The Wingham Advance, 1919-03-06, Page 3mtr\KE. PEE* ECT
BREAD
ROYAL
YEAST
CAKES
hett.a7:. CANADA
145';',MS ;II% tioritsgaIl VA-00111ra Old
- GRAIN VARIETIES.
The desirable character of any
Variety are those that enable it to
thrive in the environment in which it
iec placed, or give it comenereial Vepu-
larity. The undesirable onee are
tbose that prevent it from achieving
its best whether on the farm or in the
starlet, According to conditions a
desirable character in one locality may
be an undesirable one in another,
good resulte are not to be expected Ou
all eons. One unfa,vorabla condition is
aeldity of the sell, and the etrect of
*Alt ell 13Ueb 1:101111 Weald be toa aggra-
vate thie fsour cAudition.
In western New York, where salt
waa cheap, it was used in carload MS,
sprinkled lightlY lover a calcareous
that woe kept wall limed. Lime at that
time was also cheap, but the prtgos
received for the crops were much, leee
than the prices now received by
&rewire.
The soil was somewhat heavy and
had been lightened by heavy applica-
tions of manure for several years end
vegetable retiree of all kinds. It was
well drained by a series of tile, drains
and open ditches.
On this land crepe of gladioli, zin-
nias, lilies, corn and various vegetables
and flowering plants were grown.
Sulphur was sometimes used, sprin-
kled lightly over the soil. These
materials were cheap, and aside from
whatever fertilizing value they had it
was thought they helped to keen down
insects and diseases, The salt was ap-
plied in the auturnn, after the fall
plowing. In the, spring the land was
Plowed again, the eulphur applied,
after which it was broken up with a
disc harrow, followed by a spike tooth
barrow. It was very productive, and
In any kind of grain, yield is, and
always will be, a deslrable character,
but in many localities the variety
=PEA Orimarily.depend on other char-.
actors, such as drought resistance,
• early Meturity and tightness of chaff,
te,giye it value. In localities' where
conditions are less severe, these again
•eves later in maturing, having a loose
clixnate.
Earliness exceeds yield in impor-
tance in all of the northern districts
ot Canada, .an, wherever it is a ques-
tion of maturing grain before the
tittle of frost.
Tightness of chaff in wheat is neces-
sary wherever high winds prevail at
the time of ripening as on our prair-
ies. • In eastern, Canada, however,
where no loss is experienced from
winds, and the threshers are not used
• to threshing tight chaffed wheat, con.-
•. elderable grain may be lost over the
' rear' of the mill.
Varieties that have the ability to
reale, drought to do, as a rule, succeed
'When there is an abundance of mois-
ture.
'High baking strength is absolutely
essential wherever wheat is grown for
• export, but ter domestic use a Variety
atiay be grown ta advantage that has
only moderate 'bqing strength, if it
giOeS a high yield.
,Thinness a hull in oats is a desir-
able character under all conditions.
• krullessness in oats is only desirable
Pier a few special purposes. The husk
fiailitates the eommercial handling of
zr-t
%•,) a
Cobra- C.Ottoti Root Compoun&
safe; reliable regulating
. methane. Sold in throe do -
'noes of strength—No. 1, $1;
No. 2, $3; No. 3, $3 per box.
; „Sold by all druggists, or sent
• prepaid on receipt of price.
Fro* pamphlet. Address:
THE COOK MEDICINE eq.;
10101170. Wit (Randy Winder.)
agoamamMagia...IMIS.
AVOID COUGH&
COUGHERA
Coughing
Spreads
Disease' 4 Sims
,87.
IL
Mew
30 DkORP-STORT COUGH,"
HALF THY' rOR., OULDREN
although cropped intensively for years
the crops were free from both insects
and disease, and the colors of tb.e
flowers always brilliant.
Sulphur is now used with good re-
sults on alfalfa. land and will no doubt
be found valuable for other crops.
MANURE LOSS IN BARNYARDS,
In three months untreated manure
exposed in an open barnyard euffered
the following losses:
P. Cent,
Total organic•matter 38
Total ash ........ , 17
Total phosphorus .... 23
Water soluble phosphorus
Total potassium
•Wated soluble potassium
Total nitrogen., ,
Water soluble nitrogen , 7
Field experiments continued for
fourteen years show that such exao-
sure has caused a loss of at leaet
per cent. in the crop -producing vothe
of the manure.—Ohio Experimentt Sta-
tion.
Canadian farmers and gadononesare
protected from the evils of planking
inferior seed of many kinds of crops
imported from other countries. • By
an order -in -Council that came intceef-
fect in the auttimn, importation ie pro-
hibited of unfit seed or clovers, gras-
ses, vetches, rape, other forage plants,
field root and garden -vegetables in
lots of ten Pounds or more,
In Pamphlet S-12 of the seed branch
of the Department of Agriculture 4
Ottawa, and obtainable from the pub-
lications branch, unfit seed is describ-
ed that which does not eomply With
the Seed Control Act, requirenaent% !re-
specting the sale of seed in Canada,
or if it has been refused admittance eli-
te' any other country on account of
low vitality.
The regulations 'will be carried out
through the Custom's officials, who
are required to take and forward to
the Dominion Seed Laboratory for'ex-
amination, sample of lots of ,seeds'N of
the -deem named entered for con-
sumption in Canada. •Seed that has
arrived in Canada and'found to be'un-
afit, shall be deported under -Customs
supervision. The penalty for failing
to comply with these reguiatiOns is
WO for the tirst offense and not ex-
ceeding ;1,000 for the second and each
subsequent offense.
"
the grain and protects the kernel from
injuty.
Beards on wheat and barley are
Most undesirable but in the case of
barley it has not as yet been poetsible
to produce a beardless variety giving
a yield that Will equal the best of the
bearded sorts.
Awns in oats are unnecessary and
are not in any *ay connected with
Yield.
The color of grain leanest important,
not that it has any intrainsic. value,
but '.because the market demands a
certain Color of kernel in wheat, oats
and, barley. This demand has ar-
risen from the association of a certain
color with an outstanding variety such
as the red color of the Red Fife and
Marquis wheats, etc.
Eitough has been said to show the
fallacy ef the idea that any variety
of wheat or oats or barley is superior
under all donditions, to all other var-
ieties. The truth is that every var-
iety has its limitations, and it is up to
the grower to procure a variety
sesideh possesses the characters that
will enable it to thrive under his eon-
. ditto's% If in doubt, eounsul the
suPerinterident of your nearest Experi-
• mental Farin, Ottawa, describing your
climatie conditions and requesting his
adViee as to the variety that will suc-
ceed' best la your loeality.
SALT AND SULPHUR AS PER-
- TILIZERS.
0' Although common salt has been used
as a; fertilizer' on certain crops in Eu-
rope', the College of Agriculture states
that its tee is inadvisable because of
. the uncertainty of results and because
acid Kills, upon which salt will not act
etia fertilizer,are common in Nee
frork State.
On account of the'ehortage in potash
for fertilizer, the question has been
ralead whether common salt cannot be
used as a substitute. The, most exten-
sive experiments in this country show
that salt may takethe place of potash
to a limited extent for certain mita
and on certain soils. Mangele, turnips
avid radishes may be benefited by its
_ Uses rhe etapla crops, including pota-
toes, wheat and corn, would probably
tot be greatly benefited. However,
29
67
59
.. 27
11:1/111 YOU 1111111/111/110
that Old fiere or elrin disease •of
IMHE bream out again? It's be,
000 the rermedlea you have been
uoing tlo uot get to the root of the
disease, but remain, on tlae surface.
Try Zam-Buk! It penetrates to the
' Underlying tleattee, deetroys alt
germs, and cures from the "root"
up. • Hence Zarn-tdr, cures are
lasting. All dealers, 60o, box.
=Su
vaulte and these galleries ad cellars
were utilized by the church army as
catacombs in the early Christian plaee
af worehip eenee of the term, There
are no tombs.
The chambers „nearest the entrance
to the mines were fitted up as recrea-
tion and rest quarters for men just back
from the front lino, and here they conic
to bathe and change their clothes,
to eat, sleep and read and Write. Be-
yond the rest rooms in the faatbest
underground seetion and reached
through a labyrinth of passage -ways
and stairs and Winding galleries is a
chapel.
The soldiets themselves decorated
the chapel .and made its furniture: The
kneeling benehee and the altar are
crude and rough; the cross abave the
altar *tee hewn from an old packing
box; the ca,ndleaticka were fashioned
from the tin of bully bed cans; the
altar eloth is a strip from Tommy's
eleeping blanket, and the battered clot -
lice was salvaged from the knapsack
• of a dead German. He had stolen it
• from. ft sacked church and was taking
• it home with him.
The prayer book a there are tattered
and seine are bloodstained, and hymn
:books are feW. • But the worshippers
•care little for the printed word of
Faith. Some one, a young artist once
a member of some company .stationed
there •and Mace "gone west," painted
two or three sacred pictures On the
black walls, and these help Tommy
more than prayer books.
As for the rest, iSundays always find
the oha.pel decorated for services.
There are ,flowers when flowers are to
be tad, and green boughs. Christ-
mas was celebrated with extra candles
and red and. white paper .seeured some-
where and looped. up, and a replica of
the stable of Bethlehem was made out
of mud and bits of wood and bark,
the figures being of elay and draped
'with bits of cloth.
• • *
districto of the Sarre areuees the in-
slignations of the. Professor because
the population is almost wholly Ger-
man ,but what did Germany care about
the French population of the territory
taken in 1871. and that eeized at the
beginning of this war by German
troops that were kept close to the
frontier '(while the French were
withdrawn 10 kilometres) so 'they
could spring into the Prench coal and
Iron districts inetantly the signal
was given?
Germany will get a hard peace, but
Lt won't be harder than the peace Ger-
many has given to the nations it con-
quered. And it is idle to threaten
the Attlee and America. The only
effect 'will be to harden the hearts in
Paris and inspire more striugent
measures to snake it impossible for
Germany to seek revenge. There is
going to be a League of Nations, and
Germany will face a world in arms if
It fiball eorumit a breach of the peace.
The enore Germany raves and threat-
enf3, the severer wfll the peace terms
be, and the enore effectual will be the
mem' taken, to enforce them.
• • *
CAUGHT.
411•111•• Jellemmi PiSFSIO elona Imessossup irmeleadm
• Make Manure Twice
as Profitable by
Aading Fertilizers
Rtports of TvvoLeading
i Everiment Stations 1
Ohio Exped;acnt Station
Coverhut I a period of 13 years the
average increased produttion front
Soil treated with titan mamma and
acid phosphate ever yard mature
• 1
' itees: Cott:05.2'7 but: Wheat, 6.18
bti.; Hay, 1,840 lbs.
,
1 Pentuilloania Expethmtnt Station
13st the additieut of acid littlOie
tEisai.
ttn5 ontstr,iCti: reerdt:In157istrie,u:dr5e:
. ' V 'Ilitehli
*a*
eS ita: thb ell 132 2111:81°m: I. 71 2 iedia livtle ce et:rue:your farm.
.
The Soil arid Crop
Improvement llureau
et slit Cosi:dem realizes Association
1( 1109 TIMM ntedoottoacro 26
iota eareseseaaesseeseeeeellftill*WIM
How to Awake
Fresh as a Daisy
°Instigation Gone
He was the keenest student in the
class, and when an unpopular profes-
sor said: "Gentlemen. your next sub-
ject for compositiofl will be 'Man-
nerea " he at one rose and .eake,d:
"Can we write on had manners, sir?"
The professor looked over Ms spec-
tacles at the all -conquering youth, and
quietly answered: "Certainly; you can
write about whatever you are best
acquainted with."
Keeps Children Well 1
Makes Them Robusil
HERE IS GOOD ADVICE FOR THE
HEAD OF EVERY FAMILY.
Rapid growth, work at 'home and in
the school -room, are sure to tax the
strength of every Child, and often
prove the beginning 'of a chain of
weakness that laFts through life.
• (live your sons and dapghters
fighting chance! Gale' them good home
eurroundings, fertifythem with edam -
tion -but above all else do everything
poseible to insure for them perfeet
health in years to omo.
In ate way con you destroy ;emit:less
and build up hq,.tli" so surely as with
Ferrozone. It's the concentrated
nourishment in Ferrozone that enables
It to do so much good. It contain's,
the very elements that are needful in
building up bone and ,sinew, in vital'e-
ing and strengthening the blood. The
appetite Perrozone brings will gladden
any parent's heart, and when 0,210,,
spirits, vim, and eneity increase 40
ley day then you know what grand
work Perrozone is doing, 13ecan3e it
makes and keeps you healthy, becaase
it is a pleaeaat, harmless and sure to
do knormousesood—you and your child-
ren should use Ferrozone every, day.
Sold by all dealers in 50c. boxes, six,
for $2,50, or direct by mail from the
Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont,
SPANKING DOESN'T CURE!
Don't think children can be cur-
ed of bed-wetting by spanking them.
The trouble is constitutional, the
child cannot help it. I will rend
FREEto any, mother my successful
home treatment, with full in-
structions. If your children troublo
you in this way, send no money,, but
write me to -day. My treatment is
highly recommended to adults troubled
with urine difficulties by day or night.
Address.
• Mrs. M. Summers,
130X 28. Windsor, Ontario,
• ••••4•
Pointed Paragraphs.
There ie no tother disease quite so
contagious as gossip.
Sunbeams of humor quiekly met the
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and for year it was sup-
posed to* be incurable. Doctors prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing
to mire with local treatment, pronounced
it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease,
greatly influenced by constitutional con-
ditions and therefore requires constitu-
tional treatment. Catarrh Medi-
cine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional
remedy, is taken internally and acts
throttgh the Blood on the Mucous Sur-
faces of the System. One Hundred Dol-
lars reward is offered for any case that
Hall's Catarrh Medicine fails to cure.
Send for circulars and testimonials.
F. 5. CHENEY & CO., Toledo., Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Hall's Family Pills for constipation. •
-
•
"WAR OR A SOFT PEACE."
(Philadelphia Record).
Germany is reaping wheye it sowed,
and it does not enjoy the task. But
It will make it no easier to swear at
• the labor or to bully the nations that
are in a position to fix the terms of
peace, and enforce them.
' Premier Ebert and Professor Del-
tbrueck make themselves ridiculous by
(inveighing against the terms ef the
!armistice and the probable telms of
tthe peace, and they are injuring their
town people by their threats of what
;they will do if the Allies and .America
are not veey considerate. e
No other remedy acts the same.
Works while you sleep,ksinooth,sit-
ent„,,e.ffective. Cures theveworst head-
ache or constipation.
This is what happens velien'you Use
Dr. Hamilton's Pills.
For ,wind or pain in the stomach
nothing works ,better.
No bad taste left behind, nb furred
tongue, no more dizzy spells or bili-
ous fits after taking. Dr. Hamilton's
Pills.
.All the old costiveness, frightful
dream's and nervous disorders disap-
pelieas a shin in the niglet,
The appetite is sharpened upatakee
ori a. keers edge.
You enjoy your meals, relish and di-
gest them.
Strength and buoyant spirits retulei.^
You feel good, you look like your old
self again 'with bright eyes and rosy
cheeks.
The best guarantee of good health
and old age that man and WeinfUi can
have le -the regular /use of this fam-
ily pill.
Suited to all ages syou should get
few 25 cent boltes f#orn the drug store
and keep then handy.
IVIODBRN li.A.TAOOMBS " •
Now that force -has failed, the Ger-
mans want eqtritand justice and
concessions and a proper regard for
their feelings. As to equity, there is
a sound old maxim of the Chancery
Courts that he \vho, asks for equity
mast do equity, ' and ,Gernsany has
never done emlity. If it wants justice A great legion of women are there,
it is asking an' what wouldcleaVe very too, equally as devoted to winning the
little of 1Germany. It is idle to load war.
ice of sarcasm.
A wise man knows all he tells, but
he never tells all he, knows.
The, man who is really good often
has a sad look that is discouraging.
What a jolly old world this would
be if all men practised what they
preached.
Some men have a keen \ sense of
humor, judging by the pointless stories
they tell,
Admiratiorins far more tolerant than
love.
A smile is the bud and a laugh is
the full bloom.
Small ideas and big words 'make a
painful combination.
Seeing isn't believing when a man
can't believe his own eyes.
Comeptition is the life fo trade and
the death of the non -advertiser.
A good hard fail is often the result
of trying to stand on one's dignity.
Sotne men are locked up for safe
breaking and some for safe keeping.
Every time\ a man tries to get
something foenothing he gets a little
additional experience.
If a woman is unable to think of
anything else to say sherepeats
what she said to other people.
It is truly wonderful how fascinat-
ing most things are eo people that
are none of their business.
The average man can't realize how
easy it is to pass the contribution
plate a dnforget to chip in until he
tries it. •
Poultry
World
IP
WHITE DIARRHOEA.
(By Dr .13. F. Kaupp, Poultry Investi-
gator for North Carolina Experi-
ment Station).
Once white diarrhea, has secured a
foothold in a poultry plant
due to neglect, the motality is ex-
tremely high, often reaching ninety
per cent. of the season's hatch. All
told, the losses in dollars and cents
are almost beytind calculation. The
scourage Is widespread and probably
causes a loss of ten per cent. of aal
chicks matched in the country. By
'proper measures the disease is fairly
easy to avoid, and a large number of
the affected chicks Will recover un-
der proper treatment.
There are two forms el white, clia-
rrhea, due to two distinct 'causes. The
most common variety is caused by a
germcall° dbacterium pullorum. This
germ must be specially prepared for
study in the laboratory and magnified
1,000 times to be seen. The second
form is due to another type of germ
a single -celled organisna- or protozoa,
called the Coccidium tenellum.
littW CHICKS ARE INFECTED.
•
liver ill Usually pale, Thit ot er parta
appear twine]. A bacteriological 'ex-
aniluation reveals germs in the liver,
spleen, heart, blood and .1c1claeye, be-
Ca14110 the gerrna live and, multiply in
the •blood of the chick.
IlOW TO TUNAT IT,
For the Mat 72 holm after the
chicks break the ellen, and dry off, re-
move them from the nest or incubator.
On the third day give them 'all the
fresh buttermilk they can drink, and
keep it before them at altimes until
they are four weeks old: '11)ci fst, give
solid feed till the third feed, and
then only three light meals, bringing
them to full feeding on the fifth day.
Try this and you will find that the
chicke will be stronger, Buttermilk
or sour milk is the beet and cheapest
method of combating white dirrhea.
Milk also prometes rapid growth.
Premises must he kept clean and the
quarters should be thoroughly sprayed
With some reliable disinfectant.
The only remedy that we have found
effective in the treatment of white
diarrhea is a compoyea of equal'parts
sulphocarbolate of calcium, sulphocar-
bolate of sodium, and snlphocarbola,te
of zinc. This coMpound can be pur-
chased from manufacturing chemiste
In 30 -grain tablets. One tablet shauld
be dissolved in eacinquart or drinking
water, and ia the water for Mixing
the mash feed,.
Be Wise.
Cate; used to assert that wise men
profit more by fools than foolby wise
'men. wrote Plutarch; for wise Men
avoid the faults of fools, but fools will
not imitale the good example of wise
men.
Thirty Deaths From, Razor.
A physician in Chicago ststes thirty
deaths'ehave resulted from peeing
corns with a razor. Avoid blood pois-
oaing by applying Putnam's Corn and
lis7art Extractor. Purely vegetable.
Painless and sure is Petnam's Ex-
tractor, 25c at all deelers.
British Women Voters,
a The women yoters of Greet Britain
are a great host.
Their country recognized their abil-
ity and its need for their services
a
About three million British men are
on the continent in military a.ctiiiities.
.all tte blame upon the 1Kaiser and the
General Staff. The German people,
as represented by the "intellectuals"
and the newspapers and the coMmer-
cial classes, has been elamoring for
conquests for many years. If the
Keiser were on trial he eould make a
very plausible defense on the ground.
The women at home, millions, of
them, are the mainstay of those who
are at the front.
• There has leeen no service which
British woreep have not weillingly ren-
dere& to defeat the Hun. •
The parlianientary franchise haS
been conferred upon British women
that, the nation drove .him into the without regard to property qualifica-
war. The Pan -German sentiment was tions.
so strong than he was. afraid for his The age limit has been fixed for
thrane, whieh had been openly threat- the present at 30 years, and the priv-
ened by one of the Pan -German or-
gans.
The kaiser had Oradea war in 1905
and 1911, and was deneunced by paha
opinion for cowardice. The Gerinan
conquest literature amounted to a
flood. Preatictions of war and de-
mands for war filled newspapere,and
books and pamphlets. Professor
Delbrueek is shocked by the ruthless
greed of France. But when has Ger-
h:nany shown anything else? Partic-
ularly in regerd to France, unofficial
Germans, not the Government, were
tlamorous that France should be "bled
white," that It should be reduced to
such a Mate of inspotenee that it -Would
neer cross" Gerillany'S path again.
That France should demand, the coal
ileze of the franchise thus becomes
an honorarium (or a consolation) for
those who have reached the ripe ma-
turity co; three decades.
4 • I.
The 'Sailor's Widow.
How many people reallge, the enormous
amount of mourning caused ofery time
one of our ships goes down. Bnt few of
the heroes of the sea return disabled
to live at home in peace. It is sheer
luck or widowhood for the sailor's wife.
It is some comfort to know that several
funds provide generously for the widbws
of the sea, especially for those with bab-
ies; and it is touching to learn that the
major part of these funds is raised bY
voluntary subscriptions among the crews
who take a great pride in the knowledge
that their "mess" cuts a good figuire in
the subscription lists to sailors' char-
ities,
,
WOMEN'S RIGHT •
TO GOOD HEALM
MOST TROUBLES AFFLICTING
WOMEN ARE DUE TO WEAK,
WATERY• BLOOD.
To every woman belongs the right
to enjoy a healthy, active, happy life,
yet nine out of every ten suffer years
of agony, uqually from some form of
bloodlessness. That is why one seea
on every side pale, thin chicks, dull
eyes and drooping figures—sure signs
of headaches, weak back, aching
limbo and uncertain health. All weak,
suffering women should win the
right to be well by refreahing their
weary bodies with the new, rich, red
blood that promptly transforms them
into healthy attractive women. This
new, rich, red blood Is supplied in
abundance by Dr. Williams' Pink
which reaches every organ and
every nerve in the body.' Through the
use of these pills thousands of wo-
men have fonnd a prompt cure when
euffering from anaemia, indigestion,
heart palpitation, rheumatism, gen-
eral weakness, and thes4 ailments
from Which women alone eater.
There is ao part of that broad Dom-
inion in Which you will not find some
former sufferer who has regained
health and strength through the use
of Dr, Williams'. Pink Pine. Among
the thousands of women who bear
testimony to the value of Dr. Wil -
llama' Pink Pills is Oho W. Ferguson,
Plattesville, Ont., who says: "After
the birth of my second baby I was
left very weak, and was ateadily
growing thinner and more' bloodlese.
As time went on I. bet.ame so run
down that my friends thought I was
• In a decline. I tried different medi-
cines, but none belped me until I was
advised to take Dr. Williams' Pink
Pill. I began taking them and
Waa not long in finding that they were
helping me, and by the time I had
taken a half a. dozen boxes I felt like
a new person. I had increased in
weight, my color returned and I was
agaiu enjoying my old-time, health.
You may be sure when opportunity
effere I will gladly recommend Dr.
William'e Pink Pills."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills through any medicine dealer or
by mail at 50 Cents a box or Six
boxeci for $2.59 from The Dr, Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
A:4AT EARTH
Chickens contract the disease by be-
ing. kept in infected quarters and tak-
ing in germs through food, and water.
The meat common cause is the bird
which has the disease while a chicle
and recovers from it. If.the bird is
a fernale, the ovary may be perman-
ently affected, so that when the chick
grows to adult size and commences to
lay the eggs produced are infected
with germs of the disease. These in-
fected eggs when incubated make a
good condition under which the germs
can grow and multiplYa and as the
chick develops and finally merges
from the shell it is stricken with white
diarrhea. Symptoms appear tvvo or
three days after hatching, the bowels
discharges being of a whitish,
frothy nature, hence the name of
white diarrhea.
The other form of the disease, the
protozoan variety, is due to infection
through 'the feed and 'water. It ie
not transmitted through the egg. A
bird affected while a chick may be-
come a disease terrier by some chronic
infection or ulcer in some part of the
lining of the bowel. Recently still
another form of! the disease has been
found, the germa of which are shaped
somewhat like a tadpole, but must be
Built 'By Soldiers in a Mine in
France.
In the third tentary theicatabornha
of Rome were used aa churchas by per-
eeented Christians. • The Germane in
the tWentieth century have brought
to Promo and Belgiummuoh, the Same
condition. Men, vromen and ebildren
in occupied and devastated areas live
in cealars to escapedeath from ,botabs
and 14161143 and they woreblip itt vaults
beaks& shattered cathednals.
But it has been left to a. mining vil-
lage 'somewhere in Vrance" to pro-
duee reel twentieth century catacomb
for histerY.
• Their advent 'Wail an accident, of
course, just as the catacombs of 'Rome
aa a place of religious worship grew out
of the exigencies of Pagan oppression.
The mining village is a wreak ad when
allied fOrtee accupled it they found
dead men and ruined habitattiOne
everywhere.
But beneath the mina lay nlitteolls
vaulbs tod a, labyrinth ofigalleries and
egliars Which the Htrahad Vesealunable
to ideattoy• in their entirety. .
samossooSsam own *amass*
Woo 211009haaina
'The Great English Remedy.
Tones and invigorates the whole
nervouo system, makes new Dlopd
in old Veins, Cures ,IVervoTts
Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Despon-
dency, Loss of Energy; Palpitation of. the
DCart, FailinM
g emory. Price 51 per box, six
«or $5. Ono will Ocoee, six will cure. Sot by all
druggim
sts or ailed ia pkg. on re eipt or
Vim New pamphletinailed free. THE OOD
IMEDICINE co.,togonn. OM. (Faintly Wiedsor.)
maanified 1,00 times to be seen.
This germ has been given the name of
Trichemona. Pallorum.
SYMPTOMS OF DISEASE.
s' Whit a diarrhea is a disease of baby
chicks. Birde are seldom attacked
after thee' are ft few days old, and
never after they are two or three
weeks old. Diarrheas that develop
ideelder chicks are due to other causes,
strait as chilling contaminated 'feed,
iMpUre water fend insufficient pro-
tection from sternly weather
In your chicks the symptoms ' of
white .diarrhea are droopy wings, ruf-
fled feathers and a sleepy appearance.
The chicks huddle together; they have
no appetiter a whitish or whitish -
'brown, frothy discharge comes from
tthhee bvoewhtel,ft\tvtilfii,che daiasiclhdiatrigane akdahae‘rveto
as as
"Pasting," The chickens peep des-
pairingly most of the time and leave
white diarrhea when
no viinc ttieirness interest wiif
opened after death, show the abdomin-
al yoke only partly absorbed. The
intestines are more or- less full. The
feat Away
Pimples
and
Dandruff
with
Catic7ra
The Soap to Cleanse and Purify
The Ointment to Soothe and Heal
These fragrant, saper-crearny ernol-
Bents St451) Itching, clear the skin of
pimples, blotches, redness and rough,
nesl, the scalp of itching and dan-
druff, and the hands of chaps and
sores. In parity, delicate medica,
tion, refreshing fragrance, conve-
nience and economy, Cuticlara Soap
and Ointment meet with the approval
of the most discriminating, -Ideal for
every -day toilet uses.
For foil:unto each by mall jiddrest post•oard:
.entienra, Dept. 11,13ozton. U.S4" fiOict by deal.
ors throughout th9 orOr11,
left in the lurch of uncertainty, and
undemonstrated fade of that which le
true, So that the confident Clerietian
Scientist, wherever Ips may be, uaee
the so-called facts of aetroncany "as
proofs," Even the asaronomens are-uot
all agreed upon these mattera here
advanced. Their great mistake has
been to suppose the earth was a planet
like the rest of the starry firmament.
It does not follow; the wish ie father
to the thought.
There are 100 positive proofs that
the earth is not a globe, iseued by
Wm. Carpenter, of Ilisaltimore, U.S.A.
They are Imre in our public library,
ia Manchester. Proof 71.—"The as-
tronomer's theory of a globular earth,
necessitates the conclusabn that, if we
travel south of the equator, to see the
North Star Is aa impossibility. Yet, it
is well-known that thee star has been
`seen by navigators, when they have
been more 'than 20 degreee Gouth of
the equator. Thee fact, like hundreds
of other facts puts the theory to
shame, and gives us a proof that the
earth is not a globe."
Another proof: "The midnight sun
Is seen in the northern regions during
the whole of the 24 hours, The at-
mosphere permits this singular fact,
and is a poeitive proof that the sun
moves around the earth, which ip a
plane, fixed by the power of God, and
that, the earth is not moving as the
astronomers vainly describe it," -
Another proof in these days is:
"The aeroplane paeGing over your
house as you stand at the door, is a
proof against the theory of a whirl-
ing globe. Astronomy says that we
are travelling tb,rough space at 68,000
miles an hour, as that is more than
1,000 per minute. Well, the aeroplane
is propelled by . a generated force in-
dependent of the earth as it melee
its journey through apace to some dis-
tance up country beyond your point
of view, travelling only a. 0 miles an
hour. You can see her going, and
leaving youa spectator far behind. le
this not a fallacious exposure of the
whirling globe theory?" Are your
seines deceived by the ocular demon.
etrationa I have watched these flyere
dozens of times on the Lancashire
coast, and find adequate proof that
they are moving and we are not. What
is the conclusion tdi'awn? It is time
the Christian Scientiets defended thea
healing truths from sounder data con-
cerning their defence of Josue' teach.
Inge. He is admitted "the meet perfee
man that ever trod the globe" (earth)
ehould be, He defended Moses' writ
ings, saying, he wrote of Me."
Frank IC. Butterworth.
liaricheater, England.
rTINQ BORED.
Nilleher -What Were yea ..vaittiering?
will
,••
111' POLICY.
-I know he la a geati man, but how
loes he support his wife?'
"As lie the 'other trla.le of life,
with pat:emic and tealgitallem '
OH, THATI DIFFERENT
,
'Your fir.,t IttothItlitl must atilt love
• you: '
"WY so?"
Ue tells me that lie owes a great deal
10 yea. -
"wee rareering to the back alimeny."
AS: ',THEY LIE.
bald the Swore:woe, "suppess.
alit that by some eunvulaioti of nature
Jordon:4 GU, ate -earth. no Under Water
.0ealne arY land. What wotild be the
most prominent elitteacter of the land-
scape?'
.submarines."
suppreSa yawna replica: "tlermen
Aud, the s_..utrin._dmier woo trying
-
H
"That pbEorTi'eAtItleIT'e"cilittnAtRi E.'IIte Meant
to ou ei,,,iparmatitry mit pttc
liscisufeoeo: it, as usual!"
"flow
D'
vowed that her beauty was very
?"
•
EXnAIN ED.
-Little Edwin -Say. -father, „why 00 they
always have p, bandage ova, the eyes of
justice?
Vather-ProbablY because the t lawyers
have talked the poor 'women' blind my
son.
INIMIIM.11•111111•1111111111.1111111MileleillilannallInilk
'iwassomearo
insmosumnumanommb.
()vet Tliere—
Over Here
QTAG Chewing TobaeCii
S is appreciated by both
of Canada's war units
---thoie who fought hi.
Flanders and those who
served at home.
It is also enjoyed by
civilians of 11 ,lasses
throughout Canada a.nd
Is •recognized as being
Wye&
Are People Deceived by
tloir 0yrn tenses?
"Tim Great •Phyeician," the eubjeet
of'a sermon reported in a recent lssu
is very needful to -day. It is well for
the world to have its attention drawn
not only to its need of healing, but to
Christ Jesus as an exemplar -for heal-
ing as well as for moral reform. There
iG one phase of the sermon, however,'
to which objection can be taken, and
that is to the ineistence of the cry
that sine sickness and death are real
because they seem real. Although the
suit Gem= to rise and set, and al-
though millioneasef people for cen-
turies believed a- to rise and set, in
thee latter days we are better in-
formed.
Firat question: Has the writer, Mr.
0. R. Lowe, or any other Christian
Scientist, proved -What is here advanc-
ed? If not, why has he adduced as
evidence a mere assumption, that our
sensee are deceived? Those who have
observed phenomena itt relation to
these things confidently 'aseert that
"water le '..'" el" everywhere, and
and shows a horizontal plane eurface
on lakes, canals, or seas. It ie one of
the :pet assumptione of Christian
Scientiste to affirm as above, And in
their numerous lectures, that we are
deceived by our senees, and they fall
into this astronomical falsity, as re-
corded above. The laws of perePeetive
easily explain these things when test-
ed by true and proper means.
Second question: Hae the writer
ever fixed a prop or pole to hie garden
wall, pointing to the North Star? If he
will just do that and keep it there for
a Month or more, he will have ,evi-
dence enough% to convince him, that
the earth is a fixture'as Divine truth
says it ie. Let him 1.o.o.k up to the
star along that pole daily, or -when he
can eee it, and he will find the globe
theory smashed entirely, and proof
that what.I. advance is correct. They
discard "Materia 'Medica." one of th• e
„en -called sciences of the last days, as
out of court with their dictum that
• God, or the knowledge Of God, is the
healer, and whiCh they prove, I agree
w1th them In thit principle of truth;
• then why &IMMO the Word of God
In other respects ac to what the Bible
(says about God making the eun and
moon, asitis tecorded in the Sacred.
IWord? Iffie an ftetounding assumption
on their part. I give thera proof for
,themselves to.put to the tett arid
prove that astronomy is false in this
raved. It bee never been proved.
Their claims for true thinking in this
• matter is thalleriged. They have ac-
eepted blindly what has never been
proved, just like people who do not
think al Ged thialre, regarding the
material evidence in goeral, they get
I QI AL: tttUti
WORSE' ANCe WORSE.
At an 'evening 'Arty "11,- lady said to
her partner: • i`oan• you tell me Who
that exeeedinglY,plain Man is eitting over
there?" •
"nut is. my brother."
'Oh, I beg ylytir pardon," she replied.
"I luta not 'noticed -the resemblance."
lo '
•
SEEKINXPE'RI MOE.
yfre. Mr:akton: Didighler'says she won't
marry any man Who,haan't been in the
:war.
Mr. Meeltlom That's sportiog of her,
and 1 judge he'll'need Inc previous ex-
perience.
•
k.CINO11.
"That's a, peaeli he's with,"
skater at the Minto 'club, "but
th.4e‘cileatmIttotzteerls,";.0'o•
, tliink
"I just Jrettid hinr asking her if
was ever 'going lo„ learn to put on
own skates."• , •
'DEPENDED.
Mother-Tontiny,, ,are you
to reaelt,. thiq "'bottle on
.cod liver oil.
aaid
I guess
Napoleon's Coin Trick.
It is said that thousands Of five
franc pieces are split into halves by
their French owners every year In the
hope of discovering an immense hid-
den treasure. This treasure, accord-
ing to the legend, firmly helieVed, is
an order to pay the holder one hund-
red thousand francs in silver .five
franc coins,
When Napoleon first set the five
frame piece in circulation it was very
difficult to induce a Frenchman to
receive the new coin. Herice, accord-
ing to the story, Napolenorl geare it to
he understood that he had Watered a --
cheque for one hundred thousand
francs, written upon asbestos paper,
te-be concealed in one of the neev sil-
ver pieces.
From that day to this no one has
objected to the five frana-piece.
Coiffure Gossip.
As for eolffures.
As a rule, they remain simple.
Generally adapted to the'type of ths
individual.
-Pew ornaments are worn.
Take care of the sense of right and
wrong and the dollars will take eare
of themselves.
AtIERVOUS
,'-BREAKDOWN
she
her
•
tail enough
the kitchen
,
BOTH GETTING: EDUCATED.
"The old nlan, isgiving Bill a liberal
education."
"Yes, and 33111 is, certainly giving. Lao
old man an .education in liberality."
Miss Kelly Tells How Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound RestOred
Her Health.
THROWN o.OWN.
New Drummeraellello, Cutey!
the buyar in?
Ribbon Counter Kary—No, Preshy,
but the cellar is. downstiars.
•
LOOkearOtOT WAY.
"Now, I understand 'what they mean
by a state -of ehaos.". • •
"Seeilie'tcPbe what they are trying
to set train 'Rusaaa."•
• • •
SHE Ett,L;oYED IT.
"Did nal eii16), the Concert?"
"It wag. Wo'nderiut,'-jast wonderful,
I can't tell YetChowiiii*Oessed I was
'retelling o so enucyeglorious music
that I couldn't understand,"
• SOME RIOT,
Flannigan `}(liatonlya to new jazz re-
cord) -What ,tiridov music do ye call
that, Norah?
• Daughter -That's a fox trot, daddy.
Flannigan -An' how many tin cans did
th' fox have- tied to his- tail whin he
throtted?
Ia
Neiark, N. .L—"For"about three
year I 3uffered from nervous break-
down and got so
[1 I weak I could -hardly
stand, and hadhead-
aches'eitery day, I
tried ,everything I
could 'think' of and
was coder a phy-
sician's caroler two
years. A gid friend ,
had used Lydia E.
Pinkhain's Vege-
table Cempetind and •••
She told me about
it. From the first,
day I took itibegan
to feel better 'Emd
now 1 aux well and
-
able to do Most any
kind of work. I
have been recom-
mending OA 'Com-
pound ever since and give yon tnyiner.
mission to publish this lettet.'lliss
FLO ICELLY, 474.:So. 14th St.) Nowa*,
N.
The reason this -famous toot ad herb
remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vtigetable
Compound, was ‘so successful in Miss
Kelly's case was botanse it went to tile
.root ,of her trouble, restored her to
normal healthy condition and as &result
her nervonenese disappeared. *
ITS 'AtWAyt'DOES. .
"Its kept ine Pbor.'' ' ..
"What has?" ,
"Trying to make other people think
I'm rich."
SOVNGS RIGHT.
"Is there any disease to whWh aviators
o.re partieutarly" subject?" "
"It there is any. I glom it's the 'flu'."
•
• UNE•XFEOTEIO-REPLY.
"Da-yeei 44de-that g,telitientaii over there,
the lia.misame fellew,•Iwisting his mous-
tache?' said one Wornari- t� another, to
whent- elle lutd!jasVbeeitintroduced. "Ito
has been watching meall. the evening.
and maitiog eeeseet 1-1hink he must '
be smitten- Doe.yous Rnow.-who he is?"
ia.MY husband."
,POLltt. WIT.
"What's MS' 'Chief • -characteristic?"
asked the policeman of the old lady, who
was -trying ta,descrlbef the -Man whoOlad
n'
•oiSC,"--Said the lady,
'robbed
b edla'
thatonstiable, "Then it's
no use! trying .to look for him. A nose
like that-iltVi.s.r tittps'Am• .t'
•7 ,14
W I LLOV.TRa.W ISP•
• Knieker4,-Tias Jane12'1.00s returned to pra-
ldrig for."
e
war. woricn:
Docker -Yes, he is •loolcing for the same
job lie was loci
Transcript)
Site -Before We, were married you
bought nte lamely handsomer presents.
Ile -M -y" -g,eneral'-ieXpenses were light
then. You lived, on your father and I
Jived on Iree ittnelt: •
T(13iti4mEingPlit.FtD
inK2-1S-IleraE.
ld)
' "Do teb ne atajtit'llie-treneltes."
"They •.1ve2e manly nuns mann."
"l3ut what about alio romance of war?"
"1 tikin't'SCe attyf--fiturri.•'Hornance e.nd
coottea d0.111 goiiThftC.tagethet."
*so-
HANGE.
"Do yeti"' rdrabiitlitf?"-sitid Mrs. Corn-
tossel. -when:we susea to tell Josh 'chil-
dren should be seen, not heard?"
" les.' iop)ied thee faience, "and now
1 get called doWn by everybody if 1
1115 cs;perfentes,at the front."
Interrupt Josh while he's tellin' about
. s,
•
•"1 • , ...444",14
SCIENCE.410TES.
Paderowski can Play over 000 complis1.
lions trent -Inernoryl-Hearbeels to read Or
play a j'nece. neW .ta him only twice in
• aroer to memoilte it.
4thooe0 ay‘eoLrrstl a‘vgac:,
Students of Chli---tese history claim that
In tura in their countryt
Among nersens 80 years of age,
one inItY 'b
M
Under normal eonditions the Stilly IA -
land produce yearly 'MO tons of flowers
ter verraniamaking.
To remove enamel front almost any
ntetal it is necessary valy to heat the Can*
:meted object to a red heat and over
dm entrees(' with 444Wdered potaesium
eyaniae. After cooling the enamel will
,e ' sealable in' Water.
iklaboganY, Oak and ebony nese all hefty -
7r itieillt:atter tesei consequently sing.
•
Only One man 103 IN Oyer SIX feet
11
The top of the Itotk at Oibraltat is
1437 fcet atioVe th_e_s_Urounding see.
Illigland grows more than twice et
nitwit \sheet on an neve Of mound AA ;.11
• dee III the Unitel, Mate;.
There are 41 different kinds of hetura
fly 1,11eWn and elamified.