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The Wingham Advance, 1912-05-09, Page 341#~4.44,414oliiiwarromogrogoor* • • " 7:44prowpwrres......o.hrnortror...irhopowaw COW CAUSED In the poultry World SERIOUS TROUBLE But Dodd's Kidney Pills Brouiht the Cure. Mr. Hugh Mertin, Suffering From Kid- ney Disease for Two Years, Tells. How He got Back His Health. t. Dippolyte de Killeenuer, Lake fe'reelzieen, Terrebonne Co., (Jae., May 0, eefSpeaial).-.Again the people of this neighborhood are talking of a com- plete cure a hideey disease. Mr. Hugh 'Martin, jun., a well-known young far- xner, is the pereon ured, and he gives ell the •eredit to Doddts Kidney Pills. "My trouble was mused by a cold," Mr, Martin say, in an interview, "and I suffered for two years, head would athe and 1 had pain e in the haek as well. I felt heavy and sleepy after mettle 1 wee often dizzy, my memory wee tailing and 1 found it difficult to collect my thoughts. 1 was also nor- voue while lieart flutteringadded to my anxiety, "1 was a eick man indeed when I started to use Doild'e Kidney Pills, but by the time 1 had taken two boxee I was a changed man. Are you Sur- prised that I think Dodd' s Kidney Pills a wonderful remedy?" - if you have two or more of Mr. Mar- tin's symptoms your kidneys exe &a- oaeed. Dodd'e -Kidney Pills are tbe Bure eure. eeer SHIP THAT "KICKS." When eailors join a -tip almost the first question asked by each one as he takes the wheel for the first time, is, "Does she kick?" Kicking, as it is called by tho seamen, is due to the ac- tion of the water under the lee of the rudder when the vessel's stern, which lute for the inoment been borne sky- ward on the crest of a wave, falls back agein into the trough with such terrifie force as to make her tremble fore and aft and perhaps wrench the wheel from the grasp of the steersman. Sometimes it happens that he is takert unawares, and, being unable to let go in time, is flung right over the wheel to the other side of. the deck, often re- ceiving serious injuries. Sometimes a man will be pitched right overboard into the sea, and a recent 4ase is known of a man who received a blow under the chin from one of the spokes and died a few days later from the effects. In some of the worst types of kickers kicking straps are used regularly in nearly all weathers, and many sailors refuse to go to sea in ships which are known to be confirmed kiekers.-Tit Bite. 44.4 BOASTING BY INDIRECTION. Mrs. It W. Barlow the golf eleamplon, said the other day at thePhiladelplila- Ccauttry Club: "If a golfer is going to boast, let him ruo-aet moderately. 1 heard a golfer .ay one autumn evening, as he toasted hizu- sef before the club -house fire: "'Never did I see better golf then this afternoon. My opponent got away every drive, he hit every brassee clean, he ap- proached perfectly, and h•e didn't mess a aixagle putt.' "How much did he beat you by?' 1 aeked. "'Beat nee?' said the modest man, with a look of surprise. 'Why, he didn't beat me. It wa.43 my game from the start.'"Washington Star.. I II 411•11.01111111.11101110110.10.404em The majority of markets prefer yen low-skinnee cereessen The bulk of the meat of a fowl is placed on the breast and thighs. it id important to have a breed that growe rapitil,y and fiesheis up young. The market weigh t13 for roasting fowls varies front 21,.3 pOUralS cording to the eetteou. Small bone, short lege and well-rounded :form aer good, points deeirable. The early roaster markets call for light -weight birds ,the weight gradually increasing anti] litee fall and. eerly winter. As a rule, ehicks that grow their feathers elowly are hardier awt grow faeter than titoee that exhaust neir etrength by feethering out early. The farmers of Rhode Island eave bred the Rhode island Reds for fully 30 years. They ;,.re a egAid, meaty fowl, with short thighs, long breast bone, deep yellow seie and light pie feathers, PREVENTION BETTER THAN CURE. In raising cnieks, Proroution et Hoe seenlel be thelobject hem in view, osi the et kg are so easily killed by lice, watch are otte nen unsuspected eouree of more taiity. If eineas are hatched In incuba- tors and reared in bradere and yards un- fretneented by older l'oevis, there will be nu lice to fight. If they are hen -hatched and reared, the case is different and we must take al/ precautions that chicks begin free from lice and kept so. I have not tried the Cornett powder or sitter or chicks, but the pyrethrum powder is entirely harrniems to eggs and °bloke, and this is what I use mostly. The setting - liens should be removed front the hen- house. well dusted with the powclerapitteed upou eggs in a clean nest freshly made in some quiet building away from the other hens. It is safer to dust her the eticond week aiso and it sorely must be done two or three days ittelore chicke are dee to hatch. I have the room darkened and take them off to feed before sundown, also seeing that plenty of water is by them at feeding time, also grit and charcoal. ln using Rock hens for sItterS, I find It safe to set them over again, even the second or third titne, giving two lots of chicks to one hen to mother, aaid half the hens can be e.set. in the csee ot old hens that have proved their worth as layers and are needed for breeders. I pre- fer the long period of incubation; it reets and renews. Such birds make an easy early molt and are valuable breeders. The hens should be well powdered each week with the insecticide while broad- ing the ehicke. If, by chance. a hen steals her nest and comes off with the chIcite, they, too, must be dusted. Expressions That Will Be Obsolete After the Bar Has Been Banished. (Guelph Mercury.) "Name your pizen." "leave another!" "You look bad this morning, Bill." "our wife was looking for you." "What'll you have?" "The bottle off the top shelf, please." "No, I'm not working at present." "Lend me $2, Jim." "Have another" "No, this is mine." awfully nervous to -day."' "Let me have the price, mieteree "Chuck him out." "Everybody have a drink!" "The best you have in the house." "Don't care If I do." "Be a good fellow." "Fill 'era up again." "Will you cash this cheque, Mr, Bar- tender?" "He has no insurance," and "It's too bad be drinks." itate. A a punishment for som ezzliedernea- nor at the table, it was decided that John must not eat with the family at the neat 7rea/. 0 'IP rigr 'r1rr1prJ r51 USE 0 SELBY AND OleILD Uses Only Cid/curer. Soap for Prize Bah,. "1 have always used Cutioura Pop and no other for my baby, and he hse never' had a sore of any kind. He does not even chafe as znost ba- bies do. 1 feel that it le all owing to Cutioura Soap for ho is fine and healthy*, and when five months old won a prize in v. baby contest. It makes my heart ache to go into so rnany bozos and see a sweet faced baby with the whole top of its head a solid me of sotuf, caused by the MO of poor soap, 1. always recom- mend Cutleura, and nine times out of ten the next Ulm I see the mother ehe vays Oh!I Dm so glad you told nee of Cutioura.1 " (Signed) Mrs. 0, As. Selby, Redondo Beaoh, Calif. Althougli Cutleues Soap le sold by drug - gene sed dealers everywhere, a metal to "Outicties," Dept. 33.1, Boston, ej.e.e,,,,wfl secure a liberal Earned*, with it.2-a, book QZ/ tlis pre at sizis. &Pate eted bah'. I .1 • 1 MIMI NEW STOCK EXCHANGE RULE. Heretofore the rule in regard to de- livery of stook e on puts and calls has been that a broker patting through this form of contra/et must charge full earainiS•giOn for the amount of stock re- ceived or dolivered, but eceeptancee or deliveries on the last day of the contract, -svilieh became cash transactione, wore looked upon as mere trateefers and not subject to the commission, being con- sidered nothing but clearances. The governing committee of the New York Stook Exchange paesed a new rule covering this point Feb. 14. It carries still further the policy entered into year ago of shutting all loopholes through which the payment of full corn- miessions of one-eighth of one per cent. by outsiders might be dodged. This rule s.• lies to full one-eighth commission to I aecept4tikees or deliveries on puts and whether on the last day of contract crr at any other time. The trade in puts and calks le not °fie- otelly reeognized by the stock exchange, but merabers may eedoree suet teuzitracts if they desire -The Tieker. _3 e --- GARDEN SUBURB FOR PARIS. The Ramo for the creation of garden suburbs, on the lines of that of Hamp. stead, Eng., in the whole of the outer eirele of Paris, is shortly to be brought before the Municipal Council in connec- tion with the purchase of the fortifica- tions by the city. Garden cities have been taken up with great industry in France, and in many iedustrial centres efforte have been made to follow the English example of creatiug model vil- lages for the work people. ro ra ita ra FD P re11013 Where Do You Shop? Do you shop in a brisk, active store, or in a dull store? !-; 1 *, Advertising makes bright stores.1 Failure to ad- vertise goes hand in hand with dullness and stag- nation. BEEFEBBIE S. Advertising brushes away cob- webs and dust, smartens shop windows, quickens the intelli- gence of salesmen, and lets in the sunlight.. Advertising • makes the mer- chant think of you -of your wants and needs; makes him anxious to serve you to your Liking and advantage, r Advertising keeps stock from having birthdays. I Advertising acquaints you with new ,things, and so brightens your home, your life, your person. Advertising keeps a business from growing lazy and stupid. Advertising injects good red blood into the arteries of a business, and keeps it healthful and active. • 1 - Shop where your wants and needs are uppermost in the mind of the merchant. Shop in the store which reflects you, which you dominate. Shop where your money returns to you in better goods, better values, bet- ter service. ,17 Shun the shop that is dumb and dark and dreary; keep away from the shop that never speaks to you, never smiles at you, never bothers.4pout you.- . 0 Reward by your CUstorn the merchant who lives to serve you, and who is doing his utmost to build up this community; who takes you into his confidence by means of advertisements in your local newspapers.,r-. - • tu. Smile back at the shop which smiles at you. Shake hands with it keep company with it -your favor will be returned to you tenfold. *Advice regardin‘ your advertising problems is available ihtaufb any good adveriimg agency, or the Secretary of the Canadian Press Association, Room 503 Lowden. Bukiing. .Enluiry involves no obligation, on your pot -so Writt, if mlirtstai.fr- woramonsiman 13 E2:1 • IN THE BTQCK YARD The ewes that are Neckline leldbo should be fed very liberallyt • The young lamb ern' gnaw rapidly, KO give him a ebance. There is profit in it. Tbe sheep gearters, at lambing time especially, saouva be kept 'well -bedded and very etean, Good pasture ie Invaleable in vowing edge iniecesertaly. 14111: le the hog's natural food. Give hint all of It you can Scare up every day. Censumers axe aemancling pork watt more lean meat, Tete feeder arid breee- , er should eater to thea requirements. The feeder should try to keep the pig etea.dtly increasing in eveleeet tram one - halt to one pound evict; clay on an av- erage, Cleanlineee is next to godliness -and ahead of it with the milk inspector. A cow appreciates punctuality in zniedoe as much as a man does in-Mea14. Be mire there are no lice on the young Awn: when they are turned to pasture, 'There is money In dairying in spite of a prevalent notion to the contrary, but It neede; a combination of good cows and good management to get It out. "No foot, no horse. It won't take loug for an 1guorant stroer to ruiu yea* best foot. Look out for the yearlIng colts. Don't It them get a sietback as spring ap- proaches. A stumbling habit may be caused by poor shoeing; or it may be caused by ignorant or careless hitching. A; colt appreciates the companionship Of Man, and he should have it, especially during the first year of his life, WATCH YOUR ONION SEED Of all the different operations neces- sary to produce a onion crop that or gen- 1,111f; sure seed is a little more important than any other. Onions may fall into three classes as to kinds: red, Yellow and white, There are by far the most of the last two letnels raised. The reds age not an interior on- . Ion In any way, yet tor some reason the vegetable -buyers in our city mareets avoid them, In our market we do not have much call or use for any kind of Whites. Yellows are the hest and surest. of tee two sorts of yelowS-Soutlipurt Glebe and Flat Yellow Globe -the beat is the Southport. More of them are Pro- duced than any other knot, and in a good many eases there is some advance in price In -favor of the Southport Yellow. The Prizetaker is another variety of the light yellows, It is a fair yielder, and under very favorable conditions gets to be big in elle. lts failing is in Its keen- ing qualities. There is another of tee light-coloreo class stalled Giant Gibral- tar. These are an imitation to.' tee Southern Bermuda, whielt aro shipped into northern markets le crates. 'Ilia Gibraltar Is a mild onloti and it Is big if given any reasonable show at al:. Its objection Is its softnese. FARM FURROWS If there Is anything that es better than a stack of corn fodder at this Owe of the year it is two stack e of eorn fodder. This does not apply to those who have a good si'.ed silo on their farm. Theo are in a class by themselves. It is a true blue optimiet who can look a full-fledged blizzard in the face atm say that it is a sign of a good corn year. The 'elgn" may or may not be woeth shucks, but the man who does not let out a howl every time the weather aets up a little is wurth tying to. There Inay be boute Vfiry good argu- ments against the site, but we must get away frum the notion L.at ;t eii pensivu fetud unless we can tied some clew that will produee mete and better feed, aere for acre, thee urn that is put into the silo. Th Thuli \s -nu teen; eure that his ten aeree of meadow produee more teed better feed thaa ten aeree or corn that his neighbor put into the silo would he a fool to build. If he has good reasons to think theother way it is up to him to inveutigate. The manure spreader has lengthened the manilla eaulinte season considerably. With this implement manure can be spread over the fields after the crops are in and those who hate tried this plum seem to en well pleneeti woe the results. Spring is here whether we are wining to believe it or net. Tee almanac &eye SO ana we t:ave lied must of the "tegne" All that is lacking Is the wile clueks and geese, a feW robins tied tentie warm weather. Perhaps for the benefit or the vast majority that. are short of teed, we should add that ito leek the geeen graee grov ing all aroued. Xi one has been able to tell tn eust why one ear of corn will melte better seed than ailother ear that was saved at the same time and kept in the same room, but many have /earned, by expert- eiaee, that this is the ease. We nave also learned that the only way to be ab- solutely sure of our seed is tu test each ear separately, and of the good On chooue the best. "Better late than nev- er" is a pretty fair motto regarding 2eact- corn testing-. But "Never be bete" is better. There may oes cases vraere ggsen :teat - tared over the ground with a broaceast seeder will glee better results than where the drill is used, but this is such a rare exception to the general rule teat it Is reasonable to suppose that some- thing Is the matter, either with the dritt or with the "man behind," wtion this ts the case. Tbe new method of barn building seems to call for a long, narrow barn with the stanehions running lengthwiee and rata ig out. This makes cleaning and fee- ing quite easy, but where cattle raee the south the windows should be provided with shades; they have eyes that will be Injured by having a bright light shine direetly into them A NEW iNNOVATJON. The announeement that the Cana- dian Pacific Railway Co. will this eurn- neer begin to run a Gooks of Obierea- tion Car Service.; on the Austrian State Railways through the Tyrol, marks an epoch in the growth of the importance of Cana& in the old. world. Under a, contract with the Austrian State Ita.il- ways, the Canadian Pacific lias arrang- ed to build several observation can3 in Austria on Canadian Pacific plane. The design is that of Mr. Vaughan, head of the C. P. R. Angus shops at Montreal, who has made a personal visit to Aus- tria to study local condition)). They will differ slightly from the type as used in Canada, and etteh ear will have plat- forms at 'both ends. The care will be the longeat four -axle Cate in Europe. They will have a very Spacious interior, and will seat thirty-two passengers. There Will be hecommodation for a typist, whose SerVieeS will be at the disposal a the passengers; and an up-to-date li- brary, with all the latest magazines, juset as on the C. P. lt. transcontinental trains, will be aracmg the feature; of the car113;th Anotria and the Canadian. Pacific Railway will benefit from the eetusolidation of the new scheme. The attention of vast numbers of travelling Oenadians end Americanwill be di- verted from other parts of Europe to Austria, not only to see that interest - frig eountry, but to leant how these Canadian Pacifio obeerraion ears fulfill their anission. There will be three oh- Aervation servieei; to begin with. By ar- e:Ogee/lent with the Swiss Government, the first. of these will run between -Zurieli and Innebruek over the Arlberg toute via Tiancleek. The second will be between Innsbruck and Vienna via .'lell-mn-Zee and Salsburg. The third will be from Selsburg to Trieste over the Tanern and Karawanken Railways by way of IladgaslAn. V1.dt, 'ettles and the Valley of the Immo, "filit; la€t is a new route onle recently eompleted by the Austrian Government, which has spent immenge stimq of riimiev to .rr•o- vide a short cut from the north of Tti- tete, it greatest seaport. The Austrian Rate Ileilwa.y le per- tieelatly well favoted in the muntry feed41 at rcgarde scenery, arel aeon. te ft will be tinder the Twist favorable Auspices in Coq% new r. P. It. elleerva- 11011 ma, the beauty of the and be lnett interesting ksitt, of Any Euro - pests tour. '41.10,11$10r0L' CHARACTER. Chars,wr is the quality that keeps us always ourselYee. It stands near- est to that innermost part of US that each ealis "payseir; sometimes it is even hard to dis-tiuguich the two. But 1 like to keep character iu tuy body - !Viand. Character stands firm under every trial, if we give it the eleinee to do so. It as to all the etiemies-- temptations, diseourageramit. bad luck, the blue*, and, haste of other-- 'You may defeat the rest of the army, but You dare not come near the general." Chareeter le the quality thet elweys re- minda me that 1 am myself. c.t statute it/et next. to myeelf and fotte on repeat- ing, "Be yourself Don't forget who you are; don't .at below yourself." Where - ever it began, character id the first in our bodyguard. He will ;lever desert. A boy or girl who has charaeter, who keeps ebaraeter strong mei alive, can never truly be elefeated.--- FrOen George Lawrence Parker's "The 'Bodyguard" in May St. .Nieholtee, BADLY ULCERATED LEG Zaw.Buk Cured Her When So Bad She Had to Use &titans, For varicose sores, bad leg, or chroule ulcers, Zaea-Buk is without equal as it healer. A proof of this is just to hand from 'Montreal. 'Mrs. T. Edwards, of 1G4 Amherst St., Writeer: "Some time ago it bad .9,ore broke out on my left leg near the ankle For a week or two I did not heed it, but it. got so bad that 1 could hardly walk. 1 sent for our doctor, and be told me that 1 would have to lay up with the wound. 1 dil so for three weeks, At the end of that time the ulcer healed a little, but 1 could only move about by using crutches The sere then broke out badly, and. the doctor told me that the only thing that would cure it would be au opera- tion, and that 1 sholud have to lay up for a year. This, i knew, War; 1111.130S- sibie, as I had it family to attend to. "My sen had cured a bad out on his finger by using etant-Buk, and he tedvlsed 'zee to give this balm a trifle I did so, and in les than a week's timo it. gave me wonderful relief. It eneeped tee pain, which had been en had that reanY nights 1 did not get a wink of sleep. In a very short time the .wound was tot much better that 1 ied no risOre sleepless nights. axe Wilt1 al,SO ft,lile LoToove about and do My Nvork. 1 perse,vered %viol Zarn-itulc, wit h the result that tee wount is now perfectly (eared, andthe limb IS as sound and strong as ever. To any person suffering from ulcerated flur.,'S WOUld Say. 'try Z1.1.1.13-3.*; " Zarn-ruk Is just as good for pliEls, ab- seetteete boils, scalp SOre.s, 141004 feelson, ratite:ring wounde, cute, tennis, scents, bruises, ezeema, eruptions, anti all other injuries and diseases. All droggists and etores, eee a bog, or'atezneleek Co., To- ' rattle, for price. ftefuee hatenful suleetl- tutes ana ire-net:ens. Have you tried eeern-Buk tablet. Soepic .? e 1 FARM BULLETIN Report on Live Stook and Crops in Canada,. Otte d esp :cern : Tee eensua and etatIsree: 4YMv is(rod to -day a bulletin (,:or.1, and I!v:, Tao eryti; of eryteb,.ourttiet,,i thaiout of a yienl tf 21,-taeleloo eneheis of witeut letrveitt- ea lase Yee:. 1'S,255:000 beteielet Let 87 E per vent., was mereitentenee. ;tad teal; . at the end of 2s.tneult 5‘O1en,000 buehete, or 27 per cent, of thP W;LIO!f,, Was y(vt in femme' hende. The quantity bent by fartuere in tile Maritime Provitweli. cht Meiele 31 was S29,000 buehels; in Quebec, 350,000 bus:bele; in ()uteri°, 3,e74,000 bushels; in Manitoba, eleakateliewan and Alber- ta, 63,620,0C-0 buetzels, and in British Columbia, Awe buehele. At the same date laet year the quantity in hand ire all Canada. watt '33,012,000 buehets„ or 22 per cent. of the total crop of 340.9S9,000 buehele, of which 141,000,000 1..niehe1s, or 94 per cent., was of Merceitentable Oats, which last year gave a yield of 348,S40,600 bushels, wee merehant- able to the- extent of 310,074,000 bushel, or Se per cent., and the quan- tity in hand at the end or March was 153,846,000 brishele. or 44.18 per rent. In the 'Maritime Provineee there watt in hand at that date 4,007,000 bushels; in Quebee, 12.780,000 beeheler in Om thrice 94,870,000 busliele; in Manitoba, Snekateliewan and relbsrta, 11.1,735,000 bushels, and in British Colum.bia, 454,- 000 bushels. In the preceding year the quantity in hand out of a total harvest of 323,449,000 bushele wits 127.587,000 'bushels, or 30.44 per vent., and there Wag a total of 301,773.000 busheie, or 93.29 per cent. of merehantnble quality. The barley yield of 1911 wee 40,- 641,000 Imebele, and of thie quantity there was in baud et the (Ina of March 13,235,000 bushels, or :32.50 per cent. The merchantable yield was 36.083,000 bushels, or 90.26 per cent. The bar- ley erop of 1010 was 45,147,000 imshels, end the quantity on head at the end of March last year WaS 13335,000 butehels, of 20 per eeet. The merehanteble quan- tity of that crop Wile 41.505000 bashele, or 91.93 per cent. Ontario's erop last year was 13.760.000 bushels and that of the three Northwest Provinees 24,- 043,000 bushel. The quantities of cern and roots on hand at the end of Mereli were, in boshele, corn, 3,050,000, as compared with 4,734,000 in 1911; Intekwheet, 1,- 728.000, Against 1,759.000: potatoee, 20,404,000, againet 23,564,000; and tumioe, ete., 14,055,000, against 10,- 159,000. Of bay and elover there were on band at the end Of March last, 3,134,000 tons, compared with 5,987,000. tons on hand at the end of March, 1911, The condition of live stock at the end of March, expteesed in the per- eentage of a standard representing it healthy and thrifty state end de- noted by one houdred was, for homes, 00; mileh cows, 92,58; other eettle, 91.53; sheep, 03,40, and swine, 04. Only itt Prince 'Edward Island for cattle, in Nova Sootie, for ntileh eowe, in Ontario for eattle and in British Columbia, for eattle, other than mileit cows, and for cheep, do the figures representing eondi- tion fall below a percentage of 90. A NEW BICYCLE LAMP. A new bieyele lentp bats been intro- dueed in Amsterdam for whiek electric- ity is generated by the operation of the bicycle. A emell wheel attaehed to the shaft of the dynamo rots on the front or rear NVIleel of the bieyclet meking meaty revolutiene fur ettell one made by the larger witeel. When the lame IS net needed tIi ittUe wheel eau be set free frorn the bicycle wheel by le lever. A 'eery powerful light is &AAA at speed of 15 kilometres (04Q miles) an hour, but sufficient light iu obtained at eve% leespeed,-*Daily Conciliar a.ild ' Veda rtolosts, .1•4!'a II 1 . CO 1 ''111 • T. -.40 . . i rij ill eile"1 1 ri ; . .. : I q•4 . • 4 .1 i l' iil:P.: iiiiitil 1 elle iiii 1' 1 e 1111 ' Yill , fit ;i 111 a ,, .0. itiii;;1;!',: To% '111,1 ..014 i I iidi iel _It i ire I l*te i 1 i '11 e 1 i11 e : lei '1:11!I II 1 - el• t;Ilit I 1 1111111'14111' .. ,. Iti I lel 1 a . le i;lel "i, I. • el ; ; • Ji CIY1 ir OMPANYJI TOROttlee0144;;Ai.stAt• r- 1 It, v eistetalet el!'" r . • tl MOST PERFECT MADE MAKES LIGHT WHOLESOME BREAD. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES 111111,11' "1 % gtetelet • li} i 1 I SPUN CLASS HAIR ORNAMENTS. 4. 1)1 The of spun brilliant very lateee en:lament t glass. The effect ou the 1 ead colors enow as the weaear moves • .),;r.:•-: v. et,. I* for Worn en is mada is very pretty and flashes of to rem fro nuder electric light. Secure& Profitable Bonds Payini 67 II Price Bros. & Company have been in Inislneee in Quebec over Ioo years. It is r the largest inneetry ia Qeebee Province. Their holdings of pulp and timber - ; lands are t5,000 miles in extent, and have been valued by experts at over $rnotte,oiere The t1.1' earnings in 1910 were $448,000,000. The new pulp mill :! now undee eonstruction will double tbese earning. Timber limits are insured _ with Lloyd. of I-aerie:id againtt lire. q Price Bros, & Company First Mortgage Bonds pay 6 per cent. interest on , their present price. 'They will assuredly appreciate in value. Considering interest return, security, and future increase 311 value, they are an unusually " ' attractive investment. On application we will send you literature fully describing these bonds. R yA Le SECURITIES CORPORATION LIMITED _ • BANK: OF MONTREAL BUILDING . «YONCE AND QUEEN MEETS - TORONTO R. M. WHITE Mnruleer LONOON (ENG.) - • M ONTRZAL-0 U EC-HALMAX-OrrAWA • MOTHER GIVES TREATMEN FOR INDIGESTION. My Dear leaugliter: If I were asked wear e woman, who would be a good mothet, ehould poesess to the greatest degree. L N‘ould ariswer "patience." With salvo women this aduilranle quality is born wait /wallet. love; but, aitts, too many never eeein to acquire it: It is nut tou early to begin axercieing pati - eine, uear, ;tow teat yeti are able to 'Mkt; care of your Oahe yourself. .Y.04 Intia ha\n strength or mind to Carry out what you know is best for your inrant v,etbom rilluwing your sym- wallies or your ewe to interetere. The calla enould not te nla:,•4..d with or stirred tin -boon atter nursing', for such excite- iner.t alwaye interferes with digestion and cauees voiniteng and other disorders or a serious nature. In feet, an infant should never be played with until it is past six monthe old. The baby should devote all her energies to eating, sleep- ing and to her peysical iieveitoonent. At tale, time, however, you can lay the basis of it happy teinperantrali oy ever epeatta trig in a pleasant tone. ana giving the children it cheerful enoiruomeat. Be careful to avuld all euciden shocks, as they seatter toe nervee 4141 unswerve inly Insiet that loving and admiring friends do not pick the baby up or fondle her at litopportune times, In this con- nevtion 1 might also say that any time Is Inopportune. Above all else, let eo One kiss your child on her mouth. It is frightful to think of the agony that a dainty, sweet baby rnest have to enuttre from the dys- peptic hisses of admiring relatives and frk'lt elildSittreertallee of eating and sleeping at regular hours cannot be overestimated; It is the introduetien of order into the infant's lire as well as the foundation for good health. This Qa11110t be im- Posed too eerie', and it must be remem- bered that its psychologieal inipertanee Is gleite as great as Ite physleal wOrth. At Mat the child only realizes that she r • 14 .41' 1.41 1 II 41 .111,, I Take A Segapial 01 Each - Side By Side Take "St. Lawrence" Ctranulated in one • scoop -arid any otlier sugar in the other. Look at "St. Lena raoce" Sugar -- its perfect erystals- its pure, White sprU- fts to•atu. Test it point by point, and you will see 4) 44 Absolutely suArt Mitre it tent of the elloieeet sugars ever reeinede-with. standee.' ef tixst few sugars an beat. 'try it in :sour Lome. Atelyelt 4.081/0. "St. Ltr,Vot{..c.e Ottelaleted" to be "ee %oft to gel Pure an Sugar teeth ti o eintatattieveitettvere "Most every dealer sells St. Laseretice_.. k;ager.." TUE ST. LAWAMCE SttOrtit cfs. uumo, NIONTICRAIe grows litingro and is red when she is slc-epy and closes her eyes to rest. But there comes a day when perhaps threugh vette disorder of the stomach or other ciretirnStanceS she wants to eat before her aeustomed time, and, naturally, sets up a wail because she is not fed. How- ever. this is the thne that your bake be - gees to learn that there are laws which Tfitt61: be obeyed, as she does later when told not to touch the heated stove and do€ it, Not one mother in fifty, when she suc- smile to the sobs of her baby and gives her milk before the tegular milking thne, or picks the whimpering bit of humanity to soothe her to sleep, realizes that she is hurting the moral stamintt of that child. Unconsciously both to herself and to the baby, she is planting in her child'soul the erroneous idea that laws can be broken without much hurt and that she is exempt from their general atml I cation. Right here is where that wonclerful•tee- tience must be exemplified. So many moteers do things because they are the eaeleet things to do. They rock their bablem to sleep because it is easieo than to hear them Ory for it night or two. They stop their wiemperines by filing their mouths with food, when the out- raged little "tummie" is probably rebell- ing against Ite already overloaded condi- tion, I know the first few weeks after your nurse has gone will be bard for you, but I am glad you are able to haVe the other work of yonr home done by others for a while and to take care ot your baby Youreelf-as you were cared for by YOUR MOTHER. AN ORIGINAL DEFINITION. A teacher asked a class of ehildren itt a. Kentucky sehool what a ekeletou was. One little boy who put up bis band, re. I plied, "It's bones with the people part taken off." --Pathfinder. 1, Absolutely Best that ••• teletillee • - the eloee of Ittet e ear the number of emigrants le he left leelazel feone rev L, 1851, toTled 4ee18:000) 31.14 157, - ;No ie,s than tho greeent peptelailoo the Leland. in ,eeetteepirem71,33,t lee0 the per t I of the United States wae $307; itt 1011 it wee $1,300, in 1850the money in eirentation in the Stetete 'watt $12 per capita; itt 1011 it was $34. The aFeletnnt telegraph operator the eteitinehip Titaale was paid, ee1.0 month awl board. A good and operator gets from $25 to $.40 a week, with fewer home. 0-71 • t Well, there is at beat one sorrowful eatiefaetion in the storiee of the Titanic &tester. The men seem to have stood back to ghee up the room in the boats to the W0111011 and children. In, the next suffragette outburst, let that be kept in raised. The inquiries of a recent British un- employment commission disclose that 07 per cent, of the men out of work were (exelneive of strikere) ueder 45 years and um-thirct were tuelor :30 years. The inference was that the bulk of the most efficient workers ere ever 45 ----very ferent to what has been, expeeted, • 7 1 The Georgia State convict &yeti= is being highly praised. The 1910 report ehews that in that year there were nearly half it. million commitments. To be exact, there were 479,733 committed, from one day to life. in a few in- stances the prisonene perform tasks, but in most eases the law -observing have to pay. Many are employed on the roads, and they eeera to take a pride in their ace 0 Mid ehments, Florida is also tak- in the work up with encouraging re - suite. t = A writer in the New York Christian Ileaeld declares that merriopathea is the eeienee of health, better than homeo- pathy or allopathy for curing all the gloom diseasee and grouch e.oreplainte that make life miserable. Some illnesses wed drugs, some need the eurseo knife, some can be cured with it good laugh, so -me can be smiled away, but - neither you nor i ever knew of a eick- nese that was eure.id by a frown. merry heart doeth good like it medieLne. Chooee the merry heart. (Tan Kubelik said in, New York atter he returned from his concert tour of the west: "In, ten years 1 have made more than a million dollars withmy violin, and the time has come when 1 take a rest. On Saturday, however, he said: "No, 1 don't think 1 shall over retire until 1 am forced to do so. What I mean by taking things easy is not to give up my woek, but to devote more time to my family. 1 have never had a chance to..enjoy my home and ray five children? When a, man can take time to enjoy hie home life and be a pari of hie family he tan afford to let the world clamor for him. = Even a radiocompass, the instrument invented. by Marconi, vondd not saffiee for the accurate locating of a dereliet or an iceberg. Prof. Barnes, of McGill, Montreal, perfected a mierothermome- ter for the Canadian Government from the study of floating ice. He found that fresh water melting from icebergs can be detected at from five to ten miles distance. An experienced eca,man puts out the theory that the lose of the Ti- tanic was caused by collision not with an iceberg, 'but with-, marse-ef salt wae ter ice evleie,h floe., Zoweenf ban fresh water ico and whick would be harder to discern with level. Berne' /iliac/ther- mometer, A new euro for rabies was recentIy announced at the meeting of the Ameri- ean Association of Pathologists and 'Bacteriologists, in the College of Physi- cian. of New York City. While it is similar to that of Pasteur, in so far that it can be administered in any ordinary practising hospital, thus cutting down expenses and obviating dangerous dee lays, it involves, certain important new principles. Its) discoverer is, Dr. Harris, of St. LOWS, and the discovery -was made through experiments upon himself. The announcement 117aS, Made by Dr. Ilarris, who urged the physicians to whom it was made known to use every woes- sary care to make the remedy useful. The spectaelo of these physic/alas assuna- ing risks and devoting so much care to benefit the public healtb brings great credit to the doetore. The publication of '131.1. Edward 7 .= Clark's "Amended" version of the Ep- istle% of St. Paul is just now attract- ing much notice in England. Sir Edward is not a Greek seholar, and ro ias at- tempted art authorized version correct- ed. "in those plenee and thew pkees only where it is erroneous, mieleading, or obseure." Ins version 19 leneeessful in combining the dignifie4 and stately lan- guage of the aethor:eed verelon with the greater aecoraey and Writ). it y f the revieee, and. it deeervee nt- teetien, In the development t'if the 1r.g. liee len:elan.) the t=1 i,, iv; rran, tt..r3.; en:1 phrasee teat:rely eheine eo ',net whe,t wee n traxs:Atioli in NU a'-',' '.'<'.l a -quite roe eeteetee nee e in 1Pe1. eeee '111%.10T!! 1.(3.eTiiel:'11:.le.:;;';'< ; Prenclrtel va,„ hed u meantee !vein! reteritli eetrete reutelfte tee Cireelt. It iieve uot 'lo net eeelele• etiet Ye Nt. wnr.I eeereellet feinees tie' revitete„ itiilui ltil;Eonit..tlr, "net % heve eore