HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1912-09-19, Page 38
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4oewolagia&re-a-ArommApagiooroloxkvia,--.-7.7.1;pairowvisro.xlvagaroggloodtsparAiarrozawrawcsamosxmaskt='.4-Poziwoowtams..--1c47,:trtrtlara-47zAwiwx*:=40•44ma -oeumalowempla •". weft y
Eczema ilwavs
IN POULTRY
WORLD
Burning and itching
RESULTS Or F,XPERIMENTS STOP I READ 1 AND CONSIDER 1
AUTUMN SOWN CROPS
THROUGHOUT ONTARIO
NEVER e:Aleele CUREs
13reitaway, Winnipeg,
June 1912.
Mesere. 1.'ho Sancti Mantlfatettirlitg 00.)
t;ent1441net),--Far sorne Yeart past. I had
Three hundred end twenty-eight ler- suffered with my 11/91/t, eight -
eters throughout °lit:trio coadueted ex- e.on months ago I had ;a.eute inflammation
areeimente with autumn. sown crops dur- bed by the medical man attending me. I
of: thee() Organs, Ivhozt I wee ordered to
eig the Hot yeet. Reports hityq been re' received eonsiderable relief, but after a
poultrt rcike, necd. t iot of emir- eteved Irma thntvente of the conntiee
. Wee then that I decided to try "Sanol,"
few weeks the trouble started ag.ain.
tt, meet the m".e:crt.illee th.lt Canto of the Provinee. The average restillei of which I had both read and heard.
to' us every 'see r. My plaee the of the eerefnlly condnetcd eXperineent5 After taking two bottles I felt verY
mit), itamilii m„\pg edgy, gre hero pre. much better, and my condition rapittlY
Ailvoeate bringe me 41elly letters or woe, improved. Whon I bad taken tho von -
say., Dr. Sanborn In Poultry Advocate. ; eer‘istriirriliteilt.1 lai.ittA.t;e: it::1)11,,Itt2ievt.'irfi:tiriletis. oi wi R. tifi•f.inctilis)}1:30renioiraill)lroi tnlitlii.t.n)teltlell.,esyle4iffsie,Illtef.olgtttior ehan I
1 y kidney
if a man ni getting. along nicely with
ille Ilene and eltieke, he never poure out . ihp is pow about three months eince I
1 tt,e)r 1\iviloise:t:t f,N1Nrettr:(1.1(4lis'NtItiii()).attvaisli;itesiti sto.outattenatti
rt utsheo with the medicine anti I atn en,,
Itie good leek to me. tht the eontr:try,
7
let iliS birde fall ill, let the fertility run romp 01 tht, lea ri lug v 0 r re t i tei OU their ifo/wilevtnisioclttoloi(ts1\,tiasitictfo:"..tItrtit
1111
YOU 1.1;T.setosuftire I !
1iulo;d
low, let the ehicke die 1)(04 titre° weeks etvii farm. The average .vielde per aere
ing eight or ten bout' to my 'brother la
Olcl, aJaiite at Wire :lite); down audwritee of etrew and of grant an, as follmrs:
nie a four-page lett er. Judging by the imperial Amber, Le tone, 24.3 bueltels; 31,Cot;Igriam(ndol,lirecritcoulisrelanietx2y.iso.tts to benefit by
ntail that cumeq, 10 tho 1.1..6 t•ltre feilure American 'Wonder. 1.5 tone, 21.8 bush,
1r
•
/
.,S
err,
%sea_ Qetiguy.
handling pouitty, dee e, plette:elen seee els; Crimcpu Roil, 1.9 ton3. -41.5 bushele; I MTh gentlemen,
Yours truly,
the dark side of eonneum life eo the Flanittka., 1.4 tons, 21.2 litieliele: and Ta- . G. Henry 'Wage'.
peultry es.pert hears the hard eide of mania Red. 1..8 tone, 21.0 bushele. re- ------
e1Tarnilten, Ont., Aug. 17th. 1912.
raleing ebiekie; and handlipg hens. it will lie seen that the Imperial A.m. The lianol elanufacturing Co.,
This year 'Clore eeeine to be a certain I le r lea 3 ilea i n lei yen Loot resul te Winnipeg, man. •
faw troublee that age commonto our ' throughout Ontario, ae well ae at tbe
si)lr:ariltiloll
iti't-..hirs exhusband axed
reee.ieree These difficalticr. A re not tee Ontario Agrieulturel flollege. The Ant-
ooi.'tlY,(Qtrtre.dneemy
eiti..i.e°1111filtbn'sjent.t°tett;
eante erar after yebvm s
:er, ut. ary from ' crieti
aWan Onder. Which gave :average 1 ors. inmougieiieyll ir?1111
l
operation, so 1 thonght I woula sue what
rant to eeteon. What are eenie of tile of ddet bushels per :tere less than the ful-
l:eel thingthet are reporttel me this perial Amber, is a wInte grained variety but to our surprise it ;uncle e. well Man
Sanol would clo it. 1 hecl no faith lit It.
6prinf.f resembling. Very clesely the Dawson'e _ 0%f shImilimi., I,
Viral, ard nicat inrportant I would Golden Chaff. The Crimean Red winter 1 :iliiigeselyne.ebsivnl, Prze"aluteRerintral°, ent,ifisi.
any: Beseillary elite di-xi:rile:ea, I have wheat has been grown. at the Cotlege for no result but otr dortor %1 1 I the opet•a-
Used pax of Cuticurn 0:aliment and
it Completely DkapNored.
have r,u1Teren fami c1.2:0M, a for two years.
The trouble botae on one arta where there
' appeared tt red spot of about a tiveecent size,
und it ahsaye wideted, all the time itching
and burning. The ate, tiaye didu't care,
but eeeing that it eiderii In eize, 1 tried
- Ointment aud ----- ointment, but both
withuut etweess. et etre elwaye burning and
itching. Tlevieg ere 11 111 t 110 itewspaper the
advertisement of tho Catkura liemedies,
tried a little, and SVPITIg that it improved,
I ialeglit of the Cuticera Oinienent.
After heving used mei box, my eczema. com-
pletely disappeared. The Cuticure Ointment
should be kept in every home," (Signed)
N. Oetiguy, Jen, 14, 191 1.
.
tion was the only thing whieli he would
iletril of more failufee reering ten yeare. and ie one whivh yielde very not stand.
'eltanking you, for your patience and
tbis year linteuee of thie serious well, indeed. lt posseseee wheat of ex.
trouble with and I will always stanct
then in any three yeage past. it looke eellent quality, but the !strew is some- Pi might tell you my bus -
for sanot.
ae though what W.1.3 rare five years ago what weak. `1,1te Banatka produees grain band 10 tu his eightieth year.
is tee:owing wideepreael. 11: its a serious - of excellent quitlity for bread prodtle- Yours truly
illneree that ca.n take 95 out of every 100
chicks hatched. 'Tie failure in chicken
work to hateli 1,5O0 eldeke and have
1,200 die when lees thou four weeke old
of white diarrhutet.
Second, 1 would put, poor hatches and
weak chielee. It seems to be true that
low fertility means a. poor hatch as well
at.. -weak chicke. Thie does not always
follow, but may 'be kept in inind. If
thoee weak chicks woahl only die in
the hell w would be saved a lot of time
and eteme expenditure of cash. If all
white diarrhoea chie-ks never left the
eiteli it would be a simple matter to wipe
out fu.trtre trouble. But the weak elticke
hatch, the white diarrhoea chick spreads
ite droppingon the 'bottom of the in-
cubator, (er ht the litter of the brooder,
to infect the chivies that piele at what-
ever attrattie their attention.
Third, I would say wae; High cost of
feeding hone and el-deks. Too ina-ny
farmers are selliag their one and two-
year-old hens this month to save buyiug
ltigh-priced. grain. Cithera are ritieing
fewer ohielcs thau uettal because they
wonder where the profit ie, conning in.
What about there corn.plains 1 To
meet them you ltave got to get back to
the A, 13, Cs a poultry keeping. It
tukes thought and knowledge to be a
euccess with poultry to -clay. One hun-
dred yea rei a -go it was dad easy to
grow potatoee and apples, corn. and
grain, hatch chicks and get summer
!3gge! To -day the farmer has to know
his beeriness as never before, meet in-
sect pests never heard of thirty yeturs
ago, ,spray his appl€s. aoak his potato
geed to kill seab, kill orown-tail moths.
Th? poultryman has to learn his leseon
in flame way, wad too often it ie through
the 'hard kneeka of experience. The
poultryman must not laugh at his diar-
rhoea ailment of ehlekerehood. It is a
serioua matter and will be found. so
when it at holt gets into the flock.
Better learn its me,thod of attaek and
loirewaened.
More careful handling of breeding and
laying stook through the winter will help
get more fertile eggis, more lively ellielee,
more (sturdy pullets?, and. cockerels.
High cost of feeding.. must be met. We
must adjust our reticule to what the
prices suggest as desirable. .it may be
more green. food, more variety, nore
homeernieed grain and roots.
Thee -A /I profit in handling poul-
try, oven though things are flS I have
indicated. Whether the profit be email
or large depande on how the poultry-
man meets lii.s difficulties. Foreaight is
farbetter tha-n hindsight, and the person
who wants to keep in the game hem
got to take every opportimity to gain
facts.
171IdTEEN 'WEEKS TO PERM.
There le a difference of opinioit on
this. Many poultry keepers who let
their birds stay oa the ground for fea,r
of "eroole.ed breasts'," are letting them-
selvea in for the more serious trouble
of "no. progress." Chicks may safely be
allowed to perek, when fifteen weeks old.
The perches glioold be two inches wide,
quite flat on the suefaera and only about
a 'foot high from the floor -.a most im-
portant point. If the chicks are 'housed
in floelcs from twenty-five to thirty, the
Writs will all crowd together in one
loaner of the houae. When they do this
there will in each lot be several which
suffer by making no progress for week.
)3y letting the btale ilaVo wide perches
they spread well over these, and. over-
crowding la one part of the house will
be avoided.
A Generation. of Success
For more than a generation Cuticura Soap
and Cuticula Ointment have afforded the
epeedie.st and most ('C011OrlliCal treatment for
itching, burning, scaly and bleeding skin and
scalp humors, of young and old. A single
set is often sufficient. Hold by druggists
and dealers everywhere. For a liberal sample
of Cuticure Soap and Ointment, post-free
with 32,-p. book ou skiri eruptions, send to
Potter Drug c Chem. Corp., sole props., el
Columbus Ave., Boston, tI. S. A.
BREAK UP THE OLD PASTURES
tion,
Winter rye -Two varieties of winter
rye were distributed in the autumn of
1911. The reettits show that the Main -
moth White VaTlay CalIle at the head
of the list in yield of grain, with an
average of 23.9 bushels per acre. In ex-
periments throughout Ontario for the
Inset six years, the 'Mammoth White sun,
passed the common rye by an annual
average of fully four bushels per acre.
Fertilizers with winter wheat -earn the
co-operative experiments with different
fertilizers applied. in the autumn to win-
ter wheat, the average yields of grain
per trete for eight years are as follow
Mixed Fertilizer, 23.5 bushels; Nitrate
of Soda, 22.5 bushel-.Muriete of Pot-
ash, 21.5 bushels 7 and Superphosphat
21.2 buehels. On similar land, cow naii
-
etre, at the rate of twenty tons per acre,
gave an average yield of 25.8 bushels per
acre, and the land which received neith-
er fertilleers nor manure gave an aver-
age of 18.1 bushels per acre. T'he super-
phos-phate was applied at the rate of
320 lbs. and the muriate of potash and
the nitrate of soda each 100 lbs. per
acre. The mixed fertilizer consisted of
one-third of the quantity of each of the
other three fertilizers here nientionefl.
The usual cost of the fertilizers, as used
in this experiment, is between fonr and
five dollags per acre.
In another expeximent it wes found
that nitrate of Bode applied in the
spring gave 1.3 busheler acre more
than when applied in the autumn. 'Ni-
trate of soda increased the yield of
wheat more than common salt when ap•
plied either in the itututen or in the
:spring.
'Winter emmer and winter barley --A
comparative tet of winter emmer and
winter barley was made throughout On-
tario in each of the paet three years.
The average results for the three year
show that the winter emmer gave 1,830
and the winter barley 1,812 pounds of
grain per acre. Satietactory results
from this experiment, were reeeived
from emiy four faring in 1012, and ac-
cording to ettch of thoee reporte the
Winter entmer surpassed the winter bar-
ley in yield of grain per eerie
iTairy vetches and winter rye for fod-
dere-Three good repoole have heen re-
ceived from fanners Nvhe tested hairy
vetches and .winter rye as fodder crops.
In each instance, the hairy vetches gave
a considerably larger yield of green crop
per acre than the winter rye. the aver-
age for the hairy vetch'' beine about 25
tons of green crop. Thie large yield le
due prineipally to the vomparatively
wet. cool smniner.
Distribution of -materiel for experi-
ments in 1912---Ae long ite the supply
lasts, material will be dietributed free
of e.httrge, in the order in which the ap-
plleatiOTle fire -received, from Ontario
farmers wishing to eaberiment and to
report the results of any one of the
following testes: 1. three varieties of
winter wheat; 2, two varieties of winter
/rye; 3, five fertilieere with winter
wheat; 4, all±1111111 RMi sprieg appllea.
tions of nitrate of soda and commie
-salt with winter wheat; 5, winter em -
mer and winter I've: de hairy vetchee
and winter rye ae fodder erope. The eiee
of each plot is to be one rod wide by
two rods long.. Material for numbers 3
and 4 will be sent by express and that
for the others by 'Mail.
0. A. Zavitz.
0. A. C., Guelph, Ont.
This is a. bit of advice which farmers
he general will do well to follow, Some
of our mo -t troublesome pests tind their
breeding-phices in land that has beenleft
for some yeans under greets. Wire worms
and white grubs, which aro oftentimes
very destructive to crops of all kinds, in-
crease and 'multiply ia suelt plaees, where
they feed upon the root e of the grass.
Wire worms ia their adult age, are
knowu as di& beetles, oblong, dulheol-
°red ereaturee. White grubs turn into
what are commonly called June hn.03 or
May beetles. These worms take from
two to three years to grow to maturity,
and daring that long period they feed
upon roots and are out of eight and out
of reach. There is a popular idea that
salt will kill these creatures, and the
question ie often aeked, "How inuch salt
should. be used per acre'?" Like many
other popular superstitions, there is
nothing whatever in this material for
the purpose. Enough salt to affect the
bugs would completely prevent the
growth of any vegetation, and it ie
doubtful if any amount whatever would
kill the inseete. Many other substances
have been tried, but so far without eue-
cess. The remedy is, therefore, to break
up the breeding places. Thie should be
dene by plowing the rase fielde deeply
late in the fall, in order to expose the
grilles and their winter quarters 1 o the
frost and rani, and also to the various
animals and birds which feed. upon them.
The safest crop to grow during the first
year is peas. After that a hoed. crop,
preferably turnips, would be the eafest;
after the second year there will probably
be no grubs left. .During the flint year
any that there are itt the ground would
feed upon the sod that has been plowed
under, and would let tho growing crop
pretty well alone, To grow corn, grain,
potatoce or nnengels at the outset would
be very risky indeed. Besides these two
insecte, old pasture lands, eepecially
where the soil ie dry, are produetive
breedihg places for grasshoppers, which
spread from these fields to the crops. In
the southern counties. of Ontario, bor-
dering on Lake Erie, there it; another
serious peat, which also breede in old
pasturee, where • the soil is light and
sandy. This is knowit as the rose chafer.
The. .beetle appeare usually in greet
swarms about. the time the roses come
into blooin, and devours not only these
flowers but all sorts of others- that may
be growing ill thil garden. The worst
(teenage it does is to the blossoms and
young fruit of grape vines, of which it
is particularly fond. These four serious
pests, which are extremely difficult to
control, may be greatly reduced in Ill1/11-
bers, if not got rid of altogether, by a
short rotation. of crape, and especially
by keeping pastures not more than three
years under graee.--0. J. S. Bethinte, On-
tario Agrteultural Oolleg,e, Guelph.
SUI,PIIUR FOR POIJLTRY..
One of the moet useful subatances that
can be kept on a, poultry farm is
sulphur. The many properties that it
peer:eases render it a most useful ad-
junct to the other remedies kept on
hand. The two (thief features are its
power as an insectieide and. its value as
a healer of any wound. For many years
past I have lined nothing but flowers of
sulphur to rid the bird a of vermin, end
yory effective it has proved. The skin
and feathers are dampened with warm
water at the root of the tail, the neck
hackles, and under the winga, and the
oulphter powder iss then rubbed in.
.The results achieved -by u.sing, it in
the\ way indleated are .found to be moat
,satiefactory. The &mond use to which
it may be put te for the healing of
wounde. When fattening in the :spring
of the year, it is frequently found that
the birds peek at each other's backe
tuitiI they draw 'blood, and it has been
my practice to take these birds When itt
atigh eondition and sprinkle a quantity
of sulphur over the open part. The
effect of flits treatnient ie to dry up
the 'Wound, and in the course of two or
three dope the birds will recoyer.
TH E D REA ite-SH i P.
.A- sweet little ship stole up from the
elonth
With a cargo or baby dreams;
Oa done and /5.Ittens and warm little mit,
tens,
And rome,colured peppermint creams;
Wee wind wafted 11. on its way,
it sailed along at tile end of daY,
)own the :deed/ tAreets where the lights
were lit.
To leave each ehlid some woetlerful bit.
"Oh, hush, little eland, if you want a
dream:,
You must close your eyea-ale yes!
'Poe the dream -viol) carries a dream for
you,
Mote lovely than you could gllef38;
Perhat):1 a /mum .011 'Thine all dray,
Pereape a gown 01' color gay,
ote a queer little fish
O 1311VPT• disth-
;igen avvaY, little boat, and awItYl"
Man tiACti to WOVM)ip tile golden ealf.
.Now he worehipe the golden eagle.
'rrutli may be etrateete then fiction
ut that imi't the fault of the fieti(m.
7Writers.
FORGET FACES.
(Toronto Saturday Night.)
They were at a 'Muskoka hotel, and the
July moon was all that the heart. of the
summer girl could desire. Re was re-
minding her of the happy holiday ot
year ago, but the young lady seemed
perversely forgetful.
"Don't you remember," he asked re-
proachfully, "the night I kissed you
good -bee?"
"Why, so you did," she admitted, In a
spasm of remembrance, "but I have the
most wretched memory for faces."
Do Your Eyes Fool You?
VeC )/r4.• .>11.a...••••••••••••••••••••••••••Kr
Mrs. Wilson, 141. Main Strtet East,
Hamilton, Ont.
la the positive eeurofor Grill Stones, Rid-
ney and Bladder Stones, 'Kidney Trouble.
Gravel, Lumbago, Ailments of Vele Acid
origin. Over 1,100 complete cures re-
ported In six months. Price, K.50 Per
bottle, from druggists. Booklet fvee to
sufferers. The Sanol Manufacturing
Co., of Canada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man.
Another sure cure is Sanol's Antl-Dia.-
betes for Diabetes.
4
PRETTY SOON
These two horizontal lines are the
same length. The position of ;the
small lines at each end makes all the
difference.
*•*
JUST FROTH
There was a thin and nervous woman
HERE IS A PUN.
Kitty -My brother Cornelius has pwiliiyosiecioaunl,ditundotheSitmeat.She visited her
iid:
been wiling on Miss Chillei going
gll for "Did you oat one
tie bed?"
7e not going to.
"Oh, no, doctor," the patient replied. altr (1-3delaYingBeuatra.s8". at
"'Well," said the physichtn, "just keep play' cards. -
it glass of milk and some biscuits bezide Taan'mY-011, YOS you are. for T heard
over a year,
Marie -Is he going to marry her?
Kitty -I don't know. I'm afraid
she's rather too cold to make Corn
pop.-Itoston Transcript.
It's generally all over with the un-
der dog...
'areeteehetee-e ..ateee-Pereateyeeeitheeseeeeea-
1. • 1:v4If
•••
Tramp-Wunst wuz so hungry
I ate a house.
Mrs. Goodly -How terrible!
Tramp -Moine; it wuz fine it van
a porterhouse.
Marvellous New Pain
Killer
LOST TRHE OF r*-4;;;;;;----
1..cuiT.cAttfr
WHITES FOUND
2,000 Supposed Descend-
ants of Ericsson Followers.
STILL IN STONE AGE
Red Haired, Blue Eyed,
Fair Skinned.
Seattle report: Retaking nevt in, im.-
portance from an ethnologist standpoint
to the discovery of the lost tribee of
Israel, le the dieeovery ntade Prof.
Vils Jetliner Stefanson, of the American
Museum of Natural Illetory, of a lost
tribe of 2,000 -white people, who are be-
lieved to be direet descendants of the
following of Lion Ericsson, who tunic to
areenland front keland about the year
1000, and. a few year e later diecovered
the north coast of America, The people,
living Oh Victoria leland, 30 degreee
eaet of the mouth of the Meekenzie
River, dod. more than .2,000 miles by the
coat line, are still .in the stone age.
While the civilization of nearly 1,000
years hate gone ort they have stood still.
Pmio.orix.anSgt.-efaneon arrived at Seattle this
In 1910 Btefteneon returned to the
mouth of the Mackenzie River. where
he was joined by lir. Audereon, a
, former college clasemate from the Uoi-
versity of Iowa. During hie explorations
aw.lo.13r117r Stetfla,lensol;€1'gtiloisAiiovitetretdhtehtilte.tie%onflitelyve
triton; of people. Ten of these tribes had.
never 6een or heard. of white meu, the
progenitors of two other tribes had ecen
the membera of the Franklin expedition,
another tribe had. olive been \lotted by
a whaling veseel.
The tribe of while people width Ste -
Janson declares are putely of Norwegien
origin never had /etLti other people oi
their own. color. Their number is about
'2,000. :hitere than I.L. 0: theat have
musty red hair, blue . tee. Mir skins end
tow -colored etelea ., beards. They
live on built eleet. matien Oldie
on the malniand North Aeteriea, and
'Victoria Island. eetell hoe.,
BY A PHYSICIAN.
A new leat in the great book of
surgery is being -turned every day.
The alleviation of bodily suffering
Is a perpetual problem. And every
human being ha e eause to .feel the
keenest ,intereet al each step of
progress made. Could the settee of
pain be eliminated from the list of
human woes, the face of mau would
grow round with happiness.
If what is claimed for it be true,
the new, wonderful discovery of a
well-known London surgeon, Dr. F.
W. Forbes Ross, M.D., will abolish
human. .pain consequent upon nalury
or operation.
Dr. ,Ross says he has discovered
the wide application of a prolonged
local anaesthetic which will "kill"
pain, following the severest bodily
accident, or during and after the
severest surgical operation.
Dr. Ross says 'file preparation Is
a 1 per cent, solution of quinine and
urea hydrochloride. The method of
use Is very simple and the prepara-
tion. is so very cheap that 12 cents
covers the cost of an injection of it.
"In the operation tbe patient is put
under a general anaesthetic -chloro-
form or ether -in. the ordinary way,
and then five to tea cubic ccen -
txteters of a 1 per cent. eolution of
quinine and urea hydrochloride are
distributed over the nerve supply of
the part concerned.
"The effect of such au injection is
to produce a total loss of sensation
Of pain. Popularly the affected part
is 'put to sleep,' messages of pain
from the nerves to the brain are 'cut
off.' A patient treated thus feels no
pain. after the operation,"
Shouad Dr. Ross' discovery be as
praotical, cheap and effective as he
believes, a new era in surgery and
the treatment of all severe pain is
no doubt at hand.
PLAYING HER CARDS.
(kuburn Citizen.)
Tammy -May stay up a, little longer?
Lithet--What do you want to stay uforp
"
Tommy -I want to see you and Me
•
1 ;
matter how pe.tcefttl my be, '
cemp9Ser is usu. '
ally settling old seoi-es.
LI d. 1.I• 1.1,J . 1 1 -COMM
The destruction of the house fly
is a public duty, Almost every
American State Board of Health is
carrying on a crusade against him,
His filthy Origin and habits, and
the fact that hia body is general:y
laden with disc:tee-producing germs,
makes him one of the greatest ene-
mies of the human race.
If the housekeepers of Canada will
use
persistently, title peril ivill be tre-
mendously reduced.
ferl,
• 4.!?..,/,',0
AtiaisseepgialettotioOkitheeettle 110
rosznana saying to ntliel tlial everything
you and every night the last thing you ended on the way Ill wh1e.i ebe played
(her ewe& to -night.•
do make a light meal."
"But, doctor," 'tried the lady, "you
go home, yott think it's
• t' "
e
Billy -I'm going to Wee you before I
told mo on no at:count to eat anything
ore g
"Po* Pooh•*" said the doctor; "that bine you were goine?
was three menthe ago. Science: has
Niougebigiatiorr,
raade enormous sttrides since then."
1411- S ee How
the
Wringer
Attaisthed
°What'e the hardoet thing aboub rol-
ler skating when yore learning?" ask-
ed a hesitating young man of the in -
tractor at the rink.
'The floor," answeted the attendant.
"I don't Me your heart aetione," said
the doctor Applying his instrumeiA
again. "Yen have had. some trouble with
angira pectoris." "You're pertly right,
doctor," said the young Matt eheepishly,
"only that ien't her name."
Doetore--"Well, 1 hope you profited hy
my advice"
Patient ---"Yee, doctor, by not so ranch
as you did."
--
rat was busy on a Dull toad working
with his coat off. There were two Iiing-
lishmen laboring on the same road, So
they decided to have a joke with the
Irishman. They painted a donkey's head
on the beelt of Paths oat, and watehed
to see hini put it on. Pet, of C011tfit,i
SIM tiltdonkey'a heed on Itis root, and,
turning to the Eriglismen, eaid:
"Which of yez 'Wiped your taco on my
rota?"
"flow do ;you like 1)1 illg 8. Preeb•
man?" asked the soplenn4 re. "Oh, It.
first 01000 replied Freebie.
See Open
Top Tub
Room
to Wor
11415
elkIllSoleeetee
3(41NPOSIII0Fitit.
00110W1/40 11.4130
1113/1(01101b1011311
P/105141)31.410*
gov1tat300AAND
51ARIBL
t;t7VIREFTIrrittr°.L..
c -
themes No
itmerttMkt
'4:re=14tineseeee*,
..NeStah. sweV,
•,'""
To guard, against alum in
Baking Powder see that all ingre.
clients 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.
ENV:01LLETT COMPANY LIMITED
ToRoNcro, oN'T.
WINNIPEG MONTREAL
%%2 =
11.4.1..ALLuis No A
.•
Why Suffer Hardships in Camp When
It's Easy to be Comfortable
CA-P1P OVEN MADE -
WITH TWO EAKING
IyANS
CAMP OVEN MADE
WITH TWO SAUCE
PANS
iff .51
/elk/
ir
4
CAMP Li,R
KNIFE
SI-IE1L/7r"
CAMP SON DIAL- flRE. CAMP
LAY OUT ANY SIZE- ' SHOVEL TABLE.
* GET SHADOW On; MADE. wARE
SUN AT NOON AND WITH
WITH WATCH MARK TIN
OFF OTHER HOURS CAN
Why it ie
thinks
on a hunting or camping expedition
that he must deny himself most
comforts he enioys at horne? Why time.
when
that the average man
he goes into the woods
of
the
in.
the
inside
down,
under
that
tl t most r bred men inter- t
, is ia, l 3
known as Prince Edwarl Mend. 1 pret the terra "roughing it" to mean i
it was for this people that tioald rnalting himself as uncomfortable as ,
Amundsen, diseoverer of the Soath Pole, possible?
eearehed, while making his ,lebrated Woodsmen and experienced camp -
trip through the Northwest Paeeage, ers-out ask themselves these ques-
The Norsemen settled into two colo- tions again and again. There is no
nies, one on the _north and one 011 the reason on earth why the camp should
iiPlith rihie of Ni:wioundiand. In the not be kw comfortable and supplied
14th century, Eektutets value from the with as many conveniences as the
north and vete-mina ted 1 he people 01. home, considering the surroun dings.
the north settlement., Their record Wes 'But most men who go out on such
eomplete till 1441, when the Week plague expeditions scorn to make use of con-
eeourged Europe, and for two centuries veniences.
communication bet ween N e w f oundlaud Frequently it is not possible to
and the old country was eut off. When carry everytoing one wants in a
commuideation was neitored the people pack, but many of the things that
of the tieound settlementwere missing. make life livable eon be fashioned
Their graveyarde, buildinge and ot her OUt of rough material at hand or by
edjunete of their eemi-eivilizatie1i were using things that are brought, and
found. end the theory was formed that normally utilized, for another pur-
the people had drifted to a eettleineet Pose.
further weet aeroes the narrow elrait.s For instance, tableware ---knives,
that divided them front the A retie Rohl- forks, spoons, etc., cau easily be ob- .
whip) where they intermingled with tallied or made. A. musel shell, per-
1E:ski-ince, when' they took along with fOrated and tied securely between i
them to the island and which their de- the ends of a plit stick, makes the I
seendante, new live. They btil I ‘I.se the finest kind of a soup or coffeespoon,
seine kind of bone llee i
invented by their forefathers and many ti pointed stick is a. ,
neec'that were while a fordeed an
of their methode of life, are entailer to good substitute for a fork and need
i
not be washed.
that of their progenitor.
The tent can be heated on cool !
HOUSES BUILT OF SNOW. nights with the galvanized Iron water !
bucket. Stones are laid in the camp I
Their houses are made of 8110W. A fire and allowed to become red hot
roof its stretched -enough of them to fill an iron
means of small pieces of driftwood,
which on rare teceasions are found on 1 - „
the coast . The stray fragments of
wood atrieleirhito,.11(Ittiongpr.ized, The furs
Their shoos
aHreerecuitt to s t;Itleeitte beyv,ellItilltdo the f tul.inicgienre.. '
skirt, \Odell reaches to the wait. The ,
coat ie, fashioned in almost precisely
the same 1111.1111er ilS the "swallowtail"
Or full dress coat worn at inangeral
balls by their civilized brother, It ,
eats off at a eharp angle just above
the witiet line, a lone tail divided into
two pieces hanging down behind. The
whole .outfit is strapped together by
means of thongs and buttons made
f •
HIGH SPE
01-4AMPfatv?
The Wringer Itoard extends ram the
out of die witr of the et's er.
Prealtelly the whole toot Om tut) to ftptu 1)),--
nutkot It egsr to vitt gut 'Ad tolo out vtot!ogs.
/Ito othe .t.4.4e)* ori Move an opening.
'to tither witther (on too tvelital iv(th, erotic
MintIto, at *kit 414 toeU 096V:etre.
Do you '11110 Pftexsonll'a "ravorfte"..t..ibe
duals Met nukes (polity butter?
'Ohne us ft: r ristologues if your &Ater ktool
tot 'Wallet/sem
DAM leAMIELL se. VMS, St ?BAY'S, One
Peeve•,..11. 4 '
eeiteseent
aver the t°P bY bucket. The stones are then placed
In one place C11 the ieland Prot.
Idltefanson discovered a couleel stone
house whieh beans a striking re-
semblance to the 11 011Se built in
Greenland and Newfoundland by the
Norcs.
enien who first inhabited thoec
None of the natives had ever seen it
sulphur match or rifle. They lied
never even heard of them. One tribe
expressed surprise when Steffanson
killed a caribou with a "Manlicher"
rifle at a distance of more than 1,000
yards.
Although Stefanson must have en-
dured untold hardships during the five
years he spent in the Aretic, one
never would think so from talking to
him He traveled on foot more than
1,000iniles, and sustained himself and
Dr. Anderson on the proceeds of his
There are. but two specimens of the
barren ground bear ie the rnited States.
Stdfanson secured 19. Thirteen of them
were killed. with a rifle, and six were
killed by the natives. They will be
brought down by Dr. Andergon, who left
the shores of the Artie on a, whaler. Dr.
Anderoon also is bringiug many other
biological, geological and botanical spec -
mons,
The maps of the top of the world,
- he says, are grosely inazeurate. Riv-
ers which are marked on the charts have
no exietenee in fact, told mountain
ranges appear where, the country should
be flat, Ile found Ainundeen's maps,
however very useful and generally cor-
net.
While the Indians in the region in
wl)ielt he traveled providral for them-
selves and fed, their eged. and children
with the proceed- of the primitive wea-
poes. Stelanson was equipped with mod-
ern. firearms:I. T1it4 unlimited animals,he
says, have no more eleteee against
rifle than a mosquito would have
against e
Seientifieally the work WitS divideti
between himeelf ond Dr, Anderson. Ste -
!Anson did the intipping and the euthrep-
°logical and ethnolooleal taske. while
Dr. Anderson took care of the biologiettl,
botanical, and geological task A.
Stefarison goes east to -night,
THE RIGHT WAY.
-Wes Jaek put ottt w hen you
told hint he couldn't have n kiss?
Kitty- no; He imilL it at A. mat.
tet of course.
A Wonderful Discovery
An eminent scientist, the other day,
gave hie opinion that the utoet won-
derful discovery of reeent years was
the discovery of Zam-Buk. Oust
think! As soon ae it single thin leyer
Zam-Bug is applied to ti wound or
a sore, such injury is insured against
blood poison! Not one species of mi-
crobe has been found that Zant-Buk does
not kill:
Thee, again. At soon as Zem-Buk
is applied to a sore, or a eut, or to
skin disense, i. tope the sinerting.
That is why children are such friends
of aam-Duk. they (etre not deg fm
the science of the thing. All they
know ie that Zorn -Bak stops her
pain. Mothers should never forget this
Again. AS 50() 11 as Zam-Iluk is annlied
to a. wound or to a diseases part, the
cells beneath the skin's surface are so
stimulated that new healthy tissue is
quidkly formed. This forming of fresh
healthy tissue from below is Zeon-Bules
secret of healing. The tissue thus formed
Visitor -Little man, do you know
Is worked up to tho surface and what I am?
Iv casts off the diseased tissue a,bove It, Bobby -Gee! Don't you know?
bucket
the
w ith
nide.
will
SPOON
FORK
and
tent
earth
This
the
bucket
carried
turned
and upside
heaped around the
will form a stove
keep warm for a good long
Or else a pit might be dug in the
centre of the tent and filled with
red hot coals frone tb.e fire. The
galvanized pail is up ended over the
pit aud the sates plastered with mud.
This will keep hot all night long.
Alt excellent shoe, el to use In
handling, coale for this purpose can
be made With the tin from an old
cali straightened out and forced into
the end of a split stick and either
nailed or tied securely. The sides of
the tin should be bent slightly up-
ward.
A camp oven is a great conveni-
ence, and it is easy to make one out
of nkaterials that must he used. Two
balciug pans or ordinary sauce pann
or kettles eau be used. One of the
pans or kettles ehould be larger than
the other so that when inverted it
will fit over the top of the other.
When ready to roast meat or bake
biscuits, .build a good hot fire with
a flat bed for live coals. Let it get
gooa and hot and set your pans in
It, the snmller with the food to be
baked being placed on the coals and
tb.e larger inverted and used to cover
the smaller. Then place some coals
over the top of the improvised oven
-the upturned bottom of the larger
pan.
, This kind of an oven does fine ser -
1 Yiee and does not interfere with the
I use of the pans for either regular
duties when no baking is to be done.
SUCH IGNORANCE
This is why Zarn-Iluk cures are perman-
ent.
Only the other day Mr. Marsh, of lel A BOY I KNOW.
Delorlmier Ave., Montreal, ealied upon
tho min -Ruh Co. and told them that for The gloaming falls, and the shadow
over twenty-five years lie had been a grow,
martyr to eczema. His hands were at And a boy steps Out of the long ago
one time so covered with sores that he
bad to sleep In stoves. Four years; ago
Zam-13111c Wall introduced to him, and in
a. few months it cured him. To -day -
E. 1
over three ,'ears aft( -1 his Curedi-
sease he had for twenty-nve years -he
is still tured, and has had 110 1 race ee
any return of the tazemai
AU druggists soli Zanalitdc nt ft box,
or we will send free trial box If you send
this advertisement and 0 Ie stamp (to
pay return postage). Address Zam-Duk
Ce„ Toronto .
IV4itaeisag
"Yonr elothea SePtu tlo small for
you, George. Didn't your tailor have
enough material?"
"I'm in them too far, that's all."
Aek any eop and Ile will tell you
that no man knit e eleit he would do
in it pinch till lie gel* pincl,kAl himself,
•
1 ii Seffragettee ma- atteli yoit il goo
don't l,it,l out.
1V11,t not the t:orintii peril to
Hague tribunal?
• shooll oitPaper this Winter,
lin., a
A notional committee has been form -
pd at Toronto to fight N11111;(` 411,41C17.
No time should be lost tit 0p0Iling
boy 1 knew with a whistle shrill
And a careless cap on his tumbled
hair --
A. boy who was oue with the woods
and hill,
To whom the earth was a poem
rare.
He knew where the arbutus loved to
hide,
Where the berries lavished their
fullest yield,
Where the wild rose gladdened
gulley-side,
Whero the chestnuts littered
autumn, field.
And to him the bobolink fluted clear
; In an azure marvel of eummer sky,
Mid the mad brook sang to his lov-
ing ear,
!Fufl well do I know,
was I.
Ah me, as the
grow,
, I would I were baek in the long ago!
-Walter G. Doty, itt National
Maa-
tine.
▪ t 111(.1)11140.1 WC/1MM Wa.12t4 a divorce
because her husband inst-os on going
-hopping with her, lf the husband ear-
rios the puree, her wish. is Tmtural.
.‘ 1.16 etruek upon
the bright idea of offering prieee for tee
bright seyinge of little ehildren in an
effete to brighten up 11-,4 ctoltiotn.4.
'flut number of women doctor--; in the
States is deereasiug. There were 228
fewer women studying medicine there
last year than there were in 1911. Is the
pro'feseion ling its attraction fur wo-
men?
the
tho
for the lad
sorrowful shadows-
-.40.1P -40s
TRAGebleS TOLD IN HEADLINES.
A(!eOrdillg to S. Uovernment sta-
tistics, the railroad 8 of that country
Lined 2,481 personand injured 43,-
4.75 during the first three months of
1.012. That beatthe Itailan-Turkish
eitour eller lt.on to
Le1.1'4or."
Stuatst
r:e: 14( s r:T 'rear, TIP Ctin
eloorreee "...taste- 'le ea to eirlop
'Were. 81A0 to Stet-
-1-1.ae11.nC1)t 1,: net',)Z';-
nizcit itandivrt'!:d, rkLate4
:NOWfl Hospital."
Si r (et. itiqd, Premier of A.uetra lio
01 Ltit iw tired of all ihi. tafk anent
Cattadian loyalty. To an interviewer
he said the speeches of 11.orden and lele
colleagues were loyel enough. Now Le
was waiting to see the result of all title
talk, or words to that effect, Tho Tor.
ies ere -great on lip loyalty, but are
metally .bort when it eonies action,
1'
A preliminary statement by the .direc-
tor of the United States census howe
that in April, 1910, there were 1,318g25
women of votiug age ia the six Stateitt
which women have the eight to vete :et
all eleutione, California 071,386, Colorado
213,425, Idaho 69,818, Utah 85,729, Wash-
ington. 277,727, '(S'yoming 28,840. Roose-
velt bee made a square bid for thui above
vote, by adopting a vote for wemen
plank in his platform.
They haee a house peanniug and house
helping. system In force in Ireland. A
local government board return lesued
recently gives particulars of loans
sanctioned In England and Wales under
the housing of the Working Classes
Act, 1890. A return itt respect of labor-
er& eottages in lreland ehows that 39,-
241 such cottages have been built and
39,439 are in course of conetruction.
The amount of the loans sanctioned is
ii.:7,906,2-13 19s 5d, the Exchequer con-
tribution for the year being £a0,811 11e
Id, and amount of rent received itaCrie,
082 lTs Od.
The double -deck street car is the
;---
latelit car to he introduced on this side
ef the water. New York and Pittsburg
are trying them. The top deck in eactk,
ear has longitudinal seats running back
to back along the monitor of the roof
of the lower storey, while the aisle along
each side of the car is much lower. The
Pittsburgh cu le 49 feet long, 7 'feet
wide, 14 feet 3 inches high and is used
as a trailer. It has seat e for 112 passen-
gers and its weight, including equip-
ateut,, is reported. as 375 lb. per seetedi
passenger. The New :York car is 41 _teen
long, 8 ft. 3 in. wide, 12 it. 10 in. high,
and, has 00 horse power motere. It has
seate for 88 passengers, and its weight
is 622 lb. per seated passenger. The
_7 double-decker may ,be the, means of
solving the eongestion problem at the
ruell home.
1:1
i REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR.
(New York Press.)
: Meals make morals,
What makes a giri so pretty is elle
- can think so any how.
Farming supports the world better than
it does the farmer.
- The smarter a man is la business the
- more it woulti help hint if he had eeme
sense wit h women.
A woman naturally hates to lie, and
- maybe that's why site does it so beauti-
_ fully for the sake of the family.
• Free reason eitudren are so noisy ie
- they niight be so attractive et they
; weren't,
A woman seems to run out of Bent1.
neetta.1 pet names tor a girl the minute
lie marries her.
What makes a Man specialy proud. of
Inmeelf is his delusion. that hie lealow
citizens are.
Tlie reason a man wants to do so
innehe.1111v.f.10)tretthaettgeirrIthteostvia.lrleonzlnahre'risede.ngagect
T).' atistrt1ig alwaye benne out to
You eau whale murals into a child, hut
he has to be coaxed Into mannem.
- A V. (alma monist bo ashatned to atotat
sl,t!itad cola tie if they wore lu a tub
Leettuee 11 girl likes to be sAI tted
nrtikikepeeclancyicitge.
'ttlilne. there ie
i
What a Uultilt1 'nn never unaerstand Is
husbati eau reiminher the namo
_ of tlq. President of the Vitited StateS
Yei Wit NV; MI (101e. her eistete third
wets eorn on.
_ A girl vt it a good figure lia..sn't any
dinbt that's the way he (.:3It prove she
tiat
it sei..ths thht. tho (11.1y ay to Multi!
s,)21ntehii
t‘tti.i.iNi1
ivt;T1:1t•olibut.traNseellII0n
tr.15•aI vikilsgiltkst l
fn.e
kutai‘i!i
ug
1314 11: ("iio \1110 eitly knows now
t":11(1N\lAtt-tilt;1i;;1:1X11
1I':11:
t 1 always seems inlght)*
t4i.:;11 o a man t !Al la. has to give it to
wlitoi it lool,s nigger than a
Co.N..erdint 111 bond.
4.4(,.)(1 advice for ovt.i•Yitody is nffvt r
te 0 Wall ; lts
wilt:. flints tad ht. lois it.
;;;.
tent stare, in eneithee the Jen.
be'd 1.14\ wetterei deeth Lel; .0.
erre- .rite irreeleaet,
tee.tree elevey:- v.- 11 14.0.
: 11, e :01 14011.•
)11;!-:4 1% 11 111 .4111. 1A111.
PA.N. iii"1111'111; 1' I./111111AI :11;si
111:ri 1:111iit, 1,1 '1...;1`0.. t+, 111:111V !::11
!Aim% 1flo
:,1‘triSi.it, 11, i; ift :1;1;1 :;* st11711,21...1
1,l 1'
i• 1,. 1,, 1
'i tiittt4 1,1‘,!ouch I.1vog fo
1 !,,-4 11N1' hi,
7, 1. 1,1