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The Exeter Times, 1919-7-10, Page 3I2 PIP DYSENTERY Was So Weak She Had .To Go To .fed, Costs ---the Greatest Joke on `the the chemical division of the army, Mrs Charles. Buchanan, West Monk- Farmer: • saw a farmer burning a pile of straw 'ton, Ont.,: writes: -"I took Dr Fowler's• A city business men' bought . a and refuse. Extract of Wild Strawberry- eben I had farm and turned agriculturist in his "What are You doing?" he asked. dysentery so bad I passed nothing but 'spare hours. IIe had read' a good "Oh, this is the riebbish from the blood and water, a got medicine from deal about successful;, scientific farm- hen house," was the reply. "Makes our doctor, but it failed to help me. A , „ a good blaze, doesn't it ? , "An expensive blaze," answered the soldier.` "Why --what de you mean?" de- manded the worket, his face getting red. Then the soldier told him what I, am' setting down here for those who prize poultry litter for its blaze - making qualities. • If poultry manure could be. saved from any loss whatever, its value as fertilizer, if purchased upon the market, would amount to $32 a ton at present prices, Each hen produces approximately seventy pounds of fertilizer each year. All but ones seventh of this manure can be saved, if desired. The ter. pounds whieh can not be saved are lost in the poultry• yards, or when the. hefi has /longe over the farm; but even then%it adds something to the fertility of the soil. Four -sevenths of the manure is .de- posited„ on . the dropping board and can be easily saved; the remaining two -sevenths is found in the litter on the floor of ,the poultry house. At current prices, thehen's yearly production in fertilizer would be worth eighty-seven cents, not count- ing that, deposited in the yards or on the range. Many people do not value the hen much higher than c ig that. Some of this value will, of course, be lost in handling if the work is not done properly, If the droppings and litter are piled outside, much will be lost in leaching from rains and snows. The best way to save the manure ,is to keep it dry and the moisture ab- sorbed. "Poultry manure," said• the soldier - chemist; "is lacking in acid phos- phates. When ,this is added, it • is a fertilizer without an equal. I would suggest that acid phosphate be pur- chased on the market and lightly sprinkled over the dropping boards. It will absorb the moisture, make cleaning easier and will balance the manure. Do not burn the litter. Ap- ply it directly to the •soil." NOT B',...00DTH I R8TY. Bloodhound is Nota Ferocious Crea- And that is the greatest business ture as Generally Supposed. ' joke on many a farmer—that the work of himself and his family is The bloodhound, as its name would indicate, has always borne a reputa- tion for ferocity and relentlessness. _4s a matter 'of fact, the bloodhound is not a ferocious creature, although it isnot at all averse to "pian -tracking" ducts would show a loss, and in the Indeed; it possesses remarkable na- light of cost figures the farm would tural •,qualifications for hunting Ina be turned to raising other things that mar's. It has great speed, great scent - pay ing powers and, unlike the foxhound, One day a machinery salesman strong perseverance on an original came along and tried,. to sell a gas- line. It has been suggested that its oline engine and pumping rig to a natural enjoyment of. the pursuit of farmer. The latter hesitated to pay man has beentransmitted to it $50 for the outfit. They had always through a long line of criminalhunt- pumped water by hand, and figured ing ancestors. Luckily, however, this that it cost nothing.: But by a few zest for man -tracking does not degen-. cost figures the salesman demon - popular into license and, although many strated that his • family . had been popular manuals state that "the only pumping water for about five cents chance- for pian or beast hunted by an , hour, for many years, because a the blood hound is to take to the gasoline engine would pump for that water; it doss not follow thatko od- amount•hounds will injure their prey when he "Are you willingg to work for five is caught. On the contrary, once the cents an hour?" he asked. tracking is at an end the bloodhounds "I should say nota" replied the evince little interest in the object of farmer. "I want that engine and it 'save to sniff in an ,endeavor to as - pump rig." sure themselves that they have the Cost figures are like magic spectac- right man. . • les when ,used to view business op- The bloodhound has.. played a pro erations, farming no less than fac- minent, part in history from the very tory or store. They show country earliest times, and he sda familiar people working at wages which no figure in fiction. One of these hounds European peasant would tolerate, forms the principal character in Sir pnd often working for nothing. They Edwin handseer's celebrated picture •friend of mine dropped into see me one afternoon. I was so weak I was in bed. She told me what "Dr. Fowler's" had done for her little' boy, and she went homeandgot the bottle she always kept in her medicine chest, and believe me 'four doses helped me so I 'could get up and do my work. I took • two more doses and 1 was as normal as should be. I would not be without it now if it were five dollars a bottle. My husband has used it since I did, for diarrhoea and he got splendid results; You may publish this .I' you wish, as it may lead .some other sufferer to a cure." Dr, Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry for the past 74 years has had phenomenal success in all cases of diarrhoea, dysentery, cramps, colic, chol- era morbus, cholera infantum, summer complaint and bowel Complaintsof old and young. If you want to be en the safe side, if you don't want to experiment ar take chances as to results, refuse any and every bawd aornplaint compound that is offered you and insist, on the old reliable "Dr, Fowler's." Price. 35c. a bottle at. all dealers. Put up only by The T. Milburn Co.,. Limited, Toronto, Ont. aIT" The following rules for producing clean milk may be resolved into one, him to raise and pick the. fruit. Ile word—cleanliness-in the cow, in the remembered when he' bought his -milker, in the utensils, in the stables.) harvester, and how much he paid for 'That is the whole situation in a nut- it, but knew nothing about the ma - shell. None of these things are ex- chinery per acre cost -of raising grain. pensive, except the ice. When the city man went back 1, Brush. the udder and wipe with a hone he knew how he lost money clean cloth; wash with clean water and how his neighbor tmade it. For and dry with a clean towel. every, item of wages, machinery, in - 2. Milkers should wash their hands terest, and expense generally had with soap and water and dry with a been faithfully charged against the clean towel.. agriculturist's .crops, while the farm - 3. Whitewash the cow stable at er had only charged incidental items least twice yearly. actually paid out of pocket. 4. Feed no dusty feed until after "What did it cost me to pick my d:he milking. apples?" he said in surprise. • "Why, 5. Remove all manure from cow practically nothing—' we all turned stable twice daily. out and did the job ourselves!" 6. Keep barnyard clean and have Which was the same as saying that the manure pile at least one hundred the family picked apples without pay. feet from the stable. ing, and the money made by handling everything in a big, modern way -- crops, rotations, Cultivation, fertility, fine, breeds, good machinery and buildings. His reading 'dealt chiefly with thousands of dollars. Se he spent money freely for machinery, labor, seed, fertilizer. Being a. business mau,. he ;kept ac- curate cost records , of 'everything. 'When the time came to, sell his pro- ducts these records showed' heavy losses everywhere. But• :they, also taught him that you have to watch all the little items on a farm Profits. from an acre of land are'eetured, not in thousandsof dollen, but often in a $5 or $10 bill, Money spent in good methods will show profit, but farm operations do .not offer theseine field for heavy expenditure as sloes indus- trial production. The farm next to this city man's place was run by a real farmer. The city roan went over to get some ad- vice, His neighbor seemed tb be making money—the farm and family were prosperous. When they com- pared'. notes the agriculturist found that the farmer had few cost figures. Yes, he paid the hired man sb much a month and hie board, but did not know 1h n �v � at it cent him in wages to plow and seed 20 acres of wheat. He got so much for his apple crop last fall, but did not know what it cost 7. Have all stable floors of cemexit, properly drained. ' 8. Have abundant windows in cow- er.- ' stables to permit sunlight to reach the floor. 9. Arrange a proper system of ventilation. 10. Do not use milk from any cows suspected of garget or of any udder inflaznmation. Suoh milk contains. enormous numbers of bacteria. 11. Brush and groom the cows from head to foot as horses are groomed. 12. Use no dusty bedding; wood shavings or sawdust give the least dust. 13. Use an abundance of ice in water tank for cooling milk. Learn by Imitation. Much of a child's earliest educa- tion, often the most valuable and most enduring part, is that which is acquired at home, not by precept* or teaching, but by imitation. From the earliest beginnings of learning the child is copying the sights . and sounds ab•oet him. If he lives among people whose language is correct and agreeable, whose manners are pleas- ant, •who show a thoughtful consid- eration for others and whose bee havior is gentle and kindly, he un coersciously ' acquires similar ways. The habit of courtesy conies not alone nor chiefly from direct instruc- tion, but from imitation. Good man- ners are an invaluable asset to every person, but they have their root and foundation in fine qualities of mind and heart and only the constant daily exercise of them will give the chile thrown into farm production gratis, and that if accurate cost records were kept, and reasonable wages given Mother. and the girls, and the boys paid like the hired man, many pro - show where crops and animals are "Dignity 'and Impudence."• being 'sold for less than it cost to . raise them. They show where capital Molasses As Fuel can be invested in machinery, build- Great quantities of molasses are ings, and comforts to enable the lam- wasted by the sugar mills of Cuba. ily to produce more salable stuff: with Attempts have been made to utilize fewer hours' work, and easier work. this waste product. as fuel for the dren that charm of manner which is I Every business house must have an boilers of the sugar mills, and now a such a delight in • persons of every accounting department. Every .farm Cuban inventor asserts he has in- a►The .opposite qualities are like -I should have one. The business ac- vented an apparatus which, will per- wast�' imitated and help to produce countant ,is given •an office, a desk, mit the use•of the molasses as fuel another sort of child, and suitable working tools. The farm- without choking the furnaces. PAIN ACROSS 'KIDNEYS Was So Bad Had To Go To Beal. Women are the greatest sufferere from weak, sore, lame and aching backs, owing to the continual stooping, bending and lifting so necessary to perform their household duties. , On the first sign of any weakness of the back Doan's kidney' Pills' should be taken and thus prevent serious kidney troubles which are sure to follow if the bad back is neglected. - Miss Gladys M. •J3uolder;-Tatarna- gouche, N.S., writes: --"I feel it my - duty to let you know what Doan's Kidney Pills have done for me. 1 suffered for years with a sore back. I. was so bacl I had to take to my bed sometimes with the pain across my kidneys. 1 went to two different doc- tors; they treated me, but I got very little relief. 1 saw Doan's Kidney Pills advertised for sore back, so sent for two boxes,and before I had the arst one taken1'felt a change. I cannot recommend`` your medicine enough, Doan's Kidney Pills are 50 cents a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt ofrice by The T. Milburn Co,, Limited. Toronto. Ont. accountant should begin with these same essentials. There should be a little office in the house or barn, with a desk, account books, and writ- ing materials—perhaps a typewriter for farm correspondence. Very often separate places for entering records around the farm are a convenience— ensues a feeling of a choking sensation, one in the milking shed, another at the breatn becomes so short at is hard to breathe the grain bins or scales, so that fig- and you feel as if you were ures can be jotted down on the spot smothering, you become weak and dizzy, the heart palpitates, throbs and beats irregularly. On the fust sign of the hears be- coming weakened you will find that a few boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will strengthen and invigorate it so that it beats strong and regular, and the lost 'vitality is replaced by. vi or and energy. r. Stephen Crouse, East Clifford, • N.S., writes: --"I suffered for five years With heart trouble. I could hardly walk to the barn without resting I used to get so short of . breath. The doctors could not help me. My wife told me' about Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. I got a box and felt better; three boxes made me quite well. I am now helping my son work the farm; and can truth- fully say I. feel like a different man, I can highly recommend your pills to' any one wlio has a weak heart." Price 50e. a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co,, Limited, Toronto, Ont. SUFFERED 5 YEARS' WITH HEART TROUBLE. Through one cause br other a large ma- jority of people are troubled with some form of heart trouble, but do not know it. When the heart becomes affected there. and later taken to the office. Then a cost -accounting systemis needed. Such systems usually look complicated when one examines the. various forms for keeping figures and the different books that must be posted and balanced. That is too bad, and part of the joke, on the farmer who assumes that bookkeeping is superfluous drudgery, For the sys- tems are really simple • 'as soon as one begins to do the work, and call for notcmore thaw five or fifteen min- utes' writing and figuring daily. Send to the Publications Branch of the Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, for the necessary equipment. Burning Up the Dollars. One morning last spring 'a dis- charged soldier who had served 'in Invest Your Money. In 5 fz % DEBENTURES Interest, payable half yoariy. The Great West Permanent Loan Company Toronto Office 20 King -St. West INTERNATIONAL LESSON JULY 13. Baptism—Matt. 28: 18-20; Mark 1: 1-11; Acts 8: 26-40. Golden Text, Gal. 3: 27. Matt. 28: 18-20. Go Ye Therefore. Jesus declared,, before His final part- appear that none but•Himself, and ing front His disciples, that all power John knew what happened. It was had been given Him in Heaven and in practically Jesus call to His ministry earth. Out of that fulness of Divine of salvation, and with that the as - mission: "Go teach authority He issues this great eom- surance of His relationship to God. « The same gift of the Spirit came upon baptize," Baptism was to be in the the apostles, and upon their converts, threefold Name, "the Name of the sometimes preceding, sometimes fol - Father, and of the Son, and of the ' lowing, their baptism (Acts 8: 12- Holy Ghost" It meant confession of, 17), and confirming them in the faith faith in God, whose love was revealed' which they professed. in Jesus Christ, and whose saving In Rom. 6: 1-4 Paul compares the grace was - being manifested to men change which takes place in those through the•working of His Spirit in who believe and enter upon a new the world. And it meant admission' life of faith in Christ to baptism into into the fellowship of the Church, His death, Just as a man goes down into the community of those who into or beside the water and comes through zeal and heroic enterprise up a confessed and accepted disciple, and patient suffering were witnessing so does He come to Christ, dies with for Christ and spreading abroad His Him and is buried with I-Iim in renun- G p hi his heart. He must have had a great story to tell'when he returned to the court of Queen Candace, and he may have been one of the found- ers of that. Ethiopian Church which continues In that country to the present day. In Mark 1: 1-11, which is.one of the prescribed readings for this lesson, we have the story of John's ministry and of the baptism of Jesus. Two features of the story are worthy of special attention. The first is that John preached a "baptism of repent- ance," that it was accompanied by a confession of sins, and that •its in- tention was to secure forgiveness, These were the essential things— ,repentance, confession, and remission of sins, and these things were sought in and through baptism. The second feature is that of the coming of the Spirit. As Jesus came up out of the water there came to Him this great experience. It would fir" z JO - 4 ` - - se - Mothers and daughters of all ayes, are cordially invited to write to tb'is: department. initials only will be published. with each questan and Its answer as a moans of identificatfon, but full name and sddress must be given in each letter, write on one side of paper, only. Answers will be mailed direct if stamped and addressed envelope Is enclosed. Address all correspondence for this department to Mrs. Helen Law, 235 Woodbine Ave., Toronto. •. Engaged: The joyous news might bridegroom at her left. Do you notice )re announced at a luncheon or tea I have said "bridegroom?" One of served on the lawn or verandah or my , pet aversions is the word in the dining room. To make the "groom." About the order of the announcement at the right time lends bridal . party: first, the ushers walk a happy atmosphere to the meal. So in, followed by the bride on the arm it is beat to decide upon the number of her father, of guests first and then prepare the . Lonesome: Bless your heart! I am announcements. , The, old saw—"the so glad you poured out your troubles cat is out of the bag"—makes a to xne for that is what I am here for. splendid way of making known the You have been awfully brave and 1 engagement. Make bags of pale blue feel that things will "break" for you and pink tissue paper, using the blue soon. Just keep up your courage and to line the pink. Cut cats from thin your father is bound to realize in cardboard and paint them •black, for time what a good mother and house - you know that the black cat as a i keeper you have been to those little surprise is good luck. Tie around the! motherless children and reward yore cats' necks narrow white ribbon and( properly. And whatever happens re- attach the cards of the engaged � member it is for the best, Write me couple. Place the cat in the bag and again. then blow up the bag and tie with Proper: You do not have to ace pale pink and blue ribbon, then knowledge wedding announcements, fasten a place card to the neck of the but if this one is from a dear friend bag. Or, you may make a large bag and you slid not know she was going of alternating strips of blue and pink to be married, by all means write tissue paper and use as a centrepiece, her a nice little personal note and elation of the old life of sin, and banking the bag with flowers. Place wish her joy and happiness. os el. cats in the bag and then run a white K. Y. Z.: I am going to be married Baptism•without teaching would rises with Him into the new life of ribbon to, each place and fasten a very informally at home in the morn - avail nothing. At the best it would righteousness (compare Col. 2: 12)..place card to the end of each ribbon. ing. What shall I wear? Also can be only the admission to the Church Again, in Gal. 3: 26-28, he says, "As Have the first course in place before you suggest some menu for a simple of one who. was ignorant of the many of you as were baptized, into seating the guests and while the sec- wedding breakfast? Church's faith and life. That is, of Christ did put on Christ:' It is as course, true of the baptism of chit- tliough they had put and is being served have the cats pol- A silk dress in some pretty navy .off the old, un- led from the bag and the space then blue, tan or gray shade would be ap- dren, which can only be justified clean garment of -self and sin, and filled with a plass of flowers. • se propriate and you can wear your hat. when and where the parents under being washed had put on the new Puzzled: If you want to be real When you leave, slip your separate take to teach the children, as soon' garment of the Christ -like life. Corn- as they are able to learn, the nature ?are Col. 3: 8-14. punctillious about the seating ar- coat over your dress. A Leghorn hat rangements, here is the correct way goes well with a silk dress and gives and meaning of this sacrament s to dispose of the wedding guests: a festive touch. Of course you can- Acts 8: 34-40. If Thou Believest the bride and bridegroom sit side by not carry a bouquet since you are With All Thine Heart. For a man side at the head of the table. The not wearing a white bridal dress, but of mature years and intelligence best man sits by the bride; the maid you can wear a small one and if you that was and is the indispensable of honor by the bridegroom. The choose, carry a prayer book. For bride's father sits at the other end your wedding breakfast, I suggest of the table opposite the bride and some hot dish like creamed chicken in bridegroom and at his right sits the patty shells or on squares of toast, the bridegroom's mother, with the with a fruit or vegetable salad, sand - wife of the clergyman at his left. wiches, rolls, jelly, olives, and ice The Low -Down Wagon. There are many advantages in us- ing the low-down wagon on the farm condition. Baptism would be of no —so many, an feet, that it is a won - use without a whole -hearted faith. In der that its use is not universal. the former part of this chapter we Many have a prejudice against the read of Simon, the magician, who was use of this type of wagon because baptized' on profession of faith, but of the opinion that it has a heavier whose heart was "not right before draft. Put the mother of the bride at one cream with cake and coffee. Far the God."Peter said to him: "Thou There are so many uses to which side of the table with the clergyman centre piece, have a bowl of flowers hast neither part nor lot in this mat- the low-down wide -tire wagon may at her right and the father of the or the wedding cake. ter." The gift of the Holy Spirit be put, that every farmer should have was not for such as he. But the 'one, As a labor -saver there is no- British Columbias t_ Ethiopian officer, under Philip's care- thing to compare with it; 'tis abso- ful• instruction, believed. He was made lute economy to possess one. In the to see, in the passage of Isaiah which loading and.hauling of fruits, vege- he had been reading (Isa. 53: 7, 8), a tables, hay, heavy farm machinery, marvellous provision of the charas- stock—in fact, anything portable you taxes the strength, Thelow-wheeled ter and ministry of Jesus Christ, and, moreover, that this Jesus was none other than the long -expected Mes- siah, King and Saviour, the Son of God. "He answered and said, I be- lieve." The Ethiopian went on his way a new man, with a new under- standing of his Bible and a great joy may wish to haul the low -wheeled wagon saves you much of that ener- gy it is so necessary to conserve in these days of scarcity of labor. Lift- ing things to a. level with your body is not what overtaxes you; it is raising them above that—the last two or three inches of the lift that WHAT SHALL 1 "MAKE" OF MY CHILD? "I can see now where I made mya right to make himself what he mistake with Albert. He should I wanted to be. Their's was the bad have been a farmer and I made him , old idea that the child belongs to the a botany teacher." It was a mother 1 parents and r-iust obey. They want - speaking. "He was always crazy 1 ed Albert to do a certain thing, and over plants and flowers and tending he must do it, regardless of whether them and picking them to pieces to . he was suited to it or not. But they sea- how they were put together. The ; are not alone in the mistaken idea teacher we had when he was fourteen i that we can mold our children to suit said he was a wonder in botany, so , ourselves. The world is full of such we pinched and scrimped to save our' mistakes. money and send him to high school J Consider the poor girls, and a few If the truth were only known you and college and make him a teacher. boys, whose parents want them to would find that over one-half of the But he ain't a success. He has a new be musicians. Absolutely without any ills of life are caused by allowing the school every year, can't hold the chile talent for music and devoid of any bowels to get into a constipated con- dren the board says. You see,Al- dation. When the bowels become con- desire to shine in that line, they are stipated the stomach Beta out of order, bert pis shy. He's afraid of the boys; forced to devote five and•' six hours d the liver does not work properly and then and girls. But you ought to see his i day to pounding out scales and ex- follows the violent sick headaches, the garden. He can make things grow i ercises on the piano. And where do sourness of the stomach, belching of where no one else ever could. He they get? Nowhere. Many a girl is wind, heartburn, waterbrash, biliousness, should have been a plain farmer or a selling ribbons or pegging in on market gardener. Can't make his 1 switchboard calls to -day who has had living as it is without a garden toenough money spent on her music help out." !lessons to keep her comfortably for Her companion suggested that it life if it were wisely invested. might not be too late to change, but And the perfectly good carpenters umber Safes. wagon eliminates this. And the wide The 1918 value of the lumber out - tires make easier passage over soft fields, and do not cut up meadows badly. put was $54,162.523, which was almost double that of 1915, and 12 per cent. greater than that of 1917. The total In the loading of hay, corn fodder, production for that year was shown as grain, etc., one scarcely realizes, who 1,545,422,000 feet. Since 1915 the lum- has not used a low-down wagon, how ber cut has increased over fifty per many and important are its ad- cent. vantages. The wagon we have seems to run with no heavier draft than the high -wheeled wagons drawn at the side of it with the same kind of load. Neighbors have commented on this, and often remark: "Your wagon. runs easy, doesn't it?" --J. A. R. Enlistments of British immigrant boys who came to Canada as immi- grants numbered over 10,000. Suffered from Constip $ikn FO TWO YEARS. the mother did not agree. and masons and mechanics and farm - "We spent too much money on his ers who are drawing $10 and $12 a education," she protested. "He's got week clerking in stores or dawdling to make something out of it now. Is about in offices is appalling. An your boy good in figures?" she con- intelligent glance at the work boys tinued. "I see him figuring away soprefer in school would tell the aver - often when I come in." I age parent that the things the ay - "Yes, he's pretty good," replied the erage boy can do with his hands has other, "but not' startling." a hundred tines the appeal to him "Why don't you make a mathe- that arithmetic • and bookkeeping matics professor out of him?" pur- have. Tools, machinery, athletics, sued the first another. "They make these make the appeal to boys. Even lots of money and it's nice work." hoes, spades and rakes are preferred "I don't believe we'll try to `make' to books, as our school war gardens anything out of him," temporarized have demonstrated. And how much the second woman. "You admit you've better for the physical health to do made a mistake in picking out your some form of muscular labor'\than boy's life work, and I'm afraid we to be shut up in a schoolroom or wouldn't do any better. I think we'll J store, or to bend over a desk all day leave him alone and see what he de- long. velops. into when he gets older." Once in a while a boy or girl shown "And have him wind up a motor- marked aptitude for a professional man, maybe," protested thefirst career, but the number of these who speaker. "That's all he talks now. do is small. If your child 'happens I'd make him do something worth to be one of this small number, help while. At least Albert has a job hint, or her, along on her natural folks look up to, if he isn't very good career. But your part is to follow at it." the child, net to pick out arbitrarily And she left her friend wondering the thing you want him to do and if after all, she knew what her mis- force him into it, without regard to take had been. A big mistake had meatal or physical qualifications. been made with Albert, certainly. We'd all like our children to be mare Hut the parents were still blind to vels, but there's a natural law which the fact of what it was. They were says that water never rises higher hi total ignorance of the fact that than its source. Think of the source Albert was an individual, besides be- of the child when you insist on his ing their son, and that as such he had vocation. etc. Keep your bawds regular by using Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. Mr. A. Roder, Hastings St. E., Van- couver; B.C., writes:—"I desire to ex- press my thanks for what Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills have done for me. I had been suffering from constipation for two years also had a bad cough and headaches. 1' tried all sorts of cures and remedies, but got no relief until I was advised to try your pills. I got great relief after the first few doses." Price 25c. a vial et all dealers or mailed direct on receipt ofrice by The T. Milburn Co.. Limited, Toronto. Ont Sewing machine oil should be put on any rust spots on umbrella frames. icycle Tires "Unquestionably the Best Tires Made" For speed, safety and thoroughly satisfactory service, be sure to ride on "Dominion" Tires. The extra mileage makes them the best and cheapest to buy. 10 ',yµKr..r,O Ritzy@ Sold by the Leading Dealers DommrioN RUBBER OCItino TENTH ANNUAL TorFat to it Sh•a .tw v�. 3 UNION STOCK YARDS. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY face ," .;r her l h a, 12t Classes For: Single Steers, Lots of Three Steers, and Carloads of Steers. Single Heifers and Lots of Three Heifers. Lots of Three, Ten and Carloads of Sheep and Lambs. Lots of 'three, Five, Ten and Twelve Hogs. .;,.;°ilk �r"';ai t ,m ", ss; .aa'•a40i." Further infortn t io - on. a."�."' 1d t ti to s C« F. TOPPING, linin Stock Yards, To«oI'tto