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The Wingham Advance, 1907-04-18, Page 31 sageeteetitsfefs++++44.4**""4/4 i The People Who 'tow Productioa sad Care of I Uy Praclical Expetieno I Have Unanimously Milk for Cheese Factories Pronounced *440.44144eheielele+++44-4440.+44.4.4 In the produotioa of high -clues cheeze, it it eenential eat the milk be clean, evaetet anti A*Se from foreign flavor upon reeolting the factory. Both the quantity eatd the quality of the produet mill suf- fer Nandi' the now material is inferior. Unless the patrons eupply mille of good quality, they cannot in justice hold tire maker ees,pon.silsle for the quality of goods made therefrom. The health of your cows, the water supply, the quel- ity of tire food, the condition under which milk is drawn from the row, the care steed in ening that at is not era - peeled to dirt or dust of any kind, Deeper Uwe:Bing, eta., all regions uuceasing watehfulness and eara In order that the maker may receive imetruetion, regularly and pemodically, and that the producer may be directed wherein he may improve in the pro- duetion and care of milk, the Depart- ment of Agrioulturep has employed a staff of instructors to visit both the factories enul the farms upon which the milk is produeed. The instructor is not a detective, but a co-worker and Wu - eater. sUl tests for adulteration, will be made at the factory, eat action for Tooeecutioe. left with some official of the factory concerned. To dispel the mine:prehension which exists in the minds of many as to the objects of the Deaprtateast of AgrimOtere mid the Danymen's Associations in pro- viding instructors, a fear statements as "I have no hesitancy in reeeramegeliag to the work they are doing will here be Coltsfoote lixpootorant, 'which I have used given: time and again, and I emisitier it the best I remedy on earth tor coughs and colas. We 1. To assist the makers in producing a. ; keep in constantly in eur home, and It Is 131j.ell, class article by the beet household remedy I have known. (a) Pointing out defects in the cheese Coltefoote is like no other cough remedy I have ever used, it is ett soothing and healing, on hand, anti eugge.sting to the make-- means of avoiding or overcoming there I and I eel sure it is a purely vegetable pre - emotion." • f defects. MRS, D. MEA11011Y, (b) Explaining to the makers as clear- eel ,Cathcert street, 11=11ton, Ont. il4y as possible the quality of cheese re- Mother! Father! Do not let that boy's quired by the trade, so far as acidity, or girl's cough run on without atten- bexteutre, color, finish, etc., are ceneerned. tion, thus endangering their lives, when (c) Following the different stages of a 25e. bottle of Coltsfoote Expectorant reatuafaeture from the time the milk is 'will cure it. Get it from your dealer. receiveduntil the curd has been put to Keep it in the house always. press, and pointing out the importance . of care, watchfulness, and a definite aim at all dry hands, after wiping the teats land (d) seggesiugg ggegeg empi,gge,„eg, udder with a .damp °loth. Milk quietly, in equipmenl, dreinagegmethods of dis- quickly, cleanly and thoroughly. The. posing of whey, etc. muirshould -be strained at once after (e) Examining the curing room, and z milking, through a fine wet& strainer, instructing as to review:tents so far as ; and also through two or three thick- ventikution, degree of moisture, geg.igg, news of cheese cotton. The strainer tion of temperature, etc., are concerned, needs special care in, keeping it clean. (e) Drawing attention to gb„wegaby. The milk should be removed from the for absolute cleanliness at all times and, :stable or milking yard as soon as le:w- in m.11 stages of manufacture. sible after milking. It should be cooled (g) Making curd testa of each mg. at once to a temperature -of 60 degrees, eon's milk, in order that foreign flavone I certainly below 70 degrees, by setting and undesirable qualities may be de, the cane in tanks of cold water, and by tected. i stirring the milk without exposing to (h.) Testing samples of milk far but- the air MOTS titan is necesteatry, in order ter fat content, ; to facilitate cooiing rapidly, and allow - (i) Doing anyting and everything ' 11T animal odors to pass off readily. which will tend to stimulate both maker , After the milk is cooled to 60. degrees and patron to do their best. / (and where Saturday frizeht'e and eun. 2. To visit the farms of patrons,not day morning's milk is DO he kept over In the capacity of a. detective, but tc) see . until Monday morning, the cooling amulet the conditions under which the milk is : be as low as 50 degrees in the hot wee/. kept and give instructions as to i thee), the ems may be covered with the (a) Most effective and simple method i lid or with a pine of damp, clean eot- of cooling and caring for the milk. : ton. By leaving one end of the cotton (b) Best equipment and location of ' in the water evaporation will tend to same for cooling purposes. ,keep the milk much cooler. Night's and I mornang s milk should be kept separate (e) Necessity for an abundant sup- s"; ply of pare water both for cattle and : as long as possible., for. cleaning purposes. "If the milk be placed on a milk stand (<1) The desirability of not allowing for some time before it starts to the fee - coves to have access to swamps, stag. I tory, the stand shoteld be covered and nant ponds, weedy pastures, etc. I, boarded in on the sides, and the whole (e) Suitable places for milking. Cows neatly painted a white color. Milk should not be milked where they are ex- ; should be protected from the rays of the • posed to odors from hog pens or filthy 'sun, from the dust, and from the rain barnyards seater. There is always a danger of get - In order that the greatest good may ting undesirable flavors in the milk if it result from the work of instruction it ;is exposed to the air under the ordinary is necessary that the producer, maker farm conditions. and instructor co-operate—getting and m "If possible, the cans ehoeid be covered giving the best information obtainable. ; with a canvas cover while on the way to The following notes were prepared by the factory, especially in hot dusty Prof. H. H. Dean, of the Ontario Agri- t weather . It is needless to say that the cultural College, and are worthy of care- wagon, the man, the horses, and time ful study by every milk producer. harness Should be clean, and a credit to ; "The cows should be healthy and . the' great dairy industry of Canada. clean. Colostrum (Beistings) should not ' "Sour whey or buttermilk should not be sent to the factory. The stable and he put in the cans, as the acid destroys pasture should be clean, dry and free the tin and causes the can- -to rest. Rusty from bad odern and bad -smelling weeds, cans cause bad flavors in the milk. It is The food should be clean, pure, sweet, safer not to put whey in the milk can. and wholesome. Cows giving milk A separate vessel should he used for this should not be allowed :to eat brewers' purpose, if the whey must be returned grains, distillery slope, turnips or tops, to the farm. If the whey must be re - rape. mouldy meal, 'spoiled hay, or spoil- turned in the milk can, it should be ed silage, cleanings from the horse sta. emptied at once upon its arrival at the ble, or anything which would tend to . farm, and the can thoroughly washed taint the milk, and aired in the sunshine before milk T "Either rock or common salt ehouid is put it it again. be accessible to the cows at all times. "Do net We wooden pails. Discard all Plenty of pure water ought to be with- rusty pails, cans and stirring nee tell& In easy reach of milking cows. Foul, "Milk cans and pale should first be stagnant, or very cold water is injuri. rinsed in cool water, then washed eith one, a brush and hake -warm water, in whi...th "Cows should be milked -with clean, a little sal soda has been disseleed, then COLISTOOTE EXPECTORANT The QUiCkeSt Safest SureSt Throat and Cough CURE IN THE WORLD The reason is' it CURES everybody Wire takes it—young and, old °like, The children love it—ennest like honey. It is absolutely free from hurtful ingredients. It is the greatest household remedy of the -age. No home should be without it.. It acts immediately upon the irritated spat, stopping the cough, allaying in- flanneatien, strengthening the throat, voice and chest, /nettling breathing easy, end giving quick and permanent relief to those bevies; coughs, -colds, croup, whooping cough, sore throat, bronchitis, asthma and lung trouble. One fond mother, who knows, says; Oessided and placed. on their eideme in the OW. "Do not use a cloth to either was:: • or wipe utensils. 'The two main points in caring for milk are to have everythleg clean, and to cool (especially the night's milk), as rapidly as possible to a. temperature be- low 70 elegrene, anti to 60 or 60 degrees If possible.. "lie clean. :Keep tow, WHEN TAILORS ROSE. -- Refused to Permit a Performance That Satirized. Their Craft. In 1700 Foote had. produced, a bur- lesque, the author of which •hes never been discovered, entitled "The Tailors; a Tragedy for Warm Weather," Dow - ton announced the revival of this piece for his benefit, As the title invitee, it was a satire upon the sartorial craft and upon the bills being :awned an indigna- tion meeting was 'convened. by the knights of the needle, who vowed to op- pose the performance -by might and main. lefentleieg letters were sent to Dow - ton telling him that 17,000 tailors would attend to bis piece, and, ene, who signed himself "Death" added that 10,000 men could be found if necessary. These threats were laughed at by the actors; but when night came it was discovered that the craft were in earnest, and that, wilit few exceptions, they had, contriv- ed to secure every seat in the house, while a mob without still squeezed for admission. The moment Dowtort appear- ed upon the stage, there was a hideous uproar, and some one threw a pair of shears at him. Not a word would the rioters listen to, nor would they accept any compromise in the way of changing the piece. With. in howled and hissed without intermis- sion hundreds of exasperated tailors; outside howled and bellowed, thousands of raging tailors, who attempted to storm the house. So formidable did the riot wax that a magistrate had to be ▪ sent for and special constables called out, but these were helpless against overwhelming odd* so a troop of life guards was ultimately summoned, who after making eixteen prisoners putethe rest to flight,— American Tailor and Cutter. Raising the Age Limit. (Now York Sun.) By raising the "deed line," or age limit, to entrance into its employment from 35 to 45 the Pennsylvania railroad does a mighty sensible and encouraging thingIThe infant aMenomenons, marvelous boys sad young cae- tains of industry have become a weariness. If life is growing longer It is the more fool- ish to put men on the blacklist just as they have really shed their milk teeth. If men are "old" at M what is to be done with a large Part of the race? Should It be eaten; In the ancient New Zealand fashion, or sal)- . ported by the younger? Veal is excellent, but It is possible to have too much of it. ticamsa "Royal C17011111 Witeh-Etazei Toilet Soap (Individual size) At the Chateau Frontenae—at Place Vigcr Hotel, Montreal—at Banff—Royal Alexandra, Winnipeg —on their Pullmans and ocean liners —guests and passengers mire provided with i'iRoyal Crown" Witch -Hazel. fee a medicated soap, and toilet soap. _ Two cocoa in one for the price of one 10c. a cake. 3 large cakes foresee.. Insist on having "Royal Crown" .2i Witch -Hazel Toilet Soap. 2 9, �...........,. . .. . . . Danger and Expense of High Speed. <Railway Asa) High-speed trains may properly be called vast testing nambines, and though they do net measure maximum stresses in trot* equipment, they are relentless in showing week points and are the moat potent fact rs In suggesting improvements which tend to the betterment of the Serviee and .to develop all those details which make railway travel eater and more comfortable. High epeed is expensive from every point of view. The consumption of fuel is enormously increas- ed, More expensive equipment is required, the cost at maintaining track largely aug- mented and train or tonnage capacity ma- terially reduced, • Never judge a man by the opinion he has of himself. gi 4 et unite-. azWeit Roofing Eight With SrAlvanizerl STEEL Is Easy Work Put them on with no tools but a hammer and tinner's shears,—can't go wrong. They lock on all four sides, are self -draining and water - shedding on any roof with three or more inches pitch to the foot. Make buildings fire -proof, weatherproof and proof against lightning. Cost l-ast in the long run. Made of 28- LAuge toughened sheet steel—only one quality used and that the best— bent cold and double -galvanized. Last longer with no painting than any other metal shingles heavily - painted. Guaranteed in every way until 1982. Ought to last a century. Cheap as wood shingles in first cost; far chemoer in' the long run. " Oshawa " GhlVanized Steel Shin- gles eost only $4.50 a s qua r e, 10 ft. x 10 ft. Tell us the area of an' roof and hear our tempting offer for covering it with the cheapest roof you can really afford to buy. Let us said you ?IEE booklet about this roofing question—tells some things you may not know. eeesee*SteSleaXe.seseawaiseeserseeeeeeeseeeeees LOohawa Galvanised Steel .1 Shingles are GUAIIANTFAD in• ° t • : every way for Twenty -Five Years Ought to Last a Century 5 111.01114111114 Se.a4 for FREE BoOk—mtonfing moo net Our Offer t etoro You Root a tang 13e13141za AAiraiti Ottr MONTREAL Ntrotet Warehouse: tn.:IC/lag St. We Mainsfisial 101 tat TORONTO OTTAWA LONDON it Collionte St 423 Sussex Sb. CO DIMON eh. OW, Canada WINNIPEG tocotsovi tembrthl St. 015Pender lialatlaamMatai d o,f 4.4.10.6101,64.A. Walking the Straight Line. Speaking in New York on the "d Vella problems" which Ito bed been minded were before hien, GovernOr llughee said.; "There are problems, b somehow they adjust themselves to very simple and fundamental rule conduct. it is far easier to walk straight lite than to find one's W through a labyrinth." Governor Hugh has thee far walked the "straight lin of public, duty. Other m' en following have found that it led to the wbi house. —Boston Herald. PaPerS 00 eountry would efrefeemst their grisvancee end be a public ttenlialettlition it was hoped that the sympatey of the public) wind he aroused. The proceecton on that dew wee very late - le' made up of working women, many carry- ing Slick children in. %leer was; a number of pie:Wallies/1 women, leaders of vertou,s oth- er women's orgazezetims, marched in front. AIM they waited in, the opea ;mewl 0PPoslt0 Wootolioster Abbey, one est the leaders a eirl factory worker from Manchester, made a short speech calling attention NI Me fact thee they were otosuling In bread sanctuary, the site of the 014 Norman tower where. In the middle ages, political Vietime could mite refuge Med the officers of the lee, could not Leech them, • Ilere Oita coma the peer Queen Elizabeth Woodville, wife of Zdsvarti IV„ with her children, wheu persecuted by Stiehard of Ulouceeter, Mid it We fitting that persecut- ed women of to -day should assemble on such a spot. 'VAS suggestion was greeted by cheers Acta the assembled women, which • Promptly brought a charge of the police. The euffragatee time flee saieed elm to the lobby of the Boum of Comment', but were elected by the pollee after Many serlaunuees. No arrests were made at thet la' woe, one utter the women had been forced re- to retreet to some distance they marched LI) the house of the Prime Minieter anti to ut the house of Mr. Atiquith, the Gem:teeter of t Neceequer, who bitterly opposes any et- a fort to introduce a women's suffrage bill. Of The Women succeeded In their plan to sale - a the attention of the general public awl the battle has raged eteavIlly for the whole year "4• " pest, ee This first demonstration on the part tit a e" fete determined wontee, whereo future welfare 1{. was threatened by adverse legislation, ad- .,: te 'othertcte4nVernsvr=oainszftfot t'otheeeltomil.'431. . large eeetion of tee suffragettes Ilmite its .action to the acquieltion at Parliamentary "freachlse, while Wiens eentend for the right - to veto on county and tratuleLpal affairs In -addition. All are in aecord, however, ea one ✓ Wane aad that Is the injuetitte of the WALLIS ento- deprive hem of the right to vote.t•er, until2, woneee were perntateol to Re vote and there are eecoree showing that m even in the Ciao of leery Tudor women were le Justices of the peace in addition to having voting privileges. In 1569, there was a resit - it tution of the munietpal vote to women, but nd in the act of ISM it VMS again taken away e, from them, after the TIOnee of Commune had passee a OM Luskin women eligible to hold IL the ptfice of alderman anti county councilor, ce)f, whwicohm•ethae4Iultetueerageothasleorhdeseurejireoetteedd. upon hi • the House of UGMO:10115 Many times and in • 1894 a suffrage bile was =Tied by a vote of 111- 114, but failed of enactment. ty The stufdragettes ettel justified in their Present persistent and extreem measures by , their belief that If brought to a TOW there en Is a ears majority to carry tile act In spite ed.- of the "faithless feebleness of the disloyal .11 members." ' Their contention in this Is shared by Eng- lish public opinion, and is pm -oh -ably recog- nized by the leaders of the Liberal party, for they are determined that the question shall not be introduced If they can avoid it. The opposition is On the ground of political expediency, as it Is generally admitted that justice and fair play would give the women the franchise they seek, In spite of oonsid- 11 arable ridicule the earnestness and sacrifice of these women is recognized. About one hundred women in all have been committed to jail. It is too severe an ordeal to undergo for the cheep effect of becoming a, public martyr; Sad there is an inmate, traditional British sympathy for those so unselfishly sacrificing of •themselves tor a principle. There are thous- ands of women in this country giving their time and heartfelt sism,pathy to the cause of Ot Improved leave eoverninathieiemployment of d mwoumnyenwoeubldd but tsdoubtful if -willing be to endure imprison- ment la order to bring about such reforms. The chage of indlfterenee is sometimes brought against woman voters in the States is where equal suffrage is the hew, but the meet vigorous opponent would not have the temerity to suggest taking the voting privi- lege avvey from women, for there would be no doubt of resistance, which might far ex- ceed the manner of protest of the Beglish women who have been deprived of their foTnnheereopnrdivitilleensge. *which comfort the Amer- ican women suffraglets are to it degree dif- ferent from those in England, but women here have again and again received scant courtesy and deceptive promises from their State Legislatures and could easily enough Invite arrest and imprisonment by insistence that they be heard. What the outcome will d Ana vvomen have the example of a new v "method of seeurhate a hearing from the -world at large, °Veil it defeated in their purpose of ,being heard by a entail group of lawmakers. BABY'S MEND. Before I got Babye Own Tablets m baby was troubled with :folic and vomi sag end cried night and desy, and I w almost worn out. But after giving hi the Teblets for a few days the trout) disappeared and you would not know was the Game child he is so healthy a good-natured now." This is the gest ful testimonial of Mr. George Howe Sandy Beach, Que., and it tells oth mothers who are worn-out taring t cross sickly children, how they can lei health to the little one and ease to the selves, Baby's Owe Tablets prompt cure the =nor ailments of little on and there are no Cross sickly childr in the homes where the Tablets are us Sold by all medicine dealers, or by ruts at 25 cents a box from The Dr, WI Hams' Medicine Company, Breckvill Out. e, 4 FOLLOWED BY A. LION. Hunter's Night Adventure in an Africa Jungle. To stroll through an African jungle with a gun loaded only in one barrel and with dusk approaching seems to in- vite adventure, and so it did in the case of William Cotton °swell, the friend Livingstone. °swell started out from his camp one evening, fired his one sh at a quagga, which Ile wounded, an then followed its tracks, marked the place where it fell, and then turned his steps, as he thought, toward the wag- ons. In his biography the incident described in his own words: It was not until I had wandered care- lessly hither and thither for half an hour, feeling sure that it was only the one particular bush in front of me which hid the wagons, that I very..unwilling- ly owned to myself that I was drifting without bearings in this bushy sea. Twilight in the tropics is very slier Just before the sun set I followed game track -which I knew would lead t water. After a good draught I bega collecting firewood, but the night close in so rapidly that a bare hour's suppl was all my store. Partly to save fuel, partly in the hop that as night crept on signals would b made from the wagons, I climbed a tr and had not been long perched befo t. a 11. ff cu to prophesy, eel te A MOTHER'S MESSAGE re I heard, far off, the boom of guns. Alarmed by my absence, my compa ions suspected the cause and, were I 'siting my return; but it required very pressing invitation indeed to it duce a man to walk through two of an African wood on a dark night. It grew bitterly cold. I. determine to come down and light my fire. I ha reached the lowest bough of my tre and placed my hand beside nay feet ft jumping off, when from the bush imm diately under me a deep tote and th sound of a heavy body slipping throng ,the thorny scrub told me that a Ho I vas passing by. Without the warniu in another half second I should hay alighted on his back. I very quickl put two or three yards more betwee the soles of nay feet and the ground. I could not much longer endure my cramped position in the scraggy tree, and felt I must get down. Waiting un- til the moon was about one tree high, came down and dived into the bush. struggled for an hour, I should think, 'when four or five muskets fired together within fifty yards told me I was borne 'egIeleh.ope I was thankful then; kno ; T am now. TWO of my Hottentot ser 'rants and a batch oT Kaffirs had come to meet me and escorted me to the fire in triumph. Ah I held my half thawed ' hands over it the roar of a diseppointed lion rang through the camp, "He has missed you, Tleea, by a lit- tle this time," milel my black friends. "Let him go back to his game." — Prom the Youth's Companion. n - n - a WHAT ZAM-BUIC DID FOR HER es d "If this statement iDe. the means of a leading some mother to introduce Zam- s Buk to her home, I shall be very glad." e. So says Mrs. K. Watkins, of 26 Forge° e avenue, Montreal, and continues: "My boy, Walter (9), While attending school, contracted some sores. These o spread, and became so bad that some Y of them on the heel and ankle made TO MOTHERS , The Happy Medium " Cheap" paint is the kind you DON'T want. "high price" paints cost more than they are worth, because you can buy better for less. Ramsay's Paints are the happy medium. Ali the goodness of the most expensive kinds—with uone af the faults of the cheap." They are mixed just right—always the same—and hold their surface ancl their zolor through zero snows and torrid suns. Write us for Foat Card Series "C," showing how some houses are painted. A. RAMSAY & SCR CO., Paint Makers since 1342, Blenellin, MAKING FOOD. TREE MUST HAVE LIGHT FOR THIS PURPOSE, Practical Applications Made by the For- ester in His Treatment of Trees. A plant foams its own food by taking in carbonic acid gas, or carbon dioxide, from the air, and bringing up water eut of the soil, through its roots, and coin - liming these so as to form a -substance which the chemists elan ue a sugar. An animal, on the other hand, is dependent On plants for its food; for, though a lion array eat a lamb, Still that lamb fed on grass; and so the lion depends, finally,on grass fair rts living. This fact, namely, that plant makes its own food, while an animal is depen- dant on the plants for its fa0d, COSSti- tutes a fundamental distineelon between plants and animals, from the lowest to the highest. Every plant, from the hum- blest of the algae that form the scum on stagnant water to the loftiest tree, has thie power, with exception of a very few plants, such as the fungi that feed on other plants. In many eases there are considerable difficulties to be overcome in the process, as, for instance, when a. tall tree has to raise water from the roots up to the leaves, in order that the food may be there formed. ; The whole tree tray be divided into three parts; namely, (1) the root, or underground part. (2) the seem, or bole, of the tree, (3) the foliage, or "crown," of the tree. The 'Sugar" whielt forms the food of the tree is not initeh like the sugar on our tables. As already stated, it is ma& by the tree from avatar and carbon diox- ide. The water is got by the tree from the soil; it is absorbed the roots, and in some manner, which scientists are not able to explain fully, is pumped up through the ste mad branches into time leaves. On examining the under surface of the leaves with a microscope, there are to be found certain very small open- ings from the 'outside into the interior ,of the leaf. Then the scientists call "eto- fanata." Into these openings, and thence into the interior of the leaf, ,air, con- tainine a certain amount of carbon diem. !ides iscontinuallypassing. In the interior !of the leaf, within the cells of which it /is composed, are a number of little hod. los called by the scientists "ehloro- 'pleats." These seize on :the 'water and carbon dioxide and combine the two to' :make the "auger," It is only in the I.-gest:nee of light that this change takes place. When darkness conies on, the "thloreplaste" eloaMO work, resuming only when light ra- il 111s. 11 Itis importance to the forester in his s this Iast fact which in of so treatment of a forest. Obviously a. tree rennet grow without food, and it must somehow secure light to make this food. And if the light is rut off from. one pail; the tree will do its hest to reach the light in some other part. In a forest, whatever its size, the na- tural tendency of the trees is to crowd each other. One of the forester's dirties is to regulate this crowding and. see that the trees get the proper amount of light. It is to this end that, the "thin- nings," which form so important a part of extensive forest management, are made. Moreover, by close planting, the force - ter knows that he can eventually eat off the light from the lower parts of his trees, thus forcing the trees to grew up- wards in order to secure the light; and thus he will obtain tall, straight stems, while the lower branches-. having their light cut off, will die and finally fall off, f so that the timber made from the trees I will have the least possible amount of knots and so be the most serviceable. HIS LAST CARTRIDGE. Remorse for Slaughter of Harmless ; Songsters. So it' was there is that isle from a i sheltered and cull ravine that I fired any Inst cartridge. ray of sunlight betok- ening peace and springtime was trying' o pierce the clouds and an the little ereas tures of the air -sang louder to welcome I, Beside rue upon a, reek among bloom - ng fennel a blackbird confidently rested; nfoxicated with life, motion and gayety me raised his head toward another who ; levered about and Imes an to sing a delir- }melba:al up in a mesbanical matiner— or. the brutish instinct inborn, in us ad mastered me en, e more. The shot ; he. rutting short hie oiciirgelnhilens4 tigicinimr record this little . ody, exquisitely graceful, was but a tat - oral beap, blocely nnught, ready to he.. mince two moutheful between the rieding tenth of a Leman ogre. Ole It ,almost, impossible for him to walk, ; T. used various ointments, brat the sores persisted. One day Zam-Buk was reeemmend.ed, and; we got a supply. It seemed to take the soreness out of the place to which it was applied right away, end the avounde began to heel. In about a week's time the sores, waich had, defied other treat - inert, Were completely healed, and there . is now not a trace of sore on his body! ' 13' I believe Zam-Buk to be the best balm ever produced." When a mother rubs on to the deli- cate skin of children a. balm or salve, she needs to be as careful as if she were giving a child an internal re- medy. Zam-I3uk is pure—free from all animal fat and all mineral mat- ter, and may be applied with won derful benefit even to the skin ;of young babes. Zetnelaik heats sores, cures eczema, spring skin eruptions, ulcers, ringworm, itch, barber's hash, blood S poison, bad leg, salt rheum, abrasions, abscesses, cuts, hums ecalds, and all 4: WOMAN'S PLEA IN ENGLAND, Review of Aggressive Campaign fo Female Suffrage There. (New York Evening Post.) The advocates of woman suffrage In this country, while expressing Empathy and on- couragement for the Leglish suffragettes, are seemingly no better informed than the general public as to the reasons for time ag- gressive' campaign of the last year. Thet•e has been 8ml:watts 'suffrage agitation since ISM, when dolor etuart Mill boatel° a mem- ber of Parliament and advocated woman's rights. One the largest and most Important as- sociations of women in .lengland the Wo- man's Seelal and Political Unit:in, which is Silted with the Independent Labor Parte, which tensed consternation In many quar- ters by the number of members who were elected to Parliament at the last, eketion. During the Liberal campaign the aid of the Woman's Social mind Political Union and other like ereammtions was sought by the early Managers with the eromiee that if the Liberals were successful woman silt - /roe° should have early eonsideratim and a bill passed in favor of it by the House of CI'lltbrals°nasn' admitted fact that the systematic Work of these women contributed largely to the tateecee of the Liberal party. When. it Caine time to fulfil the promise to letroduee bill granting women Cm right to vote the Parte teeders repudiated their promise, the Primo Minister cuing it Was luteceedient and inconvenient at thia time. In addition to this thee la impending labor legislation effecting 'women wage earners very serieue- ly which has the Clemente of the "coquet pay fee equal week" agitation of the women teachers in our city. It is proposed to incorporate in iv labor bill the provialon that the Minimum 'wage elan be for men taunt tunigent for the maintehance of five persons, whether the inett be =glee or nterrhd, while the mini., mum for wonten ellen be bask d upon the ae- ces3itios of one person, and further, that maialetl women shell not he perrattted to "Trill's and other legisieliell aqui of Vali ina port:thee to the women of the Social mid Penfield Bitten, Which le lareely composed of Women worker's lu tee Meat manufacturing centreve cud' aftillAISZte4 and Blitabig- ham. Their indignation at the failure of the Liberal natty' to keep its promeee end de- irfealemation to resiet 'the injurions legielee emoted them to call a buhlte tneettsa, and to srineed In a hotly te the Mate* of Piteliament on the 400.ilia day of at, tometon of lest leer. Thee hal found that the newit. skin injuries and diseases. Of all stores and druggists at 50 cents, or , from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price. 6 boxes for $2,50. Baseball players and athletes find it best embrocation, The Warmth of a Snow -House. i Usually our snow igloos allowed each i man from eighteen to twenty inches i space in which to lie down, and just room enough to stretch his legs wall, With our sleeping bags they were entire- ly emnfortable, no, matter what the wet- !i all ther outside. The snow is porous enough it to admit of air ciroulation, but eVen a,e gale of wind without would trot affect the temperature within. It is claitned b by the natives that when the wind blows it a snow nouse is warmer than in it per- 'e fed of till cORL T could see no differ- :g r7 -t. lore song,— and my brutality to destroy it! . .Butno, I. cannot expresa the mysterious little which was formed in my mind between all these things, nor give you to understand why I was so long pursued by the remorse of this action, I and an infinite sadtteee for having corn- 'nutteddo tit, think that every day a great ;many people, with no bad, intentions af- ' ter all, commit just for pleasuee like murders, amuse themselves in slaughter- ing, nay, more, bringing back in their shooting bags poor wounded birds to whom they have not even had the ale - 'mercy of giving the "coup de grace," al- lowing them to suffer thus, half smoth- ered. between the little corpses of their fellow -creatures Awl the dove shooting. Is there more ferocious absurdity than this pastime of some worldly snobs? And the big faeh, ' ionable chases. In the itemseof sport at ethe end of each decripTion of thee laughter, when the poor deer weeps— the deer shed real, tears under the bite Of time dogs—when I come across the tradis aortal phrase: "The honors were be- ' stowed on the gracious Miss So and So" I imagine a young monster represented by a graceful looking maiden smiling at the sacrifice offered her, and. I feel a far greater aversion toward her than I do toward a young cannibal devouring a piece of human flesh when hunger pres- , ed. ; And the antelopes! the few remaining ; antelopes which foolish man will soon 'neat from the French of Pierre Loti for Fag - tire Springfield Sunday Republican. have destroyed! one ever remon- strata forcibly against the sport of hunt- " usefulness, but which in our day of civil- ization which once had its grandeur, its !much of the vulgar cruelties of olden times?— Translated by Anna M. Fag - a Azation nd refinement partakes tog A SPRING TONIC S Dr. Williams' Pilaf—J.—Pills Make Rich, Red Health -Giving Blood. , Cold winter months, enforcing aloes ' confinement in over -heated, badly yea- ! tile.ted rooms—in the home, in the shop and in the school—sap the vitality of , even the strongest. The blood becomes clogged with impurities, the liver slug. gish, the kidneys weakened, sleep is not restful—you awake just as tired as when ; you went to bed; you are low spirited, perhaps have headache and blotchy skin —that is the condition of thousands of people every spring. It comes to all un- lese the blood is enriched by a good , tonic—by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills not only banish this feeling, but they guard against the more serious ail - Inmate tha usually follow—eheumatism, nervous debility, anaemia, indigestion and kidney trouble. Dr. Wiliams' Pink Pills are an ideal spring medicine. Every dose makes new, rich, red blood. Every drop of new blood helps to strengthen the overworked neves; overcomes weak- ness and drives the germs of disease from the body. A thorough treatment gives you vim anti energy to resist the torrid he -at of the coming summer. Mrs. Jas. McDonald, Sugar Camp, Ont., says: "I was badly run clown, felt very weak and had no appetite. I ceuld scarcely drag myself about and felt that my east. uition, was growing worse. I decid- ed to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and before 1 had used a dozen boxes I was as strong as ever. My appetite retruned . and I am now able to do my housework without feeling -worn out . I think Dr. Williams' Pink Pills the best tank there • ft ' It is a, mistake to take purgatives in spring. Nature calls for a medicine to build up the wasted foree—purgativee only weakeu. It is a medicine to set on the blood, not one to act on the bowels, which is necessary. Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills are a blood medicine—they make pure, " h, red blood, and a reng nen every organ of the body. See that the full name, "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People," is printed on the wrapper around each box. All other so-ealled pink pills are fraudulent inflations. Sold by medicine dealers or by. mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. awe. A new snow igloo is, however, t hese ‚jirnqimiis end iheee enemonee whit+ dee.r hand, etainen with Immo., brought more comfortable -than one that has la gain but yest cm -day to my cottage at temboul, these sante flowers: of an or.; Wel spring fotiml again here in this olitary ravine and ender the stormy sky hen t. never expected to see them again. nil Ilan; little being, gay and full of Ifs,eonfidingle exhaling beside me its been used, for newly cut snow blocks le are snore porous. In one that has been I g used there is always a. crust of ice on the interior width prevents a peeper eir- eulation of aire—From "The Leamg Lab - reeler Trail" by DitIon Wallese in, The A Outing Magaeine for April. Maskers at tam. Two sisters, one fifteen, the other sev- 'edema have been charged at Olmutz ,with offending the publie feeling of ,reverenee by astaling to ehurch in masks. In Wenn: they protested, with tears: that they meant, no harm. They bed been at. a mathed boll till 5 o'clotit le the :morning and 'Wine devout Cetholies, had rot wished to miss thole matine. They Lad nem thought of taking off their "loupe," lint but lead ;dipped into the thureh 'just at- they were. Tim nun delivered judgment to the effect that objeetively the ae.eueed Were eettitillay guilty but subjectively they had meant and done AO berm. They were therefore acquitted, —140114411 Evening Stalltlard. _ t America's Craze for Speed. (Milwaukee Sentinel.) .emericans are Imbued with te forma de- sire to get somewhere at any coat and at the topmost speed. Some day we will be actuated by mare sober purpoeett that will but of speed. I3ut not Yet- The time rear neceesItete the eliminatien, not of *Pacer come when humatt life may be resented MI of more 'value than speed, but net yet. There Is no time. We are in a hurry. it we mut% get from Nei, Yoo•It to °wen In eigbeeigi hours and from Kalamazoo to elpedtuelt %a forty-eight we are unhappy, be the "WW1* er's bill" -what it Mae. Marriage has made a, noW mats of your Wiping Out the Old Debt. "Did I hear you, Id eh t "Then diet -wipes out that ten I owe you. Now lend me five will you Sentinel. --- I Even the reputation of being a had man is rather hard to live up to, 001064244444140467,4400Z400004304430 Tho effect of Soott'a Emattiort Oil thin, pale children is magical. It makes them plump, rosy, active, happy. 1It contains Cod Liver Oil, Hypophosphites and Glycerine, to make fat, blood and bone, and so put together that it is easily digested by little folk.TI ALL DUGGISTSI SO0. AND $1.00. 0.04141tv.2..1000000045000000411.