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THE FARM
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1. eAOHINCI A HORSE TO ETANO. him n the back,pushed him nround,
and, on the writer remarking on hie Mi Mk melte Him Obeyeoiditiet Not Sal allay, replied, "Ole my piece nre Ail like
"W" 'When Not Wanted to Stop. that," ..ana to. prove his, amenability of
dispositiou, he to the boar 'by a front
leg, turned hint over on Ina sale, and
wretched his flank, the aeinal content-
edly sobutitting with a satiefied grunt.
Acroes- the writer's. utind their flashed
IL memory of the israione winter, of a
visit to another pelt, where rt, great aged
boar had etodd motionleee, bi flttle eyea
blazing with a, wielteder light every mo-
ment, meta theowner remarked, "I guess.
it le your far coat that he doesn't sema
to like," and went quietly oat, followed
by a rather willing visitor.
-"How do you manage to keep thoee
boars so docile'?" the writer askcit the
owner of the docile pig, The latter
straightenedup, and looked the writer in
the eye, '1 do it by treatime theboar
itbOut as decently ste T. do my hired maul'
he replied. "Whim he its out Of humor,
I leave him carefully alone, until he gete
.over it. Hail he frilled to come up to.
me good-naturedly when I oiled. I
should have gone away, taking no vette°,
and a little while later 1 might bome
gone and thrown him an apple or a man -
gel. I see that he gets some exercise
every day, mita that Ile le generally in
the company at some other pigs. This
helps to keep him healthy and eontented.
He ts allowed to get a little bit hungry
every day, and never overfed or tstuffed,
tette cart never to startle Imu and
aever club lant or set the dog on' him.
When I want him to go. anywhere; I can
leaf' hint, or call him to follow me. Buhl:
docile as.hoie,1 \mallet take a (dime
with Isim when he appears :Body, al if •
he were suddenly stattled„ my first tare
would be to be out of harm' woy."
TREAT HIM RIGHT.
This owner has minted the keynote
of. the. oie matter. How maoy nevi -
dents could be avoided by always treat-
ing .entire males in just this way? The
great elifterenem after all, between the
entive male and others is in thequicker
stud more aetive resentment, which they
offer to a real cir suppowd. wrong. They
went to be "tweeted right." Animals
which are petted one moment, ond pun-
ished the next, at the mere -caprice of
the weer, sootier or later ell develop
soine form or other ot "crankinese." 'albs
is espeically true of entire, animals pos-
sessing that degree of vigor, energy and
"nerve" which a'ecompautes virnity and
prepoteney desirable in a sire. He is the
kind of animal above all, Whieh ought to
be hasedewell." neekleta treatment of
such an &Mmm'. is very dangerous.
• That there is suck a thiug as heredi-
tary viciousness is a thing to be remem-
bered, and to be avoided, but at the
same time, even tlds i theteatem a far
fewer excidents thau !''83l8 i. s in
the leindling of enimale staled upon es
docile. In the boar, prime' inetinets
are always eretty close to the surface,
end the slightest indication ot
is a danger signal whieh ought to be
healed wen. •
R. Timati„, utama,m, man.,
la
t'.timur.)
ti.aot.:114 mime tO tand niOne, .
roe8 ifi Mina 11831 /Oa mate take ;tiro .
and gm:Outten roweva 131iur
&shay owe oleos he twee emit,and pare
*Se ee me tit otorato ditwhoi.k.ence.
1".,16t of tia, %me hamlet never eay
-mesa!" tu a 010 unamehelotende
that have te eoroe time 3i unlee4. he ie
tit eettett motion. D. mat say "Wheel"
to a 'home wain going. ap to Lim intee
stitoic; Locatiee he attiegly staudiog.
lic triunes: firet ot alt 1144 Platte
ldo norm obey Lae wine. -Wlxua ," by eon.
3 to itp.ag it 1 m \%'iL.10 yttig.
whoa'and "making muelt" of hint every
that: he (Ibexes it ite dmobeye, aowever,
the trainer must elkow the here°
plotteure, by ispealeothr severely or lightly
ming u little whip, necordiag to toe
tranterts own jtnignient. After a while
the horee, if in gocal hende, will stop
whenever he 'mare the word. "Mesa." TID•
bits must at, time*. be given the lease..
All thie can 'be done on toet er wane
the animate -the latter hi prefer-
able. One cannot, do it while delving be -
mina° it is impossible to "maim nitwit" of
o. home while seated in avehicle.
MADE TO STAND.
Then tho Ooree should Ite tuede to
stend %vitae the erainer woilee rewey irom
to; the distence that he waike being ea-
ereasedeach time. dbe horee Deaver, inatle
much of toad gevest sugar now atia then)
when he Stand,i gatetty, 1.1 teattaer-
dinary how a. norse wi4 Sion stand for
hours alone ix ro..a, to "whoa" by las
tweeter on leameg it. No oue will ever
aceoutplish lunch by yelling at a. torso,
or by etkomeOing it aboot." lainielemene
mime never be inflicted unless the trate-
er's temper is perfeetier ander contrui,
Saddie horses arta others ere e01883 -
times taught to ato.nd whenever the
teine are throwu over their heeds.. 'adds
le dello by fastening a sack to the loins
.eothat whenever the horee walke for-
ward it steps on to the seek and gives
itself a jerk in the mouth; very soen he
teams that whenever the sack is left
• there, he is to stand; and afteret wttle
the seek is removed and he still knowe
'that he is to stand. Should he, howevar,
then disobey, the sack must be agetin
tied on, Some horses con be tenet this
without using the saak. espeeially if the
'eleinile are long ones like those, weft he
Alberta, etc.; on stock ponies.
LIE, DOWN..
In a simiher Way to that -Of teaching
a horse to "whew," he can be tempt to
lie dowe at word of causal:MI 'anti to lie
there until tola to get up. First of all,
a strap is. fastened amulet the off fet-
lock and- over the baek to the trainer's
right hand; the .trainer et:setae onthe
horse's neer aide dna drawsthe .00-1eg
op; he teen quietly persaaties„ the liorae
(showing.larn mote lie is not going' to
do him ony- harm) to bend his neer fore-
leg by means of .his left band; the horse
drops on to his knees. etleke muck of
himggive him a piece ofaugr and keep
him In tamt ',motion foe two or thece.
minutes. .(A bed of_ straw. ehouid be
used to do. this on.) Then let him get
it, and. repeal the perform:moo. When
lie lea ,beemintig quite accoetmalad 10
kaceling, pliel his beak over gently to.
one side until lie lies down. Make emelt
of hitu. While ineltinn hita lie 'down
alwnys say -lie down." Next !make him
lie flat on hie eide with lits legs °tit
stiaight; give him ft oit-lat and play
with hins, lying lu. between Ids lege, ctc.,
lettinghim know you are 1101lemma 10
hurt him. A horse etrugglee front rear..
Then allow himto get up slowly, 4tying
an the. while. "get op."
Then for sem.- rat days he mast be
made to lie down and get up, while us.
ing tho words. Soon the atrom eau be
dispensed with and soon the horse will
lie down a.t .wierd of .eomesantia tinter-
. tunately, "get up" is need by mime teom-
• eters -to mean neto on." Of course -a
horse that has been tought to lie down
must never be told to dget hp" unless
he is down. I cannot imagine where a
teamsterexpects hie horse to "get up"
to! It is far easier to .demonstrata
praetically the methods of teaching a
horse to stand and lie fiewn, etc., then it
is to write them. It le unfortunate
• that eo few horse owners have the gilt
of the art of equitation awl true .sym-
pathy for tile Itoreet a glimpse. at the
mutilated Hackneye, etc., at .ft horse
.shove will show how snitch there is to be
learned by a civilized people.
•MANAGEMENT OF THE BOAR.
How One Farmer Handled Hini—A
LOSSOrl Worth Leaening.
Nat long ego the writer visited the
stables of a permanent sodue breeder,
All of his pigs were oat hi paddocks,
eontentedly rooting around and enjoy-
ing life in it pig's owa piggish way. In
one paddock were eine big motherly
brood, sows, in eeveral others were pieta
of aifferent, ape and sizes, while st taut-
ber of boars of varying ages were to be
wen contenttelly grazing or rooting
around in the company of brood sows
and barroom. There were two aged
boars to be eeen out in the company of
other pine, and whim the owner wished
to eahibit one of there he ealled. "Come,
Tom," ana the big fellow immediately
TELLS THE PUBLIC
THE REASON WHY
Quebec Man Cured by Dodd's
Kidney Pills
Of Rheumatiem, Gravel and Diabetes
Says Wants Other Sufferers to
Have the Benefit of His Experience.
itaueseem Portneuff Co., (Sae.,
Dee. lie—tatpeeiall-o"Tell the public-.
Doddat Ke o
Kidney Pills cured mf Gravel,
Ithemitatiem and Diabetes." Theee are
the. words of Seraphin Carpentier, of.
thia place. .
"For.ten years I suffered," Ni, Car -
vender continues. "Then I beard - of
Dodeas Kidoey Pills and .deeidea to
try them. Almost them the first they
relieved me -.and eine all my Grovel,
Diabetes.. and Blemmetism ha.ve entirely
left me.
. "I want others to know what cured
me, because . do not -want them, to
suffer as have suffered!'
There are thousands of just such liv-
ing proofs in Canada that Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills always cure Kidney Disease.
If you take the dames° early they will
cure it -twiny- and quickly clad you will
be saved much suffering. If you have
-neglected. it and let it reach its. more
dangerous stages, emelt as Gravel, Dia-
betes or Bright's Disease, Dodd's Kid-
oey Pills will tore it. They never fail.
- • - •
MAY uffire.
"The rumors of the pnseibilly of an
economic and military alliance between
Holland Ana Belgium are, still occupying
spaee in eome of the most prominent pa-
pers. of Europe," said Richard. Wile
liemson, of New a'ork and Paris, who is.
at The New Williard. Mr. Williamson
is interested in the import of American
tnerehandise the French capital arid
he keep a watchful ,eye on the world's
actitst
"It ids generally admitted," said Mr.
"that beth Holiand and
Belgium are .faced by a common danger
in the expansiott of Genially. They are
awaited to be swallowed ie the Teutonic
Zolivereta to berain with amt in the Teu-
tonic! .empite afterward, mans they jolts.
forcen to offer great resist:mem Belgium,
it is pointed out by frierels of the plats,
is ready to diem; the tenni of cono
.plete economic and military allianee, but
• Holland desires to lead up tn it by toi
walked up, 3851 as it ,Collie dog would, ,agreement on eertain points—naine1y,
to his maeter. The latter quietly patted the unification and reduction of postal
.Montreal Woman Cured of
Stubborn, itching Eczema
Very skin sufterer should read VttAt
Ths M.A. Bentley, 93 University Se,
Mentreal, write,e of her gavots yeers of
eczeine, bow shs could not sleep or put
her hands in water, hew she tried all man.
nor of treatreent and even a hospital, but
grew worse, and how she foonct prompt
relict and anai cure in Cuticura Soap mid
Cuticera Ointment.
"Some nine yeers ago I noticed small
pimple.; breaking out oa the beide of my
hand.'. They became very irritating, and
gradually became worse, so that could
not sleep at night. I consulted a physician,
who treated me a long time, but it got
werse, and I could not put my hands hi
water. I was treated at the hospltal, and
it was just the sante. I was tole that it
was a very bad case of eczema. Well, I
just kept on using everything that I could
for nearly eight years, until I was advised
to try Cutleura Ointment. I did so and
I found after a few a.pplications and by
bendagine asy hands well up that the
burning sensations were diseppearing. I
could sleep well, and did not Isaac. any
hitting during the night. I began after a
While to use Cuticura Soap for a wash for
'them, and I think by using the Cuticura
Soap and. Ointment I was much heneated.
"I stuck to the Cuticura treatment, and
thought if I could use other remediest fur
over oven yeare with no result, After
only having a few applicatiens and Wing
ease from Cutie,ure Ointment, I thought it
deeerved a fair trial with a severe and
stubborn ease. I used the Cuticura Oint-
ment and Soap fur nearly six months; anti
I am glad to say that I have hands as clear
as anyone. I honeetly believe if all ruf.
forers of eczema would just stop paying
doctors' bine and treat themselvee nith
the Cuticura Remedits, they would not
regret 11,"I1 is my wish that you publialt tide
Letter to all the world, and if anyone doubts'
it, let theist write me."
(Siened) Mtss Mono A. 111411rutY,
1 Thu dethroning of .despots Is not
: part of the day's wOrk vf young ease
ulry einem; io it is exenesely to be
wendered at that these In Otsego of
the august .eaptivss were !tut putzled,
then eurlotte, and .eyentually to, trifle
irritated at the reiteration et th
arntlis ae-
pey seaselese remark. The per -
ironed attendente .of the fellen Sultan
• ere questioned as to what he meaut
by bird's milk; but without any light
being ailed, until up spoke a white
bearded old body servant who had
been with Abdul...Ha:mid when be sva,
a boy.
"I‘ey master's nieanine is plain
enough," said he. "When he and his
brother Rechael weee boys. together,
Recited Effendi fell ill with a malady
of fever. end -say imperial master--
whom Allah preserve le-eaeli day fed
her
is broth., whom he dearly loved,
with a prepared milk whin came
frous elerepe. in 11115, and Ott each tin
wee the pictore f;f rt, bird. Atel from
that day bas he alwaye spoken of it
LIS bird's milk."
93 1-"hiversity Street, Montreal.
Sept. 14, 18)10.Cuticula Soap and Ointment are sold
by druagists everywhere. No other treat-
ment for the elda la N economical, agree-
able and speedily effeetive. Send to the
Potter Drug at Chem, Corp., dile prop.,
Boston, q , for the latest Cuticura '
book, giving full directions for treating
skin and scalp troubles, troro. pimples and
dandruff to eczema and. ulcers,
and telegraphic services the establish-
ment of a common railway tariff and
the enactment of a law 'which will be
valid in both countries, The homes of
labor and tbe monetary system. will be
the same, the industrial legislation,
"And yet, with all these precautions,
it will be difficult for these two coun-
tries to prevent being swallowed up by
the German Empire. France aud England
will be powerless, as both have war on
hand should they feel it their duty to
cross the path of the Empire, who is
prepared to fight at any time, width is
More thaancan be sftiO a either France
or England or Russia. Austria and Ger-
many, aot even counting Italy, are in -
'
tamable, so . far as their armies are con-
cerned,. and before many years the com-
bined. navies of Gernutny and Austria
will be able to cope with those of Eng-
land and Frame. Russia, is not yet re-
garded as a factor, that country havIno
been weakened by the Japanese War to
such an extent as to home dropped from
a first-class European power to a see -
end rate one." --From the 'Washington
Hee all
ft
CHRISTMAS GIFT MAKING
XS made very eesy by a "RYRIE" Catalogue. elt You
can purchase from this just as satisketorily as by visiting
our ewe lit person. C, We guarantee tide delivery—prepey
on postal mid express chatgese-and refund the money if the
goods ere not perfectly satisfactory.
CATALOGUE 11
win bo mottled upon request. This contelei 132 pages, In
colors, of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverwere, Chine, Novelties,
etc.
lt )(kit artos., Litvarreo
Didirlii011411 isevvolerss *rid SPivetreattithei
18443043S VONOr sr.. 'remora°
IAS. MU% Prosisteet, HARRY VIM lesesTrite.
'seeee.Ve'ef_e.,:•e'
.....see-eesereee:MV
ifelekg /H
i
attickly stops collars. cures colds, heals
She throat Rad luuds• • • • 23 CAWS.
41, .14 Ai
SOUTHERN MILL VILLAGES.
WHAT. ABDUL-HAIVIID SAID.
Speaking of Sultnea, few pereons
have ever heal what Abdul -Hamid,
whom some called the Sick and others
the Damned, really said when he wan
deposed and taken, a closely guarded
captive, into exile, Some of the news-
papers bad it that he pleaded to take
with him only wren Ofhis women,
and some said seven hundred; some
that he plended for his Empire, and
others that he pleaded for himself.
But here ie the real story, the inside
story, the untold story, of that night's
grim historic doings. That, it he lit-
erally true there need be no doubt;
for I. had it from the officer who read
to the Sultan Parliament's decree.
It *as seven minntes after midnight
when the little group of officers in
their uniforms +of stained and torn
khaki entered the Sultants cabinet in
Yildiz Kiosk and read to the stoop
ehouldered, timid. shrinking little
man, whose face, as one of them ele-
scribed it afterward, evos the color of
a dead fish, the sentenceof dethrone-
ment and innernsonment, for life.
And when the reading was finished
ho exclaimed, in a voice choked with
emotion, "So this is thetreatment I
get for feeding my brother ori bird's
milk!" And all during the time that
his ;handful of faithful attendants were
dressing him for ids journey into exile
he kept toPeatiog to himself, "This
then, is the treatment I get for feed-
ing my brother ea bird's niillt I" .
At half -pest two in the morning they
took hint out of the palace on the firat
journey he had taken in thirty-three
years, on the last journey, xnayhap,•he
will ever take iht this uncertain world
of coffee cups and daggers, The elec-
tric lights in the palace had gone out,
for the imperial servante had fled
ahnost to it man; SQ a soldier took it
lamp from it waiting Carriage and used
it to light the steps of the fallen xnon-
arch. 'Without the door an armored,
motor ear, one of those that had borne
its part in the street fighting of the
previous day, waa waiting to • take
him to the station. It looked big and
grim and ghostly in the uncertain
light of the lamp, and the lean ma-
chine gun peered menacingly from
behind its armored shield.
Afford Better. Conditions Than 'the.
People Encountered Elsewhere,
In sSouth Catolina 150,000 persons, or
eut-fifth of its white population, live in
cotton mill villages, while in the ounties
of Greenville, Spartanburg and. Anderson
OflCt'hild.of the populatiOn 14 iti tbese
villages, l,ges, and .the tillages eootintie to
g
The South *Carolina mill village is 'MI/ -
ally a separate community, sometimes
having a population of over 5.000 inhab-
itants. it is entirely owited tend 0311-
troikid by _the mill end its residents have
no village corporation of any kind,
These vilinge.i ore built, 147- the Mill
managements for the simple reason
Lliet their people could not. otherwise
te hotteed near a mill. They attract
much more Attention from strangers
than front Sot:therm:re; For etrangerS,
seeing in them for the first time the gen.
era' poverty and other dietreesful
tions of ouv people, handleappod as they
hove been with legeeiee front elevery
end war, associate these dray wifh the
village,
But all Carolinituie knodit, says the
South Atlantic Qattrtetly, thal. flush vit.
lagers are of the eama etock es them-
Seivea, thing oeraposed as a. ciase of the
less succeesfith to .whoin the mills have
-offered much better wages, with better
labor and living conditioue, titan they
had beam. •
11 14' undeniable that atotith Carolina
ntill.managements, owitig to various
causes, eotne 'into closer personal 'touch.
Withtheir individual operatives arid feel
more interest in them as a body than do
Eastern cotton manutacturere; and that
Smith Carolina operatives have been
benefited by cOniiiig to the mine; that
the separate eottagea of' Southern 111111
villages-, with plenty of Air and larger
grounds, are better than "Ile city tette-
ntents generally end' by :meet operatives
-
in the East, ant that the villatm Tiring
eernooz
dintiO.11s, tulP-, are xteeflity Int.
p
NEW KIND OF COAST LIGHT.
••••,,b,,••••••rt
THE. LATE KING'S LUNIFORMS.
When King lildweres elethee mid nal -
ferias were to - be i.itspormil of, Kistg-
George 1S.14 . asked what should be
done with them. It ens presumed,
itattually, that he wield have tonne
tieheme in mind. But. no usual, ILS re -
"I must aSk .Qtpen thy." And
when the Queen wee approasehet on the
euldeet, elle Bil11led thet nen $K
ettbjeet, the suggested that Queen Alex -
fluke ouglit to be slaked to give her
advice in amatter concernieg her late
husband. Alexandra deeired to 'keep.
King Edward's field marshal -al ttuiferm
'via orders, She theIt made out it list of
persona to whom elm deeired that car -
-
thin enutli souvenirs should be given.
What was left lote been pieced in a rspe.
00. room .in'Ittlekinglians Palace.
Now, Abdul -Hann -a, who had a con-
stitutional dread of machinery,—he
once said that dynamo soundeti sus-
piciou.sly like dynamite,—had , never
set foot in a motor car, and it Was
with considerable trepidation. there-
fore, that he took the teat indicated
to him, But when the driver throw
on the power and the big ear began
to vibrate with the pulsations of the
engines, it was altogether too much
for the ex -Sultan's equanimity, and
so completely terrified did lie become
that it was necessary to remove him
to a carriage, in which, seated be-
tween men who were determined to
kill him rather then let him ee.cape,
and surrounded by it cloud of caval-
ry, he was rushed through the silent
streets of the sleeping city to the train
waiting in Stamboul. And all the
way he would matter again and again,
"So this is the treatment 1 get for
feeding my brother on bird's milk!"
IMPOVERISHED BLOOD
",•••••••••••••
A Common and a Dangerous
Trouble—You Must Enrich
the Wood to Escape
Danger.
Anaemia is simply a lack of blood.
It is one of the ;nest common and ad,
the same time moeteelangerous dis-
casts with which grating, girls suffer.
It is mammon because the blood. so
often becomes impoverished during
development, when girls are ' too fre-
quently allowed to over -study, over-
work and suffer from a lack of exer-
cise, It is dangerous beeauso of the
etealthiness of its approach, often being
well developed before its presence is re-
cognized, and bemuse of its tendency
to grow so steadily Worse, if not prompt-
ly checked, that it nuty run into con-
• sumption.
The value of the tonic • treatment
with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills- should
be known to every mother in - the
land. These Pills make new, rieh
blood, tone the organs and nerves, bristg
a glow of health to palci, fallow elteeks,
and drive away the westkriess, hezdachea,
faintness, heart palpitation and loss
of energy so noticeable in young girls
Who are suffering from. anaemia, To air
such Dr. William' Pink Me are an ac-
tual life saver. Miss ISIxtbel McTavish,
Prince Albert, Seek., toys: "In nov ease
I can only say that life had lost Re'
magic; all work was a trial. and event
pleasnre only a task. When 1 went up
a flight of stairs I was ready to drop
from eheer weakness, and I hod begun
to think life would be a continued bur-
den nee .11 this ie oew remained, thanks
to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These .were
reeommended to me, and after taking
them for about a month 3 found my
health renewed,' I could sleep better, my
appetite returned, aud T was so strong
and well that lonsework weenies longer
a burden to nee. My Meter seemed to be
eeleg the same wftv teat summer and Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills were at onee sent
for and two boxes made her as well as
ever. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are now
the prized mediciue in our home, send
doctor bine have been fewer since we
discovered the virtues of this great med-
icine." •,
Sold hy all medicine dealere or eerie
by mail at 50 eents a box or six boxee
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi -
eine Co., Brockville,• Ont.
Is Your
ircle of Neighbors
Connected by 'Phones.
rr it sc.-e taat, van lin to ratro.str4 and sti71 •cicnt tett
fitoto (03' 30. 3M? 4. Ttleritar,-,• Vot,wtlir.:1.8113 3-4-11
144.113f 0Vf,;11Prd At CO 1 ie; 4.'e4 41,41
ttuclvr trK.ch. your local sFctr.-nt 383 ra,tratin:. and 114T- viratt
OCU4 yen. our free taco.. tieiy ttesc;In•s 83134
riOT
yrn nin tf? intere;tea In
ear horlit 411183 1c4 "limy
to Vial() 3olr41 ',Celeolo.os
Limes." Ibis tool34,313
all ',tout 18334 30 erstruve i
e Tclennota. LoutPa it y "1tii,. '''.!
Wilkh Lao be c.v:ta.11 tot A 1,,Ith tiiP facts 11111 this
.,.,.. t
Prorated') v your('3488 r wcntuniv.,-- 1re,c r.irt-_, yo.ay. r1 via to co.
law 4) 141Arcti il.oitt Irv.. t I- r, tr.:1,0 r71. -f i 1' I -,.r11 11,,v 1,tt3,".. seth e
ten. 14118.1. tee wire, Sugar:am if v.:..Thott. 1341:114117014-t .4..,811,
tt::`,.
WflY
1183a 121 yytr stone and
eddrro sun 1.11 114
vtlin
444 rivra
7 it to.tion 141•54. :44
. • ; • . , • . 1 "41/1 f I ,
'1,14209a ri'x -.'
. .
.0 MANUfACTORING CO.leses
tfalufootatrfr 'en 1 rurini:.i,ri-.! GI r.,7.7. -...rt.:., awl
cliapatent peed 13 t" 1 4111t11 1, CPC:44,4:44A: 4,
44,44;4K,1.1,41 41 ;4214;rit.," .4 r..!..r.,ar:31i:o....0
4•ant,4 . . .A..v.'r-.—+ our Ararat tir;.ra.
• morrra,At, To11o3';:..0. wizzircctt
Pa!ealNA - CeLCA,Ree
4. VANCOLIVZ2.
Claimed That It Will Burn' From One
to Five Years.
"The -ndoption by the Government of
AeCtOrie gas, acetyleue dissolvea in =-
tone for uee ligathotemo beacons,.
lightships and ligbt int074, will 804u re.
volutionize the whet, system eoast
lighting in We country, vela the light-
house keeper mei buoy tender will be
forced to find. liPtit vocations," deetares
L. William Tleavis ia Popular alechanice.
explains Mrthers
"Acetylene in ins various forme is the
only commodity tot produced that will
give a light next in power to that of the
sun. By its use inventions. heve beea
perfected to preduee ligeti for n
tinuous period of from one to five years
or more, according les the amount of
fuel installed.
"The most wondetful liettlit in the
vecrld .sted nay in use by the Crated
atetes Government le the met invent:et -
Ly Delan, the Swedish Vientia%
produced by acetone gas nod late a ata. •
, waking' elm instrumeat tontainate
a glass tube- of severe.' rode of varying
refleetive powere whicit autoneatietliy
(mem and .eloseee the valve in accordance
'with the light absorbed, In other Nti'01-&,
the light 'burns continuottely until al.
.fecteci by the heat of the sum wheti it
gots out, only to be revived At dawa. It
oleo .contains. Hashing apparatus Li the
• lantern."'
44.4.4.44•44...4114444.4.4.4.4.004444111
Lace and rue.
It iii Ittresy whielt puts all in dan-
ger of evvommuilieation, 10113838311381fur
are today the favorite residua, Otte very
fashionable eloek is of peach -ordered S,It•
In, the revers fiseea with Venetien point,
it sable ski tt arrangeal ea, a collar, neat,
sable rotted the edge of the tuna met
the wide over-sleete, and a gorgeous
undercertt sippearing at wiiete and from
the knee down von& of antique golden
fersdittris hewed* from a Venetlen
.••••••••••••••*••••••••••
het"'
1 res
Are yeur halide chapped, cracked
or sore? HaAte you "cold tracks"
which -open and bleed when the skin
Is drawn tight'? Have you a told
sore, frost bite, chilblains,. or a
place, which at dries tnelees it agony
for you to go about your houeehold
duties? If so, 2rste.13uk will give you
tenet, and will heal the froat-datnaged
skin. Attoint the iSOre plaCeS at night,
Zara -Belle's rich healing essences wilt
sink Imo the wounds, end the smart -
leg, mid win heat quickly. e
Mos. Yellen, d 'Portland, arms: "My
ban& were so bore and eraeked, that ie
eves agony to put thent near 'water..
'When I did so ebey would meet emil
tuft 11 as if I had gadded theme lactated
quite nu,Alde to gt:t relief frora anything
1 put oft them until I tees 1 Zain-Buk,
and it) ,eneteciled when all dee had
failed. it, eloalal the big cache, gave
tne ease, teethed the inattmtnation, and
in a eery sheet, thee healed my hands."
tton.fliik elms daVtAg, tool*, setae)
reesee, ita• fLYNet lex tee, ,; r Wait
amilkures, aperNses, rwr is, are.,
ciato 5431 :13, brrei,r, seat.14, Oro VI
dratk irwi etveta, t fma 1,028313324(13'
Bt4 rt.., Toronto. 1,14aa
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••4••••••••••.••••••••••
KINGS MUST BE CAUTIOUS.
(Boston Post.)
Has George V. to learn the lesson that
Kings of England' must be cautious; that
they must keep their hands off pertirsan
polities, interfering in not the slightest
degree with the real government of
Great Ihitain, which lies to -day as. it
has for nearly a. century in the hands of
the House of Commons? It would so ate
peer.
MIMI the Posts's foreign. advices it
seems clear that the King is meddlirig
with the question of the shearing of the
House of Lords and that he is attempt-
ing to directmor at least influence, the
course of Premier Asquith, who is res-
ponsible to the people alone for his acts.
Alreada mutterings are heard in the Lile,
eral press to the effect that George has
actively espoused the tottering cause of
the peers and is willing to force it resig-
nation of the Asquith Ministry in order
to have his way.
George V. is ft fool if he proeeeds to.
butt his royal head against the, stone
weal of popular government...du England.
His wise old father never did &ad nev-
er_ would -attempt it. He he misguided if
he fights for the antiquated and ueeless
Reuse of Lords that has been tolerater
for years only for soeial 'reasons' ana out
of 11. species of veneratiott. Tile people
rule through the Commons; they -will
tolerate tin effort to perpetuate the
drag on progress kept up by the peeve.
The Etiglieli stiffer Kings to remain.
eta are often fond of them. But they
Infast that the Ornamental maxwells
Abell mind their own business. If
George V. persists in not minding his,
he is likely to stir up a revolution emus
pared to whiell that involving the
ITouse of Lords is a tnere proteet.
tooth :fill lAITAkuo7N:gt. eSd ItA. td ng()S a;a1 itt4N:c.74):111°'11Rfeol°‘rtigrktlittirig oleo clOt-
RICH FARMER.
A few Thomas, a
negro, p like $o;
000 mos ning Ian& .
ea the deal about the IMMO time for the
sale of a farm seuthrest of town for
"IZy yektit ago Thomas came to
• Itaneaa without A (100 And took
jobs tta eltIld get. Rut, unlike
the majeeity of his people, lie aid tat
stay in the .eity, bat sought the +bewail
• aria began farmirtg. Te•day Themes is
worth not leei than .$30,00.1, owing a
(c)ndle ef farint aud some eta: aroparty,
18.34 e. tnarine eat and valetys other 1t3
111:13 Efe.-114: bee WWI.; every dellar
t.r it flow Ka»:•as toil by irts 81 wo.ke
items tise tea.
trritepetity hes Witted many mstn,"
renatiked the morelizer. "Wen; remark -
rd, the lieireneliter. "If was going to
be leanest at all I'd want preeperity tee
du it."-- I hie nit Free Pi ewe
38
Gre
ft ert-Supp
Teti:Lk:5.
DO YOU KNOW ANYBODY LIKE
THIS?
He had not spoken to her for- a week.
triton they met on the street.
"Haven't yeti noticed," he begen, "that
I have been diepleawd?"
"Cortaiiiiivi" she answered, "how emuld
I help it?"
"Why didn't you try to find Mit?"
"I did not, eare to know."
"Then you do not care whether or not
you hurt my fellings?"
"I }owe .done nothing to hurt your
teenage."
"Maybe I heard something or miscall -
:
strum]. something you did."
"Theo you should have come to me
and given me a hearing."'
"I wanted you to come to me; I want-
ed you to mum that notch."
She smiled. Suddenly be burst out,
"I would care if I hurt amt."
"net is what you here been trying to
do for a week."
• "Well,. if I did not care so much for
you I would not Mind your indifference.'
"You do not care for me at all; yon
care only for youreelf. You enjoy her-
ing me like you; it ie agreeable to your
self-esteem."
"I would do anything in the world
for you."
"Ion would do nothing for 311e, alone;
yott woula do anything to induce me to
flatter your vanity by notieing you."
"It waked me miserable to you
hapuy with other men."
She looked at him with undisguised
cputempt.
"Yes, you are always wretches' whoa
am happy."
"Oh, .come; that ie not true; I want
you happy, but I want yen to be happy
threugh What I do for you."
"Or miserable, otherwise."
"Don't you understand love?"
^ °Yes; and that is itnit the trouble. I
can distinguish between love Which de-
sires the happiness of its object, and
self-love demanding to be Salton& I
might burn incense before some man a
shrine perpetually, but it would be a.
man who eared too maeit for me to de-
m:Led anything except what I gave vol.
' untarily—and was happy in giving."
POETS AND THE BIBLE.
The Scriptures a Constant Source of
Inspiration to Famous Writers,
Direct, but not always -aecurate,
mtotations front a acripture and allu-
sions to Biblical characters and events
eeme like unto us?"—Prom Heltra
Van Dyke's "The Influence of the
Bible in Literature" in October Cen-
tury.
170103 16111'
are very numerous hi Engliali liter-
outckly stops coudhs. cures colds heats
ature, They are found in all eorts the throat and lungs. • • • 23 ce83t3.
of books. Prof. Albert T. Cook has
recently counted sixty-three in a
volume of descriptive sketches of
Italy, twelve in a book on wild ani-
mals, and eighteen in a novel by
Thomas Hardy. A. &pedal etudy of
the Biblical refereneee in Tennyson
has been made, and mare thau five
hundred of them have been found.
The references to the Bible in the
poetry of Robert Browning have been
very carefully e-samined by Mrs. Min-
nie Gresham Ms.ehen in an admirable
little hook. In his longest poem,
"The Ring arid the Book," there ere
sai(1 to be more than five hundred
Biblical references.
With what pathos does Sir Walter
Scott, in "The Heart of Midlothian,"
make odd Davie Deans bow hie head
vrhen eees his daughter Effie on
trial for her life, and mutter to him-
self, •"Ichabod! my glory ie depart-
ed!" How magnificently does Res -
kin enrich his "Sesame and Lilies"
with that pashage from Isaiah in
which the fallen kings of Hades start
from theit thrones to greet the newly
fallen with the cry, "Art thou also
become weak as we? Art thou be -
THE CHRISTMAS STAMP.
(Montreal Star.)
The ma8 who devised the idea of
the Christmas stamp as an aid to char-
ity had & happy thought, if not a peel-
tive inspiration. Charity is, not and
should not be the exclusive luxury of
the rich and the stamp brings it within
the power of the poorest to do Some-
thing towards wiping out the disease:,
which has been well named the White
Plague; for among the white moms there
is none so nearly universal mei none
more deadly. Seareely a family but,
direetly 'of indirectly, haa euffered front
its ravages or is threatened by it.
JUST 130ING HAPPY.
;Net iwiag heopy
te13 face eling .v del
Laukirte el the leases •,:t10.
Ilather Out dr.! hit11;
1 or reeny inueeie
lergels• ln the ebeesine,
.110 just 1,4.44'4 happy
L bro115 work, antt !roe.
1,"511f; happy
Help"; •ndif+ etreigt
'r;t,ir hisriten rimy be eiewy,
And they me ..tronee
Anil pine nen sky will 'Iteliten
If other kice you brighten
Iev jnet being bnpny
With a heart full of sone!
—Cue Jnniore,
SAINTLY -FACES.
Sometimese ilt lemma through a
crowd, we -see a face that attracts us by
its sweetness of expression.- Perhaps It
is 00- .014 ia00,t. (mewled with e glory of
hoaryhairs; yet love, joy and .teace
shine out of .every dot and wrinkle In it.
Sometime it is a young face that beame
„ with health and purity and beauty.. But
whether old or young, retest we see' that
unmistakable soul -light :in aface,. we
know the heart. 'seined It is pure, the
life good, and that the body thus ilium,
hutted 133 the temple- mf the Holy •Splidt.
To loco 114 82311124 with guol,
pure, - useful, heat ktif,ii, and divine
teeuglits precludee any nossibility of
thiultiltg ahota, and tlor.; 1&isg ornpted
by, things eintill. low. er groee. it is
bscanse Pate knew tiee Met he says so.
.eernestly: "einally, Icethren, whaler).
ewer things nre t8'80. whaseever things
ire honest, wha hones, things are. jusr,
MIA t44-WVer a110 ewe. whateoever
Jeengs are lovety, " * * think on
these thaw." la the well -formed habit
if thinking pure thoughts ties the eteeret
ef being pore in heart: and in tbe daily
e141 nightly meditation on the law of.
'he Lord et a safeguard againet many Of
-110 eine what's flefioe the eernal haul
Ind deletse and blnckentbe human open.
Isniu e.—Ex.
A DEFINITION.
(Harper's Weekly.)
"Pa," said little Willie Waataltnowo
."what is a 'don't evorry' philosopher?"
"He is it man who makes his living,
my son, worryiug about other .people's
. worries," said Mr. Wantaknow,
e • a
Men home been wise in very different
modes; but they have alwo.yselaugaeJ
the same way.—Johnson.
relieve and cure indigestion—acidity of the stornach—billousness--flatulence
—dyspepsia. They. re-Inforce the stomach by supplying the active principles
needed for the digestion of all kinds of food. Try one after each meal.
50c. a box. If your druggist has not stocked them yet, send as 50c.
and we wet mail you a boa. 33
Nettenal Drut and Chemical Company of Canada, Limited, • • . Montreal.
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With a New Perfection Oil Heater
When clothes can't be hung
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ef sun and air. You can hang up
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tion Oil Heater, open the damper
top, and the heat rises and quickly
dries the clothes.
Do not put off washing to
await a sunny day in order to avoid
mildew. Dry your washing any
da with hot air from a
VIRFECTRO
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Abtohitefy smohefess ard oclortets
It gives just as much heat as you desire. It is safe, odorlesp
nfld SinkSeill eS S.
It htrIaut ont e -lo eking flame spreader, whie1.
prevents the wick from being turned high enough to rtitoket sec
is easy to remove and drop back, so the 'wick can be quick
cleaned. gurner body or gallery cannot become wedged, be-
cause of a new device in construction, rind can AVVItYS be easily
tinselneinweddioitfor
rot'itClitttinntant of 011 in thio font. Filler -cap does not need
to be se83awe1 dowa, hint Is pat in liko a cork in a hote.e, and i&nitecher; to the
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hiloattel.
LOVE'S PRAYER.
Dear Lord lainti Lord!
Gracious Lord! T pray
Thou wilt look on all L love
Tenderly ta-ilayl
Weed !their heart* nf wearinees;
Scatter every care,
Down a wake of amended *Ing• e
Winnowing the air.
•
Being unto the sorrowing
All release from pain
Let the. lips of leughter
Over flow again;
Aad with all the needy
Or, divide, 1 pray.
The: vaet treesure eentent
That le mine to -day!
--Jas. Whitcomb Biley.
PAIN.
Who 0411 tell us about the mystery
and miesion of. painr "Why do ,f pay
myself, more than God weal& to pity
met" says Richard. Baxter, a life-long
sefferer. "Ah," says the hely man, "I
soe my pain, 110 seee 1137 pain and the
end, witteh 1 do not see." Pain! It is
in °tore- heart and in every louse the
whole world round. The whole creation
groarseth and is in sympathy with man,
the higher you go up in the smile of ere-
a.tion, the more exquisite the pain; you
ascend and find at the topmost tea& of
all—Die MO of Sorrows! Given
ing heart ana a. quiek conseienee, And
there eomes the inevitable capacita for
suffering. Pain_ grows on the tree of
love, and the higher the degree of love
the more abtutdant is the pain. The har-
vest of ipain springs fromthe seed bed
of sorrow, On the door posts of every
house 1 see marks of care and tears and
pain. Oh, that my head were a fountam
that 'might weep day and night!
In One house there is the loss of hien-
dren, in another the loss of propertymin
another the loss of peace in another the -
loss of hope, Anotlaer peace,
is Marked
lonely, a, spirit is there feedin on itself.
Ob, this introspection, a detective oh the
watch, with a club in his hand. Pursue
this exercise and it leads to insanity. Get
out of this house, make for the open; it
is your life. Another beim. is marked,
"Information wanted." The spirit. cries,
"Oh, that I knew where I might find
him! I would fill ma mouth with argu-
ments." "Alasi" said- the prophet, "my
people (la not know." Another house has
emblazoned on its front pride. There is
pain and sorrow there, but there is pride,
the crowning curse of all. No sorrow like t
unto my sorrow. They refuse to be forted, they nurse their wrath to keep it
warm. Tho longest railway train ever
seen is peide,tarrying paseengere to per?
lition! Another house se marked •"Blun.
ler," Good petiole dwell here, but they
mike mistakes. Joeeph is not, 'and will
,•e take Benjamin away? All these
thiugs are against me.' No, they are
tot. "Joseph is toted' Yee, he is and
vs rides in the second eharint of is,
•
knotther house is (narked "Empty." We
'eel we are getting near to joy. Empty
1y acrif ice. This it the apex of the 14-
ingle. No joy like this; it is the rown
if God! Ile emptied. Hinteell ond came
our reeette—read this again. See Ilie
atendanta, disrobing Hint on the shores
..f highest heave. He laid «is glory by,
ind Carne the freest of the free, Mark
;heti No tompnleiezi. NO mandate. No
•oyal commend, 1 delight to come trido"
Eke will. Joy brings mo. Joy sustains
tie. Joy (Towne tne. 'Tor the JOy- that
arrIS eet befoin Rim Ile endared the eress
1111 de5pised the obante, and is forever
iet down oil the right hand of God."
.0 .Thy that eeekeet me through pain,
f eininot eloee my beert to the; f
T fraN, the minim* threttgh the rain,
knil the promie* is net vain,
Mei nine shill tealless
T,
LOVE'S CHIEF WORK.
I:eve's Wet emir is that of diseovers
'ng good, not evil, Ono tvlio constantly
Wok out defect* of other& civen
though claiming tot 11133Often the eases
to do SO "in leve" ham, not eetight tho
root principle, of love. It Wart Mid of
14. well -karma Clnistian worker: "Be -
yawn. hAo was the controlling force of
his life, 1ti energiee went out always as
33 buililer 11083(1' 139 n titsalller, lie des-
troyed evil. of eietrite. hut he building up
the meet" To do it buildiee work. lose
11111A8 tliik reeogniee the mat:elide
ter buileline Pt! illAt 14 31841 Wilere LIMO
1)91::%1 leo tolttr pewee lies. Ti eve g40.1
in miter, ultoa 11831c37, aoci.i %lily faults,
qtti it 841105 mon tie., guM in sew-
reseeeition that. Ibe Feuer of 41111
lee,1 is bloused end 'multiplied miler
levee, setruitli. If sie would hsee tase
e23.1 eee it, 1)1 Ile set &heat this sett
of lwildine to the lives 4,f Awes ensue
1131. No ether effeet blittga 1..011
•