Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1912-07-18, Page 3IN POULTRY WORLD 1-14161NOi1.Nyi.jtAToIttelidaltel Some peeple have an idea that ineto bator ehieks #are itot ise hardy as the homitatellea ehitice, When the old hen la sitting *ho gives the eggs her entire attention; she stirs the eggs, her tem- perature never gets to hot or too QOM, And if you sobstitute mechanised, means iiicutetion, and desire hardy inenba- tsg ehieks. yeti MUM, Wafeh the temper- ittere in the machine. There must be moisture in the =eh - the egge tumid Oviee a dee., the lamps} must be kept trimmed. and filled, toed the hest way to leara is to study the instructions that you get with the ineubator and then follow them care: S4oak. stale bread, in sweet skim -milk, pros out the mills as •completely as pos.. )1er eible and feed the bread to the ehleke, also keep eoarse sana before them; without it the alas cannot grind their food. Feed this bread and milk a little at a time, every two hours for two days, then add a little hard-boiled egg'shell and all, broken fine, to the brettd After a week on this ration add hulled oats and finely cracked wheat, SUMMER HOUSING The season is now here when you ex- perience the greateet heat, or at any rate, when you may expect to, and suitable housiug for all young stock is of the greatest importance, if all is to go well. Plenty of fresh air, plenty of room, plenty of soft bedding (which should be kept clean) until of sufficient age to perch, are all essentials. Over- crowding and housing of the young stock with the old in stuffy, ithven. tils.ted sleeping quarters are both com- mon and fatal errors, Chiele-ene grow faster and do better if kept cool at nights during summer, and a pure, cool atmoephere in their steeping quarters is one of the first things to be looked after if you expect them to do well, To breathe a foul atmosphere during the night time is sure to lead to bodily de- formities of various kinds to say nothing of colds, croup and other such ailments. When these evils befall the flock no end of trouble will soon follow. It is a good plan to have an open -fronted, airy shed, with a well -littered floor for howeeing the youngsters at night time during the sumraer months. The birds should be separated according to size, and kept in small flock, which can be done where the house iss of suffieient size, by placing wire partitions. Give attention to these pointe and if anything goes wrong it will not be in the housing—Nashville Ban- ner. COMMON SENSE NEEDED FOR FOWLS. Common sense in the way many people not only view poultry keeping but in tb.e way they actually keep and handle poultry. Take the matter of the much heralded intensive poultry keeping and the large profits so ex- tensively advertised. It seems almost impossible that any thinking man or woman can reason out the former or swallow tho latter, The hastinesSe too, with which many poultry keep- ers jump at concluoions does not have coromon sense to recommend it. Within, the month tb.ese lines are penned the writer has • come across several instances of this, let alone the hundreds of instances that have come directly under his observation. Com- mon sense is not only lacking in many individual poultvy operations, but there practices in poultry keep- ing in Leis State that are almost uni- versal that have nothing like good sense to recommend them. Regularity all the time is one of the imperative things in poultry keep- ing. The work is never very hard, but what work there is is work that needs to be done with clock -like regu- larity. There are no Sundays and no holidays in poultry keeping. The Sunday work can be so arranged that the minimura need be done on that day and yet there is some work that must be done as on all other days. The most important of this is the regular hour and system of feeding. The system and hour of feeding should be carefully considered and then as carefully adhered to. Feed- ing at irregular intervals causes rest- lessness and discontent in. a flock, disturbs digestion and egg laying. Poultry quickly learns to carry the time and if the feeding is always at exactly the same time they will not lose much time fretting for the feed. hour, but spend their time in activity along natural inclinations. Feeding and caring for poultry at regular hours and after an established system trends strongly toward suc- cess and profit. There are many con- ditions over which we have no con- trol and to do the usual thing at the usual time under unusual conditions is foolish and not common sense at all. CoMM0a sense again, too, would in- dicate that any sehete.e of poultry keeping that involves $10 worth of labor to get $1 worth of chickens is not likely to apepai to anyone very long and that money inveeted in houses and appliances compelling such, an inverse hallo will be eventu- ally wasted. And wher anyone at- teppts to apply such a syetem of pattltry keeping on a large scale as is frequently done of late in various de- grees, he is faee to face With eondi- tions tersely summed up in Farm Poultry a year or twO ago: The man eannot stand it The stock cannot stand it. The land cannot stand it. If anyone who is thinking of build- ing a long, continuous poultry house, with a swan, narrow yards in front, style of plant or of establishing a large plant on a small plot of grotted, will thoroughly study the above three lines he will nave himself a lot oit money and a lot of disappointment. POultry won't stand being converted into factory halide and poultry keep - %lug into factory methods. HOW THEY WALKED. (New York Sun., Without "playing" any "favorites," may we aver a personal Impression that the Greeks and tille ILighlantlers marched YesterdaY with a little the most If devil may ,eare 4140," Orui we ate not sure that tholr costume 19 Istlit sprung from a, Coln- InOn aneentOr, Xn relVarti to to 'StOtS* bowevor, it 19 difficuti to speak There le eoneetleng It; the RItIrtIttg• of the Dept that appeals to every ear, malting is all believe for the Moment that: "Still our LE!1`14.4.8 are tree, olie )ieartii aro anginal:re, And in ourtitt erkvek)a the new:ties. Ti.4.1,41,014,4.144 .14% 4.14.0 k AVIAT'ORS' DEAT'hia. frill:lade:plea Record.) Beginning. N‘ilit L4eut. 14:.%.11r11.4O, who wait" titled 'egg than four leenre ago, the stviation fatol,tit A to date nunther 1. It 0, heavy see to pay, t)f eourte, the eozuntest of t.opor will g0 o/l, but there ought to he reduction of the death rate, "there Its te,i) steetbitien fng, too 1(1111(311 eftort to ).(aeae. roeurde fur altitude or meted, tee ineny attempts to 40 WV* 0.441104 Itching and [Wilk .-ETIEN.NE CARTIER Any Headache Cured on Face and Throat Sores Disfigured So Ho Dreaded to Appear in Pubikl, No Rost Night or Dap. Cuticura 01:1timnt Curede "Six months; gee tor fret' and throat ail broke otit and ita..,..11 int-, a rooreng sore, diti not betly.i. :limn; 'it at iir4t, nut it ono week's timo 11;-4Ottl," hmi optead raP1(11,:, ovor nly 'a:re mot thlest and the burning itchiug i)ce:Te;A tat tut that 1 bealin to sew.: q! ,daTerent M bet none seemed to e'e niv ony relic:, The, Nums dlieettrai W ewe) to f11 CC extent that e dreatiest eepear ia "1 suffered terreee mai viand g...t no rest night or day. Ai lot a frittiti advised me to try the hutiesha Menefee. r inie about oven up ?.pe, tbo'ui 1would !taro one more try, mei 'ti 1 inset e Outiettre Ointment, tine e tamer! me from the start, X contineed it;ftt' t., IOW SiX. time wits completely eerea, and On say t would advise Anyone eueerine, trom ektu (lavas) to use honours% oittimeet, us it is the hest healing- helot itt Nvcritl," (Sigucd) Roscoe Good, Seven PetsenF, Alta., Feb. es, FOUND RELIEF ONLY PROM ZUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMeNT "Aly little gla when only a few weeks old broke out on the too of her head and it be - Came a solid scab. Then her cheeks became ilaw and soil) and after trying different; temaclies found alla only from using Quo, - tura Sosep and Ointment. 11 lavted six months or more, but after a thorough treat- ment with the Cuticura, Soap and Ointment never had any return." (Signed) Mrs, W. S. Owen, Yadkin eoliege, N. C., May 26, 1911. For more than a generation Cutteura Soap and Ointment have afforded the most sue- ceasful treatment for skin.and scalp troubles of infants, children and adults., A single cake of Cutieura Soap and bolt of Cutleura °Int. runt are often sufficient. Although sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world, a liberal sample, of each, with 32-p. book on the skin, will be sent free, on application to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., 51 Columbus Ave., Boston, U. 5. A. .„ HOT TIPS What to Do When Weather is Sizzling Hot. The city of Chicago department of heisith leaned the following bulletia dur- ing the day: "So far we have not ltaci, any -very hot weather. It is q ui t0 likely, though, that feont now on we will have plenty of it. "In warnt wea.ther we do not need to eat so inuell fo•sed nor of as rieh and nutritious a, kind as .we do during the winter mouths, This means that we can get along, and, in fact, be better off by reducing the amount a meat we eat and by lucre:using vegetables and fruits. "Here are some good hot weather "Doat't woeTy. "Keep your temper, "Bathe frequently, "Eat in moderation. "Get plenty of sleep. "Stay outdoors all you can, "Don't look at a thermometer. "Drink plenty of water awl butter- milk. "Let beer and all alcoholic drinks alone. "Wash your hands 'before eating the noon day lunch, "Don't eat food that ha 6 been exposed to flies or that has been handled by unclea.n hands. .Be good natured and kind and avoid a grouchy person as you would a postil- enee." KEIR HARDIE'S LETTER (Rochester Herald) Keir Hardie, one of the British Social. ist leaders, has written an open letter to King George, which appears in the Pion- eer, a. Socialist publication printed in London, Me letter deals with the visit of the King to the Dowlais works, in Merthyr Borough, Wales, where there have been labor troubles, and it conclud- es as follows: "The working classes can place but one interpretation upon a visit to Guest Keen and Nettlefolds at this stage and that will be that you,, too, are against them and on the side of their oppressors. Go to Dowlais, by all means, see their people and their homes, but shun Sista works as you would a plague spot. There I leave tile matter. It is for you to decide whether, with these facts before your notice, it is consistent with the dig- nity of your high office that you should stecept hospitality paid for out of the blood and stear-bained wealth of the es creators of dismal Dowlais." As might have been expected, King p George never paid any attention to this t letter. Probably he nevrr so much as t read it, He made the visit an! Keir r llardie furious. Hardy does notbe- leve in king. He does not like them. Why should he? He is never invited to visit king e and kings never visit him. Most difficulties are social difficulties. John Burns grew eoneeryative when he began to move in good society; ao gal - ed. A .seat in the Cabinet nutde him turn against what had be his convim ea tiontoand when King Edward smiled ups ea on him, his extreme radicalism faded like a mist before the morning sun. Would Kok liseidie be equally amenable to the lo smiles of royalty and society? We are not sure that he would, for la_ Keir Hardie is a, very piousman and we I" think, a very eincere fanatic, A man. Itt whose principles of eeonomiee or what 11 not are rooted and grounded in relig. bus sentiment is invulnerable. It le the mysticism of David Lloyd -George "r that makes him so dreaded by the Torta les, But the materialistie Soicialists, 17 and few Socialist's are ions men, like C Keir Hardie, are usually susceptible to In the flatery of society end royalty. They a enjoy being invited to dinner itt, the ea houses of the great. "r Competitive Designs for M01113,1Xlent to Statesman.. SPAR041,,,,..a.1.411 Sculptural. vompetition designs tor a MOnlInlent tO be erected at Montreal t() the iota titeorgt, t;tivitite Cartier, iiu't. lo. Competition designs front sculptors tve vited lor a montiteent to be ereet. erito the late Sir tecorge Etienne Oar - tier, Bart., eltd which will also SymboliZe "Confederation," 2o. The piernoriel when completed end in position is not to eost more than $100,000, ineluding pedestal from. the /reel of the ground. eo. The eompetition is Open to Cana- dian SC:Wilford Only. 4o. The site of the mortumeut will be on the slope of Mount Royal., near 13a- cliel street, at Montreal. 50. Deeigns ;shall be in the forns of oketch models in plaster made at it scale not exceeding otte ieeh to the foot. A deecription of the design must accom- pany each model, Co. All eennnUnleations regarding this competition shall be addressed to the President of the Cartier Centenary Comintttee, P, O. 'Box 188, Montreal. All models to be addressed to the office of the Committee, Hochelaga Bank Build- ing, at Montreal. 7o. The designs must be delivered onl or before the 15th day of September,' 1912. They will be kept from pliblie! view until the award has been made. All expenses of delivering the aketcht models and accompanying descriptionsi shall be paid by the committee. Sketein models will, after the award and at the expense of the eommitttee, be returned upon the request of the eompetitors, but at the riek of the competitors. Notice of the award evill be sent to each of the comoetitore. The award willonly be binding pro- vided the successful competitor is prepared to furnish satisfactory evi- dence, with security if demanded, that he can execute the work for the sum above mentioned, C. P. R. PURCHASE A Nineteen Million Dollar Order and What it Means. ••••••••••••••••••••••••• In these days of big things, when people talk of millions, where their grandfathers spoke of thousands, the fact that the Canadian Pacific Rail- way Company has ordered 12,600 ad- ditional freight cars and 300 more locomotives may not attract more thau mere passing attention, except amongst railway men. And yet this order involves an expenditure of the immense sum of $10,000,000—the freight cars costing $14,000,000 and the locomo- tives $5,000,000. This is a pretty big amount for any railway—even one like the C. P. R.—to spend at one time in additional equipment, especially when costly sleepers and diners or passenger coaches of any description whatever are not included. If figures are seldom amusing. they are sometimes entertaining, and that iateet purehaee of the C. P. R. furnishes a few filets that are of more than orda, nary interest. *Here are some of theme The length of a freight car from buffer to buffer is 39 feet, its weight 37,000 .pounds, and its carrying cape - city 80,000 pounds. The length oft these locomotives from pilot to bufferl of the tender is about 09 feet, and., its weight, in working order, 175 tons. Each tender carries 5,000 gallons of water and 13 tons of coai. Each loco- motive is of 15,000 horse power, and can haul on the level at least 76 cars, or on an average of 50 cars over the whole system. String these cars in one long line and they would reach a die - tame of 92 miles—from Montreal more than half -way to Quebec. The 12,600 freight ears would make up 250 trains, and if they were to start, say from Calgary, at intervals of one hour, running on a regular schedule of 20 miles an hour, nearly ten days and a half would elapse be- tween the dispatching of the first and of the last train. When the last train' left Calgary, there would be a grand procession from the Rockies to the At- lantic and 2,000 milee out on its depths —if it were possible to extend the mile on the ocean—and that is two-thirds the watery way to the old couno ry. The 5,000 mile parade would, ractically reach around one-fifth of he globe. The distance from Calgary o Montreal is 2,251 miles, and the un would occupy four and a quarter clays. It the ears were unloaded proraptly, the first train could reach Calgary, on the return trip, two days before the last one had been dispatched easta. Eak ear carrying 40 tons, the total eapaeity of the new Call would be half a million tons, more than enough rgo for 60 ships of the largest cargo- rrying type ih the world, which have, capacity of 10,000 tons, The motive power of the 300 new'. cormotives aggregates 450,000 h.p.—f nough to run 04 Angus shops, tise rgest of their kind in Canada, or the achittery of factories that would keep early four. hundred thoueand personst mployed. The trains therneelvee, with the unit" nveraging, say, 126 miles, beg veen divisional points would require, crews of five men each, between algary and 1sfontreal, a total of b5 en, end the 250 trains would need n army of traiimien, 21,250 strong, if' ch crew were to only make a single :Alta" this is but one purchase of the' P. la. When one enters upon ealeula. oils about this% yearht entire freight itipment. some 65,000 cars, on a milat besie aa that mentioned—a. 20-' ile-an-hour train hourly --- a good al of arithinetie loss to be indulged . They would make up into 1,300 ainsand it would oecupy nearly ght weeks between the departure ef • first end the lest of them from a VOA point. They would etreteli out 400 miles, and encirele the globe at e equator, where lother Earth . V0118 out to her largest eireurn- renee --- 25,000 miles. They would ah aeross the continent of North meriee. from Halifax to Vancouver, er iseven timea. And they would , vo e tortes ing eapaeity of 27,000.000 s. ns, on the Oho trip, end with hist keg equipment over tweuty.two and If millions of tone were earried during f‘, O year, All of tido( SholVa that the O. P. It'ti. ttipmentis somethitip colossal, arict L' at Rh $1.0.000,000 purehnse means eat deal more than appeare on the face of It. * Tired Systems Re -tuned WHEN YOU'RE DULL, TIRED, RESTLESS DAY AND NIGHT, SOMETHING IS WRONG IN THE STOMACH. A Prominent Publishing Man Says the Quickest Cure Is Dr. Hamilton's Pills. lieeelteolrees never come to those WhO 140 Dr. llantilton.'s rius, :lad this fact is vowited for by the Asfsietaatt Manager of the Poultry Sueeess Magee:We, of Springfield, 0., Mr. J. H. Callender, who writes: "Ne better medicine than Dr. Pills, We urea them regu. laxly and. knOWof mervellous mires that resisted everything elee, They cleanse the whole eystran, act as a tonic on the bleofl, enlivens digestion, help the etono nob, and make you feel atrong and Wien. For heaelaKAleS, indigreation and stonmeli dieordere I am confident that the one preacription ie Dr. diamiltone' Being composed of =Urfa vegetable remediee, 1)r. Hamilton's Pills poeeess great power, yet they are harmlese. They aid all organ e connected with the stomach, liver and towels. LI. conse- quence food is properly digested, tile (blood is pure and nourishing, tthe body le kept strong and resiete ilieettee, all druggists and storokeepers e1l Dr. Hamiltonas Piths; e5cs per box, 5 for $1,00, or by mail from The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Can- ada, LITER*LLY SPEAKING. on takin' in.N any this, year? Lib—Yes, Hez, every sumraer. be yr u ealculatin' summer boarders I "take 'em in" "rd. L. G." IS FOUND (Will 'Marry author of Anonymous Novel Oct. 8. Old4aet1tioned4romance v;tith / {the author of faionedern realletie theatri- Ica]. novel ferthetavine. "NI. B. G."—the person for whom 'the seaseational among- . mous novel (salted "To M. L. G." was in- tended—has reacik the book, and is to marry the author. The etory whichthas :Aroused great . curiosity, told how atworman, brought np in New York theatrical life, met a 13rit- ish army (vf.ficer and, loved him, but would iciest oeistr ry th±mtuntil 110 knew all about, her life. This ashe desserileal in. a book,)rather tharria, letter, eo that if he Teadilt and then did not want her, he needd never reply.. The bo-ok.was rpubliselied in Feearuary, thisiyear. Three's months afterward the author went. traysfiling sin Spain. "M. L. G." 'tmeanwhile was in ianother country. lie happened to sread, reviews of the bookin the tLoaiellon Dt4ly Mail tend in Everyhocleeesadagatzine, both. rather long and. • detailed. Realizing that the took was efor him„, he called for a. copy, read It, and thenriteeetenedeto England, where he had last; seon ithe "author, whoexi he had deeply ilovedgbut ovho had refused him without giving hinsi a reaeon. The books explained all that. hehad been un- able 'to und(erstand. For, some time he could get no trate of her. But .at hustilietlearised where she •Wae, and rushed to Spain. As In old roillance,%„"journeys mid in lovers' eneet. ing, an& they are to be married on Oet. 8. But who "M. L. G.," and the author are is ae launch sa myetery as'.ever. The preceding ',,fects have just eomer,to the Amalie= :tpublialiere .of the book, .Fred- eriok A. Stokes Company, through the author's solicitor,: with whoni the pub- lishers havegirom.the fleet had ails coon- munication. But ,of the author's iden- tity they Ineve ilea been informed. they know. is ebhatl tile author must be an Ameriewnlacrtresso as. she repeesenti herself in "To' M. L. 0.;" and that prob- ably ohs itonofrie of the persons to allow rumor has ales/pied thee authorship ofP the book, The 'news I, shows that , most of the guesses at authorship ihavedheen absurd and is a slap ariathe eynice—the theatrical men.who have !i aeserted that the etory th' e,t 11, any oi thought 'they, the so- ake, that tl ey;' knew it, and phiseiest.ted, cot ;rbe taken41n by literary greeniegoods,rt eseished tie protest! BE ASOOSTER. IDeyeueknowItheseete Soto or ;pew* Settiresrourat%in every` towel Girowiln? a,:irsody chachon. Stnook eve* good thing doWn? Don't you be thalt tkind e' cattle, 'Cause they atint4no use on earth, * You just bees, booster, Ivoater, Orow anoueersost {tor all you're worth, Y.f y -ours teem 'neeautthooletire, boost ler; X>on'tseholet traekt-Anad wait tit) see 4-44 EARLY WALL DECORATIONS. 0. ti Probably the earlieet wall paintingt eq are the ancient Egyptian. They em. ployed a distemper containing dissolved ni gum, and their principal pigments were white Chalk, a vegetable, yellow. ochres, itnr Ethiopian cinnabar, blue powdered glass Stained with copper and charcoal th black. Their draWing Wita teChnically akilful, and, :se as the ease with the 26 Modern decorator, their coloring wee th purely decoratiVe and their designs faro °' ciful and extravagant. fe The walls of Asaz,.rian and Babylonialt 11° dWelli2g9 WPI'D treated in muck the 41 Saint. way, and the praillee of painting OV on walls; coated with plater was eer- nit &drily in vogue in Assyria. to It has been believed &leo that the Ye Greets underetool true trete° work. ho apperently on the strength oi e phrame tb oeeurtiug nt Plutarele "to ptiat on e wet geound." Vitruvins also speaks of e(1 a surface to prepared are peentenentth — which Certainly is eharaeteristic of truer eer treaco.---,rrora the Loudon Globs. It some othorttellowri Sail eght.Pin, thies'iootiret171,3 f'reet NO one's .gant air,rnortgage on it, It, Peet( t*.eas*,anitscli as his, If your •tocn sVehy 012beosters, Y4>u get2.n thee ' 1.1 VI Just aset seem to snit you And, t1he1 werld;moetzte ildrider wrong, What's tbenatatter with se-boostin' JustAteihelpttiss thing alongt 'eause,tethinge,. wouitt atop a-goint Vcre'dnbe4in a- eorry plight Teti lust keent;that thorn a..4blowin'— Boost liar nwvoith alt your might. youeltesoroverirne f ellatLA luattorget 'era, cause you know •That foiler'stgot some good points TIM -tree the ories;you went to ShOW. "(last yoor loaveviout on tho waters. They'll come back" 's n sayln' Ix -no, Mebbe, too, thi ey'll.leonte back 'buttered" When•oome tfoller'boosts 'for you, Plats Ustkers' Criterion, THE LAW OF RECOMPENSE* Mievedka.nd Plain leeatero 1 i"It's $111'6,1%006 nvorning', fiandy," "Wi.. 4_611, 4.0)(41,1 abut it?" olAtretirt.S)ou grateful for it, rnOnt'" i 4 Ttet ikyt. mot l'iii eau gem* ta.ei tharlittt neboily ear 't." eveel wive not, SatIttyr "ri tell ye mew not. lee day only stalk 22 xre bit ttioards naldn' good Postie pttOr otter we're havind; of late." A.. t • •GOT HER IDEAL Reiross' Rules forYouth She Would Accept. New York—Mise Oilberk, heir- ess to the $15,000,000 estate left by her father, 11. Brandhell has found her ideal men aud her emeragement to Howard Prince Renshaw, eon of a millboft . rpoit.tinutettirer of Troy, was an Gilbert, who is one of the moot beautiful and popitlar young women of New York soeiety, lots been wooed by Many men, but tome of them was ar, eepted because he did not meet the•stiond. fications of a perfect husband, ashtaiti down by Mhos Gilbert herself. "liow muchbetter it would. be." Miss Gilbert is reported to iittvo wad "if every girl would cerefully formulate her ideal and then pate it up prominently where the right nom could come along and see it. What a lot of trouble and dieappointment could be saved," Here is the type MISS Gilbert insieted upon: kb muet be six feet tall, a brunette and fond of athletics, a good rider and fond of aniinals; clean shaven, with a firm jaw and. oars close to his head; a Republican and a snoney maker. Be eauet have till& curly hair—not red—over his left ear, a straight nose, large and intelligent eyes, but not soul. ful ones lbe must haw deeided ideas on the raising of poultry and pigs He =et like lemon with his tea and eat ice cream with a fork, like Robert Chambers' stories; dance the turkey trot and wear his elothee like John Drew does; swear like a gentleman and be gentlemanly even in his .eupe He must not wear pink necktie e or Sewelry, or ever have been really in love. Other Men who have sought the hand of Mies Gilbert and. been refused are Angler Duke, Jack Darragh, Alden Blodgett and Riehard Lounsbury. None of these measured up in her opinion, Mr, Renshaw is 25 years of age and attended the Rensselaer Polytechnie in- stitute at Troy, lie left the institution in 1909 before graduation and. has since spent most of his time in New York. Ire is a grandson of the late Commodore Cicero Price, U. S. N., and a nephew of fles. Lily Hammersley, who afterward be- came the Duehees of Marlborough. ••••••••• INSECT STINGS AND SUMMER SORES Insect bites and stings, blistered feet and sunburn! These three thing, or any one of them, may spoil some day e' your vacation, or make your work a bore! Zain-Buk is the remedy you need! It takes the "burn" out of these red, in- flamed patellae where the sun has got home ou you; it eases bad mosquito bites, and it soothed and heals blist- ered feet and hands. in the hot weather young babies suf. fer greatly from heat spots and chafed places. Here, again, Zam-Bnk will give almost instant ease! Mothere should always keep Zant-Bulc handy, and should use Zam-Buis Soap for baby's bath. Fun. -cuts, burns, and moire serious skin diseases, such as eczema, wood -poison- ing, otce, and for piles, 7.arn-13iuk is ab- solutely without an equal. All druggists and stores 50 eents box or Zara Buk Co.. Toron4r.i. ees. OUR PRECISE ARTIST. vr. \ seN'tp' s 1 \ , "A shower for the bride-to-be." eget SAID ABOUT WO1WANICIND, Women for the most part do not love us. They do not choose a Tnall, because - they love him, but because it pleases them to be loved by him. They lave love of all things in the wortcl, but there are vary few tnen whom they love Personally.—Alphonse ".tt is not easy to be a. widow:, one must resuro.e all the modesty of girittned with - being allowed even to feign ignor- asice.-114ane. De Girardin. A woman's hopes are 'woven as sun- 1:teaxne; aaleadow annihilates them. — George.Ellot. it is wonion's way. They always love color better than form, rhetoric better than logic, priestcraft better finial Ahilos. OILY, and flourishes better than figures. --iAttanyanotis. A prude ex.hilaits her virtue in, word and manner; a virtuous woman shows 1-1,ers la her oenduct.—Jean Do La Bruy- ere. To educate a man le to form an in.dlyl- dotal who loaves nothing behind h'im; to eduoate a. woman is to form future gen- atrationas—Tdouard Rene Lefebare Lam- bouilaye. "Alosit weinien, have no charaateriettio a,t stfl--Aiexander Pope. Wetter too soft a lasting mark to bear. —Alescanicler Pepe. just so much re*eot as a woman de- rogates Piton .hor owal set, In 'whatever ofneditioe, placed—her handmaid or depen- dent, she deareves to have diminished Vroreci herself on. that score. — Charles Lamb. Trust not a. W01119,11 oven when dead.— Latin proverb, courting women, niany dry wood for a tare that will not burn, for then1.-1-ro- nore de It is rto more poseible to do without a wife than it is to tlisnerise with eating • and drinking.--fdartin Luther. God created the coquette as ASOTh as he had miad.o the fool,—Victor Ringo. The aweeteAt thing in life is the Un- cle/aided weleente of a wife.—Nrathaniel Parker W11118. Who to a WOMDA;t1 t1-11Ste his peace of mind ltrus,ts a trail bark with a tempestuous wind. —George Granville. have soon more than one worriart drown her honor In the clear water of dlarnonflet.—Countess In all era.1 and all climes a Weirtan ot great genius or beauty has dune what she chose.-40ulda. A. woman Is sometimes fugitive, irra- tional, infloterrainalee, mid eon- thedletory. A great deal of forbearance ought to be shown her.—lienr1 VredeHe gal.& "I flatter snyeelf that wen rather sis eXhatastive Sernioll t1ii4 auorn- ift," reinarked the yontliftd elergyrnan. - 'Tee, 1 notiefel it keened te have that offeet ttpen the C'orgiols...1f.i011;$ replied the senior warilon t ff .:7,;sretwoltrisPIL:alkift ..s. .00?--,,...., ,...t,,r.--• watterstssisto _ 1hr" '2 V. lit .1: 1Prr....r....,iig filAigo:::.,ek 1..) cot ,V‘.. ci:tarratayi ref tb 1;04 :it:. 04' V474iMOSCOktiltvig ''-'4,444. . :.:14 :1 fOttli :ING :ilSR:01, t$;,4C,Out, 1 11 11,4511( 11 : _C. 4 a 4. lip, „tki.tox'41 til iNi ,0 t,i;!1, '5 il.. .4j 1, ===== To guard against alum in Baking Powder see that all ingro. dients are plainly printed on the label. The words "No Alum" without the ingredients is not sufficient. Magic Baking Powder costs no more than the ordinary kinds. Full weight one pound cans 25c. ENGILLETT COMPANYWINNOLIMITED TOR.ONTO V ONT. mONTREAL 'si „ . . \‘‘‘‘,•‘\ I "I itie ,„ "(41., \kJ/ \ "VA,' fiRsi '44/410( If dreams always came true most any fellow could bust the fish trust with a sing, e line, ;-- THE BITE TO. EAT AND THE DUD TO WEAR. Some folks are blest fortune and hoe muckle go Wdell goer; 'They Jove the weatl ncL 1. ICS pride and hae their Heaven 'here, .A. stiles* spoon was in their mouth when first they bret,.thed the all'', 'Ilhey've aye been blest lots to eat and guid braid cloth to wear;. They've, TIC.10 oity in tnelr ,hearts for a bn'utther In di,sts,s, Whs. fecht wi' want and sorrow they neer try to make dt less, They care na for Ole burden that some • blithers +has to beer, Somtlirnes for want of bite to eat and scarce a dud to wear. But some gula folks - 0 - \Phu ha8 the gowd extend a help -in' haat' And wi' a Olirist-like charity they aid their brither man, They :bae this fundamental truth im- pr,..-KAsed deeply within, i That practical religion is the ain that's gam)to win. And they tale it as their duty to rtme- tine what they SAY, They toe their neebor as theinsel and a,ct it every day, ihtearts, fu' f humanity their gowd they often, share With them wtha scarce has bite to ,at and scree n. dud to wear. Respect 'the .honest poverty that bawls a. brither doon, And aye be ready wi' your Isrolle and dinna shOw your troon, FOX you'll find amongst the pulr folks same upright, honest men, Whit it would be an honor for the rich folks just to ken. For braid ,cloth never tre, k's th' man nor yet the go1Vd, he's got. , For many an honest heart beats beneath a .ragged mat. And Father that's aboon tis tak's just as muckle care Ower them wha 'weave hae bite to eat e.ind se,airoe a dud to 'Wear. The sympathetic charity ean speak tilitit gets hairsh, But pitying words and empathy are empty, weak and warish, So prayer withoot guid -action is like faith 'without .guid deeida, Asad the giving kind of charity is what th' ;pair man needs; So let the folks wha's feeling hearts are wi' tendorn.eos, Get idoon into their pouch an' help their brithers nil distress, Per they that help th.e Wang th' Lord will aye Ulm care That they'll aye he their bite o eat and get their dud to wear. _Thomas Watson. DULSE GATREitERS PROTEST Londona-In the Britieh tales there is a close season for fish and for game and now a deivand has arisen for a elose sea - UM for seaweed or to be strictly accur- ate far a ee.rtain kind of clulse, The inhabitants of the little Isle of Grain and the adjoining districts of the east coast of Kent are ilicking that pro- tection be afforded to them owing to the destruetion of am interestiug Indus:. try. During the laet five and twenty years these isiand.ers have been collecting a beautiful white seaweed which is used by millinerfor the purpose of trimming women's hats. This wok had grown up into a very profitable induetry during th* winter months when nothiog was done Iti agrieulture. 'Unfortunately trawlers from the other side of the Themes etetuary found. out the Industry and put barbed wire on their trawls or the purporse of eolleet- jog this white fiefsweed before it was quite ripe. In the orditary way it would have fallen off from the toots and been washecl up on the shore for the is- landers to coiled. But the trawlers are now pulling it out by the roots and sell- iug it to German agents at a very low figure, Not only are the trawlere dee- , , troying the source of supply but they are oleo spoiling the market. The islanders have been in the habit of supplying their customers in London and Paris direct and have enjoyed the patronage of Queen Alexandra for many years. The Fisheries Committee, to which the matter hats beeu referred, are consider- ing what can be done to protect the in- dustry. iuto_use. Of the health insur- ance ;stamp it is estimated that more than 720,000,000 will be required an-. nually. Of the 14 cent stamps, to svhich the employer contributes, 6 and the workmen 8 cents weekly it is estimated that 432,000,000 will be used annually. The 12 cent steam will be used to the extent of 140,000,000 a year. This is the stamp which, according to the loudly expressed opinion of thous- ands of niaids and mistresses, is to in. troduce discord into neaely every home in the country. Every week or month, according as her wages are paid weekly or monthly, the domestic servant must present a card to her mistress and the mistress must see that a 12 cent stamp Is affixed in the proper place and can- celled 'by writiog the date across it in ink, The mistress is then entitled to de- duct the servant's contaibution of 6 cents from her age. A POET IN PRISON. The good old fashicnied brigand is be- coming a personage -a the past, Corsica has got rid of hien, and brigandage is beeoraing an ever more preharlous pro- fesoion in Sicily. The "last of the Skil- ..an bandits"—perhaps a disputed title --wee. lately laid by the heels eenti, is now facing the ordeal of his trial in Most visitore to that delightful island will have heard of his name and not a few have come into close and stareely pleasant contact with hint. He is Gui- eeppe Salomone. Do not picture him as a typical brigand; he is 44. dandy and has alwayd paid particular attention to his clothes. He has an expensive taste in perfumes and in gloves. And he is a poet. Ilis time in prison has been spent in writing a poetic drama of hie life's experiences and he has writteu a. good &ma a commendable verse. He ill said to have made a fortune itt brigand- age, so he can afford to be a,poet.— London Chronicle. •ihowormer• CURRENT BESTS TEREDOS. The teredo of the Pasifle Ocean, wItietia attacks all submerged woodwork, de- stroying a wharf completely le the °purse of a few years, is being success- fuly combatted by the mks of electricity. A. floating flower piant, equipped for seltf-propuslon, has ben. designed for this Purpose and current Is passed through sate wa:ter, releasing chlorin*, hydrogen, ba.oneine, iodine and, sOfilum-ihy-throxide or conoeutro.ted lye. The teredos are killed within a very few moments by the great VOlurne of chlorine gas liberated. 11'hie treatmerst does not render the piling Int- IMMO, from further attack.but it is claim- ed that art occasional treatment will keep the barons from penetrating to any great depth, so that the timbers can be reserved Indefinitely at At, eet11DaratIVOY low oltarge. The operation of destroy- ing the teredos Is not at all complex. The wharf Is first 'wired and electrodes are suspended from it so an to be submerged at a greater or lese ()meth, tee details varying with loeal conditions. Tile power plant on. a barge has a. capagity of WOO to 40,000 aenperoe, but the voltage is ex- ceedingly low. The eurrent Ls turned on for about an hour. Don't wait for opportunity to come up and elap you on the back. • An Absolutely Safe 6/0 Investment CI The First Mortgage Bonds of Price Bros. & Company 6 per cent. on the invest. ment--,secured by first mortgage on one Of the finest paper mills and over four ' million acres of the best pulp and timber land in America—insured with Lloyds, of London, England, against fir -..offer a most attractive investment. The present net earnings of the Company are stacient to pay the bond interest twice over. The growing demand for pulpwood is yearly increasing the value of the Company's properties. These bonds have been purchased by the best informed financiers in both Canada and England. At their present price they yield 6 per cent interest. Considering security, earnings, assete, and the likelihood of • appreciation in value, Price Bros. Sr Company bonds constitute an exceptional Investment. Write for full deem -lotion of these boscht. DANK v. A I SECURITIES A dr& 'ILI CORPORATION Li to 011 mor.rtimm., guitom YONCZ AVotari;ki 43TREE,T$ R. M. WH1Tt Y,40t411111AL-t ki.cr“.011AWA Malatya. LONDON (atm.) miiiimaiNiairmiawuritoaairotoilecrxxiimmemorisiloarrimirwitatilomamtertrigawatiiramarkosisolalicowitiii4owakocuivamehrar _ Tokio, lapan, has 800 public bathing places. New York:8 death rate has been halted since 1806. But id that a gain? Twentpeight natives of the Ilnite41 -4tates 'Were naturalized itt Creat Brittle tat year. The Shah of Persia's Icitehen plant is valued. al *25,000,000. Has he got a cork,,crew among the lot? • „A.3 gold pieee (a half eagle) "data 1815 has just been sold for $3,500 eet auetion. Who said money Wad Beane? 11-.4 .Ae an automobile state Massachusetts looms up large. It elailme 50,000 ears and an automobile revenue of $600,000. Over a course of 050 miles the recent ,automobile mese \vitt the thand Prix, Id Fralit'V tit til milt --s an, 11.614x, ag-4 le itt oetimated that ail,000,000 is epent for 1.1;olf balls every year. IL woala seem that, one of the purpoees of the game is to loae .111.40-41. Washington reports the number of tuitional banks in the United States as 7,894, with an aggregate capital of $1,040,545,4:35. Foot and mouth disease, whieh re- iently appeared in Penrith, Cumberland, is now reported to be prevalent in Liv- erpool. The 'United States Naval Department is making tests of Alaskan coal in nor- thern waters. All the eoal previously tested there has proved unsatisfactory. Life id a very soft affair for John D. Rockefeller. it is true that he owns four automobiles, but he gets his gaso- line and lubricating oil at cost price. 11 itt reported that .after a recent victory over the rebels the Mexican federal troops eaturnarily. hanged. 200 Zapatista prisoners. War in Memico 18 a very cruel buslnese. • Minnesota leads the States in flour and grist mill products, with a value of $1e9,120.120. New York le eeeond, with a value of $69,802,278, and Kansas third with a value of $68,376,410. = 1. A Boston girl on Tuesday gave 0,228 drops of her blood for a tranefueion to save the life of her cousin. That was 13 5-6 ounces. The girl for whom the sacrifice was made will recoyer, = The world's annual consumption of rubber was about 5,000 tons in 1875. It has taken a jump since that, the pres- ent consumption is nearly 100,000 tons, not to say anything of the faked. - A Chicago judge has publicly an- nouneed that he will send to jail for six months; every chauffeur who hita pedestrian and does not stop. That will help to a. better state of things. e During May, 1912, there were reported in Canada 70 fatal anidents and 241 non-fatal. 01 the 90 fatal accidents, nineteen occurred in steam railway ser- vice, one in electric railway service and. eeven among public emplo,yeee. New York has prohibited the use of the ent-ont on automobiles, and Phila- delphia is about to do the same. The noise of the cut-out is an intolerable nuisance, and the savingtmade iu power by adopting it is very slight. Kaiser Wilhelnfe third son Prince Adelbert, 27 years of age, is said to be arranging a marriage with the Grand Duchess Olga, eldest daughter of the Czar, who is 16 years old. There seem to be little likelihood of the raceruneing short. he I_ A Lebanon, Ohio, man has just wed- ded his mother-in-law. The lady wore the same dross as that WOrn by her daughter at her wedding ten years ago, and, the husband's daughters were her attendants. He probably fell in love with the family. In the past four years in Camden, 22 eases of titanus were treated in the Cooper Hospital by the staff. Of those two recovered and 20 died. To be sue- eeesful even the serum treatment re- quires to he resortea to early ana to be followed intelligently, The birth rate of England has been falling greatly since 1877, and alarm- ists deelare that if the present ratio of decline continuo before the year 1930 !Ingland will not be reproducing herself. This tendency to raalthusianism credited by alarmists to Charles Brad - law and Annie ilesant. The stiffragettet too, are said to be mating down the birth rate. At the °filigrees of legal me(lieixte held. in Paris, 1)r, Balthazar shosvea how the Bertillon syetern eould be applied to the identification of bullets. Every gun-bar- idl (in whielt term the barre)e of revolv- erare ineluded) leaves marks on the bullets shot, through it. The marks are always the mule for the flame barrel, hut no two barrels leave identieal invoke. Ey mesme of greatly Pratte/eel pisetographs the maikings Are ntacitl itt- fallibIy recognizable, it is fillOther pse mill:tray of pietole that the hammer never etrikee the feu tridge veseetly 112 the eentio, and that no two haunters will etrike in the irientioal plate\ 'With the multiplieation of defeetive Man -killing appears to be beeoming too (inmate to be praetis.ed profeqsionally,