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The Exeter Times, 1920-7-1, Page 3a Pe Not .Nogloot Tho"Bad Oak.. . TODAY IT MAY BE SERIOUS TO -MORROW M ny Develop bete Elronehatis, Poem amnia and porlsaps Coneminptions Miss Mary Proule, BR, No: 1, Cederdalei Ont., tvrites:—"I had the Influenza in November last, and it left me with a terrible coegh, I did not attend to it until it got so severe people warned me it wets time to see about it, I went to the doctor and got some medicine. He told inc it Was a bad attack of bronchitis. I could not sleep, and would have to sit up nearly all night, it was so difficult for me to get my breath. The doctor's medicine did not seem to .be helping me the least bit. One of our neighbore came in one day, and told me about 'Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. I tried it and took two bottles. No person could believe how it helped men I have recommended it to different people since, for I believe. I have reasons ler doing so. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup has beeu on the Market for the pest 30 years, and stands out by itself as a remedy for all coughs and cols, Be sure and. get the real "Dr. Woods'' when you ask for it. Put up in a yellow wrapper; 3 pine trees the trade ;mai price 25c. and 60c. Manufactured only by The T. Milbuin Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Cane Fruits in Summer. Cane fruits, including raspberries, blackberriee and dewberries, growing under normal conditions, produce strong vigorous shoots froan the. crowns early in the spring. These be- come the fruiting canes the following , year. When they get to be about two and one-half or three feet high they iehould have their terminals pinched back an inch or two to stimulate the formation of lateral or branch sheets. This makes a 1110re eompact bush that is less subject to winter injury and that under ordinary 'circumetances is more produrtive. • The cane -fruit patch should be gone Over several times during the latter part of May and in June, pinching back each time the -shoots that have reached a height of two and one-half or thrtee feet. The laterals should tlisigasiee allowed to grow as long as their vvill until the beginning of the following season when they May be shortened to a length ef from twelve to eighteen inches. . If. for any reason the new shoots ieSe of the cane fruits have been allowed to become four or five feet tall without pinching, they should not be headed qcle during the sumnier. Such late -needing would be liable to force die production of laterals that would not mature Well before winter and that consequently would be make subject to winter injury. As soon as the, fruiting season is over the old canes that have borne fruit should be pruned out, carried off the patch or field and burned. If left during the summer and fall months; they harbor insects and diseases that spread to the new growth, decrease the next year's crop and shorten the life. of the plantation. • The best and most effective way to deal with the insect and disease prob- lems in the .cane-frait plantation is to cut out and burn the old canes im- mediately after each fruiting season. They have to be reanoved anywtrY, andl it is no more expensive or trouble- some to remove them then than later. When this plan .is followed spraying seldom need be used for cane fruits. Commercial plantings of cane fruits need thorough cultivation throughout the growing season. In the case of small hoine plantings, heavy mulching • with straw, leaves, corn -stalks lawn clippings, etc., may take the plaSe of • cultivation. This helps to keep down weeds, conserves the moisture, keeps the soil cool during the hot summer months and otherwise promotes the health and growth of the plants. Canada's percentage of population: Rural, 55; urban, 45. 'United States, 21 and 79. hr. OM. • Bloat in Cattle. Deepite 111 that has been taught and written On this subject many cat- tle still die of bloat, or aeute disten- tioneof the rumen or paunch with gas. This is unfortunate for the disease may readily be avoided in many cases and, when isecase occurs, it need not prove fatal if the owner or attendant knows what to do. Sudden changes of feed andfeed that is in a damaged or fermenting state are common causes. But sad- den excessive eating of rank, wet green clover Or alfalfa is by far the most common cause. Alfalfa in bloom does not cause bloat; but the sugar of rod -clover blos- soms is Most likely to cause it. Look out for bloat cases ou hot, damp muggy days ,after a big thunderstoin and when the air is surcharged with electricity. There are many cases on such days, Make all changes of feed gradually and let all feed be sound. The paunch or : rumea fihls two- thirds of the left side -of the abdomen. When an animal is bleated. the paunch becomes so distended that it may rise above the level of the backbone. The - affected cow lags, stops eating, looks distressed, may slo.bber, breathes hard or gasps for air, and when about suffocated staggers and May fall and die. • Urine and feces may be sets- preseed, but in some t hot weather eases scou'eing may be present. In chronicicaees the cow .comes up bloat- ed at night and by morning the die - tension has subsided, Such cases rarely are acute, but many of them are due to tuberculosis, and for that reason 'the tuberculin test, should be applied by a veterinarians Presence of foreign bodies in the second stom- ach also may cauae frequent bloating of a subacute form. Before giving medicine of any sort to a bloated cow, set her with the hind feet low to prevent the distended paunch front pressing upon the -dia- phragm and interfering with the breathing. Put a ropeior round stick bitwise in her reouth, as that will ,pre - Hay Sling!. There are still a few farmers who think that hay -forks are the best and gaielseet means to -get a lead of hay off the wagen into the hay mow. I really believe that this is because tb,ey have never tried bay slings, • or have never seen thens used anywhere, Last tummer 1 helped a neighbor haat bey. We loaded by hand, but hnd three slings on :each load. About eighty ° ‘ Or run her water, 'orpoCrIL into o cold. water upon hst' body. Other methods of relieving bloat are to pull the tongue far out now and then, or place a handful of salt or bicarbonate of soda far back on the tongue, or persistently rub the ab- domen and give rectal injections of soapy warm water to help move the bowels and bring the gas away. Some owners believe in running the cow but we think it best to keep her quiet. Medicinal treatment eonsists in give ing two ounces `of turpentine in a pint (ye raw linseed oil or quart of new milk; er, in very severe cases, if the cow is large., some veterinarians give as much as four ounces each ,of aro- matic spirits of ammonia and turpen- tine well diluted with oil or water. These heroic doses have been found wonderfully effective. A newer treat- ment 'is to give from one to three tablespoonfuls of formaldehyde well diluted With new milk. Smaller doses may he given .in from one-half to one hour, as seen to be necessary. The term "tapping" means to insert a dagger -like instrument (trocar) sheathed in p. metal tube (cannula) ia the most distended part of the paunch high up in the left flank, close to the last rib, just under the spine and in front of the point of the hip -bone. Then withdraw the trocar, leaving the cannula to draw off the gas. Clip the hair from the skin at the point to be tapped; cut a little slit downward with a sharp, clean knife; insert the point of the truer in the wound and then with a sharp blow of the palm of the hand drive it and the cannula inward, forward and downward. Now withdraw the trocar. When the gas has escaped return the trocar and pull out -both instru- ments together; then press the lips of the wound together, apply a little disinfectant and then some pine tar. Tap in. a fresh wound if that is found necessary. Keep the instruments scrupulously clean. Stand on the right side of the cow and reach over to drive in the instruments. rods from us another farmer was , making and loading hay with tWice the help—we had. 'He unloaded with a double harpoon -fork. When we went to the barn at the same time, we would be. oat in the field again and about half loaded by the time he was through unloading and backing the wagon isutiof the barn, We made three trips with the horses and he made any- where up to fifteen to remove a load. There are some barns, of course, that mightnot stand a track or the use of a track, and hay slings require a track. A folk works a lot better with a track than without, but it can be used without a track quite well. But if the been is strong enough to stand it, and is equipped with a track, I think it willpayto try slings. Some farntere are tieing two double harpoon forks for the top of the load and one sling for the bottom to clean up with, I'll venture that often there are More ptills with this arrangement than with three slings. There is the -argument that, with the slings, it takes thee to keep the rope straight. That is true. But when we get to the field the first sling is laid on the rack floor and the other two are hitched straight on behind the wagon. They drag along behind until needed, That wears them out? A neighbor has been doing this for fourteen years with one set of slings and they, are still doing duty. _ea.> Canada is Britain's largest overseas Dominion.. 1•11•••••••11.1•MIONILOMMIMMI.I. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON JULY 4TH. David In Camp and Court, I Sam. 17: 1-18: 9. Golden Text, I Sam. 18: 14. 17: 1-39. The Philistines. Verges 1-11 are a part of the oldest narra- tives, verses 12-31 probably a later addition. from another source. The whole of Satil's reign appears to have been eccupied with the struggle against these clever, determined, and persistent foes, the Philistines. The vale of Elah was west and south of Jerusalem, on the border of the Philis- tine country. Not far away was the c;ty of Gatti, the home of the giant Goliath. Here the two armies were encamped, one on either side, with , the valley and the brook between. 1 Goliath is described Cs a very big man, about nine feet in height, and as wearing a coat of mail, the weight of which was more than two hundred pounds. A cubit was a little less than eighteen inches and a shekel about three-quarters of an ounce. David is here represented as a very young man. He is sent by his father with provisions for his fighting bro- thers and a present for their com- manding officer. The picture of David's. visit to the camp is drawn true to the life—his eager interest, his questions, the rebuke of his older brother, his indignation at the defiant challenge of the giant Philistine, his own upleaping ambition combined with the exaltation of spirit paoduced by his faith in Jehovah the God of Israel. The older story, interrupted at the end of verse 11, is reaumed in verses 32-54. 17: 40-49. In His' Scrip. The scrip was his shepherd's bag. David was accustomed to the- use of the sling, and trusted now to his familiar wea- pon rather than to the sword and armor of Saul. The sides of- he nar- row channel, in which the brook ran, were steep, and he would have to scramble down and up again. Only when he appeared .on the farthee side and drew near to the Philistine would the giant be aware of his coming. Am 1 a Dog? The Warrior is highly offended that this youth should coins against him with only a -staff in his hand. He does not seem to. be aware of the sling which David merles or of the stones which are concealed in sis bag. In the Name of the Lord of Hosts. David knoevs the ancient songs and tovies of his people. He knows that ellovah has been called a "Man of War," that He is regarded as the Captain of IsraePs, armies, and that Ie is the Giver of Victory. The title Lord of Hosts" originally meant Goa f the armies of Israel, but litter, in he teaching of the prophets, it came signify the Lord of invisible as well IneoptcperafrOMM.Vccatneerus=alliMaceitle=sermISItiumannomem lbad lobed so Ba EU TO. GO TO BED. When the liver becomes sluggish and inactive it does not manufacture enough bile to thoroughly act ori the bowels and siarry off the waste matter from the Ihativetem, heace the bowels becotne clogged •aip, the bile Fete into the blood, con- atmation Setf3 in and is followed by sick gInd bilious headaches, water brash, scheartburn, floating, specks before the Veyes, and painful internal, bleeding or protruding piles. iVfilburnis Laxit-Liver Pills regulate the flow of bile to that it acts properly ou the bowels, and stirs the sluggish liver leto activity. Mrs. E. Bainbridge, Amherst; NS., writes:.—"I take pleasure in writing yott of the good received by using Mil- burn'e Laxit-Triver Pills for headache. I was so bad .1 had tag° to bed, and could not Jilt up. A friend told me about your wonderful medicine, and two viale hieve, m me as well as I can be." A ra's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25e, VI at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt' of price, by The T. Milburn Limited, Comet°, Ont. as visible powers, and of all creation. This is the meaning we attach to the name "Lord Sabaoth:" David's faith and courage are superb. "This day," Ire says, "will the Lord deliver thee into my hand." "The Lord eavetl not with sword and spear." "Th battle is the Lord's." 17: 50-54. The Men of Israel, en- couraged by the amazing -reedit of the encounter of their youthful eham- pion with the giant, rushed' forward to his aid, and followed up their 're- treating enemy as far as Gath (not. Gai) and the gates of Ekron. The statement that David brought the Philistine's head to Jerusalem is hard to explain, because at that time, and for many years afterward, Jerusalem was a Jebusite stronghold. 17: 58-18: 5. Whose Son is This Youth? This part of the stork can only be regarded as truly historical if these events took place before David came to the court and became Saul's favorite, as related in chap. 16: The friendship which sprang n us- ern prairies are especially rich in between David and "Jonathan" is full humus, derived from the grass of interest and beauty, and has be- through ages of uninterrupted growth come a type for all time of generous, and decay. Continuous cropping, of1 enduring, and unaelfish affection. They wheat has very seriously reduced thel made a covenant of brotherhood, humus content in older sections and which remained. unbroken even when the average yield is declining.. Wild Jonathan came to know that David plants return to the soil and continu- would take his place upon the throne --71,rocR, -An Address ail eommunieations for this.departrytent to Mrs: Helen Law, 235 Woodbine Ave, Toronto. Brides of 1920:—So many inquiries former having another engagement. have come in regarding home wed- The bride or her mother should attend dings that the colamn is given up this to this. week to that most interesting subject. • Of course every girl wishes ller prAoluutsleirninn! tshP:iiril,goffaerirdingseumofnieftdiaagree weddiag to be as "correct" as possible and flowers to the farm bride and a and theee few suggestions are set down for her guidanee. Let her re- little attistic skill in arranging thern will make the simplest wedding beau - member above all to have everything* tau-. A cerner of the rOOT11, a bay as simple as possible and when knowl- window, or one end- of the room if it edge of what is the thing 'ails her, to use just, collusion sense and good is not too broad, may be transformed judgment. These will not let lier into an appropriate altar where the make great mistakes. i nuptial vows are to be exchanged. I Soft candle light is preferable to While it is wise to plan in a gen-n bright, garieh light, especially before eral way as long in advance as pos-1 and during the ceremony. 'The wise sible, the first definite thing to bel bride will avoid suell artificial effects done is to attend to the invitations as paper wedding bells, stiff arches, or annommements. Invitations should be mailed at least two weeks before the date of the wedding; announce- ments are to be mailed the day of or the day after the wedding,. For a setting Nature provides. i• small home wedding, announcements, stating that the wedding has taken place, are the proper thing and the few friends and relatives who are in- vited may be sent verbel invitations or brief notes written by the bride or her mother. The beide of course bears the expense of this and she can con- sult with the printer or the engraver about .the form.iastiytueoriue, a,une It is wise to askithe minister and father or mother, or whoever "gives his wife as long in advance as possible, her away." The bridegroom advances so there will be no darger of the a few steps to meet her and together .ena bows and streamers of ribbon and so forth. A mid -summer outdoor .wedding should appeal to the bride who de- sires something novel arid likes the At the first sounds of the bridal musie, the minister, bridegroom and his best man emerge .from a closed room downstairs and take 'their places in front of the altar facing the ap- proach pf the bride, Then the bride's attendants come slo•wly downstairs in! this order: the .bridesinaids, maid of honor, flower girl or ring bearer and Taking Stock on Can Fifty=Third Birthday Vanadian Agriculture. TO turn from crops that require a lifetime for their growth to those which are harvested annually, in other words, to turn. frotn forestry to agri- culture, we find conditions less alarm - Inge but not satisfactory. Canadian agriculture faces many, problems: labor, transportation, improvement of social life, etc.- From 4 conservation el standpoint, however, the moat import- ant question is that of maintaining the productivity of the soil. This is the basic prolblern, fox?. without soil fertility there can be no agricultute. If we waste this greatest of all natural resources, the prosperity of the farming community and of the nation as a whole is doomed to de- cline. • The Sail . Fertility Congress, held at Winnipeg on the 14th, 15th and 16th of June, was called to dis- cuss the best means of combatting! the various tendencies that menace! Canada's crop -producing power. The chief constituent of soil, influ- encing its fertility, is humus. This is the organic portion, consisting of par- tially decayed animal and vegetable matter. The virgin soils of the west - ally enrich it by their own. decompo. motion, but cultivated crops are re. moved. Hence, it is necessary to re- turn to the soil, artificially, mattee which will keep the humus content up 18: 6-9. But an incident occurred to standard. This is inost easily done on the return from the battle of the by the application of barnyard ma - vale of Elah which afterward was nure. The proper storage - of this remembered by Saul and gave occasion manure must be studied, that its valu- for jealousy and anger. The women came out from the cities with instru- ments of music to acclairn the victors, and they gave. as was natural after what hed happened, greater praise to David than to Saul. Brave and. cap- able, and with some :fine and generous qualities, Saul allowed the demon- of It is not merely necessary that jealousy to enter his mind, and, al_ plant food be in the soil; it must be though he banished it, it returned there in available • form. Nitrogen, again and again in the fits of jealops for example, is present in large madness which darkened his later quantities in the air we breathe. In this form it is useless to most plants, years: which require it in the form of soh. utele nitrates. Certain bacteria, how - The Green Aphis.- ever, possess the power of obtaining free nitrogen from the air. Clovers Eggs of green apple aphis are de - and other legumes by means of cert posited in autumn and hatch the, fol- lowing spring. Winged forms of the tain nodules on their roots, are able to co-operate with these Becteria in second generation appear in late May dr early June. • Their attacks cause curling. of apple leaves which may resillt in defoliation of affected branches. Invasion. of fruit clusters may be attended with dwarf- ed, misshapen apples which display pimpling and red stippling of the sur- faces. The delayed clamant, or btud spray, treatment of Iirne-sulphur,and nicotine sulphate protects bearing orchards until about the middle of June. Fur- ther spraying with nicotine sulphate' arid soap during midsummer resuite in efficient control, of his father. Years passed and • David behaved himself wisely, so that he was promoted to high rank and command in the army. able constituents be not leached out and lost. Humus 'can also be return- ed to the soil by plowing under soil- ing crops, such as clover, or by means of various fertilizers—nitrates, phos- phates, etc. Why uot celebrate your birthday, your wife's birthday, your son's, your daughter's, yam.' man -servant's, your maid -servant's, by planting a tree? the obtaining of free nitrogen, which they build up into compounds that are available for other plants. Hence, the plowing under of a trap of clover enriehes the soil. To obtain the best results, it is necessary to inoculate certain soils with the nitrogen -gather- ing bacteria. The introduction of this system of soil inoculation is one of the tritimplis of modern agricultnral science. Another question which has an in -1 timate relation to the conservation of soil fertility is that al', a proper rota- tion of crops. All •plants do not re- quire the same substance in the same proportions, Each crop reacts on the soil in its own avey, If one species is grown continuously an' the sante area, the soil becomes progressively less suitable for it. On the other 1 (Concluded from last week). hand, if, for example, cereals are ro- tated. with hoed 7erops, as turnips, mangels, or corn, or with hay and pasture, an opportunity is presented to kill out the weeds and to return to the soil matters which the cereals have drawn heavily upon. A suitable rotation must be worked out by ex- perts for each section of the country. Herein lies the value of the Illustra- tion Farms, which aim to set tip in each neighborhood, through the co- operation of some prominent farmer of the district, a farm where the good results of the most approved methods of tillage may be demonstrated, under.. the direction of the Govern- ment's experts. The Experimental Farm is the laboratory where new ideas may be tested; the Illustration Farm is a place on which the methods which have been proved successful' may be placed, before the eyes of the farmers of the district. Outdoor meet- ings are called to inspect the results and the reasons for whatever process may be under demonstration are explained by an agricultural adviser.State af Our Fishertes.; 1 The near extinction of seine of our most valuable food fishes is a sad, story of human cupidity and lack of foresight. The decline of the 'Fraserf River salmon fishery is a elassic in -1 stance of this. In the ;age of repeat- ed warnings by fisheries experts both k in Canada and the United States, the! wholesale slaughter of selmon heel gone on year by year. All attempts to draw up a treaty to regulate the fishery have been frustrated. The canning interests of the state of Washington have put up a consistent and hitherto successful opposition "Get rich quiick and damn posterity . has been their general attitude. To- foundation of important indu— stries.! day, it is very doubtful if the Fraser Further economies in coal production! include the briquetting, slack and. A bit of steep terrace in the back the use of soft -grade coal and lignites.i yard is an ideal place for raising cu - Water -power is a resource least cumbers, watermelons and such vines. " 9 especially true of the fur -bearers, which are the support of Canada's oldest industry. Present high prices for what used to be cheap furs are leading to intensive trapping and signs of serious depletion are showing as a result. The muskrat, whose pelt before -the war fetched aboul 50c, to- day may bring 85, and the incentive to trapping it is therefore very great. Though very prolific, there is a. limit to its fecundity, and- trapping ought to be more restricted in many local- ities. In the fall the skine are un - prime, yet all the provinces, except New Brunswick, Ontario and Mani- toba, permit fall trapping. 1 The evil is coMplained ef even by 1 some of the trappers themselves. Theyi :realize the dangee of extinction and! would not object to reasonable trictions, which would hold in check! their more short-sighted competitors., The conclusion of the Migratory Bird Treaty marks a long step for- ward in the protection of mazy of our valuable game and. insectivorous birds.i Though its constiutionality was as- sailed in the U.S. courts, the Treaty' t was upheld and the law is being en- forced on both sides of the line. Avoiding Waste in Mining. , As to minerale, it is,. of course,1 impossible to replace what is oncei mined. Much waste can, however, be r avoided in the methods of mining. Coal, for instance, should be so rained; that all the coal is removed and not 1 merely that which is more easily ac -I eeseible, Again, in the manufacturei of mineral products there is room for ; improvement. In the .coking coal, valaable by-preducts can be saved, as; EFFEq.. • Ha,* !,eft .Maq'tifook Thi tirrible scourge tar$ lett in its trate, „ weak hearts, shWed nerves Ano. general run-down conditioe of the oyetom. Thonseatiris of people, throughout Can'.. adv., are now needing the tinsel use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve no to wootemot the effeets of this trouble which a abort time ago savept Our antintry. Mrs. C. C. Palmer, Kennel, Sask„ writes:—"I wish to ieforie you of the great good Milburn's Bert and Nerve IT d d fcir . b attack {the, "elpenash Influenzie," my heart and , nerves were left, in a Very bad condition, got two boree of your pine and I must ; say they are the best ever used, and I have ta en a great many differeat Weds. II will always keep Heart and Nerve Pine lin the house." Milburn's Heart and, Nerve Pille are 50e. a box. Foineale by all dealers, or I mailed direct on receipt of rice by The T, Milburri Co., Limited, loronto, Ont, they walk to the altar and stand in front of the mieister. The bridal party is grouped about them. It is Dot advisable to have a large number of attendants at a home wed- clingeand many brides these days are doing. away with attendants altogether except for seine little youngster who aets as ring bearer or flower girl. One bride at a -recent wedding had five of her little nieces and nephews. amine /Denying her and they made an ador- able addition to the Wedding picture. If the bridegroom wishes to have two or four men attend him as ushers he may do so and they may prezede him to the altar and wait at the foot of the stairway for the bridesmaids, Imy:thea mediatel. after e -ceremony, the guests conggatulate the young couple, the, bride's mother or some member of the family leading off at once to "break the ice." It is the privilege of the bridegroom of course first to kiss the bride. The•wedding refreshments are serv- ed soon after the ceremony and the nature of the wedding feast depends entirely upon the time of the wedding. A morning or high noon wedding. will, be followed by a "breakfast," which is more in the nature of a luneheon; a late afternoon wedding by a regular dinner and an evening wedding by a supper. If there is quite a large. bridal party of young people, they may occupy one table by themselves. If the bridal party is small, then the parents of the bride and bridegroom and the minister and his wife could be seated together. Lighted candles, low bowls of flow-. ers with ferns scattered on the white cloth make the prettiest table decora- tion. A regular dinner would call for a substantial menu; but if facilities are limited, it is wise to confine it to two courses. For the wedding Skipper, -creamed chicken on squares or tri- angles of toast, or chicken salad or tvvo or three kinde of cold meat and potato salad might be prepared as the main articles of food. The bride's cake is brought in. with the last course and placed in front of her for her to cut. It is supposed to contain a penny, a thimble and a ring and of course there. is much merriment o see who captures, these ."prizes." And of tourse each person must make a wish before eating the .eake. The bridegroom's cake is a dark cake and. t is already cut before it is passed. The bride must not forget to 'throw her bouquet before she leaves to get eady for her departure, the -tradition . being that the girl who catches it will be the next bride. f farnsers worked eight hours to -day, And struck each week for higher pay, Before e'er long, Unlees I'm wrong, ' tar, ammonia, etc., whesh are the Folks wouldn't eat three times a day. River fisheries ca.n env be restored— certainly, not without very drastic measures, such as the magosition ofalike.y i to diminish.e_.A,s long as sun: Dig out a hole about a yard snare, complete close season f Or at least' shines end it win be I fill it with very rich earth, and plant a four years, which period is the cy.cle water flews' of the salmon's existence, I there. But, even here, waste musat be the seeds. As the vines g1.0% -r they The vockeye salmon is not the unilii girded against. There may be waste Will spread upward or elotteatearda,, , in development, All the power avail -1 since they like a trellis as well as fish whose numbers have been serious- ly diminished by reckless fishieg. The I isahsshould be cleveloped, or, at any 1 level ei spots, the plant should be Ee installed lobster of Nova Scotia, the eystee of j id ',Po; grovV'S. Again, New Brunswick and the whitefish of I " tile qeys the Great Lakes have all suffered in1 there may be Waste from the publcic ' - i After The 11 . a greater or Ices degree. The estab- liehment of. govevnment hataheries ; iprobgis-ermsiatyes to pass into private hands, hold back development for in'filiuhat awful epidemic, the Spantsh and more stringent regulations are,, ensei, that swept Canada from. one years and, in any case is liable to however, Lending now sonaexishat to , end to tke other a short One e.ge, left in become the foundation of a monopoly, ite wake a great xnatig bah after effeete, relieve the situation, The fact that , in these casee the Cana,lian Govern_ These sites should be retaiued under Id some awe it was a Weakened. heart, Government control and adequate fit others shattered melees, bet le a peat -1,, - f 11 - i ' i • Mann On68 wed: kid' neys have been left 8,4 a legacy. . Where the kidneys have Teem /eft wrsk ..ci an OW silica of the "rim," Doan's :Kidney Pille will prove tia led lint the remedy yott require to fithingth01 them. Mrs. glatvey D. Wile, Lake Pleasant, NB., Wiiaiii-e."Last wintet I was taken c.iok with the "AV° Oil SKlitilt 1 did Vet, etteli I found that my kidneys were wry bad, and, at night I hed tOi it up to turn arouncl in bad. / well D§an's Kidney PillS, ao found that t.hey (114 MO a tvonderful aresstuat - of good. I also recommend thein to my. irusbned, and he etarted in to nite there, 1 will always rezonsmend them to anyone who, is battlwieoteadaevrvis, kid, ney, trouble, for they t'llat • dIU7,9,kment Prifice Edward Eland, the shact point of view in allowing valuable Sat EJ to TiArn Dadi .royalties charged for•the use thereof. tag -e. International complications, s The eribject ot uonservation natur- like those connected with ;the Frillier nily is so vast that in a brief and River situation, do not arise in an hurried sketch it is enly possible to acute form touch lightly an the high spots'. But Preservation of Wild Life. enough has been said to show that What is true of the fisheries applies cans/diens must be awake to the also to terrestrial forme of wild life, value of their birthright and to the We all know what has happened the danger of diasipating it by reckless exploitation. Mat is in one mait's interest ---or What he considers his interest—may not necessarily benefit all. It is. up to us, as Canadians, to used to .00eurgeta, .stleh tremendous 'flocks literallY io darken the air, eostmer$,essilvsees eteoliil-Iatioornetrocal r:criudi mtoethedoedr otee To -day', there is abseliltelY net a incluetry, 'An informed, avide-awake sin& survivor of those Vnat multi- and, organized public opinion must de- tudo. Shotguns and traps have wiped mend and support laws whieh will them out. restrainand pirnieb the wasteful arid f out wild animals have a pass oti our heritage, not diminished, ' M but en•hanced itt valtie, to postenity, buffalo of the prairies. The caribou are goiret the same way. No species is so nuineroue that it cannot be ex- terminated. The passenger 'pigeons direct economic importience. This is Doanie Xidney Pills are 50o. a bpx at all dealers,or mailed direet on vieeelpt et pyle by Tit, 0 T. Milburn Co., Linnteal, MAO, Ont. e See that one trade mark, a V, Ndaplo 1404_9114yoare e