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Home or Cinque Ports Warden . tmj jy&K Csi&rZJ? ■ WALMER CASTLE, the fa mous old fortress near Deal, once more Is the residence of the Lord Warden of the Cinque Fort* Since the death of Lady Curzon. whose latal Ill ness began at the castle In her hus band's occupancy ol the historic hut now largely ornamental post of Loid Warden, the old place has been con sidered unhealthy, and when Lord Curzon resigned the wardeushlp and It was taken over by the present king —then Prince of Wales —Walmer ceased to be a residence and became a show place. It has been visited every summer Since by hundreds of American and other travelers, all eager to explore the picturesque stronghold whose an cient occupants had the Job of defend ing the whole of England on their Shoulders. The Duke of Wellington, greatest of Lord Wardens of the Cinque Ports, died at Walmer, where bis bedroom Is to be seen practically Just as he left It. and the long list of previous Lord Wardens Includes the names of William Pitt and that of Lord North, through whose compliance with the freaks of his royal master, George 11., the thirteen American col onies were lost to England. Shorn of Powers. When King George V. came to the throne he resigned the Lord Warden ship of the Cinque Ports, having plen ty to worry him without that, and the job was passed along to Lord Brassey, the famous naval expert. Civil Lord of the Admiralty, ex-Governor of Vic toria, and owner of the yacht Sun beam, In which he has covered more than 300,000 miles. That was two years ago, and until recently His Lord ship has shown no disposition to Inter fere with the “status quo" so far as Walmar Castle is concerned As Lord Warden, apart from appearing at groat state functions In the picturesque robes of his office, he has nothing to do except preside occasionally ovi r the old courts of Shepway and Guest ling, which have been shorn of nearly all their ancient powers, and to ap point Justices of the peace within the Jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports In cidentally the only return he gets for doing these things Is the right to oc cupy Walmer Castle, so a little time back he decided to exercise It. He and Lady Brassey, who evidently Is ■willing to risk Injury to her health, went down and Inspected the old cas tle, and as a result they have had It almost entirely refurnished and have now taken up their abode there The castle has been closed to the public for some time past, and this season s American travelers have not been able to see the Iron Duke's bedroom nor the other historical relics of which the place Is full. No doubt Lord Brassey Is Just as glad that he Is Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports now. Instead of. say, s**o years ago. To do him Justice, how ever, he probably would be capable of organizing If not flsrhtlng a bigger fleet than Hrltaln could muster at that time, which things were the chief du ties of the Lord Wardens or Lord Ad mirals. as they were called at first. “Cinque Ports,” of course, means Five Ports In plain English, and In olden times It was up to 'he ports of Hast ings, Sandwich. Dover, Romney and Hythe to defend the rest of the king dom from attack by sea They are all situated on the southeastern coast of England, which faces France, the "traditional enemy" of Drltaln before the entente cordlale came Into being, and even In the days of Edward the Confessor these five towns, as the watchdogs of the kingdom, enjoyed a special charter of privileges Their history, In this capacity, covers nearly a thousand years Here It was that the white cliffs of Albion shone bright above the waters within view of her Continental enemies and here that Caesar, Henglst. Canute and William the Conqueror landed and a hundred less successful Invaders were Ignoml nlously driven back or destroyed. Britain's “Wooden Walls.” It was the Norman Conqueror who, after humbling Romney to the dust for Its resistance to himself, really or ganized the "cinque Ports" In his time there was no British navy, nor a single port capable of furnishing a harbor for a big fleet, and so the Cinque Pohts divided the responsi bility of furnishing the "Wooden Walls" of England and looked after them. At the tlmo of Edward I they were bound to provide no less than fifty-seven ships, fully equipped and manned at their own cost, but In re turn the Five Ports formed a little principality by themselves, whose Too many forget to speak kindly to their horse, hence never have a kind horse Get th affection of your horse, and you have taken a most Important step toward getting his best services. The grower who will sort his apples Into two or more grades, packed well will get more money for his fruit than the one who throw* all kinds together ,1n a barrel and place* a layer of the beat one* on top. citizens had no taxes to pay, and whose head afterward called the Lord Warden, was a kind of Pooh-Bah, who combined in hts single person the functions of sheriff, keeper of the rolls, lord lieutenant and admiral. He also nominated the representatives of the live towns in Parliament, who, to this day, are known as the Barons of vhe Cinque Polls They were great fighters, and as good shipbuilders, were those sea dogs of the Cinque Ports Their ships were so strong that they really preferred to light in a gale, and their favorite at tack was to ram" an enemy. Either the rammer or the rammed was pretty sure to go to the bottom, and If their craft was the unlucky one. they board ed tin opporlng vessel and threw Its crew into the water. Even King John was able to lie In peace In the Isle of Wight with the merry men of the Cinque Ports guarding Its shores, and when Pope lunocent sent over a Bull of Excommunication, which consigned the king's soul to u locality famous for its warmth, the men of Sandwich sallied forth in their ships, seized the vessel containing the Bull, tore the golden Instrument to shreds and cast It upon the waves In their spare time they were pirtaea. They culled It "policing the seas,” but the French and German towns they plundered and occasionally burned, even In times of peace, found It hard to detect the dif ference. More than once thler origin al methods of "policing" plunged their country Into war, but as they them selves had to do the lighting. It didn't matter much to anybody else. There have been big changes since those times. Even the ancient organi zation of the Cinque Ports has been broken up by modern legislation, and In 1835 the Lord Warden's Jurisdiction over the law courts and other civil machinery was done away with The number of the Cinque Port barons has been reduced from sixteen to three. Little, In fact, hut old Walmer Castle Itself remains to recall the glorious past of the Five Ports. The castle was built by Henry VIM., the much-married He Intended It only for a fort, the first of a series which were to defend the coast line from Sandwich to Dover, but In time It became the official headquarters of the Lord Wardens Many royalties were wardens of the Cinque Ports, among them Prince George of Den mark, the Illustrious consort of Queen Anne. Birds That Flirt. Henry Oldys, formerly of the Pnlted States Biological survey. In the course of a recent lecture at the University of Chicago, salil that birds were pos sessed of an aesthetic sense similar to that of human beings "Birds dance In the air, do 'Highland flings.' and the more sedate with the most perfect rhythm," said Mr. Oldys. “They slug a 'bird ragtime,' ami at other times snatches of song which greatly resemble our grand opera. There Is a h'ackhtrd that has a song almost like a Wagnerian opera: the robin Is host In so-called popular songs: while the wood thrush sings a song of four dis tinct verses. Like the human being, birds flirt and are fll'ed with vanity In this capacity Ihev use their plum age with great effect In the Congo there Is a male bird that struts before Its mate, and peons under Its wing to gee If she Is looking at him.” The speaker concluded with the statement that birds sometimes copy from man. and that man could l"nrn a great deal by copying from the bird. Plan Hygiene Exposition The Australian Natives’ associa tion Is making plans for a hvglene ex position. to take place at Melbourne next year, fashioned after the one which took place at Dresden. Among the subjects to which special atten tion Is to be given are: Ventilation, the fly carrier of disease, the mos quito plague, and diseases of the tropics In the deuartment of cloth ing, space will be given to exhibits showing the harmful effects of corsets and the evolution of clothing. One of the largest departments will con tain models of scletlflcally con structed homes. Tried Trick Once Too Often. A man of seventy-five, who of re cent years had extorted money from charitable persons. In Paris, by pre tending to commit suicide, has fallen a victim to his Ingenuity. He used to fasten a rope, attached to the celling, about bis neck with an easy running noose. Then, having knocked over the furniture, he would overturn the chair on which he was standing and remain hanging by the rope. Alarm ed by the noise, the neighbors would rush In and cut him down. After be ing revived he would depict his state of distress In such moving language that money would be forthcoming for his relief Later he would repeat the trick In another house, Invariably with success. But a few days ago. when he was carrying out the trick, there was a hitch. No one went to bis help and be remained hanging, being eventually out down dead. NOTES fPfln MEADOWBSOOK EARM^rI) William Pitt >■--- ~ Gapes can he cured. Clean out the sheep fold. Market the useless roosters Plant some trees In the pasture. Try keeping a few sheep on the farm. Sit on (h.e milk stool—don’t pound the cow with It. Hot, close weather brings lots of lice to the dirty pen. Improved breeds of hogs are Im proving the hogs profit. Are there any dead heads In your dairy? If so weed them out. First-class fruit will command a first-class trade at first-class prices. Shorts are a tno.re economical feed for sows and growing pigs than for cows A boy and dog make a poor combi nation to bring the cows home from pasture. In spraying, drenching Is not de sired, slop spraying Just before drip ping begins. He who attends to the repair of ma chinery before using It saves both time and money. When a dairyman learns to use the Babcock test he Is started on the way to hls economic salvation. Frequent cultivation the remainder ol the summer will fit the strawberry bed for Us (.ext year's work. The best dairyman Is clean not because lit- has to be. hut because It It second nature for him to be. When the calf gets old enough to turn out to grnsj he sure and continue feeding a ration of grain or milk As the marketing season advances the patrons of co-operative elevator companies congratulate themselves The dairy row has a rapacity foi a great amount of feed and unless this feed I* provided she cannot do her beet. . Milk may be tested for hufterfat at different temperatures It Is well to have It between 60 and 80 degrees Fahrenheit. If Is hard to see where those pigs that are growing up In a dry pen are going to make very much profit for their owner. If a hog dies on the farm, no matter from what cause, take no chances, but remove the body a long distance from the feeding lots and burn It. CONTRIVANCE TO SAVE LABOR Excellent Device for Harnessing and Unharnessing Hor*e —Prevent* Straps From Tangling. A device for harnessing and un harnessing horses is described and Illustrated In the lowa Homestead by J, F. Forest and which he has In use on hls own farm. It consists of a %• Inch rod threaded and tightened with burrs and Inserted between the Joists above the horse, similar to a manure carrier cable. There are awning pul leys fastened together In a pair so that one pulley runs on the three eighths rod, and the other has a rope run through It with two hooks tied In so that there Is an end of rope hanging below each hook. These hooks are tied In according to the height of the horse, one hook being clear up to the pulley and the other to hook Into the hame ring or strap, pull the other end of the ropes which lifts the hames clear of the horse and hook the other hook In hame ring oi strap. The back pad and breeching are lifted In the same manner, one hook to lift the back pad and the , other can be used above the breech- Device for Harnessing. I Ing. The harness now hangs abote the horse and Is shoved back out of the way against the wall. To harness up the horse the hames are pulled ahead and are hanging ready to be lowered again In position on the horse. After becoming accustomed to It a device of this kind saves lift ing and the harness does not tt tangled up. - Value of Hogs. No stock upon the farm is more quickly turned to money than the hog i ADDED TO THE GOOD TIME Bear Story, Though Short, Wa* a Thing of Consequence to Tho*# Silent Mountaineer*. There were six stalwart pioneers who settled In Upshur county. West Virginia, long before the war, when there wasn't “a stick amiss” and hunting was good. They were brothers and their name was Phillips. ; Each fall after hog-killing time they held a family reunion, at which a feast fit for the gods was partaken of in silence, except for the blessing, which was always asked by the eld est brother. They did not believe In much talk or levity. When they spoke It was usually in monosyllables. After dinner they would sit around the big log fireplace, tilted back in split bot tom chairs, and smoke their corncob pipes In silence until it was time to, go home and do the chores. At one of the reunions something of unusual interest occurred—one of the boys told a bear story. While sitting around the fire smoking one of the brothers pushed up his sleeve, exposing a badly lacerated arm. The five gazed at It In respectful silence for a few moments. Their experience In the mountains told them that their brother had a hand to hand fight with a bear. One of them opened tho ensuing dialogue with: “Um-niph—bar?” “Yea-ali.” “Whar?” “Over thar,” jerking his thumb back over his shoulder In the direc tion ot Beech mountain. After this bear story of five words they smoked In silence until It was time to go home. For months after that reunion they would remark to visiting neighbors that they had “a powei ful fine time at Ebeu’s re union.” It was remarkable, because they had bad a bear story In addition to the blessing, which was a powerful lot of talk for these silent men. TRACE ALPHABET FAR BACK Belief That It Had It* Origin With the Phoenician* Proved to Be a Wrong One. In a lecture at the Royal Institute Prof. Flinders Pletrle attacked the long acepled theory that the origin ot the alphabet Is to be found In Phoeni cia. whence It came from Egyptian hieroglyphics. According to Professor Petrie, tho researches of the last twenty years have shown that signs were earlier than pictures and that It was the sign that survived to become the alpha and beta of one civilization and the A B C ol another. Just as the philologist had discov ered one entire system of languages, so the alphabetarlan had discovered in the diversity of alphabets an orig inal prototype of all. In Professor Petrie's words, "The Phoenicians are people of yesterday compared with those who wrote the signs that are the origin of all alphabets." It was to pottery, said the profes sor, that Egyptologists and others were Indebted for these signs, and their development was worked out on these lines Flatnose made a pot and put a mark on it to show that it was his. In time, because if was his mark, the sign stood for Flatnose himself, and then the sign became attached to a sound Irrespective of the tiling it self. Gradually the wearing down went on until the sign stood, not for a sound, but a syllable, and then for a letter. The signs, of course, were not an alphabet; that did not arrive until perhaps 1,000 B. C., whereas sign* were found In early prehistoric Egypt, probably 7.000 B. C. Proofs of this common origin were plentiful, for the signs spread by trade far north and south, and appeared similarly In Runic, Iberian and Karlan, and yet were unknown In Phoenician. When Eloquence Didn't Work. There is such a thing as being too eager, as witness the following re mark: "Yes," said the statesman, "I de feated myself by my own elo quence once.” "How was that?” “I was a candidate for the nomina tion to congress, and I got up and made a speech to the convention. In which 1 Just naturally flung Old Glory, with a capital O and a capital O, to the breeze In so enthusiastic a man ner that I took the house by storm 1 dilated on the greatness of our country and on the responsibilities ol the man who should be called tc make Its laws, till one old fellow from a back county got up and said that I had convinced him that It was too big a Job for so young a man as I was to tackle, so he moved that the con ventlon nominate a man of more ex perience; and. by gee, they did It." Hardly a Compliment. It Is said that General Crlttender ured to tell with great glee of what his small son. then eight or nine yean old, said to him a day or two after the battle of Chlckamauga. The gen era! had ridden during the battle a horse named John Jay that was r. great favorite with the little fellow The child, visiting the camp, asked after the horse and was told that in the fight ho had acted badly. Insist ing upon taking his rider to the rear The hoy considered gravely a mo ment, then, shaking a remonstrating finger, cried: "Papa, that must have been your work. 1 know John Jay would never have acted like that of hla own free i will!” She Expresed It. “I never saw such outrageous serv Ice In all my life," said the woman at the express office window. “I’ve been waiting fuly half an hour and not a sign of an employee have I seen. The heads of this company ought to be notified of this extreme negligence. It's simply outrageous.'' “What would you like to express, madam?” said a clerk who arrived at last. "I’d like to express my sympathy," replied the woman tartly, and depart I ed. rpt ~j UveStock L.* BULBS FOR BETTER BREEDING Modern Improvement of Draft Horae Brought About by Observance of Principles Given. Considering what has been said wa may next set down some simple rules for the conduct of our breeding operations upon sensible, scientific and successful lines. It may be said, too, that tho modern improvement of draft horses is being brought about by the following of these rules, and their observance has led to the suc cess achieved in foreign countries. The mares chosen for draft-horse breeding should be diaft mares in size, weight, character and tempera ment. They should be sound, work ers, over 15 hands in height and not not less than 1,200 to 1,500 pounds weight in work condition. It would be best were they 1,500 pounds and up in weight. The sire should be a sound, prepotent, muscular, thorough ly worked or exorcised, pure-bred, registered stallion (if draft breed. The resultant progeny of ttie first cross, U a male, should be castrated; if a .. __ _ . . Champion English Shire. female, it should, when the time conies, be bred to a pure-bred sire of the same breed as the original sire, and this plan of breeding should be continued, cross after cross, until five or six top-crosses of the same pure draft breed blood having been put on the progeny is practically pure bred of the breed used in its making. There should never be the slightest deviation from this plan of breeding. Had there been In Prance we would not have the modern Percherons ol today; and mixed breeding, such as has characterized American opera tions, would have absolutely prevent ed the origination and perpetuation of the Clydesdale, Shire. Suffolk or Bel gian breeds. Selection and some mix ing in blood had to be followed in tho early origination of these breeds, but it is no longer necessary and now would be ruinous. Then, too, the sire must bo sound, and throughout the entire operation of horse breeding, as we have seen, adequate feeding must be the rule. WHEN MICROBES ARE BUSIEST Although Never Dormant, It Ha* Been Proved They Have Special Hours of Activity. A celebrated scientist has made tho Interesting announcement that there are more microbes in the air at nine o'clock in the morning and at nine o'clock at night than during any oth er periods of the day. He has also discovered that the percentage of mi crobes In the atmosphere is less at three o'clock In the morning and three o'clock in the afternoon than at any other times. The explanation ad vanced for the partiality of the mi crobe for nine o'clock a. m. and p. m. is that the "microbe hour" is con trolled by the movements of people. From five to nine in the morning they are going from their homes to their working places, and from five to nine in the evening they are again jour neying through the streets, either homeward bound or in search of pleasure. He noted that at or about six o'clock every morning and evening there were indications of the ap proach of the microbe "rush" hour. From that time on until nine o'clock the atmosphere became more and more crowded with germs of all kinds, some bad, some good; and then, Immediately after nine o’clock, the tide began to ebb, until it was always lowest round about three o'clock. According to his researches, after lunch is the safest time for a nap. Answered to the Name. The two friends had been dining on dicers and sundry strange dishes at the "Cedars of Lebanon" cafe, in the Syrian quarter of New York. They were drinking their coffee, thick with coal-black grounds, and wondering whether they really enjoyed it, when Smithers suddenly cried out; "Pataug! Pataug!" The waiter hurried away, and came back presently bringing an ordinary corkscrew, “I was Just testing,” said Smithers to his companion, "the truth of the story that the first corkscrew seen in Beirut was taken lucre by a Yankee. It was a patented American contrap tion, and the Syrians were amazed at Its convenience. They spelled out on it the mystic words, 'Pat. Aug. IC, '76,' and took that to be the name of the implement. Now I believe the story that ‘pataug’ la its name all over the Levant." Under free trade the man w ho earns |2O a week now would be forced to ac cept either sls or sl2. The difference of $5 or SB, which now goes for cloth ing, rent, an occasional cigar or a the ater ticket, possibly a delicacy for the home table, will not be at his disposal. Think of the several lines of trade that will lose millions of dollars every week by such enforced economy! I g^icflSTOPilfl I For Infants and Children. f 4STORIAI The Kind You Have psM | Always Bought I A'/cgctablcPrcparationforAs- H * M I epilatingihcFoodandßegula- ■ # II fegttu* Stomachs andßowels of 11 I Si nature /%V \ Promote s Digestion, Cheerful' fl J y U I ncr,s and Rcst.Contains neither jflj n f I*. A\f I Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. || U1 /1\ 1 w KotKakcotic. I |\yi l r xuv*osoidnrSiWVELPnvuKa nj I l/V J\unpkut SuJ>“ fl IJK " Jlx.Scn/M *■ M 1/1 ■ HckJulU SJti - SB ft I M Amu Sett/ * ■ A A 111 fhfptntu/ii - H I \ i II w 111 th CurtoruKx SaJj* * IP 11 111 flirm Strd • VJ 11 Ar 1 I (lanhcf Surar • gB g 11 \\htuyn*n Aiuizr / M f 11 A Q A perfect Remedy forConslipa- H | I O' ] !iun. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, ® J Ify _ _ i Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- 1 I JU Fav II If Q K ucss and Loss of Sleep. mV J* lUI U VUi Tar Simile Signature of flj Vl* \l i _ 8 Thirty Years SHpicinßlA tXACT COPrOF WRAPPEB. S fIS B ■ BBbB IL-W- ...... ... liUlllW THI OK NTAU N COMPANY, NIW VOOR CITY, CORTRIGHT HfnREPRO^^I^B cauie they interlock end overlap in such away that the I > cannot sift under them. I buildings, because they're safe (torn all the elements. I is the building, and never need repairs. | Q. L. 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The New Home Sewing Machine Co., Otange, Mass. 1 PEERLESS Paper MEAT Sacks \r huff titMi su *n pn*v<*nt i|l|er in ioml it the .-imp * directions on each sack art* fol.owed. A-MO Nl V L ",V° il 'I OH' T?U “I WHfKE iTJVx ■„V >P AX' ' v THIS IS W( Ul! Vh /t-#f --/..A JmZ \ s a* \om’ mev I*' smoked, in thr cariv fill* i.'.ttv • kl|ll*T I|> puts 111 a! <•> ! I,it •, pIi1 1 " •* vulll IIICHI in !lM‘ SH*k, following thr !*n’s pl:l!nl\ printed Oil Will one, a> >1 \ouf-an r*st iiHsiin l ilnit yon will nut he hot hem * !■ Ii worms in vi.nr moat. •I'Tilti-s" I'iipiT Meat Sinks an* inadt* from x sp. t i.i!!- jirepared, v*rv tough, pliable, stron clos* rral :r( , ‘fi*av\ paner. will) our perfert ‘•l*eei less*' hot ton. whirl) is air and water tight, and with can* ,?ai ie used for sevrral vears Thcv are made in do t'* si/es •, suit ail sizf.s of tin at, and r!l at i, 4 *•,.1 *, <•..„!, .n.amudmg to size. Tim large o? S rent -i/r iak- tie hams and ihouhhTK of hog vi hliiK (llvf w<*l. In) from SAO to Kim pound*, at •ordiny |. how the meat Is trimmed; medium or 4 | (••!.! v|/c from JOP to H.Vi pound* and the small or > '.••r I/.- from IOP iti'jiwi pounds. .\ 'mm trial will full\ sustain every claim for om •md *•. and we feei that where onee used they wlh } •• i* a household necessity. '.j/ ■ \k yinir grocer for them. Price 1.4 and i cents apiece, according to s|/.e M ANI KAOTURan ONLY BV THR Great oiithern Ptg. & Mfg To , li< I f IKK K V| I. THE BALTIMORE NEWS Daily and Sunday live, independent news paper, published every aft rrcor fda’i" 1 Suiidtr'. j rs i:.'ti'niffiiiy ;be •■; G.e oitv, fA netvspaper for the homo—for the family cir cle. *|Enjo3 r s the confidence and respect of its readers. *fOne cent everywhere. Buy It from your local Newsdealer or order by mall. One month $ .30 Six months..., $1.75 i i One year 3.50 [j ; The Baltimore News BAL.TIMOHGI, HD. Ii