§ ts FR t $€*, PDER 1¢ IN are working steadily throughout the biz advance ought to have a monuâ€" ment all to themselves. They have alveady earned it by their magnificent courage under terrific fire. One ofâ€" ficer of a Manchester "Pals" regiâ€" ment which fought at Mametz and elsewhere is now in a London hosâ€" pital, his life saved by the courage of the men who dashed through a curâ€" tain of fire to his rescue when he fell helplessly wounded. , DEAF MAN IN WAR. _ _ He Faces Silent DQ,(!I Rescuing the He says that all the time the stretcher bearers were doing these things which deserved the Disâ€" tinguished Conduct Medal, and he told of at least one man who he thinks has won it. This is a man so deaf that he was unfit for work in the trenches. He was a cheerful sort and the men liked the queer things that happened when he failed to hear an order. Schoolâ€"Days are Joyâ€" Days to the boy or girl whose boedy is properly mcurished with foods that 4* ~Youngsters fed on Shredded Wheat Biscuit are full of the bounce and buoyancy that belong to youth. The ideal food for growing chil. dren because it contains all the material needed for good start for the day. Readyâ€"cooked and readyâ€" "Stand to!" .shouted the colonel. The deaf man turned pathetic eyes on him. "Is it true, sir," he asked anxâ€" lously, "that the Government have stopped the rum ration,?" During the big battle he was ordered to the clearing station just behind the lines, but he spent the whole day under the murderous fire of the machine guns and the artillery between the first line trenches and a shorter trench far advanced in the most exposed part of the ground, picking up the wounded, twisting them on to his broad back, and staggering back with them under fire until he reached a place of comâ€" parative safety. T toâ€"serve. Every one but the deaf man stood to attention. He took no notice. Then he went back into the thick of it again. He was the one man in that toiling, devoted company who did not hear the awful clamor of the shells, but calmly faced a silent death. The "Pals" whom he has so often amused are now hoping that he will get the medal he deserves. prainâ€"building elemen;; The under dog gets a lot of symâ€" pathyâ€"and that‘s about all. Some day the stretcher bearers who Soothes the fretting child during th > trying period of its developâ€" me it and thus gives rest and reliet to both child and mother, Buy a bottle today and keep it handy Sobt by all druggists in Canada and throughout the avorld THE NATION‘S It is a corrective for diarrhcea, colic and other ailments to which children are subject especially during the teething period. Many diseases to which childâ€" ren are susceptible, first indicate their presence in the bowels. The careful mother should watch her child‘s bowel moveâ€" ments and use It is absolutely nonâ€"narcotic and contains neither opium, morphine nor any of their deâ€" rivatives. Depends Upon Healthy Babies Properly reared children grow up to be strong, healthy citizens Soothing Syrup Soothing Syrup Mrs. Winslow‘s Makes Cheerful, Chubby Children Winslow‘s i Ready For Start. | The mechanic in charge of the machine has by this time looked over | the machine, made sure that everyâ€" | thing is all right, and is busy crankâ€" ing the engine by turning the huge ' propeller. The engine started, speech is useless. Your pilot will sit in the | rear seat just behind the planes, so | that he may have a perfect view; and his passenger will be seated just in front, between the planes. If you make your flight in a student‘s maâ€" chine you will have ample opportunity to watch the operating of the controls as both seats are fitted with a comâ€" plete system of operating, which is so constructed that both operate unâ€" der the one hand. HOW IT FEELS To BE 3,000 FEET IN THE AIR. many Speed Not Noticed and Sensations of Giddiness Are Not Or + satisfied that his engine is operating properly the pilot will show you how to strap yourself into the machine. You secure yourself by a strap which is fastened inside the seat and buckles closely to your waist. When ready, you nod to the pilot who motions to the mechanic, the blocks which are placed beneath the two front wheels, for the purpose of holding the aeroplane in place, are removed, and your pilot turns the enâ€" gine on full. Immediately you are in motion, and before fifty yards have been covered you begin to soar. _ It takes several seconds to gather your wits out of the confusion of starting, and by that time you will have atâ€" tained a height of 2,000 feet perhaps. At first you will be satisfied to sit still and observe the sky, not venturâ€" ing to look down, and enjoying to the full what might be described as the very poetry of motion, so delightful is it. But on looking down you are disâ€" appointed to find that your head does not swim and that you are not temptâ€" ed to jump out of the machine; on the contrary, the first thing that strikes you is the wondrous beauty of the panorama lying â€" beneath. The country roads mark the earth into what appear to be perfect squares, continuing thus until lost in a town or village. It is impossible to describe the sensation caused by the view of a wonderful color scheme composed of earth, lake and sky, all comprised in one vast scene. Combine with this a sensation of travelling at the rate of 65 to 75 miles an hour in a machine so delicately poised that there is abâ€" solutely no sense of rapid motion realâ€" ized, no bumps, hardly a roll. During your trip your pilot will have been navigating in such a way that just before he decides to come down he will have attained a height of between 2,500 and 3,000 feet. The difference is hardly perceptible at first. A little experience with aviators would lead you to believe that they go up for the pleasure of coming down. But, when he is ready to descend, he will turn off the power from the engine and warn you by gestures that he is about to descend. Perhaps he will do this in a series of "volplanes"; if so, there will be very little "thrill" experienced by the passenger. _ If, however, he descends in a series of spirals the thrills will be marked by the number of spirals. Dipping Down. When making the top part of the circle, the plane is tipped at an abrupt angle, and the nose suddenly raised, causing a sensation of being forced into your seat. The sidelong angle becomes more acute until suddenly without worning the nose of the maâ€" chine drops down until you are almost in a perpendicular position, at the same time you shoot earthward a disâ€" tance of about 200 feet and realize that you are, for the time, under the full influence of _ gravitation. You would probably be very much frightâ€" ened if your pilot did not warn you, but this is your initiation, and by sitâ€" ting close into the machine instead of allowing your body to become tense, you give with the machire, the following spirals will be enjoyed. After diving 200 feet your pilot brings his machine back to horizontal position, circles again, and so on, unâ€" til he has reached within five or six hundred feet from the ground, when he brings his machine into position for making a landing. When you finally approach solid g‘round, you realize for the first time the terrific speed at which you have been travelling, a fact that makes no impression upon you while fAying high. _ y Cat The landing is made uneventfully, the rear end of the machine being the first part to touch the ground. There is a total absence of shock. You simply wait until she slows down beâ€" fore getting out. _ After such an experience your feelâ€" ings of admiration for a man who can you Up in the Air. At 3,000 Feet. think and act under stances are mingled with an ambition to develop the ability to fiy yourself. The trip lasted only fifteen minutes and comprised more real pleasure than could be had in a lifetime in any RELIEF FROM INDIGESTION The Most Common Cause of This Trouble is Poor Blood. All conditions of depressed vitality tend to disturb the process of digesâ€" tion. There is not a disturbed condiâ€" tion of life that may not affect digesâ€" tion. But few causes of the trouble are so common as thin, weak blood. It affects directly and at once the proâ€" cess of nutrition. Not only is the action of the gastric and intestinal glands diminished but the muscular action of the stomach is weakened. Nothing will more promptly restore digestive efficiency than good, red blood. Without it the rormal activity of the stomach is impossible. Thin, pale people who complain of indigestion must improve the condiâ€" tion of their blood to find relief. The most active blood builder in such cases is Dr. Williams Pink Pills. They make the rich, red blood which quickly restores the digestive organs to their proper activity, and the dyspeptic who has hated the sight and smell of food now looks forward to meal time with pleasure. As proving the value of Dr. Williams Pink Pills in curing indiâ€" gestion Miss Edith M. Smith, R. R. No. 4, Perth, Ont., says: "I can honâ€" estly say I owe my present good health to Dr. Williams Pink Pills. My stomach was terribly weak and I sufâ€" fered from indigestion and sick headâ€" ache, and was always very nervops. I was troubled this way for nearly three years, and in that time took a great deal of doctors‘ medicine, which, however, did not help me. I could not eat anything without experiencing the most agonizing pain. My sick headâ€" aches were most violent and I could not rest night or day. I was asked one day by a friend to try Dr. Wilâ€" liams Pink Pills, and consented to do so. After taking them some time I found they were helping me, and I continued to take them steadily for several months, until I found that I was completely cured. While taking the pills I gained both in strength and weight, and I feel it impossible to praise Dr. Williams Pink Pills too highly." You can procure these pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. How Donald A. Smith Satisfied the Fisherman. How to get a man into a bunk that was a foot too short for him, and how to keep him from being discontented with his bed, was the Procrustean problem solved by Lord Strathcona when, as Donald A. Smith, he was a chief factor of the Hudson‘s Bay Comâ€" pany. A solution at which he arrived is described by Mr. Beckles Wilson in his "Life of Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal." ‘The company had a number of EON®, UNC IOCURIS ALC LHC UETC O° NC boarded huts for the fishermen in topmost branches. Then they would their employ, of such narrow dimenâ€"| ZENAW off small limbs, perhaps to get sions as to afford sleeping accommoâ€" : at the Plfl’l within. They stripped all dations only for persons of normal the fruit trees .and many shade trees length. On one occasion a very honâ€" l of all their f°l“‘g:,'_ est and active man presented himself | f c e to Chief Factor Smith for a bunk in M!m2®&#® Liniment Cures Burns, Eto. one of these huts. The difficulty was | & that he was six feet six inches in Cause for Wrath. lengthâ€"nearly a foot longer than the| Jones (to his grocer)â€"You seem bunk. On an inspection of his quarâ€" | angry, Mr. Brown. ters he rejected Mr. Smith‘s offer| Brownâ€"I am. The inspector of summarily, declaring that he was not | weights and measures has just been in. going to be cramped for any agent| _ Jonesâ€"Ha, ha, He caught youâ€"givâ€" or planter living, and neither was he ing 15 ounces to the pound, did he? content to be sawed in two. |! _ Brownâ€"Worse than that. â€" He said "Will a bed seven feet long suit you?" asked the chief factor. _ The fisherman said it would. Thereâ€" upon Mr. Smith sent for the comâ€" pany‘s carpenter; a hole was cut in the wall of the building, to which a box lined with deerskin was applied outside and rendered stable by props. The man afterwards told Mr. Smith it was the first thoroughly comfortâ€" able bed he had occupied in years. The receptacle was afterwards exhibited at the store at Rigolet and enjoyed much local fame as "Bill Sadler‘s leg box." "BILL SADLER‘S LEG BOX." "Another Article Against Tea and Coffee"â€" In spite of broad publicity, many people & not realize the harm that the drtxg. cafâ€" feine, in tea and coffee does to many users, until they try a 10 daye‘ change to Postum satisfhes the deâ€" sire for a hot table drink, and its users generally sleep better, feel better, smile oftener and enjoy life more. A fair trialâ€"off both tea and coffee and on Postumâ€" shows "*There‘s a Reason" Canadian P&flhz:r Oem Co., Ltd., PrPOSTUM [ The native vineyards and orchards | were stripped bare to the bark of the ‘trees and vines. Of all things fig \leaves best suited ~their taste; and | once a tree fell a prey to them, the | ground about would be literally layers | deep. Jerusalem Was Visited By Them For Several Days. In an article in the National Geoâ€" graphic Magazine, Mr. John D. Whitâ€" ing describes the ravages of the loâ€" custs that descended on Jerusalem in 1915 and wrought destruction to garâ€" dens, farms and vineyards throughout Palestine. He says: e In Jerusalem they were first seen one day early in March, at noon. The sunshine was suddenly darkened, and then came a veritable shower of their excretions, which fell thick and fast, and resembled those of mice. At times the insects were hundreds of feet in the air; again they came down quite low, and some of them alighted. The clouds of them were so dense as to appear quite black, with the edges lighter, until they faded away into the blue sky. When they first reached Jerusalem countless numbers poured into the broadâ€"walled road that leads into the city from the west. For three or four days an unending stream filled the road from side to side, like troops marching on parade, and in spite of the traffic at that point, their ranks, although thinned, entered the ancient gateway and the New Breach. The moat round "David‘s Tower" was so filled that the dry earth seemed to be a living mass. Up the city walls and the castle they climbed to the very top. They were disastrous to the crops in the country, and obnoxious in . the houses, for they squeezed through the cracks of doors and windows, and even scaled the walls to the roofs, and then got into the houses by throwing themselves into the open courts. Woâ€" men frantically swept the walls and roofs of their homes, but to no avail. For several days Jerusalem | was thus visited, but the insects evidently sought greener and less populated disâ€" tricts; so, after the first few days, we saw nothing more of them. At Bethâ€" lehem heavy showers of rain brought them to the earth, and the poorer peoâ€" ple gathered quantities of them. A few ate them roasted; but the main reason for collecting them was to get the small bounty offered by the loâ€" cal government of Bethlehem. Tons of the insects were destroyed; most of them were buried alive, until sevâ€" eral ancient abandoned cisterns were filled. When the daintier morsels were gone, the locusts ate the bark of the topmost branches. Then they would gnaw off small limbs, perhaps to get at the pith within. They stripped all the fruit trees and many shade trees of all their foliage. Brownâ€"Worse than that. â€" He said I‘d been giving 17. A woman said to a little boy with his hair bobbed in his neck; "Frankâ€" lyn, when are you going to have your hair cut like papa‘s? â€""I don‘t want my hair cut like papa‘s," he replied, "with a hole in the top." Dear Sirsâ€"I can recommend MIâ€" NARD‘S LINIMENT for Rheumatism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. Yours truly, T. B. LAVERS, St. John. One mother, accompanied by three young children, shot herself before the gates of the Royal Palace of Muâ€" nich and in the presence of the senâ€" tries. A placard found pinned to her breast stated:; "Your Majesty, feed my children, I cannot." Parents are abandoning children in the p‘ih in increasing numbers. The souce ave collected nearly 200 chilâ€" rflin Rhine towns. e Lokalanzeiger is indignant beâ€" cause thirtyâ€"two children were abanâ€" doned in Berlin one Sunday. Thefts of food are becoming frequent. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Despair of Hunger in Germany is Evident. News from Munich states that durâ€" ing a recent week, owing to the misâ€" ery of starvation, 118 suicides, the majority of whom were women, hapâ€" pened in Germany. Sore aure Eyes inflamed by expoâ€" sure to Sun, Dust and Wind uickly relieved by Murine yes Eye Remedy. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort, At Your Druggist‘s 50c per Bottle. MurineEys SalveinTubes25c. ForBook oftheEyeFreeask Druggists or Mur! ~veRemedyCo., Chice@® A PLAGUE OF LOCUSTS. 118 SUICIDES IN WEEK. REP A|RS 117 fikmocoe #t., Terouto. The Observing Child. M a & n e t o s 8 t a r t e rs. G e n era t ors Promptiy Made to Granulated Eyelids, o 91 sToRags Nenralgia. |__ Apply to Staff Serg‘t Dawson, Bandmaster K. O. (late Bandâ€" ‘master Gov. Gen‘s. Bodyguard, . Toronto) 197 Peel Street, Montâ€" WANTED ! ; "We are going to see that the men | of the 245th get every possible benefit | in the way of feeding that knowledge | and skill can supply," said Capt. Alâ€" | lan. "As a rule the men do not get much variety in their diet, with a ‘round of food that comes with monotâ€" | onous regularity and is often not near the standard that the men who have | enlisted were previously used to. Help for Woolien Mill. BANDSMEN WANTED Good wages paid in all Departments, and steady work assured. We have several openings for inexperienced help. where energy and ability will bring proâ€" motion. _ Wages paid to apprentices while learning weaving. Special induceâ€" ment to family workers. _ B The Slingshy Manafactaring Co., Carders, Weavers, Fullers and Napper Tenders. LIMITED, BRANTFORD, . â€" ( BATTALION HAS FAMOUS CHEF. Allan Line Chief Cook to Feed Solâ€" diers on Delicacies. The 245th Battalion, which has just started recruiting in Montreal, does so under the most favorable auspices conceivable, for through the agency of Capt. Andrew Allan, one of its officers, there has been engaged as chef the famous superintendent of the Allan Line cooks, M. de Gorog, who will devise the menu for the soldiers. Dr. J. W. Edwards, M.P. W. F. M. de Gorog was delighted at the opportunity of turning his culinary skill to the aid of Canada‘s soldiers, and at once volunteered his services. "In order to overcome this we have decided to try a new experiment with | the 245th Battalion, and to that end | I have enlisted the services of M. de Gorog, who is known as one of the most famous chefs in the world." | M. de Gorog has held many importâ€" ant gastronomic posts in Europe. He was for some time in an important position with the King‘s household, and was decorated by King George. He conducted a restaurant in London for some time and was chef of the Reform Club before he was brought here by the Allan Line to take charge of their catering from this end. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere, Lodges in grery Province in Canada. Purcly Canadian, safe, sound and econc i ts no local Chosen h_m. »m to w':ilï¬ Still Healthy. "Do you see that strong, healthyâ€" looking man over there?" "I was just admiring his physique," "The doctors gave him up years ago." "You surprise me." "Yes; they found out they couldn‘t get anything out of him." Kitchener‘s Own ARIO ARC TORONTO HAMILTON . ONTARIO FOR ISSUE 40â€"‘16. P41 ONTARIO. What the Canadian Pacifc Railway Is Doing For Its Employees. For the convenience of the emâ€" ployees, of whom there are nearly 2,000 in the Windsor Station buildâ€" ings, Montreal, the Canadian Pacific Railway has recently set up a cafeâ€" tera luncheon at 15 cents in a large apartment which will accommodate 251 persons at a sitting. Judging by the attendances, it is bound to be one | olthomoltpopuhr!amreuï¬weon-i pany has put its hand to. There are : hundreds of girls, especially, who have not time to go home, or . who, if they do go home, are greatly press~ ed for time. With this service at their disposal they will save car fare; they will get a thoroughly satisfying luncheon; and they can have the comâ€" fort of the lounge room in connection on wet or cold daysâ€"a lounge room | which contains a piano, mnguineo‘ and papers and in which the emâ€" ployees can rest for the balance of] their lunch hour. The arnngement] is four to a table; all the appointâ€" ments are harmonious; there is an air of quiet dignity about the place. Mr. W. A. Cooper, manager of the sleeping and dining car department, said that this was in accordance with the wellâ€"known policy of the Canadâ€" ian Pacific for taking care of its emâ€" ployees. The people in the offices constituted quite a little city in themselves. _ Many could not go home with convenience. This lunch room would meet the wants of many. Of course, there would still be the 30â€"cent luncheon upstairs, and the regular dining room in which you could have what you wanted and pay for the same as much as you liked; but this was strictly for the emâ€" ployees, male and female, who would prefer to have their luncheon inside the building to going to restaurants \It Brings Relief To Boy Standâ€" ing His Watch Deep in | Mud. â€"those of them who were in the habâ€" it of going to restaurants. A Bell Which Is Rung Only When the Nuns Want Food. Antwerp, the city of churches and chimes, is crowned with history, and its name will figure prominently when the page of the future comes to be written. The romantic Belgian city, that ever resounds with the sound of church bells, will doubtless have heard lately the sinister chime of a bell that has not been rung within the history of living man. The beil bangs in a convent supported by nuns of a curiâ€" ous order. These nuns have all been great ladies who have renounced the world and all its ways, and consecratâ€" ed their wealth to the church. Having taken the vow of poverty they walk through life barefooted, and hold no communication whatever with the busy populace outside their walls. For their daily bread they depend solely on the charity of the townspeople, who religiously leave food on their doorway every day. The bell hanging in their convent is never tolled, it beâ€" ing kept as a last desperate resort to inform the city that the nuns can live no longer unless they have food. The Tenderâ€"hearted Cookâ€"No bad news, 1 ‘ope, ma‘am? h The Mistressâ€"The master‘s been wounded. The Cookâ€"There now, ma‘am; don‘t let that worry you. _ They tells me they can patch em up so‘s they‘re bet. MOTHER LOVE AIDS SON IN TRENCHES ter than before. Minard‘s Liniment Cuores Dandraf. Once upon a time, only a few months ] e t after this terrible world war had beâ€" 7 gun, Private Bailey, a soldier in tho| ranks, had stood for days in the | _â€"___. trenches "somewhere in France." The gxppj cold rains soaked him to the skin ; | °* the mud was deep. He had had no rest. Weary and aching with rheuâ€" They I matic pains, he recalled the faith his | mother had in Sloan‘s lAiniment. He | The asked for it in his next letter home. her‘ A large bottle was immediately sent other‘ him and a few applications killed the ,| ‘" & I pain, once more he was able to stand | poral the severe exposure. He shared this , widge wonderful muscleâ€"soother with his bhboth r comrades, and they all agreed it was | . a, the greatest "reinforcement" that had | Was b ever come to their rescue. At your !"> druggist, 25¢., 50c. and $1.00 & bottle. . g’e OF A GREAT CONVENIFNCE | or inâ€"this is the A. RAMSAY & SON CO BRANCKES AT 7 BITS ABOUT ANTWERP. Stands the test of Canada‘s lrring weather as no olhcr“faim you have ever used. _ For barns and other buildings. for your implements and wagons, and for home. both outside and in there is a Ramsay finish that is the best of its kind. o the man who does his own painting the convenience and economy of Ramsay‘s ts self evident man who hires painters to do his work for him will do well to specifv Ramsay‘s mhmw so well and rvo«u wood and metal so thoroughly from deterioration my dealer will give you splendid service and suggestions. Or write direct to the ory. Wighatt ts The Silver Lining. ), (Established 1842 MONTREAL . Que. TORONTO AND VANCOUVER BY ALL DEALERS. Sl:nn POTATOES, _IRISH CORâ€" blere, Deleware, Carman. Order at once. l.wly Mimited. Write for quo»* tations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. CABINET MAKERS AND MACHINE hands wanted. . Steady work at highest | wases. Apply to The Bel Furniture €o.. Southampton, Ont VO. 50, No. €0, No. 70. STATE QUANâ€" L tity you have for sale, also Muker‘s name and best cash price. A'rpl,\' United Brass & Lead, 1.t4.. 284 St. Mclons Ave,, Toronto, Ont. KA â€" Offices for sale in wood Onturi® towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Witson Pablishins Com»â€" pany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, PROFI'A‘-HAK!.\‘\) NEWS AND JOB J Offices for sale in wood Onturie CX internal and external, cured with« out pain by our home treatment Workt® us before too late. Dr. Beliman Medical Co., Limited. Collingwood. Ont. Curbs, Filled Tendons, Soreâ€" ness from Bruises or Strains; stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain. Does not blister, remove the hair or lay up the horse. $2.00 a bottle at drupgists or delivered. Book 1 M free. ABSORBINE, JR., for mankindâ€"an antiseptic liniment for bruises, Cuts, wounds, strains, painful, swollen veins or fl:mds. It heals and soothes. $1.00 a bottle at drug= gists or nï¬tplid. Will tell you more if you write. ade in the U. 5. A. by W. F. YOUNG, P. D. 5., 516 Lymans Bidg., Montreal, Cat Absorbine and Absorbioe, Jr.. are made in Canada, Machinery For Saio Wheelsck Engine, 150 H.P., 18 x 42, with double main driviag belt 24 ins, wige, and Dbypamo 30 K W. beit driven, _ All in first class conk:tion. Would be sold together or sep>rateâ€" ly ; also a lot of shafiing at a very great bargain as room is required immediâ€" ately. 8. Frank Wilson & Sons SNIPERS KILL TWO BROTHERS They Die in Each Other‘s Arms on ths British Front. The death of two brothers in each other‘s arms at the front is related in a private letter. They were Corâ€" poral Tom and Private Henry Hardâ€" widge, of Ferndale, Rhondda Valley, both members of a Welsh regiment. An officer writes: "The eldest, Tom, was hit by a sniper‘s bullet and lay in the open under a scorching sun, when Henry, at the risk of his life, hastenâ€" ed to him with a pail of drinking waâ€" ter. Just as he reached him and as he was offering the water, a sniper shot him. He clasped his brother as the latter rose to take the water and they both died in each other‘s arms." A third brother remains in action in DOMINION RAINCOATS "Made in Canada" * Mulled free io any address by America‘s the Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. os Remsiies [118 West 31st Street, New York ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS "OTTO KIiG:L" PIANO ACTICN Best for quality, style and value. Guaranteed for all cliâ€" When buying your Piano insist on having an 78 Adclaide Street West, Toronto. WEWSPAPERS FOR SALE CRUCIELES WANTED NIBCEL LANEOUS SEED POTATOE3 D0G DISEASES And How to Feed . T5 satisfaction BoOOK ON Ask Your Dealer (35