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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-06-16, Page 3447-N. v The weekly droppinge of a floek. *ay, 25 hens, when tamped from the Mooting platforms, should be mixed with *bout eight pounds of Welk or Reid phoephate ana a half peck of sawdust. If one desires a balanced fettilizer for corn and other hoed crepe, a mixture of equal parts of kainit and add, phos- phate could he used Instead of either alone. Good dry nieadow muck or peat would be equally as good as savaluet, if not better, to use as abserlient. Freeh peultry manure at the present values of fertilizers would be worth 60 cents. per 100, Figures from different experiment stations woiud give the pro- duct of 25 hens for the winter season of six months as 375 potuois from the roost droppings alone. Poultry manure la especially adapted es a top dressireg for grass because of its high content of nitrogen in the form of omenoula eompounde, which are nearly as quick In their effect as nitrate of stela. A ton of the menure preserved with eaw- dust and chemicals would. be sufficient for an acre, when compered with a chean- cat formula for top dressing. On the same basis of comparison, 100 fowls running at krge on an acre should in a ammeter mason of Mx months have adeled to its fertility the equivalent of at least 200 pounds of sulphate am- monia, 100 pounds of high-grade acid phospbate and 60 pounds of kainit. In France parts of the careass of a fowl can be purchased in inarket—legs, wings, or any part wanted. It is a good plan to work the same horses side by side without change as much as possible. One home soon be- comes accustomed to the other's ways, and both win do better work when the team is seldom broken. Horses of a team should be stalled elOge together when it is convenient and they are agreeable. A mare that produces a strong, herathy foal every year is worth double the money of one equally as good every other way that produces a foal every other year. This is ebaracteristic of some mares. When a breeder gets one of the latter kind he will do well to get rid of her at the first favorable opportunity, unless he wants her for general use. A cow (lees not come to her highest and best flow of milk till about the fourth week after freshening. During these first weeks of lactation she should not be given all she will eat, and part of the feed should be of a laxative nature. She may be placed on full feed at the end of the fourth week,•when the flow will be at its best. The cow with her first calf may not come to her fullest and best flow of milk until the fifth or sixth week, owing to the fad that bringing forth young for the first time is a more severe physical strain than later in life, hence a longer time for redavary from the weakness caused by gestation will be required. For this reason the young eow corning fresh should be fed and eared for more carefully than older cows at the same period. A cow dc's not need much room, but she should have enough space for com- fort when she is lying down, The stall should be wide enough so that she can move with ease from side to side when she evis,hes. Where the head is confined °in a stanchion there should be enough freedom for a cow to move her head and neck, and for reaching hay end other feed, for two or three feet from the centre of her head position. Give plenty of room behind the cows for the attendant in milking and cleaning out the stable. The Missouri Experiment Station sum- marizes the value of the silo as follows: Silage keeps young stock thrifty and growing all winter. It produces fat beef more eheaply than does dry feed. It enables cows to produce milk and but- ter more economically. It is more con- veniently handled than dry fodder. The silo prevente waste of corn stalks in the manure when silage is fed. The silo will make palatable food of stuff that eaould not otherwise be'eaten. It enables the fanner to preserve food which matures at a rainy time of the year, when dry would he next to Inv, reelable. It is the most economical method of supplying food for the stock during the hot, dry periods in summer, when the pasture is short. The laying hen is not apt to become overfat. Nevertheless, it is a mistake to keep her on a diet of corn, expecting her to manufacture eggs froxa that article. Corn is no egg food. *- • WHAT NEGLECT 010 FOR HIM Jas. E. Brant Suffered Torments from Kidney Disease. "Then He Used Dodd's Kidney Pills and Became a Well Man—His Experienee a Lesson for You. .Athabasea Landing, Alta, June 13,— (Specia1a—That Kidney Disease, neglea- ted in Its earlier stages, leads to the no terrible suffering, if not death iteelf, and that the one sure cure for it it all stages is letald's laiduey Pine, Is the experience of Mr, James E, Brant, a farmer residing near hem. eft. Brant contracted Kidney Dim - cam, when young man, from a strain, and, liko host, of others, negIectea it, evpeeting it to go away itself. But it kept gladuallie growing Verse till after thirty year of increasing euie, feting the climax came, and he anind himself so crippled that ot times he coula not then in bed, and Mr two woke at a time it was impossible for aim to rise from a their without put. ting hit heads 01 his ktees. lie eould net button his -clothier. Ile was trembled with Lumbago, Gravel mul Ilackaeleo, and tried YuNlieinel for each end all of them without getting itltet, till gmeel hula tune& Isim to Dafti's Kidney Pills. Dodd', Kidney Pills etetrted at elte esottee of hie troubles Ana eurei his Kidneys, With eured Kidneys hie other teoubfee spetellie disappeered, and to- day he is a well man. If you QUO yolir ICidneye with Ihodilei Rainey Pins you will never hare 'beg°, Rheumateen, Heart Dieeasit, Drossy or leright'i Diseset. CRIPPLED BY IIHEUMATISIV Suffered. Tortures. than "Fruit -et -Wes" Took Alway Tim /Mao "Frutt-a-three," the famous fruit Medielne, is the greatest awl most scientific remedy ever alecovered for libetunatism. "Fruit -a -Goes," by its marvellous action, on the bowels, aidnoys and skim prevents the accumulation of Uric Acid, which causes Rheumatism and thereley keeps the banal pure end rich. Urs. Walter limper, of Hillview, Ont., says: "I suffered from severe Rheumatism, lost the use of my right arm and Mild riot do my work. Noth- ing helped me until to "Fruit -a - ayes" and this medicine cured me." If you aro subject to Rbeurnatism, don't wait until a severe rata* comes on before trying "Fruit -waives." Take these fruit tablets now and thus prevent the attacks. "Fruit-aetives" is sold by all dealers at 50o a, box, 6 for $2.50, or trial box, 25e, or may be obtained from Pruit-a- tiVes, Limited, Ottawa. Will Gov. Iludhes Harvest IIis Alfalfa? Will that luxurious crop ef whiskers be sacrificed to uphold the dignity and precedeuts of the supreme bench when Gov. Hughes takes his seat among the world's greatest jurists? Whiskers and judicial robes have nev- er mixed well in the United States Su- preme Court room. There seems to be some sort of unwritten law that forbids GOV. HUGHES AS HE WILL LOOK ON THE SUPREME BENCH WITH HIS WHISKERS CUT OFF. the interpreters of the constitution from covering up their chins. There have been a few violations of this law, who came in for more or less censure. When the late Justice Brewer, whom Gov. Hughes will succeed, came from Kansas to the bench, he wore as fine a- bunch of populistic whiskers as that State ever produced, but, quickly taking a broad hint, amputated them, and from that time on was one of the smooth faces. Moustaches do not come within provisions of the law, hence Chief justice Pullet, Justices Day, Lurton and Holmes sport downy decorations north of their upper lips. JustIce McKenna goes even a trifle farther and attaches himself to side whiskers. The main point is: Will Gov. Hughes rocognize the fact that whiskers and judicial brains, as exemplified by the Supreme Court, do not mix? • e• AN ORGAN FOR 25 'CENTS A WEEK We have on hand thirty-five organs, taken in exchange on Ileintznian & Co. pianos, which we must sell regardless of loss, to make room in our store. Every Instrument has peen thoroughly over- hauled, and is guaranteed for five years, and full amount will be allowed on ex- change. The pricearun from $10 to $35, for such well-known makes as Thomas, Dominion, Kern, Uxbridge, Goderich an Bell. This is your chance to save money. A. port card will bring full particulars.— Hein(zman & Co., 71 King street east, Hamaton, '• DAIRY COW QUERIES Departroent of Agriculture, office of tho Dairy and Cold Storage Com- missioner. What is the object in keeping a cow? Is it simply to consume the crops grown in the fields? Is it to Sapply home-made fertil- izer for the farm.? Is it to give the hired man another chore? Is it not rather to produce plenty of good milk? To be of real service to mankind by converting feed that he cannot utte into nourishing, appetizing food? While being kept for this purpose does she earn a profit? Data she pay for her keep? Would you be better off if you sold the feed instead of keeping some of the cows that you now have making a pretence of using its profitably? Does each ono of your cows pro- duce milk at a cheaper rate, pet hun- dfed pounds than the factory payse Does each eow in your herd pro - dues milk or butterfat at a goocl pro. fit, above the test of feed? Do you think so or just make a guess at it, or do you know for ter, tain? How else is your labor to be paid fore Do you keep recordso as to find out these things, or aro .you eontent to keep a, few poor 0OWS in a behind - the -times style? Men 'who need to get only 3,600 lbs. of milk and 133 lbs. fat per cow, are now getting 4,960 lbee of milk and 186 lbs. fat, ailICO beginning to keep reeords. Would you not be glad to obtain a similar increase of (ever 40 per cent.? Then keizo eecords. A TIMELY TIP. (Limeineott's.) Little Prother (who ha; just been given sorsa tautly) --If I mare you, ishouldn't take sister yacht:rag this after - b00% Ardent Suitor—Why do emu tety that, Tommy'? 3A11. I heard her tell mother this morning that she fearal ehted haee to throw TOla ever. Ttlf WHY SCOUT. In the -days ef Indianfighting on the weatern plain's two eeoute nem going to a dietant, fort, taking a mes- eage asking tor hela ter a milli Iry post that was 'being attacked by dm redskins. The country moo So- open and there were sa znany ravine bands of Indians .that the seotits had to ure the utmoet care or eke, they would. be cauela by them In .the day time if they dared travel at all it was usually -on their hands and knees no that no prnwling In - dean could see them. At night they would hurrv done carrying their ,boots„ as in their gawking feet they made less noise Several time band e warriers passed near by, but by lyina flat une der the bank of the river they had escaped unseen. One day they were resting behind a little mound covered with a few dry brush just as a party of Indians halted near by. let the same time a rattlesnake crawled out of hie hole beside them. They were in trouble, for if they moved to kill the •snake the savages would hear them and if the snake struck them it would first shake its rattles, which would call the savages. Then one of the ecouts had a happy Lhought. The snake was near hull and es he was chewing tobacco he instertly spat= at the snake's head. Such vile stuff was too much for his snakeship and away lie scurried into the hole again without once, eounding the warning rattles. The Indians soon went away and the scouts .finedly reached the fart En safoty. CONTROL YOUR THOUGHTS. Stop that thought. lt was in your mind all day yesterday, and it made you perfectly miserable, Over and over again you passed through all the unpleasant scenes, heard all the cruel words that were spoken, suffered again all the painful feelings, and succeeded in spoiling the day, unfitting yourself for your work and destroying all happiness out of your heart. Are you going to continue it all day to -day; and by so doing waste more of your life in the foolish, if not insane, habit of tormenting yourself now because someone or something made you unhap- py in the past? That though has no right in your nand. You may think you cannot stop it, but you eau, as it is only "a bad habit you have fallen into, and you must break it, or it will break you. You must get the mastery of your own mind and the control of your own thoughts, and while it will be the hardest battle you will ever have to fight, it will be the most glorious vic- tory you will ever win. To be a slave to unpleasant thoughts Is the worst kind. of bondage, and sometimes leads to insanity; but to be able to think on any subject you please places your happiness in your own hands, and -gives you a sense of power and independence which is not only delightful to realize, but which enables you to develop your character and shape your life according to your own choice. When you begin this work, • never shut yourself up in a room alone to brood or pray over your sorrow, but, do those things which will make you forget it; live In the open air as much as possible; get acquainted with the birds; watch the deeds; study the flowers; talk to the streams or trees, and make compan- ions of the wonderful works of the loving Father, which will help you out of yourself into the broader ' and sweeter life which they' live. But if you cannot do this, have. a book near at hand, and compel yourself to read e few lines or ri, few verses; visit a friend; do seine work which demende close attention; study a pleture; and whenever the hateful, tormenting thought presents itself, turn your back on it and your attention to something else till you can say to its "Not at home."—J. M. Holmes. 4,., Even in charity one-half the,world doesn't know how the other halgives. •••••••••••••••• AIM•41101101111011•10 Mi. M. Earn% bost Moreau St., Montreal, says: " A horrid rash came out all over my baby's ace and spread until it 'h Id totally covered his scalp. i' It was in tating and pairdul, and =ceased the little ote Immo of turiaring. We hied soaps and powders and salvee, but he got no better. Ile rekted his focd, got quite I thin end swan, and was reduced to a very 1 urines conditiere / was advised to try Zoollalt, ona did to. /t was woriclerfut hew it teemed to real and ease the child's Y burning, plaice] shin. Zam•Bult from the t very commencement seemed to go right to idle spot, and the pimples and sacs and the tirritation grew !eat and Ices. 'Within A , few weeks my beby's skirt wee heeled .eomeletely. Fie hes tow not a trece of emelt; or eruptioa, or ectemit, or burnitg 'tiara Not only an, but cured of the tor- !menting sain trouble, be Las improved In *eentrel health," 3 7.illt 1.33k il mid at ell stores and ineditica Wei z 1 ri, see, A hex, or retq fire froin Zint.11ok Co it ri.r.Nnte, r) pt ire, 6h tztef et El so. A. tet rein rtn4 .• 0114: .8 881.mt 1,4 rem burret, *tee ale rorgeli WHY BACKS ACHE he Kidneys. Seldom to Blame— The Trouble CLIC to Wood Impurities. There is more nouseitee talked about backache than inty other &ease, irlome -people have been frightened MO the be- lief that every 1J:weed:el nnane dewily kidney trouble TIM is utter rubbish. Ali a matter of ecieutifie fact, uot one Intekache in twenty has anything to do with the kidneys. Most baeleaelles come front sheer weakeeta ane aidevey (huge can't pussibly cure that. You twee some- thing to brace you up anti give you new strength, and that ie exactly what Dr. Williams' Pink Pale will ao. Qom backadies ure really muscular Acme- tiem, and Da Williams' Pink Pills have cured the worst caeca of rheumatism by driving the poisonous itekl out of the blood. Other backacht s are tile symptoms of .ordinary ailments suelt as influeuza, indigestion, vonstipetion and liver complaint. In women baekaeltes often come from tee troubleathat follow SQ surely on any weakness or irregular- ity in the usual blood supply, The one way to cure these backaches is to etrike et the root of the trouble with Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pills, Which enrich the blood. and bring strength to aching backs and weak nerves. Mr, Alex, Coeleburu, Deloraine, Mau., says: "About three years ago I suffered terribly from back- er:he, I .consulted a doctor and took his medicine, and wore a plaster, but 014 not get the least relief, Then I got a belt, but this was as useless as the other treatment, and my suffering still con- tinued. Then one of my friends asked. me why I did not try Dr. • Williams' Pink Pills, and I got a box, Before they were all used there was sem im- provement in my condition and I got three boxes more. By the time I had taken these ail the signs of the pain bad gone, and as it has not since return- ed, I feel that the cure is permauent. hay only regret is .that 2 tikl not hear of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills sooner, for not only would: I hem got i•id of the pain sooner, but would also have saved some twenty-five dollars uselessly spent in other treatment." 'The Williams' Pink Pals are sold by al dealers in medicine or may be had, by mail at 50 cents- a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr, William' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. Eye -Strain and Headache. One of the commonest causes of of chronic headache is eyeatrain, and doetors cen say that in 50 per cent. of the cases where headache is a persistent symptom, a visit to .the oculist Is the prescription they recommend. These headaches vary greatly not only in char- acter, but also M position and intensity, Sometimes there is only a slight dull pain, or a feeling of. weight and heavi- ness in other patients the pain rimy be superficial or deep. it may be frontal, temporal, vertieal or occipital, and even situated in the bade of the neck. The most common seat is the frontal region Immediately above the eyes. In, many cases a patient complains of pain in or about the., eye such as a dull ache at the bade of the orbit, a burning of the lids, a soreness M the ball of the eye, and so on. This probably leads hire na- turally to consult an oculist, but there are hundreds oe cases of ocular head- ache, which gloe rise to no special dis- comfort hi the eye, and years of suffer- ing may be enaured before the real cause is discovered. But even in such cases there is one characteristic that should_ give rise to suspicion. When the pain is almost always brought Oil or intensified by the us o of the eyes, it Is probably due to eye -strain. This us a point of great importance and should be carefully noted. Does your head ache less when you do no reading or writing? Is the pain brought on by gazing at shop windows? If so, you may suspect. that the real cause lies in the eyesight, and that you require either glasses or a change should you already wear them. Queen's niversity and College %ANrGsz? ARTS EDUCATION THEOLOGY MEDICINE SCIENCE (Including Engineering) The Arts course rnay be taken without attendance, but students desiring to grad, uate must attend one session. There were 1517 students registered session 1909-10. For Calendars, wri:e the Registrar, _ GEO. Y. CHOWN, B.A. 54 Megaton, Ontario. Mother Shipton. .Among the odti: ones that have ap- peared. from time tO time very few have lingered more persistently than Mother Shipton, who made a prophecy which was first published hi 1488, ana was reviewed and widely circulated in 1641. The Needier thing about it is that all the events predicted hove come true except the one relating to the end of the world, MOTHER SHIPTON'S PROPHECY. Carriages without horses shell go. And accidents fill the world with woe. Around the world thoughts shall fly In the twinkling of an eye. 'Waters shall yet more wonders do; . Now strange, but shell be true. The world upside aowrt shall be, And gold be found at root of tree. Through hills men shall ride, And no horse or ass be at his side, Tinder water men shall walk, Shall ride, shall eleep, Moat talk, In the air men MIMI be seen, Trt white, in bleak, in green. Iron in the water shall floae As easy as a wooden boat. Gold alien be found and found. In a land that's tot now known. Fire and waters shall wonders do, lengland shall at last admit a dew. The world to an end shall mule In eighteet hunardd and eightymne. Cueing a Oratate. - TR it itt the leg? Does it come in the night? It may be easily relieved. Simply have e good strong coal. Then you are ready for the tamp. \ellenft COttleR wind the cord around the place. Wind it rather tight, then give wit rata it ilia* pull. Viet will relieve the (lamp, whielt will net come on Again the same night. tea a permanent ClIre of the spesine rine should ga to a physician. It deem% eneke arty differe0e how goal Imainess is, the pusheart YeIlaft ‘11,1Witri running bellied. Illobby.florses For English Cavalrymen When the Englishman enlists for the cavelry he is as apt as not to know as little about a hot -'e as he does about squaring a cirela sometime hem Ile hal to be teetgat bow to sit on e horse while the animal is walking, and how to Stick on hios when he treh up n bit, ENGLISH; RECRUIT ItioUNTED ON MECHANICAL HORSE. The embryo cavalryman takes hie first lesson in riding on a rocking-horse:The mechanical steed is said to provide most of the sensations yieldea by the horse of flesh and blood and none of the dam egers. Its bead is hinged, and so cun- ningly fitted with springs that its rider soon learns how to "feel its mouth." The wooden charger has been official- ly named Backache, the reason for which is clearly apparent to the new rider after an hour's experience with one. • 0 "Love Makes Fools" Ng Poon Chew, editor of the largest Chinese newspaper in America, lecturer and student, says: "Marriage is a seri- ous business of the head and not a light affair of the heart. China is not a land of love or lovers. Our marriages aro arranged for us by our older and wiser relataitvesd 'leo not believe in love, for love is not the greatest thing in the world. It is not even a thing Or substance. It Is simply the product of an idle brain, the outgrowth of a drowsy mind. It is ineonstent. Love is a symptom of a dis- ordered brain, as a nightmare is a symp- tom of a disordered stomacb. It is is NG FOON CHEW. deadly contagious disease; for it turns the strongest head and makes the wis- est man a fool," But Poen Chew declares that he loves his Chinese wife, adding, "you see, I've lived in America about thirty years, and maybe that's why." 4: • 0 FAMOUS SAYINGS. "His baptism of fire."—Xapoleon tostumgepnreesis4Eutitsge jneine. i1 Jose ph Bonaparte, the prince imperial of Prelim under the reigii of the last of the Napoleouic em- perors, was the only child of Napoleon HI. and the Empress Eugenie. He receiv- ed his "baptism of fire" at the "little combat at Saarbruck." then on the Prus- sian frontier, June 1, 1879, while in the British servite, he was killed by a party of Zulu's in the Cape Colony district of South Africa. Xo less than seventeen Wounds, whicIt were inflicted 'by the na- tive assegai, were found on his body. On page 407 of the first volume of his "Memoirs," Gen. Grant thus refers to the present Brig. -Gen. F. D. Grant of the United States limy: "My son, accompanied me throughout the campaign and siege (of Vicksburg) . . He looked out for himself and Ise was in every battle of the campaign. Ilis age, then not quite 13, enabled him to take hi all he saw- and to retain, a recollection of it that would not be pos- sible hi more mature years." Prince Louis Napoleon was 14 years when, in July, 1870, he atcompanied his imperial father to the lines of the French army, which was massed in and about Metz. Near at hand wore the trained legions tet Von Menke's. Germans, who were (Waited soon to eliange the current history of France. "The prima imperial's health semi' imoroved by the change of air end the absence of his troop of professore," wrote a Metz correspondent *nr.4. "At the frontier he saw two dead.bod- les and lie picked up a spent bullet. But the emperor, at the dose of a Mx hums' ekirmish nt Searbrack, Which was then the nearest Prussian town to the Ereneh line, sent the following dis- patch to the empress regent at. Parist "Louis has received hi; baptism of fire. Ite was edmirably eoel anti little impressed. A divaion of Froaeardet eommand earrka the heights overlook- ing the Saar, The Prussians' made a brief resietance. Imes luta I were in front, where the bullets fell about oe. Louis kept a Lall he picked up. The soldiers wept at lik tee nquillitye 6,106401.1t..AA .1.. NOT E() BAD. (Louisville Courier Journal.) "You don't alumna to =ea" "Tut, tet, f eoula paddle my OW:1 ranee at your did. I do natty wsli f a it rick ineree e In. I min ciorate too own meter boat." 'eV some of the advantages No Heat Except Where Needed Dishes hot—food well moked—kitchen cool. No undo rdo-no food—no overheated kitchen .in summer.. Everything hot when wanted. Heat un - dei' perfect control and concentrated,. The blue flame is all heat—no smoke—no odor—no dirt, These are in using the It has a Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot. Drop shelyea for the coffee pot or r3.a.ucepar..s, and nickeled towel racks. It leas long turquoise -blue enamel chimneys. The nickel finish, with the bright blue a the chimneys, makes the stove very attractive and invites cles.nliness, Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-bUrner stoves catj be had with or without Cabinet. CAUTIONARY NOTE: lie sure you cet thls slove.-See that the name -plate reads NEW 1,213FECTION." Every dealer everywhere; if not at yours, write for Descriptive Circular to the nearest szency of the The Queen City 011 Company, Limited, Toronto. Illiasiegeme• RULERS LOOK LIKE TWINS. CZAR =NICHOLAS. KING GEORGE V, No other two of the world's rulers resemble each other no close- ly as do the Czar Nicholas of Russia and King George V. of England. They might be twin brothers, but they are only cousins. Their mothers are sisters, daughters of King Christian of Denmark. The King and Czar will tip th e scales at about the same figure, and they both touch the five feet six inch notch in height. Their facial resemblance is wonderful; a Russia n roleht easily trade -rulers with an Englishmen over night and one w ould hardly know the difference, for they are alike, too, in temperament Both are fathers of large familiea. The King has six children and the Czar five; the King has five boys a act one girl, and the Czar four girls and. one boy. e a • ataa eta "JUST KIDS," "Want a job, eh? What can you do?" "Well, I kin spit atween my te eth furder dan any kid of my size." BOMPOI•00.1.1•11, Cana Ian Made Ndoiatuloubt you will agree that if quality and price are equal every'Cana should buy Canadian made goods in preference to any others. Xot only is it patriotic—it's sound common sense. The matey spent for Canadian goods goes to build up Canadian industries and prosperity, and tuakeS it easier for every Canadian to earn a good living. On the other hand, tnoney spent for foreign blade goods goes out of the cotattry to pay foreigners—not to benefit Canadians. Toilet and Medicinal Pr parlstions are compounded in Canada from the purest ingredients tylnelt money cart buy. The National Drug and Chentieal Company of Cattada returns to Canadians itt employees' salaries, dividends and other expenSe disbursements, close to 4)no Million Dollars a year. In 'addition to this we spend millions every' year in Canada for raw materials, tine, bottles, labels, bores and other simpliee, giving einploynsent to hundreds of Canadian tinsmiths, g•IaSs workers, paper makers, printers, lithographers, box makers, and others, tao even if NAeDRU-CO goods =were only "just as good" as them imported frOM other countries, you would be following a sensible and 'patriotic course in buylog them. As a natter of feet, though, NA. Preparations are better than those Talcum Powder, NA -DRU -CO Crease' Tasteless Cod Liver Oil Compound or paration, and Lae for youteelf. . Volt riele aothiug in maleina thea teat, for if the le7A-DItte-CO eo totiele does tot entirely seamy )(Alp ratline it end your druggist w1:1 refund your moray.. Dier-CO Toilet aria Medicival imported. 1.`ry NA -DRU -CO iss Toilet Cream, NADRU-CO any other XA-DRU-CO pre - National Drug and Chem of Canada, Limited. cai Company Halifax, tt..1.4.1.,s, Montreal, Ottawa, 1:11.tinten, Termite, Ltienezah, Leman, lairotioce, Iles;es. Calsary. Nelsen, \ ancomver. Vietoria. 111•••• .40.11,1. XING (11.:01tGitl. In truetful love we chat, God save Great Britain's xinio tAod bless .King George: )ot timee who meek thy face Thy 'amnia% WC entbra,00; With WI41701», strength mid game,. God bleee iiug George. Upoti the einem also That preciou$ gift bestow All else Above: Thrnugh them Thy will deelare, That by Thy guardian We They may together share The Empires. love. And bless the subjects all Who at their Monarch's. call May. serve the State: 111 puipose wise anet strong *Unite the counties/ throng, That Ile may reign for long; God bless King George. Through comiug years of peace May righteousness inereftee And truth ithouud: Weile men Thy name revere ,And know that Thou not mar, May loyal love sincei'e The throne surround, Crentlitast, Out, Watson. WHAT MUST WANTS, Is there nothing that Owlet, as your blend, your Lore, your Saviour, wants you to do that you are leaving undone to day? Do you 'doubt one instant that it is HIS will that you should honor and help and bleat all the men about you who are Hiabrethren? And are you do- ing anything like that? leo you doubt one instant that His will is that you should make life serious and lofty? Do you doubt one instant that kb wants . you to be pure in deed anaword and -thought? . And are you pure? Do you - doubt one instant that His command is for you openly to own Him, and de- clare that you are His servant before all the world? And. have you done it? These' are questious widelt make the whole matter clear. No, not in quiet. lanes nor in bright temple courts, as Once He spike, end not from blazing aertvens as men sometimes seem to ex- pect—not $o does Christ speak to us. And yet He speaks! 1 know what He—there ill all His glory—He here in my heart—wants me to do to -day, and I know that 1 am not mistaken in my knowledge. It is no guess of mine. It is His voice that tells ma—Phillips Brooks. ADORNMENT. It is said of Goldsmith that there are no part of human learning that he did not touch. Here is depicted a stand- ing mark of human activity. It is kill on men to adorn—you build a house, you plaster the walls. That does. not add strength, but finish, You build a ship, you paint her. You do net add to her strength, but you add to her beau- ty. How many follows nature—utility is studied, so is beauty. The perfection of adornment has fallen to this after sex a long time ago. In my earlier youth when travelling in the Orient, I once saw a beautiful Greek lady in the streets of Constantinople. leer beautiful head of hair was riehly embroidered with gold foliage work and if there was one gold spangle, there was two hundred and fifty, the size of a gold donee. At a 'moderate computatiou, the worth of the gold was five hundred dollar. The word adorn is found eight times in the Bible, and five or six times it has reference to women. Servants (Titus 2, 10) we re - required to adorn the doctrine of God, Our Saviour. The doctrine must be held, established and enforced, not by hard logic, or with rouga hands, but it must be adorned. NieliY? Because you serve others, and instead of another! The reason why more men are not Christians is because they do not see the beauty of the Lord, reflected in the followers of Christ. It is good to prove a doctrine true, it is better to cause it to be loved. The human tongue is God's great mis- sionary; the human face is God's great mirror. "Behold in a glass the glory of the Lord, we art changed into the seine image, froni glory to glory as by tbe spirit of the Lord." When artists tell us that there is over six hundred ex- pressions in the human eye, and more than a thousand in the human mouth, what wonder is it that men are stirred up as to study—and few excel? We call love by the name of wisdom when it acts; we call wisdom by the name of love when it thinks and feels. From the very beginning the Creator laid the foundations of the earth in beauty as well as in strength. He em- braced both in the same harmonious dm sign, and wrought them out, through evry geological period by the same artis- tic means. "BIessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." There is no window so dean as the lines of character, spirituality of mind, purity of heart, singleness of aims, The best man by 'virtue Of his holinese, enjoys the closest communion with God ana the dearest insight into His providence, "No man liveth unto himself." If you are a servant of Christ, you are here in His stead, to share His temple, to 'breathe His spirit, to show forth His love. You are here to proclaim the great doctrine of reconciliation. You are are your own. You are bought with a price. You are the servants (slaves) of Christ. He holds you by right of con quest and of purclutse; and the beauty of your life is to 'nevem the attrac- tions of the cross! "Let the beauty of the Lord, Oor Goa, be upon us." la T. Miller. .41.••••••• The Modest Christian. (Apologies to W. J. L.) He never blows about what he knowe, Cuts no carts in the papers)? Doesn't want to show The whole world how to go, Ana, and, and say! What kind of a man is he anyway? Ms record is Matter' from view, Of what be has done or will do. He seem to be always saying "Coulee' Come to the heart below, Where heavenly currents He smilee and points the way, To the realms of mediae day. And when we do not bear him pray, He still is making plain the way. We sta him beckon, "Come tietay." ---IT. T. Millet Beeline ill a On t. "So." saki Miss Sharpe, "this is rate diamond engagement ring, do Whoa Mr. Cheepley gave thie to you it ma" have flattered you." "nattered titer (NOW MiRt 111111. "Yes; you knew, the* say eimitietion is Om Abide -tett Mittel.'» —Catholic Stantierd and aims. - --J.- .2.-