1 < /`--, ._ 1-' _',- if % .__, _ rifle ‘__ _1.l’_( '_\.'\ V* I .`_/_ --'rj ‘ .. (_ -4.. \'|>~l*§_ __ _ _.A- -1 _ 5.'_ TH ur _ 'iff `.i-: _'rw “_ it 111,. _ do _ _,_ P. ‘ .i _ 1 __ Y _ ' if -r ._ » L- _ _ _ 1 ..., A-oazlu E o :paula .L-f. _ -1, ---y\- 4 ___ 10,1111: raluiuis Farmers and others interested are invited to contribute to_ The Farm, The Dairy- 'l‘he'_' Turf, and Good Roads departments of The Guardian either by question, correspondence ni- otberwise, Answers will be given by experts to _ell _ questions of general interest and spade will be given en any arti_ele_s__ that will _in any way heli1_;to;_,g'd7a_i1_ee Prince Edward Is- land,ii\§0r_elts. ~ ._ _- _ tponirihiltors are asked to heve th_t'ilr,'-e_rtlcles at this office early each w8_e'_k»'_ FF. 'i_>i\ly_ a short emergency item cdn'lie,handled as late as one p.m. Wednesday. All received alter thatholiv cannot appear until the iol_1owing,_WQ¢l;__; _' THE Sli-li-_l)00L - THE HOME Contributions for this department should be addressed to _ “fl-~H°il1° Department will weiecnus contributions from -teachers espn. rents and will gladly publish enen M are suitable. The only condition de- miinded is that the article; 1,9 no published besides being brief and to "M P0"-lt. lD.\lBt be optimistic and en- L'0ili‘Bging and must seek to raise the Blllllcct of school improvement 'from U11! Plano of vogue discontent .ind P091! fnulifflnding to that ol helpful Sll¢K0eti0u and practical remedy. Ywnz and inexperienced teachers, in their school diiilcultles and perplexi- tws- “WY seek and obtain through _lille Department, the advice and ns- sistaace ol those who are older and more experienced than themselves. All teachers may use`it for the ex- 600080 of opinions on matters oi B°l100l Dmnugement, discipline. and methods- of teaching. Everybody in- terested in the improvement of edu- cational conditions is cordially invit- ed to contribute to its growing suc- cess. Let me but do my work from day to dey 's - ' In held or forest, at the desk or loom, In roaring market place or tranquil rooin; Let me but find it in my heart to WY. _ when 'vngrant wishes beckon me astray, -"This is my work-my blessing, not my doom; Of all who live, I am the only one by whom _ _ This work can best be done, in the Hrht-_ ive is in renllty ins'-ing to ron .thc cow oi one ol the miie important elements of her food supply; ' ' “Ni” '-i-hinge have. beeuvtalked about written about, and depos- strated times without number. yet l`lKht» in this old dairy section, we “W9 Iiassed lots of new barns the present summer without an adequate uysteni ol ventilation. 'rhe reason for this is_ that these farmers are keeping cows without realising the value oi l'lii‘e‘air. They will pile up the food and _drink and let their cows poison themselves with foal sir.. and sueb men really call themselves dairymen. li=_il_'nlti1ost painful to contemplate the rank injustice they indict upon their: cows-and themselves, yet. sub- limcly unconscious of it all, spending money -to build expensive stables with no knowledge that the oxygen which God gives freely is one oi the most important foods the cow con- sumes.-Hoard's Dnirylnan. O 0 S Som; caws will not produce more than 100 lbs. of butter iatln a year, and there are others that have pro- duced 1,000 lbs. oi fat in the same r e r length oi time. With butter fat at 30 cents a pound the 100 lb. co ld y an ie other one would pro duce $300 worth. -____-ii pernturc in stunning bodily in his own "incl-uecaliii to his credit then any ' other horse in Canada. _ __ _ 0 v 9 _ Therefore at present ave Bingen stnllions in the drst ,ur second gener- ation in,thls province, viz., Commo- ,doro Ledyerd, Bottom 2.2ii}, Mayor Todd, Catqlon, gud Aquiri 2.275. This makes tll91Bingen -the predomin- lt is rcurarkably productive of speed. O U O The ice meets are about over and before we know it we will be watch- ing the workouts on the track. This should be by long odds the most ex- citing season for' years. O I C _ There never has been ii year when speed was at such a premium as this year. The br_eeding oi speed in the next few years will surely be a good investment. The horse was never so ilrmly entrenched as new and the wise stock-owner who anticipates the de- mands of the future by breeding along speed lines will be rewarded. s 8 0 Those of us who love to see Father Time bested, would have been delight- ed ii Shadow Chimes 2.05}, the hand- some pacer owned by W. F. Robins ol W WOU this city, could have been lnlrned ll oduce d$3ilJ worth of butter int in a loose on the speedway against the ar t ' - watch. He would have given a min- ute s close shave. U U I Through the energy of F. R. New- som of The Guardian a full report oi j THE ' the Hotel Victoria Ice Races was President Teachers’ Assoc`at`on right way " ` ' ' ,sent to the Associated Press and by 1 1 - _ _ \ them flashed all over America. It is Guardian School n Then sh e » 5 n d Home all Ls e it not too great nor _ th B. ,_ ti 1 ~ i h _ P. O. Box P58. Charlottetolvn. small ‘ HAMA” S WEEKLY 8 ls me D our we me ng is (Specially Selected.) The study of geography, small as is the part allotcd to it in actual teaching, is one which must occupy a foremost place in any rational sys- tem ofprlmary education. When pre- judices have passed- away-as they must pass before a. truer conception ol the -growth of it chi1d's mind, and of the laws which govern that growth -the test of right teaching will be found in tho correspondence of our iiistrllction with thc development ol intellectual activity in those whom we instruct. The starting-point of education will be the child‘s iirst question. And the child’siirst ques- tion is about the material world in which it finds itself. So long as every sight and every sound is an object of wonder, and of the curiosity that comes of wonder, life will be e. mere string of "Whats" and “Whys." With an amusing belief in the omnlscicucc ni his elders, the child asks why tile 11\oon changes and what are the stars. why the river runs and whore the road goes to, why the hills are so high and what is beyond them. To answer these questions as they should -be answer_`ed ‘ is to teach the little questioner geography. Each of the divisions into which geography breaks 'does its. .part in _his. i:raining,..' as the picture of the earth in which he lives grows into distinctncss before him. He may never hour of physiogrnphy, but he learns in simple outline what are the forces that tell through llcat and cold, or wind or rain, on thc form of the earth, and make it the earth we seo. The name of Physical Geography may nevcr reach him, but he gets a notion of what the ciirt\l’s form actually is, of the distribution of land and sea, of mountain and plain over its surface, oi the relative position of continents and of coun- tries. of the "wily" rivers rllu and the "where" roads run to. As the structure of the world thus becomes distinct to the child he sees why races have settled, why nations lie within their boundaries, why armies have marched out and battles have been fought, why commerce has tak- en one ro_ad or another over sea and lnnd, and thus gathers his historical geography without knowing it. So as he watches how mountains divide men or rivers draw them together, how hill-line and water-parting be- come bounds of province and shire, how the town grows up by the stream and the port by the harbor-mouth, the boy lays the foundation of his political geography, though he never secs a “table of counties," or learns by rote a "list of populations.” Studied in such a fashion as this, geography would furnish a ground- work_for all other instruction. It is in fact the natural starting-point for all subjects of later training. His- tory 'strikes its roots in geography; for without s. clear and vivid realiza- tion bf the physical structure -of a country the incidents of the life which men have lived in it can have no ln- terest or meaning. Through history again- politics strike their roots in geography, and many a rash general- ization would.have been avoided had political thinkers been trained in a knowledge ol the earth they live in, nnd.o_i.,the influence, which its vary- ing structure must needs exert on the varying political tendencies and insti- tutions ofthe peoples 'who Part -it! empire betw_een.them_ Nor are-his- tory or politics the only studies which start naturally from- such a ground-week", Physical science will claim every day a larger share in our teaching; and science finds its natur- al starting-p_oint in_ that acquaint- ance with primary Dliyllili Wlmh °“` ablesta ehlldgto know how earth and the fori11s="oi'earth_ came to be what th__ey.‘M'e.» ' _ _ _- _ _ - -‘_ 1'- -*" _ ‘ ‘ u'I-In PURBQSIE or ' ` .,T_H,IS DEPARTMENT., -. 1 :.'\-'*-.-v.“""‘!'°“~- . ~ The 'G' didn,-Behool_ nnd_I-1ome_lle_- psrtineii?-'§»liiif"'ereiied snafiswelngf conducted for the benent oi parents., teachers a_nd__._,others interested ill 01° rhanageiimnitahd work of our schools ana in,_tne__ senmltrainins 0! 01° yentn nf _en,is_,P1-ovince._ fit sims to awaken,a'keene`1"P\1b14° }\“"“t nf educational gbiems. end. b!,Q!°fd'_ ihk the 'li0&i' through Which -P825 rents -‘and teachers can learn each. othilrfs, viewe‘-oneducation matters. it aims to bring the. school and the \ieine.intc_u'“1 “ff At eventide, to play and love and is needed in the way of repairs. This time to let the local agent know, so _ 8 O O In the district where the beef rais- ing lndustry is suitable, select large, roomy Bhorthorn cows, that will give a fair amount of milk] as well as feed s_1;nal.l, undersiggd steers. Dairy whilst the intestines carry twice the ll there are three things a cow lives on ` ,.. ,'._ _,v _ _. ' ._ ' Muskrats are in poor demand ani -$10.75 400. N0. 2, 6.25- _ _ _ Red Fox-N0. 1, $11.00-5.00. No. 2 6.00-4.50. No. 3. 2.50-1.50. No. 4. 1.00-.25. ` Muskrats, N. S.,' P. E. I., N. B.- Spting .R5-.3. Winter .75-.30. Fai L1 Beaver Casters, $13.00-9.00. Blui Everyone will have n speedway racei if theexcitement keeps up What s given t e orse overs. : O O O in his sixty-sixth year, will be Cui '- ._ .‘ - ~` '_ ‘ _--food, water and air; that she will again on the big line behind a good _ Thgmi gilnie.-6nli»5;x3n “vhs trotting __ _die the most quickly if the air is string. _ . _ rgmluom w‘“_,t&,,_d.» M10' L05 and a -,taken from her; that the life-giviiis '-_ - __N_“_ _,our of them "B owmd in Em_,_,pe_ l '~"""°m°”t 'in um Mr is tm oxygmi mm dis`pp°l°tm°'tt"w°:\le;l1tnerliece ion _s euoreeceiu- 20%. Biiini ‘ ...... B :l fg“,'§,¥(l1l;1Pnlgi\»xd :dT:ic;;n"fH¢1:°:,h;; ;idcs(;;:',:l;.es iligemyfeskf) 'rllie ice was, lpurrei mi. i\I_1d_`f_ _ D.-n of /ilcluyuitn 2; ee1~4. nigaiylizgiangallambcrt mg' llonmel her to breathe her supply of however, too dansewlll ‘9 ‘“°;‘;‘i’ S»mnal’d“1,,,R,,§.,‘_ _°l_ -L5" :$14 ‘$5 _ __ __ iii! l¢Wi°°"5f “"9 um”-' ' ` ' _wm1.'“°d hh’ °m°m' "ry W ,V .gin ' " ‘ 1- I01'Al§`i»lirv A ll\ Mc- } " ` 1’ A ` V x liandsfwei bsover lI00`l\>-ii nail ‘meer who have given these import- postponed them. - -' ~ - _ , tor that u ulled il, _ _ ___ __ 'ro suit n1y_ spirit nnu to prove my M.\R¥Ja_e]1iJNK w,i’;_,_ups inf,” ,*)‘h;§‘,‘_’;';B‘,‘;§: ‘aero £50 " ' The D*;W;l`5II heeriul greet the “ibm - ' ' sent_to the Canadian Courier and _ H _F 0 C ' 'I' Canadian Countryman and will in the THE STUDY OF (’EUGRAPfH`Y- IH!-T UOUFB. Beeibidcs are selling slowly with course of the next week be found de- ”'* And cllceriul turn, when the long stocks Mcumuyatinm Tannen Woking corating their pages. Bhf*d0W3 fall for lower prices as season advances. ' ° ' C1ty'Butcher Hides, green, flat l2lc “wh” M°°D°““\d_ °f J°h“°t°“'9 _ rest, per lb. Inspected Hides No, 1 13c_ River is one oi the most progressive Bccallss I know for _.mc my WOPK is N0, 2 12.-_ ND_ 3 1]_c_ Country horsemen on the Island. When John best. Hidegl flag c,m,d_ 12, to 13ic_ Pan sees a horse that suits him he doesn't --Henry Van Dyke. _ cm»ed_ 12 M., 12'*c_ Green ui to 12c_ mind the price. He made an oder for *,*”* (;-nifsking me acc,,mu1,_tmg_ and the Rexall Girl the other day that ii uae slow sale at current prices. City 33"” mia' ‘;W“°" tg hafld henoft '10 di; I I V ' ‘ _ lat15c. Country green 3 "°~ er “P” Ou!! 0 mal' hull I I llddlslgdfhxndt cured 16c cured 17c' her “Ver at '»‘ later daw- ` ` ` - Horsehldes are in ood demand '»° ° l-il) ‘lwitu ren supply. city genie ns $8.50 WEB* nisvlfgldid l<_>¢ Of S000 fellows '1‘HE'HENEI Y. _-tu $1.00. vnunti-y take nfl No. -1 "B ay" “ 0 FM “H snmein Char- ____, ‘$350 U, g4_nn_ N,,_ 2_ $23-,0 to g3_50_ lottetown. We raced all winter, had _ ;___§j_1;§_°,l;;j§;"“ “;:,°,“"‘;-_=_';‘_° gg, __1"_‘;§_§‘;“‘ 3?,2.“i’§ni§'.`.‘§ 2;’ `Z3Z_“"{‘v.‘*f.‘°.. £212.11’ _ _ f e cc n ' '= - ' Chickens than are pcniicd up;t0 Sue y-L00 to y$1_50_ C0,mt,.y 750% 'y setting an example of pulling to- should have their houses cleaned out to $1.510. gather. _ twice a week at least, and their runs _I Wool linrhanl-toil. deliveries Veiy ""* dup np‘ (tg loosen the en;-gh) gnc., a ight, demand absorbing supply HORSE NOTES. week, which enables them to have n|WaShc¢l wulbiuzz fleece 22 to 230 --- little exercise in the way of scratch-;Clotl1ing 25 to 2i\c. Rejects 17 ti ' (flpcrlnlgy Written.) ing, Tlieinmorning m@n]_ should con- 18c. lll\v\‘usl1cd fleece combing 13g tt ` -' _ _sist of potato pcclings and all_scrnps'1-icr. Clothing 155 tu idle. [Ops oaithrlmost attractive fcuturcs from the` trtble, boiled down and' allow. Good grmlcu in demand, oil > 0 _ arci Horse Show in Char- thickened, after draining well, with t’o,l0lli‘ci1 IHC n drug on thc market uttctown nn' the 19th will be A. N. barley meal, with n dnsn of pepper in City reuilerod solid in barrels 6} tt »1cKay'S Uflufiilgs. 'Dhesc are all in and when cooled down, given; their fiic. Country stock, solid in barrels illlciiilifl Condition. and are great water vessels washed and filled. For N0. l 0l~ 10 6-ic. No. 2, 5 to be »I‘0SPi‘Cf.n for the track or stud, mid-day meal,-a good size cabbage, (3050 N0~ 1 7 U1 7lC-N0- 2 0 li ° ° ° liuug to allowftlicm to get round it, 6'r‘C- .-. D‘}“'t "ill t0 "“3i1,f_\; N- M0K'1y`H and high enough for them to peck ut liorsc hair. l~`ar1uci~ or pcdlcr stock _ iii lii't?di='lSS\l¢. Il you want a ready which keeps them busy for _some con- iirnler with slight increase in pllcc. 0 -1'iwD'!lrosll,ect. -by’-‘Nancy Mac' 2.36. sldernbld`tll'ne" and for a'changc,`a? Farnior pcdlcr stock. 38c to 40c, .ihc whnn been miles in 2.25 with swede hung is vcry` good too. For Old Rubbers, etc. Are in inoderatf voryllittln work. their last meal give them' barley, it demand deliveries about sufficient tl little Wheat or darry, and occasion- supply present demands at uuchaup The RcX§_l_1 Girl is now owned by ally small Indian corn. A box kept cd prices. Rubber Boots and Shoo: lohn M onalil, Johnson’s River. in the run with ull due ashes saved according* to trim 6 to 8lc. Autt *he istalclassy triitter and will makc from the house o11- washing days, it tires, il to Sc. Bicycle tires, 3; ti tzrw wood mare being standard sifted well, gives them a bath. A (llc. Ucmi, heavy 3 to 4c. Tea leaf uid registered. She will be bred to handful of peppercorns thrown in to Zi to 3ic_ UFIISS. l\¢l1VY 9 ti) 10° “)“"_"‘ 2-231- Wlmt R COW it S|i0lllil them about once n moutnnclps to Light 7 to sc. onppcr, hcnvy, 11 he-ivith its wiiblv inheritance ol keep them in good condition, and the to llc. Light 7 to ‘.\c. Zinc 22 tt iiillien. V _ houses should be 7 linicwaslled occa- file. __ ______;__ 1 ‘ ° ' sionally. §_»1~_~;;j:n Ruby_Rcddin (standard ami regis- e e e RAW 1rU1'¢s_ tered is now owned by J. R. Barr of Repairs should be systematically -he EXHmi"€‘!`- Rllby is a great F0811- nnnde in order to have the mncblnes The I-lmison Bay Co’s inr sales an ' 1ter_s.nd has .tramped miles close to ready for use at the time wanted. It on in Imation this week. The general 2.30. Shu will be bred to Bottom is o good plan, when putting mach- fur situation is unchanged. Mink ar 5.23%- The Colt will be an inbred ines away, to make s. note oi what easier on account oi poorer quality Kremlin. O l I note may be attached to the imple- stocks accumulating. Horse Show next week. March 18th ment. If repairs are needed which No. Ont., Lake Slip., Que., N. S. and 19th. Sale on latter date. Take come from the factory now is the N. B., Lab., Newild. Mink.-No. 1 'he two days off and see the show. ' - 300 No 3, ° ° ° that he can get it for you in time. 1.75-1.25. No. 4, -50'-25- ' A l11°Cl»lUi¥ Of h0i'B0m€ and race secretaries will be held i2 Charlotte- _ .own on March 19th, to make ar- 'angements for the summer circuit. produce a. good beet steer, when .65-.25_ Kitts .15-.08. him erside on May- ~1st. This grand once n man has made s. start to Wolf-No. 1, $7.25-2.50. N0. 2. 3.25 varr or has made more ‘turi history grade uirhis hsrd,he should stick to 2.00. No. 3, 1.50-1.00. No. 4, .75 ` irobsbly than any other horse in one breed, and one only. One ol the .40. lanada had is still cnl>shle"0i mak- chief causes of failure in _.the produc- Skunk -No. 1, $4.40, No. 2. $3.05 ng it. Last year-he took- the meas- tion of good he_ei _cattle in _Canada,,N0_ 3, $2.25-1.50, N0- 4. $135--50 ire of all the Free ForAllers and has been the mixing ofthe breeds. A Racoon Dark $6.00-2.50, Heavi zsmc' home with the scalps of (our mnn nnnnld, grade _np steadily, al- $4.75-.50, 'Regular $3.25-.25. Lyn! - flctories dangling to his belt. Any- ways using a pure bred sire of good $27.00-1.00, Lynx Cat $9_.00'Z-00. Beal me who wants a g00d prospect for beef type, that’is’tbe offspring of a 527,50-.50‘, Silver Fox $1000~00-100-00- fiaritlme Frees will do well to have fair milking cow. It does not pay to (ii-Ltes, N. S., N. B-. QUS-. $40-00-5-00 : bid on Ventil- O U O I I I ! "Vesta Boy" l.05} is to he sold in steers, ‘it ls true, made gains equal psits ei- Unprime sk'-ins are alway We think the F_ R_ Henrtz Free Ferl to bee! animals. but, when killed it figured at value. .lli trot . was about the best racing is found that they are lacking; in the _ _ .. - ‘wen here for years. Seven corking valuable cuts, that their carcass is '”'“' ' _ Zieats over heavy ice was n test of patchy; and lumpy and backs bare, _ _staying power. I I I ‘ qunntity ni intestinal int that won1d_ "TEE TURF' _ 1-. s. Brown, pr_np1~1ctnr_ oi the b° f°“11‘1 in 91° ‘mf “°°"“~ Mme' . Revere Hotel is hoping the l<=° Will over when these animals come upon Hogs- NOTES _ be good 1\1iough.to plill oi the 2.24 the market they sell from $1.00 to 9 " I :rot for which he has given a Dliriw $3.00 per htlndred below the regular' ‘ _'.91 $100. Mr. Brown is a good game P;-ies, ` ~ - ` (SP°°i“u7 C°““`ib“t'°d') ‘ -sport and enjoys a race as much as _, _ _ _ _,__ ,,,_.,., .. Just wait till you see -me next year mybody_ -- _ __ ----L is what the "boys" are B8ylI18 HOW- 0 1 1 George. Ball_ingall__offers e. cream _ ' tor and buttermaker for s. far- T E _ r nd toning up the ice racing hai "pun '- H g 5 h h l -nel-'s race. These two prizes angie- 1 gate in value nearly $100- Mf- B511- ingnlrs generosity should not be FRESH AIR MEANS MILK. Brace Girdle 2.04; and Arona Me- ,m,gotm"_.,,__ our; tumor me,',d,_ ' .{_..' 'Kinney 2082 are recent arrivals lr -- “wfv o_o" BM" when it (selected) nussin from the united stntcs sctt H ,§,§,,,,,,,,,,,,, We wonder how many dairy farm will be used as hroodf mares r _ _ .Ph _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~ _ _ _ - _ __ - _ ~ 10,' ‘ __ __ _ iw _ ers who buildbsrns and cow stables - ' T" __ -‘ ' 2"; ~ do so with the understanding that Ed. Geers, the silent man. 110" _ .;1._' -..H0335-g0vrE3_ ' - .aww ._»..- _-1snsu~_-nn-»-¢..f~ ating strain in our breeding lines.. land end his breeding is gilt edged. B0'l"l`0M DUOMLETB. _.L Bottom has a great producing dam. e e_ e Bottom has a full sister with a mark of 2.l4} on a half mile track. O l O Bottom has ii full sister with a 3 year old mark of 2.185. C C O Bottom has size, strength, beauty, speed and soundness, the ilve cardin- al virtues in a sire. O O O Bottom fills the speed, the nroeding and the youth to produce the best. O O I Bottom is by liingara and resem- bles him closeiy. Like his sire hc is extremely handsome. |'l L| GOOD ROADS GOOD ROADS BY ROADMASTER. Article 3. Road Machinery; its Operations.- In introducing this article I want to explain the way the road machinery is handled ullder the present act, al- so the lack of machinery and the im- portance oi having it operated to best advantage. The road machine is-placed with a machine operator for so many road districts and he can take it in one district first or last as he thinks -best. When he does it costs $2.00 per day for his services, no difference whether he is a good man or a poor one, it is all the same thing. Now, ill the previous article I explained that thc. roadmsster only has so much money to doa lot with and it is up to him to get the most work possible done in as short a time as possible and the road machine is the most expen- sive part. For instance 4 teams at $3.00 per day. $12.00, $2.00 for oper- ator and there must always be a man or two for assistance, in many cases the total runs to at least $1U.00 per day. Now this operator is under no obli- gation to the roadmuster only to get his pay. The more days why certain ly the more dollars, and further, thi tcnmstcrs care only to get in their day and get $3.00. It is no use fo: the roadnlastcr to make ii kick abou. it as the operator will tell him be i: running the machine, so you see th. 1-oa.dmastcr's account has to suder i'-ertninly there are ii fcw good open ators bllt there is ii lot of poor one: too. I might mid llcrc that wha- luakcs a good roadmuster muy bi sumctl up in three things, uitnlely Honesty, Rush nnil Jilllgmslit. Fira see that he bus given tho ruadlilustoi 11 good, honest clay for the money \1< receives. Second, to rush along ani keep everything moving every pus sible ipomcnt, always have the much ine in readiness at.-the hours set be cnllse if teams ure waiting l hours grcaslng and fitting up machine it all counts for loss. Lastly, judgment this is the main thing required bc- cnuse he might have both honesty und rush and lack judgment and he is 110 gooii'at ali. He might keep tennis hauling back and forward over one piece of ground a whole day nnd then not make u road. He could not set his machine properly for nice, level work and various other things might lack all through want of judgment. Now when the roatlmastcr makes his return he hils to tell how much was done each day und, I tell you, some wcre ashamed to tell the cxiict amount done for the most of |-cople have a good idea of what ought to be done. (To bc Continued.) Samoa ' ' Whenever you iccl s headache coming on _ NA-DRU-C0. Headache Waters __ ' _ _ They |~iop_l1eads¢:hes promptly sad surely” D9. I _ n_ _ 1 ' _ _ opium. morphine, phenscelin. accianifiyi-es oth . _- ` ’ drugs. a box ai your Druggl:i`s_-` ' ` .»_ *_ '._. -fiiiff rtnrlonsi. enum Ano cnusical. co._ol causes. _|.ne_l_|_v U. ~ ___1 » ` 5 illhliiu-1, Ill l . ' ` _ _,. _.,'. li. Ig. 1 .4 »r »\ » _.yr " &y -i, ft ~~_~-/.i:Z¥~"Jf .ff 1 _ ~--u-'.3 - £'=. r-1. ' __ - ~- . T,__ q,_v,\ ~ ._ ,_ __ ._:._ ' ' - »' ...I ~ 6 __ _ _1;¢ _,_lt_ __-\y;~:‘ _ .L _ V _,_ _ _ ._‘~..1`_' .__-HJ. .‘l_'+,-_`};:i'_'51_ _,- _ry ,.- .1 `_ __ is not easy to warma poorly nourished bpdy. 'wlléat and strength do not come from over- _ coats or flannels. Bodily warmth and vigor H' come from foods that are rich in blood- ‘ ` making, tissue-building material. it 1 ‘ 'i _ ` .' _ __ _ _ , ___ ,Ei ._ _ 1 >_.".¢"_> _ . `\ I EM 5* is all fuel-food-no waste, no indigcstiblc maierialrto clog the system and tux the vitality. Two Sliroddcd Wheat Biscuits, heated in the oven and served with I . hot milk and a little crcum, for brcnkfilst, will supply _- P- all the heat and strength ncciloil for 11 half du_y’s work. _ Not “pre-digested,” but “rca