HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-09-16, Page 3<4
,
•
•
risyrwr'r'w'r r•—
e, -
DANGERS Ob' OVERCROWD.
ING HENS.
tlY .eie P. Marshall,
0YeiCrOWdillie la • the fattier Of a
•
Peek Of teinthles. OVererowilingmalfee
everfat be, end eVerfat bens lay
4olf-eiielle1- eggs, and egg eating ha.,
Mt fellets. Overcrotaded floelte 'will
l'ooeta 010001Y „tegether a night and
wete leavinee thorn, in le' Weakened
einlditlont resulting in sickness. OVer-
Prowdipg oleo producee, Were. Idle
belie become .miee,hievoue hen% and
thel disgusting vice of feather -pulling
Is the reeult., Better results in both
' .• health and egg produetiopecome freln
fioeks ,that liave •plenty of "elbow
reone"•
.
Tau ROLL •VAL41.h.
S011g for Cenedian $01diera end
Other.
This new bas wee° 'Ha hit" with the
beya in tbe treining cameo awl at the
front. Ae a part of his "bit" Mr; Ilezslo-
wocel Wel loose copite printed elle s-iven
way, mainly tleme*); the Teuee,e, ON THE SUMMIT °P THE IFI'Airr'
worliere. One Toronto eeleier peeked ewNI -41EBILttlE°Pr
a tepewritten .eopy• ea iiiii 110 tesoint- — el/W/le
aireere in rreace"), after tbe battle, Ana '
brought it back nem°, not knowing It
TRENCHES ONLY
TEN YARDS APART
• 1,1..1•1.1. "
W4O Termite preauet. IIr.liezelewood
feare that ono, of .1i'3thinday "lechool Scenes at the Front Dekieribed BY •
by:, to whom ee had given a copy, met
. with znieforfene On that immune% The CorrefiPeritlent in the FrOnt,
eons' le everedecee by pecial iberesia-e
'ulexte; ,
Line
'•• *O" mOtQr. 04 neWlf,
Tho OOP.- •
built
Tune.e"Wheri the rolleis called up through the WOOdee--5
yeeeere, able feat—to the top of a Mountain,
.
from Weil we walked to the summit
tWorda•lie 0-‘11Tezzloweee.-Torento.•erith of the Ildrtmenng WOltrkoPf- I will
apologiee to Wither of original/. explain this most important position
ineonee detail, at Lam specifically al -
When ICIng and Countryeallraa /owed to 00.W:the French censorship.
• and I'm wanted at the front; The last part of the - road—over:
Where the slleaPllel, Shells are which all supplies are carried—is an -
,bursting in the air; ' •
e der fire of the German but ,
When the foe in ferY, charges eM4 it is ,not until one reaches the very
we're sent to hear the brill:Ito . base of the round knob, which is the
And the roll is called for eerfricei—• feartmarms weneehope that one ea-
• As the young chieks keep getting ; I'll be there! , • ters the boyatt,
larger they should be moved to room- Cho.—When the. rell,'ete, : intmetelY entered the front
et
' ler quarter% hi out of the question • line trench. Looking. through a
" to keep thein In the same little breedWhen the Kaiser's thea are Witten steel peephole, I. Saw the German
eeelie alet expect they will develop • and his arMielt ont of France, front trench only ten yards away. I
•
and do as Well as Where they are When the Belgian- . desolation we asked at once how lines could remain
Moved to roomier • quarters as they • „repair; • "b • • so closee*hymiaes Were not exPinded!
grew, and should always be able to When the final mileter'fb -ordered and underneath :cacti ethees. trenches..
' fia4 lois of exercising conditions .: to the bilgle. sounds "Advancie". . "Solid rock," oale.elie. officer, That
"'keep- ever active and, - On; the May the GO4 of, Battles. help -mete) is the explanation; it. eillY solid
hustiq Perches Should be .provided' • ; be -there. . • '•rock that snot; aff. this 'can
for. :the*. ae:Seem as they, begin to get • .."+.4 • be leuree; •
a little size. It keeps diem *armee 'Attlee. the Allies march, through rem. ,
• Undergreand • •
and they eseera tee*. `betterer, ,• . eia with the foein.full retreat -
eVelde crowding- together at night, "That our hearts be kept from hat- Odd bullets whined. continually
.causing them to, sweat and catch eold • red" is our prayer; * overhead; two shells exploded in the
in the cool of the early Morning. When the right Of might is ,ended in a open space behind a wing at one cpr-
re placing perches they should be ' crushing last defeat, ' .• ner not twenty-five yards away; an-
al', on the same level In the. warmest And the roll is called in Berlin—I'll -other expleded at the very base of the
- part of the house away from drafts, he there! • trench, among the entanglements,
and should be readily; removable, If ; within only a few -feet of 'us, the
•
•
- the -perches- are •'not all -onethe bsame When-fOreme-"Lest Poet" iseeounded smoke, Oil disagreeable, hiding
'level the':fowls will fight for the 'op- and 'I cross the Silent Ford, for a minute mew at our very side—,
portunity to roost on the'higheste and I've a Pilot who of "mine fields" for the artillery of both, armies shell
the chances are that -many fowls will will beware; • each others' fxont-line trenches ten
. be injured by falling off the .perch,es. When "Reveille" sound e in Heaven yaedsapart front-POSitions Peri-4;ns.
The perches should be in the warmest and the Armies of the Lord, 3;000 yards away.
part of the pen, as- they need the Sing the Hallelujah choruie—P11 be We motored later to the heaclquar-,
' • most protection from the cold -duringthere! ters of a regiment, and. here we saw•
the . night, when the fowls; are Mae-,
•
the beginning of a remarkable under-
'. dye. At this time the house is usual- *To the Gallant Soldiers of Canadaground city. The trenches and chain-.
ly colder than duringethe day. The• ••bers-areeall covered, yards- of-earth-
Terchei should be easily removable, It is said that war is hell, but it overhead, with heavy wood supporta
• to facilitate cleaning, dieinfeeting and does not fellow that warriors einst. and even fireplacesatinter's Wprk.
fighting , mites They Should be so be endowed with hellish dispositions Here also Yee' saw one "of • those sad
constructed that, a disinfectant can be your, present mission is as sacred as ,little improvised cemeteries — two
readily 'applied to ale parts. They the Crusades of the Middle Agesnay graves flower strewn—which One sees
. should be as simple es possible, and it -is more sacred. The object of those so Often at the front a
• made in such a way as to have the old Crusaders was to rescue the tomb e We walked straight :through the
•
- - --smallest-humberot -critelore and "ere:. of -Chi-hit filiiiiTthe- Alerdieh; -fit the
• vices, which offer hiding places for
mites and other veemine A.s, a general
rule email he ris should have about
•
six inches of perch space While the
• . 'larger hens should be allowed eight
inches. In the wintet they 'linddle
• close together,, but •-in the •summer
there Should be plenty of room to
'•allow them to •spread -out Perches
•Should be :twelve inches apart, and
net eloser than fifteen inchee to the• ,
wall or ceiling . Show birds, especial-
ly. Leghorn% or similar type% should
• be kept at •a. greater distance from
walls and Ceilings. • Many good birds
• • • are • sPoiled by brushing.. their tails
• againat the walls. •
• In deterraining the eize.of.a_ house,
• eiinsider-thelftimbereofefeievirthel are
to be kept in one pen 'As a rule,.
• fowls are too crowded for economical
- eeproduction, A flock •of fifty hens '
•should usually be allowed about five• .
square feet of .floor spaee -per •hen.
Where- the attendant is careful to
keep the house , clean and the floor
• heavily- litteted with straw, less floor
apace Will be necessary. As rule,
it is far better to ate* too much floor
eispate-eather-than.-toolittlee--Theelare
ger the pen* the:less floor space will
be- required per hen: One hundred
hens will thrive in:a pen '20 x.20 feet,
that is four -square -feet Of floor speed
REvesGE.
,--Frbirt: The Rochester. ifeeeld.-4
LONDON'S DAItK STREEM,'.
Oeder of "Lig ' Clinks In-
hts--7our
crease of Ca.:wanks.
• One 'hundred and -fifteen -pereomi
have been 'killed and 9,001) injured in
the streets of Loden since the pie;
Sent war began: .This has been due
entirely to:the darkening of. the cell-. and made well again. That back-
tre of the -,city, which the War Office ache arid dragging weariness can be
asugPapinosetedthewpeuerlda oglaapetits. coitnieoennes i stopped • for all time. Those sharp
Occasion of the German aircraft drop- attacks when bending. over,. and that
ping a bomb over a remot section of overcome. Every ache and pain due
lameness in the morning can also be
ecindon,„ the list of dead and -injured to .kidney weakness Will disappear
theelectrie street lights: " Hamilton's Pills, a inarvelaus reznedy
You start -to use • Dr:
_was due entirely to the extinction of quickly °I'm°
. • . • long ago made ,famous by its strange
Paris; .wlueli has not' been darken- healing effect upon. 'the kidney and
ed and which has frequently been vis- liver. Don't wait till that dragging pain
kered 'one-hundredth part of the •eas- 'in the loins grows worse. Start • the
ited by German ale ships, 'has net suf-
ualties that the ban on 'electric lights „ ankles and limbs, • sharp rheumatic
care to -day. *Delay will mean swelled
Saracens. Your woods thwai'd and mission is more exalted. • Not only further edgP the \ German infantry Paine in the Miieeles and Joints and
ether painful .symptems as Wel . f
you are always tired, have continu-
the tomb. of the founder, but the di -Ie. opened* *fire, as they ' closely ' watch s oils headache, diver peel's} and. specs
tinctive, principle% of .Christianity are these:weeds, and the. bullets hemmer j before the eyes, or ringing noises in
assailed and threatened. It's yours to through- the trees. • Obing down, into -tiler mind and se; stimulates reel-ult. the ears,—these are commonsymp-
prove that the •Gospel ;of "Love and aeboyau,' we Made our -way directly ing- S° fin' from being afraid. of 2ep. toms that warn.you of thp immediate
Sacrifice is superior to "The Will to, to the front lines. ..-*. ,- • . pelinsethe London gartiaOh—li-elies liSed of Dr. Hernilton's Pills ef Man -
Power." • . "Chants of Hate- are 'un- . It was curious tit wat ' Aitkireb ‘some German warcraft will come this drake and Butternut., Sold. *in 25e.
British, Beare their results,•.vie: Lou:, still and quiet in the m -loon sun • *ay, azidif they do.it is thought the boxes by all dealers, nemedicine. .
vain, Aersehot .and Senlis. atrocities. Net a, equl could be seen,' though powerful anti -air -guns mounted at
War affords you enough methode. of many Must be there,'; The town seem., strategic points will bring them down.
punishing the aggressors without vio- ed quite undamaged, quite unaffected • The figures given above ire not of-
lating the recognized rules and With- by the war at its very gate.
out you becoming a human devil. ..•
If in the., discharge of your duty, it An Outlet of Eseape.
is your fate to fall, be assured • that We dentinned through the trenches
He who "numbers the 'Very hairs of with the engineer who built them,
our. head" is conscious of your merit, .three pies connecting at three sepa-
that_a_gratefulPouetry will keep: •rate.pointse.ao-that- there would eke
you in 'memory and accord to you the ways be an outlet of -Omen, • they
inead of human' appreciation due _ to. :Were fine trenches, with, wood floors,.
one whose life is consciously spent under which a gutter ran, the earth at
"for otherte;",, ' •-•-, .‘ either side held. .back •hy. , sapiiiigs.
You may quite consistently prey fortwined together like wickerwork. A
your so-called enemy- even whilst city was "rising" below ground.
pressing the trigger, thrusting- the Every few--score.yards there was a
bayonet or. striking with the sword: pail of water, With a bottle of hypo-
_______ sulphite of soda, to use against as-
-...... . phyxiating gases. War here is at a
FOR • ALLIES' GREAT DASH. standstill.--
:
. ----• • --- • • - - • • - , At -DaneeMarie-we -acteir the 'general
Britain His Lied Torpedo Ready—A of division. "The .only way to win
-
• Terrible Bomb. • this war," he said, 'is to -kill enough
-"The-- most habil. thing- ever iGermans." .
n-'
An acting brigadier -general : of Al -
Those, Terrible Pangs
f Kidney Suffering
Can be Cured
Don't give up! You can be cured
has 'caused -hi Londen. Tlie explana-:
tion of "a tity• of dreadful night" is
sirnrilir that Lord, Kitchener think
darkness brings War home to the pop-
eventecl."! —That's:the. "NOY -CUrloo•-.7
--- - per -hene-but oneehen ewill not '-thrive-
,. in a pen 2.i 2 feet. • In •a, large pen P. Lucas, member of the American
a • 'ea -el -One hiie a• chine" to* =wander 'eV& deem% diecribes-a-"Ireed terpede
the , entire floor space, thus getting the'Allies• are preparing to use in a
• more exercise.. As the number in the drive through ..Luxemburg within the
. . best enjoy it; and that i his opinion half mont s, a, ing rom near. 1 breait, pinned •it on to the motor cy-
fled( become less, the amowit of floor- next few weeks. . - '•
' space per hen must inerease, and azzy- Mr. Lizeas 'is in' Cleveland, Ohio, a -ette lean was a dead man. - • -
middle of -Anent, when the eleetrie elist's tunic thus presenting him veith
one ,keepino. eight or ten hens should just returned from France. He says ' .
space per hen, Unless he ie prepared- eii"if the Germans in...Belgium_ by.thee '____ CUILMIOOD DANGERg.
—to_give_srieciaLeattentiozi-to-eleeining•• '
• • and' bedditig the 'house. A erowded
••, condition in .; a poultry how is re• .
sponsible on many farms:tor lack of
• winter egg prodeetiou. •
The ventilation of a poultty house
is very inipoxiant. A holm ; veitli
tight wills, ;reef and floor and•ati open
front will *contain cold, dry and pure
.air,—three essentials for the health.of
the foids he winter. With such a eon-
struetien there eyill -be no deafts•hut
.. ..e.•:\ plenty of fresh Air. Cloth .curtains,
„• On the front openings can be dropped
-7,•".'e e---•eif ord wighte-er during stormr weite
ther, and a glass window will allow
• entrance of light at all times. Many
• ,casesof co s have been cured b re-'
pine ChasseurSetold me that gaiety
and optiinisin were his cvatehwords:
thit as everybody 'knew • the ,war,
would •lad seventeen years (until
there were no znare chi d en) one had
' -A BIT OF BRITISH PLUCK:.•
1:
•
ficial.; •the authorities are' not .anxious'iFrench General Honored the „Despatch
. . .
to expose the murderous results of .Rider.
are approximately accurate, anti have There is a prett3r little -story' .eon;
'
their policy oe.lights out. But they
been dedeced in the following . man- earning a few motor -cyclist despatch-
-. riders who were tryiug te get a de -4
tier: .• •
., In-1913--with-the•elights -on a• s -us spateh through .to a 'eertein . French
streets of Lohdon by • horse drawn the generel.. •Thpiigh in safety theme,
selves, the ground over which the
ual, '579 persons were killed in
message had to he-takee was swept
and motor -drawn- vehicles and by bi- -eke, a...reined shrapnel, aid . the first.
cycles, 'and- 18,944 perions ;were more '-"eY' -
The Home irian„aftee a hurried farewell to his
or less seriously injured.
friends; jumped on his machine and
Office has just -given but ,the official
clashed for the danger vine.' He was
figures 'for 1914, . whieh Show that
nearly through When a .piece of
lapt year 637 'persons were killed' and
shrapnel found its billet, and he came
25,239 more or less seriously hurt in
. headlong to the ground. The next
street accidents. man on the list started . with a duple-
Theie figures show that in •1914
eate_despatele but he was leas .11;c1cY
there' were -58*Inote .deaths and 6295
than the other, and he elfme down
more non-fatal injeriee than in 1913,
heavily before he had gone a quarter
aud 1913 was a typical year, rather
of .a mile. The third man jumped on
higher titan the average But the war
the lights Were not pit out ' at oneee
did not commence uetil August 4, and, to his machine; and 'going 4.4411 -out,".
made through. and delivered, his .de-
spateh to the French general. Just
The increase en accidents over. 1913, e
it may be safely assumed, took
Place tasmari-kle-strpp"ed whivamil, ganavd, 7taiiintlige-thegl'e"
rib -
entirely in the period of four. and a
. . 1 bon of the Medaille Militaire from his
240 REFUND OF Ociist TAX.
A. Platter of importance to the pub.
lie and the railways has been settled
by the Chivernment, 4 nice point has
been raised as to the possibility of re.
follunouilldflehthaengtarhista:rjhneCr4171114413/1117011-
gard tothe contemplated trip by train
or boat. If the railways insisted upon'
the tax in such cases of ,changed
tention, it was altogether 1ikey that
the public would set them dowti aa
'444Zertrlitir:137` the 'railways submitted,
the question* to the Government-.
what should bedone in ease unused
tickets presented for refelna to agent
before the train Starts.; to agent or
general office after tram departs; the
same or some following day; in tbo
Cage of Passenger *Ms; in.theruse
of sleeping car tickets; in the case of
parlor car tickets; in the case of
steamship tickets. The answer which
the railways received Was as f011OWel
, There can be no ;refund of the tax
ticket
lasolansyciracnuc1tcaexs.baCtieaea,i
nee
et
is •as though it were in the Dominion
coffers and nothing but an act'of Par-
liament can get it out ,again. It was
ettbhittl aiwinnoeoudid4b;:tihosettvDri pinnptliotyntinett: toihrot
rally
the 'millions of tax stamps that' would
have been required ,oir railway tickets
and the consequent difficulties which
,
would have ensued owing to delay' in
affiydrig and cancellation of stamps,
the present method had been adopted,
and, that as *One Of the public iould
have reasonably expected irefand on
•a stampthat had been.: affixed: and
• cakeelled,- if .ticket ‘Were •refuzided
upon, so also no refund may be eV*
peeted wherever a tax had beencol-
lected, and the ticket Unused and re -
'funded upon. In other words, the act
of purchase of the ticket in accordance
with the Tax Act is a completed tran-
saction, le far- as the -collection' ofethe-
tax is eoneerned, and under no cir-
cumstances as the law now stands
•could it be refunded. To make a re-
fund of the tax possible a special act
would, have to be passed by parlia-
ment. •
WHAT BRITIL:LEADEBS .$Ar;
.Noking countsexcept to 'save the
national' life. -Lord Haldane.
This is not a .time for profit, but foe
equality of sacrifice.—Mr. McKenna.
Victory will come'but it will not
come Of itself. T0 have got to win
it, and • the whole nation has got to
Wifi Boner Law. -
If we lose this war, net only is the
possibility of Votes for women going
to. diaaPpear, but also votes for men
will be • a thing of the past—Mrs.-
Panichurst.• ,
•It is the duty of . every First .Lord
of the Admiralty to maintain the fleet
at all times init state of instant and
constant readiness for • war.—Mr.
.1.13']he .Gith.civernnient still hold that th-,
Practices of German submarines are
not only in flagrant breach of the laws
of war, but are niean, cowardly; and
brutal.—Mr. Balfeur. ' • •
We hold only thirty-five miles of
battle, front, as against More than
300 .miles held ' by the French,. but
,thosee,thirtyellve miles • are the -crux-
ofthe position.—Ben Tillett,
" by rubbing the ebreast of -a, -fowl
with lemon -juice before „boiling, you
will be able to seed it to table with a
*snow-white appearance. • , „
- allow at least ten square feeteof ffoor the French and their allies hope to
drive proposed. •
"Land torpedoes" are to be fired
'from a minter. They are three feet
long. Concealed in a knob. at one end
is seyezity-five pounds of lyddite, a
insist powerful explosive. 'The. area
that can be devastated by the torpedo
is almost inconceivable; Mr. Lucas
• For thisdrive the French also have
provided' a new type of rapid fire
.guneketehkiss make, e.apable ef.1,009
shots e Minete, :though weighing but
•eixty pounds. ' re •
-.-•-•---
moving t e sou e Q e ouse
and alloWing sehshine and cold, pure
air. to 'enter. Hens must not freeze,
• neither do they need to he kept warm.
• In the summer time a ventilator 'in
the hack of the house may be opened.
Air enters 'this and gees up between
" _the etudding.and raftere through the
heed above" the heads of the foivle• .:
•---Thia.ailoweetireulation.erfraireethereliy,
allowieg the warm air to escape in
' the summer without a draft on Ake
• Chlekehe heade. To Min* for thie-eir
Passage the plate is but out be-,
i• Maven three studdings.. It may be ad-
. ' vitable to use erentilatore shafts or
'Other devieet ' to insure ' ventilation.
In fact, many houitethat haVe.proved
• satisfactery in every ivay have • no-
" Ventilation schemes whatever nor any,
' roosting hood.
Dumas Poreiaw German' Peril.. .
There remains a story by Alekander
Dumas 'whieh Ilea bet beee teens:kited
into English. Now a translation is to
be published •y Stanley Paul, under
. the title, "The Prussitin.Terror." The
Story was originally peblislied lat
.rrance before the war of '1870, with
the title "La Terreur • Prussienhe
•• Frankfort." DtillIRS' ohject was to
awaken Frame to her danger froin
the rise Of Prussian militarism. When
the Pruseiatis terrorized • the "free
eitY of Fretiltiort, after beatifig the
• Austrians at SadoWit; he went there
°to collect his. materialA '
---ITOT-ii—mptome, that indicate any of
the ailments of childhood . should be 90 deed and 9,000 hurt, whom the elec- to be derived from "Business Eng-,
allowed to pass without prompt Eiden- trie ei•c lights' would have saved-. • , ' lish," 'pigeon," or "pidgin," repre-
tion. The little ailment may soon be- • • Gas lamps; abe it "noted, cannot be Senting the Chinese pronunciation of
the word "business." -Pigeon English
come a' serious -one and perhaps'' A Named for the casualty' lists, because
little life passes out If Baby's Own the gas lights give out such a emal is the ordinary means of, communica-
tion between the Chinese and the Erig-
Ifsh traders.
, lights -Were-ordered (Mt, to the• end•of
one of the higheit hailers of the
the year. , Aesinnieg the same, rate French Arniy. •. •
:of accidents caused by bad • ;lighting.
-le
•for -the flesttlireeineittlis. of the "pre-- .
Terti • Yeare-W"carrietea approximately • The -phrase ,-"PigeorteEngliehmissaid
Tablets are kept in the house minor
•troubles can, be promptly cured and
serious cmee averted. The Tablets
can. be given to the new-born babe as
•
Mount of light that it has been
thought safe, exceptin strategic areas
and in the very centre of the city, to
let them burn.
well as the growing child. , Thousands • • ' ' * .
of mothers use no other medicine for ',' ' Why, Indeed? ' •• •
. -cents a box from The Dr. Williams A. military class Was stand. ing • for
their little ones.. They "are sold by
____e_ _ ___,, ..e. ..• medicine healers or by mail at 25'
FAMILY FOOD .. - eiammatien . when. the supervising
•— . lieutenant, called' upon aryoung .Teeve
•Medicine Co., Brockville,' Ont. ,
Crisp. Toothsome, and Requires. No Akigle_IN-LON-BON. -erisleatintreeeerldeel
, .1a..... ' 'iliiii.-, "Why should a soldier. ,ftght
ish student' "Answer ,this,-Isaae," he
:.
. . - • .
-• Cooking , •
. • . ,
Unusual Price.' ' fliefneanf?t,r":ii"rglie.idinIffahat. Y°‘.*hayres'hloioelild'
. • . '•
.
Over $16,000,00�Per Acre Not An
- he?" '
' Not long ago a tiny piece oe ground ' • . be
at Charing Cross, adjoining the , Mall •• Tea Costs More -Money. :.
..
Archway, and comprising only 3411/2 In A recent issue of the London
square feet, with a frontage of .39- (Bnge)e-"Standaed" -it e -wee- stated:
feet; was sold, by the London County "That prides of, •tea have risen and are
545,000 an acre. ' ' ' '
eorneene- fee enow at Alteit.hgheat point for_thirty
This reflects the greatly
'Council to an insurance
-It is in the-..eity,-the stpia're mile of. ,i_iseixereYaesaerds.'c'ost of tea at the gardens
which .is Valued ht $1,250,000,000 how- le- ce-the nrorid's supply -originates:
• - ; . ... .. e - ea _
ever,' where land can, easuy , eta= the l'Tv'" i ' d ubt di : costing More
throughout the world. .. •
Corns' Instant •
, • Relief
•,• Paint on Putriam's
mn Cern ,Extractor to.
• • r- night, and corns feel
Chit•better in the morn-
• - Inge- IVIagical th e -
way "P utnii In' s"
easel •the *with, destroys the roots;
kills. a cern for all time. No • pain.
A little boy asked his mother 'to
write an account of heir- Gape -Nuts
food had helped their family': • .
She says "Grene-Niats • was, first
lyrotight to her attention where she
visited. , , . • ,
• ."While I was there I treed the food
regelarlYeeArgeined-weight. anck„felt,
so well that when- I returned home 1
began using rape -Nuts in the family
regularly..• •- • ) • .
• "My little • 18enonths-old baby
shortly after being weaned Was, very
jil while„ teething She was .sick, **e
weeks, and we tiled everYthinglee-She
became 'SO enmeiated that it was pain-
ful to handle her, and we thought we
were eoing to lose her. One day a
happy thought urged me to try Grape:,
Nuts soaked 111 a little warm- milk.
• "Weil, it worked like a chaeie, and
• she began taking it regularly, and
improvement set in at once,. 6She
grew well and round and fat as fast
as Possible on Orape-Nnts. .•
•
• "Some time ago several of the kink-
ily were stricken With La Grippe at
the some tip% and, during the. Worst
stages they could not rehtli anything
bithe shape Of food but Grape -Nuts
and oranges, everything else was
•iioUseating..• • • . •
"We all appreciate What ;our
faniceis food has done lot mt.:fam-
ily/1 , • .•
"There's it heatlem.”, • . ,
I•linne given by :Canadian Posture
Co., Windsor, Ont.,
,
distinetion of being •the • dearest in
jewbrid Fr jirop cikt t-tidar the' *eine;
tre of the city $16,250)000 an acre is,
not fiti unusual. erice. Portions of
Cannon Street, Queen Victoria Street,
Upper Thames Street, and Ste Mary -
at -Hill; are said' to be worth $1.25 a
square inch, while in Lombard Street
and Xing William Street hind has
been sold for $2.50 per Sfinare foot'
freehold. •
The three acres mi which the Bank
of England stands would realize itt a
low estimate :$35,000,000, or the hind
adjeining has sold tit $350 and $400 a
square loot. •
Land in Cornbill *as solddt a price
• Which 'worked out at $12,452,000 an
acre, while some time ago $5,000,000
was offered and reftlied for the site
of a thureh4n Austin Priam ••
• Words resemble sunbeams the
More they ate condemned tho deeper
tbey hunt.
.
•
,
• *Whei-eie Wei -nue Detidee.
• Smart Susie wits' hurrying along
the street at a rare .speed, when She
wan into a young .lady- aegetaintance.
\Why are you in such a,hurryr ask-
ed her friend. "Why, I'm off to see
Professor Astfon, Omer." •"You sur-
prised me.. I didn't know you were
interested in stience. Why, he's the
greatest llying authority on astron-
oniy!" know," said Susie breath-
lessly. • "I expect, his lectufe will be
• a bit of a bore; but I'm told there's
no one, knOWS 58 Vitlal AS he doe's
about etitebspots. And, you know, dear,
I lueve spent heaps of money and tinie
in trying to get • rid of my' freekles. I
'simply mirstn't miss - this • splendid
thante of obtaining a good recipelq
' Awl Miteis SISO the architect 6f
most a his 'Wit misforttines.
?Award% Linliiimit ror Mae everywhere,
*Puthamee' 'Extractor to -day. .
t
A 'man seldom knows what • he
dee'sn't. want uhtil after he, aequires
it. • ; •
r.raeitt-nonsv443-Neriralilit,,
To-eure-hiceougheetill-a •-*ith-
water, drew a ; deep breath, through,
the -mouth, take aemoutliftil of water,
- hold the ghiss before you above your
head, ledge your eyes so that they can
see the bottom, of the glass walled
-duo:Ong your head -back; -swallow the
, water, and then breathe otit slowly
through the mouth..
• lriabbalt wog Lams
to0OXI1ej IF4)3 A irsotcomma
ost.11.‘,1314111 '170 Zit C.
a. Alt gJlL J1Dowscm;
IligefileAegita ei)g seeil,
IlleNoVIT4LANZNG Nipiirg AND soll
a Mesa for este gootl Oatatie
townie Tba most useful and lefereetlast
of ell buselnausee. inforteseloa•
eree..14-eitieu Wiligi4 ral$110.4)14g 'VOW
PliCISSAANIOISk
T111107I1. Zolr4111;
ILI Supernal ono Uterine'. enrol
sat pals by ear boos trsat*itWz
Alko=rufraliti.,,r4.4148Enstw.
DIRK'S RED 'Mitt KILIIR
Ono ameleation XILT413 all Mite and
prevent* their reeppearanee duraper _pee
114FIL!FIntrfailliglWrcralirliTePp.1
pasti-y and tratecto free Iron; ants.
an • us no trouble where use.
FrAtittrla* fee Arcola "tx14,
ars yourarloiontarsnall 2.41,arintally
`0Aseieepie. Sonidini 4 Crag mut. , make.
Igrripszesairjr11,:rin.q1,11:44PIt4:::«Vizz..42
ignicraZYNIZSIPAT:=2,.
PP. 41401444444m4.
• stanneet No.
OliTbill91/1 EMIT strourzas; acitoork
L !OTT
.7" 177,7
Vont.
and, Cbarlies stike To*011sTO;
Wee place many wraduntsp. In '.posittons.
Writs to-dai,lor aollege nalsadts4.
PrInciPali•704.V9P40,14,111efr „
TOSOIETCP. •
Ili -nerd's Liniment Co., Limited. .
Deaf Sirs',.=I-liad it• Bleedinge-Ta-
mor on my face foe a- long thne and
tried a number of remedies -without
any good results. I was advised to.
try MINA-R•D'S-LINIMENT, and after
using several bottles it_reasle cern-
plete cure and it healed all up. and
'saPPeeee:d-eltege •
• .. DAVID HENDERSON.-
Delleisle Station,. kings Co:, N.B.,
• Sept 17 1004.
•
- '
flig6st Cash
'Ptiees Paid for
• ..
•.,
• We are the largest huYers Of
Ginseng in America and have the
greatest demand for it. We can
therefore pay you the highest, cash ,
pzices.• If you have any wild or
cultiiiated Ginseng, write for QUI
latest Prke of ship What you
have and we will submit you .our '
tiglest
DavidBlustein&Iii-o:
, 162 w. 27!h$L, NewYork, U.S.A.
Most ilpewopltleelWee°11pIS'
with thehs , 'knees drawn up. . Ele- •,,
Plients always ; -and horses commonly
sleep standing ;up. Birds,' -with ' the .
exception of owls and -the hanging
parrots of India,. ; sleep their
heads
parrots,
tally:ter& over the back, .,
and. the beak thrust among -the feath-
ers between the *wing and the body.
Storks, gulls,., and ethei long-legged
birds ' .sleep • standing • 'on' one leg.: •
Duck's sleep,on open water. " To avoid '
drifting shoreward they keep paddling
with one foot, thus Maldng them
=Move in a 'circle. Sloths sleep hang-
ing by their four feet, the head tuck- .
ed in between their forelegs, Foree....' • eeee
and woives sleep curled -4, their .-
nosei and the soles of their feet close
together, arid•blanketed0y•thell'huSIIY.
tails. Hares, snakes, and fish sle
!With their eyes open. • ;
. ,
LOW BilItES TO THE CALIFORNIA.
EXPOSITIONS VIA CHICAGO &
NORTH WESTERN RA,reweeir. •
Your -splendid equipped daily tia.inb'
from the New Passenger Terminal ---Chi- -
cago to San'Franeisco Los Angeles and. .
San Diego, •Cbotee of staple, and direct
routes -through the .best or the West.
Something to see all the way. Double
track, autoxnatic eleetrIc safetk .signals "
all the way. Let .us plan your trip and
furnish folders andfullparticulars. Ask
for free booklet "Itineraries .of some Of
the-,Forty---Ways-‘mid-idore-to
fornia ExpoSitions.' It will save. you: • •
A.
tonge treet, Toronto, Ont.
-
A Horrible Thought.
•"I see the Gernians Italie • a
_
that wrITIEFOrrriiiiiii:" . •
"That's • terrible, —Just imegine
what is liable to happen if some fool
Who -doesn't know it's loaded starts
nionleying *1th-it"
Minarays. Liniment Cures Burns, -Ete.
1
. 4
, .
• Another disagreeable thing' abont.. ,
the weather—people are always went.
ing to_talk about it. a . •
'ZraNient Mires *Ditnifrittt. '
•
•
•• It is the custom of many large --
manufacturers and employers of labor.
in Russia to establish shops at which
they expect - `their 'workmen, under '
pain of dismissal, to purchase- every- -
thing they reteuiree• •
• Roth -Answers. •
".1Ohnnie'," said an employer to his
office bey, "in this office yie.must be
careful not to overhear remarks that
arenot intended for you. Do you un-
derstand?" "'Yes, eir" :said Johnnie.
-"Then he turned to hin typist -0-the •
other side of thetable. Brown,
did, you.hdar what 1. said to Johnnie
just now9" "Oh', 'no; sir" replied
iss • . . , .
What to Tell Him
• Footman—"A newsPiiiier • rePorteil
*Wiwi to interview you, Sir." .
Great Man; --"Did you not tell him
I was he-arse—could hardly: epeek?"-
Footmane-"Certainly, sir! • But he
assured milie would onlY-iisk rens.
tions which you could answer by a
epti-or ot the -head." j
-Great Man--1Then. tellehitn I have
a stiff neck!"
When -troubled With tilt
• -raShesieftreitta;Orsaitskin„
disease apply Zam•Bukt •
Surprising hoW 'quickly it esis'es
the slotting and stinging/ Also
cures cuti,.,burns, sores and piles.
Pol./ink Iwasaki° trout ptire her.
bed essences. iiionnintalfats.-no
mineral poisons.. Fittest healer
- , Pruggistoseur.stopeorearreafro. 1
_
6 ut
•
Ipst 31—'13.
.'•;•• *
•
'••
vatwAr4‘:,
i:over •V • Biiittorn $55,,j
' Motor Boat -
'Freight i'reptild to, any Railway •Station, in,
Ontario. Length 15 Vt., 14=1 3 Ft. 9•
;Depth 1 t: 8 In.. ANY .11/471T011 FIT$.
,eeineettee 14'6, eel 'giving engine Pricey on rounost...oet our quotations:
otiv-,-"The Peneto.ng Line cenenereial nee esioeeeee• Launches, 1t�
boats ,and Canoes.
THE GIDLE'k BOAT CO4LIMIT1lD, kgNETA.N.GL Cs0,,
• •
.01 •••