The Wingham Advance, 1911-04-13, Page 3EC1PES
NEW STRENGTH
IN THE SPRING
1•41.44.4414441.01.
ieilinb Stew With Potatoes and
Carrots.
Use neck of lamb or any other parte
%malty eeln for stew, Wash wen, and
put luto a pot ready with hot drippings
Let the pieee of meat become well sears
ed, then add water and salt, nnd let sim-
mer until dune. While the meat is etese-
ing pare four or five potatoce and boil.
Before they reach the mealy stage, and
when a bunch of Carrots Which live been
slieed and boiled in salted water are ten-
der, add the potatoes and -carrots to the
meat. Boil all together for A, few min-
utes, When done and seasoned Arrange
meat lo tho middle of the platter, vitae
around it first the potatoes, ante then
make a border with the carrots, aver
wItieli sprinkle finely cut parsley.
the juice in the pot add a little water
and flour for gravy.
Cocoa Duke.
Cone duke is a sort of jam made
with grated eoetraziut and a syrup of
sugar anel water, and served in Cabe. as
We serve bar le due jelly, with cream
cheese and cruisers, It is better made
from fresh cocoanut, but may be made
from the desiceated, if desired. Make a
very !many syrup of sugar and water,
and cool. Add as much grated Cocoa.
nut ars eau be easily enized in, bring to
A boil and seal in glasses, •
Sponge Cake,
Wes Cups sugar, two cups flour, lout
e,gga, two heaping teaspoonfuls baking
powder, one teaspoonful lemon, three-
quarters eup boiling water. Beat whites
very stiff; and sugar; then well -beaten
yolks, flour and lemon; hot water last.
Bake
in large flat pan or two smaller
oue In slow oven.
EGG LORE.
For a savory dish, spread hot buttered
toast evitle anchovy paste and serve a
peached egg on the top,
A plain omelet served withpeas makes
a tasty and 'sightly luncheon dish, Drain
the peas from their liquor, and when the
omelet is ready to turn put a couple of
tablespoon$ in the centre and fold and
remove to a plate. Then turn the rest
of the peas around the ornlet and serve.
Hard boiled eggs that are to be serv-
ed out of their hells should be dropped
at once into cold water upon coming
item the water, If they are allowed to
stand in the water in whieh they cooked
until thee; cool they will turn dark.
A tablespoenful of eheese to every
egg used in an ardinaey omelet not only
eontributes to the flavor but adds to
the nudritiousness of the dieh, ',the usual
rule ealls for A tablespoonful of water
or milk to every egg. Binh cream is
liked by many persons; others say that
water is better than either milk or cream
as the latter tave a tendency to toughest
the eggs.
Poached eiseees on toast with. tomato
sauce covering them make a delicious
luncheon dish. Cheese may be sprinkled
over the sauce.
SPRING SKIN TROUBLES
Pimples, Eruptions, and " Spotty
Complexions."
At this season, scores a people --girls
and young wonien especially --find their
limes disfigured by pimples, dark spots,
eruptions, etc. The skin needs attention
—needs renovating after the trying time
it hes passed through during the winter.
Just think what it Inc gone throughl
You have been out in nein and sleet and
snow. You have been at one moment
perspiring from skating, or some other
exertion, Tnen you have steed to "eoM
off:* You have spent hewn of the day
indoors at a temperature equal to sum-
mer heat. Then you have covered up
your skin—except your face—and gone
out into a temperature away below
zerol No wonder that, with all these
changes, the skin of the face and auk
snows signsof needing attention.
ZatinBuk and Zam-Buk Soap are the
remedies. Smear 2am-13uk lightly Over
the spots, the eruptions, the sallow
patches, at night, and wash with Zam-
Buk Soap (only 25c. per tablet) each
day. Then notice how quickly your ap.
pearance improve& As the rich, refitted,
herbal essences sink deep into the tissue,
the hard, scurfy -like patches are remove
ed. Better color results, The galls of
the skin become transparent. The blood
beneath is able to impart its proper con
orieg to the tissue. and the 'delicate
bloom of health replaces the sallownese
and pallor of disease.
gam-Buk is also it sure eure for skin
injuries and. diseases. Rezone, uleere,
vingworna, yield to its use. For cuts,.
burns, braises, ehildreites rashes, °tee it
Is unequalled, and for piles. Mothers
will find Zarb -Buie Soap best for baby's
beth! All druggists and stores at 50e.
box for Zant-litik and '25e. tablet (or 3
for Teel for the Soap. If you have any
difficulty in obtaining, order from ZaM-
Buk Co., Toronto, and sen4 price,
weAviNu GOLD CLOTH.
nIpon A hand loom in the silk works at
Braintree. England, a start has been
made weaving the cloth isf gold from
whieh will be made the Coronation robes
for the King and Queen. Tito boner of
weaving the costly fabric lute (ellen to
Tremits Wheeler, an experienced weave,
who finished his Bret dare work with
two inches of woven gold tend eilk shoot-
ing uhott the front of bis loom. The pro -
cols is very slow, because of the tare
tteeden in the manufacture, dila thig two
inches evili be about the daity Average.
Chleago leTe,we,
A pRoverta.
wiro knows and who khowe not that
he knovni not is a fool. Who known not
le humble beyond the conception of ordle
nary nien. Who known and knOlva that
he knows, yet makes fto uNe et his know*
lee, Is aeleem—PROD IXThL
Nature Needs Aid in Making New,
Health Giving Blond.
In the spring the eysten»meds ton-
ing up. To be healthy and L. trong you
anuet have new blood,jut n he teen
must have new in renew -their vi-
tality. Nature dementia it, and without
this new Wood you will feel weak atul
languid—you may have twinges of rinne•
nudism. or the share stabbing pales of
neuralgia Often there are .disfiguring
*min or .eruptionit on the okire itt
other cases there is merely it feeling of
tiredness aud it veriable appetite. My
of these are signs that tee blood is out
of order—that the indoor life of winter
has lessened eentr vitality. Whet le
needed to put you eight ie a tonie, and
in -all the world of ruedielne there in no
tank eau equal Dr. Williams' Pink
These Plies aetually make new. riele red
blood—your greatest need in the. spring.
This new blood drivee out dieenie, dears
the skin and makee weak, easily tired
mett, women mut children, bright, Active
and strong. You can prove this by your
neighbore for there is not a nook or
earner in tide great land where 'home
week, ening ream or woman bee not
been made well and strong by this great
medieine. Mr. It. Wilsn, Stenewale
Man., says: Some years ago 1 was
run dowu, languid end depressen and
felt as thougb I was only fitted for life's
scrap heap, A friend who had great
Aim ni Dr, Williame Pink Pills gave
Mc a box. Before thee' were all used
I felt some better, and thue enedItraged
got a further supply, and it was not
many weeks until I was again enjoying
my former .good hertith. 1 think Dr,
Williams' Pink Pills a bOOA to every
weak person."
Sold by an medicine dealers or by
mail, post paid. at en/ .cents a box or
eix boxes for $2.50 from The Dr, Win
name' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
"HALCYON IhAYS."
Alcyone, or Haleyone, the daughter
of AEolus, married Ceyx. Ceyx was
drowned and Alcyone, on learning his
fate, threw bemelf into the sea. Tne
gods were moved by the tragedy of the
young lovers; they brought them back
to lifi in the form of naleyons, or king-
fishera, and they decreed that for the
seven days from December 22 to Decem-
ber 29 the sea ghouls' remain calm
while tit, seabirds built their nests up-
on it. Those seven days, the last of the
year, are therefore called neleyou days,
days of tranquillity, it kind of very
late Indian summon—Prom the London
Globe.
etutekly le.ees coudhs, cures colds, beats
:be throat awl blattv• 23 cow*.
SENTENCE SERMONS,
The Wisdom of Amiel: The most
beautiful poem there is is life: lite in
which inspiration and self-conaciousness
go together end help cull ether.
The poiut of view of religion or a re-
ligion 'spirituel and profound, done gives
to life all the dignity and energy of
which it is capable.
To be disinterested is to be strong,
and the world is at the feet of him
whom it cannot tempt.
The ideal man of the Greeks is not
as high as ours, but they understood
infinitely better than we bow to rever-
ence, .cultivate and ennoble the marn
they knew.
We liave freed slaves; they are no
longer below us; they are among us.
Look twice, if wliat you want is just
conception; look once, if what you want
is beauty.
A. man only understands what.is akin
to something already existing in him-
self,
The dila who can rouse in us anger,
or impatience, or excitement, .feels him -
'self stroeger than we, and. a child only
respects strength.
The first principle of the education
(if others is: train yourself, The Bret
rule to follow if you wish to posses
yourself of your ebild's will is: xnaster
your OW11.
The Proinisen Land is the land where
one is not:.
Only those truths that have so penes
trated us as to become spontaneous
and involuntary, instinctive and Inmost-
acious, are really our life—that is to
say, something more than our prop-
erty.
From every point on earth we are
equally near to heaven arul to the in-
finite.
There are two states or conditions of
pride. The first one of self -approval;
the second, one of self-cientempt. Pride
is nen probably at its purest in the
latter.
It is by teaching that we tenth onr-
selves. by relating that we observe, by
affirming that we examine by showing
that we look, by 'writing that we thine-,
by pumping that we draw water from
the well.
When. we are doing nothing in particles
Ian, it in then that we are living through
all our being; it is then we 'ripen and
possess ourselves.
Sleep and idleness do not interrupt
-life; the flower is growing.
Prom the point of view of heppinesin
the problem of life is insoluble, fee' it is
out bighest aspirations that prevent tts
from being happy.
4 • •
WOMEN END SALOON TREATING.
e (Niagara Valls. N.Y. eournan)
In an ordinance forbidding "treating"
!iiealooris and heavily fining any liquor
dealer Who ;Wow* one misnomer to buy
smother a drink, nese referred to the
voterts of Vantim Taft TheinlaY. WOmett
have been enfranchised iri washIngton,
and therefore the Triennia referendum
embreced the gentler end better halt Of
Weal huttatitr.
The women Voted in large rtunlbere On
the anti -treating ordinance, nod general-
ise far it. /t wart adapted by /substantial
Ina:101w. in spite of ridieule and talk
obetit "freak legislation."
IIIMMIMISIONIMINO111111111111111111
SAVES YOU HONEY
To buy the Sugar that SIM'S you money Means a great deal to
every home'as so much Is used by every person, every day.
BECAVSE less of this Sugar is required for sweetening thin other
Sugars, and as it has the greatest amount of sweetening to the pend, the
Sugar that saves you money is
You also get fnll measure, and all packages eontain eloolotely correet
weight, and, when bought this way, substitution is impossible.
Try St. twronce Sogar to•day--and SAVE 'MONEY.
CE SIVA* iittrINING CO., LIMITS0, M4MtREAL
UNDERSIZED GENIUSES.
Physical PeCeiliaritin of Some Men
of Creat Mental Manny,
There ere people wen co.nteed that
genius is genex•ally situated in the per-
eone of men of few incite*. Some have
gone eo fer ea to declare that greet
beight and genius are invompatible.
LQ1111.4060 was perhaps the elnef ex-
ponent of these views, nye. the Die.
tette aud Hygienic Gazette, ht other
men of note have been in morn with
such opinions,
ln support of this nrginne»t Napoleon
the First, Alexander the tient, F.dgar
Allan Poe. Alexander Pope, Ninsen end
lilake have been eited. The 1kt of men
of undoubted genius who Wive beeu
short of stature, Sento indeed almost
dwarfe„ le long.
It is :deo a uotewortity truth that
many of the really very great men hese
been not only email but diseesed and
deformed, roe inetanee, Junin Wear
who nifty be elassed among the short
men, wag me epileptic. Napoleon eof-
fired from epilepsy. Alexander the
Great and Edgar nllen Poe were nip-
souteuiaele Pope Was grievously min,
shaper,
Byron, Although about, of everage
height, was congenitally same. 'Nelson
wars a email mut of frail heelth, and it
would be possible to tabulete aiming
men of gams of the first rank a large
number who were muter tbe average,
stature 'and afflieteo with bodily de-
fects,
Pepular Scieuee Monthly n'itarIes.
Kane' atterupte to oeerthrow the popu-
lar belief that great minds and shore
stature are closely allied. Nr. Kane'
looked through biographies and conclud-
ed as a result of his perusal that so far
as Americium are concerned distinguesh-
ed men have not been of snort stature,
but rather lite reverse. Be a•leo discove
ered that many Europeen eminent men
have been of considerable height,
In the first plan, when speaking of
average etathre it must be berne .
mind that the average stature .of emus -
trine varies greatly, The average height
of men of this eentinent is about 0 feet
8 inches, of Great Britaen less, but the
nverage height of the Latin rates of
Europe is far below the standard. But
taking:the average height of man as 5
feet 8 Julien Kassel makes out a, goodly
list of very eminent men who have ex-
ceeded the average.
Of the lives of 230 distinguished men
examined thus, those of 103 -supplied the
niformation naught either la exact fig
-
twee or by way of genera' statement;
and of these persooages it appears that
sixteen were of middle height, fifty-
eight above and twenty-nine below.
.Among the very distinguished men of
this country were some of large stature
—(Jharles Summer more than tl feat 4
inches, Jefferson and Andrew Jackson
eonsiderably over 0 feet 0 inches In
height. Among those of 0 feet and over
mity be Mentioned Samuel Adams, Geo,
Washington Lincoln, Blenterek, Thack
eray, Charles Darwin, Henry Ward
Beecher, Aisles Choate and Daniel O'Com
nell, The list of farimus men Of inedium
height is long, including Browning anI
John Adam,
An interesting and somewhat curious
fact is that some of the tall men of
genius have had moderate sized heads.
Shelley the poet was tall, but had a
Small heed and some of the small men
imbued with tbe divine spark had large
heads, apparently proving that the size
of the had had little to do with the
quality of the brains.
Of reeent deaths among men of gen-
ius Tolstoi was a tall, strongly built
man with a leonine head, Meredith was
a thin, delicane looking man of more
than niedium }might, Swineburne was
a very short man with a somewhat large
bead and Whistler was a small, thin
man a. head of more than the ordinary
size,
Just What Your Children Need
Little children can't be expected to
romp, day in and day out, without some
time, coming to grief. Some of their
tunueeineut garnee are rough and, tuziable,
cause undue fatigue, and often, indeed,
bruises, strains find swellings. When the
01114h -en come in tired and sore, see they
are eubbbed well with Nerviline; it does
wonders in relieving fatigue and reduc-
ing pain. If a cough, eold or sort throat
has developed, if there are signs of
croup nothing is more effective than a
hot dose of Nerviline. reshape there is
bewel aehe, indigestion or stomach troll-
ble. This is where Nerviline proves its
merit very quickly.. Have it ready for
bruises, strains, pains of every kind. It
hes a -wonderful list ef uses, and old
folks evil find it splendid Inc vheumatlem,
earaehe, toothache, and grippe. Wher-
ever there is pain or siekness, Nervillue
should be dose by. Pleasant to take,
certain in effeet, Poison's Nerviline is
far the best of household remedies,
THE LITTLE BOY'S DREAM.
The little boy smiled in his sleep that
night.
As he wandered to Twilight Town ;
And his face lit up with a heavenly
light
Through the shadows that drifted
down :
33Ut he woke next morning with tear-
stained eye
In the light of the gray dawn's gleam.
And out from the etilinesS We heard him
cry,
"I've lost My drearri—mn dream,"
And he told us then in his childish tvaY$
Of the woriderul dream he'd known ;
Be had Wandered away from the land of
blaY
To the distant lancl of the Grown ;
Be hied won his allure ot the fame and
fight
in the struggle and toil of ineri ;
And he sobbed and sighed In the break.
log light,
"1 Wahl my dream again."
As the Years page by the little ,bon grey/
TM he eamo to tho laud of the .Grown;
.And the dream of his early youth mune
trine
The dream that he thought had flown;
Yet once again he smiled in his sleep --
When then near by might have heard
him nine,
"I Want my dream, itY &tent I"
For he dreamed Of the Ye8terd43,y's of
Youth,
And the smile on les father's fate ;
haunt of oldetinse faith end truth
. en the lien of an old home place ;
Be had Von his Share of the tattle and
fight
In the struggle and toil of Men—
Yet he gobbed ,and sighed in the breaking
light,
"I want my dream again !"
nenrantiand Moe in the ColurrIblan Wage.
elfin
40404•* -a.....44
THE KINDLY POST-OARD.
it seettled ti rue that //11014. Bben'S Wadi
at Barker's Flat
WAS not the tandsomest estate that I
was over sit
A few old in:range bushes, a tumble-
down ind shed.
A hoes e that needed painting, it Been
that °rice was red,
e mime the -catered peetscarde
tonne that place up fine.
The bushes are it vivin green, the house
Met seems to shine.
And distance Itntis enehautment to tile
tilted and been behlrid.
And underneath the picture, this mita-
graeli X rind
"The Mete:Penne aneeetrei home of Itee-
venter Platt.
Orie of the many eherming spots he love.
ly B*rker's Flit.'
eeferace MeKiestry. In Women's Horne
-nortmetnion.
Pieper and envelope's die etettionern.
/t Ulm a pettne 'any to Carry ItheM,
•
•
CHEAP
ORGANS.
and
WAN
aielelsoweeenisenien
in Order to clean our floors of
all ueed Instruments before Meet
let we are offering the follswing
Instruments regardless of loss in
ardor to make room for spring
stock.
Peiobt 4 Pelton Organ, walnut
in god eondi- $10 01)
Dominion Orgen, walnut case, low
top, li stops, knee mend%
worth $40, „. .. ....zi17.50
Thomas Organ, high to , 7 *tope,
knee swells, couplers, 114 ru„,,, Inin
et.e....•,. ..• . • 4 • 4 • vti, Iler• ILir V'
Kern Organ, 0 stops, walnut case,
n stops, knee swellseqg dui
and couplers, .. ,.. .tpeptiourv
Thonnte Organpipe top, ll Morn,
4 sets reeds,
iknee$45 00
swll% eand, coupler.
Bell Organ, piano ease, 11 *tops,
large mirror, regular 4117 fin
AP• 0•••/ w a wravriur
Keough Square Plano, tly, octaves,
ronwood ease, fine $
tone,,,,.,,,,,,,,
50
.00
Weber Square, ebonized easg'i
1-3 octave, over- $75 00
strung bass... a
Fox Squnre, °lionized nate, fauey
carved legs and front, nen
octaves, a $90.00
barmy
In adnition to the above we have
many more good bargaius, in fact,
we can supply you with almost any
kind of an instrument you want at
your own price,.
Every instrument guaranteed.
Terms --$5,00 cash and $2.00 per
month,
assetigassagastmamizeastruesmi
lleinizman
& Coo
71 liing St. E. Hamilton
FREDDY's, MISFORTUNE,
vready. Simpson—he ainn never had it
Hecht' in his life ;
Not even when he broke the blade of
Itis pa's bran' new knife,
jor, cut the parlor carpet on' made
gouges In th' floor,
An" whittled his in-niehuls, too, tight on
their big front door.•
You see. his ma.opposes any punishinent
like that—
Why, she reasoned with him when he
spoiled his pa's new hitt.
iIuh Walter Perkins told me how his
would take n. switch,
An! whip him au tie places for a day or
so would itch
_&n 1 told Freddy Simpson about th'
lick-
lngs that / get—
So hard sometimes I'd rather sten" up
for my meals than set, .
An* Oscar /ones, an' Rufus, an' Bob an'
Freckles Smith,
They said they'd lake th' tickings rath-
er than be reasoned with.
Xis boys. We go, to tellize Freddie how
whippin's feet,
An' how yew, pe. whacks harder when
you wriggle round an' squeal,
An' bow you holler to hum t eyelet go
It any more I"
An' how you Just don't do it, long AS
you keep feelin' Sore.
An' we got Freddy Sinutsoll to believe
It isn't fair
For his folks Jest to reason—when the
reasons never scare.
ISo Freddy Simpson started out to -day
'tb•II,
An' played some triCks at breakfast till
Ills oa was awful mad
An" started out to reason—but Fred
kept a =kit' noise
An' said " Why don't you lick tue like
tit' 'others does their boys ?"
An' so his pit he licked him, an now
Spent th' rilorrg %%min' about it
to his pa.
*-Wilbur D. Nesbitt, hi Harner's Maga-
zine for March.
es.
The emoule of spriog are its the air
List to the bark of the dogwood tree.
OMEN
MAY AVOID
OPERATIONS
By taking Lydia E. Piakbamis
Vegetable Compound
The following letter from Mrs.
Orville Rook Will 'prove how unwise
it is for women to submit to the
dangers of a 'surgical operation when
it may be avoided by taking Lydia
E. Plaiduou's Vegetable Compound.
She WAS fourweeksinthehospital
and tante home suffering worse
than before.
litere is bele own statement.
_ Pa* Paw, Ilininee,
n TWO refire tegO
I suffered very Senereen With a dlis.
%clement. I could
met be on my feet for
a long tin*. My
physielan treated
motor SAM months
without Much relief
and at last sent Me
to MItt Arbor for
an operation. X was
there four weeks and
came home suffering
worse than Wore,
se:" •
My in advitsed
,
Me to try Lydia
intirhani's Vegetable Compound,
and I did. Today I am well and strong
and do all my own housework. I OWO
My health to Lydia N. PinkhaMe$
Vegetable Compound and advise my
friends who are afflicted with any
female complaint to try it"— Mrs.
Ormuz Iloor, Es IL No. 5, Paw PAW,
Michigan.
if you are ill do not -drag along until
an operationisoftesitary, but at once
take Lydia E. Plukhronta Vegetable
00MPOund.
For thirty years it has been the start.
dard remedy for women's, ills, and haa
positlye]y restored the health of thou.
a women. \VII don't you. Witt
MA= WES PO OW NEWS.
PAP11101
By Ruth. Andrews.)
"1 .eould never he without m,y envies
.of old newspapers, rink within eany
reach in the pantry," remarked a hottiie.
keeper rewrites, who .can bent of a few
short eut methods elot tiornmetly in nee
among the Average. "Thy come hend-
feet in the kitehen when I do my cook-
ing. Two .double breadth pages spread
out PH the kitehen table the eaten of
which is covered with white oil &gee
vet:eine all the want° when I cull fruit,
pare vegetables or prepare meet for the
oven, When 1 Am needy to elm away
rubbbili all I do is .fold over the eorn-
era of the »ewepaper and then it ie only
a step to the rear porch and the garb,
age eau, Auld the large eplint basket
whieb receives all the wade viper.
bia,you see entirely obviates the
need of au extra waste pan or a slusllY
dishrag,. and my kitchen tableis left
absolutely clean. Drippieg pane and
diehrags sometimes make a lot of extra
work, ad without them I can save Me
halide, my feet, and, of mune, enn
time."
WHERE: INVENTION IS NECESSARY.
In an up to date kitcheu where °rushee
an abundaime of utensils and eoneen-
knees this sbort cut done not always
euggest itself, it is in kitebenettte
housekeeping, where neccesity is often
the mother of inveution, that one might
learn to save old newepapera for foture
eonvenienees.
On wash day they make a good tem.
porary rug to proteet the floor from
spleshee and stains, When the range is
.in full blast with a kettle of lard On it,
on. n frying pan full of douginutte they
are iudespensable ea floor and. wall pro -
teeters. On ironing day you need some-
thing on which to test your ironS—and
the newepapers always conies first to
mdoirnestie 1010811.11eplelisoaunrt supply rues out you
Dryynewspapers micepod polithere
Inc windows and mirrors as well as
Stoves. Wet newspapers when torn into
shrede and nattered over carpet and
rugs will help to Bettie Ann eliminate
dust by attracting it. When staining
furniture an old newspaper ia fent aid
in )eying out your brushes And eampling,
your stain or pigments. When retouch-
ing the woodwork in your living rooms
a thick newspeper rog conies newly.
USED TO CATCH THE DUST.
Many housekeepers use it beneath ear..
pet and. runs to catch the dust that sate
through met to add eesilence, end again
between bed and spring; and inatren
he protect the latter from rust. They
are the next tiest thing to tar paper
and cloth raga, in protecting young
shrubs apnea the severities of snowless
winters or the reneges of rabbits, With
heavy binder twine drawn tightly they
may be wadded securely around the
base of young trees and other garden
growth that needs protection over whi-
ten
Certaiuly the housekeeper can, find. so
many uses for old newspapers that she
ought no loupe plug up the furnace
ars
with them for the mere shaakneoif:ogobexetittif,tolgr
them benmes almost as neeessy aa
them out of sight, A.
ds
Mead box. or wood box,
CURED THE WIFE
AND HUSBAND TOO
Great Work done by Dotid's
Kidney Pills in one
- Quebec Family
4.44.04.40.4401*
Thomas Lauriault Had Kidney Di-
sease and His Wife Bright's Di-
sease, and Dodd's Kidney Pills
Made They Both Welt.
Lao. Cayamont, Que. April 10.—,(Speo-
ialn-s-There is a wovid interest in the
simple story of 'Madame Thomee Tenure.
ault, of this city. To her own words, it
is se lotion:
"Dodd's Kidney Pills curen iny hus-
band of Kidney Disease and myself of
Bright's Disease. We recommend Dodd's
Kidney Pine to all who euffer -from Kid-
ney Or Bright's Disease."
This is it splendid example of the
grand work Dodd's Kidney Pills are
doing among the plain people of Can-
ada, Kidney'Disettee is the eommonest
of all ailments among those who have
to work herd, because the kiditcyS are
the first part of the body to feel the
wear and tear of the heavy work,
When the kidneys go wrong the blood
goo wrong, and the whole body goes
wrong. Rhetunatism, Dropey, Diabetete
and Bright's Disease are the usual re-
sults. Dodd's Kidney Pills cure these
by simply curing the kidneys,
AN UNNILFIVLED THREAT.
The very minute I pased the door,
r guessed at once mein was something
wrOng.
There wasn't it doll on the parlor floor
Or it tingle toy where It mann belong.
She sat in her wicker rocking their
And didn't look up whe,n I said "hello;"
And mother, out in the kitchen there,
r was sure knew something I ought to
knew.
At the tomer ta'bie they silent sat
zuhangIng gltumes, but nothing more;
But e wasn't very surprised thereat.
A similar silence I'd known before.
Shed done something that wasn't right
It Was Just as plain as a thing could
be.
And Mother had threatened to tell at
night
All of the terrible tale to inc.
"Well, what's the matter ?" at Mat /
awe.
And a pleading look tilled her wide
blue eyes,
And her dininied cheeks turned it cherry
red,
"There's sorethone lseen haughty here,
surmise.,
"Well. never mind," geld her mother,
then.
"I guess I won't tell you about it now,
nu sure that she won't be bad again ;
She's promised not to,anyhow."
And that is the way that it always goes,
She threatens to tell but l'ni never told,
So tor an that youngeter's steady kinivre
IIis little gini Is as good as gold.
msupposed to punish, but never d,
Par 'whippings art thing, that I WW1%
And anyhow, I am telling You.
I, don't know What I shnuld publeh tot
MODERN FINANCE.
Bartley BoYle, WhOlie office is at
eel Society tor Savings Building, mays
that he met a beggar on the greet the
ether day. The man wanted five tents
Inc a bed. says the Washington /Iereld.
" WItY doret Yott go to work ?" Asked/We,
,
Doyle. Botts, I've tried In a hundred
pitmen and r can't find no Job," *sleeted
the nenhiradier, "Whitt kin I t"
"Weil," grihned Doyle, hie inind on te
brormeetion of Itis wen, "you height Atli
OtCek.'
e Stook 1--ev4'e dat ?" askeil the man,
ettepeeting that he wax being kidded,
seliv, gook in *nine leg eohmany.
eael, to eel. Don't lieu know what
meek is ?"
"'Sure I 'worked ter P. 1), Armour
once. But / Dover reined the prire or *
runts* *teen /tow niu 1 ten stock When
I Ain't got 11 ?"
Mans do," mend htr. Doyle "melte'
elo,"
ORANGE, BUT TRUE,
ehithout wieliing to in -nouns anything
it may be mid that It good mutt' hitakftra
Mert prt feitteriell.-Ateinena Of**
Afraid to Eat
(I
1)0es the fear of indigestion spoil the .enjoyment of
your meals ? It needn't, just take
and you WRII't know you have a StOrelaell. They will see to it
that your food is properly digested. They are among the
best of the NA:4)M.1-W preparations, compounded by
expert chemists and guaranteed by the largest wholesale
druggists in Canada, 50c. a box. If your druggist has not
stocked them yet, send us soc. and we will mail you a box.
NATIONAL Mitt AND OlightleAl. Ct. oP CANADA LINUTgo, mer4THEAL.
HOW TO RAISE AND CARE FOR
THE PROFITABLE HEN.
LESSON 5—THnIR Aill..MENTS AND CURES.
It lute been said that 90 per cent, of
the ailments that attack chickens are
directly due to either the cerelesisness
or ignorance of the attendant, opeelally
where fowls are confined in close quart-
ers.
There are many causes for Gm
eases of Theses, among which are: Too
close inbreeding (no new, outside stock
introduced into the flock), impairing the
stamina and vitality of the fowle; the
presence of filth Itt or aromin the poul-
try house; stagnant and filthy drinking
water; improper ventilation; aired
drafts in the roosting house; allowing
&nese of decaying vegetables or flesh;
lack of gootl; sharp grit; and liee•
The worst (linen is undoubtedly
roup. The firstnevinpteent are sneezing
and a slight ruuning at the nostrils, the
appetite lane, the comb begins to turn
black, arel unless relieved the chicken
dies in c few days, It is contagious to
the rest of tba flock, so separate them
at once. Excellent remedies are on the
market, A few drops of tinture of
muriate of iron and a small pine of
gum camphor in the drinking water
will cure any but the very severe eas.03,
A ehicken that gets a very severe case
might as well be killed; It,, earcass
should be burned. ,
Next to roup, cholera is most to be
dreaded, The symptoms are clumpinin
nese and a diarrhea, the exerement being
of a, greenish yellow rotor. Cholera is
Itiglily eontagiousn Feed lightly with it
nvann nmeh of ground outs, wheat, bran
and midlinge, with a little flour mixed
in. Mix with scalding hot water aud
season with a little red. pepper. Get
one quarter of a pound each of powdered
eleiPime, copperas, capsicum and alum,
mix thoroughly and add a lableepoonful
for nth dozen chiekens afflicted to the
mash three times a day. Supply clean
water and grit, and those that don't
improve itt two. (ken kill awl burn. lteep
them separate until well.
Small worms sometimes lodge in the
windpipes of chicks, metking then't gape
anil in time ehokes them to death. One
of the best ways to treat gapeworms is
to Once the chicks in it box"covered over
with cheese cloth and dust, air-slakec1.
lime through to make the chicks sneeze,
and thua expel the worme, Don't over-
do this, A goon way to preveet gape-
worm is to sprinkle ah -slaked lime in
house and run-
Dysentry is cause by over -heating,
chilling and improper feeding. Feed
sparingly for it few days, no corn flt all,
and -they will venally recover.
Limberneck is caused by fowls cl-
Ing
decaying animal or vegetable mat-
ter, which is alive with evorms or mag-
gots. A few drops of turpentine or
kerosene poured down the throat will
effect a euro.
Be regular in the matter of feeding.
Don't keep a flock on a single grain diet.
Don't allow manure to eollett. Clean
up daily. 33efere you buy new stoek be
sure they are well. Introduce new blood
either by stock or eggs every yeti], or
two,
in next week's talk the ws•Iter will
travel the Tout° from the neat and poul-
try house to the table aud market.
(Continued Next Week.)
WOMEN AS DOCTORS,
Women its doctors le not, a Peen con-,
temporary observes, a product of mod-
ern "fenainisme." it seems that in the
eighteenth century there was a lady
student at Florence. nhe come tram
Malta under tite patronage of the
Kriging of Malta. The administrator
o fthe :11,Iajeur Hospital was somewhat
embarraseen with his new pupil, but he
found a nteans out of the difficulty.
The chief of the Order of the Knights
of Maltain introducing hie lady pro-
tege to the professors of the Morena.
School of :Medicine wrote: sett seems
to me that the matter could be arrange
eh without any great inconvenience if
the young lady were boarded during the
period she was studying at your medical
school with the nuns in a neighboring
convent, Inc which we would pay five
crowns it week. In regeed to her instruc-
tions, she should assist in operations at
the women's hospital, notably those per-
formed by Prof. Mann*. lie 'Mould
also give ber some private leesons at the
convent, for it' appears to me that she
should not be present in elassea with
young men."
The commit of the hospital, being well
disposed. to the Knights, adopted the
suggestion. More than it century elaps-
edbefore another lady was enrolled in
the sentient of Florence. Site was itRus-
sian and was admitted to the schools ot
MariaNettora.--Isondon Globe.
. •
7oho 9
C ir
quickly Mops cotzabs. turQa Colds. heals
tile throat mad tango. • • . 25 cents.
Army I rttroducedYg—aarettes Into
England.
•
0110 sees it retributive justice in the
fact; that the excessive consumption of
cigarettes by our soldiers is causing
anxiety to the army authorities, for the
military are generally supposed to have
been responsible for the introduction of
Ile cigarette into England, when at
the close of the Crimean war our offn
cue brought back the habit they heti
picked up from the Buesians. Laurence
Oliphant, who hied been through tha wan
As a COTeespondentovits the fleet netnble
person to display a eigenette in the
street e of London, end he, with Genie
London Chronicle.
Pelegrini, of*Lnity rain" dtd
nuieh to popultrite the new fashion.—
A good way to aettle a strike is by
anbitration, but it would take a long
tinte to iirdsh s. bell gaine that way..
SUFFERED THREE YEARS
Till Dr. Morse's Indian Root
Pills cured his Kidney Trouble
These are few dinases th5.t cause more
acute suffering than Kidney Trouble,
and Mr, P. A. Thomas, of Sudbury Ont.,
is one of those who know it. He writes:
"For over three years 1 suffered from
kidney disease. Fast I thought I had
sprained my back, for suddenly the pain
would catch the stnall of my back and it
would be impossible for me to straighten
myself up for several Mituttea. A ,dull
ache across the kidneys was always pres-
ent, my urine was thick andicloudy, and
passing it caused a burning, scalding
pain. Tried medicines, but they failed.
I was advised to try Dr. Morse's Indian
Root Pills, as they bad eined my wife
years before. A few • boxes affected a
complete cure. I now enjoy the bles-
sings of good health, which Is due to this
remedy.”
Don't neglect kidney trouble—it's too
dangerous as well as too paitifut. That
old, reliable family remedy, Dr. Morse's
Indian Root Pills, has cured thousands
and will cure you. It is equally effective
in curing constipation and its attendant
evils, biliousness, indigestion and sick
headaches, and m purifing the blood.
25c a box at your druggist's. 10
* _ •
FACTS ABOUT DOPPEE.
It's native to Abyssinia and Arabia,
Trees grow 15 to 25 feet high.
Leaves are evergreen and leathery;
flowers whith; berries, dark -scarlet.
It does not retard the action of the
bowels, as does strong tea.
The grounds are nutritiout; Asiatio
people met them.
Americans consume over nine pounds
a. year per capita.
A cup of toffee contains 08 per cent,
Water and 2 per cent. nutritive meter-
ial.
needed toffee beans eontain 1 per
4;:t.fat.water and 14 per eent.'fat; cereal
subetitutea about 0 per cent. water and
3
Trees yield first crop In third yell'
and yield about 40 years,
Leonhard Itatievelf, German physician,
introduced toffee into leutope.
Substitute* and adulterants for coffee
.tarrlree.asted ehicory root, dandelion toot,
amount of wear sent tear of the animal
tal'6306Sfitte allays hunger, oxen:Mites and
refinishes, and possibly diminishes the
seeds of the yellow iris, and sweet poi
Everybody Is asteniehed sit
the rnarvallOnti tain that eernes
to their home arid to themselves
by the time of
tenet you think it would be
better for you to enquire about
there paints? Don't UPC poor
paints—they test ton mueli,
Don't use dear paints—they cot
too much. Ilse Itanuteyei Paints,
gold at just the right price for
torrect painting. we mime A
IlkindlOrile booklet on house
Writing. You ithould lave it,
writus Inc Bee/ let AB491)10.
We will mall it
RAIVISAY Ac, SON 00.10
MN PAINT
AttAKKIN4 " Fittettrael,
1641
FAITH.
reith tote feet to walk,winege to fly,
ones to hear, en's to see, a heart to US-
deretand. Thine sere only slim:lawn tig-
even eigne, spars and balls to the kepi
hut come &ran to the .quertereteck,
down intu the cabin, down Into the heart
of the commander, there you find the
real plumose. Title is the tutor thet
trims the /mile, watelies the heavene,
usee every whin that blows, Shapes the
retiree and arriveet
Faith is the mang alive, equipped, ex-
perienced, ft Man, with wine, visions,
thalitirs, a man who knows, who fon
lows on the linow; it man at enterpriee,
crilolg;.ntent elevation. Not a. ettrenner
ti the thiril heavens, nee teleseopkallen
eindin miseineopically, beam Worde, re -
Neves impreesione, gathers energy.
Docs it all alone no human 40Ulpaniall
env, in the dark:nen of Ids own mental
epliercei for lienit IS only a. figure of
speccii, takes, in stores, ,folds in hie
benont the roll of secret, sealed orders,
faring the purpose, hoists the signal, sent
the sails, leads the fleet to neatilmod end
ta victory. A perm:rent secret between
Jeltevalt and the soul, fleece to be res
reeled to another. .1lere we giria the
=kings of leasing,. prince% contessorin
mar Lynn
"lie counted use faithful, says anted.
Hew does Ile count? Ito eetunte men
folinnil who are fit.
Timer have searched, they, bare found,
they knew the wildeness, they hese
studied alone, they bade died to 41, leo
go all, touched the desert, the heart,
elean swept, the soul vacant; then 004
comes in, Ito filleth the empty soul, the.
proud are sent empty away, Oh the
years! Forty yeare Inc Moses in Mid-
iam. • Tbirty years for John in the des-
erts "till the day of hin shoving mite
Israel." Thirty years for the Son of
Mary in seclusion with only a gleara itt
the ago of twelve.
Are these rare leoleted, disconnected,
itesue of history, when men came til
touch with God, episodes in a mireett-
lotus age?
Give me the wings of faith to riee
'Within the veil and see
The aerate above, how peat their joys,
How bright their glories be?
rest but give me the wings of faith
to rime withime the veil and sea the
&elute in earth, how great their joys and
bright their glories shine. We Shove too
Inuit into the future, we reserve too
much for heaven, we stuve.the present
for the sake of the future. This is
wrong.
We allow leither Time to clip the
wings of faith, we do not seek and find
the eempleteness, the heroic gatherings
of tbe days of earth, No thanks .ta
them in henVen for being holy, they can-
not help..it; before the easy comes the
hard, and we are holy amid the unclean,
before eve tallith the chosen realms of
bliA,, no bliss of heaven is here and
now: we ream, we gather, we enjoy, we
adern, inc display the beauty of the
Lord. Distance does not forbid, spec
does not refuse. I have the -promise, the
possession, the Presence hero and now. I
seek bemuse I have 'found, 1 eome be.
muse I know.
Why are men to -day destitute of as-
surance, shorn of persuasive power,
strangers to inspiring touch a.nd
divmn-
esi thrill?. Where is the cure? We must
haste to the henvenly places, and sit
down there anti listen, only there comas
the voiee to the confiding, lament spirit,
mine there do eve fill up with grandeur,
wily there are human fingers made fest
to the Divine Arm.
Receptive power, transmitting power,
eharged with bounding assurance. We
rise up, "we stand before the Lord, we
speak that we -do know, and testify that
wo bave seen."
PRAYER.
Prayer, to one who his -tis in doilyeerviee
of God, csftentinnes tmkes the, form of
simple commtudon, the spreading out ot
our Life to one who is worthy, whom sire
love and trust, not for sake ofnany epe
alai advice or help, but for the heart -rest
tthere is in the thing itself. For
none love confecknen eG mucheas they
who rarely have them. None love to
speak so mueb, when the.mood of speak.
ing comes, ea they who are naturally
entirely upon another so mueb,as
Strong natures that ordinarily do not
lean at all; and so the heart that goes
Winded and shut, that hides its thought's
and drends the knowledge of menet eyes,
flings itself wide open to the eye of
God.
ONENESS WITH CHRIST GIVEll
PEACE,
It is so with every soul of man that
comes to Christ and learns of Vim. lie
brings us into the same relationship With
God aehe ehjoyed. His peace mune from
a direct sense of Soilialaip with the rath-
er; and in him we too are children, and
should have the Same peace in our
hearts, the pence of perfect lone, the
peace of forgiveness, and reconciliation,
and communion. To knew peace a, man
needs to feel himself pardoned, and sue.
tallied by God, and in harmony with his
will. Such a blessed state alone ean
bring heart's oast. The secret of it is
submission to Christ, as Lord and ;Vas.
ter, whose we are and whom we serve.
This peace begins with the forgiveness
of God, bat it tan only be kept by com-
munion, by a life of diseipieship, follow-
ing Christ, thinking his thoughts, and
dOilig hie will, ancl choosing his way.
So, it is not it peace with the world
by compromise, by bete connivann, by
giving in to its .spirit. But this peen
is ponible even when io the world there
Lq tribuletion. Adversity lit its oppor.
ttenity. With the toar of life in nen
and brain, eve can still be eaten Ds the
bus,'.' market-pi:tee, in the eroWded
sheet, amid tlut strife of tongues and
the Weary Ways ,of Men* We rah he at
pfnce bemuse onr Immix Are fixed.
Vier(' IS no rOOM for fear or lasting
tronble. qty penec T give unto you. Let
yonr heart he troubled, -neither idt
We, afraid."Thott wilt keep 11101 in per -
feet pew wIttem mind Is eteyed tra thee,
lent -use lit trended in theed
THE URUGUAYAN POTATO,
new spafica Of white, potato has for
iolue years peen been eultivated in
rintee hunt plants fintrid itt tertiguay.
enegivally a eery hitter toner, the
Antelicen beeolnes,
ter inner, or yoor .,y,:ar.= of (Intention,
to admit able foal pi Alien Jt yield itt
ettendeto. and it i, exempt front tbe
inel iliee that et t apt; t lie orein ty poi es
tee It fermi best ia emiet eon, its ren
tile habitat beinir ihe inanity thorn of
the liner elereehee itt 'rentiee. 1.1.4
flowers beN c a j.141041.. -like *Idol., end A
delicate pin fume hie alresnly been ea-
trotea front them. Aftcr tow planting
the plant petpetuates Mel from the
lanhen rOots itt the SAIL