et mer ' A Visitin the Night: >) OR, A SERVICE WS TO THE STATE J CHAPTER IV.--(Cont'd) "Only on.one occasion," the other replied. 'I consulted him on behalf of the Duke of Wiltshire at the time his wife's diamonds were stolen. To tell the truth, I was half thinking of calling him in to see if he could find the fellow who broke into the stables last night, but on second thoughts I determined not to do so. I did not want to make any more fuss about it than I could 'help. But what makes you ask about Klimo?" "Well, to put the matter in 'a autshell, there has been a good Jeal of smal] pilfering down at my irainer's place lately, and I want to get it stopped," "If i were you I should wait till after the race, and then have him down. If one excites publie curio- sity just now, one never knows what will happen." "T think you are right. Anyhow, I'1] act on your advice. Now what do you say to coming along to the Rooms with me to how our horses stand in the market? Your presence there would do more than any number of paper denials to wards showing the fallacy of this etupid report. Will you come?" "With pleasure,' said Carne, and in less than five minutes he was sitting beside the noble Earl] in his mail phaeton, driving towards the rooms in question, When he got there, he found Lord Calingforth had stated the case very correctly. The report that Knight of Malta had been ptolen had been widely circulated, and Carne discovered that the animal was, for the moment, almost a dead letter in the market. The presence of his owner, however, ent to stay the panic, and when he had snapped up two or three long bets, which a few moments before had been going begging, the Yegan steadily to rise towards his see horse ec 7 145 Ai. } WAS Suilel- | that he was starving, 'and, with pe- culiar arts of his own induced them to provide him with a meal. For upwards of an hour he remained talking with the lads, and then wended his way down the hill <o- wards the village, where he further managed to induce the rector to permit him to occupy one of his outhouses for the night. After tea he went out and sat on the green, but towards eight o'clock he crossed the stream at the ford, and made his way to a little copse, which ornamented a slight emin- ence, on the opposite side of the village to that upon which the training stables were situated. How he found his way, consider- say, but that he did find it was proved by his presence there. It might also have been noticed that when he was once under cover of the bushes he gave up tapping the earth with his stick, and walked straight enough, and without ap- ing his infirmity, it is difficult to| before eight o'clock and keeps the | horse under lock and key, with the head lad sleeping in the box with him.' "Well, good-night to you, and! don't you forget about to-morrow morning; niggle the horse about a bit just to make him-impatient like, and drop a hint that he's a bit fresh. That will make his bolting look more feasible. Don't leave the track while there's any one near you, but, as soon as you do, ride like thunder to the place I told you oi. I'll see that they're put off the scent as to the way you've gone."' "All: right,"" said the Jad< <I don't like it, but I suppose I'm in too deep now to draw back. Goed-night." "'Good-night,- and good luck to you.' Once he had got rid of the youth, Carne (for it was he) returned by another route to the rector's out- building, where he laid himself down on the straw, and was soon fast asleep. His slumbers lasted | till nearly daybreak, when he rose and made his way across country to the small copse above Hang- man's Hollow on the road from Ex- bridge to Beaton Junction. Here he discovered a large van drawn up apparently Jaden with furniture both inside and out. The hor were feeding beneath a tree, and a couple of men were eating their breakfast beside them. On seeing Carne, the taller of the pair--a re- ses parent hesitation, to the stump of a tree upon which he seated him- self, For some time he enjoyed the beauty of the evening undisturbed by the presence of any other human being. Then he heard'a step behind him and next moment a smart-look- ing stable lad parted the bushes and came into view. "Hullo,"? said the "So you managed first ?" "So new-comer. to I have," said the old I be. what have ye got to say for your- self?' "I don't know that I've got < thing Say replied to y the "But certain, > 1S this much you want can't be done." "And a fine young cockerel old position. That night, Belton waite: upon his master at bedtime, found him, if possible more than It wa until when usual. ; not are to be sure, to crow so loud ¢ it can't said the old fel low, with an evil chuckle. "How do you mitt? 'Because I don't see my y be done," know it can't? work was well-nigh completed that the other spoke. "It's strange thing, Belton,' he said, "and you may hardly be lieve it, but if there were not ¢cer- tain reagons to prevent me from be- ing so magnanimous I would give this matter up, and let the race } run its merits. I don't know that I ever took a scheme iy hand with a grace. However, as it can't be helped, I suppose J must go through with it. Is the van pre- pared ?"' "It is quite ready, sir. "All the furniture arranged as ] directed 1' "It is exactly as you wished, ¢ I have attended to it myself." "And what about the 'man?' "T have engaged the young fel- low, who assisted me I know he's quick, and I my life he's trustworthy."' | "Tam glad to hear He wil é 1 e on worse et) Ir. sir, before. ean stake 1S ng covered, reaches the " then. I shall to-morrow £0 down OV ening, concerning have need to be. Now for my ar rangements. I shall make the at tempt on Friday morning next, that and the man you have just men tioned will take the van and horses | to Market Stopford, travelli by | the goods train which, I have dis town between | four and five in the morning. As| you will start straight away cng the highroad towards Exbridge, reaching the village between five | and six. I shall meet you in the road alongside the third milestone on | the other side, made up for the stand 7' "Perfectly, sir. "That will do to the village and you will,not hear from t me at the place I have mentioned. night." ; "CQood night, sir." Now, it is a well-known fact that | if you wish to excite the anger of the inhabitants of Exbridge village, ber of the Pitman Training Estab 'lishment, you have but t6 ask for information a certain blind beggar who put in an appear ance there towards sunset on the Thursday preceding the Derby of that mysterious individual first enme in sight he was ereeping along the dusty high road that winds across the Downs from Mar- Kot St« ofored to Beaton Junetion, |} to say, two days from now. Vout | } 800N as you are out of the station > | part [ am to play. Do you under me again until you meet Good and more particularly of any mem 18 and you will do so. When dolorous! ¥ quavering a ballad that to be, though few recognized it, 'The Freen," was intended would have Wearing of the On reaching the stables he tapped along the wall with his stick, until he came to the gate. Then when he was asked his business by the head lad, who had been called up by eno of the table boys he stated | | | | | VY, eplied the other. 'It's too dang Why, if t! wind E and enough to hold us l Kn : erous by a long sight. he guv nor was to you want me to do, wouldn't be big | both. You don't as I do." "IT know him well |} practical purposes, |beggar. "Now, if you've got |more objections to raise, be | about aa 5 you haven't jtalk to you. You haven't? Now, just hek get of 1 } enough for all then. } jaw, open your ears, aud listea to what I've got to sa do you go to exerc morning ?"' "Nine o'clock.' "Very good then. You po down on to the Downs, and the bogs sends you off with Vuleauiie for a canter. What } Why, you go steadily as long as he can see you, but directly you're round on the other side of the bil} you stick in your heels, aad vin in- to wood that runs along cu your right hand, just as if horse was bolting in there, good ise to-morrow ? e Yr 1 1 vo aig vou nougy the your fonees 1¢ halt with you. you go through for until a a-mile you come to stream, ford that, and then cut in- to the next wood, riding as if the devil himself were after you, til you reach the path above Hang- man's Hollow. Do know place ?" "IT reckon I ought "Well, then, you just rit. When you get 1d me waiting for you. After that I] take command, and both you and the horse out of Kng- land in such a way that nobody will ever suspect. Then there'll be five hundred pounds for your trouble. & passage _ with the horse to South Africa, and another five hun- dred the day the nag is set ashore. There's not as much as you could take between your finger and thumb, and a Jad with a spirit like yours could make a fortune with a thousand pounds on the other side. What have you to say now?" "It's all very well, replied the lad, "but how am I to know that you'll play straight with me?" "What do you take me for?' gaid the beggar indignantly, at the samo time putting his hand in his eoat pocket and producing what looked like a crumple«l piece of paper. "If you doubt me, there's something that may help to.convince vou. But don't go showing it around to- night, or you'll be giving yourself away, and that'] mean the Stone Jug for you, and 'Amen' to all your hopes of a fortune. You'll do ag I wish now, I suppose ?"' "Vl do it," said the Jad sul- lenly, as he crumpled the bank- note up and put it in his pocket. "But now I. must. be off. Since! there's been this fuss about Knight of Mata, the guv'nor has us all in you to, make tracks lO fir ii cet ror over & safe fae risx get here} ras- | eal, "and it's wonderful when you | come to think of it, considering my | age and what a poor old blind chap | But I'm glad to find ye'ye| managed to get away, my lad. Now| what | what} now "im as well | replied the} ur) doors at the end, the iz What time} the | there you'll| | spectable-looking workman, with a | big brown beard--rose and touched |his hat. The other looked with as- | tonishment at the disreputable beg- |gar standing before them. "So you .arrived here safely," jsaid Carne. "If anything you're a | little before your time. Boil me a jcup of tea, and give me stomething jto eat as quickly as possible, for I} jam nearly famished. When you have «lone that, get out the clothes I told you to bring with you, and let me change into them. It wouldn't do for any of the people | from the village back yonder to be able to say afterwards that they | Saw me talking with you in this | rig-out."' } AAs soon as his hunger was ap- [peased he disappeared into the ; wood, and dressed himself in his |new attire. Another suit of clothes | and an apron such as might be worn | by a furniture remover's foreman, \ (LETTERS OF A SON IN THE MAKING TO HIS DAD. \ [Mr. McEvoy wi this paper a s:ries of letters from the west. They will appear from time to time un- de: the above heading, and will give a picture of the great Canadian west from the standpoint of a young Ontario man going out there to make hisway. 'These let- ters should be full of inte. est for every Ontario father<] Calgary, Aug. 27th, 1911 My Dear Dad:-- Since I wrote you from Winnipeg I have left the prairies behind me. To- day, about forty-five miles before reach- ing Calgary, I had my first sight of the Roeky Mountains. They lay low along the Western horizon, like clouds. The way you could tell they were not clouds was because they did not change their shape. On the prairies I saw In- dians, very civilized with their and policemen, but I must tell everything in its turn. to newspaper only looking Bain waggons, cowboys, send the from home. I feel just like Bill Dodson, whom I met Winnipeg. He was telling me that whenever he got a paper from home, it was just like meet- ask you to be=sure to me in all about the folks he knew. Christmas present, and he said he couldn't have had anything that would have pleased him more. If I decide to out here, and anybody at should want to give me something for Christmas, they might think about this. Don't wait till Christmas to send me the paper, though, please. Dad, if you machines that stay the round the Say, saw threshing were sidings at ped to the prairies you wouldn't wonder that people in the west boom their coun try. or standing like batteries of guns wait- to be These machines, loaded on fiat cars, ing shipped, reminded me of the la grey wig, a short grey beard and ust and bowler hat, anged his ympletely ; C been tree it been a difficult matter be- looki { a ntity 1 she, C. 1 4y NOLLOW tne a | would have | to have traced any r | tween he respectabl. workman eating his the disreputable begg hour before. It was close upon nine o'clock | this time, and as soon as he realiz- ed this Carne gave the order } T,: } | put the horses to. This d they mh a> semplance t ; brea by to ne, {turned their attention to the of the van, and then a strange ¢1 apparent. Though to wed from the open side « i filled to its 1 with chests of draw- became yppearances, f 4 'le w giant : most capacity ers, Is, carpets, and other articles of household furni- ture, yet by pulling a pair of | | hand i s it was possible for two mea | easily ar bedsteac ehairs, c to withdraw what looked like | half the contents of the van. The poorest observer would then [have noticed that in almost | particular t] were dum- | mies, affixed to @ screen, capable of being removed at a moment's notice. The remainder of the van | was fitted after the fashion of | stable, with & manger at the end | and a pair of slings dependent from every 1ese articles a | | | | } 4 £ I root, The neryous tension produced by waiting soon became almost than the men could bear. Minute after minute went slowly by, and still the eagerly expected did not put in an appear- Then Belton, whom Carne | had placed on the lookout, came fly- | ing towards them with the report | that he could hear a sound of gal- loping hoofs in the wood. <A few seconds later the noise could be | plainly heard at the van, and al- most before they had time to eom- ment upon it, @ magnificent thor- oughbred, ridden by the stable boy | who had talked to the blind beg- | gar on the previous evening, dash- | ed into view, and pulled up beside the van. the more horse ance, | | | ie V (To be continued.) © ee SCOTCH LOGIC. Donald (who is seeing his more } called South African war pictures of shipping guns and ammunition to the front. There At the more 3} ist as much hustle here, sta- all feo }is jt tion, alo the line, are n | box cars are being collected: on the ings to move the crop out. be a bumper than that it is to crop and bigger ever ore. you can see from the train j ae good, They have got cutting well under It's advertise. now. way the the You frequently boards funny way towns out west come to towns been erected the where sign have the the hit at stations telling~ of advantages offer settlers. towns have to Port Arthur they had tle one-story brick building, t kiosk, a bureau of At Fort William there was a "Fort the Pulse of the Dominion: the bulk of East and West I through There another big there t a which is formation, sign: big William town." but traffic ses this there, it, could is sign and the not Head advertises this the the dian Head, Saskatchewan's Beauty Spot. Good land $20 $50 the track on other which forest town: crowded on that I Indian 80 much was so small read it the train, ig that of from place in We one side track is sign: to acre;" the "Dominion 480 Distributed per side a sign reads. mile 3,000,000 tre inspect that nursery, acres, one annually, at if free to settlers. Visitors can think advertise would to would do it in Ontario papers, Of course, of the any time." You these towns wanted thousands people read signs see them they have tickets to their des- tination and are not likely to stop off. Out the flat the | straight as edge of prised me to find out th from Winnipeg country is ag is a It at between Winni- as a and horizon as table, the ruler, eur- peg and Portage La 'Prairie, fifty-six miles 100 feet. 7,000, and Manitoba's Portage quite principal grain There are elevators there, of course, west for long way is a from there a there are elevators at all the stations; There | will "be two or three elevators at each station, belonging to different companies. To a Ontario these ele- vators, so many of them, are strange, and they are all the more noticeable because the country is so flat and there 'are no new-comer from big trees. The elevators can be seen for miles, At Brandon TI laid eyes on the first prosperous cousin off by the train --Ye micht like tae leave me a bob |or two tae drink ye a safe journey, | Wullie. Wullie (feigning regret)--Man, I canna. <A' my spare shullin's J gie tae my auld mither." Donald--That's strange. Because yer mither told me ye never gie her onything. Wullie--Weel, if I dinna gie iny auld mither onything, what sort 0? chance dae ye think you've got? Before marrying an inebriate to reform him, a girl should learn the gentle art of chasing soiled liren up and down a washboard Northwest Mounted policeman I They wear red coats, just like those of the dragoons we saw in Toronto, and cow-boy hats. It is said that the red coats were made part of the uniform of the police by Sir John Macdonald bébause the Indians among whom the police had their most difficult work always looked on the soldiers of the Queen ag their friends. A red-coat would be trusted where anyone else would meet only dis- trust and suspicion. The most promin- ent building, from the Brandof station, is a seed warchouse, and this is another indication cf the character of the West. And the fact that they go in for agri- culture wholesale is shown by 'the adver- ever saw. ™, --By REX McEVOY y) A New Head In 30 Minutes Exchange that aching, for a clear, cool, com NA-DRU-C 25c. a box at your dr National Drug and Chemical Co. of C. throbbing, suffering, muddled head tortable cne by taking a ® Headache Wafer ugeists' or by mail from 8 da, Limited, Montreal." by engines on the big farms. Out on the ment of certain facts which will en- I] write for | prairies I saw great big galvanized iron | tanks, which I thought must be for hold: Before I go any further, I want} ing an old friend,» because it told him | His father } gave him a subscription for a year as a] Winnipeg waiting to be ship-| | chines waiting to be unloaded, and empty | ; F a : ia.| > Widow, with a silent prayer, 8id- |) « the railroad track, but by the time they | home | | | | railroad | } | | a; Everybody | this } What | tainly | Back | >| -| 13} ae print | { another | On | "In- | Across | Government | from | 28 | they | by } ing gasoline for running the plowing en- gines, but a man on the train said that these were portable granaries into which the grain is put as it is threshed, until it can be taken in to the elevators. My, the prairies are lonely. You can look from the train window and get a wide sweep for miles and miles, and per- haps there will only be one house in the whole landscape. And there are no fences to show that anybody has made their home there. The rail fences, such as we have about the old place, you never see out here; wood is too scarce. Why, the only place about which there was a fence in some of the towns was the lumber- yard, and this was sure to be protected with a high fence. Wood is so valuable that they say people lock their kindling in safes before going to bed. By-bye for the present. Your loving sun, THE TREASURY. Mark 12: 41-44, |The Building was admired by all mounted | Ss Who in their trod: It was the house they loved to call The Temple of the Living God. father's footstep } i But on that day they little knew That He who owned the house was there: Of Him they did not seek a view: To Him they breathed no word of prayer. Against the treasury sat He Who is of heaven and earth the King: is all-discerning eye.could see All those who came their gifts bring. oO And He whose hand the <eil lifts That He may hidden things 1 fold Perceived gifts The worthless dross and purest gol 1, up- in- amongst their varied some brought with boastful air, As if they gloried in their ri Brought all she had--two single mites. to His the Lord, "Their gifts which seem so great are Ps own said Christ Smail; what LOGY gave could well af- ford ; But this poor widow ga ; al?' Beside the treasury to-day There sits the Lord of eart heaven: To these who do H h and is word obey The riches of His grace is given. He honors those who for His sake Unto each urgent call attend: He knows the sacrifice those make Who seek His kingdom to extend. f ] the gifts we give r gold from sordid May love enrich And cleanse ou dross: The life of ) we live And al ways glory in the cross. T. WATSON. 1911. service may Episode on Board Bound for South Africa. An A fancy-dress ball in celebration of "crossing the line," given on board iis described by Lady Elizabeth But- ler in | ? | Book and Di | tisements to be seen offering "plowing engines" for sale. The plowing is done book, "From Sketch= ary."? On this occasion the passengers of the second-class her which is} cabin were invited to join those of west, there is a rise ef} the first on the has a population of | promenade-deck. town, and one of! directly from her diary the account markets. | of the and} serts some words of explanation. gaily decorated Before quoting "catastrophe," the author in- Here I must interpolate the state able you more fully to sympathize with me in the catastrophe that closes this mid-ocean episode. You must know that white serv- ants were impossible to find at the Cape, and one must bring all one's staff out with one, 'for better, for worse," it may be for three, four, five years. If any turn out badly, it is true you may send them home, but--who is to replace them? I could not persuade my cook at Dover Castle to undertake this ex- patriation, her courage failing her at the last moment, and I had to find an untried substitue. She was a Dane with the blood of genera- tions of bellicose vikings coursing through her veins, and from afar I had watched her daily on the other deck with apprehensions. "The ball is over and I feel de- cidedly limp. I thought 1 was go- ing to have a pleasant evening. I was sitting with Lady----and all the others who were not masquerading, enjoying the sight of the figures in all kinds of extempore costumes ap- pearing on the deck from below and mustering prior to setting to, the band playing a spirited waltz, when there slowly emerged from Saloon stairway, as if rising from | the waves she rules--Britannia ! 'First a high brass helmet with scarlet crest, then a trident held in the other, and the folds of the union jack draping her commanding jform. She stepped on deck. '* 'Tsay, said a voice, 'this is the success of the evening. Who it it? ** Who is it? you heard on every side ** 'Who is it?' asked turning to me. "" "My cook,' I faintly answered. "The last speaker knew her South Lady----, the future might have spoken in my ter that caused her withdrawal. € ed back within sight of my smileless face, the fit seized her again. the Marchioness. get her in hand with Shall I ever now?' "T went back to hang over the bulwarks and lose myself among the | stars." pee pe pe aan FOUND RIGHT PATH. After a False Start. 'In 1890 I began to arink coffee. At first I noticed no t enjoyed life. bad effects from the indulgence, bu a Steamer | a steamer bound for South Africa, | ,é | | | | | | | in course of time found that various | troubles were coming upon me. | "'Palpitation of the heart took lunto itself sick and nervous head- aches, kidney troubles followed and eventually my stomach became so deranged that even a light meal caused me serious distress. | "Our physician's prescriptions \failed to help me and then I dosed |myself with patent medicines til] | was thoroughly disgusted and hope Jess. | 'Finally I began to suspect tha 4 coffee was the cause of my except for one small cup at break- fast. some, but did not altogether relieve my distress "his helped It satisfied me, however, that I was |} ] j | | { | on the right track. | "So I gave up coffee altogether land began to use Postum. \In ten Eee [ found myself greatly improy- jed, my nerves steady, my head clear, my kidneys working better and better, my heart's action rap idly improving, my appetite im- | proved and the ability to eat a |hearty. meal without subsequent | suffering restored to me, condition remains, "Leaving off coffee and using Postum did this, with no help from drugs I abandoned the use of medicines when I began to use the food drink.'? Name given by Pos tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason," and it is ex- plained in the little book, R ra! to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appcars from time to time. They genuine, true, and full of human interest. as THE PRESERVING TEST | FOR NEARLY 60 YRLARS EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR has stood the searching test of preserving time. possible because of ics consistent high quality. FROM YOUR GROCER. The Canada Sugar Refining Co., Limited, Montreal Established in 1854 by John Redpath. This is only the : Africa, and all the possibilities of | face, to judge by the choking laugh- precipitate | Each time she ventur- | "Later on I saw Britannia danc- | ing in a small set of Lancers, hand | harnessed | "At that time I was healthy and | | troubles, | I experimented by leaving it off, | And this | "The | are; The most profitable dai one that has no tendex on flesh, has a good appe large stomach, indicatin consuming and assimilating city. A cow with this confor is said to be one of the t type. : Fodder corn is the staple age for cows that give milk when properly cured is a good stitute for ensilage . The silo, ever, saves all the feed a cows relish the ensilage better b cause it is more succulent. Bad flavors in butter are caused by the feeding. The onion or garlic in the pastu do it, as everybody knows, a will musty fodder, spoiled ensila and other similarly damaged food Turnips, potatoes and roots, before or during milking, wil be apt to produce bad: flavor easily be obviated by feeding a milking. This common goat will eat o one-eighth as much food as a ¢o but will give more than th pr portion of milk. Butter goat's milk will not keep, be eaten fresh from the chur many parts of the east goats being raised in great numbers supply a rapidly growing dema for their milk and butter. Dairy cows require an abunda of succulent food. Any kind w assist digestion and render other foods more beneficial. Ca rots do not contain much solid ma' ter, being mostly water, bub the |are highly relished by all classes of stock, and the animals will pr fer them to grain, instinct prompt ing them to accept such foods b: ; cause of their effect on the system. To produce strong and health heifer calves for future dairy pur poses their dams must be fed gea erously on nutritious feeds previ ous to calving, The cow should b allowed to become dry for from six to eight weeks previous to the birth | of her calf. She will need this re from giving milk in order to buil up her physical system and to fur- nish extra nourishment to the de- velopment of her calf. ; GROW SOILING CROPS. A splendid way to utilize more profitably that piece of land near the building, that is neggigrowing up into weeds, is to Ne it up after seeding and sow some crop that can be fed to the dairy cows -- and cattle when the grass becomes this summer. : We have seen the cows drop jlow in their milk yield during th |latter part of July and August, due | to the shortage of grass during tha warm on. This ean be over come by growing a patch of eorm |clover, a mixture of peas and oats, rape white turnips near the i yard, pasture, and when the cows a fall off in the niilk lyield, and the grass becomes short, some of this green young short all YAH « seas or or show cut and feed fodder once or twice a day. Pasture is limited in many sec f this country, and in a dry year it is exceedingly importaat that we grow some green feed to. carry our cows over the dry sum. -- ; mer season to the time when the j}will have free access to the gre lhields. It not require a Jay {piece of land for these crops, [they are better for green feed sown thickly, and consequently ' ; Small area will give you a large j yield per acre, and many unsight] feorners seen on several faring cou | be changed tu profitable plots, giy }ing us, indirectly, as great retur as any equal 'Sized pieces of | on the farm. DISEASE, } tions o dk JCS PREVENTING Mu 'he heavy ~ losses in hogs are largely due to transmissible diseas es The organisms that produce such diseases enter the system in the feed and air, Muddy or dusty yards, crowded conditions and fil thy floors or troughs are respon- for most of the cholera and iswine plague. Young hogs are more susceptible than mature ani- naturally they need m6 The pens and yards shoul ; not be neglected because there ja pasture. Keep them well drain jand disinfected, Use whitewas | freely about the houses and feaces | Plough the tnused lots aad sow. lrape, oats or cowpeas. Spray the |house, feeding floors and trough j thoroughly with a djsiafoctant every two or three weeks. . Tar disinfectants are most co! venient. They should be used a not less than a 2 per cent. was solution. Spray or dip the hor oceasionally in a.l per cent. wa solution. Young hogs should |be given crowded quarters. | ; Vide a diet that will kee) healthy and help them » disease. Keeping the hogs the best sanitary eonditi using every. precaution to 'pre infection from the outside. most satisfactory mothod o| ing loss from t \unseiesible \ , | | : | | | | | a ee | sible | | | | | | ! | } | | | ti