West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 Sep 1915, p. 7

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INLAND Ea lr') Thcve remains a story by Alexander Dumas which has not been translated into English. Now a translation is to be published by Stanley Paul, under the title. "The Prussian Terror." The story was originally published in France before the war of 1870, with the title "La Terreur Prussienne a Frankfort." Dumas' object was to awaken France to her danger from the rise of Prussian militarism. . When the Prussians terrorized the "hee" city of Frankfort, after beating the Austrians at Sadowa, he went there to collect his material. [ The ventilation of a poultry house is very important. A house with tight walls, roof and floor and an open front will contain cold, dry and pure air,--thrce essentials for the health of the fowls in winter. With such a con- struction there will be no drafts but plenty of fresh air. Cloth curtains on the front openings can be dropped on cold nights or during stormy wea- ther. and a glass window will allow entrance of light at all times. Many cases of colds have been cured by re- moving the south side of the house and allowing sunshine and cold, pure air to enter. Hens must not freeze, neither do they need to be kept warm. In the summer time a ventilator in the back of the house may be opened. Air enters this and goes up between the studding and rafters through the hood above the heads of the fowls. This allows circulation of air, thereby allowing the warm air to escape in the summer without a draft on the chickens' heads. To allow for this " passage the back plate is cut out be.. tween three studdings. It may be ad- visable to use ventilator shafts or other devices to insure ventilation. In Get, many houses that have proved satisfactory in every way have no ventilation schemes whatever nor any. roosting hood. f In determining the size of a house, consider the number of fowls that are to be kept in one pen. As a rule, fowl, are too crowded for economical production. A fhrek of fifty hens should usually be allowed about five square feet of floor space per hen. Where the attendant is careful to keep the house clean and the floor heavily littered with straw, less floor space will be necessary. As a rule, it is far better to allow too much floor space rather than too little. The lar- ger the pen the less ttoor space will he required per hen. One hundred hens will thrive in a pen 20 x 20 feet, that is four square feet of floor space per hen, but one hen will not thrive in a pen 2 x 2 feet. In a large pen each one has a chance to wander over the entire floor space, thus getting more exercise. As the number in the floek become less, the amount of floor.. space per hen must increase, and any- one keeping eight or ten hens should allow at least ten square feet of Boor space per hen, unless he is prepared to Rive special attention to cleaning and bedding the house. A crowded condition in a poultry house is re- sponsible on many farms for lack of winter egg production. pcrcnes should be easily removable.| It is said that war is hell, but it to facilitate cleaning, disinfecting and i does not follow that warriors must fiehtine mites. They should be so be endowed with hellish dispositions. constructed that a disinfectant can be l, Your present mission is as sacred as readily applied to all parts. They l the Crusades of the Middle Ages; nay should be as simple as possible, and i it is more sacred. The object of those made in such a way as to have the old Crusaders was to rescue the tomb smallest number of cracks and ere- of Christ from the Saracens. Your View. whieh offer hiding places for mission is more exalted. Not only mites and other vermin. As a general l the tomb of the founder, but the dis- rule, small hens should have aboutitinctive principles, of Christianity are six inches of perch space, while the assailed and threatened. It’s yours to larger hens should be allowed eight prove that the Gospel of "Love and inches. In the winter they huddle I Sacrifice" is superior to "The Will to close together, but in the summerlpower." "Chants of Hate" are un- thvre should be plenty of room to _ British, so are their results, viz: Lou- allow them to spread out. Per'Chesjvain, Aerschot and Senlis atrocities. should be twelve inches apart, and War affords you enough methods of not closer than fifteen inches to the punishing the asp-93501.3 without vio- Wall or eeiling. Show birds, espeeial- lating the recognized rules and with- ly Leghorns, or similar types, should out you becoming a human devil. be kept at a greater distance from It in the discharge of your duty it walls and ceilings. Many ttood birds is your fate to fall. be assured that are spoiled by brushing their tails I He who "numbers the very hairs of against the walls. - 1mm!" ts, mania“. " - a-..“ As the young chicks keep getting larger they should be moved to room- Ur quarters. It is out of the question to keep them in the same little brood coops and expect they will develop and do as well " where they 'we moved to roomier quarters as they grow. and should always be Able to find lots of exercising eonditions to keep them ever netlve and on the hustle. Perches should be provided for them u soon a they begin to get e little size. It keeps them cleaner, and they seem to do better, u it avoids crowding together at night, causing them to sweat and catch cold in the cool of the early morning. In placing perches they should be all on the same level in the warmest part of the house sway from drafts. and should be readily removable. If the perches are not all on the same level the {owls will fltrht for the op- portunity to roost on the highest, and the chances are that many fowls will be injured by falling off the perches. The perches should be in the warmest part of the pen, as they need the most protection from the cold during the night, when the towls are imse- tive. At this time the house is usual- ly colder than during the day. The perches should be easily removable, roost closely together " night and "vent, lenving them in . weakened condition, resulting in sickness. Over.. crowding also produces idlers. Idle hens become mischievous hens, and the disgusting vice of feather-pulling I. the result. Better results in both health and egg production come from tlocks that have plenty of "elbow room." THE DANCERS OF OVERCROWD- LNG KENS. Overcrowdiat in the bther of a peek of troubles. Overerowdimr makes avert-t hens. and overfat hens lay coll-shelled 088'. and egg eating ha- bit follows. Overcrowded floeks will Dumas Foresaw German Peril. Br A. P. Mir-lull. "We in appreciate what your famous food has done for our fam- ily." _ _ .. ""There's a Reason." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. "Some time ago several of the fam- ily were stricken with La Grippe at the same time, and during the worst stages they could not relish anything in the shape of food but Grape-Nuts and oranges, everything else we: nauseating. __ "Well, it worked like a charm, and she began taking it regularly, and improvement set in at once. She grew well and round and fat as fast as possible on Grape-Nuts. "My little 18-months-old baby shortly after being weaned was very ill while teething. She was sick nine weeks, and we tried everything. She became so emaciated that it was pain- ful to handle her, and we thought we were going to lose her. One day a happy thought urged me to try Grape- Nuts soaked in a little warm milk. "While I was there I used the food regularly. I trained weight and felt so well that when I returned home I began using Grape-Nuts in the family regularly. Crisp, Toothsome. and Requires No Cooking. A little boy asked his mother to write an account of how Grape-Nuts food had helped their family. She says Cape-Nuts was first brought to her attention where she visited. "Land torpedoes" are to be Bred from a mortar. They are three feet long. Concealed in a knob at one end is seventy-five pounds of lyddite, a moat powerful explosive. The area that can be devastated by the torpedo is almost inconceivable, Mr. Lucas said. For this drive the French also have provided a new type of rapid fire gun, Hotchkiss make, capable of 1,000 shots a minute, though weighing but sixty pounds. Mr. Lucas is in Cleveland, Ohio, just returned from France. He says the French and their allies hope to cut off the Germans in Belgium by the drive proposed. Britain Has Land Torpedo Ready-A Terrible Bomb. "The most hellish thing ever in- vented." That's the way Charles J. P. Lucas, member of the American Red Cross, describes a "land torpedo" the Allies are preparing to use in a drive through Luxemburg within the next few weelo. If in the discharge of your duty it is your fate to fall, be assured that He who "numbers the very hairs of your head" is conscious of your merit, and that a grateful country will keep you in memory and accord to you the mead of human appreciation due to one whose life is consciously spent "for others." . You may quite consistently pray for your so-called enemy even whilst pressing the trigger, thrusting the bayonet or striking with the sword. When for me "Last Post" is sounded and I cross the Silent Ford, I've a Pilot who of "mine fields" will beware; When "Reveille" sounds in Heaven and the Armies of the Lord, Sing the Hallelujah chorus,--U'll be there! sin with the foe in full retreat "That our hearts be kept from hat- red" is our prayer; When the right of might is ended in a crushing last defeat, And the roll is called in Berlin,--Pil be there! When the Allies march through PNE- When my King and Country call me and I'm wanted at the front, Where the shrapnel shells are bursting in the air; When the foe in fury charges and we're Bent to bear the brunt, And the roll is called for service,-- I'll be there! Cho.-.When the roll, etc. When the Kaiser’s lines are broken and his armies out of France, When the Belgian desolation we repair; When the final master's ordered and the bugle sounds "Advance," May the God of Battles help me to be there. This non. bu mule “3 hit" with the boys in the, 21en camp- und " the front. A: a put of I. "bit" Mr. Hall» Wood had 15,000 copie- grinned andfven away, mainly throat the Y. .C.A. workers. Ono Toronto' soldier picked up a typewritten copy on mn " (Nome. where In France"). utter the battle. and brouttht it back home nm innmln- u - -- -r.9i.r- nun-U, no; luOWln‘ " Wu: a Toronto product. Mr. Heulowom} (can! that one of hi: Sunday Schoo boys. to whom he had given a copy, met with misfortune on that occasion. The 15an ll reproduced by special per"!!!- 5 on. (Words by o. _Heantemrod, Toronto. with Ivoloxle: to author of original). 'To the Gallant Soldiers of Canada. FOR ALLIES' GREAT DASH. Tune-: 'rmt ROLL CALL. 80-: for caaiin,, same" FAMILY FOOD ."When the roll is called up Yonder." The Roll Call‘. Words resemble sunbeams - the more they are condemned the deeper they burn. » Land in Cornhill was sold at a price which worked out at $12,452,000 an acre, while some time ago $6,000,000 was offered and refused for the site of a church in Austin Friars. The three acres on which the Bank of England stands would realize at a low estimate $85,000,000, or the land adjoining has sold at $350 and $400 a square loot, - ___ - _ It is in the city, the square mile ofI which is valued at $1,250,000,000, how-' ever, where land can easily claim the: distinction of being the dearest in) the world. For property near the cen- 1’ tre of the city $16,250,000 an acre isl, not an unusual price. Portions of f Cannon Street, Queen Victoria Street,' Upper Thames Street, and St. Mary-: at-Hill, are said to be worth $1.25 a; square inch, while in Lombard Street and King William Street land has) been sold for $3.50 per square foot) freehold. l Over $i6,000,000 Per Acre Not An Unusual Price. Not long ago a tiny piece of ground at Charing Cross, adjoining the Mall Archway, and comprising only 641% square feet, with a frontage of 69 feet, was sold by the London County Council to an insurance company for 545,000 an acre. No symptoms that indicate any of the ailments of childhood should be allowed to pass without prompt atten- tion. The little ailment may soon be- come a serious one and perhaps a little life passes out. If Baby's Own Tablets are kept in the house minor troubles can be promptly cured and serious ones averted. The Tablets can be given to the new-born babe as well as the growing child. Thousands of mothers use no other medicine for their little ones. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at M cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. An acting brigadier-general of Al- pine Chasseurs told tne that gaiety and optimism were his watchwords: that as everybody knew the war would last seventeen years (until there were no more children) one had best enjoy it; and that in his opinion a sad man was a dead man. At Dannemarie we saw the general of division. "The only way to win this war," he said, 'is to kill enough Germans." It was curious to watch Altkirch, still and quiet in the afternoon sun. Not a soul could be seen, though many must be there. The town Beem- ed quite undamaged, quite unaffected by the war at its very gate. An Outlet of Escape. We continued through the trenches with the engineer who built them, three lines connecting at three sepa- rate points, so that there would al- ways be an outlet of escape. They were fine trenches, with wood floorss, under which a gutter ran, the earth at either side held back by saplings twined together like wickerwork. A city was "rising" below ground. Every few score yards there was a pail of water, with a bottle of hypo- sulphite of soda, to use against as- phyxiating gases. War here is at a standstill. We motored later to the headquar- ters of a regiment, and here we saw the beginning of a remarkable under- ground city. The trenches and cham- bers are all covered, yards of earth ovérhead, with heavy Wood supports and even flrep1aeets-a tvinter's work. Here also we saw one “of those sad little improvised cemeteries - two graves, flower strewn-which one sees so often at the front. We walked straight through the woods toward Altkirch, and at the further edge the German infantry opened fire, as they closely watch these woods, and the bullets hammer through the trees. Going down into a boyau, we made our way directly to the front lines. Odd bullets whined continually overhead; two shells exploded in the open space behind a wing at one cor- ner not twenty-flve yards away; an- other exploded at the very base of the trench, among the entanglements, within only a few feet of us, the smoke, acrid and disagreeable, hiding for a minute men at our very aide-- for the artillery of both armies shell each others' front-line trenches ten yards apart from positions perhaps 3,000 yards away. "Solid rock," said the officer. That is the explanation; it is only on solid rock that such positions a: this can be found. We immediately entered the front line trenches. Looking through a steel peephole, I saw the German front trench only ten yards away. I asked at once how lines could remain so close, why mines were not exploded underneath each other's trenches. The last part of the road-over which all supplies are carried-ia un- der fire of the German artillery, but it is not until one teaches the very base of the round knob, which is the Hartmanns Weilerkopf, that one en- ters the boyau. We motored up a road newly built through the woods-a really remark- able "at-to the top of a mountain, from which we walked to the summit of the Hartmanns Weilerkopf. I will explain this most important position in some detail, as I am specifically " lowed to do by the French censorship. TRENCHES ONLY TEN nm APART ON THE SUMMIT OF THE HART- MANNS WEILERKOPF. VALUE OF LAND IN LONDON. CHILDHOOD DANCERS. an at the Front Described By Correspondent in the Front Underground City. W a bit of a bore; but I'm told there's no one knows as much as he does about sun-spots. And, you know, dear, I have spent heaps of money and time in trying to get rid of my freckles. I simply mustn't miss this splendid chance of obtaining a good recipe'." And man is also the architect of most of his own misfortunes. lunar. Human: for “I: ovorywhero. Smart Susie was hurrying along the street at a rare speed, when she ran into a young lady acquaintance. "Why are you in such a hurry?" ask.. ed her friend. "Why, I'm off to see Professor Astron Omer." "You sur- prised me. I didn't know you were interested in science. Why, he's the greatest living authority on astron- omy!” "I know," said Susie breath- lessly. “I expect his lecture will be In a recent issue of the London (Eng.) "Standard" it was stated: "That prices of tea have risen and are now at their highest point for thirt - six years." This reflects the greatly increased cost of tea at the gardens whence the world’s supply originates. Tea is undoubtedly costing more throughout the world. A military class was standing for examination when the supervising lieutenant called upon a young Jew- ish student. "Answer this, Isaac," he said. "Why should a soldier fight for his country, and even tsaeriflee his life for it?" "Right you are, lieu- tenant," replied Isaac. "Why should he?" Gas lamps, be it noted, cannot be blamed for the casualty lists, because the gas lights give out such a small amount of light that it has been thought safe, except in strategic areas and in the very centre of the city, to let them burn, These figures show that in 1914 there were 58 more deaths and 6,295 more non-fatal injuries than in 1913, and 1913 was a typical year, rather higher than the average. But the war did not commence until August 4, and the lights were not put out at once. The increase in accidents over 1913, it may be safely assumed, took place entirely in the period of four and a half months, dating from near the middle of August, when the electric lights were ordered out, to the end of the year. Assuming the same ratio of accidents caused by bad lighting for the first three months of the pre- sent year, we arrive at approximately 90 dead and 9,000 hurt, whom the elec- trie are lights would have saved. The flgures given above are not of- ficial; the authorities are not anxious to expose the murderous results of their policy of lights out. But they are approximately accurate, and have been deduced in the following man- ner: In 1913, with the lights on as us- ual, 579 persons were killed in the streets of London by horse-drawn and motor-drawn vehicles and by bi- cycles, and 18,944 persons were more or less seriously injured. The Home Office has just given out the official fitrures for 1914, which show that last year 637 persons were killed and 26,239 more or less seriously hurt in street accidents. Paris, which has not been darken- ed and which has frequently been vis- ited by German air ships, has not suf- fered one-hundredth part of the cas- ualties that the ban on electric lights has caused in London. The explana- tion of "a city of dreadful night" is simply that Lord Kitchener thinks darkness brings war home to the pop- ular mind and so stimulates recruit- ing. So far from being afraid of Zep- pelins, the London garrison hopes some German warcraft will come this way, and if they do it is thought the powerful anti-air guns mounted at strategic points will bring them down. Order of "Lights Out" Causes In- crease of Casualties. One hundred and fifteen persons have been killed and 9,000 injured in the streets of London since the pre- sent war began. This has been due entirely to the darkening of the cen- tre of the city, which the War Office supposed would guard the citizens against the peril of Zeppelins. On one occasion of the German aircraft drop- ping a bomb over a remote section of London, the list of dead and injured was due entirely to the extinction of the electric street lights. LONDON’S DARK STREETS, When a Woman Decides. Tea Costs More Money. Why, Indeed? REVENGE ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ED. 6. To cure hieeoutrhs, fill a glass with water, draw a deep breath, through the mouth, take a mouthful of water, hold the glass before you above your head, raise your eyes so that they can see the bottom of the glass without throwing your head back, swallow the water, and then breathe out slowly through the mouth. I Don't give up! You can be cured ,and made well again. That back- iache and dragging weariness can be stopped for all time. Those sharp Iattacks when bending over, and that flameness in the morning can also be {overcome Every ache and pain due "to kidney weakness will disappear 'quickly once you Mart to use Dr. <Hamilton’s Pills, a marvelous remedy 1iiiiii ago made famous by its strange jhealing effect upon the kidney and 1 liver. Don't wait till that dragging pain in the loins Elle worse. Start the !cure to-da . elay will mean swelled :ankles and, limbs, sharp rheumatic 11mins in the muscles and joints and iother painful symptoms as weli. If lyou are always tired, have continu- 'ous headache, dizzy spells and specs ‘before the eyes, or ringing noises in Ithe ears,---these are common symp- 'toms that warn you of the immediate lneed of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills of Man- ldrakc and Butternut. Sold in Me. 'boxes by all dealers in medicine. A man seldom knows what he doesn't want until after he acquires it. Corns Drop Out The phrase "Pigeon English" is said to be derived from “Business Eng- 1ish," "pigeon," or "Pidgin," repre- senting the Chinese pronunciation of the word "business." Pigeon English is the ordinary means of communica- tion between the Chinese and the Eng- lish traders. French General Honored the Despatch Rider. There is a pretty little story con- cerning a few motor-cyclist despatch- riders who were trying to get a de- spatch through to a certain French general. Though in safety them- selves, the ground over which the message had to be taken was swept by a rain of shrapnel, and the first man, after a hurried farewell to his friends, jumped on his machine and dashed for the danger zone. He was nearly through when a piece of shrapnel found its billet, and he came headlong to the ground. The next man on the list started with a dupli- eate despatch, but he was less lucky than the other, and he came down heavily before he had gone a quarter of a mile. The third man jumped on to his machine, and going "all-out," made through and delivered his de- spatch to the French general. Just as he was turning away the great man stopped him, and, taking the rib- bon of the Medaille Militaire from his breast, pinned it on to the motor cy- clist’s tunic, thus presenting him with one of the highest honors of the French Army. - way “Putnam's" ones the pun. destroy: the roots, kills a com tor all time. No pain. Cure guaranteed. Got. . Ma. bomb oe "Putnam'e' Extractor today. lintrd'l Humane muevn 10mm; Those Terrible Fangs --d'rom The Rochester HeraM..-. of Kidney Suffering Can be Cured A BIT OF BRITISH PLUCK. Punt on Putnam'. Corn Extractor to night, and com feel better In the morn- ing. Magical the Instant ISSUE 37--'15. Dear Sirs,--1 bed a Bleeding Tu- mor on my face for a long time and tried a number of remedies without any gat) results. I we: advised to try lNARD'S LINIMENT, Ind after .using several bottles it mude a com- plete cure, and it healed all up and disappeared -rlteethtr.u,._., -iirlit" Mtur--"Then tell him I have a stiff neck!" Footmsn--'Tertainly, air! But he assured me he would only ask ques- tions which you could answer by I nod or a shake of the head." “ERR jian--"Difroir not tell him I was hoarse-could hardly speak?” Footman--"Certainly, air! But he "That's terrible. Just imagine what is liable to happen if some fool who doesn't know it's loaded starts monkeying with it." Footman--"A newspaper reporter wishes to interview you, sir." __ - - "Johnnie," said an employer to his office boy, "in this off ice you must be careful not to overhear remarks that are not intended for you. Do you un- dergtandY' "Yea, sir," said Johnnie. Then he turned to his typist at the other side of the table. “Miss Brown, did you hear what I said to Johnnie just now'." Miss Brown. "I see the Germans have a gun that will shoot 27 miles." _ By rubbing the breast of a fowl with lemon-juice before boiling, you will be able to send it to table with a snow-white appearance. Minard'ss, Lininlettt far., limited “M” -_- -_" bhv'iD HENDERSON. Belleisle Station, Kings Co., N.B., Sept. 17, 1904. We hold only thirty-five miles of battle front, as against more than 300 miles held by the French, but those thirty-five miles are the crux of the positiom--Ben Tillett. The Government still hold that the practices of German submarines are not only in flagrant breach of the laws of war, but are mean, cowardly, and bruta1.--Mr. Balfour. If we lose this war, not only is the possibility of votes for women going to disappear, but also‘votes for men will be a thing of the past.--Mrs. Pankhurst. It is the duty of every First Lord of the Admiralty to maintain the fleet at all times in a state of instant and constant readiness for war...-.). Asquith. There can be no refund of the tsxl under any circumstances. Once the ticket is sold and the tax collected, it is as though it were in the Dominion coffers and nothing but sn act of Pur- lisment can get it out opin. It woe explained by the Dominion authorities that in order to prevent the confusion that would arise in spplying literally I the millions of tax stamps tint would I have been required on railway tickets l, and the consequent ditrieu1ties which would have ensued owing to deity in j 'ttfixing and cancellation of stumps. the present method had been udopted, l and, that as none of the public could l have reasonably expected I refund on g a stamp that had been "ixed and cancelled. if ticket were refunded upon, so also no refund any be ex- pected wherever a tax had been col-i lected, and the ticket unused and re-o funded upon. In other words, the act , of purchase of the ticket in accordance , with the Tax Act is a completed trsn- 1 section so far as the collection of the tax is concerned, and under no cir- cumstances as the law now stunds could it be refunded. To make a re- fund of the tax possible a special act would have to be passed by parlia- ment. Nothing counts except to save the national life.-Lord Haldane. Aeeordinttl, the rsilwsys submitted the questions to the Government-- what should be done in case unused tickets presented for refund to agent before the train starts; to agent or general office after train departs; the same or some following day; in the case of passenger tickets; in the case of sleeping car tickets; in the case of parlor car tickets; in the case of steamship tickets. The answer which the railways received was as follows: A new of importance to the pub- lie tnd the “than in been settled bytheGovment. Artieepointhnn tretsraimtdnatoturomtbiii'trure. fund of the - tax in cue 1 pm ahotNeha-hitsorurrnind%re.. can! to the eontempUtod trip by tnin or boat. If the nilweyl insisted upon the tax in such can: of changed in- tention, it wu altogether likely that the public would set them down " extortioners. mum'- Ialnunant can. Inna. In. " I THE GIDLEY BOAT C0., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAN. WHAT BRITISH LEADERS SAY. Freight Prepaid to my Railway Station in . gawk). with 15 Ft. Bean 8 Ft. 9 In., epth 1 Ft. In. As‘v MOTOR FITS. ,spomon No. 28 ihtrur engine prices on requelt. Get 'lt,',,ue,t'ht',' --r"Tho Panama“ Line" Commercial ma Plenum L. as. not new and moon. No REFUND or WAR TAX. A Horrible Thought. 'Y What to Tell Him. " Both Answers. 'Oh, “Overstorn " V Bottom 0 E ef ot Motor Boat GINSENG Another disagreeable thing about the weather-people are always want- ing to taik about it. Four Iglendid equipped daily train- from the ew Passenter Yertntnar-H'V cage to San Francisco. Lon Angela! and San Metro. Choice of scenic and direct routes through the best of the _ Something to lee I" the nay. Double tuck. automatic electric acutely nicoti- ul the way. Let u . plan your trip and furnilll (olden and full particulars. All for free booklet "Itineraries of some ot the Party Ways Ind More to the Call- fornie. Expositions." " will save yo. time and money. B. H. Bennett. G.A., u Yonge Street. Toronto. Ont It is the custom of many large manufacturers and employers of labor in Russia to establish shops at which they expect their workmen, under pain of dismissal, to purchase every- thing they require. Most people sleep on their sides, with their knees drawn up. Ele- phants slways, and horses commonly sleep standing up. Birds, with the exception of owls and the hanging parrots of India, sleep with their heads turned tailward over the back, snd the beak thrust among the feath- ers between the wing and the body. Starks, gulls. and other long-legged birds, sleep standing on one leg. Ducks sleep on open water. To avoid drifting shorewnrd they keep paddling with one foot, thus msking them move in s circle. Sloths sleep une- ing " their four feet, the heed tuck- ed in between their forelegs. Foxes snd wolves sleep curled up, their noses and the soles of their feet close together, and blsnketed by their bushy tells. Hares, snakes, and thrh sleep with their eyes open. LOW rm. TO Tu CAIRO...“ IINIHIOII VIA CHICAGO I won" WRITE... umvuv. You. an chum Ii-Tmhm. '"atr any “can“. a. woman. Mto My for 00110:. mum. W. a. Mt10tt, My“. Tat You“ ”not. mum. Oll'mO’I “If Ivan" .0100!- One apptieatton KILLS all like. and provontl tholr Happen-thee durlnx tho anon Keep- {owls free from t"tl2,t licke- Icaly [on bright & clean, 're. ltifi may and sweet. free from an . but! will (In no trouble where and. Write “why for special trill prtea. Booklet tree. Int-nu . -hatt. II.- M lull. Ont. DIRK’S RED IITE KILLER Highest Cash Prices Paid for luau-4'- “about euro. Dudm. We are the largest buyers of Ginseng in America and have the grated demand for it. We on therefore pay you the highest cub peices. If you have any wild or cultivated Ginseng, write for our latest price list, or ship what you have end we will submit you on highest dier. David Blustein & Bro. pe"." TEB 36? 162 W. 27th St. NewYorlx, U.S.A. .'1rri"_"'t' mi nu. How the World Sleeps. -trog-. ILLIOTT $5Se '1 [J ..

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