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The Exeter Times, 1922-8-10, Page 3,tvr -Pert Trade for Canadiai lIog Producers. Coneiderablel,dieeessibn hee recent taken, pla-ce. c.f tile advisa'oility of Government g-recling. for Canadian , b , ,ea-noi.tect to British markets, As , islet/ private firnls for 'tile trade, Bacon . Denmerk• is our keenest dempetiter inIft.ont. certain factorlee sells ata higher this trade it is of niore than usual I price than others on account of the irtterest and importance to have a I selection arid cure being better than clear knowledge of 'Danish. methods of others. There is no standaecl for hariciling haeqn in the Brit•ish markets. quality or selection, consequently there The follo-win g sp ecific questions were is no standard of price other'than that sent to London anti the infonnation in1 determined by preference of the huYer ansWor to thee -is -was supplied by E. M. for certain brands. npieeheenyasantdaeCi°eniaPdianidgY,'elileetillrhelainedcicegee-!sys9teiGnil'o'ef iansp.celecatironstt,ahtaetnliesnetrnopfloet-leicel In Greet Britain, owning factories irilby Denish paelcers ancl' state te what Ireland and De/in-rare,. wnose princi- ' -. , , . . !extent, if any, the Government enters pals were eneeged b the British G ; into, it as regards inspection in either ern/nerd throughout ;the war to organ- • Denmark or Great Britain? ize and handle their bacon supply. The Ans.—There is ne "bacon" inspec- statements, therefoi.e, are most; tpieannilenh DeeetnlytnearInkmoeintin Emnhgelarriel'ibsy ttlbt: aurridhicergitealeteiveiee•ne and an,ewees fellow; i. ve einialy inepeetione he semi. as you , L What are the 'nunibers of Delilah I have in Canada. Hogs that are entire - co -operative factoeles and those ad-, ly free from teberculosis are branded 'eatery owner' ? P , with the L. U. R. bran•cl, and can bo Ans.—Co-operative, forty-six; pri_ I, made into bacon for export, ierespect- vately owned, -thirteen. • 1 ,reccad,, or tftird quality bacon, If live of whether these hogs make best, 2. Give the approximate numbeeeof ' - Legs eaneeed by each class last ; the 'log is certified free from year.tuber- I culests, that is sufficient to permit tile Ans.---Froin April 1st, 1921, to Talkers. "1 once read a fine description of a certain ,foeuily," Natalie remarked, "The writer said that it was a family of noble silenette." Altboagh Natalie tvas not awar FOR SIX . MONTH c of Unless one ha a ergo action of the it, her Voice was defensive. here i 6 031.515Q to ensue, then in the e•ake oe, that elle was iiot a good talIcer. T were times evhen she would have g much to be, a good. talkei., a pet sQri new biewels, at least once a day, eoestipation IEsther Saveslier People, Esthqr 4; :1.0 to 5;3. Golden °I"ext eiliete3 headache heartburn, eoated ton, ed them' out 'of their trpubles.—Ps. 34:17 (Rev. Ver.) itretel constipation cornee eick hettdat.he, gue foul beeati; F430131 StOnlaqh e who s'aid clever and- sParkilng thmgs'larali'alanY forms of liver c°n1Plai4t. Letse,se9ttlee'eep,r,elv-,7,eti---telhc le)ri3Ook , of mination and witit her e,yes oseeted tories, compete with on anther in lesslY about. comm,onplac,e, doings] tate tea flow ef bile te act pioperte, el, 8. Do the Danish co-OPei7iVe Ia°- }IOW ''ttiPid. just to chatter on end- "erilherne; naxteLiver Pills Neill regu- 'fer 'l--ehs''.,:-,:le•C'e "TsTeeti 'One scholar- clearly upon; the grave dangers', to 1 1 1 V 11 I epqra,tjpIti pollee. She resolved with ,eelin deter, the selling of Procaler -II 1, , . Cousm Lori s head lifted to the a el t i / ' T i En 'land? , , , 1 , ' the 'bowels time IntatIng them active' 4, i - ' ' e e tm whoni I ber of tit 7 4 • Sh 0 • u''' sted iha i , th t. ae-itolyliteesait these. Esther is the story enter, unsurnnioried, flie. ineer. chant'''. tortes compete ,with one another and' terested in soinethinee Ans.—The Daniell co-oPe,ratIve inc-1 pose peculiar to her miler,. she was in-, aall regular( aiSd re,n,.1°Y. 'if' ° °°138 1.P• Nerxee (Ahaeerus) raises from his all ,the ,!evt's In Seise- shonld lend her Oi. a iteautittil Jewess 9 , li+:01 . 1 e sine. e lee e• eTeat,e einee, ' ation . and all Itg aineci trourolee. 1concubines to be his queen and who their spiritual support Miley were to ere bly coated, so rriuch so, that, it made adiimaognthhasc.11,Y1, Jc;n:otnilgauttoPdhafsoi'botolaic si:sttelSriix„ .,,_epinheipc,a11.1.-ct,hiefogle.atwelinvizbAyerw(allyaomiana,4nhags_ irilloelt.bittuyivvaiitohnprayers for the success of .... ing an affrone from on,e of the race. II E tl ' ----The.righteous ,dried and the LOrd heard' and deliver - March 31st, 1922, killed and expo --Cooperative, 1,812,016 hogs; pen ..„ 192,192 hogs. 3. What is the period ordina taken from the time the hog is Id raiks in Denmark until it arriv-es on British market, and what part of period is taken up • by the sides pickle? _ Anst—Thne from killing to arrival on British market is .twelve to seven- teen clays, -according to the time of the year; -the period in piclele ranges from four to six days. 4. Do the Danes use any dressing such as Canadian packers have to in -Order to preserve the bacon after it comes out of' pickle and before it is smoked in Great Britain? Ans.—There is no preservativeensed after the bacon comes out- of Pickle. 5. •Where is Danish bacon mainly sold in Great 13.eitain and ;why is it sold in any particular part? Ans.—Two-thirds of the Danish bacon. consigned to this market' is Sold in London and district, the other third in the North of England arid Scotland. London was probably the first market to appreciate lean, mild -cured bacon of good. quality, and to •pay a higher price for 11. The rest of the coun.try is taldiSPrnore of 'this bacon, as the public taste e.Yerywhere is for lean 11,10 "cured 'bacon. ' , • -`61 Is the Danish bacon sold by eon- signment Or 'contract, and to what extent do the Danish factories deal through agents in the manner that ;Canadian packers do? Ans.-The , aeon is consigned, to this snar- an sold by agents- A small quantity is sold by the factories•direct at a price f.o.b. , 7. How many of the Danish fac- tories sell through a common co- operative agency or selling house in :Ehngaial. Do, any Danish factories rnaintein wholesale or retail stores? Ans.—There are eighteen co-4er- ative factories which ship to tie Dan- ish Bacon Agency. The Danish Bacon Agency is principally owned by the, eighteen factories which coneign their *aeon anciathrough this Danish -Bacon ''Ageney do a wholesale trade. There is no factory connected with retail business. , bacon from that hog being exported. rted' There is no 'standard- cure or trim for ate,. Danish bacon. The I,. II. R. brand I represents a freedom 'from tuber- rilY culosis; that is all that the 'Govern - lied ment of Denmark is interested in. If, the any leotory sends out bacon not pro- thet1parly trimmed, which a good many of them do, the tact is brought home to them in the price. 'Dhe Danes have no representative in England to see about any Government regulations being car- ried out, because there are none. If the bacon a.ccumulates, shipments from Denmark are stopped by the tactorjes themselves, there is no Gov," eminent intervention at all; they just stop shipping, as you would stop` if your gc,ods evere accumulating here, and then the bacon accumulates in Denmark instead of lying abdut here. Packers cannot stop killing' in Den- mark any more ..than you. cant do in Canada. It is simply a question of where the bacon accumulates. Problems of Marketing. "We will never make any consider- able progress in marketing till we take the matter in hand and market what we produce. There is a way, but no way cait ever succeed as it Should till we learn how. Experts may render assistance, but they cannot de the pro- ducer's part, and the producer's 'part is the most important part."—Farm and R•anch. "There cannot be bop much real , study of the problem of marketing, though there may teasily'be too much talk about it which lacks, foundation _ . of fact. It is evident that the best 1 marketing plan' in the world 'ea.ii't !benefit the mail who hai nothing to ' sell, can't make money for the man Iwhose cost of production is ,too high, can't selLinferior products at profit- able prices. Along with our current study of marketing systems we should study systems of economical produc- tionemethods of improving the quality of the products, and the vital matter of putting products in marketable -Eon - di ti on."—National S'to ckin an . and I Farmer. Plodding Mediocrity -usnally ac- complishes 'rrior than a variable Thirty Years' Successful Farming In a period whe ntime profession of arming is more or less stagnant, when the tendency in so many coen- tries is from the rural districts to the cities and industrial centres and the oft -made complaint is that the ardor and deprivations of an agricultnra life are not commensurate with its compensations, it is consoling to read the history of a s,atis ed farmero thirty years' standing, one of the con- tinent's premier agriculturists, cele- brating his seventieth ,birthday in the tranquil satisfaction of the honors which have come to himinhis chosen profBSS'i011. Such a man is Samuel Larcomhe, of Birtle,IVTanitoba, who expresses pride; In the, realization of the signal partl he has played in making the'possibil- -ities of 'Western Canada knownto the - world The recoi.d of Mr. La.reorribe'sothirty years. of farming is almost phenornen-1 al. In that period, with the products ee his eeedez.tb,a farm, he has carried • off no less three thousand' Prizes, ineluding the world's championship , for yrileat at the Peoria Internation,n1, Fair in 1917 and the, seyeepstalre for; the best; individual farnme's exhibit as I a the dry -farming. section at the Wolds Soil Products exhibition in Kensas hi 1918. Canadian su•ccesses consti- tute t aggregate which gives him an ereeti,ge, over his farming Years of one c hundred melees per year. a Born in a little Devon villa6 p for ten years following the pursuit of ti niarket gardener, Mr. Larcombe's ex -lit pesience forrne further addition to I to e exaMples of outstanding success achieved by immigrants from the Brit- ish Isles, unacquainted with Western conditions. He came to Winnipeg in 1889 and proceeded to Birtle where even then existed a thriving colony of s; old country farmers. After a year's 11 experience as hired man with a farm- er in the district, he rented -a farm ' which, after five years, he purchased and still occupies. 1 At a time when everyone was en- grossed' in wheat he concentrated not so much upon grains as on vegetables. ;His first local exhibit won three 'prizes, and in his first ten years of 1farrning he made forty entries and secured 134 awards., From 1905 to 1908 he grew roots, vegetables and grain for theCanadianpacifie-Railyvay trieS, anclprocirced citrons; cucumber ; for exliibitionPuepo,ses in; other .eoun- purnplcins. s,qu,tis,11 and marreers,for the' tion only is not the; imp,oetan the road' demand of that country's, she agreed. "The leili".ase /mikes s a clear distinction. without saying word! If there are noble silences and there certainly alre,-L-then th are also silences that are igno There are not only silences that cowardly but silences that are la and selfish." Natalie looked startled. she had 7 supposed that the' phrase was doub edged.. "I don't see how," she pi tested,' - _ Cousin Lou apparently was e thinking especially of her young rel tire. "How silences can laxy she asked. "Oh, yes, indeed, my dee Heaps of people are silent from laz nese; their bodies may he acti • enough, bue their minds slump do's in rbelcing•-ehairs all day long'. 'Thin of a world' like ours with its exhales less beauties and adventures and di 'coveries, to say 'nothing of the mi lions eS human beings it all o whom have the most interesting thin uncle/. the sun—human nature. An hell I wri‘iill°r:;---1;t:'Cill;.11.Ea`u'enl'i)ePenortti;GQiel?'rilde,4 1)9'1° bee people if.rom 'a general tnas;saare1tha-senleit't welled b,e .acteempante,d, 110. ; ne uses' her irfluence over 1-iitn to save, fast for three dae-s; this general( , , , ble. my breath bad. I wile talking to a T are f I s 'kinds Favor, 5; TI S'torY of; Esther has ever' bee21 V. linEsther Put' on, etc. The queen., friend 41.31::R# ail4 he advised ale t° I poPuler with the jew,stfor it magnifreSi arrayed .herself in her fineet garments1 zY 518e Milburn's Laxa- r 8, W (ch lithe importa.nce of the Jewish people, so as to en,hance her beauty and, 1 (lid, and now ala PerfectlY well. My breathes threughout the tradition- i ,harms in the eyes of the king; The ' tongue is as smooth as it was before 1 prid. of their race It ale° explains Iertner court of tlie king's house, In • 113t1 got that way and owe it all to youz the ,eri-gin of the feast of Purim, as- 18846 DieulafoY excavated the ruins; le - 1 Pills of which I only used two vials." , ing it on a signal national triumph. of the palace, of Artaxerxes in Suse.. •°- . •Priee , 25e. a vial'. at all dealer e ox (See eh. 9 and especially vs. 26, 31, He describes the palace as standing in, a. aaseeerea,...,,,..e.,,,,---,.,,,,,--tesereaa. '0,......4 1 , , - , ot T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, oat. mailed direct on 'receipt of price by The „32,) the' inidst of a earclen. or "paraclise,", ve r; 1-1 Natalie shook her head whimsically. jaarrian piqued a al. eca la ' 4;ba lu .4, Aht re: ITorfgeti:te ew 4.Request, 4(:s 1e : -(1,17.11.,ac:c, osnute'rs°euciltdioeicil 0-"e'itt/b1 earofyoarltilfi,:dshivecaciol' weIns I Li e Pilis, • ' = things ,commoe fill t hey nose' to touch e • of eiVility to, Mtn persuades the king t,he•' harem, or "bou,se of the women" ritIthe spheres'?" to issue a decree permitting the ' anot er section was the throne - room, surrounded' with an open space 1 euro cruel! Cousin Lou; ) The Jaws are need, with con- that maY have been used as a garden, ile No Tlioroughlare across 411 my little', you pet, stern. atiOri and Mordecai sits hY the V. 2. The kingh id t th 1 a out . . e go - li:.1 secrt paths " , , palace gate clothed in s,ackeloth and deli sceptre. The golden acePtre ap- e 0( . i; aSheS, -When. Epther SORCIS Out other Pears in the "monlentent;s as "a long And turn you out, on the great clothes to lihri, he refuses -te put them taPering rod with a heacilike orna- a, Lou emiled, "Bon voyage, nee • p, and beg that the decree be reversed. l otleer." Tosephus says: "The king sat I ssi trails 'of endless aclitenture!" Cousini on but urges Esthe - t 'ng,ment at one end and a loop at the cl :then think -of, a mind so lazy that it Lamb in Canada. can go theenge, a ,,day..ceithon:b healing -,,Larnila consumption' ; is probably 'Natalie colored. "Oh, s i•ipe lhat anything worth' remarking on!" • • there isn't anything worth talking - About," she said; "it's that other peo- ple don't care about these things." "Hew do You know they don't?" Natalie's ,color deepened, but her chin lifted. . "I know because of the kind -of things they do thlk about , art- enter types, is active in' the king except by summons. It The Sin of Silence, i Ch. 4: 1-9, ., "with a golden sce/etre in his. hand; and V. 10. Hatach; one. of the eunuehs.1when he wished to save •any one who personal attendant upon 'Esther,. the1 of Ahaserus' ccin't and PrebahlY. rt.enandleheurithltletclo'he uciedeildt tivtaselaftee "him.; groeving but itis noticeable that ou inn" have been a trust- , Even . . to the half of the r - h • elcingdom Se .11 1 98 Th• h rwor iy man to • earry sus confidential' e ar Is '8'8'1 ir average per capita consumption of messages between Esth and er eeeee 'been. described as "the ex-aggerationa as atse a i o Ten Children . Mrs. rvini W•;' ,i,re,'•,,Vnist- rate feriamllefl.>",N0. f..13t.,wactihticeleatre4',41::',.111ahilte-ie4ritallis;ida,: a ways used Dr, Feeder's ,Lefraef Of, 'Wild 'Strateberry for Slialtree 'Complaints 'clad it, hive' never 'fzeileit'''" tl"li et , ' , Four years . age, when the ellolora tee's , , about, s.ozneitof my neiehborseetilled,in e • the doctor, :but eveld ra(l'ateoteeliefr ;I after taking it they weee soon well ttlgolalint,. h,,e -a ' about "De Fotyler ',- '' 'and . . Whee you are treubled with t:Diarr- . hem, Dysentery-, Colter' Cramps d- and Pains in the Stomach., ,Clioleta, or, ally Looseness of tee' I:towels,- be sure arid obtain a bottle of 'Dr. Fowler's" and just see hew quickly it well ,give Yon relief. • . When you consider that this valuable remedy has been oit the market ;for the past 77 years, you may be, sure that you are ,•not trying some new and un- tried preparation. Price 50c. a bottle at all d - p y y The 1, Milburn Co.; Linalted, °rent°. Ont. „ 10Se• lbs. for both nmtton and lamb decai. horn of Oriental politeness." It eves in Canada is only about111 one-sixth1 V'. 11. In ordei- to preserve the dig- not' meant to he taken too literally, that of the porlc consumption and; nity of the king and to prevent him 4 any Trial.° than the cfrer of a merchant about one -thirteenth our consumption' from assassinetion, it was a law of the in an Eastern 'bazaar wile, says to the of all meats. The growth of city life 1; PersiSais that no one progective purchaser, "0 take it for already a potent factor in changing could approach the king without being summoned. ; nut rig." one bacon demand from. the heay _fee Not even the queen could appear be- t th Y . e . whom you saw at the-posf office arid d • 45v " Application. said and what he said and she said and' they dentary, rhad sent for Esther. It would, there- -timed to us in our circumstances an our oinestic lamb constimption. Se- t vas noer thirty days since Ahasuerus ntrue; it is as prophetic and faithful • s sad knee is and what color flowers to how Miss Mattie Barber's constimptive demand for light, delicate1teme, unbidden, into the king's pri- altogether heldest thy, peace a'4 th indoor life is increasing the fore be dangerous for Esther to yen-itime as to queen Esther. "If the meat arid the tendency to smaller . vete chambers. I time," some ene els,e will speak th lysi put on last year's hat." "Yet when a novelist vv -rites about means of retail -marketing creetinge escape: Bather was r J • - liverance, and thy Abject coward spir , ce, comae, a ew- Ragged Robin. (The Leg,end c,f a Flower.) .- u Wee Robin Red in rudely coat was e known in fairyland—well known and it, band. He took three winke within a 1 loved the best of all the airy,. fairY "rose; he 'bathed in dewdrops fair; he - swung head down from cobwebs bright d and climbed a rainbow stair. He darted here, he scrambled there, he terinkled ril in and out; such trifling things as s faiey clothes he neves thought about. _ , One day, when Robin's e-elvet coat was fringed around with tatters, the fairies said the careless elf must learn to heed such matters. Whereeer Robin went he heard, "Where guest, Ragged Robin?" From. every tongue there calme the word, "What doest, Ragged Robin?" 'Wee Robin hung his golden head, -then slipped off quietly ,and flung his much betattered coat as far as he could see. , Upon a flowerless plant it lay, a splash of 'ruddy bloorn, and there it lies to this far day and lights the wood's gray. gloom. families is together with improved( V. 13- Tjtink not that thou shalt brave, timely word, which brings de • , for small cuts which can be served those things we find ;them intenselY .ever -;`; • , • h d , Will shrink, an,d wither and • -h interesting Funny isn't it.?” y year a growing tracle demand, ess, a relative o a e . ecal • • Natalie loloked startled. "I wonder ,f why ?"„she asked ,slowly. "Because of our imagination and of Our. sympathy and love fair 'folks. You remember Mr. l3ratviaing's description of Euripides with his 'touches of A Right Beginning for resh. 're.— erre— WhY is it that every person thinks he can stir the fire better than the one who' holds the poker? • as to go in to the king. V. 14. Enlargement and deliverance. to the Jews from another place. as dangerous for her to remain away Yet -when and if it were sa re o her she would perish in the general Out is was not known. at the court. ! people. So it was just strength. And eve,ry man knows i finally knoarre ence is golden—it may be kindly, an mes_othe result of self-restraint and eel The sent, of to -day, in the matter of per , his heart -whether duty command zonal relation to silence or speech. Consider the importance of the pre course, there are tinies when sil BOCA of Esther nowhere mentjors the God. The Scriptures Young Livestock Lovers lilac,..1,1ethaefinjont'o; 11 2..11 te le _oily Gleos-t stall; To-dayif ye will other place" clearly refers to ;Gocl. Esther will not plead before the king If hear his voice, Harden not your Learning Early to Produce What the Consumer Wants for her people, then God himself, re•elwhile n- l calle'd Thlda:Nr; lest allY hearts. . Exhort one another daily, • is an instbnce of • st • aly stress this "Wherefore (as mem, ering his ancient promise te 'you be hardened through the- 'deceit- 's almost in-' ,growing in popularity in•hoth east d st love of livestock Isra.el will deliver them. 13tth and ftluess. of• sin, -IIeb. 3: 7, 13.. "He brought up in th 6 i t - Th t ' • stinctive in, the early ,days of those! west, an ithy father's house, etc. If Esther re -I; , — lee in a me ac - so e (An re. a it, - The point, however, in this work s o ede OR behalf of the saith • I have heard ,t1 y a ation oftenNseerns to die away as boyslewhich may be re eel' and girls grow uP due to lack oS I article, is that p urged in this efiaasie jutdgmine,ntt ,c cepted and in the cla of s ly ;Jews,. she will be visited with a spe_ 'have I succoured thee: beh,oldt now is which evill involve the accepted time; behold, /IOW is the t for the general fhrthe other ' day of salvation," 2 Car. 6: 2. encouragement and the- absence of di-, run of farm animals intended for be Jews may escape the decreed mas-1 There are considerations that may rection for an inborn faculty. Properdpork, nnetton or lamb, th youngms. but Esther ancl her family will; be presented to the minds of a class ly guided, this early proclivity ought, &mere s.hobld continually have before' not so escape. Who knoweth, etc. of young people, emphasizing this o e family. Eventual to grow with the years. Nothing -them a clear idea of preducing feel Remember that Mordecai is urging if ever this,matter is decided it will be would stimulate interest in livestock' market needs and that prize-winn more than the proper •,c1 f • th lIsrael•s sake. He has neged other be this day; all experience. shows t Esther to appear before the Icing for Ion some "to -day"; it is wise then that g-uz ance o is only e outward mark of instinct towards a definite goal by! the market needs in view. These needs havIngi pleas but now he-plaeds,on very high that the early teens is. a more hopeful setting' beftge YOung people a plainly may differ siighttly from season to seael and ll'riselfish grounds. tine for religious choice than a later Marked stanclard ef attainment, pson bet in any case they are beet in-' Esther's heart -strings has been touch- , it be noev, if theedecision has not been V.-• 16.- A very deep chord among time; it is Gecrs will, it is duty, that haps .teiere tiould• be less cause fo I terpreted- by those rnen through evhese al and now vibretes tvith nonle .iegaet that so many boys and girls rumentality the farmers' produce "leave the faem" if this fact were is prepared :or the consumer. No better and more -widely understood. meat -yielding livestock is geed unless Oneofof thesafes standards for at- in the last - resort it fulfills the ulti- Boy and Girl Winner sat an Ontario Fair. • This .photograph was 'taken 'from a slight elevation to show th the Cattle.' points o tainment in livestock, whether for mate demand for meat as set by- mil - youth or adult, is that breeding and lions on millions of consumers, Pure.. raising stock should be directed to- bred anirnals generally are most like - wards meeting the market demand of ly to yield good market types because, day the matter of increased it) ,cueJ everic country are based largely upon ! the censumer. In fact, in Canada to- after all, the pure-bred standards of es- ma e before 'On� day • Colool4. flay n through ehe Prime-val Wood A calf walked home, as good calves should, But left a trail all leen,t askew, -A crooked t -rail, as all calves do. Since then three hundred years have fled And I assume the calf is dead, But'Still he left behind his trail And thereby hangs mY moral tale. The trail was taken up next day „, i By a lone dog that passed' that way, And then a wise bell -wether sheep Pursued -blie trail o'er vale and steep And led his flock behind him, too I As good bellwethers always do. IAnd senc,e that day, o'er hill 'and, glade Through tho.se old woode, a path was I mad e.. I And many men wound in and out 'And bent and turned and,d,odged about 1 And uttered, words of righteous wrath !Because •twati such a crooked path. f But still they folloeved, do not laugh, The first migrations of that calf, And through the winding woodway stalked , , Becarts,e he wobbled when h,e walked." YMOMMONVIIIMMI=MNIFIMME.1.10, • Treatment for Blackhead m Turkeys. Blackhead has formerly been con- sidered incurable but lately the ipecac treatment has given success in many cases. To prevent blackhead give a teaspoonful of powdered ipecac to each twenty turkeys twice a week. This is given in a moist meek, ;When.; , a turkey is sick with blackhead give ten drops of fluid extract of ipecac three times per day for three days. Then give it twice a day for two days and follow with a close a day for three drays. Where blackhead causes severe /asses it has usually been considered to iscontinue raising turkeys ntil th,e soil becomee free from the isease. Military service will never get the oriel ahead nor,give as g-eed trainint. young men as service an farnis, ines, at sea, or in lumber camps. All ese combine adventure with creative, t destructive work. to Don't use your mincing machine for vacation, Work for,,Boy. .no • a vacuum cleaner. As the machine is A boy of higli school age was very ,carried from. one cow to another there' anxious to earn money during his va- 1 is a pe.ssibility of the teat -cups drag-, cation. His parents objeeted to his Pe ging on the barn floor. When this hap- I doing inside wcrk' but agred to give be pens and the vacuum is not shut off,Itheir consent if he could find ernPicy- th the milking -machine draws dirt from ment in the open. For years the, bey eee the floor into the milk -pail. , had been spending his Saturdays and we vacations in the woods, studying the the We tried it. Advised by some wise rson, we hung a wet sheet in the droom• for the purpose of cooling e atmos,phere during the reign of a ent "solar wave." The mercury nt clown the eight of one degree; birds Inc flowers and the trees. Know - as Troubled ith .-. ing eemething about nature, ha decid- sela m e ed o be a nature guide.. He pieced an t Kt*dneys and Biaader ; ing that he was about to form a class , advertisement in the local paper say- cf young leoys to study nature in the T open, the price to be teventy-five cents ea F T r or en ears I a leSson. s.ati i His first respon--------- ratify- indi I lime and the class grew DO -rapidly that hear he eoon divided_ the boys into classes aerv t wa,s all. Nothing in 'it. 4A1116 OgRE, 4 4 SI • LEtlilE HER iiLORIE HER HEART INAS SO BAD hose feelings of Seine/was, those cliz- oo11s and 1 e all -gone sinking ,en - on which come on from time to tuno eate a weakened condition of the t arid a disordered state of the Milburn's Heart and n'TVO Pills have no equal as a remedy to strengtlieu the heart, invigorate the nerves, and build up rhe run down system. rs. 0, Ve,nhorn, Ecityille, Alta., es:—"About a year ago i had heart ble, My husband diduat dare leave loue, and often had ti etay up at t "with me. I would jest eeol kind eint, , heartwed teem, to . benimg. r. would joet; faint away, it would sometimes be an hour or fore they could brine inc back to Someono told me about Milburn's t land Nemec Pine, so got three . took them aed felt ineeh bet- , or, so continued all evinter, and now I never feel nay such faintness, T eure. ly do appreciate the good your have clone for me." Prieo 50e.- is box at ell clealers or mailed direct on roseipt price by The T. Milbur4 Limitok" Tmonto Ont., •• .!1" the ---------------Drenent for the, lam. It ss chiefly the need fOe.increas-Iin.aritets balcen aver a series of years , of eight. Each event to the evoods once seine purpese. • 1 d t• th 1' • 'B • - MJ C • ekt t rd ‘1.)., th. fi et' pio ue ion in os o , ut puie-breds menet essentiel tol r. os. touertin, Nestervil Me. Larcembe's ea,reer as an exhi- stocic, !beef cattle, hogs, 'sheep', and' good market types. There are elaszes' writOs:"."es le, ()ate a vee to ir s, e ewers J. was treated with ray kid- . and. the trees. He taught the boys al/ biter has been mie consistent succes-, lambs, which wi.1.1 beet supply -the of livestock which all short earn ee triune -a -is too lengthy to men-, after -needs of those who take trie ani- " standard flint are excellently suited I '''''Y.bladder was so weeet I was getting evhat they, ase used for. He showed writ ewl .,,,,noys and. hiadder for ['boa ten years ' he knew about the different trees and ex tion in detail. I -Tis international suc-Imal of 1.;he hands of the faemer to pre -1 lei Oa_ traiket of the day. Thi - xatt, up four or five times evorY night; 1 i them the clanger of manY etneerle be trou nown to Western Canada and widely; The illustration, talcen .cit the West -1 offer in supplyine the current den -land! - ' ka. eesses have hrsaght considerable re- pare it into meat for the eonsurner.; and the Profltahlelle's's suall livesqeelcHthall Pda:itai 11R. intiajrNVbOalr,1:;31)1:01•113rWIDC170. l' g•C(1),Ieneitingof:byairslietonrsG."11aelittearitSgthilit't°}1110g1T1h tthheeil Illnieglia rIvertised the wonderful pee7lbilities ern Fair, London Ont. last fall, is an; could -well be .013a;liasized in boys' and! Sweerilent.,,modieines bet I never et 1serviee tliathe bird/ rendea. t I °f f ler many doctors, and dif- we ae the. sweepstake for wheat in, 0 Larcombe recently; shows the 'eVinners in the baby beef; - Breeding; peints, nlethods of feeding' the trait', I met; One Of my Mends who (lif Ined Plarlit's. The sr-ilulli"'s w°r1(' f 'intelligent farming veith assLpplscation, Mr iduous; example of well •direeted effort. - eiteba ' elehrated his ,seventieth 'birthday on class,es for 'boys . and girls.' This island sy,st ems of care lee important.1 I better until ono day, when I was on kind hY cnting insects 'and the 'Seedslsatneci) he farm which has been the scene of net the place to tell in detail what the Yet) while the,se may differ widely ac- r t°°1( fear bc-xes., "illa that is 43iX inSight int° natur° and a 1°ve f0r Hie°E.tr • t very- one of his achievements. Ile, aims and objecte are of boys' and girls', cording to locality the youthful farm- .1.11°ntils ago, aud I Can truilifullY 2aY °f•'.dc'°1' things and Paid the young' 6°1'es an look back oe-er his thirty years of livestock clubs, juvenile competitions ars, boys and girls will not go faY. gtz.u:a fifteen pounds since, anol guide a. reasonable sem fear his ser - advised mo to use Doan's 'Kidney- Pills. I gave many- of the boys Of tile town aillis,br. e gricultural life in Manitoba -with sti- and junioe farmers' movements. There I wrong, in this ear13; worlc if the re, 01.71 0 V I 15.3t0i lay trott- tenie satisfaction in the 1. dge' are many agenems far that purpose in quirements of the consumers' maricefs etnampt Praise Vent. Pills eneugh^" e ow -countrymen, ments of, _Agriculture, and the idea lei farming. opal -1 nal goal St successfel livestecic direct on receipt of price by, The II. the art ef amusing the patient whiTh . a box at till dealers, ot Mailed "Physic, says. an old surgeon, "is Milbtini Co., Limited, Toionto, Oat. Nature cures till(' disease," lat. in winning renown and prosper, existence, in. particular the branches o/ are kent st.eadily before them as the 1 aro- s '171dine'' it1.19 (the °I.gitial)' es,:f.or himself lie has pointed the way the Dominion told Provincial D tliotietuida of hia.f 11, 08 t, 26 0 741