HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1912-06-20, Page 341r
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In the Poultry
World
\Viten properly eond ue ted, equals-
reieing is sure to produee a TeaSOn-
&ado profitit it3 an oecupation whieh
Ise-1114es elose attention to di:tittle,
h gam hard labor aod 4 thorough
lanewledge of methods. Such extrava-
gaet assertions; have been made by
people ivies Lad breeding filge011s to
ell that many important publieetions,
llot wishing to indorse the inaecur-
ate etatinneuts. have Almost ignored the
real merits of squab -raising.
It is- absolute Ione- tor any one to
go into equab-raising unlessiio knowa
the businese. lf be is unable to evt
experiences by securing employraeut
in 0, squab -raising plant the beet in-
troduction to the induetry would be to
-tale° a: few pairs of pigeons for a
y mil* or two, keeping careful reeords
ef the production of erieh pair and
tomtits, aee0imis of all expenses; end
ti income. Thouels this would give
bet little inetruetion in the -cost of
production and marketing 0fl a larger
scale. it would teach rs ettrefiti ob-
server the habits and requireineate of
pigeons and. 4110W ntu What ])1 It
reasonably be expected from esch
pair. The most suciessful set tut it •
ralser4 are thoye Who 1itlY0 grown
into the busincesby nateral evett-
tione -who were first faeiciere ofnyil
flocks, then of a larger number of
birds, anti who know what each pair
producing every month for at least
eight months in the year.
If the owner has complete records
of each pair's production for eight
months he can decide easily which
pairs are profitable breeders. Experi-
enced men rarely keep a pair longer
than the third successive poor nest And,
according to the indications, either the
cock or the hen or both may be (Recant-
ed. If one bird of the pair is deemed
worthy of another trial it is provided
with it new mate. To assist in this se-
lection of breeders a system of banding
iss necessary for the identification of the
birds. Durable bands are sold, made of
celluloid and re -enforced with aluminum
on the inside. No two pairs of birds in
the Bartle pen have the same color or
combination of colon?. Each bird of a
pair, of course, has the same color, but
the band of the cock is on the right leg,
that of the hen on the left. In addition
to the colored band, each bird should
also wear on one leg a numbered meted -
lie band, which by reerenee to a stud-
book will show the veaet age and pedi-
gree of the bird. In this way all in-
breeding may be avoided, or careful
line -breeding may be carried on.
EASY RECORD SYSTEMS.
To a novice many of these details
may seem unnecessary and troublesome
and keeping, records of the production
of each. pair of pigeons may seem be-
wildering work. in practice, however,
it is simple and easy if systematically
done. In four hours, with one assistant
I have frequently taken the nest re-
cords of 20 pens containing 25 pair:3
each. In order to know what a pair
of pigeons ie producing, that pair has
to be identified with its nest only once
in three or four weeks. Unless the
birds are extremely tame it is not ad-
visable to disturb them in cold weather
by going into their breeding quarters
more often than is absolutely necessary.
Otherwise some may remain off their
nests lone enough to chill the eggs or
young fatally. For convenience in mak-
ing the records the nets are numbered,
so that without handling the bird or
-undoing a rap it is necessary only to
note the nest numbers and the color of
the leg band as the pigeon alights on the
nest or leaves it. This is a great saving
of time compared with the method in
intensive chicken farming where each
hen le be caught in a trap nest and
released every time she lays and egg,
whether that is 10 or 30 times in a
month.
1337 keeping accurate records and
eliminating unprofitable birds, many
squab raisers have doubled their profits
during the }at four yeare. To do this
it is not necessary to double the pro-
duction, but merely to increase the aver-
age yearly output to some extent. For
example, if we set $1.50 as the keeping
of a pair of breeders, and if, from the
production of four pairs of squabs, three
pairs at 50 cents a pair are used to
cover that expense item, the profit of
one pair will remain. In order to double
that profit it is necessary only to
make the average output five pairs.
I have known a number of instances
in which the average production of a
block started in the first year with four
pairs of youngsters per breeding. pair
and increased m the third year -to six
and eight pairs. The useful life of a
pigeon is generally from six to seven
years, but I have had some exceptional
birds which were good. breeders at the
ego of 13 years.
;age\
..4f, 74
7-7 a but
1• rri
t;.
/I 101:1
11 %,.1./ .Z4/04
oap aia.
No other emollients do so much
for pirnples, blackheads, red,
rough and oily skin, itching,
scaly scalps, dry, thin and falling
hair, chapped hands and shapeless
nails, They do even more for skin -
tortured and disfigured. infants.
Although Outicura Soap and Ointment are
nnhl by druggists and dealers everywhere, a liberal
sample of each, WW1 32 -page booklet on treatment
of skin And hair, will be sent, post-free, on applies.*
tion to "Catieura," Dept, 8M, Boston, "CT. S. A.
Some careful system of elimination of
non -producers is just as essential to
make squab raising a continuously pros-
perous business as are proper methods
of feeding and. housing. Even with a
flock of apparently healthy pigeous re-
cords must be kept so that birds may
be removed when they cease to be of
value. With intelligent watchfulness
for the improvement of the stock, there
is every reason why squab raisigig
ehould prove a reliable means of gain-
ing profits. Small space and little capi-
tal will provide a start, and there is a
steadily growing demand in all big cit-
ies for a supply of good squabs. ---How-
ard Butcher.
•••••z•—•--4-4-0----••••
• A3,,v) --tStrNe
Now is a good time to bear in rabid
that the real Mustier le not alvverys the
Otte who gete a field -seeded OT planted
first. The real hustler "stays on the
Joh" until the work of putting in a crop
ie finished, and is the ;me who harveets
the bumper (lops that we read about
every fall.
'atil work and no play makes, Jack a
dull boy" does not mean that nil play
end Ito Nvork malsee dassle a bright boy.
A judicious mixture of wore and play
for the boy will be pretty sure to make
hini a better man and as, no doubt., the
reasson why the -coantry boy "makes
good" where his apparently brighter city
comb). fails,
-----
A. good way to eave a lot of hard
work is to drag the fen ploseitee that
is intended for corn early, so as to esive
the weeds a splendid start before the
C11 ese goes into the field. In addition to
the weed killing the dise will do firer
work, because the ground. will be loorie
and level,
"Pop, what was the tune the old
cow died on?"
"Probably a song of the fodder -
land, Willie."
t
THE MOVIES,
Lizzie hurries; home from work,
From the store where she is clerk,
And she eat- her .humble dinner in a
flurry;
.And her anether says: "Now, Liz,
Ueda° haste unseemly is;
Are you going out to -night, and ahatais
your hurry?"
"To the movies, mother dear,"
She replies; "now never fear;
That's wbere the melodrammer'e chea.p,
For a nickel you may weep
And may laugh until you're sore;
There are smiles and eighs galore
At the movies.
"PR see handsome Claude de Vero
Win his sweetheart, Maybelle dear,
in spite of every villain% masehinee
tio.uS;
rn see cowboys, very pretty,
Yes, they pose in Jersey City;
Oh, I can't resist the movies' faseinas
tione.
"To the movies, Ingather dear,
Willies with me, never fear;
That's where true love alwaye wins,
Where the bad repent their sins;
Hope they have a comic
With a ehaee-seene—splettees
At the movies.
;aeeSareseseeeeea..ssstaeeer..aeotasseeeeie-tsseeeeae.e..wsarh!'e=T-Zeerer.rasrt
1
• -Veit
tee' "zee s ess f
-
PAY:AA-I"
1,iegt
th%
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45„,6Ti
731ii
W14
2
4 The
New Perfection
0 I.
Heating Plate
: 4 41' •
6
has proved a great corivernence
users of the
Alec* Perfection
nittekkeeleceM:rotcle=zettele,seatregli
011 ir;470115)tgifed;
to all
This year we aro selling
The New Perfection Broiler
The New Perfection Toaster
The New Perfection Griddle
each designed specially for uto on the New
Perfection Stove.
Viith tlase applutatet AO the New retite.t41A slims tloor steel
vett, ihe r•lew Perfection C.t,; 1i IiDi egIciera a Man tfi
lar ccal rave. rtqtaiii;,, it it touth eitatitt trd tenser.
sse lessee est the New Pedeztien all ego Yew mind.
THE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY, Limited
Winnipeg, Montreal, St, John. Halifax stud
Queest Cfty Divisions Toronto
Ask in ma this Sieve at
your iltalert. It is hand-
somely he1. h has log
eriamelcd thirone:Pr, ter-
cab!net
ip.!re p rhisis44,
Mait with I,
2er 3 burr:era. Free Cool:.
Book with every
Coo!r.riotk .rten ho givle
nierer,e totiliug 5 este to
covet cog.
Next to good feeding the thing that
will make the horses 1001( 61eep and
comfortable is elbow meets mad a cur-
rycomb and brush, if an extra, polish
is deeired-a Stable blanket may be ueed
to Advantage, but with a- work horse
this polish is liable .to come out with
the eweat.
Planting deep to rah moisture is
often risky. I have often done it and
regretted afterwards, a heavy rain cc m-
ing along soon after and a poor stand
reaulting. A pretty safe rule is to plant
a medium depth, wether wet or dry.
If your neighbor is fool enough to
sell his best cow it may be a good
investment for you to buy her, but
be, aure that is a fool and. that the
cow is a good one before buying. The
beet way to get a herd of good. deiry
cows is to raise them from heitere,
keeping the best ones and Gelling the
others; but if you are a good. neighbor
you will sell the poor milk produeers to
the butler, not to your neigaboes.
A kernel of corn will etand coneigler-
able chilly weather and still grow, if the
germ is strong to start with, but the
tale le soon told when the weather is
warm and the soil moist. The eprcut
soon rushes right along or the hernel
rots without sprouting,.
1—
It is better to raise two good. etere to
a hill than foun
r ubbine. The man who
plants too thickly invariably raises the
nubbins instead of the eare,
It len't that a man get o up Lef ore
sunrise fincl works until hit it
what he accompliehee in it day that
counts-. Poor toole, poor metleode sett
too much puttering use time to no per -
pose.
-.---
To harrow when you plow has been
a good rule to follow ever inee thoee
old-time wet .eprings have been a, thing
of the peat. I have wen the thee when
harrowing directly behind the plow has
proven detrimental, but never so when
the weather turne .dry and windy.
—
The gr -as in the pasture is half the
1 - fence. 'When cattle have enough to eat
they are contented, and eontented
rattle never are around testing the
fences, unless they are natural snoopers
-and fence crawlere.
MAXIE AND MINNIE.
(Rochester Union and Advertiser.)
Gazing at a group of nine children
gathered about a small stoop, says the
Youngstown Telegram, an old lady ealled
ono of the little girls.
"Are all of these children your broth-
ers and sisters?" she asked.
"Yes, mum," replied the youngster.
"What is the largest one named?"
"Maxie, mum."
"And what do you call the smaller
one?"
"Minnie, mum."
e.
vanporeem0001m..—WO Tag
Are You Droopy,
Tired, Worn Out?
HE:RE 18 GOOD ADVICE TO ALL
WHO FEEL AS IF THEIR VIGOR
AND LIFE HAD ALL OOZED
AWAY,
This Condition Can be quickly Cured
by a Good Cleansing Medicine.
Your experience is probably some-
what femiliar to that described by Mr.
J. T. Fleming in the following letter
from. his home in Lebanon: "I think 1
must have the moet sluggish sort of a.
vet . 111 the moruin8. my mouth was
bitter and that foul, soft feeling that
ells you, "No breakfast needed here
11114 moreing." A eup of coffee wouli
sort of brace me up, but in two hours
wae dispesed to quit work. all energy
haling oozed out of me. Supper was
only my good meal, but 1 guess 1 didn't
digeet very vell, for I. dreamt to beat
the band. A friend put nie W IRO to Dr.
Heanilton'e Pills. 1 think they met
have taken hold on iny liver, perheps my
i.tomach, too, beceuse the very start
they made things go right. Look at me
eow---eot, sleepy in the daytime, but
hustling for the inighty dollar and get-
ting fun out of life every minute. The t's
what Dr, Hamilton's Pills have done for
me—they have rebuilt and rejuvenated
my entire system."
To keep free from headaches,- to -feel
young and bright, to enjoy your mettle,
to sleep sound and look your best, noth-
ing can help like Dr. laminar -de Pills,
25e per box, five for $1.00, at all drug-
gists and ?storekeepers, or postpaid from
The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Ye
and Kingston, Canada.
"Are the hills high out on this
road?"
"Wal, I guess, They're so high we
had to put tunnels through 'em to
let the airships by."
--eseee
TRUTH WILL OUT.
Being celled to hie feet unexpectedly
at the gathering and asked to respend
informally to the toast, "The Ladess,"
1\1r. (killers hemniesl and hawed, and be-
gan:
"My trioxide, all that 1 am, al !that 1
have in the world, I owe to a women--
iny wife."
Here he was interrupted. by thal lady
herself, who arose and eaid:
"I told you when you put the property
in rny PanIC you'd give it away the firet
time you opened your mouth.." --Judge's
Library.
cri best§ mud/
owy,1 for §unburn,
eat, ozettet, 6c2eRa4
ore reet,A, stss • Ti
Wes. A. esaa food a.
1041,traie4t3 and ilora.-547..
' •••
teeesseeteesersteeterteereeseeetegee
.6.6/04.•••••
•.•
0
I THE LITTLE DUTCH PRINCESS. 1
!Her Small Playmates—Audience With
the Prime Minister.
To -day the Princess Julianaheirebs
to the Dutelt throne, attains the age
of 3 and her birthday will be the OtNit`i-
ion of many feativitiee throughout Hui.
Queen of Holland livea the great-
er part of the year at her country seat
of the Loo, near Apeldoorn, in Uelder-
land. There the Prineees spends the
whole day in the royal park, where she
has her little baby armee, her poultry
' yard, with the fowls she ieede with her
own hands, her dog, two ponies and a
deer.
Every day at the Loo as welt as at
The Hague some children are invited to
play with her in order to mitigate ars
much as pos.sibIe the double Ionetinese
of her position as the future queen end
an only child,
then by turns, ho that the Pr
The Queen likes to invite various
uniy
learn at any early age to be friendly to
all sorts of people and not to show too
great a preference for a elefeen few.
These little three -year-olds are quite
free in their games' and often treat their
royal hostess withscant reepeet.
One of them, proud of her dainty pat*
ent leather shoes, said to the Prineese:
"I think my shoes inuelt erectier than
yours." Whereupon little Juliana look-
ed ruefully at her strong laced up boots,
saying, -And yet thee are my very
best."
A few days before the court left The
Hague the Princess Was taken for a
walk in the Scheveningen woods. It had
rained during the night, and for the
first time it dawned upon her young
mind how delightful it is to walk in
the puddles, and eepecially to stamp
one's foot in them till the drops fly
about.
This performance was witnessed by
some admiring juvenile subjects, whose
parents will no loner'be able to ad-
monish thexu with the saying so curn-
mon in Dutch nurseries: "Juliana never
does We" ur -Juliana always does
that," Their 1)aragon has proved. to be
only human after all.
During an audience whieh the Pilule
Minister, Mr. Heeaiskerk, had with the
Queen a few days ago the Prineese was
sent for. When the muse came to tuke
her out for a diive the Queen said:
"Now say `Good -by, your excellency.' "
She could, hot be made to repeat thoee
words, but as son as the footmen had
opened the door so that her retreat was
safe, she erica out: "ttood-by, curly
head," whieh allusion to air. Ileenikerk's
flowing mane was mueli appreciated by
those presentee-eh:mu the London Daily
Mail.
SWAT THAT FLY
(Exchange.)
Now StillIttier'S here,
Cast up your eYer
And strike to death
The ioanilng .t1;
-wher,-.•vr :eon find
111:11 him not,
But join the ciahs
That swat:, swat, swat,
If ttrenty thoes
As eig he'd be
Wiped uut ni man's
Worst enemy.
Because he small,
\\"e let him go
To fill our ,graws
Before we Ino.
A millIon germs
He freely brings
As un our foci(
Crawls and sre,;i.;
"Pis time we learned
fOOrfqt lot
And savell our IlVes
With swat, swat, :,;wat.
Pray, say no more
of man's aci.,•anee
Until he leitNes
:Ncluelt less to chance.
No longtr 1,vij 1:
False ego
But get you tin
And swat the fly.
—
WHY MONEY IS CHEAP.
(Judge's Library.)
"I want you to tell me what this paper
means when it ays In Its market report
that money is (heap," says iMrs. Melree
to her huehand, who like all husbands,
Is supposed to her encyclouedle.
MeFee laid down the sporting sheer.
"P's simply putting in a briefer forM the
statement that money talks," he replied,
"and that talk Is cheap."
droo
.01 <C"NigiVa
, •
•rT".?1*
"frIt:rii4:
,
—
AN ATTRACTIVE BEDROOM, alODEItATELY FL IINISHED,
6imp1icity (should be the effect her
home should strive for, especially when
the and her husband aro making their
Start on the jneome of the average
young inien. In 110 ptitee is simplicity
more desirable than in the bedroom.
In other rooms the eimple effect
is often difficult, bemuse the furniture
desired is likely to be more expeneive
than the yelIng couple might be able
to efford. &Me of the prettiest be(1.
rooms, even in elaborate hostages, are
those which are least costly. Indivi-
duality in taste may have feller play
in the bedroom than in any other plaee
in the new home.
Wall decoration iq usnally left to the
newcomer. biningreom and living room
walls mgtneceesariiy he mete eouyen-
than those of the 14,12'02021,
where lighi eoloug are prefereble.Wheri
it le poseible a tinted wall 114 hviter
then paper. Well papers with email pra-
t:011S arid f101 e.1ge.1 ate ugually moil!
tat iSittet o7y thou t11:0 W'r1)
PatternS are likely to 1!1.4‘!01titi 011'8011W.
.A white paper with I satin etripe
effective and tole leide made an ex-
quieite effect by puiclai,qint; paper of a
rote pattern mid tilt Ling oat roe-) en-
ough to paste in a trellised design over
the 'Whitatin,
' A bedroom set, bought as such, is
really an extravagauee. While maho-
gany luts the preference of natural
woods, a mahogany fourposter will cost
at leaet $25. The matt -res e and epringe
a durable quality will cod Another
45 and a good mahogany dresser can
hardly be secured for much less than
$30. A mahogany small rocker arid low
chair will be another $10.
If, instead of mahogany, white fur-
niture Is used, the cost will be consid-
erably less.
A 'white iron or a white wooden bed-
stead may be had for About $10, if the
I shopper wee diserimimitieg rare in her
j task.
; One Very attractive bedroom was fur-
! nielied 'by a yourig WO11111.11 by the pm-
eeSs of ellantelling a cheap wood bed-
; stead send areeerr. A roelter, lieugat for
70 emits at a department store sale in
a small eity where she livee, and it low
; wooden kitelien whote toe( was
leee than 00 tiling. viinipietoil the 11.;".-
tttal furniture of ft Mai' MO White l'002/1
that Wilfi :id Wiiikit had beell
anauged at a minimum eepenee,
I In addition to thii frtruituve 1 he
l bride will fled that a elatwaist hex,
covered with cheap aul pretty eretonne,
;
. will be a great convenience in the room
and that its use will do away with the
neeeesity of one chair.
The winm
window curtains may be o
if
nexpensive net or Fiwiss which the
bride rimy finish with an edging to
match the design of the design of the
wall paper border, hide curtains add
amazingly to the beauty of it window
and are pretty in any Goft washable
ntaterial. Sateen i$ an excellent substi-
tut° for silk if a plain color is desired
to go with walls where the peper's fig.
1 ure ie at all in evidence, Cretonne is
prettier when the walls are plain.
The aheete end pillow eases neeeesary
for the bedroom ,a half dozen of one
and it dozen of the other, may be heel
within a money limit of $5. A good
double blanket win eoet about $5. For
$1.50 it winter eoinfort. in carded text
-
ton with sateen lender is to be had.
Two spreads will ew,t at re,b4 $1,50
eavh. Pillows will eome to i.:!:1.
With ingenuity and geed taete tlee
bride elentlil lie able tu filr114411 tTik.)
entire Iiiiiin for riboet riaite bail:Wing the
purehaeo of tree) leg rtigi of eolor to
. blend With the &cot Mimic!, The eoeisl
• may be furnil=hed on 1C-54, the differenes
depending on pew pereeverante entl
skill in Shopping.
0111001010110 .01
Conforms to the
sionOard
good:s.
1,4efed for
Oka hundred.purpase4'.
Sho
Do
a
oL.ier
Shoot
a Striker?
Nti
TOM MANN, Vefio ne IN PRISON UNDER el UTII.ZY ACT.
WHAT TOM MANN SAID TO SOLDIERS.
Manchester, england.—Tom Mann,
England's most, militant labor leader,
Is in jail, serving a six months' sen-
tence for making Lille speeeh to sol-
diers sent to break tee coal miners'
strike:
"Men, Comradee and Frothere--You
are in the array; so are we,
"You in the army of destruction;
we in the inciuIte'al erase, of coil-
struction.
'We work at mine, 111111, ferge, fac-
tory, or dock, prodecing all the goods,
clothing, etc., whieh make it pos-
sible for people, yourselves included,
to live.
"You are workingmen's; sone. When
WHAT 1 THINK OF TOM
(By Ben
'rom Mahn has beea elle of the
most virile. foreee in this ('euntry for
close on it ssenersition; frank, fear-
less, latelleeteally courageetes, 'keen-
ly alive to all the ntisere around him,
alert and resoureeful in tht1ing out
the scientific solntiove for the pov- t
erty he sees all around him and un-
warranted.
Many yet) re ago he mad e up his
mind that huma nity Lure and
the coequest el' met; es er nature .
renders less nnel IC.511 e''.4•U-i.1 i0 the
governing en•t eonti oiling V1:1.S31-.18 to
enforce penile it elate' a cond ition of i
thinga, whielt means hunger and
drudgery on the one eide and luxury
with idleness for the other side.
The 'Iutiny Act, under which he
has been convicted, is an old act,
resurrected, an act brought into being
by the people who had robbed the
British man o' war sailor of wages
And oven food, redueln.• the service
to a state of mutiny wriich even the
cruelest lashing with the cat-o'-nine-
tails could not supprees.
The act becamo unnecessary di-
rectly the men were paid and fed aid
treated properly as human beings,
And has lain Olt the shelf for nearly
11 century, until the fears of the pre-
sent generation of elites -robbers
threw them into a p-nie, and the
usual. call for jail and bullet was
made. •
• .
we go on strike to better our lot,
which is the lot also of your fathers,
mothers, brothers, and sisters, you
tareieel!ns.
I edupon by your officers to
ntrd
"Don't do it."
For adding the last three words
Mann. was arrested, charged with in-
citing to mutiny, without bail, and
convicted.
People In England ar taiking ser-
iously of a labor uprising within the
next few years that will be a social
revolution. If that ever comes, Ben
Tillet, who writes this remarkable
article for the Times, will be the
leader of it, 'with Mann by his side.
MANN'S IMPRISONMENT.
Tillett.)
tireater London is larger than Cant.
er New York. The population of Lon.
don is 7,2400h of ()renter New York,
4,7(10,q81.
_
American touriets Spend front 00,000,-
000 to $100,000,00 yearly in European
travel. What is spent in European tra-
vel is probably 6aVed from whiskey at
home.
Beer Inv taken a jump up in Cineareo,
the third therease in eight months. The
50e it barrel added will be taken out of
the bar drinker in smaller and thiekee
glasses,
-
Tito fire loseee, of the Vnited Stater;
and Canada for the month of May, 1912,
I were 41,013.930, as eompared with $21,-
, 422,000 in May, 1011, and :i1S,S.23,201) for
' the tile month in 1010,
Mrs, Wm. Moore, of rearlington town -
.shill), Mieh., is 16 years of age, and elle
hi the mother of 24 ehildren, 7 pairs nt
twins, and the yeungeet 11 motalls
She is an ardsnt advecate ief Teddy
Roosevelt and his doetrines.
The oid West is pas•40,st. A ifrkir yeare
ago English sparrows and red cents were
practically unknown. Five eolith was
ahotet the smallest coin eemmonly lian-
(tied. Now you can buy anything down
to ft vent without ineonve-nieuese.
hody throwe away rents now in the
\Vest,
The powers that be say that we
have no right to ask the soldiers not
there, we claim the employing class
es claim the right to order the sol-
diery to shoot and murder.
Tom Mann claims, with the rest
of us, that the capitalist ales have
no right. to own and dominate the
army, any more than to own the
means of life of the population; fur -
there, we clal mthe employing class
have no right to order the shooting
of our class any more than we have
any right to order the shooting of
employers and capitalists generally.
_ This side of the case has not as
yet been eeen by the workers of this
country; but the agitation arising
over the imprisonment of Mann is
bound to revive interest in the re-
pressive measures in force in this
country.
The silly "Mother Partington's" of
government'and eapitalisin cannot re-
nreee a people by the mere torture
or imprisonment of the leaders.
eeeture to say with the facts too
brutally Stir° to my experience and
understanding of the labor move-
ment than leaders eau either invent
or arouse, and that the feeling at the
preeent moment of the rank and file
of the MoVeM.ent is not only one of
unrest, but distrust of leaders who
may counsel patience, reform or the
usual pacific nostrums.
rrora Mann is alive to the knowl-
edge of the forces moving the mimeo.
Ile shares the ambitions, he Maims
the same faith of revolution. lie is
mal -big no movement; he is repre-
senting a movement,
Tora Mann stands as it living pro-
test and a vital protest, to the class
war, in the preaching against the
class War, Mann shows the -existence
of the evil and shows how the gov-
erning classes of this country, hav-
ing blinded and fooled the workers
for so many centuries, are now
alarmed and brought face to faee
with a movement that is calling for
equality, for the equal right to live
of the commonest human being with
the so-called greatest.
• 4•4
My busbies is net to remake myself,
hut make the :Ile:elute best of what
(11(1. made, ---Browning. • :4; a'-ekt
e
• • • ' - •
An Absolutely Safe 61 Investment'
0] The First Mortgage Bonds of Price Bros. & Company 6 per cent, on the invest4
ntenteesecurcd by first mortgage on one of the finest paper mills and over four
million acres of the be.st pulp and timber land in America -.-insured with Lloyds,
of London' England, figaimt fir -.-offer it tnost attractive investment. The
present netearning3 of the Company are suflicient to pay the bend interest twice
over. The growing demend for pulpwood is yearly increasing the Naitte of the _
Company's propertie. 'lliese bonds have been purchased by the b..st informed _
financiers in both Cauada utd Enalatal. At their present price they yiAl 6 per
• cent interest. Considering t( 011 earniees, tied the likelihood of
; appreciation in value, Price Bros, & Compeey bonds contittite au exceptional -
investnier it.
f..e fell iti,nt I
R
'SECURITIES
CORPORATION u m IT -
RANK OV 1Y.101.11e1EAL 11,,U1101NG • •
R. M. WHITE
rvrea a E. er
YONGE c,;(11iF14 STREETS
TORiee°T0
M0:t4At.-s.a.ns.ots1:-,t il•AX-orvAviA
't •
• The Pelintiylvania Rail road hae pl int
'MOW I1ttn f Gar and a half million. tree);
hi the last ten years, beet year elone
515,70:t trove were transferred from the
teem pa ny 's =eery to .p er m a n en t p1acC.
The logging operations.; of the railroad
wore c.ontinued in 1911, two new plots
being involved.
Anthracite eoal crawl up; gasoline
vlso takes it jump up. The motor ruee
must pay $12,000,000 a year profit more,
to the operators in a few cents a gallon
to pay for the annoyance of the Stand-
ard 011 Companies. The coal strike an-
noyance must be made good by the pay-
ment of $8,000,000 by the coal users, al-
though the strike hit the employers, only
for it fraction over $7,000,000. But don't
equeal.
r
A Welleville, Kansas, school -boy was
told to write a poem of two verses, and
read it to the class, on flies, and got off
the following.:
Spy
A
Fly.
"Gott
He
Sees
The women of California are a disap-
pointment to the suffragettes in the
primariee. In the state. there are half
it million legally entitled to the ballot,
and out of this number only 20 per cent.
have takera the trouble to qualify. In
San Francisco , cut. of 100,000 women
entitled to register, barely 30,000 took
the opportunity, and less than 20,000
voted, at the prim:ries.. The cage was
tilt same in Los Angeles, Sacramento
and other urban centres. In the urban
distriete the women did a little better,
although it is expected that not more
than 175,000 will be legnily qualified reet
November.
s
The Philadelphia, Reeord. FiKuS .1,F.ome
good coining out of the high coat of
living. It reasons that the inereasse itt
the cast of living in the United Statee,
in so far 118 it has beeti brought about
by ineffective work on the farms nod by
wasteful management in ottr American
houeoh.olds, hat3 not been Eeltogether
calamitou.e. The farmers are sending
their boys to agricultural colleges to learn
how to make two blades of grass grow
where one grew before. At the game
time it ha -.s become a recognized. necessity
e,f complete edueation to teach our girls
the rudiments of domestic 43elerwe, cook-
ory and house economies,.
The work of exeavatiug the Roman
eity ot Unieoninm, buried on a site of
! leo acres of South Shrewsbury, under
the eluidow of IVrekin, it noted hill in
Shropehire, is about to begin and be
continued O'er several years. Little is
'known of the curly history of the place.
The work will, it is hoped, determine the
exact date of the first Roman occupa-
tion. Evidence already available clearly
puts it within the tiret century A. D. It
also confirms the tradition that the city
was stormed and burned Mid itS inhabit-
ants massacred. Coins found on the site
clearly bring the history ot the occupa-
tion down to the end of the fourth cen-
tury only.
The ordinals), man's heart is a purap-
ing station which beats or pumps (Wont
72 times a minute. When he was it baby
it beat about 120 strokes to the minute,
incl \libels be is (in years of age he will,
if he talcot Olft hia Watelt, find that has
heart is pumping iu time to the seeonde
. sei strokes to the minute. A ironed
heart pitintei abort hiN Cittni•t'S of bioei
:it- 0.t.rylklaf, .it.o*, eaell
This MenlIS tibit this little pante int,
e2i.17t 01' 'N'i 41
01,411 ii) $1.it i.iCA)1.!.
, hieniiieieid elitleotiee
egenieres ;ma easetaelorie ,,hat ere tale-
tg ritehs and regnire ereat tele ieliiere ite
nerseole iererev will tesedi le function
dieordere se" the heert „end pereietai
in the diellitharea Will 4,14,/i122.4:1y
ria,10 ,T,troo.