Ontario Community Newspapers

Newmarket Era , August 10, 1900, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

BRANCH A General ffimking Allowed Deposits ix batch DRAFTS AT Qlcrllng American Drafts cold Collection attended to j a I r J A no for to infer Itattt JCT fl on Farm an4 Isolated Town Property Over Tin Shop Newmarket IfAKUIAOB tea u or of MARRIAGE LICENSES At the private Papers at residence J jsauBit of i MARRIAGE LICENSES J4 Simpson nod Fancy mi a of Tuner of Pianos and all String Instruments Emm of people pie or Tor the poor poor for folka and easy oBuforgoodb6opleandlB very to to fcaa jAta At per on flratoltaa farm loaas effected on tlfe Insurance policies aisdavijaVH J pifate 0 Agent for tellable and Norwich Or Mount Albert NwiyiApp latest and Head Stones Ordering f THE fe m Prepared for the Bra by The Spirit Aug Matt TckI Forgive us tlebte us forgive our debtors Verse A limited not a real 23 God docs rtotgiyoiip vengeful man any K very life Id but 24 wc in WIJV- 2CAir ftUtnircoiWcenoe promise abundant to the to forgive in our pardoned debtor should Ws a patient creditor should always lead to mercy wrong somehow get into tars To act unmercifully after obtaining mercy is unpardonable 1b in no condition to mercy who cannot bestow St Mercy will never be confirmed to unmerciful 35 sown leaves a harvest of PRACTICAL U0OKbTIOM8 word is answer to our- questions Life is but prolonged obligation to the Wany sins remain coveted until God uncovers them Gods mercy carries a corresponding responsibility 3 Pardon Is somehow made dependent on conduct 35 Heart forgiveness Is a complete blotting out of sin tVKBVnAYTUUTlItt Verses 2J Perplexing questions are safely referred to Jesus Jesus knows the mind of God Jesus is willing to lead a tOdo the will of God Jesus will finally be the judge of our conduct Verse Judgment though long delayed comes finally to every servant Prolonged stewardship never becomes real ownership We must all someday give an account to God The books long used will be one day audited Verses Gods long patience is no ground for wrong doing To continue in sin because God bears with us is unwise To squander our days because life is long is To misuse blessing lecausc of their abundance is thoughtless Verses Gods demands- our with others No man is indebted to us as we are to God In forgiveness there is no room for arithmetic The unforgiving soul is unpardoned and unpardonable Verses unmerciful excludes himself from pardon Absolution is worthless to the vengeful man Forgiveness binds us to pardon the truly penitent Our forgiveness of others must he heart real The of I to a fond eremite And a to and beguile other a delight mid now to me give mo 1 the of jbooip Home Homo homo like home theres no like Money to Loan At cent on Firotoiae for Heal Queen of Liverpool Montreal Mutual for Confederation Life See Corner of Street Word comes from South Africa that the military bands never play the fa- refrain of Home Sweet Home Not it is prohibited by common consent it is felt not to be in taping the purpose or spirit of the occasion of their being in the Transvaal Some how or other our boys brave in ail things else do not care to face the sweet heart visions the familiar strains of this tune recall and hence the bands avoid playing it This song Charles says has done more than statesmanship or legislation to keep alive in the hearts of the people the virtues that Sourish at the fireside and to recall to its hallowed circle the wanderers who stray from it And yet sing ularly enough the gifted author never knew what it was to have a wner Maciu was To thee Ill return overburdened by Tug htjrtq will on mo there Ho more from that cottage again I roam- Be it ever- too bumble theres no place like borne I Homo Home Sweat a weak home theres no place like home Two Main A Fresh Supply a Wert of A Lard o The beet aud Mildest on the Market today A trial will con- you Alio Rolled Corn Meal fiuiter Cneeso Potatoes pickles Belt Canoed Cora Pickled Bologna Gam tad Totgoe o filled on a after the death of his mother which occurred when be had reached the age of thirteen- Indeed the nameless charm of his deathless song is doubtless due to the heart hungerfar home destined never to be gratified which was developed in his younger years and which appears never to have left him John Howard Payne was born- in the city of New York June In his youth he was remarkably pre cocious At the age of fourteen he edited a weekly paper The Thespian Mirror The following year he en tered Union College and became the editor of a paper called He left school before gradu ation and going on the stage he as sumed the character of Young val Hid appearance at this time is thus described Nature bestowed up on him an eye which glowed with in telligence and animation A more x- softness intelligence was never associated in a human countenance and bis face was a true index of his heart This was before he had become thru his long struggle with misfor tune Having lost the of lite early affection he never and his life was by many other blighted hopes Payne was the author of a dramas- In one of these Clara or the Maid of Milan appear the words of Home Sweet Home Al most everything he wrote has ahead been forgotten but one song will keen so long as hearts beat responsive to the tCiidrr It ap peared as follows Mid and we Beit ever theres no place like homel A from the to hallow us Which the neer met Home Sweet home place like home theres noplace like borne Ad exile from borne En vain Obi ray lowly thatch cottage eain The that at my Mil- Give mo with the peace of dearer than all Home home I There no place like bom theres no like home I Payne was appointed United Stales consul at Tunis Africa in which office he held at the bis death in There amid the dusky aspects and the fallen columns of that ancient land hard Ifie sit ting on the ruins of Carthage there in the shadow of the broken de jected column of his life be laid him down to die He waswjvich- and at once everything about him was seized to pay his debts For thirtyone years his ashes re posed in a foreign grave In Corcoran a wealthy American philanthropist had hie hud brought to this country juried in the beautiful Oak Hill took place June of the of a national to the memory of the dead author Mr Chill Oil read original poem two stanzas of follow- The exile and now In ashes shall repose ell weary past That here the end the drama close wanderer in a distant bis has ft double Felt the warm of a hand Anil pcels of a mothers stored trail of a bear in Rocky Col S sud denly caught eight of three liears a and two cubs at foot of a steep guiley was a tempting sliot and a the steep and be- the bears could reach him there was plenty of time to reload so the thought The is in Life and Advcriturca of J man fired and kilted one of the cubs and wounded the mother TJib next moment he was sliding down the slope of frozen snow towards the bears who were climbing up to take revenge on their Down down he went almost falling over the old hear who made a vicious grab at him with her paw as he pass She turned quickly and hall- sliding half rolling followed him A minute later Col reached the foot of the slide shaken and confus ed minus his cartridge pouch For- he bad held on to his rifle hut his hand was so unsteady that he dared not risk a shot although the bear was upon him At his right was a boulder and he sprang behind it and waited On came the bear she passed the end of the scrambled over the rocks and reared not live paces from where the hunter awaited her His hand was steady- enough now The express rang out and she fell dead literally at the hunters feet Another shot and the cub toppled over and rolled down the slide It was a narrow escape for the col but he maintained that three hears made a pretty good bag and were worth all the risk o- Fully people were present among- them being President Arthur members of his cabinet arid other- prominent government officials Home Sweet- Home was sune ly a full choir the entire audience rising and uniting in singing the last stanza while the exercises were in pro gress the following tribute was re ceived by telegraph from Will Carle- ton I Although today with reverent tread I mny no join heart s the living dead Who wrote the song A handsome monument surmount ed by a bust of the poet now covers the grave On the front of the shaft is the inscription John Howard Payne Author Horn Homo Bom June Died April On the reverse side are the follow ing lines which were also on the tombstone which marked his resting place in Bore thy gentle spirit fled To With angola mid to home sweet home Information Russia has decided to begin the new century January by adopting the Gregorian calendar and so keep ing lime will the rest of the world instead of being eleven days behind as at present The unexpected protraction of the Boer war need not alarm Englishmen since much longer wars have been fought by them within this century Napoleon declared war against Eng land in May lttUif the previous war between the two countries having on ly terminated by the treaty of Amiens in October The war of 1803 lasted till April 1814 when Paris sur- to the allies and Napoleon was sent as prisoner to Elba where her arrived on May He escaped from in March and recom menced the war which finally termin ated with Napoleons defeat at the battle of Waterloo on June having pearly years Napoleon was sent as prisoner to St Helena where he died in The European power that has been most At war during the century has been Turkey thirtyeight years of it as against sixtytwo of peace The se cond on the list thirty- two years of warfare not counting last fatal campaign Then came France with twentyseven years Rus sia with Great Britain had no less than twentyone Ger many not counting Prussia follows with fourteen Sweden with and Denmark with nine Our own coun try during this century has escaped with three foreign wars one civil strife the Philippine insurrection and a bakers dozen of Indian campaigns the longest of which was the war Colliets Weekly o The employees of the Dominion Cotton Companys- millat Magog Que who ate on strike became riotous and two of militia called out on Tuesday to main tain order July A soriouBaoiidtiOt occurred this after noon on tho farm of Mr Burt on the concession of ajMr Burton was driving up a hill near borne a trade broke and the- its occupant ran back on a- pile of stones it resulting His leftKip and eight- leg MrVBurton has been in poor health- for a number of years this being his third accident his lee having been broken twice before rj Talk Mens Fine Lace Boots for Mens Fine Dong Lace Bouts for Mens Fine Box Call Lace Boots for Ladies Fine Dong Oxfords for II f Look at a few of thorn o I f Ladies Fine Dong Oxford Cloth Toi Ladies Fine Dong Oxfords Mens Good Tweed Suits lor Mens Extra Good Tweed Suits for Mens Extra Fine Worsted Suits 75 attfl ape r i- SEAT -o- have an that art is a pitting a atone in a swamp under a bunch of cattails Or World Over la Dr Kidney- direct and combined action on both the kidney and liver Dr Pills are th moot valuable a family medicine and positively cur constipation all forme of Mr John White tawa writes Dr KidneyLiver pals or deranged liver and in back with excellent My for iorak trouble and hout the and In entirely cured a family medicine hundreds of iamlllfs would not think of ketntr without Dr KidneyLiver Pills vegetable In and remarkably prompt effective in One a dose a box at all dealers or Bates and Co fnodatitiK sized for Pupila Mi owidi Factory Oat fl If you and I should wake from sleep A century from now to the grave wed want to creep A century from now Wed witness such a starling change Find everything no wondrous strange Wed hurry back across the range A century from now A woman forty fat and fair A century from now May warm with grace the Speakers chair A century from now The Cabinet may lie a flock Of girlies gay of hat and frock Who talk but who wont mend a sock A century from now The people all will on wings A century from now Not heavenly but patent things A century from now Theyll soar aloft devoid of fear On pinions of a chainless gear And change their fiyeis every year A century from now Therell be restaurants at all A century from now The home will have no dining hall A century now The chemists all our wants will fill With food in tablets- and to still Our thirst well simply take a pill A century from now The Future Wifeless Telegraphy Of the future of wireless telegraphy Nikola says in the Century Magazine Stationary waves in the earth mean something more than mere telegraphy without wires to any dis tance They will enable us to obtain important specific results im possible otherwise For instance by their use we may at will from a sending station an electrical elTcct to any particular region of the globe we may determine the relative position or course of a moving object such as a vessel at sea the distance traversed by the same or its specri or we may send over the earth a wave of electricity travelling at any rate we desire from the pace of a turtle up lightning speed With these development we have every reason to anticipate in a lirao not very far distant most telegraphic messages across the oceans will be transmitted without cables For distances we need a wireless telephone which needs no expert operators The Accommodating prices for the Trustees MFC GO Notre Dame St Montreal P Write for Limited Bay St Toronto a Ah we are overstocked we will sell them for a short time ATA GOME AT ONCE Farm for Bale hair of lot concision own of Klojf consisting or ICO tcra In an culUvnttoo For further apply of reigned JO A DAVIDSON Wanted per month 1 loduetrlal Home PROMPTLY Write for oar nd AH WtdUd- Send iu A a or of your In to Itii probably We Woutrcal TRENT NOTICE TO by fully Id prompt JydLifatch i though lit- rioa distributed Pltcni of MARION MARION end lfc0 for con- Canal bo- will two Plans of forooa of at oSce of tbe Depart of and at at isf wheroforcas of teoijErCAnbeobtaJoedon and after Tut July day July the cf Arm there be attached tbeactaal of the full name tbe alios place reel- the deuce of each member of the t Friday August greater spaces to be toe or about thirteen mora rational becomes communication ween Men without wires The cable is not on ly an easily and costly In strument but it limits in the speed of transmission by of a certain electrical property inseparable from its construction A plan for effecting comraunicatioa with out wires ought to have many times the working capacity of a cable while it will involve incomparably less expense Not a long time will pass I believe beforo communication by cable will become obsolete for not The accepted thus only will signalling by this new be returned to rcepeenve partly be quicker and cheaper but also whoso tenders art not much safer By using some new I net bind means for isolating which I have contrived an almost perfect privacy can be secured School FROM JULY 3RD THE I I for rum of the for section must be of and will be forfeited it for public ficHoolhouw at ww My fire to ac cept toe or By order of Canals without authority will paid for It t J TORONTO an excellent opportunity for Teacher and Students to enjoy fa Bborthand And enter at any time spend from Itvo up- at Write for rffjbt Into fall Term wblcb op ens Toronto Compare the Bra with any weekly for home news

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy