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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-2-20, Page 3.77'T HER LITTLE GIRL COUGHED UNTIL SHE FAIRLY CHOKED. e Mrs. John Ileinherdt, Ridgctown, Ont.; writes: --"My little gel at the ago of a year and a half old had aa awful cough. She would cough until slie would fairly Choke? and I was afraid it would.go to her lone" I thought I would rule Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, as I kn.etv of.quitte a fete pereons who had used it with good results. I am glad I did so, as'I only used one bottle. It is a sure cure for cotighs and colds." ' There is no reason why Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup should not be recog- nized as tho eery best cough and cold remedy on the market to -day, combining as it does the lung healing virtues of the Norway pine tree, to which aro added wild cherry bark, sqUills, and other sooth- ing and healing pectoral remedies. ; It has gtood the test for the past 30 years and is becoming more generally used every year on account of its great merits in curing cone's, colds, bronchitis, croup, whooping cough, asthma, sore throat, and preventing pnetunonia and in many cases consumption, , So great has been its success that there have been a• great nanny Imitations put on the market to take its -place. See that none of these fio-called "pine syrups" are . handed out to yorrwhen you ask for "Di. Wood's." The genuine and original is put up in a yellow whipper; three pine trees the trade Mark; price 25e. and 50c. Manufactured only by The T, Milburn Co.; Limited, Toronto, Ont. edim Wax& 1 The Road To Story -Book Land. How many children understand - The winding road to Story -Book Land— The winding road that will lead you straight Through the enchanted Pairy-Tale Gate? Gay Bleck Lane is the atarting place; Chart Row opens beyond a space; Prim.er Street •cones next in view, It leads to. First -Reader Avenue. tx2Aisti.214t 4,4400 ' • tt4 s ss, Conducted by Professor Henry G. Bell The object of this department is to place at the _gar- lic° of our farm readers the idtvice of an acknowledged authority on all subiects pertaining to soils and crops. Address all questions to Professor Henry G. Bell, in tare of The Wilson Publishing Company, Limited, 'Toronto, and answers will appear -in this column in the,. order in which they are received. Whenwritiag kindly ',mention this paper. As space is limited it is advisable where im- mediate reply IS, necessary that a stamped and addressed envelope be enclosed with the quention, when the answer will be mailed direct. ,...A14 Nwe'atamerigaarm2162"14 A NERVOUS WRECK FROM HEART AND PtWEL '1144,144. 3,0'4* • The Realises's of • Farming—II. . Water and its imPortaitee.—Next to the soil structare itself, the supplyof Water within the soil is of pnime illl- portitnce, It is of seals great ire- portanee becavise every bit of plant- hood- outside carbon dioxide that enters the plant faust be dleeerved in water before it ecu be taken up by the toots. WaWtWer is therefore the currier of plant nutrition.. •Growing crops isequire a consider- able simply. of 'Water. For instance,, for every 'pound of rley matter in corn and smallgrain there is remitted at !least 450 lbs. of water to carry the I ea/pp through front .gerneination to maturity. Where you tare getting 50 or 60 bashelgof oats to tho. sere or 25. to .30.- bushes of Wheat per acre, ot where you are getting 10 tons e en- silage corn to the acre, you win See that there is great need of an abun- dant supply of water. lAst summer I saw acres of potatoes that had made a good stet* absolutely destroyed on 'account of a deficient supply a water, Now. when !such an enormous amount of water is required, it is necessary for the Man 'who is going to get .rnost out of his.soir, to look out for the ater- ing up of the moisture that falls dur- ing the autumn, winter . and early spring, because average airman:ex rains do not supply nearly enough moisture to meet the great demandsof the growing crops. The best means for storage consists of fairly deep fall plowing and close .attention . to the Up -keep of humus in the son. But there may 11;e too much mois- ture in the eoll and this is just as dertimental to best cimps as too lilted. If water stands on the soil and fills Then comes Second, and Third as well, Fourth and Fifth—but how can I tell Just the point. where you make the turn? That depends on how fast you learn. Oh Story -Book Lend seems far away, When a frolicsome chtla would like to Pipes; .But hour by hour, and minuteby mi- nute, Then—all of e sudden you find your- self in it! Kitty's Misfortune. , One day as the children were com- ing to school they found a kitchen frozen to a p,ipe under a bridge. They supposed s4he heard the water trickl- ing and thought it was a mouse and o elifialbed up on the pipe to wait. Her feet being wet, had frozen there and she could not get away. The boys went to a neighbor's,' house and get a pan of hat water and a •rag. They wet the cloth and wound It around the paw and melted the ice. They soon had the ice melted from the efteirs and the poor kitten free. Then two of the boye entitled it home. They were very. glad because they had helped a dumb bes.st. The Isle of Pines promises to be- come an important producr of iron, copper and °thee ores, as 11 mines have been located. The mange! Is more nutritive as a eteck food than the turnip; weight for weight, it contaIns mere dry mat- ter and a higher percentage of sugar. Compared with other animals, the domestic fowl' is a !small unit, but wide distribution and large numbers make it very important thaVvve anai.n- tain this branch of our national food supply during the o'aming reconstruc- tion period. .Eggs, like inilk, form an important part of our national diet that cannot weithe replaced with ellbstitutes. Troubled With Kidneys For Over Three Years. WAS CONFINED TO BED, Mrs. George Gray, Hopewell Hill, N.B., writes: ---"I had kidney trouble for over three years, and was so bad I was confined to my bed. First I contracted a bad cold and it went to my kidneys, and I suffered dreadfully. I got the doctor, but he did me very little good. I tried all kinds of kidney pills, but got very little help, One of zny neighbors came in td see me and told me to get Doan's Kidney Pills and give them a good trial. I usod five boxes and they have cured me as that I can sleep all night without behag disturbed, and I feel better in every way. I cannot say too much in favor of boan's :Kidney Pills," Dan' s Kidney Pills are just what their name flambee; a pill for the lcidnoys and the kidneys only. Whea you ask for 'Doan'" see that you get them put up in an oblong grey box with our trade mark "The Maple Leaf". Pries 60e, at all dealers or nAiled direct on voceipt of price by Tbe T, Milburn. Co., Limited, Toronto, Out, esetigsball>. ets • tan o7gw-essesst iitft i e, elti‘eillaisi'Ne 7 ._1,,w^ 1 4!401,4,';17*.:.44V.44:- kiltkplk•trITS"e; '41;',..:13"4,... • . %,.."%▪ "'".45 zi=3,'"=7:..t-^•,t.,,,,' ' •Ki' ?..1.14,1r,•443;rtix ; 4h144,.*,"t'...;:ii :w-L.''"fi ;".... , site ekeileTees met e AA t . iiisph`"44liitienrssfitstatlifti'llrtitifties • til esithei;s'otitss ear. •14- : • •• • ' Pk 4 - 4 F.40'.70 %VARA ."9•70 ' " "Malting two blades gratr where only ono grew.before..." - a X A • ',17 _ 0 • 1 ertoirw g•tieetloci Now ,,,,,:, The. heavy -war 'hale .productionecleenands have taken a ld. out of your laud. Remember your soil's fertility is your capital. Don't .let it Ma ' Food crop requirements will endoubtedly rexnein 'heavy for some - mars longer... Invesit in. . , A'Shur....0a,in" . Ferter Soil Tillage -e -The tillage of the sail is next in importance to the drainage. If your fields are let compact and unstitred in seeing, minions a bar- rels of maistare 'Will be lost because the water from the water -table be- low the soil an eome up to the sur- fed° and continually evaporate. The stirring of the soil by plowizsg, disk- ing and harrowing breaks up the cams pact surface layer and thereby pre- vents the escape of much of the mote - Jure. But there is 'another reason for plowing and that as to stir the !soli structure so that there may be bet- ter circulation of air• in the area where the plant roots theism, Of course, plowing also accomplishes the burying of dead plant matter, which &rays and supplies humus a, the sail. The accompanying pictures shady four types ofV....lowing. No. 1 shows the ead cut in strips alai completely inverted. This is the result of attenrpting too wide a fin -- row. Open spaces or strips of grow- ing grass remain attached between the furrows. The Sell is not pulver- ized. No. 2 shows an improvement m that the furrows overlap. Its defeat if that barge open spaces [MUT et the base of the overlapping furrows, re- tarding sufficient rise of water in the soil. These furrows, too, are not pul- verized. No. 3 shows a complete burying of plant matter, accompanied by a Cot- ough pulverizing and packing of the sofa. No. 4 shows how to obtain a deep, Mello -es seedbed; by dliking, then splowing, then. disking again. Sols are worked down :by disking, harrowing, rolling, working with a spring -tooth cultivator and dragging. 1—Complete inveesion, but elrallow2.—Oeerlapping, but little pulverizing. cut. ' St `01st;',,,,ttar , I, , deze (F4) 3,—Good inversJen, good pulverizing. 4.--Dis1ted before and atter plowing make l* a deep, mellow seedbed. the spacesbetween the soli pfartleles, it shuts out air circulation and there- fore destroys one of the essential con- ditions for the growth of soil bacteria —the tiny forms of life that have the duty of ;breaking down - the mineral matter of the SOIL so that it may be used by the growing crops. More- over, if water ‘stands on the soil fin spring therel s continuous evaporation going on which means that the evaps oration is continually retarding he weighing of the soil. Prof. King, of Wiedensin, estimated that when a pound of water . disappeared from a cubic foot, of soil by evemeration it takes aWay enough heat to lower the temperatere of eand 82 dege F. and clay 2$ deg.-. lid That is why un- drained soil is cold and backWarelein spiting. Therefore, the • man that is going to have .his in best shape towarm quickly and Iwo -elide early gro-wth will see to it that the soil. is welldrained, so that there will be as little heat lost as poeeilale tin the evap- oration of unnecessary water ht the soil. . Therre are three kinds of drains. First, the open drain, revhich in many farms: is depended upon entirely•to carry off the drainage si.rater. This type of drain especiellyshould be watched carefully. so as to see' that the water ie flowing freely..- Too often back fields are wet and late' because a little htipediment in the open drain holds back a large amount of water; then there is the covered drain, Which coneiste usually of stones covered esith brush and toll. This is effective as long as it ressaties open, .The third type of dra.irs is fortunately ..00naing into general use and is capable. of rendering enormous iservicetwhene the rows of tile are laid with engineering skill, and euttable ouMets ere enable tainel. As the enema of tile drain that ds necessary, for -certain lamas the following table gives an estinsate; Soil. Heavy Olay 15 Clay .Loam s..s. 21 Gravelly Loam wv .1«`inew.k. 21 Sandy Loam . , ,, ... 40 Do not use a spring -tooth cultivator on light friable eon. It tends to make the air spaces too laree.and results in moisture shortage. Do not use a rolaer ou heavy clay soil while the elay is wet. It tends to pack the soli and undoes the benefits of plowing. When a roller is used always fellow it with a light harrowing to. prevent escape of moisture. Do not use a drag on heavy day soil. There is danger of breaking down clay lumps into too fine partioles, with the result that the clay is puddled, 4'"TP/Aez, s au% • A cow that Is at the time kicking up a muss in the !barnyard might bet- ter walk the plank right !straight. The room of such a cow is numh better than her company. have 'seen a 4terd of 'coves gain just about one-fourth in the quantity of milk they gave after certain. (milkers werereplece,d. It takes a good, .!,laind; - patient man to milk a cow right. Only such ought to be set at that job. We hear it said that there are too few cows inthiscountry. Maybe so, .but it is a fact that there are Cies gether too many that are slackers. Every last one of such caws should go, and go now. Keep Tubes Clean. One of my neighbors got a can of milk back from the creamery because It was spoiled. He had a milking ntae chine and I believe the reason the Milk 700110d Wad bemuse the tubes were not kept clean. One thing is sure, the tubes must be thoroughly cleansed every time they are used. A few minutewill do it and save sev- eral dollars worth of milk. The can that man lest was worth at least three clones's. — — Data Re Drainage. Distance between Rods of deitin No. tile 1 -ft. rows of tileper acre. per acre. 176 2,904 -125 2078, 97 1,613 • 40 f 1 )099 f Our expert chemiets compound them only on actual know- ledge of Canadian requirements. No matter what your soil con- dition may be or what crops you wish to provide for, we can suggest a "ShugGain" Fertilizer that is bound to be a heavily paying' investment for you. Prices must stay firm for this season 7 -avoid uncertain delivery by writing fpr • prices and Booklet to -day. GUNNS LiMITD WEST TORONTO, ONTARIO tosiMitalcumeawarammwmavasszommgail=traa IS YOUR FARM GOOD TO LOOK AT? By John Coleman Ask a dozen men who have paid for their hoinee under !difficultiee how they did it, and the chances are that you will get a dozen answers. .1 think one fine old man in eue neigh- •barhood, who has succeeded above the average, gives as wise a reason as any. 41 just tried to make my plate -so beautiful that I couldn't bear to lose it" he says. There is good, satmd sense in that. A man wili pet up the biggest 'kind of fight to keep anything that he loves and takes- pride in. There is no doubt that it is the affection the soldiers a France have for their beautiful land that mekes thein the splendid fighters they are to -day. The love of beautiful things is deeply im- planted Se the heart of every normal person. When the beauty has been created by . 'chit own efforts, the thought of hieing it stimulates them to exertiens they could not other- wise make. I. said this man whose words I have .quoted had been more than or- dinarily eruccessfuL I do not mean in terms of money, although he has a fine little place, well equipped, and some cash ahead for a rainy day. Other men in that same neighborhood aa:e richer in the things we commonly Mean Vi411 we use that weed. But none has beenia better father ov • oma stronger influence toward' making the neighborhood a pleasant' .place to live in. None are more happily situated than this Man and his wife. in the evening of their days. Their children are all on farms dote to the old homestead, and they visit back and forth to the old home they grew up ire bringing a younger gen- eration with thesn to reaka the music of young voices about the well -loved old place. None of that family }eft the ferns to go to the city. When they started out for themselves they took to form- ing as naturally as ducks take to wa- ter. I count that as one of the greatest factors in this man's success, and it was due, beyond a doubt, to his policy of "making the place so beautiful: that he eouldn't bear to lose it" This man has had, ill health to con- tend with, sickness in his family, doctor bills to pay, and other lessen; but he never got sour or h,opeless. Ancl his wile h -as of the same fine mettle as himself. Together they worked through the years, adding a little more each season, sometimes only by the greatest effort, to what they had done before, but always adding that little. Paterps it was a few fruit trees planted out, in 1111- sight3y stone pile or thicket remov- ed, a nest bit of fencing done, or a little painting OT home •carpentry. But the end VMS gained. People drove !out of their way to see that lit- tle ferns. Many have offered several hundred dollars more for the piece than it is apparently, but not actually, worth, for beauty has a value. And the place is beamidfuls In one eorner of a quiet generous' ortshard There ere many people at the present time whose nerves are unstrung,. hurt affected, and general health impaired. To such we offer Milburn's Heart aud Nerve Pills as the best remedy that science Ises produced for mach troubles. These pills hovel/ wonderful effeet on the nerve mils Of the body, giving them new life and energy; they strengthen and regu- late the heart.and make the blood. rich and nourishing. Mr. Joseph Daly, Wolfe Island, Ont., writes:—"I have used Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. I was a regular nervous wreck from my heart arid nerves, I saw your advertisement in the paper and decided to try your pins, I took five boxes of them, and now 1 aro as steady as a clock. People said I could not be cured, but I fooled tb.era with Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills." INTERIN7ABTIIt017.NAARLy 2LeSSON Lesson VIII. --Moses Paying for Iss rael---Earedus 32: 1 to 34: p. Golden . Text, James 5: 16. 82:146, The Golden fkrif, "Down from the mount: Ace -ani to 24; 18, iVieses weet up into tho. mountain and remained there forty days. Com- pare 3118 and Deut. 9;0-10, This Part lad of retirement was for the complete Mg of the law, and according to the Priestly History, for the enalcing of plans for a tent eanotemey And A priesthood. Aaron may have been left es Moses' representative in the ens comment, and the various heads of the tribes already appointed assisted blinn in keeping order. The long ab- sence of Moses led to a weakening of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are gie influence and the seemed for 011 receipt of _price by The T. Milburn god whom they could zee was e nturall 50c. a box at all dealers, or mailed direct one, coming as it did from a pe-ople still g,rossly ignorent aud long act' Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. aren.nn.airenoraowewatmmwelowompl000•wabsomensa Your Own Housekeeping • . It always seems. easier to display the virtues' elsewhere than :ander our own -.vine and figtree The common complaint in that not merel,y, Itimill- arity but family Itie breede !Contempt. We meet go elaread to be appreoiated. Whert we are visiting we are recogg nied far qur amiable qualitiee- and oar merits shine. The people at home know all the weak joints in .our -sterner. In years of close association all the faalts our make-up have cropped Out. We have been elect that . rart0 under all conditions. We coukd not keep up ap- pearances all the time and occasion- ally we. Were taken off out guard. Men who returned front -Aretic ex- peditions have egefeesed et:Wu:rats of milder that it wan siery hard, under the. long tenure of the Arctic night, to skeep one's temper. The best of friends Wore on the patience of one another and got, to ",pleking at" one another with. a new and strange ini- tability. The little things, under the ordeal .of tatting and waiting in the daekness, became monstrous. It Was very iinpoistant to find occupation for mind end hand, to keep the nien from the quaint old farmhouse 4s set. A fstewing•in their awn juice" and num- pretty sweep -of lawn surrounds it, and allY deterieratiaSS. trees are set here and there -about the There leas been before our officers grounds in casiefullY considered loca- and men abroad. the problem of the time.. A curved gravdled drive leads upkeep el the morale of an &way— and. it is more than eves' e problem now that hostiltities have ceesed and the final consummation crf peace is awaited. .There must be something always for the men to do—the active intellect and the r,,assg, athletic phe-- sique must find wholesome Simi brac- ing occupation. In the life of a family there must be not a mere passive acquiescence in existence together, but a common eager Intwest ol. some spiritual kind. "A house .clivided epithet Itself can- not stand." /2 father is at the club and mother is et a neighbor e house, and the children are at a parte*, and the Divine Glory. Mosess in prayee might as well be the casual aSSOCIal^t confessed the people's great alsii pleaded for the forgiveness of Gods tion of strange.rs who dwell in a or "If not," he said, "Blot me, I WV boardiing house. It is unreasonable thee, oat of Thy book which Thou lag; to expect that the fs.mily shall act as written." He insert to offer his Own a unit in itS amusements. there life as Israers ransom. He would ought to be something like music or rather not live if the people. whom ha loved were to be destroyed. Compare reading or walking or ‘the etory . • natural history or the collection ex • in wag. 9,3, . a similar noble trecsarstion of St. Patti, stamps or the enjoymeni3 of pietures Jehoesidels anewer was a refusal a. that tis of an assoolative tendency. Moses' selftenerifieti, The guilty only There !should be something that brings should be punished. Ile is bidden to the group together; or men -their. of the return to his task as leader of Isitaeds grows) together, with the esithueiaem but essith the asserance thet Jehovah. in from the main !read. From corner to cornea: of the foam there is no un- sightly fence row, thicket, stump, or ston.e pile. There as uothing fancy, no uSeless frills, but a world of seul- satisfyring neatness, order, and pleas - are for the eye. , What a flower garden the lady of that houee has •Laii, in a -ears .g,ene.bed It is beautiful yet, but less elaborate —mostly perenniala new, becattee she is not able to give It the attention she once conld. The memory of its glories is talked of yet all through that countryside. For thirty years no wedding, christening, funeral, or like occasion took place in that comet -amity without 'bountiful floral decorations from this fine old-fazhicitied garden. Many of us are Inclined, sometimes, to neglect the beautifying of our home's, and I cannot feel otherwise than that we are making a mistake. I believe we would keep more of ota boys and girls on the farm, and be less inelined to moee to town our- selves, 'after having made a little money, if we surrounded mix homes and our work -with more beauty. It need not cost a let TOOT take a great amount of lisne. The will to do it is the mest important thing. is -elated siepresentatives on a commit- tee to confer with the Government officials and each other upon the prob- lems in connection with the domeetie Frequent deeming and a liberal uae ata export trade in a.nineal .products. of a good insecticide will aid material- ly in preventing an outbreak of mites in the poultry house. For spraying over the walls, Maws, perches, nests and dropping boards use the follow- ing sok-Rene:. 1. Three quarts of kerosene Meata Vlibh one quart of • either crude car- bolic acid or commercial cresol. 2, Kerosene .enuelsion made by -dis- solving hall a pound of hard soap In a gallon of Water by gentle boiling. and then adding two gallons of kero- sene; one part of this emulsion is mixed with six parts of wa tee. . 3. Lime sulphur solution is recom- mended for !domeant sprayleg of limit trees. 4. Diesel dieinieeting solution made as followst Put. throb and one-fifth quarts d raW linseed Oil in a. five - gallon crock. Dissolve one pound. she aunces of e,orranerelral lye in ariatlete container starting with half a, pint of. weter and adding neat very slowly• ii It is needed to dissolve the, lila Alter three hours very slewlY mid 'the lye setutiou to the raw linseed oil, stirring emstantly until a. smooth liquid soap is produced, Then very• Slowly stir in tight and a' half querte of commercial cresol. The Food Board Says. Th,e various interests engaged in the live stock btisiness, including pee- Pasiltera. taint eportatier, mins panies, and , the Cenedlan bankers, have realized that the Canadian live stock industry mu.st take is greeter part in otir national economies. Each of !those varied intereets have aps The pressent situation interrupting Our export meat business. regarded a. meeely t.empoeary one, end e. policy looking forward to the next five ewers Is what is in mind, The development looked far is not merely a matter for producers' to consider?. but for tlioSc whose business it IS to manufacture, find markets and distraint:to =heal prodaete for human consumption, end to finance these various stages o? the industry. The • committee Will . meet as occasion demands or suggests as advisaliia, to consult with the Live Stook Commissioner; at Ottawa uperi any Measures found nece,g,eary *Id practical develepment of the trade. Decileions, of the committee after- as bion is resolVed Upon will be trameneits ted to the bankers', or the railway eompanies, se! the Live Stock donne% or the vaelters, as the ease May 're -.- Vire by the member •ef the !committee dieectle" representing the inteeest and in this way !oo-ordination an.ci gener- ally appeoved !Action may be. ,obtainetl. the Oatisclitn 11,41,he Stock .Couneil wtiI be represented • by Mr. Bolle.rt of Steraville, 0.nt.• • . It is .reeogniteci that the live 'stock industry it 'slot Separate series al to ell latin .-conipettaitse s inter es LS, but it chide •of each. depeinling on the other and. linou that principle the dattlftlitted procetal. Half eipened cream churns .very sloevly—ni other worth, the :butter from it is long time coming, and the yield is not so good as from the prop- erly r ipen e d ar ticl e. custemed to the images and -smisuottg. f orrnalities of Egyptian religions • 32t7-14. The Prayer ef Mores. •1fe - "Lord, why doth Thy 'wrath 'wax hat." - Moseel• prayer- is that . largess.. • hearted end getkeVolA leader, Who recognizes his ireepleiii ignorance and folly and is willing to be patient with the.= and to forgive them. Out of a Sall heart; theeefore,.he pray* for the forgiveness ed God,. "Turnefrean Thy fierce weath," he plersdat. There is • snaking light of the evil done, hat ela- chellenge rather, of God's anereyeand.. of His tiaitliftelne.si to the prom:lel: made to the fathers. TheSetetemewt that "the Lora repented of the evil • wiiich He said He would 6," is thee writer's 'Way- of styling. that God .hou4. ored IIis qervant's p-rayer !and! was merciful. Compare Psalm 90: 13-U, 32: 15-80. - The Punishment. The ; story, as told here, is complex and somewhat dif-fieult to follow. After • Mosesis prayer izs the .anountain an.gesi and the severe punishment of the idol worshippers seem strange, ite connected and quite coznplerte story it, ., however, preserved Deut. 8-21i • according to which. the prayer for fore . greeness was offered after Moses ha,d• returned a second tirae to the moune tain. We may suppose the order tzi events, therefore, to have been as lel: loWs: Moses came down front the- nrount,ain, bearing the' laws witted upon. two stone tablets. He found to his amazement and EWE' the multie. taule of the people effering worship. to the image of a young bull, with th4 .e.anction of his brother Astront Caztte. ing the table.ts out of his liteaci,. they were broken ie pieces. He amended of Aeron the reason, for his cond.uei and Aaron made true exceseee but ne, apology. As far trte people, they heel "broken loose" and were m frank ree hellion. In response to Mose& ringe Mg call, "To me, whoever is on Jet hovah's side,' the Levites, his 0•77/1 tribeemen, ranged themselves atorng side of hive. A fierce battle ensued., in. which. many were slain, but a deciele6 victory was not gained by ehtitert PeatY. Fearing the disastrous effect4 ef continued strife, Moses offered Melte self, his own life, as an atonement, at, menne of recencillatien. A tence wag called, 'while Moses retired into the mountain to pray. 32: 31-34: 9 'Pinang Interceedicel of elvared (but not !divided) interests. wl°1•11dn kilger g° with b"flezil• "trill send abH This !sort of sharing means union, not nngelute Himmelwill not go. Just how this Is to bo Dar-Lit:ion. , explained '13 not elven', but IS is not at The mother who pirrys with her all eatisifyIng to Moses. He has dee children and still is resilatted by them pended se entirely upon the promited is a successful mother. The father presence a Jehovah that to feels he who is a conatade of his sone, whom cannot g0 forwasel without. it (83: 1(1. they obey. Is a father who, after hes paseiag, will be revel:ed. and reramile bored-, The parents who knew net where therie elaildren are nor what they are doing "are to be pitied, They have missed one of the chief end e of life and one of its greatest eatiefactiens. They do not know the meaning of the family Which they have founded, einee they have won neither its respect nor its affection. They have built ex leas- ed a house—but they have faifed therein to create a home. TrrEMP43,....C.01001.1.T.MM, Could Not Work ON ACCOUNT OF SEVERE HEADACHES. Headaches are generally caused by some disturbance Of the stomach, liver or bowels, and although not a serious complaint, the -cause should be removed before they, bcoome habitual and make your life miserable. You will find that Milburn's Lam - Liver Pills will remove the ermse by moving the bowels gently, safely and surely, refreshing and strengthening the stomach, toning up the liver, and thereby banishing the headaches, Mrs. J. Arnastrohg. 7 Harris St„ St. John, N.B., syritesiter I take ailment in writing you noteeming the good I have reneived from using Milburnhlt Lam -Liver Pills. I had snob severe headaches, 1 could not do my wort but after using two viale•of your pills, 1etas now do say week with comfort and pleasure," Lax -Liver Pills' collage purely vegetable. matter and de. not gripe like Isareh mineral purgatives do. 'Price -vial at all clatters, or mailed direct me receipt ()fluke by Therif. Hilbert Co., Linaltecl, Toronto, out. Moses returnedto And. the pe , opee ,rg a penitent mood. He destroyed golden image, and Teethed thepeople to stip themaelesee ofhtheir otita.merebe for tlae furnishing end decorating ef. Sehovale'e tent sanctuary. Then .a.gaisi, he prayed (83: 12-16), and received . this time the assuranee that jellovalfa reeence wouati ind.ta go with Idea. premise, "I will give thee rest," must have eonte with great emfort to hitt store& burdened hearb, —4 Never pick a qaarrel till let ripe. Lots of men have so much goniuss. that they are unable to de anything j but sit in the ehatie and think about 1 it. _,—...e........ . GARDEN, efaiini, LAWN ais FLOWlin ' .., cat plaW111 ; , ''''sisfst . se qkaide Write for r 4'40 Ctatoldglie Ana Do4-: let entitled °Making the Garden ray?' LIA.RRY'S SEUD STORE • Dept. li 360 Dorchester St. W., Montreal, Que. seeseaseseeseoesehtegitile SP.ift_ING MUSIMAT Ike piy the beat ffoe for ipiden Muskrats Send any Furs you hate. You ate eetured 02 entiefactlert in pride Old treatment. s • se. es . esestedesege AB:BEY FUR COMPANY ale et, P4111 In basin:tug for 80 Years nein:once: nank of floohelaitti St. Henty.