g|.-• >• i^^-r-^*^^^':'*'- v - r':-. : -1>: -r; <?••'• ^i : - - ■ • ^ ■ ^'- c-; .'r^ • - - > -w" j?r*-:•:•• *ÜÜf ;L. ■: ,< - t : - Sr ►? >. - ><f M% il LV. R [r fet T £ > r rt r ' (ftf^^Vfïwftf-«F - for tile ailments from which almost everyone sometimes su xî 8- S1C ^- headache, constipation, disturbed sleep, muddy complexion, lassitude, backache, depression ana other results of a disordered digestive system--is They have achieved the distinction of being the most widely used medicine in the world, because millions of people have found them dependable, speedy and sure in their action on stomach, liver, kidneys, and bowels. Compounded from vegetable products, Beecham's Pills are free from harmful minerals and dangerous drugs. Thdy-do not promote the physicing habit--do not irritate the bowels. Should be taken by every member of the family at the first sign of illness--so mild and effective that they are good for the aged, and for the ills of childhood, are Worth a Guinea a Box Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, England, bold everywhere in Canada and U. S. America. In boxes, 25 cents. FARE $322 Sleeping nccommoda- fcSys>y •x. The Great Ship "SEEANDBEE'* The largest and most costly steamer on any inland water of the world lions tor loOO passengers. CITY OF ERIfc." • 3 Magnificent Steamers "CITY OF BUFFALO" BETWEEN BUFFALO-Daily, May 1st to Nov. 15th-CLEVELAND Leave Buffalo - - 9:00 P.M. Leave Cleveland - . 9:00 P M Arrive Cleveland - - t :3p A. M. Arrive Buffalo - - - - 7-30 a" M* r- »• . (Eastern Standard Time) Cleveland for Cedar Point, Put-in-Bay, Toledo, Detroit and all points West and i.outh./est. Kanroad tickets reading between Buffalo and Cleveland are good for transportation on oar steamers. Ask your ticket, agent for tickets via C. & B. Line. K transportation I §Hp""SPPA C N^n r RrF^^ al ^ , " zl ® c i m £ t ( ü showi "* both exterior and interior of The Great 1 I ,'i 3 SLisANDBEE sent on receipt of five cents to cover postage and mailing Also ask I I for our 2 i-pago pictorial and descriptive booklet free, g ~ Alao *** j THE CLEVELAND^, BUFFALO TRANSIT CO., Cleveland. Ohio - - 2 \ - >r. ,es> !* Î.--7. * S' -r,z _a v *. '.-7* - ..Vî t > ÿ.^-.'rÿrrv- V.:^- • _ -> { ' ■ r^à ' j 'W! %yi - Ü2UA %:■' ucLaA yfc* -y* -> Cl Vïl ^Â- •* -f^ -~.dr^4 v( tew^- ùï L*V. r4rfrf />Zay hours to your day Summer will soon be here and you will want all the time you can get out-of-doors, free from work and worry. Get a house Telephone to help you ! Nothing can do it so well, and it will • cost only a few cents a day ! No installation charge. Let us call and talk it over-- fill out the Coupon below and mail it to-day ! The Bell Telephone Co. of Canada. Gentlemen.--Please see me about Residence Telephone Service. Name ... -- Address 1. "Won't your mother be mad wh.m! Don't keep a good movement on- she sees how you tore your clothes ?" hand; put it on foot at once. "I guess not so very. Ma'll have lots bf fun huntin' up cloth to match and puttin' in a patch so people can hard- 1 man of any age. Never argue with a man who is ! over 70 years of gae, or with a wo- HEALTH B76 DAILY BETWEEN BUFFALO & ^CLEVELAND \ ' ~ Antidotes for Poison When any acid has been taken, the : white of egg and sweet oil should be if given freely; for alcohol, hot, strong ; 1 coffee, used as an enema, and warm applications to the armpits and feet will give relief. For alkalies, administer lime-or lemon lemon juice, vinegar or oil. In arsenic poisoning, the bezt immediate immediate remedies are oil, milk and lime water, and castor oil. Whn overcome with gas, fresh air !.. and artificial respiration should be j ■■ "" ■ ■■.. __ - .. resorted to until the doctor comes, beneficial effects they are not discov- u . and when calling him the cause ot -reM. t„ -.i.JU. "-_1° V -advertised; some are old varieties un- the trouble should be stated so that he may bring a. pulmotor and a supply of oxygen. The antidotes for chloral are hot, strong coffee, artificial respiration, and walking the patient up and down so as to prevent sleep. On no ac- 1 • - i v - ' Young Folks i- 1 js composed of clean, whole yount* leaves. Picked right, blended right and packed right. It brings the fragrance oi an Eastern garden to your table. deterioration, which are readily re cognizable. It is a heart depressant, a»d experiments on animals have shown that it has a tendency to pro- -- r .. -- „„ duce hardening of the arteries. Some count should he be allowed to sleep,, of the foremost authorities have made and in case the walking alone does j clinical observations,. which indicate not keep h*m awake, use .applications ! that the use of tobacco has similar ef- of cold water or ice to the face. j fects on man. Cocaine requires the administra- ! As is generally the case in the use tron of an emetic consisting of mus r i of drugs, there is a tendency to in- tard plaster applied to the spine. ! creasing indulgence. Those who have For sugar of lead take white of, had experience in athletics are familiar On b th G ^tht h r e h SCi J"^ C investigator, j der new names, and comparatively On the other hand, there are certain few are worthy of general cultivation . to by t.he farmers °of Start.'TthS few were grown to the exclusion of fully ighty per cent The Foot Log. There was once a foot log that lived by itself. All the other foot logs were far away down the brook, but this log had been placed where the brodk was very narrow and the dogwood dogwood and hemlock branches trailed in the water. The reason it was there was that it helped to rnake a short cut to the little s-choolhouse on the mountain. Ding! dong! ding! dong! the school bell would call and then the children, would come hurrying across the foot log. The old log loved to feel the pressure of the little feet. Some, came dancing along fearlessly others ! FOR EVERY SPOR: Arm RECREATIO] SOLD BY ALL GOOD SHOE DEALERS WORN BY EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMJpf egg. with the fact that the use of tobacco results in interference with the breathing by depressing the heart ac- affectiohs For mercury white of egg or flour and milk. I In the case of opium give a mustard j t'on. There are other emetic, strong coffee, slap, shake, rouse 1 common to smokers, the patient any way you can, and "on! To make a summary in brief, the no account allow him to go to sleep.-) results of all scientific investigations Phosphorus poisoning occurs some- j seem ' to prove conclusively that the times through children sucking ! use of tobacco is distinctly harmful to matches and for this reason they the majority of men should be kept well ouc of way. If, however, poisoning occurs, give warm milk and magnesia. In cases of ptomaine poisoning, an emetic, castor oil and a stimulant are advised. For strychnine poisoning give brom ids of ammonium in one-dram doses. SEED POTATOES. Tobacco Banned By Science. The spirit which hovered about the red man's council fires, floating upward upward in the smoke of the peace pipe, seems to have charmed all mankind. The use of tobacco in one form or another another in three centuries and a half has become worldwide. Despite the almost universal indulgence indulgence and the praises that have been sung of the soothing effect of tobacco, science condemns ft and offers an imposing imposing arrary of experiemnts to prove the ill effects which follow its use. Tobacco is a drug which contains powerful poisons. Its charm lies in its drug effects. If it have any The man who grows good potatoes when potatoes are needed is a public benefactor. | A' J fevzvzv* ^VVUiUO.IU U1C EU" , According to present production and , operative experiments throughout On- consumption in Ontario, from twenty- | tario in productiveness, table quality five to thirty people, or from five to ! and popularity with the experimenters of the kinds now under cultivation better results would be obtained, whether the potatoes potatoes were produced for home uses or for commercial purposes. Some of the varieties of potatoes which have been prominent in the experiments experiments at th Ontario Agricultural Collge and in the cooperative experiments experiments throughout Ontario are the Empire Empire State, the Davies' Warrior, the Rural New Yorker No. 2, the Green Mountain and the Carman No. 1/of the late, and the Extra Early Eureka, 1 the Early Ohio, and the Stray Beauty : or Bliss Triumph of the early varie- ties. In appearance there is a simi- ; larity between the Green Mountain j and the Delaware varieties and also i between the Extra Early Eurka and ; the Irish Cobbler varieties. In the i experiments at Guelph, however, the ! Green Mountain and the Extra Early . Eureka gave the best results in yield per acre, in table quality, and . in freedom from rot. The three varie- J ties of potatoes which have made | particularly good records in the co- ; six families, are supplied with potatoes potatoes for one year from each average acre of land which the farmer plants with this crop. An incrëase of fifty per cent, in yield would mean an increase increase in the amount of potatoes produced produced on each average acre of land are the Davies' Warrior and the Em pire Sta.te of the late and the Extra Early Eureka of the early varieties, j In the. average results of all the ! varieties grown in the years, 1905, j 1906, 1910 and 1915, in which there | was more or less rot in the potato sufficient to supply about one dozen j crops at the College, the Davies' War people for twelve months. In most j rior, the Extra Early Eureka and the years Ontario imports potatoes from i Stray Beauty produced the smallest, the. Maritime Provinces, and at the ! and the Early Rose, the Beauty of ! present time a part of our supply is i Hebron and the Early Ohio the larg- ! HUSBAND OBJECTS TO OPERATION Wife Cured by Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound coming from the Provinces of Alberta and of British Columbia. Ontario is well adapted to the production of potatoes potatoes of excellent quality, and should suply at least her own demands. The potato crop of Ontario could be decidedly and economically improved improved by a môre genërâl use of pure, well bred seed of a few of the best varieties, by the adoption of better est percentages of rotten potatoes of all the varieties grown under uniform conditions. It has been found to be good practice to use smooth, well shaped, sound : tubers of good size and of the best j varieties. These can be cut by hand into sets from one to two ounces in weight, each set containing two, three or, even better, four eyes. It is an loitered as the children stopped to look at the minnows in the clear brook water. One day a boy drew ouL his knife and cut a face on the old log. "There," he said, "there you are, old Mr. Foot Log! Now you have eyes and a nose and a mouth." The other children liked the idea. They thought a log man was nicer than a snow man, because he could not melt and run away. They often stopped to talk to Mr. Foot Log, and they liked to think that at night bears i and panthers crossed the water on his , back. j Very late in the autumn a storm of ! w nd and rain came down upon the ' mountain. The great pines lashed ; their long arms, the wind wailed through the woods, and the water rose high in the little brook. When morning came all was still and the j sun was shining. The children ran j gayly to school, but when they came ! to the brook they stopped. The j waiter was wide and muddy and the) foot log was - gone ! j "Oh, Mr. Foot Log has run away." ! sobbed one little girl. "Never mind," said the boy whr had carved Mr. Foot Log's face. "I think I know where Mr. Foot Log is. Now let me carry you across the water." | Because he was very big and tall i the boy carried all the smaller children ! across the swollen'brook. ' | The next morning, when the child-1 ren went to school, there lay Mr. Foot ; Log in the same old place! i "Where was he, Whgre did Mr. | Foot Log go ?" cried the children. , I The big boy laughed. "He was | down in the sawmill pond," he ex- ! plained. "I pulled him out and ' brought him back. It is never well ! to let a friend get away from your ■ i daily path, especially such a true and ied old friend as Mi Youth's Companion. walked carefully, and some lagged or ; ° ai ^y path, espe loitered ns thp ^TiilriTon afnnno/i ■#-/-. tided old friend as klr. r oot Log is. ' DANES FOR BRITISH FARMS. New Scheme for Importation of Aliéné- - Labor. A project for employing Danish labor on farms in England and j Wales is announced by the British i Board of Agriculture. The President J has discussed the settlement of discharged discharged sailors and soldiers at a meeting at the Mansion House. London, London, but an official announcement issued issued subsequently by the board, states that the Central Labor Exchange ia prepared to obtain Danish labor for farms outside prohibited areas provided provided engagements for not less than twelve months can be guaranteed and that traveling expenss (about three pounds) from Denmark will bo advanced advanced by the farmers, who may repay repay themselves out of the men's wages. ' The men would mainly be young single men bet wen 18 and 25, with practical dairy farming. They would need t<^ be lodged and boarded under reasonably comfortable conditions, conditions, and would have to be paid the current, rate of wages. * Not That Sort. Helen--Do you love me, dear? Jack--Dearly, sweetheart. Helen--Would you die for me? Jack--No, my pet. Mine is an undying undying love. r is- A Brave Man. ."Was your husband cool when the burglar broke in the other night?" asked Mrs. Jay. "Cool?" said Mrs. Bee. "Why, ho was perfectly arctic. He shivered all over. ■ ~ A I 7 ~ ~ J V/J VU. JL V AO till methods of culture, and by a more advantage to throw the freely cut po- complete control of insects and dis- tato sets into finely ground land plas- eases. It should be the aim of every | ter and to plant them immediately grower to produce large yielüs of uni- j after being cut. Good results have form potatoes free from disease and j been obtained by dropping the pieces of high table quality. . Varieties of po- j separately from twelve to fifteen tatoes differ greatly not only in yield inches apart in the rows and by hav- per acre but also in freedom from rot j ing the rows twenty-eight - or thirty Des Moines, Iowa.--" Four years ago I was very sick and my life was nearly spent. The doctors stated that I would never get well with- out an operation and that without it I would not live one year. My husband objected to any operation and got me some of Lydia Ê. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound. I took' it and commenced to get better and am now well, am stout and able to do my own housework. I can recommend the Vegetable Compound Compound to any woman who is sick and run down as a wonderful strength and health restorer.My husband says I would have been in my grave ere this If it had not been for your Vegetable Compound."--Mrs. Blanche Jefferson, Jefferson, 703 Lyon St., Des Moines, Iowa. Before submitting to a surgical operation operation it is wise to try td build up the female system and cure its derangements derangements with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound ; it haa saved many women from surgical operations. Write to the Lydia JS. Pinlcham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice--it will be confidential. and in cooking qualities. For instance, in the trying season of 1915 the varieties varieties of potatoes grown under uniform conditions at the Ontario Agricultural inches apatt. The potato sets can be planted from three to five inches deep, depending upon the character and the condition of the soil. Level cultiva- College varied in yield per acre from [ tion frequently gives the best results 13 to 366 bushels, in amount of rot on a light soil, and ridged cultivation from less than 1 to over 70 per cent., and in table quality .from 36 to 83 per cent., out of a maximum of 100 points. Some kinds are found to be very susceptible susceptible to rot and others to be almost immune. The table quality of potatoes, potatoes, varies far more than many people people realize when mealiness, flavor and appearance of different varieties are taken into consideration and are carefully determined. In each of four years an expeiÿment has been conducted at the Agricultural Agricultural College in testing under similar conditions potatoes obtained from different different sources. For Instance, eighteen lots of Empire States potatoes- were secured from eight different sources, five in tiie_Province of New Brunswick and three in Ontario. Seed potatoes i grown about one hundred and forty | on soil of a heavier nature. It is often an advantage to expose whole seed potatoes in a subdued light in a warm room about three weeks before planting. Especially is this - true if the potatoes are to be grown for early use. The production of short, thick, green sprouts before planting helps to hasten the growth and increase the yield. C. A. ZAVITZ. Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph, Ont., April 20th, 1916. AN IDEAL TONIC When your head is dull and heavy, your tongue furred, and vou feel done-up and good for nothing, without knowing what is really the matter with you, probably all that is needed to restore you to health and THF vigour is a few doses of a reliable & digestive tonic and stomachic rem- STOMACH AND LIVER Cdy such as Mother Seigel's Syrup. ^ QTr „ „ , , . , ^ . Ta ke it after each meal for a' few da} s and note how beneficial is its action upon the stomach, liver and bow-ds-- how it restores tone and healthy activity to these important organs, and by so doing enables you to gain new stores of vigour, vitality aud" health. MOTHER SEIGEL'S SYRUP The new 1.00 size contains Uirce times as much as the trial si . sold ahSOc per bottle. SC 15 Crushing. It was the morning after a visit from the Zepps, and a certain street "somewhere in London" was sprinkled sprinkled with broken glass. duty. "Is this the result of the air-raid ?" j he asked nervously. ! The policeman looked pityingly ! down at him as he replied : "Well, now, and d'ye think a stone done it?" grown aoout one nunorea ana iorcy | There was the usual crowd .of spec- miles north of. Guelph, in Muskoka j amon 8 whom was a timid- district, near the Muskoka Lakes, have man in spectacles, who at last j given a higher yield per acre than .Y en ivured to speak to the constable on j those obtained from any other source in each of the four years of this experiment. experiment. Seed potatoes grown in a cool, moist climate which prevents maturity maturity are often superior to those which have ripened in a hot, dry climate. climate. Immature seed potatoes are usually inferior for table use, but furnish excellent seed. Potatoes grown in Ontario in a comparatively cold, wet season like that of 1915 are likely to be of good quality for planting planting providing they are free from disease. disease. Tubers showing discoloration or signs of rot on the outer surface or when cut should- nob be used for planting. * 'yiere are far too many varieties of potatoes grown on the farms of Ontario. This is one of the greatest weaknesses in the potato industry of the Province. It is a defect that should be remedied as soon as possible. possible. If Ontario would confine herself herself to a few of the ; best varieties of potatoes the annual crop would be increased increased in yield, in quality, and in commercial .value. There are over one thousand named varieties of pptafoeg in North America, America, and fully four. hundred have, keen grown under experiment at the Ontario Agriqjl'tmMji CpHegg. Many of , these aré quite inferior, evtn though they have been extravagantly ■XMHHMKMSMSSMKMH1SSSM» Doctors Agree On Eczema Remedy Confirm the Statements About D. D. D. Prescription. George T. Richardson, M. D. : "In my o'pinion D. D. p. .should be. applied in all casçs of skin disease--an immediate relief to the itch, a.calm to excited'nerves, soft, soothing, yet a powerful agent, a strength to the general system." Dr. Ünna Ifolmes: "D.D.D. is as near a specific for eczema and the dreaded psoriasis psoriasis as is.quinine for malaria. I constantly constantly prescribe D. D. D. also for salt rheum, tetter, barber's itch, pimples, all forms of itching eruptions, scales, sores." Dr. Ira T. Gabbert : "I freely admit that D.D.D,. reaches most cases of eczema and permanently cures them." Come to us andVe will tell you more about this remarkable remedy. Your money back linlcis the-first bottle relieves you. p. D. D. Sgap keeps your skin healthy. Ask about it*. Jury & Lovell, Druggists, Bowman ville. Î y° ur cares in comf.ort- , , > * ing the aches and pains ot the family from youth to old age, are lessened when you use this old and trust-worthy remedy-- Sloan's Liniment •> * Bruises--Rheumatism---Neuralgia ® W Mothers : "Keep a bottle in your home" ^ Price 25c., 50c. and $1.00 ^ * *5 Horse Sale Distemper You knbw that when you buy or soil through the, JbïîülLt °IL® chance in fifty to csv.-ipo BALE 8TABLB DI8TBMBBB. " BPOHN'S " Is vour true protection, your only safeguard, for as sure as vou treat all your horses with R, you will soon be rid of tlio' disease. It acts as a sure preventive,- no mattvr how they are exposed. ' By the bottle, or dozen Lotties, at all druggists, horse goods houses or delivered bv the manufacturers, •POHlf MEDICAL CO., Clieinists and Bacteriologists, Ü. Goshen, in BJkJi \ f ■ . ■ ; - - - " - NW .. : v- :i CCr ill