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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1903-07-17, Page 7C. raft ek- 1, Frank tette of' is Belie - Vachon, sputed. it tur- a& lisibuse - sets are re_ how. e now I sat's- y beet noni in. pent be , - Locus in 1 recited -sugar imitable t, ent, :drafted, in, Oa. gjr, .wberle [eade& to not ist bin the :Wes, Dr, tie t ,the You, MIT *ht while • ttie, 1.. don't is- badly make_ o tethin ed here tt distil- , I wee the two ey were bolished, ay cton,i_n (eductive t often tiled at tell me plenty _ t ISM= y were - become _ Made of londerry I Phid awfreak tbe secoming with : is 640 ecte. i. plainly porridge ie he whin - tering of present for the, physical ighlande - Eltghland deer on ' Many money ems are -improve- ough r, to ell4In Al VIVI- lo the of tho *ages. :ati the tit are run ' are te g, some • in trades Amelia n and *seders see be - hat they on the at coivie that we, erns or bat we cattier have to igerstor chsemint slow of dle that eturn re wait n The are often - k After- being- te. it, ship - en here over also in, a. 14 bullock the 454 of $15- , n Short- y 40) ah awn the rge5 hie t not to our. then. end ID lett. At Leto euro nog, 25e JULY 17,i903. _Asoessme iemesiamb THE irultoN EXPOSITOR.. WEAIC AND FAINTING.- i The Bad Plight of A naernio People. 1, *They Have Headaches and Beaky:hese-Are . Lenguid and Unable to Stand Exertion.' 'Irroin the Sun, Orangeville, Out. You on always aell *moult° Men and women. They areepale, weak and languid. They have heed*** and baokaohee. They - oan's eat -or they Muni digest what they do . eat, And it all conies from poor blood and mustang nerves. lienish anaemia at once by enriohhig your Moon and toning up your nerves with Dr. Williame, Pink Pills. irhousands or grateful women have said that • these pills have restored them alter all other means tried had failed. 'Mrs. Joel's Me- l -troy, of Orangeville, Ont, was a great inf- lame fore several yeere and spent muols money looking for a cure. To a reporter of the Sun Mies. i Moilroy said : "Several years- ago my health gave out oompletely. I wet so weak thet I could not do my housework. If r went upstsim my heart would palpitate violently, and eometimes I would faint away through weahriess. My nerves were uustrung, and I suffered -much from dizziness. I tried many remedies, but they did not help me. Then I was advieed 4:. to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pile, and de- cided to do so. I am glad I did, for the pills soon builrme up,and made sue a well woman. My health remained good until bet spring, when I was 3gaita ,taken with weakness. I now know by experience the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, andet once got a supply! The resulb was as bens- -nail aa before, and I can conscientiously say the pills- have done me untold. good. I em grateful for this, and hope ''' my, experi- ence will benefit some other sufferer." Dr, Williams' Pink Pills have cured more sickly, pale -faced girls and women than any other medicine yet discovered, for they sup. ply new, rich, red blood, and so strengthen every part of the body. They are equally suitable* for men, women and ehildren, \and oure not only anaernis, but 'decline, con- -suraption, indigestion, rheumatism, \St. 'Vitus' dance, land the specie" ailment. bed through any druggist, or will b sent which all women dread. - These pills an'. be • oat paid at 50 Pents a box or six Nixes for by writing direct to The Dr; Wit - Masa" Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Look for the full name on every box, so that no worthless substitute may be palmed off on you. , Counom-Council met in G. K. Hol- land's Beachwood, on Tuesday, June 30th. Menniers of council were all present. Ai • there were no appeals tri assessment of drainage byelaw No. 57, it was finally paused. The petition of W. J. Barrows min others fel...improving a stream under the •municipal drainage act the council author- ized F. VV. Farnoombe, C. E., London, by by-law, to make a report, plans, profile and estimate on the mid regetsition., The reeve was authorized to have a survey made in eideroacl 30 and 31, concession 11, so as Co put road in proper place. The following apprOpriations for roads were made, to in. elude tile drains ann culverts and bridges *bider 12 feet wide, but not award drains, sewer pipe, lumber'gravel and bridges :. aohn Murray, from lot 1 to 9 $100, and $30 on aideroad 6 and 6, ooncessions 1 and - 2 ; Charter Lit• -le, from lot 10 to 18, $i00; and $150 on sideroad 10 and 11; John M. Govenlook, from lot 19 to 26e$10 and $400 onheorth gravel road., John S. Brown, from lot 27 to 35, $100, and $30 on concession 8 and 9. The Bolton and Canada Company's drains Were both given toTaschal Pigeon as . bis were the lowcett tenders. Accounts were paid amounting to $253.65. Council ad- journed to meet skLeadbury on Thursday, the 6th day of .AuOust. at 1 o'clock p. m. JOHN C. Monneson, Clerk. New lffe for a' quarter. Miller's Com. pound Iron Pine. - At L V. Fear's Drug Store, Seaforth. 1 Cromarty. v LAST WEEK'S LOCALS.--Maeter Carl Weitzmao, of Niegare Falls, is spending his •veciation at the home of his grandparents, Mr. tied Mrs. James Park. -The Misses L. MoNatighton and .lifiimie McArthur have been visiting Miss. McLachlan and other relative!, during- the mut week. -Messrs. -James Norris, of Kincardine, and Isaac Norris and wife, of Ottawa, are -guests at the home of Mr. John Norris. -Miss Bessie Bain, of Motherwell, and Mn.. Neil Currie, - of St. Maryi, visited relatives here oe the let of July. -Min Nesmith and the Misses Jessie and Mamie' Nesmith, of Milverton, spent, a few days last week among relatives in the villegc-Mr. Will Raditz spent Sun- day at his home in Cranbrook.-Miss Agnes Park returned last week to Detroit -Mieses Mary Currie and Agnes McLachlan have gone 'id Toronto to attend the Presbyterian summitschool at Knox College. It is to be regretted that more have not availed themselves of this- splendid opportunity of Biblestudy and improvement and help, in Sunday sehord work. -a-Misses Sadie MeKel. lar and Tottie Lamont have gone to Mil- verton for le fen Weeks' visit. -Mr. Alfred Miller retinue(' to his home in Toronto last week. -Te Presbyterian Sabbath school nienie on the first at the mountain grova, Was a happy and successful affair. The steady strong wind in the early afternoon interfered greatly with the enjoyment of the programme, but the performers took the matter good humoredly and so all wene eileasantly enough despite the gale. -Th ' Sabbath morning service and the, Endeavo \ _. meeting in the evening were largely attend- ed. The Christian Endeavor mirsionary Committee read interesting letters of the work going on in the foreign and far away 'fields, and the addresem of the pastor, Rev. Mr, Cranston, both morning and evening, were all good and instructive. The new committees of the Christian Endeavor Bo - Ole* tty will now begin their work. • • 1 • 1.1 the ohildren require physic, none acts _gm nice as 'Miller's Worm Powders ; very Pleasant to take. At 1. V. Fear's Drug Store, Seaforth. • Morris. ' • Coueete Meeeteta. -The council met m a cotirt of revision on Jane 29th. The fol- lowing appeals were disposed -of f Hub- bard Cornell, entered M. F., south half of lot 8, concession 2 • Joseph Hogg, entered :tenant, 6 and 7, i\d. and 8. Bluevale ; F. Keys, entered M. V., south half of lot 25, concession 5; D. Halliday, entered F. S., south half of lot 5, 'concession 5; A. E. Jones, entered ocoupant; lot 21, Belgrave ; Alfred J. Lowry, entered owner, south ball of lot 18, concession 5, George Best, entered owner, north querterlot 24, conces- sion 6. Moved by Mr. Taylor, emended by Mr. Shaw, that the court of revision be nnwr dosed, and that the assessment roll, as now revised and corrected, be confirmed and estehlished as the assessment roll for Moriis for the current) year. -Carried. On motion of Mmes. Shaw and Code, kr. Taylor wee tustruoted to exeend M in gravelling on side line between lots 5' and 6, conceseion 5. On motion of Messrs. Code and Jackedn, the reeve was ins rnoted to have Martin's bridge, let line, refloored. A communication was remitted Jrom Mr. B. L. Diokineon,on behalf of Mr. tlsiao Fer- rand,olaiming ainages to his property by the nonstruotion o the Lamont drain. On mo- tion of Messrs Code and Taylor, she reeve was instrudted to prooure legal ;Wyk° in ,the matter from Mr. R. Vanstone, and re - pont to the clerk. Mr. A. MaLaughlan ap• plied for aseistance towards building a wire fence on east boundary at lot 30,, concession a 4. _On motion Of Messrs. Jaeleson 'ndOode, Mell$111. Shaw and Taylor were instructed to exernine thin 101ISiity of mid lence and report at -next Meeting. After passing a instil the 3rd of August. number of accounts, the council ldjourned News Notes. e Twenty-four 'pintas, &impel g 12 to 20 0163 in mon party, are row se ting out fronnvaelous points in the Provino to fur. -Fey the 50 new townships authori ed at the last session of the Ontario Legislat re. Over 30 of the townships will be in the new clay belt, beyond the height of land. -Kalbileisch Brothers, of Stratf i rd, have let the contract for the erection o a new bicyole and automobile factory. he build- ing will be of red pressed bri lc, three story' high, 48 by 60 feet. It i the in- tention of the firm to mush this ranch of the trade, and. theyhopeto have the new building opened early in the hill: -Mts. Mary O'Connor, one of ti e oldest! pioneers of the county of Perih, di ti at her home in Ellice townehip on fitin.d y. She came from County Cork, Ireland, in 1846.: She leaves two MOUS and twodaughterso -The Grand Truk railway depot ab New Hamburg was totally de.troyed by fire at 7 o'clock Thursday morning, and all the books and papers were dettroy d. The station has done duty since, the r ad was built and was an old wooden affair. -Mr. Andrew ,Frederick; Ga lb, the president of the Montreal Cotton ilompeny, and founder of thewholesale dry goodsfirm of Gault &althorn Montreal, died lase week at hie tenantry residence at Georgeville, Que- bec. Serioutly ill for tome time, aNturn for tbe worse came last Sunday, from *hi recovery was experienced.' Mr. Guilt had for years been one of the most notable fig- ures in the cotarneroien life of entree both as merchant and manufactur r. He was a -native of Stgobane, Ireland, , nd was 70 years of age. - The burring of harvesting &chines made mmio in & thousand Kansa wheat fields last Sunday, and 25,000 me and a number of women abandoned' ther acous- totned places of worship to save t • e ovei- nlpened wheat. Church servio II were abandoned in many rural, distrlo The people believed it right to utililize , perfect day for saying the wheat. Beginning Mon- day night a double shift was , put in, and harvesting by moonlight was Wang rated in Kansas. This is coalmine, to save he 100. 000,000 bathe' crop. - It is understood that Messrs. nit and Robertson, who ocinduoted a len thy in. vestigatien into the most suitable orm Of cattle guard, will report) that th y have been unable to find any guard that • ill turn datae from the railway track and at the same time can been(' efficiently and with - one danger to trains.. The reporit when completed will be an exhauetine o e, and will be profusely illuatrated. • Lifebuoy Soap -disinfectant -is stroiigli recommended by the medical profession as s enieguard against infectious diseaties. 2, During *recent outbreak of fever at Coe. nell University. one of t e students attack- ed was John Hotson, o Innerkip, Oxford county, son of George etetneof th piece. As soon as he vim able he Went h me end was surprised -a few weeks ago Ito twelve a private commemication from Andr w ,Oar- negien the steel king und philanthr Oat, in which the giver of libraries desired that Mr. Hoteon would send to him a certi- fied statement of the expenses inou red by bim while 111 at Cornell. He said e desir- ed to Owe the students aeon the a me foot- ing as they were before inourrin doctor bills. lilrellotson did not reply, an a short. time ago received a similar letter ag in from Mr. Carengie. which the answer d, and promptly received a chique for_ he full amount of his expenses. ' VETERAN QF SEBAST POL. kiirdell's Postmaster Tells What Dodcl'as Kidney Finis - are Doing for Him. , BIRDELL, Grey Co..Ont„ July 13th, 1993. -(Special)-Henry Bird, postmatite hetet is a veteran of the Crimean War whe gath- ered glory endfront dI Sebastopol. ut the hardships he encounteeed in thous tereible deem broughtion 'Kidney Trouble. . ere, is what he says Of it: " Even, time the ltdney Trimble bothers s; me I turn to Dodd'idneen-Pille. never gave them a Asir ohanpe to 'cope m thor oeghly, but they always do mel a gr at deal of good. .1 know Dodd'a Kidney ills oan do more theiitie claimed for them. ,know tome of myineighbore who have use them for the ilimettiouble as mytelf who re well people today. When I feel the trouble coming agaibk, 1 bhall surely use Dodd's .Kidney -A peculiar ciroudistence connect d with Old °pont* farming :as compare with farming' in I Oanatia, if being strated daily at the Immigration Bureau, at the Union station, at Toronto. In (1 -re. b Brit- ain farming id generally esubdivided metier& ing to the stations kindled Work to b done, and a man appliestaimself eolely to o e kind of work, such as hoeing; plowing, d irying, etc., of which he makesta specialty. When these nien arrive at the bureau and re 'ask- ed whatthey can de, they reply, " Good hoer, plowmen, harvester., ,dairym n,n as the case may be. They are inform d :that in this odundry a farmer is required o turn a hand to anything, and this, of co ree, 1. more or less disconcerting mid mak. their servicei of lese vain -into the -farmers engag- ing them. The foot it that few im igrants of any kind,lapplying at the bun au for farm work, are able at first to do mo e than a detail of the work, though many o them take tont reedily after experience, whereas a Canadian Winer can go to any part of the world and take a hand at farm'work of al- most any kind. 117•••••••-•!-. Sometimes after getting overheated there chill, then a !revere cold. The quickest remedy for tne worst kinds of coughs and Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Try it. P *. folio w nd best co co 25c. 25ci- A Mother's Opinion, Mrs,J. Snelling, Underwood, Ontario, says that she has used Dr.Low's Pleetant Worm) Syrup in her fain- tly for the past eight years, and she knows f noth;, ing Bo good for children who suffer from wor s. • Don't let headache wear You out and re der you unfitlitor business or pleasure Milburn's Sterling Headache Powdere will cure you quickly, ar d love no bad after effects, lhey do not depress t e heart Price 10e and 25o. • all • Om • .11agyard's Yellow' Oil Can be used ixternally of Ulm internallyt cures outs, burne, bruins, contracted cords, etiff joints, painful swellings, quinsy, store throat, etc. It is a regular family medicine chest, Price 25o. - Least -Liver Pills cure Bilioneneers, Sick H Dysyepsia, Sour Stomach, Water Brash, Sall piexion, etc. ?They do not gripe, weaken o Small and easy to take.' }Friers 250. Severe Toothache. '1 have used two bottles of Dr. tows T *soli° Gum, and find it splendid. It cured me of t e worst toothache I ever had." Elvin& Hill, \Elva, Man. 4** -A correepondent, ,writing from 1 loyd- minsteret N. W. T, on the forme Barr colony, says that matterie are now progress- ing sabisfactorily. Lumber hes a rii ed, houstes are being built, and work on the railway conitenetion was expected to begin in a few days. There is; aplenty of fu I. and arrangements are now being made for wInter supplies in otherlinee. e !!!` ! • '..•• ••••••••.•••• •!!•••• MISTAKES OF BIRDS. - They Are the Reiman of Contact 'With PeObably In a state of wild nature biraravever- make mistakes, but where - they dome in *contact with our civiliza- tion end nre confronted by new condi- tions they very naturally make ,,mis- . takes. For inatance, their eunni g in hest building semetlines deserts tlhem. The. art of the bird Is to conce I its nest both as to position and as toL ma- teria!, but now. and then it is betijayed Ito weaving into its tstructure sl owy a!id bizarre bits of this or that, 4blcb give its \ secret away and which cent to vinlate all the traditions of its - la have the pletere of n robin's neSit be- ffre me upon the outside of which are stutk -a small muslin flower, a .leat frOm a small calendae end a pltiote- graph of a local celebrity. A. pore incongruous use of material in ibird architeeturd it would be bard to. Itind. I have beeni told of another roblins 'nest tipon the otiltsidenif which the :bird had faetened a wooden. label from a eear by ,flower bed marked "Wake Ro0n." StIll.another nest I have Seen ltrullt upon a hire, ehotay foundation dithe .paperlike flowers of tintennarin, or et,- - .erlasting. The woody:littlish freque Stly weaves a fragment p newspaper n a white 'nig into the 40umint1on_o its "EvilconunuAications cor Upt winners." The newspaper and lag unsettle the wits' of the ag nee tph d of ni bird is capable of tbls eta eo indiscretion. All the . - pht generation‘of her tribe have ullt uPon natural ai4 therefore neutral sites, usually under eiving and o .er- in hanging rocks, and the art..21_aslari* the' nest to it surroundings, blew ing :it with thenClans been .highly devei- opeds . int p scebe now frequeotly builds ender ur sheds and porches, ;where, :so farlas ,concealment . is on- ccrned, a change of material, say fi ona moss to dty grafis Or shreds of let rk, would be an advantage to her. But she departs note mite froin the family lot- ditions; she antee the same wo dy mosses whieh in some cases, espcctt Ily when the pest is placed upontunevenly sawed ..tinabor, makeher secret an open one to all eyes. -John Burrou hs In Century.. • APHORI$MS:. No legacy IS so rich ae honest Shakespeare... A. g •at 61 'dog is better than an un- gretefu aan.-'asaadi. fir t make our habits and ten 'oun liebls Make 1.1S.-Emusons. . 'The r atrospect of life swarms th lost obtorttin1ties.-Sir4I. Taylor. ' To happy is- not)the purpose of oFtittIlc..bIiff4m:aa but to deserve happines For une ,.'nray find a pot, but y br own ndustry antast naake it bol Rousseau. . - When a p+rson IS down in the w rld an ounce of help'. is better than a pound :of preaching.-Buiwer. No than aver dil. a designed inj ry to another but Jett the same time he did a greater to himself. -Home. •When a man has not a good rea, on for,deing a thing he has one geod r a - Sot ?by letting it alone. -Thomas Sc tt. To be perfectly just is an ettrib te of the -divine. nature; te be so to he trtmost Of our abilities Is the glory of man. --Addison. He Didn't Understand. little fellow out West Roxb ry, \way some ten year old, perhaps •twelve, bested his grandmothers the other day rather neatly. All three were at the labia when one of the ti- dies \easualiy mentioned the name of Ilse • family nurse. • Immediately tIbe little fellow wanted to know who tlhe • lady was; One grandma innocently marked that it was the nurse that to care of the boy when he WAS born. "But why didn't mamma take cre jf Me? / was her baby, wasn't I?" queried the little fellow. "True," ea s gra dma; "but, yeti see, mamma does t und rstand how to look ,after little a- isles particularly the first one, and Ire hay to have nurses'who have learn d hof in the bospttals." Tl4at seemed 10 settleit, but all of a sud en the lit1le fellow blurted out, • "Wel , then, w1io took care of Cain?" Blindfold. Nine persons out of ten would pro ably gine the derivation of band 13 coming directly from l blind and fo d froin the practice of folding: a clo h round the eyes, as in the game if blind man's bufc. The word- has, 4o ever, nothing • to do • with fold, 'b t means felled or struck blind and mig it be • writted blindfelled. In the sa •• e way the word buttery Is easily co fused with the common term butte with which, however, it has no co neetion save in the minds of those wb. do not know it to be a. contraction f • r bottlery, a plaCe :where ,bottles are ke • and s over which the bottler, or butle presidea.- The Eusir Route. The -old squire 1 ty a -dying, and hilt faittiful coachman was, summoned do the bedside. "Well, John," sald the o14 -gnIlitrit, "I'm goIn4 now on a lenge jOurney than ever y u could drive me. 'Never mind, sq ire; never, mind cried ithe servant in1 broken' vole "It'll be downhill all the -way."-Lo don Globe., Her Military Taste. "Is she fond of the military?" "I Should say she was. Why, she ha all her books bound in one color they will be uniform.".. . \ es- ee-A "Fortune knock e once at the ilocso every man." • , "Yes, but sh=e;terslly very etenter IT disguised," . .. Of Post -, unreensisteed. • The 'First JEllusioa to tbe rale In that portion of Genesis w ch the otory of Joseph, the famine, we find the first historical allusion fel the horse, and farther oil in boty etri We read of the horses of the greet ' wise Solemn', which numbered ,-thacis, if the 40,000 stalls fax are to be taken as tecritesiate, - erer '174,110 PICTITRES INTflE1 ONE OF THE MYSTERIES OF THAT COMPLEX ORGAN, THE BRAIN.. Theories as to t se of the Liv. lag Colored 'unc1fci1 and Chang - lug images TI at A1pear on Lying. Down After ai Ewe timer pill-. 'There are man who will notrea.dily Understand' what As meant by 4)1etures lu the eye, unless it be the imagination, or "mind's eye, ;of lifamlet, for the power of seeing liem lasnot conferred on ali alike. E en :those who have seen them from t me to time, and prob- ably give.n them little heed, may not feel altogether s re oboist the matter Withoht a word f explanation. Lyi g in bed, a ter a tiring or excit- ing.S d y, with ypur e e�, denied and about to fall asleep, aye you never seen, 'apparently in th eyeball, spots and streaks of c lored light, changing their forms and hifti g their places? /lave you never etch el them pessliag into domplicoted patt rnse like thoso of the kaleidos ope, r into pretty landscapes quite unknOwn to you, or into strange fa, es, now and agdin very beautiful or angelic, but often as ugly and hideous as g blins from the infernal regions, r, ha In, into Scenes .of action. remlndl4lg yo of the drama, but such as you Itever aw In real life or upon any steg ? These pictures are more- alive than the "living pictures" of the MUSIC ballsj They have the hues of life and art inc1 rival the quick change artist in 1thelr protean trans- °mations. Thej anirnatograph that can imitate their ceaselees evolution without a hitch kr tremor will be a novelty and makel the fortune of its in- yentor. What are they? teries of that ma lous-organ, ,the tinguish them fro the "border land' the adjoining stat sound asleep. They are not th images of a reverie or day dream. hether we recall the past in our wak ng hours or invent new incidents lik a novelist, we can govern them to ome extent and are quite aiVare of th Ir fanciful or mental ' character. They are not a hallucina- tion in the prope sense of the term. We feel they are subjective, or within us; we suppose titem in the eye itself„ whereas we belie .e a hallucination is objective, or wlt4out us. An appari- tion or specter th4t we take for a real- ity °Is a hallnein tion. The ghost of Hamlet's father, vitnessed by several persons, and the ispook of his distant brother, seen by Ilord Brou-ham, were probably hallucitiations o a "tele-. pathic" order. 'T e _picture! of Millais where a man st rts up and sees a luminous lady at the foot nf his bed is a case of halluc ation. The "dream Image" of the undergraduate who dreamed that beL was chased by a green figure and, 4waken1ng, saw it in his room was als'a hallucination. Picture@ in the eye are 'more akin no what are called 1"after images." A. - It is one of the mys- velous-nay, miracu- rain. We must dis- other mysteries of which lies between s of wideawake and gentleman (a do mistaken), after cheered by the si tor,. if we are °riot 'fatiguing day, Was htaf,a beefsteak for his dinner, as be ery well miglit, but seemingly the stejtk made l deep im- pression on his 4nd or hiEidigestion, for while he wit4 drowsing with his eyes closed after eating it, he saw it again Hs vividly as before, and on dropping asleep b saw it a,third time , in his dream. It vasT deubtless a sub- staptial steak, no4 a ghost, and yet it haunted him, There is, Of conrse, more than one theory of these Ilving pictures in the eye or, as they Erre called in science, "hypnogogic imag s." One is that they are formed on t e retina of the eye and confined to t. Another is ‘that , they are purely mental and formed in the cortex :or bark, SO to speak, of the cerebrum. Ae often happens, the truth appears to le, in a combination of both views. It cent observations of M. Yves Delage hlive put the question to experimental p, oof. When we look at a bright body-ifer example, the sun -and shut our eiles we see a colored spot of light, andJ if we move the eye up or down, to right or left, the spot moves With it., the spot, in fact, is left by the imageof the sun upon the retina and there ore moves with it. Now, if the hypn gogic images are on the retina. they -eel 1 also move with. the eye, and this is vhat M. Delage has found. Nevertheless tbe brain also comes into play irj forming them. • , Corry (Sentinels. . . Joseph i Ottprien iit .an Irishman WO has- taave 11 °yet the world, served In the rb nav . and knows every- body. 'You an n iver naention a man or a fact or an 'thing else but Joe -knolds it. One veinier, I as sitting in a nde- cent ensile" -wit 1- some friends, dis- cus t ng the recent events. . .1 closed my re]: arks with a quota- tion from "Collo) 'Jane," an just then Joe walked in and happened to bear it. - "Who said thatt said Joe. - "Oh, Cciriplanni. Of course you knew, hien" 1 "No, -I .never kriew Min, but I knew his people. A fineeold Roscranrnon fam- ily, the O'Lanunkin I knew all Ibis heathens; but I n'pver knew Corry." • ' i v Leal cleating Bees. • The le# cuttinir bties are near rela- tives of the honly and bumble bees, which they closely resemble. They de- rive their name 't from •the habit you have observed oif cutting out bits of leaves fair thetil cells. The circular pieces are for thelends of the cells and the oblong pieceW6r the sides. These cells are :usually in burrows e'ut into wood, for some °fine leaf cutting bees, like the carpenttbeeshave theatalent of eutting boles into Wood, -St, las. Gold axle iSaver One -twelfth of alloy gives Abe e t- est hardness to wild and 'silver. 0, 1 The First Englph Judge!** Salary. The first recor of a judge's salary gives £184 13s, 44. as the stipend of Thema"; Littleton judge of the king's beich"." 1446. •- - IDEOGRAPHIC FIGURES. 'A Lesson In English That Was Taught by a Chinaman. That we bave partially adopted the Chinese method in our written lan- guage was a new thought to me and one that I got from the proprietor of a Park avenue laundry when, in the nat- ural Caucasian. fashion. I referred to his written languaga as being very; in- ferior, "John," I said, "why do your people' use those chicken tracks' instead of : having an alphabet, as we have?" "'A 13 C' too much trouble," he an- swered quickly. "Why, you use chick - "We don't use them," I replied. I en tracks, too, sometimes." , "Yes; you use them very good. I show you." Then he dipped his con- vionient brush in the ink and made the number "SS" on a sheet of brown pa- per. "That name of street over there," he continued, •pointing. e "You 84. 'eighty-nine;' you don't write It with 'A B C.' That Chinee. One mark is one thing -you say 'idea;' yes, idea. Yon don't put down 'n -i -n -e' "-and here his. brish came into use again -"you• ut de , n '9.' That's very good Chinee. We do hat all thestime." "That is ideographic," I suggested. "Yes, Engltsh have: much ideograph - c. All figures ideographic. See!" And gain lie used his brush, "Yeti make -' and '+,' and you say 'minus,' plus.' ou don't 'spell with 'A. B C.' That is a ark for idea -ideographic. You make M' and say /thousand.' That Chinese • ay. Very gootl. I say, 'How hot? nd you write 'e.+87°.' All Chinese. o 'A B C,' no many letters; only arks and. Ideas. ' "Fine way. English know some fine hinese ways. See! 1,"%.' You know hem. Ideas! You say ideographic. ou make tramp Chinese marks -marks or stare, for plants, for measures, fon eights and sighs for hundred and undred many things; same as M- ese. Good!" I actually left that laundry, wiiter han I entered its , • A DRAMATIC LAWYER. ffeetive Climax That Resulted In Setting a Murderer Free. Lachaud, the great French advocate, as renowned for deliberate but telling ramatic improvisations, as it were, ipon the originat theme. 11 At 'one time, for instance, Ce was de - ending a • murderer on Dec. 24. All ay long he harassed witnesses, re - ailing them, causing delay after de - y before getting his final address to he jury. It was well on in the even- t' g before he commenced. Then sud- enly, at the height of 'his passionate ppeals for the,prisoner, the slow, sol- mn bells of the cathedral next door • ealed for the midnight mass -the first ass of Christmas morning. Laclaaud, topped as if overwhelmed by a. sud- en warning. "Do you.. hear?" he said solemnly, ter a moment's silence, and his man- er conveyed that all his own glib Ioquence had been shattered by the vine interruption 'of Christ himsetf. 'The Redeemer comes to amend our itiable endeavors. Which of us would are now,- on this great day of mercY nd forgiveness, to condemn another buman being . and, above all, to ,con- emn one whose culpability is more an doubtful?" The prisoner was acquitted without t e least diffictilty,' though his -death s ntence ten minutes before had been r garded as certain. The actual sound of the pealing bells had been too much f r nerves, already strained to snap- ping point by the fatigue Of a long ay's sitting. But nobody, guessed, except the few_ ho knew Lachaud intimately, that he had been maneuvering from the tme the court' opened in the morning to get that one stirring effect. The prisoner was a dead man without it arid saved as certainly ff it could be ought off euecassfully. 11 4 Simple Headache Cure. Here is a headache cure that is said be a marvelous remedy and to re- l1eye the sufferer when all else fails.1 I is easy to make and easy to apply, aid it consists simply of black pepperl atid camphor. Take a quantity of black, • p pper and put it in a handkerchief. Then fold the bandkerchief ever so that the grains cannot fall ant and ' saturate the whole thing with cam- p or. Bind this "plaster" on the head a d Ile down. In a very few moments e headache, will be relfeved and the p tient will be asleep. When th hand - k rcbief becomes dry saturate again ith the camphor; that's all. ,People • ho- have tried everything el e say t at this home remedy relieve them q ickest. At any rate, it is wo th try- ing. *Piles Perry's Excape Frord the Mob. Jules Ferry had a narrow escape from violence at the hands of the Paris commune, to whom he was esbecially odious; Ile eluded their pursuit through a church, letting himself down in a basket our of a rear window while :the mob waa forcing the outer door. The basket fell to the ground with and gave its occupant a severe up. a thud baking 'Where Invention IN Necem arY. 441Tuseyou madeany improvements ir. your invention?" have,"-. answered the enterprising selentist. "One of my assistatits has jt st discovered a new way to put stock on the market." T.I fe're FM id the ionneconist 1 to the weoden Ji1inn. -Is far moat pPople a antinuous pro'wiss_ of getting used to th Ings mat Hwy Lavvia been !expect- Pnror 4 In'', nied 1-y the Chinese 1,o1'ti) • 114. Citri,41 11 esa. an Eye por t'Itselsrene. I 'I an afraal the nobleman who is to ',came:. your von -in-law has not much taient for business." "'I don't know," answered Mr i Cum - rot "If he can menage to get as good paces for other 'merchandise as he does for; a title I'll trust him 110OLIO ittimaCefi in ,businessen - „gagman THE ANT QUEENS. They Live Longer Than the Workers of Their Consionzeitlen. How Icing 'may an ant queen live? In their natural habitat 501110 cinemas doubtless have shert lives, but by rea- son of the protection affiarded them and the seclusion enforced by the workers they probably live much lon- ger than other members of the com- munity. Within artifipial surroundings they attain a comparatively long life. The oldest eamenet queen known to sel- once was one preserved under the care of Sir John Lubbock, later Lord Ave - bury. A number of years ago during a visit to this distinguished naturalist at his country seat, Iligh Elms, Kenn the writer for the nrst time saW this venerable sovereign living in the in- genious artitleial formicary which had been prepared for her. She was then in the prime of life, as it afterward ap- peared, being seven years old. In the summer of 1887 Sir John was again visited, this time at his town house in London. After greetings he 'was asked about his royal pet. "I have sad news to tell you," he ape swered. "What? Is the queen dead?" "She died only yesterday. I have not had the heart to tell the news as yet even to my wife." Having offered my hearty -tondo- lence, I asked to see the dead queen. Sir ielm led the way to the ;vont where his artificial nests were kept. The glass case which contained the special formicary in which the old ant had lived was opened up: Lying In one of the larger open spaces or rooms was the dead queen. She was surrounded by a crowd of workers, who were ten- derly licking her, touching her with their, antennte tied making other dem- onstrations an if soliciting her atten- tion or desiring to wake her out of sleep. Poor,idsunb, loving, faithful creatures! There was no response. Their queen mether ray motionless bee neath their deMonistrations. . "They do net 'appear to have discov- ered that she is really dead," remarlced Sir John. Afterward he wrote me -Of another queen which died at the age of fourteen. The ants dragged her body, about with them when they moved un- til it fell to pieces. -H. C. McCook in Harpees Magazine. A SNAKE STORY. Men Whe Coax the Venomous Rep. ties to Bite Them. `,`Iiien can become accustomed to snake bite just as they can become ao- custorned to anything else," said a man who had spent much time In studying • the habits of reptilian life, "and in not a few instances- Which have conics un- der my observation the snake bite has really become net only pleasurable, ' but a kind of physical necessity. You see, the poison Is etimulating. It works like an opiate' of the kind adminis- tered by persons who fall victims to the pernicious habit of using th e nee- dle, or of taking the stuff internally. I have known a timber of men who would make snakes bite them every day, and they simply couldn'tpt along without it, Theirlenergies Would begin to lag. • They wo id feel drowsy and lifeless. By allo ing a snake to bite them they could ieI1eve this condition. The poison .would stimulate and buoy up, having the sante effect as a dose of morphine or; cocaine or other kinds ot 'dope' has on persons addicted to its use. Of couise they are careful not to getanoverd?se of poison, always ex- tra.cting enough o it to keep down the dilngerous conseq ences of the bite. Often men addict to thie ugly prac- tiee are forced toF tantalize and goad the snake up to . tie point of deeperae tion in order tO Make it bite. But they will strike Et ter awhile. It is an, awful thing to ev n think about, isn't It? But this wor11 is filled with cunt - ems things and .clurious persons, and among the wonders ofa coarser kind is the 'mtin wheat kes the snake fang 'hypo.'" Ginger Beer. • An excellent ginger beer may be pre- -pared in the following manner: Take two ounces of bruised ginger, two ounces of cream of tartar, two pounds - of Jump sugar, two lemons cut in slices with the rind left on; put all these Into a large pan or pitcher and pour two gallons of boiling Water on them. Let this stand for several hours, strain it, and when quite cold-addia tablespoon- fnl of- brewers' yeast and let it remain the ginger beer for twelve hours. Then skim off the yeast and bottle the beer. Press the corks very firmly down and tie them. It will be ready for usin a week.lt Grim Mans. Rain during a burial is considered an excellent "sign" throughout the West India islands; If one ineasures his own' height with a rod which has been used in measuring a corpse' for the coffin he himself will die within the year: A stroke with the hand of a corpse is believed bje the We4 Indian to- be a sure cure for all 'pains. and swellings. Verg mantel. , unt`Yboouy.Hrlittle brother seems like a. play - "Yes, he, is. He's veryplayful. 'When sister wad married he stopped "up the chimney, threw pepper in the fire, put brandy in the lemonade and turned the garden hose on the minister. Ohs Ws playful all rigiht" It Made a nifferenee. Mother -Goodness. me! Is that Irene at the piano? Itittle Soie-Yes, Ma. Mother -Well, go and ask her wha$ f, she Is doing. If she is practleisse sbl eau keep on until the hour is tip.„, bet ft she is playing tell her to stop* I Mending. • , Sttlx-/ noti6ed yonr wife sitting by The window sewing this morning. I thought you told me yesterday else was 111. Dix -So she was, but' today sheli the Men& Cutting OM the Nos For Paralshreelt* Ramenes II. of egypt cut off 'tlitt nose of any person trvieted ottreasoil or arson. Attisanee, another Egyptais ruler,- punished rob ors in the smile way. After each n' . bad been amptiZe' tathd back even witi the "bridge" culprit was sent to a colony of nose felons, the place -of bardshment b known as Rhinocon in, from the sep tures of the punishe ent its colossiste had undergone. In England in led. Lord Coventr4 the "great keeper o the British sear had his nose cut (>0 by order of the' king because he bad • ared to ask SOMt questions about an ctress then ing at Drury_ Lane th ater. ; A conscript who protested openbe that he had been en tilted in the atenz of Frederick the .0 eat in a fraud- ulent manner had his nose amputate by order of that sov reign, who spoke of the punishment as an -"indelible mark on the front si e of tbe face." - The Intim sale. The Duke of Wel them Wanted le . certain piece ,of w rk done and stricted an officer o the Royal engi- neers to do it. After examination ths officer informed the duke that it wart, impossible. The duke sent for another officer, much younger man ajid attached to as - other divielon of tbel army. This offi- cer did what the duk required. •, The next morning here appeared ist the "orders of the day" the following epigrammatic note: l'He who in Wilw fails to do what he undertakes may ale ways plead accident, which invs.ciabial. attends military affa • but he who de - dares a thing to be jImpofueible "shield I s subsequently accorbpllshed registers his own ineapacity." Most Expensive Tretle In the WOrldie Probably the most xpensiee'tros the world is in the O4ty a Undone the corner of Chea side and etreet, about Mid!! y betwqen Bank of England a$St. Pa Is an enormous oak, nd is sal t9 100 years old. It protecte clause in the deed af the which forbids des Won of branches. Architects -were-cora II to plan a rather pec liar building avoid the branches. There it aims in the corner of -on Orthe bust streets in Louden, oc pYing grendeli 01 enormous 'value -an positively t$if oily tree 'in the City of 1ond6,11 ear side of ,the parks. - nwrizATA Hardwarel Store, BINDER TWINE A (At pure Manilla), MADE IN PANADIL,, BLUE RIBBON -00 ft. to the lb. RED OAP— 100 ft. to the lb. TIGER— e NO ft to the Ib. I' Best Goods.at B'pttom Prites, Harvesting Thols, Bedford Ray Forksthe best sl4e in the market., Machine Oils and Threshers' Oils. A call solicited. Sills 84 HARDW RE, 833.41.Z'O-RiMEE Stallions For 1903 The following well Imo stallions will travel during the seam of 1903, as I Howe: . CLIMAX Owen Geiger & Co. ilroprietore. Monday -Will leave his- ow, stable, Hensel', and proceed east to Chiselhurst, &z3d north to William* . Kinsman -Is, leth concession, Tinkeron3ith, for noon then west end north to Stro g's hotel, for night* Tuesday -To J11111C9 hc01, Seafortb, for noon and remain there over night. 1Wednesday-By way of the Mill rout to Brucefield, to WIlson's hotel for .• noon; then *south to Henry Shafer's hotel, Hippert, • for night. Thursday -Mil proceed west to _Robert Love's, Mlle Green, for noonr; then west to Mrs. Nicholeon's hotel, Blake, for slight. Friday—South to John Geiger's for noon ; then to Robert Jolla. oton's hotel. Zurich, for night Sattirday-East to his own stable, Bengali, whereIbe will remain until the following Monday morning. 184741 In thgurrpiate Court of the County Of Huron In the Estate of 'Charles W1leoi, late of the Town of Seafortb, n tie County of Hur- on, Gentlentate decease Notice le hereby given, purs lea, Sc. 38, that -all perso t to R. S. O., Chap. a havipg any claim against the estate of the saIdi Chr.riesWt!.on,who ec died on or about the leth clay of June, 19 ' et the said Town of Seaforth, MC r Ind, on or fore the 255h day of July, 1903, to Ben or deliver the un- dersigned, elicitor for 11,111e8 Pringle, of Sho City of Stretford. in the County of Pt sth, grain merchant, and Robert Pringle, of the C 6), of Chicago, in the Stete of Illinois, capitaliat, the Executore , of said . estate, full particulars of theirlotaim and the se -cur, itY (11 Any) held by them, duly i verified by affidavit. And, further, take netted, that after the rid 251h day of July, 1903, the Eceators will proceed to dls- ; tante the estate among the Ws sallied thereto, having reference only to clrkns of which they hall then have received notioe, and after such distribu- tion the Executors will not be reeponetble for any claim of which they Cull not have received notioe. .1. M. BEST, Seaforth, Ontario, Solicitor for the Ex- ecutors. Dated at Seafortie this 22nd day of June,t 1903. • _ 1S5,5-3 tciUop Dfrect MICHAEL MURDIE, Reeve, W JOHN S. BR.OWN, Oonneillor, CHARLEH LITTLE, Councillor JOHN MURRAY, C,ortucillor, JOHN M. GOVEN JOHN 0. MORRISON, DAVID M. ROSS, Trimmer Bowmen J. SHANNON, J.* Winthrop P. O. for 190$. inthrep P. O. forth P, 0, Viluthrep P. 0. eeohwood,P. O. nor, Winthrop P.O. ntbrop P.0 throp P. O. , SasA ry Inspectors MONEY TO LOAN Money to lean at 41/per %Int on ty. Apply to JAB. L. um :nth tam scent erristee, 'seat Medi -