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The Wingham Advance, 1919-01-09, Page 3a • adiaitt.40, 4 n (Miry other *WW1% the publie L atisiled with nothing but the ;beet 1 Thii exielains the everelaeree4ting demand tor Zeteaula Wet only is Ude treat balre the best thomehold reartedy toalay, but fl. 13 also the !Most econorteicel, •Z8.11143u1tte auPeriority la duo to the tact that t is al1 tatidielne, cone taixtbeg none Of tile Voaree tate Or liana Mineral drug's tounal Hz ordinary Onetraentel, Again, the Medielnel proPertiee ere eo highly coneentratea that they nontstin thee •enaxiMum. aneount of healing, sooth- ing and antleeptic power, so that a little Of thite bathe goes a long way, Mother reason why Zam-Buk le most ceonorteical. It will keel) in• eleareltelY atid retain to the tut ite letrength, and Purity. Bat for skin diSellaea And injuries, blood -poison - in and pile, All dealers, 50C. bon, rlin PERIOD OP OESTRU1VI DUR- INO WRICII TO BREED OWS. The period of °estrum, or heat, in the sow appeare in the neighborhood Df every twenty-one days, with the teorman animal In good breeding con - di teen. The eow remains M heat from Due to five days, The effect of delay- ing the boar'a services untie the period bf-heetsis almost over bao long been subject of diecussion with the hog- taane Such practice, it is claimed, Invariably results in 'eager litters 1han would be the case, were the sow bred during the first day. As a physiological explanation of the fore- eoing, it is claimed that during the patter part of the palled a Panel larger number of avo are presented tor fertilization by the male element, with the resultant increase in the size the embryo litter. With horses and cattle, the gener- *illy accepted practice, partieularly • With the former class of stock, le to May breeding until the period is well edvenced. Likelihood of conception iveuld thereby seent to be Increased, doe, no doubt, to the fact that the tamale functions have had time to lake place properly, that the female Is •more receptive to male ,attention •trtd !allowing a reasonable leneth ot • nine to elepse after the usual adver- tisement of ()estrum. With the SOW the same probability of coeception by delayed breeding is Vhightened for the foregoing' reason. at a larger Utter should be expect- tcl is by no means so sure, the claims; Df many expert breeders to the ton - Mare, The size, vigor and nutiebers Df the litter may be far more certain- ly teatrolled liy the condition of the our. anti atfW at the time of breecUng, fheeein the large herd uch, at least, would be indicated by sult,aote4 tra be. enema SOWS kept at the Experi- taints.' Farm at Ottawa. Herq the aenero.1 practice is to •breed on the 6ecaa1ad day, using, where necessary, thri lareeeing crate. During the winter howeve,r, several groups of uregawera bred by allowing a boar to 1'ain with each lot. Besides obviating tauchlabor in hand -breeding reluctant • Individuals and readucing to a mini - beton. the 'number of "missed sows," - the, laze end vigor of , the resultant litters left little to be desired, e. brie, to the man who keeps only few sows, and who makes use of a • tteighboring boar, breed on the second doe, depending, of Ours°, on the sow's individual •peeullarities, See that she is in rising condition, not fat, not thin, but itt fair flesh and gaining every day. If the sows have been on fall grass, use a little grain beeore breeding. If the sows havee beeti irregular in heat, this will tend te befog them in for breeding regularly and within a few days of one another, Use judgment in breeding the weaned sow. If she is much run down from httesing her little and bred In this eMedition a few days after weaning, a disappointing second litter will in most cades result. rt no boar is kept, try to eelect the Services of one not to heavily used, riamonably well ,fed and, above all, Well exercised, The thin boar, or the over -fat individual, .eateuently are both getters of small litters, no extatter When they iserve the sow. o the man who allows his boar to • run with the sows, good results tatty hoexpeotod, even if the boar does not ehow rauch seientifie knowledge, pro- vided the herd is well exercised, hOused in dry quarters and sufficiently well fed to insure gain in vetaght, and provided further than the sow is re -- Moved, temporarily, from the group le soon as properly sdrved. Empilasig, too, must not be neglected with Teter- ence to the desirable effect on breed- ing etOck of green feed in summer, *ad succulent fooasroots, clover, hay Or easilage, in vvinter„ t DISINFECT THE STABLES. (Experimeiital Perms Notes.) The fact that regular disintettion of the stables is not a corainon. prae. tice in .Canada is sufficient evidence that We AS farmers are not thorough ter do we appreelate the impertanee of the health of our animate. As in ether teantries, dieease of animals is eeeponsible.for thee less to farneets of many millions of dollars annually. Such &Bette% as tuberculosis, abor- tion, cicalas, blackleg, glandere, hog Cholera, etc., take enormous toll from our reVent:0. Again parasites glitch as lice, ticks-, etc., each year ,aatifie the waste of enormeue amounte expensive feed to say nothing of the loseee in produetion of milk, meat, tend yeueg stock. Fermate of Canada it Is yoUr duty and your best businete to Atop these losses. Don't wait till Animals die of disease Or arte emaciate naegeoslaeeelaele-134Leteglallelicalleeeen Ilow to Purify the Blood 'Fifteen to thirty drop. of Ilitrect of 11.oets, commonly called Maher Seigel's Curative Syrup, may be taken in water with meals and et bedtime, for the store of indigestion, Gonat. potion end bed blood. Persist. erase in this insentient will effect 01$1"0 Iti ilatarly every ease." the genuine at armlet*. 446.1140.4141144,404•41 ed and lettirleei froze parabitei before dilmoVering trouble. rdeeesso aro epreed More raPIdly Wh011 411114414 are confined in whet* quarter, (am of the ruoet important faotere heap and healthe winterize* Of animate is clean quarter's and no (Marten can be kept clean and free from dimes& and parasitee witnout disiarection nt leak twice annuany. The bade of clieinfectloil 10 direct coo tact. Difieltee genies under a lay. er of manure, etraW or dirt, caatiot be killed by average disieeeetioll. Hence the fleet etep ie the thorough eleaniiig oat of the barns, eeraphig (and WaallitIgetZ POseible), all Walls clad tootle, and sweeping dirt, duet and cobwebs from wane and oralinge. Wood floors shotlid be repaired and earth floo re renewed with a Myer or clean soil, WHAT DISINFECTANTS TO USE. 1, SunlIght. This is theetlearerIt and one of the best. Every stable should have at leaet 6 sq, feet of glees Per mature head or aorsee and cattle, and one-quarter this amount for ealveS and reatare bogs, [Sunlight in- duces eleamilliess, health, comfort, aiad greaten, trroeitte, 2. Wbitewaah. A good whitdwaell apPliecl hot to ceilings and wails Cove ere and kills germs and parasites. Ade drug ellsineectant 'such as Care belie Aold, if twee+ leave laousea (Use °awed animals. Apply with spray pump or brae's, 8. Drug •Disinfectants. All More, guttere, and mangers should receive) extra care. Disinfeet by soaking thoroughly 'with one a the eoal tar distillates each as Kreso, Weetcol, Zenolemxt, Creolin, eto., etc., applied in water solution 3 per ceat, to 6 pee cent. varying earith strengtle oz diein- Natant. Apply with spray pumee or sprinkler aud brush in. The Health of Animals Branch, De- partineut of Agriculture, Ottawa, can supply free instructions in selecting and preparing whitewash ane disin- fectants. Thoroughness In the above disin- fection is most important. The intelligent stockman intent On maintaining healthy steels finds it wise to disineect •mangers and feed passagee more trequently. A light spraying monthly will sufeicee, Practice proves that disinfection is -cheap insurance and an investment yielding •a high rate of interest, If Canadian farmers unitedly will bat realize this, our animal disease and lessee there flame would decrease 20 per cent. per annum. DRIED BIDET PULP AS A FEED FOR LIVE S'r001C.• An analysis 01 dried beet pulp tak- en from Henry's "Feeds and Feed- ing" shows that it contains on the average 8.2 per cent. moisture, 3.5 per cent. •ash, 8.9 per cent, crade pro- tein, 18.9 per cent. fibre, 59.6 per cent. n. free extract, and 9 per ceat: fat. The fibre content being high digesti- bility is oomparetively lOw, there be - Mg found only 4.6 per cent. protein. 66.2 per cent. carbohydrates and 7.8 Per Ont. fat, a total of 71.6 per Cent. digedtible nutrients, • Dried beef pulp will absorb from, 4 to 5 times its own weight of water and swell Up propor- tionatedy, therfore it sheuld not • ,be. fed, unless in very small quantities, without first being soaked. In this condition it has succuleece, dige,stible natrient content and laxative effect, somewhat similar to corn silage. • As a succulent food. It has been Lound that 9 pounds of dried beet pulp and 6 pounde, of mixed key was 11 per cent, better for milk prodeiction tnan 45 pounds of corn ensilage. With hay at $18.00 per ton and silage at $4.00 per ton this would give dried beet pulp a valuation of $10 per ton to replace sucelent roughage. ,As a supply of protein. Taking the analysis given above it is cal- culated that to supply protein in a ration for milk cows when bran is Worth 382:00 ner ton, then oats are worth $24.80, corn e20.00 end dried beef pulp $17.80 per ton. As a supply of digestible nutrients. On this basis if corn is worth $50.00 per ton, then wheat bran is worth $36.54, oats '$42.25 and dried -beet pull) TAKE NOTICE We publish simple, straight testknonla ale, not press agents' Interviews, from well-known people. Front all Over .America they testify to the merits of MINAR,'DS LINIMENT, the best of Household Remedies. =VAUD'S LINIMENT •CO,, LTD. $42.69 per ton. In this ease the calu- ation placed On dried map agrees vdththatof tlae Scandinavian feed unit system which rates it 10 per cent. below cern or barley, It also agrees with the findings of the Maseaciausetts Experimerital Station where they found that it Was equal to corn in a ration tontaining no succulence. As feed for fattening stock. lerheu used for this purpose with beef cattle and sheep it has been found to pro- duce growth rather than to lay on fat, therefore it can be used to ad- vantage in the early part of the fattening DeriOd*blit iihtraid be re- placed by coan. or Other heavy grain during the finistang period, Th*e OP' Dears to be to advantage in feeding it to horses While for swine it is much too balky and fibrous unless for maintaihing brood -sows. Reviewing the subjeet \St mask be eald i(a) dried beet pulp is low in protein and high. in fibre, benee the protein it digestible in a relatively smelt degree, tieerefOre it cannot re - plate any rieh protein feeds Inteofl take, cottonseed Meal or even bran or oat chop. lit the supplyitig of pro - thin in the ration; (b) it 10 useful When used to suppleinent a shortage of Succulent roughagea nu& as silage, roots and grass or to lighten up a heavy protein ration (0) under cer- tain circurestances (as a source of clie gestible nutrients) it ratty aceldre a value of $46 per ton while in other eases where succulence and theap hente grown carborhydratee (ae in corn !Wage) are aireadY preseat Its value May.be as low aa $10.00 per ton; (d) in the feedbag of beef oat. tie and elle%) it is better adapted te produaing growth, than to the larieg on of fat, but even for the former purpose is ttot as Valuable as oats. youngpop-I *tell yott thee bo- of mine la a Wender. Singleten-Ed-in that way? Yourigeop-We11, to-daY in his birthday, and I gave him a, eel/ knife. ne he. had it taw for NU,' three.quartere of ea hour and Ithen't cut hitalielf yat, • Dad Breath 2 Don't Be Offensive Remove the Cause Follow This Advice and Your fireeth Will soon he Sweet and Pure. The bad part of Bad, Breath is the feet that nearly every case &Iowa conendereble trouble from indigestion, belching gee, bloating, Plies or some toxin of etomach misery. Ofteuer than net a Pimply face, a sluggish, coast'. uated condition is the true cause of newly a inan's failure in life. By aiding digestion arid buildiug UP the week nauecles et the etomach and bowels, DR, HAMILTON'S PILLS com- pletely overcome constipation and all forme of etemeeh illness, "I was terribly run down with stomach trouble that arose through neglecteci-censtipation.," writes IVirs. P. D. Quigley, from Waehburte-P. O. "I simply eouldn't half 'digest my food. bad dreadful headache/I, pileand yellow, muddy skin. The, effect oe DR, HA,IVIILTON'S PILLS was pirenoinenal. I have gained in weight, IMO a clear skin, no -more headaches, I eat well, sleep well and enjoy my meals," There is. o need to be in failing, health when cure is so sure, so easy, by taking Dr, Hamilton's i11s oe Mandrake and Hutternet. 25c. per box, at all dealers. REFUSE1 A $UB- STrruni. Worth Remembering, • A little baking soda added to some • Otani suck as cranberries or Mamie about half 0, teaspOon to a quart of the fruit emit before sweetening will avoid the use of as much sugar, as would be otherwise he necessary. To make a good stove polish,' boll equal quantities of stove polish end hard soap together; boil slowly with enough water to dissolve and let is become a thick paste. Put into jar or tin box aud use just as you would any stove polish. Never wash a rolling pin, Scrape the dough horn it and rub throughly With a towel and It will never stick. When washing greasy disaes, if you have no soap poweler at hand use a little baking soda and it will cut the grease. * ' -- • If you haye stained your silk blouse by perspiration, moisten stain with oold watea, cover with French chalk and let it remain for 24 hours. • A little -powdered borax and glyeer- bae added to the suds in whioh baby flannels are washed will keep them soft and white, - , To clean black silk, use a teaspoon- ful of ammonia and a teaspoon of tur- pentine in a pint of tepid water. Sponge the goods with it. Hamburg steak isecheaper and bet- ter when mixed with bread crumbs. The crumbs should be soaked ia milk • first, then added to the grated onion and minced parsley and meat. Next tirae you m- akeapple sauce, try adding a little lemon juice and •einnamon. It gives an unusual flavor, To make a good cologne take eight 'ounces rectified spirits of wine, half ,a dram extract of ;verbena, one dram bergamot and e,quarter ounce tincture tolu. Mix all together and it is ready for use. 4 6 Manyamothers have reason to bless laother Oraves' Worm Exterminator ,because it has relieved the little 'ones of suffering and made them healthy. eb • a LAUNCHED INTO SPACE. Projectiles Mounted Fourteen Miles Into the Air. 11, as'reckoned, 'and as"there seems no reason to doubt, the' projectiles thrown into Paris by the new Ger- man guns from a distance of seventy- four miles mama founteer miles in- to the air, they reach further into the vault Of blue than any point hitherto attained by human effort. Next comes a "free" ;balloon that was sent up trona Berlin carrying eight auto- matic instruments te record temper- ature and alr density*, a nureber of years ago. It attained an eletratiou of eleven and a half mites. Mainly by the use of suck instru- meat-carrying [balloons much 1414.9 been learned within reeerit years about the "sea of air" at the bOttona ot which eve dwell. So rapidly does it "thin out as rate passes upward through it that no human being can survive for long beyond an elevation of font miles for lack of sufficient oxygen." Half oe the total volume of the at. mosphere le 'below the three-mile level, and its dentate, roughly speak., ing, is halved fpr each three Miles of ascent. The air contained he a Not three feet cube at sea level weighs twenty ounces; at an elevation of fourteen miles it would Weigh. less Utah one oUnee. The highest leveI ever reached by a human being VAS attained by Dr, Ber- son, evho, in 1893, voyaged in, a bal- leen to A height of nearly file milee the elevation oe the Wettest 0101,1413, auch u we call "mares' talks." whielk are belleved to be compoeul of now eryetala or lee-crYstals. Ile was en- abled to accomplieli thin feat by taking a tank of oxygan with him, and hie thermometer recorded a temperature. of .54 degrees below eero. The above-mentioned free balloon tient up from 1oriiu, which was eall- ed the (Cirrus, noted with its auto - matte thermometer n degrees. Met- erarologiste are of opinion that at twenty-five miiee above the earth's eurface the temperature is never lees than 200 degreebelow zero, and that at fifty miles It is not ur from the ab- solute zero of the outer void of spaeo -525 2-5 degrees below sero, The highest elevation attained by land was reached In 1802 by W. U. Conway, who sealed the summit o•f Pioneer Peakin the Himalaya% It is the loftiest Point ever trodden by human foot -nearly 23,000 feet above the level of the sea. But Mount Ever- est, in the same great backbone of A.sia, is more than a Mile higher and presumably can never be climbed. There is not enough air on or near Ito top, In the upper regions of the sea of car there is not 011lY no air (adequate • for human purposes) to breathe, but the cold is such that no wa.rm-blood- ed creature could aurvive` for a ute. The climate is an eternal Win- ter, its temperature mitifluerkeed by the waimest rays of the summer sun, But (supposing that we could sur- vive there for a brief time) at a level of 100 miles above the happy spot where at present it le our privilege to dwell, We took above ue, and what do wo see? The blue sky? There is no such thing. The aky is jet -black --the stars scientillating in Lit with a brilliancy wholly unfamiliar. And how about the sun? It is inconceivably dazzl- ing, but in color it is not Yellow or red. It is a brilliant blue. The as - Pact in which ordinarily.it appears to us le due to interference with its blue. ray0 by the atmosphere, To Men Who Live Inactive Liyes -Exercise in the open air is the best tonic for the stomach and system generally; but there are those whe are compelled to follow- sedentary oce- cupations and the inactivity tends to • restrict the healthy action of the digestive organs and sickness fol- low‚ Parmelee'e Vegetable Pills regu- • late the stomach and liver and Tel store healthy action, It is wise to have a packet of the p41141so always on hand. FREEDOM OF 'THE sEAB, (I3y Sir Eau Caine.) May I without presumption hazard the opinion, that President Wilson, whose fourteen conditions of peace hex° been • thought out 'with astonishing Penetration and expressed with most admirable has not yet entirely cleared, his great mind on the subject of the freedom of the seas? - •It te impossible to believe that lgs de- finition of that difficult phrase le' the some as that of Germany. The German definition implies that, while the land is • to be controlled in times a war by the strongebt militaty power, the sea, and therefore the porta on the sea, are al- ways to be open to the weakest naval Power that opposes it. This Is so Illog- ical as to bo unworthy of any mind, ex- • cept a German mind, mall hence it is Inn - possible in the mind of President Wilson. Does not the President see that the rights which Great Britain asks for her navy are neither more nor other 'than those which Germany asks for her wily? In times of /peaoe the seas are free to all, who sail on them; in times of war they can only be free on the power that can 'control them. It is control of the seas in times of war, not sovereignty of the seas at all times, that Great 13ritain requires for her navy, for as long as she may be able, or required, to maintain it less than this would place Great Britain in her in- sularity at an unjust disadvantage, a po- sition of inferiority in the only arm in whkh she can, hope to bo supreme. Does President Wilson desire this? It is Impossible to 'believe that it would be grievance and manifest injustice. The one thing / see clearly as that in Presi- • dent Wilson's second clause he is chiefly mincer/led to make the foundation of his league of nations equal. What he would ask of the army of Germany he would also ask of the navy of Britain, but the two of a thwo cases where the conditions are the e.sian only be e e an in StinIsiet.he condition of Britain in respect of her navy the same as that of Germany in reapect of her army? I think not, Tile navy of Great Britain is the chief bul- wark of her liberty; it has been the ma- terial of her history, the medium of her progress, and the essence of herself, She has built it up at great cost and saerfice through centuries of effort to meet' the exeelnional necessities of her geographi- tal postion. For these islands to accept any peace conditionthat would neutral- ize the power of her navy would be nat- ional suiekle, We cannot think of it. All we can think of is the right of a council of nations to requiaa that in times of peace we shall never use our navy to assert sovereigntY over an empire 'which belongs to all. We have never done so, and there is no reas- on to think we ever hall. The right of control of the seas, of hlookade in tirnes of war is no more nor Jess nor other than the right which every natloh Germany above aix claims for its welt tat the land. gr ewth, it °noway's t............-ea.4,Inthuesteeyrnier to Whetheold or new Corn 'Cure, the simplest and best cure ever efferee to the public. Londoit's Tea }rouses. The death of Sir Joseph Lyons re- miads us What a modern institution the teenteop is. You ueed not be very old to remember the time when prac- tically the only places where a rup of tea could be obtalned in London were the old fashioned toffee houses, with their boxed -in compartments and nar- row, uneornfortabIe seats. The customers were exclusively men, aad if a woman required light refreshment eelie had to search for a nonfectioner's shop, where tea and coffee were eorstetimes grudgingly Served, at femint prices, at little round Marble tables tueked away in dark >eorners.-London Chronicle. AMERICAN COLONEL GIVES FREE ADVICE TO RHEUMATICS 11.6,717,01, spea Ire SHEER FOLLY FOR ANYONE TO SUFFER THEBE oAvs. Rheumatism can't be cured so long ax your system is weak and run down. You must first build up and get strength to fight off the dieease, Ferrozone cures because it builds up, because it renews the blood and dis- solves the Uric Acid and the poisons tbat cause rheumatism. It is proved right here that Ferro - zone does cure. Col. II. lI. Russ, or Edwards, St. Lawrence Coe one of the fine old heroes of the Civil War, was com- pletely restored by Ferrozone. Read his statement: "I couldn't get around without a cane, and then only with difficulty. "Rheuxiatiem took complete control of my limbs. "'Suffering was more intense than liar:101W On the battlefield. "When my doctor had done hie beat I got Ferrozone, - "That came a quick change. "Ferrozone gave me comfort at once, eased the pain and took the stiffness out of xny muscles. me completely. I eau jump and run like I did forty years ago." your present medicine is useless. give it tpa:21 ell to-daY, Ferrozone cured Be sensible about your ease. If • • Don't experiment again. Ferrozone is known on all sides to be a cure that does cure, Why not get a supply to -dm'. The sooner you begin Ferro - zone the quicker you'll get well, Price e0;ahozprerrbooxneor six for p,§9, at all dealers, or direet by mall from Tile e Co., Kingston, Ont. A Via to Anton Lang. I sat beside Anton Ling In his work- room as his steady hands faghloned things of clay, I ate at table with him and in the evening we pulled up our ohairs to the comfortable fireside, where he talked of his country and ,zny eoun- try, of the Passion Play and of the war. I had been skeptical about him until I dreamer who eould not get down to the realities of this world, or if he had been eporolLeill mbrIssfeslaistitoenry; or if piety was part When I finally went from there I felt that I really understood him. Els life haa been without an atoni of reproach, yet he never poses as pious. He has been honored by royalty and men of state, yet he reenaine simple and unaa, footed. To play well his role Of Christ - us is the dominating passion of his life. Not the inalte-up box, but his own thoughts must mould his features for the role winch has been his in 100, 1000 "cl te,191hetrine that "only through hate can the greatest obstacles in life be °v. ermine" has not reached this home. He spoke to Mr. Curtin of the fabulous offers for a long tour of America which he had fefused. "Here I must always tvork hard and remain poor; there I would have grown rich," he said. "But the Passion Play is not ra business. Near - Ly SOO years ago when a terrible plague raged over the ?and, the People of Ober- ammergau vowed, to Almighty God that if he would save their 'village, they would Perform every ten years in His guory the Paseion of His Divine Son. The village was saved and- Oberammergau kept its prornise."-D. Thomas Curtin, in "The Land of Deepening Shadow.' **a Devil and the Deep Sea. • The source of this expressive but rather cryptical proverb is not (=air determined. It is usually held to have some connection with the miracle of the casting out of devils at Cudara and the rushing oe the possessed swing in- to the waters. In Clark's Paraemio- logia, published in 1639, it is noted are "Between the devil and the Dead Sea." Tne meaning, of course, is that there Is a choice only between two terrible alternatives, and the allusion may be to some long -forgotten, incident of le- gend of fiction. Every careful and obeervant moth- er knows when her child suffers from • worms. She also knows that is some remedy be not epeedily applied mucle Ilene will reeult to the infant. The best application that can be got is ,(Miller's Worm Powdere. Thoy drive worms rrom the system and set up stimuiating and soothing effects, 80 that the child's progress thereafter la, Painless and satisfying, -++4 •Silipa' Dogs Are Sea Heroes. Many dogs have received decora- tions during the war -not froni the government, of course, but from sol- diers and sailors, according to a Lon- don dispatch in the European edition of the New York leerald. A naval officer just returned from the Mediterranean tells Ma interesting story of the pet on his ship. The dog, taken young,was rated as "puppy", which it seems, in naval estimate, is a pretty huMble rating. However, the dog eonducted himself like a gen- tleman and a scholar,' the officer de- elares, and was in duos, time decorated with the insignia of A,. B. dog. Re misbehaved on various occasions and failed to do hM part in one or two brushes with submarines, so he was marched on the quarterdeck and sol- emnly remitted to "puppy" Every ranee, the story goes he has been striving to retrieve himself, but thus Mr he has not recovered his rank. It Is said that the dogs on the shine Which fought at Jutland -and there were many of them -have all been decorated by their siaipmates. Tho animals during the battle, it is as - totted, played the part of real heroes without a cowardly hair upon one of them. Alloretttal WifAlv SOLDIERS ANT4 A tifggestion to %Alp er/hosare sending' gifts t zahliere bverseas coma (rain ife.-Col. (Canon.) Frederick ,earge Scott Senior Chapittia of AO irst DIvLion, lo a r.ghle.' received by 'Mende !" Montreal, He says "The mem want ,pittying cads and chewing tobacco.0 WHAT Tell RttO FLAG M'EAN. :alquitable d'athliC Vulletin.) aalleraleatil Who are encouraging the en. teriug wedge air almae. tieciapiait in our WunitunifsoYloitiurly gtilte vizh4"lc4:ollunrce' auaucit bairn what it tut means Wow earrien Cu tnc tea tialt Propagatida, at:ttropts may it4 looricat concluinoti liotros• the Tea IOWIflj aiiI : acerlynee4;.tinteu wilerly the reeentiy returned arum aaroica: tholie0 feaPlnif tne rain crop of a gi- tainty. It is te-day an actuality. l'es” comment oe an ern:nein American. editor will be the woad's most awful graveyard. letinno 14 not 4 possanlity, X Is a eer. European Russia this ec.lnina winter 'rne v.oriting icoj4e ate ehuvly predes- tined vletime of imager and elheaoe. Vro- ductivo inbor has been annihilated and no nation can live witliout it. All financiai system late Vehlifitedr DeetO have been repuulated, banle• abol- ished, and the geld reserve of the nation largely atelen. viC70,tnciornouaectelo,tevexeitill jrom the staluiPlint or The available fuel supply has largely ateappearea Tee oil rieids stilt un- burned are not working. The am:4 ininue have been tloodecl, Rallread tiacitti and roiling stock are rapiely going to pitees.• .A. few railroads are operating, but au ,prIvate coneurns in the halide enterprislag' bandit. iacIi staion lute its own taritt for pusserigere and freight payable to the currency 91 that p alaoufeturhu Is at a standstill -nine. tenths of the faetorieg have been shut down. Many are heaps or ruins, de- stroyed by the lioisheviets. Cotton fabricating is pm:otiosity a mentory--largo quantities or cotton were., burned, because it was bekleved to havo. belonged to the banks, It is estimatar that only twenty per cent, et the tillable lands or European Russia, were taut into crops this year, Many large agricultural estates have been aurned or destroyed. Live steck and implements of prosperous farmers wore etolen and MI/hied amoug theloot- ers Ofbeforethtette2Aawar, 1,P617°0P,000414thal°vIle°tItisPaept27ffiTtlti, The city looks dreary, desolate. Boleho. viet soldiere and their families Are 1v - Ing in the deserted homea of the well to do. Hotels, restaurants. eures, ottices are Oozed, The middle -classes are excluded from puolic eating' places and are starv. Mg by thousand. Many well-anowa Persons haVe been shot Or etarvotl to death. In adattion to enduring the ter,. rible famtne conditions the lauselan People must submit to a reign of vio. lenee, brutality and murder at the hands or the armed minority, aid all in the name of the treedena of the- maalica" through the socialistic state. Our Lesson is obvious and so is our duty, . The Russian people sacrifked over 3,000,000 of their irten in holding sev- eral Getman armies out of France dur. Ira( the firet two years of the war.. Wby then are not we ,and the allies not on our way in largo force to rescue these help- less millions, of lauesiane from the !ter- rible torturee they are now ei,during. Stet% of Aldo, City of Toledo, Lucas County, as. Frank J, Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of P. a. Chen- ey &.Co., doing busincsa in the eity or Toledo, County and State aforamid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HENDRIID DOLLARS for each and ea, ery case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S PA.TARRI-I MED- ICINE. IeRAMC 3. CHENEY. Sworn to before mei and subscribed in rny presence, this Gth day of December, A. D. 1880. A. W. GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Public. Hall's: Catarrh Medicine is taken in- ternally and acts through ,the Blood on the Mucous Suraacee of the SYstein. Send for testimonials, free. U' , J. CHENEY & CO„ Toledo, 0. Sold by all druggists, • Hail's Family Pins for constipation, A-Saanpling Buie, Owing to shortness of provisions in Norway, bardened' whale fat is being Used for margarine According to infor- mation from the depattment of com- merce. This department also states that whale caching off the coast of N oraray, Which has been prohibited, by law for some years, is to be cora- menced on government account, Den- mark bas been using hardened whale fat in the inargarine industry for some years, and no injurious effects on the users have been reported. Los Angles bas an antiesampling ordinance, prohibiting honse-to-house distribution or food products, This does not apple to samples of nonedible products nor does it cover the giving of 'food samples by e„ merchant in his etore. There is some questien as to whether the law permits the baclosing of Samples with geode dealveyed, and trade sentiment favors an interpreta- tion which would permit this gerxu of sampling. • • • Traieling the Croupiers. There is at Monte Carlo it school of croupiers, It is held during the six summer months in the club -room of the Tirana Pigeons and the Salle • d'Eseraine, in the Casino° building, Here are tables similar to those in the Casino gaming room, and each pupil In turn takes the role or emu- pien, white others personate players and stake money over a table. At a given instant the croupier must cal- culate and pay out.the winning stekes. There are usually between forty and fifty pupil1 nthis school, and a six months' course is generally sufficient to turn them into finished ceouplers. Drives .Asthma Before It. The smoke or vapor from Dr, ,T.13, Kea 'egg's Asthma Reraedy gives astern:1a lie chance to linger. It -eradicates the comae. Our experience with the relief. giving remedy shows how aetual and positive is the succor it gives. It is the result of long study and experi- ment and was not submitted to the Pabiic mail its makers knew it would do its work well. + • OLD SISEET mugs, They Have Long Bean Piotur. esqie gestures of London. In the hot August days the old cry of "Sweet Lavender!" is still heard in, the streets. of London. It comes, a faint echo of those past certturies when streets teemed with vendors, hawkers and peddlers; and rot only lavender, but • rue and marjorant, rosee-e-blowing and a -growing and "Lilies of the Valley 01" were cried tip and down the town in their sea- sons. "Chairs to mend" is, or was, but a few years ago, still hoard in the suburbs, and the milkmen still gave that peculiar, Strident cry of theirs es they clattered down the • areas; but thairmen and milkmen, for the present, have gone, whethee or not to reetimitate at the close of the war, who can tell? The history • of cries is the history of soeme thaagets, One has said, and the present upheaval will only have sped the Very last of the departing guests, if It puts an end to all thitt survives • ot a eliaraeterietic feature of London, att it exieted from the days of Chau- eer, and probably long before, to the Victorian ere, Legthe Wail the name ef that popu- lation of intiaerant veledore, peddler, hawkers and street sellers whith eone gregated in the streets Of the toWies and travelled along the bighroads from fair to fair. They have left their trios in literature m well al on the etatelte holm. in 1604 the ehapinen and peddlers 'were threat- • enqd with all the terrors of the law against rogues and eturdy beggars, chiefly because they interfered with and hindered the trade of the shop. keepere. leen Johnson in his comedy of "The Silent *Woman," make* Morse walk through tit* town under Cil.M5-015INFECT5,,q.knt) FOR SOFTENING WATER -FOR MAKING HARD AND SOFT SOAP ,---- FLU „DJRECTIONS WITH XACti CAN, et "a huge turban of nightcaps," so teat he may escape the erhea of the roeimives, *wage, women, ohmeney sweeper, brown men and costara- reengere, the louden of tlx hundreds of the tribe who eo peWerritilY coo- Iribiated to hurly-burly of the town. Dut the earliest writer to mention street cries Is John Lydeate, a monk of the lienediatiiie Abbey of Bury street, Edmunds, irieud of Geoffrey Caaucer, lam author of the ballad, "London lateltapenny," The -Item ef We ballad comes to the city of West- minster In term time to obtain, legal redress for some 'wrong done hien; and being without any illeatle at all wherewith to pay even the prelirean- are /003, he ciainot in apite of tb0 hurable beseeching to "min with a silken hood," es on get the "Mune oe his mouth." Leaving Westminster Nall, he walks to the city of London, through the value Of Charing and along SW and aviae Then unio London I bid me, hi• e Of all the land it bearetb the prim; Hot peascods; ono began to Cm Strawberry rale, and cherries in the rise, Otto bade me come nead and buy some &plat; * Pepper and, saffron they gan me bed; But for lack of money, I might not speed. In Cheap (Cheapside, ) he sees much' people- standing axed shouting the merits of their "velvets, silk, lawn, and Parie thread." Them I went forth by London Stone, Throughout all Canwyke street, Drapers much cloth me offered anon; Then comes in one -crying, "Hot sheep's feet"; One bade Me buy a hood to cover my head, But for want of money, I might not be sped, Tinkers were prominent members of the street fraternity, and among them, in the earl') part of his career, was John BunYan, The version of the tinker's cry, which appeared in the Notch that Catch Can" of the Year 1617, as thus; Haire you any -work for a tinkear, miss, Old brass, old pots, or kettles? I" mend them all with a tink terry tie, And never hurt your' kettles. Maids, 1 mend old pans, or kettles, mend old pans or kettles. 01" Is the more unvarnisheel version. 4 9 0 Mcebers Value This 011. -Nathan who 'Know how 'suddenly croup may esize their children and how necessary prompt action, is in applying re1Mf, al- ways keep at nand a supply of Dr. Thomas' Electric OIL becauseeexperi- once has taught them that theee is no better preparation to be had for the treatment of this ailment, And they are wise, far its various ueee render it a *valuable medicine. Anobher "Sera? of Paper." Twenty-seven years ago /settlers ,tet Olympia, Wasli., made a treaty with the analans allowiteg them to fish anywhere and at any tiple. says Com- merce and Finance. Now the State game laws prohibit them from the sport during thq Closed season. Saluakin, big chief of the .Yaltimase with a number of other Indiana, Intel protenting in vain to the Meal avant wardens, went to the city to protest against the violation of their rights, Imagine a elzieftain, 90 years old' straight as an arrow, yet hall blind and enfeebled, entering a court radio in a modern city, Thie man had bee, the victory of civilization in its strag- gle against' the wildernees. He hail seen his race pass control of the lan'd to the white race, Still believing -ill the honor of the white man, he cams to protest against the infringement .0.1* , a treaty made a quarter of a centaren b f Saluskin eras lame:reed by an inter. preter that the district attorney could not ehange the state game laws, s • "Rohl" was his only comment. 'a airs, Newly Rich -.Are you certaia • 1'v ehad the very leteet form of !Whin - emit? Doctor -Quite, Madam. 'roe s coughed exactly like the Countess ol Wessex.-sLoridon Punch, A MOY TIARta (Portland Evening Expresc) "Do you take eseroless atter' your bath?" "Yee, I generally etert on the ewer as I get out."' NOTHING NEW, (Haltimore American.) "I hear that Wilda's widow broke hie will." "Thera nothing. ellte'e been doing it ever Witco eh* married him." A COMMON eAsg. "They seem to hava a Jot of trouble with their car." "res. bier husbandla one ot theme expert accountants who imaglaeii he le a born mechanic." •• •o • fs. A POPULAR EIENEFrAOTOR. (Montreal Star,) "What makes blin so important? HO - he struek it richt" "1 should say. He invented a coilar nittoii that doesn't roll under the bur- eau.' secoNo CHOICE, (London AnsWers.) Dootor--You ini.ve a bad mom of .gout. The ,hte:t course for you is to take no wine. no1,,S0r, no aleehol in any ,fOrni, .10 cigars - "Patient -Hold on, doctor; What's the not% test? SQUEEZED DRY, "21 Hubbard told me he got vo htial) of work. out ?f you when you was evora- ,n1; for him/ said the farmer. "Wel, I allow e dal," said tho hired emu. "Yee. Fact is, 1 guess he jugt About got it 411." 45* UP:1'.0.DATE. Visitor-Yoa don't neap a eat? Host -Net now. You see, the wo. men have invaded' all the proferealone, 40 the wife, thi)Ilts ,we ought to `ha.ve a few mice, ittease of burglare. *1* ENOOURAGING. "Ias agreat pety. I'm told," (*toren Mrs. ,Tonee, eveliee dreseing, "thee IIC4014 act takes plaeo Iwo years atter A.ct La "We may be en time for that," ommentede Mr"; Jones. •' PODFOGRANDMAI „ "Grandma, din you; like that gate. - drop?" •e "Very math, Willie." "Towser didn't. I guess .It hurt. his teeth." . A ROUNDABOUT mEnigo. wily de =ion alwaye. iusIston my singing when ;10, Riniley C lflea here?" • "Well, I don't like to come right - out and tell him tee go." TE ruNNy SIDE. s•EXEMPT, , May -She says her face is her;, for- tune, ; Bell-Well,:she won't have topay any income tax: .. • ..*. STEAtiNG KISSES. TO steal a; tkigs 15 not The workt. i eull of unclaimed kiseaee 'Po steal askiss ie Mot amiss, . Unless You steal At from A. Mrs. 4 - • :ST.i4E PROOF. Tomme-t§ansitIn' cigarettes ,hurts ' ya. Pep Wham* 06. Jimmy -Aar, he was Jest stringing ya. Tommy -No, he wasn't strIngin' me, either; he was strapplene s me. That's hoes I. know it hurts. 4. • .13REAKING "THE Ngws. Burr -"Father, was , writing ,don0 on tablets of StOnt. in the old days?' "Yes, my sena", replied the engine' parent. • "Gee!" mused the, bey, "Then, it It must havetaken a crow bar: to break the news;' • - 4, UNLESS WE WERE SearqH. Tenderfoot -Pa, are trousers plural or singular? . Father -Well, if you had a pair rd say that they were plural, but lt yeti didn't have a pair call that stogu- lar.-Boys' Lif e. • • - 6 LAVI5e4 DISPLAY. • (Iiirmingliain Ago -Herald.) "Poor old duffer. He saved all his lire and died before he could enjoy hie! 'wealth." "But somebody will enjoy it," "That's true. His widow has the satis- 14.1=11711elgalillitItil 3111r'illirelefitit that ;rot". tloman tUrri•over In his grave." GOLDEN MOMENT-% Callero-aave vett a, few Moments to spare, sire Capitellet-Young man My tinle is worth $410 an. hour, but Ini,give Yon ten MintiteS. ' " aellerenThankse Mit if it's all the ame to you, sir, 1 believe I'd 'father eke itain cashe "BEST MEDICINE FOR WOMEN" t What Lydia E. Pinicchturt's B Vegetable Compound Did For Ohio Woman, 1,1 MUSICAL MYSTICISM, "What is that tune you were ,PlaYe ng ou thetr" ist tune. That is a son- ta." "What's the differenee?" "Weil with a sonata it's hard .tor he average lesteuer to eleteet rale. akes. With a tune you'Ve got to know retty well what you are about. - Osten Tranteript, *. p A JOLLY WAR VICTIM. Pat had lost an eye in battle. When O got out of the hosPital and went ad< to the, front, he get into an ar- ument with alt English soldier. "I'll et," he said, "that X Cali see more ith my one eye than you can with our two." "Prove it." "Weil, I can See two eyes in your face, and you can only Bee one in mine." Portsmouth, Olde.-" I suffered from irregularities, pains la hey side and wee te Weak itt times could hardly get around to do my work, aad as I had four in my family and three boarder itriado it very hard for nee. 'Lydia E. Pinklutres 'Voge. table Compound Was recommended to me. I took 1 and it luta resto reY heelth. It it certainly the beef medielne for woman's ailnierita 1 evei th eaw."-e-Mrs. gARA SilaW, R. No, lee ro Portsmouth, Ohio. Mrs, Shaw pl.oved the me * merit of tiltin tnediehie and wrote this letter in ordet re that ether suffering. Women may iloci co relief as she did. :Women who are aufbring as ehe wee en should not drag along from day to day re Without r,ivInee thia famous root am, de herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vogel table Compound, a trial. Per specia advice in regard ttrlitich ailmette writ 1' to Lydia H. ?inkhorn edi eine Co., Lynn, cl Mass. The result of its forty par( ea exporiona• hitt your flOrY100.. Londort's Tea Houses. The death of Sir Jnseph Lyons re. minds us What a modern institution the tettalsop le. You need not be very old to remember the time when area- tieally the enly places where a on of „ tea, could be obtained in. London were the red fashioned ?coffee houses, with eir boxed -in eompartmettts ana tar - w, uncomfortable seats. The customers were exclutively en, and if a woman required light feeshment ehe had to 'catch for a nfEct;oner's shop, where tea and free were eametimes grudgingly ✓ el, 01 fatnine pricee, at lietie atal marble tablee tucked foloi rk corneres-Londen Chronleie. Mrs. 'Newly Itich-Are you norttin v Oval the very latest form of inti - 151? Doctor- Quite, madam. You ughed exactly like the Countess o? cssex,-Lention Puneh. o o