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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-12-24, Page 3tITI] FE'S DIGGING} The best of inert say that therei8 nothing worth; having' in:life !without hard work. But we envy the elan who has. a lot of lneney left to him, or mucic ;property. Amid the hard life, most of us have to live thee°'often` seems an unevenness.' Some have to worlk so hard whilst others have so much ease and l0, ory,,,, And it seems that some things are t'visted in life, though in the end all , things become straightened out and there is then little difference between us. Someone nota not long ago: "We all come from the same mould, but some are mouldier than others!"' It will do "one of us any good to a Y linger long upon the differences we find. Distinctions really don't matter in the ultinu tel7ss0, e. The vital things I are the contacts and one of In the. midst of our discussions. Mrs. Hummingbird grew very tame,; n the : e most there was a whir in the columbine. Important things ls,that of doing our that summer. As I sat on the steps, and lir. Xiununingbird appeared. utmost to -discover that which will she would get honey all round me. ennoble and uplift. This can onl he This was so unusual thsat pony -pians p Y ceased abruptly; we "t er still: Ther. was a flood of climbing zlastur- done by moral- and 'mental digging. Mr. HummingbirdP y, • Y duals nearby;- I wondered If their perspiration. a,is; shy; besides, he homy ,could be as placid -colored as That will mean . ers iration „lt £S;, is' such a beauty, We mutt be' auto really hard work, and at first will give to h more tbat;from .more mildly tinted flowers, ache and weariness: but it is remark- see ore columbines, in these bele About m neict year. they suit=him".so—and he me tfiloxiazed, now across my able how, soon that will wear off. The feet to int a low -1 ln .foal. does love }item. 'But—had Mrs: Lust - now o 10,01,4y g petunia, now In one wild whir across me face he Delicious Flavor drawn from the leaves of has warn. it millions of users. Finer than any Japan, G an owde ' or Young fly con. Ask for SA ,AD A. EV�q ��� @ �@1g#�A{� gp 000999 g����• �yg' At1d aJd kl�l@Y1Vffi 'A98 vim and --strength end readiness of + n ,b., :. our'roadnren and gardeners` -fellows ml g. td, for once,' sent him out to do the work? He had—so far as, any - always up over the shed -roof in the sud- always digging and bending the back t . r den conviction that there were blos-' -are remalkiible:.Somo oR filen! seem hing as transient as a'hummingbird -_ soms even finer amongthepumps p laps and to be immune from weariness. They.could have—the arduous, painstaking expression of one who •a les with ,plantains, mowing -machines and agri-' give their sweat, and will tell you they ,Pp culture,• of the back yard. Beautiful, are used 't the joban : unaccustomed task; sometimes o �o and don't notice it. binnderod a I£tt1e once al these swoops; almost too swift -even Out lives hold innumerable tree- + most missed for thought.:.: his aim ata columbine -division. SureIn an' instant, back face,es-but they rarely-.iie.near the sur -she wouldcome 1 'this was the 4ievolt of Mrs. _ (I could have told•her ` They have to be sought • and Y ra Iluin ter min 'r there was npthin0 in that beck yard). much' digging done for their discovery.gbi d. Every day, before, she had gt g been doingthe strenuous .hone': and—steel—at the convolvulus... Laois at it another way.,You can- honey - Laois throat of the convolculus g search, tasting and sucking' with; all being not learn French merely by walking her little might; dashing at every. pos-' just too long for her beak, she could about' and looking in shop windows. , sib! i x m t not, with her utmost vivacity, hunt It may mean going into the attic Y, P Y' g furious,y into the herself : in deep enough to reach the away fzom all others and just work- slightest crack in the folded petals ,honey, so had to come to vulgar ing awayinto the,earlymorning (the -columbines were hardly out), b g sometimes at. 'an inhospitable closed trampling, and pushing—which, with hours. 'We all have to forego certain burl. those needle -claws, meant also tearing pleasures when we go digging. It and scratching. But may mean that you must sacrifice (Imagine Mrs. Humming -bird do- g• they were pale Glaring, `Dearest, T must have a job"; gray,,poetic 'little scratches after all. your outdoor pleasurestthe-for a while, Mi Iiumtningbird .retorting, , `.}Aar- The gentler pencil-stripings on the but ,then look at splendor'of i ed of the fragile achievement! For life's blessings we ling—don't 'you think you have one edge gi.e blossoms were per - achievement! For beep and doing. already?" and Mrs. hummingbird sit- haps the most touching; so fairy -deli .Whatever the ambition may be, it is encing him if a• hummingbird,hus... este, so not -made -by -hands, that the far better that it should be gained byeband could be silenced, which I doubt ,flower looked as if fairies, on their our own effort, Work bard, and even —with, "But this sitting on a nest, keen little, sleds, had been coasting if we<never get as High as we have beloved, is a bore. I want to be' out- down its xis. • Only a convolvulus - aimed we shall be far better than being important, being visible, in the,bloom, unhappily, eoids up at night. those who. gain without labor. fierce trafficof the flower -beds!") A fairy would have to do its costing Lazy, indolent, easy ouch people Hummingbird nests, they tell weave on a petunia. are of littie'value. He is n far greater lined with cobwebs,; imagine one of The petunias, however, were shorter man who finds his job of digging for these little fiery creaturesconstrain- necked, and showed no fairy slidings. that which will' maintain him and ing 'itself to handle a cobweb; to As they blossomed more and more others. His drops of .neat are the weave it, patiently, into lining. Either thickly elle grew tamer and tamer. . I price he pays for his -blessings. It is cobwebs are. tougher than. one thinks inspected every item of her, as she —or else a hummingbird can be gentle hummed before me; the thorn -like the cervico which coats, whether if bo; khan it tries. shine of her beak; the exact spot for. oneself or another; that is- most P fruitful., So we should dig until our Later on, when 'leaves thinned, we where she stowed each curled -up _ball hands are horny because as we give saw the little thimble -bump of a nest; of a foot; the brace -points at the end ourselves we feed another,' and to help' high sip, but on a strong limb,as broad of her very 'practical 'tail, and, most a fellow throughlife even at the price 1 as the nest. No precarious fork-, impudent of all, the very bldclt-rim- of our blood is to redeem a life from architecture for these two. Getting: mod curve, of; her nearer eyelid! One destruction and to crown it tvith`glory honey was precarious enough, without I felt es if one ought to look away; but and honor. a wiggly nest to wormy over. I wish althow i:ttle she minded.—Anne Bos - birds were as careful. . , I worth Greene, in "Dipper Hill." "Though life, old pal, may seem yphill, You'll find the grade with speed and How Does She Do It? skill, I know you will, of you but try, "The average mother with four pr And never, never stop to cry. five children," has been under scrutiny Success, indeed, is always near by an investigator in home economics, , , To those of us who " Baby's Own Tablets Are ]Effec- persevere. He finds that the course o� a year she makes the equivalent of 1,095 tive and Easy to Give. an loaves of bread, fifty cakes d 760 The Soldier Spirit. You do not have to coax and threat. pies, prepares meat which, if asset • bled, would make one or two cows and en to get the little ones to take Baby's Though the wars depart; about six hogs, peels 5,110 potatoes, Own Tablets. The ease with which Beep the soldier spirit, makes 1,200 beds, dusts 7,600 chairs they are given, as compared with Bubbling in the heart- and sews fifty to one hundred gar- liquid mod4oines, will appeal to every Thv gay lark of the battle, the fine monis, exclusive of mending and darn- mother. Nene Is spilled or wasted: spur of the fight, ing and the sewing on of buttons. The you, know jest haw big a dose has The crusade of the April dream that gross amount of dishwashing and a 0'...10.0 the little stomach. As a rem - fills the world with light, number of other activities is not coin- ode for the itis of childhood arising Deep the soldier spirit, puted. In her spare time she may do 10.01 derangements of the stomach For old things and for new; the family Wash. and bowels they are most satisfactory, The passion of the morning lay, This hardly seems to cover the Mns' Rase Soyer, Willimantic, The'baptisnrof the dew—ground, Mothers can be recalled who Cone., says: "I used Baby's Own Tab - The brave touch of the spirit that do all that and then some. They do lets in the Canadian Nortllweat anis youth brings unto all— it without any claim to knowledge of 10000 them a wonderful martial/le for Our youth that helped the old world's modern efficiency systems. Their ab- children's troubles, especially indigos - arm beat down the serried wall, jective is work performed and they tion anal constipation: I have also Keep the soldier spirit, go far in its attainment. given them to my children for simple ""The going forth with song The investigator is endeavoring to fever and the restlessness accompany - To swing the sword of happiness contribute an answer to the question: ing teething and they :always gave re - Against the shields of wrong Shall Mother be paid a salary?. That lief, I can recommend Baby's Own The blithe blow of the fine blade that question, however, once answered in Tablets to all motile—re." clears each age -worn path the affirmative,a is productive of an- 1 abys Own Tablets are sold by With the new day's, line adventure, other just as difficult of answer: Can medicine dealers or by mail at 25 the blood of youth's high wrath, we pay her what she is worth? cents a box from The Dr. William.' Beep the soldier. spirit, Metlic)ne Co„ Bradt -vino, Ont, Though the war no longer beats; CHILDREN EN MIKE THEM Keep tho soldier spirit, The Woman Pays. The fanfare of the rattling drums,' On a Second, JOurriey, The trumpets in the streets— Give me to live this life again, and I The old, glad youpgness mounting as Would ask no boner odds than dreams mount stars of fire, those allowed The battle of the morning joy, the The right to walk and mingle with eternal dawn's desire. —B. B. the crowd,' To know the self -same space of earth Cedars in LehanOri:The housemaid, however put on and sky, The self -same friends and neighbors dwelling nigh; This country, smiling, clean and strong and proud, For freedom born, for freedom long endowed, "My new houeemaid is a treasure," declared Mrs, Johnson, "Thad a bridge party the other evening, and one wo- man failed, to turn up. You know how it is—she gave me ma notice_ what- ever." "Very annoying." 'Ever since Solomon sent 8.0,000 men ewe. of my gowns and fitted in feauti to cut diem, the cedars,: of Lebanon fully. have diad a powerful attraction to the That was htilpfnl."' tourist and the visiting aciontiet, and Yes, and T; won her week's wares!, many descriptions, of the famous trees are in print, remarkable chiefly for With all its laughing passing. by. b their apparent inaccuracy in regard to - tt sizes, distiblltion,-and number of the ?°1"�.� eel But," g g ages passin asks a voice within me, "would trees. It is s -wonder any were left atweep you x• ' ",. �< s tx < all wibh a finesh drew of 10),000 in the As you have wept to walk through: wood's, every month; for Solomon split '. " life again, his 30,000 into thee ehittn and put' Would you want joys you knew you them on the job in relays. - could not keep I - --r And face' Ince more those losses, A Good Reason. . money orders, whleh can be cubed with their pain?" Sweet Youmg Tiling--"Wby dao you enywhea•e without any eharge. • sYes, once 'again to know those happy Ysaes ,lavo knots ou the ocean instead of To obtain the top price, Cream les? I'd bear the burdens and I'd' brave the tears. —Edgard A. Guest r WE WANT CHURNING We .supply cans andpay express charges. We pay p y d ail Y by express Shipper (sarcastically) --"Well, you see, they coeldm't have tbie ocean tied if there were no`H,note." A Prolific In Corn. Bowes Company Limited, Three crape of corn are' obtained Toronto Far'refelencea—leadOffice, I from the same held in one year on cel- Toronto,' Min alluvial Lands of the Philippine- isles llilippin:e Bank of Montreal, or your 100.1 b: raker. isle•"'0.011. e. I Established for over thirty years: nomet be free from bad flavors and a n not less than i 30 per cent Butter Fat. Spruce is found in all the' forest regions of Canada, and it is not only the most abundant but is the -prinei- pal wood used in- the manufacture of both lumber and pulp.. Keep Mlnard's Liniment handy. SUNSPOTS ARE CANNON GIGANTIC Wit`•92^�.r',1Ald 1 Astron. rs Thirsk They Bombstd Earth Wit lii�Iefittl'o>ris. £ecrots of Scienoe.. By David Dietz. ,Oheel•vatlin of the sunspots, It will be remembered, resulted in the die: covery that the sun rotated on Its alis oniae in 20 days and than the fsur^faoe of the sun is molten and not solid. The exact nature of the .mots, how- ever, is still one of the mysteriesof a,etronomy.: They appear to be 'gigantic holes in the sun. Some astronomers•' think they. are great whirlpools la the sua.taee of the sun. They change in size frequently. Now osies appear and old ones' disappear, There seems to be some sort of a cvole, so astronomers have observed, the greatest number appearing every 11 years. .As we gaze at. these enn•spots it is impossible for us to,nomceive of their true -:magnitude., Many of theme are more than 60,000 miles. across. In. 1858, osis was ob- served weld' was' 107,000 males ..rope. The matter in these su•n-spots seem. to ,be whirling about' with a speed of more than 100 miles' a second: When one of thesespots'dislappoara, the sddes rush together with a speed 20 times, as great es that. Rising sprays of Oro leap thousands of, miles from the surfaee of the sun and fa11 back upon it, -rolling, out in great waves. A ship 'es large as the earth placed le such -e storm would be tossed about Iike a cork. A peculiar conmeotion has been ob• served between sun -spots and certain phenomena upon the earth. When the sun -spoofs are the moat frequent,, we have the most magnetic storms, that le, periods when cone pasees fail to function properly, when telephone and telegraph'' lines are. thrown mit of order, and the aurora borealis' or "northern lights are seen in the sky. These facts have led some astrono- mers to believe that sun -spots are like ,gigantto cannon, bombarding the earth and space with a fusillade lot electrons. plectrons 'aro tlye particles' of negative electricity widtih 'physjesist' now -be- Neve compose the atoms of all matter. Next article: Will the eau ever give out? Oh Mother! What Can I Do? How many times a. day do your babies ask you that question? And how often are you , able to suggeat !tome interesting game for them to play, sonde amusing occupation for a rainy (lay? If you'd like always to have a practical, helpful suggestion for then), read thie snappy new fes, tures - Look through elle magazine to and a picture of a sheep. Cut him out, than paste these bits of cotton on htm for wool. You can paste hint on card - bowel. to make hien strong if you wish. No Change in 20,000 Years. I't is believed that the market sec- tionof the ancient city of Bagdad has not .hanged 011 apeearatoe or method darting the Mat 20,000 years. Tlie shopping streets are like tun- nels, lined with tiny booths, and pack- ed and jammed with myon, veiled wo- men, donkeys and camels, In these quaint streets there is al- ways the clatter of at Least a dozen different lan:guagaes. This, market place Is small, but prob- ably the most congested spot In all the world dowing the business' hours, e Don't let indigestion after meals, biliousness, heartburn, or dyspepsia take the pep out of you. Take Seigel's Syrup. Any drug store. Canadian feldspar ,enjoys a well - merited reputation as a raw material for the ceramic industries, being of high grade and of uniformn potash content, analyses of sample from a number of quarries showing a potash content of about 12 per cent, When hoarse use Mihard's Lfnimsnt. Ochres, 'wad and ferruginous clays suitable for the manufacture of paint, anti hydrated oxides of iron for the purification of illuminating gas, are found in many parts of Canada. Canada -produces no tin ores. Though the occurrence cctureilce Of tin -bearing z n bear in g minerals has-been noted in a number of localities, they have Hove never et Y been found in sufficient quantity to be of any economic importance, iJoe. Melons Tubular lioa il' 8k' tea, nvetted an strong, Te w! ankle .asps. Regular 6pot{pea ill, .m. a' nm for mall .Nor .iratomen,on� .,3.F0. akin and t egtdpmei,e, 1.00..0 as¢'art-. 41 V .. sant A116a1f ae tu•3 � sips pr our lntalogue and -90.0000, b Great Beasts Were These. f pan of a:'4tt" �,l � k1$ 9�1I M The Dinasauria form an order of; a extinct land reptiles which inhabited the earth more than ten millions of years ago, Ail .that is known of them has been learned from the study of their' fossil remains found' In the rocks of Europe, India, South Africa, and North Am, - erica.. i All has£ limbs and in many species the hind ones were much larger than the front ones, indicating that the animals walked on two legs similar to the birds, The 1 T o bones ax's. hollow, as in birds, and since in several other important features the skeleton is similar to that of -birds it is believed that- the two groups are closely related and have descended from a -common par -I eat, Many species were of immense size.. Brontos- u aur s, ,the giant reptile: whose mounted stone skeleton is in the Museum of Natural History in Newt York, was over sixty feet long. I I)ipodocus, whose fossil" remains May be seen in the Carnegie Museum' of Pittsburg, was about seventy feet) in length. The extinction of this entire rou g Pl of huge creatures may have been brought about by lack of food or the presence of nemerous parasitic . ori carnivorous enemies. The reptiles are intermediate in structure between the amphibians and birds. The brain ' resembles that of the frog, but the -cerebrum is larger. The "vascular and respiratory systems approach the condition' in birds.' In most forms the heart has two•auricles and one ventricle, hut in the croeodile a partition divides the ventricle into two -parts. A WOMAN'S WORK liesldnot'. Addros,. 810 Vincent ,llored!t, 1n lila : 'n (bate. sold In 10 r'evllhI g .Ihe 7lneln,',, 00 I06 nest y( r aur 011,101, 0 bhrut'indllob, 01n giber,d trend .Y el trnn, 001 depnbits, a tom pared a'111e tyle year. 0(0, b11MY u large-itiutos•, n1010e mar loin. during the : eom,, perl04 aro considerably r ¢hired. 0,11 profit. aro 50 00000000100` Lo a what adverselS lorded, but we are left ht an 10, 0.110 810000 90011100 10 meet any Calls which. messed noilvity ata trade Lally Matte upon its, Net10llirmand1ug. those unndltlonx our dividend mid :'bonus have been earned and taxes paid, and w0 have a balanus to carry forward. There Is no out:Mien 1..01 that the trend of 10usf- negg Is.. slowly' but 0urell' 0mvarell:, Au" 00, O0ldenue Of 1111,, Dao loadings aro Cho largest an record, lebile wbolooalo, and 060851 100lne10 &!lone 0 falx dOgraa 0f lnnro0 1 activity,' Trxtllo lnttustrles aro well employed, o0d Ih6re 10 101011 demand le 0100 1,011,0,.. and Pilled' trndos, - lmproremen6' 30 0100 !hewn In other lines of business, although probta aro. curtailed In :tato grocery trade. There le 1110, Improl'mnent ai ale hunha4 lu011001 In 5 ,tum -Canada, hit western ohlpmeel by way of rho Canada, but - e.. Aar a, t pas flu ahipntentg by way 05 tits a hWtu10 1d our leading Industry and on its profitable 00to0000 01,0 9000060160 of '1100 0dmtiry lergaly donut°. ''00118 unfavourable minter con- ditions restricted han1,t105 to eomo extant. the Crop that was garnered this .year Is a .very large one 8104, at present prices, !0111 prove 'profitable -to' 5ho farmer, The marketing of the crop 'trill • bring at least $500,000,015 of now money, into Canada and. will Undoubtedly 017.00'4 n00Id0tlon 10: tann- ers' 11a1111Jticx. Th10 now Money will 110w. into all channels of trade and bo - refloated 1n 'improved business :conditioner.' general, throughout the country. Need For isublio EminentY. The' 000,0100 necessity- of restricting, 0o tar a. ,nayhe leglttmat8p. possible, ell national expendl- 1ur0e 10 05,8tally r8eogn100,1,. but gales, it 1s fellow - hi appropriate 'u011on widen 'tient!,' in reduction. In tazoo,. we marmot regard It as other thou nn anodactl • gesture. if our 019700110000 mould be. fA controlled that within a reasonable 1100. Can- edian taxae should n01 ''exceed those imaged in tarn Voi118 aortas, ft would provide 0n, important etlmulus industry and also an 8lreetl05 aid. to Immigration an4 colonization, the neod .for which Is apparent, When I mem no strongly as I can' that this measure of :prudence, and aconomy sbOtild be exer8l,Od, 'I do not .10 s0 with any tooling that loci; of confidence l0 the country. lt,olt' is -war_ ranted, In fart. I ala more ennv1010d than ever that. the codntry, .0100.80 and potentially, 900000se0 such Woalth',and opportunity that Its future cannot bo denied: and Ideprecate most strongly -expressions or opinion based upon local conditions and 1081 victual buolne0e whlch ars perverted lula'f pessimisnt 008 10 0110 80,1010,'0 0otee when 0 00.1 000680001/ fol' Foch. a sentiment nista. 0000.1 Manager. Reviews 511001ion; 10- 1t1s 0 000 Of Ino altuat10n, SIr 7,rredo,1 b \illI1lm 1a11y Luld 111 Hart; 40 ,vnu know. Ow 000 note 000 00011'00 war 001.0 Iktne Ulna It 10 to -day, 11 1v 1n 10ep 0010h 0,0 1alun us 110 du our 1.1,101 r,'0 101.,, o001 which 11,1.' ls': 9000 (nts' as 00611 a; Dau' :deter. . 1,06!0 le r 11°8 have 8090 for 0(11 :,100000 -year. or 10,115800 devresollnr and tads Is ionated to 1100 dlsn(11,00,00 ¢fn 1.01100 90000,, 0 100ntoly aur 07,170'1011007;0001:011 reet. 0lxuln p,wr 00allliu0N, OBnit Bit 0101,0ely oar 7001115 1000010 Late 1oel, 1o1nOr had WO )040strinl ..10051100 netted 00 10 pig 001. more moony to the tdn5o rind 00010, roe of Canada rather than to lout on call 10 London and Nob, 'York. or to Inn, blah -.lass 7n1'estme0ts wait h 1.11.0 yield,' As to the (afore,: my special me0eaga to our' alma. 1007087,. at 413006,8 901010 apd.broad 18 that 0004 00001'18 0008001, !.,hiding 0 50,8410,11 harvol tiara. line 00910` about a 1(61600 and- mora hopofui 1841100' tArmagh0011 0lnnda., In ,oa:Umrd pee, th,re 15 around f0r thinking that vial bar, pasopd through talo' horst 01'- qua bed'. limey .and 045E w0. 0000 (doh fpr butter &.nest • oor 11510es, fn 0811,1,, , 010o005y, our.. Paolo must abate, especially no 188 have never: been '1n 0 hatter 001,0000r to not k positten to 4048rtnlm Y business. ' . COodltons In the 5000 und01.r801,00 were' neither 80. 04 ,,nor so bad as extremists on either side helm Ota •d - Y 8 1 At 10 the outlook, St is 0000 haat, taking':the national I VIl0( national budget. a510 1 we $rt not, palaaeing o0,$ natlanal budget, '0101. moat not '00ntlauc. leo' must som0110,, and son1011ow -cOrl- 1r11v 00 1180 1,101110 000 080000'tod bogln top0Y 0(1 our OeUto. with. good 0000000,,51 07 our .00ffolrn #sw0 oIsoold:be appal able to do :titre, and We will do it en soon 08 010 people wall, up tothe fact that piddle debt le s' burden on .the individual bank and that the, bigger it gets the more money 1s takes out, of the individual p0oket Tremendous Natural Adoantaget, a. 'aiatord the lwaa,. conditions of living 1n the Anhe4'Smths and Canada wen, mach .hili end We had 0001wt accustomed to that order Of things: blit •010 .war pub Vs behind and put tho :United 51018, a. end: 800 1000900100,0 at present: la to1110, This same condition or prosperity in ,t110 United States has also .resulted 1n -tar too many of our. people crossing CA border. True, Canada 1e not' Oho only gnn00,81 whose 811088ns are attri,oted lav the pr00perity of. Ula rlulte4. Statex, but, s,0nftln0 for ourselves, there. has been, a, cause for emigration that' to more disturbing' than the fact itself,. Living. next. door, no nsntralty stand In closest comparison and 000 more exposed than any other country to a' drain oto aur population from tho 5001 0.11_01 the mreioat- we Are 40x00188 'a 1:oarY. burda, 0r d0Ut. while our 001510bo58 overdose Wlt11 wealth. -.510.1001 this, however, w0 haw, more tour they t0 otter 10 the -desirable setter trim was -ea to go on th0. land, Laud . hunger Is a human 10.00001. We have good And damp land 1n plenty. and eventually the 1014, or immigration will darn 1n. our. direction,',, , Golden Passage. Classified Advertisements j BAN'S BUSINESS SCHOOLe, eoecreoe: l tam and place people in aka nnpohttmentS through their model olflco, and Ieum0pv,nont De- partment. Particulars fro, Adm. forty moon, West, 70ronta. Leaves through the grass are telling Ove;' again �S NEVER_DONE Tile passing of the god without a name, Gone down bre earth unseen, unheard No Wonder Health Gives Out of men, and. She Becomes Weak and Despondent. It is literally true oomcel•ning wo- man in the home' that her work is never done. She starts with hoose-, work when she rises in the morning and is kept busy up to the time she retires at night, The work must be done whether she le' feeling well or not. It is no wonder that she often breake down under the strain. She becomes breathless at slight exertion, feels e0liaustod if .lie walks up stains. Headaches and dizzy spells become frequent, end life seems• a burden. Mach of this trouble is due to the tact that her blood has become thin and watery, and to regain her good health she must tape a reliable blood-eurich- ing tonic such as Dr. Williams' Pin Pills.' Tho great value of this tonic medicine is shown by the statement of Mrs. Mary Nolan, Lintlaw, .Sask., who says:—"When I began using 21r. Wil Hams' Pink Pills I was a physical wreck. It was with great difilenity that I could do light housework. I suf- fered tram headaches, my heart would. beat violently at the least exertion, and I always felt tired and depressed. I did not sleep well at night, and I had no appetite—my limbs would swell as In dropsy, It was at this stage that a -neighbor advised me to take Dr. Wil- 1!)ams' Pink Pills. I had used the pills for some weeks before I began to fee their benefit, and thus encouraged continued taking them -for severe months,' when I was again as strong and well ea ever I had been. I have no hesitation in saying that these pills are a remarkable blood builder and strength renewer and I shall ever be grateful for what they did for me." You can get these pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 cents. a box tram The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co,, Brockville, Out. Fishing Through the Ice. If you want to fish through the ice On. a fairly large scale, cut a number of holes ten inches in diameter in, the ice and in each pour a cupful of coal oil to keep the water from freezing again. Attach the line for emelt hole to an ordinary wooden barrel hoop. Lay this on the foe with the string sus- pended through the centre of the hole. The minute the fish takes the bait the beep will be pulled upriglht or part- ly so and you eau tell from a long way off that you have a bite. Moreover, the' hoop ie springy, so there is no dan- ger of breaking your line, By running the line through the centre of a sheet of newspaper and laying this on the ice mane light is ex- cluded and alight persuade a wary fish to bite. With but these footprints for his fiery fame, These alight he sitars; so goldenly they burn So fixed and 'fair axe they, so Still they Ile, And it. is only thus that men may .learn The way of 'Peet that'lately left the s'ky. , • And I who walk abroad these autumn nights, Between the star above and the stars below, Ant stili bewildered by these glimmer ing lights,' Incredulous how there will come, I know, Reins that will quench these starry prints, at lest,' is As though it had not been a god that passed. —David Morton. Mineral's Liniment for stiff muscles, Sentence Sermons. I Have Never Seen—A; speudthrift 'With a roery future. —A headetrong boy who was not having trouble. •--1. jealous person who was also happy - -A Bonie made brighter by moon- shine. —An iudhllgent mother whd did not, 1 handicap )ler child. I —A successful church run by one 1 man, --A seliatactcry substitute for sin- cerity. Swinging to Work.- • Pacific Islanders are probably the cleanest -people on earth, for they :spend a goad past of every day in the '`water, and may be said to be almost as amphibious as ,seals. The children learn to shim almost as. soon as they learn to walk. Tf the village happens to be at some distancefrom tom the shore, a aw mm�ing pool is formed in a near- by stream and these e mixed bathing is indulged in r g d leve al times every clay: with the skin constantly greased with cocoa -nut oil, the pulp .of the bit- (SP green orange makes a goo(! soap and lathers freely Done Nature also ettppees them with scrubbers, the husks of the cocoa -nut, and this they apply to their shining bodies very igorously. Their ltpwel is: provided y ,the sun and wind, Tisa BANottoeT Co... .. C• V Bleary at. Most,wel, - _ ssesesseeeeseseeesssees ,Mtnard'e Liniment for Chilblains. Canada's sugar maples have other uses besides producing maple syrup and sugar. The wood is hard, even grained, and heavy, and is used for flooring, furniture, agricultural im- plements and woodwork. Yves! It Really,. Does Stop Your Cough eKL1ts' 0503500, WRITE !FOS cA'rkI,OtUR sod list of used ovens. Hubbard Owen Coma 1001, .50: Slag !Vest, Toccata Graphite is found in"nearly all the provinces of Canada, and even in !Baffin Island. The Black Donald mine, tear "Calabogie, Ont., is the largest and richest deposit of flake graphite „known in America. French soientiats are bullding an ei '' peiimental refrigerating plant' for' 1 EYES , olosome wooing nefresmn 'TAYLOR— FORBES Tree Pruners 61iAAk11IEE0 For every purpose in the orchard, cutting limbs up to 1i inches. Handles 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 feet t Year Hardware Dealer hoowa ate.0.119 Our descriptive circular' sent to any address on request. TAYLOR-FORBES ' COMPANY, LI74ITBI3 GUELPH, ONT. OUO W NG 1 Take half a teaspoon of Minard's internally i n molasses. ' Eases the throat, stops the mingle $'ha''t/ppyrUS�[�oq,C?^ii/2qh,t�.•g.•Y+,� 'i0ULf R ,GAMED EGGS; l3ilTTIEfe!AND FEATHERS -Ws' I3UYALLYEAR ROUND - rite 2odayfor•prices-WO ywm•antee them for a ;sucks ahead A PpuL6 1 &CO..UtrflTele tabus adp kwpr1 car -s `30`39 Sonseeau+; Itiarkrt - hfantra0i hie sb ,a1M 5 aN AaA S5 see I 0- T, 8 k 0048n081, 08140041.11•I'tUl I HAD PIMPLES A WHOLE SUMMER On Face and Neck, Lost Rest, Cuticura' Healed. "I had a breaking out of little, red pimples oa my face and neck. The pimples festered and scaled over causing disfigurement. They itched and burned causing me to scratch, and the scratching caused eruptions. Theirritation erased a lot of discomfort and I lost s my rest at night. I had the trouble e. a whole summer. ' I was treated without succes . 6 I read an advertisement for Cuticula Soap and Ointment and purchased some, and afterusing one box of Cuticura Ointment and two Cakes of Cuticura Soap , I was completely healed." (Signed) Mrs. Forest Krick, R. R. 4, Rockford, Ohio. Use Cuticurato clear your skin. Bnm la'8ach tri Nb9 85.0 A 4vosx p , Can6di09 009.0: Ointment 25 and 5 , . Taleu l." Price, 6009 a.'•U" nt £S.an480C ,og Stink. `• t utieura-Shaving Stier 250. 130 1.! c - No. 82-:- 25.'