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The Exeter Times, 1923-6-14, Page 3, Bad 'Wais tt With DiarrErt:cea Thought sh • Mrs. Ernest Morris', 3 Webb St., London, Ont., writes: -"I tithe great pleasure M recommending Dr, Fow- ter's Extract of Wild Strewberry for What it has done for me. ' Some time ago I tools an s awful violent headache, thou 1 started to vomit arkt felt so sick with my stomach I could hardly stand it all clay; towards evening intense pains eame-in my bowels and -I was just doubled up, the pains Were so bad; the perspiration stood out lilco beads on my forehead; thou the dia,rh- rhoea dtartecl and I really thought •I was goingto die. . My husband went to the drug store and got a bottle of Dr. Fowler's Ex tract of Wild Strawberry; he k'ave me four closes at intervals, and by noon the next clay the diarrhoea had stopped and tlie‘pains were all gone too. Now 1 will never be without 'Doe leeeler's' in the house ae,ib was the only thing that relieved me,": , , Dr. ;Fowler's Extract of Wild Seraw- berry has been, on the market for the past 78, years, refuse substitutes, they may prove dangerous to your health; price'50e.; put up only by The T. Mils burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. When Hose Connections . Frequently thehoseconnection be- tween the: radiator and engine. of the farm truck or automobile will leak at the joints, especially if the metal is badly pitted or rusted. - • Cement can be used and will stop the leak, but if the hose afterward must be taken off it usually sticks too tightly -damaging the hose in removal and necessitating anew piece. '• To avoid difficulties of this kind, vve have found white or red lead mixed with linseed oil to forma heavy paste is best. It is applied inside the hese between it and the metal and makes an ideal connecting medium,. keeping the joint watertight, and yet not caus- ing the hose to stick should it be nee- essaey to remove it. This method will be found useful -for other hose connec- tions -about the farm that sometimes have to be taken off and replaced. - Ed. Henry. --D 4.% eterrninnigBatteryiroparity. Often when overhauling the car or Reit plant or working with the radio set the storage batteries .are discon- nected. When put back in place they should always be connected in the same manner as removed. If the polarity markings on the -battery have been obliterated so you cannot tell the negative from the positive pole, cone, neet a Short length ofwire to each pole of the battery and plunge them into the raw surface of a freshly cut po- tato. In a short time a faint green discolorationewill appear around the wire leading' to the negative pole. - R, E. D. s.14, tIntlay oclic)ol Lesson JUNE17 , Esther, the Patriot Queen, Either 4.: 13 to 5: 3. Golden ext --,-Who knowetlx whether thou. art riot come to the kingdom for such a timeas this?, -----Esther 4: 14. LESSON FOREWORD --In preparation - - POULTRY POINTE'RS FOR JUNE. One of the most critical times in the life of the growing pullets is when they are from Len to fifteen weeks of age, or along in June when the days and nights are gettine waem and when - the chicks are large enough so that they can do without artificial heat. When the brooder fires are put out, If the chicks are nob' handled with special care, they are very apt to crowd on some cold night and a rather heavy loss will occur. Weaning the pulletd is a simple process, but must be •done carefully each year. It in- volves, first of all, the gradual re- duction of the temperature under the hover, taking possibly a week to get the chicks used to a normal room temperature. This should be done by giving a little more ventilation to the house and by gradually checking the brooder flee. Finally the fire can be let out mitirely, but the stove :should be allowed to remain for another week, because the chicks will have a tend- ency in cool` weather to lie around under the hoeer. Do not move chicks from a heated brooder house to a cold house juse at this time. Pestporie this big change until they are thoeoug'hly weaned in their owp brooder quarters. A CHIEF CAUSE OF TROUBLE. During the weaning time it is espe- cially important that ifo square corn- ers be -present in the brooder house. Boards or inch -mesh poultry netting tacked across the corner will elimin- ate these pockets and keep the chicks spread out over the floor. The wea- ther conditions will have a lot to do with weaning. If one has let the brood- er fires out for a few days and the weather turn -s cold and damp, it is a good plan to start them up again, giv- ing the chicks a little heat over this trying period. Hotv many times have you succeeded in brooding a fine bunch of chicks up to four or five weeks of age and then experienced the disappointment of seeing them begin to go backwards; when for. weeks you, have had practi- cally no mortality, you begin to find weak arid deall chicks each morning under the hover. There may be a number of causes that might bring about this condition, but there is no question but that the most general one is the ailment commonly termed cocci- diosis. Expressed simply, this means that the ground immediately about the broodir heuse has become infested with coccidia. These little organisms for the lesson, the whole of the book of Esther should be read (The scholar , puts the story briefly thus: "Esther ited numbers, but in the case 01 1°- the story of. a beautiful' Jewess . of tensive brooding conclitiens, Susa whom Xerxes (Ahasuerus) are preeene in the normal chick in , of the king.She, requests that all the , ,Jews in Seise 'should , lend her their spirituel 'support They, are to fest for three day. This generalabase- ment will be accompanied, no doubt, with praYers for the' success of 'her • , laundeeds or chicks are brooded en a, raises from his concubine to be his peoject. II. ESTTTER EINDs FAVOR, 5.1-3 V. 1. Esther put on etc Esther, womanlike, arrays hei•self in her fin- est garments to enhance her charms in the eyes of the king. The inner court of the Icing's house. In 1884-'6S. Dieulafoy' excavated -the ruins of the palace of Artaxerxes in Susa. 1 -Te de- scribes the palace as- standing in the midst of a garden or "paradise" sue- eguncled with a fortified wall. In one of Purim one of the g section of the royal residence was the f,easts. Se'e ch. 9 and espereraally ves.12s6,i'llarem or "hipue of the women!' in 31, 32„ • another Section was the throne -room, Haman. Piqued at Mordecai's lack surrounded with an open sPaee 'that of civility to him, persuaded the king may l'ave been 'used as a garden. To touiglisilteer of taidieecirjeewsdecree h permitting 3t.lr I 'itihoewkiihegp'asirsse,ctiho„h of the palace, Esther sm 15.) The Jews are filled with constee- V. 2. The lring . . held out . ., the nation and Moedecai site -by the palace; golden sceptre. The golden sceptre gate clothed in sackcloth and ashes. I appears in the monuments as "a long, When Esther send d out other clothes tapering rod with a headlike ornement trgoheisthrt him, he gestototh o puttheinking enon, but; at one end a Icem at the other." JOse- ethat the decree be rescinded. and Phils says: "The' king sat with a g°1- begMordecai's message was taken to Ether by Flatach, one of the eunuchs of Ahasuerus' court, and probably a personal attendant upon Esther, the caleen. He must heve been a trust- worthy man to carry such confidential messages between Esther and Morde- cai. . . Ch 4-1 10 . In order to preserve the dignity of any more than the offer ol a merchant court life' and to prevent the assassi- in an Eastern bazaar who says to the nation of the king, it was a law of the prospective purchaser, "Oh; take it for Persiansthe k king gwithoutt atnboeoinnegd.N couldsnnn summoned. approach ot nothing." hAppLicATIoN. even the queen could 'appear before Let us set down some of the good him except she be summoned. It was elements in the character of Queen not thirty days since Ahasuerus had Esther; sent for Esther. It would, therefore, cloielaidnebnelg.se.rous for Esther to venture . unbidden into the king's private • did not forget her friends and rela- 1. home andoa foreign race, she (a) Although she. sprang from a 1. AN uRGENT REQUEST, 10717. ly to the highest office in Persia open V. 13. Think not . . that thou shalt to -any woman, -that of queen. She escape. Esther was, of course, a Jew- did not forget Mordecai who had cared ess and also a, relative of the hated ' for her during her childhood, nor did Mordecai. But this was not known at she forget the people of her own blood, the court. 'Yet when, RncL if it were, -the Jews. 7,Then the opportunity finally known, she would perish in the came, she showed herself their helper general massacre of her people. But and benefactress. „ it Was just as dangerous for her to (b) Esther tvae a Woman of extra - remain away from the king as to go ordinary courage. She faced the pos- te him: sibility of death when she approached V. 14. Enlargement and deliverance the Persian monarch unbidden, ch. . to the Jews from, another place. 4:5. The book o -f Esther nowhere directly (c) She was wise and resourceful nientions, the name of God. This is in the carrying out of her plans for ian. instance of how the mention of it is the saving of her peeple from the hor- avoided: , "Another place" is just a efble ecect that ha been promulgate roundabout 'Way of saying "God." In by the Persian king at, the instigation later times, the Jews did not pro- of the small-minded Haman, ch. 2. She nomeca. the esfame of God, -since they studied the situation carefully, and believed that:the mere utterelitee of the so clea.ely -thee the ,king mest . be ineffable -fialne•had a magical poteney.I brought to see the blacktrno`tive of his The -passage here means that if Estheriprime minister, Haman.. The Icing will not plead befote' the king fax her pledged himself to- ,give his beautiful people, then God ,himself, remembering, queen whatever she would asts, and at his ancient promise of Israel, will de- I the -psychological moment she made liver them. But thou and thy father's lier accusation against Haman, ch. 7. house, etc. If Esther will not inter -I 3. Let us now set down some of cede on behalf of the Jews, she will be I Esther's defectsebearing in mind that visited with a special judgment, which: they reflect the characteristic feelings evill involve all of her family. Eventu-'of her people. ally the other Jews may escape the de- creed massacre, but Esthee and her family will not so eecape. Who \know- eth, etc. Reniensber that Mordecai is small piece of land and where they ,qUeeii, and who uses her influence ever , have heen brooded on the saane ,piece him to save her people ,from general °aIreinnapdttro abnen,nnibreesreo-nft Yeinars' 7-ecceidi: ome4aes-saecsrea'eeew,ehinlegli eiti-Ileatrrge:aen:reivalioenre exe,,soise, (Hamsin) has prepared ,for them by numbers, in which event heavy lossta1 ee their race. e s 0.1y of s er are bound to occur. •• has ever bee:"popTuhlar twi:th theEJothws, Some of the common sYmPtonas are for it magnifies the importance of the the fact that the ehices.s seem to stop; Jewish people and niaintains through - growing. They 'get thin, many of out the traditional pride of their race. them weak on their legs' and when sIticheneitnelsp°1itiininPsetihteanoledegiinele'ftlitheejfeewaSsi opened and a post-mortem examiria- ton is made, the liver will frequently shew spots upon it and the caectun -will be filled with e hard cheesy material. As with all diseases, an ounce of Pre- vention is worth a pound Id cure. If we know the dangers of coecielial in- fection and we take pains to guard against it each year, -a seethes epis dernie in, 'the flock can alwaYe be Pre- vented. The two precautions to take are to move the brooder house to new ground each season It may not be neceesary to change ranges, but simply move the houses twenty or thiety feet to new gromed, because it seems td be the ground right around the brooder house that becomes infected. Then, secondly, lime the ground, plOw, cultivate and. seed it each fall to a good quick -grow- ing succulent crop. The-i.e. is ,nothing better for the average climate than rye or winter vetch. In the Southern climate, where clover will winter through, this can well be added. Old Found, which has not been plowed, limed or seeded for a number of years seems to be especially open to easy infection. Should you find your birds infected with coccidiosis this spring, there are two or three things you can do to relieve the situation. First, plow up the ground immediately around the brooder houses, lime it thoroughly, sow oats on it, even though the chicks are running on the land, for the oats will germinate in the ground and the chicks will scratch them out and eat off the young shoots as they appear at -the surface. Another, valuable cor- rective is the feeding of sour milk. The lactic acid in this product seems to act very decidedly, in the nature of an internal disinfectant, cleaning the in- testinal tract and having a tendency to impair the number of eoccidial oiganisrns. Normal buttermilk, sour milk and semisolid buttermilk are. ad-. mirabie products to - feed for this' P 'Pose. - Root Maggot Control. As root maggots are reported un- usually active in some' localities this , spring, -pamphlet No. 32 on their na- ture and control just published by the Doi:six-lion Department of Agriculture, Otte -ova, is particularly tfinely. - For the cabbage maggot, treatment with corrosive sublimate has been found most economicaliancl effective. Radish- es, garden and field turnips,- as well as • s cabbages and cahliffoevers, can all be treated with this enhstance without hmate, T ec ommended for the cabbage Was Troagbied •Wth Her_Liver Found Relief Using 1411L,SUIP4'S Laka-Liver - , Mrs. A. C'. Brown, Oromooto, Ont., verites:-"I have •been troubled with my liver for a few yearrback, and was Se bad did not feel able to•dO any work. 1 had'severe pin ii my.,stOma,ch, se; bad I could hardly stand them at times, coated tongue, bad taste in the mouth, especially in the morning, whites of eyes tinged with yellow and ha,d a muddy and •sallow complexion. . , I had read a great deal about Mil- • burn's 1:axaeLiver Pills and decided I Would try, a vial, aiel efter egking two two or. three .1 wes greatly improved and can -truthfully say I felt megelik.e lie-ing and can now do my own work." liaxa-Liver Pills ars, 25e. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by Tho T.1V1illourn Co., Limited Toronto Ont. - • ""1 . June- 15 or at the -time the greatest number a first generation maggots are present. .It should be remembered that the poisons referred to are of a deadly nature, and care should be taken not to leave them around where children may gain access to them. - In ordinary seasons soil cultivation and the planting of seeds of high vital- ity will keep seed corn and seed po- tato maggots under control, but in cold, damp Weather the corrosive sub - injury. Use one ounce of corrosive maggot, may be 'found effective. sublifnate to ten gallons of water and Changing the location of the fields apply liberally to the stem and roots each year, crop rotation, and the de - of each plant two or three itimes 'atstruetion of rein/lents of crops are intervals of a week, coin/ism-thing the also recommended as methods of pre- vention. fourth clay after egg -laying has been started in, which is about the eecond or thiiid week in May in normal sea- sons and a little later in backward seasons. An ordinary watering can, with the rose removed and the snout e I was a machine- capable of making the reduced-•th a convenient form, is used 50,arx y without a e etop. But this is In making the application. In control net possible,. and when stoles and so of the onion magg,ot, poisoned bait ancl - on are taken into consideration the trap crop in,ethods have been found satisfactOry: Thbait, consisting thne works out at nearly three months. e of a to At least, this was the time -allowed by 14 1-/e 'n ounce of sodium arsenate sir Ross smith wale was, preparing to a- gallon of boiling water with a for a round -tae -world flight when he pint of cheap molasses added, should met his deed,. be set' in from twerity to forty „pans, dishes or saucers arranged me the soli surfaces of each acre. In the trap Never. discard old nightdresses, but method, cull onions from the previous season's cage) are planted a hundred feet apart 'and, as. these Pr°cIncee a leaf growth fellv or five times greater than' the seedlings at the time the adults are depositing their eggs, the films are attracted to them. Pall up and destroy the trap plants about • Circling the Globe. By airplane the earth could be cir. eled in fifteen days -that is, if there • , • ' Tin j()STLE,Rs' is • We Will sell for'ten days only, or while they last,,,,Fabric and -Cord Tires, and-, Tubes; at -the following prices-. All High Grade Standard „Tires, -and Guaranteed for 6 000 Miles. No Beconds. , Reg. Our FABRIC TIOurRES •,i,ioo CORD TIRES- Price Price 30 x , $ 9.00 1 x 4 S.S. $35.00" $26,25 31 x 4- , , 25,20 18:90 32 x .31/2 00.35 22.80 32 x 4 „ , 20.95 19.95 82 x 4•88.80 28,95 33 x 42 „ , 80.69 29.70 x 4 , „ , 39,75 29.80 84 x 4i/9 40.80 30.80 •,82 x 41/2 49.85 37.40 85 x 41/2... , 43.05 32,29 . HEAVY GREY TUBES ' , x 41/2 „ g•(,) "140 1 x 4 . 2,90 1.80 82 x4 , , ,„9„,5 o.i.§ 83 x 4 , 2.90 2.25 84 x a 4.25. 2,40 2 4.90 2,65 All Tires mid l'ubes c,ejj.,'sp.i.;:ject to examination. TOFtf)NTQ 'TIRE '001tiPORATIek! 1.,11VilTED Wholestile and Ftr..4ail 1534 King St. West, Toronto • sew up the bottoms and cut away part of the sleeves if long. A frock to be kept fresh and free from dust may then be placed on a hanger and slip- ped through the neck of the nightgown and hung in place heethe wardrobe. ffered deneceptre in. his hand; and when he wished to save any one who came en - called, he held it out to him; and he that touched it was safe." , V: 3. Eisen to the:half of the kingdom. See Marls 6:23. This has been described as "the exaggeration born of Oriental politeness." It ,was. not meant to be taken too literally, - • - tives when she was promoted sudden - (a) Esther's epatelotism was too cruel and harsh in its feelings for out- sidees. She pushed her advantage with the Persian Xerxes to, an extreme, and urging Esther to appear before the asked that Harnan's ten sons shonld king for Israel's sake. He' has urged be hanged, ch. 9:13. The spirit of other arguments, but now he pleads revenge is too strong. Edith Cavell on very high grounds. -God may have I has taeght us a better way, and she elevated Esther' to the queenship for learned.itfrom Jesus. the express purpose of delivering her (b) Esther's idea of Pod is very in - people from the threatened catas- adequate. She and her Jewish coun- trophe. trymen evidently thought that God V. 16. A deep chord among Esther's would be pleased with the slaughter heart -strings has been touched. and of 75,000 of their enmities.* Here, now vibrates with a noble response. again, we must not forget that this She resolves, with calm determination and ,with her eyes open to the grave dangers involved in her course to task of Jesus to show his countrymen enter, unsummorled, the inner chamber a richer thought of God. - There s time in the package Time to do the many things ordinarily put off on wash -day. For Rinso does Xiot keep you standinf„r over the wash -tub, rubbing until your back aches and your hands are red and sore. Rinso, an entirely different kind of soap, soaks clothes dean. Rubbing and boiling are unnecessary. The big soapy Rinso suds gently loosen the most ground -in dirt without weakening a single threa.cl oaagnsa pa a I aickigclgooato d grody. caers and department stores. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO GARDEN ','OSES How to Plant'and How to Prune Them By .T. E. Carter, Vice -President Ontario Horticultural _Society It is much better to use garden roses in. beds .rather than in mixed borders, for'in the latter position they seem to be out of place. Moreover roses need more care than most plants, and this cannot be given' them to ad- vantage unless they are kept by them- selves.' The Rugosa 'rose is an excep- tion, and, so is the new Grootendorst rose; both of which can be grown ad- vantageously in the shrubbery. Roses need plenty of sunshine, and BO should have an open exposure. At the sarne timeehey dislike high -winds, fax which reason a screen or wind break of some kind is desirable. This does not rieari that the plants should be planted close to trees or tall shitubs, because then the danger of having the roots penetrate the beds, stealing both the moisture and plant food, is en- countered. If the roses must be plant- ed near trees, the roots can be pro- tected by sinking cypress boards into the ground or by making a cement wall between the trees and the garden. Roses love moisture, and if the beds can be placed where artificial watering is possible the advantage will be great. At the saine time the plants abhor wet feet, so that good drainage is im- perative. Tile drains can often be used to advantage. . The hybrid perpetual roses thrive notion ofGod was common to the best in heavy clay loam, while hybrid , Jews at this time. It was the chief teas like a warmer and more sandy soil. Yet one need not look for perfect conditions, fax roses adapt themselves fairly well to most soils, providing there is no lack of nourishment. When the subsoil is near the surface or very poor, it should be dug out. In any event it is well to have an excavation eighteen inches deep so that a thick layer of manure can be placed in the bottom. Cow manure is by all means the most satisfactory. Then the beds can be filled with loam, with which a liberal amount of well rotted manure has been mixed, If manure is not „ available, pulverized sheep meenuers and bone meal may be substituted,1 Bone meal is a good fertilizer fax roses, RS for most flowers, and ,can be worked into the ground around -well , eetablished plants with distinct benefit. Before setting, the plants ,sheteld be I examined and' all broken roots cu,t off. Bedded roses should be examined fax buds or incipient shoots from the stock, , which should be cut out. Large deep holes should be dug for the plants, the roots spread out evenly, and the holes filled with well pulverized soil. When I the sole is ahnost full, pack the soil firmly by treading on it. If the soil is not too wet to handle, firming it will do no harm and IS an essential to success. Budded roses should be plant- ed so that the bud onion, generally indicated by a Crook in the stem, is two inches below the surface of the bed. T. they are thus planted, the number o suckers is reduced to a minimum if not entirely, eliminated. Own -root • roses should be set the saine depth as before transplanting. I2 the ground is dry, a good Watering should be given. Potted plants are easier to set, but it is esse,ntigl, that the halls of soil and ii•O'citS,-"Ni"•;" thoroughly moist before rlanting, s 1,- A SEVERE ATTACK actively scratching for food, there was not a case of diarrhoea developed in OF- HEART TROUBLE the pen; the chicks remained in a - thrifty condition, greee'eatislactorily, . cause was IMMEDIATELY RELIEVED By d the mortality from any very small. In the seemed instance, an mos. RIILE3U N'S the chicks ate too much and vsere not ,e required to take sufficient exercise. :A H. and N. PILLS few cases of diarrhoea developed, .the - chicks were not as thrifty in appear - did not row EtS sati f t Mr. S. E. Barnes, Athens, Ont., writes: -"Four years ago I had a very Severe attack of heart trouble. I eon... suited my doctor. he treated me for some time, but I only seemed to be get- ting worse. I finally went to our drug. gist and purehaSed three boxes of Mil - burn's Heart and Nerve Pills and de- rived. immediate' relief frona their use In all I took twelve boxes,' and can truth - A Great Deal • fully say they are a wonderful naedicine, rom lier nays M A Wynn 1738. 3rd Ave. East., Owen Sound, Ont., writes: -"I wish to express mY thanks for the benefit I have received from your wonderful Doan's Kidney Pills, as they have certainly done me a groat deal of good. 'Poe 'About two 'oe three years I had ;suffered terribly with ray kidneys; cofild not sleep or rest ie any way; could not do my work for the pains in my back. ,-,, I was told about the good of your • Doan's Kidney to I tiled them elic before I had finished the first box 1 had rusfdy9s1 the giesidest benefit, and ballot praise them too highly. I will certainly recommend them to all my neighbore and friends whom I know to have kidney trouble." s .Doan' e Kielhey Pills :ire 50n. per box, at all dealers or maile davit es ceipt of price) by The T. Milburn Co, Limited 'Toronto Out - • • etesileaiee, I always keep a box en hand, and if I feel out of sorts, I take a few pills and feel all right again:" • Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50e. a' box at tilt rlealers, Or mailed direct on receipt of price by the T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Chicks Need 'h's'zeGaCiSe. An experiment' in chick feeding tvas tried out last year at, the Brandon, Man., Dominiori Experintental Farm. Aceordin • to the repel t oft the Super- , ilite,rld.enJaen „eystoms wore Adopted; in the chicks ly9i:e Fiyen a 'light ration atthe ;na fed siktareififly (hieing the early stages, eo np ng o t, • ffteio at t tis them t se a et Ot 11 o sa fy their appetites; and, in the other, the chicIsd were started on a heavier ration and Sufficient feed was avail- able without seeatehing, The report gives the retions in detail. In the ex. periment where the chicks were lcept ance, g s ac ori y, and the mortality was greater than in the first instance. The Chicken. •. A round white egg within a nest Beneath a mother hen's waren breast, Soon with a tiny "peep, ,peep, peep,"; 'A little .chicken Wakee.. from- sleep; ' And breaks its shell and wriggles out, And tries in vain to walk abotiiee- The Sweetest, ,dearest thing of all, A pretty, fluffy, yellow hall. • Opportunity knocks at a man's door not once but continuously. Whenever hehehooses he may admit her. asaseieseansoneeseasseseereens, of)rd pars! . ANSKY VAPORIZERS Save 23% to 40% Of Gaionne. rottRactod if not A atloheil Atter 80 dOs' trIr,.1. Prior) 14.00 ACCESSORY DISTRIBUtOtIS 8 punch* Rtrott %Yost - Toronto Cut clown newly planted bushes to within two inches to four inches of where they are budded. To obtain quantity of bloom, lighter pruning is necessary than when show blooms are desired. Strong -growing varieties eel' Lire lest, seetere pruning than weak ones, immature growths being, however, in both co.ses pruned back to a ripened The shoot, of an average rose bush when pruned may vary from four iriches to 16 inches long or theee- abouts, according to the vigor of the variety, pruning 'the side shoots in proportions' These brief hints apple to bash rose's only, it being assumed ishe climbing kinds were ,thinned and pruned after flowering last summer, A complete pewee laundry can be had fax the price of a binder and will be used fifty times as ofteis se_ww_ When you wish to skim soup, tilt the pot towards you and the scum will rise to the farther side and can easily be removed without loss of soup. TENTS; RMINNOS9 FLATit-,4 and SAILS . ALSO • B 0 A T HARDWARE, GUNS', AMMUNITION, FISHING TACKLE, GOLF GOODS AND GENERAL CAMPING OUTFITS. Tents to Rent for all purposes. The 1), Pike imited . 0 Co.,9 MANUFACTURERS 123 KING ST. EAST, TORONTO SPORTING GOODS -HOUSE t Pruning is to he dono when s'tola wreathes' has passed. These is eienger • in tieing the work too aatAly. A • , „, sPot ;.T! aStla Metilc" hes Fire, L10hthtn, R end Stoittra Send Po2atai Jr9r rOlder "13" Tile Metallic Roofing CO. 1,Pcfaite04, 404 n84 King St. W., Taranto ee-er enneseset, s 1 " 1" A If •fe - ''• . got tblizi booki Von onsnob, afford ' 03 WitItou,t R. It omto y'ott il&altog t g t0u. OW..n llorg4..%; 11 Cal 00,vo , 5:110 "Ae. "tvoh.tino on tho liorseq--M x0ntA I'01'.t0,41gginiti yonr at -5,0141;n: i, 55o ORA AR, Abqnt. Kim --1113 (VG,JS1,8ellj ..-410Ir feg'46g4(00 thoni.--whot 410 "‘ '5116nt4-451t1I alltdra , ,0.;n1V.RiAtf,tet, 100 th0try , 1 1550100500050000 pxotat,ttit.1, .411lt 5000 demzgliA 500 (1 ,At0,,, Trmt,I E;r ge (50 Ilar.m4” Sttrtto ton . , ' Dr. B. go ' Zz.aabtifi Vt. , '31eritt ' Vet fp , felh;, A tREATISC 'THE HORSE sts..ies issua NC), 2.es-t3. , • • -es eitS ,sse '11""1 •