Ontario Community Newspapers

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 21 Nov 1912, p. 1

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'RIGHT OUR MISTARES." [roman NO NO v. 21, 1912. $1 Pun Axxo iN ABVARCE WHOLZ No. 7418 | SunaroN, &0. Offise snd Residence, Queen 8t., Port Perry Mise hours--B to 10 am 5-1 to8 pm, sod Evenings. Telephone in office and house, and day over the lines south, with the residence of G. L. Robson, Port Perry, Nov. 15, 1894. WM. H. HARRIS, BA. LLB. ---- BARRISTER, &c., Successor to and uy of the offices of the Jate F Yarnold. Port Perry, - Out. open night rosa V.8. MONEY TO LOAN. Private Funds at 4 per cent. b 1901. Ino. VI. . Crozier, ARRISTER, SOLICITOR, CONVEYANCER, 3%. c. Office at resilence, 6th Con. Root (one mile west of Port Periy,)-- Moxsy To Loan. Issuer of Marriage Lionses. RE. FAREWELL, K.C, LL.B, County Crown Attorney, Barrister, County Sol- Now &c., Nutary Public and Conveyanoer. Jtics--South wing Court House, Whitby, W. A SANGSTER, . DENTAL SURGEON. Office Hours--9 to 12 a.m., 2 to 6 p.m Algo opun Saturday evenings. Rridge and Crown Vitalised Air, 4 Gold Fillings, Work a Specialty. DR. R. L. GRAHAM FD. McGrarran DON'TIST PORT. LPERIY,. ~-- . J. A. Murray, DENTIST, Office over the Poat Office. PORT PERRY, Ail branches of Dentistry, including Crown and Bridge Woik successfully practiced. Artifical Teeth on Gold, Silver, Aluminum or Rubber Plates. Fillings of Gold, Silver or Cement * Painless extruction when required: &% Prices to suit the Mnerky, © North Ontario Observer 4 Weekly Political, Agricultural ana Family Newspaper IS VUBLISHKD AT FORT PERKY, ONT. EVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY H. PARSONS FERMS, FE per annum, if paid in ndvacce ; not $1.50 be charged. No. fanerirtion taken for loss discontinued Sucoessor to Dr. ONT. Ban six onthe 2a DO LETTERS Souwinigs + money, when addressed to thi Oidice, propaid and registered will ho at our risk. ADVERTISE] TEE RTT ADVERTISEMENTS received for ¥ publication, wi th- eas) Heli hi aiont will be taken ous antl paid for. A LIBERAL discount allowed toM hants A re Manip ned owlier TAESE terme will in all cases be strictly adliered to ! 7 JOB DEPARTMENT. Pamphlots Hand Bills, Posters Programs, | Dodgers Dill Heads, ~~ Checks Lector 'Heads, Wedding Invitations, ASE Fore | RBoelpt Books | Busivess Cards Booka : _Ciroalars, . Ammembly Cards, a Viing Garda : ohne OF THE: ASCENSION, {aNGLICANY - REV.1G.8t. G. TYNER, L Th, Rector. Morning Prayr- tn and Sth Sradny each mon Eo Ind ah oad off elon nid" y Foansang, ind ai th Sunday 'of Such month. t R. C. CHURCH, REV --. RICHARDSON Third Sunday at 10 30 a. m, JOS. BA TRD PORT PERRY BRANCH H. G. HUTCHESON, Manager. Branches also at Bleckstock (R. H. Coulson, Manager), B vile] Pegalifing Clavemont | | Nertleton tation, (R, H, Coulson, a ny aemee). SButderland and Wh @ I ICEN 'ED AUCTIONKER for th 4 County of Dutario. 1 | wr the Onaknven Office ne Manchester, Jun, 19, 1899, Fase a Dillon Hinge-Stay Fence Manufactured by the Owen Sound | Wire Fence Uo. Ltd., and am prepeied to supply this whole community witli the very BEST | WIRE FENCE produced on this | Continent and at prices that can not fail to satisfy purchasers. The Dion Fence is without peer tis the BEST because it is flexible ; it is a square mesh ; it is a perfect hinge-stay fence, therefore It 1s impossible to bend the stays, in fact itis the best fence made ip | this or any other country. Before purchasing a Wire TF ence don't fail to inspect the Dicrox FENCE. J. H. Brown, DEaCER IN AGRricULTURAL IMpLsg. MENTS AND MaGHINERY. wv SEAGRAVE April 6, i.6, rons. HARNESS HARKFSS "N returning thanks to the public for t patronage extended tome for over years, I wouid vespectlully intimate tha am, as anal, now ready fur businces, a have a Large & Assorted Stock OF DOURLE AND SINQGLE HARNESS which I am determined to sell very CHEAF As an indocement to Cann purchasers 3 Daoud of 20 or omndee will be allowed on all Sales from now-dnti Jun, lst next. AH work being "+= 8% MADE BY -HANDY. and po factory work kept in stock, the sper Jrity of my goods will at ence become apparent, © ntending itlotolivers will find that by diving mea call before looking hy they can he suited in quality and price, my long experience in the trade being an indis putavle guarantee that perfect satisfaction will be oy by any ar article prircased. Eyert! ne ine, of business kept congtantly on a and 'repairs neatly and prompt y attend ol 3 "JOHN ROLPH. Patronage solivited | : REAPING A HARVEST OF SORROW 5 How many young men can look back on their early life and regret their BH misdeeds. "Sowing their wild oats" in various ways. Excesses, violation of na- ture's laws, "wine, women and soi ,;"--all have their victims. You have re- formed but what about the sced you have sown--what HS about the harvest? Don't trust to luck. If you are at present within the M clutches of any secret habit § which is sapping your life | B by degrees; if you are suf- | 3 2 \ gr fering from the results of x st indiscretions; if Q lood has been tainted from - any private diseasc and you § dare not marry; {f you are Na and live in dread of symptoms breaking § out and ing your Te if you are sufféring as the result of a misspent 8 life--DRS. K. a K. ARE YOUR REFUGE. Lay your case before them confidentially and they will tell you honestly if you are curable. | | B ul YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED i | We Treat and Cure VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOGD and URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY and BLADDER Dis- eases and all Diseases Peculiar to Men. CONSULTATION FREE. Books Free on Diseases of Man. li unable to call, write for a Question Blank for HOME TBEATMENT . | Drs. KENNEDY & KER Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Del NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our : Supsegaaes Canadian Correspondence Department jn Windsor, 2 Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in J Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are Pf used for correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian busincsa only. f§ Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. 'Write for our private adress, A. ADAMS, 3. TCHESON, ] G. HU | Beil Phone No. 4 No. 6 No. 4 ADAMS & HUTCHESON Bell Phroue Office Residence, SUCCAESSORS TO DAVID J. & DOUGLAS ADAMS FIRE i Bl SH RA Bd 8 = MARINE LIFE y id Kui ACCIDENT Real Estate Mortgage Loans | Steamship Tickets | | | i ails Close The mails are dpepiteliod from the Poa Office Lott Perry as follows: Going North-- 9.00 a. m. Going South--11.20 a. 10. Going Noith-- 5.15 p. m, yg Sofith--10 p.m Part of the Show. "'Ow's youre little boy gettin' on, Mrs Slack?" "Very well Indeed. 'I's entered the thentrical profession now." "on! Wot part's 'e takin'®* "Vell, 'e ain't exactly tasin' a part, but 'e fetches the scene shifters beer." --Loudod Answers. Oentral Livery PORT PERRY. A "Detuncter." Cnstomer (wissihg bis favorite walt er)-- Where's Charles today? Walter-- U'in sorry, gir, but 'e's gone, Cnstouiner ment in Port Perry, Ihave much pleasure in spnouncing that I have removea MY LIVERY! to my forwer place of business His Wandering Wit. Gibbs--Dubleigh has* a bright idea - wow und then. Dibbs--Yes; if Dub lelghb ever has brain fever it will be tntermittent.-- Buston Transcript, GEO. JACKSON, Licensed Awctioneor, Valuator, &ec. FoR THE CousTR OF ONTARIO AND TEyseEy ." OF CARTWRIGHT, ISHES at this the Sosmencrhinsy of RIGS Ar Sevres OHARGES R. VANSICKLEN. | Port + ro, June 21, 1900. turn thanks to. his | past favors. In reg ; Ft continged * dba Rg th desires to af awe 'will be spared 'an-his as} et alos Seteaniad to Bh succes | that & wo ~Gone! Do you mean he's defunct? EARTILY thauking the public for the | \Walter-- Ves. sir, an' with everything « liberal patronage reccived during the | 14 lag "ts 'unds on.--London many years I have kept a Livery Establish Sleteh, wy YY" another Auction Sale: Season to re: | the stories told by sev- leading clergymen, gles do not always run thar true love. Bp to act more insanely at 'at any other time, save declared one pastor, the bridegroom who flustered. It is seldom any soot "People a wedding ti perhaps a fl "and It 1s gets the th "man. One time at a usual '1 plight thee my troth.' "Another tine when I was marrylog a country couple at my home | asked question, the bridegroom the usual its 'the responses mix- 4 ud and distinct voice, much to the amusement of his hearers, 'I take we this plight' instead of the A PERSISTENT ABBE. be of Mountain Road Building In the Pyrenees. Cc I. Freeston in "Pho Passes of the ene quotes the story of Felix Armand, cure of fit:Martin-Lys, who pierced a road through the magnificent Gorge de Plerre-Lys 10 order to briug prosperity to; lis poverty stricken vil- | luge. - The imgelr: © reaclied' the huge muss of rook which blocks the gorge mear Belvlanes." Still he bravely incited his parishioners to presevere until in 1781 the tunnel was plerced which still bears the name of "Le Trou du Cure." The revolution stopped the work, but after the reign of terror the cure set to work anew. | "A pity the man should be a priest," sald Napoleon when he heard of Ar- mand's herofc efforts. "I would have made him u genera} in my army." The cure's personal bravery was great. Ouce when a nine was about to explode a muletecer was seen riding round a corner. The priest Instantly | gpraug out and extinguished a slow match just at Its last och. Armand was made apn abbe, but he declined to leave his flock and was buried at St Martin-Lys with the cross of the Le- gion of Honor on his breast. 'Wilt thou have this woman to Le thy wedded wife? and be replied, with tice in hiy eye, 'What do you suppose we're bere for ef § wouldn't? "It was ata wedding In my church that the six-year-old niece of the bride groom caused a wpple of laughter With big efes she watched the bridal procession come Bp the uisle, und as her who had come out of the ves- (g try wud with his best man and wie awalted the bride in the chancel. Up it nearcd the altar she noticed uncle, sbe jumped Rod, polnting a small fo ger nt the pridegroom, said in her shrill baby voice *Oh, mother, if there Isn't Uncle Bob with his best clothes on and She had been told her uncle, who possessed an un- usually prominent nose, that when be his everyday nose! by gout married it would De shorter. "One thwe after reading a ceremony the bridegroom handed me a five doi- two. 'Thank cud put' it into my pocket. He By touched we on the shoulder und again you want chagge? 1 inquired. He podded, Inr bill. saying. 'I'l Not understanding him, I sald, you, give you said, 'I'll give you two.' Ob, aud | biuded him $3." IN Oue laughable wedding was that of I gig married ove of her : Svototy past for Ay th ult the airs of a school a ait who kuew her by | her refesences on all occasjous to ber "departed lusband, John. In fact. John 'got to he a byword among al emotion, "Oh, ed, with Poo, | am dt this moment!" sltuntion. dhe ring ou ber finger bis nerv king tugers dropped it, and 1 way neross the floor. pertain that some great calami- be Gnisbed. wre not required. all save the bridegroom. pau an hour we waited, which was not suspected. was' ready, and | cawe ou o pretty, tushed girl "suprise when th service that made th the best mun. 1D 8 best man bad been 1 The Widow was large, tall and stont ir only my ar John were here to see how | Only foot celf control of the guesis in an Episcopal church that tions bride faluted at the al- | The overtake them, refused to go ) the services and then fainted. e4he dcluy of an Lour or so she gvuilcd upon to allow the cere- iarinn minister tells this story: e | was fo read the service fo ch lo a western state wbere The chorch d, aud {be bridat party arrived tor the rowing almost hysterical and pits restless ever a delay the t word was brought tint the pealed man stepped before me. a few whispered words. girl, aud she vodded. Were not disfippoluted. , and when the bride- | LEGENDS ABOUT DEW. Curious Beliefs as to Its Origin and Varied Powers. In many places dew is looked upon as tears of the angels and of the souls in purgatory shed on account of the gins of bumun beings upon earth, und dew ix collected to be used to cure cer- n diseases, especially those of the s, freckles, baldness, cramps, open wonnds and cuts, rheumatism, skin diseases, buros, etc. The virtues of dew as a beauty wash are also well known, remarks the Jour- pal of Relig hology. One leg end tells how by licking the dew off the plants on a certain morning when all the birds drink it ome can learn their langunge. Another folk belief is that "naked or with only thelr shirts on the witches at dew from the grass with bark sieves. this means they deprive of their miik the cows that have been pastured on the grass, and as soon as their sleves are full of dew they know that their pots at home are full of milk. The Polish people of Wongrowitz call "birds' milk." An Example of Daring. | During the bottest fighting in the I | Shipka pass the leading battalion of the who kpew the widow. Among the Russian General Dragomirof's division boarders wis 1 young fellow of twen- | recolled before a hailstorm of Turkish ty five, who fell in love with the fair | bullets. The general was a very stout relict 'of (he suinted John, and lo a | person and had the appearance of a short time (Le roomers were all in- | peaceful German professor. But when vited "to: #ttcnd #1 wedding to be held | Le saw his men recoil he dismounted in the par and walked slowly to and fro along a ridge swept by the enemy's bullets. forced to retreat. An Unexpected Conclusion, A misiress wus suminoned fu a Lon- don court for having dismissed a serv- ant girl without due notice. The de- - | her in food. t | the evidence inquired of the defendant, | "Will four and sixpence a weck keep her?" "Not nearly," replied the lady. | "1111 6 shillings?' continued the judge. the defendant, feeling that judge's hands her case was gaining strength. "Now take care," sald the judge, "and answer cautiously. Wil 7 | shillings?" "It takes 8," said the de- fendant. "Very well," sald the judge. "Then yon must pay her 8 shillings a week as board wages for one month.' -- London Mall, Good Intentions. "I do my best," sald Mr. Clumzle, "to scalter sunshine and encourage a spirit of patience and cheerfulness, but some- t | how I always go wrong." "What has happened 2" "I met a filene bowl: invited a little 'Cheer upl aim hight be. By." i | ery cloud has a silver lining, and you only make tfouble worse by thinking e | about it"™ "Didu't he respond?" "No. He simply said: 'Don't bother me. I've got the toothache. "--Wash- o | ington Star. Heredity. "Cute little cuss," sald Slabsides, n | gazing at Hawking' baby, "but why | the dickens do you supose he's trying the time of the new moon collect the | scribed by Messrs. the dew on which the birds are sup- | posed' to feud petasio micko--i ed | ve oan a tal a ES sextant, apparently a suggestion of Nowton Lis papers at his death. 180 fuvented a | a vo ot id amon Godfrey ans ticipated Oadley by SUDO one year, but for a long time bis ¢ldims were John Hadley had not. recognized, Hadley faring the entire, tradit. The gl Hoe thuks phia opposite a prmp, he saw a after flag ber pall, put It upon Rr sidewulk. The observant glazier saw the son reflected from the window oan which be had been at work into the bucket of water. His mind quickly perceived the significance of the sltua- tion, and he was thus led to the design of an instrument "for drawing the sun , down to the horizon," a deslce incom- parably superior to any tbat bad hitherto been used for the ascertain- ment of angular mensurements.-- Harper's Weekly. THE SIMPLE = LIFE. J uescfdyen i0ey Dave been found 0 have violated some fundamental pritie | ciple of the really fireproof building. A fireproof building must be co ered apart from its contents, for the | structure itseif can In ne way pre-' vent the buruing of combustible may terial within it escept the spread. fire, It is true that as yet we ha not attuined the absolutely fireproof , building, since even the best fireproot- dite fre" withoat belng damitged. A fireproof ballding, there~ fore, may be defined as ove that capable of having its contents cremat- ed without material Impairment strue- turally. That is, all burnable material nay be destroyed, but the structure it~ selt will remain intact, requiring only, the replacement of some of the fire proofing and the interior finish to make it ngalp ready for occupuaney.--K. Pe. Walther in Epgtueering Magazine, THE CRAVING FOR FGOD. | Man Eats Because He's Hungry, Not No Trouble For oN Australian Aborigines | to Break Camp. An Australian aborigine breaks the monotony of hiv life by frequent visits to other camps, hut bis preparations for these holidays have a simpllaity about them which ust appeal to many a worried housewife. It i8 thus de- Spencer and Gillen in "Across Australia" "Apart from ceremonies and dances, the one great break in the monotony of Ife is paying visits to strange camps. Packing up is not a tedious process. The man simply walks out of camp, carrying his spears, spear thrower, boomerangs aud shield; the woman takes the youngest child across her hip. balances a pitchi on her head, and, with one arm round the child and a digging stick in her free hand, ghe Is ready for the road. The girl children and younger women look after the pupples, which are never left be- hind on aoy account, and, when un- able to walk, are carried in pltchis like young bables. "Two minutes at most 18 all the time required for an aborigina® family to pack up mud start and there Is no tronhie in regard to the house while the owners are away. If any one chooses to occupy it during their ab- sence he can do but the owners will see at a glance who has been in BO, possession while they have been away." He Found the Ghest. "Talking about ghosts," snid the jan- | ftor of one of the best known concert halls in the city, "makes me think of the scare I got the otber day when I went into the auditorium after some supplies I had left back on the stage. As 1 stepped into the place I heard a scraping and hauling on the stage. Sone oie way pufilng aud blowing and then whistling a bit. For the mowent my halr began to stand up. I managed to get to one of the switches and turned op the light There was the ghost! One | of the piano houses bad seut over one | of thalr blind tuners to tix up a plano and the Liriderroom exceedingly small | He was a hundred yards in advance of for a 'Ean and when on the night of | the men, occupying the position they the wedd wg the widow appeared at | had abandoned. After staying there the praper woient leadlng her pros | for awhile without being touched he | pective finshand into the parlor, tiueh | shouted back to the battalion: "What us a ther leads her Jittle boy, even | are you doing, you geese? Did you ihe wa ftinz clergyman had to suppress think there was danger here? 1 don't a 8 After the ceremony had been | find any!" The wen responded with a | read ABA congratulatory speeches were roar of cheers, doubled up to him und | 1p p (Le erctahlle widow exelnim- | charged so fiercely thut the Turks were | houses, | houses fendant pleaded tliat the servant wus | Ist 0s the bridegroom was about | BO voracious that she couid not keep The judge after bearing | and there he bad been working away in the dark, his tools scattered arourmt the stage and parts of the piuno strewn about"--New York Bun. Hostel and Inn. At one tle the words "inn" were not confined to licensed but were applied to lodging The "inns" of Oxford und Cambridge, very namerous before the introduction of colleges, were reguluted by the college authoritivs. The ions of court were provided for the accom- modation of law students. In olden tines country houses of uu aristoc- hostel" and | rucy, during tbe absence of the owns | | ers, were used as "No; that would not keep her," replied | in the | ox inh ric ¢ recom | Jie hi' quietly stepped | ¢ consent to marry him. ever heard directly nt bridegroom, and ber best man proved a gv Néws. h in. the Way. ou do, Mr. Shears? he lv the way of [1a Fallor-- Your decidedly iu the way ndon 1 elegravh. mot his tongue EB Maxim, go ane! the guso- to get his toes into his mouth all the time?" "Takes after me" sald Hawiins. "He's trylog to make both ends meet." --Harper's. STORY OF THE SEXTANT. A Chanos, Observation That Gave God- frey a Great idea. The clement of chance plays an fin- portant role In fovention avd in ne case 1s this more strikingly illustrated than In that of Thomas Godfrey, the American. who lmproved upon the quadrant, or, rather, devised the sex- tant, the basie notion for which be got by noting the reflection 'ot the sun .. trom a pail of water. Godfrey. was 8 glazier by: trade. haut "inns," or guest honses. It was then the rule to bang | out as signs the arms of the owners; | | | | bence the origin of public house signs ~ Loudoun Globe. Making It Easier. "George Dingiebat, ry your" "Very llkely, Laura. And say, why | can't we have an understunding in the | maiter--a division of labor, as it were? I'll do the nsking, and you keep tab." --Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Real Thing. shed real tears?' asked Mrs, Grouch, between acts. "Sure," gow and then they hit a bum town. celpts,"'--Cincinnati Enqirer. Acquiesceds bacco heart. Madge--E knew it along, dear. for your old pipe than sou did for we. --Judge. A Born Ananlas. truth? Slobbs--\Vell, iso't this the | ninth time you have asked ice to mar- | "Uo these emotional actresses ever | replied Alr. Grouch. "Every self. Louisville. Courler-Jousnai. and get no peak at the box office re (harlle--The doctor sags 1 have a to- all You nlways cared more Blohbs--Does Longbow ever tell the I 'enught bim in For Scientific Reasons. In an article iu the Populir Science Mouthly I'rofessor W. B. Caunon of tbe Harvard Medical school writes: " 'Why do we eat? This question. pre- sented to a group of educated people, ts likely to bring forth the answer, 'We ent to compensate for body waste or to supply the body with fuel for its la- bors.' Although the body is in fact Jostng weight continuously and draw- ing continuously on its store of energy, aud although the body must periodi- cally be supplied with fresh materiak aud energy in order to keep a more or less even balance between the income and the outgo, this maintenance of welght and strength 1s not the motive for taking food. "I'rimitive man and the lower animals may be regarded us quite unacquainted with notions of the equilibrium of mat- ter and energy in the body, and yet they take food and have an efficient ex. {stence In spite of this ignorance. In nature generally important processes, such as the preservation of the lndi- vidual and the continuance of the race, are not left to be determined by intel lectual considerations, but are provided for in automatic devices. Natural de- sires and impulses arise in consctous- ness, driving us to action, and only by, noalysis do we learn their origin or di- vine their signiticance. Thus our pri- mury reasons for eating are to be found pot in convictions akout metabolism, Lut in the experiences of appetite and | hunger." Order of the Dragon. 'I nere is at east oue erder of Amerf- can ofcers that congress has recoge nized to the extent of permitting the members to wear the badge with their uniform on proper occasions. Tnis is the Order of the Dragon, established by commissioned officers of the urmy nt Peking in 1000. The inembers are cominissioned officers of the American army aud navy who served in China during the Boxer troubles, and thers are bonorary members from other ar mies and navies which took part in the cumpuign of the allies. The society 1s gitar tn some ways to the Order of the Cincinnati, founded by French and Am can officers at the close of the | Awerican Revolution, the object of the ¢ to perpetuate friendships --New York Sun | formed during the wa Stones Micrebes. he decay of bullding stones, accord- ing to more than one authority, is no due to wind action or other surtyee ine" fluence. but to internal disintegration resembling wood rot, and this isxas- cribed by some to a low organism like the fungi and the molds that cavéd the decay of vegetable substances. A cure has been found for tha stone discase, or ut least a form of «reutinent that diminishes its ravaged. The stones are treated with germicides, the best of which appeais to be a mixture of | sulphate of coprer solution with bi= | chloride of mercury and creosote Still Holding a Grudge. "Blinkenstein sliuply abhors women! barbers." "He bas some gort of a reason, 1 sup- i pose." "Yes; he says he can pever forget the | hare ut that Delilah gave Sormsos." Judge's Library. A Cure For Conceit. | Very few men will venture to tell yoo whit to do for a sick borsa but any- | body will tell you what to do foc yeur Front of the 5 "They have a Tamily tree, I sups ul pose "Yes, and the daughters are pipe plos!"--Judge. Without earnestness no man is ever great or dues great things. pee They know not their own defects who search for defects in otBiers.--Sanskric Proverb. - the truth once, but he tried to lis out of it.--DPhiladelphia Record. FIREPROOF BUILDINGS. They Must Be Ait as Such Apart | From Their Contents. Soe entered 1ne grocery store with la jar of marmalade In ber hand apd | fice in her eye. "See here," ebe sald to the clerk, "I bought this stuff be- | cause the card in your window saye it's an excellent substitute for butter." "¥gs, ma'am; so it 1s." - 4 Many people think that the term | "Well, it's irand substitate, T mask "Breproof" is a mishomer, that there i say! I tried frying a bit of fish with: Is no such thing as a f bulld-. ft this morning, and the taste was eo" ing and that tie use of the terw gives ' awful 1 had to throw the nl alk one too great a sense of security. ' away."--Boston 'fra 'Pranseript. 'This attitude has been brought about | largely by the destruction or serious damages of certain bulldings that were the fact that many cause a bulldiug is lo some occplit fashion | tents trom burning. It 18 a matter of

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