Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 29 Nov 1906, p. 8

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th wi 1 to th ( N' city d. sahat the | 818 for ©1 to . Ihurme have city of take for by New Com clud tens equb the the mir m ap fo te .‘!f e on . tfb’e word point us and {estN/ tQ UHC OD+ operation of (od and mar in bm nature and all the products of t~ perfection. , It :l}mn't very much matter what kind of work we may do; the supreme thing is the spirit wh’eh webri: to our work. To be fellowâ€"workers with God in our daily calling, we must have la er than merely personal aims and neex w« must see t:;t our work, both diâ€" vectly and indirectly, is an influence for wood and not an influence for evil, a lifting and not a debasing and groping inflvonce, a help and not a hindrance to the giving of a better civilization and a better society, doing something to o=â€" tablish justice and truth and goodness in the world, and to get God‘s will done on carth as it is in heaven. â€"Rev. Jobhn Huster. D. D. "We are followâ€"workers with (iod."â€"I. John Burns, England‘s labor cabinet minâ€" ister, was asked by an American woman to contribute sometbing to her autograph alâ€" bum. Mr. Burns kept the album three days and #hen returned it with the follow‘ing original stanza: ‘Born in otrvnloâ€"nared in strife~â€" Agitator all my life. Blessed with _ho-ls.l‘;'-y owa wealth John Buros. (Chicago Chronicle.) John Burns, lngnd'- labor C ister, was asked an America contribute something to her au AEee TCO CC D sÂ¥ 2 AMinm ~ow it must surely be more honoring and pleasimg to Him who made us +o strive to be something. somethine. fi i noi is be passive, empty, idio mind and heart, the inspiration of God comes. It i» not to the passive, empiv, idie mind and heart, but to the felly exercised mind and heart, the inspiration of Ged comes. It is a strong. sacred will. and not a weak and broken will, He requires for liis purposes. It is our disciplined faculties we must bring to Him if we are to be His fellowâ€"workers. We were not meant to be nomentities, and the ory to be "nothing, nothing," must be batciul in the car of im who created ns is His own image and sent us forth to his work in the world. * * * The everâ€" lasting God the Lord fainteth not, neiâ€" ther groweth weary, and in this continuâ€" ous and never-celsir:s‘work of creation man can help or hinder, develop or reâ€" tanl the creative purpose and process. clear!y that he is made in the imm! the (Creator, show that he is a fe ~ worker with God, and thus does the world point us and testify to the coâ€" sscration of Ciod and manr in bringing jestic power and s"kmn‘omnipotence of Him who created them all. And vyet that Mighty Peing deigned to resion for a time Mis Maiesty in the heavens and to come down to this carth in humility and penury in order to make an expia« tion for all who will but lay their sins unon Him. And yet how many fatwously reject that atonement, and callously inâ€" enr the wrath of that great Crogtor! â€"â€"Br And when the immensity of space is considered, with the unconceivably stupâ€" endous infinity of heavenly bodics sus pended therein. from migshty flaming suns of incredible magnitnae, to these minute wanderers of the ether, the mind is struck with awe and stupor and amazâ€" ed bewilderment, at the august and maâ€" Men Who Are War :A There is a little bymn whic I someâ€" times hear people singing. It has this refrain: "Ch. to be nothing. nothine." To give some idea of the violence of these oexplosions it is relasted that some time ago a metcorie sione, observed by Sir Hans Sloare, the groat natnralist. traversed the whole of England explodâ€" ing over Pevon or Cornwall, the explosâ€" ion being heard rnot only through those countics but on the opposite coast of France. And when comes within mosphere it bered for a thing is ligh flashing glar seconds the while overhe; of a phosph foliowed by ing sparks i thrown ; able to | into spa headliong ter their tured some to iake their rise in resolvâ€" ing nebulae, others to be small fragments of suns or of planets which,. either by collision, or by some lerrific disruption, have Leen shattered and wrecked; the larger seciions formirg new minor planâ€" ets and assuming the orldt of their overâ€" thrown parent, the smaller, not so amenâ€" able to the laws of gravity, harled out into space, where they sontinue their headlong course until, perhaps acons afâ€" Scattered throughout the depths of il lmitable space, all huriling through the ether at inconceivable velocity, owning perhaps no allegiance to any one of the myriad suns which hold sway over their attendant planets, but wandering like lost stars in the chasm of the infinite, are innumerable small metailic bodies, varying from a few tons in weight down to a few ounces or less, which are conjecâ€" tured some to iake their rise in resolvâ€" ing nebulae, others to be small fragments of suns or of planets which,. either by eollision, or by some terrific disruption, elaer at i perhaps no myriad sun atterdant lost stars MA My ?p} more cheek to: Fiss n: than on the cheek. ain gude wife Fiery Thunderboi red throughout the : space, all burtlins Cor. in. n weight uowi , which are conjecâ€" | it rise in resolvâ€" j small fragments } which, either by / rrific disruption, | d wrecked; the ! LLS. A Cough or Uoid cure it with ' ‘ 1 ‘ i Roo l gant? rek Mc( VÂ¥ ! 41 bocesfgn c, | has the pleasure 76{â€":"0.1_!-11};} ed t. i the New York afternoon paper: _‘ j table. Somebow Rover must * . the old philosopher‘s notion th: 8 ; come to him that waits.‘ ‘ ft | Setuuciauucceemmnenmencomenteneiaten <., morentt â€" aterains= v d thickly covered with ivy and creepers, over which the "gentleman from next door" conversed with Mrs. Nickleby, is still there, much worn with age. ‘n the centre of the gardon is a large patch of evergreens and marigolds. while sweet amolling jasmine perfames the air with . its gragrance. One can easily reconstruct ; the love scene in this oldâ€"fashioned corâ€" , ned and see in imagination the lady deâ€" : murely rejecting the proposals of the | madman ‘from next door." | ‘ The liitle cottage has long since been ‘ demolished, and on its site now stand the ; remains of a laundry. But the landâ€" | if these old associations are allowed to | be obliterated _ by the march of th* marks are still left, and it will be a pity builder. It.is a delightful sylvian retreat ! and the many lovers of Dickens will hope ; that the suggestion of the Dickens Felâ€" i lowship that the authorities should seâ€" eure the ?m as a “cNie recreaiion | ground will be acted ubon. ‘The estate, | which is otill surrounded by the high wall of Byas‘ private lunatic asylum, comprises close upon a dozen neres of It is a strange spot, situated in the heart of Ipmdon‘s East End, a spot which few would expect to find in this busy district. . _At the end of the avenue and away to the left lies the old time warden in which the eccentric lady and her still more eccentric lover communed in the days of long ago. The old wall, Until recently the estate was the site | of Byas‘ private lunatic asylum. Just off j the Bo wroadâ€"the high road to Chigâ€" q well, with which the novelist was well acquaintedâ€"and about three or four hunâ€" dred yards down Fairfield road the visitâ€" or comes to a large high brick wall. Paseâ€" ing through the narrow porter‘s lodge, he at once steps into an Old World garden | of quaint and singular beauty. In front ‘ of him stretches a long avenue of plane trees, and away in the distance are vistâ€" as of winding paths and leafy lanes. d An Estate at Bow Where Dickens Laid One of His Most Famous Scenes. 1 Many interesting associations are linkâ€" ed with the Grove Hall estate, at Bow, which is to come undor the aunctioncer‘s hammer toâ€"day. It was here that Chas. Dickens lai dthe scheme ot the amustug love making episodes between Mrs. Nichâ€" olas Nickleby and the "gentleman beâ€" longing to the house next door." _ Here stood the "little cottage at Bow," and the quaint old garden in which Mrs. Nickleby and her daughter Kate received the love offerings of vegetable marrows, cucumbers and onions, is still in existâ€" ence. ‘"Apd.‘"" continued the latter, "I have come to think since I have been getting the New York daily papers regularly that I‘m probably the only farmer in the State living not far from 400 milos from New York who has the pleasure of reading editions of all the New York afternoon papers at his teaâ€" table. Somebow Rover must have gotten the old philosopher‘s notion that ‘all things come to him that waits.‘ ‘ Your Doctor His name was Rover; he‘d beon in the Canâ€" fleld family since he was a puppy, was the chum of the children, drove the cows to and from pasturc, headad the sheop and did pretty generally the work of a hired man about the farm. What ever gave him ths motion of going dowr to meet the train Mr. Canfield didn‘t know, but he had noticed many days before the first bundle of papers were brought home that Rover skedaddled for somewhere immediately after he had brought up the cows from the pasture, Not many days thereafter there came to Mr. Pierce‘s Buffalo home a letter from George M. Canfield, a well to do farmer of Burdette, in which the receipt of the papers was greatefully acknowledged, togother with & little biographical sketch of the dog. Every night thereafter the dog got his bundle of papers. All of the regular pasâ€" sengers on the train and all of the crew wondered where the collie carried his burâ€" den, to whom he belonged and what was his name. Condductor Pierce hit on a way of finding out. Into the bundle one evening he slipped his card, on which he wrote his address. After the train pulled out c: Wilkesbarro the following night Mr. Pierco made up a bundle of the latest editions of the New York afternoon papers and when the train approached ‘the Burdette crossing he went out on the platform of the observation car and threw the bundle toward the dog. The colie gave a quick, sharp bark. wagged his tail furiously and bounded toward the bund!s, which he picked up in his mouth and trotted away over the bills. "I‘ll try an experiment toâ€"morow night, and we‘ll slow down a little at the crossing iq goe what happens." _ P ol s radn Conductor became interested. So did all the other reguars on the train. ‘They wanteod to know why the dog came down from someâ€" where every night to meet the train. After a week had run by Conductor Pierce said: . ] ‘The next night, same dog, same plac», same result. Next night, ditto, and so on for a week. f One fine evening about & year ago Conâ€" ductor Plerce noticed on a little elevation near the Burdette crossing a splendid Scoich collie, ears erect, watch narrowly the apâ€" proach of the train. As it passed the crosaâ€" ing the dog turned deliberately and trotted back over the hills. : Going west the Black Diamond scoots over m crossing two miles east of Burdetts, a hamlet in Seneca county, not far from Watâ€" kin‘s Glen, N. Y., at 7.20 o‘clock every evenâ€" ing. If she‘s on time. ‘The boss of the Black Diamond is Conductor G. M. Plerce, of Bufâ€" falo, who, except for his big frame, reminds one greatly of the late United States Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts. _ I Until a few months ago he was known as the Black Diamond mystery. The Black Diamond express is the fastest thing on the Lehigh Valley. It‘s even faster than a man about town. + A SMART COLLIE. } 44 4 4 4 4 44444 090004444b b4¢a Why not do as hundreds of thousands of Canadians have done for the past thirtyâ€"four zc’ears: let SHILOH be your docâ€" r whenever a Cough or Cold apgears. M o g HILOH will cure you, and all dmggilts back up this statement with a positive guaranvee. The next time you have a Cough or Cold cure it with Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, butâ€" why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and then of having hisprescription filled, when you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH‘S CURE for a quarter. Ks Why pay two to five dollars when a twentyâ€"five cent bott}g_g{is.HILOfi will cure you as quickly ? MRS. NICKLEBY‘S GARDEN. Selfish Interests. (Chicago Chronicle.) *‘Nature knows mo political parties, ne race exclusiveness, no division of territory by artificial boundaries."" So says James J. HIlI, and he speaks the toutbh. But selfish interests know all these things and profit by them to the enormous injury of the gencral interests. Theytake advantage of them to gain special nrivileges, to promote cruel injustice, to instill the malignant virus of race hbate and to plunge nations and races 1ntomblood:r and destructive wars with one another. Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD nnlfi 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two mounths‘ thorough trial. Made by * IMPERIALY PUMPING WIXNDMILL GCOLD, SHAPLEY @ MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. tw ime. Ague is one of the things that will give a follow the shake and still stay right with him. Ye may lose friend and cash if taint paid Drongs and bumble bees never give honey, An‘ mistakes are best check‘d b‘fore made. Ye needn‘t go fussin‘ fer worry, It‘ll come with a rush, when it‘s due,. If ve burnin‘ yer bridges, don‘t burry, P‘raps yer may need to cross one or two. Never put off yer chores ‘till toâ€"morrer, Do ‘em now, ‘till yer git tuckered out. Be jest as God made ye, skip sorrer ‘N‘grab bull b‘ the horns when in doubt. By Jerry J . Cohan in The Spot Light When the siky‘s kind o‘cloudy, ols feller, An‘ it looks jest a leetle like rain, Don‘t fergit that a stout umbereler Is safer to wear than a cane. If ye ketch yerself coughin‘ or sneezin‘, Got a pain, a headâ€"ache, or a chill, Kind o‘ reckon ther‘s all‘ers a reason, Nip th‘ cause an‘ yer save doctor‘s bill. Likely folks learn sich signs o‘ th‘ weather As fool folks don‘t think much about, "Till they bunch many troubles tergether, 'C;usg they didn‘t steer right, when in oubt. If yo let yer friend borrer yer money, A superficial smattering _ of _ many things is not half as useful as knowing a few things really woll. Learn all you can, but learn one thing thoroughly before you begin another. The girl with an accomplishment is never without soms interest in life. She is sought afier by other people interestâ€" ed along the same lines. and the keeping herself up to the mark is a constant stimulus to her mind. A great many girls have no time for any occomplishmentâ€"these words _ are merely for the girls who, having time, scatter their interests, thus achieving nothing. One real accomplishment is better than baif a dozen sham ones, And don‘t imâ€" agine that you can work in a balfâ€"heartâ€" ed manrer and succeed. Success in anything means hard work and courage in face of repeated â€" failure. The more hardly won the sweeter the winning. quicker you will be rid of it, If you wart an accompusnment out one that you feel you will be likely to sueceed in, and put your heart into mastering it. Don‘t s shally over it and break off when are half proficient in it to try o thing now. If you have a picce of uncongenial work to get through with the quicker you sot to: work to thoroughts **~<ter it the quicker you will bo rid of i%. If you are going to try a thing you might as well put your best into it. Whether it is work or play, it is doing well. It would be W\:er');‘;nueh better young woman if she could, be in any one of the many thines Rooneyâ€"Is Pat Casey‘s wife extravaâ€" McGannâ€"She is; she‘s had twins HP Y creciniisies ainfinbil 37â€" A "Jessie tires of things _ so quickly," sighed her mother. "I am afraid she will never be successful in anything. _ She wants to try a new thing before sho has half learned the old." C onbieitietin Di indb 5 id dsc l a 22 She does nothing really well. She sings a little and plays a very little, dabble, at painting, plays an indifferent game of tennis and the same kind of golf. sev in s s c Ca ce‘ _ "I don‘t see why it is," said a girl the }other day, "that I never seem to do anyâ€" thing as well as other girls." _ Anyone else could see why it was perâ€" fectly. She never finishes anything. She rushes into each new thing as though her life depended upon it. and tires of it before she is half way through with it. j fe tuive e is edls: iesnscs The asylum itself was closed early in t,be.present year, and the buildings, with the"exception of one or two at the exâ€" treme leit of the grounds, have been pulled down.â€"London Daily News. beautifully wooded land. Such a spot would make an :deal recreation ground. Gray’scf Syrup Red Spruce Gum Mrs. Casey‘s Extravagance. (Puck.) For Coughs and. Colds. When in Doubt. Why She Fails. tering it. Don‘t shillyâ€" nd break off when you ‘nt in it to try someâ€" plishment is better than im ones, And don‘t imâ€" in work in a hal/â€"heart "* accompiisnment pick feel you will be most in, and put your whole _ much better for that] he could, be thorough mary things she dabâ€"! TORONTO worth at all effort "Co!;)j'right t" said Crittic you have it patented." Suggesting a Better Course. (San Francisco Call.) "That‘s my best work," said the poet after nadin%‘tbe verses to Crittick. "I‘m thinking of having it copyrighted." At some points Newfoundland‘s elaims extend 200 miles inland, but Canada will not concede a strip along the whole coast of this coast. The latter wants an outlet on the Atlantic without having to pass through a coastwise strip owned by her neighbor. Forests and mineralsâ€"gold particularlyâ€"are thought to abound in the disputed area. It will not surprise the Canadian to learn that be has a second Klondike. In 1809 the castern littoral was given to Newfoundland and the unknown hinâ€" terland to Canada or rather to the Hudâ€" son Bay Company. As laid down im the documents the bouwndary is a mistaken one, since it conflicts with an express grant of the coast to Newfoundland. Negotiations are now in progress for an amicable adjustment. A refusal of Newâ€" foundland to pay royalty to Quebec for timber cut at Hamilton Inlet has brought differences to a climax. Accurate surâ€" veys are being made with a view to a decision, the last word being withk the Privy Council or arbiters chosen by the London Government. Labrador Subject of Controversy Beâ€" tween Carada and Newfoundland. | Labrador has till recently been regardâ€" el as a sort of "never, nevrer land," owing to the inhospitality of the climate and the mugged nmature of the country, but the 320,000 square miles of the penâ€" insula are now attracting attention by reason of its forests and reputed mineral wealth, and Canada is accordingly disâ€" puting the boundary line claimed by Newfoundland. The coast belongs to the latter country, but the interiorâ€"beyond a line not yet definitely locatedâ€"belongs to Canada. "‘Black Eagle, what is a quadruped? "‘A thing with four legs," the boy answered promptly. "‘Good," said the teacher. ‘And are there any feathaored uardqupeds? "‘Yes,‘ was the reply. "‘Oh, there are, are there?" laughed the teacher. ‘Well, name one.‘ "‘A feather bed,‘ said the boy." "The stoical young Indian,. no less than the emotional young paleface, is scared," soid Professor Compbell, "at the June cxaminations coming. And in examinaâ€" tion he, like the rest of the juvenile world, make a great many odd mistakes. "At Pipestone, at a recent examinaâ€" tion in etymology, a teacher said to a lad : A Feathered Quadruped. Professor W. S. Campbell, the superâ€" intendent of the Indian school at Pineâ€" stone Minn., was talking about the exâ€" aminations which, at this season, rack and harass the breasts of the young of America. "Coj But don‘t wait until an animal is injured. GET IT NOWâ€"and you have the remedy that CURES all latneness in horses. If your dealer does not handle it, send 50c. to National Drug & Chemical Co., Limited, MAY BE A NEW KLONDIKE, A powerful ex:mple cf the healing virtue of Zamâ€"Buk is provided by the case of Mrs. Lizzie Gilmour, Princess Street, Kingston (Ont.). She rays:â€" ‘Five years I bruised my leg, "and caused u.&r which developed "into a ~erious wound. 1 was in the * hospital nine months, where the doctor " wanted to ampulate the limb. After pri !mvins the hospital I heard of Zamâ€" * Eul? dtmd Iit. {.ho ulcers b?oa., to " heal, and new pink fiesh began w * where before was a raw and infls:ed "sore. I can now walk about, and canâ€" * not feel too grateful for what Zamâ€"Buk "has done for me." All druggists sell it at 50c. a box, or post free from the Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto, upon receipt of price (6 boxes for §2.50). AND BAD LEG Fellows‘ Essence MONTRE AL 13 T. Owen, of Oswestry, who is a vegeâ€" tarian of 69, stated at the vegetarian conference in Manchester that for some time he has made it a rule to fast twenty out of the twentyâ€"four hours of each day. He allows himself two meals a day, ard these consist invariably of a little bread or biscuit, fresh dried fruits, and a few nuts. To consume these be takes from forty to fortyâ€"five mimutes, and to each mouthful _ he administers from fifty to a hundred bites. Mr. Owen claims that on this diet he is able to cyele considerable distances and undergo severe mental strain without the least fatigue.â€"London Daily Craphic. ‘"In this instance," explained the proâ€" fessor of surgery, to the group of medâ€" ical students, "the left leg of the paâ€" tient is somewhat shorter than _ the right limb, thus causing the patient to limp. Now, Mr. Fresh, what would you doué a:ue like this?" Thhunictt ell," . responded .A Mr. Fresh, #E‘gteas T‘dlimp, t60."â€"Brooklyn The "SALADA" Tea Co. up to the beâ€" ginning of November have had an all around increase in their business in Canada and the United States of 26 per rent. over the corresponding period of last year. This is the most extraordinary increase they have ever known, and is the reward of serving the public well. Life. scenes and feed and entertainment is wha the women who are and pains. I was cured of a bad case of earache by MINARD‘S LINIMEXT. MRS. 8. KAULBACK, I was cured of sensitive lungs by MINXâ€" ARDS LINIMENT. f MINARD‘S LINTMENT. The Power of the Prune. Weatherwise prophets are predicting a hard winter, but there need be no hunâ€" gor. _ The gladdening news comes from California that the harvest there will inâ€" elude 110,000,000 pounds of prunes. Joy will reign in every boarding house in the country. â€" Breakfast foods may pall and evaporated fruit pies and puddings grow dull upon the jaded taste of secondâ€"floor fronts and hallroomers alike But the prune, plum, purple and palatable, is the perenmial pet in the hand of the landâ€" ladv.â€"New York Mail. I‘ve been courting Miss Meredith for about a year now, and I‘m not sure if she really cares for me, you see. How am I to find out?" "I‘ll tell you what to do," replied his friend. "Send a teleâ€" gram to yourselfâ€"Situation in India waiting for you. Will you come* " "Capâ€" ital idea," said Johnston; "I will try it." He was back next night looking rather excited. "Well," said Watson, "how did the scheme work?" "Work!" groaned Johnston; "it worked only too well. I showed her the telegram and said, ‘Would you mind if I went away? and she laid her head on my shoulder and said, ‘Not a bitâ€"I‘ll go with you‘ Capital Idea. "I have come to ask your advice and assistance, old man,." said young Johnâ€" ston, as he dropped into Watson‘s smokâ€" in@ room the other night. "You know _ _All dealers, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co,, Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. 603 weary fecling nearly ail the time. "I‘tried almost every medicine, was treated by doctors and druggists, with little or no benefit. "I tried Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill, and the results have been truly wonderful. I am so much better. Antiâ€"Pill is a most wonderful remedy." ap ao "Caution! Pedestrians are earnestly reâ€" quested to walk softly past this house. Drivers of vehicles of all kinds are imâ€" plored to slow down when passing, or, preferably, to go around by the other road, as the slichtest disturbance may bring: the buildinge down. the cobwebs which the spiders have woven in the cornâ€". ers of the rooms being not yet quite str:mg enough to hold the walls togethâ€" er. Titâ€"Bits Mrs. I. Hunter MRS. HUNTER‘S STORY Says Results are "Tru‘y Marvelions." Mrs, I. Hunter, of 111 Raglan Road, Kingston, Oy SAYREA. . .. At last, rendered desperate and reckâ€" less, the tenant painted the following notice on a big board and stuck it in his front garden: f The tenant of one of them had re peated!y petitioned the landlord to make the necessary repairs, but each time he was put off with unfulfilled promises tpblattend to the matter as soon as poSâ€" sible. tures of the most perfect stamp, with damp, cracked wum and plaster and windows and doors which rattle at the slightest breath of wind. SE Tenant Puts Up a Notice That Gets Wim the Desired Repairs. â€" ‘mI a certain London suburb, which need nok be named there is a row of typical modern twentieth century, jerryâ€"built semiâ€"detached villas. The _ houses, alâ€" though quite new, are jerryâ€"built strucâ€" The landlord has capitulatedâ€"London was cured of torrible lumbago by BRINGS LANDLORD TO TIME. Cure for Ailing Wives. Vegetarian Rules. who are always coi e htose who bave n ‘e to talk of the have to think of. ph every few weks audevilie. Even r . Let ‘em ride on : in the windows, go | take an automo! Correct. "I have suffered with kidney and liver trouâ€" ble and chronic constiâ€" pation for some time, I was subject to dizziâ€" ness, bilious headache, nervousness, drowsi ness, pains in the back and side, and a tired, REV. WM. BROWX MRS. 8. MASTERS. woss. ‘The same above all, lack ails nineâ€"tenths afflicted . with a« iLven run ‘ide on the ows, go to automobile 1 give up to sleepâ€" e old ‘k of is of aches No News of Importance. (Adams, Ga., Enterprise.) We are sorry to record that an ing sawmill eut off the left leg of our leading citizons last week. accident was caused by his losin head from getting tangled in the ery, after which he lost his leg. is no news to speak of. Mimard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria, The Lord Mayor‘s comchman is still tbo' theme of the Paris papers. . *"Nobody vbol has not seen him can imagine bim," sAYs Le u.uns“l{o is as round as an apple, as round as a ball, or rather, as round as the earth itself. He is rosy and chubby of face, aud his body is a formidable paradox. And this artonishing man #its enthroned with a wonâ€" drous dignity midway between earth and aky. His lip is scornful, una he heeds not the re. i marks of the crowd. He sees or hears noth= i ing but bis horses." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget In Cows. When a man ceases to aspire he might as well be dead, for his soul is stagnant. And, when he contemplates what socialâ€" ism really means and is, where is the man who would find life worth living on any plane above that of the brutes that perish?â€"Chicago Interâ€"Ocean. j The superstition concerning the is likely to attend a marriage in an lar month is expressed in the followi ‘‘Marry when the years is ne Always loving, kind and true; When the February birds do Yor moy wed, nor read your f If you wed when March winds Joy and sorrow both you‘ll k Mary in April when you can, Joy for maiden and for man, Marry in the month of May, You will surely rue the day. Marry when June roses blow, Over land and sea you‘ll go. . ‘They who in July do wed, Must labor always for their bx{ 3 Whoever wed in August be, Many changes are sure to see. Marry in September‘s shine, Your Hving will be rich and fine If in October you do marry, Love will come, but riches tarry. If you wed in bleak November, Only joy will come, remember. When December‘s snows fall fa Marry and true love will last." ITCH}NG PILES Puk: cuaen 2: rocouir h n eaitthouet us ho ‘eg _ Justice Callahan a few days ago delivâ€" ered a judgment which entitles him to be ranked with Solomon. A young man was brought before him, charged with frightening a young woman. _ Having gone to her home and secured an interâ€" view with her, he produced a bottle labâ€" eled "carbolic acid," drank its contents, fell on the floor, and pretended to be dyâ€" ing. The effect on the young woman may easily be imagined. The fellow was arrested and taken before Justice Callahan, who, after bearing the story, fined him $200, and he is now presumâ€" ably at the Bridewell cracking rock. There are in every community certain practical jokers, _ who think it great sport to frighten people. They Ei‘nt firearms at them, they rock the t, they go into the water and pretend to be drowning, they get into houses at night and act like burglars, or they go into lonely placas at midnight, wrap sheets around themselves anrd play the role of ghostsâ€"all to frighten somebody.â€"Chiâ€" cago Chronicle. At d BloodTone and 'l_'.blei-_ means a quicker cure. COmn ERORE ERRRTCOE EPC POCIT INY"'.\H €20 P Amee! "I used all the salves and remedies 1 MMJ Then I used Mira Ointmentâ€"and obtained more relef from it than all the others. 1 recommend it to all afflicted with this complaint," _ __________ _ "I was troubled with Itching Piles," writes ons man whose address we will };{rm_xk on request, Ointmentâ€"the iâ€"] 4 j . [ ' “‘?‘ @J G \ es M rounes ) | L o uie .UL-HUR WA C Ask for . M BDDY‘S SAFETY waTcurs ror HOTELe AsYLUNs, m".-‘w PARLOR The Lord Mayor‘s Coachman., Months for Lucky Ma each boxâ€"6 for $2.50. Used with Mira Punishing a Practical Joker. MATCHE Might as Well or from The Chemiis‘ Co. of ate, te, low. ad nfeelâ€" f one The his rchinâ€" ECCE mmd HTSw some fresh conclusions. Thore are people who read a great deal more than other peopie but know a great dea} less. They read juust to readâ€"to put in time; or a pleasurable sensation that one gets fih a hammeock or drinking a gu of Thers is no digestive force it that buillds up braio fiber. It is the sort of reading that sustains |n-|ouulkluuku~lacnuhoocm circle turn away in disgust when a serious subject is referred to. The fact is, the onaly k{n:.‘o(hmdh. that is worth the time em plo: w ion and ullde p that 'N. arouses reflect Mrs. Rappsâ€"My Husband says he wouldn‘t :1‘7' two cents for your husband‘s opinions Mrs. Slappsâ€"Of course he wouldn‘t. In m husband‘s opinion he isn‘t worth tweo ....,’ mm in d CC les of special lessons in farm bookkeepin e with full instructions, separate rulings an d printed headings for grain account, poultry account, cattle account, hog account,. labor account, dairy account, expense account; Gepartment for each kind of grain, cash received acoount and cash paid out accounst. The Manual also contains a complete insect department, a veterinary handbook, a perâ€" fect system of horseâ€"training accordiag to the methods used by Prof, 0. W. Gleason, besides the farmers‘ legai department. 400 ways be used for children teething. . it soothes the child, soothes the , cures 'numlfillthhur-.‘q“;rm.r. oem. (Mention this paper.) Agents wanted. THE FARMERS‘ MANUAL contains a ies of special lessons in farm bookkee In all the above we can give immediats possession; small payment down and low inâ€" terest and easy torms for the belance. For further particulars apply to FARMER‘S SONS Good 100 acres in Binbrook with orchard and buildings, all under cultivation; i$ miles from Hamilton, near new courty stome road; price, $2,600; a snap. T. D. J. FARMER, Barrister, Etc. 8. The south % of lot 10, in the second concession of Glanford, mear HManuon P.O., 88 mcres, good buildings. 100 acres in Grimsby ‘Township, lot T, conâ€" cession 7, formerly known as the Hanigan farm; good buildings and orchard; about 4 miles south of Grimsby village; price $2,2% 5. % acres in the Township of Willoughby, northwest part of lot 8, in the first cross concession, 12 miles east of Welland, known as the Sauer property, with fair buildings and some fruit, 3 miles from rallway station 6. 50 acres in the Township of Nelson, 17 miles from Hamiltor, known as the Harris farm; good bank barn and good hbous«; some small fruit and timber. 7. 86 aores Township of Binbrook, 14 imiles from Hamilton on new county stone road; no buildings, but fine soll. is BP mt NO 1 P F the east side of the Town of Preston; one of the best farms in Waterloo County; brick house and large bank barn. 2. ‘The Robert 8. Smith farm, Towni&i of Glanford, 7 miles from Hamilton, 09 ac good buildings and orchard, 2 acres of la beech, maple and pine timber, 12 meres (1)] wheat in s'und: fall plowing done. 8. The arpe farm, lot 13. concession 4, West Flamboro, 7 miles from liamilton on good gravel road; stome bouse, large bank barn; magnificent stock and dairy farm; 100 acres. _4. 90 mcres, J1% miles from the Village o Smithville, on the ‘B., M. & B. Ry., w.th fair byildings, known as the old Morse farm Choice FarmProperties For Sale or To Reat 7 James street south, Hamilton, Ontario Mrs. Winslow‘s Sooth The J. L NICHOLS co ISSUE NO. 48, (Obto State Jouml.)‘ must do something bosides Exchange of Compiiments â€" * _ ‘s Liniment Cures Distemper Dissipation in Reading (Detroit Free Press.) FARMS FOR SALE. MISCELLANEOUS, Publisbers, farm, 140 acres, ._d_jolnlnq Syrup should al of ¢]

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