HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-7-8, Page 6HeartSo Bed
Nerve* So Bad
Could Not SleOp
vtro.ft Hear* aa, $0. i., stw,.
ris�,, oet,, writeit-iur lista% hem se
greatly beueeted by using elillman's
Heart sled XSITO PinS I feel that
shoed write you to tell yee, how green
,fel I am for your eplendid remedy.
My ht has been bad for the past
fivo yearra, arid my nerges in, such a,
Istate could not goop at glit.
wee tired all the time, ray appetite
Was ever, OA I heal no courage to do
=Young, and did not care whether I
died or not, se One day I told my lave
ba ea that 1 was going to stop docti*
as 1 might as -well be dead se the
way I was, wiel that I would be better '
off.
Ohno one knoves what I suffered
teen my nerves t as I was afraid a
every noise and my heart would
' jump at every sound.
AR the remedies, and doctors, I had
tried dia mo oo good, until one d.ay
a ericaa told me about MTh/ernes
leeert auti Nerve Pills, said after tale
ieg the lirst box I. eould see a ohmage?
eaci after taking six I am ROW eon
pletely rid of lay troubles.
I feel that if it laad not been for
your Pills I would have been dead and
buried' by
H. and N. Pine are put up only by I
The T. lleilburn Co., Limited, Torontee
Out.
BUILD ON PAPER FIRST ss. LESSON 1 4FAI;-ExcuANGE—NO ROBBERY
In Planning Farm Buildings
Paper Are the
The best euiereation ever made to
assist farmers in getting better build-
ings, is the advice, "13ei1d the barn oe
paper ilret," Thee suggeetion applies
not only to barne, but te every build-
ing on the farm. The farm buildinge
net only afford z hetne for thelarmer
and his faintly, but they make up the
factory in which the farm products
are finiehed.
Manufacturer; know that to turn
" out a product in quantity, economic-
ally and efficiently, they must provide
factory buildiegs that are well ar-
ranged, eles.n, light, substantial, and
suited to the purpese intended, So
many farmers know that their barns,
storage buildings, hog houses, and
feeding sheds must have certain feat-
ures to make them satisfactory. Farm
buildings, especially barns, are factor-,
ies where human food is produced.
Faulty buildings can riever peoduce
the highest quality of products. Farm
operators spend severel hours of every
day iri the building's. Poor arrange-
ment' means lost motion, extra labor,
and wasted time. Valuable live stock
, and feed orops are housed and shelter-
ed in the farm buildings; -this means
that they must be clean, healthful,
and substantial.
MANY PROBLEATS.
Indeed, it weeld be difcult in so
short a space of time, even to make a
list orf all the necessary features that
should be considered. • There is the
pro .em o ma / a s, w e er o woo ,
stone, brick, tile, or concrete. Then
there is fire protection to reduce the
many rnillioes of yearly loss. Or there
is rat -proofing, for the federal gov-
ernment tells us that every rat eats
or destroys two dollars' worth of feed
every year. There Is the question of
how large to build. This answer des.
pende on the farming system, size of
farm, financial conditions, and per-
sonal desire. There are major prob-
lems. There is a whale flock of build-
ing problems related to light; ventila-
tion; sizes of pens, stalls, and alleys;
areengement of the etoek, and proper
use of space. Complicating bhese
questions, is the fact that economy
-must always be ooneidered if a profit
is to he m.ade csti the investment., Every
barn or other farm building is a spe-
cial problem, for each one of you have
Taking Self Out of SeRishneSS.
These days'the child of pre-school
age is much the centre. of attention.
In the past this study has been very
much neglected. We wonder how only
a few years ago, his deniain did not
seem to be a no -man's land of edeca-
time But wise are the leaders of such
an educational movement, or there is
no more logical time for the founda-
tion of school training to bubble forth
than before he begins school. Exper-
ience has taught us that we can ad-
just oureekes with more ease and ap-
preciativeness to a change in our life's
program if we are trained for such a
change.
Every mother has it in her power to
make the path of her children more
smooth if she but trains them in the
simple, but all-important duty of liv-
ing together, which, after all, is one
of the greatett problems of life.
Of coulee, no one likes to see a child
deprived of a 'plaything or a pleasure
that will add happiness to his little
-thilaialt sphere. But the "Ain't Ire
cute7 Be'; only six" attitude toward
his -carelessness inith clothes, furni-
ture, or playthings, does more than
keep the house in a Bedlam. On it de-
pends how he will later expect his little
school friends to look upon his selfish,
careless actions.
An amusing ineident happened the
other day. Little Jimmy had a bag
of candy and kept urging his Aunt
Jenny to tape some. When his mother
inquired why he urged only Aunt
,,,Tenny to take some. When his mother
others in the room'he replied, "Well,
when I pass it to Aunt Jenny, she nes-
ger takes any. She just thanks me
and gives it back!"
Such little happenings, and many,
many more, handicap the youngster by
not teaching him that in fair play
"thine" is as sacred as "mine," and
that "thine" and "mine" together make
"ours," in which we are all jointly
concerned.
It
will be years before a child can
appreciate his lessons of selfishness,
but when he does appreciate them,
they will be to 'him a most vaeuable
community life insurance policy.
To Keep Cut Pumpkin.
When a squash or pumpkin has been
cut and a part of it is not to be used
at once, press waxed paper over the
cut part to seal it. It will stay good
for quite a while, especially if kept
In a cool place.
For sonic time we have been in the
habit oi picking up every piece of
lumber about the farm, even if it be
not more than six inches long end four
inches wide, and putting it away in a
pile upstairs in the wagon -house, so'
that whenever we want a piece of
lumber we know where to find it,
Or.
Oh My Head!
HOW ft Aches!
Onee the head starts to ache end
pain you inay rest assured that the
eause comes from the domach, liver
or bowels, and the cause must be re-
moved before permanent relief can
behad.
Tb.ere is to better remedy on the
raarket to -dee for the relict of head -
tidies of all kinds and. of every de*
tription thaa
Xt reitievee the ettese of the honk
OW, and trite the este° temoyed you
tot be trotteded may more
Telt lip Per the pad 47. yeses by The
T. Mille= ,So. Limited Torento eine
a Pencil, Rule and 1iee of
Tools to Use.
CARTER,
ditrarent Reltditi.ea$ et location siire
of herd, orops raleed, and the like,
How .hall AVO then, with the large
number of points to be considered,
were the best and most coevenient
buildings? 'First, plan on paper be-
fore the beieding is put up, seem ,
use the combined experience of those
who have already built, and, third,
Adapt p.e.ns to your :special con Woes
1
hut use those features that have been 1
wel?. standardime
Flannin,g on paper first is tiot so ,
very difficult. A farmer, carpenter,'
or echool boy, provided with a table,
penal, and a rule, or a set of drawing
Metre/ea/its, can accomplish much in
planning. Incidentally, he call learn
a lot about construction.
' `USE EXPERIENCE OE OTHERS.
The experience of others can be
found in books on buildings, in maga-
zines and farm mere and, perhaps
best of ell, at your provincial agri-
cultural college. Almost everY agri-
cultural college has made a large nine-
ber a building plans available Their
plan service is either given free of at
a nerairee cost, .
Even though most plans have to be
specialized to a certain extent, there
are some factors that have been pretty
definitely settled and can be included
i•n the plan. For example, we know
that there are just about three types
of roof construction used ou modern
barns; they are the plank truss, braced
rafter, and Gothic arch. The hay loft
in the barn can be built free of posts
and obstructing braces. We know that
most barns should be thirty-four or
thirty-six feet wide; windows must be
inceluded in every live stock building,
with about four square feet of glass
for each cow or horse. Cows, horses,
. and hogs of average size require a
rather definite amount of space.
The information available from
architects, engineers, colleges, or
farm publications, Plus your own good
judgment, should produce the beet pos-
sible plan for you. At best, these
brief sugg,estione can only convey this
idea: "Plan the buildirig an paper
first." The well-planned building is
noticeable wherever it is, but aside
from its attractiveness, it will stand
for years as a tribute to the good
jelidginent of its owner.
OM/
The Care of Growing Pullets.
Good parent stock, good shady
range, a well ba.lanced ration and com-
fortable housing, are essential for the
development of pullets for early win-
ter egg production. Without a free
range they will not be properly matur-
ed before weather conditions make it
necessary to. put them into winter
quarters. Dry, wet -drained land with
plenty of sha.de and growing green
feed are essential.
Frorn the age of two months a dry
mash, consisting of equal parts, by
weight, - of cornmeal, bran, shorts,
ground oats, and beef scrap should be
kept before the pullets constantly in
self-feeding hoppers. In addition a •
semi -wet mash consisting largely of
chopped green feed, such as mangel
tops, alfalfa, clover, cabbage leaves,
corn or sunflower tops, etc., should be
given twice a day. It is also necessary
to keep before the pullets constantly a
hopper of good raixed grain and a
supply of milk. Clean, fresh water
should be before the birds at all times
and oyster shells and grit should be
always available.
The pullets should not be kept in
the same quaiters as hens. A portable
colony house on skids can be rnade in-
expensively. It should be dry •SID/1
well ventilated with plenty of space,
as on no account should there be over-
crowding.
Quick -Note Paper.
With the help of your sewing ma-
chine very attractive and useful hasty
note paper may be devised.
Buy a package of square envelopes.
leuri each envelope under the un-
threaded needle of your sewing ma-
chine, flap down, making a perforated
margin at each side of the envelope.
Take your scissors and cut the side
• .
closing of the envelopes. This gives a
flat sheet, perforated at the sides with
a quarter -inch margin.
Write your message inside the en-
velope. Paste the perforated rims and
seal the envelope, 'to open, tear off
sides and top.
Hasty -line paper may also be made
of firm pad sheets, running the eew-
ing maciiine at the sides and lit the
top opening of the doubled sheet
-A few of these hasty -line papers
and a small tube of paste take prac-
tically no room in a traveling bag.
They are better than the postal, as
they give privacy to the written mes-
sacre and they give more rcorne--P, B.
Chase Away the Grass Stains.
Since nature has emitted her dress
of green; the problem of retrieving
grass stains from clothing again facee
the buey houSevvife. The following
inethode 4re'reconnnendo&
Wash the'fieaSh stain in cold water
without soap. Soap Sets the stain and
should therefore' not be used.
Aleohol or ether will dissolve the
green coloringtMatter when the mate-
rial •cannot be .waehed.
eavelle water and follow bit -
mediately with belling water. Thor-
ough rinsing will prevent javelle from
affectieg the fibre.
The Poultry Garden.
A poultry vegetable garden is neces-
sary on every poultry farm. to insure
an adequate' supply of green feed. It
is especially necessary where the hens
are k.e.pt More or less manfined or in
restricted bare yards, and in the case
of the growing range which ,dries ip
in the hot months. Likewise the gar-
den should provide an abundance of
greens for the pullets and hens in the
fall and winter. r
Under normal conditions half an
acre will provide adequate greens for
a poultry flock of 1,000 to 1,200 birds,
for both the adult stock as well as the
growing chicks on range. This half -
acre area should be planted as follows:
Approximately a quarter of an acre
in late cabbage. If the cabbage plants
are grown -hi fiats and praiited late,
clubnaot will be avoided, all insects
will be reduced to a minimum and the
cabbages will make substantial heads
by cold weather.
An eighth of the acre should be
planted to mangel-wurzel beets, about
one -sixteenth of an acre to Russian
kale and one -sixteenth of an acre to
Dwarf Essex rape.
All these plantings including kale
and rape, should be drilled in so they
can be cultivated, thus reducing the
hand lab& to a minimum. The keee
and rape will provide luxuriant greens
for summer and early fall, the cabbage
for late fall and early winter, and the
beets can be stored to provide for the
balance of the winter.
To Stop Egg Eating.
Often in large flocks birds sbart egg
Pt
July 11, Childhood and gducatle" et ree0110Mie AXieein is Applied to the Problem of Entertaining,
m"-", E*odus ez,. 140; Mt; 7: 22.
aaround some eountry produce was
Golden Text-eTriain up a child in the BY CITY COUSIN,
In an old agricultural paper wap-
pda statementt by a eauntre woman, who
did not sign. her name, to the effect that
her own town relatives and friends
over -ran the farm all through the our/A-
mer and until late in the fall when
work was Preseing and help hard to
get. But that (tie' not exasperate her
as did the fact that they innocently
Terreoetreerox—Moses is, unguee- suppoeed, or pretended to believe, that
tionably, one of the most eentarhalge the things that go on the couotty table
characters which we meet in the pagee cost little or nothing. Therefore, it is
PL history, Rove in the darkest hour
way he should go; Ad when. he te
old, he evin not depart feernIt
Prey, 22; 6.
ANALYSIS,
I„ este serval AND etreneo QV ateSee,
Excel, 2:
II. ADOPTION OF NOSES ey etteueseil'e
beeen'reete 2:6-10,
111. EDUcATR.)N oy*osia, Acts 7:22,,
of his peop,ws distress, when daily a pleasure for the country woman to
entertain, and also debts, s.ocial debes
their infant children were east, by
Pharaoh's police in the Nile river, 1 contracted in this way, need never be
hidden by a loving mother until -she reptile,
eould hide hint no longer, then by a Abont the time the paper came
stiettegent brought to the notice of the I under my eye, 1 heard a town vroman
Egyptian princess who adopts him as diecoureing about how her country
her son, educated at the Egyptian relayeee over -ran her premises
and -
court in all the culteire AD extra- never paid, their soda' debts by asks
ordinarily gifted people, then, seems -
her to visit them. Having no
swiriedleyz,.naesfsugliifteiv, ea lealeard%iingofthheiswpaLspolef ing
automobile and not being able to week
in a great adventure for liberty, their the distance to the locality cf her rela-
judge, their prophet, their lawgiver, tives, she had to submit vvith such
and their priest. He left behind him grace as she cheld Muster, and her
an imperisilable InemoTY of courage wail was that country people believe
born a faith in Goa, of unremitting, or tryto make believe,that living is.'
self-denying labor of unselfish. devo- Ma
tion to the good oi the people, and of
skillful and far-seeing organization
and direction of their national life.
I. THE BIRTH !AND TIMING OE MOSES,
Exod. 2:1-4.
A man of the house of Levi, v. I. In
chap, 6, verse 20, we are told that his
name was Amami', and his wife's"
name Jochebede and that Moses had
an older brother called Aaron, His
sister, Miriam, is mentioned in verses
4 and 7. Compare Num 26: 58-59. If
the period of the sojourn of Israel in
Egypt was four hundred and thirty
years (Excel. 12:40), and if Leve was
living at the time of the settlement of
the Israelites there (Exod. 1:12), it
is not easy to uederstand how the
father of Moses can heve been Levi's
grandson, and his- mother Levi's
daughter (Exod. 6:18 and 20). It is
quite passible that some of the names.
given in Mod. 6:14-25, are nadies of
families or clans, and not of individual
persons. -
A goodly child, v. 2. So, in- the
speech of Stephen, Acts 7:20, he is de-
scribed as "exceeding fair." "It was
by faith," says the writer of the
Epistle to the Hebrews, "that Moses
was hidden for three months after
birth by his parents, because they saw
the child was beautiful" (Heb. 11:23,
Moffatt's translation).
An ark of bulrushes, v. 3. That is,
a box or basket shaped like a little
boat and made waterproof by daubing.
with bituminous slime or mortar. It
was made of the stalks of the papyrus
reed, which grew in marshy places and
along the banks of tWN'ile, and from
which the firet paper was made.
IL ADOPTION BY PHARAOH'S DAUGHTER,
5-10.
The daughter of Pharaoh.. We do
not know the name of the kindly prin-
cess who had compassion on the little
child doomed to a cruel death. Jose-
phus, a Jewish historian of the time
of Christ, calls her Thermutis, and
Eusebius, an early Christian writer,
calls her Mersis. For want of better
knowledge we may call her by one of
these names. This bathing in the
sacred -teeters of the river Nile was a
religious custom (compare 7:15). •
She had compassion on him," v. 6.
There is a strong appeal in the simple
naturalness of the story. It bears on
the face of it all the triarks of sim-
plicity and truth. It is no evidence
against the truth of it to say that other
child stories have come down to us
from the ancient world. Seeing that
all the world loves a child it would
be a marvel indeed if they had not.
Am•ong the most interesting is the story
of Sargon, king oe Akkad, in Mese-
pc•tarnia, more than 1000 B.C., who
writes, "My another of noble race eon-.
ceiyed me and bore xrie in secret. She
put. me in a -basket, and elosed up the
openings with bitumen. She cast me
1 into the river, which did not drown
me. The river carried me along to
Akki, the irrigator, who took me up,
reared me, and made me a gardener
etc." Like in some respects, this Is
very unlike in others to the story of
Moss.
Called the child's mother, 'V, 8. In
this way it is brought about that the
child Moses is nursed by his owe moth-
as cheap in towe as in the country.
"They cherge me maeleet prices for
the butter and eggs mid fruit and
s ,
vegetables they bring me," she said,
"then sit down withtheir hearty coun-
try appetites to help eat what they
charged me fore"
There you have it! Some people
in the country imposed upon and some
in tewn. I could not but think of the
fair -and honorable exchange of courte-
sies that has existed between my fame
ily and a fine country family for some
years past, for if social life is one-
sided it soon loses its cherne Ex-
change is net the wrong Ward to uee
in this connection.
When 'they thresh or pet up hay or
somethine tat is a rare treat to4Own
children, they invite the youeestere
out to see: the Performance, and en.
Siiturdaye, when the weather is good,
there is real fun on the fem. In
winter, and oceasionally in summer,
We return the cempliment by invitine
their ehildren to the city.
If it ha * hts that circus day finds
the farm folios toe busy to bring the
children in for the parade, we run out
and get theni, keeping time safe for
the day just as our own are kept safe
from machinery on clover hulling or
threshing days.
Most of the adult visits are "eats
lees" ones, but the children do revel in
eating away from home. We save up
magazines arid papers for them of
which we have more than the ordinary
fanely bemuse of business* relations
along that line, whee they in turn
give the children a chance to gather
nuts and wild berries in summer and
fall.
am sure there has never been the
slightest feel•ing on my part that I
have been imposed upon, and am quite
oertain my busy friend feels -the same.
We are not teal but they have luxur-
ies that we have not and we have
some things -that they can net enjoY
because of their location, It is nice
for them on a stormy eight to knoW
that they will not have to drive In
for their high school abildren, and
nice for us to know that (short vace-
tents in the eummer are available te
ours, There has never bean the slight-
est jar and hope never will be, We
eau not understand how people can
take and never give, either in town or
country, for one-sided friendship is
never enjoyable or profitahle.
HARRY THORN'S TEMPTATION
- • BY SOPHIE M. McGIFERT.•
"Where's the use �f being so mean? not yet medltated the wicked deed he
A fellow can't never have any etre,"
muttered Harry Them.
He was half ashamed of the words
as he spoke them, and hoped the next
minute his mother did not hear; but
elle did, and sighed deeply, as she
made answer:
"You know I try as hard as I can,
Harry, but it takes more money than
I can earn to give us even the neces-
-was so soon to do. -
Alone in his room, he nursed his
wrath against his mother, the landlord
and his plaguey fortune, as he termed
it. Finally he started up.
"I don't care; Pll have that five dee
lane -She can just as well borrow as
not, or Mr. Davis can go without his
ret -stingy old thing!"
Without giving himself tiine to
sities of life; we mustn't expect lux- think, he stole to his mother's room,
uries." ' took her purse, and there lay the five
"Good thing we don't expect them et dollars before him. - -
we'd never get 'ern." For a moment he hesitated; but a
Barry strode out, slammileg the door thought of the boys' contempt if he
violently behind him. told them he couldn't afford to join
What had come over the usually
good-tempered lad? Nothing rnore nor
less than a prospective boat -club talk-
ed over that morning at school by the
boys.
The first meeting had been apPhint-
ed for that evening, at the house of
Alfred Anderson, the lawyer's eon.
The dub was to consist of about a
dozen boys,. who were to make arrange-
ments for buying a boat, betiding a
boat -house, and'other matters pertaln-
ing to naval enterprises.
With ethe exception of Harry, the
bays were all sons of wealthy parent,
and he had considered it quite an
honor to be invited to join them.
But when he vvas informed that' the
them decided him, ande he tucked the
bill securely in his pocket, then put
the pocketbook where he had found it,
and quietly left the room and the
house.
He hastened to Alfred Anderson's
elegant home, where the boys were al-
ready assrabled, and the cordial greet-
ing given him drowned the voice of
conscience for a while.
They had a jolly time that night.
After their important business was
transacted, pop -corn and apples were
in order, and joke after joke made the
room ring with laughter.
But a more thoroughly uncomfort-
able boy than was Harry Thorn never
laid his head upon his pillow. He
tossed from side to side of the bed,
initiation fee 'would be five dollars,, in
but could:find no rest. .•
oreer that they might haye sufficient. Whitt would his mother say—his
cash to buy their boat at once, his face dea.r mothe-who had worked for him
fell, and it was with a pretty sober sia his life?
countenance that he entered his
What would little Susie say when
hinnele home. ' she heard thet her big brother was a
His mother was a widow, and Harry
thief? Thief ! How Harry shuddered.
at that word! Oh, if he only had
years old, and was still in school. power to undo that evening's work!
Mrs. Thorn tried to support him and
It rieemeci to him now that he didn't
her wily son. He was just fourteen . •
the two younger children by doing •
he never saw another boat in
plain sevring, eor Ole was very anxious care if
his
that Harry should continue, his staciies
He could bear it no longer. Rushing
as long as possible. •
*f
to his mother's room he dropped on
It was hard -work, however, to make his knees beside her bed and told her
the smell sums elle received from time the whole truth. Mrs. Thort saw hew
to time pay the house -rent and feed
he wee suffering, and refrained from
and clothe them all. any word a reproach, though her
eating. Though this habit is generally er and grows their
knewledge of his
(zit people, customs, Harry inet some Of the bo down
Ys heart ached with the thought that her
darted accidentally, an incomplete ra-their tra-
ons and theit religion. town, eagerly planning with reference
tion might tend tostecip start it. Birds ' II to the club. He was a silent hstener , b
. . bey . .
couhl not be trusted
1 Breakfast was waiting the next
He became her son, v. 10. e would,
,
should have limestone or oyster shell
herefore, receive h
to the eager talk and merry laughter, .
rem t e. education of an •. morning when the outside door opened,
before them all the time. Lack of lime E uprince The na-me "Moses" till
gyp an . gaily accosted with: and Harry Thorn bounded in and laid
will cause birds to eat eggs. Abun.. is probably Egyptian, and meant "Say. Hal, what are you so solemn
a crier, five -dollar bill upon his moth -
dance 'of green feed will help prehent "child," or "eon." for? You are coming to -night, o
er's plate.
and cure this habit. cow se"
EDUCATION OE moSEs, Acts '7:22- —
ply oyster shell or limestone. Fureish Twelve hundred or more years later, d , •
Harryl mernbled an iricranite reply,
. To prevent or cure this habit: Sup -
T , hi, and rushe towaed _home, resolving thought being sorry „wasn't enough.
and I to him everyt mg t iet as Mayas r ous oniliottfrow.
birds to preveet crowding. - Arrange d council of the Jewish nation. He :happened, and asked him to give rne
nests wee supplied with straw or raencalls the story of the patriarehs; and At supper he could talk of nothing
cleb, whatever happened. 1
nests so that they will be dark. Keep
hay, the providential r isirig up of Moses else. ' from the roll.
back by money and erase my tame '' The cold may start with a e run
rag of the nose, the head becomes Have nests at least eighteen inches to be the deliverer end lawgieer of "I sayernother, haven't you got a bit
e pro a ,
S U 0 up u 1 e a, c ou is pad
"But don't you think, mother, he t -' rt
above the floor. Peace glees egg i in Israel. Incidentally he shows, with in- o it, thinking perhaps it vriel pies
of money you could spare me?" he wouldn't do it; and he took that five -
the fleets and on the floor. Dispose of creasingdforce cias he n o is how
- r ali re" i said, for the fortieth thee, perhaps. doalar bill from his rocket and made and then it gots &wit into tho throat
away in a day or two. T'oti neglect, it,
ale-.
"Oh, mother!" he exclaimed. "I
ritd so rye: 13een to Alf. Anderson',
h d -.t clef f
id le 1 h se
Woinen With
Weak Kidneys
should Use
No womee wise strong and healthy
unlees her kith/eye axe woll, said tune
times eut of ten ,the kidneys are to
blame for the we*, larae end aching
back from whieh she auffers so much...
When you And your ladneys out of
order, when your beck aches and pains
end gives you endless nueery, all you
leave to de is take a few boxes of
Doane liciduey Pills and you will fled
that al the aches anttfains will venial,
and make yore heal and happy and
able to enjoy life to the utmost.
All areggiets sea esteems head's/
them; put up eely brehie T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Tomato, Ont.
'FAIL...
a-hfr
THE CAPE FROCK AN ESTAB-
LISHED VOGUE.
The cape has become a part of every
pb.ase of the mode, and is nowhere
more smart than when used on the
street frock, as pictured i9 -this model
of navy, trimmed with polka-dotted
silk. The cape is separate, but so flat-
tering you will never want to take it
off. It lras a long tie collai• of Its own
to be tied at the neck, or the enda
crossed, one at the back and one at the
front. The frock underneath is
straight, with a tailored collar ending
in long revers, and a set-in panel. The -V--
tight sleeves are set-in at the armhole,
.and a wide belt is crushed into a big
buckle. Ne.. 1299 is for the miss and
small woman and is in sizes 16, 18 and
20 years. Si'ze 18 years (36 bust) re-
quires 31/2 yards 54 -inch plain mater-
ial ,and leis yards -54-inch figured.
Pries 20 cents. .
The secret of distinctive dress lies in
good taste rather than a lavish expen-
diture of money. Every woman should
want to make her own elothes, and the
home. dressrnalcer will'find the designs
illustrated, in <Mr new Fashion' Book to
be practical anti simple, yet maintain-
ing the spirit of the mode of the mo-
ment Price of thehook 10 cents the
copy.
ktOW TO ORDER PA.TTeleNS.
Write your. name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want. Ehclose 20c in
stivnyea or coin (coin preferred; e -rap
it carefully) for each number, and
address your order to Pattern Dept,
•Wilson Publishing Co, 73 West Ade-
laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent be
return mail.
green feed. Have one nest to five Step en ma e se grea ence o s • .
th t h tst h membe f t b • t
' ' • • a e e a r o .II Oa
^
The Rad Cold of To -day
Christian faith before the high prieet
birds caught breaking eggs intention-. much o er an greater re gi n s
that Jewish law, and what was Moses' " Y Onhave not one ccitt innie take it. I didn't want to a bit, for and ,from there to the longs, aed be -
rightful place as a minister of God in . the home, except five dor•ars 1 Prone. I felt r didn't deserve it, But he said iclozsria ldeesgstet,of coughieg
the long history of religious progres,e. hied our landlord he should 'have tee I was to take it to ewe and it wasn't a aa
Egyptians. Recent discoveries have any leneei:T; tthet If 11 d»»‚„e tPeYhiniafford to lose so valuable a reembea
Spring -sown alfalfa. is. often killed
eecaese the nurse crop of -oats or
barley is allowed to ripen for grain.
Cut the grain for hay as seen as it
heads out.
A goad way tocateh rats, it is said,
is to use an earthenware jar, about
one foot in diameter, three feet in
depth, with. a hole, large enough 'for
a rat to enter, in the side near the
top. The jar is buried in the earth
deep enough to have the hole on the
level with the ground. When the rats
once Miter they are utable eiimb ep,
They cat then he destroyed by water.
lean anybody tried this -?—r. G. N.
1,egrnCd in all the wisdon,t of the ml
orrow. e oidme e coud , ript wtee
• ' favor to me, but to hire, for he cou:dn't
eupplemented what we have leaened of to -morrow he would rent the house to , frontthe club. Oh, Mother, wasn't he
that wisdom from the Bible and the some one who could pay." goodel
claseneal literature of aricient Greece
and Rome. The Egyptiarie had some
knowledge of astronomy, mathernatiesi
Medicine, an.d other sciences, ,They de -
"Hang the mean old felilew I" eiaciel MTS. ThOM folded her boy in her
er, if I could only have the money to -1 had eo far triumphed as to enable him
veloped the art of Writing, they were night. Couldn't you borrow it? I vvould te humble hie pride by acknowledging
skilled in egriculture, they made boats leave school and work hard to pny it his poverty and sin to his schoolmate.
for rivet riavigatien, and, even von- back." .. l She felt that this would be a last-
tured out upon the sea, they erected "No Harry; I do riot wish to bor-' ieg lesson to her sone and it was.
row o not think that it is at all Throughout the pleasant summer
lated Harry; then added: "But, moth- arms, thankfel that bis better nature
great buildings and montunente, aire
mg the elest 'wonderful ever known, ssrythat you sheult1 become a every boat -ride reminded Haerseof
eee they were artiong the first anibi- boat. club, are sur- ' •
tioue builders of empire. 3'4**h-us, the
Jewish histoelan reeritioried Above Prised that Yell have tee"d Ina e'e
says that Moses beesime a ge'neral f about it."
the Egyptian errny, and feught with Harry rushed from the room in
success against the Ethiopians. great indignation, Yet hie heart lia.d
However slight erceld you have yout
abould never neglect it, for if you do
it el just possible that it will develop
into bronchitis, pneumonia or some
other serious throat or lung trouble.
•
Dr. Wood's
Norway
Syrup
tempvatx'oxi ano ne nasliever since
beeti ktioern to take evere a penny
Which was not his own. For "Honesty
is the best polity" because the watch- t
Word of hie life.
is at universal remedy or all those
who stiffer erorn any form nf bronchial
trouble, no it etimulittes tee weakezied
ergets, aeothes and heals the irritated
poets, lOOSelia ehe phir,gro and
lied aide sleeve to ekes seeity the
morhia aeennulatione