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The Exeter Times, 1919-1-23, Page 3"''s'"-n,`"nnnsn'srnsrs—rnsatatrahenteente---- , aEIR UTTLE GIRL COUCHED UNTIL SL LYCHOKED. Mre. John Reinhardt. Ridgetowne Ont.; Writess----My little girl at the age of a year and ahalf old had in awful tough. She woald mesh until she would choke, and I was afraid it would go to her lungs, 1 thought 1 would use Dr. Wood's. Norway Pine Syrup, us 1 knew of quite' a few persons Who had 'used it with geed te dia. Lam gladl did so, as I only us t one bottle. It is a sure cure for coUghe aad colds." There is no reason why' Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup ohould not be recoge nized as the very best cough and cold remedy on the market to -day, combining sie it des the lungthealing virtues of the Norway pine tree, to whieh are added Wild cherry bark, squills, and other sooth- ing and healing pectoral reniedieS. , It has stood the test for the past 30 years mai is becoming more generally used every year on account of its great merits in curing coughs, colds, bronchitis, croup, whooping cough, asthma, sore throat, and preventieg pneumonia and in many cases corismiiption. So great has been its success that there have been A great many imitations put on the market to take its place, See t none of these so-called "pine syrups are handed .out to you• when you ask for "Dr. Wood's." The genuine and original is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 25c. and 50c. Manufactured only by The T, Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Orrh enteasheagese . se.srsfea-a--eass-e.d.;ete s Bred -to -Lay Fleeles. cleVeloping, flocks of farm poul- try. the bred -to -lay 'foetal, is deeerv- ing of much empleasie. Several sys- tems for selecting laying: hens, ,have been tried With varying Success but there Ls no method ,cf ,aceurately de- termining which hens are the 'best layers except the trapenest. 13reeders who have been 'making trap -nest rec- ords for e long period of years .havre been able to, produce hens Whiels pos- sess a marked ability to lay eggs and tranemit the power to their progeny. Some breeders claim that the high normal layers are the best breedees arnd. this .seenis miscible. The, two- Ishundred-egg hen may frequently be a I better breeder than the pbenerameal lanai' which produces nearly three i hundred eggs. It is 'the flock aveeages that donut., Stock from aestrain with eight or generations of two -hun- dred -egg henrs is mote reliable than sto•ck from two generations of, heats ! 'which will lay two hundeed and fifty eggs.: per year. The two -hundred - egg stock bred over the longer period it, more apt to hive the clearacteristie, fixed to atay. In selecting bred-toelay stock the Vane that the eggs' are produced has some influence on theie market value. Fine birds of a prominent strain made a record of one hundred and thiety-foue eggs during January in a Missouri laying tontest. At a Jan- uary price of fifty cents per dozen these eggs would have been worth $5.58, Or about $1.12 per ben for the month. . IA May a/1011ex pen produc- ed on,e hundred and thirty-three eggs, but at that time eggs were selling for about twenty-five cents per dozen. Their eggs vraulicl othy bring, $2.77, or about lifteeesix cents per hen for the month. Undoubtedler this ability to lay snintee eggs can be developed in sense strains of fowle to such an ex- tent that they can be made. raue,h more Profitable than the ordinary type of 4\sz, BESIDE HOME'S THRESHOLD k CA' . Farr Vothem Have Every Help at Hand for Anticipating the the First Year at School. • , , By Caeolyn Sheivin Bailey . . 'a. A if we stop to look Sor them, we! Manuring milk, veg;etables, frukt, e • enseg (ohi ',tees.- '''' d' will find opportunities for edueetion i berries, cookirig ingredients and e • . at the door -step of the farm lime.; learning the names and capacity a - fain het, The breeders who deveaote he city se ool rnuet eubstituie a : all the receptacles used for this these higlaguality winter layers, seem laboratory, pictures, brief tripe and' l'quhl and dry measure; riseastiling to depend very largelY linen the trap- excursions, atutred and dried speen; ann laying out floever and vegetable nett to produce high reeords. . Of mens of animale as eutistittites for. belie; counting and measuring the course, they MN Grirp111Erv,Ne vigor real life, , material used for building fences, a these wbSch is of prime importance in de -I The farm child has the whole world, dog house or a bird house; all veloping a flock of birds Neith the Of primary ,educatien within the limits, are important home tra,ining in arith- vitality to lay winter eggs. i of the farm. The farm mother has; raatic for the child on the tarn. Busy hone lay beeaute,e exercise is abundant opportunity for etarting a I The schools "tvcro:c1 be glad to dupli- furKlamental to, health and the bird. Child in the three R's at home. cote such training and so give life that is not in a healthy, vigorous coal Every child on eat er,:ng bt.'hooi finds to the dry bones of thelr teaching of etition is not prepared to produce eg'gse one of his difficulties in the begin- mathematics. Keeping the lre-ne busy fin the winter; nine. Each experienee of aritinnethe He 13 given a should be made a permanent lesson aleo keeps the poultryman on the book and must try to make abstract by having the little studer_t copy his jump. .Inenty of dean litter must be figures stand for concrete #ketS- The card figures end record the results reapplied for scratching. Mist baths ', meggp.geeeeke, tease, ,s-aen peotgems of his measuring, clunting. and Mill" must be prepared and filled with clean. !., 1 garden loam .So that the bent svill t atilow much plaster:rig to buy for Paring. When regular teaching of arith- have a chance to fight pests and sun I this room an how many shingles for gthat barn, or how much interest a ine•tie is begun in school; there are themselves while dusting in the earth.' certain amount of money will earn many home exercises that will help It pays to have something for the in a hens to peck at during wmter months. year ,at a certain per teat. are the farm child to make his growing Clover can be wrapped in a small' all confusing mental operations for knowledge of numbers a practical cylinder ed pOieltry wire and onspead_ the child who is not yet at the stage part of his everyday living. ' Some ed from the 'Wan of the house. The elen reasoning powers are develop - his own entail 'weekly allowance, of these are; keeping an a.ccount tif , bgt444.,, Keeping Dairy Herd Records. The Dairy and Cold Storage Branch of the Ottawa Department of Agriculture has issued an eight -page c:rcular giving exact instructions re- lative te the keeping of -dairy herd records. The eitcular states that the Department will pay to any qualified teeter 10 cents for each Babcock test made from the com- posite ,samples of any herd. The party who does the testing must proakde. the Babcock tester and;the neeligtry glassware and equipment for Making the test. The Department, provide- free . of :charge , the sulphuric acid preservative tablets, return entrelopes, credit slips, labels for the conitoostte sample bottlea, and blank forms for recording the weights of milk at the fame The. ...duties of the testers will be to test *re„Ve composite -samples each month, en - 'ter the tests on the retried sheets. and forward the same to Ottawa. With the elecular, a sant& is given of the record and "the manner in width it should be kept and Wes* applica- tion forins, first, for assistance in herd record work and, 2nd, for employ- ment as a milk teeter. It ,should be stated that no postage is required when writing to the Dairy and Cold Storage Commieeioner Ottawa, and. alSo that the circular 'here referred to can be hadtfrce from the Publica- tions Branch at Ottawa. Reading Good Books. The reading of books, if they be in any sense worthy, ean mangy to be a most fruitful and worth - 'while exercise. If a book only suc- ceeds fn taking a man out of himself for a time, it et least -does that much goad. But if in doing that, it takes him into a pace ,clearer thought or truer feelting ,or higher impulse, then ;it surely performs a service past ell estimating. And 'it will do ,some ono or all of these things ir it is a good book. Now if geed books were with us more than they are we would he better men and women than we are. Aad good books are all about us, ,stretching out thole haeds to us end aeking that we know and use, them. And we have time to give them, for we could easily ,spare it ,frem. some of the thhige that keep us bney hour 'after hour. We -could give enough time that we might read at least one good beets every inordli,Seati if we would all do it the etim-Wrour intelligence and happiness and ueefulness wonld lee very very greatly tecteamd. .A national labor congress will be held ehortly in Milan, Italy, Tembied :9th Kidneys For Over Three Years. , WAS CONFINED TO BED, Alm. George Gray, Hopewell Hill, N.B., writes -"X had kidney trouble for over three years, and was so bad I was confined to my bed, First I contracted a bad cold and it teed to my kidneys, and T. suffered dreadfully. 1 got the doctor, 'bub he did Ino vary littlo good. I tried all kinds of kidney pills, but, got very Hale help. One of my neighbors came in to see me and told me to get Doan'a , Kidney Pills and give them a goad trial, I I us d five boxes and they cured inc, So that I can sleep all night without being ; disturbed, and I feel better in every way. , I cermet say too znuch in favor of Doan's' Kidney Pills." Doan'e Kidney Pills are just wha e their • • name insplies; a pill for the kidneys and the kidneys only. When you ask for t Doan a SPO that you get them put op in an oblong grey box with our trade markr"Tho Maple Leaf", Price 50e. at all dealers or mailed direct on reoeipt • of piece by Phe I. _Milburn Co,rtainIted, .1d:front-a, (Int, • birds wi1l enjoy pecking at the leaves ; and bleseems and will obtain meta pereenees He needs objects and tangible ex- raising and selling' truck, dairy or 'before he tries to express fowl produce and keeping a record of LIVE AND GROW YOUNG 0 Ldfe holds ea many compensations for growing old, that when you stop to count them it seems almost a pity that you can not be born old'. Youth hes a glory of its own, but it is as the glory of the stars compared to the.. glory of the sun of mid-life or the silver light of the moon of old age. For what is nhysic-al beauty, eolor and form and action, compared to the beauty of mind and spirit -which only life can bring? What is youth anyway? Is it the condition of having a new body or is it a state of mind and soul ltilhich holds perennial spring? Which is older, the stripling who d'elivers his high school oration and settles eli the questions of tha centuriest or father who site grinning in the audi- ence? Which is younger; the lad who thinks' be knows, er the man who hae found out that he deem% know much of anything, and. eo might as well enjoy life? ' The 'saddest sight in life to me is a young folks society where the mernt here get together to eeform the world. It may be a debating society ot a healthful food by that meanie Mangele thes:e problems in terms af figures, all expense and income, having, his plated on nails will supply green foe& A few home helps t!e arithmetic in mem bank amount no matter how and help to keep the birds busy, the farm child's life will smooth his small, learning ,some interesting num..: Watch the flocks ;occasionally at, night and note the hens that are difficulties arid send lam to the top erical games that, need, quick wits. al- and beyond his class when he is in Geography is another study that ways willing to stop work and go to seneoe. the hens: has been brought home from unknown bed eanly. They are often, Arithmetic begins usually with ab- places and taught in the schools from that are poor producers and also the. ones that are the !slowest to come from street exerciaes that saim te have chil- knowledge gained at the child's home dren answer the quest:on, "How threshold. The hom.e teachng of the roost M the morning and start i.scratching. The busy hen seems many?" The ability to count and to geography deeply interests every t do sisople peoblems in addition, .sleb_ child if he or she is taught under - to have a geed &spew-1ton; she le apt: evacuee, . .hunts for feed in the litter. The lazy! all be taught to the country Nowadays we teach children to del multiplication. and division. standingly. to be the hied that eing,s while she may hen whteh pends mach of her timelicititiridg.as a natural part of his daily less bounding of provincee and more stadynig of what the province needs. huenpe.d upin the corner is usuallyas' poet layer. She may ehow some Counting comes first with the Iltth - We say less about e Dead Sea and awns of • lege at feeding time but , he i tie -child At the age of four and five mare about the where -ea and shipping is more apt to watch for the he hes. an instinct to number objects of the chiles home river or sea .!; grs'ill--; and if parents will take. advantage of , coast. the other hens scratch out rather thantots turn, et This new maethod of teat:Vile g-eo- do. her own hunting. The busy hen! natural Internet they will be able I ma apt to lay and pay, and during the rages or of ho home, the child's first i graphy opens up ,n unlimited number 'winter one ,of the poultrymards bigee arithmetic. ; me experiences that will give gest jobs . - is to keep the hens busy, i This Can be done by encouragnied a child a genera' viewpoint cia the i the youngest &lid to count as much i subject before he opens ,lies pages in . is, iH and as far as he likes;, the but:tone on , .schoel. church league, his clothing, his blocks, the eggs in i -The woild in, miniature lienset the - but which ever it f the members are imbued with the the .barn, rows of &Vales in the gar-, farm gate and from the familiar idea, that they have -a mission and a den and the number of plants in each point the boy and girl may discover message different from others th,ey.! row, the pebbles, nuts, twigs and; the points of the compass, the imm- ure pathetic, aged figures. I speak other nature material he . gathers, the: ber of and directions of the roads and from the depths of experierice. 1 bin& he sees•during g,day, the teams. the prevailing winds, the forms of -ono° was- ane of them For some that pass by on the road, the applee , the water courses, hills or mow. - years I- knew I had a special mosi.that drop- in the orchard and all the t tains, the character of the soil. sage to reform ma/tided.. I other uthiraite,d seeles ,of interesting; In the sand pile by the barn he It wan a good minhstet With a sense objeerbs that lie within the daily; can model rivercourses, reads, fields, ,ef humor Who took the idea out of me. I reach of the eouotry child. .. pay out totenshipe. Ls the home There •Was quitea groupof 1.15 yen*, • It WHI also be a good plan to pro -1 brook he tan bead toy docks and men .and young women, .ell so „Ferried : cute a box of large figures, izdther dems 'and learn outside ef beoks, the ebout the world and the others in the: cut from cardboard or printed on simple laws of land and air and wa- group, that we douldn't see we needed: cards, from a school supply shop. tf : ter. any personal changee. I suspect we i these are not obtagnable the figures! Neighboring towns, their direction, tried that poor preacher -sadly. At any may be cut from a largo calender ,1_ their industries, their '. railroads and rate after an unesuallY etrentious! and monnted on cards. I where the railroads run, together with evening , Meeting where we tackledi Wth these figtere cnt14. which what knd of freight they carry, 'why every social oreblena and very per-is:emu like a game, the chad can be and where, may be studied next. All 'son not present, but neglected to ask i taught to record the results of his; children love a railroad time -table .the Almighty to give us personal aid, counting. Beneath a• numberof seeds, i and from one of these foldev there our good minister arose, read the i nuts, twigs or other objects he is is a vast amount of home teaching in verse about the mote in our brothee's I taught to place -th9 figure or figures, geography to be had. In it he finds eye and the beam iine our own, and I corresponding to the number. t the names of towns arsi their ills- -then in gentle tones told us to recalli The ,ditSsions into tens amt. • lirn-' tames from each other. The ac - that the Great . Jehovah had been! dreds may .be taught by grouping; conipanying map is ino-re vai-unole struggling for several odd thousands: small objeets and putting together thel than any in a geo-graphy because it of years to reform the world and so figures that repreeert their number. I is a chart ef the child's own neighbor - far had not made a perfect job. There-1In a surpriaing,ly Alert time the dite i hood. Any railroad company will fere, did it not 'eens honeless for . al &nit bridge between' the concrete; send upon application a -collection of band of young Men and women, how- and the abstract in arithmetieal cal, time -tables and they will be found in a, decede. And hadn't we • better 1 I eveThe next step in thn home teach- , of most valuable in this home teaching e earnest, to expect to do the jobculations will be crossed. ; geography. leg of arithmetic is to give the child; A study of the phyeical charaeterls- las many numerical experiences as tics of land, together tyttn. ,ther real - possible. Let him .place an equal lion to, life and especially 'the life of Wir.Z.'3.•MeftWirreZ.V.MMV:4;.! ,N*.,'=":•7':,0:Ttm number of 'seede, pebbles or nuts in the community, forms an important . - seer F:et-is., . in ,, salt boxalo es or es. By como bining part f geography i,ii the, seheols of ;Ie. • - • - ,rrr some of these and separathig them, teeday. This may be learned fuest he makee a beginning, in eoncrete ad- 'rho eourttr,„ e hand on the farm. ii dition, multiplication and ,eubstrac- child hat an opportunity to fedi, t't tonknow and work tit various .eksile and . THE HOG THAT.. EUROPE ".WANTS X.4,7:ZUM:4-trZW$Z..11,M, 4-T,F4T 4 41.rd 4.4V. Winners of the first prize for Ex- port Hogs at the Ontario Winter 'Fair, Guelph, exhibited by J. E.. Brethour and Nephews, Burford, Ont. The two Yorkshire pigs while's won first prize an ideal bacon hogs at the Guelph Winter Fair wore exhibited by J. E. ,Brethour and Nephews, Rap - ford, Ont. They weighed about 200 pounds each. , They represent the Ideal type. of hogs seigtneed by the export bacon trade. o "Them never was a time when prospects :for the producer ef bacon hogs was ea good," Said Mr. Bre- them "We ha.ve ,developed' a Lig bacon beakless during the war and we can hold it, I ,errg sure of that .Mast of .the farntere- of tisir nountrY are new fh.onill'ar with the, require- ments of export trade. Fifteen years ago We slide% know so well, but our exports then W8re higher. than :Snit before the mar. The war had developed the ifisinstry here. We are well equipped now. We' Istiow the clam ef goodsdemanded. We have a larger .141trrtbor ,01 good breeding &Leek than .eyer before. .‘Even Ire- land has not a betten.type.of bacon hen' than Gastada' has: Yorkshires predominate ittdChuadu. I *: should eay .thiat eaegy'102;rrif .Otte began hoga are Yorkshire ,bl.poc." , Mr, Bretheur etiede that even though feed le high in Price, hog; can be modeled et 20% profit, es 'he has proved by his oWn experience, •sd,• ',<P* 4 r:41.4"rkslk f.".r2 ,P* • h• ›,:r4Untgel.M.W.441.U17.iiMaMIZIWS: Europe, durtng the War, ate detply into her breeding; stock, ind the shortage of hogs in the peincipal counteie s --e d fug R u.ssi , Aus- tria-Hungary end the Balkans, as here the ehortage is impoSeible to esti in ate at the present binie--ainotintS to 32,000,000 head, During the war Canada's exports of bacon increased by 571%, The opportunity is now open to hold this trade permanently and inereaec• it, for Cenadian bacon has become favorably' known ,i11 rrance and Italy and Britain, and our beet quality hes alweye been aide to hold its own in eomparison with the beet produced in Denmark or even Ireland—in both of which countries a heavy shortage now exiets- In ea.& instance bm should record become ,fainaiar with the vases and his 'result e with his cardboard figures, crops of each. The farm furniehesi To put three chestnuts in each of opportunity for a liberal education' three emelt tins, to put all nine inalong this line. Government bulli' - opo and then to put them back in tins on tells, markets, roade and road .their original places ds to "work out" buildings, choke of trope, (treillage, three fundamental "peeblems" in ad- ' end -P. • elilms, cotin multiphication and subtraction. and Pig tildes, the utildeation ef Thus arithmetic loses, all its hard- waste land, are excellent textbook.. ship because it eomes the Vim The foreign rews in the daily pap - or play. ars Islay be read to hint and explained. The dayte week of the farm leads A good encyclopedia ehould form • to other as ample and euluable nurra part of the home library, within easy bar experiences for the home child, access of the boys a.,nd INTERNATIONAL LESSON JANUARY .26 • Pr.r.rrer* Leeson. Israel •Croesing The Red Sea. Exoduee 14: 21-15; .2, . Golden Text, Ex, •14; 30.'. 14; 1-31. The Prete Narrative. "Encamp by the sea." Moses mast have expeeted to. find a passage here, passiblY by a • ford or at' low. tide. There was an Egyptian fottrese near (the tame Migdol. means, fortress) and. an emno .was already in pursuit. • The Ude wee in Whenthey anproached the Mae and the people in alarm found themselges' hemmed in on every side, fleet were entangled in the land," and there seemed. no escape. Paniestricken„ the people. turned on Moses with fierce reproaches. "Is it because there W`ere no graves in in Egypt that Oen have brought us here to die?" Beset. by perils, and assailed by the reepreeehee of dowaras and weakiinge, the faith of the great leader shone out resperalent. Few ye not, Stand etial, and se -e the. salva- tion of the Lord." "The Lord shall fight for you," he sand. Night . came on, the wind changed to the east, the tide went out, and a way was opened through the ,sea. On the right and on the left the sea formed a barrier, protecting them against ti flank at- tack. Behind was the paler of cloud, perhaps a heavy fog delvee by the wind in the face of the enemy. And so, upon firm g.round, the people paneed over to freedom and safety, The Egeoptians nought to follow but their chariot wheels dragged: heavily ,in the sand and mad, the wind changed, and the tide came. ba,c1c, so that the Lord "discomfited the heat of the . p lane," an overthrew em "in the midst of the sea." In vette 25 we should read "he bound theie ehariot wheels" ( margin of Rev. Ver.), The chariots were made -with A light wooden body, a stout axle eet as far back as pas- -seine on the two wheeks, and a pole which passed beneath the floor was fixed into the axle and. then was bent upward and attached by a band of leather to the font of the chariot. The horses were yoked to, the pole and wfthout traces. Chariots of a later age had the wheels armed with . scesthes. There were two, or often three, men in each, of whom one , drove, one was an archer with bow , and arrows, and one the bearer of ,shield. The "tank" is 'the adaptation of the .sara.e kind of maehin,e to modern waefeee—but how great the differeece! 15: 1-21. The Song of Victorye There were wax poets ,and minetreng in Israel. An early. eel-If...Won of songs was known as, "The 13•ook of • the Wars of Jehovah" (Num. 21: 14), and it is possille that this song may have been_ preserved ht that same col-, lection. It breathes the exultant fire and pa ion of that first great victory end the new .confidence hi Cod which , it 'inspired. "I will ,ring unto Jehovah, for he histih! triumphed gloriously: The horse and his rider hath thrown ieto the gen Jehovah is my ,etrength -and song, ! And he is became my salvation." For "Jehovah le a man. ef. Tar." He: hee f.ceoltt the battle of -1Ps peeele, and Henneforth •khey know His • Could Not Work ON ACCOUNT OF SEVERE HEADACHES. Headaches are generally caused by Some dieturbance of the stomach, liver or bowels, and although not A serious complaint, the cause should be removed before they. become habitual and make your life miserable. You will find that Milburn's Lan - Liver Pills will remove the cause by moving the bowels gently, safely and surely, refreshing and strengthening the stomach, toning up thejiver, and thereby banishing the headaches. Mrs. J. Armstrong,' 7 Ileitis St., Si, John, N.B., writes:--‘ I take pleasure in writing you concerning the good I have received from using 1Wilburn's Laza-Liver Pills. had such severe headache e I could not do my work but after using your pi s, can now do my work with comfort and pleasure." Milburn's Lars -Liver Pills contain purely vegetable matter and do not gripe like harsh mineral purgatives do. Ihice 25e. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. IVIllburn Coe LimitWe Toronto, Ont. paRrassnanansrosamodcauszn.mmilesall1014W.• THE TRAPPER. I Row To Trap Mink. Mink are most easily traptped along sinall streams, where the lodging of the driftwood in the crooks and wind- g.hiding r -s ..e places for the animals and consequ- ently fine spots for eettLag traps either - • o wa u whore poesible the ,sete should be female in water and on the lower bank of the strea:na. A guideway is made of two logs, the traps rat in between and on the far side placed a half a dozen drops of the bast mink halt. Again, the traps railer be set in the water near 'sante weede or tall graze, and a few drops .of geed mink bait plane,.d on the weeds or grass. Other good places te set traps far mink are inside ,old 'hellow logs or in the hollow of an old tree clase to the stream. The bait 'should be placed near the trap but not on the trap. In winter the .trapte ,should be set near the ripple.s or thin ice where the mink is most likely to come out. In work:log around the traps., glevee and .shoos eheuld be ,steritcd, with the best teal s -cent, in order to remove the effects of the lirman odor of which the, mink are very wary. If a sunk den can be discovered, and the anienale found inside., a good .emoker will drive them out so that thee may be easily ;aught In preparine mink for the market, they should be stretehed r;.alt side out and all superfluous ficels and fat ssraped off. S'eins sheuld be dried in a cal, dry alaee, net near the fire et in the sun. After Ladner -etretch- s -r In ever - eubee eert )et,i, ed ernegh to hold thea th„ of their national fife they reincenbetad e.1 this deliveranee at the Red Sea It, became the symbol and the assurance; of ealvatien, as tit is adth us to thie day. 17.(fr . does, not Gad still save those wile truss.. in HIM .!.`111d diecom-; fit their face? It seems probable that :same of the I latter verses of the song are of later dale end were written after the cella quest of Palestine. Sr for exaineie mriernera,c-scarreaciar=rr HIRAM JOHNSON, LTD,. - The t.:1d:: Raw Fur Deners in non -reel f-110.1,1aST ftlARR'ET Prite,E.3 PAM SotirSact'.on guaranteed to sh;ispers 410 St. Patti St,WaL Montreal skinare ready for Finance Canada With W.S.S. Canada must finance herself, and War Savings S'tampe ere a splendid :meamas. for the colleen -leg of the plue money of the mese of the people for this purpeee. verses 13-18, where God is 'geld sandy to have led His eeeple to His "hely habitatien," that is, the Holy! ' Laren tied to have ,etedeleri the pea- ' tde or Morn Moab and Cernan vdth - Patriotic Fund. 1 The tatel eeceipts or the Canadiae Parkas: Fund, inchaling interest ertounting to kbout S.S50,000, reached • eS.3„785,053.74 on December 17, 1918. ... total oontributicuns tn the f rel to date have amounted to a little under $42,000,0.00. Canada's Inland Revenue. As shown by the etatisties 01 tbe inland revenues of the Dominion for , I the fiscal eayr ending March 81, 1018, the total general inland revenues dm.- hig the year amounted to $20„783,41r. ......rurracesmor*orrure give it up ,and tackle something easier, like getting -the 'Sunday dinner every other week eo mother could get out to church, and paying a Mlle more for our board at home so father eould .ddecard the overcoat he had worn for the past generation? Meetly we followed his advice and we ell began to grow younger from that day on. We began to see what a futile thing emery is, and little by little sole:dein came to 115., and with it youth. For youth comes ouly with yen% (If you don't believe it, watch the gen- Who eujoys the children more, the parents or the grand- parent's. Father and mother ate too filled with the terrible resporeibiiitO of bending the twig' aright really to enjoy ethe boye and gilts. Parent- hood is real 'mot, earnest to them and they aro cons.tantly ,on the alert for bad habits,' to nip in the bed. Gran& father and -geaddmother have learned from bring:lig up their own that sve all go through the sallle 'sets of ex- perienees and that everything righte itself in time., So they laugh with the. ,children. Peobably 'iather and tviether (menden,' • the; the old folks are ,getting childish. But they arc! getting wdse. The properly developed human grows young -ex as the days slip by. Those who don't, have been thwarted ef fall and free development.--D.H. Give W.S.S. as Gifts. One or more War Savings Stamps would make a very appropriate gift. No's only are they. real money, brit they will undoubtedly have the effect of starting the person to whom they an given on the way of systematic savieg. trrr*. * The Maharajab of Mysore 'nes a throne made of solid peohl, beautiful- ly chased and set with precious stone, and resting on four huge lions, also of solid .gold. Above the throne , which is covered with a thiek cushion: of cloth of gold With pearl tassels is : a gold , umbrella shimmering with pearls; and preciot7s 'stones, on top oe wluich is a en den pt'miork (assisted.: with diamonds mid emeralds, holdiag in its, beak a largo ereneald pendant.' Silver etepe lead up lo the eeet, . 1 EiErverp R 0 o' V ha RNA .11EMIT AND HEWES. ^ azzarre—r. Wer,r3rrer. rtworrninm The EgiglA, e -,z - erica „n A. RAW FURS ITY:no matter what quantity. We pay the highest orlce. clan ompress (-barges. Try once and are assurcI 01 Satisfaction. ABOEY FUR COMPANY 310 St. Paul W. Montreal, P.Q. R..qc,rotioe: Tlaall; Gt. kletiry, . in bum! ror BO yet.m. There are litany people at the present 1 time whose nerves are unstrung,. heart Send affected, and pineal health iniptured. To such ete offer Milbtun's Heart and Nerve Pills s a the best remedy lion • ,ehenee has prodtieeil for .stit. lrouble0 _Mese pills have a woaderfu I effect on the nerve cells of the body, givige them may lif e and energy ; t hen el rengthen end regu- late the heart, and Make the blood rich ! and nolleiShirtg. Mr IeSeult islaud, Ont., writes: -'-''f 'ewe ise.d hjillnimns Heart and Nerve Pith:. 1 was a regular Mayotte wreck frons my 116Art: .orid In•IM, 1 WV your edvertisemeztl. inthe paper' and decided to try your pills.. I took live boxes of them, end. new •1 atn as steady • as a clock, • Peonle said! emit& hot 1,0 cared, but. I fooled them with Milburine Uoirl. and .Nerye Pills." • • - 7%111.bunde Heart. and Nerve l'ills are 50e. a box at all (totem on Minted direet on receipt of prim by rrho Milleure (iii, your TO 428 St. Paul St, Wet NI 0 N'11167:41., Being manuircturerx end not buyhur lo asA tell wo ulwayn orturo th !Aron tdtg oul Tho 141test rtterLet priech Quid; roturra t No price list beatal bet we gusertutoo to hold your 01005 toparao until you ucef.pt or rtiout our offer. moirowzootorrstarair