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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-11-26, Page 3•Heart So Bad Nerves So Bad •Could Not. Sleep tot,: S, Ilearaes, Inn. We. 1., Enter- prise, Ont., evritesi—"I be been so Reatly beeedtca by usiiag Milburn eart and nierve Pills I feel that 1 elsould write you to tell you how g,,Eatee ful I am for.your opleadid rep -0Y. Mg home has been bed for tit° past five years, and ley aereves in each a stato 1 could not sleep, at night. • I was tired all the tene, my appetite • vsas poor, tea I had no eoare ta to anythieg, and, did not care whether • died. or not, so one day I told my bus - bend. that I was going to to doctor- ing, as relight as well be -dead as the way I was, aid that 1 would be better Ohl no one 'knows what r suffered from my nervea, as I was afraid of every noise and my heart VPOUld, tjurap ' at every sound. , All the remedies, and doctors 1 had tried did eae leo good, until one day a friend told mo about Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and after tak- ing the Mat ,box I could see a ehange•, end after taleing Six I am. now COM.. pletely ri'd of my troubles. /- 1 feel that if it had not been for your Pills 1 would have been dead and buried by now." H. and N. Pine are put up only by, _ The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toroake, Out. - Sought Human Aid. • There are many authentic instances in ,which a wild animal eaten' sorely pressed has instinctively turned to a human being tor soccer, and one of wh these ieh came under the writer's notice seemed especially touching and beautiful. Her sister-in-law was ,sitting out in -the fields one daynot far from their country home in a beautiful part of , Ireland. Suddenly -she heard the bay- ing of hounds, and knew that a hunt was in progress, and was rapidly nom - Ing in her. direction. Being a great lover ,of animals, her -heart went out with a throb a compassion to the lit- tle creature, whatever it was, which • was at that moment fleeing for • its life, Sdarcely had this thought some to her when there leaped.in.to her lap that wildest and shyest sa all vsild animals—a hare. Without a moment's hesitation she •caught it up in her arms, and ran to- ward the house. Behind her came th dogs, giving fun tongue, and behind th.end- the b.orsemen in their gay red tutin,g coats; bat never for a second. tild-it occur to her to abandon the lit- tle animal which. in. its hour of need had „turned te her for aid. She gasped as she ran, "It's—all right! Don't be --afraid, They—inin't—get you! -I've got.you—nowi" Sobn. she .was racing up the terraced gardens and up the broad stone steps, - literally slamming the door against the nose of the foremost dog. Once inside,. on and up the wide staircase she ran, until an attic room was reach- ed. There ishe deposited her little charge; and ha,ving looked the door, put the key In her -pocket, andecame -slowly and pantingly downstairs to face the huntsmen; while the dogs, nonplussed, ran hither and thither, en- , circling the house. , • Most of the men on horseback, drawn up ou the wide gravel sweep were social acquaintances; one or two were even friends of the family. Bare- headed they explained to her that un- less she surrendered the hare tlleir • day's sport was aliened. She listened quietly to what they had' to say, stand- ing straight and tall on the portico.; and answered: ' • "Gentlemen'if you stay here all day, or all night, for that matter, it will make no difference, That little crea.- ture. turned to me Tor protection in its time of 'need, and I will not betray trust. I„ will never surrender it to you.", There was no mistaking the quiet d'etepnination, in her tones. One by one they turned arid rode away, the dog. following; and soon only -the usual quiet,. pastoral sounds pervaded the air. LAD 1 MAR RIED A FARMER BY FRANCES FITZPATRICK WRIGHT. (negeweet atill April night, I stop- about country life that makes growing setting the sueeper table end lean- old a practica:ly painless proceba. It eil fay eat my open • kitchen, wdow to may he because. esenetant aszociatien svat-ch a white moon' cliegh 'into the •,;44.nattire$ la*s one SS LESSON November 28, Paul efore Aorippa, Ants 25: 1 to 26: $2, Geiden Text - 1 Wee not disobedient unto heavenly. vision.—Aots 26i 19. A.NAL )(Si S. •altran.OUS Sky, TheOfroge were timing grows reconciled. The natural pre- i3 lip their orchestra, filling the sileace cessee of • life, from birth. throL A..tmis HEAVENLY VISION, Ala rfsugh, EVFECTS ON HIS •LIFE AND•TEACH- w:th pleasant summer •soulid. The childhood, youth, maturity'. and old n.0•, ia 19 • .23 - elm • tree near my wiedow lifted its ties are demonstrated in all growing ii. PAUL'S APPEAL TO THE SETTER ItEA,- -:azy arms to form a deliente blacls things, from thesesed we plant in the SON' OF HIS JUDGES, 24-32. filagree egaiest the bending sky. garden pp. Farm:womenare refresh- • MAPIdisess Surged info my heast, male- ingny frel from the virus that Makes , liarnenuMoN—Felix was soon •de- , . Ing it ache with the suddon heauV. women spend endless time money and posed,and it fell to his suecesior, My mind soared. e"Th.e little ca.rea vexed thought on the prol;lem of look- Festus, who was in every WAY a bet- ter man and nobler type of Roman that fretted me," the meringue that ing yoUnger then they are, had turned IMO' something like, chew- this obsession is becoming a national Surelf Vficial than Felix, to see the trial of ntelthtroegh ,,te the end. Festus, ing gtan,.., the. dress •rny six-year-old disease—tois pathetic clingirg to the as anxious o conciliate the Jews as much had daubed with paint, the milk that physical illusion of youth, whi:e the . , possible, took advantage of the was spied on my clean floor that gpirit grows weary and the mind is presence a the Jewish pri n ceHerod .. moeeing—I now realizedesevere rinim- starved for actual lack of mental food. Agrippa 11, to reopen the ease, This portant incidents insteed of the, di- Il4slitelY wiser Mid saner it seems TATegrrolPdParefwerais.edt.hteo sinuccessor of the, . tressing, accidents they had seemed, to me, to wear the Years proudly and Acts 12. He ruled as rea soeses over Galilee, Perea ' at the time. geaciouslg, to accept philosephically and other dominions in northern Pal - 1 was serene—exalted, "and 1 felt a the elfdigges that time brings. A:kind st-'d latert •d th sudden great pity for the town -bound of perennial Y'outhfulness can be at-, Jerusalem Christians with an asylum, ' sonls forever hurrying on a futile tabled by healthful living, by a gale in his territories when they fled from t I h h I 1 w th t I'd 1 t and hu tl ok on life by th , P d The, Sad Cogcr6f To.;day WilayEe Serious Tomorrow The cold may start with a little rite nieg of the nose, the head becomes stuffed up, but little attention is pend - to it, thinking perhaps it will pass • away in a day or two. You neglect it, and thennt gets dorm into the throat arid. from there to the lungs, and bee comes a eaS0 of coughing morning, • =oil; and. night. • However slight cold you have you should never neglect it, for if you do it is jest poesible that it will develop into bronchitis, pneumonia, or some other serious throat orlung trouble. Pre Wood's ...Norway Pipe SYn:IIP , is ait universal remedy for all those who stiffer from any form a bronchiel trouble, as it stimulates the weakened organs, soothes and heals tbo irritated parts, loosens the phlegmeend mucous, end aids usiture to clear away the morbid smeutralatioile. ques n t at our me a an rimr ells o edoomedcity to ella, beyon Jor- rather be a farmer's -wife than the leeeping the facete of the inind jewel- den. wife of an Ambassador to the Court bright so that it .catches' all the lightPaul's defends before Herod Agrip- that, without more ado, you would be •Of St. J'amee. Once I overheard one arou d it and b eingle faith in a takes the'fairn of a narrative of for snaking a Christian of ZIla on the woman eay to another, "She married - a farmer, my dear,, and they're fear- fully hard up. She does her own work and has a -houseful of babies, three at last. And she was an ambitious girl!" 1. shared their horror at the un- known girl's fate, visioning for my- Women Witty Weak Kidneys shoold •Use Fattening Poultry for Holiday Market •)3Y M. A. BAKER. a year old, when properly wing and tail-feathero, then from. the prepared, make good roasfers; taken shanks, dewn. the inside of the thigh, from the geperat yard, they are and over the breast ter the Peen. Take tough and fit only for soup; Cockerels only a few feathers at a time; gs'asP ten or twelve weeks old will, by spes as closely to the skin as possible, and cial fattening and inactivity, become pull quickly toward the head. At firSt plump very quickly. it may be difficult to remove the feath- morning, noon and night ree,4 ers without tearing the skin, but a little assurance and eome practice mash, as I find it is more eisilTalsine. ilated than whole corn. t o fir will' render it quite easel. After all •Isne woman can be strong and healthy unless her kidneys are well, and nine times oat of ten the nitidueys are to blame for tha weak, lame and aching be.* from which. eke suffers so nmeh. When you And your kicln.eys out of order, when your back aches and pains and gives you endless misely, all you have to do is take a few boxes a Doan. ti,Kidney Pi Is, and goa that all the aches and pabee will -vexing', and make yon healthy and happy aud, able to eneoy life to the utmost. All druggists and dealers handle them; put up ouly by The T. Milburn Lixaited, Toronto Ont, This,[ believe is a combination tht •s conversion and its aubeequent spot. The translation in the Author, a effects on his life and doctrine. Ile med. Version, "Almost thee persuad- out-does the best efforts of the beauty describes his convereion in Acts 26: est Me to be a Christian" is inaccurate. parlor and keeps a woman lovable. 1-18 and then makes the statement The words mean lite 11 • "With little la y. le ladth, which our lesson the to-clay , etc,"is yon and lovely to the end. thou persuadest me tat ' opens. are premature in thinking me Mcon- Keeping . I Milk Records. . PAuL'S HEAVENLY VISION AND ITS EFFECTS ON HIS LIFE AND TEACH - A Praotice that is generally f0110W0d ING, 19-23. self, with -the amazieg confidence one end a.dvoeated at the Ille.istretion Sta- . V. 19. Paul says he was not disobed- feels at seventeen, a brilliant career. tions in Eastern Quebec conducted lent to the heavenly. -vision. He saw I would be, I 'decided, another. Ethel under the Dominion Experimental that God bad stopped him in his mid- -Barrymore! Farms Branch is, that of weighing career as defender of the Jewish faith _ Ten years have passed and now each cow's milk. There are too many against Christ, apd henceforth divine every word of 'that pitying conversa- tion describes me accurately, 1 ani a farmer's wife., We are fearfully hard -up. .1 do -my own work. We have a houseful of babies—three at least1 But, instead ,of feeling downtrodden, as a larrner's wife is popularly sup- pused to feel, I am thrilled! And the' 'ambitions which fired my yoUthful bleast seem humorously unimportant as coinpared with the elemental eareer of "raising" chirdren. - ' NO but whit, at times, I envy my sinter friends their freedom and peace of mind, their uninterrupted afternoon naps, their time for sham- poos and manicuring and running pink rnebon in cobwebby underwear! But when bedtime comes and sweet sleepy little voices chant mechanical Now-I- Lay-Me's and heavy little heads begin to. nod and warm tired bodies graw linip in my arms—them 1 am fined of a herd comprising eleven cows be- and tried to take his life. with a deep-rooted eonviction that ing 7,967 pounds and the lowest aver- I .. V. 22. Nevertheless, throughout his age of one consisting of -13 cows beingievhose career, God's help has never 3,156 pounds. The highest producing failed. Paul has been able to deliver co* in a herd of Holsteires was 11,-Ifearless testimony both to small and 049 lbs., in a heed of A-yrshires 9,259to great—here he is excusing hinaself lbs., and in ahherd of grade Short- for his freedom of speech to Festus and to AgrippaMoreover, he has binottaornherod f is not,—the Jew notwithstanding—to MA7IC MoSIENT. ohorn 1d0e,s00s3ttilubdsingTh; btheset never said anything ateany time evhich A DRA negen I walk with my daughters the list is 3,891 lbs. It is hardly nee- be found ia Moses and in the prophets. (i0"1 the winding road that leads , essary to say that the keeping of these V. 23. For, examine Moses and the through the wood let to the gate. And records is an incentive to both better1 prophets carefully,and there it will there our rural mail box waits. Dear feedi little box! Our key to the door a the nk and better breeding.- 'discovered that, ' centuries ago, all Control of Sthat Patel and the apostles preach con - outside world. world. The most dramatic \ cerning Jesus. of Nazareth was pre - an Joie Scale. dieted. e In other words, the Old Tes- moment of our day comes when we . lift the lid and peep inside. True, it A Welland farmer asks if the San taxnent contains the clearest proof is oftenest i rejection slip we find Jese Scale can be controlled by spray- that the Messiah had to die (Isa. ch: there., For no day goes by without ing at this time of the year. Ile has 53), that he had to rise again, and that by his death and resurrection he at least one editor thanking me for been advised- that when the leaves was to bring the final divine illumine - the privilege of examining a mann_ are off the trees is a good time for tion both to the peerle of the Jews script and urging me not to feel clis- sPraYing• and to the Gentiles, Isa. 52:15; 63: 11-12: eows, says the Sapervisor in his an- grace as the one means of salvation nual report, that do not produce suf- and the insufficiency of •Judaism as Private. Festus, Agrippa,- and Queen Bernice are all favorably impressed as By the Inesente Gre.d became the motives Relent to pay for their feed. and inspiring Ideas of both life and doctrme. Moreover, God had made revelation to him through jeans The average of thirteen herds is given the e fieCrucified,tand so Jesus the Cruci, been acquitted. Ceesar. But for this he might have as 5,245 'sounds, which is better than d ekes the place of the Law a the average production of cohvs in object of faith and the instrumensthtoep f Canada, and, indicates- considerable man's approach to God. Paul's life is improvement brought about by the explained by the clearness with which methods pursued. Realizing that he saw these things and by the obedi- ence with' which be acted upon them, more milk could be produced by more V. 20. The apostolic work of Paul intelligent feeding and breeding, states Vex his conversion is briefly outlined. thee Supervisor, Mr. J, Tremblay, t Damascus'in Jerusalem, in Judea, B.S.A., five operators have been in- and finally, among the Gentiles he duced to purchase pure-bred sires with had labored to show that God now dairy record qualifications. Other op- intended that men should come to him erators are expected to followessuit in ,through Jesus and by a life in which the near future. In the production of they should act up to this repentance. the thirteen herds quoted there -is the V. 21. And because he had thus fol - ;lowed the light given to.hirri and had wide margin of .oyer 4,000 pounds in 'Jews vmced by your argument. V. 29. Paul answers that, whether premiaturely or not, whether vrith little or with much argumeneation, he longs and prays for his judges to be like himself. Then, remembering that he is 'only a poor prisoner, be adds the words: "Except for these chains." Vs, 30-32. Hie words have a visible effect. The court rises to confer in weighing the milk these animals can of course be identified and eradicated. th to Paul's Innocence on the capital, charge, and Agrippa regrets that Paul has previously appealed to ,put Jesus in the place of the La -w, the the average per cow, the best avera had seized him in the temple what I have chosen is best, which cor- viction I doubt if any woman, how- ever : brilliant and successful, feeis, unless she has eXperienced, Mothers: he e d Mr. W. A. Ross, of the Enternologi- so easy as you might think but it couraged at its return! This is not cal.Braneh ataVineland, Ontario, says is far easier,if I loiter by th-e roadside- in Circular o. 57 of the Entomologi- hew_ cal Branch at Ottawa that San Jose on my way home and pickwild ers with my ST oungslers. Alfred Noyes- scale can be controlled by thoroughly says that: sigrayisig. allparts of the tree with ° - commercial lime sulphur, five gallons II. PAUL APPEALS TO THE BETTER REA- SON OF HIS JUDGE, 24-32. Vs. 24, 25. Paul has been brought by his great argument to such a pitch of fervor that to the cold and -unim- passioned Festus he appears to be be- laxly chosen because of its silimlicity "Geownups cannot understand and going, to 35 gr - ms of water,' either side himself. He has become mental- and dash of linewhich make it so grownups never will, • - in- autumn after the leaves have ler unbalanced through the intensity of -• e • ellr ru i en o spring. answers , In apple orch- his scriptural studies. Paul answ smart without a coat. The convert - Sew short is the way to fairy land • acrose the purple hill." . ard b the best time is in the spring, that it is net so. Ile is not conscious ible calnar and patch pockets are trim - Picking` wild flowers carries one but. in peach orchards, on adcount of of ' saying anything but the sober e back farther and More swiftly toward the necessity of controlling leaf curl' "truth. . , the ,etichanted shores of Childhood,' as well as the gcale, thepay should V. 26. At this moment Paul turns than any other thing I know, I be put on in autumn or in the spring to King Agrippa, and asks him to • judge for -himself. As a member of border on the skirt, form a smart eSo when the taxes take up what' before the buds begin to swell. 011 trees should be carefully surplus might have gone into" --a spring' neglected scripture -and with recent religious or fall hat °ten ensemble‘suit.or the Pruned and the rough bark shelled. be history, Agrippa is bound to know drought burns to pleading ghosts our! scraped off the trunks and large limbs that Paul is speaking the truth. He Take care that all knows that the Christian movement beautiful stalks of corn or the rains before snraAng. • rot the potatoes in the ground at dig- f parts of the tree are thoroughly did not originate obscurely in a cor- gi/1g time or tetanus strikes down the sprayed. , , ner but in the full -light of day in the , I p,eee, very centre of the jewish nation. finest broad mare on the piace, • I -Peat nfakes excellent litter for live Paul addresses Ag„rippa straight, and through all' the trials and vexations f stock says Mr. Frank T. Shutt, Do- asks, "Do you believe the prophets?" that farmer -folk are heir to, I con-. minion Chemist. It furnishes a clean Before he has time to signify consent, sole myself with the precious thought Paul adds, "I know that you do." dry warm bed.for the anithels, absorb V. 28. Paul's willingness to think that our children can kill pick wild amounts of liquid manure and floweret Yes-nend evade in brooks and large e-- , ._ keeps the air of the stable and cow roam barefeot over, the deep -breathing, barn. sweet. It should be air-dried earth. „ ' • ' m piles before using. ' • 0 • • • • • 004fAiLfd 0.. .. ... irm i!isIarmott 1108 THE TAILORED CLOTH FROCK. Dignity and tailored simplicity are expressed in this straight-line frock, that has admirably chosen bordered material of a very becetaing design. This type of dress is being particu- need with the bordered material, as well as the long tight -fitting sleeves. Novel -shaped buttons extending in a line from the neck opening to ethe the Jewieh nation aequainted with trimming note. The plain back ex- tends over the shoulders forming a yoke to which the front is slightly gathered. No. 1108 is in sizes 34;36, SS, 40 and 42 inches bust, Size 36 bust requires 4 yards of plain ma- terial 36 inches wide, or 2 y, yards of bordered material 54 inches wide. Price 20 cents: Many styles of smart apParel may be found in our new Fashion Book. Our deeigners originate their patterns the best of Agrippa nettles that prince in the heart of the style centres, and; juse a little. He thinks Paul is jmnp- IIow re y 011 (40 n o seep em, own on the farm?" is a qaest-ien I em --eady trying to answer theugh mY1 ' latighters are .not. yet old eneugh to eiiart to school and my -son haSn't. cut -his first tooth! 'I have dedicated the -got twenty years of my lite to keep ing theffs here and teaching them to -oee it. I believe that little girls Who help raise paneles and baby chicks learn to love the coloes in a sunset f-riancily.booles„ lo do siropse tasks well, etheir hsa4i to think nth .gna. bbs riiio !lark that fonews it, n a turity evithou t skidding much ori happy and useful women, as well as to try hats on, win reach !he perilous ice of adolescende and be esera to Mal compaeionehip in dear ineeeeureci FOR M:A.NHOOD. •And 1 believe, that if my little sen sends long happy days fishing in a quiot r,trearii er trudging through seafy woods, with his dog at his hee,s, and if be learns to take pride in plow- ing a straight furrow or raising a blue ribbon lamInntha.t life's problems will never become so ,,,nriplex that he can isot handle them in 0/ plall;y way. • ,And if I grow old before I „finish tho job? WeJ, .thero no something nig rather fast to conc.usions, and his then. creations are ose o „este mash consistS of one quart of mond been extracted, hang the bird up to ten days of the fattening period the 'leathers), Pin -feathers and quills have sf7ltd,' . rtdaofb.pagetied eaanprtimfaus1111 bhieictedlielehegtuditeeleycotelcierebetthoar: two hours. carrots, beets or potatooense. greaorrttles; knNiseztiecauvtinegff ethhoeuhteatitieveitlieriachthsarel last ten days we use cornmeal, one dessertspoonful a pow- the neck, slit the skin at .' the back flexed charcoal, one pound' of potatoes lengthwise, push back, and cut out and two large onions, boiled and mash- e nen e one c ese 0 Y'. 1 the point of the knife sever the mem- ed. Mix these together and make very soft with skim -milk in which beef suet brane which holds the windpipe close quarts of milk. I:et simmer for about 15 minutes. suet, chopped fine is enough for two has been boiled. One-half pound eg t o breast, cis o e s miles, ma e Feed as much mash as the birds a breast -bone to the vent, being careful to sever the skinny flesh only. Cut in a straight cut hem. the end of the eircle round the vent and the bird vvill eat in 15 min -uteri, It should not can be drawn easily. Place a peeled , s e be allowed to stand before them con- onion or piece of charcoal in the body, tinually. Speaking of suet in the and hang it up in a cold room or cellar feed, it has long been know -n to make fer 24 hours, The foregoing method of drawing, the flesh more tender and juicy, and leaves the bird unmarred' and the makes an excellent addition to the mash when fattening for market. P000 INFLUENCES FLAVOR. Food has an important effect on flavor of poultry meat. the excellent flavor of the canvasback duck is due -to the wild celery it feeds upon. The delicious Congo chickens owe their superior excellence to the pineapples they eat. The grouse Meat of the far -western plains is aromatic with the wild sage. After the fattening has been sue - neck skin folded under the neck after the stuffing has been put in, holds it firmly in place for roasting and CarV-. big. The few stitches necessary from th8 breast -bone down do not show where the 'bird is drawn. DON'T BREAK THE GALL RAG. The cut is necessary to avoid break- ing the gall bag, which is a small sac lying between the two parts of the liver. To clean the gizzard, hold it firmly w,ith the narrow, smooth line that runs on one side uppermost. Lay- cessfully accomplished, correct killing the edge of the knife on the line and and dressing must follow to insure make a small, shallow cut, which will - excellence. At least 24 hours before killing, remove the birds to individual reveal a gray -colored bag. This must be removed intact. coops, about one and one-half feet square, with wire -netting sides, floors It has not yet become the general of slats one-half inch apart and legs market custom to ship drawn birds, but many private customers will two feet high. This open flooring and eleVated position allow the drop- quick -1Y appreciate the improvement pings to fall throegh and out of the in flavor. r believe that the present birds' reach. For about twelve hours custom of keeping apd shipping un - birds will some day be con - they have milk before them all the drawn time, but no feed at all, and the last demennedbirie har htee going t u it.hauthorities, ri s twelve hours they have nothing but When instead a being sent in a sprawling water; this inzures the crop being empty. condition, they are trussed as for • The most humane andeleest way of roasting, leaving a piece of charcoal slaughtering the birds is to have a inside to insure perfect sweetness. string with a noose at one end sus- pended from a beam in some out- house. Slip the bird's feet through A study of the report of the Can- adian egg-Iaying contests shows that the noose. Stand with your back to , gthere has been consistent breeding the bird, take the body (breast up- work and steady improvement in aver- permost) under the left arm, the head ; age yield. The standard of qualifica- in pear left hand; epen the beak by ; tion for registration is very severe, pressing at sides between thumb and states Mr, W. J. Scott of the Poultry finger, and with a French killing knifel Division in the latest issue of "Sea - stab up into the extreme back of the i sonable Hints." The males, for in - roof of the mouth, Give a quick turn .I stance, in order to qualify must be to the left and withdraw the knife. I bred from dams and grand dams that Leave the bird suspended! for a fearthave laid in a contest 200 two -ounce minutes before taking the feet from eggs each. A number of such males the noose. will be procurable this year with PLUCK BIRD IMMEDTATELY. authentic pedigrees, and carrying all Plucking Should be done at once. It the identifying marks guaranteeing is best to commence with the long their breeding. of the average woman. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such • patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap 'it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent -by return mail. National Standing in Dairying. Statistics gathered at Ottawa show that the United States is easily at the head of all, nations in quantity of butter and cheese manufactured. In butter Great Britain and Ireland COMA second, Australia third, Den- mark fourth, Canada fifth, New Zea- land sixth and the Netherlands seventh. In cheese France comes sec- ond, the. Netherlands third, New Zea- land fourth, Canada fifth, Switzer- land sixth and Great Britain and Ire- land seventh, United States has the greatest number of =Ids cows, then Germany, then France, then Great Britain and Ireland, then Canada and the Argentina. answer is practically this: "I declare popularity, brought within the means a F. pair- of Barbara Henry's full oisters, whielennade a geed ehowitig nt the ttoyal Winter Pair, Tomato. They are Owned by H. G, f4orlaan, of Lace mbe, Alta: The enintai en the left is the unslefeated champion of the west, ••••••••••••••••••, Oh My iecH Now Et Ach s1 Osseo the head starts to ache and • paiu you may rest assured that the cause comes front tho stomach liver • or bowels, and the taus& mtist be re- moved before permanent .relief can be had. ' • • There is no better remedy on the market to -day forehle relief of head- • Sedhes of all kinds aiitl. of mery des- , cription tiuut , remove S 'OM CON of the head- aches, and with the eause removed you trig not be troubled any more. PIM up for tho pest 47 years by 'no liiibura 80., Iiiitited, Toronto, Orifia Mealy Bugs in Greenhouses. A. florist in -Peel county, Ontario, complains,that his greenhouse is con- siderably infested with Mealy Bugs and would like to know the best meth- od of control. The cheapest, safest and most simple method of controlling Mealy Bug, according to the Dominion En- tomologist, is to take the infested plants out of -doors, place them on the ground and forcibly wash off the in- sects with water. Each plant should be treated individually and good pres- sure used. Sponging and brushing' with soapy waters are remedies which should be resorted to only when forcible sprinkling is impracticable. Fumigation with hydrocyanic gas as used under greenhouse conditions, the Entomologist says, is practical•ly use- less. Kerosene emulsion, one part of the stock solution to thirty parts of water, will destroy the buts but is liable to seriously injure the plants. A Canine Speedometer. eity motorist was indignant. "How do you know I was exceeding the speed limit -when you haven't a watch or anything?" he demanded. • "Wed, ye seen that yeller dog a- cha,sing yes didn't ye?" inquired the rural constable, "When that dog eau't Reap up with a feller I know that fel- ler's goin' morai 30 miles an hour, b'posh!" Tuning Fork Tests Nose. A liaalish physician, Dr. Skov-roan, testa for ouspeeted sinus infection I with a tuning fork; he stands, the in- strument before the paint to be tested, and judges from the resenance whethe er the cavity contains fluid or 1,1' e-iripty. A too generous feeding of the calf or the first fesv deys may result in cotes. It it' a waste of time to try to feed a calf from a bucket until he is ,good arid hungry. . Where ligature sires are too costly, it is often poodble to purchase a well- bred bull calf that will, in the future, add merit to the herd.