Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 9 May 1907, p. 3

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HFAPS. ut ARRILD. astroct Their Insist on Chancellor ACT. ) mMenre on Olen« k in the Buelow. vho was % 0' th 1in Fedâ€" nfidence. ow. who talkimags _ snarl ind the r _ the et ween . which Lord‘s ith the is, and urte. if )T N A FIRE nting and with w ho ‘. in vil 4 W Perâ€" 1B 1M »d of imes zhty al~ the l\r ish n t 12.00 (f ne th al 18 Ne M* n Th L Th Still sobbing bitterly she said someâ€" thing about a "lodger," and from that moment the conversation was carried on in so low a whisper that, although Laura Eimer heard the murmuring, she could not distinguish the words. _ This low, muttering conversation went on all nightâ€"went on till day was dawning "Come, come, Ruth, this is a very eold reception. Unbar the door, there‘s a dartling." _ Sobbing bitterly, Mrs. Russel unbar red the door, and admitted the nocturâ€" mal visitor. "Oh, heaven of héavens, to what straits 1 am reduced!" again complained the poor woman. "Bah! my dear, I am forgotten; beâ€" sides, the ‘danger‘ is very much modiâ€" fied by an «yent that has occurred withâ€" in the lut\'«-nty-lour hours. But all this time you are _ keeping me out in the eold. Come, let me in, there‘s a duck." "But the danger, the danger of _ re turning!" "I come from abroad, because I could not longer live away from you, Ruth. I have been but a few hours in London, and have only within the last hour disâ€" covered vyour residence." "Oh, where do you come from, and why do you come, knowing the danger*" "Because I am dying to see you and the children, Ruth. Think what a long exile I have had from you both, my dear." Painfully and intensely as she thought, she was still, as it were, extremely conâ€" scious of the sounds without. She heard Ruth Russe! and her children movâ€" ing about; she heard the murmuring of their evening preQers at their mother‘s knee; she heard that r mother take them into the little cmber adjoining the back parlor below; and the muffied shuffling with which the little ones got to bed; mnext she heard Mrs. Russel reâ€" turn to the back parlor, and settle herâ€" self in her seat, probably to sew for hoursâ€"for every sound was audible all over that small house. At last all was rerffl-tly quiet, nothing breaking the siâ€" ence except the hourly striking of the oldâ€"fashioned clock in Qie passage below. Laura sat intently thinking as the hours slowly passed. The clock struck twelve, and still she sat and thought ; one, and still she never changed her attiâ€" tude; two, and she had not once even looked up, or remembered that it was at that witching hour on the preceding night that the awful ery of murder had rung through Lester House, appalling the inmates, arousing the sleepers. She was still buried in thought between two and three o‘clock, when she was startied . by the sound of steps heard in the deep silence, coming up the walk from the litâ€" tle gate to the cottage door. Everything alarmed her now ; she listened and heard ‘ a light, cautious tapping at the cottage door, and heard the landlady go to the door, and ask in a low, trembling voice, "Who‘s there? What do you want* "It is I, Ruth, and I want to come in," answered a low voice without. "Oh, my Lord in heaven, have pity on us! Oh, why do you come here?" inâ€" quired the poor woman, in a low ,.«ffoâ€" cating voice. Bhe could not sleep, but, drawing an easy chair beside the little table before the fire. she fell into deep and severe thought upon the subject of the probable assassin of the baronet. Laura entered the neat and quiet chamber, where the snowâ€"white curtains of the windows and the bed, and the clean hearth and bright fire, diffused an air of qpurity and cheerfuiness through the scene. Mrs. Russel showed her lodger up into her private apartments, where fires had been lighted, and her luggage conveyed, and bade her goodâ€"night at the bedroom door. And longer the friends talked, but the @readed name was not again mentioned between them. The two children, who had ‘been sent out into the garden to play, now came in, and the confidential conversation was interrupted. "Forgive me if I ha've’deeply probed your sorely wounded heart, and believe me I will deal as tenderly by your feelâ€" ings as I can in justice to another." "I know it, Miss Elmer! I know it! You are perfectly right. Do not conâ€" aider me in the slightest degree. (o on, and let {'uatice be done, though the heaâ€" vens fall‘" And no word was «poken between them for some minutes. At last: "Heaven have mercy on you, most miserable of women!" said Miss Elmer. And rising, she went and took and ’l’::ed her hands, saying: "SALADA" And no Suits Every Taste Lead packets onlyâ€";u;c, 50e and 60c TRIAL FOR LIFE $ @REEN TEA es es IT HAS A most DELICIOUS FLAVOR ANQ Get 18 ABSOLUTELY PURE ©86866066°8888°0E IF YOU HAVE BEEN DRINKING JAPAN TEA YOU WiILL ENJOY sel, I think that 1 shall be doing you anmd them a good service in bringing this incorrigible villain to justice," said this serere young Nemesis, who was beginâ€" I should do it to save my children from the fatal infection of his presence and example. 1 should consider my mother duty the most sacred on earth. Oh! it is a lamentable weakness in any woman to shield a worthless and depraved man, at the risk of perpetuating an evil example to her innocent children. And, Mrs. Rus "Even for their sake it were well that such a moral leper were swept from the face of the earth, lest the very relationâ€" ship should contaminate them. Were I in your place I should deliver that monâ€" ster up to justice with less compunction than ever I killed a venomous serpent. "Then I will tell you when he will return â€"as soon _ as that money is exhausted. Mrs. Russel, I should think you would be glad of any law that would free you entirely from such a beast of Mrs. Russel evident)y could not deny this fact. s "And after the manner of such vilâ€" lains, he has taken away all your funds with him," sadi Laura, indignantly. "You forbear making any _ inquiries about my visitor of last night, Miss Elâ€" mer; yet this piece of information I will volunteer. He is off again, and I know not where he has gone, or when he will come back, or if he ever will return," said Mrs. Russel. Laura perceived that to press this point would only wound the sensitive selfâ€"respect of the poor woman, and deâ€" sisted. "Yes; but not when they have been occupied but for a day, and are left from necessity; so let us say no more about it, Miss Elmer." "I am glad you perceive I can do no otherwise than I am about to do. But for your children‘s sake, I wish you would permit me to pay for the whole term for which I took the lodgings; it is usual to do so when one leaves before the term is up." "Miss Elmer, I cannot complain, cruelâ€" ly as I suffer in this affair; I know that you are perfectly right in all that you do. But poor as I am, I cannot and will not receive payment for the lodgâ€" ings that you have occupied only a day, and that you leave this morning, not from caprice, but from a sort of necesâ€" gity," said Mrs. Russel, weeping piteousâ€" Iy. _ "I am exceedingly sorry for you, Mrs. Russel, but that does not alter _ the course of my duty. I must tell you that I heard the arrival of your visitor last night, and overheard much of your conâ€" vesation, by which I was enabled to identify the individual. This morning I must lay before the police all the parâ€" ticulars with which I have became acâ€" quainted, as well as my own private susâ€" picions. As I cannot consistently _ conâ€" tinue in your house while engaged in this ungracious work, I must leave you toâ€"day. But you will permit me to pay you for the whole term for which my lodgings were engaged; and I wish you, besides, to rest assured of my esteem and friendship, and willing services in everything in which I can aid you with-‘ out injuring the cause of justice." Miss Elmer resumed her easy chair saying: ©86°6°8°88°8°8°8°8°® "No; I have not been in bed all night. I have something to say to you this morning, Mrs. Russel; but first sit down ; you look, indeed, quite unable to stand." Mrs. Russel dropped into the nearest seat. "Ah! but my children." Mrs. Russel, pale and haggard, as with fatigue and care, entered the room, sayâ€" ing: Her resolution was soon taken. She arose and bathed her feverish face, and arranged her disordered hair, and than rang her bell. clearly to her memory When she awoke it was broad day; the sun was high in the heavens. She opened her eyes and looked around in astonishment at finding berself in â€"a strange place, and it was some seconds before she could remember how she came there. Then full consciousness of her misâ€" fertunes returned; the murder of _ Sir Vincent Lester; the imprisonment of Ferdinand Cassinove; her own change af residence; the discovery _ in regard to Mrs. Russel‘s husband; and, lastly, the strange nocturnal visit, all _ recurred in the east, when Laura Elmer, worn out by two nights‘ watching, dropped asleep in her chair and slept heavily for many hours. > per pound.â€"AT ALL GROCERS‘ From gloom to glare; from the prisen er‘s cell at Newgate to the drawing room at Bersleigh House. __From Bow steet they repaired _ to Newgate to comfort the prisoner there with the intelligence of the clue they had obtained to the real assassin. Meantime the officer with the warâ€" rant sought the accused first of all at the cottage of his wife in Chelsea; but Ruth Russel and her children had ilitted with all their lugfinge. nor could any one tell whither they had gone. l Miss Elmer and Dr. Clark had the satisfaction of seeing this warrant placâ€" ed in the hands of an experienced offiâ€" cer before leaving the magistrate‘s ofâ€" fice. Arrived there, they had to wait some time before the magistrate was at leisâ€" ure to attend to them; and when at length he was disengaged, the doctor reâ€" quested that the office might be cleared, as the information he had to give had best be given in private. The <haracter and position of Dr. Clark insured _ a prompt attention to_his request. When the office was cleared of all except the magistrate, his clerk, the doctor and Miss Elmer, the latter advanced, and beâ€" ing sworn, made her statement. Now evâ€" erything, even remotely connected with the tragedy of Lester House, was of the utmost interest to the authorities. Miss: Elemer‘s statement received a candid and attentive hearing and the magisâ€" trate thought the information of suffiâ€" cient importance to justify him in isâ€" suing a warrant for the apprehension of the accused. Laura Elmer did not keep the good doctor waiting five minutes, but went into her adjoining chamber and in a fow seconds returned, shawled, bonneted and gloved for the expedition. The 1octor handed her into his carriage, and they set out for Bow street. man whom we bolieve to be the assassin of Sir Vincent. Indeed, I doubt whether you have any evidence to give that would justify any magistrate in issuing a warrant for arresting the man upon the charge of having murdered Sir Vinâ€" cent Lester. If a warrant should be isâ€" sued for his arrest at all, it will proâ€" bably be upon the old charge. But we can soon satisfy ourselves. We will reâ€" pair at once to a magistrate and iodge the information we possess. I will wait while you put on your bonnet." The doctor left the other words unâ€" spoken. "Oh, but that is very nard," said ! aora. "It is; and 1 must remind you of anâ€" other set of cireumstancesâ€"namely, that the evidence against Ferdinand Cassinâ€" ove, whom we believe to be innocent, is much stronger than that against the "Ladies know but little of the formuâ€" las of law, my dear Miss Elmer, else you would be aware that though we may procure a warrant for the arrest of this man we cannot possibly procure the libâ€" eration of young Cassinove. Having been duly committed to prison to answer the charge of murd~\ he mus, remaimn & priâ€" soner until his trial shall have ended in his acquittal orâ€"*" & The doctor smiled _ compassionately, saying: | _ imtomeatrt "Oh, then, let us go at once to some magistrate and lodge this information, procure a warrant for the arrest of this man, and, if possible, an order for the liberation of Mr. Cassinove." "Yes, the very strongest motive that can possibly actuate bhuman natureâ€" that of selfâ€"preservation." "And there is the motive established at once for the assassination!" exclaimâ€" ed Luara, with increasing excitement. "Good heaven, and yet you do not know the cireumstance that makes that the most probable thing in the world?" exclaimed the doctor. Laura looked up, full of interest. "That criminal fled from trial and Sir Vincent Lester was the principal witâ€" noss against him; indeed, without the testimony of Sir Vincent Lester, 1 doubt if it would have been possible to conviect him." said the doctor. "Now, deep in my heart is the convieâ€" tion that this man and no other was the assassin of this unfortunate barâ€" onet." Miss Elmer commenced and related all the cireumstances of her fragmentary acâ€" quaintance _ with Sir Vircent Lester‘s protegee, Helen Ravenscroil; the mysâ€" terious stranger that waylaid and folâ€" lowed her carriage; the midnight interâ€" view and angry words that passed beâ€" tween this stranger and the baronet upon the occasion when she acidentaily discovered them together; and finally the conversation that had recently passâ€" ed between herself and poor Ruth Rusâ€" sel, in which she was enabled to put cerâ€" tain disjointed incidents together, and identify the mysterious "lightâ€"haired man" with a certain notorious criminal who had fled from justice years before. "Indeed!" exclaimed the â€" amazement. "Let me hear!" & 0. Anavegs ob l ces hy 0. Anvina â€"â€"90 "This is very, very kind, Dr. élark. You find me making minutes of a chain of evidence, or rather of probabilities which I wish to submit to you. I feel convinced that I have got the clue to the real murderer of Sir Vincent." _ Bhe sent her new address to Dr. Clark, with a request that he would call upon her at his earliest convenience. And the doctor, astonished at the change of quarters, for which he could not account, called on her in the afterâ€" noon. He found Miss Elmer busily writing at the centre table of her gloomy new parl?Lr. She arose go meet _hix_g, saying: __The landlady left the room to fulfill these directions, and immediately after breakfast Miss Elmer went out in a cab to procure new lodgings. Her cireumâ€" stances did not permit her to be fastidâ€" ious, She secured the most respectable lodgings to be found nearest to Newgate, and into them she removed in the course of the same forenoon. l am v sorry for you. I do not willingly ::{md you, on!y I wouk. be glad to see you with a clearer moral vision, and a greater moral strength," re?Iied Laura, gently. ‘I do not complain, And now, Miss Elmer, will you at least breakfast before you got" "Yes, thank you." "And when shall I order a cab?" "Immediately after breakfast, if you please, Mrs. Russel." weakness of the flesh betrayed by poor Ruth Russel. "Ah! but (ou don‘t know. You haven‘t been tried in such a way. Besides, if ever you were to talk with him, you would not think so ill of him," said the meek little woman. ning to lose patiente at the maudlin XXVL doctor, in "Tell me, Fanny, how much WOIH). give to have blonde hair like mine? "I do not know. How much did you "Most high, illustrious, invincible and powerful monarch, crowned with 101 golden crowns, each adorned with nine speciea of precious gems, greatest, purest and most divine master of immortal souls, who sees all things, Sovereign Emâ€" peror, under the shadow of whose wings lies the rich and incomparable Kingdom of Siam, King. to whom is subject the most fruitful of all lands lit by the sun, greatest of lords, whose palace :s of fine gold and gems, divine master of the golden thrones, and of the white and red elephants, Sovereign god of the nine kinds of gods, King who is like unto the sun at its zenith and like the full moon, King whose glance is more dazzling than the orb of the morning, King who is above all emperors, monarchs and poâ€" tentates of the universe, from the rising to the setting sun." The King‘s Full Title. (London Standard.) The full title of Chulalongkorn, King of Siam, who has just sailed for France, is: It is in the blnod â€" poor bloodâ€" that euch ‘troublkes as _ rheumatism, indigestion, dizziness, heart palpitation, anaemia, weakness and a host of other discases find their root. Tt is the blood that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills _ act on. They make it pure. rich, red and healthâ€" giving. That is why they cure all the commen ailments of everyday life. Sold by druggisis or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, from the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Suffered for Five Yearsâ€"Cured by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Agonizing pains, sometimes in â€" one part of the body, sometimes in anâ€" other, more often in the back or joints â€" that‘s rheumatism. Do not delay in finding a cure. Each day makes the _ discassa wome â€" increases the torture. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have cured thousands, _ They _ cured Mr. Horace Plante. of Sorel, Que., of a most aggravate case of â€"rheumatâ€" ism. What they did for Mr. Plante thay can do for you. Ho says‘ "I was was eeized with rheumatism. I walked as if my boots were filled with pebbles. The pains, starting in my feet, spread to all parts of the body: my back and foints became affected. For upwards of five years I suffered the greatest agony. Ofâ€" ten T was confined to bed, hardly able to move. Nothing seemed to help me. I despaired of ever being well again. By good chance Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills weare brought to my attention and I deâ€" cided to try them. I got six boxes â€" before they were gone I felt a great imâ€" provement. T continued the treatment and my hoalth gradually came back till now I do not feel the least pain â€" I am totally cured. It was a surprise to my friends to see me on the street again well and strong after five years of torture, They wanted to know _ what brought about the change. I told them Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pille, for I took no other medicine onca I began their use. Rhenmatic sufferers give Dr. Williame‘ Pink Pills a fair trial: they will surely do for you what they did for me." It is in the blood â€" poor bloodâ€" "No, madam, I have not come from Mr. Cassinove or Miss Elmer," said the visitor, in a singularly sweet and clear voice, as he turned around and bowed deeply to the young duchess. _"You have come to me from Miss El mer or Mr. Cassinove? Pray take & seat, sir." Rose entered the library, which was lighted but by one chand{alier hanging from the ceilin over the central table. At this table stood a rather "shabbyâ€" genteel" looking man, with his back turned, and his hands in his pockets. Rose, kindly wishing to put this imâ€" poverishedâ€"looking gentleman at his ease, advanced toward him, speaking pleasantâ€" ly, and saying: TORTURING RSEUMATISM "Yes, your grace," said the servant, bowing and retiring. "Well, show him into the library, Milâ€" ler, and say that I will see him there in a few minutes. And do you yourself be there in attendance." Secing this, and surmising _ that he might be the bearer of some note from Laura Elmer, she took the earliest opporâ€" tunity, when the dance was over, to move near the door, and beckon the man to her side. He came in, and drawing near, said: _ _"I beg pardon, your grace, but there is a person below who is very urgent to â€"see you upon the most important business," Among Women of the World dence At one end the young duchess, the beautiful and happy bride. stood to reâ€" ceive her guests; the loveliest where many were lovely. The drawing rooms, superbly furnishâ€" ed, beautifully adorned, fashion and celâ€" ebti‘ty of society. Beresleigh House was one blaze of light. Crowds of carriages blocked up the way for some distance up and down the street before the front of the house. The occasion was this: The young Duke and Duchess of Beresleigh had reâ€" turned from their bridal tour, and were receiving their _ "dear _ five hundred friends" at home. (To hbe continued.) yl every line of church work throughout the world. The London Diocesan Branch of the Queen Victoria Clergy Fund has agreed The organist of the great eathedral at Durham, England, is a priest, Rev. Arâ€" nold Culley, his recent appointment findâ€" ing parallels in the cases of Rev. T. H. Davis, who is organist of the cathedral at Wells, England, and Rev. W. D. Crofts, at St. Matthew‘s, Westminster. The Prince of Wales will on April 26 lay the foundation stone for the new house in London of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, one of the reatest missionary ‘organizations in the %nited Kingdom and in touch with nearâ€" The committee of the Protestant Reâ€" formed Church in England will strive to form a body of younger clergy especially fitted to defend the Protestant character of the church, and to this end hopes to establish scholarships for intending canâ€" didates for ordination. Probably the oldest minister in the United States in point of continuous service, Rev. William Salter, still goes about among his flock in the First Conâ€" gregational Church of Burlington, Towa, having been with the congregation 60 years on March 15. Baptist ministers at Chicago have proâ€" tested against an amendment to the school laws of the city requiring the sciâ€" entific teaching of physiology and hyâ€" giene, holding that the sole purpose is to obviate the present necessity of temperâ€" ance instruction. With a site that is extremely valuable, an income of upward of $10,000 a year and a congregation of only about 30 worshipers, the Church of St. Petetâ€"leâ€" Poor, in I;(mdon. hnflmbgc:nw(.-losed and its resources will be turned over to some struggling church. There has been a remarkable work done in Los Angeles in restoring to its old glory the Church of Our Lady of Angels, over $5,000 having been expendâ€" ed in renewing the nainting and Ava_ ed in renewing the pai;tifiév-;iara;:; peries that once made the church famâ€" ous. ic vistmannr io t d Amiaten D tar niasine. oi th sn hasinl An odd feature of the history of the Moravian Church, which has reached its 450th year of existence. is the fact that there never has been a schism in the church, which is believed to be without parallel in any other religious organizaâ€" AÂ¥es tion An important movement is on foot among English Roman Catholics lookâ€" ing to the establishment of a college for young women of that communion at Cambridge University, the leader in the work being Miss Eleanor Warner. After a period of work at Oakland, Cal., in the interests of the Sevent.h-Day Adventists, S. N. Haskill and wife are now on their way to hearquarters, at Takoma Park, near Washington, D. C. In four scho'olswof;.i’.éwark, N. J., and in a number of schools of Pennsylvania and New York, it is necessary for teachâ€" ers to have certificates fron.; tjw State Teachers‘ Association before work in the Supdny school is allowed. The Japanese brarch of the Evangeliâ€" cal Alliance at its meeting in May will take up the matter of publishing a reviâ€" sion in Japanese of the Bible, no change having been made in the work since it was translated in 1887. > A Church Army League of Friends of the Poor has been organized in Lonâ€" don, the object being not to raise money, but simply to get people to take a perâ€" sonal interest in and act as the friend of some poor family. A great conference of representatives of the Roman, Anglican and Nonâ€"Conâ€" formist Churches is proposed by Rev. R. J. Campbell, of London, with a view to common action in regard to social and moral questions. 1t is expected that the Easter contriâ€" bution of the children of the Episcopal Church throughout the country will this year total over $150,000, the offerings last year having amounted to $137,000. The County Council elections in Wales resulted in weakening the party most opposed to church interests in educaâ€" tion ,the distinctively church candidates in most cases having secured notable sueâ€" cesses. It is expected that the bution of the children of Church throughout the co year total over $150,00( last vear having amoumta The Baltimore Conference of the Methâ€" odist Church South has authorized its ministers to present to their congregaâ€" tions the work of the charity tuberculoâ€" sis sanitarium at Ironville, Va. The Congregational is the latest deâ€" nomination to set on foot a men‘s naâ€" tional organization similar to the Presâ€" byterian Brotherhood, the movement having been started in Chicago. A great rally is to be held in Carneâ€" gie Hall, New York, on April 30 by the Evangelistic Committee for the Summer Tent and Openâ€"Air Work, in which many denominations are. interested. The Presbyterian Hospital Board at Atlanta hopes to secure for its purm the $250,000 subscribed for a great r byterian University, which was blocked by legal restrictions. In the far away valley of the Okanaâ€" gan, in British Columbia, a Methodist Conference is to be held in May, when many of the delegates will see the lovely region for the first time. Confirmations in the Church of Engâ€" land last year totalled 222,808, against 230,339 in 1905, and there was a still greater decrease in the number of comâ€" municants. Surrey Chapel, in London, an historic . octagonâ€"shaped building, has been turnâ€" t ed into an automobile garage. | About $140,000 of the $200,000 reâ€" uired for Dr. Broughton‘s pr 1n~ « gtitutiolul church ':st At.lanuomdbeen i subscribed. King Edward has appointed Rev. Pre bendary E. A. Stuart to the eanonry of Canterbury Cathedral. The Religious World ‘CURRENT ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 7 per cent. German. A great advance in this domain has been made during the last few years by Germany, whose efforts tend to constitute an independent system, observes the Memorial Diploâ€" Denmark and Portueal have agreed to submit all their differences to The Hague tribunal. The total length of submarine cables in the world is about 450200 kilomsâ€" 279,622 miles, of which 60 per cent. are British, 10 per cent. American, a little more than 9 per cent. French, and about Built on the old clipper model, they sail like witches, and owing to their pe culiar constructions can be readily loadâ€" ed and discharged. They require but little ballast, and having no heay y topâ€" hamper, can, if necessary to the trade, take on immense deck loads. In the lumber traffie of the Pacific Northwest we find these vessels leaving port with huge deck loads towering ten to fifteen feet above the rail. Ocasionaily they get caught in a blow and have to sacriâ€" fice a portion of the deck load; _ but where one meets such a mishap, dozens reawh their destinations safely and land their cargoes intact.â€"From "The Backâ€" Bone of Our Sailing Fleet," by James G., McCurdy in The Outing Magazine for May. Operating expense, that prime factor in all transportation problems, is here reduced to a minimum, for there is no motive power so cheap as the free winds of heaven, mnd no other craft s well adapted to utilize and control this force,. The sails are of handy form, and can be readily handled from the deck, by a handful of men, or with steam power if desired. The schooner can sail several points nearer the eye of the wind than a squareâ€"rigger is able to do. P ue ve ty ts anraadiinirn berccciclh id | this, together with the interest thereon, | would amount to so large a sum that it | would take a large proportion of the reâ€" ! ceipts of the sale of the timber. SAILING SHIPS WILL SURVIVE. The ability of the schooner to meet the requirements of present day condiâ€" tions, while the squareâ€"riggers _ have been found wanting, can be readily unâ€" derstood when we take into consideraâ€" tion the numerous advantages pussoseâ€" ed by the foreâ€"andâ€"aft rig, that are osâ€" sential to the ideal carrier. cross. A few doses of Baby‘s Own Tab lets will remove the cause and make baby happy., The{:re a certain cure for the minor ills of babyhood. Thousands of mothers keep them continually in the house to guard against the sudden iliness of baby. A Tablet now and again wil keep the little one well. Mro. James Jew ers, Beaver Harbor, N. S., says: "I have given Baby‘s Own Tablets to m baby as occasion required since the h‘y was a day old. They have always helped her, and now at a year and a half old she is a fine healthy child. The Tablets, 1 think, are indispensable to mothers of young children." Sold by druggists or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Oo.. Brockville (né Peevish, cross babias are sick babies â€"the well baby is always happy. Perâ€" baps there may be nothing to indicate just what is the matter, but you ma depend uron it there is something troub‘ ing the little one or he would not be At the point where the dead branch joins the main stem of the tree new layers of wood are put on the tree, owâ€" ing to the yearly growth in diameter of the main stem, and the dead branch is gradually weakened at this point until, through the action of the wind, the whipping of other branches or some other cause, the branch is knocked from the tree. All that remains of that branch henceforth is the knot in the stem of the tree that is formed by that part of thf branch that is still retained within the stem. In this way, as the tree grows it is cleared of branches to a greater and greater height until finally there is left a long stem, clear of branches to a height of fifty, sixty or even a hundred feet. Such a tree will rroduce the better grades of lumber, ree from knots, and hence the kind the forester most desires. The same reâ€" sult might have haen nttninod h i21.1.. sult might have been attained Vb;-t:vki:g an axe or saw and lopping off the branches; but the original expense of To on OA7MC ernenieit veP‘y uts uns 2 The forester leaves all this to nature; he trusts in what is called "natural pruning." Mis theory is this: that, in the course of the growth of the trees, the light will be cut off from the lower branches of the trees as branches are formed higher up. In order to growâ€" indeed, in order to live at allâ€"these branches must have light; (whether they require much or little depends on the species of tree and other considerations.) Consequently, when the light is cut off from them, they cease to flourish and finally die. ester‘s management of trees and that of the horticulturists or the arboriculturist lies in the manner of pruning. The horâ€" ticulturist does not trust the tree to grow as it pleases; he carefully directs and prunes the branches so that it will best serve the purpose intended. RELIED ON BY THE FORESTERâ€" ARTIFICIAL PRUNING COPSTLY. the Eriloopd Church, has turned his attention to Persia. The Beckman Hill Methodist Episcoâ€" pal Church, in New York, has decided to introduce institutional work in the old church edifice, which will hereafter be known as the Beckman Hill Hall, a boys‘ club and a regiment of Rough Riders having already been established among the youth of the parish. One great difference between the forâ€" NATURE‘S PRUNING Ordai World‘s Submarine Cables. PEEVISH AND CROSS. , Brockville, Ont. Put i the clhurch is disestablished it can no longr be the Rstablished Church, and it is jus*t possible that the Church would be willing to join its forces with the free churches in the fight against the devil were it sure the others had no deâ€" signs upon its establishment. for disests desire to ; chureh, bu up, for it c it is capab But if th can no lon pimuns, 3 rather ti Church «e land ity, Rev. Th National « Churches i New York. _ Uncle Sam is advertising for » ers to enable him to keep in to: his new populqtion. Just how politan this is may be gathered 1 list of requirements. Interpret wanted familiar with these tong: abic, Armenian, Assyrian (Arab hemian, Buigarian, Chinese, C Dalmation, Danish, Dutech, Finnis! ish, French, German, Greek, i Merzegovinian, Hindoo, Hungaria ian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Mont« 'l(lgyar, Norwegian, Persian, Poiiâ€" tuguese, Roumanian, Russian, ut Bervian, Slovak, Slovenian We glfl'efli!: (.l\'rum;h),bies'pill'lli‘sfl,k..\] Syritn Fa Urkis d.y‘;i.m. y ( » Will Canada ever connect Pria ward Island by tunmrel with the land? The scheime is now beas tated again. In 1892 surveys and ings were made, and recentiy < ment engineers announced thai th: was feasible, that there were no mountable engineering difficut.os way. The tunnel proposed by uns « of 1892 would be seven and a h it iong, and would reach a depth 0: i: below the wat mate of cost Other estimat to $40.000,000. miate of cost was about #!5,00 Other estimates sange from = 09 to $40,000,000,. _A lot of money to the Island Provinee in good humor, workingâ€"man to come to the Fifth Aveâ€" nue Baptist Church. They wil be wel come. _ lt is not a millionaires church. I expect to have a strangely mixed crowd there next Sunday, because i bave inâ€" vited the stewards, firemen, cngineers and kitchen heipers of this «hip, and they will come." _ Me promises to be all things to all men. But the mistionaires may have a different idea of his misâ€" 81011 It is stated that the coal minors now out in the Northwest make $3 to $12 a day, and average from $5 to #6, thus, when they choose to work, +earning about $1,590 a year. Others than winâ€" ers employed about the collerics, at orâ€" dinary laborers‘ work, get dfrom 42 to $3.50 a day, These wages look big but the cost of living out there may At up a big share of it. Aud some oi the men getting the high figures may ave help ers to pay, mg to run sa Vs The Engh to take cha: New York : There are 398494 male and female members of labor unions in New York State, and of this number 260,008 are in New York City, About 90 per cont. of all labor union members in the State ove in the cities. The total population or New York State in 1901 was 7,208,â€" 894 : of New York City alone, 3,437,202, It is claimed that one in every twenty of the State‘s inhabitants is connected James Bartlett Hammond, inventor of the Hammond typewriter and prosident and practical owner of the Hammond Typewriter Company, has been commitâ€" ted for examination as to his sanity, He is a victim of drugs and intoxicating liquor. John Barleycorn can down the best of them in a long tussle. espocially iniam and the author made up their » ticle will be hba: borhood. has been fin« The quinguennigl congress of the Naâ€" tbional Council of Women will be held in Toronto in 1909, when the Toronto Uniâ€" versity will be placed at its disposal, and Lady Abordgen, the Advisory Prosident of the Council, will preside. She will come to Canada for that, purpose, aroused andis preaching revolution. Rusâ€" BW V dlis e Wa K ©nir h COMMENT NC W wWant sh ever do the work of'iki ntil it is free, taal work ment. it i roorgamizatior I« Iur tae time when alt io Chawch of ]f:!,’"lflld hiimg the forces of the th the Church of Engâ€" is a apiritual commnâ€" i1 work. 1f we plead nt, it is not that we own . the established we want to build it i aw, Secretary of the ol _ Evangelical Free ind and Wates, is in organization, hb exâ€" hed along territorial thousa rryman who ha Rockefeliors cl. Lees that he is any exclusive & the shop gul a acauer in impure, milk $1,800. The public is o dauger to human life ( life, by bad milKk, i°s in mary places have inds that the impure arâ€" ‘shed from their neighâ€" nd to nati e bee own in England »flirms that the ) pull down the Church of Fngâ€" The dl.0O, Dbe â€" @M= ong territorial al lines. Pree 1 organized to id or more in has come 10 mUre in the Yid V CB M with rvey vouk 1ail, Cn im t goâ€" »stiâ€" U0d. 999 Bo Aa lte the

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