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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-8-28, Page 3s Siomach Newer r S wf tired Worse There la no other kind of bowel trouble •+,hat comes on one so quickly' and mite iso little warning as an attack of erarrrtis in the stomaelr: 'Tinge alai very pain ul, and ,when you areseized in this way, y. and' are alt doubled up, you want fw remedy you are.., Fare wil• gave you relief; brie the it quickly too. • lou dont want some untried medicine that might only help vou. You want L}r. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. Everyone who has ever used it !snows that. as. dose or two will give instant relief. • Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry ie 'one of those remedies that should be .in every house, as no one kndws lust wh.cn stomp member of the family may be 'attacked with diarrhoea, dysentery, cholera, cramps colic or some other bowel complaint. Mee, 3. •E. Clerk, Dorian Station, Ont., w-rites:—'While visiting my mother in town, 1 was taken very amok with cramps in my starmich. 1 don't think I ever suffered worse pains. 1 sent and got a bottle of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild ,Strawberry, and in a couple of hours I was. all r'ght again, and able to ride eight milts home in the, evening. I cant, praise your wonderful medicine a, ,enough.,' Dr. Veneer's .retract of Wild Straw- berry liar, "t Nen on the market for the past 74 yearn. Don't experiment with •new and un'e.ed remedies, Recuse sub- stitutes, Th v may be daegerone. Price 35e. at all dealers. Put ur only by The T Milburn Co. Limited, Toronto. tent .A Ileal Little Neighbor. Michael was poor and old. Edith first saw him one Sunday when he babbled up the church steps and sat, aa,, the last pew to see the flowers and Alfa children on Children's Day. Then sae saw him when father, hired hire to mow the grass in front of her home.4 Micheal loved flowers and trees ai�fidi grass. Once he had oaken care of the flowers in a rich man's garden. But that was long ago; now the Isiah man! was dead, the garden was gone, and Michael was old and poor. lie told Edith many stories about his happy days of long zgo: "Miss Edith, I wish I could see my' daftedils once more. They leeked like a river of gold," and Michael rubbed,' his old coat sleeve over his eyes. • When winter came, there was no 1 mare grass to mow. Michael's piece in the church empty; he was ill. How sorry Edith was! But just be- ing sorry wasn't enough to give too Michael; Eolith knew that. She said to herself: "Pll tell other people, and they'll be sorry, too. I'm going, to shake all the money out of my bank." Some other people shook money out of their banks also, when Eolith told Michael's story. The grown-up people opened their pocketbooks. When Edith counted her own bank money and the gifts that others had given,, her face shone with surprise and gladness. Then a happy thought came to her, 'because happy thoughts are apt to come to diose who• are busy t doing good thing "Mother, may I buy a .pot of flow- ers? And father, miry I change the money into two gold pieces and hide them in the leaves'?" Mother and father helped, for it was such a splendid plan, The flow - ms were bought at the florist's, and the money was changed at the bank. The florist heard the story, and gave the prettiest bloscorns in his store. • The Canker heard th.story, incl gave the brightest gold coins he could Tinel., New tins should be set over the ,ire with boiling water in them before t,' ; od is pat into them. ,• 'To keep drawstrings from pulling out of garments sew a small brass embroidery ring to each end and but- tonhole it. Flour must be ke'p't in a perfectly err place. If it is allowed to become damp, heavy cakes and bread are the result. Keep An Aceor: nt of 'ora Cro ). No farmer is in a pos tion to ever also justice toward his business unless, he keeps a recon, of its details, He must keep mount of each crop that; he raises, and with his: various fields as well. The latter is even of more importance than the former, for an; account with certain fields for two ori three consecutive years will. reveal; that land's deiei.ency and suggest its improver eat A ,great deal of money can be wast -1 ed by growing crops en soil not adapt- ed' to them. Where one crop is grown upon a field having several different soils, the tract should be roughly plot-; ted as to soil, or a just estimate can- not be made. • No busy farmer has time for any, elaborate system of account -keeping,! but anyone cern use an ordinary jour -i nal and keep it in this way: At the top of the page write the, name of the crop, the year, and its i location. As each expense item, such as seed, soil• preparation, fertilizer', and its application, planting, cultivad tion, harvesting, etc., occurs, it is written in the journal page opposite the elate upon which the operation! occurs. The hours speer in working the crop are charged according to the rate the farmer is paying for labor. Package, packing, and selling expense must also be entered against it. Credited to the crop are the returns from the sales and an estimate of fertility value of the root and crop remail. The last-mentioned item is difficult to estimate, because it cannot be weighed or measured in most cases. There may yet exist much of the applied- fertilizers or manures which. the season's crop has not used. This is also difficult to estimate. These fer- tilizing values cannot be credited in terms of dollars .and cents, but since ,fan, and each animal separated and the full cost is charged against the kept separate on .a different pasture crop this may be mentioned as an unknown variable credit value in the case of all, crops known not to be ex- hausting. On the other hand, every crop grown removes some of the original soil fertility which has been made available during its life by its own action upon the soil, Again we are dealing with values we cannot ascer- tain, and we have to mention ,it on the debit side as an unknown variable debit value. Now as to the account with soil plots: In another part of the same . "A pound of good dairy butter, journal, 'or in another journal, if the please," said the 'customer. book is small and the farm Iarge and "Dow's is fifty cents, Denman's crops numerous, choose a page for sixty," the storekeeper . explained each plot. Write the name or descrip- briskly. "Which'll you have—Den- tion of the plot at the top of the page. man's?" In the date column write the year, "No," the customer's tone was. con - then on a line by itself the crops for, elusive. "We hacl a pound cif Den - that year and each item_ of cost for man's the other night. Worst butter the year, such as tillage, fertilizing, I ever tasted!" seed, etc., placing, the amounts in the "How did .you know it was Den - debit column. Then should follow the man's? Mrs. Denman doesn't paint and "feeders,'avieleh have come through stockyards, Anthrax not only attacks cattle of all ages. but rapidly spreads to sheep and swine.. Horses may acquire it from the bite of 'an .insect. People take it in the form of malignant pustule from in- fection of a wound, or the bite of an insect, and the attack tends to prove fatal. In anthrax of cattle the spleen is greatly engorged with black ,tar-lilee blood and the blood does not coagulate. In blackleg the blood coagulates, the spleen is practically normal after death and blood does- not flow from the natural orifices of the body, but it does so in anthrax. In anthrav the swellings show a gelatinous fluid when opened, 'while those of blackleg crackle when handled, as gas is present under the skin, and there -is a `stxrong smell from the latter swellings when opened. In hemorrhagic -septicemia bloody froth may run from the nostrils and Mouth, and blood may be present in the passe:tea before .death. After, death, red or bloody spots are found upon the serous membranes lining the chest and abdominal cavities, the cav- ities of the heartand under the cov- ering of the heart and kidney's. Sim- ilar spots (small) may be seen upon the membranes lining the nostrils and eyelids, while 'large and small bloody spots or patches are seen upon the carcass after removal of the hide. Absolute certainty in diagnosis ,is only possible by microscopic examina- tion ands testing with laboratory ani- mals, but the experienced veterinarian usually can differentiate fairly well l between the three diseases in question. When hemorrhagic septicemia is de- finitely diagnosed the preventive bio- logical agent should be hypodermatic- ally applied at once. by the veterinar- than the one where the disease oc- curred, or in clean, well -ventilated stables. Each rnimal should be given drinking water from its own marked pail, By such isolation and treatment the spread of the disease may be stop- ped; otyherwise, it would be likely to quickly kill every exposed animal. a' Do You Brand Your _Butter? of sale, prices being entered m the credit column clear of all selling expense. The balance, of lose or gain should be stated below this. The plot records of each successive year should follow. In this way the fat mer can know at a glance whether a certain soil FROM TES TOWN - TO Tt-1 f. TORONTO BY E IMJTION Tim A 13 C Automobile Road Guide of 90 pages, 75 Sectional Maps, Key Map, Legend and complete Index. All Roads clearly shown. Improved County Roads in Meavy Iced blues. If your dealer can't supply you we will mail one direct for $LOO. AUTO GUIDE COMPANY 82 King St, East - p Toronto sheaves, cows, initials, and the like, molded in the butter .itself, a distinc- tive farm ir':tnd which no dealer's chieancery can remove,' Many butter- makers in district where the brick is the universal butter form do not use; printed butter wrappers, Some others dot not use either stamp or printed wrapper, but simply 'trite the name• on a pieoe of paper and 'place ,it be- neath the 'wrapper. Such slips, of course, can be easily lost or removed. When a stamp and pad are used the imprint is often smutted out and un- decipherable when it reaches the eon - sumer "k The farm making poor dairy butter has no particular ground for adver- tising it. There are a good many in this class, so many, ,in fact, that ex- cellent buttermnakers in self-protec- tion must brand their butter unless they deliver it to consumers in person. The printed' wrapper is ordinarily the best protection. The cost of the print- ing is negligible; the protection is complete; the advertisement of great value. The home buttermaker whose market product sells at a premium on Mothers and daughters of all agate aro cordially invited to wr to to this department: initials. only will be published with each queston and is answer as a means ot'icientification, hut full name and address must be given in smell letter. Write on one side of paper only. Anewer's will be mailed direct if stamped and addressed envelope Is enclosed. Address all correspondence for this department to Mrs, Helen LaW, 2" Woodbine Ave., Toronto, Lucille: --There does seem to lie! much mystery about making intro- ductions, does there not? When a girl introduces you to a girl friend, just say, "I am very glad to meet; you." Say the same thing to e boy '?whom -you are meeting the first time, Your friend who did not introduce you to the young man who cause t,p' to talk to her while you were stem-� ing by, was either rude or knew no better. Even if she did not know l you very well and knew the young Trials much better, it was her place to introduce you. There are many peo- ple in the world, who neglect the op- . po`rtunity to make people known to each other, whether because they are not sure of the propriety of the thing, or whether they are not naturally' gracious and kindly, I do not know. It is far better to err on the side of ,introducing people too freely than on the side of withholding the few'words that may be the seed of a very happy friendship A. B. Ch—You write me that you want to go to the city to train as a nursetand that your very best girl the local market has something to point to with pride. 'Such a reputa- tion, attained only with great pains, can be destroyed in a month by a dis- honest dealer unless the producer safeguards it. To Drain Your Land. " Money spent now in properly drain- ing wet farm lands will serve the best interest of our country, and will pay a high rate of interest, often as high as 100 per cent. There is scarcely a farm in Canada where some drainage is not needed to make the soil pro- duce the ma inium crpps possible with ordinary tillage. There are millions of acres where good. drainage would double the annual food production. There are other mil- lions of acres which lie wholly useless for, the want of proper drainage. In • ninny sections the early Autumn' frosts last year ruined the_corn crop on poorly drained fields, but only, it per way, Friends must learn this tremendous lesson: Each- individual must live out and work out her own problems for herself, Friendship does not mean and cannot mean an identi- cal life path. Gertrude:—You should not accept presents of jewellery from this man unless you are engaged to him; L, C. K.: --I would like to name my farm. Can you help me find an ap- propriate name? I keep about fifteen head of cattle and sell milk. The land is level and a brook flows through' one end of farm. More than one person besides E. C. K. has been puzzled by this same question—what name shall 1 eve my farm? Of course, it is purely a per- sonal matter, one for the owner him- self to decide, yet it may be of some; assistance to state in a general way; what has influenced some people to; select the name which they did for their farm, Many times some natur- al object or distinguishing feature of the farm suggests the name. For in-, stance, a nice spring' brook that cant be seen by passers-by suggests the, friend wishes to go to the city like- name of Spring Brook Farm, or a wise, but does not care about a nurse's grove of oak trees suggests the name career. Also that her parents do not of Oak Grove Farm or Oak Lawn, or approve of her going to the city and Maple Crest because of a grove of ; might not let her go, anyway. maples which are on a rise of ground, Just because you are close friends, or Orchard Grove, Hillside Farm, etc. you do not both have to become nurses In fact, - any individual characteristic'. do you? I grant it*would be nicet.of the farm. can well be used. Again, to be in the same work but in your any characteristic of the buildings ease, if you insisted, you might force can be used. For instance, Green her to do something she did not like Gables when the gable of the house and really ought not to do, and then are painted green, and especially -if if some day -she was not happy in her, the house is so built that the gables w ork,'you would regret having in- are a prominent feature. fluenced her. As to her family, there You can probably make a choice is nothing you can do to make them from the following: Meadowbrook, change their minds. The girl herself Green Meadows, Running Brook, must talk sensibly to them and pre- Hearts' Delight, Maplerow, , Dairy - sent her case fairly and trust that land, Sunlit Lands, Golden Harvest if she is in the right, they will see Dairy Farm, Fallingbrook. slightly 'damaged that on properly Pests That Are Welcome. drained fields. When I hear farmers bragging There are thousands of miles of about the hawks, owls, weasels, and ditches that need to be made now by minks they have killed, my "dander" dredging machines. Laterals should begins to rise. Here in this Eastern ,spread out from these further to carry Ontario .community such wholesale off the excess water. killing of rodents, owls, and hawks In many sections ditches are- blast-, was the common attitude when the ed out by the use of dynamite alone. country was newer. But there has Ditches from 8 to 1 feet wide are: been a radical change. After rho INS TLY PIMPLES P INFUL BOILS Arra Caused Bygd Mood. When the blood beeomee impure, it is only natural that boils, pimples, or some ether indication of bad blood should break out of the system. Ointment and salves will do you no good. You trust get at the seat of the trouble by using a good internal blood. purifying remedy such Ile that grand old znedieine, I3urdock Blood Bitters. This preparation has been on the mnarketfor the post 40 years, and is acknowledged by all who have ever used it to be the best blood cleansing remedy. Mr. Emerson 0. Goodwin, Cambridge N.B.,'writes:—"I�or nearly two years 1 suffered from boils and pimples on my face and reale, andnearly all of my body was covered with the pimples. I tried. meat everything, but , got no relief. One day a friend advised me to try Burdock Blood I3itteis, and after using three bottles the pimples and boils had all left me, and there is no sign of them returning. I can etroogly recommend 13. B. B, to anyone who is troubled with skin disease." Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co.. Limited. Toronto. Oat. Color Scheme. In every good landscape the artist uses all the colors there are. You do not quite believe that, Then notice next time you see a fine view or a really natural painting, The landscape, even though it seems at the first glance all one green, will show tones of yellow and red, all fitted into a harmony of complement- ing colors in the light that envelops the whole. A good painting of out- doors leas its mixtures of red, yellow and blue, the three primary colors, no matter what amount of light, may determine the color values. That bit of color theory does not sound as if it had much to do with doing over the living room. But it has. As a matter of fact, the nearer one approaches to a natural outdoor arrangement of colors in decorating a room the better the., effect. It is one step in the right direction to use a single or two harmonizing colors— a blue bedroom, a green living room; and so forth. The next step toward a perfect room is to adjust several color values so that people will say: "Why, anything looks right in that room!" Grape and Currant Cuttings. Make grape and currant cuttings in Autumn. Select well ripened shoats of this season's growth and cut them into six-inch lengths, each length con- taining two or more buds; cut them square off below a bud, -so that the roots will start out around the end. Have at least one bird above ground and one below. Cuttings should be stored in green sawdust or sand in a cool place where they will not freeze. If the .sawdust is too wet the cuttings will mold, and if the temperature is too high the buds will begin to grow as soon as the rest period .is over. quickly loaded and fired under favor-' killing and trapping of these so-called- f;�if d . g� ;, able conditions. - "pests" had continued for several - 'ri r � \, iXai ti years plague of rats and mice The Best of thee ere lois her name on her butter. Her butter is This is the best season of the year always extra nice." to plan the spring garden. It is much "You told me yourself the stuff was • easier to think out alterations - now Denman's. Give me Dow's." with the garden in plain view than it Which floored the - storekeeper. He will be later on when it is deep in handed out a pound of 50 -cent butter. snow. The mistakes and successes of The explanation of this. was .simple, the 1919 season are fresh in one's The .storekeeper had overreached hien- mind and plans may be evade accord - section is making°-liim sufficient re- self, as storekeepers sometimes will. Ingle'. turns or is losing him money for his He had sold for Denman's, butter Peones, a June flowering' perennial, time and labor: It also shows him his which was really the product of a less are belayed by every one,. easily crop suecess,ions and the tendency competent buttermaken. He had done grown, very hardy and have large toward a richer or poorer farm. • 'the same thing before. He will doubt- showy flowers which are fine for A map of the farm plan should be less do it many times again. And ,in_ cutting. -There is a great variety of drawn and pasted in the front of such evitably he will pay heavily in injured colors from which to choose. It has a book for reedy reference. good -will for his poor business judge'Practically no insect enemies. The -- meat, flowers will not be as perfect the first But there is' another angle to the two years but by the third year the 1lemorxliflgic' Septicetitia. incident., It revealed the ugly thing finest kind of blooms should be pro- . Hemorrhagic septicemia • (blood that was happening to the Denman dtteed. poisoning), anthrax and blackleg are reputation, innocently entrusted to a The most popular white peony is terrible scourges and used to kill live grasping merchant. What th'i's good without doubt, Festiva Maxima, fol - stock without roan being able in any farm woman gained -at the separator lowed in popularity by Duchess de way to stay their ravages. Now they and churn she was losing because she Memours and `Marie Lemoine as mid - are well understood by trained veter- overlooked a simple olcl thing—the season bloomers, followed again by inarians, and fairly successful meths branding of her -butter. Old-fashioned Gloria Mandl, a late bloomer. ods of control have been discovered and housewives still make butter with. Of the pink varieties, La Tulipe and Eugene Verdier are early Iight plink beauties. Monsieur Jules Elie and .Madiain Costs are excellent mid-season bloomers. - For those who like red, the follow- ing peonies are good. Adolphe Ros- scan, eine of the darkest, is the early blooming variety; Felix Crousse, a rich shade of reel; Berloiz, currant red, which bloom next; Rubra Superba; a deep red, is known as the best late - blooming crimson peony. The Iris is the easiest possible flower to grow. To have an Iris garden in bloom from tulip time till August, get soiree. Dwarf Iris, which are the first to bloom in the spring. They are excel- lent for Borders. FolIow these with , intermediate Irises, which are next in height and next in tires ` of blooming. These can he, had in various colors. To continue. your Iris garden's sum- mer bloom, select some of the white, blue and purple Siberian Beardless Irises and the '1'all Bees er Irises, such as Aui'en, lefonsp rr and Spuria, Mrs. A. W. Tait. Thp last of the series is this won- derful pageant are the Japanese mise:+, which are not nearly well enough known. Many people confuse them wiih the Stherian Iris, anti think them 'small and, therefore, uninteresting. On the contrary, they aro huge, tn- brellrr-like flowers, Excelient varieties are: Yellow, put into -practice; but no remedy had been discovered. - .. Within the past ten or twelve years L� } hemorrhagic septicemia of cattle has S 2 TO INTEREST been rightly recognized sand properly . PAYABLE HALF YEARLY attributed to its actual cause. Swine Allowed on money left with us for and shee have been found to suffer from three to'ten ear F ,•� sur .: from the same disease caused by the Write for Booklet. P y S. Nod ei similar b Ilur f each f those ani- TOOK n �.- simr a • acei o ea. o i- The Great r1et t 313ernianent T IO'l`,i AWFUL BALLS. malls, while a like disease has bean Miss levaP Yateman,Krugersdor'f,Olnt., found to kill poultryt Swine plague Wesel Company. writes:— `I feel that . roust -write and ten has been the popular term for hemer- Toronto Office 20 King St, West; vou of the agent benefit ,i heve'received rhagic septicemia of hors and chicken from Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. About three and a half years ago 1 wan Wien terribly bad with my heart, nrrveo and fainting spells, and was down in bed for about six months. I doctored with -two different doctors and seemed to get better although the fainting s ells would not leave me.. 1. would take much terrible falls wherever f. was that it Wil -9 not safe to leave me alone at any time, �, t, last 1 decided to resort to proprietary medicine and took several. different kends, but seemed to receive but little benefit from any of them. One dzv noticing rhe adverti$ettient of li-lilbtu•nrc ;Heart and Nerve Pills, 1 derided to try them and before 1 had. taken more than twb boxes 1 could see they were helping me. 1 have, taken about ten boxes and are almuet cured, at those terrible spells. 1 sincerely feel that your medicine has moved e - bleneing to fere, and t would advise anyone troubled with .their heart to tr• it as 1 am coil• iSalent they will find relief' Milburn's heart tnd Nerve fills arc We, a box et all dca!ers, or rim. ei.' direct on receipt of rice by The T Milburn Co., Limited; Toronto, Ont. cholera ,is the name of tilt like disease. of poultry. Rapd advance is being made in the improvement of preventive agents for each animal, and that for cattle now ie being widely and usefully applied by veterinarians, "Pasteurella vac- cine," serum, and a 'bacterin are be- ing successfully employed i=.n staying the ravages•of the hemorrhagic sep- ticemia of cattle and our readers should understand that such treatment instantly should he given by the at- tending veterinarian if the disease • suddenly appears in a district. Let us see, then, by what symptoms the disease is ehas'aeter•ized. Hemorrhagic septicemia of cattle takes several forms and is much similar to anthrax and also to black- leg, The last-named disease, however, is confined practically to 'young cattle under two years of age, whereas bnucrrhagic septicemia attacks (*tattle of all ares; but principally "stocicersr' Use liartabm alvies erailizerri For Profit Wrffte for Free 23szileiira Ontario Fertilizers 4 Limxit„d Toronto I assailed us. With the rodents' natur- d ars t ti • l� irk lel enemies killed" off they multiplied until cern and grain fields, meadows, I orchards, and buildings swarmed with Aurea, Darius, Gracchus; pink, Her l rodents, big and little. Half, and even Majesty; white, Mas. H. Darwin; lilac, more, of our grain crops were some - Queen of May; blue, Blue Belle, De- timee destroyed Iessordsand nosy stera e light, g in ' nt The Larks ur is one of the hand-Iake our poultry houses pest -proof, p and give a kind welcome to weasels, hard• yt and most satisfactory of all i owl=, hawks, snakes, and toasts—all plants. Doed not omit the stately! friends of the farmer—and song and and old-fachi ;red hollyhock, which has , been brought to a high state of per- i of me birdsas as tlelliitk What ia a s the T oil s , -, a ew , to , fection and displays a variety of an I ,ries, and occas fruits compared with tea `ssN'1' calors. the damage done byhordes of des- , r4'r'i,r Phlox is another flower which should , find a place in every* perennial garden. i Dtrug a e rodents and insert pest ?— During late summer and fall months they are a rich mass of bloom. The following varieties are especially Typical. beautiful: Africa, a . royal purple; Asim, rich shade of mauve; Doreen, 'Binder Lightest Motor j in World, 220 lbs. Making Farming a Real Pleasure. a Also 2 Sr. 5 h.p. Portable Engine and Centrifugal Pumping. Unit. Nen �,•,tt,'r. Al] on show in the Grand Strznt.t pend- ing, Toronto exhibition. Fire litera- ture at our Exhibit. Don't fail to call. ' eoAig. BOAest. Eriel,1.rm 11101.,orcz. tel'.'.-S•.T.6.L4'?n• 0 ..^:.^•.fl --+*^n+"..▪ •v-- .+an salmon -rose; Etna, orange -red; ;Jeanne- d'Arc, white; Lord Kelvin,' red; Rynstrom, bright pin,., The Omental Poppy makes a ger- genus display, whether planted singly er ire masse;;. Golden Glow has flow- ers of the brightest golden -yellow and attains a height of six feet. It is excellent to plant along e. fence that vou wish to hide, Sweet William is a beautiful, old-fashioned border plant. Colembine is a favorite for early summer blooming. Canterbury Bells 'should find n place in every garden. Chrysanthemums give Iife end beauty to the garden from Sep- - tembcr to November. They need a icovering of leaves during. winter, Coroopsis have golden -yellow flowers, borne On long stems, and are a mass of bleorn from June until frost. The Bleeding Heart is an old favorite. The Foxglove is a handsome plant of state- ly growth, Of the flowering vines the following are desirable: Dutchman's Pipe, Trumpet Vine, Clematis, Honeysuckle, t�Tisiria, Cinnamon Vine, Hardy Flowering Shrubs will give a !variety of bloom frorn early spring until frost. The earliest is r43rsythia (yellow), then Flowering Almond I (pink, red, white) blooms in May, followed by the Spirea (white), Dentzias (pink; white), '4'Voigelic 1 otalt, white) aSzchlfge,c,(white, an I lastly, t -e7 Roza of S'nru•nti, from i August to October, having lovely trouble rose -shaped flowers of blue, phik, red ,and white.. PorArnials, whether in plant, vine or shrub farm, :re most satisfactory from every st an 1pc+irt, and are especially the sort t. i he chosen by the buoy person, as once planted they require little attention from veal to year. A Tuan from the Rhine told me,'says a writer in the London Evening News, of a British officer getting up in a Cologne tram to offer his seat to a German girl. Tlie fraulein was so startled that she did not sit down, but alIowecd the Nun who was cath her to take a seat. "And what Happened nett?” I asked. "Ile was liftad out by the scuff of bis neck, of course." • Tri ., Es eke' G 1s. CONSTIPATION. When the bowels do not perform their functions properly the liver. is sura to become affected and the inactive eon- dition of the liver will cause constipation, sick or bilious headaches, hecu•tburn, water brash, specks floating before the eyes, the tongue becomes coated, the breath foul, seri the eyes have a dull, yellow glassy appearance.. Milburn's -taxa-Liver P;lhs will regu- late eny• irregularity of the bowels and stimulate the sluggish liver into action. Pure glycerine will help to dissolve Mrs, Malcolm McDerraul, Granton fruit stains frown linen. Section, MS.,writes:—"I have been sick for a number of years with sick head - Remove stains from the fingers aches and constipation. 1 tried all kinds of doctor's medicines bat none did mo any good. 1 tried Milburn's Laxe-Liver Pills, and after using four vials I am completely cured. I would heartily recommend them to all sufferers." on them use warm water with a vial Laxm-Liver Pills at,, 25c. a mal at ail dealers or mailed direct by tablespoonful of kerosene added to The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, each pail of water. by washing them with a nate hrttsh wet with tea, and than in warm water. For washing windows, whish should be done when the sun is not shining eie • !.1.-atig',2.11t: At the Exh b tkmm this Year agiMeelaitauesaitieeieleeuegieeaaeo , SBE THESE TWO WONDERFUL NLiW 1NVENtIONS: se I. The 1?ttn�ra" that plays A.LL 3, alio ALL-' 00D O"iAt~, 'J?oiv14 records with alae exact 'VrIDIcli•T1'. tfT3AMT3tri---built like a vieliit - proper DIA,P, toe and Corrtaat ,hicla oliminatas nxotaI le harsh• isTIDT^JlaLTD. /Nothing to lalte bt4--- ,nothing to put on. A. simple twist nosy. LB'' votnt IcAltd 131" Tall 4)2 the wrist ad,iysts it instantly to JORGE. t' ,,. rert et] records. The iirunswi.ck Exhibit' is at the South West entrance of the Process Building. Free Iteteltals Daily. THE MUSICAL MERCHANDISE SALES COMPANY 819 YONRE STREET ONTO ry ti