West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Dec 1923, p. 7

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I???“ . ' «rs t l nu] In". co no stricken by tail The horse has toiled tor man, slaved . rapidly incl-suing devastating mourn for him-taid down its life that he: when You can learn how to avoid it tn might llve---irt the racking heat of ','tfl'g tor 12 21fdi 3035f} "hf“. . t a prom m: e ' w $393,330? hr2 field J', Itett lam cost, by Dorian.“ mm , ' _ " o 8now " 3 eet. , Brunswick Avenue, Toronto, gilht And tor what? Just a bit of hay'. Canada. And when the heavy day of work Note was done. man retired to his comfort- 9 able home, with the peace of his To meet the requtremerf 2,'f . family and his restful bed, secure limited number of 'yeeitrd"t'fli1l'l, from rain and wind. But the iiiii,1to dertrire eomptete ”3“", Arrange- retired to its pallet to wait alone tor; ttl1l'ntfh',e,t'",1,tgil 2'g,',teiGs'yir,'i' tor the dreary hours to pass, while the‘ their comfortable 'lb!5iiFiiiiiiii; in rain nwrrily trickled in and the wind , suitable premises ' Toronto, Ture, unceremoniously new by from a htm.. it they wish, iiiiiifll, be attended by dred sociable sills and crannies in the "perieneed piE,t,' ans. walls. Mm-ere--- Great men who have done (not things surely hove been honored with monuments of stone end ot Immor- tality. But when the day of the home ehall be I closed chnpter in the Book of Servlce. who shall have the right to claim a greater honor for service rendered humanity? Whrut the lat any-horse shun hare disappeared from the he. of tho earth, I wonder whether man will even u- Pre-Ia I mm! of thanks tor the faithful animal that bu BO greatly helped to establish him in the now comforublo position which he occupies. By JIM! Maurice Tmy Mr 'Old, . 3.1 mcent, seated on the verandah , l l ', ' , #5333403" summer home peeling willow TIle CAUSE ill? ili1,liil'fN's sis. But ”his 'lah" a towel rafk noticidha ---- .'ins ---ipmy ac nut r1tttn1ntratralght IIs?.,"' lcross the verandah. He tried to turn Almost Always Due to Weak and estinu (it back with the toe of his boot, but Impoverished Blood. in; dime little creature quickly made its need ri way round. Then Mr. Vincent. using! Apart trom uccident or illness ‘due ieteiii'C "ad in his hand, turned the ant.” infection. almost all ”Lb-mini ".. - To meet the requiremerTi ttt a. Ilimited number of Callahan???" 5 who desire complete rest r.' e a " , the Cantassium Treaurd ' 111-13111139- fments have now bees 'ifi,Ql one or lthelr comfortable " mmo a on in I ' Toronto, where. [ unable premises. I ft they wish, i)iiiiflll, be attended by !expertenced piicff2"ec, l DANGER Why wait to be stricken by this I rapidly lncreuing devastating scourge f when you can learn how to avoid it byl' sending for this FREE BOOK, which In this book no a number of ca. reports, at home and abroad, which prove the great nine of Cantu-tum Treatment to internal And to external cases ot irregular cell-growth and Cancer. The Cantassium Treatment which does “lay with the anger Ind antler-mg caused try surgical 0993' tion, radium and X-ray. The REAL CAUSE ot thin terrible disease; how to treat it und how to avoid it. in fully explained by the book on AnFith or Without confuse it nor deter it. In a it was climbing over puts ot ‘ radio otttfit, which must have tusing to it as a mountain ' forest combined in to a M " vent stamped his foot in Ure Wings. Ieated on the verandah My to give up try-l _ljiit' son Allen - may. Fail-f . ' L" ' tel tii:,::','),:),,))!).,:!':,),;,',')-)"" t)'rjtittf'i, ',t's,'". wax)”; u} _ y 3‘1“)“ if) s}- or '"et"rtle"ttems, with palpitation of the heart, poor appetite and weak dt. 3elmon, the cause is almost always poor blood. It you have nervous head- nnkn- --_, . - "Git ready to Jumy, tren'l'men looking frightened, shouted t fares. “I've done forgot de war stops him." l The next day two young non stop pod John and asked him to take them to the station as quickly as possible. "Suttiuiy. gen'l'mett," said John. "tlit right in." He gathered up the reins and shouted: "Make ready! Charge!" The horse broke into a gal-1 lop and soon reached the station. I " man clambered upon the seat um" took the reins. "Make ready'." ir; called out sharply. "Charger." 1 The old horse wicked up his ears and broke into I gallop. As they reached the station the man shouted, "Halt!" The horse obeyed. The Fri) tiipped old John a quarter. , "Huis, You say he's an old cavalry horse' lest me drive him." "No. sun; I pn't believe I kin, auh. This 1. tt bokendown ol' cavnlry hnwse. Yov'can't trit him otten a walk nohow.” A colored man wu drivint ttlong the road in a mmshlckle buy! drawn by a bony, apavlnod old ber", when l stung" hailed him: “Hello! uncle! ten you get me to the station in Mar for the next mm t" [no defeatl so n is, I tear, with men Ind women, boys and girls. Some lwith many Advantages are turned aide from pressing on to the prize of their high calling, and some who are not no equipped but who have will and determination reach the soul. lt’l El great thin: to have ttetertnitttttionl" He Forgot the" Combination. “I've done forgot is" 7601'; what " to his other us ted Gai; /' John . ‘ Thirty dozen "candelles" 1 princess 45 shillings, and she "John Brydges tor Btsathrh ings; to a poor woman that six chickens and two capona, ings; to him that made her table ot walnut tree, " thillit Bible, 20 shillings." “A Watch fer, Time Study, muttons, weak, hog and Raynlshe wine." MacAlaster, of course, means "Alas- ter’s descendants," and Sanders and Saunders are simply shortened forms of "8ander'ts-son" and "%uutdervrron." It ls not likely that such a name as "Alexander'trsdno could have lasted itt tu1eorrttpted form long enough to re- main as Alexander when the "son" finally was dropped. It probably ls a change back to original spolllng at a Mill later Period. day, The name, ot course. in Greek it origin, but it was taken by the media val residents ot England and Scotland from the Bible, and they spelled it as they pronounced it rather than as it was spelled in the Latin. They spell- ed it "Aliattumier," or "Allessaundre." It you just slide over the third syllable or drop it out, you'll shorten the name into something like "Alitrder," which isn't far from "Master." The ebbrevlation ot this name into "Alec" is not found in any ot the me- dieval records. Instead. at that time, the tendency was to shorten it into "Saunder" or "Sander." Indeed we have the Scottish form ot “Sandy" to- dnv The family name of MacAluter probably would remain much ot a mntery were it not that this clan name of Scotland in traceable directly back through the centurion to a non of Anna Mar, who was Lord of the Isles l in the year 1284, which con, it is a mat- ter of record, bore the name of Master as a variation of Alexander. Yet, taken in this connection. in: view of the variations ot the Christian _ name Alexander, which existed Pour this period in England and the Scot; tiah lowlands, the variation became more understandable. i ,,,V._-., "ll-'l'g cw denon, Saunas". Onundoroon. Raoul Orlgirt--tuottutt and lngllth‘ ttoure.--A given name. V. 'ations-A loxnndor. 1, hogs-heddes of here, u we Latin. They spell- nder," or "Alletmusmire." de over the third syllable ',, you'll shorten the name MIcALASTE R. or course, In Greek in was taken by the medle- ot England and Scotland 9, and they spelled It as "etuuieums" cost the Surnames and Their Origin Whods as up. A opt, often _ _ 9 time _ _ n the V . For and she paid to seansh 15 shill. CEDODB. ii tthill. _ opt, often 3 time n the ' Si her (race 2?. shillings; for Banach. an. brought ‘_' But someone says, "I have no one to 1‘ look after them end I am not able my- " Belt." This obstacle has been over- come in nanny families where there are no boys or girls. I was much in- terested in the poultry displays st the " school fairs this Fall, and I had the, t pleasure ot visiting quite s number. g One small town in particulariot one , thousand inhabitants) had sn exhibit g of close on two hundred fowl, ell col- , ore and stages of growth. The prises were well deserved where they were itvugltGte. were in the form ot . . ' "Nlgapaqo.trsvc- -, it By B. W. Knife. Only A small space In required to keep I luv hens in which would lup- ply t-ublo eggs all the year. tic names ' Eleanor, or, as it was more common. I fly spelled, Alienors. was a popular! lu Obaca {name for girls, among the Normans. In ithe course of the centuries: succeeding‘ I (the conquest it became veriously An- a {norm Annot, Alinot (Norman diminu- tives), Ellen, Leonora, Lina. Linot and Nel (diminutive resulting from the a n d in I Anglo-Saxon influence). Nelson simply means "the son of “Iliad-pd hr [will ya, Nel." The earliest records of the name occur in this fashion as Fitz-Ne] and "ttl, Nel." "Fitz" was the Norman: ------u"-=-----t---':-e"-eM'.ert-itr_e A i __ method ot expressing 'son of," and , a boy of 13 years, who had the caring "til" was the abbreviation of the Latin l tor M pellets ot Pellzood stock. They "tuius," meaning son. commonly used got tinest care and attention possible, by the clerks, ot that day. Neal and l with the result that their average pro Neilson are variations, " is Neile, l auction tor the year“ was 216 eu- which has no connection with the Cal-1 each in a pen 10 ft. by u n. tin human nl Ari-An ..-* .., .- .._ -- I There no literally dozens of family mamas common in Americn to-doy , which truce back to the given nume- fot women in those dun following tho (Norman conquest, when worn on the ‘continent wrest“ from the Norman. :Enxlish monarchl and their nobility, Etheir holdings in Normandy and lett; them no ulternativo but to can them~l nelvnn Englishmen. Town Lot Poultry Keeping. 3 Perhaps it would be more accurate.l however, to say that the communities ; in which they lived did so, tor family names were a growth of cultomf through many generations, rather than i the definitely adopted appellation" l families. varuttlt"w--Neiteon, Neal, Nam. Riel-I orlttlrt--Middt. Englluh. 8boureo-A woman's name. of O'Neil and 104.5151} NELSON lip-)1 them - . Donor-4'1 ”In" YE)“, air, strong can." Get your boy or girl intersted in poultry and thereby Instill into their young minds 5 fundamental knowledge ot business. also their ability to u- Iume responsibility. It mu benettt them mentally as well u hum-n. W321 te---. «on And That'. Heavy Enough, (liiljlliiiiilj" 1tte1ttirrtarauta-alrnuh,,sta 1k,Trlxsax,ai:' Qualit- Va Lamas 9r 'i a a ".F': 53550755933 _ .,' ‘1! _ I', ti "h, ' _ a? 53".; "r-"""" 47"”. I.,' , ...‘ ttttti,) -. J. 'rs s MI O In .i.l'iti.fx, If will benettt 'iprrcuur. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO this I. "S Eu- covored with boiling water and wowed to stand for tttro minute. no more nourishing tad more easily dusted than agg- plncod in boiling rum and allowed to boil for an. and I half minutes. In Why Doctors no nu. Insurance Doctor -"Wam W?v r" F the human" "You. once." "mm fort" z; , "To use my not.” P9. ;‘f;"'3"m " ttid it

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