HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1902-07-18, Page 6a
Jul) 1.8th) 1902
An Ottawa Gentleman
Says I
Life Was a Burden to Me,
d No Living Mortal
Could, Describe My.
Sufferings"
Throe 13ettleit of
THE. CLINTON 14EW ERA
I
1 ADMIRAL 000111tANE
But after an hOur of this work •
rigging, but doing iittle turtuer damage. j AAVA 0144,,IN 4,yup
6)clutts4t,"- Ms:.'„ —viewer the feeling of lassitude and
. 1
.Paine's (*iffy Conmound."
wrought a 6 Mae Mid Happy
entre that A glished a
Who s
unity.
In the ranks of siok and diseased nfferers
many men and women haye become hope -
lees because of the failuree of phyoicieus •
IPA their medicines.
'We would have ell snob dejected and des-
pairing mortals take comfort ibie very (ley.
We would irn fines upon them the blessed
Until that Value's Celery Compound is
abundantly Able to save ar d ewe, A mut.
titude of people sa‘ed from dises-ii and
'death have gi strong and iDoontrovertible
testimony diet Paine'e Celery Compound
can save even at tbe.eleventb boar. P.
inter, Ottawa. Our„ tells of hie terribte
condition, hi a falinres with physicians, and
et his wOfldet'fQ eve by Pallier; Celery
0Ororound ; he writee thus:
,01`or four years I endured terrible agony
and misery (mug to pains in my head
and, chest. Life was a burden to me, and
40 mortal could describe my suffering. • I
was trested by doceors, and need many
patent medicinee, Int nothing gave me re-
lief until I used your Paine's Celery Coto.
pound, I thank God for the day it was
brought to xt) n Ince in the Ottawa papers,
I have taken three bottles of the medicine,
audio -day I can truly say that I feel bite
a new man. I will recommend.. the re-
medy wheneyer I have the opportunity, as
els the best err given to aufferers."
Sparrow liousekeep.ing. •
• Rave you ever watched a pair Of)
sparrows wDen first the house -hunting', I
and building mania comes upon them?!
Stow stupendously busy they are, espe-•.
tidally the cock, and what a tremendous
lin he has to say! As. a matter Of feet,.
hie Missile does all the real. work, and
he supplies all the theory, which she'
consistently disregards. '
Not that .1.1rs. Sparrow .works int-
-Velum-LOY, at though. thine permitted of -
pie deliberation. On the contrary, she .
uses the gi eatest -deliberation in the,
performance of every action, however •
trivial. :Wateh her •when she. Is con-
sidering the eligibility 'ef, let us say, a .
it at string Which -she has found. in- :
the garden path, as material to be used'
In the building of a nestover which
she 'is busy, First she will sit' upon a
gooseberry twig. a yardo. twb away,
and inspect. that morsel of .stringfrcnn
the south -ea •tt. - • , ;
.Then she v.III -flit over to the- apple •
tree 'close bt and study it.'from the•-..
north-west. Then she %win examine It
from other points -of the compass. At.
last she will bop up to it •and pull- -it....
about—app., .•ently accepting it, 'but -
jecting it i•gain, still uncertain as to
its suitability for some parnpee exactly
de6ned in her foolish • little Mind: . At
- last she will decide to uSeit, and, tielt--..;•'
frig it, she will fly up to her nest with'
the treasure; but, •vacillating once
again, she drops it at the very Nitres- '
hold, and pits upon. the roof a little
while, eying it and chattering, -e3i-
plainIng to her lord, perhapt, that it
.would hare done well enOugh If It had •
been ionger or shorter, or thicker or .
thinner, or heaven knowwhat. % Pin -
ally she will flit doWn and carry...it
away to use, and behcrial to -morrow •
he has turned it out ,ortee :more, an .
It lies upon the garden path a rejected'.
thing. Not for Idn&-IrkweVer,' for
either she herself or some.Z't. iier bird
has removed it next time one looks for
the mulch considered scrap.. .
?That conceited an self-assertive ilt- • .
tie person,her lord and master,is far
Ress deliberate .in his 'actions.. He is
more certain of hfmself, being con-
vinced that he knows everything, 'aticr
that to consider. and . weigh 'and dellb-
eraite Is a waste off time. • '
Ee Is amxious to help with the nest-
rnakingy-and-holds-toitth-without
Ins while his lady builds..,OccasionaliY
be lends a hand, He 'catches sight of •
a straw, it may be, or a small, piece of
stick, and it occurs to him that •here Is -
the very thing his foolish wife *has
eptight for days and • failed to. find.
What does not occur to him IS that he .
Ts a garrulous Old 'Incompetent, and • .
knows no more about nest -building
lean he does about the laying of eggs.•
His wife knows all about him, how- ,
ever, and the straw is turnedout of
the nest againas soon as, hie back is
turned. He has -probably pjaced it in
some impossible position, and—atter.
explainIng•what a marvelous fellow he:
•
1/VA9 AN ANOIOSTola LORD DM
DONALD, OM 0.0.v.
Watt 1(nown on/ l)lablo't and the
Terror of the sottnielt-Miti:r Great -
esti Single Ship le/Fitter the World .
HA Ever Seen.
saw that if be meant to succeed
must end the action forthwith Telliog ment*Iliredne" °I"rnes° awl l'kellgth
At once or.,,. takert themselves, he or. food must be (serried by rich, red blood. It
dered some of them to blacken ° their mental fetigne worriers and alerms ycullook
s '
the rnen that they must take the frigof mind. Not Wet it goedireetilto the
ate brw rue
ein that were foolish.„ The t bran
faces, and then ealled all hands to board, not to the brain, but the owned) end as.
The doctor, Mr. Guthrie, gallantly vol. eimilative oreans., No reriledy yet lie,
unteered to take the helot, and to recovered, poseesees the enervellous twithe
main for a time the only soul on the etrengthening power that Ferrozone hoe
Speedy. .All was soon ready. The doctor ' dtmonstratea thoneande of eaves. Ferro-
' laid the Speedy alongside with adntir.zone doee not etimulete the brain into a fit.
Canadian s welcome to their
• shores in Lord Dundonald a soldier of
distinguished ability and excellent re,
cord, who is a man, of remarkable and
unusually interesting lineage. lie is the
grandson of the Bail of Dundonald who
as Lord Cochrene won a singular renown
as a sailor. The Admiral's fame Is ie
cure as the greatest single -ship fighter
whom the world has ever seen. A main
Of extraordinary power; he fought un-
der many dais. In the -British navy he
was during the great war with France
the terror of the French and Spanish '
coasts, and on the latter went by the
sinister nickname of "El Diabio",—"the
devil." Quitting the British navy for
personal reasons, he devoted himself to
the work of freeing the smaller nations
from deSpOtism, which attracted so
alaily generous and adveuturous souTa
in tlie twenties of the nineteenth cen-
tury. Chili, Peru and Brazil owe their
enfranchisement from the- yoke of Spain
and Portugal in no small measure to
the astonishing feats of the Scottish
sailor -adventurer. The Milian navyittle
ways numbers' an Almirante Cochrane
among its ships, and it is in honor of
the singelar feats Nelda Cochrane per-
formed in Command of the infant navy
of the republic. ' Pre-eminent . among
Lord Coehrane'e characteristics was a
perfectly uncanny ingenuity. . This' in-
genuity has for some generations been a
family trait, and his grandson hae in-
vented a nem* of useful military ap-
pliances, ineluding a galloping. gun car-
riage, which 1$ known by his name...
Early Days in the Navy.
Thomas Cochrane, tenth Earl of Dun-
donald, was born in 1775, and succeed,
ed to the Earldom in 1931. Allof the
deeds .which made his • name ring.
through the civilized.' world . were per,
formed ender the name Of Cochrane'. -
Ills father, a scientist and inventor of
great theoretical, skill awl. complete
lack of buSiness • atility, lied taken a-
dislike to the navy, and destined, hie son :
for the army. For the military profes!.
sion certain eccentricities: of his up.
bringingcaused him to take a. violent
dislike, and .a.fter :some' .years of. paren•••
tat oppesition he. got his -way, and in
1703, in • his •eightsenth year, a lad six
feet tall, he went to Sea:
The •h'irst Lietitenrent of. Ctichranee -
first ship . was Jaek Larmotir, a man
who had risen br.shier seperitirity of
seamanship front :the forecastle to ;the
Onarterdeek. The, Earl's' seen and . the •
'rough .Lieutenant ••beceme fast 'friend;
and Ceehtane-niost zealously applied
himself under this able instruator to the
learning of every 'detail of his Fetes,
elan, becoming in a reniarkahly short
time a :eonettnimate seainen, Early in
1795, atter httle More than .a ''ear's
service, he was acting Tided Lieutenant
of his frigate, and early in 1790 he Was
Lieutenant. High rank and, the lax re-
gulations of the -day causedthis rapid.
rise. ' . • . .
' • The Cruise of the Speedy: '
,
Early in '-18.00,;.-- Cochrane, novi 24
years of age, got his first ship; a little
brig nented the Speedy. "This famous
brig," to quote .the biography by. Ron.
J. ,W, Fortescue. "was, to use Coch-
rane's own words, little :More than a
burlesque • on a, man-of-war,
este in the
year 1800, being of about tlte size of an
'average coasting' brig,'with a burden
of no more tha.n 158 tons, She wits
'crowded . rather 7 than manned' with'. a*
Crew ef. 84 Men eM1 '0 officers, Cochritee
.hiinself included, and -5.sett,a-. armed 'With
14 four -pounders, Species of gun little
larger than a .blUnderbusa.' Indeed, in
one oceasioe ,Coebrane deeielyely walked
the quarterdeck with a whole .breifd-.
side of the Speedy'e shot in :hie',
pockets," •
oat Ets--she Was, .the -Speed y.-seion. be-
came the terror' 'of • the .Sparnsh coast.
He captined innumerable of the oast -
Ing vessels which . plied , alortg. the ' Span-
ish . coast "The ordinary • movements
of cruisers •consisted..:in coining inshore
by day,and standing Off at night. Coch-
ran; contrary to- all precedent,made
ei practice of keeping out of sight in the
'offing all daY and running in hore just
before 'dawn . . as the . enemy's
'mutters generally ceeptout at night
In order to avoid capture." t 13ythe
number of his 'captures and the ingen.
City with Which he befooled them he
kept the Spanish coast in alarm, and.
epeciai efforts • were made to entrap
him: On May ••5, 1090, same
gunboats -tried to entice him into the
harbor Of Barcelona. He was too wary,:
and nthrt 'day found that a large Span..
ish frigate was •waiting to snap up
the little Speedy. Then he deeided to
attack the 'big ship, Her ,er eve, reduced
by men sent away in prizes, was Only 69
Soule. The Spaniard 114 32' heavy guns
and 319 men. The • dg•ht that follows
remains unmatched in the annals ot
naval warfare for. ail]; calculatior
and dating," „p ..0
. A • Wonderful
' "Hoisting Amerie it colors, in ordef
to puzzle the frigate until the brig had I
reached a favorable position, Ceetrand
Suddenly ran up the British Ensign and
Made atraight for her. The Spaniard,
• Ared two broadsides without result, an
then the Speedy, runnitug in under •lice
lee, locked her yards in the Spanish rig
ging, Cochrane, who had reserved Ids
aft till this moment, now poured in hit
breeds* with great effect: The Span
Ish gilts, as he had foreseen, owing tt
the greater height of the frigate out re
the water, Could not be depressed so at
to play effectively on the Speedy; and
while their shot fie* harmlessly ovei
the hen& of the 'British, the Speedfr
' guns, elevated and trebly abated, told
with formidable eXecution on the Spari
mall deek. Twice the Spaniel
officers gave the order to board, and
twice the British, hearing the melee
sheered off. Jost at the moment of ih
execution, at •the Sante time giving tie
Spoiler& & broildelde and a volley be
fore they could reeover themselves. Tie
obetny, seeing the futility of attempt
Mg to hoard. now rbtorned to -Met
guns, cutting up the Speedy'e sails ant
When children are pale,pbevish and met.
less at night they require it dose Or two of
Miller's Worm Powdere, Sold 13), alt
Clinton drugginte, •
and what a treasure he has brought:
UP hi the way of, building rifaterial-:;
departed, forgetting •-ethou t the 'rnat-!
ter in a moment or two. .Even when
he /tees that straw lying upon 'the gar-
den path, so conceited is he that he,..
does not recognise it, because lie ettn-t
sot contemplate the possibility of its:
refection bet the inisstus. Ile thinks be,
has found another treasure. t,Therts,"1
says ne, dumping it down by her sidel
*a she site resting, perhaps. laying a!
little egg, in the semi -completed net:1
"there's another splendid straw; hew'
Is ft you don't °erne across them? it
tan And them whenever
Mongnutn's Magazine.'"
Baby% Own Tablets.
a positive ear. tor Rot Weather.
Ailments.
In the hot weather the little Once Buffer
from bowel trouble; are notion; weak,
aleeplese and irritable. Thole' vitality is
lower now than at any other r3easen,
Prompt Notion at this time often eaves a
valuable little life. Baby's Own Tablets
it the beat medicine in the world for little
•• enea during the hot weather months. Mrs
P. Fergoort, 105 Mansfield .street, Meet.
yes), sive t-61 have forma Baby's Own
Teblete the best inedioine I haVe ever need
for children. lity baby was atteeked With
dysentery and WAS hot and feverish.
gave him the tablets and they promptly
mired him. Before this he had beenrather
delicate but slime rising the Tablets, he hers
hien intich better in. every way, / cen
ilisecerely recommend the Tablete to all
Mothers with ailing children."
Baby's (hen Tablets are guaranteed to
be absolutely free front Opiates and harret,
fel drugs. Children take them readily,
end unshed to powder they out be given
te the vetthgeet infant with /reefed, 'safety.
They anemia it all drag atone or will be
tent pest veld at 28 cents a btot by writing
Aimed to Willierns' Metlioine 00.,
Ercoletillt, Oak, or licbentotedy, N. z
ittOpis eimigti
OM% Work. (fold
LesstiVe Bromo-QuininaT ablate clue
cold in elle day, No Ono, No Pity, Prieel
28 cent
11111611.11111..
able skill, and in a few seconds the reigtowttattbyimproyingcligestionOtreneth.
whole of the crew was on the enerny'S vow g the nervous eye tem, atimulatmgeeetra -
deck. The bulk of the Spaniards were oetion, giving new strength to the Mart, it
stationed to repel men who might board sends A stream et red vitalizing blood to the
by the head ; but when they saw the brain. Thus it isattue brain food. Ferro -
blackened faces break through the white zone its sold by H. B. Uombe. price 600.
smoke of the bow guns they were for .
At I hree o'clock Wednesday arming
the moment transfixed to the deck with ,,,. ,
horror at so diabolical an anparitton, toe .iineardine hat bor light, saner* d
on the end of the north oier.was etrueit
Coehrane had counted on Spanish super hy lightning and horned. Upwards eif
stition for the gain of A momerita"v au -
vantage, and he WAS not deeeive 1. Be- 100 gallons ot coal oil was in the build -
lug. and the efforts of the firemen were
fore the Spaniards could recover them- unavailing. The steamer Pittsbutg
selves the rest of the Speedy's men had was unable to enter the harbor durit.g
fallen Upon their rear, and the whole ti
paseengers by 0 e- ns of Inc yawl Ix at.
use strul e in the rigate's waist,
le progret.s t he fire. and landed her
mass was engaged in a gallant but en*,
Seeing the pettish colors still flying, n 4i44111CA.BBRI,01.01)lr..ERT rofi
Cochrane ordered them to be handed
down- The Spaniards, supposing the ' eronobitis' the preenteer of Consumption,
act to be that of their own officers, is no longer aformidable malady, because
ithout further ad • stir n ler d and
its distress end danger are now speedily
the Gamo of 32 heavy guile and 319 men everted by the dry air treatment which nos
was the prize of the Speedy, of 14 4- to quickly won the support of medical men
minders end 54 men Even so the vie- throughout the world. It's the only Imo -
lasaseepaimmiteeneeteet
A SERIVIQN THAT
COST, $1417 50.
BY BET, O. 11. I'A.TMAII.
Preaehing Is ofttlines very expensive
for the l'oteners I 'Very l But likewise
very profitable. It cost one man who
beard VIC $14,750 for a single discourse,
and yet I wart none the richer, 13aVe
in gladness of heart and joy of mind,
Those who think the Gospel of our
risen Lord has lost its power to pro-
duce great upheavals in human life
should read the unwritten records ot
missionaries, whose truth must of ne-
cessity be like fire against the secret
iniquity of those before Mtn, if any
change come to then; character by
Christ. It is truth that makes men
free. What prison is worse or what
alavery more galling than that of a
man locked in the cell of knowledge of
kis own foul deed, 'or chained to habit
of wrong, the thought Of which, day and
night, is like unto the fiesh-tearing lash
ory
was hardly complete, for there oeseful method of treatment, end that it of the Arab slava trader. '
world.
were 20$ unhamed Spanih prisoners n'`
erhy Cattarrhozove has received the 'eti- 1 The unheard groans and unmeasu
erred
on bod and but 45 British sailors to
rshew:leof doctors everywhereCatarrh-
ottia of men in
guard them. Coarane drove the Span-
Jeon, e ;
ozone re ievee conjestioe,promotes easy ex- secret sin if pt in
4-
nnt . erlud.
lards forthwith into the hold, and there otoratieaeee thobagla and enrol/ell form of weight, would ink la, very vestige of, the dseage, epeedily effect- I The preacher knows this only too
kept them at bay by means of one of 'i i g a permanent euro, Never fails; always tykoeolliv,•liefdgbee ob fe Gd,
otdr,u andepr eot ft e ltthe ie... B iebni ed alined!
their guns pointtd down the hatchway,
Jure% At all dealers, 25e and $1,00.
of men. Furthermore, he' knows that
with men standing over them with light -
here or hereafter there can be no peace
ed matches, . . . The British loss in
ef Frontenac for a stationerY bill bi
Sheriff Dawson is suing the Count
apart from repentance; that there us
the action was one man killed and Lieut.
.1 no use in trying. to heal the wound I: -
Parker and seven men wounded; that of $58 that the Audit Cominittee refused I
til the splinter 18 pulled out—and gen -
the,Spanlards included the captain, and to pass, •
ed."
thirteen men killed and 41 men wound- ;
. • Milburn s Lasa•Liyer Pills regulate the : ine repentane 1 d u
e ine u es restitution,
11?owels, mire. ortipation, dyripepsia, bit- I where it ean be emade,•
Cochrane • was captured by three
of the °roue of divestion
°melee% sick h adael3e, and all affetions x aPuzallwtrtitt*oinithtohuissr adm
iradisitesthferosineetrehseoref
French lineufhattle ships, after a crufse
men making money—making it by means
in the Sper:dy of thirteen. months of ae-
fair or foul
It bas been decided to hold the car:
—.1. stood in a crowded hall
had taken or retaken more than 50 onotion in August between the nth
tive. mischief, "during which time she
facing an immense threng. Two out of
vessels, 12:3, guns and mere than 500 ani' h.
prisoners."
tiec'M Meer; Coinpound Iron Pills,only 25o for every three were men. .Bv. some good
P5 of God, Jew and Gentile, rieh 'and
50 doses. Sold by all Clinton druggists.
The Pallas and the Corvettes.
In. 1800 Cochrane was in vommand of Governor Giles, of Illinois, ha
e remember it so well now. The hytinia
written to the Denartneent of itstme were poorly sung; they were in no home
the Pallas, a 34 -gun frigate, and with enclosing petitions from residents of or to praise and scarcely in any thood 1
her terrorized the French coast of. the riheroteliell for r cOlnalUtaitiOn of for prayer. Few bowed their heads when 1
Bay of Biscay. He Was dreaded bY. Frail:One's set* nee. devotions came. The montezt for 'My
the French as he had been by the Span- The railway coMPanies have.agreed message arrived. Fearless and bold,
iards. ,April . he looked for some .to place 40 specially fixed ears on • the arose and said:— ,
French corvettes in the Garone. Ile road for the transportation ef cheese, "He that covereth Ms sins ehall not
sent all of his men except about 40 in
the boats up the niVer to capture One / tallier's Drink Cure hill er b 6 la Prosper."
poor, gOod aafl nd bed, were there rilil(e.'
'NOTE
01.058.
MESA
AT
0011011
Jar,
114101011•11.POOL
Page Acme Poultry Netting
eriAteta es egbottonA Esind dossAnot reetuere esilis or
acpperti at edgee, heyfue strong etraight wire
biror,dis guaygs) tor, boAttltandagein cornmetre, canottiaongt a/cand iii ox
neat appearance I'Vr7 -are- and cheap. WA Ow
make farm, and ortuurientel fence, sates, sails and
staples. Tee name of Petra J.41 Year guarantee of mielity.
The rags Wire Penes Co., Molted, Oen
NOW Spring Goods
Dress Goods
Prints . .
Mu.slins
Ginghams
•taaces and Embroideries
of all kinds
R. Coats az Son
L ox. . A truth which' Gold Almighty has
of "these They took her before day- by all Clinton druggists.. written by history, so plainly that no
Weak, Vet tWo more eotvettes • came
-down to resene her; and the BrithM The •periarttnent of Railwaye and One. but. a- fool.' would pass it by un.
. Canals Is preparing plans tor the re•
seamen beat. these off .with tlte lire of..
moYal 'of obstructions. in the Weiland : '
read.. . . -
For •full forty minutes I affirmed the
• 'tits gnus •of then. prize. ' But meanwhile...
404 nal bettieeen • Port Colborne and ' truth (if :the old Bible; history, experi-
„three more French. .eoryetteS 'appeared „ . . . . . , .- -mice and conscience alike. were :With me
Welland- :
, at. sea, :bearing 'Awn on the' Pallas,
• • . ' in procd: ' "Theyit was ,sinfifi to chaevil,
knew •1t. Was wicked . to
whieli , hod only.90 men, an board. • . ' •Prof R ibertson et.detressed the butter
. ' ... -
do wrong, that
'. "Without a MOhierieS liesitatioo .Coeh- . and..cheepe exporters at Montreat yeete.
,that it °was criminal to break the laws
rane s.ent hiejeWliands. Aloft to tie unerday tthout packing for exPort..•
:Of • God:” . • • . . , .. , , . . •
' • '
....the* infied.sails With )-ope-y7arn.-',and -or- _81Pdille.r'Ef Grip Powdee'e Cure. „Sold ....by : But little, remaina in niernerY Of the
. dieed there to -stand ny with. . their all Clioton druggiste. . ; , : '' • immediate afterresults is "the hall, retire
. knives, All was soon ready; • the word • '' Mr Charoberlien Was shaken up' by that Scores asked for preyer, and, man), .
:was given to let fell; and in an instant thetuotee kf nisnau slippink. His -head bowed •and wept when I gait 'the other
the' yarn was ant away, and down fell went thrOitch tne glass front of . the -: truth, that "whoso 'oonfesseth. and for -
the whole •cloud of the frigate's canYtte - cab and was -badly out, • ' ., : •. '1 saketh his sine shall obtain inercy.
together,. as though i,i.ot forty,,./Mt 400. : .. rAvEl Adtelt et,t4miga. - ,..:-•1 ... The startling thing happened, when I
- perfeetly drilled men were aboard her. • . . . , . - got beck. to :my; hotel.- I was tired. It
The sight 'Wits. too ranch ;qr. the three • Min:Mt
Min or - wn—lady preferred: , V19',,,e 1 had teken life, real - life,'Uut: •of Me . to
icervettes. - „They. . thrned and 'fan oil- ,h4ve pleasant and :Prontable employment preach thet • sernion. I 'Jost laid my
ajOng- shore; and avis,y , started the de- for any man or Woman at every post -office hat. 011 a -chair andflung myself . on the
• lewdet s.Pallas in . pursuit, while her address in Canada or United States, for an
handful of men, all grinning their broad-. •article of great merit, which nits at sight.. . bed, oveirmat .an's1 . all, completely . ex,
Exelasive territory . given to competent . housted, , There ' was. a • knock • at the
est, as -we -.may guese,- strained: everY • '•
: (10E, but I Was too Much worn out to
. nerve to sheet' home. . Had the French- • &seas. Address ,b1'... C. Poison 'le Co.,
even answer. It opened, and in walked
. :men noticed how slowly this was done Kingston, Out. • . • .... . . , „
a great, tail; flne400king • felletv, fully
they might have diseovered . the trick, -• While' bathing, . Cecil Rennie, the . six.feet, '..dressed as n eawbey., but good
• but they were•serteed beyond all .power nine-year-eld sett 012 Prineipal Rennie, •Stoff; a large. sombrero hat, 'which. he
of...observation. , Vt.Y soon the Pallas of the ...Oakville :,.High .'schoPl, !was. kept on, and, it big 0a -shooter stuck in '
ciime up with one of the flying corvettes . drowned. . . • , . • • 7 his belt. For a moment he Tooked at
and ,opened fire frOin her bow -guns. She - .
GOOD EIE.aLTE1 FOR CAPITAL, me. and.never Said a Word; then he -tern-.
einlicl: not. have. manned mote .for' want - . . . . . .
.. a .,,,,,,, . bit :those :were ,,fte.ity. sided- ". 1Viaintaininggond 'health is, to the maj- ed 'enct,:locked the 'door end threw. the
key Over on the leer. • . '' - ' .. ."
ent. Mier half i -dozen shots the French ority of PeOpte the most vital :question Whet itall meant I did
111..1.
The fact was, I did not ertre. I had done
captain:deliberately ran his ship ashore,. the world Aliti 'nature afford no more:i. . not knoW:
and the ere*, taking to the boats, made efficient etrengtbener for the spit em and re- '
oeltrine's own admission; have failed to.
capture her: ' The, el -ended veseel hay7
in,..„0 been diemasted ,by the • ellock, the and puts Into the fitYi3tea3 the an!IP# eaergY,. WhYi
the blood, mates new, healthy nerve villa..
Chase!,, ', MY duty. I had "Warned' the- wicked"
no* "With my hoots on,". as the'y -very
frequently dO in that Tett uf . the world,
I •was ready., . . . • ' . -
all haste for ' the land; had they made steretite for the nerves than Pr
for the Pallas instead;they could not, by Nerve Food: Naturally,. gradually,. and • in a faithful way, 1111(1 if' I %vas to die
certainly. it fornia new, red corpuscles in ..
• .and vitality that defies disease.' He piffled a ehair up 'near the bed;
Fates ranged up altingsicle,'and Was. en- . .. . • .• .. . ' e ... • :sat dowo, elbows on • his • knees, hands
.- gagedin. completing the wreck by firing ' The Western Ontario Firemen's ,In- • to his cheeks,hie great big brown eyes
into her. hull when the other.two cor- "-hind In eeti nit -Will beheld.at StratfOrd : burning- with lire; and • looked- straight
Vettes .cione up .tei the rescue of • their - onAugust 5, 0 and. 1.:.. ., ...: ' .• • . ',through to • mY, son]. :That ' look lasted
.- consort-- - Again the . „,some.-....triete_: lwilintrdis .131eartIttrid Nerve _Pills Entre • fully . 01,11 minutes. He 'never .spoke a
was repeated; - with the • same enseiniameryanenese,eleepleesnes,weaknees word... I was too tired'tO utter -a---8y-1,--
• result The Pallas daelied straight: at the, - palpitation, throbbing, faint spans,:. dizzi; table. • Suddenly he 'broke out • ...:
nearest, and a. second corvettewas run nese. or atiy.condition arising from irtilior. . . "My God I You..hit Me hard 'tit -night."
, ashore in desperation and , *masted: 'erished blood, diaordered nervei3 --oe weak . . I 'made no answer. ' - * . , •
.Leriving . her to take .her chance, Coeh- heart. , ' ' .. .1 . ' ' "Sar' can you help a 'Man that ,lives
rana was returning to the river in Order . Peter:Dodd, onOnf WatfOrci's oldest • in :hell' and ' wants to get out?".
to pick up his men,"when he observed and best known 'tininess men, la bead; .1 leaned up a little, propPed •my head
the third corvette making. for- the river after an illnessof three weeks. • ih his .with•my hand, and asked, ".w.ho is the
Is: 70th year. • - • ' • ' Mon?" .
likewise .rinding herself intercepted,
she, too, was run whore and abane . . .„ . ... . "I, great heavens! I ant the one,".
cloned, and thus three corvettes,. rhOiltit!, • TO OUre a Cold in One Day. "Telt me about it; let all out, and If
.trig -between them 04 gems, deliberately
All druggists refund the'money if it fail • help ' you. .1 will. If I. eanniat, I
Take Laxative Bromo . Quinine Tablete
1 tan
committed Suicide before it defenceless
frigate, "'through sheer' ' fright at the to awe E. W. Grove's el nature is ' •on know One who ean..": .
, ..etton box, 25c, . g . . . :`,1•GV0141o.,s that ?"
fall of her. sitils. ' It is one of the ouriosi. 4, ' - . .
ties of. war.' - . • . I Sat up on the edge of the bed, and .
' .in :1808 Coehrine •was in cot/intend 'of • Joseph liaWlev, of Ha,rwick. town- out of his broken heart came a sad tale
• the Imperieuse, in which. the future Cap- ship...committed suieidaby hanging. •
tain arryatthe seilorenev.elist, was a M. BCa,radoc . township,erry, Con. 8, . . r0aInscihn,. WHhoeseWcartsttalet atohde ohoetatd000fonad glrveoaot
Mt
midshipman. The peninsular war had had twelve steer 3 killed by lightning. :.:.
'M
cominenced, and Cochrane harried' the . ' ade its English owner rich. As trust-
Britith Troop.Oil Liniment le good for ed. agent Alla .itanager, he had stolen
. French in. aid of the Spaniarde. In par -
or • . man or beast. Relievers pain,' reduces over thirteen 'thousand dollars. Stealing
makes a 'man a thief, and the- troth
of the sermon in the hall had shown him
his teal self,. It was notso much the
money that he had stolen, as liatimoght
of whet .the stealing had made. him, ---,
g son osas, •w ne allays inflammation: (tures cute,
French were besieging. and defended it burn; bruises, illumine, Miff joints, bites of
with wonderful pertmscity And ingenu hiseete, rheumatiena, eto, A large bottle
ity: ltlarryat has. given ao graphic de..., for AO cents.
t` f thiS • " '
mak". In 1800 he wifsforemost lit. the P' (316118e1 a f'Demer residePt of. Sim'
• •
a coo, WW1' drosetted Whlie 00atlfwg • on a thief! • 1 nan • hear Min repeatmg it
1
gr -t attack by .explosion vessels an. Long Point Bay, now.
fire -ships upon the brooch ships in Acc
Roads, From that mon-rent his fame r AMILY QVARRIAS 11mdottrthief 1 Oh, my
was secure as a sailor of marvellous skill "How many serious family quarrels,
and resource. Marriages oat of spite and alterations Of .1 todldi needas no lawyer td
• . wills might have been prevented 'by a
,now Drown Leithutita paid. . gentle dose of pille." With th° neer and
• . • • kidneye aluggieh ails torpid digestion, is
At a Variner's Institute ni Iowiti impaired and tennet minas But
short time ago a woman
gave a most Chase's Ridney-Liyer Pale by invigorating
• eneouraging report of her experience the notion of these' organs epeture good dig -
with Brown Leghorn chickens, She said estionend round health. One ply a„ doge
she had nb thildren to look after, and 25 cents a box •
devoted all the 'time which she could
A ntiMpany'hae been Organized at St
?mare from her housework to the care of Louis to bad a bridge over the Min
.his-
Ave undred and "fifty Brown Leghorn eiy,„1.
bens., which she kept on a eommon fent
A RED HOT SEASON,
homestead, running at large. She mid '
Poring the hot seamon the bided gate
that these liens brought her in an aver -
over -heated, the drilla on the system is
age Moine of $1:60 each, mostly from tiet•ere and the appetite in often lost. Br.
their egg product; that they were free dock Blood Bitters ptirlfieri and invigorates
from disease ; that they went every- the bleed, twee tip the system and redone
where, and because of them no attempt the lot appetitc,
Was made, to raise vegetables, . small
Queen Alexandra opened the corona.
fruits or flowers on the place. No in -
wire .fed tion bazaar in aid of his Majesty's hoe.cubator was used. The hens
liberally. This statement conflicts with pita fund/
the generally ,accepted theory that more Backache, swelling of feet and ankles'
than one hundred and fifty or two bun-. puffing under eyes, frequent thiret, scanty,
dred hens cannot be kept on the far* ellondy,highly ooloted Urine Ana all uritaty
iteme.atead •
'running • at ' large. --Farm troubles; lead to Bright'e dinette°, dropsy,
NAV& diabetee, etc. riolua's Xidney Pills are
Duro ChM
' 11.
"Repent; restore
Rthe motwyj ask God
for mercy. Let Him give you it eew heart
and a good life. Let Him niake yeti good
and keep you so."
He was well able to pay bacle all he
had taken. It was his own proposition
' I to add the interest. We figured it all
out at six per tent.—foorteert thousand
firs egvuerne ndred: and 111 Sy dollars in round
There 4 is one Englislintart who *should
love America, to that amount; at least
he is three thousand pounds eterling in
pocket. Preaching did it.
My tiredness somehow had left me.
When We arose from our kneel, Where
both had prayed, said t
"Isn't it good to be made good?"
"Yes,. bettor than gold," said be. And
If any would like to know why one
branch of tile Christian ehurch is mak- Rattionburv
In such headway in the southweist,
can tell by pointing out h treat -hearted,
man, whose thelees energy is %Ivan to
power. This be knows full well.
0011N BOWING. A moose that. Walt being shipped from
good tight boots—yon may lack the vanity
excited ti,, vanity, bgoked up Ontario without permission was seized
at Ottawa.
XA Et preieess
ti.tyoti have the geed tight bootio.you may „At. .,..
airiatiraonoyorasixtion-bifoytottlynostlepeitteatnetoulotr66.ithiiirrs 4.. tirottaiiiiviumr,„,,,..,tavidtillieXeovene:tthraceatratithon00009
Corn and We t Extractor. Druggiste bell 4 Yfire. .
I.
•:.1
iii 1467-'4 .Atiiiitoiric Igit: laver 809ieloitial visitors at
1 The Prince and Psincese of Wales en -
accidently kilted to , Eng. • M. a eforPtditeti..4
•
• .
NMI la/ INN
For twenty. years I had been a suffer-
er from bronchial troubles accompanied
With a hacking cough. I at times suffered
from extreme nervous prostration,. About
fOur years ago I. Won. taking Ripans Tab-
ules, and since then I have used them -
pretty constantly. I rarely retire at night
without taking my Tabule, and I find they
keep my digestive organs (which natur-
.
ally are weak) in Liood order,and they al so
allay' rny tendency to. nervousness and
,
make me sleep.
\ f,
\\
AT DRUGGISTS
• t • •
• .
The five -cent packet is enough for an
ordinary occasion. The family bottle, sixty
cents; contain's. a iinpi3ly for a jrear.:'
,,f(6,,,,„4„weateta•eseeimeassee‘ 41-144P$41044-wassistecet.oatatostet4siot.
Central 1The Novelty BalurY
Meat Mirket
4
businees of F. H. Powell am pre -
Having purchased the butchering
pared to furnish the people of Gin.
. ton with all kinds cif Fresh and
Cured Meats, Sausage, bologna
lard, butter and eggs always kepe on
hand..
R„ Fitzsiinons Son.
. .
Talphotad 76,
Orden delivered) promptly to ad
Partespf the town.
1&.8.--Psreette heuing hogs for
shipraent will confer it, favor by
leaving word at the Warm.
0
0
0
0
0
40.0011.9". WI*
if I AISLZ• RID GRANITE
1\11,;;.
At. ."
IL ',0701•Ktt
4
'browne, six-foot Chr Alan gent1.3.
the extension of a Gospel that as real
•
Children ate often Attacked enadenly by
painful and dangerous collo, cramp,
diatrhone, dysentery, eholere morbus ohol.
St., Works.
euivreiv.
Direct importer,. Workmanshin
and Meteriel guaranteed.
JAS. G. SEALE
Noy' Maher Neiille of Eingstott ls deed
tier infenturn eta, nt Fowler's ItztastAf „.„..\
wild sitawbibwry. is a tucutpt and ante nye The -Queen of the Beiglent is earionely
which should itlWayit be kept in the house. 111.
Ring Edwina oontinttee So make shpt...
Montreal friend from England, Oars mild f 11 Ted
rhr Gi It Parkin, In fie letter to It woe, utopia,
tageis o tOrta pent are repot, •
, two of the Ithedei fichotarshtoo wilt ,
cotao to citrutata. a b Woodstock and Dutton
a , \
„.
and Redauxani
•
Is the place to buy choice
chocolates. We handle Mo-
Cormiek's ohoiee •Mariosibo
• chocolates, also Patersonas
creams and burnt almonds and
other choice assortments.
• • •
. We are prepared .for the ;corn.
ing Season to serve soda water
in all flavors. We Ph30 have
crushed fruits in stook, me
orearn and all kinds of cool
drinke.
.A.choice stook of oranges; and
leinons, banenes end. ell kinds
of fretie ill season. -
Fancy bread andleakes:alwaya
on hand. • • •
Weildin.g Cakes a
.4 Specialty.
Teriila difibEly 'gash;
J illeClay, Metal.
CINVAiSER.
WANTED
to sell PRINTER'S INK—
it journal for advertisers,
tvnlished weekly at five
liars it year. It teaches
solstice and practice of
Advertising, and is highly
eateemed by the Mitiet
suc-
cessful advertleere in this
country and GreatEritain.
Liberal
lowedatiffrffilPPRI'ut
/NE, 10 Spruce St., New
York.