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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1898-7-15, Page 6,Stabscribere tell° do not receive their paper regularly will please notify us at once. Dall at the office for advertising rates. TILE EXETER ADVOCATE THURSDAY. KLY 14, 1898. Orchard and Garden. The grape needs hies of potash, such ase wooanishes or other peeparations potash. Plant uavy beaus among the corn after the ern is iaid by. You will get a double crop on the land. . . Roses may he protected from slug by use of White, hellebore in water, applied with a whisk broom. Planting navybenne among, the own not ottly gives you beans, but the bean *trim is a first-rate niragee Plant lice are usually under the leaf au l should be ereatetl by a. strong up- ward eprey o itereseice eraulsiou. Hardwood ashes are good fertilizers for strawberry plants. but soft wood ashes are no et muds value. Whenever you pull radishes smooth over the hole aucl plant new seed. 'I•hat will make you radishes all the reason. Ingrowingelere remember that a lIght wiser Will not hurt in but a heave tont injures its keeping quelities. Go through the orebard in July.. and .pluch eff the buds that will likely melee braneL ss, and tiles ' save pruning. The sugar maple may he griewn :any- where in the north. if the soil is a strong dry loam, or lime+ stone sell that has plenty of raeleture. Tomatoes eats he wince froni mt. tines. If erythire heepene that a plant does not grow fin up the place* by cuts tine from a stomas plant. Throw up threngh the foliage well pulvorieed lime fer the pear tree slug. or, better still, daceh Igen above:. for it la on th enpper side id the leaf...-Weet. ern Plea -man. >kennel. He was pressing his slain and appears' ed to be gettieg ;thing famously, when be was interrel witle-"Walt one + moment, Do yen use tebaeco?" Sorry1 eau t awommodate you, he replied: "but I leteen't got a bit of the weed about me." And thus was another dreamof love dispelled. There is nothlue equal to Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator for destroy- ing worms. No artiele of its kind has given sueh satisfact One of many. Clara -"Yes, I've attended half a dozen progressive euchre parties." Belle -"Did you enjoy them?" Clara -"Very much, I've bereame so Interested that I am thintsing of leain. Ing to play euchre." Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Depended on Circumstances. Brown -Do you intend to keep house when you are married? Jones -That depends on circumstances. Brown -On what circumstances? Joues-On the circumstances of the girl I marry. Adam's Apple. Madge -"Adam ate the apple, I kuove, but why do you suppose his larynx was called 'Adam'e apple?'" Dick --"Nothing eould be more appro. /Mate. When Adam ate the apple didn't he get it in the neck?" , Use Ouiekeure for Lame Back,Sprains,Strains,&e. A Good Definition. Teacher -What is a synonym? Bright Boy -It's a word you can use In. place of another one when you don't Imove how to spell the other one. Row. Could He Be. 417723 Gormandize resigned to death?" "No, indeed. He went off the day be- fore 'Thanksgiving." Mrs. Celeste Conn, Syracuse, N. Y., writes: "For years I could not eat many kinds of food without producing a barn - mg, excruciating pain in my stomach. I took ParmeleaPills according to direc- tions under the head of 'Dyspepsia or In- digestion.' One box entirely cured me. I can now eat anything I choose, without distressing me in the least." These Pills do not cause pain or griping, and should be used when a cathartic is required. THE TR,ADE CENTRES OF BRITAIN ARE LONDON, GLASGOW, LIVERPOOL AND MANCHESTER- Euglaud a Beehive of exereauttie and Martufocturing Industry -- I.oudon's SPenfal Trade Features -Tito Enter- prise of the Great Cities of Olasgow. Liverpool and Manchester -Wart Play- ecl by Coal and Irons England, Xike all ether olvtlized coon- trieswas originally an agricultural count try. Although for some centuries she bas been one of the (Net manufacturing ad mercantile batlope of the world, it has been only during the past 100 years, and espeolAlly during the past fifty years, that her development in manufaotures and in commerce has been remarkable. England is still, in respect of quality, the foremost agricultural country on the globe. Her breeds of borses, cattle, sheep and swine are the standard breeds terra which almost all other breeds derive their origin and be^ wialch from time to time they are improved. And nowhere is the raising of grebes and roots for food. of Mall and beast pursued with more skill and success than in England. Bus agri- culture Is fast cea.sIng to be an importaue Industry of Famine -el- Two minims aeres less are under cultivation low rhea were Twelve Business Maxims. The president of the London Chamber of Commerce gives 12 maxims which he has tested through years of business ex- perienee, and which he recommends as tending to insure success: 1. Have a definite aim. 2. Go straight for it. 3. Master call details. 4 Always know more than you are expected to know. 5. Remember that difficulties are only imode to overcome. 6. Treat tenures as teteppingestones to further effort. 7. Never put pour hand out further than you can draw it back. 8. At times be bold; always prudent. , 9. The minority often, beats the ma- joritw in the end. 10. Make good use of 'other men's brains. 11. Listen well; answer cantiously; idecide promptly. 12. Presroe, by all means in your power, "a sound mind in a sound body." TO CUBE A come IN ONE DAY. Take Laxative Jerome Quinine Tablets. All leruggists refund the money if it falls to cure. 25c Convinced of Ins Insanity. 'A Bradford evening paper says that a .few days ago a visitor was inspecting the Nest Riding Asylum at Moisten when tie doubted the insanity of a particular patient. "Try hitie" eind the medical superintendent. "Cory `Tally -he! a -hunt - hog we go.' " The visitor did so, :owl the twinkling of ere eye the lunatic was cat his back land plunging his heels Into Ms side. The visitor refrained from further criticism. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds etc. esin COAT. FIPLDS or BN LAND. cultivated Afty years ago. Tbe total mount of wheat raised Is sutileieet only for tlaree raoutten econsureption of the people; the remaining quantity needed must be supplied by importation. Threes fifths of the total population of the bland live in towns and only a small prepation of the population that live in the country Is actually supported by agriculture. .Agriculture, in fact, supports only 15 pr ceut, of the population in all Britain and in England only 10 per cent. Three and a half times as many people are person. ally engaged in manufactures as in rural pursuits. For three.quarters of a century the population in towns and cities has been growing four times faster than the population of the rural parts, At the same time the workbag power of the urban population has been conetantly growiog more effective. In fifty years, by the general adoption of matebbeery, the effective working power of the English workman bas been increased sixfold. In England 26 per cent. of the total work of the countre is done by steam and in Scot- land 90 per cent. Great Britain, there. fore, has become practically one great beehive of mercantile and manutieturing industry. Agriculture as a general occu- pation of the people, except in the pro- duction of the finer food products, such as choice beef and mutton and high +grade dairy products, is no longer prontable. Indeed, during the last fifteen years the plant (including land) employed le agri- cultural Industries has been depreciating in value at the rate of $150,000,000 year- ly; that is, in those fifteen years the enormous sum of $2,e50,000,000 of capital employed in agriculture bas been obliter- ated. But the gain to capital employed in profitable mercantile and manufacturing pursuits has much more than compens- ated for this enormous loss in agriculture. One reason for the great development which England has made as a manufact- uring and trading nation lies in the fact that England was the first nasion to utilize on a large scale the power of steam as a help to manufacture and trade. The steam engine was a British invention. The first railways were built an Britain. The first steamship to cross the Atlantic was a British enterprise. A second rea- son lies in the fact that when England began to use steam as a motive power she found her supplies of coal so near her Iron mines and so near her clays and earths needed for her potteries that from the very first she was able to manufacture cheaply and undersell most of her corn- petitors. Her coal fields have an area of over 12,000 square nailes, and • wherever her coalbeds are other natural products have been found near by, so that her manufacturing areas and her coal areas are almost identical. Taking Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Sheffield, Leeds, Newcastle, Durham, Bristol, Stoke, Carlisle, Cardiff, Swansea, Glas- gow, Paisley and Dundee as centers, around each of these lies a coal area of snob richness as amply sustains it in its commeroial and manufacturing pro -emin- ence. London is almost the only great commercial center of England that doea not lie in the midst of or quite adjacent to a rich coal and other mineral region. But London is within easy distance, not only by rail but also by canal and by eoastevise sailing, of every coal field and mineral deposit of Britain. London, how- ever, is an importing and exporting cen- ter rather than a manufacturing center. The commercial supremacy attained by many of the large oities of Britain is not wholly due to natural causes or even to ordinary causes. Much of it is duo to ex. traordinary enterprise and forethought or, She part of their citizens. London, for example, is the center of the wool trade of England. The woolen xiaanufactures of England use about 260,000 tons of wool annually and three-fourths of this is im- ported. Other cities that lie near the seats of the great woolen martuctures- Liverpool, for example -have tried to secure a share of this vast importation of wool, but London, because of the special attention it gives to this trade, naanages to keep almost the wbole of the trade in Its own bands. Similarly, London almost wholly monopolizes the trade of England with Arabia, India, the East Indies, China and Japan. it is therefore the great emporium for tea, coffee, sugar, spices, indigo and raw silk.- It also enjoye She bulk of England's trade in fruits (oranges, lemons, currants, raisins, Bp, dates, etc.) and in winos, olive oil and Madder with the countriee that lie about the Mediterranean. By virtue partly of its situatIon, but largely becauee of the enterprise or its merchants, it absorbe nearly the whole of England's French trade aud of England's trade with Ger- many, Belgium, Holland and Denmark. This Includes principally WineS (from France) and batter, eggs and vegetables. Another great branch et its Wade is that with tbe poets of the Baltic, including those of Russia, the imports coanprising, besides wheat and wool, tallow, flintier, henna and linseed. The tobacco imported from Virginia into England goes almost wholly to London; so does almost the when) of the Central American and Sonth Alined= trade In /Me woods, dye stairs, drugs, sugar, bides, India rubber, coffee and diamonds. Quite a large share of the trade of Englaud with Canada is concen- trated in Loudon; elso more tban eine- half et the trade of England with the West Indies, the imports cif the latter country comprising principally auger, molasses, fruit, rum, wage, cocoa, fine woods and ginger. The great commercial centers of Eng - laud after London are Glasgow (800,000), Liverpool (700,000) and ManebesMr (640,- 000 including Salford). All these cities have derived the greater portion of their size -inlet the progress they have rtlidde during the present centlery. AU, of course, owe eheir progreee and their pros- perity largely to their natural advantages ot situation, eto. Liverpeol stands at the margin of the Atlantic, "the Meniterrao- eau of the modem world," Mad thue entoye the prlueigel share or the trade with America, Needy ell tbe eottoo et the world that is Used in Europe is sent so Liverpool for dietribution, Glasgow, situated with its aspeeli directed toward the same maritime routes, eujoye also an immense treneatiantio wade both north and south. And Manc/aester. situ, steed irt the very beart of the riobese districts of the Itingilom and within easy reach at the great coetritt port, Liverpool, has built up A cotton -manufacturing in. flume- surpassiug elute ot ail the tecit Of the world. But the natural advantages Of &nation potsetsed by these great citiee have been grandly supplemented by the enterprise of their inhabitants. Waggon- is only A river port. For twenty miles below its site the Clyde le naturalle illerfOW, shal- low anti shoal -encumbered. In places it IS not more than lateen inches deep. Ily the expenthture of no less a sum, ;ban eiso,0eo,000 the shallinv stream leas hien convcrted into a cominuous harbor, lined on either side for miles with wharveeand :lecke and easily carible of eccomodelett Ina the largest and *wen merehant ships aileet. A9i coneccoamre of this ente priee Glasgow boa aseeme the gteetee shipbuildiug. port in the world. No !eel: than twenty sbipyarilesedil Oilman and magnitude of the very highest claes-aris to be found along the banns of the once shallow, Impassable Clyde between (nes- gow proper and the river's mouth. Similarly, the enterprise of the ship merchants of Liverpool has converted port that high tides and implacable bars would naturally render unfit tor modern ships into the g,reatest shipping port in the world. One hundred million dollars was spent in malting the improvement, hut $5,000,000 is the aunual revenue do. rived therefrom in dock dues alone, And because of this enterprise Liverpool can now boast of controlling oue-fourth of all the Imports of the kingdom and two-fifths of all the exports and ot handling throe - fourths ot all the grain and provielon trade of the kingdom and of having the largest grain warehouses in the world. But Manchester, a wholly inland city, forty miles distant from Liverpool, its nearest port, has outdone even Glasgow and Liverpool in its endeavor to bring the sea to its own doors. It also has speub 100,000,000 -not, however, in amounts spread over at number of years and as occasion seemed to demand, but all at once, in one lump sum, in one huge en- terprise. It bee built a canal to the tlersey :where it is navigable thirty five and one - halt miles in length and sufOciently deep and wide so that Mao whole of its vast importation of cotton and the whole of its vast manufacture of cotton and other textile fabrics and as much else as may be desired may be brought in from the sea or taken to the sea in merchant ves- sels of the very largest size now afloat. .And it has done this in the face of en - 'nearing difficulties and of obstacles raised against it by jealous competing interests that were almost insurmount- able. erannestse DR. JOHN MURRAY. Distinction and Honors for a Canadian - Honored by the German Heiser. The recent Knighting of Dr. John Murray, F.R.S., LL.D., and already SIB JOHN MIIIIRA.Y. A CANVASSER'S EXPERIENCE Suffered neon* XILtIrt•ey Trouble and Monk, matism - Was Becoming Doseonaent When Aid. Beached Him. FrOlda '..Uhe Journal, St, Catbernaes. One et the most recent witnesses about Foothill and viciaity regardma the virtues of Dr, Williams' Pink° la John F. Price. who is widely known he the Niagara District as he has been on tile road as au advertiser and can- vasser for six years, a.nd has tliousesuls of miquaintances, His complete cure has added fresh lustre to the reputa- tion of this great medicate. Bearing f Mr. Prices sufferings and restorae now a history ot his ease was requestea, Ilis story es: "I am 26 years of age and have been afflicted with rheumatism for seven years, At times I ka-ce been unable to get my teethes on or off with - cut assistance, and hove often been cour pelted to have me food tut for me at 1 trble. In the winter of 197 I was &- Melted with la grippe which settled in my kidneys. I then became so Al that I was compelled to abandon all ear plcgment. At that time my liver wed nitinees combined ln what seemed to nos their last attaele 1 issed several medicines and doctored in Buffalo ;tad Catbarines without getting, any re - reef. so nay confidence in =catch* was abceat goo& I was getting no rest day. , er night and u -as bewailing, despondent! I Mealy I was persuaded to tryWil- liams' Pion: Inns, 1 did so and have used in all onla boxes, and ani now able - to etate then 1 feei better then in the , PaSt ten eware, an tint nearest to a Speeifie Of auylhug 1 ever used, And they are the cheapeiet awe best medicine I ever tested, hating tboroughly reached my case and effected a mire, I feel so gratified for the relief I leave obtained that 1 think it my duty to euhlisin melte this statemeet. If ttll Wbo 4.fe suffering wai g vt lh, Wiltiamss Pint; Pins an lioneet trinn 1 um sure they win he as eachusiasle iu their prase as 1 knighted by Emperor Wilhelm of Ger- many, by the Queen was a well-deserved honor. Sir John Murray is a native Can- adian, having been born in Cobourg in 1841. When boy he went to London with his parents and received his educa- tion In the old Central School there. Then he was apprenticed to Mr. Robert Reid (now Collector of Custoras), but being of a decideely studious disposition he forsook commercial life and, went to Edinburgh 'University, where fie entered on a brilliant career as scholar and in- vestigator. He was naturalist on board ber Majesty's ship Challenger during her explorations of the great sea basins from 1872 to 1876. Then he was appointed on the staff selected to undertake the publi+ cation of the scientific results of the Chan lenger expedition. The editing of this great work occupied Dr. Murray's atten- tion from 1876 to 1882. Want Agricultural Machinery. Adoices from Se Petersburg state that the Russian Government is conteraplat- nag the removal of the duty on agrioul- tural machinery imported into that coun- try, and it is understood that a decree to this Me Will lie issued alraost immedi- ately. • Paine's Celery Compound Is the world's great nerve reediest" ` This is the reiinth when overworked num. weneet and girie in the biome. aorneltop, etore nen tollee feel leer:eel% red. dell, irritable. linageel and weans siee mentions result from weak and unLrtiug nervee. The nerves regulate the bloeil supply thrioneli the boine rieen the bealtb7 action of the nerves, bealth anal haw pluiss depend. wt.* have their nerves out of repair in the het weedier re the incest nileerable of mortals. Paine s Celery Compound is the astir true and safe speeide for dineaeed nerve's --it is the one medleine foe the banish, ' ment of all hot weather ills aud weak - Renew. Playsielaus reeornmend it; it tie the favorite life -giver with millions on this continent. Tina. ea substitute from Tollr dealer; "Isaines" is the kind that °urge. A Criterion or Age. Birmingham -Your daughter 4s to merry a young wean named Hi% I be- lieve, :tlanchester-Tes, he belongs to one of the very oldest families in the country. "I didn't know that he came from particularly old family." "Oh, yes; you. Often bear people use the expreseion, 'As old as the HOW to Cure Iteatiaelle.-Some maple suffer untold misery day after day evith Heaattche. There is reel" ueither day o night until the nerves are all unstrung, The cause is generally a disordered stom- ach, and a cure can be effected by using Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, containing itiendralte add Daudelion. Mr. Finlay -nsark, Lysander, P. Q., writes; "I /Ind Parmelees Pills a first-class article for Bilious Headache." A Long -Felt Want. "But what," asked the fair prospective purchaser in the bicycle shop, "what is that tiny little pill box just under the handle -bar for?" "That, miss," replied the suarve dealer, "is for the safe keeping of the piece of chewing gum." Whereupon the deal was immediately consummated. No Carom for t ommiseration. "Poor Dibbles! They say he got a pair of beautiful black eyes lately. I feel sorry for him." • "You needn't. He got a very hand- some girl with them." -Short Skits. There is danger in neglecting a cold. Many who have died of consumption dated their troubles from exposure, followed by a cold which settled on their lungs, and in a short time they were beyond the skill of the best physician. Had theyused Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup, before it was too late, their lives would have been spared. This medicine has no equal for curing coughs, colds and all affections of the throat and lungs. Unforeseen. Laura -"When Bob proposed last night did you know what was coming?" Lucretia -"No; I didn't know papa was within hearing; neither did Bob. Poor Bobl" Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. Deady to Reeeive Xt. Mr. Darley-"A fool's advice is some- times the best you know." Mrs. Darley (sweetly) -"Yes, dear. On what subject are you giving advice +to - da y?" To cure Catarrh use vapors of Quickcure. Decidedly Wrong. He -"Do you think it wrong for a man to kiss a girl he is not engaged to?" She -"I think et would be wrong for him to be engaged to all the girls he kisses." Holloway's Corn Cure is the medicine to remove all kinds of corns and warts, and only costs the small sum of twenty. five cents. THE BEST EXERCISE, Why nytabig Woe won the Voilisetated. r /*later. rositiOn.. In behalf of cycling an athlete of 'much experienee bas •the following to say: "Rowing tells on the breathing organs, the work, on dumbbells And other exers cises where the nosseles are moved with. out progression of the body tell most on the muscles theineelves, aunt long pedes. teem feate without climbing tell on the . nervous eystena, In eyeing, as Its run - Mug, It is the heart And circulation that Arse telve demonstrative evicienee of ini. portant cbengaof ocelots. • • "Modern gymnasties nave been largely 1 simpedevith reference to military pur- poses. and, while gyamasthe exercises, 12 .well seleeted Arid priaportioned, ale pro- mote muses:lee developonent and ph,yslcal grace -and vigor, they are easily carried to an eetroille, and instances Are not eatre where they nave . broltiew down the eon- .. . . Another Beason. 'Master -Well, Tommy, you were not present yesterday. Were you detained at home in consequence of the hacleros ency of the weather? Wong:ay-No, sir, 'retinae of the rala. p. "Feats of gyinuaseic skill train the nerve centers inore than the muscles, and once the trick is erquired their ealue aa exerehe is slight. Feats of steength often e an injurious stretal upon the orgea- ism with no gorrespouding benefit. "The arta appears te ee she eetene en Always on Iiand.-Mr. Theron Sure, Safe, Easy to Use. Diaumnd Dyes are the popular dye* in every Mime of the civilized world. TI ey are euro and reliable under- all ciremustances, giving the choicests most brilliant and most lasting colors. Diamond Dyes are the safest to use ia the home; no poisonous ingreilleues to irritate the bands are ever used in the vomposition of these famed dyes. Com - nem package dyes are largely cernpoeed ot daugeroue materials, Diarneted Dyes are so easy to siee that a chind can dye as successfully as a grown person. Beware of common and crude dyes sold for the sake of large profits. Insist upou /laving the Duoiond 'eyes and you will leave baPPY reslakst tine one Regret, Minister -"Was the end peaceful? Did the sister express any particular eeeret?" Nurse -"Oh. nes, sir; great renret. She mourned to tided: that the Pent don was bargein days" all the exercises of modern gymnastics- Pollen Lower lreiand, P. 0». writes: wasting and other =levee:mots wind; -My son, 18 toonth, old, had crimp so bad brow the suspeasioa of support of the that nothing gave hire redief until e. Wily' upon the Anne ausa shot:shiers neve neighbor bronghe me sotne at TOW ;heal uneuhtable worle. ind result in dz Thomas' Eelectrie Oil, which I gave him, propornionete developmene of the racaenes and ill Six hoer:, he was eine& en is the of the shoulder girdle, often esseeleted best. Medic:no I ever used. and I woul4 with a Pauniling keen, and little or PO ifet be wzthotu a 103'.iie ler it in ninhense." ineretteen newer in Nentilatiell, AIM alt' Did Wet Utunt tbe W64114. sech fe:its ane rerforiatel with a (Meet need and constrieteci hy taaneetilar eilort. Post-Iiow my poor mother Weuld "It is the Avoidance id all this end the ! worry if ebe linew where 1 2111. eenstent change of Keene, air, suosithie Claytoo--Whitt ileesn't she kneth7 and nenieu that hat given cycling The Posl.-.No, :the doeseet losow- I'm ye undieputea premier The:ohm as a pie:rime actor; elle tbitalas 1 tu athief. aud all exercise that te now +(temples." He Didn't Get the Wheel. Nally are tbe storiee told by seelliera at nubile tilliaCfS 0t ibeexpeitie of s•344 other, after the faelti ea of Judge How - land's merry of keg R. H. Stoddard opened a tOlitlikto ran Ke eepleeively that player" A sin:nearly venseeces story tOid Ms wife thouseet he wee teeming it wrb et John Waiettetaker. Ile is reported TO haro oneervel, ee he 411:4701 bis sore fine morning, three bon admiring a Menne in ting wnzilzw. WW1 netts:emcees nets et beert tat unwell ta them and eetwal Venn it then wattle lake a when. tau It le a werin Ite rahl: • "I wilt °bele; aan7attePlito"Xl4sv q%;51!:•.re%vielli3ii:::%r`42%1112+1° do you leve newt' " Inansentle 'ane of the lioye cried! out, "John ni atenaliker." "Oh, noes he repieen "yost now e siew me be- fore; you fantod nive actie beet," He then tuned to the el -wand; "Wet= do you love Wet!" he insinuating anewer came, "My father and nectibi "Eiterlient," Said Mr. Wainunalter; nit Is an sidmirable anewer 1 thinit you will get the wheelie* Then te the thlrill: "Whom do you love , beet?" "Jesue (inlet," Fain the boy. "Abi that tarhe Leer, answer of all; the bionic le yearn I am glad to see you beginning dui Chrlitien hta so youug. What Is your name and where do you live?" "MOSOS 1a.aes, Chathem street," replied the boy; but he lost the Wheel. - The Independent. Nicety of intenette. A true gentleman 'usually feels that It Is emend& to be conrceous to the least tie to the greatest, but etiquette does not &wive recognize this. setae famous Talley - rand is roported to ha vg "seal a gradua- tion of politeness in making his guests to take beef at a dinner party that be gave. Tbe grade ran thus: To Prince et the blood -May I base the honor at sending your Royal High- ness a little beef? To a Duke -Monseigneur, permit rile to seed you a Ilttle beet To a Marquis-tntrenis, may I send you a little beat To a Viscount-Viscoufat, pray have a little beet. To a Baron -Baron, do you take beef? To an untitled gentleman -Monsieur, soma beet. To bis private secretary -Beef. But there was yet an inferior personage present, and to hem Talleyrand uttered no word. He simply looked at him, and made an interrogative gesture with the carving -knife. But, if the meat were good, some of us would not trouble much how we were invited to in -London Tit - Bits. itenping as We Sort. We are not done with life as we live it. We shall meet our acts and words and influences again. A. man will reap the same as he sows, and he hiraself shall be the reaper. We go on sowing carelessly, never dreaming that we shall see our seeds again. Then some day we come to an ugly plant growing somewhere, and when we ask, "What is this?" comes the answer, "I am one of your plants. You dropped the seed winch grew into me." We ehall have to eat the seed that grows from our sowing. -Rev. J. R. Miller, D.D. Most Darable Wood. A. London paper claims that teak is the most durable wood known for structural and mechanical purposes. It is hard, yet light, easily worked, and, though porous, strong and lasting. It is soon seasoned, shrinks little, and because of its oily nature does not injure iron. In South- eastern Asia it is much used for ship building. The wood is frequently girdled a year before it is felled, and thus ex- posed to sun and wind It seasons more rapidly than when cut green. How to Make a Camper 'a Mackintosh. gi Take a yard square of oilcloth, the kind commonly used on a kitaben table. Cut a straight slit in the center long enough for the heed to pass through easily. Folded, te makes a small package easily carried in the pocket, and when caught in a shower by slipping it over the bead it will shed the rain and keep She wearer dry and comfortable and will not interfere in any way with using the bands. Gave Hi ni Pause. "Fader," said Moses junior, to his parent, who was about to chastise him, "I vould hat you remember dot vhen you bits me so hard wit lot stiok you years out mine trousers shameful! I shall soon vents anodes pair; die vill be de fifth flogginyou half gived me dis veek. Fader, for de sake of de monish, pausal" Nix. Moses paused. Foolish Sheep. Some sheep were frightened by dogs at Grenoble, France, and 242 blindly "fol- lowed their leader" over a precipice 150 feet high. s ry , raiitric-ss Cersonitleil. Shi.--"WbF 4v'2 Tro.i taMt niorehen Mit f...getlierr' too pelite to later= Inv dear" rrahletn, "Is that your boU thews or yeur bath* ing dress?" ellen Ian 1 don't linow. annuli, ha* foieiatten to Libel ft.'s Dcafugss Cannot h Cora ts-311apitclittents, , .e fter eaters74, reset tba 0 gi..1•,-.1 (..- Teetts'ei CallY woF 1111%,1qc» 1el14s 11..F awes:nut L;'71.41.,,..',!,1 F. 14. ":',. iCS,06'il. hyelti , einem of the 1!.Z erne:lied pee nave a ea:melee; s d tor orgarteet heer- zee, mei trii,en it 0 11 Weeniest le tine. wean, and it'tl 'tuliitatinAia cars he Innen atand the tee, tette:eel lis perina.1 cairatilece, neat -leg ati; let awsesayee fcrover; Mee caste cat of tc• ...:e causee by catarrhf whet Awe:ging tot ou Warned ceralation o She nun tee zi isis s, 'Wewill gave (see Ileinciscd I)elarsi for any eui rt.441r.r.ti,,e;111;:.,,1 enen14)) that care tcyji-lectriatr terileIh! Kat sine:erre neve, Seed ior jellINEY fa CO., Toted*, G. gerSeld by Bnaggiste. Tender -Warted. "Why did you do itr asked the Ise. quisitive visited* of the man who 'mut Wider aentenee for throwiug bis wite into the well. "She was ecyin'." the gentleman ex- plained. "and I never could stand it to see a woman ere." DEAR Sins, -Within the past year I know of three fatty tumors on.the head having been removed by the applica- tion of MINARD'S LINIMENT with- out any surgical operation, and there is no indication of a return. CAPT. W. A.. Trrr, Clifton, IT. 33. Gondola Ferry. .4* Seasoning. Yeast -I've just invested in one of those salt -and -pepper suits. Crimsonbeak-Well, that sounds as it it would be good for at least two sea - seas. Deward% Man'e fate is not in his control; As he scans the stars for fame He steps into an open hole And the papers print his name. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. When papa walks the floor at night With gentle coo and chirrup, To calm his crying baby's fright Then Le's a seething stir up. Discouraging. "What made Highly tank tracing Ms Dimity tree?" "Pound one of his ancestors hanglni to a limb of it." Watches for Boys. reg wind Watch and Chain during the sununer holidays, by Selling 52.50 worth of our 5e. and 100. goods - goods -not sold exchanged -no money required. State your father's oceupation, and we will mali tbe goods. Dep't m, Manufacturers' Agency Co., Toronto, Ont. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR BOECKH'S BRUSHES and BROOMS. For Sale by all Lending ouses. BOECICH BizOn. le COMPANY. Manufato turers, TORONTO. ONT. rentinininfeininlencheenieheWei Made in Canada. Goodas the Arn- ie= Water White. THIS BRAND IS GENUINE ASK YOUR DEALER FOR SARNIA OIL. T. N. 176 Y0/1 TO ATTEND. THE 'NORTHERN BUSINESS Bean For either a Business or a Shorthand Course: No olio hamlet expect to succeed without a good business kali. ies. Aaneancereent free. C. A, Fleming. Owes Semi