Newmarket Era , October 4, 1901, p. 1

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J I The Era gives mora home wo AairMtwotrtfacriBpctsin and is to be the leading Paper i it NORTH AND mo t liberty to know to otter and to argue freely according to conscience above all other liberty No paper sent outside of North York unless paid In advance No Single Copies Cents Each Newmarket Friday Oct TERMS per annum I If paid in advance The Grand Jewel Cook Stoves Now in Succsfuf Operation The only stove constructed with a double flue carrying the heat in front of the oven Thus insuring quick even bakers COAL GRATES jewels The Grand Jewel Cook Stoves are made in 4 sizes and cost a few cents more than common stoves but they will more than repay the entire cost in fuel saved I HARDWAR PAINTS OILS BLACKSMITHS SUPPLI PLUMBING NEWMARKET ONT At Some of the Prices at rug Store Regular Our Price Price Kidney Pills Chases Kidney and Liver Pills Kidney Pills Ozone large 50 Ozone small Fowlers Extract Wild Strawberry Carters Little Liver Pills Williams Pink Pills Three for 35 Regular Our Price Price Kendalls Spavin Cure Electric Oil Ayers Hoods 100 Celery Co Burdock Blood Bitters 100 Pierces Golden Medical Discovery South American Rheumatic Cure South American Kidney Cure Beef Iron Wine 100 We Lead the Trade in all Branches of our Business and will not bo ft Undersold by anyone The Leading Druggist NEWMARKET ONTARIO Tumors Tuberculosis Blood Taint MANKIND CANNOT CUBE DISEASE NATURE CAN Let fell own equal to 100 candlelight and only the light of noon day sun yet and restful to or read by is the light of the GAS LAMP It makes and bums its own gas is cheaper than oil and as easy manage though Give out very Our free catalogue gives full particu lar Write for It LIGHT CO By Frances Prey When the fever left Margaret Han son so weak and feeble that it was an effort to turn her head on the pillow her first sign of interest in the life coming back to her again was wonder at the intense stillness nurse moved as if shod with velvet no one spoke aloud in the room and the window that had creaked so all thru the first irritable stages of hex sickness moved back and forth without a sound As she watched it she remembered that she had wanted some one to fasten it but with the unreasonable ness of the sick she had said to her self that if they did not care enough for her comfort to sec that it worried her without being told she would never tell them Some one must have noticed it and padded it in some way for here it was moving back and forth in the same old way but without a sound How very sick I have been she thought as she glanced at the thin white hands which she felt no inclina tion to lift from the bed That must be the reason every one is so still and no one speaks to me Then she slept and awakened ate a little and slept again with the know ledge life and strength were com ing back to her but still the dreadful quiet which shut her in her She seemed to be an actor in a pan tonine that grew more oppressive I must ask the doctor how long it is necessary for me to lie here with no one to talk to I must ask him at his next visit am certainly bet ter and stronger this bright spring morning She was lying with her face turned to the creaking window which had been opened to let in the fresh air The branches of an appletree full of pink unopened buds almost filled it She thought of the chattering wrens had a nest in the branches the year before and hoped they would come back They were noisy company in the mornings but what a relief their shrill songs would be now They al ways treated me to a perfect carnival of song at daybreak no matter how badly wanted to sleep She raised herself up with a look of horror On the nearest branch she saw a bird who with open mouth was evidently singing with a perfect abandon of ecstasy And she could not hear him Tills then was the life she had come hack to and been so grateful to have The doctor who tried to com fort her told her that as her strength returned she might regain hearing in some degree but she turned away and refused to be comforted The spring days lengthened and health re turned and with it strength to en dure hut Margaret withdrew from all kindness and sympathy Why should I pretend to enjoy see ing any one or why should people with the best intentions endure trying to talk to me It is so distressing for them to shout at me and it cuts me to the heart when they laugh at my mistakes It only makes me more miserable than I am must endure living but can make no pre tence of enjoying St Hut just think wrote a friend how much worse It would have been for you if the fever had left you blind You can at least look out over the earth and enjoy its beauties You arc not without friends if you will let them love you You have a good home and do not have to go in to the world to live Think more of your blessings Margaret and do not dwell so persistently on what you have lost It does not help me to know it is worse to be blind she answered 1 pity all sufferers but forever pressing on me is this horror by night and by day that I am forever alone Every thing that moves around me moves as in a nightmare I never succeed in shaking off this feeling of unreality me alone that I may learn to bear this as best I may in solitude So one She no one to visit her There were many who pitied Iter but knew of no way to reach her and as the years passed by they forgot her even as she wished to be forgotten It was another day In early spring five years later when Margaret The minister of the church which she had attended years before smiled at her from the door and came out to write on her tablet It is a late Easter Margaret but we have more blossoms for it Will you not come in and see the We would be glad to have you at the services tomorrow The Lord has afflicted me and turned His face from me she an swered coldly I will not sing for gladness Christ is risen One year is as another with me except as it brings me nearer the time when I shall endure no longer Poor child sighed the minister j as she passed on so young and so bitter I wish I knew how best to reach her Margaret passed on down the street Near the end of it stood a house small and shabby and she remember ed that just the day before there had been a poor- little funeral from it Some one who was needed and will be missed she thought while I live on Will you come in here a little while I It was the doctor who spoke She was glad to have him speak to her He was one of the very lew people she could hear without much effort She turned in at the gate with him He led her to a babys crib in the corner of the one room I want you to take him and care for him He has no one in the wide world flow can I she protested 1 could not hear him if he cried or call ed You cannot be in earnest His lungs are sound I think you could hear him As if in proof of the doctors asser tion the baby raised its voice in a loud wail I can hear him indeed said she with a laugh I will take him a few days until you can do better for him 1 might do better for him possi bly but do not know any way of do ing better for her thought the doc tor The next morning she did not have time to think as she always did One more day to get through as best I may The baby must be washed and fed and by her own hands for with the sweet babyhood he would go to no one else She even sang to him as he nestled against her to sleep and Margarets old housekeeper smiled to herself as Oaf Toronto better BOTHA REPULSED WITH HEAVY LOSS she went about her work I will watch and help her where she cannot hear she thought hut- it is best for her to have the care of him Its most like old times to hear her singing like that again Arc you tired or him asked the doctor a few weeks later I have a chance to place him in a good home now It would break my heart to give him up she answered I do not think I lived at all before him Well I wont take him by force The world is full little ones ing help And full of grown up people reed ing to give it said Margaret softly I wish I could tell how much the baby did for her Almost before she realized it who was taking tip her life where she had dropped it Much as she loved the baby she found that love alone would not do Us little ailments were matters of vital im portance and must be discussed with some one who knew how to advise her One by one old friends who had long been shut out came hack at her call Margaret forgot deafness her sensitiveness and loneliness as hung over the babys crib She for got her old fear that people might speak to her and annoy her as she wheeled boy the sunshiny streets For the babys sake she went once more to the church where the lilies breathed out their fragrance and In time sang almost with the old Christ is risen The Lord had not forgotten me she said long afterward My life can never be what it might have been hut He has given me strength to make the best- of what is left by one her friends withdrew l land of forever left her homeand invited it shall be a land of hopefulness and love Youths Sept Charles Lawrence president of Great Northern Inhibition also president of West Farmers Associa tion and a highly respected farmer ewnWro7thr of high class met j York i and noticed the swelling on thowltha fatal accident while leaving The and will be big days here and thousands expected The ladies of the city will give Duchess of Cornwall and York a writ ing set of Canadian gold set with Lake Superior amethysts and orna mented with the monagram of the Duchess and the Canadian emblem the Beaver and maple wreath the enclosed in a carved box of birdseye maple The Alexandra gateway at the end of Queens Park which the daugh ters of the Empire are erecting to re cord permanently the visit of the Duke and Duchess to this city is ap proaching completion It consists of two main and four subsidiary pillars Rev Hill and wife returned from last week where they have enjoyed a summer outing The Rev gentleman occupied his pulpit Simpson Ave Methodist church on Sabbath last Hon Wallace has returned from his Northwest trip but is far from being The Muskoka express over the J leaving here at am and the train arriving here front at 115 pm also the Jacksons special have been withdrawn Kiltyeight carloads of cattle was made in one shipment from this city to Boston last week thence by steam- to Liverpool It was the largest single export of cattle ever made from this point Mr Joseph Gould was the shipper had an estrange ment with her lover last week and becoming desperate she ended her life the next evening by drinking a quantity carbolic acid She left a letter addressed to her lover the wording of which gave evidence of much mental distress Fred 28 years of age jumped from a thirdstory window at on Thursday last and sustained injuries from which he died half an hour later He had been ill with typhoid fever for several days and was delirious when he jump ed The inmates of the Central Prison now number almost the lowest for more than a decade Fewer tramps in the country is thought to be the reason for this fact Inspector Nix on says good times and higher wages coupled with the fact that Ontario has been handling the tramps rather roughly is a large factor in causing the decrease Michael employed with Wat sons confectionery while returning home Thursday night suddenly ex pired lie was near his when he fell to the sidewalk but was dead before aid reached him The Star of Thursday week had a suggestive cartoon in the line of municipal politics it rep resented the present Mayor as having a nightmarc while sleeping in which Aid is partially discernable at close range Underneath the car toon appears the following well known quotation- coming events cast their shadows before Possibly How land and may be can didates for the chief executive office of the city next January Members of the Ontario Assembly from all parts of the province who have recently visiten the city have made it a point to call at the Parlia ment Buildings and extend the glad welcome home to the Premier The visitors will leave the train which brings them to this city at Station The platform will be extended feet and other structures erected to accommodate the crowd The Ontario Government will make a grant of towards this reception accommodation Between 100 and returning har vesters from Manitoba and the Terri tories reached this city by last Fridays trains little folk from the Sick Child rens Hospital at the Island returned to the city last Friday after spend ing the summer months on the lake shore Dr of the Methodist Book Room has returned from Eng land where he has been in attendance at the Council of the Methodist church A seizure of beer was made by the Police at a York St restaurant on Saturday night This week Mr Duncan reeve OF TO BE the gentlemen the ladies without hats Considerable alterations ami decorations have recently been made in the galleries The attendance was large the occasion and the inno vation of the choir change was favor ably commented on rather than other wise Mr John Boyd of the City Tteas- fi date of Department died at the Gen- Kitchener reports Hospital on Sunday last ft ceased was years of age command of General Botha attacked A man named Andrew oi and Prospect on the Ave is held under arrest on border but were repulsed with a charge of attempted fire a heavy loss the hearing his own premises to secure ante money He will got Saturday The Milk Producers Association has resolved to fix the price of milk per can during the winter months this year the same as last Several lads who fired at a policeman on St had to answer their mischief at the police court They wont do so any more Fire the old Empire building in the Grand Opera House lane last night did damage Funics from a gasoline engine started the blaze The annual prize shooting of the York Rangers last Friday was quite up to the average in the points made For trying to imitate Carrie Nation by smashing tumblers and bottles at the Arlington Hotel on Saturday night Henry Booth was taken into IIS custody and had to answer for 1 conduct The Hunt Club races closed at the Woodbine on Saturday The crowd in attendance was the largest of the week The ceremonies in St Michaels church last Sabbath it being Mich aelmas Day were more than usually imposing Rev Dr delivered a very impressive discourse on the Hon Clifford Hon James Sutherland arm Col Tisdale MP were in the city on Monday also Mr Taylor for North Middlesex The local member for North York was among his constituents the be ginning of this week attending revi sion of voters lists BO A Texan Gusher SPOUTS OIL TWO HUNDHIOU AND FIFTY IN THE AIR News says he lilacs the tender green of the newly springing grass and with a pang the pink buds on the appletrees Tlesc were so associated with her memory of the day when she first wished they would hot bloom where must see them- the Exhibition grounds at last night His horse taking fright at a hand organ which was passing at the he- Idly recovering- from the accident met with a couple of weeks ago At the St Methodist Church last Sunday the organist reached the city yesterday Globe of Tuesday of a character in connection with the recent development the Galveston and Beaumont Texas oil district The news was received with great satisfaction by those who invested in the Ontario California Oil Company of Toronto which has recently bonded the property known as the Blue Bonnet Fox Ross yesterday re ceived Galveston Texas ex tracts from an article published in tho Galveston Tribune of Sept staling that on the previous Sunday the last few inches the bor ing at the bottom of the Victor well were completed and the pentup oil broke and shot upwards The well is eight inches in diameter and it is stated that a solid stream of oil of the full size of the pipe shot up fully feet in the air steadily and without a quiver the stream gushed at the rate of barrels per day There is nothing like this on record says the Tribune no other well has ever such a flow even the famous Russian wells cannot compare with it and beside it the wells of Ohio and California pale into Insignificance The Victor stands absolutely alone the wonder of the world and the largest oil welt on earth In reply to a question by the Tribune reporter one of the direct ors of the Victor Company replied What arc we going to do with the oil is only miles to Port Arthur where the largest ships are now loading and at which port build ings to house a large population have already leen built and more are building This opens to the Texan field the markets of the world which can be reached by cheap ocean making it possible to lay the oil down at Liverpool and other European ports at a cost of 35 cents per barrel If necessary Three barrels of this oil will go as far as a ton the best coal In making steam that sells at over in All is quiet on the Natal border Lieut Mieis accompanied by some South African Constabulary went out on Sept to meet three Boers who were coming in with a white After a short conversation the Boers shot and killed Lieut and gal oped away The scene of the affair is placed near Cologne Sept A Pretoria de spatch to the Gazette says that as a sequence to his proclamation in regard to the exiling of all Boers who did not surrender by Sept Lord Kitch ener has ordered that the wives and families of all Boors who do not lay down their arms will deported to the coast The same correspondent says the Cape rebels now number SUPPLIES ARE SCARCE Sept Supplies of wheat milk sugar salt rice and are very scarce through near ly all the railway trucks being requi- to bring supplies to the refugee camps and transportation hampered by the rinderpest Enough wheat to feed the Orange Ri ver colony for four months is waiting transportation from Thaba and The Government farms near all the principal garrisons are than sufficient green forage and vege tables for the local forces Nearly acres have been cultivated near Pretoria The crops have been phe nomenal Gen Wilson has sent prisoners belonging to commando from They also brought in their saddles rifles and ammunition Batches of prisoners from the camp are being sent every week to Durban Natal Small sur renders continue daily The mail train is now running at night for the first time in months MR SON DEAD Pretoria Sept 30 Kruger son of the former President who re cently surrendered has just died af ter a short illness REBELS PLEAD GUILTY London Sept A despatch from stales that seventeen colonial rebels who were captured with the remainder of com mando were tried ou a charge of trea son and murder Fourteen of them pleaded guilty and prayed for mercy The remainder were found guilty Sentence was reserved P band Sales Winnipeg Man Sept 30 land sales for September were much heavier than usual The aggregate is in the neighborhood of acres for 210000 In September the total sales amounted to acres for The land sold this year exceeds the sales up to the same period last year by about acres The sales by the Canada and West Land Company were also very heavy This company soid acres for the sum of For September 1U00 the sales were 2400 acres for the sum of Tlic Company for the year arc acres sales by the Canada and in excess of those up to September 30 last year time him from his buggy and choir filed in their places each a tree breaking his neck wearing black cloth gown and turing skull Death was Ins-tan- collarribbon for the ladies and collars and while ties for BRONCHIAL Affections coughs and colds all quickly cured by It has no equal Acts prompt soothes heals and cures Manu factured by the proprietors of Perry Davis PainKiller The Canadian Niagara Power Co has awarded the contract for the and to contractor A Douglas The price is over hall a million The splendid new steamer Lake Manitoba ton9 twin screws bilge keels will sail on her first voy age from Montreal for Liverpool at daybreak Friday 11 At the nominations yesterday the Nova Scotia Provincial elections four Liberals were elected by acclam ation and no Conservatives Two other Liberals are opposed only by an Independent Liberal ONE FACT IS BETTER than ten hearsays Ask Doctor Burgess Hospital for Insane Montreal where they have used it for years for his opinion of The Menthol Plaster Get the genuine made by Davis Lawrence Co Ltd

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