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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1921-05-12, Page 2water is a help In preventin7c, digest ive p, troubles. Keep the water dishe3 clean, even if hens do sometimes seem to f hat Boy of Mine like dirty water. (Azd�l %"-r_ ^ I Plentv of feed -it all seas011s M isa tonic ior tne Dirits. in Tne waiTur it must be furnished to them, The rest of the year they will gather green feel, themselves if given Plenty of ralige. Shade on, the range is a factor in i keeping hens healthy. This can be I Planning For Big Com Yields. tion be practiced in order t(Tfe-ssen the provided- by placing the house in an 4 Next autunues, corn yields will do- production cost per bushel. orchard or near an evergreen wind- I Pen4 'Very largely on, the thorough- break. Raspberries form a dense I nes3 of the job of fitting the land-, Keeping Your Chickens Realthy. growth of canes which will furnish planting, and cultivating the crop. Preventing poultry diseases is much Shade, Sunflowers -and corn fields under present conditions, corn grow- more satisfactory than trying to cure make a shady range. Xx-posur� to era will make the most pr*oifit who can them. This -prevention is accomplish- the hot sun without protection helps Produce at the least cost per bushel. ed by keePing the poultry house clean to reduce the vigor of the hens and Extra thorough cultivation, in fit- make them more susceptible to many and feeding balanced rations to keep ting the seed bed and during theearly the hens vig .. us. Breeding from diseases. days of the growth of the corn plant, I strong thrifty birds help to produce Is effective in cutting the total cost vigorous chicks that are less suscep- Spraying for Cabbage of cultivation, The proper use of tlke- tible to disease. disk, spike -tooth, and spring -tooth Wonn. harrow in fitting the seed bed-, con- I If the poultry house is -free Irom. trols weeds much more cheaply than draughts and dampness it will be a The quickest end, mosit practital, cultivating between th . e rows with the I great help in keeping chickens heal- method a getting rid, of cabbage ,corn cultivator after the crop is p:ant- thy. When a -bird is sick it should be Worms and protecting the crop from ed- isolated, -at once to prevent the infec- further attack is to spray the plants The idcal soils for corn are fertile tion of other members ofthe flo,k. A with a poison solutim: Make a fairly P strong wapsudt and add one table - well drained loanis, silt loams, and -small brood coop is handy as an isola- spoonful of powdered, arsellate of lead, clay loims, which -are well supplied tion hospital. or two tablespoonfuls if the paste with oirgznic matter. Plenty of grit is a help in 'keeping farm is used, to each gallon, of sudis, There is great advantage in plant- birds healthy. It must be supplied in Mix the solution thoroughly and apply Ing fairly early in the season.. Early hoppers during the winter when the It with a sprayer. A whisk broom or May plantings in southern Ontario, hens cannot find, their own,grit on the a wisp , of gress may be imed. for &13 - and mid-May plantings farther north, range. Grit giinds the food and with- plying,the liquid if a sprayi'g is not shouldbe the rule. While oocasional- out it -a hen is rather helpless, like a at hand . On a large-scalepToduction, ly early plantings may be caught by dog without teeth. -Charcoal is a help however, a Sprayer should be used. a late spring frost, replantings can be in preventing digestible troUblea. Water tends to = off the cabbage made, but late -planted crops are al- Plenty of exercise scratching in a le;avies� but the map-suola make the most sure to be caught by early frost straw litter 'helps to keep hens heal- oliltk, stick to the foliage. In rainy In the fall before they fully mature. thy. In the win -ter the biols will'bl seasons the epiplication should, be re - An ideal seed bed for corn can best chilled, and dumpy if they eat all their and th peated to maintain a thin, whitish I>e prepared on sod land, which has igrain without Scratching On. coaft of poison on the -leaves. Spray �een manured, and fall -plowed to a hump up in the corners, of the house. -both the top and the bottom iddev ol pood diepth. of seven or nine inches,, When they scratch for their grain the leaves If poissible. pr manuredandplowed, in early Wing they will sing and make the straw fly If argenateof lead is wtavailabfe, to a depth of seven inches. Where and it will help them to lay egg.%,. Paris green cen. be used, with a hand, - plowing for corn is done at a late date, Colds show their presence when the fill of,sleke..d linioaddedtc,eachgallcin ;a,rPqt,c,u,1yar attention is necessary In, birds have watery eyes. Colds lead to of poison solutionto 'coumteract burn - fitting the land. It is not roupand that is difficult to cure. So Ing. onough to inerely plow, harrow the isolate the bird with a cold. Rub the 0.4 land, and plant, but late plowing head with camphorated vaseline or dip thould be followed by thoroughly the head in a solution of- one of the Ventilate the Hay Mow. compacting with the -roller ior culti- coal -tar disinfectants. Color the drink- A gm&t mejority of the fi,,s that packer, and frequent haTrowings with Ing water deep red with permangimate derAmy baTna each year are Started spring -tooth or spike -tooth harrow. of Potassium -be prevent the 4colds from from combustion in the hay -mow. It ,Seed corn starts best on seed beds spreading through the flock. Birds -has long been known that when bay which are well Pecked at the bottow that are kept in thb house on raw 'IS Put Into a tight mow, especially if of the furrow slice, with the surlace windy days and fed. a balanced ration the hay be not firily cu -red, it will worked into, a condition of good tilth. are apt -to have little troullble, with go through a heiating procew—gases Fall -plowed- land can be best fitted coadS. will be formed iand sufficient beatgen�- for corn by discing in early spring and, Digestive troubles cause many loss- crated to cauve colubusion, =d- Start barro-wing at intervals of a week or es, but they �oan largely be prevented a fire. ten days until planting time. Fall- by feeding clean healthy food. Wash It isaaimple matter to ventilate a plowed land carries a higher percen- the drinking dishes and- sour milk hay�mw, Well designed cupolas will tage of moisture -and available ni- crocks occasionally with boiling water. draw the warm, air up as does a ellim- trates, which start the seed off mostl Corn cobs are fine for Scrubbing ney. These cupolas also add- to the vigorously, and opportunity is offered brushes for the poultry dishes. They appeexanoe of the building und, cer- tor a thorough fiWne and earlier I will, loosen and help remove all the tailily are ofoufficient value as insur- planting. gummy accumulations.. Fresh clean. ance against fire to justify their cost. Acid phosphate giV65 a Paying Te - torn with the corn crop, by increasing the weight of yield. and hastQn-Ing theThe Sm"Aday School Lesson maturity of the crop. The use of from two hundred to three hundred pounds of sixteen Per cent. acid phosphate MAY 15. Vives distinctly noticeable results on Working With Others. I Cor. 12: 4�27; St. John 6: 1_14. nearly all Ontario corn Soils. A more firmly -matured, and -a heavier yield- Golden Text -1 Cor. 12: 27. Ing crop aknost invariably results. I Cor. 12: 4-13. Diversities of Gifts. own good. It is the law of love. The Shoilld -a short season follow, an AP- The apostle is writing about such. man who is not guverned by this law plication. of phosphate is effective In mental and spiritual gifts as were is a disturbing member of the com- bringing through a well -ripened crop used in, the ordinary services and munity. He is a souroe of weekliess of corn. ministries, -of the church, -but what and not of strength. He oloes, -harm Phosphate, to the amount of from he says has a wider application to all and not good. He does not know and two hundred to three hundred pounds , the work of life in which men share. does notfulfil his, high place and duty Paul, says, first of all' that, what- as a member of the body of Christ. mmy be -applied at the time of fitting . John 6: 1-14. Five Barley Loaves the seed bed by fertilizer o1rill or �ver� the gift of work 1�y be, it is I through fertilizer attachment on the inspired, and- directed by the' same and Two Small Fishes. The lad might Spirit. A-11 gifts are consecrated; all I have refused, to give up his lunch ordinary grain dxill or it may be true work is Sacred. So, in the teach- basket and might have eatenlis, cakes, broadeasted, by sboveling from a In of the Old, Testament, theprophet, and fishes alone, but if he had, this wagon bed. Not more than one hun- thge priest, the statesman, the law- greatstory of thefeedingof the mul- dred pounds pler acre should be avi- giver, the ],-Ing, the soldier., the skil— titudes might never have been told,. killed at time of planting corn through ful woTkman—all are recipients. of the He did- not refuse. He -made his small fortilizer attachment, since a too large same Spirit of God.. In particulax it contribution and, the multitudes weTe application in the Tow tends to cause is Said of a certain workman that the fed. Oneof thehumblest took on, that a concentration of root growth, while Lord had called- him by name, andhas IS13 Pkmie oltgrXth,,;(ir , "filled, him with the spirit of God, in teywt,' '11.,ilg , t�i = broadcasted applications encourage wisdom, In understanding, and in One of the most interesting writers the roots to forage widely and enable knowledge, and inall manner of work- of the great war (Sapper, In No Man's ithe torn crop to better withstand, man ship." (Exo& S5: 30-86; 4). So Land) Bays of the disciplined, army: summer drought. Manure and phos- should it be with all who labor, 14Self no longer rules; self is sunk for phate are a great team to hiteh to the whether with head or hand, for their the glood Of the cause --tor the good corn crop. own common good, and. so it will be of thecommunity. A -ad the commun- A gmd -stand of com is noicessary where life is offered in whole -hearted ity, realizing that fact, endeavors, by for-goo,ol yieldis. The practice of cul- service to God and man. every means in its power, to develop that iself to the very maximum of tivating empty hills in the ro-%v is Post- The gifts of which the prophet which It is capable, knowing that, in 3y and greatly lessens profit. In addi- 'Plak-9 are those of wisdom, knowl- due course, it will reap the benefit. tion to planting corn of high gerinma- edge, faith, bealing, miracles., proph- No longer do individual -pawns strug- ecy, insight, speaking with an& inter- gle one agaimst the other, but each, tion, it is necessary that the Planter I preting tongues. These he compares developing his oyinparticulax gift to drop be uniform, and hence seed corn to, the members of the body, working the maximurn, places It, at the dis- should be carefully graded to a imi- harmoniously together, , They who posal of the community who helped form size, and the planter plates care- Possess and exercise them ' in the' him in his development!, Must we riot fully adjusted to the size of leernel,ichuTch are'litembers of the body of preserve that fine vpirit anii, that dis- so as togive a high percentage of uni- Christ. cipline of hand and, head and heart form drop. 1 14-27. Not One Member But Many. in days of peace? The duty is the For grain purposes from four to five The apostle's ideal for the Christian same. God calls to a higher ap ,�d even quarts Per acre is zuffident and foricommunity is that of happy and more. Strenuous task. Let us learnto eflage from four to eight quarts are i healthful co-operation. It is a corn- live and labor together. , um y in I wi n t I an in res ng ques. on used The depth of planting varies res ect an .... nor is neighbor's or c e on in business or )0X with the soil. On well-draffied loams, 0 k, c it wHI be frankly a is inco P ' e it co-operatio aly from one and a hall to two and a half full reco I d that all men are not it -not , e a u ul, even a n Lry inches is the proper depth, though on, I I -e, at t ey are of different Sorts, aid the pe ect end i I ful heavy clay or clay loams., one to two t eir tasks, therefore, must be co-operation? ay we not believo It L-whes is sufficient. different, 'but that each has need of the possibility of, and Strive to pro. It iDan excolriant practice to haneow the and that all must combiner duce a friendly rivalry in a, gooc 11 h=orlly to make the perfect whole. wo�rk, freely granting honors and Immediately after -planting, with a 11, it the health of one will be the Prizes to the Winner, each ribol xa' spike -tooth harrow -with teeth set health of all, and each will be happy rejoicing in, and profiting by his suc� slanting Slightly baelcwwd. The har- and. honored in the well-being of every COBS? tow may be employed until the corn other. Moreover, each man. will recog. Application. plants are abova, the ground, whet nize for himself his proper part and' A gardener was explaining to U.4 cultivation with cultivator should ber- place and gift In the, common -life, and recently the Process of grafting. Tht 9111. will bold, higown task in respect a -ad has, become quite a ywimico aniong thi It is particularly finportelit that lionor. It Is the co-operation of all growers offlowera. It is (lone to se� siloge corn be planted, eq early In the which makes the community possible, cure, as fur as possible, 8 -60111bblati.01` searon as possible for heaviest ton. The humblest =1 most obscuro I% not of excellent qualities. One flower bw 10SR 11ccesGary than the proudest and- -a defightful, appetwance, but no frag nage of the riost nutritiouo fee.a. most collapictiom. rance, Another type has a qwOetfrag Varieties- which teach the 6-ented and' Thel-0 AhOuld, theyffW, be no ranee, but is distinctly lacking li .glazed stago of maturity Are conceded schism in the bol -4y, but, the mcnib�s beauty. Others, which pomcen mival by most feeders to make the best sil- should have the s=,0 01110 Ore loran- beauty "A fragrance, are so 'fragib are 11W10 valut.. Thol ago and give the niost feed piee acre, other. If 'One suffOrg all Suff0r, it M16' that +I. - - Mey At tbiA -time wbentrop varieties are is hoilored all rejolw with it. ThZ the gar(fencr SWICA to W-ure, -by th Uhrl,3tiav coirn ",nitr tt -Lfto b,04 4)f turoltio- tmmril q pm.war- ptoceS3 of, grafting 0, 'combillation. 6 Olin' st, theso qualities. He unitos belanty mi ba_g�,- rAay be OnAdcred M Oncil nie apmltle sets torth in this w% fragrance with atrength. No man 1 - of th6 crop3 t,,- -- P"� ",I the great law of c"peration, wkie 11imacIf hag, oil, the wlalitics egskntif te�..auzo purpOSC-9 for I h114 afJ It' Organizlll?, 00d guidi'19 for a strong chuzeh,, uthy being My, *h ­2h at Is usoba. It a elf3ential thW V;�IcLrle the &Slvd -of each for the r ) tAS -19 e",) nicnof oeoctive mathoill of produe-1 clf he can confril u big, be t to it . good, of All, c-nd not simply for his of riaith.kf -WOOL-FUR$ "MEASURE UPFY ey can still be in!do Ship your lot t3uicung rum )areiy oy xne %,rossroaau or x ouLn. - ­ -r I ' "' I celving tie F iilce. -ellsollo UV' my jjQyi measure, By BEATRICE BRACE. urno i3en the same daY As ri6t shipment In received. L -D WILLIAM STONE -90NS LIMITED LW1 ill) This wag the adviCe a father fre- Oar farin papers tell ug blow to What mood- I would find him in, and� IJ 0 WOODSTOCK, ONTARIO '0 quently gave his son whe was inclined to weaken when confronted by any- tvise morecorn, to feed more hogs, to not lcno-Mmng whatto Say to him whou',,, fSTABLISKED 1870 tough pniblemor unusual- situation,, itly more land; they tell us lxow to I arrived there. , - - I gweasure up, my boyl MeaGure radicate rabies, how to feed cheaply, Influence Counted. to the deskes of our heart Is url" Thereare, times when even the, Low to produce more milk, raise, better ioultry, how to keep our land- produc- I found him lying onthe lounge In the living -room. He glaired at me obtain impianted within eneb, one. He Is. strongest need the advice, The w(zd,% have a fine, courageous ring, tmol, ng up to its highest capacity, how when I went in, but not a word was reaching out toward the g0al Of) I? would make a good maxint for a, 10 0 crate and increase the fullness if automobile; but baek of all of spolken until several days after, when I "fineibtuman be"a"'r. world, of wisdoni In those business inian. Frame them and put them, up on the wall, of Your office, or -Te his is the biggest thing on the farm we had. a quiet talk end I toild, him would. repeat it if it occurred, again, words of Joltin, McCallum in $'Ila'PPi- "Out place of busiliezo, where they vvill -the human product, and of the hu- "that but I knew that my Influence in the ness incorporated," of the full- loif my anxiety grew the satisfac- constantly remind you that you must. nan product boy" forms, One, of future, as in the past, lay in meeting ness I measure up tothe, situation Ifiat con - ,he chiefest assets. The aato Henry Wallace said: "Do him on his own ground. 'So I in- stinctively wid- gradually took to toTy �,olutionll But we can't Stand eloft on a peole- frZts you, whatever it is. When You do this -when yGU. rou know t1fat the biggest thing in teaching right beclause it was right; stal and, steer oEr boy into the gates ans�rer the call and bring all your- ife, whether in the city or country, thateociety vves based on the nitinal- Of ]leaven. We must 90' every $top courage and resourcefulness to Your s to be just a fine human being, in- ity of its people; that we surelyreap, of the journey with him, wropPingiaid, no mattqr how difficult your ;OTested- in all things that interest or ;hDuld interest all human beingis?" even in this life, what we 5cw. Even "aportintess" him in a love that 'breeds sympathy and, undeirstandint,' rather than an IT- i problem, yoii are likely to come, through all right. There is no, situa_ Next to the girl, "that boy" is the have, and so he admired a certain In dress and -appearance, -and I met responsible indulgence, and listen Often to that 4,lst,ll '3111oll voice�, that, tion that can feeze a -men when he: it like no'st precious possession we ,t payg to put our best into the human score; things -that be was him on that, interested in I was interested in. Then It, , '050 alione, gives the wisdom that is I mmaures up and, meets a man.. The trouble with musit of us is that, Droduct and, second best, Wileed, be, w1l,ii it came to things that were w a Serpent and harraleess asa dove." Doxet try to mold him in the plaster we do not measure up in a supreme. mto the live stock and, Soil. Don't think because the boy has quit really vital my influence counted. nineteen, One evening when he wais ' cast of another's individuality; M_ crMs. Whcn. great responsibili-lUea, 'confront us, when, unusual difflcultiei� 5chool that the end has come, Many -th - e year he wasgraduated from high stead, wisely guide and direethis own * oppase, us, instead, of measuring up, �reet men have -had little or no educa- bion, and all life is a -school. And don't school, he had.gone intotown to a pic- into the right channels. Get your -boy's v.iewpoint. Ninety- we are apt to measure down; our, backbones weaken; . %ve slunlip think that feeding the slot machine ture show andi, as, was my usual cus- tom, I was sitting up until, he, came . nine times out of a hundred there 1!4 miser - ably. EL-nd, games of chance are sure roads home. I bad always done this, and nD thought of evil -"his heart or mind, "There When we realize that mind ha& be the devil.. Rather refuse to bellevol some of our chummiest times had been 'and Shakespeare says: i1s; 310- power over all things, is greater than bhere IS a devil or to yield' these boyX when lie had been to some gathering thing oither good or bad, but think- all obstacles, and that man is the, be his Influenm and came home and told, me all -about Ing umReu it so." master of mind, we 'And nothing We cant mold, everyone in ithesame it; I enjoyed, it as much ais he did, singular in this. Man was made to� cast, not even- if they are brothers and But this night he didl2t come- Controlling Grasshoppers. conquer things, not to be conquered sdsters, and, if you have found, it im- pmsible to interest your boy on the Eleven oclock came -and he didn?t come. Twelve dalock cume-Ndiere If -each. and every fariner in the dis- by them. There is something within You, bigger than, anything elso on this farm, then let him try something else. could he be? It wasn'i like him, for tricts affected by graisishopPers will pluitet. It is begger than any cir- But before you give -up the idea of interesting him an the farm, -see if YOU usually if he made some other Plan he called up and, told me so, for he put threehen turkeys on his farm and then haitch and, raise their young, the cunistances, any luck, any accident of T-ortune, any Situation or emergency are going about it in, 'the Tight Way. know I would be waitting for him. hoppers will, Soon disappear. that eonfronts yo'u. And the more you Many a boy who rebels against the drudgery of weeding and plowingand The hands of the -clock slowly drag- his Turkeys die not destroy crops is some suppose, at least where there use this thing within you, the more - develop it, the planting and, digging will do twiee� as, ged round, to one -thirty when quick step finally sounded on the walk awe Plenty of bugs or insects for them. you exercise and stronger you become. much with good grace If his father outside. They will -hunt thebugs and eat them If we lm.,l no problems to gTapple makes him a Partner in the farm firm. The boy mustbe -given an opportunity I just -looked up at him mutely when he opened the door -and, came in. My b.dore touching the grain, Even if the turkeys lived on the grain they with, no difficulties to overcome, we! would, all be weaklings. Perpetual! to try out his pet schemes, too, even heart was far too full for we[rds juit, would eat less than the grasshoppers, fair weather and, Smooth seas never when, sometimes the riper experience then. He gathered me up in his- arms which the turkeyp eat would destroy. make good sailors.. It is, battling with of his father tells him that he Is nmk- and gave me one or two quick kisses Last year the grasshoppers made the elements,.sailing on -through Storm Ing -a "mistake. Work right with your and went to his room, away with all my seeding and nearly and tempest undauntedly facing hurri- boy not over him, if you want him to The next day when, we were quietly all the crops in the vicinity. canes and roughseas, that develop fir stay on the farm. talking it over he Said,: 'No matter It is also a mistaken idea that the the marin,rhis stealing qualities The Boy's Viewpoint. where I go or what I do, Mother mine, turkey tramples down much of the grain through which it wanders. They Great emergencies, tremendous, If -you caai7t get him.tosee things from Your point of view, then You see wayback in my subconscious mind I am thinking of 'you, and something Wend their way slowly between the responsibilities, hard. tintes, tight money, commercial crises, fecusinw it from his, and, don't arouse a spirit keeps me from going very far wrong." drill rows of grain and pick every hopper that hops. -IC E. W.. the mind on the solving of tough of antagonism. One day when our He Is Making Good. problems, adjusting means to ends, youngest boy was -seventeen Years old The final outcome? "Did he go to Much thought isnow being given to calling -out all of one's ingenuity and and in his third -year of hi.glh school, the dogs?" No. That fall -he went the Itarm boy, -and no better subject 1 � Icefulness to meet unusual con - a of things he came home and, throw Ing himself to col -lege, and two years later 'he was is, can be eonsi&red, Great concern * ditions-these are the that down in acliair, said, with afOrcO, and graduated from a University course, shlowriover the fact that theboys are make great business men and, success - is battling finality I knew was useles's to argue EvA won after he accepited a hundred- leaving the farm. Get the''boys inter - ful farmers. It with, and I against: "Mother, I'm not going to dollar -a -month position with chance ested in the farm, and he will wish to overcoming difficulties that Make school any more. 11mgoing to see a of steady advancement, and he is stay there. Make the work agreeable great leaders, great men ip every little of the woirld before I die." making good. and interest him in making improve - walk of life. I had seen, it coming for a long He has fixed, jolealsand the firm be- ments. New things appeal to a boy time, but seemed-, powerless to -prevent it, so k just oaid: "Well, if 'that Is the lief that he can attain them; that earnest blope end longffig is mom keenly than to a man. Men often too inad-opling Unhealthy Eyelids. way you feel, 'You might as well not eveTy PoZ­ siue of fulfillinelit; that the porwer are Slow changes ' even when unquestionably to better thing3. There axe many cames for ail im- go; but 11im afraid Youll be sorry, , healthy condition of the eyelids. Some - Little Boy." So he went to work in times the trouble lies in the eyes, a store In the ne=-jby town, end it themselves, but in many cas-s the really proved a blessing in disguise, The Canadian Steel and Wire Co., Limited eyes have nothing to do with the for a fln=elal, crisis came up, and in- HAMILTON, ONT. originof the affecdon,;Othough if the stead of lkseeing the world," he helpled lids are badly affected the eyes must tide us through. A year later he weiA �uffer. The lids are liable to ekin back to high school, taking six still- troubles., like any other part of the Jectis in oTde;r to make upthe 9-osit time, A skin. After middle life cancerous and was graduated that year. growthB sometimes, appear there. unusual boy? Indeed, nol When When, e -general inflammatory corn - he was about fourteen it so happened dition of the skin spreads to the eye - that the school that he attended, was lids, as in the case of acne, trzat it in session only hall a day for the just as'you would elsewhere, except whole term, and, he was in the habit that -you imist take great --cue not to (d geitting, home about one o'clock. use applications that are strong For several days he hadet come until enough to irritate the eyes. Ordinary t1wee or four, -and I mistrusted he was herpes, or "fever sores," which is so opending Us time and the smali el- pomnion -round, the Ups, sometimes lowance 'We gave him in a pool hall. for this better, stronger, AskYourDealerheavier affects the lids. It may be caused by So one day I dreissed and went down- fenc- feverish conditions cl the sy�tem, or town, intending to find, out. I knew galvanized ing. He buys in large secures lowest freight by extreme exposure to -Sun and wind, there was a pool hall where mairy quantities, rates and or by -any condition that irritates a high4chotyl boys were in the habit of can sell to you cheaper than anyone else. sensitive rkin. This form of herPes ceingrp-gating, mainy of them, in fact rune a mild course, and there '.3 no most of them, from.the best families need to, do anything -except ti�, keep in town. But mark this: It was on the lids coolandelean. Main Streeb-the doors were wide Rerpea zoister, or shingles, is a more open and drinking and 'gambling were 0 IN serious thing. When, that occurs, the not allowed,. I Imew this, but Still,it RU BB 'tipper lid becomes very much inflamed seemed a terrible thing for my boy ia;nch swollen. The Ulcers beneath thO to be playing Pool. scabs are deep and often leave per - Well, when I finaily stopped in pa manent sears. Somethne% the disease front ofthe pool hall my heart sank, invades the eye itself; that is always but I took a deepbreath, rnusteftd UP S-,Ti0U9, and occasionally it leadS to ,�11 the 0011urage I possessed, and went 9 the loss of dght. The vain of herrea an. I asked the man in front If - isoften, so intense that IGPI�'-J(13 was there. He said, "Yes I 'believe t vzo. needed, mid, then the -faysiclaii hie is.11 I 'stepped, up to the wide- should be called in without olelay. curtained dooway and looked in. There Warm. applications while You 'are he was with several other.boys so waiting for his arrival will do no deeply engrossed In knocking those harm and,way give rclid. ' innocent400king bell.'a about,that lie (E dema of -the eyelids, which 1,10ans never once looked up. My heart stopped lyeatingl The end it of the world had contel My boy War- the Toagl to the devil. Trouble Insurance ealila or the phy.,haian; maY Me 1'. litfle or much, and is often the rO- on %,ut:apest f;ult of sonic wivehiel in the eye�l But the thought with all its, sickeni- Ing de�spair no zooner exine than I that a car owrier can carry is a sparo DOMINION TIRE and an extra themselves. When the eyc,-1; are not tat fault, oedava. of the lids ma:.V be knew I woula never yield him to that DOMINION INNER TUBE. caused )by trouble in come reinoto- influence. With an inward prayer that I might be 141VAise US a SOTPent and, Then -if accidents or emergencies arise, you can!quickly change *i2patir-In the heart or U10 kidneys, harmless as a dove" I drew aside the tires and reach your destination without delay or inconvenience. for exampler--or it may be �owirg to ci=tain and walked UP to him and. MWIle you are fitting out your car with new DOMINION TIRES, be anae-mia. It ofttn accompanies V&rY 4gerious eye diseages, such az irits or stood at his Side before he ever saw sure to get the extra one for your tire holder and an extra keratbUs. When it ia, caused b� di, - me. DOMINION INNER TUBE in a carrying case. eago in -the eye the only thing to, d0- is When he did, his rEme went Whitey balf with anger and hall with morta,- No matter what make of car you drive, or whether you use it for to treat the eye. Ill rare cases the fication, old, he, stood looking down at business Or pleasure, you will find that DOMINION TIRES Vail oedetna, may be so extreme as to threaten thealght Then tPeratiOn lne. But he waq game, mid taking me give you a service And mileage that prove their supreme quality -an Is neoc!�sitqry fit eviler to relieve tha by the arm marc -lied, out with me with And workmanship. head lugh.-_ Not a word Was spoken, but as ,�oon as wo were, outside be Sold By The Rett Dealers Through6ut Canada, swiTtly tumod andleft me to a most sickening tumult of dod40 and, fi[Far-s ag to wh6ther MY 'cour"e, lit,, been a DOMINivN TIRES One -kindly deed, may turn th(I f0ldll' tain of thti isoul, to lov&s sweat dAY- that thee, bura 1,0719 a'-1 wlso me. lie M3 Iseillitive, high- otar, ohall oer the currents r;o1L-IIolnw1,1- strung, 1wrolinatcly proud, anA mozo 1, tto'n 0, 1%* F,0`11.vvilled, RoA I been ARIE GAOODTIRES One of the lbept Possible ways 'If 'o " t, eerpmt and. ha=W's aoo wl all I ceeping chec,8,o Is to put it; in A g1riss a (love?" I didn!t know. jL�­e with a pielco of oil papw-1 fa,15te"Cil Breathing anothOr prayer -for gui�- �,,Vvr the top of the jar with'a rubteT aTicep I hurrilied houio, not knowl;l�, barod. k 4