HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1913-12-18, Page 6I"
PALMER. eS••FINEOUS,
„
AI,ASKA.
Atuslitg''to.NOW 4ida.Camp, Wtere
idivereity,,Tiernint Fitt"RC
atter
n',4*hhit fhhahxnan of family,
*ealt,h'atial iteidltiene ireagendietteace
dOlenaired ofanaiedetrierit,-jinir it
Ic af0 wee that lie *lied no idea
of • winning renown, and
eee' by *toting aietne powder up:
'ft steep' mountain trail, Yet thats
faith. way it came iteout,
SelFave you ever carried.e. keg el
ladle efr.
your .shouldeie a rateir-
pLrisay* of one flight? Then you can-
. fret imagine whatit means in dog-
•• god endurance and -sheer grit to
„ gamy ea eieuatels twice, a day it mile
and a half up a elope so deep that
the steepest attic stairwayis child's'
• Vey. -, •
Have you 'ever lifted 150 pounds
of dead -Weight No? 'Then how
• can you imarehm whet it mews te
,ipt.0 that weight on one's back and
ecdetuniblina upward, interrainably
'upward?. How could you determine
,'whether you would or could get mil -
'hone lei doing, Whit: the, Oxford
gradeate Ldid '
Gets.News.of New Gold 'Camp.
This is how it happened, and you
can tell for yourself whether Pal-
' mer is entitled to receive frecra,the
-Ltard,yaminercaeredeeia.sepeotors of
the Northwest the warmth of good
fellowship that he does. Palmer
was on the Pacific comet when the
•tamers of a new -gold camp swept
him, with -others, northward toward
Aleskas They •followed Portland
• channel which is the boundary be-
tween Alasaa and British C/olum-
bin, to- ite head, and he and some
othere' including exPerieneed nun -
era and mine euperintendents,
6
• came into possession of 'some claims
'looked, good'' to them.
e The pay streak 140,73 high on the
aide of a precipitous mountain.
• When alley got squared away at
their job of developing what they
had staked there was work which
?naturally fell to the hands of each
of his associates. But for Palmer,
weo knew nothing a -bout the fine
' voiles • -or prospecting, *topping,
:drifting, or einlang, there seemed'
to be nothing he could do unless he
ehoulel turn cook. But that was
because ef his eclecation,
The feat that he heel a degree
from Oxford blinded the eyes of all
but Palmer to the obvious fact that
If they were going to open up the
claims they would needto have
giant powder and food to do it, He
looked too much the debonair idler
to be assigned to the drudging task
of lueging.powder up to the others
who knew better hew to do the ac-
tual work of drifting. '
kr)
0
Acted as a Human Dray,
ew "They also serve who only etand
-tee- end-'et.'t Toting is not waiting,
even if It might be weighting, but
it is Dealer that' it seemed mighty
drudging to him at, first and all of
the time, that toilsome elimb twice
• daily 'with "grub" and "soap."
But in these days teere was no
money with which to pay for this
"packing," even if a man or men
could be found who could do it.
-Twice and ea:meanies three times
every -day, until the veins were
opened upend a prospect proved to
' be a rich ,eertainty, he made the
;
trip,, from the Bear River valley up
, a/tele:eine, steep, and rough trail
through' the :timber, peer bowlders,
atuale and foot -log, bridging roar-
ing torrents, to the lira shaft,
0,400 feet ebovts the valley, carry -
peeks that weighed from eighty
to 120 pounds. Dem. -the hardiest
prospectors looked, upon this as a
terrificeetunt, exicasrailed when Pal -
suer, university men and, linguist,
Starlets and ecientise, undertook it.
If he andel carry out his part of the
assogrerame the others ()auk( carry
through theirs; hat could he?
• Day after day, and week after
• week, gradually Increasing his
bade, Palmer acted as'et,'.- human
warawareattlevelopment work at this
• earrimit went en without interr
• ten. It was 4 cies° race for t e
Ions- men of that "outfit" between
their available, cash end the grub
syould buy, and the day when the
irein, 'expeeeriehe a gully, ehould he
iselehed azal out. The mine proved
• elate; cam of the big ones of the Bri-
tish Columbia *oast, and some-
where el one °baths Palmer, EN.,
who has the money and the leisure
to follovr the tastes and the whims
were cultivated by his Oxford
edecatioe, And to tine day it is
iladel.Ythat lie would do the trick
over again if.the need should arise
In the pro:sem:biota of the enterprise
• to whist he lied lent his hatid and
• heart. He was in the game to
grit isid sirieve he and
his partners del win.
An Upstanding Yoang Giant. ,
!'elk treelle etiel: Wee prospector of
the Pertiand, Channel district in
camp or in their • rendezveus in
&aware end they will tellerou that
, Telmer well a:reel man, selealstencle
leg giant, and lee sort that any
one could tie to, Yet:Pa/met?* job
*tee amenetonousey talsome one
bet at all the kied thee he, 4,(1 qua-,
OW for in the classes, at Oxford.
• He, did the hardest. thing there was
• to do is winning witness, la a' region
erf Mountains snore preeipiteena and
•leere full of peril- to prospeetent
than any one 011001113b0red. 1$.47
earlier • 0agileS of the Clever
`Alone, the Kootteeiy, the -Car -1-
. The peeking over Olelkoot
• adia Vali& for so meaty years was
opted as the greatest test of 'hu -
Which Palmer•'undertook an,
'2( '
Andy r4edorbag,. Whe- fe. takeei
altar:eon the •Seltheoe Biver in:seeth-
es:Stern" alecakee lace ,
fame, by peeking' dela pounds of eA.115-
faieiv.a. short dietnelee,e•At'•Heretier
Misision in teleseket -the' etrea'Y'is'atid.
,of. Jetta lereatin that' act: earried
atate, weiehing:3$0 acruitele; *.froxer,
the' -wharf--to etease,Weelipteteteta
iinee, • inietetiona Ware
slieweieel Steele iliM'etleettleng.athre
Wifee'ioe,•fot:,the Witele'esunipeliated.
up alon his itaPh"and did its beet
to get Is aaatink
tre aieelteeit,' for Martin :ad:Made' es
bets '"'Beie he tarried- deafto
the beguilereeets and With peespiege
Hen dripping freni his rid% • lie
'strained on up :the trail' and'deliv-
ered his burden an'accerdaeee with
his boast. . • •
WOOD FOR ALL 'INDUSTRIES.
Ontario Grows All But Eight of the
Thirteefeur Woode, Used.
Practically all industries are more
or less dependent on wood, In ()u-
teri° alone, exclusives of the manu-
facturers of rough lu,mber, over
thirty-eight indastriee, represented
by 1,200 different hems, supplied
the statistics recently compiled and
published by the Forestry Branch,
Ottawa., -in a bulletin entitled,'
"The Wood-Uaing Industries of
Ontario." These firms in 1912 pule
thane:1'80,46,000 feet, board mea-
sure a rough lumber, valued at
$19,161,884, which, when manufac-
tured into several hundred finished
products, reeging erten hendlee to
heersee, represent a turning over
of several times this amount AA
capital.
Not only is it remarkable that so
many different industries, even in-
cludieg foundries, require wood to
carry en their operations, but it is
equally noteworthy that twenty-six
of the thirty-four kinds of wood
used should grow in Ontario. The
supplies of some of them, it is true,
are nearing exhaustion, but this
was net always the case, nor is it
likely, with the steady rise in wood
prices, that this will long continue
to be the ease.
Mr. E. J. Za,vitz, Ontario Fores-
try Commissioner, saws :-"There Is
at present in the old settled portion
of Ontario an aggregate of about
8,500 square miles of farmers'
woodlands. It is safe to say that
there is in addition to the amassed
woodland, another area of 8,500
equate miles which is suited only
for fusel, growth, This means that
southern Ontario could eventually
have over ton million mores of pri-
vate woodland." Ontario"was once
a land a valuable hardwoods, and
will be so again.
Another remarkable thing illus-
trated by this bulletin is the variety of uses ‚to which woods, still
oenunon in Ontario; may be put.
Elm aed basswood are used in
thirty -One industries, and ash is
another valuable hardwood with a
wide range of use. Maple, Ontar-
io's meet important hardwood, has
over one hundred listed uses, while
birch and :beech ire being increas-
ingly used, especially for hardwood
flooring. Pine forms 21.7 per cent.
of all the wood purchased by these
industries, but it is being gradually
replaced by spruce, as the supply
is nearing exha,ustion. By observ-
ing the uses and then consulting
the classified directory of MttnItfae-
tunas' markets may be ascertained
for cherry, apple'sumac and other
supposedly little -used hardwoods,
and also for many forms of woods
waste.
CHILDHOOD AILMENTS.
. Ailments such as constipation,
colds', vomiting, etc.,'seize
children of all ages, and the mother
should be on her guard against
there troubles by keeping a box of
Baby's Own Tablets in the house.
If any of these trouble& come on
suddenly , the Tablets will. cure
them,or if the little one is given an
occasional dem of the Tablets he
will weeps these troubles. The
Teblets are sold by medicine deal-
ers or by mail at 2Se a box from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Out.
THE COUNTRY OF VINEYARDS.
-.—
France Is the Greatest Wine Pro.
diner In the World.
•Frariee is the greatest wiee-pro-
,
(lacing country in the world,, but
its :vineyards are. slowly declining.
Nene the less' , no fewer than a mil-
lion and' a half Frenchmen still are
proprietors of vineyards, and be-
tween them they own well over
4,0,00,000 acres. .
Of the eighty-seven departments
of France, only nine have noseine.
raids At all, , The chief eine-grow-
ng department is the Herault,
where 55,009, proprietors own 450,-
000 acres; the Bordeaux district
has 325,000 acres divided between
64,000 proprietors.
How great is the production o
wine in France -is shown by; tire 'sta-
tistics for the year 1911, which were
peblisheel recently. In this year the
total amount of wine Produced in
the country was 44,896,000 becto-
litres-that is te say, nearly a
thousand Million gallons I The
greater
ordinaryr part
towite
ftlimnl efewer than
m
thirty million *lone being ever
likely to find anything like a. place
of honor in wine merchants' cel-
lars.
A Season of Recuperation.
• "So she has sant back all the pre.
sante you leave her and refuses to
'see you
allaeleni'
,'evhat a relief it is not
to be in love,"
Sam stren,gth and eedurantea was Some people use poor material
ut child's play eornpereell to the when they make up theirin 1
•
ECIIIPSINO COIL
• r •
Nes on Lied, aftnIts,,,Succiegs,
eea I*1 More asteepteg.
The triumph of oilsovei coal upon
he seithaS proceeded more 'slowly
hate upori land. 'But in the etielee
anel this eearenerks, the Jesse -ming
of that end, remark's a 'writer ea
The ,Bview of Reviews ie dee
heed t�"be even, oxeye esWeeping.
443 in tho, tale .of ,stateteery en
• geies, the inetellation'Olf oil -beret
miseipment in the first steiteers
Ware leaked` epee. a radical Mo -its -
of piece:nous prothisee eta sileOdSS
was cornalete; loesetier, and itS
manifest.advantages so evieepe thet
the few years'which have pasmed
-mina° the initial eemeeiment have
seen *almost mary ship eteemine eii
a practical radius from the-,aorte of
the coasts adjacent to the world's
four greatest oil-produeing regions
-California, eastern Mexico, the
Black Sea and the Dutch Indies -
equipped as burnere of liquid fuel,
In .the sainee way, in supplying
the domande on Med the extension
of the distributing system for the
:ships of the :sea broadened the
zones in which oil -beaming vessels
could ply, and it was not long be-
fore the tanks of the petroleum sup-
ply depots began tearing their
pieces at the, strategic points of the
world's trade routes alongside the
dwindling bituminous mountains of
the coaling stations.
Doublerese, in any case, toil rwould
have celebrated a complete triumph
over coal as n, ship's fuel withinsa
very few years. That event, how-
ever, has been materially set for-
ward by the invention of a crude
oil -consuming gas engine, which
made that marvel of scientific)
a,chieveonene, the non -steaming,
motor -driven, ocean-going ship a
fait a,cecenpli at a single stroke.
Death Weitrly Claimed
New Brunswick Lady
Was Restored to Her Anxious Fam-
ily When Hope Hail Gone.
St John, N.B. Dee. 1.6. -At one time
it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, of 28
White St., wohld succumb to the dead-
ly ravages of advanced kidney trouble.
"My first attacks of backache and
kidney trouble began years ago. For
six years that dull gnawing Pain has
been present. When I exerted myself
it was terribly -Intensified. If I caught
cold the pain was unendurable. I used
most everything, but nothing gave that
certain grateful relleathat came from
Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and
Butternut. Instead of being bowed
down with pain, to -day I am strong,
enjoy splendid appetite, sleep soundly.
Lost properties have been instilled
into my blood --cheeks are rosy with
color, and I thank the day that I heard
of so grand a' medicine as Dr. Harnii.
ton's Pills,"
Every -woman should use these pills
regularly because good health pays,
and it's goad, vigorous health that
comes to all Who Use Dr. Hamilton
Mandrake and Butternut Pills,
C
THE TURK'S CHARACTER.
His blaeliness and Dignity Stand
Out In Bold Relief.
'Writing of the ehareeeeristiee of
tho Turk id The Atlantic Monthly,
H. G. Dwight says; "There is
something about hien which I can-
not help liking -a, simplicity, a
manliness, a dignity. I like his
fondnese for water, and ilowees,
and green meadows, and spreading
treee. I like his love of children.
I like ids perfect manners: I like
his sobriety. I like hie pa:time:3e.
E ilk() the way he feces death. One
of -the things I like most about him
Is what has been most his undoing -
his leek of any commercial instinct.
I like, too what coo one, has much
notioed, the autistic side of him.
"I do not know Turkish enough
to appreciate his literature, and his
religion forbids hiare-.or he ima-
gines it does -to engage in the plas-
tic arts. But in arohitecture and
certain fornas of decoration he has
created a school of his own. is
not only that the Turkish quarter of
any Anatolian town is more pictur-
esque than the others; the ,old pal-
aces of the Sultans 111 Constanti-
nople, certain old houses I have
seen, the mosques, tele theological
schools, the tombs, the fountains,
of the Turks-, are an achievement
which deserve e a more serious
study than ems been given it.
"You may tell me that these
things are not Turkish, because
they were Modelled after Byzantine
originals or because Greeks and
Persia -us hied mu& to do with
building them. But I shell anewer
that every architecture was derived,
erom another, in days not so near
our own, and that, after all,, it was
the Turk who created the opper-
tunity for the foreign artist and
ordered what he wanted."
Simard's Ltniinent cures Distemper,
In Wrong for One°.
"I. never knew old Simpson a-e-
krtoarledge that he made a mis-
take," •
"Mi, I did once."
"Really? How did it happen?"
"Ho put the lighted end: of his
cigar in his mouth."
,xssur, 51-'18.
7, V
-ottatatrItIlrOneht
aperreets •eteteiensee Theee-Tiertialee
astimmite needs; a" soothing, lieeibit,'
tedieine. which ,gorie te the
leave Satteeke,'the fi'oubte
breathing 7.. MAO 'Me tee,eelieete etre'
at, the
mereeeeliapeeitet are, genie is- disease,
and, meet:the alefieet :therengelse,Aite•
this • Mealaile rea. eemiterliezeireea'"i 'hav,, been"a'cfiron'lc'eufferer from"
over 'eight yearee'. :spent.
'fedi- ha/aired dieters trying -to get re
F have 'spent. but .612 doilare on
Catsrrhozone, and haers been . Com-
pletely cured, and, :in feet, have been
well for some Catarrhozone le
flie only itiediaine, I have..beeri,able to
find that ireOuld not only give temper-
ary taller, but vele always cure' per.
wereently. Tours sincerely (Signed),
WILLIAM EAGAN, Brockville, Ont."
Por absolute, permanent cure' use
Catarrh Ozone.- 'Two months' outfit
costs $1.00; 'libeller fiaie. 50c., ,at all
dealers, or ,the- Catarrhosone Eat.
pane, mittens; N.Y., and Kingston,
Canada. , .
esiEe.aelit PENCE -POSTS.
•
Preservatives Prolong Life of Poor-
est Woods. ,
As a, result of the inane inquiries
inmeld to the preservative treat-
ment of :fence -posts, the: Forestry
Beanch,. Ottawa, has , slow- issued 'a
circular on this olubject which can
be thed by applying to the Director
of Forestry. The variouremetheds
described of treating the posts with
the preseevetives are all illustrated
by diagrams, land the apparatus re-
quired is eimple and costs little.
The great advantage of, these
treatments is that they keep man
cheap woods free from .decay for
from, ten to, fifteen years, Many
kinds of wood found in farmera'
Woodlots will last, when used as
poste, only; four years or there-
abouts; after, treatment, such as
described, they last twice or three
times, even four times, as long.
Creosote, whicleoests in Canada,
from ten to twenty-five owes a gal-
lon, is the beet preseivalive. 'When
boiling hot creosote is applied lib-
erally with a brush -e paint brush
or whitewash breee, for instance -
to the butts of well -seasoned posts
from which the bark has been re-
moved, it sinks into the wood for a
distance of about a quarter of an
inch. Thill should add at least ten
years to the 'life of a post made
from a non -durable wood, such se
poplar, balsam, fir or spruce, This
is not the bet method, but it is the
simplest and, on a innall sole,
probably the cheapest.' Other
methods require 'that the posts 'be
kept covered in, tanks of hot creo-
sote for 4 longer or shorter period.
Besides len-gthening the life of
the post, thepreservative treat-
ment also tends to reduce the cost
of the posts in enother way, for, as
cheap ,local weects can be, used,.the
first cost and•the cost of tra,nsper_
iation are usually snitch lower than
for cedar, oak or tamaraek. More-
over, as posts will need to be set,
leas often, the proportionate oast of
setting the post -will be less, Talc-
ing into account all the items that
go te make up the cost of the post,
and comparing this with the num-
ber ,of years it will last, it will be
found, an the majority of cases, to
be„much less for treefed posts.
Best Thing Known
For Croupy Children
A Mother Tells Her Experience.
"Bringing up young children hat Its
responsibilities under 'the best of cir-
cumstances," writes Mrs. E. G. Pagan,
°f Holmes' Corners, "but croupy colds
add considerable, to the worry. My
little family of four all went through
the croupy era, but I always had Nervi -
line on hand ane never felt nervous,
I just followed the directions, and /
can ten you that nothing I know 'of is
surer to cure croupy colds than Nerve
-
"In our home we use Nerviline•fre-
quently. For cold in the chest, pleur-
fey, hoarseness, etc., it is simply won-
derful, My husested uses it for rheum.
atism, and I often employ it for neu-
ralgia and, sick headache. Nerviline
has Co many uses that no mother can
afford to, be ‚without it." •
The large family size bottle which
sells at 60c: is the most .economical;
trial size, 'roue storekeeper or
druggist sells Nervilineeerhich is pre-
pared by the Catarrhozone Co., Buf-
falo, N. Y.
HAGENRECR AND SEA -LION, -
Followed Him About the Gronnils
A see -lion looks much like a seal,
but it is larger, baa a longer 'neck,
and holds its head very upright.
One of the largest sea -lions ever
kept in captivity Was Once owned by
Mr, Carl Ilagenbeck, who buys and
sells wild enimals. It weighed
nearly ton, but it was so good-
tempered and amiable that Mr,
leagenbeck's father took a great
liking to it, fed it einteelf eve-ry
day, and made a• great pet of it.
At last it became so tame that it,
followed him aboutthe grounds like
a (leg, stopped when he stopped, ,
and then flopped on agate alter him
In, its clumsy way, giving peculiar
little cries from time ea as if
to ask to Otte', or not to, walk
so fast.
One atterneon, when a g"eed many
people were looking at the sea -lion.
Mr, Hagenbeek took some pieces Of
fish in a basket, end went into the
encloeure to feed his pet. He threw
one piece of fish at a. time, and the
sea -lien caught them in his "meth.
Each time he caught a piece of fish
heandevioloileltni ortilvIlt,e.oiltiedoovol.a'hurriedly
and
eriet, as if begging for more. When
he had eaten mere than half the
beekettul, Mr. Ffegenbeck thought,
he had had enough for a meal, and
spoONIly on Fefehead lin& Chin-
' ikshAtned,,to',,Oo,; Out P010 ra
•ISIVilH4'OP ntM ent 65,416
• '4' •
roes ssiskirce4Winn pintielex.•esdentilly
6k -b0 fer*P4.(kOdeltin, Vetf`troublehe.i..
Ian Wfthlifinieletriend Ideritlieaddadaktligfe
'Were Omen S felt nahatned to gel, out. ^ TheF' •
Were little tediumps, and then festered and
"I'rtibbed on different rat:mance, •
Salve and -- Comm' but they did no
Food,' Then E saw the advertisemeat of.
Cutiouraitoop and,Ointreent and sent for a
temple. I get It al"egan 'using them and
in te.weede'll tune I Rotieed te change. I efiltd
Cite sample of buticura Soap and Ointment
and one Mix of Cutiennt Ointment from the
drug /store with the OutLaura flon`p. id a
math and 4 half the- pimples, and black-
' heade were gone atidfam completely
'(Sillinedi'lidits Lydia McIlwain, may 23, ea
Aeenerationof mothers has toned no nese
as wall sultenteralealsing and purifying the
akin and 'hair of infante and children as
. Cutlettra Snap. Its absolute purity and rue
freaking fragrance -idea: are enough to
recommetul. it above ordhiaryskin snaps,
but there Are added to theactinatitica delloaM
yet effective emollient, prOpertdos, derived
front Oakum Ohittnent, soden render is
Most 'valuable in overcoming a tendency to
distressing eruptions andpromoting a nor.
Mal condition of skin and hair health. A
singfe cake of Cut -loom Soap sad bon
of Calcium Ointment toe often sufacteat
when all else boa failed.. Sold by drugglitts
and dealers everywhere. Liberal earn/de Of
each mailed free, With 32-p. Skin Book.
Address pest -card Potter Drug as Chem.
Corp.. Dept, D. Boston, U. S. A.
•
taking up the basket, turned to go
out, ,
But the sea-liou did not agree
with him. Quiek as a ilakh, he
rushed up ea Mr. Hegenbeele,
caught hold of his coat with his
sharp teeth, taxi with one wrench,
net only tore it off his back, but
took a large piece of the shirt with
it. Be then caught hold of the bas-
ket iti the most greedy reenner, and
bowie to gobble up tee rest of the
fish as quick as be could.
• He wa.s yeey good-tempered about
It, and gulped down.hi feed until
the basket was quite empty; then
he went over to his master, as if to
ask if that were all. But poor Mr.
etagenbeek was standing with !hie
back to the wall; for it bad been
stripped - bare of clothing, Mid be-
fore so matey people he fee
ashamed, although the was leughing
as much as the others. He called
out to his eon to bring him an over-
ooet, and when that came, he put
it on, 5till standing with :his back to
the wall, while the sea -lion hovered
about him, evidently puzzled to
know what was the matter.
Liquid Sulphur
is proving its value as as home rem-
edy e:very day, Mothers who have
,
children going to sehool en the con-
gested districts of Toronto gargle
their -throats every morning with
LIQUID SULPHUR. Prevention
of disease is bettor than a ottre,
Price 50 Cents e bottle, All drug-
gists or SULPHUR PRODUCTS
LIMITED, 150 Day Street, Toronto.
A Spoiled Darling.
Hub-Bhe may not be a first-
class dressmaker, but she's the one
could afford.
yoltlel'ifcae-dn Batotthli....veiiiev_m_been used
to going to a dressnaaker that I
A WARM .ININTER COMING,
June weather will prevail in California,
the land of eternal Rowers, the ideal Win.
tering place, reached comfortably and
conveniently by the Chicago 'Union Paelf,*
44surNre"uttballWneg:ilte
meet direct routes,. amidst the luxurious
tomf 1,•oiaratulertf:,:::t club
and observation parlor, or the swore mo•
TglitletiVeat,37,11:%=
laud
Three, fastest train to Sart Fran.
eleco-The Los Angeles Limited, three
luaymehtione,thvoii,Magsualct (Lliaterkoof otihtey--.1tind the
WI Francine° Limited. Donb)e trach,
electric block eitoml nroteetion, rock
lasting, Onset dining ear service. Rates,
illustrated Matter and full nartionlare
on applieation, E. IL Bennett, General
Agent. 46 Tonal) Street, Toronto, Ont,
Knew Him Too Well.
"You've met Burroughs, haven't
you?"
'ryes!,
"Do you know him well?"
. "About forty dollars' worth."
I woe owed of Rheumatic Gout by'ltDi.
AMES 'LINIMENT. •
lInlitax. ANDREW KING.
I wee cured of Acute Bronchitis by MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT.
dir.-COL. C. CREWE READ,
wits cured nf Amite Rheumatism by
la IN ARD' S LINIMENT.
Markham, Ont. C. it. BILLING.
letketield, Que.. Oct. 9, 1907.
Accounted For.
A clarkey named Dick was known
an a notorious thief, so much so'in
fact, that all the thefts in the
neighborhood were charged to him.
Finally, one snail had all his tun -
kepi stolen, and he had Dick arrest,
•
''You stole Mr. King's, turkey's 7'
raked elm, jeep. . ,
paid •aeick slowly, "I'll
tell you, sir; I didn't steal dem ter.
keys, but last night I went 'cross
Mr. King's pasture and' sew ORO of
my rails on de fence, -so I jos',
brought it home, and, confound it,
when I 007116 to luck, dor was' nine
turkeys eettie' en de r.ail."
Ifer IiitiRlitte Friend.
•
"'Teat girl hat: pretty hair," re-
marked the young man. ,
"Yes," said the damsel heewas
with, "and she has some at home
that is even prettier?'
Kinard's Liniment curse Cams, as,
yay.
PheeelneniWIS 0e2"FescA
tof Shus'aria
, rinse
, 'The Milky Witsa* or ,Ocarieere is an
apparene • ring exteeding entirely
around the' universe of stem
in thesiergent *telescope. It is.cerie
prised of sunstie literate exialiens.
Theyttscadeepeaelmoteetheleaas
fr'Wiki° '°4011C:the'Y.'04)100a,r to he
,glemeetea'eaeh'"cithei, While -ea reality
they .4ro, Spiaaratell ;by Millisem end
,jlJt.)13e; of mil,, Wiites EdgesisLie
men Larldti in The National Meier
Tieftge fisri0h4 biiiti of sat. lige
leeks like, v Continuous bitod of
cloth of pearl, butetelericapes *have
the effect of 'bringing objects near-
er.. This ern:senates the filmy <deed
into many millione of 'glittering but
minute points on 'the black backs
ground of apace. At a distance,
forest trees seem bo be. close to-
gether, but ale they are approached
they :separate and, stand' alone.
It is next to impoasible to de-
scribe the inatehless beauty of -the
Milky Way Eta seen in a. telescope of
great power: Carpet a large room
with black velvet. Have many elec-
tric lights in the ceiling. Threw
deem and *scatter all over the bleak
floor a bushel of minute diamonds,
relater, pearls, 'sapphires, opals,
amethysts and other game: Then
:turn on the, light. You would -have
a feint imitation* of the supernal
glories of the Galactic holes, For
the appalling depths of space look
black in our great teleseepes.
In -places, the sunlook by per-
spective* as though they wore ar-
ranged in piles, heaps and banks,
or, built sip into colossal window,
Or twisted into spirals, or deehed
into wisps and cosmic spray,
In some places the coecentretien
is go great and dense that only the
MOSt powerful telescopes on earth
can 'Magnify enough to being out
detaile, A few clusters exist that
have not, so fee been resolved into
these needle points. And the height
of human happiness is to watch
these vast congeries of dietent mins
in a huge telescope.
--e—
ls Britain Tired of Canada?
We don't think so, but in, are sure no
ntan. has any ehanoe of curing corn° un -
leer he uses Patnartes COM EXtPae1Or. It
takes out root, stem, and branch, cures
oalnicsoly in E4 house, Use only Put-
nam'e, 26o. at all dealere.
With: Sayings.
Silence may be golden, but you
Can't buy the still small vines of
conscience.'
'Some people are so fond of bor-
rowing trouble that they never get
out of debt.
Cant people ought to wear smok-
ed glasses for fear they might, have
to look on the bright side of life.
There is a good bit, of couuterfeit
virtue in the world, in spite of the
fact that it is supposed to be its own.
reaard.
Our sins may find us out, but they
have an, unpleasant habit' of calling
again.
Never trust a man who deceives
himself.
On the other hand, the lack of
virtue is also its own punishment,
It's when the doctor's bills coins
in that we wonder if life is worth
Intellectual growth shouldn't lie-
cessarily cause a man's head to out-
grow les hate ,
The fellow who always wants to
get something for nothing can al -
wiles get in a free fight.
It doesn't take much to please a
of people who are pleased 'with
themselves.
Sir Thomas Dewar tells 41, very
good story of a skipper who ran a
small steamer up and down the
Clyde. One deg at low tieltehe man-
aged to get his vessel .071 a mud
bank, and after he had exhaested
his entire vocabulary in describing
the Oarde, his erring steamer, and
his still more to becondemned
crew, he lead ,gloomily ever the
side waiting foe the tide to rise,
Very soon he saw approaching the
river a.girl carrying it bucket, Ob-
viously she was coming down to get
some water, and the skipper's
wrath flamed up anew. Leaning
over the side and shaking his fist at
her, he gave her this fair warning;
"My lassie, if you flak' one (leap o'l
wetter cot here till I get afloat'
again I'll warm yes ear fora."
54INCE MEAT
Choicest fruitsetc.,-perfectly
balanced -ready to use.
Sams endless labour.
La
fflas!i
cans.
llostrast
1.116%
•
EDUCATION,hlt
'L'ILLIOTT'f' BUSINESS COLLEGE, To.
ILI Sento. Canada's Popular Oommee
chat Refined, Magnificent Catalogue 'free.
FARMS FOR CAL!.
W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne. Street,
Toronto.
Ie YOU WANT TO BUT oa SELL A
Fruit, Stook, Grain, or Dairy Farm,
Write It, ¶9', Dawson, lir aux pton, or 90
Cdborne St., :Toronto,
II W. DAWEON, Cetborne Si, Toronto.
NEWSPAPER FOR SALO,
XTIIIWEIPAPER AND .7011 OFFICE: , DI
A.! Grhvenhumt.' Proprietor I3eingis
drliggist, IS unable to give the printing
°Moe the attention neoesatery, and offers
It for sale' at a atterifloe. No opposition,
One of the best newapaper openings in
the Province for a praotloal roan. Anal,'
Wilson Pahl/Shine Comeany, Toronto,
WANTED,
ir rvit Poxes AND LIVE 74TNII, QTrOTH
nricio when writing. Reid Breet.„
Bothwell, Ont.
TAand Fisher. W. D. Bates, Ridgetown,
'YE UNINJURED .11/NR, MARTEN
IGGIT FOOT CED 4R POSTS rive,
.I1 V int% tops. Quote delivered Bothwell.
Reid Bros., Bothwell, Ont.
SSISCSLt aele011e
flANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETO.,
internal and external, cured with,
eat pain by oar home treatment. Write
on befere too late. Dr. Bolivian Medical
Litefted. nollinmweed. Ont,
(I ALL STONES, KIDNEY AND MAD.
we der Stones. Eldney trouble. Gravel.
Lumbago and kindred ailments pooltively
cumd with the new German romedY.
'Banal," price $1.50, Another new remedy
for Dittbetee•Mollitne. and ours care. Is
"Senors Anti•Dlobetea." Price 92,00 trout
druggists or ,direct. Tbe Sanol Marraftte.
taring Company of Canada. Limited.
Winnipeg, Van,
121.1.4q6COMMO.
DO YOUR STOCICINGS SHRINE
irons washing and hurt you?
Do the children complaint' The
IDEAL ST001(11,10 STRETCHERS
make old etockings feel and
wear like now, relieve tired
foot, omen oorns and save darn-
ing. Two sizes, adult and child.
ren'e. 60e. a pair by mail. I. O.
YORK & CO., seaweed, ont,
Buy St. Lawrence Sugar
en original pnol4n4co,
-touched from refinery to your
cupboard', you aro sure of
sugar absolutely free from
contamination or impurities
of nay kind,
si.Leivreeee granulated whita pore
cur to/orbs pgted {sat% moos i>f
ts
r.,2.416.71,e2W
.4 5 andsZ lb. COMM111.
Att first atm doa/cre van suppty
It en insist upon hawing It,
keweence Sum.
fit LAWRIINCg SUGAR REFINERIES
LIMITED, MONTREAL.
16.10.13
1.
fast thee and
It Was Evidently Bad.
It was break
i
/ Queenie, aged tire, was going to
, have .an egg. The egg was placed
before her. She took the top off,
and asked her mother if she must
eat it, .
Try Murine Eye Remedy
If you have hod, Weak, 'Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart
-Soothes Eye- Pain. Druggists $011
Murte Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25e, 50c.
Murree Eye Salve in Aseptic 'rubes,
25e, .50c., Bye Books Flee by Mail.
An eye Tonle Oood for All Ewe that Need eerie
Idurine aye .11.emedy Co., emcees
A lazy man may shut his eyes
when looking for. work and bark his
-shins on it.
fdinard's Lintment Cures Diphtheria.
---- •
A man who is satisfied with him-
self does not want much.
"Bat it Certainly I"
"But it's bad, mummy,"
"usd1 Nonsense, my child. It's
a fresh egft•"!
Queenie lapsed into silebee, A
few minutes later her mother was
asterashed at the timid query :
"Shall I 'eat the, beak and all,
in urn my V'
Minard's Liniment Cures target in cow,.
A Soft Answer.
She ---You really should give up
smoking; it affects the heart.
He --By that reasoning I ought to
give you up also.
whethe,,
,
''For Yourself
crass
Gilt to your, Friend
The well known Perrin trademark as
shown in 'nuts should be on every glove
you get, as this assures you perfection of
Style Fit And Fintsh,
Best dealers the world over: sell the
genuine PERRIS'S GLOVES.
,
6.tr-tyj