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Exeter Times, 1905-02-02, Page 211-1-14111-11-11-1-1-M41-1144-11441-11-14+1-1-1-14-14-14 His Favorite Niece ; OR A SECRET REVEALED. i44444 -1-14-H-1-1444-14-14-14444-14++++++++.14+4-14444. CHAPTER XII. The Duchess of Pasodene was de- tained for a considerable time on the Continent by severe illness ut her busbarrd, and in reply to her anxious entreaties the general a1 - lowed his beautiful niece to remain with her. Altthough his heart yearned for her, anti his cycle longed once more to behold her, ho knew that the care and training which the dueness could bestow were in- valuable and were suck as ho could not have found elaelwhere. Tao was content to wait. During Leah's absence he purchas- ed a magnificent mansion in Belgra- via to which, in loving memory of his native town, he gave the name of Hurbury house. The d000rations were so nmagulAoent, the furniture was too elegant and costly. that pub- lic attention was drawn to the house, anti it soon became known that Sir Arthur had made this pur- chase for his adopted niece and heiress. who was now in Italy with the Duchess of Roeedelle, and who was.—so rumor said --as beautiful as a vision. People looked forward with inter- est to the time when the brilliant young beauty should be presented and take her place among them. It ens a pity, certain spinsters and widows declared, that with such vast wealth and so many places to keep up, Sir Arthur did not marry himself; his beautiful young niece would have some one to look after her then. But the keen blue eyes of General Sir Arthur Hatton wore never to look on any woman with love. The duke's health having been quite restored, the chichese had ar- ranged that the travelling party should return to London at once. It was then the very end of April, and the Reason had begun. A draw- ing -room had been held, at which some fair young faces had been seen; but she knew that none could have oquallcd that of Leah Ifutton. '17te Duke had a grand old man- sion named Park View close to Hyde Park, while the duchess had a villa which eho preferred to any other resort; it was called Reach. It was situated on the Thames, not far from Kew, and nothing delighted her grace more than to escape from the crowd and spend a few clays on the banks of the river. The duke and duchess went direct to Park View. Sir Arthur was in- vited to meet thorn, and from their (house he was to take Leah home. Ifo was impatient to see her. The duchess had told hien that ,.he had changed so completely he would hardly recognize her. He lunged to see what change had been effected; to his way of thinking, who could not have grown more begutiful. Ile stood In the drawing -roost at Park View. At first he saw only the pictures, the gleam of white sta- tues. the harmonious tints e: thick, soft carpets, the brightness of in - meliorable (lowers, the groups of sweet violets whik1 porfume.1 the air; then, standing. before him, the handsome, stalely duchess, with white. jewelled hands held out in greeting to him then, further away, near a Slender, shapely petite ha dis- cerned a figure and faro po perfectly beautiful that he looked in etmcee- m.ent. It was his niece Leah. The long absence had wee derfulle im- proved her. Ile grow pale ns he went up to her and kissed her in silence. for his emotion was too great for words. The duchess had been right after n11. Nothing but Constant associn- lion with an arcotaplished and re- fined woman of the world could have given such high -bred carte and grace to h. r. "My daughter and niece." hu said, •'you have been away little more than a year. yet there is a difference •)f many years 1n you. ' "Are you entiefiter?" ss4"1 the duchess, softly, some time after- ward, when they found thcenselves alone. "I should bo meet ungrateful were I anything elso," ho replied. "1 can never thunk you enough. 1 must oonfcss myself overwhelmed with sur- prise." "I do not feel much inclined to let my treasure pass out of my puncta," said the duchess, with a senile. "If I intrust her to you, you must promise me that she shall not be seen until the day of the drawing -roots. I want her to take tbo gay world by surprise. She will nuke a sensation such as we have not had for some time past. Do you not agree with nee?" "With every word," replied the general. "I feel myself almost in awe in the presence of such perfect awl peerless loveliness." "Siind," said the duchess, laugh- ingly-. "Leah roust shako the best match of the weeson. I shall not consider any one under an earl or duko presentable. Sho might have been a princess while we were in Rome. but she would not." "I am glad of it," he declart'(1. "There are no men like Engliehm'n 1 hope she will harry ---if she tarries at all—some one who will be kind to her and make her happy." it did not occur to hint to add, •'some one whom she loves." Love had never been a necessity of life with the old sloldior•. Sir Arthur took his beautiful niece home that evening to Ilarbury House. "Ito you know why I gave this house the name of Ilarbury?" he said to her; and then ho told her that it was in affectionate remem- brance of the pretty torn where his father had lived and died. itr:.gnif;cent us the house was, it was but a fitting shrine for the young beauty who had come to be lnietress of it.. When they stood in the drawing room. Sir Arthur re• garded his niece still more atten- tively. "1 should hardly have known you, Leah," he said, gently. "Among all the ltattons I do not think we have had one like you." The exquisite face brightened. "There are Bines, uncle," ho said, "when i do not quite know myself— the change is so great to me." "My dear Leah," lie returned, in the earnest simple manner which al- ways carried truth with it, "you were born for the station I hope to see you f,ll, It would have been ten thousand pities to—leave you where—you were." That was the only allusion the general ever made to the past. and it teemed to be wrung from him by the stirt'riee of her marvellous love - On that same night he showed Lenh all over the magnificent man- sion that he had made his Own, With all its treasures of art and wealth. "'Phis will be yours when i die, Leah," he said: aunt he was proud to race that no flush of elation came to her (ace. "I wonder Leah," he eels, suddenly, "if sou could bear ill -fortune as well as you do pros- perity?" "I trust so," stho answered; and the firm. steadfast expression on her tare made hint think that sine could. "I hope you will never be tried," he said. They sat together for some time talhing. Ile was charmed with Lenh'e warmer, her bright, fascinat- ing wears, her graceful, well-chosen wer(1a. You shall not leave me again, Leah," he said, "until you are mar- ried." "1 do not think 1 am one of the mnrryintt kind." she replied. with a sweet. lots lnta h. "Among the old Roman no!•1es and gay Ncnpolitnil princes was there not nee teen liked, 1,.'l ' •' ..1 lits.1 „ nit in 1).,• -rz Smother A Cough Press your hand hard enough over your mouth and you can smother a cough, but yc :1 can't cure it that way. The outside is the wrong end to work on. SCOWS EI��tISIBII thoroughly cures coughs be- cause it strikes at the root of the trouble. The throat and lungs need a regular system of educa- tion to cure an old cough. The point of value about Scott's Emulsion and coughs is that while Scott's Emulsion does soothe the raw throat and lungs, it also nourishes and heals the inflamed parts. It replaces inflamed tissue with healthy tissue—the only real cure for an old cough. Send for Free Sample. SCOTT & DOWNS. Chemists, Toronto, Oat. ion." she replied. "The Prince of San Sabine is, I should think, ns handsome Tt man as could he seen In the world, with a most musical voice and most courtly manner. They call him the Homan Apollo." "And even this Apollo did not interest you, I-cah?" he said. ANTS HAIR COMBING. Curious Toilet Articles Carried by the Insects. If the reader were told that ants possess brushes, lino and coarse tooth combs. and other toilet arti- cles quite after the pattern of our own, lio would probably think ho was being gulled. Yet it is evert so. Let us take an inventory of these. To begin with, the body is cohered more or less closely with fine pubes- cence, correepunding somewhat with tbo fur of beasts. This is inter- spersed with bristles and shines, which are sometimes jointe.i. and are e(1 arranged as to aid uutterinlly In keeping the body clean. Particles of "soil cling to this hairy covering, but I it i h Id' "No; so, dearest uncle, if we are to live together until I ant married, I do not see any chance of our part- ing just yet.." "That's right." he said. "I could hardly bear to lose you at present, Leah. Let Inc ace—how old are you nous"" "I 11)14 in my nineteenth year," she replied. "And when is the (h•awiug-room to be held?" "N(xt Tuesday." "And from that (layr n new life will unfold to you. 1 suppose. f wish you success; I coun.t not wish it more earnestly were you my own daughter." When, after a f.tv days of anxiou-' preparet:on, Leah stood before hire (Tressed for her preant:htiou, he owned h'mself perfectly well pleased. The du(h ss. whose taste was irr,• pronchable, had chosen her court.. dress: and the general had presented her with a suite of diamonlln—stones that. shone and scintillated with every movement,-eliamonds that made many envious. "Are you quite satisfied with wase, uncle?" she asked, with a nitrile that deepened her bright loveliness. "Quite," he answered. "I al- ways thought the fashion of wear- ing feathers awkward until now." '11)10 duchess called for her, and they drove away to the Palace to- gether 'Phe day was far, the crowd great. Many of the royal family were present. There were debutantes from many of the noblest families int the land; but Leah outshone therm all ns a planet outshines the stars. She never forgot the moment when she steed first in the preeence of the eradiate; lady who rules the vast empire over which the sun never sets. looking up with half -frighten- ed rye. s. she snty before her a noble, kerne- face, with n pleasant smile, she sone the gleam of I,-w,•lled orders. A Lit the voice tt05 '.p i:!, ng lo her. Ihr nerve'' of en irate and WttlEtlty a soldier ns `=fr Arthur 1Litton coal i not best he welcomed by the sec,' eign whom he had en faithfully served. looking at the royal indy.i so true n woman, and o true a' Queen, i „ash hethou tht 1f 1171 ' i ehe het If really wens--thn daughter of the Sian who used nil his clo- • (bleu,.'. and ovety other rift . f 7fen'.•,i to him. in his endeavors !•• hurl les soverei !n from her ti to ,,•. et to tutu the hearts of her people tc from 1., r. and, as she bent low b, . KEPT HOME �RU . ll her,.,..t were fila„ fore the. succus e, with tears. 'Prue loyally rose in her heart. and she thanked Heaven once stere that, she hnil been saved from what !teemed to her worse than HA- E'S 3FRUP LINSEED and TURPENTINE nnv11'f" hn'o spoken , nl_nlinst C11h(I DR. C OF z With Coughs and Colds, and Paronto Ara Proving tho Wonderful Curativo Pawar of When grown people nestle t their eilrrclate and nllow thein to def•!en into serious diseases, they hate no one to blame but thctltaelves. With children It is different, be- cause they do not realize the seri- ouene 8 of n neglected cold nor the means of obtaining cure. and many a child, as he grows older and finds himself a victim of pneumonia, cote 8umplion, brunch:Lis, asthma 1r throat trouble, cannot but see thal his {intents w.v,' responsible for ne- glecting treatment whet his nil- m,alf began In the form of n cold. '1'o ,ley the schools have many e vnc::nt rest on account of coughs noel colds, and ninny children who arc there should be nt }tome. What treatment are these rhiidren g.'tting?t Do their parents Iraliee the serious- ness of neglecting to cure a cold? Have they proced the merits of Dr. ('he!sr.'s Syrup of 1.in`eed and Tur- pentine mss a cure fur cough,' and rattle, bronchitis. (rot t. w-h'.cptng cough, ane. all klndrrd 1:i? Very tunny hat's, for '.` .te '. 1111 oration ter 1)::m►• ..int ,ung c ween, or led the hearts of her peo- ple from her. She wined to her- scif n half sad smile. It seemed so disr•n»cs thnt has nnytlen n the strange that she, who WAS once. &- sale of hr. Chase's Syrup 01 Linseed stin' i t1 he n lecturer ngainst roy- nnd '1'urp: nt;ne. ally. Otonld now be presented to Mrs. (f(orge lirt.wn; 71 Harbor() her fin ' ty. Street, Toronto, writes:— "Our chit• (To ile Continued.) dren have teen very subject to croup. and we hate found thnt Pr. C'hnse's Syrup of i.inseed and Tur pentinc has alwnea brought. quick relic f. By using it at the first sign London iehysirinns are interested in of trouble the disease Is checked at once. We alnays k(ep this remedy n eingular case (•f n neat who pos- ts the house, and, in fart, icel that ve-:yvs ease duel 114.evry strength, yet we could not do eithont it. Ile arts no muscltlnr development. The also use it for coughs and colds with men, a German, Herr Ceorg Lettl, excellent results, and recommend ft : is only live feet in height and weighs to our friends." but 140 penia, but he can lift some- to careful when you busy to ICA thing like twenty -Ove tines his ownh that the portrait and signature or wcighC. The world's record lift is Dr. Chase nre on the wrapper If en send tho children to the et ere warn therm not to accept nnv imitn- ti•.n or vu1,stitntien. ('h.ldr• n like to tnke Pr. Chase's Syrup of Lin - reed nerd 9'urpentlne, and there is no remedy so prompt and effective. 25 cents a bottle; family etre, three tithes i s much. 60 cents; at all deal- ers, or Vdmanson, Dates . Co., Toronto A HUMAN FREAK. s a protective i netlluun, o ing the dirt aloof and isolated from the skin surfaces, so that it can bo HEART OUTSIDE BODY. readily shaken oft or taken off. The _ brushing, washttrg and combing of Beat for Sixteen Days—Other this hairy coat constitute the in- Freaks of Heart. sect's toilet making. A child was born lately with its One of the nClclent toilet articles heart placed, instead of in the place is the tongue. Armee] the sites where nature intended it to be, on of this organ curter a scrim of rid- the outride of the left breast. Aad ges covered with hemispherical bon- there, in full view of all who chow Hes. The ridges are chitinous, and to obicrt0 it, performed its rune - thus by greater hardne: s are fitted tions-ixteen days before the little for the ase,' of a brush. When eat- life, begun under such extraordinary ing this structure rasps off minute conditions, was snuffed out. particles of solid foods, so fitting The doctor who attended the case them for the stomach. For toilet says he can offer no explanation of A POSITIVE LUXURY not • mere drink. LSD 11 Ceylon Tea is Pure, Delicious and wholesome. Sold only in sealed lead packets. Black, Mixed or Natural GREEN. By all groc- ers. Received the highest award and gold medal at St. Lotus 1,100 pounds, yet Herr Lett) lifted an anchor weighing 850 pounds, wllh four men standing on ft, thus exceeding the record by about 450 pounds. Ile ran pull backward n 1R ,horse -power car running at n speed of 85 miles per hour, nud standing beteven two eight hoer., power cars placer) hack to bnck, he holds them together by ohm. strengt h of finger-tips when their engines nre working at hill speed, I uses it serves as both sponge and tiruxh, and takes up hits of dirt not otherwise removed. In short. ants use their tongues as dogs and cats do, for lapping up food and licking clean the body. One is continually reminded as he watches the tiny creatures at their toilet, of the WAR NOW LESS DEADLY SOME STARTLING FACTii ND FIGURES. In the Days of Hand -to -Band Fighting Terrible Slaughter Resulted. It is a curious and paradoxical thing that the intprotement in arras hes actually made star less and not more destructive; and that in these days of magazine rifles, Maxims, and far-reaching, quick -firing cannon tLW slaughter is much less than in the 1 older days of tuubtetit, of bows and arrows, and of hand -lo -hand conflict. And not only this, the wars of to- day aro Mercifully much shorter and thus less sanguinary than they were in centuries that are gore. f on the right side. One Oldie ideal Ender the old primitive conditions experienced u change of heart, it ' of fighting, when gunpowder was un- moving from the left side over to known, wars drift tui on for genera - ti, ns, even for centuries. For a hundred ;ears almost. without inter- mission England waged war with Scotland and aiso with France; and Origin of Commonest Forms Not the 'Thirty Years' War and, luter. Hard to Explain. the Seven Tears' War are epochs in y or ; The numerals C. and M. are prole rniiitalhisty. The •American Rebellion, though ably from the Latin centum 100, fought with muzzle -loading gone, and aline 1,000 of which they are lasted mile- four years; a year later 'the initial Letters, although various Prussia brought Austria to her ingenious theories tend to show that knees in seven shunt week., and a they originatiel in X., the oldest of generation ago crushed the power of all such symbols. 'Phis X. itself had , Franco in eight mouths. The United its beginning in a process similar to States only took ninety days to that seen to -day. where the old -rash- ' three h Spain: azul even the late war iot1ed method of tallying a ship's in South Africa, though it covered r:•rgo is in use. The checker chalks over two and a half }ears, would upon the )catch combing, or else: have been considered absurdly short %%here, a single upright line for each in the days of (quantity or article passing out or in • CIIECY AND AG1NCOUIRT, 10 the hold. Tien, when these up- i Then look for a moment at the Ler- rirht siroke:s reach ten, he draws a ' riblo slaughter In the old days, d;agerhhnl lice scenes the lines, thus' when men met in hand-to-hand con- muking X. in rough fashion. , Ilict and quarter was neither asked To express half numbers in the nor given. In the Battle of Chalons, Itnnuuns, in some eases, simply hale- fought A.D. 451, between Attila, ed the symbols representing the king of the Huns, and the Roman whole. 'Thus the upper portion of , legions under Aetius, not fewer than X. ,:tool for five. turd has given us 100,000 men were slain; indeed. the V., whilst L. is the lower part. of the number of killed has been place oblong C., and, as half of 100, - as high as :100,000. At Hastings stands for fifty. D. is similarity :30,000 men fell, though the numbers said to be a moiety of the ancient engaged were small compared with rounded M those in mo'lern battles, At the Metaurus ilasdrobal•s Carthaginians SOMEWHERi•: BF.'I'WEEN. stere practieilly annihilatei. At "mighty few people," said Uncle Aquae Sextiae and Vercellae the Eben, "is 8s good as dee. portends hordes of Cimbrt and Teutons were to be, nor as bad as deir enemies completely exterminated by Marius; 'en]."a hundred Seers later 30,0'10 Ront- �_�♦ nrs were wiped out by Armieius in 'l'eutol.erg I•'oiest; and Flt O)O The rant of a modern battleship an citizens of the Greek (-1(108 were weighs forty tone slain in it single day by the soldiers It is netbnieting what a lot of of Mithridatcs. At Crecy there fell edecating pe07)10 can stared without 1,200 French knights, 1.400 gentle - g. t t ing arty etittvttion, sten, and 4,000 men-at-arms, besides :10,000' of inferior rank; 10,000 men were killed at Agincourt and 14,000 were taken prisoners; and about 10,- 000 then, too, were slain out of the . 76.000 who fought at I•'lodden; while wet: of the 100,000 men engaged in the tierce nuc} sanguinary Battle of 'Fowl on :3t;,ln)0 are,eontputed to have (nll,n in the battle and pursuit. 111 these old -1i me battles, where the weapons were hoes and arrows, swords 811(1 battle-axes. and where no weapon was used which could be relied on to kill at a distance of more t han A FEW iHUNDRED YARDS the mortality frequently rose to ono in every three or four fighters en- gaged, and sometimes exceeded this enormous percentage; whereas in molt dern battles, with ttertpons far more deadly, a proportion of one in twen- ty iet rnrely reached. At Alma the casualties were fifty- four per 1,000, or, roughly, one to 18.5; at Inkertau they were one in twenty: ut Sedan, one in sixty• nt Grovclotte, one in 111; and at rat_ cr1uO, one in ewe• ty-one. In the ('riot lin War it took 89,000,000 )'h(,ts to kill 120,000 Ines -742 shots to dispatch one roan; and nt Cite -al- tar '2 ,:3S7 shot and si.ell found on - lye 1,:141 human target;, and of these 1111111y were only wounded. During the 1'ranco-German War one lighter wits disabled by every 25.1 shots. Fromm these ligure:ll it seems clear that /the improv. molts in death - Meng w•eaf.ots late certainly led to n dimirislie i slaughter in war, o r null t%hich w 118 long ago pr edieteul ' by experts, the reason peace that with lenge 41IWe and accurate tire - arms the fighting must nee.S:Sa fly be at corrc:sponciingly greater dis- tances. the right side. ROMAN NUMERALS. 'he phenomenon. It is merely it, fantasy of nature, and he believes there is no .•' 'lar case on record. He says the heart was caret Illy ex- amined and measured, and was found to be a trifle above the normal site for an infant. ,lust below the exposed organ there actions of his cat and dog at the w•a5 it Shia 11 hole through the side. 1 fireside. 'I he heart had evidently worked its Often one may see nn antsuddenly way through before reaching the pause in the midst of the duties of growth it showed itt birth, because field ur formicary and begin t e the cat its- was not sufficiently Targe comb herself. Isere is a mountain to admit of the heart being replaced motrtal-maker driven to the utMo't where nature intended it to do its tervour of ac4ivily. Suddenly she work, even were it possible to per - drops out of the gang 01 fellow- { form such an operation. workers, and mounting a nearly Other queer cases of freaks of the. clod, poses upon her hind legs and heart are on record. One man was blies teeth, tongue and conch. lee: Ifound to have his heart on the a few minutes the aim of being Is I fourtt hc,lns w t}► sitle. Anltherhenrted aud other and upon that act. Around her 1 organs of the thorax entirely ex coign of vantage sweeps to and fro pe=ed, there being no chest wall the bustling host bufldere, with all I formed. their energies bent upon reconstruct- ! A man teas found tonnvo a slit ing their ruined city. She combs ing heart that shifted from side to I on unconcernedly. I side. Another lived six years with his heart exposed through n bole --i— I in his side. Yet another had a heart that grew so large that tt nn- Tfe—I can n ever think of the right . any failed to perform its functions. thing to say at the right. time! She —lfhy don't you try saying the right thing sometimes even if you get it in the wrong place? A man in Massachusetts wens found tr nave two hearts, two sets of r ihs, and a double breast bone. One heart was 00 lite left side, the other An Incubator Without Cash Until October, 1905 There is big money to be made in raising chickens with in Incubator. Canada exports annually millions of chickens to the United States and Great Britain. 'The consumption of poultry in Canada is increasing rapidly and the poultry dealers complain that they cannot get enough poultry to fill their orders. One woman bought a No, s Chatham Incubator the first of March —site had five hatches by July first and had four hundred 'plump, sturdy chicks. In six months her Incubator had paid her $100.00, several times its cost. A Chatham incubator should pay for itself each hatch. We have perfected an Incubator and brooder. We believe it is now absolutely the best in the world. We have sufficient capital behind us, and we are out for the entire business in incubators. We know that there is n0 other incubator that can approach the kl Chatham Incubator This is our proposition : To demonstrate our absolute confidence in the Chatham Incubator we will send one to you, freight prepaid, and you make your first payment in October, 1905. The fact that the sell our Incubators in this manner guarantees them to the fullest extent, Thirty days' trial is a delusion and a srxtre. If you have good luck you may get off one hatch in that time, and even then you are uncertain, and if you reject the machine you will have to pay the freight both ways. But with us you send in your order and we ship the machine prepaid. When n it arrives, if it seems all right, start your hatch, and we will give you until October, 1905, before you have to pay a cent in cash. We positively guarantee that the machine is a good hatcher. Every machine should sell a dozen, and we will, on no account, allow a machine that is defective to remain in any neighborhood. Mention 16ie paper. WHAT SIX CHATHAM INCUBATOR USERS HAVE TO SAY: 4ho incubator sent me le working esetedingly well. It is fere easily operated, and tae far has required at Ieatiea for on'y a few minutes per day. The fat lot of eggs. 110, en weal■atien 1 found that b3 were not fertile, too others were broken uridentalh•, and 1 had 61 chicks or about 91 per cent et the fertile *IrR'• The second trial of 110 rave me 51 Bring chicken*. The breeder gives neatly good satisfaction. The young broods are doing well. You, truly, .1. F. Jo11`i'4TON, Editor ieaumington Poet, Leamington, Ott. The No, incubator you lent me le all right, wallah -heal oal of 11,9 ferlils eggs, 102 good strong chi, ks, and rho brooder uteri them all. w'e had in the Incubator at the mune time, in the o: her tray, 41 duck eggs and :11 goalie P4 (0, from 80:01 we gel 39 ducks awl 31 Keret; U.ta1.71 from 75 egle, also hatched 6 tort"), at the same thus that that ti -n egg, were In. We rr•' amen t the (•i'atharu Incubator .,'I Brooder to ase the lest sad tautest to hath, under all cin umarantes, of any Your No. 2 Chatham ireuniter has other an he. We have handled four Riven very go -4 return, the Ant hatch, other makes, In our poultry biteras Out of 69 eggs, 1 had 41 chicks. i was which we run on a large a ale at Riffle, rather air., I of entire the emits, and 90 1 have •,sed your No 1 In'ubatr for keep's( barred i'lymouth Rocks, rekin d;d nut. All the machine beat sten the three hitches), and am tae well pleased Danko tarsusu.d Muarmth 0h eke came, I we" Potty had not 1illed with it that 1 ordered • NaS which your ilronze Turkeys. '..urs truly, D. A. 1:. N',tl re. rmmend your Incubator to agent, Tumhull,brought to -day. My ADAMS, Pirtle, Mtn. env nr,blan. 1'01M tncert!yy• 3(05. third hatch rams oft y,terday with 112 The No. 2 Irctb.tor 1 bought from MARUAKET SLISTO:11, w•hlt ter.e'ood, chicks out of i15 eggs, We have also a you le all you re'ommended It to be. I ASK Cnalhem raining Mi11 which rives goad put in 101 eggs sad after testing out the m ,eta^tion. i will not loss an ripper infertile ewes1 have 72 chicks. 1 Zed Lunde of recommend!ur that ('bat5111e the mae►ine Stet clam!. every particular machines to my friends. You, respect- sad easy to tun, if dfr,Mlonssrelollowed (11117, MRS. SiDNET 81IITII, scotiaad,I cCNRY CIiA66nwuesp respectfully, MILS. Out Chatham Incubator; ;t:11 Brooders have every new improvement worth while in an incubator or brooder. The incubators are made with two walls case within case, of dry materel that leis been thoroughly seasoned in our lumber yards. They are finished in antique oak, are bl:::t soi:d as a rock and will stand any amount of wage for years. '1 hey are fitted with a perfect steel and brass regulator that insures a successful Ilat' h. There has never before been tush an offer as this made in the wh.lc world. The sooner you take advantage of ti:is offer, the more time you will have before October, 7935, to make first payment. Cut off the coupon and send it in today for our bo,klet on the way to raise chicker.q, what it costs and your profit. You will obtain all information regarding the Chatham incubator. 1 w1.1 to let 3w know of my =mess with your Incubator. Out of 114 eggs I got 74 chicks, and out of my second atch 1 Rot 94 from Ito r(ga. 1 find the mu•hine • pure rur.eso If run accor,ling to dire. floes. The brooder Is a wondee and I have not lost a chick as yet, and they are almost feathered. Yours truly, JOHN 11. 11cKI NNON, Colling8 nal, Ont. The Manson Campbell Co. Limited DEPT. 34 CHATHAM, Offr. Manufacturers of Chatham Incubators and Brooder's Imo r'but ing t`"arebeneee at Montreal, ciao., Breados,Kata.s ( sigary. A:ta., New Thesttataster, H.C., Halifax. IfJ>. Vacuities at c•hatbam.Ont., Detroit, lie. Also Manufacturers of rho FarnonSOampbSU lftaaalsslfills and Cbatbam ihrna Beals* eeere-- _ 1 Nese P. O. /dew Area Regs.y Patton as hums to prA.a. M, CAM!'fELL rANNIN(i MILL CO. Welted CIiATNAM, ONT. DEPT. 34 iter.' err. 1 prof Aseeriptle.Catotes :e ni the Chatham [negate, with all lnforrnatlos alw,.l 7011/ epeeist °ter, w hereby soots► will be paid este (metier, 1106. WHY HAIR CURLS. Differences in Form of Individual Hair Accounts l'or it. (1f late years by the microscopic e.l tidy of sections of hair, n n.I e t its ultra. ate seructure anti 0' ::, n1. , anthropologists have ail it ed 1,t a satisfncter;y beef, upon which to cleesify the ditfertnit races 111 'han- k!, u. I 11(11)1 this study we letter► ti::.t the three chief races, the Cauca- en. the 'dongolinn and the Ethiopilt',. ex- hibit well marked character i',t f. a io the structure of tie it leer. Tho Caucasian is, in born fine, n rind dark hair, essentially eve' in tee tion tette times even kidney -shaped. 'i his I. ,,,is Itself to gentle cur's or %veteu. 'I he straight hair of the Mongolian always a dull black. is alrloet rte. dint in section, and hene t keep♦ to 1h•• ce Iindrical form. The 47112Wy Etleopinn hair is most eecolt: y i lil'itical, rr [detest Oat (.1 se.•llon, se that it curia li!,,' n has': etl •.t,.1 fee's 8s Wool dune, end other hair will tut The variation ante/great. Individuals is far more a hatter of treatment and habit. and degree of curl than a decp's'ated ese.•ntiel difference. 1 -- --4- I IIF: NII01.1: Customer—Why 410 you sell this brand of shirts chili? Swell linber(iasher—Ileen'r' a it's faahlonable; in fact, the I.ltrmf,.*h- tunable brand. Customer--fieleel? Whet stn' 'It sem? Swell liai•,erda.hcr—'The feet that we ae.l It.