The Wingham Advance, 1910-05-12, Page 3TO POD RURAL
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ERN
::48C
11103411:411111g2 ligine
Mannholeroro Fla luoyStra LLU apparatins and
oald2ort era Ate to/Wm:Son nad platen -
Once Totoylorne our Power Mato. Maas
yonr neared office.
MONTREAL TORONTO
Car. Nem. Nos ec Gay Sta. tO },et it. W.
REGINA VANCOUVER WiNNIFEG
CALGARY 9ieiert.W. BOO HISTY AT b.
CATCHING SEALS
Eskimo Methods Very .Unlike Those
of the Wham
When the white matt and the Eskimo
meet, it is a question which will learn
the snore front the other. Certain it is
Out the Eitel= lays ,under tribute
everything that comeunder his °therm -
tion, turning it to wise aceount. Ills
method of hunting for the sail is 4 41.
1'44, '''•9leiti".ironi, the polar bora abe
ilskimo father takes his sen of eight or
ten year. with hint for a long day On the
ice etel bide hint watelt the near kill the
seal, telling hint that the e;oser dm can
imitate, the stratagem of that slylhunter
the better. What do the lunette father
and son eve in that polar kindergartent
A seal le on the lee by the tilde qf ita
hole atretehing its flippers loxiiriously
In the yeses first sum:thine The 'big
white bear has sighted his prey front
behind an lee hummock at a &stencil
when the ocal appears bet a black speck.
Throwing hineeelf on his side, the bear,
himself not much removed from the
color of the ice, "hitches" himself along
in much the ,eanle fashion aa a baby
crawler. The seal at thie seeson takee
ehert catnaps of twenty or thirty see.
onds each, waking up from cacti one and
surveying the lendscome o'er. When the
seal sleeps, Brute. As the seal
opens hi a eyea the bear lifts his need
end, imitates the voice of another seal,
the wound being so deceptive that a
Plana, ear cannot eleteet. the
The admiring innuit calls thie "talking
seal," and bids his little lad praotise it
la hie play-timc. .
This alternate "hitching" and "talk-
ing seal" goes an until the bear is within
striking distance, when a sudden rising
to hs four feet and a powerful pounce
ends the dael of duplicity on one side
aatd drowsiness on the other. If the seal
Is quick enough to reach his hole before
the hidden umpire of destinies calls
"'Strike one," he makes a home run •and
congratulates himself. For those who
would bot on the game, it is fair to say
that the poor seal does not succeed one
time out of ten.
'rise Innult, from top to toe dressed
“in skins, looks even more like a seal than
a bear sloes, and pursues his quarry from
a distance in identically the same way,
saying that if he could "talk seal" its
well as a bear he would have greater
success.—Agnes Deane Cameron, in the
Canadian Magazine for May. •
SOME ROYAL HOBBIES.
King Edward as a Collector—Queen
Alexandra's Rooks.
The King, as everybody knows, has
a weakness for walking sticks, but
another collection in his Majesty's
possession will have a unique.interest
in the future.
This consists of relics gathered to-
gether from every war in which Bri-
tish soldiers have fought since the
early days of Queen Victoria. The
King hes aleo a quaint assortment
of the programmes of every opera,
play and concert which he has attend-
ed sauce he came to years of discre-
tion. One would imagine this to be
a bulky collection,
Queen Alexandra collects many
things—lace, china, crystals and tiny
objects made in precious and semi-
precious stones; but her greatest
treasure is a collection a books, most
of which came to her by inheritance.
When Princess of Wales she received
the Mitehell bequest, that took the
form of a choice collection of books
valued at £10,040.
' And afterward the late Sir William
Fraser bequeathed to her Majesty a
splendid collection of books, papers
and pictures which dealt with the
subject of women's dress during the
last century. The Queen has also a
vast number of volumes of modern
literature.—From the Woman at
Home.
STOMACH MISERY
IMIONIEO BY muirkwivEr
WIIL'RE WAS JOHN'?
(Lipincott's Magazine.)
A .San Francisco woman whose hus-
band had been dead some years went
to a medium, who produced the :spirit
of her dead husband.
"Itty dear John," said the widow to
the spirit, "are you happy now?"
"I am very happy," John replied.
"Happier than you were on earth with
me?" she asked.
"Yes," was the answer; "I ani far
happier now than I was on earth with
you."
I 'Tell me, jahn, what it is like in
heaven?"
"Heaven!" said John. "Pm not, in
heaven."
MADE
WELL AND
S N
By Lydia FL Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Dovedale, Sask.—"I was a sufferer
from f °male weakness—monthly
periods irregular
and painful and it
bad discharge,
backache and
wretched head-
ache, and had felt
weak ever since the
birth of my twins.
I tried doctors but
got no relief. I be-
gan to take Lydia
E. Pinkham'eTeg-
etable Compound,
and after three
weeks 'was feeling
much better, and now I am well again."
Btssta Erny, Dovedale, Sask.,
Canada.
Another Woman Cured.
Christiana, Tenn.—"I suffered from
the worst form of female trouble so
that at times I thought 1 could not
live, and my nerves Were in it dreadful
condition. Lydia E. Pinkhant's Vege-
table Compound cured Me and made
me feel like a different woman. Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is
worth ite weight in gold to suffering
women." --Mrs. MART WOOD, R.r.1) 3.
If you belong to that countlese array
of women who suffer from some form
of female ills, don't hesitate to try
Lydia Pinkhara's -Vegetable Com-
pound. made from roots and herbs.
Por thirty years this famous remedy
has been the standard for all forms of
female ills, and. has cured thousands of
WOMen, Who halt been troubled with
such ailments as displaceraents, fibroid
tutors, ulceration, irregularities,
backache, and nervous prostration.
4. a
MINISTER WHO
TESTED ZAM-HUK.
Read His Deliberate Opinion!
Rev. P. F. Litugill, "The Manse," Carp,
Ont, writes: "Some consideyable time
ago I began using Zam-Buk with a view
of testing it thoroughly. I am troubled
with eczema, Which is always worse in
the early part of winter, anti seems to
leave me about spring. I tried Zam.
Buk immediately my hands started to
break out, and. am pkased to say , that
it checked the disease, which is more
than I can say for anything I have ever
before tried. We now have t Zam-Buk
iu the house continuously, and I carry
a small saniple box in my pocket. Ono
evening I happened to look in where an
old man had met 'With an accident it
week before, and had lost a' finger nail.
I dressed the wound with Zem-Buk and
left the little sample box with them. I
have seen the ohl gentleman since, and
the injury is cured." •
"On another occasion a farmer called
at 'The Manse,' foul 1 noticed a rag on
his finger. Enquiring about the injury,
I learned. that he had somehow taken a
piece of flesh off, and the wound had
started to fester. He was afraid it
wouldturn to blood poisoning. I gave
him about a third of a box of Zsen-Buk
and he 'applied it. A few days later I
saw him, and he said "Butt's great salve
of yours; my finger is now doing fine."
• This is exactly the kind of testimony
we most appreciate. Test Zam-Buk I
Don't go by hearsay! You will find it
gives the best results in all eases of
eczema, ringworm, festering sores, piles,
cuts, burns; face sores, eruptions'and
all skin Injuries and diseases. .All drug-
gists and stores, 50e box, or from Zara-
Bulc Co., Toronto, for price, but refuse
cheap and harmful substitutes and imi-
tations. •
The Egg Train,
The Missionary Egg Train,
That lute a queer sound. It starts on
its journeys through western Englanat
and Wales this month (April). It Is so
named beceuse it is loadeti with eggs and
hes a mission..
The National Poultry Organization
MR. Al.GIDE fieSERT
Stratford Centre, Wolfe Co., Que.
"I have bon completely cured of a
frightful condition of tny Stomach
through the wonderful fruit mediciiie
'Fruit -a -dyes', I could not eat anything
but what I suffered awful pain font
Indigestion.
My head ached incessantly.
was told to try 41Pruit-a.-iivea' and
sent for six boxes, Now I am entirely
well, can eat any ordinary food and
never have a Ileado.che."
ALCIDE Husgn.
soc, a box, 6 for $2.se, or trial box,
es. At all cicalas or from Itruit-a-
Oyes Limited, Ottawa.
THE CIGARETTE IN SOCIEY.
Voting Folks Hunt Secluded Corners
to Smoke, Not to Spoon. .
It is difficult to imagine what the
next generation will be like if the creze
for cigarette smoking goes on increasing
at the present. itt:e. .Not oniy young
men, but even young women seem to find
it impossible to exist for more than an
Itour at the outside without having re-
course to whatever is the correct brand
,of cigarette at the moment.
Onceaor twice lately, while the Lenten
dance season has been at its height 1
have strolled into balls, at an immense
hostelry hard by whera,hostessee find it
convenient to hire a fine suite of rooms
and pay a cheque for something like'
£1,000, when they could give a dance at
home for a quarter of that sum.
That, however, as Ruelyard
Says, is another story., What I wish to
remark upon is the craze for smoking
whielt shows itself at these festivities by
young couples finding comfortable cor-
ners on etaireases, in out-of-the-way
rooms and balonies, not, as one might
teheepl.
e.et, for purposes of flirtation, but
that they -may enjoy a cigarette toga -
And at the hotel in question, if one
goes to the restaurant for supper at a
private ball, say, at 1 a, m., a perfect
cloud of smoke greets you as you enter,
which very decidedly takes off from the
flavor of the excellent wines and viands
that are provided. This is all bad, enough,
but is nothing compared to the serious-
ness Of young men aid women smoking
cigarettes all day as well m all night
and rendering themselves, after a—few
years, nervoas and neurotic; perfectly
useless to themselves -and everybody else.
—From the Gentlewonum.
COUNT waRcrs INTER.
"The Veteran's Tale" from "Ballads
and ong of "The Brigade," by Col. C.
Coote Grant, late of H. M.. S.
On the march front Milan when out-
numbered as ever,
To check the advance, did Count Mac!
endeavour;
'Till oEoutogoeineet,edt,he fe_erless, his plans had
His triumph 'assured if our vanguard
defeated.
Not a doubt entertained, for the,corpe he
rejected
Proved always victorious—the bravest.
selected;
Andthe veterans that day which he led
to the slaughter
Were worthy the sabres of "Boyne" and
"Blackwater."
By Saint Bride how each heart In the
bosom was bounding,
As we formed into line with the kettle
drums sounding.
The 'flower of the south closed our path-
way -before us„.
But when did wet falter "the three
iiiies„ ceer us.
.A. touch of the spur 'every charger is
speeding.
While well in the front, fiery Sheldon
leading.
Ahl many a trooper departed-unshriven
Ere the squadrons of Savoy asunder were
riven.
In "hall"weot,hi and in "cabln„ Is walling and
For the dear ones afar on tthe battlefield
sleeping,
And the thought will arise as the watch
fire is burning,
For the soldier or Ireland there Is "no
returning."
They fought as they revelled, fast, fiery
Ors, they left on the field
atnhdo, true,
not a few;
And they who survived, fought and
. drank as of yore,
But the land of their hearts' hopes they
never saw more,
am ON 'ME POOD.4
Hth Tariffs Melte EXperislei
Another calm lo'flYtil:31..lietlior. mit ofUv
eone whica cepecutoy operative in
the Visited, Stat ee and the Contiuental
countriee of Ettrope-si8 the increaving
rate* of tustome tariffs, and of taxation
due to militarisni, It le impossible to Rt.
tribute the generally higher prices due to
the heavy load. of taxation laid upoi . the
cmisumer to a geueral eause like the
cheapening of gold, in the United
States the enormous ems spent by our
national governmept on harbors and riv.
eras on pensions, on the tinny, and especi-
ally on the new navy, antet be paid for
by :somebody; an that somebody is the
consumer of the taxee go ds 01 nal
average imported dutiable gootle ire In-
creased in priee to the American coe-
sumer by over 40 per cinti. lint, to
the extent tied importations are impell-
ed. not at all of this tax of over 40 per
cent. goes to the protected interests, The
dutien are so high as not to be revenue
ditties, and our treasury gets only about
000,000,000 of this tax, or less than half
of WI annual expenditure. The truth is
just comIng home to the MaSe of people
that our extremely Itig4 protective du-
ties have raised the expenees of produc.
ins: snarly goods, raked prices, and raisea
the cost of living to every family
throughout the tenth and breadth of
the land. This is one reason why Indus, -
trial activity to -day spells "hard times"
for the unorganzied consumer
Some of our public men are not deal.
Ing fairly with the people when they di-
rect attention solely to the Payne -Ald-
rich Act of 1000, and assert that it has
In some respects lowered duties, Suppose
that it had done so, as compared with
the Dingley Ad of Mg. Then, that only
tritestee the muse of offending to the
duties fixed by the Dingley Act, which
were., on the whole, tee highest in our
list of high -tariff enactments. 11 is no
comfort to a drowning luau in forty feet
of water to be told that just task of
hint the watei is forty-one feet deep. it
is no comfort to the consumer submerged
by import duties of forty, or a hundred,
at several hundred Pk cent., to be told
that a microscope will discover a frac-
tional change of a per cent. here and.
there—when in fact hosiery, gloves and
clothing bear increased duties.—From
"The increased Cost of Living," by J.
Laurence Loughlin, in. the May Scribner.
VIEN OF ACTRESSES
PRAISES PRU-NA.
Society- of Great Britain is running the For In far foreign fields from Dunkirk
to Belgrade,
Lie the soldiers and chiefs of "The Irish
Erica le."
T. Davis.
unique special train. And its advent will
doubtless he welcomed by British house-
keepers, who have been eooking and eat-
ing Da,nish, Ttallan awl even Russian
cold -storage eggs, because British liens
lay only about one-half of the eggs con-
sumed by Great Britain.
The minion of the special Egg Train
is to educale the British people es to the
value and iniaortence of teasing at least
enough eggs for home conaumption and
to show them how to do it. British wo-
men are especially interested in this, as
it is work which can be aone et home.
They will be fatly instruoted by the ex-
perts who accompany the trait.; and
they will be shown the latest models and
daykes for poultry antl egg raising. As
imported egge in Great Britain at whole-
sale Oat no lase thiut 2 tents each, and
the aemelaie eggs from 21-2 cents up,
the profit is attractive.
ilbe National' Poultry Organizatioa
Society licte concerted itself also in es-
tablishing co-operative depots for the
marketing of 13ritish eggs, by which the
producers receive about 25 per cent
more for their eggs than through the
former aerangements. There are now 20
ofthese depota in various sectione of
England and. the number is to be multi.
plied.
6 a* 410
CAEGHT WITH THE GOODS.
(Buffalo Express.)
"The new nighteratchinan only lasted
it week."
"What was there against him?"
"Somebody from the offiee tont to
his house he the anytime and found him
up and domed."
The 11113Siall floating exposition of
products aui manufactures recently
eeoredit etiet-ess at Constmainople. In
one dity 26,000 peewee v4ited it.
request the exposition itt Constantino-
ple twice prolongsa its scheduled stay.
Commercially the result surpassed ex-
Pectations. Orders worth $000,000 were
taken, and it further $1.400,044 worth is
under negotietion. Similar German and
Italian expeeitioes to the near Fast are
In oaterseletion.
Japanese School of Languages.
The language schools aro particularly
interesting, one large institution under
ntivate management, where English alone
is taught, having 8,000 students. The Gov-
ernment language school is a particularly
attractive one.
it is a veritable babel of lariguagea, for
in it are taught Engiish, French, German,
Russian, Spahish, Italian, Chinese, Cor-
ean. Tamil, 'Hindustani, hlalay and Mon.
seinen, and for eath tongue a foreign
teacher is engaged. In the professors'
common room can be found a mixture of
nationalities such as would zeem to fore -
Mailer the federation of the world. It
10 at any rate a parliament of nations. --
From the japan Magazine.
•410
Curcs sprung Tendon',
Collar and Saddle Galls
aundtcaLn eve., Moline%
Octobtr 1133*. 1001
"I loom toed your Sporin euro on 4 Spning
'Tendon *AS good resole, and' I can recommend It
for Collar and Saddle Golbs." J. 11. Hazlett.
Ken airs
Spavin Cure
ii ...Moult% to former/1W stockman. Innis told
tO *Wel, 14141411 Soimin Cure ins Mersey Nora
million* of dollars kr berm etriort;
nit the MA messy Oat tsa Lthrorsbc derendc•I
trom to ab.olittely cute 8pion, RlSjb80, COO.
.eptint, efter11140 Mid lamenclo.
XeLer WM. r#, tools or tuna rho 1,813 *tee.
.11413e0tt Se Mon or tbr toad,
keep Keittisdne obnystetsey. el. li•bome—
rot It Melon pet tcy ot 7.30 &nice& *o (03,,
of oar took "A I'Lrot.so On Ulm Ilorre"..11's tree
c• -tit Write lit L7
DR.L 3.%NAtL tO., aristeare rsus, et.
Miss
Julia
Merlowo
07 am glad to write my endors�.
montot tho great remedy, Peruna.
do so most iiearfify."...fullti lifarlowe,
Any remedy that benefits digestion
strong therm the nerves.
The nerve centers require nutrItion.
If the digestion is linpaired, the nerve
zenters become anomie, and narrow
debility Is the result.
jelr.M.Ccocacate...,.....mcccOoncNim010
11 The Garden 1
[ mpg ccmccestam.
"EVEN IN 1/06111
NEVER STRONG"
New the Rich, Happy Possessor of
Good Health Which Was "
Restored by
Dr. Hamilton's Pills,
"Even when I was young I was aot
robust and healthy like other girls. I
suffered from headaches and had sort
of blue feelings that deprived me of the
joyful spirits and pleasures other girls
seemed to get, After I married I ,found
I could not throw worries off liko other
women, and those dull feelings of des-
pondency and weariness made me very
unhappy. There was no cause to feel
so, and my doctor said my liver WAS
sluggish and this accounted for my poor
color, my tiredness, langour and des-
pair. The pills the doctor grave me were
too purgative, mado me weaker because
they were too active for my constitu-
tion: Dozens of my friends recommended
Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and they were so
mild and. healthful, Well. I never used
it pill that acted so quietly as Dr. Ham-
ilton's. They Were so comfortable to
use 1 AMA afraid they might uot help.
But in a week I knew they had 'been
actively engaged in cleaning up my sys-
tem. They did the work 'of a tonic and
blood medicine tombined, I am improv-
ed to a marvellous degree with Dr.
Hamilton's Pills and I now maintain the
most perfect kind of health by using
them just once or twice a'week.'
'It is Mrs. E. V. Erlanger, the wife of
Capt. Erlanger, well known at Gloucele
ter, who relates the above experience.
She proved what you and all others,
men and women, can prove—that Dr.
Hamilton's Pills aro, best for restoring
health and best for keeping the system
in perfect running order. Don't be mis-
led into using anything but Dr. Hamil-
ton's Pills, sold in yellow boxes,25e. All
dealers of The Oatarrhozone Co., Kings-
ton, Ont.
--- • e.
Goldwin Smith on Literary Style.
It is not wise to select seedhap-
hazard. While there are a great mauy
varieties of the differeut vegetables,
all of which are good, some of them aro
just a little better them the rest.
'You, no doubt have often heard
people who have Inen unsuccessfel
in their garden efforts attribete their
lack of success to the seed. "The seed
was no good" they will say. Thai is rare-
ly, if ever, true, if they have purchased
the Kea of a reliable dealer.
feet Widch Pale Will nbI alta:$11 te
re 4 thrungli lateen doable 1'0%44 itkic•
ing twn mei se they se. Thiel applies to
(brief varieties.
grossing pea*, •wItieit should be
treined on lintel', will require more spaee
bctucen the rows.
In dwarfs. AnteriCali Wonder and
Knott's Excelsior ere Jud to beat.
improved Stratagem an -I Omani are
both climbers, and in consequenee of
their having to be suppliea with suppm t
are mueh more trouble to grow. They
are, liowever, worth the extre effort.
Spinache—Spinaeli sod Cannot be In
the around too early. It is easily grown,
flourishing in almost any hin 1 of will.
Giant Flandere auil Long Standing are
our cholee. Spinach should be renewed
every two weeks. •
("Fees- -Cress or pepper grafis is melte
grown and ma kee a tasty green. Plant
early and at fortnightly intervene
Bede—Beets do re it in 1 gat lowly
hell Well immured, Plant in drills 12
Indies apart and cover to a depth of 1
Ina. Beets may be sown fairly thick,
as the tops and small roots make an ex-
cellent • green when boiled together.
Those pulled in the thinning may be us-
ed in this manlier.
Try Early Flat Egypthen or Emily
Blood turnip.
Sweet Pea Experiment...—Last April
we plated three late of Sweet Peas.
Lot 1 across an open space- at the beck
of a large flower bed.
Lot 2 within n. foot of the south side
of a wooden building.
Lot 3 against the north side or the
heuse.
All these lots were planted in the fol-
lowing inanneri A treuch was dug to
the depth of about 15 inches. The trench
was filled to within about four inehes
of the top with A 'MINIUM of well rotted
manure, leaf moula and soil levelled off
and trampled. Seeds were then natter.
ed over the surface and covered to the
depth of about one and a half Inches
with well pulverized Boil pressed down
with the hack of the hoe.
first to make their appearance, grew
most rapidly, flowered profusely for h
fair period, and then withered. ,
Lot 1 was A good second, bat did not
grow either as tall or bloom as profusely
as lot 3. They conlumed to bloom for a,
muc}t longer period, however, and in the
aggregate undoubtedly produced snore
bloom than lot 2.
Lot 3 though not a complete fellure,
were, indeed, a sorry 'looking spectacle.
Slow to germinate, they struggled for a
long period before theer was any sign of
Wm, What bloom they finally pro-
dueed was of a small, delicate variety
and lasted but a short time.
All of which goes to prove that the
trench in the open is undoubtedly the
best method of growing sweet peas. This
Is not always possible, however, and it is
most satisfactory to know that almost
as good results may be obtained when
peas are trained agaiikt wall or fence,.
pr(viding there Is ample sunsttIne, which
was not so in the ease of lot 3, as de-
scribed above.
if you prefer quality of bloom to
quantity In sweet, peas thin to about two
inches apart. This will very much im-
prove the size of the bloom.
Sweet pea bloom should be removett
before it has had time to go to seed.
If illtteed to do so the bloom will very
soon (Ease altogether.
Lawn clippings scattered thickly
around the roots of 'pea vines help retain
the moisture and prolong their blooming
period.
A small quantity of commercial ferti-
lizer teattered• over the surface of the
trench will also greatly ndd to the pro-
ductiveness and life of sweet peas.
Great care is always taken by seed -
men that the sod they pffer for sale is
reliable. In most eases samplee of the
seed you aro buying this year were
planted last spring and tests made. If
these tests de not prove the seed thor-
oughly reliable it is uot put on the
market.
If, therefore,' the seeds you have
planted do not produce a crop the
fault lies at your own door, and fet-
al* is due either to lack of kuowledge
of the preparation of the soil or careless-
ness in the handling of the plants after
they are above the ground.
Dig deep, manure well, buy seeds
of a' reliable firm Keep the surface of
the soil loose and free of. weeds..pollow
'instructions closely as to planting, trans.
planting and thinning, out, and if the
season prove a good growing one our
success IS assured.
Tao following selection may be of
aid to those 'who are not familia): with
the different varieties:
Lettuce—Lettuo seed may be planted
iu the open as soon as the ground is
workable, as light frosts will not injure
it. Growth must be vigorous and. rapid
in order that it may be crisp and ten-
der. Therefore ground that has been
„carefully dug, fertilized with well rot-
ted manure end fairly moiet should be
seloted.
For first. crop there is nothing better
than Nonpareil. It matures quickly and
if well thinned ott or transplanted to
new ground heads up svell.
Oos, or celery lettuce, is it smoothl
leafed variety. When transplanted to
new ground (set eight or ten inches
apart) it forms a grand head. The long
outside leaves must be gathered at the
top and tied together with some soft
material bi order to produce the best
results. 11 this is done it will produce
a cirisy, white, tender head of delicious
flavor.
Do not plant to much lettuce at one
tiine, as it is liable to become bitter if
allowed to grow old, Bettet to plant
it small quantity fortnikhtly.
Radishes. —Radishes require light,
rich,•mellow soil in order to produce the
best results. If sown early in a position
sheltered from the north, in deep, dry
well.manured soil, which has been care.
fully raked and prepared, it good crop
should be secured. Ratlines must grow
quickly, otherwise they become fibrous
and tough.
Early Scarlet (turnip or olive ehaped)
or French Breakfast are good.
White Icicle radishes ere rapid grow-
ers, crisp and tender ,and will grow to
31/2 to 4 inches in length in less than
a mouth's time,
Sow radishes every two weeks.
Onions—Plant onion sod as early as
possible in the best piece of ground
available, which should, properly speak -
big* be prepared and well mattered the
previous fall. Sow onion seed in drills
about it quarter of an inch deep. Drill»
should be about it foot apart. It is well
to sow fairly thick, as maggots will
likely attend to the thinning process for
you.
Giant Prize Taker (silver), Globe Dan-
vers (yelloe), Large Wethersfield (red),
are all good. Take your choice
Dutch Sete—To produce early green
onions and also for an early winter
trap, Yellow Dutch sets may be planted.
While not so profitable as onions grown
front seed, they are a great deal leas
trouble, and if put in early, not so li-
able) to attack from iusects.
If planted fairly- close together they
may be thiened out and used as gareens.
Plaoe about an inch apart, and late):
pull every second one. Those remaining
will then have ample room to grow
and wil produce an excelleub winter on-
ion by the end of the season.
Should you have any fairly small
cations left aver frera last season place
'them in the ground. They will grow
rapidly and produce an excellent green
onion long before sod or Bete.
Peas.—As soon as the frost has left
the ground and it has become fairly dry,
prepare the ground for garden peas. Peas
Should be sown ill drilla and covered to a
depth of three or four inches. Drills
should be about two feeet apart. A
good plate however, is to plant le double
row !shout six inches apart, leaving it
space on either side not leas then two
Professor Goldwin Smith, himself a
consummate master of style, thus spoke
on style in. his inaugural address as Re-
gius profeasor of history at Oxford, in
1889:
The style eif the elassical historian, at
least of those we read, here, undoubtedly)
is a model of purity and greatness and
far be it from us to disregard etyle In
choosing books of education. To appro.
cieite language is partly to command it,
and to command beautiful and forcible
language is to have n. key, with which
no man who le to rule through opineen
can dispense, to the heart and mind of
man. To be the master of that talisman
you need not be its slave. Nor will it
man be a master of it without being the
master of better things. Language is
not it mueical instrument into which, if a
fool breathe, ib will make melody. Its
tones are evoked only by the spirit of
high or tender thought; and though
truth is not alwaye elocilmet, real elo-
quence hoe always the glow et truth,
The language of the ancients is of the
time when the writer sought only to
give plain expression of his thought, and
when thought was fresh and young. The
composition of th.e mutant historians le
0, mode of eimple narrative for the imi-
tation of all time. But if they told their
tale so sbnply it was partly because they
bad a simple bite to tell. Snell themes
as Latin Christianity, Euro peait Civi-
the• Iteforme time the French
Revolution, are not so easily reducible
to the proportions of artistic beauty,
nor are the passions they exeite so easily
ealmed to the serenity of Sep:mina
att. Nor are all the moderns devoid of
classical beauty. No narrative so com-
piloted was Over tonducted with So
emelt skill ns that of Lord Macaulay.
No historital pointing was ever so vivid
as that whieh lures the leader through
all that is extravagant. in Carlyle.
GIb-
bali's shallow and satirical view of the
elinreh and ehurelnuen has made him
Mks the grand Action end the ,great ac-
tors on the stage. But turn to the say'
awe strttetuee of this great wark, its cm -
&need thought, its lofty and sustained
ita linninoua graneleur and au-
gust proportions, tearea 41,4 it is oat of
0. heap of materials the meet ceniused
and mean. entt ask ef what tleeek or
llonein edifice, however elaceical, it is
nut the Veal -
s vte
SAME
truck.)
W1111*—Are you going to take your law -
Mt to a 'higher court?
taillie—No. We heve. *greed to Just
etc Mate the fees in this one itiatead.
CORNS CURD
Volt tor Painlessly rrovs $4,
' 14 -10U13$
rlsYntlfr
laard, 40 C or Weeding, y: ittthawo„,•
earl ,i Extreetor. it neverb its n.C1Kri.
tiOlitinite DO folide ; Is hrnirtte bane ecompoetee
OnlY of loneling glues 8114 baJnt. J4ir la
0. bottles. ecenthe outietitueet '3/4—".. g •t*
SM • *X *
PUTNAM'S PAINLESS
CORN, EXTRAC.T.C! '
BAP MANN I gii$ IN STREET CARL
Some Offencestommitted by 1114;r7ori
or Garolass eassensoro.
"rou. know." said the elevated guard,
31328 01; 31 Nati 31,111 %lien IliO Matt ke
WKS taflUng lt) tee oly paiesenger
1:ettila611 °N14:41'01.:4•14 ait ad: ty J*I te°117)eli):::t, .evnAt;
est* SO 111111LY lateeeagt; o tc,c
71114tIrlieW, just touglieu
"I can't help lotting the 1I130, who gns.
In a crowdeu cur m lila tepee:reseed. '
1.QU'Ve react a iut aoutit elm in rile pa -
Perm, but 1 don't think Le reads the ptiPer:'
inniseir, or it lie does he never realizes
that tine plece is 111,0313 11033, Oa et bedews
lie's too mean it) Care lvtiq.5 ppm paapit.
think of los mannere. • • ,• • -•
"Tttere'a plenty of men. thgt -Sit WItli
tlair legs erossed and neeer • taxa :Imre
down when people pees,' but `I'M net Isere,
to tesice the peteseitgers ulatioats. '
Mire to Item aux the -trate. Atol au. I at-
tend etrictIY bitsii1ess'33341 bt,1I*Q(' about
tt Mat as little.' 115••17'cant: ..z . •-.•.
Anvi:0klootihter onlaotnil elottono'itz .1.telehumbe to44)74erin
there's been an improvemoe in nes
since the paseing of that law agatast
spitting In the oars and on the ptettorma
but the worm thitig tee c:roes-ieggen no.o.
does Is to Mt with his crossed feet stock
out in front of Mtn oa the floor 10 a
erenvded cox. where they can't be seen,
for people ta stumble over. An the crotm
legged men are irritable men, and tat nue
nothing better than to go in arid streight.
en 'ent all out, and X could do it.
"Another thing I don't like Is to see a
man a passenger, sitting in it motorman s
box In et car bucked up against one end
ancl with his feet up against the wood-
werk at the other. Apparently he doesn't
wive a.cuss about scratching the varnish
and marring the wood and making that
Place"tinsightly to „other people, to say
nothing of the injury he does to properry
which it takes money to repair.
"I don't altogether object to a man's
Putting his feet up on a seat, or I mean
his leg. I do object bitterly to a man sit-
in a cross Seat putting his feet up on the
edge of thecross seat opposite. X think
ite's a mean, thoughtless, cheap chump
tun, way you put it. He's wearing out
the seat by tieing it and he may be put-
ting mud on it for some unsuspicious
Passenger to sit on.
"Then there's the man who trims his
finger nails ort the train, not a very ele-
gant nerson that; and then there's the
man who cleana his finger nails, still
more distressing.
"Then there's the people that 'eat pea-;
nuts in the oars. Of course. there ought
to be a law against that, for to some
people the odor of peanuts in it closed
atmasphere is decidedly unpleasant, to
say nothing about the offence of littering
up the floor with the shells.
"You know the fact la when there's a
lot of people that don't know any better
than to do these things, and so I don't
know a you could blame them. You see
iic.me man. narrow, obstinate people that
do know better, but there's a whole lot
of people that don't kow any better."
N. Y. Sun.
uten'SdniverSiic
attO Collot =Tao
ARTS
EDUCATION
THEOLOGY
MEDICINE
SCIENCE (Including relginterileg)
Students registering f•tr the first time
before October 2 1at, 1909, may cora.
Plete the Arls course without attendance
For Calendars, write the Regittrar,
GZO. Y. CHOWN,
12 KingnotiaOstiriss
ECZEMA IS CAUSED
BY IMPURE BLOOD
It is Bailed by Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills Because They Make
Good Blood.
Ask any doctor and he will tell you
that eczema, is caused by impurities in
the blood; that -nothing can cure it that
does not reach the blood—that outward
applications are 'worthless. Thet is the
reason why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
have always proved so successful—they
act on the blood, and in acting on the
blood they banish those eruptions and
pimples, relieve the irritation and itching
and give 'perfect health. They have cur-
ed thousands of cases where poor blood
bas resulted in disease Among those
they have cured is •Mra. James. Wilkins,
Aylmer, Ont., who says: "1 suffered a
good deal with eczema and did not get
enything to help me until I took Dr.
Williams Pink Pills. These freed my
blood of all impurities and gave me
speedy relief. I am, therefore, natur-
ally very enthusiastic in praiee of these
pills."
A medicine that can make rich, red
blood will cure anaemia, rheumatism,
eczema, neuralgia, indigestiou, heart pal.
pitation, the ills, of girlhood and woman-
hood aria it host of other troubles—
simply because those troubles are the re-
sult of bad blood—that is why thee.; al-
ways cure the above troubles and bring
the glow of health to rale cheeks. Sold
by all medicine dealers br direct at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, from
tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co, Brock-
ville, Ont,
The Comet.
Out of the dark where worlds lie steak, and
suns have long been told,
Prom far beyond where eons dawned whose
tale has not been told,
With ceaseless &Weep out from the deep ,where
unfound planets swim—
So far, in truth, that we, torsooth, are Mit
a divielon dim—
The ceinet whirls through misty swIrIst of ;e-
mir that was Maria
And time nor space may end Us race for
ft will heed no bars.
Past realms of light that glimmer wlaite out -
tide ereAtions bOUndS,
Peet tysteine new whew) verlds askew feet
on their primal rounds;.
'Through each vast throe to swift that time
ends as a breath Indrawn.
AM years leg. beck upOn the treck laod-
ding night and dawn— •
ths cornet flys by dip and rine of universes
made
'Open a way left clear tbe day the Mara' long
patina were laid.
And mane may know where it inay go war
aorta know *whence It eontes,
Holy doWit the height .of outtiung night Its
poising murmur thruma:
None knows US tvny, Mir on what day With
I mighty force 'twee. 'buried.
ra weave Its petit in ewe wrath past trem-
bling on And world.
Tho Song of tho Shore.
,(11. T. Miller.)
They ask song in, 4 stranger's laud,
What shall I sing as 1 musing start&
With saddened heart end eyes that
weep,
And troubled dreams that arise In
sleep,
"Under the cloud,
Above the sea,
A gleani of light shines out for ree.
Here may I fiud a eon.
The lapping wavelets touch the beach,
And. call with a gentle ru3Ttio speech.
Out of the vast, aweet ministrelsy,
Eloquent tones of symphony,
Uncle: the cloud,
Above the sea,
A gleam of hope shines out for me,
Here I have found a song.
Song is oldest form of speed),
Coming front heaven's sublimest
reach,
Songs of the angels first began
'i're sounds -came forth front finite
111411,
Under the cloud,
Above the sea,
Gleams of promise shine out for me,
Loftiest them of song.
'Songs of the shore are given to me,
Songs. of the soul's deep mystery,
Showing a hand stretched out to save.
Lifted me up from the weltering wave.
Under the cloud,
Above the sea,
Gleams of victory reaching to me,'
Making my life a ,song.
Old Wisdom of the Chinese.
Without sorrow none become saints.
, Obedience is better than reverence,
A. teacher can lead us into the porch,
but culture depends ott self.
It is the good swimmer that gets
drowned. .
Soldiers may not be needed for a hun.
deed years, but cannot be dispensed with
a single day.
An image maker IleVer worships idols.
A. crow is black the world over.
In beating a dog have regard for its
master.
A good. hearer is better than it good
speaker.
Tao ten fingers cannot be all one
length.
Murder may be condoned, but cour-
tesy never.
When no enoney is spent there no
grace is gained.
The biggest hand cannot hide the
heavens.
Water may run in it thousand chan-
nels, but all returns to the sea.
Better be alive and poor than rich
and dead.
Men's minds are as unlike as their
faces.
Alms clone openly will be repaid se-
cretly.
The grub dies in the cabbage.
Rotten wood cannot be carved.
Rigidity of Motor Cars.
Discusaing the question of the weight
of motor cars, the Autocar states that
there is no such thing as ebsolute rigidi-
ty, and the most scientifically built car
is that which provides just that natural
amount of spring and give in the struc-
ture, as it whole, which is desirable, and
at the same time does not contain a sin-
gle part which is insufficiently strong for
its work. Anything more than this
means the carrying of needless weight,
which in its turn not only resultain
uli-
duly rapid wear of tires, but also means
slow climbing, lack of liveliness, and
waste of petrol. On the level and down-
hill, so far as speed is concerned, weight
Is no disadvantage. Speaking broadly,
it may be said that the teaviest ears in
proportion to their power are the small-
er ones, as many of thee are almost as
heavy as cars of considerably higher
power. At first glance it would appear
that either the smaller cars are need-
leeely heavy or that the larger cars are
insufficiently strong. However, practice
has shown that neither the one assump-
tion nor the other is correct, and that
both ears are just about the tight
strength, and, therefore presumably of
about the right weight fot• their work.
Considering the experieuce gained and
the improved materials now available, it
cannot be said that, az it whole, weight
has been kept dowr quite as much as
It should have been,
HE INHERITED
\ HIS ILL -HEALTH
•
But Dodd's kidney Pills cured
Balliargeon's Rheumatism.
Prayer.
Ever blessed Goa, our Heavenly
Father, the source a light ad know-
ledge, we beseech Thee to reveal Thy-
self to us, so that we may know
Thee as 'Thou art and may under.
stand the meaning of that precept—
Be ye perfect, even. as your Father
which is in heaven is perfect. We
thank Thee far teaching ua that God
is love and for manifesting that holy
love so clearly in the person and life
of Thy dear Son. Bestow upon us
the spirit of .Tailus; let that mind be
in us which was in Ham; teach us to
Iove God and men as He did, that
wo may be changed into the divine
image. And let the whole world be
transformed by the spirit of love.
Amen.
Further Proof That No Case of Kid-
ney Diseese Can Stand Before the
Old Reliable Kidney Remedy.
Monte Bello, Labelle Co., Que., May 0.
his blood pure and hit body toned' up
—0-4(becem. elitl.)--Thot it man may be cured
perience of John llaillArgeon, of tine
even of inherited ill -health if he keeps
by using Doddes Kidney Pils is the ex -
"I inherited peer heelth frosts any par.
rnts," Mr. Ileillargeon sole. "I was
botherea with Rhetimatiem, Lumbege,
None knows the eines through Which it fliee, end Crawl. I was alwity3 th•ed and mer-
le) log stay none can irace— Illus. In fart, 1 was si. total wreck. 1
Great and alone It may luso anima this is tli;f tlillinkitildstroiefausdlitettlin4sichiudttotyglt,311140.
s new;
au eMPlY Place t'llilte:ty:lid me goo.1 Mil Ito mistake, I
drpths *bee° worldare
Out of the dark where worltla Ifs stark, fnrat took Moe hetes in all, but I am
On. eft11,1"ItinPderali 1111111 tittelhdasseglobnleu614nto the r;:-Vri;.:11‘4V3fe5o:14314itel-1:21dice1811*I)::14.1;4f.ilitItill
Theough realms mitt:town with great guile
farther: Tenni! rem ..tem.
Of emit° relantatteimottlimeteng race that drives i Dead's Kianey Piile rim i ne leidneve
Ane musks at us %he fumble thus with hours i "bat is why they alwayt wile Rheum.
—*Wilbur II. Nesbit. la et. Lent*
and days and yrare dioui. Lem, Luirthaeo D•terov ael Matt Da
t. 'IiirtedrItielarev‘i , Sat rain e I ii 3:10nrpitirhiothi,e1.0 till
t nee.
:a i 180.1.40 IP.' 4 142, el
el 1 6 L . *
The tetnet Icans across the dope ell bare
orbs end eel:crest
floweret.
Aboundng Grace.
Pardon of sins is a grace that the
mot holy persons beg of God with
mighty passion, and labor for with a
greet diligence, and expect with tom-
bline fors, and concerning it many times
suffer sadness with uncertain souls, and
receive) it by degrees, and it enters upon
them by little portions, and it is broken
as their sighs and sleep. But so have 1
seen the returning sea enter upon tile
stvand, and the witters rolling towards
the shore throw up little portions of the
tide, and retire as if Nature meant to
play, and not to change the abode of
waters; but still the flood crept by lit-
tle steppings, and invaded more by his
progressions tha,n-he lost by his retreat,
anehaving told the number of its steps,
it possesses its now portion till the an-
gel calls it back, that it may leave its
unfaithful dwelling of the sane; so is
the pardon of our sin; it conies by slew
motion, and first quits a present death,
and turns, it may be, into it sharp sick-
ness; and if that sickness prove not
health to the soul it washes off, and it
may be will dash against the rock again,
and proceed to take off several instances
of anger and the periods of wrath; but
all this while it is uncertain cone.erning
our final interest, whether it be ebb or
flood; and every hearty prayer, and eve
ery bountiful alms, still enlarges the par-
don, or adds a degree of probability and
hope; neglect of religion makes the par-
don retire; and while it is disputed be-
tweeen Christ and Christ's enemy who
shall be Lord, the pardon fluctuates like
the wave, striving to climb the rock, and
is washed off like its own retinue, and it
gets possession by time and uncertainty,
by difficulty and. the degrees of a hard
progression.—Jeremy Taylor.
Worship.
Oh, worship the Lord in the beauty of
holiness fear before Him all the earth.
We may ask at once what is worship?
It is the craving of man after God, and
the craving of God after man. Many
men are ignorant of the impulses that
govern them. Worship begins net with
us, but outside of us; it begins with
God. All along the line for centuries
He has been moving the hearts of men
to seek Him. This divine craving een
neither be summoned, eontrolled nor
diernissect Let us look at the founda-
tion of worship. 1. Divine hunger. I
am weary for thy love; holy can I give
thee up? 2. Divine beauty, Flowers are,
not made for food, but for admiration,
and if you see not beauty, the beauty
of the Lord, you are color-blind, and not
fit fel? a watchmen or it workman. Men
see no beauty in Jesus; it is only when
they want to stveter that they say, "By
Jesus Christ." 3. Divine attraction.
This beauty draws; you turn again and
take another look at the face, at the
flower, at the firmament. Does the
megnetie compass ewing true to the '
pole? Does that diviner compass draw
with irresistible power and bring men
to bow at the feet' •of indescribable
beauty? Every regenerate seta can give
aft answer. 4. Divine continuity. Al-
ways, ever, evermore, Sailing up the
Baltic, sometimes the cempase will take
a spin, because the iron mountains not
far off deflect the needle. Are there
irou mountains to deflect the spirit com-
pass? No I
Mike I go to worehip do1 go te beg,
Or to embody and reflect? We are not
paupers. but children, princes of the
blood, The soldier glories in his strength,
the athlete in his prowesa. How beauti-
ful upot the mountable are the feet of
them that praise! I teed on God. My
meat k to do the will of Him that sent
mr ; my greatest gain ie when 1 give, not
when I receive.
"Give unto the ltero the glory due
unto his name. Bring nit offering Alia
conic -into hie courts." Man is made to
impend, to reflect, to imitate, to follow,
to aceept pilotage. "The religious im-
pulse at its beet ie the free. spontetteone
exprosioe ot healthy pereonality. It
does not count the tote nor tompute the
benefit". The only reward it eravee ie
the satiefaction Met acrompaniee pee-
ennal fulfilment. It eceepte with equal
readitless p0Verty Or rielice. disgrace or
honor. martyrdom or length of dee% if
only it eau feel that it, is iteldeving ite
proper destiny. Almost indifferently it
rejoices or ie aetenely eat!, toils itta Itt-
bors, •er gives itself up to the ecstasy of
ontemplittion, guided chiefly by it feel.
ing of the worthewhileneee of its behav-
iour in and for itself and it senao -of
Itaingtment to a spiritnal nniterse."