The Wingham Advance, 1911-11-23, Page 3tioalth for Dory Wow .
No More Headed:is
MIP11.1.*”101,
From Weaknen and Despair Then..
liande Have Been Reetored to Ref,
but Cleod Health by D. Harrill.
tont Pills.
That sick wanton aro made well by
Dr, Hamilton's Pine is proved In the
following letter:
'Tot years' 1 -Wu thin aud delicate.
; lost 'colter and was ea.sily tired; a
yellow pallor, pimples and blotches oe
JAiy face were not only mortifying to
my. feelinge, but because 1 thought
myskin would never look med.
again I :grew despondent. Then ride ap-
'petite failed. I grew very weak. Variotte
remedies, pills, tonies and tablets I
tried without permanent benefit. A visit
to my sister put into nty hands a, box
of pt. Hamilton's Pills, .She placed re-
liance Upon therm mid now that 'they
have nutde me a well woman Lemuel
not Ise without them whatever they
might east. I found Dr. Hamiltons
by. their.. mild, yet searching action
very Suitable to the dentate chem.
ter of a wornants nature. They
never once geiped me, yet they es.
tablished reularkty. My appetint
grew -by blood red and pure -heavy
rings under my eyes disapeared,
and to -day my skin is as clear and
unwrinkled as when I was a 'girl.
Dr. Hamilton's Pills did it all.
The above etraightforward •letter front
Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of A well-known
citizen iu Rogersville, is droof sufficient
that Dr. Hamilton's Pills are a wonder-
ful woman'a medicine. Ilise no other
pill but Dr, IMmilton'e, 25c per box,
All dealers or the Catarrhozone Co.,
Ifingeton, Ontario.
•
THE FUTURE OF CHINA.
Writing from Chungking, China,
Prof. Geo. A. Dorsey gives some hints
of the eonditions which make China a
difficult problem to -day, He kayo the
two elements,. Chinese at$ foreign? are
to be encountered inevery eomiuunity.
"Strongest, of course, is the Chinese
ee-
nient. W the two forties at work amoeg
the Chinese the conservative still helds
the field. The gaubuts, consulates; tied
eruissions-they are dirt ,,ef 'Chungking
as barnaeles .are -Of a. ehip. It is luu•dly
fair, however, he says, to liken them
to barnitelesj'for that implies thatthey
impede progress. But he affirms that, es r-
tainly; the gunboats e•efd the consulate
add nothing. Gunboats and consulates
o not necesettrily o togethed. But it is
significant that they usually tra'vel in
pairs in China. They represent "the Big
Stick"; and he is of opinion that the
"BigStiek" policy is mit good fop the
missions. To it he traces a decline in
the Chunking. Missions front 50,000 to
3,000. Says he' "The whole gunboat idea
is inconsistent with Christianity, That
Whieli prompts men to go ferth iuto all
lands and preach the gospel is no ex-
cuse for following it up with a pop .°'
toryfind a guhlibat, even less' for de-
manding that for every Christian killed
a life shall be paid."
In Chungking foreigners meet with no
open hostility; but they are disliked.
Foreigners went there uninvited, backed
hy for.. That must alWays bekept in
mind, When China has resisted this
force eho has -always come off second
hest Prof Dorsey thinks Chiba Tenet de-
-velop claws and teeth, or be destroyed.
China may wake up and snaked the
West pa tt A terrible Freefor its in-
roads on her country and .its careless-
uese of her rights And wishes...Ae Prof.'
Dorsey says. "The race of carnivores,
the British lion, the Russian bear, the
American eagle, eta, have much to my
abent peaceful intentions, .Nevertheless
they are in China fors their own ends.
China does not want them; she cannot
help herself. The law of the eurvidal of
the fittest decrees that she must change
her weapons or be defeated." The fu-
ture of China is fraught With import
-
gime to the world.
Aft
C
SToPs couatis_ .1114:9'sgtENI
SHE WAS WILLING TO' DIVIDE.'
Dr, IL H. Wiley, the rood expert, was
talking at a luncheon in Washington
about a food adulterator, says the gar
man.
"Ilia first offer," said Or. 'Wiley,
"sounded, on the face of ft, fair to the,
public, but it was in reality as uufair
u the offer of the „divorcee, •
"A wife, after tha divorce, said to her
husband:
" AM willing to let you have the
baby half the time.'
"Good,' he said, rubbing his hands:
'Splendid!'
'Yes," she eemused, 'you may have
bite nighte: "
• • wee.
The aviator can bern his bridgea be-
hind him with inipunity,„
-
wesese ;eels sgeriddlaa
PftEVENLON 'Of COLDS.
The fa is the sttsion 'for "eittithiusd"
cold*. Many of them ,is his *seeded
by the exereise of 041.0awl prudenee;
and in no ruatter do ears And prudence
yield better returns. The followithe on
'How to Avoid Colds' containe many
good hints:
.A. idelds are eatehinge mostly front
°there,.
therefore--
.Avoidpeople who have Mile: •
Avoid people who have recently_ had
pneumonlit. (Within two years.), '
Avoid crowds.
Avoid hot plates.
. Avoidbadly yeaellated.places.
COlde -can he mania irom one's eelf,
'therefore -
Keep the mouth, nose and tousles
deo.
Aveld, gorging with food or drink. •
Avoid eleoltolies,
C, The germ is; a factor, but the Inunati
body is also, dherefore-
'Avoid' -getting' `overwarni or .overcold
in the entire- body or any part -thereof:
D. Coldscannot be ettught when de-
sistence is high, therefore build up, heat -
making powers II-
Sleehing out. •
Vold baths,
Moderate eathig,
Exercising, eapeelally M the ,eden
also on rainy or snowy days.
J. If a. cold has been contracted -
Do not spit- carelessly.
Do not !tame or cough carelessly. ..
Destroy all nose and mouth eecretionns
;la If the attack is accompanied by
aches and fevers, avoid 'pneumonia by -
Going to bed.
Decreasing Wine.
Taking a purge.
•
Taking atedicalecounsel, •
-a
LOS ANGELES' GREAT AQUEDUCT,;
In constructing the new waterworks
systeth of Los Angelo, California, by
which the waters of the Sierra Nevada
„
are to be carried 250 miles southward
through the longeet aqueduct in the
world, some method had to be devised
for eroeting deep aqueducts and gulchee.
The Romans overmans these natural obs
staelee by tier on tier of eonerete arches
raised .to the elevation at which the
water wag to be earried across, but mod
-
ere eineineering employs steel, and in a
number of instances the teeter will he -
carried across chums by means of In.
verted steel siphons, the outlets of which
are ;slightly lower than the nlets, so
that the water will traverse the distance
by means of gmvitys-Populir Meehan.
iss.
. .
, .
NEURALGIA CURED
This Painful Trouble is Due to
Poverty (*the. Blood.
Neuralgia is one of the most pain-
ful maladies that afflicthumanity.,
The trouble is•ustially seated in the face
ami head, follow;ni the coarse of some
nerve, but it attacks other parts of the
system as well. It is characterized by
acute pains, sometimes .ifeady, at others
spasmodic and deiting, headacheand a
feeling as though the fomhead was a
band of iron. Medicen authorities agree
that•ueuralgia is a cry of the nerves for
better food, and that is the blood is purl.
fted and enriched the trouble will disap-
pear. This is the reason why Dr. Wil.
limns' Pink Pills cure even the most se-
vere cities of neuralgia.- They actually
inake uew, eich blood, whieli feeds the
tired, stet ved nerves and thus cure the
trouble, et the same time leaving the
sufferee ein better health in every way
than was formerly enjoyed. In proof we
give the case of Mr. Brooks, of Au-
rora, Ont., who say: "About two years
ago, while working in Collingwood, 1
was attaeked with neuralgias which be-
came so bad that I was frequently un-
able to go to work, The pain would start
over my right eye and would theigspread
to the whole face and ca,used me the
greatest agony, I'was 'under the are of
a good (teethe, but his treatment did not
do more than give me temporary re-
lief, and I was therefore an almost eon -
stela sufferer. Acting on the advice of
My wife, 1 finally decided, to give Dr,
Williams' Pink ,Pills a trial, and 1 an;
profoundly* thankful that I did so, as in
the course of a few weeks I began to im-
prove, .and after a further use of the
Pills the trouble' disappeared and I have
not since had any trace of it. I may
also add that while taking the Pills nay
weight increased by- nine pounds, -which
shove that the Pills are a body builder
as well as a nerve restorer."
.Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail
at 50 cents a box. or six boxes for $2.50
from The Dr. Williams' Medicifie Co.,
Brockville, Out.
-
WHAT FATHER TOOK.
He came down the garden palliest sad,
5i:wrought' figure. She watched him With
anxious eyes.
"How die father take it?"
"Ile took it -.well," replied the young
man.
nOti, am so glad, George," she cried,
pressing her hands together.
"Are you?" replied fs'eorge, flopping
forlornly by her side. "Well, Iscon't titer
that I ern, dear. At first your father
wouldn't listen to nue"
"Why didn'e you tell hitn that yon had
$2,500 in the bankr as I told you to?"
she exclaimed.
"I did, after all else bed failed," rin-
sWered George; dejectedly. .
"And what did he do then?" ,
"Dol" .echoed the young man, passim;
his hand weatily through his hair. "He
borrowed it:"
CANNY WILHELM,
The Kaiser has .put down his mailed
boot. He has decided that for thesfuture
no member Of the, Hohenzollern family
tell be allowed to finanee a theatrical
predvetIon. He does not mean to run
the risk of having a Imelda' comedy
daughter -es -new.
11111i$11121 1010
ililli1111111111:1111$1111d111181111211141110110;11$419111illro
eiereeteavatelefeereme
To the busy man time Is money. Why Wiate ft ? The old
*my of shaving Is elow. It's mimeo, too -you may gash
rain facts any day. Beside, eaving time, the
GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR
.we, your fete. With it you can shave us fest as you
ctitseerio scratches,
year ilealer to threw you the_OVI.L11TTE. if he Lee eei the Issas
or *if Oaftkintc. WM* la. We MN Nee that
its ere etesouses. The 011.1.ZT/r
GILLETTE. SAFETY RAZOR eft CO. mindere ed -r
cAtara, ammo, sliver %plated reser
WON* soil Fe e tern 43 5 t. Aliefertier St.,11foireriel. erld I doe- Witte", $8.
NO lilleedetim NO MORINO
311
•
ll'auF,TooriP
Toronto Mon Cured
Hettyle Seri Seys it le Given te the
teem meant; nothing...lee zioneense. Hut
thing mut have a purpose. I used tO
'• The -only use for money is to keep it in
'Mos It--forhealth or eumetning.
use. A railliou donate bathe•bank down
that vase. 'ravel hi MI good, it You (Milt
tteo ceng avoer,a I1jutemei that because
thy -Cranium out earning' other militons 15
collect rare editiens, But peePle began
MONEY LIKEFLOUR.
0.4orn•rfnlgi
a.egettel 1111111011. And it means that
• know new to nee it, iTinit's my pleasure
mit-10111.y. Only the. verse poor. tweed their
Ihnere an egtravagant peOple..'We think
too nurch. about clothier, but • yet that's
wily human neture. The same impulim
governe every One Of us -to 1004 succese-
rut before others. Now, very rich" people
are known to be able to aftord good
good clothee-eo they donn.have to get
sent, The only people get fele
clothes are those who still have•
to prove
their succese-and they think the cetthes
look liae succese. But tea nice to bp
called a Yankee,, jutit the same -nicer
than anything else. Vt'eere the liveet nes
tive there Is,
I have an.and3itien. I want to own a
big yacht some day and cruise for six
weeks. I'd -like that: • I sit here flame -
Ulnae and make pictures of it- and draw
plant -it's be the biggest yacht ever
made, and everything in It is to be a few
eizes larger than things In other yachts.
I Ora want to burin my bead' going
through doers. No! Maybe.it•wOtet ever
be built like I can tee it in mY rzijiid. 11
I had it I'd get tired of it.
• 400.01.••••••••*•••,,
STREET. EXPRESSIONS.
(John Stettin)
"Ten to eight we'll elect -a"
eLitele at the poor gook's hat
"Boss, ean You hen) a Peer fellow that
Met got in t own?"• •
"This LS the winclfeet corner in the
eity."
zny"Staryle,nId*wnant you to put in a vote for
ae Umtata I wouldn't bring an umbrel-
la, arid, of eourse-,P
UI Intolerable . Ruch to be Lb"'
Louie Post-Diseatchd
(Iuterview with Edware IL Greee itt elt.
we use money becaUse we KnoNv itew.
We aren't afraid et it. We're used to it.
Yost aren't, but we know all about It.
Now, I'm not *nate to handle a bemired
time:zone dellare. It means no mere to us
• then -so much eleur to ehtecook. Ana tee
ttutieoptite wit int million. 4 know how
I sieve no use for 141e people. Nor for
idie pieesuree-amusements that den't
IlaVe sante.use. Thane wny I like comedy
' •bese, the other playa are idle if ttleY
don't teach seine lesson; But it's a good
thine, to larth, and comet:item are useful
•
•
• •
Ir. 3„ B.
Hooper,
'roroato; '
ByCuticera Soap ancl Culienra Ointment •
"I eset want to sae a good word for Ceti-
curnaP nnd Ointment. Four or five years
ago I was in Fort Aneur, anti 1 had an attack
of the Iten. It certaialy was an Intolerable
nuisance. The Itching was Principally et'
nights betore I went to bed. The thighs
were especially affected,
went to two doctors about it, 'and tried
More than one remedy. 1 was heginging te
think the coraplaint was incurable. when L
was telling my trouble to a barber, and,ho
said that he would guarantee to cure me. Ho
told me to take e hot bath, Use Outlaws,
Soap, and than apply Cuticura Ointment.
I took his adviee, and, sure enough, the itch
vanished. I had probably been troubled with
the itch tor two or three mouths before X
trkd Calcine. Soap and Ointment, and they
vompletely cured me of that intolerable
nuisance.After one Warm bath with Cuti-
cum Soap and use of the Cuticura Ointment
I was never troubled with the Itching again..
Anything thLs testimonial I would be pre-
pared to swear to in a Mat of jaw." (Signed)
.T. E. Hooper, 268 Parliament tweet, Toronto,
Jan, 10, 1911.
,• For more than a generation Cancers Soap
and. Ointment have afforded the speedteet,
simplest and most econconicel treatment for
skin and scalp humors., Sold by druggists
,S and dealers everYtthere. A liberal sample of
cad), with 32 -peg book, sent free, to any
address, by the Potter Drug & Chem, Corp,
• fg Columbus Ave., Boston, IL sa A.
REAR ADMIRAL MURDOCK.
Rear Admiral Joseph S. Murdock
is on the job to protect- American in-
terests in China. On his arrival at
Shanghai he ordered $50 American
marines to Hankow to help in the
protection of foreign interests.
THE STREET A STAGE.
(Bence, in Vaneouver Sunset.)
The streets are a stage, set some-
times to melodrama, or to it pageant;
More often, to a cemedy. As in smile
Zizabethan piece, we who witness it
may be both spectators and players. In
'Vancouver the play is never dull, the
scenery is often striking in color, and
the players often picturesque in interest.
In larger cities the play is more spec-
tacular, with lest of human interest, per-
haps, and more emphasis on the "pro-
perties." The play is Always improvised,
and the street sends up accompaniment
to the piece that is always playing; the
comedie humaine. It is difficult to ren-
der the Amick -shifting movement of the
street types and scenes, and he would
he a clever artist Who eould in his
book catch the essence of the eternal
comedy. It is the timeliness of it all
OM has such interest and chum. The
street has movement, not Mere motion;
the people yo Imre are of the street,
not merely in it. In Vancouver is little
little slum life, little crime, lit-
tle to be seen that is unpleasant or nig.
gestIve.
•
FRESH FOR THE BISHOP.
"Look here, Dinah," said Blinks as he
opened a questionable Ogg at breakfast,
"is this the freshest egg You can find?"
• "Now, gull," replied Dinah, "We've
done got it half dozen laid this mother'
suh, but de bishop's corain' dowel hYar
In three months, suh, and tve'l savin'
ail de fresh ales for him, sub.' -"Harp-
er's Weekly,
4.*
'•
Cold Settles in the Back
It hits people in a tender spot and
znakes it might hard to brace ups Ner-
reline takes that kink out of yottr spinel
column inshortorder; it es:soave that's
why- relief comes sis soon. Netviline
penetrates,. that's why it cures.. Five
times stronger than ordinary remedies,
Nervilhfe can't fail to cure lame lutek,
lumbege, sciatica and neuralgia. ;ler.
viline is instant death to all museular
pain. Pot nearly fifty years the larg-
est selling liniment in Canada. Better
try it.
16.0.*1
• THE WASHERWOMAN.
In a veil' humble cot, .
in a rather quiet spot,
In the sada and in the Soap
Washed a woman fun of hope;
WerkIng, singles, all day loos,
In it sort qf unuertone;
'With a Saviour for a friend,
Ho will keep me to the end.'
Sereetimes, happening along,
,/,niee beard the senu-song,
And I used tiometittes to smile
more in syeroathy than guile.
leUt I never said a word
In regard to what.1 heard,
As she sang about her friend;
Who Weuld keep her to the end.
Not in xerrew nor in glee,
Working all day long was she,
Arid her children, three or four
Ineying round her on the floor,
Ilut in moutone the Song
She was humming an day long;
'With a Saviour for a friend,
He will keep inc to tho end.'
It's a tong I do net slim',
For 1 ;scarce believe a tiling
Of the ineries that are told.
Of the miracles of old.
But I know that her bend
Is the anodyne of grief,
And win always be a friend
That win keep ber to the end.
Just a trine lOnemorne she,
Just as poor as poor tan lge,
But her apirila always rose
Like the butanes In the close.
And, though widowed and alone,
Cheered her )vIth the trio:Atone
01 a Saviour and a Wend -
'Who -would keep. her to the en&
't have seen her rtta and scrub
On the Wilelibtiard III the tub,
WIll:o the baby sopped In Ruts
Relied *..d tumbled in the fith:Ps,
Crr teas Paddling In tho pool
With 'old eeisrore in a spool,
Ithe Mill hununliog of her frietiti,
Who will keep Ler to the end.
• Menu hopes and Minute .reds
Have their root ill htlillati needs,
And T slinual not wish t,. strip
Vont that westierwon,an's thl
• Any sang teat Oili, tan
tOtem
tiv heee sous tem ltrittg,
r the Welhatt has a file:el
11.0 WIII keep tier to the end.
. . --le. P. Ware.
A WONDERFUL CASE
Three Months in Hospital and Came
Out Uncured.,
.....1.•••:•••••••••
Zam-Buk Cured Him In Few Weeks.
Mr. Fred MasOn, the well-known up-
holstered end mattresa manufacturer of
St, Andrew's N. B., says:
"I had eczema on my knee, which
cieteeed, me terrible pain and inconveitis
mice, ,The soie,paTts woulda itch and
hurn and tingle, and then when rubbed
Or scratched, would became very pain-
ful. When the kuee got warm, it burn-
ed worse, and the itching awl • burning
and smartingwere :Almost ianbeitrable. I
tiled rezieue remedies, but got no better,
so I decided to go th Montreal and take
special treatment. 1: receivedtreatment
at the Montreal General hospital for 13
weeks, but at dhe end of that tiene I
wits not elided, and almost gave in. A
friend advised ma to give Zain-Buk a
'Almost na soon as applied, Zain-Buk
stop* the itching end the irritation.
perseverel .with the balm, and it was
soon evident.that it *would do me geed.
Each day, the pain was " reduced, the
sore spots began to Leal, and by the time
I had ueed a few boxee of 2iinelluk I'
WAS quite cured. , •
'Since then Zam-Buk has cured blood-
poieon in my finger, and atet time when
my finger was in Rua a terrible condi:
tion that I feared it would have to be
amputated."
Per eezenut, blood:poisoning, piles, ul-
cers, sores. abscesses, varicose ulcers,
had leg, geoid sores. chapped hande, cuts,
burns, bruises and all skin injuries and
diseases. Zane -Bak is withont equal.
50e box, all druggists and stores or
post ftee front Zam-Buk Co„ Toronto,
for price, 'Refuse imitations.
4.
HER TALENT.
. (Pittsburg (3azette-Times.)
:Neither wise nor yet discerning,
All her little store of learning
Censisted of such trifles as she had learn-
• ed by chance.
„In her talk she was not witty,
And you couldn't call her pretty,
Yet she never lacked admirers' nor for
. partners at a dance.
In faCe and thrm this fairy
Was -well, very ordinary; • .•
Ifer clothes were inexpensive -the women
called them loudt
But at every ball and party
• Her reception was meet hearty
Promehe Men who all would gather about
her in a crowd.
She was tiny and soubrettish,
And Just it bit coquettish,
But for music, art and letters* she had no
gift at all.- •
Ref fortune was most meager,
• Yet all the men seemed eager e•
On the slightest prover -anon et her little
feet to fall.
leer cookingwas atrocious. • •
A I1 would make a man ferecious;
But by men this girl,yesvoted a most
engaging ell. •• -
Yes, 'every man who knetv her
Persisteritly Would, woo •her,. . •
Per -she gat.° him rapt attention while
lie talked about himself!
Rnetus-"What you tink is de mat-
tah vif me, doctahr Doctor -"Oh,
nothing but the 'Chickenpox, I guess."
Rastus (getting nernotts)-"I 'dare on
mak honah, doctor. I elfet been nowhar
I could ketch dad" --Medical Times.
A BOND
IS A FIRST MORTGAGE
. q A bond is te first mortgage
Split up into denominations of
nee hundred dollar's and upwards.
Bonds are a • compatatively
modem krill of %vestment.
. Pretioutly a corporatimi or un••
dertaking desiring tie raise money
against their assets *as rectuired
to Wade it In One or deVeral large
mortgages.
•41 NoWadaya an Julie Of ben&
is made instead.
ig bonds are a convenient form
of reortgage,-eind those beide
•-which we offer are thdroughly
I
ventral
to determine that
the epayment Of ihteriest and
principal is absolutely assured.
fie We hoe literature More tally de-
scribleg bonds In is well re
*pacific Week which We will Ito slid tet
• seed upon toplicatiett. Seed me it.
ROYAL
SECURITIES
CORPORATION
LiNitto
SANK Olt MONTRPAL 131111.61nell
YONDE AND CtUEEN ZTL
TORONTO "
R. M. WIRTZ Mottagor
etOttenristertueare-NAtleAg-tONOON(1040.)
•••• -
e
STANDARD
FAVORITE NM
'MADE 11\ir
CANDA
WHAT IS TRH A.VHRAGB OP A COW?
' (Canadian Parra.)
1 ;Some attention Is being given in dairy
cireme, though not In Canada, to what
is.the average lite of it cow. It is an In-
teresting question, and at the same time
a ditficult One to obtain accurate Infer -
minion loon. In Holland the average
lite of a cow ss placed at elght youiv.
Tlie dairymen of that country declare
Shat lf a herd -of cows be taken at an
gIven age, say, ef Mur years, with the
best of usage, a maiority ss1 them will be
found unprofitable after they have at-
tained eight years of age. lcurthermore.
It Is Maimed that there 18 a large per-
centage of mortality among good cows
at that age. There are cows, however,
and good ones. Leo, that have proven
pregnable up to twelve and =teen years
of"age. But, as a rule, dairymen get
rid of their cows before they get to titeee
ages and replace thetn by younger ones,
going on the nrinciple that Mien a cow
becomee old Its usetulness Is gone. 13e -
•fore• the advent of the scales and the
Babcock test it lee ispeoehle that the av-
erage me of a cow Whs longer than It ie
to -day. In these days when dairymen
are sizing up their cows, sending the
poor ones to the block, and.retalning only,
the meet profitable ones, the average 1110
of a cow has boll materlaly reduced.
..When the weeding out process is over
and dairymen bave settled down, to pro-
duce as much milit as possible from the
food consumed, we may expect fill ins
crease in the average life of a cow. The
quee.tion Is an interesting one at all
events, and we would be glad to have the
views of practical dab•ymen upon it,
There can be no denial that the profits
front your far marc mighty safe In the
bank. "but the other fellows gets the ben-
efit of this money which should be voile
Ing around gathering more for you. • It
Is very true that your spare money win
reelize sometimes five per cent. by tak-
ing a mortgage or two. These are the
investmentsthat farmers are generally
familiar with, but what does the city
fellow do? He puts his money back in
his business, and the farnter who wants
good use for his money must put part of
it back Into his farm. You need Imple-
ments, fresh stock, znot•e land, extra help,
fertilizers, or something else which. will
help to increase your- erop teturns. You
will find this • a profitable investment
Isn't it reasonable to believe that the oth-
er fellow is willing to borrow your mon.
ey at three per cent. to 4 ptr cent. that
he's going to make a Ilttle 'for himself?
Sickness is usually
caused by the accu-
mulation of waste
matter and impurities
within the body.
• Dr. Morse s
Indian
Root Pills,
enable the bowels, the
Icidneys,thelungs awl '
the pores of the skin
to throw' off these ' •
hnpurities. Thtte they
prevent or cure die.
ease. 12
• 25c. a box.
1.•
RBORVITS mamma.
Conspictieus Change ii AtlitUde of 0 °LDS
Some Jewish Organigailane.
E E
L....over the attitttde of eeveral publie
A. rienarkable ehattge lute rtgeroly • ' •
B
bodies and ore,ane of puleie opinion to. .
ward the wideepread eggeement iniewit
Ti e Alija uec Israelite of PEtris. n'.ils,i H
.....„, •
h..., „,,...„,.. ,,,,,,..„ro„,.. the, in.,re-
.--„,„----........
meta, has ehanged he alai -toile anti tile ,e, s e
Teraelite of Cineinierti hue iii tweet. le• Oar Torrihie Expenonoo Shows
AnPi relent:wed the:r former anti-Zionie- How porimashAgtiti Ela 6 Every
irozoit uv on
tie at tit IWO and flo0 tivd. ili'lea -1 4 tv!a•
inale friendship towardeZhaiisen Home to Prevent Colds.
.,..
• en the tiro Latin: fefek fee reystiti for Itt,e. c. s.
tbe -change is given *with aome platptibil. $age r s c r,
ity; these paPersadrelave . Omit while 13111 ae'i.ed-
Zionism. Ives purely political and eon- n lal.;
Willed on the lines .101 doyen by its •city, leio.,
founder, the late Dr.-ellerel, they were writes:
opposed to it, as they tonsidered any "4 feel it
political aspirations of Jove both futile 11. duty to
and dangerous. But it IS contended by
these organs that at the late tenth eon- AignyusedInal!,
geese the White' side of '4o:deo wee
fore at liboty exprege the etenpathy opeak o r
so succesefully with the sentimental Zis "My troll,
dieted • like
onnisin that lookwith Mete but not bia Arst
with desire, toward the hunt of Lite earn° aftel
fathdes, •
It will be dIfieult to prove the confer!.
tion that the late Congress suede tiny
suit fundamental chauge in the prtit-
ciples of Zioniem. It reeognized that in
the present condition of Turkey the
fatrnediate application of Dr. Herzl's
ideas would be impracticable, but so far
as we could alecern, the final Rini of the
movement, as interpreted by the Con-
gress, remained the same, and Zionism
remains as national as it ever was.
Perhaps a more complete explanation
of the remarkable vette face made by
these journals as well as by the allience
Is the discovery that they have made
that the more ideal spirits of the exing.
la gr ippo
eight or
nine years
ago. a gath-
ering in, naY
head a n d
neuralgia. I
suffered
most all the
t 1 in e. MY
nose, ears
and oyen
were badly
affected ftar
the last two years. / think from youi
description of internal catarrh that 1
=net bare had that also. I suffered
very oeveroly.
"Nothing ever relieved me like Pee
rime. It keeps me from %kit* cad,
Mre.
5. Sagerser,
er generation are almost without exets.p. "With the exception of some deg -
tion Zionistle in spirit and that if they nese I am feeling perfectly cured; I
kept up their attitude Of oppoeitiou they am forty-six years old,
would find themselves left in the latish, "I feel that worde are inadequate tt
-e-American Hebrew.•' e-1Pre118 my praise for Perms."
.......04*•••••••.•••••••••••.••••••••••.•
TOLD HER TO REST
BUT SHE COULDN'T
But Mrs. Cheff foUnd a oure
in Dotici's Kidney Pills.
She Suffered From Rheumatism,
Neuralgia and Other Symptoms of
• Diseased Kidneys-Dodd's Kidney
Pills Made Her Strong and Healthy.
Peveril, Vitudreuil Co., Que.--(Spec-
fal.)-One more of the tired, pain -
wrecked women of Canada has found
relief and new life in Dodd's Kidney
Pills. She is tire. dos. Chef 1, of this
place, and elm never tires of telling her
neighbors of her Wonderful mire or sing-
ing the praises of the good old remedy
that brought it about.
"I suliered from Rheumatism Netu•al-
gift, Violent headaches And Palpitation
of the Heart," Mrsn Chef! states. "My
back ached. 1 was always tired and ner-
vous and 1 had weak spells. My doctor
told me to just rest, but that was just
what L couldn't do, till reading of the
cures of others lea me to try Dodd's
Kidney Pills.
• "From the first dose they helped me.
I soon left my bed and started to do
my ordinary housework.
"I took in all twelve hoes of Dodd's
Kidney Pills and now my health is ex-
cellent. I reeommena Dodd's Kidney
Pills to all suffering woreen.”
Thousands of Canadian women will
tell you that Dodd's Kideey ]?ills are
the one sure relief or suffering women.
FOUNTAINS.
Fountains are public and private; they
stand for beauty; fertility and life; they
are venerable, they are holy, they eall
forth Worship They reach back to the
everlasting hilts, their tinkling music
tells of Med. The running ihater has
worn a csoinhel in .the marble Hp, and
the devout has kissed that lip in venera-
sipiOnn.se fountain sealed secluded as
The foun e
ntaitandsr m
footherhood,
a plentiful family was e blessing, my
in a, garden, concealed from the stare of
the vulgar, sweet in privacy, delicacy
and modesty. God is a fountain; God
In Christ is a fountain of life. 0, the
' cleansing, the refreshing the restoring,
wash and be clean, drink and drink
abundantly, beloved. Elisha poured wat.
er en the hands of Elijah, why? The
copper pot with a long spout was an im•
itation fountain.• Still water was count-
ed dead, running water was counted liv-
ing. •
The human race is thirsty. "Whose
drinketh of this water shall thirst again,
but whose drinketh of the water that I
shall give him shall never thirst," says
Jesuseto. the woman at the Well, • What
millions have been refreshed! The hunt-
ed martyrs or the fitst cetithrtv,. the
hiding ones itt the Catacothlis, did they
not drink? • a•
Come down the ages, who can mention
all? Augustine with Ma mighty heart,
pouring out a flood of affection, demist.
ating the Christian Church for thirteen
centuries. Did not, Joan Hues drink?
Was not Luther refreshed? They all
drank of this water and were made
strong. They left their "Amen? on the
fountain steps, and there they are to-
day, millions of them; they almost block
tbe way, so great is the aecuntolation.
Their benedktious return, the waters
tun to the sea,are gathered up into the
eleuds, fell as rain down. run again in
AAMPha
Ther why thouldn't YOU have the extra
interest on yOur Own money? Our riehttet
ferment are the men who not only 01 -
vetted all their Bine hut also Invested
Most of their spare cash iri tele- businein.
Get nexti
THE JERSEY AS A MILK COW.
(Sy Anglo -'Scots,)
It is generally hupposed that the Jersey
Is a buttet cove and of ..comparettvely
Httte nae for the milk teade, but meaty
contend that this is a Mistake, and that
in oeveral eases herds are kept tor pro-
duoingmilk for gale. Generally the .pro-
ducer IS the retailer, for wholesalers will
not give the price for Jersey milk that
it 14 Worth, for the• Men who renting WO
own milk fron't Jersey cows eau general-
ly itectire it verygood tease of customepa.
The breed's perforinance at the dairy
show Indieate that it eim be used to ad-
t•arettire for•mint production. The beet
nine cows in the .Terse' ohms averaged
nue on 42 tanks per day, and tine at an
es-eraged period of lactation of over He
days or nearly half way through. Con.
sidering tho fact that thoy are small
cows, and consequently coneume Mae
than the big -grade Shortherna, it 14 hot
eurprieing teat many find them profit.
able for milk -selling dairying. In butter
they OM equally and On the aver-
age Were not much under the big cows,
• IC the difference hi laetation la consider-
/. Jersey breeders have Meet. at their
.cowe calf In spring to get the advantage
of the .Surtuner wagi. for buttetantakInsee
awl some of them were it bit :dale. More
of the graves. are calved woutotort tO
come •in for the winter milk eontrtiets,
so that they bad sc)1110 advantage in Gas
eistmeet, though, of eoursee.tvient points,
site calettinted out anontmee is inade for
1111 11,
THE L11141T.
'Tits 110 ego of Men ehetabermait14; ff1r1
. .
And things mote nnomaloan -.yet; •
Bet the letest, the sttangest, Most"
startling of these
IS that efeatitre, e 10.euffrag4'ilfr.
• e-Pitelt,
one perpetual round, lainging life and
healing and sah,atIon.
"The Word dwells in tie toglay with a
halo of mystic vindleations about it that
it could not poasess in the begInuing. It
comes to U5 not only as it message from
God, but trenattloue with the rotintless
"Amens" it has awakened in the hereic
souls It has fashioned and inspired. The
nemeses upon,which Gest% servatits in
every age huve hoped receive back Into
themselves eublinte reactioks from the
spiritual forces they have kindled with,
iu the sited, and eome to us vocal with
new significance. The experiences of the
devout and the. believing in all ages are
gathered back into the divine message
by which such souls were helped and
earictified. and through his living voice
within us we realize the doetrine of
the coninituden of saints. It is in this
high sit:ritual sense that the chureh is
the interpreter and the guardiau of
God's Word."
The drink is passed, the men are away,
the women have joined Mary to call her
blessed, only the "Atnens" remain. "Of
the inereasse of Ills Kingdom and Govern-
ment there shall be no
-II. T. Miller.
••••••••••••*1.4. IIII•••••••••••••..
BISMARCK'S ADVICE.
When Bismarck was at the height of
hig fame one of his supporters 'ventured
to enlist the Oltaneellor's amistanee
obtaining an oppointment for Ids son.
The proud father expatiated on his son's
capacity, "He is admirably equipped,"
said the father, "and 'speaks seven lan-
guages."
"Ale" said Bismarek; then reflecting
for a few seconds; he added: "If he
speaks seven languages make him a ha,
tel manager." -From the London Globe.
SICKLY BABIES CRY
FIEALTHY BANES SMILE
Baby's cry indicatee distress -his smile
health and contentment. The mother
may be sure there never was a baby
who cried for the fun of it, Baby's dis-
position is naturally a happy one, and
it is only distress such as may be
brought on by a disordered condition of
the stomach bit bowels that can change
this. So, mothers, to keep your baby
happy you must keep him well -Baby's
Own. Tablets will do this, Concerning
them Itlys. Chas. Potvin, Causapeteia,
N. S., writes: "Baby's Own Tablets have
proved an exeellent remedy for my baby.
I had been using syrups, but they failed
to help him, and be cried Constantly.
The Tablets cured him, and now he is a
fat, healthy child." The Tablets are sole
by medicine dealers or by mall at
cents a box from The Dr. Williame
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
4•••••••.**
SORROW AND LTAPPINESS.
The waves which sorrow lashes up
Around els stand high between us and
the worldand make our ship solitary
in the midst of a haven full of vessels.
Richter.
For a, num who knows how to sorrow
rightly, knows how to be glad with a
holy joy; and when he is happiest, it is
as though them ere a something of
God throbbing in his bosom. It ia AS
Battle that we are happiest; and so eni•
tering makes for happihess, because it
helps to make the soul, Oh, what good
sorrow does us, often! To many a one,
while he is happy, the outer world teele
eternal; bht as soon as he is sorrow-
ful, all worldly existence is only a film,
beeause God and his soul feel so close.
• William Mountford,
elS4e
t.'4A
A
II I.. •
NA:
The Lamp That
Saves The Eyes
Mickel* naturally stover think of
possible strain on their eye 'sight when
pork% over a fastinatiAg book.
It is up to you to see they do not ruin
their young ayes these on evenings
Ly reading under a poor light.
. The Ray° Limp is an insurante
against eft troubles, alike for young
and old.
The I4yo is a low.priced lamp, but k is abstracted on the soundest
scientific principles, and there h not a better lamp made at any price.
It it easy on the eye because its light is so soft and white and
widely diffused. And a Rayo Lamp never flickers.
Ekuay righted wittoid removing iliac at eltiemey; essy no dem and
•, sad lasst ineuelteui, with heedseme eittel elex ja UMW Gillet elilee Ettiaten
A*kis*2etio,lsw 1art1iii:0;tryltreta aelite fot tleeripets Attila
,
"".
The Nate My Oil Coapoi thalfeil
lit 1910 Australia imperted inetere, bi-
eycles and parte to the value el £$30.-
236. Of tide amount X37,878 Caine frOal
Cenatia,
The index umber of the Isgonden
Eeonoutisit fell 17 points! during Detoltere
indicatiug a downward movement in the
cost of living in Great Britain.
111 '—
The York Lame liquitletiou develop-
ments go to support the view that tive
sliareholdere might here fared pretty
well Lad the amalgamation. scheme gouo
through,
The Ineia Rubber World eetimatee
that 12,000,000 golf balls are ifekl an-
nually iu the United State*, That mews*
at 50e end, $0,000,000 for the Item a
the sport.
**0
Rudyard Kipling was probably seek-
ing to test public patieace. When he
wrote and published. "The Female sad
the Species." It is it pretty nenseouts
dese-even frem Rudyard.
Montreal gelatine a birth rate of 38,45,
as against 18 in Paris and 16 in Billite
sels, 'Unfortunately Montreal dieo has
a death rate of 22.40 as against 10.7 in
Paris And 13,6 in Bru.ssele.
But if those vviseat speculators who
have been trying' to corner the market
in Chicago should, drop a few million dol-
lars, the general public will not %mete
many tears ever them.
We are informed by German statiettes
lens that 1 cent invested at 5 per teat,
compound interest at the 'beginning of
'the year A. D. 1 would now have growa
to the value of $29,018 followea by 84
Oat. Just our lnek; hadn't the eent in-
vested.
Italy says it expecte to be reimburs-
ed for the expense to which she is put
la occupying Trlpoli. Doulitlese ta Tur-
key that demand sounds like the effert
of a highwayman to collect pay for time
spent in the hold-up.
* It is a little too early yet to congra-
tulate the United States` peophe upon
the success of actions under the Sher-
man law in breaking up truth and com-
bines, The trusts are fertile in resource,
and it may take five or ten years to get,
it judicial deeision in some of these
cases.
4
A ease of bubonic plague has been dts-
covered. in the naval barracks at Shotley,
on the Suffolk coast, England. In the
middle ages this disease carried off a
third of England's population, It le bet-
ter understood now, and preventive med-
icine will probably be able to deal effi-
ciently with it.
•*
The New York Journal of Commerce
says a $65,000,000 merger to own and
control over 600 ten -cent stores deny
businese in all parts of the United States,
Canada and England is planned. Arneug
the names mentioned are those of P. Ws
Woolworth & Co., New York, and S. H.
Knox & Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Seventy-one case ss of violation of the
pure food laws were heard in New York
the other day, and finea and jail sen-
tences were inflicted. For selling fish
unfit for food, a penalty- of $100 was
imposed on a email dealer. Food is
dear enough in Canada now to be pro-
tected by the eourte; but punishment
of violations is rare.
e••
The year 1911 has been a record one
in salmon packing. The paek is esti.
mated as 3,000,000 caws of Alaska, la
350,000 eases of Puget Sound, 500,000
eases of Coliimbia. River spring and fall,
750,000 cases British Columbia, and
250,000 eases outside rivers, a total of
5,850,000 cases, or 000,000 eases mere
than any previous year in the history of
the ealmon business.
• - 40 -
The effort of the British and Irish.
Assodation to improve the qual-
ity of the wheat grown in the old eouu-
try would appear to have 'succeeded. A
hybrid grain, producing 4,9 buil/tele to
the acre, 66 pounds per bushel, and of
excellent sample, ha e been the result el
the experiments made. It it a hybrid
of the old English Rough Chaff and the
Canadian Red B'yfe. The Red Pyle. de-
terioratee when grown in Britain, but it
is said that the hybrid does not metier
in this way, and is equal hi every re-
Speet toehe best Canadian No. 1 Intrd.
The lIaasechueette Ilighvray (*mmta-
8101) a tabulation that eoveve
from December 1, 1010, to OeMbet
1911, that on the highways of thaetsite
theer were eighty-five deaths,divided as
follows: Pedestrians, 60; vecupants
motor vehicles, 20; bieyele rideta, 5; oe-
cupants of earriages, 3; street ear pee-
eengers, 1. There were 004 persons in-
jurea in the sante time; 419 oecupints
of motor vehicles, 395 pedestrians, 118
00eUpants Of Carriages, hiesycle riders,
and 0 etrest ear pitsseng`ersi. Reding in,
an 01101110Mb appears to be a danger-
otta pattintS.
This now Ilritish Idonte 8N:rotary halt
banned pr$e-fighte or boxing matehte
to be dvoided by a knockout. Be rules
•that the law is that if the ohjett and in.
tent of the eombatants were to litilktile
•KWh Other by violeut blows nail one
eeeld etdure it no longer the catzteet
W.19 illegal. •On the other band, a nut-
iieg mateb whoein the objett Wits to
v.iii by skill and not be severity et te•
itirfeti iufmtoa is tmittl. A legal !tont
Might Also, by the matiter is *WI it
ie eateletted, tlegeeerate into ita
?rite -fight.