The Exeter Times, 1923-3-29, Page 31
aaaa—
",.s 4,0
Neat. tt 'tonsure:1)60a thera are moao
rdeathe caaaed front pabinnonia -tient
from: any other form et luurtroulale,
fact, paetamonla :might lie 1,eseribed
lea 'Imag
A cough :is the eadieSt 'Symptom. It
is at firat freqUent •and latching, and
Ltecaraptalied- with a tough, colorless
expeetmartion whicrit some, however, be-
comes :move copiolis andats of •a thick,
rustys red color, • The breathing be-
comesthe, teraperatai:e rises and
the puler, is wealea :Psona.the frtilure
of • the heart's rietioa.
Males me marc commonly attacked.
alian - females, .ana a previous attack
seems to give a special liability ;to an-
other. : On the first sign. of a cough or cold
you should, got a bottle of Dr. Wood's
NOTWaV rine Syrup and, thee prevent
the cold from doveloPing int& serious
lung trouble.
, Mrs, W. Schnack, Beadle E4
W.
. Write " 31--iTeeb a few lines toiteil you
of the benefit I ha.-vo had from your
•wanAorillit inetline. • r.tairo Years ago
nearly lost" 311V iiUc 410 Who had
double pnetunmelit, htit afta having
given. -ter it 1.5W bottles of Dr i 'Woad's
Norway Tine Syrup, I found that it
Norway Euro !Syrup, it found that it
ha& completely -relieved: -her, I now
alwaye toll other people to •uze it.'
Priceefi5c. and 60e. a bottle; pat -up
only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited.
Toronto, Ont.
SundayThe Sell°01 esson
EASTER DAY
"he WAWofEnimaiis,St. Ln Ice 24: 1.3-21.. cliten Text --
Why 'seek ye the, livifig rapng, the cd? Hein�t
here '
'
START AFRESH
Easter menioaial FI
',:,,ixt.'-
rc,etion and a Near .Lie:But, 1,1,-rq'e, le
another resurrectionqi
, and a v•„,41; and
but resen —St Lola 4 5
• - • laary elr,ou,s iew • e,..rotrna ,and ahouit
you, whie,1i van kia)741y fail in i tfa-
dssam Foreword --:---The two who heaarta will-'huarr within us", It is fe! imaaaaa8 aria apepeeeg eppaaa It is
walked out to Emmaus, were sall'eaing constant surpSe .to ups, this nearness tie, f
New life ia starrrili eyprywillere:. So
what about a .new life for yourself .
What aboir1 revitalizing .yeurs.elf?
Th.ausea,nalia: stand in sore need of a
reSurrectiont. :Are you one?
If so now is the time to :act.. Just
teem aneclipse sif, faith. It Ye true of the , Greet ,Conipanion, and has
that li.crilore they, left ...Jerusalem theretidantess fo ire* in aaar.asay,sadte can -
Wilma hlid brought strange stories versatione :and • revive our sinking
;front' the' tot/Di raf Jesus ; bat these faith. 4
a.to ries ttlite two' could 'not credit. They 2. The rem r.rectio n . appearances
required-, stranger 'evidence than that ineantethe beginning of a' new life for
of theawometi 1.).Q convince them that the early Chris.tians. When they be-.
Jeses YMS , Jesus, appear- came eorivinced. that Jesus was living,
aaKae tor -them is chartlebe'lIirSte, of, his their faith in hhd reasserteditasaa
post-restrareation . appearallreess. - He; with overtvli.elaning. for.oe. Now they
came upon them suddenly and vanish- understood that .the way.. of the crosta
:ed just as .Studiclenly. By such appears twist theunexpeteted pathway thiat God
, .
anees Jesus eonvineed the cascaptea,hacl selected for the ifulfilment of his
that; though unaeten, be was ,still near plan. These , early. Christians avere
handvand'amuld still hold. -fellowship: fi.V.ed with ,eastiatic Jo•y', and seen they
with .them. .Ther-barrim) between the set out to eap:tare ;the World" for
seen and the rein:i.leen is only the thin-. Ohmet, the tectoeseas., risen Christ, who
nest Shell, wilideb 'he earl break. through Wm -4d ceraPilete raetesaanic taa.k— eeoreY atitunins. .and dark winters,
•
• to ea.rth. It was a SatIrClee of a. new goalie . of ielariat :and succeae.fully,
11.• The Streunger,
epoch, h.otli..for these Christians and tfliel,s,,e 7,c1,T,rer8,e een.ditions, We insiet, on
• V; 13- Tw° two of the for the Wellt 'flying, and not be' potent with
lainatms co nnaututY Jerhsiallem, i We DEM 'Still Walk WR1 Ch '
•existing. We guae each year a res -
not two of the disicatp• One of them Henry Drummond:gives the confession
was. CleoPas (v. 18); and, according of, a man of putetanding intellectual Perk'sle to the extraerdinary and inspire -
to some, the, othei' was 'etrerseht,1in the high noon of has sue- 'ing luiluence Of the'''s'Priug--it$.. resur-
others,thinIc that. it was bloke himself.' (seats. ' He tang "I want to speak to- rection from 'deed:nests to a ' '
Id. , 3. a."11,1e,
ar,) Ncw Year's Day prov/de,$ a Peg on
which tc. hang a steadying resolution,
so alto does Eaater provide an nee,
OSSaa'y illiSpir21,1013. to begin .to live
again.). And we can, if we will that
yo ean—and have faith in ourselves.
•Burst With the Buds.
The years, as :they pile up, and tile
at , So they felt suire—by a speedy return affect ns mentally' and physically
w lite.
.BU:t there are..others who don't. To
Weriit itailat s,taine , day. "Threats Master, night onay a little. but -that Tittle I de-
-having:been -taken from tilican; the &ler.- ".sta-e' to .sped,k..o.f. Am. SLimedt name Of them it seems mare tcomfortable to be
cipleswere smite:yin to their aWin :Christ, who' Re my life, niY ilisPiiatiCh, dorinant, to take things quietly, and
htarnes.- Among' others; the twce. die- myellopta, and my surety. In- looking 11 1, to, stir, thrust; :and. strive. That,
abiales who lived at Emmaus went beak ba.Ok upon my exPerienee; that part -.11.4.,°„,.„,11„ .; d„,„,inri, It is meeting old
to. that town. E13111141.15; ,2 1110,5,1 diffi- of My life which stands mat and which ----`'''' ''''' "''.J'''''"'''
-.std -,
,oult place to identify, but near enough I reinember most viasidlry, is just that
a,,.e more than lf.
t Jerusalem (60 4i (00 :or 71/2 ptart that has had some conecioue as-, SlUshint it: back. haway, ineaei
It is a deliberate
miles) fan—the titre to have their even- sloe:1241ton, with Christ," After all is
ing meat there and to retairn to Jen:- net' 'Mica the best scat of religion--
u,saleni the same evening 'and find the just walking with Christ and sharing
• i
disciple:s still assemble( his high filendsa p?
.. V. 14. These things. The crucifixion, 4. The lesson reveals Jesus as con -
The P..q.codelim Pioneers, and, peiliaps. the reported 'resurrection, quering death. and all its terrorise. Paul
of Je.lsatia ay,ere the topitc of their eon- phrased 11 Alius.---"Jestis, Christ.
'America is generally looked upon as vereriatitn, • =hath death." T. R. Glover
the land cf MO in Pioneer, u ap. near. While has. a .splendaci passage to show how
there is a neviar migratory movement allay. ware alb:am:bed in -111.ought and 'Christ conquered. the pagan World. He
contemplated. 11 15 forecast.by the au- .
nouncereent that the Russian Goa-eril-
ment, is willing to throw open to a
large number of Armenians the fertile . .
conversation Jesn'S came anon them "out -lived" ham; he eaut-cieed hima,,
'unnoticed from behind. ' rand he "out-thou.ght" him. as 'gl'a(--1'-'3/ as Nature does. For talc
ohriatiaa "out- trees, the fields, the hedgerotws—a re -
V. 16. 'Variatis conjecture:s 'have! How did the early
:been offered for their failure to recog- die" the patgall? That is our 00n00ra1 sruirre4ion and a new life. And for
acquiescence in tube lalunting of the
intellect. It is a .'t,consent to brain -
sleep and deterioration.
And deterioration hes but one end
—disintegration. We die prernature-
ly. And what is that but a species
of suicide?
Never Too ()Id To Live.
We should resaitond tb the spring
MiTffze Sesuts--that they were emotion- juat now. Why dad ne face martyx-
fa:rifling region of the Don ana K.uban
ally unstrung, -that 111; appear ance had atom with daunI:a
r'tless CORge ? Glover
Rivers east of the Black and Azov
been disfigured by the sufferings en, is speaking of Tertullian, a fatuous"
Seas. . - the cross, or t'liatt he appeared in a scholar arid saint. "I stay here," ho eallts -us to get up, and to live a new
Th e Ruben a is tric.t might well be transformed btclas. The evangelise:said. What does it cost a -ratan to (1°1' !life. We ,aate never too old to live!
called the lehip, row of. RUSSia's racial evidently believed' trha.t this 'was the that? People .Lisked -taltat was tibe I And it is be who determines' that his
che.cketheara. Geographically, the re- worIc of God hinaseif up.on their eyes. magic of it. The intagie of it was on'i st
' 1 mind silia111: hte kept alert, keen, an:d
n the other sicle of the fire was
glen is delimited by thee tw° seas and II. The Conversation 17 27. thi8'---° '
us, too, it we atrial.- The dark, depressing, devitalizing winter pushes .ute
dcavra. But Easter ancl .the s.pring
active, and that his h.orly .shall not sag
' the same friiend; "if he wa,nts. me to • • -
V. 18. Ter Cleonas it was incredible be burnt alive, I am here." Jetsus mita odd 'age -1,1e, IS the man whoeke.eps
the two rivers :Men ti on ed on thaee
t m n an in ia o eraser ca a , as as - •
ars • cate. secret of it young an,cl. defies-, the yea•rst.
stides and Circassia, on the east, Its • b. b.it f , . . . .
PoPulatioll, however. is hounded. bY piaarian to the paseover there, should a .E.ach spring gives him hisensputa-
„ tion. A resurrection and a new life.
the Circasaians and the Georgians on be unacquainted with the stirring Recreational Uses of,Forest
Reserves.
It is natural that people should de -
the south, by the Great R.ussians and events ofthe caucrtlasson. It was tqe.
the Don Cossacks an the -north, aml talk of the day in Jerusalem.
, .
the 'Kalmucirs 'on the east. V. 19. A propthetaTins inuca at least
Kuban, as the inter -river district Is was certain concearung Jesus, that he s.ire to malc.e use of the forest.reserves
was a prophet •Iliis teacluras and Irks
known, ie. inhabited by Cossacks who', '' ”' tor recreational puiposes, and, under
-aside :front the manner ,of their cone. ' ri---.atto's°-ed *int the 'reirit (1-1! God
was in him in a unique tvaar. .
Ing, suggest two important features OE
V. 20. The chief priests. According
American clevelopraeria, the New Eng- to a concession of the Romans, the
lead towel meetiag a 13 Cl 411 e ,oii1 ririor ,Tea ,ii,sav ealriyaLhaal to right rto.de- ,
- -
Preperasupervision and. regulation, this
is desirable from the forest. admaniss
trator'a Standpoint. People who Spend
their hollaaYs in -the woods, whether
aavs.ol-airrartar West, el -no -aCcos"dline to their cayri religions t all:41y in eathaing ea ea heating ansi.
fishingaget a good idea: of the value of
Catherine the Great deported the laws 'upon iirlrom the death sentence
Dnieper Cossacks., or Zaporogians, en siliouCid be passed, but the Romans re- forest resources and thus became ac -
masse to this land of ,black earth and served the'rig-ht to caray out the Wsen- tive agents: for forest protection. In
Thus tate .cPoief riests ere
future wileatla lids, and here they at tenoe.
ultimately responsible fpor the death desirable locations along the shores of
first strung, along arum Azov to the x.Jenia lakes in different forest reserves plots
Caspian, as "guardians of the fron-
V. 21. We trusted, etc. Not only had , are leased to citizens on condition that
tier." • the two recognized Jesus as a prophet,thej erect sultable houses and keep
When an American automobile but th,ey had had hopes 'that -Inc .Wcaild1 their surroundings in .good'order. The
manufacturer or steel company creates prove the' Messiah NV.Iro would deliver I number of thse cottages is steadily in-
- a city for its employees, it follows the Iarael from the yoke. of foreign op- creaiing although progress in this re-
., precedent of Catherine, who not only
gave her fiercest 'fighters great tracts
of Russia's richest soil, but built them
houses, stores and, ohurhes, forming
the city which, still bears her name,
Eka,terinodar, "Catherine's ,gift."
These Zaporogiata had a democratic
custom in their old hOme which they
retained for a time in their proiniSea
and promising land. Yearly at an as-
sembly they' elected from their number
their helanan, ca head man, 'and his
preaes.ecstor went back into the ranks
with ne more official status, and none
, of the prestige, :Of all American ex -
president. ••
It is the. niarvelous, horsemanship of
the Eltihriz' , Cossacks of old which
-brings to mind their likeness, an this
,5particular, te the plainsmen of our own
frontier days. The Cossacks of Rus-
, ate, the gauchos of the Parapaa and
the cowboys of the plains are the
fay o ri to , rough riders. of the world.
A piece. of string aabout eight feet
• long, with the ends tied" together to
form.a loop, is the favorite plaything
of natives in many part a of Africa;
with it they play various farms of thiness,- which the ewe ,had allowed t.ci
'cat's cradle" games'. • destroy their .hopes wse'ie a emit -lama-
• s- tion of- thern.v.: (Plummer).
I V. 27, ilViiiStie's and fable' . 'prophets.
Wy.\ ovER,EAs ' 3. yEAR The three divisions of the Old Testa-.
• Mont were known to the' Jews as th-e
Returned To Canada " Lew (the books Of Massa), the PrePh
A an
-
Almost wreck eta d the avritinga. Thus Jesus gave'1, them a running commentary on all
Mr. Blaquiere, MorinviIle, 1 the references in the Old Testament to
'Alta., writes i -a-•‘ 'After three years ser- the Messiah.
Disclosure
vice overseas1 acturned to Canada al-
III. The 28-1.
pression. Up to thti
is me 310 Jew had
thought that the Messiah would have
to suffer death to achieve his end, and
so the death of Jesus shattered their
hopes. The third clay. ,They had dim
recollections of Jesus' prediction thalt
on the third day he would rise again
(v. 7). but it was now the,thircl day
n
ad he had mat vet apsoeared to them.
V 22. Their hopes. however; were to angling. The efforts in this direc-
spect has not been -so rapid of late ow-
ing to the business depression. Fish-
ing is one of the great attractions for
tourists and cottagers, and the policy
of the Forestat BrafiCh is to maintain
good fishing, by stoclaing the lakes
with fin
Sh fry, when ee'essary, and by
restricting the method of taking fish
stirred by the favorable report of the
women, Although they did net regard
this report az merely idle go:szip, they
W0111 not in- a position to eatablish 11
as entirely timistworthy,
y . 25. Fools, and" slow Of heart, etc.
The two, had . shown a gross lack of
Unclerztanding inetheir reading of the
prophets.' For, „according to Je.sus,
the •prephots had pointed fOrward to
just such a NItessiali as'hinissilf. It is •
worthy ef nate that 'here Jesus re-
gard's his death and resurrec.tien as A Bachelor's Aid.
the fuillihnent prophecy. The . woman emancipationist had
V. 26, Ought u,ot Chalet to . . suf- tackled the serene olcl bacheler, and
ferad? The Jews had- looked for a was reading the riot act to him in_ a
trinzinpLant, ,and.,neL a siuffertng 1VIcts-
slab. They never supposed, for
natal -toe, that Ise., ch. 53 referred to
Messiala, wInareas Jeaus identified
himself with the, suffming servant of
that p,weage., "Accoti1cling to the de-
cree respecting . the Metesaah as ex-
preeeed in prophecy, precisely the
tion are meeting with success; and in
the matter of fish. and 'game protection
the ,Fet-estry Branch acts in so-opera-
tiOn with the Dominion fishery auth-
orities on the one liana, and the vari-
ous provincial game wardens on the
others—Annual Re:poi)* Director Of
Fore,try, Ottawa:
He responds. to the spring, .and alloav.s
that extraordinary, hypnotic, life-giv-
most a comPleto wreck, I heti loeen '
•
gassed an Was suffering from ahell
' d ' V, .28 The' at—ranger' gave th.e nu-
, ,, , . . • ...•
shock and rlicuthatism, aud was so. nor: paeta.sitin that, hod th.ey not hay-it:ea trim
VOUS I Mild' not slee)? at night), / i to their home, he would liatre,j.ourney...
was so bad iii the fall df- 1919 My t
.'se .saaisy / amid saemeix t, V. 30, Although he was the. guest,
hands got
,,,,, , id ,,,,17.1.1,iiii,,. in them, auci it scam. 'Jesus assumed ,the role of host and
I had Et steel
lue as if. :ha d ,, :this unusual procedure helped the two
1,,ag .c.),11 Illy head. The /east excitement to recognize nn Too c bi„ead, etc,. In
. won. it 33100 , (rive mo into fits, an ,...._ eime b. cad is torn ..p, at by the
- lil 1 t 1 ' ' ' a l''''' .. ' r ' '. ' '..
,
,:,,,y whole system seemed. to be in dis- hand,: and sornetaines the heist toga:is—it
orcikr. ,,,j had e,aral)., in. ii.a.e caLe, 0.e off himself and' then offerat it to the
guests. It hasm
, been ,comonly thought
mY legs neal'IY every night afrd: hob' mid. th,a,t jes,u,s'had ,a; -WaY, Pe.aul.iar taliiiyar-
told chills( Tenting 1111 and down mY qtakf, of are;aking and liPessing the
back r.onaltY all tile tilho• One day I bread. H. so, this too avould help the
decided to try.Millairn's Ileart and two to z e hint
Nerve pilib, and after I had taken 81'.
;beau I bogey to fed -bettor, I kepi; mi Application,
using 'th°1" ansi afteT a ',1i3,1'.1(' °'n"' Many valtiliblas le.s.aons 111aY
ri°6-a.Y rc1i"3d. Now 1,..Qe0P lily) a drawn 1're/A this Faster narrative. .,
1041,1101i redt. ally pain, •sveili 230 lbs. 1. our unawareness' of the Great
and. wock Cray day."2 Granipanion's nearness to us. 'Ninny
Price rihe, a box at •1.11. (l,eviers or (hit* that Christ ta mediated to tig
mailed ail 00 on rtweipt of pride by by 111›rier,,t; or sacrament or church.
The T. 'Milburn. Limited TOT t it tor 0111 bra` th'ng
Wo hav lent to hear hii voide and our
half-dozZu different places at once. He
squirmed occasionally, but retained his
seresiity.
"Have you .ever done, anything for
the emancipation of -woman, I cl like
to know?" she said, coming down the
home -stretch.
"Indeed, 1 have, madam," he smiled.
'1 have rdmained a bachelor."
i
being. He drinks of the elixir of life
ng sp,ail ng t
enee o g o s
1-'7 you
Qwi
asik ?Dr 2
7_t0
Y_ME (EV7
"(Amor\ !Are!)
,...z:zarvanra-
soorw,....,=+•.*.zeolx.,1,xu=n3re.....--.....n.emn/anasrmucwagu...m....c.,,,..,aminosti _ _ . .. ranclaluerver.*.s.
At some places in the Sierra Ne -a In parts of South America the pet- &octor '',Vithout any qualifleation they
vada and. the Cascade Mountains from ple hold a civil engineer in such great mean that Inc is a doctor, not of aried i -
thirty to forty feet of 'snow falls dale,' esteem that when they call a man a eine, but of engineering.
ifornia,
ing the winter months. At Summit,
..,- -- . .... . . .
about . seven thousand feet, there has 1 = agragBgliailggratarasaraessratersesaa,
Calwhith has an elevation of I
been recorded sixty feet of snow in a
single season and about twenty-five
feet in a. single month.
—ancl so Jives,. ,
Ansi, finally, if he is observant, he BABY.
will have nortie ci that the new life in
Terribile Headaches
And Dizziness
,
Miss S. Raphael 237 -Kenilworth'
Ave. N., Hamilton, One,' writes; --( f
used to suffer fitin terrible headaches
and dizziness. Last Summer, -while I
was walking up a side streets Isgot
dizzy spell and Cell in the middle of
the road. An old gentleman helped file
to get to where I was going and told
inc to get a vial of Mibuya's Laxa-
Liver Pills. Well, I did and they did
,
wonders for ma. 1 dOR 71, know how to
thank you, as don't g -et headaches or
ttizzy spells any more."
• When) your liver gets sluggish and in-
active year wbole health su4ers, and
the only way to keep wen p the
liver oro, '5
ver active a a
POrfoTlulog' PieoPer-'
functions- by Whig 'Milburn's Laxa-
Liver
Prio0' e 25viol. at all dealers or
maned direct on receipt o b
The T Milbum Co timiied Toronto
the trees and shrubs :and hedgerows
iS sty-on:gest .where, there iw been. out -1
ting arid pruning. You see the moral?!
Here's tb .tlie 'spring and its resur-J
rection tand life!
Oiu
Every man must •'edrucarte himself.
1-Iits books .and teacher are but helps;
the -work is, his.—Webster.
Lost Her Appetite
SAT DOWN AT TABLE
BUT COULD NOT EAT
If you have a variable appetite, a
faint gnawing feeling at the pit of the
stomach, misatisfied hunger, a loathing
of food, rising and souring of food-,
headaches, etc., you must look to your
stomach as beingthe cause of your
trouble.
BURDOCK BLOOD _BITTERS
wihl regukte the stomach, stimulate Se-
cretion of the saliva and gastric :juice
to facilitate clig,ostion, remove acidity,
andtone up the entire system.
Mrs. J. H. Barker, Gain.Cord, Alta.,
writes.. ---"I wass troubled with loss of
a-ppetite, and was 'badly rundown. I
would sit down at the table, but could
n.ot-. eat anything, also I coulsi not do
• any work. 1 tTioa,Burdock Blood Bit-
ters, and after taking half a bottle
found I was eating better, and alter
having taken two,bottles I couldi hard-
ly get enough to eat. I certainly will
praise ]3.B. B."
Get the genuine; put up only by The
T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
.0.1)1M4WS .13)MMOFZ;‘).11,E35tiRa.,i
Man Y Farmers
Use TP.is Miser
The "Brant-
ford" Mixuir ca.n
Inc operaterl by
hand or. by a
kinall •engine.
it provides car -l-
ase -to for build-
ing silos, barn
floors, fence pasts, etc. We also
. make larger Mixers. Write POr
free booklet. , •
Goold Shapley.& Muir Co., Ltd:
200 TV ellingtOu St„ Brantford, °al;
aa,
05
IOKS
25 of therm deLiverod free to every
person wino registers f ou Shaw's
Coldbelt Poultry Course for Rome
start last soar: You may have someStudy. 234 people anatae the right
of their testimonials. Write Shaw
School, Poultry Department, 46 /floor
W., Toronto.
.1M1.11•••
6
Ch
ng i,IEElgs>
Never crack or fail ail
Send for our Free. Bootzlet "c"
The Ittietanic R.of§rAg Co.
'0 Limited , 461
1194 fll[fing St.ws
Toronto
' I €1, rrigated a -aims on'
oitrr Alberta '
In the Famous Nran.hall District
Ilow River Irrigation project
An especially good location Tor mixed
farming and dairying-. Splendid ea-
portunity for young men now living.
• in districts where godd land nnot
be bought at reasonable prices.
THIS IS NDP PI.ONDEINO, the
first 10,000 acres are Tally settled and .
another 10,000 acres now ready for
• settlement; maximum. , distance. .froni
railroad, se-ven mi1s Good roads,
telephones a.nd schbois. Easy pay-
ments, extending over is years.
This Is the Best nand 2311.:Sr in Alberta
'Write for further in.forynation to §
CANADA DAND and IRRIGATION 1
' COIAPAN15, DIMITP.D
Medicine /Tat, - - ,Aiberta
tfiCaTiSe
THE HORSE
Get this book! You cannot afford to
es without it, 'It costs you nothing t If
7011 (1)511 liores, it can saver yoros hundreds
of dollars,
• 'The hook —"A treatise on the borse” —is
yours for the asking, at your druggist's.
The horse and (10 about him— his diseases
—how to recomilso them—what to do about
thoin—with chili -I ors on brociling,—sliees
and shoeing, Tootling—and many tried and
pnwen liorsornim's
Ask your druggist 0010 Copy 00.A Trsa MHO
011 11.10 gorso" or 150110 00 direct-. 12
, Dr. B. .1. KENDALL
5nonure 00.1s, Vt. U.S.A.
, ,
(t' You Must 1)e'cide Nomr
Whether you are going to be satisfied with low yields and
injerioi. wilily ^ 01' whether you are going 16 'have Big Profit-
'
alite '''''' ,of Superior Quality.
#4
r,4',IL;tf.: S/AUR-GAIN Fertilizer§ get' you
•''.1k,',t)1.!:4,rid'o.;'t:';',,';'''it'''''',,,',,,ago returns from :5 siEtlions, reve,als.," 'the fact
that "at:it/tout a ,single exception fertilizers lucre 'Profitably
• employed." Larger yield,and,o,r,kier,inatiirity cart be obtain°
• at much less d'ost by a combination of chemical jertilirter.s with
manure than by the manure only." pornittion Experimental Farms Rm.
Order your Shor.Gain Fertil^ .
izers Nt.)W.515a A ii1tt1204 St.-Clittir Stree
Consult our Agett ,or write,
int. Limited• Torzonro'
....
-
a
Hatc
Rmse very 'ck
=AV
This 35 the Most critical time of the whole
year. A -little thought NOW avill prevent
heavy losses which can't be made good later.
"5' Poultry Regulator
added to'the rnash, will keep your breeders strong
and healthy. It tones up the entire sysfem; pre-
vents disease; increases fertility; insures .hig
hatches'of sturdy chicks. Then you can raise all
your chick8 byfeeding them, from the very first, on
Buttermilk
r
Baby Chick Food
--the original "Baby Food for Baby Chicks."
No other food is required far the first few vv-peks.
"Pratts" contains everything needed to build
bone, muscle and feathers. It helps to prevent
the deadly White Diarrhoea—insures rapid gain
in strength and weight—costs about 2c per chick
for 6 weeks' feeding.
Your Money Back if YOU Are Not Satisfied
Made in Canada. Sold by Dt.3alera Everywhere.
FREE ADVICE. Let our ogperts solve your poultry
Problems. Write us fully. Asl: for FREE Booklet —
worth dollars to YOU., Or send 10c. in stamps for
cornpitte, 160-pago Poultryman's Handbook.
PRATT 1,90D COMPANY 015 CANADA, Limited,
232W Carlaw Avenue, Terence 7
01
he CarnarRara P talc Railway
• WILL FIND
ar H
stern krmor)
TO BE or. SERVICE to Eastern Canadian Fatinei11 and heiri" to inset the/f
needs in securing competent farm help, 'the Canadian Pacific Aailwasr,,.513
prepared to utilize its widespread oN.s.anization to provide such heIR40074,
-a number of countries.
ri`he 'CANADIAN PACIFIO'Rallway will now -rocelve and hii4a, k....•tor,1111
applications for reale and female farm help to be supplied' fieir,t,, Great
Britain, 13elgiurn, Holland, Denmark, Switzerland' and Norway,. hi all ef
which countries tile company Inc representatitios •svho have farmed in and
are with Eastern Canadian conditione and who aro now iu toucil
with such rnen and women ready and :anxious to come to Paulda.
a131E1 GOvERNItleNTS of the countries above, mentioned Lave ,exptessec
their:willingness to aid the'imaragration, of this class of tilei-g Deonl,:s. X
order to 511 SUCh applicationa satisSactoray and brin4 the help to the
farmer, at tho proper 'Lola and with a clear Understanding of the 'reonim-
rums and obligations of oath, a printed "Applicotioh Roll)" /orm htla
pc., prepared -which ean he obtained from any of the oi!f&pes Puthd taelem
pie 'Company win mabo 110 charlre 10 1130 larmei for this, servico noT,, Still
the faliner bo required to Inal<0 anIT Cn$1.1, ‘•d,,t,.tnt.r) WhatSoover tOWLI r(13 t113
travoilliut expenses or hin help to the nearest railway, station. 'The 1nforroa.
tion necessarily asked for in these) apPlication iorms„ 'which will be,hold ht
stiAct,ett' confidence, covors'tho ianowina polets)--iito kind al help vr.iiiliciiras
o'Cleirinio-anivirried or unmarried; dal.° reotdrad and .for how 111501
• aiationality desired; monthly .miges,efforod; kind of work offerod. Qt.Qx
' „
711°N.171111.1''' P'1-,°a"))aallat ararieri. rw°Aral, Land Agent, OP•Ig-
N.S.-7coca.nNach... OaluraapanaacitCn
14ee Atiaraie H.
Department tq Colonization. mid Development
Baliway
`nrNixts, 1hit emnsitsio11or, Moutreat,
'444,110 ° .V