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The Clinton News-Record, 1904-12-15, Page 8la 7 :t2, ;77'7 -7..-77-44 477x. R T x'x T yap 'r•Ya • The Clinton News -Record zi ENGLAND'S PATRON mut.' • ....,..,_ _. .,,.�.•.-, riot lief; .aper, nein!: ,'VronT 1 Mini* lnebbe. %Ade goat Spun. Pauline, TO late Wes'sera I.I. Palestine and Weir ' 1 MADNESS OF THE DESERT. between .. . ; Moe slry, hal hal What vor 'pile Belseseed In mIR. married, Gottlieb, hey? Nein, nein!" ' St. George, the patrcei saint of Eng- • • pine crashed iri lass fees.. land, was :born at Lydda, but brought Threatened Gottlieb; "Peri„ I 'marry up In Cappadocia, He was a tribune. r A l♦lbw~ S RI1I, . C Katrina," - In the reign of Diocletian and, items Stool Copyright,1903. b ! T. O. McClure "Katrina, heel" sneered I'atrlinn With IR clumsy shale. "Ach, vel sire marrf, you, Gottlieb, She loomp at you. Yell. ask at her!" 14 man of great courage, wai a favorite, but aS he .complained to the emperor • of his severities toward the Christians and argued in their defense he wee, Illfaot of the Monotony of Silence • 'Sport Monism Hokum. ' "The silence of the desert has a road- t.ening etfeet upon the" human brain," Wild. a traveler whose experiences are -not often paralleled. "Monotony is More severe them anything else ,deriv- , ing its entire pain from mental effect. 1 Oil m sighed theThe monotony of silence ie worse than "" , y!" Widow . Stab!, Himmel! A few moments later, al 1►ut in prison and beheaded April 28, ' a4y ether kind. for the widow was In the threes of a ! listened to the slow, lrncertain :802. St .Terome mentions him in one ; "Take a Man away from the bum of dile lama, She had lover two of then, Obt ftle of Iia heavy feet trailing down of his "Martyrologies," and in the fol.• the work of melt and send slim out on 4 . 4, the alkali deserts, and the deep silence and for both Ohs entertained a mss}sure+ wooden stair, the widow wavered. lowing century there ^ were many ; Should ehe recall him, bey? Ach, nein! churches named to his honor. In re- becomes awful and is sometimes un- er affection and respect, In the !Al- He had • Seen the ad, about her oncle • beargbie. All at . once, without any ance she had weighed them and found geld 'tonin • connection with he Order in the paper. His was a sordid, atom- Ashmole, in his "History of the Order previous symptom, some member of neither wanting, Tip, up went .Gott ash loofe, ehust the thing for the of the Garter," Saye that King Arthur' the party may stop; suddenly, with a lieb, down went Hans. 'Tip, up went . epineter Katrina, For her, Pauline, der in. the sixth century placed the picture ' dazed look ee bin lace and a wild ex' Hans, down went Gottlieb. Tip, steady; 'vas still the handsome Hane, dree hon- of st. George on his banners, and: pression in bis eye' He Is dangerous. ounce to ounce they weighed and hung. Bred acme, and a vernal Selden tells us he was patron saint of ; Hie reason le torn in wild Confusion. would may them. • . nt. passed. The tour ineertions England in a Saxon times. • Anything or .anybody familiar infuri- ates Avery hair w ld s y Amo I p him. "Ach, dey both be goot vor husbands,' - petered out. Hans must have• seen It is quite certain that the council; and bound at Vich beat, bey? I don't knew new," .theme one at least; every farmer read. of Oxford in 1222 commanded his fes He must be disarmed .. she mused, "Gottlieb, he haat a varm, the Western Prairie news, Still Hans tival to be observed in England as a' onee or he will deal death to the whole dree bemired acres, two horse, som" did not come. His customary week holiday of lesser rank, and in 1830 he • party. He is possessed of 'desert mad - cow, som' pig, an' he work hard;;he, end visits, even, he omitted, and no was adopted as the patron of the Or- Hess; brought on by the monotony of ' plow so much. Ach, but Hans, he. haaf letter, no explanation, nothing. .He ; der of the Garter: The dragon slain silence: He suffers excruciating men- * • dat muck, too, alretty, an' he - York 'must be sick, declared, the widow.' : by St, George is simply a common al -a tal anguish. He • needs to be relieved harder; be plow so inucli as Gottlieb. 'Two writhe passed. legory to express the triumph of the by: being brought'.back to his aeeus- Eider vood do, Oh, 'my'V' And again -tomed surroundings.. Yab, Haze vas sick! She would Christian here over evil, which Sohn "On• this account men used to the i the widow sighed. • make some soup, and she would go to ' the Evangelist beheld under the im desert refuse to go o• ut with those with Now, of the well matched rivals hard•. him Since. he could not come to •her.• age of the dragon."* „ 'whom they are well acquainted. The Working Hane was the younger and So, • armed with a pail of Gottlieb s Gibbon, in bis Decline and Fall, mad man.is not eal ted. e i the handsomer, but Gottlieb, if he was delight, she Sought the baa!'ful bitch; asserts that the patron paint of Eng- If there k likelynMendtoa ae the • older and of coarser fiber,' was more . slur In his den. • land was George of C3appadoela, the • ardent, more noticing of .the small She found him robust, quite cheery, turbulent Arian bishop of Alexandria, party his. madness is likely to' assert things so dear to a woman's soul, and 'and smoking a corncob pipe. but the character of this assertion has itself' in running rather than in fight if neither had popped the momentous "Mg you rascal!" she cried playful-. been fully disproved by Papebroch, ins. It is a fearful disease not .yet un - question, right cunningly had Gottlieb ly. "What vor you vrighten me? What Milner and others.—Plxchange. derstood.'•'• approached it. Yah, yah, much nearer .vor you stay away vrom Pauline?"• than Hans had ever dared to go. Replied Hans, rudely puffing an eye • ARTIST AND ARTISAN • FEMININE LANGUAGE. "Pauline," one day he had ventured smarting cloud past' the olive tinted with a grie..all- over his vacuous face, tate so near his own: "Your oncle, out "you make ride goot soup. Eferey day ov respec' vor Neem, I atay'away." I vash I ged mine dinner vrom you." - Tip, up went Hans. • • "Dat vas near, ver' near, vas it not? Himmel! Such sweet consideration! Ach, bud. Bans' Hans vas chest so . ""Ya -as, .ya-as," stammered Pauline,'. awvul handsome, too, te-he-hel" 'snip- a 'series of tiny gulps .impeding her gered the widow, and certainly, in the 'usually glib response, "I—I— vas a -a - sheepish glances, the frequent vise- mournia , eh, ell, bud, Hang," She mur- like pressures of his horny hand, in his inured, seating her fiat, ungraceful flg- own dumb way Hans told an equally , ure close beside him on the settle and flattering tale.searching. bis stolid face for a tender • "Ha, bud chust so -Val .I might be gleam, "y -you syntbathize,, you loofe..: carevul. Von . nefer knows," argued me, bey?" • the widow. Hans rnovedraway.. Truly for this caution the widow •"Nein, nein!" he muttered' roughly. - had good cause. Before marriage the ""1 haaf change my mind, Pauline.. late Herr Stahl, like the present suit- ' ...Me- Oncle Charles : I .never' tell you ' ors,'had been weighed in the balance so before -he own der Western Farm.- and arre=and found "not wanting," After mar- er,: yah!.'Und you, Pauline, von'dollar riage a long, long, practical sermon he 'you ,pay mine ,oncle vor you're• Stud - had preached, the text of which had part uncle's ad. 'Look out, Hans, look been "the waste of precious love." out!' mine Oncle,Charles say.Ali, ha! 'And now: "Loofe, loote! Oh, no; ;o13;• your oncle'iss not' died, Pauline. Ven no!" sneered. the widow. "Mit .such •I see your ad. I write to hemp, Mine rings as dat I haat netting more to do! Nein, nein'" ' For her , man, . Gottlieb or Hans, whichever won her hand, she' •would' vash close, make ride goot soup, clean house and do chest so val as she 'could. Bud loofe—nein, .nein' . ' In a grinding matrimonial mail, to be sure, the widow had been flattened. Not so Gottlieb, riot so. Hans, , and she- forgot that, while to them the prated - cal side of the contract'must have its roseate hues, the loofe 'side still would be the rosier. Such was the ease. For the tender feminine signs which never came each bashful loyer had Waited long, and at last: "Ach, chust se vale I wait som' longer. Von nefer knows; von nefer knows," each argued fn his turn. Now, to her name the Widow'Stahl, had nothing—no horse, no cow,'no pig, no dot. But, worstof all, the marriage mangle had squeezed `from her that subtle coquetry, the magnet of her sex, and, try as she might to extract 'a pro- posal from her cooling . swains, they returned only sheepish ' looks, hand claps and. praise for culinary, skill. O'hone, what was the matter? The widow steeped her brains. "Ach, Gott, the sordid lions!" It was dowry they were after. To vash close, to make ride goot soup, to clean house, to do chest so val as a woman. can, was not enough for them—ash, nein! At last she understood. In the old country the widow had an' oncle. Seventy years of agewas ;the onele, and at seventy oncles 'sometimes die. To Gottlieb and to Hans of that oncle she had often spoken -yah, yah! Eight thousand dollars she believed he e had amassed. Ah, if in loots Pauline was weak in strategy she was strong!'' Mine Gott, she had a. scheme! Iv the widow of • the late Auguste Stahl• mit the ondersigned vi11 correspond, of som't'ing greatly to her advantage: she will hear. In Stuttgart her aged oncle, haat died. Four insertions such as that HI he Western Prairie Farmer, and Pauline i could take her choice. ' Hans? Meblie. Gottlieb? Mebbe. Ach, cheat ilo'•val she might be carevul.. The lest sordid she would choose, . * • • ,• * • • "Hey?" mused Gottlieb, two weeks later, when his gray greeneyesde- voured four closely printed lines . in the personal of the Western Prairie. Farmer. "Hey, Stuttgart? .Dat might be Pauline's oncle mit the comvortable vortune. Pauline, ba! she vash.' close; she make ride goot soup. Vy not ged mine dinner by her eferey day? 1 can chest so val pay vor two, den. Ihaaf more time to' work; Hey, vy not? tied —und to Sana, 'dat leetle mortgage I could pay. Hey, vy not?" So to the widow hastened Gottlieb. "Pauline," in a cold sweat he rambled, his bony fingers clinching and un - clinching at a crackling hayseed hat, "I—I—loofe you. I.1-haaf a varm, dree hondred acres,' two horse, som' cow, som' pig.. You: you haat not ting•-notting at a11, Pauline, no varm, no. husband. YOU pas a relit; but 'Y loofa you, Pauline,. lI loofe you. You vash de close, ged dinner, clean house, I1[ plow, t-vork in de wield, Ve better ged married, hes'?" It was a mighty effort for. the wooer, but it did not please the wooed. "Hey. So I vac a relic, was I, Gottlieb? 'What vor you !Dote relics? Dem only in. tereatin'. , &ob, vrom„the,heart',you. do Read the Xmas ads, , oracle, he so` advise. Your oncle,he re- ply;.1 haaf -not died. .I haaf potting to her advantage, neinl' Hees •letter I. viii read," concluded, Hans. • "Hey l,• .Huh! A letter! Y -your on clef- M -mine cadet,: -Hey!" stuttered the astonished strategist, tilting back n her ward 'on seat: "-- : Y -yeas,,, and, disgusted, -Haps arose. Crash! - The widow. -was between two stools. - • . In a, Village. Russian Vill e. '. As a rule.a Russian village is a' for - born looking place, wherei,the 'huts of. the .poor are made of birch logs, with Upright oak or pine supports, ceilings of strips of the same birch and walls - lined •with the . crude branches. Li these : huts there are only two rooms, one of which is riot for everyday, use, but is kept for best occasions. This room houses those sacred images.: so dear to .the heart '.of every member; of the Greek church, -to which belong the What It Ie That Measures the MIN formica Bet'veen Them. "My son is going to be an artist,"' bald a proud father. "He does not need to study a lot of • scientific rub- bish." . . ; ' • . Perhaps this lather does not know, that what he. calls "scientific. rubbish” • 'measures the difference between the artisan and an 'artist, the difference' between the common and the superb, `between mediocrity and excellence. It, was what this 'man called "scientific rubbish" .which made the difference between the works of Michael 'Angelo. and those of a himdred other artists of his day who have gone into oblivien. It was this "scientific rubbish" -study- - ing, anatomy : for a dozen.yeare—that gave immortality to the • .statues •.of Moses and David and to bis paintings the "Last: Judgment" and "The Story of Creation., . . Many an artist of ' real ability. ,bad failed to produceany greet 'work of art because; of his ignorance -of. just Bitch "ecientific, rubbish," . Of what good is an artistic tereperantent..'or , genius to - '.the sculptor who does nqknow the' origin, the insertion I and the contour of the various muscles, who 'is not i thoroughly hl familiar with h the' human anatomy? Michael Angelo thought It worth while .to spend a great deal of. time 'upon: the, anatomy of a horse ,and upon abstruse mathematics. great massof the Russian people. The other room servesthe purpose of both kitchen and sleeping Morn, aa one of the principal ideas of comfort to these' people, ice and snow bound for eo many months of , the year; is warmth. In. many of the peasant Mita no beds are used, and the top: of a greatStove, reaehing nearly, to tlid roof, is a. much sought sleeping place.'. Although the. conditions make dirt and the aceom- panying'results •inseparable in thedo- mestic lite: of these peasants, they are. devotedly • eond. of bathing.• The vapor bath, in a crude 'term may be celled a national institution, and a not Menem] picture of a summer afternoon is the village pond ,filled with • women and children .bathers. --Social Service. • • '• , Irish Nomenclature. Irish names have often a knack of being frankly pugnacious, so that even a peaceful lord chief justice has had to bear the inciting to murder sobriquet of Kiilowen. But the mountains from Lismore: to 'Clogheen, known no the Knockmealdown range, . are capable of en entirely pacific interpretation, •tor• we commonly say we •are knocked down . all. in a heap by this or that whichtakes usby surprise, and these mountains surprise all by their beauty, There is 'no lovelier 'sight in Ireland, and if an 'air of melancholy prevails it. is because the Scene is "somehow sad by excess of serenity," to use, a. phrase • of Henry James it would be difficult to better. -London Chronicle, An £Hagfish Critioiem• of .the Ifs* of • Words by Women. , You may, talk to a woman for an hour or ,moreand understand' every 'word. she says. Meat, bread, money, motor cars, drains, the ace of trumps= -there is. really • no . space at my disposal to • give` a list of the words ' that are cont,- mon to both languages.' In • fact, most et the solid, concrete, things of Life may: be lett out of the question. It 'Is when we pass beyond the concrete that the real misunderstanding arises. -,Take a couple of very common 'words used equally Ay both. sexes. A man will say that So-and-so' is a "nice" girl. I should know what he meant. A. woman will reply .that the girl is. pretty, agreeable and all, that sort of thing, but that she.. is "not quite nice." • The'two are using' the same word to express different ' ideas, and they will never agree'as-to whether that girl is nice, or otherwise • until they .can talk the seme',language.• • '. Again in the feminine dictionary the. opposite. of "nice" Is. "horrid."'• A man will talk of 'a.: "nice scoundrel" :and. a "horrid ;bore," and I can understand ' him. But when a'woman tells me -that. a .man is wealthy and clever and good looking -"but I'm sure: he's horrid"— 'she: has dropped into her .foreign lan- ere thathe n•onl •b 1; ua e. T ca e g g y. s 'does not mean what I. m'ean', when I speak of a "horrid girl."—London Out, look, • ' • The Nanme Tibet. • Many forms -'of the name Tibet sprang. from the Chinese T'ubar (fifth century) through the variations of Tuebet, To- poet,. Thibet.(1166), Tebet. (1298), to TI bet (1730), The. origln of the name has been variously. aecounted for, but the weight of historical evidence•indicates: that the word is derived from Tubat,, a famous family name proper to'several,. ancient Tartar. dynasties, ,extensively used in the sense of "chi'ef.." Hodgson asserts that before.'the ar- - ' '...:Yea's;nidn'fCount ' ' Napoleon in 'the course of his Italian • campaign took* a • Hungarian battalion prisoners.' The -colonel, •an old man, complained. bitterly . of . ` the French mode of fighting, by rapid: and desul- tory attacks on the flank, the rear, the . lines of communication, 'etc„ conclud- big by saying that he fought in the army of Maria Theresa. "You must be old," said Napoleon; • "Yes, .I UM either: sixty or 'seventy,'": Was the re,- Ply-' "Whys colonel,"' .remarked the Cor - steam,: "you have certainly. lived .long enoughto know ,how to count years a little more, closely." "General," said the. Hungarian, "I reckon my money, my shirts' and my horses, but as for my • years' I., know that, nobody will want to..steel them and that I shall never 'lose one of them." '. mew Do YOT Aeeroneh:!a Diffienity? It makes great ;difference how you approach a difficulty. Obstacles are. like wild animals. They are cowards, but they' will Weft you if they Can. If they see you are afraid o! them, if you stand and :hesitate, if you take your • eye from theirs, they are liable to spring upon you, but if you do not `slinch;'if you look.them. squarely in the eye, : they will slink out of sight. 'So. difficulties flee before absolute fearless- ness, though they are 'very real •and formidable -to the timid and'hesitating and grow larger and. larger and more ,• formidable with vacillatingg contempla- fion.—prison Swett 'garden,' in ' Sue- • cess. Beltimos' Appetites. The Eskimos have enormous appe= tithe. An arctic; explorer relates that • he saw a boy eatten pounds of solid food. ,und drink a gallon 'and a half of ' liquid with much gueto. This • same explorer observed an. adult eat ten pounds of meat and two candles .at a meal. Sir P. Phillips 'tells how a lad of seventeen years ate twenty-four pounds of.beef in twenty-four hours. Analogies. t"I understand your friend ,7enkins has resigned thai6 city clerkship be held." "Resigned? Veil" • "Oh, wasn't it voluntary?" "Well, it Was juat'all voluntar7,as his contributions to the campaign' fund were.". ••The News -Record gives the news of you a 1�ewS- HUron, Are y Record St.bserlher? Record brings good results. • A Legend of .t.aee. • 'According to Melchior de Vogue, the '' legend of lace is as follows: A..Vene- tian sailor gave .bus ladylove a' frond of • 'spreading ..Aeaweed to keep him in memory while at sea. But the girl found that the seaweed' was rapidly drying up• and disappearing, So she caught the fine branches and leaves of the 'plant withthread against a piece of linen and, working on, with her thoughts following her lover, invented lace. Must HaVe Outgrown It. She (11:80 a• m,) -7 -Do you know any- thing . He 'thing about baiteba11 , M. Borem? H --Yes, .indeed! 1[ was considered the. best amateur shortstop in the country a few years ago, lehe—Well, I never ;wouldhave thought it. Changed Their Made. "I understand you were going to call bn Miss Pert thin afternoon." "We changed our minds," "What caused you to do that?" • . . "'Why" we learned at the last moment That she Wad at home." • Everybody exelaimd against ingrati- tude. Are there so many; benefactorp? rival of Indian teachers the people had no name for themselves or their land, and, though, the present name. Is not, as some • say, unknown in:• the country it- self, the ; mpdern •Tibetans. call them- 'selves Bod-pa and their land Bod-yul, Bod :being a Buddhist appelletive sug- gested'by the.Sanskrit b'•ot, or bat,: eo -working back to the .Tartar., game.— ,London j3pectator Heart -In the 'Hall "You don't know enough. •to stay in when It.raftis," derisively said_the cane: to the umbrella. . "Look here,"' retorted the umbrella, . "!such • bluffs from a• mere stick like yon. don't go with • me., My motto is 'Put alp orshut up' every time." - The Main .Question. First Artist -We must go te.'na inature !torour subjects. Second .Artist-eOb, • that's 'easy, but where in thunder are • we to go for, our customers?. ' • FOOD VALUE OF MILK. .•'- Its ' Katritive Snbstaneep,' Ali et • Which Are Digestible. `• ' In certain sicknesses; says ascientlst,. such as typhoid, life may depend: on milk, Which may not Only postpone the final issue in ceatain kinds of senile .de- reay, but may •contribute to the stability of vigor in maturity. • While the food value of milk is gen- erally recognized, there is a popular ig- norance of the exact nature ofits •nu- tritive properties. If a gallon of water 3s boiled long enough it is lost in steam. Milk einiilarly boiled leaves a solld res- idue weighing from twenty to twenty- three ounces. This substance chiefly consists of sugar, fat, the fat of butter, Casein -a material with feeding prop- ertiee resembling.thoge of the white, of egg, of the lean of meat and the gluten of wheat and certain mineral sub- 'stances which re essential in the Man- lefacture of th :bones arid teeth. Un- like almost all ther foods, these milk substances are ail digestible, and, what Is more, they exist in almost precisely correct proportion to each other. The once famous analyst Letheby • - demonstrated that whereas 100 ponnds of. quite lean beef without bone con- tained seventy-two pounds of water and twent .elgbt• pounds of feeding matter -not all of which is digestive -- 106 pounds cif good milk contained V:4111601 pounds of feeding matter—all digestible, An 'advertisement • in The News- A W*tave Itertatiten, to the sympathetic vagarie. of+ Watches a eorrespondent writhe: "I die. covered some years ago that /4 was the metal buckle of my braces that eaused the irregularities of lay own particular watch. l` therefore now make a rule of putting my speetacle ease en the in- side of my watch pocket, thus cutting off the connection." — tondon Ohroni• ate. Mutgs* Sipe. Tom—What Heade you give me away ao when I was telling That yarn at the dinner table? Dick—I didn't mean to; it was only a alip of the tongue. But that's no reason why you should have. kicked me 80 hard! Tom.—Oh, I didn't mean to—it was only a slip of the foot. Ingratitude is a form of weakness, I have never known a man of real abii• Mx.to be ungrateful. h+-..••+P•-..--r-!•w.•..xP!.•.•..•., • .. 7777 .•.. December 115th 1y1)4 THE NEWS-REOORD To the end, of 190 ":, FREE And to the77,77.- end. .. of ..05 fO r -• ~ i - C) (D w�w_.e__ •f •Lm4wr ftaurcxcr •.•-,•Sp,.y,,fAcf, a}1w . •♦••••••♦♦••1•N•♦.•♦♦•N•0<••N N♦!{••1••♦•1•♦N�♦♦•♦♦♦•� .•• � •Y♦N••♦•N••1•N•1••N�♦ISN•N•♦b•♦1•H•N•1f•1♦•N•N•N•N•N•�E•.♦f ♦♦♦ 1j1 ♦,,•♦�11� ♦♦••♦•♦•H♦..♦. ��.•,1•• • •Y •N••• •�♦•,•♦1 ••♦•••• ••••. . ... .•.N♦N♦♦♦•N.4•♦♦1•••.•►♦•1.N♦!♦♦••♦N : t• • Di •2� 1111 You Help It• ? •_:;: z s 44 •:.1• -Q •..r �J A M b•.j. THE HOSPITAL FOR .:. �. Di 'mg..�...� .... ,_ .:M.---.�.-,�._.y.W_"•a...-- ,_,.4♦ , Vr i • SICK CHILDREN •t. a♦ x .• •• . .....t. :.j. A i ♦• •j• For it Cares for Every Sick Cll!!d in Ontario • whose Parents ' Cannot Afford to Pay For ,Treatment, ' ♦,• :' _. ':♦ • ♦. ▪ � .. j• ...w...�.....,...,...w.. .-..,.... .,A..- . memo. a.. -.. _«.. .j• A • • • :_•: - The follow 'ln are our • :z• :_: 4 • ❖ t clubbing rates for the ba,ia n- :j: The Hospital •for Sick Children, College street, Toronto, appeals to the fathers and mothers of Ontario for funds to maintain the thousand. sick children that it nurses within its walls every. year. ' The Hospital'is not a local institution -- but Provincial. • The sick child Froin any. place in .Ontario who can't afford to ' pay has the Bathe privi- leges 'as:_thd . child living in -Toronto and is treated free. The Hospital 'hail last year in its beds and cot& 761 patients, 267of these were :.' from -d96 places out- side of Toronto. Tho cost is 98 cents • per 'patientper day, - � ' and there were: 1'29 sick little cries a. day "6oOn DAY, poc'ron,!in. the Hospital. Since its.founda• ` • tion , the : Hospital, has treated 10,371. Children -about 7,500 of these•were unableto: pay. and, p. wore treated ;free F ' .Every collar may L bo`the'tt'RI1S1M1ter of„i •, yourkind.thoughts a3'S into: the. Hospital • . 4 _ ki••E nd er deeh Y ..dsod Y ` tZt .tz' : s dol- ''.'.-''''1/4.'''''''......._..:.______:::. . Y ', ,toriend'in-Need to. ”. • suasion. Somebody's child. iNi,Let the money' of the strong be inere ' to the weak,' The %los itai :' a i out, divi•- P PY dends of health and happiness to suffer- ing . childhood • on every dollar that .i.; paid by the friends of little children. If :you know of. any sick child' ii1 -'• your: neighborhood 1:. who. is' sick or trip., (. , I pled or has Club �wA feet send '.the p, eiit's Hanle to the - _ Ilospltal.: "BHFi'8 KNIDi INQ" ..Seo the example of what can bo done for clubfoot children. •There. were 14 like oases last year and bun' dreds in 28 years. • _.•j•:ce of x.9®4 and x.905: co .j• •;' News -Record and :j:.:=.; .• : Mail and Em ���ire $1.80 •j:.:. .h •_• t :� •j• News_ Record.and F'am.- :j:. it . Herald and Week:- :' ly Star 1.85 .j♦ •O :..;. "News -Record and j•• Weekly Globe 1.75 +2 x._. •News -Record and ..• .• t. Weekly Sun 1.85 . :♦ •j.: News -Record and =•..j. Toronto News 1.90 X... .1. •_. 4. .... 1=.._:, • .•. •_•. .:i ♦ : _• ❖4. 3:2 ♦j• •;• •••* 4;., ••. •:. • • •� $IGTORR - AFTFR Plea,ae send contributions to 3. loos; Robertson, Chairman, or to Douglas David- son, Sec.-Treas., of The Hospital for Sick lJnt ! 4. •.X: �•, N♦.♦•••••••♦••.w♦ •••••.♦'♦•.H••N.•♦.�••.•♦••�•••••.♦•:•••••••7.N1{••♦••.••7•• �•♦♦••••7•♦i7•.•••.•,,e:•e...'.�,;a,'a,♦�... a�` .•N•.••♦r•.•♦•• ♦•♦••♦v.-�•• •:♦ �.,.a->-•7--7777. •Z♦•.`•♦♦•••N♦•♦♦•••••••••••••••N1N•••K•.:4 ♦ NN♦N•• ••• `t, t i •.N:iw•:•:N•N1:•••♦�":"• Chi dren,College Street, oro „v. To Non -Subscribers : Let's Have Your Subscription Now So That You May Get The •0@eiing Chaptets • 9,f Oar. New Story' f *6' 1..la'.alt.1 ALA, eat.pie.7YY.ALA tail.r4L-.91..♦u...A.J16,/1;e aa. a 1111111 1 1 News -Record and Toronto Star 1.85 • a Newvv es_R co • d an � Fanners' Advocate 2•,357 • News-Record,and • Weekly Free Press .' 1.85 News -Record and . Toronto World. • • 3.10 • ♦: •_♦ .••1❖ • o.• ... s 77 .7 • •i• ❖ i x.. Remit b • :postai gistered letter or re s It j 777 ;j• . . �♦ 7777 �.address ,. order �n�. •j� ♦ji A .. • New.•$ - 9 cord , Clinton. o, '1441'4 1111•1,1116 III I I 1111.14.,Si.-nix a .,.ry ,uo,or itaataii.uwra ►e Toronto Star A %DAILY ?APER. has ceased to'be a luxury and'is classed to -day 1Z as a necessity by most people. • There . are special reasons, however, why the raovnla Daily . Star has• become so exceptionally popular. ' The nitride' range of news it gives, the thoroughness of its reports and the catch,- style in which they are dealt 'with account for its popularity. • y" y \ independent s irit Its political. news is reported and dlsc�ssed in an.spirit. It gives .all markt and stock reports up to the close of the markets tin' the very day of publication. it publishes the events of the world on the day they occur. 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