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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-10-20, Page 3WHEN EICALTH IS RUN DOWN • A Tonic Such as Dr. Williams PinK Pills is Promptly Needed. Whets the health is run dowu from any cause whatever, a tonic is needed. A feeling of weakness, poor appetite, loss of breath after slight exertion, in- dicates that a complete breakdown is near. Sometimee these troubles nee due to everwork or worry, or again they may be dee to the after effecte of fever or some waeting illness. But whatever the cause the trouble should not be neg- lected, and, for the purpose of gaining new health and UM strength there is absolutely no better medicine than Dr. VS'illiaans Pink Pills, which fill, the yeinie with new, rich blood, tvhieli tones and strengthens every nerve and every or- gan in the body. Mrs, Rose A. Smith, Roblin, Man., says: 'Some years ago I had a severe attack of typhoid fever. When I recovered sufficiently to be able to get about I found that I was not ,able to gather up my streugth. I tried. tonic wines aud other medicines, but without avail. For months 1 could hard- ly go up. stairs, and if I took a svelte I was always obliged to take a friend with me to help me home again. A doc- tor had again bean called in, but lie said I would grow out of it in time and gave me more medicine,. but instead of gain- ing I kept getting worse, and was at litet obliged to take to my bed. One day -while lying reading I chanced to come itaaOSS cure made by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and. this decided me to try them. 33efore I had taken the pills long I began to feel A decided insprovemeut and my friends also said I was begin- ning to loot: like my old self again. Prom this on the Improvement was steady, but 1 ontinued to take the Pills for a eouple of months, when I felt that the cure was complete. Several years have passed since then and as I have remained in the best of health I am warranted in saying that the cure is permanent and I freely give this statemene for the benefit it may bring to others." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or may be had by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont. o THE RIGHTS OF THE SERVANT. A very large part of the trouble which honsekeepere experience in the adjust- mentsof demestie help would he obvi- ated If the first interview between mis- tress and nudd was businesslike. The duties and privileges of the indid should. be clearly. defined. She has a positive right to certain afternoons out, and, if possible, her evenings should always be free after the evening meal. No woman an be expected to work with good tem- per and without fatigue from 0 in the morning until 10 at TOOL Wages should riot be given for inexpert service on the scale which is demanded justly by a WO- mAn who is capable ,ekilful. and efficient. The whole syei tem s set jarring at the outset, because in engaging the maid, nine times out of ten the employer does not £,eem to know what she ought to. expect, grant or pay for. When women learn to manage this department of home life on business principles we shall hear far fewer complaints from both eides.--nfarearet E. Sangster, in the Christian. Herald. •ShI70h Cure quickly stops canals, cures colds. hen/ the throat and hinds. • e • 20 cents. WHEN MAN MAY BE USEFUL. (Car. N. Y. Sun.) The fact that women have the ballot In New Zealand leads .Miss Alice Stone Bleakevell to believe that it is the cause of an increased birth rate and a Decreased infant mortality. But in her letter to the Sun the offers no proof that this happy state in New Zealand Is solely _attributable to women voting. 1 am inclined to believe that man is en- titled to just a little share of the praise. The birth rate has no doubt increased because women vote; no one would dis- pute for a minute, but keeping the cbildren alive is undoubtedly due to the next for they have taken mere of the children when women were attending to the affairs of the State, and the men have probably instituted many import- ant reforms in the care of infants. And I am mighty glad that I can say this, for it shows that man is still of some use and ha a at last found soniething he can de and make a little success of. TIM TUBERCULOSIS PROBLEM. (Farmers' Advecate.) Thre ie no evading the fact that bo- vine tuberculosis'endaugering, as it does, the health of cattle, swine and hu- man beings, must sooner or later be grappled with in a thoroughgoing male ner. .Whiles in £0 far am the question of human infection is eoncerned, thinking Inen still attach considerable weight to the late Dr. Koclee pronouncement, that bovine tuberculosis was a less frequent source of the disease in people than was human tuberculosiseand that there was no authentic ease on record where pul- monary tuberculosis (tuberculosis of the lungs) in man had been demonstrated as of bovine origin; still, the danger of tuberculous, infection from nillk and. meat, More especially the former, is too great to be ignored. One unnecessary ehance with death is one too many. Without wading into a maze of statis- ties and clinical records, let es suggest that those who saw the exhibit of tuber- culous meat exhibited at the Canadian National, in Toronto, last year, put the ouestion plainly to themselves, whether they would care to eat such meat, or eause others to use it? Scarcely leee important ie the eco- nomic loss threatened by the ravage of bovine tuberculosis amongour herds of tattle, and among the swine which fol- low them, or which consume unpasteur- ized skins milk or whey abstraeted from the milk of tuberculous cows. For it should be understood that, even when the udder of a cow is free front tubercu- losis, as it probably is in most cases, there Is always the danger of introduc- ing tuberculoseis germs into milk through the spattering of immure, in which in- fected cattle void the bacili. At all events, it is a demonstrated fact that, at nork peeking plants there is a heavy per- centage of eoudemnations adiong the bogs from dairy sections, and sections where liogs are fattened on the drop - Pings of corn -fed cattle, Many centres of tuberculosis in cattle have been thus traced. back from the peeking plants, and this strongly suggests the expellees- cv of the tagging system recommended, among other means of location, by the International Commission on the Con- trol of Bovine Tuberculosis, which was appointed. a year ago by the American Veterinary Medical Association, and -whose report was synopsized in our news columns last week, with further re- ference in the live stock department this week. Its carefully considered recom- mendations, we trusb, mark an epoch in the rational haneling of this stupendous- ly difficult matter, and we edema every- one to inform himself carefully on every point of its deliverance. Intelligent self-interest, if no higher enotive,, de - mends it. ONLY ONE GRADE OF EGGS WANTED. The following taken from the litera- ture being sent- out to the Co-operative Poultry Circles, gives in concise form the kind of eggs the market wants and how to get them: An egg not over four days old in warm weather and seven days old in cold weather. An egg that has been ga- thered.promptly and kept in a dry plate free from draught, dampness, or any foul odor. On holding a new laid egg to the light it will be seen that the air space in the lane_ end is very small, not larger than -a 5c. piece and. the yolk almost invisible. As the age continues the air cell becomes larger and the yolk becomes more visible. Though some markets may call for sevral grades of eggs, as a general mile there is no necessity for many grades. What the best trade demands is {rosy,- ness, grading, uniformity in packing and regularity in supply. For the present but one grade of egg will be expected, and the following care should be exercis- ed: All eggs must be eleau and un- washed. The surest way to have a clean egg is to have a clean nest and not al- low the hens to roost oh the nest boxes so that the hens will be compellei to lay under the roosts or in unsuitable places, at least one nest should be al- lowed for every six or eight hens kept. The nest should. be so arranged so that the hen enter from the side rather than from the top of the nest box, and. ar- ranged so that the nest box may easily be cleaned. Eggs should never be washed, because FA, MCMJ c.T.4 113RIT511 DM! Royal Naval Club, Portsectouth. To the Zam•Buk Co., Dear SIV51,-I have found Zattft,DtIli. most reliable fori healing outs and abrasions •, wittle for the re/lef of akin Irritation It is Invaluable. YOurs faithfully. (Signed) RODNEY rd. LLOYD. Admiral. How It 11ealed a Terrible Burn. From top to bottom of the great British naval leAder Zara-Buk is known and used. Admiral and stoker alike have proved its value, SEI tilei foregoing and the following show; • Stoker Kingsnorth, of H. M. First OlasS Cruiser " 00ehrane," says t --P One dayI slipped. and fell with nay arm °Ilan exhaust steam pipe, wkdch fairly frizzled the skin. At once the ship's surgeon dressed nay arm, g but from the lint, the burns took the wrong way, owing I to a lot of coal dust and dirt from. the /Ape having got embedded in the flesh and setting up blood -poison. A large scab appeared, and from underneath the festering flesh matter oozed out. I Was in fearful pain and. didn't know how to get ease "For weeks X remained under treatment, but the ordinary obit - merits proved .nn good for my AM. Indeed, X got worse, and became alarmed at the spreading of the poison. I therefore obtained a 'supply of Zarn-llu.k and almost as soon at this was applied X get ease. From the vet7 first application, healing commenced; cuid few boxes of Zaro-Buk healed my wound completely," Ito rod*. in .What occupation or stage of life you may be, for skin injuries sod diseases of all kinds you will find 2,am Xiok it tho latest and best in seientific healing, That is why ib is so popular to.day.. Mothers should see that it is always handy in the home. It is a proved cure for comma, ttleers, abscesses, ringworm, poisoned wounds, totter, itch, bed log, varicose ulcors, suppurating wounds, odd sores, chipped hand's, babies' sorts, inflamed patches, to, 20,01.Dsk is also a specific for piles. All druggists and stores tkt 1500, box or pmt free ftlYill Z1.111-nak Co., Toronto, for price. Reims all inbAitAites and harmful imitations. wanhing remeves the lime from the Shell and allow,: the eontents to evaporate and :deo to tteelmilate the bactetia Henn the The samplesof egge elioutd be ae form as poseible, whiell simply ineene that the very large or very small, -alio the offedutped egge, shntild he used for home eoesumption. If both brown end white-ehelled egns are gathered from one Beek, it helpe the appearanee to sort into color, that is, to paek brown on oee side and. wbite eggs on the other side. In eonelusion, market your eggs while new laid, here them (-lean, uniform in size, .and, if possible, sorted according to color, and eon -fertilized. The two eseentlals are new laid and non -fertilized. The quality of the Circle -depemis en the proance supplied by the individual member, and as a ehain is judged by its weakest link, so a eirele may ;deo be judged by its weakest member. A MISSING LANDMARk, Trouble Its Moving Made for a Man Who Was Looking for His •Room. The heur 1 a. nt., and all silent along tha hall of this sleeping floor in a. sant. nier hotel save for the ozeasioaally heard muffled note of a foghorn'the sound of sou:nobody snoring in one of the rooms; and then preeentls the sound of somebody moviug quietly, almost stealthily, aloug the longhail, and then under the breath, spoken in 4 10W toile: "DevilWhere's that trunk?" I knew that trunk he was looking for well, for it had been a landmark to Inc too, standing in the hall outside of one of the rooms. My room was two dem beyond the trunk on the right, and always when I came up I made for that trunk and then I didn't need to look for my number -my room was two. doors farther an -and apparently he lind beau doing the same thing. Now the trunk was gone and in that long hall there was no landinnek for him, and then I heardhim moving abont quietly, almost stealthily, in the dim light scanning the numbers on the doers and then I heard him set a lcey in a lock and open le door and go in somewhere and shut the door behind him, and ap- parentlyhe had hit the eight room, for then again all was still save for the pace- slOnally liven muffled note of that fog- horn. MOTHERS SHOULD WATCH CLOSELY Diseased Kidneys the Cause of Bed-Wettingi Wellesley Young Man Permanently Cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills, Gives the Public the Benefit of His Experience. Wellesley, Ont., Oen 1T -(Special.) -- That all diseases of the bladder from bedewetting to gravel aro the aireet results of Kidney Disease, has been prov- ed again. and again by Dodd' s Kidney Pille. They cure the Kidneys and the Bladder diseases speedily disappear. One of the latest proofs comes in tae expert- euce of Mr. George Strebel, the well- known harness -maker, of this place. "I was troubled. with bed-wetting for many years," Mr. Strebel says. "The doctor could not give me relief and no one knowe how I suffered. I tried many medicines, till in January, 1905, reading the experiences Of others led inc to use Dodd'a Kidney Pills. Nine boxes cured me so completely that I have never been troubled since." Mothers should learn that when their children are addicted to bed-wetting it is time to look for the cause. The. Kid- neys are the cause. Cure the Kidneys by using Dodd' e Kidney Pills, and mit only stop the bed-wetting, but ward off serious and dangerous diseases in after life. 300,000 BABIES. There Are That' Many Under Three • Years Old in New York City. There were 122,976 babies born In five boroughs of New York last year. This figure is exclusive of imported babies, of which there were many, but they were offset by the export of babies to the ceuntry, which is equally heavy. Of these 122,976 babies, 5,171 came only to depart at once and 15,976 failed to survive their natal year. So it is fair- ly correct to assume that there are about 300,000 babies In the City of New York between three and feta, years of age. Where are the babies of New York? What industries do they foster? Who supplies the hundreds of t housands of nursing bottles and teething rings, and other abtruse articles of which the bachelor wots not? What proportion of the babies are mislaid in a year, and where are they taken when found? These questtons and a score of ethers eorne smarming about at the thought of that great helpless army. The average baby under 1 year old consumes about forty-five ounces or milk a day. This amount increases with the Manger of advancing years to about two quarts, and half a million quarto is coneumed by the babies of New York In the coerse of a single day. And how much of it is pure milk? For the cow's 'milk, the answer rests with the Health Commissioner. Da Ernst J. Lederie and Dr. Josephine 13aker of the Chnd Ilygiene Bureau of the Departmeht of Health have done much fOr the health of the infants of New York City. Where ere the babies of New York? repeata a 'writer in the American Baby. Some of them spend their days In the day nurseries, of which there are eighty- four in Greater NeW 'York, Sixty-three ar in Manhattan and take care Of about COO children every day. At the Stuiny- side Nursery, 221 West 104th street, More babies are cared for than at any 0± the fOrth e rise' s t babies, Police need - quarters was once their gathering place, regardless of age, or previtios condition of pettedheas or servitude. For thirty years Matrort Tra.vers Was substitute Mother for all New Yerk's babies. Now this time honored arrangement is changed. Rabies under two. If hitt, are taken at once to Bellevue Hospital. Babiee over two yenta' Of age are keat at the Various Mations where there are police matrons until nine ceelock at night when they are dent to the charge fef Spa Walsh, Cif the SOMety kr the Pre.. mitten of Cruelty of Children at the ,eoroer or room avenue and Twenty third street and delivered over to nurse the !satiety now has twenty-one nurses, and in a room full of dots and lounges on the ground flair a nurse 18 in attend- ance through the night. The roam is crowded On Saturday nights and the nights of big pitersdee or an utinatal celee bration. But Only a very email portion or the bast children are bablem. -N. Y. Sun. STILL WAITING. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) The leading Mall had urged the eta to marry him. She shook her queenly puffee. "No. George." he said. itt a VOlte thnt was vibrant with mph:We. "that would bo folly. In thei present Mato of the drammer woteulan't cutlet on the mese giving lie anythiug leiter*then a four - line item with a eneline head. We must wait net't thcre*e enneethtuie itt it tee Me" The lading man admitted the farm* of the argument and the waitieg still gene an. HOW SKIN:FROUBLFS ' HAVE BEEN CURED FT.11.8.10 0.1011.10.0: Remarkable Record of Itching,. Burning, Disilguring. Eruptions :Successfully Treated. That theze wee) have raaarcd e."ng end kopelessly teem, eezehie raid real, ;ertiglea disfiguriug cruptioee ef tee :ela end i.teie and who lives Let ielitit 1.t I:11 dianlue treatment, may 1141P.: that tea,-; Way tu. :431(limmalluer. lief, tee rein:wine ternareahla scrim of ceralmed testeeeniel., W. II. White, 912 E. Cebot St. Knee- to ;vele a mass Of 01-141411. fetifkIng simply intleaceibehle far tb 'Ion„.e. yeare. Iled to bleed reit ; health was undermined ewe elek ee ;key, Outicura Remedies cured it without a mark. Mrs, M. Ci. Maitland, Jasper, °ate itchy Tub, on her baby's IIC'e.d alien lett terve months old. it epregel over erala. body. Put Mittene .en Mau to pievert teareig able. Reduced tO 4 Sittleteil. 0110 bah with k.titt- cum, Seep and am:lie:Won .6: talcum. Oita-. merit soothed iea to :hem A :Ingle 1.,f4 cured elm, clew wool bare, eau but for (Melee. Jennediee. Mrs, Wm. Mune Lee Fairmount Ave., Newaik, N. J.: ie helo body a mass ci law, torturing eezc With Wow! v.'crq5. Rah all iell mt. end cars gamed ready drop off. tictieng would Lack to biceding tiesei. Moped ileath weuld men end ',ranee. sintering. Cutleura ltenlealee cooled tact ;tell- ing, bleediiia. tieen cera ;eel sOua Lem. Mine. J. II. Renaud, '47 7, W.:name Montreal; 'treated by dottas 46 years sor bad eczema, an leg, It.. veth3d train loin down; foot like. rew flesla aoetor adyierd center,lee cif. Decided to try eutieure remedies eel. In two months' Les of Ceti - cure itemedies Fite wee cured. Mrs. Nora Fmniott, efe Lena •Garclens, brook Green, Legatee. little gide lad dreadful eculp tumble. that doctors called ringworm. Vied wait Lerma netting. Hos- pital treatmelit gray frightful pain but did no geed, angered three years,_ etnee by three sets of J.. utictaa Soap and Qintment. II. A. Iarutslialla 6714 Wabash Ave., Chicago; Itching eruptionepread from hautte to body. ',Realty tore his acin 01±111 shreds. Doctors and remedies aid no good. Cuticura Soap, °Unmet and Pills stopped itching quickly and cured dietaxe in three wecice. Frank Gridley, 825 11. 43rd at., New York: In twenty -lour hours he became taw from head to foot with a dreadful burning itch. Suffered agonies and could not lie down or sit up. Cuticula Soap and Cuticure Ointmeet cured birn in a eingle day. Mrs, 'Nate Broughern, 20 Dewey Gt., benniugton, Vt.: Bath mane on her beba and seen aimed to watery, crusted eczema over face, heed and body. lie was a fearful sight and all attempts at cure were fruitless. Vastly improved in a wed: by use of Cuticure Remedies and scion elein aas clear and healthy. G. J. Dance, 27, New Road, Breetford, England; Tortured tor O .. ro ..airs with bud :skin disease. Attended hospital five :maths without success, -Covered with ertietion. No sleep nor rest. Felt like tearing larneelt to pieces with terrible fie:hinge With lira aprel- cation. of Cuticura Ointment was relieved aria got good night's eleep. In a fortnight Cut!. cure Ointment cured hen as Eby maga. ticura Soap, Cuticura Ointmerit, Cuticura Resolvent and Cutieura Pills are raid by dreg - gists. everywhere. Send to Potter Drug Is Chem, Corp., Boston; Mass.. for free 32-pego Cuticura Beek on eloo diseases. "REFORMATION OF CRIMINALS' KEYNOTE OF WORLD'S PRISON coNortEss.. etripee or tread the loakstep. and tile whole werld Ittg roe Ines hotter. The eeugrees ircete (awe every five year% and tile;:o if,1 110 more eoe- . Ittopelitan gathering on earth. The last meeting wes in Perla. It was only tbeitty year or ete age that (hear Wilde wrote of the Brit - Leh prisons where little children were penned up with innederernespiaces. where "4 all fergot, wo rot and rot." Twenty years has ehaned all that. The modern prison is not a place of herrore to winch offender's ege seat for punishment, but an inetitution for reforming erhaileais and turning them into honeet men. There are write new words in the eession toeday, word," whieh five years ago at Paris etood for vaeve reforms toward which eriminotogists wore groping, but will& to -day represent definite 'pronagandas which will be written into the etatute books of many nations before long. One of these is the "Indeterminate sentence" and a great deal is being fold on this subject at the congress. The indeterminateeentence will be a revolution in criminal procedure. It n,eans that all offendere found guilty will be cent to venom not for to many yoars, menthe .and days, but indefinitely,their release to be in the hande of governing boardsof who will' determine when the of- fender bas beecine nolonger it men- ace to society. Another topic attracting much dis- Oussion is the parole system, in which America has, talcea the lead. The congress will night unanimously favors a parole, which releases tho culprit olt 1113 'seed behavior. Dr. Chas, R. liendereon, professor - e! eoeiology at the University of Chi - cage, is the president of the congress, DR. CHAS. R. HENDERSON, President Prison Congress. Washington. -Twenty years isn't a long space irt a mare's life or a na- tion's existence, but the last 20 years has seen more real prison reform than all the previous history of pen- ology could show. Delegates from every civilized country en earth are in -Washington to -day attending the opening session of the international prison. congress. The new national museum building is a Babel of many tongues. But no matter what tongue they speak in, these courtly northerners, gesturing southerners and impassive orientels have come to tell that the prisons of Siberia are more humane than that on Blackwell's Island; men no longer go mad in French island penal colonies; the English knout and lightless dungeons have joined the rack and thumbscrew on civili- zation's junk heap; af Leavenworth prisoners no longer* wear degrading CURES Added to the Long List due to This Famous Remedy. Glanford Station, Ont. -"I have taken LidiaE.Pinkhara's Vegetable Corn. pound for years and Dearer fOttIld any medicine to tompare with it. I had ulcers and fall- ing of the uterue, and doctors did inc no good. I suffered dreadfully. until I began taking your medicine. It has ale° helped other women to whom bave recomniended it." -Mrs. Mora' CLARE, Glanford Station, Ontario. Gardiner, Me. -"I was a great suf. ferer from a female disease. The doe, - tor said I would have to go to the hospital for art operation, but Lydia E. Pinkham's 'Vegetable Compound com- pletoly eared me in three months." - Mrs. S. A. WIT.,trAets, It. P.D. NO. 14, Bolt 1;0, Gardiner, Maine. Because your ease Is it difficult on, doetors having done yott no good, die not eontinne to suffer without giving Lydia i. Pinkham's Vegetable Com. pound it trial. It surely has cured many easeri of female ills, midt as- in- k in tea i011,11leerati.011, displacements, tilo old tumors. irregularities,periodic rains, l tick:elle, that biettrnktiown feeling, ind1t.Aion, dir,rinecs, aud ner- vous pith -N. -4.1(m. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result is worth mil- lions to nttimy suffering women. 11 you wait Alyea' advieo write foritt oMrs.11inkbamiLynn.Maal. It le free and always1io1jCuI.. Is Your Circle of Neighbors Connected by 'Phones ,, abut oit No. 1317 type TtIepboe Set,which bas heas clay developed at a cost of 10,e00.- to :meet tht coedit ono teaks* varah your local eyetan le operettas, end we tbeatere poet 6egni vo. our fee wee, whlea futhr elescribee tels tetepeone. IF NOT WHY NOT a ,e lett ell! ac intereated in rer, send us your name awl cur beta entitled "How c address and tell us that to Build aural Telephone ai, PA M j..40 0. you want Bulletin P.le. Lines," Ibis took Olio ' \lea . la. at ',1'eae it 340a4 we wet rerward an ebeet bow to organize to 'feu by the erta st 011 a Trlenliene, Oerapany ' aftee.'6*/ PREZ welch cen be -owned and Witb the bete Viet tles operated bY Your own cm:insular-- book gives you, yon will be. sure bow to proceed about line construe- prised to teem bow little mit g tem. roles. line Wire, installing of telephone system wouta cost, iaanuaents, etc, MANUFACTURINGCO,mra Mannfaeturcr and suppliec of an amiantus sal equipment marl FA the construction. operation end nalniciance et Tolestone 51ro Marra andElentno Hallway PlantO• • • .AdarOso our =oast houuo• MONTREAL. TORONTO WINNIPEG REGINA ' CALGARY VANCOUVER SEND FOR CATALOGUE THE DUKE OF OPORTO, Who with the King, the Queen Mother, and the Dowager Queen, fled Lisbon on board the Royal yacht Amelia, and is now at Gibraltar. The • Duke is a brother of the assassinated King Carlos, and uncle of King Man- uel. ihkrVt\\\ The best premiums and the hest values ever offered. Gold and SliverWatches, Gem Set Rings aud Breeches, laughter -producing Moving Picture Machines, Finely Decorated Tea Sets and many other premiums given FREE for selling our high class Gold Em- bossed Picture Post Cards. Tho very latest designs in VieWS, Birthday,_Floral, 1101Iday, Comics, ,ac., ate for 10e. Sell $3.00 worth and 'win one of these fine premium. You ean 16 sell them in an hour or two, but don't delay, for we _give an extra premium for prompt- ness. Write to -day and we will send you a package and our big premium list Come with the crowds and get the hen prat gams offered. Write your name and address very plainly, COBALT GOLD PEN CO. Dept. 220 Toronto, ...e.e.os Women Strikers in Paris. The Midinettes were again on the war- path to -day with as much ardor as ever and greatly annoyed at the idea thee the police should take any notice of them or insist that order should be ole served in the strecte by women as well as by men. At 10 o'clock this morning a large procession of the girls, usually known as "petites mains" and "confec- tionneusese with searlet revolutionary ribbons in their hair, started out front the Leber texchenge in the Rue Chateau - dun, and crossed the Piece de la Repub- lique. The crowds alt onee stopped to look on, and people exclaistencl, "Here they are again! See, the Alidinettes aro on strike!' The public seemed to enjoy it, and trams and 'buses were unable to pass. By the time they had marched half a mile their numbers had swollen from 200 to 500, mid about an equal ninnber of hangers on and street urchine followed as far as the Boulevard Sebas- topol. .•: it was apparent that the .objeet of the girls was to storm se big shop on the other side of the Rue Reaumur, but the difficulty was to does the boulevard. The polite force had been increased by one member since yesterday, and two stalwart blueeotets stood on the opposite side to prevent the processiori from. pass- ing. They vsere less severe toward the girls than yesterday, and simply map shelled them Itt small groups on the pavement. lf they promised to keep the neace they would be allowed. to pass. They walked down to the shop which has excited all their wrath ami stood en the pavement opposite, "cox:spathe' the owners and managers. "Shut up the shop!" they shouted. "Down with the .nutriager!" The employees of the shop crowded to the `windows end seemed to enjoy the demonstration, whieh was easily kept within limits by four pollea. men, who stood on the street, watching the pftleeedillg8.-4'arii e0freSp011iteltt London Daily Telegraph. A CONTINUOtne PERFORMER. (Philadelphia, Record.) "Are you monied or unmarried?" ask- ed the eress-queetioning lawyer. "Unmarried, several times," replied the female witness from Chicego. The learned counsel was aneoyed at trieg interrupted, so warmly exclaimed: "I' shell epeak, sir, as long as 1pleaselk 'You ha ae already spoken, sir, longer than you please:" retorted the other sideee-Blue Ball, E have just issued the handsomest Jewelry Catalogue ever published in Canada -and it is yours for the asking. Ca, It contains 132 pages of illustrations in colors, of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware, China, Cut Glass, Leather Goods, etc. 01II, We prepay all delivery charges on every article purchased from us -guarantee safe delivery -and cheerfully refund the money if goods are,not perfectly satisfactory. RYRIE BROS. LIMITED Diamond Merchante. Jevvelers and Silversmiths 134-136-138 Yonge St. Toronto JAS. 11YRIE, President. HARRY RYRIE, See.-Treas. 11244111111 abialtri :0,141111M11141011 Fifty Largest Cities of U.S. Show reat Gains Here's the List Up To Date; Just How All the Big Burgs Stand in Uncle Sam's Census Book. Washington, D. C., Oct. 6. -Here's the now 1910 alignment of American cities. - the 50 largest centres of population In the United States, with the number of inhabitants shown by the liew census and the percentage of increase over 1900. • The first 40 are shown with the official figures of the new census, Uncle Sam's .compilation for the rest is not yet com- plete, but a careful estimate is given in each case. Here they arc: 42,181288833 2288..77 1,639,008 19.7 687,02e 19.4 670,085 19.6 560,063 46.9 653,455 9.7 633,905 31'.3 44653,772 2 016 a30..0 2 2 373,857 31.1) 364,463 11.8 347,469 41.2 339,075 18.1 331.069 18.8 267,779 29.7 248,381 51.7 233,650 38.1 224,326 27.8 218,149 .84.2 214,744 31.7 213.381 69,4 116881:459478 2474..26 12574:284309 2762:23 133,605 23.7 129,867 27.3 127,625 60.1 11225:260002 1139:24 116,577 36.6 112,571 28.6 106,291 11.9 104,839 14.1 10002:202524 43.7 98 915 236..98 San Antonio.. ,. .. , 81.2 The tn-g 0± 01! over 100,000 100,000 populatiort have not yet beett re- ported and the World Almanae estimates for 1910 are given. These cities will. take pproessiteiloitristointitshoeigtal.bove list impossible to New York., .... .... Chicago a a a Philadelphia .. .. - Sc. Louis.. Bent011.. . • • • • • • • • Cleveland.. Baltimore.. Pittsburg.. Detroit.. .. Buffalo.. Milwaukee.. Cincinnati.. Newarica New Orleans.. Washington.. .. Jersey City.. a TOR R.I. City. Mo.. .. Indiartapolisa Providence.. Rochester............ St. Paul.. a Denver,. .. .. Columbus, 0... Toledo.. .. .. Atlanta.. .• Syracuse.. New Haven.. be •• seranton- Ric:111mnd, Paterson,. Fall River• • .• a *a Dayton. .• Grand Rap'ds.. Lowell.. .• .. • , • Cambridge.. Bridgeport.. Albany.. Ilartford• • • II • • • • • • Estimate Cities.. .. .. 1910 1900 San Francisco., a a 50000 842,782 Los Angles .. 325,130 102,479 Minneapolis.. .. 310,000 202,710 Seattle.. 230,000 204,731 Louisville .. 290,000 204,731 Portland, Ore.. .. .. 276,000 90,426 Mertnehisa a 200,000 102,320 155,000 102,555 worcester.. .. 144,470 118,421 St, Joseph, Mo... 130,000 102,973 These two lists combined, give us the probable to largest came. aithought there are good chances that Tacoma, Wa.; Spokane: Salt Lake City; Nashville, Tenn.; New Bebtordl, mass.; Trenton, N. J., or may get close to or above the 100,000 mark, thus displacing' Hartford, Sall Antonia or Reaeling. For the 40 cities for which the cOunt has been coximietedait will be noted that the rates for individfual cities iaary wide- ly, ranging from 6.5 to 81,2. High rates of incresase are riot con- fined to any one geographical section of the country. Ot the mac clties with rate of increase above 40 per cent., two, Newark and Bridgeport, are eastern, three, Riehmond, Atlanta and San Aonio, are southern; and four, Detroit, Denver, Kansas City and Celembus, aro scattered in the middle west, two east and two west of the Mississippi river. On the other hand, of the three cities with the lowest rates, two are easten and one middle western. The extraordinary percentage of in- crease shown in Nevv York city exceeds that of 30 other cities shown in tare above group, and Is exceeded by only eight of them, The New York city eate, how- ever., has been maintained at its present high point for two decades, and may therefore be regardea as a normal rate for that city. The obvious explanation of fails condition, of °our% is tho fact that New York absents such a large per- centage of our immigration population. quickly stops cousiks. camas colds. heals the throat and lar.ds. . 25 cats. TOURING ICELAND.' Iceland! The namn Iteelf is a barrier to tourist travel. But let the tourist ignore prejudice and embark at Copen- hagen or Leith, and he will find a de- lightful voyage over the maillaig summer bea if he .sirould go during June, .July or August. Rea will be hardly more than two days out of sight of land -the far- reaching rock-bound cost oie Scotland or the snow-e.rownerl peaks of 'emend - but the journey acmes will occupy about four days. ;nor hits arouseamrit the &W- ahine wilt tumble, the whales will spout, the seal wiii swim, and tbe seabirds will fly, aand there Will be glorious run - rises ane sunsets, with hardly more than two homes of night interveniree When he finality reaches Beelana. he will Reis the sun set about late o'clock, and rise again shortly after la o'cleck, the golden glow of the sunset mingling with the tromen glees. Of the sunrise. All these daligbt can not be. a:mural to the winter travelled- /0 zeetene. en fact he will bet obliged to keep his lamp burn- ing until half Oast ten In the morniner, rind then to light it egain at two o'clock In the afternoon..-afts. W. le. crarets, in TIM Chrlatian Herald. ammorramoil000mmy at Mail to be that the dirtiest, and hardest Work e a woman lied to do about the house Was, polishing the stoves. "Mack Knight" Stove Polish hes made it no akesaa''saeaaaa. work and no miles at all, aee. "Mack Tatiight" 15 5 stilooth paste, that is anted azzaaa-aa ensily with a cloth er brush add ehines like a black dial:toed after s±* gentle rttb5. It tithes as I t pal ishes-kceps the stoves freelt traaaa end bright, with almost as little trouble ite asaae. polishing one's ithoce, roe. buys; a big Cita Of "Meek lenight." -at your deter', or stet postpaid on 26 rec±Ipt0ftriCe, Rig 7.7. DALLE to.t.amte. HAMILTON. o Ms 0I Ike.b000le;IM SIM tei AXLE is the turning...161rd to eeonorny hi wear and *iv of wagone. Try *box. Every tic tier evetralzre. Tho Imperral 011 Co. y Ltd., °Awls Aston Ttepocel Cliat all tie Lide SMALL THINGS ARV. BEST. Hearts gooti and true Have wishes few In narrow cireles. bounded. And hope that Uvea On what Goa gives. ie Christian hope well founded. Smell things ere best; t le f and unrest To rank and wealth are given' Put little things On little wings Bear little souls to beeven. In W. Faber. HOT STUFF, ( Toro p t o Presbyterian.) To ilinstrete what we have said. The PreeCut theatrice: sealant was opened in one of the so -celled .high classthe - alms el Termite with it piece entitled "The Gill in the 'Taxi." The paster seld that it was, exccodingly mirth-pro- vekieg-and excellent quality. But what was the cluuneter of the humor? The arswer may be foiled in the following .liescription et the play taken from the Toronto World: It is the torridest thing that hes appeared on a Toronto tagP, and if ;my ladles happen to see it they. may be moved to.- follow the example cf eome wbo left last night afar the wend att. tbe seene of wine)" :A a XtW York house of assignation. The dialegue is full ef double man- hig when it ie not.direerle salatilene." A .fe NV NV< eks nfterwarde the lame- theatre ainioner«1 "The Cliri Mom Rector's." This is One of the ma Ittetione whieh made the New York Atage infa Moue a year or mare ago. It wile included among is number of pleys whose plot was out- lined in the American "Megazine at that time and which was eeathingly condema- ed RS an outrage upon deeeney. WINNING GOD'S REST. God cannot give us of His best to•cley• without our help. For Clod's best bless - fug for any child of his always ineans that that one takes some part iu fulfill- ing or briuging to passthe blessing. hlusele growth means muscle exercise. God does not stultify or degrade us by permitting us to be only passive recep- tacles. of Ills goodness; in Order that his power and love may reach their full fruition in us He provides that we shall join our energies to His omnipotence. So. this means that we must do something about it. to -day, if the day is to record te high-water mark hi God's blessing of our lives. It will eali for definite action ty in some direction, n,nd it will call foe self -repression, self-sacrifice, self -death, at the same time. All this is hard; but what is any blessing worth unless it is at least partially earned? "God has. His best things for the few Who dare to stand the test. God has his second choice for those Who did not have His best." -S. 5, Times. FOOD FROM VARIOUS SOURCES. The Gospel of Christ is a fact; has been a fact for almost nineteen hundred years, and no amount of laughter, of scorn, or of unbelief erns dislodge it from that point of vantage. The question as to the claim of Jesus is not involved in the question of fact. The gospel is in the world and will remain. All of us most of the Hine and most of us all of the time, are influenced more by the heart than by tlie head. The affections furnish it stronger motive to the will than the intellect in most of our decisions. Logic leaves the field to the affectious. For this reason the warn- ingisb given: "Set your affections on things What breaks a, heart with grief for sin? The gospel of Christ. It is a fact. What fills a, soul with joy under the con- sciousness of forgiven sin? The gospel of Jesus Christ. It is it fact. What con- soles the broken heart when the last hope vanishes and a bereaved soul be- gins to walk life's way alone? The gos- pel of Jesus Christ. It is a fact. "Preach the Word." is no idle vapor - fine It is a solemn command. No flock .will, no flock can, tolerate anything short of obedience to it for a long time. It is the "Word" preached that the Spir- it uses to have the dying and guide, comfort; mid edify the saint. There is a hungering more or less tstrong in ev- erybody that the "Word" and the "Word." only can satisfy. All experience is the same: "The Lord is the strength of my life; the Lord will give strength to his people." We have the sttre word of God. When Jesus was assailed, His answer in every case was, "It is written!' Our foundation has this hiscriptiou, "The Lord knoweth them that are His." God is near to us and is aecessible. It is in His holy temple; Be is in the place of prayer and hears the call of His distressed ones, the prayer for help of His tried ones. There is no doubt but there would be a greater disposition on the part Of the drinker's family, and the drinker him- self, to attend, the public worship of God if he spent his money at home and for his home. A reformed husband and father moans sunshine to the home, and the grateful family will have an espee- lel reason for .expression of gratitude OS God by a public profession of His name. Every argument that supports the sa- loon opposes the eb.urelt. THE SMOOTHERS OF THE WAY. "She always made things easier," was the tribute paid a little while ngo to a, quiet won= not unteh known outside the, four walls of her household and in tt eharity of two, but who left an aching void behina her when she paseed on httle the larger life. No .one knew her -cella help recognizing the simple completenees of the statement. Proiu her husband to her housemaid, everyOne itt the .fairtily felt his or her daily way smoothed and straightemed by her taet and system and gentleness. She was it living -example of George Eliot'* taying: "Whet do We live for if it is net to make life less difficult for eke another?" To some girls am women perhaps tbie eveme a small need to live for, Yet that it is so often approttehed makes the hope and happiness of home. Life is intritus- bigly difficult. inereasingly eemplek, in many tommunities to -day. The bus - nand, the eirildreu, the Mende, of the woman who, "Make.; thinge.easier,"111ore and more vise lip Mkt ran her blessed. Her wotk is werth living .for, beeauee it coutinually makes every ilte within its Nile tox e .t bettt r worth liv *nee And wben she is gone -how rugged the way, how heavy the burden, witheut her gentle ministry! We hema greet deal vowed:tee stout the. -stiperiltiolle women, e'01110 laallela 5 cf women's welt; nuty veretowded-lut never, never. eutely, the high ecatIoe of the emoother ef the way.----lierper'e Bent