Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1920-2-19, Page 2Pe Not Neglect The Bad Call OF TO -DAY IT MAY IBE SERIOUS TOMORROW YBar Deeelep Into Bronchitis, Ptleu• t MOM* and perhaps Consumption. Miss Mary Prouse, R.R. No. 1, Cedardale, Ont., writes:—"I had the Influenza m November last, and it left the with a terrible cough. I did not attend to it until it got so severe people warned me it was time to see about it, & went to the doctor and got some Medicine, He told me it was a bad attack of bronchitis. I could not sleep and would have to sit up nearly all night, it was sodifficult for nee to get breath. The doctor's medicine did not seem to be helping me the least bit. One of our neighbors came in one day, and told me about Dr Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, I tried it and took two bottles. No person could believe how it helped me, I have recommended it to different people since, for I believe I have reasons for doing so. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup fire been on the market for the past• 30 fcars and stands out by itself as a remedy or all coughs and colds. Be sure and get the real '`Dr. Wood's" when you ask for it. Put up in a yellow wrapper; 3 pine trees the trade marks price 25e. and 50c. Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co,, Limited, Toronto. Ont. The average milk cow '"requires nearly ten gallons ofeevater a day, and' More than two-thirds of that must' came as drink and the balance from' vtater in the feed, With such a large consumption of water, there's no need; she add more to the milk. A hungry cow makes a hungry man! --a lot of them, in fact. A concrete base :for the separator; is a good thing, but between it and the base of the machine, bolt down.; a board to provide e'as;;icity. Before you say any man's publih- ed milk record is fake, see ;chat you; can do yourself: You may be he most s eptired man in town. One re. ion why ninny farmers have; quit nicking butter is that a good, clean, wholesome product brings not better ,price at the store than the' poorer product which is dumped into; a tub or barrel in the wareroom. Ai r provincial butter -grading service, rrbich diecr•iminates between good but-, ter and poor butter would encourages br.tter-milking on some farms. OF "FLU" Hat Left May Wuk Rents. This terrible scourge has left in its train weak -hearts, shattered nerves, end a general run -:down condition of the system. Thousands of people, throughout Can- are now needing the timely use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills to counteract the effects of this trouble which a short time ago swept our country. Mrs. C. C. Palmer, Keppel, Sask., writes: -"X wish to inform you of the great good Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills did for .me. Aftera bad attack of the "Spanish Inxlucnza,} my heart and aierves were left in a very bad. condition. I got two boxes o#, your pins and I must pay they are the best I ever used, and I have taken a great many different kinds. l will always keep Heart and Nerve Pills In the house." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are iidfe. a box. For sale by all dealers, or p�ailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co... Limited, Toronto, Ont. MO Eggs Livery Hen New System of Poultry Keeping—Get Dollar A Dozen Eggs --Famous Poultryman TELLS HOW "The great trouble with the poultry business has always been that the lay- ing life of a hen was too short," says Henry Trafford, International Poultry Expert and. Breeder, for nearly eighteen years Editor of Poultry Success. The average pullet lays 150 eggs. If kept the second year,she may lay 100 more. Then she goes to market. Yet i has been scientifically established that every pullet is born or hatched with over one thousand minute egg germs in her systezn—and will lay them on a highly profitable basis over a period pt tour to six years' time if given proper care. Ilow to nor every hen; how to get pullets laying • early: how to make the oh: hens lay like puiieis; how to keep up heavy egg pro- auction all through cold winter months when eggs, aro highest; triple egg pro- t1m'tlon; make slacker hens hustle; $5.00 peens from every hen in six winter n:,•nths. These and many other money ;tuna poultry secrets are mita nod in i'rafford s "1,000 EGG !TEN' sys- •, of poultry raising, one copy of y-1,.:'1 will be sent absolutely free to a n*, render of this paper who keeps six 11,,;n4 or moron 'Egg..4 'Egg..should go to a dol- lar ter more a dozen this winter. This means ldg profit to the poultry keeper ;^...n gets the eggs. Mr. Trafford ,t,ells how. Ti' you keep ehtr'i,r.s, t end want. ":fem to make innncy fpr, Nrttt, rut nut. Vtis ,d and send It with r te,n,e and ttelcrtes.4 1 , Henry Trafford .'Site fair 1). `P nr., BI(1f 141narlratnlrtmt N. A, ,tint a fr r er,l ; ni T111 1,00: i:.+.R 1 need. '�Y i.a t • .t. by return mail, How to Keep Good Help. Often the hired man seems to have' a hatred toward the dairy business. The question comes at once; "Why is this true? Is milking harder than; other work ?" I think that most h r- ed men will agree that milking is not such hard work, but often the., fanner figures on having the hand to do a day's work in the fields and then do the milking in the niornir:g, find evening besides, without any ex-' tra pay. Certainly, if the dairy busi-F ness is worth while the farmer should 1 be willing to pay for the extra labor! involved. 1 Farm management investigations I worked for several years as a show that on almost every farm a hired man on the farm, and found part of the work is carried on at a that from the standpoint of the hired loss. Many farms do not pay any - hand the work of milking the cows thing for the labor spent upon "them, is not harder than other work, but if a fair rate of interest is deducted that the tendency of the farmer is and the living, ,including house rent, too often to do the milking after a is allowed. hard day's work has been done in the; The unprofitable cow is one of the field. Often the milking was begun factors that makes for lack of profit at five or earlier in the morning, and on the farm; but the boarder cow in in the evening when the milking was many cases is not the only boarder. done, the milk separated, and the Low -yielding acres, like boarder calves led it was from eight to nine cows, are often fatal when profit from o'clock: the farm is considered. Poorly - The demands of the hired -man of drained soils, soils low in humus, and to -day are not so much for higher compact, sour soils greatly reduce net wages as they are for shorter days.l profits. Sometimes thirty per cent This is all right, and if the farmer of the farm acreage does not produce can cut a few hours off the day's enough to pay its way. work in the field and use them in the Unprofitable land can not be dis- dairy business, he will make just as posed of so easily as boarder cows, mueh money and enjoy life a great but usually can be improved until it deal better. The hired man will not is profit -bearing. If the ,income from object to this system of working. such land can not be increased, the Cows in order to do their best labor spent upon it can be reduced should be milked at regular intervals. until the income at least pays a little If they are milked at five in the more than the cost of the labor. morning, they should be milked at five 'The size of the business often ,is the in the evening. If this plan is fol -1 determining factor in making the lowed I am sure that the hired -man farm profitable. Farms often have question will not be so difficult to too many or too few acres. Decrees - handle on the farm where there are ed yields per acre in a province may or a goodly number of cows to take care may not indicate poorer agricultural af. methods. For instance, as the price A hired man should be paid accord- of wheat becomes higher more land ing to his ability and willingness to is planted to wheat. Much of this work. If he is a sluggard and still land may not be adapted to wheat, re, eives the same wages as the alert but better prices make. it profitable. man, the man with the higher midi- In this way the average yields per tion is soon discouraged because he acre are decreased, because land that does not receive pay in proportion. was formerly unprofitable is brought to the amount of work that he does. under cultivation. In many cases the farmer is con- i Higher prices, better farming demning the hired man when the; methods, more efficient machinery, farmer himself is doing about all he i immigration—all these tend to ex - can to discourage the man's ability. tend agriculture into sections that Human interest and kindness are formerly could not be farmed at a perhaps the -best means of getting the profit. As population increase all most out of the hired pian. If he is classes will be benefited if the rapidly greeted in a cheerful way in the rising' cost of farm products can be morning when he meets 'his boss at they bought for credit. I soon came to the conclusion that I was on the wrong side of the fence, so I changed, As to the selling end, I have in my possession several books containing, naly dollars in lostst accounts. • Dur- ing ur- ing the seven years of my .credit busi- nese I lost at least $200 in this way; and I am certain I lost that much oby buying on credit. But never again for me. That $400 is as good to me as it is for the other fellow, and here- after I intend to keep it, Every Acre Should Pay. the barn, and is treated as a man, a real human being, he /egg that there _s something in this old world be- sides hard work, and will feel more Iike trying to please his employer. On the other hand, if the man is greeted in a grouchy way in the early morning, or receives- no greeting at all, he feels that the man for whom he is working is interested in him only so far as he wishes to get work out of him. If some of the foregoing hints are carried out, the dairy business will not be dreaded to so great an extent by the hired than, and ,in the long run the farmer will be money ahead. The dairy business is certainly worth while. Why should not the farmer do his beet to develop it on his farm? Buy and Sell for Cash. After mine years of doing business on a credit, two years ago I adopted a strictly sash system of buying and selling. Since that time I have saved a good many dollars that would other- wise have been lost to me. It took me a long time to learn this lesson, but. I have learned it well. Whefii I began business as ,a mar- ket gardener I had to buy• -nearly everything I needed on the long-time payment plan. for I had only $200 after paying for my Iand. It took me seven years to get out of debt, be- cause goods bought on credit cost me a great deal more than if I had paid cash. Of course, in my case it was convenient and necessary, but in the long run I paid dear for it. I always bought my groceries, dry - goods, hardware and other articles from stores that would trust me for several months at a time. In fact, I was paying even more at my own dealers than town folk were paying, because they were• getting their goods delivered to their doors, while" I was paying the same price and hailed my jurchases'hame in my wagon. Several times I noticed that one strictly cash store sold, goods much cheaper than I was paying for the same articles. Upon making inquiry, I learned that this one cash store was able to sell goodsso cheaply because it for c bought ash and adopted the .t g cash and carry"system of selling. In this way it saved interest money and made discounts in buying, and at the same time there were no ex- pensive delivery wagons and labor. The store also saved the expense of lost -credit acceunts with eustoners unable to pay bilis. 1 This set me to thinking. ' 'dere I was p . y e helping to for delivery con- veniences rti veniences that I did not use, besides paying the dealers •fora their lost ac- counts with 'other eustomers. In ad- dition to thie I was losing .interest money that, the dealers lost when met, in part by making idle acres work and making unprofitable land produce a satisfactory income. Some pf our unprofitable land can never be brought under cultivation by any method now known. Land not now in farms should be farmed, and • unimproved land now in farms should be improved' only when this can be done profitably. Every farmer who owns unprofitable land should make a detailed examination of his farm, acre by acre, to -determine the un- profitable areas. Next he should de- termine about how much it would cost him to make each acre pay its way. This study will show what and how much in the way of manure, drainage, cover crops, commercial fertilizers, lime or other preparations is needed to produce satisfactory crop yields. This analysis will show what acres. can not be cultivated i rofitabiy. It is better to leave. such eland in per - menet pasture than to farm it at a lose. The "arm is not only a home; it is a pan::: of business. As such, each e+ `•`prise and each acre should re- ceive attention and be put on a paying basis. INTERNATIONAL LESSON. FEBRUARY 22. Peter Delivered from Prison -Acts 12: 5-17. Golden Text.—Psalm 3417. 1-4. Herod the King was not Herod Antipas, mentioned several times in the gospels as ruler of Galilee and Perea, but Herod Agrippa 1, king' of Palestine under the Romans, 41-44 A.D., a nephew of Antipas, and grand- son of Herod the Great, who was ruler at the time of the birth of Ohrest, .. He was educated at Rome and acquired with his educationthe vices which prevailed in Rome at d hat time. At the age of forty, out ofrfa- vor with the emperor Tiberius, end bankrupt, he fled from his eteditoys and came to Palestine. His sister, Herodias, had married Antipas (sell; Mark (1: 17), and through her • influ- ence he was appointed to a lucrative office in Tiberias, 'which he held, only fora short time. After• many aldvet-. tures, he succeeded in borrowing motley enough to take, him back to ,Rome, where he was put in prison by. the emperor. But at the death. of Tiberias shortly after, he found 'a friend in the new emperor, Caius, who made him king but kept him in Rome. When .Claudius became em- peror in 41 A,D. he received the ter- ritories in Palestine which had been ruled by his grandfather, The reek- less and wandering adventurer now ler arch 22n- FR: 'PRlELEM� 13Y MuffELEN UAW Ship ijor Raw Furs M Once Last Receivin� Nate March 1s IS IT TAG DAY FOR YOU? see eee ee�ati tee , rr w a` te?' e't°ff O e l .' " yaw /' A.4 /se' • // , . Attach one of these tags to your package, bale or bales —take to express or post office and it will be on its way to join thousands of others already in our warehouse, sorted, listed and put up in best possible shape, for the inspection and bids of hundreds of eager buyers. You will getthe opinions on your furs expressed in the satisfying forth of RECORD PRICES by at least 300 buyers from the chief great distributing centers of the world. • The SMALL SKIPPER is welcome—we want to Drove to all consignors, large or small, our certain ability to get these real results. WE HAVE NOTHING to offer buyers at this sale but genuine average Canadian furs in ORIGINAL collec- tions --that's ' all just the best in the world! Immense quantities of every variety marked on this tag are on hand—yet.yve have not nearly enough—there are not enough anywhere to supply the universally keen de- mand existent. March lst is last receiving date; all shippers are cordially invited to attend the sale. ADDRESS: Canadian Fur Auction Sales Co., LIMITED . iONTREA , Temporary Offices Windsor Hotel, Montreal. Quality in Quantity makes the, R EAt. market op,y"f�e 5,Q01‘.. �OJ � 4leo�es. /1641$* t ��''C4�'�e O 41 , fio ie4"' .pecatetleb` coo ons e8 She ,V cos ecce settled down in Jerusalem, professed his adherence to the strict laws of the ancient faith, took part in the services of the temple, and undertook to re- press Christianity by a renewed and severe persecution. Forunately hb did not live long enough to do much harm and his kingdom came to an end with him. His son, Agrippa II (25:,13) ruled over certain small pro- vinces only (50-100 A.D.). James the brother of John was one of the three disciples who formed an inner circle about Jesus and shared some of His most secret thoughts and experiences. The policy of Herod seems to have been to remove the leaders of the Christian movement, and so he proceeded to seize Peter also. The character of the king is well reflected in the words of the historian: "Because he saw that it pleased the Jews." His zeal for the ;ewish religion was entirely a matter of policy. The days of unleavened bread were the seven days following the eating of the Passover, during which no good Jew permitted anything leav- e ened to remain in his house (Exod. 12: 14). ) It was a season when Jerusalem would be filled with peo- ple, whose enthusiasm for the preser- vation of Jewish law and custom could be easily excited. For that reason the king intended bringing him forth after the Passover .for pub- lic sentence. and execution, believing that this would win for him popular enthusiasm and applause. Meanwhile Peter was carefully guarded by "four quaternions," that is by tour groups of four men, who watehed for six hours each, and he was chained to two of his four guards. There seemed no possibility of escape from such guard - zerf Address ail,t:prnmunloatIons for this department to Mrs, Helen- Law, 235 Woodbine Ave., Toronto. President: Why not try a: "Non - settee secial'? The young people will all want . tocome to . it,andthe older people, young in spirit, can't 'keep away either. Besides, the notices posted around town may be worded so that no one need hesitate for fear of being thought frivolous. Print them thus: "A little nonsense now and then Is relished by'tho best of men," So Why not put in a jolly evening at a Nonsense Social next Friday at the Community Hall, Atim,ission 6 senses. First of all, there will be jokes on all the people who think they have puzzled out the meaning of the ad- mission price and try to pay five cent pieces. But the real amusements of the evening will consist among others of nonsense contests, - Announce that for fifteen minutes. there will be a deaf and clunrb inter- val, and that all conversation and communications must .be carried on by signs. If everybody -enters into the spirit of it, it will be exceedingly jolly. Following that may come some blindfold stunts. One that is always good sport is blowing out the candle. The contestants are in turn blind- folded, turned around three times, and headed for the lighted candle, The object, of course, is to blow it out, and there are sure to be all sorts of ludicrous results. • A good way to carry out another contest in which the sense of smell is featured ,is to provide a variety of food samples which each contest- ant must identify with eyes closed and nose held tightly. Cooked oat- meal, bread, cake, loaf sugar, a piece of banana, a bit of potato, all are mystifying without the sense of smell to aid the sense 'of taste. , After the "nonsense" contests may come sotste "sense" contests. The sight contest: Fill a table with a great variety of objects, and allow everybody a minute by the clock to observe it, after which each per- son writes down a list of what he or ,she remembers. A prize may be given for the loiigest list—for instance, a pair of rose-colored goggles. The hearing contest: Let a versatile musician play snatches of tunes on the piano. The contestants, provided with paper and pencil, write down the' titres as fast as they recognize them. Again the owner of the best list may receive n prize --a mouth organ or u tin horn , or something musieal l or pseudo -musical, cal, Time feeling contest: Arrange an assort nlellt of objects for each coll- testtint, 'blindfolded, to be identified by 'touch, Such things as a carrot, a piece, of crayon, a glass pape.t; weight, a leather case, a piece of sponge are suggestions for such a test. - The smell contest: This is an old stunt, but fits in here. Prepare sever- al 'little plain bottles and fill them with different liquids, all having an odor. Some should be enough alike to make discrimination hard, as for instance, lily -of -the -valley perfume, carnation perfume, white rose and violet, vanilla, almond cream, bay rum. Fill one bottle with clear water and notice the different odors. as- signed to it by the .contestants. Atter these tests, let the nonsense element enter again. Here is a nonsense game that is great fun if everyone is in a happy mood—it ii called "You IIave a Face." All sit in a circle, and the game starts when one person turning to his right-hand neighbor remarks, "You have a face." The other asks "What kind of a face?" The first person replies, using an adjective beginning with "a." Thus •he may say, "an an- gelic face" or "an ambitious face" er an "anarchistic face." The right- hand neighbor then in turn tells his right-hand neighbor that he has a face, and so it goes around the circle. Tho second time around, "b" may be the initial letter of the face adjective. There is nothing personal about the application of the adjectives, and often the incongruity of them with the faces to which they are applied makes hilaniy run high. A nonsense program could be ar- ranged as a climax to the evening if desired. The refreshments may be announ;i- ed _as appealing to the sense of taste, and sight. Perhaps oyster stet, would be "sensible," or the conven- tional coffee and sandwiches may form the menu. A truly nonsensical menu might consist of orange ice and lady fingers or some other very airy wafers. For souvenirs pass around a tray of "purple cows," paper ones of course; with Burgess Johnson's famous rhyme on each: 'I've never seen a purple cow, I never hope to see one; • But this thing I know, anyhow, I'd rather see than be one. ianship. But "prayer was made earn- estly of the church unto God for hini." 5-12.' An Angel of the Lord. It is useless to speculate as to whether or not the angel may have been some good friend in disguise, who had suf- ficient influence to cajole er to bribe his guards. If that were the case he would he'ne been none the less an angel, a messepger of the Lord. We can but take the story as it is told, and admit that it bears upon ,it the stamp of truth. Peter arose from sleep and went forth with his un- known guide, walking as in a dream. He "thought he saw a vision." Not until bis deliverer had Ieft him did he come to himself. Then he sought the well known and hospitable "house of Mary tXie mother of John whose surname was Mark."' Was it John Mark from whom Luke learned the sto13-ry19. They were amazed. Though praying for this very thing, they could '- ' y leve it true, so amazing was ® to e HowMuch ®r Earn bis deliverance. Often, indeed God's answer goes far beyond our faith. In handl bel To find your labor indene for the year use this plan. Firsts put down 1 how much your farm is worth—not what you would like to sell it for; but what -you could actually get for it you put it on the market. This figure is usually about halfway between what- you would like to get and what you would get from a forced sale. Then figure in what stock you had during•., the year. Sales of all sorts of products are taken into account, as well as any expense in repairing or buying machinery, the purchasing of seed, fertilizer, etc. In fact, list everything you are ahead under. "re- , ceipts," and whatever you spent on the farm under "expenses." From this simple little problem in arithmetic you get the figure show ing how much more you have at the end of the year than at the beginning. Take a'typical case: A man has a farm and equipment valued. at $18,- 000. His expen,'es for the year are $2,800. His tetceipts are $4,000. He figures that ho made'"'$1,100 during the year, and he thinks it isn't so bad. But he hasn't taken into account tiie capital invested. If he invested that $18,000 elsewhere he would ",get • at least four per cent interest.; if lie had: to borrow it, he would very lilrely, pay six per cent. So ' we take the average,. and say that his capital in- vested earns' five per cente Five per cent of $18,000 is $000. So his cap- ital earned $000 of that $1,1001 and the grower hineself, working hard a:ll year, earned only $200. In other words, $200 was his "labor ineeme," He would have made more money if his capital had been invested in Vic- tory bonds and he had worked out by the day. All the planning and thought he putt into his farm opera- tions didn't bring him a cent. Remem- ber too, that you should receive some- thing also for the work your family has done. If your labor income doesn't conte out the way you would like. don't he. discouraged. You might have had bad luck with some crops or live stock, or you might not have hit fa- vorable markets. Maybe, though, there is something you can do anoth- , er year that will make your labor in- come compare more favorably •with' the salary of the man of the sante ability in town. Remember, too, that it costs him a lot more to live than it does yet and your family in the country. Where he is struggling with the rent problem, you have a comfortable borne' that costs you noth- mg, and your grocery and butcher bis aregreatly g eatly reduced by the things you raise yourself. But if you feel that in some way or other the salary you are earning for yourself can be .increased, dort't stop figuring until you have Worked out some ways of inereasing your farm profits. It may mean increased crops yields through using more ferti- lizer, It may mean better stock by using a pure-bred sire or higher grade dams. The secret may bo de- creased labor coats through the use of farm power, 'Whatever it is, there is a way for you to solve it if you, decide to do it. this instance they thought that the one who knocked must be. "his angel," for they believed that every man had his guardian angel, who might oh oc- casion asspme'his form (see Heb. 1: • 14 and Matt. 18: 10 •Salt thrown on spot which has fallen on the carpet will prevent stain. Head Ached So Bad • D TO GO TO BED. When the liver becomes sluggish and inactive it does not manufacture enough bile to thoroughly aet on the bowels and carry off the waste matter from the system, hence the bowels become clogged up, he bile bets into the blood, con- stipation sets In and is followed by sick and bilious headaches, water ra sh heartburn,floating, s ecks before the eyes, and painful internal, bleeding or protruding piles. Ntriiiu ..' T.one,Liver Pills regulate the flow of bile so that it aci,i k t on the 1 It h� . owels ori d stirs to h slu t liver into activity. gg Mrs. E. Bainbridge, Amherst, writes.-- I takeIn leasu e ' writing i p ruin of the ood I received b using Mils burnsLax - a Liroer Pills .or hei►dache, t was so bad 1 had'to go to bed, and could not sit up , A friend told me about dfuI me our f woni' K clicmwell asI can ba," e'. and two vials have made me as Milburn's Lan -Liver Pills are 2CIa. a 'vial ab all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price, by The T. Milburn Co,,. Limited, Toronto, Ont. • Were Raaf ee ,., 52 � After "rete Sat Up to Turn In Bed. That awful epidemic, the . Spanish influenza, that swept Canada from one end to the other a short time ago, left in its wake a great many bad after effects. i In some cases it was a weakened heart, in others shattered nerves, but in a great many cases weak kidneys have been left as a legacy. Where the kidneys have been left weak as an after effect of the "Flu," Doan's Kidney Pills will prove to be just the remedy you require to strengthen them. Mrs. Harvey D. Wile, Lake Pleasant, N.S. writes:—"Last winter I was taken, sick with the "Flu," and when I did get better I found that my kidneys were very bad, and at night I had to sit up to turn around in bed. I used Doan's Kidney Pills and found that they did me a wonderful amount of good. I also recommend them to my husband and he started in to use them. I will always recommend them to anyone who is bothered with kidney trouble, for they are wonders." Doan's Kidney Pills are 50c. a box at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt or price by The T. Milburn' Co., ,Limited, Toronto, Qnt. See that our trade mark, a "Maple Leaf." appears on the box. BALED SHAV1!S FOR EDD NG I Write or phone for special Car•lot Prices. R. LAIDLAW LUMBER CO. Limited 62 YONGE ST., TORONTO, ase iuoei'ing 1, the same cid .,price Sion- O@ctod xomee Pure inq ur Cape Tremolo, Iso regularly. &esd it to your COYs laHorses,a and watch them taw On weight, Sprinkle it over rutrstw, ol(i hay, Rae all ousel fodder, xt e� X�c s Stock Healthy u ld .Flesh Faster Moro �� Cows Give - Milli Ili T.t cutis dowst tote of ' feeding. able d uditioner at ue iieliyte is0 oivi ttibi o.' oat, xsitle of pure ougurcano molasses. Buy it by the barrel. Obtained frclm all first-class dxaler0, Send fol feeding airoulars ante ico, Cane 1Y ,Aa Co., of Cai1alaa, Limited 118 Si. Pial St. West, Montreal, Que.