West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 3 Jun 1915, p. 7

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RONT rong His ured at fears tal â€"to ;r: served in the an< RATi led W TIQN ty WAs STARVATION â€" OR 1 MERCILESS TORTURE A choice between starvation or mereiless torture is the dismal 1 pect before all victims of ’.& tion, for although they are in need of food to nourish the M’ M are afraid to eat because of the long pr:u(lx of pain and discomâ€" ak.. that follow even the lightest _ The urgent from Vindiy t« t« the pr U ~â€"~â€"â€"â€"\ s f 4 ;&‘ *X / f ‘ sy M G @ ‘fi. NG° C | 2l \“’YX\ /r T & ' k: : .}’)‘jifi\ ; | § L J A= .\bs - S '\,\%_ ' «a CS C td Ae S \- I JiU v"‘-"" l / 11")J H that suddenly Increased in Size. Scottish farmer was one day ng some wool to a carrier, and + weigh‘ng it in the y‘l’d he t into the house to make out an â€"â€" (Coming back he missed iees» which had been standing r i behind the outer door, wlancing at the bag of wool he vâ€"«l that it had suddenly inâ€" n a person has a fishbone in roat insert the forefinger and «down upon the root of the c. so as to induce vomiting. s fails let him swallow a large { potato or soft bread, and «e fail give a mustard emetic. indigestion _ is . to . gain , so that the stomach f nourishment km fi.. h‘\ Pain after eating is the \ stomach signifies its protest is too weak to do nature‘s To take purgatives is u? avate the trouble. Dr. Wilâ€" Pink Pills give new strength « stomachs because they enâ€" «l purify the blood supply, mabling the stomach to diâ€" od naturally. Almost from i the appetite revives: then n be taken without pain and rdon of indigestion disapâ€" The following case proves th of these statements. Mr. Slver, a wellâ€"known farmer n the vicinity of Hemford, ivs : "‘For upwards of seven _ was tortured with indigesâ€" nctimes I was so bad that I not taste a bit of hearty ut would have to content with a bit of stale bread. es 1 suffered .excruciating n â€" my ~t<-maoh, and could s‘sep at night. I tried variâ€" riptions, but got no beneâ€" n them and naturally I was v reduced state of health. come to believe that I was 1 for the balance of my life nost constant torture, when { a case similar to my own rough the use of Dr. Wilâ€" Pink Pills This gave me rage, and I decided to try T. make a long story short, o‘ the Pills for a couple of completely cured me. This two vears ago, and I have return of the trouble, and to eat as hearty a meal as an get Dr. Williams‘ Pink <u_"\ your medicine dealer a‘l at 50 cents a box or six t $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" Medicine Co., Brockville, For Sale by disoriminating shopkeepers everywhere need of all who suffer 1e h As the result of a mysterious exâ€" plosion in a Dublin whiskey distilâ€" lery a vat containing 3,000 gallons was blown up last week. Mr. Wm. Colhoun, proprietor of the Londonderry Sentinel, and one of the best known Irish journalists, ha:_ dicd‘at his Derry residence. Happenings In the Emera of Interest to Irishâ€" The roll of honor of Queen‘s Uniâ€" versity, Belfast, now numbers 374 graduates, _ undergraduates _ and members of the O.T.C. of the uniâ€" versity . Acting on fresh instructions isâ€" sued recently, the Royal Irish Conâ€" stabulary are about to enter on a general recruiting campaign all over Ireland. The death of Mr. Loftus L. Nuyum, J.P., head of the firm of Messrs. Nuyum, coal importers, Dublin, occurred at his residence, Brunswick Street. Mrs. Rose Murphy, Newcastle, County Down, who died recently in her Olst year, left five sons, three daughters, 45 grandchildren and 52 greatâ€"grandchildren. A gigantic scheme is on foot that will light the whole of Ireland by electricity to be developed at Belâ€" leck by the water of Lough Erne, and at Limerick by the Shannon. It is proposed to make a complete list of the names of those Old Boys of Mountjoy School, Dublin, who have come forward in the defence of King and country. _ _ ie Dublin, Belfast, and Limerick railway workers have passed resoâ€" lutions pressing for a grant to Irish railwaymen of a similar war bonus to that secured for those in Engâ€" land and Scotland. A number of residents of Castleâ€" wellan are considering the feasibilâ€" ity of a public electric lighting inâ€" stailation, the gas works being mentioned as a possible site for a generating station. 3 The Standing Council of the Irish Technical Instruction Association have decided, owing to the war, not to convene the 1915 Technical Instruction Congress which was to have been held at Larne. The diversion line of the Dublin and Southâ€"Easterr Railway Comâ€" pany is now almost completed, and passenger trains are now running over the Woodbroke and Shawgaâ€" Fagh section in the Harcourt Street ine. Anâ€"nersonâ€"‘"A‘m _ hear‘n that thon Gairman Emperor preten‘s tae be rale releegious in a wey 0‘ his ain.‘" Murdochâ€"‘"Ay, releegâ€" iows like ‘is granâ€"faither. D‘ye min‘ the auld sang 0‘ he seventiesâ€" "*"Ten thousand Frenchmen laid below Praise God from whom all blessâ€" ings Tow. _ y Tams‘nâ€"‘"A‘ve heard it. An‘ whin this yin sen‘s ower a dizzen or twa o‘ his Zeppelins tae drap bombs on (Gilesca he‘ll be singingâ€"‘All good things come from above.‘" ilâ€"advised as to call you a liar, colonel, in what light would you regard the act?‘ . _ _ _ _ _ --i’(;hlu;;y _Colonel : "I would reâ€" gard it simply as a form of suicide, sah."‘ Easy. Yankee: "If some one were ale in nearly every â€"ms to be sonething a that makes it the ; craves in warm children or grownâ€" Rale Releegious. the Signâ€" Look stt sar y ‘‘Times are not what they used to be for us flys. Ah, no! Far from it. Why I remember,‘"‘ said the father fiy, "when grandma, in whose house we used to live, told her children that if they killed a i};â€" a dozen would come to the funâ€" eral. She never harmed us, bless her sainted name.‘"‘ _ es o ‘¥es," said mother fly, "and grandpa would let us play on his bald head and walk over his face when he took a nap, and the worst he did was to wrinkle his hose and fan his hands to show his pleasure. But now! Ah me! How different the grandpa‘s of these days, as well as the rest of the relationship, inâ€" cluding the grandchildren, who are really the worst of all. They are so impudent that we cannot eved enjoy a garbage can in peace. They say we carry disease germs on our hairy legs and spongy feet. Just think,"" and she wiped away a fallâ€" ing tear, ‘"all our children gone and we alone are left without a home to our backs, for we cannot get into houses or barns, and even the very manure heap is screened, and no place to hatch our eggs. Oh, dear! I am growing so shy since I have been swatted at so often that I dodge at every movement. Noâ€" body looks at me in a friendly way any more. I keep out of reach, I can tell you. Oh, I wish the good old times would return.‘" A Nova Scotia Case Of Interest to All Women Halifax, N.S., Dec., 15. â€"When interâ€" viewed at her home at 194 Argyle St., Mrs. Haverstock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case. "I was always ‘blue‘ and depressed, felt weak. languid and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. I suffered greatly from dizziness and sick headâ€" ache and feared a nervous breakdown. Upon my druggist‘s recommendation I used Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. s Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help to Many People. "I felt better at once. Every day I improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differâ€" ent physicians had failed to help me. 1t is for this reason that I strongly urge sufferers with stomach or d‘gesâ€" tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills." _D;' Hamilton‘s Pills strengthen the stomach, improve digestion,_ s_-t}'_e‘:pgth- en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood of longâ€"standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Mandrake and Butternut Women Work All Winter to Bring Products to Market in Spring. As soon as the roads are fit for foot travel the Indian women will come from their homes, bringing in wondrous creations in basketry and quill work. Throughout t{he win; hy hok fln t i mennendare ts â€"A90 3 ter the women spend their days and evenings working on their basketry. It takes practically a year to gather, prepare and weave baskets. From one spring to another the woman is gathering sweet grass, basswood bark, black ash, hedgeâ€" hog quills and white birch bark for her work, sometimes having to go miles into the woods to peel the bark, slay the hedgehog or gather the grasses from some wayside creek. The sweet grass, which is a wild fragrant reed grass and grows on the banks of creeks and ponds, is gathered in the fall. Before it can be woven or sewed into baskets it has to be rolled across the hot surâ€" face of a stove. When it has been sufficiently rolled about and abâ€" sorbed enough heat to make it suitâ€" able for her purposes, the womam ties a knot in one end and hangs it head downward upon a nail on the outside wall of her house, or hanke it mver a tree branch in the The sweet grass, V fragrant reed grass the banks of creeks gathered in the fall. be woven or sewed be woven or sewed Nt DAsRCLS 1b has to be rolled across the hot surâ€" face of a stove. When it has been sufficiently rolled about and abâ€" sorbed enough heat to make it suitâ€" able for her purposes, the womam ties a knot in one end and hangs it head downward upon a nail on the outside wall of her house, or hooks it over a tree branch in the sun. This grass has been used by the Indians for gensrations, and although some commercial basket manufacturers have begun its use, their wares do not have the wearing quality of those made by the Indian wom:n basket weavers, because it is mot dried by hand, and thus loses its flexibility. Other work done by these Inâ€" disn women is of white birch bark curiously embroided and embelâ€" lis‘hed with hedgehog quills. These recepiacles are trimmed with bands of sweet grass a_nd_tasesled‘ofi' with INDIAN BASKET WEAVERS. a fbre made of basswood bark. This fibre, which resombles coarse yarn, is mads by boiling the bark until of the right consistency; then drawing it through a hole in a bone or stone until it is twisted into strands. It is then dried in the sun and when dried is ready for braiding or for whatever purpose it is to be put. _ o t Black ash is the wood material used for basketry. This ash is first pounded with a dull implement unâ€" til it begins to split. A heavy knife is then run under the strips, careâ€" fully removing them in the desired wid‘hs. â€" When they are needed they are first laid in a bucket of warm water, which softens them so they can be woven without breaking. Her hedgehog quills are dampened by placing them in a basin of warm water while she is working. Her bark she puts into a warm oven. Frequently sheo finds misty weather suitable to basket weaving and takes her materials outdoors, sitâ€" ting on the ground as she worlks, Several of her neighbors will bring ir work into her yard and the ree or four of them chat while t weave, ignoring the mists enâ€" tirely. mm i frcciicll__. ~One salmon has been krzown to basket its use, wearing > Indian Message of Hope 7 For All Womon Suffered for Three Years and Could Find No Lasting Relief Till She Used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, Thurso, Que.,, May 24th (Special). Tired, runâ€"down women can read a message of hope in the statement of Miss Mary Sabourin, an estimable lady living here. â€"In a statement to the public Miss Sabourin says : "I was a sufferer for three years. I was always tired and nervous. My sleep was broken and unreâ€" freshing. I was troubled with headâ€" aches and pains in my back. I had heart flutterings to add to my anxâ€" "I was treated by a doctor and a specialist, but nothing seemed to do me any lasting good till I started to use Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, MISS MARY SABOURIN TELLS HOW SHE FOUXD HEALTH. iety Nineâ€"tenths of women‘s troubles come from sick Kidneys. Sick kidâ€" neys fail in their duty of straining the impurities out of the blood. That means that poison and disease is carried to all parts of the body. The remedy is to cure the kidneys with Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. If you haven‘t used them ask your neighâ€" bor about them. _ Nearly every family in Canada is using.or has used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. them." Heir of Marquis of Northampton Dead ; Others Wounded. Official ind unofficial â€" casualty lists published include the names of more than 200 officers, many of them members of the aristocracy. Among the killed are : _ f _ Lieutenant W. F. Rodney, of the flying corps, son of the late Lord Rodney; Lord Spencer Douglas Compton, a lieutenant in the Horse Guards, son of the late Marquis of Northampton and brother and heir of the present Marquis; Lieutenâ€" ant Keith Anthony Stewart, of the Black Watch, son of the Earl of Galloway ; Captain Eric Upton, of the Royal Rifles, son of Viscount Templeton. Lieutenantâ€"Colonel Lord R. F. Cavendish, of the Royal Lancasâ€" ters, is listed as wounded. He is a brother of the Duke of Devonshire. Among the wounded also are Tieuâ€" tenant Charles Huntington and Lieutenant G. Bruce, son of Lord Bruce. 3 Called For a Rope. An Irishman applied at the wharf for work as a stevedore. He was only four and a half feet in height, and the boss was dubious. ‘‘We‘re loading 300â€"1b. anvils into that steamer,‘"‘ said he, "and a little chap like yourself couldn‘t handlg ‘-ll“}l PME B mt UEA 0 ‘em." . ‘‘Try me,"" said Pat. And the boss put him to work. Pat handled the anvils aboard all right. The cargo was nearly all stowed in the hold when the boss heard & splash. He ran to the rail, and, looking over, saw Pat struggling in the water. "‘Throw me a rope !‘‘ he yelled, as he went under. He came up, called for a rope and went under again. Again he rose to the surface,. ‘"If you don‘t throw me a rope,‘‘ he sputtered anâ€" grily, "I‘m going to drop this anâ€" vil The moral world, like the materâ€" ial, is held in a state of stable equiâ€" librium by the combined action of two laws. As the planets are kept in their orbits by ‘the balanced counteraction of the centripetal and centrifugal forces, so the moral universe is maintained in harmony and settled now +by the compleâ€" mentary action of the two great laws of vicarious love and personâ€" al responsibility, stated by Paul in these simple termsâ€"‘‘Bear ye one another‘s â€" burdens,‘"‘ that being the law of love; ‘"Let every man prove his own work," that being the law of individual responsibilâ€" l ity. â€"Bruce. One Ought to Have a Good Appeâ€" tite. A good appetite is the best sauce. It goes a long way toward h?lnp‘ing in the digestive process, and that is absolutely essential to health and strength. s tparrt? Many persons have found that Grapeâ€"Nuts food is not only nourâ€" ishing but is a great appetizer, and children like the taste of it and grow strong and rosy from its use. It is especially the food to make a weak stomach strong and create an appetite for dinner. "I am 57 years old," writes a grandmother,‘‘ and have had a weak stomach from childhood.. By great care as to my dist I enjoyed a reasonable degree of health, but never found anything to equal Grapeâ€"Nuts as a standby. _ 5 my strength, I take 4 teaspoonfuls of Grapeâ€"Nuts with good rich milk, and when dinner comes I am hunâ€" gry. While if I go without ‘any breakfast I never feel like eating dinner. Grapeâ€"Nuts for breakfast for dinner. "‘My little gg&ndson\ was sick wifihl stomach trowble during the past summer, and finally we put him. onl Grapeâ€"Nuts. Now he is growing plump and well. When asked if he wants his nurse or Grapeâ€"Nuts, he brightens up and points to the cupâ€" bol:fl-_ He was mno trouble to wean at thanks to Grapeâ€"Nuts.‘‘ Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Read, ‘"‘The Road _ o Wellwilie," in pkgs. "There‘s a Reason.‘"‘ _ Rver read the above letter? A new _‘"When I have no appetite for breakfast and just eat to keep up soxs OF PEERS KILLED. Laws of the Moral World. WwHEXN DINNER COMES make a healthy appetite just three boxes of There are many rules for estiâ€" mating the weight of cattle by measurement, but one of the auâ€" thorities on the subject says that ‘‘There is no rule that comes ne&râ€" ér than good guessing,‘‘ and that ‘‘no two animals will weigh alike according to measurement.‘‘ The same authority further reâ€" marks that a rule, as good as any, is to find the superficial feet by multiplying the girth, just behind the shoulder blades, by the length from the fore part cf the shoulder blade to the root of the tail. Thus an ox girthing 7 feet 9 inches, and measuring 6 feet in length, would contain seven and threeâ€"quarters times six, or fortyâ€" six and a half superficial feet. For cattle, grass fed, the following is igiven as the weight per supsrhcial oot : Thus the steer, as per above measuvurements, should weigh 46.50 by 31, or 1,441 pounds, gross. Unâ€" der this rule it is usual to deduct one pound in twenty on halfâ€"fatted cattle, from fifteen to _ twenty pounds on a cow having two calves, and if not fatted an equal amount. The author of this rule suggests its use only when the scale is wanting, as the scale is the only true standâ€" Ginth less than three feetâ€"11 pounds; girth three to five feetâ€" 16 pounds ; girth five to seven feet â€"23 pounds; girth seven to nine feetâ€"31 pounds. ard Colicky children can be promptly cured by Baby‘s Own Tablets beâ€" cause these Tablets act directly on the stomach and bowels and cleanse them of all impurities._ Concerning them Mrs. Jas. C. Slater, Sumâ€" merville, N.S., writes: "I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets and am glad to say I have found them an excellent medicine for colic and loss of sleep.‘"‘ The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont‘. A college professor who was alâ€" ways ready for a joke was asked by a student one day if he would like a good recipe for catching rabâ€" bits. ‘‘Why. yes,"" replied the proâ€" fessor. ‘"What is it?‘ ‘‘Well, you crouch down behind a thick stone wall and make a noise like a turâ€" nip.‘‘ ‘"That may tbe,""« said the professor, with a twinkle in his eyes, ‘"but a better way than that would be for you ito go and sit quietly in a bed of cabbage heads and look natural.‘"‘ Computing the Weight of Cattle. Had ehip‘s anchor fall on my knee and leg, and knee ewelled up and for six days I could not move it or get he.lr‘.l 1 then started to use MINARD‘S NIMENT and two bottles cured me. , PROSPER FERGUSON. Many a woman who thinks she is a good mother is only a slave to the tyranny of a child. Wellington‘s men and officers ofâ€" ten fought through a whole camâ€" paign without receiving a letter from home. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. COLICKY CHILDREN KINGSTON, ONTARIO ARTS ~EDUCATION MEDICINE ED. 6 AINT _ as. QUEEN‘S SCHOOL OF MINING MINING CHEMICAL MECHANICAL IVIL ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING GEO. Y. CHOWN, Registrar AUTO AND BOAT TOPS CUTTEN & FOSTER Ford owners write for s::edo-eter Station. 179 Queen Street West, What Is It? UNIVERSITY HOME STUDY Arts Courses only. S U M M ER $ C H 0O O L JULY and AVGUST 188UE 2â€" No More Corns to you, and thank Him every day for the many blessings you enjoy. You have but to look at your nelx- bor to find someone who is worse off than you yourself areâ€"some unâ€" fortunate whose trouble makes yours appear like a pebble beside a boulder. Go, give your neighbor a cheery word, a little lift on life‘s weary road, and see how quickly your own trouble will sink into noâ€" thingness. Don‘t â€" worryâ€"and. again, don‘t worry. **5A% Many people seek trowble, court worry. Bome of you are not happy unless you are fre:lien‘gkover someâ€" thing. It is an unhealithy state of mindâ€"almost a wicked state of be ing; for your Creator did not inâ€" tend you to fret your life away, and in doing so deal unhappiness to others. Consider God‘s good gifts f Never known . to More fail; acts without , pain in 24 hours. Is * soothing, â€" healing; co rns takes the sting right ovrt. No remedy so guick, safe and sure as Putnam‘s Painâ€" less Corn Extractor. Sold everyâ€" whereâ€"25c. per bottle. ‘"‘FEvery man," said Uncle Eben, "‘thinks he‘s right mos‘ of de time. An‘ de res‘ of de time he thinks his mistakes is puffeckly excusable." A Highlandman from Tobermory asked the price of a railway ticket from Oban to Killie of the cleix a> the Oban railway station. ‘‘Bo much,‘"‘ replied the clerk. "Och awa‘,""‘ replied Donald, ‘‘it‘s far ower dear. T‘d rather walk.‘" And off he started. He had not proâ€" ceeded far when the train came tearing along, whistling as it nearâ€" ed the station. ‘‘Ye needna whistle for me!" said Donald ; "I made ye an offer aince, an‘ ye wadna tak‘ it; sae ye can gang on. I‘m no‘ comin‘."‘ BGpecification No. 2B @iving engine prices on request. Get our quotations onâ€""The Penetang Line" Commeroial and Pleasure Launches, Row boats and Canoes. Canoes, Skiffs, Motor Boats THE PETERBOROUGH LINE. If any canoe can give you satisfa ction AlWways and ever the acme of service ish. | Over fifty styles and sizes. Write . is the Peterborough canvas covered. 4 for the popular Outboard Motors. Powe! ers. Get folders telling all about these How to Kill Trouble. THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAN. Â¥Ye Wadna Tak‘ It. Even As You Or 1. THE PETERBOROUGH CANOE comPany PETERBOROUGH, ONT. STR"(E a matchâ€"in less than a minute the NEW PERFECTION Oil Cookstove is giving full, easily regulated heat for any kind of cooking. ‘The NEW PERFECTION gives you, too, a cool, comfortable kitchen. _ No smoke, no odor, no coal, ashes or kindli Let your hardware desler show you the NEW PERFEC TION today, in _theâ€"l,_z,â€"!â€"a_ni"l;\nef'n;en. If he can‘t supply you, write Perfect Heat For Any Kind of Cooking ROYALITE OIL BEST RESULTS THE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY tIio0 ARCHIVES TORONTO ve you satisfaction, it is a "PETERBOROUGH." e acme of service, model, strength and finâ€" ; and sizes. Write for catalogue. The latest canoe canvas covered. Ask for illustrated folder. Skiffs ard Motors. Power Launches, all sizes and pow» "Overstern" V Bottom Freight Propaid to any Railway Btation in Ontario. Length 15 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In., Depth 1 Ft. 6 In. ANXY MOoTOR FITS. Motor Boat ist 1 a 0 re Eyes inflamed by expoâ€" sure to Sun, Dust and Wind gui('kly relieved by Muring yes yeRemedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort At Your Dng‘n‘u 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye Salvein T 25¢. ForBook ol theEyeFreeask Druggists or Murine Eyc Remedy Co., Chicage When Sultan of Turkey, Abdul Hamid possessed about two thouâ€" sand waistcoats. Three of these were bullet proof. Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Pricn4. b spccially eelected and Government inspected for eced. Only limited quantity. Price, One Dollar per bushel L.o.b. Bramp ton. Also Counoisseur‘s Pride and _ Now Bnow, two excellent new potaoes. Price, Two ‘Dollare per bushel. Special pr ©@ for large quantity. Cash must Accome t y. LMen IOCTY AMNuW, PBOFIT-IAK[NG NEW8 M fices for sale in gg_o‘d pany Evce PE ORRRIINCELCCCCO® alll l’ fices for sale in good Ontario town#, The most usefu! and interesting of all bueinesees. Full information on App CÂ¥ Li xi _ omneve mar bueinessés. _ P0 27MCITDE C Acmmmacnce . T tion to Wileon Publishing Company, 13 Weet Adela:de 8t.. Toronto ~ ARLY IRISH COBBLER POTATOES, Father‘s Omniscent. Willie: Paw, what is an optimâ€" NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE ordere. 1 W. Daweon, Bramp SEED POTATOES , LIMITEP, $55 AND JOB OP« badt | t t b

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