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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1918-02-07, Page 3p. EVA HAS t PAINFUL ECZEM id up tee swami patent should then be AGtSIT WANTED 4 • infection trete spreading to any eetuul Ulan% co. m ee u. n p A one. ' lee roa tber plan • The head heel Pull++ tired into a pail contained a, 3 ter cent. • so talon oe tormiain to chalet* t trem PleMograahs to their friends awl adhering spores. Title WM prevent the other rat* toefe0Iteatetteguifurizt.. Plealt tem:died efMr 'OP re. demised iculage. Itched and Burned Wanted to Boratotis M Time* Soa,rcoiy Any Steep., 4.1aealiee a wee fifteen yeersi ecze0 flea came 1,4 a rash, Arst on my mad, thee on my ears, and afterwards on my body, It was very peinful and was itching and burning s9 warned: to • scratch all the WO, scarcely had any Veep. o "A.fter Wed tear eakcs boxes o :Uncut I was coariSoop and six nettled." (Signed) Mre, Carlton, Country Steep Creek, Sash., Feb. 6, '17. Clear the pores of impurities by daily Use of Cuticura Soap and eteasional, 'Plebes of Cuticura Oirerneat, For Free Sample Each by Mail ad- dress posecard; "Cutieura, Dept. A, Boston, IL el. A." Sold everywhere. 1141.101.1..0./411111111111101•111001•011•101.201•011141,11. e PROTECTION OF FRUITS TREES FROM MICB. • (Bxperkriental reams Note). The annual loss of fruit trees in Cane ada from malice is very great. Some years they are much more destructive than in others, 'while in a certain year they nay be very destructive in one part of Oanada itnee do little or no dame age In another. The, scarcity of abura .nen en pieete )a.ve. been vole OSBORNE d.( rtili.". paper ttag burn it, conteets twievit tt the* menneee small plot may be kept Quite free from digestee and will rzautbront','71.1V/ok‘IfertTeld"Aadt some I:0700 mxtaboo awe.y trout *nee ordin. arY Deere or pea plat. NOTES, old cucumber and vebbege, seed g ve bet- than the fee -called common scrub that fresh tieed still can be Seen on. many of the farma throughout the country. . The true utility fovvi is One of merit, made by proper breeding along producing lines, and backed up by performance above that of the general run ot pure- bred poultry. Those who really have utility fleolte are skillful breeders, whose charges tor hatching eggs, chicks or stock are well. Worth the price, But every poultry keeper is not a utility breeder. egteatelve trucit grower ears that An experlenced fruit grower earl it is r results almost Impoasible to grow firet-olase peaches evitneut thinning, and .ealltellY difficult to get gortal plums. In buying et, farm horse welch litii gait J. feat -Walking, steady -going horse le wOrtli much more than a eiow-nroving aninue. Prefit COMA* from malting Pork from young oteek. In, a horse it poor Appetite generally suggeste some 'weakness. Hogs are the only domestic animals raised, for food alone. Time, labor and investment should be* eonsittered when reeleteang prefite. ' Those rarmers who produce their own suppliera of flour and meal, summer and Winter vegetables, fruit and meats, end grow their own istock and dairy feeds, ere the °nee who least feel and stress of high prices. They are fallowing a safe and sane system of farming. The younger the animal' the greater ins increase In proportion, to food con- sumed. aystern Is necessary in all things, and in nothing more than in butter melting. PHONOGRAPH 004 Me, Toronto, Ont. 1 there 10 l(St to this question. It 10 not always the qaauti,ey at put* the breeding towle knit oe eareilaillistan as fier as fertile eggs is coacerued, but the klud. of focus that hislie been be- fore them. Under -feeding will not produce eggs, or keep the hens in good eoadition, but strong fertility can be gained by the proper mixture of feeds, both in the mesh and grains. Just pure-bred poultry dem not Mean fowl% for in manY canes the pure-bred fowls of one color, named atter different breed; may net be any better Producers in the egg line dance of feed, the number ref mice wbieh are in the, vicinity when -winter sots in, and the character cif the winter. all have an influence on the amount of Injury which is dorte. were the orchard is in sod or were there is rub- bish about in :which mien can harbor, the Watley to trees, If unprotected, is liable to be much greater than Where the ore chard has been under clean oultivatiou or even where a cover crop is sown the preview summer. It frequently happens that,. -orchards which have escaped much injury from mice for several ream .frometne time of planting, 'sat •be badly injured, if not Teets TROUBLE ROOTED IN THE ruined, Just when the first crop is ex- pected', T -hare is nothing more dle- BLOOD AND CAN ONLY BE CURED couraging to a farmer or fruit grower than to have an orchard destroeed In BY ENRICHIN.G THE BLOOD. this way after he has cared for it for nuniber of years, and there must be Some diseases give immunity from. inany instances in Canada where earm- another attack but rheumatism POULTRY MITES. Lice by day and mites by night furnish the unhappy conditione of Poultry kept under insanitary sur. roundings, Treatments for lice are not effective for mites because the tetter work only at night, making rattle on the fewle from their hiding places crevices of the roosts and cracks of the building. To destroy mites and keep the flock free of their depredations insecticide sprays and a sanitary buildings are necessary. In "Mites and Lice on Poultry," Farmers' Bulletin 801, F. C. Bishop and H. P. Wood, of the Bureau of EntomolOgY, 'United States Departnient of Agricul- ture, tell how a complete renovation can be done. The presence of mites is indicated ......r,11....410^4.. * by small black and white specks on Nature Teaches Inventors. the roosts -the excrement of. these Corn, wheat, oats, bran, olineeel, "We get our hints from nature," the insects. The first step is to get rid of Itteddralinogas ti of onlueelatt 117.91 constituted Inventor said. "Take, for instance, the Lire rhidingoots IIplacesould re trt :dO3osusiboolad. per hen per year. °Hen.: fed only corn and meat scrap laid 123 eggs per hen. 137 eggs hellow pillar, which is stronger than .1. all unnecessary boards and boxes re- The cost of feed per dozen eggs was the solid one. The wheat straw 'ahoy"- t Moved. In heavily infested houses the nearly 4 per cent. greeter in the case ed us the superior strength of the hole mites are to be found in all parts of of the hens fed -the variety ration. low pillar. Solid, the wheat straw • the building, including the root. Where they are less numerous the lte • .* would be able to support ' its head e %es •Reennaaa • Peecreenn letealNix• ger PNINTICO ON yew SIIIEWlintALIGISTESI Hens fed On corn and meat scrap for 1,047 days at the Ohio Experimept Station laid an average of 351 eggs a bee. Those fed a ration of corn, wheat, oats, bran and meat scrap pro- duced 870 eggs. The feed cost per dozen eggs was 16 per cent. higher for the lot getting the variety of feeds than for the corn andmoatscrap lot. festations usually are confined to the True Modern Courtesy. of grain. Where aid man get his idea roosts and nests and the walls mme- for carriage springs? From the hoofs diately adjacent. For small coops a of the horse, which, like the springs derived, from them, are mede from hand atomizer will suffice for apply. parallel plates. Scissors we get from Mg insecticides as sprays, but for the jaws of the tortoise, which are na- larger houses a bucket pump, knap- tural scissors; chisels from the squir- 1 sack sprayer or barrel pump is desir- rel, who carries them in.,his mouth; able. A rather course spray should be adzes from the hipeopotamus, whose applied front all angles and thoroughly ivories are aazes of the best design; , driven. into the cracks. The floor also the plane from the bee's jaws; the should be treated, as many mites fall triphammer from the woodpecker." to the floor when the roosts are being •••••*++ removed. Of tne several materials that have proved effective, one of the secant/d,. wood preservers consisting of certain coal tar products, known as anthra- cene oll.with zinc chlorid added, has given particularly good results. Its repelling power lasts for months. The wet is about $1. a gallon, but twice the quantity may be obtained by reducing with equal parts of kerosene. Crude petroleum is almost as effec- tive, retains its killing power for sev- eral weeks and in. most localities is very cheap. It will spray better if thinned with one part of kerosene to tour parts of crude oil. Both of these materials often con- tain foreign particles which should be strained out before spraying is begun. It has been found that one thorough application of either of these materials will completely eradicate the mites from an infected chickeo house, but ordinarily it is advisable to make a second application a month after the first, and in some cases a third treat- ment is required. These subsequent applications may be made with a brush, using the materials pure and covering only the roosts, their sup- ports, the walls adjoining and the nests if they are infested. This method of application is effective for the first treatment also if the houses are not heavily infested. Poultry should be kept out of the treated buildings until the material is well dried into the wood. Used as a dip, crude petroleum will also destroy the small mite which causes scale leg. In dipping for this mite the solution should not be allowed to reach the flesh above the infestation or to get on the feathers. CULLING- OUT THE SIACICERS • PAID. Culling the flock to eliminate the nonalaying hens it: one method of in- creasing' profits in the poultry busi- ness. Conclusive proof of this is apparent in reports of two denacnstrae dons conducted by members of the poultry department of the Connecticut Agricultural College. One of these de• monstratious was held at the home of Frank D. Edmunds, at North Wind- ham, July 12. The *Week before the demonstration the flock of 322 hens laid 59$ eggs, or an average of 26.3 per cent. A total of 124 birds were culled from the flock, leaving 198 hens. These hens laid dnring the following week 659 eggs, or an average of 40,3 per Cent, , Another demonstration was put on by the poultry department at the farm of Mrs. F. Huntington Clark at Box - bury, July 10. Previous to the demon - Stratton this flock of 980 hens laid 2,406 eggs, or an average of 35 per cent. The fleck was culled to 671 birds, 303 being removed. These 011 hens laid 2,750 eggs the week follow- ing the demonstration, an average of 41 per cent. The 303 culls Vete held at the farm fer thirty-six hours atter being separated and during that time they laid only 10 eggs. What has bon done with theee flocks • Can. be duplicated practically everywhere, RHEUMATISM A MYSTERY do not re. w rks just the other way. Every at - era after a loss at this kind, 0 plant. . Although it is not every year that mice are troublesome, trees should le protected from them every year until about six Melees nt diameter and even a tree of this size will sometimes be part- ly girdled. If this pretection la neglected for one year, 'that may be the year when mice are very e.bundant l uch The mce usually tack of rheumatism invites another, worse than that, it reduces the body's power so that each • attack is worse than the one before. If. any disease needs curing early it is rheumatism but there. is seemly any disease that pb.ystcians find more ---- injurydifficult to treat successfully. When are looking for, or feeding on, seeds close to the ground under the snow and a medicine does cure rheumatism when they come to a tree they are likely therefore it is worthy of special notice. to begin to •gne.w the bark. if it is un - Medical authorities agree that the protected, and before theY haYe tin- ished the tree may be cornirtely girdled blood becomes thin with alarming ra- ter most of the stunmer following. therefore a reasonable way of prevent- its trees from mice is to wrap or- , it works out in fact is shown by the of the trees. The paper is cut treatment of rheumatism ,acute, mus - breadth of the roll of paper, the width culler and articular, with that great into stripe eveicie are the length of the of the strips depending on the size ot blood tonic, Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills. tree and time in ttvo places with twine. is 8, fact beyond dispute. That rheu- tee to a height of 'twelve to e Moen Inches pidity as rheumatism develops. Main - above the ground, which usually. causes tattling the quality of the blood is its death, .although it may remain alive ing and combatting rheumatism. That The cheapest and' surest method of pro- dinr white building paper around the beneficial effects which follow the the tree. he strips should be just wide 1 That thousands of people who Tee have taken Dr. Williams' Pinie Pills enough to lap over, as one thiceness paper is wrapped tightly around the ifor their rheumatism have been cured of paper is all that is necessary. A little earth I. hoed up base after the epaper is tied, t'o cover any opening through which the mica might reach the' trunk. Several thou- sand young treeseare wrapped each year at the Feeperletteatal Farm in this way end there have been praotioally no cases where the' mice have *gnawed through the pa,per to gee:at the tree. Tar pa- per is also effectual but trees have been injured by using it and it is well to avoid this .as banding' paper will do as well. A small .mound • of earth from eight to ten inches in height about the base of the tree will often 'prevent mice front injuries the trees and oven snow tramped about the tree has proved quite effective but one .cannot always depend upon it. Fine Naive -gosh 4 wraimed around the tree dl gapped so that lb will expand with the growth of the trees. while more•expensive firet, is . very durable and will protect the trees well. leace may he poisoned 'by making a mixture of one part by weight of arsenic with three parts of „corn -meal -an:I-pate ting it In runways made by nailing two pieces of board each five rea, six feet In length and six inches wide .eo make an inverted trough, andeptittrng about at tablespoonful of the' poTsell ape a.ehingle near the middle of • the runs,renewing the poison from time te'lleile. 'Poison- ing wouldt however, beftfound a rather tedious methed large. orchard. • DISEASES OF BEANS I./IND-PEAS. • (Eicp€rimental Farms. Note). Long the diseases of Atte garden bean and pea, anthracnose or pod spot is the Most deatmletIve. The disease disfiguies the pods by dark bream spots, . but also occurs- on the leaves and. stems of these plants, where however, the symptbrns of disease are less conspicuous. The disease is calmed by the Magee Dellatotrichum In the bean and bY soochyta tied Septeria in the pea. once the disease becomes noticed in the crop, there is no practical method' fat preventing Its spread. These anthracnose diseases are eon- veyeld to a crop by' the Ivo of infected seed. Infectea beanand ejea seeds are found among practically toe seed met - Atlanta' stock. On the seeds,the disease xnerilfeste itself by more orless prom- inent, brownish diecolorations, very noticiable qn the whitaseedmi varieties. When very prominent the affected beeds may easily lee separated, from sound ones by hand pieking; this will reduce the disease to Oortie extent, hut ' not control it completely, Since it is very dif- $cUlt to detect those infected eareis which shim very lit,tle discolorathte and some seeds which are sufficiently infected to propagate the disease, l atway* find their eeri-wil e' into the soil. It Is but to grcrt; one's own' aged isuPPly. When the crap is entirely free fretn the disease it.is an ettey inatter to esthete dirges* Src seed; but when the disettee is present, care must bd. -taken tidt etrieet few- sed only molt pool ag are perfectiti sotiod. Those pods should he picked oft I and stored In cote. On (flour) begs melee/rem any infect-- 'ed Material. The IVO' se, notwithstand- itue Prole put It. Is, therefore, necessary to 'watch the -even Sign tite. day the first etledllags anneal" weevil Urc`qack ellseased plante generally..'seiow Mee leaven either brownislpett•eaketl.".(ati.oP Vetly distinct pale yellow toter? °Whiff" Alta • Wier is ''-tVe ettSe; disettac -‚he ., welly in present on .the etenretioavego. leeese eign, are neared prompt tictien is necemmary. Eatth dateasea or ildiclekly- ,fta$ plants Should be pulletrAtektrat WI all, and' he depotited a paper -bag', Si et throlni.sin the ground amongdtad 6, • I matism does not return as long as the blood is kept ,rich and red is equally true. If therefore, you are suffering front rheumatism in any form you should lose no time in giving Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills a fair trial. .alr. A. E. Hinton, Western avenue, Toronto. says: "Up to about a year ago, rtlY wife had suffered for nearly three years from rheumatism, from which she suffered greatly. She had been under the care of several doctors, be- sides spending dollars on advertised cures loot did not get ny relief. One day, talking to a fellow clerk she said her sister had been cured of this trouble by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Alemegh not feeling very hopeful- I took two boxes home that evening and urged My .wife to try them. By the time they were used they had done her so much good -that she required no pressing to -continue the , treatment, and after -taking six or seven boxes she was completely cured. As I have said this was about a 'year ago, and she had had no return of the trouble Since.' •. I feel very grateful for the immeese good Dr. Williams' ,Pink Pills have done my wife, and hope other eiufferers will benefit by her experience." pills through You can get these any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a, box or six boxes for $2.50 front The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Should a lady get up an give a gentleman a seat in the car? That, doubtless, depends somewhat upon the gentleman. If he is young and banal - some or quite old and feeble, yes, If, he is able to stand up fairly well, then ladies should be governed in such cases by their individual judgments. There are undoubtedly some men. who do not expect to have women give up their seats. There are other men who, when given a seat, do not as much as say "Thank you." All thisedlowever, being frankly admitted, it still re- mains true that every real lady will offer her seat to a gentleman if he looks deserving. It helps her as much as it does him. It is true modern courtesY.-Life. et de 5$4 Square miles, an eXteut equal that cumBED STAIRS gives them so, area of holdiags of Ile of Alsace-Lorraine and SeXteriy to- gather. The aim of the Metropolitan and Haniteetic eelonizatma companies at home has been to deflect the cur- rent of Gordian emigration trona the United States to Brezil and to have German allegianee, the liraellieu colenists retain "The sucoeele Of the plan la attest- ; their ed by Konigeburg who, in his work on Rio Grande do Sul, Ws: vel*Ttlelli "it° state. C)f German, (materiels very little has been lost; also, the German dia- lect, with its native idiom, is handed down trom generation to generation. Portuguese is little spoken, and even then the Germans use le with great difficulty.' The school teachers. of the colonies are German e•astors. "Through their possession of land the Germans in Brazil control one- half of the world's supply of coffee, and the Germanization of the people is further carried out through the com- pulsion hail upon the army of ern- Piereee and servants to learn the Ger- man language rather than to oblige the alien to gain the native tongue, "'The ieeals and ties of the imeen grants,' says Frederic Wall= Wile in the Eclectic Magazine, 'are eliseto daily and ineradicably German.' it is Wile also who declares that 'the Ger- nianiea.tiou of Brazil le no twentieth century project. Ist has been in pro- ieet, It has been in progress for more than seventy years, although aggress. colonies have bitilt a state e. of war work and will be so more and more. I cannot conceive that this great nation, having put it e hand to the plow, will turn back before universal peace is attained, but I believe that only a few among you know the mag- nitude of that which lies before You. The longer you carry on the war, the more your normal life will be dis- turbed, and even after the war we must be prepared to see all the present belligerents busied, for many years to come, in repairing what has been laid waste. But humanadevelopment cannot be thus suddenly stopped late a clock without incalculable damage, and, therefore, clvilization itself de- mands that some should remain out- side the conflict that is now drawing almost the whole world into its vor- tex. The fact that we Scandinavian na- tions are small doeS not prevent us trom retailing this mission. lung - land was not much larger than Nor- way to -day, certainly not larger than Sweden, when she produced Shake- speare, and the world owes a debt of gratitude to Holland, the Creek cities, and the Italian republics, Indeed, small states have, in some respects, an advantage over the larger, Their culture is more homogeneous.-Pridt- jot Neilsen, in American Scandinavian ttevieiv. Are Very Popular in Prince Edward Island TO 111111. 0...••••••••••••• He stood alone. • The cold, damp- drizzle of a wintry day Sr era all about hint. , Yet I saw him smile, And saw him stay there, Close beside the window full .• Inas toys. And other children came. and And leek.ed With eager eyes. aelagieeyewere milled' by hurrying' hands 't•Cway, .Eaeh 'bolting In his heart on Christmas That , guns or drunt 'would be upon his . tree. Still 'the beer,- gazed on: And then there cants to me A longing to perhaps fin up thee little heart With joy, Because you see, I too, had been a boy, Hato at4oir-oot in dusk, cold and • alone, Lodging with aching heart for love and Ircirtfa. • - So. thinking. thus, I gently tipoke to Wei, "Neee teem,: T.said. • , Ile leelcen up With .- Arl eager, hainey Smile that made his .facee Much phtehed and drawn with cola, „, A welcome place for tired eyes to dwells And then as If for love of me ho said: "Here Mister, melee in so you kin see." I aid, while •he ,teeplanted 'With winsome boyish art en‘lieetbmeght Which lay the nearest to hie •-•itealt, . ',These' other kids, they all must go of Christ - stood MR. M. ARSENEAULT TELLS JUST WHAT DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS DID FOR HIM. They Gave Him Quick Relief From Headache and Backache -He Re- commends Them to All -Sufferers. Cape Egmont, P. E. I., Jan. 28.- (Speciale-Dodd's Kidney Pills have numerous friends in. this tight little island, and among the most enthus- iastic of them is Mr. Mathurin Arse- nea.ult, of tble place. "I recommend Dodd's Kidney Pills to all who stiffer," Mr. Arsetteault says. "I had been troubled with head- ache and backache about two years till I read in. Dodd's Almanac how many sufferers had benefited by using Dodd's Hidaey Pills. "I decided to send for two boxes: Before I had finished taking them I was feeling as well as ever. "It gives me great pleasure to say a few words for Dodd's Kidney Pills." All over the island you find people who tell of benefits received- from Dodd's Kidney Pills. They are recog- nized as the standard remedy for kid- ney ills. Acting directly on the kid- neys, they refresh and in.vigorate those organs. The result is that they -do their full work of straining all the im- purities, all the seeds of disease, out of the blood. That is why Dodd's Kidney Pills are recognized as atonic. _ • ON HER HAWS Too Pito Walk Upright Operation Advised. &Area by Lydia E. Pinkbans's Vegetable Compound, IF VI E QtelJleal ,Expositeri A goo' wey Pave olectriA listable at this ante et the you' would he male Ole ate get up tittle Reedier. PERHAPea gee Thomas ecturna4 eeermen's eentemplated ofeeneive ree the Weetern trout la said to have been ?Agate:Ito. Perimpe dierve decided to This woman now raises chickens and love the orown orinee his baton with. does manual labor. geed her story: text wasting many teen. Richmond, Ind.---"leor two years I Was so sick and Weak With troubles NOT UP TO EXPECTATION'S, from rny age that (Torenito stare when going U p The "new end layous wee" tet which staire I. had to go the tleeueeee engaged lit the r 104 Is proving to be any. very slowly with tnreee the aoed avert. and the aura my bands on the „lame they exoected it would go at that steps, thensit down :nee. at the top to rest. t The doctor said Ito thought I should I have an operation, and my friende thoughtIwould not I live to move into I OnrneWh01180. My I daughter asked me l to try Lydia E. rnItharn's Vegetable Compound as she had taken it with good results, I did so, my weakness dis- appeared, I gained in strength,. moved Into our new home, did all kiede of garden work, aboveled dirt, did bend - Went prosecuted only -during the nast ing and cement work, and mind bun - decade (writing ia 1906) coincident dreds of chickens and ducks, I can. with the rise of the expansion moire not say enough in praise of laelia E. meat known s pan-Germanlem." Pinkhum's Vegetable Compound and if these faets are useful you may pain YOUR MENTAL IVIACHINE. wornen.''-tiee. tat 0, .10eNeTON,RoeU Le lish, them for the benefit of other D. Box 190, Riehmond, lad. Shut Off Its Power at Night After ^ from Epicurus (342-271 U. C.), who a Day's Hard Work. was a philosopher of Attic descent, "earden" Athene rivaled in It is a great thing to learn -to shut 11:011-p°uTarzty the "porch" and . the "ace.- off the mental steam when you demy." work. What would you think of a fac- tory manager who would leave ,all of his power turned on after the opera- ' tors had left the factory, the delicate machinery running everywhere, pounding itself to pieces, grinding o ut its delicate bearings without produc- number of them hat -O on. lug anything? I doors are mysteriously closed and they alauy of us do not turn off our men-• : are prisoners tal power lifter we are through pro - The Southern Pacific Railroad lute several "tramp traps" in the shape of freight cars which are left in couill- tiou to invite the tramps, and after it ' 11 creating for the day. W0 1 Queen Victoria died January 2, 1901. bed -with us, think, plan, worry and A front bicycle wheel,, equipped tiucing or eetee-e-e4-4-e-e-e-peee-44-404-4-404-0÷4÷" carry our business home, take it to 1 / waste precious energy in all sorts of a suitebie Dandle and a cyelemeter, is ways, in superfluous thinking, fool- now employed in a number of Pa tional e • b. g an that produces nothing, forests of the west in measuring trails. Germans raztl UNFORTUNATELY. Courier -Journal) '"riale Is am 41p." "Yee; noboely trYing to conserve AN AMENDED VERSVON. (Life) levee -n-1 feel hue fifty cents. Poet,. -Toil mean like thirty cents. "Nu; everything has been marked np." LITY. (Bostcn Tr:mem-44 "They separated on account of ia- compatabil.ty, understand." "Yes, it:: would never get angry when WaS. -- A NEW CHEESE. aegreit Free Prass) "eae you fend,- elteese?" 'Wee, especially that 'cam-uflage" we 1, are hearing ao W0011 about la.tely." I"'Who is going to score the new. opera but grinds out the exquisite xnental - . machinery and unfits it for the next Model houses constructed of coraent, • k d (I rico husks are being erected - . THE SCORE. (Baltimore Amerioanl -ae-ge-4-4,-4-egeoe-geet-e-e-e-0-4-0-4,-+4.-44-e• ay s . "The Germanic element in Brazil is It is a great art to learn to shut off power when through our day's work, • by the Philitpine health service. These tin of the U. S. National Geographic chinery, refresh our minds and rem- outlast the unsanitary nipa houses houses can be built for $250 and will low in general use. nunaerous awl energetic," says a bulth- so that we can oil our mental ma - society. "They number at least, a Perate ourselves, so that we can. go- to the next day's, work completely rein- 1 .....-....-...0--. (million souls, and they are practicelly vigoratecl. limited in residence to the foar south- Many men seem to think that they states -Rio Grande do tarina, Paraaa and Sao Paulo- -where when not at work, but thea really ac - they have thrust their national roots complish less than nothing because "Do )la.in girls or pretty gine do be. - e AVM 'Ratite Waster, / kilt stay and stay, For mother's up In Heaven and, yea see, Sbhteride the angels with these sights for Me. . viol he mailed egair, and then was ;eirellaaireia Verisbed mid the hurrying busy -mead. t started after, and again I aeented to gone, Pee 'Mkt eager, halve face snide tip at me, And, somehow, I sew life aa it Metall be. Ale little ragged boy! Weerteer eoit go, •In this vett dream of ours, Smite out and thus within that heart of Be sone artd true, May only mother's angels dare for yen. -Margaret Yereles Bryan at the Cott* adlau Magazine or January. . yours, The Cause.ol ti) "earl Trouble' raelly dikeetion causes the gentoretiott of rersseen the. *Whittle whkit inliate and prose down on tile heert wed interfere -with its reveler POC*U4 (genus* and paira Itieto SO drape of Whet Seigere nurellne Spate after mettle gni digestion right,which allows the bettrtfo best fall sad vitoist. • .....•••••• A BLACK ARMY, you arc fer",11`7t be the critars." PEARLS. (Louisville Courier -Senegal) I it "What're that yeti are reading seientifec article, It rears that eysters secrete pearls," "‘derrii Where do they scorete thorn?" "tinder the bed of the ocean. I sup - VERY QUEER. (Baltimore American) "There is a famine just now in stem- ographers." "Queer, end a .niethora of dictators." COSTLY. (Dallas News) He (proposing la a taxi)---SaY Yes, dar- ling. She-Cive me time to tb.irdt. Ile -Yes, but good heavens, not in tore. EXPLAINED. '(llirnairigharo Age -Herald) "'Your office girl takes -two hours for hunch rtud you take only a) minutes." "Why. la that?" . "I guess it's because I can get along without a. rarevie for dessert." ernmost of the Brazilian maritime are accomplishing something if they theirminds on business even German A.m_____hitions in Equatorial (Hees'AtoTnOr-ansoritjP. pt) Theodore Roosevelt, writing in 1914 vigor, the focusing of the mind, which about the future os Equatorial Africa? any of their inborn che.racteristies. ergy, the power for concentration, tho Why is General Smuts anxious ter.itin., aretiin_ddr.need. The owe far into foreign soil without losing they are wasting precioug mental en - Of -Sao Paulo, says: 'In tiles province is imperative for creating purposes.- Because the war has brought the sur - I met for the first time Germans born Orison Sweet Marden. don't make so many(tume:stakes, but there arciewr. kincksa. atcut the blunders the in the country who 'could speak only * - grace can be transformed into some of I prising revelation that the African ne- InettY Geirmane the finest fighting material in the I . A CONSERVER. MISSION OF THE SMALL NEUTRALS Ips a Weal( throat world. General Snias confesees that eirst Bearder-It •tv mid be rather unfor- "German colonizatiou in Braze has li e been going on since 1825, when the s settlement of San Leopolde Rio Grande do Sul was. establisliea. Fox ten years the stream of iramiaration continued, when it was inarrupted Restore Eurnan Relations and Balance NOTES. The first halt of the chicks hatched in an incubator eoutain practically all of the best laying liens in that batch. They will grow more rapidly, lay first. and prove the best layout, and will be stronger than the others. The belt half of the hatch will be lower in vitality and will be unprofitable to keep; the broilo or frying age is the time to dieposo of these. Mark the last half of the hatch and dispose of them in time to make a profit. Over -feeding, especially to Ilene, is alnacket as bad as llilderafeeding, But „The IL S. liaise or representativeti Contains Sal immense American nag. .but the largest one in the world le Mlle pelatled ,trom time top of the poettiffied dabilat dial" ftild'ellieniC2011 reel in tli atter onivera DRS. SOPER & WtilTE 'SPECIALISTS Althrtlit Catarrh. Plerpleie Cyspepati, eellepty, Rhoometistn, Skin, KM. nap Bitiodt Wirvosand Bladder DaileS360. , or send history for fres advice. Maas* ferttleted in tablet tone, liours..10 asato I OA. ilea ate 6 leer. Sundayeeele a.m. tel eaii. COliteltatiet Vtgi ORO* SOPER & WHtE TereeteSteToteitoeCen. 144siodi Thie roper. trengthens. the Voice rican eeperiences. He realized then for the first time that it would be jussetorndw'Boardw"kiellreOl jh", I •don't know. tunate if anything happened to Hoover his eyes were opened by his East Af- Cures Bronchttts' possible to organize among the MM. hate an idea ,that oer landiader could cam blacke one of "the of the most fill his place) and give him cards and - . powertul armies the world has ever "ades' by the sairsculotte devolt in southern Brazil. This interruption lasted for • seen." Commender Wedgwood said(NEW RECORD. nine years. In 1848 the flood of set- Breathing the Healing Balsame of the same thing in Parliament. He de. (Louisville Courier-Iournel) Catarreozone You Are Cured caned that tb.o Adicaris in East Africa „well, this iiook is the record." tiers was perceptibly swollen by the families from Schleswig-Holstein and Without Using Druee. I who fought under Ger Mall leadership "How see. were affected by the revolt of the Nam breathe through the Catarrh. , aa earth was Ta" Ozone inhaler medicated air that is I were "the most formidable forces of 1."•eiti:d broke something before atm black, troope that I have ever seen." • ?•I'vt t 11' 4 4 11 the other parts of -Germany which duthies against Denmark. can equivalent for "sopoy," but has an I (The term. Asher' is t East "Her promise to come.' At the Close of Present Hostilities. By - Alit • .4.- - --7, - "No less than thirteen important full of healing, soothing balsams, Asiatic derivation.) For strength and i LEGAL LOVE -MAKING. German colonies were established in full of piney antiseptic essences that (Puck) by generous grants of land from the has a truly marvellous action on weak : brute courage. for insens:bility to pain . atWilliet glYr1.134, homethreenights a reeeire e lets an aapearance southern Brazil between 1848 and 1860, resemble the air of the pine woode and ability to endure fatigue and short Bleed -Hots. a young lawyer,' and Oes- the earliest settlers being greatly aided in the Adirondacks. This pine' Vapor , rations, for docility under orders, for perattly in leap: 11 -n0 lees than 174, acres to each inurie to the bronchittc, stops that hacking 'most unequalled. Commander Wedg- listen, and then appeals again!' fearlessness of death, some of the Brazilian government, which allotted throats. It brings strength and health I i e I bate- races Of Central Africa are an pree.de his caec,• eeceivas an adverse de - grant. Owing to apeculative abuses .., i . that a• g 'ditty black , I have been asked why the five small neutrals do not enter the war; their quota of perhaps 1,600,000 of soldiers would be enough, some pee- .. this privilege was largely reduced - but without noticeable effect upon the movement -"which was only checked by the imperial edict of 1859 forbid- ding the further migrations of Ger- mans to Brazil. Thi e edict remained In vigor until 1896, when, a.s Austin Harrison terms him in the Panaaer- manic •doctrIne, 'the great sea emperor, William II, saw early and -clearly into the future and taught his subjects to see too.' "Under this teaching the Germanic flood swept in large volume into Brazil and now has spread over a ter- ritory approximately as large as that of the American states of Florida, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, North alarolina, Virginia, West Vile ginia and Tennessee. Fully 250,000 Germans are to be found in the state of Rio Grande de Sul, where in the cities they have taken a. strong hold upon the actIvities of the country and have practically a•bsoribed eammercial and industrial enterprise. In Port Alegre, the -capital of the state, three German publications indicate and ex- peund the Germanic doctrine, "In Santa Catarina, time next state Mirth, Conditions are analogous. Ger- men customs and the German idiom prevail, and in many towns one may almost imagine himself in the father- land, The Germanic element here was strong enough so -me years ago to elect a German governor, and with the ex- ception of the officers of the federal court the office holders are almost entirely German. The anomaly of Bra- zilian governmental reports written by Germans is by no means unusual, "The German colony in this state Wee no little of its strength to the fact that hoe for some time was the residence of the Prince de Joinvine of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, who married a daughter of Dom Pedro, the first em. parer of Brazil; and the City of Join. yule, German to the marrow, is a Monument to his royal highness' et - foto to form a. nucleus for- German immigration. "The lands to which the Germans have Oleo title in eolith Breen now Pie think, to 'turn the scales in favor of the Allies. Yet the most elementary knowledge of' military tactics should convince anyone that five small scattered units do not make an army, A large, concentrated totes could erueh them one by one. How, for instance, could our men be brought into the :nude Denmark would be conquered before we could come to her assistance, and Sweden's long coastline would lie open to the attacks of the German fleet now idle in the Baltic. The setuation in Scandi- havis is so complicated that no humeri being can foretell what would happen If any one of the three countries amid be dragged into the war, but our moot likely fate would be to -bee come another Roumania. The great duty and Mission Of the small states now is to keep the peace so far as it lies with them. A time will come when they Will be required to tie again all the fine threads of intellectual and commercial latercetirse that have been broken so ruthiesely„ Even after the Franco. Prussian war in 1870, German and Freneit seholars, working iti. the sante field, eetused to t o -operate or even- to knew anything about one another's Progress, while Ilelgiatts who read Ger. Man were looked On with (Waver In in litatiee. Yet the hatreds engendered by that War were as _nothing in in- tensity sae duration cOmPated with what this War will sutely heing in its Wake.- . 4 It is the tisk of the neutrals to keep 1111brOlten the chain. tot human development. At pregeat everY avail- 1 able brain in, the belligerferit tOilfitriee la pretend into Ileeviee to illnatit Means oll delitrattien. or Inetini teitiVOld dee lartietiOn. Were here in Ili* United gate* a 'Mt szliount 0 MAO MS Me ready leetne def140(0 lake the channels irritating cough, prevents hoarseness woo( and diffieult breathing, You can't , army eould be created which would " Africa " General Smuts THE IMPORT -ANT THING. (Life.) on earth more beneficial than Catarrh_ ; told the essence of the German plan, oeeo, sir; I .can tell you it doesu t take find anything for weak-tb.roated poople through ozone.. It means heaven on earth to which is to create a "great Central mo long to get an Wee into my head." the man that has had bronchitis, . African Empire," steeteliing front the af';i0erea Irriz.r.lytiumeorte.?..,But wlat deers it do ‘t catarrh or throat irritation. You will I Ifidian Ocean to Lite South Atlantic , Their project whioh was first FOOLISH QUESTION. realize thee the first time you use • . Catarrhozone, which is a scientific disclosed in 1012 wider the direct in preparation especially designed for t. spiration of the German Government, dideogee of the nese, throat and bran. 1 is to acquire Portuguese East and WO tubes. Get the large size; ii West Africa and the Belgian Congo, lasts two months, coed) a1.00; m0(1111111 and to. link these territories with Kam. 50c; sant-tile 25c. All store - cram Iiiconjunction with a reinvigor. • size gee, . ted Turkey they hope to seize Egypt :keepers and drugeiste or the Catarre- ozone Co., Kingston, Canada. I • ‘• ,t le•ET a woman ease yoursuffetine. want s "-int% to write, and let matte you of my simple method of home treatment, 4 lead you ten days' free trial, Post. laN paid, end put you in touch with Vee women In Crinadewhe wlli tiredly tellwhat My method has done for them. if you are troubled • geese. 'with -Weak. tired Slott bladA feelings, bed' 4coP der weakness. ache, bee Ic.,tice Mconstipetion, iche,betet • ahal condition*, Int down ['Alla pain lathe side., bt,„,,,,,f,wegabrilt; ntisolacentene of' ote game nese onballie desire tti tree talleitetTorlehet Mates, driiit rings under the ayes. or a Iota of %tared 14We, Write, td s Ueda?, Addriese Mrs, M. ilegoarti, lot o Vladteri ....••••••••••• Odd and Interesting Pacts. The so-called twinkling of the stars is el:defier an effect produced in our atmosphere upon the waves of light, Dealers througuout Australia. • note an increasing' demand for women's hats aul sport coatof AIM:tier:1'1 make. Fruit and shade trees, bush fruits and roses will be benefited by receiv- ing a good spraying of Border= mix- tuie- d the Sudan, They would hold the aleez Canal, and by means of naval bases on both eties of Africa they would command the sea reutes to the East and to Atletrala.siet. And their main instrument would be hordes of black troops trailiee amid equipped in tropical Africa, all of whieh is of course contingent on the Impoesibeity of Germany winnieg the war. QUITE NECESSARY. (Baltintere American) "Are diplomatic posts strictly neces- sary'?" 'Of couese: _they're ueed for leterna- t.onal hitches." "Now, Robbie, you mustn't tell ilay Leda that you saw me kissing your sis- ter." "Um, that's what they all • Seventy-four per eent of the forest eeee, Log rites in the U. S. are of known Origin, '"' and lightning accounted for • one-se- venth of these. a clothesline an inventor has patented 1, 13u ing "liT r To increase the carrying capacity of a rod to be hung transversely from = a line and to which small articles ean = - - ..... ............- - . - The power contained in the water- = fails of Norway Ima been. estitnated = at from 6,000,000 to 10,000,000 horse es Power. Until recently the uovelop- = meat of these fails had been largele tr. brought about with the aid of foreign Fe; eapital, - _ ... — be plated in the usual way. It if little cold water Is added to waffle batter an, throughly beaten tile waffles will be 'lighter and will Omen more eitsily, •••*4•••• A clay pipe may be used as A. cruci- ble for melting small quantities of me- . tal. The 'Mem is broken off and a teltig fitted into IL • Artuntg the modern Egyptian girls generally' Imagery When. 12 or 14 vettre of age; at 18 they are regarded "un - marriageable" and "uttmanateeable." Since the European war hew one- third of the American race has bead Massacred or ;tied from Merv:ellen and oneettalf cf thoee remaining are E herainess ea dying la -exile. Met Not You'll en!oy buying in Toronto. The big --, etot es are 60 busy an F.: attractive. And the range of mo- il &Midis° is So extensive -that it is = certainly a great pleasure -buying 5. in Toronto. • And this pleasure le the greater tr. because you tan May at the most E comfortable of home -like hotels, THE WALF.ER HOUSE (The = Iletise of Plenty) where every at - • tauten is evert to ledies and child - ran travelling without escort. And your purchases may be deli". = bred there for you and relive you F.. of all worry. Fe: When you come be sure you stay at 1. The Walker ouse The Ileeret of Pleaty , (Boston Transeripta Cellectore-When shall I call again about the bile sir? Debteteetteavens, newel I can't al- ways tell ahead just when I'm going to lee out, WISE.. (Birmingham Age -Herald.) "Say the word that Will make me a happy man. -Ad right. . No." '.1"eu.refuse mo?" "Yes. 'No' is the word that will Make you happy, eltboUgh you may not reallea it reneee as PI a F. 4414 441. ,•44 - top kw* �fl A JUDICIAL FiNDie4G, (Pucke "Judge," mid )fra Steven to the mag' istruto who had recantly come to board with her. 'I'm pastioularily to have you try tins chlogon 60 "1 have tried it," replied the Irate, "and my decision Is that the dldek- an has proved an alibi.' • Byron. in an Ugly: Mood. I have not yet read Byrron'a "Con- versations " but there was au anecdote in one of 'the extracts which continue what I heard long since, but which I codld not depend oti before. Ile had. an Detention to see women- eat. Col- onel --- was at Byrov.'s home in Piccadilly. Lady Byron Was in the room, ad luncheon was brought in - veal cutlets, etc. She began eating. Byron turned round in disgust and „ said, "GOrmandizing beast!" and, tak- ing up the tray, threw the Whole luncheon. into the hall. Lady Byrou cried and left the tOoMP--Teld by Hay - don, the Painter. - • * The Kaiser's Pion. The followitmg haa bteti going the retinas of the weekly Areas: My Tuesdays are meatless. My Wednesdays. aro wheatlets. I'm getting more eatless Melt day; Itly house it is heatless, Ily bee it Is theelless. --Vase sent to the The bar -rooms are treaticss, My coffee Is eweetleee. leach day I grow poorer and wiazel My stockings are feetlese, My tremistes are seatiess. omit &tett; Hew I do hate the Italstri �5 • "That's an awful town you liVel said the city Mate "What's Wrong with. it?" replied the eahurbenite. "Way, I went through, It reitterday in my oar. Why even Church street is badi"---Yonkers Statue:am "Our women should nave time patti- otiern of their aneesidre,4 oled the curbsterie orator. -Morelli for the girls of /6." "You can ha't'e all the Kline of '76 you unfit," one e ili voice from the crowd. "me tor The tIlletineelle derived their natial g!tle .6t rt.