SOME CANADMN INDUSTRIES Tflï¬' IMPERIL THE SAIBA‘I'II lie Lori’s Day Alliance is Keeping I Keen Lookout The March number of the Lord’s Day Advocate says that during the week beginning the ï¬rst. Sunday at- m Easter, special attention has for drawn to the neces- some years been . ,A,___.... A! the Sab- city of better ObseTVancc or bath. The advocate also outline of the work of the day obsel different industries. It say We have a sufï¬cient supply t one of the seric greed, bu threatening our Canadian S imported greed. Not mer€ determined form of capital, large proï¬ts at any cost, b1 frequently in the form of managers, like, who come in to superi: ious forms of industry, am sist upon a lar nary work being done on t â€(’lnfl lurlllnuvu vv.-.- -, utmnp with which he could mail a. lottor to his absent wile. Of course tho L.l).A. did no such thing. For that tho mngiatrato was solely re- Iponsihlt‘. It is n unmplo of the unfair criticism to which we are sometimes exposed, though we might expect something better in Toronto. THE SCOTTISH CURLERS The Scottish curlers, accompanied by their captain, the Rev. John Kerr. gavv themselvi-s so full a program on week days that they had no time left for a. visit to Niagara. Falls, and spent the. Lord's day, 25th January, travelling to and trounnnd inspecting not only the natural wonders of Nia- gara Falls. but tht the electric po- were development plants and attend- ing industries. For this they were very properly and eflectively criticized by the Rev. Dr. Milligan of Old St. Andrew’s who voiced the indignation of Christi-ans generally, and Scotchâ€" =â€" “unmlat because of this men in particular, because of this wanton desecration of the Lord’s day by representatives of the country that, the world over, has been fa.- mous for its regard for the Sabbath. We must, however, not hold Scotâ€" land responsible for the ill-doing of these poor representatives of her people. ,i _--‘-on 5'": C ANADIANS AT PARIS Canada has been more worthily re- presented by a number of the memâ€" bers of the All-Canadian Foot Ball Team has been touring the old land. The team was asked to play a game on the Lord's day in Paris. A number of the members positively refused. We regret that all did not do so. Those who were willing thus to desecrate the Lord‘s day were joined 'by others of the same sort from Britain and France, made up a "scratch team,†played the Sunday match and got thoroughly beaten. All honor to Canadians, who, when abroad, have the courage to refuse before a foreign public to dishonor one of the most valued of Canadian institutionsâ€"the Christian Sabbath. BEET SUGAR MAKING Readers of the “Advocate†already know that the Sugar Beet Industry which has recently taken root in se- veral neighborhoods in Ontario, claims the right to run its factories day and night, week day and Lord’s day, from the beginning to the end of the season. The Lord’s Day Alliance has made very careful investigation of the grounds on which this claim is bas- Hi. and is persuaded that there is no real “necessity" for the operating of these factories on the Lord’s day. A test case has, therefore, already been begun against the Ontario Su- gar Company of Berlin. Shortly after the case. opened, the company’s lawyer made a determined efl'ort to have the case dismissed on the techâ€" nical ground that since the court of appeal had decided that a corporatf ion was not subject to the restric- tiOns of the Lord's Day Act, there fore its employees ought not to be so. In this, however, he was not sucâ€" cessful, the magistrate, after an able argument by the Alliance Counsel, Mr. A. E. O’Meara, B.A., deciding that the case would not be dismissâ€" ed on such a technicality, but that he would go into the merits of the claim of the “necessity†for con- tinuous running. The case is stilt pending before the magistrate’s court. ing industries. For 1 very properly and effect by the Rev. Dr. Millig‘ Andrew's who voiced t! of christi-ans generally vvu- '- Meantime, it is interesting to note that another factory of the same Lind during the coal famine, found that on more than one occasion its supply of fuel ran out, and it was compelled to close down for periods of various length, and was able to resume as soon as coal was secured, without any disastrous consequences appearing. “ " It is earnestly to bepoped that no technical view in the law willre- large PAGE lave a. sumuem h†_ but one of the serious perils Lening our Canadian Sabbath is 'tcd greed. Not merely in the of capital, determined to make at any cost, but not inâ€" rm of foremen, ' dents and the ndustry, and who inâ€" amount of unnecw- done on the Lord's forms of -i 1pon a large work being Mexican 1 has recently lVU va. uv _ to the local public, that employees came to the :- local Alliance and re- be prosecuted in order 1M. get deliverance from ch an one or our Vassar The inroads upon the no been so serious, and eï¬tion has for nce or the Sab‘ )f the Alliance It says: manufacturing , established a which manuI: lated Spiérits' at Toronto. andâ€"'Deseronto, in untauu, w..- , Cookshire, Que, carries on to a con- siderable extent on the Lord’s day the process of manufacture. As in‘ so many other industries, it claims that this is new ssary. The grounds Iof the claim are at the present time Ibeing carefully investigated, the pre- Isent impression being that they are }by no means suflicient and that beâ€" 1,yond the maintaining of a certain de- lgree of heat in the building, there is no need for the manufacturing proâ€" cws to be continued. such im- At no Very great expense, proved facilities, notably increased . capacity {as would readily ena *ries to close dow Too often the are unwisely cond ed about their E Sabbath question more than they d Sabbath rest._ 1 THE RAILRO ADS' he railroad companies i nod and criticizâ€". 0 toward the uld do tter of 1 Too often t are unwisely condom ed about their attitud Sabbath question. They sho more than they do in the ma Sabbath rest. In some circumstances, howevCr. doing more than the per- are ï¬nding fault with . T am satisï¬ed that many of m desire to see the whole Sunday service abolished. They are in not it inw instances. splendid men: men the welfare oi their hands in their thought. sonabie thing j for the welfare oi their. ark their men; 10. because M“ in it. but be-‘ lieve to be . 'i‘ , Sabbath as a ru y pleasure cause what they be public demand. Last summer when a was wanted to open up a gener ness in Sunday excursions, and sought the co-operation of the great roads in the enterprise. the compa- ed to furnish the Sun- The railroad ofï¬cials . . best people dis- ! the Sunday excursions. 2. We work our men entirely too much on the Sabbath as it is. We are not willing to impose any extra Sabbath labor on them, that we can avoid; therefore we will not grant any extra Sunday trains. From Fort Dodge, IOWa, says Rev. S. W. Gamble, secretary of the American Sabbath Union, I received information from Hon. L. S. Cofï¬n, who is better informed probably, than any other man in the nation, on the problem of Sunday railroad trafï¬c and labor,_ that 'in a recent conversa- tion With a railroad ofï¬cial who was tern city approve o and who ; ed al busi- bcioro the b '1..an Jun-I a “D v ,, spraying with the dust process. We our orchard into blocks. divide spray a part wit part with the h the liquid and a dust. spraying the same number oi times and on the same days. Where we used the dust we had .a fair crop oi apples. and but few where we used the liquid. Where we used the dust it was evi- dent wo had overcome the fungus to such a degree that by increasing i the compound and k we could eradi- 'l‘hc next the strength 0 with thorough wor onto it from the orchard. year we sprayed six times, the best crop oi iruit we had grown in ten years. The machines we us- in distributing the dust Were not sstisiactory. They were oi thchel- lows pattern. Last year we pur- chased a machine made at Kansas City. which is better. We could drive a volume of dust th 9} inch pipe. covering everything with dust. driving at a slow walk. We sprayed eight times: first Just loom opened; than as it twice the next week : it until we had spray- We sprayed last the e iew wormy apples k of the codling dropped ; then then once a wee ed seven times. end oi July. Th we had were the we:- lie . fruit, and not a sign oi fungus could you ï¬nd on our fruit. We had as ï¬ne a lot as ever was grown in northern Missouri around us threw half of theirs int-3 the cull pile, and what they barreled were poor No. 2. On a block. oi J onathans we boarded 300 barrels two years ago. Last year from the same trees 'we gather- ed 550 barrels of as ï¬ne fruit as The ever went into any market. some trees are iuli oi .iruit buds for this year. Our prospect in general , 2.... - -nnA nrnn [his \rmr_ and tnunu. _____ them desire to ace the wt norvlco abolished. They :\ tow instances. aplendld who have the welfare of conltantly in their thong} am rody to do any reuse thoy can do. men. They do not. war! on Sabbath an a. rule. having any pleasure in cause of what they b4 in they are sons who them. v-- v V doingimoro than th< -. KW“C‘11icé.go railroad omcial, some time ago, was criticized for putting I '1'- ‘omplaining about feeling usually fatigued. Mr. C. said. “You need Sabbath rest; why do you not get it ?†The oï¬â€˜xcial replied, “I would be very glad tostop all Sabbath la.â€" bor on my road if public sentiment would permit it."‘ Many People Week‘en Their Systems by Taking Purgative Medicines People who use a purgative medi- cine in the spring make a. serious mistake. Most people do need a medicine at this=season, but it is a tonic that is required to give health. vigor and vim. Purgatives irritate and weakenâ€"a. tonic medicine invigâ€" orate: and strengthens. Dr. Wil- liams’ Fink Pills are absolutely the best tonic medicine in the world. These pills do not gallop through the bowelsâ€"they are gently absorbed into the system; ï¬lling the veins with the pure, rich, red blood that car- ries healing, health and strength to every part of the body. Dr. Wilâ€" liams’ Pink Pills cure skin eruptions, indigestion. headaches, nervousness. neuralgia, backache, rheumatism, cont inucd weariness and all other blood troubles. They are just the tonic you need for this spring. Mr. A. Campeau, Alexandria, Ont, says: â€"-“I received great beneï¬t from the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and take pleasure in recommending them to all who suï¬er from troubles aris- ing out of a poor condition of the blood. I think there is no better tonic medicine.†ILL-In“; “bu, nun v---____v._ a new Sunday train on his road. He replied, that he had been pressed up- on to put the train on, and that he had spent a large sum in advertising the proposed new train in order to waken a protest that would enable ‘m to decline to put the train on.â€" But not a christian man in Chicago came to his aid with a protwt, un- til weeks after the train was put on. It is an unfortunate fact that the church people have been in the rear of this procession for nearly a dozen years. vow Llllllu my“- .. -..V. If you need a. medicine this spring give these pills a. trialâ€"they will not disappoint you. Do not be per- suaded to take a. substitute or any of the “just a’ good." medicines which some dealers, who care only for proï¬t, offer their customers. See that the full name, Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, is on the wmppe!" around every box. If in manufactures 01 manufactur by the er: of P319 wood, chemical Pmcm' .: -_ A: +heir A COMMON MISTAKE A-..â€" v r.â€" m the railroad companies lifnrtv Qiï¬h the dust .y condemned and cx'iticiz-!leo number 0‘ til their attitude toward the II same dava. Where w mation. They shoals! dfi‘wo had .a. fair cm? H A --.‘ I and other byeâ€"p Longford, Fenelc .to, in Ontario, ne.. carries on t , carries on to a con- t on the Lord’s day manufacture. As in industries, it claims essary. The grounds 'e at the ‘prosent time =-'mc’cioratcd. the pre- :OAL WORKS Chemical Company, res charcoal, methy- l other byeâ€"products «ford. Fenelon F_a.lls 0“ wood. these doubt â€I.“ V‘- poat paid, {at 50 cents boxes for $2-50' South African Constabulary speak in anything but complimentary terms of their experience in Smith Africa, and state that they are very glad to back to Canada again. .They f unjust treatment iand n the part of the and say that Cana- get complain o discrimination o lAfrica, and that he contemplated re- " 3‘ 3“ n In!†month! The Dry Mixture is Better Thu the Liquid A writer in the last issue of the Country Gentleman says : We are strong believers in sprayâ€" ing. We have 70 acres in apple trees, varying in age from 5 to 25 years. We have been spraying for; ‘9 years. We used the liquid process. for 6 yearsâ€"Spraying from three to 'mes a yearâ€"using 'the regular bordeaux mixture for fungus, and the arsenics for codling moth. Our suc- as never satisfactory. The |fungus kept increasing until we had lonly a small percentage of perfect .fruit. We were more successful in 'holding in check the codling moth than the fungus. Three years ago we commenced ;spi-aying with the dust process. We spray a part with the liquid and a mart, with the dust. spraying the same number of times and on the name. days. Where We used the (lust - __.-_1..- a-†We sprayed eight times: ï¬rst. gum, before the bloom opened ; than as it dropped; than twice the next week; then once a. week until We had apt-ey- ed seven times. We sprayed lest. the end of July. The tow wormy apples we had were the work of the codlin-g moth during June and July. In our J onethans not over 8 per cent... and Ben Davis 5 per cent. Wen: wan-my fruit- and not a sign of fungus coutd _-- . A) A“ Ben UaVIB a yu- ~~---- fruit, and not a sign of fungus could you ï¬nd on our fruit. We had as ï¬ne a lot as ever was grown in northern Missouri. Our neighbors around us threw half of theirs into the cull pile, and what they barreled were poor No. 2. On a block. of J onathans we barreled 300 barrels two years ago. Last year from the same trees ' we gatherâ€" ed 550 barrels of as ï¬ne fruit as ever went into any market. The same trees are full of .fruit buds for this year. Our prospect in general is ï¬ne for a good crop this year. and that is not all. Our orchard is practically clear of insect life, and there are no evidences of fungus. The mixture used was as follows: One barrel of truth lime: 25 lb. blue stone; 5 lb. concentrated lye; 25 lb. powdered sulphur ; 5 lb. Paris green (pure). Increase Paris green to 10 lb. for canker worms. llreuk lime into small pieces and put it in-‘ to box 3 x 6 feet. Dissolve blue. stone in boiling water, 6 gallonsâ€".1 Dissolve lye in 5 gallons hot waterfl Keep the two solutions separatei Take sprinkler and sprinkle the so- lutions on the lime ; if not enough to ' slack into dust, use water. Cover! over the dust when through slack- ing. Make sieve of ï¬ne wire and atâ€" tach long handle. Sieve out the (lust. Rub sulphur through sieve into the dust and put Paris green in. Stir thoroughly. Be careful not to get dust too damp. I fruit, and not. a 813:: u; . you ï¬nd on our fruit. ï¬ne a lot as ever wa: northern Missouri. Ou around us threw half of the cull pile, and what u were poor No. 2. 0n Jonathan: we barreled vellers. He came from his home, Clinton, east, Sunday, and stationâ€" ed himself near the ticket wicket. At ï¬ve minutes to seven Miss Wheeler approached to purchase a, ticket for Boston. \ About thirty other per- sons were awaiting the train. Just as the woman reached the ticket of- ï¬ce window Moulton" drew a revol- vet and ï¬red twice. Miss Wheeler fell, and Moulton. evidently believing she was dying, blew out. his own bfains. A physician found that, al- though both shotS‘ had struck the woman in the head, the bullets had glanced from the skull â€and she pro- bably will_ recover. ' _:_-- -' n n I, A‘A ___-_.I_ try in an address on Sunday evenâ€" ing before the Chicago Federation of Labor. â€"-Charlcs Moulton attempted to kill his divorced wife, Lillian Wheelâ€" er and then committed suicide at the railway station at Myei, Mass†on Monday. The tragedy was wit- nessed by more than a score at tra- â€"-Frank Buchanan, who is to lead the bridge and iron workers in their struggle with the United States Steel Corporation, predicted a gene- ral labor war throughout the coun- ..â€"~_J ,, â€"Annie 'M. Hildérbrgnde, the young trained name of Orange, who was re- cently convicted of having shot and St vcrely wounded Bernard J. Mc- Callam at‘ Orange, was on Monday sentenced to six months’ impriSOn. meat in the county jail. ‘thn ar- raigned for seï¬tence she asked “that she be saint to‘prison for {lira-ï¬iymg ' aenu ww ’ Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont... nu. nills will be sent by mail DUST SPRAY FOR TREES TWICE TOLD TALES :1 on the part of the are, and say that Cana- rs of the South African ‘ are generally disgusted Africa. and anxious to The men also say that as becom tired of South that he contemplated re- !annda in a. few months (1an station and when on her re- turn, within a mile of home, the horse took fright and threw her out of the buggy. She became entang- led in the lines. and was dragged a. mile. Her neck‘ygs broken. 1,; u.. w... her life had been ruined, and she might as well spend what. remained of it. in jail. â€"The Grand Lodge of British America, the supreme gowrning body of the Orange Order in the Dominion, has been called to meet in Winnipeg on June 10th, and the railway com- panies have promised single fares from all parts of Canada for the round trip. The original date for the meeting was the last Tuesday in May, but, that was considered inâ€" convenient for many of those desirâ€" ous of attending. â€"Miss Annie Scott. aged nineteen, daughter of William Scott. was kill- ed at Maxwell, Ont... on Monday. She had driven ha- mother to Dun- I. ‘_ _.‘ It is Seven Monmsddflpdstlam generally-conceded by men of the Canadian Pacific northwest branch and o! the Canadian North- ern through that country are bound to be quickly populotcd Within a; few years. In this connection it Eight be Many Thermals are Pourl~r into the (rut remain “ h at B it (Tuesday's Globe) “I am alrnid that there will be a perfect jam.†said Mr. Hugh Suther- land oi Winnipeg, referring to the inâ€" ilux of immigrants. Even now there is scarcely a roomorabedtobe had in Winnipeg. and l 'bclieve that within a month there will be 7,000 or 8,000 people under canvas there. In fact, there will be a repetition of the scenes of the great boom of twenty years ago. when more than that number lived in tents. winter and summer. The north Saskatche- wan valley seems to be the Mecca of the majority of than going further west. and many are also going into the Peace River district. “to routes noted that. of the highest court. of the MethodiSL church against ministers 'wearin‘g gowns in the pulpit, Rev. Dr. Rose of Dominion Square church, Ottawa, publicly let his gown fall from his shoulders in the pulpit last Sunday, and made a vigorous protat against the church's ruling. {J :6.- him Lo oppose the land bill strenuously. in the innermost. politi a! duties that Mr. Chamberlain is 1.0L reconcilod to the Irish policy of the governâ€" ment. although matters have gone too CRO qum weetw RD the Canadian Northern [LEW oWARDEB. APRIL 9th., 1903 mil'ay Company, preparing [01 rush, have compieted contracts 150,000 tons of coal for the pro year. The company's mm com for coal a few years ago was for 5,000 tons to be dcliu‘n‘d in nun“: pm“!!- pd“ gm- :- sun 1 purely Wine“ m0†meat. 11me their W“ or am a they often 1“" "a anon to GO. tnd 1'“ 3"" thew!†mmnmbu capturedand “magnum W nunessâ€"whilc over we! a death of his \\ ife. own hand sought rest beyond. mfll‘ In Mil." In Milan a shave costs only but every customer is expccmd npennyortwom abox to!" among the assistants. ’ Slr Samuel Rommy. a mm m "" llant genius. by whose elforts the 6’2"" all laws of England were Female“? t mu loved (or his sweet nature 1" d nllnessâ€"whilc overcome of n ho (hath of his wife. Wiw N. the tablecloth." lid! Whales. “A! biz us a whale" might be W wall. as there is a species of the 060' cum genus hardly three feet long. 011! m. Table Manners- All old English “Manners Boar's“ “A lady should dip only the tips at M ï¬ngers in the sauce bowl and BM“ not let food fall out of her mouth, A Noted Suicide- Tuble Mun-0|"- contract was only ed in one E II My enjoy8 his 133“ under the main te 4.... nnlioo’s feol' gall snort. He went Luxnau_ an rider of the outside horse m dong by the bridle rain and around he circled umil l we of direction, and when mil, shunted out through 1 u mt flaps he was so dizzy namely stand. ' One at the pincatorml curl CB north Paciï¬c coast. ospovia In! 110118 the shores of Britis ‘ It.“ the ï¬sh known to Indian“ I†M11 breed! as the “cam: In the «lend-u he is the WWI paclflcus). and 11‘ “all for two reasons. Tm w b about fourteen inches 1 Inca and II Caught in large ql .1 west coast ï¬shermen (101 months of February. March a: ltlltbe‘tntbest of all ï¬shes, fl noon large numbers or tl tied and smoked to be used as In; food during the long rigon â€no common in that region. Large numbers of them are through crude presses, which the oil. This is p’resex'vod in s‘ and used much in the 8:: me 111 whale’l blubber is used by t 'nos. This “candle fï¬sh" gets non name from --the fact th «and it burns with a brig! lune until entirely consume much used by the “coasters" Columbia and Alaska, either without a wick passed 1hr _ Al Ancient Colt. One of Mrs. Grant's favor III of an experience in c: where in the Adirondacks. husband, then president f0 Mm. wanted to get away f1 baton otï¬cialdom. Mrs. ()1 bothered about the washing. recommended a woman who better days, who lived :1 1 Mn the lake. Mrs. Grant Ill. Two days afterward 8? come that, as she express minded her of “Elaine.†1t ushervmman paddling in a (' Had a. heap of snowy linen. “Lens '11 a year ago,†said fl Wï¬mlly, “I wouldn’t I w the boat. I brung it I): But one day he jes’ got com W and rolled over on the CHI. My. how we miss that < u him for twenty years." ~ the! are flower. How .3- Blngoâ€"It takes the! iwrown and Country. The Ont ad the Dough This is a true story, says that my grandmother told her cat and dog. She used Over 01! her doughnut jar, a M that her doughnuts d' (be day the heard a noise Mme at was on the shelf “shunts were kept. Then 1" 1n the jar and drew on lit Ind pushed it off the sh “I. who was looking up “It the doughnut in his a it. When they found “'8'“. they acted very gui “7 Frenchmen Are 1 It 1| laid that the under 1 head: and their physical “Initiation are due f‘ .3 h! the heavy drain 11191 no. 5! Napoleon. All the‘ ‘u were enrolled in his sel ‘ lone It domestic or bu :3 except the extremely 1 -_ Iced- From this drain moun‘ Mo: Tender He} (hmâ€"00mg In for chm? “you! Wlntis it this tq Mâ€"We are going tn fl 009168 of Bomb» Manon; the poor. 3 “a h digestion, ytu In than!!!†has a 1 Eater em I. ulwa t M cum! m "79 for. b0 mu wmm w “MAM Candle fusion in whic .gether as thick me the riders frantic haste. I ï¬ned. At last ,1, was as a neg; There w Then a bugle GRAND EN Fish.