West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Sep 1913, p. 6

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#4 ons and footstool. _ One brought him his favorite drink. The other gelected one of the books that he Aked best and rard to him until he elept. © Then both sat perfectly still watching over him, lest something ahould come to disturb his comfort. Daughter and gramlfather tenderâ€" ly placed the old man in the room‘s most comfortable chair, with cushâ€" *‘*You are right, my daughter. We men fail our women, but out women never fail us. It has always been so. It will always be so. You are right; our women must learn to stand alone." ‘‘Every girl should be able to make her own way in the world, unâ€" aided ; every woman. For none knows what day she will be thrown upon her own resources, I want to teach you to care for yourself. The thing we women must learn is to put our trust in ourselves, Evelyn, not in men.‘* Unseen by the two women, a broâ€" ken old man had entered the room. His wrinkled hand rested on his daughter‘s arm. ‘‘Mother, I wiihvvâ€"):;)um..:ouldn't make me learn to earn my own livâ€" ing. We h&_vg money andâ€"‘*‘ By a big bay window overlooking a park, Amy Plummer Page and ber daughter were standing. ‘‘Don‘t try to talk, mother," said the girl. _ ‘"‘They are bringing grandfather hero. I want you to save your strength for him.‘" ‘"Butâ€"youâ€"and â€" father â€" toâ€" gether t ‘"Yes. I ran away from my faâ€" ther‘s home. I couldn‘t stand it, and grandfather took me in. â€" You see, grandfather failed rapidly after you went away. I seldom leave his side now. He seems to get so much comfort from just holding my hand. For years we have searched for you. And now you must be very quiet because weo want to taka vwon The woman‘s tired eyes lighted up wonderfully and she went to alsep murmul_'@ng. ‘"He needs me ; When the woman opened her eyes they rested upon a goldenâ€"haired girl, fashionably gowned. It was the same girl who had bidden the chauffeur stop the machine that its victim might be cared for. Crosaing a busy strest one day, an automobile dashed around the corner. _ Its shrill siren startled the nervous woman. _ She dodged first one way, then the other. The big car passed over ber; then it stopped ; she was lifted into the tonneau and hurried to the nearest hospital And when ho awoke t.l-m-e;v:;;]..:! ment as a domestic servant. For seven years she lived thus, unknown and unmolested. _ When she went out, which was seldom, she wore a heavy veil that concealed her feaâ€" tures in order that those whom she loved might be spared knowledge of her lowly life. hold ; the outside world and its ways were to her a sealed book. For two days she sat upon the front steps of her father‘s house, but was denied admittance. _ Sho haunted her husband‘s office, but was ever turned away. In desperation, the castâ€"off went to a friend to borrow the money to go to another city. Often she was hungry and her clothos were ragged, threadbare. There was no work for the inexperienced hand. At last, a kindly woman gave her employâ€" But one morning the scales dropâ€" ped from her eyes. Her baby was taken from her and she was cast awdrift upon the workiâ€"a divorced woman. _ Another and more careâ€" free woman had taken her place. Where Amy had cared for the child and had done her own work, a nurse and servants were employed. And there was nothing that Amy could do. They told her that the law had so decided things, and Amy knew nothing of the law. It terrified her. Bhe knew naught but of the houseâ€" When her baby girl was 2 years old a storm broke over Amy‘s houseâ€" holid. She never knew quite how it had happened. _ She had been so busy with little Evelyn. Her houseâ€" hold duties had absorbed every vaâ€" eant hour. She had so little time to ses what was going on about her. _ Perhaps she had neglected Will. Many evenings she was too tired to notico Will‘s absence or his whereabouts. many times. When the baby came, Amy thought surely her father would relent, but her hope was vain. Silas Plummer was adamant. A successful man, ableâ€"bodied, livâ€" ing in the midst of luxury, he was deaf to his daughter‘s plea. He had closed the parental door against her and hers forever Amy _ Plummer, goldenâ€"haired, young, beautiful, headstrong, made her choice. She left her father‘s house and married the man she lovedâ€"married him in the rooms of a clergyman. _ When her baby was born Amy‘s happiness was almost complete. The one flaw was that her father had not yet forâ€" given her for her marriage to Will Page. She had never seen him since the morning he had closed the door behind him, though she had tried door behind him. He was done. ‘‘*You must. If this manâ€"this scoundrelâ€"is to be your husband, I will have nothing more to do with before ~a daughter, blackâ€"browed, unyielding. E _ ‘‘Father, oh, father, please! I love him. I1â€"‘" >me ‘‘You must choose between me ‘"Oh, I cannot, father. I canâ€" WHEN MAN FALS HER 1se we want to take you Grandfather needs you Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read the litâ€" tle booklet, ‘‘The Road to Wellâ€" ville,‘"‘ in pkgs. "‘There‘s a reason.‘"‘ potaanarne med Ape o Smuins, trom. and ‘tudt af aman ‘"In albout two weeks I was sleepâ€" ing soundly. In a short time gainâ€" ed 20 lbs. in weight and felt like a different woman. My little daughâ€" ter whom I was obliged to keep out of school last spring on account of chronic catarrh, has changed from a thin, pale nervous child to a rosy, healthy girl and has gone back to school this fall. "Grapeâ€"Nuts and fresh air were the only agents used to accomplish the happy results." ‘"Reading of Grapeâ€"Nuts, I deterâ€" mined to stop the tonics and see what a change of diet would do. I ate Grapeâ€"Nuts four times a day with cream and drank milk also, went to bed early after eating a dish of Grapeâ€"Nuts before retiring. ‘‘My friends became alarmed beâ€" cause I grew pale and thin and could not sleep nights. I took variâ€" ous tonics prescribed by physicians, but their effects wore off shortly after I stopped taking them. My food did not seem to nourish me and I gained no flesh nor blood. New material from which to reâ€" build wasted nerve cells, is what should be supplied, and this can be obtained only from proper food. The mistake is frequently made of trying to build up a wornâ€"out nervous system on soâ€"called tonics â€"drugs. ‘‘IT‘wo years ago I found myself on the verge of a complete nervous colâ€" lapse, due to overwork and study, and to illness in the family,‘"‘ writes a young mother. be wet, and, strangely enough, it can stand far hotter liquids inside than out. For example, the averâ€" ago teaâ€"drinker sips tea at a temâ€" perature of about 140 degroes F. â€"sometimes as high as 145 degrees. But he cannot bear his hand in water at 120 degrees, or his feet in water higher than 120 degroes. Fow people can stand a bath in water at 105 degrees. In parts of Central Australia men live in an average temperature of 115 degrees F. in the shade and 140 degrees in the sun, while 151 degrees has been registerâ€" ed. In the Persian Gulf the therâ€" mometers on ships vary between 122 degrees and 140. A recont exâ€" plorer in the Himalayas reports that he found at 9 a.m. in Decemâ€" ber, and at more than 10,000 feet alâ€" titude, a temperature of 131 deâ€" grees F. Drs. Bleyden and Chanâ€" trey, two English scientists, desirâ€" ing to ascertain how hig a temperaâ€" ture the human body could stand, shut themselves in an oven, of which the heat was gradually raised, and they were able to bead it until the thermometer registered 212 degrees F., the boiling point of water. Taking Tonics, and Bauilt up on Right Food. was filled with sandâ€"and very coarseâ€"grained sand at that ! _ _Finally, after Col. Sceley, his adâ€" visers and experts had _ gotten cramp in their fingers, the Minister of War ordered the box opened. This was not easy, as it was fasâ€" tened by tight bolts and scrows. But finally after a warm half hour the mechanics managed to pry open the sides. Then up stepped the British Minister for War and his retinue of confreres to inspect the contrivance. There wasn‘t much to inspect, though. The box Experiments Showed That It Can Stand 212 Degrees F. greater heat if it be dry than if it HEAT AND THE HUMAN BODY. After two avions had gotten up ‘"‘the technical experts‘‘ got busy with a boxâ€"like contrivance with a few buttons on th elid. According to directions they tapped a crimâ€" son button once and then a black one twice. But nothing happened. Then they commenced _ playing ‘"‘Home, Bweet Home‘"‘ on the keyâ€" board. All to no effect! Well, _ anyhow, _ after twelve weeks of negotiation and discusâ€" sion, the Secretary of State for War and his experts and advisers one fine morning last week motored forty miles through the Surrey hills and arrived at the Royal Air Craft Factory at Farnborough. Om arrival a few avions were put up and the militant pilots were told to hold themselves in readiness to volplane to carth at any time they found their motors inadvertently cut off. * How any body of men of even nearly human intelligence could have allowed a crank with such a preposterous scheme to go on pumping them for three months is a mystery. It must be understood that the War Office has ali sorts of technical advisers at its call. Fooled With a Contrivance for Reâ€" sisting Aerial Attack. Much merriment by the public ‘and sundry blushes by Col. Seeley, the British Secretary of War, have lately been caused by a crank joke. For the last three months the Briâ€" tith War Office has been in comâ€" munication with a professed invenâ€" tor. The subject of correspondence is in connection with a contrivance for resisting aerial attack. The inâ€" ventor was said to be able to conâ€" trol the magneto of the motor of the hostile air craft in such a way that when a wireless spark was sent out from the ground stationâ€"even at a distance of 100 miles!â€"the propeller of the avion could be made to stop work. en his hours. tenderly up into his face, asked what more they could do to brightâ€" WAR OFFICE HOAXED. STOPPED SHORT Minard‘s Liniment Oures Qarget in cows. The cellars are narrow, tombâ€" like, and within each stands a cofâ€" fin. The attendants creep about in felt slippers. No one is allowed to utter a word. The silence is that of the grave. Once a day the cell doors are unlocked, and the half a thousand _ wretches march out, clothed in shrouds and with faces covered with masks, for it is part of this hideous punishment that none may look upon the countenance of his fellowâ€"prisoner. Few of them endure this torture for more than ten years. Nothing is easier than faultâ€"findâ€" ing. No talent, no selfâ€"denial, no character is required to set up in this business. Horrible Treatment of Prisoners in Portugal. Entombed in a grim castle on the outekirts of Lisbon are some of the most miserable men on earth. These are inmates of Portugal‘s ‘‘Prison of Silence.‘"‘ In this buildâ€" ing everything that human ingenuâ€" ity can suggest to render the lives of its prisoners a horribl>, maddenâ€" ing torture is done. The corridors, piled tier on tier five stories high, extend from a common centre like the spokes of a huge wheel. tect had meant the tower to rise straight up from its foundations. Equally significant is the fact that above the third floor of the tower none of the precautions just desâ€" cribed are taken. was thrown off the overhanging side. This, he says, would have been quite unnecessary if the archiâ€" Mr. Bickerstaffe points out, howâ€" ever, that careful measurements below the third floor show that the arches of the staircase were delibâ€" erately increased in â€" height, and that the downward dip was so arâ€" ranged that the weight of the tower In the Leaning Tower thero is a deliberate effort above the third floor to return to the perpendicular. This is made by a delicate series of changes in the pitch of the columns on the lower sideâ€"evidence taken by some investigators as indication of an attempt to remedy an error made by the architects, the foundaâ€" tion according to one theory having subsided as the result of their inexâ€" perience with the peculiar soil of Pisa. _ To substantiate this view, he deâ€" scribes similar divergences that o¢câ€" curred in contemporary buildings. The Baptistery of the Cathedral in Pisa, built also in the thirteenth century, leans seventeen inches out of the perpendicular, and the plinth blocks of its foundations tilt down gradually and evenly for nine inchâ€" es in the direction of this lean. The Campanile of San Niccolo leans forward in the same way, as likeâ€" wise do the facades of the Catheâ€" dral in Pisa, It is worthy of note, too, that they curve back again toâ€" ward the perpendicular. Leaning Tower of Pisa the Cause of Much Discussion. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, that most eccentric pieco of© Southern Romanesque architecture, has been the cause of an almost continuous discussion. Scientists and archiâ€" tects have examined its foundaâ€" tions, measured its columns, and theorized as to its strange deparâ€" ture from the perpendicular, In 1773 Goethe explained it as intenâ€" tionally so built for the purpose of attracting the spectator‘s attention from the ordinary straight shafts, of which Pisa in the twelfth century is said to have had ten thousand. This is the interesting theory that Mr. Isaac Bickerstaffte upholds in Field. \ Designed by Bernard, Paris. Model of blue satin with jacket of blue moire, made with wide sash effect and trimmed with collar and cuffs of civet. ACCIDENT OR INXTENTIOX. "PRISON OF SILENCE." A NEW FALL MODEL. ED. 7. > MSE #%;â€"‘18. Tommyâ€"Something you can see through. â€" =~ S Teacherâ€"Right! Give me an exâ€" ample. Tommyâ€"A ladder. Teacherâ€"What‘s the meaning of the word transparent? Truth is what man knows ; what a woman believes. _ BStudents of plant life have found that squashes and other gourdâ€"like growths when harnessed to the proâ€" per recording machinery, exert thousands of pounds pressure. ‘‘Every operation of plant life," Professor Ganong says, ‘""involves some movement, and therefore real work; so that animals and plants are working, and often right hard from the physical point of view, when they merely are keeping alive â€"a conclusion from: which the readâ€" er is welcome to draw any comforts he can." ]‘ry Murine Eye Remedy germinate and send tiny delicate roots feeling their way deeper into the restricted aperture. Their proâ€" gress is painfully slow, but irreâ€" sistible. In the course of time the little seed, which fell into such an unfriendly environment, grows into a sturdy, towering tree and its roots have split and rent asunder masses of stone weighing tons. The roots of trees planted along city streets frequently throw out of place ponderous curbstones that interfere with their growth, and pavements themselves are uplifted and cracked by the strength of the seemingly frail plants. Even softâ€" bodied fungi, such as mushâ€"rooms, are capable of bursting upward an asphalt pavement. Everyone Fas noticed the tremenâ€" dous, if imperceptible, force exertâ€" ed by growing plants when their development is restrained by stones or other obstacles.. A minute seed may lodge in & pinch of earth in a crevice of And that incessant labor, none the less real because the moveâ€" ments are too slow to be seen by human eyes, is going on within the plant, as well as without. Continâ€" ual changes aro taking place in the plant structure; new growths are being added, and external injuries repaired and healed over. The life blood of the plant is forcing its way through the fibrous and cellular structure, andâ€"innumerable etrucâ€" tural atomse are hurrying about perâ€" forming their varied and neverâ€"endâ€" ing tasks of building. *vidoumydiq counp juowju1y s.piruimy A Vigorous Tremble, as if straining at some hidden leash ; he would see tho buds of some flowers open and close with a straining yawn or a sudden snap, and others burst into bloom like a rocket when it breaks to a spray of manyâ€"colored lights; roots in their efforts to penetrate the earth turnâ€" ing and twi«sting like angleworms ; seedlings in their struggle to break through the ground heaving and straining at the burden of superâ€" incumbent soil, like a powerful man at some load which has fallen upon him; tendrils swooping in curves through the air, gripping the first thing they meet and jerking their pl-gnt_s towands the support.‘‘ William F. Ganong, professor of botany in Smith College, says in his book, ‘"The Living Plant,‘" something of what might be seen if plant labors were so hastened. ‘‘Then the observer would see the tip of every growing plant strucâ€" ture nodding and moving energetiâ€" cally about, so that a meadow, a copse or a forest would seem all of The foregoing familiar Biblical quotation expresses a popular fanâ€" cy and a poetic sentiment, ecienâ€" tists say, but not the physical fact. The price of existence for the liliec of the field, as well as all other forms of plant life, is incessant work; it is only because they are placid of mien, and do not visibly hurry and fret and strain, that we conclude they lead a life of luxuriâ€" Scientists Say the Biblical Quo{lzâ€" tion Is Wrongly Interâ€" preted. £ hoOo:;:ier the liliss (t).fu the field, w they grow ; th 1 noiâ€" ther do they spim. _ _ w' A ous ease, idling away a more or less brief season as ornaments on the landscape. If plant actions could be â€"magnified in speed they would quickly convince the obâ€" server as to the labor they perform. PLANTS HAVE 10 STRUSELE MUST TOIL FOR THE PRIVIâ€" LEGE OF EXISTING. A Granite Cliff, Sure Enough. PVAE TORONTO Mackâ€"I have three daughters on m%hmds. yldâ€"That‘s nothing, I have three sonsâ€"inâ€"law on mine, ~ Small Boyâ€"‘"What is a roost, papa?‘ Parentâ€"‘‘A roost, my son, is the pole on which chickens roost at night.‘"" Small Boyâ€"‘"And what is a perch, papa?‘ Parentâ€""A perch is what chickens perch on at night.‘‘ Small Boyâ€"‘"Well, papa, could a chicken roost on a perch ?‘‘ Parentâ€"‘‘Why, of course.‘" Smaill Boyâ€"‘"And could they perch on a roost 1‘ Parentâ€"‘"Qertainly, of course.‘"‘ ~ Small Boyâ€"‘"But if the chicken perched on a roost, that would make the roost a perch, wouldn‘t it?"‘ Parentâ€""Oh, yes, I suppose so.‘" Small Boyâ€"‘"But if just after ~some chickens had perched on a roost, and made it a perch, some chickens came along and roosted on the perch and made it & roost, then the roost would be a perch and the perch would be a roost, and some of the chickens would be perchers and the others would be roosters and â€"â€"‘"â€" Paâ€" rentâ€"‘"Busan, Busan‘! take this child to bed before he drives me‘ The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ‘"‘John, those burglars are in the antry at my pies and cake. ‘Phone ?or & policeman, quick!" "I‘ll phone for a doctorâ€"they won‘t need a policeman." More little ones die during hot weather than at any other time of the year, Diarrhoeas, dysentery, cholera infantum and stomach dis orders come without warning, and ‘when a medicine is not at hand to give promptly the short delay too frequently means that the child has passed beyond aid. Baby‘s Own Tablets should always be kept in the home where there are young children. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent> stomaech and bowel troubles, or if the trouâ€" ble comes suddenly the prompt use of the Tablets will cure the baby. BABY‘S GREAT DANGER DURING HOT WEATHER There is an old rhyme in the country which is often quoted, and which it may be well to remember. It runs : change is expeoted. Rain is indiâ€" cated by guinea fowls and peacocks squalling, by perrots whistlingand by pigeons returning home unusuâ€" ally early. ‘‘If the cock goes crowing to bed, He‘ll '?erlt‘ainly rise with a watery ma 10 Bheep turn their heads to the wind when the day is going to be fine. But if they graze with their tails to windward it is a sure sign of rain, so experienced shepherds say. Like cows, too, they show an unusual liveliness at the approach of a storm. Even the sedate pig is watched by country weather proâ€" phets, for it is always uneasy when rain is coming. ly frisky. They run up and down the field and butt imaginary obâ€" stacles at such times, Donkeys will bray loudly and continuously at the approach of a storm. If cows lie down in the early morning instead of feeding, or huddle together with their tails to windward, then there is rain about. Like cats, the apf;r;;ixfigfâ€"; thunderstorm makes cows extremeâ€" How Dumb Animals Act Before a Storm. Cat‘s fur is full of electricity and before a thunderstorm a cat is alâ€" ways extremely lively and playful, probably on account of its electrical condition. Before rain is expected you will see a cat assiduously washâ€" ing its face. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Ete. erased from busier, fuller, betterâ€" trained memories, as though inspirâ€" ed by a sort of necessity to let loose the unmannerly crowd of revived images where it gives most annoyâ€" ance. How often we wish for others the reverse of what we deâ€" sire for ourselves! If they could only forget!â€"Blackwood‘s Magaâ€" zine. & sort of malignant activity; a memory dissociated from sympathy, recalling precisely the things which ought to be forgottenâ€"misfortunes, humiliation, and the likeâ€"and forcâ€" ing on reluctant ears with unflinchâ€" ing acclitu:y"of detail facts long things learnt, for thought, for events, for persons, for the outâ€" sides of things, for words, for names, for datesâ€"yet for follies, vanities, trifles, grudges connected with self ; and especially for losses, wrongs, slights, enubs, dispmgoâ€" ments, injuries, real or fancied, inâ€" flicted in the course of a lifetime on that dear self. If memory is not put to its legitimate uses, subjected to rule, given work to do, it degenâ€" erates into a mere deposit, a resiâ€" duum of worthless refuse, degradâ€" ing the nature it should elevate, supplying the mind with unwholeâ€" some food, on which it largely broods and ruminates. Of the same class is the memory roused out of the lethargy by the presence of othersâ€"as, for example, on the reâ€" vival of former acquaintanceâ€"into ory, but a tenacious memory, for some things. If for nothing useful, if not for things observed. for Degenerates Into a Mero Deposit Unless Put to Legitimate Uses. All people have not only a memâ€" The Small Boy‘s Question WEATHER BAROMETERS. Bad and Worse. MEMORY. for for Critical. Heâ€"Why does an actor, to porâ€" tray deep emotion, clutch at his head, and an actross at her heart? sUMMER TOURIST RATEs To THE PACIFIC Coast. Via Chicago and North Western Ry, Special low rate round trip tickets on eale from all points in Canada to Los Aungeles, Ban Francigoo, Portland, Beattle, Â¥ancouver, Victoria, Edmonton, Calgary, Banff, Yellowstone Park, etc., d“flufi, Aug» ust and Beptember. Excellent train eerâ€" vice. For rates, illustrated foldere, time tables and full particulars address, B. H. Bennett, Genmf Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario. Bheâ€"Each feels weakest point. WANTEDâ€"More Workers 4.:>; : « Faint heart ne‘er won fair lady but there is the brunette. ‘‘That‘s all the better for them, f9r if they‘re not smooth, we iron ‘‘Some of these convicts, Mr. Warden, have a very smooth manâ€" ner.‘"‘ This is to certify that I have used MINâ€" ARD‘8S Liniment in my family for years, and consider it the best liniment on the market. I have found it excellent for horee fiesh. (Bigned) W. 8. PINEO, ‘‘Woodlands," Middleton, N.8. They say a corn interfered w‘th his speed. Always apply Putnam‘s Corn Exâ€" tractor. For fifty years it has been curing corns and warts. "Putnam‘s" never fails. Use no other, %¢. at aill dealers. drawbacks.‘"‘ ‘‘Yes, & great many people are loafing toâ€"day because they intend to move & mountain tomorrow."‘ al operations impracticable, and the Mechan are thus dependent upon traders for provisions, but Mecca‘s command of the principal caravan routes, both from north to south and from coast to the highâ€" lands, affords the inhabitants unâ€" usual facilities for commerceâ€"quite apart from the city‘s reputation as a holy spot ; which is, of course, the chief source of its prosperity, Mecca is made up of quite modâ€" ern buildings, excepting the Great Mosque and some few others, owing to the frequent devastations caused by the torrents which pour down from surrounding hills during the winter. Through it runs the sacred Course, a wide road extending from Bafa to Marwa, which must be traâ€" versed by every pilgrim. The streets, though broad, are unâ€" paved, and as filthy as the streets of any other eastern town. The houses form irregular terraces,. mounting the hills upon each side, and are, for the most part, of stone and fairly well built, sometimes beâ€" x;ng t.hre.e or four stories high, with Ever read the above letter! A new one appears from time to time. They aro genuine, true, and full of human interest. flat roofs and pictumsq;:â€"l'at;;i; windows overhanging the street. Minard‘s Linimont Cures Distemper. From the earliest times Mecca has been a notable trading centre. The barren soil renders agriculturâ€" ‘Visited for Centuries by Tens of ;L Thousands of Moslems. _ â€" . Bome 245 miles south of Medina and 65 east of Jeddah, on the Red Gea, in a narrow, desolate valley, hemmed in by barren hills and only accessible through two passes, lies Becca, now known as Mecca, one of the most ancient cities of Arabia and the metropolis of all Isâ€" lam, says the London Globe. The Makoraba of Ptolemy and the capiâ€" tal of the Hedjas, Meoca‘s fame chiefly rests upon its possession of the Kaaba, where flock some 60,000 or 70,000 pilgrims annually. Ages before Mohammed was born the Kaaba attracted pagan pilgrims as toâ€"day it attracts Moslems for, as & heathen shrine, containing a mirâ€" aculous fetich, it enjoyed wide ne-‘ pute in very remote times. Prior to its reconquest by the prophet, in 627 (five years after his flight or heâ€" gira therefrom), Mecca was under the control of the Koreish, from whom Mohammed wrested it. For several centuries it remained under the rule of the caliphs, who epent enormous sums in adorning and reâ€" storing it. In 930 it was sacked by the Karmathions, who carried off l the sacred black stone and retained it for over twenty years. Mecca subsequently fell unrder the influâ€". ence of whatever dynastyâ€"Fatiâ€" mite, Ayyubite, Mamelukeâ€"hapâ€" pened to rule in Egypt. Finally it fell into the hands of the Ottoman sultans, but their power was never more than nominal. How Teddy Lost the Bear. KAABA‘S HKOLY STONE. Better for Them. resolutions are sometimes It‘s a Fact. it in the Pulleys of emaller sizos and Bhafting of various longthe and piges to be aold at very low figures. "‘Piets, Primting Messen, ns * 8 zroo'd m%t:nm 12 x 48 in. 1 z'o?mi:umu% x 48 in, 1 fzr.?fl?‘li’:.w' 12% x 28 in. ALL ABTONES, KIDNEY AND BLADâ€" ‘fib::r Btonek-, Kidney u:-ouuo Or‘ucll. o and kindred ailments positively cured with the now German remedy, "Banol," price $1.50. Another new remedy for Diabetesâ€"Mellitus, and gure ~coure, is "Banol‘s Antiâ€"Diabetes." Price $200 from druggists or direct. The Sanol Manufaeâ€" turing Company of Ganada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man. CANCER. TUMORA, LUMPS, ETC., internal and oxternal, cured withâ€" out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. Pulleys & Shafting S'ruui COLLECTIORSâ€"HUNDRED | DIF farant Faraimn â€"Stamns MAntalnnma J ferent Foreign Stamps. Catalogue Album, only Seven Cents. Marke 8tamp Company, Toronto. MEN WANTED YOUNG MAN BE A BARBER. I TBACK MEN WANTED Wilson Publishing Co., R ESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN Brampton and a dozen other towns. H. W. DAWSON, Colborns $t., Toronte H. W. DAWSON, Ninsty Colborme Otreet, ‘"I think I‘d like to be a lawyer, sir. There‘s a good deal of money passes through a lawyer‘s hands, wn‘t there ?" ‘"He never lets it pass through if he knows his business, my son.‘‘ ‘‘Well, son, now that you‘ve graâ€" duated, what are you going to be !‘ for 8 T/16 in. NACTOoRY sITES, WITBR oR WITHOUT Railway _ trackage, in â€" Toronts, ampton and other towns and eities. For treating poor complexions, red, rough hands, and dry, thin and faling hair, Outt» cura Boap and Outicura Ointment have been the world‘s favorites for more than a genâ€" eration. Bold throughout the world. 1ibâ€" eral sample of each mailed free, with 82â€"p, Bkin Book. Address post card Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. 34D, Boston, U. 8, A, and inflamed all the time. It came on her face, hands and arms, and it used to make her restless at night. Bhe got the rash in March and how I hated to see it on her little face and hands! I tried a lot of different things after that but nothing did any good. I saw the edvertisement and sent for samples of Cutiâ€" cura Soap and Ointment and it started to get better right away, I used them only about once a day, and in !ittle more than two woeks she hadn‘t a spot on her anyâ€" where. She had it three months before I used the treatment, She has not had a mark on her since and she is two and a half years old now. Cuticura Soap and Ointâ€" (Signed) Mrs. McKnight, Jan. 8, 1912. $78 Gladstone Ave., Toronto, Ont.â€"* My baby‘s trouble began as & rash and the skin used to sometimes peel off and look as if i were going to get bettar; but would just cake over again and peel. ‘Thespots were large and it used to Skin Would Olkl:.znr and Peel, mm Has Not uff’. Mark on Her Since. â€" They Also Cured Mother of Pimples on Face, RUIT, RASH ON FACE HANDS AND ARMNS MALE HELP WANTED. STANMPS aND corms BTOCK, GRAIN AND DAaIRY ; in all sections ot Ontario. MISCELLAWNEONE 100. _ Write for free omiaâ€" College, £19 Queen Bt. East, It Sticks. , 105 x 36 in. *A le:mon extract, on« fectioner‘s sugar. gredients . toget) whites of the ege hour. When the remove from the « whites until stiff eup of confection top of the puddin oven and brown. Coceanut Pie,. â€"One « eocoanut, four tablesp two tablespoons cort ecups sweet milk, one cream, one half teas dash of nutmeg, two . the milk ; beat the eg light with the sugar, 4 starch and mix with milk. Cook, stirring c til it thickens. Remo fhire, add cream and « set away to cool. Be to a stiff froth, add vau meg and fold into the « a pie tin lined with px all over with a fork, little of the egg white the oven to bake until done, &ll with the cus in the oven and brown Cocoanut Macaroon hive eggs, one and a ha ded cocoanut, one hal dered sugar, Beat U uptil stiff and very : carefully powdered s nut. Mix very | E‘ reaspoonfuls on bake in a slow oven tw Take out of the oven « brown and, when cok under side of the paps macaroons may easly Coeganut Custard, neu-,nilk, two eggs coanut, two llb‘(‘bpuu half salt spoon of sa spoonful of cornstar spoonful of vanilla. cornstarch in a little milk. Have the ren MILK . milk h in the utes. gether them â€" thick from stinr i M aldort Mix one I § Ki nut #ome galt â€" one cup ol &1 Its weaght o4 white of on taste. Beat quite stiff en eugar. Drop bake fifteen When cold 1 nut ©48 Take up the wkillet a tal & tablespoor fine. Let c« Fried Calves‘® h bearts into long st! werve i1 10e cold lemonade which is ous, the only draw that it cennot be ment it is made, i: a couple of houre ‘The juice of throe rind of one, one « sugar, â€" Take one water, ?our over Lh eugar, let it t strain,. â€" This gmn jmioe ol of suga tunvoler pou P uV Lrape lemon ad the {r-p- juice worth trying. farmer‘s daughier make yeast cakes $or months; Boll g Qw‘g c.!’e-s ?uuie {yer gday stip 4 it slightly and m Coccanut Drops it. white of one O inilt 1 <l¢ t} © the Miscellaneou ges Qena ver night. Iuice 1 Salad wit 11 (f more id In d M C4N

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