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The Huron Expositor, 1917-04-20, Page 6THE REPliBleie :eopsuGAL • GROWING STRONG -RR., IIE ease with Wince .tne at eat "revolution" in Portu- gal was suppressed, a short tinie-agor sentree to:;eMieha- size, once again, the at tbat the Republie has come to ine,y, i It does this in a, specially interesting way. Ever since the Republic was 'ant established, some six yeare .ago, ris- ings against the Governm.eht have The deatinef Munition -jeently oteurred as a result liked-polsoning-from alight cut. . Now we are all Mere or lees, liable to accidentia botti at home ould at work), but we can protect eurselvee against serious oonse- • guences by taking the proper pre- eautionsia-that is by an -Pining Sam -Bok immediately an injury Is =Stained. Zam-Bile tomblium very unusual qualities. It is a strong antiseptic, and at the same time is very sooth- ing and healing. It is therefore, capable of ending the pain and de- stroying the poison in a wound be fere it heals it. Zara-Buk not Only destroy* all germs in the Wound, but by protecting tne sore place from the germ -laden air, keeps .the disease& out. At the tame time, the heeling essences of Zam- Ruin are growing new skin -which gradually covers the place, and a complete cure is the result. There is nothing elsa known to *ciente whieh will perform, the healing Miracles done by Zara-Buk. This is because of the secret herbal - composition of Zam-Bu. Be pre- pared for any eraergenen by keep- ing a box of 9tam-Buk atways on hand. Efic. box, Z for nlme. Ali druggists, or Zara-Bulc Co, Toronto. Bend le stameefor postage and free trial box will be sent TOIL Stratford, Ont. 1 Ontario 'a Best Business College. Students may enter our classes at 1 any thne. Commence your course now and be qualified for a pnition by reidsununer. During July and Augoat of last year we received r over 200 office assistans e could not supply. Our vadu- atert- are in demand. Write at I °neater our free catalogue. 1 A. McLachlan, PraneleiitelIt IlEART COULD NOT WORK COULD NOT SLEEP. oaramets.m.saa• • Many women are kept in a state of flair of death, become weak, worn and maseratde and are unable to attend to their household, smial or 'mashie& duties; SU account of *he unnatural action of 51111e heart- / To all simh scitlie'rers Milburn's Heart sad Nmve ehre peompt and per- manent relief t Mrs. 3. Day, 2114 John Street South, errata -Ai, Ont., writes: "I was ect run Sown with a we heart I could not even I swept the floor, nor could I sleep at *ight. I wash* awfully sick some:1meg i had to stay in bed all day as I was so Meak. I used three and a. half boxes of I liridournis Heart and Nerve Pills and I * a cured winilan to -day, and as strong pa anyone cotild he. 2.14 &AM WTI r.k, even my own wasiuiig doctmed. for over two years but got mo help tmtil T used your pills. - Milhieries Heart and Nerve Pills are ▪ plr box, 3 boxes for $1.25, at all Anders or mailed direct on receipt of "dee be Tstit T. Mniscraw Co., Latrree, leoehs. Oat. Ffrst Things to ing the Garden Reidy. FEW TOOLS ARE NECESSARY Information on Digging, Plantlig, and Transplanting Which Will Help the Amateur to Get Started Right HURON EXPOSITOB been frequent. In eertain seetions of the press, all over Europe, thes Specialiet, °Mario Department Of e By S. C. JOHNSTON; Vegetable have been made to aseuine 'extraer- Agriculture, Toronto.dinary impor is u tance, and the newspa- pers so dealing with them Memo been The soil is the work on tfl. which in Ito way disconeerted by ethe coat- fond many. of the conetiteents sideration that the facts of eitch case, which go to make up. plant food, as they became -available, showed the Thew foods must be so treated that latest revolution to have partaken they will be in such a. condition that more of the naeure of a comic opera they may lie readily taken up by the even than any of its many Oredeces- slender "rootlets of the Want so that some •The recent rising of the mai- the intuit will thrive and mature. minterit Machado dos Smiles certain - If possible add sorae manure to iy possessed wonderful possibilities your sell and vomit it up well before in -this direction.Proceeding to - planting time. Thi,s , manure may be ward% Abrantes vilth 300 Soldners, obtained pessibl, from variouz. says a recent description: of the incit sources close to your home; livery dent from Mathid, he 'Was arrested at stables or firms deeding entirely with the gates of that town by the colonel manure would be willing to supply commanding. Many of hie corapan it at a reasonable rate. On heavy -ions had already thought better of it. soils it is particularly recommended and the remainder gave themsalema that heavinapplicationa be Made in • ap. Their leader was 'delivered to the order that the soil will be of A Math Military authorities ofiEntrancamen- liner condition so that it willretain to, and was taken to Lisbon and a large quantity of plant food. Many there put on board the Vase° de, of the garden, soils *ill be benefited Game. , by the application of lime. Thie $o ended tfet% another revolution. may be secured from various sources Nevertheless, the incident was by no such as the contractor andbuilder, means -without 1mortauc It is a lime and cement dealers: and may be -men astablished fact that the action in the forra of fresh lime or even was fomented and. assisted by the slaked lirae. This lime should be Germanophiles M Spain, and that ir scattered over the aurface of the Soil was onlY one amongst many devices' after the digging has taken place. - resorted to by these.,people, "to put a I and a sufficient amount should be iitack between the legs of the Allies" applied to make the etirface ofthe in the prosecution of the war, as a ground fairly white. This should. be well-known diplomatist once descrile gently raked into the soil just pre- ed such tactics. Machado dos Santoa /dons to the planting of the seed. . plainly declared that his Moyeinent • PHIL 20, i917 DIGGING. It is neceswy- in elf had for its object the prevention of gardens that the soil be,t,ffed over Portugal' taking an active share. in at one time or another during the the war, and in this he was only !de - early spring in order that it May be,, . ijloping further the policy, followed come dry and fined. We find that . by the • Conservatives of the old re - many inallY ef the 'troublea. of the back- ' gime ever dace Portugal threw in i I yard. geirdens are Sawed by digging her lot with the Allies. Pity:. haVe the -Soli too early in the spring. One .. lost no opportunity for protanwhig 61 the lhe easiein ways to tell when the their views. They have *geld that ' WU is ready for digging is to gather the absence of large numbers of men a handful and -prkss the lingere:.(Wle on active service will seriously jeo- it. If the soil in the hand sets in a pardize the futere-of the Republic, somewhat compact' mass the time le and they have insisted that Portugal, not far enough ainvanced for tom- with the greater part of her army mewing digging. lf, -however, the abroad, Would be at the mercy of sett falla apart into several small SINtill: Then, in order to prove this ts we may rest assured that it Is pwootly,, sato to (fig. , latter point, they have done their utmost to stir up suite between the VOOIStin It is unneiessern fOr the two countries., Rumor ha e been haikYard gardener to p hase, many made to . follow ruirtom and no toaster Ole. lira garden.' Those who aniount of denial has been sufficient la" a"a growing vegetables i'i• to -prevent the reiteration of these dbbiHr-liacityard for a number of yearn. reports. `Thfil was specially notice - gradually add to their supply until able in the case of the mittorious after 'three or four years they have • ikieamulated many . special tools , Canpfirtargureesgea rdtrinoogps tbaee rpantilsestrpanise ohf • Whit& are stilted- for particniat oper- 7 territory on the way. to Prance. It t*one in the garden; Complaints wee emphatically dmied,by the Por - ate aoMetimen heard that the 6:14)613843 tuguese authorities, and. • oven. more -negate': ary to commence a. backyard n is ref! '_great. Many' NWT' emphaticaily denied by the Spatilsh authorities, but the -story 'has gone teod 'backyard gardens have been made'a0.. -excellent barvosits obtain- on appearing at intervals, in various . forms and with ever new embellish- ed leitbay tew and 'comparatiiveln -a i L ment in the matter of -detail. i ineipensMetoels. A digging fork or Now all these efforts have been snade, a Taira, and a hoe are about For Prices and tonna el side of Wm feriewbs brands applyst=--- ifAZ ORDER tomersturr • timarfkolkslisil ites4 63 P 0:111111 &PM MONTREAL. a INDIA P CIE HO Vala ORS PORTER L.......g.#-RINGSSEERCIAIR SPECIAL HOMEAREW PA ALE PORTER ROHEMIAN LAGER The above goods are ell fell sMensih and are supplied io consumers direct fra112 h. Brewery ONLY In localities where no licensed traders reside. Sk Meadlache e ousnes CURED BY MILBURN'S AXA-LIVrR, 1211 Mrs. Willard Tower, Hillsbeco, N.B., writes: "I: have suffered someiltig‘g awful with sleek hmidache. At times I wctthl name bilious, s.nd would have severe • in Illy stomach after eating, and e a bad taste in. my mouth every 'um I told some of my /den& it and I was advised to use Mil- 's Iraxmlaver Pills. This I did and and they cured me." When the liver becomes atingle and Nesetivee the bhwelS-beconie constiPated. Abe tongue hepouts ccated the 4ontach and sick end hilides-headacbesAccur. fiIbwn'gPllls dein' the ised oferW tOrrinee and stomach- and "able headaeha.. Lazo-1,1ver Pills are 2k. , 5 viols for $1.1*, at an laws, Ogr 1111114 d Street on receipt of owe hp tazumir-co., 1,mays!, uNiarbb. uim 1' I uecessful,e and the all the tools essential a the, outset, einze„ ar uns . and these are inexpensiveposition as between repoblican Por - PLANTING Mins. wizen staltegaadlilyabdecomminognacrIcetcaireir. 8PTahine refs - has been. determined that the. soil hi • • • suitable for digging and the weather cent visit to Lisbon of Senor Melqui- ades Alvarez afforded a notable proof is nice and warm, it is necessary that of this better understanding. Senor the geede be planted in the "PIem —Alvarez went to Portugal at the head As fine a surface as possible should be secured, so that the little seeds will quickly germinate and grow. To sow the seeds quickly, evenly, - and thinly requires considerable p ce and care. The row may bee straight by stretching fairly tight, the Spanish Government and the ob- vious sympathy of the great mass of the Spanish people, and it was, from beginning to en& :something in the nature of a triumphal success. Senor Alvarez returned to Madrid "full of feuuttuhrue.si,stic °Milner= as regards the So the work goes on, and, in spite of eny rumors to the contrary, those who fully understand the position in the country recognize that every Month that passes finds Protug-al more -firmly established than over in her position as a republic, and on better terms than ever "oefore with tier monarchical neighbor. S, If a., of a mission of the Spatish Reform- ist Party. His miseion, which had tor its Object the bringing about of better relations between the two countries had the frank approval of piece of string from one portion of the garden to another and using this as er guide for Making the trenches or drills for placing the seeds in. After the seeds have been dropped in they should at once be covered with sad by gently drawing some of the loam surface soil in over the seeds with a piece of stick lir with the hands. This soil should, however, not be heaped up Over the row but should be placed evenly with the rest of the garden. soil and 'packed down. THINNING. Backyard gardeners should not attempt to grow immense quantities at first. It is necessity to plant sufficient seed to secure good crop of plants, the more slender plants being thinned out soon attic they are above ground so as to assure eneasonabLe room for a good crop or hieeithier plants. The thinning OhOilld be commenced when the plants are from one to two inches ha height Mid should not be left until the plants have become long and slender. because if they are left one plant simply tries to smother another one out; whereas, if they are Unri- fled to the proper distance they will have room to grow to their required size of maturity. 'PRANSPLANTING. The city dweller will find it almost impossible to grow plants of first-class quality of such vegetables as tomatoes, celery, or cabbages unless he 'has other appliances such as a hot -bed, which enables him to start the seeds very early in the spring and some` time before they could have been planted out in the garden.; in ordee that he may secure early crops. It is 'Tgood practice for him to purchase plants which may be taken to the it,ckysa-cl garden and transplanted or set out in the garden at a required diztamm and good healthy crops &nonu from them, and in all eases wheu purchasing plants only stirrely and vigorous growing plants should be awepted. Tomato plants to give the best results should be eight inches high, and the stalk should be at least as thick as a lead pencil and tbeeeer if possible. If the plants al- ready are in bloom this may be con- sidered a very. good feature. The root system of the plants should be large and having fine rootlets. Wberi transplanting individual plants care should be taken to make sure that quite a good deal of soil is log around the root of each Plant 1 CASTOR IA Por Infants and Obiblion. Ili Did You Pushup II Segne the Signature o THE REPORT OP THE NICKEL COMMISSION. HE report or tne Royal Nickel Commission appoint- ed by the Ontario Govern- ment in. September, 1914, has been. completed. On all points the report fulfils the expectations ef Hon. G. H. Ferguson, Minister of Lauds, Forests, and mines, that it would be the last word on the metal- lurgy of nickel refuting in Outario. The report points (tut that two ques- tions have been uppermost in num,- erous discussions that, have taken place concerning the nickel industry during. the last twenty-five years. The first, can nickel be economically refined in Ontario; and, second, ar2 nickel deposits of Ontario of such a character that this Province can -compete successfully as a nickel pro- ducer with any other cduntry? -To both these question t the Com- mission answers yes. "The nickel ore deposits of Ontario are much more extensive and offer better fa- cilities for the production of nickel at a low cost than do those of any other eountey," reeds the report. Any or the nrocesees now in use for refiaing nickel could be successfully worked in Ontario, and , conditions and facilities are as good here as any other part of Canada. The most satisfactory method of refining in Ontario will be electrolytic, The re- finiag of tticleel in Ontario will not only benefit the inchistry locally but promote the chemical and metallur- gical industries and lead to their groveth. The methodemployed by the, two large operating companies in Ontario are inoderi an.d efficient Beth have passed the experimental stage without receiving any Goveses- meat assistempe and have e.Arned the sitecese which they have aebievede .On the impertafft questian of miniag taxation the report, 1111 most (Arlie% After an investigation into tM methods of taxation in practice la other couatries where mining op- WHAT THE 'KIDNEYS ; RE RESPONSIBLE-. FOR 1 The funjet on Of t e IridneY0 is to purify the 'blood. Every thre. minutes, the entire blood titres= 1 „passes through the kidneys and is, relieved of isa impurities by these . '-busy organs. When the kidney* fail* their work, .poison ;Leman - late* in the blood --pains are felt. in the back, t'he hsad aches, ths mbar/ syetem ie deranged, -the joints and ankles are apt to swell and there Is grave Unger of rheumatism, sciatica and lumbago. Gin Pins treaters the kidneys .s* to their -normal activity, and *should be taken as soon as any of the symptomindicated above are -felt. Gin Pills Booth and heal the kidneys.- Don't neglect kidney trouble -you will only suffer need- iest pain. AIX druggists sell Gin Pills-. 50c. a box, or 6 boxes for *2,50. A sample will be sent free upon request to - NATIONAL DRUG & ONENIOAL GO. OP CANADA, _IMITED Toronto, Ont. 62 if. O. Addrese-Na-Dru-UO. Inc. gO2 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y. prostierous howls, la the guise ot echool-teechers, doctors, Midwives, house servants, and factory hands, to bring the doctrines of social and po- litical freedom to nhe people, Among the first outstanding ag- urea in the history of militant Beni - elan protest is Vera Zesulitch, the daughter of a family of the nobility, Who in 1878 shot and wounded Oen. Trepoff, Prefect of St Petersblirg. So strong was tb.e eurrent of liberal 'thought at that time among all see- • thou; of society` that Vera Zasuliteh. i Wail acquitted by a jury. Within the ; next two years there 'Were attempts, ! Successful and unsuccessful; on the • liv'es of high offitials in the capital , and in the pm:Winces. NO less than , .three attempts were made on the life i of Alexander IIbefore the success- • Intl amp in March., 1881, under the / leadership of Sophia, Perovsky. She I was the daughter of a former Gov- t, ernor-General of St. 'Petersburg, but, ; in accordance 'with the common prao- ; tiee of theetinie, had devoted herself I in the social • welfare through the ; humdrum profession of schdoleteache ; nng before she graduated into terror- / ism. She was the first woman re- 1 volutionist to iindergo the death pen- 1 silty. Associated with her was ; Jessie Hellman, a young womam of 1, , Jewish parentage, whose b.ouse woe headquarters for the plotters against , the life of the Czar. Condemned to • , death, she was reprieved because she was about to become a mother, and , died in the prison hospital soon after 1 the birth of her child, i. I Death in prison or exile at an ! ea,rly age has been the fate of a long , Succession of women nghters from i Sophia Rerovelty to the victime of the : revolution of ten years ago. Only to , Ifew has it been glean to live to see the victory of the cause for which they offered life and freedom so cheerfully. Among these is Vera Figner, who was condemned to death in 1884, had her sentence coral:ant- ed to life imprisonment, and epent twenty years in the ' Schlusselburg , bastille. She was released after the 'revolutionary outbreak in in0-5 and noW lives, broken in health, outside '. *of Ruses,. Most fortunate of all has .been "Babuslika" Breshkovsky, in witim long years of imprisonment, of exile, and defeated hopes, have not *battered that indomitable, buoyant •niPirit which her American -friends know so well, "Passionate and pre- lPhetle Breshkaia," eo Stepalait recornenended should not be higher 1 eaBs her in ids emoirs of the Rus - than C per cent: Although the re- shin revolution • written thirty-nve l port inakes certaiu recommendations years ago. In that time there has tile bill to carry these recommenda- / beeu no change in the spirit of Rus- sian. women. . Young girls went into erations are- eirriet, on exte the commission flints toot "the pre- sent system of mining taxation in Ontario is just and equitable and in the public interest, and is the best- systeni for this Province. Any ques- tion of change is rather one of rate. than. of principle," Th.e tax in On- tario is based upon the net profits of the mine, and this the Commission tionz 1:10 effect at tne time of writ- ing has not been tntroduced to the Howie. It , understood, however, that the Government mil probably accept the recommend- ations of the Commission which, as ..las be:en pointel out, approves of the memo teens of taxation on net pro - lits, • te Meeks that the rate should me_ and on a progressive scale, Ute ...tie a tax increasing as the pro- -its gr. -0 'If the recommendations of Si,e • ,CJifliS1OU are entirely adopoid ny tee Government it will meet). Lhat Oetario will secure a, rev- unuz from this source on the basis of last operations of about $2,- ee0,000. -This is what was anticipated by he leeti sterwhen the Commission wai apeolnea.ct, but rather that deal •v.i.'i tee geettlen in a piecemeal tire6 hes been taken to con - heir ihe cineetion -*nom every angle ene reach a decision that will be per- m.. t a -ad satisfying. ' Tim rtport is a lengthf document of cr.ae five hundred pages with at ape m Mat. It is perhaps the most. . x u -She study of the Wake]. indent - my Mat has yet been made, and will v ; an important contribution to the rierature on the subject,. As- a 'result of the enterprise of Mr. Fer- gueori two refining plants in Ontario have already been assured, one by the International Nickel Company at Pot Colborne, 'another by the British America Nickel Com.pariy at Sudbury. To facilitate theoperation of these plants an extensive development of electrical energy will be required, and as a result of having these in- duetries in our midst, apart from patriotic advantages, important in- dustries of a minor character will spring up from time to time requir- ing a large investment of capital and the employment el many hun- dred e• of hands. The public is not interested. in the technical aspect of the report, but it is only fair to the Commission to say that they have -brought to the dis- charge of their duties a devotion. to the general welfare of the Province thatis as worthy in its achievenient as the importance of the whole sub- ject warranted. RUSSIAN WOMEN WILL GET VOTE. • Tql-E first °Melee act or tne Minister of Justice in the Provisional Government at Petrograd was an order for the recall from Siberia of the aged Catharine Breshkovsky, the "Little Grandraother of the Revolution." in that act the culmination of a people's war for freedom during half a cen- tury found lb appropriate symbol. To how many of those who have read that the Constituent Assembly, which will'iay the foundations of demo- cratic government in Russia, is to be chosen by universal suffrage, has it occurred that by universal suffrage the men now in charge at Petrograd really mean universal? The women of Russia are to ha- e their share in. the upbuilding and operation of Slav democracy. Every liberal mind in Ruesia takes that as a matter of course. It is not a question of sen- tiMent or abstract jUstice. It is the recognition of an accomplishedfact. In RD tither country has the comrade - &4p of men and women taken such Arm root. _partly the reason lies in the national temperament.' More di- rectly, it arises irom the history of the nation's efforts for freedom. I It 44 bean se from the beginning. Whetethe revolutionary movement Wass aa- yet a missionary movement in Um period immediately following t*Poe• Old emancipation of the serfs in 184 1,,,Womeo. and men alike "Went Get from :the universities, the tech:Waal and peotcssional schools, and from ctbildre Att. -ORA the sailors' resorts at Cronsta,dt in 19'06 when it was a question of win- ning over the garrison of that greet nivel port to the revolution. Some- where in a Russian prison up tilt the events of a fortnight .ago there was still living Marie Spiridonovis who in 1906 assassinated . the Lieutenant - Governor of the province of Tam- bov.People will recall the horror with Which the outside world read of the indescribable inigulties to Which this girl was subjected before sentence wastpanted on her. axfe Spiridonova's address to her *dies is a commonplace in the re - and of Russia's revolutionary Wa- tery, commonplace and typical, that la, for Russia. Elsewhere we are act eastoneed to read of men uttering their faith and justification in *the faee of death. It- is a document which illuminates the history of fifty years: "Gentlemen Judges: Look around you! Where do you see the bright faces of the happy and cottented? There are no such faces. Evemithose who seem now to have the upper hand are afflicted by grief; they know their hour of triumph is short. "I am about to be sent from this life. You may kill me—you may kill me over and. over again as you have already done. You may subject me to the most terrible penalties, but you can adds nothing to what I have already endured. I do not fear death. You may now hill my body, but you 'cannot destroy' my belief that the time of the people's happi- ness and freedom is surely coming, a time when the life of the people will express itself tn forms in which truth and justice Will be realized, when the ideas of brotherhood and. freedom will be not mere empty sounds, but part of our every -day,' real life. If this is truth, it is 110 grief to lay down one's life. "I ,have Ladies, Try This. Two ladies we the other side of the border were holding a stairhead con- fab one morning on the troubles of life, and husbands in particelar. "I dilate wonder at some puir wives having to help themselves out of tne'r husbands' trouser-pockits," re ea:lied the one. "I raima say I like them under- weem myself," rehimnded the 3C.,? metro.... "I Pet turn ma nt.en beetiches doonside Op and help -,- f* off .carpet!' -Tit -'Bits, the- Pera The Three Women Tell How They Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of Surgical Operations. Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they should be the last resort for women who suffer with Mx peculiar to their sex.. Many letters 011 file in the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn? Mass., prove that a great number of women after They have been recommended to submit to an operation have been 'made well by Lydia E. ?inkhorn's Vegetable Compound. Here are three such letters. All sick women should read them. Mazinette„ Wis.—“ I -went to the doctor and he told me I must have an operation fey a female troub1e and I hated to have it done as I had been only a short time. I would have tenible anti my hands and. feet were oold all the_ I took Lydia E. Pinkham'S Vegetable Coss. pound and. was cured,and I feel better in ever! 'Jay. I five you permission to publish my name became am so thankful that I feel vrell again.* --Mrs. FRED BEHNKE, Marinette, Wis., Detroiti_ifiej3.--" When I first took Lydia IL Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound I was so run down Ivith female troubles that I could not do anything, and. our doctor said. I would have to undergo an operation. I could hardly -walk without help so when I read about the .Vegetable Compottnil and what it had done for others I thought I would try it. I got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkhaufs Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia E. PinkhamIs Sanative Wa$h and. used them according to nirectioDs. They helped me and today Tam able to do all my work and Ism well.* —Mrs. Taos. Dix xisn, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich. Bellevue, Pa.—" I suffered. more than tongue can tell with terrible bearing down pains and inflammation. I tried several doctors and they all told me the same story, that I never could get well without an operation and. I just dreadecl the thought of that. I also tied a good. many other medicines that were recommended tall* and none of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lydia E. Pink. ham's Verzetable Compound a trial. The first bottle helped, I kept iaking i 4.44 nova don't know what it is to be sick any more adTi am *knit up in weight. I am 20 years old and weigh 1.4 pounds. It -will be 1,10 greatest pleasure to me if I can have the %vv. tunity to recommend it to any other suffering woman."—Miss Jamie FRomomen„.1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa. ci If -you would like special advice write to Lydia E. Plnkham Med. Co. (confideutial),Lynno Mass. Your letter will be opened., read and answered by a woman an held in strost ennaildencee Try to Sae These. Here are a, few well-known tongue twistems. Can you say them quickly and clearly? , Long ego it -used to be the fasbion in the country senools to give these as part of the schoo: course. Begin with "What eort of a noiee annoys an oyster.? s A noisy noim annoys an oyster." Try "Four mut in fur coats eima far from Ferfar to emet their foe - tunes. For men in. fur coma int.'.ij. walked well and got forwerd amae- ingly. 4" 'But why eie Ave -1-ripq furs fi sand the 1 r. ' • have let our feua iirs in Menem, then we shrend Mire got fer 1i -74 -- warder on the roan to ior if only, instead of feur furs, we tad brought our liddiet we mignet have made our four tunen ht -re zin41 now!'" • And- what about -When the fo- ran far from the fowl run, the fame er ran.farther to get on the fr :nee of the fowl and the. rametne failee ran farther still, . • " "Don't run so feet. faitt-r, ehouted the farmer, 'or yi fr en the fowl and that- will fnake run farther and get ferther limn the fowl run.'" Say this: "If the :on eime beer, sunrise to take e rive out of in fa- ther, it can be said truthfully the rising sun will shine neon Me eon setting out to do v -hat aroee n the son's mind befere the me t'030." And this is a familiar env: "Peter Piperpicked a peck of pickled p• p- pers. If Peter Piper peeled a n of pickled peppers, how Marly Oda(' i peppers di a Peter Pipr pirlt?" Turn About. He was about to propoire, but be- fore doing eo he 'wished to make sure ahe was a eompetent girl. So he asked her: "Can you wash dishes?" "Yes," she said .et etly. "Can you wipe theth?" Be didn't propose, SENSITIVE THROATS need careful treatment from within more than they need bundling wraps durmg clan seasons. 1The pure cod liver eil in helping thousandsto strengthen the tender linings of their throe* while at the sam. e time it aids the lungs and improves the quality of the blood, Throat Specialists enclotts SCOITS EMULSION— ry Tt Scott& Bowne. Toronto, Ont. Treat Maniacs . ilrnter. The modern phys : •., Is soothing! lunatics with nothii:g irer» er if'se than water, aecord:n' n article! by John E. Lind, M.D., •*.n. !he March] Popular Science Mom 'the are three ways of giv:i; weeer, treatment—by • the p- ley the "Scotelt douche" and . contin- uous bath. All tees -• are Meeting with tiotehie - He Las "So you wen; i.11V ; Pate in a profit-sharie • < "How did you 11.,o::n. "I discovered teal the scheme was e de axing." and th -