Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Feb 1907, p. 6

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'p1tll11Pi')l' li i'.':'. 1'8llll)'ll?iirs) Does :31on think an it Thu had not nonoy not. thaw would boll-duo! hie with The Thur trial is not dob. Incl to increase respect for United Stun jour- nalism 'or [united States administratio- n! itrsreee. Pram to hear that owing to the ar-ity of the cold - the at.” d tern made very expensive Ind theta-o primes will have to he raised sein. N in said that Stout-d is may“. ore-emit- in the mud-tune of "weeds and tut nearly Mirth. ot the oo-cnllod scotch tweeds minnow nude in Eula-l. The fuel problem in the WW”!- ntill persists. A great "-dris ug- ing, and Brandon u at.“ a! Mel. To make the amnion an Wt, the nilwayn are obliled to meoamt the train uni“. During the recent areoeseese6H'usrtnp in Vancouver there was g grub-horny oi coal, and dealers sotuuljymold fuel to the "In at lea-than colt to prevent suffering, pin. to will Trouble to hasten deBrsHes. In iii. "way great hard-hip no "and. Now'tletm big red mark u Tr'et on Ibo'ore'ditwide of the mu! m" account. In tho United trtate. 12750318 children My... the mo! tan and fifteen are employed it wt-tmai-tr toil. That is a wracked all-owing for a highly "pro- tected" poopk. At least nine-tenths of these littBewrte.dhotird be at school. The evil effect. 'of inch 1 condition will he- tome ”punt. 10m. you: hence. A. Mi moiety item, says: "In the but Hugh]: society the fashion of rid- ing ostrich is growing rapidly. Lady CM in.“ example, and them are a number.“ young girls mu in the Roar in the divided skirt." Welt, the “cumin" -style of riding my not be to Woo as tho other, but it in wry In): "safer, and it is easier on the hon... In France all titles of nobility have been by .hw abolished, but many dint to them. There are, too, . great my boys title, min] for courting United Stun Mingus. The Government put- you. taxing all genuine titles, bogus hsadln hing allowed do mp0. Od mum, Jew titteuaaersariit Mme to pay. The _tax km, from.3,ml. for n duh to 1,001". Iqra chevnlier. On April 29 Egypt in to have t not census taken. Stranngy enough such a process is viewed with great dialuor by tit Mnhb. who look for judgments to “new the "number'ng of the people." “In Egypt became mkoman province in the yearn C. 30, she had {In esti- ttaou,petPttiatioat of “M400. Bat she has non much misfortune since that time. Theseus” of 1897 showed a pop Nation of 9,738,405, tut. increase of 43 pct oent. in “(tun years. It is believed that tho-minus presently to be taken will "ow a popuhtion of over 1'.u300,060. British rule is doing much for Egypt. Your million Chinese .uan'ing. Pu-l dren being goldvhy _theirtrentis at from 82 to 34 oaeh to keep them from famish- ing. Woman crushed to death in the scum“ to: Mod. Such is the new: that some from China. It is thought that the famine will be more serious than the one of .1810. when 10,000,” Chinese perished. m, “and aghast when the news in: fuahed (um:- the. ocean that Iii-pu- had been wrecked by an earthquake all bundled. of lives loot. What of this may wane calamity! In there no eye to pity, no 1m to an? In other words, in Canada, is the not ot the world, to make no effort to am these people! Speaking of ttkeorreutirtu that co- Hm- structure. an fre-tir left rough and inartintie, the Iue-eir,ttr and Building Record blame! this on tb lmlW ttob. It regards concrete to In admienMo material from "err paint oi slew. " uaVs: . 5mm a,huirable mutate block york is mm being done in the concrete masonry dam. in pnm of construction in tho Crctott had". and at least in "tte or two reinbrrced concrete bridges recently cum- plt'tmi. The finest and smoothest an" fave mm ir.. meeured with a smooth tim. ber mold with nu man can- than h on- dinly feasible under the usual eirrum- ntances of good work. In the latter (is: there mar be ommuommy a little Nr- pearanu- o! the grain of the wood under Hom- rmmbmtion, an! nonn- poreity of the surface. but. after all. probably with n" and? amine "irsteetdeetiyxs on tha "ole than Hut-class naturttrste" In; no Ina-r0 authln: imPutectieuts on the. "ltolt, than “ntwlass natural slum“ “w lllwmly exhibit. Tlt" gvlwnd effect of and; cum-tru- buck work h in a high Je- grw dignifird. and in e-wry “my admira- ble. The rennin shanty attained in ac- tual may]: justify the application of these ot-ations, even to concrete railings, and pant! walls. The employ“?- bt, mnterete an mum in no lo- autumn}: when incline-Hy and Tet'tt'tl " winch-91y Wntd- a you -ber of eeraqbted, 5W than in the can ot mt. Both. reiitro leted Ll?,,' v ber m John A. Hnekiv,rd of Listowel. “I this rib. elected wank-n ot the county of or . ills?iilltiJ,irs;.iri",i,ve'ir?,r WWW My. prom“ proble-u nt the 'r".".' day which were never encoun- tuod m the put. Here in a use in A young man cud his betrothed were whoohnntu and became engaged during their last year u the high school. The understanding was that they should wait until he w“ able to marry. He left Dine and plunged into busi- ncu life. ll vs: hard sledding for some you", but recently he pushed his salary up to the $2,000 mark, and was ready to marry. -- --- .. a .. ' 1-.. “A; u, _....,. But. meanwhile, his Rosalind, has not seen fit to sit down and wait for seven veers for him to get ready to marry For. She had gone into business her- self end " she had both brains ad good family connections she is now confiden- tial secretary to a house which pays her 8t,MO 1 year. . The ma must ask her to out her in- come in two if she marries him. He does not blame her at all for going to work, but he does feel that his position is not an inapiring one to contemplate, for he must either ask her to out her income in two to - him or else let her go on working for a. salary after tho wedding. Cupid mad Been-h. have not 'yet'set- tled their difference: in this case. In Iimihr use: they have settled it in a varier of war. . ' L. a .....-., -. m. ___ A few yen; ego one of -the big dry goods stores employed a women to buyer for one important department. She went to Europe four times a year with nit her expenses paid and a big1 sultry. In one of her trips she became' acquainted with the purser of the vessel, and they made a lore match ot it. The business woman was delighted to give up her fine position 1nd lit: salary to marry the man she loved and to live with him -in a. tiny place they massed out on Long Island. She was charmed with her little home and raised chickens and flowers galore; and when the baby came their happiness would have been complete tmtHor one mt trouble. That was that her husband was away from her nearly all the time. She wor- ried so about tut that finally he gave up his place as purscr on a liner and tried to get "its “hon. . Like a good many other men who leave their own'line-of work, he did not succeed. Finally she said: "Now see hem, Johnny, you can't get a job. and if you did you wouldn't earn more than one-third of "what' I can. If you are to go to sea I miight about as wen Uveato husband at an.” "Now if you’ll stay down here in the country and took.trfterthe baby and the chidkem and'the mes. I'll go back into my old place-iglin .,ithralways waiting for ant." _ It was fixed up in tint-way. and the household is-now runnimp on that plan. The man is the housekeeper and the Woman is the bread Winner. In one,of the ingest and oldest clip- ping bureaus ,in,ttteororld;the proprie- tof’a wife has entire eharge of the reading department. It‘begnn in 1898, than a. foreman left him suddenly and and she rune down to help him. She “had the work and'has retained it permanently. "Nou coutdti’t drive her away." says her “husband, ":Unt1 it suits me all right, for ohe brings 'tbn intelligence and devotion to the business that I couldn’t hire'."-juthirttttort Post. Ras halted the Phoefior Years Trying to Win Bock Berrarm. Toronto Terugrtun:--rripwards of sev- onty you! mutt he the ago of poor old Mary Ray. who .haunb.th0 corridors of Osgoode Hall tuning for justice. She in beat with years and trouble. and in u deof no a door p?st. “Thy pthet‘rc old figure in its sombre black clock. with three tapes. as a. familiar one of the officials at the:HalL She pot- ters in, hee umbrella topping on the tiles. till uhe comes to a bewildered belt among the arches of the ,otundtc There she eyes the multitude. of mys- terious doors Wish owirtg constantly to the "art and egress of tho busy lawyers w go about quite quietly. but nevertheless waking whom they tony devour. Sometimes old Mary Ray succeeds in attracting the attention of one of the tttttit,',' and then, in the quivering. Hating voice of = ' tells her story. It has often n told in these. Mlle. ud moat of the officials know it by hart. m areenL-f?U we. Ahere again to- day. a Paisley shawl wrapped about her ohouldera. her dull eyes groping for some- one to hettr her. ' "Are ye a hwyer? Fhetr of you tnke a can for me," was 'her form of mint-Hon. “The clerk 'worn set it dawn on the list unless he has the paw-ta. and it's down in Stu-15y." Some years ago she had a farm worth 31,000. down no“ Sal-ma. "There W“ a mortgage on it, Theh, on day. Ae found herself turned out of her hm. A woman with fourteen chif- dram went to live in it. and said that she had bought it. Old Mry Ray said she had meived no money for the house and brought action to have the intrud- Of (jaded. .. . .- A ---- Jam. 'l ruw u»... At the trial. Fix?“ Va: {won again-t Mary., It wan. whown that the houre had been sold for 8400 to the wo- man with the large family. and the money had been applied to wiping of! the mortgi. ,,I,I A, LL- mt..,'.,'.-.., .m- ".""rep9" The caAP trtta appealed to the Division. ot Court, and the .iuement was sustain. ed. Sim-e than Mary bu fed several law. you»: in Guelph. Atratiord and Toronto to take on the use. but it. " alwaye abandoned after a few prermdrtarier. Now Mary Aland: her time ttving to we one cf the judges. She has great Inith that if she could get the ear hf . judge her case would be straightened ”mos AT OSGOODE HALL. , ",%'r _ W'vy'kiw‘r? w; is” iiaiifitsrijivfigii'iiii Are the people mm; but; on the land: - to the - of an a -sewyorestaaoma.uaiis-eotAe I riculture, the I” in in. will 1 in that Mata has con. to n stamhoti11, l and the momenta mtg 'att, to , the citiuuld the west bu can “a 1 people, he believer, are again beginning 1 to realize that life on . New York State I rarm is in some respects prefernhle to life in a. crowded city. The great pro- blem, now, is the shortnfe in km labor. in an article on "Popu ntion and A53- ".alture," in this month's Fortnightly . view, J. A. Spender gives some muons tor the decline in Great Britain of the rural population, and can” the idara that tariffs have anything to do with it. He says: In the mud period [the Itat half of the past century]. the diminution in the number oi those etsgeil slu agriculture reached 'il. point which gave rise to the opposite apprehension, but the decline has been due in considerable part to the cessation of women and ehildren's labor and to the adoption of agricultural ma- chinery. two cause-t which must be tak- cn-as signs off prosperity and not of de- cay. Apart from :the opening of foreign wheatiielde, and the chenpening of trans- port, it deeline in the laboring popular tient “as in any case bound to follow from thee chutes in the rweond half " the last century. As we might fairly ex- pect. the actual decline has been out of all proportion to the decline in the acre- age under tvheat. and was most marked during n period of acknowledged agricul- tural prosperity. We have accordingly no ground for thinking that any of the fit- L cal measures suggested for stimulating whpat-produetion would have any appre- ' eiable effect upon the rural populwtion , (location. even if for other resinous it I were thought politic to adopt them. AttWlKgivWP, He points out. that no hatter how‘ prosperous agriculture might have been the rural population could not have in-) creaaed in the same ratio as the urban.I because there was only a fixed quantity of land to be tilled. and in addition the tendency was to greater and greater economy of labor. thus dispensing with much hard labor formerly necessary. He also argues that the decline even of the agricultural population is usually exag- gerated. and is to be measured not by the figures of laborers and farm-servants which are eommonly cited. but by those of the total popnhtion engaged in agri- euiture. which will be found to include. under other hemb, a good many of the labnrora who are commonly supposed to have been lost to the land. iid "iaiiriini,i"iiult a; derlinintt rural population is not always a sign of ag- ricultural decay. In fact, he slows that tho deeline has taken place when acri- mltura was in n. prosperous condition. Machinery and improved methods have mum-d tho change. The telen'hone. the trollev car. and the labor saving devices are doing much to make life on the farms, more ntraetiro. and the time may not he far distant when dewnod farms will he a curiosity indeed. The only Victoria Cross won on (Jamar Jun territory was that given to a. pri- 'ate of the Rifle Brigade, named o'Hea. "The vxploits' writes Mr, N L. Holden, in his recently published 1500]: of thes s". C.,' ‘was performed at I railway aid-f ing between Quebec and Montreal in' June. 1886. while Ulla was acting as- one of an escort in clause of on ammu- nition wagon. To everybody} alarm a. fire broke out. enveloping the car in, flames and smoke. "side were kegs " 1powder and mm of ammunition. which, did they ignite, would (11M a most ten rible mph-ion. While tbe others hesi-, tated. ltTiea notched the keys from the sorgeant's hand, opened the door of the um. and rolled for voluntem to bring him water and " ladder. The Int. l trr was quickly procured, and standing} on this the plucky private emptied buck. _ Mful after buekrtful upon the burning wood. It was a tourh-attd-go business; an the tongues of flame shot out. every now and then. coming dangerously near to the powder kegs. but omea stm-k to his post. and he fought the fire an; der. 1 Though the Rifle Brigade has four. teen crown-x to its credit. won in the Crimea, in India. and in South Africa, I rather fancy that not one of Them wan gained in "ireumstances of more deadly peril. and his vomradm were well pleased when Private T5moitry O'Ht-u's name went to swell the proud list of'V. C. heroes. O’Hea WM " forwards lost in tho Atstraiian bush. Ninaripe Liniment Cups Distemper. 'In the Living Room. i, This should he the pleasantent room in‘ the house. Too often it is made a catch- :rll. for all-the discarded and shabby fur. nishings front the reut of the dwelling. It does not matter that thew furnishings n-re old. The point ix. they should not be trashy-ugly and unsightly. If they In. throw them out at once. Du'nnt foree the family. in the room where theyapeml most of their time, to look upon what in not beautiful. Beauty his an influence on life. and this room, oi all others. almuld exert this influence. Alvrgw. in this room, there should be a table light or same, kind. that the family may gather around. llaugingd att' figured Madras will be found mod .ultruetive and servieeable. as will also those of figured China silk, ‘whieh will malt. and yet not soil so wasin as whit-e draperies. Tlie hardin: hmm- vines to withstsnd “a fumes are tbe German and English hiss. Wandering MW. and Madeira vine. Um or two of “New in hanging baskets will add beauty togt sitting room. In a room like this there should al- ways he some sort of couch. and books. Without than it snow: singularly incom- plete. . . . . It is a mistake to try to keep such a mom in apple-pic onlr-r. " dusted once a day. fresh water put. on the flowers, fndm'l Hum-gs thrown away and generally tidied up in the morning. a little untidi. m-sn un-muulnicd later will only add to its honmlikenoss. l Here is where the family should lm privileged to muss up tho cushions and liner papers almutAalittlo. Mira Vern '3tout--Soette people any think me dull. but Mr Kidder. at any we. W‘s menu-d to "r he never not "trorte no wide, awake 98 I my. _ Duty 1 RENEE; to get into print but hue! to Itut ml osdisrt,: 3 "Sh: iGGLi'esr. but. ot tNMtrae, be might have added that you're put " ,ride “low. BACK to m: We?“ How O'Hea Won the Broad Enough at All Times. " try to keep such a "ler. ll" dusted once put, on the flowers, I away and generally h. sun-i mono , may persons“le that the use“ on"; so little the” " not worti while to save " all. If you an new but little you on.» to be the more snxious to an. and if you. perse- vere you will presently be surprised " the smount of your saving! . Muny . millionaire has said that the first thou- sand dollsrs yes the hardest part of his fortune to get. You are not likely to be millionaires, but it is possible for many of you who are not doing so to save very considerable amounts, which, it safely invested, will w.ork for you day and night, and will add to your comfort, your self-respect, and especially give you the feeling of security ngsinst illnesslor loss of position. Determine, then, to save your money, and be even more deter- mined to invest your uvings conserva- tively and carefully, not with the ex- poetation of receiving a large rate of interest, but only of so much interest as a safe investment of the prinpical wilt bring. (Harriet Quimhy in Hanna's Weekly.) Why a lulu-ta ot the ll”. ordhtarttr known on a his. would be given such ”new in the ltteratttre and drum of the world both biblicll Ind bimodal. cannot. be ooma‘ by reooum to my written mummy: yet during all than you! since tho beginning ot time this poculiu- uluution does not pn- neu- to in" ion in nine. nor in then In! immedince prospect ot in so doing. Whot the playwright. the novelict. and in: post would do without this peg upon which to hang . plot it would be difficult to soy. and this while: especially to the playwrights. tor dozen: ot imiiinr dramatic productions, sev- eral of which hove graced the New York stage thin season. have found their We". factor. the wheel upon which the machinery of the scene- runn and the plot depends. in a kiatr-Ahatqt'aTmm unis-wont... Compound will be sent free to any one suffering from any form of Rheumatism. The express (about Me.) is all we ask you to pay. Send a post card far it to-day-and begin your cure. Dr, B. ll. Mack, W) Yonge street, To- Tonto Man the Only Animal That Kin“. The Man Who Did. l Mrs. Susan Young Gate, the daughter ot) Brigham Young. is a trustee ot the Salt. Lake University and a lecturer of note. "Woman must work tor hes-down Ids-anon- meatt." she and in a ROOM address in Salt Lake City. "but she must not tseltushly neg- lect be: other duties for this work. .. ‘13 more a man pruent,’ a (mic lec- turer once shrieked, ‘who has ever helped in the slightest dost-w to lighten his wife's burden? la more a. man here that has even amen up at it o‘clock. leaving " and wife to sleep on undisturbed. and. dressing. quietly who downsinirs. raked up the tire, cooked brukim. washed and dressed the children, scoured tho pow and pans, swept the kitchen. sawed the Stl"'.': and done -- 7»- "-- - A- a“ unhnln we Klwuw. “a"... ...V -e-"-"-. all this " necessary day alter day without complaint? The lecturer looked her audience over with died-In. 'it there Sta-such e men here,' lbs lead. 'let him the. bet the mu: rise. that all my use and prair.e'hirm' ___ 7A”.- Itq.ras m... in . hnek ml rise. 11].; an nun; a“ --_. ,._._r_ __ “Thu! a mild littlty mm In a back not role muddy, He was the Instant": hul- Japanese Sardines. The sardine is caught in such numbers all along the mast of Japan that hither. to the sur lus catch has been used for manure. 'tt"l','mc,','i' me now being made to turn.the fish to some more profitable use. Cunning esstnlrlishmentm have. been i started at various places-notably Chiba and Noyngo 'with a "iew to ascertain- ing whether the Japanese product can- nut. in for eastern and American mar. kets at least, compete with the Medi. terrainenu product. At present the olive _ tree, a most important factor in this m- dustry, is nut cultivated by the Japan- ene, and at the suiue time the customs levy a duty on imported oil. This draw- lmck otntltl.,of murse. easily be overcome by the (Govnrmuent allowing a rebate to running "etutllishmvtits. As far no taste and quality go, there is not much to choose between the Japanese product and the Ettropeuu.--London Daily Gra- Rheumatism Makes Baby Strong phie BETTER THAN SPANKING. Spunkln: do“ not cure ehildren ot bed- vettlng. There Is a "ottatitutiotuU - tor this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers. Box W. 8, Windsor, oat., Wm send nine to my mother her auaxmsttt' home (remnant. with lull mat-mum. Bond no money but wrlle her may it your cblldren Mable you in an. way. Don't blame the child. the chances us It ean't help lt. This treatment also can» Mult- and need We enabled with urine ditncutties by day or plant. By all menm h-t us cling to the old qwlling. If the pronoun style of spelling mu good tuning]: for our parents why not good enough for us? “like "gnat/' fur instance. Instead of dropping the g why not, if it is a good thing. use it more freely? Why not raise your ghnt to a gut if she is gfat? And k-what harm in a little more of a sensible cus- tom? If you have the knowledge why make u knoiso? Knoliody is haughty. A knife is knevor knlce unless knee"- sary. And why should not a kuvc knail knapkins to Luutreotieat And are knnpkins better than napkins? Kilo; decidedly kmott.--Life. mum’s Liniment Guru Diphtheria. FREE no war: I»... .. J'"."--" -. _w, 7 -" _ ans-a. mtet by had. The place to tench and to learn Scum-Inn In In a -- otttee, It up” be a little old country weekly or a mu. " on: any. and (he: the an and. be horn a, 1ottrttpllirt or the job will In Rma the Hal: on“ lo perk?! . health. Gives not: sleep. VIM [ moett ore . . y/ 'd'e','11'lll, ll',',','..' Me. 6:12:59" tasidiitkiu_tttseeyg9.,.t..sh,iu Nurscs’ & Molhers' Treasure EIT,', 'he. 'ret': talta by or; E. fligts in I}; Save You: - A Doll-r Bottle ol Dr. Mack's Ii Til. H. MAOK More Reform Spdling. TORONTO _ GIRLS [WIRING Mothers who hove doughters just on the critied borderinstd over which the girl - into the fuller life of womanhood, will find Bilenns I greet boon. They make rich, red blood, and strengthen and invigorate the interns! organs involved in the grant change. Mrs. T. Beadle, of Home Place, To. ronto, says: "W daughter, Elsie (IN, was feeling far from well this winter.; She complnined of frequent heed-Che and was slwsys weakly, tired and drowsy. She seemed altogether with- out energy or strength. Each morning her tongue was coated and her sppetite failed. She wee sometimes so dizzy that on stooping she almost fell, and she wss slso troubled a great deal with constipation. One single box of Bilenns made a world of difference in her, and so I continued to give her this remedy. Within s few weeks they built her up wonderfully and they are keeping her in the best of health." . Ill use way u- m-.-_. Bilesns slso cure anaemic, green sickness, dehility, sick headache, consti~ potion, piles, rtietumstism, sciatica, and all liver and kidney ailments. They tone up the system and enable it to throw off colds, chills, etc. All druggists and stores sell Bilenns at 50e. a. bor, or ob- tainable from the Bilcan Co., Toronto, for price. " boxes sent for $2.50. (From " Finenciel courtship.” by Fruit W. Robbins.) WHAT IS A BOND'. "A bond " e promiee to any. It may he issued by e town, city. county, or the government. in which case the tsith and credit ot the tnuuicipalltr, or governenmt is pledxed for the payment; or it my be issued by n corporation. like I rnllroed. on electric light company or s mill. in which one It . oizsasrM1T eecured by a manage, but not) necessarily so, for there are debenture bonds which trenuently hove no 'specme eecurity behind than on which you can levy. It is usueiiy e promiee to pay I sum ot money (soy 81.000) at s oemin stated time. with on nneement to pay the intereet every six months. For convenience there ere etuched to the bond little obling note, or promises to any. for the mount of such six months' interest. on that ell you hsve to do when the six months rolls eround is to cut ott one of these little Io-celied coupons end present " to Your bank. which will collect it tor you. (any $1.000) at I certain nneemenc to pay the months. For convenienc to therbondklmle obllng Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. W tile WHI- .....- --" - any. for the amount of interest. to that ttil you h six months rolls cround of these limo Ila-culled c tt to your bank. which wt Some time ago I huh a bad attack of Quinzy which laid me up for two weeks und cost a. lot of money. Ending the lump again forming in my throat, I bathed freely with MINARD's LIXIMEXT. and saturating a cloth with the Iiniment Icit it on all night. Next morning the swelling war, gone and l attributed the warding off of an attack of Quinzy to the free use of MIN. ARDF LINIMENT. Energy Lost in Lay Climtes. European and Northern American em~ igntion is rather shy of California. and our eastern gulf states because they are lazy climates. With all its umion to work. the human race wants the option of being able to "ork. A country where Mind‘s Liniment Cures Ceids, etc. in the growing and ripening drawn a man is forced to intermit his toil all through the middle of the day and where there is no long summer twilight to com- pensate for the noondny beat will never attract a. large permanent immigration. For the lazy climates are the climates without a twilight. There is ' distinct relation between twilight hours and ra- ck! mtersrr.---New York Mail. Dr. Wight. State Commissioner of Charities and Correction, New Jersey, has ideas of his own regarding the treatment of consumptive patients. Ile says that there are 6,000 or more consumptive: in that State: that the tuberculosis sani- tnrimn cannot hold much over one hun. drod. In view of theme facts lu- says. I If the design is to give the patients ism-h assistant-e as their friends nrv un- Ole to render, and to make their. last days as oomfortahle as pmssihlo, that can I ln- donv at their homes at less cost, and perhaps' much more effectively. I sug- gest that a praetivnl use of the institu- tion would he to make tt 11 training school as well in a sauitariutu. Fill it With patients from the mwoml counties, am. trash them by expert physicians and trained nurses what it is possible for them to do for their own relief. what kind of clothing to WPttr, the proper food and how to prepping it, the kind and amount of J.xor'eise, they should take. and. in Int. everything whiting to their condition 1nd revover.v. After three or four months of training those patients could go home and make room for others, to be instrueted in a like mannrr. In their own (mm-minim Imm' of these graduates. as we. may call them. would become important lwlpers in the 1'art' of others. - A Bad Cue. An iron founder of Pennsylvania, hav- ing risen from pcnury to Opulence. sent his son to llururd lulu-mil); The buy was bright. diligent and graduated with honors. Three weeks win-r the boy's r... turn to his home in Pittnbmg the iron founder sought his pastor. "I'm grout ly worried about William John since iris, return from ”inward." began the fatlvrr. "Ah, I warned you nguimt, llnrurd. W- has become a drunkardt" interrupted the good man. "No. no: I asked him to lake a drink with me "weral times and In- msuldn't." "He has heroine ontunghul with some creature of tlttrelrorust" "So: he knows no such women." "Ah, he gam- bless'." "No, he doesn't know one card from another." N new] see-it is far. hr worse, Harvard is a Unituian uni- versity. He has come bark a heathen:" The ttti, father g'rdnncd. "Wotuw mun all t t. Doctor, he believes in tar. tiff reform. - _ St. John rum adults A BOOM. Each inking a Chance. Dr. Puker---Take this prescription; it will either kill or cure you. .Puient-r-But am so it kills met Dr. 'i'/hti-/2'ul'l'rlt ventured, noth- Ing pitted. My motto is, "No cure, no pay," tert t_nl_sing a slum. us well u 'o'i/--rttiudatpttraiasrrr. TRAINING roit tithtTtt. Lessons "iiiiiithttii0iD FOR LADIES. G . F. \YORDEN by Frank cutiuuon W""""-" . The ,ginaeug cultivation fever, which was at its height tour or live year! an. like moat other agrteultural lull. proved a dlaappolntment to the enthusiast. A representative of the Rural New Yorker, who recently visited three ginst-ng plan- tations of considerable sin, three or four years old, report? that they were all stifteriatg from a diaeue peculiar to lthia plant. - ... . _-c....-' Hunt it takes um pill“. It will be remembered that it taken the ginseng root five or nix years to ma- ture,ao that when a ptneitatiomlu,ttr two or three years of care and waiting, is affected with blight, the running crop failure la much more serious than with almost any other crop. The productiveneaa of two of the plan- tations was so seriously affected that will had been practically abandoned, w e the third plantation, although damned to a less extent. had not be- damaged to a lens e gun to pay expense', w ton Post. Dear Mother Science in Dairy lathe“. In Dennurrk the dairymen have sue- eeedcd in making ever animal ply pro- fits. This was done by thirty or more owners of dairies employing an officinl tester to report upon the results from! individual cows, After carefully watch; ing and weighing tho milk for I. given time the inspector reported on the indi- viduals in web herd. The result we; that poor cows went to the neat mer- ket, and the producing nine of duiry cows inereased in one year from $18 to "tso each. Such results mine from 1 system of working everything for profit. That is the spirit that controls in cul- oossiul "rieufture.-settttle Post-Intel- 1sgeaseer. mum'- Liniment Cum Garret in Cowl. r.rt-ome.ottettetrLerat..ett ttrat an unduly no“. In chl- qttta. during the last weak was a abundance ot the pace, we know: to inform them that we unseemly tumult - only the effect a suburb..- had Moon the attic: force than " remittance tor tive years sruhoterUtioa reached as Ind In his letter ho did It was: In. we to be discontinued. The mu is I muc- man "ttout own_h.n. gun. E Pe. nun-n “w. "rr... -"_ -"--"" ,7 V - we! do likewise. hymen. by a mtbtseettrer thmh be In in mm for may you! causes more rejoicing in I hum qttioq ttnut the ninety and nun who - par. Your Bloom-n I m a" i an "d Win "at. 1tltig'd1, gallon”, fiGochGretf,ltikht mm "r)"'r""=-..T.--." ",(iiiiiiiiyitiiif,2a,pPttigl via-tit doubt-anally? hill“ i7iTi7GiiiFPiiisuGe4real1 iiUi'LkiiiGFrr-i.uathr. tiiii.'iirie,ej2gih,,t,21t'phl,' . i-ieee4toe.seyrr"ter smut -iG-ikris2se..hterhottii, aiiariiriGi.atsd-dl " SHILOH iiuergtp_eeyeieewseeegi. my “my uncut up noun, Imus-outrun. I" a You: inmate! try Din!“ pint-II: to may. - " ___ “duh-II PARLOR "_,mL,.t..9qt,"q WAX cmszxc ems. Explaining the Commotion. Jaurel Duncan.) MATCHES PM. vouch” .. . ,.._-_ w ”I " - -- ladies to do plain and mm at home, whole or none (in, good m. Work " any distance. charge- pad. Sand stamp for full punt-ulna. tation- ll Manufacturing Company, Mantra“. -..---.-------" ter.. WWI will: Sir-n -- -- can to mud tor can run mm". " “no no and. ”can an - curat- trh"t.tlNlrirtir'iat"""' formu- te=Le-"===r-=T--'=r.717CT. that“ Donation-Icy Tamil“. A story in the February McClure} dewribing the nee between two mum merchant-chip to reach New York 11nr- bor before the resting into effect of the McKinley Tariff Bill, all. up w inter. eating "nation in our recent politic“ history. In the Review of Reviews. at ,November, 1890, the following rxtract inputs in an editorial: "The month opened with e sensational [rue min“ time on the port of several _. ' ___ct._., ‘n rmmh New luau. mm. Sci-awh- nod eve collusion- hell on In“! or " In no min-nu by WolloN‘n sum It lent but. Botd by mull“. "i"ii7"7iiiii'tt,',yi,,e, ‘99”. " In -B"'.". "The month opened with . sensation! race mint time on the part of several great Atlantic steomohips to reach New York before the foul moment when the McKinley Tariff became law. The up» tain of the agtrurin' wan obfe to one his cargo by a few seconds from the im. pmition of the new tariff. The caving effected by the difference between the new tariff and the old on that vary» amounted to no less a pm“ than £200, ISSUE No. 7, 19"? M "in! 'iriiiiiiiEit.t?eyh ooo. "From the Depths of Things" would seem to illustrate the rival Power of the "tint with the historien in the task of recording experience. Mr. Perry tells October i, tttyo-forgotten to most of WWW! I, Auvv "r'".'.""'"" - the humul side of the story mtn tt viz or nnd individuality "t,t,u,t',e,, the date Ute-t new and lively dun! unce. tuRhamuTutr,eec.--oieHeit- trrthe ”mam-0mm... Why er with in mold itehiriqt minds-Mrs? Br't ‘me th', w "I.“P_' w__,__--_ ' w only 'k . bor-d in! 'Mit. ck' why- At tttfar, i"- Thr M’ Co. u My . had, Hawilt-- "em.. “AIR: My: 'ot-tttfe,'"',': p, . . A .. N. ff an, 2rgtru7. 7"“..- w 3m: w P1." ll. _ .. 'T ".r....e'H 'i'te'ifia'?i?tfli ?i'i7i'i'ii?? mundanfn It." a m "ea. 'i2ieeliflaydrdei'iua-s- clou. a t W at was“ - Muuon. Dun comment a the a. I. pad tor an We], a tt a who! u a” 1n . or In who“ in a vsodevmo um. 11:. ants-pm an... as pictured in every quuuty of ndirule and degradation; they are tahitttted to tin. publw .34 to their (name: In all the monik- - oowro o! tugged ens-donut?! they an in.- M M ther prlvucy And their um. --- _ - . ni‘A.A__ku- ‘__A. -- u _ - .._. -..... Be'" m. __ - m [tutorial In hamlet-Me - u If any unto the but": criminal: in...“ at can. dunno We!!!“ A public duty. m. v. cut-m. qmttttttt coming indefinitely tt a. Seal? Skirt Dueee EEG; diTArt tour, " to aesauri "rrs"ri77i7iirtitiiEm um: um nun-unto bl my my» the new tariff. The. suing we difference between the and the old on that out» o no less a nun than x'200.- ITGH 7, 1907. “a err, Orr." Tr him-II" eered ' sum-n 1artutrt ifil5,'?,?lli?Ml ", tttuLf/tisf . 377.27%.“ . - I1- ou rt Heayjtftti of _, Irs. Thar7ell m we "W " T s'i'i/.lTrira'""c'"' tii.iiFij.titae% ssl/st to lung Thaw mm: ' u the wimt pun-0)“ not F W “'1'“ at nailed (mind;- a l Mn. Thaw". he» rotvoswatod mum The binllvlivil} of beicrlrtem tbo N11“! . I TlFatttte5.a . Add!) vat" lt W M cuuAetet W " w" f nu _ hum-way c'3lalil"G"iiii',r f""' at“ and " or: to l inn voi 1"ec'P.t'r,M"l.r “”1th judge. c , . but 4!)! .. question ““1 INN. 'e told tin ll“ "rs' "When ot,'oat'as' t “not." "How I Evelyl Shaw j ”milk! t.itP", with her l Truman While at_ “it " L w. Dim" his rtrart que" Km: which “‘ riv att' dinner \\ ll I! " Hit“? did in I Tells " " h mt ly ll in the Botr ninlbi“ h J 1qi.t6 Wrote " " “It "

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