The Wingham Advance, 1910-05-26, Page 3Rheumatic Families
Inherit a Tendency to.
ease.
211edical opinion confirms the view
that rheumatism and gout are tranamit-
ted front one goner:Aim o aneithen
Only by conibatiug nem and blood
weehnesses on these be prevented. if
they et In the faintly, they develop
ouickly when the blood becomes impure
or the nerves weak.
M. E. E. Hollister, St. Solves, says:
"reedy in lifei evaa occeteionally trete
bled with aching pains: in the back, Lat-
er my joints became stiff in bail weath-
er, and lately gouty condition:: develop-
ed.
"These troubles I knew were very
common hi my family. I can recall how
stiffened up my grandfather wen from
enlargement of the joint&
".t epecialist in New or told me
that only by maintenance of the moat
vigorous conditions counl these family
predispositions be prevented. Because
of his advice five years ago, when Ver.
rovone was first introducea into this
eolony, I began n systematic buildiog
im of my system, The New York spe-
eitilietni opinion was justified in ray
ease, and I presume it is generally true,
"Before eix months had paesed I had
gotten rid of every vestige of rheuma-
tic:in and iny laealtit too WaS visibly ims
proved."
For rheumatism, gout and generni
bodily \Yoakum there is no -remedy like
Ferrozone; try it, 50e a box, six boxes
for ns2.50, all dealers or The Oetarrhos
vane Co, Kingston, Ont.
PRBMATURE BURT= 11'
•••••••••,,,
It is poesible that esi examination of
the probability of premature burial hi
the light of certain faete may he. of
consolation to the less prejudiced of
those 'who dread its occurrence. In all
the thousands al post mortem exanaura-
tions which have beea performed
throughout the civilized world duriug
the last fifty yeaea there has not been, a
single instance of the supposed corpse
uuder examivation shelving signs of life
bitch as would infallibly iippear at the
diseection of a living subject? We ven-
ture to say that if this bad occurred
the world would have -heard of it.
We would point out moreover, that
the bodies upon which post-mortem ex-
aminations are performed are in no sense
selected, but include those of persons of
both sexes and of all ages who have
flied from all sorts of natural and violent
deaths and at widely varying intervals
of time before the sectio cadaveris.
In our minds this coneideration at once
disposes of the assumption that prema-
ture burial ie of any frequent ocenr-
reuce and limits discussion to these un-
usual cases in which., either because of a
tune° condition having existed before
the supposed time of death or from the
delay of rigor mortis, or from the tem-
porary peretstence of the body tempera-
ture of life, there are reasonable doubts
of the fact of death. But surely these
are just the cases In which expert opin-
ion will. always be aougot and in which
burial will be naturally delayed until the
onset of the incontrovertible sign of
putrefaction,
Evidence more conclusive than that
of opinion is forthcoming, for our. .Vien-
na eorrespondent describes the elaborate
system of death certification which hae
been enforced in Austria during the last
fifty years, which provides that every
body before burial must be seen at least
twice within forty-eiglet hour e after
death by two independent Medical men,
and by one of them again immediately
before the closing of the coffin. In no
single instance haa the fact of death been
controverted during these repeated ex-
aminations, and to make assurance
doubly sure in. Vienna those persons
who desire it can have the uneoffined
'bodies of their dead friends kept under
observation in special mortuary halls
for as long as eight erten before burial,
but of the many thousands of bodies
which have been laid out in this man-
ner not one has ever risen from hie or
her probationary bier.—From the Lan-
cet.
• .•
COMPELLED TO
ABANDON WORK
MOO MUSKRAT TRAPPVIS,
Good Thing That Little en irilai4
Ceente Earle and Often.
In America =arty ten thousand people
trap tee trutegustelo or musskrat, ()very
year. Afore people trap this little ani.
nisi than any tether. It io daimed that
the greatest manlier of skims aro taken
in Minnesota and the Pad River dis.
trien Most a the pelts are talented.
Tie skin* are Vcry uniform in eolog
tonally A, dark brown. liewever, tenet
of Alaska and the Mackenzie :bet:riot
are very light in eekr. The like!: ;Hite
or tnose whieh are nearly se, come
froni the southern sectioun although
occasionally a few are found is other
The muskrat is very prolifie. In eome
latitudes, says Fur News, it has three
Jitters of young in a Rummer and froof
three to five young In each litter. The
anittuals are nocturnal in their habits,
but are often sem during the Lime
Musquash, it is eaid, thrive beat, In
sluggish streams, lakes and marshes.
In appearance it is very much like the
beaver awl its Imeite are very Gino
ilar,
The muskrats that inhabit the ponds,
marebes andeshallow lakes buiht their
houses of grass, weeds, etc., aud pater
them together with mud. The hones is
built in the shape of a dome ant is usu-
ally Berens!, feet above the w ster. The
musquash that live. Jong the streame
usually hes its home in the banns of
them. The entrance to this den is al-
most always beneath the water, but as
the burrows: mitre upward the dens are
never filled wall water exempt in times
of freshets.
FAMOUS DOCTOR'S
PRESCRIPTION.
14 R
MARIO' OF STOlt
Holiness.
Holiness may be said to be the burden
of the Bible. If God is anything He is
holy. We rend of holy mountains, the
holy city, the holy tenaple, the holy land
and holy men. Are you holy? Ask this
question in town and country, and what
answers will you get? The thunder clap
A Very Severe Case of S. Vitus
Dance Cured by Dr.
limns' Pink Pills.
St. Vitus dance is a common disease
In children and is also found in highly
strung men and women. The only eure
lies in plenty of pure bloodbecause
pure blood is the life food of the nerves.
.And Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is the only
medicine to make new, rich, red blood.
This statement has been. proven over
and over again and now from Port Malt -
land, H.S., comes another remarkable
piece of evidence of the power of Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills over disease. Mr.
Lyndon E. Porter is ono of the best
known residents of that town. Ile suf-
fered from a severe attack of St. Vitus
dance, and got no help from medicine
until lie began using Dr. Williams' Pink
Ife says: "My ease was unusual-
ly had. I was tompelled to abandon
work. I found it impoasible to skep,
and night after eight would toss about
In bed. I was receiving =died atten.
tion, but in enke of the careful treat-
ment I gradually grew woree. My limbs
jerked and twitched to such an extent
that I could not cross the floor without
falling or coming in contact with some
piece of furniture. 1 could not raise a
glass of -water to my lips so badly dM
did my arms and hands tremble and
Amite. I cannot imagine more severe
suffering and inecovenience than one en.
shires with St. Vitus dance. My father
being a eltuggiet knew of the nany cures
effeeted by Dr. , Williams' Pink Pills,
mut advised me to try them. I did so,
with the meet haotiv results. In less
titan two months from the time I began
the tiee of the pills I was a even man,
and I have rot e:nee hat the slightest
eymotom of the trnuble."
All over the woeln Dr. "tVillbentsi Pink
Mlle are tanning II1St ueti earee fte Mr.
P011ees, They go right down to the
:gone et the dinestee in the blood. In
siely they havo -moved in thorteands
are 4a to cure attaetala, iteetlaehe and
lee; teee. raennuttism. hunl.ago. mew-
enee. rue v ueneet. decline
-.1 the $,netiel nilments of rowing girle
nea w nin. Soin liv all radii:it deal.
i'V Mei et 59 (-elite a box or six
ese e for inl.n0 from The De.
itelidee tee. Itroskville, Ont.
',a.m...
Vt. ' 14Virj, the gin ehet killan Iri4
ene oiret lege sie more. The fe-evernr
h!lp. vi.itor.--who a
11.r .! uvlit Vim a lot of Tong'
oner muederers hate put -Cleve-
Laitaer.
is: "Be ye holy." The terrible alterna-
tive is ever sounding, "Exce,pt ye be
holy ye shall not see the Lord."
What is holiness? It is wholeness.
Whole, not half, not seventy-five cents
in the dollar, but a hundred. What is
wholeness? Did you ever see a ship
loading square timber in the harbor of
Quebec? It is a heavy, tedious process.
In the bows of the ship you see square
openings, called ports; the large sticks
of timber go through these apertures till
the ship is laden. These ports are care -
full closed, caulked and. made water
tight. Then, and. tot till then, is the
ship whole, seaworthy to stand the
storm.
The Christian life is almost invariably
depleted as a decision. a start, a pro-
gress and arrival.. What if the idea of
Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress is after all
a snare? How many sad. hearts are
ready to confess, "I aave not attained?"
We ask in rejoinder, when are you go-
ing to be, and how long will it take and
how much more time do you -want.
We respectfully challenge this view.
We have ceased to teeth, "It is a long
way and there are many windings." All
the time the people are missing the
wholeness. Men are like ships e they
are holy when they are seaworthy, not
before. Look at the ark of Noah. Was
she holy, whole-ly, fib for sea? Well
built, well pitched, with no fear of a
leak, there was no pump in case of leak-
age. She was not built for leaking, but
for carrying.
Was the ark a type of Christ? Am I
inenten to come on board the ark of
Chriat? And when I ant board, have 1 a
cordial welcome, am I a servant or a
son, is there and second rank for me?
Am I not a prince of God? Can I ever
attain a higher rank than this: "Now,
eve are the sons of God!" The law thun-
ders out the curses and says, "I3e ye
holy?" 1 reply, all right; I am in Christ
and He is holy, and complete, and near,
and precious:: He is all in all now, right
here. My theme, my inspiration and
my erown. In a !tense there is no pro.
gross here, for I have all and abound,
They never have a log on board the ark,
Progress was not thought of; they shin
ply waited; so do I for the mite eeaeoll. A
bright girl once esker' a sailor what they
did. at see? "We simply sit down and
let the wind blow us along, and wo get
there;" ern thotuni this was extrava-
gant, it was largely true.
In Christ I move ne the planets move
—silently, truly, aoftly, irresistibly. I
go from light to light. nty progress is
the progress of God; ray environmeut
the environment of God: inside the bun
evarks em eafe; outside is: danger arra
GIVEN UP BY WS PHYSICIAN
"FP1LIIT.,A-.TIVZ11" THIC FAMOUS
Fenn( witptctne, iAvco HIS tor.
JAMMS OINOWALL, Roo.
Williamstown, Ont., July 27th, leo&
"I suffered all my life front Chronic
Coustipation an4 no doctor, or remedy,
I ever tried helped me. "Prult-a-tivesio
promptly cured me. .Also, last spring
I had a bad attack of BLADDER and
KIDNEY TROUBLE and the &Meer
gave me up but "Fruit-n-tives" ;laved
my life. ram now over eighty years
of age and I strongly recommend
"Fruit-a-tives" for Constipation. and
Kidney Trouble",
(Signed) JAMES DINGWALL,.
SOO ES box, 6 for $2,so—or trial box, ese
—.at dealers or from Itruit-a-tive,s
Limited, Ottawa.
WHEN HE MISSED HIS MOTHER.
Stories Told of the Late Bishop of
Lincoln.
Canon Scott Holland., an appre.cht-
tion 'of the late Biehop of Lincoln, men-
tions that Dr. King was a builder, and
his mother lived with him tin her death
Ile lend once, after hearing a rasping
sermon that irritated him: "Ibis at fetch
a time .that I mesa my mother." Ile was
asked wire..
"Because directly we were through the
door I should have turned to her and
said: 'That was a beastly sermon') and
then it would have been out and I should
have been sorry to leave said it and
should have begun to apologize for the
sermon and, to love the preacher. Now
the poison is in me all the weelte and
I van% get rid of it."
Dr. King had a delicate and, subtle wit,
Once, said the Canon, we had all been
rather swept off our feet by the vivacity
of eertain Bampton lectures which were
laid out on rather well worn conventional
The material was old, no doubt, but
still it was surprising how well they
went. How was it? 'What would King
as yof them? "Well, it Is wonderfure he
said, "how good an old' pair of trousers
will come out, if you have la,id them
away for some time lu a drawer,"
• He had hit it exactly. The trousers
were green, for all their apparent sheen.
—From the Commonwealth,
NEWFOUNDLAND
PAYS TRIBUTE
To the Grand Work Dodd's
Kidney Pills are Doing.
41,4K,PA.00.1,1011114%
SPRING CROP
REPORT
The (Marie DON moult of .Agricul-
hire lies United the following etatemeet
regerding agricultural conditiona exist-
ing et the beginniug er May:
Vegetation—The warm weather el
• Mareit started vegetation unmorally
soon—from three to four Avecks earlier
than usual. The latter half of April,
however, was very we. anti cold, and
further edvanee Ives much retarded, the
:result being that May opened with
growth a week or two Ahead of the
Average, and three weeks or a month in
advance of heat year. Foreete were in
early lot, and- many orehards were in.
biome, pasturee were green and were
furnishing a, good bite for the mane
sheep end young rattle that had been
turned out to feed.
Spring Sewing—Pieta operations have
been the earliest far many years. Most
of the plowing had been done in the fail,
and owing to the mild weather but little
frost remained in the ground after the
aiiow went away early in March. epring.
sowing is ahout a month earlier than
last season, and a week or two ahead
of the average year.
Fall Wheat—This crop entered, into
May well forward and presenting good
appearance on the whole, more espe-
cially where it had been got in early.
Some late sewn fields looked rather thin,
owing to the dry fall, and on low-lying
places there were bare spots cauaed by
ice forming during time winter. The in-
jury from insect pests is less than
mime there being but scattering men-
tion of Hessian fly, wireworm, anti
white grub.
Winter Bye—The acreage of tnis crap
is small, but where grown it is reported
to be in good eon/lit/on generally.
'Clover—Like fall wheat, clover winter -
en well, ana the spring was also favor-
able, there being practically no heaving
horn frost,
Fodder Supplies—A correZpondent,
Fishermen Regard, Them- as a Boon
to Mankind—Mr. Frank Banfield
Tolls How They Cured His Back-
ache.
Garnish, Fortune Bay, Nfld., May 28.
—(Special).—Among the fishermen here,
who through exposure to web and cold
are subject to those pains and aches
evhich come from diseased Kidneys,
Dodd's Kidney Pills are looked upon as
a positive boon to mankind. They are
never tired .of telling how their Back-
aehes and their Rheumatism vanish be-
fore the great Kidney remedy.
Among many others Mr. Frank Ban -
field, after years of suffering, has found
relief in Dodd's Kidney Pills, and here
is what he is telling his friends:
"I find Dodd's Kidney Pills the best
medicine for Backache I have ever used.
I only used two boxes and they cured me
of Backache I had had for five years.
It started through a strain. My father's
back also bothered Men, and he gob some
relief from one pill I gave him. They
were too precious to give him more. All
persons suffering from Backache should
use Deed's: Kidney Pills."
Why do Dodd's Kidney Pills cure
Backache? Simply because Backache is
Kidney ache, and Doddts Kidney Pills
positively cure all Kidney aehes and ills.
This has been proved in thousands of
cases in. Caeada. If you haven't uted
them yourself ask your neighbors.
Going Up.
Justice has a streak of yellow, for she
grips the little fellow, but her temper
seems to mile* toward the man who's
higher up. •
Though she runs to fix her clutches tei
the one who steals as much as OD cents,
describing the fodder situation. sad's:
"The short and mild winter worked won-
ders," and, others write to the same ef-
fect. The good corn crop ef last year
also helped farmers to save on hay and
grain in feeding live stock, Straw has
been scarce and. dear.
Live Stock—All atlases of live stock
aro at a premium. Prices for horses are
high and. firm, attributed by some to the
great demand front our western Pro-
vinces, Their general health has been
good, except for a form of strangles.
Cattle heye been remarkably free from
disease, but ere rather thin in flesh
owing to somewhat close feeding. Milk
cowe are fewer in number than usual,
but in both dairy and beef -raising sec-
tions more calves are being kept. Fat
cattle are very sca.rce, and stockers are
harder to procure than in former years,
while local butchers find it difficult to
procure suitable animals, A3 a conse-
quence a good deal of inferior beef has
been disposed of at good. pr:ces. Sheep
aro doing. well, lambs coining strong and
plentiful in proportion to the number of
dams. High prices for these also pre -
rail. A correspondent very suggestively
remark e that the rabies among dogs has
been a boon to sheep. Swine are not so
plentifal as in former years, as they
have beenrushedto market at prices
characterized by one correspondent as
"sky high." In fact, there are complaints
of too hasty marketing.
Fruit Trees—With the exception of a
severe ice or sleet storm in the latter
part of November that broke off many
branches, fruit trees have come through
the winter in normal. condition. The
damage dono waa confined to a few sec-
tions iu western Ontario.
she limps on. crutches toward the man
W116115 higher up,
If the duties are evaded quiek is right-
eous wrath paraded, for the few are shn.
ply aided—not the man. who's higher
up.
'Tis a mint obnoxious feature; justice
surely needs a teacher; worst of sinnera
not the creature, but the nuns who's
higher up.
Little chaps must go to prison for
erime not really biers, while champagae
is ever fizzle for the man who's higher
up.
When a trust is eaught at sehenaing
justice takes its menials, seerningnot to
e'en be faintly dimming of the nutn
who's higher tip.
Ever calm her way pnestring, juetice
death, but 1 am kept, and kept for ever- hotes what some are donne, but this duty
More. is .celiewing when the man is higher up.
I am holy because 1 am in a lroly Justice should take off her blinder, to
telitee, keep bolo tompeny, eat holy the smaller fry be kinder, and, before
bread, dress in holy garments, sing with her or behind her. grab the man who's
holy eompanions. "I am in heavenly higher nine -Philadelphia Public Mager.
place 'now, becaliee I am in Christ; =tin
AN °ROAN FOR 25 CENTS
et', "y life le hid with Cheiet in God." ,
A double security ngainst all poseible
-rr•
datgee Glory le het-tun:a-IL Ts Miller, A WEEK
A Faithful Cervent. We have on hand thirty-five oegsns,
Carlyle told onee of a lawsuit penal- taken in exchange on Ileintzumu Co.
pianos, witch we most sell regardless of
Mg in Scetland affecting the succes- inza, to make Teem itt onr Rt Att.• Every
moo to a great estate of svhich he had
sainethimt. ale case depended !ustenlentlit bas lien thoroughly over-
kitbwn mily secret known only to one ana is euaranteee fir five yens;
on a faene full eniount will be allowed oa ex.
old tervant, who refused to reveal it.
she Must speak en peril of her *out ;41: r et. 'a le'tl'icel 1 -1 klilieet's tlitai afkr:4N)s..natIthtann$re;
Daminioa, Val:tidy, Goderieh an
kirk miiiister was terat to tell her
"rein of irlY rMifl" slou.",td Belt. Thie yeur ehanee to save money.
noted ye put the honor of an anti noel- ecest tetra will bring full pettienlarte—
tit& family in competition with the raid Ilt:Intrenen & loe 71 Meg ..trect este,
of * poeteteature nee met" Itemilton.
MAP BET ITEM.
nudge Itenioul yeeently at tee
Whice.go Chronielen city of T.ondon reert tied au engage -
Porker pries have tr.st skewerd;
Squealers row *re chow' with game
But the street ear heirs reed Tale°
Melees Aeon tke same.
meet ring wee it toeditionel gift anti
thee in ft (n041. where en PlIftvorrimit bad
hetet enslea the gill matte return tke
ring.
CORNS.F,:iuRep.
24 HOVel
you caa painlesaly remove any ecru, enoet
itsrd, soft or Weeding, ty applying Putuatiet
Cern extraeter. it nerenburus. leaves no sear,
cenuons tie outdo; Is barrel ess because eonneasea
only otbealiug gem and balms. lritty yeare hi
nee. °ere guaranteed. teed oy druggists
tee bottle*. Refuse oubatitutes.
PUTNAM'S- PAINLESS
conri EXTRACTOR e
1.0.4.110•1,•14..1.••••,..
yesterday determined what we are
tbinking aud doing and how we are lie-
ing to -day. TO -morrow IR as truly bound
to to -day asto-day is to yesterday. Poi
ever is just as surely bound to now.
The eternal life is a life forever. That
la the time% aspeet of it. It is also a life
in God. That is the quality aspect of 11.
And the time aspect will take care of
itself if we take care, with Godes help,
of the quality aspect. Jesus teaching
and the deep doctrine of Christianity is
that the quality aspect is cared for
within Christ. "This le life eternal, that
they should know thee the only true
God, and Hine whom Thou didst Bend,
even Jesus Christ." c`I came that they
may have lifo, and may bave it abun-
(Minty." If we live now in Christ, as
Christ's: dear followers, loving and serv-
ing IIhn, we shall live on forever in
Christ. We shall be at home in the
eternity of which we speak as Vine
beyond time because we have been at
hieing in the Eternal One who ineludes
all past and present and future, even
in Jesus Christ, the same yesterday,
to -day and forever.
Some people tell us that one world
at a time is enough, and that if we will
do our duty here in the future will take
care of itself, but there is no one world
at a time. The eternal world is hens
now as truly as It will be hereafter.
And men can only do their duty as they
know both worlds. Duty is the lasv
0 the eternal world laid upon the eon-
ditions of the present world whieh our
bodies move. And the idea that we
can shrivel up into the Mueller world
and pen our souls into it when they
were meant to be soaring all the time
into the higher world which surrounds
this and includes thia'is an absurd idea.
It ie death. now and. it is the utter un-
fitting of ourselves for the eternities
which are both above us and beyond us.
•e.
HE CARRIES A "CAN" Cie HIS
EAR.
This Uganda- bay livos in the dis-
trict through which tho Roosevelt
party hunted. When he 'wan a mere
baby his reerente bored a hole in the
10be of his ear and placed a piece of
wood in it, replacing the stick by a
larger one as he grew older, until at
last the lobe of his ear has been
stretched enough to hold a bueket
two or three inches. wide. He is
Irmch admired by the native women.
oh.44,
Getting Ready to Live Forever.*
(By Robert E. Speer.)
What would the man 40 with eter-
nity who doesn't knew how to live half
an hour t This was one of Inuereon's
questiona What would he del sup-
pose that a nran's syhole life has eon -
slated *in material things, ana that sud-
denly he is transported where there are
no material tbinge, or is left wbere he
is, while all material things are swept
from him out of being. What is be going
to do? Ho can't go visiting places.
There are none, Ile caret play. There
are to toys of the only kind he kuowa
how to use, There are lots of peraone
but these person e never intereeted him
unless they were against a background
of things, and tom his tbings are all
gone. To be sure, there is truth and
beauty and all that world of principles
and ideas ,of whit+ he often liestrd, and
to wlikh he had himself sometimes: en
hided, but he torrid n. ver keep up any
suetained interest in them. Alia now
he is doomed to an eternal life without
hie only mean.: ef living. Living forever
is a pridnern to suet a man. It is WOM
than a problem. It is hell.
If we are to live forever we must be-
• gin tioing it now. Now is st part of for-
evtr. What time is, what will become
to, time, kWlayetfees to us. But AO
3.311111, that WtullrtY ivat are Ilt:te it
what We •rall timesail that whatever
loat was a lime we ate to be still an
I 4$ be alenye. Ani what we want t
4 he we have te begin to be new. Wha
we tkovght and did, and hew we liven
Ole
A ROYAL WIDOW'S MOURNING.
QUEEN ALEXANDRA AND HER GRANDSON, PRINCE OLAF
OF NORWAY.
No orle will more strictly observe the official twelvemonth of mourn-
ing for King Edward than his widow, Alexandra. It is likely that she
will remain in the severest seclusion not only for the whole period, but
long afterward, and perhaps never again figure in, brilliant social Ohara.
She is, in fact, relieved of alroost all eocial duties through the accession
of her daughter-in-law, Mary, to tho queenship. Alexandra, although
still a queen, is referred to now properly as the inueen Mother, her son
being King.
EVERY PART PERFECT
THE secret of the perfection of
our newly designed No. 1817
Type Telephone $et lies in the
fact that every part 0 it—every
individual piece—is itself abso-
lutely perfect, The perfection
of the whole is attained
through perfection in the partS,
Examine the transmitter, for
example—standarcllong-distance
type you will find it,—or the
receiver, •with, its construction
that bars' out all, local noises to
spoil- transmission. Or look
into the generator—the ringers
• and gongs, --the switch hook
— or any part you like,
You won't find a better
rural telephone than this made
anywhere.
MRS. MARILLA RICKER,
Who aspires to be come Governor of
New Hampshiro.
4.0
WINTERGREEN OIL.
Process of Distillation From tho Bark
of Sweet Birch.
011 of wintergreen was formerly dies
tilled from the leaves of the -winter-
green, commonly called in Marne box -
berry, and is worth about 15 a -pound
troy. Almost all of the natural oil now
on the market is obtained from street
birch, it tree growing at its best in lee
Southern Appasaehian Mountains. Tbo
bark alone is used for the distillation of
the oil arid it is essential that it be
green, for if it is allowed to dry out be-
fore distilling it becomes worthless let
the production of oil.
The bark is stripped from the trunks
aed stumps and the longer limbs, but
the twigs and the bark of the smaller
limbs are not used. The bark is brought
to the distiller and put on the floor,
around which there is a. narrow strip of
luraber forming a shallow box. Here it
is chipped up fine with axes, ready for
distilling, The distillery consists of a
floor ten whica the bark is chipped and
ono or *ore vats or stills with their
condensers, and those aro roofed. over
with a frameworinof poles covered with
bark. This serves to protect the birch
'bark froni the drying sun and the fires
from the ram, as well as shielding the
Workers from tho weather.
The stills are 3 fest wide by 4 feet
long and 3 feet deep. They aro construct-
ed of wood with iron bottoms and steam -
tight tops that can be reinoved, The
still is placed in a positiou on two par-
allel rows of flat rocks, one under each
side of the box, leaving a spice under-
neath to Innen the fire. The smoke es-
capes through a low reek chimney or
pipe at the tear.
Insane the box and about four inches
above the ball bottom is 5 grating of
wooden strips four inches wido and plac-
ed about one inch apart. tinder this
grating water is boiled by a fire plane
on the eround under the iron bottom
and the chipped hark rests on the gran
ing. The grating thus keeps the bark out
of the eveter, and the steam alone as it
• rises through the still filled with 'barr.
extracts the oil.
Tha eenelenser consists of a straight
iron water pipe whieh is laid in a trough
through which the water from a brook
is deflated, The condensed water mei
is collected in a glass jar the moeth
of which is eovered with a cloth through
the ail and water aro sarainel.
The oil sinks to the bottom of the jar;
• the smioky water as it overflows le -
turns by another pipe to the bottou
tho,still and is boiled over again aid
keeps up the neeessary supply of wattr
for the distillation. —Front the Bangor
Commereial,
• 4.8
HAVE YOU
BEEN STUNG?
FREE Ditius teilti Jic?Incoth:ysotiotrinoefeetiniits(gIre;
BOOKtost.attokcviralIttrdala
ieiustieniseasweiasgdpaorf.
ticulars of every step necessary in
the organization of a rural telephoue company.
Write and esk for Bulletin No, 3133—it's Free.
Some people have tecently been bad-
ly "stung" by gettinte, substitutes for
Zarer-13uk. When they have esked for
a box of Zara -Bilk, tho dealer has pro-
duced EOM line ou 'which ho Makes
more profit, end talised about "Jet ae
geed and theaper," or "Ono of nry
own, and 1 know voliatei in it," or
"Really, the sante thieg at half the
peke," ete., ete. When toted, this
cheap substitute. hag, of course, failed
to do anythitos like what 7Arn-lluk
does, but the buyer has, neveetheless,
parted vralt hie money! You will have
to get Zaire:Ruh eventually! 'but
waste money ea useless easbetitutes. The
name "Zane:Birk" is protected by law.
1 nee it on every peeket befeee payine. If
your local deiler rhouni be out of :teen,
t 1 *Abe "Zam-link, Toronto." We will
mail it by return.
JTE EtIll ELECTRIC
Bs2vissturrsouts LON=
Mcssufecimers und euiAdiers of if opparatas and equipment
used in tho construction, operation and maintenance of
le:cacao acd Power Plants. Address yocr nearest office.
MONTfiPAL—Cor,Notre DA720 & este Sb. TORONTO -60 FroatSt, W.
REGINA CALCART
VANCOVER-918 Pecan:St. W. WINSIPEG-590HenryAoe.
EAU AIRSilir
Prominent Features of Great Betain's
New Vessel,
Ship Will be Ready to Fly in August
or September.
Although Lientenat N. F. Uabavne,
IL N., is still in -France attending the
trtalsof [he new Clement -Bayard airship
(which is to fly from the other side of
the C•hanael to the Daily Mail garage
on Wormwood lectubben the training of
the .crew which will man the British
navy airship when she is ready is being
puttied energetieelly forward at Bar-
row. 143riCASIIIre.
The veesel is likely to be ready to fly
some time in. August or September.
Work is well advanced on the nine sce-
tions Into whieh the framework is divid-
ed. These are made not .of aluminium,
as has been stated, but of a metal Which
its both lighter ancrstrongee. In view of
the size of the balloon, whicb will urea -
sure more than 500 feet (00 feet loner
that is to say, thao the largest Zeppelin
yet built, it was important to use as
light it material as poesible. So far the
metal employed has given satiefactory
results.
The gag eompartmente. nine f them,
will not be all made of the cone mete-
rial. 'Several stuffs will be tried in or-
der to see which is the most serviceable.
One of these is entirely new, a kind of
waterproof cloth, very thin yet storable.
—If -tt domes up to expectation% it will
no doubt be used for all airships. It Is
• thd ,dIscoverv of a British inventor.
The propellers have not yet been elms.
en. Experiment:: are being mede with
one of four blance 10 feet in diameter.
If these are eneeessful, there will be
every reason to hope that the cetimated
speed of forty-five miles en hour may be
ettained, The two i200 -bale Wolselty
motore of eight eylindere :melt will be
quite capable Lf pi (lancing, that speed if
other eonditioes are favorable.
It has been fouud quite practicelne to
fit the, oieship with wirebne telegraplay
This will greatly im.rrasit s v3Intl f'n'
seouting puteosee. The he olio mere of
the vessel will be GO the 'North nee. As
she moat 1 ri'e.t1.1 ta eery ont f g
days .stt a Ulm\ she has be.rn cougatletcd
to take a eery It •1vy 11:1' MOW
will prebeb:y elinelet of teensy 111 'n, ati
they will Le aisle to tine ultli th-en
large quantity of a:oi es. with, if ion. S.
eery,
PAISLEY THE RAGE.
Paris Uses Scottish Pattern in Every
Article of Dress.
Parte is "mad" on Paisley. Everything
showns the well-known Patsley pattern.
There are even Paisley stockings and
Paisley collars!
The oldefashioned mixture of Paisley
and fringe is being shown ih most of
tho principal shops in many articks of
clothing and other accessories for wore -
en's use.
Paisley patterns are seen in every
variety of dress, from the eeegant af-
ternoon toilette to the cheap cotton
blouse, sold in thousands.
There are Paisley ties, Paisley gowns
shrouded in chiffon, and plain Paisley
blouses are shown quite • unadorned. In
seamless blouse of foulard or silk.
Even the men have not esoaped the
Paisley craze, as Paisley tobaccoymches
are on sale made of a silk covering o -ver
india rubber.
Touches of Paisley are wen on tailor-
made costumea—even Toby frills and
Claudine collars of chiffon or muslin
can be purchased; in Paislee pattern.
Quaint Paisley sunshades are shown
everywhere with long, old-fanhioned
fringes in a bewilderment of shapes.
Another curious sunshade fashion is
the marabout shade, which consists of
a mass of fluffy feathers and is rather
smaller than the usual parasol.
This is to be used principally- for mo -
toeing.
"Whether the feather sunshade will
beeome popular or not we canna tell,"
said a representative of one firm. "It
is quite an experiment."
A'it'll AL.
tt level.: u 1 laselera
"AMi det v.ife die it natural
deathii?" "
ei.n.„ nese :de. ae• te!i nig alien the ;
tud emu."
Ignorance or Selfishness.
11 is really ignorance which MUM
limey a father aue mother to SAY, s'e
amin ettow how to trein iny eldittrea..4
or le it Piet plain stlfiehneste Is it
becaisee parents do not know what to
do that se many ceileren grow ete
most without training, or is it Menem
the pen -one ere unwilling to itie the
time and strength neeeesary to the
successful aceomplishment of that sa-
cred task': In these Lissy days, it 14
natural euough that overworked fee
thine and mothers should seek their
own comfort in their own homes anti
Fth(lUid "riot want to be bothered with
ehildren," but such parents might well
be periled en their expreenione of eat-
teetion for their •offspring. Love se
aft pot ber own.
"What on earth made your mothei
bring home [.bat bundle of feathers?"
"I'm sure I don't know, dad, unless if
was because elie saw it marked "downe
—Baltimore American.
ENDUES
SPAM
E
Ellis Bone Spavira
Riots Valleys Alla, May 20111. 10G9
"X have used your .Spavitt Cure for a
long time aoil would not be Without it.
'lave killed it none Spavin by its use."
ores CARLSON.
That tette thr *tide story. And
hundreds of -thousands have had the
sAtue experience in the past 49 years.
For Spain, Illughone, Curti
Splint Swelliugs and
di Laments%
Vendall's Spavin Cure tures the
troable—makeri the horse *mind end
w tt4tUut save 9 monsv for the owner
it remotes the taloa a me
tt 01i10.
Kre-p a bottle always at hind- tit,: 0
forf,tiol,et for mon and tetot. Ask
v!tu, tI t r for f eqe 'NW of elor book
Tv,*Itris,.!tni he it,:t Ke" or vet I:ens.
11 ?ILL:MAIL 40. treenne Nee 11.
:prayer.
Our Father, look upon us, it company
of Thy dependent creatures, ell of we
reelpiente of Thy mercy, of more mer -
dos than we can count, all or uecap-
able of receiving Thee into our labarts„
ana of glorifying Thee in our Ulnae
yet all more or 0" condom .of des
paiture from Thee, ant transgressiona
ageinet Thee and on:naives.. We pray
Thee for folgiveneee, for the clear as-
is:.:(rsaeulcite inof oludit.yiznretir elan eTevie, meavV.
lag the darkneen light around us. We
pray than bennn by-, Thy pardoning
1110rdefi, we Rely serve Thee With en-
tirely devoted. hearts. 0 Lord, truly we
are Thy eereistots, Thou has leased our
boucle and set us free for Thy service.
May we find the impulse: and the power
and the pattera of all holy living in
'Teens Christ our Saviour -Brother.. And
we pray that Thy grace with us, Thy
Spirit dwelling in our spirits, Thy wits,
dem enlightening . our thoughte, Thy
commandmeuts written on the. fleshly
tables Of our heart, may all tend. to
make ottr iivt;it noble and blessed, our
characters sweet and peaeeful, Amete
The Sea,
Give me the inornieg twilight on the
. strand.
Its mystery and mitt and fragrant
i°'
Flittingpinhia•ntoms fleeing to the land,
itisinn„ falling searching for -a home.
Plotless, constant, eareseing, mighty sea,
Biding, revealing, glinte of beauty
rare.
How straege that changeless magesty to
Inc.
Whose chaugeful music drives away
my care.
watch to see the stooping morning sky
Touch the uplifted, palpitated sea,
The freshening air brine up a flood of
How deep, and clear, and strong the
minstrelsy.
Now eonies the dreaming haze to veil the
eyes
Of new-born h
born radianee offspring fres
and free;
What tender folding clouds obscure the
p
Of dancing waves and rippling songs of
glee.
1 feel the powers of life on sandy beach,
The mighty eaffs inspire my heart
line, breath;
The waves so old, so new, fresh lessons
.Andbless4 my courage with abounding
wealth.
Of old it knew its bars an a boundary
in
But wisdom knows no bounds, for ever
The soul leaps o'er the cramping stays Of
time.
Illimitable seal My teacher Of Infin-
ity!
The Time is Short.
Timo is tt nilil that grinds to dust, and
yet I am not ground, time is a. conquer-
or, yet I am not captured, time is a
flood, yet I am not submerged.
"Pick my left pocket of its silver dime,
But spare the right, it holds my golden
time."
What is time? It is a gift. God says,
"I give you a chance to change your
mind. Attention, right about, march."
Time is n measured. quantity, the pendu-
lum of heaven measures it. The stars
are the indicators of the movement of
this magnificent clock. From one angle
time is short, from another it is part of
eternity. "In the kingdom of nature
ant an island near the shore; in the king-
dom of grace I am a. small peninsula."
What is time? • Pearls strung on a
golden thread, limited in number, passing
swiftly behind. "Buy us though you
bought not, sale as though you sold not,
hold your wife as -though you held her
not, for the river of time ruts into the
see.
Paul says "time is sheet," yet there
was time for love, time to build a char-
acter, time to do good, time to climb to
tho vettibule that leads to the palace of
the great Kieg. He lightly esteemed
earth beeause he saw the things that are
not seen; the things that he saw were
melting, Melting, going to the vanisbing
point; the unseen things are sure, Solid,
beautiful for evern put kept a whole
ge.neration on the tiptoe of expectation,
not that he aespisea .the beauty of
earth or the joy of light, or heaven in
a woentoes smile, but beettuse he SaaV
overwhelming glory and durable riches
of the world to come.
Good.bye, old 1009. I am not weary,
but hopeful. I am not disgrinitleci, but
disillusionized, 1 have seen the ropes,
the cannles, the cobweb e behind, the
seenes of the play hOtilte. I turft front
satowe to things aubstantial atul enb.
lime. Here eve have no continuing city;
let us be sure that we seek atm to tome.
Ta4 not the angels when they wind up
my estate, those SICOrAtil accountants,
who separate the fish on the shore, let
them not write "banlettipt, to effects,"
hut let them -convoy mete the rikee send
preemee, where I may hear the ‚words,
"Thou beet been faithful over a OW
Unripe I will make thee triter over Many
thlop: enter thou into the joy of thy
Lotd." 11. T. litilier.
A. OMIT SIIVECII.
-(Xtly York Herald.)
Peeing tribute to their dead ruler the
emphasie whieh Iinglislt statesmen plate
on the -Peke of his services as a peao ..
maker is equallea only by the tonfid-
mice whiell they .express itt King Georege
Premier Asquith at, yesterdey's tsessie
of Parliament in Yoking the *Witte*,
of the British people moved hie Iteittene
as ftlie seldom do even in the heat et
eettiseu debate.