-E,._. .asses .___-i-_£23 -\~':~ vi all-. -- li ~'l'!"l l v . r i __ ___ __ __ _-_-ll-fl: _.4 ~ 4 ._ __-_'iii- _Q <-_» ; _ -.__ “ii i* rn'-' fi _ff- i.-_» 1,3, - .,_ _ _ lv-_di-_¢f1f 5 _llflv .H _ _ __ "_,& -- infix ' . ,__ _ - '\.'. 25.7. gs.. ‘ ffl J ,na . fel? gil if .ge 'lil il " E "i 9: . ;` ' .:f_wi~z enaanian mi D. iw- e FEBRUARY 6, vii# _ E - _---_ _ _ - .__- .e - - e ,_ .__ ._ __ ,_ _,__ _...__ _ . - ‘ ‘ THE MA AZlNE GUARDMN For Parents. Pupils. Teachers. _ _ _ _ _ __ F arntei-5, Dairiymen.;Horsem_e_13 A ,N and aghen intgl-"nd "1, Raspberry tart made of freshly _ N0- °l lll°°m° b |,:::re: to couu-mug, to fp;-,, Fm-m_ gathered fruit may be among the E‘l‘l°“l-1°” _ Flll`“l°l'° 1ll°0m¢ eaten in any consideration amounts The ])uiry_ Th, Tum and Gocd sweets on the Christmas dinner table A"*°lld°_‘l ‘ll°ll"l°¢ 3 ‘ it anad. department. of tha Guardian for the “rn tune in memory in som” 861100 .__ 98 $318 gr” either by question. correspondence oi- south of England homes. Mr. Walte.‘_A"~¢!l\l°d |1l¢_ll °°ll°°l 155 522 _market - otherwise. Answers will be given by S8128 at Hllitings ll” llllllcd Olmflllfi Mgr’ qw” h gh' ‘ experts to all questions of general H DB1! Pin” Of Ville Nm” ill ¢h\’°¢ mgll °°h°°l l’ "°"'ll lll°"° tha” interest and space will be 'given to weeks, and his experience has heen_lll1 1U"¢Sfl1l€l1t Of $5.000 ill UV8 Der any article. that win iu any way shared by other people. °°°*~ l>°”‘l°- We ‘l° 11°' l““’° ll¥“'°° help to advance Prince Edward ls- Blackberries, both wild and culti- land interests. vated, are still in flower and fruit _to- gether in some places, and the ber- Contribufors are asked to have ries are remarkably large and full their articles at this omce early each flavored. Quite a crop of good fruit week, as only a short emergency is to be gathered even in East Ang- item can be handled as late as one lian lanes, while farther south the p.m. Wednesday. All received after berries are abundant. Almost every- that hour cannot appear until the_ body who has a strawberry bed is following week. eeeeoooeooeeeeseeoee - . . .;»,».,»;»:».;»;»:..;..:..:..3 ,R THE SCHO0L MID THE HOME »°°Z°°I°°Z~*Z*°Z*°I°°I°°2~3°‘!°~Z°'!°°!°°$°°!°°2~Z~Z°°. -_- {Dlf¥'gf0“"<1__i'1 Wlll°ll _[alley 3:” l;_l“_l;l -"-‘*"“-””'“ to er one can et a room of nr been too maturc at the time of hu. crimination in feeding, apportioningl ac The Journal rc t bl* 01' 0'- el' “mes E 0 el' ll “ear 5 ‘ ng the sum ,.es,,m,,g in moldy _,___ the gi-um auuordiug to the yield of average of flve dollars and seventy _ _nine cents which was the average 13_ Cow testing emphasizes the yield per acre cultivated including .iou. due eiiher to the method of nu- benefit of iinernlity in feedins sueen- P“°*“’° ¢l"°“ °lll°l“ll’ 8° ll” “"°l" ( . of Agi ul ure und] g ~ Horticulture) _acre should be devoted to a school _.we Should so live and labor in'served a little spac; for ii l_t_iddies' ___ _%_ our time, that what Comes to us as Pl3ygr°l_llld» Where t ey llflay *_* Pro' . . » » »,,» » » » ."3 ETB seed may go to the next generation vl'~`l“d Wltll B sand heal? lll Wlllcll to °'°°:°';”:°°"°':“:”°”;":“:”°°°:°°‘°°° ’”‘“‘°°>°'"' °° ly _ as b10ss0m§_ and that which comes to _amuse themselves. The school should THE WINTER TONIC foolish to expect ‘Eggs €\Ellf- t_° llwelvf us as blossoms, may go to it as (min _be the local beauty spot of the sect- FOR THE BENQ days old to hatch out a_ satisfactory This is _,__ha, we mean by p,.0g,_esB_.._ioi1_. _ _ ` _percentage of chicks. while eggs fron. Respect for labor and the value of lflldel the direction _of Prof. S_. B. .__ stock bll"dB kept ill Small Pell” are h,_nd___,,,_ _,___ ,,,,_.er have me place McCready, _the teaching of agricul- __ -_even worse. Cross bred eggs, as L they should have in the Opinion of ture in public schools is fast gaining A f€W YBGYB 880 f-here W8-B VSFY lt- ru] chilflrcn and people until what are lzfagwax' Q; l)°=_m'eF 0"? __by_Pr°f'1_t1ev_h.;atx; a£)u0tu';__§ree:x;(;3_.‘; [Cir éorgz Of DUT9 breeds- Tl`l9~°lll¢k5 SW sl-l"-“S k_ _ ..-»» - ., .creay csc oo o te uture‘lll 'I . lll 11 _ g,p_.C::;nt§§ 32;,L_§';2,2,ne,fé1eb;lf_cl;h0‘;?; will be a local experimental farm in _ been follllfl that fi lllleml l`“tl°“ Pl Zhell, while fertility is always more as me cgiyural sub]-ect5_ .a simple but effective way; it will in-'Si\CC\1leilt f00d tends to maintain sati,,'acto,.y_ ee oo,wgoo.»°e¢,oo.~o,¢¢.»o.e¢.».»e.»o.eo.»o.o¢_oo.e¢.e:z_ _ O .’.~:~:~:~,-:»-:~:»»:~:-:- CD F’ ‘discovering bloom on the plants. A Bracknell (Berkshire) reader has sent us ii. list of forty-eight different summer :lowers which have just been gathered in a igarden which “lies -high, is bleak, and has a cold clay leysuckle, and hollybocks_-Eng. pap- farm and garden. Somewhere is re wwwm :wi__u¢;___nv__ug ii; ai;u~».. _Emu sleeve* ‘mn *>°Y°“‘l ll" °i°'"`°f °°'1°°i-,lgu_;..___ ' ~ ree rn am” ar yester y and _ua opped up une, ._ § To ‘nz FARMER rg an egg lying on the grass climbed the ll¢lB"°° 01 E‘l“°‘lll°ll °° l-‘ll`l’°l' Il1'_ Dwarf ‘llhsex rape is an - I come. $7' F r - *¢;»q.¢..;..g..¢..¢..;..°_,.;..g,.;..;..¢,,;,,:,¢,:,,»__:,,__ t;;;__a;iélg_:o_\:_ud__a starlings nest with ‘ 4 ln' gsouree of green food for poultry, but for a large number of college men, mated from the census figures that lsoil_" The list includes fucbBias.hon-'the average 13501' il1°0!!l° f01` all 3° farms in the United States is $318.22, MODEL COUNTRY SCHOOL table for 398 farmers in a New York.-tem county t '”`“ Th' 1 h w th t the high school im ~ - _ _ - - (The Journal of Agriculture and I-lor-_ _md 'shes Galaga place B man abD_,e_rect temperature under varying elim ducing colic, sconrs, and other 41593. the total yield of milk and flat from of Contributions for this department tl°“ll‘"`°') [the average in his earning capacityfg; slionid hc addressed to _ on the farm. If his advantage in] . -_ ~. . A -11 h 1 <1 in mimu- - most any room. but they si" Bef {"l»drdmw 3615001 "'nd.H0me lture Iwosea Sfiealtfiregglusitgrest at thfgreater pleasure am? appreciation isfactory results only When every- 1.0. Box ho. 116, Charlottetown. ll _ _ _ _ _could be measured in dollars and _ _ _ r ‘ OO ODOOQOUOQOIOQO _.steep»,»:e¢,oo,n,»,»,.e»,»,oo.oo_oo.oe,»~.»~.o~_e 3 ego d THE FARM ~° oe:oo:e °b 3?: 3. George MacdO,,a1d_ that WN," of troduce new varieties of field crops health and vigor of all the_ birds and wise and beautiful _“nga _,aim ...The and test methods of cultivation increase the egg D1`0d_\1‘?t10ll Df the day Wm ¢(,mc_a,,d may I do Some__througb the children’s school farm;llaying hens. To be entirely satisfac- thing to help it hither~when the,it will be the local beauty spot with tory this class of food must be pro- youth ,__ our country will ,,ecogmze.neat fences, well-kept buildings, law- duced at small cost. At the_ Maine ML D_ F_ Laurie, of the Depart- ,h_,t_ tasen in _,sem it is more :_1_s_an_d flowerdbeds; i_t wigl be_ the _l_¢_>- Staiion seve_ra1yf;i;_rs_fi_§_e§Per_menta___ ment of Agriculture of South Aug. _ v ._ B ,_ - P8Ygr0un , no ony or e wor have s own a e ows mee ti-3 sxfleigdl Q clllrloi-teh ;;iuO;1’;'~ lnthgg; "lf children but for the grown-ups; it something besides succulence in their poultry took Argas persicus, suer follow 3 good handicraft __ _t‘m__ke_w‘1ll be the_ local centre for social so-called green food. Thcy m\‘ie 8 family lxodoidea, family Argasidsc) _he hands black as wa] than ` to gatherings; its library will serve ev- distinction between s succulent foci- was produced in South Australia spend _he day _n keeping ' hooks and _eryone with books, magazines, bullet- der and ii “green food" in the strict_fro making up __cc__un_s_,, Not but that _ins and _reports that concern_ them- sense. Succulence may be supplied in,the ________ __ ___g______ _________ ___ _________ s_____-_selves with the farm work_ in home the form of root crops, such as_of _ _ an work Bet bv God and done divine; and lleld “S Well “B Wlfh l1t¢l'f1l'Y mangels, but a-careful consideration_chouxi (the caustlve agent of tick ly is of equa1'h0nm- but when were matters' _ _ of the case has made it apparent fever.) Goodresults against tick fev- is 1 choice I would 'glam Eee a bo l .ID the sclloolwork It wlll not c0ll` that the fundamental need Of tlleler I » ' y y “ld” examlnatlon as the ll°'8ll and fowls is not for succulence as such bu 'l' "Une °l°°°S° falll" *° be H l’l“°l“ end un of its effort- it win not chest - - l ' h ' _ smith than a clerk. Production mak- ' but rather for the tonic effect which opinion of t e writer, is the eradlcst » the many for the sake of preparing u ~ md” ed b teen plant l-obgmu ing, are higher things in _the scale few for advanced work ~ h- h ls D 0 .y g B' P l . . - , _ lll fl lg 01' 1 rimaril because of the res-‘fic fl( ;';M»l,:y th§néel§§§n°ulIl:slf;n'b s~\_|1chls?h°°l' lt Wm renlemll" lllllt "l°”"f :fled ol) chloroghyll. In feeding fldwls he Efssileryltog did] ho stgwork nem €s'mme at sch°°1’. and 8 long time at f0l‘ high-egg PFOGUCUOD it is llecelf ll" __=*__ ______ ____ ______f;_€____ The ____§1____ ______f_> of the pupils will have only_a short sary that they he given 8 mtiou ri¢u,The ticks are destroyed by one min- or Y___ ___________ ____ _________ who ____ ________wor|§, and it will make its instruct- in Dr0tem_ only fowls of su-Dug ¢°n._ute's immersion in this liquid; for es; unde, 'me' greater d,,~f_c_,_ty,.. lrhgge t§l_§°‘l“,__t_‘_’f_lll_‘§___‘f'_°’l";’ _‘$0 iiuusiion una with thoroughly sounulnrsetlcnl purposes. the s ra in and ' - - ' . _ fl 0 ° ° ' e s can handle the 9" _ In th_e preface to his First Lesson scholar; it will try to keep the boy glgest_11_ve.n sygtltigns carry,” meamthis emulsion has proved efficacious. in Agriculture. written for the On- who is not clever in h ii t d‘ ea" al" g g Oi tario Public Schools in 1870, Dr. Eg-fschool and to d __ 0'? S u les at scrn.il_f1nd oil meal, which are nowl crton Ryerson says: fpractical activiftidl-icaine 3113, _t:r;’_l:_§§_l so widely used bypoultrymen, for :hhmh serve as shelters t0 *ll* l-l°l‘9- .-identitied as I am by birth and at h0me_ in handung tools: ___ __xp_____ egg Production with successful re. early education with the agricultural iences in Nature‘s Workshop no less -sults` on these heavy -:anions were D0lJlilflti011 Of this COUHYTY. I regret than by learning from books; it will is 8 tenqency. f°r.th° bugs “vers ts to see so many of our agricultural_brlng the fathers and mothers back b-ecome ‘mpmred m mrctmn' and ul' 'l‘l youths leave the noblest of eartbly_to school again in using the daily timately to become en arged and dis. cmployments, and the most iude-_home interests as the means of edu- Egsfgtlis $1?-Eumgllgtteilonhtli tvfddldtusd- pendent or social .pursuits for cation of their children. pear that one 0, the chie, tunctiqns ___T the warehouse, and even for petty _mt Of gfoen f00l'0D€i"ly at- Poultry “cts prlmllrlly lathe? as ll D may prompt to the ,mme course ,___ tended to this is a matter which will mild tonic than as a food_in thech regard to some farmers’ sons; and a _regulate itself. It is not easy to guy proper sense. There seems to be lit-iw, divine call may select from the farm, -lllS_f 110W much sleep a person rc- 'C16 Of this ¢0“i° ¢fl¢¢t l>l'0d\lC€d Prom V, as well as from the shops and col- ‘lU11'€B, as the growth is going oh_ succulent non-gffell |0009 Ulm mimg- im lege, for a divine vocation; but that, and 19580119 aswell, the youngéshould CIS- ' gh as a general rule, the sons of farm- llll_"@ all f-he 911521’ they desire. Many The Dl'f1CticBl lil'0l1l¢l11 tllell b¢°°m99 co ers, as soon as they begin to he children do not get nearly enough, to devise a system which shall insure ca educated, leave the farm is a mis- They Bit up late over homework, or a supillv of green f00d lOl' the birds ,na fortune to the parties themselves, u go out too much to enf.ertain1nents,‘ at all seasons of the year. The fol- nt ions to agriculture, and tu the couu- Or they are made to get up lowing system of rotation in the me try. A boy's leaving the farm bu. far too early to do some work before green food supply has been in use| ' cause he has or is acquiring a good going to school. Ten hours or even for several years _on the poultry education is an assumption oi' ad. rather more is not too much for the plant at the Maine Station with sat- misslon by all consenting parties, Bl"°WlDg b0y or girl. The adult isfactory l`€HUl¢B- If Bl10“ld be Said that the farmer does not need such 9h0\lld g0flei`8l‘ly get eight hours, that, owing to the small M68 of uu eduuutiuu und as long as this is fl10Ug'fl some people keep wen qu ground available for the poultry admitted by farmers not being edu. less. It will sometimes be found that work at the Station in relation to_“ cated, agriculture will be looked on occasion a desire for sleep makes the number of birds it is ne¢essal‘Y-to_;; down upon, iuugeud of being iouked itself insfstently felt several hours Ib. carry, green food must be added to up go, ug u pursuit for educated men fore the usual time for retiring Wheh| the ration practically throughout the 5° _ _ _ _ But let the boy be educated this is the case the best thing is to year, not only for the adult fowls_ 5"* tu make him a better farmer, as well yield and go.to bed. It will generally in the laying houses, but also forthe °Wll 5"* "ell if the shop is Just as a better citizen; let it be assum- be found that the hour of awakingh; flocks growing on the rB\lS¢- B°glil- ac ed, and become a recognized fact. not earlier than usual, thus proving ning in the early fall when the pul- ‘ll 1,. that a farmer as a lawyer, doctor,or that the body or possibly the mind lets are put in the laying house they ‘lg clergyman must he educated as ii was reuny in want oi rest. Luck ui are slven green corn fodder cut me ll lil master of his work, and agriculture sleep is much better made up at the in a fodder cutter. Btalks, leaves and bu will hold a rank equal to, ii not beginning than at the end, but -hu. ears are cut together in pieces aver- 3° above. that of law or medicine _ _ _ turnlly this cannot always be done. aging Bbollt 0ll¢°llfllf lll°ll ill lilllglfh- "l°m°“t'° W°l`k~ Oth" "°l'* ls l'B°‘ I know it may be said bY S0l'1l'€. those very fathers will beat witness VALUE T0 FARMERS? yet been able to find. Its usefulness Bl' that they would have done and felt -_ is limited only by the season within H0 much better had they been educated (The Journal of Agriculture aildftlor- which it fs possible to get it. The ll Besides, the soil was then new and ticulture) fwdiug 01 cm-u fodder is mu-uuuud a more productive, and the mode of cultivating it most simple; but the HOW molly 8 youth says! "I the corn can no longer be used cab- 6° culture of the soil, the growing of l\BV¢ll’i tlmv to S0 to school.” How bags is fed. The supply- of this ll! crops, the raising of stock, and the many a father has thought the same lasts through December. In the event 0* business transactions and social re- thing. Haven't time to go to school? of the guppiy 0|. uhhh" (smug 1,9. wo lations of the farmer are very differ- Let us figure on this a little and fore it is desirable to start tha out _ot ent now from vhllt U10! '"0 in °°°- sprouter. which has previously been Ch former years. Pl‘0f°Bl0l' Worrell. 0| Cornell Uni- described in these columns, the in- |10 The ilrst and great staple interest Vefiity, ill hi! h0<-‘K 011 Fbfm Mull' terval is filled out by the use of 1° of Gul’ 00'll1l¢l'! f°~:~:-~:»:~:»-:~:». °»-¢~‘ :»»>»:» :~:»1;» Horticulture) te This means certainty in dairying; ed oth in re reall silo; or (5) failure on the part of the <1 of one who is in any way careless.- ll’ treatment, this includes rfiguhintya ` Y Y 8 _ airy cows the best of care and kind -‘"5 The herd will average up better if feed time in getting horses accustomed to $0 mlllllngr “ally Bl-“bllllg lll tll the poor cows are weeded out' no all, protection from wld rains you know for certain which they are? fed continuously on dry feed for a _l’Pl`ll"lll€ to l’l`°t°°t fl'°lll llle “W1 Yo considerable time. Great care and 5 'udgment should, therefore, be used` in feeding silage to horses and it 1' th” stable' lg.; 15. Cow testing demonstrates that d any good cows can be kept at a B u can easily detect them is you _ 51 bove all, particular attention to ke” 'ewrds °“ ,mms supplied H” eanliness, light and ventilation in Hy the dairy division, Ottawa. State your letter if you want forms for ighing every day, or only on three ys per month. Is there any good anon why your cows should not C. C. Palmer, Minnesota University. :maller cost' °l feed' Tllls not re tinginess, but economy. 2? .~ ld t_ 2. _i_1_;ore observant of all those little d - abou no '~°_ ' 2. !»v._ . ‘~. .~ ~ ___ of ll’I’he Journal of Agriculture and _ ersge at least six thousand pounds milk? Many men are getting this and more, but they don't do it until THE DAIRYMAN HIMSELF they keep ~secords and know which 16_ Keeping records makes ______\ cows should he kept and which e ils that go ,to make up success. 17. Because cow testing develops SIZE AND L____AYING POWER" associations are becomld far bet the,” ls no deanne “egg type mmm; te, dai,,ymen_ g ` iowlr, though from time to time I - _ 1 _ _ many writers have claimed that a de- 8 There is 8 great stimulus re finite type as fixed b themselves was ceived from compar ng notes and re- _' _ y From correspondence with memlbersvsu of cow testing associations the fol-l has tried various measures, and lowing good reasons why every deity uf armer should commence and continue gl ° '“f;l_'_ e er ll en 0" osene emulsion is the best remedy. U19 Syst-em. have been Clfliflilled- mga Neighboring ,,,_.,,.,,,,s who m,__led in breeding work ulong lines ol iu- INDIVIDUAL Cows ginany sconed at the idea 0, cow creased cgg production, admit that ----»»---~ |5123” °.‘1':2.“.‘;';‘:: 2.‘;:.f:.;”:.r‘..‘:;°“.‘.‘:° 2;, ethlzufgwgne;'o,,BE,l:_!:;“';3ri__;';f tario Agricultural College, and Dr. ._. th ___ tt ' tt ti and get lieari of the Maine Experiment Bia- re m, tion both of whom have been engag- sting have become impressed with dlp” is no and type which bm" “ 1. Cow testing enables one to find the results obtained by members. ~‘lll`e“l' relation t° egg yield- Tl" l`°' out the poorest cows, those not g t m sure or personal __ paying for their feed, so that they satisfaction results from studying 9_e"”l°”° °°nd“°l°°‘,l lll 'A“°"“ll"'- may bil gotten rid of. leach cow as an individual performer, b'”l3l‘“"‘l “Ml Al”°_r‘°°' “lm” ll° .°'l‘l' Ill llllllly 08906 one-quarter of the not as a mere machine. |°'l°° ‘,’l l`°l'll'l°ll"llll’ l’elw°°ll_t7P° “llll ows in the herd have been discovered' 22. Cow testing increases one's “gg Yleld- to he not worth keeping, in some lo g s, 1 _ ases half the herd and even as high nnitely more pleasure in the work of has °"'“" that lf-ellllllll l° “l'“lld“l`lz°‘l ~lF. (JHEAPEST as threrquarters have been turned the farm. lfowls have been am°l1Z the \l°BViHll out. _ | za. The definite knuwleuve obtain-_levers and more recently it line been 21_ A nm ea suits of the numerous egg Laying com ve for ood cow and creates ~,,_' in America the general conception from the regular monthly testing _UPS ‘ll bl' all'-ll°l`ltl°l" lllllf l’l'°¢ll°l`° 'no more guesswork as to individual is much more satisfactory in every_f`l1°l‘ld i1V0id USU!!! _imlill hell! ill H-formance, ‘Way than getting B9 occaaioual re, breeding for increased e roduc 2. Cow testing shows that many_sult only once or twice a year. nws considered only average are 24. Financially. cow testing is of he best in the herd. _very great benefit; young bulls sell 3. Gow testing points out dednite- for higher pr ces. Cows sell for dou- h cows are best producers, ble the old prices when buyers see milk and butter~fat. ' records. 4. (low testing proves that many' 25. Cow testing not only interests nsldered the highest in test the bovs and girls more and more in y the lowest. farm life, but materially assists in 5. Cow testing saves rnr>.l con,-5 providing additional home comforts ng becfed; they are found to_for the women and children.-Ex-_ S8 D ' tion. One reason, though not the niuior one of the general advice a- gainst breeding from small fowls was to avoid impairing thr constitutional vigor and vitality of the laying stool.. Contrary to this general theory, however, Mr. G. A. Palmer, in "'l‘be' u_rmer and Stock Breeder," con- ' Continued ou page eight. _ terial-not excluding eat moss DUPPOBCB. T THE FARM WORK SHOP There are but few farms on which workshop is not needed, for there io auo dn znd 01 ou: .ioi Apnsq n CON will c fcmpe Kidne _..__...._. l.=:___ ‘Q ORSEMEN ATTENTION! DR. J. WOODBURY’S HORSE LINIMENT and DR. J. WOODBURY’S DITION POWDERS will save and preserve the life of your horses.Their use ure and prevent the disease common to horses, such as Cough, Colds, Dis- r, Glanders, Spavins, Pink Eye, Splints, Curbs, Enlargements, Cracked Hoof, y Trouble, Fevers, Cuts, Sores and will remove bunches of all kinds. -_ __ lg `?‘?r\ ___.»_ _ Y. ac smith shop is too . ca een year and this was only part of until the frost kills the planes when what I val out- My time wal Worth mething. I have sent to a shop arly a. mile away and found that hers were before me so that my rk could be done that day. An- _ her trip hun; quy gud my mu. when you can get a reliable and fnes must stand idle. No matter w simple the break or how easy mend, we must go to the shop if are not llrellared to do it _ en if we have an outht it D ily the same. With a farm shop, hired man can do most of the rk on rainy days, under your eup- SU high as twenty dollars AFTER USING Why have a sick or lame horse warranted remedy? The leading horsemen of the Dominion endorse Dr. J. W.oodbury‘s Horse Lini l‘°'“° ment. home can dx it or have to suit selves which ls the ,,,;=--= ~°,,,~;, ,_,,, 'gi For 'Sale all _Dealers ' “‘“'° "°`1’l;`~;', .Price 25 cents H ._ ; _ ~ ...m_ _._; . l I 1 . l ofa-' _ ..‘._,. .. ____ _ _ . _ ~i,_ Jr fJ.vv0uB _ across uslsc _ ,ma Huis, 'quell UAIAAA- llkfwrscruilci _ ll1omf0__f__., -___ ag _ ;. ..,.-. l l _ miss oivviiiuir iii A fiuhm2§fyiua¢u¢ ii offs ~ ` Do _von know that "Dr. J.Wood bury's` Horse Lluiment" is endors ed by all the leading horsemen of the Dominion. Sgvg and prgggfvg the life of your horses byfitsuse. It will cure and prevent disease common among horses. ~ nuiiiua in-. J; W°°db\ll'y’9 f f