HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1913-07-03, Page 3HEN THEY WERE
BABIESa,7ttile,child and c41 ed 11°Th°
P have fence beza informed that
ILE C LLE C 'BON S TREAT STAY
WITH TILE G;ROWNUPS.
,
tar'ry de \Yindt Met the _Prince--
"srly Memories of a, Noted
English Preacher.
'What is year earliest retrieve, -
Lance in hail
Beata one of us can recall some
happening—probably 'some trivial
ineiclent—which took place when we
were mere babies, but which has re-
mained vividly outlined in our
minds through life. -
We have grown up with the re-
• collectien that at the inportant age
of two we fell' dawastairs, and that
at three and a half we Iran, panic-
• stricken from a policeman, who,
we firmly believed, would arrest us
for being naughty, or something
else equally impre,ssive at the timeo.
Why such matters stick it is diffi-
cult to say, remarks London An -
ewers. • Even the busy master minds
of the World retain theastrst mam-
oriea,
and here are some confes-
sions,, which we have obtained fiam
well-known, iseople:
Geouge Groves, the comedian,'
writes:
"My first memory of anything
was'when, seated in an oktlash-
, Fened basmette, Vis-a-vis with a
'brother of mine, I friskily, took his
feeding -bottle and threw at at the
nurse! Result, hard smacking! I
was -about $ix at the time."
Harry de Windt, the explorer,
goes to Paris for : Us first reinmn-
• brance:
was born and bred in France
(being only half English) in the
days of the empire, when Paris was
really •
The Queen of Capitals.
"We lived not far ,from the Tuil-
eries Gardens, where I was taken
by my nurse every morning to' play
about with other' children a tny
- own age and size (the year was
1867).
"One morning a rather pale, shy
little boy joined our group, but
"when we got into conversation I
soon discovered that he was any-
thing but timid and far less effemi-
nate in epeech and manner than,
most.ef my .French playmates.
"Somehow I liked the by so
much that I beggedany.nurse to ask
gardeite‘r sta,nding by who he WES.
, ',What, you den't know 7" .eaid
"the mans with surprise at her ig-
Boranee. 'Why, he is -the prince
imperial
"This, barring several severe cas-'
Iffiaaaillatigattions, is, I think, nay earliest
"'"P"--- recollection," 0
The Rev. R. J. Gartipbell, the
celebrated preacher and head of
the City Temple, can rec.all a ser-
ies of events which took place'be-
fore he eould walk; '
"My earliest recollection is Of be-
ing brought from the north of Ire-
land to pay a -visit to my parent's i•n
England when. I Was quite a small
child: Owing to my delicate health,
any early years had to bo spent in
the canntry with nay grandparents.
"Ori the oceasion of the visit re-
ferred to I can distinctly remember
what the house was like, though I
cannot reeall tam journey or the
arrival there. ,
"I remember waking early in the
morning and creeping dlown-stairs
backward—a most thrilling adven-
'ture, I felt—and making my way to
••
the kitchen where ati indulgent
maid treated me tOsa confection, of
bread said butter with jam and su-
gar on the top, a thing I lied never
been allo-wed before and probably
• ought 'hot to have been allowed
then. .
'Soiheone about that time gave
San a s,mallsblue china dog, which
had formed the handle of
A Vegetable Dish.
In my mind's eye I cam aee the dog
quite plainly at thie in,oanent. ,
' "Apparently I could not walk,
but I ca,n remember crawling and
waffling my way into a -neighbor'a
house, •where I appropriated
small wooden, horse, belonging to
• The Bight Soap
For Baby's Skin
Is Cuticura Soap
N the care of
baby'sskin and
hair, -Cuticura
Soap is the
mother's fa-
vourite. ' Not
only,is unri-
valed in puritY and refreshing
• ragrance, but its gentle emol-
• lient properties render
great value,in promoting skin
and hair health generally. Fot
the treatmen t of eOzemas, rashes'
-"and Other itching; hurnixig in-
-fantile• er4tionS, warm baths
with Cliticura Soap, followed
\ by gentle applicatiOns of Cuti-
cura Ointment are usually effec-
tive when other Methods fail.
CuticUraSoap wears to awafer,,
often outlasting several cakes
.grdinary soaP and making'
its use Most economical,
Cuticiira Soap and • Ointrhont aro geld,
throughout tho *arid; Ia Slberal samPle Of
each, with 22..page booltipt• on the card and
treatment of tho slrin. andsealp, sent pos.frce. Addre3a Potter Drug & Chem, Corp.;
_Dept. 16D, Bostori,,U. 5.
rnyanemory of this ineidcnt is quite
reliable, and that some alarm was
oceasioue,c1 by ray disappearance,
ne ono knowing what had 1.1C001110
of me uatil the information was
bpought' ,frote next doers The
horse was rethrnel to its rightful
owner, I am load, when I was
"1 remember, 'too, that the (sail
in the establi`shment to which I al, -
ludo Was kept in at onthouse, and
one day I got in there to watah a
.
young anele of mane swinging his
saMe from a beam in tho room, and
that I Was _ignominiously -expelled
when he caught sight of me,
• "An older' uncle with vvhom,
was- !math more laminar, gave a
penny to a monkey 111 nay presence:
I can remesnbe'r the jingle of the
penny on the pavement, the dive of
-the monkey after it and the queer
antics he went through when ho
got it before giving it Up to iiiis
master, ' •
"My father, father, who corroborates'
these recolleotijzie, says I could not
hav-et-been quite two years old at
the time. I think, therefore, that
they furnish a am:nes/hat excep-
tional instance of early memory,
• "No doubt, the circiunatances of
the brief change from one he•nie to
another and to entirely different
surroundings must have clone seme--
thing to stamp the .events on nv
Sir William Bell, M.P. for Ham-
mersmith, • can • also remember
(went& which happened when, he
wastwo: '
"My memory goes back to almost
incredible dates, I can quite dis-
tinctly reraember seeing any elder
brother drop any ,father's heavy
hunting crop out of a window look-
ing on to a stableyard at a hotel
called ,
Carrell's, in Gloucester. '
"It impressed itaelf on my mind
besaurre the crop bloke the neck ef
a chicken and we were'scoldecl. I
was born on Michaelmas Day, 1863,
sena the 'books of. the hotel will
show, I think, that we were there
in the winter of 1865.
`,1 can remember about the same
date :en old lock -keeper on the
Gloucester canal presenting to nay'
bryther a threessuasted,' square-
rigged ship,. painted black. Bevis%
no lead on ate keel, it float,ed on its„
side,
"I can also remember going to
London in 1864,- ,3ify brother Ed
snund was this one year old' and
was put up in the „hatrack, which
was thought, very:ingenious. All
the rest ef us were Yea..7 thirsty 0en
the journeyiand ‘claniered for hours
for ,Something to drink. Ablest we
reached a etatien, where we were
given .sonie enilk. The moment it
came our thiret flew, and we did
not want it I 1 rerminber being
ecolde,d for ingratitude.
"1 cionfirin the date of the jour-
ney. It was by the G.W.R., arid
the station at which we gat the
milk was Swiindon. I was not faux
years old."
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
IlIGHLY RECOMMENDED
No medicine for little ones is so
highly recommended as -is Baby's
Own Tablets. They are guaran-
teed by a governmeat analyst to be
absolutely safe, and besides that
thousanda of mothers throughout
the land praise them as the only
• SEM cure for childhood ailments.
Concerning them Mia, Edw4rd Me -
Donald, Douglastown, Que.'says:
"I can highly reoommend Baby's
Own Tablets to any mother who
has a baby suffering from eonstipa-
tion or teething troubles." The
Tablets are sold by medieine deal-
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williame' Medicine,
0o., Brookville, Ont. ••
SWAT THE ,SPARROW NOW.
Thp Chirpy Little Bird Is a Nuis-
, mice in City and Country.
To the slogan•of "Swat the Fly",
might well be added that of "Kill
the Sparrow." Flies and sparrows
.belong NI the same class as nuis-
ances and mentiees to health,.. says
a writer in a health magazine.
Moat Maxis deserve to bs protect-
ed for eorae Servide they perforan,
but when al the evidence, hasbeen
submitted in the ,sparrow's case it
Will stand oonclemned. Perhaps it
occasionally eats a harmful w,erni,
but the greater part of its food is
of , grain. Then, it is the constant
enemy, of native birds. -which, unlike
itself, 'live mostly on wo.rms and
insects that are injurious to trees„,
and ,drops.
For inaav years the 'sparrow was
unknown- gxcept in the towns, and
it gained the name of "to7n bird."
But it late,r y-elfas it ITas ,spread all
over the country, until aloycf it is
prebably' a 'greater nuisance on the
farm than in the 'city. • The spar-
row's habit of living always near
settlements, and in 'sheltered places
makes it a most prolific bird, It is
almost independent of the eeascins
in breeding. Several breeds of as
many as SOVen or eight birds may
be reared in a year.
The sparrow helps to spread (-Hs-
.
eases by. huilding nests laical cr
near homes,- Biz/Ming on houses is
especially a menace to health in the
Country, where people catch writer
fporn the roofs to fill'their cisterna.
The nests are of auch constraction
that they aro likely harbors for var-
ious sorts of vermin and gerra.
A Bad !lake
"A fampos college president okesit;
cia;7t:sh.tillaiet 1:cillOcers4 ado6ens6hriee7,)• grimly
returned the Old Codge.r. "Well,
he ought to see the husband my
niece has just married and brought
home to live on me."
THE DANGER
OF, ANAEMIA
Consumption May loilowinleas its
Eavaies are Chocked
There is,danger teevery girl and
every woman who falls a victim to
that , is lilcodlessuctss.
They became listless, feel ttoo weak,
•too wretched and tad 'hopeless to
take peampt steps to stop the trou-
ble. Too iotten, through neglect,
they drift\ into a. WOISO ooaditien,
forgetting that ancteinia frequently
leads on to tamsumptioa. If you
are ana6mic ILI the least degree•you
should lose neatime in beginning
trea,tment to ncrease 'and enrich
the bloed_supply. To do this there
is no other medicine so good as
Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills. Every
dose itelite make rich red ,blood,
which drives out disease and brings
again the bloccia of health to pale
andsallow cheeks. There are thou-
sands of aomen and g.retwing girls
in Calia,da avhe awe their present
good health to the timely use of
Dr, Villiains' Pink Pills. Among
those who have •been restored to
health by this -great _ medicine is
Mis,s Rose Neville, Mount Forest,
Ont., who says: "Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills perforated almost a mir-
acle in my case. I wasia, victirn of
anaemia, in what my friends con-
sidered a dangerous form. I was"
very, pale, always felt tired out,
suffered frban 'were •hte,aclitehes, and
had, no appetite. I was taking doe-
toi's Medicine' for a iong time-ain
fact I• tried two doetors"---but in-
stead of improving I seemed to be
growink worse. My parents werte
M a' loss to know' what to do for
me, and thought I would not reco-
ver. Then a friend advised Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills and I bad only
taken them a few weeks when I
began to, feel„better. .This greatly
encouraged me, and I continued
taking -the pills for some time
longer, and found my h,ealth again,
as good as ever it had been. In
fart I am stranger than ever I was
before. I have advised the wie-of
I)r, Wi.11iasne' Pink Pills to other
girl who have found the result's
equally benefteial:"
Sold by all aneilicine dealers ..or
by nasal at 50 cedts a box or six
boxes for- $2.50 .from .he Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
HIGH SPEED STE,EL PATENTED
Now Proaess Depends on the Intro-
: auction of Cobalt. ,
Great, interest has been .amused
in Sheffield, England, in a method
of producing a supermi" high speed
steel by the introduction of cobalt.
The process has been patented
throughout the world -by a Contin-
ental firm, but there are indications
that the Sheffield manufacturers
will fight for the privilege of mak-
ing the new steel themselves -with-
out having 110 pay royalties under
foreign patent. . ••
Ifigh speed ,steel ii wad in the
making of (tools required for boring
and cutting the hardest materials
at a rapid rate. Such tools are
largely used in, armansentsmanufass
tare: The ne.w material is said to
mask a gne,at advance on the best
qualities of .steel at present'obtain-
able for making these implements.
A few years ago the discovery of
high speed steel itself brought
about a revolution in steel making.
The American inventor sought sa..
monopoly by measas of patents. The
ease was taken to the courts and
the American lost. It is under -
steed that high speed steel contain-
ing cobalt ,hact been produced in
Sheffield but that its possibilities
were not realized.
A Sheffield manufacaturer na)rs
that tented against some of the
foremost Sheffield brands of high
peed steel the new produce has
s,hown an , extraordinary superior-
ity.• -
'BANISHED.
Tea and Coffee Finally Had. to Go.
The way some persons cling to
tea and coffee, even after they know
they are doing them harm, is a
puzzler. (Tea is just Be harmful
because it contains caffeine, the
same drug found in, coffee). But it
is are easy matter to give it up for
good, when Postum is properly
made and used instead. A giel
writes!•
• "Mather had been suffering with
neryous headaches for severs, weary
years, but kept on etrinking coOee.
"One day I asked why s,he did n.ct
give uP coffee, as a cousin of mine
had'done who had -taken to Postuni.
But Mother wasameh a slave to cof-
fee she thought it would be terrible
to give it up.
• “FinallY, one <IV she made Ills
change to Postuna, and quickly her
headaches disappeared. One morn--
ing while she was drinking Post=
so freely and with "-such relish, I
asked for a taste.. •
"That started vie on Postuinand
Pew drink it 1110re freely that I
did eoffe:e, whieh never comes into
eur houea now.," • '
Nano given by Canadian Postum
Co.,'Wiedsor, Ont. Write for book-
let, "The Itos,c1 to'Wellville."
-Possum comes ixi two„ferms.
Restihr Pristtun (must be boiled.)
• Instant Postum doesn't -require
boPing; hut is jeepared instantly
by stirring a level teaepoonful in
an ordinary cup of hot water, which
mikes it right"for'inost persons.
A big cup requires more, and
same people who like strong things
put in ,a heaping teaspoonful and
temper it with a large supply of
•
cre
Experiment until yousknow the
amount that pleases your palate,
sani,d, havu 1,6 it seassa that way in the
u
Bre.
"There's a B,easen" 'for Pesaura.
FROM MERRY 010 [NOLAN)
, •
NEWS/ BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN
BULL AND HIS., PEOPLE. -
Occurrences In the Land Th
Reigns Supreme In the Com-
, ,
mercial World.
coAvermirgvfil)vileb°
aciirelja"surhashegarden,e.enoPeri-
eel in Bournemouth.
It is proposed to erect in London
a hostel as a tribute to Mr. W. T.
Stead from wonaen at all nationali-
.
ties. .
Aboat $20,000 damages was drOne
by a fire that broke out atlfseiirs.
Barkers furniture repository at
Kensington.
It is rumored that the King is
purchasing Byrkley Lodge, Buz -bet-
on -Trent, as a residence for the
Prince of Wales.
•• A copy ,of the rare original Kil-
marnock edition of Rdbert Burns'
poems, 1786; was recently e,old at
Sotheby's for $700.
Williani Hikohcock,:i dairyman of
Richmond, was lined the maximum
Penalty, $100, at Rielnuond for
adaltefating milk. -
' A fifteen-raonths'-old Child at
Birmingham, in trying to getout of
its bot, got its head fixed in the
ironworlrancrivis suffocated.
Ann Caterer, who has died in the
Henley Workhouse a the age of
nitiety-two, was first, admitted to
the workhouse in 1857.
There are now between 45,000 and
20,000 people ort etrike iti South
Staffordshire isi connection with
disputes in various industries.
Mr). Alice Jane Hicks, of Rare
Street, Woolwioh, who was. known
a
as the "Queen the Goatees," has
died it the age of ninety.
Several policem.en were injured
in a, fierce fight at Bradford ia eon-
nection yeah` the carter strike.
Some 3,000 men are new, out. „
Selby, formerly an important
centre of flax growing, has been
chesen by the development as . the
site of further experiments in the
industry.
The new tramway route between'
Rushey Green and Forest Hill via
Oatford Hill and Stanstead Road,
has stow ,been opened for traffic.
• The Lord Mayor of 'Leeds re-
ceived a deputation of citizens ad-
vocating a proposal that the city be
converted into' a seaport with a ship
canal,
To effect the reinstatement of a•
man who was diseherged at the
Holyhead Mountain Clay noad
China Works, over one hundred
employes struck work. • -.
Ifythe TOW/1 Council have bleu-
gurabod a campaign against wasps.
They are offqiing one cent a head
tor every queen waisp killed in, +lie
at
•orough.
Captain Fred Womb:well, th
famous animal trainer, was badly
'mangled by a lion at Bostock and
Wesnbrelts menagerie at Ply-
mouth, -
The scheme to reconerbruet the
isolation pavilion of Worthing Pier,
wrecked at Baiter,.with a, wider
struetuie at a. cost, of $50,000, has
now been a,pproved.
A auffragette tried to burn down
the goods, yard el the Great Central
Railway Co. at Nettingliam; but
fortunately all but two tacks of
timber wits saved.
Burglars broke into the Berkeley
Hotel in Piccadilly, bound and
gagged the ten porte,re on duty a,nd
rifled the safe of money and jewel-
lery to the value of $15,600.
The Thames Ironworks property
at Canning Town, where the Thun-
derer was built, has been disposed
of to /the Great Eastern Railway,
whose line adjoins the site.
The green of the North Oxford
Crieket and Bowling Clubs was ex-
tensively burnt by some corrosive
fluid auppoged to be vitriol, thought
to be the work of -suffragettes.
The driver of & motor bus, named
Alexa,nder Doe, was auddenly taken
ill while arising in the Strand, and
had just time' to apply the brakes
when he fel unconscious.
A tombstone erected in the .Wal -
ford Road Cemetery, Leicester, to
the memory of a man and his wife,
ha.ve cabisiet, portraits of them.
The photos a,re let into the stone-
work' and eovered by glass.
Feet and Fancy.
The average astan's ide& of ecosa
only is to preach it to his wife.
Hebrews are the longe,strlived
rade, '
Strong fish brine will remove su-
perfluous hair• :
It's easy enough to die game.
Live gameil .
Sicanese "'women to avert bad
lack, take down thcar hair when a
fp riCialpas see. -
The under dog in a - fight gets all
thp sympathy, but, unfortunately,
that isn't op he gets. • •
Same 'dealers consider , an egg
newlaid till it is seven, !lays old;
others till it is fifteen. •
The lazier a man' is, the more he
bo going to do to -morrow.
- Acrobats in India.
The wandering aerobals of India
are rseesuite,d from- a low oast° of
People called, Domb,aranvis, who
live by this profession alone. The
children are trained from . their
earliest childhood and de not BR -
1 y ed Ili in 6 /1 011
06 V sIT1 Itet o a.
They ,tra,vel from village toi town
and_give their: performances, which
aro really wonderful, ill the open
air befere orowcIs of oaleekers.
fl?nidt4hesf tanaacrih•oblitnideldanisspIttal;, very
d
engage th.e best of the men. te Per-
form before their guests at enter-
tainments.'
Minard'a Linlatent cures Colds, Etc:
A Bad Heart,
Its Cause and Cure
Many, Firmly Convinced They Aye
Dying of Heart . Trouble, Have
• Often the Strongest H.eurts.
Sometimes you wake 11D at night, heart,
throbbing like a eteara engine. .:Your
'breathing is shert,' and irregular, Pains
shoot through tbo chest and 'abdomen,
and cause horrible anxiety.
Your trouble isn't with the heart et
all. These sensations are the outcome of
indigestion, Which has caused gas to form
on the stomach and pre,ss against the
Just road what happened tO Isaac
Mations, of Belle River, Ont.: '
"Three mariths age I was a weak, sick-
IY man. My appetite,was poor, food fer.
mented in mY stomach, I bad sour 'ris-
ings and indigestion., At night I would
often weaken with gar in the storna,ch
and heart palpitation.
'I consulted 'My' doctor and, used Ten-
erliee that my' friends advised. Nothing
'One day' I received a sample of Dr.
Ilarniltons Pills, 'and my eon Commen-
ced. To -day I have A vikorous appetite,
strong heart action, and no sign of in.
digest6m. I feel yoUnger and healthier
than ever' before." •
Your druggist or storekeeper smile Dr.
Iialnifton'e Pills, 25.3 per box or five boxes
for $1.00. By mail ,from The Catarrho.
zone Co., Buffalo,. N.Y., and Ethseiton,
• ZEBRAS AND LIONS.
•Wild Animals Understand EachOther'S Ways. •
Once, When Afa,jor Stevenson -
Hamilton was folio -wing the tracks
of setae • lions in, Africa., a sraial
troop of zebras a little distaace isa
front of him eaught sight oa the big
cats at, close quarters, although
they were still invisibl,e t� the hunt-
ers. Their sudden headlong ru,sh,
Major Stev*son-llamilton writes
in "Animal/Life in Africa" was a
thing to remember, Conduct of an-
other sorb on the part of zebras,
however, wan observed by ono of
the rangers a few•yeare ago.
'As he Was riding along- the bank
ef the Olifa,nts River, he suddenly
heard zebras making a great noise
just in front, a,nd coming into a
clearing, lie found that three lion,s
had pulled down a, mare, but had
,not yet killed her. The rest 'of the
troop were standing some twenty
paces from the, lions, facing them in
semi-cirele' excited. They
were makinga great noise, • but
showed no disposition to bolt; the
foal -was between its clam and the
herd. When the ranger fired ,at one
of the lioas, the zebras nt once
stampeded; but. -the young animal
waited about for itaanothox, which,
although badly clawed, WR,S able to
get up a,nd make oft also.
Another ranger came on a lion
and two lionesses taking their mid-
day siesta, within a hundred yards
of a troop of zebras. One lion was
lying ou• its back, with all four
legs in the air,. like a cat before, the
fire, while the zebrat -were standing
about, apparently half -asleep. The
lions must have been clearly visible
to them.
Incidents such as this illustrate
the perfect unders'tanding that the
wild creatures have of each others'
ways, and how far man is from a,
clear comprehension of them,
BARD, SOFT, OR BLEEDING?
No matter what kind or where located,
any earn is promptly cured by Putnam's
Corn Extractor; being purely vegetable it
causes no pain. Guarantee with every
bottle of "Putnam's," use no other, 250.
at all dealers,
In general pride is at bottom of
all great mistakes.
Mlnard's LInlinent CUres Diphtheria.
An army officer, noted for his
bluntness of speech, rudely remark-
ed in the presence of a clergyman:
"If I had a son who was an idiot I
would make him a Parson.' "Evi-
dently your father held a different
view, six," responded the clergy-
man, quietly.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
• Dear Sits, -This fall I got thrown on a
fence and hurt my chest very bad, so 5 -
could riot work and it hurt me to breathe.
I triedtall kinds of Liniments and they
did me no good.
One bottle of 'MTNA.PD'S LINIMENT,
warmed en flannels and applied on my
breast, cured me completely.
0. COSSABOOM
Rosiway, Digby Ce., N.H.
An Ancient Legend.
"This inn must be very old,,"' re-
marked a tourist, in a story. printed
in London Opit4on,•to the landlord;
who was serving him with ,dinner.
"Very old, sir," assented the
landlord. "Would you like ti hear
some of the legends connected with
the place ?"
"I would indeed," replied the
tourist. "Tell me the legend of
. .
this cumin old mince pie, 1 no-
tice it every time I come."
If we could see ourselves • as
others see us ,we wouldn't believe
ExiierinP111),,t1s, Glillislls,EsTedgick,Winn.I‘IEEllIl.
gItand and
, Experiments made in Sweden
with is view to obtaining a "pedi-
gree"' wheat were referred to in a
recent lecture by Prof, T. B, Wood,
of Cambridge, England, at the Roy-
al Institution,
The two important tharacteris-
lics which the farmer wanted, tilin
lecturer said, were a good quality
and a large yield. Comparison of
the yield per acre over 10 yeare in
Lancashire, 35 blishols, and in MOB-
mouthshiro, 28 bushels, indicated
a,t once, he said, that soil iktid clim-
ate were responsible to, a large ex-
tent, and leteorologifits were of the
opinion that the, weather daring the
autumn sewing irn 1a large measure
determined the yield. The average
yield per acre in different court -
tries: Denmark, 42.1 bushels;
Great Britain, 32.9 bushels; Can,
axle, 17.0 bushels; India, 11.4 bush-
els. and Russia, 10 bushels.
bush-
ole;
at Cambridge and
other places showed ,tamt there WAS
no relation between the size•of the
ear, the size a the grain., or the
numher o'f., stems and the bulk of
the crop. Both squarehead and
rivets one of whieh had a small, ear
and the other a large, gave an al-
most equal yield. In this connec-
tion 'Professes, Wood pointed out
tha,t the efforts' ta Obtain a pedigree
wheat had Been unavailing. In
Sweden, by mocha,nical separators,
they, had picked the largest grains
from the largest ears out of succes-
siva crops, but the result was act-
ually not so.good as that obtained
from anaortdatnary sowing.
PROPER TIME TO RISE.
Is When Eyes First*Open—Dozing
Not Healthy.,
alhe 'proper time to' rise—if we
could only make up our minds te it
—is when sleep properly ends,:
Dozing is not a,danissible from any
reasonable ox health point of view.
The Imain falli into the state we
can sleeps and the other orgains.of
the body follow it. True sleep is
the aggregate of sleeps. In, other
words, sleep, which must be a nat-
ural function, is a state which con-
sists in the sleeping or rest of all
the several parts ofthe organism
Sometimes one, -and at other
times another paris of the' body an a,
• whole mayaba...fatigued, and so the
last to awake, or the moat exhaust-
ed and therefore the most difficult
to amuae.
Minard's Liniment Curet aarset In Cows.,
a Mother—Well, dears; did you
meet any one you kneav ..The three
childree (whohave just returned
Loan the morning walk)—Yes; Ruby
and Derek. Mother—Where did
yoe meet them?' ‘Barbara, • (the
youngest)—At the same -place as we
was. -
Try Murine Eye Reweecly
If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eyelids, Doese't Smart
--Soothes Eye Paha Druggists Sell
lvfurine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50e.
Marine Eye 'Salve in Aseptic Tubes,
25c, 50, Eye 'Books Free by Mail
An Eye Tante Good far AS eyes that Need care
Murillo Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Every failure teaches a man
onrething if he will learn.
+wineries Liniment' aural Distemper.
"BLUE FLAME"
• SPECIAL
• ';',1%
To Lower our stock
byaTutly net — our
stock-taking—we of-
fer these excellent
Plugs at
$2
Per Set of Four
"BLUE FLAMES"
give 'perfect igni-
tion and will •give
a hotter apark than
any plug at this
prim. '
RUSSELL MOTOR CAR CO.,
• Limited.
Accessories DMit., WEST soaossro
satuyis Pen- SALE.
11. W: DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street,
Toronto. -
RTOCB, GRAIN AND DAIRY
A.' Parma 'in all sections ot Ontario,
Remo imaps.
F AglaNtyY RITES, wises cm warners ,
nrseareen
and eifivaack!t'Sg;is,
1-1 ESIDI3NTIAL ,P11,01"L'RTIIIS ;nit
JCL ' Brampton foul a dcizen other towns,
H. W. 51AWS0N, Colberna St., Toronto
3/000 ROMESTEA.DS AND 1M.
.,F,ItliRrAed farms, $16.00 to 1115.05
par acre...'oest grain and mixed farming
gauntry. Write Commissioner, Board of
Trade,' Manhole -Seek
MALE HELP VVAN'TECit
A1, CiNCE-MEN ,WANTED1 .LEARN'
Barber Trade; great denurod; good
wages; twenty to thirty advertised for
daily ta" aarenta papers alone. Can Jonah
you In six to eight weeks: Send for Cata.
Moler College, 221 Queen East, To-
' STAMPS AND COINS,
SPAMP COLLECTO H N DRS DAP-
ferent Foreign,- 'Stamps. Catalogue.
Albtint, only Seven Centel. Marks. Stant/
Com n To ro n to;
MISCELLANEOUS.
ANGER, 11.12,1013,5, LUMPSM
. B.
11,j Interual and external,. cared wins.
out vain by our home treatment. Write
he before too late. Dr. Hellman Idedlirell
co., Limited. f;ollingworal, Ont.
BOYS AND GIRLS
make one or twodollars a week melting Poet
Cards for your vacation trip, and win also
beautifulpize, Write, for particulars, ,
TORONTO TRADING do,
454 1.0045 AVE:, TORONTO, ONT. ,041
FINE Grain Sugar
1'o have every grabs alike, size
of dots at left, each one choice
extra Granulated White pure cane
a , get the St. Lawrence in
sugar, get zsibs
et) bs.
IIIIEDIUNI Grain
In the bags of St. Zawrerwe
"Medium Grain"- blue tags -,every grain Is choicest granulated
sugar, about size of a seed pearl,
every one pure cane sugar, 0•
COARSE Grain
Many people prefer the coarser
grain. The St. Lawrence Green
Tog assures eve rygrain distinct
mystal, each about the size of a
email diamond, and ahnost as
bright, hut quickly melted into
pure sweetness.
Your grocer's wholesaler has
the exact style you waut-grriln,
quality and quantity all guar-
anteed by
.St.LawriffeeSugar Refineries
11mitekMentreal.
1
RETIELIEll8ONTARIO
miANGAAVIRAGATiON Co.
THET°SEA-
Vac:ition Trip
Niagara Falls, Toronto, Thou-
sand Islands, St. fsawrmicc
'
Rapid, Montreal, Quebec ante
• the Saguenay Itiver—ouc Of
a t (1 '8 'nest impressive
scenie wonders.
Low rates for tickets Including meals
and berths. Par infer.
mitten apply to local.
ticket agents or
Hugh tDve..Pia. cl
tecuros.: n,
Gen. Agt , Toren.
to, Out., or IL
is Poster Chaffee,
P.T.M., Mont.
owe Tarin,T
lloPeat. •
"Did Mr, Cumso 81363/4 annoyed
at your calling with his bill'?" asked
Mr. Gasketts of labs new collector.
"No, sir," replied the young
man; "on the oontrary, he asked ,
me to call agifin."
Limited.
Jack Makeit—How can WP mar,-
ry? I'm only worth fifteen' thou-
sand dollars, and ' that wouldn't
buy your clothea,
May Spendit—Oh,, yes, it „would,
• Jack, for neaadif five years !
WANTED --More Workers At once .tri do picture coloring for n in
their home with our wonderful gnu,
_• foal Proceed. Simile, mechanicai work, rapidly done., All pair,
terns furnished, Pesitively no oxperienee required. Wo furnish the Pieeess' and
ehemicals and supplY you with pictures to ooldr, whiell you return to us, (food
• prias paid promptly by the week or month, No canyasaing or. &Eine-our trav-
ellers eell the geode amd the Scipio Ma1irnite,t1 for o:zr work,- If you want Glom;
Dioapant work the year ,round for
wole or spare tme, write ie andwe• IOAN1Pc" "PY•h',
'TWI.11rvSfaais.coLLEcs STREET sonerroONT
SONORA moToR
HORNS
comma, DEGasszaw,,,,
ou-AiitArrtn) for one Year
;against all mechanical' defeats
1`,11/.. 7,
IS$1.1E,
h
- -
• PROVED by several years of
exiicrience a meat satiable -
tory horil. /The Sonera, „isa motor
' driven, using but little otirrent.
..By a new device the Sonora doee
away with the rasping andameta,lnd
s'ereeehes' so 131110,11 noticed. It pa'd'
dace's a anadath, ear -pleasing tone.-
• SPECLIL PRICE TILL A.UGUST
Our stock'must be recluced by that time for the annual stock -taking.
Sonora EritSS Horn Motor Driven) .... Reg. $20".00, Sale price $53.25
Sonora„ Nickel Horn " . Reg. $24J30, talo price $14.28
Sonora, Comb. L and 86 Electric-, Brass . Reg. $so.00, Sale price 07.90
Sonora, " " Nickel . .Reg. $36,00. Sale price $22.00
Phone or Wpfto
RUSSELL MOTOR GAR COMPANY, LIMITED
Accessories Department. WJEST TORONTO