HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1919-07-17, Page 3VtIttlt ▪ 4,4` Of4o4A44 110110/4
hc....144.4 in94 400440 Itift.
mm4Ar m 4044 1(1. 4witrc
4'00 R.44.
.71.4 WARACO4 1401A4 Tora49 Ilkulallo. 4104
tgotly4.4 44mlagrAo Attibuc4 tr,:=4,04
40•11 t$ 41.44 kr WO
thict444ter os44 rmwsutssamiss(ric.(\
RIcNot 4 Phaot4 0.44 pou4.411. 4 07.45•4 k4,404 $.4044
eccic. sci.coc
mc:44014«,ic wit whit co4 44
1
ii44444* cum: Now Itcm met U454 P44 cs4 • IW4 0414
44, low OW ...-
THE- WALKER HOUSE,
"art, iT1441"4
Yea.01411; cANAPA
olsrin .stisprAmns.
They Ax to Beat t Bo rotiud
• Anywhere. •
Prying subinarineatiete out et, the
British Admireite is atometbing like
-well, it simply can be done! Oh,
• they will all talk, thase very polite
Admiralty 'people, ,but they firet find
out if you "play- cricket" „(Engliga
for being "en the lever') an then
they bind you •to eecreey. Yea meet
tot tell. The Admiralty debe net
want eith4inities too =netttalltK
about,
.There seeme to be a general ine-
reselon abroad in CP world that
ermany had almost a monopoly on
aebulaeine deviate& and that the rest
ot the World stood by in amazement
Or humbly followed in the master's
footsteps. This, of couree, is "all rot"
sa.any British submarine officer will
tell you, -
Awl he makes no bones at all of
'saying that the 160 eir so sub -surface
.bots wieleh Germany has surrender:,
ed atiatain he "aerate" not known
alyeady to British ()Memo, and ono
et them at least yolunteered, tbee In-
formation that the plans ter; mane a
German submarine had been eau and
examined 'before. ever there Was one
captured of the s'ame typo 4-- which'
would seem to indicate, if true, that
Ceerneany had no monopoly of eecret
SerVice efficiency! .
!Britain started with SOM0 80. Sub-
inarinee, built about 180 during the
ertif and lent about 30 prObably
largely by mines before the anti -
Mine device, whatever it es, carae
In-
t ee being. During this building. .cam-
paign site developed ideas of hee own
Whiela Germany never- dreanted *fee
•tho M1, for' e• instance, which is a
1,70e -ton sulinsatineearryina a 12-
laela aun.'11o, 1 am not romanehig-,
Ate exists. She Was built foe the.
Daiedanellee operations, and ewhile
she wao eprapieted too late for that
purpoee, she was a technical seeeees.
.17010 fires, of course, only; fore, iteeC
aft,thegun having a traveree at aera
haeie six degrees , and only_ wined:Orate
Ade.StiOn.. 'Nor de* she 'use „ fuU
charge, but send% lier •620-atatitd shell
a .,rnsalmurn of 15,000 yarda. The:e'en
carriee oottple of tubes and anti.
alreraft rn.—
There le a wide divergence of entin-
ion to .be heerd regarding the dale
Peeitien or tbe iturrendered sUb-
Marine fleet. Admiralty officers not
taeMiected with the eubtnarine aer-
erica generally think the bearaterine
should. be abelisbed and el* surren-
dered boat e etnele or dietrtiatited to
Yarkate tatiene eitertlY a eVallgt*
and euelesitlea. "Of eeUree,' they
will tell erne "our tellowa can Play
the game and did. play It- we tor-
'Pedoed. aelpletie merelaantmen and
shelled no, open boat e with defence -
lees wornsaa and children, nor (stood
by and laughed :white enemy crews
drowned! 13Ot Other people, upper-
entlYs, ean't. And if they cant, then
the aubmeelim ought to be abole
lektel.'-'4eSetentifie Ameriean.
Re WiIietled to Ole 'queen,
Tbere is as reeld‘nt of Sunbury who
will feel uncomfortable in hie
for along time to come. He wee
wanting behind ewe women In the
Park, when be noticed the younger of
them drop her handkerehief. He pia -
ed 1 Ma to attract the ovner's atten-
tion, 'straitened loudly ashe ran to re -
'store it:
*The owner. thanked him politely.
Afterward, to his confliction, he /aton-
ed he had been whistling to. theaCadeen
and Princess Mary. -London cable' to
New york Times.
If knot Wing
You Rave Palo
&hooch Needs Aid
ISPeciallats who have,. devoted their
lives to the treatment of atonmeh ail-
ments now tell us that many.people
wbe • complain about their stonier:Oa
have no stomach ailment at ali. 3
You may suffer from bloating gas,,
sellrnese• and other unpleasant °POW
tome. If so your best eoume is to
tori e UP tbe bowele with a reliable
vegetable remedy like Dr. Hanttiton's
Pills. Thie old-time family medielhe
is a wooderful corrective of all diges-
tive and stomach clisordere. • ,
There is no mystery about the quiek
effect you get from Dr. Hatateltonat
Pelle. They simply supply the addi-
tional aid required by the syetele to
enable it to do its work correetlY.
. You'll ; enjoy your meale, digest
everything you eat, look better, fee'
better, be •free trent headachefe con-
stipation and indigestion, all -"these
benefits eozne to ell that use Dr.
Hamilton's Pills. Everyman or
woman with a stomach ill is advisee
to spend 26e on a box of tbie won-
derfue vegetable remedy.
Shave
With
sCuti-
cora
Soap
uticura
)1311AP
MEDIONAI,
Pftiti
The
New
cure
Way
Buy Colima Soap Mei
You Buy A Safety Razor
N
Ap4 double razor efilcienee, No Marl
no slimy Irritstlon
er irrltazlon ea bathe
and *herniae° with ounkimice
01 Goo. um soap ler all uses. Rinse
aWitianntntenPida feworcogrindlnwsajtreudi, ly enTalcu4
satinet/ how oat an velvety your
Abeolutely nothing like the potato. tie
for eyeacday toilet was. Soap to Cleanse
B,P4 itutthr. Ointment to Soften asideeethe,
s II4C to .powder and netball& Sample
each y mail. Addresa "Oakum,
Dept. t4, Boton, 1.1.0.. A."
Ittftrommroril.1441.oemoial
the forenoon as soon as the dew is of
and rake the hay that, afternoon, leav-
ing it lie in the 'Windrow over night,
and then take it up the next after-
noon, provided Me Weather 18 favor-
able. Others begin cutting late in the
efternoon, leaviug the hay ne in the
swath over night, Alld'begill raking the
next lorenoon after the dew Is off.
Either Way is satietaetery, if the
hay is oot put into the mew while the
dew is on. The reoleture on the hay
Is more injurious than the mielstUre in
it,
The same methods ertheraployed in
making elfalfe hay' as for clover.
.Altalfa will stand Mode ram and still
enake geed hay that ,either clover or
stitoothy. A. good teet .or deterrainin
• when clover or alfalfa hay is ready for
the mow is to twist et few of the
stalks in the hands, and if no utoisture
can be squeezed outat has eured suf-
ficiently to keep in storage without
moulding, and Is in the right condi-
tion to prevent loss of leaves during
handling,
•RULE FOR ESTIMATING HAY.
C4.1 544
r.v-okii•Ars.
. : .- ' HAYMAKING. .• -eee
In haynaa.kiug, the weather plaasiaa,
very essential part. First-class ahiaY
cannot be made during unfivoiable
weather. Good dryilig winds .ark
plenty of sunshine are ideal. Theelerina,
, eiples of making high quality hay are
trr eut the grass at the proper. stagea
of maturity and get it cured with.:the'
least possible loss of . food nuttlantea
The /Herteez*. the cured hay is in aDiettr-e
ante :ant...Ctiznposition4; the.' free !Orme
the better is it, and the s0oner3Itethaye
eau be cured and placed in mote tile
,.,
stack after being -cut the better; fen
event. dete. and ram causes' a- loss
feedingaand -market value, '. te
WREN TO CUT CLOVER May.
The time to cut clover for hay
'when the plants are •in full Jae
with. a .,,.hrivi kt. t4e„.„hioesoms turni
brown, It Is at this stage "that
taakes the most pale.table teed nu
tiotis feed, it out too soon the hay w
be "washy," and if too late the. lea
will shatter off and be lost in harve
ng, and as the -leaves •contain inikoh of
the nutrients oe the plant there le con-
aiderable-loss. •, Timothy makes the
best hay when cut Just as it isaeoming
into bloom. The plants contain more
moisture and, are a little harder
to came; tilt this isnnoleelhan Offset
by the inceease. iriapalatability.e There
Is some diversity of opinion on ' title
point,' sem° writers clearaing better
hay is secured. by cutting after the'
bloom has tenon. Exeeriment*,iitatiott
men taYbr the earlier cutting. The
tIenothy plant inereaties in content of
dry matter as it matttree, but de-
creases' in nutrient Content, so that
while more hay natty be seeured by.
late cutting, and it vein be nacos easily'
mired, it will' Itot have as high a feed-
ing value. .•' -
Where clover and timothy' are
groVeh together it is neeeesary to cut
the erop before the timothy has quite
reached the proper maturity in order
to catch the doter at the right stage,
It le eUtitomary. to gauge the time- of
'mating by the matdrity of the clover.
Alfalfa is ready for harvest when
• the new dhobtii starting from , the
crown of the plant are one -halt ate
oue inch long. Ie the harvest is de.
laved until new growth is three' ler'
more inches long, it will be cut aft
and the seeoled °top will be injured.
The tutting of alfalfa too early le aloe
adIrradvantage, teri It Wes foxtail and
blue grass a chance tet crowd in and
take possessien of the field. , When;
ever the tops, turn erellew of the tiara)
"becomee tieriousiV liffected,by leaf spot
-
or other disease it obould also be cut,
even thotigh the fresh sheets .haVe not
started.
HOW HAY IS WEED.
Hay Mei Vann, 'Weenie in 'the dock
than in the liWatli or 'windrow, 'but a
takes Mere Mbar to brindle' it that
woe By raking the hay beret* the
leaven are and placing It in 'becks
the leaf/tee-continue to draw,moiettire
out of the stems, thus allowing the
hay to dry evenly. In rainy weather
this is the best method, and theta is
less exposare to rain and lees bleach.
ittg. Some fart:aorta find it profitable
to taw coleus caps on. the hay 'tocke
to proteet them during the euriug
goon.
A large proportion of the hay is
dined on the oWath or windrow -to in
'shock's nude by btmehing with a horse
aka. After the graree is out, It Is
tallied with. a, tedderp side.delivery
rake or ha.y rake as soon ati the leaves,
In the upper part of the swath. have
thoroughly' wilted. The objeet 'it to,
keep the hay loose so the wind may
he free circulation through it an&.
lesep it keen expoeure to the hot sun
• an far ar possible. Before the Unites
Ihems bootee stiff ant dry the k I
Or the loader.
raked into windrow* and left i 1
reedy to be taken up with hand for
liOthe feermers start the IneWer in
HAT" is your .doctor's Siel -
question? Why does he sus-
pect conseiPation?
Because 90% of his. patients are
sulteritneefforn aiintents caused tli-
reCtlior indirectly by, the action of
Poitiouiloinled'in a sluggish. hues.
tiatitiitAisp-Ave.
ThUi)Ody pOisotware absorbed by
the bitted' and carried all over the
bodyunril Organ) unable k
to withalettad the poisonous. cientact,
heaattifea. infected and refuges to act
properly. Utifotennetely it is usually".'
• not until then that the doctor is eon.
stiltetklnd asked to treat the diseased
8rpn' ratt4RSAf4;,.4;1.);alid
. The street Way of purifyipg the
blood antrpeeventing the formation
of these destructive body poisoris is
#1*vasot stagnation of food wait,91'
44 4Otestitial ORO -eta 'prevent
eoniti tion:Agfeeeitaa*-Abe4Witt,
edit ton is not a matter to be
• sly or neglected. Igor •
k •eitlEir itur debt or safes to take
castor Oil, le4 fse saltkminerat
ettii-hrz-order!-to 'force" bowel
action. Such action does not cure
conostipation, it makes constipation
Neje' lo entirely different from dregs as
it does not force or irritate the bowel.
Oplol prevents stagriation by. softening
oar aalefie_ and enema:long the itte
tan' muscles to Act nateiragy, Slits re- • -
rniviag the cause of constipation and self- .
pekorneg. It is absolutely beireleas and
edema! to take. 4
•
-
Nu I helps Nature ettablish easy, thor-
ough reatUatitin at regular intervals
e healthiest -habit in the mead. Get
.bottle teen your druggist todey. .,, .0.
thea e tesold in iteled
II ''!1I bottles bearing the
Motel taste Mirk. All drugging. In -
Alit ota *dol. You may offir Irani
subuitutes: • .
zok,
' • It
. Nay Is often sold the mow' or
stack :where the weight has to be
estimated. For this. purpose 400 cubic
feet ot hay is considered,a, ton. The
actual weight of 400 enbic, feet of hay
vent vary according to the quality of
the hay, time of cutting, poeition In
the mow, eee. For making an estimate
in a given case, multiply the length
Oreadth and height of the mow or
stack in feet and divide the product by;
• 400. The quotient will be the number
of tons.
1
PREVENTING FORE 'IN HAY- a
STACKS.• a
When there is any reason to fear a
that the hay which is intended to he eaa
housed or stacked is not, sufficiently' u
dry, let a few handfuls of COMA=
salt be scattered betWeen each layer, • t
This, byeabsorbing the bioulditY of thg
hay, not only prevents fermentation, e
and consequent inflammatien of it, but h
adds a taste to it, which stimulates n
the appetites of cattle and preserves hi
, them from raanw diseases. • lie
ebreut the !int et Alba Ver b
MOW the ground should be lime
the beetle properly tbinned out.
Piga produee a pound Of gain
tour to tive ot dry =Merl whil
toning tattle require front 10
pound. The pig Yielde trent, 70
per cent. of live weiglet ae
earcese, the eteer only from ,05
per cent.
The delta' cew exceeile the ho
retu.rn of edible producto :OM a
amount of feed, but. the coW
commute the leivegrede reeding
aties that tbe hog readily utilizee
aPecialized, agriculture createe
Waite antterials that canbey
Utilized ouly by the hog. He lit
art ioteusive scheme, adaptiog hi
to trmell apacealf necessary, anilaing d
Whet would otherwiee be 0
velure While beef an, mutton ar
largely eoneuMed ae freah Meet,
Prodieets of the hog MEW be Cure
treatecith a Variety of Waya and
indefinitelY.
It hese been discovered that
honey -bee is or even Moro iro
ante to the alfalfa tban the alta
to the honey -bee. The won4
Strength and ermed of the beee
them long rilettances for their
and they have reeouree to a, great,
iety of plants. But the peculiar
etroeelon ot ,the alfalfa aloseom
dersit unable to fertilize Itoolt,,
it stall° Makes eroesefertiliza
very diftleoltaIo the marvelaila
anee of good" in ureter°, alfalfa,
.theueanda of otaer plants, le aided
Re lease on KO by the, ineect w
It Os not known itiet how manY
sects or birds assiet title remark
Plait, but the honey-liee is, the .
conspicuous, the moat induetriolle,
nioet eager, and certainly the
useful.
telt re -
4 ana
froln
4 tet-
te 18
to $0
rerieeti
tie $6:
g in
given
alettot
reel-
, Our
man/
eadilY
e into
molt
uti-
f no
e very
the
and
hetet
the
Port.
fa le
°dal
take
food,'
Ter.
con-
reit -
and
tion
'bale
Bke
oriel,
In -
abs
etepet
the
most
WEAK MOTHERS
•REGAIN HEALTH
Airm
lial•ROUGH THE New nCoop DR.
witiLaAms, PINK MLLE ACT-
- • 7 UAlsLY MAKE.
No mother should allow nervous
weakness to get• the upper hand of
her. If she doea woery wilt mar her
work In the home and tornaent her in
body and mind. Day after tlaY pent
anaid the ?same surroundings' is
enough to cause fretfulness, and de-
pression. Bet there are other causes,
as every mother lenowei, .that teed to
make her nerves zeindown. A change
would benefit her Jaded system, and
rest might In1prove her blood eo as
to give the nerves 'a better tone. But
test and change are 'often investable,
and it is then. that ail worn out wo-
Men, should take se short: treatraent
witb Dr. Williams' Pink Pine' which
plate new his0d, 401 With the ele-
mepts on which the 'nerves thieve.
n this way these pills restore regu-
ar health, 'Increased energy, new
tabition and steady e nerve. There is
lesson for ether women in the case
f Mrs. Haiti, P. Silkier, Wilton, Ont.,
ho says: "Five eantre ago ray twin
ables were born, and I was left Very
eak and, arty, tolistrable, hardly fit
o do anything.. The:elector .ga.ve,. me
edicine, hut did /10t help rae.
hen I triedeartotaer. doctor, .but with
o ,better malts. One day I, Went
woe to piY smother, telling -her how
Joinable telt. and that the doctor's
edielne. had not ',done me any good.
other asked pie why I did not try
r. WilliaratteaPiok • :Pillow and its
as glad to r);.t.i,nything that might
elp me, I got three boxes when I
met back aotriea By the time those
ate used tfaefee wits no- delibt they
ere helplege.tio, and I got three
ore boxes. ;But I did not need tkein
1, for by theiAitne the fifth box Was
.ed r was efitirely ,cured, and haver
It bettor 'InaraY Mae. Now 'whin I
ar pertale aefselk about feeling' 'weak
miserablel'a always teeommend :Dr.
Rheum' Pink Pine, and tell what
ey did for me, and in similar eases I
all continue to recommend them."
At the first sign that the blood is
out of Oder: take Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills and note the speedy improve-
ment they Make .fe the appetite,
'health and sPirite. you can get these
Pills through .any Medicine chalet Or
by mail at 60 cents a box or six boxes
for '42.50 The Dr. -Williams
Medicine Co., larockerille, Ont.
a see
ir-4.4e4,-e-esre-eateeeeeiee-e-e-ihiscee-erese
C4ina First
:In America
1014na, whiCh has claimed the In-
vention of gimpowder and printing
end Attet .pig and - the. compass,. Is said
to have discovered Atneriea long be-
fore the time of Columbus. Accor4ing
tie -documents of -another. era, Chinese
voyagers discovered 'Mexieo and." land-
ed there, some time in 409 A.D.
The Cltinese.annal record ,that the
ileingstom Fu -Sang (which Is
thought At> be Mealco) was situation
to theaeast of the Middle Kingdoms
twenty thousand Chinese miles to the
soutireard of the Great Ilan (British
Colthith(a), '''It'flaaik*Its name trete
the tree, £u -sang, from which its in-
liabitants obtitihed food, clothes, fibre
and wood. In the stime tuthels is de-
-scribed the Itingdoneof the Wornen,
situated' about one thousand Chinese
Bailee eouth of bat -Sang; And aeme
seven thotioand Chinese miles north-
east of Jalutie WAS in the land of the'
Marked Bodiete inhabited by died'
Who Were tatooed, and the eileti With
+Dogs' nolods. . •
FARM NEWS AND VIEWS.
. • As the weather beanies warmer, h
`lifted should be planted somewhat w
,deeper, so they will not. dry out before
they germinate. Afeter plantengerun a w
wheelbarrow over the row, or use it
to coyer seed in this way, in a Mali ei
'furrow. Those who have tried It say us
.fe
he
or
th
sh
at.
elie wheelbarrow is a' happy thought,
„e and wherever it was used over the seed
a good stand of turnips, mustard, col-
lards tool .other. airellar .vegetation re-
sulted. Probably the best -work can
be' done by pulling the wheelbarrow
• than by pushing it, as a straighter
rotv can be made In the former Wai-
ner.
Acceding to figures furnished DI
the Connecticut Experiment Statiott,
18
OM
ng
it
itt
Yes
st-• the Weight of a quart of feed is • le
'as• follows: Cottonseed meal, 1.5
Pounds; lioseed meal,- old process, 1.1
Olinda; gluten. meal, let pounds;
feed, 1.2 pounds; wheat mid
wheat bran, coarse, 0.6 pounde; gluten
wane, .08 poutide; wheat midolinge,
fine, 1.1 pounds. raixed wheat' feed,
0.6 pounds; cornmeal, 1.5 pounds;
Date, 1.2 pounds; rye bran, 0,6 pounds;
Mixed 'wheat feed, 9.0 pounds; eorn-
, Meal, 1.-5 pounds; oats, 1.2 pounds;
• rye bran, tata Poilnds-
Beets for 'winter tole can be planted
#Niosi....••••••=•••••••••••444.*
LANK'S.
fORK
AND
BEANS
EXCEL IN'
•,f
QUALITY,
FLAVOR
COOKINC
ANTHIS00141011011T01141IT
TEE
**-1)F PURITY7
W. CLARK
work*
0014114At
toffi eta Cort
14/4.14 8114
,101111011111111101001111011106.111
-e
That the ancient Chinese had memo
knotvledge of the Attleritan cotitinent
title bean ,belieVed for a long time. an
• no Philippe al auelee a French. write
er, published &'treatise -An which ha
stated that the Chinette had establish.
• ed 14, eelony ott the Gulf of California
in 648, tailing the land dee-Saint. Tri
• 1701 an eminent Prenth sehigar,
to Gaieties, published abeither ttea-
tie°, In which be also referied to the
Chinese discovery of Amerieti. Slime
• that time scholars and hiveptigatord
'have argued the question pro and
• eon. n 1885, a father Werd Wee Meld
by Edward P. Vining in his' "An In.
glorious Columbus," in. which he
88*161 t� lutio proved that the Leila
• aet Marked Bodies is the AleUtiali /se
lender; the country of the Great Ban,
Britfele tolumbia;- Pueflang, Mettle°,
11.:116fithoec Kin,gdotti Of Women, Central
ilineleSen, a Chinese traveler, kite
left behind him the story of hie Id-
boW eoulitrymen'is voyage to Aliteriea,
In the entitle it is written.: ,
."In-tito first year allia rein
• the Tel dynasty a slattesehl (teevelling
• 101080 maned Ilitel-Sen clime tO
Kiott.Chen from the land of Vu43astg,
relating the foHOWitag ilarrattfe:
• tIrti44,11,i aittiated twenty thou-
,
lie;14.1444h.
Hot
OVAL
YEAST CAKES
4
Moro io more energy
in a. pound • of good
loroixd mule in the
borne with Royal Yeast
Cake. than in pound
of OWL Broad nv.oking
io a- simple operation
. regimes no pre.
vious ape:4mm Full
instructions in 'Loyal
YeaSt Mae Book..
mailed five on requool.
E. W. GILLETT CO. LTD.
TORONTO
111
sand 11 (Chinese miles) or Irei
the east of axe country or the
older rioter or a Younger Meter,
day,. Tbey piece ea a Pedeetel an
. image VW repreeents Lae pigeon WM)
lias died, and tbeet revg,rence and otter
at libations morntnit aijd4Y0.4111g. TileY
de w4e'atkiltrnin •
"The prince wit° inherite the throne
doe* not occupy kinteelf with affeire
of govereraeut until three yore after
aiti moleskin. In ancient theme they
were ignorant and they did not knew
the religion of Beddhaeleat In tae reign
of the dynasty of Sung. In the eecoMi
year of the period called Timing, five
,Men, of the country of Ki -P1, who
were pi -eau, paid a .vislt to the people
already mentleeed and made ICTIOWli to
them the laws of Ileiddhrt, Ma sacrecl
hooka and his images. They taught
the people tbe rules of the rnOttastic
life, atiel at lest caused the redneets et
their elleterms to diaaPorattr."
The 'aged= of the WOnzeit ware
Inhabited :by a strange Mee, loestle of
,the paler ilex. They were *err
straight, pure white in color and coy-
'oreel With long hair. The women rein
ed the and. In the year 607 Db1lie40
Marittere were swept to the shore of
' the Land of the Women and were re-
ceived hospitably. The women re.
ambled those of the Middle Kingdom
ut, their lea age was unintelligiblo.
halite elothee vora .dr cotton atid the
Ouses of ibaked elaY and circular la
ern], with yore entail doors.
The land of the Merited Bodies waa
ealto inhabited by the tattimed Doing's, who -
Han, (Widen also le situated east
great Jived Walled CMOS, They were heti-
of pitahie. The king's reeldence was eur-
O. by "silver water" (quiekell-
vela, over which water tlowed when
it rained. ,
The country of the Great Hao was
peolie413 AO, lod by
ogneetathien dr4mace'dwelial cob aarr:
0144- They onfereed their Jaws by giving
1114 erintinals over to theeivild beasts...
b of That tiler:6 truth. in the,,aseertiort
d hinese clionteler in indicated
eee. by his description of- the -inhabitants
me and by the 'fact that the deecendants
The el the aeoPles ot wbein he wrotebear
the 4ountry of needle Kingdene), roi
It proeuced mane' tteeeeng trees,
Whom comes its name. The leaVea-
ea the fu -sang are like those of „ the
tree that the Chinese call tong. It
first ehoots look like those of h
bamboo. The inhabitants of the C
try eat them, as also the fruit, eir
Is in the form ot a pear, althoug
red eolor. Prom its bark three
Made, which they weave to en
their clothing. They also make f
it flee Mottles and brocades.
houses in 'which they live are made
of grata!, They have neither fortresa
nor walled cities. They had a kind
of writing, and they make paper afom
the bark of the fu -sang. They have
no weapons, nor, do they =eke war,
"The 'hetes of the country ord
that there shalt 'be two prison,
of them in the north, and the o
in the Beath; Those who comniit
tenses of little impotaance are c
fined in the prison ot the south,
those who commit 'grieve crimes
ecetflned in the prison of the no
Those who are coutinea in the pri
of the south may be pardoned *
those in the prison of the north in
not. The men and women' in
prison of the north may marry,
their children becomes Mayes
boys at the age of eight and the
girls at Menge of•nine„
"When a person .0 high rank corn -
mite a crime, the inhabitents of th.
country gather in a areae assent
and Judge him while salted at
bottom of an excel/anon- .They h
a feast and a bantotet In Ws pr
ent, and may take:lettere ot hiin as
dying man. If ,ae. sentenced'
death, they cover 'lam With ash
It his crime is of 'the' first degr
only the criminal is lituilithed• If
the second degree; his eehileren. a
grendoleildren areepteeislagcl.,-. , it
of the 'third degree, eala • generates
are .punished. ,
"The King of athar country bona
the title or eaieratif 'the - xoultitud
;Tile nobles oteetlitiatiaat eategoay a
the Win; those igt,kra‘and cat
gory, tbe little „ of t
third category, the tta-to?oba. Wh
the king leaves h1 palace mole
preceded and followed. by drums en
trumpets. The color of his ;yestmen
changee according; Wattle. course •
the years. . The feastanict eecond ye
(of a cYcle of Len), they' are blue; th
t rd and fourth, they ere yed; th
fifth and sixth, they are yellow; th
seventh and ergtha they ate white
and the nine and tenth, they -are 'bate
"The oxen of Fu -Sang have eno
mous horns and can endure great NI
ens. The Inhabitants keep the!
wealth In empty ,harits,. some of whien
are twenty times as large as the eora-
mon ones. Oxen,' horses and deeteare
employed to draw the vehl les. The
inhebitants of the country have herde
a deer, just as the ChIngse have herds
of cattle. They make acheese frets
ain
one
theta
of-
(A -
but
lame
rth.
Solt
bile
tea
tbe
but
thtt
ong el/ elle° of having Chinese
blood in utheir vein% Eskimos are
Of Mongolian origin. Mexican Indians,
too, bear the stamp of* the Chinese
race.
Don't Exaggerate.*
The girl who seretches'every state-
ment she' makes out eie artreeemblancir
to the actual facts of the ease raay
imagine she is strengthening what she
Is trying to say. But that Is a mistake,
PeoPle who liaten to an exaggerated
Statement invaxiablY, discount it; and,
Atonally -more- than it deserVes, and M
addition. they feel a distrust of any-
tigw c has to be so overemphas
sized. Evety'exaggerated statement is
weakened in, proeortiOn as it is exag-
gera t .
• • I
State of Ohio, City at...Toledo, Lucas
County -ss. •
bly pune .1. Cheney. makes oath that he is
the e
senioreo„ pctangerboufsithee Drum tot F, J.
To -
old led°, County and ;late Iclogliertidn, and
• -. that said firm wilepay the sum of ONE
./.111.1NDRED DOLLARS for any ease of
(.741.0.11* that Cannot be mired by the use
tia Or HALL's CATArtnee.mairoaxer8.
es, Fneeeeecer. CHENEY
ee,' Sworn to before ine7andSsubseribed
of -zny presence, tills 6th;day. of December,
ak, 188G.
Is itailt lakelta
is taken 'Internally and ecte4 through the
telij '15tYpEl'iru(gitel este 76e.ecTeesot..ituToVelialos, forebeio..
ecohnenetyhe Mucouesurfaces of tho
re •iee.
e -
A Wataaiis Mite.
he
en The poor woman's Anita was well
es illustrated during the beet Peed the
d Guile campalgo in lagdon. The sicorY
ti is told that while thee Mayor of
of Shorteditch was standing .one deer in
ar th,e street holding in his hand a
e cheque for R2e,(100, sent to him be•
o war factory, a poor Woman gave him a
e nhilling to Invest Weyer, bonds. "It is
11:, all I haeop she said, "bot you are
welcorae to it .to feed the guns and
no help the bore," The mayor accepted
re the' eltilling, and 'the papers published
r a notice to the effect that if the
in-
vestor would Call .at Shoreditch town
hall she would be provided with a war
Savings certificate. The actual shil-
ling, laoWeYer, is being mounted to be
kept at Shoreditch as a token of the
patriotism ot its People.
in Ile They have a. kind of red pea
that keep a year without rotting, an
they aloe have tomatoes. In th
country iron is not tout& but appe
is. ' Gold and silver, have no value.
In their markets there are neithe
taxes nor fixed prices.
'As to marriage, he who desires to
marry a young -woman constructs a
house in front of the house in which
she lives. For the period of a year
In the morning and afternoon, he
cleans Mel waters the front of his
house. If the maiden doers not accept
• • e
d
r TEE .&BBEY BELLS.
e•
✓ Westminster's Peal is Now a Pull
r Ootave-.
m then, he goes somewhere elae, but
if they please each other mutually the
wedding is celebrated. The ceremon-
ies are almost the same as those in the
Middle Kingdom. When the father,
the mother, the 'wife be' the son dies,
the relatives feet seven days; he the
older brother dies, the younger brother,
the olceer brother „et the father; the
DOCTOR URGED
AN OPERATION
Instead 1 took Lydia E. Pink.
buret Vegetable Compound
and Was Cured.
Baltimore, Md. -"Nearly four years
-I suffered from organic. troubles, nee-
Vousnees and head.
-.Aches and every .s
month would have to
atey in bed Meet of
the timo. Treat*
meats would relieve
me for a time but
my doctor was al.,
ways urging t..o to
aye an operation.!
bly, sister asked Mo
tOtrY Lydia E. Pink:
hams Vegetable
Compound b ef or e
consenting to an
operation. X t leek
five bottles of itand
it has compietsty •
euted' foe ' and iny
Work Ioa plouurp, I tell sql rny friend
'Who have any trouble of this kind what
Lydia B. Philtham's VegetAble Com.
pentad has demi for me."-Nsetae11,
BittrImottait, 609 Calvertottild., Dahl.
blare, Md.
It It only natural for any vroinen fx
dread the thoughtot an reparation. Fk
many wom.n have been restored to
healIb by this famous remedy, Lytilit B.
Ink Vegeteble Compound; after
an operation hes been advised that ft
Will p' any woman who 'offers from
'doh *Entente to weeder trylng it be.
aubseittitg to such a t.rying ordeal,
•
. The bells et Westminster Abbey,
• which, except on rate oceasiotts el'
hietorie Impertana, have been silent
stor a long period of years, rang out
again on. the occasion of the King's
. birthday, at the close of an impressive
dedicationservicee conducted by the
Dean of Weetminitter.
• But the peal,was different from any
due to the Abbey bell -lingers in pre-
vious times. For the first time in his-
tory, the famous Abbey possesses a
1 lull *ernettiklvteliottheeigithiteiboeryllso, :nrildsolInadveeldT.
• • Sea bells had teee the number of
"the peal ever striae the Abbey had a
• tower in whiele to hong them, They
were used to celebrate the ertelettee,
the last amoeba ote WW1' they were
rung, and beet* that, on the Corona -
teen days of 1Cing*GeOrge and King
,Edward. Recently, Weever, some
antinyltiOUB d011Oril offered to renoVate
the old pdal, andVtdd the hells heces-
etety to make th.eatt.bbey the pOssessor
of a. full octave.
The offer was received with gratl-
tilde by the DeAte, and twe cif the rad
bells were re -cast and two new ones
ttedihe cloae of the triiiiiiiieservice.
Ob. June 3rd the congregation passed
to -the northwest Omer, and there the
• Deese formally dedicated the bells in
•ahe following tame: "In the faith of
• Jet= Christ, said in hope of the
world's peace, We deditate the bells
1101V hung in thee tower, as well as
Mom newly cot se those that, being
,old, have been reoriented and bunt
afresh to the Glory of Clod and for the
replenishing of this Church Of St.
• ll'eTtehresDienanWtheetningilugnatearilli
'it:0 the bet-
frY by milling a light cord, end the
bells immediately, rang out their Peal.
The generous demos 01 the new belle
Were present at the ceretnony, the
Dean afterwards declared, Mit hodnot
yet released him from the pkdge of
Preserving their anonymity.
RenoVate 1Brueieg,
'When eweeper brush. bristles become
soft front long use end 'do not sweep
up liet as Well ad when stiff, Put a
Ilttle tornmon halting eode in some
hot water; take the brutai out of the
eweeper, and dip it up and down in
Mtg. Let it dry in the sue and it will
be like new. Bair beushee or any
brush can be treated in the RAMO way
with tali beet of retralte •
tare
The Indian 'never liked rk but be
posoisreatedwo hp, otrtWebet0 opieuit cvir deaeossoots as
woak
and lot hi
hunt, ore
"4 he dug
roof far for
ritheammt ,Wee iheir
itre:oa:a7leieroeWelvioeieettPre
the IMMO TOO
4014 ,4. 4,
k. 44c4.4" 1' ::::::11:14:::
lc% WMPRIAC°AblailijAilr
ser"Fiapvtiloriol! +OOP":
11.01710pm:inn awtnreguiaro are woorriarreostantvarWitotenweauffer,
who are nervous or dizzy at theeet Shot114
bare that reliable, temperance, herbal
ton' sr 9 4 doctor m active practice
PPremilerce abedFo:ll:rite"fteracriagP:o:
drigO,Ste, in -tablet* and ifeitliel,-ir Dr.
ow sold by
Send 10e. to Dr. Pierce's Invade Rowe
Buffalo, N. Y., for trial package.
WOODIrtoOK. ONT.,-`11 cannot say enough he
Praise et Dr. Pierce's Iffedkinos. I had oolong
'rostra** and MA emooletely "down and out.'
INV/AS so bad the doctors thnsidered mina a hope.
kiss csoie. 1 was much 'discoureged and was
ready to give up when I heifer' taking the
'Favorite Presertation and the Golden Medical
liffain and, ggY4 me the on real rellef. Being
Diecovem' "These mediciciii put me on thip test
nurse I have recommended, r. Pierce's Medicines
to many„.eapecially, the 'Favorite Prescription.'
I know of many a young mother to whom limy.
recommended Favorite Prescription' thataleal
been cwonderfulry helped.
I am glad to lend my name in connection with
rlerr44 fleitigs.; 4Inciant.1,121.1t.1- '144°
• •
4-0-1-4+4.4-4-e-a++:44+-•••-e-e-s-ass-44
I
'The Regent
'Diamond
There la an intereeting etory told
of tho great Regent diamond, nay
owned. by the larench government,
'Thomas Pitt, the grtuadfatIter of the
great William vitt, ,Lord Chatham,
'purchased the stone wiale goVernet
for the East India Company, and dent
It to England In eharge of his son
Robert.
Pitt first heard of it In the summer
of 1701, and about December of that
year jarachund, one of the best
• known native merchants, brought the
diamond to him 'at Medraer, end of-
fered to sell it for two hundred thous-
and pagodas, Pitt would not offet
him more than thirty thousand, so
the negotiations ecerhe to a close, Isi
February..aarrichunel offered Pitt the
diamond for one hundred eltousand
pagodas. Pitt bait him down to tif-
ty-five thousand and raised his 'own
offer to forty-five thousand. ,iam.
eltund would not agree,' and they took
• a friendly leaete. a •
An hour later ,faxachund reappeared
and offered thaetediataand for fifty
thousand pagodas, Pitt raised hi of-
fer to forty-sevenetheeisand five hun-
dred pagodas. ja,mehtl'ad, alter long
haggling, Came doWe to • fortyeeight
ttieusand-about e1,00,000- and Pitt
closed with him.'••
According to nicidern ideas; Pitt'.
"grand affair," as he, called it, 'con-
ducted by a mane in • his potation,
might be regarded is one of deubte
ful propriety. But the Company
ed no objection, their only fear belies
that Pitt% purchase -might bring them
into collision with the native author-
ities.
Cook% Coottutt Root Compound.
.tt tale, retiable regulating
medisine. Bold in three de.
grace of ctropgth-No. 1,01;
No. 2, se; Lie. St *5
Sold by all druggists, oe sent
prepaid
on receipt of brie°.
Free. . pamphlet. Address:
THE COOK IVIEDICINECO4
TORONTO, ONT. (ftraartt Ohm)
• Pitt calcula.ted that when ;the dia.
ntoud was cot, it would weigh about
300 carats and be worth £460, vibrate
he declared -Was "cheap as 'neck beef."
Some monarch, he thought, would •be
the "fitirest ehapman" for it; aud he
preferred that it should' be purchased
•or the crown rif England. For the
English crown be would make loree
abatement, but under no circumstances
was it tosbe dold "to a club of people
that shall make more advantage of it
thao myselte, who have run the great-
est of risks to purehase it."
--. In 1703 these risks began to grow
more serious. • Never was man more
tormented by a treasure. His letters
• from audia palpitate with ,his Peeve
He dreaded being robbect by his :own
• agents, lea.ving ettrusted 11 to his son
Robert and Sir Stephen. Ettenee; he
• subsequently ordered them to he.nd it
to his cousin, George Pitt. About Itob-
• ert he wrote:
"I am net a little Jealous too oemy
sone, who has already had too bold
with me on several occasions; there -
Aire pray take care now that he doea
not strip Me."
Rumors affeeting Evance'a credit
threw hira into, an ozone of alarm.
Bitter too was his disappointnient
when he found that the stone had been
reduced by cutting from 41(i to 127
carats.
In 1706 It was ready for•
"glorious sight" -but no purchaser ap-
Peered. Pitt grew seriously eoncerned
bis anxiety being increased by the
growing farne of the jewel. His move.
ments became uncertain and Myster-
lotus; he eften went about in disguise
and he -redoubled les precautions for
the eafokeeping of the treasare,
1n.1717, the Duke of:Warne
iitganit during the infancy ef LOWS
XV, agreed to buy it for the Free&
Crown.-Pitteactompanied by his on•
and his son-in-law, Chariest Chalmette
deley, carried it over to Charles; where
it was delivered to the Jeweller ap-
Pointed 10 receive it. Pitt in a letter
to his son (Robert Wrote:
4
()VEEN'S
UNIVERSITY
raltaiga011,
Oicranni
ARTS
Porta the Arts course maybe covered, by
cOrrespondencec
MEDICINE EDUCATION
APPLIED SCIENCE
• Mining, Chemical, Civil*
Meolutaiesti And Elaotrisal
Eaglactrin• d
IMAM 1011001. 11016131911 SCHOU
• elayeed August. Decentlyr toaertt
61 (14141 Y. 'CROWN. Restore*,
ifilleteilletelegiaglietermitaiereateat
am
,
a Decade
Farnou Writor4 Born Between
1809 and 1819.
Iii the Intellectuel sphere it will ke
iound thet nteet of tee great OathOe
of the Victorieu Age are Mose of men
and woman born in the tee yeare be.
401teituy.iitoratli), ji.et geneirtgett, atlet4,.
tittle earlier, and Herbert apetteee,
Matthew Artuild, Millais, 'meow
Mertelith a little later„ But the COW'
endar of those ten year* Is worth re.
eco°11111188.titi,Ttllnetal)e;trvaiy,n,elladotone,
1812, Dickeese itobert firowning
16)10, Charlotte tirente.
1819, (the bletts year of quoit v,ta.
Ktoiruipaivere, RelutilifiOne. USK, CharlOdi
I have Included Pennell and Glide
gone not becauee, but. in +spite, .of
their being politicians.
At the queettes acceesion the eideet
of them wee twentyeeigetand tite
Youngeet eighteen. That Year (1e37)ae
the opening Nene- of the Victorian
aranm-fltly heralded the future; fee
111 lt were giveu to the Enlist/ world
two Immortal works, opposite as taif
poles in cbarecter, but each di.5C100;
tug for the firet time the real genius
et Its author; thckens' "Pickwitli
Papers" end cerlyitee "French !Revalue
Um" During the decade whieh fol.
towed our. tliterefure Vas corleauti
by "Vaulty Fair," "Jane Eyre," tila
first volume of "Modern Paintere;
and the ftrat two volumes of .uacau.•
say's "History of England."
Sir EdWer4 Clarke 110,,3 recentie
produced an interesting autobio-
graphy. I will not go through ale ca-
talogue, WhiCh every one should read.
and study; Out I will take two Air
-hree years art eninples, %amenities;
.imitcing one or ttve of Sir E. Clarke'*
Gpecirn en s, and sofaetimea Adding efie
or two, for which he has not found
a place.
"Take first 1850 -the year of 1ll)04••
amnia," "In memoriam," and "Christie
tne,seEve and Etteter Dale." Or again,
1855, with "Maud," "Men and WO -
men," "The Virginians," Macaulaere
third and fourth volumes, and Here
eg,Spweihthenteer'suyast
'Psychology," Or, King,"OoleiastlY
is
',Adam Bode," "The Tete of Two Ci-
tes," "The Ordeal of Richard rever-
t," Edward PitZgerald's "Rubaiyat,"
nd (in aorne WaYn the most epoeh-
tatking of them ell) Darwin's "(aright
f Species." Even,: this marvelous and
:most unexatepled array Wee an fa.
amigo ideaz of the reeourcea et Vic -
erten genlueatvhen the age wart at its
enith. Foreeewithin, the same tett
'ears, we Oaku tare first published
oems of elatfle6heatikad and Williain •
'orris, fluslcatesa"Stonee of Vedette"
he first naval"- ria Anthony Tr011oPec
Ga.skelletrallforil," Mill's "Ialt-
rty," and thealeat; work of Charles
eingeley. Tletieetrearn, if never after -
lied quite -setiateel,aini strong, did not
ry up; it Waveatefeyears later being.
onstantly re -enforced and vitalized
y new tributaries, down to the very
wines of the Victorian Age.
The wind blows where It nets; and
o tieoryo
4tirwlthwrehI
macquamt-11terofleedltY,
r imaginable .anteeedents--can ade-
uately accOlfrit for these inclioutable
eta It is right, moreover, to record;
at the Victorian publie, the men in
e street ete- %Wont Matthew Arnold
bed, the ,staasserlaera to the cliculat-
g librariese etaich then vein far, to
ake or unmake the fortunes of an
uthor, were neither unapprociative,
or exelusiewart; their appreciations.
is true tleareelie two greatest 'of the
omen writereeeef the age -Charlotte
ronte and 'Cleoege Eliot --were, at the
tset of their, careers, roughly banded by theeterthedox and fashionable
Mee. In th ef eats of another pair of
e irmet Mated.' authors of the. tine%
obert Bro'Knitig and George Mere-
th, each of WhOM had tO wait he-
re he meld% make good his ;elate -is
pass, from:the worship of a coterie,
to the reagnized Pentheon, • the
alt perhaps, ae much with the
rversity of the writer • as with the
llnese of l`the .public. -From
quitheg Roatiartea lecture, "Some Ase
eta of the Victorian' Age," • •-•
a •
Improvements. •
a
•
a
z
A
a
fa
tit
th
gi
in
a
11
It
ou
Ie
cr
th
di
fo
te
In
pe
tin
Ae
pe
Baker's callialnon buns, alwaea ao
unlike "the kind mother used. to
bake," rnay be made almost to pass
for those, ty buttering, rolling in ;a
bit or einnanion mixed with esuger
and browning tor sjust 111 few nilnute.4
in the 'even: The bakera' cinnamon
bune are never brown enough. anyhow,
80 thie will not mane these overdone.
Apple sauce served with a dressing
of lee emu orange Mice le delicious;
When compelled to serve berriee
without create, try a Dale marshinalr
low -whip instead -It as really alirmet
as good, perhaps quite so. It can be
Made at home or bought,. and las the
advantage of, keepeng indefinitely. It
has proved a boon to many a h,ourie- e
wrifew,hwena hettvthueddn
ere:noteother has gone
o
seems untetriptIng, and reouirce a
little extra touch to make it Just
right,
GW spearmint in your garden, and
make a perfect summer drink, by
°melting a few leaves of it in a
glass and adding a Mile aeinott juice,
sugar and ice cold water. Without the
• lemon juice it will be insipid.
Home-made baked beans in 20 min-
• utes-vvell yet would think they were
home-made_ anyhow/.. But they area
really only ordinary, bought, canned
ones, eel:noised froin the can to an
earthen diet), a few etripe of bacon
km to the top, and a little black mo.
lessee mixed with the beans -thee the
whole baked: for a little while till
brown. They have quite the bome.
• mule !levet- Even a Boatonlan Might
be fooled! .
A**
01011de ITows,
eland -painted %satins.
Three.quarter sleeves.
Overbioutice ot plain net.
Softly rounded necks iplenty.
Button -back models now and then,
13aeque models of eporte wear.
Blouses01 trleotine made on sweat.
01VialnieetTelenneet end Inicheee eotribined
in front pantie.
&eV Vork Bystorootio Growth.
•
A remarkable fotecest ef poPUlation
of New York is brought to light in
copies of the Scientific American for
September 8, 1880. A etatistleitin for
the Mantua of the common council
shows the population of the eitY to 10.
treala Wail 1006 would have made the
mutation Of New York 5,287,4$8,
figure almost in aecord-with the ali-
ne of that time.
Some people never step to think,
and wouldn't think if they did.
cop 44.
—a . 7,21. _