cure that only good idtallioua are employed. _ . 'Algy (in Highland eostumel--BO Jove, the did at first, but I said to them: “{1th Diana forget that my am mudleyther III a btttUtttntti" and, batr love, they warmed up right to the "I suppose you know, barber," laid Percy, with tt wink It the man in the other chair, "that the Tair on n man's head grows "the rate of three.mi0iottth, of a yard in a. second." 'NI,. I never bend tlu'. before," "'d the tuber, beating . tattoo on the :‘trop with his razor; "tut I know there's a spot on the bark of your new! when: the hair wouldn‘t grow an mud: Is that in a m.uion yer..." - Mind Cure. Pretty eoutin---Altry, don't your knees get _eold _in tktfnifprm . "It is a regulation of the War Office that horses shall not be bought under four yen: old. This is the foreittuer's chance. Not only the Germans, but pne- tically every Continental country, In: agents bent on securing the very pick of the available three-year-o1ds. They purchase osperinlly young mares, which of course do not return to this country. They are, therefore, reducing both in quality and number the supply of four- year-olds obtainable by the home auth- oritiel. "The principal cause: of the alarming tscarcity-for I am convinced if war broke out to-morrow we have not a suf- ficient supply for the ttrmy-ttre the unprecedented buying of young horses by foreign agéuls. the fact that farm. ers are more and more giving up the breeding of bones, the increase in me- chanical traction, and the hetrvrdemand Fr horses during the late South African ,ttar."-Prorn the Pall Mall Gamrtte. Two Class” in One Car. A novel type of trolley car has been built for the South Manchurian unil- road. The car is divided into first and second-class compartments by a vesti. bule Ind steps at the centre of the car. As xhese steps must not project outside the car body, they cut into the side sills and necessitate a special construction ot framework. The first-clans comput- ment is fitted with upholstered seats, while slat not: ttre provided in the m- end-cuss compartment. "There is no use disguising the fact," said an expert on English horse breed- ing, "that the country is rapidly being denuded of its best horses, and the poni- tion is becoming acute. Sir Gilisert Parker is raising the point in one of its important aspects next week in the House of Commons. m has given notice to [call the attention of the Secretary of State for War to the {not that German ngentl are exten- sively buying three-yenr-old horses suit. able for army purposes in England, Ire. land and Wales. ' Not Equal to Demand in England- French and German Stables. The adequate supply of homes for the army, it would scarcely be denied, is as essential to its efficiency In men and guns. Yet in this vital particular' the Government, as in so many other ques- tions relative to the defence of the country, have utterly failed to realize their responsibilities. . And the hillmen, creeping cautiously forward, finally rz".C"d in nervous, awkward reunion. So tint the mam: Gram. feud went out as it began, with I girl's impassioned weeping. 14h fight.” nssentéd Sawfly Grant, with startled eagerness. "We started it --letu end it." _ - Grunts were on hand because the Luth- am: were present. Ind it was a good time for trouble. Sammy, in the back. ground, law the radiant glory of Elsie, and realized his own miserable lack of charm. But Elsie tripped straight up to Sam- my and, before the astonished clunsmen could interfere, they were treated to the spectacle of a Latham girl hugging and kuaines youth of the Grants, who did his best at returning 1ho favors. . . "Sammy, oh, Sammy!” cried Elsie Latham, "let's et married trnd settle thin terrible 'dd. I know you Are dying to, but would never dare to ask me now; an}! I can't wait on a proposal while the old cemetery fills up." of maturer years, Joined in the great eluhign of club. But Ernie " the mis. sion school learned that these things should not be, and wrote home to tUt effect. The Lnthamn laughed at the let. ten and fought all the harder-the Grant ang could not lick them. And Ellnie learned Latin, Greek, a lit. tle French and a smattering of music and returned in time to the hills, n beautiful, budding woman, with strange ideas of pean- and unity in her bead. When the train pulled in at the Ma. tion in the Moccasin Valley, what w" left of the Latham faction was there to greet Elsie; ulm the remnants of the The Lnthama came forward, guns in hand, to greet Elsie; and the Gran", taking shelter behind barrels and boxes, let loose a volley of nimlesa dernutee. Sammy Grunt wished that he was dead. SUPPLY OF ARMY HORSES. CRYSHED. WE Rio ARCHIVES TORONTO English Process Which Turns Germ. Into Useful Building Blocks. At Woolwich end at Nelson. Englmd, garbage is incinerated in furnacee. The combustion gases, alter heating boilers in which steam is produced fur the gen- eration of an electric lighting current, flow. through tubes surrounded by air, which is thus heated to 300 degrees F., and is then blown through the lurnacei. The operation leaves a large quantity of clinkcrs, composed of silica, aluminn, lime and iron, with n litttle magnum, potash and soda, which in utilized in making sand-lime brick. The ground clinkers are mixed with quick-lime and about lo per cent. of water, to form a soft mortar, which is stored in brick cisterns for a day or two to insure the complete sinking of the lime. and then goes to the brick-making machine. The fresh bricks are placed in closed veaaels and subjected tor eight or ten hours to the action of Iteam " etht atmos- pheres pressure. When taken out the bricks are sufficiently hard for imme- diate use. The hardening is caused, an in the use of ordinary sand-lime brick, say: the Scientific American. by the combin- ation of the lime with' the silica of the elinkers, at the high tismpertttnre of the steamer. The quality of.the Nelson garbage brick is ual to that of good blue h"al'/t,Tlui'ree11,'r'll,kt, except that it is rather more hygroscopic. Large building blocks Ind pavement tiles In made by Iimiinr processes. "Pu: I Pioco of Tree." A tree found in Asharftee In excellent butter. For free sample bottle, write to The D. D. D. Laboratory, Department D, 23 Jordan Itreet. Toronto. in my legs. I only used two bottles when the? were clear of Dueme. The Your bott es I have left will keep for hires and insect bites. It is a useful remedy to have in the house at nll times. Wishing you all success with For eczema and other skin disease. certainly nothing in the world could be simpler than oil of Wintergreen, eure- fully combined with Inch well-known healing and antiseptic substance: as lliymol, glycerine, etc'., as in the D. D. D. Prescription. The use of this simple remedy, though, nEcomplishes results that look like miracles. Cases of eczema of ten, twenty and even thirty years' standing have been completely cured in a few weeks. Read the experience of Mrs. John Sun derl,, of Griswold, Manitoba: "When I sent tdr six bottles of D. D. D. I had one of the worst cases of Beam: EGZEMA CUBE A MIHAOLE? ---IW, JUSI SOUND SGIEIGE Phyticinns now admit the superior value of simpler medicines for all cm- elm. .: The summer leaves tttd their brilliant color have new theories to explain them. One Stuhl argue: that the green hue in a complementary adoptntion to the col. or oi sunlight, in which when filtered through the atmosphere, red and yellow my: preponderate. Similar complemen- tary uduptution is exhibited, m-cording to t?chorler, by the ilugellates and dia. toms of the black ponds of the Eu Mountains, between Saxony und Ital-e» min. In clear water those plants are golden yellow Ind brown, but both u- uume a green hue in the coffee colored water of the ponds. This change of col. or in the same direction in two organ- isms so unlike can only be attributed to the action of external influences of which the brown moor water is unqual- tionahly the chief. " green light, Ind yellow-brown in blue ight. The moor water, which Appen- eofte-colored in thick and yellow in thin layers, absorbs Iome of the my; and tnnsmiu the red and yellow rays which develop complementary 'shades of green in the organisms, thus lncreuing their power of absorption and’ assimilation and making life possible under adverse conditions. Ulidukov Ind Engelnuum have found that certain blue and red plant: have the faculty of changing their color with the light by which they are bathed. They produce pigment cells of I hue complementary to that oi the illumin- tion. Thus they become green in red light, blue-green in orange light, red in For sale by all draggisU Theory of Color: in Plants. fdt2hiiEli.%"ti'e. ',ieka, BRICKS FROM REFUSE. Rabbis are making plan: to prepare a net of historical works in male p u. in form than the Jewish 'e1e'.'dL1,lCl?l'. They are preparing a "History of the Jewish People" for the general public. The history is to cunliut of twelve vol, times; one end two will deal with Allin, Egypt and North America; three will den] with southern and oouth-eutgrn Europe, four with France, Belgium and Holland, five and six with Germany, Switzerland And the Scandinavian coun- tries; uven, Austria-Hungary; eighth, England and Colonies; ninth and tenth, Bunk. and eleventh and twelfth, the American: continent. Dr. (issuer's 'find" of the Samsriun Book of Joshua. has At last found as strong sdvocste in Mr. Bruno Schiniler, who endeavors in a long eottttnttttieatioa to the English Jewish press to unblish its genuineness. it. are three apartments bearing the IN“- hlouce of toning, and in these a family, consisting of fuller. mother, luur chil- dren and n boarder manage to exist. The father has been out of work for months; the' mother. won to bear again the responsibility of motherhood. gum out daily to earn I partial support for the family by doing julitor work. In "lather can, in surroundings almost limilar, we find the father has been ill for months. Ind the mother looks tso-L tbe wonder u that it could be ether- wiu. The eldest son. n mere child, is . criminal. returning regululy to the had: of the police, and this is whct we might expect. In neither home referred to we there any unit-r, maniac". These two typical - to which we have "(and an he/ulled . neither baa at M _ . The late Leon Emanuel. of Ports mouth, England left by will over 8.50, 000 for charitable pun-panes. THIS IS IN TOMS“). (Rev. IL B. Magee in Christian Guar. din.) Here in one inManee.. A dirty hovel, the floor of which in broken down to. ward the middle, so that it "an on the ground. Ind on the Jloor "(or Mage into- ty any monthsrol the year. In According to the St. Petersburg pn- pen, u new 'Society for Jewish NI- tionnl Music" hu been founded there by certain well-known Jewish Artists, sing- err, Ind musician. The Queen of Italy bu dunked the Jews of Mimsk, Hunk, for their con- tribution to the Italian 'tttttttquake cut fen-en. The Yiddish poet, hug, who ha.- been nerolully ill for some time. will shortly have Ruuh for the Tyrol on the " vice of his physicians. M. Winter, the well-known Cumtitur lionul lkluocrut Mud member of the first Datum, has been elected editor of the new periodical which will uppear n the orgnn of the St. Petersburg lawyers. Since the mouncemeut by Mr. "nr will on behalf of the Ito of the abun- datunent of Cyreneioe u in Jewish terri- tery there he! been an evident (litigati- tion on the part of may territoria Uta to turn their uttention to Palestine uni its immediate treigltborltuuis tn the ex- clusion of every other possible .erritory. There Are evidence: that the In in tho beginning to look upon the neighbor- lnnd- ot Pile-tine u a favorable legion for Jewish colonization on a huge scale. The directors of the Rocklwny Park Sanitarium tor Hebrew Children by the Bu Announce that additions have been complehd which will enable their build. ins. to "eornmod.te day more both. This uniurinm for the New York tone- ment ditttriet children now has a total of 475 beds. A Jeri-ll hoopitul u to be put " on California "cane, Chicago, on ground that In: Lint been ul'chmd from Wil- linm J. c llahnn t; the Malnuouides Kosher Hospital. The hospital will be six storeys Ind will cost at lent $75,000, Ground is to be Inoken in June for the new building. At the office of the Federation of Am, eriun Zionist. were bu recently been noticed In unexpected development of in tel-en In the Anglo-Palestine Umuplny, which in a. branch of the Jewish Colon- ial Trust. The constnnt lllld healthy growth ot the Hilsverein der deuuchen Jaden in one of the most encouraging sign. of the times in Jewish life in Germany. Drbllermln Adler, chief ubhi of the British Empire, will celebrate his level» tieth birthday and the fiftieth year of his miniury by the puhliution of 3 vol- umo of sermons nnd nddrHM-l an I me- morlal of his labor!- F‘gnor Ludovico Mortars, advocate- general It the Court of Cuuuun in Rome, but been promoted to Profurfyr.- genonl It the Court at Cal-anon in POI. ermo, Herr Julius Rotholz, of Berlin, to mm memmorate his ninelieth birthday Inui- veunr ', hu ivrn . donation of I hun- dred JaeMI marks to thy hospital of the Jewish community of that city. The Rev. Dr. u. P. Meade. haa issued an Appeal to the Jew: at New York for the sum of thirty thouund dollars, to pay oft We imkbudneu all the Institu- tion for the Improved Inatruetion of Dent Hutu, no that we administration of it uuy be Jewish. Governor Noel, of Mistslsaippi, appuiut ed Rabbi Max Rubin. at Temple Beth lame], Meridian, Min" to represent the State ut the Mound National Peace Oun- gren, which met but Munduy in Chicago. At the recent mum! meeting at Tonto [Minn-r] of New Orleans, I deficit of 820.1130 or the year mu reported. The holpitd is the finest in Sew Orlum, and, in addition to the indoor work, for te thoustutd one: were treated in the olinie, of which ninety-{he per cent, were those of no" Jews. The total ex- peu‘ at the honpitul and home for aged “an about "19.000. it can be proved by wit-ei, and Bot ne-rily by the production of the bill of divorce. ' The announcement in made of two gifts to the Jewish Foster Home And Orphan Asylum of Philadelphia by Leo Loch, Prudent of the institution, and Benjamin W. Loeb, his son. The for, mer in inn $5,000 and the latter " 000 tor “no ennui-hing of n fund tor the education of buster Hume boys. A ruli In: been had in New York to the ewect that n tabttirtieal divorce chained in Run-in, when both parties to it Inn in that countr , will be could- tred "lid in the United? sum, And that Under the new due-lion] an, the Jew“ schools in Ralph. will naive Gov-uncut aid on an an. tooth. u the not of the people. A "- ot 458 number. My the hot you in ttte Independent Order at Free Son- of Judah, m ripened by Grad Master In“ CrMI, at who nuns] convention of the order. The total membnhip of the order on Jul. i, 1909, In 9,553. AMONG a q " THE aliNim Vegetabie Comma“ bu done for be (In " this try 2 Karma. Couple“ reqtogattott to halt mem- so Ilch to me that for the an of other ' in. women I am willing to make lg tumble public so you Ti', public thin lettei."-iug. (was. use“): 1Lk'.D.,Granitevinr, Vt. For man-1mm no yams it ha: been curing female comphinu Inch an intiammatiou, Mia-mum. heal “an: new. tibroid tumors. trrrppiatities. periodic palm. baa-hem. mans-m. Mid nervous protstratimt. and it " unequalled tor carrying women at“, through the [mind of than? of titi. " etrstB bat little to trt ..rdia R. “Wasn't Vent-blue Cotitpotsiad. out " Mrs. Barrinlnyut h wan. mom was of you an “(can It“ No other medieine for volun’a " has received such 2't.1tgtt all an. qualified ond-tent. .. bother “- ieine we know of In: such I terestxt ot mm ot female "I: " has Lydh E. Piggkham'u Ytxttetabie Compound, Gmnitevillo, Vt. - " I In through mommy me '.',taget Ihtrintt3;tattge of Ute, '3 says Mrs. Chas. Bard-y "Ho he proposed yet!" "Not In so may worm." "Tum no answer. Proposal. - do come In words-tttey can” of “in. 'lmna, bun and gur‘lufkwnlou l LIS'l‘KNlNO TO THE BAND. l (Montreal Wuhan.) To hear hand qualc out-of-doore, out people have to take the one and go to one or two plaoee in the out end,where they have to pay. We ought to here bands murtieipally provided. We are big enough he a cit), and our people are musically inclined. Mueic ia iaapirulg. If it ie Innate of the right kind, it la ameliorating and elevating. There ie warmly a any of any sin in England or on the continent of Europe that doea not have a band to play in the parks or squares. If public muelc in coneidered [WWI] them, can we attord to do wit-bout it? That muaie doee elevate lute in not generally dteputad, and the is specifically testified to by the Parka Committee of the London County Coun- cil. which he. found that the alandard of muaical knowledge of the average park frequenter in higher than it hae ever been. Even in the poorest diatricta in which the Council’e open - are eituated, there ie an ever-growing appre- ciation of good band music. So much in thin the cue, that before completing the musical arrangements for the caning aeaeon, men-here of the Parks Cont-nit- tee visited the varioue parka and made agreenenta with the band oonduetore whereby in the more popular public place. onehalf the programme meet be free from barn dnaoee, cake welka. waltue, haékneyed national fentaelaa. and Iirnilar piecea; and only one lily-H piem is to be allowed in the other plaeee where bands perform. Among the llet of pieces not to be played " any of the performancea given by the Council ere such great favorites of the peat he “Se-anee River," "'Way Down Tenne- see," "Live on the. Ocean," “Coon he! Conteat," "In Old Kentucky," "Dnaky Dinah," and e More of others. Along other regulations are that 2td'tt: having a foreign title Intent " the title tranelated into Eetgtuh--eaoth" “education made euy ldea”-nnd that no two pieces by the “In calm, however, popular, lunet heve a plane in the “game programme. That London coue' ere mualc neceeaar Ia he edged by the fact that the 't,2l'lt'd (gone:- vetive one-U epending about “We. bands thie unmet, and that in my recreation grounds for which hitHeto no music he been provided, heads will now play for the tint tine. Lender. WORTH MOUNTAINS side, and had A Yum! of eon-mt It lira-ion. The and!“ etrerthm vault our. use haul-I. and l v“ re- duced In flesh ottil 1 I only " pounds. I got :10th to u - til I haul the an at Dr. I“ Pink tls. no, bog:- "Wag I. utter the first 'et':? of vats, and in n few mare week. wu Mala perfect- ly well. The eoior mutroed to my chub, the paint left In, and l d in weight until now I we 1.0 pounds, I feel no Ye, for t Dr. Williams' Pink Pills an don tor me that I hope tom. other mung, - this girl will profit by my “pork-u and chain new hnlth." Thou Pills are mid by all Mo dealers or you can get them by " " 50 can" a box or at: bong to: I” from the Dr, Willium' mm Cu, Brovkville, 0m. A QUESIION 0f mm: It - you. to.“ nad '0“ RIM-0.3. w: ot trMt1 u to but... all “anagram-n demand that In “My " no... din-um an and by n also-dc (or Hood's) A!“ that - out. Pilot new. that the blood is Io: furnishing the o u with the maimed mount of maria-mat. than “all be unison“ inter-u in “so his ' an with Dr. Wink-f PM Hun. Thin blood mogul tun-ed “not, not» and dictation, function! Mun. headaches, Munch; neural“, "intiess, and qVStt puthl paralysis. Dr. Wil. liuuu' Pink nu. build up lb blood, rev pair tune and puma! “d chock di' eue. They fill tho antes “a rich. red blood, whkh "In good tumult um Miss Marie Dionne, tit. Angela, QM... up: " In deeply “total tor win. Dr. \Villnlnu' Pink Sril'd in" to” for me. My blood had the» can“ to vital. I m" pale, had nomad“. "mend from pd!" in the all trieuroa,tuggudr-tu. 'tstbitihr-9mrt. lite, THE LANGUAGE OP UNI. OF GOLD and "ren'rtti." I never forget. man my friend: “It LydhEPlnkhnn'a ot and to oie/Utt '0'. red my tr.eaitt from who...» ttfttgt'ttpt symptom. and an “an that F,tt.th akin-'- \euublo Co.- pound In. proved worth mountain- Lo

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