The Exeter Times, 1919-3-20, Page 3rj
,TWO MOTHS OLD BABY
DAB BAB COLD.
DF WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE SYRUP
'SAVED WS gine
It takes the life out of a mother to see
the child—the idol of her heart—slipping
away, succumbing too the cruel cough that
ali the remedies she has tried won't pure.
There is nothing so good for children's
coughs, or colds croup, whooping cou(ih,
•er bronchitis as Dr, Wood's Norway Pune
Syrup,
It is pleasant to take, and it cures so
.quickly and thoroughly that the heart Qf
the mother is delighted,
Mrs. Angus Mckinnon, Richmond,
P.E.I., writes ".Gast winter my baby
was just two months old, when he 'took
a bad cold. He could not keep anything
on his stomach with the cough. I tried
doctor's medicine, but it gave no relief.
I told my husband I would try Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrup, and I must say it
saved leis life. I just used four bottles
and now he is perfectly cured, and 1 can't
heli but express my thanks to you for
during my baby. .
Two years ago I used it for one of my
girls. She had a cold and cough, but the
doctor's medicine was no good for her,
I got nix bottles of Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup, and it gave her a perfect cure,
1 can not praise it half enough.';
The genuine Dr, W'ood's Norway Pine
.Syrup has been on the market for the
past 30 years. Don't accept a substitute
and perhaps endanger your child's life.
Prion 25c. and 50e. Put up only by
The T. Milburn Co,, Limited, Toronto,
Ont.
NO HOPE FOR 120,000 MEN.
•Of 314,000 Posted as siVlissing" on
French Casualty Lists.
On the casualty lists of the French
army the word "missing" is written
in opposite the names of 314,000 men.
Investigations which have been con-
ducted have resulted in establishing
the fact that of this number all hope
for approximately 120,000 must be
abandoned.
In these tines of intensive warfare
it is, of course, possible for a man to
be literally "blown to atoms," but a
minute examination of No Mans Land,
it is hoped, may still yield indications
by which it is possible to trace the
fate of at least some of the missing
men.
An army of 12,000 searchers will
subject all the trenches and dugouts
along the whole battle line to a most
careful scrutiny for any evidence that
may lead to identification. That this
is no light task is evident. Nearly 17,-
000 square miles of ground must be
explored. In all cases approaching de-
finite
identification, a proper burial
certificate will be issued to the fami-
lies of the fallen.
There is talk. of cemeteries being
laid out on the battle fields to be
"plains of silence." Others prefer
that the fields should be planted with
trees to grow into mighty forests as
an everlasting monument to the
dead of the great war.
The Canadian Herd -Boy.
(A Song of the Backwoods).
Through the deep woods at peep of
day,
The careless herd -boy wends his way,
• By piny ridge and forest stream,
To summon home his roving team: -
Cobos! Cobos! from distant dell
Sly echo• wafts the cattle-belll.
A blithe reply he whistles back,
And follows out the devious track,
O'er fallen tree and mossy stone,
A path to all save him unknown:
'Cobos! Cobos! from distant dell
More faintly falls the cattle -bell.
See the dark swamp before him
throws +a
A tangled maze of cedar boughs;
On all around deep silence broods
In Nature's boundless solitudes:.
.Cobos! Cobos! the breezes swell,
As nearer floats the cattle -bell.
He sees them now; beneath yon trees,
His motley herd recline at ease;
With lazy face and sullen stare "
They slowly leave their 'shady lair: ' '
Cobos! Cobos! far up the dell
Quick jingling comes the :cattle -bell,
. • The supply of clover seed in Eng-
land is insufficient to meet the needs
of that country.
COT
CLING
Th llEADAC E
AND SOCK 5 °DACHA
Mr. P. M. Phelps, Stanbridge East,
Que., writes: --"I have been taking Mil -
burn's .Lara -Liver Pills with such good
results I thought I would write you. I
had -stomach and liver trouble, and would
Set up inth
e morning Withaheadaeh
headache,
stomach sick and feel dizzy. After taking
two vials I was cured of these troubles,
and constipation as well."
Carelessness and neglect, and often-
times wilful disregard of nature's laws
will put the system all out of sorts. The
stomach becomes upset, the bowels
clogged, and the liver inactive. To bring
the system back to its normal state must
be the
object
of those who wish
to be
well, This can quickly he done by using
Milburn's Latta -Liver Pills, They liven
up the liver, get the bowels back to
'their
normal condition and tone up the
stomach, making the entire system sweet
and clean,
Milburn's r+axa-Li e •
v i .Pi lis are 25c. a
vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on '
receipt of price by That T. Milburn Co., I
Toronto, Ont. , . . • - t
Conducted by Professor r iemrf G. dell,
The object of this cleparttnent is to place at the Or.
'dee of our farm readers the u$i ice of an acknowledged
authority onall subjects pertaining to soils and Crops.
Address all questions to Professor Henry G. L3e11, in
Bare of The Wilson Publishing Company, Lin.ited, Toronto,
and answers will appear in this column - in • the order in
which they are received. 'When ,writing kindly .mention
thin paper. As space is limited It is advisable where im-
mediate reply is necessary that a stampedend addressed
envelope be enclosed .with the quevtion, when..• the answer
will be *nailed direct;
er
The Business of Farming.—'V'.
How to know what to use.—When
it comes to using fertilizers the prac-
tical business farmer is faced with
the one great question, "How shall
I know what to use?" This question
is asked in various forms, one man
asks, "What do my soils need?" an-
other, "What will pay?"
In our previous work we have out-
lined the great primary essentials
which to a large extent determine the
profit of the use of fertilizers. In-
deed they actually determine the
profit from the crop that is grown.
The soil must be in good mechanical
condition if air is to circulate therein
and if sufficient moisture is to be
held in which plantfood can be dis-
solved so that it can be taken up by
the crop. These are nature's de-
mands. They are no humanly im-
posed regulations, but they are uni-
versally required. Moreover, for
many crops the soil must have a
sweet reaction, hence sufficient lime
must be returned to keep the soil
from becoming acid, under which con-
dition neither the free bacteria, nor
the bacteria on the roots of the
legumes would thrive.
In our last article we tried to make
plain the nature of the essentials of
plantfoocl whether found in the soil,
manure or in fertilizers. Lack of
this necessary information has. let
times resulted disastrously, because
the full importance of the plantfood
which the crop needed was not real-
ized. It is our object to clear up this
lack of information.
You will remember that nitrogen
was the kind of plantfood that caused
the. growth of stalks and leaves of
plants. Phosphoric acid was the kind
of plantfood which ripened the crops
and materially increased their root
growth, while potash was the fooeil
that gives strength to the crop to
resist disease and materially assists
in the laying down of starch in the
grain or fruit.
When the question comes up,
"What fertilizer shall I use," you
should keep in mind the actual nature
of fertilizers. There is nothing mys-
terious or wonderful about them.
made, with the object of finding what
to use and how much. First the erops
were analyzed and it was found that.
certain crops removed characteristic
quantities of plantfood, as shown in
the following table:
Now this was true of crops whe-
ther grown in England, Scotland,
United States or Canada, or in any 1
other part of the world; hence the
chemist argued that if the soils were
analyzed and the crops were analyz-
ed, that the exact amount of plant -
food to apply could be determined and
proper methods outlined. However,
actual application of this scheme of
doing things did not bring satisfac-
tion, for several reasons. Some of
the most important reasons for this
discrepancy were: as follows:
(a) The mechanical condition of
soils was so variable in different
areas of similar types of soil and
these variations in mechanical con-
ditions had so much to do with the
growth of plants that the variations
in chemical analyses had very little
bearing on the situation.
(b) Various plantfood elements
were held in different soils in dif-
ferent chemical combinations, some
of which could be used as plantfood,
while others could not. Chemical
analyses of soils did not distinguish
Between the available and unavail-
able forms in which the plantfood was
held.
It was no uncommon thing for
chemists to analyze soil samples and
report that the elements were found
in sufficient quantities in a certain
soil to grow highly profitable crops.
When this chemical analysis was
forwarded to the farmer sending in
the sample, he was disappointed at
times, because he knew that, although
his soil may be reported to contain
sufficient plantfood, it actually did
not produce paying crops. Hence, the
idea of anyone analyzing the soil and
telling exactly what to apply in
order to get certain crop yields fell
into disrepute, and the ,idea of soil
analysis as a final court of appeal in
order to find out what to use was set
aside.
It is sometimes hard for one who
Crop
Wheats .. , ..
Corn
Clover
Sugar Beets
Oats
Barley
What Crops Remove From the Soil.
Yield
per acre.
20 bus.
40 bus.
2 ton
10 ton
50 'bus.
50 bus,
Plantfood Removed
Nitrogen Phos. Acid
41 " 13
56 21
83 18
30 14
48. 18
61. 24
Potash
2$
88
71
40
47
Then typical soils were analyze d and they were found to contain
sante plantfoods in the quantities shown in the following table:
Plantfood Supplies in Soils.
Plantfood.
Phosponic Acid
Low
Medium to Low
Fair
Fair, frequently
unavailable.
. Low
Soil
Sandy Soil
Loam ....
Limestone Soil
Clay
Muck and Peaty
Nitrogen
Low
Fair
Medium to Low
Fair to Good
High
the
Potash
Low
Fair
Low
Fair, frequently
unavailable.
Very Short
They are carriers of exactly the same
plantfood as is supplied by manure,
but in a much more concentrated
form. Complete fertilizers carry
nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash,
in forms in which it will readily dis-
solve and become available as plant -
food. Now, plantfood in this form is
very closely comparable to rich,
easily digested food which you feed
to young stock. The reason for feed-
ing this easily digested food to the
stock is to give them a 'healthy, vig-
orous start in life. The same reason
to a Iarge extent underlies the use
of fertili1 ers on crops. Fertilizers
are not stimulants, they are food.
Frequently we are asked if a man
uses fertilizers once will he always
have to do so. There is absolutely no
compulsion as to the use of fertiliz-
ers any more than there is as to
making a good livelihood. If a man
follows a business to -day where he
can make a fair return for his ef-
forts, there is no obligation whatever
that he shall continue that same busi-
ness to -morrow, 'but the probability
is that'•he will do so, because he finds
it profitable. This is the basis on
which to place fertilizers,. If. the use
of fertilizers returns a profit, no
further argument to induce their use
is necessary. If properly used they
are just as sure to return
profitable
results as is good food sure to give
strength and energy to a pian as he
takes it clay by day.
Within the memory of some of the
oldest Ontario farmers there was a
great cry raised regarding soil
analysis.
When the theory y tool 0 plant -
feeding
f pa t
feeding and plantfood supplies in the
soil was first developed in Europe,
during. the 'early part of the 19th
Century nt y a nd its teachings began to
take root in the eastern part of the
North American
ed continent, it was
thought that chemical analysis would
be the great saving agent, hence
great quantities of soil analyses were
has not studied chemistry to fully
appreciate t: e importance of this
fact. Let us illustrate. Let us say a
man robe is rot informed on general
farming principles buys a piece of
land Sn a certain moderately good
territory. He determines to raise
meat stock. Not knowing the breeds,
he picks up a lot of calves, some of
which do fairly well, others of which
never make satisfactory beef animals.
Now he has a type of animals front
which to produce meat,—he has cat-
tle; but the farmer who knows, could
go to his barn and tell him that he
might feed Ayreshire or Jersey .calves
all their lives and still not produce
good beef steers. Had he picked out
calves bearing a large percent. of
beef blood such as Shorthorns, Aber-
deen Angus, or Hereford, his results
would have been entirely different.
The point is that the lack of informa-
tion as to the essential character of
the breeds prevented him from using
the right breed, hence the odds were
against him from the very start.
Again, evelono knows that at cer-
tain times of the year merchants of
all sorts are in the habit of going
through their stockrooms and taking
stock or finding how much they have
on hand of the various articles which
they sell. Nowth
this l
s practice
rac
ilea
g
and is very largely comparable to
soil surveys which our Provincial
Soil. Departments are just getting
well under way. This gives a certain
type of valuable information, ' but
while the merchant's taking of his
annual inventory tells him what he
has o hand
n it does nott e
1 1
him a
thingabout
how many pairs of shoes
or how many hats or automobiles or
automobile parts he can sell during
the year, nor does chemical" analysis
of the soil tell anything but the total
amount of plantfood
ofcertain n lei
nds
which the crops can take out of the
soil.
(To be continued,)
The small town newspaper can be
made one of the largest factors in
the uplift .of the community, In many.
local towns the local paper is now
the vital .spark that keeps business
going, It is the organ of the social
life of the community and it keeps
friends front forgetting each other,
The local paper keeps the former'
citizen interested in the old home
town even after he has :roved to the
city. Without a live local paper the
small town laclts one of the most
necessary agents for its welfare.
Why does the local paper appeal
to the reader? The boy in France
may not worry over the future of the
German •colonie3 in Africa, or the
boundaries of Siberia, but he does
like to know that Bill Jones is paint-
ing his barn and that Tom Smith has
opened a new grocery en the corner,
The small town paper appealo to the
Citizen of the community in the same
manner as it appeals to the soldier.
It is the story of much of the life
around home and everything that
tells of home is very interesting to
all of us.
Confidence in the local paper is
necessary if, it performs the highest
service, "Well," says Johnson, "they
had a big fight at the school meeting
last week.". "Is that so," responds
Brom, "I didn't read anything ab'out
it in 'The Bugle,' and if it's not there
it didn't happen." Brown had faith
in his weekly paper. A paper that,
can hold the confidence of its readers
has a great responsib]lii;'g' to them,
as the readers will take its state-
ments without question and act ac-
cordingly. A paper that does not
enjoy .the confidence of the commun-
ity might better not be printed, even
though it is somewhat of a financial
success. The place of the paper in
the lives of the people in the com-:
muliity can be made so important!
that' the value of the influence can- l
not be computed in money.
Co-operation between the people of
the town and the publisher of the
local paper is important. There are
two sides to the proposition. First,
we have emphasized the ' obligation
that the publisher owes the people of
the town and his duty to furnish
them with the best possible service.
Next comes the duty of the people to
the publisher • of their community
paper.
• The cost of publishing papers has
increased because of the increased
price of paper, ink, labor, and in fact,
everything that goes into the manu-
facture of a paper or magazine. The
local paper depends for its income
on the business which it receives
from the community. Subscriptions
are not the biggest item in the re-
ceipts, but they must be paid. Often
a farmer with abundant funds will
neglect the payment of a newspaper
subscription until frequent duns have
been received. He may feel that it
is only a piece of paper and as long
as the editor prints a bunch of them
anyway the small subscription fee
from one subscriber will not worry
the publisher. Multiply that feeling
a few hundred times and ,it will cause
the publisher enough worry to pos-
sibly put him out of business. Pro-
bably nothing in the newspaper busi-
ness can help the editor more. than
prompt payment of subscriptions.
The merchants of a small town
soon learn to appreciate the value of
a live local paper. Their advertising
patronage is absolutely necessary to
keep the publisher ,in business. It is
a well known fact that a man must
advertise to improve his business as
soon as that business reaches a stage
where he is prepared to deliver the
right kind of goods. Honest adver-
tising in the local paper will create
confidence in the publisher of the
paper as well as improve the busi-
ness of the advertiser. The local
merchant should do all in his power
to make the advertisement clear and
free from the slightest tinge of a
l misleading statement. This is an
important factor in making the local
I paper a success. Many a customer
who has been cheated at a sale has
lost all faith in the paper in which
1 he read the advertisement. The pub-
; fisher owes ,it to himself and to the
community to refuse questionable ad-
vertising and also all copy from local
11 b
ALL OVER
HIS BODY'.
The nasty, unsightly little pimples that
break out on .the face and other parts of
the body are simply little irritating re-
minders that the blood is out of order and
requires purifying.
c Blood e .I B loo d Bitt ars has been on the
market for the past forty years, and its
reputation is unrivalled as a medicine
to drive all the impurities out of the
blood, thus eradicating the pimples and
leaving a bright, clear complexion.
Mr. T. W. Steward, 165 Avenue Road,
Toronto, Ont., writes:—"I was troubled
with pimples all over my body. I hap-
pened mention it to a friend whoad-
vised
-
enedton td
1�
se Burd
' eel. meto u Burdock Blood Bitters.
I am now using the third bottle, and . am
very pleased with the results, I have no
more irritation and feel a whole lot better
in every way. Your medicine seems to
have fixed me up in general."
Burdock Blood Bitters
is manufactured
only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont, ,See that their name
appears on the wranbor.
•
lnercliants who may billre d eregard-
ed
e'ard-ed the truth, in writing their i dv'er-
tisenaents.
The farrier is vitally interested in
the small town paper because suck.
a paper depends greatly on the pat -
nage of the farmers in the con -
unity. The paper keeps the farmer
in touch with all meetings of a busi-
ness or social nature which occur an.
the town. Thus the farmer is able
to do his part in the life of the com-
munity to a larger extent than as if
the town had no live paper to keep
him posted on local events.
The life of the community de-
mands that there be some method of
informing the people of what is go-
ing on. The local paper fills that
place and as a real factor in the de-
velopment of a town and a farming
community, it deserves the co-opera-
tion of every farmer.
A•
e e"
k.
ri�Jw. &21 .i i..•i W. .�`.f.. r1fi�r�,;; v9 r. et« Ta a P �+ti t'ntil"�
"Making two blades grow where only one grew before."
met Experl i emit With Fertilizers
Let the other fellow risk his season's crop and living -you stick to the
tried and proven winner, Gunn's"Shur-Gain," New fertilizers face you
at every turn, but remember, for a completely balanoed soil food made
by men with many years' experience with Canadian farm needs,' you
can't beat
Sh
INTERNATIONAL LESSON
IVIARCE 23.
Lesson XII. Israel Warned Against
Compromise—Josh, 23: 1 to 24: 28.
Golden Text, 1 Cor. 15: 33.
23: 1-13. The "elders" were chiefs
or leading men of tribes and clans
who had authority both in civil mat-
ters and ,in war. The "heads" were
the representative chiefs of family
groups or small kindred clans. The
"judges" were either the heads of l
clans and tribes, or were men spec-!
ially chosen for that office, as in i
Exod, 18: 21-22. The "officers" were.
police marshals, who preserved
order, had charge of processions and
made proclamations.
"He that hath fought for you." It,
is a common thing, in time of war,
for each of the opposing forces to
claim that God is with them. It ,is
better, surely, instead of such a
claim, which might seem boastful, to
seek most earnestly and humbly to
do right and so set ourselves on
God's side, for we niay be sure, what-
ever our boast or claim, that God is
for and will defend the right. The
causes of the war which Israel wag-
ed for the possession of Canaan are
largely unknown to us. It is pro-
bably
not true to say that it was an
entirely cruel and unwarranted in-,
vas,ion of territory to which -isms].
had no moral claire or right. Cer-
tainly Moses and Joshua regarded its
as the land of their fathers, promised'
them by Jehovah, their God. That!
;they were sincere and honest in that
' belief there is no doubt. If there was
an entire disregard of the rights of
the small nations which they drove
out' or dispossessed, then we must ad -1
mit that a serious wrong was done.!
We could not acquit of the charge of
barbarianism and cruelty those who
Icommitted to fire and sword a whole
city with its people, as for example,
Jericho (6: 21), and Ai (8: 25-26),
and the fact that they thought it to i
be pleasing to God does not justify
the act in our eyes. At the same time
we must remember the customs and
standards of conduct of that age, so
long before Christ, and their ways
of thinking, which were in so many
respects different from ours. Our
judgment must be reasonable and
balanced. Above all, we must recog-
nize the sincerity, the faith, and the
really high ideals which were the in-
spiration of the leaders of Israel in
this age, It is by such faith and such
ideals that progress is made possible.
"That ye turn not aside," A high
standard of righteousness was set
before them in their book of law.
From that they must not turn aside.
They will meet temptation in their
association with the Canaanites, and
especially in their acquaintance with
the seductive and sensuous rites of
Canaanite idolatry, but they must re-
main true to their own God. "Cleave
'unto the Lord your God" is Joshua's
earnest and insistent command.
"One man of you." Joshua knows
the strength of purity and fidelity.
Samson lost his strength through
drunkenness, David through lust,
Solomon through luxury. Joshua be-
lieved that a roan of Israel, true to
his God, will be strongr than a thou-
sand, and he was right.
"Snares and traps." That is ex-
actly what the intimate association
and intermarriage of Israelites with
Canaanites proved to be, The people
of Israel were ensnared in the vices
and idolatries of the Canaanites.
How often this brought trouble and
disaster upon there may be seen in
the book of Judges. See for example,
Jud. 2: 3, 11-15; 3: 7-8; 10: 6-8.
14-16. "Not one thing hath fail-
ed." Such was the splendid testi-
mony of the old warrior about. to lay
down his arms and commit his soul
to God. Not one thing hath failed
of all the good words of God. But
just as sure as the
good which is the
reward of truth and
faithfulness,so
sure is the evil that is the penaltof
falsehood and a broken covenant.
24: 1-28, In his second speech,
Joshua reminds the people that their
ancestors "served other gods," and
that Jehovah had taken Abraham
and given him this land and set him
.u ora new way of faith He recalls
is
their bondage in Egypt and their
great deliverance, Ile reviews inci-
dents of their wars and victories. In
all he shows the hand of God, His
loving are and His bounteous good-
ness. Knowing how deep -:.noted are
the tendencies to polytheism, �hei
m,
he
urges again fidelity to Jehovah, and
challenges them to makes un;:e for all
their choice between Jehovah and
a
F rtf f lz rs
Get you; requirements in at once before it is too late, Gunn's Shur -
Gain Fertilizers not only mean an early start for your crops, but a
steady stream of plant food right through the growing period, meaning
strong, full -headed, disease -resisting growths. We have a mixture to
suit your soil and crop.
Ask your dealer about Gunn's "Shur -Gain" to -day and write us for
interesting Booklet, "Bumper Crops."
Qt1NNS LIMITED WEST TORONTO, ONT.,
"the gods of the Amorites." He de-
clares his own choice for himself and
his house, and the people respond
heartily with theirs. But Joshua ?
says, "Ye cannot serve Jehovah; for
He is a holy God; He ,is a jealous
God." He means that they cannot !
dividetheir allegiance and their ser- I
vice between Him and another. They
answer, "Nay, but we will serve Je-'
hovah."
$9,195,000,000 MUNITIONS BLL.
Great Britain Has Large. Surplus
Stook to be Disposed of.
Frederick George Kellaway, Parlia-
mentary Secretary for the Ministry of
Munitions, gave some remarkable
figures in the House of Commons re-
cently regarding the work of his de-
partment, says a London despatch. On
November 11, he said, there were 33,-
000 separate contracts outstanding,
which involved a liability of £ 325,-
000,000, The expenditures of the
Ministry of Munitions during the war
totalled £1,839,000,000. There are
large surplus stocks to be disposed
of, ranging from tanks to tin tacks,
and from guns to glue. They are
scattered over three continents.
Apart from the work done by pri-
vate firms, 132 national factories were
established at an expense of £ 60,-
000,000. Others were altered at a
cost of £5,000.000. Thirty of these
factories will be retooled for storage
purposes, and others will be held for
emergencies.
The Woolwich Arsenal is still work-
ing to meet any military emergency,
Mr. Kellaway stated. The employees
there, instead of being dismissed, are
being employed at repairing motor
lorries and in the production of ar-
ticles needed by the army when it is
Placed. on a peace footing.
Metal Thimbles Soarce.
The war is responsible for a dearth
of metal thimbles. France, Italy,
Spain and Portugal are absolutely
without supplies. Before the war
Lille, Nuremberg and Vienna manu-
factured thimbles for all those coun-
tries, and there are only four manu-
facturers in England—three at Bir-
mingham and one at Redditch—but
the metal shortage has brought their
business almost to a standstill, The
trade does not consume a great weight
of metal, but -the number of thimbles
on order looks formidable enough,'
France alone is in want of 450,000
gross.
The Bank of Commerce of Canada
has more than 1,000 women in its
employement.
HEART PALPITATED
FAINT MID DIZZY SPELLS.
WOULD FALL DOWN EH FAINT.
Palpitation of the heart is very often
accompanied by weak, faint and dizzy
spells, and is generally caused by some
sudden fright, or associated with condi-
tions of a nervous breakdown, but what-
ever the cause, it is of considerable im-
portance that the heart should bestrength-
ened, and brought back to its regular
beat.
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are
just the remedy to do this for you.
Mr. Henry Fawcett, li illam's Mills,
N.B., writes:—"I have used Milburn's
Heart and Nerve Pills for heart trouble.
I was very weak and run down, my heart
would palpitate, I would take faint and
dizzy spells and sometimes I would fall
faint. in 1st ed totake your
down In a a t. art
pills and I must say they have done
wonders for me. I will always speak a
good word for your Heart and Nerve
Pills."'
Milburn's heart and Nerve Pills are
50c. a box at all dealers or mailed direct
on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
N.R. SEED POTATOES
Roses, Xiebrons, C'obblers, Delawares.
Green Mountains: and Silver Dollars.
Strict attention large or small orders,
F. L. ESTABROOKS & CO,
(Dealers in Hay, Potatoes as Produce)
SACKVILL
Le, N.B.
POTATOES
50 New 'Varieties can positively be
g-rown from one Packet of I.lybri-
:lined Potato Seeds. Every hill will
be different. A11 colors, shapes and
sizes. May be worth a gold mine.
Don't miss these rarest and most
wonderful of Seeds. Packet, with
Directions, 15c., 4 .for.00e., 10 for
$1,00, with our booklet, "Making the
Garden Pay."
33r.&B,8Yr5 IMMO WrOBE,
Dept B 360 Dorchester St. W.
MONTEB.1.i,,
SPRING RILISEIRATS
We pay the best prjee for Spring
M uskrats
Send any Furs you have. You are
assured of satisfaction in pride and
treatment.
ABBEY FUR. COlciPANY
310 St. Paul St. W., Montreal, Que.
In business for 30 years.
Reference: Bank of Hochelaga,
St. Henry.
Varicos
wnAE `7.1ExS
Iron-xlastio Bared'Stocning
S.8-11-1-1-19'41 as.. they may
he washed or boiled.
Ana-usTAELn, laced like
a legging; always fits.
coaarR corzstiABnM, made
to measure; light and
durable.
COOL. contains NO RUB-
BER.
1,500,000 SOLD
mool'TOr4XC8T..,cost $3.50
each, or two for the sane
limb, $6.50, postpaid.
'Trite for Catalogue and
Self -Measurement dank
Corliss Limb Specialty Co.
514 New Birks Bldg.
Montreal, P.C.a
e.
SPRING
In Big Demand
Highest Prices
Assured by
Sending to
Lrer,
Brai8r
84 Company
84 FRONT ST. EAST
TORONTO
Established 1907
Send a Trial Lot
Results Will Please You
radc.�oA?im. mO..- anzarr giessan ens..
CripSaver
Top--ress Fall Wheat.
With Fertilizers
Frosts and thaws have done con-
siderable damage to Fall Wheat by
heaving the soil.
Spring top -dressing is eaten the
life-saver.
•.
Increases
from
Top -dress nd with
Fertilizers
Increase in yields Ohio Experi-
ment Station for a period of 23
years was 13.2 bushels per acre.
Ontario Agricultural Col'iege
reports= increased 8,3 bushels
per acre.
Make ew'e of your grass 'Melt and In-
crease your tritest yield this spring by
feeding the
weak Plcnte.
T
IT PAT'S TO r.. ,Trrrzl
'Write for Pamphlet No. 1--"Peedin;; for
rood .
The r semi Crop
LThe Soil A
Improvement
Bureau rea
u
11o0t1he nxP" e-.rexr0{:NTD
'