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The Wingham Advance, 1911-03-23, Page 34 4 esemetwilintene nee-- SPRING REMINDERS OF RHEUMATISM Raw. Damp Weather Starts the Pain. But the Trouble Lies in the Blood. e'Pring eveather is bad for illeumatie eaferers. The ehanges front mild to were weather, cold, raw, damp wind following mildnees start the aehes and twinges, or in more extreme mete the natures a the trouble going. Bet it must he borne In mind that it is not the weather that causes rheumatism, the trottble $e rooted iu the blood—tbe changeable weather merely stints the peins. The only way to reach the treuble and to ctire It is through the blood, The poiemous theumatie adds mint be thrown off tine driven out. Thie is a solemn luedical truth every rheumatie sufferer should realize. Lin- huents and outward application may give temporary relief, but they never did and never can vier° theuentatism. Any doctor will tell you this ie, trtte, The sufferer is only westing time and money with thht sort of treatment, and all the time the trouble le becom Jug more firmly rooted—and harder to cure. There is just one sure, speedy eure for rheumatism—Dr. Wil Pink Pills, They net directly on the weak, impure and tainted blood. They purify aud, strengthen it awl thus root out the cause of rheumatism. leen is a bit of proot out of thousands of similar cases that miglit be given. Mrs. P. X, Boisaeau, St. Jerome, Quee says: ---"For almost two years I was a ier- rible sufferer from rheumatism. The trouble first located in 'the right leg, making work about the house impos- sible, and walking very difficult. I tried to cure myself by meant of all sorts of iluimeets and lotions, but. with no result—it was only money wasted. The trouble constautly grow worse and the pains more Unbearable. neatly it attacked the other leg, and I was all but helpless and completely discouraged, thinking I would be a suf- ferer for the rest of my life. At this time I mad in our home paper of the trouble being cured by Dr. WIllianes' Pink Pills and I decided to try them After using the pills for several Weeks I could see that they were helping me, and I continued taking them entil I lead used- nine or ten boxes when every symptom of the trouble lad dis- appeared and 1 could walk as well as ever I did. Bad I known of Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills earlier I would have saved myself much suffering and much money spent in other useless treatment Re well." Whether you are ailing or not a, few boxes of Dr. Williatus' Pink Pills will increase your vitality and give you in- creased strength to withstand the tor- rid summer weather coming, when even the strongest feel easily fagged out. You can get these pills from any dean er itt medicines or by mail at 60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. PRIMITIVE TELEGRAPHY. Among the Indian tribes inhabiting the valley of the Putumayo River, in the Upper Amazon region, there exists, according to Mr. W. E. Hardenburg, a system of "wireless telegraphy" which snows no little ingenuity. The apparatus consists of two logs of hard wood, through whieh boles lave been burned with heated stones, in order to wary the notesgiven out when the loge are struck with a rubber -tipped dug. One of the logs is thicker than the other—. the heavier log gives. the lower note. A telegraphic eode is based upon the dile ferebeee of tone, and the number and in- terval of the blows. The signals can he heard at distances of six to nine miles, according to the state of the at- niosphere, •-•••••,...ame,11,4 courts. cares heels ••••••••••••••••11 •1••••••01.100.n.r.ann.....• SWEET CORN STALKS. BAD CASE tit} muse be Andermeri. No shadow of mine side became equally cenvinced that Ph vourt was at a hots. Then Anderetat mourn wav thrown on the mates saline. nle.ret. and dietributing themeelves among Make the Very Best of Ensilage Says an Expert. At a meeting of the Natiend Cannerte Aseociation of the ttnited States N. 1. Neieon, Seeretary and, Treadttrer of the Lake Mills thinning Conzpany, chote his subject "ftweet Corn Stelke a* Ka- oline." Mr. Neloott in .art: "It will be my elm ta enbutit filets and figures to stibeteetiate elaint that sweet oorn etalks make the very best of eittilage with an outlay of practically tiothing, 1 here hore comparative fl- utes en the relative valitee of ewet corn stalke mut mature delft tore which 1 edo tained front O. W. Patterson, dairy ex- pert of the Norte 'owe Dairy Imotove- tneizt Assoeiation, whe ha tt his heatiquar- ters at Lake Mille. lir. Pattereon hes made a special ettoly of euetinge and hi made a personal anelysie of these ,products, therefore the tiptoe en be de- pended upon as abeelutely veneer. Here are the figures for your consieeration: Per cent. of digestible uutrienta,T in sweet corn italks—Proteht, .04; (tube - hydrates, 14; fat, el; dry matter, 22,3. Per cent. of Oigestible nutrients iu mature dent corn eilage--Proteln„S; carbohydratee, lino fat, .7; dry mutter, 0,�. You "You will observe that in point of di- bestible nutriments the sweet corn stalk-, without the ears, exceeds that of the dent corn, ineluaing the cars. We find that 100 tons 01 sweet corn silage con- tains as much digestible natriments as does $261.50 worth of shelled. corn ot.40e per bushel, or $390 worth of oats at 28e per bushel. Again, 100 tons of sweet corn silage eoutaina 27,792 potrads of di- gestible nutriments. To ine these fientres are most interesting, and they sorely ex- plode the now prehistoile contention that sweet corn stalks an? worthlesa as ensilage. "So much for the old figure end of tny argument, and now I will impart to you information whicb lave gleaned frost personal observation. A eertain customer Of our Lake Mills factory last seaSon planted 2e0 acres of sweet eorn. He is of the ,progreasive type of fanner and pram flees economn whenever he can. ent was seized with the idea that sweet corn stalks would make good ellege, and in order to demonstrate his theory pur- chased silo of the Indiana Silo Cain - 0! Des Moines, and fifteen days after having finished pieking les erne began tbe pack of the silage. After hav- ing filled the structure about half full he allowed m to "Settle for a few days and that filled the remainiug half. When the filling prccess was eompleted be scattered a layer of oats over it and allowed it to remain there until the first of November laat. Upon uncovering it the allege was found to be in the very best condition, and from Nov. 1 mail Feb. 1 Las furnished food for 20 head of cattle, aue fully two-thirds of the pack remains in the silo. This silo is 18 feet in diameter and 32 feet high, and con- tained 1e0 tons of ensilage. I have said that 26 head haa been furnished food from this silo since Nov. 1, and this is substantially true, but in order to keep history exactly correct, mnet add that a small quantity of dry stalks were kept in the yard where they might feed in the day if they so desired, but we learn thet this variety of food was partaken of very spariugly, the silage apperently be- ing eutirely satisfying. On the 29th day of January I called. at the home of the owner of this silo and viewed the sweet corn ensilage -fed cattle, T inust say that I never saw a finer looking lot of cattle—in the best of flesh, healtlee look- ing and fu/1 of life. In proeuriog the material to fill his silo he !ism' the stalks front about 30 aeres, But TIOW, gentlemen. let me have your right earl The total cost of filling this inn was $48. Taking the figures of our Mr. Pat- terson, using shelled corn as a basis— . • throat median . . ea cents. 100 tons of sweet .corn silage, equal to .1.m.1.11••••••••••,... HOW TO RAISE AND CARE FOR THE PROFITABLE- HEN. LESSON 2—FROM EGGS TO CHICKS. The qUestion to deckle is whether you two breeds. Venally small, active hens are Vestlese on the nest and bring off It isinaller percentage of healthy chteks. Stadium sized quiet hens are best. Having set the hen, see to it that plenty of fooe and fresh water is within teeth so that She will not .have to take unneceasary One off the eggs, but allow het' much latitude in the matter of leav- ing the nest. She know,' more about Welting the eggs than you do, anyhow-. Wateli ber for lice arid eprinkle heth her and the nest with inseeticides. L1e9 are chick killer. In three wek.s litLIe beakt will begin breaking through. *.elany people ree DIM the little alas and keep them in a warm baektt uutil the hatelmeg is weer, and then give them haek to the hen lieep the hen and her little ones away front the rest of the floek. Put her in a box or b,arrel, securea againet tirafte and dampness; nail some letbs across the front, allowing enough room for the little elikks to watt out at win, 1! you want to use ten tggs wttich your hens lay for latelting purpoees, you mug heat a. rooster with the hoete lf the here are two year the roaster should be a eeitelieg, and viee tenet. Woe the egg,s oi the be. !sieving hens for hatching. When hens ay petticular- ly well during winter ute their eggs, for their (leeks will also be gnat Meta Laying 'trains teen le. Woe& itt a Reek, 11 your hens du not lay -hulas the win- ter, provided of tOUTR6 that you have eared for theett intelligently. get some eggs flout gone laying leeks of the same breed. uteealtting variety, you wm Lave ta 14- now to take ton tht veto(); el to 04 Joule ether breed te do the hatch chieks Is the anbjeet vett week'e ar- iree you speeialite itt either of those tlele. (Continued Nott, %rook) are going to hat& the chicks in the old- fashioned way, let biddy do it, or get an artificial incubator, For the person who wants to go into the business on a large tette, the machine is undoubtedly the better. For the city man, who only has the back yard for his "ehickee. fame' there is much to be said in favor of Other method, A. machine ecets little, the timeliest as low as $5. The smallest will hatch from 40 to 60 eggs 'att a time. The expense of rumeing one is very small. Utteltinea are very simple alfalfa when onee understood—a bright boy or girl ean Manage both the incithatot and the brooder Into which the little ebieks aro plaged 4$ hours after they break the shell. Coattplete instruetiont are given with eeelk machine sold, find results dependIng entirely on how one follows instreetions are to he obteinee. But if you do not wish to invest in a maeldne,.and want to let the hen hatch out the eggs, :eon will probelee have to buy the hews and then wait until they went to it. Maybe yon ean beer seine hems already braudy. Try her ter a day ur two nu wet (kegs, to see whether ehe has walla made up her mind to it, and then. 4 niget, pleee as many eggs wrier ber an she tan well cover, Don't fill the nest too fun of eggs, 44 those hear the Hillside will bet veinee, luta spoil. From Id to 13 eggs are about the average for the entwine, heti, As regimens and .Slizioreas are id' the or Arnold Wag taken ii with pneumonia, and in the course tit a weelr. was demi, OF fiRip tqvcigeY.1". 'Neetill fkIrttg .itit,;41e71, Ark; Ms ease nee one of double personalite. I - What the vourpe decision would heve been lied the mem ItVed, of uouree, le ubbnown.--Vroto "Who Am I ?" in Caused Sore Throat and Ton. 'March Technicel World Magazine. Mitts. Restored by m, W.Peruna. II. Roue - ley,. Stony Point, Teu. n e s e ie writes: "F i v a yeare ago I took a very kevere cold whieh re. resulted in la grippe. I never was so bad off. 1 was in bed sev- eral weeks, and when 1 did get up 1 had t uniIitis and 6ore throat. "I tried to 011re tilia for eighteen xaon.ths, but it gradually got worse. A.- doctor ad- inc to have my tonsils cut out. but I did not like the idea. Another doctor examined me, and told me the sam,e thing. 1 finally got a bottle of r eruna, and after 1 bad taken one bottle my throat was better. 1 bought and used a dozen bottles, and saw I was going to get well, end 1 Mr. W. H. Housley. $281.50- worth of shelled corn, we can figure that our friend has secured fiety $500 worth of foodetuffs for Mee ees, and bear itemind that this tt500 worth of winter Seed is a eleaa pielteup, as the stalks had yielded their .znit and it had been marketed at our feetory at $ti per ton. After filling lits elle there remained in this field $1,500 worth of food eteffs which could have been uttlized lied he had occasion to use it. "it is safe to say that during the past year fatly 60,000 acres of Iowa soil bore sweet corn, and figeking that each acre of stalks was worth 410 (ae that is the ratio that my friend realised front his 50 acres of silage), a shameful waste hes been allowed and fully 000,000 worth of bovine food stuff has been re- tuvned to mother earth without having nerformed its duty." *n _ .71 n ore quickie stops coedits, cures colds' heels the throat clad tunes. . • 38cents. • SHE WRITES PULAYS TO REACH H EA RTS, This is the Princess Troubetzkoy, better known as Amelia Rives, who writes novels while her titled hug - band applies life to canvas with paint and brush. She's just had two plays produced. This inspired her to say to an interviewer that "love ia the biggest truth in the world," and mean it, too, oven if someone has said it befeee. Anyhow, she writes to the heart rather than. the head. "I do not wish to write playa to make people think miserably about miserable things. I want to write plays that will make people tender, make them happier and make them sweet," he says. BUNGALOWS CAME FROM INDIA. The word bungalow is an Anglo -lie diau version of the WWI bangle, witleh primarily means Bengali, or of Bengal, anti is also applied to a thateheel hut, says Country Lite in Aineritet. It inay be worth while to explain how this trivial and merely local mune came to be fixed on the Jeuglishmatt's house in India. Early residents there, engaged in mili- tarv, administrative or trading duties, tired a nontedie life for the greater part of the year in tents, Ana since there was nothing in the indigenous buildings of Bengal suited to their requirements their firet dwelling houses, designed by therneelvee and built of materiale at site, were naturally planned on the model of the Indian service touts- to Willett they were accuehomed—tbat is, a Wargo and lofty roOni surrounded by trouble walls of canvas enclosing space between them, with partitions at two or more corners for bath or store room. It is probable, indeed, that in the be- ginning the tent itself was occaeionally covered with the sun proof thatch or bangle: The name and. the thatch were all thee were taken, arid now the origin of the tame is forgotten even by most Indians, who accept the retienaut, tvi- sylialkie bungalow as the Englishnutees own name for his owu peculiar hOille- ALL WIDOWS SHOOLD BE PEN- SIONED, SHE THINKE!. A STRANGE LEGAL. eses.SE. Pine questione of law maul right had into one another with o. nicety difficult Lu unravel, in certain phases of double Personality. jam Anderson was a fairly prosperous farmer, who rented some -eighty acres in one .of the corn -belt States. He had o. wife and family with whom he lived in perfect accord, as well as with his neighbore. He was a hard-working, pru- dent and saving, anti as sound in intel- lect RS you or 1. Owing to the delicate health of elle of the children, and for lateens of ambition, he conceived the Idea, of going to Southern California, to 1.ur an orange grove, to have a hOme oi iiis own, and live in peaee and quiet with his family for the rest of his days. Hie frugal habits and continuous torhad prevented enough tor this pur. nese, so he went on alone with the in- tentiert of Wetting for his family a$ soon at he could findthe kind of place he wanted. For some time letters were received at frequent intervals ; OrerY0 thing eeeined to be progressing favorably with bim, and then no more lettere cone, and all traee Of him Wile lost, months of wetting went by. and Yeare. The mother and taileren were verging on eoverty, and had long given up the father as deed. One day surprising news news %%MR brought by a. tteigbbor, 'who had :Met returned from the west, and had known Andereon in former days. He had met Anderson face to face in Cali- fornia : had found /LIM living en most prosperous etrcumstances, with a new isife and family. But he had failed to recognize the old friend, who had grown.. un With him from boyhood, and seemed 50 enanged in thought, Actions, anti ev- erethIng but Ills external appearance, that the old neighbor WAR beginning to %tender whether or not he himself was toeing his own proper identity. This news of Andereod resulted in u.purse he - has made un ler the ieng.ahandoned mum and the iteighbor and ales. An- deleon went to California to take legal stvp Lo enfee her zeolite and bring her Id:Amid i .11:14, 11 pessibie. Tbe meet- ing between the two tem eitifut. All wItnesstd It. were Impressed AvIth tlds inatt's Inucleeme, atel actually took titles agaitat the woman for behiging trteible ana netoriety to eeeliI. 01141 11;e1filitr 1.1 MP etanintthity. Bat the wife held her groune. His eyee, Lair. suit, rummer or ff)ecoll, all were the woe she bad known ea lung. As .she ttelted these ettrione 1:8 11'. tuul the many ittle familiar lueldents, iniewn oily 1,0 11.COIStiVkil. a their taws- eta e together, Alle10*^” f11,1A•1114-11 ellaveteey dumbrotted- td. timi filet. tvith team fit hie eyes. and then ie matter, fiA:tr ir.441 me RN) wa. mietaten ; thet 1,4441 taller letUril Or 111 A7a1(1R.,1i, Or1.1 that laIR 1411.1110 era! Arnold. tetetito A teal 'nee matter got into coat. All tete tenviated that (Al tuan SRI But elk bearing the MRS. CLARENCE BURNS. The preeident of the Little Mothere Aid Society in New York, Mrs, ehlar- enee Burns, tent that the govern- ment ought to pension all widows left with small children. "A woman, risks her life," ehe maintains, "for her country, her children grow up to seeve the nation, and why, when this woman gives so much to the world, ehouid she not when left deo- titute receive as much as the man who goes to war?" The pension should be ht propor- tion to the number of children the mother had, Mrs. Burne thinks. May- be Unit might solve, the anti -race gni- eide problem, too. is .4f, ELECTRICITY AND COAL. Some of the statement* made by Mr. 8. Z. De Ferranti, in an address before the Iet...titution of Electrieal Engineers in Loudon recently, may cause surprise to readers who are net familiar with the facts -dealt with by him. For in- stance, be deelared that, taking ail the uses for coal into consideration, we are getting, in she form of useful work, much less that ten per cent. of the energy eontined in the coal. Moreover, by present method % nearly the whole of the valuable by-products of the coal, consisting principally of fixed nitrogen, is dielsipated. Hie suggested remedy is to energy, to be distributed over the eourt- try from as few central stations as pos- eouvert the whole of the coal which is -used, for bean and power into electric sible,,th.e premess of eonversion to be performed under strict soientifie super- vzsioe. In the search rot' Lumpiness many a man might employ a Whole private de- teetive agency, and then not find it. 11110•111110••••1...110111.1606•1•MV•Mir AFTEIt DOCTOR s FAILED Lydia E. Pinkbana's Vegeta. ble Compound Cured Iler.- Midgie Station, N. B.—One can hardly believe this as it is not natural, but it was my ease. For ten months I suffered from suppression. I had different doctors, tried different me- dieines, but none helped Inc. My friends teed me would go hito decline: One d4y lady friend told vne what your tile& eine had done for her, to I WrOteeent for adviee and re. calved your reply with pleasure, started taking Lydia N. rinkhant'e Vegetable C,orepoural, and at the setond bottle allowed improvement, oW 1 rink regular and never was eo Well in my life, thanks to rinkhatres inediehre, Plebes) publish my letter Lor tbe benefit of others,—Mas. JoIlliat W. IltOxs, Midgie Station, N. R, Indian Head, Sask.—Lydia E. rink. btun'a Vegetable Compound is indeed Wen tC1 Wonteri Whet suffer frorn female ills. My beelth Is better now then it has been in nky live years of Married lifo grel I thank eou for the good your advice and Medicine hoe (lona Ina, I htel epent hundreds et dollars on doetors without receiving any benefit. —Man. FRANK CoOrita, tIox 448, Indian Head, Saskatchewan. The most successful remedy in this country for the eure of all forma Of female eetnplaints 'le Lydia IL Pitithard'a Vegetable Compound. HOW RAO BOWELS POISON THE 010000 Dr. Hamilton Clearly t xplains ter. taln Health I. acts You ought to Know. In the first place let us eleatly under- totanetthe muses that lead up to Pad w The stomach muscles grow weak; then Indigestion creeps in. Soon the contente of the fitomach turn tour awl ferment. Thie decayed food matter brings on eon- stipation and poisons the blood. juet the same AS the putrid contents ni the stomach would spoil water if it were added,1t.8 admitted that certain p0180118 taken into the mouth rause death, and it is just as certain that the poieous ab- sorbed. into the blood from sluggish powele will quickly destroy health and vitality. Therefore, by allowing celeste- pation to run on, you are joet, as surely poisoning yourself as the pereon who takes stryehnine. Yon are also bound. to suffer from breath so vile as to make you disgusting; to suffer also front sal- low team pimples, boils, constant bead - ache and stomach distress. Although numerous remediee are In the market for constipation, stout:tell distress, heatlaelle and bowel complaint, yet not one comperes) in power to eure with Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. By aiding digestion and buildiug up weak stomaelis to a condi- time of health and -vigor, Dr. Hamilton's Pills are bound to restore your lost or failing strength in a short time. If you are sick at your stomach, if you lack appetite, if your color is bad, your blood poor, your strength run down—there you need Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and they will surely cure you—quickly and per-, nianently too. -All dealers sell Dr. Bann ilton's Pills, 25e per box. By nail from the Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont. • - • THE EARTH FROM THE MOON, Aa we look up through the trane- parent •atrnoaphere on a clear night and aeee the moon beaming brilliant- ly down. upon us, every one has at tunes been moved to epeculate upon the wonderful eigbt the continents and oceans of the earth must present when viewed from the lunar regions. As a matter of fact, however, we are seemed that a xnan on the moon would eat& but fleeting glimpses of the outlines of our continents. One authority has stated that the true rediating. surface of the earth, as a planet, le 'chiefly the wathe vapor at aneleVatiOn of 4,000 meters (le, - 120 feet), or more,above the sea. level. In consequenee the mao in. the moon would •see the features of the earth dimly outlined in the glare of light reflected from the atmosphere. • GENERAL'S WIDOW TO WED M ILL IONS. • MODISH HANDKERCHIEFS FOR WOMEN. Ilemstitelied bandleerell:ele eve :it irt faehlonable than the mot with the see!. loped edge, styles of hendkereleefs that bare been the most poPniar 0,- seaeon are the liana eethreidel al either,. particularly the one eornereil design,. kleal Matb-ira work has 'mu weli re - (wired ane expellent efforts are ea b. had In the imitation* at pepitear prieee These have beea breught mu in kuneet attreetive patterns. the *meows', ti- t emit lime flower sprays a ttriteting many. while others prefer the 1-1,4yennetrwat ettete arotind a eentral garland or eideld iII which an initial inay 170 worked. Embinideted 'initial handltereltiefe are also need exteneirely. Provielisly Here has been elrong interest 'shown in faint blue embroidery, but the preferenee late has been fez' the white. The latest Park fad is .the colored lieudkereltief. A distinct novelty, which bee appeared recently, le a handkerchief of which exeetly one-half le in valor atm the other hall white. The handkerehiet le folded, exaetty on the bias thraupik th? centre, the solid color printing d vneug at this .point. The new feature in the printed hendkereldefs is the use of dark, etronn ,colorings— brown, purple, prune. deep- nem, navy and Fremelt blue. Proof of the popularity of the colt:Wed handkerchief in Paris is lite fact . thee faehio»ahly dresSed ;nee verry them with eveuing dress, in dark poles, dark greee and brown. Dainty looking lienakereitiele are white with eolored Items in light tones, the initiate worked tit the sante tone, but in a Week design, lett as .en initial ap- pears on stationery. The neweet in lace trimmed haudger- chiefs at mode,st paves are those edged with Armenian lace. This lace finiehes the narrow hemstitched hem, At the higher prIcee a row of Miley etitehing-- called, by the Femme, revering—teat looks miwit itke erawn, work, . run, eround the handkerchief inside the hem. Pee Oleo.' use, white erossbar kerchiehr are preferred to the petite They wear better, I Wilma, owing to the sarong threads that .forni the bet. The tiny wreath ineloeiug an initial ie favored decoration. and pretty handker- chiefe on this order in varied adtieet be bought as low ad eeuts. In the eepetteive handlterelenfa are filmy pietas of hand spun linen trimmed withreal lettleneiennes lace only helf an 11)011 wide. MRS, IT. 0, CORBIN. The engagement of Mrs. Corbin, the widow of the late Maj. Gen. Cor- bin, to J. G. Sehmidilepp, Cincinnati millionaire and warm personal friend of President Taft, is expected to be announoecl immediately after Lent. Afro. Corbin, who was one of the famous Patten sisters and a noted Washington beauty, first met the Cin- cinnatian when site and her husband were with the AIlee Roosevelt -Philip- pine junket,' out of whieh grew many other romances: 4 • * A POEM OF THE GYPSIES. A. poem that is full of real poetrd ap- pears In the leebruary Canadian Maga- gine. Mies Georgia, Davie, the author, Is a young woman of Nova Scotia. PATTER -4.N* Whensomcoilnds., bare fields break. Into bloat - Wooed by the sun and rain, You eearch the pasture elopes with me abnutubud Ars again. Long -lost, yet near. The first gay robin's call, The nag -flowers tall and blue, Hach simple joy which marked our cal- ender, hBright eowslips, honey -sweet, you pick sfoerrgain with you. ine : White clover breathee your name; A.gainet the Wall we see itspOntee. Break Into searlet flame, A.11 the tataillar, ott.recurieng things. The tonne, yet something more; The very grasses seem to murmur loW, our teet have passed before, walk the woode. I see the falrY-Plante YOU loved the beat of all; Bed cup-tritnelfragile ferns and }flume. Arid hoar again the call of that shy bird whose two note. pletee my Meet ." mow oh we mhearth to So, month by month, by sores telneln- tiered sign, I trace you Waugh the veer. But wletfut autuenn Miles inearuadined. Mid euminer isires are lledl Then taded flower") willow to my Tbathelearlike them, are fluid. in vein, In vain, any merit seeks to find lour path beyond the eters; If only you could send stoma tokete dear, To ten me where you are: One petal trim the Amara/all you wear -- My courage would not mail, lIew gladly I would brave an unknown wan TO follow 011 your trail. AVIA handful of grass Mach the gypelte streW on the toads as thee travel, to give information to any of their compel -l- iens wee may be behind as to the route they Live taken. "I, sir," —reize tulip/int the. zee, "am it texpayer." replied the politleat boss,"you hario Me to thank. You wouldn't be rosily much of g ttutpayer ea you are exemaing for My efterts."----Weehingter. Star. 1 WHY DO CHILDREN LIKE ZANI-BilK ? A Chat With Mothers "Whenever my eltildren have any mire plates, tuts, or skin troultice. they oak for Zane-I:Mk. They can aitveye depetel upon it doing what 1needed," $o says Mr*. .Alee, a 170 Chatham street. lionireel. • A. missionary, witing from the West. ' Coast of Afriea, bays: "One boy Mtn • was ireatee for it bad epee of niter eame bate: recently awl said. 't like best that green meditine."rhe 'green niedieine' was Zam.Buk." Now, why sbould ehildren all the world over, show sulk o marked prefer- enee for Zem-Buke Children like Zane -Bak 1,ee4tueeas - 50011 OA applied to it burn, a cut. or R eore, it atops the pale and then graa- unity, but surety, it beans. As 80011 aS the pftin of a wound or. sore is relieved ea» neither matelt His expectancy, :tor a ehild tan go on with he ploy 0181 .leave minister to His dignity. In His preserma Zam-Buk to finish off the heeling. Mothers might look a little more deeply into the adieu of Zam-Bult. First, it is highly autieeptie. Ae smolt as ap- plied it stops all danger of fettering. bloodepoisoning wed inflammation. Sec- ond. it is soothing. It cools the wound or sore; allays the irritation; stops the pain and. smarting. Then. thirdly, it stimulates the eelle, beneath the injured part, to healthy tuition, and eauses the speedy creationof new. healthy tieene. Just try Zam-Buk for euts, or burns, or cold sores; or eczema, ulcers, rashes, bad leg, piles, varicose ulcers, or any inflamed or diseased: eondition of the skin. All druggists and. stores 60c. box, or .free from elanolluk Co., Toronto, for price. Berme harmful imitations and theme worthless sueetitutes. • • se - Lord Desbmough writes to The Lou- den Times, demanding the publication ot the full text of the reciprocity Agree- ment, saying no two of the six dolt- mente already published are iu complete OARRIED GLADNESS TO THIS HOME ra. Annie Vanverwt's Hart Diseaoe Cured by Diadd'iii Kidney Pills. She Found Qtr -ie -k --Re—lief in the Old Reliable Kidney. Remedy, and Ade eKisidenseAylloHneisr.Friends to Ose Parld's et. ilenediet, Sask,, Mame '40.- (Spe- cial), Mad/teas bete replikeee the :mei- Pte. that reigned la the howieltold of Aire, Annie l'auvorst of this peace. For S01110 time past Mrs. letuvoret bail suf fored from Kiduey 'Irotible anti paha, tation of the heart, and fears were en- tertained of those terribly etiddeu fatal- ities that so frequently aecompeny At- feetions of the heart. But relief from both ailments was quickly found lit the old, reliable reneekv, Dodd's Kidney Pili. In an interview Mrs, raileoret says: "1 had palpitation of the heart and My 'Kidneys were out of order. 1 took one box of Doddet Kidney Pills, and foetid greet relief. For a Kidney pill Doddet Kidney Pills cannot be beat. You may publielk what 1 -stay as. it may be the means of benefitting others iviletaorisnitatsvel.tjt Kidney Trouble or Pare blood ie the basis of all health, awl you can't have pure blood unless your feidneye aro in good worhing Klaney Pine never fell to put the Kidnap in perfect' working ORDER: The. heaven‘ which tell of God's gIory tell Alec, hi Hie hendes firm hold on us, ana on our world and. all ite We are part of the order we wonder at stud admire, we are hound to tbe eeavena, which ere, all feet bound to the throne of Omnipotence. Motel things ale &teet- er than material, and spiritual thinge are the er,;"rn of all. Our smile are hound eioeer to heaven by, ties more intimete than thoee 'Ana etare to one another. and. ell to Him wh them n thei r place. The laws of worship are the motions of Goti in the heart of man. they invite aua lead to an Ma that shall be 'above end beyond death, beeause abating fully the life end character of ocia. If thie is tine, our epiritual timepiecea never lees nr gains. We grow ie. the majesty of dilence as the trees, we move like the ereient rhythm of the start, we (tome hp %NW). bite music of the morneng tide, we 'Aelt in harleleny as lite goes into night. lie whispers the germs (4'.f prayer, 1 inhale; respond, enjoy. and give hack, anti the eireie is eomplete. I, there not fi t nest, and bea ty 2 Did the 1110/11 - ilia stars sing at the creation, with sounds fun of discord? Es there perfee- tiou and power in the whole et Killen and a confused rabble as they enter through t he gats s into the ity? Alas! mell halt met stutuhle And Oat ger as they urge themselves to pray. Where le the lack? They do not wele, they are not calm, they think themselves up to a certain ghee. Row meek better to wait in silenge and obtorption, and. know that He le ever the giver. 'Men need aprons to hide tbesuseives from men; they eover what is too awed to dieplay, but when. we come before the Dna we may remove the apron and know that itt His preeence we are per - witted tel cherish the privacy of self- ' respect and to be aSsured that Ile nei- tber • upbraids nor repels. Our wards we *tinily meanings, Rad deepen our knowledge; we wonder ebout the origin ei thoughts, how they take chime, ana Mutt is the secret of moods? Is the mind the playground of email -ding Rime? Do I see Jinn more dietinetly on whose breeet id emblazoned the wend, "'Vic- tory"? Do I,find more readily the well- epring of joy? Here I 'tui reassured that, order, eternal oraer, may and must be found, NO GOSSIP., (Baltimore American.) "Our new neighber umst tie a very ow pletous character?' "Why Sol" "She eraploys maid who le deaf and dumb, the mean thingle tr READY FOR A BARGAIN. (Judge's Library.) Pat (readinif sign, "Tembrellas, 750 up")—What evi 1 yez charge me for one agreement. of thim closed? •••••••,... THE TANGLE Of A VANDERI3ILT SCION ALFRED GWYNN CAN'T HAVE 130111, WHICH ? VANDERBILT'S PROBLEM—MR S. GEORGE MRS. WOK .New rork.—The fasItionables of New )ork-Lendort swelldorn are pus. zled trying to work out the Vander- bilt-Law-Meltim love tangle. The trouble is that Alfred Gwynn's Van. derbilt won't stay cuyaged to the one rumor pieks out for him. Since the Felon .4 tiro Vanderbilt Millions w03 diVorod in 1006 by Elsie French, he has in en a much engaged man. Finally it ce utrd down. to Mrs. George LAW, 1%110 before her marriage in 130 to the aged multimillionaire IGeorge Law Wile Mi ee Olga. Slilitb., Arid Mra, Meirgar0 Frille70/1 Meitirtl, Walt) a bbort time .14(3 dvoreed Dr. fltuit'l Ilollirta.MeXim. Society has it xliv "Alfie" eould lde bow with either -"keere the other LAW, AT LEFT, AND dear charmer away." But neither is. The effaire that led up to the sine gular and sensational suits threaten. ad by It, Holline-McKim against Vanderbilt, the former Mrs. l441eXim and her father, Col. Emerson, and the large eseli eettlement that follow. ed, cause old dame ramor to begin ringing wedding bolls right away, but both Mrs. McKim and 'Vanderbilt denied having any ida of getting rnatried. Then Alfrod Gwynrte haate ily tailed for Europe, awl, strangely, Mrs. Law toed; a boat tiVo or tbret days later for Ettr,)pc, where Vander- bilt is twit. Anybudy eau see fro:4 these pie. tures what a Itar,i job 4*Alft-3" lute it picking out "the" fi? KIRROVil PAST. j'eltee'et The shadow has gone by; A peace fille all the 11141 My days are warm. and quiet, SUMly hie, nigitte are fall of reet; TIty love is manifestt 1 tienik. Thee Thou bee leti me from the etrife. I. know that toil and pain Win come to me eealni T'utt many shadows on my life most fell; 1, know by loug yearkt past Smelt quiet eanuot teat Af'd yet I thank Thee it has eoMe at all. When darkness falle at length, shalt have gathered strength From these sweet elaye of pleasantness and Oahu; And wlth sincerest heart, When sweetest lights depart, 11171Y, through all, lift up toy Voice in Now, with no care for fear, Bemuse 1 feel. Thee near. Bemuse my haw% were not reaehed out nt vain. ,••••,•••••••••11. Strangely do some people talk of "getting ever" a ereat sorrow—over- leaping It, passing It by, thrusting it in- to oblivion. Not so. No ono ever does that—at least no nature which WI 1* toutheet by the feeling of grief at all. The only way is to pass through the ocean of efflietion einemuly, slowly, with humility and faith, as the !Reel- ites passed through the see. Then its my wavesofmisery will divide and be- come to us a wall on the right side and on the left, until the gulf narrows and narrows before our eyes, and we land safe on the opposite shore. THE MOST WINNING WORD OF Jesus. (fee the 'Rev. A. Boyd Scott, II, D., ij oCtorno unto me,1?Ilv} ye that labor and are heavy -laden, and 1 will give you rest. . . . For my yoke is easy and my burden in light." ---Matthew. se, 28, 30. "Come unto me, all ye that labor told are heavy -laden, and I will give you mt." Don't you think that it is perhaps the moat winning word cif our Lord and Saviour, desus Christ? Great painters and noble sculptors and graci- ous poets lave tried to portray the spectacle which is offered in that most winning word, but have any of them ma:ceded? lio.ve even our sweetest hymn -writers succeeded.? Ilas even Thorwaldsen, the great sculptor auc- goveed, with all the beauty end the gen- tle itelination and the tender hands of that white statue of his? 1 trow not. There ie a thrill in this word, tbere is a heavenly gesture in it, there is a univer- sality of appeal which no geniis among men luta been able to conetuntaate in Word, or *oleo' or in marble. Ana SO preacher ean hardly hope to succeed where these others have failed; DO more can he indicatethe depth 01 love in those eyes of the Lord, as (beep aa the blue firmament itself; no more ell,Th he describe the sweep of divine rayster- les that verve behind that appealing fig- ure; no more can he oeproduee that voice thrilling as with silver trumpets front the innermost recesses of the shrine of God himself. But there is one thing aepreacher can do, speaking to those who, like himself, have all of them their nurdens and their loa-ds and their distresses, he can try to make plain to yeti that there is no burden or load of any sort of which our Lord is not able and willing to relieve us or to give us rest. Spiritual burdens---yest but physical and material burdens as 'well. For 1 come more and more to be- lieve that this word of our Lord is ad- dreeweed to tem% who are stricken in bc4y, to those who are enslaved by toil, to these who are driven by drudgery, no lesa truly than it is addressed, to"thoee what are laden in spirit. 1 should like to speak to you along that line, but 1 have other things to say. 1 must post- pone it; but I believe there is no dis- eased body,' there is no one driven by drudgery in his daily toll, who ts not able to find rest, relief for these things, in responding to the invitation of our Lord Jesus Quest. just not there are appearing in the newspapers arid in cer- tain magazines a Series of advertlse- ments and most beentlfully lusttated. They show a great multi- tude of all sorts 9.nd eonditions of men, weary -eyed, driven by toil, exhausted in their hope for the material life they are livingand east week 1 saw on a board- ing irt Maryhill a poster, one of those issued by the anti -consumption crusade, width shows massed against back- ground of great mills, a big crowd of men and women, stamped on their faces with that blanching disease. Now 1 be- lieve far more than we reeognize that it le to theeo people, with their outward, manifest troubles, that our Lord issues troubles, that'our Lord lames this invi- tatiOn, as Wel 111*.t0 th0Se with spiritual trouble. 1 believe- that those pressing to the Lord in response to this invites - tion shall find a rest for their bodies, a rest in their drudgery, a transmutation of theit troubles such as not even their dearest physician can offer, or any sane- torium, or any garden rity. But 1 Must Nave over speakieg about this aspect ot it. It is a reel aspect; it is a more bles- sed aspect than we realize. 41•••••41.1.41.... THE LAS1 MESSAGE. Itev. Dr. Mowatt, of Montreal ,dropped dead in his church two Sundays age, and IA the evening serviee Rev. Dr. Reett .dslivered the departed pastor's last message, as follows: "Rev, Dr. 'elowattei kat striking mes- sage prepared for his congregation la.st Stteday evening, was front the story of Chet co 'testament tragedy, the de- streetion of SWIM and the escape of Lot and his family by night from Sodoni to the little town of 7.ore. Tho tet Was from Geticeit Ia, 20 'And the MIS was risen upon the earth when Lot tame into 2.,ort,' Ife went on to show ih his nanusmipt thet the televise Which. light- nuel Lot into his eity of refuge 'VMS the htet enurise otSO(lOill. AtRi the dosing words of that settiott, the lest sermon )lowatt every prepared, were: "Olt, child of the world, hearken to -he mercy of Gott in Christ etta yield hyralf to the lvo.ctfl oi tlie gospel. twin' this that the eunriee of light and eve will eoou wine to au end end thete vill be for theo n 1.',t etteriee tie $Ondev tn Sodom, aridthen what wilt thott do? )h, in this day tef mercy end hre.e, bow iown arid kiss Ole Oa of thy Leta anti he will the eteratti eunrieo lightea they Nii'l"The last sunr:ee will aweken florae notnieg as it has dene mauy netting. Seratthiug haptier.e .M14 there te ns mote &lye tirprivilege and epee:- urity-eour ram tun; our work dose; Let ue let up and doing, tire. for Ilia rieht (entice when na Melt -can work,'"