nearly all the time. PAGE FOURTEEN THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, , Heart Of My, Heart, I'm Pining For You. Words by HALSEY 'K. MOHR Moderato. i of to-night, plan fu.turedays, fd per.fume the air, you, dear, a -lone, Sad-ly my heart is Allthro'the day, at a tempo be night in my » "XA beautiful, pathetic Ballad, Soft - ly the moon is To Thats, sweet with a cal- ling to you, Filled with a Copyright by LEO, FRIST, Inc., Foist Building, Publishers of "I'M .ON_MY WAY TO MANDALAY"the latest Sug by the Writ : Used by permission, Murray Music Co , New York drift. ing so bright, Sweet Found peace and rest throughlove's Music by pe W FRANK HARLING of ros .es ways, Dreamed of a thronefor ae you they are send' - ing love thoughts un- end ~'tle love, like 5 An . from a.bove. rif. r . [& love thats end-leds and true, Con-stant be-fore me Na New York : Whig's Popular ~ Music Series Selection Published Each Saturday Extra Copies May Be Obtained at the Office ersof 'Peg O'My Heart" SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1914. gaze in your eyes wouldseem i - ress, with soft sooth-ing ra. diso, Yot CHORUS. Valse moderato. that is do.npied me yes, Would moan E-ter. nal too, doar! hap- piness. Heart of my heart, Im pining for you, Each paasing day brings mein-o-ries too, mp Sad is my heart, -cen-do : @ I nev-er knew till you,dear,had gone, 'Sad and des-pair- ing, with na-bo-dy and wea.ry tho pain AT ne J AoE l= EAE was, to be Just what it np sar - io%, Oh! bring back yourhesrt to mel piulento The Above Music Can Be Bought at Dutton's Music Store, Phone 210 Dutton's has the largest and latest stock of Popular, Operatic and Classical Music, Song Folios, Etude, etc. Sole agents for Canada's leading piano, "Newcombe," noted for purity of tone and durability. Only piano having Howard straining rods. 'THE CARE OF THE CHILD - | 3 pb Article No 3:--The Baby Up to One | Year. The Baby's Growth.--Babies need a.tention and care, if they are to grow. Before all else, the mother must give time to the baby: For the first year or two of life, babies re- quire a great deal of care to keep them well. New-born babies are like pants They need to be kept warm, to sleep, to be kept clean, to have food re gularly, to drink a little cool water, 10 have fresh air, to get sunshine 'This chapter tells how it may be done "The Baby's Eyes.--Remember that that the baby's eyes should be wash- -ed out by the doctor as soon as the baby is born. He dods this to protect your baby from blindness, Keeping Baby Warm.--After the baby is washed and dressed for the first time, It must be kept warm to be comfortable. When the baby is very little, it will often cry because it is cold or too warm. lis feet and hands will tell you when it is comfof- table. They should be warm. A cro cheted shawl is the very best cover ing for the baby, and over it there should be one of the little home-made cheese-clath blankets mentioned in the second chapter. Keep the little baby worm. Sleep. --New-born bahies sleep As the baby grows colder, it sleeps less. After a few weeks, it learns to sleep longer at night and less in the daytime. The baby can soon learn to sleep at about the same time every day. The mother can do more work and take better care of the baby if she knows just when and about how long the baby will sleep. Soon the baby will take a long sleep in the morning, stay a- wake for an hour or two in the mid- dle of tbe day, and taken another nap in the afternoon. It should be . trained, as soon as possible, to sleep during the hours that the mother is busiest with her housework. If kept awake during the latter part of the afternoon, it will be tired, and sleep well during the night. Babies should £0 to bed not later than six o'clock. Windows should always be open . When the baby sleeps, and the baby wrapped up warmly. Even a baby.a | days old can begin 'to learn that It must sleep at night. Do not take it UP every time it cries at night. Some- times when it sleeps it becomes un- comfortable and wants to be turned 40 another position. It is best for babies Ww. Few habiés cannot to sleep without any sleep this way. To keep the baby awake at HF yme you want 'it to learn to he 'awake, play with it or take it up. pe time of going out and of feed- ing will have much te do with the ur of 'the baby's sleeping. After a ng, 'or when it is outdoors, the Early in the morning; when the bahy wakes and is fed, it will like to re- main awake, But it cap learn to lie | in its basket and play It need not! be taken up after being made com- | fortable | The baby should be trained to sleep at the same time every day and | all night . The Bath.--Baliies are well and | comfortable if they are kept warm, | sleep much and are kept clean. The baby should be given a bath every | day. Some mothers have' more time; to do this in the morning after the| housework is done, and others have! more time in the evening when the supper is ready. The hour at which the baby is bathed makes little diff- erence to the child. It is advisable to bathe it just before feeding or sleep] ing time. Never bathe the baby just | after it has eaten. Before handling | the baby to give it any attention, the mother should first wash her pwn | hands carefully to remove all dirt] and possible germs. | Baths in Summer.--In warm wea-| ther a tub and a sponge bath, or ey- en two, may be given daily without harm to the baby. The baby is not apt to have prickly heat if its body is kept cool and clean. | The E . Ears and . Nose,--The | 3 should be washed every! y with a .little boracic acid water should be made as described in chapter I. The mouth should be was- hed out very gently every day with a little piece of cdatton, wound a- round the finger and moistened with the boracic acid water, After using, throw away the cotton. The baby's ears should be gently cleansed with a littie bit. of soft cotton twisted into a point, and dipped into boracie acid. After using the wet cotton, use a dry piece, so that no water remains in the 'ear. The nose should $e cleansed ont occasionally with a little twisted piece of cotton, dipped in boracic acid water, like the piece used for the ears, The eyes, ears, moth and nose are very delicate, and great care is need- ed to keep them in good conditivn: All that is done to them must be done gently. The Head.-- The baby's head should be washed carefully évery day. If a scaly, yellowish or, brown skin appears on it, the head should he greased at night with vaseline or sweet-oil. In the morning afier the bath, the head should be gently fone over with a soft brush. The scales will come off. Use no scented or strongly smelling soap on the head. This should be done daily urtil the head is clean. Every. time the scales conte back, it should be done azain. It the head becomes covered with cradle 'cap that you cannot remove in this way, see you doctor, as some- yes, | may | baby is taken. out, and in a very few | warm. times a very sore scalp or'cczema occur froms neglect. "'Daudruff cap" means a dirty hgad Bathe the baby every day, and see that mouth, eves, noses and head are kept clean Care of the Baby's Clothés.--The baby cannot be clean, even with baths, if its clothes are not kept clean. It will not be comfortable if wet or soiled diapers are left on, After the bath each day put on clean outer clothes and underclothes. Put the soiled garments, except the dia- pers, into the bath water after the ears, moments they can be washed out, rin | sed in clean water, and the baby will always have a clean, fresh outfit. If little knitted nightgowns are used no ironing will be necessary. Before putting them on, shirts, bands and nightgowns must always be clean and If they are wasked often, not $0 many will have to be bought. The flannel petticoats, unless accidenial ly soiled by the. baby, need not be washed more than once a week. The three petticoats provided, should be worn turn and turn about, the one that is left off being aired for the night or the next day. Flannel wears better if 5 not washed often, ana airing freshens it, A soiled garment should never he put back on the baby or left on be- fause it is too much trouble 10 make it clean. The baby will be better just wrapped in a blanket with no clothes on at all, than left in dirty ones Wet diapers will make a baby fretful If the baby is very the night, it may be changed to see if that causes the disturbance A A very little baby, uniil it is three months old, will be satisfied to be changed just before each feeding. It 18 not necessary to waken baby to change its diapers during the night unless there is a stool. Diapers should be washed and dried before being used a second time. The water pa ed by the baby has certain qualities that make the cloth irritating, and Asing the diaper a second time with- out washing may make the baby's soft and tender skin very sore. Keep a large, covered pail for wet diapers. ha not jet flies get at soiled diapers Vv. might go from the diapers to the baby and muke it sick. After the baby's bath every morning, while it sleeps, is the timé Tor the mother to do the baby's washing, fo that it can ' : How's This ? fo offer One Hundred Dollars woany case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Re- FF. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo, O. We the undersighed have known F I. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be- Heve him ° perfectly honorable'in i business transactions and financially ahie to carry out any obligations made by' his firm ¥ Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal. ly: acting diredtly upon the blood and iucous surfaces of the system. Testi: moniais sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all" druggists 3 Take Hall's oh Family Pills for const. pat on. - restless during] he dried in the sunshine and warmed over night before being put on again. put a damp garment on a aby It is a good plan to lay the garment against the cheek hat it is warm and dry. Soiled dia pers should be washed as soon as possible. Little scrubbing brushes can be used to brush the stools off the oiled diapers, then it can be rinsed immediately and put in the pail to be washed out carefully with the oth ers All soap in washing diapers must be carefully rinsed out. If Yoap remains in, the skin will become sore Always, after washing diapers, the mother should carefully wash her own hands. Once or twice a week the diapers that require washing should be boiled. Pads that are on the bed or warn the baby must § be kept clean, and should be ai . As they do not touch the baby's skin, if they have no odor they may be dried once and used again. The blan kets and shawls used to cover the baby should not be allowed to be- come soiled or dirty, The stringy of the baby's cap should be washed out and-changed often. Fresh Air.~~Many' kinds of. sick ness are cured by fresh air, which ai- so keeps babies from getting sick Warmly covered, the very little baby should sleep in a room with a win dow open. In the winter, new-born babies ordinarly are not taken out until they are four weeks old. In the summer they may go out at two week 1¢ baby must be kept warm when it is out, and protected from the wind. On very cold days a hot-water bottle or a hot brick or iron can be Never to see by by | placed in the carriage. Sometimes a baby born in 'winter need not go out fat all if the -weather is bad. If the | robm is sunny in the middle of the days,' it can be dressed ag for going {out and laid near the wide-open win- | tdow. This will save a busy mother's | time. Babies who live in the country | may be placed on the veranda to! sleep, and get their fresh air in that | way. Babies can sleep outdoors sum mer and winter, in the daytime, in dry weather if they are kept out of the wind and Kept warm. Remember that the baby is sitting or lying still in the carriage, and is not moveing about as you are. It feels the cold moye. Cold weather never hurts a warmly dressed baby. If it is warmly covered it may even sleep with the window open a little on the coldest nights.' See that the baby is dressed warmly enough, and the fresh air with make it grow and keep it strong and well Fresh air will help to cure sick babies and will help well babies to digest their food. Fresh air can be kept in a room by putting a board, the width of the window and two or three inches thick, under the lower sash. The fresh air coming in at the opening between upper and lower 'sash does not make a draft and will keep the air in the room pure, While sunshine is needed, strong light ought not to shine directly ipto baby's eyes. \ The baby needs fresh air day and night as much as it necds food. Water.~~Babies get thirsty, Ba- } bies who nurse get especially thirsty Give the baby plenty of cool boiled water to drink. Do not give it just before feeding unless ordered by the doctor. Give- it between feedings, Jometimes when the baby cries it is wily thirsty. Try giving it water Feeding the Baby.--Every mother viio can nurse her own baby should io so. That her most important tuty. She does her child a great rong of she does not make every ef- ort to nurse it. Of children born 1ealthy and fed on the breast, very 'w die in the early years of life: very many children fed by bottles ind patent foods die before they are v year old. Mother's milk" is the na- ural food for the child What Women Spend for Dress. Members of the, Chicago Dress- maker's Club say that a few women in Chicago spend $75,000 each on clothes; 100 social leaders spend $50,000 each; 10,000 others get long. on $5,000; well-dressed club- women manage to worry along on $1500 apiece; but the modest suf- fragists and church workers, who, (though few of us have probably noticed it,) must dress about alike, spend the same amount, namely $600, Having various causes much it heart, they have other uses for their money than displaying it on their backs, The social werkers very properly, more modest spending only $300. The sten- )graphers, shop-girls and factory girls spend respectively, $275, $250, and $240. As the wages of these girls cannot average above $15, $10, and "$8, respectively, it will be seen- that they spend too much on their clothes, and vet they could hardly prespnt a decent appearance on less, Ihey lose something by not making their own clothes, but they must be very strong to sew much after finishing their day's work.--Kawe Upson Clark, in Leslie's. Poincare Has Pet Cat. M." Poincare, whose love for ani- mals is well known, has set a new fashion for travelers in France by taking in the train with him on his journey to Nice, his favorite cat, Gris:Gris. Gris<Gris js a magnifi- cient Siamese cat. When the train stopped at Cannes, the mayor oa entering the saloon to greet the president was much astonished to find him caressing the purring Gris- Gris, who had just finished her breakfast of milk out of M. Poin- care's own saucer.--Paris Cable to the Chicago Examiner. - A Slip of the Tongue. Mrs. Mills was a woman of few words. One afternoon she went in- to a music shop to buy the book of an opera for her daughter. A shop- man walked - np to her, and in a quiet way Mrs. Mills said: " 'Mikado' libretto." ° "What's. that, ma'am? 2 "'Mikado' libretto," repeated the woman. RC "Me no speakee Italiane," he re- plied, shaking his head. = Hy whe w------" WITHOUT ACID. If you want yovr clothes to Inst, you must hav em washed without acld. We use no meld whatever A posteard will bring door. We appreciate the o te serve you, CHONG "ROS., LAUNDRY. A A AA A A A St. Helen's School, Dunham, Que. A Resident'al School for Girls, miles south of Montreal Ful from Preparatory t Matriculat High, healthy situs games sports Special courses Art, Languages and Physi Resident English staff MISS WADE y to the rtunity ire. spectus apply Otta wa Ladies' College RE~-OPENS SEPT, 8th. New Building--costing $140,000.00. Absolutely Fire-prool. Every Modern Convenience. New Furnishings. Pure Water trom Artesian Well. § COURSES: Academic Course from Preparatory to First Year University. Music, Art, Domestic Science, Phys- ical Culture, Stenography. Write for calendar. REV. J. W. H. MILNE, B.A. D.D., President. J. W; ROBERTSON, LL.D,,C.M.G., Chalraan of Board of Trustees. Sn Prinei- 0.L.C. LAUNDERING DONE |= Ofa, lcve thats all ~ in vain. ~N aN Our customers are our best ad- vertisement. Every pair of BOOTS AND SHOES sold by un nelis others. Every day someone sayx, Mrs, So-and-so In so well pleased with her phoes that | thought I would, come. to you. We are huomas--never satisfied. We want to add you té our chain To fit you is to fit your friends the future. We have all makes styles of men's, women's and children's boots and shoes at the lowest price In the eity.. "ONTARIO LADIES wive All the other The new 925.000 GC ete., together with a for unequalled in any Ladies' School in this country. The strength ef the staff may be judged from the fact that Sevea University Graduates, all Specialists fn thelr Anam) wm, with swimming pool, and attractive eampus, . Next Term Begins Sept. 10th 3