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The Signal, 1924-5-22, Page 8li--Tlwreda• n" 21', 1024 TM Athlete's Remedy iii Series and mate THE grails sad bruins +tam'e'd Swart roll, with the eppkcateadMirnrd's Liniment. This facts confirmed by the lel- keens letter maim! from D.E. McPherson, Secy. wit aro.g ftigtt Scholl assehall Orb : "Sias fpsMarl dfieteldaim kesetalar *Mad mike fima aft_ i /s. mon a es OMNI imam( ear auttlb . Iat1/ ssaf nil* alauY `rip • bulb is;,a Ile leap owe N eaa4.e'a eems of ohs �~ WOMEN! DYE WORN, FADED THINGS NEW S iyeaters Waists Skirts Dresses, Coats Kimonos Draperies Ginghams Stockings Each 15 Bent package of "I)iamond Dyes" contains directions so simple any roman can dee or tint any old. ware, ivied thing new, even if she ban reeler teed before. Choose any color at drug t,•re. BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK Try Grandmother's Old Favorite Realpe of Sage TM and Sulphur • Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly com- pounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and trouble- some. Nowadays by asking atety drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul- phur Compound," you win get.a large bottle of this famous old recipe im- proved by the addition of other in- gredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try fel No one can" possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so daturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soh brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disap. pears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark. glossy and attractive. HOW YOU CAN TELL GENUINE ASPIRIN Oar Tablets with "Bayer Dose WO Aspirin -No others) 'Thea le only one Aspirin, that marked with the "Rayer Cross" -sill other tale leen are only acid imitations. Genuine 'Bayer Tablets' of Aspirin" Gap" been prescribed by physieians far isiaateen years and proved safe by mil - Mom for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Q�jie Rheumatismgo , Lumba, Nehritie. )dandy tin boxes of 12 tkbkta--aloe "Bayer" p.eka/re*, eta be W drug store. Made in Chards. is the trade mark 1, of Bayer Menu(' urs a dieter of etalleylitaeld. k is well known that Aeplr Dwyer maltrifaetnre, to assist the Tie smallest imitations, the Tablet. of ,.y1 piegy. Ltd., will be .tamped their risers' trade mark, tie rhe 1 e r lsrez THE IGNAL, Sunday Afternoon By 1L HAMILTON, Goderich, Ont. Dark the future: he Thy light tlwtde ua, bright and morning sitar: Ylertr our foes sue bard the ngbt ; Arm as. `i:.uour• for the war. Is our w.wknem Rock of strength stay; In the poothh-s wi Be our true :nut and dtatrest, be Thou our !demean, loving way. -lieury Downton. 'TRAINS 0 moat dear and tender Father, our Defender and Nourtaher; endue us with Thy grace, that we nay east off the great blladnesa of our mluds and caretulneas of worldly things and may put our whole study and care lu keeping of Thy holy law ; and that we may labor and travail for our 0e- elasltlee in this lite, like the birds of the air and the Mlles of the field, without care. For Thou haat prom- ised to be careful for us; and lest commanded that upon Thee we should cast oar aro, who lives' and relgnest world without end. Amen. -Henry VIII's Primer. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON FOR JUN let, Lessee Title --Thea ltirlol�rias Exile et Judah, Lamm Pa.aage,-2 Csrwa $S:11-21. Galdes Ott -Prov. 14:34. Babyloola, also called the land of ('bald•,, was a provinee of ]fiddle Asia. bounded on the north by Meso- potamia, oo the east by the Tigris, on the youth by the Persian (lull and on the went by the Arabian Desert. It was founded by Nimrod, the great grandson of Noah. At the time of today's lesion the kingdom had be- come one of the three great empires of the East. Its king. Nebuchadnez- zar. was Its mist software! monarch. It was be who made Babylon such a large and magnificent city. Its walla, Its canals, Its palace with its banging gardens, considered to be one of the wonders of tbe world. were all attributed to his genius and passion for building. In the )t.-riptures Baby- lon Is spoken of as "the glory of kingdoms. the lady of kingdoms, the beauty of the ('haldee excellency" Al this indicates the power of the enemy against which the people of Judah had to contend, and luto whose kande they eventually fell. and by whom Jerusalem was utterly destroy- ed. There were several Invaelona and apes one of these the vessels of the house of the Lord were t•arrkd off end pot in the idol -temple et Ba- bylon. Many people, • among them such choice young men as DenIl and bis three companions. were mail.• enp• five. end the whole country laid un- der tribute. For three years. King JM d*kim paid this tribute: but h• sels.d the opportunity to throw oft tlw l'haldalmn yoke when Nebuchad- neasar was engaged In war with the king of Egypt. Jeremiah. the pro- phet. warned him ageism thin step. but In vain. After a time the land was again Invaded, and Jerusalem had to ammeter and the king was slain. For a tern month. hie eon as vssal t he wan rried off to ref/teed llahylon aniluhis brother.aZeck- kWh. appointell king over Judah and Jerusalem. Verses 11 -I4 --King Zedeklab, AN n vassal of the king of liebylon be had 1n take an oath of allegiance to him, but at the same• time he watched for a shame to free lila country from the foreign yoke. Like Jo many of bin predecessors, his heart was not right with God. m he gave hued to table prophets' and turned a de'af ear to the warnings of Jeremiah, Who faithfully d.Iiverea the word of the Lord. though worked aad clew - Weed and imprisoned for so doing. Then IL was that the, sager of ,the Lord bowel forth upon this wicked king and his eounelllora, who bt their folly brought the khigdom to the brink of rain. Verve. 17.21 -The ,heal Livasisis. Instead of linking to Jehovah for help when the ('haldaean came Into the land and laid 'siege to Jerusalem Rede•ldal Nought help from the king of Rapt. The siege was begun on the troth day of the tenth Month 1n ITSIINO tSZtMA DItitD RI•/T UP DY T1iS SWAM Key brukieg eat of the skin, even eery. itclktg eitassa, can be quickly mencome by applying a little blench*. Sulphur, says a noted skin specialist limattse of its germ destroying proper- ties, this sulphur preparation instantly brings ease from skin irritation. soothes sad heals the eczema right up and laves the skin clear and smooth. It seldom fails to relieve the torment and dief�rement. Sufferers from skin trouble srtotrld get a little jar of Rowles Menthe -Sulphur from any good drag• gist and use it like a cold cream. C[iiLDRE[i CRY FOR "CASTCRIA" w liar m Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops Soothing Soaps - No Narcotics! caaterla bee Teed; giving enteral Slier „rhnut to relieve' 4tgtstee. Th. genuine hear. s,gn.tuv of Osaetipatnns, INari4..1 arising there - Hie Stomach of 1.444 the ninth year of Iola reign. it lasted tar • year and a half ; hut when fam- ine wrestled in the city and there WOW DO bread for the people of the laud. the elty fell and the king and lila army fled by night, but were over- taken on the rend to Jericho. The king's sopa were slain before his eyes. and then he himself was dep,rty. ed of his sight and sect la chattel to Babylon, where he died in prison. Jerusalem was completely destroyed at the time. The castle of David. tit' temple of Solomon and the entire city lay In rains and, to all appearaavw, there was a■ end Of the people as well as of the holy city. Tim.: was the word of the Lord as spoken hy Jere- miah fulfilled. Thus too was fulfilled tike propllaey by Moses that Jern'sa- lem would be smitten by calamity If the people would not keep the cow maadmeMs of the Lord lint broke his covenant t Lev. 201. Boit (Mod, with whom • tbonaand years are as one day, gave this afflicted people a vision of hope. The mate prophets who foretold the deetruttlou of Jerusalem predicted their return from captivity (Lieut. 70:1-:5; 1 Kings 11:46113). WORLD MISSIONS Mehasseardi. Iabkraaee That there are many Wool.•m, who would readily accept Christianity if religious liberty were granted them 1s positively known. They are only prevented from an open profession tea 111e certain persecution which would follow. Mohammedan fanati- cism 1s so desperate that men will compeer the death of their own bro- thers, rather than see them become Christiane. What might not be esx- pecttd, if this superior people were dellverel from the thraldom of a mere form of religion and led Into the living faith and the glorious liberty of the pure gospel? (Ihtybrevk la the Dark Continent) Childhood Indigestion Nothing is more common in child- hood then indigestion. Nothing ti more dangerous to proper growth. more weeketling to the constitution or ZOOM likely`to pave the way to dang- ernus disease. Fully nine -tenths of all the minor ill* of childhood have their root In Indigestion. There la no medi- cine for little ones to equal Baby's Own Tablets In relieving this trouble. They bare proved of benefit in thou - Minds of homes. Concerning them hdra. Jos. Lunette. Immaculate Coe- cr'ptlon, ()he.. writ*e "M4 baby was a great sufferer from Indigestion, bet the Tablets mon set her right. sad no* f would not be without them." Baby's Own Tablet* are *old by medi- cine dealers or hy mall at 2.1 trot, a hit from The Dr. 1PIItianis Medicine Co, Brockville. Ont. CANADIAN SLANG. • Makes a Large contribution to oar Language. Fes, we have slang of our own! ways the Toronto Globe. A criticism ofeAmerican slang recently uttered be Mr. Justice Mowat has prompted a reader, who has Deed much on the frostier, to remind our readers that Canadians should not turn up their noses too much at language welch has originated In no email degree In their own country. It will probably be news to most people that Canada has made so large a contribution In this field, and It may take uff the edge of some of the criticisms In till!! Avid. C. C. J. writes: "A careful analysis of the collu- qulallsms used by English-speaking people est the way from Hudson Bay to the Rio Grande will ,bow that a goodly portion of them originated oo syr own soil -among our lumber- jacks of the North, our cattlemen of the West, our trall-paekers and pros- pectors In the hlyterlands, our sailors on the Great Likes and our own street urchins. As an lastanoe; let me point out that the phrase 'getting In a jam' was the coinage of Cana- dian river -drivers; that 'greasing the puck' originated 1n our national game of hockey, from the action of o player mashie the responsibility another In the shape of the rn disk so known at a critical pot the game; that 'maverick' 'broncho' as terms applied to human beluga, came from t Man prairies; that 'mush r t in and unruly • Cana- ' ,' mess- I Ing 'to be away with you' or 'be off,' came from Canadian -drivers, la the sub-areUnt that god' and , 'plugged to the root," Leek of further spice, wan used by I Canadian grsle-trtyflaers 1* deelgaat- lag that aa elevator was *lied; that 'snow' as a term for sareoties, and 'snow -bird,' i*Uaing an addict, be- gan with Canadian lumberjeeks and bad referenee to Copeahagea snuff and Copenhagen .nut seers; that 'stalled' and 'stalled la the drifts' are the abduct' of Cesadla■ rail- waymen; that 'he-man' so doubt originate with certain Northwestern Canadian indlaa tribes, who dada - oats the ante. as 'be -mew' sad 'eke - see.' "N. doubt buades& et other North American eoUogsialfsms sed Maas terms algid be lased to bays their origin north et the 45th pored - lei. I am net se eare et where 'wlad)ammsr' Ant eases Irma, but M ham bees used as a term of MO - tempt aaong our Great takes, Mari- time and Peelle ()east eatlermes tea Inner year's. Through tbe feet that colloquialisms have bees sapltaUsed Sed popularised by iifalted Maters theatrical •oi l.pasiea, maa7 people have takes it for greater Uwe they ettgtaated is test e.sal . h (r set se !mg ago that the phrase lime max • meth Lha atetea y u. Noma) ,.a.• 4" • GODERICH. ONT. A& DAVIS NERVOUS WRECK T5i1R.ml.OeWall. Nes Restored to Perfect dell` by Lydia B. Plekllam's WOW* Cessioned RIanipeg Ilan.-•' 1 cermet tweak Isle highly -cif what bytes 1. Pintasa's pppo ad has CIe Cele. dose his m.. I was a nrerveue wreck and I just WI to fares myeelS two de my work. 6vea tip saws d optamy�nigwe_ all - dean me (feel a if I must scream U they did not get away from me. I could wet eves spook t to sty husband- doctor said be oseld do boding for nos. M bus - band's mother ad me to take the Vegetable Comptes/ and 1 star*ad kat otos. I was able is ds ray week once mors and it was • set a bur- den. Now I ham • am bouncing baby mad am able to atom ler and Mtjoy do - fag my work, Is /�t kelp emcee- toeing mce- t oeelngrroe before Int andnd me me now, can see what k does for me. I am only too pleased for yes to ass aansyy tsetlmonial.' -Mrs. EMILY DAM, MI McGee Street, Wiestpeg, Man. _ Lydta E. Pbtkbam'. Private Text. Dock Ailments Peculiar to Women" will be sect you tree upon Lydiarequest. WHO, to the Malimbalm,. Co.,do., embalm, Ont. E. book softiies valuable information. C wan m genet.. ...eat was popular. teed by a United States road show, but I heard 1t used In the North country long before it came Into gen- eral use, and tradition has it that 1t started with a Canadian half-breed girl who, seeing a giant paeketeer negotiate a muskeg portage with 500 Pounds of lour on his back, exclaim- ed: 'Some peek! Some man!' " lteaewiu...•. nulis. Rheuwatraw 01 aiK•tie may aftect either the wulicutar .uauv ur on; joints lir WUSCutat' (110 ur.hg (klub. C001WO11. ,.bUat aI*oanrll.•a .p. .•e dna, Several causes at haat paru wpuau It the disease. k aposu i e w a. ca.h<r t.. largely respoustute fur tuned ui it. intectlon also pays go ueyportaut part. The formation within the sway of Injurious chemical suostaucea Way be a cause. A combination of all timer duuoiles' brume the disease. The first evw.ace ti y...0 shuwe by the annual watt' it mutts. A snot Ind lamrarsn 1.l present. 1.. hail cast-. Loud is refuses sou the hug nes down must of the Cort. Aside bolo tut pale and lauter;raa, the annual with a mud case, ma. 51105 110 ay uls.loua. 11 Oar joint.; are not"•u u, lilt rr ua Uali) is a aligns tat er. Macon last lruw eevera) ways lel tau weeks. Gond quarb•ts 10,001 u,• pruvid•d• dry with 11tH•• varw.wu Ili 1emparr lure. laxatttes smuuw be given, aua sodium salicylate in bran dunes ui trout halt w Due teasp..uu.u. two or three tames daily. It the a1.1 mal recovers calif. ly truce tile allure, It might be best tt. mai krt. 11. Arlthmedk ter Citizens, Sir Henry Jones once asked Ida Glasgow students to do a sum 112 boo&-k.eplug. "I'tN down," he said, "all the perigees that you have ren- dered to your ,enndry. and put a goal price on them. Then pmt •11 the ser - rhes which your country has ren- dered le yon, Sud east ftp the .mount." It was a tearuhing chal- lenge and, If It *tInmtlated his hearers to care more for the piddle and peas for ttu•mseh'e.. ,t very useful ewe. Brown sells us our groceries "Where do you buy your groceries?" we heard Mrs. Parke ask her friend. "Oh ! Brown sells us our groceries," the friend re- plied. "He calla up every morning between 9.30 and 11 and 'cook' knows by that time what is needed." Brown is proud of his grocery business. He should be. It is growing. He doesn't depend on "the telephone." He hail three. one to buy with; one to sell with and on• to take orders over. He knows the value of tells rotor "equipment i.- 'llm your facilities aha. gust. T goersMTd' 1 -•• ray /ranine 'neem 0111 NATIONAL PARKS samoruARIIM ow WILD LIVE AEI .RAL►! 15.aOBTa. By War the Greeter Number Are Y the West, Rut Ontario Ms Tee and Num Bevel& Has serves Cover as Area of 211,01114,401 Aires, The Canadian NaUoaal Parks art eleven In number. The.. it will be remembered are the property of the Federal Government; and, la addle Uon to these are large ares Wileslga ing to the provinces, that are keel apart as sanctuaries of wild lite Sad health resorts and pleasure grolndi for the people. By tar the greater part of this fed• eral park area 1s in the We. 1, com- Prising those well known, and eves famous parks at Banff, Yoho, Olader, Mount Revelstoke, Jasper, Waterton Lakes, the Buffalo National Park al Wainwright, and the Rik-Ialand Park. There are two federal Natleaal Parks is Ontarlo-one at Point Pelee, the southern projection of Est sex County, and the Bt. Lawrence 1. lands National Park -several of the Thousand Wanda. There Is one 1* Nova Scotia, Fort Anne Park at old Port Royal, now *anapoUs Royal. The Dominion Parks and 1Fore.1 Reserves cover an area of 25;(194,405 DOM. J. B. Harkin, Commisetoncr of Canadian National Parke, represents the happiest combination of the crea- tive and the practical, a well blended prescription of Celtic vision and . l$eotttah canniness. It seems to most of us that the Canadian National Parks system has been a fifty-year reality, so well entrenched is the idea In the public' mind, and so widely ad- vertised have been the nam.. and ekaraoterlatlea of the great*Western playgrounds, but as a matter of fuel that national organlaatlon of parks, on the present plan, was not launch- ed until June, 1511, when J. B. Har- kin took his place as commissioner. The chole* of a commissioner was well made. lir. Harkin had been city editor of the Ottawa Journal which probably taught him all the Alpine tricks of leaping from crag to crag. Mr. Harkin with his newspaper- atu•e sense 01 balsam at once launched a plan to make the National Parks a great economic asset, a mag- net to tourist business, and in • com- paratively few years had focussed national attention on the earning power of the parks as well as their high importance to the more crowded populations of Western Canada a few decades hence. To -day the system of National Parks is beyond the possi- bility of political or other fnterfer- ems. The sound Idea Of setting aside for the perpetual use of the people great and superlatively beautiful are of forest and mountain Sad river cannot now be disturbed. More- over, the demonstrated national pro- fit 1n dollars and cents from tourist traMe derived chiefly from the United States has made Parliament sensibly indulgent to annual appropriations for upkeep and Improvements. One of Mt. Harkin's wisest steps was to put through the construction of a Oae motor road across the Rockies, linking Alberta with British Columbia and giving direct access to the motor rads of the United States. Other outstanding successes to Mr. Harkin's eredlt are the thoroughness of game protection in the parks, by which. In particular, the Bighorn and the Reeky Mountain goat have been saved for the future; the protection of the buffalo; the admlilstratlon of the Migratory Birds Act; the preser- vation of the historic and prehistoric site' of our Dominion. The work of the Canadian National Parks Branch of the Department of the interior is one of the worthiest achievements to the credit of our public service. Last year the total appropriation for the National Parke was 1906,000, or 134,000 less than one million dol- lars. Let the other side' of the ac- count, that of revenue, be presented in the words of the comealuloner, who writes: "An analysts of the year's travel shows that 59,783 people went to the large parks along the main rail- way lines, of whom approximately 66,000 were from foreign countries. Estimated 'on the basis of expendi- ture of 1300 for each foreign visitor, ft means that the national parks are responsible for an indirect revenue of approximately 110,600,000. • The total appropriation for the national parka during the past year were 5966,000. According to the last census the population of Canada numbers 8,775,763 so that the na- tional parks last year cost the people of Canada about 12 cents per capita. They bring In an Indirect revenue of 119,600,000, or a per capital return of approximately 52.22. That U in- direct revenue. But It must be re- membered that this 119.600,000 1s dlvided among the people and in- creases their incomes to that extent. There ern oleo other revenues from the parks, from the sale of timber and from various eonee.klons and lease.. Which amounted last year to 572.000. In addition there were apprrlsl- tnately 27 000 foreign visitors to the smaller parks. It must be remem- bered, ton. that the parks performed a direct servlet, which cannot be cal- culated In dollars and cents, by e.'rv- lag as a awaits of recreation for !early 75,000 Canadian." Importation of Tea. Canada imported 39,121,147 Mundy of tea during the twelve montha (+ndlrg November, which works nut at around 4.4 pounds for every nun, woman and ehlld in the Dominion Rut Canada's consump- tion of tet per capita 1s a leg way behind that of (treat:Britain, There tee annual consumption per head L Shout eight pound.. Black tea trout India tst chief among Canada's tea lleportatlona FLIES AND LIVE STOCK flow to Bring Relief to Fan. Anima.s In Summer. Description of the eatable r-ly-The Treatment Usually Offered -tribes Remedies Summated - Stack Thresblsag Has Advantage,. 'Contributed by Ontario Department et r Agriculture. Toronto.) The fly Is a destroyer of presets. The annoyattc'• that the various typep of live stock suffer from this taus* during the summer period can be de termined with fair accuracy and -ex pressed as loss in pounds of milk, pounds of pork or work not done. Animals get no rest from morning Intl' night. 'The worry is greatest during the period of greatest light and temperature. • Dcatripllon of the 117. The common stable tly, also known as Steam's)* Caicitran., resembles the COIUh1011 house fl) in site Sad 'that,. The stable fly bites mach harder, giving quite a sharp atl0g. at 1* also • blood sucker and a very per- sistent tease. 1'he thiel akin covering the legs, 'tanks am: abdomen of cattle and horses is the area tory attack when bent on saustying ttit•!r thirst and hunger. At other tines they may rest quietly on the animal's bask or on the stable wall. Any person who has to milk cows during the summer period is well acquainted with the aneoyance that these little tt'eatures can create. And alien the stable fly ►s ably assisted by the Lotze fly and the horu fly, oath the iew and the milker have motion," but a pleasant Owe in their rude:ours to he at least half efficient in milk pn•ducuuu. 1 h stable by breeds priue,p.til lu decay- ing refuse. hurt, miwu1,•, rutting straw-watertais that are too fre- quently found quite close to the farm uuildiugs nowt.,;; the summer period when it is p,,ss.o•,• to keep them at a dlatauce. The Treatment t.ually Offered. To prevent the stable tly from an- uoying atilerala, prulldlhg darkened amines, pens, shed:: or other shelters to which the auu,ta„"cau retreat U a good practice. or brushing the animals over with liquid fly re- pellant* la Rho, ad'. lted. There V no repellant of very enduring efficiency, but a uumber of such now in common use are worth while even if their effect is so siert us to require dally or twice a day, application. This may *et Ill a lot of wt. k, but a alai with .t1 :n:w e;,tay Iw,d.ug two ,,allons of .a.d can go over a line of twenty cows In five minutes. A successful preparation that can be used as a spray 1s made by mixing the follow- 43 ingbs- acuandlrtyarsodaipp. 31 bVVe..u,..tl 454 ea. tun oil. 1 *te a hale wt. Dissolve the laundry shat. 111 water and then add the other ingredients and more water to make 311 gallons of spray. Additional 'treatment Suggested. Poisons and traps are sometimes used and cap be made ver) efficient agents in stable Sy control if used with ordinary fut.11gence and thor- oughness. Formaldehyde is one of the best poisons to use In fly de- struction. dllx two ounces of for- maldehyde with 1 Sk quarts of milk, sweeten with brown sugar, and place lu a window where the files rougre- gate. In stables and pig peals pro- perly darkened, one window may be left uncovered to provide the neces- sary light to attract the dies to the putson dish. If the stable man will at the beginning of the season pro- vide shelves un which to place poison dishes high enough up to be out of the way and where there 1. light, keep the same replenished from day to day with formaldehyde, milk and sugar, and see that all other mois- ture Is covered up, millions of dies can be destroyed with little effort. A general clean up dally to preveul the pest Increasing by breeding 1s very necessary to by control; In fact there is title use 1n trying to puisuu or trap dies If we are so shiftless and neglectful of sanitary conditions as to Permit thou, to breed wholesale. Clean up Is the first and last word In stable fly control -L. Stevieuaon, Dept. of Extension, U.A. College, Guelph. Mark Threshing Has Advantages. Recorda show that it costs the farmer a 11tU more to stack ilia graiu and thresh it from the start' than It does to tin. .h d:r.'rtl) from the field. The cost t,f threshing 4111114- til luur•u Wreehing from the slack is less ahau the cont of tiresiute in tile field, but when the cont of stacking, which must be. taken Into consider- ation, !. added, the coat of stacking and threshing fro:a the stack in a lit- tle higher. To offset this, however„ the orace and grain are usually of a better quality. Consldelable lou Is likely to result .[runt leaving grain In the shock a long while waiting for the threshing machine. Rsfweintly Is .Ula keel^ it tie, u...Uh,r . W aura ltiO'e, 11 ei•a.0 act 51, 1400 aa soon an it is fit Ili ease of wet weather one plow call b•• *tarood. Shucks �.audw. any lengt t ul time on Ileitis served t0 grans kill out the grass. Colibequently in fields of this kind the grain .hound be threshed or stack- ed as early as possible. The tomato 1. closely related to the potato, and While the actual food value of the tomato Is not so great as that of the potato, 1t has ter*als qual- ifier' that make It ase et the moat desirable of our garden crepe. Farmers are nor oaly profiting hy shipping their poultry co-operatively, but they are gelUwg Into the field of busmen', learning business methods and bow to tare for their poultry to got the beat results. A cow theft hag to use her energy warnlag the lee sold water she drinks ssa't Ike that saergy to maks *like •' F' '_ 013E ISES T9►u �r,; ' l I Irttti'el That Tr) 1., I tut :IN:r =. .trw1Y In,1'•_r•:• 1ud It. resat hent �I•1,;, . 1- ile. o.eut Of , wd. -.•u lld..N er Ittal►.-11'. It e'•`•et i. .'Ing. .t-001.0 u.rd b) ,;al. rug . • 'AMsi of . �,�; ,;;;+,• Moron w.) 'scute l on. seeding 1. a „ ; the rush of spring wine 61uod mors that are nota i._ heals are r.. qulred 10 labor 1 u utld The mare breuul . err; 1;,•al , au, -t Sud mal Del away fro,., +: u. a or alt boors. Wb.-: -In , at noun or nlghl and u;' 'optwr' tnalty 10 IIUI•, SIC 1101 norusat 1n that a ., ar „ 'uply 01.mUk, or in., - ,silk U .0 ,, got] fora hungry c, a at , ut uu,• and Mho milk 1. at -o I r, ta• t) a•lorrd somewhat due t•; (lie ut,+tl,auug 01 ID. :oday during tabor t. the Geld Theort 1a perw,ttrd to outer sad attefew h pracucr, 41- velop+ dy7:14.144:::::Ylikdia:p.WIpt-bleutrisdlimg, dtatusutakes toe diarrhoea. The Bell Dtecuu, ay halo abdum- 1141pathgdeahe tiwe, tr, way bt no- toceo*:t,udtug us milli, 01 *lilt punk teat dlaehargu from the a)lane Prevention Is the most desirable course, dud this dtsurdrr t.i. lea 11414 dole■ by cresting nol.,ul .,,udtiww luf the marr4ud tua1. L t'.;r wart must *ora, eatY, should b. hewn nut to overheat her *u uar, and sd to keep her away fromu11'51 tea wore than tures ur tuu.. her udder is distended :..,d 14.11f64 milk part of the euu.en.. <a i 14 baud intone petreittlug i :r coat 1.1 parse. 1 be sal.►ta.) c1 udi . •.. a... boat the stable ur tut tee.u0 b.. the tela, and Inc Head that 1. bet' t.t.0 to the mare should ne auto a, to Pry - mute a norwal, healthy Wilk [Ma. Treat.nent--if'there is a comae tent, graduate veterinary pracutioa.t available, It Is au►nlable to 'hell lila It here to u., veterinary available, toe iotlowang t cau be given Give a await calomel, and iolluw with au 1 antiseptic. if diarrhoea ce, should be checked by Motu' ut opluw or chlorodyne and u, Brandy and eggs, or milk ego can be g.v••n lrequenhy mud 1 tad amount. until conditions are a a. Water is trry Irhpurtaat; out tet It Is warm. Gastric impaction. 11 fiat killed the colt? A Bombe of toils are iota men yearla ever/ uiatrlct through gastric l.upaCMooLa - disorder occarrlug during the Orsi week tullowu.g weaning In tall that air weaned too yours,;. The tali siumaeh has been death,; with culla pretty much during the first three months, and it has uol ueveWpud t• a cuuditiu0 that `will pe . wit of the spccesaful handling of coarse reeds. The cult that Is weeded too early fa life is at a disadvantage. It bas de• pended upon its mother for the great- er part of its food and also protuctioa. It suddenly deprived of Its mother. the colt gets quite a shock. 1f mat not have learned to drink and teed by itself, and may not know the where. abouts of the feed and water supply. Colts that have he'll with their stable led dams usually know the ways 4 the stable. But the colt that hs rug out :n the pasture 0eld with Its another all its lite has pot had an opo portunity of such experience, and consequently is at a loss when Sud. dimly taken from the field. trawl. (erred to tbe stable and separated from Its mother. The Bolt attest separation is excited and MAY fret tag a few days, refusing teed, or ewUug ,.and not drinking. ltywptunis, which usually octet( four or Ove nays after weaning. The . cult may Ile down a good del of sty tithe, grunts, becomes re.tlesa, abottrt • log pain, lies dowu and gets use bowels irregular, some distension Ilan!, pals evidenced us touching re. gion of stomach, temperature ma) tot subnormal at start and Inerts. :ug tater, becomes sleepy and atuit d, susggery gait. Poet mortem abuse the ■tumach to be Lull, much ear larged, watts thin and -pale in culwg and the contents a doughy masa Treatment- 11 the case has reacgs ed a point of development wbete ua� colt Is sleepy, stupid and ataggri) in gait, little can be done. The t.arhep :.woes can be reileved by the appiu:a. t. tf wustard, hut blanket, or awl'. mouical flatulent to the at.domeu the colt, warts enemas elven, hale courage cult to•drius by putuug Salk on t,ack of mouth. Gies' bay 1,4i strong coffee, hypwulpbate of s'esd and abundant warm water. Pose rives are of little nee. Frlctbr t„ ,r liaeadlug theabdomen gives sum. .e. lief. Water la very Important. The weanlug of colts should be gra.. dual, and not until the colt is well versed is the ways of Wording and the '-'!,-•reaboete of teed. A Tittle attef. C.: it a weigh anon' 01 Inc tome that 1t is decided to see. ate It from its mother war save -oa• '...tenable trouble tater, The Sunflower Stella. The pith of swallower stalks Is said to be the lightest vegetable substance. Dried 'mellower pith is l■ tact lea times lighter than cork. In central Russia wue,e the plant le extensively cultivat.ed, every pare 01 the plant Is put to sem* we. The pith In particular is carefully removed from the sta.k rid used r matting life saving app.lahcei. It•s a Orme feeling, Did you ever took a togs 1s the eye wbo was talking mt.out ease thing you knew ail about and he f;, ght 4e 414 but You tan be atdn't? That t. tie feeling acid the ,.leaaure that tomes to use els •,,plug books and know. wird Y dusag. 1' • Wal he lig ass White 'event Ire' dough cell, • the r palufl the 1' wan going Area pins memo yuunl nd st ruc lnflle ne I f tb. o ' t. tel Leri oriel Pr addn week and her ('1 the 4 has a of tt Huse Strut is et. Hr met, dein Chun , Ha ton R.' a-� Et Sto a 1 Sul ' !r f oe able reef. Prat Mot net Mr.