Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 30 Aug 1905, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

If Tour IM HelthIsDue red how otlèiers hvesufferedwt tesin oi I oudelief fror1i lesesConstipationaud Stol sud liver Complaint. Thiat la exaýctly w,,ha 't Fr proof thlat poe - 1ani tking Ëierit.tive.ç and mnust sly tIie-y areý th, forI.ier nd lomehTrouble.Iwulnt eihott or Fw,it Liver Tabl I5C. a bo. At aldruggts. Maufrturcd by F creatuire. Eenth)olgh it be i %V cweakness and pvry a11henlth TG'i d' W]îtàalilkîn'dîs of othier wretch- eesnothingj equals the njobility of a human creature. That is what a chlld does net kaow. At the begininLg of 111e you are ?alnt, and lîow they . ignorant of youron self. We try >mach Trouble.Th to awaken youi. The first period of C1 REyou of Bloses existence isspetnlasleeping, nma- itatvsdo.,II-lee la te terially to a smai-ll degree ýaad spri- tually to .a greater (degree. C(Ildren ýeS estredy 1 have ever seen lare subrnbut there -,cones a icema"t any price." timie When we musI>t kowourscives, eILA nusF, ssex, Ont. look lîîto and study ourselves; there cornes another time when xve must begin to preside ox-er our republ, for ln acd of us there is a republic cornpesed of aIl kinds of powers that miglit fal l ito anarchy if net properly directed. When yen bave reached the age wvhen it is well for you to look aft'er your own interests aad to nuaken to humanity what we teach you are 'ruit-a-tlves Lited, Ottawa. not theories or precepts, because pre- cepts and theorles are la themselves ________ dry and lifeless-what we tearli you ïs Lîfe. WVe interpret Life to you. We en- deavor to transmit jts shock to you u to mxake yeu thnlll. We deposit a a's wful Sufferby ig ou elid Notezm.loJ Fer and c-(1;i Arm sl -Grtfl Mo011the ol,,id, roe hd erm. h pand en I ud a T;ls. ybisWere sec(-uLred b fLOI ovew o * Godn Cham laraTurzey ed, etc. Teojc~in tLhiswork the good qualýlities anid ellinin-1 ethe poor0qalitiel!js of te Parenlt (-aieis. Tho e suit's so far are Frem E czera Th csl ontiveSeart Her -Tore ests ade, at the oleg show a veaeinr!ease lun yield of grain ~t o iecs eracre of 6.8 bushels fromt large as cornpared with smnall gèe 1, f 7 ays: busbels from plump as coP.r - with shruaken seed, and of 3t5.G bushels from Sound as compared with broken seed. Seed which was 19LIE allowed to becomne very ripe before )lp- il LFE i Waseut produced a greatcr yield of both grain and Straw and a heav- six Mnonths îier weight of grain per measured W~e used ail bushA than that produced fromY nothing did wheat which was eut at any one of P ie kept,-get- four earlier stages of rmaturity. InTeGl utTwn r lasred ~wr Te cap herhands 1897 aud agaia in 1902, a large Hh odDs wn r lasrE -Ok dress her, I amount of the wiater wheo t i nn are certainly artists La the o1uaning lino. Ter'sIthin talew or I tario became sprouted before it was cleanable which eer facekink harvested owingto the wet weather.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy