The Huron Expositor, 1915-09-03, Page 6Pea
-The iv laivii lc'
he, Kitstriaition,
rr E
Lestowea was car
I -About 25
f _
a vote of an to
12
'
Mitchell, freer
•v $12,000 Icor.
ydra. power - in_
on Saturday by
-ea have. arrived in
szt eacLI the purpose ot, uitontingeeyfirrzr.rfor.
wk_o__LU Wm. Forreteter
. Uel p
The crop is good, net
Her Work—Found the. weather Is anyOing but favorable
. k for pulling. I. f , .
'Novel Wav =wilting to Jit
Pte. -Preen Tay*,•
e
1 with the: firet Ar
trenehee, and have ecetved their halt -
tem of fire. .
' --Actieg MinisterOf MIlitia-Loug-
i
heed hats notated C anty Clerk David -
on
sthat ibe -0 ve nment bees placed
an order for a
"1 stiffereed terribly
and backache and
got so oak that I
couki hardly de my
•work. When 1
Vitashe4 my dishes
to
the Boor I would get
soweak that' would
have to get a drink
every few Ininntage
suid before I did My
dilating Iwould have .
Me down. rgot
*at my folks thoright.I-watt
to tonsumption. One day I
Wee a paper blowing aroUnd.,
the and I picked it up and read, it
Saved from the Grave,' and.
hat Lydia E. Pinkham's\Vegeta-
nipound has done for worn I
threy husbaixl and he s
Whit doretyou.try ItT' so I did, and
taken two bottles sl felt
and Pesti taentylinabod, don't
neit.an mire, and be skid You, had
bettir takeAt a little longer anyikr.'
So rtoolt it for dune months and got
wellland.-atrong." --lir& ALONZO E.
SAXON, VSCUMiNith St, Adrian, Afich.
INA Will Enough to Work
ctheue la hidden the tragedy
of veiny a ;housekeeper or wage
earnirwho ports herself and is'etten
IselpOur to ppert a family, cin meagre
-ther in homm'effice;fac
tory' shop, 'store or Idtchen,' "Wm*
shouki rem ber that there is one tried
and tattle edy for the ills towhichall
;rein= no, and that is Lydia E.
notable Compound. It
t vigor which makes work
easy, TheLydia E. Pinkham Medicine
leYnae Mugs
protietea
4.771,4 -Lczaz •‘-,)
A Christian college -home,
healthful situation.
Forpeespeetesandtermsevritetheitteeleal
ILLWarneriM.A.,D.D.,Stnrliemas,Ont,
63
CREAM WANTED
We have our Creamery now in fait
operation, and we _want your petaon-
age. We are. prepared' to pay you
thehighest prices for yoarcream, pat
you every two weeks, weigh, sample
and test each can of cream carefully
and give you statement of the same.
We also stipply can free of charger
and give you an honest business deal.
Oalitn and see us or drop tis a card for
particurars
The Seaforth Crea mery
Seaforth Ont
'Wife Ine Stratford
Weep we.nt oVersea
t from the 84th
33atta1ion, as the are now in the
gone, moluded
gift of eight.
-Rev. J. Arehte
iber of machine
eh _were Perth's
uer, who was ac-
eneed to pre.aelelbe• he StratfordlPree-
bytery at its jest meeting, het re-
ceived a call frone the Preeleyterlan
cotigregatxm In Dr •n. 5Ie is a on
:of Mr. Wro, Twer, Fellartaa. and ,si
entetteget4ked grad' . of Mitchell
1 High 'ghobi. - il
.: -The rrarrutge ot .two former Well
known- eitieens• of 11tchetl took piece
-
tit Toronto laint w4ek. Miss Lttella,
d_augIhiter of Mr. an, .14*. T. Couch,
and Jarrete Norman • agleam, Mae; Bee.;
of Edironton, w • married at the
lerides •lieree, the ev. S. E. ‘Couch,
her uncle, off -Lela g. , ,
-The results -of he standing fleid
. cepa- competition w, ch was held un-
der the auspicee of the Stratferd:Ag-
ricultural Society re given. below:
First, Robert ,Shorc op, parliugfordi 82
1-2- second- Alex. 'tson, Oarlingford,
82; third, Wert fr., ood, St. LPiuts, 81
:-17v 2 n forthJoitin array,- St. Paula
i81 1 2; fifth, G e Herold, .Strat-
-ford, 74; sixth!, g ' ry Stewart, St.
paella, 78 1 2; seve John Fraser,
'Stratfoid, 78 points. .
e -A good -number c Llstowel's young
men have answer the cail of the
,Enerere, the. total ing neventy -five,
Including the folio lig Who ,reoently
Joined the Areriy Iv1c1ical Corps: Amb-
rose Moore, Bari ry, genry Zilliax.
-.PItne,B., Fred et Olen Pb.m13 Chan
• .
, Tatham, Irwin Bricer, Clarence Arn-
old, Thomas Klity',1Ben Torrance, 11:
.W, Patterson,- W1111a4r. Grahatn, Albert
Hamilton, Thoatate u.t,tle and George
. McCalltink BtElides these enlisting, in
the Army M.edical ,10rele, four from
Instowel have. been killed, in action.
four wounded, one iti rcisain.g, nine 43xe
at the front, e1ghten in England, 'six
„en route and twel e lin training -tat
Loadoi and eleew .1
-St. Marys 'has tia40 a nurober: of
, auto Ancidents reed, tlY. On Sunday
evening Mr. War: p 41.tute, by great
preisence of mind, leeeaped with his
lire. NVJelle irotoringlIonk Widder'etreet
-east, be earr.e upon."some loiter. road.
The _road was way, ow, alongside
of the river, and. th ', recent -rains and
heavy traffic had, tr 'd.e WO deep ;guts.
Endeavoring to get, the car out - of
'ilteruts the car served and turned
'turtle tato, the 'dee ditch- alongside
the -flyer. Just as . Pullyblaink no-
ticed the car reelin , he junvect -andi:
allowed, the car- to turrisle into the
ditch. It .was a fortunate, thing he 'hail '
preSerice of rcintt at tillis loritical point,
as he Would, no doubt, have been pin-
,i,ed beneath.; the er. The ear. was
hauled to his igarag in ,laevery rr.•iteh
Idazraged tonditioh.-- t '
Miy froa.iflea.
Frei Wrng.Abition •
el
Unless the liver is working properly
you may look forward to a great many
troubles arising- such as biliousness, con-
stipation, heartburn, the fising and
souring of food which leaves a nasty
taste in the mouth, sick headache,
jaundice, etc,,, "
Mr. H6ward Newcomb, Pleasant Har-
bor, NS., writes: "I' have hadsick
headache, been b4i.ous, and have -had
pains after eating and was also troubled
with a bad taste in my mouth every
morning. I used four vials of your
Milburn'saa,axa-Liver Pills, and they
cured me. The best praise I can give'
is notenouob for th.eki."
Milburn's I,axa-Liver Pills are 25ce
per vial, 5 vials for 81.00; at all dealers
o.r mailed direct on receipt of price by
The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto,
Ont, _
til Ths4: 01 Day.
-
Interesting Sketc ea of The
Early Days of Se fort* and
chilly, Taken P rn •tae Files
of TheEx sltor. •
Seaforth; iuiy 20th, 1894.
Mr. F. Falkner left on 1Wednesday
for Toledo, where h has' secured a
1. good position, as a finisher.
James Gray, well 'yawn ithroughout
this county, and wio uetially. made
Seaforth Ins theadqua tars, died few
days ago at the Hose of 1Refuge in
Strathroy. Hel was a est 14kfitoi and
). competent accountant
I Mr. Samuel Hill, orf Clinton, has
deeded Toronto property worth $10,000
to the. Salute:vie air* '
At the residence of the bride's 'moth-
er, *IC -Mop, on by Rev, J.
e. Henderson, of ale/lean, assisted by
Rev. D. Forrest, of W.afto.n., iMr. W:
ham E. Hoggartle, of .11ensail, taami‘
Maggte Shrason, {laughter of the late
Alexander Simpson, of McKillop..
Edll wheat was teeling at 55 cents
on thie Seaforth arark* thle week,oats
at 36c, butter at 13c; eggs at 8e per
dozen and new bay at $8.50 .per ton.
Messrs. Scott Bros.; purchased
' tbe Seaforth electric !light plant and
will l'Unit. after Septprben ,lat. •
Ali. Robert Loganihere-sold the :resin
dance forree.rly occup ed by. the late
`^
When you pay for good fruit, and spend a lot of time o
It, you naturally watit to be sure that your jelliea
preserves will turn out just right. _You cai be, if you
Sugar.
Absghttely pure, and always the-s-ame, REDPATH Su
has for sixty years proved most dependable for preservi
canning and jelly -making.
Itis just as easy to get the best -and
well worth vebile. So tell your grocer
a must be REDPATH Sugar, in one
of the packages originated for
REDPATH--
2 and 5 lb, Sealed Cartons,
10, 20,50 and 100 lb. Cloth Bags,
er
nd
se .
Cheeneat
ey has
farne lead la co to toile -
to
rentele.
At the reeidence of thejaricle's fath,-
Egrroatitillle, on 3tiler 18thi, by Bev.
Neil Shaw', )eforit-
ganrare -Beals Seaforth, to Miss
Charlotte, daughter of Mr,. Robert
Powell.
* * •
Seafarthl July 27tie, 1894,
(Henry Mentete, of the eseborid
.aoncleasioa, L. R. Se Ttlakeraitribill de-
livered the fillet load of mew 'evfatta
at Ogilvles' mill bete on. Wednesday,
July- 28t1t It wet% an excellent eantple
and weighad 68 1-2 pounde etantatird.
• D. Nitwit ihas eold. the oat-
e..*1 air. Walter Thompson, of
• .
• deteree beattae shif)ped 26,000
patinae of wool, OAS week.
Mr. Thomas Henderson hate sold het
60 -acre. farm. on. the 10th conceeston
of 'McIallop, to Mr. John Dodds or
$40.00. Mr. Herdensen alas since bought
a 100 -acre farm, lbeetig the old '8utbier-
zlaad place, in Eullett, from Mrs. 'Seth-
erland, Of -Seaforthi, for $5,500 and wilt
arove to that townehtle. t
Mr. C.haeles Lowrie, one. of the plot
neer reetdents of Hallett, but rest -
dent of Seaforbh, for the paned 15
yearn, died very suddenly at this aiorre
here on Tuesday, afternoon last his
76th year.
e., •
' Settfortht August 8rd, 1894.
Mr. CblarleiSe' Murray, -ail the 8rdeon-
cession of Tucketerrithi, was 'kicke4l in
the *dolmen by one' of his horsea. on
Friday teat, -and idespite the best 'medi-
cal zed., be :passed away the following
eventng. Ire Veep 84 years collage and
unmarried. " -
Masora. Alexander Davtdsen, Stephen
Lair and -John Turner, of this town
left on Wednesday lest ona pleasure
trip tra the old country. , •'
Mr. And,reve Sutherland hes gone to
Thedford to take charge of the pest -
office there, . f ;
• 1
Senior -0i, Augunt 1.7th, 1894.
On Tuesday of last week tihere was
quate, an exciting time down the rail-
way track, east of thle townett. spark
from- a locomative got Into sonte grain
On the Larne of Mr. JohneDevereuk and
swept over a, fteld burning a number
of loads of tants and a good deal of
fencing and it was only withf'ahe help
of the flax mill betide and the 'Messrs.
'Coleiran,'S teen from. the foundry that
the fire was prevented, from npreading
to the adjoiningefarrris.
' Dr. B. W. Bruce Smith of ethts town,
Vas been appointed medical officer at
Orchard House, Harralton Insane Aey-
Ara. • r . • „.
Mr. S. Dicleson, Jr., Miss Dickson and
Mass -MeGatighey, of Ingersoll, had' h
wonderful escape from eerroue or per
t atal vnjury on Saturday' last.
They k- ere dreting 'down Main street,
when a wagon cut in front of them
and the l'iole of the Phaeton catight
it the back wheel of the wagon and
was token off, allinetng the rig to
eon upon the, homes' 'wells andteausing
therm torten: a -way. 1
.• Litany for Armyand Navy
God of our fathers, at whose call
We now beforethy footstool fall, s -
Where grace bath mitIde our Empire
- -- Ittrang, • • .
Thiteugh love of right .tenel hate of
*reitg.
thee Klerk htenrenee plead with
Thee . I
Fox Bittairre' eauae, err IMO": and spa.
Not for the -lust of war we fight,
But for the art-ter:ph of the•teight;
The tstalfe we hate is on us thrust,
Our earls are pure, ourcauseis just:
So, strong in faith,- we plead with
Thee • .. , .
For Britaincaose. On land, and sea.
Asleep ibene,a.th Thy ample dome.
WWI many a tenderedream of home -
Or 'eialarging In the dast and glare
'trade waerbolas hurling .through the
air- .
In this dark hour we plead with
'
'. Thee I •
' For Sri:tab-as BOIT% on land. -and eea.
If wounded an ithe, dreadtel fray ,
Be ThOu their corrfort and,. 'their
tay ; -
If Klying, may they, in their pain,
Behold, the Lamb for sinners elaAn;
jel
In thie darki. hour we pplead With
allief/ c ' ' ' .
: For AT'. tain'e sons on 'land and sea,
And sieo , 0 bleated fArInce of Peace,
33r1etg in ethe tdayiet when war shall
cease,
And men- aa brothers shall ualte
Tot fal the World with loveand light ;
Till then, 0 Lord,- We plead with
Thee , , •
For Beitaintetcense on land and eee.
Manitoba and Northwest Notes. -
-AP thie\resu4 Of one 'months' 'oper-
ations, the city of Winnipeg paid. for
5.429 deed Tata under the tenecent
-bonus areterre .
-Jarrsis treockart, age 29, elde,st on.
of Williaxr.1 Lockart, of Lenore, Man.,
idled on August 19th. William' Lockart,
father, -is one of the pioneers of.
Lenore district.
-A Russian nameAll WacSik, whi13
working With a four-horee team on
the farm of Clarence M., McNangiiton,
near Warren, Inn.' was killed by are
electric bolt which.„,i,i‘Aso killed, three
of the homes. ,
-The first load, Of new wheat was
delivered at Portage la Prairie, to be
Lake of the tifoodis mill by Henry
Voss, of Burnside. It- graded No kj.
Northern, and averaged.25 bushels to
the acre. • (
-Thi crop was nnearly ell cut %in
Crystal City district, Man., on Angust
24th'. The ikeid will be tr.uch better
than expected and the quality excel-
lent. .A. light frost darn -aged the gar-
derts -somewhat, but !grain is all at of
danger, from. 'frost at least. Crystal
City, district ha.s been in- the -.dry belt
for a cople of months. .
-After, 22 years' service with the
city of Winnipeg, Edward Green, care-
taker of the city hall, has re-signed
and Will apply for a pension._ Though
80 years of age, Mr. Green Ls an per-
fect physical cal -Anion, and he is only
resigning eccourit et his wife's ill -
health. He has been at the • city hall
for 16 yeas.
. -George God dar d , of Minitones,
Man., areeyed in Winnipeg recently on
.pleasure bent, with :$300 in his pockets.
One nialat he drove outsto Tranecona,
with the better part of the amount in
hls possession. In thee provincial police
station a fevr days ago he stated that
he rerrembere-d ependIng $150 In one
of the heuees of the elletrict,,but saw
or heard nothing antra later in the
riorning when he vieke up lying ,On
the. -prairie "flat broke"
dertes Duthie, of Ilartney,
Man.- died on August 2(ith., of cancer
of atoetach after very brief
'
Unbearable froth' indlitastion
Restored bytTruineettives"
MELLeetenGAILREAU
Rochon.P.Qs 3an, 14th, 1915.
fq suffered f9r, many years with.
ierrioie indize.dion and Constifiediol. I
became, thin, and, Astable. 1 had
frequent dist( .spells,44. became SO
run down *never thought 'would
get wellagat
Aneighboradvinea me to trY' `Fruit"
a-tives' 1 dill so and to the surprise
of tray doctor, I began to improve and
headviseffineiagvonAttith ,
I continued this medicine aid all my ,
Indigestion and Constipation wait
relieyed. I:consider that 1 04we my life
to 'Fruit-a41.mA' and 1 want to say to
those who suffer from Adigestion;
Constipation or rfeadachesi 'try 'Fruit-
divf ihis,lozieWriefinsedicine
afair choke and you will get well the
same as I did". ,
-100IUNE GAUDREAU..
At all allni! IM4dealelirsf9rorisen4t#416pos'4"F25e.
postpaid by
Fruit-a-tives LimitedssiNtawa.,..
nabs, although ate lhad. been suffer-
ing-frone inflammatoryriSeurnatisne for
inetea Months.: The suddenness of her
death ewe ate a severe shock. to the
district; She ware alta•earla settler if
the dintaict and highly esteemed. She
leavesa hitsband and tour children. to .
rottur.n. _her low.' The family reelde 5
millets front Hartley, - •
Frank BOdetyrone of the axid-
eatresident*, in the -Macdonald dis-
trict, Manitoba, palmed away on Au-
girst 24tal, at the -age of 54 years.
The dgeeased wns'iborn at Olra.lkeRiver,
Ont., came went- line 1881; and twee Mare
tied tohhet late FranktBoddy in. Port-
age la Prairie. They eettled in Mac-
,
donald 2& yeatiel ago, and , `botb1 'She
and flier husbeald, who died last year,
Ifdvn been. respected an the
correnurat,y 'during_ Oil* long- sojourn
We're. Dwane& Is Survived by three
Monis. #
a -Rev. Mx. Steteer, a German. Luthf-
eran pastor at .1;uslainel.;ISaska Is in
the cella_ at Xerronert. The _charge a...
gems hirri has not peen made known,
but it is eaigerlrethit -11e has been.
ditt tributing'neditione litertintrete,Mong
the "Genrati poinalettone.of the idistricti
It -in Sant alit Wore the -war there
were inntureraltie faittexte anaongethe
Gerran ispeantrig, people, but that now
the weekly -gathertrigia, atthe cl-urch
'have Inc eased itt eize.wondeefullY and
that meals are gove brought to the
meeting house: - (
-Mrs. S. M. afeIntyre, of Sanford,
an, died at the General Hospital,
tram the 'ei:fecte of iniaales received,
in a oarria,ge accident ,which occured
near Sanford, on Sunday, August 8t1.
sfrs. McIntyre was divingtrort(chureh
tn. company With Mrs. A. Moftatt, wife
of the Presbyterian Manister, of San-.
ford, when the horses took fright and
'bolted, anel both ladies were thrown
to the !ground:, laIrs. McIntyre was ren-
dered imconscioutenand was conveyed
to Winnipeg General thloapital with -the
least esoesible dLay. ears. Moffatt was
not -.seriously Injured. The deceased
lady W/34,5 a widow and a pioneer itt.
lber district About 30 yeare ago she
settled itt Sanford, where she was
highly esteemed for her excellent
I
-Anothiereold timer bf Mardetn.
dis-
trict,--Mwrdtba, in the pe-rson of John
A. Heredereacin passed 'away Sunday
morning at -eight, o'clock. Death was
attributed chiefly to old aa,
gthe de-
ceased, !being 84 years old. The late
Mr liendArison Was town 'La Ireland an.
1881, the kr:migrate/a tio Canada Lre 1850
end earrtee to aforden dIetelet in 1899.
ale was maiTled, the first, year the ar-
rived, in Canada• and all of ads child-
dren, three dau,ghters ,an two sons,
are 'still living. His wife predeceased..
him -about isle years ago, The (deCeased
was a Methodist in religioti and a
Conservitive in paliticer. The rnernbers
of the Orange SeseciatiOn. in which so-
ciety the h.as 'been an ardent member
Piece 1851, :had; charge. Of the funeral, -
wretch wee coV,ucteed, in the. Metleodist
cleuroh Wedineaday afternoon.
•
HEAVING THE LEAD
How a Ship Feels Its Way Over
the Bed of the Ocean.
'TAKING SOUNDINGS AT SEA,,
Por Deep Water Work Machines That
Carry 300 Fathoms of Wire and a
twenty-four Pound Weight Are Used.
Casting by Hand In Bad Weather.
"By the d -e -e -p,
The peculiar, long drawn out cry of
he leadsmen in the cbalus echoes out
as the cruiser gathers speed and be-
gins to nioye through the water.
"By the m -a -r -k, feurl
We watch the manalts' he twirlsethe
lead in the air, and reels off the.sound-
Ing with mathematical accuracy. He
etanding in the port "chains" -a
email platform, perhaps four feet
square, jutting out from one end of the
creiseits bridge. To us his position
seems rather precaeious, for his -perch
overhangs the dark water thirty feet
below, but the man himself -a season-,
ed petty officer -feels ',perfectly safe,
for he lean., his body against a canvas
"apron," traiet high, while his feet are
nrinlY nnifinet a wooden IniY se -
liven to tin? platforni itself,
But let us =tett lain iiS Ile makes a
mete He Brat 14Ves the cud of the lead
line is properly seetired and then pro-
ceeds to coil it up lu his right hand.
Wile line Itself, whitened by long use,
has sundry, little markt: nt various dis-
tances along it. At two fathoms
(twelve feetfrom a be lend are two
strips of leather. -while at three UM -
ones there are three. At live fathoms,
and again at fifteen, is npiece of tvhlte
bunting, at seven and seventeen fath-
limaa piece of rtel bunting. rind at ten
a Piece of leather witb a hole in It.
At thirteen atflionis toines a rag of
blue bunthig, while at twenty-three lei
Indwell bit of line, with two knots tied
hi it spliced into tbe lead line itself.
The lead line Is twenty-tive fathoms
long, while the lead secured to its end
Is about fourteen pounds In • weight.
The bottom of it is.hollowed out to re-
ceive the "arming' of tallow or soap,
and this allows the nature of the bot-
tom' to be ascertained, for the sticky
substatice will _tame to the surface
with particles of mad or sand, etc., ad-
hering tee It '
"Heaving the lead" ,looks easy
enough, and -anybody who is .aceus-
touted to doing it will say that it Is
quite simple: but It takes d lone time
before a nuth becomes n proficient
IetWsinan. A novice is apt to be fright-
cueen at the whirling fourteen pound
weight on the end of its line, atud if he
' Josef; heart and ()snits to give It that
peculiar little Ilea,k Which brings it fly-
ing round in a eirele it may fall per -
pandit -Wally in -close proximity ato
head. e
Heaving the lead may be ail righe
, enougla in good wcat hertint' in the
_winter, wben it is batwing hnrilorene
tug onsnowiug. It is anYthing but pleas-
ant. Thetdriving. rain 4111t1 snow search
out every portion of- the letithanatas
anatomy, evert though he may be wean'
Ing oilskins% While his hands get Dumb
veith cold until there is no feeling left
in them, •
The deep sea lead line, which was In
variably used for deep water work be-
fore the iptrodueilon of imtent sound-
ing- niethines and would still be used
if they. broke Liman, cone's& of 100
fetbotos of line- and u twenty-eight
pound leadit is marked up to twenty
fathonas itt tbe same way as the hand
teed lineand then at ttventy-firethir
ty-fire, forty-tive -etc, aithoms witb
one knot; and at thii ty. foi ty. fifts-.
etc., with three four or live knotsand
stfon, to the greatest depth of the line
The ship is usually stopped when
using the deep sea tinefor it takes a
considerable time for the lead to reach
the. -bottom.
-The patent soundbee machine con-
sists of 3(10 fathoms of thin photo wire
wound on a drum, and to the end of
-the wire.' is secured 4 twenty-four
pound lead, with, just above it a per
forated, brass 'sheath fitted With a cap._
Before aoundIng takes plaee a glass
tube open at one endand coated ou
the inside with a red chemical -com-
pound, is placed in' the brass sheath.
-
The' wire Is then- allowed to run out
natil the teed is on the bottom. and
as it descends the peessure forces the
water up the glass tube and turns the
red chemical Into a milky white color
for a certain distance up.
-. The lead is then hauled In by Aland,
or by a motor, ,and the 'depth is as-
certained by comparing the line of
demarcation between the teVo celors
in the glass tube with al wooden scale
marke4 in fathoms.
With these simple. but extremely re-
liable machines soundings canahe ob-
tained -at greater depths, and with the
ship traveling at a far greater speed,
than, with the hand lead and line,
though-, as already stated, tbe aldtr
method is always held in reserve.- -
London Answers.
• .Fantastio Fling.
"I understand your husband is learn -
'lug to dance?"
"No," replied airs. Glumsbee "That
report was started by some neighbors
who happened to be looking through
our baeement 'wpridotw just after- he
had dropped a hat cinder on ;his foot."
-• Washington Star.
Force of Habit.
consel in Guatemala tells a. story
of 'a man who ran a store In Retalhu-
nett Who had beeo ordering candles
from Geemeny for many years. Each
caadle was wrapped In blue paper.
One Shipment came wrapped in yellow
paper- -The people would not huy them.
In vain he argued and showed that the
candles were the same as he had been
selling. It was no use, and he could
not sell those candies until he sent to a
paper supply house In Guatemala City,
and bought sufficient blue .paper in
which to wrap them. Then he had no
d Iffiee I ty in selling them,
Dr. Wiley SayS American women are
the worst cooks in the world. ,Have
you never beeu in England. doe?
What hurts most when a man falls
on a slippery sidewalk is the thouglit
that people are laughing at Lana
e•
A tease and considerate wife is one
who tnever nenkee eugeestione while
her Itheband is patting n a siotepfpn
-
REMEMBER-- ! The --oir;
yoii pulcfi our chad's skin get.
into the system iust is surely as
food the child eats.'-_ Don't let
impure fats and 'mineral coloring
matter (such as many of the
cheap ointments contain) get
into your child's blood Pi Zam-
Buk is purely herbal. No po-
onous coloring. T,Joe it alwaYs.
50c. Box at All Druggists inurSiorts,
R I
,
•
.... .1.4-,
D RU q.4 4113 , POISONS.
. peptone Delusion of fits Safety of the
sPuriebe atecietableP
"Of nilTopuhus deltisionk as to drugs
and elieni.cal- eOmpoundS," said a mein-
lnent theiniSt, ,"perhaPs the most harnt-
ful Is that concerujoV medicines thate
are *purely vegetetiled There Seems to
be almost a universal ' impresaien'
among even the eduCated elasseS that
such medicines as .ire composed en-
tirely of vegetable *trupounde 'are on
that account harmlees;'F.while on the
other band any' mineral compound is of
ueceseity'pelsonous.--,-, .II, -
"Now, as, a Matter 101 fact, not Only
has the questim of 1whether a medi-
cine in vegetable -01.1 mineral not the
lightest relation to lilts poisepous or
tionpolsonous qualittg.ebut.in practical
medicine It -Would extern that most of .
the °Minim t:polattieteare 'vegetable.
Look at the poisons; Most commonly
known and note t their compositimi
rake stttyohniiie, aconite, opium, aleo.
hot, digitalle, -liyesethe and. ,cocaine.
Every singleeone et' these. is tpuftly
i
-vegatablat 'Yet meet 1..the deaths by
ehrimitt poisentiag. con e-treen- one of
these. ' The MOSt- owerful poison
knoWn, nit:tine' Kobernt one Bre-thou-
eandtle:ofta grainnettlwhielt Will kili a
grown lone Is made entirely- from the
cantor oil -bean. A i :
- in*: being P isoninis, are not
"On the-othetahanl mann tantsernist
sofan fa
anlyt hartateen but sotahhig. - pismutn,
a paremitietut, is grann in qt1ite large
quantities even to smiel ,babies for the
purpose of allaying inflammation.
wb Ile ircereti one .otti. the tteadenteetineon
P - •
1°411‘Steosda. is not only -,'.4pe, of ' the -M,4*_,
11/11VerS41 and haeraiosseofe mineral*
but It ts also largely. thaed_ in, our foods.
Salt Is it pure minetkialo' yet It is. not-'
only enecesdary to lifetebuti duet of the
:greatest cleansers nil& preservatives
-
known. Without ittlbatent andehane e
Would he impossible tuid-the luscious
dill pickle unknown.,
"01 course, theretetne ml.negaig that
are highly polsonOuSeauele 44 IfigrcArf,
Ett'Sellie and potassiont4o aertnixtecOmee -
inflations, but they,t4ree neither. more
deadly. nor more nuMenalitailnane the
vegetable poisons ee .111sealsoeinay be '
Raid in fever of the ,:neraip-Olsone It -,
je considered by many physielitnia 044
its action is much Mpeeecertetinethan-
its---vegetable brothereentliere vegetable,
poteons are mueh nitire uheerteln In -
thelr action upon thl.human systeme
Hence. deo th by overdasets more iikely
to °emir 'from n iege ble thatta min-.
-el-al-poison when take i tnadicinelly. '
'Xust how the put) lc ever get the
delusion that the 'p 'rely vegetable'
was a badge of harm ssness I. do not
knlev, but the faet reimaIns Hutt such
is the common beli4fa'-Washington
Star.
. They Used Chatlfes Lamb.
Franking privileges a England were
greatly ahusedin. day gene by. The -
government employeet• friends sittired
In his opportunities n u ' letter writ-
ten" by ''WordswOrth i . it315 1 -he poet
said: "By meanteaDe t Mena iti Lon-
don, I can bare my lettere free. His
l
i
name is Li mb, ana.,it you will 'add an
V -to bis -name he AN111 :not open the
letters. trect Its- belt* wit houf a ny-
thing fu then -*Mr. 1 Lambe, India
house, Loodon.' "...Coleridge, to0. sae
that a postage saved MIS a tiostage
gained and made use ef the Mrlenah
of the India-house.-Cluirles Lamb
i
1 Art and N ture.
Art is the revelation of man. and not
merely that. but,like vise the revela-
tion of nature, speaking through man
Art pre-exists in natutte, end nature is
reproduced In art, As .vapors from the
ocean. fleeting landwa d and dissolved
In rain, tire carried b ck in rivers to
the ocean. so though - and the sem
hiances of things that fall upon the
soul Of men in showerS flow out again
in living streams of art and lose them-
selves in the great oeeliti, wbieh is na-
ture. Art and nature are not then. dal.
cordant, but ever lia'ritionionsly tioi:k-
itig in each othea-Lonefellow,
A Roumanian Custom.
A strange custom is r111 onserved in
Roumania. 'When a . servant has dis-
pleased his or her inns kr the Offender
takes his boots in bis hands suid places
them before th'e aedroinn door of his
master. It Is a sign of great snbuds-
sion, and tbe boots are either kicked
away as an intimatione that 'the fault
will not be forgiven, or else the serv-
ant.is told to place thint on his feet,
which shows that lie is forgiven.
• -
0111
leatrunRAND,Dgpfi.oRAORicitualquae
Peaches and plums are both so goed
this year that there letlevery induce-
ment for theliciunewife to "put down'
a liberalstipaal. The Oinadian. Clubs
and Red Cross Societies are asking
for contributions of canned or pre-
served -not jammed. ,fruit, for our
soldiers in France. People who wish
With thelnearest Can Ian 'Mob or
to 'do their bit' shoulclginnomicate
Red Cross branch. Much fruit is be-
ing put down without sugar, by star-
etizing process. The best plums for
the purpose are Bradahaws, Gage
and Lombards, and forpeachesthe
St. Johns, Orawfords and Elberta,s.
I Orders pieced in advitnce with your
!grocer rneans better f etit for you.
OLD ENGLISH °USES.
n the Days 4 Wooden futs, Thatob‘d
Roofs and Clay Fffoors.
The habitations of E ellsb common
people for centuries c nsisted of a
WO-oilen hut ofig6 17o*, with the fire
built in the center. To ithis hut, 11 a
man increased fn family and wealth a
le -an -6 was addeil-and laier1inother
and another, The'rooas N ere of thatch,
thtraw r tr
l
e beds of loose sa.-w beds
with bolsters_ of the sa ri' e laid on tbe
floor or perhaps eventually shut Iti by
a self and ledge like the bertha of a
elejP or by a small closet;
The Saxon thane. or i knight built
a more pretentious "hnintt a large open
epom like the Roman atrium with a
lofty rotif thatched or tovered vvith
slates or wooden shingles In the cen-
ter of the hard clay floor burned great
fires of dry wood; hoeewthin acrid
.smoke escaped:from op ings In the
%de geteralla4 ineiktliett itY. ttle...diteni.
LIFEBUOY
50AP
every -purpose -soap
where health is g
consideration
For tbe toilet Paid the bath
lelfebuoi Soap is unexcelted.
Its velvety lather soothes
and cleanses while its mild
earholicsolutionisawondere
fulbealtbentreserving agent. •
The slight carbolic ,odor
' :tvaniehee quickly after use.
ALE.i _CERoCailtS
t•-snee ,
-
+01,001.0e10..*_ 3a
windows and openings -Muter the ewes
of -the thateh. ' --. _ - -
By day thet"beartlisinen't and OW
tors, earhers not warkingtOr lightingsat
en long benches on either,side of the
fire and, as John- Hay puts It. analmlye
*Inkiest and jawed" or, gathering at
longbeards- placed on trestles, regal-
ed _themselves on Some sort of porridge
with . fish and -milk or meat and eta
' Ataight straw -or rushes- spread on
the 'floor t-ormed beds for the entire
company int e earlier and ruder day*
i
when the ' aser sorts were glad to
share their. ra Vi with the cows. -Na-
tional Magazine.
SEEING THE WIND.
Easy to Watch. the • Air,Currents FIow
'ice a Waterfatli
leg LI .
It is said that any one may actually
see „the wind by means of a common
handsaw. The experiment is simple
enough to be worth treng at least.
According to those veto- have made the
experiment, all that necessary Is a
handsaw and a good breeze.
On any blowy day - hold the saw
against the wind -that ls, if the wind
Is in the north hold the saw with one
end panting east and the other west. --
Hold the sawwith the teeth -upper-
most and tip It slowly, toward the ho-
rizon until iteis at an angle of about
fortyelive degrees.
By ilancIng along the edge of the
teeth you can "see ahe wind" -It -will -
be pouring over the edge of the saw
much after the manner that Water
pours over-nt waterfolLa This is_ cleat -
less due to the fact that there are
always fine particles of dust in the
air, and in a strong; breeze the wind
forces against the slanting sides of
the ea w, slides op tbe surface and
sulalenly "pours over" 'Viten it reaches
the T op. - ../ •
Il Jet datibtless the tiny particles that
make 1 c air dust laden that can be
seen hilling over the edge of the saw ,
as the wind eurrent drops, but It als
about as near as any one Can get to
Seeing the wind ender lumina' tondi-
tions.-Washington Pest.
Humor in 0lel
A certairt Lieutenant Colonel Nash
left an annuity to the bell ringers of
Bath to, "bell dolefully" on ea-eh:anent.
Yersary of bis wedding day, and -eon-
trite Afr. WithiPol of Walthamstow
left the bulk of his' property to "his
wife, "trusting," he says--a`yeas, 1 may,
say as I think, asstiring myself -that!
she" will marry no man for feartomeet'e
with so evil a husband as I hate been
to her." -
. Mr. Jasper Maple at least considered
himself witty when lie bequeathed ta
his valet a wornout portmanteau,as
-emit:tined something, said the Will,
whieli would make him drink. The
excited vette ripped open the trunk'
raid foiimi- n red herriog-in it. Si,
ont)11.ess. did the Spoteh gentleman
who in 1877 left to his son's -care his
two west watches, "because," he said,
"I know be is sure to dissect them."--,
St. James' Gazette. -
at -a'
Wonderful Memory.
A few years ago there was a teamr
ster in Milwaukee nemed Israel, Muflfn
who was able to tell at the end. of thit
week the number of load's and. their,
weights he had hauled for the nix days'
past without so much as a figure on
paper. It would have been ineles0 to
f-urnish hien with paper and pen -cilia
his memory was found to be unerrihg.
He wa'e dismissed once for lista& liquor
too free/y and a man nppointed-to his
place wbo used pencil and paper. Tho
first week the pencil and paper man
made over a dozen errors, and. Mullin
got his Joh back. -Pittsburgh Press.
,,svaa • -
wpt,
tthew i raveng Mer.
"She's.e sensible e;ii said the first
traveling man,
."You -bet sae is," saM the Second.
"Last night. When I took her to dinner •
before ordering sbe asked me if f was-
geing to pay tbe ebeck myself or work
it into tbe expense account" -Detroit
Free Press: ---
eMinoritys Power.
"You believe in -the 'will of the ma-
jority, of course."
"Weil," replied Three Fingered Said,
"IN all right, thiefetleal; but it :wpg,"
.always work Out in practice. I've
two men hold-up a whole trairdord*11
pe" -Washington, sta.
o hildt:04,0.
..roktflETOINIES
•
you
at robs
and make
Torestor
is so essen
or compare
- cause its
zaent inel,,
etterg,y are
• 'One sharpe
health in
11 you r.r
Overworked
Zmulsion
seott
-Darrkger,
- Meal PL
Weikm.'s Xa
**tore,
Barrister,
Sunnis /or is
Mita „street,:
PEOUDIfi
"i,y, Par
y to
h
4020
110nor)row
ars _4)0
"Alaimo fatal
.1ild to end chi
Dentistry a 1
- de/elf-on: God
of Dr.
...Donor grail
sty tollese$, -
the Medical
Veiterinani
ell Domes -
Kik
le- epee
Bait Attain
dors lett at th
tteflhtlon, 141
411. RIchtna
-*wield;
sry diseates
DR. 4/93
asteopoto
*waft In
-
diseases, r
end nervous
- ord throat. 1
tkommerelai
sad irrildaygi
De!
&tate O
ninerel
- Of PI
0 .'leto
da;•
dent Me4
Metintre
:doom- east 4
Bengali, Pat4
laR.
of - 1
tario; pates X
Meal Sato
themie
University -C-1,
England.
Bank, Seafot
tele answer
stre4t, Seat
ensed
of Bnron.
of tit
nec 111
reas
, Exeter
No, 1. Orde
Positor 011
tanded to.
Liceneed
of Baron en
sale dates t
Pbone I on.
oa'tbe Ezp
erde and