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The Wingham Advance, 1910-11-17, Page 3•OFP • TREE GROWING. Forestry Branch Will Give Advice aud Beed. _____ Why not grow your own maple and atilt trains for youreelf, if you want to Melee forest plantatione, or even to plant Ithade trees? Anyone who has had any experience in gardening eon do One Witheut difficulty and the trees, when they time to be planted, will not have to meet the risk of a long journey bY railway and possible delays which maY injure, or even kill timin. TIM Voreetry Branch of the Department of the In- terior will gladly give aelvice in the Matter, and even send the aced free, a$ long a$ their supply holds out. Thiss recommendation ia Made in the Runnel report of the Superintendent of Forestry, which forms part of the an- imal report of the Department of . the Interior, lately issued, One caution must, however, be given. The seed used should always, if possible, be that taken from trees grown in the Canadian Northwest, Seed obtained frone the eastern provinces of the Dominion, or even from tbe prairie states, rannot be depended on to produce good, :hardy trees. , A recent experience of the. Forestry Brandt gives good evidence of this. In 1906 the crop of ltatuttoba maple seed was a failure throughout the °median prairie provinees. The supply of seed for sowing the following spring had to be obtained from Dakota, and this was duly !own in the spring of 1907, Trees which sprang from this seea were sent out in the spring of 1908, and Many reports have been subsequently received of these having been badly f‘winter.killed." In some eases tate en- tire tree, roots and top, wae killed dur- ing the imvere weather; sometimes on& the tops were killed. Usuailly the Manitoba maple has been found a barely tree in almost every part of the West, that so many have died in, this case la doubtless clue to the fact that the seed front which they originated wee obtained from xegions farther south. Some years ago the 13rancik had a similar, though not so dis- astrous, experience with elm seed ob- tained in the east. Sometimes, of course, when the supply of western seed fails, seed from the east must he used even 'with the accompanying risk of failure. The work of the Branch in the free distribution of trees continues to devel- op. The number. of trees sent out from the Indian Head nursery has for several years remained practically stationary at' about two and a half million annually. The capacity of the nursery has been al- most, if not quite, reached, and if treee are to be distributed in greater num- bers eitler the present nursery must be enlarged or new ones will have to be established. The number of applicants for trees has considerably increased, namely, from 2,- 010 in 1909 to 3,173, in 1910 (nearly 00 per centO At the sante time the average liumber of trees to oath applicant has had to be cut down; in 1908 the average number of trees sent to each was 1,400, but in 1910 only 800 could be sent toi each applicant, In 1009 the number of new applications received was 2,235; in 1910 the number of these was 3,832. Many other interesting facts regard- ing., this and other aspects of the fores- try work of title Dominion Forest Ser- vice are given in the report mentioned. Copies may he had free of ebarge on ap- plication to R. II. Campbell, Superinten- ---,sae-- allis,..es, .41'..ra ..."*"..n 5 10 8 iffri c Quickly stops condhs, ClIre3 colds. heals the throat and lends: . . . 23 eepts. 0 • 40 A CROP THREE THOUSANDFOLD. Mrs, Gentry. who lives in an English village, dug out a pit in the corner of her garden. She put half an hush of soil between One grain of wheat, which she placed in the bottom of the pit, and the sub -soil of gravel. The top -of the pit was about one yard. across. This was done in. March, 1909. After a few weeks, tho grain had half a dozen ehoots, from then till harvest the sprout- ing grain was covered over and over again, until the pit was leveled up, and a grass of wheat clothed the whole of the yard -wide circle. During the winter this small crop of wheat remained quiescent and last spring It began to grow rapidly, growing beautifully through the summer until a few weeks ago, when it was ripe for cutting. Mrs. Gentry gathered her wheat crop, cover- ing an. area of six vinare feet. She had in her harvest eighty-five stalks of wheat; twenty ears were of large size and the grain of good quality; fifty were of medium size and a little beloW the a eerage in quality, while the remelt': ing fifteen were unripened. There were in all 2,800 grains.—Ferdinand C. Igle- hart, D.D., in the Christian Herald. PERHAPS IT'S HER ONLY CHANCE (Roston Transeript.) Arthur—Are you sure she loves you? Jaele—Yes. When I told her I had no money to marry on, she asked me if I couldn't borrow some, loc=n1 Is==ra CpLoosing Christmas Gifts in Without Worry is possible with a " RYRIB" Catalogue. You cart select suitable gift artioles just as setisfactorily as by visiting our *dere. ft We guarantee disk delivery —pay all postal and express eharget—and immediately re. fund the money if goods are not. satinfitotore ill Send kor Catalogue S at ono° endisitensill unnetetsaey worry. IN =I C::=1 sr= RYRIE BROS. LIMITED etnneret allikethenta Jovielers mkt Stivertntits 114-13e YONC: ST. TORONTO utant. mon. Evans, President, Sea -Tram. Ili= c;4= .4•••••• •••• COLDS BREED CATARRH Ber Terrible Experience Shows Now Peron Should Be in Every Home to Prevent Colds. Mrs, 0, Ss $age r e 1311 Wood- land Ave., IC a, s as Clty, aloe writes: "I feel It a duty tO you and to others that may be ale dieted, like myself, to speak f o r Peruna. "aify trou- b le first eame after la gr ippe eight or nine years ago, a gath- ering in my head a n d neuralgia. I suffered most all the t I e. My nose, eara and eyes were badly affected for the last two years. think from your description af internal eaten:II that I must have had that also. I suffered very severely. "Nothing ever relleVed nle Ince Pee rune. It keeps me from 'taking cold. "With the exception of some deaf- ness I am feeling perfectly cute& am forty-six years old. "1 feel that wordie are inadequate to express my praise tor Femme." Catarrh in Ittad Form. Mrs. Yennie Darling, R. F, D. I: Smyrna letills, Maine, 'writes: "I was unable to do my work for four years. as I haa catarrh In a bad form, 1 coughed inceesantly, and got so weak and was conalned to my bed. "Femme came to my relief and bY faithfully using it, 1 am able to do mY work. Feruna is the beet medicine that I ever took." Mrs. C. S. Sagerser. WHERE LITE IS EN‘JOYABLE, Delightful Hakeits and Customs of Cers tain Places and People. Denmark claims that there ig not a single person in her domain who cannot read and write. On one northeast coast of New Guinea, the Island of Kettaba, surrounded by a wall of coral 300 feet high on one side and hewn fifty to 100 feet on the other, maintains thirteen Til- lages of natives,- to whcon war, crime and poverty have been unknown since the beginning of their titaditions. The most peaceful and comfortable comment- ity in Europe is the commune of the Canton 'Vend, in Switaertand. Nearly everyone is well off and there are no paupers. Finland is a realm. 'whose inhabitants are remarkable for tbeir inviolate integ- rity. There are no banks and no sane de- posits, for on such setturity is essential. You Inity leave your taggege anywlhere for any length of time, and be quite stire of finding it untouelion on your refeorn, and your purse fatt„sethapoo.ey would be just as secure under dinner circum- stances. The Finns place their money and valuables in holes in the grounn. and cover them with a big leaf. Such treas- ure is sacredly respected :by all who pass it, but, in the rare agent of a man wishing to borrow of his neighbor dur- ing his absence, he will take only the smallest sum he requires and place. a message in theihole telling of his urgent need, promising to repay the amount on a specific date. And he will invariably keep his word, for the Finn is invincible in his independence. Agneta Park, near Delft, Holland. is another Utopian example. A' tract of ten acres hes upon it 150 'houses, each with its little garden and with. certain ceremon buildings and common grounds. The houses are °coupled by the em- picyees 'of a great alistilltag company, wt.° lona a corporation which owns the park. Each member owns shares in the, corporation and pays rent for his house. The surplus, after all expenses have. been paid, comes back to hint as divi- dend. If he wishes to go envoy or if he dees his shares are bought up by the cor- r.oration and sold to the man who takes his Mace. likks quickly stops coudhs, cures colds. heals she throat and lunds. e 23 cents,. - Or • THE NEW COUNTRY SCHOOL. The walls and the ceiling they're orgy- ing, They're scrubbing the -woodwork and the floors:, A istream On the blackboard is playing, They're boiling the desees and the dOors; The old water pail has been scalded, A cup ror each lassie and lad, And no one may drink, as we all did, From that old tin titmice. we had. They've Cleaned ever pointer arid termite, The ink welle are serubbed out witb Iye, The bOoks and the slates are made. sterile. The• old well Is filled up tend dry; The girls have to wear, veiny -limy, • A. button which beam this Bald reign: "The line that touch germs or baecillt Are lips that will never teach mine." The dunce cap 10 boiled. every morning. (They've the irstlividua2 kind!) The trent aoor itt set with this warning: "Who enters here leaved' germs behindoe leeo apple is smuggled foe sharing AR was on the schootenys of yore, Until thee've made siert* the Pateng And quite disinfected the eore. Alas! The raid pump is ellseartled, And gone in the flight of the years; The drinking fountain is guarded By the Antl-germ Cetenadierst The vines from the windows they're strieetne Leet germomeeding itioectS rnialt stay. The eaves and.the rafters are (tripping All wet with a sterilized sprey. Cal come, In tbe Joy et the morning, What secrete of tithooltlayS tell,. That thiek teseng vapor Mites Warni That Teacher is boning the hell. Itts time for the B Class 1:x Scrubbing. The A Claes Is eot out to eool Trom its recent boiling and rubbing -1 lairee rimers for the Sterilized Selo:nit —./. W. Poky, In Life. Railway Station Becomes Garage. The &inversion of a reilway statical into garage curious. This, *trete African Engineering:I, his occurred at a South Afritan town, troll...Whitt'. owinte to the progress the motor ear, tratne have Netted to run, and the tatatime there ham, with invisive irony. Neer give en over to the howling of eelf-proJellet1 vehicles. The bookieg au.k. other ,,ffieeoe 1,04 GARDEN or THE BEA. Submarine Lift of the Harbor of PoN Galore, in the Port Valera is one of the most beauti- ful ports in this part of the tropics and when tne Wands are developed will be one of lig great sow places. There an two entrances to the herbor and bath are remarkably pretty. Rugged bluffs alternate with stretthee of gleaming white Mathes aud the water is clear as (Tyke', Cotoaullts and fan palms line the shore and the scenery is distinetly tropical, Meng the beaches lie a series of 'wonderful see pardon'. There are coral strimturee of almost every shape and design imaginable and aroend them are gardens ard groves of sea plants ana trees. Through them play hundrede of colored fish, some of them brilliant blues, others deep purple, others whits with eurioue Mack end yellow stripe& The wonderful clarity of the water per. mits a perfect view of all this submarine life. Under favorable ciremostiteees the bot- tom ean be scan at sixty feet and at lialf that (listeners ether the water is still the smallest objeets may be plainly seen. The coloring, is wonderful. ilile sand is almost pore white and above it are the greens, !Antis, reds and yel- lows of the coral plants and rocks, and these effects are furtlier heightenea by the wonderful penned. Bah that play around, Alen who have seen tbe $ea gardens at Bermuda, the Behanote and Catelina declare that those of Port Galera are quite as wonderful and marvel that they are so little known. Governor-Geuerel Forbes visitea the port some time ago and so interested bas he become that he has ordered -a glass bottoM boat, in which he intiends to make a more thor- ough exploration. Port Galera is ninety miles front Mean, and although it is close to Verde Island Channel, is not visited by many steamers,—Manila Times. las ' A Rule for Spelling. It often happens that the easiest way to do a thing is the wrong way. The story is told of A man who had, great difficulty in spelling words that had '"ei" or 'le" in them. One day a irked offered to give hint an infallible zule for such eases. "It is a rule," he said, "that in 47 yeetis has never failed me." His friend expreased hie delight and waited. The man resumed: "The rule is simply this: Write your T and exactly alike, and put your dot exactly between them."—Washing- too Star. PLANK FELL ON HIM 101amplempElmmy. Hamilton Man Badly Injured Reuben Atherton, of 3E7 Ferguson a.ve- nue, Hamilton, an employee of the Otis Elevator Company, sustained serious in- jury while at work. A plank fell from a height on to itis right foot, crushing it badly. Ile was taken home, where Zion- Buk was applied, with good result. Telling Ms experience of the Wino he said: "Aftey the doctor had dressed the damaged foot with stone preparation of his own I was in great pain, and as day after day 1 seemed to get no relief I left off medical treatment and tried Zam-Buk. From the very first appliea,- tion I traced an improvement. Zorn- Buk really seeme.d to act like magic, cleaning all the unhealthy matter from the wounds, drawing out all discolora- tion, inflommation and soreness; and started healing in quick time. In two weeks the toe and foot were well again. Zam-Buk Balm is certainly a wonderful healer, and I would not care to be with- out a box in the house. Won can use the above statement in any papers, books or publications, as it ma,y lead some oth. er eufferer to use Zarn-Bule and get relief as 1 did." All workers should keep Zam-Buk handy. Applied to a cut or wound, It stops the pain, commences healing, and —what is equally fige—it prevents all possibility of blood-poisouing. Zam-Buk is equally good for skin diseases, and cures eczema, itch, ulcers, abscesses, vari- cose ulcers, scalp sores, abscesse,s, vari- ete. It heals coldt, cracks, chapped hands, frog bite; eures piles and all inflamed conditions of the skin and tissue. Fifty omits°. box, from all druggists and stores, but avoid imitations and substitutes, some of which are highly dangerous, and rione are beneficial. 4> NAMES OF ENGINES. Give Place to Numbers in the States, but Nbt Abroad. When the railroads first broke their way through the prejudices of our fathers one of the forces behiiid them, as opposed to those prejudices, was the romantic affection for the project that every builder has for his work. In no way was this more 'dearly. sheiwn than In the naming of locomotives. By and by this land of the proseic, of figures, of standardized parts, aban- doned the flowery nomencletture of the old days, and in place of the Thun- aerer came the 999; the Geheral was succeeded by some such bald fact as the 140, and the thousand meri who worked upon a siftgIe engine reade engine parts that would as well have fitted the 909 as the 140. But in the old world, saws the Rail- road Man's Magazine, standardleatioit of netts, rapid building and pooling of engines were not allowed to rob the mighty flyers of all their romance. In their names is still reeorded the popu- lar worship of some soldier idol or glori- ons battlefield or loyalty to a leader or ruler. The Sebastopol, Inkermari and Alfit were sticeeeded by the Tel-el-Kebir, Ateicraidria, . Omdurman and Atbara, which lave in torn given plaee to the Baden-Powell, Ladyismith, alitfeking, Sit George White or Kimberley, while sueli naneee as Beatrice and Princess of Wales pay their tribute of popularity to the reigning house. Even the first of that most unromantic of all Memo- tiveS, the oil burial', was elevated into the Petrolea. In fad so minaerous are the named locomotives that considerable ingenuity is required in the invention of new names. The Great Wmaern ite now drawing upon the Mall kitten), end Hyaeinthe, *Lobelias, Garcienies and other delicate blown's% are blooming smokily alotig its right of way, while the eights ef earth end the angels et' heeteen have long ago been drawn upon to the point of exhaustion—Nutt exhauetion of the loenmotive builder's familinrity with them. - oieee 'lea a hara orld," said ihe aiiietor who felt that he Was not nppreciated. "Yen" replied. the ealtseatie. Ilse world would be meth (eviler for oar linkucee and the waiting rooms are nowilused RA if it could hs‘e been mesh. tif rubhrr workshops and storer-mra I and iallated."---Washingbn Star, r,1 filTP1 '71/P nee johrl Tyrrell Scrdeltedlintil lioreilie t "It woe in the ilattar end of the year 1003 thet 11aety !tell came thseuga pay slan, attd ecratehed :t until 1 tore the ilea tried FeVz*rui ointments to no efinet. I went le a skin hospital, They advieed me to go to Om Hoipleali bat fused. I could not deep with the coneteat itch. was that way until o about the month of naouary. Goo arty I dimmed to see in the papera a Oa Ae lVf.0 mine, but I gave it en ereximee. At last I mild, '1 will fly Cuticura ificeneelies..' With the art,: Wash and Outicura. Ointment X 'eon, I feiund their effects. I got one box of the Ointment more, and in lees than ono week the skin was all right, and left no traces after it. have not bad a return of the salne since, and shall always praise the Cutleura Remedies as Mertz the pitean.s of my cure." (Signed) ;force TYRRELL, 94, Scotland Road, Liverpool. In a, further letter Mr. Tyrrell adds: "The first appearance of my skin eczema W0.9 a burning itch which I tore and left my body, legs and arms one mass elf sores, It caused sleep- less nights, but now I can eleep as well as ever." UtiCtirai, Soap and Ointment aro sold by druggists everywhere. Potter Drug & Chem. come me props., Boston, Mass. Mailed free, °talcum Book on Ochs diseaws. 'Asloleszazt :4`1!:44W+01S0V1",-,rm 4101....0aMillie•111 PSYCHOLOGY OF DREAMS. -- Suppressed Desire Vents Its Longing During Sleep. It is due to the geuius of Professor Sigmund Frend, of Vienna—toelay the most daring and original psychologist in the field of morbid peychic phenomena— that we owe the longenegieeted ree,ogni- tion of the large plaet. of ceisubolism in dreaming. acheriter had argued in fa- vor of this aspect of dreams, but he was an uudietinginshed and unreliable psy- chologist and his arguments failed to be influential. aimed avows. himself a par- tiean of Sthernerts theory of dreaming and opponent of ail other theories, but Ids treatment of the matter is Mem. parably more searehing and profound. Freud, aowever, goee far beyond the fundamentale-and, ae I believe, unde- niable—proposition that dreenaimegery is largely symbolie. He holds that he. hind the symbolism of areams there lies ultimately a wish; he bell:wee, more - of more or lees sexual character, and, over, that this wish tenls to be really further, that it is tinged by elements that go back to the dreamer's infantile days. As Freud. views the mechaniem of dreams, it far from exhibiting mere disordered mental activity, hut is (much as he has also argued hysteria to be), the outcome of a, desire, which is driven baek by a kind of inhibition or censure (i. e., that kind of moral cheek which is stil more . alert in the waking state) and IR seeking new forme of expreesiou. —Dr. Havelock Ellis in the Papular Sci- ence Monthly. THE BEST ADVICE, (Boston Transcript.) Ethel—Mereol Here's papa coming, and he told me the next time he caught you here he'd kick you. Jack—What would you 'advise nee to do? Ethel—Sit down. A WEIGHED EXISTENCE. The Pig—Yes, my dear Medor, they kill us when we weigh 200 pounds, I have still 45 pounds to live.—Pele Mele. UN AIM OF Nth During Change, of Life, says Mrs. Chas. Barclay Graniteville, Vt. -- "I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered from nervousness andother annoying symptoms, and can truly say that LydiaN.Pinkharier Vegetable Com. pound has proved worth mountains of gold to me, &Sit restored my health and strength. I. never forget to tell ray friends what Lydiallrinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me during this trying period. Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other Auffer. ing women I am willing to make ray trouble public so you may publish this letter." --Mts. CHAS. BAUM" ilel?.1).,Graniteville, Vt. No other taedicine for NVOMatl'a ills has reeeived tuth wide -spread and tut - qualified endorsement. No other med- icine 'We know of has such record of eures of female ills as has Lydia 1.1. Pitilthara's Vegetable Compound. For h.oro than 30 years it has been curing female complaints such as infiammation, ulceration, local v..eak- tle8SOS, fibroid titulars, irregularities, Periodic pains, backarhe, indigestim, arid nervoua prostration, and it is onequalled for carrying' women tafely throuth the period of ehange of life. It ermts but little to try Lydia, N. Finklt.ort's Vegetable Compound, and, Bart lay etyma t " worth mom. bane of gold" So ritiner114 WerlAtati. IAN OVERCROWDED CITY. .. How Vienna Would. Furnish -cheaper, Dwelling for the Peer. Ia no other capital in Europe has the cost of living in:itemised eo greatly due- ing, the Met two or three yeare se in Vienea, .atel 'Parliament has taken ole step tountel easing the iitrain by a grant of money for tile Mailing of eimaper dwelling% Fifty thotrana pounds a year for tea years win he p7areil at the elis. position of lecal authorities, ainl 'build - tog meociations. with tine objeet, The eonomit is eot very large but it is a beginning toweed the improvement of the housing of the poor, Who buffese ter- eibly at present front overcrowding,. Ac- cordina to the lest sitetiniee Available aearly one-half of the apartmente in Vittina, WI:kat are all flats, consiet of only otos room, atmetintes with a latch. en, but meaty without. Vorty.three per emit. of tne whole pomernioa ere living. in these one room fiats; and that, is not the worst, ter not fewer than, 30;000 of them. mieerably emet'l dwellings are ocs eupied by eix er inme peesous. The eael eoneequerece of tomb over- erowding are plainly' to be eon 'ti Ire mortality etatisties of the eity. To ont en:railed teuement districts 293 deaths ise 10,000 are recorded", agablet 1'23 In tate better claes distriets, As opals. tubereuloeis, Vienna's greatest seeteuge, seventy persons in 10.00 die from this (invitee in the woeitioo clatis quertees. as compared with kixteell ill the other districts. Parliament's action in granting motl- ey for building saaitary divellinge in Vienna has .cortainly nut come any tee ecloaozelart:lenua Correspondent* Pall Mail CHINA'S WAR ON THE POPPY. From Shrtnei there now comes a pa- thetic story of extreme poverty leading to law -breaking, and the coneequent pun- •ishment. In the region north of Feu- Chon-Fu. (Shansi), the people are very poor, When they planted wheat, the incense from their small fame was not sufficient for the pro's. expenses, They knew that if they planted the poppy, their Mamie. would be greater. They also knew that it was Against the law, as the Chinese Government is fighting the opium traffic; but in their straits they decidea that • they muet grow opium. So they banded together, think. mg if comey one planted it, the authori- ties coital not do much In punishing them. They started planting and retro bution followed quickly, An offidal with a hundred soldiers went to the village and shot down thirty-seven men, and told the rest he would b,e back to do the same to thein if the poppy were al- lowed to grow.—Lucy n, Whiting, in the Christian: Herald. GLAD TIDINGS FROM NOVA SCOTIA Sure Relief For Suffering Women is Found In Dodd's dney Pills. Miss Kathleen Murphy Tells How She Suffered and How Easy and Com- plete Was Her Cure by the Great Canadian Kidney Remedy. Tangier Mines, Halifax Co., N. S., Nov. 14.--(Special)—There is no longer any doubt that of the thousands of stare -ling women of Canada; nine out of every ten owe their troubles to Kidney Disease. For that reason it is mad tiding.; that Miss Kathleen Murphy, of -this place, is sending out to her suffering sisters. "My troubles started from a cold," says Miss Murphy in an' interview. "I had pains in my head and back, and Rheumatista and Diabetes finally devel- oped. "Then I started to take Doddis Kid- ney Pills and they cleared out my Rheu- ntatism, cured my Kidney Disease and brought bade my health. "1 Would not, be without Dodd's Kid- ney Pills, for 1 have given them u thor- ough test and found them to be all that is claimed for them." The secret of health for women is to keep the kidneys strong and heatthy. Healthy kidneys mean pure blood, abun- dant energy and a clear, healthy com- plexion. The one sure way to keep the kidneys healthy is to use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Lei .M ON GOL I AN PH EASANTS. Increasing Flapidlit in Western New York and Becoming Very Tame. The recent arrest of a young man, chargd with shooting a Mongolian phea- sant, just outside of the city limits em- phasizes the fact that these birds have become numerous in this twenty and incidentally nearly as tame as domestic fowls. Under tne game laws the killing of Mongolian plie : • having them in possession is -absolutely forbidden until the year 1910. When the birds were first introduced some doubt exieted regard- ing their aeclimation, and it was thought best to make a close season of Jive years, and this was done. Contrary to the opinion of many naturalists the plmasants _made themselves much at home and have increased. with oingular rapidity. Although the penalty for kill- iog the birds is very heavy, it is be- lieeed that large numbers ere killed each season. NOtwitasttencling this handicap they hove become so plentiful as to be regarded ae a pest by farmers. It is charged that by reason of comparative iriimunity they have become bold and deetroy crops to a greater exteut even than crows, It must be confessed that the farmer is plaemt in en anomalous position. He has to ehoose betweeh damage to his crops by the saucy Oriental beauties or killing them and ritiking a heavy fine, 'rhea. are eo formica; that in many caste they eau be killed with a billet of Wood end the temptation to destroy there is almost irresistible, If the pheasants foiled their habitat in the woods and groyne only their pre - tepee weuld not be tandesirable to tbe agriculturist. When they are protected and penetrate to the garden patch pati- ent* and respect "for the game law emme to be a virtue. It as contended by many eportsinen "thet the object of the long doe° seamen has olreedy been accent. plieb.ea and that it veasonable open sett. son eboula be provided twit year. The eirejudice ogithiSt Iambi itniong the farmers has teemed sueh proportions that, it is probable an effort will be made to modify Um law tit thr rooting eession of the Legislatere, et leasit to the extent of allowing a fernier to pro- tein hie eropit.--Froin the llotheeter Democrat utd "I don't knoer Whether aceept this testimonial Or net." mulled the hair-maurcr men. "Wlotee mat. 'er with it!," drmandrd tio adverth._:- ing untnaieer. "Weil." eirselnined ene Miss, "the man nritc..: 't te:rd to have thew ball epote on the top ef me head, bat einee Whitt i,flo 1)403 Lf your hair r.:ft.rer hrt%r. ouly out" -saw '11 • GOOD HEALTH FOR YOUNG GiRf S What Is keded Is the Rich, Red Tiond be. Williams' Fink Fills. Actually Make. Perhara you have already noticed that your ditughter ''ttr "tams" bee detelopet a fitful temper, ie less and exeiteble„ In that ease re- member that the .inareh of ;entre i4 leadine her on to womanhood, and at this. time a greet respoteability Llits'sutitl3atItt-Prolis '11)).1:le.asentittiTLI(Xs4, of It w3:4tkir- ness ana, depreesion, feels "all tired out" after n little exerthou It slits tens of heedeeave, ter batikatilien or imin la the elan di not diereanad these milestone, 'niter tienertter needs _b_eltintaftobiliomisuestsi,to.st proleibly anaemic> Shoeld yea iuniee. any of t'seee signs. loee. no. time, but immure. Dr Pink Pine, fee ' bee thy eirlitood Mama to le ol to un - limn the' woeutnlioals Pv, Pink Pills enrielt inmoverished blood .and, by &ins' ax thee reotir wes'e ad prevent diseaae. They 14vA to sickly. illumine able, health. brigan ness and enema. with (Atm in the eheclis, Might eyes. a lightnesse Masi tilice:1;11:tas,:ininsitlittills..:.:1,i,:i. Mune' Intik Pale as that of :Sties Groce "I really eannOt SOX el101104 praiee of Dr. \Villiers& Pink Pills, eis they lime moat me feel like n new earl. T was pale and almost Morolleee £111'.4 think that on au average I missed at least three SP111)01 HOSIS10113 a week, beeauee I felt like broken down Person. and too weak to do, anything, The doetora medicine I took dil tittle more than keep me in hope; it certainly did not cure me, Then I wes nilvised to fake Dr. Wil - taunt' Pink Pills, and they anon inede me feel like a new person. Day by day I gained strength tied ealcne apa I have your medieine to thank for it." Dr, Williams'. Pink Pills see Sola by all medieine dealers or mey be heti by $2.50 front The Dr. Willianin Medicine Coe Broeltyille,. Ont. mail at 50 cents av..:il.ear or six boxee for r.T.ORA MACDONALD, •- the auny immedigtely After the a's:tiding, kit 1140 T14 4.ti,14.1•11 WA!. 1,..y.s 1,1:h 41. k s'..11•11114 11‘.43,1), 1•41111tIo :1, 1118 I utiy. APter 1)1ittle 144)f -U310, AWOL Aif4:, (Wlirad. Wit,1 had beeta eaptured, utto rea- litoilax Mu. la too umnthe lig i5 au rent to Reading, P. A., ter commie, anent. In Pe re. palled trees L'hatteet tea ta et. at where lea line - I bra Jolliet her upon his relettat later. '8 el. they lived In iskye. eiets wed on sloreh fi, J7'9. tar Welter eleott vael tbst 1:e pateessee Feint's ;aerie:mg conificete, Now thist Inttrtmmt.o I 4.51 441111.11y,4 1.414311 1.44 wan tim origami of seatt's Flora Att Ivor In "Was, eriee." 1 think she Mal Ned r nela Pt it :Late the battle eUll‘don. :LIAO 4:14114 lied thrown them - teats with rm.-Mass abandon into the tette er tsharlts Lewerd, end +alien ail lit IN- v. ae 1. :It eueeted aim escape at the ite minent risk of her Orill In the Pt it a to IP seconu Volume tit "Wavtliee"` Sir 'Walter Seett NaYs: *The tattle& of 'Wet erley' has been eberged painting the young advent - war eeitme mere tuneable than het characier deeervcd. It may be adulated Ilea tat- teepee, like othere et tint tairian 1.um 'leen supp eted to Lave held every taattlett end eittrifite made in hie eeuee 1.8 100 emelt el' tie- duty or the Pereon limiting it to merit eetravagusa gran- teee on 1 is Ix ; VI. on the tiOlc it letinee Clainsis tea eueoluded Ilte he.n afar his inirecelous escape ciatracter 10 lastery 1111iSt have titooa may high. / t (See it) ale e sere: "It has* rate (het the taitere sernetimes exacted nit -11. stew end (*solemnise than esemed tuit 1.1s eutantloo," I suppvse that he ti 1,19 SV1114 141111 ti..14' teis reason, Ora getve :0 Alatalozield as 11 token of gr.ititiale. see 1: eie it mall she tom etillosd to sell it ta return to Sitot. Ita,ti. It iN tt .1".• res eeatletnen Parter of Wilmiegton, &mune others by os eiimats• ey Mr. ) glieee, a steulthy whom rt.c Ait.sssausetts Clezette (..f September 2 1774 ea'1, "'Hy I, 1 ' cmily nuele ea utter of hie vessel to ".1.0- 41. 10141 of W1,1181041.1 to 13eston, Pieces of the Pretender's Gift Have Been Twice Sold in North Carolina. E. A. or Miami, P. A., writing to the NeW iorit Sun sayS: 1 ant awe that some of your readere will be interested in the following letter, which was writ- ten In reply to an Inquiry of mine about some silver that was given by 'Cliarlee Falward Stuart, 'the 'Young Pretender,' Nesolortitta elLantrucoutattl.ct and which 'was sold Perhaps some Luxe" seelog thls letter and fortunate enough to own pieces of the eaver se reit or romantic es:steep.- tions may be kied eheugh to send a fess' titles about It to The Sun. Even a dee- erlptIon or it would be deeply interest- ing 1 gladly write out for you the story of ntl),ierlgtittotno:rNt .silav.er which was sold III Wil - Ane of the histories that deal with the early history of North Caroline, will turnith tbe story of the Scotch High- landers 'who, having been born and lived as loyal adherents to the House of Stuart. after various. disaster emigrated to this country and established them- selvea along the upper Cape Fear River, North Carolina. There the old grave- yards are still filled, or were when I read them. with their names. I quote from the last ciecount of them to which I have aecess, from "A 121s- -tory of New Ilenover County anti the Lower Cape Fear Region. From 1721 to MO," by Alfred M. Waddell. "The immigration of the Scotch High- landers, which. had begun as early as 1756 under the Johnstone administration, was again and again increased until a very large proportion of the population above Wilmington consisted of these emigrants. Among the last arrivals, in the winteP of 1774-1775, were the Mac- donalds. with their glorious heroine Flora, wife of Alan Macdonald, whose fame fOr her noble conduct in saving Prince Charles Edward, the Pretender, was world wide. 'Upon the arrival of the heroine in Wilmington ahe and her daughter Annie were treated with great dietinction. When Flora Arrived at Fayetteville, where were hundreds of her countrymen who had preceded her and made that region their home for years, she was .greeted by a great throhg with manifest- ations of Joy and was welcomed with the wild notes of. the bagpipes. She rived a short tline in Fayetteville and then at Cameron Hill, and finally her husband bought a farm on the borders of Richmond and Montgomery counties, which he named Killegry, wbere two or their children .died and were buried. Then came the battle of Moore's Creek, February 27, 1776, where Alexand- er McLeod, who had married Flora's daughter, Annie, and who left her for ireleht free. Phe port nf 13ostuit luta I.:RE It clesed by eta of Petannient, which ::,:ttsell ;peat among the poor. A contribution wan taken up Im Wu- mington, ca for them and Was del - trued in Boston on Mr. Quito:we vessel. a (17io4rrit°111-lesilYorent(ITI:hfillaefet:rwa011$1.agelaviini 3%-aldr for similar reasons. S,..me cousina or curs oleeeendants of Mr. Quinee) wish - lee to follow other members or tbeir minim to oalifernia. (needed to sell silver And other vinuaaiee, as Oountless others in the Seal:. were doing, and they ti4C4RO pieces or this silver which had fallen to them because they thought that 0,» history of the silver and the Stuart hieaer price, as I believe was the ease. arme engraved town it would insure a oseas soid in Asheville to 'Northern people, I think. My mother and 2 were on a visit to North Carolina And w -ere Present at the discussions. Tbere were a gocd many of her (MY mother's) generation present and nolicalo mimed use authentielly of the sliver, for 11:OY an knew about it arm had &maks done iso, TV Paso, Tex., August 17. ,A. E. 1). FREE TO YOU Tho best premiums and the best values ever offered. Gold and Sliver V7atches, Gem Set Rings and Brooches, laughteaproducing Moving Picture MathInes, Palely Decorated Tea Sets an:I many other premiums given latent for selling our high class (told Em - basted Pletnro Post Curds. The vem latest designs In Views, Birihda.y, Floral, Holiday, Comm, tee., ate tor me. Sell 83.00 worth ma win one ot these fine premiums. Yon can soli them in an hour or two, but don't delay, for tve _give an extra premium for prompt- ness. write today and we wliesena you a package ahd our bIg premium Itst Come withthe crowds mid get the best premiums offered. Write Your name and addaess very CO)3ALT GOLD PEN CO. Dept. 220 Toronto, Cat ..C....1011•11CCIam•liMiptall=" The Charlemagne Rose Tree. The most venerable rose tree in exist- ence is said. to bloom against the ancient ehurth of Ilildesheim in Germany. Not- withstanding the many parties which at different times have been in the eseend- aney, they all seem to have respected and tended the rose tree, which it is said was planted by Charlemagne. The trunk is now almost as bigi as a man's body. There ttre five principal limbs trained against the church, the tree being pro- tectea- by iron railings, enclosing an area of about twenty-six square feet. The rude German soldienoin early ages tend- ed the tree, Catholics and Protestants, in turn masters of the town, drained. the ground, the soldiers df Turenne fastened. up the branches with clamps and those of Napoleon a century and a half later, erected the rallings.—London Globe. FREE axdoldraafteara.droarinies asamcgammmummosamara TO BOYS This FINE AIR niFtE, nickeled steel barrel, peep eights, polished walnut stock, shooting 1313 shot or darts with sufficient force to kill birds, Squirrels, etc. Boys, this is the best Air Rifle made, and svo give it to you men tor selling Et boxes, only, of Dr. hiaturin'a ranious Vegettble Pills, at 23c. A Inix. These Pills are tho beat remedy known in all cases of weak audios/awe bluod, indigestion, stomach troubles, constipation, nervous diseases, rheum. tismiu°sttet.iend your IMMO aud address plainly written, and we will send you 8 boxes of onr Pills and 8 Saucy Pins to gIVonWay, as &premium, with each box sold. When you laws sold the 8 boxes, send u 4 the money C2.03 and we will, immediately, sond you Ws handsome Air Rifle. We do not ask anyrdon07 before the Pills ace sold and we take baek what you cannot sell. gthirtss—THE OB. IIATIMINAIEUICINE CB., 57 Toronto, ht. etanetellealer ANew Laxative ___Lhethbeesatcktinve6wpnrintocimploedwerhnige= so much better than ordinary physics. While thoroughly effective, they never geipe, purge or cause nausea, and never lose their effectiveness. One of the best 6f the NA. -DRU -CO line. 25c. a box. If your druggist has TM yet stocked them, send 25o. and We WM mail them. 23 Natienal Drug and Chemical Company of Canada, Limited, - litiontreaL . . . eaNaplapat.... 'DISTEMPER Pink Eye. reheat's:. Sitipping Pever. and Catarrhal Fever. Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how lorses at any ate Are infected or "exposed," Mold, given on tho tongue, sots on the Blood tuld Glenda, expels the poisonoui terms treat the body, Cures Distemper in Dogs and Sheep, end Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy. Cotes La Grippe among human beings end is a ene kidney remedy. sea end st bottle t se end tit a dozen, Cut this out. Kest) it Show it to your druggist, who wan get It tor you. Pree tiookiet, "Distemper, Causes and Cures." SISTBIBUTOFIS—ALL WHOLESALE nnunaisve SPOBN MEDICAL co., Choate tad Datterlateelso, geentleientimil. amit, ArloWarriblimoi, Tho Ravo Lamp Is a high grade Fats,p., sold at a low price. t -e'borppi eee te.91, 1,11t 1110•0 is better hung mole at *ay p i.e. t'on.trieted of a 'kat !latest- easily kei t eleari ; On 1-4.4.01Aot Vtlf r 1-41O in env hoti.e. TLere Id 116111 11:rt st bony mtkin2 that' ran sdil t Mt. teats It !In ILI% I) amp :Pi l'ehe eivam "aeviet. gone tler avaorsthaia, va at y. elite ford*. sette.ave sassier t th Is t evin Tile Queen City Oil Company, Limitc31, ie--ememesaasieemeteetallitiiitallinsaillahillesimme.--eseezeamea..eaitt _ STRENCATHENg0 BY ATTACK, :Herald and Presbytert--A, nation Zs sometimes unified by attacks front without. Its citizens relly to Its eteml- ard, The church may be unified by IllviSion. Mate Wile Antagonize merit tial truth may be forced together, end times lo) -al to the truth lined up against theme Sornetimea the Chureh needs sudt a line up. Its people are beiwildered and half hearted, and do not know where they stand. They need an issue, some plain, streight questiona of loyalty to Gode or, Tether, they need to realize that Bach alt is* sue 28 always before thera in some form or other, and to establish it ae pita ciple that they stand by the Word of God, and set their Wee like a flint against any effort to rob the Lord Jes- us Chriet of the honor due Rim as God incarnate, the Redeemer of Men and Judge of all the eerth. "I dl.7ST KEEP STILL." a nrolit heIrv, biatt, yitoonb'n" e vaerk e.gde t ° innet obeocyrapq like the rest of liar '93ecause I don't talk back," 4112W8::' ed Robbie, premptly, "When a boy says hard things to me, I just keep still." Many a man whose life has had in. it a great deal cif trouble and opposi tion woald have saved much if he had learned in his childhood. the lesson which this little fellow bad mastered —that of "keeping still," If a hard word hurts, it would not make it tarsier to make an angry reply, If you do not answer at all, it stops right there; if your tongue' can not lie restrained, no. body knows. what the result will be. It doesn't inntter much what your playmates says, so long as you keep your temper and hola your tongue; it is what you reply to him, raise times out of ten, that makes the quarrel. Let him say his say, end be done with It; then you will find the whole aanoy- twee done with notch more readily thau if you hail "freeel your mind" in rehire. "Just keeping Mill" is one of the things thin save thee., trouble, wretched- ness in this world. The strong charfte. ter 0/111 be quiet under abuse or misrep- resentation, and the storm passed by a/1 the sootier, Patience eomethnes serves a man bettor than courage. You will find. again and again that the way to "keep out of scraps" is to keep still. -- AL H. N., In the Christian. "fn which time Moses trite ann."— Aets. vii. 20. Who ean tell when the air inflatee the lungs, how far and how many inflations may follow ? The frogs stared. at the homeimade raft and isang the launching song its it gently bumped againat the heeds of the River Nile. It was a mighty venture. it wan a tauter splash, it was a inothera daring, her very :soul went out, 11; was a Divine impuleion, the very ion. verse called a halt at this ship-latiacht Every human birth is a fiat of God, every soul is a fragment of God. The dew drop is a. perfect sphere, not too small to reflect the rays Of tho sun, the oeetax Ls a sphere not too large to reflect the orb of day. Man is Made in the image of God, a unit, inlivisible, inee- structable, entire. Personality doee not grow as a tree grows. A tree reaches perfection and then declines. There is tto decline to the soul; it will outlive the stale; it will roll on for ever. Look at the living freight on beard this home-made raft, mark the first triumph: ery reaches womana heart, the conquest of Minos has begun. Soon he is eonscious of capa- city, he feels that strange something in him which is the gift of leadership. Every TlIalT born of women comes chara• eil 'with a mousing, a message, a deanny which will employ the energies of angel et ellen tsi I drop a stone ana the entire sea is changed, the least movement affeets all nature. A limn may truly say, "I make the universe to tremble, vibrations go out and one and all is changed because am here: my action is myself, my en- tire self, not a part, 1 am not a part, but a whole; this is ever so; 1 ain in- divisible. This personality is wonderful; there is joy in heaven over a sinner on earth, and there ie a vacant place in hell. So I touch other worlds, the universal world of spirits, in the centre of all is God. Rays of this light, vibrations from His touch; responses touching other spir- its and all in harmony. It ie one fam- ily, related, united, employed. When 1 toueli another, my whole spielt toucheo. I cannot give a part of myeelf. So when I ant touched by God He touches My whole being, and His whole being touches me. The wind blows on a ship, the . whole ship moves, all aboard. share the motion. 'When the Holy Shirit touches my spirit the whole is aftectea, ener- gised, inspired, living. Light chases the dark, life the death; there is no Ionelii ness, no isolation, no passing another without a salutation. Living, bonds bind living beings, all move around the eentre of lifet Pascal says: "1 ane in A setnpiternal despair of ever knowing either my begin- ning or my etid. am 80 week, Ile is 8.) strong, Too much noise deafens, me, too much dazzles, extreme dieta.nce or nearness impedes sight, excessive Ingth or brevity itt speech reuders it obscure, too ninth truth appals." How far is the knowledge of God from. the love of God? Are there oceans bee tween, or do they join7 Jesus Christ is the alin of all, the centre of all. He who knows Hint knows the reason Of all things, and the quality of an things. Sea water is sett, air is freeli, the rose is /meet. "0 God, Thy worla is sweet with prayer; 'rhe breath -of Christ is in the air." THE ANCHOR. (Acts 27:28. Heb. 6:10.) Wiesely the anchors had been oast, When fiercely blew the whiter blast And piercing was the cold: The tempest held terrine sWay, But gallons heard the captain say, "Thank Cod, the atiehore hold." Then, After many happy years, There came that storm of doubts and feint Width oft sueh power unfolds: but in that storm which mortals dread, In dearest tome, that captain said, "Thank Cod, the anehors hoid." When skill tend kindness watched in vein, lie knew that niystery of pain Which human life tattle: Anti. as his spirit homeward fled, in lowly confitnnee lie erticl, (MI, the Ateliers hold," Prom, seeming 111 the Lord briege goodt pain and lots and flame and flood 0110,en 011t a lie 1110111Idg And safe in Hit safe Itteping they Fintalve the tag:iig elmene arid Asa% r"Iletek God. the ettliore hold." 1;raetlitirst. --T. Watson,