Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
The Huron Expositor, 1929-03-08, Page 2
sea SUNDAY AFTERNOON Isabel Hamilton, Goderdch, Ont.) 'Emu, Lord, didst once for all atone; et• may both Jews and Gentile own their two walls the Corner -Stone ming 'them one. Join high with low, join young with old, Esi leave that never waxes cold; Mndag one shepherd, in one fold, lig e us all one. —C. Wordsworth. PRAYER ® God, who by Thine Eternal Son create all things, and, when the .•?" d had grown old in sin, didst deign to renew it by the holy mystery of the Incarnation, we humbly beseech Tigre to pour down upon us Thy ser - vents the grace of the same Lord Jesus Christ, that, being renewed tlsareby in the spirit of our minds, we easilyput off the old man with his . , and may put cm the new man ch is created after God; through this same Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Prt of ]nig sun thoei aro lr'isrAit tail: Jaunt to the place 34510 anf l Hasse with. sv is eutel a ro in a as may Secured will esus,:, le the eaalte^rs to realize satisfactory wanes, There is no splice where an auetion may be etazed at as ;low costs as right on the term whre the stock has ,been produced. This is one 'ad- vantage. The other, and oat equal if not grater importance, is the fact that each seller is contributing to a reputation as a breeder of good live. stock and is maim; it possible to improve the quality of the cattle grown in his eemmunity whereas when he ships them long distances at much expense to be sold in a eensign- ment sale, he is losing sight of, in n measure, what is best for himself as well as his community. Consignment auctions are necessary and have, and will, continue to serve a useful purpose, but they are not al- ways for the best interests of every breed who sells through them and sacrifices his own and the best in- terest of his own community. For as oft as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till He come. Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. But let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup. For he that eateth and drinketh un- worthily, eateth and drinketh damna- tion to himself, not discerning the Lord is body. S. LESSON FOR MARCH 10th Lesson Topic—Baptism and the Lard's Supper. Lesson Passage—Matt. 28:19, 20 ; 9. Cor. 11:23-29. Geddes Text -1 Cor. 11:24- 120lhen John the Baptist began to baptize, Jesus was still an unknown artisan in Nazareth. But in this new madvement He hears .a call which He cannot resist. He is conscious that he must attach himself to it. He appears, therefore, as a candidate for baptism. But to the Baptist this pre- sented a difficulty he had not forsecn; 4']f have need to be baptized of Thee, aria comest Thou to me?" Jesus re- plies: 'Thus it becometh us to fulfill an righteousness." The baptism of Jesus thus became His anointing as Tang. Jesus was thus actually equip - with the fullness of the Divine "frit In to -day's lesson we read of b= 6, tus'm as the initiatory rite of the -tian Church instituted such by tS..jist Himself. Our Lord appeared N.. His disciples after the resurree- v and gave them a command to go ' disciple all nations and to ad_nit them, to fellowship with Himself in visible Church by baptizing them id. the name of the Trinity. Thos is `` sued in our own day by Protest - bodies of various denominations. t F', Lord's Supper -1 Cor. 11:23-29. ue Passover was the most distinc- t� ,-aestival of the Jewish religion and J r , ever careful to observe the re- ements of the Jewish law, made ttar'"igemants for the observance of feast on His last visit to Jerusa- lem: "With desire I have desired to this passove'r with you before I WORLD MISSIONS An Investment of the Trinidad Mission. (By John W. Richards Natrem, In- dore, Central India.) ABOUT YOUR NERVES Headaches and Other Troubles Follow When the Nerves Give Way. Nerves are delicate fibres running from the brain to all parts of the body. Some of then give us the sense of touch and feeling; others convey the will to our muscles and enable us to move. When we have an "attack of nerves" it means that the body is in some way out of order and the nerves have become over- sensitive, no that we get neuralgia. nervous headache, sciatica, or some other nerve trouble. Sometimes the nerves get too weak to do the will of the brain, and we get trembling hands or limbs, or perhaps St. Vi*us dance. The whole nervous system is fed and kept healthy by your hloo•i. If that is thin and poor, nervous weakness follows. In that case a tonic is needed to build up the blood, so that it may in turn feed the nerves, spine and brain. The very best medi- cine for enriching the blood is Dr. Williams' Pink Pips. You cannot take them without feeling the uplift they give. Your appetite improves, your brain is clearer, you gain strength in every way, and you feel full of new life. One sufferer, 'Miss Margaret R. MacDonald, Catalone Road, N. S., tells what this medicine did for her. She says:—"I suffered for a long ti'r' from severe headache and nervous ex- haustion. I tried several kinds of medicine but got no relief until I us- ed Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and these, before long, gave me complete relief. From my own experience I feed that I cannot praise Dr. Williams' Pink Pills too highly,' and would advise anyone who is suffering from head- aches or nervous exhaustion, to give thein a fair trial, as I feel sure the results cannot be anything but satis- factory." Take these pills as a tonic if yea are not in the best physical condi- tion and cultivate a resistance that will keep you well and strong. You can get these pills through any medi- cine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. I am deeply grateful to the Board of Foreign Missions for sending me Iiterature in connection with the re- cent Jubilee celebrations of the Trini- dad Mission. It has made my heart leap for joy to learn of the achieve- ments of the'Mission during the past sixty years, especially as the influ- ences set in motion in the little island across the seas have echoed and re- echoed out here in India. Nearly sixty years ago a yo•ing man of a romantic nature left Cal- cutta for the West Indies as an in • dentured laborer. The voyage was slow and perilous, but after six months of longing far the land they were finally privileged o get into the "Land of the Humming -bird." This Hindu young man, just about 18 years of age was assigned to a portion of the plantations where he served for four years according to agreement. He was entitled to a free passage back to India at the end of this per iod, but he liked the island se much that he stayed on in the various sec- tions of the West Indies for 14 years. During this period he came into con- tact with the late Dr. John Mortoe, who taught him some English, gave him a copy of the English New Testa- ment and took very special interest in his general welfare. He had given up his old Hindu faith, had learned a great deal from Dr. Norton about Jesus Christ and His offer of life eternal as a free gift, but the final battle, on the one hand, between his girl wife .and his other dear ones whom he had left behind, and on the other hand, the claims of Jesus Christ had yet to he fought out and won, as he expected some day to return to India, and, being the eldest son in the family, become the head of his people under the old joint -family system. Persecution in India for converts to Christianity at that time was so great that he shuddered at the thought of returning to India as a convert ; in fact he had already forfeited his membership with the Hindu society as he had left the sacred land of India and had crossed the sea which was anathema. Should be then do as Dr. Morton was asking him to do, accept Jesus Christ as his Lord and Saviour, return home to India and face the ordeal of having become a Christian or just come back as a Hindu, bow down to the family gods, feed a few Brahamans, perform ablu- tions in the sacred water of the moth- er Ganges and settle down to the old Hindu life? This was the time of a crisis in his life. e ul in writing to the Corinthians reason to censure them for their nation of the Lord's Supper- s as follows: For I have receAved a Lord that which also I deliver - met unto you, that the Lord Jesus the night in which He was betrayed bread. d when e had given thanks, He e , e it, and said, take eat, this is body, which is broken for you: do in rememlbrance of Me. After the same manner also !: e took ie% cup, when e had supplied saying, s cup is the New Testament in My • this do ye, as oft as ye drink fir; in remembrance of Me. e 1116 , • • 1: ystfriiillemegBacezdartioeSeaafied , eccfar1 e rrt tn` en u Czga-gzers Ameg .i zed ori aaq asCa,rndndamtred 320 trarSe>AmM_ 9ba=vaOat (To be continued.) e. ri a,•y�'"...:,,..-.,""+,'"�,r+�ar ins.,-'".,�,.�,.,�w,,mx.�.,ry�r»R"`.,.. •,-Mvy,.0 okt account lain llal;urluag. British aubjeast br birth, he bras what might be called an American crook of the higher class, but some of hie work was done in Canada and hie first prison sentence was server here. In Canada he was flogged. The hogging hurt. Those who recommend flogging because criminals will shrinks from it are right. Those who approve it because they think criminals will on that account abandon crime are, wrong. This is what Black says;— "The flogging just hardened me more, that's all. I found myself somehow more determined, more confident, apd with a feeling that 1 would play this game of violence to a finish. 1 had taken everything they had in the way of violence, and could take it again. Instead of going away igi fear I found my fears removed. The whipping post is a strange place to gather fresh confidence and courage, yet that's what it gave m'e, and in that dark cell I left .be'hind many fears and misgivings." At the end of his criminal career Black, through the influence of friends was given a year's imprisonment by a San Francisco judge when many years might have been imposed upon him for his record and for sentences un- completed when he escaped. He had come to th'e conclusion that the busi- ness did not pay, and that he was less expert and less daring than he had been. After the judge had pro- nounced the sentence. Black made a statement to the court which sum- marized his career and give his phil- osophy as regards- society and the criminal. In it he referred again to his whipping in these words: "I could not see that I deserved this flogging. and it seemed when I got it that all the cruelty in the world was visited on me—all the brutality, all the vio- lence. There was a lesson in cruelty I have never forgotten. Fortunately I had a disposition that hardened with the flogging instead of breaking under it. I proved an incorrigible prisoner while 'there. I broke the rules many, many times in a small way—nothing violent, nothing, des- perate, but I would talk, laugh, whistle and sing, and that outraged the silence system hthen in vogue." "I was punished repeatedly on bread and water, the dark cell. The warden was a hard, stern man. His motto was `break them first and make them after.' Then came the day for the second instalment of my flogging and my discharge from prison. I went out with theskin of my back blistered and broken and my mind bent on revenge. I went out of there with a hatred for law and order, so- ciety and justice, discipline and re- straint and everything that was ord- erly and systematic. I had a hatred ed from the north and west winds by fences, buildings, or shrubbery. Make a pile of the manure eighteen inches deep, and be sure it is well pressed down. If drainage is good, a hole may be dug and the manure placed in this. On top of the manure; place a light frame of wood any desired size and cover tightly with a window sash, sloping this a few inches to- wards the front which must be south. Cover the manure with three or four inches of fine soil. The bed will heat up rapidly at first, but by the fourtn day will have cooled clown sufficiently to allow planting. In cold weather water sparingly and only on bright days. Ventilate a little every day by raising the sash, keeping this open longer as the days grow warmer. Plants should be transplanted once, and hardened off in a cold frame, which is similar to the hot bed only without the manure, before being set outside. ENCOURAGE LOCAL AUCTIONS We think the tendency of recent years of concentrating cattle at cen- tral points foe auction sales is not the best for the industry. Very of- ten such a practice takes the needed breeding material from sections avhere needled and where perhaps the buyer may not be so exacting in his re- quirements as is often the case at a larger sale center. There are many communities where two or more breeders may join forces and make up the required number for an auction and the results will be quite satisfactory where the Yale is properly promoted by e•ective public- ity. Such a sale will have the sup - lecaalno'e have been able t invest :he name of Louadale with he same ieiud of honoar that the Earn ly narne- af ]Lowther lead' held for u any gen- 'irat'ions in Westmoreland and Cuu:a•- aeriand. The Lowthers have always been wealthy, although it is esplain- ,d that most of their vast holdings aave been bought in the past hundred years. Lord ]Lonsdale now ownj a- bout 175,000 acres, which makes him one of the largest land owners in tine peerage. A good deal of this is "ag- ricultural land upon which the rents have remained • notoriously low. The income is derived mainly from coal. mines, iron mines, fireclay, gypsum, lead ore and limestone workings. The chief seat is Lowther castle near Pen- rith, in Westmoreland, an enormous Gothic building of red sandstone, which Wentworth in one of his less - inspired moments spoke of as "that majestic pile." Here there is a priv- ate drive five miles long, something no other English peer cars boast of. In this great park it le Lord Lone- TREATMENT OF CRIMINALS A GHASTLY FAILURE Rev. Murdoch Mackinnon, who spoke on Sunday evening in the Run- nymede United Church, Toronto, on the subject of "Christ and the Crim- inal," made some remarks that ought to be stimulating to those who heard for courts, jailers, prison keepers and wardens. I hated policemen, prose- cutors, judges and jurors. If I had reasoned right I might have made a better start than I did. But I had no experience to guide me. I plan- ned for revenge and I turned on so- ciety to get it, because society furn- ishes th'e judges, the jurors, the po- licemen, the prosecutors. Remember that the flogging took place compar- atively early in Black's criminal career. It did not deter him. It did not prevent him from returning to Canada again and again to commit a crime. If the flogging did anything other than he says it postponed the day of his redemption. For and Sunatica At the very first indication of nagging. pains in the back or sciatic nerve, apply Abeorbine, Jr. Relief will be prompt bz cauee this powerful :liniment pravidee the nereseary warmth which stimulates the circulation and breaks up the con- gestion, Abaorbine, Jr., can be depended upon to do ite work promptly and well. It take the stiffnees out of your back, and ein greaseless, does not stain the skin being. thes. Get a bottle to -day at your favourite druggists -01.25. 7 dale's delight to hold sheep dog trials, and here as elsewhere he mingles with his tenants and the humble fol- lowers of sport on terms of perfect equality. The castle itself is plain to view, something like Lord Lonsdale himself, but inside it is fitted with al- most regal magnificence, as well as having all the modern inventions that one would expect in the home of an American millionaire. Hero, toe, as Lord Lonsdale must sometimes pen • sively reflect, he used to caststain his friend when he was the emperor of Germany. The two men had a fond- ness for yachting in common and the former Kaiser delighted to honor this typical Englishman by palling upon hien on the occasion of his visits, for- mal or incognito, in England. He used to have a staff of 80 attend hin. when he travelled on these little pic- nic -like excursions. In Lowther cas- tle they were swallowed up as though they had been eight. What Lord Lonsdale now thinks of his former guest we have no way of knowing, but since he is often spoken of as the most typical of old-fashioned Eng- lish squires, it is easy to guess. There is one other regret that not infrequently perches, raven -like, by the shoulder of this noble lord. He has never yet won the Derby. Now while it is possible to compile a large book containing nothing but the names of those who have never won the Derby, much as they would like to have done so, this does not make the disappointment easier to bear on the part of a man niho is known as one of the best judges of horseflesh in Europe, owns a fine stable and has been competing with fair success on the English turf for almost half a century. But he knows, too, that it takes an exceptional bit of luck. add- ed to everything else, to breed a Der- by winner, and perhaps he hopes to have that bit of luck one of these days. We cannot doubt that he would rather win the Derby than have had the Order of the Garter conferred up- on him, and we cannot doubt, either, that except for a victory of the royal colors no victory would be more popu- lar in England than one which would round out Lord Lonsdale's career on the turf. In the days before the motor car, Lord Lansdale's carriage horses were always chestnuts whose tails he never would permit to be docked. His car- riages were always bright canary color and the name "mustard pets" was used in describing them. They are no longer to be seen in the streets of London nor on the way to a racy meet, but along his private drives one may yet see these charming barouch- es with old-fashioned postillions. The tastes of the Prince of Wales might have been moulded upon those of the older man. Like the prince, he hes friends in all walks of life. Boxers, jockeys, costermongers, dog breeders, farmers talk to him about their par- ticular specialties in the knowledge that they are 'talking to an expert and a sympathetic one. He is the pa- tron of ,,whatever is physically hard and tough, and was at one time a re- nowned boxer. The Lonsdale belts which he donated, denote ring champ- ionships in England. Despite his pre- ference for people who are not his social equal, and his delight in sim- ple manners and words he can on oc- casion be the icy aristocrat, and it is said that on one occasion a thrust- ing Belgian millionaire who attempt- ed to enter into conversation with him at Melton Mowbray, received one of the most humiliating rebuffs ever ministered on a hunting field. him. He pointed out that crime is increasing despite our drastic punish- ments. That fact in itself if suffici- ently pondered by the public gener- ally, might well lead to a demand that some other methods than those time -dishonored ones which we have been employing should be adopted. Itshould alarm the public in the same way that doctors would be alarmed if they found a certain disease in- creasing despite the fact that a eer- t.ain course of treatment was being followed. In a word, our present method does not prevent crime. It does not ever] hold crime in check. We have been trying to make the pun- ishment fit the crime and we have failed to give any reasonable kind of fit. The notion of making the pun- ishment fit the criminal is newer and more complex. It requires a good deal of study for each case, and we have not the time to give to it. So we persist in our old-fashioned, dis- credited way and are shocked and astonished when our attention is call- ed to the fact that crime is increas- ing. Bearing on this subject there has recently come into our hands a book called "You Can't Win." The author is Jack Black, a reformed American criminal. He is at present holding a responsible position in San Francisco and has the respect of those with whom he comes into contact. He was a criminal for more than thirty years. a yegg, a hold-up, a burglar. The only thing he never was is a liar, and about the'only boast he makes in his book from cover to cover is that he never told a lie either to a fellow - criminal or an officer. He took his various punishments without whining, and at the age of fifty found himself brake and in impaired health. His activities were interrupted by terms of imprisonmglnt and he calculates that he was active for fifteen years. In that time probably $50,000 passed through his hands, or about $9 a day. From this must be deducted what he spent on lawyers, bondsmen, police and other bribes that were necessary if be was 'permitted his liberty. He calculated that if he had been a dish- washer for thirty years he would have been further ahead financially than he was after what many might consider a successful career of crime. More than anything else in this re- markable book we were impressed by CANADIAN GARDENING SERVICE One should not be content with the same flowers and vegetables year af- ter year. At least, one new variety should be tried each season and often in this way a certain previously un- known flower or vegetable • wi'll be found that is particularly suited to the local climate and soil. Of course those that have done especially well in the past should not be abandoned unless some much higher quality sort is ranted. In the flower line, besides such well known sorts as zinnias, marigolds, petunias and phlox, there are lesser known beauties like calli- opsis, godetia, calendula, lupins, an- nual larkspur, scabiosa, salpiglossis, California poppies, schizanthus or Butterfly flower, and several others now listed and fully described in the best catalogues. Some of these are worth trying in every garden. Among the vegetables, one would do well to experiment with the cos lettuce, a new spinach, asparagus, Brussels sprouts, cress, Swiss Chard, endive, kohl rabi. vegetable marrow, or some of the herbs. Indoor Planting. Many tender bedding plants for the window box and hanging baskets can be grown by the amateur if startel indoors this month, while the hardier sorts if given an earlier start in this way will come into bloom several weeks sooner than -if planted direct- ly in the open. The same is true of many vegetables such as tomatoes, cabbages, lettuce, melons, and even a few beets, carrots, and hills of corn. Starting these indoors will materially hasten the time when they will be ready for the table. A shallow cigar box or something similar is the best thing t.,o grow these in where space is limited, or if there is plenty of room a florist's "flat"—a shallow box 12 inches by 18—may be used. Punch a few holes in the bottom of the box to allow drainage, and add a layer of cinders or gravel to serve the same purpose. Get some fairly good soil, and break it up fine. Moisten the earth, then mark off the rows, which need only.be one inch apart, sow the seed, and cover the top of the box tightly with a piece of sacking or bur- lap. This keeps the seeds in a warm*, dark place, and when they have push- ed up through the soil, remove the burlap, and give them full sunlight. Unless there is a storm window on. outside, keep the box hack at least eight inches from the glees to avoid] drafts and low temperature. How to MJIIaiae a IStott lied. Where one has, a larger garden and wants to get of? to an early amort, it io better to build a hot bedthan to try and grow the early planta haa4ourYza. Seeuzre a supply of iris.* horse man- ure, which has been tuns ed every day or so to prevent burning; land store- this toretuiis lin coram s"naA9e;ieal spot mei feam'Jq to nos. •'iii9i0 Ttosc• bsd should he lo- cated whe e it will as canonicals 4om the attendant, and it , iaus+c bn l atoeftr 09106,04. f 0.011 a� a� as -et -0 a9`° 6, �®oq s go_®$ ars 099 8 0 @Iz US°41,111, 1hhO 1© m 111e Isl :1l ti Hue Gama ONTARIIO PIAN USED DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS ly satisfactorily small cleaning plant. can be, fixed up by a farmer by com- bining a fanning mill and an indent or disk machine in line. The fanning mill will blow off or separate the inert matter and widely different sized seeds and the special machine for the purpose will make the finer •separa.- tions. Some farmers use a coarubrna- tion of three machines, the last two, being suited for special purposes. To determine whether the machine is doing the work you wish, spree& out a quantity of the cleaned seed on a table where: weed seeds can he' more readily seen. A sample may also be sent to a seed laboratory where an analysis of the impurities will be made. All seed should be cleaned• before seeding and cleaning should be done early enough in the spring so that the work does not have to be hurried. Mr. Fred Jordan Suffered With Paan in His Back and ]Hips. Bolton, Ont., Mar. 7th—(Special) —Mr. F. Jordan, of R. R. No. 3, Bol- ton, Ont., relates his experience with Dodd's Kidney Pitts in the following letter. lEle states:—a"I had pains in my back and hips, and for some time thought it was a cold and that it would leave me again. However, in- stead of doing so, it got worse, until I was badly crippled and had to clutch something to pull myself up out of a chair. Then it struck me that it was my kidneys. II bought a box of Dodd's Kidney Pills and soon got re- lief. After taking a second box the pains have all gone. Now I always keep a box in the house." The best and most practical system of relief in the world to -day is the one in which the sufferer ascertains for himself the nature of his disease and then chooses the most certain means of healing; this has been known for th:e past thirty years as Dodd's Kidney Pill treatment. Love makes the world go round only when the lovers are intoxicated with happiness.—Detroit News. A girl may love a young man from. the bottom of her heart, but there e. always room at the top.—Chicage Daily News. A mother's praise for her children never interests any other woman.— Chicago Daily News. Too many hymns give an idea of God as being a rather angry Eastern. potentate.—Martin Shaw. I have no acquaintance with opera bouffe, but I occasionally come ir,to- contact with low comedians.—Winston Churchill. LORD LONSDALE RECEIVES ORDER OF THE GARTER Why titles are extinct in Canada is something to be explained by those who have at one time or another re- ceived them, and why they are not likely to become extinct in England, may be inferred from a sketch of Lord Lonsdale, the latest peer to be honored with the Garter, the oldest of British orders. Lord Lonsdale, head of the Lowther family, belongs to a type once common enough but now all too rare, the sporting peer. He is immensely rich, popular with his tenants, and devoted to all sport- ing creatures, especially horses and dogs. Anything tha'c can ie- done singly or in combination with dogs, horses and guns finds in him a doughty champion. No race meet can be considered properly under way without the presence of Lord Lons- dale, with his grey topper, his but- ton hole and the inevitable cigar. Bouts at the National Sporting club might as well be attempted. without the boxers as without this peer. He is the organizer of the annual show', of working horses in Regents park, and it was only last year When, he had awarded a ribbon to 'toster'a smoke, that the enthusiastic wife of the owner threw fiery^ or= about hid neek and gave ilius a hearty mica . The Lowthers are one ati4 th s elldctt eows9l Pa ssilies in nanism] asrr;'n"!' : 3ot along very Well without tit8 o the nineteenth ee190 7. Tbo pit:7orat ease usthe walan6Tao rs ozu CLEANING GRAIIN Canada's mining output in 1928 was $271,000,000—ten per cent. more than in 1927. It is hard not to be bullish about this country.—Ottawa Journal. The cleaning of seed grain should', be one of the most important opera- tions on the farm, and the fat`mpr who retains clean land and produces clean grain year after year must follow the practice of thoroughly cleaning all grain before seeding. The machinery necessary for clean- ing and the way of doing this work must be governed by the weed seeds and other impurities to be removed. Impurities such as broken straw, chaff, and weed seeds which differ markedly in size and shape from the grain being cleaned can be readily cleaned out by most fanning mills properly operated.. The weed seeds which are of much the same size es the grain being cleaned are the main difficulty and where such separations are to be made special machines are necessary and in special cases, as sep- arating wild oats from oats, the only thoEough method of cleaning is by hand picking. The cleaning out of inert matter and weed seeds of widely difFereht size from the grain need not be dis- cussed extensively in this article as nearly any niake of general purpose cleaner properly operated will do gond woek in such cases. Care must he taken to operate at the right speed and to feed within its c. ;.acity as when the sieves ars overload - +!d aro machine can do good work. The cleaning of grain where the tit- re/skies ere similar in *shape presents greater di ,e catty and in many mass apealat cleaners are required to do a good job. In any eastekt ilnese& g central' eleaninyj plight 4a available thee 2azm71e7 44 advised to itava tmlo arit elcamsdi at ouch tar,plaat ttaialIcia be ,raises auaffml34014 cc . to warrant shmtallir<ae a ;kat ate tat oVn. A Idira (of gqintr- birea e 24 and co ffoa l4aead in aka Perky Pion Gem` ]troth -over 500 other . Monaca for 403. Welt= Canada Flour Arhus iso - a s Liffittet. Toronto IE SEISaRa, EXE, This is the efficient, com- plete carbohydrate ration that gives swine the thing s they need in most digestible form. itt works faster; it ]buil.+. s better *neat; itis more economical because you usa. . less of it—hogs ore ready for market sooner. We keep a ready supply on hand fat. you—always fresh, : w y o the same. Gee. a Mak ak Bg Bo= Mermaali d 183za ctaellall, ett~, ii o :s 51;