The Wingham Advance, 1912-10-17, Page 3ONLY ON C WAY TO
CURL' RHEUMATISM
It Must Be Treated Throudh the
Blood and the Poisonous
Acid Driven Out,
The twinges and tortures of rheumee
titre are uot due to cold, damp weather
aa o many peareens euppose. Rhenium -
tient eomes from poisonoes acid in the
blood. This le a medical truth *Welt
every sufferer eltoulti realize. There ie
oply one way to cure rheumatism.— it
Must be treated. through the blood. An
the liniments and robbing and so-called
electric treatment in the world. Neill not
cure riteumetient. and the sufferer vrho
tries them b. not only wasting money,
but is allowing the trouble to become
more deep-rooted in the system and
harder to cure when the proper remedy
le tried. Dr. \inflame' Pink Pills always
eure rIteinuatieva betatuse they go right
to the root of the trouble in the blood.
Thette Pills make the new, rieh blood of
health, and lu this way drive out the
poisouous acidwhich causee rheuma-
tism. Thousandof instances of cures
might be givten, among which, is the fol-
lowing one, Mrs. G, R. Dulma,ge, Cher-
ry Vellee, Ont., saye: "1 was attacked
with rheumatism which gradually grew
worse until I was. eonfined to my bed.
For about two weeks I had to be shift-
ed and turned M bed as I was utterly
unable to help myself. I was under the
doctor's care and so far recovered that
I was able to get op and move about,
hut the trouble still remained ihi my
aystem. If I put my hands in cold wa-
ter, or if I went out in the evening or
in damp weather the trouble would re-
turn, a,nd for four years I tiue. suffered
from rheumatism, until I began to think
it could not be driven from my eystem.
Flually I gave up all other niedicine and
began to use Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,
and after using them for a couple of
months I was completely eured and
have not had, a twinge of rheumatism
since. I can recommend the Pills to
anyone Buffering from this trouble,"
These Pills are sold by all medicine
dealers or by mail at 60 cents a box or
six boxes for $2.50 from, The Dr, Wil-
liams' 'Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
.t;OOD BREEIDEsTG '5193ENTIAL TO
PF.OFT:CABILE FEEDING.
Veaperiance hoe taught many a feeder
to shun the animal of no particular
breed. The "mongrel" has regularly been
found a loser when it comes to a ques-
tion of feeding for profit. By the term
"mongrel" is not meant animals which
have resulted from the croseing of
well bred individuals of two different
pure breeds but animals which have eta
(tutted from indiseriminate crossing, or
in other words from common stock.
There are and have been erossed animal
than which no one could have wished
for better feedere. Good grades are corn-
eae/I in every breed, but is not a good
grade, one whose sires back for at
least a few generations have been pure-
breds, a wellebred animal from a feeder's
standpoint, especially when compared
svith the animal of the nondeseript
elaes? A writer in "The Fanner and
iStock Breeder" says:
"There cannot be too rauelt import-
ance attached to the keeping of the
best -bred stock of all kinds on the farm,
whatever the class or nature of the
farm meg he. There is no more false
econoray than either buying or breed-
ing ill-bred animals., Mato -wench as they
eat just as much, and in many eaees
more, than the well-bred ones, and in-
stead of what they consume going to
the profit of the fanner in the ethape of
beef and mutton, it goes to the support
of a light -fleshed., rough and bony
frame, which takes twice as long to
,00me to maturity, and which is, when
the time comes, worth considerably less
in every respect than the evellebred one.
There are so many points in favor of
well-bred stock that it is a marvel that
a great meny farmers should be content
with buying in for breeding purposes
the rough class of animals they do;
and it is also to be wondered at that
thee° who make a, business of raising
etore cattle do nbt make an effort to
raise something better."
If we are to make the great possible
profit out of litre stock feeding, we
must have stock which will mature
early. The rate at whieh maturity takee
place bears more or less of a direct
relation to the breeding of the animal.
Did you ever see a two-year-old. scrub
steer that you considered anywhere
near that maturity at which he could
go on the market in a finished condi-
tion and command the top price? Suah
are the exception, not the rule. But such
has been aceomplished with the better
bred class of steers, and many feeders
have made a success of 'finishing two-
year -olds. A steer which can be made
as heavy in two years as another in
four yars, must be the more econotni-
cal and more profitable feeder. There
are points worthy of consideration in
*electing feeding cattle. The man who
breeds good stock is mutiny a good
feeder, and the reverse is often found
to be true a the carelees breeder. Good
feeding while young means much with
live stock, and a well-bred steer which
hae been kept in good. coxtdition
and has never lost his celf fat, it
.in every way likely to give much
better returns from feeding thau the
half-starved bundle of bones, the big.
feast portion of whose eareass is head
toed horns. The well-fed. well-bred ant.
Mal ie naturally- thick fleshed, has nevi
Cr been compelled to subeist en lesi
,food than that required to maintain the
body in good health and promote growth
'ts oonstitutionally strong, and as a re
-
suit, is as a rule a smaller eoturumer
.of food than bi sthin brother, Who may
have been taken from his bad eondi-
thaw by the eattle feeder, and pItteed
.on. a ration intended to fatten him, but
'which gotee in en unsucteeeful and cwt. -
31, effort in an endeavor te promote the
gerowth ef a, stunte& raw-boned frame.
,As a fat animal becomos fatter eon-
aumption grows less untii a eertein
it le rein:heel. Anyone who has finished
,snnasbore of pigs or steers has noticed
ithia. They tanot be finished, though, be -
'fore it fa apparont. Feeders 'have also
2-erafirked the insatiable appetite of very
•-!,thin half-starved stnimaia. It is quite
islea.r that the maxinufm consumption
erof fated gots with the poorer dots of
Anima Pooriy bred stock grows slowly,
'and, matures very slowly, whereas well..
ikred stock grows rapidly and matures
At see early age.
Front the feeder's viewpoint, the ani -
Mal which has breeding behind it has
!everything in its boor. The buyer al-
fkeeke the lt4;hly fibet1produet
; and tho highly fittielted produet in al-
-Prays a 3.11E41 -bred anhattl---woll-bred, but
not neetsearily pule, bred, he'i'r, if
prearred 450 11111.21 ill* better* Bettah-
vpiromPowni vpiwookRaNswarawroimittpuortowiramotroomerlsoursoz
ere alvase loole for qeelity. 7+ ie
it whicg eornmends the highest mega
and whieh is dcwanded by the high elaie
trade„ Clood. (polity may be prochated,
ht a eel fain amount of reemenized
goon 1)11)4.641g eeseary to geality is
very likely to be wanting.
The old cry etunem up taltere are
we to get the tiellt kind of feaders':"
Tree there U111C diffieulty at ,the
prestent time with a grewing ocareity
of eattle in obtaining these, but the
opportunity fa open to produre them.
Inetead Of losing a bull whieh is in
eerviee more to freelten the vows then
for any velne whieh may be pleeed op -
On his get, let every eattle owner make
it a point to nee nothing but a pure-
bred sire. And attere the young stoak
15 to be fed off, a sire of one of the
recognized beef breed. Tide praetice cow
tinned in will tweedy have a good effect
upon the beef eattle of the country.
Herds will be graded Iv and good feed-
ers will be more plentitul, resulting in
greater profit to both the raiser of
stocks and the feeder, as well as better
satisfaetion to butt:here and constun-
ers. In closing let us say in the words
of the writer on the other (side of the
Atlautie "that no matter bow bad
things are, there isalways a better mar-
ket tor good otoek than bad, and -many
more thingare possible with well-bred
animate than with ill-bred twee by rea-
son of their greater adaptability to all
sorts of land and conditions.
A Lesson In Evolution
BABY'S BEST FRIEND
Baby's OW11 Tablets are baby's best
friend, and the motherte greatest aid.
They cure eonstipation, simple fevers,
break up colds, expel worms and regu-
late the stomach and bowels, Concern.
Ing them Mr. Napoleon Pelletier, St.
Marcel, Que., writes: "I have used
Baby's Own Tablets for constipation. ttad
eimple fever for ;both my little girl of
three years and my boy ot four montla.e,
and have found them entirely satisfac-
tory and alwaye keep theiu in the
house." The Tablets are sold by medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Medicien
Coe Brockville, Ont.
HANDBILLS FROM THE SKY.
An amusing incident arising out of
M. Lepine's interdiction against throw-
ing handbills on the streets has hap-
pened in Paris. The victim of one of
the firet proseeutions Was the aviation
pilot Vedrines. Toward 4 o'elock in the
afternoon the people of the Tuileries
gardens and on the Place de la Concorde
saw a monoplane circling about the
Chamber of Deputies on the other side
of the river.
Those who were nearer the Chamber
saw a few minutes later that the pilot
was distributing a few 'hundred little
handbills from his eyrie. A watchful po-
liceman took note of this and after dis-
'covering that the pilot was Idedrine,
initiated a prosecution. The handbille
contained the words "Let France have
the aeroplanes she needs,".9.1his was Ire-
drane's Method of eneouraging the cam-
paign in favor of devoting £4,000,000
thts year toward eupplying the army
with aerOplanes.—From the London
Evening Standard.
HE'S POPULAR.
A Kansas preacher writes his sex--
moas in ahortha,nd. And delivers' em
Otto.
Seed corn is timid to be bad this year
and the pipe erop is threatened.
One way to influence a girl not to
forget yon ia to tie e string around her
finger. But, perhaps, a ring is better.
MA% ELC5
pliGH SPEro
GI-IAMPloh
Is in a class by itself—the easiest
peeling, the Most substantially built,
the mast satiefactory weeher, ever
invented.
Only wesher worked with conk
bargee et side as well as top lever—end
the only on where the whole top
opens up.
Ask Veer denier to ehoef rea thet
"Champion" Washer.
°Favorite' O'hurn Is the world's
loest elem. Write
for estalogue.
Vie MAXWELL &Old
se, teetiv's, one.
0.46$014441,91,1100000110,10,4,W000910CM,1,401‘40.44404011004,4.10f.“044441,001.41.0,40.400100.00WORP/araiMPIC
The Best Treatrneni)
for Itching Scalps'
and Failing Hai
To allay itching and irritation of the scalp,
prevent dry, thin and fulling hair, remove
crusts, scales and dandruff, and promote the
gsrowth atid, beauty of the hair, the following
snecial treatment Is most effective, agreeable
end economical. Oa retiring, comb the hair
out straight all around, then begin at the slide
and make st parting, gently rubbing Cuticura
ointment iato the perting wite a bit of soft
liannel held over the end 01thefinger. Anoint
additional pertinge about half an inch apart
until the whole scalp has been treated, the pur-
pose being to get the Cut ieure ointment on the
ecap sisin ratter than on the hair. It is well
to place is light covering over the hair to
protect the pillow froni possible stain. The
next morning, shampoo with Cutieurit soap
and hot water. Sitainpooe alone may be
used as often as agreeable, but once or
twice a month is generally sufficient for
this special treatment for women's hair. Not-
withstauding Cutieura soap und ointment are
sold everywhere, those wishing to try this
treatment may do so without expense by
sending to "Cutieura," Dept. 4V1, Boston, U.
S. A., for a free sample of Cutieura soap and
ointraent, with 32-p. book on skin and hair.
. Noradom....1,
011.=•••••10•110•111014111.0%••••••••01m..1•WAMMOINI.101M001.40.01.11401
Poultiy Hints
For Breeders
(T. Uttley in Poultry 'World)
The history of the Andameian seems a
difficult aubject. We cannot trace the
present-day fowl back very far, It would
appear that Ilex:orea blood tuts entered
largely into their composition. The birds
fit* imported from Spain to England
were said to have afterwards been cross-
ed with the Spanish fowl.
The Andalusian is more reaehy in gen-
eral builcl than the Minorca, It should be
tame upright and gamyin type. The
old dirty drab color is fast dying out, or
It should be. Personally I do not like
a light ground color, of course a too dark
should be avoided. The medium rien
shade is the correct color, although many
Canadian fanciers seem to favor the
lighter shade which is rarely clear. A
heavily laced bird gives a lovely "lacy"
effect; this lace or net -like effect is very
pleasing, and gives the Andalusian a
very handsome appearance.
The legs and feet should be a lead col-
or. The comb of the male sheathe be
upright, single. That of the heirs lying
to one side as a Minorca's, only finer nd
narrower. I do not intend to go fully
into the exhibition points of the blue An-
dalusian, but a word or two must be said
about calor.
Tee Andalusian it. a disappointing
breed, in that we emt blue, white, and
black chickens front the same mating; a
good strain of Andaluslans is ea/m.1)1e of
throwing 70 to 75 per cent. of blues, the
rest come black and white. Great care
must be e.xercised in mating or you will
probably never see a blue chicken, al-
though Your breeding pens; are all a good
blue. Mate a light blue cockerel to well
laced darker hens; or a dark cockerel to
light blue hens; the cockerel must be of
the same strain as the .hens. but of
course not a near relation; if you use an
entirely unrelated male the chances are
you will never see eblue chicken. I have
known good blues bred front black mated
to white "sports," but this is not recom-
mended, as your strain becomes unreli-
able, yet at the same time these "sports"
are used at certain times to regulate the
color in a strain.
For utility purposes the Andalusian is
a useful chicken; they lay a goo -shed
egg, in fact I have seen some of the
largest eggs produced by Andalusian.
They lay a larger egg than a Leghorn
(speaking generally) quite as large as a
Minorca's, and a good strain will produce
Pullets that will turn out 2W eggs per an-
num. When six or seven eggs will weigh
one pound this Is going some.
In producing a utility strain keep down
the size of the comb, especially in the
roosters, by breeding from birds with on-
ly medium-sized combs, The Andalusian
has a narrower comb than the Minorca,
this being slightly thinner is one of the
greatest drawbacks against the breed in
Canada, nevertheless there are many An-
daluelan breeders here who find no trou-
ble in this reepeet, who will tell you that
the Blue Andalusian is a strong, useful
fowl, that the chickens are hardy and
easy to rear. Eggs prove very fertile,
and they are a fair ta.ble-chicken. They
aro non -sitters, mature quickly. Ttte
fact is, some strains are more delicate
tha nothers. My own personal expert-
ence of the breed is that they are 0. K.
The Andalusian rooster is a very useful
bird to cross with a heavy breed, as the
progeny are less inclined to brooevness.
The size of egg ie usually increased,
which is an important item in utility pul-
lets, and as the Andalusian is a good
sized chicken the cockerels from such a
cross are usually quick growers, hut, or
course, such a cross would only be re
sorted to with an eye to the production
of strong large egg -laying pullets.
MARKETING DRE,eiSED POULTRY.
Dressed poultry always pays a good
profit and as with egges appearance goes
a long way in securing top prices and the
best market is direct to a retailer. The
following rules shoule eontrol your ship-
ments:
1. Starve the birds at least twenty-four
hours before killing. This leaves the crop
empty and the flesh in better shape,
2. Always dry -pick your birds, never
timid them. Dry plecked.birds will sell
at from two to three cents per pound
more than scalded. Scalding discolors
the flesh.
2. It is not neee'Ssary to draw chickens
or turkeys but ducks and gese should be
always drawn before shipping. Leave on
the head and ,feet.
4. Get In touch with a retailer In the
city nearest you and aseertain his desire
as to how he wishes shipments truesed,
number in box, ete.
5. Get new clean boxes that will just
hold the amber the dealer wishes. Lirie
the boxes with white paper, leaving en -
enough to fold over from each side. Cut
neat scallops on the edges of the paper.
leaving enough to fold over from oath
aide. Cut neat scallops on the edges of
the paper. Place your birds in carefully.
Do everything you can think of that will
utak° the shipment attractive end be sure
that yur name shows conspicuously on
the side of the beic or elsewhere, Shipments of this kind, the dealer Will display
in your shipping eases, and you get the
advertising. S'oon customers will he de-
manding your poultry. The dealer will
return your thipping eases when etupty.
--Caned te.n Farah
TIMAdretretert TeOlt S'elfittadele ITZADS
TURTeleY8.
I see in the hem of September tale
Mrs.
J. M. is inquiring about swelled
head in turkeys, or ruup. t win give you
my experience with the disease. About
Yeare 'age it first made ito appearance
In my flock ef 100 turkeys. I dipped
their heeds in (e,al oil every morning, but
thirty of them died, so 1 found that a
failure. About two years ago it again
2rtedo ite appearance in my flocla I saw
in the papers to isteittte the siek blrdsi
from the rest of the fleets:. There was
juet one had it, and I oltut it up end t
watched the Nook and took them out nt
the flret sentlitotes, until / had eighteea
Aut. pp with the ti?seesse 1.4 na'n gor
Ect e•ent pttekeee or a proptiotarY rom)
cure, tted put it In tteir drinking WItier,
and fed them bran ono short e :nixed With
Milk Arid freth green clever tops until
the MVP:ling 3i: wont (wen teed thee were
better. I' then he them rnn sit large
tegain, when weeo of tviem attain look it.
Theft I tried a more erfectual mettle&
took ft fence staple and opened the ,swell.
ing and premed out tee suppurated mnt-
tete end then filled to opotiing with roup
- cure. axle put. a Mlle in the mouth as
well. After the first day the lgrds um.
proved rapidly arta soon %ere better. (ri
some of the birds I had to operatc twice,
but 1 did not lose any or them, and saaut
eeteted twenty-eight pouilds Ili veiling
timt' 1 aleo gave then all copperas In
their drinking water. W. W. Alt-
itt Verrners' Advocate.
Pointe in poultry husbandry, on which
51,1'448 wa iahi tlY missourt lifai and
Cow Special last oprine', were alliterative-
ly arntoged n follows:
"Grit—with which to grind the food.
"teraine—eiorn, wheat and oats; end a
dry mash Made or the same food
sround,
''Greens—ground alfalfa, elover, cow -
peas, beets or cabbage.
"Oriabs—dry beef scraps, eltim or but.
terrnilk, or meat food.
"Gumption—tbe use of oonnitme SVhS4 Itt
an your operations.
"Good care woe the :mirth eeteeritial,
willingness to work, and tho ability to
hatch and rear ehickens. If any one
fact Was made plainer than another, It
was that you must keep your houses and
premises abeolutely elee.n."— Farmers'
A.dvoeute.
A POEM BY CABLE.
Doubtless it is very poetic to flush rues -
sages by cable under tlx roaming sea.,
but stock market reports are much more
titan poems to be sent by cable.
Except for ewe poems by Kipling- and
one by William Watson, it is not known
that any poem has ever been so honored
as one by Albert Noyes, the new English
major poet, regarding wbom the follow-
ing message was cabled from New York
to London, on eepternber eth:
The following poem Ity Alfred Noyes,
entitled 'into ,Origin of Life," is publish-,_
ed In The Daily Mall title morning:
la the beginning slowly grope we back
Aloug the narrowing traelc,
Back to the deeerts Of the world's pale
prime--
7Mo mire, the clay, the slime.
And then, what then? Surely to some-
thing leas;
Back—back to. nothingness!
You dare not halt upon that dwindling.
way,
There is no giulf to stay
Your footsteps to the last. GO back you
must
Far, fur below the dust.
Deseend, descend grade by diesolving
grade;
We follow unafraid.
Dissolve, dissolve thie moving world of
Into Wn
in Ear, and then,
0 pioneers, 0 warriora of the light,
In that abysmal night
Will you have courage then to rise and
tell
Earth of this miracle?
Will you have courage then to bow the
head
And say, when all is said:
"Out of this nothingness; arose our
thought,
This blank abysmal nought
Woke and brought forth that lighted eltY
street,
Those towers, that armored fleet"
Wheisticyieosu have seen those vaeant primal
Beyond the centuries;
Wat enheesds tfhieowp.ale mists across their dark -
As in a lantern show,
Wea.ving by mereet "chance" out of thin
air
Pageants of 'praise and prayer;
Watched the .greatt hills like clouds arise
ahd set
And one named Olivet;
When you have zeen a shadow 'passing
away
One child clasp hands and pray;
W110r1 you have seen emerge from that
One idnaarrtkyrnail;a
ingee with fire;
Or from that nothingness, by special
grace,
One woman's love -lit face,
Will you have•courage then to front that
law,
From whieli .our sophists draw
Their ()nee right to flout one human
creed,
That nothing' can proceed—
Not even thought, nor even love from
Ie
Thanirs own nothingness?
The law is yours, but dare you waive
your pride
And tkhneert,e1 where you denied?
The law is YOUT'S, dare you re -kindle,
One faith for faithless men
And say you found, on that dark road
you trod.
In the beginning—God?
Alfred Noyes, who is 32 years old. has
been a rising figure in English literature
for a decade. He is a son-in-law of the
late Col. B. G. Daniels, of the 'United
States Army, whose youngest daughter.
Miss Garnett Daniels, he married In roe.
• Among 1114 works are: "Sherwood," a
verse drama: "Drake," a long ne
poem; "Flower of Old Japan," au.
Enchanted Island," collections of is _se.
STOP! READ AND CONSIDER
NEVER FAILS TO CURE
368 Broadway, Winnipeg, Man„
June Gth, 1912.
Messrs., The Sanol Manufacturing Co.
Gentlemen. --For some years past I had
suffered with my kidneys. About eight-
een months ago I had acute inflamma-
tion of these organs, when I was ordered
to bed by the medical man attending me.
I received censiderable relief, but after a
a few weeks the trouble etarted again.
It was then that I decided to try "Sanol."
of wench I had both read and heard.
After taming two bottles I felt very
much better, and my condition reanuiy
improved. When I had taken the con-
tents of eight bottles I felt better than* 1
my kidnea
Ittiaoduld)loenehafdoresnotnirieelyyeiaelf.ts, Innen'
it Is now about three months since
finished with the medicine and I am en-
joying the best or nealth.
intend TO visit r:enis.i.n the course of a.
few days to make arranm
geents for send-
Lngsieaignlait, ov,t:ntoistenbottlestuto ny bbrother biyn
I
your wonderful re d
I am, gentienten,
Yours truly,
G. Henry Wagg
...••••••••••••
Hamilton.. Ont., Aug. litie 1912,
The Sanol lelanuracturinlgyinnp
Co., eg., man,
haatlkindwn.giteY him)
epYaolu. Sir.—
Your ia.--n ol hag cured my huseband ane
son. I might tell You one et/ our best
doctors to our eity had prepared hint for
ten operation. so 1 thought r would see
What 8111101 would do. I had no faith in
it, but to our surprise It made Et well man
of him. 1 am sure we had ten doctors
to see him; all gave him treatments, 'with
no result, but our doctor said the opera-
tion Was the only thing which he would
int for your patience and
troublen9t'and 1 will always
stand for Sanol. I might tell you my
htteband is in his eightieth year.
Hamilton, ont.
Mrs. Wilson, 141. Main Street East,
Yours truly,
Ate Pa tt. s.
Is the positive cure for Gall Stones, Kid-
ney and Bladcler Stones, Kidney Trouble,
Gravel, Ltirnbago, Ailments of Uric Acid
origin. Over aloe eomplete cures re-
ported in six -months. Price, $1,50 per
bottle, from druggists. Booklet free to
sufferers. The Sanol Manufacturing
Co., of Canada, Limited, Winnipeg, Man.
Another sure cure is Senors Anti -Dia-
betes for Diabetee.
"Mrs. Illank is getting a double
chin."
"To Much work for one, I suppose."
No ,police inquiry will be made 'before
September itt connection with the IPar-M-
es Dank ease.
THIleit.
'BAKINGgsow
15 COMPOSED WYHC
FOLLOWING IffeltE01.
NTSANO NONE OINEIti
PHOWNAII,1310/18...
ONAItOrlIOGIUNO
.F/FARCH.
1
Costs
no more
than the
Alum
Kinds
The only Baking Powder
made in Canada that has
all its ingredients plainly
printed on the label.
For economy we recom.
mend the one pound cans.
Chats With
the Doctor
By a Physician
THE .BUSI:\ZESS :MAN'S HEALTH.
In his presidenthe at:sire:a' to the Brit-
ish At
ssociatioe ieeelard Hill 14, °Waled
a note which desie. ,es ea, attention of
every man wile is: - ..eintary life, or
whose busies- tia , ise ins weole tune.
The neeeesity itt eereire .entstantly
being preached te tee city who
often goes by true, or tram alma:. ...try
atop of the way between home and 0...tce.
The health -giving prepertiee of eye
light, temperature and activity, says Dr.
Hill, yet on ail sides he sees sedentary
workers, many of whom "have become
cave -dwellers. confined for most or tneir
waking and sleeping hours In Windless
places, artificially lit, monotonously
warmed. Tee .un is cot off by the Shad -
OW of tall intiklinge and by entolte—the
sun, energieer tile world, the giver of
all good thinge width bring joy to tae
heart of man, the fitting object of wor-
ship of our forerathere.
'Certainly the picture is not that of a
healthy life, yet business must go on, and
nowadays the indoor workers outnumber
those who teem their bread cee the land,
or by outdoor occupatione. The man liv-
ing an entdoor lite promotes the eircula-
don of les blood- 1111(1 the aetivitiee of
his museles, 'and bis brain is stenttlated
iu consequenece la Is not poseiblo to
work body and brain at the same time,
so that the num in bUSillefAS W110 depends
on his brain does not need exercise dur-
ing business flours. :Out at eonie other
time lie ought to take it, otherwise the
!train will not get the service of blood
and muscles that it ought to have. Fresh
air is a help; lie can sleep always with
open window. but it is not enough, and
he ouglit to make out seine programme
that will give himthe needful exercise.
.lespeolally as winter _approaehes is tins
necessary. Dr. Hill''could not have ut-
tered his viborous protest at a more teas -
tenable time. A smart little week In the
morning- or evening—both if post•dble—as
much exercise as can be had during the
week-eml in any form that is preferred
walaing-, gardenitig, golf, (a -cling. but
above all, regularity in taking it, will do
neve' fur the general health. The seden-
tary worker is as a rule suseeptlete to
colds alight ailments, simply because
he does not get enough air and exercise.
To quote .Or. H111 once more; The prime
cause uf *void' or •ehill' is not really ex-
posed to cold, but to the over -heated and
confined air cf rooms, facturiee and meet-
ing places." Let him tey this year a
different plan, audnete the result. If he
can have more ventilatioh during busi-
uess hours all th ebeter, bat at least let
him devote a part of his free time to ex-
erciee, he will find himself working in
better in consequence, and in businees
health is an asset that plays a consider-
able part in success.
FI.A.T Lee:N.(7E.
Thousantie of people suffer constantly
front what is popularly called "wind," a
14."..r0-1111. ecommilation pf gas in the
stomach, produced by undigested food as
;',..u1t,tazit.4 th liattilenoi-1 IS su
severe as to eauee cone:Wert:ale pain, and
compel a %eternal (oho, by the way, is
more often troubled time a man). to
loosen her cursete. tit additlen to the
discomfort breuitht tibiae. by the dieten-
tension of the abdomen, people a ho stun.
fer from title form of .dyseepela one»
complain mental eepreseinn. A very
usual remedy Is thirty to forty deoPe
sal volatile In e little trate'', but tnough
this may etenetimes afford tempurary re-
lief it Is het to be leolued upon in any
ktense ai u uiv. Cf,arvual I.t oftttn of
great value taken in doses of five to ten
grains. When the flatulence comes on
while a. meal is actually being taken and
prevents the eufferer from finishing* 11,
it is a good plan to take charcoal (either
in powder or as a biscuit) immediately
before each meal. In either cases when
the patient usually feels no in °feats till
about half an hour after eating the char-
eoal should be taken immediately after
the meal. For some patients it is well
to mix with the charcoal an equal quan-
tity' of carbonate of bismuth. Another
useful remedy le fifteen grains of sulpho-
carbonate of soda dissolved In water and
taken three times a tlay. The beet rent-
edy of all Is undoubtedly to pay attention
to aim:. The use of brown bread or toast-
ed bread is to be reeommended; large
gnantitiee of tea. nhould be avoisietle
though a cup twiee a day If freshly Made
and Mixed with a faIr quantity of milk,
will do no harnt. Cabbage, even when,
properly coOked will generally be found
to disagree. alvery patient luta certain
peeuliarnies of digestion, but a Itttle care
In notieing what artieles of diet give rise
to discOmfort to enable any one to make
out a list of things to be avoided by
thetnselves. Thorough mastication of
food and the Wishes; of liquids, separately
trom solids win be fomul, ne a rule, to
do More toward the relief of this distresei-
ing conditiOn than allY druale
SUN' AND AIR IN TITO ilOralt
A good housewife tightly considers that
her Work should be set about in good
time in the morning, but It is possible to
to some of it too early. It ie fir exam -
Pie a -mistake to make up the beds before
they have been thoroughly aired. The
proper thing is to remove all the blankets
and eoveringe from the bedstead send to
place. them 3,Iiho•0 air and suroddrie can
get at them. The Mottrees, also, should
Do turned half over the foot of the bed
and 80 left for a time. If every etcu-
Pant of the Weise were taught to do this
before leaving the bedroom for breakfatet,
the airing preeess nmet be well doee by
the time the moal was over. 11: this he
not arranged the housewife should de
gemething else before beginning her bed -
Making, going upeteers immediately after
breakfast to fiee that all mattresses nett
clothes are duly sprawl out.
During the whiter glisto the mother who
einrac-banded, ,shoutil arrange her
liotoewerlt so as to admit of her taking
the 1,,hildren out O' tlOore in the beet part
of the morning. 71 in better to let the
dusting, etc., Wait than to smote a Twee -
inlet hour of stmobble over it, only to find
tiett when it le done. and there itt lelettre
to lake the Millet -an out, the env haS
Hendee ever and tan dee' bevOnle thtny.
HIS JOB.
‘fte•At,.,„r \eerie- er
"What delta; tuesiit, of the city istereliell
are you in?"
LENGTHENING
,,,,,,,,,,rosvaimoempAirr1,0101tWarAn,'W
LIFE. Had Bad Sores for Years
The increase in. population (luring tent years years has. beeu due to the tiecreeeed
death rate. This has resulted tlireetly
from the appliaatione of violet!, to medi-
cine and hygiene and indir.mtly from the
imptived conditions of living witialt
enee heti made possible. In 311 eivi'ized
emintries the birth rate is eow smeller
than the death rate was formerly, flet
the death rate eannot decrease
sule-
nitely; it has indeed possibly reaehed itt
Great Britain a lower level that eau be
maintained. A death rate of lt; por
thousand in a stetionary populatiou
means that the average length of life is
over 00 years, and as one-fourth of Close
who die are under five yeards of age the
average age at death of those stuadving
infancy would be about 80 years, Odd,
as it may appear at first sight, the de-
creasecj death rate of a cot t t ry s tte it as
Great Britain is largely dee to a. do.
ereasing birth rate combined with an in.
eretteing population. Soeh tondilons
give a population in which there are
fewer ehildren under five and fewer old
people over sixty, in which groups the
death rate is about 60 per thottiand,
whereas between the ages Q1 5 and :15 it,
below 5. In France there are _fewer
children than have ever existed in any
population, which redtee:e$ the death
rate; but there are more old people -
twice as many as in Great Britaile It
should also be remembered that the
death rate of those over 45 hae increased
continually, owing mainly to the keep-
ing alive of weakly people at earner
ages.—The Popular Science Mouthle
HOLLAND'S ARMY,
Although Holland hart jumped in the
apace of ten years from an approprietion
of 9,000,000 florins. or about $12,000,000, for
the maletenance of her army. the end is
not yet. The eeconci chamber of the
States General has been, disetissiug fur
?wine weelts past. a Inn premised by the
Miristry for the remodelling uf tee en-
tire military system. It proposes to
increase the uumber of men drawit an-
nually by lot for 4et.yiee In the army front
17.50e to 22,500.
in order to minhnize the burden oa the
industrial population it is propozed to
reduce the period of liability fur aveive
service from eight to six Yeare. Tte
sudival levy will be called to arrueiu two
parts, the tirst section coesisting of the
remainder. The first section will re-
DIP.111 eight namt.lis and a half with the
colors; the rest only for four months:.
A system er gymnastic.- instructioa for
the youth et'. the cuuntry is to be sub-
stitutea for "preparatory military in-
struction," which is a feature uf tee old
system. A corps of military workmen
nemaering 1,500 is to be organized to give
special auxiliary services whenever the
&rine is mobilized.
The bill eas be.en made a Cabinet mea-
sure and. the alatietry Is supported te re-
gard to It by the majority cutripeeed of
tile ultra -Protestant group, theQatleolles
and the moderate Liberals, the -
and Socialiete, but its passage :s as•
su red.
The national budget contemplates ap-
propriations of 22e,000,000 floaatte, with es-
timated revenue uf 202,000000, There is
therefore on the suratee a deficit of 20,-
000,000 floriiie, or about $8,000,000. How-
ever, 11,00,000 florins or thereabout ot
the appropriations may be elaselfled as
extraordinary and by some :cher paring
mid pruning the Pittance Minister ex-
pects to reduce the actual shortage 011
the year's expenses to about tleeemeei
tiox-
t about $2,400,000. Evea tais is nut
re.gartleal by eeities of tile GOVert11110Ot
al; I" very 'Militantshowink,,, for a pros-
reezaNes ititattit.ly.
yetatiett Is planning tet in -
THAT'S ITS CHIEF OBJECTION.
This thing of "allowancee" or wives
is all right itt its way, but the trouble
is that many of them want olore taint
a Mall makes.—Pitiladelphia Inquirer.
"Ilow's the June bride getting along?"
"All right. ahe's settled dowu in the
rut el married life." So. In what aayr
"'Well, she's got so now that he doesn't
cere how she leolts at breakfast time."
----Detroit Free Press.
ZAIVI-BUK HAS HEALE,M IT 1
Mrs. 'Wilson, 110 Wicksolt aveulte, `,ro-
ronto. says: "About four se5.rg3 op a
,.;ore spot appeared on tlie right side of
my lace. This spot inereeeed hieiee
ill itbeeame about half all 11101 111
meter and very painful. I went to a,
doctor. but the ointment he gave me did
not have any good effect. The sere 0071.
atoned to diecharge freely. and Nvaf# must
painful. I had it ceuterized, tried poul.
flees an ail kinds of salves. but it was
no tra0d. Waft 1 continned to staffer from
it for four yearAt
A sample of Zaxn•Bak was one dam
given to me. and T meet it. Although
the quantity Was SO .snutll it seeme(1 to
on, 1.,02fle good. and I continued to
litiffer from it for .‚t'at's!
"A sample of Zant-Buk wee onedav
given to me, and 1 used it. Although
the onantitv was so small. it seemed to
do me some good, so I purchased a fur.
t her .supply,
"Eaeb box did me Ulnae and more
qood, and, to niv delight, before1 had
boon r4ing Zinn Bilk three weeks. I saw
that it was going to heal the €tore, itt
lesA than a month it mu; healed!
'T know s lads' in the east of the
whote hushand onffered for years
with an open sore on his leg. On utv
recommendatioe. Zam-13u1; tried itt
that case. The other dav, when 1 saw
her, she told. me thaf it had healed the
gore completely.
"My daughter, who lives in Lethbridge.
Alta., bee else used 7etna-Bu3c with the
Same eatisfeetoav resell. I -think it
bevene all donet, the lenest beating balm
known."
Such it the opalion t4f ell persons who
have reallY tried Zem-Bult. ls a Sure
cure for eczema, piles, abscesses, ulcers,
scalp sores, ring -worm, cuts. burns.
sealde, bruiees, aria all sezin injuriee and
diseaSes. 50e a box, all droggists and
stores. 01' post free from Zap -Bilk. COe
Toronto, for priee, tn (-lee or akin die -
ease use elso Zern-BnIc Soap. 25e tablet.
SHIFTING THE GULRe STREAM.
The proposal has often been made, as a
mere matey of theory, to change the ell -
mate or North Amerlea, by digging a new
millet for tee Ceuta stveam; it was
preeented 1114I1Y yeers ago In the
A.:la:nee Monthly, by the late Professor
abater, of Ltartford, Pelt it Is how
brulight furward in apparent seriousness
by the New York engineer, Carrot Liv-
ingston Riker, who SaY4 that foe lees
than tho cost of the Pallarn(i. Canal the
Arctic can be thawed out, an end made
or the Iceberg menace and the earth shifte
ed a triflo on its pole with consequences
to climatic conditions not easily calcu-
lable. ails plan, as outlined in a little
book issued recently in New York, is to
build a jetty WO miles long extendiag est -
ward from Cape Race across the Grand
Banks and turning aside the eold tream
ream the Aretio into the deep water of
the mid-Atlantic, where it would pass
underneath the warm surface water of
the Gulf stream, with which it now
conflictin the sliallows east of New-
foundland. But a jetty only thirty miles
long, he holds, 'would muffioe to modify
the climate, from Newfoundland to flat -
teras, doing away with the eevereet win-
ter weather and bringing an early aPring.
The cot title he estimates nt $190,400.-
600, which is much less than the oast of
the Panama. Canal, and it would 'unde-
niably be cheap at the price. But have
'the scientist's ytNt agreed as to whether
Pie (wean eue reels cetise tile elinutte ar
-whether both eve results or a catinnon
NAllh(t. A few years ago there wa.s an
aggreseiveecitool of skeptics who sneered
at the old-fashioned view of the Gulf
stream and said that the heat which It
carried was so quiekly dleelpated itt the,
atmosphere as to be negligible in its ef-
fects upon climate. This issue ought to
be thoroughly setlted before even it, trifle
like 514).001),(104) is spent on the oxperi-
nient. 1:1 without saying that if it
a ecomplished what Mr. Riker promisee it
would be vastly more Important than the
Panama Canal, though nations left out
in the cold by the shiftiog of Ocean eur-
rents might have a grivance against us.
--Springfield 'Republican.
4
He who minde his own business is
kept too hue), to do much ,else.
Here Is the Scientific Frog That Never
Had a Father
The "ratherlees frog," which was "raised" by Prof. Jacques Loeb,
of Chicago, and was recently on exhibition in a glass jar at th.e national
hygienic exposition at the Red Cross building in Washington., now has
its picture in the paper for the first time.
This freak, which Is shown In both the tadpole and the frog stage,
never had any father outside of Prof. Loeb. Prof, Loeb fertilized the
:egg of the female frog by a ehemical procoss,
The result was that scientists call "parthenogenesis" ---a case or birth
with only one parent. The frog developed into a very healthy speeimen.
:"»
Take A Bound 01
"St. Lawreuee" Sugar
Out To The Store Door
—Out vrhere the light eau
fall on it -.and ere the
brilliant, diamond -like
sparkle the pure -white
color, of every grain.
That's the way to teat
auy auger — that's the
way we hope you will teat
compare its pare, white
Stigtor
Compare it lWith any.other suga.r
sparke—tte even gram its matchless sweetness.
'letter still, get a ao pound or too pouttd bag at your groeer's and
tett "St. Lawreuca Sugar" in yout honie,
ST. LA.IttilUNCE SIJOAR 1%EFINE:1MS LIMITED, MONTRE.AL,
6;A
Another aviator killed. Aviation seems
te be a 1,1fort mad ti ) that bourne,
whence no travcner e'er returns.
- s • •
The Pres1),yterian, Angliean,
and Congregational Colleges of Xontreal,
will merge their lectures, thus eaving
expense, and showing the way to union
xt the churches,
: • 4.4.4
Gladys 147,vans, is out of jail. Gladys
was pump -fed until she was nearly dead,
But las the authorities did not 111,:t‘ the
idea of being murderers, they stopped.
short of killing her and bundled her
outside.
toaet
Bev. Dr. Milligan, of Torontre in a
sermon on Sunday lamented the fact
that th.e bast businees mea refused to
tteeept numieipe.1 office, leaving the man-
agement of the city's ffaire to a dews
of laferior men. That was not very
complimentary to the Toronto eldermen.
aeeee
The llrantford Expoeitor wants the
(3overnmeet to esteblielt an inebriate
farm. The $2 fitte or thirty days plan
of panishineut has proved itself a fail-
ure, and the Indian list is not moeda
bettor. These vie dine should have a
chance to reform, and an inebriate farm
might give them the opportunity to work
the juice out of thele system.
4
Toronto lute a Central Neighborhood
House, where Jews, ItalLans, Poles and
other e huddlecj together into overcrowd-
ed hottees bounded by Queen and College:
streets and Yong,o street and taivers-
ity avenue, can find a hemfor reerett-
tiou, for adviee and for assietanee in
their daily struggle fox- a liviage It is
along the lino of the playground move-
ment, and. is doing a good work among
those people.
1
the conuectiou lei International
Congress of Ilygiete and Demography,
held at Washington, the American Fed.
eration of Sex Ilygiene has made it strik-
ing exhibit of the annual waste and logs
from the substance of the people due to
indulgence in vice and luxury. An esti-
mate of the money cost of the social evil
is put at the appalli g sum of $3,000,000,-
000 a year. But the waste of human
flesh is still more appalling.
Whine; of the "-third degree," a sher-
iff in a. town near Chicago, to oh-
tain a confession of theft from a. negro,
staged a lynehing. He got together a
crowd of farmers, put a rope about the
suspect's neck, and theu led him to a
tree. The negro believed that he woes
looking death in the face, and confessed.
The sheriffte remark at the close of the
mock lynching was that "that was some
third degree." That sheriff Should get
the recall evithout1,or of time.
.;
Sir George McRae, chairman of the
Local Government Board of Scotland, is
In Canada looking, after runaway Scotch -
men. who have dtc-s- erted their wives and
familiee. "In the city of Glasgow elone,"
says Sir George, "the number of wives
and children deserttol last year was
970, which ceat the city no less than
$41,260. The number for the whole ot
tootland was 3,908, representing an ex-
penditure to the eountry of $157,500." A
wholesale deportation from Canada in
+4**1
surely due.
That tuberculosis le responsible for
one-third of the sicknese that redneee
families to despondency is indicated by
e study just completed • by the. 'New
York Association for Improving the Con.-
dition of the Poor. In a. statement sent
out the fieeociation etatee that the facts
obtained also indicate that this dieeieee
ie the cauee of over 8 per cent. of the
destitute homes in New York -City. Poor
food, poor .ventilation and unsanitary
surrounding e are no doubt the enntribut-
ing eausee.
414
The Bruesels Post says one of the
grossly unfair points of so-called frn.tar-
nal eocietie-s is the fact that juat as
Sean as the monthly call is not paid eas-
peleteion follows, and then cuncellation.
It thinks after a person has paid 'fifteeu
or twenty years he fihould have a right
to demand a paid-up polle.y or cash sue --
/*ender. To meet this demand thereto of
weeeesmene might have to be increased
However, it does eecin a hardship that
-a man should lose everything because
he had bfreotrte behind, in a month's as-
serisment,
10.4.4
Italy and Turkey have been. at war
now for twelve mouths. Thousands of
lit -es have been lost, and millions of
money wasted, and thut end is net yet.
Never too flush of funds, Italy has spent
5,415.000,000 in extraordinary milite..ry and
naval o:penses in connection with the
War, for whieh she shows that she belds
the etetet of Tripoli and the more import-
ant islands of the Aegean Sea. She has
partied soble glory in her ighting mbt
11...o3 enhanced het' poeition as a first-
class tower. But the balance, we believe,
ier still aeeinst her. fly this war her peo.
ple let ve becenie hupoverisbrcl, much, ef
her beet blood has bean spent. and re -
forme at home have beeu neglected. Tui.
ktsy hae uisi suffered in blood ttatl trea.
Pure. and h't' hatred or the chri9tiatt
hos hypn ineveastel and iatertsified.
'the Voteitt Teelne ahe at one time
hello ,I ae it thee' ae re lo IIIItIg trutteeee
,11011- eembltuee of order end ctvi
beet. feilen, and Alleue.a.
etel Cele., ate! the 1;1.4olz 1tantIa
enotit
loottie itige tot tee. !tier:nee .4.osi •';'1
tee. ie tiett,edies nal( onnl. lhr 14 .1
v.ould 1n!i4 Got 'to.* *
tov., 1; 1,' 001,0,-,ony 211
11..i 2 cc.tno /hit Wiwi 11it:On-4
110y 1' (1 I2le6., 11,61)" t'N•
ett.;(-4 tull