July 1, 1908 
THE AUSTRALIAN GARDENER. 
29 
 w HE ELBARROWS, 
Light, Strong, and Everlasting. Unequalled for Garden; Farm, and General Use. 
Made in Black or Galvanized Iron, Sizes—No. 0, 1} bushels ; No. 1, 15 bushels ; No. 2, 2+ bushels. 
MANUFACTURERSS 
‘ 
‘Kp SEMRSON & SOM 
Gawler Place and Pirie Street, Adelaide. 
Makers of Field Gates, Water Burrows, 
Medical science during the last feur or 
five decades has taken wonderful advanced 
strides. and the practitioner who prescribos 
plood-letting and blistering is a man of 
bygone days. But the end is not yet, for 
the modern physician is beginning to find 
that the present method of dosing patients 
with evil smelling and tasting medicines 
(some of which contain deadly poisons) is 
anything but satisfactory, and they are 
now turning their attention more than 
ever to the natural remedies of nature, 
viz., pure food, water, and air. 
disease, whether it is produced by accident 
or in some other way. two conditions of the 
body are always present : —l. A circulation 
of the blood that is disturbed, some parts 
of the body having too much and others 
too little blood. 2. An abnormal quantity — 
of poisons in the system. The quickest, 
safest, and most natural way to assist 
nature to right these abnormal conditions 
is by the use of water intelligentiy applied. 
In the Hydropathic Institute, Victoria — 
square east, water applied in a number of 
different ways takes the place of medicine. © 
‘Baths, packs, fomentations, sprays. douches. 
etc., are used very effectively, and in con- 
junction with electricity and massage 
proves a very great help in bringing back 
health to those who have lost it. Such 
diseases as rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, 
$4 _indigestion, constipation, as well at all 
nerve disorders, yield very readily to the 
methods used at the Electro-Hydropathie 
Institute, and we would advise our readers 
help to patronise the Institute. 
In every. 
Garden Use. 
the next time they are in need of medical 
interesting time can be spent in inspecting 
the different appliances — electrical and 
otherwise—that are used in the establisb- 
ment, and the inanager (Mr Charles D. 
_ Baron) will be very pleased to give any 
information in regard to the methods of 
treatment used in the Iustitute. “ 
The Melbourne | 
Tailoring Depot, 
No. 10 ARCADE, Adelaide. 
Absolutely the best in the States. : 
Customers have a choice of over 2,000 
patterns. ) =a bat 
New Goods now open for Spring and 
Summer wear. 
First-class fit and workmanship guar- 
anteed, : 
NOTE THE ADDRESS, and profit 
by ordering your next suit fromus. We 
post free to country customers patterns 
abd self-measurement forms, 
Please mention this paper. 
Quite an - 
Watering Cans, and all kinds of Metallic Goods for 
Duriag his 19 years’ experiance as 
manager of the Sewage Farm Mr Bedford 
Hack, who has retired from the position 
made several experiments with the object 
of determining which fodder grasses were 
the most profitable to grow there. The 
desirableness of planting varieties which _ 
would alternate and thus provide a per. 
mant pasturage was always in the mind of 
Mr Hack during the experimental stage, 
and he demonstrated clearly that prairie, 
rye, and lucerne were the best sorts to sow 
where irrigation could be applied. ‘I 
~ sowed one and a half bushels of prairie, 
a quarter of a bushel of perennial rye, — 
and 6lb of lucerne,’ he said when dis- 
cussing the subject with a representative 
of “The Advertiser.” ‘‘ The mixture has 
proved most satisfactory, because it pro- 
vides a permanent green pasture, The 
prairie is a winter grass, and it proved 
‘one of the best I tried. The others are 
summer plants, and lacerne particularly 
has done remarkably well under the irri- 
gation system. Where people can apply 
water freely I think they cannot do better 
than plant these three grasses in the one 
paddock, as I have done with such sus- 
cess.” : } ae 
——— ed 
It has been said that we have more 
wife-made men than self-made men on ~ 
our farms to-day. : 
