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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1912-01-25, Page 3IT WAS READY DIZZY HEADACHES CURED IN ONE NWT The British. Fleet in the Rem cent Moroccan Crisis. (New York Sun.) Rather surprising evidence of the nar. row margin by which war between Eugiand and Germany wee avoided last duly is supplied by the serni-officiaI uttera,nces printed by all I3tih news- paper e immediately after the astonish- ing deelaratione made by Captain Fahey, ijt obseure member of Parliaanent and a not less vonspienoue military critic. Captain Faber's deelarations, ivch were made at a patine dinner end promptly seized upon by German, ,Freuch end British 'journals alike, emo.untecl to the eharge thet in the mot eritical days in July, wheu war seemed unavoidable, the Britieli fleet was scat- tered all about the 13ritisli Isles, that the British Ministry was divided on the question of "sticking to France," and that the Jenny alone was prepared to the extent of having 160,000 regular troops ready for instant despatch to France. As to the first charge of Captain Faber that the Britith fleet was so scattered that a sudden raid by the German fleet would have permitted the Germane to repeat the Japanese exploit in the :RuSsian war and defeat the IMMO in detail, the answer of all the respon- eible British journals is icleniieal, that the eharge is false. At the moment when the Moroccan negotiations eeemed least hopeful there was concentrated on Cromarty Firth in northern Scotland, facing the German Ocean, seven Dreadnought battleehips and four Dreadnought cruisers. Aseeeond squadron, consisting of six hattleshipe, two Drea.dnaughte, two of the Lord Nelson:- class and two of the rung Ed- ward VEr. class, together with four. powerful erasers, were at Roeyth, sepe arated'only by three or four hours of eteaming from the first division. The first squadron exceeded the fighting re. sources of the entire German navy and the seeond was suffieient to make a formidable fight alone. In addition, Captain Faber eharged thatthe intelligence department of the navy lost sight of the German fleet's movements for a whole day. This is similarly denied. With the two north- ern fleets were two flotillas of destroy- ers, the scouts of the navy'one of which was actually patrolling the German Ocean. The only thing actually iost sight of wee one flotilla, of German deetroyers and they turned up subsequently in the Baltic—that is, outside of the field of opmiations. During all this time the two fleets were in complete readiness for war, with torpedo nets down and every Preliminary preparation made for battle. Tivo other fleets were mobilized, one in the Firth of Clyde, the other on the Irish coast. As to the preparation o the army, the inaccuracy of Captain lts,ber's as. sertione is less clear. Apparently there was an actual disagreement between army and navy a,utherities over the question of sending the entire available regular estalbliehment a Great Britain to the continent. That the 160„000 troops were ready is agreed, that the prepara- tions on thepart of the fleet to cover Emil an operation were made seems lees certain. The discusition in England which led to Sir Edward Grey's recent &chum - tion in the House of Cotumons seems to have been provoked by the statement by Captain Faber that England was pre - Pared to send its army abroad. Asser- tions were made immediately thereaittr that French and British staff officers had prepared a coxnplete :trogramme, which the Admiralty had rejected and the Cabinet disagreed about. The euh- sequeet changes in the Cabinet are de- clared to have been one eonsequence of this clivielert of opinion. All evidence seems to justify the con- cluston that in July the British navy was ready. for :war, that preperations sufficient to meet attack had been made, that the British fleet facing German waters was overwhelmingly superior to the German naval establishmentj As to the array preparations and the plans for co-ordination with the .navy, neces- teary for seeiding trnops to France, com- plete informatiom for reasons not herd to gra.sp, is still lacking. So far as Sir Edward Grey's explanation was expected to clear up these details it failed com- pletely and deliberately. , LITTLE WORRIES IN THE HOME 11 is These That Bring Wrinkles era Make Women Look Pre. Maturely Old. Almost every woman at the head of a - U.oUse meets daily with little worries in" her household affairs. They may be too small to notice an hour after- wards, but it is these saixie constant littlo worries that make so many wo- meu look prematurely old. Their effect may be notiosable in siek or nervous headaches fickle appetite, pain in the back or side, sallow complexion, and the' coming of wrinkles, which every woman dreada. To those thus afflieted 1)r. Wil. Hams' Pink Pills offer a speedy and. certain cure, a restoration of color to tae cheeks, brightness to the eye, a healthy appetite and a sense of freedom from weariness. 'At:tong the thoutands of Canadian wallet who have found new health and new strength through the use of Dr. Williams* Pink Pills is Mrs. W. C. De,err, London, Ont., who sari: "About two years ago I dound myself go badly run down that it tease almoet impossible to perform any household duties. I fell off in flesh, was weak and very pale, bad no appetite, feet conetantly eold, and to further make my life miserable I was offlieted with those other ailments from which eo many evoineu suffer. T tried many kinds of medieite, but got no bene. fit, and began to feel that I was slipping into chronie ievnlidiern. I was advised to try Dr. 'Williams* Pink Pills, aid although I felt somewhat hopeless de- eided to do so. To ray deliglit, after taking the Pills a few weekte I felt much better, and a, further use of them brought Inc back to my old time heelth. I have othiee reeommenned the Pins fo many ether,s, end thome who 'have need theta have alweye been benefited." bv an Inedieine deelere or by mail at, 50 cents n box or six hovel for Iti.1.50 from The 1)r, WiIiianiai Atedicine (toe Brookville, Ont. .444 "Ana d 0 you really !eve ine, eleoraeV she naked. "Love your' repeated "clear" Geoege, fervently. "Why, lebile r Wag bidding you good bye on the vetch lest night, my ane;e1, the dog bit a large 'hunk out of my leg, end I never ,no- tieed it till 1 got hotne.".--Xatierte City tietireSti. II Troubled With Head- Ful)neSS, Binding Noises, Specs Before the Eye, the Stomach i$ t Fault. "I had terrible pains in my head. My appetite faded away and when I did eat anything it disagreed and made me very sick for hours after •each meal. The actrve paha in my rieomach and the dizzy headaches I had to endure almozt set one wild. Sometimes attacks canne on so se- verely that I lind to go to bed. I would feel so worn, depressed and ut- terly miserablethat for hours I wouldn't speak to my family. My system was poisoned with wastes and nothing .helped me till I used Die Hamilton Pills. Without this grand system -cleaning remedy I would, be eick, but each day brought me bet- ter health and spirits. I was cured and made as steong, ruddy and healthy looking as one could wish, end will always use and recommend Dr, Hamilton's Pills. MRS. 13. C. OtrItRAN„ "Weseport, P.O." Thousands who etee in en ailing, low state of health need nothing else but Dr, Hamilton's. Pills. They cure blood disorders, pimplea, raehee, bad etelor, biliatesnees, livee„ stomach and kidney teoublea. Mild, certain axed. sate. 13.e. ware of reoetations and substitutes, 25c per box or five boxes for $1.00, at all 1 dealers or the Oatarrhozone Company, Ingeton., Ont. BARONESS DE MEYER. The Begonees is the wife of a Rus - Mae. nobleman„ and they are both visiting New 'York for a few weeks. t THE MOAN Of MANY A MAN. (Life) I don't mind the work, The regular job. Tele thing I can do, And know how to do, And get used to it. les not this that frets. And hinders and pulls, And puts out of Joint. It's extrae I mind, It's this and it's that I don't know about, And cannot plan for, ..e.ncl do not expect. It's speeches to make and hothing to say; It's calls to return, Send presents to give. And letters to write, Committees to meet A.nd bores I must hear. And quarrels adjust, And jealousies to calm. And meetings for this, A.nd meetings for that, And things I meet do That no one wants done That have to be done I3ecause they're the thing. It's little things here And little things there That busy men do "Because, as you khoW, it you want a thing done, 'You go to a man Who has all he can de' I don't mind my 'work, My regular job. If that were Just all, It's entree I mind, That take up my time, 4.nd eat up mg strength, And never say 'thanks." Arid heaven, I thiek, will Just he it niece Where ettch man Will do His job -and no more. I TEN ROYAL RESOLUTIONS. (Christian F. 'teener. D. D.) I will study the language oe gentleinen and refuse to use worde that bite and tones that Klee I. win practice patience at home lest MY testy temper break through unexneetedli and disgrace me. I will remember that my neighbors beve troubles enough to carry without loading Mine on there. I will excuse others' faults and failures as often and fully as X expeet other's to be lenient with mine. I will cure criticism with oteminendan tion, close up against gossip and build healthy loves bY service. I will be a friend under trying tests and wear everywhere a geed AVM fate unedited by aloofnees. I will gloat over gaine never, but amaze Only to enrich others arid Me gain a Wealthy heart. I will love boys and girl, so that old age will not find me ewe arid soured. will gladden my nature by tanning text loud o neeVre fair Occanion and by etitieeking entimietleally. will nlay frequently, think geed thinga. believe men and de a full day's 'work without fear or favor. A PEACE CODE. (International Arbitration ty.) Any eode must oppotse War,vhiett is fiething hut muraer permitted 'by tem- eeteery lo,w. A tiO Man ean give back life to rt. deed body, so no hew can give teIt. uoreort theiright to take away a life Of another. The time win cerrie, nay, le at lifted. When men Will leek noon the annals of war ae the blaeketted Daces of bi$tery, mid upon vcoarit rioail the art- inor centorwhent they are moot ashes:Tied. That whin ix true to -'lay elielhot be wrong te-morrow: and it an yeet In human :fustier. aftor being resettled KA eleht, ham etterwerde been iooked upon wrertm it btis lover boon craw right. Tine right in uttebanaeabte, ululates:No nee eettetorn, bet ell met bane het the resteral gift of d:seerniug it. THE NORTHWEST PROGRESS 11.1ADE 1N WWI; AND ear.1.71.00K. FOR 1012. (Chan. F. Mend, Commissioner, Bureau induetry, Winnipeg, Menitoba„) 'Nee Its eaeli year ia the peat has N'illeeed those that werie before, )011 has mite recorde in figures of growth and development along all lines of agriculture, industry and trade in Win. nig and Western Canada. City and e.ountry both have ebared equally iu the growth that has made euele very. subetantial progress. The farmers of Weetern Canada have never had to bring their elope through a year of more illetteorted weather experiences than during the past twelve months, bat in spite of these ill-fevored condi. tions the farms of Western Canada liave protium' this year by far the /argot crops in the country% history. Manitobe alone lute yielded. 61,058,780 bush- els of wheat, 73,780,683 buehels of oats, , and 9,0,000,000 bushels of barley, while 'the yield for the three orovincce, 11h:hiding .6askateliewan and Alberta, is computed to be not less than 177,000,- 000 basizele of wheat, 182,000,000 bush- els of oats, 34,000,000 bushels of bar- ley and 0,000,000 'bushels of flax. The purehaeing power in money when the 1011 crop is all marketed, gives the en- ormous cash value to the eountry of ap- proximately $260,000,000. The outstandingfeature of the pre - gree made in •Winnieg during ION was the big increase of two and a half mil- lion dollars in building over that of Sine - 106480 in 1010. Iri addition to the build- ing permits iseued to the value of $17,- 650,000 inside the city litnits in 1911,, may be added $3,000,000, as expended in new hoines and public baldinge in the immediate outlying suburbs. To keep pace with tide development the city of Winnipeg has expended $1,- 000,000 on street inaproveraeuts aloue during the past year. There has been a deeided grentith in Winnipeg's population during the last s year. The report] of the City Assess. ment Comraiesioaer show that as many ae 21,000 people have been added and that the assesement value of pro- perty has advanced from $157,608,220 in 1910, to $172,677,250 for 1911. In course of the building up of the pepuiation of the west there hits been a most rapid development in the build- ing trade, as mud, as $70,000,000 go- ing iato new buildings in the ten .ehief cities west of the Great Lakes during 1911. During 1011, 1596 miles of new rail- way was completed in. Western Canada, 203 new towns were started in the three prairie provinces; 41 being established on the C. P. R. system, 1130 on the C. N. R. western system, and 32 thriving ) towns on tlae Grand Trunk Pacific Rail- way. t DM NOT HAVE TO GALL THE DOCTOR Because she tried Dodd's Kidney Pills first. One Box of Them Cured Mrs. Mary A. Cook's Rheumatism From Which She Had 'Suffered *Jr Fourteara Years. Mannheim, Ont., Jan. 15,--(Special)— now quickly and easily Theurnatisin can be cured. when you use the right means is shown in the case of Mrs. Mary A. Cook, well known and highly respected bere. in an interview regardieg her cure, of which all the village, knows, ,Mrs. Cook says: "1 had Rheumatism so bad that sometimes I would sit up nearly afl nig. "I first thought I would try the doe - tors, but luckily 1 deeided to first try Dodd's Kidney Pills. !They cured me, and I didn't have to try the doctors. And just to think that after fourteen years of suffering one box of Dodd's Kidney Pills should curet I will recommend Dodd's Kidney Pills to anyone who suffers from Rheu- matism." Yes, it is easy to cure Rheumatism when you go the right way about it. Rheumatism is =mei by uric acid in the blood. If the Kidneys are working right they will stertin all the uric acid out of the bleed e,....0_and there can be no Rheuraatism. Dodd's Kidney Pills always make the Kidneys work right. LEAP YEAR, (New York Herald.) 'Tir Lesee Year, girls, and don't forget, The privilege of the suffragette. With bashful, hesitating beaux, Pluck up your courage and propose, *Untie old Precedent's red tape • And let no quality men escane, She who hesitates is lost, So and your man at any erten tt you ho.ve youth as well as beauty, The Leap Year Ore?' is, "Do your duty." Say, Horace, dear, will you be, mine? Of ail mankind ter you I pine.' If he a hetet*" year would wish you, And slYly try to dodge the issue, jest get a grip unon his coat And put the question tO a vote. ee he 'Votes "No," ane you vote "Yes," Threw Out to signal of distress. 'Hive. hip, hurrah, it is a tie - Blest be the tie that binds, You cry. ot.614. =0 Keep "Dick" At His Be. Hall give, you his sweeteet song only when beetle the intik of condition. Put him there, a ri d keep him there, by teedine iiim en Broeit's Bird Seed Heti onioe it mere, thrive- better en% look finer and sing mere eweetly. *fhb nevi is a etientifie mixtura--a perfectly balanced Reid for eerie - birds in this climate -end thee.** of eirock's Bird Treat in twiny Peckeite Is it splendid bird fetid. Let "nice ire title Bird Tonle at our eXpense, Mall us the ceepen below, filled in, end WeWill earid you, aleneutely free, two full-size cakes of Brack% Sird Treat. 46 VIOROLSON OttOCItt 9-I1 Pamela Street, Ton:meta Vor this toupee pe*, Send tne, trot, of elate* or elingettoti On MY rot, two fulasize (take* of Dinettes nen Veit, tate Oblate. tMt000000000 ...peewee a A AbantitsS 0000 00000000000000 solis460•0 es Eight Years of Bed Eczema on Hands Miss Mary &Delany 4leetreal Cured by Cutieura Soap and Ointment Miss nary .A. Bentley, 93 'University Ste Montreaa writes, in a recent letter: "Sonia lane yeara ago I niniced small pimples break- ing out on the back ot my hands. They became Very irritating, and gradually became Worse, so that Could not sleep night. x consolted n. physteiazi who treated me a long time, but it got worse, and I could not put my hands in wrner. I Was treated at the boepital, and it WaS jus i Mc same. I was tole that it Was a very bad ease oe %%emit. 'Vellajust icept on using everything that t could for nearly eight:yew until x WWI advised to try Cuticura, Ointment. X did so, and / found after a few applieations the burning senee.tionte were dieappearing, I could sleep, well, and did not lutve any itching use Cutinurit Gap. I duet to tbe Cuticura during the Wild. loegett after it while to treatment, en thought U I could use other xernedies for °vet severi years with no result. and after only having 4 Yew applications and lending ease Treat Cutioura Ointment, it deserved a fair trial with a severe and &tube bora case. I used the cutieure. Ointment and Soap ter fleetly six months, and I ant glad to eaa that t Wive hands as clear at anyone. It 14 my wisli that yell publish this letter to all the world, and if enyone doubts it, let them Write me." Cuticula, Soap and Oiramerit are gold by Ortiggiete and clealere everywhere. Fee a nberel free somple et erteh, with sale. beet:, deed to PotteraDeug et Chem. Cornet &0MuMbus A1'"--"" Ti. S. A. WITH THE WOMEN. News Notes and Miscellany Regard- ing Them. Miss Margaret Pugh, of Birmingham, England, was last month elected to the Oity amnion by a large majority, The Countees of Aberdeen was recently elected "first Lady President of the Roy- al InetItute of Publie Ilealth Congress." In the coarse of her address before the congress, Lady Aberdeen eald she re - weeded her appointment as a elattering ana enoeuraging recognition of the work of women in the cause of public health. The Repu'bIlean, of Springfield, :aloe eays: "We hazard the prediction that it will not be many Years before the women oe Missouri Will be given the ballot the same as the ,men. We hazard the Par- ther oredietion that It wilt not be a bad t4ing fOr Missouri when that eventeul epoebeenakireg day arreees." Tete population of the State of lellssise sippi Is about five times that oe the city of Los Angeles, but et is said that the woreen of L,oe Angeles cast more votes at the recent election than the voters of the State of Mississippi cast in the last PresIderitial campaign. Miss Maud Wood Park, of Boston, evlio recenti:V cOmpleted a trip around the world, says that while in China she found every argumeat against the anti.foov- binding movement there emlier to thoet used against race for wereen liere. Among other things, it was declared tbat Chinese men wanted their wemen ae different • from themeelvez as aselble; that if their shackles were removed they would stray from home and neglect their children; that "all the women" were not in favor of abolishing the practice. etc, • Two women were elected to the Board of Education in Columbus, Ohio, one ot them running 4.000 ahead of he rticket, and the other receiving 10,500 ,vetes. Mist: A. It. Blanchard and Miss Irene Heiner are said to be the only women bitek tellers in Boston. They have been, Put in charge of the woman's depart. tient of a popular banking insttteetior in that city, occupying an entire floor on which men are not allowed, DELHI AS INDIAN CAPITAL. The Council of India, in explaining to the Britise Government their reasons for wishing Delhi to be the new capIta.1, wrete; The political advantages of the transfer are mpoesible to overestimate. Deihl is still a name to conjure with. It is intimately associated in the minds of the Hindus with sacred legerals which go back even beyond the dawn or his- tory. It is in the plain of Delhi that the Pandava princes fonght out with the Kurnwa the epic struggle reeorded in the Reababarata, and celebrated on the banks of the banks of- the Janina the famous sacrefice which conseceated their title to empire The Purana Knit still marks the site of the city wh eh they founded and and called Indraprastha, barely three miles from the eouth gate of the modern city of Delhi To tho Mohammedans It would be a source or unbouptied gratifi- cation to see the ancient capital Of the rgoguls restored to its proud posit on as the seat of empire. Throughout India, as far south as the Mohammedan conquest extended, every wallee town has- int 'Del- hi gate.' and among the masses of, the people it is still revered as the seat of the former Empire. The change would letrike the imagination ot the people of India as nothing else could do, would send a. wave of enthusiasm throughout the country, and wouci be acceptel by all as the assertion of an unfaltering deter- mination to maintain British rule in In- dia. It woeld be hailed with joy by the ruling chiefs and the races Of northere India, and would be warmly weleonied bv the vast majority of Indians throtigh. out the contlnent."-New York Evening Post. • 11 SIMS COHEALS THE LUNG UGHS S PRICE, 25 CENTS A _ DO WE EAT TO OMUCH? A Plausible writer in the Washington Post insists that the large majority of people overeat -and overeat dangerously. We need more moderation anct less et everything elite, We eat, more or less, a, ton of food a year. which is about tWice tut mice as eve really need. During the cold inceeths, esneelally, do we overeat, as the biting air seems to put an 'edge on the appetite. But all very well to eatisty the !flinger, but we should do so judiciouslY. Let us start with the morning meal and toesider the foods that ehouid be eaten during the day. It is a mistake to start the day' during the oold monthswithout a, bearty break - taut, which will warm the blood and put the body into eonditlort to restet tIiC cold weather. The woman who ariseat tae last minute, isnatehes a cue of coffee ettal 4 teen and begins her day's work on at ernuty stonmen must expect head. acbes. poor circulation and the tninitnurn Vitality as a reautt. Let the breakfast begin with a bit oe fettle -an Orange, nratiefruit or baked apple--atid conttnee on tO cereal. The cereal feeds, one end an, are nourishing, and when eaten with sugar and Milk do double ent'Y leY heat- ing the blood. An egg, Mimi every One knows contains the nienimuni of flour., Ishment. should be taken In or terra or anOther, arid bread -plain, wholesome bread-shOuld bo on the morning Mane. Bread, in vette ef all that has been ;SW against it. Is tho staff of ]lee, arel one thick enough te leen en with safety,, It is the cheapest et ail foods and con- tains the meet nourishment. In one cent's Worth Of bread are eight °urines of nourishment. Whereon a cent's iverth of meat contains four-fifths of an (Mee. Therefore, bread In f301110 form, should large nen in Our meals, This Is the time for Melting new reso- lutions. What better could any man or woman do num to Make a trial or die., tare refortnt He HAD A CHANCE. (tette "So you think tee author of Ole olaY will nye do vont" Feint:eked the tourist. "Toe" replied the, manager oe the Frozen Doc Opera, }rouse. Veal got a fiveemile start, and 1 don't thine: the boym kin ketch MM." GOT A SCARE, atotitreel Star.) Youtletra leititoreeCau r marry your dereet tete leather -Can you 'reopen, a fat h tit teeteraIleeeene" Have you loet your JO? minim mot WITH MN», The Channel of the Arreanses aecomes Narrower. Ibo Arkansee River is filling .up, Not with water, hut with Wend. A teiii years ago sand. hunters used. to drive their teams and wagons under the riter bridge at the foot of biiz etreet without auy trouble. Now they can lewdly drive tteder. Not only is the river filling, but it le narrowing. The old thee Arititnsite River bridge was belt a utile or more Jong, Every thne It inte Wart built some span . has been cut out and the bridge Itort. ened. Now the county eceantlesioners aro eerionely considering the platter tee building a new concrete bridge over the river when the. old bridge must again be rehallt, The proposed concrete bridge Neill be Still eliorter, the bault being filicd in on either side, thus considerably narrowing the channel. In a report on the Arkansas River, prepared after a earettri inveetigation by eforatie N. Parker, of the United States Geologieal Survey, he says: "The siteltaneas River Valley was for- merly much deeper than it noi# it. The filling in process has been in operation suffieieutly long to raise the ehannel of the stream to the level of its Rood plain and doubtless has raised very appreci- ably the general level of the fiood plain. There is ample evidence that at ono time the river valley was from 50 to.100 feet deeper than it now is, "Within the leet fifteen, years very notieeable iiiiing in has oeeurred. Eight to twelve years ago, when the several bridges that cros the river at different places were constructed, ie was poselble for a, man sitting ereet on atersebaek to ride under most of them, but the sande have since aeCinnulated to sueh a depth that few of the bridges are more than five to eix feet above the top of the sands. The accumulation of the sand is not due to the presence, of the bridge, for the eand under the bridge is at the earoe lovel as that above or beiew it. "Throughout the greater part of the couree of the river in western Kansai the recent filling in Process !laA been going ou, partictilaely ten the south nide cf the river. From the Kantas.Colorado state line to ..krkanaas City marks of many old ehanaele are eosin itt the valley, and it is apparent that the stream has shifted frem bluff to bluff along its channel many times and that in claims (10 it has gradual' built up its flood paath." —lilutchinson News. BEST CURE FOR SKIN SOPiES IS ZAZBUE., An illustration of the way in which gainaBule curee even the, Trott serious and, chronic cases of ulcers, ereuptions and sexes is provided by Mr. Barker, of Glencairn, Ont. ".1Xe says: "I Would not have believed that any remedy could cure so quiekly, and at the. same time so effectively, as Zane Buk cured me. • 'My lace became eevered with a Mei of rash, which itched and irritated. Thit rash then turned to sores, whieh dis- charged freely and began to spread. first tried one thing and then auother, but nothing seemed to do me any good, and the eruption got worse and wares, nntil my face wa•s just covered with run- ning sores,. "Apart from the pain (which waa very bad), my face Wt14 such a terrible eight that 1 was not fit to go out. This was iny state when some one advised me to try Zam-Buk. 1 got a supply, and, ; marvellous as it aila.y sound, within lit- I tie under a month, every sore on my face - was healed. I Was so amazed. that .11 have told the facts to several persona, and I have no objecting to you stating my experience .for the benefit of other sufferers." Zanolluk is purely herbal in .eatriposa time and is the ideal halm for babies and young children, for who tender ekin eoaree ointanente are so dangerous. Um- Buk is a sure cure for cold sores, chap- ped hands, frost bite, 'blood -poison, vari- cose sores, piles, scalp sores, ringworm, inflamed patched, babies' ernptione and chapped plueee, ente, burns, btuises and ekin injuries generalite Ail druggists and stores sell at 50e box, or post free from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, upon re- ceipt of price. Refuse harmful substi- tutes. -Z.', .4 a THE CROW IN LEGEND. It is difficult to state the average life of a crow, but it is certain that its tale of years is much in excess of its merits, for it ceet scarcely be said to attain to a good old. age, and even in its senility it is etill ripe for tniechief, leer the crow io ail ages has reached a bad emi- nence. It is frequently mentioned in legendary lore. According to Ronean mythology its color Was ortgintally white, and it MOS its blaelf pluniage to Jesuit- lapius, eor his mother, the nymph, Cor- onis, had a quarrel with his tattier, Apollo. who so far lest his temper---Pre- liable he bad the. inurtrt of the angument --as to kill the unfortunate nymph upon the spot. Apollo lied the grace to mourn Itis rash net, and be determined that the crow should mourn, too, and so he changed its white feathers into black, and the crow was made to "put on sul- len lilac kincontinent." Tile crow has always been fabled to have the gift of speech, and it was cone secreted to Apollo on clement of its - giet oropelicy. The Augurs eratehed its flight as a means of divination. le it flew to the right it wee' a most favor,. able omen, while it it turned to the left it was a olain indication that disaster awaited the entereriee. Pliny also corn - Merits upoia the long nee of the crow, arid states that if it made its aPPearancne upon the left side it wee 5 hateay ang- ury. He sans that its cries were an in. dientien of ooroing rain, and that ite eyes were valuable as charms. The enttin crow teems to bane been a more woethy • atie better behaved bird than brother, who is an incorrigible thief and ntlschie•f-ratiker and an enneitictated nins. atice. Adecirding to Dr. Bucklatiel, fine- erni hetiore were Vain to the etc)* eral the reereti by tile Romans and the Egypt - tans, fid be gave tho following tranaia- teens proof of ele statement: 'Anil the Braa s perterraeti funeral rites to the tee en. eitite player letteing the neecese oft, berrie alert Oil the ellehldeee of two Ethionians. Around the ItIftren et layrie semittibree of the Oninai MO Deb, Made of eniluable stone. Were vietted."-, Lobeon Globe. Intht FEE I A nict I ,1141raltitytgledgit?Al:1,1: ginvig„u 0 e1Goid 01es ourottwoh1nl„nropn .AVM WIiiand met, MI a ie ltbl 0 fereclet. Thieis (vet alo NA:* d W west the watotKO glee til,Ithilemi etdiocietteV'moini :titre I 'itittor titita 14 X, teieekit, Hann, Otitis Of also MIA ril 00104 P OtOrA Opilt .4 r 10 id _ 1 Debts e yirs t110. 'Mee all v Jev fec filttl leke t4ft tAk**,,1601* (tliAt- v 1: 44 Yet; OVIS011 ift riTY4rryntititalla preartowneret thie ejeonia . . ‘1 ceatet• Ottleagerite ere eughtnflst , p lures., CiaOtgkr GOLD !* fiii tn. I.. . mept, ms, Toronto, oat, • ettele - .44 torsoef COSTS HO MORE THAN THE ORDINARY IIINDS 41:14DC,114 C.4)4AD4 - tiet • DANCING SCHOOL FROCK Fort LITTLE DAUGHTER, tt ti' her five -year -3 ee. 14 <1::.:411tar it have a ,dainty clanatug school froze. let nee purelmee foot deep erubtoidery .flourteing. Zhitig 16 prettier Ler wee women and when the summer Ceffil'etS cinch a troele will. eell'e for Sunday beee, Doable flounces mreirti a pretty in odel. The wide flounce thasi fells about tiny shoulders is di! it depth, to reach the baby waists Tslate flounce ie edged with inch wide lace and the ladder insertion at thozt waier line has a ribbon run throog li it. Thie ens in a bow and loop at the bat*. Swine reeder lf you have a 80W that is good shtrreoliedlgi eir, keep her as long as she proauees Ilove the hog pen a good istance from the house. The odors iroin them are not always agreeable. To many pigs ehould not be allowed to aleep together i ntim same bei. They will crowd in so close together that et wiul cause them to get too hot and catch ts o et y d,oandt71es tniosaio, nresult tuey will not win- vii.aolumtea.uli agood inate ae A god Waoy to tangitter lulgs is to Shot them in the brain with a revolver al' email rizte. '1.11Cy eau then be etuek and bled with no fright or iujary. The most deeirable littere aer gener- ally obtained lee breeding large, old sows to aged boars. eaier feed potatoes to liege unless they aro cooked.. iN.lost, of the nutriment in then tee:sit:Ls of 5:tirell, and this ex- iste i nthe form of granule's in cells, con- taining water. Fed raw, these mils ere only pstrtly broken up, and a large per- ettilleige of the nutritive is therefore lost by not being, digested. But if potatoes are well cooked the eells aro breken up and the starch renewed as digest:11e postible. It is policy, however, stareh not being a well-balanced food, to bail the potatoes with corn or the like aml then add some tkinimed or eeparator tudv to got all the value you cam out of tbe feed given to pigs. See that none is wasted, and the proper combine - thin mode for the greatest gain. Fee that tile bog e have a god. waru place in which to sleep. Many pigs des- tined to make large porkers, fail to do so beenuse of the coli they awe subject. ed to in winter. Rots of various kiede with apple; and nieril • make an economical food for swine. Pumpkins mav be Added, or pumpkins, apples aud nieal may be used. Provide no roots ere at hand, boiled pumpkins and meal intike an excellent coinbination, Tench epprecinted by swine. When a Iteg hqs ittatgestion, change its diet to lighter feed. at onee,,and i1)05- Sible put it tat grace. A slop of mid- dling:a milk, bran, a very little corn DI001 and flaxseed mall is generally gaoa to give, to it;Tifell Watet is added at daell meni. Yleein the Animal le iteitg well Again the lime Wailer by detereee teay be dieearded, 4.no1her important thiag is to see thet the slop barite and feed trongh ere kept terepVienely glean. • it.vold raieing InilItirtere o Inge =Nee you aro able te provide good eiteiter and tome kina of enetealent feel that is mut- eine. Improve tate bog pastaxee nor hy sowing grass teed Weer tit() 10015krosted places. 'Whett a pig trough is eenstrtleted, right boards shoultd be insortcd ocea01. (malty to keep the from crowding oldcheaing one another from feed. The noon of old hogs, urdess trimmed, wiI sometiznes become Efe long that filth Is llithle to etand itraight on. its feat. This is something that always wattle to be looked oat for. Moveble pens are excellent to have on eity farm where ho ge are rairred, these are need and ittovfei from place to niece the loge ere 'leapt elentel and healthy, and the tuaeure erioro evenly tRettileaterl. IgArtallnatele' IfOG WAtIleOWS. OTQ eet) opieetlans It the fiittty mud 1,10„si °Litt 040- welow %tee aKtig Ixtt.,'.:r for it I °i1 or,44 einetentee MOO le t voti,rigme Mean wator. 1 finettlieet iny otmeat heg v,adiew is ore of the of orollAty. . , 111141— most eatiefaetor,y irn.provements 1 have ever put art tee harm. It it Situated near a storage taxa; that is fed by a wind pump, and is direetly over an tight - inch drain. The water is allowed to flow through the hog wallow, and out into the tile, eo it is always pure for the bop te drink. r knee never had any skness amongthern itt tahe litet fourteen. yea, and I have used this method. I find that the lidgs get •great eatisfaa-• tion from lying down and wallowing, except, in the winter, at whioli eeasen they are content to drink from the eldest, 'My cement warlow is IQ feet Ion, five feet wide and. 12 inehee deep, insitae measurements, and lute a eetadeut floor several feet Wide beyond each sine, so that the wallow will not get tio meddy. Thongh the hogs trittilap.:0, tt) <,41;z7 some mud to it. I find that jt COIL bci cleaned out vary eaAy every kw weeke, A wallow of this kind is very anal) in extermitiating the lies on hope this eau be clone by stoppiug the outlet and the Inlet and using an standard Weal - ?octant or crude ail. The etude oil stays ' art top of the water rued has the same effect as if (mod 1 int dippite,h tinutr Witit - the 'dee of the clisitirecUtit tette hogs get benefits both (externally and fretermilly Pome awthoritiee tibittet to giving noge" all the water they' wantatirint the ettea leer months, but I have never faund any ill-effects from allowing liege of ail age. el It -be water they can driek at all titea DAVID R FORGAN'S faciae eubjecte for each erazahuetion. The women voters of California 'At - number the rata by 87,000. What chaMe a man hope ta have in California? 444, Bear ill Mind teilat thlizt le leapar, made one day longer than the /Aber three to ri ake the open season for men longer. The 011111e00 CO4t is aid, to UONt3 sao,copoo secreted in l'ekin, most of it in gold W1le:1. That IJ worth 4rus, gliag for. In 1011 423 p1)1404,3 1Var4kl1Ld La tile streets of New York City hy valak14%, 1 That is equal to the loss in many large battke. The retaliatory axeentiona by Russia at Teherau has roused much re:ratan feeling, the effects of which may eon - thane long after the present diffieulty is eettled. Czluto OXUS to frareeee itt Witierlotate the ntunber of aacs handled in 1911 be- ing 12,540, an iner01.513 of 8,062 over the number in 1910. But thea the poptrla- tion of Winnipeg b inereoesing at a BO greater proportion, seat With the New Year the Oublle in cup and the C0111111012 towel come un- der the ban of the law in Connecticut, In hotels, tehools, municipal bullairigs tied other publie institutioue the cheap is now iu force. tea* The Louie the' XIV. chair shipped, to St. Ilelena for the house to be occupied by Napoleon while a prisoner, was sold • at Fordsburg, South Africa., recently for $7.50. Its value is now appraised by ex- perts at $16,000. 44,4 - The 11110:11.041 Council of Ministers has decided to shut out the Salvation Array fele= earrying out it work In the em- pire, Has the Czar eoncluded that aer.k. eral1)0013. Is a dangerous anarohistt 4 - The famous Clydesdale stallion, Baron of lituehlyvio, over which there han Wear Litigation reeohing the House of Lords, was sold at Ayr, Scotland, reeentay for X0,500. ThLe is mid, to be a record price. The ratio of prisoners to populatios in the United States on Jemmy 1„, 1910, was, aeeording to the census, 126 to every 100,040. At the beginning of 1910, one person out of every 800 itt te couztry was in jaal. • — — Tr Mr The criminal records of Oanada, for the past year are not calculated to stir Canadian pride. It is bad enough that the number of arrests should have been greater; it ie even worse that the num- : bar of arrests for the inoro serious erimes should Show it ditipreportionate inereftee among the native-born popular tion. A Britieh tramp eteamenip arrived et :Neve York the other day with 29,0og leashele of potatoeti from Dundee, &at- . land, teeeperieneug a very rough voyage • A 11 arriving in a badly battered were ditioa. It is hardly creditable to 024 tillers of American soil that. Scottitsh potatoes should find a market ou this . side a the water, E. K. Coulter, Clerk of the Candren's Court, New York, has given up a eat- ary of $4,000 a, year to praetias law and incidentally to promote the "Big Brother" movement for tho uplifting of - children. Mr. Coulter Lea etraile itt of- fio become itttereeted itt &tont 100,000 childreu, and will promote a 1411 for the medieal,examination of 111er:tally de- fective jnyeniles. Ile eontende that children charged with felonies are prima Advice to Young Men Soaking Wealth. (Chicago Tribune.) Start in businese the eternings of Which will go to you, not the etoeknoldere. Cheese a bushiest in wbech it is p05 - aloe to start in a swan way oa your own account, vvitli unlimited laossehiliteen et grewth. Be persistent, bard working and 'Atlas* Seek, elo not avoid, diftioultiee. Itis first Job is A young titan' first great opportunity. Tilt: steel trust and other large corner, atione, by their oenstant eeitreh Lor ewe- oetent managetete. are daily proving there is plenty of room at the tope A heed woreing, intelligent, lioneet OM• tolOyer can $111,VAYS "'lee tO the top bee caose most of his emu:eaten eboty a mar- • veloue amount ne mediocrity. lie lutist be interested, elose know his own worn and eyerybudeee Tee best eapita( ie that wiltdh you envy eateeni yeursele. ntaree teeth a definite oneeet evel revolve) on Jronit 8n eameet in Amour eleteenttar- i-etert rent telai tralrine te, Write a neon natal, flgere W411, opeu foils Dolt a go40 eionyle .etrtet. inidgelt*, ts the geeeteat 'D'OWen ia thee bneineee 11'14°42 tri;1 bet riea. a man le, WS 01A-3 aneere re more; 1.1:1 coriortmelanOs Aler 5iC- CII neftee M trule were to tounti he tele Mete ee 4 . 444444444444444+44-44.4444444 STRON4 WORDS Oir PRAM (Itev.) W. XL ()lark*, Sta- ling, Ont., writes: "X wish to give this unsolicited tostimoninl to the great talus ef 13ahY's OVA Till3* Dor little girl, horn, hat Vebruary, was At first vsey 00:1 - seri 'ate& Men other Itneleiliee fa el we tried tho Tahlcia ana iti week $4o was eompletely oured. the use oi the Tatlets she has been 1:,ept w til c.nd luting over s;suve." It 13 t?trong, pra4a like this that has raede Ilaltee Own Tablets so populer. Taoteeande of efiker Dlothare have ealde "011att we gave the Tablet') a trial eYe had Ite0141Ig hat pretise for them." tfo, f.ROOts ere vva by Aueilielue ittit‘1as rawil etute bem from The De. ttei.:t..etee' YA1- ether Co., „, 44+4.444-4*4-0 •;1.4 t • 4 4 *4 If the scheme of the Chievo peeaere had gone throngh, a $0213,000,0)0 treat wored have been the result, $012,500,000 of which was to have beete "water.7 Tbe lea.oltera were to receive for eheir pat> tarty a proportionate share of the fon lowing: $75,000,000 bonds, $.101,e50eta pteferred stook, W25,000000 common stock. Toho syndieate was tc• be giveu security far obtaining a loetn of $000 00e,000, the following: %0,000,000, Lond.s; $36,815,000, preferred stock; VA, 010 000, common etoet. Of the bonds, $10,000,000 woe to remain unieentod. ate0e• 000,000 of bond() was to be hept for bine peyable. The managers ot tho sytedicata were to receive as guarantors $10.000e isi0 par vane cornmeal stook. Tho Petlek woeld have Oot the pi-ore:Nal uleuverav It le Paid that 4 aradizato of AineeS. can and United States eapitalists has bought 0,000,000 Acres of land in Brazils ipon which to. Mine cattle ioad lane to eupply European markets with chltled beef and pork produete. The eyndineete vill put expetienced eattle men in &ergo Ind expects to care for re0,000 head of eattle aud a large number of hogs, and wrimee ether food animal& The hea4. etertere of tho eyndleate ilea to be at he port of &tutor; in Solitheru 50 tediee north of 13etenoe Ayrtea, Wb.kai 8 already a port for large shipments of ,eef from Arger WWI tilt) only country f South At rlca wtde.h !IOW 6014111.14t4t4 111.110 te the eeneeil'e et' meat, 11.4 cheme is art atunitiorte led there iteatel tu bit uo reiteeti Ite et le 6110412041. ..4r03t404 4%'4.0.)41-4 200,000 tette of eialliedht4arerualln, A1141 the herder ie eneelree. Roetie Ateroe• eon Het vettle barn Kea laaa eary:ediel front tiee illatopitto it U4, (Af fo.,1 or ti.'1.ri'e:1 tr,v.at prevail very erieveseifol,