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The Wingham Advance, 1907-01-24, Page 3PRISONERS ON FARM. iVew Method of Caring For Wards in the State of OW. 01110'e new farm colony of 1,500 acres those a:filleted with tuberculosis. In at Cleveland, ore whieh are being groupe(1 every ward in the eity she has a tuber - in separete villages tbe city worklumee , culosis clinic where the ward physician prieoners, the infirmary wards and the , Wider the direction a the health officer, tubercular patiente, represents art inno. ; looks after the patioute. Visiting emus vation in municipal Mears that is bound ' oleo go to the Immo of those, too ill te attract the attention of every city in to come to tbe elinie. Greet arm is tho United States. The population of this , add upoii fresh air in the factories and elta ferin, already numbering into the stores and espeeially tbe sleepingguar- bundreds„ will ultimately reaeli 2,000. The ters, and to wbolcsome food asul also present Area Neill likely be increased to the destruction of all sputum. 5,000 acne when all the city's penal, said- I Threelearters of a, mile south of the tiny and philanthropic institutions shall tuberculosis village at Warrensville is have been removed from the bleier streets the infirmary department of the eolony. far foto tee country. The new plan not This at present is a large farmhouse only represents a philanthrophy but also With a new two storey frame building an economy, one department or inatitu. attached. Here too are some of the barna tion being made to serve another, to the for the etorieg of hn,y aria for the sbelt. end that the whole is to become self- ering of some of tho horses. Eventually eupporting, the city farm is expected to raise all the The site of this new city farm is some hay that will be necessary for the horse ten miles from the central part of Cleve- in the fire and- pollee -departments laud, near the little rural town of War- I throughout the entire eity. Wheat is to a i rensvele. It formerly comprisedgrown and gristmill established twenty ' b° distinct farms and inductee a high pla. which will furnish the flour for all the teau which separates the Chagrin eed baking for the different villages in the °Vallee% valleys and. svhich is 600 feet 01°IiY• above Lake Erie—in feat, the highest The permanent infirmary building is to be the finest and best arranged in point in Cuyahoga county. The air here the world. Ground was; broken for it in X afforded is just the thing for tubercular i:member and it is to be emu leted the coming year. It ia to be but t tamed a quadrangle with sleeping rooms on tbe outside. The portion nearest the quad- rangle is to be given over to a wide cor- ridor running all around the building. patients and the land produces; just the crops which are most needed in the main- tenartee of city institutions, *while in ad- dition to farming occupations .for the prisoners- there are stone quarries of goodly dimensions, A wide veranda is planned for the feont A mile a electric railway has been of the building, where aged persons maa built by the city from the centre of the bask in the eunlight. From the second farm to an interurban road leading into town. The farm is also provided with its own coach, which has the privilege of running over the various; electric lines of the city, This coach is equipped with eots for tubercular patients unable to ride in the seats, and has its apartment for freight in addition to its passenger quarters. Nearly a mile to the west of the field terminal of the colony railway there -were several prisoners at work in -the eefreehing open air. They were living In cottage's where iron bars were un- known. One young inan was hauling turnips from the fields, The turnip crop bad been planted, cultivated and dug by prisoners from the Cleveland workhouse. Across the road other prisoners were burying large quantities of potatoes and cabbages for the winter. The corn In another field was still in tbe shock, and. there were many acres of it. On a distant hill were thirty coves belonging to the city of Cleveland. "Stay 'until 4.30 and you will see the prisoners milking," remarked one of the younger of the city's wards. Already the colony Is furnishing not only supplies for its own existence, but is stepping milk and vegetables to those divisions of the city's institutions which have not yet been re- moved to Warrensville. Right in .the heart of the woods a ntrusties'" lodge is being erected at a cost of $10,000. The prisoners under capable supervision are building it. Later it is planned to sell the big brick ware- house structure down town. It would bring enough to put up a great modern plant upon the farm. This plant will be within an enclosure and, with the prisoners as the workmen, will provide all the power for lighting and operating all the institutions of the colony. All prisoners that can be trusted will bo given work on the farm. All others will work within the inclosure. About 5.30 in the evening the present corps of prisoners at the farm eome itt from their various activities and get tbeir suppers at a farmhouse Nehieh has been converted into a dining hall. After supper they it around and talk and at 8.30 they retire. Their beds are arranged in rows. as in a, hospital ward. When all are in bed the superintendent calls tbe roll and then they sleep till early morn- ing. On Baterdey afternoon they quit work at 2 oalock and take a bath. Over near the stone quarfy is a bathhouse. Shower baths are provide& Eaeli man takes a change of clothing provided by the city with him and his old clothes go to one of the otbor city institutions. to be washed. The men go and come across the fickle to the bathhouse as they please and not under guard. Once in a while one escapes, but not often. Most of them appreciate' their new sur- roundings so much over real workhouse lite that they lieve little thought of run- ning away. On Sunday they sit about tbs, cottages or fields and read or talk. Nearly a mile and a half from where the seventy prisoners are at work the temporary buildings of the tuberculosis hospital are rising. Tbe dining roams, kitchen and such like departments are ing..A sunhouse is Ong up near by and grouped alsone the main buildings are one -storey frame houses fitted up with beds and so arranged tnat the patients can sleep in the fresh air at will. One hundred patients from the city are al- ready taking thss fresh air treatment In this beautiful .pot. Within a year or two orrangernents will be complete to take mare of 100 sr 20/) more. As the patient e move about from place to piece during the day each one earriee In his hand a small pasteboard box. By pressing the thumb upon a small lever the cover M lifted and the patient after coughing expectorates into these cups. The lid is then replaced. Each day tbe boxes aro burned In it little furnace in the field. The patients are very much In evidence in good weather. They walls - through the fields and along the mee- tly road and eat apples in the orchard. 'The fresh air also gives i unt an appetite, and they eat twice as much as tiles* did In the city. Clevelend has an eepeeially unique and practleal way of earing for 11.1.tioNnoressewes story of the building it will be possible to see both the city of Olervelana and Lake Erie, The quadrangle is to be pav- ed with flagging and there will be a fountein at the entre and plenty of plants and flowers. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. If you have a baby or young chil- dren in the home always keep a box of Baby's Own Tablets on hand. Dont wait until the little one le sick, for ;sometimes an hour's delay may prove fatal, This medicine cures stomach trou- bles, constipation, diarrhoea, simple fev- ers and mattes teething painless. If chil- dren are sick Baby's Own Tablets, make them well; and better still an occasional dose will keep them well. The Tablets are geed for children of all ages and are guaranteed to contain no opiate or harmful drug, Mrs. &melee Ross, Haw- thorne, Ont., says: "I have used Baby's Own Tablets and find them just the thing to keep children well." These Tab- lets are sold by all medicine dealers or you can get them by mail at 25e a box by writing The Dr. Williams' /sleek:line Co., Briekville, Ont. ies• CHANGES IN THE CALENDAR. Reforrns Made by Caesar and; Pope Greg- ory the Most Notable. When Julius Caesar came lute power he found. the Roman callendse itt comae eion. The Alexansleian astronomer Soil - genes suggested the Mien calendar, weevil, with slight modifictuelons, is the one use& -toeless. The beginning of the yeas was moved back from altereb. to Jne. 1. Previous to tame time Septerne ber was the seventh month (from sep- teal, seven), Octerbee the eighth month (octo, eighth), etc. In honor of himself Caesar changed the name of the fifth month from Quintilius to July. Augustus Caesar, sucessor to Julius, not to be outdone, changed the name of the sixth month from Sextillis to Aug- - ust, and stole a, day from February to make August as great a mouth as July. At the thee of Pope Gregory the Jul- ian -calendar had thrown the reckoning out ten days, because the year is not quite 365 1-4 days, as had been supposed. The calendar was ten days slow, so Gre- gory, following the advice of the astron- omer Clavius, ordered that ten days should be dropped so that the day fol- lowing Oct. 4, 1552, should be the fif- teenth instead of the fifth, and that leap years should be dropped in century years not divisible by 400. The change was not adopted in all Catholic countries se once, but the Greek Church and most Protestant nations re- fused to change. England, however'ad- opted the change in 1761, providing that the year 1752 should begin on Jan. 1. in- stead of March 25, and that the day following Sept. 2, 1752, shoulti be the fourteenth instead of the third, thus dropping eleven days. Riots followed in many places, since the people thought they had been robbed of eleven days, although the net of Parliament was framed so that no injustice resulted in the payment of tent, interest, etc. Since 1800 and 1900 were Julian leap years but not Gregorian, countries using 'the oId. Julian calendar ate now thirteen cloys behind the Gregorian calendar. Thus in Russia Oct. 30 is called the 17th. If a writer in Russia wishes to be [emi- rate be writes the /bete Oct, 17.30, thus showing the title by both calendars. 4-• No Coat for Nineteen Years. (south African Railway les,gaziee.) During Abe Journey from Victoria Palle to Kimberly a big, sun browned man boarded the Zambesi express 711112119 his coat, with his shirtsleeves rolled. Ho took a seat at dinner and the thief steward remarked to him that as there were ladies preeent per- haps ho woUld have no objeetiona to Tutting on his coat. "Great Scott!" the man re- plied, "I haven't worn a coat for Oinateett years. You will have to wait, int' friend, until X coat buy one at Kimberley!" 4,44*404.04941400:042623042400641304010 Grippe or Influenza, whichever you like to call it, is one of the most weakening diseases known. Emal,slota, isihieh is Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites in easily di- gested form, is the greatest strength -builder known to medical science. It is so easily digested that it sinks into the system, making new blood and new fat, and strengthening nerves and muscles. Use Sooteis Einalaion after Influenza. !available ibr COOIMS 1111d Odd& LL bflUCi1818t 50o. AND 151.00* 04144.40400.00:40444641460 HAD SLUNSII1.fin Ic:horra ebovwrecititolz cootie, ebee.eietet Connoisseurs t arried ehoice claret, el - AND INDIGESTION der, c.igars, Corsieen tordiela, chempagne, Codding eousins contributed eouilinientin confectionery, mediae cannedcranbet- 'MEANS TCOMPLETE rielo clieetnuts, celery, currants, mem- EFFECED A , GORE. bers, (-bopped cabbage. Velebreted citrate Collyer's comrades eo»tributed considerable cash, Cruden's Concordance, Clark's -Commentaries. The liver rifles the body, Bailers rule the liver. "A sluggish liver in my taee Cab led to tonstipation and indigestion,' flugratiled communicathms mused con. on comprehended 'cross main - saps Mrs. Frances Greene, of Earl ea- Counivial China, eondoled. Cube's street, Kingston, Out, "I felt dull and eemPeeelell eballenged eompetition. Can - sleepy, bad; no energy whatever for work aaa, civily commiserated. Camera caught tnalledkeovierbilineflaelissd. 4Tgligkeinfoiodbadi aatebaseed ant; te'ohntigi°p'slat7t1w.'8Verfnilisnotteinleillocieuls ec°aPrIlorpithdt ed to lie heavy oil eny stomach mid did crisped, eliarree Chime°. me no good. I had wind and cramps in Chicago cannot continue elieerless, the stomach fold bowels from the rood. Courageous citizens can consistently con- anennireserg. The constipation was ee guerilla calantitiee, construct coming city, bad that My bowels ha4 to be forced Chronicler coufesses eousulting complete at each passage. All kinds of -medicines eSelelledie. I tried, but nothing did me any lasting E good until I got Bileane. I have never MAN WHO RULES NGLAND found anything to equal theml They soon began to4o ui&gqnd and ie the Not King Edward, But the Leader of the end cured Me. Since using them. I feel Political Majority. like a different woman. 0.111' begat i and buoyant in spirits, not dull andTlrtjetreeatilrtuulleae; soono f lilitlerlithettir! sleepy as I used to be. I have got my is lut, h energy- and Activity back, and, in fact, editary nobility; it is the leamie or the all my ailments have yieltled to Means." politimal majority, who derives his pew. Bileans are a purely herbal remedy er solely froui the dilate vote of the pea. and. operate gently on liver and stomach. pie, The prime minister of England is Headache, ;constipation billausness, subordinate neither to the King nor the piles, pains in the chest and Woke wind: House of Peers. Every man ivies shares pains and dizziness—all these symptoms with him in the work of the govereenent arise really from derangements of liver Is his subordinate. and. stomach, so that by correcting the Following a general election tbe soy - root cause of these troubles, Beeens ereign sends for a member of the ma. speedily end them all, This is surely jority party and instructs him to form better than taking powders for head- a government, This is one of those ache, hot drinks for wind pains and deal- fictions of the constitutional auteurity lug with each symptom pie.comeal? All of the sovereign to whieh the English druggists and stores sell Bileans at 60e, people cling as to the heritage of trade per box, or obtainable from the Bilean tin, me summons is delivered, but ie Co., Toronto, upon receipt of price. 6 is merely a form The party leader is boxes for $2.50, Write for free sample, euela not by the grace of the sovereign sending a one cent stamp. but by the choice of the majority; tot by election but because he has the qualiVALTJE OF - BESSEMER STEEL ties of leadership. •••••••••., The leader, having received the sov- Invention Cheapens Transportation Both ereign's instructions to fora: a govern - by Land and Water, , ment, becomes by that mandate the au- tocrat of the empire. His power is ab - Most persona are unaware of the revs,- solute. Like the president, be may a.p- talon created in industrial circles by the point wbouisoever be pleases a mem. introduction of the Bessemer process of her of his cabinet, but unlike the pre - making steel. This process belongs in sident, he is not influenced by geograple the same category with the invention. ot Seal consideratioes, nor does he have to the printing press and the introduction submit his nominations to the senate. of the steam engine in its relation to in both countries the members of the human progress. cabinet bold office at the will of the ap. Steel is a compound of iron with a pointing power, but the tenure of of - email percentage of carbon which le flee iseven more preorious in England rendered malleable by being cast while than. it is in the United States. Here in a state of fusion. Oast iron Is iron a minister may differ from the presi- with a much larger percentage of car- dent en it matter of policy-, and not feel bon and other impurities. Bessemer's it incumbent upon him to resign; in Eng - process converts east iron into steel by blowing a, blast of cold air through melt- ed cast iron. The oxygen of the air burns out the carbon, sill= and other unwelcome elements until the right pro- portion is reached, and then the stool is cast. The effect of the process was at once land there can be no differences. Eith- er a minieter agrees with his chief or he resigns. In England the cabinet is an extra- legal creation. Nationally it is one of the conimittees of the privy council, whose functions are to advise the sov- ereign, but this it simply a survival of to cheapen steel and to increase its derthe tmheedm evllffi. a ' The cabinet is un- enormously. use eosntrol .of the premier, un - In 1855 when Bessemer took out his hampered by royal or other interference, first patent, steel sold in England for five times its present price. Sir Henry Bessemer shared the common lot of in- ventors in encountering incredulity when his discovery was first announced, but he was more fortunate than most in- ventors. Ile lived to enjoy the rewards of fame and fortune and to witness the world-wide adoption of Ms process. The first Bessemer steel rail ever laid down was at Derby, England, in 1817. It was placed at a point where it had been necessary to remove the iron rails once in three months because of Imes. sant wear. It was not taken up for six- teen years, during which time 1,250,000 trains passed. over it. It is to the 13essemer process that is due the rapid development of great rail- way ssytems. The giant locomotives that draw long trains across the continent and. the steel rails upon which they run are due to its discovery. It is estimated that the Bes- semer process has reduced tbe cost of land transportation two-thirds and it has also greatly cheapened transporta- tion by water. It has opened great tracts of fertile country which could not have been reached otherwise and has given the farmer good markets. In the development of electric roads it is all the time bringing together scattered vil- lages and givuig new opportunities for intercourse. The world owes to Sir }leery Bes- semer the improvements in modern steamships, the strength and lightness of the bridges which cross rivers, count- less modern forras of machinery and their cheapened products and the sky scrapers of New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, which could not have been built save by the use of steel. ; -4 • a CHICAGO CONFLAGRATION, A Remarkable Specimett of Alliteratiee Writing. (Awaa B. Gifford.) Chicago's careless citizen's cow cap- sized combustible candle, creating clam- orous chaotie confusion, Contiguous constunable cornices, catching combus- tion commenced crackling. Cottgges calified, colossal castles ,chapels, cher- ished chateaus erUmbled. Chimneys crashed, Corinthian church, clod -clapped crosses, crowning Catholic cathedrals, conservatories, charitable convents, clois- ters, collapsed. Crowds congregated. Coachmen circum- spectly collected carriages. Clumsy cart- ers connived, clutching conspicuous 'com- modities; consequently claiming mutest- ible carting charges. Confluent crowds continually conflicted. Crazy ereatures caught chairs, carpets, curtains, clocks, cushions, crockery, cradles. Crying chikdren eireunnembuIated cir- euitoits circles completely confused. Com. passionate elergynten Calmly ksollectcd contrary children, coaxing consent. Chok- ing eats concealed. Cruel eowards, Crafty, traven churls, .crowding mewling eriples. Conceited coxcombs circulated counterfeit currency, eausing consider. able tomplaint. Crusty creditors eon. tinually countermanded cringing cure tamers credit. Courteous eurates considerably calmed country clowns, carrying credulous, elouded countenances, censuring critics' caricatures. Complaeent ceremonious cardinal's eabinet, ordaining costly eu. rioaities, eorripletely consumed; eornpris- Ing thapiete, Chinese choppers, crucifixes, Christopher Columbus Oren - ides. Civil colonel's eampa circled city, tom. paling careful eonduct cannonading, contumacious cronies committing car- nage. City torporation tonsented. Christian convention convened conven- tions, eounselling considerable colleo- dons. Charitable eonnattnities contribut- ed commodious, capacious chests, corn - peaty crowded, ordaining etimpensats ing oommodities; ealieo, totton cloth, comfortablem, eroelicted clouds, roars. cloaks, chinchilla twee, cltar, cuffs* eambriefi. C'orapetent cooks earefully toteiteyed eold oollition, eonaprising criteker** took - its, ttistardt, MOM cakes torn oak*, but—another survival—no member of the cabinet may make publie any matter discussed by the cabinet without the ex- press sanctiSore of .the *sovereign, and when the premier issues it summons to a cabinet council, which meets at irre- gular intervals according to the exigency of public business, the minister is "re - guested to attend a meeting of his ma- jesty's servants."—Appleton's Magazine. 44e, Trains That Never Change. The modern traveling man who Carries always the latest eirne schedules in his coat pocket my find it difficult to be- lieve that certain fundamental trains bare been going in and out of Boston at the same hour on the same service and making the mine atop fer three -Beare years. Nevertheless, such is the case. In fact, Massnehusetts Alike rather resent a change in time tables. The story is told of one Massachusetts rural town in the old days that when it. was pro- pased to put on more trains to Boston the inhabitants objeeted because they said it would be a task to remember the times of so many trains.—Boston Herald. 3.4 "It is considered it. mark of ill -breeding Lor a man to continually have his hands in Ids pockets," remarked the Wise Guy. "Possibly," agreed the Sinaple Mug, 'but no such distinction is drawn in the co,se of the man who continually has his hands in other people's pockets." lam CORDIAL INVITATION ADDRESSED TO WORKING GIRLS .10....••••••••••••...• Robitaille Tells How Mrs. Pinks WM'S Advice Helps Working Girls. Girls who work a r e particularly eusceptIble to fe- male disorders, es- pecially those who are obliged to stand on their feet from morning until night in stores or facto- ries. Day in and day out the girl toils, and she is often the bread -winner of the family. Whether she is sick or well, whether it rains or shiners, she must go to her lehice of em- ployment, perform the duties exacted of her—smile and be agreeable. AMOrig this class the symptoms of female diseases aro early manifest by weak and aching backs, pain in the lower limbs and, lower patt of the etomach. In consequence of frequent wetting of the feet, periods become pain- ful and irregular, and frequently there are faint and dizzy spells, with loss of appetite, until life is it burden. All of these symptoms poitit to a derangement of tile female orgareem whieh can be easily and promptly cured by Lydia E. 'Inkhorn's Vegetable Compound. Mho: Anna Robitaillo, 78 rue St. Franeels, Quebet, Qiiebec, tells what this great reedietne did for her. She writee Dear Mrs. Piiikhnm Overwork and icing 'home tit the together with a neglected cold, brought on a very serious female trouble until finally I was annine to no to work. I then thought of a friend who had taken Lydia E. Pinks hams Vegetable Compound wlien her health wae in the -same condemit that nune was and straightway sent out for e bottle, finished that and took two more before I really began to improve bet after that my rocOVerv wag- vary timid and I Was soon well ail oblo to go back to work mein. certainly think your ruedielne for sick women worthy ot praise arid ant indeed glad to endorse it,' it is to such kirk; that Mr. Pinkhartt holds but it hOlping hand and extends cordial invitation to eoriespond with her. She is daughter-in-law of Lydia Pitikham turd for twenty -.five years has been advising tnek Women free of theme. Her tank record of feleettig irt treating woman's illa makes her letters of Advice ot nnteld Value to' every ailing iltOrldrig girl. PRAISE CHI A Marvellous and Triumphant Record of Victory Over Disease• No medikine liss ever effeeted as large it RUMber Of wonderful and almost mor - venom] =eft as l'sychine. It has had one continuous record of victories over dieees- es of the throat, chest, lungs and :,ton.tach. Where doctors have pronounced eases incureble from consumption and other wetting diseases Psychine steps in and reecues nuntbei late people even from the very verge of the grave. Coughs, Colds, Catarrh, fironcilitei, Chills, blightSiveate, La Grippe, Pneumonia, and other like trouknee, all of which are forerunners of Consumption, yield quickly to the 'cura- tive powere of ?value. Mo. Campbell, one of the many cured, makes the followbag statement : croon reflex. from telling ail who suffer of my Temerkable recovery with 1'4yd:hie, In April, 1402, I caught a heavy cold whieh sensed on my lungs and graduall,v led to consumption. I could not sleep, was subject to night sweats my lungs were so diseased, ray doctor considered ma incurable. Rev. Mr, Mahally, Port Elgin Presbyterian Chureh, recommended Or, Bloettsn's Peyebine tome, when I was living in °maths. Alter using Psyehine Mr a short time I ate awl slept well, the night meats and cough ceeaed. Menthe ago I stopped taking Paychine, as I was perfectly watered to health and to day I never felt better In my life. Payable has been ti pd. send to me. Ides. eitretew (einem it Cottonwood, N.W.T. PSYOHINE never disappoints. PSYOHINE has no substitute. There is no other medieine "Suet as good," At MI dealers, ii0c, and $1.00 per bottle. II not write to DA. T. A. ROCA Llnitted, 179 Xing St, W, MOHO Dr Root's Kidney Pills are a sure and permanent cure for Rheumatism, Bright's Disease, Pain in the Back and all forma of Kidney Trouble. 25c per box, at all dealers. MADE M. PALLIERES WEEP, Touching Tribute Paid by the People of Hie Native Town, A pretty compliment was paid by his fellow toweemen to President Manes of France upon the occasion of bis re- cent visit to his birthplace, the little town of Mezin. To widen the street the iitheill;erriorrsticrt. Eve, the blowing ext the Twenty feet to the right or to the leaft tackle conarctlag with rads leg mid maned by tea or a &eta Inca When ail is ready the trainer stands le front of the 0,111M11 orradieeera,. IsTishihooeist,hasstros'i'Dog no imwdowtionit'li 3: itt . stands "weaving" hie trunk end mwaying hit body from 4140 to side. "Down: down! • tA7 ilt8 the trainer vela, and upon a sagnal thboornsislotekretYliqurneeauk, btlietilisspteoit obreatled . stadwbtlighe' Will be seat frse to anyone suffering the trainer continues hatoutiog hie command tho pachyderm's lege begin to be drawn front , from 811eurnatiam. You the ex rose ("bout Me.) — under hum. With it ecalp-raielug tritalpet I , Pay P wtoloti: cb•irsotrfwele ar tr 61.1edaelgtio tuoidaetratinglIgrA, day, sanadll,begtSeumlyoaurpocautroca. rd for it to - with trs tip eget:ire tho flrorfrantleallY r. NaCkt So Yong* Stroet, Tore irecklug for it bold to eteady himaelf. Dot Wel relentless) ropes continue to draw his lege. onto. The buy,e heart teazle at a ferbIddlng angle, FREIE A DOMAN IROME or DM MACK'S RHEUMATISM -COMPOUND bellowing like it herd of sneers! and drown- ing the "Pown! down!" of the trainer. The 1 CAusrs or GREAT FLOODS, great body begins to totter; for an instent It regains ito balance, then It falls, creek. Destruction of Forests LOWV011 Iiillaided Unprotected Against Rolne. Trpon theme forests three foes ere ;cen- time nonete; 130 very startling bite happened eentrating their Attzwite. Fit* iis the and that really he ought to feel very ROM+ WWI/ faniter, who, crowded frOlat the furtahlo imam rite vane" is mideavoriug to hew for 'To teaeli him to stave on big bead the trainer again wee tee 'block anti taelatt. Itiene.elf and hie dependents a living out or the mountain side. To do thei be To foreatall the effects of a boa tall, the floor At OA trainteg stable it tilleklY lit* teeters it spaee, farms it in tilde fteithi0A need with straw. Then the tandidate )4 and in from five to twenty years ex- t.:true:ace with ebalns and tho bellyband. Lsusts it Ile now nowt* up tilo lump. teat bioeit and Maio as he was when learn- '. .. - - - ' • lug tp :par, tbs agaoranea ease that 00, taln aule and repeats the premeas. Erse &aims from ouster the belly lead between shin follows his opeeetions and the land She hind instead et 'between the fore lege, betemeei a series of worthless gutters. se thee the hindquarters inetead of the fere. . . quarters, may be raised. i Next inay be mentioned the protes- toThiaoltistt.belitaratiiinteragnilvmeas 1 heisveest113epaanodoswignaanl snilotnna,lputivpoonideenutters, including tan bark. tutellieent, the first time he It lifted in Gale and litinberers. The firet Penner he is mad clear through. Whateser . seek only the bark, but, like the bunter 14 in rearb of his trill* is razed atemietely. of flatturtgoee' tongues or buffalo /tides, night and left and up and &two sweeps they leave behind them to rot after col - the truak, tenee as it eteet miring, as eleletting tbeir tribute it huge but worth- phantre trunks nre Apt to he when on rime- I,g, rpgidim The peeprearl cues dean, ear bent. tehoula the •treluer at this time — --- — of the eaudidate to be taught to lie down gond, bad, large, inttall, old and young, fum beavy stakes are driven into the ground, thus making natural reproduetion of the and from each of these runs a blook and he would be veuture within remit grasesel, forest impossible, 'eke lumberman takes burled to the floor of the barn, and come what he wants, numb or little, but by teroawurila,w4ehinteovevulob.cnzattobiwokizien,g. oturulympteotinbge lisittetthaOkdeast,haatuddepstrzyaticalmnyeetittassurmeuelhiresne, with ragethe animal reaches 'beneath its which complete the work of denudatiou. belly to tear eft the bated stain, and not ,, until it Is baok on 411 fours dues it begin rieving eonquerea and burned Carthage, to ealm uuder the caresses of an instructor. Scipio passed the plow through its eite. Then the candidate is boisted again to the, . again and again be Is lifted until he begins "The correspondling final touch, hi given din of bellowing and trumpeting. and att. to ot realize that it le all in the day's work, rains. While the forest rennens these In time the hind legs are raised higher and regulatethedf e tohree.e treudn no fi fo,u nhtaalidntnst 11 opb eatltt a c kby thee Mill higher until he la foreed to bend at „,„1.,,,, lifted Near on to his head, where he is passing it into the underground the knee% Rarely before (be fourth day has ""— ' . h steadied by guide ropes to prevent falling e;.leracilr laat isounb4atnaini t Tanis uergi null thrsoturegatutflotwe, the pupil Trogressed so that he may he hitnseet, but makes an attenipt to perform greatly to the advantage of agrieulture, to tither tideuntil at , the end of a vreelt the trick when ordered,—Appletou's Maga- But the forest genes interests ;concerned. commerce, manufactures and all ether or so be: not only knows how to balanee sine and the very soil --a vegetable mould—eaten away by the flames, this onservative influence no longer operates. Torrents now rush down the umuutain sides, filling etreams and Ing with it con thud on to the heti ot straw. Trumpeting like tbe screech out of a !mask- ed ;steam calliope, the brute triee vatuly to etruggle to tie feet, until at the end of throe *r four sninutea be beanie to realize DAILY FADING AWAY. harbors, producing overflows, denuding The Story Of a Woman Made Well farms of tbeir sone or burying them with sand, destroying water powers and by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. sweeping away railroads, bridges, fac- tories, houses, even villages. oRa blood meats bad health. That In this way, as by the Paeolet el:Aster, i house in which the President was born is why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills mean Property valued at $4,500,000, habeen had been pulled down sonie years good health. Th v make destroyed in a single day, while, as in s What was to be -done? The people of - °- actuallY Thaee . 1901-1902, $18,000,000 has been carried new, rich blood which strengthens ev- ery nerve and every organ in the body. I away in a year, The continuation of Mezin put their heads together and when ; That is Why people who use Dr. Win this process nieens, as in vast areas in their distinguished fellow -citizen arrived, reproduction of his old. home in papier of the region affected into a desert.— the old world, the rapid transformation imagine his delight at. finding an exact lia,ms' Pink Pias feel bright, active and. maths! All was perfect, down to the strong. eine. Arthur Hazmigan, Marsh- . villa, One, is a witness of the truth of Review of Reviews. very farniture, part of Well had been ht,hese seatements. Mrs, Hannigan says: t For eearly three years I suffered from TALL TELEPHONE POLE. collected from the country around and pant reproehiced in facsimile. The prof- I dent thanked his friends in a, voice brok- anaemia (bloodlessness) and during Single Stick of Fir One Hundred and en with emotion and tears actually that time consulted and took medicine :streamed down his chelcs as he finished from several doctors, without beneficial Twenty-six Feet High, Ms little epeeeh. results. My complexion was of it waxy One of the tallest telephone poles in The late French President, Lonbet, appearance, my lips and gums seemed the world is where the wires of the Pa - was once the remittent opf an mteresteng oo ess. su ere rom lea c me, be esene. It eansistea of an immense al- , zinessand palpitation of the heart, My pan filed wa thousands of press cut - appetite was so poor that I did not care 1 'Mugs related to his visit to Italy and , -whether I ate or not and I grew so to England. The album, which is of en- 1 weak' and wae so much reduced in flesh orraous size and richly bound, contains ' that my friends thought I Wile in con - not only cuttings, but photographs and suzziption. As 1 bave said I doctored illuetrations of all kinds. It forms in- ; without benefit, until the last doctor deed, n complete chronicle of his, life whom I consulted advised me to try Dr. written by many different people and in . Williams' Pink Pills. I followed his ad- Ithe native rajahs consider it i vice and less than a dozen boxes have n India more than a dozen different languages. made me the well woman I am to -day. the highest possible compliment to be A11 the symptoms of my trouble have presentee with fine specimens of wild varnehed awl I enjoy the very best of beasts ;and consequently bete Kiez rd„ .health. I know there are hundreds' of the recipients of many gifts of this de- : veomee who are drifting into the same the recipients of many gifts of this de- Ostrongly urge the immediate use of Dr. condition I was and to all such I would ward and the Prince of Wales have been - scription. But. when, one fine day, two 1Willituss' Pink Pills'" splendid tigers arrived unexpectedly el I Dr, Williams' Pink P1119 do not net Sandringt? remonstrate. "I have necommodae ' upon the bowels; they do not tinker ham, King Edward was driven tem," he said, "for horses, dots, cows with mere symptoms; they go right to 1 the root of the trouble in the. blood. That they cure common ailments like cats; mice and even rats, but I musi - is why draw the line at tigers." #n, od gift 'MIA received by the Crown i rheumatism, neuralgia, kidney trouble, Prince of Germany npon his coming of 1 headaches and backaches, St. Vitus dance, and the speetal ailmente that of- :age. A deputation of butchers at,tended, Met so many wrii?en and growing girlt. worked in suet their greetings to the at, 50e a box or six boxes for e2.50 from Sold by all medicine dealers or by nmil steak, upon the surface of which was Brock - future monareh. The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Simplicity of Language. 4 The late Prince Bis4 • 1 Simplicity of language marked Poor Bismarck once received from tome miners in Westphalia a bust PLENTY OF NITROGEN LEFT. 1 Ricbard's almanse to such an erxtentthat of himself carved in coal, end it is said that this odd present was always careful- SulliFro ea._ 1 the author would have been appellee V m. the Atmosphere Alone even at the titles of some papers to be • elfie States Telephone Company cross Use Chehalis River, near Aberdeen, Wa,stie For some years past a pole 90 feet high was sufficient to keep the wire clear of river craft. But the increasing passage of ocean steamers made a highs es- pole necessary, and a new one 126 feet high was set up. This pole is one single stick of Washington fir, 18 inehes at the butt and 8 inches at the top. The pole weighs 6,000 pounds. The stick was cut at a point twelve miles distant and towed down the river, where it was erected by six men, using a 12 horse -power hoisting engine. The Amerierin Telephone Journal says that for making attaehment to the pole and moving it a five -eights inch steel cable was employed, run through tereinelt steel blocks. The pole was set 12 feet in the ground and guyed with four steel -stranded wires at the top, and also guyed about 40 feet from the top with four five -six- teenths -inch 'stranded wires. The guys are fastened to dead men set in the ground to a, depth of eight feet. These dead ITIP11 are of edart eight by- eight inches in section and seven feet long. ly preserved by Min and looked upon eomewhat in the light of a, luck bringer. A compliment which had serious re- . read in hie honor to members of tbe It has been setimated that In France these bears the following caption: "The rac ica y . ' ..knierican Philosophical society. One of son at a little mining town in British . alone the anteunt of nitrogen Yealkr Chromosomes in the Spermatogenesis of sults was paid to an actor named Ilan - taken from the soil is 600,000 tons and the Hemiptera Heteroptera." Behind; thie Columbia. The audience was so stirred net muelt more them one-half of this is what paesibilities of delight! Yet strip - by Mr. Hartson's acting that some perreturned to the eoil in. etable xuanure, ped of disguise it means that the paper - ' sons began throwing presents upon the Let it be asusmed, tor the purpose ot will IDrecord of a study in the growth stage. One burly miner, having nothing argument, that those countries employ- trz,fhabstAgs,01notindniuvmideuraiipm caldlyeveblilotinentu specinal. else handy, hurled it lump or gold ore. I in nitrogenous fertilizers use during Unluckily it hit the actor on the head ettelt year 6,000,000 tont of nitiogen. fortunately it will appeal but distantly and knocked him down. He was badly This seems to be it fairly liberal esti- to the lay mind, winch, when conscious 1 injured, and ft was weeks before he was mate judging from the above figure re- of it bite. wonder e how the pesky eras - I gar ding France and the fact that dne. tthrtereiodoilt iotr, but ether algsgreenvaaltlioensoneedrncharos into, able to play again. Perhaps the oddest idea of paying a ing 1905, 1,500.000 tons of nitrate of soda. c compliment belongs to a tribe of Indians were employed throughout the world. atin which collect in indireet ell divis- on the Alaskan coast. When it elder On this bares it is easily seen that there ion about the axis of tbe spindle, awl \visits -a to do honor to a distinguished is no danger 41f impoverishing the ats split into halves.—Philadelphits, Ledger, 4frir visitor be invites him to it "potlach" or nmsphere at sea level eorresitontls to .f , Another Blow at Mosquitoes. Then when all }give eaten their about eleven pounds of nitrogen a sq.! A. new means of destroying mosqui- fill the thief goes to the edge of the cliff inch, or say 1,500 pounds a sq. foot, or . and solemnlycasts into the sea. as many 20,000,000 tons a square mile. toes within the house has been tried with e ' of his posseesions as he thinks he can rtf- ' Each square mile of thmirth's sur- good results in New Orleans, Where their ford. This is held to be tho highest face Las above it enough nitrogen to eupply the entire world for five years melee of the number of those which may presence is partieularly dangerous be. form of compliment and netteh superior. : mien short of 200,000,000 square miles acid and camphor and is called "Mint's ott the baeie assumed above and since spread yellow fever. 14 is a vapor pro - to merely giving presents; to the guest.— I the. world can go on abstraetiug tetro. cackle," because Professor Mete of I the entire surface. of the earth .is not ducted by heating a mixture of earbolie London Tit.T3its. ' get at title rate for tibout 1,000,00D years New Orleans first suggested its use. it. TRAINING ELEPHANTS. the. said to he as effective at sulphur, HoW the Big Beast is Scliooled for Circua before reducing the quail! itv in the at- - m + * —.Prodigious Strength Displayed, ospeere oneetenth psnore certain than most of the other 4 er eeef. whieh is equivalent to saying that it is on a number of points elephant trainers I SUbStalided useL It oats more but it agree. Theso are: First, that the tall, flat. Dagger in the Duke's Bouquet. (Pall Mall elazette.) has the tulvantage of doing rio harm to ileicigiroanlz ilhti-theeKnoeiddgesno.emtlegogliallbiltrst°eknItbneoi:thgseireetrahonodsist. fully Wicitstr of his prodlge Vladisnlr in Paris a. person of unimpeachable tittle* after the fuinigation is finished.— tile contents of the room. It is elm pos. There recently called to see the Grand Duke Bible to enter the room tilmaat immedi. the reason au elephant obeye his master la visitor deeteed to present his ealutations and that an 010Phalik i2 d t Ulm but because the nozegay. No objettion woos raised in : the cage of the former, but ho wag invited 1 toes strength compared with mares. and that atMeararice, with a very largo beuquet. The Hartford, Conn., Theses. na o over UM nor 1 OffAT tig a groo Enormous Display of Naval Power. • • 0 he has an affection for hint. Third, Yon 418Y , , 1_ , a 1 to at net beaus° o (Now Yotk Ilanald.) by ramraing red hot irons dwelt his theoat of the thambere. Ho did to, with no eat gr beat a "hoe elephant/ to death or kili him to la art effort to press the "squeal of Bur. radiness, and the groom of the chambers In toseenee er the edemino poo, of tot 'redistribution adopted two yeare ago tbe Sri - render" out of him, but the one a.,,3 only d tseovencu that the flowerer sheathed a Very w ay to train -.-..-------leportortu Woke himinews1110 dogget. tisk admiralty has Alec ordened it Mobilize - through kindness and patience unending. e tiou which la the ohertootor end ettnipoeltien the of the battle units and auxiliaries ts Paseed even in Ilinglish atIOSIA. 1120 totel force etagere the Imaginatitin. Thirty battle shies. Sixteen emoted ortsitters and. feut- -teen Protested cruisers and stouts are in Pohruary to be terseinbled in the Bey Of Mee tay ter the police treining and devolopinent tan Which In tear, or at the threat tof War, the !security of the greateet aware rote, The ships to be metered 413 the cbtuireal, At- lantic and Mediterranean Mote ara with rare exception—notably itt tha abetince af the Dreadnought, at the ltIgheat extreme— the 'latest exemplare el naval thought. their tonnages alone reaelics the attenuate total Of 0.41,116 tons. Profitless Dieenssi on. Motion Heald.) This tliftelittlAft aft to -whether Eingkeild Would tilde 'With Japan in the event of a wee With this eountry serene that other biter. own* tillait141 a to Whether your Meter nee estrardels /Lod if you tation't get a whether eke *tonal like theta If tott 064 Litilittlyig.etitscuot ontotthoe ele.p tinitilt bout der exceeds Met of any other seimal. aleohaut trainers maintain that trotting an elephant to perternt le like teacbtng boy circus riding, only less difficult. Where the boy, despite al We agility and tupelo. ness, requires years to learn ble proteseilti, the elephant, despite lila bulk and Peeming awleteardneee, teeing his most difficult tricks within a few months. Generally it Is trecete eery only to nutko an elephant comprehend what le wented to have him perform a trick. For, strengo though It may teens, Ithis eitmetain of flesh is Somewhat of a gymnast, In lila own wild doeskin he can lIal1:6:t:°tgelTstr°util :Vn•ga1AottIlee 0erti3t beet:. Itortonunitilt reitriptiperaeralortfrukivin 0i:toeholds, taitIndd tAlelgaY era even reeling hie ponderotts fore feet ecrots the Apires of tmotber elegitarit es tf Perfornitug the trfelt of the "pyramid" for Oil adnliting aualenee. A ntinsber of the stranler triekt `With Which au eleobant entertains hie andlenee terrier its StAtetriti to bins tbe lapping 44 Mille Miles