West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 30 Oct 1919, p. 7

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KFor him the heavy world, all day for bim The tyrant task, the tension of the Not unto him does heaven grant to bend By day and night above the creamy cheek And dimplad smile of baby. ‘Tis the meek, EBweet privilege of mother to attend The cradle shrine. There patience without end Wins her a beauty words can never speak. Her troubled joy has nothing more to seek Where life and love in one devotion blend. Meanwhile the clever Japanese bought up in China nearly all of the visible supply of "cash‘"â€"the copper pleces with square holes for stringing them together. At the enhanced price of copper they were worth conâ€" siderably more as bullion than as money. Â¥ iX oX9Kax ~â€"square, round, octagonal, oval and diamond shaped. This "card money" was guaranteed by the local munictâ€" pality, and was good only for use in transactions with merchants of the town where it was issued. Even more curlous was the pasteâ€" board money issued in some of the enemyâ€"occupled cities in France. It was in denominations up to five francs, and was of different colors and shapes > SZEING LIFE WHOLE } Germany issued hundreds of milâ€" lions of fiveâ€"pfennig and tenâ€"pfennig Iron coins, the later output of these pleces being coated with zinc to preâ€" vent rust. Iron coins were likewise minted by the governments of Sweâ€" den, Norway and Denmark. The Germans issued oneâ€"pfennig pleces of aluminum, and in Algeria also aluminum coins of five centimes and ten centimes made their appearâ€" ance in circulation. Gormany issued muslin notes, and the local governments in that coun» try and in Austria printed paper money of the smallest value ever known, representing oneâ€"fifth of & cent. ered ayeYary s Â¥eyefexerar®rexazxaeaq Near the Calatian ch The great war brought into cireuâ€" lation some very odd ks of money. There was lack of copper and nickel throughout Europe, owing to the deâ€" mand for those metals for munitions, etc.; _ and, to aggravate the situation people everywhere took to hoarding coing. find Rest with the blessed angels of his Very {ow, if any other, plants ch a viold of flowers for so ! ars as peony and ins and wh tle trouble. Did you ever rub brown sugar Life has a definite, actual signifiâ€" ce. It means just so much, neither re nor less. _ What we persuade rselves to think about life changes thing. The only wisdom is to try see life whole, and to live according that enlarged view. He alice of ham before brodling it. You Wl fAwd it gives a ar the seat of one of the early lian churches of Asia Minor the vologists have found and deciphâ€" this Christian epitaph: ere lies the slave of God, Theoâ€" presbyter of the saints and sitâ€" vorker, the friend of all. He was cted on November 15." e inscription gives us few details, it reflects a wonderfully wellâ€" nome not t light mind Th il were vain as any froth or peony and iris and ; dim iriness, and father turns to Queer Money. Father Love. d He died as the "slave of !, with the firm confidence ad other work for him to do ! a sweeter rest to give, his rlends wrote over his grave, erfected on November 15." iat had broadened to fill its nt here was merely transâ€" it hour to come when twi a wider sphere above fe whole means to se it. Is it nothing more opportunity for per enjoyment? _ Or is C to be reckoned wi ind does that entail ol here a divine purpos ur life and mine that 1 complete life. _ In one a struggle for daily bread, re, like other men of that , had his craft. _ But to is a service, too, and God er to whom he owed imâ€" mee. He counted it a disâ€" be called "the slave of this was not merely a associated with men who _ and his implicit faith and eem to have made him a ‘0, he was known beyond urch circle. _ He did not zood works and his kindly a to those who thought i he did. Like his Master, i1 who needed his service. : was better known in his as the "friend of all" than yter of the saints." , too, he saw beyond what d as the pathetic end of . 18 it nothing more than )pportunity for personal njoyment? _ Or is God a to be reckoned with in nd does that entail obligaâ€" ere a divine purpose uns ir life and mine that gives cter of a trust held for nission in behalf of other how far does this mission e all |\ _ But the subject has been carefully and patiently studied by so many obâ€" servers and naturalists that it is no | longer impossible to answer these | questions. The cliff swallows and | blackpoll warblers spend their winters | in tropical South America; the golden | plover, which nests on the Arctic Sea, winters 8,000 miles away in the Arâ€" lgenflne; the scarlet tanager is to be | found in December and January in :Ecuador and Peru, and the bobolink \ in southern Brazil. For a long time it was thought that the golden plover bore off the palm for length of fiight between summer and winter homes, but now that disâ€" tinction is awarded to the Arctic hen. This bird breeds as far north as it can find anything stable on which to conâ€" struct its nest; it has been found within seven and a half degrees of the pole. And that nest was found surrounded by a wall of newly fallen For many years the annual migraâ€" tion of the birds, although a perfectly familiar fact, was shrouded in mysâ€" tery. _ Except in the case of a few birds like the robin, which winters not far south of its summer home, no one knew where the song birds or the shore birds went in the fall, or when they began their northward fiight in the spring. In 1917 when the shortage of foods throughout the world became serious and the Allies, wherever they might live, were urged to speed up producâ€" tion if the war was to be won, the Deâ€" partment of the‘ Interior had passed the Northwest game act placing the fur trapping and trading industry unâ€" der control. Closely following a comâ€" mission was appointed to consider the advisability and possibility of developâ€" ing reindeer and musk ox herds as a means of supplying food and clothing. The results are beginning to be realâ€" Of course it will come as a shock to the Englishman, in touring Canada, ! to take his favorite chair at the table : in his favorite hotel or restaurant, | scan.the card and find that roast beef, | just plain roast beef, is missing. Buti in its place he may find roast reln,-’ deer, broiled Arctic musk ox or a cut of caribou. And the Englishman, lov-l ing to take a chance, because he likes | game foods, most likely will order thel reindeer, the musk ox or the caribou. Price, 20 cents. â€"Body and sleeve in one, or dropped shoulder; vest to be slipped on over the head, and gathered vest. Cut in 6 sizes, 34 to 44 ins. bust. Size 86 requires, with bell sleeves, 1% yds. 36 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 54 ins. wide; collar, vest, undersleeves, 1 yd. 36 ins. wide; body and sleeves in one, 244 yds. 36 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 54 ins. wide; gathered vest, 4 yd. 36 ins. wide. No. 9044â€"Twoâ€"Piece Skirt with caughtâ€"under panels. Price, 20 cents. lafuri>«â€" Apiptadiinaieinittnts it uns l Ah 4.2.2.0 14 451 ced These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond street, Toronto, Dept. W. Every school where the children are obliged to eat lunch should be equipâ€" ped for prepaiing and serving one warm dish with the children‘s meal. !}Io. 8748â€"Lndigs'r'l‘ie-0n Basque, New Game Foods From the North Users kxow by test Build Up A Bird That Hates Darkness B7 18â€"0044 certain food values necesâ€" Popular for its delightful flavor and because it furnishes in body and brain‘ "There‘s a Reason With Grapeâ€"Nuts _for b}xi!ding the best i This territory is unsuited for the | cultivation of fruits and cereals, but E for grazing purposes it is excellent. In ! other parts of the world the increased | cultivation of fruits and grains has deâ€" creased the aroas ~suited for grazing (purpones. but on these wild square | miles in the north of Canada there has been no encroachment due to the war and its call for increased food supâ€" plies. The Arctic tern enjoy more hours of sunlight than any other creature on the globe. The sun never sets durâ€" Ing its stay at the northern nesting grounds, and during the stay in the south it has two months of continuous sunlight and practical daylight for beâ€" tween six and eight months of the year. A few individuals are occasionally seen along the New England coast in the fall, but the flocks of thousands and thousands of these gregarious birds which alternate from pole to pole have never been met by any trained observer competent to learn their preâ€" ferred path and their time schedule. They must travel at least 150 miles a dayâ€"apart from their flights in search or pursuit of foodâ€"to carry them withâ€" in ten or twelve weeks from one end of the world to the other. The tern arrives in the Far North about June 15, and leaves again for the south toward the end of August, when the young birds are able to fly strongly. Two or three months later the birds are found skirting the edge of the Antarctic continent, 11,000 miles away. What their track is over that vast space no one yet knows. Already it has been found that the Arctic musk ox, a rather untractable animal, can be domesticated, and that he will yield a large meat supply with a game taste, to be sure, and that at the same time he will assist in inâ€" creasing the supply of wool. snow which the mother bird had careâ€" fully scooped out from round her chick. Is Caused by Thin, Watery Blood and Cured by Enriching the Most people think of neuralgila as 4| * mpg j _ pain in the head or in the face, but Whirled round him like a dizzy sea, neuralgia may affect any nerve in the and pain body. Different names are given t0| qi,weq redly on it like a burning it when it affects certain nerves. Thus ship â€" ;« . neuralgia of the sciatic nerve is called A distant bugle plead with trembâ€" sciatica, but the character of the pain ling lip. and the nature of the disease are the ’ And, mppun‘ with his n‘., he strove same. The cause being the same, the again. cure to be effective must be the same. ’ The pain in neuralgia is caused by| He climbed the ivy at the wall, and set starved nerves. The blood which carâ€"| His foot upon the déadly parapet, ries nourishment to the nerves has beâ€"| And fell beneath a foeman‘s frantic come thin and impure and no longer blow, % does so, and the pain you feel is the l A bubble of blood upon his last, fierce cry of the nerves for their natural!, breath. food. You may ease the pain of neurâ€"| Then strove his spirit, and, a conâ€" algia with hot applications, but you queror, lo, can only cure the trouble by enriching | He stood upon the ~battlements of and purifying the blood. For this purâ€" death. pose we know of no medicine that can w mm madffgememeneemens equal Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. These Keep lmplements Under pills actually make new, rich blood‘ CO and thus act as the most efficient of ’ ver. nerve tonics. ?f you are suffering| 1If one travels through the country from this most dreaded of troubles,| at the present time, the haying and or any form of nerve trouble, £iv® | harvesting machinery on many farms these pills a fair trial, and see hOW | may be seen standing in the field speedily you will be restored to good } where last used. It may have been health. | drawn out into the lane somewhere You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pill#s| or may even be at the barn, but not from any medicine dealer, or by mail inside it In the Prairie Provinces at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50| there seems to be a sort of reckless from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine CO.,| abandon regarding the use of machinâ€" Brockville, Ont. | ery. When a binder breaks down it is aommoms omm fffrimenniemmene |oflen drawn off to one side of the A Government scientist has succeedâ€"| field and forsaken when it could be ed in making the Pacific coast kelp easily repaired and made to serve for edible by pickling it. | a season or two longer. _ _ _ ized now, and the commission reports that Canada has available for this new industry more than 1,000,000 square miles in the North, and that all of this is suitable for the propagation of the reindéer and the musk ox, and that the caribouâ€"the barren land caribou â€"already thrives there. Spread leaves three or four inches deep on the floor of the hen house. This material helps absorb the dropâ€" pings and provides a means of feedâ€" ing the grain in such a way that the hens are obliged to exercise by scratching for it. You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills ! from any medicine dealer, or by mail . at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 | from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.,| Brockville, Ont. | PAINFUL NEVRALGIA «++ es 0@ For the use of the blind a geographâ€" ic and industrial atlas of Great ‘Brita.ix! ilas been prepared, consisting twenty maps in relief and 202 pages embossed descriptive text. Many preventive measures of conâ€" trolling soil washing, such as crop rotation, deep plowing maintaining organic matter in the soils, etc., have been advocated, but there is nothing that equals terracing or "contour farming," as it is sometimes called. In 1826 a bell was immersed and rung under water, and was heard across the Lake of Geneva. Electric bell signals can now be detected seven miles away under water, and down in the hold of a ship men can hbear the sound of a shovel dropped inside another passing ship. The art of listening under water was brought to perfection during the great submarine hunt of the last year or two, and it is interesting to know from Professor Bragg, recently lecâ€" turing at the Royal Institution, that the first experiments in this direction were begun less than a hundred years ago, says a London magazine. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,â€"I can recommend MIâ€" NARD‘S LINIMENT for Rheumatism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. Many ancient families in England have stored away lifeâ€"sized figures in wax of their ancestors, made at the time of the original‘s death. _ The Duke of Norfolk ‘has the figures of three wives of one of his ancestors, which are kept in a glass case at one of his country seats. Turpentine is a moth preventive. Cows should not be allowed to idle away the fall and winter. Milk proâ€" duction is no longer confined to the summer months on farms that show good returns. Mrs. A. Bernard, La Presentation, Que., writes:â€""I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets for my baby and am well satisfied with them. I have recomâ€" mended them to several of my friends who have also used them with beneâ€" fAcial results." The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the stomach and bowels and thus prove of benefit in cases of indigesâ€" tion, constipation, colic, colds, etc. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. It is frequently stated that the farâ€" mer is and must be toâ€"day more of a business man than formerly. Men in other lines of business where maâ€" chinery is employed see that it is oiled and properly cared for in order to keep down production costs. The farmer should do the same. _ When he pays the price that he has to pay toâ€"day for machinery he should take good care of it. Cost of production can be reduced in this way, which means increased profits. Try it. WELL SATISFIED WITH BABV‘S OWN TABLETS While death smote fast with quakâ€" ing blows, and smoke Clung skulking to the shuddering ground, when spoke ’ The chattering guns in ambuscade. Thén all Whirled round him like a dizzy sea, and pain Glowed redly on it like a burning ship .~. . A distant bugle plead with trembâ€" ling lip. And, grappling with his life, he strove He climbed the ivy at the wall, and set His foot upon the déadly parapet, And fell beneath a foeman‘s frantic blow, A bubble of blood upon his last, fierce breath. Then strove his spirit, and, a conâ€" queror, lo, He stood upon the ~battlements of death. The prices of all kinds of farm imâ€" plements have gone up and it is poor business to neglect the machinery by leaving it exposed to the weather. The wooden parts soon rot away and the metal parts rust out. It takes l'onger also to get a rusty implement into working order again. ‘The Conquest. Numbly he stumbled to the untaken Keep Implements Under Cover. If one travels through the country at the present time, the haying and harvesting machinery on many farms may be seen standing in the field Listening Under Water. Yours truly, T. B. LAVERS, St. John. "Buppose," says another authority, "that instead of being at this enorâ€" mous distance it were placed in the centre of the solar system, in liou of the sun? It would then occupy .85 of the space lying within the orbit of Venus, and as seen from the earth would subtend an angle of about 70 degrees of arc. Thus, when its lower limb was on our horizon, its upper would be within 20 degrees of the zenith. Needless to say, no life could exist on earth with such a neighbor. A Giant Sun. Canopus, the giant of the solar sysâ€" tem, is, according to a recent calculaâ€" tion, 49,000 times as bright as the sun. Its diameter is 184 times that of the sun; it is 18,000 times larger in surâ€" face, and 2,420,000 times larger in volume. The distance of it from us, according to this calculation, is 489 light years. The contents of a thousand eggs would provide all the necessary inâ€" gredients for making his body anew. Minard‘s Liniment Relioves Neuralgia. He would also contain sufficient fat to make a fifteenâ€"pound candle, enough carbon to make 9,000 pencils, enough phosphorusâ€"about fifty ouncesâ€"to make $00,000 matches. His body conâ€" tains sugar equivalent to sixty lumps and twenty spoonsful of salt. "What‘s a man?" asked David. A chemist has been answering the quesâ€" tion. A man weighing about eleven stone would produce, if his body were conâ€" verted into hydrogen and other gases, about 85,000 cubic feet of gas, worth about 11is. 24. for illuminating purâ€" poses. MONEY ORDERS. Remit by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or stolen you get your money back. Until, at last, by man is won The prize to manhood due, And all thy poets‘ dream of loveâ€" And more, shall be made true. O Enzland, where the great waves beat Upon thy timeâ€"worn shore, Up, blaze the trail, and lead thy sons, As in the days of yore. Accept "California" Syrup of Figs onlyâ€"look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Childâ€" ren love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child‘s dose on each botâ€" tle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say "California." Who saw the Parliament of Man, The bloodâ€"stained banners furled, And looked from thee to emanate The new law of the world. O little island, set in sea Of silver, sung by him Who wrote on many a glowing page Thy deeds of valor grim. Which gave them vision in the nightâ€" A wise, prophetic band, Who saw the New Jerusalem In thy green, pleasant land. Rise up and be the pioneer Of that heroic dream Thy poets knew when to them came The bright, authentic gleam. So do those rheumatic twinges and the loinâ€"aches of lumbago, the nerveâ€" inflammation of neuritis, the wry neck, the joint wrench, the ligament t%nifl, tl:;imusclc strain, and the throbbing brittise. Give way before the peneâ€" trating effects of Sloan‘s Liniment DARTING, PIERCING SCIATIC PAINS "SYRUP OF FIGS" CHILD‘S LAXATIVE ok at tongue! Remove poiâ€" sons from little stomach, The Tight Little Isle. ISSUE No. 43â€"‘19. liver and bowels What‘s in a Man? He says freezone is an ether comâ€" pound which dries immediately and never inflames or even irritates the surrounding tissue or skin. A quarter of an ounce of freezone will cost very little at any drug store, but is suffâ€" clent to remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one‘s feet. Millions of American women will welcome this announcement since the inauguration of the high heels. Ouch ! 1 ! 11 ! This kind of rough talk will be heard less here in town if people troubled with corns will follow the simple advice of this Cincinnati authority, who claims that a few drops of a drug called freezong when applied to a tender, aching corn stops soreness at once, and soon the corn dries up and lifts right out without pain. Time and Effort Wasted. M. O.â€""I hear that you cough with more difficuity than you did yesterâ€" day." Tommyâ€"*"That‘s odd, sir, because I‘ve been practicing all night." Careless of Him. Mrs. Jones‘s mirth was so proâ€" nounced that it attracted the attention of her husband. "What are you laughing at?" he asked. "Maud‘s letter. She writes that they had foggy weather all the way across." "I don‘t see anything funny in that." "No; but she adds that the captain must have neglected to take out clearâ€" ing papers." A Cascaret toâ€"night will have you feeling clear, rosy and as fit as a fidâ€" dle by morning. They work while you gsleep. Sick headache, biliousness, coated tongue, sour, gassy stomachâ€"always trace this to torpid liver;‘ delayed, fermenting food in the bowels, Poisonous matter clogged in the inâ€" testines, instead of being cast out of the system is reâ€"absorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes congesâ€" tion and that dull, throbbing, sickenâ€" ing headache. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poiâ€" sons in the bowels. The Cure. "Doctor, I‘m feeling awful," said the young man. "I can‘t sleepâ€"" "I can cure you," replied the doctor promptly. "Ask her to marry you." uht nint n tent ind se gâ€"t4 00060 0 00 G ) fymnty ol t sn c0 ce lsntc ol t l ool e oo +t 0 America‘s Pioncer Dog Remedies Keep Liver and Bowels Clean and Active with ‘*Cascarets‘‘ "FIDDLEâ€"FIT" ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Mailed Free to any Adâ€" dress by the Author. H. Clay Glover Co., Inc. 118 West 3ist Street New York, U.8.A. Book on DOG DISEASES onl oi otentootcntoi +0 10 arRchHives ~â€"***~ Toronto URSESâ€"THE HOSPITAL POR INâ€" CURABLES, in affiliation with | Bellevue and Allied Mospitals, New York, offers a course of training to young woâ€" men desiring to become nurses; this hosâ€" pital has now adopted the eight hour system. For salary and other informaâ€" tion mpply to Superintendent 130 Dunn | Avenue, Toronto portunity wher other words, J you have abilit ing moments t« and incidentalh which means : cess? Small tc township side Pelman Systen other words, Pelmanise! If you know ?~ou have ability, why not use the waitâ€" ng moments to improve your efficiency and incidentally acquire that Personality which means so much in seeking Sucâ€" cess? Smaill town or big ¢ity, or on the township side line, it matters notâ€"the Pelman System is conducted by . mail. "Mind and Memory" tells you all about It. It is a book that‘s free and lays no obligation upon you to enroll, though {ou'll be surprised to find how moderate 8 the fee required. Write for the book and particulars to-dn.fi to the J‘slman Institute, 765 Temple Buillding, Toronto, Can The touring car, which is the most familiar type of car, takes its name from the fact that it is used by motorâ€" ists on lengthy tours. It is an open car also, with a tonneau and four doors, seating seven passengers, Minard‘s Liniment Oures Burns, eto. A RE YOU AMiiTIOUsS? IF Â¥YoU Cesire advancement in any situation vi life, mental efficiency is what will bring you success. The Pelman System of Mind and Memory Training develops latent powers ‘with wonderful r.flllm yet it requires but spare moments study and mental exercise. 1t matters not where you live for the course is conâ€" ducted by mailâ€"by confidential corresâ€" rondenee Your request for l‘{m book» et, "Mind and Memory," will Fring this and all particulars by return mail Write , toâ€"day. _ Pelman Institute " 766 Temple Bldg. Toronto you just drifting along that "everything com waits"â€"without much efficlency? If you a class, be up and doingâ€" and memory so as to 1 portunity when it come other words. Pelmanis "All seedâ€"sowing is a mysterious thing, whether the seed fall into the earth or into souls."â€"Amiol. Â¥VÂ¥ and job printing plant . I'r'l-lnng{- astern Ontario. imxurnnce earried $1.500. P #o for $1.200 on quick sale _ Box 62, Wileon Publishing Co.. Ltd. Toronto. I ADIES WANTED To DO PLAIN 4light sewing at home; _ whole or epare time; good work sent any distance; charges Send stamp for particulars. National â€" Manufacturing Company, Montreal. A N County. Splendid opportunity. Write Box T. Wilson Publishing Co.. blllh‘. T3 Adelaide St. W., Toronto ‘V:EL EQUIPPED | NEWSPAPER and job printine nlant in Eastern The Cuticura Toilet Trio Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Talcum is an indiepenseble edjunct of the daily toilet in maintaining akin purity and skin health. *‘A rash started all over my little girl‘s bodmnd she had some on her ye . Jt started in a pimple (\,.), that was full of water, and ({ail})] it got red and itchy. . She ‘g criedfor hours. This trouble Z4 lasted a year. e *‘Then I started with a free sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I bought more, and I used four cakes of Soap and three boxes of Ointment which Knbd her." (Signed) Mrs. Dora Langly, 1032 lO-ru;xlde St., Verdun, Que., August 1, 1918. akin Eh:ind skin health. «t of Outicurs Boap, Ointâ€" B 1 Wny tilP qatrere,, coaees _ f,, face. (€\ that M% it go ‘@' laste ze «6y sam: On Bod;and Face,. Redand Itchy. Cried For Hours,. Lasted a Year, CUTGURA HEALS RASH ON CHILD TEWsPAPER, WEEKLY, IN BRUCR RJ ING ments to improve your identally acquire that 1 means so much in se« Small town or big city. ip side line, it matter _ System is conducted SITUATIONS VACANT EITUATIONS YACANT. M MISCELLANEOUS. LOOK1 training to young woâ€" come nurses; this hosâ€" opted the eight hour ‘y and other informaâ€" erintendent, 1390 Dunm World in« aphy of the b. ‘Poronto; POWN IN retic youth AN OPEN

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