Milverton Sun, 23 Oct 1913, p. 7

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the centenaries which rate i i ”’ which is still proudly ex- ited at South Kensington as the locomotive and the founder now know, it is certainly older than the Wylam Dilly i in the Edin. ing that it could outdo horses in ta speed and polling iS Paget, From the hea vy beam engine of Boulton and Watt, the improved one, beamless and direct acting of the Cornishman Trevithick and the introduced the horizontal cylinder and the fly wheel, came the ‘work of Stephenson, which finished the first stage of rail locomotion. William Hedley, the much for Trevithick. The chief of these difficulties was thought to be that of getting a smooth wheel to hold on a smooth rail. Hedley be- lieved that the adhesion would be gine, a crude and ponderous thing bi though it was, proved in 1813 that it could pull eight loaded wagons at five miles an hour. Ti was sixteen years after this that Stephenson’s Rocket appear- ed, and in that period he and others underwent heart breaking Seperiments before they arrived at anything like a solution of the dif- ficulties. presented by the engine and the rails. The first use which the locomotive was put was the carrying of coals and other freight, but the transportation of Passengers naturally followed, and soon railroads were in operation in the of the orld. principal countries Eyen in our present day changes have taken place in evolution of the rail engine speed and endurance undreamed of ‘by Hedley and Stephenson have been achieved, but, with Trevi- hick, the ‘honor of the invention is _ theirs. ——_a___ A woman who cannot find a ser- yant willing to accept the wages which people in moderate circum- fi stances are able to pay and to real- ize that the advantages of compan- jonship with a considerate mistréss, th of a home, and of instruction in the science of housekeeping, urges that young women if they consult their ‘own best interests would seo that | of tio service would fit them for homes of their own, which homes, when made, would be invaluable to the postal It is true, aniouipatl: that ser- whee of this sort might be an ap- nticeship to happiness and use- fulness, but the inquiring woman nd | all others for whom she may eqnfront the fact that the 180 all sum aid phere was the cistial row she told him “Nervous! ‘Is she pervoust” en ji proposal |’ ses see ° colliery “ails _ The Gouty Age. _ Whenever uric acid is in the body instead oe being rea in carried eal means of the action of the healthy liver and kid. may have periodical at. tanks i pane gout in the great toe Point bago, with stiffness and pain that is brought on by oe movement, n worse are sciatica and neuri- tis, in both of which sharp needle- - | pointed erystals of uric acid pene- trate the protecting sheaths of the nerves; in sciatica it is the nerves ther troubles to which gouty people are very liable are certain skin Supssse chief among which is gouty ec: The finger joints and eyen the: Ree of the ears frequently show gt white lumps under the skin, and th no-|y eas but solid deposits of uric Oa youth and early adult life AIS ee ages Retina tance paaple eioald oat i senitally: 2a tart eke Tall x pint at a eae between meals, will | © e found to be a relief to aoe Be si aealswaak: aay Ue saeetet and prevent such accumulation as would only yield to the action of drugs. Go Slowly. other step in the direction of taking life easily is to allow ample time for those actions which have daily. t0| mean getting out o vast | ° the | for °} undergo the t|alds, set like jewels in kets © | sitory dyes to be performed Get up hiswlg, ease adwls, Gon'y batt your breakfast and rush off with it in your throat. It will probably a quar- ter of an hour earlier, Bit after a week you will not notice that, while the gain in comfort ill be iet is dealt with also rather less and should not oo Hi THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY uence LESSON, OCTOBER 26. Lesson IY,—The Sin of Moses and Aaron. Num, 20, 1-8. Golden Text, Psa. 19. 14, to enter Canaan, noar re the southern border of which they sige and their neat against Jehovah bring upon them letra of ae derort again move forward to the conquest of the land of prom Verse 1. The erlldaciieas of Zin— In the immediate vicinity 0! a deth and sed noral ine vildereeer 1 The Anb month—The Nisan or pri Se Meatiad themselves together against Moses—Star! mu against CES EY Strove with Moses—A strife of eonte and argument, abounding in complaint, When our brethren died—Under the burden of Egyptian slavery or Subsequently in the wilderness. of month of . Abid, corresponding to oe “This evil place—The place. of hardship and extreme physical dis- ‘ort. ona place of seed . . . vines . pomegranates — The mise them had been that ihicy should ie brought into a land overflowing with milk and ie Se symbols of prodigal abunda: Neltherie tere 4 any water—Not only is there about ti no sij of an abundance of ‘an and ratte for food; there is not eve water to 6, Fell aS ee faces—Utterly discouraged and helpless. The glory of Jehovah—The cloud, Veprosenting the presence of Jeho- 8. Take the rod—The rod of Aaron which had budded (Num. of} 17) and which was later kept ‘“be- poached eggs (without the toast on which they are always eae roll and butter and a cup cf cof- foe. word is said for sugar gontnies. @ larg nt an an seeellent tabloid meal toF the tired worker who was unable to give up enough time in da; lay to get sufficient mixed danger of constant nerve imizing this d ger, by Miccae out a simple plan|t it is too a time when simple measures are 2 spree of any avail—A Physici Spe ie TESTS FOR LIFE OR DEATH. Method of Avoiding Possibility of |“ Premature Burial. A remarkable new method of test- | i ing absolutely whether an apparent dead person is ly dead, and thus rowing the possibility of a Aho | a3 Ww golden yellow, while the eyes be- e emerald green. If, on duces no effect. to be. enough to make this ‘The ae mille duly ene _ are askin, by whee foucne who he live ae yeing ess, and Bie ee eed vail ee the w tint and the green oyid 5 Bian) Dn evn says, “They | © are transformed into superb sist Tt be added, however, that aaa is ons ne of the most en: aaa _ Literally So! af “Yesterday I received an un- speakable insult.’” “What was it?” “A deaf and dumb man spelled on an ia fingers to me that I was a Z - “What is Fouy nat name??? mum.’ “All right, but we expect a maximum of work, m ind. a 5 | the <i: 5 m™ Minnie, fore Jehovah,” that is, in the sanc- tuary, as a testim f his pow its fubagrngat use is indicated in verse 0 Gathered the gether—From this point on, th narrative as it stands -| confusing. sible rearrangement of tho story r pugusated, by several eminent com- ‘tato: loses and Aaron were at first bidden by Jehovah to speak the rock, which, being skeptical words Jehovah replies, addressing himself fe Moses and Aaron with the word: rots as it stan shall not se this. seen tio! the land—A severe nalty ‘or @ wrong not fully nance in our narrative (cournst re comments on yerse 10 al 1 |ly, of strife or contenti place was in the imieuate vicinity of, if not identical with, adesh double name Meribah of Ka- desh is frequently met with, as a Ni 2’ eut. 32. 51, and 8 sanctified in them—In » the sense or revealing himself as holy. a CHIEF CAN John Avehibald Ruddick Was Born in Oxford County. A despatch the other day an- nounced that we were in danger of in the British ‘K DAIRYMAN. primacy was probably due a large extent to Se otoner ent: we gave ourselves by at cheese een in the fall of 1892 i Bee ae dian Pacific Railway station shed at Perth, Ontario, went sent to the World’s Fair in Chicago the | aoe year, It weighed 22,000 Ibs., requi r its mm: ing the saulvaleen of the es ae ing of 10,000 the fair was over the Sheets a TE ae pe where it was widely ae bi already place for itself in the ket; but that place Jehov: one 5 n the in-}* dispensable piment of ausane: : assembly to-| evi at “Meribah—Literal zu That is clear from the fact: ha the immense] Beans the biggest cite in the } j, manufac- | enlarged as a result of the unique easerinene te which was fully sup- ported by the quality of the Cana- ae article. who had charge of the making of that cheese was Mr. John Archibald Hudslcky ion, ‘since.1905 the Dairy and Cold Storage Commissioner. and official chief of the dairy interests for Can. “Au Oxford Cotmty_m e mi At the time he super ade the | f2.f makitia of this glant ¢ aaa: Tadd tok Tied tore deo ae been : figure in the cheene- raking world » He was at the time just thirty vanes of age, having been born of Bootch- Trish and United Empire Loyalist atoock i 5 ihe rich county of Oxfor natural enoug! that a should t tae his peas to lairying and make a ss of tt, ver, that gave him his chance, tbo} it did lay a broad stro: ong foundation of im. It was ange the ‘cheese ale ae D. M. Mac- pherson, of Lanca in the east- ern end of the Drevin, that Mr. Ruddick got his most valuable ex- perience and made. nis name, When Mr. J. A. Ruddick. twenty years of fee he entered the service of Mr. Maha then controled j in Glengarry and in untingdon, P after this it was that Mr. Ruddick entered the service of the m to spread proved methods of cheese and but- © meantime haying been taken ever by the Ontario Department of Agriculture. Went to New Zealand, It looks very much as if he would have to lay some of the blame for the soneeaue which our cheese is g from New. Zealand on Ruddick. Young Folks 3 Little Mary’s mati . ifty were She liked fom all, but the one she liked best w white peer ane a white tal tinted with bro: When\ seated teeabtunh table her-tethay allel hor She thi how she liked her gifts. nob answer, so 8 rabbit, pretty in the centre of eWhy do you like it?’’ asked her father. ais. t know, but it’s sof; and ss L aoe do love it.”’ As soon as breakfast was over they all went out into the kitchen +) table #0 as tha aa aromen for tea, ah ree vere going to have a party to look their best, little silk dress her mother le for At the dinner eet each one got a chocolate egg, which nae said was her birthday gift to That night mee feck her rabbit eelbarrow, ite as Ever. night she would put it in its wheel- bagrow. She did this until she was a grown woman, and thought it was foolish for a lady to be doing such a silly thing. The i socraees House. hat, Aunt Hya lived in anid ie. “Then another,” said grand- Immediately Timmie and Doris drew their chairs close to the porch told “all about the bagworm and its move-about house. “The lit- tle creaturé is called bagworm,”’ grandfather went on, “because the 8. comes, the of it firmly with his hind feet. Then, on his front feet, he walks away, and drags his house behind him. So. you see, when he gets to a new ele borkodds be “dsetenos haveric Hi go house-hunting. “By and by the bagworm fastens y tl ‘ge ae: wien ma house to the limb of he crawls inside; soon ae aictees into a chrysalis; but Mr. Bagworm is not willing to remain just a dee tad wants wings. crawls 0} ae house he has lived in py since was a larva, and becomes a fully winged moth, with a dark body and wings of a light color. t+ may be that Mrs. Bagworm tes wants wings, just like Mr. Bag- a his Spots Sie er with the Kingston Dairy School i 1898, it was for tl “| evergreen no less than ieee other Canadians for this punpo: drawn upon our cheese a: makers to assist them in improving. ARG methods, . Ruddick's life has in a re- ed the export of dairy pro- a considerable scale not aus has not been figured out; but en years earlier it was one hun- esd and fifty million pounds. This is a three-fold increase, and prob- ably in 1910 it was nearly fountold: ie growth of the cheese produc- tion has been much greater, it be- ing over two hun red million Bounce in 1907, an erent of fifty- | a fold.— man in the Star Weekly. — » The engagement was: pretty 2 ae in fact it looked hopeles: ca] ea ily + “My ee fellows, Pag like ercls hee your ammuni- _tion’s ‘gone, . lives. “I’ve-got a core foot, so I’ll start now. Au revoir, tees The family were emigra’ to| Australia, and little Willie did not | feel altogether at home in his new d 1 | house, lays some eggs, and dies,’ A “Do ibagworms ever fasten their. houses to ore at our trees?” ee “The f heart, _ hath Eek can pee is fool oe @ cannot si that th oie inde rine was in thor, oa you yourself discover as Treason for your denial? No Adequate Ground. For any positive assertion of this kind, ne all, must eal ‘dpolisess with’ partes “truth ‘that he has never heard Pure Women Have Walked With Him ene Se Sa jay, but it] wp aa: ovidentsi . a much later proclamation of | i e | And wi of Beate Men and ce of the Divine, but tl eters Palestinian @ field, or the care sembly as compared with the word of eooraiers And how shall we dare mmon the resolutions of whi tle congress of atheists peainal one life like that of Christ? “I do not Know.” ter all, the most that we can ‘ing confession of his own experience 0°. ‘T do 10 God,” save s ee verdict long pane pronounced y the hagas Psalm ‘o assert Pa problem DOSaHRitoE an open apa I say, the uit limit of denial that w when this is aay =the Siges in the reality of the Divine is well content. For experiences of yetleninr and to-day are sure, and in the face of these experiences ta question can remain an open on only like ane npottins elinibian for the. sal of argument !—Rev, ! John Fis aeh foimen> ;}OLD LONDON HOTELS GOING. Famous Hostelries pa ebenting in Prd) lon, Englan tae in pei er of well-known hostelries have disappeared, and several ambitious schemes have b been proposed to re- Blass them Hotel and ‘Restaurant, Court Hotel, Richm in Eagle Street,’ the Albion in Al- dersgate Street, and the Bedford ational Roman holic lub, but it Buby still give hotel ac- ‘commodatio: to its members, to- ether iat an oratory as part of its equipmen’ But the seni of old hotels interesting no less for the sequel— the opening of new. Ar*hitectural splendors and modern luxuries are nowadays aimed at everywhere, Th of ae hotel mie asked, finished. “T have eee Der them on our grandfather answered. “Some day wie T find a fine specimen, you and Doris and T will look at it under a micro- scope.’’—Youth’s Companion, “LIQUOR KINGS” WARY. South Africans Successfully Elude the Watchful Police. As an instance of the widespread ramifications and cunning met! ee were found in the possession of two} 4, natives, who appeared to be driv- ing a laundry van in the vicinity. ie ‘ b Simmer Deep Mine. hidden beneath what tles were i so-called looked like bundles of laundry. @ white bosses of this nefarious traffic ate be reached, as tl pnvariably sudtingnthe cltyet They are on a level with the Meael gold buyers. ad h gangs are Be well known to the Cini un for oe e 8 Minister’s promise to adopt drastic measures 2 the Te de of the traffic is welcomed. o! Gentleman (entering) ~"<Do you boy? work pe re, ice-boy— “Only when the ee cae Tous ing. : eee Slow forgiveness is little betier| » Feban rgiveness, gone hand in hand wit than $50,000,000 has been expended on hotel building in London. © biggest hotel in the world 000, - . George’s ‘Hos- | pital, Hyde Park Comer, aa has een purchased for pose hy Mallaby Deeley, ee pe SPECIFIC POR THE THE BLOOD. Formula May Prove Valuable in Tuberculosis Fig) ree which maj A specific a Sigel ally to the coker sateen) sion in the campaign against tuber- culosis and other diseases has been s introduced by a London publisher. David Doig, head of the firm Ua fa and Co., publishers the » has interested himself for several years in the potentiali- ties of a mula a ‘ich, he says, has ae efiects in improy- ing the quality of the blood and e depo kg resistance of the bay to At his sane tests have been carried out in one of the London hospitals which haye demonstrated the value of the formula in a very remarkable way, and Mr. Doig is now anxious to secure further and more extended tests with’ the as- sistance of school clinics and pub- lic health authorities. Some thirty years ago the for- mula, made out by an eminent scientific chemist, came into the possession of Mr. Doig’s atoll 4 and was frequently reso ted to en, occasion arose with beneeial” re- gee combination ot natural |e ae ae of which are in acon eentrated form, which powerful stimulating action on the al quite insapensiys, ‘Bil! ichap ; pi We all admire a man who ae inst what he thinks.’’ peo cae: speoplee St ond, the Tollard f Ig S08 Son cine f Fashion Hints § Seen in Paris Shops, V shaped necks are finished with shadow laces. The simple semi-neglige gown is much in demand. Fashion ee meet a skirt nar- rowest at, the he: n the new ailinery, chin strape are gaining in favo: ‘The Pembnatiee of mh yellow and white is Gloves rs natal ate gowns or pi a Saige § contrast. of white cotton yous are cine an colored line: ou A potted Hove are gradually vinning populari Long veils of pase sah on es ‘tilly lace are mu ats are turning ae their brims at the ape in piquant fashion, The ana wait ‘ite combination is ai et for young girls’ top- Mtsay zibelines and yelours will be ee in the making of fall cos- tum Silver buttons, the size and shape of a penny, trim some of the new sui Belts are worn in a variety way hang about the waist rar than encircle it. Petticoats are still narrower, trimmed wit deep flounces of lace or embroi Attractive for the tal costume are the foulards and dark - plaid es is the use. of tartan plaile with other materials. Ball trimmings are seen on the — new serge skirts—usually edging dri d shades for fall, n mesh veils, with shen- ite ak, or vel ce ae f quently seen. “ ‘ibeline, especially in ese winter of er have Hanes conanatfe silks fee tin sul brocades been seen. This wedding gown Field. be tacbionae of plain or brocaded yenas crepe. de chine, or Slee eless tunica of brocade ap- hs on some: of the new charmeuse Bot ushable velour hats finer undergarments, laces of cobwebby texture and th pee: Valenciennes are used. | ‘ oe stunning vest ci iped satin or ine ane 1 14 co: |. Cheviot serge coats, ingens fur will be worn ski aan that he has nee felt the ure ty? same ae the. sanaep behold att we for the vote of the Re ae As-— wo fone — ba cation ee for apery. ‘ caren gray is one of the favor- ~ Another is deep» for . Brat are now to be seen in —

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