I "dragging af oy heaith snd 0 Ng preacrips n used heir action T e that I was suffers | Bh sick." If you want to get back the vi and Hie of youth, if you want" rile of robust health {er i a Ne TE b after AR the ba am The ad- wh this mixture are: First, (the turpentine 1s the prin- * second, and ® in use (while corrosive 'Sublimate is extremely poisonous if , It is fot stic In Fu and if it gets on the n ER the operator Rota It Un Bi It makes no trouble); third, the : properties of the -turpen- 'tine. carry the germicide deeply into the diseased tissues and insure a prompt 2Be ana radical cure. authority on the ina of sheep for wool and wulton expresses his opinfon on the subject 1h the 'fol: lowing manver: To develop a good floek of breeding sheep for wool and mutton begin with the ewes that are tialf Cotswold and half Merino and be sare that you select a buck that is a fill blooded Shropshire. In this cross you get a grade of sheep that is hard to surpass both for wool and mutton. in an experiment this method proved a good one. A twin lamb sheared when [From Breeder's Gazette, Chicago.] a little more than a year old sixteen pounds of good wool, and when a year and a half old the carcass weighed 160 potinds. - if the sheep are getting too wrinkly and the wool too short I get either a Cotswold, Oxford or Shropshire buck, and If the fleece is getting too hairy and light In weight I breed back to the Merinos. Sheep like rape, but they should not be. kept on rape alone. During this the cold period of the year, when the pystires do not furnish enough feed to keep them thrifty and growing nicely, it is a good ides to be- gin feeding corn and fodderfcowpeas and clover hay and sometimes thrash- ed oats or sheep oats. Ten shéep will eat as thuch as one Sov. tr Te at at oy feed accordingly. Some breeders prefer to have lambs come in February. Although it may require care to save them during cold weather, they will go through the win- ter better and make better sheep that do late lambs. Tell Some Sg Ove It Is Free I It < JI You de Sil ack of Homan tof sams sick friend ot ls, my 1s rg aia reend ts er "y BE s absolutely and unconditionally ha 4 ready know of Dr. w An zou, To Sob 5 fy ; or controlling nerves of ail, 1% is Dr. Ehoop's y vitalized, and streng- ky nerves and A frequent change of feed the cow's appetite keen, and buyer refuses to recognize the different rade of excellence: ROOTS FOR THE STOCK. They Are Considered Best as Succulent and Supplementary Feeds. The average farwer pays little or no attention to roots, but they are worthy of sqme atteution, for they stand high as succulent dod supple- mentary feeds. You cannot value roots solely by the nutriment they contain They aid in digestion and assimilation of dry food amd contribute to the healthfulness of all animals so fortu- nate as to get them, If fruits are of value, if not a necessity, to men, then roots and grasses have a place in feed- ing farm animals. Carrots way be fed to horses and sheep. sugar beets and turnips to dry cattle and lambs, aud dairy cattle and hogs relish them #flL To withhold socculence, unture's great provision for thrift and health, is to lessen profits. Carrots are sfightly barder to grow than beets, but they are the best feed. Sow the seeds fi" rows gbout two and one-half feet apart. 'The rows should be ridged slightly, as this facilitates their culture. It {8 better, perbaps, to sow rather thickly, so as to insure a good stand. When the young plants are a few inches high barrow the ground with a fight harrow for weed destruction and for thinning purposes. It will reqbire only a hasty going over to put the carrot patch in shape to de- stroy weeds ang leave the plants six to eight inches apart. A horse cuiti- vator will complete the work. Tbe latge stock varieties are, of course, to be preferfed to the fine grain--the gar- den kind. Turnips are cultivated in the sume wag, but they come later in the season. The Swede variety should be selected. Turnips may be sown broadcast, but for large yields the row method is pre- ferred. Mangels are grown with the Jeast dificuity, but they. are not so good as carrots or turnips. For sheep roots are almost indispensable. FEEDING PENS FOR CALVES. Suggestion For One That Can Be Easily Constructed. It 1s necessary in raising calves to have a good, serviceable feeding pen. A promijuvent stockman makes the fol- lowing suggestion for one that can be constructed easily and cheap: First make four or more little plank troughs of the size desired. Then pall togetber several boards to make a partition. This should stand higher than a calf apd be a little longer. Make five of {hese partitions, all the same size, Nail ope of the troughs In position in A chy shoudd theo chases: ls Eb fst as 1 do by couvenl @rinking distance for the calf from the floor, against one of the partitions. There should be at least siz meh partition boarding in front of the frough. Nail the 2nd of the troogh against partition. Then nail on anothef partition and anotbet trough" against. that until all priitions and Get Rid of the Brutal Watch the bired thal tending to the stovk. n, he is and brutal you can well dispense animals 1h Swine The herd of swine bona we of tik form color and the lots of swine for market should be of as near uniforms size and shape and color as possible The packers pay more. for this.kind.of | Stern Pursuits Into the irk Mounted Polics, ron. ere is the story of one of the un- considered adventures in the ordiiey round of police duties in the far Northwest. A Lorileux Indian, who i DOW serv- in Ca ing a life prison for the murder of 2 two-yeat: old child, had to be tracked down and captured. This is how the work was done: "A mounted policeman followed the wretch to a point nearer the Pole than many explorers reach, and got his man. "The policeman stocked a canoe with provisions, and the lo: and hazardous journey up the Mackenzie River began. For 1,200 miles the little procession pushed its way along that silent. stream. '""At the bow sat the Indian, a man< acled murderer, looking forw: to a lifetime within prison walls. In the stern, paddle in hand, one lonely representing 'outraged Pax "The pair arrived eventually at | Regina, where the constable handed over his prisoner, saluted, and fell back three He had no report to make; ere were no commenda- tions, no fireworks." Another incident shows a grim police chase which lasted six months. "A fugitive having fled Tom a ghastly murder committed the londike, Major Constantine i out his sleuths on the track, and for hall a year they followed their man. Seath from White Horse the constables d ged their murderer, pieking up thelr rst clue in a little logging camp on Puget Bound. Pe bad man was trailed from Seattle to Butee, thence to Slosang north to Ri British C« then at Ogden, Utah, we see Canada' A watchdogs, and on the Nevada-Cali- fornia lire. "Finally the hunted man was run to earth at Laredo, where, waiving extradition, he was carried to the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, -- was put on board a British vessel." Wimipeg, about two years ceived the idea of establi dren's orga in that ° wanted it placed in the foreign ter, ores the sick children ignorant poor could be cared for. M: Bond is not a rich woman, and a though many sympathized with project, some people interested in ' General Hospital argued that the chil- dren's ward of the city institution was all-sufficient. The first step in her campaign was a a tea, ab which, perhaps ten talented Winnipeg women, read or sa original com- positions, a fee of y cents being charged. This proved so popular that another of similar nature was ar- ranged. With the money realized in this way a small Children's Hospital was started last February in the poorest quarter, and has cared for hundreds of cases. In November a bazaar was held, at which seven thousand dol- lars were realized, and this sum will be used as a payment upon a perman- nl gan site. as founder of the ospital has, made it a ol rane of Winnipeg Mrs. Bond has Hg a remarkable career. She was one of the first nurses appointed by the British Gov- ernment to care for the wounded sol- diers in the Zulu war. A few volun- teers preceded. her, but Mrs. Bond went t in an official, eapacity. It was only after the Egyptian cam- paign that the incapacitated soldiers were nursed by women. Mrs. Bond was one of the first wo- men de Victoria with the Order of Royal Red Cross, and the late Khedive of Egypt made her the recipient of a medal for dis- {inguished services, Sea in Seine tar the tian tréops. Mrs. Bon been decorated wi bravery, and fo rag the es » 'olion | ers of the Empire. t Parolé System a Succést. That the results of the. prisoner 'bontinue. port prea celebrated road that it: as good as ever, it was made more centuries ago. and at the end of | the was sighing for morning he left his is cabin 4 Eggs of Crabs and Crabs and lobsters are hatel eggs, resembling upon 2 Ju, as the ani y the microscope in a dr water. They are as unlike t fish they are to become *4 life as a grub is unlike In the case of the crab ters are attached benea after extrusion, while fastened Kingsville. "Then I weak spot, and would have to lig move or turn, Lin hot applications desired relief, and ever getting 3 decided to test bottles from the di rubbed on three ness and pain and by continu completely cured Refuse an' tles of Nervilin: dealers, or The Cat ston, Onty Impro n| That ~delightfol magazine, the is to Canada som trated News,' or land, coutinues to. of ite = tenos. general y Pp tions are given of world Lovet, = as give 'News stories, music, ments added to. the The quality of exquisite, enamel! ir cannot be. ess actually see i To dif anne Montreal Jast,' 'nuan And Is Constantly growing in Publis FavoF. it Is the DVERTISING MEDIUM In this Shteitt} h the Champions of the Qgriculiurists and more conservative class. of peigill ds mie favorlte of so hemee, foomers and clques---it Is the WM. TUMMONDS. Pott Perry, AUg.6, 1007. + (Cleaning. 1 am prepared to do all kinds of wy Fain. fe. (Successor po House ahd Lot for Sale! a The undersigned offer for Safe at a Bargain a Four Acre Lot in Port Perry, on Lorne Street, on which there 18 20 dwelling house, bara, yiabie ving shed ; 1\ fenced, pls well an ber of apple trees. Applyio the proprietor, THOS. PEARCE, Scugog, Oct 7, 1908. - i sail; 2 pum ying is the Time for Hoiise} JAK x 3.doors north of Mr. Widden s store one of dur salesmen you there is good money. 0 the