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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-09-02, Page 3%.:••=testnt"'---Tfr . wt.". '•••• 11.,• -•=1...7 -...Z. -71:1C'' -'3F-7.':172.771.--.17.- ' • give* little more thou thne te itchnirei the knowledge, situd experienee to Viejo the be euccees. Any knowl- edge, therefore, acquired before its imperative need is of the Very great - ea value and May saVe hundreds ef &liars not thousands wlien the real test varies,'" Many Imre through a resSing interest in ponitry gradually POULTRY'S PART IN IIA,CK-TO. acquired the knowledge that enabled LAND MOVEMENT. them to Put in Practice in * larger , A. P. Menthe% Nlagara rano, Canada': • 1-f One could trace haelt the eource " et a- voy. great many developed de- sires for rural endeavor ultimatelY re" eating in lifeWork on the farm ()Vona : Serter another- n0,401;114 they would reveal an important part played by the, wish to liroduce and pleasure, de- . , riVed in the growing of polOt,4! This idea seemed to loom up on ac - mat of incidents following in, close : succession, that, all seemed to imply the same, thing. In the first" place we I ran across a man, a barber by trade who of TurAlinclinations, keeping his I • garden and chickenseneally made the break and in four ears has one of the very neatest 7 acre "places we; • have ever seen. The chicken d helped • materially, but in this -case are really pnly one of the products of his most sueeeSSful place. • - . 'Going through a thriving fruit .sec- tion, we noticed one of the tidiest fit:0 • • of plaees where severak dote') children were. ..berry idaFingi and ^ enquiry elicited the infernietion that thte,Wes. °a heck -Oh -the -land marentieat With. the Most satisfactory results. In evidence ' were the bfooderi end feirlk large mindiers of thriving chickens giving ,.evidence that they were playing an important if perhqpis not a major part . *In the good results obtained. The following day- on the street of neighboring city we met an old busi- Seas acquaintance from whom we had belied -quite a lot of "a commodity he was then supplying. From one thing to another the present came under discussion and here we find another on a fruit farm as keen in the carrying en of this as though he hail -been it it for many years. Still in the same ' day we meet a very successful travel- ler and falling into conversation while -watching-a livelygameof -tennis, he too volunteers the lamination that he is going to have a poultry farm Of about 80 acres. Much of his .plans al- ready figured out, he is preparing to •know the subject in a way that will help him make less mistakes when he Wally laekleir tli serious endeavor- to make a living and e surplus along this _ ' What does. this mean and what les- son can it have to any one whe gives the matter any thought and has any inclination along these lines.? Re- , flection could not but make us feel the k necessity in each and -every case for the years of apprenticeship as it • were, at a comparatively smell cost' or . • spread out in such a way as to be hardly noticeable. If every man_ or 'woman who -has any idea of poultry • farmieg'oranyother; ire fact could do so in a comparatively sniall way Lir a number of Years, they could at least deternrkine. if the inclinetion is still strong, even if this would not show -Wharrestilts Much • of sehool training seems to have it- tle value or meeming_ta_us and even, . . - in, after life some Of it seems to give • els nothing that proves of use, but who can say any mental or physical effort was valneless if tot in a. practical, • perhaps by the moral or indirect re- sult it might have had. • ' Some have said that there is little ,•difference in men, but this difference makes a big difference. Very °nit' • ability may be in; favor of the one •k who fails; but knowledge, perseveie ewe, and a spiritthat .appreciates • when .one thinks seriously of the mat- ter of making a really . suecessful • career, along any_gisfen linerthat it AW Tiff BIG GUN'S VALUE THE GEOMAN KAISER GUESSED WORT. IvAgN IT RAINS IN PANAMA, idfor Bli)od! Allirry A, Powell. end Three Comrade* • - Had AWftil.BetPerieriCe. ern'efil Sand,/ Headache, poWeruJ Before Ps • spread the rePeelog : Languor pid Tiredness. aP"-'43jrainering You clon't need to pa told , hew you Across the bay, clear ae en etching., feeh•--blue sort of ,eickish, poor • an- htY Venal/rat backed thr Angel), la petite, vaine pains, tired nit the 'morn - regular cadenee the Weil OWOPt on tip sands. Such was the scene de - way what they bad found beet work, . scribed by Mr. Harry A. VraAelt kg tender conditiOaS milaalre Belloo Acknowledge!' Allieft "Zeno Nieman 88," when, his and restricted . three poi/wades went one day for a Many A SilecesSflal fruit and poultrY SAW twig. Pr. ofitably . -ttraler ttifl• fact that Mi. , „ Abe'44' . restricted poultry interest "led ' Hillaire Bellec, Pranco-Britishendli- 11 ' to learn many things that stood Win tary,writer, pays Gerulany alone win 'n en the man. ' tritired ireePing MA eye out for tlieeVerah:a4Enfe' '84.01thf°atirglilea'enditnlierwobtalliielyy itt would not bite, if they did. The'suin surreundingo and enabled him -be a - An%) dl ltohp4 41 erg rill a It v 42' te t r rg9g 'tel. ry wet; ue ekil brazed down wbfte-119t fr°M pity. The Lieutenant and Sen., 010141- of .the acquired habit of successfellY in Etrope, He pays; . tem from A pew anglo and by hie Pe- the probable . turn ' modern warearelhemes in the sand or all that, and of the German guesses is to. Oeant JaCk had not been able te specializing to take up the praposi- . ,Two , ',come, but we arrenged ,the 'races And CIlliar business qualificatiOnS build ilP . ould take Cala be dealt with briefly, a trade that ; means for him a splendi for ill each the Germans.- were thee. went tnte them with a will And— A raindrop fell. Then A few more. living satisfactory *cork. eeehtj iii the right and the allies, as Then many more, Before we had fin - If anyone therefore take a fancy a whole in the wrong: ished the hundred -yard dash it was 'forpaultry work it seems as though These. tern points are the use . 0 undeniably . rattling. Half a minute it'Wellicl be :Well to give this side of heavy Artillery ill the open field -with later "bucketfuls" ieopld have been a :the subject due consideration. A lit- tle reflection will show that it ,would be very Aviee, to study "the ,Pubjeet 'in Ouch away as td learn all that might -7,1•1•1, • THE BEAM hfenY stpd Carious Are the Stylenf • 'Whiskers. 0. °•There is a sort of an unwritten JAW, Often broken, that array men obeli ..1‘iflYalffeirfg Irefirti; Need Not wear a M011atieheo naval men, to be •clean Owens, but, of eourae, in the •, Bring Wrinkles, infs. Thie eendition is common at .navy +especially, there .are manY ex- VirllY ShOlad anY man m or woan tnitter this seaeon,.. * r ortunatelY there is prompt relief ' ri:eiQm711°1:;14tielefite'teThlieeeWe b9.recetttehr; '1,4.1ilynr°1e447:tiA4441514edlusf'4einintilL;ehaetiolle"ttbsalgt"thl in Dr. RaMilten 0 Pille which Intqlettli,' merit; kunkit in time to aPPIY! a'apted1742gellalesiree_p.:trhoedu'llittgclnin:fttearli. Pe.15Qh4 m'fitosutstttisshin rl.e'rhiSin, "all tfo have bter-he 11-1,1-not411 71:e 4:1::: en:y f 1 nu frf I etbicen::Quer704; - Thousands have been so Utterly de- rowed the idea from the Attatrian.S.Or; certain. :Oriental •0110 0.11 reVe,41 A t ... ,pressdi Isci-yve4,21-„Inat...7-415.7- to be: 66- vice- _. : - - - --- . - ,Careitnan-tiltvener 'by' 41.4 Arab,e Pea13.1: : - -' pondent, lent Dr. Hamilton's Pills el- Among the S. Arab_. , and Per- vreetatrygra to restore their fading tweeuaringearowal the•therrae,wer."foi canpr. B innsPean,,lt tadasiethi:_drairirPtitvilal;:p;freTtg extent re- wr4es: wknrionws,wo of ga;IgTv jalubegiiitajou'cwrflit-iinielvzsorri • N itann'gstiyonn4:47,,,,viraistri.spez..inTi Femarabnf000S dgeagrdratiedataisona_ §mevozyntuliniholono swenetar4nbyd .tfbac uooTtnuobh 7ouet owho at ti4ni ;hi:of:hoe er. ti:er; vb br jage 4txti5vtijile_l_, , e nreparatigg, which is obtainable eradicate every, wrinkle, , i. ' Mitt Maas. Co.. Lintited.,,470 Itonces; i• "Vies Avenue, Toronto. was thin and weak, I was terrible rsn. , , down, had Awful headaches *Rd./ A the beard of the Prophet end . their til I used Dr, Hamilton's Pillsrethey operation immediately after prayers,. i gnaleme; empty feeling .neene tioy OW11, carry combs about with theni to stomach, I couldn't sleep or work un- drese the beard. They perform this did me a world of good." At all remaining on their knees the whilek dealers in„25e, boxes, . The hairs that fall out. are carefully -, . , Preserved for entombment with their • eweer when he dies; he himself fre- . THE GOSPEL OF PATE' . - . quentlY depositing ' them in his des - which may be incorporated the value Weak 'simile. The blanket of water , • , • of. -high explosive - Oho; not ',, only blotted out Panama and Anon hill ; Gerinams- Dislilie Of England H tined tomb. It is customary among: Against Permanent fortifications, but across the'bay,lblotted out the distant . In.creased. 17enfo4t. , , - as. .twhieth„Tupregrifin, Into:: atnociantonintr:nittkire beathredms, the time owe fenZeglnieiryel'uepnoenretttlieees-deftgdaythee, vaaluex; hand than even those 'clo,s,o' at ,be of 'assistance When . , %Some* politicians, MOStlY of an -'oh- with. incense. • ' ' to require to develop' the poultry into very large Provision of inachine.gues. W • , e rematnesi under Water.for a A linci,that•will bring , satisfaetory Allies 'Feared /Nobility, time -to keep. dry., But the rain seure typerhave tinea emleavOrecl• to persuade the Eritish Working men that they have no real intefest thiS, war, and that the triumph of the Gere Persian kings used- to have 'their beards interwoven witin h gold ,thread; living, • • Roughly rineekillg, there ' -irere' two Of stinging lashes. • We crawled .auf As to the .first ef , these points: whipped Or, 'faces ;a4 With 'thousands 'stilig'ritgoYPf tir:bousr°1114,grebviatber:ormcisettrMe4s...ki‘l'AtInCiEert:a.l'raUerigtairelel. licut3ree.e EeriT&Iee ST*104, ng” -. . schools before the outbreak of war, and dishful 'blindly hP the' bank ',f134 Man, arms would not adversely affect wore 'false beards of plaited Ilum out pain by Imre treanneet 'write . - . HARD ON.: HART The schoolwhich ii nu d the. 1. es before too WO. Dr. Beiltuatt ifedice4 . ..e 1 e ...va .4.0 ward,the sawirrill„ the ram beating on their., fortunes vir. materiallY change .Whiell varied 41 id,* 4410 length'. sc., ,c,ci,. X.imited.:Collingwood., gnr. ,, . • • , • • -t-7-- "4 ' ,• , of heavy guns in the fi:Old; and of the our all, init bare Sithuf. ' It felt as it the conrete of their lived, Writes. Earl cording 'ts„ranlp.e.?etei the ;great 'No season of the year is So danger- use of high hplosive shell for general might feel to stand in Miraflores leeks Cromer - in the. London Spectator. compelled shaving in Russia, and had outi to the life of little ones as is the purposes took their,etand upon the re- and let the §antl pour (Meth upon us There cannot be o - greater error. ... It the beards of all whom he found *ear- .1 eummer, The excessive heat throws cent lesions of . lout]) Africa and from sixty feet above. When at last is no, exaggeration t� say that a corn- ing,Them plucked out by, the root or We little stomach out of order. se MinchuNa. .. • we stumbled under Over and Up the 'plete German Victory -would *e±erciSe shaved with a blunt razor. quickly that unless prompt aid is at The proportion of losses produced stairs to where our clothing hung, it a Profound effect on the political stat- .,.,,,bi Greece the beard was universally ' hand the baby may be beyond allby these methods did not seem to was as if a weight ot many tOns had us, the material wealth, the social Worn until the time of Alexander thehuman help before the Mother realizes warrant the very great expense and been lifted-frOm•our shoulders. . condition and the, surrounding moral Great, who ordered shaving so that he is ill. Summer is the season' wile!! Jack of mobility they :entailed. The sawmill was without side walls, diarrohbea, cholera infainurii,-dysene eeiew, it must here be theceded that and consisted only ota sheet -iron roof try and colic are most prevalerit. Any though the enemy was right in his and floors. The storm pounded on one of these troubles May prove -dead- theory; and we were wrong, chance ' the roof- with a roar that made the ly if not °promptly treated., Dining has also playia very directly into the sign language necessary. It was as the summer the mothers best friend enemy's h . . if we were surrounded on all sides by ands, . solid walls of water, and forever shut ... Effect of Trench Warfare: off from the outer world -if indeed • cams FOR RENT, /4901KING ,FQ3 A ream. COS4VIAT Ine, 1 41aire over Two Thiedred ee eiy net. /cleated' in the hest .sections of Del tart°. All sirex. N. 7 Dawson. lirseiPt01. NEWSPAPERS NO3IT-144UONtl Ng'W.S. AND, .191$ Ogices for vele In good Ontario ^, towns. The most useful and Interesting of all businesses. Full' information on application to Wilson Publishing Com- IWO', la WestAilelaide. 81.. Toronto., MISCELLASE,0011. is Baby'seOwn Tablets. They regu- late the bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep baby healthy. The Tablets are sold bymedicine dealers or by mail at .25 .cents a box from The Dr. Williams' IVIedieine-CO., Brookville; Ont. • •• Donald Drew Himself Up. • A gentleman having an estate ii the Highlands, as he was going broad for Some Ihne, advertified his shootings to let, and told his game- keeper, Donald, who -Waste show the ground, to give it a. good character to :anyone who called to see it. An Eng- lishman dame -down, and, inquiring of Donald as to how it was stocited with game., first asked if it had any deer. -Donald's reply wris-"Thoo- sands. of them." "Any' grouse'?" ,-!`Thoosandi of them,- o.!' "Any part- ' ridges?" "Thoosands of them, too." "Any woodcock?" • nhoosaeds • of 1 -them, tote The Englishman, thinking Donald was drawing the long •bcrw, asked if there were any gorillas. Don- ald drew himself up. "Well, they are no' plentifu'; they jist come occasion- ally, noo and again, like yourserr ' • Teri chinjag, Into Great Favor.. •Not in the memory of.the oidest tea Planter has the price of tea reached before the present figure in Colombo. There seems to be a widespread move- ment in favor of • tea..throughout the world; and the supply is insufficient 'to cope with 'the inceeased deniand. Until the law of supPly and demand adjusts itself higher prices for tea must be expected. - . - It isn't what you say, but how you :.say_it; that makes a woman . either your friend or ypur enemy. • , --Ittinattre- ZInimerit Caring • After all, what is it that renders the' that had survived.Sheets of water use of heavy shell and high explosives slashed in farther and farther across of such peculiar value at this mo- the floor, We took to huddling be- .ment21t.is that , the war settled hind beams and under saw bencheb dowe months ago to french warfare, the militant storm hunted ifs out and Which is essentially siege work. • wetted us bit by bit "The. Admiral" What' makes that trench, Warfare and I tucked ourselves away on the possible? Nothing but the 'combine- forty-fiveedegree I beams up under the tion of two unforeseen events -name- roaring roof. .The angry Water gath- • ly, the failure of the enemy% use � ered togethei• in coluimis, and swept. mere numbers at the ()Wet of the in and -up to soak -us. war and the immense forces available At the -end of tin hour the downpour for the holding of' a defensive line. had inceeased some hundred per cent. It is essential to the prolonged (ie_ That was the day when little harm- less streams tore themselves apart Ipto .great_gorges, and left their pa- thetic little bridges alone and deserted -oat in the middle of the gulf. That was the &moils May 12, 1912, whin' Ancon recorded the greatest rainfall in her history -1.23 inches virtually • all within three hours. Three of us were ready to surrender and swim home through it --But there was the .Admiral .to considr. He was dressed' clear to his 'scaffpin-and Panama tailors tear horrible holes. in a police- man's salary. So we waited, and dodged, and squirmed _into smaller holea-fori4nothee steadily wetter. • At length dusk 'began to fall; but instead ' of dying with the d, ifie furyof the etorm increased. It was thee that the Admiral - capitulated, seeing fate plainly in league with his tailor; wigwagging his decision to ui, he led the way down the stairs and dived -into the world awash: Wet? We had not taken the third fence of an entrenched position that - its two -flanks should be quite secure.' ' Enemy Proved Right. , On the second point, theample vision of machine guns and the train- ing of many officers and men in their use, there is nothing to be said ex- • cept' that the enemy has proved en- tirely in the right. It is, perhaps, if we survey the war • as a Whole, the only point in• which the enemy's theories are open tb no -criticism at all.. Just that the French theory a a most highly -perfected quick -firing field piece has Proved 'upon their' side' the' one unchallenge- able 'preparation for modern war. • Avery higher commariel on both 'aides at thistnoment sees quite. clear- ly that the choice is between the en- emy's obtaining a real decision within a Comparatively brief delay and his approaching exhaustion as 'compared with his foes. • • Strategy of To -day. f •TheiefOre his. grand startegy ire its simplest terms Meet be mit-ifilrdirect-; edto the attainment of such a• decision and that of the allies rath,er to, poit- polling it • than to.direct action at the moment upon their' part. And, this being so; it. is fair t� judge the..general atrategie results on • both sides by the 'measare of success the enemy attains in his eneiny's forces, whetlier•that attempt be made •on the East, like the one -now in prO- grees, or upon the *eat, where, in the opinion of many ,judges, he will last athick as ever when .We fought a •Make- his next and -perhaps--hi--last S effort.. It is true to say that the import- ance to the enerny of obtaining his' decision before the late. autumn is very much greaterthan the iniport- arice to the albies of obtaining a cor- resporidieg decision against his .East- ern or his Western line bithe same date, and it is • Upon this criterion that •the whole position mustbe judged. -- - atmosphere of eyery individual sub- ject of Eing George V. A partial vic- tory ,would produce changes in pro- portion to its extent. •Let it not he supposed for one mement. that any degree' of statesmanlike ' generosity would be extended to the 'vanquished-. Engliihmen have been OM to reeog. nize the extent to which the 'old Ger- many, with its really noble aapira- tions and high standard ofmorals, has passed away. Its place has been tak- en by a Germany one of whose prin- cipal national characteristics is ex- treme vindictiveness, and. a catholic capacity for hating other nationa. Ac- cording to the testimony of all com- petent observers the hatred for: En - land •which existed -before the • war exceeded anything which we thuld have believed poesible. • It has, of course, now been increased tenfold. • .1. "-TRADE SECRETS. the' beards. .of _leis soldiers sheuld mote he laid hold of by their enemies -in battle. ' * Opens September lit. In -Rome the first dayo of , shaving all-ere was.regarded>by the Romans as ' the ELLIOTT entrance into manhood, and it was celebrated with great festivities. 14,11. • lump11 .• no, lej,Y::::,,Aw.4.451:43:,Ud 11.t414:1.1341:11::: fr. slat* 0404 ponain pn tatapots , 1'1.A saia AppliedIn A 4- S ' ° 11.! econ • • el•Scge, .blIstering feat urea r corn-pinahed , • toes can be• euml U _ treater in 24 heart. • tett "Putnam's" soothes. Ly that drawing pain, east% !natalit- ymaltes"th-e-feet- Wear -toed -a On'a. a .250. bottle ot "Patilam'e ert4a,Y. • ' • Telling Anexdotee. A. little' group of holiday-makers were' sitting :round; telling anecdotes, One girl told a humorous story, Costliness of the Shadowing That . Has to be Dwhich was eeceived With great appre- one. • . eiation; .1yhen the laughter had Hew trade secrets become the pro- ceased her rival said -"My goodness! • perty f rival firms is the .cause of a That story is at least thirty years eetist_azhount± of shadowing of snspect- old!"' The other' one smiled sweetly'. ed employees. Such secrets are re- t"What a memory, You have, deari" She sporisible for a large portion of the. said, "Farley remembering' Wet litz private inquiry agent's prosperity. In tle story ever since- you heard it the the case' of a celebrated fashion firm first tinier ' the -leakage of secrets With regard to ' . .jiewjiesigns , Sept,. owers to be employed, and the track- MiLaehute9ue.; 25th 1908. nard's Limment Co., Limited big, extendiM ng ever several months Gentle Eversinc•e: :cOming cost-ionw-hundreds- home from the. Boer War. I have been actiOn. for damages against the Cul -,bothered with 'running fever sores on Prit -rival establis'hment' resulted in in legs- I tried many salVes 'and • 734 Yong. St., WONONTo. .14.. Nigh .Clrade School. None setter ta Canaan,. Witte for Net, college Announcement: Highest Cash - Prices Paid for .We are the largist buyers of 'Ginseng in America and have the -greatestdertiatd, for it-- We Can ' • thereforepayou tbe highest-caslx-- prices. If you have -any.7wild or cultivated Ginseng,. write -re?,our latest price list, or ship What you have and we will submit you 01.g highest .offer. . . David BitistOin &Bra, 162 W. '27th St., NewYeik„ U.S.A. . . • . • . Disappointed With kis Dinner. -A-marr who -vas: somethinguf. 4a gourniet ordered a dinner for himself • and _Ids Party which, from the menu,' " ' swinging damages, the celebrated liniments; Also -doctored continuous: should have been very palatable, but K.C. who led for the plaintiffs em_ leyntforrelitehfe, btillolodla,-shtuwt winter no heti . -permen,, apparently it was not so. Course suc- my ceeded course, and toward the end• mother got me to try IIIINTARDI.S of Alia Meal the host' could restrain . LINIMENT. The effect of •_which ' himself no longer. He called up the phasising the Costliness of the shad- owing that had to be done. 'Perhaps one of -the .strangest reasons for hav- was almost magical. Two e. step before we were streaming like ing a perpzi, shadowed. was revealed I comPletely cured me and f hxpostiilated:-"I ordered' ave work. a good .', bottles waiter and clinnerverid--ive--have, waited- -fire 'hose. There was nearly an hour in the codrse of h law case in which r ed. every working day since. , of it; splashing knee-deep through one ' society beauty was the plaintiff Yours gratefully, e . _ .. . patiently for some satisfactory dish.- what had been little dry, . Sandy hol- and s rival beauty the defendant It JOHN WALSHThesoup was a failure; the fish Was 16w -se -steering hy guess, for the en Was compiaina by the aggrieved lady s disappointment, the ,entree uneate '. could make out .nothing fifty Yards that the defendant had had -her shad, • -- - - - able, and I am sorry to tell you that - daring the whole dinner there has `... heenInething Worthylooking at: The ., ahead, even before the cheese -thick darkness fell; 'bowed like_nona.genar- ians under the burden of. water; 'stag- gering back and forth as. the 'storrn. caught us cresswise or the earth gave way under us.' The Admiral's paterit• leathershoes-but why go into pain- ful details? The wall of. water wat ToRoNtrces MOST POPULAR SUM - !ER DISSIPATION IS CITY 'DAIRY ICE CREAM—the &mud hasspreadfront yeiti to year until it is now on sale in .nearly every itIM111 In Ontario. There seethe to be so mithing - about theclimateof Canada' that-makesit-the- - confection that ,everybody craves in warm weather—infanta, invalids, children or grown- ups. it makes no difference what your state or station. City Dairy tee Cream is most refresh- ing. nourishing and digestible. For Sate 4bso Alteephitinating •ehttpktitWeria -twor • . .440901 felt , the Sign. TORONTO' We went an tititki.tist eeriew iteWtto.. • . MISCHIEF- • . , Now 'Strong and Robutit. • bowed and weary way up over the cred force for the last dash, •w4 plunged toward our several., gatris: As the door of 411 slammed behind me, the downpour suddenly slackened. As I paused before my room .to_drein, it stonped An Atialt's fond _tiolt-,eatir_save- a - baby proves itself to be nourishing and easily digested and good .for big and little folks.'" An Eastern man says: . "When our baby was about eleven Months old he began to grow thin and pale. This was attributed to the heat and the fact that his teeth were corn- • hut; in reality, the . :poor little thittir wa,e_starving, his mcither's. not being sufficient .nsnrishment. "One do after he had cried bitterly for an hour, I suggested that my wife try 'him on 'Orape=Xuts. She, soaked %we, teattpatinflas in half a tile Of Ivartn-water-for-5' then - poured off the liquid and to it added a like -amountof rich milk and a' little sugar. This -baby ate ravenously. "It was not many days before he fotgot. all about being. nursed, and has since liveralmost exclusively on Grape -Nuts. • to -day the boy is strong and robust, and ae 'cute a mis- • chief -maker as a thirteen-moriths'-old baby is expected,to bed " "Ilse this letter any way you wish, for my wife and I 'can neeer 'prattle , Grape -Nuts enough after the bright- ness it has brought to our household." Grape -Nuts is not made for a baby fodd, but experience. with thousand•s' , of babies shows it to be 'among the best, if not entirely the best le 'use. Being a scimitiftc preparation Oi ' • Nt- ture's it is equally effective as • a body and brain builder for grown. "Oh, will he -bite?" exclaitned One tips. "There's a Reasen." bi our. Siveetestgirls, with a look of • 'Name given by Canadian rostuM alarm, when she saW one of the date. Coi,°Windsor, pa. • ing beers on the street, the other 'clay. Ever read the abo,volottor f now "No, but he can hue "Oh," she said• : the almeata from tiltie tO titled or With .ft distracting Mile, "/ don't, sto geintiner true, and full Of intersa. nun t owed in order to discover the beapty ' About Her Young i!an... shop where the jealous one ambled A servant WaS"-- elling-herinistrets artificial aid with respect to her com- plexion. - •14 A • SPLENDID RECORD. . • Most people. know . that the Can- a:diari'Vaeific Railway- tr&versts-we fa 41pesand inile9_of_countr. • Canada, encOuntere• 'even tropical and arctic weathers., cuts its *ay through the ragged and''difficult country a -long the shores of Lake ,Superior; crosses the endless prairies of the west; and finally runs throukh the glories' of the Canadian • Rockies where the road,in- * some places ,has been liewn out Of the' mountain sides under towering peaks; ' Tlie' usual crowd of Small boys was — Ihreeigh great ca'nyo'ns, And in other gath6red about the entrance of the circus tent in a town. A benevolent- • : places tunnels and ,piral rails have to • be negotiated, all_ necessitating care n . . _ _ looking old gentleman .standilig near - Some good Advice 13y the Late,Robert _ _ .by watched them for'a few •minutes •- -----..-•--.' . 3. llurdette. ' operatioq. But in spite of all .these• -1‘..nememoer, my. son," said Robert. with a beaming eye.. Thep, •wallrhig- ei-:::-- --e•-.---__-_- • ' . ' • , difficulties:the Canadian PaCifie h 1 Burdettei."yeu haVe-t-tiVerk,---Whe- not killed a single passenger. i.negad.' up to the ticket -taker, he • said, with ther you handle a . pick Or a. pen,. a train accident during the past two an aiiof mithority, "Couiitilt .those wide', is it record -Caned: a: boys as they paste" Theidoorkee er .wheelbarrOw or a set °of books, dig; :3tears' . . piece against the *recent boast Of the hinEng that the benevolent -looking ing an auction bell on writing fanny Pennsylvania Railroad not . having bia gentleMari • was indulging in a ging ditches or .editing a paper, ring place you must • work. If you look killed a Passenger in three years. bit of philanthropy; did as requested. eopsideio When the lest lad had gone in he turn- aroundEspecially so when . it is ' are most aide to liv-e the rest ° of their .,e,c1Gnannddi announced, "Twentyetonr, sir?, " said. the henevolerit-looking you you will see the men ,who that the latter road has not the same climath conditions to face and the easy ceuntry threugh which it tra- old gentleman, as he .walked awash "I lives without work are the men who Work the hardest- Don't be afraid , of verses. • killing ypurSelf, with. overwork., • Jt is , . ,:°. • .. .,-;.:,. ..e. . . , thought I guessed right". - ' ., • beyond your power to do that on the '-Alhinetre &lard the -day- they are sunny side -of thirty. They die' some- born and the day -they are -buried: ' waiter looked tr-oubled for ari. instant ' the other day of he boasting indulged and then lirightenieg up • saide•-elf .• in by the servant next door about her you Wait a monient, Sir, I will bring • -young man M khaki. "I can't under- yoo • stencrhow got 'Oil fist;" she . • remarked: "He's • only been in the A arnir. a few months, yet she told me ineNeirember thathe-veas a 'corporal; last Week she. said he'd been m d sergeant,and now she says he's to be When a Chinaman desires to marry. a Court-martial" • his parents intimate that fact to the professional "match -maker," who thereupon runs through,the list of her • visiiihg acqe'aintatices, and- selects one whom she considers e fitting bride A Benevolent Ohl-Gentlernan—.: fot the yourfg.man- =nava% ianimeat cares Gaiget4h Co. + atinardys .E.Initnent. Cures' ,Distemper. A TALK WITH .THE BOYS. times, but ib is because they leave work at six p.m„ and -doh get, home till Midnight. It it -the ifiterVal that _ atinard'o rdoingent Wei Colde.-Ete.:-= killsony-Tott: .The Work -gives You -1Vii.-tfrowi9My good man, What - an appetite for your meals, it lends ever caused you tobecome a tramp?" solidity, to your slumbers; it gives a The Wandering ' Oneeegt, 'wee 'm'y'perfect and'grateful appreCifiticon Of'a *Mita! adviser, sir. He toldme to. holidity. There are young men who take long walks after meals, and I've do not work, but the world is hot been welkin' after 'em ever since.". proud of them. It does not 'even brow their names; it simply aneaks of Ahem ea 'old Oo-and-So's boys,' No- body likes them, The great, busy world does not know -that they are there. So find 'kept what you want to be and do, ahd take off your coat and do it. Tlie busier you are the less harm You will be apt to get Intel the -evtieeter -Will be your .sicep,'thetright- eh and hermit', your holidays,' and the better satisfied will all the rprld. be with yon." ONTARIO. VI'IrERiNAI COLLECE • You will 'led relief in Zen -Saki it eases the bUrOng,. stinging' pain, stops !deeding and brings '-ease.-PerseVeratieerwierZanw Buk, tneans cure: -Why not prove this 7 AU Druggists turAlltopese- bo.V. , • Under, tre control Orthe -Depaftmett-o-f . Agnicultmer of Ontario: Established 1862. .- Affiliated' Virith tee University of Toronto.Collee .,.. --410--ttinversity-Avie, l'artONTO, -OW.; CAN." Reopens.--FridaY, -,Qctober Write Dept. D. for Calendar. E. A. A. Grange, • Y.& M.S.,. Principal; ' ' .?1 •t•,. 410vetste:rn" V ,Ele4toot • • • Motor Boat • k'reight Prepaid to any Railway Station .1), , Ontario., Length '15 It:, Beam 3 rt. 9 4.k • DOPth 1 n. .6. In. ANY 101'011 PITS, ,epecincolton NO. 213 Oving engine prices on request. Get our quotations ort, -"The Penetang Line" Commercial end Pleasure Lthipthes, Itow boat and Canoes. THE GIDLE:St EOATi., CO, LIDOTEDt i)ENETANOt • t 'ffISUB 35'i5 1.1 .•. ,