Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 6 Aug 1908, p. 2

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IllOM ERlN’S GREEN ISLE NEWS BY MAIL FROM IRE- LAND’S SHORES. ._‘ Happenings in the Emerald Isle of Interest to Irish- men. The King has no intention of go- ing to Ireland this year. Good takes of salmon at all the stautioni alon that coast are re- ported from gkibbereen. A poor old woman who was found dead in bed in Dublin, was discov- ered to have boarded up over $3,- 500. The death is announced of Majorâ€" General Sir Thomas Maunsell, K. C B., ‘at Burghelere. near New- bury, at the age of 86. young woman named Muleahy, while driving cattle at Dungarvan, was attacked and seriously injur- ed by a donkey. Two brothers, Thomas and Willi- am Cullen, aged 17 and 15, respec- tively, were found drowned in a hog hole at Manor Moss. The death has occurred of Peter Scanlon, who was wounded in a re- cent shooting occurrence in Tyrone street, Dublin. A swarm of bees recently took possession of a wall letter box in the town of Killane, and were with difficulty dislodged. The stock of a cattle owner near .Tullinadaly consisting of 225 sheep and 14 head of cattle were recently driven from his lands. The death is announced of Mr. Michael J. Lawler, of Newtownbur~ 'ry, who was widely known in the Counties of Wexford, Wicklow, and Dublin. Because milk contractors refused to supply milk for the Limerick Board of Guardians, at a low price, the master gave the paupers porter as a substitute. Elizabeth Doherty, in custody in Belfast on the charge of poisoning her husband and daughter at Kirk~ bill, will not be tried until further evidemce is obtained. Thomas O’Loughlen, convicted of .the shooting of Mr. Daniel O’Loughlen, county councillor, near Lisdoonvarna, was sentenced to three years penal servitude. Walking in his sleep, Private Far» rell, of the Connaught Rangers, stepped through a window at his quarters in the Tipperary Barracks and was instantly killed. Two shots were fired at a Boss lare express as it was running be- tween Rosslare and Waterford, the bullets entering a firstâ€"class break- fast car and passing close to a pas- senger’s ear. Miss Elizabeth Nerie. an elderly woman living alone with a maid servant on a small farm at Drum- allan, Co. Derry, was attacked by hoodlums and her house completly wrecked. The Dublin Sailors’ Home has been unusually full during the greater part of the past month, ow- ing to an unusual number of ar- rivals of grain-laden ships from abroad. Registrations numbered 140. A farm laborer, William Butler, who was under remand at Kilken- ny, charged with the murder of an old woman and attem ted murder of Head Constable rizelle, has committed suicide in Kilkenny pri- 50D. *4“ consâ€"AND-ENDS. Most men of sense are also mod- .est. The fool who admits his folly is no longer a fool. A philosopher is he who doesn’t want what he can’t have. It’s easy for the man with a good income to be a philosopher. You may think yourself a super- ior being, but keep it to yourself. No girl treats a young man bet- ter than he sees her treat her mo- ther. Stupid people seldom realize their stupidity; which is fortunate for them. Mind your own business, and let other people mismanage theirs if they want to. Girls who cheapen themselves soon learn that most men are not bargain-hunters. If some people only worked as hard as they worry, they’d have no time to worry. Doctorâ€"~"From now you may let; your husband have a glass 0f beer every dayâ€"you understand '2” Wifeâ€"“Yes, doctor; just one glass 3 day.” Doctor (3. week later) ~â€" “Now, I hope you have kept strict- ly to that one glass per day that I allowed your husband to take?” \Vifeâ€"J‘Most decidedly, doctor â€" only he is four weeks in advance with his allowance.” Do you think your coal supply will last the winter through? TIIE TOM “STONE CUTTER. Plying Mallet and (‘hiscl Ile Phil- osophizcs on a Familiar Inscription. i) “Do you know, said the tomh~ stone cutter as he chipped away at the last letter of the last word of the familiar inscription, “At Rest,” that he was carving in the granite, “do you know that when I first be gan carving these words on tombâ€" stones a good many years ago, when I was younger and the world seem- ed tull hopetulness, it used to sometimes seem to me as if people had ’em put on, as you might say, on general principles, because they soomcd nice and appropriate there, while really the deceased might not have had such a terrible hard time in life, and would much rather be not at rest but up and around among folks? “That’s the way these words used to strike me when I was younger, but now, after considerable experi- ence of life, I look at them differ- ently. Now I realize that they may truly mean what they say, and be not merely an appropriate form; that the one over whose grave they are seen may in truth be glad to lie there under the stone, at last at rest. “Because, you secâ€"as we are like- ly to discover when we grow older â€"-this life is not a road strewn with roses for all of us; and besides those who have been worn out. in life’s struggles or in its simple work we find those who have been disap- pointed, or misunderstood, or unapâ€" preciated, or those who have been broken by some great sorrow. “So, while in many cases, indeed, that ‘At Rest’ carved on the tombâ€" stone may be but a form, or have been prompted simply bv love or af- fection, and yet, in many cases, placed there most lovingly, it tells a true story, and always, now, from my present point of view, I look at it not lightly, but with a sympathe- tic heart. Many a gentle soul, nev- er shunning. may be glad to lay down life’s burdens. “But, happily, as to most of us life adjusts its burdens to our aging shoulders and deadens us to mental ills, with increasing years we grow cold, not only in our blood but in our power of apprehension of life’s troubles, or it may be that, blessed still with the possession of all our faculties, we are now endowed with a kind philosophy that makes us at once less exacting of others and more considerate, and gives to us a full measure of enjoyment. In short, nature may be very kind to us, keep- ing us to the very end through years that may seem to us never de- clining but ever happy and hopeful. “As, for all my years, and despite my calling, the world seems to me this morning.” ___.__..p..___. BABY’S GREAT DANGER. DURING HJT WEATHER More little lives are lost during the hot weather than at any other time of the year, diarrhoea, dysenâ€" try, cholera, infantum and stomach troubles come without warning, and when a medicine is not at hand to give promptly the short delay too frequently means that the child has passed beyond aid. During the hot weather months Baby's Own Tab- lets should be kept in every home where there are small children. An occasional dose of the Tablets will prevent stomach and bowel trou~ bles. Or if the trouble comes un~ awares the prompt use of this meâ€" dicine will bring the child through safely. Mrs. J. Renard, New Glas~ gow, Que, says :â€"â€"“One of my chil- dren had a severe attack of diar~ rhoea which Baby’s Own Tablets promptly cured. I know of no me dicine so good for stomach and bowel troubles.” Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medi~ cine Co., Brockvillc, Ont. â€"â€"â€"-i< HARD FISTED. “He’s almost as wealthy as you are, isn’t he i" asked Jugley. r‘Yes,” replied Ilichlcy, “but he’s awfully tightâ€"chested." “\Vliy, he said he'd give fifty dol- lars to that charity if you would.” “Exactly; that just shows that he doesn’t expect to contribute at all.” “Dear, oh dear.” sighed Mr. Salâ€" lowday. “I wish I knew sonic "and way to acquirc an nppctitc." “Nonâ€" sense!” exclaimed his wife; “what do you want with an appetite '1 1t would only give you more. dyspep- . ,. that you wish to leave and hocnne an attendant at a lunatic n :vlum of all places Why, what experience have you llflt’ ?" l ' 31a “Your mistress tells n‘c. Jane, lbeen here three years.’ A (,‘AI‘SE OF CRIME. Mr. Phligminthroc‘s View of the Effect. of Cold l’lnlcs 0n Mankind. “I suppose” said Mr. I’hligminâ€" throc, “that when everything has been counth up and reduced to the final analysis it will he .liscovcrcd that the one single, most prolific cause of crime is cold plaice. ' “I wouldn't be understood as sayâ€" ing that cold plates are a dircct inâ€" cltment to murder, though it is not impossible that might be so; but as an insidious, undermining Cause. as an influence tending perhaps indi« rcctly, but still with no less cor- tainty, to the committing of crime I have no doubt you would find cold plates leaving all the rest. “How often do we hear it said of the fate of nations that it is tremb- ling in the balance, ready to be movâ€" ed this way or that by the slightest touch’l And if this can be true of nations how much more may it be true of individuals, who may be swayed, their fortunes for the time settled, or their whole Conduct of life determined by the slightest cirâ€" cumstance'l “Coming back now to cold plates. You take a man who has worked hard and been hurried all day and who comes home at night tired and worried and whom a square meal would brace up mightily and cause him to take a new view of life and to set his face in the right direction, and you give this man a good dinner with hot plates and don’t you see that you head him up right and conâ€" firm in him his good impulses? You nail him, so to speak, you start him off right. and you keep him going right; and there’s a man saved. “And now you take that same man and give him his dinner on cold plates; and that may be the last straw that breaks the camel’s back, and he may get peevish over it, and not enjoy his after dinner smoke, and get so wrought up that he doesn’t sleep well that night and wakes up the next morning and goes to business already tired out and not fit to do anything, so that he loses his temper and is cross and irritable, and misses every play he makes and goes from bad to Worse and winds up maybe by killing some- body before the day is over. All this is absolutely attributable to cold plates. “So of major crimes such as mur- der and that sort of thing; but when it comes to little things, such as plain sulkiness and kicking over chairs at home, and being cross to the children and making your wife unhappy and causing gloom to settle on the household generally, why, these cold plates have crimes to answer for innumerable. “Tall oaks from little acorns grow, millâ€"dams break and spread their devastating waters from leaks that at first you couldn’t put your little finger through, and I have no doubt that many disturbing, dis- tressing, harowing things have been primarily due to so small a thing as cold plates, which indeed, as I have said, I believe to be the one mest prolific cause of crime. “And taking this view, what a re- sponsibility rests upon those whose duty it is to see that the plates are hot! For the good of humanity, if not for our own comfort, well being and happiness, give us hot plates l” â€" D”... THE EARTH’S XENOGEAESIS. (By a Banker.) In the earlier epochs of its history, the aspect of this earth of ours was subject to continued and Violent changes. In that remote period far away down the dim vista of the past, without form and void, it is plunged in the blackness of darkness, owing to the dense mists and asphaltic vapors rising from its semi-molten surface. Then during the long aeons fellowmg it gradually cools down, and the wondrous principle of Life appears; at first of an extremely lowly type, then as the earth be- came more and more capable of supâ€" ,porting it, subsequent creations lgradunlly advancing to higher and rmorc perfect types. Then, the dry |land bcing raised up from the waâ€" ters, vegetation appears; the first in order having apparently been the lcommon horsetail. still to be found labunduutly in many marshy places lthroughout the world. ‘, After morc long acons. conic.» thc. ,iplcndid coal period. when magni- sfircnt liowcrlcss trees of many va- lrietics crew in the warm humid laimosplicrc in luxuriant profusion. their f05>lilZPZl remains forming the .pllCOlC‘SS fuel which is now such a )ncccssity of civilization. After a ‘tnuc this porn-d of tho rnign of {'0‘ printing] comes to an cud. (Worâ€" . v ,. . unmnmd and onzulpn'd in some .tremondous (-nlnclysmz while later in. t witch after lhc lapse of long leras «f violent changes. came the “Well, sir, I've period when the earth was cver~lGod. run with stupendous living creagl EGGS Make Your Stomach Happy with SHREDDED WHEAT and fresh fruits. An ideal summer food, wholesome, nourishing, dellcious. CONTAINS MORE REAL NUTNll’lElVT THAN MEAT 0R SOLD BY ALL GROCERS A..l. PATTlSON a co, 33-35 SCOTT ST., TORONTO. Correspondents â€" Chas. 50 CENTS. ALL CLARKSON, Toronto; l'J-‘leu-ekwfi-rwueaz 1+"; .535 .35..»- yy; ' Authorized Capital, win “I: 1 manager Boofers’ Supply Co., Larder City. Bankersâ€"The Crown Bank, The property consists of ‘28 share. Do not lose this golden ticulars apply to HENRY F. DARRELL - tures, mighty beasts, the largest of which â€" the Atlantosaurus â€" was nearly a hundred feet in length and thirty feet high. A monster like this would require almost the po- pulation of a village for a meal! And not the land only, but also the sea swarmed with gigantic life â€" some believe that the seaâ€"serpent is a survival of that period â€" many of them equally at home both on land and in the ocean. And then once more the land is submerged. quietude reigning for ‘long ages; the shells of inculculable mvriads of minute marine organ- iisins falling to the bottom of the rsca and forming the chalk deposits, which, with their snow-white purâ€" in, are such a feature of beauty on thc shore line of England. Then more upheavals and more ‘rhangcs. the shrinkage of the- now ctmll‘tl earth forcing upwards the mountain rungcs and farming the ’lwautiful hills and dalos, ravines ‘nnd gorges. upl‘czircd cliffs and rol- ling: down which so add to El: lwt'eâ€" illness and to its attyactivcncss. And at hugih. now in It< i'cry prime. man is created. But alas, lip won r'irrldx to temptation. and rcllcls against his Creator. But no one nccd suffer from this fall of Jl‘vi: first parents. lw r the Son of, by offering: Hi1n<elf a sub- stizutc, Himself bore the punish- 1' The Pango Company, wHOLEeALE LYMAN BROS. & (10., Toronlo and (No Personal Liability) . Directorsâ€"President, Arthur Viceâ€"President, A. S. Wigmore, Manager Holmes Electric & Protection 00., Toronto; Secretary~Treasurer, Fred Armstrong, contractor, Toronto; F. H. Herbert, architect and engineer, Toronto; J. C. Holtby, contractor, Auditorâ€"Henry Barber, Toronto. joining the now famous Harris Maxwell and .upon the same amount of development should prove equally as good. 100,000 shares are now offered to the public at 15 cents per of the most promising properties in the district. No. 8 Colbor ne Street, Toronto. Bonds and Stocks Bought 3 and Sold on all all Exchanges Head 6: Co., lembers i l New York and Boston Stock Exchanges. anal. ,..:.--..-_. ,. .r,.._.,._.,.~ ,, . ,, ,. . A . , .Wdache. ‘i W%_ Pain, Etc. DRUGGISTS, on Toronto Montreal; LYMAN KNOX & NATIONAL DRUG (10., London. r ~.:‘.,.,â€":~--. - - 0L0 MINES LIMITED. $4,000,000.00 Dinnis, contractor, Toronto; 5’ George Duthie, J. H. Tighe, miner, Toronto ; Toronto ; Toronto.. 40-acre claims immediately ad- opportunity of investing in one For full par- . FISCAL AGENT. ment due by all who will accept Him as their Redeemer. And who~ soever will may freely participate in that redemption. >11 NOT YET. “Alfred, have you got every thing?" tenderly enquired Baron Southmont’s wife, as he started off on a journey. The billionaire burst into tears. “There you gof” he exclaimed; “always saying things to give me pain. You know very well, in spite of all my efforts, I haven't yet suc- ceeded in getting everything.” WOMEN IN CIVIL SERVICE. .‘\CCHTCllIlg to the latest report of 521 women employed in the execu- ‘tive civil service of the United ‘Siatcs. In the District of Colum- lbia three women are employed to levery seven men; in the country at ,largc, one woman to every twenty- lfive men. In the national capital (the average pay for men is $1.178, for women $.66. Some men are so convinced they are going to wake up some morn- ing and find themselves famous that they can‘t sleep. the Census Bureau there are 13,-. [.4

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