The Wingham Advance, 1910-04-21, Page 3Neglected Colds
Lead to Consumption
tj4ss* a cemplete cure le effected,
the hiflemenation passes rapidly to the
throat, browbeat tube e and, theo the
lump.
You esn't nuke new
lungs any moo than you
can make new fingere or
a new noee—benee con-
sumptiou h practically in-
curable.
But Catarrh can be car-
ed, except in its final end
;away* fatal stage
Catarrh sufferers, mean
-
big those with colds. sore
throat, bronchial trouble,
ete can all be cured
right at hornaby inhaling
"Catarritozone."
In using Catarrhozone
you don't take medne
into the stomach—you
just breathe a healing,
piny vapor direct to the
lungs alai& passages.
CATARRIWZONE
Guaranteed to Cure
The purest balsams
and the greatest antisep-
tics aro thus sent to
every spot where catarrh-
al trouble exists—germs
are killed, foal seeretiene
are destroyed, eature is
given a chance, and cure comes quickly.
Colds and throat troubles can't last if
the pure healing vapor of Catarrhozone
Is breathed --sneezing and coughing cease
et owe, because irritation is retrieved.
'Use Catarrhozone to prevent—use it
to mere your winter ills—it's pleasant,
safe and guaranteed in every °me.
Two months' treatment, large size,
guaranteed to cure, price $1; mall give
504) at all dealers. Beware of substi-
tutes tied imitations. By mail from the
Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont.
NO USE FOR IT THEN.
(New York Times.)
When the kid went to Sunday school
st a time of near when there were no
pimento being given away and told the
teacher he wanted to join the class she
Kt highly elated. The kid's reform
however, seemed too aquiefseent to le;
lasting. When she paid an unexpected
weekday visit to him she found him
smoking a cigarette.
"Oh, I am so sorry," she said. "Row
10 WoU ever expecit to go to heaven if
you insist on smoking?"
"What's that got to do with it?" he
etteitioned,
"Why, nothing unelesm—and your
Wreath is unelean—can enter the gates
of hisseenee
"0.10 he replied, "I ain't goin/ to let
that trouble me. You see, when I die
Pm goin' to leave my breath behind!"
The rain, which had come suddenly
in unexpectedly, was falling in tor-
rents,.
Among the persona who had taken
shelter under a friendly isladison street
tenting was a fashionably dressed
ivoinan.
"I beg your pardon, madam," said a
plainly attired man, considerably past
Middle age, stepping up to her and lift-
ing his hat, "but I want to offer you
=3r $31noere .thanks."
"What do you niean, sir?" she said.
'Thanks for what?"
"I never expected to see it again," he
went on, with tears in his eyes, "It has
been nearly thirty years since "
"Since what, sir? What are you
talking about?"
"Pardon rny emotion, madam; but I
used to live in Salt Lake City and—"
"I have nothing to do with Salt Lake
Pity, air. I never was there in my
life."
"But I was. That was my home for
many years. And when I saw—"
"When you sew what?"
"That hat of yours, !madam It
brought back the old thrill. It's an
exact reproduction of the great Mormon
abernaele, which my eyes have been
aching through all the weary years to
see once more before I die. My longing
hae been satisfied at last, and I thank
you from the bottom of a grateful
heart!"
Again lifting his hate he etepped forth
trite the pouring rain and strode rapidly
down the street, wiping his eyes as he
walked.—Chicago Tribune.
A man that has had his fill is no
eaten—Spanish.
FARM DRAINAGE.
Assistance Given lay Ontario Agrico!.
tarot College.
logatonwn•Orer
Thorough drainage of lauds needing
it will increases the yearly returns from
the land by about $29 per acre, as
them% by reports *of men who have
drained, ilthis is the salieut fact brought
out in Bulletin 174, iust issued by the
Department of Agriculture, Toronto, en-
titleel "Form Underdrainage; Does It
Pay?"
During the past five years the an -
(sunt ota.,raivage bideg dime has dou-
bled, and thorough drainage, that is
wit/I lines of tile -every four rods, more
or less, ia rapidly inereaeing. Many
areas are so flat or so irregular that it
ia imposaable without a surveyor's level
to tell juat what is the best way of
draining them. For the encouragement
of farmers having seek areas, the Ons
trio Agricultural College is renewing
its offer of assistance iu drainage aur-
veyitig. During the summer the Col,
lege has a special drainage staff en-
gaged in this work. Awyone having
drainage problems to solve may have
the assistance of one of theee drainage
advisore byApplying for the same. M
tho concluieon of eaeli survey a publio
meeting is held in the field to discuss
and demonstrate the best methods of
finding the fall, determining the grade,
digging the ditch true to grade, etc.
The only outlay to the farmer is the
travelling expeeees of one man, contesting of meals, if any, cartage of int
strumeets, if any, and railway fare at
a cent a mile each way. As several sur,
veys are tumally made on the same trip
the *dual cash outlay for each man le
small, frequently being $1, and sehloni
over $2, though in ease of an individual
survey in a. remote part it might reach
$5 or more. The farmer is ales) expect-
ed to meet the college representatives at
the etatioia and return him to it, as
well as accommodate him 'while on the
survey.
Those wishing to make application for
a drainage survey should writes to Prof.
W. H. Day, Department of Physics, 0,
A. C., Guelph, whereupon e, reg -alar ap-
plioaticin form wili be sent.
.1111110
WORTII
MOUNTAINS
OF GOLD
During Change of Life,
says Mrs. Chas. Barclay
Graniteville, Vt. "I was passing
through the Change of Life and suffered
from nervousness
and other annoying
symptoms, and I
can truly say that
Lydia.E.Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
pound has proved
worth inolintairus
of gold to me, as it
restored my health
and etrength. I
never forget to tell
my friends what
LydiaRPinktiam's
agetable Compound has done for me
durM.g this trying period. Complete
restoration to health means so inueh
tome that for the sake of other suffer-
ing Women / am willing to make ray
trouble public so you may publish
this letter." CnAs. BARCLAY,
BeFtDeGraniteekille, Vt.
:No other Medicine for woman's ills
hie received esuoh wide -spread and un-
qualified endorsement. ago other Zed-
idue we knew of has such & record
of cures of female Ills as has Lydia B.
Ankharnia Vegetable Compound.
For More than SO years it has been
°string female complaints such as
inidatnnifitiorit ulceration, local Weak-
blegossa, iihreld w00% irregularities,
sedate pains, backache, indigestion
*wrens prostration* and it is
for (*trying women safely
0 period of change of life.
litt to try Lydia rt.
Is Compound, and,
sayotait4tworth MVO*
ta Worriett.
,70
The
FARM NEWS.
Working Capacity of Horses
After a Winter Rest.
Many farmers seem to think that be-
cause horses hate been resting all win -
tar they can do more work when spring
comae The reverse is true. If they
leithe teen in the harness almost every
day in winter they will be hardy and
strong for spring work, and a rush day's
work will not injure them. But if they
have been idle for a, few weeks they °tin-
ned stand heavy work without perspir-
ing, becoming short of breath and snow-
ing fatigue within a short time. Often
an hour's fast driving or heavy work
will cause the horse to become ill, and In
some eases to result fatally, or in die,
ablement for several weeks.
The calf will do some better on whole
milk than on skim, milk. The fat in the
milk will make it fat, plump and in fine
finish for market. For this reason the
calf sold tor veal should be fed more
whole mink than one kept for malt' or
breeding purposes. Wrien wet eatt is 4
or 5 weeks old it will eat scene hey, shell-
ed corn and ground feeds. If these are
given daily in conneetien with the milk
diet, veal can be produced cheaply.
The main ideas in trinuning a fruit
tree is to removd diseased and superflu-
out branches and for making an open top
for letting in the air and light to all the
foliage and fruit, In pruning vines al-
ways cut just ahead of the bud, as the
bud is the place where new growth, fruit
or foliage is formed.
A. cow that has not the capacity to pro.
duce milk can easily be overfed, but the
cow that will give a large flow of milk is
the one that ehould have the extra feed
and the one that usually does uot reetive
enough.
:Adrundance of succulent feeds eon-
taining the proper materials in right pro-
portions for producing milk, plenty of
tad water, some salt, mild teniperature
and comfortaible serroundings generally,
are the conditions for making a dairy
cow do ber best.
A cow that will give a pound or more
of butter a. day is a good eow, and, in
addition to a variety of feeds grown on
the farm, she should be fed daily a smell
quantity of bran or cottonseed meal.
As to the desirability of the use of the
wide tires there can be no geestion. The
ineet casual observation will suffice to
convince anyone of the damege which
a heavily -laden wagon, equipped with the
ordinary sharp, rounded, narrow tires,
will produce on any road. There is also
another and perhapa even greater aavan-
tage to be gained by the use of wide
tires—viz., the increased linuling eapa-
city attained.
Considerable attention should be given
to ewes and young lambs. A new-born
lamb is just about the most helpless
thing on the farm, and frequently needs
a little help to get startea in life, but
when fairly under way no young stook
will give the owner nore satitfaction;
and it will pay to have patience and do
all one can to aeist them at first.
Thirty-seven cows on the Cornell Ex-
periment Farm averaged last year over
7,000 pounds of milk, which Is 2,500
pounds more than the average in the
tate. The most intereetieg feature Con-
nected with this herd is the fact that
it was started with cows averaging only
2,600 pounds of milk per year, and was
raised to the preeent standard by breed-
ing and selection, using pure-bred sires.
The queen bee lives front two to live
yeara, according to the manner in which
she is raised. When raise.d by the nat-
ural way, as by the swarming of the
bees, And the mother queen is two or.
more years old, she often lives four or
five years. The life of the workers
varies from 45 days in the honey -gath-
ering season to five or ei ottletimes six
mouths during winter, taking the time
of October to April. Drones very seldem
live more than four or five weeks in hot
weather.
The Vermont Iteperiment Station, af-
ter careful investigation, announces that
from the reports of glowers the coet. of
produeing a barrel of apples rengee from
25 cents to $L The lower aliment is 'an.
doubtediy too low, wItlie the maxintuni
figure le too high.
Princess Culotta, ft Holstein- cow in
the dairy herd of the Miesouri College
of Agrieulture, hod year gave 18.115
pounds of milk, equal to 1,300 gallons,
Mid from this 727 pelmet of batter were
made. On her meta alene this cow is
Worth admit $1,500, es she meder a net,
nrollt Of $610 in one rise
The turkey crop of the Veiled }Wenn
last year was about 6.600.000 teed, ut
whiedt Idieeouri prods/era 466.001.
The Departuteat of Agriculture la
N PAIN FOR YEARS
" FIll1114.TIVES " BRINOS RELIEF
MRS. FRANK EATON
Frankville, Ont„ Sept. 2e, 1909.
"I suffered for years front headaches
and pain in the back, and I consulted
'looters and took every remedy obtain-
able without any relief. Then I began
taking "Vreina-tives", the famous fruit
juice tablets, end this was the only
medicine that ever did me any real good..
I took several boxes altogether, and
now I am entirely well of all nay dread-
ful headaches and backaches".
(Signed) MRS. FRANK EATON.
soc a box, 6 for$2.5o or trial box, 250.
At dealers or from lentinaatives Limited,
Ottawa.
perhnenting with corn ehippea from
China. Plants raised last year averaged
less than 16 inches in height, with an it.e-
erage of 12 green leaves at the time of
tasseling. The ears averaged 5 1-2 inches
in length, and 4 1-3 in greateet circumfer-
ence, with. 16 to 18 rows of small grains.
Delaware farmers are doing some greet
things. At Laurel, recently, the finest
lot of white potatoes ever grown in the
State were exhibited, hundreds of which
weighed over a pound each. Thee' Nem
of the Green Mountain variety. Neaten
oue sweet potatoes weighing from 0 to
14 ounces have been exhibited in various
places.
Professor L. R. Waldron, of the North
Dakota Experiment Station, hal deter-
mined from a series of experiments that
bumble -bees are responsible for about 95
per cent of the clover seed produced, and
that only a small amount is formes' by
itaturad self-pollination.
The largest farm in the world is own-
ed by one man in the State of Chihua-
hua, Mexico. It measures 150 miles from
north to south, 200 miles from east to
west, and contains about 8,000,000 acres,
On this farm are raised about a million
head of cattle, 7,000 sheep and 100,000
horses,
Oklahoma is the only State wbich now
has a law requiring the teaching of agri-
culture in all of its eountry schools. It
is expected, however, that similar laws
will be passed in other States.
The tobacco raisers of the United
States realize about $87,000,000 a year
from this crop alone.
An inch of water on an acre of land
equals 22,000 gallons, or 230;000 pounds,
or 100 tons.
11 40
Rooster on Cowcatcher.
When the 3.40 exprese arrived yester-
day afternoon people noticed that little
Robert Thompson, who was in the
crowd, started on a run for the engine.
In a minute or two he climbed on the
front of the locomotive, and as people
began to call tho eegincer to look out
for the boy, Thompson jumped to the
platform with a large Plymouth Rock
rooster in his arms.
It had been picked up somewhere on
tho route by the locomotive; its feet
caught so that it was held, and Thomp-
son secured it practically uninjured.—
Lee correspondence Springfield Repub-
lican.
PRECAUTION.
(Kansas City Journal.)
"Why do you always go out on the
balcony when I begin to sing, John?
Can't you bear to listen to me?"
"It isn't that, but I don't want the
neighbors to think I'm a wile -beater."
ri° For
Ladies
Only!
HOW BE FIND WAY TO HIVE.
Special Sone*. of Direction—Not Guid-
ed by Sight or Odor,
The Olathe emit which is Pou4kons4 by
lesee betlie object of reeearolies made by AL
Oaeton Bottler. et Perls, alai he seems to
prowl that ince powes a special muse like
that of order pigeons.
Thies eau fir for two miles from the hive
and are then able to return after tethering
their saPPIY ef hone'. Xemgetroth aud other*
eunpose that vieion comae tato ploy and thet
beee tan see for a great distanve aud yea also
note 01,/jeCt0 011 the vow eo as toflud their
Path, Others, with riatient, suppose tbet the
ease are gultkd by the souse of smell and
that, they eanmcie
sell flowers at e ansl a, belt
Wien.
The author inekee experimente to Provo
that bees cau return to the rive without
tieing either eight or odor. At to eight, he
takee bees to a distance of one or two miles
front the hive la a closed box, They etwaye
Ib- hack to the Itho when reloaded. The same
ts truo when their eyes are covered, so that
seebt Is not eteeutlat. As regards odor, es-
pminsents eeein to prove that 000tt perceive
odors at (ally short distances. When a needle
dipped in ether ts brought near the head of
the bee, it thowe signs of perceiving the
odor, but not so when the needle is Pldeed
back of him or ilear other organs.
Besides. when the organs 01 emelt (anten-
nae) are rerooyca entirely the bees will re-
turn to the Live. M. Bonnier makes the fol-
lowing ognoriment. At 600 feet from the blve
he plaees a supply of syrup, end the bete
.000a tind it. proceeding to and fro to the
hive. Sueli bees ho maks with green colored
Powder. Ho then places a second supply of
syrup at tbe same distance from the hive
but spaced at twenty feet from the former.
Other bees are now engaged In the to and
fro movement to thie point, but these are
not the same indWiduals as the green marked
bees. wbo are still working on the tiret sup-
ply, and the marks these In red.
We !hue have two distinct sets of bees,
and we see that they can distinguish two
directions which form a very acute angle,
We sewn to have here a epecial directive
sem which does not reside in the antennae
but probably in the cerebroid ganglia, Other
Mats May be cited in evidence of the direc-
tive sense of bees.
Weak Heart,
Poor Blood
Shortness of Breath a
Women need ZameBuk even
more than men. For chafed
places, inflamed surfaces, skin
Bore from frietion from clothing,
rough, red hands, unsightly face
sores for all these and 41
hundred -and -one needs that are
peculiar to women, Zam-Buk is
a boon.
Then there are the children I
For their little cuts and burns
and knocks—lor shin rashes and
skin soree'Zarn-Buk is far the
best. 'W'hy?
Best because it is pure. Best
becituse it contains not one grata
of mineral matter or poisonous
coloring, not one bit ot animal
fat. It is antiseptic, soothing
and healing.
A WIFE'S EXPERIENCE.
joeeph Carr, who keeps I
grocery more at eel Hamburg Ave.,
Toronto, eays:—"In all my years of
housekeeping I bay° never yet used
preparation equal to ZeneBuk. It is
nothing Omit of a %vender- a Miracle),
Indeed I cannot epeak in terms too
praireevotelry nI it. wonderful healing
properties, end would not be teithout
this remedy in my home at any test.
lite:vowed it for sores, cuts, bruises
and other &kin alludes, end conalder
it. St household tecessity, especially
Where there aro eltildren, as it heals
all wound' arta bruiees in alreoat in.
credibly short time. ahly eldest, toe
had *tension to use 7afiellisic for a,
badly hdlomed too, catteol by an in-
growing toe Del A few epplieetioris
Ware allthat wafs rieressery to emu. otst
fhe serene:4 and inflanonetien, end 1.'
wheel ea treelle with tits e tit.... Serer
ea:to/erase rime tvitto,alub t h •s dent s
slang ha elm &shame Lane ." et
41.
thit one testae v lessee velar. tee ,
Imtilftte>a twvi re, keeit.e, 5!' 1",
Worm, 0,10 tsl,t.a. ai,t, 0 00, 1 %unto, .re, 1
And All skin ! "',.i s,r1 se, r, MI 1, 7,,
dieggistt sw1 s vete; fr. eett tree
freereemesek tee, Zeal:: T, 1.r r:.r.
COLDS AFFECT
THE KIDNEY&
"It was a good thing I began taking
Ferrozone when I did, or isny condition
would have fallen into Perniciona Anae.
ink, and thie disease I am told is incur-
able," writes Mr. Samuel 8, Michaud, of
Pembroke. "I sun thankful both for re -
°every and escape from a disease that
eurely rtms its course in a brief time.
The first itymptoms that gave sign that
my naturally great strength was failing,
developed from climbing to the fourth
fioor In an office building in Montreal.
'When I got to the top, a blindnees
seemed to overcome my eyes. I breath-
ed heavily and my breath was very
quick and short.
"My blood had turned to water, I was
told, and I needed the very best tonic
obtainable to vitalize I. You can, im-
agine how run down in quality my blood
was when it seemed that I was suffer-
ing from Pernicious Anaemirue Ferro -
zone worked wonders. Every week I
could see how my blood was making my
eonstitution stronger. I hadn't any
heart disease. The palpitation was
caused by poor blood—so was the short-
ness of breath, Ferrozone has made a
new man of me. I am as hearty, ruddy
and vigorous as I was twenty years ago.
I urge every man and woman in ,ror
health to build up with Fertozone.
No tonic is so certain as Ferrozone—
lust one or two tablets to take at meals..
50e per box, six for $2.50, all dealers or
The Tatarrhozone Co., Kingston, Can-
ada.
IN THE MIDST 01? THE VOLCANOES.
(By a Banker,)
The early (lawn is gradually extba-
guishiug the glittering lustre of the stars
in the eastern horizon, and a rule glow
is slowly suffusing the violet hue a the
star-spangled heavens; though the west-
ern skies are still brilliant in a multi-
tude of scintillating, orbs, scarce daunted
by the faintly ehimmering gleam la the
east. In the distanee the aeop crimson
hue of the smoke issuing from the cra-
ter of Stromboli, the "lighthouse of the
Mediterranean," ean be &seemed, the
lesser glow front Vulcan°, that conbeal
earth -vent projected high out of ocean,
around which so tna»y myths and Lades
have clustered, being lest in evidence. And
now pale shafts and streades of light il-
lundee more and more the orient skies
slowly transmuting the indigo inte:
ineuve, the matiVa into ember, the em-
ber into geld.
Thc coruscating. glittering host has d-
etest faded away before the ever mining
aurora, the inerning star with her placid
light for a time still huttrous but grtudo-
ally paling away before the advaiming
dawn until at length her pallid light hoe
yielded to the superiorbeillianon.of the
rising orb of day. The fleecy evisps of
vapor high in Air have now assumed
a glorious e -ver -deepening rose -pink
soon to be shared by some low-down
"cirro-stratus" clouds hanging over the
deep, reflecting their leveler tints on the
undulating wavelets of the (mean. The
horizon is now a blew: of fire-o.pal sur-
mounted with burniehed gold, even more
and more splendid and vivid, until now
in the midst of the glory, in a dazzling
flood of light, the upper limb of the
great luminary appears rising tram- the
ocean; at first but a narrow atreek, and
then rapialy mounting upwards, until, a
.00e:be traosheendenttsiJieitallteeninee
itIth'ideliderti, 'cidies.the'lweeze- stir-
red wateee to. glitter gips:diamonds and
rubies.
And ndW the hisheltiiiie the midst of
.that numerous grodhof voloartie Islands,
;the Aeolian, or Lipari Isles, mostly small
.theughdofteeeonee wising elver frera the
sea, now inoetly extinct; though Strove
boli—ite cone is about three „thousand
'feet high—ledbaliethel ted 'be' never at
east.: Weenie- is ,said 'to 'be in per-
petmel .eruption. •e• Thie, however, is
"doetbtflii.. , . .
' Aces:tiding tiS'the gni& books this for -
mor foreanoL:Sli-oinholi—was in the
dark ages regarded as the place of pur-
gtaory, travellers having reporeea .that
the enes of imprieoned eletime could be
heard hinting from the crater! Also
stating that, in ebtaegttektee, the ,Abbot
of Cluny, in A. D. 048, inetilteted "Alt
Soule Day." nut in this mores erilighte
cued age sitteh a statement -would of
course lee ridieuleil by all. And it such
a Mediaeval theory weer at all :within
the ;Alkaline of possibility, it is to be fear -
ea that the little volcano would by tide
time be fairly crowdeti. But time who
live a godly life, mid whose Whol hope of
deliveranee frem the wrath to come ie
bane upon the atonement Made for
tenni -upon the eroas by the Sol) of God,
ivlia bore the punidiuterit of their -dies,
Ana by \Ames faripee they are heeled,
are of a rertairty assured of st glorrous
inheritenee in the Kingdom of /heir
Litra,
DRAFT PROM 'ME CALtERY.
((line:ea Netvs.)
The Ifika;ng man ht the berestorming
New leisglittul drama 'a ;Rea iTi the %%tinge.
"I puree I'd lifttcr go 111.01i fie an
emote,' lee amietniteel reouelln. "I :still
Lear the whet hiniter in the lilieeried
St
"'(,ti fliarkd thp irate
manager, " the
bUzaard—
th&t'i th* gudi
THE THRILLS OF LION teeINTING,
EXERCISE!
In the latit, three months two men
have lost arms, and almost their le, 1.4,
riding lions. IIL bath cases the sama nits -
take was made. 1.hcy pres,e4 the beast
too closely. No twee ean tarn or stop
as can a cat . 1 have seen a cheetah
was riding. ---an :tinned very nutelr faettr
then any non—actually stop in its very
stride, It was as though its claws were
glued to the ,earth. It did imt seem
possible that such a sudden halt Oat
be made by anything that ran. Nur
can any other beast glow the desperate
speed oi a eat for a few yards' distanee.
Mr. Pereivale, the game warden of the
Protectorate, who has probably ridden
inure lions than any other malt in the
country, tells me that he, though well
mounted, was Once almost pulled down
by a lion that he had ridden into cover.
lite too on. that oceasion came too
close, the lion for some reason or other
dispensed with all the usual pre-
liminaries and rushed at hen. He tent-
ed his horse as quickly as he amid, and
rode for his life. He hail quito hity
yards' atart, and ,yet he believes that
had he not fired his hesiew revolver into
the face of the lion when it was alaunt
ou his horse's hind quarters, both he
and the horse would have been piabid
.down. Mr. Pereivale was alone. '1 here
WAS no other horse or hunter neer to
divide the lion's attention. This, per-
haps, may account for its very unusually
rapid and deadly attack.
Hoey was attatIced by three lionesses,
near the Rock. The only provocation
ha had given them was that two hours
before he herd shot the lion of the bend.
He was riding beck to his ceenp, un-
armed, having left his rifle with his
guntearer, who was sicinning the lion
he had killed. The three sew him from
a distance of quite two hundred yards,
and pressed him hard for a quarter of
a mile. He was riding the same fast
mule that I rode, and so outran them.
There are one or two things that any
man riding lions would. do well to re-
member.
First, it is not well to follow a lion or
lions into cover if you are on horseback,
not even into thin cover. Once yoe
have chaaed a lion, it is very different
from the beast that rapidly slinks, away
from you, when you are hunting on
foot. Iu this last ead'e it instinctively
knows it ean get away if it cares to.
In the former it finds you have its pace,
and, resenting that, will attack with de-
termination The second lion Hoey and
/ rode had every chance to walk into
the impeentrable stronghold of the river
grass if it lied wanted. to. The gram
grew thickly not twenty yards from
where the lion was first hit. But it dld
not want to do anything of the sort,
and, 'angered by the long, hard ehaae,
cast all idea of further retreat behind
and eame boldly away from tho covert
Secondly, the man who does the shoot-
ing must dismount without delay or
hesitation. He must quickly choose his
place; fixing it in his mind as he gallops
up—if possible, a epot from which he
can command the Iion for a few • yards
every way, and on which he can plump
clown. If there is no such place of
course, he must stand up and shoot.
All delay is dangerous. Get the beast
before it rushes in. Any cool hunter
can knock a standing lion out with one
shot at one hundred yards or less. leo
living Man canbe sure of hitting a
charging, snarling erabodirnent of death.
—Dr. W. S. Riensforel, in the World's
Work.
• • *
0,14114011*/...1.
ti
; • Pride of Profession ;
eieeteeeeese-et4.-***-4,+-04-.-4,4,4-t++*
'atter.)
12,itetv
deer" w11iv:1 ha 1 b..4.41 his hmno for
fear year, and ten months on the in -
plan, the, gavel:nor
Lad a larwoll i It Will,
"thl s.t 8gh, Larry," 1t pleadeel
catneelly. "iturve had a good record
while in She; iiu, nd you've hpea
plot:Liked p joe by the Dieeharged Vrie-
oilers' Aid :,loeiety. You're toil intelli-
gent a man is, run eraoltel; besides, re-
member, sem er or later you got caught.
Keep away from the flowery, and good
limit to you."
So Larq came to New York wearing
his 1.(0IV bait , hat, mew Shoes and
new undervear, with a revr life before
hind and rcatly live years of discharge
,tielociu.
tey in his pocket, which, will,. the
few dollars he had had on entering,
which .the govertiment had kindly kept
for hm
him, amounted to sixty-sevem nine -
He meant to tun straight; he had
vowed so ho;:cstiy to Om pardon
hoard. Yet it was hard that he, the
cleverest ideigmekrt who ever vmiat 'up,"
who hal -emnted his income at a good
"fifty per ' ell the year through, should
reart out afreelt on ten 11. week running
an elevator. He did not want to go to
work so 5C,0a,, 110t 11/11110 that $07 re-
posed in his pocket.
So on the first evening his fret led
• alrne:,t against his will, to the
vicinity of Chatham Square. There he
BANISH PIMPLES
AND ERUPTIONS
AND NEITHER SPOKE; ONLY
LARRY AND HIS INTENDED VIC-
TIM EYED ONE ANOTHER UNDER
THE LIGHT OF THE STREET LAMP.
picked up some pale and disgusted them
with the information that he was going
to run straight.
"AIN, come off," said one. 'You,
Larry, that can live on the fat of the
land! I thought you had some pride."
• Larry stumbled out into tits night,
those words ringing in his soul. Aye,
that was the crux of it. It was sheer
pride that led him to clip the gold re.
?eater from the fob, to snatch the mag-
nate's pooltetbook from the inside pookeb
of his coat. Should he, the peerless pick-
pocket, throw up this old life and start
running an elevator?
At that same instant a portly, under-
sized gentleman with a long beard
strolled by. Larry's fingers itched. His
resolutions were forgotten, for the breaat
of the frock coat bulged -with what his
expert oyo told him was a fat wallet.
Softly he crept up, drew abreast, jost-
led his victim in the crowd—and the
trained fingers crept over the lapels
deftly, only to be seized in a sinewy
grip.
That grasp was like steAal. And neither
spoke; only Larry and his intended vic-
tim eyed ono another under the light of
the street lamp. Gradually the strang-
er's eyes grew wider in surprise.
"Larry Callahan! 0, Larry Cal-
lahan!" he ejaculated. "And to
think you would pick an ex -detective
for your work. 0, bungler, bungler.
Well, wind have you got to say?" he
said, in a sharp tone of command.
"Come, for old times' sake, I'll put up a
a drink before I hike you to the sta-
tion. No, an ice cream soda," he con-
tinued, as Larry edged toward a saloon.
"Intoxicants are an abomination. Yes,
Larry, I tine an evangelist now. And
before I shut up your body I would
try to save your sand,"
"Religious guy," thought Larry, "I'll
work him if I can." And, seated side
by side before tho soda counter in a
dingy drug store, while the ex-dette-
tive's revolver pointed its mouth menses
ingly at Larry's breast, the strange pair
held communion.
Larry was not wholly insincere in
telling his tale. How he hadjust
been released, how professional pride
and the instinct for theft had overcome
him at sight of what seemed to him
an easy victim. Ile blamed it to that
$07 in his pocket, which had induced
him to take a holiday. He pleaded for
a chance. He had thought long of run-
ning straight, had wavered; now, if re-
leased, he woald go straight to the
society and secure his job. Atid, as he
spoke, a kinder light came into his
captor's yes. They rose up.
"Larry, rn give you the ehanee you
ask for. Go," raid the ex -detective.
And Larry walked away free, but
utterly dispirited. Ile Nvould run
straight indeed. With that $67 in hie
vest pocket—the other poeket—his coat
pocket then—
The money had gone. Callahan, the
starewdeet thief on the Bowery, htof met
Itis match; he had been hoodwinked;
cheated, plundered!
The man's pride in his craft wee
broken at last. Ire wheeled upon his
heel and steeled. off in the direction of
the soeiety with a light of isew resolu-
tion in his oyes.
In the Spring Most People Need a
Tonic Medicine.
If you want new health and new
strength in the spring you must build:
up your blood with a tonic tnediehe.
Following the long, indoor winter months
most peopleedo feel depressed and eas-
ily tired. This means that the, blood is
linpure and watery. It le this stake
of the blood that causes pimples and un-
sightliy eruptions. To this some con-
dition is due attacks: of rheumatism
and lumbago; the eharp stabbing pains
of sciatico and neuralgia.; poor appe-
tite, frequent headaches and a desire to
avoid exertion. You caul cure these
trouble's by the use of purgatives; you
need a tonic and a; tonic only, endamong
ell medieinea there le none ean equal
Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills for their toeie,
life-giving, nerve restoring powers,.
Every dose of this medielne makes new,
rioh blood, which delvee out impurities,
stimulates every organ, and brings a
feeling of new health and eeergy to
weak, Urea out, aillog men, women and
thildien. If you are feeling out of sorts
give this medicine a trial, it will not
disappoint you. hfr. Paul Charbonnetu,
a teeming man, well known in the tette
of St. Jerome. Que., is 011.43 of the hoist
who bear teetininny to the value of Dr.
Willieras' Pink Pills. He soya: "When
left school I became a bookkeeper in
important °Mee. Probably due to
eonfinement, 17 began to suffer from ie.
digettion awl hos strength. 1 he-
eisanet pale atilt seeminglo blootilese and
wag Otte seizea with palpitation of the
heatt end violent liefelaelles. t triM
beveled remedies„ but they del not do
me ft bit of good. 7 was 'Ovinet tro try
Dr. Williams Pink PHIS amsi ilia se, find
the WO of eight besot brought nu. to
perfect health itna strength. I have
shoe enjoyed the nest of health and
eannet Psis too mak 111 plai.q, of this
valunble
Soli by ell neelieitie altos Air by Weil
01 514 eente a Itee ev 4i 1,ima a for $Letel
free) 'Ilse De. Wielianee Melieire
lineletelie.
WWII FL weinan eve, mu% li
to tell how." elle rosily wens
dot4Uft know where to stop.
CORNS CURED
veil Lein peeiles!e remove ativ
.tti'l4fil'A1,1f,g,!"'4"'"F
‘.01i10113 no as 4 S 4I55 becateie emaposed,
if 5):Iregueug:,sts.itt:tec:indi,lf,.!4111.i4;y 1,4111t4vAalt::gli
b011;(.°. Betri.,* t41,./10ifteV,0,
PUTNArvi'S PAINLESS
CORN EXTRACTOR.
TEACHING A HORSE TO JUMP.
It May be Done by Coaxing, Lungine
or Priving.
There are three methods of teaching
a horns, to ieap —coaxing, lunging and
driving. In the tkoaxing niethode the
roung bean is turned into a small pad-
dock having a low hedge or hurdle
aerie's the c ;titre, in plain view of the
pupil a ride on a Memel jumper
rhould take him over this hurdle sev-
eral times.
The trainer then goes to the opposite
tilde with a measure of corn or mite and
calls the horse, ehalciug up the ,graiu
and pouring it with his hand back aud
forth in the receptacle. The boundary
will soon 14‘: cleared, and whim a few
mouthfuls have been eaten the station
of the instructor should be at the other
side of the hurdle and the leseou re-
peated. 11 this be done daily the
hurdle may be gradually heightened.
The habit of jumping is thus acquir-
ed without those risles whieh attend a
novel performance when a heavy bur-
den oppresses the strength and whit)
and spur distract the attention. The
horse's body, says Country Life in
America, is not partially diaribled by
the imposition of a heavy load before
the powers are taxed to the utmost and
his capabilities are unfettered.
The second method is termed lunging.
A. long rein or cord is attached to the
bit and the animal is exercised iu
circle in which a hurdle has been
placed or a shallow ditch dug. L long
lashed whip, need only to keep him in
motion, or lightly applied at the proper,
moment, will keep him up to his Wurk.
Soon the horse will enter iato the sprit
of the oceasion, aud by unruistalcable
signs will manifest his enthusiastic, en-
joyment qf the exercise,
The thied method, driving, is exactly
what its name implies, At first the
obstruction should be slight. Any open
space will answer the purpose, an earth
or sod surface or tanbark being prefer-
able. Long reins, a straight bar or
snaffle bit, a long whip and patience
and perseverance are required.
.All things considered, the driving
method is the quickest and surest way
of teaching the horse to leap. When
he has become somewhat proficient,
having thoroughly learned what is re-
quired of him, the saddle may be called
into requisition and the practical les -
Sons begun.
Almost any young horse can be taught
to leap. Of course his proficiency will
depend on the c,are bestowed on his
training and on his general etharacteris-
tics of wind, limb and nerve. An ordin-
ary cob or htorgem will attain the pro-
ficiency of an Irish hunter, but any
horse that is used for a saddler will be
of far greater value to his owner if
he can be taken occasionally for a erose -
country ride and put over ditahes and
low obetructions.
fee*
4 .
A Stirring War Whoop.
At the siege of Frederie,ksburg, when
the Confederates. were euauring even
more then their usual pangs of hunget,
oue of the Southern skirmiehing patties
made a sudden raid on an unsuspecting
Federal brigade.
After some interchange of firing the
assailants riuthed upon their disconeett-
ed enemy. One etnaehtted "Johnny"
1:variedly emptied the keep:tack of a
pin -trate SO1(1101.% StritighttP11111g
regardlese of blades am' bullets, waNed
Isia tooty aleive his head,
"Charge hill, bops, eliarge 'ens" he
yelled, "Thee ha got Clue se .I'ront
Livpincott's.
-
STABIL!: nneRit
(Wadi:tenses Trent:de
'len en, emitter, yon ill:eine:end, spend-
ing my vasetesis 11:.11 It 0.11
et ler. Hew iaasii ine 1, 'aid be?"
"len per
"slid Si c.5,14 a 1; it' tAl telk
thaletit."4
THEY TOOK HIM
OUT OF HIS BED
Dodd's Kidney Pills cured Mr.
F. McAuliffe's Lumbago.
Lachute Man, After Fourteen Years
Suffering, Finds Health and Strength
In an Old Reliable Kidney Remedy.
Lachute, Que., April 12.—(Special).—
Atter fourteen years of suffering, which
fitarted from pleurisy, followed by
dropsical rovellinge, and culminated en
Lumbago, aud confined him to his bed,
Malachi F. McAuliffe'a Well-known re-
sident of this place, has entirely le -
covered his health, sad he says with-
out hesitation, "I am mire, I owe it
entirely to Dodd's Kidney Pills."
"I was laid up. -with Pleurisy, which,
aftfeeted my kidneys," Mr. McAuliffe
continues. "I suffered a, -vest deal of
pain, eepecially in my back. I was
also terribly troubled with dropsical
swellings, and finally, after many at-
tempts to get rid of my trouble, I
found myself heropelled to give up and
was confined to my bed with L
I tried =ay medictinee but they failed
to do me any good. Then I turned to
Dodd's Kidney Pith, awl after taking
ono box I felt greatly relieved. I took
several more boxes and found myself
completely oared."
Dod.:14e Malloy Pills alwayS7-eure any
and all forms of Kidney Disease.
es ter
HARD-SHELLS IN mapruotty.
Captain Tracey, who lived down in
Kentucky, was a good old Hard -Shell
Baptist, who oceessionaely would tell a
story at the expense od the brethren.
Years ago they Were riot so oonspicutous.
ly orthedox on the temperance question
AS they are in our time.
"On oue oceasion," said the Captain,
"the brethren ie ray region were about
to have a grated thureh gatintring, and
all the fideheal in the neighborh,00a were
expected to exert themselves to miter-
tain suitably and hospitably. the visitin,g
brethren. Two of my neaghhhrs met
oaeh other just before the grand gather-
ing. One of them Raid:
"'Mat are you gaing to do?'
"Well,' replied the men, 'I've laid it
a 'raga of firstrate whiskey:
'A. &talk:ell' retorted hie neighbor,
with it look of contempt; 'why, I've got
it barrel, and you are just; as able to
eupport the gospel as I tone"
CHRONIC.
"Away down in her heart," said the
boarding house philosopher, "every wos
titan is a pessimist. "When any calamity
napperte the always wants to know the
Worst, and isel happy until he hearts
ist3e ! 14 Karats Elolid
Gold Shall Ringo,
We will tIts yob yeti
iholo• et sued these bows-
titul rings, gementeed14
kerma solid gold aisle
• pieta, engraved, Of int
with elegant timulated
jeWels, tor the side et 4
-Vexes only. at ete. a box.
et Dr. bletwslee remelts
Inteetable Fins. whey
W. treat's% rentbdy
for Indigeotioe, toistipis.
tion, thoutnetisel, weak
er hurtle blood, o144errir,
dIsesses et the liter 50d
kidusyl. When you here
told those 4 boxes alpha
teed us the snotty el end
the *lied the ring desired
end we will bend you,
your choice of One of those
hetubotle Rings, Wein asp
graved os sot erseinus stows. Nog
ycsor, mem* end i.ldrome isemedistibly &n4 we
will *col yon, ereepeiti, the Pills itn4 fano,
tins width are 10 sire new to enroll:04re ot
/he plib. V5ite slot 0,414 SW!' weereeefors,
teepees ate elle Ned of tee* bstit whet yet
eiturrot
A.14reek 'The iirr. 401es00 *tannin* Cip.
nag iseri 4, 9 Tweed*, Oats
LI -
7:
0.••••...10.•VION.,010
Ifir]
-Y-V8e4(44i1
LORD'S DAY HYMN.
(Isaiah ovi, 1. 84
Cod of our fattier% EYCI'MOre
Will SW Thy various name. adore
For a'l that Thou /mot given:
les t nuietal life Aimed he 'in rein,
Theca !eel or:lathed for hand and braid.
One day oli rest in seven.
God of our fathers, hear our :prayer,
Mei all thy wondrous love declare.
Anti make Thy presence known:
rlird ail Thy melanin with Thy strength
That all the human race at length
May Thy temmendments own.
God of our fathers, Thou has made
The day of rest, like eveuingh shade,
To -cool the caul of times
When burdens press and eares increase,
Idle day of tent briugs calm end peace
And power the heights to climb.
God of our fathers, grant, we prey..
That we may make the sacred dew
What Molt wouldst have it hos
And may the weekly wet day brine,
The jay witiere maltes all hearts to sine
Sincerest maise to Thee.
he Watson.
Grauthurtt, Out., 1910.
we elfytvonlythi :11.1Pial mi• :ri• sttetRiti 11: 1'1)1 lia;e:1°40.eak°:w;T:talle'attli l'ht:"141.;
faitbharvest, Send, we beseech Thee, she
Wros
neeeled rain and sunshine, and let ilia
earth bring forth abundantly. And as
Thou dest eatisfy our wants, help ua to
look up with gratitude, (leaking grace
that we may serve Thee with unstinfsd
devotion. Let Thy Word be as good
seed in our hearts ,waterecl and warmed
by the giacious influences of Thy Hot7
Spirit and growing up and beaten&
praise and glory. Amen.
friut to Thy
The WOVA1 VIOVVI:iiiRpS1Ha Ian. old one, The
old :Norsemen knew it well and used it.
They diecovered Americo, before Coltrm,
bus; they struck Labrador, and called it
Vineland, for they folind grapes growing
in luxuriance. A Fillip is made to carry.
Citizenship carries the citizen, friendship
carried the friend, worship carries the
worth—"wor" is a contraction of worth.
This covers the whole meaning of tlte
the lamb for sinners slain,
lYthe redeemed above;
Worthy the Lamb on' earth we sing,
Who died our souls to save."
This is the rallying cry as we gather
round about the feet of Christ; bring all
your substance and fill this ship full!
Dominion, majeaty and power'excellen-
ey, purity and peace, glory, honor, im-
mortality. Search heaven and earth and
the sold for cargo for this ship! Divini-
ty, humanity, destiny. All hail! On
ilia head are many crowns. Oh, come,
let us worship and bow down. What is
worship? You do not get muck help
from ecclesiastical religiousness. What
did Christ find in His day? The reli-
gious official fell under his heaviest de-
nunciation, and what do we find to -day?
Not a resource, but a chain; not a well
fitting garment, but a straight jacket;
not an inspiration, but a restraint; not
a home, but a prison. What are we to
seek? A spirit rather than a letter; a
character rather than a formula; a life
rather than a drill; motives inspired by
the character of Christ, rather than by
the sanctions of the law. Let us find
the higher ranges of thought in our ex-
perienees, our -aspiration, our possibili-
tiese.t
lhat is worship? It is an net. Go in
and shut the door, disrobe, be empty;
stand with naked feet in the holy place.
It is the attitude; stand in sincerity,
Simplicty and honesty. Give, give an
empty heart, a willing mind, a foot trem-
bling to obey, to obey with delight. It
is an atmosphere. You inhale, you move,
you enlarge. You have the highest
companionship; secrets are interchang-
ed; secrets of mastery, victory, minis-
try and power. This sublime mechanism
is to rtin for ever!
It is an endowment, a permanent au -
unity, a perpetual curacy. It branches
out into three divisions: Communion,
inspiration, revelation. If you have not
eommunion hitherto, you have kept poor
company. If you have not inspiration,
the sails of your soul have not been fill-
ed with the wind of spirit life. If you
have not had revelations, you are not
O discoverer, you are not a pioneer, you
write no log, you run no risks, you
spread no sail, you breathe no farewells.
Put the spyglass to your eye—there's a
signal even for you.—H. T. Miller.
CHRIST IN YOU.
There must bo some controlling power
in every life, something that gives
strength and impulse and motive and
disposition to do things, that energizes
and stimulates. Is it the love of gain?
Is it the desire for power? Is it Christ
in us the hope of glory? The things
that we eat strengthen us. We rise
from the table and: go forth to our labor
witlt renewed energy, with added
strength. The bread in us has betel
the occasion of activity. Before the
noon hour we were hungry, weak and
eared not to earry on our work, but
with the hunger eupplied we rise from
the table ready for any toil, Suppose
we partake of the bread of life, Sup-
pose we nave eatea of the bread. that
warmth down front Heaven; then Christ
in us becomes the source of our hope
and. our Christian enthusiasm,
As without the supply of our phyeical
Wan& We have felt our weakness itrui
inefficieney for fhe day's lebor, how
me we hope to do a full day's; Work
in the vieeekera of our Lord tudeas we
have supplied our spiritual hunger by
eating of that, Wand of which if ft man
eat lie :titan never hunger? May it not
be just here that the reason lies why
some are weak met sickly among ui
and Many faint? Our hands are Weak,
our knees are feeble because we have
not eaten sit the table of our tent 'We
have failed to partake of his provision.
Our labor, therefore, is ueressarily in-
effieient. We have toiled all day and
have not hinted our pettily. We have
gene up early in the viiieyard to see
if the eines budilika grail 11115 11114110gra•
neve wei e in flower. leti we have uot,
seen the footpriute of our 'Beloved. We
intirlsTnktaiinr
11
efeste
but the hied of Te.taisitis lens its lwee
erne. 'nut to tits thrill with Chine.?
Thest limy sit down under hie eliadow
ii ilhfireat delight. end Itie Omit will
lie sees.' mitt) Ism. teeth When eludes:,
the etrength in lei he will be the
Will he th'm
Fite otive heels • of all ter
1:4.f1t 1;01'
1"1,i4
endeavor. Ilk altered h svll 1e low
etrength, Hie life (Air life Ills love ow
;eve. eel the peewee id Ilit tel-eieve wt)
he Ilse nurn.,e.‘ sI stit'*. rnitc 1 P..cs.