HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-06-23, Page 6\ OPetAtIft WO This buttlect trefore tbe
Umpire Clolt at Toreros:.
Eloqueoce of the very highest from
one who stonde in the front: rook of
liviog orotore distinguished the seas
aon'e final ineetiog of the EMpire
Club at Toronto. The' .13ishep of Ni-
agara war: briefly introduced by • Cal,
Meson, and Was welcoured with. loud
appleuse. They Would. agree • With
6
PILLA1 .3 OF THE EMPIRE. THE 1,..AROER HOPE.
Ilitisitop or tliezare. Delivere Niosetent
Ob, rat we trust thet, someltow, goo4
Will be tire neat ot 111,
To PanSit ot nature, taus of wilit
Defect* et doubt era taints of blood.
Ttlort"lietugnnlig alat VeingirtoTet1
Or oast as rubbiah. to the void;
When God hirthtuade the ale commie*
(IA itworm 10
0cloveS in 74:Tbat :11;o.
ehriveled in or truitlesa the
WM, 1m th.ought, that the verdict of Or but aubserveit :mother s gabs.
history had been recorded is• Savor -Tennyson.
of constructive statesmanship. The last; W 4W
Empire builders were the heroes of REAPING ALOUD. The angels in the heavens ot gladness real) tills amount of Money In Isaac didn't
the world, Alexcuider, Caesar, Char -
UNERRING 4,1611(...E.
-"
Tile Clinton News -Record
STRIKING A BARGAIN.
4,10.111.200
The bloonakuito stile well, my br)thera each A. Ossie Wbere Meru Insuor liald
The outcome of hie former Jiving 1111 Cot Muck ot a 'Figurer
The bygone wrongs bring forth serreIve "Several year age there was a bOOM
The bygone right breeds Whet in certain lands in Florida beraUse of
and woes,
KO phosphate depoOlte," tiald a Eicelltio
Te areslAtt.batrult the soul of things 10 ern inana "A speculator asked one of
is will; that whIch mks those eimple Eleritla folk what would
Stronger than woe
be the lowest price he would take for
The heart of being le eelestial rest.
Doth pater to better -beet. some landwhich before the boom he
good •_.
bad been enable to sell for $500. The
What hath been bringeth what :Malt he and owner really didn't know. 'I 1 sPeelt-
Worse-better-last for first and 1114 for
is later agreed to deposit in tr .,. ailti,000
1 Out
' Wit. i 1,
Not
• Prieto) of a boly past.
--Sir R1 In Arno14. mean very much to the natiVe,
Imagine, Napoleon, Olive, Hastings:, An Accomplishment That Is Neglected Toe '
"He said he wanted a farm of sixty
and. last, bot not least, Cecil Much Nowadets,
SILOH EST E R'S MYST FRY. • web with a house on it, toe Whole to
Rhodes. Reading aloud ivoll is, on &town- cost a few hunared.
It was a remarkable thing that it
, t.
"' a
plishment, ranking next to music as Itemains of Some or the 014
Iteman Homier
Are Alissing. Can I have horse and saddle and " 'Whet•eleer asked tae speculator,
would be impossible to evoke the a means of entertainmenat home
enthusiasm around the motnorY soand in the family circle. In a past bridle?'
Gladstone that bums up spontano- generation the long winter • evenings The eXeavations carried out dors-
ously around the inetnel'y or Bon" WOrll looked forward .to with pleasinging the la.st fourteen years by the
r" 'And a ride?'
-- •" 'Certainly.'
conalield, who had been deveted to anticipations. , swat were reaiid, SOOletY of Antigne.ries on the site of
the ancient Roznano-British City of 'dr ryes.
rotors of Empire. heine, and going to parties was the ,
the building up cot the Enipire. when they were. ' chiefly spent at Silchester ("Callevai Atrebaturn")
'0 'And Some prOVIS41011ar.
The pillars upon which, the Empire exception, The father, mother and cumstances which have yet to have revealed scone very curiOus cito
" °Yea'
rested were two and ling, came the children all gathered in themm
coon 'be ex -
strong pillar cif commerce, In all living roora, and ow: read aloud plained 'The city is surrounded by The eyes of the native began to
"
a large wall nearly two milea pause.
great movements towards EMr
Pie While others busied themselves with s ta bulge. There was
length, overhung with trees and " 'What else do you want?' asked the
commerce seemed to have led, Slid lionle handiwcitic, and all, save.. very overgrown with creeping plants, en- speculator.
the sword was uusheathed to Pre- small ones, who had an earlybed- closing an area of 100 acres. Out- "'Ob, give me $50 for the old. woman
tect ittime, listened with attention and im-
Bishop Dumoulin entered upon a tercet. There is notch talk just now side runs a deep fosse and largo to buy tliings for herself and chit»
moundThis mound -sections of dr
brilliant account of the three gwhich have been taken -1S comp0reot about the study of child nature. It . _ _ ie,
.1112'-
ethen Started to walk aWav.
companies which had given England would astonish some of those ete.„ ged
0 "What else?' asked the s eculator
tluveafourths of her territory and dents could they know how meal of solely' of earth 'soil, wIlile the fosse
nine -tenths of her population. good literature intended for mature or ditch has been dug out of the .. P ,
" 'Is gth' ravel soere more yet?
il which is found a foot or
It
The East India Company came flyst ininde was comprehended and appre-
and its career Was a magnificent ro- were so under the ground all over the -Leo.
"'Well, give me a plug of tObacco
elated by children
mance, which no man out of his lino- given a chance to become acquaint -
when they country in • and oround Silehester,
and Set me down where the fish will
gination could rival. It did not be- ed with it. Sir Walter Scott's novels and of which one would suppose the
mound to be made since the sur- bite all daY, and ycm can have the
gin with dreams of conquest and and poems, "Paradise Lost,"
a" face soil would not 'have been Boni- rest.'
•
srugation. It originated in the other similar loadings have been a eient by itself.
c tionereial idea of the nation oi strong factor in forming a goo& -
shop -keepers, merchant princes, who taste in literature when heard by The question is, why Was the
looked across the seas, and listened children from seven to tell Years of mound made solely of earth soil, and
to the storiee of the noble Posses- age. Such children have,. of their where did thisearth come front?
sions which characterized tho nit- own volition, learned large parts of r.nhe only explanation is that the . .
tions of old. They employed the
army of their money, their golden of the Last Minstrel "
pounds, and as their returns in- .:"The Lady of the Lake," "The Lay
email poems ot great merit. One WO
, and many
.. - removed from the surface when the '
mound is composed of all the earth
foundations of the houses and streets The Great Fair' at St. r,otils and
t 18 • OW DC17.1,01
a__ ao_____•
I
creased, there arose the difficultiesrecently dead, took pleasure, whert were being formed and laid out; but tickirts are on sale •slaily from Cli
which led to subsequent events. The long %past her. eightieth . year, in re- this edema a curious thing to have .
influence of the native princes of to- peating gems of poetry learned in her done, for a gravel mound would Gcsat 15 days
ao
Good . days , ' •
15.u7•55
dia could not go down without a early girlhood. • . More been far superior. :When the G $33,15
• o
struggle, and it was in this condi- There is too mremains of thhouses and other Good for season tisa.Souch light and trashy
tion of things that there arose the, reading for ehildren. They are left 'buildings. are:uneovered there are
bright star, the military genius,, see- too much to themselves in choice of found no traces, or velar few, of the With stop over •privileges at. any
:
ond perhaps only to Napoleon, Lord ' books. Parents are too .apt to be enintermediate Caparlian static.ris, also material of the upper ports, as Oir
other Roman sites, except •the foun- at Detroit rad Chita:act .•
to see ttie Fair •while ererytItiog '
Clive. Ilad he been in command of grossed in their own pursuits to give
the forces during the American Revco' their c.hildien the proper training in . dations and payentents.. 'Nor is any a.
lution, it. was probable, said the reading aloud at home. Too much of the building material to be. seen
; .1 s x a ir_ I ee_ ibits are at tlieir heat.,
fre 1 i e h 18
Bishop, that George Washington. 'dependence is placed on their ' being in neighboring churehes, as at St.
t, 0 itricitt ha of May and Jute' will . be
could not have achieved his success'. taught ' at sehool, At school there is ' Albany . Abbey,' Guildford Castle "
1 te in e, . . ,
Warren Hastings followed, and it. not sufficient time togive. each child and other places, where Saxons and
was notable that these men who all the exercise in this that is need-
Normans have utilizedin their
*'s ; -
For tickets, illustrated iitertilo.Te,
should have been , supported by the at Road Ing aloud: should. be a home' chinches and castle.s material from regarding WorldFair and otherin
, a, .
people for whoni they labored, were, habit. One principal of a school has Roman sites sites. This semis to stiggest formationpply to PRHodgeos
one of them, brought before a corn- recognieed this, so,nd • is making an that the walls of the buildings only tnen ager ; A . P Ltson, i d '
,t . 0 . a
. , ' f
The Empire of India wag not • feet, above the t. t st atent 1 -
epot . Milt'. a habit., HO givoa a• credit to children ground, wood being used in the up-
• , .
,
IR
under the providence ef God. .. The . tell to his class the. things he has the conly - explanaticin so far to aro- . Tribal!
. ,
Empit.e was ,the greatest thing that read, The responsibility of a child's count for the' non-existence• of the .
the world had to show, and it education is not wholly the teach- materiale of the upper .parts of the.
Aeration and
Cooling of NUM.
By ;4878111111ali;4878111111 of mint we tindet'sland
tiors exprising of Milk to rm, or the rot -
oh% ot !tie loin milk, said Prof Ilean ot
the Oittstio Agol000moi college, Al
the conferebee of dairy eX reris lurid at
I be Depart merit of Agt ieniture,011.1ro a
lard 11111.'14(1''14(1' theory of the practice is
14114. 1114' oxygen of the air porillee or
impt•oves. the milk, anti at the some is
time gast,es (4)' volatile oils w hien tire in
the milk are .ennbled to pass away. ir
tho au. to, which the mita i$ exposed ur
whieh is forced into the milk he per- •,
feetly pore, the result will undonhl ed
he en Improvement in the flavor stiol
physical grant y the milk . The ex. I
perirnetit at the College have not
shown any advantages ir our aerating :I
milk. Probat.ly the conditions ther e,
so far as feeding the cotve ond coriog
for the milk AVG roncerned, aro better
than those of the average farm, The
farmer retry he 00111 pelted to feed his
COWS in Sloth a way, or the cows them;
eel Vela may get such feed, that aeration
et the milk would be an advent age.-
AERATION IN THE BARNYARD
141 litany ('884(4.Pe. ha we've'', the a511' is
no). pure, and oft en as much harm as .
gond is none. Instructor Publow has I
toentionecl that fifty per cent. of . the 1
coos 18,Bo:stern Ontaim are left, in the
barn,ya rd.. Aerating milk in the bn
ar.
yard is (44411 of the worn things a teen ,
could possibly do We ler ve milked
our cows iir the yard, which is kept it
good deal cleanee than the average
barnyard, Wp have put a. be aerator
. outside the ferice• the cownd
s o
have let the milk run flown over, the
aerator. The result watt that we • got
sortie (i the worst milk we could pos-
sibly have. Unless the ale be p1448, it
would be better tit cool the milk with •
as little aeration as Possade.
COOLING MILT( FOR
'11.1.10 OH ILES.E FAOTORY,
mission, and the other impeached, effort .to entourage childrea m the . •
great commercial conquest. but the rot hoMo .reading aloud, and asks a per parts; but this could hardly have ,
very best thing which could have be- report from •the parents, and also been the case in such in important
fallen that great part of the world gives the'pupil an opportunity. to place as Silchesteralthough this is
shoilld t he'll with throl:thing •er's. The teacher is sirnply to sups buildings...
pride, and energize them: to nobk pletnept the efforts of, the parent, to '1'here are also many pits 18 feet to
deeds and lofty purposessupply what it is .inconvenient or iros 30 feet deep, at, the bottom of which
iludson Bay Exploited. possible for the parent to . give, are found perfeat gots among. much
The Hudson Bay Co. wee prosaic Schools are not, intended to toko. a. rubbishand breitera pottery. How
after the glitter Of the Indian storyparent's place, -Montreal Statdid these come there? Some of the
pits wore , possibly wells, and •the
But there was manifested endput, •
forth the same indomitable energy
which led Britons to wrestle .with
the jungle and tropic fire, -.-in con-
test with the snow and ice and
storms of the frigid zone. They knew .0n the 27th April, 1904, Postmass ed), and after the wells were dried .
not the wealth which lay in meant-. ter Robert Lawrie Of St. 'Catharines rip" they were used •for throwing iti .
' measuieble lands. been postmaster 28. year's, .and is is taocitneidtht-.atit,usidro.cpOpveedrining. ;the imesele .
tains and ri ver's and far-off end las. celebrated his 86th birthday. ' He has
Names like McTavish and Macken- hale and hearty as he was when ap-
zie turned to golden numbers on the pointed by •• the Mackenzie Asiminia.
was considered faithful where faith, Mr. Lawrie Was brim on April 27; Undoubtedly the insist extraordi-
Bishop's lips, and the poor Indian traturn. .
1818s. at Innerwick, in the et:stern :nary township in England is that of
was kept. The renowned and -rP-,- Skiddatia: In !Cumberland. It con -
sound ,
on •his. nineteenth birthday, April .27:, st.,6,alincsa biastitittiirtuos%atcheedaTettern.elsia . .1:
ing name of Donald Smith • il- Part nf Scotland lie left his s home .
lustrated the type of the Empire • •
the South African, and, 'raid the Bridgetown. The Voyage listed sev. ..there is rio' Overseer t.o- prepare. it .
The . last chartered company Was • Nevi York on the. sailiog vessel
Bishop, All the romance .ef your en: weeks; and he landed on .tune 14. voters' list and no church or other
souls may gather round the name of • From New York he rent to Buffalo,. place of worship s or 'as:tenthly on I : •
which to publish tole. • •
. ,.
ti Rhodes," ile had joined • alma: the.. trip consuming ten days via. the Tao. olost. remote village M Eng-
merce and imaginatiou together; to Erie Canal. Crossing to Canada, the land is that of Farley-cuna-Pitton; • "
niake Africa all red," . young •Sc.otratitan soon •foond hims This truly ruraL, spot is thirty miles •
Olean Eiterati Kruger. self taking a • strentiOus part in:pub-
(Yaks , William Lyon Mackenzie and .a hay ,. from the nearest rail -
The Bishop referred to the events 'lie a---- ' • . . . a way statton, As. a contrast to this
had suceeedod in • bringing abou r •
of, 1882 • and minced no words M May be meritioned • the nexnlet of
speaking of the traitoroue, plans Of what ie .Oxiovrii in history as• "Mar
itenzie's: Ittebeilien." ' Mr., Lawr ei, YStraci; about ten. miless frain Car-. I
the meanest rascal -Paul Kruger." diff. ' This tint, settlement possesses :
joirtedair Scotch company of trolions•
'Phe development of Africa was to be two important main roads, two rail-
uasher a-------------------. n. 'sup- ' .nd The Woo to • 'lloesv the iteoerage. pji E'aell Such exhibitor a sum equal to the
. They oho ie: prizetrienetawideli .he sectu•es in the
undertaken, "not for •covetousness .a. . . •ways a
•
but for the highest good and greats •. • A very unique feature is exClusively
POSTMASTER AT 86. •pots' might have been accidentally •
Robert Lawrie, of St. oatbarines, Etas Filled dropped in by thosel fetchiog rotor •
• offtee os Tears. • (the 'water breaking their fall and
• • • • • pretrenting them from biting shatter -
English Village Oddities.
tats
; Cooling of milk is a most important
point. The advontage of cooling is
that it'provents t he gro wt.!) of Imetet•ia
or Oro:mist-1os Whieh are dill to velot)
boalstiovolo ins the milk. There are
two ways of cooling milk. • 0,.e is hy
. the rnaxinituta, of exposui e to the Ana .
and the other. by the Minimum or eX
• postire the a tr. The first methocl,
thause of such a cooler as, the Stile or
(Therepton, will coel milk •rattictly,
w bleb re a decided ritlytrfrereite. A ie -
advantage is that nee, di lost have•wa• er4
elevated or under pres:sute in order" to • •
use, an ordinary • cooler, and 'At great .
_ many fanners hi 88 not such a warer•
• ttiPply. A second disadvantage is 'the'
• 'labor of lifting the milk up to. the cool- .
eitend of 'washing the 'cooler. after- •
worda TIM tirsjority cif faemei s I
riot. under•go the labor 'necessary to do
this Work pis •periy: To lift • the niilk
arta let it rim over ille• cooler, is more .
than I he. average Man Will do,. Tire
thei e 'is the difficult y. !but b3r uting
. nth n ooler; the milk la largely ex pas
O lair the air anti the same risk is n
.rttin the ose of the aerator. Any form
of cooler, which vools t he il it taPid v
,exposes it, largely to the air. •Aild
whit rstiris giVe.S opportu ti i for gas-
ir•nd oi's to pass away, ito -
4) re loot lo absoi heti:. To or er-
emite this difficulty.' various device:,
have been suogtoted to :cool. the .041111
under ravers, Probably 't he "lest plan
is to set the cans of milk in Maks. t.f '
.1e.ading- car- cold Witter. Run oitot, water, at a. I mr.•
• . perature ot .IU 4, SCI do roes give; th e
riage makers.
All work
manufap-
tured on
the premises
guaranteed
builders of the :West. 0;37, and sailed. from Liverpool for ton"s privilege of voting .because• .anc
teers,. or anired by Capt. Edgeworth
ideal; conditions. Where that is not,
obtainable ice will be necessary , to get
' the riailk primerly coolod. In that cate
the milk should be sufficiently stirred
tvhile cooling to • hring he: cool milk
fi0onr t•he ontside'of the can to the een-
• tre.. and so facilitate the ropid cooling
: of the milk with a minimum of . expo-
• sure t he air, Milk for .1aotory work
thoold he . cooled to a; teniperature at
least. lielow 70 degrees, In 00 degrees if.
• tiossible, Where tlie milk is „pajd. for
. hy the fat cont ems the ()weer is assor
Oil of better and more uniform tests if •
. ir will stir 1148 milk and keep the
P.ARTNIENT OF AGE RAJ fit IIR,E'
c0rerim from rising. , • •
,Repairing ptoonytly attended to. `WILL DUPLEO..1.TIII PRIZES.
: The Him, Syritiet• eiitii,„,11tinister of
RUMBALL and MeMATH 4orionitot#,. has itothorized the live
stock cominienioner to announce that
nny. 'Canadian: who ethibits '.horses,
'Eforon St., Olin ton. oat sheep, swipe, or pito) try•tit the '
'St.:Louts ExpOsittom Will re ee 488 'snob
tetvices as are 'granted to ealtibitors in
:OLD TIME COFFEE. other classesantal in adrift ion 4148 JIYi-
ontrtmeet of Agriculture will .pay to
pressing the outbreak. The Burn tot- .
------------ litat.y. equipment of each claimed by Trimley, a small village. • . _ • storripeLitions for which he enters...The
est happiness of all the people who . .
make that country their home." • in Suffolk: Li the one churchyard.- of• • An old cookbook, -publiehed hi -1002;
'Member ofsthis company consisted of • • • - • 10 • ••L tl • h
items 1011 au tonties ove asked that
They had been taunted with bein,g • the paris,h two churches are to • be gives What is perhaps the first EngliSh i tw aommiesiciner of Exolition51 8,14511
shopkeepers like the Dutch, but they seen ' • Service is conducted three' recipe for coffee. The recipe reads.; . .
a rotteket, an Indian blanket and a eountersign Sir efidorse the cer•tificates
, •Glengarry cap. . Nevertheless, they ,
times •a week in each of these church- To make the drink that IS nor. of registration of Torte bred stock All
I were soldiers also, like. the --French
were tnsbued with a spirit of sturdy ... . • . •
r and combined military and (roomer- es, ,at the same hour. .. much used, called Coffee: • ' eh tries or implications for space for
o eat geniusa They must never permit • eThe coffee berries•are to be bought :. 1 tensetritkItnellizi.loceogilitsainendertrittre
loyalty to the established order , of
I competence, ignoranCe, or neglig- tilieruglitrwtiitelieha•sftrboeuble.''
en a member of ,It stretches..650 feet:1)01.0w the sur- '
round at Hamilton. lis Hampshire. '
lite deepest well in England .• re • ao ci T k . curtithifili(1111(Itisi:.r.tu, 4B410,d,s..ing . ..0ipositioti
fl e what:quantity yeti please, s, , , sa ,. . .0
affairs; . and did yeoman Service'
i the Empire to be impaired by in- t any druggist's, ahout 7 shillings the
once. half -wear P un '
and over a charcord ilre in an old fry- •• Yours very trtily, •
• the board Of Managers of . 'Khoo face of the earth... • About ,
a Presbyterian Church for years. down this well -shaft .is a subway,
Language the otheoPillar. • ing pan keep them always stirring un- W. A Clertiorot .
Tire other pillar of the Empire wai three miles' in tength, .
til they be quite black, and -when you .• ' Palaissit ion Clerk.,
language. If the great Empire is to . • lite. Tibia:Knew: ' h t •of the arish church
leaven the world she must have a A visitor to Toronto last. week was -.owerin Dieknoller, Somersetiatire, crack One with your. teeth that it is
_ , ---s-
language and speech to express all, Mr,' James Doyle, soxne time private is a yew tree, now .5 feet high, and Week within as It le without, yet If ,....,,,,. ...,
1--M
the noble thoughts laid up in her secretary • th •President McKinley, still growing in a hardy' fashion, • It ,you exeeed, then do not waste tae I Open Doo
bosom. It had gradually built itself ' alio now united states Consul at is gestetallY believed that the tree Oyl, and if less, then will it not de. ==.74 ..... r
owes its origin to ri, Seed droPped bY liver its Oyl, and if you should con- . - .
up into the greatest tongue in 'the Liverpool, Mr. Botrle is an old To- •
vantages of its predecessors and all a printer on The Mail. He is not - Perhaps the most splendidly decor- make Ito coffee, 13Ut only give yell its seek ingt business opt,ort, jai t I d
the milk and cream of its contem- noted for suavity, and he had an 'ated church in the Kingdom is that •
Balt Beat end forte through a laWn -
poraries. Telegraphers saved 25 per endounter with Mr. Horace Tibbs, of Whitley Court,. Woacestershire. It toeee... . .
IN THE NORTHWEST
aunt. in using English. The Anglo- "Take Clear water and boil. one third .
Saxon globe-trotter had carried it chief clerk of the King Edward, who irely constrcted of, white
portseases that quality in large rotes- Marble; the ----------- are chastely carved,
where. English was not spoken. "the village greeri at Meriden; in fee and boil it gently one Wont and able location
Fifth in rank at the beginning of the station on that , day; for he re-
membered Toronto of old. Mr. at ' • , h 0 i bare strew
was Tibbs. assured him that the luggage cross', which is 'opposed to mark the
the last century, tho language s
It was the tongue of Shakespoate would be 55111 to the depot on time, central point pi England.
first at the beginning of this:
and Milton, and of the gloriotis lit- and, On, Mr. Boyle's fourth or fifth •
Oration -and his reassuranee-Mr, Italie Activity in 1411ovOrs. Of the Disearas called Cronleal."*--
world to -day. It had all the ad- rontonian, having been at one Aline a bird. • tinue lire till it be white it Will then to prosperity Offered those
ure. Mr. Boyle Wile in a great state and the pulpit is of genuine. Cairrara Of lt tuition and it is tit for use. "Take • :s.,th
The smell tradesman, the inershollt•
elle& field of in vestinent, '
fifty hotels had stayed tit only one of mind Mat, Sunday as to whether marble„.richly panelled with coetlY tine quart of this prepared water, put '
he could get hie baggage dilly sent to it in one ounce of your prepared cef- i I he capitalist ran natured ly find a suit- I
Into the corners of the earth, Tho
Bishop had traveled himself and in
stooini • • •
It is. for your. use. Drink. ;one guar. : FOR 4 .intStItiEss. 'OPENING !
ter of a pint as hot as you can sip it., I in the eitiesend towns aleng the line
It doth abate the fury and. sharpness. and tribulary to I be •
of the Acrimony, 'which la the gender" ' GREAT NORTHERN. RA ILWA Y. "
. ribbs remarked,. in all inneeenco. ' A French :scientist has discovered ,Bostcni COoking School Magazine. . S8ql(1 2 emits in stamps tor "Busitess
was the speech or Tennyson, and a Openirigia" a deSrliptiVe patio illet of
erature of the age of Queen Arme. Xt ..•
though it might provoke tr emile, the • the nosiness opportunities or the Nor -
The Most difficult folks on earth to evidence of radio . actiVity in the
deal With ere Government officials," petals , Of, several perfume beariog • —.--------------a----a— • taws/O. Fop flu I her i 1, foi.o, a mon ad.
""'whyr° said /Idyl°, "I hapPen to flowiera; * ' Whorl geraniunts or Vert • . . - : dress erly agt•nt of the GI eat Mirth ei ri
language of Kipling, who not only -
warbled the ballads of Tommy be a Ooverement official myself."
ous communion arid Worshipful itta 131)/33.-"rrar°a° /la"' interrupted, the Metal . at once dies, with Lame Back ..i„,„,, il kit. jinni, Minn.
Recessional, bringing us into glori:-
knoteledgment of the geoat God Of . . • : .. plays signs of strange actiVity and -....ots.e. General .Inalnigt etilli.
all.
Badly .Cripple•
kins, but gave us the incomparable :"No amendnientst" answered. -Mr. which an electric otrrent has boon • ItailWat or add rose.: :
bones. are placed near selenium with
_
*here treehtene 6„,;11:0 joewho becomes sax electric Conductor., These
Ile exhorted them to Ilse that Ian-. It is solid that a Moder of fashion rays hove bd N r
een astilioill'.
gunge with due sense of its • groat- Was ohesr driving in the park when her Mord to /Wove In floosie..
oeSe, and to speak no blasphemous, hat was blown off. The earriage wheele.. An American wished to move from
Medea impure, unbt.otheriv or die» paeoing over it made it a fearful and the Hotel Europe, the principal hotel
loyal word. • wonderful shape but ao the wearer in St. Petersburg to• a smaller hotel
, •
Ho eoncluded with the hope that
"Peace and happiness, trath and ft
illead to defy critielsIxt she put around the cooter. tte tame down
justice, religion and piety, las the T-
It on And calmly continued her drior
ve.
he net week dozens of hats exactly With his bag peeked ready to go. • *l-
ry," said the manager, "but you earo
benediction of oa all."
' ' like the damaged ono appeared. This not leave this hotel or : register at an.
A Popular terror.
story may be .true, but it soonds like other hotel until we' get your passport
Mr. Austen Chamberlain is moo.=
a mere' malicious, masculine Moen- trom the police, and that will take a
larly supposed to be in aPlloarttnce .
almost the duplicate of his father. tion, -London Woman, day and a night. Itou must go through
As a matter of fact, theta itt Very'
exactly the same procedure aa if you
little facial reseroblairce Wren A leintoiltier. Were leaving the country," -World's
thorn, and in physique they tree quite tfaud-Ien't the mu you are ell- Work,
unlike. (J he Chancellor' of the Ex. moo to a apeconstoes
chequer it most peoniinent feature la claro_olo, wooedl nets a moulder, •• • ' Ittendlnir Ainforts ..
not the nose, as in the One 01 Chatt14. 'To end amber requires a certain
bertain pore, but thq oyes, which are (4( 11 do ritt1 knOW?"
didti't buy the ehageMent ring M
amount of care, though the proeess is a
e ar
blue and With the priaglinence 'Which „ eitople one, Apply some linseed oil to
sometimee, but not always, denotes until aftettli had accepted him, ,
the broken edges, told then hold the
,.. . .. .,
characteriotie, physieal or aequired, Hate you a friend who &see Well and t
of th nibe meanwhile with a
oloqttertee of !mooch, Almoot the only oiled note over a gag jet, covering the
which father mud *on have in corn- with whom you ocenolonally Mut fttult
Mon, 14 an eyeglasoi, Worar eotistatitly because lie doeenrt do better/ This is cloth, A* 00Ork Ste the oiled parts be -
in the walk. Their townie!. of spook* Atchison mob., edge* Width are tO he United together
1 f ft
In the right eye, and a slight delve Oticky with the heat press the
the Illeafteitt Meatiness! in the world.—
Ott 14 PrtntrypOintri ..t1 dr owls
0
sad hold theill TerY Careftllitt till 011
V
_ 111111•11,..1 1.11I
Was almost used up volth
kidney disease, but cure
came With the use of
Dr. Chase's kidney.
Liver Pills.
Ptroos D'Astous, Farmer, St, Made.
kisnouski Co., Qum, writes: -"For several
years I was troubled with a weak, lame, aching
back, and lard iterate so crippled that I could
about used- up at MAY:tete, noYnefsda;ria
scarcely lift anything at all. I also had pins In
the arms and legs and began to consider myself
grtceived o
book describing kidney
disease and ite symptoms
and found but the nature
of nny ailment. I began
using De Oases Kidney»,
Liver Pills and noticed a
mar k d improvement
when the fittt box WaS
finished, I continued to
use them from time to
time rad to.dity I am real,
well, entirely cured Of
beekethe a d kidneys
tr " Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pint, ono
MN. WASTOttli pill it dote. 95 MOS a
box. To proteet you agolnst Imitations the
pottofit and signature of Mt A. NV. Clouse, the
&Meet receipt book author, Ott On etott bto4
Ageot,220S;Clor k St, (locust RI 2to
NOBLE ANDORANITE
R,attertbaryStreet Works
Hired lin porters. Wm km an»
'0* -1 Materiel guaranteed.
J. O. SALE & Co,
Jnue 23rd 1004
R NEW KRIEL
Orrrr.1.40M140.0.-rfrOrrrrNrrorrrr
•
,r11•1111.
YO NG
TRUST
x Charles Garvice
author of "A Modern
Juliet," "Better Than
Life," "Once in a Life"
began in a recent issue o
The News -Record, It is.
e of' the best we have
yet published, the inter-
est aroused in the opea,
.••
ing chapter being sus-
tained until "The End."
eo04444.44.044.0•04410.40 ,
n't fliss T
Chapters
*44444 lot**************
75 cents will pay a sub-
scription to The News -
Record and the Family
Herald and Weekly Star
to Jan It, 1905.
ONLY
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eorsatolesertelttallsteltsieleterkostalttalliefalste‘aoseserestesesestaltalittate•
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