Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 10 Dec 1903, p. 6

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Slllll;-II 0630!] 30 V cuuuc uIIsc_|. _We` ipend :4 days` in 'making`each bot- tip of -,Liq;"i'o1one,-d tho" I"e sult'is liquid oxygen?-the--best t in'g*injthe'wor1d font `you. yet certain destruction to disease V...-.'..... -hie-nip: :1`.-.' Lkmoume-laden . are the known get-m_diseues. A!1t!i'diili:ini f<:si: do!orthhe__traxbles id to"`!i'e`lgS` Nitu rd' o v?:`reouic*' we `gm-I'ns.4 and teIn1tI.__II"tiudirect and un- certs" `inf -% M `mm.'im em. whemm they; reynnd 'the_'. rest: to. an; ihevitalzle. B1 dept:-oying tin cans: of the ti`-6iuAbl"e`, it xiifgiidbly gn di"u;ue,' % n'gAt";: fofm into the blood that no, germ could live in any membrane or tissue. 1 3;-nun-pnnn Anna {kn} THE RYE Live In any lncnlnrunc ur uanuc. Liquozone does that. The results are so certain that we ublish on every bottle an oer cf 81,000 or a germ that it can- not kill. Yet oxygen is Nature : greatest _to'nic-the veryvsource of your vitality. Its eects are exhilajrgiting, purifying vitllizing... Bnt'g,rj!;s are vegetables; anti this excess of oxygen-'-the very life of an animal;-is deadly tovegeteble matter. um '.'....-.41 .1 Anud in"mnI:imr`pm-h" hat. com: Conn (`nin- Inc IttnIu_|, m gag -I7, rVI$H I adghtfmnu.-sue Bowel `Troubles l'\.aun-1-n__l`AI1I A T ,z++++_+++o $ A 6 you, yet Clj(l_l_n ucapxrucuuu up uIa_IUv. gain-ms. wherein the Liquoaonc-laden THE NEWEST BOOK. We have them} CATHOLIC PRAYER BOOK. Cnrncu -or ENGLAND Pmnrnns AND Hnms, Mmuonxsr AND PRESBY'I`El`.IA1\' Bums, in all bindings. V - "See SCOTT'S STOCK anyway befor purchasing BOX OF STATIONERY-- . V A 34- L 1 0, nS g?1l1!z%As O11r stock `of crass-Out Saws, Axes, sleigh galls, Oalq Ties and I-lalters,l-lorse Blank- ets, RoI:aoL1s,L'i8;;lu_io%s and Hockey stick: is the up-to-da.te at lowest prices. WW0 attribute this to the fact that we brave the goods that are required?--at prices we can save you money on. If you 1je anything in the stove line see our stock. %W "can save you money by purchasing at R`A`R'R'I"I`. R `RTE. IIADTIXIT AD~'I:' Qrlvrnn ...HAMBLY 6* BAKER... Our busines s this season has been away beyond our expectations. V nvvj V 3 TKCC WV BAR'1z_1E`sBIG HAhWAii`'T5FT Ha rdwa re, Stoves andTinware . . . ...HAMBLY 8 BAKER. . Of all kincig in stock or mad` 3% es. Q!'8P0=and Requisites furnished. For. ANY Mnumm or THE Fuumr Nornnza Mom: Arrnoparun THAN A ` Dise9ae- _T'\for its Subscribers at Dnnssma Guns, Wonx Buxxtrs, Punsns, Hum CAI{ENmLns AND Xmas Cums in endless varietv. ___, __ _. ----.-v apvguau AALLLUUL Abltltn WATERMAN;: IISLSAL FOUNTAIN viii? AND" STROUD. THE Al)_\_[ANCE With Any Paper In I up-Yhng-non uuwrwu Idvct.-'|`!ouhl.-I llnlath-Ndunlgh Iluny Heart Troubles Pilot.-Pncurnonh It nolmutum skin Diane: Scrotum--syphilis IN THE DOMINION EVERY ONE GUARANTEED Clubbing Rates Dandruff-Dropoy be U:-wwu Throat Tro """' 2.ema--Er aipehn Tubercu1os`iIsbk' Fever:--Gal stones Tumors_mQ,. Goitre-Gout Varicocexg Gonorrhea-meet W A:`1m1}" `\i;.V5}n wi m""' m"" 3:: 315:`; cam" r-e-3:1 wm`i' ``"-cu _ In no.-rvoun__dAe_ my I. q we um, .,. nu are or rammed bloodl" nervous dc lily quozonc acts :1 her. accomplishing what no drugs cu do?` _#i-- ---- 1.iquozonc-our tndemnrk name-now appear; on evcry bottle of genuine liquicd ouong, 't ' `Hon ' ' um VVVIUN I on): may nouppnr 1 , pg the blank: and mm it t - th:'i:uid 3100:: 30.. 13 Kiosk 8%.. Chicnzo. F `'3' uu,_ av lull. ~ 2:-.. .,7`-"". :'.~":'."?"7." .";'.'. _ ., '3 mugero -another xgmbygu gquni __l __..__- -. vvuUIvIIIIOOIO DOIIOIIooIo0Ivoo. i I have never tried Liquozone at Powieym : Liquled Ozone. but if you um an 1 L I soc. home free 1 will an n. W M ` ny ooao-oooogg...., ' I.-..- ___.-_ A_l_.l 9 v 0000000000000 u-ac: uv vuugpuull WUBICVCT. Liquozone cqots 50c. and 31. "cur our `nus courou for this oer may not nm... ...1_ ..... 50. Bottle Free. Give full uddr~so--write plainly, BAGs,'at all prices. lV) ucx mm: 10, UV vvuvlw 5l - . ..i:h-o-9`-analog Otounch `hon rout Troub berculosis 01 la umofg_l1 I...- ,.,.-uucu UIUOQ. V` quozone I vital. . can do. oociiolinooloolcooo -Wl"lt0 nlninh JVIJI Alla U51 Idllugg uvvll Ilhivuusuvq -tfn 1901 there were 7,200 ' females and 6,468 male lunatic: over ten years of age in Scotland. Their for- -mer employments included: Medical prbfeslon, twenty-ve females and: `twenty--six males; teaching, eighty- two "females and `fifty-four. males; art, ' mueiciand drama. twenty females a_.nd V twenty-four males; and domestic ser- ; ee. 1,740 female: , and thirty-ve` Z- Zllul-U 1uI'(I.I'.'O' 1t;r'en.=m-kable story. says vrn. Liv- olt: V =ft9m`'Mel1rr 33,33 all ntiged :1 `hora: % ...?v99H1%a 3? mm .a. a-my 1 : J:t"towo.rds a.1e'x1c,o.h-I1dl,na"11y.` 7: -' "`1t ,*thrdi1gh "if. 'hjod;z'o V Wirhy : "3" -'A&I..:.`- 1*. ' .__. A_.i`.L sh` ,yk.obo$fond.4 Sat xtho ' `exact 5 IJU uuc uagcu van Altogether. 5,686 women are class- ed as employers, and 42,418 women are "working on their own account," 7-. 1l'\1 Liana.` -an9uu H Onn `nu-u\n'Inn V (WU. - _ma!oa. DIVE, ugtuuau au'x,uuu usaauuc There s were no women engaged in the "defence of the country," but many were employed in occwpations usually reserved for men. Two. only are described as "dealers in money," - but one is described as a dock labor- er, one is classed as a. co achmen,"` two are classed as builders, one as a. chimney ,sweeper, thirty-seven are on- gaged in `cycle and motor manufac-3` ture, ve rank as farm grieves (man-_ egers), one is engaged `in omnibus oervi_ce."- one is 9, paper-hanger, ano- ther is a plasterer, and two - are , `house agents. 1 'L`L-..-4`-_- K RCA Ilvtuvuuann nun n`nn-4.` The new uollume of the Scotch cen-. sus throws some light on the female portion of the population. In 1901 there were in Scotland 4,472,108 puf- sons, of whom 2,173,755 were males, and 2,298,348 were females. Ofthis total, 1,982,812, or 44 per cent... followed some occupation. _ _There ._were, however,'1,198,618 females gv- ` or ten years of age who were return- ed as unoccupied and non-produc- tive," against 264,893 males. mu--- um- -an uvnrnnn nnamnn in louvuyn nvlavuvvuu uolsoaa ovnnqvauouun win: "Lady Warwick is, however, scar- cely kinder in her appreciation of the saintly Mary Rich,:whosc famous. diary is one among the most curious `of spiritual human documents in ex- istence. A lilacvviiw VI II `no vv -v-Us Penelope deserves to take her place among the romantic heroinesof the world. even it shedid have but an attenuated respect for the -marriage tie, for she was the belovod Stel- ila" of Sir Philip Sidney, and, but for her worldly parents, would have been his wife. However, concerning this lady, her modern namesake is very. severe, observing` that she is better forgotten than remembered. 14' nplcn `l7.._--y{n`- {n L :::::: `Int! I\IV|_ rw," " ` It in amazing how many famouu loll}. lrom William the Conqueror to Lord Nelson, have had some sort 0! coohnection with Warwick Castle. Well and apiritedly told "are the lot"o`ries of the two famous women. Pohelope Devereux and Mary `Boyle, who both bore the proud title 01 Countau of Warwick. .I___,,_, A I, I, __ I TZ$C VI V VI, II? VI UIIV `I Will IIDCIII IIVJ9. Bviuchampn, Nevilles, Plantagvneta, Du,d1e'i,1"Richeu and last. not least, GI_?:'e:vi `whose life histories were intgarwgvn with that of the historic --Inagv to After -dealing with the Saxon and Norman nobles who had the good fortune to "own the first of the many cuties built at Warwick, Lady War- wi'c'k `divides the rest of her work in- Vt`oV`.`ve"Ie'ctibhs , each describing ex- llagttively one of the great familiar, L Bedmchnmnn. N evillas_ Plnntn,n'cne1`s_ tr vnua JIVVD She tells very prettily the roman- tic story of Guy. Earl of Warwick, andhis wife, Phyllis, and in setting forth the famous adventures of Lady Godiva-who was, ` by the way. a conhection of the Lord Warwick oi her day-quotcs the witty and little- known stanzas which appeared in `tho Etonian of 1780, and which are cer- tainly the best ever written on the subject. Ate..- ,A-..I:..... ...uaI. an- a- _-._ -...I av au vllu guuu Uya Some most curious letters, pathe- tic, `humorous and politically im- portant, are qcuttered through the thousand pages, and here and there Iaagdy Warwick indulges in amusing Adigressions concerning certain of her husband's ancestors and their often eventful lives. . 4,11, not .- nu: vounusal OI, WIIWICK [I68 `ll! Igdxpubliohed her" `histoflcal "work". "V;|v'rw1cI_:_ vcgqtlc and It: Earls, from Baxbn '1`ixfn`es" to t!1" eV"l`_`x-csnt`; 'Da.y.' fit ; is ol.tdn"the ' case, with `book; compiled and -written. by those who, .Ivl_aiJo having no `pretense to special lttcgary ucquircnlents, yet. possess an Iblbfrbing interest; hi `and knowledge" at Jtheir subject. Warwick Castle ind` Ito Earls" is full 'of valuable um- `tarial '1or'the zfuture historian. and cqbtains many `charming glimpses of thojdaily life` led by our great nobil- ity in times gone by. Qulihnn vmAnd~ II ...... .._ 1..L...... _-LI.- WA IWIOK CASTLE. jg" ' iii; Warwick rum -0 and mo and no` ' ` - , . .nIIn. . .nt contains in the tnsmaljlcst I A t A _possible bnlkall`tl1estrcngthe;1ing ` ; 2 and stimulating p_ropprd of. I, i'a_nd tinvigqrating that thousands are .gtting,. THE B_QV'R'IL HABIT-"-bec.'ausc they like it 7, > `\VdIinlng-NourishIng-8_ tlmulat|uig.- D. ncst Bf. i and tisg so pailatable; rftcshing V --becausewxt IS tihctdcal cold wcatltet bcvcmgg. Countesn 61,). 'W:.I`?vvick has just : mhlinhur :IiAii -I..o'..;.'.'a....| ....- -- AI_ Iqno_ `II'dOl'Ilo' V lootch W: non. ~ w-~ . " - _~.,, \\e:e S* Th7e:r`;is haith and sungt in every draught` of j - % BOVRII E L piclal I vuuu-ac yawn en. uuguu uver U18 lull!!- Many important changes in the so- liie oi the country were brought about by the Norman Con- ` . Jqueet. One was the decrease of drunkenness. Sobriety was: not the T , least of the virtues of the Norman; | The custom _oi pledging has `come down to us iroman early period in 3 our annals, and iewoi us, as we -- perform` the ceremony at the festive board, call to remembrance the an- . cient historical associations connect- ` ed with the usage. It is generally agreed that the word` "pledge" is de- rived from the French pleige," ~a surety or gage. Some studentsoi the past say we derivethe saying, ` I'll pledge you. from. a practice insti- tuted in -the days when the Danes were a power in this country. ' . It is asserted that.it was no un- common occurrence for the treacher- ous invaders to invite the Saxons with whomvthey came in contact to drink with them, and while drinking to plunge a knife or` dagger into ' their throats. It came to pass that a man would not drink with a stran- ger until someone undertook to give a nledtrn fnr Min anrmu rm... ...1..-.:.-.--. vuv oovvvuvn sung vaav . van '1: V` tected by high sides, so thgt the Duke can go in safely into the inela- sure where he keeps the -wilder ani- mals of his wonderful zoo at Wo- burn. Somoof these beasts are in-_- clinedto be restive-at `times. and the Duke had 9. narrow escape-hfrom. be- ing damaged by a large. specimen of; deer which turned ferocious one: day % while- the` Duke and a somqwhat; stout friend were intthe inclosurd ins-` specting `various . newcoznu-a.i ..The A in ` closures Hare` "fenced; round; with ivory ; high: palings, and the Dul(e;,; 'whog::.',:is~i "active ""'/..1i'I`I`1n -w`a`.s.: ion}: {the ; iititdidegrbut his? rriehd:V;hadg=m,<>l?6:tdj,1.,'{ nbultw and :;son l1`y iqacaned ;' by` 71.33 .':j:very 7, - illmiw "9iil=:~r:hn9q*thc-:.m!M3i$n6h- 1 *>~n i1;1:uwFthi;`rr:II!no`+ * i . -* 1, J `h 1 ~ The Duke -of Bedford has caused. a good deal of amusement to the in- habitants of Woburn by his latest in- vestment, 9. sort.of miniature armor- ed train, consisting of a. truck, paint- ed brown like the Duke's livery and drawn by a small steam motor. Both ' the` motor and the -truck are, pro- LAAOAJ Eco `datuk nt`1us an `R155 `L. .,v ynvvvvv luul. It i genera1_ly believed that young Edward the Martyr was in 979 `as; sassinated at the instigation of his false-hearted step-mother, the infev mous Elfrida. He was stabbed in the back while drinking stirrupcup at Cor'feCastle. The object of the mu:-h 'der was to place`Elfrida. s son ontho throne. . Some writers believe that from this tragedy we derive til! min . tom of pledging; wo vwu--coca In \.lJlLll\. Some curious notes on -this theme i appear in the History of V Great "Britain." by the Rev. Robert Henry, D.D. In the second volume, publish- ed in 1774, it is stated: Iian Eng- plishman presumed to drink inthe pre- sence of a Dane, without express per- mission. it was esteemed a great mark of disrespect, thatnothing but his instant death could expiatef Nay, the English were so intimidated that they would not adventure to drink even when they were invited until the Danes had pledged their honor for their safety. The man who .pIedgede the "drinker stood byfwcapon in hand to protect him." ` T4- 9... -uuu muucuuu .uuueI't.0OK E0 SIIVB a pledge for his safety. The pledger ohen held up his knife or sword to protect the person drinking. An un- protected manewas an easy victim {or a foe when engaged ' in the act of taking a. drink. ' gangs- n----A--- ~ `` ' '- - _ not use; vv I_-`y u~v vuv At3UJ.uull . The Dane; drank to great. xcuu, and during the time" their Kings pc- , cupied the throne or ElIglai1d_ drunk- Innesa cast a.. blight over the? land. `font: `VIA'ulvIt`u-C .Inn-_.- 1.. LL. _- UIIIQQ VII 0 Let them be very temperate at church. wake: and pray earnestly end tuner there no drinking or unseem- linesa. aw-ovaua vuuuac Ill villi! uxuuun. "Lo; no priest be an ale-sop.) not `In any way not the ~1'eeman.'f_ Ioeetol loin or Milking opposed _. ` .31 I09`; v ld['os.'V V ` King Edger must be credited with doing .n- noble work in; the reforms- tion 0! his subjects troy. the banexui habit of hired "drafting. '1`hisino ne;rch lnenrly anticipated by 1` thousand yeah `the legislation proposed -by the ` United Kingdom Alliance. Acting on. the advice of `Dunstan, "says Strutt, he put down many, ale-houses, `suffer- ing only one to `exist in ovillage or smell town. He iurther` ordained that pins or -naillsshould be fastened into drinking ,cup or horns, at stat- ed distances; so that whoever should- drink beyond these marks. at one draught should be liable to '5 severe punishment. Archbishop Dunstan was - equally zealous in checking intern- perance in the church. The following extracts are from a. code drawn up by him: ' 441' -4 .._ .I'_(..I..._ 1.; -n-._-.1 1.. LL- '7;-2* Dfiests beware of dfunkenness, 'u_1d be diligent in warning and cor. recting others in this matter. "'46 1g -nun`;-5 I... A... -1- _-- - _.-__ C. QUICK ' Int no drinking bi allowed in the church. 111- _A __;,, g rm`. Dukvi Ainorod Truly. '8` IIFOIMING KING :-nnj anvwuuu UJ 111.11.- In winoer they hunt caribou or trap furred. `animals in the woods, because then `the coast is blocked with ice. `8 In March and April the seal shery ` is prosecuted among. the oes that. cover the Grand Banks. aFrom May until October the main sheries, al- ready enumerated; are pursued, and 'se_1s and boats have to be repaired. nets renewed, rewood cut in the for- ests and hauled out with dog teams ence. The Newfoundlander works 1 hard and braves terrible dangers on seavand. land, and every village has its stories. of grim disaster and long list of widows and orphans. The `whole. interior is almost de- '_void of population, except for a. few 4 lumbering `settlements. You may travel hundreds of miles by the `rail- -` way which pierces the island and not : gap. 5 hnncm ..nn.....4. '- -4...- -I-~~ and all themultitude of duties inci- Zdental to "such conditions of `exist- `When winter `comes round again ves- ; s 9 i 1 ...,y Ivallvll yaunuca bile Island ~ a. house except a. trackman s hut. -his, however, -is changing now. The island's case is somewhat like" that of Alaska, which was pronounced ut- terly valueless when purchased by the United States, but is now found to possess immense resources. So with Newfoundland. Its agricultural, min- eral and timber wealth is coming to be recognized as of the first order. Capital is approaching" the island to help in "developing its `stores of bur- ied_ wea1th--buried in the teeming weters,round the coast, in, the "un- worked mines of the interior and the untrodden forests which clothe the virg"in`soil. The iron mine ' at `Bell Island; Gonceptionu-Bey, supplies the era;wj"=ma.terie.l~ for the Dominion` Iron &'i'Steel 0ompe.ny a smelter. at Syd. Jney. ` I The .cop pe1-..m'lne_ia,t .Tllt Covei; lssyone .01.; the rich.6,Bt_.in,ht119i `world nB69ton.is u _.-.m. . ..u=_u:.uuu uy , a. "clan con-. Zerng; $'vn1"n` gs` "s_e.'!j,ti@tOf b9` equal` to: |l O' b_AOlt"Qf now : V0rl;1h'~' 1;, .'w':I`he J uJ van: uDuUlU1lL. - , people have freeeland and free access to the forests, so that they can build their own houses and yes,- sels. `Every man has his own boats and skiffs, or his schooner, if he can afford it. He is also his own black- smith and sailmaker. He is a. thor- ough sherman and sailor, a compe- tent woodman, and a good hunter. ~'l`he isolation of the settlement throws [everybody on his own re- sources, and a. man `has to acquire a prociency in every trade likely-to be needed by him- - Tn o-:...A.... .LI__ I, A -- vvvurunnnvwo The people are frugal and thrifty, land can supplement the proceeds at their catch 0! cod and other shes by tilling small farms near their hon`1'es'.'. Usually these `are mere gardens, but they 3'1`-llce to `provide the owners with Vegetables for dometic con"- sumption. and often for sale". Almost -every family" has its little hoard` of coin secreted `against atime oi mis- fortune or distress.` Prior to the dis- astrous hanll failures in the islandfin .1894 nearly all of` thismoney was held in "bank" notes,` carefully "disposed in secure hiding places, and when the -local banks collapsed the holders do: `away by the sherfolk. these notes lost heavily. The lesson has not been lost on them; now they will put aside nothing but gold, and itis `estimated that along the south- ern coast, where the Americans fre- quent in quest or herring and ' bait, there is over two million dollars in United States gold pieces hidden 'IV`In.. ..........1- ,1. - _-, u - - - -sxsmnn ,ooLoNY vv v- val vvuaauvw Us uuucly pl Ulln'UUbU- Despite their hazardous pursuits, the isolation of their villages and in- frequent intercourse with the world outside, these Newfoundland sher folk are happy and contented, peace- iul and. law-abiding. Less-than 100 constables suice to maintain order over this whole area, and half oi these_;are quartered in St. J ohn's,. whence they are detailed as occasion requires. There are thirty magis- trates. each receiving $500 to 3700 a, year, and having jurisdiction over specic stretches of coast. Thevonly cases they have to adjudicate usually are sherydisputes, and the average of murders in the whole island is but onevin ten year. The penitentiary j at St . John's, where all offenders are -conned, except for most trivial mis-' j deeds, rarely has more than forty I "fYI_- ._--_I- -_- 0,, I - .- ._. I way of the St. Lawrence is in many` `respects the most -remerkeble oi Brie tnin dependencies." Although its "dreh is I `g"riteri"th's.`n` 0 that 0 oz Malena. its.populs.tion~is less thanjythet ;'J.`oro'nto.*j= last census fsliowed if to 0 have = 217.937 inhebits`.nts__, 0. besiqes 8,947 on="Laihrador. ' 0! *v this` ltotul; prssticelly all .are.1999'-`$1.8-#9113 0 the seeboerd, because shing is the xnsfin-' `industry; therefore everybdiiy must live: as near the -ocean `as pos- sibie, Consequently every cove creek rouiailj `the cogsstfllne at 4.000)` miles its 5 `little settlement, `sow thllt raltogether there "L362 olj these , oi "which" `89`lr:`l_Iuve . less 100:" `each. `The ; census shows 888'ise`ttlm`e`nt's' of `them ,1 to - .`.l5__'_`| . persons, 294 of from 25.10 50. 157.} I or !romi50. to 75, and 10, oi 75 to 100. . V. "f i `The voyager, as he cruises don: the . coast, can see these` little lets perched in the inlets, the whi_t`e-V-L washed houses showing against the rugged clis like 1ns.tch-boxeI . on; 3" well. and the -little cockleshells ' oi bouts tossing on -the see."-oujtside - as` the hardyishermen trawl the ocean. oor ior their harvest. Of the 136.`- 000 human beings in the island who are overiiiteen years oi age, 83,000 are engaged in the sheries, tor cod, herring, salmon, lobster. seal and whale, and of the total` exports of $9,000,000, more than $8,000,000 worth consists of shery products. | mnifn Chain `naIIlan|nJ`4;un- can ---- --3&- canddea. sister colony at the .,m. I Erna VILLAGES ~ mo THE PEOPLETOF 1 ' % NEWFOUNDLAND". T with u rogupcgou o!_138.000' luau no '3 - `Ilia. 30 1.803 Iottlolnbnts. 894 ` or Inna : `nu; Lou up. no rm... : hob-`ox an ring: Nuxhbu of Inhabi- huh Arc. lngsgoil ill: risking. %ii`iI1:5%%1vo RTHE1zfN ADVANCE I-cu uuauao .&f'reoei-p_l'.v of 20 . '~`*7 :Q9t!- % who MAaTx;re%nztn:c1:iAN1o*siPUIE TAB OAP hegls and poftens theskin while romptl 'o1ean.s1_ng` it of grease. i oil`. rust. etc. nvaln`uiblo`for `mushy :- lim. 1' A ` ' ~ on. runs: aw. mvamanle for `moohan- 1 lion. farfri mar,-tamon.`;FREE ` `k ` }..- 925.90;-.t21s9;_ -.A.1`: >r.' Methodist mission rooms recently from R. W. Large, M.D., superinten- dent of the Bella. Bella. Hospital, Bri- tish Columbia, says: "Owing to` so much work around this part of the 3 country at present, it is almost im- ` ; possible tovget the people to attend 1 church, says Dr. _La.rge. "Indians t have been keeping from drunkenness I of late, due to better co-operation 7 between the managers of the`va.riou -works and the; pplicemen, `although . 1 several oi the tribe have just` lately oto.und_yout` a way to `manufacture an intoxicating liquor `from 9. mixture "of berries, 1`-`ic9,`r|`l88.J`. beans and `ap- 'p1'ea'. The rlngleadere. hdvivaver; -have `.Iinco.`beon l`cnpturi*;~' . now 1 coni_lnod.`l'n P'ro_Vi'nciul TJo.il`.2~ Han! " ` "slid -. 3oln_d. V V,-2 . .._ .. .. . f...`-._....v-`.'..-~-.... -7 2 1, 7 - ' k A letter receivegl at the Toronto } N \ `I .._,.__._. Q60. re. however, only" a I mi -61 the a5ve1oj5ments'n6w' taking I-(`A ` 'QI|I'|)i '01:` "main ' .0-`Inn. sunny lnvuc III III`! ,1(l0nl OI EH3- - ieh j'soc_i'e'ty -toiday, use that mode and: its `highest, boldest and raost. lucid expression ? naturally in the man who holds the highest. olce in j the State. "There hava been plenty of cynical. Prime. Ministers in our his- ' tory. - Melbourne was a cynic; Palmg erston was s. cynic; Disraeli was a cynic; but it was the cyn'ici'sm oi the world'-ws-1') . or the astute, `or the adventurer. ` It remained {or Mr. Bal-`-, {our-` to display the `cynicism ol ' `persi- ags. There are new personalities in political life, therefore, whom it is more dilcult to understand than the Prime Minister. If you talk even to people who are intimate with him, it is hard to nd two -who take exactly the same view of his character. There are those who will tell you that he has no human feeling at all, or that it he has any it is strictly conned to one or two individuals, and these 1 individuals do not belong to the ` ranks of the men who are his lead- ing political colleagues. On the oth- er hand, there are intimates of Mr. Balfour _who claim that he is a man of warm personal feeling and of 1 strong personal friendships, and who declare that of all the men they know, he is the one above all others ` to whom they would go in a moment 01 stress and difficulty. Again, who . can tell which is the real Arthur. Balfour as regards his ambitions and his treatment of other men? Is he what he `once said of himself, as a little child_ who has got to his" great position and is l able to retain it, almost_ in spite of himself, without conscious eflort--with as little calcul- ation of consequences as though he. were playing a -game. of golf or writ-1 ing an abstruse metaphysical essay? Or is he aman oi inordinate ambi- tion, who pursues his purpose with `all the cold astuteness of the race to which - h'e"belongs, and who uses `and then casts oi! other men as they. suit his policy "and his purpose?-T. P. O'Connor, in,M.'.A.P. -----u-cw: vs trvcv ZllI$I-"C -lUCI fusion 0"! no Rut. . u To treat everything in the lightest tone of persindlgo--ncv6r' for one 1210- , ment to rela.pso' into` mriousnesn-to hide real .loeling- md to o'.dvertiso.\In- real tegltng, uo_ that it it slyvpya imp evo-9_>l. .to any jwhcrv .re-1_it basins snd.aI!eqtation `ends-thisfia the dam- iniixt iibd_`in fl7arg`e "_necti6na' oi Exig-" .Iidn~nmhn_u..o,.;a.; an 4.5.: .....-.m. ; am Ohdrutrmld`-bt'~ilo [nun nun. KIIIIIOI Cl Crtbfiflli-'-CylIOOI hla g- ---O - V- cu-av nnvvv-vyuavulvu HUN I-19 . --- `I15 place, and tending? `to `draw -the people irom the sheries to iandtnr-. ing pursuits, and to make the island more in harmony with conditions such as prevail in the neighboring. colonies, so that it may be no longer a wilderness ` with a few thousand tis herfoll:"equatti'ng'on its iringe `of Ieahoard. Newfoundlantfe ultimate destiny. as almost everybody admits, . is` to be merged `into the` Canadian ' federation, and when that day comes Canada will acquire a. province as valuable {or its intrinsic wealth us because it is now the- only separated colony` in North America.--P. '1'. lb- Grath`. in The Globe. for the rights to Li uozone for Au;pxi' 5 W9, .t.eIt_.d $1111, pr ggcg, fqgyeats " `mas; ` '(li`IKcltg_'r'h|` 'f1xxg j,`we_ ' ' `ht !-hes'k`i1; ht sfiiHiK%`higheit pri ever paid for a scientic 7 *? mA7hA'A 'C`nh anp'3n.--`5-`:35;-coin? `I `Hana-"an; . W0? id'*Tthitprice'i-ibcauht;- : 1 uoafane `t .t%1%l3.9.=lsi.1l.;its $.11-;-!!!...!5! 9!! nof do wilout it. Any dng ,thpt,kil_1,'I 8m.':8.i,|..!_ .. to os=,I,.In.d" ,t .:iii,tI':'>fi1>"<= ukn-* ` T 19.. = .,h"*hif =PT|!`i3i=ii.h$. th` iInj:lo`y'v`lJiq iioi6ii c'3i16iie to: gen: troubles; and any.---physiciih I.'h0`-- `advent ! ilr almost ihelp1eu_ Ill. ffany agnn (hngnnn .. $3352 i'3I1`aJyp'f` 12` EZ{i;`3s"i' otherway tq dcsttoy the cause of any It in now in Auriga-:3: Dill` onnnc whn `VI III `[9131. It is new to America. and millions who need it dnn t`kn'ow of it. For that reason we make this:r,.emarks.b1.oer. V -We will bnyfthe first-bottle euaivgive.-it to yo_t1'if you need it. . We wi1l,.,do~ it willingly, ' gladly; `t'6"cbAn'v,i`nce y6u;jgft'A onc'e",a'x_n_i' tor- everflhat Liqudzohe doeikill germs. 1I1UIVJl$Il\o'IC Cllll IJ II\!|II\I drugdmoelcohol inf; It isth` "sco`v"e:y 6! PuIll.:th'e great German chemist, `who spent 2o]eeu61'1 it. V His objectwu to getideh an excess of oxygen in Itdple pr3&`3Z?'ni`?Z? 1f`;i?Z.`3l' :r ?6'J without killing `you. No man knows any PERSIFLAVGIAN Acvmcisu. wsAr:d% $99-9 O9 Liquoaone -liquidhxygen-is the only .o-n:InnI- flan; nun '17:`, norm-In 311 Glen In-Iv Liquoaone-is simply liquid ox yVgen_--no Quasi `rauunlnndl-nul Sc. 36. '. fa} 1.-4-a.I.A'.`.l-. .........J"_.... Lo link In own Liquor. M me- Boftl of Lihozdna ant} C3-ive to You to Try. gujuautvalz 0.33 Albert I 'y H... - .4. .. .. ._ _`_ 4 fotmgtlxkxgawn _in caudn p`9,{1 9_v-r|ley's Lxguigd Ozone.) r g 1 2`: -/..T.'\,2;`.'l'1`_) (vnwiw ` 'v ~ '.,..'.17 \$u@, V `B ` - '- "nu nxuuo xu auuun Va. an... to`Torder. Ro % -~ % . gs Ulf`P`-Dd Funeral Requisites r P1'0Inptly attended to. 1 in IE-`F " : _ or) stroudo Y 0 II I B ' ")7 |. v,11r.,!,.!.!!', 2.` I to`gfd6.

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