Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 31 Mar 1904, p. 7

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z* & in t c ncirmclatth t a c ic It wasa‘t much of a game. While the youug woman wasn‘t gsitting opâ€" posite tre young man, sho was sitâ€" ting sext to him, and every few minâ€" utes one or the other of them forgot to:play when it was his or her turn. Then, too, there were frequent â€" inâ€" quirics as to who took the last trick and what was trumps, and, altogeâ€" ther, the old man felt a good deal Lke ewerring ons one or two occasions. Finally he made up his minrd that pat‘esse fhad ceased to be a viritue. To game h:ad come to a etandst‘] while the FYOuDT nAOGNIK â€" AUenxmuamneat C tssn becianbe dudith i 4. B . _ fair. If you and lGladys sat opposite eacon other you would probably perâ€" sist in poking into each other‘s eyes, to the great detriment of the game." Naturally the younrg woman and tho youns man blushed, but they sa‘d nothing, and the game began. consent, it was evident that he would im time. ~fo% T us it happered that the cld man, wix» Lked nothing better than a .good games of whist or euchre or hearts, mvited Aim to a little game one eveniog, and, of course, he didn‘t feel that it would be policy to reluse. "You and mother,"" said the old min, referring to bis wife, "can blay against Gladys and me. That will be fair. If you and Gladys sat opposile] cnon OThO® Vn urnnmbt weak_srg20 000C Things had progressed to a point where the young man had been prac« tically received into the family circle. Whdo he hadn‘t yet mustered up sufâ€" ficiont courage to ask the old man‘s EPA OWEIT PRWAET TY UU HEUT. lto (’i*’“‘{)fi p” k Smnmnsmmmmmmmmmmemmemmmermemene | ready b>e HELD AN EXCELLENT HAND, | mewspapers, One end of the lake traffie is Listve nichnai. The other is Misovaia. The dis tance between them is 53 miles.: cane, without warning. When it strikes the surrounding hills, which nose out inâ€" to the lake in rugged ,precipitous promâ€" ontories, the hurricane changes to a eyâ€" clone, and the surface of the deep sea is twisted into the most appailing shapeas. Russian boatmen never attempt to weaâ€" ther Baikal storms if there is any hove of reaching the nearest shore. If the shore be astern sailors turn about and flee. If it be ahead they flee. Baikal terâ€" rilles the Russian not only in summer, but in winter. In winter it is equally dangerous. When the air holes close in the ice, as is frequently dome, there is an exploâ€". sion that can be heard for miles. The: surface of the ice becomes a voleano an!: huge mountains of ice shoot upward, fall , and disappear in the water, to reappear | at another place, crashing through the‘ frozen ice. The closing of an air hole 3n’ the ice of Lake Baikal might wreck the } Crzar‘s ice raidroad, simnks his cars, and ; rails, and possibly his soldiers, and com-’ pletely cut off communication until anâ€" | other route across the lake could be laid out, to meet, perlmRs, a similar fate. ‘ The directors of the read have contemâ€"‘ plated building around the lower end of ‘ the lake, and possibly work already has | begun. But it will be two or three yeass before it is finished, and surely not in’ time to assist in the transporting of trcops to met the advance of the Japanâ€" | ese on the Yalu. J Can be had in TUBS, PAILS, WASH BASIN3S, ILK PANS, STABLE PAILS, ETC. FIBRE WARE Use In summer the storms strike Lake Baikal out of a clear sky. The wind rushâ€" es down from the north like a hurriâ€" cane, without warning. When it strikes There is a conviet route around the lower portion of the lake, but the grades are so stupendous that the cost of a road over this route has been estimated to be $250,600 a mile. Roads in the Unitâ€" ed States average about 240,000 a mile, under difficultics. The route is 150 miles long. It is evident why the Russian doâ€" pevds upon his boats in summer, which make three round trips weekly, and builds his railroad upon the ice in winâ€" ter, when it freezes to a depth of 12‘ feet. The drowning of several hundred Rusâ€" sian soldiers in Lake Baikal, in Siberia, has been chronicled in the despatches, but the report is declared erroncous. The lake is from 20 to 60 miles wide, and 500 to 600 miles long. It lies between 180 and 110 degrees cast longitude and 50 to 56 degrees north latitude. Its area equals that of Lake Erie and Ontario combined. Its depth is a mile in places, Lake Superâ€" ior, tLe deepest of American lakes, is 1,030 feet deep. _ \ rcrfectly trustworthy persons, of high ntelligence and universally respected, will vouch for it that they themselves have seen the banks of rivers in Britâ€" ish Columbia packed with dead salmon which produced such a disagreeable atâ€" mosphere by reason of their disintegraâ€" tion that it was almost unbearable for people who had to pass that way. In the push of fish there is not room for them in narrow parts and they are crowded right up to the banks. There: is no doubt of this, and it is among the smaller ancedotes of the kind that one will gather in a trip in that part of the world. | The same journal refers to the story that salmon in our western rivers push each other ashore in their upstream rush, and casts a doubt on this. But It is recognized that last year in England was phenomenally rainy. _ It broke every known record for preceipiâ€" tation. There is an intimation that that superabundance of fresh water may have had its influence in inducing the salmon to go upstream. The Specâ€" tator says that many salmon stay around in the sea and refrain from going into fresh water. It says, too, that it has been proved by marking the fish that within the space of five weeks the two days a salmon of ten and oneâ€" half pounds has been found to grow to twenty and oneâ€"quarter poundc.l Nothing else grows so fast. | that the fish were gradually diappearâ€" ing. This shows how little is underâ€" stood about the ways of fishes. f Recent Phenomenal Catches Show the Habits of Finny Tribes Are Peculiar. During the year 1903 there was the largest run of salmon in Irish, English and Scottish waters ever known, and this came right upon a general assumpâ€" tion that the records of preceding years From any firstâ€"c‘ass desier GREAT LAKE OF SIBERIA. niadl come to a standst‘]! young people exchanged LITTLE KNOWN ABOUT FISH. man wasn‘t sitting opâ€" ing man, she wes sitâ€" im, and every few minâ€" e other of them forgot it was his or her turn. it is equally dangerous. holes close in the ice, as done, there is an exploâ€" be heard for miles. The ice becomes a volcano an! NY 34 s o et keaues i o hore 0 0o mhne o. hase wl line of any two plates.â€"From the Sciâ€" entific American. THE LARCEST PHOTOGRAPH EVER 1 AKEN, At the recent Dresden Exhibition of German Civic Life there was exhibited a photograph which is said to be the largest ever taken. This gigantic picture measures 39 feet 8 inches by 4 feet 1: inches. It represents the Bay of Napies, and was taken from Casteil San Marino, the highest point behind Naples, from which the eye commands the whole crty and bay as far as Mount Vesuvius and Capri. In order to secure as extensive a panorama as possible, six different views on as many plates, measuritg 8.1 inches by 10.5 inches were first taken. From these six plates, which were designcd with a view to being connected to ono another in a continuous series, six enâ€" largements, four feet 11 inches by 6 feet 7 inches in size, were prepared by moeans of an apparatus with a lens 1 foot in diameter. The enlargements were made directly on silver bromide paper. The inâ€" herent difficulty of connecting the singie plates so as to avoid any break was overcome so successfully that it is nracâ€" tically impos;ible to detect the boundary chant has to se money fo? somet] already acquired. w ud oc t oo oi + There is no queition that newsâ€" papor advertising is the best and the cheap»st, if two conditions are complied with: Honesty â€" with the public in making propositions â€" and livin@ up to them, and constant adâ€" vertising, . The chief obijcction to other methâ€" ods of advortising is that thav fain ks s ulc oage 1 Fourth Estate, ‘ The unanimity with whic! chants‘ associations all country have sagresd to p the fuiure all forms ol a except in newspapers or ¢ tablished publications i3 q tilying. They have ben foreed to action by importunings L anco to share the expense eratl> programmos, dane etc., that are not worth c to them by way of return, have bsen gui‘dod in selecti paper advertising as the y vestment ol their money, b porience of the most succes CRAKHLE In Ihc Asuntms Whem He sent to all preach, In a halo of glory tien O _ vew, Having taught all II> ef teach. alimny amos havs passod since first Fagstor morn When Christ provedl His powor atove, &A Tor uask amt FaxiL o.l i Wg 20 3 0 °C CCCR HOW arisCiL Fear not ; All now ts fullillA that Ha said." Quick hastened they hbick, all their fear thus polioved ; The faith{ful discipes to soek; Then Poteor and Joun went, and all then belioved, €a voe Thomas, whoso faith was still weak Forty days ai1 Hs stay to confirm ___them anow, * ‘ E1 ILC CC C200 0E . C EECRIEE | Whiteâ€"robed were the angels who | watched through the gloom, ' While dark, sable night spread its pall ; | But when, incorrupt, He arose from | the tomtb ’ There flashed a bright halo o‘er f +t OM A ; ‘ Then came holy women, ere sunlighb. t appear‘d, 4 | _ Toanoint His dear body, alone; ; No one will be present, to open, they ' Tear‘jl, _ The sepulchre sealed with a stone. They found that the task had alâ€" ready been doneâ€" The body they looked for in vainâ€" "They havo ta‘en Him away," cried in anguish cach one, ‘"Wheore shall we our Lord find again ?" Then hrard they an angel who stood by the spot Whers the 1 ody of Jesus had laid, Say, "H> whom you sxck has arisen., Wws‘ ve evsik . \or past and these yet unt lademption was E7 10 0 RECZ AUEDM UHOC IP= lumin‘d the morn When Christ, our Redcemer, arose Triumphant o‘er death, from where, tortur‘d ard torn, His body was laid in repose. U huisac s S ut ‘al The only station in New York city is the Grand Central Station of the New York Central, situated corner 4th aveâ€" nue and 42nd street. Bright, bright was cards that are on the table," sugâ€" gested the old gentleman, dryly. 5 He did. His missing hand appeared above the table almost instantly, and a&#> did hers, and they both blushed. â€"New York Press,; |. , . _ muCl confidezces in a Grand Central Station â€" o. 3746 Is that they fai1 psopls who have not alâ€" n accuainted, through the °S with what the merâ€" s to sell. It ig spending * something that bas been mawirad vel it it mm 3A 5.244 0P 1 1. I their money, by the exâ€" ‘ the most fuccessful merâ€" the country. no quertion that naws " . , _~CHR@3 IOP astist. ire the expense of innumâ€" grammes, dance orders, ire not worth one enny way of return, undPthey gu‘dod in selecting news. ues :o 0 Es Stopping Waste $ with which the mer. itions _ ali over the agreod to pass up in forms of advertising Spapers or other egâ€" cations is most graâ€" ind for present, for untorn, wosr by H> came for to the _wi'sjps-a-t~ lr; all nations ‘to whispor. Itwas noâ€" the orb that ilâ€" y His love. O‘Donnel1. power from passed out tak>e this that Speaking of the police force, a bad copper doesn‘t always turn up, especialâ€" ly when he is wanted. Uncertain, (Toronto Telegram.) Worst of this climate is that the sleighing is apt to get bad long about July. selves say with the utmost complacencey that they have possessed since the eighth century (when to Corean "melody" was added the Chinesescale and notation) "the perfect music." There is no such thing in Japan as melody for itselfâ€"as we know it in the westâ€"ard that is what an Occidental thinks of when he speaks of music. The music in The Darling of the Gods bears a unique relation to the play. Proâ€" tagonists and antagonists of what is miscalled "Japanese" musiec assert that it outâ€"Wagners Wagner in descriptiveâ€" nessâ€"that thnere is no such thing as "music" in Japan. The Japanese themâ€" oughly did they become inspired with the possibilities, musically, for the new play that they decided to include in their orâ€" chestral arrangements several instruâ€" ments peculiar to Japan. These are the biwa, samisen, koto, tsudzumi, and fuye. They are played on the stage by native Japanese performers, the quaint melodies blending with the music of the large orâ€" chestra in front. William Furst was engazed for a year past in composing the eighty musicai numbers, including entr‘actes and interâ€" mezzosh, heard in the Darling of the Gods. With Mr. Belasco he bas studied Japanese music from every side. So thorâ€" Orientals Proud of Sounds Produced on Their Quaint Instruments. When Planche Bates first apgmars in The Darling of the Gods, her entrance is to an accompaniment of simple and exâ€" pressive melody, quaint, odd, Japanesque. This strikes the appropriate theme in the elaborate music settine. _by local applications as they canrot reach ‘ tfre diseased portion of the ear. ‘Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by conâ€" stitutional remedies. _ Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inâ€" flamed yoiu have a rumbling sound or imperâ€" fect henring, and when it is ontirely closed, Deatnes» is the result, and uniess the Inflainâ€" mation can betiaken out and this tuberestorâ€" ed to its normal econdition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine casea out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Doniness (caused by eatarrh) that cannot be cured by Hali‘s Ca tarrh Cure. Send for cireulars, free. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED i .. CUCC JACCPC fairly swarming with the vermin, but since the ratâ€"catchers‘ visit I can scarceâ€" ly see one. I believe the animals come prospecting arourd before a vessel leaves port, and pick their ship like passengers. For instarce, they would sooner sign articles on a grain ship than on one carrying pig iron."â€"Lonâ€" don Mail. LONPON RAT CATCHERS KILL 202,â€" 782 RATS. Over two hundred thousand ratsâ€" 202,782 to be preciseâ€"have been caught at the London docks within the last five weeks. They have fallen viectims to the official ratâ€"catchers, who visit every ship that comes into port and do their best to rid it of live stock of the rodent variety. "We are very glad to see them," said an officer of a South American grain‘ ship. on Saturday. "\Ve came here e se itc tin im s kae l F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Sold by Drugaista, 75¢. Take Hall‘s Family Pills for Constipati Eend ton cents in stamps for Russoâ€" ’Japa.nese War Atlas issued by‘ ‘The Chicago and Northwest R‘y. Three fine colored maps, cach 14x20 ; bouna in convenient form for reference. The Eastern situation shown in deâ€" tail, with tables showing â€" relative military and naval strength and financial resources of Russia â€" and Japan. B. H. Bennott, 2 East Kingl St., Toronto, Ont. : JAPANESE MUSIC IS QUEER. The Northâ€"Western Line Russiaâ€"Japan Atlas. A BEAUTIFUL WOMAN. Amorg the most beautiful women in London society is the Countess of Airâ€" lie, who still retains the loveliness of feature, complexion and expression that made her famous as Lady Mabel Gore. The fact that her hair has now grown white if anything enhances her brilliant Irish beauty and gives the effect of powder. She is a widow, her husband, the earl, baving been killed in a cavalry charge in the Boer war. It is whispered‘ that her widowhood is shortly to be broken. No woman during its continuâ€" ance has been made and refused so many offers. The successful man is said to be an American multimillionaire, who bas taken up his residence in England, ]hinllsolf a widower, and still young in 00ks, A Sour Stomach and a Sour Tomper travel bhandâ€"inâ€"hand and are the precursors of mental and physical wreck. Nine hundred and ninetyâ€"nine times in a thousand food ferment (indigestion) is the cause. Dr. Von Stan‘s Pineapplo Tablets keep the stomach sweetâ€"aid digestionâ€" keep the nerve centres well balancedâ€"they‘re nature‘s panaceaâ€"pleasart and harmless, 35 cents.â€"88 . Better Stay at Homs. (Toronto Globe.) Cardinal Gibbons has advised the working classes of Ireland not to emiâ€" grate to the United States, He says their condition, on the whole, is better at home. TCO P . Ts T Cld tw utristadi ++ 22110 .<â€" Tok Clande G. Wood, Palace Theatre, London, Eng., writes : "*One pull of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder will cure any headache." Miss Bijou Russell, 10 Keppe St., London, Eng.. seys: ‘"One bottle Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder cured me of chronic colds orcatarrh. It relieves in 10 minutes." Dr. Agnew‘s Heart Cure relieves heart disease in 30 minutes. 81 Colds, Hendache, Influenza and Catarrh relieved in 10 minutes, by Dr. Agnew‘s Catarthal Powder. Prominent peoPle throughout England,the United States and canndnz ?mbe Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder. It will cure you Miss Blanch Sloan, London, Eug., the only slater of Tod Sloan, the world famousjockey, says : "I have suffered for years from catarrh and colds. Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder gave me relief in 10 minutes. . Is w‘q.rth‘alln other remedies combined." English Testimony | onstipation. TORONTO xt Has to Entertain. (Oswego Times.) Sabinaâ€"Do you quote Shakespeare and Dante when that college professor calls? Rabrillaâ€"Not much; I whirl in and make him a rousing Welsh rabbit. ~_"I ~did, and I‘m keo}win;,';v}fi_-v word : don‘t drink a bit more than I used to." Keeping His Word Faithfully. (New Orleans Timesâ€"Democrat.) "I thought you promised your wife you wouldn‘t drink any more?" Cighty Years Oldâ€"Catarah Fifty Yoars. Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder cures him. Want any stronger evidence of the power of this wonderful remedy over this universaldisease? Want thetruth ofthe case confirmed? Write George Lewis, Shamokin, Pa, â€" Hesays : "1Iloor upon my cure as a miracle." It relieves in ten minutes.â€"89 It is the fence that has stoo€ the test of timeaâ€"atamda #ka i.i 2l _2 . B'S' THE PAGE WIRE FEXCE 00. LIMITED 81 , Most peoFle think too lightly of a cough. It is a serious matter and needs prompt attention, Take @ 9 . * Shiloh‘s & Consumption 400 acres. 3 The rate of interest which the‘investâ€" ments of Harvard University earned last year was 4 68â€"100 per cent., a decrease of 12â€"100 per cent. from the preceding year. _ Cardiff exports 12,000,000 tons of eaol a year, Newcastle from 4,000,000. Newâ€" port and Sutherland each ship abroad about 2,500,000 tons a year. Dr. William Foster, of the department of chemistry at Princeton University, has discovered a new acid, hereafter to be labelled with the interesting name of trisulphoxyarsenic acid. The sea is said to be gradually eating away the French coast, having within the last five years swallowed up no less than ©eul c uce Owing to the clearness of the versation in the Arctic regions carried on by persons two miles caliled on by persons two miles apart. The meat received into Smithfield market every year for the feeding of London exceeds 403,000 tons. por@iitneiio iess MCnm l 12 _ _Bpain has an average of 3,000 howm sunshine a year, against only 1,400 Encland. In all countriecs more n place in June than in any Snl ie Pn PnE Ta m â€" Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever‘s Dry Soap a powder. â€" It will re.â€" move the grease with the greatest ease. 3€¢ qLE UIT PMTECTEVM HEVY EC house by thrce stronz men, the ice bad, to be broken from him with clubs, He was badly frightened by the exâ€" perience, but otherwiseo unharmed. ‘The body of the cat was found frozen to his back.â€"Pioneerâ€"Press. P iniptntinemet Ah 6 s tentic c l c cck oo 104 4 +4 It was pecessary to loosen the unâ€" fortunate man‘s feet with chisels, and when he had been carried into the $ ue n Em S 1 Soon the flow, of the water was stopped by the sediment in the tank flowing into the bullet hole, and a little son of Ar. Wilte, who had ssen the whole affair, ran for assistance. ; 4 OV Aprempcomine midics sut dih 4 5 * The Lun uPP ,32. °s when the first sign of a cough or cold appears. It will cure you easily and quickly thenâ€"later it will be harder to cure. Instantly his overshoes froze to the stoze foundation on which he was etanding, and, stcoping to uubucklo them, he was chained by the spray, freezing in the iterrible cold as fast ag it fell Snto a helpless statue of ice, gstiff and immovabl> as a stone. Only by his stooping posture, which kept his face free from the ice, was he saved, from suffocation. Te bullet killed the cat and pierced the bottom of the tank, and in an instant the water, gushing out, surâ€" rounded Mr. Wilte with a complete shower bath in a temperature ol 35 degrecs below zero. [ Strange Things Said to Have fapponed When Temperaturs Was 82 Betow. Oscar Wilte, of Le Sueur, Minn., met with a most remarkable accident this morning that very nearly cost him his life. With his riile in hand he was attempting to get within range of a cat he desired to shoot, when the animal‘ ran up into the framework supporting the water tank. Standing directly beneath the cat, Wilte shot straight up at it, careâ€" lessly forgetting the foaet that the tuflnk was within range. WEIRD COLUV wEATHER STORY How to Treat a Cat. UNFAMILIAR FACTS 17 C~veIness ol the arr conâ€" the Arctic regions can be L’,soc" asd $1.00. 311 Ituthefcneothuthultoodth.tutotuns-cmâ€" he sagsâ€"the standard the world over. Order mmmx.;'?.‘. _ marmnages take ny other month. of 8,000 hours of _ Mr, C. W. Campbell, British Consul in Wuchow, has written a report on a journey made by him in Mongolia, iving an account of the mode of life in tfie inâ€" terior of China. One very peeuliar custom is noted. He says he was particularly struck by the numbers of peirs of boots hung in separate wooden cages in the archway of the main west gate of Hshuâ€" anâ€"hua, the valedictory gifts of benefiâ€" cent prefects. It is the custom in China to invite a departing magistrate whose rule has been popul?lr to leave a pair of old boots for suspension in a prominâ€" ent place as a hint to his successor to follow in his footsteps. f c c ine 1 ) en en o. AROCIEDL all brilliant ornaments, such as neckâ€" laces ard bangtes, when appearing in public.: They must be dressed with deâ€" corum, and in acordance with the Musâ€" sulman law, the ordinance says, ia de fault of which the husbands of women offending will be visited with punishment. An imperial irade has at Constantinople, in whi kish women are comman all brilliant ornamante in wWOoMEN‘S VANITIES IN TUrKEYy An iImbderial Tradn Ina s L in on perce "Robert Bonner," said a writer of adâ€" vertisements, "was the biggest adverâ€" tiser of his day. I was once talking to him about advertising, and a remark he made still lingers in my memory,. "To try to attract the public withâ€" out advertising,‘ Mr. Bonner said, ‘is like trying to dlirt with a girl in the dark. Wink and smirk at her as much as you pleaseâ€"you ywerself know what you are up to, but sheâ€"your publicâ€" has no inkling‘ " d 2 s C Z2I0MIReR " VHC POSC, That Shamrockâ€"eating lunchâ€"counter }:And you generally know an Enpglish story comes around as regularly as St. man Patrick‘s Day. And it is nearly as old. By the blossom on his nose. a Looked the Part. (April Smart Set.) "There goes Mrs. Ganderâ€"Beach. They say she fights continually with her husâ€" band." "Well, she has a happy, contented look, as if she thoroughly enjoyed herself." The next active agent in making men insane was intemperance, whose victims number 45. Ontario statistics classify and subâ€" divide this worry into subâ€"heads, under religious, business, love, domestic trouâ€" bles and other causes of mental discomâ€" fort, but the plain word worry in each case expresses the cause of the mental unbalancing of the patient. _ _ Main Thing, Don‘t Worry. (Ottawa Journal.) Amongst 820 patients admitted last year to the insane asylums of Ontario the cause of insanity in 153 of these was directly traced to worry. _ % i The satisfaction of having thne washing done early in the day, and well done, belongs to every user of Sunlight Soap. 10B uie Micere FREE A GCOD HINT. w â€" AFarmer Who â€" 3# Raises Sheepe It Was an Old Story. de has been published , in which married Turâ€" commanded to discard ments, such as neckâ€" ands the heaviest strainâ€"novep mhflwtcfimmu !‘Mhrth!alochlnehuot.h!m.mun. R CNEAPTPOY PR main trideat oo s td Ds i â€" Wewili forfelt aimaes s. l _22C_C‘ATUOnZ Machine. Jt is Atver 9 am. _ We wili forfelt $100 to anyone who senasus $3:80 and can Prenmti beer. 45 route, ow ‘ s J & 2s \ A curious feature vonnected with tha Servian army is the manner in which most of the regiments carry the big drum. It is not, as in most countries, slung in front of the man who plays it, but in placed upon a small | ywo. wheeled cart drawn by a single dog, which has been so trained that it keeps its place even through the longest and most tedious of marches. The drumâ€" mer takes up a position behind the cart and performs on the instrument as the animal pulls it along, DRUMMER Mrs. Blackâ€"Oh, 3 enough, but then she actually thinks one comfort and not for 1. During his recent stay in this country Michael Davitt told many stories to il. lustrate the cheerfulness‘ of Irish charâ€" acter. "No man‘s condition," he said, "js so wretched but he will crack a joke about it." By way of illustrating this he told of a poor peat cutter whom the parâ€" ish priest invited to dinner one day. "It isn‘t much of a dinner, Pat," said he, "only beef, potatoes and beer, but you are yvery welcome." "Srre, your reverâ€" ence," said the peat cutter, with twinkâ€" ling eye, "‘tis a good dinner enoughâ€"the same as I‘d be getting at home, barring the beef and the beer," Bt. Jchn, X.B, This Ought to Make Trouble. (Toronto Star.) The shamrock is the Scotchman‘s { er, The Irishman‘s the rose, And you generally know an En>! |ISSUE NO. 14 1904 Brusn & Go., NO BRASS EYELETs B § C THE CHEERFUL IrISH. A POPULAR CORSET FOR 1904 STYLE DoGs IN TtHg SERVIANX Abwuw not for looks U LONCG HIP J MANUFACTURED ONLY Ey TORONTO, â€" ONnT. 442000 X , ure conmected w s the manner in giments carry t , as in most cor i:f the man who 2Pb3 Con‘t I like her 8 so eccentric. should dress Taikin# Machine. Jt is seem to like for 10 We 4 â€"JAPAN Great Ar Active 0O Coreans With paper des press sa )\ to state & greal i vance O mouth 0| mow com} movemen\ invasion 0 The con graph at sorship wi which may m l‘(‘pul'( movement. The « ‘I‘lph, C ther ac tions. from Cl that ev of Core Coreans and them makes only means Corea. To eould entail is supposed make their : where, using version. I strong posit of the Mio Hwangju ar is probayly from attack Russians, w the Yalu R ju their ba 'leinfnrc('mu the Russian his retreat 1 fl up of th xÂ¥ 250 J: understa about a the Yaluo up of ment i try, bi supplic eorresno sive mo\ vance ol trated n eould have ea The corresy anese as mo Beoul by fon the lightest p mo tents. The snow â€"covered preparations fly stations : route, but the a constant = pean army im eonditions. T tillery, but is ped. The troo the torrible of dysentery alry horses ] many of the horses are go bridge across eeeding rapid advance is in construct ing : Yalu River, 1 dl t‘K‘ (1lih(" Collision of the T the dirst a Yang, 49 1 mo intenti be the dut ©r six the J.pcnm-v. much as ; ties belicn avre Usin Bt. Potorsb .nko'fi rv[w‘," works gingle divi iamd op m whort outse, lng the .nd '(;l a scree from T natural lack on mounte: A(‘(‘(‘h ports th of Anju h touc tary _ o Anju, Is Freaty Port i London The X Kowâ€"C) L LAND BATTLE R be exix mea Hs dut s NEV al rik Ag N .4 tI the ti D

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