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The Wingham Times, 1907-06-27, Page 3SOLUTE SECURITY. �eune Carte r 's Little Liver Pills. Must Moor Signature 011 See Puo.Simlie Wrapper Below. Tor smao and es easy *stake ea *imam CARTERS FOR p ��NESS mu FOR BILiOUSNESS, I VER FW YORPW LIVED FILLS. FOR„CONSTIPA'ION FOR SALLOW SKIN. ,FOR THE COMPLEXION Tf* Q�IZiY711Y7(D MY$YIUY. $MuIIl, tfr °'eut> ryegetaA�e i/.r �..vG CIURE SICK HEADACH;, IN THE MASTER'S FLOCK By 0. Kyle Anderson, Melville, Mont. Tho' just a bit lamb in the flock o' the Master, There's noobt I'll be wanting what- ever; ate happy am I, sae green le the pasture, And bonny the palm flowing river. 'The voice o'. the Master sae gladly I hear, Saying "Thirsty ones drink ye and live,- '2ae the blue -gray shade of the rook keep near, Frae the sun's scorching rays the relieve." Be bids no tae rest on the braes, ever green; He gi'es tae His loved ones sweet sleep; 'Tho' far in the distance fierce wolves may be seen, • He sees that far distant they keep. "When I free the richt road a truant wad stray, Tae follow the tvrang, which! take, He in His great love brings me back tae the way; Ay, even for for His airs name's sake, e wi'hauds uaething avid of all 1 desire, Ane' richt forenent o' my foes; At His table I taste of true joys still higher, Where my cup 0' Iove's wine over - Sows. A promise He gi'es tae enpply every need 0' His Sack, till their day here is o'er; Then they tae the gran' feud o' fauld's He will lead, Tae bide wi' Him there everomore. .ell., tho' He leads through the valley of nicht, I'll follow Him close all the way; The great rooting lion canna harm or afi'rioht, For my Master's crook it my stay. So I'll trust in Hie word, I'll doot not nor tear The strength of His staff and His rod; By grace tae the great Rook of rooks I'll keep near, Near tae my shepherd, my God. Mrs. C. Kyle Anderson, the author of the above, is a sister of Mrs. Wm. labile ter, of Morris township. SHORT GRAMMAR. (New York Stu,) Three Little words yon often see Are articles, a, an and the. A noun's the name of anything, As school, or garden, hoop or swing. Ajeotives tell the kind of noun, As great, small, pretty, white or brown. Instead of nouns the pronouns stand,-, His head, her face, your arm, my hand. Verbs tell something to be done - To read, count, laugh, sing, jump or run. How things are done the adverbs tell. As slowly, quickly, ill or well. Oonjunctione join the words together, As men and women, wind or weather. The preposition stands before The noun, as in or through the door. The interjection shows surprise, Ae Oh, how pretty I Ah, how wise! 'The whole are called nine parts of speech, 'Which reading, writing, speaking teach. Stop That Cold; 'To check early colds or Oribpe with "Proventicb' means sure defeat for Pneumo4nia. To stop a cold with Proventics is safer than'to Iet it run and ho obliged to cure it afterwards. To be sura. Pte- y'entica will cure even a deeply seated cold but taken early -at the sneer.° stage -they break. or tad off these early colds. That's surely bettor. hat's why they are called Proventics, rennticsaiclittle Candy' Q fd Cures .Nuu#, lineo phys, nothing sickening. Nice for the j1echildron-and thoroughly safe too. if you feel yohiiiy, if you sneeze, if you ache all Over, think of Enmities. Promptness may MHO save half your ecoalsickness. And don't !brget your child, if there is feverishness, night or day. Heroin prob. bey lies Preventics' greatest efficiency, Sold la boxes for .the pocket, also in 25c boxes of 4S townies. Insist on your druggists giving you Prevent• ics TALL DEALERS" FIND PEARL OYSTERS O RICH . DEPOSIT FGEM 1 SAS . QQV- EKED IN NEWFOUNDLAND. Clergyman and His Guide Stumble Upon. Source of Wealth While Caribou Hunting -Pearls in Lob, ster Cans --Micmac Indiana; Excel As Hunters and Trappers -.-Single Gem Found Worth $1,500.,, Somewhere in one of the many small etreaans which flow into the Bay of Islands, Newtoundignd, is a Valuable deposit of pearl oysters. From that deposit hundreds of pearls. have been taken, one at least valued as high as $1,500. Ito exact location is known tc but two men, one Rev. Elwood Worcester, rector of the Em- manuel Church, Boston, and the other his trusty Indian guide, who has ao, companied the clergyman year after year during his caribou hunting ex- peditions into the island. Deposits of pearl oysters are not rare in North America by any means. Hundreds of them have been dis- covered, but they are located as a rule in southern waters, in the Gulf of Mexico, in the Caribbean Sea, and on the Pacific coast. Even in some of the rivers in the northern part of the continent the pearl mussel is abundant, yet the occurrence of good pearls in these shells does not appear to be frequent. Trusted Writings of Explorers. ' Many good pearls have been found from time to time in the rivers of New England, and the Canadian riv- ers have yielded fresh water pearls to considerable size and beauty, espe, cially in the small streams in tbe country north of Quebec. Columbus found pearls plentiful among the Indians when he discover, ed America, and took back to Fer- dinand and Isabella hundreds of beautiful stones. The Indians recog- nized them as stones of beauty and Indian maidens wore strings of pearls which would create a sensation at an up-to-date horse show or opera. The Cabots, John and .Sebastian, sailing westward from rneland ander direc- tion of Ring Henry VII., found a few in the Newfoundland rivers and took them back to their patron, who was delighted with them. It was from the writings of these latter explorers, says Dr. Worcester, that he gleaned the information which led to his finding the pearl deposit. He conceived the Iden suddenly while on a caribou expedition into New- foundland, and, having, read in their reports to the Rin- of the early dis- covery, set out to find the pearl oy- sters, with but a vague idea of their location and little hope of finding them. It happened some years ago. Dr. Worcester has for many seasons jour- neyed to Newfoundland to hunt cari- bon. and has there a small schooner which he calls into use occasionally in going from place to place along the bleak coast. Being much interested in New- fonndland, I)r. Worcester had read all of the history and much of the literature about the island. While he was serving as rector of a prominent Philadelphia church he made his an- nnal visit to the country, and when his schooner was anchored in the Bap of Islands he *eealled the pearl dis- covery of the C"bots and determined to make a search. Struck a Rich Denosit, Going on into one of the streams with hie faithful Indian guide, they watched The led of the stream close- ly. Some distance "n they discovered an nvater bed, and the Indian began to dive from a small boat after them. Time and time gain he dived and came up wit,! one or two shells. He had gone down perhaps twenty-five times when he returned to the shore where Dr, Worcester was standing, bringing with him two shells which seemed to be pearl bearers. They opened the first one, but it was em- pty. On opening the second the sight they beheld almost took their breath away. Reposing snugly in one cor- ner of the shiny white shell was a beautiful gleaming pearl. It was a most encouraging start. They had found a deposit. Whether it was the one, referred to by the Ca - bots or not Dr, Worcester did not know, and he didn't care much. Persevering, they found 305 pearls, large and small. But Dr. Worcester had made the tiresome trip to New- foundland for hunting and recreation, , and so he left the pears deposit, and with his guide set off into the inter- ior of the country in search of the mighty- caribou. Later, in Philadei-' phis, Dr. Worcester was offered $1, 500 for the first pearl he ,found. It was a gem of unusual size and luster and perfectly round - Some months after returning to Philadelphia, Dr. Worcester received.; a half-dozen cans of lobster from his Indian guide. They were put away' in the cellar until one day, feeling that he would like some lobster, a Can was brought up and opened. In' it were a number of small pearls. Opening the other ears, Dr. Worcester found sixty in all. The Indian had' sent them as te surprise, and a sur-' prise they were. Hunting the Big Deer. tglorious o rtuni But it is he ppb ty for l the island that Iices enthusiasm in every sportsman who' has visited it. Caribou are rxurrler-' ons in the interiot and, not being' very much hinted, have little fear of man so long as they do not wind him, and often allow a moat to ap- proach without making off. Terrible battles take place among them, and it is rare to find a. f till-grovrn stag ' Whose nuttersare not battered. In these battles the powerful antlers ate used. sometimes with fatal effect, and instances have been. knotrn *bete the antlers have interlocked' and both participants died of starvation. Without an Indian guide the cati:- boa hunter in Newfoundland is 21t a. tremendous disadvantage The tndians there ate of the Micmac tribe, end are and unexcelled as hunters trappers and in.ltmxbering, Twat buildi, ol- ing up rivers and all the iticidentel ak the backwoodsman's stat,,_ • THE WJN'UUf..l T .MES JUNE 27 1307 FAIRIES IN IRELAND. A Boatman's Story of the Antics of the Little People. gore Is a mo dern fairy story from Ireland "One day about twenty years ago," writes a correspondent, "1 wars fishing from a boat on bough Derg. I inquired of my boatmen 1f they bad ever seen fairies; At drat, fearing to be laughed at, they scouted the idea, but;oxre of theta told the following; "Oa a Sunday be was returning after mass and stood with a friend named Sullivan on the bridge of Riilaloe.. Looking toward a potato fleld on the slope of the rising ground to the emit Of the town, a field which he wart able to point out from the boat, be saw issuing from the lies a troop of 'little people,' one being distinctly taller than tbe rest. At first they seemed rather blurred, then took distinct shapes and began to play the national game of hurley autopg the bare potato rias, He called Sullivan's attention to them,, but for some time his friend could, not see them, then said he could, and they watched the game together for a time. 'risen the sun went in, and the fairies, moving toward the lies, as 1f return- ing to it, vanished. leases are rough places, sometimes hillocks, sometimes depressions, often bushy, but never cultivated, I have been told they are left as doorways for the fairies when visitin,e the earth's surface." HUNTING MAHOGANY. It Takes an Experienced Woodsman to Locate the Trees. Mahogany trees do not grow in clus- tem, but are scattered throughout the forest and hidden in a dense growth of underbrush, vines and creepers and require a skillful and experienced woodsman to find them. He seeks the highest ground in a forest, climbs to the top of the tallest tree and surveys the surrounding country, The mahog- any has a peculiar foliage, and his practiced eye soon detects the trees within sight, The axmen follow the hunter, and Wen come the sawyers and hewers, a large mahogany takiteg two men a full day to fell it. The tree has large spurs which project from the trunk at Ito base, and scaffolds must be erected so Haat the tree can be cut Off above the spurs. This leaves a stump ten to fit, teen feet high, which is sheer waste, as the stump really contains the best lumber. The hunter has nothing to do with the work of cutting or removing the tree, his duty being simply to locate it. le he is clever and energetic, his remuneration may amount to $500 or 51,000 a month, but he may travel weeks at a time without detecting a tree, and as lie is generally paid by results his earnings are rather precari- Ous. Not !£sop's Day. West Point's nim is to tench men to meet any situation with the best there is In them. When General Custer was a cadet, he ventured Into the French section room without having so much as looked at the day's lesson. The sec- tion had been engaged in the transla- tion of 1Esop's fables from French to English, but on this particular day the task consisted of a page of bistory written in French. Cadet Custer was given the book and very bravely dashed into the translation of this sentence; "Leopold, due d'Autricbe, se mettit sur les piaines de Silesie." But the Duke •bf Austria did not seem to appeal to him, for without hesitation he read: "The leopard, the duck and the os- trich met upon the plains of Silesia." . Some Very Old Trees. Brazilian cocoanut palms live for 000 to 700 years, and the Arabs assert that the date palm frequently reaches the age of 200 to 300 years. Walian's oak, near Paisley, Scotland, is known to be over 700 years ofd, and there' are eight olive trees on the Mount of Olives, near Jerusalem, whicb sire known to have been flourishing in 1099. The yew's at Fountain abbey, York- shire, were old trees when, in 1132, the abbey was built, and a redwood • in Mariposa grove, California, is a mani- fold centenarian. Baobab trees of Af- rica have been computed to be over 5,000 years old, Mad the deciduous cy- press at Chapultepec is considered to be of a still greater age.. The Fallon Mieflty. "It isn't necessary to go to the Wal- dorf to see the nobility," said the man about town. "Go down on Second ave- nue to the Hungarian restaurants there. The proprietor of one is en exiled baron, the pianist Is a prince, the violinist is a duke, the waiter with the mustachios was a titled landown- er in his own eountry, and each and every one Of the patrons, myself ex- cepted, is a scion of Russian, German or Hungarian nobility, banished for some reason or other to the Wilds of New York.II . A Striking Monument. Nowhere in the world can be found a mare striking monument than that erected on the shores of Lake Tasy Kul, in central AMA, in honor of the itusstan General Prjevaiski, a fatuous explorer of that region. 'the tomb is hollowed out in the summit of aa ut- ting cliff on the eastern margin of the lake, and the moeunnent consists of an enormous rough hewn block of gray granite, twenty-five feet high, over which is thrown a chart of central Asia. Cruel. Derey-Db you knew, Mies Alice, l'i'e alwabs had a hotter of premature bur- ial -being buried too early„ clo'ntcher- lwow? .Afire -Oh, what nonsense!! ?httt�'lt knpoeelblls , , Hocking the Wary Trout. Trout when hungry usually face the current. This fact sboutd be remetu- bered when pPproaebing a . bridge or eddy where the 4'speckled beauties love to hide." If Feasible, such spots should be approached upstream. It may take a little MOO brae to go arotwd and come back up, but "make haste slow- ly'^ is said to be the fleet axiom of trout fishing. As the stream becomes warmer, the trout seek the cool pools and shaded places. They are to be found where a cold spring bubbles up ftltothe stream or .where a mountain creek enters. often a number frequent the same haunt. Each additional fish means two more eyes to watch for tate fisherman. One trout is all that is nee- essary to give a clanger signal by darting away. The rest immediately follow suit, To catch more than one, or even that, in such a place takes skill in the use of the line. But who has said that trout fishing is not an art2-Cirele Magazine. Cour Pygmy Ancestors. The armor of the knights of the mid• dle ages is too small for thele modern descendants. IIamilton Smith records that two Englisbtuen of average di- mensions found no suit large enough to fit either of them in the great col- lection of Sir Samuel Meyrick. The head of the oriental saber will not ad- mit the English band nor the bracelet of the Kaffir warrior the English arna. The swords found in Boman tumult have handles Inconveniently small, and the great mediaeval two handed sword 1s now supposed to have been used only for one or two blows at the first onset and then exchanged for a small- er one. The statements made by Ho- mer, Aristotle and Vitruvius represent six feet as a high standard for full grown men, and the Irrefuta*ale evi- dence of the ancient doorways. bed- steads and tombs prove.; the average size of the race certainly not to have diminished in modern days. -London Hospital. Great Musician's Eccentricities, Dolls were the idols, after his be- loved instruments, of Domenico Dra- gonetti, the king of the double bass. He had a huge collection of these pup, pets dressed in various national cos, trees, and wherever Dragonetti went the dolls were sure to go. That was only one of this eccentric genius' pecul- iarities. Hewould never play unless his dog were in the orchestra, and no- body would have got a note out of him unless he had been permitted to sit in the orchestra next to the stage door. This was a precaution to enable bine to save bis wonderful instrument In case of fire. The instrument itself be brought from the monastery of St. Pietro when on a visit to Vincenzo, and when be died he bequeathed it to St. Mark's, Venice, to be used at solemn services. -London Standard. A Queer Coincidence. While a serial story was running in a certain magazine a lady in Johannes- burg wrote to the publisher asking whether Christian Lys (the author's nom de plume) was assumed or not. She herself was a Mrs. Lys. who was trying to trace an ancestor of her late husband, who was a descendant of Joan of Arc. Mr. Brebner, the author in question, wrote assuring her that bis pen name was a family one, his forbears having come from Aberdeen. Strangely enough. it came out that her family came also from Aberdeen and their name was Brebner.-Pail Mall Gazette. Pilgrims and Puritans. The pilgrims, or, as they are often called, the "pilgrim fathers," were the seventy-four men and the twenty- eight women, members of the John liobiason's church, who sailed in the Mayflower from Leyden to North America and landed at Plymouth Bock, where they founded a colony Dec, 25, 1620. The Puritans were the English nonconformists who came over later, the name being given to them on ac- count of their supposed great purity of doctrine, life and discipline. r Cochineal. Coebineal, so much used for coloring table jellies and nibo given to infants as a domestic remedy for whooping cough, is the whole insect of a class called coccus, but only the females are used. Why? Because the insects are captured by suffocating them with the smoke of fres below tbe trees on which they live, and as the males have wings, while the females have none, the gen- tiemen take to flight when the atmos, phere becomes unpleasantly warm, leaving their ladies to their fate. Warnings. Mrs. Stubb-I notice so many mar- ried mon save the receipted milliner bills. What use do they make of them? Mn Stubb---Charlty. Mrs. Stnbb-Char- ity? Mr. Stubb-Yes; they are sent around to the bachelor clubs to warn any reckless member who might be thinking about plunging into the sea of matrimony, Her Postscript. "Why does a woman always add ,a postscript to her letter?" "Well," answered the ungallant wretch, "she probably figures out in her own mind what her letter has Made yoft think and then tries to have the last word." The Trouble. JonesT understand there is trouble between bits. Poet and her husband. Smith -'- Yes. lie couldn't sell his poems, and she couldn't eat them, so she left him. The man 'who gambles is a deluded tool, but the man Who gambles when he continues to lose is a colossal #I�nl'y Sutllt>!tt(.. ..•: �i .:... _.,._i .. A DREAM QF SUMMER. (Jobe D. Whittler.) Eland as the morning breath of June, The t3clnthwest breezes play; And through its .hart. the winter noon Seems warm as summer's day. The snow plumed Augei of the North Hes dropped hie toy spear; Agafa the mosey earth looks forth, Again the streams gush clear, The tee his hillside cell foreekee, The wneerat leaves his nook, The hlnehird in the tpeedow brakes Is siogiog with the brook "B-ar ap, Q Mother Nature "pry Bird, breeze and streawlet free; "Oar winter voices prophesy Of summer days to thee!" So, it these winters r f tee soul, By bitter of s s and dee sr, 0 asswtpt flow trim ory's frrz"n pole, Will sunny atop apt ear, Reviving Hope and Faun tbey show The e 'ul iti living powers, .Anti how beneath the wiurer's snow Lie germs of enmmer flowers. The Night is morhar of the 1)ay, The Winter of the Spring, And ever upon old Dacus' The gr eneet moosee olive Behind the elo u) the sten ight Ian's, Through en' were the eaULeawa fail; Fcr God, w leo )oveth all hie works, Has left but hope with all. How They Dance In Hungary, With the exception of the Spaniards there is no nation in Europe that dances like the Hungarians. They love it with a love that amounts to a passion. They not only go In for it heart and soul,- but they will dance on anything, in any sort of weather. A paddock, a village street, a stable yard, the earth en floor of a wayside csarda--it is all. ,the same to them. Not the eeosrbing sun or the wa•1iritng dust or the pelting rain or the failing snow will deter them. They all dance beautifully too. It seems to be in their blood. Customs of Brittany. ' Brittany alone, of all the provinces of France, seems to have preserved its; types and individuality. To be Breton ir'by no means to be French. The old• men to this day chatter in the Celtic tongue. The Breton mother when not at work linthe fleids sits in the door of her cottage plying the distaff and resit. ing the old legends and quaint folk. songs to the wbite coifed, baby beside her. The Breton woman still wears the costume of her mothers before her and fa satisfied in It. • Too •Heavy to Keep. Magistrate (t0 prisoner) -Miserable being, not Daly have you robbed your employer of the fruits of long years of labor, but you have dissipated it in the wildest extravagance. Prisoner - That is true, but I couldn't peep the stolen money; it weighed too heavily on my conscience. Loisirs. Try This. Bill had a billboard. Bill also bad a board bit. The board bili bored Bill so that Bill sold the billboard to pay bis board bit. So after Bin sold' his billboard to pay bis board bit the board bill no longer bored Bill, Tho Right One. "Sir, 1 want your daughter's hand." "You may have it with the greatest pleasure, dear boy, if you'll take the one that's always in my pocket."-Bal- tlxnore Sun. The secret of A Beautiful Complexion Now Revealed FREE What beauty is more desirable than an exquisite complexion and:elegant jewels. An opportunity for every woman to obtain both, for a limitca time only. The directions and recipe for obtain. i . ing a faultless complexion is the secret long guarded by the master minds of the ORIENTALS and GREEKS. This we obtained atter years of work and at great expense. Itis the method used by the fairest and most beautful women of Europe. Hundreds of Ameri. an women who now use it have expressed their delight and satisfaction. This secret is entity understood and simple to follow and it will save you the expense of creams, oosmotice, bleaches and forever give you a beautiful com• plexion and free your akin from pimples, bad color, blackheads, etc. It alone is worth to you many times the price we a k yon to send for the genuine diamond ring of latest design. We sell yon this ring as one small profit above manufacturing cost. The price is less than one half what others charge. The recipe is free with every ring. It is a genuine rose out diamond ring k .br brilliancy sol t 1 of spati Ing i) ahoy ab o n e y iruaran• teed, 'very dainty, shaped like a Belcher with Tiffany setting of 12 Kt. gold shell, at your local jeweler it would cost you considerable more than $2.00., We mail yon this beautiful complex- ion recipe free when your order is re- ceived for ring and $2 00 in money order, stamps or bills. Get your order in be- fore our supply is exhausted. T made for a This offer x is limited time only as a means of advertising and intro- ducing our goods. Send today before this opportunity is forgotten. T. 0, MOSELEY, 32 East 23rd Street, New York City. FREETo women for colleoting names and belling our novelties, we give big premiums sand your frame to. day for our new plan of big profits With little work. Write today. Address C. T. MOSELEY Premium department 32 E. 23rd Street, New York Gity • s11 UNSHINL FuRNACE UNBREAKABLE FIRE -POT The lower portion of a fire -pot is usually nearly or partly filled with dead ashes, leaving the live, red-hot coals hi the upper part. The result is that the upper portion expands much more than the lower. This uneven expansion causes a strain too great for a one-piece fire -pot to stand. Sooner or later it will split, allowing precious heat and sickening gases to escape, But the fire -pot cf the Sunshine is constructed to meet this on dition, It is in two sections, The upper half expands, as much as necessary, independently of the lacer. When cool, it contracts back to its original size, fitting to the lower half perfectly. And this strong, unbreakable, gas and heat -tight, two-piece fire -pot is just one of the many superior feataresof the Sunshine. If your local dealer does not handle the " Sunshine," write direct to us for FREE BOOKLET. te' London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B. ALEX. 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