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The Wingham Advance, 1912-04-11, Page 39.2941999919r-94urirtfileir,':armA....,.. - In the Poultry World Will' VAIL': Several yettrs ago when a man etn- harked in the poultry busieees, every- one elaimed that any one that went into the "ehieken busineee" was Weit1;.- 14i11(it'd, as 4 taillIrt, 11`48 1 0 in( 010 result. There is no need of any failures in the peultry busineee. S'tatis- rice ehow that Do per rent. of peaple that 1.0 into the mereantile bueiness - maktk a, atilure. Tine ertnnot be said of the poultry Inteiness, an'l if every - elle that goes hitt? the_poultry hueiness will work aml attend to businees, leaving strong drink, vte., teloue, they will make ti :11(!et,ss 0f the bueinese. Wherever you find a failure in the k' poultry leaeineee, trave it up, and you will find the l4115( tO eithinlack of Ineeinees abelity, laeinese, ;trill?: or the spending of intatlOo for building. and $l On for chiekene, and expo. the plant te pay. Either a the fonr reneons is the eause for tai Uri in •the poultry hail- eese. Take a man that but several hun- dred dollarsvortli Owl.; 111d bpe10.14 a few dollar:, in buildings, 411..1 you will 'find he is makitee a encees4 of hie poultry business right from the ettert; but show a men who hae epent several thousand dollata ia buildinge, and when it eomes to buying fowls, he buys about $20 worth, and you will have a failure in the busin•ess. The hen is the mime:a-maker, and. you must have the chickento make the poultry plant pay. Good Intildings are all 0. K. but if you spend two thousand in buildingpend. three thouseeul in ehickens, and y0111' plant will pay you from the start. There is no neeeteity foe any one making a failure of tho poultry lmsines.s if they stay chew of the pit- falls mentioned above. If you 'se small coops for houeing your birds, there should be a tj0011- Sizer down or an extra. coop as near to them as possible, where feed and uteneils rua•y be etored, o az to save unneeeseary steps, This is ahvays de- sirable, tart especially so in cold or stormy weather. If you build a long open front house, be sure to liave under the same roof a large room where all feed can be kept. • Malte the ea= large enough to keep all necessary tools, andif possible, have a plaee :where you can make some of the repairs that are al- ways needed in eonnection with your poultry work. room with a stove for heating water for 8ea1ding fowl, or for washing them for shows, or before snipment, will be found a great con- venience. Make the most of the early days of summer, for these are the days in which to get the chicks well started growing. If you wait till it es too late, you will not be able to get thern in laying condition by the time the cold weather comes. If you will give them the best of care, the May hatched chicks will give the earlier ones a hustle for the laurels by the elose of the summer. The old adage, "Make hay while the sun ehines," is a good one, and one • that the poultryman should ever have in mind. MINERALS THAT HENS .NEED. Grit is as necessery for a growing chicken as it is for a grown man, but in a different way. Grit for chickene 8110111d po.asess two eesentiras: Extreme pa.rdness and grinding edges. The pri- mary result expected from its use is the comminution of the food; but, LIS a secondary result, it is believed that it furnishes needed mineral constituents that are to some extent lacking in the grain e ot ter articles of food. This, as lezei, ttppears to be eertain, that chiekens provided with plenty of good grit develop into larger and . better fowls that thoee f or which no such pro- vision is .made. Many poultry -keepers err in supposing, that chickens obtain from the eoil all the grit which they need. if suelt persons would fill a hopper With grit they would probably be surprised to see how much would be cousumed by the ehickene. As there are a number of brands of excellent grit upon the market, and as all these brands may be purchased at a compara- tively low- price, there is no excuse for allowing the chickens to lack this t".'011 - tial article. There are tittles when both chicks and adult fowls demand iron in their fool. The eheapest and beet Wfty to supply tine is to ada to the water a small quantity of sulphate of iron. It ie extremely eheap, for a cryetal the size of a marrowfat pea will be suffi- cient for eight or ten quarts of wafer. just enough should be added to the water to slightly discolor it and give it a brackish taste. The water impregnated with the iron may be used in mixing wet maskee or it may be given in he fountains for drink. Iron is a tonio to the system. It is Slightly astringent, and is useful in checking diarrhoeal tendeneies. It is to some extent a germ. icicle, destroying or rendering germs nnert Hustle the egv out of the boxee. Go down eeveral times a day. The closer you. ean keep up to the hens the better. PAPER FROM COTTON STALKS. Cotton stalks, it is thought, ratty be used fer the mandaeture of paper. inaelfine has been oateeted which will eparate the brown barn from the inner pith and it is that excellent paper pulp may De :LOC from the latter. Vro the bark a subetitna) for exceleloe i. manufactured. nagfrar 1,11 ii:1'01,;111' rl'17 PV) b'v p Ur Ch Ain 4111,1teft . 4 rcrair4,,Milid.q 11; c47/0 111;11111:;' I e-seee-etteeteayc're,rill j I r5H ‘;',4,•ril'!iml.... ‘, 404 . e•X ii l v.l-h teeevaia 8n. 4 . 1,=1 :61.,•!''',..,,, efftV.',4`;;ii il.(,i p•ii! 1 tt'41:1; r von IlI ' s:• 141 f(111(i10 .'.i• 110' 1),!. • ky; 1,4 i,..0:1114.:71.1.:45.:0,:c 1:si, P, I OULI „ 1.1tY1,111),•rr .,'&";;iiTi [la .„• , 0 11, • .•.e. • t ;!CJIAlt;t!'ne.. teell,1 in I 1 Hi:il111.11 E 1.111) THAT LEASES El PEOPLE' flu MOOT FRFCT MADE 1•1001010.0.041101iNeAg. • vomre SPRING WALKING HAT OF BLUE'. Severe ie. the etyle of the ,walk ing, hat that many a maid will wear when the first spring days appear. • This model - comes from England where, girls and women still affec t the straight in line and simple in decoration when out on a promenade or shopping. The crown of the -walking hat is semi -high and the brim rolls up at the sides. Back and front the rim dips toward the face and nape of the neck respectively. This hat is worn a bit back on the head. An English walking hat that i s a smart model is of fine Dunstable straw in a dark blue shade. The o nly trimming upon it is a velvet bow of blue from which extends an osprey. This has many colors in it. Orange, red, green, brown and blue touch the delicate feathers. They Reep the whole Ts yErtem in the pink of condition. Their singular curative pro- perties discovered by an Indian tribe—introduced to civilizatton nearly a century z:go—com- pounded since 1857 in the Uoliigtock Laboratories at Brockville, Ontario. Dr. M. oa rsez Indian Root Pills have a remarkable record fcr conz:stently curir4,7 constipa. tion,biliotiznessandindizeation, purifying the bk.-,od, banishing headaches and clearing the 23% skin. 25c. box everywhere. • UNNATURAL MODESTY. Lord Tangervilie, who is sending his son to an American school in order that his boy may escape from the toadyism of English sc000lboys, said the other day in New York: "There are too many Englishmen and English boys as Nye/I—who develop, in the presence of a lord, a painful and unnat- ural modesty. This reminds me yiliage tinker: "This tinker had a rather crusty dis- position. and the pastor said to him one aa'74:Ity roan, you should love your neigh- bor as yOursolf.' sir,' said the tinker, "13ut the pastel' ho.tl in mind a nasty black eye that the tinker had given the brieltiayee next door, and so he went on: " 'Do you, though; do you, honestly, love your neighbor as yourself?' " 'Yes, sr; OFh yes, sir,' said the tink- er; and be added, 'But I'm a mode,A man, ”, see, and to tell the truth, I ain't a bit stuck on myself, str."---Washington star. (The Farmeres Advocate.) Well -cured clover ,hay is more suit- able for fleehing horses than timothy hay, • It is always better to allow f,110 horse to cease steaming before blank- eting. Horses. of high quality usually po- en greater endurance than those of inferior make-up. Do not neglect to blanket the driver whenever he ie left in an open shed or a, cold stable after a drive. Fine, silky hair is the beet indication of good quality in drafters. Coarse, rough hair generally a.coompanies roughness throughout. In feeding the fattening horse, Diet. ness and aegularity are eseential. Lib - oral rations mut be fed, and every- thing done to promote the comfoot of the animal. Many hoasee are thin because of Wee- tive teeth, Have the mouths of animals which are in low eohdition exameted by a veterinarian before they go into winter quarters. If looking for a pure-bred mare for breeding purposes, there is no better plan than to go to the barns of a re. putable breeder where the sir and Conr, and often second and third dames, eau be eeen. The brood mare should receive a grain ration throughout her yeriod of enie- tione A hettyy ration to not adveseble, but. to keep her in good condition and to insure the best development of -the feetue, a fair quantity of grain is notes- sairSt'is not safe to assume that, lyvAuse a horse is registered he must be a good one, lie is more likely to be a desirable animal if he hats a pedigree, yet very many inferior animale aro registned, and the buyer should accept nothing but a good individual. Greatest and cheapest gains are mmie lieliable merchants everywhere display this box and sell STEELE, BMOCS' SEEDS. Look for them—accept no ether. Steele,igrirtge are the best grown. No matter what °ron need in seeds, {his name otands for highest quality. Behind every packet is the strongest seod reputation in Canada. Thousands of successful • growers everywhere use STEELE, niticososups year after me because they are sure of what thy are buyIng. Look for this box at your loal storo. If your .local doaler cannot supply you order diroot. r AAR. 9,9999.9((oreisit. in fattening the horse when little or no exercise is given. This may be all right for the f3e11er, but is not always in the best interests Of the buyer, AS great cafe must be taken in putting the attn. mat to work. The buyer Shoola be fully decided as to what kind of animal he is going to Purchase before he leaves 111 quest of it, and, having onee deeided upon the type and conformation, a deal should not be elosed until the horse is found whieh filis all requirements. The bock is a very important part of the animal, it is impossible to get too strong a hock. Weak, defeetive hocks eause more draft horses to go wrong than many other defeete combined. The hoek should be broad, angular and eleament, and free from all appearance of fullnees, To get the. highest price possible for a horse, it is necessary that someone fit him for sale. Partnere are in the beet position, to make the maet profit out ef this businees, and the returns will ten ttally justify the feeding of horses in preference to the other animals. 11 the young eon, has not been halter - broken, lose no time in doing it. The longer he le left loose the greater will be his resistant* when attempts are mede to tie him. While it is often ad- vieable to allow the eolts to run loose in. a box stall tbe first winter, it is al - better that they be perfectly hal- ter -broken, and, to do this, they should 'be seeureqly tied for short intervals, so that they may become thorougbly accustomed to it. •••••••••••••••••10, TESTING MILK. ON THE FARM. The milk of every cow varies in fat , content from milkng to milking and from day to day. For this reason a mixed sample covering several days is necessary to give a fair average of her - milk. 1 The sample tested should be an aver - age of at lettet six milkings, and better even more. In taking the sample from '- the individual cows, proceed as follows: Procure as many sample jars (ordinary pint fruit jars are good) as there are ems being milked. Paste a label upon each jar, upon whch is written th.e name or number of the eow. Bo sure the jar e are provided with the usual rubber rings to -make them airtight. Drop .1.3 drops of form- alin into each, jar to preseve the milk. Formalin may be obtained from nearly any druggist. Put the jar e with has screwed on tightly in a safe place convenient to where tb.e milk is strained. After a cow is milked, mix the milk in the pail by stirring or pouring into another vessel. Take a sample out with a small dipper ma -de by eoldering a piece ef wire to a brass shotgun shell, Be sure the dipper s full of milk. Pour the contents of the dipper into the jar bearing the name of the animal whose milk is being Sampled. Screw t -he lid on tightly. Do the same with each eow's milk. Repeat the process during at least six consecutive milkngs. Shake the jar gently each day so as to prevent the cream from hardening and, sticking to the sidee of the jar. DZ, not, however, shake hard enough to churn the milk. e - e GOOD MEDICINE FOR THE SPRING Do Not Use Harsh Purdatives—A Tonic is All You Need. Not exactly sicit-4eat not feeling quite well. That is the wa,y mot Peonle feel in 'Hat Fon'ing. Enfilly tired, appetite fickle, sometmes headaches:, L21(1 a feeling of depression. l'implte or eruptioee may appar on the skin, or there may lie twingts of rhenmataon or neuralgia. Any of these indleate that the blood is out of order—that the in- door life of winter lute left its meek up- on you and may easily develop into' more serious trouble. Do not doe yomeelf with purgativea �S 90 many people do, in the hope that you can put our blood right. Purge - three gallop through the eystern and weakens instead of giving etrentetla Any doctor will toll you this is true. What you need in pring is a, tonic that will make 11CAV 1)100(1. 11,114 build op the nerve:s. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is the only meditine that can do this speedily. eafely and surely. Every <10 -se of tale medieine makes new blood, which clear the ekin, etrengthens the appetite and tnalees tired, ,depreeeed men, women and children bright-, active and strong. Ala's. Mau -de. Bas gg Lemberg, Sask:, saps: "I can 11n1lo5ittitiltly recanmend Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills -as. a blooalatilder and tonic. I was very mueh run down when 1: began using the pine, and a few boxes fully restored my health." Sold bv all inedieine •deatere er -by mail at 50 cents a box or 8ix boxee for .from The Dr. Williams' Medieine Co., Brockville, Ont. - I- A HEAVY ONE. Lady Vieitor—My dear man, isn't there an awful weight on your con- science? Prisoner—No, lady, de weight is On me ankle. - LONG LiVtD MUSICIANS. A. Dr. Roggers has been studying the effects of wind instruments tm the life of musieians. The average life of the wind instrument artist is 03, while that of others is 02. Thirty-four per eent, of the former category attain 70 years. Performers on the flute, in Dr. Boners' "eehelle de longevite" reaches on the average the age of 01, while the hautbois exe- crate:a lives two years loom. Buglere go two years better, and die clarinet player lives till he is 05. lie nIhe eornetonly fails the allots span by iine , year. The ophieleide artist beats thew" all. .1Tis time, of life is from 73 to 80.44. Nlinth•rnot.-- You don't pay- the iPast attention to anything 1 .say, trnw many times have 1 teal on not ..to AllIOke in the hotitze? Sinidernot—: I durtno. iIuw int.!y tm.t.,, hat ts 1 done it? 11040104 •-r Terrible itching Got Little Sleep Mr. T, Williams, Wiradpeg. Until Cuticura Rcme4ieo Cured Hint Those who have steTenel lone and hopes lessly from torturing tikin eruptions will read with interest thhi letter from lidr. T. Williams, 118 Punk: Ave., Winnipeg (dated Jan. 14, 1011): 4"rbe Cutteura Item(,:dies certainly did work finely, and 1 aro tbaaeltil that t1ie:.0 is sue.h it remedy, and that 1 triQd it. About three months ago a terrible Itching corn. =need on my body. 1 could not understand it. It gradually f;1.1117 worze and covered a large portion ot my body. There was also a slight cruption Of till lkiL1, eort of a rash. 1 sut/ered gretly with thu itching and at night time 1 had little sleep. 1 tried one or two remedies witivh did no good, and then I tried Cutleura Soap, Ointment and Re. solvent. in about ten days 1 was c Its affections, send a postal to the Pottet QuIPIPtely Remedies have sfronled the speediest and cured." For more than a gem'rition the Cuticura. most economical tteattnent fur itching, burn - log, scaly and bleeding skin and scalp hu- mors, of young and old. Sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. For a liberal sample Of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, with 32-p. book on the care of the skin and treatment of Drug de Chem. Corp., sole props., 51 Colum- bus Ave., Boqton. IT 0 A. Light is for the eye, the eye is for light. An. infant's eye sees nothing but light. 1 look into the eye. I Fee some one behind, sonic person looking at me. I look again, I ttra a searcher. Nay there are two searchers; "nly soul eearehee for God, for the living God; when shall I come and appenr before God?" "Where is 3ily wandering sheep," says the other, for "I came to seek." We talk of conjunctions of the heavenly bodies, and our alma:tracks foretell, and they are absolutely correct. There are other eonjunctions not made known to the sons of men; they are undiscovered, unrecorded, hidden things found only in the eecret place of the most high. The eon of men seek, he leaks into many faces; he does not find. Ah! me, the toil, the travail, the tears, when he finds. Oh! the thrill of joy; be glad, ye heavens, he finds himself, through many 41111,1111.e1S, by not a few ministries, through secret doors. A new conjunc- tion is preelairteed, Jirt to the spirit of the jaet, hext t the aneele %vile wait and study and pray, and then to the double mutual .eunseiousness of finder and found. He is within, behin4 the eye, conies into view out of the seebv• ion of the soul'palace. What authen- tic recognition, intervour.se! He epeaks, I hear; He touehee, I respond; mind, will, heart, conscienee, ernypathy are all active, aflame; the body becomes a sanctuary, it thrills,- it bears witness, host and gnest embrace; there is feast- ing, there is joy, theie is light! There is joy of pardon, peeve of love, bliss of fellowship, repose of freshfulness, forestaste of paradise, hope of heaven. Ilio wreal, how near, how elose, "Closer ie Ile than breathing, And nearer than hands and feet." The Bible is fresh; nature sings a new song, his way is illumined. The universe cries: Holy, holy, holy ie the Lord! Christ is eelf revealing, Fell recordiag. Light must ehine, darkness must depart. see it in the eoel's amen. How softly the light spreads, eltaeing, ilealing, till ing, lifting; I eye it in the world; dif- fusing, spreading, enlarging, banishing bigotry, cruelty, infamy,; soothing, eerfuting, widening, the human heart. I see it in heathen nations. "Bel bow. eth down, Nebo stoopeth." 1all1Q1 de. crept, halting moving; eo valor, no ye- loeity. So great was the terror of Islam centuries ago that devout men wondered if the profesors of the false prophet would Sit in the chief eintire of learning in Oxford. Who built the shylyiug beach that turned the fire 'MINT that threatened to flood Western Europe? The light from the east worshipped that angry flood and turned it back on itself. By divine fiat, bade it hasten to bury, itself in Ishmael's grave of sand. He that sitteth in the heavens tames, the tiger nature of man. The world marvelled to see the New Terkieh Party putting into their motto the work: "Equality" and "Fraternity:' lehun has never stood. for either. Still more re- markable is the recent proclamation by the Sheik-id-1E1mo, the religious of Mo- hammedanism, declaring that constitu- tional government is sanctioned by the Koran; that Christians who truly wor- ship God are the true brethren of Moe - lams and that they also will have a place in Paradise; that it is the day of Mohammedan government to protect the Christian and the Jew, just as it protects Moslems and that before the government and before God all are equal. Here is strange doetrine, and we search in vain through the Koran to discover where the Sheik-u1-Islum found warrant for proclaiming it. The revolution in. Turkey could never have taken place but for the leavening truths of the New Testament. --H. T. Miller. 50 CENTS) PER WEEK Puts An Oran or Piano in Your Howe. Imorraohreor....4 On Friday, March 13th, we 00111111011e0 OUT a11111111.1 kihtug,hter sale of all used in. strutnents in stock. Thi8 year sees us with double the number we ever had Seme eighty-five instrumentare offered and among them organbealong 114141.1e8 •Of 6neit well-known 3 11,1kel'R ai 1301 Kano Thomas, Doherty and Dominion. The priees of tlteee range from $15 to oo at the above terms. Tlte. pianos bear sit& well-known ttalnei ot tilakerq as neeker, Thomas, Ilerald, Weber, 'Worm. with end Heinteman & Co. Every inetetee went haa been repairel by our own • workmen, and carrke a five years! iintee, and fl a. epecial 'inducement ,:,•we make an agreement :t any in. ,struntent back on exchate,loot beVtcr one any time within three .,!..,oars,. and rai. ,7„ low every eetit paid. Send postAard` at , -once for complete with full pattiett. ,lars. Ileintzman 71 Kinn' street east, Hitmilton, VTALL$_7 CITIES TERRIBLE RBULT OF BLOOD POISON To Se Torn Oown to Make Way for m p ro vem en te. The &vision to 8b0lW1 the -in-int wall surrouteling ninneettai city is an tereeting sign of tee 1 Mee; 11A 1V011 ae 11'1 preliminary to an ana'Aeai rchtnit, development. seores of work yt: - day, says the Noctit Daiiy with pick and shovyl on that po:.tion the eity minima .vh;-1) Nees the t,t3Tet leading to the 014 v,Inwr 1-hf, veral ti v • !, --1'1,1R tire alierw:qs along which pedestrians and riekshas made their dmious and diffi- cult lvay in that part of the eity. Th..1 space netpzirect by the removal of the wall should therefore, if used to best advalltage, he of considerable value. It appears to have been suddenly covered that the wall i4 usvie$s toi a menus of defenve and thal., it is tot impediment of the native toartle.s, .1.1te Nvork was put in hand itnmediately the order .went forth from the town hell works department that it was to be executed without fail. The firk section to be removed is that stretching from. near the old yamen alone by the Great East Gate to the Unitriel Fire Brigade Buildings. The moat or creek beneath the Wall 18 to he INeti in and it is reported a broad undo() is to take its pie ea, The owners and iultabitante of ehan- ties ou the wail have been order.!d to remove these, and any .fences, material, ete., widen would impede the proeeess of the work. An outcry might have been exPected, since,. the scheme had been strongly opposed, but the order .14:( quietly accepted. Jii fnet, i"E're iitlJe the work, even though it invtgutates intereet seems to have been aro..tvld. by a etriking ehange. Two of the principal gates in the city wall of Hangchow have been remo•ven, At Canton the Republiean Government has ordered an investigation as to the population and. the limber of houses aloog the wall inside entt outeide the city. The officials deputed to the work are to report in a Month, S111.3111itting list of the houses and residents, -to- gether •witli 8 elteme .for the demolition of the entire city wall. OMEN IN ALL PARTS OF CANADA Tell of the Health Dodd's Kidney Pills &W. They Made a New Woman of Mrs. tIe Amirault Who Was a Victim of Kidney Disease for Over a Year. Aruiraul t' ilill. Yarmouth ('o,-N.Se April 1.--tSpechel.)---"Four boxee of Dodd" 7.- Kidney Pillmade a new wonean of me." Thoee are •the -eenea. of Xlie. Elie Authotult, or the'. oleee, Thee are wordthat have heen tteal ahele. and again by women. in all parte of Can- ada who have i.•:teifered, and who have found relief. and (;ure in Dodd's Kidney Pill s. "1 suflietd tor ever a year front aid- ney dieoase," Mr, Arairault eontinuee. 'Nothing. L tried helped me. At hast some one told ree to try Dodd'e Kidney Pill, Before 1 luid fluielted the first box 1 felt aetter, roue bieeee made a new WO1141-1 1n(i.” No roinediy (aV givou to the publit, has brought health and happinese into the lives of so many WOMen ns DOtid'iv Kidney Pilk. Th'sit4 In:V;(11Se nine-tenthF• of the ills to whieh women are sethject eome from di,eeetet kidmas. No woman who uses lhahhe Kidney Pills can have dise8.4,ed kidney. aleveye flirt, the kidneys. PRINCE ARTHUR OF CONNAUGHT, Prince Arthur of Connaught, son of the Duke, the Clovern.or-General of Canada, and brother of Princess Pat- ricia, is taking part in advancing the CallSe of education for young men desiring to enter work in the trades. He hae consented to become a patron of the Apprenticeship and Skilled Employment Assoeiation. which has It officee in Denison Douse, and he bait made several suggestions of methods which have already beett adopted by the association.. PAVING A NaAT COMPLIMENT. Few ministere were better loved by their fleck than Bishop Reese, of Sa- vannah, says the Boston Journal. It is told of him that when he was rector of a pariith bo Saw one of hie parishioners talking very emphatically to Ids son, Dr. Reece called out: 'What are you going, to do' with that'boy .o f you rs The old man advaneed to the door and replicd: "What ani T going to do with him? will tell you, doetin4 aht going -Ito .-With "my sh what vett cannot ;to with :.-ouria* "Oh, itideeni" pid the doctor, "and pray whet is theta" -; e "Why, Vra noble' to „nollo a bettoe 'man of him than his Itilthig'.;* Commercial Tvaveler tountry to- t-t'L Are tlietri quite (lean? -Chambermaid- 4 ehettlil eay so. They're 'only jus t home from the laundry. Feel 'em; thcfre t,tP.1 roe!" e Wise 40110.460.1000i MOVOIYMPIWMVI Mier Three Operations Zain.11uk Was Tried and Proved Successful. If people would only Ilse ZennBult for (throttle eores, blood -poison, ('1 e., before permitting en operation, seores of limbs would be saved, nobt, patterfioa, of North Pelham, \Vinland ea, Ont., writes: "My daugh- ter, Allah', /lad 1400d.p013011 in her fing- er. The doetor operated. twiee on the fluger, but did not obtain the desired reFoaiti and a third OpiqatiOn was annii(1. ere4 11PM.sary, "Three doctors were presentat this operation, but after it had been per- formed the wound. did not heal. Try as W(' would we could nei get anything to close tho wound. "We at last tried Zinn -Bina :led it Wa. wouderful to Walell hOW this balm healed the wound. Ertel, day there was a marked ininrovement. First the wound in the palm of the hand. closed., and then the finger whiell had been bad so long began to heal. The diseased flesh seem- ed to rise out of the wound and then drop off and. new healthy Stein formed from below, pushing off the diseased Us- fsitItitg. eerin a short time the wound was completely healed, Had we, appliea d Z Zuk at first we might hat ve saved. the 5'We. itad another proof of Zarn-Bukill'Is' Dowel in the ease of my son. When t.yo pears old Ile had his hand badly mangled. One finger had to be ampu- tated and it left n runnim; sore Or sante 111011018. This wound, also, was finally healed by Zam-Buk." For ehrmlic sores, blued -poison, ulcers, abscesses, sealp SOMS, piles, eruptions, inflamed patches, eczema, cuts, burns, bruises and all skin injuries and dis- eases Zam-Bult is without enual. ftt)c box at ail druagistn and sweet or post free from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, tor EVletc'aMe . l:Jaye you tried Zam-13ult Soap? e. NATIONAL LlFE. (Dr. Martin, Montreal.) Carry the application to a higher phase of life, and it becotnes equally con- vincing. The foundatiott ?teed of human eoeietr is moral inteatity and a highly evolved eerise of mutual helpfulneee. The security aw1 social advancement of any nation waits upon the evolution of these elements in its eltizene. During Christ's earthly minietry, at the call e't homan need, He wrought a miracle ithich is at onee eugge.stive of the abundance of Godti hidden provisions in nature, of the presidency of man over the laws controlling thoee provisions, and of an economic trust whieh the con- stitution of soeiety itself imposes 111)011 its members. By the maeterfulnese of his power He niulitiplied a few loaves and fiehee eo as abundantly to meet the demands -of a fainting multitude. But the beet tradition of tl.ds divine aet tells us that He distributed the lbaves and fishes to Hie disciples, and. they in turn to the people 'Rerein see the eentral ethiciple - u soolal rponibi1ity. Folp iiMng hard upen the materiel prosper. ity of every peoole eomee the question of equitable distribution. It is at this point that the life of nation after nation has given way. It was while Babylon was feasting that her doom was sealed. It was while the prince e of lerael re- elled in ease and luxury that the voice of Amos proclaimed the judgmenfe of th.od in the dissolution of the nation. Long before the Goths pressed upon Rome front the north and while yet she was rolling in wealth, the tremblings of her downfall could be felt in her streete. Jr no instance wee there lack of wealth, but in every inetanee the lack of moral intergity • and the absence of social ?..esponsibbity. Why has France been drenched,again and again with blood? No fields are more productive than the fields of France' no people more thrifty than the Frenchpeople. In a generation France liquidated an enormous war in- demnity :and seeme not to awns felt it. Why then lute France been baptized in such floods of blood? Because of man's inhumanity to man in the fentof in- iquitous inequalities and where these exist ancl ant adowed, not only is social progresa arrested, but sooner or later t.'0133,C8 t'le crash of national calamity. The Iteadying, integrating (lenient in all national life is the moral element. Let moral integrity be the possession of men, and let the sense of mutual aid become the distinctive property of individual lives — let Chriet's prayer be realized that the love wherewith the Father had loved hilIl might be in the people—end the seeurity and progress of society are guaranteed, no matter under what form of government. But whatever be the form of goverrunent and whatever be the vastness of a peoples wealth, and how- ever strategio its geographiral assign- ment, if theFse foundations are not strong the perpetuity and bleesing of the nation are not passible. 4 Shift h STOPS COUCHS ITAVYsE11711./g SHOWS UNIQUE HEROISM. Weeks of isolation in an icebound lighthouse, hunger. woman's heroic bat- tle with an ugly 6ea, the lonely death of the husband while nt prayer and the wife's self-sacrifieing devotion to duty after his body had been taken ashore, are eome of the elements of the story that has come to light. William Taylor and hie wife were keepers of the lighthouse on the treach- erous ehoals of Chincoteague. The lee, piled up by the recent cold- winds fol- lowing zero weather, shut the two off from the mainland. At last the husband fell ill. The upolies had grown desper- ately low. In the crisie the wife volun- teered to brave the ugly sea in a e,aso- line lattnelo The managed to rtiaelt the shore. OW night she noticed that tbe light was not burning. Undaunted by her previous experience, she boarded the launch and fought her way again through the iee. In the little bodehant. her she found her husband kneeling at his bedside ns if in prayer. Tfe was dead. Mre. Taylor tended the light and kept the lonely vigil while Natant buried her hushariel.—Snow Hill. Md., ileseatel Oak- land Tribune. MOTHERS RECOMMEND BABY'S OWN TABLETS Baby's Ow n 'eablete are reeernetended by thousands of thaukful mothon whit Nita* nsed them for their little ones and haws found them a safe ATLI tittre eure for vonstipatimi, indiaesviion. worms, simple fevers artil ell siontaot ena bowl troubles. Coneerning them 'Aire tuette. Blier,, of St. Demote,. Que., NVPitt'ti: “Piellg40 Send 1111* another box oi 1ib 's Own 'r;lhiettl, 1 h Lt1' 8 b8 J3 u -ed them and 'have found 1 1,,la evealimil, lent- edy for little ono„t,, 1 would reconmeat thcm to an 10,,t1,11s." Tabletsoare "Ma 11),‘ W.* 41'1101-'3 1)1 by wail at 2:1 vows a hr. from 'elle De. WU1itu.;\ ledit,114. LAC ITeleplein- eaieseleeppingutust be a me , t i t :telt mate: itte andieted, ae tee tie 1. (I: 1 1 'A' ,(f 1 hi. del %.*4. I 1) di:treat tilie 1%.,1 iill.i i.1.1" liaN 11.1•11 10)10 t(1 s(01 iliS I/94- (.11 1 trn .1.7,0110. jalut:tail...'si...bruary persono Ivere j and 17e injured by industrial ace1dent4, again4 SO and 21,1 respeotivoly itt The completion of the Panama Canal will shorten the dietqUe0 from Australia to Montreal by about 2,740 miles, and that from England to San Franeleco may be made in 6,200, Peur Germans, intspected ot beiog spies, have been. arreeted withiu the cinets of gt. Helen's Fort, 011 the Isle of wolalei. if they keep a supply of good lager be-er on the Isle of Wight? op= a There are 56,000 Smiths in New York eity, or 1,125 in each 100,000 of the pop- ulation. Not long ttg,'0 there were ne Smith; in the United States Senate, hut now the elan, heeded by Hoke Smith, oi Georgia, has invaded it, and. their nunt- bete are rapidly increasing. Prom Tunis comes the news of the dis. cowry by Dr. Naarne, a French physi- cian, of a specific for cholera in the venous injection of adrevalin. It has been favorably reported upon by the Pasteur Institute, after tenting it in twenty cases, in all of which it proved successful. sate Illiteracy is decreasing in tho United States. Ten years ago 5,517,608 persons or 7.7 per cent. of the people were un- able to road or write. Ten years ago 0,181,000 or 10.7 per cent. were illiterate. That was an actual decrease of 603,401 in the face of an increase of population of 13,040,450. 4.9 49' The Duke of Conmanght, like his roy- al brother, Edward, is strongly opposed to the doeking of horses' tails, which he denounees as a relic of batharietn. Without stopping to u rge tonna niter - ittuistit against the practice, it should need. no more than the comparison of a well-groomed and eared, for perfect, horse with one of these rentilted to owe:emit the pinatuie,.. Thomas A. Edison Is said to have a ;strong prejudice against employing Yale men. He says an edueation on seientifie lines is necessary to suceeee thie age, and, a college education, un- less it be scientific, is not a good. found- ation upon which to lay a career. The young man who is welcomed in the world of affaire to.day is he who is able to do things. S,ylvia Pankhuost has been explaining to the .1;;Tew York Herald how much bet- ter hammers serve the purpose of suf- fragette window -breaking than stones. She says that the women are not al- ways able to throw accurately, and are liable to hit things they don't intend to break. Perhaps, however, the female hoodlums can succeed in hitting a large plateglaes window with a harruner, and get 'comfortably jailed, when, if they tried to drave a nail, they might hit their thumbs. as -4 One of the hoodlum. suffragettes who threw a bundle of lighted oil-sos.ked shavings into a branch of the London general post -office, has been sentenced to six months' imprisonment, a puniehe latent which she received with the cry: suffer for the freedom of women." Surely there is here ample evidence that ench creatures aro weak in the upper storey, if, indeed, they have not been hired to 'commit, these offences. Con- finement in a lunatic autism would seem to fit such cases. 1: Dr. Mary Walker, tho trousered suf- frage advocate, says "the hoodlums in London, who are breaking windows, are a disgrace to their sex." Mary says, "the way to vote is to vote. Let the wo- men march up to the polls at the next election and. cast their ballots, demand- ing it as their right. You'll see the men step aside fast enough. There would. be no fighting of any kind. The men are like sheep. Just show a brave front aud they won't have a thing to aay." But what fun of glory would the Pankhursts get out of a victory like that? Dr. W. 3. Morton, of New York, says he has taken with radium e. photograph through a heavy revolver, the eartridgen in it eoming up plainly. Ile has also taken phetographs through flat -irons and. :Belgian Weeks. He has two tabee of radium, each worth $1,000, and vire leaning ten reillignims. Ho dropped a tube on the carpet once and it was step, pod on. iTe never reeovered it, and the cost of the rug to him jumped. to about $1,200. Since then he has tendom taken the radium out of tho aluminum tube. It is important that stieh eostly main- ial be eat -dully husbanded, as there 15 probably not a teaspoonful of it in the world. In the year 1011 the Btitieh Board of Trade statistiee show that in the necado which it eloeod thine was a teduction of :1:23.000 80I'nS itt the ouliivate3 :UV& 0.f. 1 11;4 U12itis:1 Kingamtl, and 115,000 act es in tne rough Israelite la tel. la the wine. 41,1 t 1911 it. 0:10,,n.11 thitt 1!„(1 t )ti area, Of :Alia in U1 11411 (11.41it.1.' tx•-.1(A tibelitt'' 11,0'10,000 11%.•!, i 11 inc-11,43t, 02 1P„;:(..“,/ ,!..104‘ 01' 11101•0 I' 010 (.1' 1:111 rthe 1.1• at OW 11'0.1).1. her ‘,1 1111 ill. hoitUng0.10 1110.1(1., illf)t itt the t'l1,(11 (0-' 1011 thote wets: fi0dneti evelt Iteitifeee in 'Fete. leeil ;net ‘Valoe. ns ageinst 28s,1'0.1 itt 1010, and that in tie, 1,4,4 Owe vent-, ihore has been a ettin in Humber of dent!. er item ly per eunt,