West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 Aug 1914, p. 6

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It in “hit- that, to French Qua-[l Id. u lint. brings the full glory q of the Candi-n year. The [endear- '1 in; Euliehlnln ling: of the Joys of 1 In English spring, “Oh to he in , England now that April’n then!” ', lorgetting, umurtlsetshottto- l sickness. that April any he very _ tedious and chilly end diehenrten- ‘ ing. and that the joye my here more poetry than reality about them any: n writer in Chambers', Journal. But spring in “stern Canada scarcely exists. One 1etpe at a bound " it were, from wiir. ter to full summer; and it is only afterwards one reeol1eets that there were days {ml of “the irsfiriito ex- pectation of the dawn," when one matched the exquisite little waves of warm, light green breaking ever] the tree-tops, and welcomed the whim back to the garden, full of the business of lite and mating; to we them later settling down to the responsibility of the worm winner of the brmd. Summer in Quebec is hot. and is given up to tourists who take infinite pains to "do" a number of things that no native'; has ever heard of; but with thel beginning of September one looks forward to eight weeks or more of fine, exhilarating weather. and the ipul't one loves best. Each day is 'ike a golden gift. accepted with; lveper intensity of gratitude ii) muse of the underlying. impoignant sense of impermanence. and the; Knowledge that “the shadow of the winter', on the yearn" Mind and Jodi are in tune after the holiday.; IIml re pond g‘uriuusly to the fine-l 'ruGirr, quality uf the 'y,1ft"yyyyi aalCautumn air that makes all 'T,'; arcne a delight. The beauty of "he \plwtdid autumn f1tuv.e burns on! "iety hi'Mdrn and kindlvs every} Ull‘ll and rawhide weed into sear-i let and (‘wppr'l' and gold. The prim-. imp instinct to kill awakes, andi The swamp extends from Quebec :., Si. Jnuchlm. a distance of 26 miles. It lies all the way between the railwr" track, from which it is separated by a natural hedge of small bmshes--aider, thorn, and yuung willow-and the river St. Lawrence. Near Quebec the ground behind the swamp is almost level, but it gradually humps itself into steep and irregular hills the nearer one gets to M. Joachim. These hills being wooded with birch and maple to a great extent, have often begun bush and roadside ween Into scar let and copper and gold. The prim- itive inntinct to kill nukes. and the hunter goes " to the hill. or, taking his gun and his dog, spends long days of This is particularly the case to- ward the end of the season, when tho west wind and rain have beaten dawn the tall grass. making the walking from east to west almost impossible, for any but an ardent A DAY IN A CANAD1ANdNrAru' You avoid fussing over a hot stove--- Have u dish that will please the home folks! A package of W'-'"'" - Sell by Grocers- ChgtaSian Put- ore' 00.. Lt&. and some cream or good milk-sometimes with ber- ries or fruit-- Touties m sweet, crisp bittt of Indian com perfect- Ir cooked and to-ted--. Post Toasties Tramping the Swan-p. Save time and energy-- A breakfast, lunch or Readrtoeatfromthe Dittteutty of Walking. Fit for a King! e Do the Cooking ' and youthful mo It. Below the swamps ere than” FUta proper-wide, level IW of mud, inlaid, as it to”, with pools which are full clarion; 'rtieetioe" of form and color, and broken by sudden, angular ridges otiaty rock It is here the plover teed., Beyond the flats are huge boulders on which numbers of great. blue 1semrt.--verr picturesque in spite of their poker- stiff necks and various meohanical movement-nd gulls of various species sit to feed at low tide. With the herons it is a. came of distance lending enchantment, and it it per- haps as well that they are diihcult to approach, for their ungainly leips amrneck, and their loose, dull gray \plumnge infested with parasites, at Eclosc quarters detract somewhat 'lrom the effect gained by their re- l lameness. . The natural beauty of the swamp is very great. Behind, in the north, are the hills ablaze against the clear blue sky with the transform- ing fires of autumn; and parallel with the swamp from Montmorency to Ste Anne runs the Island of Or- leans, separated from the mainland by a shallow channel three quar- ters of a mile wide. In late Octo- ber and the beginning of November great convoys of thousands of ducks I of many species gather in the chan- nel: and though the Quebec game laws distinctly state that no wild- fowl of any sort may be shot from a motor-boat. yet the duck are con- stantly being chalked by men P 'rasolene-launehes, and this in broad daylight, under the eyes of every sportsman on either the Island or the Ste Anne swamp! The is- land swamp closely resembles the Ste Anne side, except that, on ac- count of the small size of the Is- land, there are no streams. M Ste Anne. Grande Riviere, which is of considerable size com- pared with the numerous little run- nels that flow down the hillsides, and almost deserves its name, divi- des the swamp by its several chan- nels. At high tide the delta is full of islands frequented sometimes by small "bunches"--to use the local term-ot golden eye or mergansers. The general color of the swamp isl brownish-gray, yellowing in the dis- tance. On a clear day, as one looksl down towards the end of the Island, 3 the water is of an intense ultra- marine blue, and the bold promon; tory of Cap Tourment is backed by almost 'summer-like masses of white cumulus cloud. Strange and wonderfully beautiful mirage effects are seen near St. Joachim, and lthrough the crisp air one can hear ‘the church bells of Chateau Richer land Ste Anne for miles. The shin, ing spires of the great church, to which thousands of pilgrims make their way every year, are clearly visible lifting into the sky. The loriginal shrine was built by a few lFrench sailors, who had been saved from drowning, and expressed their gratitude and devotion in simple and patriarchal fashion by erecting an altar to their friend and patron. "La bonne Ste Anne Sauvegarde dos Marius"; but splendour has long since swallowed up simplicity, _()nc lulu-s the town about sixi "1iiir'gi,a'r'CGTid M. Lavine, of thel o clock lit the morning for a good i Coast Artillery, stationed at Fort Tot-l long day m the marsh. It takes a ten, Long Island, may lose the sight little less than an hour to get tolof his right eye as the result ot al Ste Anne by electric tram: but it meyultt?, bite. l favorite dcrice is to shoot for anl New York wholesale poultry deal- h ' t F . l . d tl , (ers have again taken up the prac-l 1ttll or wo In ot."': p ttt'C, on ten I tice of using a mixture ot corn, ce-l inkr the tram sshif.h runs hourly. lment and sand to increase the weight [or three or four milvs, and try the I of their produce, swamp ttyiain farther down. It is) Thousands of fish were stunned and a clear. almost windless day in I flung to tho. surface when four mar- t-arly Svptemher. with a slight haze E ine mines were exploded oft Sandy hanging about marsh and river, that I Hook. T38 Ema] test proved a. bow. "il' l softens all marsh outlines i'anea.t.0 t 0 shermen. _ u a ant ___, .’ t ." t . t Frightened when a wounded spar-l without obscuring the New lrow tell on her hat and became tang-| The Swamp is Full of Birds. [living iléngnolerlogtiid Nt,t,i,tugir/i, but bu early in the st-uson snipr'id'",',t'2,"f? near Garrison. N.Y. l me few. and those found are small. l poigiliiii 2pi' #:2292221: its)“ car-l _h, i...t.r,., 'nl.,! .. '_rmt esnwy blflidmg birds, butt generally disi'Gi/iiriii'n business financial prosper-) trihuted. Later on ."l 9cteber,iity should not continue, despite thel when the duck are arriving in large i present European crisis. l flocks. the larger snipe come fromi While, pruning treeg, William Rie. the north in pairs or small groups i, ““553 Passaie man, slipped and tell, or four or fire. The migration of 1 firms This hand M3] his prunirlilg the jacksnipt" or pectoral sandpiperi cm C. o ma e ma are worse el is just commencing, and the yellow- : 1'll. then attacked by his own bull.) legs. young turnstoncs. black. i Two girls and tour boys were bitten breasted and ring-neclwd plover 1 by a mad cat in Gotham. The feline are still to be found. Sandpipers l had been abandoned by a woman who and plovers are on the beach carly l moved from the neighborhood, and in the day, but about eight o'clock 1. wt,'oTtti,.eg,intggh1te,"Irin hi it ' . g‘ . . , i, S W e, 3811“" if 'JJ, l (hop l,? om 1.othe.rl'. 'Edward Trelsch, Westhampton, Beach,1 8“) Us I £12285 an 1","11'l5: u,t,-, ',vL.1., got 30 days in Jail. For stealing terms: a harsh Escape'. .esc'ape' fa chicken from Trelsch. Jas. Reeve as they do so; but at this seagull was put in the same jail for " days. the snipe shooting is nothing to "I'd rather go to Wtbr and tret tshot “mm it will be in late October, than marry you," declared John Ines-r when no other shore-birds, except “if! f, Ne: 30'? whsn hehtound him, perhaps the jacks and a few greater J%11/"ly i/tnth:.',),',', giggling yellow legs remain. Even now the wiez. ry commonest, shore-birds, the least Baltimore fertilizer manufacturers and serni-palmated sandpiper, of i received word from the German firm which at the very beginning of the l whieh produces the world’s supply of season one may see flocks of hifi/-i1,',tt',1', 333:1! no 1',il'leTtlu1Ut', ‘dreds swinging up the river, wheel- I $9 un e war on B. a m es lug alighting. feeding. and (i;'ilii,t,ti'ge.'m1nu'aeture of fertilizer impoa. _ hiring distrrbed taking flight again, i , :__._-I.__ a ways up, are almost all gone, alll c but a few stragglers, Sora rails.SUMMER COMPLAINT", are very common, but Virginia rail, l KILL LITTLE ONES the larger cousin of the sora, isl - l _ rare; one sel.dom sees more than At first sign of illness during the two of three in a season. Bittern hot weather give the little one: are numcrous. and put up with alBaby'a Own Tablets. or in a few frightened squawk. Sometimes they'lhours he may be beyond aid. The fly to the hills. and are lost to View l Tablets will prevent summer com- .m the. trees. The habitants makeiplaint if given occasionally to the [them into a not unaaVory pie, and;well child and will promptly cure Pre very glad of n present of aithese troubles it they come on couple, when at midday one finds ‘ suddenly. Baby's Own Tablets ione‘s way up to a cottage to getlshould be kept in every home in cup of _coffee and a huge bowl of Where there are young children. _ r23 htettitre,trd'i",',y,.7'ug'g'dt a "tr'L' Tgsrzhi: no other medicine no good, a ex not _innry goo . e a l mother has the antes i Freth-canaditn farmers in this of a government anal " 8that. they ,locahty are extremely value-do, are absolutely note. in. Edward and live very comfortably. “On Coven, Lombardy Ont. an: "A mange cornmo il hut ch: nous” mother who has one: iiUii M135. who the ditptitied reply of a 'iragter Own Trim“ tor be: oh” will wife to l youngnnd hungry hunter never all to show her no“. who“ demanded rather mattnib for than. Tile” ttt o wo T con y change in t he. of my l What Me Could line to Eat. ore..'.' le, “TM are eu i and after partaking of their good 'tttttd . mm“ b ."thtMt line u an inclined to - honrt- tent? , hom P. w ' .. . .. . .... ' 7 Indian. 00.,3 . Ont; and after partaking of their good fare he felt inclined to agree heart. ily in the vernacular "Beau dom- me t." which is equivalent to "Rather I” The least bittern, not ineptly des- cribed u resembling a hit of yellow an}. uncommon. Young black duck 1n the early season, and than t" plenty of other wild fowl in tho 'tVer-tHMM/p, golden-eye, mergnm lens, and "hutterUll." Often and! flocks of butterbtUl aredlushod from tle crossing streams. They paddle violently n'ong the water for a few yards to gain impetus, hurl them- selve'é into the air, and fly like small cannon balls far down the river, till they join a flock of their onn species in inid-channel, or dis- appear completely. C “Irv-n ""~l.'""’v' The sun drops below the northern hills comparatively early. and the mist which has hung about the swamp and river all day becomes a translucent golden haze. The spires of Ste Anne reflect a crimson glow, and the little cottages on the Island seem to be on fire. The luminous color graduously becomes more opa- que, and through the thickening mist the lights of Quebec begin to appear one by one, till dusk falls completely, and the city lies like a handful of twinkling jewels on the hil . Twelve hours is a long day, and one reaches the firm ground above the marsh to wait for a tram, well content to be on one’s homeward way, and to have perhaps some dozen or fourteen snipe, twice as many Plover, a couple of fat black experimented on in a pie, after the excellent fashion of the habitant. NEWS ACROSS IE Illlllillill WHAT ls GOING ON OVER THE STATES. Latest Happenings in Big Republie Condensed for Busy Resident. _ Twenty persons were Injured in a panic on a Newark street car, when a fuse blew out. Cotton dropped to " a bale in New Orleans as a result ot the pessimis- tic reports from Europe. The Grand Trunk docks a have been destroyed by _thy "'irii"Fiiinaitareriic, coke region reports an increase of over 300 ovens fired during thirlastpyeek. . phia "iiviiiCi'onrorkoid consigned to the sub-treasury arrived in Wall Street by parcel post trom Philadel- A tuberculosis census is to be taken in thousands of churches throughout the United States next September. Mrs. Thomas Cranshaw took pity on a negro tramp and ted him. As a reward, he robbed her of a gold watch and diamond ring. New York theatrical managers are worrying lest the European cloud will hold up many performers who are summerlng abroad. . John Carroll, an 18-year-old New Yorker, had his arm so badly lacer- ated that he fell unconscious, when he attempted to pet a French poodle. A Pittsburgh firm is said to have received orders for quantities of steel tor bayonets and scabbards from the Austrian and Servian governments. New York hotel proprietors tear a "waiter famine." Many Austrian waiters have already signified their intention of going home shouid war become general. Sergeant David M. Lavine, of thel Coast Artillery, stationed at Fort iii) ten, Long Island, may lose the slght, of his right eye as the result ot ttl mosquito bite. I New York wholesale poultry deal- ers have again taken up the prac- tice of using a mixture of corn, ce- ment and sand to increase the weight of their produce. Thousands of fish were stunned and flung to the surface when tour mar- ine mines were exploded oft Sandy Hook. The naval test proved a bon. anza to the fishermen. Frightened when a wounded Bpar- row tell on her hat and became tang- led in it, Mrs. Floyd Nesbitt over- turned her canoe and was nearly drowned near Garrison, N.Y. Judge Gary, head of the steel cor- poration, says he sees no reason why American business financial prosper- ity should not continue, despite the present European crisis. . While pruning trees, William Rie. Keds, a Passaic man, slipped and fell, gashing his hand with his pruning knife. To make matters worse he was then attacked by his own bull. dog. Two girls and tour boys were bitten by a mad cat In Gotham. The feline had been abandoned by a woman who moved from the neighborhood, and was maddened by hunger. For threatening to kill his wife, Edward Trelsch, Westhampton, Beach, Lt, got 30 days in Jail. For stealing a chicken from Trelsch. Jas. Reeve was put in the same jail tor 90 days. "I'd rather go to war and get shot than marry you," declared John Rzes- nik of New York, when he round him, self in court, charged with breach ot promise by Miss Catharine Kobrytto- wicz. Baltimore fertilizer manufacturers received word from the German firm which produces the world's supply of potash, that no shipments will be made until the war ends. This makes the manufacture of fertilizer impos- sible. . Every time a man tries to show " something gets his goat. mmmcue- amen-cm ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO at Seattle IN Klee hid Stiff Three Years Anyone mid Inn-vol at my room. 911. write- Mr. Leonard Lothlun. I you“ man well known about Chat- hom. I had Inherited o rhenmItic tow dency through my mother's “my. and in my early days tsutrered fright- fully. About three years ago the pain and stiffness settled in my left knee joint. I was lame and walked with I very distinct limp. Nervlline was brought to my notice and I rubbed it into the tstitt Joint tour or five, times a day. It dispelled every vestige of pain. reduced the swelling, took out the stiffness and gave me the full use of my limb again. I don't believe there is a pain-relieving remedy, not a. sin- gle liniment that can compare with Nervillne. I hope every person with pains, with sore back, with lameness. with lumbago, with neuralgia--1 do hope they will try out Nerviline which The Canadian Minister ot Justice Is a Genial Man. Hon. Chas. Joseph Doherty, Minister of Justice and member of the House of Commons for the St. Ann's District of Montreal, is act- ing as Premier while Sir Robert Borden takes a. rest in Muskoka from the worries and labors of that position. From the worries par- ticularly would Sir Robert be de- livered. "Judge" Doherty is not a war- rier. He has the happy faculty of working without worrying. His nature is that of a genial, sunny- dispositioned Irishman of ripened philosophy. He smokes a cigar with extreme calm and enjoyment. He can relax-thath, the blessed en- dowment which distinguishes him from his leader, Sir Robert, who is conscious of his responsibilities all the time, day or night. _ If Nerviline wagn't a wonderful painless remedy, it Nervlline didn't quickly relieve, it Nervlline wasn't known to be a grand cure for all rheu. matic conditions, it wouldn't have been so largely used as a family rem- edy for the past forty years. No bet- ter, stronger, or more soothing lini- ment made. Get the large 50c. fam- ily size bottle; small trial size Me.; sold by any dealer, anywhere. i%i, 'isiriiviiGdivijt rqulckly and per. manently cure them.".. 7",, - , HON. CHAS. JOSEPH DOHERTY Nothing more learned, sounder, or sounding, than Judge Ddherty's speeches in the House are ever heard there since his election in 1908. The Minister of Justice de- livers his utterances from his seat for St. Ann's, as he used to deliver his judgments from the bench of the Superior Court of Quebec, which he adorned for five years back in the nineties. His style is entirely judicial, tempered, how- es er, at times by t smile, and a, de- licious underlying sense of humor. When he is in true form is when he is put up by the Government to state the legal and constitutional aspect of a subject in Parliamen- tary controversy. Then he sue- ceeds beautifully in making the question as clear as mud. Nobody on the Opposition side can follow him, while those on the Govern- ment side sit back at ease, smiling. They don't need to follow him. Sentences Miles Long. They know the judge can bewil- der them. He goes at it by a sys- tem of parenthesis. His sentences are miles long, with dependent clauses at every few yards. His predicate verb is withheld until the .last. Nobody knows when it is coming, not even the judge. _ . After he is "tished that he has completely involved his hearers in a hopeless tangle of comparisons, he, with marvellous surety and skill, picks his way out of his par- enthesis, closing them after him one by one, like gates, and comes to his final assertion and his verb so long awaited. By that time the subject at the other end of the sen- tence is forgotten. It's a perfectly good sentence, however-it his hearers could only follow it, with a logical argument in it, all excep- tions, accidents, farewell cues, ett., ,tc.,_duly noted by the my. Judge. Doherty, as was univer- sally acknowledged, made the wit- tiest and best speech at the Press Gallery dinner last session. It was spontaneous entirely, being suggested by a, joke in the' menu card upon his ptLrenthentical, inde- terminate sentences. As a. genial sfterdinuer speaker trust an Irishman, and Judge Doherty is an Irishman, inasmuch " his father and mother both come from the troubled isle. "You minimise him. The morn- ing after you called on me he seem- ed quite worried‘for door I had not treated you with proper nouns”. “Indeed! What did he say!” "maaksdtttetterrr I could be so rude as to let you so ovoy with- out your breakiut.” "I don't think your Lther feels very kindly toward me," said Mr. Stnylnte. _ - A - _ - when av NERVqul'. Hon. C. J. Doherty. Dianne”. 'taint mum su 311's or- NEWS “was THE grunting “onsets. -ria"Tari, after he had been’ hit by a street car, Michael Kerwin died at Lurdes. NS. - _ _ A good-sized whale mlde an " pearance in the harbor at Charlotte. town, P. E. I., and caused consider- able excitement. [tens of“ "teieat Fro-r Place! Late' by Wares ot tho Atlantic. The first shipment of Albert Court. tr, N.B., shale recently left St. John tor England. _ _ _ _ The baittousie, N.B.. Lumber Cola mills were destroyed by fire, $25,000 damage being done. _ _ The" meane"r oftice and several other buildings were damaged in a 315.000 tire at Fredericton. Owing to the shopmen et the will be put on present. James F. LeBlanc, aged M, was badly crushed while working in the Louisville brickyard at Moncton and died as a result of his injuries. 7 After trout fishing all day, Patrick Day, aged 17, of Bay Bulls, St. John, collapsed on the roadside near his home and died instantly from heart failure. Fredericton is a healthy city. No cases of contagious disease have been reported to the Board of Health for two weeks and it Is 16 days since a death occurred. Arthur Jefferson Snulnler of Wei. lington. N. B., was riding a bicycle when he ran into a team and received injuries trom which he died. He was 18 years of age. When a cannon was being fired to welcome the Duke ot Connaught at Blane Sablon, Newfoundland, a theh. erman, Hugh Palmer, lost an arm as a result of the explosion. l A new feature in military training -has been given a successful trial by ,the New Brunswick Corps of Guides. jA party of 70 men completed a trip (tyt 200 miles, from Canterbury to An. l dover, the march being taken in place toi’ the annual training in camp, in [order to give the guides a taste of iaetual service conditions. Mr. Robert Van Buskirk, of Freder- icton. was held up by three tramps while driving a rig trom Carlo to the city. He made a getaway before the tramps had time to catch the horse. Newcastle, N.B., has the largest wireless station in the world. The tower is 600 feet high, and 150 words a minute are tlashed to the sister station at Ballybuion on the south- west coast ot Ireland. The value of tigheries in the county of Pictou, NS., tor the month of June was $37,830, and the value in Guys. boro county $53,298. Considering the adverse conditions during May this is a good showing. A two million feet per day dow ot gas has been struck by the Maritime Oiltieldg Company in the Albert Coun. ty gas field, says a Moncton despatch. The strike was made in an old well which was deepened. Mary A., wife of Henry Crawford, died at St. John, from pleura-pneu- monia, but two weeks after the death ot her son. Harry, from the same cause. Her daughter, Mrs. Sydney Jones, Is also suffering from pleura- pneumonia. Fire gutted the M. John Milling Company's plant and did $45,000 dam- age. Twelve thousand bushels of cer- eal were ruined, involving a cessation of business for a year. All ettorttt to control a fire which broke out in the McGregor seam of the Albion mine at New Glasgow, N. B., failed, and the whole slope was sealed up in the hope that the cut. ting on of the air supply would ex- tinguish the blue. The premises of Horton and Manitt on Grafton street, Halifax, a wooden structure, were destroyed by fire. the flames belching halt way across the street and giving the whole fire force of the eity a good hour's work. The building was not insured. Minard'n Liniment Co., Limited, Sent. "8torke." it: -ALilraunouriuaa, Gentlemen,-" have 11de MINARD‘S LINIMENT on my weasel Ind in my fam- ilv for years. and tor the every day in: and 1accidents of life I consider it has no can: . "r-s-rand not start on a vovnge without it. if it cost a dollar a bottle, CAPT. P. R. DEMARDTN, girls.” "Yes, and they work well." "Don't watch the clock then l" "Don't even watch the mirror." Mr. Fogarty (in proposing the bride's healel0--,hn' ith, meself is proud to any I 'ave bowed the bride this 40 year. The Bride-Mt'. a thunderin' liar you are, Foguty, me bein' only just. turned thirty wan an’ a. halt. SUMMER TOURIST RATES To THE "cane OOAO‘I'. Vin Chicago Ind North Watern Ry. Special low rate round trip (idea; on sale from all points in Canada to Log Angeles, Ban Francisco, Porthnd, Seattle. Vancou- ver, Victoria. Edmonton, Calgary. Btuttr, Yellawawne Pin-k. eta. during Angus: and September. Enchant thin service. For rates. {llustratad toldem. time tables and full particulars. Address. B. IL Bennett. general Agent. " You“ Bt., Toronto, at. - Better a penny in the hand than a. nickel in the slot. land's mun: Cum ”temper. gee you employ a number of Perfectly Trustworthy. falling oft in tratfie I. C. R. at Moncton short time tor the Sou probs are not Without. an- honor. / Theoriou - us more worry thnat do has. Dead men's shoes seldom " than who wait for than. . The charity thut begins at home also covers a lot of sin. Bout rockers on the as; of matri- mony deserve their fate. Some men carry their'courage around in a pocket fhok. Many a, man learns something every time ts fool blunders. A woman’s stu-ngth lies in her knowledge of a man's wonknoss. Some men are honest because they are too poor to be otherwise. It sometimes happens that the chap who hesitates doesn't get lost. A man is known as his mother's about," but others. A man is known as his mother son until he becomes his wife husband Be sure you are right, but don't be too blamed sure that everybody else is wrong. _ iio.iiiiiri'ir, because a girl's com- piexion is a dream that all dreams are hand-painted. . Of course, a married man can live on less than a bachelor-- if his wife takes in washing. No, Alonzo, a girl isn't measur- ily stone blind just because she doesn't care for diamonds. __ Occasionally a girl marries a man just to keep him from hanging around the houae every evening. When a Woman Sums With Chronic Backaclle There In Trouble Ahead. Constantly on their feet, attending to the wants of a large and exacting family. women often break down with nervous exhaustion. _ In the stores, factories. and on a farm are weak, ailing woman. dragged down with torturing backache and bearing down pains. "Emil” Girl/riaFiG't natural, but " dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys, _ . The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kidney complaint can't cure themselves. they require the assistance of Dr. Hamil- ton's Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble. To give vitality and power to the kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder and liver, to tree the blood ot poisons, probably there is no remedy so suc- cessful " Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For all womanly irregularities their merit is well known. 7 Because ot their mild, soothing. and healing etteet, Dr. Hamilton’s Pills are safe. and are recommended for girls and women of all ages. 25 cents per box " all dealers. Refuse any aub- stltute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills ot Man- drade and Butternut. Metropolitan 1ttraettom, Not Given II Guide Books. There must be many visitors to London who are not entirely satis- fied with the bird's-eye view which is afforded them by the guide-book and the conducted tour, says Lon- don Answers. Monuments, galleries, cathedrals, and drives through the main streets are but little of the wonderful scenes of the city of the world; the real beauty, the real life. is lurk- ing some way off the brawn track, in slums and foreign quarters. You may start in the West, and dine in France or Italy. which is called Soho. Here all the shops are either French or Italian. and are labelled in those languages. and also in Yiddish. On the other side of Oxford Street you are in Ger- many, and may drink long lagers and smoke thin cigars, and be re- ceived with perfect frietyilinyts. You may then take a 'bas in Ox- ford Street to Bpittslfields, in the East. where you will find some of the loveliest, bits oi sixteenth cen- tury domestic architecture, relics of the dutch weavers. A few min- utes' walk to the north of Spital- trelds will bring you into the hooli- gan quarter-Horton tgtreer--and its interesting surroundings. In Bethnal Green, which is near at hand, you will find Brick Lane and Wentworth Street, which is the Russian quarter. In this street and its cafes are heavy-bearded men and dark-haired girls, all of them perfectly amiable, sud you may drink Russian tea with them in perfect, safety. Still further East you find Lime- house, where are the Asiatic quar- ter and Chinatown. Perhaps the finest sight that London Afford: is the Pool, or the West Indin Dock at night, when it is massed with liners, merchnnt vessels, and tramps, and all about the guts; are their crews of yellow, brown, and black men from the Paeihe. Here again you Are free from any molestation, though Indies would do well, perhaps, to avoid Chins- town-two tborrow Itreets on either side of West India Dock Road. The quaint old whines, water- side taverms, and tumbling old cot- tages are far more deserving of a visit than many of the show-tsue" to which visitors are conducted. Every shop is . mine “on, and the atmosphere in that of Norway and Sweden. When you no tired of lookinl at When you are tired of looking at cathednlu and tombstones of for- gotten celebrities you will find much to attract you in these spots; and you on ramble there alone without any hesitation. There is no need to "dress up.' Of course, you must not go in expensive st- tire, nor must you arrive " n Rus- aim cote in e w. Anotherpoirtt or .0: Don't visit the _esltlie Imam of then quarters. Don t got into mutation with A little to the west is Shndwell High Street and M. George Street (once 1utclitt Highway) and the yrene of many of the Ripper mur- POINTS!) PARAGIAPIIS. LONDON ou'r 0F SIGHT. tropd woman woman may be talked she doesn't talk about not without dis- I" YOU WANT TO BUY Fruit. Stock. Grntn or write H. W. Dawson. Mot Coiborne BL. Tomato. GOOD WEEKLY IN LIVE Town IN York County. Summary and Book Bum.” " connecdon. Price “my ".000. Terms “barn. wtrson rumm- Inu Company. " Weat Adeubde Sin-oz. Toronto. sT.Hr. suwsox. com". FoiiCiFg,ii-,Te',iLeg,e, Bum“ Poul. (hue-ponder)“ qoltcitud ll Run. Bothwdl. Ont. _-_-__-_-- CANCER famous. LUMl's m ". Internal and external. cured Mm- cut an by our home lreainmn: N' 4:. " before an late. Dr Bellrnnn Mei, al Co.. Limited rol‘invu'nnd 'tnt Don't play cards; you will find cud-games in progreu in many of the Russian and Scandinavian cafes, but do not pity. At tie Jewish quarter, which is in Whit.. chapel, be careful how you behaw in the restaurants, or you mny un intentionally give ofence. Dani uk for calico and milk with your lunch. and don't uh for butter when you are eating menu of any kind. Londoners in the foreign quarters; if you talk, talk with people of the quarter. - - ... - . It is a grievous sin for I Bebrew to take milk or its derivatives. such " butter, cheese. out. with any fled, food. If you want a drink with your meal lot it be tra- nad-lemon. plexion." “How about the hair? W make it carrots!' The world soon gets tired of . chronic kicker. Continually on their feet. thr "PH-1n m inns-Ml! troubud with (some n! beutio_t not for lone. because an new at I click cure. Putnam‘c Corm h tractor. it (W usiulmdy in " hour try "Putnam's." lie. at :11 dealers When I man "we“. to he, listen ing attentively to your talk in my be thinking of something t any. A wanna should never get mar tied until she can afford it. you: OWN DIDGQIS‘I wu- .'. g. Try Karine Eye Remedy 'or' K [you “a Sunnis: " Eyelid h ee,', is," Cantor. Unto in; in.“ Free. Kunm- Eye “bu We feel sorry for the ave ram who get- what he deserves. A Friend of the Policeman w. untidy. mam Calhoun sum. !mnu. - ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE Assisted when necessary by Cuticura Ointment. They keep the skin and scaipclean and clear, sweet and healthy, besides soothing irritations which often prevent sicep and if 'lieglgr,t,if, become chronic di igurements. e-m-Set-tmired Wmulhoul - a an - a! “cum 8'" van “uh-null “so! the Alan'wl a...” Alt-m m t L um 'M..gtqL8K.-.N.s.s CUTICURA SOAP NB. (‘01-th wilt reopen ou Thumduy. the In! of October. Wu, in tho new Colle Building. 110 Univcuity Ava. Totolnl). Canada CALEIOQI on APPLICATION. E. A. A. G'BANG'E,T.fL,.M.s'. Punch-l. mm Human: cue. member-1s - the control " the ttettart can! " Agricunm ot 01mm Est-Mum “It. Alllaud with m IntltterMtr " Toronto. 'ct-et, Llumcn! Cure. Colds. Ti'c PRESERVE nnrnxns fOIile': "rots are good for we rau- rox nu: Assczasx.aamotrs. Anybody E now'. TO BUY on SELL A own or Dairy Farm. mu. Bumvwn- or " Bt.. Toronto With ll com they Nu' , 0U h' Foolish “It“ M gunman” Ia hughvd right eye row trom I at "The good I‘ othrr" .34 MM 9: know. .1 dear n; who.» on 1mm '0". " funnel-e: ouch-audio bwrir.e-, In“ to pull it on as! day or two hm. l. " no“ nun-pan” but s-ue bl't can (or mom-y " r Hannah, no” my. Inn tor uhu tlfll I“ " haw nu in. and I In". Man I". cum. um tttte N. Then can: W - ol In honor Irv-er mum " the twlscttw n all will be I poor .4. Incl." he slid driH who "W" “It!" orlsord tltr N- inc. Swim-d u of In um, l I be In! cum-.1 with chem-em. l f PM nodded ,' aiid.H Nagpur I 3&3...- opma It “w_ lie hr'd - ”dugout tiutt ttrt mun-n In u open and at. “4 “m?!“ l m - to ""' Q “I“. with tto am: the! It" ti dm- H!“ I ens-77?: aria; ttor. m-t‘ 're! Iron iiai, WWW . ham '.rr in!“ - ttrms' by Ain “that's ertrie. mm: xxx - at” ot _ er, lam [on tl "a “lull Stl " ~_ygkn~r. ‘I _.--'“[ huh" tr.oyiA nun-H an Id Voss «on. - lt. I“ a W"" m f te we: J'.cu l gun-.399” WV, Fiirffthtir " ‘M $gt thot ‘m " t'U" - td. t put-r39 S' ii". {pal-I - 160 thr ’“ $1111” &:d"§9 . I I 'l toiGuesr f aad "tist but he ou', 50.00,)? I um h thir Mr deat It"d "te' t k cum had Four Fue do, he I You C new "en-9 4 "thir tlt, " his t meg h" m. p.1 "Vm"'r NN eNtor “Latte an Ia taberl Wow toe I co "w up to»? foul You , _ he I03 arttrt' " ' (In: "..n Fun ture Ill 'iVrtrktr. 'es, at I " b at tior “A tw or, a iv": , In] I n and I timr th the Bette)

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