Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Jan 1914, p. 3

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n if”: tlt Ttor tye, 0Y3. ya TIT. the rt id- par " " Lf THE HALF-SPEED MN MI) WOMAN on veins he W Or Tearl" Prudnetion in Canada Ex- eeeded All Former Rc-cords. " Sh the prudw bia being in prm inc " product not preven production at! in Britis IV dra mg was aim "The med mo tempor: happened u rczema was Then I read been relieve I?" Then I read the been pel'-.eved oi in; Grape-Nuts “I decided to We of the fut tan T " In simple (ha-go In Food. m Ill LI: cotr. OUTPUT. was almusl The medicit temporary mened to I " on Vpul snd you ar li' lecided to try it. I liked the " the food and was particu- th‘asHi to notice that my di- l was imr noting and that the on was (happening " if by I had st Int. food, in this fond. something that Ruched rtp in Km rd ShlV (LEAKED h mumiun on my face. and atclt nur doctor called ee- _l which caused me a great. nvonveuience. Tho annot- almost unbearable. nedicinc Iatook only gave porary relief. One day I I ttt read somewhere that was caused by indigestion. "ad that. many pencils had Med of indigestion by eat- RY., on ed 109 308,997 tons. The lat- would hare had a high- nn had labor troubles ed a normal output. The in Alberta is the high- 'or that province, while Columbia the greatest was attained in 1910. " r ne He " W e rtheh " 9.044 and con " to 3.2 in Brit BIBS d is eaused by I. You can be- " condition to- Williams' Pink rich, red Hood through your arven thrill with e is convincing v strength and had through the os' Pink Pills. 'W, North Tryon, nn a farmer and work very hard. t I found myself mm. My blood watery, and my I took doctors' 'lid not help me On st n Canadian Pastum ns ear time on re argest pro 240.577 tons l constitut- I the total odueta of Compared r the.pro- mm tons tons and ear s e pr u tear m and " IT e 28 per " or W 1t kgs The PRISM Ililllllllilil (lf IllNlll MEN or THREE NATIOSS T0 UNITE IN PROTEST. ravine! Evidence Itt Greed“: Ae eepted by lande- . , "th-tties. - "Since the Czar's manifesto of October, 1906, promising liberty to the people of Russia, over 40o,000 persons have been sentenced for po- litical offences. Of these 3,000 were executed and more than 10,000 thrown into the horrible "Eator- ga" (hard labor) prisons. Rooms overerowded. "Packed in overcrowded rooms, which are devoid of the simplest hygienic equipment and cleanliness, the underfed prisoners are almost deprived of any medzcal assistance and become the victims of all kinds) of epidemics. Scurvy, typhus and: tuberculosis decimate their ranks. ‘In some prisons the death rate has :reached 12 per cent. Very often 'these prisons become a centre of Iinfectiun for the surrounding dir itrict. Those sentenced to long ‘terms of imprisonment-chiefly p0- litical--are in actual fact condemn- ed to a cruel form of slow death. i “Most tragic is the fate of those itens of thousands of political ex- ‘iles, of whom most are deported to ESiberia without trial, but simply by _the arbitrary action of the adminis- tuition. Most of them are sent to a frozen waste, where, unable to obtain the necessary foul. clothing 'nnd housing, they perish.” l The above is a quotation from the recent international protest Against the. treatment of political I prisoners in Russia, signed by many of the most prominent public men in France, Germany and England. W heart taria agita ways drunk. victims drink defy descript state. There is m 4.000 exiles i 4,000 miles in Siberia under direcbl police ~upemision. These do not. include the prison inmates. The gmerumeut has sent them to thel very worst part of Siberia, for vari- (ms political offences, such as keep- irg schcols where children and grown ups were taught, for hold-l ing political meetings in their houses, for criticizing the govern- ment-in short, for doing the hun-g dred and one little things which) everybody can do with impunity in! Canada. The upkeep of these 4,000l amounts, according to budget re- turns, to $350,000 a year, or $87.50 per head. This sum includes the food, lodging ind clothing of the im- happy exiles. They are forbidden to work, because it is a well-known fact that people are happier when they have something to do, and also because the pittance they could earn on colonists' farms during the {short summer would buy them a (little more food than the $87.50 can. i Innocent are Punished. l The following is a. lair example of iwhnt goes on, almost dailvr in Rus- tsia: Charles Maminski and John ,Trzaski, two decent workingmen, (employed in the foundry of Wloch, ihave been doing hard labor for five :years. though innocent. In 1907 a 'policeman and a eossack were wounded near the foundry. A few days later a woman, Mme. Maci- siewska, well known to the police, ins a receiver of stolen goods and la white slave trathe agent, went to lthe police station and said she ‘knew who attacked the Gro wound- led men. She pointed out Marninsril, {and Trzaski. They were arrested,: (tried by court martial and, solely" l on the woman's evidence, condemn- led to be hangedl The C2ar com- imnted the sentence to 20 years' hard labor for Maminski and 15 team fur his comrade. Their em- p':oyers' declaration that both were gtluiet, honest men. and their own iprotecations that the woman gave levidence against them because they ‘prevented her from getting two lynung girls into her clutches, made vinot the slightest difference. They were thrown, chained, into a cell lwith the scum of a Russian prison; titheir wires and families were left .‘to starve; they were sent in chains ', across the Urals and put to work in I lthe mines. l After four years the police began .ta hear trom different sources that (ttte two men were innoeent. For a. long time they took no notice. At ‘Inst. however, one of the lawyers who had acted " “Prisonen’ friend" at the court martial, spent nome apare time in looking up tho 'men's friends and relatives. Ho ,found that the woman’a own son te. shot at. the policeman Lnd the cossack. After a you and much ‘trouble. he made the centnl court martial of Warsaw look into the lease. _ _ . - u the mindgriarf min, poop}; such Memonts savor of exaggeration, it“ a St. Petersburg correspond- Whde Maminski 1nd Trzaski worked on in the Ural mines, jen- ers used the lash on them with im- punity, for were they not there for trying fo kill the polieot Their food was molds bread and cabbage soup. ll prison horrors really exist in a, or are the thousands of wist well-informed men and n who claim so, simply soft- ed and soft-brained humani- as. led astray by designing tors in the Czar's realms? the prison of the ancient city nonqtuchova, where is the fam- Avdine monastery and the :uluus picture of the Virgin, 534 than 60 prisoners are even oeing kept on bread, water and tnt applications of the rod. tetual Conditions. l tter Four Years. " Itarge are nearly al- lb do not let their en water. The cells l, so filthy is their eys een and wife of Prince Eitel Fritz, the Kai- ser’s second son, who, it is reportr ed, has left her husband and is now residing in Paris. At night they lay on wooden bunks, built against the walls of 11 wooden hut. When they had time they us- ed to try and destroy the vermin by throwing boiling water over it. They were not allowed to write to their families or get letters horn them. Om night, aftm' work, they were told w go to the inspector, who, after satisfying himself that they were Maminski and Trzaski, told them they were free. You can im- agine their ivy, Good-I330, 01d Racknclle, Nerviliuc Till Fix You! 8tlttrtest lt Rubbed lush! out: Every Slgn ttt Pain Disapman. Gee wha-think of it! No more stomal‘h dosing necessary to cure your lame back. Every trace ot lumeneaa. every bit. of stiffness. every sign ot weakness in the back's muscles can In rubbed uuy for all time to come by good old "Nervilims" No other liniment can do the work so quickly, can penetrate so deeply, can bring ease and comfort to the bark-weary satterer as Nervilino invariably does. Backache isn't the only malady Notwi- line ts quick to euro. For lumbago or sciatica you would so tar to tind relief so speedy as Nerviline lives. For chronic rheumatism there are pain-detstrovirur pro- perties in Nervi'.ine that the it tirxtt rank. The way it limbers up . It“! Joint and takes soreness out of nrainod or rheumatic muscles is simply I wonder. If you have am who or a. pain anywhere, if you have a euro back. a tstitt neck. I stitf joint. a strained mmrehr-it you have lumbago. congested cheat or pore throah just, try Nerviline. Rub it on plenti- lunywit. won't blister, it can't do any. thing bat cure you quickly. The large 50c. lamily size bottle in the most economi- cal, of course. but you can. from any dealer, also get the Me. small size of Ncrviline. the king of v.11 pain-relieving remedies. Punishment in Case of Betrayal of Professional Conduct. Medical men very rarely indeed figure in divorce cases in Europe. Especially is this the case in Great Britain. There is a reason for this which is not generally known, that the General Medical Council main- tains a strict watch over the con- duct of the members of the medical profession in the United Kingdom, and that if it can be shown that a doctor has availed himself of the privileged position due to his call- ing to misconduct himself, his name is removed from the Statutory Re- gister of medical practitioners, which is the medical equivalent for lthe disbarment of a lawyer., - Thus, Dr. Thomas Francis Roche, of Kingston-on-Thames, a physician oi some eminence, has just, been publicly disciplined in this fashion, as the aftermath of the divorce case of Stuart. versus Stuart in which he figured as co-respondent. Had Dr. Roche been merely a friend of the Stuart family and not their medical attendant, the Gener- ai Medical Council would have tak.. en no notice of the case. But the General Medical Council took the ground that, being in prdessional attendance on the Stuart family, he had taken improper advantage of the confidence reposed in his calling and therefore. expelled him. For a doctor to have his name struck off the Statutory Register of medical practitioners spells pro- fessional ruin. For it means that he can no longer grant medical certi- hcates nor huld medical appoint- ments nor even practice medicine unless he makes it quite clear to his patient that he is not a statu- turity qualified medical practition- er. Moreover, he is unable to me for fees. - "burn you think women are gee- ting mo daringly original in the matter of dress l" "Original.' They are getting positively aboriginal." ED. 4. mnard's Llnlmont Cures Dishing». DO("I'0RS IN BRITAIN. Princess Sophia, \ppronrhing That. ISSI'E t--'14. Will Quick3y thee Any tour Stomach "When I was working around the tarm last winter, I had an attack of In- tiammation," writes Mr. E. P. Dawkins. of Port Richmond. "I was weak for a long time, but well enough to work until spring. But something went wrong with my bowels. for I had to use salts or physio all the time. My stomach kept sour, and always after eating there was paln and tulness, and all the symptoms ot intestinal indi- gestion. Nothing helped me until I ”Hum... -"'""'-'"V - used Dr. Hamilton’s Pills. Instead ot hurting, like other pills, they acted very mildly, and seemed to heal the bowels. I did not require large doses to get results with Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and feel so glad that I have found a mild yet certain remedy. To-day I am well-- no pain, no sour stomach, a good appetite, able to digest anything. This is a whole lot of good for one medicine to do, and I can say Dr. Hamilton's Pills are the best pills, and my letter, I am sore, proves it." my Icucu, A an; nun-y, guy”... ... Refuse a substitute for Dr. Hamil- ton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut, sold in yellow boxes, 25c. All dealers, or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont. Most Prof1tturie Use Is in Chicken Rearing. A paper of more than ordinary interest was read before the British Royal Society of Arts by Mr. G. Thorne Baker. The subject was “The Application of Electricity to Agriculture and Lite." Mr. Baker said he considered the most profit- able application of electricity to the farm was in chicken-rearing. Chickens weighing a, few ounces only and about twelve weeks old fetched a remunerative price in the market. Such chickens could be grown under electric stimulus at about double the rate, thus doub- ling the output of a. chicken farm, and halving the food bill per chicx- en On Mr, Randolph Meeeh's poul- try farm at Poole an intensive chivken house, consisting of six flats, each large enough to accom- mudate seventy-five chickens, was electrified. The current was ap- plied for ten minutes every hour during the dky. Six chickens only out of a total of 400 died, showinga mortality of only 1.5 per cent.-An the ordinary way the mortality was often as much as tro per cent. in the summer months-and the chickens were ready for market, despatch in five weeks as against three months. _ - The vitality of the treated chick-! ens was remarkable. Instead of running away when one put a fin- ger to the netting, they would rush up and peek vigorously. During the treatment they were so highly charged with electricity that quite a distinct shock was felt in the fin.. gers on touching them, although the birds themselves were supreme- ly unconscious of anything. The sparks which flew from their beaks on their pecking onehs finger did not appear to be felt in the least by them. . ELECTRICITY ON TUE FARM. Experiments with radio-active earth were also dealt with by Mr. Baker, who stated that the growth of plants had been shown to be enormously increased. He was for.. tunately in a position to announce that the supply of radium in the near future on a comparatively large scale would be assured, ow- ing to the successful nature of two new processes, one in this country and one iii Austria. A core corn, he mud, was bad enough, but to have it stopped on was the limit. Ha invested in a bottle of Putnam‘a Painless Corn Extractor. and now wears a. happy smile. Corn is goanouch mid. Try Putnun'l Extractor, Me. at tsll deal. on. If a man is a bore he's always the last to discover it. Dominion Forestry Brunch Reports ‘ Remarkably Small Loss. The lowest level of forest fire loss on record in Canada was reached last year on Dominion Forest Re- serves in Western Canada. From the first of April to the end of Sep- tember several of these reserves es- capd without a single fre over ten l, acres in extene, the small fires that did occur being extinguished by the rangers before occasioning any damage to standing timber. On the jl’mcky Mountain Forest Reserve, lwhich has an area of 13,373,856, incres, the fire-loss amounted to but? ', 1,150 acres of young timber of only) ipotential value and $150 worth oil mature timber. The total aresi burnt over, more than half of which! was cut-over or grass land, was but! 3,010 acres, representing only o.K, per cent of the area of this reserve. On the Dominion Forest reserves in British Columbia, which have a to- ital area. of 2,420,000 acres not a ‘single fire succeeded in spreading Fiir a larger area than ten acres, and the only green timber injured! by fire was four acres of young lodgepole pine. The records are not yet complete for Saskatchewan and Manitobs, but the available figures compare favorably with the ones cited. The above figures also oom- pu'o favorably with corresponding ones on the National Forests of the United States, where the area burned in 1913, although the small- est in recent years, was somewhat over 0.3 per cent. of the total re- served area. _ _ . . Relieves Fullness After Meals. Mlnard's Llnlmont gum Golda. Etc. In the Fire Districts on Dominion Crown Lands in the west patrolled by Dominion fire rangers the loss occasioned by foresAfirett last sea- FOREST FIRE LOSSES, 1913. Uri, 7:150 reUarknbly small, nor is this due wholly to_tlys large amoupt Jt rain which' qp last summer in the west, for there were also sever- al dry spells when frequent fires oo- SMITH GOT WISE. rid.) Not Sold In 5 ANADIAN HAIR BESIORER M., Windsor, SCALPCLEAN cgliApuyg HAIR RESTORER Restores Gray Hair to original color. Two might use from same bottle, hire! one becomes black. the other blond or other color as they were in youth. Stops Falling Hair, Dendrul, Itchiux. Cures all Scalp Diseases, Produces New Growth. Satisfaction guaranteed or money back. Price 11m“ or two lot One Dollar (may. curred, which only the alertness of the fire-rangers prevented from oc- casioning large losses. In the Coast, Fire Ranging District, B.C., which) being situated in the Railway Bella is administered by the Dominion! Forestry Branch, during June nndi July and August no less than 1101 Hires occurred, yet all of these 1ieii) were. extinguish“) before any stand- I CUTICURA SOAP Frequent shampoos with Cuticura Soap, assisted when necessary by gentle anointings with Cuticura Ointment, afford the purest, sweet- est and most economical method of freeing the scalp of infants and children from minor eruptions, itchings and sailings and of es- tablishing permanent hair health. in; Rigger; was destroyed Cutlcun ttttatt and Clntmenc In cold ummz the world. A “hers! sample ot each, rm: 32w. booklet on the care and tmlment ot the 3km Ind only. pent poet-tree. Adan-m Power Drug & Chen. Com. Dem. 88.3mm U. B. A. East’s Youngest. "Don't your shoes feel very un- comfortable when you walk, Mrs. Nurychet" Mrs. 'Nuryche---"Dear me, what an extraordinary ques- tion! Why do you ask, child?" Youngster-C"?, only cos pa, said the other day since you'd come in to your money you’d got too big for your boots." His Mite. Bhe---Whab have you ever done tor humanity? . . ' D0 YOUR STOCKINGS HHRINK from washing and hurt you? Do tho channel: oomTplmu? Tho IDEAL " count] ' RETcHER! nuke old utookinu he! and you like new, relieve tired eat. on. corn; and save darn- inn. Two sins, adult Ind child- pta Me. a Data by mail. I. E. ORR a co., luncrd. ont. 101 nun-nu...y . HemSaved at least one man from a terrible fate. she-When was this? lie-When I married you! Try Murine Ere Remggly It ychu have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or Granulated Exeljds. _Doesn_'t Sula): Cause and effect - whiskey straight and a. crooked walk. --Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liqui ' 25c, 50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes. 25c, 50c. Eye Books Free bv Mail. aa-tooo-t_-tOro Murin- lye Round, Co., Chic“. mum‘s Llnimont Cures Car”: In Com The Care-Free Servants. ".Tsn't it a fright what wages nut girls are} nowadays?" "m" a---- "'0 "e-ee __ - "It certainly is. It's got to the point where it is hard to tell whe- ther our servant girl is working for us or whether we're just work- ing for our servant girl." ulnard's Linlmcm Cures Diphthorla. Cannington Manor, Saltn Writes :-“My brother sur fered severely from eczema. The sores were very exten- sive, and burned like coal: into hUfiesh. Zam-Buktook out all the fire, and quickly Cave him ease. Within three weeks of commencing with Zam~Buk treatment, every note had been cured." This [is but one of the many letters we Ire constantly receiving from people who have ts." the healing powers of Tam. uk. " can: vile. m. burns, an: as .11 skin troubles there in nothing like this wonderful balm. No skin disease abould be con- sidered incurable until lam-But he: been tried. Alt DWI“. Mk.. per Box. MRS. A. snag. _of Not Sold In sum. With ser Light Four home by doipg your daily symnnstic stunt! Utilize the energy developed in exercising tor health by making it operate . dyns- mo and storing up electricity to be turned on no light. Such is the "idea of u Frenchman, who bu in- vented tho apparatus that will do this very thing. m In: combined a bicycle with tl dynamo and storage battery in such a way that each member of . fam- ily can, by taking I brief ride bow fore breakftst, store up enough electricity to light several lamps. One hour's peddling is enough. The machine is made in two sires, one to work with a stonge battery of twelve volts and twelve amperes for the use of ordinary purses, the other for use with a storage battery of twelve volts and twenty-five un- Peres, for strong per-39m. . Tho su'eutihe American remarks that one advantage of this machine is that if the lighting of the home be dependent upon the electricity derived from it, will give a tstintu- his to the use of the machine for exercise and tend to prevent the daily gymnastics from being ne- glected. - Everywhere. Wanted: Glad and sunny people All along the way, Just to make it fair and mellow As a summerhs day; Just to speak a word of greeting And to give a smile That shall make each splendid pur pose Still the more worth while. thytttlemam,-Larst winter I ranked a {rut btrnetit from the use of MLNARD94 INIMENT in a severe nun-k of LI (hippo. And I hive frequently raved it to be very etrtxeuee in cases of flli'h"ll,d/ tion, Mirtard'g Linimont Co., Limited Not to Her Taste. Art Dealer-This is a beauli scene from "Hamlet." Mrs. Newrichwl don't care'fvr hamlets. Show me a. tNod-sized city LIQUID SULPHUR is Nature's own remedy for RHEU- MATISM, ECZEMA 1nd kindred troubles, arising from impure blood. It has no equal as a blood purifier. Price 50 Cents 3, bottle. All druggists, or SULPHUR PRO- DUCTS LIMITED, 158 Bay Street, Toronto. Tho day was drawing to a close. Judge, jurors, witnesses and lur- yers were growing weary. Finally the counsel for the prosecution rose to examine the defendant. -"EGriiif how far is it between the two towns l" asked the lawyer in a weary vpice. -iL, defendant yawncd, and re- plied, “About four miles as the cry flows." - " “The; all three looked at pne Mt- other, feeling that Something was wrong somewhere. Mr. Wilkins was near the explod- ing point when his neighbor met him on the street. "That man Tomkins," he burst out, “has more nerve than anyone I ever met." "Why?" asked his neighbor euri- ously. “He came over to my house last evening and borrowed my gun to kill I dog that kept him awake nights.” "Well, what of that?" "Why," shouted Mr. Wil- kins, "it was my dog he killed.” T Your Ext-mite Ught UP the Home. irii/Gi'euldiiraitr 600. Write (or iihurtrat1d booklet. CHARLES o. MARQUETTE. TRAYMORE HOTEL COMPANY, Hanna. B. c. want. "alum. A III-[Ilium tenotorr, are-prod addition ir Just be thin “no“ hosmlry the new": and mom urtcrdate of A new have In the unusual an of the bed rooms. no I!" I.“ nulwny um Ivcwwu. unu- -. -y _""-..., 7., __,,, _ A m but!“ In the unusual am of the bed roan“. nor-um; " feet nuns. Iver room oogtttttatrdes Ill can view. lurch attached with so: sud "an: nut. '5i5"iiiil,, tn every chamber. Tam "stun regulau-d by Thor-south, tho bust. duo opment in new heavuf. {layman tn every won. 00" privileges. Cum“, coo. Write tor il an“ Monet. WHAT NEXT! A Legal Tangle. Cause for h "cr. Yours, W. A. HUTCHIN SON W' Pqririr E3 TORONTO N. W. DIVI‘OI 70'0"... If YOU WANT N BUY on .IIAL . Prull. Rind. drain. or ruirr Purl- wrhe " W. human. IrllnD'uOl- or . Nib,rci. RI ,. Toronto I w. DAWSON. Cotton. __________.__.__' [IVE UNLVJI‘RED amen. HAITI! Jd llld Fisher. W D. Batu, Ridgelo'l. nt. NEWSPAPERS F0. ClLE. Mrr HAVE SEVERAL (mun SEMI paper prom-Him: tcr «do m 0n- "rio towns at rich! uric-en. , nulv quirk” n lubsrrmtmn rI-Iu-nn' time In jun opt-VI- int. Wilson Publish " t‘nmpany. " West Adelaide fitrvr:. Tana»... CANCER. TVMOBR. Lt' MP! FTC.. Intern-l and (“rm-l cured wtth. et pain by our home frvn'mpnt, Wt“. no beror* (on law Dr ll-“wmn Iodlml N "mum: Cr"ti.-worM on. iTCiviil pay you $1?0-01l comm Ut not req ity for ii): (0!" promotion. - um. may .0 ttved. lnurnmionul lib}. PM“. I. Fpadinl Imam, Toronto. YT"' wwtunx umpnmmm FIFTY _ urn-um. Free (tn-log. mmumu Son. Grow-send. Ontario. to GUNN, LANGIDIB & CO., LIMITED. MONTREAL, you "t'tlrP. tho BEST REBUTAM. One trial shipment rwomm'nd d. PB6BUCEttS-Br shipping your at annual urn. oo., Luann tut Wellington St., IontreleQu. NEW LAID EGGS rihute rki.iiou/titorturr, In your mly. "'1xtg dlyl’ work Experienc- mired. Man or woman. Opportu_n- Buy St. Lawrence he in original pack-goo. Jn. ir'irrigusnt puck-foo. Un- touched from refirserr to your cupboard, you are In" of sugar Ihsululely free from eorttnmiruatiort or impurities of my kind. tit. Lawrence ‘rnnuiued whit: an an: "luri- ”rind in threr uim ot 'rlinrdmc, Indium and mm. in NHL. 25 lb. and an lb. at!“ but and 5 lb. Ind 2 lb. Mon. All (in! clan Icahn” M " u inu'u up. In“ It. hire-a in". IT. unmet mu "nttmr' MM. mum. -- - MTUATINI VACANT. "no can on: tt URSE RY STOCK IIII'VU Owen-I WANTED m be!" eotRNotrd, palm: te of All-Mk; City lunch “In." COUWID. 'tr.6 ump- my} " . Tonna- N/od. :11 had Ate 'iid w. on: “a. C: «U to an!

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