Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 26 Apr 1900, p. 6

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-- __-.- v`-un S 1`RANGE SUNS. .f`.Z,`;m` !y as- h ee lo sent from what they are here. `- same elements a're'there. % in their.combinatious. We shouldn't ex- 1 _ . crenuuu. It is a good thing to be assured that sums are not all as quiet as,ours, not` all cradle tenders for worlds lled with crea- tures whom slight alterations ot tempera- " ture and climate destroy us a blast from the north destroys the roses. Those stars that periodically blaze and gleam with redonbled erceness or radiation give us `(glimpse into at part of the universe where the conditions of existence and -of vitality must necessarily be vastly dier- Yet the The variety is ` pect to meet men among the stars, but 1 there is no reason for expecting to meet nobody there, mt... ..a...:c.. .....t..o- no elm unfun-an gunq luuuuy l.ucn:._ | The innite variety of the universe` -adds zest to the hope that in a tutureo state we shall see more of it. Why should the ghosts of departed men and women hover about this old humdrum earth . when such an innity of wonders is oer. ed for exploration? Manitestlyn they ` kavenever heard of M5 or of the Great : Cluster in Hercules or otthe holessin the | Milky Way or of the kingly splendor: of 5 Aldebaran. If they had heard 01 them. - _they `would .)have departed long ago to i visit such wonders. Let themlget away . iljrom the scene 0: their dusty terrestrial ! I-pilgrimage and banish - the memory 01' rjheir troubles here and retresh them-I `ielves -among `the T perennial marvels of ` ilgwtar clusters.-Garrett P. Serviss in `R_ej1rYiorl:J'ournal. ` A ` '- . /- Ilfot Dleutlblev. _ i 5 _1'hmp-Phase. n)a am, will You 61" "V=:bite~toeat2 . ' 1-|..v:'..;n. -_-n.I'.l--r3\bunBi4I- In!!! I ` 1 - . L lnoonulnteht. _ Benham-I claim that the stage in. an ` Wlncjator. V min... I-|-._n.___ er 3-..}; _ ,,_._- #44:. ._-_.1. r;- a one to ear: ' .IAdy-I haven't anything cooked. put I !D:.3?.Y9.YW;a 9ir919!4.-:h!- . " P` "*2-"': Anigtvenham-I don t agree with you. .' took me to a temperance play the,` .IIr.`nih,t and went out three timer be- `n -45- _E.._.;....9.. nnnnu ' .' ZEUS III`Il-U Ell VVCI-It Ullt Ellie: II the acts.--Harper : Bazat. cu luuuuuv VA v u ; V n v . . v....v- - The Romans drove nails into the walls of their cottages as an antidote for the plague. The Arabs believe that the evil geni which` sends the simoon uponthem can be appeased by the shout, Iron, iron!" and when "overtaken by that storm that is the cry they raise. The Scandinavian constantly carries; in the bottoinot his boat an open knife or nail driven in a reed to ward off the water spir- its. Many nations have long held that iron is a potentbreaker of the spell of witchcraft, so the nding of old iron is lucky, and asiold iron is mostly found in the shape of horse- shoes, and as, the horseshoe is the "lucky crescent shape, the horseshoe has` come to be considered `a lucky emblem. 4.1,-,1- A_1I_ 1...... I...\...n.u-u IIYAOOQ 8trnug6`8u'porI.tlzI6n conrming Thin Elli- blom or "Luck-Yanl;`ou steal F1-gm L , Queen .31:-can-at in: England. vvaao I In the long ago the` horseshoe su- perstition seems "to. have had several different origins, among them being the facts that ,its shape was very early considered `an, emblem of good luck; it was Worn by the horse,wh_i`ch was looke,d'up'on as the "most useful and the most lucky of animals, and it is made of_ iron, which is popularly/ believed to be endowed with pro- tecting qualities beyond those of any other metal. Eyen now the -most rabid enemy of superstition will half- laughingly `pick up an old horseshoe and curry it home with him. ` V rl... 'I........-..\nI..nn Lam A94-on Bonn +hQ ALIA, new 3 J 10 AIIILAAG vv Luna. nun. ' The horseshoe has often been the means ofsaving life. English lore tells how Queen Margaret Watched the battle of Blore Heath in 1459, and. when shesaw the battle would be lost made her escape on horseback, havingthe blacksmith reverse the,` shoes of her horse, so that it" would appear she was galloping towards the scene of the battle instead of away. During the American civil War this scheme was put into practice and Yankee wit was credited with origin- ating it. `Back in the Middle Ages, 33' years before Columbus started on his famous voyage, a woman was bright enough to think of this plan to save her husband and his follow- ers. This is the earliest authenticat- ed instance of the scheme. ` _-_-_ .u_....... ._...-1_ :...a.. 4.1.... `-`Wk; fill a. ho-rseshb lt-ick5:v , I and why is it hung` over the door` to bring luck to theuhome, and why don't` ev- erybody have one? demanded the sma.l1`questioner of the household. 13- unnvvun:-I 4-... tl\lICv u-vunL&nun nJ- 4`.--6` B1505!-ll \-1|D\aDv1\III\aL I15 vllv lavuauvlavouu It seemed an .easy matter at irst to answer this rush of- questioning, but it was It surprise to discover, on making a. careful` research for` horse- shoe superstitions, how_ widespread and how ancient is the belief in the power of the horseshoe to ward or: evil. ' - - ) 111- ,, ,_ ll LI__". -_____I._- ...- CLLLI-JACLAL o In English folk lore horses were looked upon as luck-bringers, and in Yorkshire it is still thought that a disease may be cured by burying a horse alive, while in some rural dis- tricts it isa. common practice? to place horses hoofs under the beds of invnlids to cure diseases. Near the close` of the last century the belief in the power of horseshoesreached its height and in the West End of Lon- don a. horseshoe was hailed over .the door of almost every house. . Fifty years [later there were but half as many, and the present day sees only -- -n.-at fnuir nu- ndIlPS`|f'.ilTI I and the present. uay sees um, I a scant few, as: education overrides superstition. . r\....... +1....-. rInnu nf nna nf the nrinci-N Supersuuuu. Over thedoor of one of the princi- pal churches of Suffolk a prominent horseshoe was worked into the archi- tecture, probably with the idea of keeping the witches out. At that time, 50 years ago`, many churches had horseshoes nailed over thedoors. The Irish peasants modify-the custom and nail horseshoes on the thresholds, planting cloves of wild garlic over ` the door. There is a prevailing cus-l tomof aixing a horseshoe to the` foremasts of ships, and many of the! \ most famous battleships have carried ` , ,1_u-_-_ _`__ Ll...` rxnn` I Sit down by your little one : bed `and speak softly and evenly. Weave a fanciful but quiet story, that tells of pretty streams and birds and lov- ' ing uttle boysfand girls---these woo ` `sleep to `the weary. but active, little 1 Bahrain. not wltlnthe suffocating pree- Iure 01.1-aha gathering storm, lit with 1?-1.5 ashes. bu't_eWi4th the soft cloud: 1 ;1 `.5119 `N133? lh1,`iZ0n. that change `IP93! rosy pink to tender enveloping `~.3.'a.'yv._ and 135`. " I111 lrlnnln," " ' unnusuvu nun IMIU Vnnwfauv van-we ` Shnuld Bo soothing and Rcutful for. tho` ' Th-ed Little Bruin. M If mothers only realized how much 1 lot the restlessness of children during the night was due to overwrought brains they would be more careful in the choices of the bedtime stories," said the thoughtful mother. `IT rninla. T 11713193 ahln fn nn-H-A Q1` I-lluh Launuuu Iuvv vv-v~-.-r.. this emblem in the past. T5 Ipllvllllac 53.3139 I-IUUIIIJ I-IIAILULIJJQ Then the rapidity with which these strange suns gain and lose their light is `absolutely startling. The average lapse of time from one of their maxima of. splendor to the next is only between 12 and 13 hours. Think what a terror our sun would be it twice every 24 hours he blazed out with between two and three times hi ordinary light and heat. And that appears to b.e actually what occurs with the variable stars in M5. It isa series of sudden outbursts by which they are affected. Nearly half the time they are at theminimum of brightness. Sud- ilenly they begin to gain and to glow with waxing energy. In an hour or two they- have doubled in radiant power, but still ' the furnace becomes ercer. When they have attained their `greatest intensity. they instantly fall off again and. less rapidly than they had risen, sink back to 5 their original condition. . 1.. 4.1.- {V.......|. (VI.....o.... 8.. t1l .....u.I.-u. ...t.:..t. aaau bill: Ultuuanvlwa usuvlnvou I wish I were able to write all the go-to-sleep stories that are told to the little ones_' an over the land. she continued; It makes me positive lly sad to think or the small brain that are lled with distorted images, hobgoblins, ogres, giants and the like, just as reason is losing its hold `upon them for several `hours. ' H1 .-1..-.36 Ivlnfmly vnnflanra woa`I3vvA Pun VII`;LI-L l\-II $7 V C7-I EU` 1|`, `F5 5 O ``I don't think mothers - realizo what an inuence upon a. child's life- ufter it has ceased to be a. child, is exerted by this apparently triing matter or how it goes to `sleep.-A - u1n-_-__- ..x__|.'4.r ..-`|...... T ....4.n`I.. ....... 1:4. I-A,-Iuavvvl vs uvvv Av gvvu vv unvugn y`Every night when I catch my lit- tle daughter working off the, big thought that sweep over her brain as her tired body beginsto `relax, while- her mentality seems towbe briey and proportionately stimulat- ed, I trembleyto think of the harm that could be done to her or any |child-for mine is not an abnormal . ohild in any way -- by an ignorant : nurse or thoughtless parent. an-11.- 1-..; 41...; ` ............ u|nuuvmn1` ll\I'l B9 1.15 \aIl\IIaIAAUAvu1u 2-I50! vnnvn The fact that every normal storyv shows that V its mental [nature needs .it, just as `its physical` "nature , craves sweets. [You want to give your child pure icandy, so give him` the adulterated Qstory. A ` `'1 an urn null` flan `nu MI!` nnrmnlenli- ,chi1d cries out for 'a.r bedtime. | Leave out the fearful personali- : ties, the grim and gigantic gures ; t.hese, even if they are properly van- fquished by the gallant hero. are too [distinct for the crib-side tale. . _1'-___,_ u__'_ _--___. 1.-1.41- -_._v_ I'.-_'| LORE or-`A THEEORSESHOE. \ N igi` I 3 ' 1 - -1`: QVGVI ,-VIIITII. . The mon;l`1 9f February, 1900, pie- juntod the very rage autonomic! he-. tun " 01-? hiwtnn" THWE Bl-.'DTlM E STORY- aid Noiyxui Moon, ._ll.' `.1 -15-. . , `. Unlllulul VVV VI. uuu unvubuvluu wuuhuo . A Now comes the surprising thing, a dis- covery which shows that we have only just begun to uncover the wonders of starry space. Out of the 900 stars clear- ly photographed in the cluster no les than 85 are variable, constantly winking, as it were. Atone time they are between two and three times as bright as at an- other. And evidently they all obey the same law and are connected in their won- derful vicissitudes by some subtle link of relationship, because while they do not all rise andfall together in brilliance, yet the period of change in every case is of nearly the same length, and the amount or change is also nearly uniform, ` '01.... 4-1.- .......:.J:4-.. ...:4-In mkinh oh-nan 3A LLIS'l`.`0N--ReV..v Father Hydon has sold his yearling colt, "Salmak II, to Keepan Broa.,` N. Y;, for 8300. ceta:-Hon ]?res., M. TBrown; Pres._, J. Morris"; Vice-Pres., H. M00. Wright ; Sec.-"1`reas., E. Murphy; Capt,` R. Rennick; Manager, Dr, H. od ; Managing Committee, W. J. Hancey, Frank Hurst and W. Jarret. The club adopted red and black at; their colors. (EWM.ARKE'r-0n Tuesdsy znoi-ningi, while Mrs. Lepard was engaged in her work, is rie bullet came in through the window and passing with- in six inches of Mrs. Lepard s head, lodged in the wall on the opposite side of the room. Chief Anderson has the bullet in` his possession. It is a. Win- chester bullet, and the rie was prob- ably fired in the country. ' ` f"A7"1i.Tr.1stro1't.--'-'l`her. Allistoh Lacrosse Club has reorganized with three oi- slime news llDGET.1 Cnnrnonn-The township hall at Duntroon was _burned to the ground on Thursday morning last. ' The old hall was one of the landmarksof the town- ship, and was the scene of many a sharp ooniot between municipal legis- lators in years gone by. A lot of old papers and records were stored away in the shelves, a portion of which were got out before being consumed` The origin of the re is unknown, though it is supposed by many to have been incendiary. ...The. Spring show of the Nottawasaga Agricultural So- ciety will beheld at Duntroon, on Thursday. next, 26th inst. PnNnraNoU1snnNn-We understand that a oanning faet,ory- will be operated `here this season. A building has been engaged and a number of girls have been hired . . . ..The new Keene mill is being -thoroughly overhauled. The slash` table is being moved closer to the edger. The stationary rollers have been removed and live ones put` in. These repairs will save a great deal of handling. . . .7Mr. Alph Tessier has the addition to the summer hotel we`! under way. . . .Division Court here next Wednesday . . . . At the land sale held bythe township of Tiny at the Canada House on Saturday all the property was sold. an n ran` ORILLIA-Frank Selalr, a young dental student employed by Mr. Wm. M. Harvey. received a bulletin his arm on Good Friday` from a small calibre rile in the hands of a young- er brother. The dischargeof the wea- pon was accidental, and the wound in` icted was not serious, no bones being hit. ; . .The Board of Works is asking for $2,000 for the current year, as against $451000 last year. . . .Rev. W. J. Armitage, rector of St; Paul s ohurh, Halifax, and formerly of Orillia, has been appointed Rural Dean of Haliax . .Mr. -C; J. Miller was presented with a gold-headed cane prior to leav- ing on a trip to Europe.` BBADFOBD--An extension is being erected to the west end of Mickie, Dy. ment 8: Son's Planing Factory here. The entire building is also being put in a nished condition. Other im- provements are in contemplation . . . . Col. `Tyrwhitt, M.P , spent Easter vacation at home. His many friends will be glad to know that his general health is impr/oving.e...The congre- gation of Trinity church at a meeeting `held on Monday decided to begin re- building at" once. They will put up a brick church to cost about $3,000 with a basement and a tower, The work of excavation will begin this week, the brick having been already cleared and piled? X it - A qvgvnn Q `MIHFIIV puma- S'rAYNnn--Mr. Chas. Murray, had the misfortune to get the little nger on his left hand badly smashed while unloading .implements at Mr. Row- oli`e's' shop one day last week. . . . While Mr. Simon Little was at the farm of Mr. Wm.-`Bowman, 2nd line, on Friday last his horse V became "frightened at some turkeys, which were in the yard, and ran away. The animal, evaluable one, fell and broke one ofitsglegs, and hadto be shot. . ., Oju-r volunteeis and young riemen en- joyed an e`xoellen t`.praotise last Friday. The "following .exoelle'nt_ speak `well for the future of our marksman. V Regular e-piaotiee `twill, he held eaoh V .month `with--. the Snider` ries :"-Lieut. sooinv~s;Pee.,I_<..,ruek. E "R;-~5'O. , I CHIC! ` 1 Amongthese star heaps-1or when seen } with 11 powertul telescope they really do resemble piles otglittering sand heaped ?,upon a table, thick in the middle and scattered thinly around the edges-there are two to which reference is especially m'ade--viz,.the so called Great Cluster in the constellation Hercules and the mass named M5 in the constellation Libra. In both of these the central stars are so nu- merous that they present a perfect blaze of light, amid which the eye cannot dis- tinguish the individual luminaries. But photographs deal more satisfactorily with them, xing the images 01- many hun- dreds of the stars so that they can be ac- curately counted and their comparative magnitudes correctly measured. In- his photographs of cluster M5 Professor So- lon Baileygot -clear images of no less than 900 of the assembled stars. \Y--._ --........ LI..- ...-.....-....-_.. ALE..- - J2- :1?i1i;:%1w6rzmHAm;nN%AnvANcxAy `L rbmnniiiimhvaiam Joseph Mc0urdy has written to the Sentinel` denying that the doors of. Christ church were looked` against Rev.` Mr. Lindsay, and stating that Rev, Mr. Watt had not o'ered his services free,` as was re- ported. . . .Mr. Falooner wants $500 from Toronto, Township Council for damagee to team and rig, owing to de_ fective read. 8500 would have done a good deal of repairs. ' ~ obined 75,. :Ro.nga1`00,A 200, and 300 yards. % ` 0ooKs'r_owN-`Word was received here last week that Mr. 7R. A-. Duff, who recently left here for Nelson, B..C., was seriously ill in the hospital there suffering from appendicitis. A suc- cessful `operation has since been per-' formed on Mr. Du', `who is recovering as rapidly as can be expected . . . .Mr. Robt. ' Agnew, well and favorably known here, is at` present in the hos- -p1tal,_Toronto, suffering from a severe attack of pneumonia. . . .Mr. George` Thompson, who has been seriously ill for some time, is somewhat better. Doctors Mackay of this place, and Ross and McTavish, of Barrie performed A an operation on Mr. Thomson on Monday, which so far, we are pleased to say, is . proving successful . . . .Some miscreants have been tear- ing down pens in the Agricultural Grounds, throwing the debris into St. J ohn s church cemetery, injuring and knocking. down several of the tomb- stones. If the parties can be found out they will be asked to appear before the magistrate, and if such, we hope the punishment may be as .severe as such miserable conduct would deserve. . . . As a result of being a little over-zealous in their hilarity on the streets one evening recently, Constable Gilroy had several of the participants summoned to appear before Major Cooke on Tuesday last. By each en- riching the coffers of the county treasury to the tune of $2 50, the case was settled before the time for trial. BEETON--While chopping wood in the bush last week Mr. Milton Long, of Teoumseth, came verynearly losing his life. It appears he was engaged in `felling trees, when the branches of one caught in a tree closeby, causing the tree to fall in an unexpected manner, crushing Mr. Long to the ground he- neath the branches. Fortunately, none of the heavy limbs struck him, and the assistance of two other choppers with their axes soon released him` from his pinioned position. This is the 'second close call Mr. long has had with- in a year. Last summer he fell a number of feet from his windmill to the ground andthen, too. miraculously escaped death.. . .Messrs. Wm. and John Alderson, and William John Wil- son, of Elmgrove, and Frank Bell, of Alliston, were in town on Tuesday on their, way , to Barrie to. serve on the petit iury. During their stay in Bee- ton -between trains they visited the House of Refuge and were very much pleased with that institution. . . .The case of John McGill against the town of Beeton was" not heard at the Assizes in Barrie last week owing to some legal point havinz arisen regarding the entering of the same. . . .Mr. R. `J. , Croft went to Barrie last week to serve on the Grand Jury, but as there was nothing `for that bodyto deliberate on, his stay at the county town was short. . . . .At the Easter Vestry meeting held in St. _- Paul's church on Monday even- ing last Dr. Law and Mr.` James Mul- len were appointed church `wardens; Dr. Law and Wm. McAdam lay dele- gates to the Synod, whichlmeets in To- ronto in June; and Messrs. H. Law . and Wm. McAdam, jr., sidemen. V The following resolution was also passed: Moved by Thomas Hammell, seconded ' by Wm. McAdam, and resolyed-That . we, the members of St. Paul's church, ` Boston, at this, our Easter Vestry-meet- ing,' desire to express our deep sorrow at the death of our late incumbent, the Rev. D. A. Madill. We tender our heartfelt sympathy to the bereaved family in their sad aiiction. We feel how unsearchable are the dealings of God's providence in removing from our midst one whose. course of usefulness was just beginning in the Church of Christ. We are comforted by knowing that The righteous live for evermore; their reward also is, with the Lord, and the of them is with the -Most High."--World. L __-_`,, , OOLLINGWOODQ-The, following 0111-- 0011: of the G1-exit Northern Exhibition have been` Eleotod :- --President `and "Manager, Chas. Lawronoo; Vioe-Pros! .Ar?3*t=n L H , Guilfoyle . and W. A. Hogg.' The dates for the Fall exhibition were fixed for the 18th to 21st September . .{.Active operations have now com- menced on the steel shipyard, and a large gang of men are busily employed removing fences and preparing the ground for the buildings. A switch has been staked out, and the work of construction commenced. Nine care loaded with heavy machinery arrived ` Illclt Utasluun \.UuuALIvuu - In the Great Cluster in Hercules, which also contains an astonishing. number of- variables, there is one star which actual- ly doubles its light in 15 minutes. A con agration could`not be kindled as swiftly as that. And this blazing star would wrap the whole earth in its mounting ames as easily'us a gaslight singes a y. rnL--.- -..- ......:..I.I.. ..L...... .......ss.....\.1 5...- ______ ,* d _ last week, and have since been viewed by hundreds of curious citizens. The immense weight of this machinery may be judged from the fact that the freight bill was in the neighborhood of $4,500. ....Miss A. M. Aston, the young,| beautiful and accomplished eldest Fen daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Whitmore R. F Aston, who are among Collingwood s her] most highly respected citizens, and a The family in every way above reproach, __ was united in marriage on Wednesday, __ Agril 4th, to a so-called man named Dvid Stadelbaure, of Berlin, with every hope of a long and happy mar- l`l(-`d life. Unhappily the man proved a veritable wolf in sheep's clothing. and the fair bride of a week now Her at the home of her parents almost at the point of death, the result of her cruel experience. It appears that this Stadelbaure is a most consummate liar and romancer, and on the occasion of his frequentvisits represented himself to be a man of means, with a flourish- ing business in the town of Berlin, and that he had a beautiful and modern_ residence, handsomely furnished, ready for the reception of the bride. What was the young girl's dismay, on, her ar rival at her destination, to nd, that she had been deceived in the most heartless manner. There was neither home, friends or means of support, and she was taken to a shanty, devoid of furniture or accommodation of any kind. On the facts being communicat- ed to her parents, Mrs. Aston at once proceeded to Berlin and brought her daughter home, and her investigations proved the man to be without means, credit or respect in Berlin. The family i have the sympathy of the town in; their trouble,- and Stadelbaure will ' likely get a warm reception should he? ever come to Collingwood.-Euterprise. I ....Mr. James Payne has been ap pointed engineer of the Str. Brook- ville. . . .The continued southerly winds of Monday and Tuesday moved the i . ice from the inner and outer harbor . . . . Capt. Alex. Birnie, will be master of .the new steamer Ottawa, which the Bertrams are building at Toronto for the Canada Atlantic Railway `Co; . . . Th The owners of the City of Windsor re- mede port that they are unable to nd P91 . another suitable boat to place on the Soc 3:; ti route:.._._.Capt. Andrew `Campbell has F; e the Str; Telegram about ready `to sail. um V` He expects tp get out early next week, deli, . . .The Parry Sound posit pjLum_ber g Company .- are getting` the , Pr 3 materials ready to build a new tag for Law . 1u_so',il.1, the harbpr, 63- feet long. The C Hinds, Grocer, Thos. N. Hoblev, Grocer, James Howg, Baker. 0. A. Perkins, Grocer, . Saxgeant 8: Smith. Dry Goods, R. 0:? , Jeweler, Doug B1-03., Furniture. `THE FOLLOWING IIIERCHANTSGIVE CASH COUPONS: M. J. Frawley, sole local Agent, CASH`_(_3_(n)_LiPONS, T. N. Hl]BlEY 8 Grocery Store, AND GET A BOOK FREE. ARE YOU COLLECTING Tuesday he wired to Ald. H. Y. Telte, that everything was of a most wig. i factory` character, which would indicate ! that there will be no delay; in com- a j mencing operations. I with the blast furnace propoeitiox: uuuu.-5 an canny up u. 5unu5u|._ aungco u. 14;. There are variable stars scattered sin- ; gly in the heavens which undergo changes 1 almost as wonderful, but they do notn `arouse the interest thateis awakened by the sight of these clustered variables, whose restlesness seems to arise from a_ common cause and, to indicate that there is something mysterious to our apprehen- sion occurring among them. One is re- minded of the `old adage, Birds of a feather flock together. V `K).....:.l.... _..`|..nL :11 4-.` kn 6-I\nnn1\ AC nu-Inn Persona.I~News ' Misses Madge and Sadie Gilchrist are visiting friends in Aurora. Rev. E. I. Hart, who was here on account of the illness and death of Mr. and Mrs. Harper, returned to`North 7Bay last Thursday evening. -Mrs. Edward Ferris, of Whiteld, mother of Messrs. James, William sud Matthqr Ferris, _of Mulmur, David Ferns, of Hornings Mills, and Thea, 1 Ferris, of Carman-, Mam, celebrated her 100th birthday on Feb. 14th, 1900. The aged lady is still quite smrrt. NOW IS THE TIME TO START. CALL AT U HAVE YOU TRIED .HaoLaren s Perfect Headache W b "A 3850 and instantaneous cure for Head: ind Neumlgia. . Guaranteed to cure. l|N6lN 8IABl[l8| These Tablets are the latest productim` 0}" V . . - ` `tel! medern medlcal scxence. They are 111?! silperior to all pills and similar pr9P"mn5} for the cure of Indigestion and all diseaw the Stomach. Bowels, Liver and Kidneys` k , -1 ml ` EDO atomacn. DOWGIS, LIVGI uuu um--. 1;. For Nervous Prostration and general nd ness they have no equal. To nlervousvei delicate women these Tablets wxll PW positive blessing. W Price, 50. per box. Sold by D-_ H- Laren, Druggiat, sole agent for Barne- S. M. Lawrence, Boots and Shogg Shaw Bros., Photograpnem ' Geo. Monkman. Druggist, Mrs. L. Stephens, Fancy Goods and Crockery. lllfbc .L.l- Duupuuua, I` UJJUY U0 R. H. Fleming. Stationer. THE nusou comm. ilffliqnlnti Stan"-no That Double Their _ `itlnllfht and -Heat and Fade Again 7 ' livery Twelve Hours. and one That Dues It Every Fifteen Minutes. : `3:There have been some discoveries made A . in astronomy which should open'pcople'e 2 eyes to the narrowuess of the doctrine that our little corner of the universe is a type of the whole. The particular discov- eries referred to have been made with the aid of photography, and they relate to the `conditions prevailing in certain clusters` `of stars which have long excited the as- tonishment ot astronomers by the count- xless number of glowing orbs packed with- in their limits, but whose mostwondertul characteristics have only just been re- vealed; ' A __-..._ 4L-__ _L__. I.-_._.. 1-... ._..L-.. -4-.. Nguma. I I ! ` I Guaranteed are freshly popped by the pro- cess which renders them`the ridge made. Thg.t s a strong point that will commend itself to_ you when buying Rolled Oats. No stale goods ever leave our mills, and the reason why Pan-Dried Oats have that fresh Pop- Corn like flavor is because thev moat wholesome breakfast por- Alwavs ARE NOT A VPATENT MEDICINE. . . TILLSONBURG, om. ICCI Luca LIUUIL |.U5CI.ucL v Besides, what is to be thought of suns that behave after such a fashion, and . what kind of life can exist in a star clus- ter where a large portion of the congre- gated orbs are and icker like guttering candles?` It doesn't look comfortable from our terrestrial point or view. And this is just where the signicance of these discoveries becomes manifest. We are too prone to wear the green spectacles of our little terraqueous globe. The importance of Professor Bailey's photographs of the assemblage or winking and blinking stars in Libra is largely due to the fact that such revelations tend to free men s minds s from the bonds or the old, unintelligent notion that where we dwell is the garden o1'.the gods and thatetheearth and its luminaries set the pace for the whole creation. 1. 2- - _...u u.:__ 4.- I... .............I 01.no- (Limited) Aimt. 26. Tel fer Yet am Ihad onl dream - open 'wi ` roofs. I disgusted I was so ever Fca was that % augx 111 V to close . out on a ffollowed - paws me _ warm tn ' down on termlned must be raw "me {he ideal} -HOW be gutters r on ve'1v.e to melt in vfibnosasj or Tsp/ace THAT. Anai SHOWN av PHOTOGRAPHY; ` 1

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