SPER Regulate the Bowels "lI have been troubled with constipation for several years, and have tried a great many kinds of pills, 4s well as medicine from the doctor. - Nothing seemed to help me until I bLe- gan taking Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills. 1 found the little pills very effective, and I am thankies that at last I have a reliable remedy." MRS. F.'M. DUNKIN, LeRoy, Tis Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills simply cause the bowels to rove _4n a normal manner, agd with- out the griping effects of cath:r tics and purgatives. That's why they are so universally used 1s women and children. Th longer they are taken the le are needed Natural conditions gradually being restored. Price 2% at yout druggist. Me supply you. If he does not, son $0 us, we forward prepaid. DR MILES MEDICAL CO., Tore Gips For Gbhe Farmers BY UNCLE JOSH. Fresh poultry manure at the pre sent values of fertilizers would be worth sixty cents per hiindred pounds, Figures from different experiment sta- tions would give the product of twen- ty-five hens for the winter season of six months as 370 pounds from the roost droppings oily Poultry manure is especially adapted a¥ a top dressing for grass, because of ite high content of nitrogen in the form of ammonia compounds, which are nearly as quick in their effect as nitrate of soda. A ton of the manure | preserved with sawdust und chemicals {would be sufficient for an acre, when { compared with a chemical formula for | top dressing. { On the same basis of comparison, | 106 fowls running at large on an acre should, in a summer season, of six { months have added to its fertility the {equivalent of pearly 200 pounds of | suplhate ammonia, 10 oounds of sulphate ammonia, 106 pounds of i pounds of kainit, A certain amount of fertility is washed out of the air with snow and 1%, if conditions are suitable when the {snow melts, added to the goil in {spring. The abundant snow fall of this ydar, if it goes off gradually in spring, and without frequent freezing land thawing, will prove an excellent protection for winter wheat dnd clover «land add materially to the fertility of ere ee ay " A COLD PREVENTIVE Is a cellar filled with Coal. | ean sup- Ply you with an excellent quality F. WALSH, 05-37 arrack St. Cook's Cotton Root Compound. | a ing nitrogen to the soil will he found Te great Uterine Tonic, an Ong sie ilo on which women 8 Sh di ro of stryngth--Na, 1, $1; To! 10 degrees stronger, $3; No. B= Bhecial cases, $5 per box, A 7 all dru or sent id on rocel of price, pamphlet. Adress : 4 ook Meoiomg Oo, Toronto, ONY, Vormeriy Windeor DOV VVOOTVVVVOOVO0O0O000 COAL! The kind you are looking for is © the kind we sell. HOO pol OOOO Scranton Coal is good coal and we guarantee prompt delivery BOOTH & CO., FOOT WEST STREET. R000 0VV0VOCOO0DOSOOT00 ~ CHILDREN Psychine Made Her A Robust! Child k any word: ven Sow wre worse, and the ould do nothing wore. We her doctor who told us ever lone and that theohild col cided 10 take the litt treal dootor, who said her lung: pis ant that she would vive on if we would save her he eame down 1 ated] npon her, bu e AS hs was te and fs though Sw been readin, ual Monthly | in OOOO ; the land and leave the soil in excellent mechanical condition. Everything points so: far to bumper' crops this year | A Rhode Island correspondent of i Rnral New Yorker savs he uses coal | ashos as an absorbent in liquid man- ture and finds this beneficial when put on land. He has also noticed where conl ashes are sprinkled along A walk that the grass alongside the walk has a peculiarly rich green. He thinks there is more value in coal ashes than srientists are generally disposed to admit, i With the growing of consuming po- {pudation, and the comparatively ro | stricted area given to production, the | question of how to maintain soil fer- {tility is one of steadily increasing im- | portance ne of the readiest means of restor- under. The late i Prof. Fletcher, of the Dominion FEx- {perimental Farm, Otiawn, estimated { that by seeding clover with wheat and plowing under, a3 mach fertility will Ibe returned to the soil as the wheat i would remove from it. plowing clover Fresh sawdust, says Rural New { Yorker, contains an acid which, when vse heavily on land, may injure soils { that are deficient in lime. Liquid from i manure, however, will neutralize the sawdust, if well soaked into it. Where sawdust is used for bedding for ani- | mals, therefore, it. ie a snfe addition 1 ta the manure so made In parts of the United States it has been the practice for some 'years to | uso railway trains in connection with { farmers' institute work, Cars in such traing have been fitted out for the i purpose of affording demonstration in leon culture or some other line of { farm work, and accompanying the tra'n went institute speakers who ad- | dressed meetings at each stopping | place. | The same gencral idea has been adopted, in a modified way, in the | western provinces of Canada, England jis now following suit. During the { present month a train started from | Paddington for the purpose of giving a stimulus to the poultry industry of | the West of England and Wales. "The | train stopped wherever a vompany of | country residents collected, and' lec- j turers used the roofs of the carriage jlo a platform, while otlfers gave de monstrations in the use of incubators j and other matters | poultry production. i mm Good Outlook for Poultry. "The outlook for the poultry busi ness as a branch of farming never was better," says Prof. Graham, writing in the O.A.C. Reviews "Prices of the products gre very high,' and L can seo no reason why the 'av farmer should not keep an ke good hens, which should mean an hundred and fifty dollars clea ofit, 1 be- Lieve the time is not'fat distant when flocks of from five hindred to one thousand birds will be common upon the farms of Ontario." Individua: Herd Testing. At the recent menting of the Hols- tein Association' in * Tordmto, RS. Stavatuch a » oF To 'a warn: against the danger of ooking too on A to individual , tests. is re quired, said Mr. ? from connected with wf 58% ii i it 1 | £ THE DAILY BRITISH WHI SAPTRLAY OR city, he says, that causes so many run-down farms. Something in the way of accomplish ing * what thi correspoodent desires lis ben' carried out in one corper Ontario and in a considerable section of the west. Around St. Thomas much of the farm surplus is handled through local loan companies. The surplus earned by the well-to-dy is used in assisting farmers who are barrow ers. Western farmers' organization again have, as E. A. Partridge stated at the anpual meeting of the Domin-, ion Grange, Tormed a sort of @nion with the Home bank. Members of the Sas katchewan Urain Growers' Assuaciation are encouraged to take stock in the Home bask and the Home bank gn its part uses its funds in the west largely for the purpose of enabling western grain farmers - to purchase {hair stimmer requirements on a cash basis, the debt being repaid when western grain is miarketed in the fall. Sp - - Price of Food Stuffs, Broomhall's Corn Trade News makes amv interesting contribution to the pre discussion on ° prices of food stuffs Jroomhalls thinks that the, ih nomenal low prices of a few years ago, and the very high prices of 'to- div, are explained by the history of he development in agricultural mach- inory, . At the beginning of the last h i century there was a marvellous and sudden development in labor-sav- , farm machinery, this development, covering bindevs, seed drills, disco har rows arsed = other lines of implements. he resalt, coupled with the opening f vast areas a virgin territory, was Jn CROTMOUS increase in producticn of rod, en increase that for surpassed the growing demand, ard a slump in prices followed. This period of cheap food was fol lowed 'again by an abnormally rapid n rease in population and this later rapid increase in population has been | accompanicd by an absence of further notable advance in labor saving de- viecs on the farm. As a consopuence population has again caught up with production, and a period of con- tinued © high prices in food may De looked for. The Irish Homestead, writing along much the same line, and speaking from the standpcint of the British far- mer, says that farmers will require no tariff protection in order to secure thir prospetity. The great industrial development of the United States, Gee- ngny and, England will, it says, man tain such a high level of prices for ood stufis that farmers will be able to sell either at home or abroad all that they can produce and at a re munsrative price. -- Care of Sows at Farrowing Time. ¢ hortly before farrowing, the sow should be given laxative food, sach ag roots ard clover, to put her di- wstive system right. Exercise daily ior the fresh air, in order to keep the blood in good condition, is equally necessary. A few days before farrow- n: she should be put in a warm, pen, with some cut straw for bed- dinz, and boards around to prevint her from lying down on the little ones. Sores . in° the udder, which sent IN CANADA sometimes causes the dam to eat her | voung may be caused by a too full | supply of milk, and to avoid this the dam should be fed rather lightiy | for a day of so before farrowing. | Sod and 'ashes will also prove of val- | ue. ! The little ones should be removed as | soon as they come and be kept dry | and warm and then watched until the | mother and little ones become accus- | tomed to each other. . After farrowing | the feed should be light for a few | meals, and regulated according as to | whither the supply of milk is suffi cient or otherwise. The best ration | for producing x flow of milk is fresh | milk with shorte gradually added. - : | charges. Pure Seed. i From now to the end of seeding the | in our Spring and Summer Gatalogue. whether or fiot you like them. worthy of a trial order as well. IF YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED A COPY WRITE NOW HE largest, most comprehensive and best sele-ted stock of merchandise which +T.EATON Ce, ever offered for sale, is listed ; From the stindpoints of style, quality, value and price every item is worthy of special mention. We were never before in a position to so successfully supply your every need as we are at present. Almost every article is clearly illustrated, and all desrriptions are easily understood. Shopping through our Catalogue is even more satisfactory than doing so over the counters in a store, Because, when you receive a shipment of goods from EATON'S you haye ten days instead of a few minutes, in which to decide During that time you can obtain the offindbns of your family and friends regarding the merits of our merchandise, and at the same time be absolutely free from any influence on our part, H after examining the goods, you are not perfectly satiefied in every way, send them back and we will refund your money in full and pay all transportation Surely the EATON system of doing business will appeal to you as being not only reasonable and fair, but Why ? trade in seed will be active, and it behooves every farmer to take dtock of what he has on hand to sow or what | he has to buy. i in ymany places dealers say that the! seed which is now coming in quite freely from the farmers is more poliu- 1 ted with poxious weed seeds than it has been for several seasons. As a consequence there is heavy loss cleaning, and high class No. 1 seed % will be expensive. In view of these Ce conditions it is likely that there will be a smaller proportion than usual of No. } seed placed on the market, and considerable of the second-rate seed will probally be pretty close to the prohibitive line. It ie, therefore, im- portant this year that farmers who have to buy seed should use every precaution to see that they do not get a supply: of weed seeds. Uf you. want high class, pure seed, and = are willing to pay the price, place your order early for guaranteed No. 1 seed, and to see that the seed delivered is | up to standard, send a sample to the seed laboratory, department of agri. culture, Ottawa, and vou will be sent a report giving the 'grading and the kinds and number of weed seeds pre- sent, if any. ' Produce And Prices. Kingston, March 12.-The market clerk reports as follows : Carrots, 80c. to 6lc, bag, apples,75c, to $1 bush.; turnips, 4c. bag; esh- Be, dos onions, 5 bag: potatoes, 38c. 40c. vy b To to Be.; to ; 1l4e. LIRR lank, 12. to Mes ducks, 31. to Tra - 1.50. paar; geese, $1.15 to $1.25" each; [to $3. Hunguridn patent, $3: batmesl Yirkays. Ae 18e:; chickens, 90c. to ! and ollg es 5.50 per barrel, corn- $1 a pain; boron, 25¢. to 2Sc.; fresh (meal, $1.90 1682! bran, $23 to #4 tone , - 20e. 3c, (shorts, 325; straw (baled), $10; straw J. A. McFarlane, Brock street, re- looss, 8% hay, loose, $15: flour, feed cad grain selling as to $16. SEND US A TRIAL ORDER in -- pressed, $15. oWs : Oats, 450. local wheat, 9c! Jobn McKay, Brock street, rt buckwheat, 656. barley, B53c.; rye, |as follows : Wool, washed, 200.3 . 68c.; peas, 81; yellow flou rn, Shc; $2.90 to 33.10; farmers', $2.50 iwkine, 1: tallow, ine, T3e: veal skins, i 1,"8e: No, #470 6e.; horse hides, $3. s i Dominion Fish Co, repofis prices We of Dall - R < ward for ny eu an 3 dy ae s follows! Salmon troit, 124 to not be by Hall's Catarrh Cure. [15e.; a Ib. skivned digh7 herring, 20, F. J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo. 0. {lka white fish, 1246. to 1552 Ib; pike, We the undersigned have known F.lie, lbs Chinook salmon, 3e. lb Le Aor the ars, ang he aa i nal, Sasnelny ac. docs perch, rendered, Go. de 15c. per ib.; No. 3, How's This? <T. EATON CS... TORONTO - The MKttle apron overskirts that re mind one of the stage waitress' apron will be popular for girls this sum- mer Unly a watst on the glimpse order should be chosen for use with a skirt in short. apron effect. Wf. ome wikhes to preserve the girlish gppesr- ance. _ An elaborate or even & pleated skirt not in keeping with such style skirt, ' When the svearer is not tall it is =» good plan to ran a double hox plone down the back of the skirt over th anderskirt. 3 The census bureau statistics of ele trie. Hghting., electric teaction snd companies show a gross ine conse for the three industries in the pita Spates of ETWA00 00 jn to Hearil iv oflering ws. alladng field Our Grocery Catalogue CANADA is FREE spread on brown bread makes the spoonful of OXO to a cup of hot