Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 26 Jun 1913, p. 2

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(U "Finally. we come back to the island again in connection with a scheme which ought to be carried through with a swing of enthusiasm whatever else happens. We mean, of course, the aUmirable suggestion to purchase and endow Sulgrave Manor. in Northamptonshire, the ancestral home of the Washington. Everyone knows that over the main doorway of this quiet old country house there are still to be seen the nrmurinl bearings from which the Stars and Stripes of the American ttae are derived. Murally Sulgnve would then become, as it were, a little bit of America in England. 3nd would be n place of pilgrimage like Btrnttord-orrAvam for all pil- grims on this side. "hrwiritirur as is this pro. gramme, we have said that there is A uncle cake ot Cunt-m Soap and box a! Cum-um ohms m ohm maiden. visa til elm banned. Sold trydruista and duh-s qverrwh.rxr. Uhenl ample at out at“ he. with 32-9. Skin Book. A“. pou md Ptttter Drug a Chan. Can. not» aaha. B-. Tr. tk A. - T-uh' V‘v f birth. Tho half A', ', "iiter, was dry lad ure- l 2! theyé} lean and alumna ttt I "r, x "--, ml out on one “I. m-" . A Ci?, duo of his head. T . I washed the lis N; _ _ gut, bead who I. 1: - ;’7,{("/ day with warm I ,\ T 'I water and Curl- an loop. dried it. and very awfully - plbd tho (‘m‘cun Ointment And In about “bout-anery ttnqtttueemxtttnntittsq “(around an ottMah+gtdnoatq qWthqhairg"ngdComotoo. Thu-1m put coma Cum-urn (Mm-neat a! mm h and: an that to was. the had I“ I used I hm has at Caucu- Glut-m 'rtthttt.Cuttmtmthmpamt9ttnSrnm. cunning in - Ind the Inle- " an; Todayhohuunlcothmddhklnd uhmmnga-you 10mm“ on." (Hand) Mm. c. P. KM. Mar no. ”12. pusals. 0n the American side it is designed to throw owr the rapids of the Niagara River a Memorial Free Bridge as a daily link between tho daily lit" of the Republic and that of Canada; and as a symbol of The Perpetual Amity that ought, mar to exist between them. “We agree so entirely with this JEWEL w..fl. ELIE! retyrnju.i again. just as we ”Eu Qpi',', My other ideas already touc pon or still to be mentioned. Two other plans must, bo noticed before we leave the monumental class of pro- 170 Adchfdo 31.. St. John. N. B.--"' and my little boy or a bad use old-n- Srutt with (Jul-1cm Soup and Ointment. 'rhodandrutt A“ termed on his ay rr , gas . I _ N; A 3 “Y , 'iiit3,ii.it: 1 l iEiki'ii": 7 KI/F'--'-"'-"" Sx ", Let Equal "our Be Bone on both sides of the Atlantic to those who preserved it and whose example would be first recalled, if by any monstrous chance not now to be foreseen the friendship of Britain and America should be threatenvd in Some mad moment of the future. It is proposed that a statue to Queen Victoria should be raised in Washington by the women of America. What is to be our an- awrr to that? In our opinion there can be only one adequate answer. We ought to raise a statue in Lon- don to one of the very greatest of all English-speaking men, and one whose words and temper are more important for the democracies of the Republic and the Empire than the utterances and example of any other statesman without exception. We mean Abraham Lincoln. We think it is Mr. Price Collier who has pointed out with his own happy in-, night into the living realities or things. that a statue to Lincoln would be a human stroke going home to the general heart of the American people in a manner with which nothing else of the kind could compare. lljlllllllllflr WOULD UH OFF IN SHEETS Hair Dry and Lifeless. Almost All Hair Out on One Side of Head. Used Cuticura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment. Hair Coming in Nicely and Scales All Gone, “Even that is not enough. To recall the great origins is good.no doubt; but Wuhington was before the hundred years of peace. "Wheute consider the first clan of centenary suggestions all sympt- thy upon both sides of the sea ought to be carried for a series of very picturesque plans. For the United States statues of Chatham and Burke are urged. Tho minds of both of them entered into the thought of America aimed, as much IS though they had been born there, and inftueneod American des- tinies no less. It is proposed that on this side the bust of Washington shall be placed in Westminster Ab- hey. We can imagine nothing more just. The rebel and rogicide Crom- well stands to-day outside the Pur- liament he closed. remembered as the -greatest Prince that ever ruled in England." Bo ought (it-urge Washington to be commem- oratrd here as one of the greatest characters of the undivided race Ind belonging no loss than'Shakes- peare himself to the whole English- speaking world. HONOR TO THOSE WHO MADE FOB PEACE Regarding the Hundred Years of Peace celebration, Tho Observer, London, Ear, Bays: - GWEN/{RY SWESWS Between the Uttited States of AI- erica and the British Nation. 5311mm Armstrong of the Pen, nth police was directed to investi. Katy. As he was making the usual inspection, searching for foobprints or finger prints on the moss and grass, he suddenly heard an angry hiss, and before he had time to no cognizo his assailant he was struck on the face, one of his eyes narrow- liy escaping destruction. With the other eye he saw o huge owl, which we: upon him once more. befbre he had time to recover. The owl cut open his cheek with its beak. He beat the angry bird ott, but could not capture it. [man's Human! Can: “I“ I”. When one is renllv young t"? thing is possible; when one " old most things are inconceivable. Next. night about the same hour Thomas Pattinson of Penrith was attacked at the very some spot, receiving a deep gush on the side of the head. George Lamb, head gardener at Carleton Hall, was returning to the village one night about 10 o'clock when suddenly something “ruck him on the head, knocking off his hat and cutting a gash two inches long on the side of his head. Thinking some one had thrown a stum- at him he searched behind the heelr,e, but could neither see nor hear anything. He went home and informed the police. Attacks and Wounds Two Men in South Wales. For three days it was a mystery. It was believed a. madman had es- caped and was in hiding in the woods near the little village of Carleton, Po-nrith, in South Wales. Then it was learned that an owl was responsible. No other medicine will so quickly cure colic as will Baby's Own Tab- lets. They regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach and drive out every trace of this trouble. Con- cerning them Mrs. Wm. A. Smith, Rxwkhavon, Sask.. writes: "I like Baby's Own Tablets and always keep them in the house. Whenever my baby has colic I give her a couple of Tablets and she is soon well again. I know of no other medicine for little ones to equal them." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. "Indifference to these conditions, and national inertia, imperil the very existence of the French Peo- ple," was tho closing declaration of M. Bourgeois. CHIDLHOOD COLIC COMPLETELY CURED M. Bourgeois declared that " though the death rate of tubercu- losis had fallen in England and Germany to 11 for 10,000 popula- tion, the rate in France was 22.5. The general mortality in France, rk"t.itltstdrrtlj.ry,s "the mess cf 'medicine and surgery. was still 18 to 19 a 1,000, while in England, Hol- land and the Scandinavian coun- tries the mortality did not exceed H to the thousand. "Our people must be instructed in the perils that menace us," tho speaker continued, "it will require all the resources and strength of tho government successfully to combat the dangers." This pessimistic view was shared by another prominent Frenchman, Leon Bourgeois, who also has been premier. Sees French Race Vanishing As Victims of Disease. "The French race "ss becoming obliterated; alcoholism, tuberculo- sis and the absence of adequate hy- giene decimate the country," is the opinion of Alexandre Ribot, a. for- mer premier, as expressed before tho Hygiene Social Alliance. "And now we come to the last of the suggestions. It is hoped that on the Christmas eve of 1914 com- pleting the hundred years of peace there will be religious services in every place of worship throughout the kindred nations and, above all, that there shall be a simultaneous five minutes' silence throughout the Fir1glish-speaking world. If the minds of men were well and truly prepared-if they knew rightly upon what purpose of everlasting peace for Britain and America, upon what example for the world they Were asked to reflect-the hushed silence of that five minutes might be felt through all time." FORNIER I'IHIMIER'S WARNING "Then there is the remarkable proposal for a text-book of Anglo-American History, which might be widely read and even used in schools on both sides to the increase both of truer under- standing and more generous thought. We have indicated above that we would regard this if it could be accomplished as the moat search- ing achievement of all. Up to twenty years ago it would have been simply unthinkable. The task is dimcult still; but the temper of the time is ripe for it and for a writer of sane genius on either side it is as fine a piece of work of its kind as is yet to be done in the world. another class of commemoration ideal to which we attach even more trigniBesnoe. A oontinutsl inter- chnnge of professors ought to be arranged for between the universi- ties of the United States, Canada, and this country. A continuous series of lectures bearing upon the chief histories] aspects and future ideals of the English-speaking world ought to be delivered by turns in the island, the Dominion and the Republic, and we need not say that we should like Australia, New Zea- land and South Africa to be associ- sted with this scheme. 0WL Ch [NI-IS TERROR. In the office of the mayor was a picture of Alfonso, but wearing white gloves. This caused the king to approach and examine the print closely. "Never have I worn white gloves," muttered Alfonso. Then the mayor came forward, covered with confusion, and explained. The picture was originally of Alfon- so XII., the king's father. When son followed father to the throne the thrifty mayor decapitated Al- fonso XII. and had the head of Alfonso XIII. painted on the origi- nal canvas. He had not, however, known about the gloves. Puzzled. Nessedd--Did you spend so much money as this before I married you? Mrp. Newedd-Why, yes. Newedd-Then I can't understand why your father went on so when I took you away from him. V Agony) has also a keen and quick eye, and he relates this story of an incident in the Pyrenees. Passing through a. little village the royal automobile misbehtrved, and the royal traveller alighted to direct the royal chauffeurs in making re- pairs. The mayor of the village. struggled into a white collar and his best clothes and came forward to offer assistance. The king asked him to show him around the village. and the two men left the car in the road and walked through the town. Alfonso Refuses to Wear Them On Important Occasions. Alfonso of Spain has a peculiar aversion to gloves, and he refuses to wear them, even on great state occasions. In the beginning the strict etiquette of tho Court of Spain was shocked, but now the young king's independence is taken as nutter oi (bursa. It you are suffering from indiges- tion do not waste time experiment- ing, but begin to cure yourself to- day with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which go right to the root of the trouble through the blood. .Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville Ont. Indigestion is one of the moat distressing maladies tsfBicting mun. kind. Tho stomach is unable to perform the work nature calls upon it to do, and the result is extreme pain after eating, nausea, heart- burn, painful fluttering of the heart, sick headache, and often a loathing of food, even though the sufferer is half starved. People with poor digestion are prone to try all sorts of experiments to aid the process of digestion, and there is only one way in which the trouble can be actually cured, and that is through the blood. That is why the tonic treatment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cures even the moat ob- stinate cases of indigestion. They make the rich, red blood that strengthens the stomach and its nerves, thus enabling it to do its ‘work. The process is simple, but the result means a good appetite, and increased health and pleasure in life. Mr. R. Lussier, of Sorel, Que., offers ample proof of this. He says: "For several years I was a. sufferer from indigestion, and the torture I suffered after meals was often almost unendurable. Often I would go without a. meal rather than undergo the suffering that fol- lowed. Accompanying the trouble I had headaches, dizziness, and lor-, ten a. feeling of nausea. All the time I was taking one medicine " ter another in the hope of getting relief, but without avail. Finally I read of the case of a similar suf- ferer cured through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I decided to try them. I took the pills sit-oath ly for about six weeks with result that I was fully cured, and could eat anything I cared for. I may add that I have not since had any return of the trouble." Toasties are always crisp and typpetizing---ready to eat direct from the pack- age. You save heaps, of time and avoid hot work in the kitchen. Some rich cream --a11lrar if you want it-or cool fruit juice, with these ttuf- fy bits of corn, and you have a dish that " fungu- ating for any meal of the day. Toastiee are sold b: grocers everywhere, Candi.- Mun Geno! oo.. m mac-or. mum. When the Stomach is Wrong the Whole Body Suffers-How to They are among the good things to eat, but not in the cook book, because they require no cooking. HEALTH AWAITS Home Folks By serving Please the Post Toasties KING DISLIKES GLOVES. Keep It Healthy. GOOD I)liiliS'l'l()ll by It is good for us to have some- times troubles and. adversities, for they make a man enter into him- self, that he may know that he is pa exile, and may not place his hopes in anything of this world.--- Thomas A. Kempis. , The ledger of the Almighty is strictly kept, and every one of us has the balance of his operations paid over to him at the end of every minute of his existence.--- nglgy. ' We may know a man by the com- pany he keeps, we may know him tstill better by the books he loves; and if he loves none he is not worth kewintr.rBithop Spaldipg: _ . The only happiness a. brave man ever troubled himself with asking much about was happiness enough to get his work done.--Carlyle. Politeness has indeed about it something mystical; like religion, it is everywhere understood and no- where defined.--Chesterton. These are only a few of the super- stitions that have survived the days when the trial by battle and the criminality of witchcraft were fin. ally eliminated from that law which is our proud heritage and which has been so fondly praised as "the per- fectiun of human reason." Leisure is a. very pleasant gar- ment to look at, but a very bad one to wear.-Hawthorne. The comfort which poor human beings want in such a. world as this is not the comfort oi ease, but the comfort of Istreryrth.--kingsley. Many generations of lawyers learned in equity pleading have iol, lowed the ancient practice of con- cluding a. bill of complaint with the solemn assurance, "And thus your orator will ever pray, etc." Ap- parently no modern lawyer knew what the decaudated formula meant, until recently a well-known author ran the thing to its lair among the ancient rolls of the court of Chancery, and found that (before it lost its tail) it was a. prayer for the health and longevity of' the king I Neither days, nor lies., can be made noble or holy by doing noth- ing to them.--Ruskin. of a very useful little book succeed- ed, after much antiquarian re- search among the pipe rolls and other interesting lore, in ascertain- ing the original siirttihetrnce of the abbreviation. which is "tscilicet," or "to wit." The omission of the let- ters is now quite immaterial. Then there is the invariable cus- tom of writing "ss" after the venue of an affidavit or an aelrnowledg- ment. What legal efficacy do these two letters possess? How many lawyers even know what. they mean? It is only lately, we be- lieve, that Why do we begin a, will with an invocation to the Deity and a reci- tal that the testabor is “of sound mind and disposing memory?" Does the former aid the testator spiritually and does the latter fur- nish any evidence of his testamen- tary capacity? And why do we so Siam insist 4,ititk1aching a seal op- posito the teiiitoiu dynamite] Our skatutes do not require a. will to be sealed, wherefore the seal is wholly superflous as the law books have long advised us. By Another Common Practice deeds are made to recite that the grant is made "in consideration of the sum of 81, good and lawful money, to me in hand paid, the re- ceipt whereof I hereby twknow- ledge,” or some equivalent formu- la. The idea that a. deed must ex- prese a. consideration is ineradic- able and equally fixed appears to be the superstition that a. consider- ation of $1 is quite as effective as a consideration commensurate with the value of the estate granted. Lawyers learned in the law of real property know better, of course, but such is the popular notion. It in elementary that as between the parties a. deed is perfectly valid without any consideration at all; otherwise there could be no such tfy as a, conveyance by way of gt t. For instance. what useful purpose is served by inserting in a. bond; conditioned for the payment of money. a penal sum of twice the amount of the actual debt? Bonds have been thus drawn since the days of Lord Coke, and the printed forms in common use today ooh- tain the ancient penal clause. By the letter of such a bond the obligee is clearly entitled to recover the full penal, sum on the obliger's de- fault in paying the sum specified in the condition. But has the obligee, for these 200 or 300 years, ever been allowed to recover more than the actual debt with interest and costs? Terr Old Formulas Which Have Survived thenays of Witch- can. We hear much of the supersti- tions pertaining to certain forms of religion and of their somewhat re- markable persistence in a material- istic if not skeptical age, a survival that is but incompletely explained by the difficulty of differentiating faith from credulity, or by the ten- dencr-old as the human races-to attribute natural phenomena to supernatural causes and to magnify both by tradition. Though not so much discussed, the law also has its little superstitions notwithstand- ing the prevalent conception of that science as cold, uuemotional and se- verely logical. (lillEllitiim.illliWlhlllll MANY ccnmcs‘ svnnuns or LEGAL sl’rnnsrmoxs. The Painstaking Author TORONTO Pearls of Truth. ED. 7. On a certain Saturday two Irish, men were arranging to attend I meeting together on the following day, but each was at a loss to know how, on arrival, he should tell whether the other had gone in. They thought about the matter for some time, and then Pat said, "Well, if I get there first I'll put a chalk mark on the wall, and it vou get there first you rub it out." The doorbell rings. The mistress of the house answers it. A small child, the child of a, near neigh- bor, is discovered on the doorstep. The Mistress-What is it, Cissy? The Child w Please, ma'am, moth- er wants to know if you'll be so kind as to lend her your recipe t'r makin' bombs. The last one she made only smelled bad and wouldn't bust. mum‘s Llnlnom our" than In Con Not to the nun who bu to move about. but I alight application ot "Putnam's" softens the thickest. tissue and cure: the bunion quickly. Just no ttood for wart... lumps. tnd caucuses is Putnam's Plinleu Corn Extrutor. Us: no other. thc. It nit dealers. Beardir---These were regarded as a sacred poesession by ancient, races. The Jews were proud of their beards, and wore them through the days of their Egyptian bondage, although the Egyptians shaved. Tho Greeks and Romans of the ancient days mostly shaved, and the term "Urbarous" (beard- wearing) was applied for a long period to people who were consid- ered out of the male of polite so- ciety. Boards have been taxed occasionally, as in Russia by Peter the Great, and at an earlier date, in England. l The tree is native to the eastern slopes of the Caucasus and ranges eastward to the foothills of the Himalaya mountains, from which it extends southward to northern In- dia and the mountains of the upper Burma. It has been widely planted in America under the: 4*!“ English walnut. The wood grown here, however, has not the qualities demanded by the cabinet and fur- niture maker. Much of the Circus, sian walnut now used comes from the. Black Sea and from other parts of Asia. " Is Getting Source, Otto Good Tree Selling for $3,003. The high cost of Circassisn wzvl- nut is due to the scarcity of the beautifully figured variety demand- ed for furniture and interior fin- ish, for the tree itself is more wide- ly distributed tha,n almost any other of commercial importance. The demand for the best Wood. how- ever, has always outrun the tmp- ply. Even in the eighteenth cen- tary, when wars were frequent, so much Circaissia,n walnut was used for gunstocks that tho supply was seriously depleted. Early in the nineteenth century the wood of 12,- 000 trees was used for this purpose alone. Single trees, containing tine burls or choice bird'ts-eye fUrures, have sold for more than $3,000. Are not Mrs. Dickinson's symp- toms those of any rttrvxiown vom- out woman? They.aro also the symptoms of kidney disease. Dodd's Kidney Pills give new lite to rundown women by curing their kidneys. “I had rheumatism and neural- gia, and my joints were stiff; my muscles were cramped, and I was always tired and nervous. I per- spired freely with the slightest ex- ertion. I was depressed and low spirited, my limbs swelled, and I had a dragging sensation across. the loins. The speaker is Mrs. John S. Dick- inson, of this place. She is enthu- siastic in her praises of the great Canadian kidney remedy, and not without reason. "I tu1ffered from kidney trouble that started in a cold," she contin- UPS. "And for four years I was never free of it. I was treated by a doctor, but ho did not seem to be able to do me much good. _ "Nine boxes of Dodd's kidney Pills made a new woman of me.” She tguitereil for Four Years, All the Doctor Could Not Help Her, But Dodd’s Kidney Pills Gave Her 3 New Lease of Lite. Porton, Carleton Ca,"N.B., Jane 16 (specitsl).---N find Dodd's Nd- ney Pills the best kidney medicine I have ever used. They have been of untold benefit to me." _ Have Been M New Brunswick Wound Praises Dodd's Kidney Pills BUNIONS M JOKE. CIItCtb'SIAN Wh " l'T. Peter Taxed Beards. In London. Pat Again. Untold ','attit IGSEE 2ir--'18. if; Mrs. Gabbleigh (nudging her hue band, who is "oringy--Willum, you'd make less noise it you kept yogr mouth shut. - Husband (only half 'orake)--tk'd you. - ,7 __ _._. N-'"'. ."-le.M' rllylh d cunn‘ Prank-o for many you: how a ‘ dedicated to the Public and Ink! by “mun-u " be hoe per t'otue. luring 2". It]. as". In Layne fun... to“ n.._.__ - _ - - - A " u '* 3.2.1352: 2,,,tt2, i y" Il'.','ll'd,1',',.! II a a gf itJrt'.2t "I have a message for the world." said the gloomy individual on the plat-form. "Before you go any further," spoke up 1 man in the rear of the hall, "please tell us whether or not your mounge is prepaid." Plenum. Bar, an ulNAEDB IANIIENT is the only Lini. meut Inked lor at my "om and tho only onang keep tor sale. When asked, "What are the five great races of mankind I" I. Chin- ese student gave the following art- swer: "The hundred yards, the hurdles, the quarter-mile, the mile 'and the three miles." When srt.rft.,t.tittAP PM! Chinese students. like other for- eigners seeking to master the Fate- lish language, sometimes make lud- icrous mistakes. Bishop Montgom- cry, at a recent anniversary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. gave some exampies of an- ‘swers given by students to exam- ination questions. Wouldn't Dare to " Wide Awake. meanin- worh the yen you rontrttet and tho COMMERCIAL AI? " Gulch“ Can I. In. Nun- Ilton'n Nils. lie-duh" never come to those who not Dr. Huntlwn'. Pills. And this tut is vouched tor by the Auiuant Hunger of the Poultry Same" Hun-inc. of Bprirtqtiotd, o., Mr. J. B. Callnndpr. who writu: "No better medicine than Dr. Hamilton's Pills. We use them regular- ly and know of marvelous Puree that re. sisted everything else. They clennse the whole system. at u . tonic on the blood. enliven digestion. help the atom- uh. Ind make you feel Itrong and well. For headaches. indignation Ind eunuch dUordem I no oontident that the one prescription in Dr. Hamilton's Pills." Kid-rm: 1mm! Tut-w remedies. Dr. Ilamilton'n Pill. .pouma great power. yet ther are hnrmieoh, The, aid " organs connected with the atom- uh, liver, Ind bowels. In connequqnoe. food is properly dice-ted. the blood'il pure Ind nourishing, the body is kept strong and resists disease. all dratrrutal, 1nd 'storekeepersr a”! Dr. Hamilton's Pint} t, n n _ - th " ts, Ulnar!“ Llnlmm Cur" mammal. "Are you the same man who ate my mince pie 1art, week f" -B.ieee- --- ieal tGG - - Ira" In: our VOIIA‘THII I71!!! .Pyooam. Inch-n: wol- . r idl done, All I! torttg furnUttod. Falwell no upon-6:. mused. We “mm 'dd Provo” . “in" "4 we!!! I“ with Mann- to color. which you return to us. Or PH“. 'e/Mott' I " the wash or Iona. No "rtising or polling our on ellem all 9 [ooh and the Gold ll null-nod [or our work. It you In!“ 'tge,',',,',,.',':'.,?.,?,, 'L"utt'H.ft 1rhote or ”are time, true III “a We. wt 25c per box, 5 for $1.00, or by mail from the Cntnrrhomno Co., Btttulo, N.Y., and Kingston. Canada. "No, mim. I'll never be th same man again y' Any Headache Cured, Tired Systems Re-Toned A Promlnont Publishing Inn Says the Great skaters are often clever men, and it is possible that the fac- ulty of balance, most necessary in all games, is associated with intelli- gence and one develops both in de- veloping one. WHEN YOU'RE BULL, TIRED, NET?- LESS DAY AND NIGHT SONETNING " WRONG IN THE ITONAON. One Oxford don who had studied the question maintained that walk- ing was the form of exercise most often associated with high intelli- gence. He would maintain that ell clever men were good walkers and that may done would walk univers sity athletes off their legs. There are certainly a, number of remark- able examples of this exceptional walking ability among scholars. Some well known headmasters and dons will occur immediately to tho mind of public school and univer- sity men. In Denmark, where any)“ every elementary school hu 1. tmmtaiiiytrt attached, it in a commonplace that the best gymnast: are also the beat scholars; but with the Danes aseho- larship includes a great deal that is physical. Mr. Junker, one of their leaders in physical culture, who was at one time employed by our education office, told a "Tre- sentativc of the London Daily Mail that he could see the intelligence expand in direct ratio with the chest, and, he added, in the case of women, with the waist. This was in the case not of pupils but of teachers who went to Silkeborg, in Denmark, to learn the art of phy- sical training. mmgnsrmmunxr i. the All the po’oph we it, Physical Cum; San Intuit, Increases with Insole. It has been and by Sir John Cockburn that the bop who were best at games were the bert schol- IFS. _ . , _r_, L--t.ul It bu been and by Sir John Cockburn that the boys who were best at games were the but schol- us. This question is now being tested at some public schools and in . less scientific manner at one of the uni- versities. BIG CHEST IEANS BIG BRAIN The Five Great Rat-es. mm». In ”Jodi 5:35.“; “7 um: "on. “as, “Mary b. and. annulus: layout. Gtraa Book In nah .. --- ".e...-., _ v I No SmnanAFeoll Ftrso-Art. Quickly Try " tongue. “at. “it": by. All. an“.-. an..- ..., .7 A -- _ Not the Same. - an... ...--..-.--. unu( rum. Ivan“: " oom- , our Urnllih~nol . "Futon ,. ut v"p.?!At.tttyetttyPtiir. mum fur ln-n- -- LA_ MARLIN FULTON M. one. to do "rturo coloring for us tn their home: with our wonderful (ms-- wank-u work. r nu done. All pat- I‘muénd. .Ire. ("an LI PM" and - - "6.37“. --""t Thin en It In aplendid running order. 1n '.. oquirood and worth I:th more than t.ty pr . "Weak 21m traft a!» Luv-IM- Ila-uh Llnlncnl Cum alumna». TOMI‘OA The fashion in Kiengeu l’rmjnm China, in whatever one wants Every mo we." what is right in his own eyes. A panama. goes jaun- tily down the street followed by a fur-covered brim cap. Felt hats of scarlet and verdigril green fulluw along with greys and bruum that jetrlly do the ”auteur lump” 4 rp- idit. Eskimo top capes. a few dwrhy ‘hats, and the smart military nu, ‘formo gave the streets a piquanvy that we: missed formerly in Um Chine blue crowds. Of all the nw tices posted on the city gate the 'rtvrh that attracts the most attention H ry.e#rAims plate that has been ch hibitéd tor weeks. It displays I'm: or three of the typical "western ' suits. There ere the "swal Uiled" and the low front frock fur evening functions. There ono fiils, the pllited skirts recommended {Hr the women. The silk or "am" pipe" but has its corner with th" other felts. Regulu'it Dr. M61155 M Indian Root Pills "Go sway from me," said the taahionablrdresr.ed woman to the tramp; “I wouldn't have you touwh me for n dollar.” "t was only goin' to touch you for a comer. lady," came the' reply. Toronto. O UX or amtunmv Him Lu vow right. Lou-n burl)" trade, adult" can emotovatmtt tor harlwr Our m. moved methodc. mnl‘nm prawn” .nd 'mrtrtgestiomt qualify you far p” 'rave' Irt than time. "nd for rntn‘rm‘w Mu. For link. This car was ulna in Plv'hlnln r..- . rend-wt model " it no I'm largr Yul tho owner. Completely equwmj Orb. “A IUNELL .0708 CAI M., Unwed, " Richmond St., We“. FREE HOIEHTEAD.‘ AND S,000 proved fut-mo, B" or ', nut.” per acre. Ron (rain and mun-41 hm.“ country. Write Commission”, Ir a"! of Trade. Humboldt. Bank. STAIP C0ta.tlCt'0itm-ritJN1- my. N" hunt Foreign Rump- mum". than. cal; Coven Conn lurk. Hum. fnmnnnv‘ omnm FAMIY ”was. WITH m: “Huan- but” truck-n, in T'orontr, CANCEL famous. Luann FU, Imernnl nod tuna-l. tuna was out "in " our homo: "rumrm Write u before no late. Dr. 3mm” Hedlod tet.. Undead. Colllncwood. Ont BUN. BECK. GRAIN ANI, In]!!! F [W [I All uecliunu .11 (mung. In. at”. It? "1:113," trad-ii," {a "'1 In.» In 1nd other mum and m K. W. DIWIOI. “In.” Colbomo -. K. w. ”wool. column a. 7mm? Solon at the bowel. is Ill absolute neces- sity for good health. Unless the waste matter from the food Ihhh collects there is got rid of at ltust ol'". I_dly, it deyyt and poison? the Whole body. uusin biliousness, indu- gestion and lick f/de/alll','.,': Salts 9nd other huth mineral purgatiwt irritate the delicate lining of the bowel; Dr. Mom's Indian Root Pilie-emtirely vegetable - _ regulate that bowel. effectively without weak- enupcickeningorgriping. Use, once I a. ,it decays ttnd poisons the whole i'ldlyt'c'tf,12' bitiousness, indi- RUSSELL MODEL " R " - I wanna I. so Mann "Us, Toronto. Thon. nld lulu“. st. hurt-mm lhpidn. Inntrul. ouch“: and the Hum-n)" River, one of I ttt n re'u non! imprmiw sunk- won‘t-rm In": run tor (Mu-u including meal. 5nd berm. For Infor- mumn apply to loud tirVt mm. or Cl,.,.,)]')]']?""].""'":";"')": For Bah. hp. "eia.a_hpeeerqrr warm: BNDENr0L PROPERTH‘~ limEN'l'uh PROPER'r1ruw n. Implant and a dnzon an” m"... THOMAS FLYE R I. mam-Hui 'Ei..'ii'u? Fashion " lndh idual. HALE "an" All) com! "III FOR [ALI IIIC'L I, NFL. WANT?!) .N.rttrB men. I. an“ than I. an“ uni moan ... pr A ud h. ha " THE PE FOR Wh TEE o. ASK? (hum ('IIA

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