HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-10-18, Page 3tine/TERING BEES OUTSIDE 1 l
Experiments Show Advantages Over movement for the 'Conserve -
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Cellar wintering.,, tion of food. Help to pre,
Experhrients in wintering"' bees out- vent t b d d , the
a ,ease, were started at the Centra] Whole wheat grain in break
Eeperimelrte1 Farm, Ottawa,' in the fast foods and bread stuffs.
winter of 1912-18, and have been con- Substitute whole wheat 'for
Untied every year since. Compared
with bees wintered in the cellar the meati eggs and potatoes,
side, placing; four colonies together in waste e
Y 131a21 i
rig
- outdoor -wintered bees have, on the The whole -wheat grain is the
average, come out in 'spring in better Most perfect food given
d of
eo Tt o
In
n tad •ed t e ro
b h o'io
ging
Y p, p ortion
colonies found to be living in the to man' In Shredded
spring and the number of combs '., in
Wheat Biscuit y o
u
Y
each hiv' found to be covered b els
e d yb s
the -whole wheat grain h n made
atthefi•
g
a
t� examination , lna fol d
have
toward -
of
4
t ma digestible
the`end,of April. by Steam -co k ng,
`- The wintering cases employed were shredding and baking.
large enough to take , four 10 -frame ruses particle of the whole
Langstroth hives with a space for Wheat grain is used includi
three inches of planer shavings at the
sides between the hives and the walls the outer bran coat which is
of the case, and also -three inches -un- 's0 U aid in the bow -
e , a;packing
we ve, els healthy and active.
inches on top. The topwas
s
derneatlt the hiv s d t t l For
a a any meal with milk and fres
placed in bran sacks for easy removal. 3 •
The outside entrances to the • hives, fruits.
cut in.tlie ease as far apart as'prac-I Made in Canada.
ticable, measured about 8 -inches longi
by 1% inches high, A piece of wood' '
revolving on a screw reduced each en-
LURE
trance to % of an inch wide by 1i/s DEATH'S
inches high during the scold weather. WHITE DESERT
Sheltering the apiary during whiter
from, wind was found to be very im-
portant, At Ottawa the wintering t
apiary is thus protected *by a c%se FINDING OF BO'rR POLES. DOES
board fence 6 feet high -8 feet high NOT END EXPLORATION.
would be better for an apiary of. fifty'
or -one hundred colonies -and Norway
spruce trees have been planted close
to the fence to take its place in years Roll of Heroes Who' Have 'Sought
to An important advantage of outside `Farther Places” of the Earth ..
wintering over cellar wintering was Begins $25 B.C.
found in the proteetion`affordod by the
wintering case aitd packing during the The history of Arctic exploration
spring. The colonies thus protected begins in 326 B.C. when- the Greek
ahvays built up much faster in the Pythias from Massalja (Mapseilles)
spring than those that were brought made a voyage along the coast of Eu-
out of the cellar and given little or rope aa far as"northern . Norway. In
no protection. The hives were left 825 A.D. Trish monks discovered Ice -
n the wintering oases until June, the land and the Faroes. The Norwegian
cases being deep enough to take one Otter in 870 A.D. entered $hee'White
super. • Sea, which'he claimed •for his sove-
There was a somewhat greater con -
the
Greenland was discovered bi
sumption of stores during the winter the Norwegian; Eric the Bed, about
In the colonies ,ieft outside than: in 985,Norwegians later colonized parts
those wintered in the cellar, and of the new territory. Remains of these
breeding commenced earlier in the settlements are still to be seen, but a21
outside wintered colonies. Young bees
,vere,usually emerging''ut the date
(average, April llth) that the cellar
traces of, the people have long since
disappeared.
About 1000 A.D. Leif the Lucky
wintered. colonies were brought out, reached America, probably Nova
these latter colonies having eggs only Scotia. John Cabot in 1497 rediseov-
at that time.• ered the American continent, touch -
The bees got their first good clean- ing at Cape Breton and Nova Scotia,
sing flight about the middle of March Corte -Real, the Portuguese,redis-
three or four weeks earlier than'`the covered Greenland in 1500. One of his
date the cellar wintered bees were ships returned but he, was lost.
brought out. From'' the date of this III -Fated Expeditions.
flight onwards•. they did exceedingly
well. From then on followed numerous
The arrangement -of four colonies the attempts to find the fabled "North-
gether in each •case*•is a particularly west Passage," which etas led many a
good one, because they keep one an- good man to his death. Martin Fro -1
other warm. They are placed back to bisher did reach what is assumed to
back with the -entrances on the two have`been an entrance to that tendepassage.
opposite sides. Fatality after fatality attended the
next few attempts tem t
Bes to
Bees hr
have alsop etAt ou
been successfully
g h'
cessfulg b
Y
y
anrt
northern route from the Atlantic to
wintered out-of-doors at the Experi-
mental'Farm at Brandon, Man., where
the cold is still greater and steadier
than at Ottawa, and at the Expert-
- mental Stations at St, Anne de la
Pocatiere, ,Que.' and Fredericton,N.B: Dominion and
Farms
Note. _ r
,, TIIE WHEAT WE WASTE.
Would, Feed London For Four or Five
Months.
It is estimated that an average
threshing rig.wastes two bushels of
grain a setting.. On a year's wheat
crop in Western Canada the loss from
this source would amount to a quarter
of a million bushels, Threshing from
the stack• causes a loss estithated at
more than a million bushels in a two
hundred million bushel crop. This is
a low estimate of the loss' in stack
theshing. Quite possjjlly this loss,
plus the smaller loss that occurs in
stacking the proportion of. the crop
that is threshed. that . way, would
amount totwo million bushels, or •one
.per cent. -of the crop. The threshing
loss—that is, the' wheat that goes over
unthreshed in the straw—has been
frequeetly estimated at -two per cent„
or four million bushels on an average
crop, a total of 5,250,000 bushels lost
after thecrop is made;. lost because
the rack bottoms leak or the separator
is carelessly handled, according to the.
Nor'west Farmer,
No paiticular moral need be drawn.
Five and one quarter million bushels
of wheat will make more than a mil-
lion barrels of flour, a
rid one barrel of
flour, under, .
Present co diti
ona in "
Eu-
rope, will feed one civiliap, his wife
and and child"fores year. At that rate
the wheat wasted on the farms of
these three provinces, not counting
that lost in transit, thrown away as
samples everywhere and lest around
the elevators, would feed London for
four or five months, as far as braa°d
can feed human beings. '
"A ease of love at first eight, I elm -
pose?" "
uppos ? No; second eight. The first
tlmo he taw her he didn't know she
leas an heire s"'
hoot cellai`a will a in vogue this
Neaten as never before, and amateurs
ere urged to seen ,the, advise of
practical hien who know, and thereby
Avoid disappointment and loss;
While we ere displaying the flag at
the front of the hatted, Tet ua keep the
weeds down lit the rear and see that
the •garbiige,pail gets no more Utah its
sates.
the Pacific. Many valuable additions
to scientific knowledge were made
during this period and the geography
of the mirth began to take definite
form. Bering Strait, was found, and
King' William Land. There were
Dutch eepeditions, Atpericen expedi-
tions, including the ill-fated one of
De Long; Danish expeditions and
Swedish expeditiop, The comeptition
for northern _.honors' never was ^ so
'keen,
Both Capt. Vitus Bering and el•Ien-
drik'Hudson died in the arctic after
discovering the waters that bear their
names, Hudson perished in a small
boat in which he, his little son and the
sick men of -his party had beencast
adrift by a mutinous crew. Bering
and most of his men died of scurvyt-
In 1845 Sir John Franklin set sail
with a party of 1§5 in the Erebus and
the Terror tofind a passage from
Lancaster Sound to Bering Strait, Not
ohe of them was ever seen again by
civilized men.
In 1882 ten nations established sta-
tions in the north from which observe-
tions could be taken and expeditions
despatched, The first .American ven-
ture as part of this international ef-
fort *as the sending of Lieut. A. W.
Greely, U.S.A., on a journey north--.
•
People e eat
Grap�Nuts
bcatse the, .,
1-i-ke it and
ifs they
kknow)tS 4
goodfor _ �:
them
1I1IIII1IIIII1IIi
llllllllllllllll
yard from Lady Franklin DAV. Great plan to break the Cartier. ey
ba tTh sent
to
ins
mg
But Baby's Own Tablete are a perfect
and Medicine for little ones, They regulate
re
-
moults -i
results were secured, but at a grave` over three seaplanes with orders
cost in lives; only seven men out 'di descend low over the GreatBarrier,
twenty-three ret'ui•ning alive, and they at any risk, and ,Boot their' mach
nearly dead from starvation,
Reached the North Pole.
guns into the• buoys, thus sink
them and the barrier with them,
In 1888 Lieut. Robert E, Peary, U. the patrol boats were on hand,
S.A., destined to become the foremost two' of the three soaplanes never
of Arctic explorers, made his first trip turned to their German home,
into the north, It is noteworthy thate-....----.
he was at that time accompanied by FATE OF GERMAN COLONIES
Dr. Frederick A.. Cook, who letei1 be,
camellia most, bitter rival as a claim- Hun Holding's in Africa, China a
ant of the discovery of the pole, Mat- the Pacific Cannot be Returned,
thew Henson, the colored man who Evety now and then the fate of
was Pear s sole companion
Peary pan on on his
Gomm cin'
e a 0 0 fes crops up as a
cue ess ul as
c dash
f in 1909 s
the party. + was also in joct of discussion. Yet there is v
/In 1899 the Italian Govermftent en- little to discuss, says an Eng1
writer, S e
tered the struggle for Arctic honors, Ydn r Broglir, Phe Alli
Before this time the object of actually chiefly the British, ai'e now in p
reaching the spot called the pole had sessio• n of every one of Germany
come
into view and had added `the reduction of
spice of competition to scientific re- . , •
search and made effort keener than lags. And they have not the smalls
ever. The Italians, led by the ,,royal intention ,pf surrendering- them eith
Duke of the 'Abruzyi d b
A PERFECT MEDICINE
FOR LITTLE ONES
le bowels, sweeten the stomach, thus
drive out constipation, indigestion,
breaks up colds and simple fevers and
make teething easy. Concerning them
114rs. Jolin Babineau, 'Brest, N.B.,
nd writes: ';I have used Baby's Otvu. Tab-
lets and have found them a perfect
medicine for little ones." The Tablets
the aro
sold by medichre dealers or by
sub- mail 1 at 25 conte a
box from ro The Dr.
ery Williams Medieine Co„,73rockville, Ont.
1'ah _.
es,, LOVE BELATED.
OS- _•_,,,
'a' De� r heart, the love of girl and boy
n1
a-
. /'It was not ours
to know --
in /The trembling hope, the surging jay,
111 Of passion's earliest glow.
colonies except East Africa, the
which, though as certa
as anythtng_in war can ever be, st
est
• Love sings these such a clear sweet
attempt and drave
id Abruzzi,
m the furthest during the vier or after it. Walt
north record, but 'the pole was -still to 'Long, the.Colonial Secretary, was sa
gain, Amundsen in 1901 succeeded,in ,ing the other and nay that the feehn
navigating his `vessel across from'the popular official, through
ocean to ocean, she Tieing the first the. British ];metro was on this poi
ship to make the' passage north of ibuGreat j It certainly is Nobody_
Patagonia.
In Great-.kjritain itself. Nobody
y— Our. pain to. you and me.
er
song j
As birds sing aftey rain,
' And they are glad; to us belong
ut Notes of a sadder strain,
nt Yet there is Comfort even in this—
up Their gladness cannot be
-I So near like heaven, dear heart, as is
g
Other fruitless efforts to reach the think I can say literally, nobody
pole occurred lit efforts
rwe contemplates it as even conceivable
years. • that Germany's holdings in Africa .a
Peary being ;the„ foremost. figure in - the' Pacific and in China should be'
them. In 1908, 'after a struggle of
turned to her,
nearly a year, Peary"succeeded, the Any such development would,I b
glorious culmination of twenty-three
yeprs o£ fighting for the honer. Novo, disrupt the British Empire. T
In' 1913 MacMillan, who had been dominions,:. and especially Australia,
one of Admiral Peary's lieutenants on New Zealand and British Africa, would
-his successful dash to the pole, was feel that the motherland had reckless-
senteent with a splendidly., equipped ly betrayed them, had planted. an
force on the steamship Dana from avowed enemy on their flanks,' and
North Sydney, Nova Scotia: that the statemanship edpable.of such
This most successful expedition has a treachery •was wholly incompetent
shown that Crocker Land, which Ad- to econductire, the affairs of a worldwide
miral Peary thought -he saw in 1906 mp
from the top of Cape Thomas Hub- But there is no chance whatever that
bard, is,. in the words of MacMillan, the British leaders, on whom the de -
"a wonderful image. It was but a mir- vision will ultimately rest, will be
age, but so clear that you could see guilty of any such criminal stupidity.
If the war ends in an Allied victory
—and every week that passes only
makes it clearer that it can"have no
other end—"Greater Germany-" will
come to an abrupt and final stop.
There will be the last of it, not pnly
for our time but for all' time No
who died after actually reaching the ether issue is possible; no other is
south pole. The bitterest disappoint- meditated; and T am confident that
ment"that weld come to a man must American opinion, when it is acquaint -
have been felt by this heroic -pioneer, ed with the facts, will fully and heart-
for when after Herculean efforts he ily indorse the British determination.
reached hisgoal it was only to find
that Roald Amundsen, the Norwegian, f
had been there* month and four days
MOD1JL BIRD MARRIAGES
Examples of Most Cart be Tuilekr ll3
Humans—Mate But Once
The married life of most bards could
be taken for a model by members of
the human family, For instance, the
staid, dignified and homely, baldheaded
eagle never mates but once and lives
with his one mate until he or she dies,
If left a widower—even a young wid-
ower—the baldheaded eagle never
mates t again. He a remains
g alone. and
disconsolate in' the nest of the rocky
cragor in
:the branches b nc sof
e thetall
e that t formed his domicile while
his mate was alive. No other female
eagle
can tempt
himto forsake p rake his
desolate life'. With him once a -wid-
ower, *always `a widower. The golden
woodpeckers
kive
ina a
happy ppy
state, hating but once, If the male
dies' his mate's grief is lasting, and,
she remains a widowed bird the rest 1
of her life,
arluard'e rinimoat for sale everywhere.
Wise observers are sounding they
warning to keep the live stock on the
farm, and thereby avoid a national
calamity. The big prices paid for'
every kind of animal that can be turn-
ed into meat are depleting flocks and
herds far beyond the safety point.
Mtn I,Li he best
t
yeast in
ri th'e world.
�t Makes
t perfect,
'E r
tie
— ,,•<, ,-.
MADE
l
W 0
•G I
IE
1 h
it 1
I
El NY
P
w
TCOM A
IN
sp r.
R
�N o o/
ne
7 . f.
eH ,
CMA
°
A DA
At.
,a Y
li
kt
,a'+�
EWGIL ETT COMPANY!
. l LIMITED
TORONTO.ONT.
WINNIPEG ON
1. MONTREAL
To cheat*a neighbor is bad; to boast
of it is worse.
Kettles made of thin paper are used
by Japanese soldiers. When needed
for boiling, the kettle is filled with
water, and then water is poured over
it. It is hung over the fire and in
ten minutes the water is boiling. The
kettle can be used eight or ten times.
nd
T n Uy PUNS AT 11,1.1OLESALE
MONEY ORDERS PRICES, Persian Lamb, Mink, Al-
e- Minard's Liniment Co„ Limited, Remit by Dominion Express Money sots ay bee, i uanin sea urSend Dorf ii -
lie Dear., Sirs,—I can recommend MI- Order, If lost of stolen, you get your lustrated. catalog. McCombor's .Limited,
NARD'S LINIMENT for Rbeumatisna money back. Manufacturers, d20 D 3t. Pahl west,
Montreal,
and Sprains, as 1 have used it for both xEwsnaPEas P0R BALM
WW1 excellent results. Lettuce,. cabbage and cauliflower
Yours truly, started in September should be trans- p� RORIT.1OAICINC, Nffiws ANL JOi3
r p -L Offices for sale in Suod Ontario
T. B, LAS 1>1R9, ferrel to the frames as soon as the towns.
The most useful ane inters:nag
St. Jahn: plants a e large enough to handle. of altafonintoetVnson1l,ib]lshihtton o
Give the plants plenty of room -2 x 2 pans,li Adelaide Street, Toronto,
Cn-
inches is none too much.
PIIS
green hills covered with vegetation
rising high above the water.
A South Pole Tragedy.
01 all' the tragedies of polar explor-
ation the greatest is that of the Eng-
lishman; Capt, Robert F. Scott, R.N.,
before him. Imagine the feelings that WEAK BOYS AND GIRLS
must have been his when he found the
Norwegian flag flying at the pole. It is a mistake to think that anaemia
Scott and -four other members of his is only a girl's complaint. Girls prob-
expedition died two months later 156 ably show the effect' of weak, watery
miles from their base of supplies,.. on blood more plainly than boys. De -
their return, layed development, pale faces, head-
aches, palpitation, and a Peeling of
listlessness, call attenti'ian to weak
blood in the case of girls. But many
boys in their teens grow thin and
"weedy" and have pimples on the face,
showing that they have not enough
Wherever explorers have gene,
hunting in the north or south, they
have left' evidence of "their visits,
Amundsenleft the Norwegian flag at
the South
Pole and Seott left a Brit-
ish ensign flflag was planted at thehe ying near it. Amer',
North blood. The anaemic boy is Just as
can
Pole by Peary, Greely left a letter likely to become a victim of consump-
witlr-a cache of supplies in northern l tion as the pale, breathless girl with
G"reehland. All over the Arctic, hun- hu,. i,d""""
dreds of miles apart in most cases,
adventurers have left surplus supplies
foil less fortunate men who might la-
ter go over the same trails. This is
part of the•strange camaraderie of the
polar fields. Men a continent apart
consider themselves ' neighbors, for
there were no human beings between
them. When they find traces,ef other
expeditions they go to the utmost
trouble to let the world know the fact,
so that their brothers in arms may get
the glory that is due them.
d _
PROTECTING THE CHANNEL.
Great Barrier From Shore to Shore
Keeps Foe Out.
E
v
0
ri
g
ti
of
Pi
co
an
ex
hi
in
an
b'
ch
se
the
qu
wli
lay
ch
Th
Pe
an
sub
ane
So
oft
fro
the
gro
ro
exp
'Wel
R
Across the eastern mouth of the
nglish Channel there still stretches
he Great Barrier, which is one of
he principal defenses of the allies'
ital channel traffic against the visits
P the, German submarine.
The "Barrage" they call the Bar-
er innavai•'phrase. It consists, in
eneral terms, of a series of "obstruc-
ons" • stretched from huge steel
uoys, shore to shore, twenty ., odd
Rea. Any craft ,which strikes one
these obstructions strhightway ex -
lodes a group of mines which spell
nis to the intruder.
A whole ileet of naval shipping is
nstantly engaged in maintaining
it Patrolling the Great Barrier, Its
istence is no secret to the Ger-
ans, .for they are constantly send -
over airplanes els to chart t the buoye
p b
y
d mark anychanges es that.
g mayhave
a
en made Since e • c their last visit. And
anges are constantly being made.
Here and there along the line are
eret'opehings through which naval
ots may glide legitimate craft on
mir-way, but these ppenings are fre-
ently altered, and not even the air-
anis eye of the German can! tell
ich buoy marks safe passaged and
ieh marks destreetion, . If his mine -
leg submarines wish to enter the
annel, they mus£'iake their chances,
ey must cross' submerged, for the
trol boats are on constant ditty,
d if they escape the traps while
merged, i6 can only be said that
ther miracle has happened.
Such miracles seldom happen,
metimee twice' a week, sometitnes
ener, eitplosione are hea el.et night
ne the Great Barrier," indicating
t "somethIng" has touched off a
up of Minos, .Immediately the pat-
e. hurry offIn the direction of the
losien, What they find there is e
1 -kept secret. 101011,
ecently the Gormtna ttlocl a baw+o--
1Wnitd's Llnnfieat ewes bowline,
Let
the boy in this condition catch cold
and he will lose his strength and his
health becomes precarious, - ,
To prevent serious disaster to those
of the rising generation, let both boys
and girls be given the new rich blood
which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are fa-
mous the world over for making.
When giving- these pills watch how
soon the appetite returns and how the
languirl,girl or the weak boy becomes
fulf'of activity and high spirits. Re-
member that the boy has to develop,
too, if be is to make e. strong hearty
man. Give both the boys and girls
a fair chance to develop strongly
through the new, rich blood Dr, Wile
Name Pink Pills actually make. You
will then see' active boys and girls, in-
stead of weakly children around you.
Dr. Williams Pink Pllls are sold by
all medicine dealers or may be ob-
tained by mall at 60 ceats a box or
stir boxes for $2.60 from The Dr, Wil-
liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
A New Place For Orderlies.
There is evidence that life in the
army has its humorous side even in
war time. In a story that recently
went £he rounds of the English press,
a newly appointed officer who was
making his first visit to the mess, with
the usual inquiry of "any complaints?"
arrived" at one mess somewhat earlier
than he was expected, and the orderly
of the day, ileing taken by surprise,
and in his shirte
sleeves, dived under
v e
the table e
to ave a r p rimand.
Il
"An complaint's'?"1nt*s
?
,
asledhe officer.
The corporal, grasping the situation
at once, answered for the absent
orderly.
"None, sir."
"Who is this?" asked the officer,
suddenly catching sight of the orderly
under the table.
The eorporal'.again rose to the situa-
tion.
"Orderly of the day, sir," he answer-
ed,
"Ohl" bald the officer, and passed
On,
The next mese were quite prepared,
with the orderly, spiel and span,
stapoing at attention at the hand of
the table.
"Any complaints 7"
"None, air," snswored the orderly,
The officer looked him well over.
"And whb aro you 7" ho asked.
"Orderly ofdtlte day, she"
"Then why the dickens aren't you
under the table?" was the unexpected
•
•
Needless Waste,
Donald McAllister, a Scottosh
farmer, was going to town for a day
or two and his daughter, Maggie, had
a weary time listening to the hundred
and one instructions he gave her as to
care and economy.
"Mind the. coaI," "Don't waste any
food," "Don't sit up burning light,"
etc. Finally he set off, but in a mo-
ment he was back with a parting ad-
monition: -
"An', Maggie, there's young Angus.
See that he doesn't wear his spectacles
when he's not readin' or writhe; It's
needless wear an' tear."
FR/NE Granulated Eyelids;
Sore Eyes,Eyes Inflamed by
Sun, Lust and Wind quickly
50R` '" relieved by Murine. Try It In
ay-Cyour Eyes and inBaby'sgyes.
OUR ET WNoSmartin ,JostEyeCorefort
Muriinerye RemedyAt Your Druseist's or by
orBOk of 1h ilepterins
[ye Salvo, In Tebee Zfin. For Hook OJ Eos—Free.
Ask Marine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago e
Keeping Apples
A. fruit grower reports that he kept
nearly 4 000
x bushels she s apples y of 1 s in his
pP
cellar. Bins were made and the floor
and sides sprinkled with a solution of
copperas and the bins filled with ap-
i ples. Very little ventilation was
given, as he had discovered that the
apples exposed to -the air rotted quick-
erhan
t those in the middle of the'
piles. - Apples left in piles have a
greasy coating formed on the outside,
a waxy coating provided by nature to
protect the seed until it can find its
way en to soil where it may sprout
and reproduce. When apples reach.
this state they arecomparatively free
from rot. This coating is formed in
from six weeks to two months, and
'most of the rot starts during this
period'. . The cellar should be sprayed
frequently to stop fungus growth.
Minard's Liniment Cures Enrns, Eta
Minerd'e Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
Some -wheat .harvested near Moose
Jbushel.aw weighed over 600 pounds to the
IF FOOD DISAGREES
DRINK DDS` WATER
When food lies like lead in the stom-
+ach and you have that uncomfortable,
distended feeling, it is because of in-
' sufficient blood supply to the stomach,
' combined with add and food Fermenta-
, tion, In sudt cases n•y Che plan now
followed in many hospitals and advleed
many eminent physicians of taking a
to
teaspoonful of pure b1surated magnesia
In half a glass of water. as hot as you
can comfortably drink it. The lint wa-
ter draws the blood to 2110 stomach and
the bleurated magnesia, as any physician
can tail you, instantly neutralizes the
acid and stops intently
fermentation.
Try this simple Ulan and you 11.111 be as-
tonished at the immediate feeling of re-
lief and comfort that always follows the
restoration of the normal process of di-
gestion. People who find It Inconvenient
at times to secure hot water and travel-
era who are frequently obliged to take
hasty meals poorly prepared, should al-
ways take two or three tive-grain tab-
lets of Bisurated Magnesia after meal:
to prevent Yermentatfon and heutl•a/tze
the acid In their stomach,
Awkward.
She: "Well, I maintain that women
can do anything that men can do."
He: "Oh, no. The auctioneer's
business is one a woman cannot go
into."
She: "Nonsense! She'd make every
bit as good an auctioneer as a man."
He; "Just imagine an unmarried
lady getting up before a crowd and ex-
claiming: "Now, gentlemen, all I want
is an offer!'"
' The Aou1 of a Plano is the
Action. Insist on the
"OTTO HIGELr
PIANO' ACTION
•
0-0 0-0 0 0—o 0 o—o
ANY CORN LIFTS OUT,
,
DOESN'T
HURT
A 81T
No foolishnette 1 LIft your corn'
and calluses off with fingers
—It's like maglo h
O o 0—o 0 o—d
Sore corns, hard come, soft corns or
any kind of a corn, can harmlessly be
tfted right mit with the fingers if you
apply upas the oerlt a few drops of
reozone, says a Ci1loinnate authority,
For little cost: oplo can 'get a small
ottle :of freezone at any drug store,
whloh'will positively rid one's feet of
very corn or callus without pain,
This 81nlple drug dries the moment
t is appliod 0214 dole not oven Jeri.
ate the surrounding skin while ap-
plying ,it or aftorWards,
That
ea announcement will iutoro
many of our reaciet's. It soar drug -
g st Mona any freozono tell him to
u1012' get a 01210.11 bottle for you from
le wholoeule dreg hoes°,
ISSUE No, 41. -'17t -
4
WEN!a
OTHERS!
DAUGHTER
SXSSCEZLAREOVB
('IANCER• TUA2ons, LUb2PS,
,) internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment Write
us before too late. Dr. Gellman 112edteat
Co., Limited, Colllhgwood, Ont.
Your good looks may be your fortune.
Who knows? Then why not keep your
complexion fresh and clear, your hands
soft and white, your hair rich and glossy.
Cuticura will help you. Used everyday
for all toilet- purposes, Cuticura Soap
clears the pores of impurities, while little
touches of Cuticura Ointment
prevent
little skin troubles becoming serious.
Absolutely nothing better or purer.
Semple Reels Free by Mal. Address poet -caro:
"Cutici,ra, Dept. N, aorta, U. S. A." Sold
throughput the world.
VI OMAN NOW IN
PERFECT HEALTH
What Came From Reading
a Pinkham Adver-
tisement.
Paterson, N. J. — "I thank you for
the Lydia E. Pinkham remedies as they
have made me well
and healthy. Some-
time ago I felt so
run down, had pains
in my backend side, •
was very irregular,
tired, nervous, bad
such b ad dreams,
did not feel like eat-
ing and had short
breath. I read your
advertisement in
the newspapers and
deeded to try a bottle of LydiaE.Pink-
ham a Vegetable Compound. It worked
from the first bottle, so I took a second
and a third, also a bottle of Lydia B.
Finkbam's'Blood Purifier, and now am
just as well as any other woman. I ad-
vise every woman, single or married,
who is troubled with any of the afore-
said ailments, to try your wonderful
Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifiep
and I am sure they will help her to get
rid of her troubles as they did me,"—
Mrs, ELSIE J. V1
AN DEE SANDE, 36 o
N.
York St., Paterson,
Write the Lydia E. Pinkha
E
Y m Medicine
Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass, if yeti
good spa"cial advice.
Voll-'wh0
tire. easily:
are pale, hag,
Ward and
worn; nerdous`
o r irritable:
��Vvho era eub-
ieat to ata Of
melancholy or
the blues,"
get your blood
examined f o r
Iron ,dead-
encs..
RITZATIID
resort taken
"hese hints rt,
Y after
-js will In trees' your -etren
anC3 '100 Per cent in to
n many Ca$e9 -.
Fe din
r
N
r
hX TE
nY.T n
A D IRON
floe
effete
bt
be In Fd from R d �tpp
rvgsio
8u of :
'Red t
•or n t
reo e
tun 10
ucs-
Y
ulf rep
,,
r � na
r , talo a
Ir to M
8 1
k three Ore, nt =r ants
nd
test
Ode
Machinery For Sale
1 WHEELOCK ENGINE, 18x42.
/New Automatic Valve Typo. Complete with supply and exhaust piping,
fi wheat etc.
Will accept t 2
fie:wheal, p $1, 00 cash for Immediate sale,
1 ELECTRIC GENERATOR, 20 110-120 110.120 Volts D.C.
Witt accept $428 doh' for Immediate sale,
1 LARGE LEATHER BELT, Double, Endless. 24 inch x 70 ft.
Will'aecept 8300 for Immediate sale, although belt le in excellent Con•
dltion and new one would -cost about $600,
PULLEYS, Largo size,
26x68--4$0 ; 12x60--$20 ; 12;,'ak48—$1e ; 12x$6 --?68,
2 ftOWi RS Olt PANS, Buffalo make,
One 10 inch, othor 14 Inch discharge—$30 each,
REAL ESTATES CORPORATION, LTD.
(10 Front ht. West, Te to