The Exeter Times, 1923-9-27, Page 71 F T
Summer Complaint ie one Of tb.e
most dangerous diseases of children dur-
the hot Summer months, and not only
of children, but the ()la and the young,
the strong and the weak are all affected
alike. ,
The Attack- may be slight or it rimy be
serious, but you caa't tell when it seizes
you whether it will end fatally, or not.
Allow the profuse diarrhoea, the vomit-
ing and purging to continue for A day
or two and you will quickly become
weak and prostrated.
Just as soon as there is a sign of the
bowels becoming unduly looseneri up
you should get a bottle of Dr. -Fowler's
Extract of Wild Strawberry and check
these unnatural movements and thus
'quickly offset the vomiting, purging
• and diarrhoea.
Mre. S. -Lafontaine Greet. Desert,
Ont., writes:—"My baby, when a year
old, was suffering with summer coin -
plant. Two doctors attended him, but
nothing would etop the vomiting and
diarrhoea. A friend teld me to try Dr.
' Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry
and after the second dose the baby was
better, and I van say it saved my baby's
life. I would not be without a bottle
in the house for untold gold. It is the
• best remedy I have ever heard of for
summer complaint."
Price 50c.,a bottle; put Up only'. by The
T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Improving Live Stock
Markets.
In the Dominion Live Stock Branch
market reports dated August 16, there
were several gratifying features. On
the British market, Canadian bacon
was reported sto have advanced ten
shillings per long hundredweight dur-
ing the week, and to be in good de-
mand, leanest and lean being quoted
at 115 shillings, prime at 110 to 115
shillings, and bales at 120 shillings.
American bacon was quoted at 86 to
95 shillings and Danish at from 119
to 131 shillings. Canadian and Dan-
ish quotations are nearer than they
have been for some time.
Our own markets all reported hogs
stronger, the quotations generally be-
ing a dollar in advance of the previous
week. At Montreal various sales of
officially graded select hogs were made
• at $11.25 per hundred. The report
states that drovers and. other ship-
pers had no difficulty in selling select
bacon hogs at a much higher figure
than ungraded lots, and that the ques-
tion of selling on a quality basis now
rests with the producer. Indications
at the close of trading for the week
pointed toward strong prices for im-
--•"Triediate shipments.
The report from Montreal for the
week ending August 16 also says there
was keener interest- apparent in the
lamb market. Buyer's for the Amer-
ican markets state that it is their in-
tention to ship lambs to Boston and
New York as usual. Owing in laite
measure to lack of docking and alter-
ing as well as to lack of Weight and
finish the average quality of the lambs
was not as good as it might be. The
average quality of breeding, however,
appears to be improving each year.
The most desirable lambs should weigh
around 80 to 85 pounds at the market
and should be docked and either ewes
av•ethers.
A Horse's Epitaph.
Soft lies the turf on these who find
• their rest
Beneath our common mother's anaple
• breast.
Unstained by meanness, avarice, 01-
. pride, -
They never cheated, and they never
lied. •
They ne'er intrigued a rival to ,dis-
place,
• They ran, but never betted on the
• race.
Content '• with harmless sport and
simple -food,
Boundless in faith and love and grati-
tude; '•
• Happy the man, if there be any such,
' Of whom this epitaph can say as
• much. —Lord Sherbrooke.
WV. OUT Hi
IMPLES Find
1
Mass Irene A. IVIsitthetie, Staplers\
Ont., writes:--- thought would
write and tell you of the experience and
benefit I haveederiged from 'Burdock
Blood Bitters. " '• •
Sonne few months 'ago I was troubled
with had blood which broke out on -Eris,
face in themature of pimples, boils and
ring -worm, and I got so bad I really
did not know what to do.
I was esharned to go anywhere, and
the itching arid burning, caused suoh a
terrible sonsatioa 1 could get iso relief
day or night.
One day a friend saiviseci me to use
l3urdook Blood Bitters. 1 aged One
bottle and falt qtrite a relief, and by the
time I hid talsen 3 bottles I was com-
pletely relieved.
catmot praise 13.13.13, enough and
I hope anyone afflicted like I was will
etthe, same benefit I received,"
Burdock Illriod Bitters is manufac-
tured only by The T. Milburn CO.,
'_'omato Ont,
11E
L.0
HAD A WEAK HEART
• FOR THREE YEARS
ALSO VERY NERVOUS
how much good Alilburn's Heart and
SAMSki!78Yfritees°8:—Ie "IPweit:hrs to t
you kno-
SELLING DIRECT FIS,OIVI THE quality varies, a am afraid;-vsill never Nerve Pills have done for me.
The ,
FARM. be sold di'. ect le any lee ge way, For neatly thiee years I was very bad -
set le, run CYWD had a w
It is the favorite hidoor pastime enlY way i which' the fla.1:raerisaea: most
zadionutsaiwlesayt.someetaimk eb-e• aft' ,aoncldWal3'
of a certain class of newspaper writ-. more InoneY 'fol these Products is t° ee aer.v. r"oan:6 people' wh: had
-
like this:
ers to Propound problems something
upon the statute books, and have heard of
have cornpulsoty grauing w put
grades, '
strict, official supervision of all 1 so e,std. ed 0 0..voearietrean.adNerve APHitiser,
"If the farmer gets one dollar a . 1 d d d t ' ti trial
that same bushel at the store, who is waliwifigs Into°117ayer.alfesasnepyee.pprliecewfhoor aelg:e. I had used two boxes a sauna a, had There Was even a tiny .telephone and
youi 1 8 euoug , bathroom had a 'real bathtub With la
bushel for his potatoes and the man
Y Y ,Y one me good, an after having taken
five boxes 1 was completely aelieved.
d d ' a little piano in the living room. The
ethheannti?.?,fiteer, tbe farmer or the met._
treme quality in supplies for their and I would advise anyone havin • a
I eannotrecornmend with
.1Pn'ellivoeuYsnessa, tam and i' you put water in the tan
in the city has to pay four dollare for
' In ever cit of an siee there are
teble. 'Chese rePreeent/only a small weak heart or troubled si attached to the- tap, You could turn
city pre is • • '' p o
ss abo t the prefiteeinig r - class of the buyers f f d t ff • but t Iliem." rs o oo s u s,o use t em. , / doll's bath would really run into the
t' the tall and water for the little china
I used to read a good deal in the
to the extent to which they buy, they Milburn's tub just as it does in a real one.
oftel 8,
Betty's Doll Ficoue.
• BY ELSE pA4Risii.,
Betty had A 10Yely doll hoilse, but
the little girl that lived next doer did
not have any. Betty's doll homier bad
four rooms: a living room, a kitchen/
a bedroom and a loatlarbores The floor
of the kitchen .had real oilcloth' on 4
in a tiny blue -and -white pattern.
Every room was completely furnished.
pensities of the farmer, and in late are the best opportunity for direct Milburn's R. & N. Pills are 50c. a
box at all -dealers, or mailed direct on When the doll house first cense
years considerably considerably more about the
profiteering propensities of the' aver-
age retail dealer. Without entering
into any argument over the matter,
other than to make the general obser-
vation that farmers certainly have not
been profiteerS and that retail mer-
chants are not as guilty as we would
like to believe, I wish to discuss one
of the proposed remedies for narrow-
ing the Spread between the buying
and selling prices of farm products.
marketing. Any farmer who believes receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.,
that the spread between the price he Limited, 'Toronto, Oat;
receives and the price the consumer ,
pays is too large can sell direct at aaa• Retail
Profit if he keep d the following points 1-4 8 Now ed to Grade.Acoordirig
in mind:
Not so very long ago writers for the
farm papers believed they had bit
upon the solution when they suggested
selling direct from _the farm to the
consumer. To help along, the govern-
ment developed the parcel post, so that
all a farmer had to do was to drop a
bushel of potatoes into the rural mail
box, and presto, his marketing was
done! While there undoubtedly is
• considerable marketing of farm pro-
ducts done in this manner. I have not
noticed that the post office has put
either the wholesale or retail dealers
out of business.
• What are the products -which people
in the cities can buy to advantage
direct from the firms? They reallsih
are more limited than we might at
first blush suppose. Potatoes, apples,
eggs, butter, poultry, hams and bacon,
and that is about all. Modern methods
of probessing and distributing milk
has made it almost impossible for any-
one except a specialist to distribute
milk. As to fresh meat, there are
numerous practical difficulties in the.
way, especially -in summer, when meat
will not_ keep. Potatoes and apples
are good examples of bulky commodi-
ties which might conceivably be sold
direct, but here again we encounter
difficulties. Dwellers in tenant houses,
the inhabitants of flats and apart-
ments, have no storage room for any-
thing bulky. They are almost com-
pelled to buy in driblets at retail,
Even those people who have cellars
do not like to buy their. potatoes and
apples 0.nd:things like that direct, un-
less they can inspect the commodity
fleet. The reason is obvious, for there
are potatoes and potatoes, and apples
and apples.' One farmer might, sell
well -graded potatoes of the highest
quality for a dollar a bushel, and his
neighbor might charge a dollar for an
ungraded, inferior lot. Yet both are
selling potatbea :When pree buys at -a
retail- store the has some, means of
enforcing quality.
Bulky commodities in
ty took good care of it. Every day and and every Friday she cleaned the
rooms and dusted the furniture and
put everything in place. Yes, at first
• Betty was a good little housekeeper,
.. but after a while she grew careless.
1. He must grade and standardize At the 1,923 session of Parliament, She let the floors and furniture get
,
pick, and put only the best qualities legislation was secured to enable the dusty. ' Things were always upside
upon the market. Culls and off sizes Dominlon Ministerg 'c u e down. The kitchen stove would some -
should go through the cider presses4 extend egg grading to the domestic how, get int9, the bathroom: and the
Then he should have attractive labels trade. Hitherto, grading and classin- bathtub into the living room, and the
printed, and label every single con- cation have been required for inter- poor little china doll vvould be left in
tainer, and seal the containers. I provincial exportandniemcepsosratrysthhipast O
the water for days at a time.
2. In his newspaper advertising and ments- It now
il
descriptive folders he must explain; eggs
intended for home consumption wannteyoduayBetty'stolendyounirotdhoeirl IlsOanids'e toI
just how this grading and packing has shouid.be sirnillarly classified. By this
been done, and tell the Customer ea.) step the consumer will have assurance wthheolliettmleofiltrh1that.I'mlipvreesjiyextsurdeooshrefowir will
I
actly what to expect. He must say, that the eggs purchased are of the take better care of it than you do."
that his box of apples which sells for, class represented. This will result not So Betty lent her doll house to the
24.00 express prepaid, has about so, only in his getting value for his little girl next door for a whole month.
many apples of such and such a var-; nloneY; but indirectly in increased, egg Every Monday and every Friday the
iety, and areeabout of such a size. an consumption, The producer will also little girl next door cleaned the rooms
other words, if your container holds be benefited because he will be in a po- and dusted the furniture and put
two hundred Baldwin apples about' sition to realize the price that a high everything into its place, and when -
two inches in diameter, say so. - I quality product should command over ever Betty went over to Play with her
3. He must maintain the same the poorer grades. This in itself should she always found her doll house In
I
standards year after year; in other, do a 'great deal to place the poultry perfect order.
words, do the same thing that the industry on a more prosperous basis At the end of the month Betty be -
great wholesale houses do with their this country'
products. .: gan to feel ashamed of herself and to
realize what a fortunate little girl
in
this kind of direct selling is very posed to render its subjects incapable house.
she was to own such e, lovely doll
The opportunity for extra profit in _Scopolamine, the drug that is sup -
large, but it is only fair to state that of ling, does not find favor with all "After this I shall always take care
not many farmers who try it succeted. of the medical Profession. Some phy- of it, the way You do; and you may
In the first place, many of them are sicians have lately pointed out that come into my nursery and play with
not good enough farmers to raise the drug- is obtained from henbane, it every clay. Then it will be almost
solutely useless to think for even a that all it does is to produce
crops, of the desired quality. It is ab-
deadly nightshade nightshade and prickly pear, the same as if each of us had one of
our very own," said Betty, and she
smiled at the little girl who lived next
,n
door.
4id
that • plan worked very well.— .
Youth's Companion. -
minute that people in the city will fuss tion and cause the victiin to talk free -
i .
to buy direct unless they are going to le. There s no certainty, they think,
get_ better values tha.n their- stores that the accused criminal will tell only
offer. The only chance such a farmer the truth.
will have to sell direct is to put up a
sign so that passing motorists may
stop, and even then.not every one who
stops will -buy.
The farmer who is master of his
profession, and does raise the poultry,
and make the butter, and produce the
apples which deserve a quality price
is not always a born- business man, a
man who knows how to advertise his
products and how to deal with his
customers.
• All of which brings us down to the
oft repeated statement of late that
the farmer's primary function is to
produce his crops, and that experts in
marketing should do the selling. The
exception, the man who combines the We have been companyings for three Iln.gWohfe jnetshues,a
cern-
two facalties, will sell Ln gu ke le ain:n2o6u-n3c3ed the Whenebut the great rank and file will not be direct anyway, months, with some of the great ones of
the early daya of the Christian Jesus was lost in the Temple, Luke 2:
able to develop that side of their Church. To -day they are all before* 41-52. 3. At the marriage feast in
us. What an amazing diversity is Cana of Galilee, John 2: 1-11. What
here! Evidently devotion to the is the last reference to Mary in the
Christian way does not destroy indi- New Testament, Acts 1: 12.
back of the poultry house be sure that viduality. And how tremendously hu- LESSON III. Peter's *Failures and
they are sealed tight. It does not take man they all are—truly our brothers Successes. What was Peter's great
,
much of a draifght to blow the heat and sisters. And yet how rich in the confession? (Matt. 16: 13-18.) How
fruition of lives lived humbly and did Peter fail? In what sense did
out of the open front of a poultry faithfully in the service of our corn- Peter become a fishes of men?
house. The construction of the open-
, mon Lord! LEssoer IV. John, the Bosom Friend
front house is wrong unless the house Perhaps the best thing to do is to, of Jesus. What incident shosvs the
issealed tightly on the other three spend just a minute or two recalling, tolerance of John when he first became
sides.
and restating theoutstanding rnessage, a disciple of Jesus? (Luke 9: 49-56.)
of permanent value which each life What *great change came over John?
• Early Frost.- studied has given us, somewhat after LESSON V. Matthew Overcoming a
Autumn's earliest frost had given the following manner. Handicap. What was Matthew's oc-
John the Baptist—his fearlessness cupation? How would he find it diffi-
To the woods below Hues of, beauty, such as Heaven , and self -forgetfulness as he pioneered cult- to follow Jesus?
the way to a higher and more spiritual LEssoN VI. A Woman's Grateful
Lendeth to its bow.
Sel:fvoirceM4 a" i cr iyh?a t Howgr a td ithing e didse JesusNvher
.lite. —Whittier. Mary, the Mother of esus—her do
se-- simple faith in God and her mother gratitude? What did Mary do on. the
Cruelty is bad morals and bad
morning of the Resurrection?
manners.•
love and fidelity.
Simon Peter—so near to 'us all in
LESSON VII. Trite Friendship
•a human frailty, and yet .such an in-
Shown by Martha ancl Mary. How did
these sisters differ from one another?
Public drinking places for animals apiration in the heights of heroism
and devetion attained by a life finally What did Jesus say about Martha's
ghrist-mastered.
worries? (Luke 10: 41-42.) What did
towns and villages. Farmers driving .
John the APostle—the man of the Jesus do for them? (John 11:31-46.)
in from long distances have to drive loving heart,, who has shown us that How did Mary show her gratitude?
fa:r out of their way to the hotel in love gives insight, virility, gLESSON V.TH The First Christian has done valuable relief work for theentleness, (Mark 14: 2-9.) .
The
Stand
y School Lesson
a•SM.....10.1moottmeoar,amossiso,
SEPTEMBER 30
Review: Great Men and WI omen of the New Testament,
Golden Text—Wh.erefor e, seeing we also are compass-
• ed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, lay aside
every weight, and the sin which cloth so easily beset us,
• and let us run with patience the race that is set before
us.—Heb. 12: 1.
which the business.
POULTRY
Some poultrymen use one per cent.
salt in the dry mash as it' seems to
make the mash more appetizing -to the
birds. To obtain heavy production it
is necessary that the hens eat large
quantities of egg -producing food. The
salt should be fine and well distributed
through the mash so individual birds
will not receive an overdose.
If you do not buy cornmercial grit
be sure and lay in a supply of gravel
for the poultry before the • ground
freezes. A little dry, clean sand gath-
ered on a sunny fall day will be of
great value in scattering around the
brooder stoves early next spring when
the ground is frozen and covered with
Mow.
When buying grit and oyster shells
it is convenient.te lay in a few hun-
dred pounds in the fallThis will
prevent the hoppers from standing
empty next Winter when the roads are
bad for trips to tOWII, although the
hens need the grit to grind their re -
tions and need the shelr to cover the
winter eggs. .
Nothing makes poultry litter leok
like a manure heap quicker than a
leaky 'roof. Be sure that the seams of
the roofing paper are tightly sealed.
A little till. painted over the seams
and the roofing. pails will help to, seal
the small cracks. Replace torn srips
• on quiet, sunny days, end it is easier
, •
sic> make a smooth job of patching.
Vlien making repairs on a poultry
muse avoid dropping staples or, small
in the litter or Oil the grotmcl
mksicle the house.- Birds are attract-
ed by bright pieces of metal and may
eat such niaterial. once killed a
are not to be found in many of our
Mail t
Coup
and
Watch
all
.e e
It will bring -you at once a copy of our booklet
"Buying Bonds on the Partial Payment Plan." There-
in you will find •a eane, workable plan for budgeting
your income and a simple Method for the investment
of a 'monthly surpluse--no matter how larg,e or srrialle
—in sound securities. A systematic programme of
saving and investing a determined portion of your
earnings is the foundation of an iridependent income.
OUT Partial Payment Plan will enable. you to do this.
During the next few months you,can become the
owner of.a safe 2200, $500 or $1,000 Bondi Just send us
your narne arid address on the coupon below and full
particulars will be mailed to you.
Ainthus aryls C
„LIMITED
293 Bay Street Toronto
Kindly send me a copy Of "Buying Bends on the
Partial Payment Plars."
Narne
Address
Branch Offices: Montreal, London, Ottawa, New York, London, Eng.
18
ftic :,11" Vt "itela
For Horne and Country
News From Ontario Women's Institutes,
for its good programs, it keeps
travelling library on hand for the usa
of the community and never Sails to
show some expression of sympathy in
case of illness or bereavement.
Halycon Days.
The haiycon days are the seven daYa
before and the seven days after the
shortest day. The halycon, or King-
fisher, is supposed to be breeding at
"this time, for Which reason the sea,
for this fortnight, is supposed to very
considerably preaerve a perfect calm.
Erin Institute has on hand a
"School Fund" of $185 which they are
planning to use in furnishing a room
in a new school which is now being
built.
Glen Allen Institute sent to the
Northern fire sufferers a quantity of
clothing and fruit valued at $400.
Clifford Institute has put a piano in
the sehool, provided plants for the
park and school, and is raising money
for a skating rink.
Mt. St. Louis Institute has a box for
questions and suggestions at each
meeting so that any member who is
too shy to "speak out" inay still give
the others the benefit of her ideas.
When a program is rather short this
Institute reviews the lessons in sewing
and home nursing given in their De-
monstration Lecture courses.
Rama Institute on the Indian Re-
serve gave tooth brushes to the school
children, helped a poor neighbor and
contributed to the Orillia Memorial
Hospital.
Victoria Harbor Institute is work-
ing to secure a dental clinic for their
school choldren.
Vellore Institute, after the North-
ern Ontario fire, sent $100 to a minis-
ter at Englehart to get a church
established, and at Christmas time
they got good woolen stockings and
filled -them with Christmas treats for
the children of three Sunday Schools.
Elba Institute in Dufferin put first
aid kits in four schools.
The Institute at Sunnidale Corners
in East Simcoe bought chairs for the
town hall. •
Nottawa Institute put a light on a
bridge at a dangerous crossing.
.Magnetasvan Institute has given the
school, a drinking. fountain, a number
of pictures and a library. They had
a photograph of the sixty local boys
in the army, framed and hung in the
'rta. Institute in Terniskoming
is making itself very helpful in assist-
ing the members in making quilts.
They have each meeting at the home
cf a mernber and after the program
they spend the afternoon in quilting
for the hostess. This Institute also
keeps the town hall in repair and
ready for any community gathering.
In return for this service they are al-
lowed the free use of the hall for In-
stitute functions.
Hillview Institute In Terniskaming
order to get a mouthful of water for power to a human life.
their thirsty teams. Why not beautify Matthew the Publican—who found Martyr. Why was Stephen _chosen to fire sufferers. This Institute supplied
the towns of Ontario by a few artistic the higher scales of values in life, and help ahe apostles? (Acts 6: 5.) What material for a hot lunch for their two
yielded his life to the highest motive. 'led to his arrest? Why was he stoned school rooms last winter. They give
fountains? _
Mary Magdalene—love and grati- ' to death? How did he die?
tude te the Lord uttering itself in acts LEssoN IX. how Barrzabcts Showed lasl, summer they bought flannel and
• special prizes to the school fair and
gt53 116-ce To Eat
nything Ye Like
• AHD HOT HAVE
of clevotion and of servic,e. His Generous Spirit. In what way made sport, suits for'the boys' baseball
Martha and Mary—helping us to did Bareabas befriend Paul? (Acts 9: team.
find the true balance in life and to 26-31.) What fine thing is written ctf
The Institute at Elk Lake in Tem-
, fi t Barnabas in A is 11 :24?
Whether we are in rags or in silks,
in a hovel or a palace, it is all the
same to animals. They love and trust
us.—Lady Edward Cecil.
The autumn time is with us! Its aps
proach
Was heralded, not many days ago,
By hazy skies that veiled the brazen
sun,
And sea -like miirmurs from the Tests
ling corn,
And low -voiced low -voiced brooks that wanderid
drowsily
-By purpling clusters of the juicy
grape, -
Swinging upon the vine. And now, -'tis
here. —Wm, D. Gallagher.
1000 Eggs
in Every Hen
New System of Poultry Keeping—Get
Dollar a Dozen Eggs—Famous Pout,
tryman
TELLS HOW
'The great trouble with the poultry
business has always been that the lay-
ing life of a hen was too short' says
Henry Trafford, Inrnational Poultry
Expert an Breeder, or nearly eighteen
years Editor of Poultry Success.
The average pullet lays 150 eggs. If
kept the second year, she • may lay '100
more. Therr, she goes to market. Yet,
it has been scient fically eelwished that
i
every pu et is ern or batched wiili,
over one housan minute egg germs n
her system—and. will lay them on a ,
highly profitable basis over a period of -
four to six years' time if given proper
How to work to get 1,000 eggs, from
every hen; how to get pullets laying
early: how to make the old -hens lay like
pullets, how to keep up heavy egg pro-
duction all through cold winter months
,when eggs are highest; triple egg pro-
duction'
. make a el; ens trIe; p..00
sl clt h
profit fromevery en in x winter
months, These ant many other money
making poultry secrets are contained in
Mr. Trafford's "1,000 EGG HEN" syetera
of poultry raising one copy a which
morweriollial.neeorbraeoo.raostlanginstg8ptahasbiptisseobrlluwidtnhetegio!..0:ktefoerTpettisoi idss oitzlonll a hex: anynnoa:
buil%xeen chickens and. Want them to make
eggs,profit bo Orr.t hoT rptt13.ffun .0intiTiti atked de; irescpsehrso wtwo,bilt: gets'
moner tor you, Mit out this ad and s.end
,irti' awffi tohray your tneazen3e013, Her
ald Bldg., Bing-
enr.i
hal-Lipton, N. Y arid a free copy ac .
"THE 1,00p 11:GG HEN" will be sent b3r
StePhee the Martyr --the 1)oldness lEssoN X. return
saa paa,,,a/asa iskaming. has erected as fine Institute,
put first things is . AC •
Ls
extleness of a spirit -filled life. What is the first mention made of hall, equipping it with a piano, seat-;
)3,aniabas, the Great-Heaated—the Paul? What made •hiM • so bittet. ing and kitchenette, at a cost of $3,000,
gracioua generosity ef a truly Chris, against 'Christianity'? Have some This hall is open for the use of the
teraegetitleman. Ischolar tell the circumstances; attend- coneramity. This Institute -arresiges
.Paul the APostie—uttering, as per- in g Paul's conversion? How did Paul bees to clean and plant the t
haps no other, the pessionate mission- the Christian show les eettl and cour-
• , :easy itimalse of his Istitd, world -vision age?
In .the ease of heartburn 'there fa` it in heart, and world-eonquest as his ) LESsoN XI. Warning and Encour-
gnawing and burning pain in the stem.' goal. • Jana/nen/ from the Life of Mark. Who
sch attended by a disturbed ,appetite, John Mark—in spite of early halt- ' was John Mark, and what great op -
;Mused by the general acidity, aS When ing„ winning out along the path of portunity did ' -he have? Wherein did
too much food Le taken it is liable to humble and arduous service. • he fail? Who gave him a second
• Linie—the gracious and gifted phy- chance? 1.)1c1 he make good? What is
siciarna swinpathetic, devoted in per- the chief ICSSOT1 for us?
sorrel friendahip, making the Kingdom LESSON XII. How Luke Helped
of God his first concern. Paul. What claim does Luke make for
Timothy—through the influence of hims,elf, as a writer? (Lnke 1: 1-4.)
his 'friend and spiritual father, Paul, What parables are found only in
eatching his spirit and the spirit of Lalso's Gospel? -
his I.ord, and fulfilling it splendid, un- LESSO.N Timothy Trained to
selfish mieistryg for Jesus Christ. Serve. Who were TirnothY's parents?
I,F,ssore J. The Herald of the Christ. What fine tribute did Paul pay to
In. what way did John prepare the Eunice and Lois? (2 Tim. 1: G.) What
way for Chriat's coming? What is the (reality in Timothy did Paul especially
diffeeence 'between real repentance and adinire? What important tasks did
simply beitig sorry for sin.? Pael give Timothy to do? Did Tirn-
LEssma IL Notable Incidents in the othy measure tip to these difficult
Life of Mary. 'What did Mary say; situations?
dumpy cockerel and. found a long pin terment, and become extremely sour,
working through the gizzard in such 0 re and what is tines -ye up
a posiben the, every InaVerneet muSt te sometimes sour and bitter.
.
have caused suffering to the bird. , Mr. Joseph H. ManDonald, Christ -
Seal up all the cracks and crevices nias Island, NA, writese-- wo years
that iriaa'l permit e raught over the ego I suffered all the time from heart -
roosts. Some poultry houses do not burn. I took one vial of Milbure s Lase -
to the Liver Pills' and have never been troubled
Lasa -
have the sills tightly joined
cement fouadation, Place you). hand sinae•
emit the wall close to the floor on a it IS verY n• ice
thing you like and not !rave heartburn.
windy day and sec if the wind is blow- ,, •
fug across Poultry house floor. -Milburn's Le:ea-Liver ,Pills are 25c. a
Such draughts mes' cause colds that It'll at all dealers or mailed direct on
later develop into roup. receipt of -price by l'he T:Milburn: Co.(
" '
vomitingCell
• . • • '
If' there ere vindows in the sides or 'Limited*, otonto, Oat,
come ety.,
They also contributed generously to:
the fire eufferers.
South Yarmouth Institute has taken ;
on rather heavy hospital work this ,
year, having promised to raise $1,000,
for the London Memorial Hospital. A '
donation of canned fruit was sent to
another hospital, and a "Melon Show-
er" given to the nurses. Gifts of
clothing, bedding aed money were sent
to the Northern Ontario fire sufferers,
a contribution made to the Church
Hall, gents made fer needy families
and an autograph quilt made as a
means of raising money. Other funds
were raised by it play, and a bazaar
and sale of homemade cooking at the
"Made in St. Thomas" exhibition. At
the same time -local affaire are not
neglected. South Yarmouth is noted
Back to Work
Kendall's Spavin Treaftriept will get that
lame horse back on the lob again. For
more than forty years aa Kendall's Spovin
Cure it has been removing spavinst splint,
ringbone, thorOughpin and all kinds of
body growths. ,
Get 0 et Inny ch void's tothiPt alto theftee
hook "A I reottse on the Horst. and Ms
Dtztoses" or thrtie direct to
OR. 8, J. 'KENDALL. COMPANY,
Encobtorg Falls, Vt., U.S.A.
radall's
Trestmen'
I to. 38--'23.
•