Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 20 Aug 1885, p. 6

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I~ll\a vnnv blow up green at the .:3l"T5 "9 , APEIIFEW cum: {lions and` In _|`-oljlovid from ` uy:6u_Ij njlur_y&_ - -30-Pllls In? a box. 2*=!a=w-irzivo-=--:!=v>x-%vr'- 7 f`FOI?`SA'L-,8! Au; Jmuaclsrs Alva L DEILER8 IN MEDICINES . Beware of Conkxfei Base Imitations. .Gl1`!i.1.1:. wrappgd` pal '_ix_1 Blue, with signa- ) u_reAo`n .Yl'y-J39x._,-.ree-,trial pac 6 Of ,tbe;CleI;i'.f3i`PilIs_'sent to guy a dtss :0` 3 3.*1**='WP-L ` fREATE$T .'l'.o all V llidlgoson. % ; Stomach. " "V:.-.'w- tn V` V?! ` " `,'8Ol;!`PdoP'd`lE1"O8;V, _ ` f 3W1: as KgIqoTstu::`:t'%A`st. Tamra. om`. Wlll thoroughly can you. They do not 3|-lpo or purse. but not Inlklly; and wllonbvor used in [ oqmldoroql `phloe- [ ' lion.` `flay have provon to to tho " uav uu uvvvuav an UA Lu 1' I thin , replied the judge, there is a great opportunity for a. young man to rise who es an expert in law -Glngham9 cap at '1`. W. Gray as C093. ' " DlI\A III others. _ - - - -lii Rev. Sam Jones on Darwinism. Good character is the immortal part of man. While we lay down our bodies as aschool-boy lays aside his books, charac- ter outlives the universe, if well rounded and complete. When I speak to you of Cornelius, I say to you that he was a heathen. When I_ look at this heathen I am ashamed of myself and every other man that walks the earth. In the noon-' tide blaze of this nineteenth century, with its capacity for the highest hights and deepest depths, I nd no men who I can compare with Cornelius. I look. at him and reverse . the Darwin theory. If Cornelius was a sample of what men were, then weare going back to monkeys. Some of us have nearly reached that point already, and if we could get a little more hair and a few tails it would set us up. ' Something Special. So you think of becoming a lawyer ? observed the judge, kindly. van II4'.\v\l:A4-I uuuu mm `H . 13.3.... (L T vuuvs vvu L119 Jrlugu, zuuuly. ` Yes, rephed young Mr Badger. I think I will become an expert in some line of practice. What would you advise me to become an expert in I T , `kn .'.-.J..... ll LL -_- lrlll Ill `VII-IIILEQ . Itwuz all I bould pay fur. Now yo go and gntyo drink. You ll eat libber, but do man wat sells yo de stuff will hab his" po terhouse steak. De man behin de bar eats po te1-house-de man in front `eats libber. I ain t touched the stuff` in thirty yeahs, an I am eatin po terhouse myself. IIIUIIII: I.' IJTIL I.I?l 0 `_`W at do you wan ? said the but- chah. ` 41 III` 1 . 1 9 I I III! 9 IIIIKIIO `Grip me ten `cents wuf ob libber, wuz my remark. `an ....... -11 1 '.....-1.: ..-.. 1:... xi'.._ ....s* RUB HIV lIll&Vl Bllullu V ` `Give me ten of twelve pounds po ter- house steak, he said. ' ` `(KIA AL 11. ....-.1 &......L `...-L T ~....-1.....J LLVIIDU DUUIIII, `JV Dillllw He got it and` went Out. I sneaked up to do butchah and looked to see what money I: had lef (GTITI. -L .3.` ...... .......J 0 ...2.3 L1... I...-L GEORGE ANDREW!` overseer in the Lowell . I Carpet Corporstion ' wu forover twenty years before his rexno to Lowell slcted with Salt Rheum in its worst form. Its ulcerations actusllocgvered morethsnhslf the surface of his ysnd limbs. He was entirely cured b Ann's SABBAPABILLA. -. See certicate Ayefs `tor1883. __*__` ..5...... ,....,........ _ Objection 4th--If living beings began from a eck of albumen oating on the sea, as some of these philosophers say; it will puzzle them to nd a way to intro- duce them to air and land life. For so far as is known all propagation of living beings on land and in air, is by sex, and none of the inhabitants of the sea are known t) have any proper sexual orgav 3 like land animals, and therefore th 1' could be no transition from aquatic to land andjair breathing animals by any mode of propagation known to us. ' (\l...'...'.L:.._ ::.L rnI__ _-_,, 1 n arm at --3` A` Dr.J.O.Ayor&co., Lowell, Mam. _ sold bysll Druggzsu; :1, aixbottlea for 35.} `Yo s gwan to get a drink, Jim? ask- ed the elder. Dat 8 what I s gwan to do. Go and git yo drink. I yoost ter do do same ting when I wuz young. When I wuz fust married hah ' was a gin-mill next to the shop wha. I , wucked and -I spent in .it fty and sebenty cents a day outen de dollah a. half I eahned. Wall, one mawnin I went into de butchah shop, and who hood come in but de man wat kep de tlikkershop. bounds po 'Scienee,`~j'philosophy,' religionp are motive epowertthat` have done something .towa_rd opening the dark corners of the earth and bringing the world to our doors, but the desire to better our condition, the thirst for gain,` the mighty dollar--this is the breath that lls the sails of commerce- the engine that draws the train round the World. _ 1.; to - vvu --- 1"--__ '- ..-j`.__.___vv Two colored barbers, one an . old man and the other a. young one. The young one took off his` apron and started out of the door. (11? 1 ,, . , . , ,1 ,-"1, 11-. on _,I, - L`Al`IlU your! 530 L |1|:l|MA| Mt hBheu$ut:stmckm.so .2: vote that I could not move from` the bed, or dneeo, without help. I tried several reme- dies without much it any relief, until I took Aura SLRSAPABILLA, by the use of two bottles of which I was com letely cured. Hove sold large quantities 0 your S.uzsA- PARILLA, end it still retains its wonderful ggzuleritz; The men notqble cure: it has ected this vioini convince me that it is the-best blood medicine ever otrered to the public. F Huznxe." _ River st. Bucklnnd, Haulfniy 13, 1882. `Tho followin letter from one of our best- known , matte Druggms should be of interest to every Iu orer:- . .1 1 , - '. u-.-_-w , TESTIFIES. .~' 0-] Popularity 9.1: home is not always the best test of merit, but we point proudly to the feet that no other medicine has won. for iteelt Inch universal approbation in its own city, Itatemndooun ,andemonge11peop1e,u I BHEl!U!I!3M- A HOM;l}_]_)_1iUGGIST{ Aye;- s Sarsapafl. Avuusuu IIIIIJ U0 UUIJHIAUIIDIY lllllllllltlllikla This natural selection must be nearly as good as a god.- He must have at least , the natural attributes of the God of the Bible, wisdom, knowledge, power, ubi- quity, immensity, and immutability. If he lacks anything it can only be the mor- al attributes, and even these are at least hinted at, in the adjustments of the world indicating goodness and mercy, and the benets that are seen to follow some courses of conduct, and the terrible evils that are seen tonfollow other courses. The evolutionists have not, however, seemed inclined to nd the moral attributes. They did not invent their little deity with any such design. These great philo- sophers seem not to think of the necessity for mind, skill and wisdom in the abor- tion of matter that is useless, and the se- lection of just what would be suitable for the new end aimed at for some remote future, and the location of it, Just where and just so much as will serve a new pur- pose, if it can be proper to talk of an end aimed at, and a purpose without an intel- ligent purposer. (XI.-.:....L:,... Au. T: 1:._:;.__ L-:-- 1 -!N.. o. `WmlTCT_~l': T go. ` I"I `DJAQHI-Cughglr "A Povfful Lecture bu Temperance. nvsr:Fs:K on mnmesnou, WHY SUFFER FROM BLESS! N G <.>I=% AGE ` '%AT THE KWPENFELDT mmv, mam. 500 BUSHELS UP man MANIJRE wmin! . nu rnvr` '1'! mi . i I, "'1EI.ni1re':11.::tI . m` L` "" " 1 . be ` free `P011! and and straw 46-tf. uulIJ\rLvl.r'|.l. FIL I` IJIBAI I I I/ID" noU(r.u"r"ANn sow. Auction Rooms and Ofce. --Few Doors North } of Wellington Hotel. Baveld st.. Barrie. IJA ALIVLJO Objection 3rd-E volutionists claim that a power called Natural Selection exists, , that changes are goingon toward a higher t condition, by the abortion of useless or worthless matter particles, and the accretion of such as will improve the condition. These changes always Im- proving the. form and adding new uses. They call this the survival of the ttest. They have selection but no selector. They have descrimination perpetuated through ages, millions of years, removing just the right particles at just the right place, and just the `right quantity, not to disturb the organization, and then choosing out other particles, just the right ones, in just the right quantity, and nding justthe right place for them not to incommode the organization, but to carry it on to- ward the completion of the new form. All this is done without mind or plan. It is a wonderful chance that has happened for millions of years to prevail so that such uniformity has been preserved that scientic classication is possible, and that results may be condently anticipated. 'Fh:I`l |o+I`IIIn1nn1anI>;t\rn ennui-. In. ........I-- Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Simcoe. Orden left at the ADVANCE Omce willbe 1-om tly attended to. and information willbe ed Earties requiring Mr. Ford's services. as thong he had himself been consulted. Sales taken in prices to suit everybody. 1 sncoun-nun FURNITURE IDIIITIVIIIII Anvn not In "C Parlor Suites. Bedroom sullen, Sideboards, Easy Chain, &c., Cornice Poles, and all kinds of Furniture made to order by ' ompetent workmen. Also ` Planing and Turning * Done on Shortest Notice. DAVID DOUGALL, In Rear 0 the Market In thanking the f bl A , . for the liberal p``roi,a Iggrile in the past, begs to state thgtom siderable expense incre sed 1112`? 0311:: ant` so an... ......___ . Made hi the various styles and qu rt --Delivered in all Darts of the tovval Y the bee - Ill uxnuunyxg Lne D1101 `f 1 ` I patro;1cae Il3)::{le.ad vicini. ii} thgtbgxed u .-7 sxderable increased hiseb has at can ties and is 11 3km than ever. ow prepared to do a larger 8 Q B E A n b-`nea . -u-Au, _--:-- 1 PIC-NIC PARTIES SOCIALS Sc wnmn .- . I\(}E _ supplied at short notxce and on reasonable I [ terms. I FREDERICK J BROW); TH * ' ---xunuu . . ' Agent for the following Inarauum CI 7 11 CITY OF LONDON EN GL C3pit812.000.000; dgposit ` AND: . . ment at Ottawg 3100 wfod with the G T 50.000 S'ter1'jn3erve gumim. THE Mmm A mm. .. ` 0 FFIO1v}-: Up I lllll-IIll\ILISo Not a shade of difference in the mind or instinct has been noted. Men are men everywhere and always, in every clime, mode of life, government, and social con- dition. Beasts are" beasts everywhere without change except where they have been brought under the molding inuence r of men. l\ q -- c . . GONYEYANCER, COMM} the following Insflranc, n,, BIONERIN > .- - w - I V manufactured fresh every (13 grocer for them and you will ht:-)Bg:thiou; er. I171 : `Y?t '\ . o..____, , GEO. R, FORD. FURNITURE 750 B usIV-I'Ls or` \/ 1J'~) Ht L F3 on Lennox db ...-.a;4A||J ' Capital. n n J I _ . ..L `VIIIJDV l5I\-IULIJII IIJ IIIIU IIIIQWIIUW UL ILICI Objection 2nd--If evolution has been `going on for ages, it is very surprising that no specimen of a being in a state of transition from one species to another has been found in earth, air, or water, nor any fossil to convey even a hint in sup- port of the theory. If any such evolution ever existed, and has been suspended-, it is unaccountable that some remains should not be found to show the fact, and it is very strange that it should be withdrawn before there was an intelligent being on earth to be a witness of the change, since it is claimed that man is the crowning work of this evolution. During the thous- ands of years of recorded history men, beasts, birds, shes, reptiles, insects, and vegetables have continued their fortns and functions." ' ' I Q"!!! 0 ml 0 C BREAD THE 11-1: run rnnoj ` RY f'AII.S 'r.o Accofu1n@ jrit. ANIMAL on VEGETABLE nu. `objection 1st_1~`a{;'{h.;.;; ';ia1; ac- count for life, either animal or vegetable. No fact has been adduced to show that _life has` ever been produced from ,dead matter spontaneously or by any scientic process, but on the other hand it has been seen that decomposition and disorgan-j ization begin at once after life departs. ` Earnest efforts of scientists to produce . life have never been rewarded with suc- . cause motion in the absence of life`. t\l_!,,1', A 1 -In 1' 1- I cess. It has been claimed that life, in- L` stinct, mind, and moral nature are the re- ` sult of the motion of brain corpuscles, but no evidence to support this -hvpothesis has been produced, nor has there been i any evidence produced that there is any \ motion of brain corpuscles, or anything to It Requires unrest on lnumutfncreduilty Innitely Greater than the Belief I 3 The theory of Evolution by Darwin and "N others is, that organized forms have 1 been evolved from jelly-like matter, in; the sea. simple,. homogeneous. without? organism, without parts, without life. I l\I I 'l`!!IB.!*!*1UB}TE0TIDN8%T"DERW-Tlf&`7`| manila`: n most across me une of species, canes Awholly offensive 1n waning IIUIV, Ill UV". ay. " N ames for the city n He was Taking Something. .=3~.~` - ` Hello, Jones; _hov_v qriyouf glad to see you. I waa just agoing to'.t.kg1ome.___ thing-go along? .Oome~to"think"*61` it,` though, you weVren"tA taking Elbe last `?tim'eoI saw you. Taking -any `:13 now - _ I `; Oh, yes, Smith ; gtrnight along. 33.," `f Good. `Come in} -" What --are. you: Nnmaa. Emu H... 45:51: .I:;...[;;.... n--n? `aw Jun:-I nu uusu vuuuvuluulaluuq . - ` Objection 30th-The credulity Qfthe Christian believer bears" no comparison with that of the believer of evolution, for we live in a. world full of evidence of, innite foresight and wise oontrivanifand adaptations that somehow perpetuate the nselyesin a uniform line for thousands of years, so as to make science possible, and assure us of results of our plans, all ;of_ which compels the conclusion, _that ~`theregwere thought, plan, wisdom. 'power}3 and ubiquity atfthe origin of [this system.` ofthings. - ' -: -- e .,.-.-L Vllkn .-....:a.....' .1----_-L ....-:.;_J -1 to 2-H qtnmga. -I . `,,~. The writer. does`not pretend" thattlieso "thirty objctions r`ac'h,thi"b'oti5om,;of; fthb K-`of the same` sort. --Rev . .M, S in -Wil_ford a Microcoam`. ~ subject, but are qpec_irne'n.off plgnyyfmore _ 5!`: 3 J L tdne,x_N._V:D , Ill vuwuau. Obiection 29 th-This conclusion contra-` diets our every-day consciousness. "We feel guilty and deserving of punish- ment whenever we have done wrong, whether any one knows it or not. We cannot escape those judicial iniotions` of conscience unless it has been hardened by long practice in wrong-doing, and all about us join in this condemnation. '. A lhlu-:nn&:n-u QIILL "IL- -__j__`I!s A .c w... -5 you vanuuv Illull-I VIVUA J-VLCIJ Wuulu UU no more to blame for killing his fellow ith strychnine than the strychnine is for being poison. It is quite likely that the evolutionist philosophers have. aimed at this conclusion in putting forth this hypothesis. ` . t\l..`....L`:.... (ILL nu - n vuaanvnn vu. an vuv ILIIUUIIIUII U1 IJIIULI` UWUo Objection 27 th--Man has been progres- sive from age to age, and man only of all the living beings that inhabit this planet, while the brute has never lifted himself one grain in the scale of being since man was placed upon the earth. Objection 28-If man was evolved from a moneron (a eck of albumen) without parts, without organization, without life, throughout all the intermediate orders of being, taking on somewhere in the course instinct, intellect and moral sense without his choice, it must follow that he is total- ly irresponsible, and there can be no such `til mg as virtue and vice. Man would be nn manna L.` L`..... D,__ 1-4112, ` I II unlunuuwu Luvu suuuuuqu U1` lI.lUl'BI. Iaculues. It has been improved nowhere within the historic period, not hasit been brought into use in` more than about four direc- tions --nourishment, defense, propagation, and migration. It has nowhere shown a tendency to become rational or moral in its operations, nor has it been susceptible of ' change permanently. If a change has- been made by pressure, it always reverts as soon as the pressure has been taken off. The farmer, the breeder, and the hunter all rely upon the uniformity of instincts in their several departments, and the cul- tivation of brute natures must always be carried on in the direction of their own. ('\I...`....L:..... or.-`.1. II'__ I... L--- H", Objection 26th-Instinct is afaculty prior to ex erience, and inde endent` of instruction. It "is not capab e of being expanded into intellect or moral facuities. Ta. 1.-.. 1..--.. :......_-_-.I _--: 17 - vunuavuvuu an a 11110- Objection 25th--Races coeval with man have come down from the earliest -date unchanged except by human skill. _The little god Natural Selection seems to have abdicateq. ' ` An.- n;- .. , . - visa: uuvvulu Luu uuwu. Objection 24th-The finest specimens of natural wealth are found only in coun-_ tries where the highest civilization pre- vails, .where the intellect of man is most cultivated as a rule. I l`\L:_-L:__ nu-,uI_ "I\ u-nuns--. uvswvulullu LIIU HIIU KLWHJU UIIU -- . .Y eff-sot of human care and skill guided b experience and observation. Domestic animals everywhere nd their highest per- fection in the hands of intelligent man, and are to be found only among the most advanced nations. If evolution weretrue we should look for the highest perfection among wild animals in the oldest, coun- tries. Instead of nding the tendency up- ward in our ocks and herds. the tenden- cy` to deterioration is the very thing that farmers and breeders would have to ght continually. The finest stock in the hands of a careless or unskillful breeder will always run down. nI~.-:....a-:.... 014.1. rm.- c_.-_:. _..-_:--- -__ us uawunon auu IIBUII. Objection 23rd-A species may be im- proved by careful breeding in the line of its own `instincts and habits, but never across the line mto another species; These improvements ate never effected by natural selection, They are always the Hf?-en}: nf hnnnnn noun and .1,l'| .-....:.'.I..A `I... V- 6gi:otlon 22nd-If di'erent species of animals could interbreed, it would require at least an evolutionist to estimate the ruin that would ensue upon the world in the destruction of values, the confusion of natures and uses. l\I..:....L:.... nn,,1 . _ l"'5:U- I L ucy IIIIU lllllVUl'B8IlYv3Uel'll8o _ Objectnoq 21st - If hybrids in, the vegetable kmgdom were fertile `we should never_ know whether we were eating food 0]. nmnnn_ ' Wu: 1III:l| ufnaaug Ull Uu1laUUFJ! I-I-VIu !`!5uDUl'y, dlgestlve, _se_axt_za.1,M logqqonya, _ma.tern'al apparatus, mstmcta. organs and appetites. Thr ll I`Il\ l\|nh nnunn`I.ovn k.c"6 wytruauvlln, IIIDIIIIIUDB. urguua auu PpeUlW85o There ,seems no other alternative but starvation, at "least unless the process can be hurried up ' ` nl-n'....+:.... on1._, 1).. - :_--1_ -1: _`.L-___ ll` UVIIIVII I VIII`. `L159... LXUII iitjia must be reconstructed. _ l\I_ S_-_A3 , , 11 xi. `I'-V _r-` S! .-..5.u.. manna can run vruuuuuluu- Objection 19th-If evolution requires millions of years it is so much worse for the theory, for its advocates would need to explain how such unnished creatures could live in such a state of betweenity as to vital organs. circulatory! masticatory,` diUf.iVA,> IAYIHA1` Innisnnnlrsnn iv\n`1\nv|'n III) IIlI.I.l.lU.\L UP , Objectmn 20t`h-By a freak of nature monsters sometimes appear, but they pro- Pagate. Theyare univeraallyfsterile. I nhinnnn 01.; 1 : 'I._L..:.`l_ :.. n_- "" .IP.",,` =;*I5.`?I9!.:,_IswtIYV PPWI-' tus must be 1-'ecqni_trutled_:: if ' Objection 12th-._-'l_`,he whole osseous system must be .re0ons t.rl1_cted . - flu. ....l.:..... `I DAL 'I\L_ .1.._...:_;- _ -_ __ _ -__ IIW ICVVJIIQUI I-IK" IJKL Objection 1523b--Evulfttion from ovi- parous animals to mammals would require a. whole lacteal apparatus'for`wh'i'ch there are no germs in aquatic animals except the cetacea. V - 111.` on- I IIIJIJ \I\) RWY`-71. Objection l6th+-These reconstructions C01lld~I](2t D )8Slbly be going on for thqug. gnds o_f'_ye_ars. Ii`. would involve many ;x'nposs1b1l1t1es found in the last ten objec-' Ions. T ~ . -.u - vvavul. vuuakl UIJUI IIU sup ly. Objection 18th--The whole system of muscles, tendons. and nerves must be re- constructed. '.We have already encoun- tered more miracles than the Christian religion claims as its credentisls.. (\l-.:.....L:.... 1n:.L fl! __,L,ns, M ULU Ian- Objection 17th--The locomotive appa- ratus must be supplied at once or encum- ber the creature in water a. few thousand or million of years with rudimentary wings, legs, hair, feathers, to sw nothing of the tormentmg hungerfor which the water could offer no supply. ` him-.1-.inn 15:4-}.__'I"I.... ...1...I.. ....a..;.. ..c B"ZI..?i3Z" 1"3I111: i"153'}i% e appara- tus m_nst_be reconstructed. ` ` 1A.I All `C I "bi'}3EiS `17I'h"I{if`'1I instindts must be re - luv! 1-.` 15.. . Illll llllllc UU I. UIp`IIIBll.'ll|5|@\l.o Obi; 1 i!,= 1.1`1!.`Th9.3._589AV appara- us recc_>_ni_trui3t_ed-.'. -1 j nl.:..,..c:..... 10.1.` rm.....'...1...1... ...... -- UV vuw nyyvvnuv us an IIIIIILE Iquu LIGH- Objection 7 th-Evolution_ from ` eqnetic to air breathing animals would require a. complete revolution.` of the Pulmonary Apparatus. How could sh live {or ages in water losing aquatic organs and taking ai1'nl')A1:eething organs`? 1 - V --.. L... on. VIII..- ...1...`I- -:_-__I_;2___, II`! VAVII Irv: J _ inate_rnal nu, uoglanu. tour .orf_;nv9"; -dead :9119l_:_n_a U9 .. H `;e`htHezdaot.hd`, % A 5 ":`:Hwullo`! `thoj4ho1igajlg: :s_l_lod theolonellv `%9'7we;hh1t`9s1!!t't1=f:gt-';'1. % ` 5 `.A teg 3` lopg ;mi1;u ,3. (me out. ` , assay aI.u_u_.n'i 0311511.! on. . i ' We ` rst'canie on a faririer afoofand 6 . - ' '. `o;mewhat o a` hjurnyai .Two`or`th'ree'_ of . thei'i1p&rs `onihu right. Jiind; were. badly shattered and, 119. ,had not stopped. long enough` to "envelope `izhe hand" in` a He said something -about three miles and the doctor as he passed us. . Driving" ,a1)`i`1g`.f)fr' abjoja ,1`1l1f.5l,..'-'1',l'!ila we came upon a dead mule in harness, with a \ ' greatsj I_ap!in_t_e__t driven 'clag_ tlgrbufgh _hiti'i. T13`if .'.:VW5,A .i'V5'. i5.6yl1`db9M'-'. 21 yam at age was `wiqsinz blood": oirhis: `heel and didn't `seem -_to'1hear. om: que`s'tions.- Haif "a' *n'1`ile 58 W189?- i1g. :.th9`g'iiV.ii?df5V5"~3h`s ` msas..4.1..-.- 3;.-.`.s.'r-'. i*.s..1I . . seatecinon mpile; of: rails fheam by, `but he ., aeybiid this was aloga O8bin.""'fOI`1nO'id" _ ;.li'dd.oor1I~l,un`dhngV Iwooff. 'Thato*.6uis ; agndjour-or!`-ief,'deUd*'3:h9kas; ; e ` " ` now coming to A we will sell Checked Dress Goods 1 to 20 er cent. below price. They 111 go. all Goods are 0 To W & 000 Frank Shemishar Midland had a close call last Friday. tanding on a at car loaded with lumber which was moving down a steep grade in the"B. C. L. yard, the break refused to play and there was no chance to jump except in front of the ` car which would have been certain death `and still the prospect was just that at the end of the track, as the carwould strike against a pile of wood and crush the unfor- jtunateman to death. Alarge plank on the track broke the speed of the car -and ' the `brake rod prevented the lumber from `being V. thrown; ; forward and f so` Frank escaped with sc"ni'e`severe' bruises only. a. -_.--y. u in Dress Goods to ...;.. .; 7.32:. Goods now coming make room for to hands To W 0 G Cog The editor of the and Free" Press takes a bantering reference to the Mid- land and-Penetang excursionists by the Collingwood Enterprise as a very serious matter,vand threatens toboycot Coiling- ingwood in the way of excursions for the future. We hope our Midland confrere will not let the goaks of the irrepressible humorist of the Enterprise interfere with the usual consumption of Midland bread and butter; ;_ - I493 The Beeton World\9unts to know who is milking the cows of that burg. About every two days somebody s "cow doesn't come home, _and when she does return it is found that she has been milk- ed regularly. and next day another `cow is missing only to turn up in two days like the former. There is evidently some- body down there that believes in living in a land of milk honey. , ning `Inn-an .. l_ I\..-.... A~_-Jr A - __: _-v-.- _7---vwu -1`o(c'ie;r. a utuul line or Prlntoil [Anon Lawn, 1- ed om 20. to 15. oi To W. GPCY & C .. -g-__ _--- vv vvuav vvlualltllsn _(loIrl_ Hosiery, Collars Lace and Embrolde at '1`. W. Gray 3: Co l. A 'The~angel;'of:de`a has thisweek, visit-_ ed the house _of the` Rev. B. N. `Grant , and taken away the ower of the family, Mary Louise Robinson, the only daugh- ter, a sweet little child of only 22 months. Mr. and Mrs. Grant have, the sympathy of not only the Presbyterians of the town, but of all denominations, in their sad be~ reavement.---O_gillia Times. VIVA ml.`-- - IL...4n-._s un_- _ --n - - - I4IWl'Ig 63` I & C00 ,,--~- '---v- v--v- Z ZVVOI \\Il9/I ' -Extra val 1:1 Tweed: at '1`. W. Gray as 0099. T A boy named braith came near drowning the other dsyst Orillia. He was fooling on the logs and fell o`, and `assistance arrived just in time to save him from a watery grave`. Of course all other foolish boyswjll fail to take warning. I `I-'1:-'n--I l`|._II_-._. I A A - " 5E3K' "&{:'ii12"}"{"iZZ`mu.t be reconstructed. T . `A junibr lacrosse club from Calling` wood played with the `union of Meaford the other day. The nlletin says": `-` A harder fought game we -never wltnessed, for after two hours',ha.rd struggle neither `side could clai a 'geo'l.' (Sic). _'3`.vQnn urni Ia. lII_..--_I.. -4 -n -- An Adjala. man offers to bet that more whiskey is sold at two or three cross- roads in that township than in all the other 2,000 square miles of the County of Simcoe `taken together, and that it is done openly and indeance of all law. ._-_ -.. ---r.~-.vo- Young C`aoVe-d'a. has been pleying some dlsagreeable practical tricks in, the neigh- borhood of J amieson s Corners. The late storms have played havoc with fruit and trees _in the same section. _.- Mrs. Harman, of Flos, whose husband was gored` to death last week by an in- furiated animal, tried at the risk of her own life to save her husband. -wv I There was 9. sale of Devons last week at Atherlv. Mr. G. Boulton cannot very ;well be beaten in Devon cattle and Southdown shat p. , 1'2: II I The Press says. the Rescue Fire Brigade was cheered by the people after the late re for their. good and e`e.~.tive work. ' M ltev-.` .i`IcKee, of Barrie, will supply for Rev. J. Bryant for three weeks while the latter takes a Vacation for his `l.....1n.. Q Q xT-__ vvuuv uuv LGIILUK IRHSUD hea1th.-S.T S News: 4 .4 b. The! Hi4l_n t Oauzilt) W- t:*....4.<` '.-.'-:_ -_i;.~"-_ , cAp'1'un`nn1n1r'stnIco n iAi'1>*n1s"r1uc1' % nxcn mans AS Loon. Nnws. u IIJIUI Ba Among shes there is no known com- merce of sexes. The female chooses shal- low water, or some place where her natur- aleneinies are not likely to come, and de- posits her spawn, and the male cbmes at a different time and fertilizes. These philosophers `surely ought to tell `.118 how other species whose modes of ' procreation bear no resemblance to *7` this can have evolved from "shes, or how. theyilivedp during the last few thousands of years that they were in a forming state partly". sh` and partly. bird,_ reptile, `qu__adru.pe,d,_ cumbered with organs, :3. mass of,-E matting useless in water, and with; nothing suited` l to the appetite of anything but sh. - nI~:no-n i `gin-um; -"'.~.-L:- 4` The xdvation probes- Vcession a. few days ago consisted of two oicelfs and one soldier; T J Lfifw -cheese factory in East '01-o. Canadian cheese` `takes the palm in the English market. `A 1 u An inqa;.E7.'pEa.'g';i&"t;';Ee;.}'1.e "discovery of the person-who set fire to Mr. `Stephens blacksmith shop in Tottenham. "And Condensed -1ntoi'V1ntei-stung `Para- T graphite: Advance Readers who Like The narrow or the Meat. The Midland Fire Brigade excurt `to Owen Sound to-"marrow." - `It it Ysaid latve sizorms have not done I so much damage to crops as was at first believed. V ` Sombdy from Collingwood has been catching four pound speckled trout in the Thessalon River. ' , `George FA1-eeT,(of Collingwood,, is report- ed drowned at Mud Lake, though the re- port `isnot credited. V A 1; ans.- ` -Crops -Blue Moun- tain, and things are ourishing generally. Lots of building is reported from there. I` The cmzductors on th N. &VN. W. }Railway have been provided with new 1 unifqrms. V Th. `Mara and Rama. Agricultural] Society claims to be in a good nancial I posiAtion._ ' I a runny c-n 1 XII Ul? UIIIII `II 3513 I Objection 8th:-The tvhole circulating apparatus must be reconstructed. HA Qhjecticn `9th-The appetite must ' Orillia hioat amsther 01' her old land mark: by the removal of a. log building in the Roman Catholih cemetery. ,nnAn- `nn`p:-_ -":11 -1. 1)`... II'_..._ -.vv.-'-9." um. .w-uvwy J Donner! $11 is bar- bariqm. Thq average Ngw Enghnqgr b9- livei hilestinz .t. be #119 Wm7 Of` ;, ,out_i_il1o;.o_f.which is Auv urdtli (0300 I % `Tue jenitat` 'o?`h6 mai'i a"wg3r1d "ihfa pt' ,td b vi-y'na`i1` td'h'is'sgf`1;1igl"ool_1iti:i1."".l_`he ` Chinamalfl ma-D '<'>f".` Qlxllnzaitibn` `covers bnlv the ten-itnrv of 4.1.- (`L-.l....a.:-l 'nu---2 ......`.(.. ;5u_-uv nay _ U6 ll10Ql'al_n' En z11_u1jde;-9.1; fqpqggls; -;tilL hull kenfry 81.11 ;P1.ntd .104-4.. M.8.W.n.in. 5. Huh Honor amt sac`:-ed,,1;hi.ng.` . ' V. , 9 A) . .. % ` '1'h`Groa.te`qs rm . ih'.`t1'#n1auon5. 'Tf1' 'e1itai-"of `azsrr :n.*.';'.:..a.a ~-:.- gun fr .--c v. wuwnuvliil IIIIQII IIIIU VULUIIUL out : ` v .Wh1ch way, boy. ? Inter Macon, nah." . Anything important? You reckon ! _' What are you going to do with that Purtoct my honah", aah.. ' How a_`thatT" . ` Know d__ t _black follor doy call Por- simono Smith? No? Wall, nah, ho_ was boardin fwid `me out at do patch , an last nito, ho an do olo woman runs` off togothor. Rockongl day "has gone , inter Macon to koo`p.hOl1B-" , i i . 1 _ " . " - ` ` And _yqn arofaftor m 1" Y: 5." 7,, . . , ' w And 9n=w_l kill him 1"` - ` I * "Dat opgnda.` .I_f l_1owanta.'tor koop do olo woman 'an jpay mojfj$2 `Pl! shoot dose buck;.I9.!=-into - 3. ,=:s.t&.-wz t..0..k;._n all will b9.!1`8iYn-g -1.5.116 1`9.fl1.5.3 6 come d9w.n Wis1..d,e. or ziv `up my 5?-.1! zzwme a ter 39 Ih09ti!i 8.3 80f1'.Iii.x'?- mu:dera.a9InIa1:tls;;tiI1,i.1ia hun konfrv So it Is. About three miles out `from Macon, as ; we rode along the highway, we_ met a. colored man_, who was going into town. He was walkimz in the middle of the road, erect `as a. bean-pole, and he had an old shot-gun on his shoulder. A He looked s full of business that the Colonel called mat - _ W ` vr-- Victor Bovy is unnoubtedl the. smallest in the world. The total length from handle to muzzle is one and one-half inches, and the weight is something under half an` ounce.` The cartridges shown are also natural size, though only about a quarter of an inch in length, and the weight of shell, charge and bullet is only a trie over a 'n. The charge consists entirely of fu minute, as the dimensions are too small to permit the use of powder. It isvin all respects a perfect little instru- ment, and quite as complete as a large re- volver. prupugtsuuu uuuwn B0 115. Objection 5th-The sexual organs are almost innitely diversied, usually suited. .only to the same species except in a few rare cases. In avery few cases races mix once, but never propagste the hybrid. If `hybrids were fertile. scientic classication -would be forever barred, and science would be imposslble in biology and botany. 1- gnvnnl ;nu;nn`- nun an to vvu Va 1.101105`! Buok,*the inventor of the Waterbury watch, has built an engine so small `that, with boiler, governor and pumps, it would stand on a gold -- dollar. It was ve- eighths of an inch high, had 148 separate pieces, held together by (fty.-two screws, and three drops of water were required for the boiler. Diameter of 1 cylinder one- sixteenth inch, stroke threethtrty-seconds inch, total weight fteen grains. A vm-v rliminnnn Ana.-... ........I- 1... `Ir. ~:X v:u:ii't:j::;i;;wmumu snuxlxxde by Mr. Vxctor vy -u glnalleat, `n EBA nu-add TL- L..L-II__- V .i.h`e` tree of Central India (bassie latifolin) bears owers which are `now being exported to Europe for their sugar, of which they contain more than `-half their weight. . The tree resembles the oak, and 5 single specimen sometimes been a ton of owers. D..-I_ LL- :___ Popular science. Trial trips at Nice with the submarine boat of the naturalist Toseli have indicat- ed that the vessel will render valuable service to science. It can penetrate to a depth of about 800 feet, audits powerful electric lamps make easy a minute inspec- tionnl of the sea. - `IE! 1 D In . u -- '-- ` Women in: Sweden. To complete the ecstasy of those who believe in the degradation of human labor need I say that -at Stockholm the d9b839' ment. of woman is perhaps more thorough and complete than in any city of northern Europe? She here partially , supplants the beast of burden. . And I am not alto- gether unfamiliar with woman s work in Europe. I have seen her around the pit mouth, at the forge, and bare,-footed in the brickyaids of-merrie England, ll- ing blast furnaces and tending coke ovens in sunny France. I have daily watched` her bearing the heat and burden of the day in the elds of the Fatherland, and in Austria-Hungary doing the work of man and beaston the farm andinthe mine. I have seen woman emerge from the coal nits of ` busy Belgium, where little girls and young women graduate underground as `hewers of coal and draw- ers of carts, for it is? no uncommon thing in Europe to hitch women and -dogs to- gether that manufacturing may be done cheaply-. A Aged, bent and sunburned, I have seen women, with rope over shoulders toiling on the banks of canals and dykes in picturesque Holland. Having witness- ed all this I was yet surprised to nd in a city so beautiful and seemingly so rich and prosperous as Stockholm, women still more debased. In Stockholm she is almost exclusively employed as hod-carrier and brick-layers assistant.- She carries brick, mixes mortar, -and in short, does all the heavy work. about the building. At the dinner hour you see groups of wo- men sitting on the piles of wood and stones eating their frugal repast. They wear a short gown, coming a trie below the knee, their home-knitted woolen stockings and wooden shoes. Over their head a vkerchief is tightlytied. Those en- gaged in mixing mortar and tending plasterers wear aprons. They are paid for a day of hard work of this toil,` lasting "twelve hours, the municent sum of one kroner (equivalent to 26.8 cents). Women sweep the streets, haul.the rubbish, drag` hand-carts up the hills and over the cobble stones, unload bricks at thegquays, attend to the parks, do the gardening and row the numerous ferries which abound at Stockholm. The entire dairy business of the city is in their hands and here they take the places of horses and dogs, carry- ing on their shoulders the heavy cans of milk from door to door. .. ,;g;,__,:y,1g;\,;;-..;....-.~{sc:I:s'.3,o $5.35} M. = W: .A-. .~ I I `. I . . . '. * `. `. - 77'. . ,~-- b1i3di!8?fTi:i$ii1".sh?a earook on s`c1i'661`Ii ii 3i.lii us `by: bar.` .-.-n___ - -_-1-..- 1...-.. on ....1....4 nm | VIA IUUL VI. G uvuvvn nun Been a cyclone Colonel. _ ; ..'1 n . ;`J.S`<; 1't|eBedy.ehebtfii`g 5!: A Q A A N o. _ e ' V ` Cau tvbe no political meeting 1 - N0; , . . . . ' ' Well, what 1 in _Halifax is the row,- then T 7 11`? 1|` 1 9 , A A`__ -1: ._.-._ 4...` `kn IIIIUII I ` N uthin'. cept the old than boys has got some dynamite to ` stumps with, and they're sort 0 3 Liz; bizness." ' here '1 asked the ` vvvuuu luv Lulyuulsllllu Ill UlU.l0gy Ina. Downy- Objection 6th Sexual instincts are as diverse as the organs, and so is the "sex call. Attraction: of sex would be whollv unintelligible across the line of species, an:-1,in mnnl: munch mhnlln rd`-l'....-:.... ....

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