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The Exeter Times, 1924-5-29, Page 2s Yoir Heart ak? Are Your Nerves Unstrisintr,? Diseases and disorders o tbi heart end nerves have 'become frightfully Prevalent of late years, arta in au uses where the heart a.nd nerves ere affected you will fiaa that mil- bura's licert and Nerve Pills will strengthen and. invigorate the heart action, tone up the Rervous system, enrich the blood, aud then all your troubles, which have become the cause of so much fear ana imxi.ety, will be a thing of the past Mre. R. Kyle, Moose Saw, Sask, weiteee--" about two years ago 1euf- erea from palpitation of the heart Iserteesso breath. My heart vats, at times, and often e up'in bed to get st breath, y tenses-• got so unsteting I could not'eleep, telly for about two hours each might. Having read so much about year Ifiiburnts Heart and laTerve Pills 1 tried them and they ie g ei ire wonderful relief so much so that I have used them ever since.'' Milbern's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50c. a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn. Go. Ltd., Toronto, Ont. Feeng Lambs. Lambs should be taught to eat as soon as possible after birth. Even when a few days old they will cam- mence nibbling, and when they are two weeks of age should .be eating fairly regularly. A separate compart- ment, says an authority of the Do- minion Live Stock Branch, should be provided wherein they can be fed without molestation -by the ewes. To, effect this, a Ianab creep can be readily constructed by means of two wooden rollers revolving around iron pins in a hurdle a sufficient distance apart to allow only the lambs to go through. The rollers are better than stationary slabs, since rubbing and consequent wearing of the wool from the lambs sides are minimized. A good quality of hay, preferably alfalfu or clover, should be provided in small racks within reach of the lambs. Grain and some succulent feed, as cabbage or turnips, should be fed twice a day in amounts consistent with their appe- tites. The lambs should be fed all they evill eat of „a palatable and nu- tritious ration, so as to keep them in thriving condition and to avoid seri- ous checks in growth. Raising Motherless Lambs. Relative to the raising of pet, or motherless lambs, if great care and discretion are observed in feeding, stunting will be avoided. An ordinary bottle and rubber should be used. In commencing the Iambs upon cow's milk, avoid feeding too heavily upon a miLlt that is very rich, as it may cause indigestion, is the advice of the Sheep and Swine Division of the Dominion Live Stock Branch. The milk is irfore palatable when slightly sweetened with sugar, and it may be necessary to feed with it, at intervals, some castor oil to prevent constipation. The first feed of the lamb should be, -if possible, colostruin or the milk- of the Ezet five days after commence- ment of the lactation. If this cannot be obtained use castor oil freely until the fleeces show yellow. If many Iambs are to be raised by hand a bucket with several rubber tubes with nipples attached can be used advan- tageously, or the more convenient practice of teaching the lambs, like calves, to drink out of a bowl or pail may be followed. The man behind the spray rod has as much ±0 do with the results as the dope he shoots out of it. You may sing Pie a song of the open road, A ballad of blossoming lanes, Of tossing trees, and a singing breeze, aind the scent after warm spring rains. —Susan Graves. 1(IDNEY5 SC) 13A -o Had to Stay Home From Work When the kidneys begin to "act up" and fail to filter the blood -through them, there passes, into the "AySteM uric acid and other virulent poisons which will cells° some of the severest and most deadly diseases known to mankind.. On the first approach of kidney trouble, DOEtrir8 Kidney Pills should be used. and serious trouble avoided. Mrs. J. B. Johnson, Brentford, Ont., writest—''My hesband suffered 80Me. thing awful, with his kidneys and woted have tostay home from work two or three times a week. He tried ell hinds of thitag1 s but they only re- lieved him for a, sh.ort while. He saw Dean's Kidney Pills advertised and after a fow closes he felt fine; after he had used font boxes he was cone pletely relieved. Thet was two years ago andehe has imt euffored since." Be ;Aire end get "Doan's" when rOtt Rek for them. Prise 50e, rt box at ail cleiders, ,eyalled direeton receipt te' Nice by the ill arilbuta 'hie Limited, Toronto, (dht The ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY makes IrY•41 fmer tea and more of at The.: Sunday School Less JUNE 1.: • • The Babylonian Exile of Judah, 2 Kings, chs. 21 to 25; $2,000 CASH FOR A, $PRING. "I'll give you $2,000 cish for your spring if youll move it over on my place," said John Bernhard to John Sass, a neighbor, the other day. But, as it happens, sPrings can not be bouglit. They are here or there, or they aren't, and no amount of money or any power of rnan can make any differeiace. Man can say, how- ever, whether springs live or die. An instance of what spring coeser- va11 means to modern farming is Chronicles, ch. 36. Golden Text—Righteousness em. tiC1 found on the farm of John and Fred alteth a nation: but sm Is a reproach to any people.— Sass. In the first place, the farm was Prov. 14: 34. located where it is just because of the spring. Much timber•has been cut on When after the death of Josiah in daughter of Zion with a cloud in his 1 the Sass land in the years since it the battle with the Egyptians at Me- anger, and cast down from heaven \sais taken up as a hoineatead, but the gifldo (2 Kings ch. 28:29, 30), the unto the earth the beauty of Israel. trees in the ravine heavy hand of Egypt first., then that APPLICATION. in which the spring, of Babylon, fell upon the little kMg- There is some.thing tragic about; theihrealts from the rock never have been1 dbm there was neither strength to lee! touched nor have those in the mime - destruction of a great and his to . . • 1 diate vicinity of the spring. To clay j resis-t nor -wisdom to guide Jelma.haz, „ city like Jerusalem, for such a city le ie flit of Josiah's sonsto su ceec . the heart of the nation. the fine stream of pure cold water him, after a brief reign of three 1 months., was deposed and carried cap- How did this world-shaking disasterin flows undiminished volume. In the tics& to Egypt. , come about? Did Jerusalem fm- all sibox that has been built around it, the , !ply because the .Chaldean was a cove- cream can is kept. When the farmers' Jehoiakim, a second son, set on the tous, merciless, overpowering irivaderl creamerY, patronized by the Sass throne of Judah by the Egyptian king, 'or had the Jew something to do with, brothers, this year offered prizes for reigned derma evil years. After the , the unspeakable fate of his beloved the best and sweetest cream received great battle at Carcheinish, on the , city? river Euphrates, in B.C. 604, when! The Chaldean was hard and vindic- during. a period of six successive the victoriaus Chaldeans routed the ,tive, boastful and arrogant, but the months, the Sass brothers were Egyptian anew and drove it back to Jew brought ruin about his own ears awarded the first prize of $25. Egypt (Jer. 46! 1-12), he transferred by his treachery and violation of "How do you care for your cream?" his allegiance to the Chaldeans, who treaties. Zedekiah swore to be loyal they were asked. now from their capital city of Baby -'to the king of Babylon, but he broke lon sought to rule the world. Three his oath, and the doom fell on his years later he rebelled and brought nation and capital., upon his country the horrors of a for T eign in.vasion (2 Kings 24 14) : - in the here is another incident worth midst of which he died. •Ilis wicked- ' noting because it gives us a clue to put the can in the box. The cold water ness and injustice, in striking contrast that mar , the disre ard for the lighted word! drives out the „animal heat quickly to the goodness of his father, and his lgted the rulers !of Jerusalem. and l and keeps it cold. The deep shade unhappy • end, are described in Jer. While the siege was in progress, ch. 22:13-19. the children were crying for food, and men's hearts were despeeate, the rul- Jerusalem was taken th B.C. 597, by ers resolved to proclaim the emanci- Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, patien of the slaves. That decision the young king Jehoiachin (called also -,,'as the result of panic and fear. Jecornah and Couiab), together with a Suddenly an Egyptian army had ap- great number of the best of the peo- peered on the scene. The Babylonians ple, was carried away to Babylon into . gave up their task of subduing the lifelong capitvity, and "none remained city until the Egyptian should be at save the poorest soet of the people of , tended to. At once the rulers, in a the land," 2 Kings 24:1046; Jer. 22:1delirium of joy, revoked their slavery! brooklets. One brooklet TIMS through 24-30. A third son of Josiah, who as-lemancipation act It -was a base act 1 the hog pasture past the hog barn. The other ripples down through the chicken yard by the poultry house. Both hog, stable and chicken coop have been purposely located beside the brooks. The Sasses have their feed cooker close to the spring, making it handy for water. In fact, they have made their spring an elmostpriceless util- ity and a time and labor saver be- sides. t'And all just because we saved the trees," says John. either shut your eyes or never look back." The reasen some farmers never har- row young corn as the first CliltlYatiOn liatrse11 tollteiatittioltfehrtelyleg'leilti: fla ui it dalll (1Uptheor hr8°111w it Such fear, however, is unfounded. Harrowing young corn wit 0 en cover much of it but it will not root it out, providing the harrow teeth aie set the least bit slanting bachwards. In some good corn sections harrow- ing cern for the first cultivatien 15 practiced generally. These farmers believe, and for good reasons, that the harrow is a better implement for the first going over of young corn than the shovel cultivator., Also, ith on team and a two -section harrow you can cultivate twice as much corn as with a standard two horse shovel cultivator, and do the work twice as easily The harrow -works very close to the young stalks without injury, and it rnakes the surface soil •fine and smoother for conherving,,moisture. • The only time not to harrow young corn. is when the spring season is wet and the corn ground soil wet and packed. Last season we harrowed and cross harrowed a good-sized field of young corn. After the second harrowing it "Oh, our spring does the work,"! John ansWer ed.. "The water is . very I cold. We take the cream down to the spring, right from the separator, and! helps, too.'" -You. couldn't hire use -to Cut dowea the trees about the spring or up the ravine. One of our neigh- bors had a geed 'spring, but he cut off .all the trees and the spring has dried up." But the spring is more than a cream cooler to, the Sasses., It flows away frOin the cream -can box in two sumed the royal name of Zedekiah, 1 of treachery. They broke a solemn was left to -rule over this wretched covenant "How could there be any - remnant for another eleven years. !thing but ruin for a state ruled by 2 Chron. 36:11-21. The reign of such men?" Zedekiah and fall of Jo-usaleni. Com- I It is well to note the completeness pare closely- \vith this passage 2 of the destruction of Jerusalem. The Kings 24:18 to 25:11 and Jer. 52:1-15.1people had gloried in the temple as The eleven years ,of Zedekiah's reign the centre of their worship. Sacrificial were between B.C. 597 and 586. Zede- ritual on an enormous scale had been kiah appears to have been a man of carried out It had become an ortho- some good impulses, but weale and doxy that the temple could not be easily subjected to the stronger will:overtuened. And now everything was of his unscrupulous counsellors. Jere- I gone,t--temple, priesthood, palace and miah spoke to him boldly and earnest-1monarch; even the walls of the city ly, advising.submission to Babylon as were laid low. "The city was put to the only reasonable and wise policy, I fire and sword. Neither age nor dig- HARROWING YOUNG CORN. but vy-hen rebellion was determined nity of sacred office saved the leading! One of our neighbors, who made a e upon he was put under restraint, and men from the Babylonian vengeance.1 neat farm fortune, always made a at one time was thrown into a foul At last, when the blood of fury of the practice of harrowing young corn as dungeon. Zedekiah more than once fierce soldiers from the Eupltratcei had the first cultivation. Fre says: sought his counsel, and had he listen- subsided, all of the population possess- ed to it might have saved himself and ing any worth in the eyes of a slave - his city. His pitiful weakness and holding empire, were deported. Jeru- cowardice was his undoing. See the salem, accord'hig to Micah's prophecy, graphic story told of the king and the became a heap." . prophet in Jer. 37:1 to 38:28. For the But was everything lost? Men "When you harrowyoung corn looked like a bare field. .Almost all ef the young stalks were covered—with fine dirt.' In two days that field of young corn was the brightest an-cl-best on the big fame. Often a farmer is: rushed with late spring planting and is not able to :work his corn groarid as well as he would wish before planting. In, such cases it is well to go 'ahead and do the planting. Then follow at leis-ure with a harrowing, just as the young corn is beginning to come up, or a little later. This later harrowing Will smooth and compact the soil nicely, will make a dust mulch for dry times, and -will serve as a right good first cultivation. One rather dry year we gave one cornfield two harrotvings for first cul- tivations, and after those used a one- horse fourteen -toothed harrow, culti- vator when the corn was _older and taller. That field that year was culti- vated wholly with harrows, and the yield was large. Old cern after tasseling and 'shoot- ing, when it can no longer be culti- vated with the standard two -horse cultivater, may be cultivated to ad-, vantage with a one-horse hafrow or harrow cultivator. Of a dry year such late light surface cultivation keeps down late weeds and conserves soil moisture at a critical time of ear de- velopment, when abundance of soil moisture is the making of a banner crop. - Fertilizers for Field Crops. The following fertilizer applications several occasions upon which Jere- avoided the site of the city as the per acre are prescribed. for various miah addressed messages to the king,- place where the curse of God had crops, by the Dominion Chemist and see chs. 21, 27, 32, 37, and 38 of his fallen. Did Jerusalem leave behind Soil Fertility Specialist at Ottawa, in book. • only smoke and bloodshed, disappoint- Bulletin No. 8, N.S of the Dominion Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Baby- me,nt and blighted 0 hopes? Such would Department f Agriculture" Ion, had made him swear" submission be a very mistaken estimate of the -. by a most solemn oath. Jeremiah legacy bequeathed to the world by the . For grain—Nitrate „of soda 100 lbs., counseled him to keep his sworn obli- doomed city. At least one man threw superphosphate 150 lbs., muriate of gation (compare Ezek. 17:19) and about the dying city an imperishable potash 50 lbs., basic slag .(300 lbsper this counsel of the prophet, which glory—Jeremiah. (See Jer. chs. 37, acre) may - profitably replace the seemed at first treasonable th many 38.) What a loyal soul! How brave superphosphate, especially where of the princes and people, was proved and tenacious of his high purposeclover has been seeded. Yell wheat, in the end to have been the only pos- What a sufferer! How he loved his • - . or other gram not seeded dONVil Wit11 sible way of safety. The writer of people and his country, and how it s Chronicles, however, „regards as the broke his heart to be compelled -Co clover or grass seed, may require only king's chief sin the fact that he testify against them because of their nitrate of sada (100-150 lbsper acre) "hardened kis heart from turning sins! unto the Lord God of Israel." But Jeremiah's contribution may be a In aggravation of Ids political set forth more specifically. He had For potatoes ---Nitrate of soda 260 faith that though all destroyed, reli- lbs., superphosphate 300 lbs., muriate gion itself would flourish in men's of potash 150 lbs. Certain experiments hearts as a spiritual 'experience, far have indicated that a inixture of id - more genuinely than in the old days when men leaned hard on the outward trate of soda and sulphate of am - institutions. So "Jeremiah announc- nionia may sometimes yield results ed that religion is eternal because it is superior to those from the use of the possession of the heart of maneither alone. In that case nitrate of The Chaldeans had struck down a soda 130 lbs , sulphate of ammonia state and a city, and an organization 100 Ihs, superphosphate 300 lbs, mur- of religionbut. the indestructible late of potash 150 lbsis recom- thing was beyond their power, even mended. that secret of true religion hidden in the breast of man whose bitter fate For mangels and beets--Niteeete of it was to sit lonely in hi S prison while soda 200 lbs., superphosphate 300 lbs., Judah went to her doom." muriate of potash 100 lbs. to encourage vigorous, early growth, lathe spring. crime, his breaking faith with the Babylonian king, was the crime against religion committed not only by Zedekiah, but also by "all th,e chiefs of the priests, and the people." They "transgressed very much- after all the abomination -s of the heathen." They introduced these abominations and often unclean practices into the very temple of Jehovah. Ezekiel; who had been a temple priest and knew the place well, and who was at that time a captive in Babylon, describes in the form of a vision what he saw in the temple—the "image of jealonsY" (per- haps an image of the -goddess Ash- toreth) and, in a secret chamber, a mysterious animal worship, then ,.st the temple gate "the women weeping for Tammuz" (a Babylonian custom connected with the spring festivals, and often accompanied by licentious practices), then a group of sun - worshippers with their backs turned to the temple, and he adds: "Is it a light thing to the house of Judah that they commit the abominations which they commit here? for they have filled She land with violence." Idolatry and lawlessness went hand in hand, and the desperate condition of the coun- try did not restrain from evil deeds: (See L'zek. ch. 8.) • • God had, indeed, sent his messen- gers," the m,'ophets, men lilte Jere- miah and Zephaniah, Habakkuk and Ezekiel, who had faithfully warned the people, had Preached repentance and God's forgiving graee, but they 'had been mocked arid despised "until the wrath of the Lord arose against his people, till there was V° rginedy." 'The taking of Jerusalem in B.C. 086, after a long siege, by the Chal- deans,• must. have been a great arid terrible calamity. With the descrip- tion of this horror given here, should be compared the Lamentations of .1r1'-,' 111 some patt of which was probably written shortly after the (went See eepecially ehapters 2 aed 4. "How heth the Lord i•t.overed the Ttiat erbisCcugh Alarms the Mother For corn—Nitrate of soda 120 lbs., superphosphate 300 lbs., plumate of potash 100 lbs. For cabbage and other leafy vege- tables—Nitrate of soda 380 lbs., superphosphate 320 lbe., inuriate of It strikes terror to the mother's potash 200 lbs. heart to have her baby wake up dur- For flax -h --Nitrate of soda 160 lbs., ing the night with a croupy 'cough. superphosphate 190 lbs., rriuriate of 'When this happens there is no time I potash 100 lbs. for delay; the first thing to do is to_ For tomatoes-eNitrate of soda 200 apply hot,pouitioe. to the throat and lbs., superphosphate -400 lbs , muriate upper part the chest, and then df potash 100 lbs.. • g3" a fewdocs 6Far clover and alfalfa—Nitrate of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup soda 100 lbs., superphosphate 300 11/s., as by doing this the mother will find muriate of potash 100 lbs. For clover that the child will receive prompt and basic slag (500 lbs. per acre) may, permanent relief, and perhaps the life with profit, be substituted for super- savecl by taking this immediate pre. Phosphate 01111'610n, For srn'all fruits ---Nitrate of soda mrs. we'daY'11°67 C°nest°g°' o'() 3 writes:—' little girl had. a very croupy cough which kept her awake illurilbs., superphosphate 00 lbs., ate of Potash 130 lbs. at night. I had tried 8everal things For applese—Nitrate of soda, 5 to to relieve it, but could. get nothing 10 lbs. per tree (or 200 to 400 lbs. per until I got Dr. -Weed's Norway Pine acre) applied about eise.se eeeeee het Syrup. After oho had taken a few foec 13lossoraing time. doses I saw good efieets se I kept right on -faith it and her ceugli soon left her,'' Dr. wood's Norway. lee° sheep ie Coat all knots with shellac before 8tie. a bottle; 60c. for the large farnily panting and the paint will not ecale size; put up only- hv The T. Milburn off. Shellac keeps resin, from running Ce„ Limited, Toroatio, Out. out which eattees paint to scale POULTRY. A lot of colds that cause losses next fall can be prevented bef teaching the chicks to roost at an early age. Then they do not crowd arid become over- heated at night arid eatch cold in the morning on the cool ground. The slight running «at the nostrils whith may trouble a• growing chick all sum- mer may be the cause of the swollen head which -suddenly develops during the cool fall weather. Keep the brooder 'houses as free as possible from dust and it may help to prevent colds. .This is done by occa- sionally changing • the "litter and brushing the stove,. and brooder can- opy which is soon thickly covered with dust. Keep down the accumulation of cobwebs and keep the windows clean to permit the sunshine to ,enter and help disinfect the house. Mites often sap the blood from young stack and make them more snsceptible to colds. The roosts in colony houses need just as much spray dope as the laying house rOJetS. Often the colony house roosts are naLcd to the uprights furnishing . crevices where millions of mites can hide dur- ing the day: Soak those crevices with the engine oil drained from a crank case and yeti will help protect the young stock from mites. r Do You Suffer 1,11\1SO is ideal for any wash -clay 1 method you use, You do not have to ,change any of your usual steps—just use Kills° where you • • used to use ordinary soap. H you like to boil your white cot. tons, Ririso will give you just the safe cleansing suds you need in the boiler. If you, use a washing machine, follow the advice of the big washing, machine manufacturers— use Rills°. Just soaking with this new kind of ebap loosens all the dirt until a single rinsing /eaves the clothes clean and spotless. However you ,do your wash, make it easy by using Rinso. Ritmo is sold by all grocers and department stores If you use a Washing Machine, soak your clothes in the 1Rinsa suds as usual. Intim morning add more Rinso solution and vorle the machine. Then rinse and dry— you will have a clean sveet snow - while wash. PE.N7 • ,144 LEVER BROTHERS ' LIMITED TORONTO ' .11-4-29 N.MMSR8Ba or Horne and Country Of What Use Are the.13ranch Directors? "No," objected the President. "The President and Secretary have their hands quite full with the regular du- ties of their office. The Vice -President is absent. I would suggest that the Directors .take this upon themselves." Accordingly the meeting put through •a motion that the Directors be a committee of investigation to examine and report upon all desirable ways of raising funds, reconimending to the consideration of the Branch those which, in the Committee's opin- ion, were best suited to the talents and resources of the neighborhood. Thus the work will not only. he dis- tributed among a larger, number of members and the evil of 'over-working:se the few avoided, but a more thoroug-cloge- and efficient study .of the question will in all probability be attained. THOSE BALES STILL h GODSEND. The Secretary of a Northern Insti- tute that distributed donations of clothing writes: "People are just the same as of old. When'you help them materially there is a prospect of help- ing them materially. The President and I have got along pretty well hand- ing out goods. We were so fortunate as to be able to help a family where the man had a broken leg; there was a wife and eight children, the eldest fourteen., "In another home there were a brother and sister, both elderly. The brother told my husband that he had no underclothes and that his sister had,her feet wrapped in burlap bags. They .needed everything in the way. of clothing. The Institute seet one parcel and have bought yarn and are sending socks and stockings. We have not everything, but ,we are getting quite a lot out of what we had left from the bales from the Institutes of Southern. Ontario. We are putting , some of our own with it, and sending a little food too." Another ''says: "The boxes from Southern Ontario Institutes proved a veritable, Godsend to us. A family of six were burned out at noon en Sun- day and by night our officers and few members .had them fixed up cora- fortable in a shack of their own." • • This is the time to hill weeds.,Every 'weed that gets an ,inch high in ti growing croP decreases the yield of that crop. The fellow who waits till all the weeds germinate before culti- vating his corn, so that he can kill them all at one lick, has to buy fetid Lor . his horSes. My hired man got sick last srritig in the midst of the corn planting rush when 1 was crowding the work. I had been driving- a three -horse disk while he followed u 1 hotavo hoises oil • the 'harrow: I tried ridieg the disk and driving with one hand while I led the harrow Lcare. Using a brooni- stick instead of a strap 1 could hoiri theni back frore. stepping into the dis1,-. blades. It worked. Since then I don't use two men to do one man's work, if 1 oauu figure out a one-man way of doing it. I was eorry Jake got tech, but I use my head a little more. This is a quesion frequently asked by the Directors themselves. The Board of Directors for the Branch consists of the President, Vice -Presidents, Secretary -treasurer and three Directors with an additional Director for each twenty-five members above fifty. The inembers may elect additional Directors if they so desire, at the time of the annual meeting. The whole forms the Management Committee, a sort of trustee board, for the Institute for the year. It is elected annually in May by the paid-up members for the current year and those who have paid -their fee for the coming year. The Directors are expected to assist the Executive officers M carrying on the work of the Institute It is advisable to have one or more of the Directors on each special com- mittee. -e The Directors should help to distri- bute the printed programs among all the homes of the neighborhood and to secure new members. They should suggest ways and means by which the- work may be • . . . made more effective. Particularly in collecting and offering practical and workable -ideas for the next year's program can they be of use. Each Directof should make himself 'familiar- with the • contents of the Hatid.- -Book: - - All expenditures of Institute funds except •for postage or stationery, should be -approved by the President on authority of the Executive or Board of Directors. When large sums are to be expended or new lines of work requiring expenditure of funds are to be undertaken, it is well to I have the approval of a regular or spe- ' dal meeting 1 The Directors should riot undertake anything of an unusual character in connection with the Institute :Work., until it has been approved by the ma- jority of the members. All theirework 'must be ratified by the general mem The Chairman "of each Committee should report to the Board of Direc- \vhen called upon to do so by the sPip oss.i,dorone-quarter eil,t°rami °31. iatftheY °i.nhei ernh piree t The Executive _Conirnittee, consist- ing of "the President, Vice-Preeidents and Secretary -treasurer, should carry into effect the business of the Insti- tute, as specified by the membership aB s a whole or by the oard of Direc- tors. Anything of an unusual charac- ter,,whether, it be regarding' meeting,s, entertainments or the expenditure of funds, should bereferred to the Dimes tors or a regolor or special meeting. .an example of t, e syorls of Direc- tors in a Special case was receetly given et Fh ontill institute. This lira -eel: -vvorlcing for a Much- roadad community hail; and ways and means cll. ..,aising oney,,which should also reive the coirmineaty better edu- cationally ancl socially were being c1 150 Finelly it wee prepoeed to leave it to the Eateculisse iireestigate and repOrt. From Headaches.? tors ,or• at reguler monthly meetings, Headaches seera,to be habitual with many people and make life miserable forthe sufferer, in fact, a million needles ceulcl not produce the suffer- ing and torture that these affieted un- dergo. There is only one way to get rid of the headaches, and that is to go right to the seat of tile tro. uble. Burdock Blood Bittere do this by removing the cause of the trouble through its cleansing, strengthening and tonic action on the whole system. hir. E. hi ache atter, Mo o s eh o rn , Man., writes: ---``I had headachee every second day, :ind thoy sveie 50 had 1 would have to stay in bed all day long, in .fact, from 6 o'clock in the morrting to 10 o'clock at night. I eould hardly bear the sefferiug, but ane da when T Wa5 311 i,015 B. I was advised to use Burdock Blood Bitters, and it StITO did relieve ine heatisches,'' Burdock Blood Bitters has been. 071 the market ler the past 45 years and, itt Manufactured only'by The T. Mil- berii Co., Limited. Toreete,