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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1907-01-03, Page 3!Val 13975.' i•„...,..,. — OLE) LAW OF THE SEA HARD. 1 1/141' Stintum's °flat T°11141144.444w$44+++++++^ ,,,,..... ...... _ 1 and Disease Destreyer , :#79,9:1; TRADING . Rtiles Prescribed by Richard Coeur del i ate++++++++4++#14++++#44 1 It la A lees' trip from Wall Area to leal*. sell stocke elven la New York is executed bare *treat, but often an order to buy or 1ia lionaoa la little error two nelautee. In (Shipping Illustrated.) Entgla,nd in 1004 that "whereas,. it often 1.., s (PROMOUNCEO $1-i(tati) the last ftlY Menthe the market* leave been I Although the nautical acidervementa of hapens that mestere awl, mariners of i used In Thausitrsdr,, twswht claier teter mod esalinse by Fileallicianis and Carthaginian* ate elaps, having insurel or taken up on soh I et, .es New York in the lameen market and leondou k faithfully reeorded in the writings of torary greater mines than the value a i 0j- ss.omes in Cada in see New ;ewe eeareee elm eemee Iwo*. . er r their adventure, do willfully cast away, I TITOSPI WHO don't anow whatl'oyc um lthan evebefore. burn or otherwise deetroy the ships uu- le and what it does aro asking about it. sale4'jal),Ieueru, s:Ltito,ots„tint tWlur. der their charge to the great lose of trerneee 1 a ,-.....--- WHO eo -notv what Poychine pediment te traziattiteure traareitaleas, has merchant eta Owneril, such mestere, eta, sis and veliat it does are Wine la They sem tame th est reearded its a filial:Act ad. shall auger death as felons." As there regard it as their beat phyasataa and vantaim. rue hentimi market *pees at 11 eves r o war navy proper in those deys, friend. taiiglie!felalial et14:34.11Z1lesilantil6en? ?ti . tter°, 01hilcr1et the sea fighters being generally men who TII08ha wrio use it aro being quietly alent to ei. a. so. New Yorg. Time there 15 followed the sea for mercantile, although and permanently curet' a all forms of oats eall bum. tatty durleg whien the ex - not unwarlike, purposes', it follows that throat, chest, lung and etomach gawatLehtialliht'hahleeia. tut!. otttecouiteg the routine oft bea,rd all veseels was pret- trenbles. It is a scientifie PrePara- Issee time aa beer er Atre,Laattea gt 1.14Mr me ty much the same. 'lids routine, to tion, destroying all disease gentle in the Wage ea Jaye:, whic b. eepeude on verajudge by some old records, did not at all blood and system. it is a wonderful Slone in pricse in the two warmest. Former - partake of the dullneett of everyday life tonic and system building reinedy, and aYteuelTputauhlittuwh.auti°43 uanatItahat al?, musea, wheat in tee wse i.l. on a medern matoot-war. ie a. certain cure for the west experienced opera:ire. Now the Begigebege coughs, area:lee trading ler freed:ma at legate le An affidavit dated. 1991)' has been pre. COUGII3, 04.4a la ouiyarg..m with the eater businees. served wherein the ofticers of the Dun- Chills and Fever, kdr labtance, the New Yore, trader bee LA GRIPPE, kirk certify that "in one a their druttle- rmd. DIElcult Breathing, en fits at see," two seamen set a can. '"'" " General WeaRnoto dle on a jar of oil in the steward's room, rettrattinnias net to the powder Y00111, by which Bronchitis, Female 'Troubles, Tswana the oil took fire and the ship was Catarrh, Fichte Appetite, in &Leger of being blown up if the see- wawa vac., Heiriegerlingcc, ond lieutenant had not exerted himself, For this both sulprits receiVed forty r/Plessnes3' 11/6111 SWe8313 Consumption, lashes. The expression "in one of their wervauaness. Catarrh of the drunken fits,' is harticullariy enjoyable, Malaria, as it implies that etch diversions were Aliaamla, Stomach. eeehheehenee Leon Were Strict. historiene, detells of the doely routine I ea board their argoalee are woefully 1. husking. More methodical, however, if le* poetical, were the histaiographers I, Of the middle ages, thaavka to whom gneer glimmeets may be had of the pe- culiar means resorted to in thee flare in order to Calm the outbursts of ; giant ilaelete aroused peados)" According; to Matthew Verbs. +end oils t ere, when King Richard I. was at Chtne an, On the Vienne, he isened, certain or- ' dirtakeea for the preservation of diecip- tine. on board the fleet whielt Was to 4.traneport his any from Mareeillee to the Iloly Land. These :may be regarded . the earliest artieles of war for the • government of the navy ;in the history of 1 Analo-Saxonclorn. They are as follow. 1. Anyone who shall kill another on fimaTa ship snail be tied to the deed body and thrown into the tea. ' 2. Anyone who shall kill another on thud shall be tied to the deaa body and " hurled with jt in the earth. • 3. Anyone' unlawfully convicted: of drawing a knife or other weapon, with intent to etrike another so as to draw ; blood shall lose Ilk halide ; 4. Anyone striking another with the hand, no ;blood benta shed, shall be dip- ' 'ped thrice in the Rea, 6. Anyone uttering opprobrious or con- • turaelious words to the smutting or cure- ing of another shall on earth occasion pay ono cemme of silver to the injured per- • ZOM 6. Anyone lawfully convicted of theft sal have hie head shaved and boiling • itch poured. upon itt and feathers or te awn shall then be strewn upon it, for ; the distinguishing of the offender, and ' upon the first occasion he shall be put h • then common. bathe same affidavit mention is made of another mariner, "person very negla gent aud very sealtious," who threaten- ed hie captain and to kill one of the lieutenantg of the ship and attempted to EMT the ship's company in an open inutiny . The latter appears to have got off without any puniehment, so odd was the standard of discipline at that per- iod. The feeding of tile men was atrocious. The beer taken by fir Walter Raleigh on one of his cruises had been stored in old oil and fish casks. Sir RiebardHaeve kins thought that in twenty years 10,-. 000 men died from scurvy. In the year •Itwil1 be noticed that .paragraph 4 1731 each man received ne gallon of beer ; makes ;mention of dippink into the sea. daily, to Which could. be substituted eith- ' This proves beyond a doubt the ancient er 11. pint of wine or half a pint of brans and, himorable origin ef yardearne hang- dy, rum or amok. A pound of biscuits, ing, which, however, slid not reach Its too often moldy and infested' by insects, ; fullest develop/lent until tbe seven- was also given daily, and six pounds of ; teenth century, when the ;practice of seat emat served for seven days; extras . keelhauling. became an established bath being provided for in the shape of peas, • tution. • currants, oatmeal, beef suet, butter, In a dusty "Discourses of Mraine .M- cheese, etc. Cocoa with sugar was seri,• . faires," wesread that "the ducking at ed for breakfast, and when a ship was : the yard arm ie where a malefaction by provided some of tbe ship's company i having a rope fastened under his arms could be employed in fishing, for the ben- , and about his waist, is this hoisted.up ofit of .the sick, the surplus to be divided to the end of the yard, whence he is among officers a,nd: seamen, without any . again 'violently let fall into the sea. deduction of their allowance of provis- i " * And if the offense be very foul ions on that Recount., One of the earn- !, he is also drawn under the very keel est schemes for a merchant service fund ,-, of the ship, which is termed. keelhauling, appeared in 1038. • and whilst he is under water a great By a, proclamation of Charles I. it was gun is fired right over his hea.de the ordered that there should be deducted ; whieh is done as well to esti:mash hine sixpence a month from all officers' pay ; the more with the thunder thereat, which and fourpenee a month from the wages , much troubleth ;him, as to give werning of all sailors in the merchant service in the port of London, to be applied to the to all others to look out and bewareof relief of maimed, shipwrecked or other- -' his aims," The oustom underwent many modifies- wise distressed semen: and: the widows and orphans of such as should be killed tiono in the course of time, until, in the : middle .01f the nineteenth century, it had or lost during "morehanclizing voyages." 'alie fund was to he echninistered by the ; become but: a memory in the various navies, while on Yankee whalers it had corporation of Trinity houge. become confined to haeging to the rig- ging by the thumbs, the tips of the toes - al;; of the patient barely reaehing the deek. •1 The above regulation's of Rielmrd Coeur , de Leon are aloe interesting in that they 1 establish tne origin of casting away sea- men, a tender mode of ;puniehment here- tofore ascribed to the Dutch navigatolis 7 of the sixteenth century, although it was often resorted to by alio Spanish , • "eonquistadares" and the' English .pirates ; of the same period. The solution of this knotty historical 1 point is left to more scholarly intellecte, ; althougli it should. be noticed in passing ' that tisk practice has not yet died out, the only difference being that in these , days sailors aro not cast away on desol- ate shores, but are taken away . from their ships while in port by tradesmen i whom some writers vilify by the name of 1 crimps and who provide suck sailors with drink in plenty, and also with food, un- til new berth has been found for them. .; the wages earned by the seamen lentil leaving their ships being, of course, with- held. by the masters tbereof, in strict compliance with the• letter of the WV: • To represe a reprehensive tendency. atnong some mariners it was enacted in KIN COVERED WITH SORES. nzeu ALL REMEDIES FOR ilf/EVEN YEARS, AND DOCTORS SAIDA "NQ %IRV • Yet Zam-Buk Hee COMpletely CUrtigh OQ Peserful are tire Imam; emanate in Zam-nule that in some wee winch Iowa Nee Pronounced beyond relict they heve weekes1 complete tura! 9041 an Instance ie just re. ported trom Invermay. Mrs. J. M. Me. Cormick, et that plitee, gays: "About seven playa to employ extra children in.large I have spent yams of tautly years ago my Mee broke alit la rough red nuettere, Ilumpty Inunpty lead eighty, epared Mit OX"fifidetee in working a ve Dietetics, Whieh burned and itched and cznarte Ikee.u.ty and the Ideget fifty, and The that eau be depended Ott in every Wase. ia turn ideneit beyond endurance. tried Cat 2,evelitY-five. Rsal DS 410114• Low Ifintago lOmp*Teta apeot Om* The eatiehren'e daavaletts ketekleig wit* le a busy pieee just no', far rolisterwela are ix programs far a apeettegolar duetion one of Shalsespeeireh pLaya mane witieb. employ 100 oltildree. Tale * roenk probeNy the kergeot number of qiiiktesa i1:11111 411.14't ever need Is ono ply, end is one of lawny eigna that the publie likes to pea childrea on the etage. Bea Hue, some ten years ego, wits fifty children, and The Sorrows et Satan, with fifty or :sixty, were about the first ash- rhea: Fovea hleatt OA * W*11,14,0AA '.11okets filisomaliom Complicit My ("empound attleeks the root of as With the steeds; inereaee leas come an trosible-the liras Aoiel, atueusnuasted Very remedy eouta set for face end sala agenty devoted to the booking of oldie about the jointa anti mum:sloe. It breake treublee. but la Vain. I coneultee doetere, t'aell edema . It le run )ser a wornan, a these up anti marital them out et the and they told me there was abeolutely no land hived, motile:11y woman, who late body, strengthening the kidnerye and the cure tor me, but that 1 shoutd have to walt eealdreen of her 4,1,yll Una looleis atter her dgeizoranslehttenanlottereisoturnth.at the painful eon - until I outgrew the attire:ie. "letrialle nee ,liush3na rent for a earople of *eltletii.4.-y's. fetaorvetiouNfiern are children of ace 1Vrite for my booklet On. RbAIGAAUSAI, fouud it. of advanteee to place order4 fifes; Ztem-Duk, We applied scree at a email eateb 0 tho disum0s, 10 .0..r dp:i .ilt 0,..,.., ,.„71 thrri and actressee who are playing, al- It will help you. It will seed it free am 4he Ilvw York Moe, le, to be exeeuted iss • . „" ' . ." "'" th011erla A. 1QW lillg to playera who for post paid. Write today, . 60 lenge street, Tor - 'orders ge 71{7r0Sa every niaht. in teetea et activity largo Duyiug and solute; We then obtained a proper sU,P9IY, end began " stage, ileet of them are the children of outo. IN'eer Yerk marl:et of an iniportain do- lt trader Cep Zatu-auk treatment. 1 am mow delighki to e at tbet after having used a fe,v bo„el' ' inehey. Lb Leudiat market tee tenor/lug null 06. i Wire, rteiteeat or ;Welker h-ve left the Dr 11 II Mae treated with geni-Bea yore eutelaY tiJ veheim afiectine teams tor erAtuple alter the closing et t Wel peal' pettaie who really need the ti particular belle, it I am completely / will Bever he wire- Among the 100 children for the ntulte- would melt if it could, extremely hot -00 hot that everything is to intereet `to take advantage tie ma out Zaoe.Puk in the heuee tee loin; ad I *dal Pid.Y are five fahm 'one filaglY, Tao preesure abeve keeps it from If lie waltz for New York to open the know- lateltilaw all the way down. At a depth 13i Leasing in London he cote ill all early, til" In "L1114413 a 5VV;4131 °I Z.trit"11‘34 1 whth the father ie dead, Their S5la14e3 knowlmies at tte earliest poesune peomeete live, end to all who are troubled with Slag kilge, may have become 'widely disseminated, diseases in any form I evosald see, west& no . . eninetleitilith,eu wwohilk1;. jeleaptobte fhaxatrilly lintestalvoeir'ty, lonfoa0b4041ileseuoutigieh ptoresse;ureetavreoteci ansmoimmt4: gt least, see any one else. ...IWO sine° eleallied a suenly for an old laly . Lea:loin that a play keeps the children on wile had an ulster on Ler leg for 30 yeare. reek and metal, back lute 0, gelid state. selves and if not promptly cured in thenit tuor; Iflt, 1...eau,doil the :sub market is opeiu etn-Ouk mire* eute. burns, treisee, scald% I. home e;e4. in bed before tae oley le over; on h to become li tad but by the leWe for various rezemee aiegineiteeees, to COT/flee it cures rheutuatiere. seletler. and cold o:t •a ibio. , 1 ed b - , . + r, , . • i e levee metre children never travel when . Pitgilidis if titaenezdedit down under uanodrr atheloliggiort ab. ,. t prodaetiot ;01 tele kind goes on the weight upon s - _. ... " teerfartearm . b 5 ccesees, iten, sore pack, r t °7 All these diseases are eerioue theme ilia- the leindue euraz market. differs from wown.4.., •until the ?net ;act. They a.re nee:ally at I The interior of the earth 4144t en- Titis *ddaudeci from the feet Three boxes were Sufficient to close the early ;stages are the certain forerunners of • Sues:1144cl are steam Loatquentsy Pelethea and thtll'e practically oo liabor in the ; ef gmatter can not 4,11O so without eseh Stock ;eizeheages mad oe.Y eezema, eel sores, wounds children's rashes; ulcers bells rebel , • ..0 Consumption in its most terrible forme, in Ordinary 1.11104 OA LIMY begin dealing on • and curee Collet= - th Lo d syc prevent its developnaent by using Psy- ueaung to tno 140119011 until 9 o'ebels in tbe esmaing London time , COnhlnUt c.hine. Here is a sample of thousands of In times of great naerket activity arrange - tee hour of um, closing". ' . voluntary and unsolicited stateinents from ments ere frequently made by the Wall all over Canada: street houses with. London connections for Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited; early openiug or a late closing of the Londen Gentlemen, --I feel it my duty to advise you curb. in tee day, last August, of the deelar- of the remarkable cure affected by your ?eyelike and Oxonsulsion, which have come under my personal observation, Three men, well known to me, Albert Townsend, Hazel Ilimon and John MI:May, all of Shelburne County, were pre - tuned by the best medieal men to hese tion, but it, is much eaeier and. safer to e tbe chert. All eruggiets and eteree sell Zara. reeer-the agent epee ahead and gathers • 'The earth, origioally liquid, bsettea0 e. oes Bult at elk per box, Or ottaluable trona the egtra ellittlren in. eeelt city. IIer ;nettled solid under two influenees; it began to for $2.00. is to fro to the pelneipale of sellools, tell solidify at the surface by cooliag, the Zaw-Bult 0o., 'Termite, for Wee. 6 boeee • Preposterrus, eel?'" to her any strong, healthy ehildren it began to solidify at the centre by , them what she wants and invite them to *crust •growing -thicker and thieker, end. Pacific dividends curb brok 1 L a ere n on on • trite ere able to take part ia the per- pressure, the Ore growing larger and ation ot ate union Moine and Southern ..aN:0," replied the wife of tlte multi - were kept busy executing orders until late , 1)1111m:tire, "neither Jelin nor I will ever fora:ranee outside of gebool lrours with- larger. The double phenomenon of *1- t out injury, An;who eeett the money. idifriog continued nutil e, solid caster 1 be as happy again ae we were weal see 4 t - - first re- t ether in whet may be eatled the cri. eleetion euppliee tieuely example. All the 1, d Of " earlY °Pelting the late lived in a five -room ‘eottege and he Sha eaheYe gate five or aix times ftg Oho 1 ana te solid inner core came *los in the night. consumption, and to bo incurable and beyond the big houses with London connections made all night and to wor tbe day, carryine with him maf'Y e• • # Axoreadeion and they ere now in good health. have the Louden curb open at 8 a, m. or , New York time, The Mane were my own bands." le hearsel sifts tilom out. In New York,' tits,' region of the earth, a region taMt I feei it a duty owe'to suited:le humanity to 8 m. "Wit do 't --------- our money , else shmotimee goee to amateur enter- feeds lava to veleanoese-Rochester Xer- ld, reached rnedical aid, They ured Psvehino end arrangements to keep open the lunch that: I prepaied for im h 3' u tainmente, eemeol exercises and the like, a • a , t t 1 1 I don for •the purpose ot stimulating the New iii about as pretty a sight as can be lam, UAW/AR licICEITZ1B, 3.1%. mhe difference in time which affords pram- crelar9"--Chicage Ildeord-Iieredd. Green Harbor, N.S. icsiheaanlige, is alto a great help to pool opera- tions. It la possible to muy stocks in Lon - York matket, and buy in Now York for the warpage of stineulating the New yak mar- ket. Broleers and experienced operators, abroad for a vacation, epend mere and more of their time in London anti combine business; with BLIND MAN CIIECICER ADEPT. summer, weld that they had got as far as measure. Some ef eliem, on their return last Challenges ABlivPenlay—peirlissabnudisrH. as Defeated London and stayed there engaging in busi- st te these facts for the benefit of other sufferers carried out but trading was light In con- • leoleine• fer good, material. • I from this terrible disease, • ' the returns favored Hearst.• • and. re urn o the mad, sirup e ;see Yours very Univ. y an all night end all day Stock Ix-, "Good heavens. Do you think we're A. gusdre4 extra caildren io a htInch, rnarlson with what it would have bacon had Peychine, pronounced Si -keen, is for glued, her they are always chosen for sale at all up-to-date dealers. If your druggist or general store cermet supply ou, write Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited, 179 iiing Street West, Toronto. ness daily and making more money than if they bad remained in their New York offkes. Y 1 heekers? forrn zit:idea also stocks are bought and sold There is a blind man in Philadelphia witIwieisiagnh settlements are who can beat you, no matter how well 171usghctity.anfovid:raysi often the savingaern riantteerseisi fortnightly settlement, and stocks you play. He has defeated Pillsbury, free of inte;;sdts.12 Itlattnew Priest, and half a dozen other a more than cant to pay the expenk professionals despite the fad that lie can not see as much as a ray of light comfortable sum bleseeri hdeae.ephlay(1.1teshanand leave a statocks may bo carried over tilecca&orircrohasles‘t• with the asistance of his finger tips. and hats to follow the game in his mind 1 titricearil•ers!nigical ciuttatereseualwmeetrbreisionveitry. "When the women got the kitchen professionally. ye a rlygl th;P:ssibie John Thompsou is the blind. chem. vlahlemthte 0113 alareryi low in London, a multitudsvo t wilt:a pion's name. He lives at 251 'North tsiste4 that there must Warnock street, where many of the market, in- most seleatific checker players in the be llquidatlowar tares . permit profitable holding of at s oaks for a n they are 4 e O. • 'United States have called on him and Put, are still very perffiulare,rk d met their Waterloo. it came out thta settles a 1 t ch. heugnsilds &shares rise. But the mark t h kl firm and gradually' eines and Lord Knows What. -that was made especially for him, the Thom son Las a crude little board very° apeadrently their actual Rural Raistence With Piano Lamns, En- were being carried operators have thel great majority of the bitg- Judging from the following ;remarks squares 'being elliik ill the wood. One et of men its square to match the holes purchaTngh ovredLn'in lation in its grip. A fanner writing to the trenuous life has got the rural popia- and has a little groove on one side. When nw:A:uissesn wornhilcsrhns:tiavtetdah oev;ilotseepre.nd tr hhanoures0forbduserif; buitness opaye excellent cable arrangements Agricultural Advertising says: the men have only a single value these grooves are turned downward, but wben "About five years age the old cook they reach the king row the grooves aro cabled, executed in London, and replies received in from five to ten minutes. stove got so unpopular with the women are turned upward. , ' The London market also offers the those big steel rang,es that set US back round checkers and with his delicate nese The other set of nien are the 'usual il,ei;ened oisenrattolusr s which has been almost entirel'y ahead- :::":enw:tte:P.U°:: a bnudasoill t -- folk that we •simply had to buy ono of "When this great bakery was installed touch Thompson can distinguish be- , e s a combination of a call and a $00. • the call, the put and the strad- tween them as readily as anyone who d eret,Ifit %)L Ili9' : tercet rates being altogether too high here to it made some other things in the kitchen has the full use of his eyes. purchased oxtensively by American traders steel ajul tin ware had to come soon Forty-six years ago Thompson's vision look like three dimes. A lot of modern loss, for profit and for protection against afterward.; the on things wouldn't work left him. Ile is tetaly, absolutely blind. on that new range. • It was about fifteen years ago that hoe HENS IN LAYING CONTEST. 4' le "Then a neighbor just the other da determined to learn to play checks and telephoned a testimonial about an oil Y had his little board made. HThe gaioe stove, just the thing for the kitchen in fascinated him and. he has been play - British Biddies. Peculiar Race in Progress Among summertime; so eve have got to buy one. ing steadily ever since, part of the time For several years he has been a re gli• A large and distinguished "hen party," work lessened they had more time for lar feature at the Ninth and Arch which is to last for fourteen weeks, began other parts of the house. Of course one streets museum and he will play there in Ravi°, fn Essex, recen' tly. Its object, of the daughters in the family had taken again this year. Re meets all comers however, is business end not pleasure, for solne MuSte lessons. She butted in and urged the purehase of a piano. • and rarely loses a game. ; tho 180 fowls invited to attend the function "That piano of ours drew a new centre "Ole it's a beautiful game," hthey e said, ' are expected to show what can do in table into the parlor, then a new tangled rapturously to a visitor who called. at the shape ot laying eggs. his house. "There's no end to it. Pills-' a 'w‘Maelt aeafd liesaYsehatenn bhye ?II enearlytra bury himself admitted to me that there Journey, are Just beginning to settle down tthlietdlia,iriadesrv is more in it than there is in chess, and oace more," said E. W. Richardson, the see - you know. Poor Pillsbury' 'He was a thetition. leo has to collect, weigh, tabulate tri 'scotmopbee. that's a good deal for Pillsbury to say, iatarjavoef (1)0 club. uselfirloluicaaorudtson 0 good. opponent, the kind of opponent and register every egg laid by the 160 coin - that a, man likes to meet.; petitore as well to look after the well being I of the birds themselves. A. train journey, ho "That's one reason I always had a . explained, had usually the effect of stoppieg kindly feeling toward Edgar Allan Poe. the supply of eggs for some days and the He was a friend of checkers, or draughts 180 hens had scarcely laid two dozen eggs be- ns he called there. He said that cheek- ; trwaeevlituligercii3astq,ngtotwheevelra.stt‘wvoeekoz.gsinwoenree ers was undoubtedly the 'nest seienti- l found which had been laid on the Journey by fie game on earth," 1. keen competitors. This is not regarded as a d the hens generally a masterpiece of art or musie and with , a. g:dh=a1=g4r He talked (Shout the game as if it were arnesources for the offi- al start of the competition to -day. dispute as to which hen unerring accuracy he 'worked out the There can be no lays which egg, for "trap teses," which prae- problems. "I could playcheekers forever," he ex- tically catch the hen redheaded, are em- ployed. Shell -less eggs, for example Whites claimed enthusiastically, "It is a WO11- are disqualified, can not be foisted off like derful genie. People don't uuderstand foundling upon the wrong bird. Eighty hens are housed in twenty pens of four apiece, in the open air, and eighty others are laying eggs against time in an indoor Kscratching house" on the American system. is believed that the "outdoors" svill do best in a uilld winter and the "Indoer'" *ection if the frost is severe. Each group of four birds belongs to a dif- ferent owner, sued it Is •practioally 5 team race, though a prize is given for the in- dividual beet layer. Last year's record (for this is the tenth annual contest) ie hold by a tame of four white legnorne with 251 eggs In the fourteen weeks. The second team (buff Orpingtons) was twice the weight of the leghorna. Tee wooden spoon went to a team which only produced eight eggs in the first three :no:sties, while two birds distin- guished themselves by not layinga single egg. A buff Orpington was top individual scorer, with seventy-five eggs in fourteen 'weeks:, thus working six days a week With only in oceasimiel Saturday off. "Beeping" in the conVet is ex,preesly for- bidden ins the followleg rule: "No condi- :monk pr spices to be given." The birds are dot allowed to leave their Pens for the whole fOurteen weeks. Offend- ers Will have their whip clipped. -Mesa- while the secretary's owe private pullets are loafing about the padoek free as sir, and ate making irritating remarks to the captive competitors*. *se. r3'ooit. into this their grime and beauty. They never seem' to get their head* tweed, ner to clevelsep stage fever. In fact, they take the re- roofing question 1 Imarestas as the Ishiglisli are sai4, to take their plea,sures. lane neeeeeiary ellecipttne ie naturally irksome to children, and. they mast keep still, both as to tongues and feet. Children ore her more easy to train than adult extras. They are more ph - see how little abSe, far lees self-conscious. The man- rialt you take • ager's only object is to get them ;simply any when you th be themselves on the stage, when roof they are euro to make a hit. Very few buildins with of theee extra c h'Idren remain. upon the etage, Extra, children receive $5 a week. When they are capable of taking ;metro parts they get $25 or $35 it week or enure. O'nildren in parts have increased as meth as in the thorue in reeent yteaes, ana these °banning infants in Peter • Pan, Mrs. Wigs of the Cabbage Patch, The Prince Chap, 'and other productions 'wee fresh in tale public minds Five of the ebildren in the Cabbage Patch were from one family and all bad been extra's. Tete mother of One Cif the Cabbage Pat& children was ;employed to travel with the •production for the purpoee of easing for th•e ehildren. The youngsters, finished. the meson healthy and happy, and without a day's 'illness. 'the five children in Peter Pan had none of them been extras. All started Prince Chap were coached for their parts with parts. The tw.o little girls in The by the children's booking agent. 'It ie a curious, thing that a child ac- tor almost always does well. There are no sticks among them. But the charm- ing children of the stage are seldom lueard of afberward. Th•e exquisite nat- uralness which makes them delightful all disappears as they latve the realm af childhood, and they have to learn all over again how to be a grown-up actor. -New York Sun. Get book on "Roofing Right" and 'OSHAWA" GALVANWED STEEL and Lord knows haw the endless A CRITICAL PERI00"Tw chain is going to dreg out,.. e---yeartraren-, these busybodies, INTELLIGENT INOBIEN PREPARE Dangers and Pain of Thie Critical • Period Avoided by the Use of Lydia E. Pinkleare's Vegetable Compound. ' — manY How women real . - • ize that the niost critical, period in a woman s existence Is the change of life, and that the anxiety felt by women as this time draws near ii not without , reason? „ If her syetero is in, ; a deranged condition, or she is ;media- ; posed to apoplexy of any organ., it is at t this time likely to become active and, 1 with a host of nervous irritations, make 1 life a burden. ' At this time,ale°, reamers end tumors 1 are more liable to begin their destructive work. Such warning spriptoms as a , sena° of suffocation, hot flashes, dizziness, ` headache, dread of impending evil, fourids in the ears, timidity, palpitation • of the heart, sparket before the eyes, Lae.; gularities, constipation, variable appetite, • ;weakness and inquietude are promptly i;heeded by intelligent', eomen who are ,approaching the period of life when woman's great change may be expected. 1 Lydia E. Pinkhagee Vegetable Coni. pound is the world's greatest remedy- •for women at this trying period. Lydis, E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Come potind ilivigorates and strengthens the 'female organism, and builds up the ' ),Weakened nervous system ea no other medicine can. • Madame Louis Belleau of 17 Ramsay EL, Quebec, Que., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkbain: i • "Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetablaCompound 1 essisted me to pass the elsatege of life with but. very lit le sickness and pain, and I am 1 'yoleaseci to ve it iriy eridorsetnent, for I feel I that it is tF1a medicine *width every woman •ehould take, I am the mother of three . ' children, and when I leeched the age of fifty naturally rey health was none too good, and I feel sure that if I had not taken smutWO table Conapound I should not have pawed the client% safely. I took it off and on Ile two years and hoer find that 15111 in spleedid health endettength anti feel younger arid better than I did ten years ago. Much praise to yeur medicine, end may all searing e we:lie:thaw o . For special advice; regarding this lin- portent period, women are invited to tho Vedsting HIM= Voiee, write to Mrs. Pinkliam, Lynn, Meifoe. Pk few Mere rears ann our min will no She la a daughter-in-Iavf of Lydia E. longer be elermed try the towt•tf tenes of the rilekhAftt aticVfor branty-flte rapt hoe t1101 Ind the sliral:. erns provent faehloi boon advlsing tack women free of charge, abet on tee longtnevirewers2jor i'litir eltern'ig Hee eel:rice its free mad always helptul to tnia it Is rrobebi I teet our geeceetdents will glint W0211418, neyel' be able to eniny tbs operse Of Verdi 01 1W•he Striae to the truth of stesiee. (these evemen, took up the bathroom pro- position. Now we have a bathrooza with a big porcelain tub in it; but before we got that outfit we had other rivers to cross; we bad to drill a well, put in a, windmill, construct a tower and build a reservoir. . (Then there was a lot of piping and plumbing to do. And while we were at it we put in a lighting plant, acetylene gas. The windmill got. lazy in still days, of Wadi there seemed more than emough, so we had to buy an engine to do its work. "Then there was more tremble. This engine was hard to keep in business -it cleaned up all the work we could find for it, so we had to gee busy and devise new chores for it. "Why not buy a cream separator to run with this engine?. Why not .buy a feed grinder to work it? Yeti, get it fanning Ina', a new meat chopper, a sheep shearing machine and it few other tools to work this devilish gasoline engine. "Now, efficient farm labor is get- ting scarce, and we are trying to reduce our requirements for it, so we purchaded some two row etativators this sumnier. Wanting to get the most out of our corn 'crop we have built a silo; that will call for it silage cutter, also a corn binder, "As hay is a short crop we are going to bale a lot of oat and wheat :straw - this will compel us to buy a baling press. New ideas as to eorn culture have caused ns to invest in surface, cultivators and onediorse luerrowe to use at the last cul &galore "Of course we must keep peaee in the family, in other words, the women folk demesne an appropriation for their de- partment every year, and it is increasing right along. But the best of it is that the more things we bey the more money 'e can make and the better wo am live, so I guess we are aiming out all right after ell, "Our women folk get to town more than ever before, read more and San more. The men also get 'out and. mix with ono another and with business men. Thisbroadens us Anil makes us want some of the things city people hereto- fore have had as their exclusive poeses- alone. We are using printed stationery. operate a typettriter and have a Copy press." ' • es SHINGLES Soldunder a plain GUARANTEE that keeps your roof good for 25 years. With decent care, an Oshawa- Cia=!_will last a CENTURY. Easy To Put On With a hammer and a snips (tinners' shears anybody can put Oshawa Shingles on perfectly. Locked on all four sides—see the side lock? It drains the shingles so that water can't seep under. Top lock (see below) makes whole roof practi- cally one piece and sheds water quick. Made in one grade only-22-guag,e semi -toughened steel, double -galvanized (saves painting). it, They think it's a shallow game, but it's .• deep - deep. -Philadelphia North American. ' 4 e Don't Talk to Your Horse So Much. .A. horse Who has always been made to obey quickly, will respond to commands from anyone, whereas the• treature who lute been petted and talked to accords, unless- hungry, emit attention to any- one. We talk to horses altogeblier too much, and it is a silly mut dangerous 'custom. "Wheal" should mean but one thing, and, slip, slide or fall, should melee With inetaot obedience. Not another word should ever be used, beyonct pos. eibly the order to "stand over" in the stall (although even that is best unsaid:), •xtept, the 'knelt" of the tongue fot in - amused. speed. The animal's attention le kept if you are silent -he does not know What you Will do text, and as he distrusts and merely tolerates you, even as he fears you, his anxiety ig always to find out what you wish done, or what move you will next inake.-11'. M. Ware in; The Mental Limitatione of the Horse, be the Outing Magazine for Oetober, Wind - water and ir PROOF. Keep buildings safe from Lightning. Cost only $ . 5 0 a square (10 ft. x 10 ft.) Trying to Outdo Chalet.. It is rematkable lime mildly the new city is rising from the ruins of the old. Lot week one Vast expeepe of ghastly and titegled ruins Met tilteye on all sides in the burned districts But behold the transformation one sheet week has effected. The dismal eastern is already dotted with bo'.' wooden and corrugated iron tenements for trade, all bright, new and smiling. They art even now im- parting to the desolate seams a cheerful • ithe At the tato at which they are get. Ing up the burned area, NVill be pretty Well buried in Re own graveyard. within sixty or ninety days, end we alien see no more of it, We shall bid it 1 are - Well forever without regret. Clikego has elretidy been held up AS fill exatnple of how quickly a lively and enterwrieleg Areericati city entt ariee from lie fishes. • Lot no bee if Me onn not beat cbtoatfo. -4is 3frouixa0 cial. Send for book- let and learn how little a RIGHT roof costs. Address The lliDEDLAR IERSS PEOPLE Of Oshawa Montreal Ottawa 321,3 Craig St. W. 423 Sassex St Toronto London 11 Colborne St. 69 Dundas St. Winnipeg Vancouver 1 78-82 Lombard St. 615 Ponder st. 4110•10%.1111•101111.10111•II., • - ON THE SILVERY STRAND4 (By a Banker.) How exhilarating and ineptriting to thoee who appreciate tag glories nted tee beauties of nature is a long walk ithmg the herd dry mad of the sea-ahore ia• stb6 early prime of a bright aummer vf morniog. A spirit of gladness and re - joking pervadet all rtattere dim abore birds - sea -larks, rock pipits, dotterel, se • and many another feathered beauti - are gamboling and frolieking, and flit- ting froin reek to rock and from pool to pool in the exuberance of their joY; a flock of graceful terns is skimming over the breaking waves, so swiftly that they pass like a flash of light; and chefing and testifying their gladness in O chorus of somewhat shrill and discord- ant cries. Landwards rise the lofty beetling cliffs towering upwards to the azure of the skies; here and there cleft in twain sh by the hand of some titanic giant, the great fissure clothed in verdure and gay with wild flowers; while scattered about upon the shore are great fragments of rock, detached perhaps ages ago from the cliff by some convulsion of nature; • many of them surrounded by lovely marine polls, their sides clothed with feathery coraline and graceful waving fronds of many hued algae, while In- numerable tiny fish and immature trus- tame dart hither and thither, or lurk in dark recesses ready to pounce upon its unwary prey. And there, seawards, is the great ocean, its surface glittering like diamonds in the glorious sun, and flecked here and there with the white Balla of some pl- hint ship, or with the russet brown and leas graceful form of a number of fish- ing boats returning from an all night's quest of the harvest of the sea. And when the pedestrian hag left far behind the haunts of man, and has reached a wild part of the coast where the foot of man scarce ever treads, he finds that the sea birds resent his intru- sion into their realms, and circle round him, angrily uttering their disco -Mph. cries and fiercely threatening, aneatramk. But let hint beware lest the exhilaration of the walk cause hint to stray too far INTERIOR OF GLOBE SOLID. -- Rigid Core Redhot, but is Prevented by Pressure From Melting. from the 'shore, for when the tide turns The interior of the earth, although it it advances along that flat, hard sand has been cooling 20,000,000 years, ac- like a wind-swept mill race, and then he cording to Lord Kelvin, and 100,000,000 must flee forhis life, or the e.dranoing according to geologists, is still consider- water will inevitably overwhelm them. ably hot. There is a rough-and-ready rule 1 And so in like manner many, entranced that the tensperature rises ten degrees , with the pleasures and with the gaieties Fahrenheit for every 51 feet, of descent. ' of this life, forget that they are wander!. • But after a certain point, say 200 miles Ing far away from the shores of eternal:, below the surface, the rate of increase . safety. And then when the rushing ' There is no molten sea below Ude 200- ! all must pass come suddenly upon them, 1 waters of that dark stream over which is hardly appeociable. mile point, but, ou the contrary se great ' they realize, perhaps, Rieke too late,that rigia core, and the mass of ores and all is blaekness and darkness. But there chemical existing at this enormous nre others who fear not that stream; foi; heat is at least twice as rigid as steel. ' He who died that they might live ;etern- .. This theory is based on the obsera'a- ' 911y, and Whom they have loved and. e" tion of seinnie waves. The rapidity of obeyed, will •safely pilot them over itii the traveling of these waves varied di' : dark waters right on to the bright and redly with the rigidity of the medium,' joyous shores of the gloryland. It is found that a seisinie wave starting at Valparaiso amt coming necessairly Sounds, Reasonable. through the eentre of the earth reaches as fast as they would come the mune • (Harper's Weekly.) W . ashington in 10 minutes, "It's tes, nearly twice I a tsa's d readful queer," mod the housewife, direction through solid steel. Renee the ' sohmuch bigger at the top of tbe sack theta conclusion that the matter inside the they are at the bottom." earth, although at a treinendous high , "It'sjest skistnuamZysaltottlalthesoneisst fgrZe rt•ii . temperature. is as rigid again as steel. "3 This phone:none, invariably noted at so fast jest now thet by tbe !line 1 Ail it' tm.ektul the last ones dug is ever so •baucts all seismic observations, entirely upsets 'bigger 'h the fust onea" the old theory that the earth's interior j is a freely moving liquid and demon- 1 Mugging- "1 hear you art having strates epparently that the earth orange Jour datighter's voice cultivated." Bug. under its IWO or trust to it nmes much gms-"Yes. I'm afraid it can't be. eared., more rigid than the trust itself, though so I am doing the next beet thing." '‘s Ase. meei.enermeween• . A BENEDICTION. •God's love and peace be with thee, where goe'er thia soft autumnal air lAfts the dark tresses of thy hair! Whether through city casemehts comes Its kiwi to thee hi crowded rooms, Or, out among the 'woodland Moores, It frostiness o'er thy thoughtful face. Imparting, in its ,eled embrace, Beauty to beauty, graee to grace! Pair nature's book together read, The old wood -paths that knoW our tread, The maple diadems overt:bed- the tails wo ceinbed, the river /feet Ey gleams along its deo ravine - All keep thy Memory fresh and green. If, then, 5 fervent WM for thee The gra1er:8 11e51 -e08 IvIll laced from me, What should, deer heart, its burden bet • The eiebitit of a ehaken reed - What can / mere then meekly plead The greatness of our tommon ueed? • God's love-eunebetighig, pure and true., Particiette wbiteariblning through Ins thete---the fen Of Herrman's DWI With sueh it prayer, to, tlite sweet day, AS thou most hear and I MALY seY1, I greet thee, **nee, ter away! ereet thee, *emirate f*r awayt -John Oteenlese Whittier. When a Man boae.ta that he never ad anything le ie ashamed of, it inlay tier* indicate that be is inotang in a teats of ottataia 444,04144430040)0:84•41034.40103••• Most people know that if they have been sick they need Scoff., Emu , - slot: to bring back health and strength. But the strongest point about ...Ccolf Emal.sion is that you don't have to sick to get results frorn it. It keeps up the athlete's strength, puts fat on thin people, makes a fretful baby happy, brings color to a pale girl's cheeks, and pro. vents coughs, colds and consumption. 4:1 Food in concentrated form for tick mid well, young and old, rich and And it caiWns no drugs and Att. pitutiourrs: 4601a* AN