HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1920-11-18, Page 20 I .1 1 4, r , - IF-
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I . sht- I
I Magic Carpet,
,� -
1i _ N!
I irloas to.New 1vorrds _1
_.__________,_ -,
I
ROYAL
YEAST CAKES
exe now packed in
.
The BulgArlaus ,.vilo are attaetitig
sqttare package -3.
Toronto Fat Stock ShOW
"I
the Greeks once more have had a
Each package ton-
.
I ple with It, and made It a household
checkered national career during the
tains five takes,
Anticipates its'exquislite
flawur,
last halt century. Their country,
which has been little alt2red by the I
Which we equed in
will be the best show og the series
war, forms roughly mi oblong area
que'nilty to six
Sen4 us A postal for a free sample. Please state the.,
betweeu Roumanla on the north, t�e
�
.Black Sea on the east, and Greece and I
roan4'cake3. All
. . -5
priceyou now payand W, 1%ether blacks Greeri,or M_,ed
the Aegean Sea oa tha south, and I
'dealerS are ,author-
A4dress Salada, roranto.
. B723
Jugo-$14via oil the west Its fron-
iZed to gua-mntce
Anke, -until 11, has bc,gun to brown on
ated lit the stoma6i and pasa uway
tiers were determined by the Treatfe3
I
In the stools without being percep-
. 11 .
1�
- . I . . - .-AM-ft
of Bucliarest and Constantinople in
that the quality of
-----. ___ili ,
O
GIANT NLVTS,
1913. The present area of the voun-
try Is about 43,000 square miles, and it I
the round e,nd
In opi%ratlon. .Nothing could be more
I Ip net vometbing that Is merMy to be
thorough or desirable than thMr ac-
occupies about one-fiffli. of the rybole
3quare cakes
i
r6ver falls to bring relief, .and 14 your
own Individual easi It Vill do the
A Dress to kitep, llecFdles smooth
Long-fttinct Species Was Often
of the Balkan peninsula. Thfo nlack
Sea Is more hospitable than the Ae-
I arc identical
At thot Point whert they are the Most
I ont afflicted With tIlls disease owes
we.dkled.
it to himself to try It.
KEPT
Pive Feet Lon_w,
gean, and contains two important
r I .
I
Over in Europe, quite a while ago.
ports, Varna and Burgas. Dede-gatch,
reape t.
.
bones were dug up of some newts
on the Aegean, which came into prem-
I
,
Nothing Should Be Left Ex-
whicr. ' M life had been about five feet
inenes during the great war, and
which Is the only port of iniportau-.a
'ill
I
� ,
-I I
I
posed, Especially in
loug�
111very boy is familiar with newts.
on that sea, is shallow and unprotect-
ed. It is served by the Danube, the
I
11111
I'll � .
111i", I J1 611 I
ill
Hot Weather
which no calls "saiamanders.11 ,r n ey
are coullnonly found in orooks auu
Kanichik, the Maritlia and the Strumm.
- -
- - q
------ -- -- - .
tPouds' A "caluielt "ve '11'�nes 'Ong Ia
The Inhabitants are mainly a fusion of
Bulgars and Slays, and theIr language
,
F.F�%M
�h R
�
Butter should be kept In a. dark,
a w,Uopplug big one. but uve ft,tt
Phew!
Ur those
was simplified in structure by the
Txxrk,,.-h conquest. It was In the mid-
"9
a
ta
a
Hndory
19
N
'I
cool place. tightly covered and away
course, giant newts were
dle of the seventh century that the
I
[Tho of
111
I
from every possible taint. Yet how
many leare It exposed ,and
Of long-extincE species. Bur tne joxe
f it was viLaT a iearned investiaawr
0 1
Bulgars first appeared In the Balkans,
:1018 11186 Bulgaria waz a
R
.,
n
%
Your Name-
& i
,�!
-1
LQ
people sit-
declarea tne I)Oncs To be taose of -
but from to
dependency of the Gr4ok& Later it
- 1
EN �R I
ting on window ledges or in a hot
kite4eu tar hours at a time, where It
Auman beings, pre3timawy drownea
Ill the tloo(L from Wtuou Nola aud
I
was overrun by the Turlzs, The year
IEE,m3E,41��-RES�gRlqq.DFW-i,t,.Z!M-�.m--c-.m.mm�4
I
Is literally soaking up bad odors and
his faintly escaped ill Me arr'.
100S was the great yeirr lor Bulgaria,
'Russia
RIGGINNS I
impurities, It Is a scientific fact that
milk and buter absorb odor and Im.-
it woutd. have been latt-resting to
live in those distant days, vineu so
The agreement lletWeel't and I
Austria came to an end, and Russ'an .
VARIATIONS-O'Higgin. INICHIg- -
glu� Higgison, Huggins� '114ellisofn,
purl4l witlt great rapidity. milk sour#
and microbes multiply many thousands
many queer Monsters (niostly Oj
aquatic (habits) swarinect on the
and English diplomatists met at lte';-
al, as a resalt of 'Which tlie independ-
McHiggin.
RACIAL ORIGIN -Irish.
a minute or many thousands per tea-
earth. They seem to uave ueen among
I
ence of Bulgaria was proclaimed with
SOURCL�'-�k given name.
oPoonful. No sensible housekeeper, in
hot weather especially,, will leave
nature's earlier experimeny.s, avan-
doned later,
Ferdinand as the first monarch of the
country. Bulgaria took part in both
V-.'hi'.e the family names Higgins -
"Hicle,
these exposed for more than a few
There were no maininals then; au,1
the first and the second Baltan wars,
much territory ,or
and Hlgg�nson often come from
"Hiecon." aid English nick -names
minutes.
Urd � should be kept carefully, yet
the supposition is that L11 tile mamniam
of to -day, Including man, were origin-
and while she, gained
from Turkey, she was forced to cede
for Richard. it is safe to say that in
the majority of cases in this country
IiDw few women show- any effort In
caring fbr it! Usually one sees it left
ally derived from a reptilian ancestry.
We cannot say for certain that this
some to _onmania. The bulk of the
peqple of Bulgaria belong to the Greek
such names are Celtic. So far as O' -
exposed and hardening, it should
queer reptile (which liv,Ld about 7,000.-
Orthodox Church, but there Is libarty
Higgin and MacHiggin or McHiggin
are concerned there Is no reasoni'51-e
be wrapped in wax paper in cool. dly
000 years ago) was not actually an an-
of belief to other religious For manv
&
doubt that they are Irish.
places In the dark. When you 'have
a lare.- cheese and have cut into it
cestor of our own
It was dug up -in Texas, and has
years the education of country
was entirely In the hands of the Greek
The Irfsh lligg-;ns ' like the English,
and wish to put away what Is left you
been named Dimetrodon. About eight
clergy, but tlie progress of recent
comes frGm. a given fiame, but not the
should butter the cut edges. The
feet lon- the most curious thing
"
years has been striking. In 188S only
the
same one.
The m1stake is often made of con -
smaller qaastities that are for daily
rederock.
about it was the enormous fin It car-
ried on its back -the rIbs of the fin
eleven per cent. of Population
could read and write. To -day prob- lKeegan.
fusing this name with the name of
that Is, In assuming that it
Cheese should cut in a grainy way,
not waxy. It should be solid, never
being a series of bones extending from
the vertebrae.
ably forty per cent, is literate. The
country is largely agricultural, both
__q ,
f-11 t,hp Came given "a ... �
greasy, ead should be watched con-
Of what use was this f1u? Perhaps
cereals and livestock being exported,...,,_
Rogban, through the use of the p,et
gument being that
C. i tie z&r.
tinually for weevil. The saronsr smell-
it was merely for ornament. t Or it
as well as some cotton, sugar and to- I
there is little real difference between
Ing cheese should be wrapped in tin-
foil and kept In covered croaks.
maY be that it was a means of de-
fence, rendering the huge lizard less
bacco. There are Some Mineral -S, in-
cluding some hc..%vy dc,,,,ositg of oil I
MacKeegan and 111acHiggln. This ar-
-Streaked bacon is dark red and the
attracttye to, the appetite of larger
. h t, I awaits development.
bale, whic s il.
gument, however, loses sight Of the
fact that both of these forms are but
tat is white. It the tat be yellow it Is
Prey'. __
#
English corruptions of the Irish Sur-
not so choice. It should be salty. of
course, delicately smoky.
SOXE 111111EW STAMPS
WHY ANEMIA PHRAILS,
I
names, which are traceable definitely
and smell
Salt pork has a paler red and should
1
to different sources both by means of
his torical-genealogi-
be white and firm. Ham should have
a rich, good red and clear, fine white
1, In conection. with the proclamation
I
I of D'Anaunzio as Dictator of Flume,
The Strenuous Conditt-on of Life
spelling and the
cal records In the Irish language. I
and be firm .
i a new postage stamp for the port has
To -day Are Responsible. -
The Irish form of the surname Is
"O'll-Vigin," or "Mactigin," the
The skin of pork sliould be elastic
and the fat white and clear. It sliould
been designed, by fhe Italian artist
I Guido -lassurig, . and is now being
Mothers who re -nark that girls to-
"Ji" being a nece8sar,- insertion after
be kept cool in tiot water and examin-
printed In Rome. The design 1sv more
i
, ,L
day are inore prone to anaE -Aa than
"O" to make it pronounceable. The
Kamily or clan name comes from the
ed mleroseopleally for trichinae Smell
*
the big joints, for it Is in them tl hat
stardling than picturesque, the dis-
I pla�'�f the sculptured, truncated head
the girls of a generation ago, sho*,111i I
look back at the surroundings in I
,
given name of "1311gin," which ih.eans
"knowledge." I
the first signs of spoiling show-
Glass jays are excellent for lc?eping
of D'A_nnunzI9,-on a ground of solid
.color. producing a somewhat maca-
which they and their compani=-, I
lived. Thw� would earily see th.,
The form Iligginson would appear
I
many kinds Of food. It they contain
bre effe.ct.
reason in life's altered circuipstance 5 1.
to be English. but there are many
�
cases on reco:d, where it Is simp'y an
-
,fruit Or preserves they would better
�be wrapped In paper. It Is Csisential
: The forerunner of the spzclal stamp
Issues in commemoration of tile cent-
to-daY.
C I
Now the school,girl's life Is more
Ang'lclze,d version of the Irish f*amily
�'
to keep them where it tool and dark,
enary of South American independ-
in Ecuador.
strenuous; her more numerous stil- ,
dies are a severe tax upon her i
inast common in Westmeath and Gal -
way.
and a dr3% movable bin in a cellar Is
excellent. StLulight, bu jelly gives rich
mark- l
Ing the 100th anniversary of the lib-
strength. A130 -girls enter business I
.
THE BIRDS.
texture.
erattiou of the provinc�N of Guayaquil, I
soon after leaving school -at an age I
I
AlR,%1EN AND
I
11
--t- 4
whi,th, waii Me J.'rat. to cast off the
I .&
I
whenothey mogp 'Wed rest and outdoor
The , .
develolftftt i�- I
.....a
ad ex -
In %)lte of their difficult w
PERMANENTLY SPIGHT KETTLES
Spanish yoke, stamp,s are in
-1 I
life, ,Ir viornanli- -
hampered by ,6b, sinss of �worklng i
acting task, a few'zirmen have found
PROMISED
denominationq, with reproductions
.por-Lraits
bours, hurried alid olten scanty meals. I
opportunity to observe and record the
Stainless steel, made rust -proof by a
I O� and monuments of lead-
ers of the revolution, such as Sucre
Girls are more liable to bloodlessnebs
height at which various m!,grating
birds are accustomed to fly. Thus
large perc-eetage of ,chromium has
been used hitherto only -for ' knife
( 1
I an -.1 Bolivar. '
to -day, but there is this consolation
that, wIlereas doctors formerly regard- I
from French soldiers of the air it.
baldes. It is,now declared practical
by the discovery of a heat treatment,
'' After many dol2k*s. the loag4awaft-
I ed Victory postage stamps off Bar-
ed anacinia as often incurable, the
cures are' now counted In tens of J
is learned that swallows have been
observed to maintain an average al-
to produce kettles, trying plus and
I bados were placed, on sale to the
' l
-
thousands. Such medicines as Dr.
titUde Of 700 Yards, and wild ducks
other kitchex utensils of this material,
,public an.. September 9. For somp-
Williams, n red to
-one Of 1,800 Yards, and that green
and such ware will not only retain the
.months past they havo lain Idle in
good health thousands of weak an-
plovers have been seen at . height
brillfaitcy of burnished steel but it
the local Treasury, owing: it Is said,
I
I
aemic girls and wortion, simply be-
of 2,150 yards. Incidentally it may
vill be much naere durable than the
to enormous
cause they contain the elements ueces-
,
be mentioned that the ducks wqre
old. Vegefable leldS have no. effect.
,ed -from stamp dealers In the 'United
sary to make new, rich, red blood
moving at'a speed of sixty-five and a 1
PScletee Sittings."
States, whi.rb would li,�tve complete- I
which means good health and vitality.
half miles an hour when flying up-
byr exhausted the fultial'supply. 'Ad-
When your daug ter s strength falls I
-ward and sixty�nfno miles an hour I
THE FALL WEATHER
ditlonal staeks have now been re-
,colved In the colony. the new stamps I
and .pallor, breathlessness and back-
ache d sclose her anaemic condition.. I
"' I
when flying horizontally. Another,
wHator when flying at 9,500 feet sav
HARD ON LITTLE ONES
-
cire being brought into use. and ma;y
Ahe experted to reach London abou 't I
b that you can make her -.;ell I
reme.m er
ire her healV.iy development
and ssi�
i
swallows high above him. And an -
other who made his observations at a
,the end of September. I
by giving bar Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
a height of 6,000 feet during a heavy
Canadian fall weather is extremel3r
I
Always Serviceabl-M-M-Ost Pills lose,
to make good red blood. Remember,
too- that for women of all ages, Dr. I
bombardment, with . anti-aircraft
shells bursting all about him, says
hard on little ones. One dar is warm
and bright and the next wet and cold.
their properties with age, Not I
s 0 with Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. i
I
Williams' Pink Pills are especially
helpful in the many ailments that re-
I
that, be saw 0-00 golden plovers, per -
haps driven highe-r than usual by the
These sudden changes bring on colds,
is so compounded that I
suit from watery blood. They make
f set that the viclult ty was an unpleas-
cramps and colic, and unless b3bY's
little is kept right the result
The pill mass
their strength and effectiveness is
women and girls well and keep them
I
alit belt to cross.
stomach
may be serious. There Is nothing to
preserved and the Pills can be car-
ried anywhere without fear of losing!
I well. This Is amply proved by the
case of Miss Eva .MacKinnon, Mani-
I
�
BLED TO DEATH
equal Baby's own Tablets in keeping
their potency. This Is a quality that
1 mI%, Ont., who says: "As a school
-�
the little ones well. They sweeten
the bowel&
few pills possess. Some pills lese
. girl I grew very. pale and would take -
Tried to trim a -w4rt with a razor
the stomach. regulate
break up colds and make baby thrIVO.
their power. but not so with Parme�
lee's. They will maintain their fresh-
I dizzY spells and sometimes vonliting. i
I My condition was such t4at I was not ,
an The
. d severed an artery. only
wart cure Is "Putnaw*s" wIlich re.
The Tablets are sold by madicine deal-
ness and potency for a long time,
I able to attend school regularly, and I
moves warts, corns, callouses In one
er$ or by mail at 26 cents a box from
my mother was very muca worried
- day. Insist on getting Putnam's Corn
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ont.
The antelope has been discovered
I
about my condition. Finally she de.'
and Wart Extractor, it's the best, 25c
at all dealers.
yule,
by Roy Chapman Andrews to be able
aided to give me Dr. NVIIIIAms' Pink
;
The English University in Dlrmln�.
J to travel at a speed of sixty miles an
hour for a short time. This; species
Pills and I took these for a consider-
able time, gradually gaining strongtil
5 ___
, 20,000 PICT17RES A SECOND.
I
ham has been given a fund to pro-
lives in the Imongollan desert and the
until I was perfectly well. It Is some
3lessrs. F.. Abraham & Blach and
mot(� research In relation to motorA
animal Is also a native of Africa.
years since I took the pills and I bave
i L J31orb report to the French Aca-
cycles,
enjoyed the best of health, and I ani
I demy of Scien"s that tMey have de -
For withdrawing splinters an Eng-
I
cert2ln pale, sickly girls will find rinv
i v,-Iot h V�
pEd a mac In that takes moving
As avermicide there Is, no prepara-
lishman has invented tweezers so,
healtli if they give Dr. Williams' Pink
, pictures at a speed of more than 2103, -
tion that equals Mother Graves' Worm
Exterminator. It has Saved the lives
1 rined that they press down the flesh
t to
Pills a fair trial." i 000 a wcond.
You can procure Dr. V,71111afns' Pink
ot countless children. I � -
on each side of the Jaws.
� I - - -
Pills through any dealer in medlehip
I
I I -_ 1.
I Pain Flees Before It. -There Is more
,,,,
��_ __
-
or they will be sent *.*on by' mail at, --10 .' virtue in a bottlo of Dr Thows' 7-1 -
ce . tits a box or six boxes for $12.50 by I. l,etric a � I
, Oil us a nubduer of pain tit i
writing diract to The Dr. Williama' I in gallons of other medicine. The
Medicine Co,., Brathville, Out.
public lmow this and there ari few
Toronto Fat Stock ShOW
households throughout the country
. where it cannot be found. Thirty
The Toronto Pat Stock Shov: takes
years of use has familiarized the peo-
place at the Union Stock Yards, West
I ple with It, and made It a household
Toronto, on December 9th and 10th,
medicine throughout the western
world.
1920. Entries close. on November
I
24th, Send in your entry now. Do
not walt until tbe last day. This
-
Instead or grating clices
will be the best show og the series
aroul, cut it into sinall pleve.; and add
yet.
to a white sauca 6*asontd with salt
and tpaprlRa, stir over a fire until th�
I
-
tlioc3,� Is me!,ted and blend,2d with the
' Miller's Worm Powders work so
� stlueN ,VIX will, 111aceroni wljk�h 11a4
effectively, that no traces of wornig
beon boiled in sa!�tcd watc,r until toflt.
can bk� found. The pests are macer-
Anke, -until 11, has bc,gun to brown on
ated lit the stoma6i and pasa uway
-,Op. A capful of whRe saue'a and a
In the stools without being percep-
cupful of elfe-so to a halt Tiound of
tible. TheY 1211*6an entire alld ele3n
macaront ip a good I-ronortion.
Sweep of the Intestines. and nothlbg
-----. ___ili ,
in the shape of a worm can find lodge-
Your Mthmm Too. e Afflc.�P.v
ment there when theae Powders are
of 'Dr. 1. 1). Xellogg% Astltma 11.10medy-
In opi%ratlon. .Nothing could be more
I Ip net vometbing that Is merMy to be
thorough or desirable than thMr ac-
I hoped for; It Is to be expected. It
fion.
r6ver falls to bring relief, .and 14 your
own Individual easi It Vill do the
A Dress to kitep, llecFdles smooth
imme. So universal ha,-; beou the sue,
IcesS
that bag be6n Patented str8tches them
of thii far4amml varA that OyAr'*
At thot Point whert they are the Most
I ont afflicted With tIlls disease owes
we.dkled.
it to himself to try It.
11'acts About
Canada
Indlans in the .014 days .0" a iory
f ery aua hou0s.
Thay were merciless in their treat-
ment of the coward, whether he was
a wwte or one of their own number.
They honored bravery even in the
worst enemy. Frequer.tly they ox-
cuted cowards at once. for their ac.
ttons were considered a disgrace to
the whole tribe, When, for instance,
In 1643 the Bersiamites returned from
a victorious assault on the onemy,
Ntichwat, one of their numberq:acted,
while the fight was on, the part o
the waverer. The warriors upon
their return were given a wonderful
reception by the old men, women and
he p. The coward
withdrew from the scene of revelry
and sat alone on a log by the river.
Then without apparent design, the
girls and ebildrdu danced nearer and
nearer to him until they reached
where he sat. Then Pieskaret, the
chief or the tribe, stalked into the I
circle.
oBy your cowardice in front of the
enemy, you hqve disgraced us all. You I
must dle2'
That was all lie said, but the ver-
dict of the tribe had been rendered
and there was no appeal. The sen.
tence w4s carried out at once. The
-festivities stopped Instantly and the
warriors and boys gathered .around
the victim and the executioner., An
ominous allerwe. like a pall, enveloped
all. Without a word the coward rose '
from the log on which he sat, bared
the breast and the war chief struck,
The body was carried away outside
the camp and the feast went on with
no more interruption. All but the
father and the brothers of the dis"
graced man spent the night in feast -1
Ing and revelry.
This was the swift and te.,rible pun-
ishment meted out for cowardice and
treachery -the two things must de-
sDised l,y the wild, untutored red man
of the,forest Death was even the
n v ailed to pre-
vent two of tits warrior friends from
falling the i-letim, of an enemy scalp-
ing knife; he must risk his life for I
any brave of the tribe -or die.
I ^ I
0 . , I
I
�
CURED HE
"EUMATismul
R.1
R n
"I am eiguty-three years old and I
doctored for rheuinatiern ever since I
came out of the army, over 51 year.4
ago. Like inany othem., r spent mone3,
cteeiy for so-called -cures' and I have
read about 'Urle Acid' until I Could
almost taste it. I could not Slec!)
Aights, or walk Without pain; iny hands
ff I could not hold
a pen. But now I am armin in active i
bwdness and can walk with ease or
"
write ail da-.- wit% coinfo,t. Frien&
are .%urprisea at the chanxe." You
migH just ar. weil atteinvt to put out
a Die with 01 as try to got rid of "ur
I h,milm Liam, nPuritis and 'ike com-
Wla:vts by taking treat.-Ilent suppo,*ed
to drive Uric Acid out of your blood
an(I body. It took Mr. Ashelinan
fifty years to find out me. truVa.
Tie learned how to get rid of
. trutli. He -earned !low to get rid of
the true cause of his rheumatfs'n,
other disorders. ani recover Ill,
&trengtli frorn "The inner My.-terits.1
now being distributei'free by an au-
thor Nvho cfevoted uyer twenty yeara
to tg.v jentifie atudy'of this trouble.
nv reader of this paper wishes
*
"TDe Ipne� ,A1y,sqPr;e3 of RheurnatisrWl
overlooked bv doctors and scientists
for centurles'past, simplv send a post
card or letter to 11. P. Mearwater, Xo.
655-X Street. Hallowell. Maine. Send
now, lest you forget! If not a suffer-
er. cut out this noth,s and hand this
good rkews and opportunitv to some af-
flicted friend. All who send will re-
ceive It by return Mail wIthout any
chargo wbatever.
*-6
A LABOR or tom
Monlrisli Work of Writing in By-
. gone 3)ays.
)
The monastic libraries of Itile mid-
dle ages preserved the spirit -of those
rigorously ecclesiastical. days and safe -
iguarded literary treasures of antiquity.
,To,day legion of worXers "stir up the
dust of manuscripts, unxnoN�n and de-
splsed since the 16th ocntury, bring -
I Ing to light a new intellectual worid
whose human sigulfla_,nce is undon-
iable."
lNowhere, perhaps, better than in
America, whcre public libraries are of
great repute, can one ut-denstand what
attention the monks displayed for
their books. In other words, a cloister
without books resembled a strong
castle without arms. Kfors the in-
vention of printing in the 15th cen-
tury the mechanical process of book-
making was exhaustive, but at the
period there were many thousands of
manuscripts, and as they were of such
value a book was regarded a nrivve,y
MR. *Xot only did the prodm- *-.-. iu
the monasteries, but almost � :2�t
was neccesary for their prod. . .on
was found there.
Parchment was mostly tt:,,-d -he
e "
Parchment was usually prepired -,rv..h-
in the monastery, cand the mwiksta-
tioner has left particulars G21 his work
as follows. "When the skin of the
beast was quite dry it was scraDed by
meats of a, razor In order to reduce
its roughness. Then Pumice stone re-
mov;ad the markq of tile renews and
gave to the whola surface a whitone�53
without spot." Afterwards the parch-
ment was folded into leaves and
ruled. 'Not only the 1,archment, but
the blaelt Ink, W11' .ell to -day after cen-
turics retains its luster, but r,J ink
and the leave� of gellft which Illumin-
atod mary pagei-, were manufactured
by the monitg.
With fl%G! Parchment UPon a table
bt,fnrt� 111M. tba monk measured the
qvftres for linel at.'d lettem, with et-
tromo. r1lealty and exertea all bta %kill
upon each letb�r. Ilaildwriting a
wArohnitnt rMuired 1111HY houri. bttt
tho- beautiful and artistic letttiring 43f
tho-_06 middle nge monIts have neyer
bcPn -nsaa.5ed.-Rastoa Transetipt,
&.&.*--
I
.;6 matter how dnep-rootod this ftrn
I or wart mv bus, It must vield to ltollo-
wev,lis Corn Cute It ugeJ as litrftte4.
0
0
FURELYNE"AL-1114 P 1111"X09S Pail".
AMEPM-StOPS 1014001-11411son.
SnATlim-Eidia2leaRisir.mrlimate-
I ,-----
PURE-4est fat baby's rsshol
,
REAS all $ergo,
1
7 $ ,50i: lox --X1 deab-m
-----.
� ; " " . 11 I
1= J
- _-, � ,. , � 1-1_-_--1 I _ ,
EARLY HISTORY
OF FiRST AUTO
Ridicule Heaped on Inven-
tor of Forerunner of
Modern Car
Few people who ride ,about the coun-
try In palatial limousines or tiny ran-
4bouts are familiar with the early his-
tory of the Incention which has done
so much to revolutionize trausporta-
tion, and which has played such an
important part In the Industrial de-
velopment of the world to,day.
The interest aroused by the contest
announced by the San Francisco Ad-
vertislug Club heia ClurIng the recent
auto show in the Exposition -auditor-
Ium for the display of antiquated ve-
hi4des, and for which prizes of cups
were given, makes the history of the
first automobile In the world of time-
Steam-I)ropelled vehicles had been
d2vised and used to a very limited
extent 'In England and America as
.
early as ls3o. in 1825 two New Eng-
land men proposed electricity as mo-
tor powor, but the problem of suc-
cessful road locomotion Iaggged until
the middle seventies, Then appeared
a genius who appreciated the W381-
b1litles of the motor vehicles at a
time when his Ideas were regarded
as visionary. -
c
Strange as It may seem, and VUh a
touch of the ludicrous, the first com-
)xqkJo-i engine was operated by a
combination of nittous oxide (laugh -
Ing gas) aud coal oil. Mixed by an
,
atoinizing jet Very high power 'w9s
developed In proportion to weight, but,
as the explosion took place In tin ex-
ternal chamber, and the expanding
� '% listi tn b,% introduced into a cvltn-
der proper through a valve, the beat
oi t)le explosion Invariably fused this -
valve after a short time and stopped
the engine. ?
The Inventor then realized that to
iiiake a gas engine for highway loco-
motion the primary explosion, must
take place within the cylinder Itself.
This lie worked out to a point Of suc-
cossful operation, and by certain rude
tests determined that. .it developed
power enough to propel his Vehicle.
He met the overheating problem by
a splash system from a supply Of
water In the crank chamber, and
solved the problem of lubrication
with a mineral manufactured from pe-
trolcum.
This was in IS' .7. The engine a' lOne
was operated this year. The gears,
wheels. chitch ,and st,,.ering .mnaratuq
were matter of toy -like models, of
blue PrInts ,and�.speclfleatiqns. . OU
c taeuts.�
Thus, the first gasoline propelled
road wagon In the world was con-
ceived by George 13 Seldon, of Ro-
licester. N. Y., In IiM although the
actual running model was not built at
that time. This reason was expressed
by Seldon, "In that early day I was
capital In such
a crazy thing." But It mus, be re -
I membered that Seld!,n wRR W, 11v a?'
Inventor. Ne satisfied himself that
the mechanical difficulties were de-
monstrably solved, but did not build
He was 'not a manufacturer; he was
a pioneer experimenter. He first
coucelvqd the idea, which be was sat-
Istled could be demonstrated.
IT CUR"LS ,
CA11"ARRH
"
BRONCIff-11TIS
- You don't have to
I'll' ,
. Wait for relief when
. You use Catarrho.
, zone.
�
11 I This wonderful In.
' . ,
... t�
guaranteed to cure
I 11 . � any case of Catarrh,
. no matter, how
chronic.
I
I You breathe through
. �11 . this tqhalor and In
).'I- - -� so doing you send
. ... to.. � I �� Instantly all through
..
. i the breathing or.
� �� 11"M gans a DoNvertul
I . vapor that Ia full of
, ': �
Ili , 1� ` soothing, healing,
I . 4 , 4 , germ-destroyhig pro.
' I
I
... , _rtles.
: .. po
. �
fit
-
4'. In this way the
�,
I I seeds of Cafiiih are
. 11, destroyed. Sore nos-
. - I weak
Y, " �
I , throat are cured.
� I
�'. , 11 J. Coughing. hard,
breathing, and
I sneezing all stop
- For lasting core Use
-4,4
� onIr ,Catarrhosone.
1�.J Refuse a substitute.
I 1 :14 Two mouthcV. treat.
'11!.,
�, I ment (14cludlIng the
.- Inhaler), price $1.00.
� staoll size See, at
all ,dealers, or Tho Vatarrhozond Co.,
xingston, Ont, Canada.
"_,� �
When preparing a thfaken to fr,v.
try thig Plan Instead of rolling elLeh
plece, In tiour- Place the flour In a,
good-sized basin or pan with a tight
lid - then lb.y In 11116 pieces of eble'ken
I all at Ont -0 and Place tho lid oift. T*ke
the baela In both ha-Adti, thuhtb.,; hold,
Ing the lid 'In POSItion, Mid flbs&§ up
9,nit do*n and sideways, severttl tl�Aijs
IXMI the tbloken Vill be evenly 4n
DICAY flourcd ft out-balt the ttm��
The "M41111119 flour May be used in
.*.w-- - .
.
I
11 I 1---
A Little of
Everytbing
1.1-.11
.
NEVADAIS SOCIABLE STON134S.
In Nevada aro found curious min -
oral specimens kaown as "so,.Jablo
,stones." When a low .ire dirtribute(I
over a level floor two or three feet
apart they will begin to move to,ward
one another to a counnon ecittre with
an alacrity that Is ludicrouj. �
Campers first noticed those stone.q.
They had used wrapping mper for a
table cloth and weighted the corners
with some of the stones spread over
the level top of a boulder. A few mo.
ments later onc o.1' too men noticed
that the paper wits flapping In the
breeze and that four or five stones
were huddled In a group In the middle
of the paper like a nest full of eggs,
He thought tbG wind w -as responsible,
straightened them and added more
stones. , I
The next time he looked around the IL
stones were back In the heal) .tgaln. ^
Once more he replaced the .stones and
sat down to watch them They began
to roll and liftch along toward one an-
other until they were In a, pile,
I
i TEA TRADE START1,;D-200 YEA -11,9
AQO.
The tea trade of Tatsienju, lu tile
Chinese province of Szechuan, near the
Tibetan border, was first started In
the reign of Yung Chen�, some, 206
wears ago. ,kt flint t1r4e, it Is said,
Tatsienlu did not exist as 4 town, but
. tents were pitched In the valley, -and
the Tibetans gathered and bartered on
the occasion of religious fairs.
The tea trade Is now established un-
der government control, yielding 4
handsome revenue. Licenses are is.
sued quarterly, and taken up by ovat
100 firms engaged In the trade. )3acb
license costs one taol. in Chinest
money, equivalent to about 80 cent;
In Canadian exchange. The license
allows the holder to Import f1v6 bales
of tea into Tatsleulu, more being per-
mitted according to 1,equiroments,
Tea has become almost Indispens-
aW to the Tibetans, hence they are
naturally 'drawn to the tea market,
to which they bring their Own 'pro-
ducts for sale or expliange. One of
the largest firms In Tatstenlu buys a.,�
many as 20,000 bales, others 10,00(
bales. The total regular license$ kv )-Ig
sued annually Is given as 108.0m Th4 -L' ,N IV
11censes were formerly issuid at , �
Chengtu, but the authority was trans -
tarred to Tatatenlu In 1918.
ANCIENT HAND -BALLS.
Amber and crystal are so extTAor,
dinarily popular now that I often wou,
der, as I admire the neewlace, of
these decorative 114seral-preclons" Jew-
els, -why we nave never revived the
,,antique use,of them. Roman ladlee of
distinction were always followed bi
�siaves, says a woman correspondent.
who carried amber and crysatl balls
in gold and silver nets. These were ,
handed to their ownO-Irs, who VIQ7ed
with them at public fetes�gladiatorlal
rights, ete-twisting and pressing
them in their fingers so that they
winight keep their hands cool, When
ithe Crystal hall became heated At was
ToDlaced by an amber one, which, to
�,quoto the vords'of an old ahronicler.
I "as It warmed, gave forth a dellcloua
� color." This custom originate -4 in
1 Egypt, and yas followed by. GaIlle wo-
i,men, as well as Roman ladiesi ftring
� the Gallo -Roman period. I
I
I 'SURGICAL 0111ZT?�A.TTON
. S IN. WID_
OCEAN.
The operation for apperdl�ltls, Der-
! formed on *the eag!neer of Me Amer-
�ican liner St. Paul, while the ship was
travelling at 16 knots an hour, is not
a unique Instance of %killed surgery at
sea, remarks a medical writer. The
I captain of a merchant vessel tells. us
� that while transporting troops In the
I first Australian convoy from Albany
to Suez, In the early days of the late
,war, an operation for appendicitis was
Performed Upon One-�Zf the "Diggers"
by the .ship's doctor, T"he hospital ac-,V%'A.J
commodation beffig, un,mitable, the QP�AMN .
eration was performed on the saloon
table, and (iulte ncee-.,qfullY. The. thip
vas steaming ten knots agallist the
S. W. monsoon In the Indian Ocean.
STUNNED BY A -STING.
To loot-, art a catervIt' .ar after it has
b6en stung by a bee or wasp bne
would iniagine It to be, dead. In most
cases, however, this is not so. The
caterpillar has only been sent into a
kind of'stupor, from which It never
wakes. Sometimes the victim djo�% but
then the Poison InJeated by the other'
vents the body from decaying, Mitre
are several kinds of wasps wbleh.
When they 14Y eggs, surround them
with e4tctffillars; lit order that On
Young, when they ApPerr, mav be Weli
SUPPHOd with food . Ard Ole tv,%.ri of
the wasn's pol$OT, Upon the dead or
Paralvzed caterpillars ,moitres f1rit
this food shttll 1,q fresIx r(joa. 1,-. - t
, 'n
Nature wonderful?
.
PAS1110XVS IN V AMS
Has anyone noticed 11-aw pj�
, vpt,ltn
v011r faglilonablo wordan of tiv, dcv
16OU97 asks 3 contemporary. Thera
,
are fisbjo�s in faces ju,pf .
, ,tn thore pro
f18111011-14 luthernannerof wtaring the. .
,'air. Vaea ftishlous. 41nwftver. rtly"nt.
be altered when It suits th(5 iflit, but
rom,0- for "t 14s,%,At 0, of."e-11. p"fl
Sometimes for Jears. SometitAe$ the
'01PUMMY -It .14 rertein i;port or hoblvr
Is responstwe for the pr",111ing fa-
ortqix fvnn
P1110111, tit othor tiblos A cm
-bOcOftlPs DoVulor, and, throtlxh rMfiat-
1119 thitl type, the fac4s ussumos a pdr-
Inallent oxprossion of it -0ftrtIc*Al!lr dk--
scriDtion. The fact th"It. fashlov,
.4 Ili
falcO$ llavb tXlSted, 4nit that th,�-y h1vo
Varied v0rY tonalderfibly in fAbop# trid
stylt'. Mar be provL*d by & ,.4ttttTv, ot'
the best ,pleturom Of peoift of dIfftr-
"it PO'HOdA. 60111(� 0 the varlatlons;
1In the Daintod 101011reS thav bt �due to ,#�
ffifferences in Ideals of ihA avtlst.�k.
4)ut. a"Tain. much must ciao 11-we-i"beo-1
dite to differonces in t116 face Itg0r.
��_ _ -
motitild ""A10, T111111161t 420 lit
1 V410 to tho tnn, blia b"n d1wo,r6red
Oft the Q110en Chitr1otte IglikUdg.