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Flesherton Advance, 18 Nov 1920, p. 2

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Into a Crockery Teapot Put a teaspoofilul of the genuine "SALADA" for every TWO cups. Pour on freshly BOILING water and let it stand for five minutes. THE RESULT viriii be the most perfect flavoured tea you ever tasted. ^^^' TK(B HSsftcDiry olF 1' â-ºâ™¦-♦•♦-♦â- â™¦- Housing Small Flocks B«tiniixg the Ventilation, Boosting and Feeding MethodB â€" ♦ ♦ .. ♦ ♦ »♦♦»♦♦♦»>♦♦♦♦♦♦.-♦♦♦♦>♦♦-♦♦♦♦â- â™¦â™¦ •♦♦♦.-.♦*-.^..^» «♦«♦-»*-*-»♦♦ By M. B. Taubenhaus. To the many typeB of deoiongtraUon Boultry bouses tli« wrlt«r biui added <mt that h«« Mverai improveroerta ct especial benefit to the ^mail-scaip poultry raiser. I found Ly .xperlence to comiuerclal poultry enterprises ns ••ell as at the Agrkili iral Colieae poultry department that tb?re is (till Deed tor the Improvement of the ventilation syBtem, the roosting ur- rangement and the feeding method. Veotiiatlon Is one of the main es- sentials of an efficient poultry plant. Bottom and top ventilators are best. ,The principal Idea of bottom and top Tentllatlon Is to create a conetAni cir- culation of fresh air throughout the bouse and allow the escac>e of foul air out of the upper or top veniilaton. This Tentllatlon arrangement denion- oDstrates its great value best In hot ireather. PLENTY OF AIR The birds will remain active and Uvely and during the night will get a refreshing rest, always breathing freeh and clean air which will give them •pare vitaUty for the hours of intense heat during the day. The bottom oi)enlng8 are also of a •peclal advantage during the day. The birds retiring from the sun Into the •hade of the house or escaping from rain get the influx of fresh air through thes« bottom ventilators. In fact the btrdfl have this advantage for a Krrat tart of the (lay, u.. ihty are spending a considerable percentage of the hours in the house for feeding as well an for resting. And for this reason the value of this kind of ventilation should not be underestimated. Another advantage of these ventila- tors Is that they are adjustable â€" that Is, they can be opened or closed or partly closed, the proper adjustment <lepending on weather conditions. RKMOVAULK PERCHES The roosts or perches are indepen- dent of each other, loosely placed and removable. Kach individual perch rests on a board which In turn is nail- ed to the rafters. Tho boards which carry the perches are provided with two protruding ends, creating km opening of about two and a half Inches. A wire gate hook is fastened Into the center of one of the protrud- ing endfl with Uie eyes fastened into the opposite or correspondiug end, the perch resting on the body of the gate Book. An arrangement of thi» kind pcrniits an almost Instant removal of the perches, an It nquires but the liftinB of the hook from Its ere to release the perches, thus allowing an easy control of mlteu. This roosting method has no drop- Jdngs platform. Instead a small pit B created by simply placing a tw\>lve- Jnch board running parallel with the perch. The pit Is formed on oio ti'le by the Will of the house and ,) i the i other side by the twelve inehes 'jf tho board. A strip of poultry netting Is fastened to the wall and boa.d to prevent the fowls from scratching !n this pit. Little space is taken up, leaving the remainder of the flou- •vallable for scratching. A Utter < f two to three Inches of cottouocvd hulU placed In the pit scrvu.s I's an absorbent and an occasional spraying makes the house highly sanitary. The absorbent (jualities of the hulls, to- gether with the circulation of the air through the bottom ventilators, dry out the droppings, thereby preventing foul odors in the house. The twelve- inch board Is easily taken out when the droppings are to bo removed with the hulls. Yearn of obgervntion and experience have brought home the fact to the writer that the pit system is in every way superior to the droppings board for many reasons, mainly its strictly sanitary advantage over the latter. To be more explicit the droppings cannot scatter all over the floor, as they are caught by the hulls in the pit. They do not adhere to the dry boards and permit all Impurities to settle and form a breeding place for the many types of vermin so well known to the poultryman as the cause of low effic- iency In the flock. 8elf-feedi.no hoppers. The pit may be cleaned out when- ever the time of the owner permits, whereas the droppings-board system re<iulreB the scraping of the droppings every day and a frequent cleaning dur- ing the summer season. It Is no doubt easier to sweep out the pit than to scrub the droppings board and then in addition sweep the floor. Another attractive feature of thia style of housing consists of the home- made self-feeding hoppers. The feed- ing and watering are done entirely from outside of the house, which saves not only labor but also floor space. The latter is free from the burden of the water containers and feeders which spill feed and splj^sh water, thus keepin gthe floor of the house In an unsanitar ycondition. Tho feeders and water receptacles are eas- ily removed from the outside and, when filled, are easily returned to â- lieir con\partn:ents. The feeders and â- water containers arc protected againat the sun and rain by the overhanging ventilators, thus keeping the feed and water clean, cool and uncontaminated. These feeders easily can be made out of discarded oil cans. They niaiie a ready and sanitary container for dry mash and oyster shell at a very small expense. Kach water bucket is placed in a coniparinieiit by itself but near enougli to the feeders and next to the entrance opening. This arrangement allows the poultry to feed at their own will, which is a Rrcut factor in main- taininK a produciiiK flock. Oil cans al.'io are used for nests. As they are arranged in the same way as the feeders, tho gallisring of egKs can be done from outside at a srcat sav- ing of time and labor. A poultry house of this dcscripticu is reeonnueiulej for tho fancy breeder and e.'iiecially for the small-scale poultry-raisers. . >-â-ºÂ« An Easy Pill to Take. â€" Some i)er- sons have repiigiiaiico to pills because of their iiuuseatiiiK taste. Par- I melee's \'ogctable Pills are so prepar- ed as to make them ugreacble to the most fastidious. The most delicate can take them without feeling the revulsion that follows the taking of ordinary pilN. This is one reason for the poiiuliuity of these celebrated pills, but tho main reason Is their high tonlcul (luality as a medicine for the stomach. ^♦-o •itfHiBKftlBfttKltlllBVftaBaKBBBIItKiaM ft K n m m m #, m a. <a>MW I'^simnics â€" ' » HAY WARD. VARIATIONS â€" Hey ward, Huward, Howard. RACIAL OniOIN EngllBb. SOPRCK An office or title. It Is a surprising thing how many family names of to-day have come down to us from words denoting occii- |>atlon or titles of office which long since have become obsolete. Kew people In this country bearing the name would have any Idea of what a "hayward" or a "heyward" was In England of the twelfth, thirteenth or fourteenth centuries, nor of the na- ture of his duties. Even the explanation that the medl- val word "hay" meant "hedge," and Is not our modern "hay," would hard- ly iserve to give .vou the right <lue. The "hedge warden" was not the keeper of hedges in the sense that he was a gardener. Ills duties consisted In .service toward the villagers, the fanners of his day. Fences and walls were little used in those days to mark the division of land. For this purpose hedges, either the real thing or mere indications of them, were used. Naturally, cattle had a tendency to stray from one man's land to another. It was the "hayward's" duty to prevent this. Or- iginally his duties were limited to this. He was a servitor of the entire com- munity rather than the employee of a single person. But in the course of time his authority and his duties were extended until he became a sort of general trespass officer, and an of- ficial of considerable importance In each village or community. "Hayward" Is not the regular source of the family of Howard, though some- times' the latter is simply a corrupted spelling of the former. BAKING POWDER Contains no al\im We unhesitatingly rc' commend Ma^ic Bakinil Powder as being (he best and purest baking powder possible to produce. It possesses elements of food that have (o do the building up of brain and nerve matter and is absolutely free from alum or other injarious substitutes. â-º^♦♦- LEHER FROM MRS. WAKELIN Tdl> Remarkable Story of Sickness and Recovery. Toronto, Ont. â€" "I Buffered from weakneMLSeeined to be tired al the time, and had no ambition to do any- thing or go any place. My nerves were In bad Hliape, I could not Bleep at night, and then came a breakdovrn. I read of Lydia K. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound In the newspapers and hct- ieral of my friends I advised me to use It, and it surely put new life into me. Now 1 am qt.it.0 ul.le U) do all my own work, and I wijiJJ strongly advise every suf- fering woman to irive Lydia R. Pink- ham's Vcgetxble Cximpound a trial." â€" Mrs. Chakijs Waksun, 272 Christie Bt, Toronto, Ont.« The makers of Lyiilla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound liavc thousands of men letters as uiat abdveâ€" they tell the truth, eUe they could not have been ob- tained for love or money. This medicine is no stranger -it has stood the test for more than forty years. | If there are any cumpllottlons you do not understand wrfte to Lydia E. Pink« ham MedidM Oo^ (ooDfiduitial), l^aa, \VEST.MINSTEU ABBEY (Life, New York.) It Is disclosed In the jvaper that Westminster Abbey is In bad repair, and there is a call out for a million and a (luarier dollars for a repair fund. Money will be accepted even from the United States. To keai> up Westminster Abbey^ or any other ab- bey or cathedral ciiureh in Kugland, Is an excellent invest nieni for Am- erican loose change. These old churches In Great Britain are as much behind that part of the population of the United States which Is of British descent as tliey are behind the Britisli at home. Nobody much came to this hemisphere from the British Isles be- fore the seventeenth century, and in the seventeenth century the Kiigllsh cathedrals and abbeys were already old <'hurches. I'hjslcally they belong to En>;land; spiritually they belong to anybody that derives from Eng- land. Americans of English descent may well help to keep them standing and In repair. If only for the sake of their own descendants. Nothing Is so interesting to American travellers, not even .Moiitn.artie, as the lOnglish cath- edrals. When the hat Is passed for Westminster Abbey, drop something substantial In it, not at all as charity, but as an investment, and an Inherited duty. <» » CM for Toothsche. â€" Then* Is no pnin so acute and dlHtres;siiig us toothache. When vou have so unwelcome a vIhI- t(ir iipiil.v Itr. Thomas' Eilectric Oil n(('ordlnK to directions and you will find Immediute relief. It (ouches the nerve with soothing effect and the pain departs at onre. That It wlU ease tool bathe Is another fine quality of this Oil, showing the many uses It has. ' How Sallow Skin Can Be Changeil I To Rosy Complexion j -♦ •♦-♦ ♦ ♦ ♦•♦♦♦♦»♦•♦♦♦«♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦ Every woman with pale cheeks and poor complexion needs medicine â€" needs a potent tonic to regulate her s.vstem. To tone up the stomach â€" to insure good digestion - to give new life and vitality to the whole systemâ€" where Is there a remedy like Dr. Hamilton's Pills'^ Dr. Hamilton's Pills enable you to eat what you like -- they correct con- siipatioiiâ€" make nourishing blood - instil force and %ini into a run-down system. If nervous and can't sleep yotir re- medy is Ur. Hamilton's Pills - they search out the cause of your condition and you rise In the morning refreshed, strong, vigorous, ready for the day's work. Dr. Hamilton asks every weak and debilitnti (I person to U'^° his Mandrake and liulternut I'ills. They make old folks feel young, and weak folks feel strong. Their effects upon insonionia am! langour is marveliou-. Hundreds deiiare tiiey soothe aiul (|ulet tho nerve.s so that a good night's rest al- ways follows tlieir use. To look will, to feel well, to keep well, use Dr. Hainillons Pills. They are mild, cleaiiKlng, slrenpthening - good for the young or old. Bold by all dealers in 2r)c boxc.-s. A Mine Shaft. The sinking of a mine shaft 21.5 feet in diameter is no s.uall undertak- ing, and its Hccomplishiuent is con- sidered the record for the world in such work. If one vLsuali/es what a hole In the ;;round ov'c'r twenty feet across means and 27it feet deep, its magnitude ciiinmeiices to be appreci- ated. The feat was accomplished in South Africa. The sinking of the shaft was accomplished in thirty-one days. The average tons of earth and rock hoisted at a blast was ninety, maning S,100 tons for thirty days of sinking, three blasts a day. The total explosives used amounted to fifteen pounds a foot sunk. Asthma Brings Misery, but Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asth^na Remedy will replace the misery with welcome relief. In- haled ae smoko or vapor it reaches tlui very inmost rectisses of tho bronchial passages and Hoothes them. Ro- ptriction pass(.s and easy breathing returns. If you knew as well how this remedy ^â- (nlld help you as do thousands of grateful users, there would be a pfckage In your home to- night. Try P.. • . » Ar. attachment for sewing machines to wave a fan is the Invention of a Texan. NATiniAL "That confounded waiter spilled some steaming soup down my neck." "Don't blame you for getting hot under the collar." â€" Boston "Tran- script. Ml Hard's Liniment For Olttempsr, '%i^\\ Baby s Own Soap Keeps the ekin healthy and sweet Jt't Best for liaby ond Dett for Toit AtaSST f OATS UMrrCO, Mtra, M«mimL PT.tfl POEMS SUCCESS. Success Is counted sweetest By those who ne'er succeed. To comprehend a nectar Requires sorest need. .\'ot one of al! the purple host \\'ho took the flag to-day Can tell the definition So clear of victory. "' ' As he .defeated, dying. On whose forbidden ear The distant strains of triumph Break, agonized and clear. â€" Emily Dickinson. DOG FLIESâ€" NOT FLEAS -4000 MILES Liieutenant Crumrinc, one of tho group of aviators to make tha transcontinental f.lghl of <00O miles from Now York to Nome, Alaska, he.s just linishfd the re- turn trip, landing at Mineola, L. 1., bringing with him a pup of tha famous "Bhie-Eyed Siberian" breed, which recently won th» Alaskan sweepstakes and are 89 much l>) demand. ,, ^ ^ • CHILDHOOD AILMENTS. The ailments of childhood â€" consti- pation, iiniigestlon, colic,-colds, etc. â€" can be iinickly banished through the use of Haby's Own Tablets. They are ii mild but thorough laxative which instantly regulate the bowels and sweeten the .stomach. They are guar- anteed to contain no harmful drugs and can he given t â-  the youngest baby with perfect safety. Concerning them Mrs. .Mclde Lepage, Ste. Beatrix, Que., writes: â€" "Baby's Own Tablets were of great help to my baby. They regulated her bowels and stomach and made her plump and well." The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 2Iic a box from The Dr. Williiiins' Medlciue Co., BrockviUo Ont. ^♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«i*^«««««*««#4 - e»r Magic Carpet 1 1 \ Constlpalfoa Cure » I V/sifs to New Worldi | i'OZ.VANIA. Few parts, of Kurope have a more IntereffinK or more romantic history than the province which formed part of Prussia's share of the partition of >'oland and which was known before the war as tb<; (li'and Duchy of Posen. The toleil i:rea, sometimes referred to before tho re-birth of Poland us Prus- sian Poland, contains an area of 11,- 200 square miles .tlie two towns of Importance beiiig Bromberg and Po- sen. It adjoins \\'est Prussia on the north, Brandeiiliur.i; on the west, Sile- sia on the south, and what was known until recently as Kusslan Poland, its boundaries coincide with no natural division of any kind. There are several hundred lakes and about cme-fifth of the area is sandy and unfertile and one-tenth marsh. With the i!xc eption of the Vis- tula the rivers of Poznanla are mostly tributaries of the Oder, the largest being the Warta. The climate Is tem- perature and the rainfall Is not' ex- cessive.' Poznanla is the central sec- tion of the racial borderline between the Germans and Slavs which runs from the Baltic to the Boravlan gate. The population save for the military and civic officials was almost wholly Polish, but there are a few (Jerman 8ettleinei:ts. The decree of annexation of Poznanla fcillov.ed the signing of the treaty of Vienna In 181.5. In 18.10 a rebellion occurred In Russian Po- land, and as a result of this Poznanla lost many of the special privileges which has 1 ten granted to her. An abortive revolution took place In 1846 and for three years anarchy reigned. Tliereaftcr the natlcmal struggle was keen but in 1S70 Blsmack attacked Poles and Catholics In a rapid succes- sion of laws. Finally making a spe- cific attack against the Polish lan- guage. The Poles now have their long awaited revenue. The chief In- dustry Is agriculttire. the most Im- portant crop being rye. About twen- ty per cent, of Poznanla Is forest, and there are practically no manufactures and no minerals except salt. •♦-♦â- â™¦â™¦-♦â- â™¦-♦«-♦â- â™¦â™¦-♦-»•♦ ♦♦-•-♦â- â™¦^* ♦-♦-♦-♦♦ ♦ ♦ ' ' i J Sneeze, or Cough * t Use "Catarrhozone" | ♦ ♦ -♦ ♦-♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦-♦ ♦â- â™¦-♦-♦^» ♦ ♦-♦ ♦♦»«♦* *^*-^ When germs attack the lining or the nose, make you sneeze and gag â€" wjien later on they infest tiie bron- chial tubesâ€" how can you follow fbem wltli a cough syrui)? You can't do it that's all. Cough syrups go to the stomachâ€" that's "why they fail. But Catarrhozone goes everywhere ' gels right after the germsâ€" kills themâ€" heal.-; tlie soreness cures the inflammation- makes Catarrh disap- pear. N'ot diffi- « t fd^ Catarrhozone to cure. In cause it contains the cs- sen'es of pine balsams and other anfi:;ppllC3 that siinply mean death to catarrh. Large size costs Jl.OO and contains two months' treat'uient: smaller sizes 2uc and iOc, all druggists and storekeepers. ' A A dnif gut say* « "For naar.jr thirty years I hart commcndcti tha E.xtT*ct of Uooit, kaovrn ki Mstber Scloci't Curative Syrcp, for tht radical cure of con*tipatiaa ar.j indigeclian. It it an old relirbl* ravtedy that never fsils to <{o the work." 30 drop* thrice daily. Get tbc Geacica, at £ rsf gi**** * ! Facts About Canada \ Don't Hawk, Blow, Sneeze, or Cough MILKING OF COWS Twice or Thrice Daily a Debated Question. Shall cnws be milked twice or three time* a day? To tlie average render this may seem of siunll concern. To the farmer and dairyman it is a (luestion of considerable interest Tests have recently been made In .Nova Sco- tia, Quebec- and Ontario. Professor Barton, of .Macdotiald College, says that it lins been found from the stand- point of economy and safety ih.it a cow giving CO lbs. of milk a day shnuM l>e iiiilkctl three lime.*. Both Pro- fessor Trueman of the Xova Scotia Agricultural ColleRe and Professor Barton are agreed, however, that un- less the udder ks over distended there Is little or no advantage to bo gained by milking three time.< a day. Those authorities are fiuoted in the Septfm- ber number of tlie Argicultural (laz- ette of Canada. ProfCi^sor Wade Toole also contributed to a solution of the same problem by giving results of tests made at the Ontario Agricultural College. The test.s are to be con- finufKl and Professor Toole hopes to be able to give a more definite opin- ion another year than he does at pre.s- ent. In the meantime he shows that three hi.rch-claKs pure-bred cows gave more by thrice than by twice milking a day. His present conclusions, however, are the same as those of Professor Barton and Trueman. , #«» â€" - â€" Worms feed upon the vitality of children and endanger their lives. A simple and effective cure Is Mother Oravos' Worm Kxtermlnator. A British naval officer Is the In- ventor of a motor operated, chata driven lawn mower with adjustabl* speeds. KIPLING'S CHEQUES. At one t::iie Uudyard Kipling al.- way paid his bills, no matter how small tliev happened to be, with cheque. After a while he discovered to his amazement that his bank ac- count .'•bowed a much larger balance than the stubs of his chequebook, warranted. In fac-t. while ho was drawing clietiucs for small amounts nlmcst duily, lii.s money In the bank did not dwindle in the least. For a •lon.i? time he wiis at a loss to account for this astonishing fact until he hap- pened one dav to visit an office, the occupant of which was an enthusias- tic autograiph collector. Theie tho author saw o:ie of his own cheques, framed and hanging on the waU. Thus \\iv myster.x was solved. It ap- peared that t'ne local ehopkeepers found that they could often gel mure for Kipling's cheques by selling them to autograph hunters than they could by cashing them at the bank, and so. although the author kept on signing cheques, his bank balance remained almost Intact. < . ». To safc.^uard the child from dam- age that worms cause, use Miller's Worm Powders, the medicine par ex- cellence for (hiloren. These pow- ders will clear the system entirely of worms, will regulate and stimulate the organs Injuriously affected by the worms, and will enc-ourage healthful opt'ntlon of the digestive i)rocesse9. As a vermifuge it cannot be surpassed In effectiveness. With the Indians of ttic cJ djys In Canada, woman was a d;'u.ls-' and a slave. She was the mjtiier of warriers; that was the greatest iionor luai could come to her. As far as sharing the regard of her lord and master or taking any .-.ctive part in the affairs of the trll*e, she had but little part. The care of the lodge, the dre.*s!DK of sldna, the cutting ancl gatheriug of' the family firewood from the near-by forests were her daily duties. She and her children gathered nuts and berries in the fail and summer for the menu of the lodge, wher_e the husband and father lived on the best ahe could procure. I !er cooking aparatus waa the simplest kind is was, too. the household work that she performed. She contributed, too, her -shares in tile manufacture of enow shoes and (anoes, and when the, warriors were on the war patli or off on one of their long hunts, they remained In the old camps and kept thing/i in order until the return of the braves, 'i'hey passed the Cme In gossipâ€" or niade moccasins for the winter months, wove fish nets for the river catch and prepared furs for windy aays. The boys aud girls fished In the streams or snared the small f.nl- nials with which the woods abound- ed. When the men of the tribe re- turned, there was a great celebra- tion. If victory had been their lot and prisoners were brousht b;ick, one of the great events la an Indian's i'fe came The prisoner was tortur- ed to death amidst the laughter of the famp. If defe;.t was their portion then was heard the death wail of the women as they l,".raented the fall rf the red warriors. But the life of the Indian woma.a was one long drab exis- tence without regard or love. IB y«ar« Slardard for r)i.Iayc<3 and Painfol M.':i!it.rv:BtKn ecslcd Tin imc!ta?e o.nlv, all Uiasciit. or direct ty Mail Price 'K.CO. Kr.ickirbncker Ecni<-cJy Co., 71 E. Front Pl loroiito, Cana'Ji. A GOLDEN CITY. Tho -Mexican cuy of Guanajuato, built near the oldest gold mines in the- country, was originally constructed of adobes made of the refuse of theoe mines. .Xs the early processes c f ex- traction were very imperfect, tho walls and floors of these buildings wer» thus full of gold. Things would havj continued thus for an indefinite time, and the inhab- itauts would have been living yet in these valuable buildings, if th? pass- age of a railway line nearby l!;>;J not necessitated the demolition of ;ibout 100 liou'-es. Tho decline of lltcrutiiro Indicates the decline of a nation: the two keep pace In their downward tendency. â€" Goethe. ». a Minard's Linlmsnt For Colds, Etc. A merchant can obtain an Imitatlott of IMI.VARD'S LI.NLMENT from a To- ronto house at a very low price, and have It labeled his own product. This greasy imitation is the poore.st one we have yet seen of the many that every Tom, Dick and Harry has tried to introduce. Ask for MI.VARD'S LINIMENT acd you will get It. Minard't Liniment For Garoet In Cowa, K hanser h,is been pstented that suspends a towel from two ('orners go air can circukile tlirough and dry it Skin Sufkrers Readâ€" "1 had a f»vcre atlaci of Kciema," savt Mr. hUchati Tapley of Uadi-won. Sask. "MvlH)dv was sinipiv covered with eruption. 1 had tried every salva and slcin scvip that money cyiiU! buy be- lore I hit ujHm Zam Buk. "Zam-Buk proved the very treatment I needed. I «ged Zam-Buk Medicmal Soap for hatliing. and afterwards applied llie Zam link balm in liberal qiiaiiliiy. • Soothing acid comlortmg. this lre»nent toon hfoiighl iiKatinn linprovrinenl Pertlnt- «nl« »ilh il.iuBuk tuullcd in my kkin bcilia coinpleMly cuir<l " • I'M i.m lluk forCuti. Wonndt at SorM. lU healUi^ pamt Uatioiilthloi 1 KJc all dealer*. You Need Maldng Rugs 'Antique. " How "genuine aulique rug.*" are manufactured and prepared tor Kuro- pean and American markets Is told by an .\merlca'< who visited Bagdad. The shopping streets seem like tun- nels. They are arched overhead with brick to keep out tho heat; thu.s thty run, like suhv.ays, up and down the bazaar quarter. Throuj'h those long, stifling, faintly lighted tunnels throsigs the eternal crowd of men, mules and camels. Often one will see a fine rug Jylng flat in the filth of a narrow street, ground beneath the tramp of men and beasts, Iffit there Is method In this. Foreigners make Oriental rugs, bright and new. In Persia, and sell thcni through Bi'gdad. Sino an "old rug" Is worth more, wily brokers have hit on this way to make a new rug look: old. There Is no poisonous Inin-edient In: Holloway's Corn Cure, and It can be: used without danger of Injury. * • » .. AFTER MONDAY (London Advertiser.) The liquor Interests have every rea- son to believe that the female of th* species Is more deadly than the tuale. Minard't Liniment For Diphtheria. • â- Â» The epigrammatic chatiffenr an- nounces that practice la a punettnv to the tire of theory.

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