HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1911-04-06, Page 3WATERY BLOOD
IN TR SPRING
how to Get New health and New
Strength at This Season,
Evee the meet rause find the win-
ter months trying te their health. con-
finement Indoore, often in overheated
and needy always hadeventileted roonas
e -in the tome, the effice, the ehops
and the school-eta:4e, the vitality of
even the strougeet. The blood becomes
thin end, watery or clogged with ingiuri-
thee Some people have headaches end
a feeling of lengour; othere are low -
*perked end tiervoue; *till others beve
pimplea and ekin eruption; while scene
get up in the morning feeling just as
tired ae when they went to bed.
These are all sluing symptoms that the
blood is out of order, and that a medi-
cine is needed. Many people rwth to
hergative medicines; in tee spring. This
WA mistake. You can not cure these
troubles with .a medicine that Ohio
through your system end leaves you
weaker still. What you need to give
you health and strength in the spring
is on tonic medicine that will enrich
the blooct and sootie the jangled nerves,
and the one always reliable tonic and
blood -builder is Dr. WilliamsPink
Pills. These Pills not only banish Whig
weaknesses and ills, but guard you
against the more serious ailments that
follow, ouch as anaemia, nervous debil-
ity, indigeetion, theurnatism and other
eiseesee due to bad blood. Dr. Williams'
Pirtle Pills actually make new, rich red
blade which strengthen$ every nerve,
every organ and every part of the body,
and makes weak, ailing people bright,
happy and strong. Mrs. shames Mc-
• Donald, Harcourt, N.B., says: "In my
*
-• opinion Dr, eVilliams' Pink PiIle do all that is claimed for them.' My system
was run dOwn, and I was so weak I
eould hardly do my work, and taking
care of my baby addea to my diffieul-
ties, I ueecl a few boxes of Dr, Wil.
Hams' Pink Pills and they made me feel
like my own self. I Very cheerfuly re
-
commie' the Pills to all who are weak
or ailing."
Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail
at 30 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50
from The Dr. 'Williams' Medicine Co.,
Broeleville, Ont.
HERE YOU AREI
Hints for You When Crossing Inter-
secting Streets. '
Don't pause 'mid car tracks to adinire
a berm ekirt
Or to phileeophize on some favorite
passage froira Browning—
Or to adjust hatpins or any portion of
your attire—
Or to examine your shopping Iiet or
investigate the eontente of your valise --
Or to decide who way you want to go
—oue is lost indeed who hesitates 'here—
Clr to flirt—flirting, always idiotic, rip.
.pears extremely 'do when done in the
middle of a ear track—
Or to admire an oncoming; auto—Or to
test your ability to recognize its make
before its name is within reading dis-
tance; artd, above all --
Don't fail to remember that there are
four avenues of approach to intersecting
etreets and that this means eight "righte
of way" to teamsters, cabmen, delivery
wagons, automobiles, pushcart men, mes.
itengers ou bicycles, ete.; therefore, atter
flashing a &nee in the four direetrons,
level one eye on the direction indicating
atm of the polie,eman. and the otlier on
your destination, take a good, deep
breath (it may be your hurt), and hurry
madly to the eereer you are aiming for,
concentrating all your atteation on this
feat that you may adeomplish it without
a sequel of ambulance or morgue.
ON filElleG SOLEMN.
• In all seriousness, uow, does ed pay
Von to be serimis?
Do you take yourself seriously, and
if .. ,so why so?
What are you serious about?
Surely you won't acknowledge that
you. -consider your own little trials and
ambitions deserve serious consideration
—for we all know that each individual
is such an insignificant creature that
no mares affairs eau pessibly be seri-
ous.
Cowsare serious, 'You've seen them
chewing their euds, looking as if the
cares of the whole world rested on their
slhoulders,
A mule is a sort of serious chap. An
elephant is a Mg, foolish animal of sere
ous turn of mind.
. you are not a cow, an elephant or a
mule. Don't imitate them. You really
esn't afford to.
Buck up! Go after the enemy with
a smile instead of a frown. The fighter
who smiles AS he fights is the most dare
gerous kind of 4 fighter'
There's a wall card worth hanging up
In your office—or your kitchen. It
reads like thie: "Smile awhile. And
while you smile another smiles. And
soon theta are miles and miles of smiles.
..end Lite's worth while because you
ataile."
Shiloh4Cuir
tealeitly stops eatteks. cures colds. heals
Si throat sad lundsa • • • 23 cents.
••• .
WOMEN SHOULD RE CAREFUL.
Montreal Gazette.)
By a Judgineet rendered In the Superior
Court ni this city the marriage of two
Roman Catholics, contracted, In thie
Province, has been declared null, on the
*Mind that the eleegyme.n who officiated
was a Protestant. The civil authority in
the case gave effect to a decision of the
Rotten Catholic Church authorities, Who,
In the spirit Of the Ne Tatum* decree,
held unions contracted tinder such dr-
cumetance, to be non-eacramental and
veld The eviedom of making the civil.
hew subsidiary to the eccieslastical law
In such. cam Is not in ensue Just now.
The (*Quit simply interpreted the law, and
there are precedent, rot* the decision.
What hi of moment, however, that men
end women, eatieciany women, ehould be
careful that when they consent JO mar -
slag. the ceremony shall be performed
under eireuntstances that will net penult
of its validity being queetioned. Neeteet
ef Mt may subieet them or their ehltd•
ten to huhilliatiott and *haute and grief.
WILL DIAZ DARE EHOOT THIS
MAN?
ftfft.zi
GUISSIPPI GARABALDI,
(The mart etanding). From photo-
graph taken in insurrecto .camp
pest before he was captured.
131 Paso, Tex.—Guissippi Garabaldi,
grandeon a Italy's great Garabaldi,
who is reported to have been captured
by the federal lorces, is typical of the
Garabaldis.
Now will Navarro order him ehot---
On the quiet, perhaps,. to &void
trouble with Italy; but shoot him.
nevertheless; for a Garabaldi in the
revolutionary camp is a strong feat-
ure. There are men with the revolu-
tionists who will willingly risk more
than their lives to rot tee him.
Garabaldi has been a picturesque
soldier of fortune for :loam He has
eerved in the revolting availed of
Nicaragua, Venezuela, Led Colombia.
He is always in the thick of any
Latin-American insurrection.
ROYAL PHYSICIANS.
The German Emperor, on whom the
tinivensity of Prague has Conferred
a medical degree is not the Brat Ger-
man royatty entatled to style himself
doctor of medicine.
The late Duke Charles Theodore of
Bavaria, father of the Queen of the
Belgiane, after nerving with distinc-
tion in the Franco-Pruseian war stu-•
died medicine at Multioh, Zurich and
Vienna. When he had taken his de-
gree he eetabliehed an ophthalmic
hospital tie Tegerncee, at .which. all
patients were treated free of charge.
The Duke was devoted to his pro-
fee...then and between 1874 and 1909
performed over 5,000 operations for
cohered besides treating innumerable
patients for other diseases. of the eye.
—From theLondon Chronicle.
•
• IP
German Government Fighting
Hard Against Tuberculosis
Millions of lehflets are being circulat-
ed among the people of the Empire, in.
forming the masses how to guard
ageinst Tuberculosis, of which 100,cra
Germans die every' year. The time is
fast approaching when this disease will
be treated like diphtheria and smelipox
--the patient being isolated and removed
from contact with others. eleantime it
ts to be hoped the masses will leant the
ell -important lesson of guarding against
cough:, and hest colds, from which tu-
ebereulosis always springs. When your
throat tkkles, your chest feels tight and
sore, when you sneeze and feel cold shiv.•
era up your back—that should be. your
warning. The following treatment is
known to be very efficient: Give the
cheet 'and throat a vigorous hand -rub-
bing with Nerviline and put a Nerviline
Porous Plaster over the these, By foe
lowang this advice you ean keep clear of
colds, pneumonia, bronchitis, and pre-
serve uniform good health. This is
worth cutting out and preserving.
s
FOCUSSING SOUND WAVES.
Few people are aware that sound can
be focussed just e.a light can, All etre
familiar with the burning glass of read-
ing lens which, 11 placed in a, beam of
sunlight will focus the rays let° a sniall
spot, Which is so hot as to be able to
set fire to a piece of paper. Light le
wave in the ether, but sound is a wave
in a material medium, generally the,
air.
If We make a convex lens out of rub -
here or collodion and fill it with gas
heavier than air, tray carbon dioxid, We
shall have a„ sound lens analogous in
neatly all respects to a glass lens for
light. It will be found Oat we can focus
seined waves in the folloWitig mariner:
Take a Watch and place it some feet
away front one side .of the lens and
put year ear on a line With the watch
and the one* of the lens, but on the
other aide, and Metre Outward froin the
len. While Meeting out you cannot hear
the Watch until you get to a Certain
point where tho waves are focussed, at
which place you will hear it plainly.
Title is &tiled the conjugate toms of
the Watch. ---New York Tribute,
WHATWILL Well, this brand will make
PAINT DO? your owie a prince
ite neighbor:4 it will telt of
bamongst
tette and Prosperity about Your -
It will momyou happier
In Pour hornet.
RAMSAYS PAINTS
bring happiness* to your home.
They never dlitanpoltd. roll alit
were in buying Me Did Web,*
netted well-known brand. Al-
ways' teebuttle .and of great
remit* for ten* and beauty. You
ean have our handsome Book..
let an hoot painting to help
you if you write mt. Ask for
Booklet ABODB. Free.
A. IBAIVIIIAY St *Ott 00.,
Toot 'more menteloa
mattEitli.
earra. 5e4a.
CHEAP
ORGANS
and
IANO
In order to clear our floors of
all ueed Instruments before May
1st we are offering the following
Instruments regardless of lose In
order to make room for spring
stuck.
Pelohet l Pelton Organ, -walnut
ease, in good eoluli-
thee.. , . „ .. 1 0•00
Dowthion Organ, walnut ease, low
top, 5 stops,„ knee swell! 7 gib
worth $40, .* a awls
Thomas ()mite, high top, 7 stops,
knee swells emtplers,
ete. ...... $25.00
:Kara Organ, 9 stope, walnut case,
9 stops, knee swells din
and ... .1PleatateVa/
Moms Organ, pipe top, 11 stops,
4 sets reeds, knee eix An
swells, ain't couplers.. erittP•WIX,
Bell Organ, piano ease, 11 atops,
large mirror,
$150,... .....
reguinr$75.00
Keough Squere Piano, WA octaves,
rosewood
case, fine
tone...• • •$50,00
Weber Square, ebonized ease,
7 1.3 75 (weave, over $
00 strung bass... •
Fox, Square, ebonieed ease, fanoY
carved lege and front, 0i42
octaves A
...... $90.00
In addition to the above we have
Many more good bargains, in feet,
we can supply yen with almost any
kind of An instrument you want at
your own price..
Every instrument guaranteed.
Terms—$5.00 cash and $2.00 per
month.
Heinizman
& Co.
71 King St. E Hamilton
SHE PRESIDES OVER LEGIS-
LATURE.
MRS. AGNES L. RIDDLE.
Denver, Co.—A woman—Mrs. Agnes
Riddle—has had the honor of pre-
siding over the House of Representa-
tives of Colorado.
Called to the chair during a fierce
debate on child labor laws,. she
piloted the House through parlia-
mentary mazes and party moves cern-
ly and succeeisfulte No appeal was
taken froni the feminine "chair.”
Mrs, Riddle is the owner and oper-
ator of a big dairy. She rises every
morning at 3 o'clook, prepares break-
fast for her dairy hands, gets the
children ready for school, attends to
varioua household duties—and then
rides six miles to the city, where from
10 a. In„ till 5 p, re, she helps make
the laws of Cooradb. At night. she
goes back to home duties.
She is the only woman legislator
Who has proved hemelf bigger than
lier party. Though. a Republican,
she fought valiantly tor the remai—
n, Democratic measure—and helped
lafgely in Mr passage. She is against
passes4 and returns them as faist as
the radroads send them to her.
In the Legislature she has won the
fever of men end women alike by
her keen humor, quiek . eit, hard
sense and Capable parlianienterism.
()flied& the Legislature elue is the
popular teeretary of the Colorfido
grange, staunchy supported by the
farmers.
• 4** ***
THE RIGHT TO WORK,
tee was a little sotialist,
i. out-theeworld-irt-shave-er
And to hts nun for eringIng grid,
Ile ren a little paper.
The usual screeds, of coulee,*
ihrettchttl,
The usual songs he sung 'em,
The mond rights of man he preached --
The right-to-work" among 'en).
I twit* Agreed 'twee even so;
I held the nen he hits It.
Ma Work in life Is writing. though
No editor admits It.)
•
he
eto to tny Socialist I bled,
That outethe-worlden-ebape-er.
"7 <deem ' the right to work' 1" I cried,
e "aeon your little Paper.'
Said he : "I own your right divine
To work. austrerne, eternal ;
Tat. end it please you, not on mine
But souse one elee'e Journal I"
—London Truth.
*AN QUICKLY REPORT,
Washington Stare'
Col. Roosevelt, while not *dive in the
ruaroeuvrete le near enough to be :lum-
bered among this. present at short no-
tice,
Any tramp wid tell yott that e dog
Is the manger in worth two in the front
yard,
FARM NEWS.
Value of Hen Manure—The Work
Horse's
It 14 Claimed Viet a butiltel of wheat
(mantes. In mita numbers, 1$ Pounds of
;shrews. worth 2ii cents ; 3 Pounds ot
mush. worth less then a cents, end e
Pounds of phosphoric acid, worth 3 1-2
CAWS. or a total 44 tr.) 1-2 vents. Oats Lath-
ers:. figure on the selling pries ot what In
eetiniating the Value of the lienee manure.
ypeolshn
iaein attit4 p
magoouwrehttu.1,1104
111 tuger., 1 bectidie.
1%1.'14111g: ehuabastaetecte'ets fhtPer fsohoad."14Pna9j1
ef the Olittst rood le the wheat goes to
eeveloe the heir herself and Pert goes
atto her eggs. In the ordittery flock Inc
sally mamire havenItt that len in the
'muse. A lair proportion ot the manure
le droimen la the.Yard or while itt. ralteo
In the fields. Ben manure le more val-
uable. Dound for pound, than any other
kind because it is drier. The hen 'tate
:tomtits and meat width °ornate more
retrogen than grain. nen, too, the nee
Lode and solids hi the hen manure are
thorouglily mixed together, While with
iarger 'neck they are separated. The
/finale contaitt Inc only part of tee man -
tire that Is "actually digested or ecauble
They are molly lost,. which Is tore reassou
Wirt hen manure should be dried, out at
once with some aoluble like plaster, •
A heavy draft horse should be long.,
ribbed. If a horse Is 'more -ribbed he is
light in his middle. and nettrIY alwars a
noor feeder, His stomata Is too small
eontain .enough reed to serve Infn from
rase meal to ;molten Whens put at bard
Work lle generally has a, fagged -out ap-
Veighs well, and welstnt In a draft berme
glnaranee. A light -centred horse seldom
If It comes from bone, sinew and muscle,
gocentiosa:orloinagasavamyuteohward determining hie
comm circuit, value.
ley and almost aa high aa wheat- De
irrioodurcteehr alas
it is a producer ot m41111(.141'4.
estrogen and mineral matter. Bearing
high nutritive ratio. It la equal to bar -
eaten isto extend the food ration, re-
duce the too-coucentrated grain food and
uarheovesnetcothlide aercoepu.mouttatIroonwoefte tee, ohvn earl, Catlo.
the best. Clover ihould be Cut in foll
elossom. Let it grew until tho flrttt blos
soles begin to turn brown.
ehaoperatIon in frult and vegeltabie
growing has many advantages to the
commercial horticulturiets in the great
dietriets of the west and south .where
eceoperatIve methods of marketing have
been post extensively developed, there
are found the most progressive damsels
OL . farmers. Co-operation properly done
requires better business methods than
tativIdual marketing.
Our exports of pork products were 1.-
151,678,139$ bounds,. in 1908 • were 8$5,970,130
pounds In the year 1909,. and only 67$,-
S9e,OSS pounds in 1910. This includes
becon, hams. fresh and salt pork and
lard. The decrease is fully accounted for
by the decrease in, the number of hogs
marketed, and the remarkable feature 14
ethuitutmesotarniwuocsh: can be exporter! under the
There are MAAY COWS Which he,ve
record of .15 or more pounds of butter
Per weelc. However, these animals never
volume of butter per week. Good milkers
aeareenebQfrrno.mtmot,hers that produced three
eheeti can stand ellmanner of dry cold
in winter, but they will soon be injured
by mud and ranee Let them out on free,
mien pasture when the ground is frozen
hard. but drive them to shelter when It
rains. .
The Rusilan mulberry has value for
wihdbreake. food and fuel. It Is e, low,
bush!". ishrubbY grower, with an orna-
mental folinge, and the fruit from the
!selected teeee is erten quite palatable.
For culinary purposes it is used with
some more acid fruits. or with the addi-
tioh ef a Irmo vinegar.
The butternut and the hickorynut need
the same conditions cot the oak, and the
ground should be mulched with straw
the first year or two in planting this
class of trees. Boren' trouble them
greatly and they should be grown where
thee have plenty of shade in summer and
winter on the trunks.
The black locust Is hardy and a retain
grower. and is one of the most valuable
of al the quick -growing timber trees. It
thould be planted only In the centre of a
grove. however, and not Along the edges,
because of , its vott-sprouting tendencies.
They will do no harm in the body of the
grove. but might be annoying on its edge.
liorers are less apt to injure the black
locust In a 'Matted place. It is one of
the best growing trees we have, and will
eishing inaterlal ter the finest kind of
posts. stakes and poles. It has the ad-
vantage or being a very durable wood.
The Osage orange ean be tnade a valu-
able tree for DOM It planted in a thick
grove. Plant eice feet and cultivate until
the trees take the ground and shade out
the lower branches. Them uee for post
timber.. They are better, we think, than
genuine cedar.
The honey locust is a tree that has be-
come disliked because it lute been impro-
perly used in hedges. It should be plant-
ed In selected formas a shade tree, and
the foliage will be ligbt enough. The
tree is fine in expression, leaf and limb,
&Mega Jike A fern.
Horseradish contains a higher percent-
age at' sulphur than any other Vegetable
food. Spinach ranks next. Pumpkin leads
for phospiterous, and radishes are rich In
Iron - •
.The gardener, perhaneemore than any-
one else engaged in agriculture, should
nupreolate the value of staple manure for
enrlehing the WI. Atels perhaps knowia
manure. when stacked In the yard With
no tovering over It, loses Its greatest
oualitie plant food, by washing of rains
and exposure. 00 tho other hand, If
stored under w shed or protected, it win
steam and heat, thus toeing another most
important factor. nitrogen. The average
gardener is In the habit of storing hie
anere in the open air, hut a better plan
ls., to pile it under a roof Of some sort
p
id tramp It down tight In order that uo
air may penetrate through to drive out
the valuable nitrogen.' The garden sou
should be, well treated this Year With
lflY
DAUGHTE
WAS CUR
ED
By Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Baltinnere, Md.—"I send you here-
with the picture of my fifteen year old
daughter Alice, who
was restored to
health by Lydia E.
Pinkhalia's Vegeta-
}1c Compound. She
*as pale, with dark
cireles under her
eyes, weak and irri-
table. Two different
doctors treated her
anct called it Green
Sickness, but she
grew worse all the
time, Lydia E.X'ink-
ham's Vegetable Compound was rec-
onimended, and atter taking three bot-
tles slielms regained her health, thanks
to your medicine. X can recommend it
for all female troubles." --.Mrs. L. A.
Clanktiaal, 1108 Rutland Street, Balti-
more, Md.
Ittnidteds of such letters from moth-
ers expressing their gratitude for what
Lydia B. rinkham's .Vegetable Com-
pound has accomplished tot them hard
been received by the Lydia X'inkhatin
Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass.
Young Girls, Wed This Advice.
Girls who ate troubled with painful
or irregular periods, backache, head.
ache, dragging -down sensatione,
ing spells or indigeistion, should take
immediate action and be restored to
health by Lydia, B. Pinkbam's Vogt.
table Compelled. Thousands hate been
restored to health by its use.
Write to Mrs. VissIcharni Linn,
Ittnee.. tor skir fee, tree.
FAMOUS DOCTOR'S
PRESCRIPTION
treat: manure, which has both a 'suffic-
ient Quantity of plant food and nitrogen.
To raise good vegetables it le essetttial
to plant them In rich soil etel soli In
tittle loses its value.
The gooseberry is ono of the most dello-
toue and prontaele ot the small thine.
et is easily grown and suited to almost
all localities la the United States. It is
elaimed that an average yield of goose-
berries 14 from 600 to SOO bushels per
acre. The Price of marketable berries is
esidom lege than 25 cents per gallon, or
$2 0, Nisbet, hence au acre will produce
from $1.000 to $2,000 worth of fruit.
• - •
AMERICAN SOLDIER OF FORTUNE
The above id Capt. Paul Mason,
one of the American legion with the
Mexican insurrecto army under Ma-
dero, operating in Chihuahua. Capt.
Mason Wit$ with Gen. Lee Chrietenae
in Honduras when he heard of the
outbreak of the Megiean revolution.
He hurried to New Orleans and came
front there to El Paso, where he join-
ed the insurrecto army then encamp-
ed at Guadeloupe, oppeeite the Texas
border.
He engaged in the battle of Cases
Grandes and was one of the few
Americana who survived that engage -
Went.
1410MS
Vr:". itats,
THE• TASK SYSTEM."
An Explanation- of "The Kernel of
Scientific Management."
neon WIlI 1rwIns "The Awakening of
the American Business Man" In the
ievphrel In Cersirt eudreyi.,
ick W. Taylor and his
eaenest apostles of efficiency set about
to revoludonizemachine production, they
had to reckon from the very first with
the wetting/lien's set, negative conser-
vatism. He had learned his trade under
the old hit-or-irtiss system ; to do cerectin
things In certain Inefficient ways was
habit with. hint. The age -long struggle
betv teen capital and labor, which began
In the oppression of the kinglish -textile
opeintives, had rendered fent sellen and
suspicious * * * * Taylor understood
from the first that methods of scientific
management. which worked, out so won-
derfully in the laboratory and on paper,
must have the consent and co-operation
of the worker before they could be ap-
132Tlehde tlirneigio
leoablvly.
Its method to aecomplish
Ibis was the "piece -work" plan. Etta
industry learned long era the falsity of
much a smelt'. On piece work certain
operatives push tar ahead of others. The
operatives push far ahead of others.
Their earnings become so great that they
make what seems to the maleagement
at, undue wage. Cuts in rate follow
the wages of the expert !ow reach a
Menet level, those of the inexpert many
sv down toward the starvation point.
The operatives work beyond all reason -
ebbs Ismael of work irregularly ; bad liv-
ing couditione, disease, reduction of the
working life follow, until finally we ate
rive at conditions like those of the east
side " sweatshops" in their most panto.
Ions days. Industry becontes dlsorgate,
iz10,30.
veda,yiaonrd. bootelti.estlodrees.
lulIlt 011 the "task
systetn." lie discovered, by the oollece
Von and eorelation of data. the beet and
Quickest method of perfornsIng any given
taste discovered at what pace the aver -
SAC operator could apply it without in -
Jur yto Isis immediate strength or hie
nermanent vitality, and made that the
straulard. The preper teak dlecovered
in this rreanner. lie encouraged the molt tit
apply it by a system of bonuees. "Whitt
the Workmen most wants, atter tile"
sem Taylor, " is higher wages." He took
as his etandard the pay whieh the
workman had bee nrecetving untler the
old regime. Norte received less than
that : but each worktnan, Who, after in-
etruetion from the teacher or foremen,
learned to perform the task in a naw
vaoters:ceia:edo, in die allotted timae. got
bonus. That. so far tut the worker Is
remains tlte kernel of
ecieetific management.
T.
Nom
Te m su Li s
Miss goring is walking In her sleep,
Al settle' there the gees.
Uuon her little feet aereeo
Areund the bede of roe.
She does not knoW ft ht clot time
Por her to come Aleut's),
And neither does elle feel the Wine
Of frost upoa the ground.
Almost some days she opens her eyei
And wakes : it mikes mi trate
nal? again the cold gray fakes
th•aw eurtaine teem the heart.
Her little hands held eta before
1.1ke some blind. au me,
elie reaelies fur the rose ence more,
The woodflower ithd the tree,
en hushed along the starve of Ahearn
Sbe4. VOMPS With Mighlt, Sat Wed,
A thelet amid the hails of gleam
eliostn ut violet's led.
teLe horst have thought she heard the eel!
of Malteds in the Wake-.
hit. how *nes feele alone the well,
if bige Welt111 wake
...Baltimore Sun.
Some women have ettelt clear COOP
ptexione flew we tau tee tight through
them,
0000 READING
Is Not Necessarily Costly to Procure .
by the People. •
Cood prune that paintsit hit:tare Met
itneerts an idea is * dernoeretie thing:
John litu7an was a tinker, mei George
Foe was apprenticed to a thoemeker bt.
fore he beton that work which ended in
the Societe' of Friends; yet both have
written ouch proee as many more fortu-
nate in the world's estimation would be
glad to write if it gave them like fame.
The "Pilgrim's Progress" Mt be found
la any public library, end good ednione
of the book, lenglish and Auserion,
may be lioughe for very little money;
the "Jeweled' of George Fox is easily
had, Now, both these men write a
laeguage that for simplivity, istrengte
end, sweetnees is hard to beat, and their
words are those of the people, not of
tboae that learn front mere academie
sources and thereby perhaps ineensibiy
ask privilege for learning. The prose el
ouch men as Fox. and Bunyan is part of
the musk of the people; where one has
read the "Essays" of Sir William Tem-
ple, e thoueand have read enrent the
wouderful story of Christian and Great-
liciert, and Fox will in A sentence or tw.r
paint you each a picture as than be vi-
vre to the eyes. Nobody is asked to re-
late a parable in a letter of business or
to be graphic where eastetneas is of tee
.essenee of the matter, but tone ea» es-
cape the duty of precision; and this can
be learned by eath man for himself by
reading, but reading weat es good-.Clegstian Seience Monitor.
HOW TO SAYE MONEY
A Pointer to Housekeeriers..
Look .at the financial side' of Zam-
Buk'e nee, A cut .sustained in the
home, the store, or the workshop, a
sore which is unattended, results, eay,
in festering or blood -poisoning, , Yon
heve to lay off for a day or two. What
does that mean when pay day comes
round? Zana-Buk insures you against
that loin! A little Zam-Buk applied
to such an ihjuty prevents all danger
of blood-poisorung, takes out the
smarting and heats.
Heads of families know how costly
doctoring ia. I3e wise and act on the
preventive line, • A box of Zarn-Duk
in the home is so all-round useful.
The babyat mho, the older child-
rell'S cuts and beitneese the inevitable
burn, out, or scald—for all these, as
well as for more eerioue, ailments,
sueli as piles, ulcere, eczema, ring.
worm, ate., ZaunBuk is without a
rival.
Dangers of Shaying.—You get a cut
at tbe ,barber'a shop. A little Zara-
Buk smeared on the wound prevents
all danger. If any ailment has been
contracted, Zana-Bult .eurea. Mr.
George Robderr, 108 Manitoba street,
St. Thomas, Ontario, .saye: "I earn
traeted barber'a rash, and the whole
of my left cheek broke out it due
mass of red, watery pimples and sores.
These spread to the other parts of
my face until face and neck were
covered with running sores. How Inc
the &sense would have spread had
it not been for -Zam-Buk, I don't
know. I applied this balm, and in a
ehort time Zane -1311k effected a corn-
plete cure."
Zam-Buk Soap it as good as the
balm, but iu a different way. Washed
in Zam-I3uk Soap the skin is disin-
fected and disease germs lying upon
it are killed. Mothers will find it
unequalled for baby's bath.
Zam-Bnk Bali and Zarn-litik Soap
aresold by all druggists and stores at
60c lox the balm and 800 tablet, for
the soap.
EVIDENTLY A FIRST EXPER-
I EN.CE.
(Washington Star.)
"That man you just met is a eompar-
ative stranger to you," .said the haver-
tinent amateur detective.
Pile is. But how -die you know it?"
"When you offered him .one of your
-cigars he took it without protest and
proceeded to smoke. it without a eign ef
suspieion."
JUST ONE WOMAN
IN THOUSANDS
VVho Ostn Say "DoOd's Kldn0Y
Pill* Made Me Wein"
.1.","0.0.11.11MTI•
Mrs, Louis Delorme, who was odvittiS
tired and nervous oud suffered
front Backache, tells how she
found a cure.
51, lbw du Lae). MAIL, April 3.—
doh- The etory ni Mee. Louie Detonate,
a wedeltuown mot highly respected reg.
item of thie place, is identical with eltat
of thousantle of other women in Canada.
11. le ell the most interesting on that ae-
euturt. t'elle mete tired, nervorte and worn
0111. ,Dothl'e li.idney Pilis eured her.
"I suffered for five years from Hack.
;tile and too frequent :urination, whieli
deetroyed my sleep," Mrs. Delorma
setups. "My head would nehe, and I was
always tired awl nervorte. My limbs,
were heavy, and 1 bad a dragging _serra-
tion *ernes the loins. Dodd's Kidney Pale
made Me Well. I usee in all ten boxes,
but they fixed inc 1110
Tbothands of ether thinatlian women
aim have not mod Doddh Kidney tetis
are in rust the coudition Mra. Delorme
was in before she used tbem. Thousands
of ,others who were in that eondition
and who ueed Dodd'e 'Kidney Pills, Are
pew well and strong.
We leittil from the experiences of eth-
er, and those experiencesteath us that
the weary and wore women of Canada
can find relief in Dodd's Kidney Pills.
. 0*
JAPAN'S GREAT ADMIRAL
COMING.
ADMIRAL TOGO.
Admiral Togo of the Japauetre fleet
which destroyed Ruesia,•s navy in the
battle of the Sea of japan, will be a
summer visitor to the United States,
provided, however, no war exists be-
tween the United States and Japan
et that time. Togo will be in New
York the second week in June and
Iwill .pass about time days in \Vasil-
ington, This trip will be made
cidental to Togo's visit to England
Ias special Japanese envoy to the core -
nation of King George.
44*
HIS OATH.
(Pittsburg Gazette.)
John 1). Rockefeller, jun., at the re-
cent reunion of the Bible elass of lvItieh
he is vice-president, said of it soineweat
&Waive magazine writer:
"He attacks his country's greatest
men, but, when 1 read his attacks, I
can't help thinking that he la rather like
old 'Uncle Itastus.
"Uncle liastus, testifying in it eertein
lawsuit, tefused to be sworn. •
"'Alt will affirm,' he said.
"'But, Uncle eRastuse said the judge,
'how is this? Last week in the Calhoun
case, you swore readily enough.'
"'Ye' honohe said Uncle Resells sob
slimly. 'Alt was 2120' /ninth o' nuth lacks
in dat case dan in dis one.'"ee
HOW TO RAISE AND CARE FOR
THE PROFITABLE HEN.
LESSON 4. --HOW TO CA RE FOR THE FLOCK.
A small flock of chickens shouldn't` be learned that to feed hens very light re -
much bother at all. tions for two weeke in the latter part
Wholesome food, fresh water, dealt of July, and then begin feeding heavily,
awl evelleeentilatea roosting houses, will induce them to moult early and be -
shade and freedom from lice are the gin laying again in NeveMber, and, con.
five most important hot weather rept- ditions being right, lay all winter.
sites. Above all these thinga don't al- (live them lots of grit and keep !tome
low them to drink dirty, impure water. broken charcoal within their reach,
Ie Is a good thing to put at few drops Cull out all useless old hens, surplus
of tincture of iron in the drinking wa- Mattel% and runts; fetten and kill be -
ter oceasionally. fore winter sets in.
Separate the males from the females When eold weather comes on,,be sure
as soon as the former begin to ewe, the ehkken house is dry and airtight
and keep them quiet until eggs are on all sides but one, ureferably the
wanted for !stitching again, By forced south. side, which may, exeept on e± -
feeding get the young roosters ready trereely cold nights, have- no other ewe -
for the market. Oudot( breeding tee- ering then a burlap.
sons at letteh She hefts ithottla he allotted Rens in damp, drafty, filthy !toilets'
to eech rooster. will not lay; remember that if you want
Itenovete the thicken house end nut winter eggs. Take .are thed the venti-
at keit nee a, week, removing Alt de- letiou Is suffieient during eoid Weather,
If there it no nature} shade, sueli as when the flock spends most time Inside.
that you can shift the ruel to fresh Give them pleuty of green food. leab-
ground, plant letteke or seurething of Irma is excellent; peelings are fine, too.
the like on the old nth and time renew will A loweided box with eine tukd
bat
thlef"tlii1;er ne natural Shed*. Well Mtle. Dry leaVesl thrown thickly over
dust, so that the Irene may oneey dust
a iree or blushes, make a fretnework tbe floor, or grew or hay, metre a good
and rover With came or bonnie. A littee into which the grain food may be
'patch of sunflowers wilco a good tirade eelittereil, making the hem .sink to
and furnishes feed for the poultry. If dill it. Lazy Ilene lay few eggs.
Ow thicken hone* become*. Infested Wttic Give them all the meat e'raps from
Hee and mites, elose, it up tight and Du. table. Au tweasional feed ot
nIlOn-
fuinig;its with stelphur. Liberal doses 11,1 o»ionse-aliout onee a week—elemel
aefel twit ilitheawt.strapopinagitibeahalertitolvitalt, je10111 o:tesp, toeag.in(e$fn htiitiigmtisa,agifh thug).
thIllAtt(trelSeollrensitslitrt;u141 be fol dialog the twebtf
ieive hens in ono fh,eti.
Do net attcmpt wilder mem than
time. Despite heed (etrand lose .111.011,11.moult early ususiiy fay ehickens will get somelimee, etegt
i e c
well during the winter. it has be.:n week's talk will Id about tthlt,
(0011thIlleti Nut Week.)
MINISTERING SPIRITS.
Not until we know all that 004 leueive
.,,on we eetituate to tee full power and
the .etterednees of SOMAI ette life which
may even the brimblest in the world'.
There is no oetiou so slight run AO
mean but it ntay be done to a great
purpose awl enobled therefor; nor iS any
purple
to great but that slight Attlee
may heip it, and may be done as to help
it well, meet especially that chief of ell
Perpcaee—by pleaelag 01 Gml, iVe treat
Ched with nrevereuce by hauishing Hire
front our thoughtie not by referring to
Ills still on slight oevaelons. Re is not
the finite authority of Intelligeuce whieb
cannot be troubled with small things.—
John, Ruskin.
GOD'S WORLD AND MAN'S.
It is not God's world, with its love
and friendship, and little children, ite
fields end flowers, sea and sky, sunlight
ard starshine and sweet eonsobetiort of
art and songs, againet which we are
bidden to beware. No it is man's world,
which devotes itself to gain, or to the
wish to be sontebody in society; to the
frittering away 'of our days in (*Orion -
able frivolity, or in struggling to outdo
our neighbor, not in the purity of our
lime, or the dignity of our actions, but
in 'doer elothese our carriages and Um
company we keep—this worki it is which
earnest be rightly loved by one in whom
awelleth the love of the Father.
But Getter w,orld we can never love
half enough, can never sufficiently ate,
Prolate -and enjoy, I believe that if
God, were to make a man, a full-grown
man in a moment ana were to set him
down in the midst of the world to look
upon it with new eyes, and for the firet
time, instead of letting him grow up
from a child, to become aocustomed to
it—for it' is true as Mr. Lowell says
that "we &nee careleesly at the sun -
Ilene, and get used to Orion and the
Pleindes"—I believe that the man would
110 in danger of delirium from his over-
whelniiiig joy and wonder at the beauty
and the boundleseness of that which ee
eaw around.—A Dead Mane; Diary.
A SERVANT OF PARADISE.
Do not ask my name. I Was put to
work before alphabets were termed or
conjugatione were in Mlle, Just think
of me as v. mere student, compartment
eroteetor of men. My premotion involy.
ee separation from my compeers, and
oh, 'the changee j was, the first to eonie
to earth, and my newborn protege was it
wonder, Did f say total He WM
never horn, he had no mother, no home.,
the moat solitary being yott ever ma -
lined, and my, solitude waa nearly a$
!tuminfinitelihedtug
°Prelit;tlie
dsiill
etehas
lYailt wthe dawn,
i
toil fresh, and the experience can never
:h. repeated. Ile breethed, he e:ghed, he
wept, he laughed, he wearied, he elept, •
he dreamed, he reste4, he wakened. The
light waa veiled by the rain, Ms hair
sveved in the breeze, he walked,: tie
stumbled, he laure his knee; he 'learned
obedience by awkward failure, he ex-
tended his survey as a nestling, aid I
helped him to appreciate the first ripe
Unite erre to smell the flowera.
Ile bad no memory and no hope, for
lie had no past, he was without wielder
eor there was nothing old. I Iva* a
•:oneiy pilot on a irately sea, in a lonely
elep, semetimes: fieh would le.a.p out
the water and fall with a splash, and
there wee mew sensation. now huh
the summer showers' how teraceng the
winter cold. He. didnot play, he did
not grow (in etteture) hie powers of vis -
on were large, end ydt he learned as a
eabe would Warp, He had a tongue but
to ianguage, his health WA4 Superb, his
loquence wa.s sherd yet. musical.
My wonder, my joy, my charge, rite/ -
evil& \Viet powere were locked up in
1:tt tniustnu,rae.progenitorra king, these
altDo you ask when, or Where, or how?
.111nyeiwaeirialathtermy.. D.y....Ont ask the length of
tt is eaMmair to ask,. glieetiona than it le to
To ask or search I blame thee not; for
TA as the book of God before the set,
Wherein to read His wondrous works,
and learn
TTi seoaer nyrs
sea, lo.,tr...rs, or days, or mouths
a ,
My ministry was limited as to time
and person and place. A high officier of
state infOrmen me that I was supereeded
by two of exalted rank, one was the
man, the other 'over the source of 44
104.4mist motherhood
otaheraohooit
the seem., I was
caught up,they were as lonely se a at
the beginning, but myetery roee in mys-
tery, al the leaves unfold in the *ging.
—11. T. Millie.
••••6•0..aa••••
TELEPHONE.
Speak to me gently o'er the phone,
Tin, the ab lu monotone,
Trembling, tinkling, vibrant wire,
13urdened with a fond desire!
Put an apron tin' your though;
Only a portion only wrought,
Comes outside the burs of mind,
Drawn so gently, so refined.
0 the stock of sweet reserve,
Stowed away for those who serve,
Blessed is it thus to give
Treasures deep foe those who live.
Like a dove in folded breast.
Breathing softly balmy wit,
Fuel bring I to the fire,
When 1 phone my deep desire.
lip again at dainty cup,
When you're weary, call me up.
• IL T. 'Millen
.16.41•••••...11,
LOOK TO HEAVEN.
Ilearte weary et the woe and worry of
life look longingly to heaven with a sen-
timent not much higher than that whieb
moved a Worldositk poet to cry tor a
desert, "Where he might all forget the
htinuen race Anywhere, away from
am% Woven1 the world where berth
with all its storm and Arlie may for-
gottert; atone with the eulet Angela,
within tins tranghtil sphere of. the ser.
Otto activity of God. N'othiug like Me
will he heaveh, It is the 'sphere ie
which the elect spirits who Mee woo
the piece in lifehi diattlee, who hare •
Ouse forth from the . thew of strife
traioed, inured, yet pure, shell play out
their parte on a grander merle, itt 4 Wid-
er theatre, under the eye of a more It
Witte and exigent. Ring. Alt that sod
-
Ay aims at on tenth and rafrieet, the
grand order of Iranian relatbne, the nee-
jesfic processlan ot human activities, of
whiter, waited antltrippled a. they are
nu earth, the wiseet end noblest have
not vessed to &ton, trliall there tie
reallaedl. With Quiet the Slug
in the centre ef it, toid tbe meta et -
Umlaut.
113.1ketin /frown.