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The Wingham Times, 1897-04-30, Page 2
THlea \V INGHAM IsINLES, APRIL 30, 1sti(, SUBMARINE t rwBL.r:,.S. !Cleo X1',1”0eltir3 ;r-xol.s.te.•:41 In FEentlina 11:fR:•�1f,;(•9 at a rrtn'.tebte speed.. ceder•/ c.,'1 Low be unalo ('f :._'e~ 1. • illi anti:at et ::.1:t;retive1y sluxll •t, t, , rind (1's . ,.-lht:sare rani can countered. in t'i'2'.( hag 1110F8n,g(•:t id a centime rchake pre :;.el. les r e d, and these diLhrit' •ra-..: with the length of :(s laic ' ' , the line. In lerg cf,blee there in a trou- bletamie trou— ble'(ret (....("1 of the license cur- rant, t..: to the feet that the ...,. 1 :leg cum ot the (, t ' . la:r.ends le: on U it- self ekes; . :.l .:, reel thi.a ^ c,.2i a (•liar;;e dc's ( •� , . Vt1 :i, the cur- rent et Cho Leehraina el' any signal from rieiegr.; :taiy th in., maximum Anel :nada ti'em Y:aa y dying (ut. �. 'to come -gut i:(( a „1i::iS that while frond. 400 to OW \, (_,,, a .:1`rdlae ;':al be sent over t. hied 1:S.e, tL" 1uaY-12:1::111 1,11.:CU 011 1..1 Atha:tit'vett<i.st( ntwv1.re abeUt 82 reed: -..:..ate. I;.fere th:e'::•ip1.en recorder" ,:et Lend Kelvin's "curb sender" were tot, _,tea, the i:laxilnnm speed. v es c :; f t c 1• ten v. crds per mi l - Tete. ( ^rte ::a•.y ;Tough, the mere perfect the c•,;c''.,'i'. :ion: ,vlcthe }n to is this legit;. it tt, and sli .Lt leaks in this c: tl' e i e1e.,.ee for the time that lie..r•ej woe's captivity. ,'city. The Torr, -vc of the mat w; .ter{ ac- tive :.t ease, faints, howcvcr, and will seen clone sIntak in the ease. Pre:(seer vi :'a11rs P. ',1.herapsen of the i ' yah . a eiety of England has in- vented a. eyansra cf cable cenetracticn by which he capectsnet only to increase the capacity ef the present Meese Lut to make 1 r::caiable the covering of the 3, 600 mike Lich repirate Hawaii from North Ar:erica. Ills plan is to make a cable vritll two separate conductors in- closed in the same armor, so as to form a ccmplctc circuit, and every 100 or 160 miles he Will introduce stretches of cable with three such conductors, the third Icing a wire of high resistance, the pmeesc cf which is to net as a sort of aitificial and protected leak. Ono end of this third Wile -will be connected with the resitivc condnetar and the other with the negative one. Ey this device the static charge on ene Wire will neu- tralize. that on the other, and all retarda- tion will he avoided. The expectation is to multiply four cr five times the number ef words now sent over Atlantic cables, to increase to 70 or 80 the 12 words rer minute that could be sent over a e`2:r•1e core cable to Hawaii, and raise ficin 15 to 75 the Words rent from Lon -den to Cnpe Town.—New York Times. NO BLOOD SPILLED. But the Duel Was Fought, and Everybody Was Sat.eficd. Ever; enc wvLo is r.w; s a aythin ; about .k ajcr Whiten blows that he is wit bent a .speak cf physic el ccw,,..aice. That is the rcarcn that he ire -treed no risk in telling the story that follows: "I; • net after the weir I went to Texas and fanned a L•Ur:l yss part:n e :-i;,1 with a rough:,t brave and big heti tail eeti v e. ;: We 1e/ , -d aw'i stocked an ext.( wive cat- tle nen i1, larehd our cowboys and estab- lished a little community of cur own. My paru(r imperiutended affairs at the ranch while I did the dealing, the pur- chase of supplies included. This took me to the nearest market, and, as it was too seen fcr the prejudices between tho two en( at sections of the country to be entirely allayed, I was very careful to talk nothing but business. "Bat elle day in the hotel au ex -colo- nel who 1i;d :Luken on extra steam at the bar io 1•c n i;;tently attacked 11:y political prii:c il'.c s :(nd so clearly aimed his t en- eraiiti(s at me that I retorted angrily. This tees what he wanted. He handed me Lia card, and -within half an hour two cf his friends waited,on me, pursu- ant t; ti:e code duello,..s-To gain time I :ref(rred them to any partner and hurried 'back to the ranch. Ho was delighted at •the I r( spec:. It would be a great piece of ' c:verti: ing to bowl the cohered over, :and a the same time it would insure :me egainst like trouble fu the future. But by principle and training I was ir- revccably committed against the duel. "It was elifricuit for me to make my parts:( r comprehend any such moral bias, espc ch.iiy as ww e had fought off cattle thieves together, and he knew that I had nerve and was a dead shot. He himself, when aroused, was recognized as gime of the most dangerous men in the southv: a s t. His ultimatum was that we must meet, but with it wall a positive assuraaee that no one should be hurt. the affair came off, and after three ex - chastens honor was satisfied without a dreil of bloccl. My painter had simply toles th-' eel:oile; s s:rconds that they must load ww ith bh;ilk c aVtridges or settle with him. 'I1:cyhasteeed to choose the bhulk altereetis tend in time the colonel and I la et me fest friend% He confidentially rah/lien d to me afterward that he reek - (mod he'd lett his shooting eye and must . keep tut cf trouble."—Detroit Free Prose. Realism In Literature. "The movement for realism in Mora - tare luza given to the best current fiction a verity end value as a refleetic;n of the times that the novels 'of no ether era possess," writes Droch in The Ladies' Home Journal. "This is not saying, by any means, that our Novelists aro great- er than any of previous *cells. c c IIs. 13ut never before could a reacher of fhe'tion ac- cumulate a vivid, true and varied pic- ture of io many Bides of human nature, to many Cenditiont ef actual life, It therefore broaden/ the horizon of a je dicfous reader in 0, -way that books of travel never diel It ought to :ma often floes broaden the i,yinlathies of the reader so that the prejudices ef c1a's and nationality aro broken dowu, and here is it ini-r.' charitable lodgment of runinu nature width can't help being different.' " why sus rat Stave:, Tommy :inquiringly)—Mamina, is his hair oil in thy' lottle? Alumina --No, tb at'e glue. Tommy (n(1neint10 t(Iy)—Then I ex - tet that's why I ci.n't get my hat oft -Chicago Ftucurd. SHE'S WELL EDUCATED. 0. Wcanon Who Has Learned Entirely by Careful Listening. The wonderful development of certain icctltlee in the cases of persons who have lest the use of mine of their natural fua:ethers, cr of others whose faculties have act been fully developed, has long been a matter of remark, but it is not rl( 1:(1 the outside observers who appre- ciate the povisions of nature fer the I•: 1:1 f:t of the unfcrtuiatcs. The suffer. f::; t tat 2usclves often /appreciate this ful- ly, alai in some instances, after year:, geees to depend so lhlac'h open their ac - Tailed face -Ides as to bo afraid of a `l,:nee, even if they have the l.haxnee of one. An illustration of this is given by a wvc loan in Brooklyn who never has 1e::riled to read or write. In no way could ene di:a:over this ( xcept by her own admission cr by putting her to a direct 't(-st, fer she i:: ene of the best ed- ucated women in the country, convey- soot with languages, art, literature and all the current topics of the day. she is rich, too, and could afford all the serv- ices of the best teachers if she but chose to learn to read, but she refuses to do so. When this woman was a child, her parents lived far from schools, so she had no chance thou to learn to read or write. As a mere child she began to earn her own living, and again the e. •lance for schooling slipped away. Then she married and the cares of a family tech: up her time. By the time the ba- bies were off her hands, her husband had grown rich, and then she began her real education, and now, as a widow, sale continues it. Her companions read to her and talk with her aLcut all the tcpies which interest her. Years of such wale have stored her hind with a rich treasure of knowledge, and there is not a rage of a book that has been read to her that she is not familiar with. Her stores of'kuowledge are at her instant command. Why will she not learn to read? Because, she rays, she fears that this Wonderful memory, which is now neck a treasure house to her, might be inquired if the were to do anything to w. e akcn the d( IIOLOS tem it. What such ' 1II(10cly can do is well illustrated iu the case of a tailor of this City who cannot read or -write. Ho is Probably the most widely kncww•ix man in his business here, as for many years he ]las delle busincr:i with New York's firemen and pclic'ul:cn. Almost every man cf these two bodies has dealings with this tailr,:, and each month be- tween the first and the tenth days he visits every station house and engine and truck IIOUSe fn this city to collect his dues. He has acquired considerable wealth, and it is said cf him that in all the years he has dealt with the firemen and policemen he never was known to make a mistake of a cent in :my man's recount, although all his records of transactions have been kept in his dead. —New York Vera. WHEN GRANT WAS POOR. 9 Time 3n His Career 'When lac (Seeded tlro ww•inerevrit'ha1. General W. II. L. Barnes, one of the leaders of the San Francisco bar, at a meeting of the California colnrnaudery of the Military Order cf the Loyal Le- gion, told the following story about General Grunt. It was told years ago to General Barnes by Captain Richard L. Ogden, once a clerk in tho office of the United States quartermaster at San Francisco, and General Barnes recently copied it from Captain Ogden's diary. It was that when Grant resigned his colnmisseiCn as captain, at the age of 82, being then in Oregon, he went to San Francisco en his way home and present - cd to Captain Ogden a certificate of per diens seri:ice On a court martial amGtlllt- ing to nbaut fe40. The certificate was in- cur( ctly drawn, and Grant with a look cf despair asked Captain O€alen's per- mission to sleep on the lounge i21 the latter's office, saying he had not a cent to his name. He slept on the rickety n ice lounge, and Ogden agreed to cash the certificate perl0na11y and to send it back to Ore€;cn Pr conceder). Grout had expected to buy passage for himself to New York in the steerage, but Ogden \w elft with hint to i the Pacific Mail steamship office and procured far slim a cabin paE•saf,-e I:ass:, or what was the nearest• to it the steamship company could give, for Urant had to pay his railroad fare a(tc88 the istlnnus. Tllis, bo w'evcr, loft him tin 5, and Grant was very grateful, The diary quotes Minh. as saying to Captain Ogden: "This is a (great luxury and what I did not (.;pert, and I am in- debted to you for it. The prespcet of ever Leing able to reciprocate is cer- tainly remote, but strange things hap- pen ill this world, and there isnokuow- ing. "W-Pitteturg Dispatch. TEE 5 6T.H Fi'E' JIO1 SE, ARRAN(: ERIENT OF THE OFFICIAI, QUARTERS OF THE EXECUTIVE. T'Rus Ecom the'Windows of the Last Iteem. The "hall of the Disappointed." Telcpisulle Is Almost the Only Modern Xaa+nrtercnue1t In the Thudding. Mr. (:. O. Fuel writes 0 paper for The Century on "Our sallow Citizen of the White Penke,'' devoted to the official cares an 1 duties of the president, in tho course of which ho says: At 10 o'clock a hardly discernible sign ' against the t, lass of the barrier an- neunecs to the citizen who has arrived ender ilte grand portal that the exccu- tite 11mn1si011 is "open" to visitors. At 2 o'clock the (sign is el:anged to "clos- ed." The decrkecpers swing the deers open to everybody. Within the largo vestibul'' nothing' is seen which indi- cates the arrangement and. purposes of the different parts of tho mansion, It was not always so, for originally the neww• concealed corridor, or middle hall, with the staircase en the right, was a part of the entrance hall. Now the s120ccs between the middle column:: are cloud with colored €class partliclas, and the vestibule is simply a large, Square room pleasant to slat out of. Na way appears to open to the state apartments in the center or to tho west . wing, which is devoted to the private apartments. Yet glass doors are there, though as imperceptible to the stranger as a swinging panel. To the left there is a door which is always open. It ad- nits to a small hall, across which a sim- ilar door is the side entrance to the great east room. About this splendid room, comprisiug the whole cast end of the mansion, the visitor may wander at will before the portraits or enjoy frem the windows the beauty of the treasury building to the east or the imeressive ! landscape to the south, inelralieg, the towering shaft of the Washington mon- ument and beyond the ever charming Potomac, spreading with enlarging :curves toward Mount Vcrneu, and in I the private garden under tho windows he may chance to see a merry band of little ones. From the small hall between tho ves- tibule arra the east room a stairway as- cends toward the medial line of the building to a wide middle hall, on each side of which are the offices of the pres- ident. The arrangement is simple, and in the floor plan covers the space occu- pied below by tho east room and the green room, the latter beilig the coun- terpart of the small 11011 with the public stairway just Mentioned. At the head of these stairs, over the green rcau2, is the cabinet room, which is the first apartment in the south side ef the hall, a jog di two step, at the private cheer luta the president's rccnl, marking tiro raisc(1 calling of the cast rccnl below. The preside et reaehcs Lis office thrcu ,h the cabinet recall, catering the latter frcm the library, -which corresponds o11 the second ilccr with the blue rcrm of the (•tote slbO riluents. President Arthur j i1x1: e d need the library as his office and the cabinet eh:a:saber for an 0111(roe2n, while his private eccrctary was dcn1i- e1i(1 in thio traditional (•ince of the pres- ideht. During his first term Mr. Cleve- land preserved the same arra gement. Bet (:;(dural Harrison went Leek to the oLee Li:heww-ed by Lincoln's cccupanes, sed Mr. Cleveland, cn his relearn, found the crrangcnicnt so satisfactory. that he celltieeed it. Beyond the president's large, square office is the corner room where Private Secretary Thurber is always tither wrestling with the details of executive bin:il:c:te or standing with his ale -alder braced against the crowd /tru€ glia;; to live the president. It is a 12,^irrf,w apart- ment and night bo called appXcl'iiately the "hall of the disappointed,"the ug- € esticn 12eing enlrahal:i„cc1 by roltraits of the greatest of presidential asi?ilants, Clay and Webster, to which Mr. 'Thurber added, as his private property, all elh- grtvi2lg cf the closest contestant for the dice, Governor Tilden. On the earth side of the hall there are two rooms which correspond to those on the south side just described, the small ene being occupied by Mr. O. L. Prudcm the assistant secretary sineo Gen- eial Grant's time and the euste(tii1n of the eke 1:o0ks as well as of thio iradi- tious which govern the public social routine cf the executive =maim. In his rc01n sits the telegraph clerk at his irainnn(n.t, and by the window is a Id - epitome which saves a great 12112(111,1 o.f mesa: tiger t:0rvice between the plc sidcnt and t he departments. 0etasienally i1 (0L t1'±telltale with less ceremony than ('liN('rlti(,1I, attempts to get an appoint- ment with the ear of tho president over the 1' 1:•1,Lcne, and there is a rccold of a stems e arthgnake prcdtte(•.d i21 the la•ivato tiecr'etursde roe a by a furi0u:1 cougress- nien who found the telephone ineffect- ive and his Olympian stylo even less: /u. il'ctwithtstanding that it is almost the E:o"r: modern improvement 1n tho �4'I1itO tl.(ttt`,(', 1'1('si(lc'at Caer('1(111t1 wwas 121111 at the tele phone Lt:t (Thee, and then, needless to say, not 021 call. row to Freshen Down Comforters. After cidsrolawn co,nforters is:., is» i toed for a time they lo:ae their lightnaew. lbulg such comforters over a lint' in 0 strong wind for a few hcraro and vivo them a good beating with a rattail. Tide will give them renewed life. A. DREADFUL DISEASE Ii1FORMATiON OF VALUE TO EVERY•• GII.E1Y ABOUT APPENDICITIS. it L'x,tegerous tiuperfuity---Popular Errors n1t ileo Sulljeet'-•ll'ow to Recognize the )'2I11er SI0us•-12etireen the Ates of 'I'eu and 'thirty It Is 11lost to re feared, Thele iS 0 popular and false notion. duct appendicitis is caused by a grape' e•cd, lot orange seed or some other foreign! lull,:: anee getting into the vcrluifot-iru rl 1, mlix. The true cause is thio setting ;ip of intianuuation andeousequcnt guns Maw in the tissue of the appendix, Uifi- eally clue to insufficient circulation of blood in the part itself. In thentatuds of operetierts which have taken lelace-- Uru1y iu tiluc to save the' life of the pa- tie2.t feud many too late—thele is not (:no authenticated case of a foreign sub - stem.", such as a seed, beimfi found in the appeedfx. This will he more fully c0.::lined when one iiae in mind that the interior of the appendix fs only big cxongb to admit 0 int ilium sized (lam- ina; 1::•0(110. Its greet liability to disease is due entirely to its low order cf vital r(-sistauce—that ia, it is a» agar' which apps ;ars to have no actual use fu the present machinery of Ivan, but iu the earlier stngee ef Wool's development it believed to Ixlve Leen a large pouch ihet played fah important part in the digestive (02(1 (218018 cf 1120 human sys- tem. By ages of disuse it has gradually shrunk to its present dimensions and is known to science as a vestigial Grgnn, clw which is may a remnant of its former self meet pc'eessiug Isttt a vestige of its original fueestic.22s. T becomes mere clear if servo other parts of the body which 110W /Teal to halve 110 1150 are coesidercd. The tousils are in this class and ale° t'10 vied= teeth, itud both are peculiarly subject to disease. The appendix is 121. one of the most delicate anti vital parts of the body, in the peritoneal cavity, US102lIy to the right of the r, 21te:r of tho abdomen. haul in rare i?lets21ces i t has been found 711 (11:a left side, neo still more rarely 1t11erwiao displ ;0011. rills discovery, made very recently, has caused the sur- geons to ho extremely careful to locate the trouble before fleing the kuife, But science never stands still. It al- ways pushes its iavesiigations beyond mere appearances, and out of the nlyte- ries of nature develops facts which give It pewee and might. Whencu it w; as once proved that than poison which produced eeptie Perit0nitis came: from the break- in; down or decay of the appendix, rho very root of one of plan's worst physical foes 17:16 laid bare. Further praetice c:s't:bushed beyond adoubt that in a large iaojority of apses the appen- dix ccrlcl lie r(1110Ved by :t simple sur- gical apezaticn and the patient restored to vigcreus Leitith, if the disease was discovered in tivtc and cerreetly diag- nosed. The surgeons now regard the opera- tion ii:ieif :'S elle of the most simple, but to obtain the best results it should take odece within 0 few hours after the patient begins to suffer from the disease. In fact, tI:e 8001108 the operation is had the better aro the chances of recovery, while if the knife is not resorted to (Meth is sure to ansae very promptly cr after lingering miseries from the deadly poison perambulating through the sys- tem and coming to the surface in ab- settease , The symptoms are 80 plain and un- mistakable to the surgeon of today that any sufferer may know them fer 1linas0lf: First.—Tile attack is airways sudden. It comes ea wale» the Iverson is appar- ently iu the best of health and without the slightest warning. Secoaids—A sharp pilins is felt in the very center oaf the. abdomen. 'this is al- ways the case, 171101fler the appendix be in its correct place on the right side or displaced to the left. Third. ---A sere end tender spot, very painful to the touch, is located exactly where the incision must be made to finch the appendix. These are the throe plaid symptoms which have been found in thousands of 0118es:with namely a variation. Thus it is that many sudden deaths occur to persons in robust health. They are thought to have a colic or a vertigo, when the truth is that miserable and useless little organ, the appendix, has met with so1110 kind of au accident and. clogs the whole machine. Appendicitis usually occurs between the ages of 10 end 30 years. It is CX- tremely ram above or below those ages. It is 1181CI1 more frequent among 21)1(1(•11 than females, the pre -portion in all eount1±es being 20 per cent females to 80 per cent ma118, 'elle cause for this difference is of very recent; discovery, and i8 not even known generally ammo, the m(11i001 mate: cion, Dr. Clado, a T're'nch Ku2gc-ash and inwc'Stigator, eeut;llt en explanation • of the comparative immunity of the fe- male si x from the malady, and (iiscoV- ere d that the apse ndiX ill' woman has an extra blood 'mad that sloes not exist in : man. 'iasis discovery was hailed with delight by the surgical world. It was not only a bit of new knowledge of in • - finite value, but was an additional proof of the theory that the collapse of the i appendix is always due to its want of , vital resistance. --New York Journal ' 4f CEYLON TEA �-1 1 :•(, ��4.%'fir?fS t re 1� r,The a _ It . .. Lead packages cal , M-, ;a, o, r(, set t:o"•. per Ib. Belch 'iv all grocers. Tao latt lcltwl 11 1iuf, Ltd., Wboles1}1&1 Agents, seeranto.. �------,'......'-.•,»."""_"�, Factory Wager: Dr lwtreella. As for the distrib lion of wages, the pay cf a 'woman (uuc'ants:10 threcequar- tors of that of a main, that of it boy or girl of 12 10 17 seees to cue -half, that of a child trader l:3 years to one-third of a grown man's:: wages. The advantage arising for the factories from women's :U1(1 Childr('I)'S wages is such that no humanitarian attempts have been as yet able to /olve that harassing problem in any civilized country. But as the. wage's of workingmen in Rul:sia aro ab- solutoly reduced to a minimum, and scarcely sufficient to keep ooul and body together for more than 13 hours' daily toil, it is a cruel and gross injustice to eat 'working women's wages by a third, since the first nccessarie8 of life aro alike in men and 'twtmeu regardless of sex. The monthly wages of tux adult la- borer, mall or 11OM1111, in England are 21sf, timer: (124.05 per cent), in America 4 4-5 (370.14 per colt) times, greater than the wages of a like laborer in the Moscow factories. Since, however, the duration of working time in the three countries is different, Mr. Dententhif has reduced the col: pari:?oil cf -weave per hour and come to 1 he cezeitta o,l that wages fu England are by 284.5 per cent and fn L':_T e aclmsetts by 42:3 per cent , higher then diose i:i the Moscow facto. . ries. If we make a ;,sod allowance fcr t310 higher cost of living in America— which. however, is to be mule stood emu gr:xuo satin, only the luxuries cr life being d'.'niw hew, not the 2e,e"- series iii.: ;;:Tait, florr, bread --still no comparison eel: he (.2•:; -aa between the motto of living of :;.1 ira•aicau and a Russian laborer.—C:;tbolie World. Bine of the Congrt :..:iridal Library. Fcundcd in it r y( :.c 11300 t:•: the. mod- est aperepriatic :: (t 4 , Gtt0 "fur the pur- chase of ouch be el1:1 as may be 1 (cssary for 111e use cf cc2:f:rct•s lit laic safcl city of Wasllingten," this collection has grown, i:otwtt :ata..n.tng the ravages of two fire::, to (lie present cggicgate of 740,000 volutaes. The 11(qui: itiOn Of the Jeffc rsen Maury in 181 i,, the Fere() Historical liLrar'y in 181;13, the Lahith- Soni,:l library i:t 1807 ..-'d t'. lend collcc:icn 111 11132, all c:. :i ,.:.,, - daily i2:1p.(:rn:et anal w ele:able .;cel reit to 1181. 11110. .n i.:' t:.c (l 1.: (1a cf the ccpeeight haw el 1` 70, field,. -,:cd Ly the inter:_,:tic:.::l cr_: i '.t net (1 1(2 ;1, this li1.2 ry beceesse cetiti(ii to r(ec'ive two 0(41105 of •.ail 1(•11.1, ;: eiet.i(021 1:22(1 other publications 010111:fe5 the 1:rotee- tion of copyright in the United aaates. —A. R. Spefferd in CG.11tury. Deserved Credit. "I may -iced a w:i:d life," said g"hut Lut Ill fell yen cue illieg—I take clue about the l:ecp ie my bays as- lociate with," "1 know you c1o, " said Hawkins. "I've ibserw•c(1 that you eland very little time ' Fite 'ons yourself, old Man, and I honer ' •011 fed: it. "--.harper's Bazar. Colli Cures. A plau is befit€( recennncndcd by French physici:;l:s to cure colds by ap- plying foe to the spire. Indeed, 1101V- adays the curet; ye valued ('old is being highly spoken of, and the inflammatory sore throat which used to be treated by poultices and Warmth is now said to bo easily and quickly mired by sucking ice and keeping the patient in a low tem- perature. Utility. "Your daughter has 1x1(1 a great many adnlirersl" "Oh, yes! She puts nearly all her Mildew curtains on the rods with her 3ld egg::goment rings. "—Chips. .A. Wonderful Mathematician. Zerah Colburn, born iu 1804, was`the most remarkable natural mathematician every known. He wwas able to raise 8 t:) the sixteenth power, this comprising 15 figures, and was right in every par- ticular. Once he was requested to name the factors which produced tho number 247,483 and immediately gave the cor- rect answer. He was asked the square root of 106,020, and before thio figures could bo written dawn ho gave the an - Ewer. Chew for a few moments a cracker .Ontalllillg 110 sugar and notice how sweet it becomes. This is tho sugar foto which your saliva has converted the Ouch of the cracker. When a dentist in China is pulling a ooth for a Dutton, au assistant 1lalnnlers in a ,Tong to drown the cries of the *tint. It is just as well to know that ophelia, softy color, is a pale mauve -e. D! WOOD's OJE'E's COUCH.% COLD,, E"!i OAe:SENESS9 ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, AND ALL DISEASES OF THE THROAT AND L J ;CS. PRICE 2213o. ©P 3 FOR $1.00 ^OR GALE 12V ALL DRUGGISTS fees nen seal !Ise esedneres rd. 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