use-4' ~<+"~.'.-'ov-_ - .1---,. ....., ' -'P ."». _,,_.s._\\ . .- .i ; _ - 1 1. .. .‘-s.,-.. , ;_ 4 '_ ._N --_ _ ~ _ _,yy < _ ‘ ' ‘-_'i " _ *?`1iHn'cI-ts1u.orTsrowNcUsnnlAr'<. f - .- -MAGAzlNt_-.r -unsold ____llolll_ 0|! BS and Wholesome I _ L _ uk". g[|¢kg,,,,-y Je", Wm, m".n'n¢ 9,. hoppetr fllrlil ofniiranh where can be 'lIfI°5t\P°}1{‘;’te‘:_|5‘;_{g\"*grth"? °f;;l:P§’:§o:?[wax can best be shipped in 'double . I.. -__ . <=-»-- .ll°...:.°.. llc-..;°.f...°l..;'° -»--» -ui- Wu. ---»»sl::;‘°.:'.l:.°l:.£.‘;°;.r:‘;..:l“:J.l..l.“‘;:.’:; A frgdnotit obiection. to. hot- cakes llieat the desired qusult , - - y of _ber- 3‘g;_-uftgtd tglalltnglebeflour oi' corn-(ries in a stone clock or the upper od In the bn” time _¢hi:£°D°l’¥‘ 0001!- part of the double boiler, then strain hi th* an Tm. mah “ft ashes toss in the _making of current Jelly. For ny no mem; 8 delhmsl me ot cake each quart of the berry juice add two “mm” ohmrer Howevoe eta' for the cupsful of either strained, grape juice 3 number of N-cm" 'bfi hors are. or current Juice. reheet ‘and let boil B bun .num or “arch” ga "0 °llfor.twei1ty minutes. Add un' equal "My ,mnmenu Mohd » t are al-_ amount of heated sugar to that of the Y » “ll °l'°°° lwilins Juice sud lst -bull uulil lt I then add the dry sifted ingred- mem, of 9 ~ ld,” - _-~ V ystsr shell lying where all , *-0 the l'l¢0-going public by goth- quite impossible to manufacture foun- inllbgggklan 4_7 31°! Kl‘idill°» bf°W° the fowls can get it. We feed meat- j°rm5 bil llhlllielil in stubbornly C011- dation from old combs Nor cappiugs be- ‘quarters of an acre per day, and some! lscrap all the tim, to all our birds .`» Y. _._ ____ _rl tested races. many of which were in fo,-9 gh," have been 1-efingd f ' ._-. ._ ..,~.,¢'~;--..._ .` I I .ii I I. I I \ .-` -=- to weed or thin from half to three-i can do even more. The position of | 'Old lliil young, and usuaaliy have it d°ubt ti’ th°Nl“'t °"'id° 0f U10 ll-Ut Experience has shown that bees-ithe operator and the shape of his' hoe; will dig and scratch all day around the grass mote if they- are allowed to run out. I have never been able to deter- mine what they find that keeps them busy and have sometimes thought they pick up minute bits of sand. Whatever it is, they keep picking ‘and digging and the exercise is certainly good for| them. A good many young chicks are killed by mistaken kindness. _ -- -» H, Cleveland in “'91 Wm man pmb_'stores. Some shippers propose to "ec-I ability remain unchallenged forever i°”°m’z°" by “sing °“l“' tm" bumni .lhere me others on me way but if sacks. This is exceedingly' poor econ- Geers should never draw a. rein overlomy' mr Wax shipment” are Wbiect' another horse. his fame is secure. The [ed to, -very “ugh h°‘“du”3 While ml {.’,°‘“, "°{,° ‘""§{‘,“‘§’{,° ,,"” M“,',“1-+§`d‘li'<° fdssrilseliiaiffli flrbgiiflii $013: un er, rown a r oint r, a Pointer, Hai Dillard, Fantasy. ‘ilobertithe shipment- which 1°" “Wit be met i J.. Humlin’s Nightingale, Jog patchemiby none other than the shipper. Just ,lt is at right angles with the handle Lady of the Manor, Lord Derby, The; in "“h°“t di” |'°°“m- adding both grape and current Juice """"' "°‘ °"‘°' it' must b the urs r lt ' ‘ iuic ith-| ,_? - - ~ e -li ru e w 1 gigm gg 'mgw f‘“'"1“- out any water. Seal ss in the 'previ 1 cl-ipiul of flour ` ou' recipe' f i ggipoonfuls of baking 'powder B? tttasuoonful of saly _ I 0 BK! 81111 the trina togeth- , er until smooth, then stil in the milk, GHIGKS HMT FEED ' sifted flour and it db ki - ~ er and ben woulzx 5:10 I ull? POW¢| Much of the trouble often found in _ . ' U 5 ° 3'9"'-brooding chicks i d - d 3 _ s ue alone to feed- ° "ins Dann." cm" ing too early, or in excess during the 1 6" _ ' aixgdlfew dayl;m{n tns(;uire’s :ay of 1 by ' D8 V0l’Y s ee s sec red by &ld°;mm;l°£r?a¥meB] the mother hen for the first two or *The oatmeal or comme” would be thrx dayis. Just here and there a poured into a loaf pan when cookedlgf 93;: ’ 9' nmmel °' t°“d°' 3'"°' and there allowed to cool. 'When de-lcohantmpsfgrvgrm' \Th" fmclé' °"`° 1,-ed f k _~ . ey are amos con- :O thlcfsr °° d‘;“"in;° tclfld ‘“_.tinuously hovered -by the mother hen, ces' 9 n ° ° W °“i' because natui-lil instinct tells her that ie: :g:l,eT;2dn'g}yk|f:1£°_y “um bmw" her -babies should be carefully' brood-E d° m°"\z"°l;l°3DEf Bild aftifwfliyoly they speculation with its marvellous oppor- H°m'"y “R” ggoxgliutdhgiiasgazbogiceililis usltlgiilygf 52°-me Tizoggly lxilwnhgsnltwls p:::l‘i:o‘i$vli»;?e:l gliewwwsitngugrwigsglgveeydg is at 1955; two or th,-9e'days_ But wmf; the value -of milk as a restorative of E cused of even dropping a heat. Geers the brood of cmcks in the brood” it. health. Consequently much attention, won. No one ever had any doubts as is datum] fm- the ,pendant ¢° Wmy is paid to the purity of milk sold to to what he would do in a pinch, as if 1 cupful of boiled hominy Bi cilpful of lukewarm milk is cupful of cornmeal - 1 tsblespoonful of butter M teupuonml of “lt to see them picking at the feed so .2 .us . easily scattered, and, fearing least Add me warm mm( mana,” to; they should become hungry, in nearly the _hominy and but uhm smohnmevery case they are fed too much at then stir in the butter, salt, eggs well bestenfand the cornmeal. Pour -in well -greased pans, quite -thin, and bske` for about 25 minutes. . the beginn-ing. We have never known a brood of chicks to be damaged from withholding the feed. " 1 cupiul of cold boiled rice it cupful of milk _ M cupful of flour Poultry keepers will find it more plgfttable to market young cockerels 1 teaspoonful of baking powder W en i-My mach ° Weight °f 2 ‘bs ,1 mblemoonful of melted mmerrather than to feed the birds until 1 teuwonml of "sax, late fall or early winter Experiments % tyeupounfulvpf ,ah show that at least |10 pounds of rain 1 beaten 688 - g;\i:ltsll)1?l isdistgoiibgiiliicevhiatllxr gti-sig S I _ h ' row y cwk t 8 rice m about °n°°'should be utilized for meat product ion through poultry On the average the feed necessary to grow birds to maturity will cost quarter- cupfui of milk until well soft- ened, then add remainder of milk. 'Sift other Ingredients- and beat well. Pour on hot griddle and bake until bmw” on bum _,mu four cents 9. pound thus unless the sd . 5,-"4 HW glkn ,poultrymroducer has a special market 6 slices of thick salt bread 1 ess. __ ,' , _ -~~1;~cnptui~ of milk ., ' it teaspconful of salt , The .bread should be about half an inch thick. Beat the egg and milk to- gether and add the salt. Soak the bread in this mixture for about 15 minutes. Then brown on a hot butter- ed griddle or frying pan. Serve with maple syrup or stowed furlt. Crumb Hot Cakes 1 cupful of table breadcbumbs given the fowls. Young cockerels mar keted now as hroilers generally bring an attractive price; then the flock may at once be fed with \a view of eveloping winter-egg producers. _ KIM-M-ILK I8 GOOD FOR CHICKS -According to one Ohio Experiment I 55 °“Pt“l M n°“r ‘gym-;gué;nque“|0ned_ The reason lg 1841, on the. SPM' gelding ROCkl1'lE° brasswood season be saved to feed 1 553 ‘ _` that skim-vm-ilk is a complete food In hl|_1gIl»erl;'h|§lf1 ;Vll1tl;ni;¢;l;-le]l3le;1l:e1§‘:5»F eta? th; bees lnthwil;<;i;).nd gligeplggillgrég in less degree, to the thirteen-frame 4 teupoonmls of baking powder iltfsaillty' ‘ii1igeeci’e1' in lh°i:'jll&§P'-nm *&‘:e(;“‘;;rh‘;§;§ Abbott, Heir at Law, Billy Buck, Dir-v ect Hal. Anvil. Etawsll, Dudle Arch- dale. The Harvester, Napoleon Direct, St. Frisco, 'Single G., Goldie Todd and this year’s babies Molly Knight and Dudette. _ Geers, like his present day rival, 'rl-ls MILK-naar cuss ' A new cur, is being tried for run-, , Egwnthéndlfgyiilgiest It C&:e’,,kn°‘;‘; I Thomegi W. léullipgly, has always had tion ve something from which persons in poor health are giv- an um _ on from two to “gm quarts of mmkl childhood. For forty three, years he du.-. cs--id i;‘::..“'.:l:.“.'::.l.‘;:::.a°.€.“::::? ‘°§.:l l The d°°t°" Wh° is “dV°°“un§ 'this that the arrow ot' his career is point- `°Y°°°m °f "°°*°l`l”S l“‘°k°”'f1°WH lug westward. although lt is still s humanity “V5 that theft! is long way from the horizon, notwith- nothing which so quickly and favorab- Bmndmg ms fan at Syracuse' it can ly U-ff°°t° thi’ bl°°d'9t"°°m as d°°5 be said that Geers will always remem- ' milk' His th"°fY ill *hat 3.11 Per' ber not so much by what he raced as 111811011! IIGIIHBE must 'be H1550 what he did and the manner in which ‘through the blood-stream. and what it was dom, . such persons need is something which? surrounded by ins temptations and will put vitality _arid strength into _ pitfalls which peset the path of those ` 'U19 i)i00d in B. Bh0l't time. .This Will, who repeatedly crogg the hot, bed of hospitals.-H. H. D. he could, Gears won. This is the source of hi popularity and when like “ y for all of us some one will be called upon to select an epitapll to mark his _.._. final resting place, the best selection ' ~ for the granite block would be the GEERS, DOBLE AND MARVIN. words "Georg won," Edward Franklin Geers was born ` ____ three miles from Lebanon, Tenn. Jan. 25 1851 I-Ie is now in his sixty ninth FALL |-ioN.Ev year and making his forty third trip _.i with a stable of trotters and pacers 13,-_ E_ F_ phillips, of the Depart. over the leading tracks of the co_un ment of Agriculture, Waahington, |)_ WY- During that P°"|°d he has “P C., says that bee keepers should give P°*“`°d in “we” before n’°""’ P°°I’19 the bees winter stores of honey tllut than “HY man Wh° “Ve” Ba' in 9' Bulky' was gathered in the summer time and the immber at Charter oak Park .not that brought in the: fall. Unless Hartford, alone being over a million. care is taken the bees Wm get the He has 815° “mn more “ces than any ‘fall honey flow. The reason the fall man that ever followed the profession honey is, not so good is that it hm, in which his name Wm always be a‘ more indigestibie stuff in it and the leader' lhees' intestines -are stuffed with feces _ broug t in e g,l3;le|Ba,l:g;:h;;y Iigflggfnglegxleeayzggg in the winter. He suggests that in h b the old localities where there is such fall and narrow path t at ears l _ if, loney from esters and golden rod bee fashioned mbel'°t integrity By mer lies ers feed the bees ten pounds of fldlinth dthi_y_D auth: rfroilai sid gmlgliieii tlgclrcwzs sugar syrup lu September- The” fuel' fixtures during the balance of their will eu/t this first and not the fall careers. _ honey. If one does this he must take Doble won his iirstpromlnent race oft his honey which he expects to ex- figurs out the 'l-xconomy" when you| lose some few pounds of beeswax: is insurance on your property. Some persons prefer boxing their wax. Wax shipped in boxes usually Sets through all right if the boxes are strong, for it takes a strong box when filled with beeswax to withstand a jolt by some rough freight-handler. Then boxes make excess weight, for which trans- portation charges must be paid, uny- wllcre from 1‘5 to 30 pounds' or over. LARGE AND SMALL HIVE8. The large and the small hive is dis- cussed by Miss Emma Wilson and Frank Pellett in the American Bee Journul. This much is plain-that for those who neglect their bees there is little doubt that tile ten-frame hive is preferable to the eight-frame hive for wintering; but for those who at- tend to supplying their colonies with stores in the f-all (which, it is to be hoped, the great majority of our road ers' do), colonies may be wlntered warmer and cheaper in an eight-frame hive or in a -ten-frame contracted to eight. ‘ ` The points -”Miss Wilson makes, how- ever, ln favor of the lighter supers are very well ciloserl..fShe says that even if the thirteen-frame hive were -piled five high, and the eight-frame eight high, which ,would give the same capacity, it would still be about as -easy to remove the supers from the eight-frame -as from the thirteen- frame; for, though it would beihand- ler to lift the three supers from the high eight-frame hive than thetwo top supers' of the thirteen-frame hive, stlll`this extra work would be offset .by the greater ease in removing the remaining five of the eight-frame sup- ers than the -three of the thirteen- frame supers. In the second place, Miss Wilson thinks that in the ma- jority of cases the supers are not pil- ed es high as this. She further calls attention to the times the brood-cham- ber must be moved to u new stand or down cellar and out again. In these cases, sho says, the lifting is 62% per cent, harder with the large hives than with the small. Last of all, she says ali discussion along this line ls quite _idle for those women who sim- ply can not lift a thirtesn~frame hive at any height. A great many would°not care to fare the deciding factors between easyl ‘and difficult, fast and slow work, audi `every man who intends to do any! amount of hoeing should readjust his* Jule to fit the work. It is a simple mst-i lvl' :iml Mill be dom- by fllrjr .llnndf-'I :null or hm(-_l-:slllilll by first srlunrlilgl fu.; ends ol' the hoe with rt cold chiself und filing :hem as sharp as pcssiblci us well as the face. Then place ,the ft neck of the hoe fn the fire and heat| t until the blade can be bent back till, It will only take s. few minutes to do lt this, but it will save many hours cf' from your shipment. The extra sack lwork as well as the~tiresome task ofi hack-bending to remove weeds or sup- plus plants. ._._._____._-_-- LOCATION OF FARM BUILDINGS- Location of farm buildings is of the greatest importance in saving time and labor. A different problem is pre- sent on different farms, so that ‘Lt is impossible to lay down hard and fast rules for locating farm bllillllngs. Local conditions, such as natural drainage or slope, will affect the _loca- tion tc a great extent. F. A. Meckel. of the University of Missouri College of Agriculturle, gives the following suggestions for the location and ar- rangements for farm buildings: 1. The farm-stead should be con- veniently located with _respect to the fields. 2. The farlnstead should be near an improved road. The barnyards and lots should be welll drained; either by nartural drainage or tiles. 4. Have troughs emptying into drains or cislerns will eliminate mucll mud in barnyards. 5. An exposed hill ig undesirable, but s south slope is to be desired. 6; A timber windbreak will prove valuable on the north andswest of the farm-stead. 7. The buildings should he group- ed around ll central courtyard. 8. The granary should be conven- iefnt to tha barn and hog-houses. 9. A water supply must be avail- nlllc. Running water in house, barns and yard is a_great convenience. 10. Barllyardsshould not face the house or road. 11. The barn and yards should be 150 to 200 feet from the house, and not in the direction of the prevailing winds. ' 12. The house should be set well back from tho road to avoid the dust. 13. The house should command a view of the barn door, the front en- trance from the door, and the central courtyard. GROUND GLASS NOT HARMFUL Experiments recently carried out by the Army Medical Corps have entir-. ely disproven the popular belief that `_ ground glass is harmful -to the diges- tlves tract. Rm ak" l MARKET THE ooclvyi‘iilglecl‘i'itcl3‘lilsn::,i1iilll!io‘i:sb2 :AS avgllty §'€9‘:8y0¥. |16 llll-Vlllg b€€l1‘1;l?i(ilipsr also suggests that a super of ti ted nor its cheapness and born at Tuilytown. 11-. October 10th»`honey filled in the white clover or in regard to the tm,-teen_f,-ame and Lou' aries The former was born in 1839 Cal., on September 3 of this year Af ter laying aside his blue uniform at the close of the Civil War. Marvin lo- cated in Kansas. Very little was heard of ,him in the racing world un- til 187d when he burst upon the east- ern public with Smuggier whose bat- tles with Goldsmith Maid, Judge Ful- were the talk of the .counti'y. I-Iis greatest vic ory was won in the free- for-ail at Cleveland, where he defeat- ‘ed the above field. It was folloged by e. reduction of the stallion re rd to 2.15%, In a race at Hartford. Palo Alto was the scene oi' Mar- vin’s crowning work. At different times while there he reduced all of th world’s record to 8.08% with Sun- suilburst being in 1891 when he cut the two-year-old record with the won- der colt Arion to 2.10%, the stallion record with Palo Alto-to 2.08%, and the world's' record to 2.08% with Sun- ol. They were the last champions started no the high wheel sulky. Man/In’s last masterpiece was Sill- ko, a Kentucky Futurity winner that 'afterwards became champion of Eur- ope. Today he is 'in the public eye as the sire of the three-year-old lilly Reriscope, 2.04%." , While time performances were the stepping stones upon which both Do- ble and Marvin mounted the pedestal of fame, Geers made himself near and Bl\BY’S DWN --'l‘ABl.ll'l`S_- 7` -» 0F ‘GREAT HELP and the use an eight-frame hive at ali; and yet thesessme arguments that hold eight-frame hive will hold nlso, though and the ten-frame. Those who wish to save themselves too much heavy lift- ing, and yet are intertestod in s large brood-chamber may find themselves' quite contented with a two-stony ten- frsme brood-chamber in the spring. lei-ton, Bodine and Lucius colddusoslbls. for the fbosswsx must first be combs, capplngs, etc., exclusive of the honey, dead bees, dirt and other rc- lfuse. It very,often happens that some one sends along a shipment of old combs or cappings and expects to re- ceive credlt for thepentire weight as beeswax. »Such credit is quite -lmPOS- rendered from the capplngs, combs. or whatever it may be, and credit given cn the actual amount of beeswax con- tained therein. Of course, most manu- facturers of foundation are well equip- ped to do the rendering -for the bee- _keepers who do not have equipment ,or who do not cars to do the work; but there must necessarily be com- pensation for such services rendered ,-ordinarily n certain percentage of thebeeswax rendered. The manufact- -urers, may be likened to the mining ‘concerns that produce ore-fthe ore imust first be refined at the smelters before the metal itself can be put to any manufacturing purpose. And it is F- »- -_ - _;_ - . Sage and Sulphur , Darkensihay Hair -I-r'e c`nANoMo'ri-lows nsclrs 'ro assroas cohen, ol..osa AND ATTRACTIVBNBSS 1 ' -_nad . Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound- ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to_the hs-ir ‘when faded, steak- -od or grey. ago the only way -this was to make it trou- My Sul- and at a ilu HOEING PAYS iN CORN AND ROOTS ' The introduction of improved met- hods of agriculture and the use of labor-saving implements in Canada can be dated back to the time this country was captured from the In- dians, and while development has been steady, their use was greatly accentuated by the wnr. Help was scarce and hand labor reduced to the minimum during the past four years, consequently the only alternative was to use machinery wherever possible The success of that change can be judged best by the crops obtained, facturers. in many cases -the substi- tution of implements for hand labor had a beneficial effect,_ largely be- cause the work was done ‘more fre- quently, but there was on every farm, an apparent lack of hand hoeing. It may be all right to plant hoed crops in elevated ridges, check rows and cultivate both ways, but there is nothing that can replace the hand hoe. No horse drawn lnlplement can go as close to the plants, and no lm- plement has as yet been devised that will remove weeds that grow between the plants and keep the ground stir- red except between the rows. But such work is essential If a maximum crop is to be expected; and it cannot be done without more or less hand hoeing. ‘ The work of hoeing may seem very simple, but there is a great "knack" in doing it, in fact there are very few men who are real experts at the job. However, hoeing is not hard -to learn; it requires common sense and patien- ce and cannot be done at "break neck" speed as many people suppose. The best hoers in the world are the men of-the British Isles, and it is most in- teresting to watch them doing the work. Going at It in a systematic way _they work very easily and' cover s. grlot area in a day. work, every with o han They stand sideways to row and by eo They use _right alleles t t-he acute Canada. ends' of them Glass was ground and sifted to sc-; cure varying degrees of flneness andj considerable quantities of the mater-\ lal were incorporated in fresh meat; the same being fcd to hungry dogs._ This was repeated in some instances; on a number of days after which tile' dogs were killed and the digestive tract examined both with the naked eye and by the aid of the microscope and no injury whatever was percep-1 tiblm Before being killed the dogs ap-1 pnrently suffered no inconvenience! .lnfl appeared normal in every way.' I These -findings should eliminate for! .ull time the idea of glass being the cause of death in animals mallciously poisoned.-W. H. Feldman. Colorado Agricultural College. Fort Col1lns,§ Colorado. | HORSE AND TRACTOR ` The breeder 'of good horses has; ant reason to lie awake nights wor- .sc rylng about the future. The only man who has reason to fear the onward march of the farm is the one who is wasting his time srowliis plus horses. l Thousands of farms are horse poor’ with those mediocre animals that a-I market buyer won’t look nt. This fs. the class of horse the tractor is going f to eliminate. lt is the only part of the I horse-breeding industry that the tfac-, tor is going to injure. I In the future the horse and the trac- tor will pull together. They will make ’ a willing team for agriculture. The! tractor will supplement and conserve; horse power and vice versa and the, -combination of horse and mechanical co-operation will mean better farmingf methods and more economical opera-' tion of land. The properly equipped,- farm of tomorrow will employ both I horse and tractor power. The lsnd‘ operator will use the one or the othsrj consistent with his needs and the seas-f ons. - ; The msn who is still frltterlng away V his time and energy growing cheap? horses might as well face the music' The farm tractor will elbow him and his scrubs out of the way. I-Ie should study carefully the “hand writing up- Lived on Biscuits I For Three Months COULDN'T EVEN DRlNK`A CUPOF TEA--,G-UNB THIRTV POUiD8 AFTER TAN!-AG ENDS TROUBLE ` A -The public of today is accustomed 0 strange and unusual occurrences. and the news papers are filled with sensation after sensation from- day o day; but in spite of this the story of Mrs. Wellington Campbell, re- garding her remarkable recovery by the use of Tanlac. would hardly be believed were it not for the high character of Mr. and Mrs. Campbell and the further fact that each and every circumstance can he establish- ed beyond a reasonabl doubt. Mr. Campbell is a retired farmer and rancher. They came from Kings- ton, Ontario, to Calgary just afbel' the great war started and located at 901 13th Avenue, West, where they now reside. Mr. and Mrs. Camp- bell have flve sons, -two of whom mada -the “Supreme Sacrifice. Anoth- er, who was badly wounded, is now working in the office of the Canadian Pacino railroad in Calgary. “I am sl well, happy woman now,” said Mrs. Campbell after completing her remarkable statement “and my husband remarked just the other day that I would not be with him now if it had not been for Tanlac." Following is a recital' of the facts just as Mrs. Campbell relates them: "Ser the beneflit of others I want to-tell how my health has been so wonderfully restored by Tsnlac. My age-for I am now almost seventy- makes it seem all the more wonder- ful. and I hope my statement will be the cause of others finding health and happiness. I had suffered for thirty years or more from stomach trouble and nerve disorders and about s. year ago my health became so bad that I Have up all hope of every getting well. My stomach was in such a bad condition that I could not eat a bite of food for weeks at a time and my nerves were shattered completely. lt is impossible to describe the su.f~ fering I went through and only those afflicted the same way can have much idea. I tried every known treatment at great expense, but the results were always discouraging. For three months I lived entilrely on specially Prepared biscuits and could not even drink a cup of tea. "A.t this time I wag very weak and delicate and Vmy' husband never ex- pected to see me pull through, and a friend visiting us at the time went always believing she would never see me alive again. My husband finally bought me a bottle of Tanlsc. having read cf the splendid results others had gotten fronl it. and the next time he bought ilv,-, bottles. for I found it was correcting my troubles and soothing my -stomach. In a short -tim.;-it had created an appetite for m'e and I be,<"\n to improve rapidly. Well. the result I have obtained from nine bottles ig nothing less than astonishing. There has been thir-tv pounds added to my weight and my health is better -than at any time since my troubles began. A walk down town which is eighteen blocks, is just good exercise for me and when my friend returnedto visit me again H few filly! ago she could hardly believe her own eyes. I feel -that I would be ungrateful not to tell others about Taniac for I consider it the greatest of all medicines." Tanlac is sold In Charlottetown by Iteddin Bros., in Montague by I-I. J. Mahon, in Georgetown by Seymour C. Knight. in Souris by James G. Ferguson and in Kensington by Kler & McFadyen. on the wall"; it will assure him of the ulrofltable days to .come whql -the scrub only exists -In memory. ORGANIC MATTER _-..- Ordinarily one thinks of organic matter in the soil merely in terms of fertility or plant food. To plow under a cover crop represents to one so much organic matter which will undergo decay and in so doing release certain soil elements of value to growing crops. However, .tho physical quali- ities of organic matter are of an im- portance scarcely if any less than the purely chemical or food providing res- ources which centre in It. Organic matter tends to make a eoil dark in color, consequently it absorbs more heat and warms up sooner in spring. This in turn results in more rapifl growth of the bacterial organisms which ply their trade in the upper lay- er of the soil and which are eo neces- sary irl the development of plant grow- th. In addition to this, organic mat- ter makes a soil more porous and con- sequently iucressos its water-holding Cllllaolty. As a result it becomes more resistant to drought. A-ll told, the pur~ eLv physical influence which* secure -uofinli .le1'se.l2 .log 10 em nos eq; of; as t-he result of adding organic matter ance than many people would suppose. boxes of ' Q NOPE! YOU CAN'T FOOL ’EM! é¢...__-an-ng-. 1 _Wllell _Twenty-five Millions Buy “Cascareis" ,They Must be “Just Right” for Liver and Bowels ~ , . W... ,.3 sour, cost ealitjile -5 , . . A rr I, l , t \~ F _ fr 'J 'im . . H-pl I-_'.'_{ . .,.,.4 -5' 9. - a -r;,,_r»¢; ~. - -_ 4-`.~¢ ...Y .~¢ may .., .‘- I. _ _ , __ fi'-'QL 5., -1, ~ 1 ’ , H.; . .»_l _-_'r, .4 .i{_ I .,_ ` . .» 1-. 4* U -pffl _,img l»_ .1 '.‘ `._~ ' 'fm' _ Ju' A ' rel" In _ __,.. , ‘\.. \\. ...= ‘I f lr 4 '-s ,_ ~`,. '-r :': A 1 :- -“.1 c -_ __.' -~ ~»‘.=..‘ - -