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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-03-08, Page 7' Conducted by Professor Mary G. Ben, By NI• T The (*Jr* thle deportment is to Ohm at thee Nifty years ago, when good ce Service of our farm reorders the advice of an acknowl. stock was in abundance and le edged *Minority on ell !subjects pertaining to sells end crepe. tore their own eagles b'Y saw! /aft", the fanners used to Mama Address ail questions to Professor Henry O. 1411, in eplitting and ehaving, *ant there •eare of The Wilson Publishing Company, leintited, Meaty roohi yet throughout the go tont., and *newer. •will• *poser in this column: in tbe try whereepliteereeriewrod collar sh - reedit ebt 'which -they' are -received. 'apace Is Malted lee were wiled fifty yeses et stamped and addressed envelope be enclosed with tho I• t ° IS advisable where Immediete reply le necessary that Thopp ableatee were genereii7 ab queetion, when the' anewer will be Mailed direct. % tO %" think, but time and wort Henry G. Bell. have reduced. the thicknees of the • posed portione to that of cardboa Queetion-W. there any Otee in a mixture of 21 gallons Of wa- Under the Materiel tehdeneea of thin iihse*tity of spring wheat grown in ter to one-itelf pound of formeline ever, the days of split or ehav Kent and Estiex .,Ceeretiese • Would There are other treamente, but thie ceder aiiinglee are Peeeed, and te, you Advise plenttng spring wheat in le one of the handiest and "nest effeee • • Kent County on et good clay loam tive as formalin can easily be pure , ,pee ' • loll, Mod- Breda apart, 4 he tile? '4111;4 at, any drug store. Some . :When' ohouId itki planted . so• that it farmers prefer to sprinkle, theomixture , will be ewe ty:i ripen?. • of water and formalin' on the wheat Answitra--BPrini :wheat ,has been and to cover the wheat -pile with bags ".•:.'44tleceinifully grown in both Kent and over night, so that the formic acid gas,ERse , males, - In 191,1 'tent CAM- which .is dietiolved' in the **gyre of • • ty Was. growing 1,018 acres while. in water and formalin, wirll be kept 4914 there were only 183. In 1911' he around the wheat as long as pose Essex County was griming 1,345 acres sible. It is this gas which' kills the and in 1914 there were reported only tiny smut spar's.' 177 acres. From a study ef the Qtrestion-K. G. had 40 acres cliznatjc conditionfechoth the range of of alfalfe. which we cut 'three times temperature and ihe rainfall, I see last -simmer. Am afraid it went into no reason why spring wheat cannot be winter rather weak. I have a gOesa successfully grown in these counties, supply a Manure. ViTould you ad - if proper precautions are taken. vise manuring this fieldr Would you According to Investigations at Oa- advise. liming it? • If. when? • • • tario Agricultural college, , goring Answer: -•-If alleilfa has gone intq wheat should be `seeded as early as the the winter in week shape it should • • ground can be worked. I note that be given good care early in the spring, your ground, is clay loam and ie well. if its vigor is to be revived and a good supplied with tile. This •ground ore% is to be produced-. If you have • should, not be worked while it is sticky, Some fairly well rotted manure, I nor should it be left unworked until would advise spreading at least two • it 'dews. hp into a rough seed -bed. In to four tons of this,to the acre on the . order to insure a geed stand of wheat, Alfalfa field. I would also advise ap- • you would do well to apple 200 tp.300 plying from one to two tons per -acre pounds of a fertilizer carrying. from of finely4round limestone', evenly dis- .. 2 to 9% ammonia and ge to 10% tribated over the field. When 'the :available phosphoric acid. . The am- snow is gone in the spring and the • Amnia Will give the young cropet good, alfalfa has gotten a gond start, it will vigorous .start; while the available greatly help it to top -dress . the alfalfa • phosphoric acid will hasten its ripen- with about. 250 to • 400 pounds per eau-, big« ..At.a recent meeting of. the Of acid -phospliate'or bone meal' The .tario . Experimental' Union, Prof. late Joe Wing, the -great 'American Zavita'strongly recommended the use Waifs authority,. said: of Marquis wheat. If this is sOwn at "The phosphorus generally stirrer - the rate of one and a half bushels per • lates the little alfalfa plants and acre on well prepared land, there is !makes. them hustle to get ahead of the , good reason expect a profitable reer weeds and grass. On Woodland • tern: • - ' I Farm we have 'tried raw bone meal and Question --e9. R. P. :-I .had a bad acidphosphateWith abet -eqntil- re: dose of smat in my wheat -Ittet' sum- sults, as far iff the eye. could see. It What treatment will malce. it is or practice to. put 'on 250. to 400 safe to use as -deed fleet spring? . pounds per 'act* of 16% acid phosphate • . Answer: - The disease, . yotir when the -alfalfa is sown on soils well wheat ‘suelmer May have been' filled With %lime. Acid ,phosphate , , either the loose smut or -the Stinking about the most .Soluble of the Ape - smut Or' bunt. . About the only cure phatie fertilizers and thus is best .for • for the loose smut is eareful selection top -dressing when there is abundant of seed from grain 'Which: is heelthy, lirne,in the sail . . ' . . On our e -followed by Soaking. . the 'Seed .five ferM ev4 give the alfalfa eneadoWs 'a • hours cold Water .arid then 10 mine heavy dreasing of, ezhosphoras..:(phos- water at 134 degrees Pahren. phoric PraCtiee,apaye .. • It is Met likely: that' the disease in If ,the alfalfa field is fairly heavy your crop was stinking.srnut or Bunt. soil and it appears to be Pretty close - This. attacks the Young wheat seed- ly comparted, et, would' greatly help_ • and the se'edihg'e.partseer-speresetlreealfirlfeteieefetk thi-fielif'hy her - .are carried an sage which take, the reeving with. the. teeth of the. harrOw. plate of -ethee -Wheat• Ex- turned • heck „Baas AO, 't0 tear the. 'Perifnental teste7slintietthat the best plants out.. This • also would stir up • . method of .killing .Bunt or stinking a 'sell' mulch. and belp•'retain the wit.; emut is to immerse the seed .20 • min- tee that is so neceesary, to big dope'. • "M,44.4 TT 4- 's ROOFING FARM BUILDINGS The Cedar $biask,,Sfaralby of a Past exeneratloo, Giving Place to ,Lightalag-Proof, Spark-Realsting E. Clark- • der bolt, and burning ember e from. atiotber bor 'fire can dolt no dateage. ae• Meet ahieglee are iight in weight olf. • Mille eree)oden .shingleff averogil Obent are ':26e• ]b to 104/ eg. ft, elate, about GOO o, ant -three Ifetal Rook leir. net 'IMMO ilierebY" leiserdal the needed strength of the suPeretrue- out. ture alef trusses. Then, too,"Iteervy her and Wet. enow atilt not remain on 'lop ex. Ing metal mote, 'whereas. it attaehei lite" rd. self to 'Woodeneehinglee as' readily ea as, plaster doea wail*, autrtilie ii3new ed. leed aierages eometienes Ote lb, to .the re- geinere. foot, e 2,•Don't give the ,ewes. corn.• ' Corn. inekes-thefn'teverish and inflames the • . . , uddere. :fuflained udders ere a bad thing at lambing time ' • Neither crowd nor pinch, the sheep -in fodder, . ' . • An Unruly ram is a good • candidate for .the meat then: ewe that is soon: to Yean shetiki not be too, fleshy. • ' If your neighbor keepssheep' ef the • same breed as yours, -be sure to have The disposition -Of e brood soW.goes a long way in making herei profitable There Was a noticeable decrease lastyear in the number. of • death& from hog cholera in places where it was long prevalent. 5 We' suspect that -a closer attention ter -sanitation had a great deal to do with the change. ' 'Milkashorts, and -finely-ground tette -Make the,best feed for • oung pigs and very httle is, require the first ' yeurs marked. Sheep Will brettk out few weeks, after weaning. Care e sometimes, and if two flocks become should be taken at all times to have Mixed• it is a hard matter th divide ' themthe pigs clean . hp the feed in the , troegh after every meal,. _-_,The feed - The right kind of-slidep in a neiglee er mest tise' his judgment as to the borhood where there tut the ' right arnottnt of grain to :feed.. • prepositiOn, ,..„Unfortunately-atinions ,. kind of dogs. might to be a ..Winning ..1..e,iiar ilid,i!rgasi,rias.zr akseas rule, the thsti,eitet ' diff ee as to dogs. .. r: ---7-:':t • quantities to sheep with fairly ii;ir.d° -1.--"ru e ghtly higher than when these Silage is sometimes fed in smal*1 th grown. separately .° ., It may , . . e s is 0 sod. be necessary toWarefei the end of the results. ' Be sure gila e ' f ' a eeeeeeee-e-eeeeetearelitye'enteftrohltteaer iretere4IreBritriAdr-1"-Ilttereitire e-WherreitereeetatatitiWee'enfehiedeyeee • , - :en a very fitnall quit ity-ditilY a a n . 'ley ok. ittee-n-t-e-theyeratien. : .. tot on his job. Water is ,vthat the graduelly increase., - Start giving a t Rape is an excellent pasture crop birds need, hot snow. - pound or two to ah Matured sheep for hogs. ALfalfe also gives eeeellent If you have customers who. like rich . e, ' :. daily.. . Pregnant ewes have beep fed „ results and is considered one of the brown eggs, that means . that eon up, to few' pounds or four -and one. tbest perennial pastures. Sweet•cloit. should keep sozne Plymeuth 'Rinke or half pounds daily With ne bed resets. I et is. semetities grown,but it is acivis- I !_.Erb:le_to pastereeit thyt first 'ear e lrehmas.. • . i, ,. :. e ..,' • Of -course, glover bay and ,D,' few oats 1 ' arid if possibte a few roots should be ' • - • . '...* ° „ Eeer See.a Coney. ., . Sed as Wellt3e mire the silage .is . New PuMping ' Device.' There are Several allusions in the gocch Under noeircurestances feed . erewBible' . . • thirtieth apparatus for "filling automo- to the coneyThe eheep sporled sdage. bile tirea.with-aiza_eutotrieticallyeuts. clagPter; thtentereaiettit. verse ._ of Pree off the etiPplY evbenthe.- overinflatron verbs says -"the coneys ere but a , feeble gOlk, yet they make their house point' is reached, ... , in the recite." • Coneys are yet found on the Lebanon -and hi the Jordan anti Dead sea valleYs. • The , emerey is, about' tha Siete of "the dceneatie-cat, has long hane,a phort tail, round ears and ' chews the Ode ceet years the shingle beeaine the pr• o- duct of the saw mill, and the n3aau. facturers Of shingles Were not so par- ticular as to eke kind of Stock they used. as was the farmer who laborious- ly hi own supply. The ()income was. that ' shingles were put • on the market at a Mice which 4cm:emended trade but gave much leas satisfaetion, and many a farmer ,who could afford It replaced his cedar ehinglee.with gale verified iron in one form or another: Until recent yeas, howeyer, a gal- vanized bon toot was eluxinae.but the introduction ' of modern machinery has reduced the cost of galvanizing to a, mininiUm and it is new possible to get a substantial and almost everlasting roof in the form. of metal shingles at a. vely_inedetrite cost- - One feature -of the Metal Shingle and Roofing. Is that it eoes• not take an expert workman to applyelt, Any une skilled. buyer with a moderate degree of adaptability, pair of snips arid' ti hammer cam apply -these up4O-date shingles' is well as sheet rootings and - , • Probably. the 'greatest virtue of the Metal roof is •that the, risk froin° fire and, lightning- is minimieed by it's Use, ind•uceinents in: the way Of reduced :premiums -to eneenrage the •uie • of galvanized cdverfng, as a -building with' stroll a :raia!, properly connected to the ground - by a water spout or a wire coatade-le proof against lightnieg -0 Charcoal sharpens a hen',3_ grinders. The colder the day the more corn eeeded-. . • --A salad- of chopped cabbage puti a good keen edge on the bird's appetite. If you can't get milk igaylie you can get, whey. It isn't quite up to the mark of Milk, hut it makes a fair sub-, ititute. - • . • . Cracked corn shquld be sifted be- fore being red to the poultry; the amount of meal saved Will more than -offset the. labor. e - Growth and development require both quantity and quality el food, in. order *. to 'erund up. good send frames and give strength and vitality to the growing stock.. . Don't let any cebbageeor other' reots go to waste. Tie a stout string around the roots of several cabbages, and hang them in the hen house so that/ the hens can just reach them nicely. Have you found liens on the floor under the roost, dead? Uusually thelien which dies this evaY is rathee well. atoirg in years and has been fed freely of food that makes fat. She beCame too fleshy and died. of fade degeneration. -- • ' - It seems sometimes as4it it makes little or no difference how dusty the windows Ofetheepoultry-houses. ere: But •it is a fact., that cleari windows tend to health.„ and bappiness..That makes it 'Worth while to •clean the darkened -windows often, • e When speaking of durabilitY of a metal, roof, galvanized materials Only are referred to. Farinere in this coun- try, nearly twenty years age, applied Painted roofin,g, and the tepainting of this roofing, which in some eases' should have been, an annual affair, was - neglected, and the eonsequenee was that corrosion set In, and -the roofs rapidly deteriorated, but this is net the case with Galvanized Roofing:- In the rural districts, where sulphurous acid gases are not pratilent, a Galvanized, Roof made of good material and pro- . - Orli, applied should eve gatisfaction for half a century at leaete In the march of progress a rapidly growing number' of farmers', recogniz- ing the merits of metal, ate now adopt- ing, -as a safeguard, against fire, light= fling and decay, many forms- of sheet metal products, sea as ;metal roof Ings, sIddngsr,,ventilators, silo covers, etc., thus reducingrisk as well ae _ maintenance cost.. T SUNDAY SCH001, • .INTERNATIONAL LESSON •. He was an old dark_ He wore no Overcoat, and the icy wind twisted his threadbare clothes about his shriveled "Robert," elticl his teacher, sternly, • body. "Wind," he demanded whitnsi- "you are incorrigible. I shall eertein- Cally, "whar, wuz yoo dis time las'. Vr have to ask on father4e come and july?" F • see met, 7".". . .... ,..c..4,..e° ifisr.....4112;41,..,,am--.4t--"''''c'' Mothers and esushters et elf egos ye sordid!), Welted to Wits is "1,11/ dePortarrent. initial, only will be published' with oaf* nientioa *ad "l' sannelir le * Mem* of Identifiestien but foil name Ina address must be ideen In each letter. Write on erre "olde of paw only. Answers van b. smiled direct It stamped !male addreseacleeeteelope la onelesed. Address all eorreepondence for thlivdepa m nt to fdra Helen Law, 71 'Castle Fronk Road, Toronto. - e ---- . e" inonfii soi Ind impouseisonwoug influence of eta, al Mrs. F. 24.1---1. If le (a) insufficient sleen; (b In the bedroom; (e) a late end bOan _RiBtUaPlir y(,.:ege) gtaelelerli_21"./1: condition. nemedies . for the first' • three .are obvious. For, the fourth it is utually sufficient to rise promptly, to dress briskly, Meteor improving the circula- tion and to take a nourishing break- fast: ' g. To gain weight, eat . raw egg and and 'Milk, cream! rice, cereala olive oil end grape juice, better and M. X. R.:-1. ,Tewele, which are to be egrinirbernolleraedPrwiTette"inbitiriellestor her maiden name, not that of her prospec- tive husband.' 2. Nothing you could give your college friendwould be Mere highly appreciated titan a knit or crocheted set of afghan and pillow in the waversity colors for the Inevitable college couch. A pennon made of felt in' the. colors is also most accept- able. . „ G. H. :--1. David Lloyd George was born in Manchester, England, in 1898', of Welsh parentag,e, His lathery a BEDTIME STORY orange* are, plaged in boiling water or in a hot (Veen for five minutes before ermereeing juke can he easily exe traded. 9. . Vegetableg should not be moved individual side dishes, but Should be placed on the dinner Plate with the meat. 8. A 'child's Tam te, Skeeter hat after being washed should be stretched Over 'a diener plate to prevent it from shrinking and losing shape. 4. Cornstarch 'added to the lloue for pie deist wilt inalcieit, More flaky. If you. aro using pastry' Pour add one -tablespoon to every tun of flour; if ordinary flour add two tableapoons to oery cup. O. The task of washing the family handker- chiefs is easy according to the follow- ing Method:, In a vessel containing at leaet two genders of Warm water, put four heaping tableseroons of any good' soap or powder dissolved and one tablespoon coal oil. Plunge. soil- ed handkerchiefs into this and bring slowly to a boil, then put them into clean strong suds and very little rub- bing either by and or machine will poor and invalid schoolmaster, died in make theni s white. colored early manhood, . and David .was ealideteleres7!hoBuolidl b5ironedairnocnee da fonrathwe potato brought up .in humble circtunstaneee by an uncle in Wales. 9. To venti- in fat vvhichthas 'been scorched or has late a room without draughts, tale a, burned taste and the flavor will be ta starched lin or cheese,cloth across it and tack old window screen, stretch thin muse erieostthoer:dm.rith wt.= Swpartienkr Iteo make them • it in place; and put it in a wiralovaas stiffer. . • you would a fly -screen. 9, A lecre- F. R. Ee-1.' If you Wake tired it tary "pro tempore" is a secretary mfOr, is probably due to one of the folloWt the time being". .00* Zii orandr4TEIX SC,Rotbee. APBOOKs ouroAserliElitlfrbook there had lived, for, eh, se =Mr able. list WI white the* wee sy:reinkitiside deawithrieunt lyittle roisibufelrgthiltalkaht, not: o 111114"abWigOatilithlinof tthaliscoll"dcrovined°1 a Phi:* dainty curls. The two little girls, Bessie and Ada', *twos *shed to see her whenever theY 'visited grandraother, who W0014 tell 1' theta . weenalerful lotteries &milt the, fairy, $he eiways ended by ilayingik .1%4 so full of mischief t,hot it is er.1, Tar,' gOod.• thing indeed that I hove, her oaf, in thle book! Surely, the ewe, • as will keep her them!" One Saturday, vrhen Bessie end _Ma! arrived at their grandmothees tzar, fermi tie house hi graiit„ JAW* excitement. The parrot had got er,. of his Mtge arid gone up a tree; thee whiagatnat*Athe'lg"ne&velyki.'pettrntoribildriellarVildbbstl'orerel • and was noVra bright green; and hurter but not least, the beautiful 04 that was baking forIlkeehildren had been. entirely forgotten, after it was put, into the oven, end had burned to ai cinder. " • But Bessie and Ada had beeni brought up to be useful children and, to help.'wherever they could. 'Ada/ who was as active as any monkey,' went up .the tree and brought do_vvirJ even Ptoarrtryot,towpheoekWaats and dghBteesnactiais took hold of the kitten by its and`neatly Elnippea off bunches of hart where the paint was thickest. Thew they both told grendmother that they would, much rather' have the .red-' cheeked apples they could see on the` sideboard than any cake that had OM,. been' baked. real, though blind desire, for the hea- • judice that made impoissible for 07 venlye gift went vviheineradiale pree thorn to-receiye it: verse 30 is enough . to prove it. • Sometimes a cow is uneasy, steps, or 36. This is the converse of John 20. MOWS or even kicks when being milk - 29: jet is not in the Greek either here ed. or there. . • See if there are stray hairs on Re- often37. Tohnendfoirnmthoisf thisGosp Gospel; ei s John nne mtho%u.,..taheeruLthlayt_taile_re use einogf ipulled.ea rs and 17. , ere the Amerman Revision, has put the true translation in the note if the cow -.s more quiet. margin. The objects of redemption Don't neglect to have the box stalls are rst brought together into a unity, and when distributed as individuals. reedy for the cows that are to calve Our.d eteine of the church will come in the early spring. • • "Lest we forget" let me again urge that if the stables are not quite warm enough, blanket the new-born calf. Pieces of old wool blankets washed clean are just the thing. This is im- portant. These blatkets are easy to. matee. Fasten themeby strings, tied. at _the 'neck, aeound. eclair hind leg, and -aralerethe belly by the fore As the calf,. grows these strings can be let out. My. calves have grown and Worn these blankets until they were a mere patch on their backs. ' • "The dairy' cow," says a Professor -Dean, "Will -help the learner -eolve- the labor problem by furnishing remuner- ative Labor all the year round, on high priced land* we can see no other solu- thin of , the- -labor difficulties • on. farms." • • fro et- careful - consideration of th se asga es,' The Father giveth e thought is ' developed in Rom. 8. 29, 30. Such statements peem to leave no • room for human free will, which is authoritatively asserted by our men consciences, and set forth by Paul in the same breath with the complement, ry truth, Phil. 2. The doctrine -V God's minefairefareewil I ulative problem, 'far as our finite ntelligence can solve it 'here. The act is whet matters most: God gives" to his son all who are *Ming o hear his call, and the son will 'never eject therh. , • • a • e ' MARCH .11. " • r Lesson X. Jeaus The Bread Of -Life. -John. 22-40. -• Golden • • • Text -John 6. 85. Verse 24. Capernaum-It does not say that they found him there. verse 17 the 'Ultimate objective CaPer- naum, but Mark expressly says they aimed at Bethsaide, and then finally that they ereossa-tcruzetaret.''' So here jt is said vaguely they found him on the other side. 26. In the dialogues of this Gospel We regularly find Jesus going direct- ly for the thought behind the words. 27. Perisheth-Compare Col., 2. 22. Son of Mete AS _elsewhere; „recalls his 'ultimate function as Judge of men. He will judge us then according to our tteatinent of his edema now. Seal- ed -As his complete Representative. The seal was the mark of ownership. 28/ This verse arid verso 29. sum- marize the New Testament doctrine of justification by faith, the recovery of which made the Reformation, • In every teligioh men "glide into the treason" of thinking they can accumu- late merit and dame, God's supreme blessing of tight. That is likeetya ing apples on the houghs of a dead tree, Whet God wants is :life, and ethateeomee fruer the---sueratal trust in Christ. Mexico's Shape. I. ' In shape Mexico •is like an enor- mous cornucopia •ith.its opening to- wards the United States. ' 11101B444,17 44t1Witi7X9 • .glevezeta , • ar-i6 .,„ Grandmother smiled - to see whate capable and amiable little girls they' Were, although e. she kept repeatin that she could not see"how the per- *, the cat and the Cake had all ma aged to make .so muttle trouble at ou time, . • • ffe - • - - , •Supper was not quite toady; so/ Bessie picked' •un the old scrapbook, Which that day was lying on the table,' to look again at the fairy, The'. 'book opened almost of itself •at the' familiar page -but no lairy was to he • fonnd, , ' _ -"Why, grandmother," Cried Bessie.i 'shoiVing the empty page, "she's not. • here! What has become of her?" • •Grandmother looked and laokedehutt • sure enough there was no rose-gare • landed tittle createre to be seen any- where -only two spots of glue where, she had once been. • • "That book llew open this mornine, said grandmother, "arid the fairy has ,scapedl That: ageounts for all that has happened. We must find her and • put her back agein, -or who knowa: -whet will Ifitypen nextr They children at once began the smirch, and seen I3essie's bright eyea. lobed the fairy -in the fireplace al- most at ttie other end of the room, ' looking, i'grandriaither declared, even more mischievous- theri-ever. 'Now,":said ' giatichhothar, as she'''. brought, out a bottle of fresh 'paste turd fastened the 'fairy to . the , page Again, "we will go to tbe'"dining room and enjoy our supper in, peace" • A Song or Winter. . Meg a seng of w,inteir When-coldesteweetherecomeea- Four and twenty snowbirds ' . . Picking up the Months; • ' --When-the crumbs. are eaten, - The birds fly. to a tree; , • Isn't that a pretty sight: For anyane tO see? 'Impaction of the Colon may beepre-i sent for some time without ma.rked; symptoms, then slight, coliekY -- Sitting on halm:thee, peetelirg trietri. - against ane solid object,' little* or no, pessages of fteces, e, general fullness • of. the right side of the. are - other symptoms'. / .aGieeete-pureative, follow -by -2-clrein •doses nux vomica 3 times, daily,' • ( feed bran onte: - eeetat-inee,„..... Tam trete 2 &tune soiid extract of ,belladonna. • Oats is the principal grain for horSes, but a little bran or Oil 'cake might profitably he added to put the horse in conditicin. . Boiled oats might be fed occasionally, and care must be taken, npe. ov.`erfee_d orelay, , ' Don't buy a 'field iinplement Without - a spring Seat Why'? •Becturse if yea come in leg -weary from the field the . chances nee, the horses will not get,tha. attention they silo-ilid. bave in the way ,hot rgiubnbing is. a. 'vice of grooming after a dusty day an the , that is herd tA be kept in a box stall without inangere or racks. In the Majority of cesee, the "vice can. be cheeeti by tiareklingt a strap -rather tightly arotind • tine herses's threat, Do net have so; tight as to interfere with breathing oft swualnlioowatingin.ulg be 'fed earettilly to horses in order •to avoid digestive troubles and kin eruptions. Asethe kernels are smell and hard they should he rolled 1"4:. all farm •animals. If ground too finely the meal trust bee • mixed with coarser feed 4 to avoid • :forming a pasty 11mA theeanitnahe mouth.. Wheat lute feeding value about equal to corn, but, for horeep, bat nee preferable. eameera. ae...-leleasie teeth Eree Holiend Ueon mahy sources. On this occasion the Thigroup of refugees•is typical, of can do is -to see that the Belgiang and their 'babies are fed. And this; they !have been doing. British, Canadians and Americaps have responded nobly to the call, and have kept alive the na- t tern that saved them from he Ger- i. . demand seems, Purely stupid, when the bulk of 'the Belgian people to -day. following._ a sign so much- like that of Their faces show pitiably the hard -- the manna that they emote. It conies ' ships they have undergorrein the last apparently from that half-witted eon- ; two years e . servatism that gives the ;past a Hort:, Most e . • . , . of ex officio transcendenee, and :ean- 1,patnetre of all ere the enildreh. net imagine'God hemelif -outtletrig eis-t-Thanks-to-theapiendid-Teterk-of erneej- former deeds; • fish philanthrepists, they are being ; 31. Written -In Pea. 78: 24. '` fed well But apart from this there 82. Giveth--is offering you now. ie little that cnn b0 done for them. It True bread -Th e otilY one that,lkome .iSimpossiblee foreiestahceate Supply pletiely patisfimtthe. name. . The them with homesor with those use - manna Was only partiallYso, for those Jess but delightful gifts that eliaract- who ate It hungered again: 83. The World -As in John•3. 16: the -essence of -the- gift is that it has anlintitlef rate or time., • - 34. The appeal is to be composed with that- of theSamaritan WOMEM in erize the holidays in mote fortunate lands: Least .of all can these chil- dren know the Soy tied come -ref Mirk= big suck gifts': - • • Surely in these citeunistances the John 4. 15. _ . Here it seems, that a' !east the people of the Britieh Empire ...444444 r ce• ricsiL:axam cog' %kite rrres. Tom ,1 wmer MR& JOisi' es TO WALK ovOk Tb DRU6' :STORE v11114 me- voLoioutva CARO,OP BER 1AI3V 'Write WE. COMe 13ACK . KIT0.1 e1- KITC140 Vrei4e1.-100, cATO4 Voi) 1'1.4 cAtc 44U In full confiaence that they will con - thine theit generous gifts the. Bel- gian Relief Committee is reminding us -that evetteelay of-the:"Slea-Flia the ,Gerretras• are in. Belgian -I it is necessary that -food be supplied to the grown-ups and the 'kiddies of this stricken land. • leeilttileutionafor thie purpose may be 'sent to the Central Belgian Relief Committee,. '59 St Peter Street, Montreal, or to. the local offices' in each community or district... 00W -sea TRE• NIcE Rj ING- .a.e,..,9 1144Ati'wertheRFtir. LOIA“' /404 1F TROIA. pNPi HORR1 AND 4 CO te1E- DAcl< ! 44 e _ New to Iler. A: travelling man •oneeeightefound - himself obliged to remain in n email • town on rieeount of a Washout en •the . • railroad ceused by the beavY rain, . which was still coming down in tor- rents. The travelliegrean turned to the waiteeee "„Thie eertainly 1001iS like the flood." , "-The what?" 4°rhe flood. 'You've read allow the flood. and the eel: landing en Wont Arcata. eurely." . • "Gee! Mister," she ereirmed, abet seen a paper foe three) ave."