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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1919-12-25, Page 2.1NT G, D. MeTAGGART D. Ms:TAGGART •—•••••,--• McTaggart Bros. *BANKERS A GENERAL BANKING EUSIs NESS TRANSACTED, NOTES ORCOUNTE12, DRAFTS ISSUED. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DE,t POSITS. SALE NOTES puu, CHASED. T, RANCH -- NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY- AMER, FINANCIAL dtEAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSEE- ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT- ING 14 FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES. DIVISION COURT OFFICE, • CLINTON. W. BRYDONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, 'ETC. Office— Sloan Block —CLINTON DR. GENII Office ems at la's residence, coe. High and Kirk streets.,. • DR. J. C. GANDIER Office 11ourss---1.130 to 3.30 p.m., 7.80 is; 9.00 p.m. Sundays 12.80 to 1.30 tare, Other hours by appointment only. Office and Residence—Victoria St ' e CHARLES B. HALE, ConveyancereNotary Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURAN,CE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, — CLINTON. GARFIELD McMICHAEL. • Licensed Auctioneerer for the County of Huron. Sales con- ducted in any part of the county. Charges moderate and satisfac- ticn guaranteed. Address: Sea - forth, R. R. No. 2. Phone 18 on , 286,- Seaforth Central. GEORGELL EIOTT' er Licensed Auctioneer for the County-. of Buren. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made foe Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, Or by . calling Phone 18 on 157. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. . tit at tit Box 127, Clinton' - Phone 100. Agent for The Huron & _Erie Mortgage Cor. - Iteration and The Canada Trust Company Comm'er E. C. of J., Conveyancer. Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public Also a numbeer of good farms fel. sale. At Brumfield on Wednesday each week. —TIME TABLE— Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH DIV. Going east, depart 6.33 a.m. 2.52 p.m. Going West ar. 11,10, dp. 11.15 a.m. " ar. 6.08, do. 6.47 p.m. " ar. 11.18 p.m. LONDON, HURON & BRIICE DIV. Going South, ar, 8.23, \di). 8.23 am. 4.15 p.m. Going North depart 6.40 p.m. 11,07, 11.11 a.m. The licKillop Fire Insurance Company Addrese oentrafinIcatIons to A8ron9mist734Adelaide St, West, Toronto Diversified Farming, • \ Tq keep the beetles from, leaving ialeir holes and thus infesting o 1er The plurals& of every crop that can be raised on the ferm jwbat trees, as well ars to prevent the frame% tion of other imerowe in the tree meet of us have aineed et for years ready • attaelsea, a thigh wash of Pelts al - end years. To raise every possible ssible land cement end ('withitb bit of farm produce that is pomisenate of lend) should be ap- and so keep the money On the farm is the aim, I have been 'broughPlied to the trenks of the infested t P 11- that line and so I have trees and other tee e in the vicinity along aer been likely to be attacked: This applieation bothered quite ‘raelet, 'by the idea I have inherited -8o to peak. should be made about May 1 and te- e / When a farm erep or a vegetable potted in one month. takes more time for the prodattion of it tbanathe crop tomes to, then it i$ Selling the Earle Piecemeal, time to 'let some other fellow erase X have' seen a lot of farms that are that crop and let Inc raise senlething 'being sold piecemeal, though their that I can make a go of: Beans is a owners don't aeon/ to be aware of the crop that we used to monkey with, fact. They think "they are keeping, but we haven't just the right condi- their farm in their own possession, tions for growing the, crop. We do hut in many cases they "have sold quite have the climate for a .dozen other a Chunk of it already. Thom again, it crops that we can produce at a profit isn't such an easy matter as it appears' and also with pleasure, because it is a at east thought to keep from selling Pleasure to grow a crop that yields eSome of the farm as we go along. It well nd brings a profit. is pretty good farm& that has de- • *e aro told very often by wiser men velopeel a system that prevents thie than we that we must not put all the fully. eggs in one basket. I will say that we Every crop we grow Lakes a certain must not aut our eggs in the wrong amount ea plant food from the soil—a basket, but when we find the right one, ei two or three baskets, then fill the fad we all recogeize. .There is plant basketk.beeomeavailable to meet this de - up as high,as they will hold. food stored in the soil/that gradually s Certam farms are •adepted to cor- tain crops. We can't get around that. !nand, but under ordinary conditions I can raise one or two crops on this thd if the cropping is continued ais is insufficient to make up the loss, an place that my neighbor can't make go well, and he can raise something that time must come when the plant food available each year Fill not produce I can't make a success at. That is not paying crop—the 1 arm will have a matter of climate, as we have tlae a been about all sold. same wind and the same aim. And Farmers have learned that it pays another tilting to consiaer is that dif- ferent men farm differently. I have to - put hack , on the farm as much of half the acres that my neighbor has. :the plant food removed as they can conveniently, but still a good manY His aarm must be arranged differently than mine. I can't have as much area neglect to do it that know, and some others will not give the matter much as he has, but I can do Bay laming a little more intensively. That in itself ,consideration. These go right along makes a different line of crops fit each selling their farm's fertility, which particular farm. measures the fan's real values Farm To find the crop that fits the farM, buyers are coming to take ft-Iona:hinge and also the crop that fits the man, is into consideration and a arise buyer the biggest problem we have, I think. will find out how the farm' has been Bigger production will come only treated and Whether a large part of when I can get sense enough to stop the fertility has been sold before he monkeying with a crop that does not invests. He can build up the soil -in !say and start with one that is adapted time but' he knows that he will be the to Inc and my farm. If I can't find loser for the time it takes him to do that than I had better iet someone else have the farm or let the farm have someone else to run it Either will allow both of us to serve our pur- pose better. Winter Injury to Cherry Trees. Maty cherry growers in Ontario have noticed masses of gum upon the trunk g and branches of their cherry the air and stores it in its roots to trees, which have an appearance more becomes a part of the soil, but it is or less unhealthy. It has been especi- very rich in plant food which it re- ally notfecable upon neglected trees turns, and when we buy alfalfa to fad which have dropped their leaves pre. we are buying a valuable fertilizer at maturely.from an attack of the leaf. the sense time—one that costal/1s spot disease. Especially in the small- about fifty -pounds of nitrogen, ten ler trees, the growth of the trunk and pounds of phosphoric acid, and forty branches for the past two years has pounds of potash to the ton. If we been very alight, and an examination buy bran to feed with it we.get with Chows that except for a narrow ring' each thousand pounds twenty-six of tambium next t'o the bark the pounds of nitrogen, twenty-nine wood is brown and dry. Where such . pounds of phosphoric acid, and sixteen conditions exist, it is very evident that pounds of potash. Fattening animals the trees were -insured during the win- ter of 1917-1918. Although not present in all cases, man' of these 'trees have numerois dairy cows return a low percentage holes about the size of a fine knittrag direct—about sixty per cent—where needle in the balk. In the burrows, the milk is fed on the farm and only back of these holes one or more black the butterfat sold the percentage re - beetles will be found. Sometimes the turned altogether is high. From these holes are so numeroas that the inner ordinary farm feedi we can see how bark is completely honeycombed. This we can supplement the fertilizer re - alone would soon oause the death of turned to the farms and get profit the trees but, in nearly if not all cases from the use of the feed. Thera are where the borers are discovered, it other feeds at rich in plant food as will be found that the trees have been these, ,and feedl eliffer greatly in this. winter -injured and the number of bor- Cottonseed meal contains about the ers will be nearly in proportion to same phosphoric acid and potash but the extent ea the injury from the nearly three times the amount' of . Canadian Poultry For Francp. The Direetors oa the National IsAvieeltural Society of Frence have been granted fi subetantial erecilt by the Preneli Government for the per - pose of acquiring breeding POIlltrY for the restocking of the liberated regions in Ptsinee, This need was brought to the attention of the Federal Minister of Agriculture by Monsieur M. Chev- alier of the Credit Fonder FrancoCanadien, the Minister referring Mon - sin= 'ClleValier to the National Pout - try Council. The Connell is now in cornmeal:lea. Om with the Avieelturel Society ek France and pending ,receipt of infor- mation as to the quaritity of the dif- ferent breeds required, the Prottineial Representatives of the Council ere making a aurvesraof their reoective provinces in order to aticertalin what stock may be available for export, The varieties favored by the French are tlia Barred Plymeuth Rock, the White .Wyandette, Dleek Minorea and Rhode Island Red, and also Dronse Turkeys. An appeal 80 being made by tho Presi- dent 01 the Council to the Provincial Depaetments of Agriculture, Agricall- tural Colleges, and the C.anaaian pees -to do Edi possible to /*SSW in the ac - gulling of the,necessary information to carry on negotlatione vvith the Ai - cultural Society of France, and to take advantage of the opportunity pres- ented to ,place Canada in a favorable international light as a producer and exporter sI breeding poultry. The provincial officers of the Natiobal Poultry Council are as follow: P.E.I, --Dr. P. C. Gauthier Vice- Pres, Na- tional Poultry Council, St, Louis; N:S. —Mr. H. Hull, Poultry and P. O. Ass'n. Glace Bay; N.B.—Mr. A. C. McCulloch, Poultry Division, Depart- ment of Agriculture, Fretrerickon, • Que.—Dr. S. Lafortune, Pointe Gat- ineau; Ont.—Dr. Robert Barnes, Health of Animals Branch, Ottawa; Man. --Mr, II. M. Kerr, Vice -Pres., National Poultry Council, Brandon; Sack —Mr. II. M. Arnaud, Sask. Prov- incial Popltry Ass'n Regina; Alta.— Mr. C. M. Baker, 'Alta. irovincial Poultry Asian, Calgary; B.C..—Mr, H. E. 'Weby, Provincial Poultry Ass'n., Enderby. It is interesting to note that in a report issued bY the Commissioner - General for Canada in France ini561:- tatione of eggs into that country in 1912 amounted to 303,243 (Quintaux Metirques), the carports for the same year being 51,155. In 1918 the im- ports fell to 71,162 and the exports 4,600. From these figures it will be seen that prior to the War France was head office, Seaforth. Ont. DlitleCluttY s President, James Connolly, Goderich; Vice., James Evans, Beechwood; Sec. -Treasurer, Thos. IL Hays, Sea. torth. Directors: George McCartney, Sea. forth; D. F. McGrew, r, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, Waltoss; Wm. 'Rine, Sea. teeth; Mehleaen, Clinton; Robert Ferries, Harlock; John Benneweir, Brodhagen; Jai, Connolly, Goderich. Agents: Alex 1.eitch, Clinton; J. W. T eo Goderich; Ea. Hinchley, Seaforth; W, 'Chesney, Egniondville; R. G. Jar. meth, Brodhagen. Any money la be paid :a may be paid to Moorish clethir.t, eo., Clinton. or at cat's Grocery, Goderich. Parties desire,' to effect inauranes ar transact other business will be promptly attended to on application to anf of the above officers addressee -to, Mseir respection Post offiees- Losessa •leepeeted by the director who live. saarest the scone. Clinton News- Record CLINTON, ONTARIO. Terms of subscription—OM per yews; in advance to Canadian addreesea; PM to the U.S. or other foreign countries, No paper discontinued until ail arreara are paid utiles:teed the option of the publisher. The date to which. overy subscription is pisid is denoted, on the label: Advertising rates—Transient edema, tisements, 10 cents, per nonpareil line for first insertion and 6 cents per line for each subsequent insera lion. Small advertisements not to exeeed one inch, such as "Losta" "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., hisert- ed onto for 36 emits, and each substa. meet insertioe 10 cents, Communications intended for publicit- tion must, as a guarantee of good faith, be Accompanied by the name of the writer, HALL, M. R. CLARK. Proprietor Editor, this. Now to keep the ferns from losing 7 a 'heav3r importer of eggs, and no any of its fertility we will be obliged i doubt ‚efforts will be made to bring to replace somewhat more than. the the poultry population of France manure that stock eating .the traps r above the pre-war level in order that -a l'ner d° she may be self-sustaining. Canada will ' produce, but many f i a this by judicious feeding of boughten should be in a posibion to supply all feeds; as well as by growing lcgames. the breeding poultry required, but it Alfalfa is a very strong. soil builder, will be necessary f or all interested for it not only takes nitrogen from to give all assistance possible to the National Poultry Council in the lo- cating. and the selection of bred -to -lay stock.—Robert Barnes, President; Ernest Rhoades, Secretary, Live Stock Braneh, Ottawa, Ont. make the greatest use of the carbon in the feeds and return almost ninety per cent. of the plant food, and while How to Keep Fit After Forty -Five. Drink without eating and eel with- out drinking. Five glasses of water a day, none with meals, will make you free of the doctors. Warm feet and a cool head 'need no physician. A bath, cold if you please, hot if you must, with a good rub, starts the day right. If you will save your smoke till after 'luncheon, you'll never have smoker's heart. „Weaning , the same weight under - Clothing the year around will save you O lot of colds. Dress cool when you walk and warm when you ride. • Your nose, not your mouth, was given you to breathe through. Clean akin, clean socks, clean under - winter. ,, nitrogen, an 1, is et wou wear evca-y day,• • The shot -hole borers founsi in the over two &ales a hundred pounds Don't sit still with wet feet. Walk injured oherry trees .are known as for the plstat food returned if the until you have a chance to change. "fruit bark beetles a Of these, there mum svas taken care of properly so Never let a day pass without cover- ' four miles 'on foot The averrare hen 'eye from 100 to 150 eggs a yeer, extra geOd olle5 now Among those in the eetitt tosdaY lay 200 egge. Not 40 long ago the who 1=1 to he LIMO tO go to ohlovoh 2004egg. ben WAS considered eomething there' f(74." lilt"1" PnaTals of Marvel, and the elenei,jon, 0,00denined by St, Pout in his great , la:waling of the everage hen to the l'IPI$ILle toetbe Remans. They ere in-; 200.eag mark ,w,oe oe the ultimate ei,tenetiblin.because they never glorify heVyYVVVY inn, ilium fts etr, I C' 't? hairdrli to ro 1 IS iiii0 I UU0 tipiat . ...".e.,rWlet,'WYVVV,I,0,11WWWW,VYVVY,,,,, 1 attainment, Now thousands of liare- God or give thenke to Biro for the bred hens ley 200 eggs a year, and the• hloodago theY 13y the light TO£18011 they are able to perceive goad has been set amnia higher, watch ol this obligation and to understandlheir dependence on Inc Almighty power bY whieh life is perpetuated. Like the 'breeding and Selection may attain in Ai:idiot given the proper care, crease by 100 the number ol Think what it would xnean to, In - in heart, vain in their thoughts ami ebstisrioilteine0: 011 the average by the hens of Caneda, °gP It" le)17:131.: Qlfacoklictnet.hienT thbeenenall°15 It is estimated that there are more than 100,000,000 less hens in the world to -day than before the war. At 'the lay average of 100 egge year this means that this year the egg 'output of the worIclis 000 eggs less than it was five years egos, Perhaps we cau see in Vasa ecnne reason for the prices we are paying. More hens and better hene, the kind that lay 200 ems a year on the aver- age, is the need of the world. Food by 100 Calories. At a recce course in food values the various foodstuffs in 100 calorie portions were eMphasized. There are manyahouseesives who would like to memofize this table of food as meas- ured by the new calory unit. A good way to de this is to pin this table in the kitchen, where it may be studied for a moment many times a day: • A 5111011 lamb chop weighing one ounce. A large egg. A small dish of baked beans. An iamb and a half cube of cheese. An ordinary sized sauce dish of sweet corn. .A large boiled potato. A. etnaller sweet potato. An ordinary thick slice of breasa. Two macaroons. Two small baking powder biscuits. Two-thirds cup of cornmeal mush. One cup eatmealo,(cooked). Three-quarters tup steamed rice. One and a third cupfuls Miffed rice. Two scant tralffespoonfula granulated sugar. One acant tablespoonful •butter, oil, or bacon fat. • One and a half tablespoonfuls con- densed mak, sweetened. Half a cup macaroni and cheese. One large raw apple. Four dates. Half a cup of grape juice. Scant three-quarters cup milk. Six clams. Six sardines. One codfish ball. Oee banana. Two brazil nuts, 20 peanuts, 12 pecans or 12 svalauts. Three-quarters cup green peas. One-third cap succotash. What We Accomplished. I attended Brownsville school when a little girl 110 thus knew just what to expect when I went there ab a teacher. Thanks to the ;board of trus- tees I found the building in good re- pair but the walls were bare with the exception oe one picture which the superintendent told me was fit only for the basement. There was not even a clock andats that is a very valuable asset in a country school we decided to work for that first of all. The children sold useful merchan- dise for math premiums, taking most of the orders in their own homes. We clock. a' secured a large calendar and -wall The heat: year we worked for pic- tures in the same way. -.We now have thirteen nicely framed pictures. Last year we had our first enter- tainment. - • With the money receives' at our en- tertainment and a few donations, we bought two lamps, a small talking machme, records and a stand. We spent many a pleasant noon hour listening to the music -avhen the weath- er was unfavorable for outdoor play, When we tired of our cold 'lunches we had occasionally an egg day or potato day. At those times we brought are many kinds, svilich attack a great its plant food would not e lost.eggs anti potatoes from home, prepar- variety of fruit and forest trees. They Then the value of the manure to the See how high you can hold your ed them at recess and then at a cer- . ' • • 11 ' tl 1 rit food that IS head and how deeply you can breathe tain time had one of the older pupils me seldom if ever found exceptin , trees which have been injured by the sreturned, for humus is necessary to whenever you are out -of doors. winter, sun -scall, or from other profitable -production on any soil, and Hot water quick is the best thing for a sprain. . Short shoes and shoes that don't fit causes. - • When the trees are badly injured, there will bee little -hope of saving them. And, as it will, prevent the spread of the insects to other trees, they should at once be taken out and burned. However, in many cases the winter -injury may not be very senious and if the beetles are not numerous, it will be worth wIrple to attempt to save the trees by aiding them to a good growth next year in order to repair the damage, so far as possible, -This can be done by frequent cultivation during the early part of the spring and sowing a cover crop in July to help in their ripening. The use of moderate amounts of stable manure, or commercial fertilizer, will also be helpful, from the manure we get this humus. There are sources of'plant food that are unavailable that the chemical ac- tion of the•gassesAeleased by the de- composition and :fermentation of the manure make available that would not be available but ter the manure, or ,at least not so (middy. Then the manure makes_ the soil more suitable for the roots to penetrate and helps to hoha moisture, thus in a mechanical way, assisting iri production. larhere we systeniatically \voles to impeove the soil continually we aro adding to owe harm instead of selling it off piecemeal, It is like depositing money in the bank, but it as whore we can he sure to drnw It when we want It, and no absconding bank cashier, or Isandits, in panics, ea n touch it. The Correct Posture. In a correct standing position a plemb line dropped from the ear should juist,back of the first joint of the east tee. Many persone.stand with the hips placed so far forward that' if aepluieb line were. nroppod from...the ear it would fall opposite the heel. In this position the chest is flattened, the abdominal muscles are relaxed and the lower abdomee pro- trudes. In a correct position the thest is carried welt forward, the hips are Iseld well bag. The back is quite stroegly concave end he 'anterior wall of the trunk is 'Convex. The abdom- inal misseles are well drawe„in. This pesitioa may be secured without the aid of an instructor by the following method: Standing with the bask agalest a wall or a dome prese the hole, hips, shoulders, back of heed and little fing- er eide of eaoh bend firmly ggainsb the Wall, Now emit the alio-olden for-,! ward away from the well by bending-, the head backward until the eyes look ettaight up to the ceiling, keeping the' heels, hip e aml handflemly pressed" against the wail so as to fix the mus -I des of the trunk; then bring the head, forward away *ern the wall, drawing down the chin without allowing the shoulders to move baukward. The "%Mee of the body will neer be found very nearly corned, iu sl fitly exaggeraLed. • Relax, the niehtilee slightly, while (still .holding the ehest up; step out from the wull, swinging the tains, and the reault will be a perfect standing and walking poise, Persons past middle life, whose in- copatione heve been cedentary, eepeci- idly those who have been occepled with desk work, are generally flat -chested ant roued-shouldaed be it very mark- ed degree. Not infrequently in such caseSo extensive deluges of the museles and bones have oecureed that the form of the body has become fixed and eannot be entietly corrected. This is especially true hn 001450 lil which essifiention of the cartilagee of the ribs has taken place. Even in such ceses, hosvever, very great Mamba/e- a:lent may be scented, ena the benefit to be clativre -from ar, approximate ap- proach to ecrrect attitude is so great that the eff,Irt is well worth while, . ..-- - Save the celety taps for soup. put them over the fire: 70111 sure eggs and potatoes never tasted better. For the last two years we have gathered on an evening in May to test a lot in the long run. svork in the school flower bed and to Getting mad makes black marks .plant vines. If there were a fence on the bealth. N round the whole plot we should have any digestion. Envy, jealousy, and wroth will elan better results. 'Therefore, I consider tbe secueing of the fence one of our You'll never get the gout from future problems, a sending table-an- svalkima other, still another buying more books. Sleep woo's the physically tired man; she floes the mentally exhauritesl. - Nature never puniiihed a man fel. Care of House Planth. getting his logs tired. 'She has pun- iicrise plants should be given water killed many for getting their nerves at intervals and in quantities sof& exhausted. dent only to keep the toil in the poto Two hours of outdoor exercise by from beemahlg drY. the master never yet made him °vet, ,The note should not be kept stand- cilltieal of the cook. • ing in sinners of water, Don't aiik the heart to pimp extra When the math isa the pots' is kept blood to the terain all dap Mel then wet it it aim to.hecome celd mut sour to an overloaded stomach all night. mid the plants will Buffer, Tight; Shoes have sent; lawny a wee Hydeated lime oiled in watering tho to bed with a cold, plants, oueo a month, at the, rate ef Leg wearinese 'Meets Pet Produced • one teaspoonful to n quart of Wets*. brain fag, I will keep the mil :sweet or neutral, Loom cloebes, looae gloves, easy provading they are oot overwsitered, elmes spell min -fort end health, .' 'No %vine athlete steeds still after If you deaire light and flaky numbed 'excrete& without eiatting something potatoee, add e tenspoorrful Of isnicleg oyes' him powder La themilit III mashing them. ,.. .......... ...,..... _ , the gratitude due to their Creator. I It he wan writing for the preseut; time St Paul live& and a stronger; condemnation needed to suit the case; .ef. the modern indifferentist, who ha8! before las eyen the evidence of what religion lias done for human welfare since the Apostles went out among the nations to teach the divthe revela- tion intrusted to them. Some of our neighbors are quite passive. and care not to have God in their knowledge, while others are busy at work disseminating false teaching or seeking to bring into contempt the study of divine truth. By ridicule chiefly of divine truth. By ridieulo laith. Holy Scripture gives warrant for the statement that a fool may say there is no'bod. He can get into such intitte of mind only by *Hui `blind- ness, by refusing to accept the testi- mony of the hest and wisest men of all nations, The Study ef history furnish- es abundant proof that the most bar- barous tribes are by nature inclined to adopt some form a religious w61. - ship. As there never has been a na- tion entirely composed of drunkards or lunatics, so there is no record of O whole nation being atheists or agnostics. In every country such per- sons are regarded as exceptional, A. vain show of learning with high- sounding woraii may cause a confusion of ideas in many minds, but the fact remains that human beings in every age have eherished a belief in the existence of a Supreme Ruler to whom they OWe obedience, prompted by the law written on the tablets of the heart. Forms of prayer, rites and eeremonies have been established to give visible expression to the inward convictions. With sentiments of wonder and pity we read of the strange religious ob- servances preseticedsby heathens in re- mote limas. yare discover traces of weird superstitions in •the tombs of their ea/testers, They believed in rap - pealing to a superhuman powerafor blessings to hallow the joys of home and to consecrate their graves. All the varieties of false worship may be broaght forward to strengthen the argument that impiety is repugnant to the human mind. Agnosticism stands condemned by the vast majority of the Open windowe don't snake half ea teeny colds ars dome! 011014 t10. 13lood prefesere does not coinc to the Men who witilt a lot ellb of doors; histeed it broke foe there who Int tsnd oee, a lot in(1oore. Many ti num flnds lin) late that 1114 Melon, ettS edSt 111111 more in health and legs than 11 1so Id tires and gasoli ne. A four or five-mlle well( daily makes your credit et the bank or health menet np steadily, Nature witn't stund rnv nver(intrui eny te.ore time your Mink. . 'Von not ce HMV 1 elog fill Isjs mouth with food and llien lido 14 (Ifillk te wails it down, No prospeteive breeder should 104 11011)5 that the* work ie easy if he ee- pects to master tlic delnils all suc- ceed; THE CHEERFVL CHERVI5 I lie in cold suspense cit-wn And lottit For tny elt.rrn clack's ce.11 —7; It'so overnwlyithwilen thet .'s Tl -ret ca.». sleep pe:o.ae. irre1 Wirt You Shoval aso—Mees Soesess. fsi ged E.00noreipol TreatIlletA• 119 you IMO feeling of general weiltnese 'day in and mit? Is yoUr eppetite poor? Dime year food fail to strengthee yen and. Tier eleep to refresh? DO you find it hard to do or to bear what shonid be easy? Here your ordinary duties anti °urea become great tasks apd burdens? If eo, take liood's Hersaparillan- this great niedieine revitalises the , Woad, gives vigor itnd tone to all the .olgeos and itinetionis, all is un- equalled for thote who are in any de- gree debilitated or rell down. Do nob delay treatment—begin today. To rouse the torpid liver and regu- late the bowels take Hood's Pills, They ere purely vegetable. human race throughout „the ages oa the past, I Tho teachlag ef St. Paul clearlY I affirms that by the light of reasen i alone a considerable knowledge of .od ' may be obtained, which is. further creased by the aSsistance of divine faith. From the study of tha things which God has made wo• can form e some notion of His power, His wisdom and His goodfsess. We Cell get ma - 'sealable priofs that the Creator of the ' world is not limited ESS we are by space and time; that Ilis intelligence is vaster and more penetrating than any intellectual force existing' among men. ' We can perceive the beauty of the heavens, the grandeur of high violin-, tains, the broad expanse of the ocean, and from these visible objects we may ! clerive.en idea of the invisible creative Power by which the universewas established. We have implanted • within the domain of eonsciousness sense of the diviinity, called the moral sense, that gives testimony to the Supreme Ruler. Far more precious than any earthly treasure is the spiritual underetand- 'Mg by which we appreciate our true telation.s to God ELS our Creator and Chief Lawgiver. The Christians of Rome and elsewhere were urged by St. Paul to be worthy of God by fidelity an every good work. He would allow no line of distinction in favor of the Jewish race, from which he came, "for the same Lord is! over all, rich unto ali that call upon Him." — 13uy Thrift Stamps. Much of the high eost of living is due to the feet that many fel,ks de- pend on ethers to do things that might better be done by th.emselves. Sensible women are making- over old clothes because they realize that the materials in the old articles are better than they can buy now at three times the price. ilazie's Children Left the Farm-- Clinchit's Stayed at Home. Why? Farmer Olinchit bre-sight up four have been as good hands at business boys and three girls. All etayed on as the Clinchit youngsters—if they the farm -until they married, and then bad over had a chance. But Dad Haase they stayed in the neighborhood, I "hated to be bothered with details." Hank might develop an -ambition to Parnaer Hazie had only two young- sters—a boy and a girl—and both left enter a prize acre corn eontest. But home as soon as they were old enough btiencaluisaezibeufsabrrasshreandidatn1 to work loose ands olvhoo; to crystad.ze the proposittoe and lay And the difference -was largely a lit before his father. In*act, lie was matter of just plain business. I afraid to, and felt that D'ad would not, The Clinchits eever undertook any - be very gympathetic, anyway. If Dad thing-evithout a talk and a plain busi- i Hazie gave permission it was offhand, nese understanding. ! when caught in a good humor, and Neither pig nor canning ciltibs had then he mid vaguely: "Oh, well—yes, been invented when these youngsters I guess so. But you -won't get any - were small. But they all had separate thing out of .it." farm interests of their own—chickelis And probably he was right, because. pigs calves, colts, a corner of the , ragueness abotit help or horse work in garlien, certain fields, .ceetabe fruil. -denting or cultivating wrecked tho trees, certain crops. Before Pa Clinch. nterprise halfway. Or his fother did it gave them animals to raise, or lin not remember next fall that that acre anced their enterprises, there was al - of corn belonged to the boy, and so ways a talk about details. Johnny got,ap.c in i. i got nothing out of it. the colthe wanted, but rendered such-, 1 Business discussion is fine mental and -such return in work, while mat- : training, apart from the clear under- ters of feed, pasture, care, and owner - standing that it gives a family about ship were 'clearly settled beforehand. money matters, property, and common If Milly got the .chicken money, it was interests. because she assumed responsibilityl 1 The Jews are capable business Imen and did the work. There was the same: and women wherever you find them.. -understanding between Pa Intl Ma • 1VItich of their capability grows out of Cjinchit about household money,lJewish family life, where discussion clothes money, and the member of men of business matters, even in the ah - Coming iii the threshing crew, the street, is encouraged anci becomes a cultivation of Ma's berry patch. habit. Jewish boys and girls grow up• But over in the Hazie family nobody in an atmosphere of mental rivalry, knew where anybody stood. 'learning to give and take, and also to lAttle Hank Hezie worked file a be exact in the statement of details. Trojan all summer, raisine a litter of Carry the same attention to clear pigs, under, the impression that they detail and exact? itatement a little fur - were his An, only to find that Dad timer end it becomes the scientific' sold them to the butcher just: before epirit and the basis of all human pro - fair Mine and didn't remember giving gress. Children have the faculty them to Hank. gaieties. Mrs. Heide n , aterally, because An their liking for nor Cluirlotie ever hod 10111101 Lar fade, mei with their undeveloped themselves, They got eloilies ellei a powera of theorizing, they are seien- few trimmings a life en a it11141111,11* me. illelliali pi1111,111100V11111t lA111110010r Ma, Pernailer is certainly a business -- Beale felt proepeame tll, NOV. '11lbte V0111121eX in details, veal often, elver ne 0 llInschte eanteeet, 'I hey onig husiuees" corporation would run hie"vh" "f the tlil,whit 114410117'‘0"1" family is an informal corporation. No. A' b"‘""" """P01."(''ht "h10154( thee imiestrial business, The farm never put sueb thina'a bk wrillialr. Bet along without conferencee, definitions, ell the details woo tlisenseed, netti)b- „itgromnents. Probebly a little "big Renee Points 510113111 14103 "'It", 1,''',''i Wetness" on the farm Waauld do MOT. LloPlethPol' i 11111(0 ""w'l b-"I'll'hthig' thait any other one ehieg to keep the, boas and girlii at home. Pa and Ma began marrleti life (ha1 way, whon be provided au much ,ef the ever steemy for running the homes -fuel allewed her all else seved roe her own, tind to isiolis 11 pellleg prOpetty matiere 121 Rom ehnpo for on emergency. Loog before they left; school the eviler Clifieleita Weess `good hencle at heel:tom. Bs the leclustriel \eerie they would 1100e been capable saleapeople— maybe capteine of industry. They el- Weys eanse to you with a clear, well- thought-oub huethese proposition. When one of them had a big project - iii viervv he not only itartecl by having ;11. definite ungersianding with his, 11 father, but las° lied decided exactly' what be wanted erom Pa Clinehit, Ond how and whets. That gave a basis! for going ehead and getting reeells„1 cowl enjoying there ono's; eels% I But the poor ITazie family! It ran something iiko a :Factory where orerY- I • body is on 0 pioce-work basis., and; . the boss likely de tot a p,leee rate' overnight, Bank rind charlotte wouldi • .potvt let 41 ran toe long, it *III lead to clirefile. indigestion. In • the meanwhile you suffer from miserable, sick Iseadaelice, ner- vouttneaa, deprea- Rion and sallo w compleeion Just try C li A al DER 1,AI N S STOMACH&LIVER TABLETS. They re- lieve fermentation, thcligeation — gently Let sately .4o0nn0 the ottani one knot) OW btA1111101 SyLrin oWoc4;141eniqe oaf. A 1 01 8,560, 2Se., as Sy ataa Om 1 Chanaberiniu editine do, Totonto iiiinklaa==ltaltalgzsgssemgas's •