Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Feb 1916, p. 11

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CARBON A PUZZLE The Mystery That Links a Dia- « mond to.a Lump of Graphite. A SECRET OF THE MOLECULES. Mhy Exactly the S. ne Elements Form Such Different Su satances Is the Rid- die--Changing a Mass of Charcoal i Into a Minute but Pure Gem. Carbon, one of the seventy or eighty primary elements out of which all mat- ger is formed, occurs, pure, in two en- © firely different and contrasted forms. . These are, first, diamond and, second, graphite or plumbago (pencil lead). If each of these substances was a com- pound or mixture of diffe:ent elements, comprising in both cases carbon as the principal constituent there would be no cause for mystification. But they are 'absolutely the same unmixed thing, al- though in appearance asd jn properties they are totally unlike! | The molecules of each are the same-- they are molecules of carbon, and noth- ing else--but in one the molecules ure Oo Jingo that they form a tramspar- ent, expessively hard, solid crystal, en- dowed with marvelous powers of re- Iracting light which make it the most dazzling of all gems, and, in the other, the sa molecules are so arranged that they form a dull, soft, black or gray substance that leaves a dirty streak (when rubbed upon paper. | The pecret lies within them. It is in the internal play of the molecular forces,| but what makes those forces act so differently when they have pre cisely the same material to work upon? Burn d diamond and it turns to graph- ite. | Charpoal is a third form of carbon, 'ordinarily produced by the charring of wood, (whereby all the other elements contaiged in the wood are removed, lea the carbon in the form of a soft, black substance which, in some ways, mbles graphite. | Cha | and a few similar sub- ptances are ealled amorphous, or "shapeless" carbon, because they are ver grystallized, as diamond always, 'and graphite sometimes, is. Yet char «coal, tpo, has the royal diamond blood, That plood sometimes sits on the throne and sometimes slaves in the' imine; put, despite the turn of chance below, [it is always itself. ; Charpoal can turn to diamond, and the things that make it turn are great heat gombined with great pressure. Here, [in outline, is the process, as it bas been performed in laboratories, es- pecially by the French chemist, Mois- san: Into a mass of molten iron a quantity of pure charcoal is put. Then the liguid iron, which dissolves the charcoal very thuch as water dissolves sugar, is placed in an electric furnace and heated in a temperature of nearly 5,000 degrees F., Immediately it is plunged into cold water, in order to cause a quick cooling. | The result of the sudden cooling is the formation of a solidified shell on the surface of the iron which power- fully compresses the interior part, when it in turn cools and tries to ex- pand. The result of this compression 18 to force the imprisoned carbon (char- coal) to crystallize into diamond. ,If the molten iron is allowed to cool at ordinary pressure the charcoal only turns to graphite. So we see that the magic wand whose touch makes dia- mond of what would otherwise be mere dull pencil lead is the wand of high pressure. ' | It is believed that this is substan- tially the way in which nature herself makes diamonds. In the great dia- mond mines of South Africa there is evidence that the gems were formed in the bowels of ancient and long since extinct volcanoes, where, of course, both intense heat and enormous pres- sure were available in uulimited quap- tities. But nature in ber huge volcanic laboratories works on a scale which 'We cannot imitate, so that there is no - cause for surprise in the fact that, while she can make diamonds as big as walnuts when she chooses, we can make none even as big as a pin's head. The t artificial diamond is less than a millimeter in diameter, But it is genuine diamond, and with that fact to start with, who can say what may be done some day? ! There are a number of meteors which have fallen upon the earth from outer ppace that contain microscopic dia- resembling the artificial omnes. one of them is large enough to be of y importance except as scientific \ but as such they fill the mind with wonder. Where and how (were they created--in what world or what star? The principal metals found in me- teors are iron and nickel, with oceca- sional traces of cobalt, copper, alumi num, tin and maguesium i wg ¥ Done. i "Gadspur is a man who prides him- self on doing things." | "True. But I had to disappoint tim J the other day." | "How so¥ . "He wanted to do me" ; Yo ' 4 Cruel Comment. Manager--| say. Hamfat, old mam, why don't you join a woving picture company? Crushed Tragedian-- Why ~ should 1 so degrade wy art. sir? Man- ager--Because then. you see, you can become a reel acter : Our life--a little gleam of time be tween two eternities. ~Carlyvie. | Sir Glenholme Falconbridge, Speaking at a rebruiting meeting, of- fered his services ip any capacity. Canada's revenue increased more than thirty million dollars during the Past ten months, : ! DODGING AN AVALANCHE. hid 3 4 Ege A Risk That Often Must Be Faced In Climbing the Alps. While au Englishman was climbing one of the peaks of the Alps be came (0 a stretch of broken snow about 100 feet in breadth, composed 'of the rem- nants of avalanches which bad fallen from the face of the mountain gbove. It was necessary to cross it. An ava- lanche had fallen ten minutes before this Englishman and his two guides had reached the piace and another would doubtless soon follow. The crossing must be made between two avalanches. Twenty yards this side of the snow track and perhaps 100 yards from the threatening snow wall the little party paused for critical survey. The ques- tion stood for imstaut decision. From the appearance of thie snow wall It must be determined whether another avalanche would fall within the next few minutes. 'Was it best to hurry silently across? Was it best to wait? Was the nest section of the snow face in such a con- dition that a mighty yell would send an avalanche down and gave them an opportunity for a hasty retreat? On the other hand, if they all yelled together and no avalanche fell would the con- cussion hasten the next fall, whereby they might be overwhelmed in the crossing? One towering pinnacle of snow, push- ed a little beyond its fellows, seemed ready to totter to its fall. They look- ed at it doubtfully. It ought to have gone with the last avilanche. Would it stand or would it fall within the next three minutes? A hundred feet is not much of a space to cross, but such crossing, If through fresh, broken snow from six to ten feet deep, is slow and floundering work. From the time that the party came within view of the snow the utmost si- lence had to be observed, and mow, the searching but momentary scruti- ny completed, one of the guides whis- pered that they could come along. With noiseless speed they hurried for ward. Silently they struggled through the snow and as silently emerged on the other side. - Just the Thing. "Do you think 1 bad better give the patient gas?" inquired the dentist's as- sistant of his chief. "By all means," replied the eminent practitioner. "He has taken an hour and a half of my time telling me how be suffers, and on the 'like cures like' principle gas is just what he needs." Humor on the Links. "Fore!" shouted the golfer, ready to play. y But the woman on the course paid no attention. "Fore!" he repeated, with not a bit more effect than the first time. "Try her with 'Three ninety-eight,'" suggested his partner. "She may be one of those bargain counter fiends." Japan's National Symbel. The origin of the emblem of the sun as the Japanese national symbol dates back to time immemorial. The first record of its use on land is that of a famous war lord of the eleventh cen- tury. Again in the fifteenth. century the emblem was adopted by the feudal lords and warriors. The commection of the emblem with the navy is also deep rooted, having had local usage as ear- ly as 71 A. D. and a more extended field in 110 A. D. The official adeption of the sun flag to represent the nation took place in 1810. : +) An Ominous Outlook. "The judge of my court is & charac ter," remarked the clerk. "He saw a play called 'Seven Days' and the fol- lowing morning every prisoner got seven days. Then he read a book call- ed 'Three Weeks') and every culprit got three weeks. I'm a little puzzled as to the outcome of his present liter ary activities." "Why so?' 5 "Just now be is reading a volume en- titled 'One Hundred Years of Prog: ress.' a - H to Test Paper: You cannot test paper, as you would string, by stre it. It has been stretched so much in the process of mgnufacture that it won't stand much more. The way to test it is to rub it in the bands. After such treatment Poor paper is full of holes and cracks. Good paper simply takes the dppear- unce of leather. If much white dust Is produced we know there are earth- ly impurities. If it cracks it has been bleached too much.--Londou Globe. -------------------- Remembered. "Mother, you must have known our principal when you went to school." "Why. yes, 1 guess I did." "He seemed to remember you to- day. He told me what a bdght girl I was, and then he said, 'It doesn't seem possible that you can be Amy Jones' daughter." Rapid Thinker. Mother--Always think twice before Jou speak. Tommy--Gee. ma, if you do that yourself you must do some swift thinkin' when you get goin' for pa. . - 1 Infatuated. by "Likes to hear himself talk, doesn't he?" "Does he? Say, If be talked in his weep Le'd stay awake all night to Jie ten!™ ' A brakeman named H. McDowell, Toronto, was fatally crushed while shunting at the" consumers' QGas Works siding. " A Government commission will probe the coal and eoke question in Great Britain, CHANGED ONE LETTER. How a Serious Political Crisis in Cana- da Was Averted. At the period when British Columbia was threatening to withdraw from the Dominion of Canada because the Car Darvon settlement had been ignored by the Mackensie administration the late Lord Dufferin took part in a pub lic function in Quebec. A While the procession was moving through the principal streets a gentle man, breathless with excitement, hur- ried up to his excellency's carriage to say a "rebel" arch had been placed across the road so as to identify the viceroy with the approval of the dis- loyal inscription thereon. "Can you tell me what words there are on the arch?' quietly asked Duf- ferin. ; "Oh, yes!" replied his informant. "They are 'Carnarvon Terms or Sepa- ration.' " "Send the committee to. me," com- manded his excellency. "Now, gentle. men," said he, with a smile to the com- mittee, "I'll go under your beautiful arch on one condition. I won't ask you to do much, and 1 beg but a trifling fa- vor. | merely ask that you alter one letter in your motto, Turn the 8 into an R--make it 'Carnarvon Terms or Reparation'--and 1 will gladly pass.un- der it." The cominittee yielded, and eventu- ally Dufferin contrived to smooth over the difficulties and to reconcile the mal- contents, SENSES OF TREES. Something Almost Human In Same of the Plants' Actions. Mr. James Rodway, who is the cura. tor of the British Guiana museum and an eminent botanist, declares that plants have at least three of our five senses--feeling, taste and smell--and that certain tropical trees smell water from a distance and will move straight toward it. But trees not in the tropics can do as well. A resident of an old Scotch mansion, says a writer lu the Scots. man, found the waste pipe from the house repeatedly choked. Lifting the slabs in the basement paving, he dis- covered that the pipe was completely encircled by poplar roots, They be louged to a tree that grew some thirty yards away on the opposite side of the house. Thus the roots had moved steadily toward the house and had penetrated below the foundation and across the basement until they reached their goal, the waste pipe, 150 feet away. Then they had pierced a cement joining and had worked their way in long, taper ing lengths inside the pipe tor a con- siderable distance beyond the' house. There seems something almost hu- man in such unerring iustinct and per- severance in surmounting obstacles. And Yet They Say Authors Are Poor. Authors may not now. spuru the of- fer of money for their work, but they really do sometimes fail 10 cash checks, according to the cashier of the Century company. "Il. don't know what they do with the checks." be said in com- plaint to a friend the other day, ""un- less they frame them. "Though ac- knowledgments bave proved the re- ceipt of the checks; | am always carry: fug on the books corresponding -ac- counts that I can't close up for months, Sometimes years. | remember espe- clally one check issued to a famous actor and author. He died a number of years ago The check was made out anew to the estate. Still it is un- cashed. There is more thun one au thor I'd bless if he--it 1s usuvally he-- would only go and get his money." Ready For the Worst. "A woman in a parish where I lived," said an 'English clergyman. "used each day to prepare herself for the worst 1 was complimenting her one day on the extreme tidiness of the huusde even early in the morning. "Yes, she said; 'I always likes to 'ave my bedrooms done hearly, for, as I allus sez, you never knows what may 'appen, 'ow soon one of the children may be brought 'ome in a fit or with a broken leg, and, as 1 allus sez, it don't matter what 'appens. so long as Fou've got a bedroom to put 'em iuto.' " Chivalry. "Do you know," said the particularly well groomed and elaborately viva: cious lady in the full bloow of her sec- ond youth, "that 1 have the most won- derful gardener in the world--the ten- derest hearted not only of gardeners, but of men? He has always Made me up a very special bouquet on my birth- day and presented it to me in person. But ever since 1 was thirty--well. he's only given \me a birthday bouquet ev ery third year." . Heroes and Villains. Men are not made herves by the per- formance of an act of heroism. bat must be brave before they can perform it; so they were not wade villains by the commission of a crime. but were, villains befyre they committed it is This So, Ladies? "They say that a Martian year has over G00 days." "Possibly it is in Martian years that our 'ladies give their ages." Solved. Knicker-- What would happen i" an Irresistible "force met an immarahle body? Bocker---The mule would kick itself Intelligence is the mother of good luck. . rn nein Rev: Dr. W. H. Hincks of the Methodist Church, Toreato, urged fellow-preachers of milifary age to join the army as privates, not as Achaplains, we { ! IS OUR CLIMATE CHANGING? Not at All; It's About the Same Now as It Was Ages Age. - The question of the constancy of the climate must be discussed for three different time iutervals--first, Las the climate remained constant daring the recent past, say the last hondred years; secondly, bas the climate re- mained constant during the historic times, say the last 7,000 years; third- ly, has the climate remained constant during recent geologic ages, say she last 10,000,000 years? There are many stations where me- teorological observations have been made for more than a hundred years-- in fact, a few records cover more than 800 years. Based upon these observa- tions, the statement can confidently be made that the climate is essentially the same now as it was many years or even a hundred years ago. This is largely contrary to popular bellef. It means that, taking one year with an- other, the snowfall is just as large now as then. It means that sleighing lasts just as long now as then. 'It means that the winters are po milder now than then. It means that the sum- mers are no hotter now than then. The constant statements by the older people that the climate is different now than it used to be when they were younger are due to the tendency to magnify and remember the unusual, while the ordinary is forgotten. Thus in time it is only the unusual snowfall or the extremely low temperatures that are well remembered, and unconscious- ly the abmormal bas thus been substi tuted for the normal. These state- ments are also due to the fact that the attitude toward life, the amount of en- ergy, the dally occupations and per- haps the place of residence of the old- er people are very different now than when they were younger. In discussing the possible changes in climate during the last 7,000 years in- ference must be drawn from such re- corded facts as the dates of harvest, the kind and amount of crops raised, the kind of clothing worn by the peo- ple, the habits of life of the people, the existence of certain wild animals and forest trees, the size of the rivers, the height of lakes and inclosed seas, etc. From evidence of this kind the conclusion has been drawn that there have been no marked changes in cli- mate during historic times.--From Wil- lis I. Milham's Book on Meteorology. Storms and the Wind. It is a curloys fact that what is gen- erally known in some of the eastern states as a northeastern storm is in reality, says Popular Mechanics, of quite a contrary origin. Because a strong wind which frequently carries beavy rain is apparently driven from a northeasterly direction it is popular- ly assumed in a specific area that the storm originates somewhere in a north- eastern zone, while in truth its real source 1s in the west or southwest. The explanation is that such a disturb- ance is merely an indraft of a baro- metric depression in the opposite direc- tion. The storm is known as a "flare- back" and is ome of the conditions which cause a weather forecaster diffi- culty. One Reason. "Do you know why money is so scarce, brothers?' the soap box orator demanded, and a fair sized section of the backbone of the nation waited in leisurely pafience for the answer. A tired looking woman had paused for a moment on the edge of the crowd. She spoke shortly: "It's because 80 many of you men spend your time telling each other why 'stead of hustling to see that it ain't!" The Oldest Libraries. The oldest: libraries of which we bave any certain knowledge are those brought to light by excavations among the ruins of the east. Among these are the Babylonish books inseribed on clay tablets, supposed to have been pre- pared for public instruction about 6560 B. O. It 1s sald by Aristotle that Strabo was the first known collector of books and manuscripts. This was about the year 830 B. C. Skeptical. Over the Phone--Hello! Is that you, Blank? Why, there's a report around town that you're dead. "Is that so? Well, call me up again It it's confirmed, will you? 2 A Downpour. ' "What do you do when your wife begins to cry, Jibway?" > "As my wife is a bead taller than I am and she cries copiously, my first thought is to stand from under." nT - Unkind. Tired Business Man--Take dancing lessons! Well, I guess not! There are too many other ways by which I can make a fool of myself. His Loving Wite--Yes, dear, but you have tried all of those. - A Definition. Debate--An argument or word battle of a formal nature, engaged in by two or more people, in which each tries to convince the other that he is wrong, but only 'succeeds in convincing him- self more firmly that he is right. : < -- % The Hard Struggle, "It's a tough struggle." n, "What is?" " "Doing without the things we actn- ally have to have to try to keep up the payments on the luxuries we didn't Deed ™- Mrs. Mohr was acquitted at Provi- dence of the charge of instigating the murder of hen husband. "The Germans/have killed chival- ry in warfa™ > sald the Bishop of London in'an address Saturday. _-y | 4 Fun in a Blue Book. According to the London corres. of The Glasgow Hex:ld, an incident in the later years of diplomatic career of the late Sir Claude Macdonsld has passed un- by his biographers. It happened at the time that he was at the head of the Legation at Pekin. He had sent to the home Government a despatch dealing with events which were at that moment widespread atténtien, and a rough proof of the document was sub- mitted in due course to Mr. G. N. Curaon, the late Lord Salisbury's as- sistant at the Foreign Office, One afternoon the Under-Secretary perused the despatch and pencilled in the margin a number of piquant comments upon th} grammar of the ished diplomat. Indeed, so forcible were the interlineations that no doubt whatever existed that ue- tween the two men there was the ut- most divergence of view in regard to the question of grammatical pro- priety. To the amazement, however, of the Foreign Office, the comments in ull their bald frankness appeared in the Blue Book as subsequently published, and upon attention being directed 'o the matter the issue was promptly withdrawn and a fresh editién sub- stituted. How these marginal notes ever came to be published in the finished | document will probably remain a se-, cret for all time, unless the theory be accepted that the printers adbered too strictly to the wholesome rule as to following "copy," which is, or should be, one of the cardinal prin- ciples of the typographical art. Actors In Retirement. Many actors have lived long after re. tiring from the stage. Macready, retir ing in 1851 at the age of fifty-eight. passed an honored leisure till his death at Cheltenham, England, in 1873. Aft. er Mrs, Siddons' farewell appearance as Lady Macbeth 1a 1812, being then in her fifty-seventh year, she spent her re- maining score of years in, almost un- broken retirement. The record in this respect, however, is held by that fa mous Master Betty whoin in 1804 Lon- don acclaimed as the Infant Roscius His positively last appearance was made on Aug. 9, 1824, at the age of thirty-two. He died in August, 1874. a "resting" of half a century.--London Standard. Discovered by Accident. - Fuller's earth was discovered in Flob ida in 1898 through mere accident. An effort was made to burn brick on the property of a cigar company near Quincy. The effort failed, but an em- ployee of the company called attention to the close resemblance of the clay used to the 'German fuller's earth. Florida is now the leading state in the production of fuller's earth. A One Sided Argument. "He wants to marry Mary." "Well?" "What do ycu think of him?" #Oh, he's all right, | guess!" "But doesn't it strike you that he is a little bit foolish?" "Of course, dearest, 1 cannot argue that with you because the fact that he wants to get married would give you the strangle hold." Common Phenomena. "Father," said the small boy, "what are delusions of grandeur?' "My son, they are what would cause almost any man to be considered in- sane if he were so indiscréet as to own up to them in public." The Wrong Thing. "I can give you a few wrinkles about keeping young." "That's where wrinkles won't do." ¢ The Play. It is remarkable how virttious and generously. disposed every one is at a play. We uniformly applaud what is right and condemn what is wrong when it costs us nothing but the senti- ment. --Hagzlitt, Rewarded. Actor--I have been in your company ten years. Is it not time that you do something extra for me? Manager-- Yes. From uow on you shall play all the parts in which there is eating. -- Fliegende Blaetter. That's Different. "Faint heart never won fair lady, you know." "Nonsense! I know a man who's got $4,000,000 and a weak heart, and all the girls are just crazy to marry him."--8t. Louis Post-Dispatch. Room Dust. Dust is everywhere, but the worst kind of dust is that which is confined within the four walls of a room. The dust is always germ laden, becanse it is infested with effete matter thro off by human bodies. dl The Comforter. 1 "I understand Mrs. Green Is very fIL* "That's so? What's the matter?' "The doctor thinks it's pleurisy." On, my. 1 must hurry right ev tw see The term "brown study" is a corrup- tion of brow study, brow being derived . from the old German "braun," meaning the brow. We make our fortumes. We call them fate.--Alroy, -- A. R, Creelman, K. C., for four- teen years general counsel to the C. P. R., and formerly of a prominent Toronto law firm, died at Montreal COMPULSORY SERVICE. Objections to System Disappear England. Boston Transcript. rod Opposition to compulsory service disappeared in Great Britain when the question came to its final test, Only 36 votes were counted against the bill on its third reading in the House of Commons, and the bill is now before the Lords, who will cer- tainly not obstruct it. The war will do at least this for Great Britain--it will bring about a recognition of the fact that the state has a right to call upon every citizen to come to its de- fence in time of danger. This right, it is needless to say, has been recog- nized in the United States, where the draft has been invoked in thé past, ind any Serious opposition, the moment the country got into a tight fix. question for us, as well as for Great Britain, to consider is whether it is not wise to employ the principle in Our preparation for defence instead of leaving its invocation to the last desperate moment. Both countries have learned by experience that no tyranny is involved in calling upon all citizens to do their part,with equal service, in the defence of the country, and would be invoked again, without | The | The principle is in nowise different from that implied in requiring every premises clear of unsanitary or in- neighbors, low citizens. why not recognize the duty frankly of universal military training for the young which would supply us with. a sufficient number of capable soldiers for any emergency? THE VALUE OF Real Cause Of This. London Mai) At least one-third of British mer- rhant tonnage is in the hands of the Government, The Admiralty is bu- sinesslike in its dealings with ship- owners, but it acts only as a broker to the War Office and has no control over a ship after it has secured it [He system works this way: War Office wants to transport thousand men overseas. It asks the Admiralty to supply a ship. ship is requisitioned, After that it is for the War Office, not the Admir- alty, to say when the ship's work is done. because someone thinks the may 'come in handy' some day she is left at a foreign port carrying no car- go and 'pushing up' the freights ev- erywhere. this sort of work. end of the war--that is, the trans- is now 86s, A ship can pay for it- self in three or four such voyages. port, clothing, feeding, and muni- tioning of the men: A firm which has been buying and selling ships for a hundred years shows that the rise in freights is looked upon by ship-buyers as a so- lid, tangible thing, which justifies the pre-war price for a ship. "Sailing ships are worth their weight in gold. A ship with a net tonnage of 1,380 sold in 1914 for £5,500. A similar ship, of less tonnage, sold last month for £11,250." These prices are not extraordinary when it is remembered that the coal master, was arrested at Wingham, and a mysterious box of explosixes was discovered there in the railway station. Chief Justice R. M. Meredith has been appointed a Royal Commission- er to investigate charges against County Judge Dowlin of Kent. Guelph, St. Catharines, Brantford and other places have taken addition- al precautions to guard factories, etc. The world is full of short-imeasur people, y= Infants and C oric, Drops ans neither Soothin um, and allays Feverishness. Flatulen Diarrhoea. It lates " alter a lengthy illness, ~ cendiary conditions that threaten his | them in paying three and four times | January | man to pay his taxes and to keep his! It is a part of what each | 1an owes to the safety of all his fel. | Since this is the case, | from the start, and introduce a form! Tripled In Cost Since the War--The | The | The men may be landed, and | ship | We want a special Government for | Let the soldiers | and sailors do the fighting and let | the business men run the business freight to Genoa, formerly 10s a ton! Adolph Schatte, a German band- | armories, | Mr. J. McEwen of Dundas, Ont., writes:--* For fifteen years | suffered with Piles and could ge no permanent cure until I tried Zam-Buk. Perseverance with this herbal balm resulted in a complete cure, and I have not been troubled with the painful ail ment since." Mr. Henry Fougere of Poula- mond, N.S, says:--"1 suffered terribly with Piles and could find nothing to give me relief until I tried Zam-Buk. This cared me. I con+ sider Zam-Buk the finest vintment on the market."" The above are specimens of the many letters we are constantly recgiv- ing from men and women who have ended their suffering by using Zam Buk. Why not do likewise ? Zam-Buk is best for eczema, blood poisoning, ulcers, sores, cuts, bruises, and all skin injuries and diseases. S0c., box, all druggists and stores, or post free from Zam- Buk Co., Toronto. Send this ad- vertisement with name of p and one cent stamp for free trial box. wRITE FOR FREE SAMPLE Bulk Oysters Dominion Fish Co. PHONE 826. Here is Your Chance For a short time we will give an enlargement with a dozen of our $4.00 Cabinet Photos. THE COOKE STUDIO 159 Wellington Street, , Next Carnovsky's Fruit Store. * Coal The kind you are looking for 1s * the kind we sell. Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we guarantee prompt delivery. . BOOTH & CO., Foot of West St. p-- a At tA Nit Children Cry for Fletcher's CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne th and has been made under his pere sonal supervision since its infancy. ' Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢¢ Just-as-good ** are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of hildren--Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA 3 Castoria is a harmless gabstitute for Castor Oil, Pare yrups. orphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms For more than thirty has been in constant use for the relief of Constig cy, Wind Colic, all Teething Troub It is pleasant. Ig ears it les Stomach and Bowels, regu assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. GeNUINE CASTORIA Aways Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Fears . The Kind You Have Always Bought |

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