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The Exeter Times, 1924-8-14, Page 7LosseAr he to the infestations of about one :week to reaeh the.hatching theyee forty •species of lice that' stage and, two weeks for the young 'life% !domestic fowl are in the aggre- louse to grow to maturity. 1 gate many thouSands ' of dollars an The largo hen louse, Gauiocotes nuttily to the poultry keepers of On- abdomente/is, sometimes called the tario. Small insects working out of ,"blue louse," is Sineky grey 41 1.1.0r sight of the human eye, their presenee and °e -third larger than the preced-: ., is often unsuspected until the birds, ing.It sticks* closely to the body, e show unthriftiness, loss- in weight, ' may be found anywhere , and is easily ' lower egg production, and reduced vi- recognized by its size and large round • tatity, causing the owner to make an head, examination. If the examination Is . The wing louse, Lipeurus caPon'ts, . thorough, lice are generally found in is a small, king and slender epecies - the great majority of flocks. A few with a large rounded heed. It confines its activities to the wing feathers. „.., Two other species, the "fluff` louse" and the "brown louse," are rarely present in numbers. Both inhabit the body feathers. may not be 'serious, but if the little crawlers ara permitted to increase to , thousands the effect on the peultry- keeping part ,:itf the faini business is serious. Infested birds present a • droopy and unkempt appearance, the wings lowered, the feathers ruffled, and the birds may suffer from diarrhoea.• ' INFESTING CHICKENS. - Of, the forty species that infest ,fowl, seven have a decided ,preference for and infest chickees. The body louse, Menopon biseriatunt, is light yellow in color and sticks pretty close to the skin, It lays its eggs in large' clusters on the small feathers 'below the vent. , It takes about three weeks from egg to mature louse. This species sticking close to the skin and feeding thereon is very irritating. The Me -Repo -a pallidum is similar to the preceding, only somewhat smaller and has the habit of sPending its life on found arS'Deoc!Phorus letero&a, a very the feathers. It js not so irritating small • parasite, and the Lipeeteus- INFESTING TURKEYS, Two species are commonly found on turkeys, the Gkiodes stylifer and the Lipeu'res potetrapezies. The Gouiodes stylifer is the most common. It ie a large louse bearing serne resemblance -to the large hen louse and may be distinguished froin it by having the posterior angles of the hea.d,extended backward and terminating in long bristles. DUCKS AND GEESE. Three species infest ducks and geese to a limited extent, the oily na- ture of the skin of waterfowl being a good, preventive agai-nst thee external parasites. The • species' commonly and deposits its eggs singly at the base of the feathers. The head louse, Lipeurus heterographus, is commonly found on the head and neck of yourfg ' chickens. It is dark grey in color, deposits its eggs singly on the down about the head of the chick, It takes squalidws, a long, slender, yellowish colored, louse, e PIGEONS. These birds are frequently infested with one or all three Li- peurus baculus, Gowiodes daMicornis, and Goniocotes THE NEED OF ETERNAL VIGILANCE The farmer must be eirer on the alert. He is a man of all work, a sort of Jack of all trades. His busi- ness as it must generally be conduct- ed these modern days has various .ramifications. No longer can the man who is inclined to rest that part- of his anatomy which lies above his ears, expect to farm, with success. Brawn has ceased to bethe only requirement. The man who would make the farm' esuccessful concern • these days should be a first class mechanic. Few . occupations demand familiarity with - a greater variety of machinery than modern diversified farming. More and more of the physical operations of 'the farm are being done by ma- chinery, and more will be done as tithe goes on. But we may go all up and s' dowh the long line of physical tasks • that are apparent to the casual ob- server, from the turning of the 'sod in rearly spring to the shucking of the • .1st ear ,of corn, in the late- fall, and thhalf has eice been told. Soils are no longer virgin, most of them have reached the point where 1'w -hey need intelligent care and treat- •411rnient. In order to geep 'the seil "rich a bright light like that,. anyway?" , and productive ;eve. can, ;lee, long:el. con- sider .it Merely as a' "clad totreadJamaica' was originally named Xay- upon," but we must learn to know it man; meal -ling "Land of Wood and as a living thing, for such it is, and Water.' teeming -with bacterial life. We must also grow a variety of crops, and not one of them but has a life history of its own which has to do with plant food requirements, insect pests, and diseases. These may seem trivial things, but the success or failure 6f any plant or tree or flower is, often entirely dependent upon a knowledge of these things and of the methads of their control. And when we come to live stock there is a whole new list of things to learn. Balanced rations, parasites, internal and external dis- eases and, how to prevent and treat them. There is. a great wide range of things that are full of absorbing in- terest for him who aspires to do things in the country. To know and do the right thing at the right time and to know how and when to prevent or re- -pair the wrong thing is the price of success. There is no time to loaf or sleep on the job. It is this jab that malls insistently for eternal vigilance. Hard Luck. Bug iLover—"Who cans:spoon under. ICE CREA FOR THE FA11 HOME T L., • BY BELLE MILLAR, DAIRY DEPT., 0. A. COLLEGE. On the farm we have the cream and that next time the proper proportion in many cases the ice also. -A freezer may be used. ' If another recipe has is all that is needed to give the boys given good results and a dish much and girls much pleasure._ liked by all, make a comment to that When .purchasing ice. cream effect on the margin of the book. Some one asks, "What is the eas- Mr. Hugh B, Miller, Hubbarde, writes: --s suffered. for a long time from dyspepsia and indigestion. I used doctor's medicines and tablets of all , description, but got very little re.sults from them. I started. tailing Burdock Bleed Bitters, and after using three 'bottles, can ,gladly say- that I^ am better, and can etit•mesteanything With- out having any ba -.'d after effects. I. can highly recommend B.13, B. to all who suffer as 1 flid.1' B. B. B. ie manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Whfte diarrhoea is caused .by a germ known as Bacterium pullorwm, found in the ovary of the hen and in eggs from affected, hens, It is ob- served that most chicks dying from this disease have portions of the yolk that have not been absorbed, gemain- ing in their bodies. The disease develops in from three to ten days after hatching, and ,in some severe forms the chicks die be- fore they are hatched. In some cases the infection becomes manifest im- mediately after hatching, and in such cases losses are •extremely heavy: Germs- causing, white diarrhoea are given off in the droppings of the chicks, and infection is carried from one bird to another. Affected chicks have ruffled feath- • ers, sleepy appearance and drooping wings. They have little or no app -e -i tite, crowd closely together, the yolk - sac is not properly absorbed,' and there is a brownish white or Whitish discharge or diarrhoea, which is very sticky and gives the chickens a pasted - up appearance.. Birds sit or stand about, usually have very prominent abdomens,- and most of the time make a peeping noise. Frequently this dis- ease is more prevalent in the later hatches than in the winter or early spring hatches. SoUr milk has proved very effective for baby. chicks, not only because of its food value, but because it is a preventive of this disease. If in addi- tion to sour milk, potassium perman- ganate is used in the drinking water from the time the chicks are hatched until past the time for the disease to make its appearance, most of the chicks will be saved. Baby chicks coming from a hatch that has been affected, should be promptly marked and should not be used in the•breeding pens. • Wlien chicke"are hatched, they have portions of the yolk :which must be absorbed: For"this reason thefe-should not be fed sooner than forty-eight hours, and in riiny cases /fat :until sixty houes after hatching. If fed tee, to an tree upon which ' Hardy Alfalfa m Ontarzo. A lazige number of test's have been conducted in past years on the expert- Inental plate at the Ontaeie Agricul- tural College with different varieties and strains of alfalfa. It was dis- covered more than a decade ago that tlae Common b.lfalfa from the Central Western States would not live long in Ontarie Variegated alfalfa, uch as the Grimm and the Ontario Varie- gated, however, proved hardy in this province.These two varieties are nOW increasing substantially as the farm- ers appreciate their superiority over the Common, violet flowered variety. In one 'experiment at the College', alfalfa ;has been cut fee hay three „times a year for eleven successive years without re -seeding. The first eutting this year, therefore, is the thirty-fourth crop obtained from the one seeding. The average yield of hay per acre per annam from the eleven years of this test was elightly over four tons. In another experiment of thirty- four plots seeded in the spring of 1922, the highest yield of hay from the first cutting of this year was of the Variegated type. The Common aheteet has variegated flowers of different densities and the Variegated alfalfa has violet, green, blue and yellow of various blends which can be seen when the blossoms are fully opened. . Several car loads of seed of high quality of Variegated alfalfa have been produced and sold for seed pur- poses in each of the past two years in Peel county alone. Also in a number of other counties seed of the Varie- gated type of alfalfa is being pro- dueed. When the Drain Clogs. The other day the kitchen sink drain clogged, and not having the usual type of force pimp on hand, it was neces- sary to improvise one for the purpose, or else put a slop pail underneath. We didn't have to use the pail. I cut a block of wood about four inches in diameter and a good inch and a half thick, boeing.one hole clear through the centre and another half through large enough to fit tightly over the end of a small bicycle pump. A tire -pump barrel would do just as well, providing the plunger leathers are tight. By making the hole slight- ly smaller, the threads on the end of, the pump barrel cut into the wood, forming a tight 'connection. • A large circle of rubber was then, cut from an old inner tube and the edges tacked about the sides of the wood diek. A hole was cut in the bottom. The sink was filled half full of water, the lower end of the pump immersed and the handle raised. This filled the barrel with water. Then the rubber was pressed about the drain and the handle forced doern. Water isn't compressible and the 'clog was, not very tight. It came out the first attempt. Now weekeep this pump on hand for further cases of etlais kind. —D. R. V.. Bands Check Tussock Moths. The tussock moth is a midsummer pest of shade trees and orchards and should always be watched for. Some seasons it appears in much larger than normal numbers and if neglected may ,do great injury. The .female moth is unable -to fly and must crawl AUGU ST 17. Jesus Cleanses the Temple, John 2: 13.-22, Golden My house shall be called the house of prayer. 21: 13. • ANALYSIS. I, CHRIST TI/E REFORMER OF WOR- SHIP, 1347, II, CHRIST TIIE NEW CENTRE OF SPIRITUAL, WORSHIP, 18-22, INTRODUCTION—One of the fixst pub- lic acts of Jesus was to claim the temple for the pure service of his Father. Going up to Jerusalem at the Passover season, he was filled with holY indignation at the desecrating traffic which went on in the Temple courts, and with fierce gestures of in- tolerance he drove the traders from the holy precincts, declaring that God's house was not to be turned into We know from other sources (Mark eaerialenifpoio.riGuould's"hniouarseket;r0Tvholilsedactthoef destruction of the temple, and it may 18:1,2) that Jesus predicted the final angry remonstrance of the Jews, who be that his words here contain an al- lusion to the same event. But his words had still another meaning. Vs. 21, 22, Jesus, says the evangel - at their administration demand an explanation. What credentials has Jesus for acting in this manner? • . 'Jesus' answer is, "Destroy this tern- ple, and in three days (that is, in a very short time) I will raiee it up." The enigmatic word mystified the Jews, who renaind Jesus that the pres- ent temple had already been forty-six years in course of reconstruction. Be- gun by Herod in the year ,B.C. 21-29, the restoration works were still con- tinuing in A.D. 26, 27, and, as a mat- ter of fact, were not completed until A.D. 64, six years before the final overthrow of the city by the Romans. asked Jesus what "sign" of authority he could point to for taking upon him the reformation of the customary usages. Jesus answered, "Destroy raise it up." this temple, and in three days I will ist, was speaking of hie own coming death and resurrection, the destruc- The evangelist says that tion and restoration of "the temple of these words of Christ referred to his his body." resurrection, that in fact the resur- This was not understoed at the time, but in later years the rection proved the validity of Chriet's claim to Assume control of the insti- words came back to the minds of the tutions of worship in the name of disciples, and became a new reason God. In future, not the material for believing "the scripture and the word of Jesus." Temple, but Christ himself, would be the centre of worship, the means We see by this lesson that Jesus the sphere of man's approach to God. I. CHRIST THE REFORmER OF WORSHIP, house of prayer for the people of God. 13-17. • and loved and valued the religious service of the temple. He wished it to be a He knew also that, even if it were de - V. 13. The Passover began in each stroyed, even if the temple service . year on the fourteenth day of the ceased, the holy work of God would month Nisan, the day preceding our go on, a new temple would be raised Good Friday, and lasted for over a to God's praise. The proof of this is week. Jerusalem at Passover was the origin and history of the Christian thronged with pilgrims. church. Sometimes we forget that Vs. 14-17. The outer courts of the Prayer is the principal thing in the Temple were the scene of a busy traf- life and work of the church of God. tic, arising from the circumstance that In Jerusalem at the present day, some pilgrims found it inconvenient to of the Christian churches, represent - bring their own animals for sacrifice, ing the Roman, Orthodox Greek, Ar- end were, therefore, obliged to pur- menian and other creeds, are disgrac- chase them from the dealers on the ed by the sale of relies and other sup - spot. Another circumstance in -favor I erstitious objects. hatred and stri e of the local ' dealers was that the ani- between the different denominations mals offered on the altar had to be ' too often finds a place. This would passed by the priests as satisfying not be so if Christians all remem me the standard of perfection required! Christ's holy act in claiming the by the Law; consequently it was con- I temple for the pure worship of our venient to buy only such as had al -I Father who is in heaven. ready been licensed for the purpose. APPLICATION. . A third circumstance explaining the due of a half -shekel, which every male, is a living issue to -day. The motor extensive traffic was that the temple- Public Assembly. The • need of this Jew was obliged to pay annually, cai has changed family habits. The I • could only be paid in temple -currency. Sunday picnic is a poor substitute for Ordinary money had' to be changed the family pew. Arid now we have into temple -currency by exchangers,, the radio, a boon and a blessing. to or bankers, who made a considerable many, but to others a poor excuse for 'revenue by brokerage. All this ac- absence from e-vening -worship. Jesus el.' h Jesuswit- ' went to church. And he observed the counts for the cenes nessed in the temple courts, the jest': helpful customs of the religion of his Ing of traders and animals, the un- the by visiting the distant temple at seemly chaffering, the iniquitous over-. the appointed times. Amid these as- . d -1d1' sociations he found much of interest, c „ g, tne The saul of Jesus was filled with sor- row at the desecration of God's holy of all, he found- opportunity to reach temple, and, making a whip of cords, great numbers from all parts of the and raising Ws arm, he forthwith world, with his teaching. The public sale the annual fair, the race track, the patriotic cele - 1 ' d the court. "Make not my market, the auction , c eale Father's house,17 he said, "an house of merchandise." bration, any place or time where II. CHRIST THE- NEW CENTRE OF SPIRIT- great crowds gather, is a challenging opportunity to Christian workers, to - - UAL wORSHIP, 18-22. meet and mingle with people, and to Vs. 18-22. The traders were -taken seek and to find ways and means of by surprise, but presently the Jews., honoring him who said, "Ye are my annoyed by the. open rebuke levelled witnesses." TRAINING OUR all REN absorbed rapidly, and this .brings After the eggs hatch, the young How to Keep Children Happy and Contented During Hot Yshe lays her soon after hatching, the yolk is pot eggs, - . about digestive troubles, often pie - disposing the chicks to white diarr- hoea. Above all, take the proper precau- tions right at the start to prevent ehe disease, which is responsible for one of the biggest losses in the poultry business. Potassium permanganate costs little and is easy to use in the drinking water. The poultry raiser who fails to take these simple precau- tions surely does not value the benefit of preventive measures which are at tree and infest a large area. These Weather. caterpillars may crawl from, tree to _ facts are taken advantage of in fight- BY ETHEL CL ARK BICKEL. ' Trees that are free from the co- "Oh, look, deer, see that lovely baby flower guide. They also love to keep track of the birds they see on each ing the insect. coons of the moth may be kept clean oriole!" exclaimed Betty's aunt. by banding the trunks with some " 'Sense me, Aunty, but it isn't an trip, and are fairly ecstatic if they Sticky material that will prevent oriole, it's -a redstart," returned Betty are treated. toee song, by an indigo either the adult moths or the after a momentary glance upward. bunting or brown thraSher. They vie pillars from reaching the branches etty was, at that time, only a trifle with each other in the length of their e cater- B Sticky fly paper may be tied around over four years old. lists of quails, bobolinks, and scarlet tanagers, as well as numerous other aration may be smeared -direct' I have repeated mY'little girl's re- ' merely to illustrate what I have The summer months go all too fast the trunk or a band of a special pre-. mark birds they never seen in town. on, tried to do for my little folks during f •th family interested i least 90 per cent. effective. 13the trunks. for en nature when company cornes 'One freezerful made 'by freezing a cream ,that has 'ng remedies to b -ib chicks the summer months, namely, to teach niay be continued throug,hout the year. freezer get one a little larger than study. Needless to say, however, it what is required 'for the family so lest ice cream to make?" It is one, One should be very careful in feed - them to know and love God's wonder- ful out-of-doors. - For the wee ones "The Buigess Bird Nature study with one's children is Book for Children- pubhshed by Lit- , , t delightful and helpful of will do. When a freezer is purchased been sweetened and flavored. . •I • y , since that is rather on the. small side, it 7'6 a quart of thin cream add three- means.extra work if two lots have to quarters of a cup of granulated sugar, ' • 11, g, is dis- solved, add about two teaspoonsful of • be prepared and frozen. It is -well to have two. openings in the tub of the freeze?... One near . the top to prevent the brine getting too high. The other opening should vanilla extract and freeze. No de- finite amounts of flavoring can be nairied as there is a great difference in the strength of different brands of be near the bottom and kept plugged flavoring. until it is necessary to repackqhe ice- cream, when the.. cork may be removed It is alevays best to taste the 'mix- ture before putting it into the freezer and the brine run off without tipping the freezer. , Buy the very coarse salt such as ice ,,creani manufacturers use, as •it will , There is more plain vanilla ice give more satisfactory results. crearn ueed than any other • kind, but The ice should be broken very finely. making additions many fancy One good Way is to place it en a sack by dishes may be made. For example, and pound it well. , when vanilla fee cream is partly fro - Although many cook books give the proportion of ice to salt as to 1, zen,"the addition of strawberries that experiments conducted along that line have been 'crushed and sweetened and can, remembering that it ,will not taste so Sweet nor will the flavor be so peonounced after it is frozen. caustic and irritating drugs may do more harm than good. Potassium permanganate is an internal anti- septic and a tonic which )vill tone up the general health of the chicks 'so that they will be able to 'fight off the germs. A Rainy -Day Job. oo ny- ay job f • th d •e ese ays th Throw out everything that Might e IT1OS should loves the stories which Jenny Wren is to clean up the apple -storage house. d h get I tle, Brown & Co., is a dalight.Betty . . thoroughly; open all the windows and out , the most joy ,ou • o , one to the woods often; two or three out - summer pastimes. In order to , go told to Peter Rabbit, better even than ' fair tales. become moldy; sweep the room oo , In order to make my children corn - ings a week,are none too many, How - air it well. Then make up`some d' e can study birds in one s •ever, .one whitewash and give the whole inter - our yard, i fortable, in hot weather, I dress them If London's soot for one year could storage packages. If own yard, if necessary. In • t• I courage them to nap during the hot- . ior a thorough dose of that. . And in this general clean-up don't ' simply, bathe them frequently and en - be collec.ted in a pile, ii. 1 . . . ie e 0-1, now booxnees .1.-,e 't many trees we frequently have as many as six- or seven varie f ' birds nesting. in a singde season. I , les , test part of the day, allowing them to 4 - overlook tl I . , wou rl cover is using ne-w bare ls ' Westminster Abbey. ' Heart So Elad. f tl • thi We have a ee. t g or le,puipose every ng will be all . •secondhapd packages for th to crtunbs euet corn and other bird makes a world of difference in chile .h remain up later in the evening when e s ra e • ' ' which the children keep supplied with i s coo . repel c o ng n summer right. But very frequently one uses The worst lute had the reputation, of being specific remedy -for the relief of all boweletroublee suck as arrhoea, Dysenteryy Colic St mach Cramps!, Sum er Complaint), And Other, Looseness of , . The Bowels Mrs, Norman Heal, RR. No, 3, Sax,. nis,, Ont., writes: --"Last Summer I had a very severe attack of summer complaint. I took a few doses of Dr, Fowler's Extract of •Wild Strawberry and in a few home got relief from the severe pains. 'Dr. Fowler's' is the only medicine I have ever taken that will give relief so quickly.', When you ask for Dr. Fowler's Ex- tract of Wild Strawberry, be sure you get what you ask for, as some of the cheap imitations may prove to be dae- g-erous to your health, • Egg -Laying Contest Results.' Si' X thousand, six hundred and , eighty ' hens competed in the,. Egg-, laying Contests conducted bY the Do- minion Experimental Farms in the first three years of operation. These contests include the Canadian Contest for the whole of Canada, carried on at Ottawa, and Provincial contests conducted at an Experimental Farm or Station in each of the provinces. The number of birds entered as well as the average yield per hen, in- creased with each succeeding contest. The first year 1,6-10 birds gave an average of 112.6; the second year 2,- 480 yielded an average of 134.5; and for the third year, namely, 1921-22, 2,590 birds yielded an average of 146.3 eggs per bird. The average cost of the eggs produced was approxi- mately 25 cents per dozen for the three years. These contests are associated with the Record of Performance for poul- try, which grants registration to birds that lay, in 12 months, 200 or more eggs weighing at Jeast t‘venty-four ounces to the doE'ri. Males are also eligible for registration if they are the sons or grandsons of registered females and otherwise meet official ,requirements. According to the re- , port on the contests, which is issued as Bulletin No. 38 of the Dept. of Agriculture at Ottawa, 23 per cent. of the hens taking part qualified for registration in 1920, 26.4 per cent. in 1921, 40.8 in 1922. In the latter year, 402 birds qualified, and, of this num- ber, 269 are reported to have been 'registered by their owners. Nine breeds were represented, the leaders being Barred Rocks, Single Comb t eghorns, White Wyandottes, ad Single Comb Anconas. ..• , Driving Comfort. Driving a heavily laden farm truck on a summer day is usually a pretty hot job, which sometimes becomes al- most unbearable when standing still. As much of this excessive heat comes from the exhaust pipe, quite a bit of the discomfort can be overcome by covering with asbestos the exhaust pipe where it runs in front of and underneath the driver's seat. The asbestos -is wrapped on and then clamped or strapped with thin nietal strips or with wire. When cool days .come the covering can be rernoved if desired. Originally golf ,balls were quite smooth. They easily became dented,. however, arid it was noticed that dent- ed golf balls travelled farther than smooth ones. The present type was• then introduced. , • . WHEN YOUR BAC dren s dispositions. I find that my K ACHES . g. T1 ' 1 drinking' ones should. be discarded e I and the balance should be thoroughly t,le folks are happiest when clothed in , I THINK OF YOUR KIDNEYS C Not Sleep- .pedestal. The cardinals, bluebirdsf' I coveralls " bo s and • ' -1 lik ), .Propped Up orioles, phoel es, woodpeckers, cat-, , c.cansed and aired so that the Mrs: H. B. • Me7,eod, Portage La Prairie, Man., writese--"'Aftee having L_d ." The Flu ''' I was 'Imthered with )7 s a e.. Ar - re rrtay • rayed in these simple g-arments they Many'people fail to understand. the not be the slightestdo o r o. , • • 'birds thrushes and chipping spar -I t emcell get the most out of their lif in Few people realize how quickly an apple Will alesbrb odors hem 'thon- tainer in which it. is stored:or from childten neer tire'Of watching rows visit t u ca'3,, do. three-fourths of their „growing dur- them the open. I scimetinies think that they Occasionally an unknown esiitor ar- a very bad heart and my doctor claimed the air of the 'ann. Mueliness or bad rives. Then for the bird guide! "Oh,, edegee line summer. 8 to 1 is a good proportion for freez-1gives a can of strawberry ice ereain • got any better. I was so bad, at times, ' • See here the picture of it i$ on page. – Order 0 Mother, I've , founcl out what it isn Engine's ! in food laboratories have found that then ' ,the work of freezing continued; that it Would. be five years before it oors Of a • dn'y kind will very span cause Irr . A•F-i•ing d an. apple to oecome unpalatable. , At times we need to know without • . mg. ,-,:'' - tint will be much enjoyed. I could not lie down to sleep but had • to be propped up in bed, as 1 week -• feel as if I were going to el/lather, and ' . • . . ," Betty will exclaint delight-, dela, a quick and easy method of , Do not fill the can more than two- For hilt ice cream the nuts should edly. Sometimes a flock. of cedar, fold:T.11g the firing order of a gas thirds full with the mixture that is to be chopped and added sometimes my heart would beat so fast to the freezer ,waxwings :stop with us for a day, i ondine. be frozen, then put on the top and fill when the Mixture PArtlY frozen, ie reed° me feel sick, enneciagnhebeohri,1: heleielPrirliiegs.themselves to aurl There are several ways of doing it. Once} early it One is to take off the valve cover u" 'the space between the can andethe Thus we See that' bY varying the • • - Ky. other Aavised. htle To Take t 'with ice and salt: , flavoring's the,fruits and the mite, we the• summer, an otchard eriole hap-, plates ancl oscertain which a•..e the'. 'First put he enough ice to. fill it up can give the , many •Pleasent 11/1111.4URWS 'time a, intake and wilich the exhaust iialves. .• one-third of the way„ then put. surprises. • pened, per way, and 'another HEART AND NERVE • flock •ol geld•finches. Each ,event 'was, Then watch the intake valves, and • one-eighth as much soli: and continne Then we should .bear Mind the in PILLS hall,etlewith d.b the -children, delight .by y NvInle doing so have someone turn the putting it in layer by layer but keep- factethat it is not necessary to have and I 1111.1St say that they dieino Wild floWer study' - necessarflY engine over elowly-by hand Now ob ing the same proportion of salt to ice., creain in Order to haVe frozen treats.- world of geed, as in ft 'vei.y short time It is not necessary to put Salt near We all know that fruit juides with I• felt :My hetet become rritteh. stronger . the bottom as it will work its way the addition of water -and sugar make and could do my own houSewsork without down. Rodipee are ,many and ,think it a geod plari to make note • of results. eefeeehieg deihks. Shei bets are Made that 4ired,, worneet feelatie I will al. by taking. thiS Sanie'.,mixtur end. wave receminend them, to all' those, suf- - Wise- Worm. after adding the beaten whites etinupe, ft mu -heart {,1 011 "), ,chic1;_,-Doti,t,..y.c^i Wan t to ielaY with For example, if a tecipo is tided and eggs, it is frozen, and the resultant we think too much or too little sugar dish will' be eery welcome on a warm had beee Called for; Mark' it down at) daY,' Milburn's bi & N• Pins are foi stele w xin at all druggists and dealers; put np.. , Worm ----"No, I'm afraid it might be only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited) , ,„ Toronto, Ont. Lou play s. must be condeceed in the woods or serve in what erder the intake valves fields or along the country 'roads. Fre- riee, This will be the firing order of quently,•when the -father of our ram- the engine. ily ha $ finished the dee work, we all Or if the engine is equipped with petcocks, open them and pack a small wed of paper in (melt Then turn the engine over by hand and the order epilo into the cer, and, with a eimple lunch, speed nw.p.y froni town, The !children ,are nevee happier than when seine flowee}: neW to, them, is. diseovee- ixi Which the compression blows , the ,and intist be hutted upin the wads out is the engine's thing order. sigmificauce 'bf a lame, weak, :sore or aching back. • : When the :beck aches or becomes weak; it is a evarnieg that the kidneys are etifeeted in soma way. , Take notice ,of this warning; relieve the backache, and 'dispose of any chances of serious kidney troubles. ere( will ,streneethett the weak kidneys and relieve all ehe terrible pains in the hack. • Mre. A. Hebert; Point du Mello, N. B, writes t-----ieFor two years I was greedy troubled with, pains hi my back. I tried all hind e of liniments and pins - tors, but get no eelief until I took Doan' s Kidney 7 hey° just fin- ished the Second box, and tow the oaine have all disappeared." Put up only by The T. Afilbara Ob4 Limitoa, Toronto, Oet,