Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-4-29, Page 7something new this summer 'IP via the Sareteero-to the eenie regions Of the Far NArtst. Califostrda ,,,-veitllogarade9 Nertir Mexice,,--,Atd.zecta Itock'fies9 Gra d' (Can- yon liatiletial Park, lreseedte and 0122 Toee,$ and other Na - 'dolma Parks* Mai l this couPon to me G. G. Roberton, T. P. A. P. T, Hendry, G. .A., Serail re tilr‘. 401 TranspOrtatnin Detroit, Welt, 849 Or See Local A.aent Wouldlke information regarding annuner tee g V:1 3 There will be ... persona the yam" • .,111 Alen snail dwaripti.ve tsavel foklaa. 1 1,1 ,, 111111* ...... ••"• • • • •••• . • ...... •••••• cnn . ... psalms au aim:ma City and State Storaach-Worrn Prevention. Here is the urete-the-minute dope on the prevention of stornech worms in sheep. Sopper sulphate crystals, four ounces, aveirdupois. Diseolve com- pletely in a pint to a quart of hot 'Water and make up with, cold watetto three gallons, using geanitesware or earthenware vessels. This makes a 4 per cent. solution and is enough for 100 doses. The apparatus is extremely eimple -a-four-ounce glass measuring grad- uate -or a bottle on which the ouncea 41.re• marked -a egranite-were quart Measure a gallon meastre of the same material and a drenching- tube. .. The drenching tube is made of a granite -ware or rubber funnel, a three -and -a -half -feet rubber tube, three-eighths of an inch inside meas - Sere, and a six-inch brass. tube, all fit- ted tagethce. The dose: Fez sheep weighing over eighty pounds, four fluid ounces; for lambs weighing seventy pounds, three And a half fluid ounces; for lambs weighing sixty pounds, three fluid ounces. It is not neeessary to starve the *beep before dosing them. Ileirig them into the barn and go. to work. h - Two.men are needed, °nets handle the isleelle the other to 4/1,..cl1e the dos- ing. The man with -the sheep stew:i- ces it,sbacks•et into a corner and holds • fie head horizontally with no. hand endevith the ;Alter hand he idgerts the r 'brass tube about four inchess into the aleeepie mouth, wiggling it around the • while. The other rnan measures out the dose into the glass and slowly pours it into the funnel. , The two of them can handle as ritano as; fifty sheep in an hour without casualties. But -dent be in a hurry and don't fail to keep the'sheep's head In .a horizontal position or the solution wild go into its lungs. . Lambs are not closed'until they are weaned and ewes. are not dosed withire two weeks cd lambing. ,To in,alte protection al the rrioee certain, raise your lambs 'on a succes- ‘ge. Siert of faage crops -rye, what, -oats, hd‘ barley, rape, goy beans, corn.—and you "i will have no losses from stomach worms. - Get Rid Of The Cough -That Sticks Some colds and coughs seem hard to shake off; stick right to you in spite of everything yea do to get rid of them, but cannot. These afe the kind that are Anger- ous; the kind that wealcen the Tunes the kind that allow serious lung troubles to get a foothold in your system. • On the first appearance of a edugh or mad you should procure a. bottle of Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and you will fled that after taking a few dose S yetir cough or cold riJ1 have • disappeated. s This preparation hes boon oes the market for the past 87 yeaes, so• Itheu yen, buysit you tge eot experimentieg with some new and 'untried remedy, but WO that you get "Dr, Wood'en whorl you ask for it. Pet up ofily by The T. Milburn Co., himitrd, Toronto, Ont. s THE FARM GARDEN Its Various Problems an Comparative4' few farmefs appres elate the value- of the farm garden as a factor in, promoting the health of their families, and furnishing an abundant supply a paletable and nouriehieg food at all timee during the gre'vving season. Ie the firstPleee, there Is a.kb of satisfaction in having fAe,h yeah...tees from one'e own gar- den; and, in the second place, a good garden makes •a direct appeal to the family finances. And, by no means the least of gardening pleasures is the feeling that you have proved an effielent gardener by going your eeighbors ODO better, and getting peas, early pottitoes, or sweet corn, a few days earlier then they do. eSome farmers complain that they have no good garden land. That is a poor excuse for neglecting to grow some of the vegetables one can easily raise at home. One must balance the arguments for mid :Against any par, ticular spot for the garden, and pick out the best available. It is a mistake to select a site toe far from the house, for the garden natty easily be made an attractive feature of the farmstead, and the chances are ten to one that it will be neglected if the distance is too far from the buildings and water sup- ply. Sandy soil, with an abuncace of organic matter in it, is the best for early garden crops. Butif one has no sandy soil, he need not abandon hope of having an early garden. The standard early vegetable crops will grow in any soil that is reasonably fertile and well prepared. On heavy clay Soils there is greater necessity for plowing ender organic matter and theroughly pulverizing the lumps -and clods. ABUNDANT MO/STURE. Of first importance.th the proper de- velopment of most vegetable plants is an abundant supply of moisfure from start to finish. If this is limited, nd amount of plant food, care and atten- tion will being complete•sticcess. In a sense; water is the limitings'factor in d Its Many Possibilities, KELLY. nure it only contains teadily avails able plant food, bet it furnishes the Roil with organic matter; thus keeleing it open and porous, and in condition to !absorb great quantities of moisture and retain it until needed. It will give the best resultspread on top a the soil, disked in and plowed under, That leaves the, bottom of the VurroW free from clods when the crop is planted. If the supply of riumure is limited, or In case dee desires to hasten the growth and maturity of certain crops, it may he done by using special high- grade fertilizers, or Makiltg mixture of tweetysfive pounds of nitrate of soda, fifty pounds of sulphate of pot- ash, seventy-five pounds of acid phos' ithate, 169 pounds of tankage, spreads ing It broadcast on the plowed ground and hat's -owing it while preparing the strolled 'for planting. There is little danger a getting the soil too rich to produce ceops of fine vegetables. A well fertilized, properly prepared soil is the foundation of a successful farm garden. BUY GOOD SEED, There is nothing more disappointing to the gardener than, to have his labor of preparing a good seed -bed go to naught becauee of poor seed of low germinetieg powers, or varieties not true to name. By all means buy gar- den seed e of responsible seedsmen and get the best tested seed you can find. It is alway's safer to order seed early. By delaying the matter the chances are one may not get the desired varie- ties, and the seed may be,old and light. Another important problem is the se- lection ,of auitable varieties. As a gen- eral rule, it will pay to stick to the good old favorites which have been tried out and given satisfaction in your locality. If you wish t try mit a few new varieties, buy the seeds by the packet and try them out in a small way. In most cases, the so-ealled su- pericas varietTe5: are merely an , im- provement over sorts that have been plant .growth development, for their growie for years. It is well to send food must be taken in liquid form.. In other words., the capacity of a soil to produce fine crops of vegetables de- pends epos( its, powers of retaining moisture until such a' thee as it is needed by • the growing crops. The chemiCal chaeges, with which plitnt foods ferrn compounds of nitrogen, potash arid phosphoric acid are has- • tened by properly preparing the soil to hold all adequate supply of moisture during the periods -of dry weathers.. Thoroughly pulverizing the lumps and clods, not only cre.ates favorable con- ditions for the tiny -roots of plants, but proyides greater etorage capacity for moisture and hastens the' availability for several seed catalogues and:snake a eareful study of the different 'Var- ieties and find out all you can about each crop or variety you attempt to grow. : As a rule, the fanner will find it more profitable to buy Celery, tonmeo, pepper and cauliflower plants than to 'attempt to grow them at home. It is better to go to' some good market gardener and buy what one needs. Al- ways bearein inind that bigness. is risk a safe rule to follow in estimating the value or vegetable plants. Plante that are stocky and wellhardened off, plat is, which have been mit of doors; day and night, for a weekpr ten days, will 1 of plant food. Getting the surface start growing quickly and prove more smooth by shallow -harrowing and vigorous than the more tender ones leveling, prepares a fine seed -bed 'and removed from the rows in the hot - leaves a soil mulch to check the escape hduse and planted immediately in the of .neoisture. I garden. The vigorous plant that has Rich, *ell -composed ferm manure is , beconie toughened to outdoor life has the best fertilizerftir the garden. Ma -la tough, stocky, purplish appearance. SLIP COVERS DREM UP 'YOUR OD FUR1IITURE . BY.. LOTJISE EILLERROWN. Walked the Floor Heart and Nerves Were So Bad Mr. Thomas CO; R. No. Godfrey', Ont„ w'jites:-"I was so bad with my heart and nerves 1 would have to get up 'out of bed. during the night and walk the floor, es I would take such bad smethering spelle with in heart, 1 would Vault that sometinsee would die before 1 got over them. • • After taking twe boxes of- • Milburres Heart and Nerve Pills got better and am now as Well enit as hearty as ever I was. , Now,. I would recommend Milburn Erde • got and Nerve Pills to all who are bothered in any vi'ay with th.eir heart • or nerves,. sett cannot say too much it their Millsurn's Heart and Nerve Pills heve been on the- marltet for the past 82 years; see that you get them wiles you ask for theta. Pat tip only by The T. AllIburn 00,e Limited, Toronto, Ont. • „ • How to Deceive One's Husband. In "Noon," Kathleen Norris' spark- ling reminiscences of those yesterdays in which elle and "himself" lived in New York, ate, dressed, paid rent, am- used themselves and saved a little bit 'for a rainy day on tesenty-five dollars a, week, she tells sorne of' the amusing SS. LESSON May 2. God's Oovenant Witte Noah, Geo, 61 28 to 9: 29. Golden Text-- oio eet xrly bow in the cloud, and it eball be for a token of a covenant between me and the eartts-Gert, 9: 13. ANALYSIS., L NOAH'S' FAMILY HISTORY, 5;28-82. JI.er'M SIN or THE ANoiMS, 044 ; AND or in, 6:5-12, - III. STORY. ()F THE mop, 6:18 to 814. IV. THE ALTAR • AND THE•PROMISE, 8:15-22, e V. Tr -f4 aLHOSING AND THE: COVENANT, VI. NOAII AS VINEDRESSER, AND MS* THREE AGNS, 9:18-29. ,INTstonticrioN-Noall is the teeth • andi as of the patriarchs before the flood, chap. 5. Like them he is repre- sented as having lived to a very mat age (9:29), and like Enoch. (5:22) he is described as a good and pioue man, "a isigingous man and perfect in his lgeneratious," a man who "walked with God," 6:9. So, in the midst of a wick- ed world, he "found grace in the oyes of the Lord" and was saved -with his family from perishing in the great flood. Compare what is said of Noah irt Hebrews 11:7, I. -III, 528 to 8:14, There has been found an interesting parallel te the Story of the flood, con- tained in these sections, in a series of mcgaly written tablets of baked clay found in 1872 in the ruins of an As- syrian palace on the banks of the Tigris river. They formed part of the library •of an Assyrian king of the seventh century, B.C, The story which they contain comes from an old Baby- lonian source andstells of a council of the gods which resolved to send a flood upon the earth. A certain man, who was a favorite of one of the gods, re- ceived warning, built a great ship, and saved himself, his family, and his de- pendents, with domestic and wild ani- mals, from drowning in the rising waters. .Many of the details of this story dr in • Genesis, but they differ very greatly in their conception of the character an.d purpose of God. The idea of God in Genesis is pure and high, untainted by eyilpa.selous, in strong contrast to expedients to which a young wife re,- "the quarrelsome, deceitful, vindictive sorts when money is low in the femily peek of BahYlorden deities." pocket book. Bath narratives, in all probability, "More tho.neonee I deceived the head l Preserve the memory of some great catastrophe of the lower 1VIeeopotainia of the house in an innocent fashion which T am glad to pass on now to • other budget -ridden wives," she says. "When he first get home, at the weary, early summer by the floods of the end of the day, there was always an Tigris and Euphrates rivers, fed by appearance. Of plenty. A tureen of ' the melting snows of the Armenian thick soup, Muffins, a deep plum pie imountains. There must have been a Visible on the table. When he sat down, i much greater inundation than usual, perhaps accompanied by a widespread starving and suspicious, with the' usual male: 'Whet's coming?' and the seismic disturbance, which, to the simple folk of that early age usual glance kitchenward, I would say have seemed. to cover the whole' would earth. serenely, Thops.and stuffed potatoes,' There is no sufficient' reason for de - or 'Scalloped iieh,' or anything else. claring, as some modern writers do,. ..,that came into my head, that the Flood Story is unhistorical,. • "He would then fall upon the soupa-n..,bofutwtahteerresicos nored the whole world at o evidence that the flood more soup and UpO-111, the muffins-- other muffin and we would talk. And" kmw it th-day. ^ The extent of the earth was unknown to that age and presently I would read him the letters. . . . And he would tell me the news I when whhi thosrs fi t told the story said, "the woe earth' they must of the office. . . . When the soup was 'surely have meant the earth or the land, which they knew. IV-V. THE BLESSING AND THE COVEN- ANT, 8:15 to 9:17. There is reason t� believe that this entire narrative of the flood and -what Can you -could you use those things followed is drawn from two older over, again? If I'm to eat any pie-' sources. The. material has been care - "He never knew that there was 110 ;fully and intncately woventogether so fish, no chops." as to form a continuous narrative, but i -- it s quite possible in many places to distinguish the two 'strands. For ix - Salt Boxes for Block Salt. • ample 8:20-22, in which the divine When block salt is thrown on the name is "the Lord," a translation of ground and left there for the cattle the Hebrew Yahweh, comes from ane ' of these older sourees, and 9:1-17, in Slip covers hide a pile of ugliness. decoratitiri to the chair edVerings. much of it is wasted by dissolving which the divine name is "God," from And there is plenty more for them toiLinen-orash covers bound with ere. next to the diunp ground or in rains. the Hebrew Elohim, is from the other. country, one of the earliest hemes of the human race. That region is still c.overed with water in the spring and gone, and the muffins almost gone, and a cream cheese had been unex- 'pectedly discovered .and attacked; in- variably my dinner companion would ask casually: `Chops, eh? Fish is it? cover up if we would, but give them tonne are pretty. And cretonne bound Block -salt boxes of concrete are easy Two very aecient laws appear in 9; half .a chance. I with velvet is unusual and yet service- to rne.ke. . „ able. Monk's cloth is perhaps the most 4-6, a prohibition of the eating of To each 100 lbs. of the above Set a form made of ten-in.eh boards blood, and of the taking of human life mix- ' We cent afford to digessid every old s piece of upholeterecl furniture vvhose Practical material. It stays cle,an a and about eighteen. inches square on without cause. The life of man is ture houldbe added 1 pint of cod 1 Boon To Ford Owners hrida EGOMETIER"-A Genuine Iden levee:Von for Ford Gar., Qualesevteed by Thoe, A. Edison to ineretese yoler nelleege $0 te 50%. TO pekes your, Mater MA OnlOother and 'Oooler, orwt upvarbou, inorose "ooelerati°11 „ Clve your engine real pep and ineWer. OPOretess Positively eila eeusematicailds ua1kd by anyone( to 15 minutes, Packed in box with full instruetiong, by snail, $3.00, Postpaid, Sold only onsa Positive Money Book Guaraotee, 4. post oard fmn you on a 10 -der trig/ wfll GOB4 your money hack immediately- and YOU keep the Ecometen , GADSBY 045 CLINTON ST, TORONTO 6 eole Canetilart Representative.' Refereecese-The Imperial Bank of Canada. Automobile AUTO BEARINGS SHOULD There are no more important fac- tors ixi an automobile than the bear ings. • A bearing is a eupport for a moving part, made so as to minimize friction, stand wear and achieve a fine adjustment. Numerous types of bearings areme found in motor cars. In sothe metals are selected with the idea of obtaining great etrength rather than non -friction quelities; others have strong metal sherirlined with a com- paratively soft norefriction metal. Then there are so-called anti -friction hearings, in which balls,'or straight, taper or helical rollers are used,..giv- ing a rolling rather than a sliding contact. e„ RECEIVE 0ONSIDERATIOhT: The bearings emisidered so far are - eared for by the Ifrobricating system ef the eengine, which starts when the engine starts to run if there is a sup - 'ply <d oil, The fan usually rune on ball bear - legs, which are lanceted with a squirt can. The water -pump bearings aro lubricated by compreesion grease cups. When the bearings become bad- ly worn it is necessary to drive out the bushings and replace them. Prole. ably the haft ails° will need replacing. The velve-stern guides most often are holes bored through the cylinder casting. When wear occurs the holes must be raped true and larger, and valves with larger stems he insetted. In the ignition system ball bearings usually are employed, with or without means of adjustment. These are lubri- cated with -an all can or packed in grease. The carburetor air -valve bearing. operates better if not lubricated, but does wear, and needs replacing at times. The throttle bearings should be lubricated. • 100 ENGINE BEARINGS. There are more than 100 bearings in the' engine. The cylinder and piston, not generally termed' bearings, are usually of cast iron, -which gives com- paratively long wear and in which the friction is not great if lubrication is good, When wear does occur at this point it is necessary to rebore the cyl- inders and have larger pistons fitted. The wrist -pin bearings usually are in the form of a bronze shell, caRed a bushing, surrounding the wrist pin. When wear occurs it is necessary to drive out the bushing and replace with a new one which fits. • In the crank -pin. bearings, which usually are bronze lined with babbitt, when wear occurs, the .adjusteneet made by -taking out thin sheets of metal called shims. The reale crank- shaft bearings ere of the same type. The eam-shaft bearings usually are of ball type, which must be replaced with new ones when they become worn. The cam -follower bearings may be just flat plates resting direct- ly upon the earn, or rollers running on a pin in the valve push rod,. Wear in these parts usually would be compen- sated for ,by adjusting strews on the valve push rods. The push -rod guides require replacement when worn. OIt-11.1111" BEARINGS. The oil -pump bearings consist of a Plunger working in a small cylinder, -with one end -bearing against a cam, or a pair of gears driven from the tam shaft. Perfectly- lubricated, these bearings; seldom require adjustment, FREQUENT LUBRICATION. The throttle and spark -control links age have a number of bearings which should be frequently lubricated. Usu- ally they are not adjustable, so that parts xnust be replaced when they be- come badly worn. The self-starter motor and gener- ator usually are equipped with ball bearings and are lubricated with a squirt can. ,Both the motor and gen- erator have a copper commutator on which Carbon brushes bear. These are not bearings, strictly spealdng, but they do require a very slight trace of oil. Other principal bearings are usually of baK or roller type, which may or may not be adjustable. While practi- cally all of the bearings in the engine are kept well lubricated by the main engine lubricating system, those locat- ed on other parts of the chassis. usual- ly need individual attention. The bear- ings in the tra.nsmission gear, rear axle and steering gear are lubricated from the supply of oil carried in the respective housings. Directions for care and replacement are given ie the manufacturer's instruction book and should be studied. • Hopper Method of Feeding Baby Chicks. • Many people do very well in rearing chicks by using the hopper method. The hopper method, as compared. to the six moist meals per clay method, entailer:leech leas Usher and with some people give as good results. We have not been -able to raise as high a per- centage of chicks on the hopper or dry method, but then they do grow fairly one-half the meat scrap. -W. R. Gra- well. ham, Poultry Dept., 0.A.C. Ration: Ground yellow corn (sweet and clean -not Mouldy, heated or musty, 50 lbs., middlings 45 lbs., bran 5 lbs., fine oyster shell 5' lbs„ fine dry salt 1 lb.,beef scrap 18 lbs. Thoroughly mix -if not well mixed the salt may do more harm than good. kept constantly before the chicks. Have plenty of boxes so each ehick gets a thence. One should feed eash 100 chicks about 3 dessertspoonfuls ca fine chiek feed, such as pinhead oatmeal and crock corn each day. Sprinkle this in the litter for exercise. If milk ist given to drink take out 75 per cent. of the beef strap, and if milk and water are both given, remove faded color or gaudy patter's fairs tO lotg time and its rough linen surfaee the ground and Pour itt foul' inches a held sacred, because he is made in the liver oil. It is well not to mik-the oil TORONTO OFFERS BEST MARKET FOR Poultry, Butter, Eggs We Offer Toronto's Best Prices. LINES, LIMITED st. Lawrence Market Toronto 2, ,lesEgammasengsmaia frt into seer room picture. Anyhow, thee image of God. in. the feed too far in advance of feed - wears well. It comes in a variety oe concrete. -Wrap a block of salt -vvith colors besides the natural linen in a -thith pad of newspaper and set it 9:8. The word "covenant" has a in. It would be best not to mix the old stuhdy pieces are sometimes sliest very important place in the religious oil in more than a weele's supply. If comfortable. Their familiar hollows which we knesv it first. on this concrete. Pour concrete around teaching of -the Old Testament. Its the chicks haw plenty -of direct sun - fit exactly the curves Of a tired back. It isn't necessary to cover every this until the form is full. • primary meaning is "bond." It rep - And Father might have a word to say `piece of furniture in a:room. with sllp Tear the paper away g_rone the to rent s an agreement between two light and tender green feed the oil may be omitted. 1 bl t f the We would advise the use of cut al - if you decide to send his old armchair covers. One chair may need a cover of the salt block anel let the cattle get. parties' freely entered into, but -then and all the rest may be in good condi- wears a netv_slip doyen • Secretly he'll to thelttic. Mit he won't mind if it ured moteri I cover just one or two pieces, in these to the salt. The paper pad is to make invo v ne an o iga ion o e most, space around the block so other blocks; binding ''character. Under this figure is falfa hay -of good quality -as litter tion. I think it is Most attractive to admire it. a s and have the rest of -1 will slip into the box easily to replace • etionship into which God enters with every week or ten days. :represented again and again the rein- in the brooder, mid renew' it about A slip cover is just. what the name g -r{the first. . e mniture plain. Th18 ‘ddS vatintY implies -a separate covering' of some Ichosen men and with a chosen people; Feed the mash in been or troughs to your morn. To preserve brooms,..dip them in der noses* • with Noah, and Abraham, and Israel leadership, and David Iight material smade to fit the chair. It fits like an envelope enchis fastened Fl. 'boiling soapsuds for a- few minutes the king. God is revealed making his ....r'sHIP v°1-1 to Give Aw • WeeklY. I I Perhaps the most important spray Item undertake otedience to the lasvs : BUTTER AND FEATHERg with snappers, or tied together' with That's what s-ou can do freeleh! for the old orchard -is the dormant' of God': The same obligation rests . we Bu., r ALLYEAR ROUND - tapes. ,,If macle a.nd fitted carefully svithout a qualm, if e-ou plant a row or i spray, the covers are as trim-le:eking as up- tvvo of animals in your garden, aloneedgcab, which aids in coatroling scales upon both to observe and keep the j157y,2 iodayforprioey–w‹, gitaralittoo aphids and mites. For this puri terms of the covenant bond. As God . • promises to, men and men in their , POULTRY,GAME, EGGS under the chair seat or at the back oWelCS Away. tical. When. they ,are -soiled you can cuitiyated. with ease at. the same time.) . popular. , true. As he is -faithful so trust they estesesese sseeco neer P. POULIN &CO.,1„INITEO them je,ir a week ahead 1,46...:,3,..a.BzzsroursMerkst - treat slip them oft for a tubbing or haw Last year we planted scarlet sage,' be faithful. The same standard a hostery and ever so much more prac- side the yegetab:es so they may, lee Pose the lime sulphtir solution is /nest is true to his promise so must men be them dry-cleaned, according to your bachelor buttsins, asters, zinnias, marl- D you Call replace them for half .the vated thern when weworked t vege- 'righteousness which they attribute to - ,) Backache A Sure Sign te After .- money iC wou:d cost tge upholster the tables and had a beautifnl displav. material. When they are worn out golds and cosmos in our gard cuni- oes him must be theirs. I" Indigestion the storm of rain the rainbow appears. hlidneY Trouble chair. • - until frost. We sowed the. seed the Cellte You Disfres,s Atter EverY MOM? , of God's anger, the rainbow which foe. $ 1 If the destructive, rain was a symbol SliP covers became popular a few row and hadplants to transplant and Tho sufferer from dyspepsia Or ise lowed became a sign of his mercy and years ago evhen the decorators dis- to give away in abundanee. The bless digestion who has to mick and choose his forgiving grace. , Of course the covered the eagle of , figured tinges, sores cheered us up when we went irito his ,food is the most ,sniserable of all rainbow is a natural phonemeison, pro- th,e garden for. any purpose. They inapkind. Even tha little he does eat duced 'by the refraction, as a prism, chintzes and cretonnee for living-. ' d b ' 1 • . ouquets in plenty for the of the rays of light, and It is not said had used these materials in curtains geed. eausee stic i torture, and is digested so imperfectly that it does Min little hero to have been now created for the rooms as we:1,as bedroarne..After they suPlide house and the blossoms that were cut upholster when. frost threatened supplied cut .I „ first time. But it now becomes a sign . hey began • to use them to flowers for the local church and schooi of the, covenant promise, a symbol of furniture. This was extravagant, as What the dyspeptic needs is not the mercy and restored fats& of God. artificiel di estates, but somothin that the cold. Enough wi put the stomacieright so that i . . romeone thought -of the slip cover In, Plants were kli-ed bY for two or three weeks after the g the light colors soiled !too easily, Then 1 A Ti -S i Feac k seed was gatherecl to plantsagain next, will manufacture its own digestiee ale av ng e etead of using them only as a covering ferments. season and to supply some beds at the A feed rack that is a real time -savor for delicate furniture to altield it from .. to the owner is twenty-four .reet long the summer dust, slip covers became schoolhousee-L. H. Is. and eight feet wide and' most of the part of the decorative eeheine, ,,They ` ' ' ' . . 1,Vlientlidfarrnlylireaks &eves tinere 1 coestructicm details are Of the usual were made mit of charming, bright-, IS not'o substitute to mead the 'break. The Countryriseing the ideal pla,ce for ' t:Yril°t.'it: the rack sots -with nee and sodsged materials and I atcr out of cots s` . buildirig and maintaining the true against the, bans and in direct lino ,CanachatidtattelY, IS, for this rearon evith a wide door through the barn ,�f fiy§il imPortanee .,to our cities, . 1 Insects wilt bo cliscottimgecl ,where • '7%'11.en it is neeeSsary to ciraW from on damask, heavy monk's cloth, glaze ed chintz and even volvetT or ceedurey where the room demanded more lux- irious textures, , • Slip covers may snatch the wiedoW sanging in material or they may be' a plain fabeic that harmoillees in color, f plain it is wise to bind the scams with another ehade to ,glve bit of 'places properly cleaned out. feed stored in the been mow it is filled ,fanners practice Clean culteral meth- . ode with good crop rotations and keep by dropping hay cloWei throagh a hole ;the fence rows, ditch bank -S, and waste ' in the mow floor directly in front of tin) door, then pitching the hay into 1 the rack. 'When the kidneys got ill the back gives out. Bet the back is not to t blame; the ache Conies from ths kid- neys which lie under the small of the baek Therefore, dull pains'in the back, or sharp, quick twinges, aro warnings of sick kidneys- warnings of kidney trouble. Plasters inid liniments will do the back no good, for they cannot resell the kidneys which rause the troubles elie kidneys 'themselves, as they tue a peciel remedy fer the kirbley ancisthe kidneys only. They banish sil the paint artd adios by making the kidesoya illter out all" the pais -ells from the systein. Your druggist. Or diitaat seas tlieroj put up only 1•*,r Tile T. klalburn, tamitod,' Toronto., Oat, O farmers and, dairymen and others are making ex- tra :money by shipping us I,441 all kinds of used -empty bags. You can do the same. We pay the freight and also highest. prices. "Write us and we will sand yeti itill informatien and ship- ping tags. NO quantity too large or too sm,all. Write now to SENDEL & GORDON 1 'al Duke St., Montreal, Que. .17,40KIER114, TAYLOR-. FORBES Tree= -7] SWAN,* Pruners. For every purpose in the orohard, daiiing lirobs up to a inches. Idatidles-- 9,10 and 12 feet. Vast flargitate Otiaier !waits ihti Otrr lescrItitivit eireuicit eterit to any addrniis oatetuttat. TAYLOR -romp , GRIMM ONT. •