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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1912-02-08, Page 3Skin. Alt Covered With. Eruption ‘.1 N. Henri Taedif. Tried Many Remedies 3 or 4 Years. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. A Quebec man, N. Henri Tardif, of St. Casimir, writes in a letter dated Mar. 31,1011; "I had a versebad skin, all covered with eruption, eight years ago. I have had all of both my shoulders covered with it, and the aigh part of my arms, and my face, but it was the worst on my shoulciers. I tried many different remedies to cure it, but nothing was any good. At last 1 went to an apothecary. Ho asked me if I had ever used Cutteura Soap and Ointmeut. I told hen no, and I bought a box of Cuticure Ointment and It cake of Cutieura Soap, I wed three boxe,s of Catieura Ointment, but I am glad of the settee for Cuticura Soap and Ointment completely eured me of my skin eruption. 1 spread the Cuticura Ointment on all my sore parts, and I think that in washing my face with the Cuticure Soap, it hindered my eruption from itching and burning. I tried many remedies during three or four years but Cuticura soap and Ointment cured ma" (Signed) N. Henri Tardif. Cuticura Soap and Ointment aro sold througnout the world, but to those who have suffered much, lost hope and are with- out faith in any treatment, a liberal sample of each weth a ee p. booklet on the skin and scalp will be mailed free, on application. Address Potter Dreg & chem. Corp., 60 Columbus Ave., Toyeon, U. S. A. DUST AR I STOCRACY, Tablet Yeast as Distinguished From Wild Variety. The kingdom of dust is made up of little folk, and :some of them are eager to help the housewife, in her manifold duties. Indeed she could not get along without them, as they make her bread Spongy and light, furnish her with god, sour vinegar, and manufacture all the alcohol that is made in the world. Those little folk, and they are really very small as 2,800 can find plenty of room on a thread one inch long, are the ehemiete. of the kingdom of dust, and they are the meet efficient cheiniets in the world. They do not charge en- ormous fees for commutation, and are always at hand ready for work, In fact we can buy a whole uuiversity of them for five cents at the nearest gro- cery, They come in very small cakes wrapped. in tinfoil, and every cake con- tains milliins of theee erudite chemists, known to us as yeaet. Thee° cotnpressed tablets are what might be termed the aristocrats of the yeast family, to distinguish them from the wandererand trample known as wild yeast, which are scattered every- where in the atmoephere, and have no regularity of lineage or habits of life. Compressed yeast isliterally the cul- tured variety of the yeast tribe, and is made up of etrong, healthy plants that are known to do the very best work, and to produce no unpleasant reeults in the way of making sour bread, or eau. s- ing causing other iniechief, as their wild brethren of the atmosphere are so prone to do. --J. Gordan Ogden in Popular Mechanics. WRIST WATCH FREE KING'S NEW CROWN. _Six Thousand 1)iamond4—Tastefu and Magnificent. Soule idea of the magnifieenee of the new imperial state erown, whitili WAS - used at the cceemonial at the Delhi' Thither may be gathered from the faet that there are 6,170 diamonds employed in it. Stich a mites of beautiful gems Ilan perhaps never before been combined in any single jewel. The crown ie forMcd of a, 'minim supporting eight imperial areltee, feur croseee-teitees with four fleurehelye be- tween, the whole being eurmounted by an orb and. crw,se.patee, '11.4? bandeau with our of S'a.pphires and alien) ond s, Detween them sixteen large eluetere, four of emerald:, and diamonds, alternate with fonr of supphires and litanonds, while betwei n eeeli are eight large beil- liant elueters, the whole of these being divided by trifoliated learage ornaments. They centre clueters contains an rndian emerald, weigh :g 34 carats of extraor- tlinary fineness and beanty, while the . three remaining emeralds are uausual and remarkable stones. The four eapphire centrewith the eight 1)1.111i:trite cone, pleting the eeutre scheme of the bandeau are equally wort hy of their positions in the circlet of this imperial Symbol. The eight arehes are formed by 48 large brilliants, each divided by diamond wreathing leaven and enclosed by two outer diamond bands, At the baee of these arches nee four crosees-patees in diamonds, each with a large Indian lathy in the middle, while between are four diamond fluere-de-lys, all having an In- dian emerald of marvellous finenese and color for their centres. The crown is surmounted as it cul- rrinating point by the orb or monde usual in an English crown. This is formed by a globe of brilliants with •a crosse-patee above, having in the centre another magnificent Indian emerald of rere brilliancy and color, making a worthy finial to this superb emblem of en imperial ruler,—Londom eorr. Mont- real Gazette. 4 -es NEW BRUNSWICK HEARD FROM AGAIN Another splendid/ cure by Dodd's 'Kidney Pills. Mr. Bon Gauvang Had Backache So Bad He Had to Quit Work—Dodd's Kidney Pills Fixed Him Up, Puellering Settlement, Kent 00., N,. B., Jan. 29.—(Special )-- Every earn- er of New Brunswiek tells of ()urea made by Dodd's Kidney Piths, and this settlement can contribute its share. Mee Ben, Gauvang its one man who without 'hesitation :states that he owes his good 4tealth to the great Canadian -Kidney remedy. "Yes, Dodd'se Kidney Pills certainly did me good," Mr. Gauvang says in an interview. "Before I etierted taking them my back itched so that I had to give up work and I also had tobe careful how I walked and moved about. I took nine boxes, all told, and they fixed me up. They are the beet medi- cine for all diseases of the kidneys." Dodd's Kidney Pills are no cure-all. They only cure the kidneys. But they always cure the kidneys and with cured kidneys you ean't have backaohe, rheu- matism, Bright's disease, diabetes or dropsy. eete RUG SUPERSTITIONS. here is a splendid chance to I. AD Es wino, lovelyainaii size la ig hie Poiishod Gunmetal Watch with Gold Bow and Crown, stem wind and set, and a beautiful leather Bracelet This is a very stylish and safe way to wear the waxen We give both these splen- did premiums FR EE for selling only $4.50 worth of beautifully Lithographed and Em- bossed Picture Post Cards at 6 for 100. These cards are the latest designs in Views,. Fiore!,Birthday, Comics; also Vatentine, St. Patrick and Easter in season. Write to -day and we will send you a package of cards which you can sell in every house and soon be the proud owner of this Elegant Watch and 13 recesiet. Our agents are delighted with these prenuntn% COBALT GOLD PEN CO., Dept. 203, roronte. °et, .41.•••411/011•1‘, Sif UP STRAIGHT (By a Phyeician.) There is a therapeutic value in sitting up straight that few people fully ap- preciate. A loeping, sagging attitude induces a "sagging') condition of tne nervous system and when the nervous system "lets down" we are eick, whether there is anything tangible the matter or not. When one site etooped shouldered with the diaphragm relaxed and with all the contents of the abdominal cavity sagging against the fret; wall of the abdomen he sits in a position that fairly invites disease. But with shoulders thrown back, with lungs working to capacity, with diaphragm held firm and stomech drawn in, he is in a measure fortfied against dieease by his very attitude. And if he is in a plate where the air that he breathes is pure, be is doubly fortified. Seville queer that all the Kentucky beeeball clubs should be affiliated with the minors, when etioet Kentuckians are Maiors. n the Orient Maidens Weave Their Thoughts. (Suburban. Lite.) The little cottage Oriental rugs often made by girls who are ssiortly to be mar- ried, in lurkey, PCX‘31ill in the Armen. - 1841/ plateau and in Afghanistan, carry with them all the poetry and mystioism of the Oriental girl's mind, aSslie is just budding into womanhood. • She weaves into tee rugs almost' her very thoughts—se much is rug-weaving a part of the Oriental life, and tee little is it a purely commeecial pursuit. Time is not counted of value in the East when rugs are made. Coneegaently, Am- ericans have found it impossible to com- pete with the Orientalin the manlifae- ture of these practically everlasting pro- ducts. In some parts of the Oriental -rug countries, it is considered wrong to have the rugs seen in the making by Christians. If such an accident oeeurs, and cne from the western world viewe one of the rugs, the workman offsets the suspected injury by weaving a small white espot in the rug, to keep away the "evil eye.' Sometimes, whet the rug is not made foreale, but as the dowry of some girl at the time of her marriage, and when something inauspicious had happened, a little break is left in the border of the rug, by which it is hoped that the devil may escape from the household. Were the border continuous, the Orien- tals believe that the devil would run around and around the rug, ani never leave the house. ,* aesee BLACK LIST OF WOMEN. "Women now provide a dispropor- tionate large part of the habitual drunk- ards," says the head eonetable of Liver- pool, England. Thus, during 1010, in the class of three or more convictions within twelve months there were 133 men and 184 women, and in the class of six to sixty convictions (all told) there were 733 men and 774 women. ror two tars the "black list" in. Liverpool has consisted solely of women.—From Tem- perarige. I THE STANDARD AND FAVORITE BRAND YR" " • I z N TAI NO ALUM 'IS THE WHITEST,LINT-EST, NEGRESS TURNS WHITE. *4,0 Said to be Due to tite Work of a Pasasitic Insect. Frances Jones, a neseress, who ten years ago was as black as a coat„ now boasts of a complexion almoet as white and. as smooth as that of a baby. The negroes who know her, to whom she is an object of mixed admiration, wonder and awe, declare elle is ehangin' ter white folks. The metamorphosie is now almost complete. Only a narrow streak of the original black under eaoh eye now remains. Her hands are entirely white. An aged negro man who has known the woman all her life states that she told him on several occasions that she has been pray- ing to the Lord to ehunete her to a white person for the lest fifteen years, and many of the negroee believe that her strange transformation is a direct 'an- swer to her prayer. Those who have known the woman all her life state that she began to turn white about ten years ago. First a *white spot appeared on one sido of her face. This spot grew larger as time paesed until it filially covered one eide of the face. Then a similar white spot appeared on the other side, the process of spread- ing continuing as in the first instance until that side also became entirely white with the exception of n narrow black streak under each eye. The woman is 45 years a age, weigh° about 185 pounds and a,pnears to be per- fectly healthy. Medial authorities state that this con- dition is the result of a disease known as vitiligo. It is produced by a pasaisitie insect which burrows in the euticle and consumes the coloring matter. The dis- ease is not fatal.—Little Rock (Ark.) corr. New York World. FAIR PLAY, Wife—/ see you're puttleg en your new teat It makes my old hat look awfully ehabby liesbancl--Is that so? 'Well, that's soon mended. I'll mit on MY old coat. FREE TO YOU The boat pterniunis ae4 blotto releee ever offered. Gold end in Silver Watehos, Gam set Rings mid Brooches, latightevprodlue. log Moving Picture Mssehinew, finely deeorated Sets, Silvenvere, Accordions Lovely Dressed Eons Anti marl other beautiful Oreirlititas given rarc for Ranh* our high Mess Gold Embossed Pies het Pest Cords 6 fot We. oar csalla ere the very West dolga% in rioral, Birthday, Holitleke Visrsvie Cessitie*, eke., in tialetict more send of latch tripesior etiality Met yea will hoe fl trouble sou• ins thstri. JUST SHOW THEM AND TARE IN THE IIIONEY• omt win any ot these splendid promiume by rattling $ae° *oral and upwards, eked if you will *rite tollayyati eau Mao wirt one of the Extra Preolisseet we 0* giving to thole who are prompt. Head tut your OMBe and address, plainly *kitten, stud svor will forward you a teteattee ot estrde And Otif itie Ovulate flit. We tO groat mattaropeet order* frosts out custorriets. Why? BECAUSE Otnt 711011011115 ARE PM BEST. conaLv wow PLN CO. 11160to aneitteeeiste, Ord. Birds of the air get ex- ercise to keep them healthy.. Cage birds get little exercise, and should be given BrocR's Bird Treat —a tonic in cake form which aids digestion, sweetens the song and brightens the pluraage. It is given free in package of -Brock's Bird Seed or two cakes will be sent free if you fill in the coupon below and mail it to us. We know it will improve your bird in every way, NICHOLSON al, BROCK 9.11 Francis Street, Toronto. For this coupon, please send me, free of charge or obligation on my part, two full-size cakes of Brock's Bird Treat, and oblige. 47 NAME ADDRESS • 0.1 ••••••••44,....A..."•••••••14 01•40/OPPY DECEIVED SNAKSS. Anaemic Mothers' FIELD 'CROPS. Here is Relief! Ottawa report; Tito census and Ste- You Can Enrich. Your Worwout ctitsotttueareoirzfair Isom° q1t0wtt and Quickly Renew Your Health bulletin, giving the final estimates of the - • • • area, yield and value et the principal 'With Dr. ilfunilten'S mid =BS of the DeMilliOri for 1911. Tile luS field crops of. Canada are ehown to Wee occupied last year a total area Of 32,803,- 000, and their value, calculated at the average local market prices, ameunts to eeeeee1e,000, The area under wheat heel year was 10,374.000 acres, of which 1,172- 000 acres were fall wheat in Ontario and Alberta and the produetion was 215,851,000 bushels of the value of ei?,1,401,000. Oats occupied 9,220,000 acres, ane Yielaed 348.- 149,090 bushels of the value of $126,812,000; barley. 1,404,000 acres yie/ded datum) buel.ele of the value of Of 519,467,000. Tllo combined area under rye, peas, buck- wlicat„ 'nixed grains and flax was 2,43ie. 000 acres, the yield 44,9F6m bushels and the value $41,560,000. Hoed and oultivated men, comprising beaus, corns for hook- ing. potatoes, turnips and other roots ex- eept gogar beets, occupied 1,062,000 P.M% and Yielded 17004,000 bushels -of the value of $78.290.000. Sugar beet in Ontario and .Alberta ad an acreage of 20.878. and a Yield of 177,000 tons of the value of Sle. 165,000. Feder crops, including fodder corr., hay. elover and alfalfa show an acreage o•f 8,290,000, a production of 15.- 49900 tons and a value of 5161,214,000. Al- falta. a record of which was taken to the first time, shows an area of 101,781 acres, wit ha yiela of 227,900 tons. This valuable foaer crop is being prineipallY grown in Ontario. Quebec and Alberta, the average yield per acre of the whole of Canada being 2 1-4 toes. For the year 1911 the areas from which the yields are calculated were strictly comparable with the estimates of the three, previous years which were based UPon the reports of selettea correspond- ents. It May be mentioned, however, that the area, and production or wheat in 1911 exceed by over 1,000.000 acres and 65,820.000 bushels the estimates of 1910. A. more satisfactory criterion of the differ- ence between the two seasons of 1911 and 1910 th afforded by the average rates of yield' per aerewhich for fan whaht was 22.19 bushels in 1911, against 23.49 to 1910, spring wheat 20.03 against 15.63, °ate 37.76 agninst 22.09, barley 28.94 against 24.62, and flax 11.41 agninst 7.97. In the three Northwest Provinces of Mar Reba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the wheat production was 194,083,000 bush- els in: the estimate of 1910 of oats 212.- 819,000. cameral with 126,753.000 and of barley 24,043,000 oompared with 21,377,000. The wheat production of 1911 iyi Manitoba was 00,275.000 bushels from 2930.000 acres; In Snsicatcheware 97,695,000 bushels frnm 4.705,000 acres. end in Alberta 361.43.090, Snskatchewata n07,1470.00; Alberta, $47.- 750.('00: Britleh Columbia, 51,290.000. Oving to the exceptionally mild weath- er which prevailed cinring the fell and early winted live stock are reported o having entered winter quarters in excel- lent condition. As a general rule vipter supplies ere emote. Archibald Blue. Chief Officer. Two Zoo Reptiles Break Their Necks Against Cage Scenery. When Curator Dieuetre fixed up El, painted background for the rattlesnake ftge in the reptilo house at The Bronx zoo one time ago he took great pains to make it realistic. Last night he was thinkiag of taking it oat altogether, for it proved so natural that two snakes broke thdir necks yesterday trying to get into an imitation cave. The faney beak of the tege was cop- ied by Mr. Ditmere from a, scene in Sullivan county. It is about twelve feet high and of the same length, It repre- sents a rocky slope, and some real roeks put in at the bottom heighten the effect. Among the painted rooks aro reptiles were so quiet, hey were dead. viees tenth as :makes live ire Yeeterday afternoon there were a gooa many via- itors in the reptile hoes° and something happened which frightened the enakes. Two of them made a dash for a, fake twee and fell ixtek to the floor of the cage. Some attendants saw the commotion in the rattlesnake compartment. 'They investigated to find out why two of the replies were so quiet. They were dead. 130th of them, doo authoritics 8ay, had broken their neeks.--Vrom the New 'York Sun. • THE ReCKONING. Bridegroom on the wedding trip)—How situoldi We ought to have got out at the laet etation. Porter—Yes. sir. Top traveled a few kisses too far. V en! THIS is a HOME DYE Thaf AKYONE earl use 1 dyed ALL these D1FFor iloNoTdlk, NDS with the SAME Due. a used IONE DYEFoRAU. KINDsorGooDs CLEAN and SIMPLE to Use. I NO chance of using the WRONG Dye for the Goods : one has to color. MI co!ors from your Druggist or Dealer. MEL' Color Card and STORY Booklet 10, The Johnson -Richardson Co., Limited, Montreal, SUNKEN BELLS TOLL. Tale of an Old Town Engulfed by the Sea. On the Suffolk coast the sea has been 'encroaching for centuries upon the land. At Thorpennees, Aldeburgh, reeeetly no lees than 1,000,000 ti)113 of sand were washed away, and a row of little bungee lows evhich until lately was 100 yards away frotn the sea now etands only a fen, feet from the high-water mark. The coast of Suffelk is one of great antiquarian interest. Standing on tile beach at night, eo runs a local legend, the bells of submerged churches can bo heard ringing their peals under the wares. They are said to be the bells ef Dunwieh in succession. King Sigeberht, Kinn*°of East Anglia built himself a pal- acehere and ereeti a cathedral. It is poesible, therefore, that the city was possessed of gent wealth. When the high tide spoken of above receded, taking with it so large a por- tion of the shore sand, it uncovered hut. dreds of coins of gold, silver and bronze antique bronze rings and ornaments and the bronze clasp of an old bag bearing a silver inscription, &aid by an expert to belong to the age of King John. . One lonely ruin of a church still re- mains to tell to the past history of his, city; the reet of it perished in the waves. A little rose adorns the shore, called the Dunwich rose. According to tradition this rose was brought by the monks of EAGft Anglia to England more than 1,400 years a.go.—From the Christian Science Monitor. YOKOHAMA'S FIRE WATCH TOWERS. ' (covernment Consular .g...011 -t) There are it watch tower e iti Yoke - home., each fitted svith kontr with which tire alarms are g)ven, ,A.t night wat tt t en are icert on two Of these towers. who give tl alarm by gents in case of a tire being citscovered. In Tokyo the tower svst MI is rilso osed car both fire and police alarms. The city is divided lute seven ellhte tts, each having an al- ai' mstatiou. About 290 maghines record the alarms upon ticker tape at the cllf- fre reit rseitee ova fire stptione. oaeaaeeeseaaaaae.- Diaa but deep enough-, and muter an earth runs water, undo. all life 11111111 - griof.—Bulwer, Sufferer of Twenty Years, States Dr, Hamilton's Pills Are a Real pure. "1 can't member any time during the peat 20 years when ray head wasn't aching. If I bent over, dark specks would come 'before my eyes, and it seemed as if all the ,blood it my body wanted. to rush to the head." Thus opens the leiter of Mrs. Enoeli S. Spry, of Putnam P. 0:, and eontinuing her !interesting etatement As says: "Work or exertion riled° my leart beat terrible, and going up stairs caueed such shortness of breath that it* fairly frightened me, My doctor told me that if that was the cause Dr. Hamilton" Pills are the greatest blood renewer on earth. I tell you how I feel to -day and you can understand what a great cure Dr. Hamilton's Pills have made. I feel strong enough now to work like a man, as for going up stairs on the,run, it doesn't bother me at all. I eat and sleep as anywell person ought, and as for dizziness which used to frighten me so much, it has entirely disappeared. Dr. Hanel, - ton's Pills are a wonderful woman's medicine. They helped me inother ways, too, and I know every woman that uses them will have comfort and good health. Refrole anything offered you instead of Dr. Iiamiltoree Pills of Mandrake and Butternut, 2e5e per box. All dealers or the Catarralo- zone Oo., Kingston, Ontario. In the Poultry World lftaltiMMUMISOMONIEMIRMIOWerrw A CHICK-UROWINO BATION. While visiting with a sueeeesful poul- try raiser we were diecu,seing rations, and he told me he had found the grow- ing ration which he had fed. to hie ducks earlier in the season an excellent one to make chicks grow; the chicks • being hatched a bit litter than he had intend- ed, them to be he was priehing the pul- lets somewhat, ESO are to bring them to laying maturity. r,Obe mixture was: Cornmeal Bran.. ..... . Middlings Flour (]ow grade) .. Beef scrape ...... To this he added a third in bulk of green food, which was fine -chopped rye or green corn, and kept beefs scraps before them all the time. Thie was all thoroughly mixed. He had the simplest and best way to mix it I ever BRW. Having a large barrel churn not in use the thought Parte 8 18 14 9 « .44"A*io ii?,110110111f10 orgranel, and by the fifth day begin HER DAUGHTER SOED to feed a Wight proportion (Ifb f eef •scraps. This proportion may be gratle ually increased until, at two weeks Oa« they are getting five per cent. of the beef scrap; at three weekf3 old their food should be one-)ialf bran, one.liall corn meal, and about eeven per e,eat. of the whole mixture beef scraps. Chad- ually inerease the animal xnatter until .at five weeks they aro having fifteen per cent. This proportion may be car- ried until killing tims, which under or- dinary conditions, should be at' ten weeks, when they should weigh from ten to twelve pounds per pair. •RIGHTS OF RUSSIAN WOKEN, 4••••••••••10rodomin A Bill to inereas the Amount They Little by 1CitatnI le nntt,h:resilL' law is ao- leteowleclasieg the claims of women. Though the peasants are 06 obstin- ately a.gainst them as 'ver, says t1. -x; American Woman's Review, the pro- fessional classes are getting things done. The Duana has under its considera- tion a -private bill for the regulation of women's inheritance laws, 'Up till now WOMOn who have brothers living ani74e'rit°1114cle-f°Atelh):Cftil01parent6reiale$aatd 07- eighth of their inrsonal property. lialf«sisters and gal cousins have no right at all se lOng as thole brothers are living. Two years ago twenty-three mem- bers introduced a bill to give to wo-N men the same rights of inheritance as their brothers, Though they can- not do so in the ease of a will being made, the testators will now be al- lowed to leave their daughters MOTO than ono-fourtentai or eine-eighth part, on 'oorndition that their shares do not exoeed the brothel -a' or mother's-. When the bill beoornes law it will make things far bettez foil- Russian women, butits oppoThents fear it will cause family estates to be broken up in zt couple of -generations. The law of entail -will also be altered, so that heirs can *sell estates which Wither - to have been -unsalable, • disinherit hi Lehildran. The laW itt- dinterit his children, The, law in- variably overrules a will -where Lillis has been attempted. A 'parent must leave his offe(pring La certain amount of property. This is a relic of the old Slavonie *communal system, when every acre of land was looked upon as lent to a man for his lifetime rather than given to him. So tbe only was in which a Man or woman can be deprived of inheritaaace is by imperial ukase of ciortfiaoatiore, 'when the estate goes to the CZar. The imperial family baa obtained positively thousands of tailee of foresi and arable land in thia way, to say nothing of miae.s. °curt favorites and Sueeeestul Generals sometimes. got gift a from this inexaiauetible store, and Grand D-ukes veho have incutred -the imperial displeasure by marrying commoners not infrequently lose their estates by eoafiscation. aseee- :STOPS PAIN OF BURNS AND CUTS Really IVontlerful Uow Zarri.Buk Gives Ease, • This is the verdict of alt who have tried Za,m-Buk. The woman in the home knows beet its value. A. burn from the stove, from a flat iron, or a hot pan, is instantly soothed by •Zara- Buk. When the little ones fall and cut or scratch themselves, Zam-Buk stops the pain, and, incidentally, their crying: The 'bcaft proof of this is the fact that children who . hay° one hail Zanelluk itpplidd. e.ome for it again. For more serious hurtle, too, it ie' un- equalled. Mr. John Johnston. or 734 South Marks etreet, Fort William, a moulder in Copp's foundry, SAVB: "5ome time ago 1 buzned the top of my foot severely by dropping some molten iron from a ladle I was carrying. large .hole was burned through my shoe ead into the top of my foot. I was taken (struck him to use it for a feed: mixer, home an.ti Zion -Belk was applied to the with the result that he has been using I burn directly, It was empriseing . what it ever since for that, purpoe,e. The I relief this balm afforded. The burn was dry mixtere ie put ia the churn and1 sodeep and so serious that it required ,itl•At sufficient water added to make, : careful attentien, but Zam-Buk prevent - it stiek together. • It is crumbly and ed other complications- arising, and as When it COIllet3 out of Lite churn it is it was daily applied, eoothed the pain largely in the shape of tiny belle the and allayed the inflammatien. In. the size of peas, and the chicks "jnet go course of two weeks' the hole bliened for it." mash sedthe Nearly every poultryman my foot had been well healed," dieviefeliieltletkg twice Mr.- NV. B. Gibson, of 13elleville; writes nujemezt : in coldiuse We have tried Zam-Bak often on cuts a day, morning and itfternon, ann. at and sores, and I think there is nothing in the feed troughs; although they Zam-Bule will also be found a sure night a feed Of cracked corn is given that cau equal it." seem to be well filled with the mixtere euro for cold soros, chapped halide, -frost they eat eoneiderable cracked cern, end bite, ulcers, blood -poison, varieose sores, you can tuet "see them grow," as the piles, seelp soros, ringworm. inflamed owner snid. . patches, Wales' eruptions raid chapped This seems to me to be a eimple and places, and ekin injuriee generaliv, Ali easy method of pushing along the late- druggists acid stores eeil at 50c. bon, or hatched chicks, and the five or six post paid from Mei-Buie Co., Toronto, hundred pullets I saw there looked to for price. . ing broiler chicks while they are young. be growing rapidly. I would think tbis GNIUS. ...........--4 . A PRODUCTS OF INVENTORS' A. E. V, tionary. articles to .A new electrieal soldering iron is sta. .be soldered being FEED AND CARE OF DUCKS. hela against It. A series of toothed wheels revol-ve and All sorts of mixing and all sorts of fussing have been recommended in feed- ing young ducks, in times past. The big - e steering wheel for gest and best breedere of the present da the food mixtures are of the plainest 8 l'irfth°,11r-a t)211'ICIoi2c.S1:0 sidesaOr the lids oe a trunk y, however, do very little fnssing, and electrieally ha are pad. ndl d ded I. ti P Otto. out 10 m a beei tor use kind. I have found a mixture of two- that thirds wheat bran and one-third corn ;r, „mayworm, Meal, with it handfni of fine gravel or '-a---- ----"' coA aatitiEgiere"t . tor a gas Jr that w411 coarse sand mixed in, for the. fired two also to be an excellent retion for pueln choe up the elinkers in an ash sifter invented by a New York man, Utilizing current from a magneto or batteries an inventor has gTought out an or three days, sufficient for ell their leeen„ needs. If skim or whole ran eater gage would. di:rg thtaistigbeaenn wineveinto:odsavheyr1:inss elle tiof n htollls"\vfitrite;‘e.""221 el"n"13 tc4' to got, it may be used to moisten this not available has a belleo ilevcstrwieklich lamps mixture to a crumbly consistenev; otla erwiee either hot or cold water will ans. wer. I frequently break raw eggs into the meal, in the pronortion of two eggs to one quart of Vlie dry grain. This mllet be thoroughly mixed in order that it may not bo too pasty or sticky. After or gravel, and by the fifth day begin vons**pan• warn*. FREEMAGNIFICENT DOLL PIANO AND STOOL 4 AND LOVELY IMPORTED DOLL ,e%Tipripe GIRLS. Don't telst this vese4. ' e 11017.1 14.1ifigie,49,If J fili. ;Ler", 'ley* sparkling iewelled Ring. lhoevedthyhttoogreit brniairtekah_:latissrlagniciiPiosen4. impotted dressed Doll. an this . ......7.16".6-T.7-1111tri:...41tira.1".' I ;1 i .o......1.4 • • ' . • . . edul ehaace to ebtain absolutele .,#Wit,.141. ' get seco, it has two fuii ()does This ss the handsomest 4911 Piano --.7...'„of it.7 .., 7. 01410wmi 4 Ainecliigtfudetliildbet ealudtiwruiltihrti'dler7; . - - " i'7" l'''..4.: ',$!,,e, ,47;c4,0. -•24-„A *.r.+g:,,,,,,..„„! '4 j' at founeets keys, metal sousti. „ifil'iltINY, blue and told litatta to mato, tt plays real music and you can ' :Or • ..s. ,H. 4 't'k'.14444:.('tlilielaYnYItiMbet°tl°Vell :4iierardSUTPt0YPtI ff0tha; ti1:;1inrhnc:.. a theThe 'P rin ant i tte inedt 1'1 cD1,1 'telt 1.3 A rethoho ftAly jointed a tms, legs and head, thrlY hair, pearly teeth and,„;keerea told.* hPert ilt,r tia,t1t4 , , ,, , 4 10 rtnie,estis. Return WI the ihrte dollatt after You eel! then'e end -esnl *ill asoliellv mude on pier pitider, We smote tep gaud payment of all tillages rie yete OtellIAIMS. Aware Lsi to her (taint? shoes. t ma is to. a moo intt2.0010, san A ntfin-Outmly tool:01Ni lyeanty,,.,,,,,, . 441 ,, ,.e. nearly 14 ?lodes in lenri*.h. YOO CAN CET ALL) '11-IRF,T, PRItSENTS and ie addition thir beteg/ea jewelled tint is tin 0.•xitti ptetent if you tvtli tell rot us iust duet do!lat# worth d iho loveliest jeweller* yell bs,va ever teen. We send handsamo tarries breethre beauty pin seta, tath pills., gents run linkg, toiler bUttOble3 rtti be pinta)) tlq,hly gold ithiltitvet finished teld at with lovely iewals, and all in Stil at only 10 costs rade MY are Wilitth AYtritY.fiVt centP, tin tho hot sell like. hot takes at out wonderlul r'elre GI onle remittal, Olean Warble and the extra peseta of a ha_prkerno ring if ,Vouteill allover the das eteartasmeet reompay. Dena mai shit chino. wtii6 1041 end in ol iew dial You ail be lshYbill lovelY NATI N SAL q CO 11 I ED I), PT 114 TORONTO 0 TAR 6. 11'1\\ ,.'i,Lt.\\\," , t.00ri a norsou beolt and Is op ',rated oy a handle at one side to provide the She* II • St1Seelldillg a feed bag fjom a bracket eael:11 1 11111 :1‘r v trtagl) :ab: rs erimai wtii heve rr ore freedom Of 19,.- 1011. Tv. o etalitie engineers living la NnAr ork eaee deeigned 11 bdrElehlAte te lift an aviator from a falling aeropialie and lev:er litm to earth unharmed. Primaribe for the use of baysiciaris, the/14.1uo transtore bas knee inventee iu Pranee Whit li um. turn out, eureent I 0.101, • twimitms and stretigtee at the same timo dt,sfred. .a.tgAvione automobile headlielite hAYS beer' Prate ded with an atteebeeent wit?: Iyhich the gaS telitY be limited by short el -4-3'1.1-0m( `he sparking' system with a 31.011 trent t (Jiverni *eat, 1 IVIOD4RN 0088114, (Detroit rree Prom.) 41tott remember the Clrecruirr Ifow are the getting on?" "They're divorced," "You don't say7" "Yee. Remember tbe little Yililittabr on Maio etreet'?" "You bet" "She's ;Are. Green %low." welan "Iletnemher Steel:ere—the hem (aerial* 41Isiptinetly." "1!_e Mari lea errern t. w "Weil, well; What a tflttere&ic a tli%) Melee" "SO YOU are eppoeed to having the poot plc elect tthtt'tt 1 y dieret votet" itna° deelavel tiveator Satugg, '`Xeat tJiV1Ltirelle to vonOttet klireet inveetie gatiolue"--Louleville iten r Journal. Stricken With Acute Rheumatism -.Recovery Scarcely Expected. "qrs, wlor, writing front Oxbrow, 8ak., ineye: "1 would he lack- ing in gratitude if 1 did not write you and let you know of the wonderful good your Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for nay daughter, Delle Lawlor. Indeed, think 1 may safely say that they- have been the mo4ns Of saving her lite. For many years my home has been in Brae° Mines, Ont. Something over a. year ago my son And daughter, then in her six- teenth year, left for the west. When leaving here my daughter was in tile best Of health, but in the following spring she waestricken with what the doctor said was inflammatory rltcnma- itt its worst form. After a. fort weeks she ,was able to get up, but her bands and limbs were so swollen that she could not dress herself, Site contin- ue(' in this way for seine time, and then ,seeond attack, wonn% than the first, set in, and my son telegreplted me. as She Was vervelow, While 1 was getting 'reedy te raalse the trip of .eigh.tecti hun- dred miles I got eeeond messege to COMP, At once,. es they fenred 1t emene not live, When .1 reeelied her I found her even, worse thou 1 had expected. Sbr. was so WOltii: and entaelated that I Would not have 1;now•-, her, end elle could only speak in a whiener,Hcr 'haude sad fingers were all tivieted and her limbs swollen to twice their 11111111,Ai size. The doetor IUId then been attend• ing, her for -two 11104115i , Bri she seemed steadily growing worse. We dii not dare move her in bed for fear of ltor heart giving out, She \vas as pale as a corpse, and bor lips and. face always eold. We bad to fan her continually. and if we ceased even for it little while She gasped for breath, arid no one who saw ber thought it 'possible- she could get bettor, Site suffored sneh nein that used, -to go Ott of fito-roOm and put my- finger e in euy ears to shut out her gasping and Moaning. - I had krvawn before of Dr. Williams' Pink Pals, aud as we eould gradoally see her sinking told my son I was going to give her the Pills. •lie was opposed to my idea, for he thought a Change in the meal - eine would.prove fatal. However, it WAS finally deculed to give her the Pills. Irk a week's time she showed some improve- ment .and felt like eating. Prom that time on she began to gain steadily. 'Grad- ually her hands and fingere became straight, the swelling in the Limbs went down, and her heart/beats beea.me 'regu- lar, and the color returned to bar face, and soon, the ogee was complete. Wae is „now as;s strong and healthy, as any girl ofher age. and to see her you would. aever - think he had paesed through an illness from Whi.011 llorte '4DX her iaiends thought she could recover. You have ray sincerest thanks for what Dr. WU lianas' Pthk Pills have done for my daughter, and you may be sure t aball always warmly recommend them." 1 4- THAT MU6:IC'AL. COW. (flew I:era Herald) (News"Notte—j. Gilbert. Hiecog. a lefil- wayeeee earreer, galbs 51.000 a 'ear bl 1,i'ClridiP • It11,1Stu Ori phonograuh for his totes wnti,e tbey are lesi,ne: milked.) 'Oh. Jenny, out a report -In; It - tee farmer's cey,- ALA soon oluenkey .hatl ,,-Coirdre eehrorgh The 14Ye." It n-ue her te,Ontli to Water ewe He" trostrils Ceenecl wide 'ci.a2urtieAolalhxt:Ilanotet:Qetw arilae:ns. 'Hay" she "TY:e C-foocl' Old. Summer Time" called TE'brc,;0113,r fragrant river Side. ' She eheee ell. her ciel Jnoatrrt tontelit At Slalt's, "sem and Inane" And valient o,Tearitig of the Green," :made verdant pastures pries. Aral then knee deep she was "an one le:erituckyie bluest melee," \Thee Gentle Annles epringtime came ShDYen•'tleliahlellcr tio',11. IltliretinYOe-" tthe shade Of an "Old ApPle Where "Little '1;liattercuos," so dear, Stareseattered ghe could see— She switched her tall and then she heard "Shoo Ply. Don't Bother And as old Sukey's cultured ear Took in, each pleesatit strain, $ne gave of milk each on she had, To that wiee farmer's gait), . But fortune balked. there came an end '.Lo a hat he set his pride on, hep—sad mistalte—he played Ono day "The Tune the Old co* Died On!" "HER POINT OP VIEW." alontre.al Herald.) A twelve-yeareold glrl from the slums was invited to a garden party given nY n iiatlioTrsiht:e_ :81st to c rat ic lady t a grcrop Of r,00r Titthd le girl as She drank her tea an ate her *eke on a velvet lawn ander a. tvIiite ,blooneleg cherry -tree, wild to her "Dees your husband drink" "Wner—er—no," was the astonished re - "How =eh dbes he make?" "He doesn't work," tined the ltuly, "fie is a. capitalist" "You keep ,out of debt, I hope?" "Of coorse, child. What an dartti—" "Your color looks nattral, I hope You idito yn.,:mitopepunadtiolit.t/ "Why, child," exclaimed tho amazed hostess, "what do you mean by such questiens? Don't YOU know they are said the little ItirL "Wo. ma'am, mother told me to be sure and behave like a lady, and when ladles Call at cur rooms they always ask mother those Questions." ..••••• Shilohi; Cure STOPS COUGHS rittgiNsEarig GROWTH OF ST. PETERSBURG. That Ste Petersburg is rapidly grow- ing in population la evidenced by the census taken in December, 1910„ whioh showed the population, including cer- tain suburban villages formerly not covered, to be 1,907,708. It is Woe eminently an "office town" mai also a seaport for c Or eight mouths of the year. Ths principal indwtry is the menu. facture of oaten textile, although its advantage as a port of oatry for tho interior is ;alums rookossitigut A thao Of *tamers hsa boon ootablisk. od to Libau, ow:mooting thine Vita It transatlantic lino to New Yoz.k. This ottable4 anierioan phippeze to *end la direct to this port without the (slays of transshipment in foreign ports,--PrOnt Caticuloa 11.114 Trade He. porta. BABY'S OWN TABLETS. CURE CONSTIPATION :afre. Albert Barriault, St. Alphonse, writee: "I have used Baby's Own Tablets kr my baby, who euffered from constipation. Mel completely eared her anti I eat etrongly recommeni them to alt rnottiere." The tfablete not only cure e4)1',i4tipation. but they cure all other I roubles eiiii1g It 1)11.1 e dt2.041.1.erea Pit Rt a the St01101,rilian1 1)6w14,4. sneii As colic, folds; .iimple ittilgestion, etc, Itaby'.4 Own Tablvt,4 a, ‘161(1 by all medi- eine elealtilS or lir to,1;) at, eeeta a boo fieen th. oat , - - tatAn cNcual.t. "I)c,spi !..C1111' Ater Let tit "Well, learn% ',neete.r IF WE Artii roolt. If we are poor because we $tand trize to life and duty, we. are poor only as the, eower IS poor, because he- has to east his wheat into the furrow,, and then wait for the sheaves of harvest. if oor life is us God will, yet ie bare, it to only as the granary is bare in 4one—t1at very bareness is the prophecy of plenty. 'fere cr there In the full time comes the 1 all blessing; the flower flashing out ,glory, the fields laughing, with plen- ty,—Ilohert Collyer. PEACE, There la a spiritual proportion where every power does its work, every feel- ing fills its reetionre; all knowledge, de- sire, and will, playing gently into each' other, make a conunen current to bear the soul along to ever -new freedom and joy, The peaceful heart is quiet, work - lug, For hurn,an god, then, tte for pri, vate joy,let Us Seek; to reeeive the peace of Jesus, by "ming like Rimealka- tive, sinlees, and holy. The heavenly proportion of Hie spirit, a harenouy ta relive in, aladneee to eveay touch of the Diviesty, and made Ms life loving to all manklad. I wonder many times that ever a caild of God ehould have 11,. end heart, considering what the Lord ie preparing for Him. POCKETS. 1 shovellea earthand it turned to copper. I traded and It turned to silver, I went on and it turued to go.Id. I searched for a resting Place of my riches; I ilooke.d diligently and I found no pooket where I might stow my gold. Is there a place where they find the gold.? Is there 110 place in the opiria of man where tsobl of earth can fiad a reeting place? Then why do men erave. for that whiela they cannot carry? 1.101V self -deceived are men who enake their heap; all the while they have no capacity to hold a Isieese no thicker than the seale of a lisle These thought(' • Dame to me aith force as I stood in the midst of ruiree of a city; waves of sand had rolled up in hunger and buried man's workman- ahip; oh, the glory of man buried be- neath the billows of (mud. And yet this city shall be remembered, for a poor man once spoke a word that shat not die. Thia is the glory that he stronger than the desert. For 00d lath given eternity to the thought of max.. What is man? Re is a thgtOit, thought of God.. Be is pure thought, a eluster of thoughts. ELI glory, hla Is thought; he is a Ilona of multittide; he hos no pocket for gold, or land, oe wealth in any material form, became he le pure spirit. Hie food l pirit; his atmosp)aere i pirit, "There IsA, spirit in man, and the inspiration QS Ow Al- mighty iiiveth hire, uaderatandbag. God revealeth unto man His thought." Heaven is full of epirits, pure and true.; they believe in God. Hell is fall of spirit, not pu:e, they believe in God. Man on earth is between; he make.* a god of gold; heroin is 'bis fellte for he has ao pooket to hold it. Ohl that they vrere wise, that they underaood, that they IVOIlid C011id to be rebuilt, to be put in harmony, that; they meighl bring praise and rejoin the elsoir who. offer eeaseless praise.. All earthly poteeeesions are onteido a man; they are etored in warehouses or as cargo in ehips; 'they 0011;te nearer, they will not sort, they cannot be absorbed; :they are but the dab 0:1 mud an the (sleeve of the driver as h,41 guides hie thariot through the mires Our topmost height le a pile of gold; the marl wbo 15 there on it Ls f upper duties. Thiel is the latest atilt, yet it is not going to dust. It will not last because it is. badly founded. It rests Olt the negation pf the 2pou1, and the soul le an awkward thing to ignore. It has a way ef breu.kink up from be- neath, a8 vegetation will burst theough a rotten pavereent. Already the breath is blowing as of yore from Galilee. H. T. Millar, UPON THE THRESHOLD. The seas are quiet when the wide give o'er; So calm are we -when paeeirms are no more; For then we. knowhow vain it was to. boast Of fleeting things too certain to be lost. Clouds of affection from our younger eyes Concealed that emptiness which age de. series. ' The soul's dark cottage, battered and de - Lets innewlight through chinks ttuat time has made; Strongeeorm.eby weakness, wiser mea be - As they draw near to their eternal home! Leaving the old, both worlde at once they view; That stand upon the threehold of the new. SERVING GOD. Eternal God, who eommitteet to us the swift and solemn trust of life, Elilb5t1 we know not what a day may bring, forth, but only that the hour for sets, ing Thee is always present, may We wake to the instant claims, of Thy holy will: not waiting for to -morrow, but yielding to -day. Lay to rest, by the persuasion of Thy spirit, the resistenee °tour priselon, indolence, or fear. Cott- seerate with Thy presence tho way our feet may go; and the humblest work will shine, and the roughest pjlaees be niade plain. Lift 110 ith0Ve uprighteoua anger and mistrust into faith and hope and charity, bit a simple and steadfaet reliance on Thy euro will: and so may we be medest in our time of wealth, patient under dieappointment, ready for danger, sereno in death. In all things, draw as to the naiad of Christ, that Thy lost image may be traced again, and Thou =yet oven lie at °nee 'with }Mtn and Thee.—Martineatee Service Book. WELL S1NT LIFE. A well spent life; with its ripened ex- perienee, its mellow wisdom, its remetu. brances full of peace, and its hopes full of huortality. It may be useful to the last, and perhaps more useful as it draate nigh to the last. Does it not tread oo tbe helienly world? "At that day eaell men loole 10 his Meter." .1 Lew, wcieat ti,ji' it Het ettietti t' inulitieus 1,illews roll, vemilrokie ;el ire,eeelf apposite I it, halevird ealm of elull weaned bird flown &rthe tlil.st.iv wotild 1150110 pitt ILA Atattf0 to)tila eros* the .gnit agAlu (',it ha 4 brevetlit tavo'er. VaroOK,A.