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Durham Review (1897), 31 Aug 1933, p. 7

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34 ed Cassidy at the top:( iu_vku: "to make good me load!" "What do you want?" asked the man. He Wanted a Full Trip. The foroman had rebuked Caseidy for not taking a full load of bricks up the ladder every trip, and Cassidy had promised not to offend again. One morning the supply of bricks ran out, and Cassidy, after gathering every one in sight, found he was still short tha proper number. He called to & workman on the fifth floor. ( ~o one with the most elementary knowledga of the danger of an electric current would immerse himself in the ordinary bhousehold bath and then proâ€" ceed to administer treatment from any piecce of apparatus connected with the ordinary lighting circuit; nor, indeed, would he sallow anveanma alss aa 2z "Throw me Jawn Speaking of deaths in which electrical applian tached, the British Mod says: hairpins in notlons department, east side of basement, three aisles beyond hardware; gloves in women‘s wear, fifth floor of annex; reached by pasâ€" sagoway over streot; toothbrush in drugs and tollet artic.es department on balcony, reached by moving stair way, which you will flind on your right as you pass the fountain in the florist shop in the centre of the main floor." Electricity in the Bathroom. m d No one with a distracted shopper in a great deâ€" partment store. "I want some shoestrings, some rairpins, a pair of gloves and a toothâ€" brush," the woman said. "I have to atch a train, and have but a few minâ€" & Animals Brar of foxes from nisked. and a up 1 W pa Interesting Facts Regarding Fox Raising. nt, ri vator Frest Skhe Took the Next Train Across ter r to ¢s, youngsters, half a holidayâ€"I mind the maples blazed Like ilames against the smoky sky; the goldenrod was brown, cross a stretch of searing hills the lazy cuttle grazed; And all the little neighberhood was on its way to town. W he allow anyone else to adâ€" r such treatment. It is pracâ€" useless to attempt to insulate inary bath, fitted with metal frequ i, madam!" the floorwalker re-; briskly. "That‘s the beauty of & | ment storeâ€"get anything youj right under the one roof! Take or to eleventh floor, shoe depart-] #«ight aisles to the right from | passageway, for shoe ltrings;i is in notlons department, ent,‘ ‘ basement, three alsles beyondf ire; gloves in women‘s wear, | oor of annex; reached by pasâ€" | y over streot; toothbrush !nf electrical appliances ‘;-e-re atâ€" clanked across theâ€"crisping fields, tired bay by tired grayâ€" he house was primped for company from roof to shining floor ; ite, starchy curtains blowing in, fresh hung for Sabbath Day, nd spicy oven smells affoat from out the kitchen door. ar t Ur AFP Wit garments lay upon the bed in ir weo lofty room. sharoed the cloudy lookingâ€"glass ith consclous boyish pride ©‘d our new and shining blades, «d feared a bloody doom wavering on cheek and chin, we It their keenness slide n cuts, if the road is too steep, prove short; and places that together may not bo readily from one another. Those fasâ€" impossible directions, famâ€" ur childish years, sometimes n inleresting facts regarding ming are forthcoming from erinary Director General, Dr. e. In an article in The Agriâ€" Gazette of Canada for Noâ€" he tells us that the main y connected with the raising s in captivity is the protectâ€" them from discase. It is noâ€" that the female instead of irth to a liiter of four or five ne, as she does when free, roduces more than two, the for the farms in Prince Edâ€" land being at the rate of one alf. â€" Individual fox ranchers, . by care and improved , do succeed in securing an‘ of three or even four per| Vith a view to making this more general, under the _ of Dr. Torrance, research | s been undertaken. Land and| nt have been acquired, twof _experts from the Health of| Branch employed, six pairs| ‘ntl 1 st ght British Medical Journal sters, half a holidayâ€"the road at last ‘r wheels to race our own, yâ€"hearted "wayâ€" good Genie stole an hour 11 the rest ware noet » the Island ranches furâ€" a small laboratory fitted studying of the diseases 3 that affect the animals. th one brick," shout e another. Those fasâ€" sible directions, famâ€" dish years, sometimes nient echo in present lown the crooked lane, he square." Certainly come to the mind of pper in a great deâ€" UT rest were pas d it to you is slide bathtubs to th and s | HOMER. lt] Racial Originâ€"Angloâ€"Norman. B.’ Sourceâ€"An occupation. )yt; While the Normans spoke French . they were really a Teutonic race. [ | Indeed, a large part of the blood of & modern France, particularly in the . , north, was originally Teutonic, the reâ€" o | sult of the great migrations westward _ | of the Teutons into what had preâ€" | viously been the purely Gallic provâ€" »' inces of the Roman Empire. Thus not ’fonly the overwhelming majority of ; names, but a large percentage of the ,,;’worda in the medieval French speech _’9 were Teutonic. | One of these words was that for‘ | "helmet," a modern word which has ; come down to us both through the | Angloâ€"Saxon and the Norman-Fren,ch, y tongues, only for some reason we have | | perpetuated the diminutive rather than :the original word itself. "Helmet" | means "little helm." As the Normzans orlginally spelled and pronounced it, 'lt was "healme," but in accm‘dance, | with that tendency which has scatterâ€" 'ed the diphthong "au" so protusely.‘ through modern French, namely, the‘ tendency to drop the pronunciation of the "I" and substitute a long "o" ,sound for the former vowel, it was é quite generally spelled ""heaume" beâ€"| , fore the population of England finally swung back toward the old Angloâ€"| : ’Snxon speech. $ _ The "heaumers" or ""healmers" of |â€" medieval England were the makers of | j helmets. The name was, of course,|} first applied as descriptive of this ocâ€"| 4 cupation, with this meaning being ul l 7 timately lost in that of mere personal designation. With the original meanâ€"] t ing forgotten or unstressed the tendâ€"| a ency toward phonetic spelling in an| t age when spelling was little standardâ€"| ( "Burke‘s Peerage," one of England‘s best known annual handbooks, was first published in 1826. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Distemper MoNEY OoRDERs. Send a Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. eo e e e en en Channel, was for many years in the occupation of a man named Heaven, and the place was referred to by sailors as the "Kingdom of Heaven." | _ No. $743â€"Dress. Price, 35 cents. ‘ Sizes 16 to 20. Transfer Designâ€"No. | 969. Price, 25 cents. | _ This pattern may be obtained from | your local McCall dealer, or from the i McCall Co., 70 Bond Street, Toronto, Dept. W. ‘ ! Constipationâ€"that disordered state of the digestive tract which is nearly always caused by improper feedingâ€" can be readily regulated by the use of Baby‘s Own Tablets. These Tablets are a mild but thoroughly laxative. They are easy to take and are absoâ€" lutely free from injurious drugs. Conâ€" cerning them Mrs. Joseph Dion, Ste. Perpetue, Que., writes:â€""I have noâ€" thing but praise for Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets, When my baby was three months old he was terribly constipated but the Tablets soon set him right and now at the age of fifteen months he is a big healthy boy and this good health 1 attribute entirely to the use | of whe Tablets." They are sold by' medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wmiams" Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ClHLDHOSD InstAXT Postux | When tea or coffee bothers l'l why not turn to i_slnnd of Lundy, off the 1 Lundy, off the Bristol for many years in the a man named Hcaven, Emubratde D"L:l Not.ag Surnames and Their Origin 9143 CONST:PATION The O‘Caseys in Ireland are most thickly settled in Munster, Limerick and Clare (the territory which was the ancient Thomond), and also in Cork." 5 ‘ The giver name from which this family or clan name was developed is "Cathasach," and its meaning is "brave." It was a name quite comâ€" mon in the old Irish nomenclature, but, of course, only in comparatively few instances gave rise to a fam!ly‘ name. i | _ The Irish spelling is nothing less ’lhan "O‘Cathasaigh," sometimes also ‘spe]]od "O‘Cahesaidh." To our Engâ€" lishâ€"trained eyes the latter form illusâ€" trates best its pronunciation, when it is remembered that the sound of the final "dh" easily became eliminatod,! and makes clear the reason for the: spelling sometimes, but not often met with Cahasey, Thoe "h" in such a name is very easy to ignore except for a tongue trained in the Irish language. | CASEY (as we have to pht up with hastily cook Foutsks % c 3Gt |ed in the woods. Having proved the Il ‘"f“"onâ€".â€"(.'aha‘“:y' O‘Casey. | value of Dr. Williams‘ Pirk Pills, as ',‘a""‘l 0"3","‘1”51" | a tonic and health builder, I am never mourceâ€"A given name. ._| without them, and I lose no opportunâ€" The Irish family name of Casey is! ity in recommending them to weak one which, strangely enough in \'icw'pé“pm whom I meet." 0f its Irish form, so complicated w! Dr, Williams‘ Pick Pills should be our Englishâ€"accustomed eyes, has de-= kept in every home, and their occaâ€" veloped very few variations in its stonal use will keep the blood pure transition into English spelling. | and ward off illness. You can get This is true because, despite the these pills through any modicine deal. complicated looks of the Gaelic spellâ€"| er, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six ing, the pronunciation is not very| boxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams‘ susceptible to any other phonetic; Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. rendition in English than Casey, ort ~â€"â€"~~â€"lprrom .. when care is taken to preserve the| Perfect Hands. faint "h" sound in the middle of the| A prominent British artist says that name, Cahasey. | in "am 5 ts ons ho o 0oi Svie h 5 L2 ized anyhow, eventually brought the family name to the form of Homer, ’ "To a very large degree, producâ€" tion is eentrolled by profits and the ease of marketing the products, but sometimes, as in the live stock indusâ€" try, markets have to be created. Canada was producing the fat hog and for years had an outlet for the‘ surplus product; but marketing conâ€" ditions changed and the industry imâ€" mediately faced rather a difflcult' situation. _A new market was the solution. The Government was imme-! diately seized of the situation and had | careful surveys and investigations‘ made; educational campaigns were| carried on, the type of hog raised in! Mrs. Thaster forthwith began to read the New Testament and became so much interested in it that she went about with a copy in her pocket; whenever she had a chance she would read it. From that time she began to attend Phillips Brooks‘s church, She was converted to Christianity by a Brakmin theosonhist! ‘ "What!" he said. "You do not read your own religious books? 1 never heard anything more beautifal than this." By and by Mohini himself happened to get hold of a copy of the New Testament, and was much surprised and impressed by tho beauty of its contents. He spoke of it to Mrs. Thaxter, and found to his amazement that she knew nothing about the New Testament. Miss Parkman replied, "But did not Jesus teach that? Is it not all in the Sermon on the Mount? E RT N800 Ne 0 en io on is to feel no contempt for an,. human being." One day she said to her friend, Mary Parkman, "Did I speak contemptuousâ€" ly of such a person? I cught not to, for one of the principles of theosophy Making Markets. Gentlemen,â€"Last winter I receivod great benefit from the use of MIN.â€" ARD‘S LINIMENT in a severe attack of LaGrippe, and I have frequently proved it to be very effective in cases of Inflammation. Yours, W. A. HUTCHINSOX | these pills through any modicine deal. | er, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six | boxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams‘ liMedicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ’ The wonderful sucesss of Dr. Wilâ€" .. liams‘ Pink Pills is due to the fact xe’ that they go right to the root of the ;) discase in the blood, and by making g. the vital fuld rich and red strengthen 1| every organ and every nerve, thus ,| driving out discase and pain, and g‘ making weak, despondent people ‘l brighnt, active and strong. Mr. W. T. _| Johnson, one of the best known and [l;' most highly esteemod men in Lvnonâ€" ‘burg county, N.S., says:â€""I am a el Provincial Land Surveyor, and am exâ€" :) posed for the greater part of the year dl to very hard work travelling through °! the forests by day and camping out °/ by night, and I find the only thing that ’f will keep me up to the mark is Dr. -" Williaims‘ Pink Pills. When I leave ‘ home for a trip in the woods I am as i interested in having my supply of pills | as provistons, and on such occasions, {I tako them regularly. ‘The result is [I am always fit I never take cold, \ end can digest all kinds of food euch |as we have to pht up with hastily cookâ€" |ed in the woods. Having proved the | yailue of Dr, Williams‘ Pink Pills, as a tonic and health builder, I am neverI‘ | without them, and I lose no opportun-" l’ny in rocommending them to weak l fpcup!o whom I meet." |_ Dr. Williams‘ Pick Pills should be c | kept in every home, and their occaâ€" | slonal use will keep the blood pure j ;:md ward off illne=s. You can get|‘ Minard‘s Liniment Co., Lim‘ited A prominent British artist says that in the perfect hand of a woman the third finger is longer than the first, or index finger, while in a man the perfect proportions are a longer first finger than the third. You have only to ask your neighâ€" bors, and they can tell you of some rheumailc or nerveâ€"shattered man, some suffering woman, ailing youth or anaemic girl who owes pre:ent health and strength to Dr. Willlams‘ Pink Pills. For more than a quarter of a century these pills have been known not only in Canada, but througbout all the world, as a reliable tonmic, bloodâ€" making medicine. ‘ There is not a nook or corner in Canada, in the cities, the towns, in villages, on the farms and in the mines and lumber camps, where Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills have not been used, and from one end of the country to the other they have brought back to breadâ€"winners, their wives and famâ€" ies the splendid tressure of new health and strength. THE TREASURE OF GOOD HEALTH Eastern Canada was changed, and the bacon industry as we know it toâ€"day came into being. Those who assisted in the transformation realized how great were the difficulties and how tremendous the possibilities. Time has‘ 'proved to the satisfaction of Canaâ€" | dians that the exportable surplus of, agricultural products must meet, in so far as is possible, the standards| laid down by the importing nations.| Moreover, we have learned that it is; profitable to meet â€" these demands | wherever feasible. Canadian bacon is| in Great Britain, and even in other countries, a standard product. The Government‘s part now is to keep clear all trade channels, thus proâ€" viding the demand, while the reputaâ€" tion already achieved assures the proâ€" ducer a price comparable to that reâ€"| ceived in any other market."â€"Dr. S. F. Tolmic, Minister of Agriculture. asily Maintained Through the Use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis. cove HUTCHIXSOXN your liver and bowels to straighten you out by morning. Wake up with head clear, stomach right, breath Eweet and feeling fine. No griping, no inconvenience. Children love Cascan ets, too. 10, 25, 50 cents. Sloan‘s liniment(s) Do you feel all ta}ded upâ€"billous, constipated, headachy, nervous, full of cold? _ Take Cascarets tonight for your liver and bowels to atrairhtan For 39 years Sloan‘s HI..'mxm' ent has helped thousands the world over. You ar;:n"t Likely to be an exception. It cerâ€" kn en 9 9 . HAT Sloan‘s does, it does thor» Woughlyâ€"pmdrates without rubâ€" bing to the affiicted part and promptly relieves most kinds of exterâ€" wal pains and aches. You‘ll find it clean and nonâ€"skinâ€"staining. Meep i handy for sciatica, lumb:}}go, neuralgia, :wc'fir-exerted xi*;ubclce,sti joints, 1 icke e, pains, bruises, straing, eprains, bad weather afteg_-efl’ects, tions. The death rate for adulâ€"ts is at its lowest in June, under normal condiâ€" Get busy and relieve those ing with that handy bottle J’ "I beg your pardor, but am I adâ€" dressing Wealter Raleigh ?" The man looked at him for a mo. ment, and, thinking he must be mad, replied : "No, I am Christopher Columbus, Walter Raleigh is in the smokingâ€"room with Queen Elizabeth," OUCH! ANOTHER _ RHEUMATIC TWINGE C OPm Distinguished Personages. Wher Professor Walter Raleigh was asked to lecture at Princeton College, Professor Root wert down to the staâ€" tion to meet the distinguished visitor. Professor Root did not know Profesâ€" gor Raleigh, but walking up to a man whom he thought looked like him, he said : inly does produce results, _ _ Al{ druggistsâ€"35¢, 70c, $1.40, | °_ _9 107C © seoUumonisi of conformity from the minister of his parish, It was this same Charles 1, who, in 1634, issued another proclamation forâ€" bidding any but royal ships to fly the Union Jackâ€"the old flag of the lngâ€" ish and Scottish crosses. Queen Aune, in 1707, ordered merchant ships to fAy a red flag with the Union Jack in a canton at the upper corner thereof, This is the British red ensign, well known in every port of the world. | Originally the name "Jack" was given to the small upright spar in the ship‘s bows from which the flag was fown when going into action. Gradu. ally the term came to be applied to any flag of noble size that had the cross of 8t. Georgoe next to the staff. The Union Jack with tme crosses of St. George and St. Andrew supplanted the St. George‘s jack on the ascension of James I., when the crown of Seot. land was united with that of England, «‘They Work while you Sleep" MÂ¥ detatatstsdiecis: ©14 In many ways the sailing of the Mayflower was an event in England‘s history, but how different that history would have been had the example of the Pilgrims been followed by certain other men who had made up â€"their minds to join William Brewster and his companions! Wearled by civil and religious strife in England, Oliver: Cromwell zid John Hampden were preparing to set out for America, when Archbishop Laud procured an order from Charles 1, forbidding them to leave. ‘That proclamation of May 1, 1638, declared that the king, being in. formed that many persons went yearly to New England to escape ecclesiast!â€" cal authority, ordered that no one should henceforth pass without a liâ€" cense and a testimonial of conformity | from the minister of his parish. | During the preparations for celebratâ€" ing the tercentenary of the sailing of the Pilgrims it has been discovered that the painting of the Mayflower in the Houses of Parliament depicts the ship flying the modern Union Jack. The present Union Jack did not come into existence until 1801, at the time of the union of Ireland with Great Britain, when the cross of St. Patrick was added to the British flag. J C Ts * ISSUE No. 50â€"‘29. CASCARETS The Mayflower‘s F lag. Sloan‘s BAUME BENCGUE { $1.00 a tube _ THE LEEMING MiLE3 CO., LTD. MONT AEAL Agents for Dr. Jules Bengué RELIEVES PaAin has immediate effect. BEWARE OF susstitares Quick relief from RHEUMATIC D. Gradu. applied to t had the the staff. ONTARIO ARCHIves TORoNTo Aspirin is the trade m eceticacidester of Saiicy manufactur«, to assist t! will be scuimped with th« of "Ba Hete The name "Bayer" identifies the | contains proper directions for Coldd, only finu;ne hmlzw.Two A.S:tn]lln“, Toothache, E-.-m.,yk ibed by phys a lor over nineâ€" n)gk,lnhu.,!hnnul_, Z:n years and now made in Canada.!tis Joint p.n=.‘ 1â€"TUWatism, Neurf §Masciss wili 8 ' A few cents buys "Danderine." After an application of "Danderine" you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff besides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickness, At All Booksellers or J. M. DENT & sons, Ltd., Pubs, INVENTIONS Money refunded if not n'tlcfiéti 99 Saguenay, By Dean Harris, le a Canadian book that should -b_o_ in every homeâ€"and read. 5o sHipman CHampces A Gift Book for Allâ€"Young or Old, Protestant or Cathollo "The Crossbearers of the Send for list of inventions wanted by Manufeacturers. Fortunes have been made from simple ideas. *Patent Protection" booklet and **Proof of Conception" on request. HAROLD C. SHIPMAN & co. PATENT ATTORNEYS Tommy Knew. Teacher: "Who was the first elecâ€" trician ?" Tommy: "Noah. He made the arc(k) light on Mount Ararat." WANTED "Oh, not at all. It is merely a boil on the back of your neck, but I would advise you to keep an eye on it." "Well, doctor, do you think it is anything serious?" America‘s Pioneer Dog Remedies x * *"a | Book on "Applaud? _ They made about as much noise as a rubber heel on a feather mattress!" Orator‘s Wife: "Did the people apâ€" plaud ?" "I got even with the editor last night," sald the budding authoress. "How did you do it?" gushed the confidential friend. "I declined his son, with thanks." Stops Hair Doubles y 10. ; _ 000 _ 7 0C @ede . EC " UkG There is only one A..pu-h_..n.”'.._r.- must say sDirin 1# the TAAA wumete rllsalel o2 C X 3OBSECOUGHS 410°00", LEW, ARG se chnrel' 6t., 'l‘onlu. , _ SINCE g 1870 bi Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" FROM HERE 6 THERE BITSs OF 6 it®, to Assist t DANDERINE Declined With Thanks. ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN and gow to Feed Mailed Free to an{ Adâ€" dreas b‘ the Author. w. m% lover Co., Ine, 118 West Blst Straot DCOCG DISEASES Easy Task! A Failure. West #1st Btreet ew York, U.8.A. Coming Out Its Beauty. +_+ OTTAWA, CANADA 11 Accept "California® Syrup of Fige enlyâ€"look for the name California om the packege, then you are eure your child is baving the bost end most Larmless physic for the little stom ach, liver and bowels Children love msCA k CCCR C WPV â€" ""California Syrup of Figs" Child‘s Best Laxative s aiap ui tOn (eWHippolytn 2C mdOIniALIEX CISRTAIN â€"Swedene l borg‘s great work on Heaven an® | Mell, and a real world beIond. Over 400 | pages, only 26e postpatd. H. B. Law, l‘tlu‘ Euclid Ave., ll‘on'mto. ine American bale of cotton is 500 pounds, the Egyptian 700 pounds, and the West African 400 pounds. The average man spends too mu& time making money and too little time enjoying it. Minard‘s Liniment For Oandru® ETTE Nes Tb iaP Prider y Ratthit? No Aivcratruadvanctsadh >3 in 1888, by distribution of larrs “utl- ties of Almanacs, Coox Books, Health Books, etc.. which are furnished to Agents free of churge. ‘The remedies are gold mt a price that allows ”onu double their money. Write ongo Bliss Medical Co., 124 St Paul St. Montreal. Mention this paper e GIENTS WANTED: BLL8SS NAI'N’ Herbs is a remedy for the relief {onstipation, â€" Indigestion, liliousness, Rheumatism, Kidney ‘Troubles. lt.r wellâ€"known, having been utennlvd( = vertised, since it was first munufacturedg in 1888, by distribution of larrs thuu“- Hes of Almanacs, Coox Books, Health ]3.\,\k._ elC. which ara Furnisiaa~ £~ Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water to free the pores of impuriiies and follow with a gentle application of Cuticura Oint» ment to southe and heal. They are ideal for the toilet, as is also Cuticura Talcum for perfuming. Soap 25¢. 25 and 56c. Taleum 25¢. Sold mm%mxz g."u\;dhnl)apo( FC»&-. Subdnvu'w;b.u-u.. Cuticura For All Skin Irritations The American hbale of cott MMORTALITY CERTAIN MOTHER! Larger "Bayer" packages, AGENTS WANMTED. s~ull directions on L4 ¢ # A hi m“ M T3 Â¥$

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