mz- mww -.<â€" v. an. :1 l .5 NEW HOPE :llow a Sick Woman ' l -- Can Regain lloalth' :READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY.- “For years I was thin and delicate. I lost color and was easily tired; a. yellow pallor, pimples and blotches on my face were not only mortifying to my feelings. but because I thought my skin would never look nice again I {grew despondent. Then my appetite failed. I grew very weak. Various remedies, pills. tonics, and tablets I gtried without permanent beneï¬t. 'A avisit- to my sister put into my hands ‘39. box of Dr. Hamilton’s Pills. She ,placed reliance upon them and now Ethat they have made me a well woman [I would not be without them whatever ithey might cost. I found Dr. Hamil- ?ton's Pills by their mild yet searching \action very suitable to the delicate 'gcharacter of a woman's nature. They never once griped me. yet they estab- lished regularity. My appetite grew keen-my blood red and pureâ€"heavy '{ings under my eyes disappeared and ; 0-day my skin is as clear and un- Jwrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr. hamilton’s- Pills did it all.†“k The above straightforward letter _ron1 Mrs. ,J. Y. Todd, wife of a well- [known miller in Rogersville, is proof Sufï¬cient that Dr. Hamilton’s Pills are in. wonderful woman's medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Hamilton’s, 25c. per box. All dealers or The Catarrh- “(ozone 00.. Kingston, Ontario. KING GEORGE A BUSY MAN. ._._â€". lCorrcspOndence Keeps Him Busy Several Hem-s a Day. ‘ The .King has impressed everyâ€" }body at St. James’ Palace both by lhnis industry and the businesslike fw'ay in which he getsthno-ugh his ‘work. The amount of corresponâ€" dence'whioh his Majesty must per- sonally deal with tends ever to in- crease, and though Lord Stamford- fham relieves the King of as much {work as possible, there remains af- ter the most exhaustive sifting suf- ï¬cient to keep the rmon-anrc'h occupied ffor several hours a diay. ‘ It is pos- sible that the King, if he liked, {could de-puttize most of his work, but, like his father, the late King Edward, he takes the perfectly cor- }"rect view that it would be injudii cicus to put his name or give~ his " assent to any document or plan - . {which he had not himself carefully studied. Besides, to one of his Ma.- ijetsty’s clearly deï¬ned views, tacirt agreement on some matters would be highly repugnant. The “Wakeâ€" Iurp-England†King believes in lookâ€" ing into things for himself. 1 His Majesty is an early riser, ,Genera-lly breakfast is served upâ€" Estajrs, a light meal ever which very few moments are spent. Then, if the King has not a morning en- gagement, he attends to his private fqorr=espond’enoe, which often means dealing with a. score- of letters daily. Sloane letters he dictates, others he iwi‘ltes himself. autographed letters mostly being to royal relatives. Then comes the business of dealing Lwit-h Sltalte correspondence, on or- deal. which keeps Lord Stamf-ordlham land his staff occupied the whole , .. 'ed‘ay- . '- No letter directed to the King, ex- cepting it be from a crank or a. mad- hnan, who frequently pick out roy- ‘lalties for their effusions, goes unâ€" answered. It Inlay be a more for- mal acknowledgment or it may con- tra-in an expression of the King’s feelings. Whatever the case, the courtesy of an early reply may al- ways be expected from the Palace. OX! ' CAUSE All I) EFFECT â€"- ,Good Digestion Follows Right Food , Indigestion. and the attendant 'dlscomfo-rts of mind and body are certain to follow continued use of improper food. ‘ Those 'who are still young and Lr-obust are likely to overlook the fact that, as dropping water will _'wea.r a stone away at last, so will the useof heavy, greasy, rich food, finally. cause loss of appetite and indigestion . ' Fortunately many are thoughtful “enough to study themselves and note the principle of cause and effect in their daily food. A young kwoma‘n writes her experience thus: "‘ “Sometime ago I had a. lot of trouble from indigestion, caused by 0 rich food. I got so I was un- ble to digest scarcely anything, and medicines seemed useless. “A friend advised me to try wraps-Nuts food, praising highly, and as a last resort, I tried It. I am~thankful to say that Grape-Nuts ,not only relieved me of my trouble, lbut built me up and strengthened I - . any digestive organs so that. I can inow eat anything I} desire. But I latiek to Grape-Nuts.†Nuane given by Canadian Postum lCo.,.» Windsor, Ont. Read “The oad to Wellviille,†in ,pkgs. .‘I‘There’s a. Reason.†» , Ever read be above letter? A new one app-en om time to time. They are genuine. true. no tun of human interns. Commeï¬t on Events Getting at the Heart. It is a great gift to be able to sift the Wheat from the chaff. and it was a habit of mind with Goldwin Smith always to let the mud settle. He wanted to see clear to the heart of a question after all the irrelevancies had blown awalv'. and his was an intellect which could pierce through clouds of rhetoric‘ and seize up- on the one little central bit of fact or theory over which rival writers or talk- ers were beating the air. Says ’Mr. Ar- nold Haultain in his book on Goldwin Smith: Numberless instances spring to my mind of this his faculty of seeing through layers upon layers of misty ar- gument and laying hold of the one small solid fact beneath. Thus when the whole economic world was looking. on and wondering whether New Zealan had really solved the problem of strikes by the institution of arbitration courts which should ï¬x the rates of wages, he quietly asked: “Can any Court force an employer to pay .what he can't afford to pay. or force an employee to accept a wage lower than he can obtain else- where?" So with the whole question of paper money and the right and ability of the state to manufacture dollar bills ad libitum- which once so agitated the western continent of America. “People do not see," he said. “that a dollar bill is not money. It is a mere promise to pay. When it changes hands credit passes at the bank of issue from the giv- er to the receiver." So with the whole question of Socialism. "Socialists." over and over again he has said to me. “tell us that ‘the state’ should be the sole owner, manufacturer. landlord and what-not. \Vhat is ‘the state'? Is it not the people themselves? 'The state' is not a person who can put his hand in his pocket and make everybody rich." It is .well perhaps now and again to recall these ‘Tsmall solid facts beneath†the surface of life. The world still goes on the same old way. establishing the- ories and mistaking them for practice. Wheat Harvestupf the World. Januaryâ€"Chili, Australia. and New Zealand, and is the ï¬nishing up of bar- vest in Argentine. February and Marchâ€"Upper, Egypt and Southern India. . Aprilâ€"India, Asia Jilinor, Egypt, and Mexico. Mayâ€"Northern Africa (excepting Egypt), Central Asia, and Japan. May also ushers in the harvest for the United States. in Texas. Juneâ€"Southern Russia. rAustria- Hungary, Roumania. Bulgaria. Ger- many. France. Southern England. and Eastern Canada. In the United States the harvest has worked northward. and is new general in the Central and New England States. and in Nebraska and Iowa. The- Paciï¬c States, Oregon and Lower Washington. are harvesting. and even' South Dakota is at work. July is the greatest harvest month of the year. Augustâ€"Belgium. Holland. Poland, Denmark, and Great Britain. In the United States. the Northâ€"“’est, \Vest- ern Canada. also is cutting. , September and Octoberâ€"Northern Russia, Norway. Sweden. Scotland. \Vestern Canada. ' Novemberâ€"Peru. South Africa. In fact, this month is the beginning of the wheat harvest in the southern hemi- sphere. Argentina does a. little in this month. - Decemberâ€"Argentina... This country finishes in January. By the distribution of the seasons Na- ture preserves a balance and prevents the entire harvest from coming on the market at one time. , Something to Apprehend. The aged Emperor Francis Josef of Austria-Hungary, eighty-four years old. may expire at any gtlme. His race is nearly run. What will happen to his conglomerateempire when he passes away has long been an anxious query in the chancelleries of Europe. For the conviction has always been held that the unity of the Empire hung on the Emperor's life and that when he should die it would fly apart. German and Magyar. Hungarian, Slav. Croat. Pole, Italian and other races make up a pop- ulation more curiously mixed than any other in Europe, and no two that are not racially antagonistic. Emperor Francis Josef has been reported ill. and the cable may at any moment flash the news of his death. When that event oc- curs Europe will have something to ap- prehend. , . V. Must Live Up To Standard. Henry Ford's foreign-born employees are ï¬nding out that when the Detroit motorcar king practically doubled their wages by his proï¬t-sharing plan he did not intend that all the extra. money should go into the savingr banks. Many of these people in their native lands ex- isted in squalid hovels. bare. dirty and unwholesom-. Mr. Ford has served noâ€" tice upon them that they must clean up their homes and live cleanly. decently and comfortably. There must be no more crowding their abodes with board- ers of their own nationalities; no more, bathtubs used as duck ponds. American wages must mean American standards of living. I{<_,.___ ARE PLANETS INHABITED . Scientist Says Venus and Mars Are -Seasons Like Ours. That Venus and Mars, in our own planet-airy system, are surely in- habited by human beings of some kind is the assertion of T. T. J. See, who writes on that subject in a reâ€" cent issue of Leslie’s Weekly. Con- tinuing, he says that observations show that Mars has a rare atmos- phere, a (lay thirtyâ€"seven minutes longer than ours, seasons of the same type, but no longer duration, and snow caps at the poles, and thus water vapor, though the amount is small. , _ V The probability of Venus being in- habited is much greater than that of Mars; for Venus rotates in twenty-one minutes, and in all ro- spects so closely resembles the eanth as to be called her twin sister. Veâ€" nus has an abundance of air, clouds, water and also mountains, and therefore seas, lakes and rivers. The seasons are like ours except they are shorterâ€"the year being 225 days in length. >E' rThe maid-ofoll-work in the ser- vice of a family, the members whereof are not on the most amic- able‘of term-s, recently tendered her resignation, mudhto the distress of the z-ady of the house. “So you are going to"leave>us ’l†asde the .mi's- tress, sadly. “What’s the matter, Mary? Haven’t we always treated you like one of the family?†“Yis, mum,†said Mary; “an’ I’ve stood it as long as I’m goin’ to l†anyone interested. In this connec- FOR SUFFERERS . FROM PARALYSIS There are cases of paralysis that cannot be cured. But that is far different from saying that every case- of There is absolute proof that many forms of this disease are curable. paralysis is- -:incurabl-e. Of the cases that cannot be cured many can be so beneï¬tt-ed. that the formerly hopeless sufferer will once d more ï¬nd her life worth living. Attention is called to the remark- able cures that have been effected in cases of partial paralysis, and other severe nervous disorders, by the use of Dr. VVilliamns’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Some of these cures are so wonderful as to chal- lenge belief, but in every case the statements have been carefully veriï¬ed and may be investigated by tion the case of Miss B. Milleuhaan, of St. John, N.B., is worthy of the most careful attention. Miss Milleâ€" han says: “Some three years ago I was taken seriously ill with diph- theria. The doctor brought me safely through this dreaded trouâ€" ble, and I was assumed to be well. But two weeks later I took a. re- lapse, my throat and limbs becom- ing paralyzed. I could' neither spleIa-k'nor walk. .I._W.as under the best of medical care, and after a few weeks was able to sit up in bed, but my throat was still com- pletely paralyzed and I could only utter unintelligible sounds. I was treated by three of St. John’s best physicians for this trouble and my case was given up as ‘hopeless. A friend asked me to try Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills, but I had spent so much on medicine without help that I thought it would be only a further waste of money. However, I felt myself gnowlng daily weaker and weaker, and I decided as a last chance that I would try the .Pill-s. By the time I had taken a half-dozen boxes I could walk across the floor, something doctors had told me could never happen again, I still continued taking the pills, my speech returned, and I felt myself in perfect health. My friends thought my restoration nothing short of a. miracle, and I think myself that I have to thamk Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills that I am living today, and I feel conï¬dent they can do quite as much for others as they did, for me.†Dr. VVllldzaims’ Pink Pills effect curves in cases of this kind because they make new, rich, red blood, which feeds- and strengthens the nerves, and tones up the whole sys- tem. If you are in need of a medi- cine give these pills a trial. We are conï¬dent you will not be disap- point-ed. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for. $2.50 from The Dr. Wih liams’ Medicine 00., Bl‘OClellluB, Ont. M FORESTRY FACTS. ‘anada’s Timber Wealth Compared With Other Countries. At an average cost of less than one cent per square mile, 15,203 miles of Dominion.Crown timberâ€" lands in the Northwest were exam- ined last summer by forest survey parties sent out by the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior. The Philippine Islands, which are extremely heavily wooded, are sup- posed to contain 200,000,000,000 feet, board measure, of timber. ’This is about one-third the estiâ€" mated timber wealth of Canada, not including .pulpwood, of- which there are approximately 400,000,000 cords. . With the opening of the Panama Canal, the development of the forâ€" est resources of‘thc near-by tropi- erable stimulus. The wood of the mangrove-tree, which grows along the low-lying coasts of British said to be twice as Strong as oak, and, when stood on end, will sus- tain without crushing a load of 8 tons to the square inch. It is said to be immune from decay,,which, with its great strength, makes it an ideal wood for railway ties. Five thousand cords of poplar are used annually in Canada for the manufacture of exoelsior, accord- ing to statistics recently gathered by the Dominion Forestry Branch. The wood must be clear of knots, peeled, and cut into four-foot lengths, to command the highest price from the manufacturer. In Switzerland excelsior is chiefly made from pine and ï¬r and is used largely for upholstering, for it re- tains its elasticity longer than hair and the small percentage of resin in the wood is said to protect the fur- niture from moths. The Canadian product is used chiefly for packing cal countries should receive consid- _ Guiana and adjacent countries, is furniture, but by using pine and spruce the present uses of excelsior might be extended. In the little country of Denmark there are 230 pulp or paper mills. In Canada, according to the latest available statistics of the Dominion Forestry Branch, there are only 48 pulp-mills in actual operation. The ianadian mills are, however, many times larger than those of Denâ€" mark. Large game preserves have reâ€" cently been set aside in Somaliland, Uganda and other British protec- torates in Africa, in which the hunt- ing is prohibited of elephants, gir~ affes, rhinoceroses and other valu- able game in danger of extinction. This policy has also proved success- ful in perpetuating the game sup- ply on certain Dominion For-est Re- serves in Western Canada, and as occasion demands the number of these game preserves will be in- creased. MOST PERFECT MADE THElNCREASEDNUTRITl- ous van): or BREAD MADE 'IN THE HOME WITH ROYAL YEAST CAKES SHOULD s: vsurncuzu'r INCENTIVE To THE CAREFUL HOUSEWIFE "ro swarms/IMPORTANT rooo rrsM THE ATTENTION TO WHICH IT IS Jus‘er EN- TlTLED. HOME BREAD'BAKING as- DUCES THE_ HIGH COST or LIVING BY LESSEHING THE AMOUNT or sxreusws mans REQUIRED TO sue. .PLY Tss‘uscsssmv NOUR- [SHMENT To Tm: BODY. E. W. GILLETTCO. LTD. {4 Our Debt to Others. It is a beautiful and salutary ar- rangement wthich wesexldlom reflect on as we ought that, as a rule, men can only become rich and great by supplying some want of their. fellowâ€" men, by doing work for othe rs which others need and are willing to pay for, be that work moral guidance or material provision. We cannot rise to command except by stoopi-ng to serve; we cannot obtain conspicu- ous station among men or power over them without in some way or . other rendering ourselves useful or _ TORONTO, ONT necessary to themâ€"W. Backbone w'mmpsa MONTREAL Greg. * I ' p . ._ . . WAKEFUL BABIES is applied in successive lay-ers and the “snow†abraded by the skates ' _ . . can be collected and melted with not be ’comfortegd that {3’ the tilne qulred for a Single Layer 13 about to ive him Blab’ ,s wah T M t one-ï¬fth ofapound .per square foot. g y a 'e' S' A fresh layer applied t-wme 'a week They promote sleep â€" not the .. .. , ' - - drugged iinnatiiral kind obtained to keep an or'dma’ry mnk m through the use of “soothing†mix- tures, but that refreshing natural sleep of the healthy child. The Tablets banish all stomach and bowel oompllaiintsréthe direct cause of crossness and sleeplessness. Concerning the-m Mrs. E. Medras, Grand Bods, Que, says: “When I began using Baby’s Own Tablets baby was so troubled with constipa- tion he would not sleep day or night. -Now all this trouble has vanished and he ,is a strong healthy chil -.†'llhe Tablets are. sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a. box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine 00., B-rockville. Ont. #4â€" SKATING RINK OF' SALT. )Ic____ ___, POINTED PARAGRAPHS. The man who hesitates may find it to late to act. It’s easy to be happy ; all you have to do is to be foolish. Ignorance of the law excuses no manâ€"unless he has a pull. Turkeys are innocent bird's; al‘ most any woman can stuff them. The world will forgive a. man al- most any old thing except a, failure, Execpt for his big cars, a. donkey could not appreciate his-own music. Occasionally a man wins a. ï¬ght because he hasn’t the nerve to run away. Our idea of a“ poor excuse of a man is one who solicits dirty linen for his wife to wash and iron. ï¬e INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS Pigeon, Pig-eon & Davis, patent solicitors, Montreal, report 127 Canadian patents issued for the week ending April 21st, 1914, 84 of which were granted to Americans, 18 to Canadians, 14 to residents of foreign countries, and 11 to resi- dents of Great Britain and colo- nies. Of the Canadians who re- ceived patents, 12 were of Ontario. 3 of Quebec, 2 of Manitoba and 1 of Saskatchewan. No Costly Refrigerating Process ' Was Necessary. A skating rink made of salt was recently exhibited and skated upon at the Berlin “Zoo.†It was pro- duo'ed by purely chemich means and without the employment of a costly refrigerating process. It re- sembled ice in every way, was odor- less and proof against any heat; be_, low 86 degrees Fahrenheit. This salt rink was made after a. process invented and patented. It can be applied over wood, cement, or as- phalt, or boards can be coated with it and assembled to form floors. It HAS PAID 7% PER ANNUM half yearly since the Securities of this Corporation were laced on .the market 10 years ago. Business established 8 years. Investment may be withdrawn in part or whole any time after one year. Safe as a. mortgage. Full par- ticulars and booklet gladly furnished on request. NATIONAL SECURETHE$ GORPORATWH, LIMITED, OOH’I‘EDERATION LIFE BUILDING - TORONTO. ONT. Extra Gran d Sugar is put up at the Refinery in 10 Pound, ' When you buy 20 Pound, Extra Granulated Sugar in any 50 Pound of these original packages you and are sure of getting the genuine 100 Pound Canada’s finest Clflï¬agsa sugar, pure and clean as when m~ ~it leftthe Reï¬nery. 4 -- .7 lâ€. 2Pound .. . . and 5 Pound' ' ~ it’s- worth while to insist on Sealed Cartons the Original Packages. CANADA SUGAR REFINING C0., LIMITED, 80 MONTREAL. PVW‘M " '4‘ rec "