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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1919-02-13, Page 3MED AT LAS • Finds Cure for Rheumatism After Suffering Fifty Years! Now 88 Years Old 4111 —gegairts Srength and Laughs at "VRIC ACID"' Goes Fishing. Back to Busi- ntss, Feels Fine! Bow Others May Dolti 1-10W- IT HAPPEN131D, "I am eighty-three years old and doctored for rheumatism ever eince 1 I came out of the army over fifty years ago. Like many others. I spent money 'freely for so-called 'cures', and I have read about 'Uric Acid' until I could almost taste it, I could not sleep nights or walk without pain; my liands were so sore and stiff I could not hold a pen. But now I am. again in active business and can walk with ease or write all day with comfort, Friends are •surprised at the change." now OTHERS MAY BENEFIT. Thee statements may seem strange to some folks, because elearly all suf- ferers have all along been led to believe In ,the old "Uric Acid" humbug, It took Mr: Asheirnan fifty years to find out this truth. He learned how to get rid of the true cause of his rhumatism, other disorders and recover his atrength from ,"The Inner Mysteries," a remark- able book that is now being distributed free by an authority who devoted over twenty years to, the scientific study of this trouble. If any reader of this paper wishes a copy of this book that re- veals startling facts overlooked by doc- tors and scientists for centuries past, simply seed a postcard or. letter to H. 13, Clearwater, 555.B "Street, Hallowell, Maine, and it will be sent by return mail without any charge whatever. Cut out this notiee lest you forget If not a sufferer yourself, hand this good news to some afflicted friend. THE RAISING OF CALVES. This subject could be very well di- vided into three parts, viz., (1) [Breeding, (2) Feeding, and (3) Hous- ing. (1) Breeding -In •order to get the /most prefitable reedits for feed con- sumed and labor spent in raising calves it Is necessary to see that the breeding of the calves is of the best, that their sires and dame are good in- dividuals of the breed which you are working with, and that they have good records of performance behind them. This applies to beef breeds as Well as dairy. (3) Feeding-Ae soon as the -calf ie dropped it should be sepa • ted from its dam and not given any food for twelve hours, when it will have devel- oped a good appetite and be ready to take its first food, which ehould stet of 5 pounds or ite mother's milk. This should be duplicated in 12 houre, which will make 10 pounds per day, which amount the calf should receive for the first two weeks. At the end of two weeks the calf should be getting 6 pounds twice a day, which ehould be continued for three weeks, at the end of five weeks commenceedeeding the calf a small quantity of skim - milk, mixed with the whole milk, gra- dually increasing the skim -milk and decreasing the whale milk until at the end of the seventh week the calf would be getting 15 pounds skim -milli per day. This amount should be con- tinued until the calf is six menthe old. As soon as the -calf is getting ekim- niulk there should- be added to the milk a small quantity of equal parts of oil ceke and ground oats with hulls ta.kete out. This is a good cream subetitute which partly takes the place of the butter fat which is lack- ing in the skim -milk. An ounce of this mixture, at first, twice a day, is sufficient, but should be gradually in- creased as the calf develops. Wheu the calf is eix or seven weeks old, there ehould be placed before it some nice; sweet, clover hay and equal parts of ground oats and bran, which it will soon learn to eat. It should have as much of thee feed as it will sat up readily twice a day. Always be careful that there is no feed left over in mangers, and that all pails and boxes in which calves are fed are kept perfectly clean and eweet. They phould be fed an accurate quantity at regu- lar times, which is very important in keeping the calf's digestive organs in 116 best condition possible, which is very eesential for rapid and robust de- velopment. (3) Housing. -All quarters in which calves are kept should be clean and they should be given all the room pos- sible so as to allow chance for exer- else. They should always be well bed- ded with plenty ef light and good ven- tilation, so that the calf will cleeelop a good strongemnstitution in order to be a healthy acquisition, whet, grown,. to the farm herd. KNOW MILK YIEDD OF BULL'S DAM. Not much headway can be made in breeding up a dairy herd if the dam of the bell le not a good milker. This R VE 79 Zam-Buk invaluable for eczema, both itt the as of ray baby and Inytleit," says Mrs, L. Bonin of 'West Ariehat, N.S. She adds: "Baby's skin Was badly broken out, but repeated applications of Zaza-Buk entirely .cured it. my own meet I had eczen1a on my hatids, whieh Made it very` inconvenieet for me to dd my Imusework. Particularly Vas this so, AS it aggravated the trouble so to put my hands in Water. By using Ziene-Buk, however, 1teen got re- lief, and it Ivaa not eery long before every trate of tbe trothie had dire fapp6afed. 1 really- think no hotne ellettla be without Zettelluk.'" Zam-Belt le Wally geed for all Orin !Wilde& All (lettere "500.box. is now a,. well known fad, lead verY high prices halite lately heel), Paid for bulls out or heave' pioducing cove. At the 'Can Rene Experimental Station a very fine .eNsench.40anadiall which will be called VIP waB bought a few yeare ago, one thee would easily have Won chantplouship honors at any exhibition in Canada against all comer. Zgoreover, this bull, According to ordinary standards, was of a conformation which induced one to 'believe that he was of a heavy milking strain, awl would produce good heifers. But, unfortunately, eecli was not the case, and be del not leave a single heifer which Wee werta keeping as a Milk produce'. Cow A, to the eervIce of another bull, produced a daughter whiM Iater qualified for Record Of Pei f riniece with 7,794 poundof milk, whilst to the service of Z, alie gave a betel* which never gave fifteen pounds of per day during lair erst lacta- tion period. Cow B qualified for Recora of Per- formance as a three-year-old with 5.- 332 pounds of milk, gave 402i pounds during her first pexiod of lactation, and averaged 6.117 during her first five years in milk Her daughter, by Z, only gar° 3,040 ',wands Jdrata her first period .of lactation. Cow C Wes out of a eam whica (male if:ed for Record of Performance, with 3,747 pounde of milk, but herself failed to qualify, though tried two different yeare, She only gave 1' 297 rounds Our - Ing her firet period oflactation, and her daughter, by Z, only save 2,800 pounds during her fixet period of lac- tation. 4 'Cow Dqualified for Record of Per formance with 8,854 pounds of milk and her daughter, by 2, only gave 2,- 775 pounds during her first lactation period, Cow E qualified for Record of Pee- formance as a two-year-old with 4,547 Pounds of milk, and as a three-year- old with 6,530 pounds, whilst her daughter, by Z, only averaged 2,721 pounds during the first two periods of lactation, Cow F is. the dam of a eoW which gave 10,239 pounds milk la 365 dayS, and her daughter, by Z, onlY gavaeg4 401 pounds during, her first lactation period. •Cow G averaged 5,271 pounds during four lactation periods, going up to 6,- 224 in one of them, and her ,daugletge, by Z, only gave 2,947 pounds ddribs her first 365 days in milk. The cost of barn room. care, feed, has gone up faster than the price of milk. so that every dairy farmer meet see that he does not use a bull like 0. GOOD DIGESTION A GREAT BUSSING An Acute Sufferer Tells How She Found New Health. .10 Very few people appreciate what good digestion means until they lose it. To be able to eat what you want and to properly digest it is a price- less blessing. But if you find that Your digestion is in any way impair-. ed you :cannot afford to risk experi- ments by trying uncertain remedice. Strong medicines are hard on the etomach; pre-digested foods only ag- gravate the frouble._What is needed is a tonic that will*strengthen the stomach as to enable it to do its oWii. work. There) is no tonic for the sto- mach that le not at the same time a tonic for every other part of the body. As the blood circulathe through all the body an improvement in its condition quickly results in strengthening any weak organ. Rich red blood is abso- lutely necessary to good digestion. If Your stomach is weak, if you are troubled with sour risings in your throat, a feeling of nausea after eat- ing, pains or fluttering about the heart, try at once the true tonic treat - 'nen of Dr. Williarne' Pink Pine. So many people have been helped by this treatment that every sufferer from in- digestion should promptly try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Among the many who rejoice in a renewed diges- tion through the use of this medicine Is Mr. Willien Dale, Midland, Ont., Who says: "I suffered for aelongetime from a severe form of indigestion, and had doctored so much without benefit that I had all but given up , hope of getting better. Everything ate caused me intense pain, and come days` I did not touch a thing but a cup of cold water, and even that dietress- ed me. As a reeult I was very much run down, and slept so poorly that I dreaded night coming on. I was con- tinually taking medicine, but was ac- tually growing waree instead of bet- ter. Having often read the cures made by Dr. Williams' Pink Pill, I finally decided to give them a trial. I have had great cause to bless this decision for by the time I had ..used a couple of boxes there Was no doubt the pills had cured me, and I was again en- JoYing not only good digestion but 'better health in every way than be- fore." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any medicine dealer, or by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. °Wil- liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Oat. LOVE AIIPLES. They Contain Calomel Ttat Cor - reels Biliousness. What are they? Tomatoes! Our ancestors called them that. brot until the latter part of 1i(00 were they generally looked upon as good to eat. Even now many folks Under-esthrle ate their Value aa a liver regulator and blood cooler, The calomel they contain cOrreets blithe:Mess and sets the secretions of the hody in action. The tontato can be served in two dozen deliciells ways, namely: In salado, simply (sliced raw, as a soup, stewed, baked, escalloped, creathed, fried, as a saute,„ with macaroni, With fish, combined with eggs in varicaIS fonts, as Catsup, as a pickle, even fis a preserve, raw with Whipped &earn, as crOquetted, stuffed, in fritter fortn, cur. ried, etc. Effiieioy 11oW do yeti, Work? By doing the "next thing"? The "eext thing" memo the most Important Sonie folks have the stacker habit of doing the least important mid ease lest tasks firet. IAke the old IadY, you know, who had bread to bake and a nap to take. Well, to "get it oft her mind" ehe took the nap first, you'll remember, ' And as for the breed, well, the, child ren went hungry. Doing good is the only certainlk rap- py action of it inn's lifee-Sir Philip Sidtiey. FACE A FRIGHT 1U111 PIMPLES a 110.611ANIKOWCARIX14 Also On Back, Kept Aw.ake, cora Healed at Cost of 750. "My face and bee% were all broken out with pimple% and my face was a fright to look at. The pixie. ples festered and were scat, tercd, and were co itchy that I scratched until the skIn was sore and red. ,They kept me awake at eeeee esnight. se: "When I saw Cuticura Soap and Ointment advertised I thought Iwould try them. I was come pletely healed after ming one box cif Outicura Ointment and one cake of Soap." (Signed) IVIiss Maty elastedt, Cottarn, Ont„ August 19, 1917. Keep your skin clear by using Ceti. cure Soap and Ointment for every -day toilet purposes. Nothing better. For Free Sample Each by Mail ad. dress post -card: "Cutieura, Dept. A, Boston, u. S. A." Soki everywhere. A Canadian, - Homestead The typital tioniestead of the Cana- -Wan prairie is 0P011 to the four winda of heaven. It is possible there is a road leading to it, but one should not rely upon that. The ocular evidencee of a thoroughfare are not everything to this great, level lead. It .evoula be safer to accept the triendlyluida 01 a compass than to be deluded by the path which, now beaten, now dim, here wide and there merging into the plowed furrows of the "fields," may bob up again by a swamp, or elee disappear altogether in the tender haze of the horizon. line. The home- stead can be seen miles away, a fixed though minute point; the "road," on the other hand, .makes no pretense to constancy of permanency', The homesteader who built the house on the treeless, virgin preiele, or who intends to build one, usually hires himself out to an established farmer in a kind of preliminary an- prenticeship. This hiring is one of the essential steps in developing his qualificationa? He has to .get hie hand it, to increase his wherewithal, to acquire the practical knowledge requisite for working his land. As a "homesteader," he has secured a tract of unappropriated land not ex- ceeding 160 acres, •cin condition of settle,ment, cultivation imd continu- ous occupancy as a honto IV him fer a definite period, and the payment of Gertain sums. His initial task is to "break" the prairie, so that the soil can be penetrated alike by sun and feost and transferred into a light, friable, Mould. So one day, fortified by the hard experienca which has helped him to adapt himself to his primitive environment, he gathers to himself some houzehold goods, and probably accompanied and assisted by a wife, tre,ks from the one spot on the lonely prairie which henceforth, for some years, is destined to be his promised land. His other posses- sions, of the portable kind, have the sante practical„ charaedt,r, to say the least. He must havea wenn and a pair of oxen or horses, and on to the wagon he loads the greater part of his future home and what is to go therewith. A more incongruous "load" could hardly be imagined. Stovepipes may protrude from the midst of bedding, haskete and lan- terns cling like barnacies to the strange -looking "craft." The walls and roof of the neW house may be slung, by means of lashings, to the sides just above the springs, while the lowly domestic broom probably sticks up at a rakish angle above the litter at the rear, as if symbolical of that temper which has made, a clean and triumphant sweep of all the social encumbrances of the past. For a number of years the homesteader will be called upon to make a sacri- fice of almost everything he, holds dear, for the sake. of this great adventure. The teeming world, the humble fireside, kith and kin'known and loved ways, have been left be- hind, that he may win his birthright to the soil and gain what, after all, Meet at timee seem to him like a phantom freedom. A few weeks later his first crude home has arisen on the prairie. There is no architecture to speak of. The shelter is little more than a door and a window with some clapboards arranged rectangularly around them, 9wing to the race with time and the hurry to conquer the earth, the ends of the clapboards aro not sawea off. The stovepipe now standa.like a flag - less polo above the Iniinble wooden roof. Water barrels and sacks are littered about. There is a grinding wheel and a bench. Probably thee° is ta tent' to relieve the solitude of the shack. There May be a henceop and a woodpile. A trail, newly Made, may ten lett and right from the lowly threshold and lose Itself in the Throbbind Headache Made to Disappear Over Nidht Follow This Advice and You'll Oat Relief Mighty Quick. 1 interest to the. progressive and up to - 11d, But plowed farrowe aro Imre to be everywhere, to come up to thq door and aimed touch it, fur uothluti mita ran to waste. Where every. thing, the man, his eattle, hie wife, illtiet eleid, ef their utmost, there le no room for tech rrivolitleo as yards • and gardens, or Iteagee, or flowers, or ittlieS and. treee. 1.1 not the railroad only two hours' ride away, tile schoolhouse a ellen twenty mile.: die• taut, the big town Of the prairies a scant day's joreey? It will, or course, be two yew'a. before the first 'crop ie garnered, ai. other year, perhaps, before the first rude ehanty, with some improve- ments, will give place to the comfort- able farmhouse with its barn, machine shed,. granaries, pig pone and, lueury of luxuries, the telephone! And an- other five years after that? The homesteader rests for a moment over his ploy as he picturesin his mind's eYe the coming town with etores and churches, the eyed road and the political callous, his election fe• a seat in tlie Local Legislature and, it meY be, his final return to the beloved beaten waYs of life which he left when Ito set put in eearch of the heattago of the twairtee. "Ileadaches are caused by the acme Mutation of poisons in the bleed. The cure is not diffieult. First, eleanse the; entire testinal tract. Second, stimulate the aetion of the kidneys and liver. Third, keep the pores of the skin Opod, Lastly, regulate, the bewels tied avoid constipation as you would the plague. The remedy is Dr. IIteniltorea Pills, which cure the dizziest headaelte ever known. In fact people who nee Dr. Haniiit• ton's Pills never have headaches, be- anie they regulate the system to thoroughly that rio chance is given for a sick condition to develop. Away with Your heedaehes, be demo with dizzinees, languor and bilioue. nes-use Dr. Hamilton's ;eine and enjoy the health that they alone can bring, Contain nothing but vegetable eittraets and juices, and tire abeolutely safe for children, women or men, (let the genuine eDr. Piths in yeliOve boxes. 25e, each. "SO." (The symbol of um don er the day's work for the newepepor man) Let us be mindful et' the friendJ so dear Who have departed. Not only in the Pilehe0A of grief. But in compenionehips theyloved to share Let us remember those who go before; Their work is done. Tho life of each stands forth Fair as the printed page on which he wrought. From day to day their deeds and thoughts theY Placed In a relationship correct and sure To show inert: plainly than the types could tell Their message of Itope and Ilelpfulness To those they loved, By their example we who linger hero May work with truer rkill RS WO compile The vast, mysterious universal book To which all men mnst give who ;:ass this way Their Much, their Little -but their q11 in ail. • . And nasty we be like them when we in turn Complete the taslc And hear the Voice ef Conscience gently MY, "Your labor well performed Ham made you worthy of the Great Re- ward.", The form le closed -the proofs are yeti- And,eall is well. Good Night. And Sweet Repose ! -Philander .Tohnson Dna. 'Wisdom. The feeder clothes you .havo. T'he quieter and more coneervative they must be. Bright clothes worn often advertise their age, because well 'remembered. Then, too, each garment should be bought to harmonize with the wear- ing apparel already possessed, unless buying a •complete costume at one tiMe. It la economy to buy -really good garments, for 'theyretain their sbapo, usually are a more advanced pattern, and wear °Eger. Women in Ali Parts of Canada TELL OF THE eie:ALTH DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS BRING. They Made a New Woman of •eil rs. John Mortimer. Who Was a Victim of Kidney .01sease. a ,Glenavon, Seek., Fob. 10. -(Special) -"Three boxes of Dodd s KidneyPllbo made anew woman of n13." Those are the words of Mrs. John ale -flamer, af this place. They are words that have been usdd tiegain 'and again by wo- men in all pars Or. 'Canada who have suffered, and who have found relief and cure in Doclies Kidney Pills. "I feel it is my duty to lot you know what Dodd's Kidney Pills have done for me," Mae'. Mortimer con- tinues. "I had a pain in my back, and I could not get out of bed without awful pain. I •tried everything, but could get no relief. I was adVised tO try Dodd's Kidney Pills. and I sent to Toronto for them. The day I re- ceived them I Wok threebefore going bo bed, and I felt a lot better next morning. . . "I took them aecording to direc- tioas, and in one week I wag as well as ever. I am fifty-five, and am do- ing all niy housework. If I overwork ane my back fools.nveak I take a Dodd's Kidney P1110, and feel better in a few hours. I have recent - mended them to my friends, and they also have been helped." • If you haven't used Dodd's Kidney Pills ask your neighborsabout them. 3 U-BOAT' FATE. Q -Ship's° Bag Thirty Hours Be- fore Armlet:lee. The story of the "Q" boats, those mystery ships which asked only to be treated no merchantmen by the Ger- man submarines; contains few enci- dents more thrilling tiian the tale of how the Q-19, gat.s. Privet, sank what was probably the last of the German U-boats to be destroyed. It was on Saturday, Nov. 9 -less than thirty hotirs before the armistice was signed, Lieut. Percy S. Atkins, the leommander of thq Privet, was waiting in the Straits of. Gibraltar, hoping to inter- cept four 11 -boats expected to be Mak- lag for home from the Mediterranean. A-EMbmarine duly came along at 1140 at night and manoeuvred into position to Shell the innocent -looking Privet. Then for 40 minutes the Privet was chased and shelled. One shell wounded 11 of the crew of 60. The top of a fun - eel was blown. off; one of the masts was carried overboard. The PrIvqt`e `panic party" rushed for the boats, With shells flying past them as they .The submarine was within 100 yards. Then Lieut. Atkins gave his order. Through a periscope hidden in n ventilator the exact renge of the 71 -beat had been obtained. With the drawing of a bolt the mechanieene worked blockhouse in the stern col- lopsed and a 4.7 gun came into posi- tion. The crow were at.their stations. Seven shells were fired; every one hit the submarine; the commander was hlown off the conning tower (his eap was pieked up later), and the U-boat :tank, The other three tl-boats from tha Mediterranean were near. One escaped by pretending to submerge, but going only so deep that her *intim tower was just above Water, With the result that elm did not receive the, full f orce, of the depth theirge. This eetbe marine sank the battleship lIfitannia jest afterwards, and Lieut. Atkins picked no 150 of the eurrivore. The other two IT -boats never vettelleti their base, and their destruction lute ben. claimed. Weak,. Sickly Folks regain Health Quickly A •in,c,apPoop NOW MANUFAO, TuRgo THAT AC:COME-I-ASHES, feARVE La. - Lott; oil eleeete that were thin and mei,erreile torycags imvo recently bine. restored Ly tine eimplo treatment. Ail you have to do in to take two little chocolate-coatee teelete with a 'We pt watee at the close oe each meal. The tablete, which, by the way. -are called eleerrozoee," are 131 reallty perfect food for tee blood. They con- tain exactly those Millionth your Weed limes when it acomes thin, weak, and unhealthy, Tinfi 10 tiet the time to una Ferro - zone; it excleva spleaelid aepetite, gives digestion splendid aid, suppliee nobrishment for the weak organs. At once you feel buoyant wiel strong. Nutritiove. blood COUr303 through your veins, supplies strength, make:: yell tingle with auithation and. •atabition. No more headache. , None of that tired languor. You feel like doine things because Ferrozone completely renews and streegthene your whole eyetene No medicine on earth glees such quick, lasting benefits as Forrozone. It has raised thousande front clown - right weaknoes, brings robuet health ellunlY because it contaius the 2orti- gying elements that ruu-down systems require. • One week after using' Fdrrozone you'll feel like new, you'll appreciate what real robust, health means. In a month you'll scarcely credit the push your vigor and spill:to Iftwe received. Iserrozone is more than a tonic be- cause its' work lasts, its benefits re- main and are not temporary, It re- stores health where other, treatments fail, and should he need, by every man, woman and child. Try it, 50c per box ozone Co., Kiagoton, Ontario, dealers or mail from The Catarrh - or six Lox(11.:2.p_.0. Sold by all (Christian Scicncn Monitor.) "Nature made .Dove'r for hee pleae- ure, and man has remade Dover for his use. The cliffs have been tunnel- ed within and fortified overhead; the sea has been bound insine a vaat'har- bor, and driven back to realie way for trucks and trelleya to carry stones for its prison walls; the emoke of unnols has superseded the gentle motions of sane; ..theee aro forte, and barracks and prisons, Me great warehousea for hu- man geode; ..cverywherel there is ac- tion, change, energy; there are for- eign facee, ate3ple coming and going from the ends of the earth, to whom Dover is -a e.teppingastone; and it is a gate, 'which can Lo opened to friends and dozed on enemies. A gate •of England, one of the Cinque Ports and the only one of them, that has held its own; lt has always been a part of his- tory; it is our only pert which has a natural nimaiiieciicr: and a great tra- dition" So Arthur Symons wrote of Dover in 1903 in an c.iiSaY recently pub- lished in -"Cities and Sca Coasts and Islands." 'The sea at Dever, since_ the Admir- alty has looped It in with its stone bar - tiers, canhardly be said to have re- mained .a quite wholly natural part of nature any longer, It has been tamed, brought to eerve man meekly, and not at its own will. By day we see tho gap in the prison w ailed and the ships going in and out to, be .eaught or looz- ed. But bY night there -is the aspect ef a lake, and the gold and red and green lights that go in a aemicircie about it seem like lights outlining a curving shore. The execrable British pleafeare-pier, with the `looped and windowed nakedness' of its bulbecl head thrust, impudently glittering, in- to the water, adds tite last sign to the deeper signs ofemans.drmination, Yet, by .day or night, if you listen, yeti Wilt hear the lisp of water on the pebblea, in a faint, powerless affirmation; you will know, in that faint sound, the sea's voide. I3ut to see the sea, really itself, and to hear it speak out at its own pleatmre, you Must stand on the stone wall which binds itein from the west wind, or look down the cliffa, on west or cast. Th3 cliffs share in its liberty; they beree never consented to its bondage; they endure • its buf- fetings with patience, as friendly los- ers do in a game. 'When the wind freshens and the water is 'whipped from gre,en to white, and leapseat and over the great stone pier of the Admir- alty in showers of white foam, the cliffs above it turn to the color of thunder clouds. Under a taint mist „cliffs arid sea suffer a new enchant- ment; bloom 'comes out over them, Seenlieg to melt them into a single DOCTOR AN OPERATION Instead 1 took Lydia E. Pink - hams Vegetable Compound and Was Cured. Baltimore, ma. -"Nearly four years e metered from organic troubles, nue vousness and head. aches and every, month would have to stay in bed most of tho time. Treat.' mente would relieve me for a thno but my doctor was al - says urging tne to havean operation.' ,,tPly sister asked mo -•to try Lydia E. Pi nk- h a iree "Vegetable Compound b of ore consenting t 0 511 operation. X took five bottles of it and it- has completely 'cured ito and my Work Is a pleasure, 1 tell I rny Mende Whe have any trooble of th'$ kind what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetlable Com. ponied has dope for mo."-NELt.m 11. 009 Calvert:0Di Ed., Bat tie motet Md. It is only natural for any woman to dread the thought of an operation. So ManyWOMell have been festered to health by thie famous remedy, Lydia E. Pinkhaits n'Veptable Compound-, after AA operation htle beee advised that it Will pay any woman who suffers from such ailments to eenekler trying ft be, ore submitting to such a trong ordeal. intengtbia texture. The ditto and k ca, in still or storm, are at 0110." "it la the cliffe that make tits best beauty of Dover. They aro her crown, her eupport, her defence:, they hold her in their arnie as she sits, white and long, with her feet in the sea, They are beautiful, at all hours, vvith their witite walls and the bare green and browp of their downe; they are like fertresees, calm, assured, 'steadfast, awl ready to become impregnable. Everywhere towers, walls, and bean Equate castle, fewest ancient deem - es; and the friendliness of the cliffs to the towp, Wilieh it holds againet the sea, has a reticence of manner to- ward strangers awl foreign. coasts, At night they rise mysteriously against the sky, with roWa and patches of lights shining out of dull level walls, turned noWainto. candelabra fax can- dles ef gold fire, The old, red, gabl- ed, coedit]: harbor, seen dimly, its lights striking like red and yellow knives into the stagnant water, be- comes a kiwi a fairy thing, which one vaguely rentelnbers to have seen in foreign. lands, Which? Venice has no auch eager cliffs above her tamed water; and Venice, for a moment, has come into the mernery,'returning there, as she does at moot sights of houces looking down into water. Is it Ali- cante? The palms on the sand are not here, nothing of what is African in that rare coast of Spain; but I re- member a certain likeness in the hill whith its 'castle rising more abruptly over it long, curved towa, whiter and stranger than Dover. "To see Dover as a whole, you must stend on tb.e• stone parapet above the landing -place, where . the steamers slide in gently, hardly touching be quay with the wooden,roofs over their propellers. You must turn your back on the sea, 'which is there really the sea, and not an inclosed bay, a harbor made for ships to come back into; and. You must look across the black engine smoke of the trains, to the . white cliffs, which 'with evening turn to a dull grey, over the long curve of white - fronted house% with their dark- green balconies and flat windows set at reg- ular intervals; going on beyond them to the east, with many indentatiens, white, vast, and delicate, shutting' in the sea with its high walls, and seem- ing to throw out long, thin piers to clutch and Imprison it; on the west, Shakespeare's Cliff, and then smoke and the long mine -chimney, and the cliffs turn the corner and are beyond your sight. Bat, fcr the very heart of Dover, you must look under You, where dock after dock lies motionless, its long arms shut about its guests," SDIENUE JOTTINGS. ' A magnet will attract a hook and eye Which Is liable to rust, while it rejects the uoa-liable onea. So a magnet is a handy fool for the cowing basket. To eaveeits workmen half an hour of travel and an extra la -cent carfare, the Squantum Destroyer Plant, near Bos- ton, built a bridge over the, Neponset River, from their plant to. Commercial Pollan Boson, in six weeks. It is called Victory :Bridge. A now method: ot Making a non- aetinth light for photographic toe leas been worked out by J. Bardin in France, who makes use of the princi- ple of platinum sponge; which is first heated iu a flame, and then preserves ite heating nowor when exposed to vapor of alcohol, ether cre gasoline. The Inventor makee use of this property by employing a ,Sraail round tablet Made up Of a platinum salt, a lithium or AVOID COUGH" COUGHERA couom, sepreeds "eeeez Diseese e„wee. Xeleppli %see L,1...11 I . :30 DROPS-ST8RJ" COUGH', MIX THIS FOR CIILDRIel •.•••••••.•••••,•••••••••••amn. strontium salt, asbeetos, magnesia and alumina. A small bottle or lamp hold- Lug- alcohol, .etc., is provided with a on wick with f.at eoiu_pon ee.'hic.,h is based the tablet, and altar lighting and then blowing out, the tablet glows with a red of other n-aetinic light which can be used in the dark room. "For the first thne in the history of. warfare," says the New 'York Medical Jourual, "mantal hygiene as practised among the soldiers ire glean the prom- inence it deeerves, and, profiting ' by the experience of England and France in the present war, the surg,eonage,n- eral was impelled to inaugurate an elaborate organization, both in num- ber and plan, to take care of any mental disturbances detected in the camps or among the soldiers dining the war. Thi e isae, distinct ihnosation in the medical army work, for the sub- jects of mental hygiene and of mental and nervous diseases hi . general, as occurring among seldiers in wartime, were for many reasons oither ITIthlitly treated or neglected. altogether," A narcotic named marihuana, de- rived from a Mexican, hemp, is stronger than opium and corresponds to the hasheesh of the Far East. A horticul- turist recently found thd, plants in large numbers growing In a San An- tonio, Texas, cattle corral. Experiments have shown that the best condUctors of lightning, plaeed in the order 61 conductives, are: Metals, gas coke, graphite, solutions of salts, acids and water. The best hoe -conduce tore, eliding With: the Most perfect in- sulattan, are india rubber, gutta- percha, dry air and gases, wed, Oen- silk, glass, wool,r sulphur, resins and pariffin. For all fruits mid Viewers only three coloring Substances are furnished by nature. One of these is the familiar "chlorophyll," which Wets the bores and peas, the watermelon and .the leavee of the trees eo vivid it green. Another is "xanthophyll," whien ex - Whits ite Intense yellow in the carrot, for example. The third Is "erythro- phyll," which shows its rieh red in the boot, The last two are only modified "chlorophyll," however. But is it mar- vellotie to realiee that all the varied hues of flowere and fruits aro due to these substances, mixed 'in different proportions. The length of the day and night at any time, of the year iney be easily eseertained by doublieg the time of the sue'setting for the length of the day, and doubling the time of its tieing for that Of the night. . s ' • "Mighty small quantity you gave me for 10 cents," "You wouldn't have gotten anything 11 you habit brought your own bottle,' the drug clerk repliede.-Louleville Cattier- Zeurnal, I OM ANY Mill Whl J'Aft Oti TO r Ogj;liplA, 0.•••••••••••••.••••"••••••.a.m.. The Bush of Australict +.4-4 4-0+4++++0-44-4-41.4-1-44-04-4,.. The Australian dwells in the large state capital, which acts as the eole trade outlet and, inlet to the whole state; or itt the agricultural distriets immediately behind the coast; or In the back .country, given up to grazing. The Australian of the cities speaks of the reat of his continent as "the bash," The dwellers in the agricul- tural country speak of the district further inland as the "back country." Those themselves in the back country have behind them a land, partly un - desolate. • . , There are wastes of sand hummodics, with crest and hello* as regular as the wave and the trough of the sea. Over all these wastes grows nothing bet the stiff Spinifex grass, recognized as an unfailing sign of bare ren land. The broad Western plains are more cheerful, with their clumps of droop-, ing myalls, that glisten like silver when the wind stirs their leaves. The gray salt bush that covers the plain is not attractive to the eye, but it has theamerit of being useful, There are other plains, where neither tree, bush, nor herb covers the nakedness of the red sit, and where .the wind comeg heralder by a cloud of dust that set- tles on everything, caoking the dry creek -beds, drifting over fenceand even over buildings 'with its effacing redness. To the Australian it is all the bush, The mangrove swamps and dense tropical forests of the north, the tracts of giant timber in SouthwesternAustralia, the "scrub" waste of the known, .and therefore attractive to the adventurous, rwhia they call the "Nevereliever Land," It has often been declared that the distinctive characteristic of the bush 'is its monotony. Flat or gently undu- lating land, dated with trees nearly d all belongineto the same family, an preseating a uniform dark green hue to the eye, extends for hundred e of miles, The trees are not so close together as to prevent the grass from flourishing on the plain beneath them, and there is little or no under- growth, This is a elunnion aspect of the bush, but is is -only one aspect and the bush has many. There are Australiana to whom the world recalls the picture of a roaring mountain stream of cold, cleat wate?:' The banks are carpeted knee-deep with maiden -hair and coral fern, and out of this tender green rise the velvety brown boles of the tree ferns, each crowned with its wide circle of broad fronts, Above the tree ferneetrembles the graceful feathery• foliage of the sassafras, and higher than the sassafras grows the myrtle, must shapely of all Australian trees, From this tangle of forest and fern, the tall mountain ashesrear their emooth gray columns, one hundred and fifty feet of straight timber before the first branch. The air is sweet with the ecent of fragrant meadow plants, and from the thicket close at hand comes the long -drawn note of the whip bird, ewitla its curious and startling etacato ending. Somewhere in the distance the lyre. bird is imitating all the sounds of the forest, now fluting like a magpie, and anon warbling like a T whole chorus of wrens. his is the bush in one of its most gracious as- pects. Fifty miles nearer the coast the mountain stream has become a brim.- ming river, winding through fertile valleys and broad sunlit plains. Its banksaro lined with groves of pleaa- ant wattles, that are covered in the early spring with a garment of yellow blossoms, so fragrant that the warm breezes carry their message to the distant city, and raen there know that winter has become spring again. Be- tween the river and the distant blue hills, the grassy meadows are un- broken by any tree, .save the clumps of lightwoods, with thiek and •shinittg foliage, These cast across the grass a welcome ehadowe in which the eheep and. Cattle cluster When the sun grows warm. From tho distance, the blue hills beckon invitingly, but viewed close at hand, they are forbidding and interior, all go to make up the bush. --O. C. Buley, in "Australian Life in Town and Country." .11.1114•10.1.1110111101111111•111•1110161.12. EN TO TYRE EDDY'S When you are all out of matches, and you go t� the nearest store for a fresh Supply, /0 to 1 there're Eddy's. The matchbox on the Shelf above the kitchen stove, from whith you, help yourself so freely -it) to 1 Ws Eddy's. 'You strike it light -in -the rote attrant, the dub or sleeping car-. 10 to 1 you'll find that Eddy's name is on the boat. EDDY'S MATCHES are practleelly in weversel use through. out Canada, litnsteltfotevetyparpole, and every match fit fot Its purpose. The next Unit youbuy Matches,. ace that the Eddy name is on the Wt. /t Is your best guarantee of latiefaction. 4 The E. R. EbVio CO. Limited NULL Calintit Also makers of Indurated ParelOate androNt SPetiollits* C3. A WM OCIN. Nur..ic..-Itebble, *top flaing that; your mower wvnal be vOrY cress. Robble-Oh, not so very. Ma Isn't what yeuel sell a really bad4teMperes1 WOnlan. • ANOTHER. She -I was .a fool te marry you. He -No doubt; bet I'M net willing to let yea hear all the blame, 1 asited you to, •,",*,..^.^.1.164,0,•••••no, f AFTER REVENGE, Mrs. A -My husband wanted too Se* teat a hat for me. Mrs. B. -Perhaps he wanted to get even with you for selecting his tieg. r RICH YIELD, Dr. X.--Pld ohl MoneYgruh'S eat;e Yield to treatment ? Dr. re -It did -Something Itho Ken in fdx months. eel • NO HPPE. (Boston Tree:meet) neith-"Haveret you,ane Tack been eti. gaged long enough to get married ?" le,thel-*".,,oe long ! 110 hasn't got it cent left, ' • ••••' com pgmi • sure) . Artist -011, Vallanta, 11 yen will poise for me 111 give you a dollar an hour. eteeery, sir; but I'm getting.a. thousand a week from a moving -picture concern over the hill," sURPRISE NATURAL. (Boston Transcript) "You Ought to have seen the surprised leek on the.cop's face when his prisoner suddenly scooted." "That was natural. A. bolt,frorn the blue is always surprising, you know." HER ONLY AIM. (Tbe Passing' Show) Lady -What is your aim in life, thy good woman ? Cidocl Woman -Me 'husband, gen'ralie. el I NT FOR FATHER-IN-LAW, (Londen Answers) "No inan want to be too hard on his chielree's, "Thon, It 1 marry Your daughter, mit I expect you to make proper allowance for her ?" Al, ADVANTAO,Ee - • Gentleman. •,(t(1 house agent) -"The groat disady'antage is that the house Is so danin.". - House Agent-"Disadvants.go.. alt? Ad- vantage, 1.•.call it. In casegf Tire 'itc wouldn't be., s;c1 likely to .burn. SHE MAAE 'A "SPARE." . (Judge) "Honey, / may be home a trine late," "Where axe you telephoning from ?"' "Tho office; of course. Why do you ask ?" "Oh, nothing. Sounds like a bowling alley, but no matter." Louise-. hAolSAY. liehaBsObro Cleen, off three engagements to be married, dulia-Asa boy he'd ring a bell add then run away. -Life. - "why has .Your E.viDEN,CE •P R (APE RITY. didid 'again stat- ed to dun you for that hack rent?" "Ile caught me buying a new pair of shoes to -day." -Life.' 4.40 U N SEL FISH, "Goodness!" exclairned little Betty, "here'"Weler you runeesqi.bh ig ahead el'd. and ' let hini bite you," said ber• small brothet. Bobby. "The • doctor said / inusnit' have a bite betwe4;iiiertle'' • IT'S AN ILL Wien;.ETO,• "I'm rather Par- venu could get those'swell soolety folks ' to attend her dinnere." "Well, the high' cost of living' help - cd to overcometheir scruples, I sup- pose." -. _ that -Mrs. Q Mrs, Van.Josins-How ,ditt your son happen to join the cavalry : ' • Mrs. DeSelythe-Oh, ;heathotight he kiiew so much about horses.::You see, he' found a, buggy whtp,ence when he was •a boy. -Exchange. es* EXCEPTIONALLY •RAllt. Dealer in Antleuee---Here, sir is a rare old revolver 'that Was eartied by Christopher Columbus., Custoiner-Whati • Why, .revolvers were not invented in COltimbug/ time. Dealer -I knoW. That's what 'makes this one so rare. BEATS THE SAND... (Philadelphia Record). Blobbs-"If yon are goinghe for chsoloosbti Ivo, music, which insit,rvuen.le,aniwlaywao, tliouglit Would:like to be a seloitt.oh a cashe register." HIS OPINION CHANGED. . . "I wish now I'd taken mother's ad -- vice when she begged 'menet te marry you.?" • "Did your mother try to keep yes from marrying me?" "She did." "Oh, how I have wronged that WO. meal" UNFORTUNATE ILLUsTRA1ION.,7 (Boston Tranadript) Wigg -Do yott belleVe in nietenip- sychosis ? Wagg-0011t0 again, please. • 'Wigg -It's like this.. According ,to that —4+-etee doctrine my soul a„fter it leaves ,thie shell nuty inhabit tho eedy • of h. jackess, Ivagg-Well, I didn't .know any, place where it would feel, more at home, HOPES FOR A CHANCE, (Baltimore sure Tho weary and pallid little num enter- c15dornerkueoteorv ytexios rt. oviver h4 -Yess," replied the druggen. "(lemma sex bottles for lny wife." "Tried all other rereedies without sue- tess, eh?" said the elreggint; coevers- arioneliy. "No; she ain't 111 et all,' Uut 1 saw in the advertisement where a woman wrote, after taking six bottles, 'I am tt differ- ent Wortart! " DINING outEt, Iteep Things. Ni tit .inaBr1ght About the Table: How tnatiy gloomy (lining rooms there, are in wiriteri ' 'When the windowe are dosed and the green outside has tithed to a SOO brown, the konsetvith mist nottibat dreathiels. A cheerful tittiing room koma .diges- tione and teriiper good and gives hap- piness a seat at the fsttn114 board. Keep the Iliterie gleamitig -white, the eilver shining. Serve things daletity. Have plants on the window sIia and fieWees or feres upon the table, pretty vehlte eurteins fhat will admit God's ,ranah:nt: into the room tit the Win- dows, 511(1, if you reptiper this fall, Iet dining roorri paper be 11 81111117 prie It ,buff Is good.. ‘s