Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 May 1906, p. 3

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of + shâ€" of t ame far the ming thuâ€" sing hot â€" i he ore 3A ing ent to Lox XFID LF. to of ndâ€" THE was »ing the ny, hts the Manâ€" OT sh 113 ning 118 the in 1 w Ni« ake «O it ts er "Very likely. Then another tremena ous puzzle is life. Why are we sent here ¢o endure so much gertain painâ€"to taste aar .?A.Lo’rk" a 20 L2 *You are getting beyond me altogether. Good men etll us to work out our salvaâ€" "I declare! You talk like a book! It‘s all very fine; but it‘s natural feeling, mot reason, that rules such mattersâ€"and eo much the better for us poor, miserable ereatures. Yours is a man‘s creedâ€"not a woman‘s, dear. Men never will be conâ€" mdone r@remenpeit. Snba t s etnBings seimeiihee P: ts 4 t +5 mu‘d know, as I do, that it hopeth all ings and endureth all things." "I can believe that of a mother‘sâ€"a sister‘sâ€"a friend‘s love. But the love of lovers is different. There is a personal feeling in that which, if it evaporates, ean never, I fancy, be recalled; nor do I see that one can complain of its disapâ€" rance. There is nothing to be dorfé m to resign it without a lt‘r:fle, and let one‘s own passion exhale die out as fast as possible." _ "Stick to that, my dear; it will earry u_ _safe through a good deal. But 1 z:nzg thinx you know much of love, or "Ah! don‘t talk like a heathen, child. True love grows with gour growth, ana always sees the same charm in the thing it lovesâ€"unless, indeed, that thing proves faithless and cruel; even then, some natures cannot be choken off." "I cannot understand," returned Mona. "I understand forgiving a great dealâ€" even faithlessness and changsâ€"for the sake of the old love; but to love anyone who was indlifferent to me seems imâ€" possible." work at the convent, and other work in Germany. I am really fond of my needle. I do not even disdain darning stockings, ovided they are taken in time; there zrsomething soothing in those long, even lines of rurning." "Well, 1 am sure {ou are welcome to mend all mine, for I hate it! But I don‘t like to see you sitting silent over your stitchery with a pale, sad face, as if you were comparing the present with ‘the past. Ah, its‘ a terrible change for you!" "Not half so bad as you imagine, Deb. The comfort of being with you is great; the consolation of being able to help myâ€" self is enormous, ard at twenty, I shall be twenty in a coupte of monthsthere is so much of life to be explored, that I may find an unexpected oasis! I am not always thinking of the past when I seem in a brown studyâ€"I am sometimes speculating on matters that puzzle me, which are gl’ob.bly beyond me, still, they have a fascination." “hnt are they, cherie?" "Oh, there are a fcnt variety of puzâ€" zing things. One, for instance, is the .:fnl risk of marrying. It seems to me P on clisane ie‘ a "I think, dear Deb, I saw the very net which would go with the ground of this shaw!," said Mona, examining it care fully, "at Peter Robinson‘s; then I could lay the broken pattern over it ,and copy it with black filoselle." The landlady 1 ner of her duste {elpo of the do; ow, where he w Cision too, when I st Mrs. Puddiford about this unt â€"1 wil tle land ble. M and tou wOL 0s PEX 20 ADICREGTY WO ATF. Rigden this night!" said Mane. Debrisay, with emphasis, "and let me know the result. ]gither he sends away his dogâ€" or goes away with his doiâ€"or Miss Craig and I go, this day week!" tragicâ€" ally. + T ons d . This to the audacious animal, who darâ€" ed to present himself on the threshold with an inquiring look. _A violent flick of the duster she had brought, in anticiâ€" pation of something to be "wiped up," again routed Dandic. <"*"Be sure you explain mattars ts Mâ€" "fo think how micely settled I am, with two such firstâ€"rate lodgers, and then to think of being upset by a nasty dog. Ah! get out with yvou!" & auiet 1. 4,,@ _ _ j" CC You leave, Such| ‘"Par exemple! You would maae i a quiet lodger, and sure money. I will | firstâ€"rate Catholic, Mona. I am no great speak to Mr. Rigden, ma‘am, and see if things myseif, but I would beA:roud to he can send the dog to the country. He| see you in the true Church. . there‘s is a good lodger, too! but that taken NP | nothing like it, as churches go! God forâ€" with the dog I don‘t know he will ever give me, but I haven‘t been to confesâ€" part with it." sion for a year or more!" "I neither know nor care," said Mme. "Never mind, dear Deb; your goodâ€" Debrisay, solemn‘!y. "I give you two | ness to me will more than make up for days to expel the venomous cur, at the | that omission. But there is small chance end of which time, should he remain, | of my becoming a Catholic; can you not eonsider I have given notice." see that ?" "Dear, dear! why will gentlemen fancey "No, I can‘t. I tell you what I can these wild beasts" ‘almost whimpered see, that although you are an angel to the landlady. 'me. there is a good dash of his Satanic "CGentlemen!" repeated Mme. Debriâ€" Majesty in you." say, with a fine scorn, as she regulatedl "Perhaps there is. So be it, if it will her cap. hakhe wis tioan s x den itikness B EReoe SV is a good lodger, t with the dog‘;rd( part with it." "I neither know Debrisay, solemn! days to expel the end of which tin eonsider I have giv "Dear. dear‘! wh NO ADULTERATION "SALADA" _touchy!" es . And you will find I can REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. _ Load packets only . 40c, 50c and 60c per Ib. At all grocers. MEHISNNSSNIIHSSIHNNIINNerrmmmmmnsummmmnmmennn ady s until you bring me your deâ€" norrow." dlady retired, pressing the corâ€" t duster to her eyes, while the the dog were heard from beâ€" e he was being tied up. . dear Deb, 1 saw the very net ild go with the ground of this rid Mona, examining it careâ€" Peter Robinson‘s; then I could Won at Last amâ€"I will! "I foresee denâ€"he is CEYLON GREEN TEA. _ _ The tea that outclasses all Japans. T _find I can be touchy, nd on m rights. Now, I wish to hear no more you bring me your deâ€" n, ma‘am, and see if to the country. He ! but that taken up t know he will ever 18e * sniffed the litâ€" a heap of trouâ€" that obstinate is used in the preparation of soopp"p PCC°. IFrCoonuy a moyal Uak Having heard her friend‘s summary, emnibus came up, and paused before she | and assisted to reduce the sea of small hailed it. Mona hastened to enter as | account books, scribbled of A soon as an elderly and somewhat deâ€" | bills, and receipts to -om li{:Poer- crepitâ€"looking man had descended, with der, Mona related her adventure, and maâ€" the help of a stick and a baggy umâ€" | dame did not scold. brella. "Well, it was funny! May be the old The omnibus moved on before the old .gentlieman is a millionaire in disguise! gentleman had one foot clear of the step they are generally queer. May be your Having done her shopping, she crossed to the other side, lmf walked a little way toward Totterham Court Road, hopâ€" ing to find room trfnn ?n omnibus, withâ€" out having to struggle at the regular stoppingâ€"place. Presently a Royal Oak emnibus came up, and paused before she hailed it. Mona hastened to enter as soon as an elderly and somewhat deâ€" crepitâ€"looking man had descended, with The next day was bright and fresh afâ€" ter‘ the thunder, and Mona having given a lesson in Gloucester Place early in the afternoon, went on to Regent‘s Cireus to match the lace, intending to make madame‘s shaw! as good as new. erl" _ihat man had a nice little room above stairs for his lumber. If I could get her a good lodger at six pounds a month without it, she might let you have it for a song," said Mme. Debrisay, reflectivelv. "L am sure," added Mme. Debrisay, sotto voce, when Mrs. P. had gone, "I hope, I‘ll succeed, for if her rooms reâ€" main empty she‘ll think I have lost her six pounds a month, and ‘there will be wigs on the green‘!" "I hope nothing disagreceable will arise for I have grown quite at home here!" exclaimed Mona. us "That man had a nice little room _1 am sure, ma‘am, you are very good, and I believe you are lucky! I am not sorry Mr. Rigden is going, only for the money! â€" He was desp‘rate parâ€" tic‘lar, and the dog is a hinderance!" "Of course it isâ€"shocking brute! We will do our best for you, Mrs. Puddiâ€" ford." _A assure you, Mrs. Puddiford, it is not of the slightest consequence whethâ€" er Mr. Ridgen considers me old and canâ€" tankerous or not. I congratulate you on getting rid of a troublesome, illâ€"bred "Ah O EOWE CCC 2C UTS 9 & MURUEâ€" ly tenant); that lhe would look out for rooms, as soon as ever he found anoth>r place, free from cantankerous ord woâ€" men, he‘d leave, if he forfeited a fortâ€" night‘s rent. I am sorry to say he so far forgot bimself, but them was his very words, ma‘am." "I assure you, Mrs. Puddiford. it is "He wouldn‘t be a man if he did, unâ€" less it were on his own side!" ejaculatâ€" ed madame. "He spoke most disrespectful," conâ€" tinued the landlady, beginning to play with the corner of her apron. "He said he would stand no more dâ€"â€"d nonsense (them was his words, ma‘am), and was sorry he had just begun a month, as he would haye to naw tus 12 n _ 3 "_ o hk Mr. Rigden was observed that morning to draw his umbrclia from the stand with a degree of violence which upset all the other umbrellas and sticks, and "banged" the front door with a reckâ€" lessness which was in itself a casus belli. Soon after, Mrs. Puddiford appeared with a rueful countenance. "Well‘m, I have spoken to Mr. Rigâ€" den. He is noways inclined to hear reason!" The next day was stormy, with heavy thunder showers, and Mme. Debrisay would not hear ‘of Mona taking a jourâ€" ney to town in search of materials to repair the damage done by the detinguâ€" ent Dandic. Moreover, a council of war had to be held. "Of life, Mona ? No, of society. Yes, life is worldâ€"wide, society is a cornerâ€" often a shabby corner. Faith, dear, you and I are a brace of philosophers; only we are too wise to have a theory. Here‘s dinner; I hope it will be more digestible than your doctrines." Majesty in you." "Perhaps there is. So be it, if it will help me in the battle of life! _ As far as I can see, the one unpardonable sin of life is poverty." "No, I can‘t. I tell you see, that although you are me, there is a good dash o Majesty in you." "Yes, good men of your church; but mine says that 1 never can!â€"that a mental act of faithâ€"which to many minds is impossibleâ€"will do more at the last moment than a lifeâ€"time of tender consideration for« othersâ€"of â€" selfâ€"sacriâ€" ficeâ€"of purity." , you are a profound schemâ€" C have not reduced your own bit of money much, that‘s a comfort; keep a tight hold of it, dear." _ any whereâ€"not Lr:dently ; and you canâ€" not putlbyr anyt} ing. At all events, you But MNme. Debrisay was in a ph'cid mood when Mona reached homeâ€"for maâ€" dame had her moods. She had passed the morning and some of the afternoon auditing her own and Mona‘s accounts. The result was, on the whole, satisfacâ€" tory, thoughâ€""The way money slips through your finfiers is most amazing," she ofiserved; "t onx‘l;nwo have done pretty well, we couldn‘t afford & trip «"What a funny adventure!‘ thought Mona. "I wonder if Madame Debrisay will scold me." With infinite difficulty and many groans, he scrambled in, dropping his umbrella during the process. Mona pickâ€" ed it up and gave it to him. He seated himself with his back to the horse, smilâ€" ing and nodding to his young protectress as he drove slowly away, § at your house settle it," suggested Mona. "Make it two shillin‘, angf I take you safe and aisy." "Varra weel. Goodâ€"bye, missee; I canâ€" na help thinking you are a Scotch lasâ€" sie Struggling to his feet, and seizing his umbrella, he hobbled to the door. Mona followed him. "Ah! but you were! you have saved my life. If you had not stood between me ard that cawb, I‘d have been a deid mon! I‘ll try and get home." "There is my card then, but I live ever so far away. Pray do not trouble about m=; I am very glad to have been of any use to you." "Wait a bit. Where do you bide? I want to pay ye what you‘ve laid oot." "Oh! never mind; it (i:)es not matter." "Ye are a Scotch lassie?" "No, I never was in Scotland." "Ah! I thocht ye were, from yer bonâ€" nie reed heid." "Indeed!" said Mona, laughing. She could not bear to have ger hair considered red. "Weel, I‘ll no leaye this till I know where I‘ll find ye." "Do you feel equal to going home?" said Mona, who was beginning to feel a little ashamed of her quixotic attentions to this elderly waif. "I will get you a cab, if you like." o "I dare say it is an accident that may happen to him again, if he finds kind young ladies to pay for him," said the buxom woman behind the desk, smiling â€""sixpence, please," v k# 7 HPBANID OS Aiis l 4: * ~pdndcintt "That is a mere trifleâ€"I will pay it." Going to the counter she said, "This poor gentleman‘s purse has been taken. I must pay for what he has ‘had." "Oh! that is dreadful! I hope you had not much in it ?" "Guid preserve us!â€"it‘s clean gane! My pocket has been picked!" "It‘s a crue‘, costly place; but," apoloâ€" getically, "I canna help it; I‘ll just pay ;’or the spirits and water, and gang my ane." He dived into a side pocketâ€"he routed out his trousers pocketsâ€"his breast pocketâ€"all in vain. "You had better rest a few minutes first," said Mona, who felt sincere comâ€" passion for him. "I am afraid you are more hurt than you think." "I am a puir frail bodie. Eh, but my back is twisted. What‘ll they ask now for a cab"â€"he called it "cawb"â€" "to Camden Town ?" shillings." His eyes closed partially, and Mona begged an attendant to bring the restroaâ€" tive. Her patient was a small, spare man, with thin grey hair, small whiskers, faded blue eyes, a contemptuounl{ upâ€" turned nose, and a wide, thinâ€" ipped month. He was neatly dressed in a pepâ€" perâ€"andâ€"salt colored suit, and though not a gentleman, was by no means of the working class, nor yet like a city clerk. "Try and take a little of this," urged Mona. "Thank ye, thank ye." He put the glass to his lipe and drank very slowly. "The Lord be thankit," he said, placing it half emptied on the table, "for saving my life; but I am saur shaken!" Again he drank. "Ow!" he uttered & strange sound between a groan and a sigh. "It was near a‘ ower wi‘ me! 1 am much beholden to you, my young leddy. I must try an‘ get awa‘ to my bed, but I can scarce stan‘. I had better get into a cab." "Ayé," he"s:liidâ€";m‘-"lvm;;{ h;\;gsome- thing to raise my heart!" _ j5°, [‘ iCWiy supporting his trembling self on his stick, and loofiing round him with a pitiful expression of bewilderâ€" ment. + "I am afraid you are hurt?" said Mona kindly. She did not like to desert him, for she felt he was not a Londoner. "I‘ve just an awful pain i‘ my back," he said, pantingly, "and feel dazed like. If T could sit doon a bit." "Come into this shop and have a glass of water," and she guided him into a pastryâ€"cook‘s close by, where she found a chair, and, feeling alarmed at the old man‘s extreme pallor, asked if he would not try a little brandy and water. So saying, he proceeded march, leaving the suffe with difficulty supportin self on his stick, and loofii with a pitiful expression ment. L stick and umbrella, You confectioner‘s store, and You‘ll be as right as a t minutes," T y oo ooo ied d on Ts t ie watered ground. The driver of a hansom could hardly draw up quickly enough to prevent his horse from trampling on the prostrate figure, which seemed unâ€" able to recover the perpendicular. Mona, by a natural impulse, bent down to assist him, and a burly policeman soon set him on his feet. "No bones broken." he said, cheerfully, feeling his legs and arms. "Here‘s your whinke cami <smeccios c becs a> Wt :2 and he fell prone on the damp, profusely ausal d m n i oc ol n Commeg 2 l $ . am not sureâ€"eighteenpence or two T ul me as right as a trivet in five he proceeded on his stately suj ferer ptfi?fi_fi}. pe I into the tafi summat. man about to propose can afford to pegâ€" Hit.â€"lfldon"m;m.\ vegâ€" Meanwhile the operator, surreptitiousâ€" ly folding a second towel and wringing it out with scalding water, euddeniy apâ€" plies it like a mask upon the face. The first feeling is one of agony, which soon passes, giving place to delicions glowing and throbbing. Three times the hot towel is replenâ€" ished. Then, when the pores of the skin are thoroughly open, massage cream is worked into every fold of the epidermis by the hands of the operator, and the impurities hidden in the skin are worked out. Oold :dcter towelst ‘fdollow, to close the pores and prevent coldâ€"catching, and the skin is soothed with gnwi:lf fragrant eauâ€"deâ€"Portugal. ‘The improvement to the complexion is so remarkable that no The victim is placed in a chair simâ€" ilar to those in use at dentists‘. By means of a handle and crank the chair is wound backwards until the victim‘s posiâ€" tion is almost horizontal. The edges of a towel and waterproof sheet are then tucked inside his collar. _ _ It would be a mistake to suppose that the advantages of faceâ€"massage are conâ€" fined to bringing a fresh complexion. Its uses are deeper. It is a muchâ€"recommendâ€" ed cure for headache; and for imparting alertness and brightness to the mind beâ€" fore a tough Parliamentary debate nothâ€" ing else is known to equal it. _ ment is now in high favor among all sections of Parliament, with the possible exception of the Labor party. New Source of Cheerfulness and Success. * The attention formerly given to shayâ€" ing and hairâ€"cutting among members of Parliament has been to a great extent transferred to faceâ€"massage. This treatâ€" , Every dose of Dr. Wiliams‘ Pink Pills makes rich, pure, healthâ€"giving blood. That is why they cure head â€" aches and backaches, indigestion, kidney and liver troubles, anaemia, heart palâ€" pitation, and the ills that afflict women only. _ But be sure you get the genuine pills with the full name, "Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People," on the wrapper around each box. Imitations are worthlessâ€"often dangerous. All meâ€" dicine dealers sell these pills or you can get them by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writing The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Company, Brockville, , There is just one sure, scientific cure for sciatica, rheumatism, lumbago, neuralgia, headaches â€" you must drive the pain from your blood and nerves with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Liniâ€" ments never cure nerve and blood disâ€" eases. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills strike straight at the cause because they acâ€" tually make new blood, Through the blood they conquer the painful poison, soothe the nerves, loosen the muscles, and banish every ache and pain, Mr. Thomas J. Etsell, Walkerton, Ont., says "When I began using Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills I had been off work for three months, The cords of my right leg were all drawn up and I could only limp along with the aid of a stick. The pain I suffered was terrible. Only those who . have been afflicted with sciatica can unâ€"| derstand the misery 1 was in both day and night, I took six boxes of Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills bef@®re they helped me, but after that every day saw an imâ€" provement, and by the time I had used fiftcen boxes, every vestage of the pain had disappeared. I have no hesitation in pronouncing Dr, Williams‘ Pink Pills the best medicine in the world for seciâ€" atica." A Sure and Certain Way to Cure This Terrible Torture. After voluminous apologies for her siâ€" lence, she expressed her warm sympathy with her "dearest cousin." toun. The Saturday following Mona‘s rescue of the old Scotchman, she was surprised and delighted by the receipt of a letter from Evelyn Everard, now Lady Finisâ€" "Only lucky in having you to befriend me! \your cap is very crooked, dearâ€"go nm:dput on your bonnet! I am not a bit tired. Let us indulge in a hansom to Kensington Gardens, and stroll about till it is time for a late tea." From some unrevealed cause, there seems to be a tendency in events to accuâ€" mulate at intervals, like the seventh wave, which scientists tell us is always the largest. So after the monotonous ripple o% many quiet weeks, the crop of incident which has been ripening, bursts its bounds and expends itself in a few days. _ 6/ mt "Well, 1 shall be curious to see what will come of it! It is my belief that your meeting didn‘t happen for nothing," and Mme. Debrisay shook her head solâ€" emnly. "I believe you are a lucky girl, Mona." _ "You have too much imagination, Deb," said Mona, laughing. . "There was nothâ€" ing of the millionaire about my old man. He was too humble for a moneyed man. If they are queer, they are generally conâ€" sequential. I fancy he will make his way here. He is very feeble, however, nm{ I imagine ‘cawbs‘â€"as he calls them â€"are too costly for his taste. I am alâ€" most sorry I gave him my card, but be was et}luit‘ determined to have it. H» seemed so dazed and helpless, I felt grieved for him; but he is not by any means attractive." ; sixpence will prove the sprat that caught u> aedte t 39 CRIPPLING SCIATICA FACE MASSAGE FOR M. P‘S. you have Strength, Flavor, Qâ€"ualit7 that‘s economy. Some buy inferior tea because it is cheap. Might as well buy a cheap tea because it is inâ€" ferior. The same thing, but not economy either way. With ECONOMIES Blue Ribbon _Ceylon Tea (To be continusd.} roceeding; but if he has a steady diet Koovutullymmthnpay:!c’thk keep. Advertise in the Times. tises for three consecutive days _ and reaches the conclusion that because he doesn‘t fit his money back on the fourth day, publicity doesn‘t pay. Feeding a hog semiâ€"occasionally is not a profitable "If a farmer has no more faith than some advertisers, he would become crazy at seeing good, sound corn going into a hog," observes Agricultural Advertising. This is a justifiable "knock" at the sharpâ€"sighted business man who adverâ€" Baby‘s Own Tablets is the very best medicine in the world for curing the minor ailments of babies and young chilâ€" dren. ‘It is the best because it is absoâ€" lutely harmless. _ It is the best because it never fails to cure. _ A few doses reâ€" lieves and cures constipation, indigestion, colic, diarrhoea, and simple fevers, â€"It breaks up coldsâ€"thus preventing croup â€"expels worms and brings teething withâ€" out tears. Not one particle of opiate or poisonous soothing stuff is in this meJi’cino. Mrs. Hugh B. Denton, of Scotchtown, N. B., says: â€""I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets and have always found them a satisfactory . medicine." You can get the Tablets from any mediâ€" cine dealer or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Comâ€" pany, Brockville, Ont. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO | "No catemrerâ€"can afford to disregard [the aesthetic siue of the food question. To please the eye is to prepare a welâ€" |come reception for the food itself, and if this were the whole story, there would be no heated discussions on the subject between the manufacturer and food inâ€" sepector, no laws passed to suppress the coloring of foods. But the using of artiâ€" ficial coloring has brought forward two serious possibilities; first, that poisonâ€" ous ingredients will be used for the purâ€" pose; second, that second grade or even spoiled foods may be made by this means to appoar better than they are, and so deceive the purchaser. By the use of mineral coloring, peas, beans and other vegetables are sometimes greened before canning by ‘being boiled in a very dilute solution of copper sulphate. The practice has never been common in this country, and coppered vegetables are now exeludâ€" ed from our markets by law. The leadâ€" ing brands of butter color as examined by chemists, are made of coal tar. These colors are also used extensively to give the desired tint to beverages, as sodu water, and to restore the color to fruit and vegetables that have lost it in the process if cooking. Most important of all, these colors are the great meliance of the manufacturer who puts up a very 'chea.p grade of jam, jelly and catsup, ’sn'nce tomato and apple skin and core are not up to the mark in flavor or color. Our people should again learn what should be the color of milk and cream; to accept the fact that heat must change the bright hues of fruits and vegetables, and to learn the effect of timet :nd temperature on the color of meat. Coloring _ Matters and _ Commercial ’ Cheats, _ In the Delineator‘s campaign for sate Foods, Mary Hinman Abel writes, in the May number, a chapter on Coloring Matters and Commercial Cheats of vital importance, and afetr reading it one realizes something of the impositions that are practised on unsuspecting households. Mrs, Abel says: 4 ] In the recent campaign, for the first time in the history of English electionâ€" ecring, some women had to be forcibly removed from a meeting. They were earnest woman‘s suffragists and as the speaker of the occasion, who was no less than Sir Henry Campbellâ€"Bannerman, would not stop to pay any attention to them, they proceeded to hoist a banner (upside down, as it happened), and to address the audience in competition with the Prime Minister. After five minutes of uproarious confusion the police and some of the officials of the meeting gently but firmly half carried and hali pushed them out of the hall.â€"Harper‘s weekly, ‘ English Political Audiences Cherish Right to Heckle,. If America is the paradise England is the purgatory of the political speaker, He is very far from being allowed in England to have things all his own way. It is an unwritten law of the counâ€" try that he is liable to contradi:tion, Any man in the audience may get up and dispute any statement he pleases, and the orator is, not allowed to disreâ€" gard the interruption, but has to stop and argue the matter out with his adâ€" versary, The heckler has a recognized standing and all Englishmen are hocklers, and esâ€" pecially all English workingmen. In a company of six you have only to show an American that five are against him to convince him that he is wrong. That is just when an English workingman would become finally convinced that he was the only sane person in the room. If you have never watched an English workingman heckling Mr. Balfour on the subject of Chinese labor, you have yet to learn of what a political meeting is capâ€" able. These contests are followed by the audience with supreme zest and good humor. If they threaten to become too protracted the interrupter is pulled down in his seat by willing hands from behind or simply thrown out of the hall. AN AID TO MOTHERS. BREAK IN ON SPEAXERS, Hog Fattening. WHAT WE EAT. and Valueâ€" ’ "My son," he said, "if your father‘s advice is worth anything to you, let me urge you to seek a woman who hasn‘t the independence, the positiveness, the neral characteristics of your mother." E was interrupted at that moment b{: light footfall and realized that his loved helpmate had entered the room, "No, my son," he continued, "do nok hop: to find another woman like your tiously. "I have not done so yet, father," the young man replied. "What sort of wife would you suggest?" Biddlecomb was holding his eldest son in earnest converse. "My boy," he said, "I am filled with anxiety when I think that you will soon make choice of a wife." F 2 PCOW "VT UIROT. There is money enough in this counâ€" try toâ€"day in the hands of the few, if justly distributed to make "good times" for all. . * C The greatest compliment ever paid me was that by my u& work I hur.;fi to make the conditions of the world ter for women. _ ° EPCOJ CCOIJ sINRIC second Of my life; not on my knees, but with m work. Work and worship are one wit{ me. I have not allied and shall not ally myself to any party or measure save the one of j\lutieo and equality for women. 1 pray every single second of life; not on my knees, but with work. Work and worship are one The one distinctive feature of our as sociation has been the right of individual opinion for every member. Everyone who gives a dollar helps do the work where it is most needed to gain the practical result. As there is no way out of this job exâ€" cept through it, through it I must go. Selfâ€"government is as necessary for the best devolorment of women as of men. To prevail with the rank and file of voters you must appeal to their sense of justice. I know only woman and her disfranâ€" chised. Rentiment never was and never can be a guaranty for justice. No man is good enough to govern any woman without her consent. LATTIage ol secretary is on siding, where he shot a lion just now, and others are roarâ€" ing on Makindu side. Driver must proceed without signals and stop engine opposite autl'on. Guard must not get out of the brake van. Later advices have not yet come to hand, but if any station master is finding life monâ€", otonous and longs to have a dull, rountine peppered with incident and adventure, perâ€" baps he may arrange to swap jobs with the babu at Simba.â€"Buffalo Express. The track man succeeded in reaching the station before relief arrived. For several days the telegraph wire was burdened only with routine despatches. ‘Then another epi« sode was proclaimed in the following shape; ‘To guard the driver of Down Train: ‘Carriage of secretary is on siding, where he shot a lion just now, and others are roarâ€" ing on Makindu side. Driver muct neamaas ‘Extra Urgentâ€"Track band was surround« ed by two lions while returning from signal box. He climbed a telegraph pole near the water tank. He is up there yet. Order train to stop there and take him aboard, The traffic manager will please make neeâ€" essary arrangements.‘ G C atris d id PCTUT 420 had hardly reached terra firma, however, before the wounded lon burst out of the scrub and struck the hunter a blow with his paw which tore the flesh of his arm to the bone. ‘The hunter was knocked to the ground, and the lion, which was evidently growing weaker, rolled over on the grass and then dragged itself back into the bush, where its dead body was found a little later, ‘The hunter gave up watching for ons and sought a hospital at the coast, and the poor tbabu was left again in the wilderness. He told the train hands every day that he could pot sleep nights and his nerves wore badly shaken. There was nothing, however, for several weeks after the great day when three lions had been laid low within a few rods of the station. ‘Then came another nervoue telegram , uw an t 2 C THnZ CR the body with their paws, and at last began to drag it away, perhaps with the idea of awakening her. Just then a bullet ended the life of one of the brutes, and the other, wounded by the second shot, sprang into the bush. For half an hour the sportsman awaited on the platform any signs of life in the busbhes, but detecting no movement he _ descended from â€" his perch. He had hardly reached terra firma, however, Innfme UE : ce mecestp it (Hel l o ! It is not quite certain whether the babu was chiefly solicitous for the safety of the guard or whether he thought that the lion might take advantage of the open door to come into the office. However this may be, the distress signal from Simba had the imâ€" mediate result of starting a British sportsâ€" man in that direction. He took the next train for Simba, and under the water tank he and the railway men erected a platform about ten feet above the ground, where the Ninnrod spent several days waiting for tha visitors. His patience was at length rewardâ€" ed. The first animal he saw was a lioness, that came walking out of the scrub, very likely for the purpose of quenching hber thirst at the little stream that was leaking from the tank. When she was within about a hundred and fifty feet of the platform the hunter put a cordit bulet into her and stretched her on the ground. ‘The hunter did not leave his perch, for he thought someâ€" thing more would be doing. He was not misâ€" taken. A little later two lions came out of the high grass, and were soon in great menâ€" tal distress over the dead attitude of the dead female. They kept circling around her body, now growling, now whining. They hit Bhes ds cutur e t ESmE â€" ! Cl PCCCCCY: P PORDD THBEUCC guard and driver (engineer) to proceed careâ€" fully and to make no signals in the yard. Tell the guard to advise passengers not to get out here, and to be very €areful himself vl'mn he comes into the office.‘ * 2RC6, Dut they are of no use against lions.‘ This profound obsrvation has the earmarks Of sober truth. Whether the lion desired to by a ticket or whether a fellow feeling for the lonesome babu induced him to try to cultivate his acquaintance is not known, but it is quite certain that blank cartridges wore not appropriate ammunition, and that ball cartridges were in demand. It is to be supâ€" posed that they were promptly supplied, but if so, they did not make a deep impression upon the lions, for in August another bairâ€" raising telegram reached the triffic manager, as follows ‘A lion has been bothering me for three nights. He come up on the station platform and goes asleep. ‘Ther be walks up and down, scratches on the wall and door, and tries to get into the office. Ploase send cartridges for a Snider rifle by the first train for my protection. I have blank cartâ€" ridges, but they are of no use against lions.‘ on,. the -Au,u track road. ‘The trouble began mt Simba eleven months ago, when the trafâ€" fic manager at Nairobi one morning received g:llbutonumn‘ telegram from the babu at m ba : & special study of the railway station, has only a station building, a water tank for the engines, and a sideâ€"track, this being oune of the places where trains pass each other _ __The lons of East Africa appear to be watâ€" ching the progress of civilization with deep interest, and nothing has done more to aArouse their curiosity and wonder than the trains on the Uganda ‘Railway. The railway from the Indian Ocean to Victoria Nyanza 58i miles long, â€"and between the terminal points are thirtyâ€"nine stations. ‘The line is managed on the system of the Indian railâ€" ways, and most of the men on the track, train and station service are East Indijans. The Indian station agent is known s a babu and hbe leads a lonesome life. Simba, for enn.lp._ where the lions have been making bacs ~Auia d ad d & id rgent. ‘To Traffic Manager * ‘A lion is on the platform. Please instruct l'll"d and driver (engineer) to proceed careâ€" mdns ie ald ind l CEJ O *A Word of Advike, ‘> SUSAN B. ANTHONY SAID: August 17, 1.45 a.m. "The legislation und the fourth century, wa come of the teaching Church and of three ¢ tian usage. The auth -ervufnee toh‘o the Lord‘s rest for C freshment is to : sciousness of the eb Holy Spirit, his head or be it with his hands, the more he needs the rest that the univerâ€" sal Father bas provided for him in the Christian Sunday. A holiday in summer is not enough, A day off now and again or even every ten days (as was oncse tried in France)‘is not sufficient. Man and thl:xl;ult o!l burden require the exâ€" act relaxation from Ir which infinâ€" ite wisdom has M C poong : "We owe this to the God of the Bible. Heathenism has no Sundayâ€"no knowâ€" ledge of the God who made heaven and earth and rested from his labors on the seventh day. The loving thoughtfulness of the universal Father for the comfort and happiness of the sons of men shines in every book of Holy Seripture. He has arranged that the busy day shall al~ ways be succeeded by the night for rest, and that the tired body shall, by reason of its very weariness, the better woo reâ€" freshing sleep that "gathers up the ravelâ€" led edge of care" and fits the body for the dutics of the morrow. So, he has arranged that, year after year, the fields pour their largesse at our feet, that rivâ€" ers flow past our doors in never failing abundance and fruits and fiowers gladâ€" den us in their season. _ God has so arranged and adjusted our bodies that they can work for six days and he has arranged that the sixth day shall be followed by a day of complete res*. This is His own ordinance, designed to meet our needs and to minister to our comfort and happiness. To violate this law continually is to expose the body, mind and soul of a man to & whole train of disastrous consequences. On its religious side the secularization of the Lord‘s Day is certain to hurt the men who work and also the children who are theirs, and for whose -rbm are responsible. It will not only the appointed exercises. of personal teâ€" ligion, but will affect the wholé idea of the supernatural, is every man‘s day. More it the wo'kl7 man‘s day and er he works during the week, be it with ed, the factory and store locked up, work on the farm suspended, schools, mm and law courts deserted, and all the of buying and selling hushed for a perâ€" iod of twentyâ€"four hours. "The weekly day of rest is one _ of God‘s best gifts to men. Think of the pleasure with which millions of people look forward to Sundayâ€"the office closâ€" But a time is comingâ€"and some think that it is nearer than we imagineâ€"when the powers of nature shall be shaken.and there shall be strange signs and wonders in the skies above us. And then will those thrice happy ones, who have served and loved God, and have been redeemed through faith in His Son, Jlook up in glad aniicipation, for they know that their redemption dramweth nigh. But those who have forgotten Him will verâ€" ily cry in their agony for the rocks to cover them, and hide them from the anâ€" gry glance of the Great Judge, EVERYMAN‘S DAY. He rested on the seventh day. (Geneâ€" sis ii, 2). _ Nomewhat similar in character, perâ€" haps, to this electric cross, may be the "sunâ€"pillar," which was observed quite recently in England. It was described as being a tall, wellâ€"defined shaft or column of bright light, standing vertically erect, its base resting upon the llofllzn, and its capital reaching high up in the skies. It was stated to have oo:tinucd shining for half an hour or more, but before night had closed in had disappeared from view. Had the fire pillar, or still more so, had that fiery cross, appeared in the skiecs during the darkness of night, how much more impressive, and, to the un educated, even appalling, would the specâ€" tacle have been. and all vibrating in a shimmering, everâ€" changing refulge‘m; now blazing out in metallic, iridescent streams of prismatic fires, now for a moment receding someâ€" what into the darkness, but Olllxy to puiâ€" sate aagin into an everâ€"Augmenting vivid flow, until it appeared as if the heaven tself were on.rire, and a vision of the glories of the hereafter were being unâ€" rolled for our delectation. Another and seldom ohd'v;: phenome» enon, also (jnu A otograph which the wr':t:?i t:b‘bkl)',’ol electrica} ori« gin, is the appearance of a great flamâ€" ing cross in the skies,. _ The scenceâ€"it was near Bray, in Irelandâ€"was unspeak ably beautiful and impressive. Right down to the sandy shore stretched a leafy, undulating wood, with an underâ€" growth of flowering shrubs and wild flowers. The sea glittered with that pe!â€" lucid, wavy gleam which sometimes preâ€" sages a coming storm. And there, over the waters, suspended in midâ€"air, hung the Sign of the Cross, the sacred emâ€" blem glowing with a pale, subdued fire, wondrously beautifual and dtogethe:.h explicable. Well might they who privileged to witness this strange natâ€" ural phenomenon be held spellbound,. alâ€" most with bewildered awe, at the inefâ€" fably fascinating spectacte. . SIGNS OF THE & (By a | ) * From time to time of and varied opticel take in our atmosphere of i beauty, some Qd and startling, altogether amazing in M and magnificence. gnt wonderful s ‘ e aurora borealis, r“’ vone : the most . gorgeous ltflw specâ€" tacles ever witnessed from this earth, In a former article.of this series the writer endeavored feebly to give an adeâ€" quate description of a sumptuous outâ€" burst of this electrical phmuot which he was fortunate in wi isng; when the entire northern hmifi; was bridged over by a piliare arch of dgmy-hud ,dfim:g tires, flashing in all colors of the rainvow and quivering with a strange tremor as if nature herself were terrorâ€"struck at her own weird beauty, Geometric columns of amethyst, of saphire, of emerald, or of fireâ€"opal, clustered all aglow side by side, the base of some depending beneath the lower arch of the reat vaulted bow ; [GppiDAl _5 ts

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