Ontario Community Newspapers

Milverton Sun, 18 Sep 1913, p. 3

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NOTES AND COMMENTS A quarry miner of Northumber- land, land, has focused atten- | tion on himself of late by reason | of his prodigious memory. This Fashion Hints singular man appears to possess @ mind similar to a phonograph re- _ cord. He can ae an example, reat Jong liste of words both backward | ihe predicted exclusive reign df rd af me have been | the small hat—at least for street and forward aver they have been |g meen veil comes again into read out to him once only; he can its own. Some devotees, of course, reproduce, after a single hearing, | remain true to the veil even in the saoneilors bishops, and adyisors, fe our last lesson a CODs| “Tena with dice i I ‘as many as half a dozen pages ee weather. Some veillovers! and spent three days on Canadian | P= to drink, but no hard and/tain sundry laws ¢ delay Jouns snteec ie ai ees muakecand all ofthis sordid hoa; a book; he recently won-a large try to get around the fact that veils | 53). Fast Ase ste rules on this subject can | tai] the legislation relating to sab-!w;hen they found him among the De® which fairly reeks of the " : ©\are uncomfortable by wearing ®| The Mormon people are making be laid down. Drink a little more | baths, sage the furnishings avd! doctors in the temple and ‘earth, earthy,” first call : wager by glancing through.a pam-|freak veil, like the nose veil seen| 45:9 gains in Canada, ‘They are | “ater in the course of the day: than | a nis of the tabernacle and shim wh deserted “th, tipon Gur time’ and takes the best ; phlet of coster songs aud reeling at some of the seaside s—a | abs pee See ore: (you atenan hie bane af drinking ; the regulations governing its ser“|-Thys carly had, deserted them. “tat there is in us of blood and them off without an error, though {little veil that was liften from the | oq ‘own upwards of 200,000 nepce of | at 38 & good rule for the besin-|vices. All these, according to, the| cate His Li eonninatiene oe Set sweat. If, when every last item of eo the reading occupied twenty min- /¢hin to dea: and tied under the Seven years | prount Coes aayeso fhe narrative, Lee oven ed, oo Moses iis life exclusively to the work of| these tasks has dest attended to, $ ‘anama in ie recesses e mountain ' i 4c utes. And there are roared women beet one tract} drinking from three pints to ‘two| where he met with Jehovah face to wee aos Anat pe Pas had ats ae Be left ioe eee fenen, ready to take up a at- |? h is being colo-| quarts of water. face. Joshua had accompanied him fai ae Sn secmaitiin gy mete aly aa things, w perhaps remember Such a prodigy as this miner is|ter how warm the eas like the | nized with people from Utah. There is a dilference of opinion as | part o pis ign anager) ore youthful dream or| (TG (Tunes. End that there is only @ trifle less impressive than |mystery veils—heavy veils that Pals ae Smith was born} to the oe water.|shorter distance. Aaron, Nadab, = pene oy saps IMPS | some business ‘of His which needs tr spning aor" ol fer tat aet e| eae ee gs bee rege a ae le clearing © is rh D ss a = extract fie) cube roob of 676,004, : ties ot ae Fecha te some say that it is ‘then. owe ee ce the ay first rose in the synagogue © pi is This the Worst! 267,906 in his head, and he sexves| yells though they be, refuse to ‘the only way to find ‘out whether people at the foot of the mountain| iis native town | te ion h the ac-| It is bad enough to make the as an exeuse for the London Stand-|wear them in the summer. Am you at mealtinies 18|became impatient of his retur ceptable year of the Hord to tie Father's business wait upon the ard to moralize a bit on the decay | When, summer sanctions the wear- to try d it then. you|‘The story of their impatience and|) 0)" Ciw by the servants Savane petiy things high we would do for Ot tomiaetg. “Only aioe he vale: |e, of big hats the, veil se forgotten Wiive indigestion “alter “ateals, try. epostasy andthe consequent —die- oy a oe ye Pare Sami etbay. ; v Veil weather is back eating without drinking and drink| pleasure of Jehovah is related in|? one consecrated t0| when the eaten a not only meg- tively iterate, says the Standard, | again in America, and with it a big between meals. the opening verses of our lesson| + sacred mission. Nothing seemed jected, but: actually opposed? ‘That are such memories likely to be showing of interesting weaves and A glassful: of water as aos a shapéet aT ve any claim upon His ti is is not infrequ he found to-day; unless people are in- picnate on the part of the makers y ken in the “mornin, Vers Went down from the nal otienion ae Sonnet vee ae is shown clearly enough by the fact sulated somehow against the strong | °F, Ye proces ing. Another at hedtime is mount -tsinmed unto the camp] hod fore iad a Ne | that much of the Reaied uusi- | ithe most interesting of the new Bo of Isr sche Yat lone 1 ness of men is in open antagonis / current of contemporary print, they |veijs are important. tr ‘clear water is inpleasant to| Two Sl tablets ot stone, ae world—to heal the sick, redeem| +, the will of God, and can succeed rely on memory very little. In the| men, it is said, are not paying mich you, and it is to some try | alr ea) mentioned ii He r; destroy tyranny, estab-| ony by defeating a will, In all mediaeval days, on the ral nbtantions to veils ee wees : but drinking it with a litt Se ee anes 16. The tables were the ork of a y gushics: bring in the Kingdom] .ich cases we hav seteactn * merican women erase ike them. without sugar, squee into. it. GN, es so, how , the “two ade tg hether we shall do 1 ts ee Hoge eae sea es jen | They are called “novelties.” Like The lemen juice aver it some char-|tables of stone hike unto the first,” This Was His One Task. whi do what we owl sounter-RADat HG LADS eee many new things, ths “novelty” acter and taste. This is not lemon- mies subsequently were See Not only must nothing else inter-] serve us for a fleeting moment his mind of thousands of lines of /yejling is expensive—partly Ade, however, @ sweet, un-led for these and which Moses him-|fere with this divine work, but t to| what wil. serve Goa Bicone * all Vergil or pages of Tacitus with as cause it is a novelty, and partly be- fecired cork” ‘This sweeb femon-|self, at the command of Jehovah,| His mind nothing else was eve fitdnet neha great facility as a magician pulls | ¢ ee it is well The mi ade does not take the place of wa-|hewed at of the stone on ti leone doing at ail! Life is sire ‘such fateful ties sare be rabies feorkia tate rather hear ae ue ae Ls ae é ues aes oe (compare Exod. Seiaaae flneting stnene sean le we have effrontery to. Pa together to form lace-like a food in itself, and which really | 1-4 | Therefore must al ave and al ok out simp] i patterns on various sorts of back- does not contain such a large per-| The writing was the writing of|we are be dedicated exclusively to ee Sone es ioe ete i Learning by heart, as the saying rounds, centage ais sparagus | God—So Ses oe subsequent | God ‘ather’s business altogether out of ib dacd-is He WteHES cP tows, with| Seme/of the grounda’are of al: does; and neither do the usual be-|table (Exod To the ordinary man there is|our lives bui nt arises 1 | most Palle like fineness, and some verages, coffee, tea and chocolate.) 17. Jos! fina Who had ee rejoin-| something altogether remote—not | con! ict between our business and our forefathers, if we are to believe | are lined heavily with threads run. They are Sule enue or food) ed Moses on his way t _ say unreal—about this singleness | his se aety Him, thwart Him, fight all we hear--which we don’t quite. | ning parallel to each other, all. in drinks, an way supply the | mountain, f purpose which was so supremely | Him ‘i : You will read in the Ee one direction, from en: part which water should take. The noise of the people—Gre. Sonate of the Nazarene. And| Now to all this the career of actors of the heroic period th: 4g) the veiling. e have checked 2 demonstrations of religious ‘s naturally so,-as the ordinary man/| Jesus presents an exact antithe- all the works of Shakespeare eager partes Neryous Habits. vor, including ge singing exactly reverses the example of the| sis. His business, if He had any caemans cscGhal A cena wonla? vy t bees Tiida not at all vanesboGues & bers aneing, were characteristic) Master. What Jesus put first. | apart from that of God, had ly pi made in both Bes mae whi son; pal an adolescent, mak- of Aiaiases ceremonies in ancient| most of us put second—and a bad wait, and if any chance this tim | second at that! ‘The thing of prime Brusness was hostile to that of God wide conflagration, such and such @ treader of the boards could have | sat down if the flames had spared him—and restored Shakespeare word for word. Literary men like | Macaulay had a most inconvenient way of flooring their opponents in parliament and elsewhere by appo- site quotations from the Mastios that lacked nothing whatever in their fullness. But the tide has now 80 completely turned that we find Mr. Chesterton making it a| test of copious reading to misquote. then we , but going back to the Thus Mr. Chester- is more or Jess of a pretence to-day. Perhaps it is in some degree, but itis still more a dreary task, @ penalty for wrongdoing, which fact ‘indicates, sufficiently how hard me- morizing has become for moderns. One hundred lines of Vergil or a page of Wicero used to be the re- gular sentence imposed upon luck- less youth “‘kept in” after school. The sonorous Latin’s landscapes compensated presumably for the genuine landscapes through which the culprit vainly longed to wan- der. Hateful task! How dreary ‘became the pastoral view so loving- ly depicted by the poet. The mur- mur of the sea among the mount- ains could hardly compensate for the want of the murmur of the One wonders how many who forgotten éven the tale of Dido could yet reel off one hundred lines of choicest Latin—the last bit of|™ heroic nore ns ee ever ac- complished ? — CORNER IN BEANS FAILS, Egyptians Won't Buy Them When Price Is Raised. It has been said, Lord Kitchener's the trade of the wsurers who-had in the reaped untold, profits out of Juckless fellah, whom tl been won’t to exploit to an colleagues, year beans, So they, de- cided to corner the bean supply, ‘which is is only just sufficiont to meo e dem: Up went the pri: unds, and the telah ae beans becoming so: nis rar -bounds, _ began what of we. acury. aK tay be improvi- dent, but he: is no f He at 01 nerers on their stocks, an to oe bee an. extent that fie ia ba ieee all had to z sold r once ina way the telat a and the brit of the nose Tho place to carry literature is in |¢ the head, he argues, and unless ‘a| © Egyptian homestead law had ruined | worked. 2 —— , AUSTRIA DRINKS LESS BEER. ers while Hungary is srctted i } comes first with eat Ee Bini have | d, -{eold fee world, has just made a visit to Can- Veils Are Popul ada, and while here dedicated the SUEDE eet round for the first Mormon Temple With the coming of autumn and/on British soil. The oceasion was of Joseph ee al <acMan of Remark- ihe Mormon Church ‘throughout the marked by a ieee celebration in the town of Cardsto: eS the event nee came HE MORMON P 1 p ‘Ability. 4 resident ee: Smith, head of HEALTH Alberta, wh ‘The presid in a private, train with ae These new veils od eegely fied” oye’ then anon over the an in fords about the nec held together at the base at h veil pins or hai Unlike much that characterizes the present fashions, they the epitome o} ness. ar not drawn trimly and anootly over the hat ada ie a not sm Lace veils, to be worn loosely with the larger hate, are afl fash- varied ing a good deal is given to a design which shows a rather small, decided motif, peated Bi mathematical precise- ness. The pig, ae allover de- sign is a in favor as this Seni. uqnallg suring aratiann: Fashion Notes. The French variation of the lin-|" gerie dress—lace tunic and black satin te seen daily. urrent red serge, trimmed | and revers, is chic and becoming. The all tulle hat of black is quite the thing, the transparent crown eas, the coiffure plainly to be m even ry popular is the normal waist line, with the broad sash, which suggests the upper line of a high attachment. jowns of white voile and lace are noticeable among the pretty new costumes. .They frequently haye tunics of embroidered voiles in colored flower effects. The best effect must be feats of the new neckwear. as been socertes by fashion as a touch worth w! lived b: rT Unie tis dnvofal Mist Wl oa ae inc mcm mien *|the head, special attention is paid a magnificent race,”’ Mr. Crawford to bandeaux. are jeweled} sontinued. ‘I settled among a mil- and: barbaric. Hele is more used than ever, there is scarcely a gown with- out the plaited frills or ruffle of this soft, materia! The dividing line between tunie and skirt drapery is so dim that e can scarce distinguish the one from the ot! The favorite embroidery at the moment for fine lingerie. dresses is the East Indian. or blind- work, with no holes, but broad flat flow- ers and leaves evenly and finely Statisties Showing the Output and Consumption in 1912. Judging from the official returns | just published, ers will be very -Taeke ‘if they aoe t rop more than another 5 per cent. this year. Bohemia, the centre of pana 5 beer } production, brewed more than eivecmsiahte of ‘the total “esto, only little over one-ten: for one-seventh of the total produc- tion. ¢ Pilsen Citizens’ Brewery €00,000 barrels, about 2,000 barrels. per lay, Which is half as much ee in as the second on tho list. “Maker of Fact. ‘Darling? Sweetheart! ee my burning heart at et “Nee, ee the use? is haven’ t] your {b Sittin blue satin. at the cufts|D ‘t| there Four breyeries were responsible | b working B a “Can't T i , young Smith was six years father, oe Smith, ee a mob ab Carthage, Il., wo vents before. In 1848, when the long trek was made to Utah, the of the Mormon cattle. is hie —— 4 STORY OF DAN CRAWFORD. Atrica. Ss hman, a8 lost himself in who recently produced book call- d ‘Thinking Black,’ caved in i ere He is known as w—not Daniel—Crawford. The Siar author is a short mi rd and mous- mi: aoe Say hair, beard ache. He has sharp flashing eyes and a ecu of ae rapidly and with great emp! “Ror 23 years,” Ne Mr. Craw- ford on his SoSH “JT never wore a collar, never saw a& i and hardly ws spoke man, “I really feel more negro than white man. A quarter of a century man and I was dying from consumption. I hear that the climate of Africa would be good for my pores and I went. a missionary. I struck lion of these people. a wonderful language, whi it took int ie Lobe language, Ein thon it. is, gives | a pretty sou idea_of the tongue “Did you find any of ae peoples (™ the ws ee Sas you able to convent these people to Christianity?” “Ty tribesmen with whom sidence were ready a =) made my’ 1 sesses a culture nm. He definite and delightful fas a eine ie Mr. Crawford said thet after his| yu. part ‘A man is all right in his way as afialysed Spent Twenty Tze Years in the 2 tho heart of Africa for 23 years, and | the > has now ar-| co} ne the heart of the country alone t ‘amomar, Ww) hich, incom- jq| Show a well polite, and’ eyes is a distinct im- oe cease in the manher eG »” Drink Water To Be Boiled, “To remain young, drink water water.” Se 82 vs dif- pen pope of water as the ue THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPTEMBER 21. Lesson XII. The Golden Calf] (femperance Lesson)—Ex. Chap. 82. Golden Text, 1 John 5.2t. The chapters anterrenitg between t ne ing movement, rapid, sudan: and SCR ee: repeated from ti tic If such a movement be carefully it will generally bi e had.a cause origin- proud, boast that he “never lost a| of. the hoof.” eral health anepores \d of a esiabliahed ne only fo cu is to educate the higher Savas ie tocontrol the movements. This form of treatment, togethe: way Been Made. Lord Bi ery’s recent lament: 0: he decay of manners has led an in. Tanon Dally Exp examin: years to le 2 n is wel ods |! ‘ ‘ tenses o aT te ead the wan has|and might even be said to show a ceria eae 9 genders. “1 translated: the Bible | D2"Ked: mpravemend over the fig-| tioned in Num, 14. 35: “In this wil- and also | Ures ae the corresponding week|derness they shall be consume last_y “The | first Lopdonee subjected + observation was a top-hatted cit; an in a Liverpool: aoa omnibus. allowing the toe was taken nine persons said ‘Awful mate, as some di soup in a distinctly’ foreign and these cases could be included in the English t total. “Children ‘in seyret rts of the ci ‘desire for cigarette cards. ate Se oe res way. 5 gee w @ | nee before in his early tite Sad + has become Amis | Some ae Experiments Alleged to aye ATEY a reek aid: prolonged ation, I have great pleasure in certifying that the general civil- aty. upon—in ten eases of te ‘econ and the’ Bian idecaret (ike « that iy | ought to sit on the co a the omni- a not properly aceeeens eee Branding for crimes was “not abolished by law* in oe sgt 1892, 18. The noise of them that sing sound con- | Moses grown exceedingly angry au the point of losing control of h. On_ this: occasion his o. cast the tables aes Eee h boy, then 8 years of age, the ‘ove a team of oxen’ across the| fal : alf—A symbol of | Wester plains. Reeaing: a the strength, borrowed from the Lake Valley, Joseph was nine iS A os ee an old, and became a herd boy foatanhy balanced hat may be ae Fraweseeiliees Poa tores feria ae 29 record the appeal) 8 ich Agvop aiatle Jn beball of the | Cvsdent aymptomie! cf -exjovm ple and the relentless punish.| 1 was fishing a small trout-stream ~|ment inflicted by the loy: i oe of that ran through a narrow: moun- |g, m-|Levi at the command of Beg oa Ora approaching 30. Sin: ned a They | quite near to the timber on either |side . A friend was fishing the same j mise, but in ely | of gross ingr: Aste a oe Jehov Peindyenturs 2 shall make pou ment for your sin—Appease in| ST ueswagcthe. erage Ge eTehovaly| 8\ apparently by offering himself in! j e their stead to be blotted out of the} with attention he. general) 39. Forgive their sin—; and if health, will generally soon prove ef-| not, blot me, I pray thea, 0 out of} : fectual pook—We in ir eeauels the . ellipsis indicat by TESTING ERS. ash, inserting some such a as aes and good,’”? or ‘T x “I have no more Droken phrases indi- am content, tet to ig of Moses. say The cate the deep. feelin, f| 34, 35. Twill visit “heir sin upon|® deeeescaiieay clear whether the : threatened visitation of _ punish- to be tho gh of as follow. or at some later time. From the expression, ‘And Jehovah. smote the people,” some have inferred the former, while others’ think that the punishment: sl }and there they shall die s, — Y) BACILLI LIKE MEAT DIET. Jed him to the eel conelusign that the seur milk bacilli combatted ment and veget: ables in separate Culture tnhes and injected the cul- tures into a rabbit. From the ve; table cultutes the. tabbit. expe enced “no incoiivenierco, But the y | colon bacilli in ‘the meat Sn ° had multiplied to-srch ap, oxt ent that the rabbit's <asfnise Mellow ed quickly. 2 (Sen eee = Den due to traffic accidents i in 904 to 687 in lay The Cunning of These Animals Is re-| audience experience, and in the case of image) Nie owil x itr, 8 the Outing Magazine, tells how he |came upon a big blac! +k bear which | was indulging in a feast: with very | voi he metropolitan: area of London} Bar increased in number from 155) ( ‘Mo! mui THE FATHER’S BUSINESS Time and Again Our Ways Are Not God’s Ways, and Our Purposes Not His Purposes, « < Wist ye not. that I must be about my Father’s business. tie ii., ivivix. 3 ‘vestments that we want to secure, + was dropped ieee Thus was ’s also ; y. to ‘oy Joseph received his early edu- ti Be Thee be 5 i f x. | time, yet not due to any nee and not the Father’s. lis life sath. God, and 's Deer tee Seton cause. These movements are | ct but af es festive singing, which Jands that we want to buy, goods’ with ope oh Set aes were compel led torficee from Nau- known as Mase that we want to manufacture, in- Holmes. A BLACK BEAR’S MEAL, « Almost Beyond Belief, watch wild animals feeding at Young Folks fey sctt een, Senea ce 1; a. comparatively rare one. Charles 8. Moody, writing in| ; thing like half an hour came aware of a mn ested i rae became mote distinet, I thought my {end had eee musical, the sound became very dort I eed up. I was less than ‘thirty feet from a black ee ote : looked about the size of a fey. His bearship did not on Ss ut was busy licking ae off a dead pie) -tree that 1 edge of he forest. I was wens t ean seo the seetts running about = those above his head. His dinner over, he dropped ted) through ‘the dense I . Applying the treading-on-the-toe : a “The cannibals?’ Mr. Crawford was (ee See dave oe aes Metchnikel! Shows that Enemy of iam woos iT ee Ke vs rehere together in’ hath “Very few,” he replied, | “and jt | eight pound pressure on this ae 8 System Shuns- Vegetables. ae Died Se the | When it was a whole house ey Ret may interest’ you that | Patent leather shoes, an Metchnikoff, a eminent investi- | height of the salmon Hees forest Shree auanier, of one. i then re is ea A a eariale sponse to the eres Awtully gator and bacteriologist, appears} fire had event ‘over tho ‘Ol ‘one the brothers 32 a quar- cannibal, Although the men may |£0TY,) Was gratifiedito hear the/to: be intent on sianae back to] Mountains, and’ destroyed all the rel, art one, of then cat Huson Hesh'the. women of the |Sebyees, come: Limumplantly oul OF earth the made ; on go of and Tll take ele same tribe never do. ‘The women the. ee Leu Bs - Ea ans-| meat. in) OR ‘with ny are further advanced than the men, | V% 3 tion. of ihe Eanes little colon king still | er 7 i ar4 they band together to protett| “On leaving the omnibus, ‘the|Lacilius he has reached the conclu Sh ee are BL OS eae he themelves from “nan, the mons. |@mners tester increased the pres-| sion that this busy and ungrateful sunshine. Phe tobike swith wrorcmen, jahd they ter.’ @ movement for equal |SUre to forty pounds on the samc | parasite would not have euch an en-| [ walked up the river one even-| measured the old house ‘and. divid- tuffirage is probably stronger. in| 0, but the experiment could hard: joyable time in the human system) ing about eunse search of a}ed it into quarters. Then the Contral ‘Attics than anywhere’ in| ¥.be classed as successful but fora meat diet. His recent ox-|qeon, Coming round a bend, I «aw jsawed and shopped ai cutee Usiny plorations into the realms of bacilli a large black bi mn ok away one quarter.to another uy fiat. rock, several feet. from the I “could noti tell at first what f bus and hang their legs over the) pacilli.. Abstinence from meat sub-| yond his react, - oe Cale rails. tracts further from the Be rere a heal SS nee Jey he could ‘The soup test, oe applied “at| vironment and bownteous commis| pot swim. He bear was using several Weet End restaurants,| sary of man’s principal enemy in| paw to. er an eddy that would ern trang ter the: bacteriological fica. draw the fish within his grasp. tity of soup consumed being slight- a interesting experiment tee the aise salmon. drifted 40 eee it Was: amucing . watch how can aay the bear moved his paw so as not to frighten ‘his prey, At last tho fish came within reach; Las ee reached over, gave it a qui bs, it is jaws, leaps e; pared lumbored off, to-eati ie evening | meal in Byseey: Ne ful In Tt. all my things out of this playhouse and m 601 else Then how would your old playhouse look?” grandma looked tro’ way 0! batts pele ist a little asham- in great confusion, Occasionally | veranda. SrecLcar: woul put Bhev ieee ied] “ory tat de tqupen eldeles ga out would come the ants. He would! o¢ Marblehead, on the Massachus- lick them up, rising on his hind] e¢ts shore,” began grandma when The Spite House. ‘You're mean, Kit “So are if you don > have where ‘Kitty, Patty! " at called, arly. ae Kitty and Patty did not Wi the door 0 playhouse they grandma's ies, >» 80, looking at_each other, they walked Sony beside grandma up to the is a ve it, just as you cut rr poner’. corher out of a loaf of eak “How funny!” cried’ Kitty. ae mi it that way?’ aske you folleweine® a little winding street to the water's i there you will see ue saad e House,’ as per mints for dessert, ma, as she kissed each Hiss girl. a ' Luck. : 2 ‘eee seems to have. Sa aie that’s the matter nowt : n 0 ee ip to the west for i health?

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