HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-04-07, Page 3•".....0.1•••••-.••••••••mem,...,
That Old Whiter Cough
The Cough Syrup You've Taken
Has Sickened But Not Cured
You.
You'll Never Be Well TIII You Heal
the Lunge With "Oatarrheeone."
Nothing pulls down Strength, makes
you wretched, miserable, and deapondent
like a chimera (lough. The olddashioned
lIquidmietures elip down the threat, en-
ter the stomach and. do little else but
rule digeetiou.
Caterrhozone is the
only breathable cold, cat-
arrh and emagh inediclne,
Instead of taking drowsy
drugs, chloral, morphine
aud opium mixtures you
einaply inhale the riChest
nine balsam% breathe in-
to your lungs the healing,
soothing vapor of solen.
tide remedy that com-
mands, the admiration ef
all good. phyaiciaus,
The extraordinary efR-
catty of Catarrhozone is
without a parallel. A
sneezing cold is eared 111
ten nilnutes, a. hareh
cough is eased In an hour,
the most offensive cat-
arrh Is thoroughly drawn
from the system. In case
of asthma and bronchitis
the relief mid certain cure
• that comes from the heal-
ing balsamte extracts in
Catarrhozone Is simply
Wonderful.
"For more than twenty
• years I suffered with a
cough, bronchitis, aethina
and nasal catarrh," writes
J. E, Fenwick, of. Staun.
ton P. 0.- "Every attack
I had seemed to grow
worse and I could hardly
breathe on account of an accumulation
of phlegm in the nose and throat. One
day I tried Catarrhozone and. in ten
minuteswas wonderfully relieved.
could breathe freely and naturally
through the nose and blood spitting
etopped—the phlegm was cleared
away and my regaled- breathing restored.
No remedy can do more than 'Catarrh -
ozone."
"There is no remedy so certain and
safe as Catarrhozone, but being a good
remedy it Is imitated. Beware of the
substitutor, Large Caterrhozone lasts
two months, price $1.00. Smaller glees
Me. and 50e . All reliable dealers or the
Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Oht.
An Abuse.
Francis Wilson, the comedian, said at
a dinner in New York, aprepos of the
law that forbade the performance of his
play, "The Bachelor's Baby":
"The law against child labor is an ex.
cellent one, but it is an abuse of this
law to forbid children, properly 'protect-
ed, to appear on the stage.
"The best of things are open to abuse,
you know. Even prayer meetings."
Mr. Wileon smiled.
"William Spurges," he resumed, "rose
in prayer meeting one night and said
he &sired to tell the dear friends pres-
entof the great cha,nge of heart that
had came over him so thad
a.he now for-
g ve, fully and freely, Deaeon Jones for
the horse he had sold him.
"Deacon Jones was too shocked at
first to reply. He Boon recovered him.
self, however, and he rose in his pew
and -said:
"I am indeed glad, dear „Christian
friends, to have gained Brother William
Spargus' forgiveness, but, all the sumo,
he ain't paid me for the hose yet,'"
ASPECT OF
Zata-Bult spells saving to you I Sup.
polo husband, wife or some member of
the family sustains a cut or a bad
seratch,whichfesters or tureptoblood-
poisoning. Result—off work ! What
doe" that moan at pay day? Zana-Buk
peeverde , Anemias, cute or injurlea
74 turning the wrong way." Apply it
tramediately, and it keta the poison
lheetraom
rilieaanling.
0 et Wiped,
you heave in
e fatuity, ec.
heitteeietirworea,
filtieretioue or
-fw Skin disease,
Zeta -Bilk
te-don't spend
e y on expert.
Ot Zatit. ‘1 ii \•,_ / ij
telly.. ' i I
evei ,p, wed it
gle mt- ) oo ".
4i4ro ' .- vague fi .
6tIpir thtngs.
i tame persons :—
kt. A. M. Brook, Wellington Street,
toe,_Ont., says :—." If only I had
ain4luk at drat, it would have,
ir 0 Iteeree a donate t Ate lvas
07
0 yigott7." Mr. Brecht:has been
9 &astute Hangs t—" My•na*,
eed bay were covered with the
tile diseaeo. The !telling, burning
sitting I augured, none who hag
Outs through it eau toll I Doetors'
sj selves) and prescriptions didn't
a it bib of good; and from one
ng fee Another I passed, only to find
ts, niselosa. 'With Zam-Balt it was
;le and Without ping through a
ty, / Can say that a feut weeks'
$ •eith ties great healing beimbOoltd
and rid 1115 for good of the terrible
eh hid held me irk Its grip tot over
applied Zama:0g lathe findiplsoe,
Wag the other terribly, t
evokesPM / a Vet et 00 13
0. 1
Did ell, of 44 Pro akelisr
/If • Tin . iit4 Iodfrefl
I.olu*.ruicl
44-04-0-41-1M+000-9eteltereet. ev-verl
1
Experiments With
Farm Crops
4444+4-44-44-0.4•444-44-+++ 4.4+44-0
The members of the Ontario Agricul-
tural and Experimented Union ere
pleaeed to stete that for 1010 they are
prepared to distribute into every town-
ship a ()aerie material of ltigh quality
to experiments with feelder crops, roots,
grebes., gratieee, cloverai4 fertilizero,
as followed.
Eaperiments. Plots.
1—Three varieties: of oats , 3
2a—erhree varieties of eix-rowed
barley . • , • . • • • 8
2b—Two varieties of two -rowed
barley ....... 2
3—Two varieties et hullese barley 2
4—Two varieties of spring wheat 2
5—Two varieties of buckwheat .„ 2
0—Two varietiee of field peas ; 2
7—Emnier and. spelt.. , . ..... 2
8—Two varieties of Soy, Soja, or
Japanese beans .. 2
9—Three varieties of husking corn 3
10—Three varieties of numgels 3
11 -.-.Two verietiesi of sugar beets for
feeding purposes „ 2
12—Three varieties of Swedish tur-
Alps.. 3
13—Two varieties of fall turnips 2
I4—Two varieties of carrots 2
15—,Three varieties of foddee or
fodder corn . . 3
10—Three varieties of millet . , „., 8
17—Two varieties of sorghum ,2
18—Grass peas and two varieties: of
vetches , 8
19-1ape, kale and field cabbage 3
20—Three varieties of clover 3
21—Testing two varieties of alfalfa
(Lucerne). , , 2
22—Four verieties of grassee 4
23—Three varieties of field peas 3
24—Theee varieties, of sweet corn 3
20—Fertilizers with Swedish turnips
28a—Two varieties of early potatoes 2
28b—Two varieties of medium ripen-
ing potatoes ..... . 2
280—Two varieties of late potatoes 2
29—Three grain mixtures for grain
production.. . ..... 3
30—Three grain mixtures for fodder
production . , 3
Each plot is to be two reels long by
one rod wide, exeept No. 20, which is to
be one roe square.
Any person In Ontario may oho ose any
ono of the experiments for 1910 and
apply for the same. The material will
be furnished in the order in which ap-
plications are received while the supply
lasts. It might be well for eacb appli-
cant to make a second choice, for fear
the first wild, not be granted. All
material will be furnished eutlrely free
of charge to eaoh applicant, and the
produoe will, of course, become the pro-
perty of the person who conducts the
experiment, •
•(:), A. Zavitz,
. :Director.
Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph,
sormm.se
CORN SG CURED
IN 24 HOVNS
You can painlessly remove any corn, either
hard, soft or bleeding, by applying Putnam's
Corn Extractor. It never burns, loaves no scar,
contains no acids; is harmless because composed
only of healing gums and balms. Fifty years in
use. Cure guaranteed. _ Sold by all druggists
Mc. bottles. Refuse substitutes.
PUTNAM'S PAINLESS
'CORN EXTRACTOR.
USE OF SCIENCE
In the Work of Fighting Fruit Tree
Pests.
Prof. Leopold Trouvelot, of the astro-
nomical observatory at Harvard 'Univer-
sity, was interested in the silkworm. He
thought possibly that a hardier breed of
the insect could be produced, and was
experimenting along that line. Disease
was attacking the commercial silkworm,
both in the United States and. in turepe.
Prof. Trouvelot importee silk -spinning
caterpillars, in various stages of develop-
ment, and. among them were clusters of
eggs from tho gipsy moth. In the village
of Medford he conducted his experi-
ments, placing thd caterpillars on a
shrub in his yard. To keep the speci-
mens from becoming scattered he cover-
ed the bush with a -net.
The New England States would to -day
be free from the terrible gipsy moth
curse if e windstorm hadn't come along
and torn the net asunder, liberating the
'caterpillars and moths and scattering
them beyond. recall. It is not always
easy to trace the origin of such pests,
but the gipsy moth's introduction, is
clearly established.
In its caterpillar state the moth does
most damage. It eats everything in its
path—fruit, ehade trees, almost every
stort of vegetation, entire forests.
Japan Was afflicted with the gipsy
moth, but it ravages were not felt in
the lana of the Mikado. Some force
seemed, to hold the moth in checke and.
prevent its destructiveneas.
A parasite, so minute as to be barely
seen without the aid of a magnifying
glass, fed upon the moth in its caterpil-
lar state, arid counterbalene,ed its propa-
gating and ravaging power.
The United States consul -general in
Yokohama learned the facts' and. sent a
report to the department ofagriculture
—and. so eventually forty thousand par-
asites were brought into the United
States and. released in. the infected dis-
tricts of New England. The experiment
is being watched. with great ieterest, and
promises to be a decided suocese, unless
some unforseen complication ariees to
render ineffectual the atteeks of the
parasite.—From "Doom of the Gipsy
Moth," in April Technical World Maga-
zine, Chicago, Ill.
tb
Speeding to Falr, Fat and Forty.
Everybody knows of some at friend
or relative, knows just why the flabby
fat has come. A woman, Sal, has a fine
set of it:sides-. hIrth. heart, •lungs, stom-
ach and liver ate perfect. She works
for a living, digests perfectly her food,
and Bleeps like a serf. She marries,
never strikes; another lick of work, and
eats all manner of candies, cutlets, con-
dithents, cakes and erestres. EMIG has "In.
aomidt," "cannot sleep mote than an
hour or two out of the 24." She speeds
the day on divan, ahd the nights In
night gowns. She hail brought to her
hod o, big, fine breakfast, too much for a
retiletplitter.—New York Preete
- • es:
trentP,,,sn OBLIGE.
(Puck.)
l'No doubt you are kerning that
Wealth hats itte obligatione, now thee you
are tieeelf weathy
yee, iticletall Islet it wonderful!
Only to -day I (Recovered that there's
right way 0.1141 0, wrong way to area
onde housemslail"
***
WANTED TO KILL IT DEAll
(Rolston Transtript.)
Clerk --Revolver, yes, sir. Six-shooter,
f
Onitemsr—Better make it a tnas.
iitootir. 1 wt to kill a. of*
GIVEN UP BY HIS PHYSICIAN
4FurraiffslYtTriATZ 'HIV VA.
JAMES DINGWALL, pm.
Wil1iar0StOWn, Ont., July 27th, so8,
"r suffered all my life from Chronic
Constipation and no (teeter, or remedy,
I ever tried helped me. "Fruit-a-tives"
promptly cured me. Also, last spring
had a bad attack of BLADDER and
KIDNEY TROUBLE and the doctor
gave nie up but "Eruit-a-tivee" saved
my life. I am now over eighty years
of age and I strongly recommend
"Fruit-a-tives" for Constipation and
Kidney Trouble".
(Signed) JAMES DINGWALL
soc a box, 6 for $2.so—or trial box, 25e
—at dealers or from Fruit-a-tives
Limited, Ottawa.
Strength of Birds.
Birds eau eat and digeet from ten to
thirty times as much food in proportion
to their size as men can. If a man
could eat we much in proportion to his
size as a sparrow is able to eonsunte,
he would need a whole sheep for dinner,
a couple of dozen chickens for break-
fast, and six turkeys for hie et -ening
meal. A tree sparrow has been known
to eat seven hundred grass seeds in a
day. Relative to the bird's size, these
seeds were as big as an ordinary lunch
basket would be to a full grown man.
A bird's strength is equally amazing.
A white tailed eagle weighing twelve
pounds, with a wing spread of six feet,
has been known to pounce on a pig
weighing forty-two pounds, raise it to
a height of a hundred feet and fly
off with it. The bird. had covered a
distance of half a mile before the pl,g's
owner succeeded th shooting the thief.
Birds can and do work far harder than
human beings. A pair of house martens
when nesting will feed their young ones
In twenty seconds—that is, each bird,
male and female, makes ninety journeys
to and fro in an hour, or about a thou-
sand a day. It must be remembered
that on, each journey the bird, has the
added work of catching the worm. Even
so tiny a bird as the wren has been
counted to make 110 trips to and from
its nest within 430 minutes, and the
prey it carried consisted of larger,
heavier and hardier -to -fight insects, than
were caught by the sparrows. Among
them were 20 caterpillars, 10 grasshop-
pers, 7 spiders, 11 worms ancl more
than one fat chrysalis.
• • •
An Automobile's Great Force.
The extraordinary thing happened the
other afternoon when a small automo-
bile broke off at the base a tall electdo
light pole • on West Fifth axles -am llo
automobile, running at a fair clip, went
wrong in the steaming goer, and ran in-
to the tight pole, sideswiping it. Teo
pole was broken off withiti a. few feat
of the ground, and it was necessary to
plant a new ono in its place. The man
that was operating the auto got out and
looked his machine over after the ace -
dent and then returned to his seat and
drove the machine away, none tho worse
for its experieucce—Columbus Despatch.
Free!14 Karats Solid c
Gold Shell Rings
W. will give you your
ahem% et oneof those beau-
tiful zings, guarenteed 14
karate scald gold shall,
plain, engraved, or eet
with elegant simulated
jewels, for the sale .of 4
boxes only. M 23o. • box,
9f Dr. fdaturin's F111110U8
egetablet Pdls. They
are the greatest remedy
for indigestion, roactipa-
Mon, rheumatism, weak
sr impure blood, catarrh,
diseases of the liver and
kidneys. Whoa you have
soId these 4 boxes of pills,
send es the money $1. and
the nfile of the ring desired
and we will lend you,
your choir., of onset those
handsome Rings, plain en-
graved 9r lit with precious stones. rod
rev mune *Ad *Adresse immediately an_ we
will send you, post -_paid, the Pills and lanoy
pin* whioh are to give away to purohasers 0
the pilb. We do not ask any money before
the pills ars sold and we take back what you
cannot sell.
Address 'the �r. leaturkfiledlolne 00.1
Il Ig'ing Dent 409 it *roads, Ont.
Beitoleiggeope
BIRD NOTES.
poets Ali seem to lore the bluebird. Le
well speaks: a him as
"Shifting hie light load of song
Frem poet to poet along the OtCerlefS
fenee."
In the woods the bluejey's loud call
attracts attention,and you are lucky if
you ere permitted to hear his other call
—witch velem and Imaetifully
A flo-ak of wild gem flew swiftly
northeast, one warm, rainy slay, and an-
other day a robin was thought to have
been heard off in the mysterious dis-
tance. And last, but not least, of these
February birds come the American
crow, "the happy, hardy outlaw," who
roams these United States over the tear
'round.
Nerristown, Pa.
Martha Simpson,
COLLECTING WAGES IN OLD JAVA,
(National Geographic Magazine.)
At least once a year the Prince of
Solo gives a great entertainment, when
he dispenses a truly royal hospitality.
Hundreds Of natives and Europeans are
invited to the festival, and the best De-
ters and dancers are engaged. After one
of these entertainments: it is said all
sorts of tableware and bric-a-brac aro
offered for eat° in the city—a result of
the 'wholesale thefts ou the part of the
sereauts, who seldom receive any pay
and take this means to "get even.' it ie
saki some one remonsteated with the
Prince for permitting this condition of
affairs to exist, and. he is Arad to have
answered: "From whom can my people
eteal if not from me?"
•
A GOOD MEDICINE
FOR THE SPRING
Do Not Dose With Purgatives—A
Tonic is A.I1 You Need.
Not, exactly sick — but not feeling
quite well. That's the way most
people feel in the spring. Fesily tired,
appetite fickle, sometimes headaches and
a feeling of depression. Pimples or erup-
tions may appeer on the skin, or there
may be twinges of rheumatism or neu-
ralgia. Any of these indicate that the
bloott is out of order; that the indoor
life of winter has left its mark upon
you, and may easily develop into more
serious trouble. Don't dose yourself
with purgatives as many people do, in
the hope that you can put your blood
right. Purgatives gallop through the
aystem and weaken instead of giving
strength. Any doctor will tell you tide
is true. What you need in the spring is
a tonic that will make new blood and
build up the nerves. Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills is the only medicine that can do
this speedily, safely and surely: Every
dose of thie medicine helps make new
blood, which clears the skin, strengthens
the appetite, and mires tired, depressed
een and women bright, eetive and strong.
Miss Mary Baker, Tancook, N. S., saes:
"Dr. Williams' Pink Pills lutve bean a
great blessing to me. Lest year while I
was attending school I became so weak
and completely run aown that I thought
I would have to give up going to school.
NM affected- with dizzy spells and
would fall down at any time. I got half
a dozen boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
and before they were ludf gone I felt my
strength returning. By the time I had
used them all, the dizzy spells were com-
pletely gone, and I was again enjoying
good health."
Sold by alt medioine dealers or by
mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
o •
INTIFFECT'UAL.
(Puck.)
There was once a man who, finding
himself -without sin, deemed that he was
chosen to throw the first atone. But
the world laughed at him.
"Such a sissy can't throw a stone to
hurt muchl" guffawed the world, and
wagged' on ita own wicked way, mocking
at morale.
First and foremost, in a chronicle of
the birds of February conies tho Euglish
house sparrow, for it, like the poor, we
have always with us. Why Is it that or-
nithologiet, almoit without exceptiom
speak so harshly of this little foreigner,
for he is a bird and for that reason, if
no other, should have an attraction for
all bird lovers. No doubt if he had been
consulted when his introduction to this
country was oantemplated in 1851, ,he
would have said that he much preferred
,to remain on his native heath. He, is not
altogether unmusical, either, for one day
he tome to the window sip, tempte4 by Is
cold buckwheat cake, and his chirpings
were quite soft and pleasing,
. One moaning, when the sntiow lay
many inches deep on the ground, a. tong.
sparrow sang at intervals duriigh�
whole inormag. Hi a song is hiletelye
cheery atid sweet, but, as Chapetuegthiade;
"heard in silent February it seentrthe'
divined bird -lay to which mortil...efer
listened." Thia iittk Ong eparrcH gets
his meals from our doorway, aikl
house sparrow intrudes on his o'e,he 'es-
pecial crumb -patch the Eegliedi brother
always hats to give way.
-
The little slate -colored juncos were
numerous this month, coming neakon the
house for their meals the severir- the
weather becante.
The cardinal grosbeak seems tij love
to contrast hi beautiful plumage with
the snow, for every time that I have
seen him this month he has been careful
to plaee limmelf against a snowy! benk.
Ile looka, with his rich tolore, to be-
long to Immo trople regions— seem
Southern orange grove, 'rather then to
our cold north country.
A. pair of white-brine:skid nuthatelies
have had a fino timo liecking an old,
ham bone hung out on a tree for their
especial benefit; And the little "downy"
woodpeckere apparently gat abundant
food from the bark of the maple trees.
The bird "with the earth tinge on his
breast and the sky tinge on his back,"
as Moreau tells him, has been with
eta all winter, and oet *Arm, runny cleys
&eters us with his eweeb notte, which
Sohn Burroughs °elle "the violet of
sound." Venereal calls the bluebird
"Airii's bird," bub Burrottelts thbaks
Stkra4 Ow tili helonp to elle Debi*. The
' Coating for Luminous Paper.
Forty parts bichromate of potash,
450 parts of gelatine, 500 poets of
sulphide of potassium, perfectly dry,
areg round and mixed. One part
mixed with two parts of hat water.
Apply several coate, passing through
the calendering machine after each
ooating.
*
Ragson Tatters—Can't ye help a poor
fellow w.ot's had an automobile pass over
him? Kind gentleman--Certainly1 Here's
a quarter. How did it happen? Ita„gson
Tatters—I wuz sleeping under a bridge
last. night when an automobile went
across."—Chicago News.
BEST
REMEDY
ForWomen—Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound
Belleville, Ont.—"I was so weak
.and worn out from a female weakness
'that I concluded to try Lydia E. Fink -
ham's Vegetable
Compound. I took
several bottles of
It, and I gained
strength so rapidly
that it seemed to
make anew woman
of me. I can do as
good a day's work
as I ever did,
sincerely blese the
day that I made up
my mind to take
your medicine for
female weakness,
and am exceedingly grateful to youfor
your 'kind letters, as I certainly profited
by them. / give you permission to
publish this any time you wish."—
ALIIRAT WXClatTT, Belleville,
Ontario, Canada.
Women everywhere shouldrercember
that there is no other remedy known
to medicine that will cure fatale weak-
ness and so suecestftilly carry worosn
through the Change of Life as Lydia E.
Pinkharn'sVegetable Compound, made
trOM native roots and herbs.
For SO years it has been curing
woMenfrom the worst forms of female
ills— inflammation, ulceration, Ills.
placements, fibroid tumors, irregularl.
ties, periodic pains, backache, mat
nervous prostration.
If you want special advito write
okittabirs.rinkbana,Lynn,Maso.
t trea eUrel *Altos hateful.
WHAT THEY DO HI Ken
911....e110,0
Tells How They Cure Weari-
ness and Tiredness in
Sherbrooke.
Probably no remedy has COMO 60 rap-
idly to, the front and is held inBuch
hio cochnntiou by the people of Sher-
brooke as ".Ferrozoned
Everyone is talking-. of the wonderful
cures it has made, and.- no one is mere
enthutdaatie in their. praise of Ferro -
zone than Mrs. George Ray, of No, 3
Alexander street, who writes of her mist,:
as follows:
"Permit ine to say a few words con -
earning that grand medicine, 'Ferree
zone':
"1 heel lost my appetite.
"1 -wee very weak.
"Had pains in my back.
"Suffered with bad digestion.
"Heedaelies were frequent.
"I always felt weary,
"I commenced to use Ferrozono aml
improved rappidly. I now feel well —
am cured, and am glad to recommend
Ferrozone to all my friends.
(Signed) "MRS. GEO. RAY,"
If you have any of Mrs, Ray's symp-
toms you will be quickly cured by Far-
row:Me—the best of all tonics—the moat
nourishing and strength -giving. Try
one or two Ferrozone tablets at meal
time—the results will surprise you; 500
a box, six boxes for $2.50, all dealers,
or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Can-
ada. •
••••••••,...•
A BIRD SANCTUARY IN NORTH
AMPTONSIIIRE.
Thinking that your readers might like
to hear something of what ie being done
here for feediug and caring for the wild
birds, I write to tell you about it. Some
time ago, I took in about four acres of
parkland and, planted it with every ine
eginable herdy shrub and tree which
bear fruits or berries beloved of the
birds. It is now a. fascinating tangle of
leaves, fruit, berries, seeds and cones in
their season, with wild' trails and nat-
ural paths leading here and, there. in
dell, bank, knoll or wilderness.
I got the carpenter to build a little
feeding pavilion of oak on oak poets,
with a. sloping shingle roof to keep off
the snow and rain. Inside there are
three tiers of oaken trays, in which I
have placed every morning a mixture of
chopped fat, suet, seeds, oats, cracked
Indian maize, meal and grit. Over this
mixture we pour boiling water, and
when it cools a little the trays aro filled
with it. On the ground beneath the
pavilion we place a large, very shallow
earthenware pan of fresh water. This is
renewed twice a da.v in the frosty weath-
er and every .morn'ing otherwiae. Fresh
water Is as neeessary as feed to our bird
friends, especially in cold weather.
On the cross:bus that support or up-
hold this structure I hang cocoanuts,
stuffed with suet. Our acrobatic friends,
the tits, when regaling themselves on
'these, perform wondrous antics.
The bird -feeding pavilion stands in
front of our dining room windows, and
it is quite delightful to SOS the joy and
surprise of the many varieties of birds
which visit it, I have also invented feed-
ing troughs for the birds, which are roof.
ed over so as to protect them while feed-
ing from the snow and rails. These
troughs are placed in sheltered corners
of the gardens. On almost every tree I
have hung up great feeding sticked with
deep, round holes, which are filled with
fat and seeds regularly. In the wilder-
ness I hang up meaty bones on the tree
branches and other edibles at which the
birds like to peck.
Outside each of the bedroom windows
I have had oak trays put up on supports
of iron. On these trays food and fresh
water are placed every morning for the
birds. I have also put several hundreds
of nestieg brevet in the trees and in
manquiet retreats all over the grounds,
so I think and hope the birds are happy
her:
In America we always gave the birds
a Christmas tree, and I have tried to
keep up the cusitom in my adopted home.
Our servants are very good to the bird's,
and outside the windows many birds
feed without fear, or chatter, gossip and
sing while the maids are sewing close by.
Often when I am walking in the garden
the birds come so near that I can touch
them. They sing to me, and I learn
many beautiful eecrets from. them --
Irene Osgood, Guilsborough Hall, North-
ampton.
1.1111.1,1,
"Mounted Cossacks stood far out, ti
cella of hundred yards or so; others
galloped across the fields. In every
lane leading to the line there were at
least two Coe:seek% and where there
wete cottages near the railway mote
Cossacks.'
The writer Was iuu E WhiCh was
pushed by the royal trein.
"There teas no crowding to tile Will-
dOWS I wondered," he continued, "why,
and placed myself in a good position. 1
soon learned, however, why there was
no cempetition, The train slowed .down
and bayonets came on board. -
"An officer marched throegh the ear.
elages, followed 1:y an attendant, who
pulled down all the windew blind. A
soldier was placed at every window.
The train stopped. Outside 1 eould hear
tile'TItslewatirlitionf 8NavlatisIP"1;eina surrounded.
Then all was silent EMI almost dark,
save for the candles over the door, witlt
which third-claee eartiages in Russia El'e
miaerably lighted.
eThere came the rumbling of an ap,
preaching train. The soldiers in the
cerriage stood at attention, Whirr —
whizz—the curtains fluttered as the
train rushee by. That was all I sew of
the Czar and the royal train.
"A few minutes later the blinds were
raised, the soldiers left the carriage, and
we pufeel sldo•wly into a station, Sol.
diere were coming in along the line and
from the Heide; the festoone and the
flags Were .bcieg taken down. The web.
come was over. Every one was relieved.
The responsibility of royalty in Russia
is no light thing.
STATEMENT OF
A TRAVELLER
Is Sure Dodd's Kidney Pills
Cured His Dlabetee,
Geo. H. Watterworth, of Rodney,
Feels Like a Boy Again After Suf.
foring From the Most Deadly of
Kidney Diseases.
Rodney, Ont., April 4,—(Special)---Mr.
Geo. IT. Watterworth, a well known
travelling salesman, whose home is in
this place, makes an unqualified state-
ment that he was ured of Diabetes by
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"Yes," Mr, Watterworth said when
asked. regarding his cure, "Dodd'e Kid-
ney Pills ured MP. of Dialietes. I took
thirty-seven boxes in all, but to -day I
am restored to good health.
"I was also troubled with Rheumatism
and Headache, my sleep was broken and
unrefreshing, and I' was always: tired
and nervous. But Dodd's Kidney Pills
cured me and. now I feel just like I did.
when I was a boy."
Dodd's Kidney Pills mire Diabetes be-
cause it is it Kidney disease and there
it no form of Kidney disease Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills will not cure. Mr. Wetter -
worth's other ailments were caused by
diseased Kidneys failing to strain im-
purities out of the blood, and Dodd's
Kidney Pith cured them by curing the
sick ICidneys.
e • •
Wireless Telephony.
Experiments in wireless telephony are
now at a standstill, according to a 'writer
In the Electrical World, and the wonder-
ful things which were expected are not
likely to be realized in the near future,
_Occasionally articulate speech is trans.
mitted a bong distance by Hertz waves,
and the hwentors are greatly encourag.
ed. This success may be followed by a
complete failure, when conditions are ay.
parently the Berne, and then sicence
baffled. Frequently there is serious in-
terference from wireless stations. More-
over, the nature and expense of the ap-
paratus—the Hertz wave generator and
the upright wire—are such that wireless
telephony is a fascinating toy for scienti-
fic men, but the day seems far distant
when it will he placed on a commercial
longs and made a feature of every day
lite, as has been done with wireless tel.
egraphy,
es- • *
A Spring Lilt.
There's a ripple on the river, where the
water is agleam;
There's a brown bird singing to its
shadow in the stream;
And the barren woods are blooming, and
Itis people are a -wing,
For over hill and over dale they hear
the coming spring!
Here's a snow of buds ablow, in the ap-
ple tree;
• Overhead a sunny wind, blowing to
the sea.
Who 'will come agoaming? Conte with
me to -day.
And, oh, the yearning faces on the
bread highway!
There's a ruffle on the water and
drowsy cloud. above;
There's a blue sky spilling out a show-
er for its love.
For sweet April is adveeping and is
laughing as she ale% '
Atel she gathers up a rainbow end and
dries her pretty eyes.
Here's the way to Yesterday; take it,
ithead, dancing on
wili
Apriasra yonbu
theohill.
Who Oce the insuicap? Hurry,
while you mayl
w
uidwoo
And, oh, the feet that wander front the
breed highway!
—Herman Da, Costa, in April Smart Sot.
4_ 9
HOW NICHOLAS IRAVELS.
Very Different From Untie Edward's
Way of Travelling.
A estrange story of how the Czar re
timed to Itusein after his recent visit
to Italy is told by 3. Lande in the Jew-
ish World.
The sight, he says, was certainly
striLing. Telegraph poles were sparsely
decorated with bunting and banhers; the
wayside stations were festooned with
garlands of leaves and ribbons, but them
were not the things to which the fingers
pointed. At every few Wes on tither
side of the vailway line stood a eoleier
With bayonet flied to his gun. At every
level cresting there WM a Military en.
estnipment, at every bridge) it galrleen;
evt•ry wayside station watt a barracks,
"Scone of the soldiers stood at atten-
tion facing the line, others had their
backs to the trains," the writer says. "1
believe they stood SA alternately, but
am not certein. Officers marehed to
sued fro. No plate levers were to 'be
seen, no workers wore in the Nide bor.
&alas " on the See.
4o se
Lord Walsingham, who has just pre-
sented his wonderful collection of moths
to the British Natural History Museum,
shares with Lord de Gray the distinc-
tion of being the finest shot in Great
Britain. He is probably the only man
who cat, a,nd does, shoot wasps on tho
wing.
•••••••••••••••!..•=011•10•11M1Y.
KIDNEY TROUBLE
Steered Tr* Years;—.Reiisved iut Thoe
Months Thanks to 1'le.1? (7../V44.
ao 11 =ER, Mt. Sterling, Ky., says :
eht
.e
'41 have Buffered with icidney Bud
bladder trouble torten yearspast.
'Last March 1 conamonced using
Peruna and continued for three menthe
havo not used it since, nor bevel fell
4Patn:oal Now.;e
d from Peat.
4O
Peat is partly developed coal. Nature
has failed to impart that enormous pros.
euro arising from the deposit of soil
and rock upon the decayed, vegetable
substance which is necessary to cern.
press it into a hard material, nor hoe it
been carbonized and the water eliminat-
ed by the interior heat of the earth, A
natural upheaval whereby the peat bogs
were buried under immense accumula-
tious of rock and ecu would. achieve this
end. If, therefore, one could, reproduce
the cycle of epee -emus carried out, by
nature, compress the peat and drive oxf
tee,eatie,ersthtylt.a steady heat, coal would
Dtbr. Martin Ekenberg, a. well known
Swedish scientist, after many years' re-
search and ceaseless experiments, has
apparently solved the problem and has
produced at the manufactory erected, up.
On his own peat bogs in Sweden a peat
fuel which in appearance, combustibility,
and heat raising propertiea compares
feverishly with goal.
By minute etudy of the natural evolu-
tion he has succeeded in perfecting an
artificial process, the fundamental char-
acteristics of which are the elimination
of the water by heat and the applica-
tion of pressure by mechanical agency.
Illuminating gas can aleo be easily
and cheaply derived from this peat coal.
The process is the same as that adopted
for the manufacture of gas from coal.
The carbonized peat is distilled in e dry
retort, and the volatile constituents are
secured, scrubbed, washed and dried, in
the usual way, while the ordinary by-
products are also obtained.
The gas has a high illuminating inten-
sity, comparing favorably with coal gas,
while the coke residue is superior to that
resulting from coal distillation, owing
to its low sulphur percentage. This
coke is eminently adapted to metallur-
gical processes. And it cau also be used
In place of charcoal to a considerable
'extent, with the advantage of being
muck cheaper.
• MADE IN CANADA
YEAST
CAKES
Best Yeast
in the World
Sold and
Used
Everywhere
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Toronto. Ont.
'I" DISTEMPER
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Sure cure and positive preventive.ito matter how horses at any age see
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DISTRIBUTORS—ALL WHOLESALE OEVOGISTS
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HANDSOME WATCH FREE.
A dents' or Ladies' Solid Gold Watch costa from $28
to $so. Do not throw your inoney away. If you desire
to secure a Watch which to keep and last well will
be equal to any Solid Gold Wat send us your name and
address immediatelytw
and ee sell 10 your
ouly of
Dr. Maturin's Famous Vegetable Fills at 26e, a box.
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A GENTS or 'LADIES WATCH
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TH C DR. WIATU RI N MEDICINE co. Watch Dept. 20 Toronto, Ont.
'
Everybody Who Eats Bread
Should !WOW danger of purftlet In delivery from the oven to
the home. I nsist oil your IS akar wrapping his bread in
EDDY'S BREAD WRAPPERS
We are the original manufacturers sf bread wrappers now
used by leading bakeri el Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto and other
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FREE .115.5 LOCKET gii.NADSVRTI
This biennial Gold frialidl Loaf:4 mounted with Ortellistsii
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EASTER MORN.
tily W. Sherwood VOX.)
The pasqmeflower, .urgent on it finni-
ing
wing,
Oem winter's heal and legions trinmpb.
lug;
Ita ice -tomb shattered and untenanted,
The river chanting onward to the Red;
The catkins, loosed from their thill
smothering shroud,
Buoyantly rising like a eirrus,elond;
The sparse guerilla army of the gram
Victorious thrusting through Sir Frost's
cuirass;
A thousand vital Murmurs o'er the
Marking the new blood pulsing through
earth's veins;
And o'er the velley, ,mists that will not
down,
Tint mount aspiring to the heaven's
erown;
This quenehleas host of world -old things
new -horn
Recall that thiss—that this is Easter
more.
—•The Westminster for March,
Prayer,
Almighty God, who elitist send Thy
Son, Christ Jesus, to minister to suf-
fering and sinful men, we thank Theo
that Thou haat inatle provision for car-
rying on His graeious work. We thank
Thee for all those who have given their
lives to the gospel ministry and for
these who, in school and college, are now
preparing, for this high service. We pray
especially at this time for those who
are going.forth frem our colleges to the
-mission T.et Thy Spirit guide
and enlighten them,- May they have
the mind that was in their Master,
Christ, and may they seek with single
eye the glory of God and the good of
those to whom they miuister. Thy
kingdom come. Thy will be done on
earth as it is in heaven, Amen.
Loving With Our Minds.
. We are to love God with our minds
es well as with our hearts. That
means that God is ta have it possession
of our thoughts as well as of our af-
fections. It means, also, that our af-
lotions are to be thoughtful and rea-
sonable, that we are to think about our
love and what love calls for. And we
are to love mw .neighbors with as wise
and true a love as that with which we
love .God. The mere impulse of love will
not always stiffice. How can I show
my love most helpfully? "My sister
is (me of the most loving and unselfish
souls," a num remarked, "but half a
dozen people have to follow her around
to clear up the unfinished jobs of un-
selfishness she leaves _behind her." She
loved with everything except her mind.
Her unselfishness created more burdens
than it relieved. She left, wherever she
went, a MeSS of well -meant kindnesses
which were not reasoned, which re-
quired work on the part of many others
in order to rediem her assurances, while
she went on her way serenely, happy
in the thought of her -thoughtless love.
Whatever duty we owe to God needs
to be discharged wi ill all the faculties
we have, mind ad soul, as well as
heart and strength. And in our human
relations the will to be helpful needs to
be enriched and directed by the mind
-of love, by the whole intellect alive
and keen to perceive and reason out
the ways of greatest pdssible servioe,
of service which will help most. We
are not helping a man enough when we
endow hint with a deed of kindness on
which he has to pay a usurious interest
to make it of any real use or to save it
from being it positive encumbrance.—
Sunday .School Times.
Coming and Going.
The leader is an ensample to his men,
as He was so are we. We came as He
came, by birth. We. go as He went, by
death. These are the only gates. "In
the volume of the book it is written of
me, I come. The Son of Man goetle as it
is written of Him." As was the Master,
so is the servant. Oar coming is fixed
and determined in council. The time,
the place, the color of the skin, the lan-
guage, the timber of which our bones
are built, the moral tine spiritual fibre
which wrap around that priceless gem
the soul of nem. You did not come be-
fore, or after, but just then.
Where were y011. when Canute com-
manded the waves and they did not
obey? Where, when Alfred burnt the
cakes in the woodmen's cottage? Where,
when Charles lost his head, and blied
Milton saw into Heaven, and Cromwell
was proclaimed victor and Protector?
These good old times were not for you.
Yomeame by ordination, es a new star
eons into the night. You were not
sent to build a bridge, or a ship, you
were sent eot to do, but to be. "Walk
before me and be perfect." You are not
for the task, the task ia for you, whe-
ther you finish the job or not. You are
of blood royal, a prince, not to be cramp-
ed by man's interpretation. of divine
things. The Sabbath was made for man,
not man for the Sabbath. The time of
coming and going! Who are the scribes,
how many volumes in the great library
of God in which these destinice are writ-
ten? The Master says, "It LS written
of me"; the disciple says, "It is written
of inc." Perhaps the child of teed is the
only man on time, What 'blunders men
make hi war, in polities, in eommerecl
HOW often we hear it said: "just
little to etaly, e little. too late," Let it
be proclaimed in every pulpit in tho.
wide world, that this is Eovor true of
God!
Look at the Cruseders, for long, long
years muting the very flower of the
land to blue away at Moelem strong.
halite to resole the holy .sepuichte from
the hands of the infidel. Suppose they
had succeeded, all they would' have heard
would have been the voice of the angel,
"He is not here, He is rhen," new
many revoIntimeiste are too early, how
many hardted penitents are too late! A
iiau es1vent1(‘etntro the 1 1,), e;tdi
t tleetftionntillirtym a :if,
zave hiM this, "Spate to repent."
a-;1;ii
ttn::1
11),T‘
rti%IlYt1
itC4reat Threne
Intesel in beauty not your non."
T. driller.
"A dog that is aetualle eabld does not
titract attention exeept in me eases. As
I ride it wantto 1,e let alone and will
iot attaek unli.s4 bothered. 1t4
i'itlifl 1-
1111 14 to wander a lout; distatol, as
rieelt whieh its throat hoc.micis dry
and parched and *alive drips front Jut
Bps,"