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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1911-12-07, Page 3Irevivionws••••,.••••••••m- Ways to Cook EGGS SaitA,MRLED EGOS AND TOMATO TOABT—atelt two talaespoontule butter, tahl two tablesoounfule flour and ptIr un - tel wet& mended; then pour on gradually, while ;stirring Penetantly, one aud oue- half cues stewed and etrained tomatoes, ta which litte been eaded oae-rourth tea - steam soda. Put In double Wier and add one-half cep rich niUb. Dip slices toastea bread in saece, and waen sort ronove to eervIngtllsb Pour remaining satece Over all. Seramble OggS in a little better and eerve on the toast. EGG VERMICEteLI—Three hareabolled. egg. one and oneshair cupfuls of milk, two and one-half tablespoettfule ot flour, two and oneshalf tablespootifuls butter. four or six slices of toast, LiatI teaspoon s It and eaitspoon of Pepper. elake 0. ate tiauce by melting butter, at floute lk oait caul pepper, Chop the whites of the eggs, add to the sauce and pour ever"the toast. Rubb the yolks or the eggs allrougli a sieve and eprinitle over the top, STUFFED EGGS IN TOMATO S.A.UCF, --Cut six head boiled egg's in half, eress- wiee. and remove the yolks. Mash the Yelku fine, adding one teaspoonful of but- ter, half a cup of bread crumbs slightly Inolelened svith mills (three tablesnoos IWO, one teaspoonful of finely minced Persela or scraped onion, one half tea- spoenful of salt Mal one-half salt spoon r pepper. FM the halves firmly with this niixture, Preees two together and terve In hot tomato sauce, Garnish with vareley. rOGS AND TOMATOES—Take cold masbed potatoes. add a little milk. to Ygake them soft, ape teaspoonful of melt- ed butter: beat me well; put on a granite ple tlieh which has aeon greased and a . little flour (lusted over it; put potatoes on the dish in mound shape; bave them nice and onoeth; Put in oven to get leo 114 brown; when done remove carefully onto a roune, flat dish; scramble as erianY eggs as you net, and put them around the potatoes. Serve hot. DATE LINE ECCENTRICITIES. (New York Herald.) '• d it occurred to you," said the taloa ceeiser, "that there'll be a day this Month when you can set down the month, dal^ of the month and the year with. Mx steaight titles? No? WlL I'll show YOU." and the bookkeeper wrote down this; 11-11-11. "There you are," he said, "the eleventh month. the eleventh day and the el6v. eath year of the century, all made with Sastesix straigbt lines." "Yes, that's so," said the stenograpber, "and you can work up triples like that . just once 3.110113 in the present century. in Decernbee, 1912. You can write the 12th dna, of December next year like this—" and the stenograpber taut down his row of figures 12-12-12. Then the bookkeeper turned to his books again mid the stenographer began banging the typewriter. The easeashinitik stove polish in the big can. Not a powder, . which must be mixed with water . —nor a hard cakes which must be scraped but a soft paste, ready to use, that gives a brilliant polish With few rubs. Equally good for stoves, pipes, grates and ironwork..., If your dealer does not carry • "Black Knight" 'Stove Polish, :acrid us his nazue and xoc. and we will send a full size tin by return mail.- 36 The F.F.Dalley Co. Lhalted,Ilamliton,Ont. Makersof the fititt011o "2in 1" Shoe Polish. .1.1•1•••••••••••••••••••••••• AT THE OPERA. ,(New York Herald.) rt YOU do look stunning!" "What et perfect Mee of a gown!" "I want you to meet my husband!" "Is the family back in town?" "The're's that Mrs. Thingamajig!" . "Dld you ever see suet) taste?" *The shortest one is her husband!" "But it wrinkles In the waist!" "So goo dto bo here, isn't it?" "Really, you don't say!" "Whet le Emily thinking of?" "lle's elety if he's a day!" "almeY, my head is splitting!" • "Ho was to lame. 1heeria "Where are the BlectOculs sitting!" "Sill Not so loud, my dear!" "Terat that ridiculous? "Maybe they've had a spat!" "I guess they're applauding Caruso!" "Heavens, isn't he fat?" "Illy. the curtain is ailing!" "Didn't that three hours fly?" "See yeti un at New Haven:" "Love to all! Eve. bye!" A MOTHER'S CARES DESTRUCTIVE TO HEALTH ANAEMIA, BAD BLOOD, I1EADACtIES, AND LASSITUDE VERY COMMON Mrs, Wilkinsen's Letter Gives Ad- vice That Every Mother Pan Well Follow. From her bettie in Newton, wbere she reeides with her /ergo family, alre. Wil- kilisen writes: "For.yeare .1 was Ole, anaemic!. and laeleing vitality., 1 WaS constaut euffm or front indigestion, and the dietreee and. pain it aimed aita coupled with ever-inereasing anaemia, made me weaker day by day. Conetent headaches, epeeke before the eyee and attacks of dizziness made. me feet 55 if life were not \earth living. My consti- tution was completely undermined and the conetant pallor and (Witless in My eyes showed what a sick woman 1 was. I began to take Dr. Hamitic:nal rat and the improvement, althouga slow, was sure. "I gradually got lack my strength and my appetite grew much stronger, and I enjoyed my meals thoroughly. I felt happier and more contented and the sickly patter of ray face was replaccid by n bright, rosy , color, which proved that a strong medicine was at work, In a .few Months Dr. Hamilton's Pills brought me from a aOrldition of deathly pallor to robust health." • You can obtain the same remits ey usiag Dr. Hrtmiltonae Pills — beware of the substitutor that offers you anything except Dr Hamilton's Pills, Me, pa box, or five boxes for $1,00, at all dealers .or the Catarrhozone Company, Kingeton, Ont. — The Cost of Keeping a Cow The letest evidence on the cost of keep- ing eows in dairy herds cornea from some Investigations conducted by the Minne- sota ExPerimental Station and the Fed- eral Bureau of Statistics. This study is especially trustworthy since it is based upon detailed aeounts collected by spe- cially trained agents from a number ot farms in widely separated neighbor- hoodc. There were eight or ten farms on eaeli statistical route and a total of about 25 dairy farms upon which data were collected. A record of each of these dairy herds for several consecutive years furnishes opportunity fpor cheats- ing ttO the, results. INCLUDE ENTIRE COST. In this investigatton the cest of main- tainine a cow included the following it- ems: cash sundries, cash feeds, term feeds, labor -amen and horse—generol ex- pense. eheitee, depreciation, machinery and equipment, herd bulls and Interest on the investment. The classification is somewhat arbitrary, as in some Olsten. ces an item of cost charged to one class might be charged to another with equal correctness. Cash sundries comprise those itetns for which cash wes paid; ropes halters. veterinary services and medicine. Cash feeds are those purchas- (Weed on the farm. Labor includes both ed for cash; farm feeds are those pro... man and horse labor at the current rate of wages for the month and year, com- prising all items of labor performed for and affecting the dairy. General expense comprises those items that a charge to the farm and is made up of 'cash and labor expendittires. The total for the farm is then expropriated trill 1th mhmh farm is then apportioned to the product- ive enterprises, of which the dairy is one. ••••••yero.p...,eiro.rwo mainteett leanper year from 1000 to lin olaarla *awn OR all routes—the result m: el 1row1ng euet or lood. labor .and so fcrtlf. In Sections near Important map- "La alai (elates of population thee oet of maiutalitance Is enormously ittereaied over that iu alinnesota. With reughiege averaging a on or lees, a»d a fee& lees than one cent a IMMO, the formers in the rural districts of the taentral Wet bave a decided advantage over those loestatice where grains are ono mid one -halt to two cents 0. pound, and roughage $15 to $20 it ton. In the latter ease a cow eanitot be maintained on less than eri to eta) a year. FreM fieuras it Is safe to say that the av- in Miunesota tinder good cenditiens aP- crags, aroanal rest a maintainIng a cow emelt-Imes esp. The cost can be kept at a minItnunt through economa In reeding arid care and judgment in marketing an hurdlingthe product." witee'r 4 ('015"IS le`011131 It is Mthy et eworthat these Wallas agree eltealy with estimates that have been elven oat by close student's of daire' con - (titian& Tim tame investigation ellowea that when everythipg is t•barged to the attlinale the 00 5( or producing milk has been ereatar then the erten receivekla some inetalices tee cost per pound or batter fat was as high as 31 mile, while the price received was only 18 vents. This ittreetigation, like others that have been reeeraiss conduetea, dimeloses the fact that only recouree for the dairyman le to weed out the unproduetive animate and to keep only seeh as will priscluce eacugh mint to pay the cost ot mainten- ance and give n reasonable arena On this basis the farmer cannot afford to pay $86 to $100 for a cow unless he pro- duces '4500 to 0000 Dolmas of milk, The proalem resolves itself primarily inio one of securing only high-yleiding cows either by breeding or purehaee. A. further de- tailed, study of this investigation will be Prompted later. --The Countra Gentleman THE VETERAN ON THE FIRE „ HORSE. (Toledo Blade) (Niagara Falls Gazette) So they're buying a bunh of autos—the old stele is too slow: IGhtasoftzonogtoof engines—and the fire horse Well, Maybe the auto is better—a sort of an upward climb—, 'Bet Ian glad that Ian near my Pension, for it's not late the good old time! Why, the horses we had was human—you 'couldn't fool 'etrt on calls, And before the gong was stopped tinglin' they WAS ready out ot tiler ?tails: And you didn't have to urge 'ern, as they buckled down to their wok— In feet they was better than humans, for acme of the latter might shirk. 'You'll not see the eltilder folk Moan' round them motors, Till bet, Lilte thea always wee with the borses, wben the little misses was let— And the horse that would pull an negine like a freight car rnunnin' wild. Would step around like a kitten, for tear of iturtin. a eltild. Yee, maybe the autas is better for it surely busted yew, nerve To save a fool guy on the car tracks and kill your team with a swerve, To :see em crash into a pillar—it seetns kind oe less than fair,* When they was doin' tbelr duty, and, the guy was just out to stare, It's a hardening life In aw ay, Das unsin- ess of rushin' to fires. But we all have a spark of sentiment—. a spark that never expires. So the horses we've %it'd with So lone, Perhaps they no longer will do, I3ut all the eame I'm not sorry my own time is nearly through. COST VARIES EACH YEAR 'With these items included, the annual cost of maintaining a cow in the vicinity of Northfield, 'Minnesota, was as follows; for 1905, $54.42; 1906. 954,40; 1907, 954.84; 1908, $72.32; 1909, Nue: the average cost from 1905 to 1909 being abobt $60. In Marchall. Minnesota, the cost fur 1906 wns $40.41h 1907, $$1.85; 1908, 843.09; 1903, $47.87; with an average • cost of about $46. In Halsted. Minnesota, It was $42.20 for 1904: in 1e05, $42.59: 1003, 946.34; 1907, 947.42; 1008, 958,26; 1900, 58.91; with an average cost of about 949. Cemmenting ou these statistice, the Investigators say: "increasing cost of 111.01•••••••••4 •••••••••••••, - The Rayo is the best ; lamp tnade. gives a strong, &fused light that is remarkably easy to the eyes. There is no glare to it; no flicker. It lights up a whole room. The Rapt) is an econnmital lamp, too. You rce,the most possible lightevalue for the oil burned; and the Ray° itself is is tow -priced lamp. 'Yet it is a hmiclsomo lamp—ean ornament to *lir room in the house. rhe Ttayo Lamp is easily lighted without retntrving shade er ishitneey; easy to deed) bed rewick. Made of solid brass, nickel -plated; also in calumnies other styles tand finisher. Ask yea desW to sbow yen bh Iue oI Rayo Isnot or write for dessikelve titular to tem *saw of The Queen City Oil Company, Limited It Never Flickers The long winter even- ings give e woman a splen- did chance for sewing or embroidery; but her eyes suffer from the strain unless ,she has a good light. , 41•••••• THEY ACT QUICKLY AND ALWAYS CURE Postmaster tells of quick relief Dodd's Kidney Pills giVe Two of Them Taken Before Going to Bed Clears Away His Pain in the Back—Why They Always Cure More Serious Kidney Diseases, BucksLake Ont., Nov, 27.—(Special.) —How quickly Dodd's Kidney Pills re- lieve pain in the back when taken in time is evidenced by Mr. James Thomas, the even knowu andelighly respected postmaster here. "I wish to inform you that I always find relief for pain in the back by tak- ing Dodd's Kidney Pills," says Postmas- ter Thomas. "Sometimes in the morn- ings I cannot straighten up for hours, but if I take two Dodd's Kidney Pills before going to bed the pain all chs - appears and I have no trouble in the morning." Dodd's Kidney Pills act directly on the Kidneys. When pain in the back Is caused by. slight Kidney disorders the pain is relieved at once. Where the complaint is of long standing and the Kidneys are diseased the cure takes longer'but Dodd's Kidney Pills never fall. Thousands of Canadians ten of the cure' of Kidney Disease of all forms, from pain in the back to Bright's Die - Rase, by Dodd's Kidney Pills. There is not on record a gingle ell.Se a Kidney Disease or of diseases resulting from dis- eased Kidneys, such as Rheumatism or Dropsy which Dodd's Kidney Pills bave failed to cure if taken regularly and ac- cording to directions. • --• MAKING VACUUM BOTTLES. Cured of Shingles and Eczema 1•••••1•nr I TUE SOWS THAT. AIM SELDOM 114AltD or. Mr. 3, 51. Jerv is. Rifigstou By Cutieura Soap and Ointment. C64 Raw, Bleeding and Itchy. "t just want to say a good word for Cull - tura Soap and Ointment, In November. ISO, I had what tlie elector.] call shingles and eremite. My chest was raw and bleedleg and itchy. r was that way all winter. It was not terbad in the summer. 10 September it got worse. X had the best doctors trcatin Me, but dld me no good, and I was all run down in healtli. In November. 1910, it got worse again. 'sent to you for twample cake ef Cuticure Soap. Yen sent if to me and X got a box of Cuticula, Ointment, 1 -have used two boxes and on the third one it has cured Trio of denies and eczema. I am de- lighted with them and do feet pleased to think I have something 5 have confidence in. Should anyone be sufrering as I did, I hope that teey will do as I tild, and I am sure ot the results. I am recommending them from experience." (Signed) J. IL Jarvis, 7 Ann Eitigston, Ont., Iday SO, 1911, For more than a generation cutteura goo and Cutioura Ointment bave afforded the speedieet and most economleel treatment for itching, burning, scaly and bleeding skin and scalp hymors, of young and old. A. slegle eet is ofteneufficient. Cutteura Soap and Oint- ment are sold throughout tho world, but to those who have suffered much, lost hope and • aro w1thout,faith in uny treatment, a ilberal santpie of each with ae-p. booklet on the skin will be mailed free, on application. Address PotteraDrug ac Chem. Cora., 65 Columbustwee noston. 11. B. A. ••••••••••arogIr least me faddry, a far more perfect vacuum ie then seeurea by a- mercury fall system, tile called. There is an intricate arrangement of tubes of neercury, which in falling pth- duce the necessary prefigure to. remove the last vedige of air, a yeoman or some fourteen pounda to the square inch. This is guaranteed to keep things hot forty hours, and cold ninety or longer. Equally importaut from the cermet:. cial standpoint are the details thAt have been worked out for the making of the various kinds of eases, for vacuum goods are provided in different etylea and sizes to meet the public demand, and .any. thing from a hotel carafe to a nursery bottle, allay now be had In Ns ware. Accordingly the making of wieleer eases and beekets, of leather holders and straps, is all part of the work, Expensive and Elaborate Process— High Wages Paid. Vacuum bottles are made on the prin- ciple of one holder inside another, With aesmall air space between, which serves as insulation. The two are then fused together, with such support for the Mier tube as emu be devised, silver plated to 1W:event the transmission of light waves and placed in a suitable contabier. The basis of the proems then is the double glass container. These come to the factory in tubings of approximately correct size, says the Edison Monthly, and aro then cut roughly to length. In • this process great wade seems unavoid- able, for whatever flaaa are found there is nothing to do but to throw away the defeetive tubing. Thie in fact is one of the chief elextients of expense, as the de- feat may not appear until some of the finishing proceesei Are reached. After the cutting dewn of the tubes the work of the glassblowers begins. Expert Craftsmen eotnmanding from $40 to $50 a week beet the tube and when it is molten shape it to the right length. At the same time, they round and ciese- , e bottom. The softened glaula is kept in shape by a stream of air within, tone- ing from motor driven pumpii. Iv some of the bottles the inner tube is separated at the bottom from the outer One by a padding of asbestos. In another make there are three dente in tbe curved aurface whieh form supports separating the two tubes. Thee are covered with mica to Itiainteitt the in. sulation. When, the tops bare been feted to- gether and properly sliaped by skilled glees workers the bottle is ready to be washed and silver plated. First an acid and then a silver solution is forced betweert the two gleee shell% through the hole in the bottom, This esin be done only by first drs,wing old, the air, after whieh the pressure floe tone* the liquid in. The bottle with this rather dirty leek. ing solution IS ,placea in a tank of e.eald. Ing water, A few seeolids later it emerges, tranefortned into a salver etattett object bentitiful to behold. The pInting is then set by bilking in an eleetrically li retell oven. Making the vaecuurn is the next and the most dellote opera tiori of all. Is ordinary pumping one en proditee 5. \anima of about seven pounces to the maitre Inch, ;Odell were to keep liqnitle 0*. FREE TO VonTh. best nrannunis as blectest values Stet offered. Ool,1 ead M Silyre Watelles, Cem fist Rings and Breoeliss, boulder -prams, ing Moetee Plefaree Moabite*, gaily doerated Tea gait, Sileorwarer Accordion". Levity weaved looms and many othsre botanist pramilines seven FREE for stalker our high 41414 goshoissiti Pica tag* r *I Cards ate for irc. onr carat are the very latest designs in nand. Birthday, Itolidder, ffiserica, Ate., In artistic eoloni and of :web superior quit ity tbet yen still liar* no wow* eau. ing Pawl. JUST SHOW /MCP! AND TAKE IN THE MONY. ell eta *in en, et these splendid proneness by selling 18.00 worth end upwards, *tad It you will *rite todityynia Oen ithri ICA frt the Extra P rushers we ate Alvin" to theme *rho are attrapt. Fowl es * will toward yea a peek e cards and" r THE "TRAINED DOGS. A troupe of trained dogs is an inter- esting study. The intelligent ananals p'ay dead, jump through hoops and de other high- ly diverting things, all at' the command of the trainer. The tiainee bows in aeknowledgment of the salplausee he also receives the re- ward for the performanee of the dogs. The trainer voter is also an intereet- ing ,study: He refuses to perforin for any but his urge, argue eed plead trari:enter. fxno thor with him, 1111 will not do a single trick until his trainer snaps his fingers or creeks the whip. When the troupe of trained voters is jumped through the boons, played dead, waltzed and otherwisealemonstrat- ed its allegiance to established principle, tile trainer bows to the applause and re. Nives the reward for the performance. Whose poodle are you —Chicago Post. 4 •111. The *hips that are edema neentioaett: Mentreitee big port au tuft ot tacit eve** berate'. &1 t»' fuel 80.4 lo tee WItte world teems NI 1.11, tne fineatism (Text. The big snips voile mutt *0, tinents waten their :towel and tamer - lure, anti tons eater altar lettere Lave etteken beneatit nie nerizett tuu Wirelt,sfi whispers Its messages Iron% totau to we Mende on the snore. Eager norms RW:l4l, anxiously the Malt word Atm the m- et:mum ship. They live weir nays 10 tne glare of publicity. eatnn that oay wheu they tale theft firm plow the ways into their future efertient until that taller ono when tile old :flues' reet on some fOrbidaIng Peel: or in a soca brohere; yard, tney are public etetradere I» the tiocial and commerciat worlds they uteupy »remittent Waves - But tee unnamed ships 00050 and go without mention. Not a, line in the paPot 0.111-1(1.111CeS their lauazdhtaig UPI tew jour- nals et people even note their disappear - a1700 iron' the sea nntess they figure in some dire accident. 'rhea aro the peas - entry of the great deep and, like WU peasantry et thv nations they aro natty- iti1'71,7 Is' unknewn, The bargee and meows of tha nater amdereoria' bear 1101(11017'n twines, lama 1n the out-of-the-way bertlin 10 the liarbor none eo poor as t ell/ them reverence.' 1,11te their twin Mather 10 obecurity, the coal berge, the trot vestige of paint has long 811100 van - Jailed amen their eldee and fathom There uo thorough tea:aping, elect:deg, paintina foe them at the end of eacit voeitge. But year atter year they make their mottot. onotts routes tuaterakled, unkhowli, cared for. They labor Into pert under their own WearY engines, or, more ottett at the end of a tow rope behind a noleY, miffing tug. Gut dice the poor son of the soil, these unituewn sea -goers are tbe essentials a commerce. From a thousand ports and rivere where the lag ships ca.onat go, they gather the produete of nations, 17410 beae it to the 0050.0 port. Barge loads of coal fed the hungry finer:aces of the 'liner' while in her cavernoue hold is sterea the lumber, the dairy products, the fruits gathered frcra the hatniels of thesareat Dominion, the thInge the peeple beyond' the great sea dee:re and the Pro^ duction .and sale of whith enriches the humble teller. So here's to the slaps that are never named—the • barges, seows, ttige and solteoners uf. the marine underworld—the peasantry ef the sea—the essenteals of ocean commerce. WOMEN IN SWEDISH ELECTIONS. Women seem to have played a consid- erable part in the recent elections in Sweden. They have not got the vote, of course, like the women of Norway, but they haste been carrying on an active campaign for the suffrage for several years, and they seem at last to have made en impression on the governing powers, for the Conservatives, against whozn they threw ail their energies, have been beaten, To assist their allies, the Liberals and Social Deinocrats, the suffragettes establisbed n committee in every constituency and held 217 meet- ings during the eleetion. One of their leaders made thirty•five speeches, but their campaign was not marked by any ouabreaks of violence against their op- ponents or the Government. The Swedish suffragettes seem to have campaigned ea tae lines of peaceful persuasion from the first, and perhaps that is why the mere man in Sweden seeing to have list- ened to them.—Westrninster pazette. THE STAIRCASE TEST If You Cannot Pass It Your Health is Failing. When you 'Suffer acute palpitation of the heart, dizziness or faintuess every time you go up atairs; when exertion of any kind leaves yote breathless and trembling, it is a warning that yonr blood is defective—that you are anae- mic. If these warnings are neglected worse disorders will follow—perhaps decline and dearly consumption. If you ere in thie condition, you need the new, good blood of health that lute been given to thousands of sufferers by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Thee Pilllanisb all the ailments arisitig from poor bloody toite up the system and make weak men and women well And etrong. Miss Elizabeth Campbell, Altnonte, Ont., says: "I WO living in Pembroke at the time My health failed nie. 'I kept growing Wettker every day until 1 at last grew ad weak 1 could not walk up taira without help, ancl I eauId not go down street without sitting down and resting. My mother got quite stiatiout about me, and. took Me to a doctor, Mee sald he was quite Bare be could restore my health. Ile gave we a bottle of medi- cine, and I eontinued its use antil 1 had takert fear bottles, but ingtead df get. thig etronger I was growing' weaker all the time, and was only a mere slettlow of my former self. My pa:anti be. lievea 9 was in a decline and renal riot get better. My mother hall heard so Patch about Dr. Willianea Pink Pills Itik4dthi 1%1 eo tden%lat Lae Tintintelllh tilt:Met:Yiuntilhe lied taken five or six boxes, when a decided impeoventent set in, and from that on I grew stronger neat etronger each day, until throttglt a gotitintied itee of the Ville 9 was briele te flIy eld.time health Anil strength. I believa 1)r, William' Pink Pills the best remedy on earth for elek people, and ietnnot too strongly Urge other vteak: gale to give therti a trim." Sokt b31 7311 medieine. sliaIrrs or by inall 40 cents a box or sie boxen for r 1111.11te . hot or cold for le certain number of $2,50 from The 1/r. Williams M'edielne Thera are 7118 speeleS of rotes kROWIT liet. TIN tit 1 rite Misr Go m14 (Indies teem oesetrosteneers. Why „ BECAME. Alttr-UVEST. eel SALT ut ran uo. impt. 315, Toyama, Wit. Minn, Wlien this ham been' dont, ia At Co., liroekville, Ont, and 44$ Of ehryserithetnunts, i—e..---01:*04d4rWACV74001- MADE lisiCANADK CONTAINt40 'ACI.T14 QUEEN ALEXANDRA. ,Naw York Sun,) There Is one place 111 Englend where Queen Alexandre. still holds her °Id po* salon, and that te at Sandringham. When the .H.Ol'at fiuntty stays there Queen Al- exandra presides in great style at Sand- langitant 1101100, while King George and Queen Miery have to put up in the email and unuretentioue 'rink cottage, welch was originally built by King Edward as a bochelor annex to the larger residenee SHE WAS SURPRISED When Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills (hired her Chronic Liver Complaint Mut R. Smith, of Winnipeg, Man, tells an interesting story of relief from almost intolerable sufferings: "I can hardly tell you flow great my sufferings have been, Clironie liver cone. plaint accompanied by biliousness were a daily source of trial to me. • Every day I experienced. the sickening effeete of these ailments,. I longed for some medi- cine that should permanently drive them away., Hearing of Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills, I thought, they were worthy of a trial. My surprise was indeed great. Prom the very first I experienced relief. Continuing with them I found my troub- les were slowly but surely leaving me, and before long I once more L:new what it was to be free from the harassing ef- fects of the ailaients that had long sick- ened and weakened me, So great is my faith in Dr. Morse's Indian Fills that I shall never ou any account be without them?' • Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills cure Bowel and Kidney as web as Liver troube, les, and keep you healthy. 25e a box st your dealer's. 14 ALONE. It is nOt 104 to be alone; the eye is dim, the letudediang down, the heart is sad. Dreams come and eome to stay, but, oh, the loneliness of dreams! Rob- inson Crusoe was lonely an his island. Columbus was lonely in his dream of the western world; and went after compan- ions. By some means he had heard of northern voyagers, he fled to Scandina- via for company, how his solitary spirit pined for fellows, how glad to drop his anchor in a port in Norway, to eat food to feed bis dream, the greatest htteger is soul hunger, when once we are set in, the path. Who does not pray for a double‘ portion to be given to the pioneer! The majority of meo aro not first, never will be; they will follow, they cannot lead. I knew an excellent man who had an -opportunity to be a leader, be had wealth, position, he was good; he would have cheered the heart of an ardent man who had a fruitful bee itt his bonnet, but he did not respond. Months after when others took the lead, he sent a large donation. He was a follower, not a leader. There are different degrees -of self- reliance; what diversities of character we meet. When there is art insurrec- tion look out for the aing-leatierel Those are the men who realize their dream, They are alone at first, they pray, they weep, they ere in Agony, ana by a strange and beneficeut law they gee the mountainside full of horsee and chariots. Luther was alone as he went up thts steps of the stone tower on las knees, eayIng a prayer at every etep; then. came a little bird aact whispered, "The just shall live by faitb," and he came down quickly, and the loneliness was past. Ile was in possession of truth and light,nouns of multitude. This is the meet finished character viatica be- • gins ia beauty and elide in power, when a host of spirits occupy and fill the spirit, and be can say at last before assembled dignities and chetah and stete1"Here I stand; I ean do no other, May Gori help ine" The mountain pin- naelea are lonely; they eat& the first light, they are aflame when the volley is in darkness. Mountain men obey the eitinrads, perform, the taak with vigor, paralized by no anxiety, ruffled by tie doubt, volitions are executed at solo, nothing intervenee between seeing the course mut taking it., He waits for no tuan'a •eapport, he Adorns eoneessien, op- positiou hinders him and he is fixed as a rook,"ThIS one thing I do," says Paul. "The hottr .eometh," says the Mader. "Yet it is new tame that yo shall be seattered and shall leave me alone, alul yet 9 WM not alone, bemuse• the rather is with me." The management olt the eliaraeter, the orreetion Of evfl habits, the suPpreielion ef Wrong desires, the creation of neer virtues—this is a work strietly Individ• ilea with which on etrange.r attained - Meth, in which the syreptitha of friends May he deceptive, arid onr only safety is in a superhuman `reliance. The rela- tion of the human beteg to (301 is alto. gether pereorial; there can be no part - lo its responeibllitiee. Our moral eonyletiohe timet have an werivided elle. iatee, and to withold.1 ear reverence 0111 they are eupporteil by the satin:gee of others, Is an ineult whieli the ywili not bear, What win these even who rendes beet know of oar weitkneseee aral Want Sfltt en pebili t lee X CHILDISH PRAYERS. Tbe rather was to nis stealy at the back of tee house leoklote mu on tile garfler when he saw his angel ebito 174 las little niglitehirt came secretly down the steps arid steal to it corner of the garden behind some sbrubs. He had a garden fork •10 Itls bend. After it lapee of a me tulnutes Ile (01110 011t again and stole quietly upstairs. The father's in- vestigations revealed sone freeltly turned earth_ acme few inebes clown 0:18 11 closed envelope witteh the elahl had bur- ek), On opening it he found a luelfer match .auft tt ellp of paper, 011 W1110/1 W118 written itt pencil, Ilt a sprawling hand' "Dear Devil—Please come and take away Aunt Julia." SPRAINED HER ANKLE "I slipped off an icy step and sprain- ed my right ankle very badly," awe Mies Miunie Burgoyne, of Glenevood, "It swell. ed to a tremendous size and caused in- tense pain, I applied Poison's Nerviline and got prompt relief; the swelling wag reduced, and before long I was able to use my foot." For sprains, swelling; and museular mane .N'erviline is the 0114. sure remedy. Strong, penetrating, ewift to destroy pain eathatat Poleotia Xerviline. Fifty years in use, A CANINE NEGOTIATOR.. An amusing etory concerni»g the Mor- occo negotiatione k going the round,: of the French preee. Von laiderlen- Wachter Ir0:4408.; .1ti'fti I dog, of the boarhoutel type. The dog end hie waiter are inseparable. One 11 VCti for the ether; in fact, they remind one of Worilewortha "I'wo Thieves" for their attachment.. The dog takes pirt in the negotiations, lying at the feet of his master, end for the most part 010810(1 - less. Bet 111 the touree of the converse - tions, somethimes the Preneh iltroomit- tist enema:elm:sly raises his voice, Then a low growl from the dog lead.; al, (tam - bon io nmaulate hie vale)1. When Von KiderleneWacliter had to visit tio, Kai - ger on 'Waal hie yaeht itt Kiel some time ego the dog, more so, aceompanied lane The two friends at the port SPelilefl like- ly to suffer a ehort equitation, hot the Kaieer 5)70 Whlt Wit.; nil*: fill 601 tr,V11 ilte eteteeme 0 aml harbor efneette aud solved 00 diffienitv. observiug, "When ler° brothers come to eee me, I cannot do otherwlee than reeeive them toeeth- er."--Lontion Globe, IL 1'. Miller AIL e THE SUPREME TEST. (Youth's Compaeione "There never VAS Amoe' collet for aa utaand-down good nature," sale etre, Clifford, in sae:draw of her deceased bus - lanai to the ileW eumnier boarder.. "My son 30e always said pa was mere pati- ent than Job." "I tell you," she continued, "you can figure for youeself bow patieet Amos woes by this. Our old horse. Dimly. would get the rein under his tail ansa keen it there off an' on for lea mile senile& Amos gettiug made' SHE KNEW. Ile remarked that just three years ago There was a heavy fall of mum. 13tit hie wife sale quickly: "That's not sta It's atsur yeare since that storm, you Icnow," 110 ventured to sity that very night A, cat was yowling with all her might; fetid Illgilleit;w1fe: "He isn't telling. It Twa nelghborhocal doge began to fight." "It wile 1 o'cloolt hi the morning, when The racket began," he Spoke uo again. line his wife exclaimed; "1,1that nodsonso, Bert! You know very well it wan only ten," "I carefully picked up my old boot -jack, To the front door went in my dressing seae. k," Bet Me wife cut in with: "Alas, Weak! I'm Positive that you want it in the back,' "An I was saying," Bata he once more, "I fluhg wide open the big front door!" But his wife asked: "What are fibbing for? You went to the back Its I told before," Whether figliting tlegs, or feline yell, fr011t 01' DRek, I cannot tele They comidn't stgreie.o.n_ just what befell, n Burey certainly contradicted well, A WARNING TO MOTHERS X0 11101 1811' expva her little one to eeteape all the ills of childhood, but every mother whit accepts fair warning. as to the treatment of these little ilts can 711VC her baby melt suffering. Titon- sends of mothers of young children keep Baby's Owe Tablets in the house—alf inothers should do so. The Tablets are it never -failing cure for all tee minor ills of babyhood and ehilahootl. They NM be given with perfect safety—they alvateee do good: never harm.. Doneti- pation, 111111g041 1(211, enlie, simple fevers, coati, eta., all rapidly disappear uncler treatment with the Tabiete. The Tab - Ike are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 eente a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Meaieine Cio,, Broeaville, Ont. WHO AM I ANYHOW? married a widow who had a daugh- ter. My father visited the house fre- quently, fell in love aml married my stepelaughter. Thus my father become. Thy son-in-law, and my step -daughter my mother, because she was ray father's wale. My step -daughter had a son, be was, of course, my brother and at the same time my grcndehild, for lie was the son of my daugliter. My wife WitS my grandmotheit, •be-eause she wile my motherSs mother. 9 Was my wife's hue. build and grandchild at the same time, alai as the husband of a person's grand - 14 los gratulfather, I must be my own grandfather. V V $200.00 NI PA IN CASH AND 1,000 VALUABLE PREMIUMS GIVEN AWAY. 1st Prize, $50.00 in Cash 3rd Prize, $35.00 in Cash 2nd Prize, 540.00 in Cash 4th Prize, 525.00 in Cash Sth to eth Prizes, each$10.00 In Cash. • Herewith will be found the picture of an old man. Around his head and shoul- ders are concealed the faces of his S even daughters. Catt you find these seven faces? If so, mark the faces with an X. Cut out the picture and send it to us, together with a dip of paper ou which you have written the words "1 haveloand the seven faces and marked than." Write the above words plainly and neatly, as 17i cage of ties, both writing and neatnese will be considered in this contest. Should you not happen to be a neat Remember, all you have to do is to mark the faces, cut out the pietare and write on a separate piece of paper the words, "I have found the seven faces and snaked than.' writer, show this advertisement t o some friend ofyours whocanwriteplain- ly and neatly, and haveldinor her en- ter this contest in his or her name for you. First, agree withthepersouwho istodothe writing, that you are to re- ceive any prize money or prize that may be award- ed. Thistnay take up alittle of your time but as ehereis TWO HUNDRED DOL- LARS in cash and One Thousand preiniuma given away, it is worth your time to take a little trouble over this matter. We do not ask You to Spend One Citit o Your Money in.order to enter this Contest, Send year linsteerat t: ree reitl reply by Return Retort will be found a partial tlal or tha Pune tat 71.0 telling you whether your answer is correet or not, addreuret of a few pereons who bare woo toot* of out and we win send von •contpiete Prise 1.10, together with larger priseathreeentcariteste. AltbougfetheeePtrapalect Cie cameo and Addressee of fiell7115 win, have recently entirely unknown to us, they are ear temente% A% received over Obe Thotriand Dollars totath Priees front enqutry front any one of them will bring the orefenn". inand full particulars of.. simple eontlition that Must be that our contests *re curled out with the el0041 14105411 fulfilled, (This condition duo. not Involve the spending and integrity. Vont oppertaalty to win is goad 00024 of an of 4020 00007.) mint is equally 87o04 114 that of eayone elm. ow Ng wirl not be allowed to enter int% Dewiest. entering thles.conttIf., Winnetts of Clash Pato. 1.2 a.m. Iola nom, petitions, proolo,u.s w. 1,nnero_ol,t71.1.7•4 On, delistudi 540. Names and Addresses of a Pun -Wangs tri Recent Contest she W. A. c. Orr, to' 8 1:1„ ZVinniptig...1070O—blisTartrittlite, Its Otta;tri...:: 35,09 Miss R. Brodeur, 6 Oillesple st,snen.maz. . soco ri. 0 11, Benson. 33 Iltrgrost V. WItiolP4.• • 33010 Lonis Quutta,.Clistlettisgitc,,Que... i s000 Mrs, W Little, P0016114111. I' CO Mr. Alphonte Drown. Der4.6t8t&0f State.Ottaite.• sod* Mr. Thos. Meaty, 53(7.28(751,53,00 Mr,,f, A. St Pierre, Anhatskt. nee . , .0 soca Miss Mary Lamb, la Spencer, St. john'e Mid% 03tst Mrs. R. McMillari, 33s Welland St. Wett Turento soco Miss h' A Rentiedy, ta Railway St, lIstoillbis„.• 27 Mist 1.11, liettjartun, t:$ e000 314 Julea, 00e070alies,.0otda3a Atter. Oat is o) 44450 )1,0, Powell, P.O. Dept , Ottawa, OM., . 43.00 Mt }no. M. Sullivan.DuckWorth, St. John't„Nitilaoso 8)o.. Andrew Johnson, tiok toy. koblin, Mart—.• 40,00 44,4 11 11 %Innen, 10.3 linghsen St , Havilltog. 05.0% atr, Mortnan Robinton, Milford Raven, Oot 40 co Mr W e stase.em mama.— 83.04 M. 'rhos, Humphries, ckt Ayers& SOns,St John's. 40 03 tare, 11. W. 'Utak'''. 562 *71. 1^0,*011. 001 ISata Mr. P Pergnson, 141),tme4 Ate , Winnipeg'. ' 40 00 440 h ilugden . &ferry Meeting St. JOhn'tHfitl roma MT& J. $1. ASt, MaiFonneshe. 7100(401,1, 31 00 Mist Pollock. ss 'triter Wee,. Months', so.00 Mrs, A Ferguson.. ts Stant* Malt, Winnipeg 3.1,00 Miss Roth PrItten, 43V:white/land Att„Wintiiptif, moat Mr.. 11 it. Chadwick. 6:4 Spedina Ate., Toranto 3,00 Mae Isabel Ecrgosen, Sot 1(04. 8IIMOM°n•Ithl,•• 10,4 Mr, xi a. Strange, pa litockisid Rd St,John,N 11... • 3700 7)4 Q R Renjunin, ne Rtigboon St,. Hautiltall,., togsg Address: 130VEL. TMFG.. 'CaY: 30Vii;1101101NO2,! WIONTeEAL, bANADA.- Suite 5 I 000 Toilet Sets FREE Don't throve your money away buying *toilet set *ben you can get it high elass one ilke this PREZ. A toilet met ln a very neeessary article on every dressing table, and the one we offer as a premhun will commend Itself te the Mostreteled and artiste taste. The ease Is bent!. tune lithographed in hotel?' patterns and huge noral sprays. It Is sateen nett lined and fitted with a handsomely ern. bossed back mirror and brush with torah to match. Wo give you this lovely Toilet get FREE for Melling only !KO worth Of Christmas and New Wilds and lending Booklets at titer lee. Thetis are the yerv litteet mat Ineet eXeltaive de - mi s. V.mbosed end lithographed fft all tbo natural eolorS. At our price of tor loam inst showthem and take the money. Don't Mira this wonderful chaDee, Wrtte today. - veu iesity hot ow tats edeerttiseartint *tan. COBALT OoLO Pti4 CO.. Dept TOrtink Olt. The total enlisted streagth Of the (hilted States incladiug all britnelies, ie 70,011. The number of commit:lot:ea off:mere ii: 4,433. Analysis of the last United Statee census ehows that of the whole popula- tion 32,200,000 pawns are of foreign birth or are bora of foreign parentage. V1 4 The net direct—itra 0.7177071, in 1010 was $550,578,330. Canada shared in that trade to the extent of 111,024,- 120, according to the figures issued by Washington, Italy seeras likely to keep Tripoli, but the territory will cost her souse money. Already, it is said, tho war haa cost $100,000,000, Alia the end, is not yet. The expensiveness of war is a strOnet 313* Silence for peace, ••••• lautrice and Germany there is a great vomplaint about the increa$e. in the cost of the necessaries ot life. In Lyone milk has gone up from 4 cents, • a quart in 1000 to 0 and 7 cent in 1011. Ia Berlin it is even dearer. •••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••....-- Great Britain has launched her twen- ty-first Dreadnought, a vessel 05.5 feet in leagth,80 feet beam and a aisplacta ment of 23,000 tons. Iler watertigh.t compartment construction renders her unsinkable even if pierced below the wa- terline. The Russian State-ewned and epos.- ated railways closed last year with a heavy deficit. In the last seven yeare the Government roads have not may not earned anything upon capital oat - lay, but have left a deficit of more than $250,000,000 upon operation accOunt. The German Government will include In its next estimates an itean of $1,5001- 000 for the purchase of an aeroplaue fleet next year. It will now he la order for all the other nations to double that expense for war aeroplanes. The net deficit 4:!11 the openttIou of the British telegraph system last year was X1,182,321— £133,108 greater' alum he the preview; year. 'rhe net davit in telephone operation WM R.41,830— being £41;223 leee than in the previous year. Beane UnIted States papers are com- paring King George's trip to t1u3 Durbar with President Taft's swing around the circle on his political tour. It is pointed out that Taft's tour eoverea 14,280 miles, while Kluge George's tour will cover 10,858, without allowing for travel in India. -4 4 IP Dr. W. T. Connell, of Queen's, calla attention to the danger of typhoid from polluted water supply in the village and rural districts of Ontario. And that stream of pollution is poured into the rivers and lakes from, which the cities draw their supply. The moral is: filter the water. The Japanese Antarctic expedition, has set out on its second attempt to reach the South Pole. On its former, attempt it got as far as 74 degrees south, but the vessel, Kainan Marta waa unable to resist the ice pressure az4 had to turn back for important re- pairs. An investigation conducted in New York recently showed that 300 people, who lied obtained loans from sharks who advanced money on the securityof wages, were paying an average of 80 per cent, for the money borrowed. Caste like these are the strongest argument in favor of' some legal limit to interest and Some cheap and easy method of rostrata. Ing extortion. A report just furnished to the United States Congress shows that the cost of the military forces sent to the Philip- pines since the treaty of peace with Spain was concluded in 1898 has been $107,486,000. Adding the $205000,000 to Spain for the Islands, end all the other contingent costs, Uncle Sam's van - tare out into the Pacific has proved a very costly one. The tax records of Germany list 747 persons with fortunes of $1,100,000 ov over. Bertha Krupp von Bolden Hal- bach retutned her property in the year 1008 as valued at $44,500,000, and her income at. $4,048,000. In 1002 her &Oa, er, sinee dead, returned his ineorao at $10,000,000. In 1800 Baron Wilhelm von llothschila returned his property es valued At $0i,300,0410 1)r. Woods Hutehitison tells us that mince pie is "an eaaily aseitailabalt palysachrld carbohydate of highly cal- orie efficiency." Who woUld have thought it? It, retain& us that In the old days the unfortuteate military tau. diciate 171415 required to learn that Se mini° ball was "an elongated, cylindro. eonoidel, pynaraidal expanding prolec- tile with a hollow aperture at the bees fitted for the reception of a wooaelt plug." Aecording to the reports tarnished to the Census and Statistias Office for the month of October, the area planted in potatoes, route and fodder eeope thie largest inerease le abown itt potato454 vaine of tvhielt total $210,011,000. 'The largest inereaee in idioms in potatoes, which is nearly $0,0110,000 more thee litet year, althouglt the crop is 9,000,000 bushels less. The average selling price is 60 cents a boshel, les compared with 41 eents 11leer ago. 'rhe committers la this quarter of the tountry seem to be paying a great deal MOPe then the aver- se prite.