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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-8-7, Page 31.6•." -.^•••••*, HAD DYSENTERY Was So Weak She Had To Go To Bed, Mrs Charles Buchanan, West Monk- -ton, Ont,„ writes:—"I took Dr Fowler's .Extract of Wild Strawberry when I had dyaentery •so bed I passed nothing bu ,F t 471,•• • • eetethe ...•:-.y.1(0.11r._...PI4ce in Repatriation• All 'Canada's feerifiee in Need and eervice will .have been in vain if out a the turmoil men have not come to a realization of the fact that We are every one his brother's keeper. s The old selfish attitude of "let George do it" must find no place lxi this new erg of reconstruction, says a writer in Canadian Municipal Journal. There is a task for every hand to do; a vision of work for each to catch, and your part in Repatria- then as an individual only commences where the plans of the Government leseve off. Profits in TurlteYs. soon, as possible after harvest, eon - For those ' who are favorably lo- serving the moisture and making eated for raising turkeys, a more plowing easier. This early disking profitable side line can hardly be also starts the growth of volunteer blood and water. I got medicine from found. Given plenty of range, where wheat, and tends to have the fly em - our doctor, but it failed to help me. A the turkey can find grasshoppers and urge early, or it exposes the "flax - friend of mine dropped into see me one other insects, green vegetation and seeds" bo unusual conditions which are afternoon, I was so weak I was in bed, seeds of weeds and grasses, acorns. fatal to a great many of than, She told me what Dr. Fowler s /lad and na te ee aerie uskins, ie cos Alone for likr little boy, and she went home and got the bottle she always kept. of raising them as very small and the deliegogin her medicine chest, and believe me profit very large. four doses helped me so I could get up Grain, stock and general farms are And do my work. I took two more especially adapted to turkey raising, doses and I was as normal as I should be. and it is on such farms that most of I 'Would not be without it now if it were five dollars a bottle. My husband has used it since I did, for dianigna ande he got splendid results. You nuty publish this .f you wish, as it may lead some other sufferer to a cure." Dr. Fowler's Extraet of Wild Straw - terry for the past 7e years has had phenomenal success in all cases of diarrhoea, dysentery, cramps, colic, chole era morbus, cholera infantum, summer emplane, and bowel complaints of old and young. If you want to be on the safe side, if .you don't want to Aixperixnent or take - chances as to results, refuse any and every bowel esomplaint compound that is ,offered you and insist on the old reliable "Dr. Fowler's." 'Price 35c. a bottle :at all dealers. :Put up enaly by The T: Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.. • All ducklings which are to go to 'market should be fattened and killed as soon as possible before they- eat The ground should be plowed to a depth of at least six inclies„ and all the stubble and volunteer wheat buried under at least three inches of soil, This will bury practically all the flies, so that it will be impossible for them the turkeys are found, Little has ever to reach the surface. If the plowing been done in the way of raising them is done about three or four weeks in confinement, and has resulted in after the disking, it gives the volun- failure where tried, Plenty of range teer wheat and 'Weeds a chance to start their growth and they are then more easily controlled. After plowing, the ground should be worked until it becomes a good seed bed. All the time, however, de- struction of the volunteer wheat should be kept in mind. If ground upon which wheat has been grown is left to be planted to spring crops the following year, ,it is of vital import- ance that the flies be destroyed in these fields. Fields of this character aim of nbe-breeder' to have a flock of should be plowed or listed late in the pure-bred turkeys even though they summer before" the near -by wheat is are sold at regular market prices. The seeded. If these implanted fields are anale at the head of the flock should by left undisturbed, the flies will emerge all means be a pure-bred of the best from the stubble in the spring before weather conditions are such as will permit plowing, and migrate to 'the and by constantly selecting the best late -sown fields of wheat which were females of a similar type and mating free from infestation in the fall. This these with o, pure-bred male, one can is one of the reasons why some late. soo'n have a flock of uniformly large, planted wheat fields which were not early -maturing, strong -boned, long infested last fall have been dantagee corning. • The people saw a vision dur- and deep -bodied turkeys of the same by the Hessian fly this spring ling the war' and that vision is a Can - The second factor in contrening ada made fit for the returning urea, is essential to success. In selecting turkeys for breeding, the modit important factors to be con- sidered are vigor, size, shape, bone, early maturity and color of Ohmage. The body should be deep and wide, the hack broad and the breast round and full. The head should be of good size, and of a clean, healthy appearance. . A strong, well -made skeleton is shown by thick, sturdy shanks; and straight, strong toes. it should be the type obtainable. The male is one-half of the flock, 'Organizations, churches, manici- panties, employers and individuals, all \working towards the one end wee the ideal. of the Repatriation Com- mittee, which has been steadily urged upon platforms end through the spirit of'the pres,shgluring the past twelve months. From end to end oE Canada the gos- pel of Repatriation has been preathed, and it is now up to the man in the street to go out and live up to the ideal. As far as the Government is concerned its scheme of Repatriation deals with the return of our fighting men to civilian life, medical care, pen- sions, vocational training, the estab- lishment of employment offices, and refitting the returning. man in every way after his demobilization, from pensions and artificial limbs to re- education, establishing his home, and finally finding him a job. Over and above these tasks there are many others, which can only be carried on through the coseperation, good will,,end energy of the individual -gethe employer, the municipality, the churches', and all org-anizations deal- ing with human factors. Home is the central idea of Repa- neaten. The boys are coming home. Home is being prepared for their .. too much feed. None that Are less! • Fifteen turkey hens ems safely be the fly consists in delaying the plant- ed of. than eight weeks old should. be dispos-I mated to one vigorous torn. If 25 or 30 henihere kept, two toms should be -oeity big of the wheat until the .vast maj- of the , flies have emerged and Even on the beet of range, growing i usedeorie running with them at a time, laid their eggs. ' , turkeys should have one good feed of say- for one day,. while the, other is • , corn each 'day, wheat or oats and pre- confined, and, the other the 'next day. Separator \Prevents Waste. terably all three, either mixed or fed The toms will fight during the meting one a certain day, another on. the next ,seeson., In these days of high-priced butter - !lay, and so on. • 'Turkey hens Nike nothing, better fat no fanner can afford to feed it nat Although growing. eosling's Will than to hide their nest half a Mile to the hogs. A cream separatmeia *so usually pickup enough about thefarm from the farm buildings, usually in a much more thorough than any other to sustain life, they will not grew as patch of grass or. weeds. To locate system of securing cream that, with well and therefore will not he 'as.pro- fiteble' as they would be if fed, each day, one good feed of mash or grain. Be sure to -make dull use of all the 'table 'and' kitchen Waste, lawn trim- -milsgs,, waste vegetables, fruies and - other -foods, by feeding them to the fowls and chicks and turning them into high-priced poultry meale, and eggs'. ' Do not allow growing. chicks to crowd in coops, . Be sure that every sleeping place is sufficiently ,ventilat- ^ these nests often proves a long and a herd of four cows or more, it soon 1 tedious ' task, the better method being pays for itself.. The system of letting to follow each hen as it separates from i cream rise in crocks and then skim- thesfleek ands. starte towards her nest, ming it off is the most wasteful of all. not, letinteher lemow she is followed. . But the fact that you have a sepa- A still -easier and quicker method than rater is no proof that you are not this would be to confine the hens early, feedingbutterfat to the hogs. I have some morning .s.Oon ,a, fter they have viaited *airy farms where the sopa- come down from kook, and let them rater 'was not even screwed to the out late in -the afterntidn. Those -that toot. On a cold day -I saw -one owner are laying will, then make for their move his separator nearer to the nests, that they may hide their eggs stoVe, while this same machine has with the othete, he . h often been carried to a -place near. a ed, so that it does not get -too warm If many turkeys axe kept, the use window on a sultry day. This ma - at night, for if the growing' stock is of a breeding pen will be found a chine has never done 'good work; a separator must always stand firm.. overheated, it makes less piofltable great convenience. This pen should \ growth and never is as strong when cover a sufficient area, say an acre A solid foundation and placing the mature. for fifteen fowls, which would give separator so that the bowl is perfectly .....--.. -them room for exercise, A hog -tight level are the two essentials. A con- crete foundation is best, with one of Keeping Quality of Silage; wire ferscerthree feet high, will hold heavy planks a second choice. We most turkeys,' and if any persist in "How long can silage • be .kept'?" flying out, the flight feathers of one made the foundation for our separator by pouring concrete into a frame four asks a dairyman who wishes .particu- wing should be clipped. Nests should inches deep and somewhat bigger in larly to -know whether it will remain be scattered about the pen—those in good condition over the summer which turkey hens take to Most read- the other dimensions than the base if -the silo is not opened. fly being barrels turned en their sides of the separater. Silage in a geed silo -will keep al- and nests shaped in them with straw. ...e While the concrete was still slushy most indefinitely. Like canned goodse. Turkey hens, chielten hens and in- we sunk two 2x4 timbers down to a it will keep for years in practically as cubators are commonly used to hatch. level with the 'concrete. When the good condition as when put up. But During the early part of the laying! mixture was thoroughly hard the lug-. in ordinary farming practice, where season it often happens that one has ' of the separator were fastened to the timbers with wood screws. There is no wobble to a machine on such a base. " by attempting to keep sttage too long. be incubated before any of the turkey there is stock to feed, little is gained! on hand a member of eggs that should - Better feed it the 'winter after it is hens are through laying their first produced and grow more the follow- litter and become broody. , A foundation which permits a ma- in summer. But if you are putting In sugh case ande also when it is chine to wobble or vibrate excessively up silage with the intention of keep-, desired that the turkey hens lay more, makes the separator harder to operate, lag it two or three years against- a, than one litter some of the eggs may! it wears out sooner, and all the time poesible shortage of feed, first make, be incubated under chickens or in the' it is doing poor work. Vibration a very careful inepection of the silo,' incubator. causes a portion of the skim milk and being sure that all the walls and doors casings are air -tight, end then pack the silage especially well. e " • Knowiedee. In careless youth- laughed at Death Nor felt the pressure of the strife; I wolked the world as one who saith, "By. living all,' may one learn Life." -dot But on ,the day my failing breath Shellmark tae ending of the strife; Then I will close my dyes in Death That I may learn at last of Lite. Suffered from About a week before the poults are. cream to mix again and a considerable due to, hitch, turkey hens enough amount of butterfat is lost in the skim should be allowed to Eat to take all, milk, , ' the poults hatched. They can be: Careful oiling is aitother thing not given a few eggs from the incubator , to overlook in a machine that operates or from under the chicken hens, and at as high speed as a separator. About allowed to hatch the poults themselves, i every ten days we 'put kerosene or at night a newly hatched poult can' through our machine to cut the grease, be slipped under each turkey hen thee, using kerosene while separating, so is to be given a brood of poults, and , the machine .will be going .at full by morning she will be glad to 'dem! speed. We also are particular to see them. . i that no oil opening is obstructed. I Lice are a comnion annoyance to , know of one machine that was injured eetting hens, and are one of the Worse, through this neglect. But the great - enemies of young poults. To preeent est and most common canse of lose in their getting a foothold, dust the e opeis.teng trearri separators turng h n . , thoroughly with some good lice powds in g them too slow. • .stip should be kept clean and if the eggs most makes of separators slow turn- . FOR TWO YEARS. . With lukewarm , water. • . noticed also th.at thorough cleaning fra er before she is pladed on the nest,! One of the little • metrumente that and Zence a week thereafter' until she indicates the speed of a separator is is setting'. The nesting material' a very usefill thing to have, for in become dirty they should be waehed mg means a loss .of butterfat. I have If the truth were only known you would find that over one-half of the ills of life are caused by allowing the bowels to 'get into' a constipated con- dition, When the bowels become con- stipated the stomach gets out of order, the liver does not work properly and then follewe the violent, sick headaches, the sourness of the stomach, belching of wind, heartburn, water brash, biliousness, etc. Keep your bawds regular by using Milburn's Lexa-Liver Pills. Mr. A. Roder, Hattiegs St. E., Van- couver: B.C., writes: --"I desire to ex- press my thanks for what Milburn's Lam -Liver' Pills have done for me. had been suffering front constirettion for two years, also had, a bad cough and headaches, I. tried all sorts of cures and remedies, but got no relief until I was advised to try your pills, I got, great relief after the first few doses." Price 25e. a vial st all dealers or mailed dilate, on reveipt, of price by The Milbere. Co.. pinned; Toroztc4 Ont If th is arm and dr tWiee a day is considered unnecessary e weatherw no shelter is required, as the poults by sonic people, whet are satiefied with do better in the open. Should it be one washing and one flushing out. But rainy, however, they need to be pro- aside from sEtnitary reasons which in tected, for nothing is more heitridous themselves are important, our .experi- than for them to become wet and moot station has demonstrated that Fighting Hessian Flies, more fat is lost when. the. machine is washed only once a day. Who would think of letting the milk pails stand Hessian flies come from two sources overnight without washing? Wouldn't ---the stabbla of the 'previous trop, they be harder te wash next morning? and volunteer wheat. To control the danger, a concerted fight must be made by all wheat growers. If only a few 'clean up, their crops will be damaged 'from HesSiaii 4lles which have developed in the neighboring fields, .The person who , Is bothered with Hessian fly thin year must start :immediately after harvest to prim- etee method of control which have been found practical and effeceivey Occasionally we have ellowed mire to stand overnight, btit it is ao much more difficult the next morning that We feel it is time lost. We always 'separate right after milk- ing while the milk is still warm, : it gets cold it is best to waren it befeee separating, Ete warm milk skims more closely then .cold When the separator is installed on 'a eolid foundation, kept Well oiled, keel, and clean, it puts The stubble should be -thsked Money in the owner's pocket. who have achieved such resplendent glory et the front for their country and . themselves. Repatriation is an attempt to make. tangible that vision. It asks whether or not Canada is ready to receive the retorning men. Is Canada able to give them the opportunities for em- ployment • commensurate with their services? Is Canada organized to make use of the energies, the courage and the ambitions of the returning men? Have the returning men grown too big for Canada, as she was, and is Canada to -day capable of measur- ing up to their needs and their ideals? , The men who went over the top faced a thousand deaths and in exal- tation overcame death by the mere fact of seeing beyond it. Death has uo tears for them. But it may be that they are more fearful of the monotony. of the task of living. Thus, ',repatriation . suggests a house-cleaning on the part of Canada, against the home -coming of the re- turning men. ' Canada has to take tock- of her possessions and her equipment in the light of what will be required of Canada by them. Old things have ped away Anci, 4)eleeld, all things are become neve. Thie. is What has come to posse in Can- ada. The dawn of a new era, has come, Canada cannot go back to the old conditions, if she would, and she ought not, if she could, Definite 'events mark the culmina- tion a every struggle for zome part tieular goal in the world's journey t� prop: r Immediately fol- lowing the event comes the necessity for stabilization, in order that the goal attained be not lost. Canada meet not lose the opportunity of ob- taining fin eneceecling generations working Rad living conditions which will guarantee proper development for the people. I The scientific „placement of men in positions, the right man in the eight job; the improvemeat of living cOndi- tions by establishing a standard of working mens houses; the care of those disabled by the war, which will make them self-supporting; the eel- ployers' realization of their true re- lation to their employees; more wis- dom in education; a greater brother- hood in our social reactions. All these things are rendered possible because the war has "set a tide running in the hearts of men," which is without parallel in history. These things are being done and the vision seen during the war will 'not be forgotten, and the anguish, the pain, and the death will bear 'fruit in the mitigation of sorrow, because they have not been in vain. Repatriation is more than trans- portation. It includes the establish- ment in civil life of all returning men who have sacrificed their positions to go to the front. It puts upon the Government and the citizens of Can- ada the necessity of ensuring adequate opportunities for all returning men to do better than to take up life where they left it off. Repatriation is a social and industrial task, which will never be solved until the returning men feel that the opportunities for advancement which were within their grasp when they went to the front are returned to them. When it can be said that no citizen who took up arms lost ground in the struggle for existence; that no widow or child of a fallen soldier has been bereft of the opportunity to live in comfort, and to obtain the education that would have been certain but for the sacrifice of a soldier's -life; when positions of responsibility th.roughout Canada are as free to the returning men as to those who did not go over- seas, then Repatriation win have been accomplished. Repatinaehm. is the. biggeit task Canada ever undertook!, It is not a thing for ,an hour, but -it is forever. It is a national etock-taking. —The Government has prepared the ma- chinery to receive the returning men and fit them back to civil life, but the persistent co-operation of the people of Canada ,.necessary if Repatriatten is to baa success. Mr. Citizen, what are you doing about it? by their .decision„, but mindful of the directing agency of the Spirit of God and the immediate 'duty, the four friends began their work in Philippi. On week days they labored, earning their daily bread, and on the Sabbath they joined the company of Jews INTERNATIONAL LESSON whose open-air place of meeting was AUGUST 10 by the river. Here Lydia heard of . Jesus Christ and believed, .and by bap- tism she and. her household -were ad- mitted to the Christian .Community, which beginning at Jerusalem was. thus extending itself throughout the world. Lydia was evidently . a person of some importance. Her Original home was at Thyatiea, north of Ephesus, in Asia, and she was probably a Jenvess. The word spoken by the apostles wsis, not the only agency in her conversion. The Lord Himself in His Spirit was working with His servants. Of Lydia it is said, "Whose heart tha Lord • opened." Her faith was openly: con- fessed in 'baptism, and the first -fruits of her changed life were seen in the ready and cordial hospitality which she extended. to Paul and his •compan- hms. The conversion of this one wo- man must have had an immediate in- fluence untie many others. A church was founded which endured persecu- tion and continued faithful for many Winning Others to Chrieb—.Acts 16: 9-15; drones 5: 19, 20. Golden Text, Acts 1: 8. Acts 16: 9-15: The Winning of One. Paul was upon hes second great mis- sionary jurney. Silas was with him, and together they had vieited the Churches in Asia Minor which had been established by him and Barnabas a year or two before. Paul had de- sired to preach the Gospel in other parts of that country, but there had been Sndications of Providence, which he could not ignore, which directed his steps to Trees on the Aegean Sea, a few miles south of the entrance to the Dardanelles and the peninsula of Gallipoli. At Lystra he had found Timothy, a convert of his first mission to that city, and had brought him along, and the three travelers were joined at Trees by Luke, the author of the gospel which bears his name and. of the Book of Acta. The en- trance of Luke into the little company is marked here by the. sudden intro- duction of the pronoun "we," (vs. 10-18). • No doubt there had been much con- versation and prayer together as to the direction winch they should now proceed. The vfilon. which. "appeared to Paul in the eight" determined the matter. They went over 'the sea to Macedonia, and thus for the first time carried the Gospel into Europe. This little incident, apparently in Itaelf so 'Small, became one of the.great turn- ing -points of history. "Lydia, a seller of perple," is the first recorded con- vert to the Christian faith on Eur - (moan soil, first of the vast multitude which in the 'centuries keine have be- lieved and suffered and labored- for the maintainlige of that faith and the spreading of it to the .ends of the earth, Poe it was 'hero determined that the Christian world for two thous- and years should be not Aeratic but European, and, as consedience, Am- erican, Unconscious, no doubt, of the vest - extent and -significariee of the move- ments which were tothe set On Soot 6 years, whose loyal and disintereeted affectihn was proved to Paul again and again in his hours of need (Phil. 4: 1040), May we not eappoee that •Lealia here'elf was one O these whose thoughtful affection and care for him Paul eneales of inlets letter which he wrote them from a Roman prison, who had sent a messenger there with gifts for him? (Phil, 2: 25). See what Paul says of them also in Phil. 1: 8-1.1. It was a great thing indeed to be the means of saving a group of people of whom snail words could be written. James 5: 19, 20, A Great Achieve- ment. The turning of a - single soul from sin to righteousness is ,indeed great achievement. It is like the taking ef a new city for the Redeem- er's kingdom. It means a defeat for the forces of evil. It means victory, accession of strength, recovery of that which had been lost, an increase of lemma resourcei, encouragement for all who do well. It means to -"save a soul from death" arid "hide a multitude of sins." And it means "joy in heaven." The glory of -heaven itself is greater, and its joy is in- creased. There is me finer or richer happi- ness on earth than that of winning another to a knowledge of the salva- tion that ie in Christ. And this is the truest worship, to love, to restore, and to bless. • eameameaeaaaem. 5.11wirERED 5 YEARS USN ACROSS KIDNEYS Was So Bad ilad To Go To Bed. Women are the greatest sufferers from wes,k, sore, lame and aching -backs, owing to the continual stooping, bending and lifting so necessary to perform their household duties. On the first sign of any weakness of the back Dome's Kidney Pills should be taken, and thus. prevent serious kidney troubles which are sure to follow if the bad back is neglected. Miss Gladys M. Buckler, Tatama- gauche, N.S., writesndul feel it my duty to let you know what Dean's Kidney Pills have done for me. I suffered 'for years with a sore back. I. was so cad I had to take to my bed sometimes with the pain across my kidneys. went, to two different doe - tors; they teeeted me, but I got very little relief. I saw Dean's Kidney Pills advertised for sore back, so scot for two boxes, and before I had the first one taken I felt a change. I cannot reeommend your medicine enough." Doan' s Kidney Pills are 60 cents 'a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto. Ont. WITH HEART TreouBLE. Through one cause or other a large ma- lority of people are troubled with some form of heart trouble, but do not know it. When the heart becomes affected there ensues a feeling of a choking sensation, the breatn becomes so short it is hard to breathe and you feel as if you were smethering, you become weak and dizzy, the heart palpitates, -flambe and heate irregularly. On the first sign of the heart be- coming weakened you will find that a few boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will strengthen and invigorate it so that it beats streee and regular, and the lctst vitality is replaced by vigor and energy. , Mr. Stephen Crowe., East Clifford, N.S.'writes:—"I suffered for five years with heart trouble. I could hardly walk to the barn without resting I used to get so short of breath. The doctors could not help me. My wife told me about `Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. I got a box and felt better; three boxes made me quite well. I am now helping my son work the farm; and can truth. - fully say I feel like a different man. I. can highly recommend your pals to any one who has a weak heart," Price 50e. a box at all dealers'or direct on receipt of price by The T. Milbura. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. 41•11.1•••••111, iirveSt Yalu! ivxonoy • .51/2% DElitiVIT.RES Interest' payable half yeariete The (Treat West i'ertninent Loan Company Toronto Office 20 Mae St West Seedat Lambs ltept for breeding etock should be wearied when from four to five months of age. The lambs intend- ed for market, on the other hand, should attain marketable weights be- fore they are five months of age and ehoeld be weanedeet the time they are sold. Lambs of weaning time should be kept for four or five days at least on the old pasture as they 'do not fret as much as ',in a strange place, The ewes should be eetrovecl to another pasture as far away as possible from the lambs. If the feed on this pasture be a little" scant, so much the better, for this will help cheek the milk flow. The ewes and lambs should not be turned in together again, for a large amount of milk from a ewe that has notebeen suckled for two or three days is liable to cause digestive disturbances in the lamb. At weaning time the ability of a ewe to produce a good lamb is often ruined because the necessary care is mit taken to see that she is dried off properly. A little care at this time will be well repaid. Two or three days after the separation the ewes should be milked out. All of the milk need not be drawn from the udder, but enough should be taken to leave the udder soft and pliable. Mark with colored chalk ewes needing no further attention. In about three days the ewes should be milked out again and the drys marked. Further attention should be given four or five days later to those not dry. No efforts should be spared to maintain every breeding animal in a sound and useful condi- tion. Chicks and fowls in confinement during the hot weather must have lots of green food and meat or milk, or both. If they are on free range they can obtain much of their meat food in the form of bugs and worms and can add to their variety of grain the vari- ous vegetable growths that they ob- tain by foraging. This is equally true of the fowls. .6.11=C2.211.1V.IS.Zta .o the Tithe To prepare your stock for the Toronto Fat Rod Show To be held at. UNION STOCK YARDS HER 11th and 12th • Early preparation produces the prize winners. Premium List, which will be ready for "distribtitien in three weeks, carries more classes than ever before. •ZgM6.=VarM'=CZ.... 1.[MIZSIZ.MIVE.O.1.1.11.1 .4,339.1t21159.1131MER. CireLnnarrn TV00 aiVd.411. • •• "• 11,-;4\ 4.,•• • • • P 72.--"-**. o'.::s-T•.% c. “nzaltiug Ti -,r0 'Blades Grow 'Where Only one CirOW 'Before,, A,.. .iank (11' kmp acre, Cm It azr Fail Wheat l‘Z'o ev,•r, Ontario grows shows better profits with proper fertilizing than Fall Wheat Returns 12 to $0 extra bushels per acre—with the same labor coat, remember—are proven over and o;ser again. Sawn with the seed, V'erlillzer starts the 'plant- off with N igorous growth, gives strong, numerous rootlets that shake off .the heaving and root -snapping in- finemc.s of 'frost, ancl supplies the rich, balanced nourishment needed for hoayy crop..' • • "Sh w -Gain" Fertilizers Are compounded by experts who know from ac- tual field experience what Ontario farms need. They are concentrated, finely gratkal, quickly assimi- lated by the soil. They 0,-1,ve nitrogen, the stalk-franieri phosphoric acid, the plant rinener and root invigorator, and potash for strength and dise`ase 'resistance. Forty years of •-•' success, SEEDING TIME IS NEAR GET YOUR SUPPLY NOW This advertise/11:ot will be Wastif we don't impress you with the danger of delay in ordni 'ng, risking shipping delays, lasbatinute rush and scarcity of materal; Don't let the othe, ifellow heal you out. Get early shipping discounts. Get your “fillittt-Gain" noW, Se or phone your dealer to -day, S LIMITED WEST TORONTO lindleentAINVOIRIP1010.00.014.0...