Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 11 Aug 1910, p. 3

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The simple mason for this is that Dr. Williams’» Pink Pills make new, rich, red blood, which strengthens all the vital organs, brings brightness to the eye, a glow of health to the cheek, and bracing afrength to every part of the body. ,Mra. Warren Wright, Una, Sask, says: “I feel that I owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Williams’ Pink ills that nothing I can say in their favor will fully repay. I was Io reduced in health and strength that I was hardly able to walk at all, and could do no work what- ever. My blood was so thin and {watery that my lips and finger tips resembled those of a corpse. I had It'most constant headaches, and the lmallost exertion would set my heart palpitating violently, and of- kn I would drop in a faint. Nothing I did seemed to help me in the least Ind I felt so far gone that I never axpected to recover my health. I was in this critical condition when 1 road in a newspaper of a cure in I. case like mine through the use 0! Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and I de- cided to try them. I got a half dozen boxes and before I used them all there was a great change in my condition. My appetite returned, the color began to come back to my lips and face, and my strength was Increasing. I continued the use of the_Pills for some time. longer and they restored me to the pink of per- fect health. While using the Pills _I gained. twenty pounds in weight. In China. there are 1.557 walled icihevs Where there is neither a forâ€" eign no: Chinese pastor. BROKEN HEALTH BRINGS WRINKLES It is the Airedale breed that is employed, and the experiment has been attended with so much success that large kennels have been pro- vided and it is now proposed to augment the number of animals. Tramps scarcely ever sleep out on the docks now, but hold the dogs in deadly terror. Trained to Regard all Not in Uni- form as Enemies. As an additional protection to the Hull (Eng.) docks, a scheme has just been formulated by which the police constables of the, North Eastern Railway on night duty will be a"sisted by dogs. Each dog undergoes a most ela- borate training which centres wholly around one idea, that every person dressed in other than police uniform is an enemy. This is an impértant point, and no person ‘ressed in plain clothes is allowed to touch or pet the_ dogs. M; curé’ was lfiaac in the suminex of 1909, and I am now enjoying bet- ter health than ever before.” The policemen who tend them must only enter the kennels in uni- form. The dogs are taught to obey a policeman’s whistle, which they soon learn, for the Airedale terrier is obedient. Each animal under- goes strict and rigid training, and, so far. the dogs have rendered most valuable service. low All Women Dan Preserve Good Health and Hood Looks. Too many women and girls look QM long before they should. In fine cases out of ten it is a. matter cl health. Work, worry, confine- ment indoors and lack of exercise «use tho health 'to run down. Then faces become thin and pale; fines and wrinkles appear, there no headaches, backachca and a constant feeling of‘tirednoss. Woman and girls who feel well k well. Therefore improve your altl: and you will look bther. It lb 5 {not that thousands of Canadi- nn women and girls owe the; robust. health they onjt-y to Dr. Williams’ rink P1115. They feel well and en- ioy Info as only a. healthy person D7. Williams’ Pink Pills will do In:- other weak and worn women just what they did for Mrs. Wright. of they are given a, fair trial: Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a. box or six boxes for 82.50 from The Dr. Williams’ Me- dlcine Co., Broclgville, Ont. 7) “I learned to spell walnut, was the proud reply. “Hi-0k, wal; u r-y nut; walnut!” / City air, scientists declare, con- tains fourteen times as many mi- Cmbes as country alr. When little Kathrine came home frnm school, her aunt; asked her 'What she had learned that dav. If a. fireman antagonizes you tell him to go to blazes. RAILWAY POLICE D 0 G S. THE MODERN SPELLER. 9. They received every man a. shil- lingâ€"The point to keep before us is that the householder was paying for work done in his own vineyard, and was therefore the sole judge of the value of that work to him. He Cid not consider that those who were pressed in at the last, when time was precious and the work crowded, could with justice be paid less than a full day’s wage. It was of no advantage to them that he had his steward begin from the last unto the first (8). This order is necessary to the proper develop- I'LlC"l'/ of the parable. If the first had been paid and sent away, there would have been no occasion for complaining on their part. 10. Supposed that they would reâ€" ceive xnoreâ€"â€"They were figuring on the beneficence of the master. They hau borne the burden of the day a) d the scorching heat (12); if, therefore, such benevolence was be- stowed upon the oneâ€"hour men, what would they not get? This was pyecisely the spirit of the disciples, Voiced in the petty question of Petâ€" er (Matt. 19. 27 . Go ye alsoâ€"No word is spoken about wages. Men who come in so late certainly have very little to expect, according to the mercenary measures of men. They are willing to get a pittance rather than close the day with nothing. He who sends us forth is qualified to judge as to the proper remuneration. And he alone is qualified. 6. The eleventh hour-Even when the day is nearly done, and men have frittere-d away their time in idleness, the compassionate house- holder finds' some usefulness in them which he can bring into the service of his vineyard. 7. No man hath hired us~They were undoubtedly the poorest type of laborer. But they were certain- ly better at the beginning of the (layihan at its close, except, per- haps, they would now be more ea- ger to make up for the time they had lost. They were not to blame for their failure to work in the vineyard. They had haunt‘éd the market place hoping for a chance call. Many a man is hurriedly passed by because there seems to be in him little promise of value to the kingdom. But God keeps going out; to the places where men are to be found, and every man in time gets his call. 3. The third hourâ€"The day was divided into hours, but the night into watches. No mention is ever made of 'definite hours of the night. This would be at nine o’clock. With those who were standing at this huur idle in he marketplace, no sti- pulation was made, except that the householder would give what was right (4). God can be depended upon to deal generously with every man. _Nothing is said about disqua- lifications arising from idleness dur- ing the three best workng hours of the day. 11. They murmured against the householderâ€"But unfairly. Why should they be jealous of others, so long as they themselves received all that had been agieed upon? Some lz‘bor all day whose only motive is to get what is in it for them. They have no particular loyalty to the householder. That these men were thinking mainly of the pay is icvi‘ (lent. Some men crowd more loyâ€" alty into .a fagvend of life than others into a long period of oppor- tunity. It is Simply a question of motive. Verse 1. Early in the morningâ€"â€" The laborers hired at this time may represent the apostles, to whom thzs seems to have been a. much needed lesson at this period. They were the first; on the field. Lesson VII. The Laborers in the Vineyard. Matt, 20. 1-16. Golden Text, Matt. 19.30. 2. Had agreed with the laborers â€"They therefore had no just cause for complaint at the close of the day. 14. Take up that which is thinc- The rewards of the future are not arbitrarily assigned. 11: is indeed lawful fur God to do what he will with his own (15). But it is impos- sible to think of him as giving to anyone less than that; \one deserves. Wnen we take account of his mercy it is probable we‘ shall all receive In re than we merit. But the man- A shilling a dayâ€"This was the common wage of the day laborer. The denarius was the official coin of the empire, and was worth about seventeen cents of our money, but with a. much greater purchasing power. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, ’ AUG. 14. Mr. Walter, K.C., contended the plaintiff had no right to restrain the defendants, but he undertook to with-draw the photograph, and 0-. that understanding the motion was allowed to stand over. substituted that of the Queenâ€"mo- ther, the copyright of which was the plaintiff’s. His wish was, if possiblg. to get the photograph off the markets. Englishmen Who Carry Weight all the Time. If it be admitted that England is not just now producing intellectual giants, still the clay of brawn and beef is not over in the old coun- try. Some very big men have latc- ly been brought into prominence. In Brierley Hill, Staffs, there is 2‘. giant named Geo. Lovatt, who stands over six feet in height and weighs 476 pounds. Living in the Harrow road, London, there is Mr. W. T. Ecclestone, better known as “Jolly Jumbo,” who, although un~ der 5 feet 10 inches, weighs 462. Mr. J. Walker, of Leeds, who makes Relish, also weighs 4-62 pounds. Constable \Volfe, of the Dublin police, weighs 420 pounds.. and stands 6 feet 6 inches in his stockings. Many other giants have been brought, to light. For the plain ,iff Mr A. Grant, K. C., alleged that the defendants induced a lady to sit, dressed in mcurning, far a photograph. "Then, he said, they cut- out her face, and IS a Desiroyer Launched Recently in England. The fastest ship in the world is Lhu destroyer Swift, launched re- cently at Portsmouth. England. This ship, which is of 1,800 tons disâ€" piacement, has a speed exceeding 35 knots an hour. Her fires are fed by petroleum. The turbines give 30,000 horsepower divided among four screws. How One of Queen Alexandra was Produced. An ingenious method by which izpâ€"to-date photographs may beseâ€" cured was alleged in the Chancery Division in London. (England) dur- ing the recent hearing of a motion in the action Lafayette v. the R0- tary Photographic Company. ‘ An injunction was asked for to restrain the Rotary Company .in- fringing the plaintiff’s copyright-in a photograph of the Queen-mothér, and to give the: names of those to whom the photograph had been sold. The English Admiralty had al- ready realized 34 knots in the de- stroyers Cobra and Viper. One of these excessive long boats broke in two upon a wave not long after she was launched. 16. This is the moral of the parâ€" able, the text from which it is preached. The evident meaning is that. in the final distribution of re- wards, the first and last are to be treated alike. There will be no dis- inctions of first and last, such as prevail among men. Not that they are going to change places, but they will all be on an equal footing. The maximum speed of the French torpedo boats averages about 31 knots. The fact that he is good settles all questions as to his dealings with us, whether they are settled or not ac- cording to our estimates of what is right. Our part is not to judge, but to work, and to work for the love of it and of him, to our full limit; 15. It is the mark of a. shallow, painfully suspicious disposition to call in qugstiop the just-ice of God. ner in which we conduct ourselves during our day of work will bear an inevitable fruitage when even is come '(8). SWIFTEST SHIP AFLOAT. A ROYAL PHOTOGRAPH. GIANTS IN THE LAND. This recalls to mind a, funny story. Old folks are aware that the birth of the late Duke of Clarâ€" ence was somewhat premature. His baby clothes were not ready and the small but precious arrival was wrapped in cotton wool which had been taken off Lady Knollys’s last new bonnet from Paris. It may not be generally known that» it was through the Knollys family that CIOSE relations were established be- tween royalty and they Roths- childs. His Majesty has reappointed four 0! the grooms in waiting who‘were in the service of his late Majesty, and Edward Wallington, who was in his former household. The new appointments are those of C01. William Lambton, a brother of Lord Durham- and a distinguished soldier, and Capt. Seymour ForteS< one a brother of Lord Fortescue and a naval officer who acted as equerry to the late King Edward. iq a fact that will never be for- rgotten. His sister, Miss Charlotte Knollys, has been in attendance on Queen Alexandra since 1863, and it will be remembered that his par- ents. Sir William and Lady Knolâ€" lys, were about the court of Queen Victoria. Sir Arthur Bigge has for years been a special friend of his present Majesty. He is an experienced courtier and acted as groom in waiting to Queen Victoria. as long ago as 1880. He is clever and tact- f'vl but somewhat silent, and King George was once heard to say that one of Sir Arthur’s good qualities was that. he preferred thinking to talking. Lord Knollys and Sir Arthur Bigge are to be joint, private secre- taries. Lord Knollys has for forty yams been the faithful friend and trust-ed counsellor of royalty and his deep affection for King Edward As regards equerries King George has retained in his service the four who were in his house- hcld as Prince of Wales. And the new appointments are those of C01. Charles Legge‘, Col. Frederick Ponsonby, and Major W'igram. are a family who have been much about the court and Col. Fritz held the same post in the late house- Many of the oflices'in the house- hcld of the King of England are political appointments which change with the Government. But the Master of the Household, the Grooms in Waiting, the Equxerries In Waiting, the Keeper of the Privy Purse, the private secretaries, etc., are appointed by the sovereign, says the Gentlewoman. King George chooses also his per- manent Lord in Waiting, which past he has bestowed on Lord An- naly. His Majesty has appointed as Keeper of the Privy Purse Sir William Carington. He is brother to Lord Carrington”, but elects to spell his name in a diflerent ma;â€" nor; and his marriage in 1871 is worthy of note as being one of the first of the now long line of Anglo- American alliances. DUTIES OF MEN HE HAS AP- POINTED T0 OFFICE. THE KING’S HOUSEHOLD Many are Experienced Courtiers and Friends of His Present Majesty. LATE DUKE OF CLARENCE. THE PONSONBYS comes nextvto the lord stelwand in household precedence. All invita~ tions to count are sent out in the 10rd chamberlain’s name by com- mand of the sovereign. In state proc-essions’he walks backwards in front of his Majesty, with the lord steward, and at a. court or levea The master of the horse has the sole right of any one at court to have one of the royal carriages and pair of horses always at his dis- posal, and two of the royal footmen are always on duty for his special ctnvenience. This high ofiice is now held by'Lord Granard. . The lords in waiting are seven in number and two at least- of these are always in attendancei' Their term of office varies from about. a fortnight to a month, according to royal convenience. No one but a peer can hold this office. The cap- tain of the honorable corps of genâ€" tlemen in arms is sworn into the post by the Lord Chamberlain. At present the duties of this corps are limit-ed to attendance at ourts and levees. The captain of t e yeoman of the guard is at the head of a. corps which was raised by Henry VII.‘ and which still wears the dress of that period. The yeomen of the guard are on duty at the palace on Now we will take a'look at the great oflices in the royal household that are political appointments and which do not change at the acâ€" cession of a, new sovereign. The post of lord steward, now held by Lord Beauchamp, is one of the most important. In his hands are plate- ed the whole direction of the royal household below stairs, and he. has authority over all servants in the royal establishment. The official designation of the office over which he presides is the board of green cloth, and he carries the. staff of his office at high ceremonials and at last may have the sad duty of breaks ing it over the grave of his sover- eign. is is his duty to stand next to the King and read out the name of each one who approaches the royal pres. ence. The vice-Chamberlain, the lads in waiting, the mistress of the robes and the ladies of the house- bold are in this department. Lord Althrop now helds the important post of lord Chamberlain. The 'master of the horse is the third great; officer of the royal household. He has entire control of the royal stables, and all the King's horses and carriages are under his supervision. He arranges every detail of state processions, and on such occasions his place is in the sovereign’s carriage unless the. seat is occupied bv some mem- ber of the royal family. Also the whole staff of equerries is under his control and he arranges their “waits” in the desired order. The treasurer Of the house-hold ranks next to the lord sbewarel in that department. He also carries a. white wand of office, and at a coronation it is his privilege to dis- tribute the medals which are struck iv commemoration. W. Dudley Ward, a nephew of Lord Esh‘er, in at present treasurer of the house- hold. The comptroller of the house- hold stands next, and‘h-e too has a white staff, and his chief duty in to examine all the accounts which come under the lord steward’s de~ partment. This post is now held hv Lord Liverpool. a}! state occasions. hold of our late sovereigns. 001. Charles Legge is only brother of Lcrcl Dartmouth and acted in the same capacity at the court of King Edward VII. THE LORD CHAMBERLAIN AXLE GREA§E The Imperial Oil 00.,Ltd. Onaflo Agents: The 05cm City 03’ 69.. EM. is the turning-point :0 economy in wear and tear of wagons. Try a box. Every dealer everywhere.

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