HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-01-04, Page 60111•11111110igt--.
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-
•
,
tan "SYRUP OP FIGS"
• TO OONSTIOATED Clara
laPrult Laxative" Oen% iarm
'tender little Stomach, Liver
and Dowels.
41•••••••••••••1
Loelii at the tongue, niothdrf
your little one's stomach, liver
and ltowels need cleansing at once.
then peevieh, cross, listlessi doesn't
sleep, eat or act naturally, 'or is fever-
ish, 'stomach sour, breath lead; has sore
throat, diarrhea, full of cold, give a
teaerronful of "California, Syrup of
Ings," and in a few hours all the foul,
constipated waste, undigested food and
emir bile gently moves out of itB little
'bowels without griping, and you have a
well,playful chili again. Ask your
druggist for a bottle of "California,'
Syrup of Fi^. " which contains full
nireabtiona for obies, ,childreref an aro
end for grown -not
ni es W a eg on
r Gener.t1 in-:urance Agent
Real Estate Pi.nd Loan Agent'
Dealer in N'w--ving Machines,
For good housea for sale,
conven entli situated In the
• Town f eaforth. Terms
reasons We •nd possession
given prone tly
'Apply at my office for particulars.
firfflomArarporsoroworimom
isetwur SOO STOMACH
FLOATING VMS
116664 liEFORE ETES -
BOTH CURED BY
LAXA-LIVER P11.1..t
They stimulate the 'sluggish liver,
dean the coated tongue, sweeten the
breath, clean aivay all waste and poison-
ous matter fcom the system, and prevent
aa well as cure all sickness arising front
a disordered condition of the stotnach,
liver and bowels. ,
Mrs. Joseph H. Therieau, Saulner-
ville, N.S., writes -_"X was troubled
with a sour tii.OstIlt:Chf and took Eve vials
of leh.lburnti eet-Liver Pills, and they
eure.lme.
•
hi leo! t estd Item for floating
elieti• e e -es. nhey eured her
sato net t, telten four vials. We
bent iniee1-.Iftitic.T.A. them to all
sueSereee '-r trotS;les."
'‘`• •Ttnie nee 25c.
per e - nolt t.‘d direct on
iv .1".a. T. hlilhurn Co.
Lint • • h -t.
IMIMIIIM•11111=MIII•
MUM GLOSSY HAIR
pinag III0/41:420:114111F,
rodr•ftworsomaill
alrlad Twit' Halrgets soft, finfly, sad
beautiftil--aht`a ditudi bottle
of.plinderlito
If Tod care ler heavy heir thietegliOr
tens with beauty and is radiant with
lifet has en'-incrompliableeeteitileiWand
fiallyeauct.luettetet, try Dariderine. •
atist ebne applicatien doubles he
beauty Of your hair, besides'it
disitely `disiolves every particle of
dandruff. You can not have nice heayy,
healthy hair if you have dandruff. This
destructive scurf robs the hair of its
lustre, its strength and its very life,
and if not overcome it produces a fever-
ishneee and itching of the eestp; the
Lair reed& famish, loosen and die; then
the bair falls out fast. Surely get a.
email bottle of Knowlton's Danderine
front any drug store and just try it.
MILLIONS DIE
.artgarennenninemenot
Every year from Consumption,
could have been saved if
Wan connnon sense prevention had
been used in the fast stage. If YOU
ARE a Sufferer from Asthma, Bron-
nhitis, Catarrh, Tleurisy, Weak
Lunge, Cough and Colds ---all 'Dire
eases leading up to Consumption—
tuberculosis, YOU ARE interested
In Dr. Strandgant's T. B. Medicine.
.Write for Testimonials and Bookiett
D3. angAltrelnintell tniblichihn efie
206.2#ef*Alio "."
9/905/10$110.1firi~115511i1
141400A0MITS"WOkil
:I MILE YOU SIAM
.11m1.11.0ram..~
Po SUR Headache, Seise $.3tomach,
Sluggish Liver and BOVMS—
Take Cascarets tonighe.
t
.444:44194.446.44•44444.46.4 BLOCKADE MADE M
Dissatislaction ORD ROBERT oECIL'it recent
EvFacrIvs
letter' ' to Peefesse Birek,
the Danish 'etireant, twho. re-'
NOW
Gerrnan Navy•
eentbr visit d on on on a
L
dentelett eteteted tweet enteideeedenti tante eh
VOW Teague, Bad Taste, Mete.
&ion, itlallate4gein and. Miserable Beane
*elm cot& ham A torpid iiiVer 'and
feloOtil bethels, which cause your stom-
ach tit behnike filled with undigested
food, whialviours and ferment e gaze
b,age in a *Will barrel. That's the' first
step to untold inisexy—Ludigestion, foul
gases, bad breath, yellow skin, mental
fears, everything that ia horrible and
nauseating. A flescaret to -night will
give eahur oon-stipated nowelres tlthrongb
cleansing and. straighten you out" by
mornieg. They work while Ton isieep--
a 10 -bent box frOmeyoUr druggiit will
keep pee feeling 'geed. for months.
$2.00.000
to tend on Feriae First, Second
11ortgeges. Call or write me at
once and get your loan arranged
by return mail No advance
charges.
E. R. REYNOLDS,
77 Victoria $t., Toronto.
N aeeount of his experiencee,
bate been obtained from. a
native of Schleswig who
eseaped from Germany in, ,
June laet, after serving as a blue-
jacket in the Gektnan Navy from the
beginning `of the war.
Schleswig, he explained, is not
German in sent
the Enimen , although Prus- .
eta has had 50 years in which to
l
establish her sway vet., the eopula- ,
tion, ,and Schleswigers' like himself
Save fought for spire during
'ete war only becauee they are 'coma
•
Jelled to do so. Re, for his part,
eventually determined to make a bid.,
ter freedom, and made the journey
Dton Wilhelmshavee to the panish
-frontier on foot, finally contriving to
slip through the barbed-wire bard-
- at -the frontier. A Sentry who
detected Mm afterhe had pushed
forvrard some 100„ yards or so on the
Danish side gent soitte bullets after
him in his Right, but these fortun-
eteiy oilseed their marks' and but: for
this incident tend a narrOw -escape
from the gendarmes at a previous
stake of hitiejOurney lie encountered
no Serious difficulty en his WO..
As Admiral von Capelle had just
made his statement in the Reichtitag
as to the detection of a revolutionary
movement in the Germany Navy, the
conversation naturally turned first
of all to the atmosphere prevailing
in the German fleet. The sailor was
not surprised to, hear the news. Al-
ready in May, he said, there had been
a disturbance on the Konig Albert,
the crew having refused to obey
Orders by- way of protest against the
rationserved out to them, The
Bayern also, he said, was known to
he a center of disaffection, and in-
deed discontent' was general. So far
as he could judge,. however, this dis-
coatent was not political in its
origin,or directed against the *Wet-
ing form of -government; it was sim-
ply the outcome of the scarcity of
food, of the monotony of the life to
whieh the men of the German Navy
have been fer the 'most part con-
demned since the -outbreak' of war,
and, above all, -of the' iron diecipline
to which they are subjected. The ef-
fect oe moreethan three years 'Of that
discipline under war ;conditians is
such, the speaker wan -convinced,
that, white the men °Vale Germany
-army end niey Will -see the 'war
-throughto, the end, /they will refuse
to A man to endura it -any - longer
once peace. is- declared. In this cofl-
n�t1o,a * *there, be clamed the
army tand'inivy together. he men
coinpolieg b001, he -old, are drawn
from math' the same' social classes,
and are animated by ninth* the i8ante
sentiment. 'An insight into Abe atti-
tude" of the army, for instance, is
after* by tlie fact that the troops
called 'in• to deal with *Mit are now
the feequent ood riots in Gorman
tosans are oftan, draWn from lathe
other center, the local garrlson being
considered too much in sympae
with the townsfolk to prove reliaie
Questioned as the attitude of the
navy toward the itibtharine cam-
paign, the Gerneen tar said, the sttb-
Marine crews are meetly recruited
'from among marines- with good sea-
going 4xperience, their place on the
battleships being taken by men from
the depots. The submarine service,
he added, Is Ipopultr, for the pay and
the food is better, the conditions are
frequently more Comfortable, and,
above alt, there is the prospect of
relief from the tedium of life in
port. As for the moral aspect of the
matter, the rank and file of the navy
merely obey orders, he pointed out,
and, like the rank and file of the
people as a whole, accept the view
of the circumstances put forward in
the newspapers. So far as he was
able to judge, there is, in addition„ a
large section of the population which,
having ineested in twar loans,- is anx-
ious for the war to be won .by any
means; but ,he nevertheless corned-
ers that there are ift educated Ger-
man circles many Who disapprove of
the metneels of warfare adopted by
the , German authorities, although
their voices cannot now be heard.
Asked, with reference to. the war
loans, wh,ether any compulsion to
subscribe is exercised upon. men in
the navy, --the speaker stated that
there is no compulsion in connection
with the 15 marks aemonth, paid to
he 'German bluelacket--although,
to be sure, a goodly part of that goes
to the paynient of *taxes; but there
are fresh regulatiens' with regeen to
the clothing atIcivrinee of If Marks a
month. If thie was left tratenehed,
the men used to be eititletto, t;tadent
the total 144 marks at the end' Ottlite
year, but now tfiey are cem011ed to
invest at. least Ito Marks lit the war
I oan.
With regard to shipbuilding activ-
ity in Germany duritig the War; the
speaker's intpteasion woe, that, at all
ee main centers at any ratecit has
seen eichtstvely - confined te the
• eeilding of warships, not merehatit-
den. The mea employed on this
leork, he added, are like the taunt -
eon workers, earning good, wages;
out, among 'there Ow the food Situa-
tion has aroused discontent which
tOUnd Jxpressioik last spring Innit
i4tike in the state shipbuilding yarns.
On this oceasicin, as many as 400
workmen were transferred to the
army, their place being taken by men
elreedy in the ranks.
The Gnat.
The gnat is but one of many
species of mosquito. Altogethea
there are no fewer than thirty-five
described as natives of Europe, while
as many as one hundred and thirty
different varieties are found scatter-
ed over th,e rest of the world. Of
this large number, same are known
by the Spanish name of mosquito—
that is, "little By"'—while others are
given the title of "gnat"; but from a
scientific point of view ther is no
difference between the insect knovcu
under these different names.
CASTOR I
ite Mugs =di Children.
lit ad Yoe Have bap Bought
Doan tba
�aoS
mission teem his Government, onlhe
subject of the allied blockade Of Gere
many, emphasizes a point to which
all neutrals bordering on the terri-
tory of tne Central Powers do
well to give renewed attention. It
is this, that the whole position in...re-
gard to the blockade os neutrals was
changed with the entry of theUnited
States into the war. Previous to that
event, the position ter the Allies was
often most difilettit when they desir-
-04 te prevent eup lies from the Milt-
ed ntetes from eaching Germany
'through neutral countries, and the
history, of the flit two and a nalf_
LORD ROBERT OEC*
years of the wen is full of incielents
showing the uphill nature: of the
task. and the uncertainty with which
It was surrounded.
The European neutrals derived
practically all their overseas supplies
from the United States, and, technt-
cally speaking, both those neutrals
and the great neutral at the other
side of the Atlantic, with which they
ostensibly wanted to do business,
had good grounds for complaint if
they were prevented by the allied
blockade frora doing business. The
moment, however, the United States
entered the war, it • ' me the con-
cern Of that country, e tea*: with all
the other allies, to pi vent;supplies
from going through ne tut Countries
to Germany. Thee.1 d the goods,
they had the right to, se 1 them or not
sell them, ea they pie seds and, if
they did sell them, the a right
to de so • on their own urea The
terms of the United Sta es were that
not one partible of tTjilted States ,
eroduce should reach ermany. "V
you "cermet guarantee t1at in case of
the goods we supply td.ieu," the
United States declared, !in effect, to
thel'Europesta neutral, "then We can-
not suppky You." Aso rd Robert
Cecil said, "new that merica hi a
belligerent, she is entItlIed to make
any condition that seems pied to her
as a price for continuing her trade,
and the allied governments are equal-
ly entitled to take similar aetion."
To this argument Professor Birck
replies that, by the coninton law
adopted by British • and American.
legislation, it is Provided that the
exercise of rights resulting `from the
possession of merchand14e aid means
of production should le "fair and
reasonable," and he ,deduces from
this that neither the TJnited States
nor the Allies have a right to impose
the conditions they seek io iinpoie.
It is all et question of what shall
be ealled "faheand reasonable," even
if Professor Birck's cOntentioa be
accepted. The terms oft the United
States and of the Allies are veryffar
from being impoesible terms, - and
the neutrals are free to accept them
or refuse them.
SOUTH AMERICA PROSPERS.
Trade Has Increased as Ittestidt of the
Wax.
Trade &it een. -North America and
South America is three times as
great as in the year before the war.
A compilation by the National -City
Bank of New York shows that total
exports. to that t!ontimpnitL14! the eight
months 'ending wlth August—the lat-
est, nita#th. for which ligureg;are avail -
ewe Aggregated $ 189000 ,000 as
against$65V000,000 in' the aaie
morales cif ,1111:4; and 'the imaitfti
from South America 'were $431;00111:- ;
000, again* $151,0014440, in JO,:
same Mortara of 1'614. Ththe total'
trade With' that creatieentin-the-ifitht
months- of 1e17 was •$0-90,000,000„
asi against n222,000,0,00 10 the cor-
responding months :of 1914. -
TO Atgentlea, Chile, and Peru ex -
Ports thetre -glare theft doubled; riet&
to Ineintinat quadrtipted; While r
Ectiadoneend' Yea-
eetiela thist'itencirte, are neerly. thete
tithestas great -as in :lnitt To 'Ate.
,gentlita the totill for " the -eight
months' eeding With Atirgustil17,-,lis
$.62-,256,000, agitnfit. $19,649,009,
the same month e of 1914; ; tolginsit
$4,157,000 against 415,575°,0C Ao
Chile $3,971,000 against $10,800,-
000 la the corresponding Al0AikS ,of
1914. ' ' . • •
'IMports from each of the South
fArneriesin echattrieieshove largett ine
;eases, but especially -those fig& Art
entitle, Uruguay, Chile, and Porn. •
From Argentina the imports an the
eight months of the current year are
$133,86.9,000 against $40,52,00.0 10
the Same months cif 1914; from Chile
$96,626,000 against $1,954,000;
from Uruguay $28,389,000 against
$8,522,000; and from Brazil $466e-
335,000 against $62,633,000 in- the
corresponding months of 1914.
This increase continues down to
the very latest moment for which
figures are available, the August
1917 ,export to all South America
having been $24,888,000 against $5,-
312,000 in August, 1914, and the im-
ports ,from that continent in August
of the current year $49,336,000
against $15,096,000 in August of
Thl1EoN int
,
Make* WS* lotkiii fora leve Centel§
remove. tsin-freckilie
Tour v.teetee hie the beams and aur
drug 'store, ot toifet winder Will supply
you.. evith three 6thices of orchard wliite
for few dente. 1$qaftieso.'ititurtiaiee or
two 'fresh leinens a, bottle, Ren pub
in the 'orchard White and shake well.
This makee. a quartet pint Of the. very
beet lemon skin whitener and complexion
beautifier known., Massae this fra-
grant, creamy lotion daily trite the face,
neck, arms and hands and, just see how
freckles, tan,* salloWnesse redness and
roughness dieappear :and, how smooth,
soft and clear the skin becomes. Yee!
It is harmless, mut the beautiful results
will surer* teat.
41111111114111pinwummihiews
1914.
The principal article; tri which the
grOlirth' 04eurikee, 'on the import
side, wool, hidelet', 6000.0r, nitrate, In-
dia rubber; eteebeecho, pope, pace°.
eWdoi the ealierte fro alt Southf
'Amirida !Inc the- eight- ntimthlt 01114irtg
w1tAngtiet, 1917, antoented to
410`8;040‘,#00 'valtiarhagaink only -
000;000 1 the awe -menthe of 1914;
h1dee464,000,000 in 1917 against
$21,000,000 in' the same months of
1914; copper $56,000,060 against
$9,000,900 ,In the 'terreeponding
months of 1e14; quebraeho $46,000,-
406- against $2,500,064, and nitrate.
$36,000,000' agtdast $1/,00•0,0`00 in
the corresponding months of 1914.
Capturing ,
Vera few people, when inspecting
the various exhibits in a• Zee, 'stop to
eek themselves .how the -animals got
there. Ae a matter offeet ,the task
of capturing wild beagle; alive and
shipping' thein out to cIIilizatiou, u
harmed is an inanitoly 'danger° s
and difficult undertaking, 4far mole)
thrilling than ordinary big -game
shooting. In an artiele under the
&bevel:We in the Wide World Maga-
zine, John Alfred Norden edeseribes
how he got together, -at practically
complete collection of. Afriean .'ant -
mals for shipment to - Europe, and
glves 'a -yield idea of the nanIfo1d
danger e of the business. hile en-
gaged in this work, Mr. Jor
tured a colobus monkey, the most
beautlful of all the jgimiark tribe.
"They have long black 'fur," says tbe
writer, 'with ...white Oval patch down
the center of the back, and; an ex-
tremely long, bushy white tail,' They
are very vslus.ble, andeso tar, I be-
lieve, 'rto specimen halt foaed any
zoological society: They live n
thlck-
iieets in cold, high attlnde, rang-
ing from eight to teit ousand feet
-f above the sea -level. A *great num-
ber have been captirre& onel *kept in.:,
the country, but when they are 111111)-
1)0d to- Europe they always die com-
ing thrtiugh the Red Sea. '
an caP-
Trialfles.
The trefile 18 a ertittoltimie' Ph*,
hawing no viaible means of fructih-
cation, and is found at all 80
depths beneaththe soil, from.tWo
laChelVto two feet. It poseeeses
neither root; stetn,le leaf, and
voles, color from t brown to,
-It is eemeWli lebular 10
PiDsia,*igeif44'sTitile that of- a
filbert te a ;large :40ekl:egg, . and
weighs' trent Into " pence's fain
pounds or More. its surface is knot-
ty or warty, and is covered with a
skin which forms a Wit of network
of serpentine veins. Little is known
of its early- developments as a veget-
able Pradueldon. In, its native state
It is /mind free from attachment to
any other body.
*TASTEFUL LAUGHTER. '
What It Costs to Make a Movie
Comic.
In making moving pictures of ZL
comic order three kinds of pies are
used, one solid and two edible. The
solid pie is made of upholstery and
is used for long shots, but even on
the long shots the elesenp, showing
the hit, is made with real pie. ,The
two varieties of edible • pie are cas-
tard and blackberry. Custard is. more
splashy; blackberry, by its color,
photographs more vividly.
These facts, among others, are im-
parted by a writer on the ,technique
of cinematography who describes the
Prelusion in. which pies are used in
a pairsage condensible as follows;
"The •outside ,world has no condep-
tion of the importance of pie in a
comedy. . When it is 'realized
that at least -ten pies afe thrown to
tetnid ;Ite0hc: Chit one may realise
the enetatel'elendition ef the $et after
A fOtSAA'bthillAdaVASAt, of 'five Or ten
; : pie' e Whole place le
iin
figures, then, a half dozen hits
means sixty 1.'•*;"‘.
*ie. requires for its
magitlroleerries, sugar, a little
ficiarrAleedl4- te7eruit, With shortening'
10 It is flottie '
ensiled likie tae 8 eggs, milk, and
- inset* *A as ale irust containihg
oU*tdnlibrfinaltig.
We stld net believe ;that the ,erdin-
ary'reitizeitA thete days • Of high
,pritanktai)feed will ceiitader that the
cahele resiiittee'ejustify' " the movie
men' 's wastaufilits. .„,
A SOUTH -SEA. MARRIAGE..
Sailor Deecribes Iteeent Royal Care-
.
C. H. Hang4n, rat assistant en -
'110/41 'he. 'the tilend_ly' laps' .
Omer; eteraember 'of the crew .of
the 'Motor' schoOner S. I. Allard, new
of liteiblifiti,.witheissed the marriage
01 Prilicteri Charlotte -Tobou -Oaf .
Nines:VIM:am TOngi at Noknelefa;
-Friendly- Iglands, last; SepteMber.
'The Gogartezientelisuid ' played all
the eerenionlalerettsic, inid other mu -
t steal Orgaglaations taSeisted -it
throughout the day, he says. The
wedding dress worit by the, Princess
• wee made in Sydney, Australia,' and
fashioned after the latest styles. The
.wedding cake, which was eight feet
thigh and is said to have cost more
than $500, was baked in Auckland,
New Zealand. About. twenty-five
I white people attended the reception,
others present being chiefs, officials,
and natives from 11- surrounding
WOWS*
" the Wedding breeitfasit the table
nded from inside the Penne,
where the royal party waft seated,
ion through one of the doefis for 250
feet The guests were seated on
either side. Tapa—a material made
from the beaten bark of the mulberry
tree—eaVered the length of the table.
Friday was the big day for all the
islanders who happened to be in the
neighborhood of Nokualofa. Several
thoueand gathered in the palaoe
grounds awl the adjoining square In
the" early, morning.
The King nersothally seperintended
the work of distributing hundrede of
roast pigs among his subjects, many
of the large porkers having =alter
ones tied to them in, a decorative
way. It web a holiday for all.
Chocolate Flavor popular.
Have you ever watollied what peo-
ple order at A. sOda Iciuntain? If
you have you've prolthly seen what
a favorite chocolate is. A great drug
store man has written an article for
the American Magazine in which he
says:
"Similarly, we know what kind of
candy peOple prefer, how much more
pepular is ehocolate with huts in it
than ordinary caramels, and, ill such
things as that, because we make a
big effort to find out. We now that
chocolate 'wrap Is the flavor most •
sought at the soda fountain;" but we
go farther and aka to knew exactly
what Particular kind of' chocolate
haver will giv.e the most general sat-
isfaction. •
"'Th18 no deep psychologY
about the idea , of Anding out what
people like. It is just plain common
sense. Yet it is a cOmparative nov-
elty. The tendency bas been to pro-
ceed along lines of haphazard guess-
wotk; If I were conducting a news-
paper, or magazine, or motion pid-
ture theatre, or any kind of store, I
should spare no reasonable expense
to as6.ertain lust what my customers
thought of the staff I was offering,
which things they liked best. 1
would aim to know, not onty in a
general way but with precision.
Think, for example, what an advan-
tage an editor has over his competi-
tors if he knows exactly what I his
readers like, what percentage care
tor a certattt kind of news; or a cer-
tain depteeiment in the. paper, and
his c.ompetitor is merely'guessing at
it."
Molyhdanma.
Mobtdanunt is playing a part in
tha Yeeeeat war for both the Allies
_aid for filename By hardening the,
sbeet ibleb in toed in the riling of
Vir ging, it is repbrted to hove 111-•
'tressed the life of the guns twenty
time anell is used' also as a r
in Donee high explegives, grao item
powder, and to make a dense smoke
In the locationbombs which are arid
pretlosig' to the firing of the prejer-
tile. It is lined in many- themicals
held ha dyes for leather, rubber. silk,
Sad as a dlsinfeetante
'
SCHEME, under the name
. of the White Croesefor the
assistance of. children
whose balance, mental and
physical, 'is threatened by the hor-
rible eonditions'of war, is being or-
ganized by the famous educationist,
Dr. Maria Montessori, whose method
ha.s a wonderfully calming influence
on nervous children. The problem is
to restore the injured minds of the,
little ones to normal activity and joy.
The intention is to start a free
course to prepare volunteers to un -
Loather Cloth.
The peculiar' apgesirange of the
*niter= of some Germans recently
captured led- te an examination
Which showed that the officers' mai-
forms Were made of cloth woven
from leather fibres, while the en -
Bated men wore uniforms made from
leiter fibre. The fabrics resemble
'regulation army cloth.
The Black Flash.
It is said that the "black flash"
wont by the Royal Welsh Fusiliers
Is a survival of the days when W-
illem wore collars. to protect their'
Unica from the pomatum on their
Vatted pigtails.
Leos Harley for Brewing.
The Hamburger i'remidenblate re-
ports that, owing to the average
poor results of the barley harvest it
istintended to assign to breweiies
on.ly about 20,000 to 30,000 tons of
barley monthly, so_ that the barley
Mined for brewing Purposes will he
disposed of in about -lour to six
months. Omitting Bavaria, the
peaee-time consumption of. German
breweries amounts to about 1.2 mil-
lion tons of barley. The assignment
in the new harvest year would, there -
fere, amotnit to not more thaa ten
per cent. of the pence -time consump-
tion,
Stained-glass Windows.
In making stained-glass windows
every bit of the work is done by
hand, and it is amazing to reelige
howmany times each -piece of f,glass
must be handled. An operator tells
of Counting up one day and finding
lhat no lees than twelve times were
Dee:emery. All the leadwork is dem
by hand, too; 4ii-on' the:ort.aitias_
the little; slots into loblai migage
is fastened.
Statms'at'llentry IV.
0.11". Mend rff. le Bes-
ie
ifit -vitto thought
witiejeets should Bowe a fowl
thaer„illipter, celebrated_ its °cell-
eleS 'Weir Ssy. It is, of eeurele
mask -roost is point of
• contrasted with, the ven-
bridge irbiggr it adorns. The
happpee, elesaistit entiegh•
_ the oldest bridge lel Pawls. Built
1578 And 1607; at ,fho,
ly,. aat�& throlie the
Alenateraer ;1& has jean
vow linitOW is its litensali,-
imaegii was ow edged erith
b6,0141 1110 e.l ehOPII, its ensile*
proving an irresistible attre-
$asnes eglio-t„ the . r�.
little old "boutiques" cal, die-
* 90,,eftlee o1 the- la*It
bOiie the *rh it
ire the groteetW -.1014
•Sti(tienfili-tenttiry
ptor, ornamented 'It.."The Bear -
statue tekhiliiiikreatiag; It •i
gagtifrOile the lioiwbtftw :Athos
'Hapehren, 'One etihkk'''sidoitied
. that timer -di the VOndotoe=eatinin ate
tbe other the e4elninai it thellohlogiii
map, ;whence the Petit taaotio
skit* his list at England.
tar a
C A STICIal A
Fishing in Samoa.
Fishing in Samoan seas is often
done by the iwomen, and without
nets, boats, or hooks. They simply
wade into the Water and form them-
selves into a ring. The fishes being
so plentiful, they, are almost sure to
imprison some in the ring. These
women -are very quick elid active,
and. every tiine the.y catch aifish with
. _their hands they simply throw it,
into. the„heeket on. their hack
DR. MARIA MOineetteSORI
dertake the intellectual care of chil-
dren Ann it will include first aid,
knowledge of nervous diseases, die-
tetics, and a theoretical and practical
course in the Montessori .method as
' specialty applied to children under
war cortditions. Dr. Montessori, who
Is giving her services, will prepare
the White Cross workers with the
assistance of medical specialists In
nervous diseases.
iThe plan is then to send out work -
fag groups to France Belgium, Ser-
bia, `Roumania, Russlie, and other
"Mitropean eountries,' eaeh (=misting
of four to six pereone. Eacb group
womb0 be located In places where re-
fugees are already gathered (for Dr.
Montessori is net trying to found new
institiations, but to supllenient those
i
already established, whch are doing.
*vital, but necessarily la rtial, work
in pfovitting physical es,r0e These
Crone of White 0, go workers.
11
should /then, as soon they are in
the field, pr,epare others, such as war
widows and 'orphan ger s, and thus
-
the Work 01! this* new societit will
m)ultiply Tepidly. Dr. M ntesaori has
already farmed a temn31ttee in Am-
erteee hope and ..* form einallai
committees in all :the allied coun-
tries.
filikeTWIlit Said- !Wart is' Benet
In answer to inquiries as to where
Oen. 'William T. Sherman said war
was hell, and to refute, Intimations
that he never said it at all, the Col-
Ombus Dispatch asserts that General
Sherman said it in Columbus on
tugust*12, 1880, and in. support of
-tbe assertion produces from its files
the copy of a short address he made
here at that/time in :which the now
famons definition of war Was made.
The occasion was a reunion of the
civil war soldiers of Ohio. President
Hayee was a guest of honor and most
of the 'living generals of the civil
war were present: The addresses
were made in the open in Franklin
-park. If' vrasi raining hard when
General SherMan's turn came to
speak, but he stood out uncovered
and delivered hie 'short speech. As
nublished, it contained just 308
words. Alluding to the fact that ald
soldiers did not mind rain, he eon-
tinued: -"You all 'mow that this is
not soldiering. There is many a boy
here to -day .who thinks war is all
glory, but, boys, it is all hell. You
can bear that warning to generations
'yet to come. I look upon it with
horror, but if It has to come, I am
hero." ' • .
Tis last clause bfueght great ap-
planse, and when it srtbsided the gen-
eral proceeded on. another line of
thought.
w
WHAT MEAKNESS 15.
A. Business Van .9*,ers a New
business man says In. the Ameri-
can. 'Magazine:
"I Vag brought -up in a pious fam-
ily—had to to to elierth.es 4 )04. r
can imeember tsittim there 'sudsy
attieFlivadai-hy ny,fittlin,rs site and
herhig the proweherread -Ant 01 the
Ateek. Vinito1-11,40 -the Syne
exp#0,. the Bible read
tb4P.P.01-418... gr. '14.M.Plo litersUi
thottiands of times, .becaufie we hack
it every day. Some of it made a. tur-.
_Ions impression on me. Takether
one, 'To him that bath ;shall be.gives,
and to him that ilea not shall be
taken awey even that (which he ItstW`
°Why, I used to sit there 'when tent
years old and say to myself when,
they'd read that—'Well, that 0310.1i
e lie—nothing but a lie-. Who ever
heard anything eo.foolishe' , But, eh,.
how I have bad to eat my words oz
It Of course 1 knoiv 110W ;that It la-
the last Word on -the sulineet—tite
truth stated so nakedly that it le al-
most ernel. It is, one of those inews
of life so deep that itt takes a man
half a lifetime even tograsp it.
There was another one that used to
-
amuse me—'The meek shall Inherit
,the earth.' When they'd read that r
almost laughed In my sleeve at titre
nensense Who•eaerheard any-
thing so riditulous as the idea that
the amok. Would ever get anywhere
de you know that 1 WAS A hat-
1,1WW1)man earaing Ssoies a year he -
fore I tumbled to the factthat times
vas something It Of course,
knew neer that there is everything la
la You bet the meek inherit the
earth—if they have ability. Aad
inikekliONIt le he itself a great
iiitionass bedding yourk -teinilere
atielthag to a course, refusing to as
swerred- fronithe main line Of aetime.
Ok, 1 nzelienstand el* meaning Of thal
isvaldeold Wisdom notr. I rola amps
it wick out. 1 hare *len again -
the blesiterer. s lose egt. NO, -sae
itonitliave to Sell me 'the libie Sa. a
k Of prsetreal 'Wedeln:. 1 am an
„sr, have no yeligions'
lent- 'know that1 ugeonaideuilly !Ow
ilee /tale hi iny btettins• _se all .14
time; I dent4t think 1 lialf realise
hew much I owe to that expert*** et
gettirtg it drummed into me. as a
boy—rebelling agalest . it—and „thew
finding out -as the years passed that I
wasn't so smart as I bad thought -I
• was!'
Reserve
hriod
moti -
;,.
Chbeese Greeting, '
When a Chinaman meets another
he shakes and squeezeit bia elm
hands and COVeliW Ws headilegreat
friends have not seen each other for
a long time, after the mutual hand-
shaking they wilt rub shoulders. /a -
stead .of asking after each other's
health they say, "Have yon eaten.
your rice? Where are you going?
What is your business when you got
there?"'
Manufacture of Comae
The 331airteateture- of coral is COW"
tined to Torre del Greeo. In other
citiel, such as Naples, Rome, alai
Pari, often pointed out as centres of
coral manufacture, only the mount
-
Mg of coral i Li.Itai is done.
I' The ------;7 etort.
The Lady to Gallant V. (. In-
valided out)--i-Why aren't you in.
khaki? The' V. C. ----For the same
reason that ou are not in the
heenty eh jithynteally unfit.
GRAY HAIL
Dsh.
.satie; boat
'to Onto*.
motor:or-
C A
Por SIatb. 14 Itiglitles
" rn bOL
Peeler
.X4X
Be "Prince-.
OraiNV Dublin
Y
Jae? (1111Thi
to John
Phone 19 on -147. fieuf •
it supplies
liver oa for ric
mid contains lime -
witik, _medicinal
all important
for
VOWS
abundant
it is free
Insist on
seett a &Swim.
wec�d
Wood
d soda
cerine,
edients
the nee.
itumishing
diLI WAMILD.
aroglimmAIMm.
We have our -Creamery now In foil
operation, ani11- we want your patron-
age. We are prepared tea- M. YQS
the high prices for your -
you every two meets, %dirt,
and test each can of cream corel
and give you statement of the'sainte
We also supply cans free of &ogee
and give you an, honest huahless
Gail m and see us or Airop wit -card fos
particulars.
-r THE SEAFOlint citgAMERT
Seaforth. Onto*
Grad
eGW
et Cob
Osto
af C
of Itaal
litosatti
doom
NAINSIdl
alb
--- east of
G,
-College
Atnn .A1
*fa of
Ontario
C. Ms
Ity
Mint
Shis coii
Onti
_Uesse
at Ram
air: age
saatiliy
*ell* 1
Watt am
' Lissa'
al ANN
P:2110 of
LIMN